The evening world. Newspaper, May 26, 1911, Page 22

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TPR tte ee pnt ~ . — - The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, May 26, 19113. Cre AES saorio Mr. and Mrs. John. GREAT act | + eile ncaa te. MR amoUN AAT pre fee: INGEN Per Tae en or f By Maurice Ketten. NSPI HISTOR * Now, York cy Lact be pt ae an ane Pot Counties in the Interpetionsl Postel Unton, Entered at the Post-Ofice to The EF Untted States ory GET A SHAVE ANO HAIR CUT SHAVE ANO ' . 88.80) One Yoar ios + 80. JOouN AND DON'T Miss : ; O81 Be Hsia: . THAT TRAIN «I'LL BE tal Yes, No. 6—Jack Cade's Plot to Seize a Kingdom. eevee NO. 18,175, a) (Must Get That i oe SIR ACK CADE, a loud-mouthed, violent demagogue, was for three wild a —- - 3 ‘Six FIRTY-FWVE Wy ex) | daye the actual ruler of England. His conspiracy might, per ‘ ix TRAIN ny ae | haps, have carried him te the very throne itself had he not | “1 : a | played the fool UT of Albany comes a resolution calling for the | appointment of a Legislative Committee to inves- tigate the subway problem in this city and appro- priating $50,000 to defray the cost. It might have been expected. The Public Ser- | vice Commission is estimated to have expended already mare than a million of dollars in. preparing plans, and there is no estimating how much other money has been | expended in discussing plans and otherwise wasting time. Therefore | it ie not strange that the statesmen at the capitel should become! possessed of a desire to join in the discussion and share in the ex- penditure. A solution of the subway problem would be cheap at $50,000. Cade was a doctor and had a smattering of political knowledge. He had been forced to flee to France te escape the gallows for murdering @ { woman, Later he had ventured back to England and had settled down im | Kent, where he practised medicine and married a rich farmer's daughter. | But he was not content to have dodged the hangman. He looked about for fresh trouble and he found It. England at that time was in the grip of the King and the nobles. The | common people's rights had been turned into a mockery, The poor were | prowbeaten, overtaxed and at the mercy of the great. The electing of Par | Mament members to represent the poople had become a farce. The House ot | | ‘Commons did pretty much what the House of Lords told it to. This was (| 1} yi hw fi | | | | | | | arranged by filling Parliament with mer who were siavishly obedient to the | Lords. ‘At parliamentary elections the nobles would send their servants and gangs \ of “strong-arm men” to the polls to beat or scare away all voters who would not cast a ballot for the candidates chosen by the Lords. ‘Thus the voice of the COMMUTING Th | people was stified and ala ae Hd wailltun wae fal hs MBs of of the nobility. ‘The King, the court, the aristoc No one in the city would grudge the money and very few up-State SiR CAN You A Me ¢ could rule or misrule, as they chose. Corruption, tavor= | || would deem it worth while to complain. But what would an investi- “ Yes TELL ME THE pre tor {tism, all forms of graft and of brutality went tne gation be ° IT'S Correct Tine 7 Liberty. checked. The King (Henry VI.) was a semt-imbectle Steck DELIGHTFUL and was helpless in the hands of hie univst ministers. siting | Altogether the condition of the country Invited rebellion. | Gade formed @ conspiracy against the throne. Hoe stirred up the men of ] | Kent by flery speeches, procured money and weapons, and in June, 1460, marched | | on London at the head of nearly 20,000 armed peasants and farmers, He changed | |/ | his name to Mortimer and claimed to have royal blood s veins, ‘This ia | | | thought to have been done with the possibie idea of selzing the crown for him- | self, But his outward purpose was to avenge the people's ill-treatment. | Cade and his men camped in the suburbs of London. The King sent out to ask the meaning of the uprising. Cade replied with @ proclamation, in which he aet forth the wrongs of the people and the corruption of the court, and de- manded not only new and better laws, but the execution of the grafting of COMPLAINTS OF MEN. HILE women are manifesting their discontent | with life and love by suffragette parades and | proud palavers, let it not be supposed that men | so meek and mild are wholly content with things as they are. From their silent, unmarching ranks | . | | holders. ‘These demands awoke the citizens of London to sympathy with the | | 4 come letters of complaint of many sorrows and eug- | rebellion. It even affected the royal army. The King sent forth troops to dis- 4 | “| battle at Seve s routed them, The 4 gestions of hoped for reforms. | perse the rebels. Cade met them in battle a even Oaks and routed them ‘nh’ 7} One writes to ask why men may not sit in their shirtsleeves ii in the reading room of the public library during the heat of summer. | Another wishes to know why clerks may not have elhow sleeves to their shirts while at work in sweltering offices. The ease and comfort of shirtwaists and of elbow sleeves are freely and fully conceded to women—why not to men? But the hidden force that holds woman back from the harem King’s troops had fought half-heartedly and many of them refused to take up arms a second time against the rebels, So Cade had the citizens and the troops alike with him, He had everything | in his favor, Into London he marched his peasant army on July 2 and took | ‘possession of the city, He forced the Mayor and the Judges to try and con- demn to death Lord Say, the Royal Treasurer, and Cromer, the High Sheriff of om 's who had been foremost in the people's injuries. And his own 8 cut off the condemned men's heads. Thus far everything went well. Cade was keeping his promises, He was pun- lishing grafters and was enforcing the rights of the poor. For two days he kept his army in atrict order. The Londoners were inclined to look upon him as a oh: the strest, wiille permitts stk i (——@$g7Tg _r, Mtilverer. There might have been no limits to his aue- ' ekirt n hile permitting the indulgence of something A BSR Gad Wad. 0 NADY Wd ae But he had Hot tis power { like knickerbockers on the beach, withholds fram man in town the im King” to do this. 4 neg}igee of the camp. Suffragettes will win and women will vote | be pala Peiiruinercee mens Ane mea. Wat Mims eererpeeny { ; . All about them were houses full of valuables, The and run for office before man will be emancipated from the clothing | temptation was too strohg for Cade and his followers, On the third day of their stay in London they began plundering and robbing, breaking into houses and } . : 7 « * } i of conventionality. Every summer brings complaints, but none ever Stealing everything in sight. ‘This crazy behavior, of course, set the citizens 4 \ } brings relief. It is the law of the jungle. a i A BOOST FOR THE PARCELS POST. against them. No Londoner felt that his own home was safe from the robbers. So the townsfolk rose against Cade. At the same time the court promised frea | pardon to all the rebels who would return quietly to their homes, and promised | also to redress their wrongs, Cade's army under these influences melted away ke snow hot weathe*, , ihe a : The demagogue who had held London in the hollow of his hand now found him- i REPRESENTAT IV E body of business men met i} self a fugitive with a price on his head. He tried to escape to France, but w ‘ . : | overtaken by an esquire of Kent, Alexander Iden by name. Iden is sald to h i 4 at the Waldorf to help the Postal Progress | had a grudge against Cade, and he followed the flying demagogue remorselessly. | } League to make progress, and incidentally to help | Iden caught up with Cade in a garden near the Sussex coast, where the fugitive | } kg : P| was hiding. After a desperate hand-to-hand fight Cad killed. 4 i y N y , : ding. -to- nade was kille ew York and the rest of the country get from | His head was stuck on a pole on London Bridge as a wavning to traitors. ] the postal authorities a parcels post service long nn waited for and much needed. | Mrs. Jarr Weeps, but She Isn’t Unhappy. The conference developed many points of inter- | est. One speaker predicted that a time will come when mail matter | Mr. Jarr Is Unhappy, but He Doesn't Weep will not be divided into classes and subjected to different rates of 4 Rich Man Spoxe to Him. |x ot ety a postage i p carrie ingle » y NE of equuuntanees fe much inter |" ante hagpesalt wall be careled ata alngle rato nf one cent for any| yL. McCardell. © |. Att !ast inquiry Master Jarr emitted) “Way don’t you send the children jrunning domestics, such as Gertrude, “O ested inthe ciaarin Falls Hunt ind, ‘ weight up to a pound. Another aathority stated that the adoption By Roy L. McCardell. & loud, prolonged wall and itttle Miss|out?" asked Mr, Jarr. are free and independent. They can fa Pgs ha atad pera RT BE oo | ey the ps Smarovall teane, Gea HEN Mr, Jarr came home the|Jarr joined it with her woes articulate! “I was going to say the children en-|quit and leave—and they do, if preseed to me, with some show | one dream of my if command a Britian i y th department of improved twentieth century methods for han-| other evening Master Jarr was) in childish tre} \soyed that, and they laughed @t me for| too far, But all nearer and dearer ones | that gredually he wes getting eo-| Dreadnought and to lay her alongyide of an | | Joy . y American Dreadnovght of th f dling parcels would cut the cost from the present figure of eeventy-| sitting in one corner of the! “Now, pleef don’ glo interfleering wit| sneezing. Futhermore, if I've got to|must suffer and endu: agree ican Dreadnought of the same strength for n common. Quainted with the twenty minutes,” huh childun," repited Mrs, Jagr. | stand the discomfort of it they can too!” | "I don’t see why the children are ory- |," Why. .Das, Hance come right up end @roke | Pip ce eotaneoaic ae tear-stained fac hingis iff upsplep unuff ath tith.” | “Well, excuse ME!" said Mr, Jarr jing, then, f they enjoy the snuff and °-"1y that sot’ 1 repiied, ‘What did be say to Minneanolis Journal, while the litte) Mr. Jarr.understood every word whe|making a flank movement for the door. | pepper," said Mr. Jarr. “It reminds me | yout’ Jarr girl was in/ said, He had heard her talk with pins) “And you can stay, too,” said Mre,|of ‘Alice In Wonderland,’ and Mr. ||) ’He sid. pont get too near thes front room with five cents a ton to ninoteen cents. A third speaker told of the use of | aeroplanes for carrying mail in India and in Algiers and foretold the nge of a similar means here in the near future. More 1 Theorizing. kick your darned heed ctf” T the other corner in her mouth many a time and oft. | Jarr, decisively, ‘How like @ man to|Jarr chanted. | Seeresass “Eivaens 2 is 6620 yon think Mars mu i hen the conference got down to business and passed a resolu- | making short! However, thay discommoded her flow| permit his wife to suffer while he runs| ‘Speak roughly to your little boy | Se | S enh Seplled, Uncle: Rasberry, “Eahe 4 tion urging the enactment by Congress at this session of the Sulzer. catches at her of diction and she took them out. “I’m| away!" And beat vim when he sneeses; =| Enough to Sink Him. dems ‘habitants ta culled folhs 1 t bill . _ ' i breath that also! trying to wrap up and put away the| “But what good am IT’ esked the be-| He only doen it to annoy, OL, OBAUNOEY DEWEY, Inepector-Gen-| wouldn't be no good wifout canal boate an’ canal i parcels, post bill, “or some more simple and progressive measure.” | stgnified recently| heavy winter clothes, and those ahil-|wildered man. “I can't pack up clothes Because he knows it teases!" Cc or Gite, Gnas etiones Gaerd, fold | boats woulda’ » good witout mules, An’ dar Tt was the right thing to do, Prophecies of the future are. inter-| pearvense emotion. dren haven't done & thing but worry| with moth preventives.” “That's right!" oried Mre, Jarr, “En- go, inte witout de hetp ot euilud tolka,”"o-Weate Mrs. Jarr was sit-| the life out of me esting, but what New York expects of her business men is always al movement for immediate enterprise. “No, you can't do ft, Gertrude can't |courage the chtldren by mocking me! ting in the middle) Here Mra. Jarr threw back her head) do it, the children cam't do {t, #o I have | Willie isn't orying about the sneeses. of the room sur-|and sneezed, and Mr. Jarr eneezed and! to do 4!" sald Mrs. Jarr eneezivg again. | He wants moth dalle, and little Emme rounded by an in-|the ohtidren sneesed, | "well, you oan all stay and endure|thas been crying for them, too!" “That's pepper, 'm putting some of what I have to endure!” And, tf the| “Moth dalle?" repeated Mr. Jerr. A ito y wea i the things away tr jer. Mrs. Rangle casual observer will notice, it a a per-| ‘Why, they're not ft to eat! They're SAILORS’ STRIKES AND RIGHTS. | vr tees arson Zina'aa us| ua" "P70 ee, ane sue | rave faltn ot women 1 mate erry Peieoas HOULD the long talked. of international strike 4 Glen wnat s Sie Better oe shar viltebaly we oe of sailors take place on Saturday, as is now Were red und ter nowe Unowee threatened, there is going to be put up to the consideration of landsmen one of the most per- plexing of industrial problems—that of determin- | ing how far the seafaring workman is en- : titled to rights freely accorded to the workers tn any line of industry on land i. The difference in the standing of the two classes of workers is shown in a statement recently made from the British consulate that any sailor that quits a British ship in this port is liable to arrest, de- portation to Great Britain and imprisonment there. No workman on land is liable to criminal arrest and imprisonment for quitting a job, much jess to deportation across the sea. Dual ‘One of our admirals," he sald, “showed the ington Star. i a Here body share everything of this sort and| “Oh, they don't want to eat them," | woe and grief with her. sold Mra, Jarr, aneesing and continuing | “Well, call \in Gertrude, then! No|to make flat packages of heavy cloth- | favoritism!” said Mr. Jerr, grimly, as|ing end pinning them in sheets and | |he sat down on the sofa. cloths, with liberal layers of pepper he asked. “I haven't been crying, “Oh, Gertrude is busy getting the din- | and snuff, | piled Mr. Jerr, * replied Mra. Jarr. But she knew watled snuff has driven me crazy, and the | and Mr. Jarr knew that whtle children chtldren— and husbands may be chattels, light johnny Rangie’s mamma lets him - play marbles with the moth baila!” “And I am not using moth balls this year,” sald Mra, Jarr, "I don't think Can YOU Answer These Questions? — | |shstun'tnd soms mtn tune, ‘There Are You a New Yorker? Then What} | thom cnuaren have me ve worsted and those children have me so worried and Do You Know About Your Own City? fretted that I do believe I swallowed a k UCH a pretty uttio blouse as this is sure to meet with & welcome from every girl, In the tlustration {t 1s made from bor dered m rial and it ie especially well adapted to such use; but it can be made available for any seasonable fabric, for the straight edges can be trimmed with banding or with eme broldery, ‘The neck ts cut out to form a small 4 64 couple of ping while sneezing!” Here Mre, Jarr scattered some more tions about New York. of the irritant powders and all present | @) ERE are five more qui e. You live in New York. When you go out of town you area ittie| sneered until the tears rolled down | ‘The blouse is made in» (J + proud of being refer N n i ee eg ve The argument that the law of the land cannot apply to the s Te cow ea peda pal eee city of yours? “We'll finish after supper,” sald Mrs. t pleces that ese \ { f 4s old and venerable. Men have grown up to look upon it as un- anne How many of these questiona can you answer? ee SOE ER MN Eats nag paris Mee be } Try. Then put the questic ‘a the trimming conceals . : answerable. Once upon a time, and that not very distant, it was sup- He TONE Ra He GNOAELANS 10 Some OF FOUF Sine “Oh, by the way, get out my dreas the seam. There are i posed to justify the flogging of sailors. It is an argument that the 106, Where was New York's frat public Wdrary and wien waa st] Sub" sald Me dare. “There's a trade | tucks at the centrefront { ) 4 strike will bring under review, and it may be it will have to be re- founded? Mee aateeatt guid Mie ioe tous | SWS AMOS 18 oR) { wieed. Alipgether the issue threatens to be troublesome. Tt seems 107. Under what circumstances was Trinity Church invaded in time of|dress mutt ts Deches 3 and put aw that extend for full y pate bi ashans , ot have your t ner with eng 0 cl to. be 4 case where expert arbitration is necessary to the achievement peace by a band of armed men? ae ere eur Ales Coat: length fe olaning 8 of sustice 108. Where waa the famous tract of land known as “John Robinson's! ign” ented se tr. a ‘nvisibly @t the cash ol nee orchard"? . hope you have a dinner not to be! Por hades veae aca a ome 109, When was New York's (vst city directory printed sneezed ' ue will require & ' SENATOR SEEDS SAYS: - 110, Who was Manhattan Isiand’s first political “reformer”? nein OD yards of bordered mates Letters From the Peop] IF LOTS OF RICH FELLERS To Cure Hiccoughs, | Leatan estat ite eae ple The foregoing queries wil! be answered in Monday's Evening World. CLIRGYMAN was smoking a cigar | Ue yards of banding an i HAD DETECTIVES WATCH Wolspiae ata tus tenis to wat wveseadayls Gusaitan A mader an oat | 14 yants of rufting A i lll agen se das to the Grand can {{IN’ EM. WHEN THEY WUZ |]. tt 2tictiof Barad street "made ground, where formerly there was an in- “My congregation coughed this | abble Pe oattiel oli } Te the Bdltor of The Evening World and f 4 at of the gee. morning,” he eaid. "I could hanily va 1 yard % or @ | { aa aiceiesa and would dike 14 ial: or to own district above MAKIN THER’ MONEY 102, The English took New York from the Dutch in 164, In 1673 @ Dutoh force| make myself heard. It was most annoy- ina ae 4 ? it is arty on ust leave the tun= 60) strong, under Capt, Anthony Colve, seized Manhattan from the English and| ing | iio btiheag | come # surveyor if it Is a good « ee : Fe rat No. 70% i 1 om tall, strong avd healthy. win [Dard ton or John |{| THEY WOULDN'T NEED SO ||! nei tt under Dutch rule for neerty.@ veer, until e treety between Holland and Weg, auld & pvetoian, “the next | : Pattern Nov 700 t0) fy \ etreet # h 7 he la im y © bs, aed ¢ pumereniad, reesere sive advices on jr.” 2, nme’ 11 DURN MANY DETECTIVES Te PTE oreo A wieal cirpata hem to press tne upper lip Just beneath | Tucked Blouse for Misses and Small Women—or 14, 1) ond 18 youre \t pak aban ital: ona. ie line of unde: } ¢ otto 3 ose, Presaiug the nerves in that of 4 there 18 4 wood future in this business, [SPURT « have a blo PROTECTIN’ —M AFTER 104. The Colonial Governor, Dongan, condemned a atrip of land along the north be eet annt thet weet ouaeaea | Ratiarn NOs 20G e ; Others may be interested in reading OM ‘9 the termi side of Wall street, forty feet wide, sold it and, {t 18 said, pocketed the cash, The} cough, ang. >y the same token, tt wil Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION? the answers, TB, |tunne the subway? And tet every |1] THEY GOT 1T. avisonoon ||| forty foot strip encroached on the highway itself, and when nouses were built stop @ aneexe, 100. BURWAU, Lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, or send by lendaie, 1.’ 1, [other train or every third train trom ||] coo. op A thereon the street become uncomfortably narrow, as it remains to this day, MEA! oll you how to stop the hlosough, te ee te MAY MANTON PATTERN CO. 183 B. Twenty-third atrece, t ate chiaekc Tannel, |Jereey City cut in on the subway line a 106, he “New City Hall” was butlt Mm 169 on Wail street, at the head of| You ress Gers oF nese nerves there |} Obt@tm IN, ¥, Send ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered, { / i ay Adige nd run uptown as far ae Fourteenth By Hrond, at a com of $20,000, The rear part of the bullding was used as a Jail and| font of, the, oar, hese pecves Knee | IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always he Modeon tance! 1ands is downtown \or Forty-second etreet? What do read: sito the garret as @ debtors’ prison, Courtroom and the Council Chamber oocupted the | °c, "* You need only lepecity size wanted, Add two cents for letter postage if tn a ' Paasengers just one block from the mub-|ers Say to thie suggestion? | Se | wecond floor, and religious services were held there on @undays, Just across the| Derves will do the rest.” eapolts |} Patterns trues, wag. Peesengers travelling from poinw COMMUTER. | street were the stocks, the pillory and the whipping post. ; A on ™ + ¢ ¢ | 4 a wa a 9 wy ez ranma eee = " re 23, - See “ea - /

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