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} Need eaanemimedy oT Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday: May 3152011" ~~ CO } he BRE aatorio. Webtabed Dany Excops Bundy Kress ishing Company; 68 0 68 '@ aNavs phere eat Tos! a pact nia Bee'y a 8 Park’ Row, 68 Park Row. 3 Envored at the Post-Omi Aton The e for the States 50 o.g9 Innd and the Continont 5s Cornieies in the Tnternauon hd Postal Union, Ses Heosia::::: beet “ WOLUME 81... ...ccccee seveeeeeeees seveeere NO, 18,180, CARNEGIE AND MORGAN. UT of all the talk on the part of steel magnates and their opponents that has followed the testimony given by John W. Gates to the investigating com- Nev a as Second-Class Matter, ‘and Canada. ‘ear. onth One One mittea of the House there has come but one. point of agreement, and that is that Mr. Andrew Carnegie got more money from the Morgan ayndi- cate than he ever should have got. Judge Gary, for example, was quoted as eaying: “The prince! point in Mr. Gates’s testimony was that Andrew Carnegie got many more millions for his eteel holdings than the actual propertics were worth. No one ever denied that fact.” Yet, strange as it may scem, a contrary opinion once prevailed fn the land. It was believed the honest ironmaster had been cheated by the estute financier. The story ran that Carnegie complained to Morgan: “If I had known you could float a billion dollar trust I would have charged you at least twenty-five millions more for my interests.” ‘And that Morgan replied, “If you had stood out for fifty millions more you would have got it.” It was added that Carnegie nearly wept | every time he thought of his innocence. Such was the tale of yesteryear. Yet now all the men on the ‘Mside say the only wicked partner to the deal was this sume Carnegie. But Carnegie is no longer a partner. | “ ~-———__ . AMEND THE GAME LAWS. . HILE a young man and his fiancee were sitting \V under a tree on the shores of Snyder Lake, near Cohoes, they were mistaken for woodchuck by a farmer's boy and shot, both of them being seriously wounded. There are accidents that fall within the scope of well regulated families, but this is not one of them. During the hunting season the sportsman expects in the or- dinary course of things to be shot for a deer or to shoot some one else. When a bird hunter, bending over to tie his shoe, has the tails of his hunting shirt shot away by mistake for a flock of quail, ‘that aleo is natural and expected. Such things give a charm to the merry hunter's life by adding to its excitements and its vicissitud But no youth walking with his girl in the springtime expects to be shot.for a woodchuck. : * Love making, holiday making, summer loitering by lake and ea and river have dangers enough of their own without being ex- posed to those of the shooting season as well. It may be laid down es @ safe proposition that during the months when city folks are frequent in the woodland ways the farmer’s boy should never be permitted to take his gun with him when he goes out. Amend the game laws. + ON THE s land site for a p among them the school houses and the subway extension, of’ these things they deem much 1 to ocean front property. In e measure they are right. ONCERNING the suggested purchase of Dream- gast and President Mitchel of the Board of Alder- men say there are at this time other needs of the city more pressing than that. WING. ublic park, Comptroller Prender- need for more hospitals, more | Each nore important than any addition But the city can build more hos- pitals and more school houses and the subway next year, while it| cannot be sure of getting desirable beach property next year at any- thing like the price it can get it today. The Dreamland site is a bird—and the bird is on the wing. “Three Things a Woman Will Never Understand.”, N article by a “barb’) criticising ‘women's secret societies in the colleges was recently published in @ie Womans Home Companion. A “das, or ‘barbarian, is college par- lance for one who is not a member af @actety, A "Greek" ts college parlance Gor @ member of a Greek: ietter frater- mity, Following are a tew observations on women’s waye made by the ‘Greek’; ‘waa mede by some mem- @aoulty while I was in ool- something to bring the together in ail the factions, and at the same time to furnish a peg to hang stray edcial events on for the girls whe 14 not belong to any sorority. It out with @ grand flourish of al!- Ghe-wortd'e-my-sieter feelings, but the outcome might easily have been foretold even then, By election day the one in- divisible mass of affection was honey- combed with clectioneering cliques. ‘When @ frat girl would have the reins 0f government the barb members would i the power and glory of her frat. When & non-frat gir] was made president the | frat members very foolishly dropped out, | 0 that tt developed into a eort of soctal | solace for left-overs, It's not mrprising | that any group of ¢tris however philo- sophioal shoukl resent that, so the death of that sincere and well-meaning at- tempt at democracy wae perfectly nat- ural. “It @eeme hardly fair to say that a01 orities should be abolished, for they @! 4 maximum amount of pleasure to the individual with @ minimum of harm, but reform ts badly needed, Most thoughtful fraternity girls are alive to this and they ehould have the credit of tt sororities will continue to be a decidedly Mixed Ulessing until it ts possible for women to organize and work together for other women without a shade of ‘This day Patronage in their attitude. seems fur off, for, as Mr. says, ‘There are three things a woman will never understand—iberty, frater- complain that it wae being worked for nity and equality. No. Go the Raitor of The Evening World: Te theve euch @ thing as an “Fdieon GAs. Using Brain at Cost of Body. To the Béitor of The Evening World: To your correspondent who cannot { body too little, There in hie head and too lle mental faculties high pressure that they the routine work of continue through the ‘e@ must open the safety valve catastrophe, That Must equalize the knew what he be i 4 of thy face shalt thou eat bread,” and the manual laborer oan alwaye seen. Therefore in the evening put on yofr Overcoat and button it and take a run @round the block—not too fast, but keep going. And woon the perspiration wil come. Keep on running until you feel very tired, then go to bed, Do not catch cold, Do not talk to any one and wait until morning to wash up, If your case is of long standing it may require two or three runs before you have the full benefit. DOCTOR, Babylon, 1. 1. Fria To the RAitor of The Evening World On what day of the week did Get. i, 1873, fal? W. 8. 1 Central Park Is the Lares To the Raitor of The Evening Wo: Which ts the larger par! » Central or aah They cite | 6 6 A INT we A Pop? Mr. Jarr Sets Out to Celebrate, and Initiates His Son in the Art of Cautious Extravagance By Roy L. McCardell. boy, emerged with throngs after the the smiting of the Philiies at the hande of the Giants. “Subway, sont” replied the fond father. “Do you see those rubber- neck a@utomobiles? We're going down town on one of those, We'll cele- brate thie glorious victory, beginning here! ‘How much do they charj ked the delighted child. Pop?" In the Tall Timber r POP SHORTS SAYS:— SID FLASHER wrO wuZ ARRESTED AGIN FER SPEED- IN’ 1S BURNIN’ PERFUME IN WIS AUTOMOBILE TO GIT IN RIGHT ODOR WITH THE AUTHORITIES. Ne xt? By Maurice Ketten. THESEARE NOT THe “What do I care now much they charge?" retorted the generous and af- fectionate father. “We're out for a ®ood time and expense {s no object.” “Hey! cried one of the barkera as Mr, Jarr climbed aboard, . Jarr hastily climbed down egain and hurried over to the fiftstoent onen. “Charge for the little boy?” he asked. The youth ballyhooing for passengers looked around and noting that the ve- hicle was filling rapidly, replied: “Not ¢ you hold him on yer lap ¢ill somebody gets off going down town.” Whereupon the cautious spendthrift and his son and heir got aboard, Now, with shouts of warning and a honking of horns, the string of auto- mobiles were radiating out in all direo- tlona, but mostly in the direction of down town. Mr. Jerr, with his sturdy youngster on his tap, could have been but lHttle more crowded and jammed in the subway, But Master Willie was so elated that Mr. Jarr would have borne with twice the weight and crowding. “Who beat?’ ered urchins, rushing out from the sidewalk in the uppe: reaches of Washington Heights. Hut Master Jarr gazed at them with haughty distain, His attitude being that »f one who does not delleve in pamper- ing the lower claweses even with sp ing result “Aren't we going to get off here near i} HAPPY DAYS FoR. US our corner?” asked Master Jarr finally, after @ biissful and dusty ride of some miles into the Harlem section, He was bursting to recount the im- pressive inchients of the great struggle to his boyish companions in the neigh- borhood. But Mr. Jarr restrained him. “we are going to At the terminus of the rubberneck route, Forty-second street and Broad- way, Mr. Jarr took the boy to a big restaurant near by and permitted him to order as his fancy pleased. Master Jarr’s choice was strawberry shortcake and ice cream. When asked !f he would have anything more he replied, yes he would have more of both. After dinner and the dark, the twain entered the portals of a vaudeville house, whe! among hectic burglar and bandit plays and funny men hitting other funny men in the face with all sorts of portable objects, @ hoarse gen- tlemap in evening attire and tan shoes appeared and announced the champion of all champions, Mr. Jack Johnson Master Wilt farr gazed in open mouthed awe as the White Man's Burden boxed, with cheerful lassitude, three young men, any one of whom was almost half his size. And, as Mr. Jarr said, the champtonship would ike- ly be a chess problem of the black to win in @ix moves, if such were to be h fous adversaries, of ry . Can YOU Answer These Questions? Are You a New Yorker? Then What Do You Know About Your Own City? Queries and answers? Lf 80, you are collecting a valuable pocket encyclopedia to New ¥! How many of the following questions can you answer? IRE you one of the countless people who are cutting out and saving theso| j 116—How long waa slavery permitted in New York City, and from what | two races were the slaves recruited? 117 Dollar?’ What famous New Yorker originated the phrase “The Almighty 118-——Where did the great “City Fort" stand? 119—What was the original name of the Tombs Prison? 120—fhere was the pirat Brooklyn house built? Here are the anewers to last Monday's questions: 1—Lots on Wall street in 168 sold at #80 apiece, The earliest recoried sell | Was $815, and having two gun-bastiona, 14—The Firet P: In the nineteenth 1S-/Phe total ten; | Ing price of the lots on the southwest corner of Wall and Broad streets (in 1700) 12—The city wall was @ stockade made of rounded stekes, twoive fect high It ran across the Jeland of Manhattan from oast to west, where Wall street now fs, and was | site of a fence that had been placed there to keep the pias, sheep, &c,, within the city limits and to prevent them from being caught and killed by the wild beasts that infested the wilderness to the north, 18-—-Now York's first bank was established in 17M, yterian churoh Chutlt 1719) was moved, brick by brick, early ury, to Jersey City, where tt atill h of Brooklyn Bridgs stan, mt eh m1 fa om ph iy” 180 rode long, 3t was built on the jtands, with extensions, ts 7,080 feet, The mee After viewing the chariot race and the underwear boxers and other of the mbving electric Ught signs, the theatr being out, Mr. Jerr led the tired but happy boy down into the subway where he fell promptly asleep. He was in a walking doze when they arrived home, “Where have you been with that child ‘until this hour’ “Ball games are not played at night sald Mrs, Jafr, sharply, as she proceed. ed with the disrobing of Master Willie. “There was a vaudeville entertain- ment afterward,” said Mr, Jarr. ‘What would there be a vaudeville entertain- ment for?" asked Mrs. Jarr. “To liven up the gtoom,” sald M: Jarr, ‘Look at thie evening paper! And Mr. Jarr pointed to the terse descriptions in the baseball extra he had brought home with him: Raymond blew up in the eighth and Matty was the life saver. Dooin died at home." Poor feltow!” said Mre. Jarr, “I'm glad they got him home, But who was this young lady, Matty, who was the| heroine? Well, never mind!” she added 4s she saw Mr. Jarr healtate, “But you can understand, right now, that Willie shall go to no more buseball games. He 1s too young for euch |shocking acenes; besides, it's bad enough to have one member of the fam- lly out until all hours!” joa sa LA ‘“*Nobody Knows It.”’ By Cora M. W. Greenleaf. 66 OBODY knows it?" Well, what N if it's true GREAT. acl OnsPIPEnsTOR BY ALBERT PAYSON TERHUNE 7 | Coprright, 1011, by The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York World), 8—The “Gray-Eyed Man of Destiny’s’’ Plot. He admirere called him ‘The Gray-Eyed Man of Destiny.” Wits | enemies referred to him in more vividly fanciful terms which need not be set down here. His rather unromantic name was He was a chronic conspirator. in hie time—lawyer, doctor and editor, for tm stance. But as soon as he had once formed his taste for plotting he gave himself up, heart and soul, to his odd new career, and kept at it until it | killed him, Walker's first conspiracy was against Mexico. He had been | practising law in California when the idea came to him. Raising # band ‘of 170 armed men, Walker declared his aim of establishing s ‘military col |ony” tm the State of Sonora, Mexico. In July, 1853, he dodged the Gov- ‘ernment watchers at San Francisco and sailed with his little army and ‘three cannon to La Paz, in Lower California. There he formed a Pacifte | republic, with himself as President. | Then the next January he started for Sonora. The Mexicans swooped | gown om him Ii warm of angty hornets. Walker fled for the frontier and | saved himself by surrendering to the United States authoriti Hi ity itted. He trial for violating the neutrality laws, but managed to get himself ecqu: kept on framing new plans for the capture of Gonom, but nothing came of them, So, In 1865, he turned to a far bigger conspiracy. Central America was made up of @ group of weelt Wetle countries, It seemed to Walker—and to other adventures separately to vast profit. Walker picked out Nicaragua as the etarting point ef t ie venture Col yt L. Kinney had already landed a body of armel “settlers” {n one part of Nicaragua. Walker joined him in forming his colony there. Then he proceeded to put Kinney down and to take the latter's place as leader, The Nicaraguan Government guessed what was up and protested to the United @ustes, | Our Government “interfered” in 60 very mild a fashion that. the conapiraters Gest | all fear. Walker, with 300 men, m@rched against the City of | thousands of natives would flock to his standard. But those | q tazy, unambitious lot who falled for the most part to feel any | Watker’s promises to “save” their country, Few of Nicaraguan army came up—and Walker retreated. But a few months later he beat the Nicaraguan forces in city of Granada and (by a deal with Gen. Corral, the native leader) appointed commander-in-chief of all Nicaragua's troops, Within « | Walker had about 1,200 American adventurers around him—enough to maiee | feel eure of himself, So ho had his rival, Corral, put to death. Then he « Costa Rica army sent against him, and made himself President of ‘This was to be but the first he fortified his position in e way was worthy of the man. Hi Nicaragua to fill his treasury, flooded the place with worthless paper currenay, | and revoked the law which forbade slavery. ny si j tie | toniats to rage. against Wal ought desperately. But ee numbers. Walker was beaten and was forced to fly for his lif, He escaped by surrendering once more to the United States Government. | had he landed in his native country when he went to New Orleans and there | started @ new expedition against Nicaragua. He was caught at the mouth of | the Mississipp! and wae turned back, In 1860 ‘he embarked in another emai expedition et New Orleans; this time as part of @ plot to conquer Honduras. He wae unsuccessful in persuading the Honduras natives to rise againet their Government. British officieis in- terfered and Walker was captured. The Honduras authorities took him to ‘Truxiiio and tried him there by court-martial. By this time all Central America had learned to regard William Walker ee | human firebrand. Though he was but thirty-five years old, his name was terrer throughout the little States. The local governments feared and hated ‘Now that he was at last in the grip of one of these governmentsy his fate was foreordained. He was found gutity, and on Sept. 12, 1860, was shot, Perhaps the kindest, fairest epitaph for Walker wae this sentence written ‘by @ later historian: “He was as brave « achieve what was imposstbi as ever lived, and wasted his life in trying to “Why don't you sod him beck with itr Mis Honor auiled instnuatingly as he resped out the question “Bend him beck, Jedget exclaimed the woman, throwing up her hands in « gesture of 4 = He Would Get the Coal. HE Judge of the Juvenile Court, leaning for ward in his chair, looked \y from the discreet and very ragged tdocaninny be- to the ample and solicitous form of ment, ‘Send ‘tm beck! W'y, Jedge, ain't feat done been told me I didn't oughter smd child to no sech dangesome and place?"’—Youth's Companion, petite Remembering the Sabbath. ate reverence for the @abbeth im the culprit’s mother. “Why do you send him to the railroad yards to pick up coal!” demanded His Honor. ‘You know it 1s against the law to send your child where he will be in feopanty of hie life."* “Deed, Jedge, 1 doesn't ood ‘im; I nebber has sent ‘im, ‘deed"— “‘Doam't he bring home ¢he coal!” interrupted the Judge, tmpattentiy, ometimes takes @ form one would dave anticipated. An old Highland man once explained to om Bogitsh tourt “They're a God-tearing eet o'folim, deed they are, and I'll give ye an Tastaaty be Tast Sabbath, just as the Kirk wee ’ there was a dtover chap free nad, whistiin’ aud jokin” as Cy sta, miale of ta wack. Weal na Conlfoaring get of lead, anit Ypon him “end almost ? iapateh, | The May Manton Fashions HE dlouse mage T from bordered material is anaeh seen this season, D- lustrated 1s one of he’ vest models, It is made from bordered: flounctng combined with all-over embrelé- ery. The feature ef the blouse, however, « {fs found in ite @me, treme simplicity, ead it can be made avadl- able for bordered ma-" terial or any other with a straight edge. If square neck 4 Iiked it can be cut out es ‘The careful disctpiinarian turned ber shiny countenance reprovingly upon her undisturbed offspring, but Rept a conciliatory eye for the Judge, “You Dura the cogh.te brings, do you not?" persisted the Judge. “Burns it—burne {t-—‘cose 1 burns tt. W'y, broad, Jedge, 1 has to git it out ob de way,” shown in the email That nobody knows your trans-| front view. Breesiona but you? | The blouse is made, | If you've sinned the time's coming you'd | with the front end give the world’s pelt | back portions and |For the power to forget what you know | of yourself, | with the yoke and up per portions of the [in the favor of kings you'll then find sleeves which are in’ | Uttle worth, one piece, The front: your praises should ring to the! and back portions are Tho! | ends of the earth. Are allowed the illusion, and ignorant stand Lake ostriches hiding their heads in the na. “Nobody knows {t!"" That treacherous reef | Has wrecked human lives beyond count Drowns the sound of the bell buoy of conscience or soul, “Nobody knows it!" Ah, wormwood and or pellet, pe eae RN ARI | Call at THD EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION; | Phe. Tear st fhawe Reaakor enon gira BURBAU, Lexington evenue and Twenty-third street, or send by’ lapped onto st end , t stitched to position, But ever and ever there's some one—It's sired a. | | Tere {s somebofty knows !t besides you ba neck edge, and God. | ‘or a woman @f Was there ever a secret that nobody | sey y dys | knew . bordered “mat j | outside of its guilty possessor? But few inches Wide, with yard, 96 inches or the shou tlons “or 2 “yanad ap! plain material 27, 19° vards 36 or 44 fi wide, i hnttern No, vote cut in alee cop B 34,30, 38 and 40 bust measure, i Blouse With Peasant Sieevee—Pattern No. 7016. eee mail to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO., 132 E. Twenty-third > Obtain jx, ¥, fend ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered}! IMPORTANT—Write your addrese plainly and alweys}> rue! . te an Get you can never unde, city sise wanted, 446 the, tg Or eee pene