The evening world. Newspaper, May 4, 1911, Page 18

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eS Putfiuhed Dally Except Sunday by the Rress Hiahing Company, Nos. 68 to 68 rk Row, New ork 8 BHAW B axovs sr Junior, Seo'y. OW. pros. and Ti ULITZR Pros. and Tre JosEPH PULITZR re teeta Cd En dat the $t-OIC@ as Second. M | Ra o eK land and the Cont eg ca eis . $3.50) One ¥ 7 828 Foren 09-85 One Month ETO LTT aR PEVOTUME Siuaviievenivawvivis ye weviiveevnriiNOr 16/los GO RIGHT AHEAD. DON resigning the office of City Chamberlain Mr. liyde said in a statement to the public: “I shall) ve that this indictment is the out- 1 conspiracies in | able to pr me of one of the most wick city. » neglected to “give verisimill- | © this otherwise bald and uninteresting nar-| rative” either by naming the conspirators or by defining the plot. It will be reca Jed that when Robin declared himself the victim of conspiracy he added a few details of names, dates and circumstances. | During the hearing of the case in court the attorney for Mr. | Hyde eaid: “I do not wish to make any extended remarke or I might probably *ny something the District-Attorney would not like to hear.” To which the District-Attorney replied: “Go right ahead.” | But there was no going ahead. The argument shifted to another issus. | Neither Mr. Iyde nor his attorney can talk too plainly nor too promptly conce: the conspiracy they assert existe, Public cu-| riosity is keen to learn all the ramifications and convolutions of | intrigues that wrecked the Carnegie Trust Company. As soon as they are ready with their revelations they will have an attentive hearing and an impartial one. ‘They may go right ahead. eS POR HEALTH AND CHARITY. \REFUL research has shown that upward of | forty thousand children in this city are living th tubercular parents and aro in immediate danger of contracting the disease. That means,| of course, a menace to many thousands of other children with whom these are likely to be brought into association. Fortunately a vigilant organization is watching the danger and doing what it can to prevent it. A recent gift of $50,000 from “a friend” to the Tuberculosis Preventorium for Children has called attention to the worth and the magnitude of the work undertaken by it. But while much has been done, much remains. The associa- tion is now desfrous not only of completing the present buildings but of adding two additional units of 158 beds each to the accommo- dations. ‘There are also needed further contributions in the way of annual support. Hardly any charity makes a more deserving appeal to the hu- manity and generosity of the city than this. It is, moreover, one in which almost all classes can help. Any annual contribution from one dollar to a thousand will count in the work and be appreciated by the workers. ——-+-—___. BRAVE WORDS WELL SPOKEN, PEAKING under his double responsibility as Gov- ernor and as a probable candidate for the Presi- dency, and on the occasion of a party banquet, a tended by professional politicians and their bosses, Gov. Wilson of New Jersey had the candor and the courage to speak of the Democratic machine and the Republican machine as equal iniquities, His exact words are worth noting. He was speaking of reform legislation in New Jersey and he said: “There were two organiza- tions over there that had a strangle hold on tho Legislature. One was called the Democratic organization, the other the Republican or- ganization. We had a preliminary ekirmish and the strangle hold was broken.” “The etranglers!” Who are they? Over in Ohio events now ooourring and secrete now transpiring show that the bribe- were grouped in bipartisan combinations, closures of similar bipartisan politics tlom is euspected at Washington. rivals, of both. And Gov. Wilson, at a table with C os F. rphy, iel 1 Cohalan, Perry Belmont and others, orb age lio Alea room that doesn't know what [ say is true.” o seckers There were recent dis- at Albany. A like condi Tho stranglers evidently are not To break the hold of one it is necessary to break the power Phere isn’t a man in the Letters From the People} toon nnn nnnnnennnnnn OLE | “A For oP ” bs ula in Phyate: CIVIL Service Commissioner at Custom The Rvening World uN New York, ‘The poi the foowing solution to the| be filled for the first tine hey r the time r which were formerly) filled UL army and navy officers. T think archt tects and surveying graduates jiave a ae preferen CAPT, ©. C. ‘The Cirele and Triangte, pu To the ¥ ne World ston, Pa, asks # triangle ribed celera onde). suns} EX-PUPIL \ They Are Poems Tight House Chances, or im 1 4 The F \ AR a » asks what artshin of Miles Standish young © understands eur ‘are two long, blank COMPLETE SET - FIFTY CENTS ~ PAY AS You READ ~ONE CENT AYEAR rucTHRow THat! BOTTLE of INte IN YouR Face > WE BUILD ea a ( we aive THe \ | MONEY Bacte WITH INTEREST AFTER You VE READ THE Me Boots FREE TO PUT THESE BOOKS IN, AND Nou DONT_HAVE. To PaY A CENT TILL DARN IT} ‘You 4 HOME WHO LET Youn? WE GIVE A ‘YACHT FREE OF CHARGE Tp WE BUYERS OF THiyDILAPIDATED, WORM EATEN OLD h cS chin a TIE EELS, OE Tig Book a Thursday, May 4, Can You Beat It? By Maurice Ketten. PAY AS You LIKE - HEN You LIKE = NEVER IF you : DON'T WANT To ! Mrs. Jarr Rejoices to Find England’s Queen Is Punishing One of Harlem’s Social Leaders. By Roy L. McCardell. ere over at Mra, Stryver's vy yourself?" Jarre must be be sien} Spelvin| dwelt on the word | ly that only its | etness, long drawn out, could convey grandeur of those glad Yes, and [think 1» a shame that a fat old thing like Mrs, ver stould have everyth! nice this wo when pec who have fix Mrs, Jarre looked reassurt at own trim form, “should not have a thing but belind-the-styles and made- overs,” “Fut that's what Mra. such a state ab makers and milliners,”* vin, "Didn't you hear her complain that so many of her things, Just bou Were behind tho style “She's crazy about the old tion!” erled Mrs. d of going. America east 7 ans, are a Jot of toad It's der English people of ste ho reapect for the Roth ladies were talkin Jarr's yond 1 “Does that ‘Guide to New York’ 0, can do to get on: On June 7 or y Henry W. Longfellow. thereabouts an examination will be held Hoy Scouts forecandidates for house in-| To a ‘The Exening Words wpectors for eight or ton districta cov-| 1 At of many boys, 1 wish ering U. 8, San Juan, P. Hj Pacific | scm: Who understands the ub. ands (U. 8.) and Manila, Wages | ject would write briefly the alms, duttes, 1,0 to $2.40 yearly, Your education | « »y Boouts of America, and ehewld qualify you. Inquire of U. &. Low to join them YANKEW BOY, ’ tell how the Battery got Its name foIng to the coronation and to get the very tainly has t e money ids." in't y 4 that the h at the aya on wen that of Gould's lady's matds lin the M Copyright, 1911, by By Sophie Irene Loeb. ESTERDAY T was int hrong!” fast tomer “Naw; but | guess it was named for Mathewson an’ Chief Myers.’ to-morrow, Tole te the © cer-|ing in RAL. soctety for Mra, Vanswine that Vivien Gould, who ts Lady Dectes, know, has to simply throw away ost of her beautiful trousseau because en Mary je skirt | the styles were on the narrow models, coronation? |}when, as you see, Queen Mary has| ves a smal! announced that she doesn’t countenance to come | them," Jarr, Mrs. Are American fashions at the dicta- but tt did] tion of English Royalty?” esked Mr. when she|Jarr, Not that he cared, but It wes t authority |a safe topte matd, who] Both lies viewed him with mild Mrs. George | astonishment most ce be- | “Isn't tt coronation year?" they Merry onth of May Pie Prem Publis Ing Co, (The New York World.) new hares, for new resolves, $, rather than at INSPIRATIC n of December. fe man ag, POF nature herself takes the initiative AP nee uh und Just shows you how it !s done. And | he “made at {9 more natural than Nature hei f, t weather, the ha Little woman, did the maid leave Just wre to a cus: | 4% You Were about to clean house, and do you Just dread “breaking {n" a new Or it y 1 have no maid and per- yu do every little thing your- velly Just DO it, get it OVIR and vut Into the May. Forget the sor- and let the ever present sun- reep into every nook and cranny, v1 without sentiment, who only emes td foster and t tt gl in unison. eS a 1911. Nixola Greeley-Smith Holds the Mirror Up to w Women of women's skirts, Of course she can keep the narrow ekirts away from the cor: English Queens never have set fashtons and they never wil! denutiful, daring Empress of the French, put the whole world just Decause she WAS gay, beautiful and daring, and looked well in anything she wore. But fancy an Pngiish Queen who deserved any of theen adsectives! If she aid her stodgy subjects would run her off the throne. There ts one type that can w hens successfully and another that can get fashions. And never, never, this side of Plutonian darkness, will they meet in the same ex rather sorry for the attempt of Queen Mary of [England to fx the width woman, I’ there any woman in New York City who would lke to be Police Commis- ner? he women of Massachusetts have petitioned the Governor of their @tate to name @ woman as the head of the police force of Boston, and !t may be that Mayor Gaynor can be persuaded to take a hint in the same direction the next tima a Police Commisatoner or one of his deputies resigns. The Boston ladies declare that the appointment which they urge will “wupprese wickedness." They ask also for women police inepectors, and suggest to the | Governor that if he fifds it impossible to grant thelr demands he must call ont the militia to reduce Bovton to ekghteousness, Boston, as we have all heard, ts not @ pia Greadful state of mind tt must be at present! Perhaps !t may have caught the contagion of New York's present epidemlo of wickedness, which has given our City Fatters @o much cause for reorknination And perha) woman Poltce Commissioner {s what the city neods. Iam afraid T can't see the pecullar effictency that would attach to a woman dea clos to their ne way, ts not the lace for idess—that it might be interest- For a Police “Captainette?” { Te oat namaaaaaaaaeaaanaaneeaneend Thave known many a woman who could at least look and act the part of the old style police captain, And any husband will admit that women can administer the th degree with a Machiavellian eunning which would revolutionise police methods !f it could be applied them, But these ara the lighter issues of the police game. Seriously considered, @ woman Police Commissioner belongs to comic opera, and @ woman policeman 1d be a Joke to tho most tim!d criminal tn the etty Some time ago one of the advocates of a feminine “An ment upon me, made tne remark “The woman policemen could enter @ saloon whenever she suspected Mquo was being sold to minora, show her badge and enforce the jaw." | But obedience to the law {s not enforced by the mere showing of a badge, it ® behind the badge that cows the criminal, And what woman of normad sympathies would want to use th possible ty her—that of flrearms? A group of small boys sli but a state of mind. And what a we in urging his aneu- “Besides,” said M Jarr, “Queen ) would laugh at the attempts of a woman police oficer to breuc Mary !s a comparatively young woman] gang taugh not only at her, but at every principle of government and has a greater influence on thel teeny endeavor to represent. modes, in consequences; not ony in En land, Dut all over the world. Not only} om ts q mistake for women to smagine that because uave for oer that, but early Victorian styles are com- | tain tasks they also have the heart for them, ing back. Of course you won't see them | I had this brought home to me very forcibly the other day when I wat er in New York till in the fall. New ‘ork 1s alway Parts, away Mehind Lond summer to the coronation, han But, as all the wealthy and fas Jonable people are going abroad t! THEY'LL the bench with one of New York's judges and listened to the wentoncing of twenty tive criminals to long terms of imprisonment Among the persons arraigned for sentence were two boys, each ninet of ape, vted, one of entering and robbing @ store, the other of cessful attempt at the same crime. he is have what Is de rigueur!” va] One of the boys bore all the stigmata of the born criminal, t er had ‘And the ermine, don’t forget that!" | _ weak ut pleasant face, which ested that without said Miss Spelvin, his companion he might have become ratheer a nice bellboy—quite a favorite with "Yes, ermine fur fe the style, or WILL be the style, to trim hats for the su! mer, There again ts the influence,” said Mrs. Jarr, “My word!" gaid Mr. Jarr, as though tremendousiy impressed. "If you could have heard Mrs, Stryver talked of the and the royal family,” sald Mrs. “It was sickening! teh tyranny. the old Continentals, yielding 1 chanted Mr, Jarr. “And now duding up the most gorg glad rags to Ko see George V. ‘And what do you think 3 ve she never ren until now woman, she said and & regre would be a happy she only had a little name George and Mary of to be license that beautiful, of p rambler roses for It not practical. “Not pi blooming bus! the gilt basket around the pot ts 4 what I wanted for a waste basket.’ ———_ AN APTERTHOUGHT. fy Just breathe in a bit of this | Ma e who knows but you may SRE RAT a a| set #LE on that deal? apa iee | a have you had a grievance that It ‘Is May again, |seemed like @ mountain? Has some aM eS phere seems |%OUNS man's fancy Uhtly turned to- io hie periientod the It-is-good-toe | Ward you, and just as Mghtly turned i ; All are EQUAL part. |ewar? 2 t possible that you have fea in a hn. ‘There ts no pre-| ad a DISTORTED vision of it all t ie 1 the weather. Any|And have MAGNIFIRD tt, ao that tt wa eal trutt, and you and |assumed ALARMING proportions and 1 may enjoy the DIVI- | xo d-not seo that sure enough silver lining back of tt all? the hesgar man, the} Well, Just look at {t through the Mi silce, and he who runs | gladness. Let Old @ol do the mag- hhanaak ae (6 ailnce £. Te 13 so strong, He ts strong moment? Has. tite | exo to make EVERYTHING grow ° m? Have} and YOU too, He can draw up all the your echemes?| pretty atoms that would keep you from vida of December con. | growing. \ SHADOW evert unti! | And, boy, you who have lost that job, just know this: the world 1s PULL of \ hat they can't res] Jobs and the fellow that ts on the Job Now per {# many] AIAVAYS has one, ‘There ts ever the montlis away fresh START looming up in the mtddle May ts and you @lso know | distance, If you don’t belleve it Just that Ma December never could by | look at the grass and see the growing Mte par Yhey are too far apart. |:hings that find places for ¢hemselves OF course one Way need the other; bur | to shoot up and grow, even though enjoy tha goods that the gods pro- | ‘here seams tp de but LITTLE space. vide"-now! Verily {t fe at the BEGINNING of ‘Tis Spring, With these May days| things, Truly may we ask, “Live pes this tri 6 DREAMS of| there man (or woman, ton, bless you!) tay are the ROATIZATION of} with soul ao dead that never to himaelt to-day, and the COMMONPLACES of or herself hath said”; “new year UT i MAY Bhe vsed to be a pensive maid, But now, upon my life, Since wi ied, I'm afraid She's an ex-pensive wife, coronat! the way You'd never think 0 ho » fuss: tth La Dlg Vea ARR eed “T find you were convicted only of an attem forefathers casting off the yoke of Brit. | 82 T reduce your sentence to not leea than five and not moro i * In State's Priso: ‘In thetr ragged regimentals stood ia?" asked Mrs, Jarr Mr. Jarr could only shake his hi from alde to eide, if to rept: never could guess in vhe world, but t after the dear “Why, children are not thought enough ink Pretty gift, repeated Qfre. Jarr. “Why, the pink alli ribbons made two sashes for our Uttle Emma, and mushy old ladies in hotet. Not less than ten years and not more than twenty y m- on ars in State's Prison," said the Jtidge in doth cases. The was led stolidly out. The second broke Into sobs, As he wns led out the of the court leaned over and spoke to the Judge “Come back here! Bring that boy back!” called the Judge. { One Man's Idea of “Mercy,” i JO eo Ne | And when the prisoner was again standing bef. hat udge !s a good man. Th ‘@ men would not k in Open court to reduce a sentence imposed throu who Ms Bot think of growing so callous to human life as to be able to make meh a mista rae All judges must get #0, I suppose, dealing as they do with Ife and death Bot at that moment 1 registered a vow y tae Votes of my fellow suffragists never make me a Judge!’ 1}, speaking of votes for women, Gov. Hardy of Idaho undertook the rather unnece: task of convincing an audience at ¢ r Union thts week that wives will not vote as their husbands io. I wonder what sort i¢ | Successful autocrat in to | house shall be painted always win her point in th and staying power an optimist {t t# that v ers of politics than he eves man would be a mere n decidin vat color the shall be, VW weal a9 greater enduranee in he King and Queen, Sho sald it seemed so touching and loyal. She said she meant » the language of the ringside, marriage ts an unlimited “go,” and a man it, too, And children are so much more| can't get the de n except through a foul or @ lucky pun trouble than Pomeranians and never But women fn the matter of votes or anything else will always do as their attract nearly as much attention,” husbands tel! them—if their husbands teil them what they want to hear, 1 should say not!” said Mr. Jarr, — Fashion Notes From Paris “At the same time ‘George’ end ‘Mai are sweetly old-fashioned names,” sald Miss Spelvin. "You know, ASHIONS as seen on the Riviera| Valenciennes and a narrow border ima really, our family Is English, and we've F still maintain the keynote of #im-| finely embroidered de or simply the always had a Mary and George Spelvin plicity. In the enorning the French | corners ‘dered tn the popular Sut- tn some branch of it, T o Spel-|'woman of fashion wil! be seen in a|terfiles, dragon fies or floral pattern ving are generally actors. I don’t know| taflored sult of serge, cloth or thin ve! The coming coronation 1s bringipe why." vet mace with the plain, narrow ghort | forth brillian: color effects, and many Mr, Jarr didn't know why, either. skirt and short, tight fitting Jacket.| of the old vivid shades of years gone by “Well,” he said, “old Mra. Stryver| For the afternoon promenade she ap-|are being revived. Among these te ¢he fen't so very dad Sie did send you! pears in a stylish costume of white| old gold that some serge or cloth made up in the eame| admired in the fin simple lines, the collar and cuffs betng| chest 4) in the dg that contains relics of mother’s of vlack, When driving she wears with | girlhood days. this sult @ long white coat made up in| At @ recent Riviera nace meet it wee loone effect with a hood, quite evident that th new extremely high-crowned helmet shapes are much in adout her dress, accessories and she is| Vogue. A favorite trimming ts @ pte very precise about handkerchtets, In| fusion of plumes to fall over the crows, | the morning with her tallored gown ehe| Huge ribbon bows were also in emt. uses the smati white batt dence on hats, and those of whtte wnout embroidered in blue, #ray. | velvet were especially popular, ‘They! with a tiny monogram to match, For|were either piaced at the back ef @hi @fternoon use she has sheer handker-|het or directly across the top ef chiefa edged with very pasrtaw veel qrowm t | The French woman !s very festidioun ory Us have often | " |

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