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ee _Suppressed and severely punished. The ean Pabitshed Dally neg Sunds by, the row Rudlishing Company: Nos, 68 60 63 H Rom. Now, batty 8 PULITZER Junior, See'y, 8 anowe sas fre Toei¥h Pup peaey pgm Ore t the Post-Office at New York ns Second-Clane Matter yeaing | For England and the Continent All les in the Internation al Union, é soz 50! One Yoar 1.d0| One Month... ‘ WOUUME BLisiisesssss sevesrevcees NO. 18,179. | OUR REANIMATED POLICE. VTER a winter of so-called ‘demoralization,” with much criticism and confusion, and no little swearing, it must be a joyful change to the police to enter upon the bright new summertime with twelve new captains, Jorty-four promotions to lieutenant, seventy-one advancements to the | rank of sergeant, five new general inspectors and one hundred and sixty men added to the ranks. Happy is the fortune of Commissioner Walilo to begin his term | of office with this advance all along the line, this distribution of honors and of augmented salaries. After the black clouds comes the bright rainbow. After Oropsey comes all this. With the new command, the new promotions and the new re- | sponsibilities for so many officers, there may reasonably be expected a new fervor and a new zeal on the part of the force generally. What wae demoralized has been reanimated. It is to be hoped the increased efficiency will equal expectation. ee ee | STREET CAR ROWDIES. EVERAL rowdies convicted the Men's Night | Court of disorderly conduct in «a car on West- chester avenue were fined $10 cach. Magistrate | Krotel, in imposing the fines, stated that he would have subjected the offenders to imprison- ment if the complaint and testimony of the in-| spector had been corroborated by the conductor | of the car. But it appears the conductor was not i» court. Why was he not there? | It is to the interest of the railway companies, as well as to that of the public, that disorderly conduct on cars should be summarily | Rowdyiem by half-drunken hood- lums on street care, even when it does not go to the extent of vio- lence or assault upon peaceable passengers, nevertheless tends to disturb the peace of the community much more than an ordinary street row. And, moreover, in the suburban travel of the summer nights there are always women and girls to be frivhioned and in- sulted if not actually endangered by the gange. | Such being the case, since the courte desire ile testimony of | conductors as well as of inspectors, the companies should see to it ahat the conductors go to court. If they are needed they ‘should be there. in eS there, PLAYS AND PLAYWRITERS. AUGUSTUS THOMAS, just returned from aj | three-weeks’ study of things theatrical in Europe, | ‘ says: “Our plays are better and our writers are more vigorous than those on the other side.” This statement comes appropriate to the ap-! proach of the season when cherries will be ripe. | 3 It is only a little while ago that Mr. Frohman complained to the conference of American publishers that the stage in this country needs new writers with new ideas and needs them badly. In fact, Mr. Frohman urged the publishers to set some of our novelists to work on literary plays for the relief of managers and playgoers. The contrariety of these views is doubtless professional rather than personal, for, as Mr. Thomas is an American playwright and Mr. Frohman is a seeker after novelties, the point of view ia not the same. The impartial critic will not be disturbed by this divergence of authorities, He may courteously admit to Mr. Thomas that Ameri- can playwrights are better than those of Europe, while at the same | time agreeing with Mr. Frohman that a further betterment is de- | 667 ME PARK HORSE THAT 18 sirable, heard confusion of | aye SURE ‘TO WIN 18 CALLBL crowd and noise. | ates 2. come Mis eyes and his attention were ally Fletcher, upon the bright green ball fleld. | Who has not fel! VOICES OF THE WAITERS. For here even the diamond was lawn- the thrill of an un- | like, And yet it was not on the ball expected letter or a oof o« rai » increasing de fleld of {tself, but on the alert and active surprising call over | or ULAR protests against the increasing demand Mannelisind Autres ‘ugen itctta: Gleata rae tslanighe for tips in cafes and hotels has had the effect of | and the visiting Philadelphians at prac- rousing waiters themselves to a discussion of the| tee before the that the boy's 1” Kaze was concentrated from an employer issue, The frequency with which they write on the | “tte was too Interested, too excited, to or a word of praise rubject to either the Evening or the Morning | eat: for when his father asked him tf \ World in : Aas | he wantod peanuts he only replied by despondency? orld is quite a notable feature of the current ldnquiring witch was Mathewson and The agitation which was "Bly Chief Meyers. ee thought that r i va vinted e great balgoenie ene Loeb ha) of them writing a few days ago stated that his salary as aot ce ee Shears he Ve roe unto NO OTHER, & waiter is but #20 2 month. Out of this sum he has “to stake the | that the “Big Chet’ was not in war |for, times without number, Las TL head waiter” among “two captains and two omnibuses,” ‘This intimates the prac-| behind them who knew the ( (epee a gps : , A ‘ 4 py she appy tho nw tise of certain phases of graft not generally known to | “Lives of the Giants" by Bhe's | * N E y known to exist, Tt the mother of one of those kids that| A Wise old man once sata: shows that « present conducted the trade of a waiter is abso- [tends to the bats, the little mascot over a em i a x have monn many trou- lutely dependent upon the continuity of the tipping system and thi | Satan ee bites bur most o' em never hap the much-abused he} | | | waiter is preyed upon quite as ferociously as preys upon others The interest shown hy waiters in the subject is the more im> portant because the solution of the evil lies with them. Hotel and | cafe owners will never pay their help so long as they can shift it upon their patron And so long as waiters tips, head waiters and captains will demand a share. When the waiters’ union refuses to work without wages, or to submit to extortions by head waiters, the problem will be near a satisfactory solution + A Time Table Grievance ne, But isn't it to a ratiroad’s interests, Yo the HAitor of The Bening World readers, to give good summer service, | I travel on the rie—(don't laugh, any] so as to lure visitors back to the soll? | one; it isn't a joke, f #0, {t's on VICTIM. me)—on the Susquehanna branch, The eto 6 Cuba, summer time table in the main seems to} Ty rhe Paitor of The Hvenlue World Me to be a little lees satisfactory than) Could any experienced reader give fast summer's, and last mers was ‘T WAS a beautiful day and the crowds to $10 a month and has to distribute $10 a month more, °°” The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday. May 30. WHEN WAS WITH GRANT IN THE WILDERNESS — | WHEN JEB STUART The Veteran. By Maurice Ketten. THE WAY WE ) BEAT LEE Lk GETS BUR ) IQHTIN T ANTE TAm The Two Jarrs, Father and Son, See Fair Play Between the Giants and the Dreaded Foe there, And she never misses a game: The eye of Master Jarr sought thi By Roy L. McCardell. sifted down through the grand} 0007 most appreciative of mothers, and he! wondered why his own mother could have been so lost to the Joys of living # to prefer going shopping to neve stand seats In seemingly endless trickles of human- fty To Mr. Jarr the | ight was remints cent of a swarm of ants down a shelving sand) bank, atl ‘To Master Jarr, | who held a close, ecstatle grip upon the parental hand, it was a scarcely By Sophie Irene Loeb. troubles as well as BIG one- are wave: aside in and buckskin he did not show it that big woman tn pink?” said A Double Guarantee. ble-the kind } you haven't. you have and the kine end. ‘The | that tt Is @ lot of trouble to have tt. at's Just tt ourselves the advance agents of destiny land it 1s Just as easy |runner of the PLE mind « Jan "who but reagon tt leans the windows and ry the big front door” wit tm expressive of the IN) RICH indeed, MORROW SOMETHING will come vor? | The ilttle mole hills that might jcome veritable mountaing are summed |up in the elogan of the day, “Oh, well, | something will turn up.” And it usually does. ‘The happy thought 1s an ease! If possersed, it makes you and me and jall of us the possessora of the key, to] tf, “If 1 should consent to your marry-|almos! every situation, While this old The fe Day “Happy Thought” | Covrmabt, 1011, by The Pree Publishing Oo, (The New York World), at the moment of | Pens to him who alts quietly springs up is like ed woodplle, the thought that some gvod | thing WOULD happen. No one oan take | In fact it ts lke no other. So that there are two kinds of trou- ‘There are but few of the first sort, but of the second there 1s no ny thing about trouble te We are given to make to be the fore- | about SANT thing—If the "The ttle wom- | way and the scales will tip in her fa- day everything goes DEAD WRONG and a what's-the-use feeling comes stealing into the thoughts, there Is the yl everlasting sure and REASONABLE UNEXPRCTED," gaya Horace | 0P® that something WILL happen, Isn't 1t a fact that yesterday things seemed aa if one good “turn-down" de- .| Served another, and the thing looked forward to DIDN'T materialize when ‘ou were down in the dumps for fair? or | Well, this morning the deal DID go looked #0 IMPOSSIBLE yesterday. Certainly the unexpected ne ing—for {t 1s NOT unexpected. But he happy | Whe says nothing and saws wood wakes| up @ome morning to find an unexpect- ‘The Joy ts in the thought of the every day, Everything comes to him who watts—provided he WORKS 1) while he waits, And, contrary to the hardened cynte, there 18 Joy in work, | When the weekly pay envelope ts in | the hand and one realizes his responst- bility for its BEING there—this ts the eward that truly gladdens. So that to | think the happy thought, in the process of DOING, 1s the great wisdom of the 1) wise, And eventually every one gete wise to that. In other words, it ts the how to Hye with the LEAST harrowing thoughts. Certainly, as Robert Louis Stevenson sy “Happy thinking’ well perplex a poor on every aide by chimes and haunted, flaming dal-plates, , modern, clocks even at night, wirt and by cots to realize and castles in the fire to turn into solid, habitable manalons on a gravel soll, that we can find no time for pleasure tripe into the Land of Thought, “We are in such haste to be DOING, to be writing, to be gathering gear, to make our volces audible a moment tn forget the one thing of which these are ‘but the parts, namely, to LIVE, We fall in love, we drink hard, we run to and fro upon the earth lke frightened A|kheep. And now you are to ask yourself when all is done, vou would not have been better and been happy think- my as fo the conditions in Cuba ing my daughter, do you think you 1 of oure revolves we revolve and | ing.” worse, I think, than toose of ten vears » as to work and general | could support her?” LVI with it. ‘Phere is che everlast-| Right, Mr. Stevenson! I don't kic! the winter time surroundings for a young man who| wpghaw! 7 ask shiiieise lies dia vind, perhaps, and there Hves no| And: The a muter Owns! wants to botter his luck? ‘This may shaw! Two big equainted with griets THE HAPPY THOUGHT OF ‘THE hie home and can very well Ket away, | interest others in the same condition, | | Wouldn't stand by and a lady in| it is an actual fact that the unex-|RVERY-DAY WILL SURELY DRIVE ne matier how the train sepvice may ROBERN ‘want, would wet” pected ALWATS happens. Go that if 4o- nai CARE AWAY. 1s a phrase that} For we are all SO| ubs | BUSY, and have eo many far-off proj-| the floor and polishes up the handle of a SMILE that PR thought ts Who knows but that TO- the derisive silence of eternity, that we} % never missing @ game. And then his boyish fancy solved his own question: The fond mother in pink never missed a game, not because she preferred the national sport ebove shopping, but be- cause she came to gloat over the ex- alted position of her boy, who actually attended to the bats for the Giants! Now the game was called and Mr. Arthur Raymond, alluded to by eur rounding admirers (to his faults @ little blind) “Bugs,” seized a nice new ball tossed to lim by the umpire, spat upon it and rubbed it in the dire. As one in a dream Master Jarr ate sandwiches, drank sarsepariiia and munched peanuts. The happy afternoon of thrille and heart-jumps went swiftly by. The New Yorks, who had led by @ fe margin or two, were now in deadly peril : ‘The indomitable Philadelphians, a wary and vigilant foe never to be deemed safely disposei of unt! the game was over, hed tried to score in| an unusual mark through, and you wondered at yourgelt) (Ne Clgitty and two men were @tiit on of apprectation for being so foolish as to think that {t/ anes © ny one men ‘There was an ominous pa battle, while cries of ‘Ifetp!"" ‘Help! arose on all sides. The mother of the mascot and the repartee of “Red” Mur- | Tay were forgotten by Master Jarr, for the tall form of Mr, Matheweon was beheld strolling acroas the fleid. Master Jarr leaned back and sighed jcontentedly, It's all right now, Pop, ain't itt he e in the asked, “Matty will fan ‘em out, won't he?” “T hope » said Mr, Jarr fervently, as he convulsively shell and all, crunched a peanut, ‘but I think they've got our goats! “He just better do it," whimpered Master Jarr, ‘Gee! If I was to go home and the Giants got beat the fell would chase me off the block, Iz Slavinsky told me I was a hoodoo.” Nonsense, Wille!’ said Mr. Jar, “You mustn't be superstitious. “But get up and stretch for luck. Don't you see everybody else is doing it?” And he yanked the youngster to his feet while ten thousand good men and true, not to mention women fair and bright American boys, did likewise. ‘The great Mathewson then performed la enighty Highland fing and the ball sped over the plate true as @ bullet to the mark, ‘Strike on walled mighty cheer arose, Again Mr, Mathewson delivered thim- self of a hop, skip and a jump and the the umpire, A TH!" cried the umpire. The glad acclaims were redoubled. Then the batter e@truck the ball, but went out on @ fly and the thimt man Waa thrown out at home, In the next Inning the New Yorks }made two runs and in their last time {at the bat the Philadelphians fatled to score. | “Are we going home now, pop?" |asked Master Willle as they swarm: down and across the fleld with the #: ultant fans, “Home nothing!" replted Mr, J “We're going to celebrate!” 1911° Nixola Greeley-Smith’s| | | Little Talks With Women 1—Men to Solve the Ser- vant Problem? | 2—Sentiment and Bad Cookery. | 3—How About a ‘‘Sap- phira Club?”’’ 1911 ) Copsright by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World) HE culinary expert who's conducting a cooking class for sixteen young i men who attend Grace Chapel has made the assertion that her mas- culine pupils show more aptitude for the art preservative of Ife than any group of girls she has ever taught. Is it possible that her discovery heralds the solution of the servant | problem? Will Bridget and Marte, Freda and Wilhelmina yield the skillet | and the carpet sweeper to the more competent hands of Terence, Armand! | Einar and Carl? a | It {s asserted often and truthfully that man's pre-eminence of achieve ment extends even to the kitchen, that no woman cook has ever equalled the performance of certain famous chefs, , And there ts one supreme reason why men should make better cooks thar women: They cat with a keener pleasure, suffer more painfully from hung and ure more discriminating as to the fine shades of culinary skill AS an Intense interest In one's work {s the first essential of success, thereir | may Me the explanation of why all the blue ribbons of the kitchen to men. Another probable cause lies in that much-quoted line of Byron | y e ribbons » Kitchen have gone i quote s, “Man's love h : *tls woman's whole existence.” ‘The reason why female sentimentality should epoll the broth or over-broil the beefsteak may not i 1s of his life a thing apart be Immediately apparent. And it may be objected t! mental as women. quite ~—> | XO they are, but not during business hours iS Man, who has had to work for his brea has learned to concentrate his mind uy | systematize lis emotions, to reserve sentiment for His love and his work have been entirely sep. woman's love and work till very recently have been necessartly coincidental, Rather a sertous way of explaining why a female cook is more iikel her disappointment in love burn her employer's roast, tsn't it? female cook—a Frenchwoman—and on days when she receive certain Italian chef in Albany EscoMer himself could not But on the letterless day and she hears in that the roast is overdone a’ neen dolled in tears, Now, a man cook, if disappointed in love, might cut fast or hang himself in the laundry after serving a perfect dianer | realize that there are times for work and other times for sentime the good work of Grace Chapel flourish and multiply t the dawn of usiness of the is leisure ate, while eivi momet hours Bur a lotte and tee! from nique that #he cooks urpass. when the postman ol, oblivious note 1 the drooping, with a brilllancy whistles sivviil the knell apat the house cold that it ha love, agus sis tue p ox are ie aspa fore break- He wo t. So mu number of male cooks eee 16 a! RUTH ta ying out among the Engieh, 1 Jus! Vaugha ; Williams of London the other day. | And an Engltsh journalist in indorsing the judictal utterance dyy %« 4é | clared that “there are 45,000,000 descendants of Ananias in Great Britain 1 j | Blood ts thicker than water, and T am not sure the United States cons 1s ma | couldn't beat those figures. ‘The answer might depend how er arget Anantas Club would allow, an assoctate ord Sapphiras, for t! a Sapphire ‘ for every Anantas in the world. I don't mean that men 1 married ge: | erally to women who prevaricate. On the contra the wite or husband of confirmed lar 4s apt to tell the undeviating truth from sheer disgust a lke the poet or the Siamese twin, is born, and not infrequently frequent, foolish and futile that one suspects lying to be a} If a woman tells you that fifty, or even a dozen, men have proposed to h her to consult an osteopathist. It 4s more likely that she has a dis! tebra than that she believes you have dislocated common » Or if a $30-a-week man, actuated by our queer American megalon pocketbook, brags of losing $50,000 he never had, either in Wall » failure of a bank, don’t imagine that he suspects you his les a thotogical cond: have a clot on the brain Qnd are going to belleve him. It {9 more likely the clot {s on the Ifar'a brain, Liars He not to ve belleved but for the sheer joy of lying. And in considering those who put so many crimps in the hairline of truth we should remember the great popular preference fo: Legends of Old New York By Alice Phebe Eldridge. “ ¢ 7?) Wealthy relatives intervened, efroum- | The ‘‘Hangman’s Noose.” | on ei area | ‘T the beginning of the last and the Court delayed sentence unt centuny, in a lonely ok! stone Sutherland should be nintyenine house a mile outside of Leeds, old; ordering hin in the meantime ¢ in the Catskills, a man died) wear a noose around his neck and to qutetly in his bed, wearing appear on every vear before the around his neck @ silk noose. |Judges in Catskill y ‘This man was Ralph Sutherland, who so he lived, si Blends Malai for most of hie life had been shunned speaking, his rough manner gone. No and dreaded, paying @ strange punish | one came near the house, for tt wos ment for an early crime. [rumored th shrieking woman pass-| Years before he jad been of w violent |1¢ niihtly tied at the tall of a @ta land cruel disposition, which he had horse; that a skeleton in a winding \vented tn full force upon his Scotch sheet had been found there: that \servant. The servant had attempted to | figure like a woman's sat on his ganley {mun away and he, in vile temper, hat | wall, lighis shining from her Anger |followed her, overtaken her and tied ber | uttering unear laughter, and tha by her wrists to his horse's taf! domestic animate reproa him | Just what happened no one knew; groaning | ows | Sutherland swore that the girl had tury, Jone stumbled against the horse's legs, 1 nin rt \frightening the steed #o that he ran day came le had been © away, dashing the screaming girl (o|ated, new and he was no! pieces over rocks and through woods, 4 upon to pay lle final punishmer But his neighbors belleved that Suth-)upon the sallow erland had started the horse into a| Sut! dlived yet another year, gallop, meaning to drag the «irl dying in 181, Whether fom remorse ‘@ short distance and in his anger had |self-punishment oy hal til we not reined up in time before killing her. |the noose and died in his own house, He was tried and sentenced to die up-|his neck encircled by the hangman's on the gallows | rope. $0 f One Way to Avoid Being Killed on the Fourth. Lamm annnnnn SAA AA AAA AA RARRAALY AARAAR AAAI, “ VERY year the Fourth has been rade, Fresh dresses and sults and a in t Woman’ Home Com "3.0 PM, nd ardtack panion. “or v ks I tried to think of monade and tbelland , something t would make the chil- rm M.—Mail f n heine Tl wave {aren happy without fireworks. ‘This}them their Fourth of J cards and was my plan: I made out the following | ew one a pa we yotaining aur | programme (without the explanations in) prises, sueh as a penny sword, a tiny entheses) and pinned it on the door | bow and arrow, candy, &e.) Fourth of July morning, 1 told the{ 7 P. Mo-Pieket doty, (Another walk children they were to be soldiers all | and joe im.) day, and any one leaving the fort (our| "8 P. M.—Camp-fires, (ited Mghts and own yard) would be put in the mod-| my husband sent up some vaper ats “Programme. |. “9 P. MBlankets and lights out, (1 “1 A. M—Cannon-balls, (Oranges | had thelr pajamas downstairs rolled up stacked on table with tiny silk flags in{and tied with red, white and blue rib each one) be » they rhou ed and marehed "7,20. A, M.—Call to meas. (Breakfast. | satisfied wit | 9 AL M.—Knapsacks, (Each one re- | theli |cetved a “Gee Whix" box of popcorn. | ” ‘These make a big nolse when empty.) ! “10 A. M.—Butlets. (Several new mar: | Ambiguous. les AY; docs Go gee eressing we dat ( Sending mail home, ( S em a eas \ one received a box of small note paper | my iy hr hn! and diniag-rom ie howe, and wrote a letter to grandma.) Yes, my chil j"*12"MemCall to meas, (Dinner served | after manent’ combate contemplation in ' in piente style on the \lawn.) Ir “Gee, 1 ouldu't like to be pa,"'dume Lape | "SP. M—-New unis (Dress 98> puncott's , :