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Che Pubtishea fatly Except Sund it e 4) * Publishing Company, Noa, 63 to 63 k Treas, JOSEPH PULITZER Junior, Bee'y. 63 Park Row 1 Pros. and Oftice at New York a «Evening | For bo States Au Co Second-t » Internation: th Postal Unio: $3.50] One Your 60] One Month, . « NO. 18,206. NEVER WILL BE MISSED. HILE no anne man will rejoice over the loss of trade by another, there is none the less a cause for general congratulation in the announcement that the crneade the of dangerous fireworks on the Fourth of July has greatly di use | H A against Ri 9 minished the demand for the cannon eracker that a few years ago was ¢o conspicuous a part of the nuisanoss of the day. What the manufacturers of fireworks lose in this respect they will eventually make up in eome other way. It is not at all likely their trade will permanently suffer by the suppression of that por- tion of it that public opinion condemns. On the contrary, it is fairly certain that when the noisy and dangerous crackers that aro eold cheaply are finally swept out of use altogether there will come a demand for the finer and better pyrotechnics that are not only less dangerous to the public but more profitable to the manufacturer. We are promised thie year a celebration in New York along rational lines. It will be patriotic, musical, literary and spectacu- 1 And it will not be dangerous. We will epare the cannon cracker withont missing it a DISAPPOINTED VISITORS. NUMBER of sighteeeing girls from Alabama wero disappointed in Fifth avenue. Said one of them:)| “We expected to see fine houses with spacious lawns in front of them end well dressed men and women walking about. But we found a dingy, thoroughfare with a roadbed full of holes, needing | repair badly.” | The expectation of a shaded avenue lined with lawns and gar-| dens amid which mansions roso from terraces wreathed with roses) shows the bucolic mind. Such {s the ideal residence street anywhere from Maine to Florida. She that looks for it in New York is, of course, on a level with the New York girl that on visiting the country | aaks to see the cow that gives ice cream. But let that pass. The issue of moment in the criticism of the Alabama ladios is that even as a street of hotels and shops the much boasted avenue is not equal tc its fame. When people have been roading for years about the wealth, the splendor and the progre:sive- ness of New York they do not like to come to town and find the roadbeds full of holes. We ought truly to reform in street work or quit bragging. —. AT BEVERLY AND AT BOSTON. The Day of Rest. By Maurice Ketten. Ea ) doun GETUP! HIDE Your BEO Quick !. OUR Guests | ARE UP ano WE MusT HAVE ThE | ) welt ie we Dawnedl | Gave uP MY BEDROOM To THEM 440 NOw DO You watll AE To Go lo We Baon 2) } LIVING ROOM ORDER WHEN They Ger Down LOIDN'T INVITE THEM They TJusT Brew w ano 1 HAD To Say | was TicKL€0 To : Oeatu “THEM FoR THE WEEN END? _ THEY MIGHT AT LEAST MeLP WITH WE Diswnes. | seh? TWUNDER DID You INVITE PIFFLE! PUNK ! PUNik ! * PIFELES WHY Bon'T __” THEY HELP A uTme— PirFce ! Don't GET EXCITED. ey nave WGO BACK TO NEW YoRK To NIGHT \ CAN You BEAT IT! aL PLEATY oF PoraToes JoMN, TH EAT & LOT WHEN ier | VISIT BILL LETS STAY HERS THIS WEEK, WE ARE NO TROUBLE ano THEY, ENTOY HAVING US - IT’S LONESOME FoR. THEM im THE COUNTRY \ Ler’ WHY IN THE DEUCE ‘DON" THEY MAKE THEIR BEeDs7, Do THEY THINK 1am 4° vA CHAMBER MAID NE co reer i s we ITS RESTFUL Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, june b6. Do Tey Tank tam A COOK 4nd BorTLe wai WHY DON'T Tuey Go Ie A HOTEL stead oF SPONGING ON US ————_ ‘00D a! S) TAY 3 2 1912. What Do Canvass ot Women Wage Earners’ Literary Tastes, 4\ Shows interesting Phases of Feminine Nature :: Copyright, 1011, by The Prem Publishing Go, (The New York World), matority of novel readers are women. Especially women who work for # }ving,” sald @ publisher recently. The average gir is of her—traveling to and from work, fs usuaily deep tn a library novel. As soon as her newspaper ts . finished. she opens her book and becomes lost In Its pages. What ts she reading? And why? Fiction 1s often her only means rising | for the time out of her own world of tol and petty economies, into @ realm of fancy. What sort ot Hterature doos she choose for that end? As @ psychological e@tudy inte giri-nature the reply would be vitally interesting. The Evening World hae endeavored to find the solution by canvassing the lterary tastes of representative working girls, At a glance, the results will show that the flashy, sensational “dime novel” epoch is long past, and that the work- tng girl of to-day hae startlingly original and discriminating tastes tn fetion read ing. Here is the first of the series of answers: No. 1.—‘'The Society Novel Is My Favorite,’’ saya |ADA BROWN (Employee ot a Large Firm of Shirt- waist Manufacturers,. \T Girls Read? HE soctety novel ie my favorite. I Uke to read about people whe are different from those with whom I come m contact every day. 1 Mike to read disartptions of beautiful» clothes I'4 ike te wear, wonderful éin- ners ['d ike to eat, glorious sports and dances 1'4 like to share in. It's something to know what they are, even if you're out of it ail I like the heroes of the eodiety nev- ela, the handsome, well-groomed, witty, devightful young men who were born with etlver epoons in their mouthe, ani who take them quite for granted. ‘They ure alwaye tall, and they have good ehouklers china, and they know how to dance and play tennis perfectly. I think they're quite delightf. The girls they marry are wonderful persons, too, and I should think they must ai. be very happy. LAD BROW A” ‘The books of Robert W. Chambers are about the vest I've ever read. Sometimes they seem rather far-fetched, be- cause I don't think people generally fall in love at Gret eight in real life; but otherwise I think he te very true to life. ‘The drawings in his stories look exactly like the people I see on the avenue. And then he always teaches such @ good lesson in his stories, When his characters do wrong things they are all the time trying not to 4 them. In the end the good fn their natures almost always conquers the ba: ‘That makes it encouraging for other people who are trying to do what the chink ts right. But the very best thing about books Mke these !s that they give you @ look at a different life from your own. When you have to work hard and count your pennies it’s not going to malo you particularly happy to read about a lot of other people who have to do the same thing you're doing. Bupposing they are true to life—that makes it ali the more depres#ing, To read about your own sort of Ife doesn't improve you, and {t certainly tan’: enjoyable ‘ ‘That's why I always want the books I read to end happily. Things don’t en! eo in real life; but you get enough of i¢ there without finding {t in books, too Speak Only on Invitation. the train neared Boston Josiah nudged i's wit The Naked Truth, OTH Fred Shireman, chief clerk, and Jud Carter, night clerk at the Beelbach Hotel, bald headed, and both bare fe. “Abbte,"* ead he, chee to her es-, “on't way a word to me and i won't to while we're goin’ through this ely, It aint REPORT from Beverly says the yacht Mayflower is to be stationed there all summer and will be used by the ladies of the President’s household Gays ago A travelling man, who bad not been wopying et the hotel for some time, pulled up at the desk the other day. He gazed at bath over the rim of his gold spre. tacles for e minute, ' Gracious goodness,” b> said, “you fellows will soon be combing your bair with boy at the hotel to take the concelt out of them @ few | p. unlew ye're invited.” What?” ‘Yes, This ts Boston, th’ place we're heer! eo much on as bein’ th’ city o’ th’ culture’, and 1 just overheed vue 0° dman slshed lookin Gentlemen in th’ seat abead tell th’ other he wos goin’ to stop off here because he has been favited for eocial functions. A report from Boston says statistica show that the people of thet city eat more epaghetti than beans. While the two items have no superficial simi- larity, they spring from one and the samo base, that of the change that is overcoming American life. The use of naval vessels for pleas- ure purposes by our Presidents proceeded for a time by very slow degrees. When Cleveland took a Government boat to go down the | Virginia const for duck shooting it was carefully announced that he prid all the cost of the service. But from that time on the use| or the abuse of the privilege has grown greatly. Cleveland’s action | was mado the subject of widespread ¢riticism and condemnation. Some fervid Republicans wished him to be impeached for it. Our contemporary the Sun of those days used to have eruptions over it. But there will be no criticism now. The age of Puritan simplicity is over. They eat epaghetti in Boston. H® cherry crop fe the best in years, This was once a @reat cherry section, but various pests killed off the trees, The ther when dry, while Gus Scott and the power house thtrsts will be that much nearer, We heard @ preacher once way that there were compensations ‘ varminte have let up a little! for everything. We suppose in this case and all rejoice, including the robins, the |{t would imply that we would be dluejays and Judge Brush It ts @/thiratier, while the other fellows can pleasant sight to see our JenMing jurist | get theirs autoker, nicely balanced on top of @ Wé-foot Ind- — der with @ ten-quart pa!) ploking oz- down hearts, Unole Ben Wilmot's tree hen | ant earct Padeigees pt JE cal Produced fine fruit also, We hove tried | trolley company hes laid on the land it some, Come again, Uncle Ben! took away from the town without pay- — ing for it, saying how fine, and Commerce has resumed her sway at | can keep out of the mud, ‘witah (0 tee our shores in the arrival of the schooner | a far ae Mond avenue, though there Ip Curlew, loaded with what are called] otitt @ bed gap im to the Methodier hollew brick tile for Pullding purpose: wiroh, which will bother in @otne tu Heretotore an oocasional barge lonted | wtrowborr thine with craoked atone for the prayer ar ee bcialalsadllia # Now and then some one asks how 40 you find #o much @olng on in a small place? They do not seem te understand | thet olroumstanoos not stae, are what make things intoresting, Resides, there Aro people Who gaNnot see beyond thety Ronen, fow of which are more than two inohos in projection, of the Curlew ts emart onough to keep Mr, Matien from kidnapping hie eraft and annexing (he to the Mew Mmgiand Nevigation Home pay wo mugdt not te complain beoause the New York automobiles wear out the reads of (he town, as we have privilewe of wearing out the in New York with our fe: Vhey must (ink we have eeetty bug fort, Porn ta wome A foot hiwh and the per | fato planta ave Die enough to tmterest | the buga, Bq) ea are tn bioem and! vor of op eltinena wil) have mosses at peas by July « i} Inquirer fol, Noosevelt att) @werte | Mt Oyster Bay, but It ta net ap pray to | hear him as ef vere, od Toby has maved, This means that we will have (9 qwalle Home % feet furs Outer ide, To the BAitor of phn Wort Ie t proper for w Be ate on the outer side af the sidewalk walking walk bet Another “Tonwest Werat th 4 The Breaing Wort atk] J've read the various “longest werts.t ben | How {9 “Honorificebiiitudinity” @ar 9 ith twq ladies, or wmontq bel lang ane? A drunken man fy Cad a en thems AB powers tp HF to Ray th * W Jowing domestic scene had ensued: eee you; says his name is Berry,” said | Gertrude, the Jarra’ domestic, appear | ing im the dining-room @oor and wiping her hands on her apron. taker in Brooklyn we hired that ewful | and yet he was nice—horse, Clarence, Jarr arising quickly. out.” | Player A, Player Bl Jumpe to square & | |removing Player B, Player f) Jumpe Vpqiara & (Re ale GHTVIYeR Copyright, 1911, by The Pree Publishing Os. (The New York Werld). By Roy L. McCardell. E left Clarence, Mr. Berry's more- than-human horse, buying wine for Mr. Jarr, et al, at Gass thirst oulture par- lors, he whispered. “He's got long, lanky ‘weeping willows on the sides of bis tac “Mr, Berry te one of the dignified, old echool undertakers,” eaid Mrs Jarr. “You are speaking very kindly’ about Just Wha method now and stray back to the eventsthat brougat Clarence and tne muave Mr. Berry fron Darkest Brooklyn to the Jarre’ Harlem domicile, A fittle By Sophie Irene Loeb. INCH the very first days of “will S you take this woman!” the mar- flage question has held the centre of the stage and has been the head- liner in the com- eodies and tragedies of Ute, Bome have made good and reaped the reward and ep- Dlause thereof. Others have played their parts because they have been thue, willy-nfy, cast. Gome have gone through the “This is no concern of yours,” said performance ot Mra, Jarr, “I oan manage it and 1| NWOMSSITY end etill others im the want you to keep out of it, Mamme | P@AL JOT. Dired the horse, Let her pay for it,| Amd now comese writer who talks at And go I'll tell this man Berry,” baie on the LMT oean ot Tellenre! f . hands «| he {e exempi! e woman teh ae'h Base er of Nim!" |iooks the matter @QUARELY IN THE FACE, accepting the marriage proposl- tion aa @ principle, with all its ques- tiong In economics frankly dincussed with the husband, : At last we have onme to realize that for Ronnie Reasie to mest Rareld on @ moonlight Wednestay and a fow weeks later some evening have the knot tled that (es or js not THE Tm THAT RIND, and then awaken up some blue Monday morning to realization of the “what-have-I-done?''—this is the ax- perlence of the everyday, ‘Thus, since HO MANY have gone be- fore and have jived to tell the tale of woe oy Ditma, aa the ease miwht he, It would seam that in this proposition by whieh the strl of te-day becomes the woman of to-morrow ff #6 would STOR, LOOK AND LIEV GN—even pa though erossing @ Pallroad treck-—ahe might gave many enrvees and geoure many pleasures, ¥¢ che would but Keep her HAD ta the deaision ang nay allow the warmth of heart on to @aininate her the ceurts of diyuroe would net be now werking overtime, end| 4 Wise cant hes eniq that marcinge fy layer 1, | 4 ase ny cone fy AY laugh at ene a fH uy a ever | another's jokes, ere AP PRA ang es on Stone mere Pupdamental things: _ | FE 0 We @ Hen mann and ft ty Me enty “Please, mum, a gentiemun wants to “Oh, dear! It's that dreadful under from to go driving, and mamma didn't | pay him!" said Mra Jarr in alarm. “Wheat shall I do?” { “You needn't do Answer to Pennant Puzzle, Hi (ant eventually lands an the pennant equare h by jumping the Players {n the inanmey following} Player D {umpe to equare i, remaving ta square 4, fomeving Player then jumpq fq 1% removing Player Fy (hi Player ¢ A Mysterious Stranger With a Prancing Steed Comes From Darkest Brooklyn to Visit the Jarrs PPP AAPL PARP AAPRPAAP PP PPLPLARPRPPLLL AAPA APLC OT, him now,” interrupted Mr. Jann “Well, I have found that one can catch more files with molasses than with vinegar,” said Mra, Jarr, “And If I go about it in @ nice way I feel sure I can make him believe that my moth- t Is A Love Match? attribute, the question t# DO riches wing HAPPINESS? Is he @ poor man—so poor that after the first glamour of love is spent there {@ nothing left to apend even for the CRBATURE COMFORTS THAT ARE NBCESSARY? Is he a REAL COMPANION, or does he need many other companions to fill in the following of his natural bent? Is he @ man who can prove his inter- eet by rea) support, or will she forever dave to assist in the ACTUAL mong+ making? Is he tnterested tn the SAME PLBAS- ‘URDS or t there a material difference ea to what constitutes pleasure? ‘This ie certainly a new idea es op posed to the eo-called OLD-FASH- IONHD women. She {t te who accepts marriage as @ escrifice, a matter of eervitude—calling it love—who thinks of NOTHING bat the heme and the dbak- ing and the cooking. Calldren to her are UNAVOIDABLE eocidents that must be taken care of ae a matter of course; and the REAL JOY of life is lost. The day of this woman je passed, ‘Then there {s the @o-calle@ chattel ‘woman. 8he it ¢ who REALIZES the trend of the times, in that woman is a THINKING being es well as a WORKING woman; but who, because ot LACK OF INITIATIVE, or rather laziness, either mental or physicel, would rather be the dependent, oltnging vine that ‘hangs on,” perhaps for the soe purpose of existence, fhe It is who, povseesing a pretty face, thinks that all rewarda should come ta her ON AQCOUNT OF IT rather than IN @PrTe OF rt, @he ft {s who mistakes KMOTION for LOVE, Motherhood ta distastety! % ber, Hors ts the butterfty existence, Tater, thia woman, whe haa ONLY heauty, in Ker efforts to retain It losea that which wan attracted by It, And thus ta e@hronteled the wagedy of a LONBLY wits, Tt a qt woul loat batave aha L0AP, in thia thoughtful age of living, perhaps the words “until death da ue part" would more eften etuallp game ia } Rot in the tolerant eense BUY TN fia pRoM siniets, = Yea, there APR Wenn, mane i ares, het aie of SITE \* er is the one to whom he must look for his bill.” “Maybe he has looked to her end strained his eyes," suggested Mr. Jerr. “Better tet me go in and pull bis whtsk- ‘No, you stay right here and keep quiet, I'l) tell btm you are out,” said Mra, Jarr. Bo the head of the house subsided and Mra, Jarr went ir. to greet her caller, “Ab, charming evening, Mre. Jarr,” eaid Mr. Berry blandly. “Painful ne- ceasity calle me here, Charming quer- tera!™ Here he squinted around the parlor with @ professional air, “Would seat forty on camp chairs, I should pay,” he added, “provided, of course, | there was not over the usual percentage of etouts. Stouts, if sou Rave noticed, are prone to indulg in grief and are . What's the troublet’* * re fain work,’” sid @bireman, “Lent right, Cartert’* ‘Mi comeck corroborated Darter, “Only thinking men become bald headed.” Then he turned and winked at 4 negro bellboy. “Feot, ten’t tt, Hem!” he aid. ‘The ragre grinned. “Wall, now, bum,” ho sald, “1 don't know foh eush ‘bout thet, My ole dad he always ‘low dat an empty bahn dou’ need no cove"——Louterille Times. ak A Sma.! Matter. to epeak here to-night,"——Jucee, ———— A Drastic Reminder. OMEN umaally find ways of hering thing don they want others to de then jo. woman womna to tan the prize, if ale of the hustand can be De Hered. Itecently the wife gave him a sealed le:! with instructions not to open tt uatil be rescie! his office, He did as directed, “1 am obliged to tell jou something that wil pain you," the letter rend. ‘‘I'bere is, howere 66] AST month,” axid W. W. Jecobe, the tory | no help for it, You wisi know all, IC; writer, “I wes on my way to Inverness. | for some time that {{ murt come to this, Ff About ten miles out the train stopped, then | remain silent no longer. went on « few feet, then stopped again. This hap-| “You must bear part of this trouble pened several times, and finally we came to dead | and do not overwhelm me with reyrowdth stop. Thirty minutes pamed by. Finelly | mw) The haand’s face wns ghastly, and o one of the guards @tting on the embankment, aud | perspiration stood out on his brow, He © abouted to him: prepanet for the worst, ‘Trembiting, be read "Tt aay, Sandy, what's the mattert Is there e| ‘i have asked you to onder a load of wreck head?’ Maybe you will not forget {t this time,” “he a, the}, The coal was delivered that afternpon.—t dof’ "8 ‘Y'oare Garette-Times, youre sor; the water tm jus’ gone off Louie Globe Democrat. « {The May Manton Fashions © wont to gather on occasions of be- | reavement. Stouts seem to have a pen- chant for the sombre garb and to in- dulge in larchrym: emotions, I have noticed, even where not personally con- cerned, eave chains,’ as the poet says. “Very true, Mr. Berry,” said Mre. Jarr, “but to come to the point, i you have called about"— first, business afterward, aid Mr, Berry: greasily. “‘Btern Necessity is oftimes Sorrow's friend,’ as the poet fitly tates.” Here he scanned the neatly arranged | parlor again. | “By opening this door,” here he tmdi- | cated the door from the hall to the| parlor that was seldom or ever used, “friends and relatives might pass to the right, and still forty could be seat- | 4, allowing for stovts" | Mra. Jest interrupted htm. She want-| @4 to refuse responsibility for the liv- | ery bill and she also desired to squelch the suggestive use he could only see for her parlor, “Clarence, the horse, wasn’t hurt | when he Kioked you?" she asked so- Uettously, “As @or the bill for the drive, my mother’— | “Clarence was not injured fm the @ightest, But I was," said Mr, Berry In aolemn tones, ‘Clarence is outside I Grove him ever,” “Exouse me @ moment!” cried Mrs. | Jerr, fhe ran out to her hnehand and whis- | pered, “Take @ pooketful of sugar outside And feod It @ Clarence, and tell him) to Kok that awftl Berry again when he gota home, Clarence will under stand" Clarence a4 understand, As nlrenty palated, under the giren jure of lump gugar he diveated himesit of shatta e14 harmem and followed Mr, arr into | Gas'g place, There he wea formally | Intrefued te the (sometime) genial | rapriater aa an educated horse thay) inained om aMering wine, Pd Gua fal for is? Walt @) ter WReTTEW and con ee ‘By friendship'’e oral, HE sip made with a high walst line is absolutely — necer sary for wear der transparent gowns that ary treated in the same Thia cor & moderate: smooth fitting akir' and can be made from any materiai that in used f. garments of the kind. In the tlus- tration white lawn is trimmed with flouncing, bandin« and lace edging, but slips of thin silk are greatly liked. The sitp consists ot et co and akirt, corset cover made with fr and backs and neck can be cut on either a square o round outli skirt Is five gored The flounce can ve J yards of en. protdery 12 Inches wide or 6-8 yard of additfonal materia} 36 or #4 Inches wide for the flounce, § 1-4 y of edging and ards bead ern N in mites for , 38, 40 and 4 bust measur? Mew Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION | ‘te BUREAU, lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, or wend by mail te MAY MANTON PATTERN CO,, 189 E. Twenty-third street, Odense IN, ¥, Bend ten conta tm eotn er stampa for each pattern ordered. These TMPORTANT-Write your address plainly and always japoctty ating wanted, AGG two conte Gor letter postage if ino Patvorec hurry, Gom-Princeees Slip In Empire Style—Pattern No, 7064, iach POPOIRNIONPORORIIONIIDLID ON,