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‘ew York ae Second-Ciaes Matter, For England and the Continent All Counteles im the Interu@stonal Postal Unioa, on toe seccvcccccesceseNO, 18,144 THE M'NAMARA ARREST. ITH the arrest of John J. McNamara, Secretary | and Treasurer of the International Bridge and Structural Ironworkers of America, upon a charge | if complicity in the dynamiting of the building of! the Los Angeles ‘Times, there begins @ trial that! s going to hold popular attention and divide} popular opinion as sharply ae did the trial eome | years ago of certain officers of the Western Federation of Miners on | the charge of murdering Gov. Steunenberg, of Idaho. It ia to be! hoped, however, that this time the evidence enbmitted will be #0 con- elusive one way or the other as to leave no doubt as to the moral and | the legal guilt or innocence of the accused. | The crime represents one of the worst criminal tendencies of | the age. The nse of dynamite and assassination in the course of the cocasional conflicts between labor and capital is the more terrible | because such conflicts appear to be inevitable in the present period of incessant economic and industrial change. If that form of fight | ing is to be defended or tolerated by the Isbor unions or by any | influential portion of them, then civilization is confronted by « real | anarchy. A majority of the American people sympathize with organized | Isbor. Popular sentiment sides with the efforts of the workers to improve their conditions. But for the dynamiter there @honld be, | Om aren to The. fey for the United Stat and Canad short shrift. oe. — THE STREETS OF MANHATTAN, | Y wny of proving that the need of New York at) this time is not a new charter but a better exercise of the powers of the present one, the Bu- reau of Municipal Research cites as an example of inefficiency the administration of the streets of | Manhattan by the Bureau of Highways. In the Teport are enumerated twelve defecta of admints- trative work to which the attention of Borough President McAneny | has been directed. | These charges are not only made by a responsible organiration | Dud-ere stated in plain terms and each is clearly specified and defined. Moreover, facts are cited to sustain them. ‘The report says: “All instances of maladministration and Jax methods found in the present procedure of the Burean of Highways point toward the enormous advantages to be gained by asphalt companies through any cor rapting influence brought to bear upon city employees.” Neverthe- |. leas tt fs not the contention that the Highways Bureau is corrupt, but that it might as well be. The more the subject is investigated the more clear {s the con- clusion that the demand for charter changes is a mere confusion of the public mind. Tho present law affords ample powers to remedy existing evils. The one thing needed {is better administration. —————-¢-2-______ A UNITARIAN PROPAGANDA, RESIDENT TAFT says thet during the Presi- | dential compaign he was asked to brand as “an iniquitous libel” a report that he is a member of the Unitarian Ohurch. Senator Fletcher of Florida reports a like experience while he was a candi- date. The two statesmen agree there is pressing need at the National Capital of a church that will eo-promufgate Unitarian principles that the American voter may. cq@me to understund them and know they are as harmless as any | theology ever devised, and as full of hope as Universalism itself, But the reappearance of the old-time hostility to Unitarianiem fancy that | martyre were killed by letting water gious controversy that concerns itself with something that neither heade until they went quite mad. ste can either prove or refute. Trinitarians and Unitarians have | Such Is Life Reflections of a Bachelor Girl ROM the sort of wives most men select you would softening of the heart ae of softening of the | A woman's love te supposed to be made of cast-iron, | warranted to stand the strain long after her fatth hae deen shattered. Marriage {sa marathon, and the one who takes the lead at the altar tot!t usually keep it all the way to the grave, Ita not our dtp faulte, but owr ltttle fatiings, that get on one another's ts on interesting {iectration of the persistence of roe kina of reli | nerves after marriage. A drop of water te a little thing, but hundreds of a ind of reli- (In the Spring.) By Maurice Ketten. ' / areal By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1913, by the Prem Publishing On, (The New York World), Love doesn't come in bottles; it's ke a well-—the more you draw on tt the more frecly and plentifully tt flow, love was not 40 much a matter of On, yes, most men are “brutes” and most women “fools,” perhaps, but unfortunately, that’s just what makes them attractive to one another. It ts a waste of time to read advice on the art of fascinating a man, be- cause any woman who knows anything about it 1s too buay practising to stop to theorize. Matrimony ts Mke a see-saw—tohem one fics up in the air the other alwaye comes down from the heights with a sickening thud. drop in the same spot on thetr fore mostly @ matter of “dough.” deem et odds for nineteon hundred yoars, and it seems there is atill need for a campaign of education. The movement supported hy the President and the Senator is a good one. Washington needs every | sortof religions help any sort of theology can afford it. Green Room Glintings | By Frank J. Wilstach the | YOUTH AND CRIME. N Sunday afternoon no less than eleven prisoners, all of them young, wero held by magistrates in| this city on charges ranging from highway rob-| bery to dance hall fighting. The faot was noted hecanee of its pertinence to the discussion of the frequency of crimes committed by big boys and young men Conditions are just as bad eleewhere i. som people for variety go to the theatre. SOME stars are really “a @cream" mt of the pain that they ca N tt ac RITICS sometimes consider that the punishment should fit the orlme. ANY playgoera can't nard Shaw be In Boston the District-| sume wine iy Corian’ ttorney attributes the evil mainly to the inability of young men to! for the reason that they a find steady employment. An Assistant Chief of Police in Chicago ar at feretly Sut gues that young criminals are encouraged in crime by leniency of the | courts and by misdirected sympathy. In St, Lou “a detective aya | publicity given to young criminals flatters their vanity and prompts others to follow the example. Each and all of these causes has some bearing, perhaps, upon the case of almost every young criminal. Meanwhile it should not be forgotten that every young man is largely a self-governing creature, responsible for his acts, and that a certainty of punishment to come, whfle it may not cure 9 criminal impulse, is very apt to restrain it Until doctors agree, therefore, on a way of preventing the young eriminal’s exuberance, the best thing to do is to lock him up on the firet outbreak. endure Rer- nn To Baperintendent of Cooper Unt Po Be Fitter of Phe Voor : I ten 19 enter Co Union, Boss—There's $10, gone from my eem can J apply f Ne an. Boniit cash drawer. Johnny, you and | were Uarntttence? JONBS, the only people who had the keys to that drawer! Office Boy—Well e'pose we each pay $5 and eay no more about it? » Pive, To the PAftor of The Evening World Pe Me Miter of The Prening World: What day of the week was I born | Maw many boroughs eve there Im on? Is wae Ootoder 20, 1m, PF, AP, ( i LM i AR LUNES ! | | SARA eS SS NR RR ENLE BI | Springtime o’ the Year. “All the World’s a Stage.” (Little Comedies of Every Day.) }) By Alma Woodward. | Copytght, 1911, by The Pres Pobtiating Oo, (ihe New York World.) | Homeward Bound! | foved mend. tre, Jones etaren at rns} When the dark tag aldors wave | Smait brown banners on the brenve, A Van Cortlas regs ii | b ; Nee iat Ste SEEN sohany | Johnny (stage whisper)—Say, ma,| And the ataghorn mumace brandish {red head or # of 1! ithere’a a man lookin’ at you-I think! Tawny ‘mongst t trees. a yhe's goin’ to give you @ weat—he's got) Pas a acpalariay arial [In the springtime o' the year, Qfrs, Smith looks at the purple tied| Freed from win T) bloom By Cora M. W. Greenleaf. HEN the willows are ! Ah! it's then there {s no room | For unhappiness or gloom, Mingivings or grim fear, RS, J, (ent Ming in here! My! fant {t close I don’t care what you v's fey chains, ay, I don’t thini It's healthy to Individual and procures the seat.) treams are running clear, | travel in a hole underground, herded in) Johnny overing something)—Aw! Swelled, and riotous with cheer, with a lot of strangors! Why there wet out here—that ain't) OV ing lov | may be people in this car right is {t ma—to give somebody Now the days are s na Jute with typhotd fever and p somethin’ you ain't goln’ to use mo mora) And the rongbirds ‘ 4a st, mat? lon! once more ts lite ns S. (ooking around)—Sh! Some, Mra, 8. (tensely)—You simply muatn't| For ‘tls springtime o Ne may hear you Johnny (suddenty)—Say, ma, do you fot to have @ doctor when you got the pip? Mra 8 (btushing)—Why, Where 4d you ever hear t alle #0 loudly | ee (There 4a a short, impressive pause.) | Queer Facts Johnny: y, ma, do you emetl ontona? | Mra, §.—No, I don't~and you don't, LASICA hes great forests of tim: Johnny!) elther, ie A ber, but ghey are practically vir- es I do, man ain yet, Outaide of frewood only 1,00 board feet were cut in wo ohnny (stubpornty) Johnny (ehriMy)—Billy Brown saya! you got a Merce cold, that's the reason, | teacher's got it! Don't you ramamber you tol’ pa last) (Mra, Smith atlencea Johnny by meth-|night that you hoped you'd keep the cold ode best known to herself. The train|as long as he #moket thome punk offers! \lurehes, Mra, Jones deacribes an abbre-| Mr. Jones eave him” 10, A quaint off superstition tn Iceland that every Drie must invite all her yiated parabola and lands tn a dusky! Mrs. J. (shrieking) ~ Punk cigarat, ‘tends to a dinner tn her own homo, @amee!'s lap.) ‘That Mr. Jo Wh y= and every article of food must be pre- Mra, J. (reweutng hersetf)—Dla you may Mra. 8. (in: = Jovnny's hand to a pared by the bride herself. If she ts American men were the most gallant {0 pulp)—You misunderstood—mother ead) successful in plearing her # fhe not the world? Mr. Green, not Mr, Jones, lonly receives praise for her own skill Mra 8. (oontemptuoualy)—Well, I Johnny (tumbling to !t)—That's right, | but hetpe alorg her younger #laters, who kuess not! Goodness! Don't 1 with I\ma, I fargot—the ones Mr. Jones give|are then assumed to be equally good at had stayed in that local—tt waan't as bad ast #aving in the tesbox for company cooling, and consequently Rave @ much in I remember better chance of getting married, Mra J. (audtbly)—T don't mind atand-| Mra, J. (beamtng)—T thought se~t! aly tng, Dut somo one certainly ought to| knew they were very fne ECU Ae Ie give YOU @ acat—with a child to take Guard (in duleet noan {¥ that cach noble hae a private GE coc cain wise: tail RO en wt, ies wo Sm ai ohnny (piping v y father don’ 0 trio arises an ; y ’ |matehea by @ linguistic complteation tn est up and ative ladies seata no more! | Johany (hanging back a Mt)—Say, ma, hed by @ linguistic compuoation tn Mra, S. (strenuously) —W ohnny! | that wuz wo! el wann't tt? dip cortain other parts of Polynesia. |e ¢ Mrs. @. (fr {a anda the men and the women | dor leflantly) He don't net—he| Johan my Well, tf tt ain't | a different language. The ped on his corne the} (Mra, Smith, ¢ Ng her purse aud-jcome by making the women use the {wus goint to give her his seat, an’ he|denty, extracts the nickel and ehoves ft) Masculine tongue when tating to the give her a good kick on the a an'|iato his greedy palm.) men. Among themselves it is taboo, Johany (to himself) — lu tare these cigere again! money’ | And the men do not trouble thair bends _ emous tae eaber, cece shoei she wus so surprised, an ; | Giire, Smith etame the gorvent with @ ea an Ariat SRLS 1 hae nk IBALL AS i Sl aS | Modern love affatre, Uke modern etrawberry short-ake, are getting to be mak In the! The Jarr Family A recente Mrs. Farr Plans a Riotous Day's Osting, Bat Gets Scant Sympathy From Mr. Faw Copyright, 1011, by The Pram Pubitsting Oo, (The New York Wort.) ‘Bitth 1 @he is @ generom Gio By Roy L. McCardell. sine, 06d It's wretched the way (eee ec tr, you be home early?’ | nrite of a Mat husband of here teste asked Mrs, Jerr, ae Mr. | ner gbout her alimony. Jars was leaving for downs] upoeen't he pay tt?” t—_ wn Tt WAS] FO, he pays it all right but Re waite the usual question | ¢1) the very Inst mtr the law afows » Jarr an-land then fust sends her @ oheot oor usual the exact amount, although he le eaaie ling twice as much money as he wae got her decres, Mrs, eure he eatd. z when shi seems to ting because are got er." “I was going to say that 6 dear we hor , ahe'e piven o with Mea seheon with her cen wood and help t epring sardening: piace of her two | Mrs, Jarr went Wants me to go © with her to-day.” “A Soly day ta then," sald Mr. Jann, ae om leet oe. OCU | she wae married in Indianapolis, too, HWickett would feel hurt.” + | end hase husband out 2 “How h > widow | Jarr. cries about that. She thinks "Hees feet thuatand hae Neen Geen ton (it WOU bea solace to her if they years second husband all at rest togetier. Leoad bor iinies replied Mra. Jarr. oa | “It would look neater, too,” ead Mr goes over the fret wann weather in |JO°T. "T think it is a mire sign of eares the apring and fixes up the lot where |essness to scatter defunct husbands they both are. It ts such a litte lot |Atound that way, Well, aa T eatd, 14 that it onty takes her one day to get it Father put in the afternoon with the looking nice." | grass widow than the sod one.” | “Why ca he get a ittie one, doesnt! “I have no doubt yo would,” ae @he intend to marry agin?” | Mrs, Jarre with a meaning look." “I'm @ure I don't know. If you are /tf [ have any fault to find with Mrs, #0 anxious to know, why don't you ask | Ictttingly it {s that she would most like- her?” replied Mrs, Jarr, ly not object, ether, Oh, “Oh, I'm not anxious to know; worse than a lot of others. might think me a prospective candidate,” | “At least an afternoon tn her eom- Mr. Jarr. “Well, I hope the day| pany ts @ little bitther,” aid Mr, Jarre be one of tempered resignation.” | ‘rhe thought that the Inte Mr. Hickett were tn the vicinity would rather spoil the day for mis.” “What etls all @ women anyway? sked Mra, Jarr, ‘They will tell you w the territie they led with this hus \ band or who have died or whom they've divoresd, and yet they can’t | keep away from them, Mra, Kittingly tn almost as bad as Mra. Hickett, she always goes to hincheon where she kenOwa her ex-hushand comes, and she to the cemetery | in tore for you, husbands. the a . + Ilickett has two hush | in Greenwood and I only have one; but at least she knows whe! ey are.” the Jovial doings of “On, I don't know that [ll her," said Mrs. Jarr. ‘Mra, | upstairs hes asked me to Ko dow o with ttingly own *y |glares at him and whiepere the most shopping with her. You can eay What! terrible things about him till It makes ee a ee one uncomfortabie, She enya if ge oe him lunching with another would create a scene rght | were to woman a a mo coming | manner, And, then, too, she's a gen- | erous tiie thing and alwaye takes one |e |in a taxtoad and buys a nice iuncheon, | “Well, maybe he wouNl Go the same | And that'a more than a lot af people do | if he paw her unching there with ape | who are so quick to ke remerke | Ofer man," gaia Mr. Jarr. about her, but are Just as quick to ac-| ‘But he never does, that's what drives | cept of her hospitatity. There's a thing | her no wild,” replied Mra. J “On, | T have noticed, and that is that a lot/ you men are all alike 7 rather aise | of people who pride themselves on thetr | Mre. Hickett has less heartache over | extreme respectability are eo mean and Mttte Mre, Kit- Grasping end stingy. Poor ittie Mra. | husbands she’s had than tingly hae over hers.” Jungle Tales For Children. Durdens end !t would hurt ag yheavy lynees if I had to get down without By Farmer Smith. M R. CAMBL was walling 0M 1 o96 pads, I may look homely to you, Sweezum street in Jungie TOWN | jyomy, put I am @ wonderful animal. when he caught sight of Jimmy | Monkey sitting at| the bottom of a| cocoanut palin. “Good morni Jimmy," he ead. | conte: Good morning, | ooa tn the w Iocan go twenty hours without food or rest, and if I do not see anything better ke ant Cange had a comforteMe I an happy and for I do a bot o@ | Mr, Camel," eatd | Jimmy; you going?" } | ‘I think Io wilt! 4 go Gown to che; river and get aj) s drimw, 1 haven'e, “It is using your had a érink im|Mr. Camel, “In the daytime I look at jeight dave.” i} “In eight Gaye!” began Jimmy. | “Planae do not talk M!ke thet; you) thirsty | ¥en," anid the camel, “I am the animal-that can go so long without a | @rint.”* | ‘Do you know,’ ov not give you pleasure, have |T¥,"" sald his companton @iways wondered why you have those |S%Ng now, T need a cri Deautiful pads on your knees, What; “Get @ hump on yourself," said are they for’ Jimeny. “They are to kneel on," eai4 Mr.| Mr. Camel went away Inuching to ‘camel. ‘You see, 1 have to carry very think how smart Jimny was 2s the ong 1pon NEW feature in negiiaces ejor three different laces pies, they are elipped over the] ‘The pointed effects in vogue this season slight V Ince ane the A deep yoko with @ ning composed of fourmeh head and since the front fastenings done away with, the essential stratg! \aine effect Is obtained noe the wearing of beudo!r caps ts De ning more and more many pretty models are app are made up of deinty mulls, al roideries, batiste, light silks or lace and it ts quite a now idea to have the cap of cotton crepe ('o match the negli- to & fo ard ck net howe w 4 with a pllase strand femal id white inake @ most effeutive a light trimming for e Sted, gee), Anished off with a frill of eatin oe ; about the face, combining @wes ‘A striling feature of the spring gowns {9 the profusion of buttons that form the trimming of the costume. Th ily in @tlt or stiver, either ba or flat, ‘The woman who poesesees rare peces of Ince, Dut not mMelont of any one kind to trim a gown, can now com- placently Dring out her treasures, as this| Heading Jace and colored rt Ceneon‘s fashion permite the use of two 'the effectivenem at these oa aS aati Q fais eached to un ments, New night dresses have the D yoke and ktmono sleeves (cut in ened { ‘ined or cross-barred dimity ama of the garment in soft white Book. Then again the upper section of figured dimity in da! colored § the lower part of the gown be pee. white, The Memories That Cling. | .")!)°%R%, diows nobody te had a retorted for detatla rer | acces | Thick Weathor. cary « vrine for sven here wom the tng. your thon “Don't recall," answered the old man. en- | thusiastically, ‘But 1 was there the year Jones | played halfback, and itobiuson, ran up a score of | ade, pet Sis “Site Slephone masmge one hia clerk