The evening world. Newspaper, April 26, 1911, Page 18

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7 The Evenin The Pe Wiorld. Poblished Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 53 to 63 Park Row, New York 3. ANGUS SHAW, Pres. aud Treas, JOSEPH PULITZER Junior, Scc'y. 63 Park’ Row. 63 Park Row, Entered at the Post-Ofioe at New Yorl: as Second-Cloes Matter Godscrip*ion Rates to The Evening | For nud and the Continent and ‘orld for the United Btates All Counteles In the Interuational @ud Canad ol one Year... rome! Valen. iH font + 50] One Month: r 85 KEEP THE ISSUE CLEAR. OME of the mos conspicuous of our labor lead- ers have shown an inclination to involve all organized labor in the case of the men charged with dynamiting the building of the Los Angeles Times. This inclination should be combated ' from the first by the full force of public sen- | timent. It tends to intrude an ugly side issue into a case where the supreme issue should be kept free from con- fusion. | Organized labor is not on trial. pected of complicity in the commissi No union is charged or sus- 1 of the crime. The charges | is right the accused parties of all the aid and help their friends and run against individuals personally, should have the ben sympat ment of that right. victims of capital | ers can give them, and the law will assure them the enjoy- s not right to represent them as the ation with organized labor. No of labor or lved in the case. No man nor set of men should to confuse it with even the bhadow of such an issue. } THE kl AY. | OSTMASTER-G AL TITCHCOCK has the satisfaction of reporting that during the first months of the current fiscal r the deficit of income in his department was virtually wiped | out. He estimates that at the end of the year) there will be a surplus. He adds: “This was “ accomplished not by curtailing postal facilities | but by extending the service along profitable lines.” | ~» Here is a case where public congratulation is in order. A long! evil, discreditable to the Government, has been ended and in the right way. ‘The fact is the more remarkable because of its simplicity. The Postmaster-General did no more than follow the plain business method of developing his service along lines that were profitable. ; Such an application of common sense and encrgy to a departmental | problem must not be treated as a slight thing. It is so rare in gov-| ernmental affairs as to be cither an accident or a stroke of genius. Now that it has been developed it should be exploited to the full. The parcels post can be made much more profitable than it is. ; THere’s millions in it. oe GHT W six Pannnuneneneny 9 0 wueeneninn PUT TO THE TEST. Y the appointment of Gen. Bingham as Chief Engineer of the Bureau of Highways in Man-| 0 hattan an opportunity is presented of trying out the theory of the Bureau of Municipal Re- 3 search that the evils of municipal government of | f late have been due not to defects of law but to deficiencies of administration. | Borough President McAneny has in this caso taken a course that | ts greeted with well-nigh univereal approval. He has chosen for this important work a man in whom popular confidence is complete and | of whose coming reforms public expectation is high. | The task of putting the streets in good condition is difficult, but ft is not impossible. Gen. Bingham has the training, the expe- rience and the native abilities needed for the right performance of | the duty intrusted to him. If, now, he is given cordial support from | the right quarters, we shall learn just how far there is needed an amendment of the law or a general invigoration of the administrative service, In either case the knowledge will be valuable, | clleseaecict 5G Meee THE LIE POLITICAL, AYETTE YOUNG, add Boston in the triple dig ing the people of nity of an ex-Senator, an existing editor and an uninsurgent Iowan, said: “It ought to be a penal offense for Governors and Senators to tell a thing politically that is not se i The point and pith of this philosophy derives all of its originality and most of its virtue from | the unique use of the word “politically.” Had it been said only | that a Sey ra Governor should be jailed whenever he told a no guch thing the phrase would have been a more Rooseveltism, or Platitude of old morality. But the limitation of the penalty words spoken politically calls for an explanation of the meaning the word in that connection. Many years ago a member of the House of Commons, having deen summoned to apologize for ng another a } stated that| he had used the word in a “parliamentary sense.” 'The spe eepted the explanation as suffic Charles Dickens afte ridiculed the incident in Pi pers by permitting Mr. Winkle ‘ to call Mr, Snodgrass a liar in a “Pickwickian eense,” These precedents cast a ray or two 1 @ thing politically, but do not adequat clearly the duty of the Iowa Academy or Inst the country } fayette Y , | now what La Letters From the Peo ple} ols Commater encwenad ies as Battor of The Breniug World : m Ree with atudents w to work This may interest some of your bual- feaders, I have Just moved out ¢ i chance of the subur great 11 f Peete rit ingenious, well educated and atrong 1 Oh eg h neen Mer ase Fo told that green peas are easy to grow, eo I have bought a can, Hut what 1 To Postmaster of Town, want to know is, 8 ed . & World before plantt: and for how long? at Arizona T, LADD. t in seven What Shall He fe the Katttor of The Evening World WM clever readers advise a young @erried man (who has had ten years’ { experience in architect and surveying "pee and finds they wcem to! ve orer-| rat To the Féltor of The Byening World: On what date did Easter fail in 184? Cc. ARLANS, 4 g¢ World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, April 26, 1911. The Don’t-Hurry-Up Wagon By Maurice Ketten. uN Th ! \ sag i 4 SUB AX Heute \ CALL (MMA AA TT | Mrs. Jarr Makes a Sensation Among the Neighbors, but It’s Not On the Free List By Roy L. M’Cardell. @ubway and onier some things home and then rush night dack again. Really, “And tht old hat, too; I've worn it tm I'm Ware face ilove ; sure people wonder it I was now at te door, And :s Mrs, Jarr ed, A morcher is a dangerous a7 A ATE aaTr ripped down the atreet }1'm not dressed well enough to go In a|made a vow never to take It off! entered w Stryver she knew rian fas no chance ot all, Buy 24 (OH, cdre darei® ghee ortega | Omens , saying Mra, Stryver cocked h that, stand back in their ¢ront| Fd sible eae “Mrs. Stryver eaw |, Nonsense! You look very aweet, in-|poleon hand-made, rough atraw hat of |rooms, but still commanding the street, | te ee bs said Mrs. Stryver, gractously.| royal blue, picked out a crimson | unse themselves, M. Rangle, M: that you passing and * themselves, Mrs, Rangle, Mrs. !! deatitee ates ooo I'm just wearing this awful| velvet bow. And Mrs. Jarr never feli| Bassford and possibly naif a dozen! 1.4 g sedentary fe,” Up and Doing, She ie wor, JOM! Berge. Really, it's disgracet #9 aha and out of style in all her/other envious ewlves were Ob- | work in an office and we have no danger or e OT all city folks arr as ignoremt of the enya can You! Ana Mra, Stryver gazed at her rather| {Ifo before. ney q roel farmer’ murroundings as the farmers mame- in 2 nd Mra, ‘ t life befor serving her triumphant departure. ettament me ' : ‘ * MO! stout figure enveloped in di biu oD ku hn at taking cheoatouna i : Hear about porta!” asked the examiner, ‘i. times euppose, Tida was evidenced by an ment? cA Ag A See Be khow she's just taking me aroun en they arrived at the first store | voy play foutiiall? Rasovall? Do sou box? Re the stay of « young New Yorker on & serge, the coat of wh! ch was ined with her th stryve produced a $20 bill, Th Mrs, Jarr paused, will think 'm a ments would Mal . ould afford to pay for a whole outfit, Hin a taxicab 1 make it up to you some oth . ow," she said, “I'm just fan and muffins!" 1 and then or Was ! ayings of aware ngle anc of their \ pastry Mr Windows upon w ina on inl vyver sald geniatly': | Harlem, | Ts a (@) om (@) ‘t r It seems #o ridiculous to pay ninety: | labia And you can say what you Ike, but! f - jen cents for luncheon. It r ITTLE children It does look classy to have the neatly A ji to break a $20 bill, You pay areprottios ped and aproned §30-a-month parlor Being the Contessions of the , and J tip the waitress a Ie tnd pbb ty - maid of Me riohest lady who lives tn Seven Hundredth Wite 1 have here in my pocketbook simple frocks. This the finest privato house in the ‘e And Ul remember ft with the taxicab, one ‘Gan be aninea net borhood run out after one and. bri ebited on. fare you paid, The next time wo Ko Ba borhood run out after one and bring . Temstted By Helen Rowland tar aH pall Fie aah Ams we wor mith § ough > Mra, _— ~ give the long watste Rasstord and oF | thin ‘ | thing ench effect, or tt h ed down their windows a CHARGE thee, thou Spring Bridegroom, enter not} Mrs. Jarr satd can be left plain as aod, but dire, dare into Holy Matrimony with a THEORY upon thy) “0% no in the back ken they had seen a! aa . TRE But my! she was mad. Then Mrs An We ieee einai sa NY ning concerning how to manage a WIPE Pee etea era Hanan akaaee he shirred diam : So Ul aH For, alas thou shalt be as one that fatteth mont at Mys, Vanswine's, and added toe eae Mrs Mrs. dare re beneath shining stars ¢ moonlight, and is And I'm sorry you can't go with me, inthe dliuateee tirned maid; and balaccae: ened Wy a THUNDER my dear, You have your shopping to eharenl 7 rred to ou were going down- ; anid Ty ay é ore be 1 sinds : inentatad basa eral tiers Lo, all men as ONE man, but of woinen there be as many Kinds "se sare was too angry to shop WwW aes {us there be varieties of weather; and each woman hath more lightning went right toward home in he a da n't cost an changes than a day in April. Behold, only a confirmed bachelor Inowet' , but alighted a few stations be- mAs ne back ) # taxloab than it does everything concerning women; for no man discovereth how LITTLE he| r street and completed the Jour is 6 auld 2 Soins hor I OI ney, as whe started, in a taxicab, Un- Ing occasions, knoweth, until he hath bee: r NE woma Tt bd norather in a hurry,” sata} His ii he hath been married wate af least ONE woman iminished grandeur at alxty cents. Tho dress ts made fre dacs, i wept a Id, he that cherisheth a THEORY in his heart ts as one that goeth |”. aula acre With front and back! / down to the shopping distr t burdened titi an umbrella, in case of storm; he forgvt ital to Mrs, Bassford. “I'l ventu portions and with at when the storm th and he in most nece to say Mrs. Stryver pagd for that tax’ round yoke. , and neither alt fair weather; and thou canst not tel! whall be the next ‘or, why shalt thou say it shall rain to-morrow be one day what the domesti pee Ee By John L. Hobtle atmospher ause it is ratning SCRIB says that a man 1 or it shail shir to-morrow ause it ¢s shining to-day, or niy humorist unul he shail U aged to-morrow because she is pleased to-day, New, 1| e ne. ‘ tye No. 7,014 jn, ) , ah hy sou I Orvows 6 hy wiig's % ule, ¢ the . take thy jovs, thy sorrows, and thy t 18 ; “isa ; 1 rON8 ia happen to COMB, even as Christmas gifts, thou 1 peace i| dren of six montha! . mind. one, two and = four! "7 Th y theori I 1 Hottentat ma plion | | AN i forge Mee meer woe Child's Dress Pattern No. 7,014, t fa sno 1 a bachelor m treatise on wediock, wet hor a e ¢ ANG om . ye, Ae vmtil they Bowe TRIBO |" rt Tew) ca we te HALAING WOLD MAY MANTON PABHION TL. bast BRSOT AUG: AASAD MN MR: MANNS wel te: SBURKAU, Lexington avenue and Twen! ird treet, or send by theme MAN {s rich when he has everything {mail to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO,, 132 HB. Twenty-third street, Worilii Samii da taurien on maieimiena da nab aapiniin an auiormantt that he can afford. Ovtete jN, ¥, Send ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered” “Do you think that any of these sana eer , Saal _ 1 | IMPORTANT—Write your dress ir 4 |upon upholstered cushions, over fed road, but a coast down hill, tn a Th ¥ plainly and alwa ‘No seat, no farce’ laws will stand? ’ R sip ls Meh de : JANIS, who succumbed ¢ ve OLDIE MH be the ony akiects (art without springa, over many thank-younaems! And no man can tert\C “If not, the: fon the subway that don’t have to,” when the JOLT are coming! BSeclah/ to understwnd than husbands, | easier +L This was true enough. The taxicab| as though debating | "8" Dive eatin and, raising her skirt] companion of something of the #o or taxicad chauffeur, had no whether the stross|{2 Show that although the skirt wasn't] thought Mrs. Jarr do’ . of course, of social engage. | ie the petticoat of soft sille in king's] “But at lent Mrs. pay the man, my dear," eatd ue had cost more than Mrs. Jarr| Bassford see me r ver, gushing “It's only $1. muffins and Ver rily, WHO hath found a yeliable RECIPE managing {cab back, Betore 14 be @ tod + woman? Even he, that expecteth naught but the UNEXPECTED! NAD Es naceraragarand lt Wik Gere that playeth all the love-tunes by EAM, and mixcth his ways, as! ¢ alakenine Pra Reighias gery ok mireth her sala bu IN INCT! > made eit r sho. o Even he that hath been born with the KNACK! For in the tove-game *% A “| When the dr th sare cs nought, and braing ave as nothing, Buta iitle PRACTICE Hedgeville pele sly gocth @ long wen. . of the Go to, thou Egotiat! I say unto thee, matrimony is not ALD storms, Editor wes ° Cupid recently, says that men are —s akes peares i ove Stories By Atsert PaysoNIERHUNE. Copyright, 1011, by The Prem Wublishing Co, (The New York World.) No. XXIT.—RICHARD and ANNE, in ‘‘King Richard 111’’ OR years Dngland had been rent by civil war. ® Wenry VI, a weak, thick headed old monarch, had ruled the kingdom. The Duke of Yor) bad rebelled against him, had been killed in battle, and the rebellion had gone on to success under York's eidest aon, Edward. Henry VI. was thrown into prison and there was murdered by Edward's humpbacked brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, Henry's only son had also been murdered ‘by Richard, and Edward was King of Dugiand. | Richard, the humpbacked Duke, coveted the crown. | Though his eldest brother, Edward, and the latter's two sons and another elder brother, © , stood | between him and the throne, Richard craftily planned to remove them all from h's path. To cc the beaten adherents of Henry VI, he resolved to marry Lady Anne, the lovely young wid Henry's murdere? ‘ + eon, He knew Anne det eo murderer of her ANN EY father-in-law and as the vont urse of wairiwind courtship he sought to by s barsier ¢ » win Anne's love. It was one of the shortest, etrangest woolngs ¢ bed, the body of Henry VI, was borne through the London streets on the to tts resting place, Anne followed as chief mourners Richard suddenly appeared cession, With drawn sword he ordered the the bier. They dared not disobey before the p bearers to set down him, in apite of Anne's furious protests. Having cast this latest insult at his mumlered victim, Richard turned to Anne, She upbraided him with her husband's death and Henry's, and she called | l@own heaven's curses on hie head. Richard at firet denied hie guilt. The! breaking in upon her torrent of abuse, he asked: “Ig not the causer of these timeless deaths as blameful as the executioner “Thou wert the cause!" she retorted. “Your beauty was the cause,” he gently corrected, “your Deauty that a4 haunt me in my sleep to undertake the death of w!! the worla so I might live cone hour tn thy sweet love. It is a quarrel most unnatural to bo revenged on one that loveth you."” ‘ms “Tt {9 a quarrel Just and natural,” ghe cried, “to be revenged on tim thas, slew my husband.” - “He that bereft thee, Lady, of thy husband,” answered Mtchant, | help thee to a better husband." y sight!" erled Anne, in horror, “(hou dost infect mine eyes.” | *nntne eyes, sweet Lady, have Infected mine.” he replied. “aid tt to Handing her his drawn rapier, he continued “Lo! Here I lend thee thi pointed , which, hide in thia true bosom and let the soul forth that adoreth tnee, I lay it naked, deadly atroke. Nay, do not pause, for I did kil) King Henry, ‘twas * beauty that provoked me. Nay, now patch! “f'was I that stabbed thy f thou please tow ba’ But ‘twas thy heavenly face that me on!" ‘Anne let the sword clatter to the ground. She was falling under the man's | subtle influence and know not how to free herself 7 | “I would I knew thy heart,” she murmured, doubtfully. ’ * said he. she replied. he vowed, Tis figured tn my ton fear me both are false en never man was true,” wear this ring.” Giving her no chance: to refuee, “Was Ever Woman In This Humor Won?” “Vou “1 the circles upon her hand, saying: ‘ he ett “Look how this ring encompasseth thy finger! Even so tny | my poor heart, Wear both of them, for both of them are ‘The young widow, who had so lately hated and called a geance on his head, ended by accepting him as her betrothea nusbal As the departed, Richard broke into a triumphant laugh, expla “Was ever woman in this humor wooed? Was ever woman in this humor, | won? I'll have Ler; but—T will not keep her ions! ? sed hes" | husb: and his father, to take her in her heart's extremest hate, cursaa iE her heart, tears in her eyes, having God and her consclence against me-and I nothing to back my suit at all but the plain devil and dissempling looks—and | yet to win her!” —— - How do you get about! * A Dangerous Risk. and farm, 3 young man," mid the farner to his eity , who Was up early and looking around, haycock crow, 1 suppose.’ p winke! at his hired man, city man smitled. “* gald he suareiy: ne) yan athletic none of that etuff, I guess I'm a cafe risk: “Do you seoreht” What do you meant” your car faster than the apes! The aa “y'se morely been out tying a knot ine cord of | imi sora dudge. L have no om me May Manton Fashions maid two yeal fs 8 yarde 7 specity alze wanted, Add two cents for letter postage if in « hurry. Oren rrr Patterns

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