The evening world. Newspaper, July 13, 1911, Page 16

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The Li pany, Non, 63 to 63 w York JOSEPH PULITZER Junior, Beo'y. Park Ri Evenin 4 Pabltshed Dafly Excopt Sunday by tho Parl J. ANGUS SITAW, Pros. oud Treas. 63 Park’ Row. 6 9 Publishing © Entored at tho Pos at New York ae Second:Cinwn M Subseripiton es to T ng | Vor nd und the Conti World tor the United ‘Btates All Couatrios In tho Interna’ Postal and Canada, aanaeest One Year One Mont ++ 83.50 20 | MEDIUM CCS aA ACLU AO ES LETTERS TO BURN. PRIVATE ry valu LETTER may acquire historic and pe- | or it may develop a boomerang vital- | sctive of time, or of cun ef, quite irre the ordinary, normal hazards of circumstance. It may crop up unexpectedly and make all sorts of trouble. It may disappear—as did a package of nine tied with “rather faded pink ribbon,” in the local celebrated case now before the public— and raise a fearful rumpus involving lawyers, de- tectivee und policemen, in addition to the prin- cipals in the affair. It may do both of these} alarming things in quick succession, The lighter the missive, the heavier its consequenc The} more private its contents, the wider its publicity when once it gete started on its supplementary career. There ate no end of humorous possibilities, but it is a shuddering sort of fun. A letter deliberately faked, garbled, or misused with malicious | intent—a postecript of the current “Dick-to-Dick” type, for inatanco— is not liable to do half as much harm as a genuine and comparatively innocent missive fallen into the wrong box. A letter sent through the mails becomes the property in trust of the person to whom it is addressed. At the same time the right to publish ench a Jetter remains with tho writer. This partnership of interest between sender and recipient simply provides two horns | to the dilemma. Between the two, the letter slips out end gets into, print, and then the whole universe is “in on i” | Under such circumstances the necessity of taking precautions in matters of correspondenco in obvious. ‘Tlleyrand’s cynical advice, | never to write a letter and never to destroy one, is not only im- practicable, but illogical—for if everybody followed it there would be | no letters to destroy. Since wo must write occasionally, and have no means of compelling our correspondents to burn their correspond- | ence, the only eafe thing to do is to sterilize our letters and make them publicity-proof before dropping them into that modern Lion’s | Mouth, the post-office. | Remember, the private letter is a confessional, whose sanctity is not guaranteed inviolate. 4,582 DEAD IN THE STREETS. Aa ¥T: Health Department makes public the figures & r} = sent in by its contractors for the removal of ¢ dead horses and other animals from the streets of Z, the Greater City during the week of torrid weather ending (the week ended, the weather didn’t) on Saturday night Inet. It is o sad and humiliating record, The number of horses that died in New York City during this terrible week was 948, as com- pared with 447 in the corresponding week in 1910. 3,617 were taken up. | From the utilitarian point of view, it is only the be All took their canoes and paddled to fag : ~ stealing over her, she sought her canoe|the cove at the Island of Elms, where ses tha — ly, olesale heartles | her c ° horses that count. Morally, this wholesale heartless abandonment | “Cossrant, 1011, by The Press Publishing Co, | She was an ardent Democrat herself, ) you know,” she added. BC" paid Mies Hickett actdly. and paddled out upon the lke; she| the Bird had plunged to death. of the dogs and cats—helplesa animals victimized as “pets”-—should (The' New York World), for the reason that her husband wi “The name's an insult, and I do ni “Your sweetheart died in the war, I body GAR ARIA BSc A9 hops for pee A ieabaed kif fenee white as enow : * . sas, ayl s co! epubites ths: > ve u ” ince his wor wa ve nother lag t air with perfume; = sinite heavily on the consciences of self-complacent citizens who| By Roy L. McCardell. [ peer teg eoapeon mpeietedl gated Bie | want ote) beer ény more ebony it peers ig ly bi Ne Og lg pre gy i puis eee lisw ae theless acne, bbl Ss iar ne ais zi 2 flourishing Christi (GF PUUIS ‘ininds ne of when T livea | Main thing they could quarrel about, as, | snapped Mra, Rangle. asked Miss Mudridge; which wasn't a| HL Lpraaes 4 rejoice that they belong to a great and flourishing Christian com- tn Indianny," sald Mrs. Du-! Stange to say, they both belonged to] ‘You like to go to places without an! civil question. | ;A# soon as the feasting was over the| Out stepped the old Medteine-man of munity aenhacey raat the same religious denomination. escort?” said Miss Mudridge to Miss/ “The Spanish war," replied Miss, Sun followed the footprints of the Bird, | the tribe. ; Meg Dusenderry| “A Democrat. We ginerally carried | Hickett. For Miss Mudridge beheld HER! Hickett. “It was a boy and girl affair.:| He pursued her across wie lake and,| ‘My children,” he said, ‘4t is our was speaking of them on Democrats,”" said Mrs, Dusen- | escort returning. But she bit her Mp. The civil mrert| Cratineine ety vatabass tance pee Hage “the CUE ower, the basket picnio| berry. “I means a light epring wagon, ! ‘Mother 1s very careful with whom I| The {dea’ white ts her purity, He pent sane i An unctvil war was now brewing|t? him. She bade him begone. the yellow her love, You shall ree that ea ear SS among tho Indies, Mrs. Terwiliiger hav- | The™ growing impatient, he com-| her heart will close whgn the sun sets ee Ha al iat | ing made a general remark about “un- M&Mded her to listen to him, She still | and will reopen at his coming.” mica a oral o mannerly brats," when the little Jarra drew further away. He followed her. At these wonis the chief went apart T fairly makes us boll to read dropping a penny in wht tm called the Hekate anaeches | Needless Worries T hat end the little Rangien bad upset eideck | Clim Im ORG. Leek etafom, Full OF 1 end bowed Bis lead Farmer erton's brags about {slot and pushing something a handful | mother, Mina are Ghetr on ber basket of provisions, Orenk- | S2°TVw ent love. ehe erang to the sage fe wes the WatersLity born out of @ the fert 11 of Long Island |of peanuts falls into the receptacle pro- Mudrid@e and bs (s bottig, ‘the laws: contenta, o¢/ 0% B/MORP TOMS. Aah Rasieney Of rie aba llpving: heart threo. feet deep and. raising | viced, fromm which ttle easy for the puts nea ts Age New York OMEN} | ree mnens. oy ene odormwae teak 0 bushels of ms to the |chaser to extract them and proceed to | ver, the exasperat- ing on the deck. — acre which city folks sometimes pay jenjoy this intellectual fodder, Peanute : ing bachelor, were “Let's dance the turkey trot. We're $100 per bushel for whon they can't met \are nourishing and are an ald to re| f7e° sd peared By Alma Woodward aia jotty crowd tonether:” remareed $O Gd Facts About any, while he knows perfectly weil that | ge RoY L Jut in Indian- . . the unfortunate Rangle, who did net | ‘ad this * @ soll" slid over from - | MSCARDELE y."" Mra, Dusen- Consrtaht, 1911, by The Prees Publishing Co, (The New York World), behold @ cloud in the eky of # happy | St kK E h Connecticut wane yeare ago, Caul EN our most hopeful citizens have] berry drawied on, “I belonged to the! Dartej “Bront.’? | Nberewithal te draw on, some one tn) “47: | oc XC ange flower, cabbages and raspberries are riven up the Idea that State High- | Order of Royal Neighbors, and we used utting on ront. ound to aufter. | All the fadies glared ast him. Mrs, #0 clnied tn profusion, while out wayman Macdonald te going to|to get up infairs of all sorts, sech as HERE'S a dim, dread phan-| Who ts tt? Rangle told him to shut up. 4 scan scar ra arfare, Tt mads | plant anything on what was once the fish fries and barbecues, My husband tom lurking In the shadows! The man who provides, first of all. P: chil | PT 18 @ very odd fact hat the en cessful candidate pays his initiation furtier to sit on the depot platform |p 1, Home thought last fall when | was a millwright, and we was very po of @ great many women's, Ho works hard, ts deprived of every-| aid Mra, Hickett, slyly, “I can | / who pays $70,000, or $20,000, or 990,000, | fee and dues and signe the constitutiesr and see showers sprinkling all ov first ploughed the thoroughfare up| befor’ he tuck out his patent. fo lives that, though 1t may be thing that means aolid comfort to him |8ee that he ts dreadfully bored with that | or any other price for his Stock Ex- | whereby he agrees to ablde by all the Long Island, while eit is dry as @/that ho Intended to seed down winter | “No, we didn't go to the coronation driven away for a short, vic-| @nd doesn't get an inch nearer the goal | Pld Mudridge girl Johange seat has nothing to show for | rules and regulations of the Exchange, hone ‘and FR. Jay: Walsh's water com: lwhoat, but this was a wrong guess | {nis year sald Mro, Hickett, oo though | torious @oment, always, retuene’ enal toward whion be's eteiving, Mrs. Hickett knew only too well that| the heavy expenditure except the can-/and then he becomes a member. The will not let us squirt on the Ar | When apring came tt seemed as if oate | tmplying she went last year and would | conq in the end by weer per-} The sufferer next in line f# the smali| Mr. Silver had the bachelor's aversion celled check which he gave in payment Exchange takes no note whatever ef » because Mt hae gold too much Water were the proper think. Ty June it ap- | go noxt tinactty. tradesman—the grocer, butcher, baker,|t? children, But fond mothers are} tu the persons from whom He Rane 4 pres @ member pays for his seat, ne roy, though Korte peared there was nothing toft to do ex |” yer remark was levelied at Clara| Its name tx, “What WHI the World| &. The woman eplurger HAS to pay |Diind to this Iie seat, ‘No certificate of memberaioy for that t a matter between the Burs . tas wenseh toe wet ah kwneat and turn it wO-f pudriage, am was rue, in a measire, | SAY?” aid Ite birth waa recorded on] the exoritant rent of her showy aparte| "G0 over and ask Mr. Gtiver what |or any evidence of membership what-| chaser and the aeller a8 Individuals der and then try red clover, #0 a8 to] hocause Mra, Duscnberry was. telling | te day Eve evoluted from Adarn'a ribt, ment or she'll he put out. She HAS to| a" anid Ure, Jarr to her off: | eoever, te lsqued to 8 broker by the EA-| The mythical weat’" ta not the only lane, wuien leet rt for miscelianeous crops | sing, Hickett the story of her life, dee What WI the World Say?* haw! pay the gaa and electric ght com-| "But don’t you ask him for VEARED: ne sirehesed his vents tal ey erie or sradiiion that eurvivesiag nee Who are eke Sear, This has not been done. We | ing Mrs, Hickett might be interested, aa] Walked hand in hand and heart to| nantes, ‘ause they are monopolies eae ; eae ie Has purchased Nie seat, hel the: Mook Bache hi For tnstance, Axes W alsed, | Now it appears he cannot even farm itl pase middie I |femintne; and, being pampered and| the first sign of backsliding. dren, 2 athe: Se be il has be orned by the Hon. | intelligently. raat Mra. Hickett's mind was not cone{verfed, has steadily gained In strength, |. But. there are hundreds of emalt|other moment they were holding up|the Exchange, acqualating him of the| Regulatty each afternoon, et 216 Sines F Wen and * corned with the ovat Neighbors of In| Ull It hag grown from a weak-kneed| grocers, butchers, @c. ready to give|Mr. Silver and pawing over ‘4s splc|fact and a mere memorandum slip is| o'clock, or @ few seconds earlier, ae bard. This site PTY salary of our Kenial Post dana, She Was interested in style and | SubJect to abeut as husky @ spectmen| credit In the beginning to extend their|and span white flannela demanding | tnclosed in the letter, insionting that he | matter how active the day, the ticker perity. The associatic . ter, Charley Munainger, has been | scotety, and discussed stage folk most | #s 18 eligible to the Phantom Club, I Mst of customers, And when Madame| baksheesh. should send a certified check to the| printing the sales of stocks hesitates, Charles A. Moore pre t | & paiwod to $1,700 per annum, This! > ‘ average Now York Woman totes} has reached the dead line at one place, The hoat bumped against Glen Teland | treasurer for, say, $2,010—the $2,000 rep-| and then deliberately prints the words, he ts absent In FP ng whatever !t| makes some of our citizens feel like se ied (nas a it it with her, an insep: © com-| she satis serenely to the next. dock Just In time to prevent Mr, Bilver, | resenting an initiation fee and the $10 “Hammond's time.” Every man in @ ts that the Romani |veing Democrats about 918, What? T sintt Geen ere: |n) New, York lus ion, endiin faltheul knliation of the iittle modest woman, living in al frantic at the smearing of his clothes, /q frat payment toward the Gratuity broker's oMfce pulls out hia watch and | and don't feel he ts aa 3 Fe be BHA Hl te 1, thinks ¢ by hiding modest way-you, who pay your|from throwing the child demons over- | rund, says the Scrap Book. Each mem- | notes fifteen distinct clicks of the HE editor of the Greenwich Graphic PTER we in ig | MPt founds church: that aula me | ie face she will entirely conceal it (» you go along and have to do|voard. ber pays anual dues of $19, aswessed ticker, @nd thereafter the cry goes up s scored ons on te a A n went on the lady from Indiana, “Tt want whe cove with a face mask) with two hats a season—don't cant en-| It was @ folly ovtlook for @ merry | somi-annually, and $10 to the Gratulty in every stook broker's office in the ries, the New 4 He . neh to sat hag a preacher what terrifies Pa And when she puts| vious eyes at the toxged-up sister who|ay- Fund on the death of a member. jetty: "Time's up." estat tom ‘s ad tn our nye 3oR. § snythin world will say. She is| Go around to the back door of her) 4 en letter from Secretary Ely notifying | 215 o'clock, 1f they are at fault, go device By | midst your swain Hs a Cora Hick ful as the ostrich! j establishment, and there you'll find ;| Answer to the him of his election, with the inclosed back into the pockots, and every om theatre - - ~ —————~ |" iu all gh Mi Seeing no clty In the world t#) bread line of, creditors as long as the Swiss Puzzle. | memorandum of initial expenses, @ euc- knows that “delivery hou. hes come, stauting mits formation, ae ee 4 x “front” so| proverbial lane that has no turning. ccc Interesting Bits of Information : | wt York-and {t is, Stand at her elbow while she opens RD breakin . a the same over which the library of and Mr. Iangle, who led th times out of a hundred | her morning mail (most of which has wa t Date Kancite tk ee eatoe | e hy ie pllo we Of the yer of the matrt ominto: printed thin in the upper No ante Sonning 1h tay Br MOER Me glo drew @ fla owe |teft hand corners of the envelopes) and nine provincia ry are A A Here) Bolle team ps Ae ustvand plead for] watch the paling of her pink cheek, the mee | " a ‘ inseon comforts, | worry creases on hier alr brow and the {t round when {t slipned out “ ; | dare, “Vm 4 r dinpiay' tixhtening of her Cupkt's baw. mouth, Testing an Egg. blewed if ie didn't tit the polices and Gj T > M s @ e| back ¢ every turn, The] It's the toll she has to pay! a > re Jane," rmonstratet her mis: | €@ ss he was watchin’ ane thu the window, ar # of teach |r went over to n't ige yt Naren acter tress, “You mast leara. to be. more | An’ please, “‘taum,"" concluded. the : 3 ‘ ; cal com 4 How do you ever expect to set along| your placid, comely reflection with cons them in the pudding! Now, a good way of testing | too, for I listened aud I heard « murwurinney is we pe a ( Star a M et | way to its de the 1 Workt unless you put on a good) tent at your heart. You have not fa to take an egg in your hand, ewing it around | oh, quite ® loud murmuria’, mum!"'—T; ° . 4 Bit, sarily daueah how ta. explains that “they had to pitch | "A nip of I hurt ‘em, so] front? Of course, tf you are content to| splurged in the mean time, but you! & fom mon and then piace it to your ear. If st —>—_—_ , dow vad to fleld uphill and the ums | Jong as there ain't w lof it with) remain in the Small Salary class ti| nave lived and had your share of | Gee Secititare thet Itt fimen and good” An Overdose, $ —_— jpire was @ purgiar, tem said Mrs, Dusen’ consolingly, | doomsday, all right But the people | pleasure, ISS SWITZER'S feat of producing | Like a dutiful cook Jane promised in future WELL known Federal offiet! was strofe The Andover The Seminary | : — ds that men drinks most at burys|who make the BIG money are. thos The lady who has put on “front will | the Swiss flag fram an {rregu-| to ober her mistress's instructions end that same | ing down Pennsylvania avenve one after # stored at Andover brary of| An English manufacturer at Bradford T ain't never forgot the time we! who w how to blu!’ have 4 mound of debts, & disgruntied | larly-shaped pleco of paper te ace | sh there ae a | oe eee ‘he enoountered @ very email Sony "volun, | thea books Wil pe is now weaving a cloth made entirely | lived eighteen miles out of Kivanavitie,| So th gratifying her own love of os-| husband and A face that shows UP Well complished as ehown in the aCcOmpAnY-| gaiini@*But st the crucial moment Jone ap | WIGS titer wth ahat setae moved to the library of the new bulld- | (warp and weft of human fr, The| in Dunk ywnstip, when Mel Beam-|tentation #he bas the audacity to pre-| only in artificial ight to her credit. ing diagram. peared upon the scene with nothing to show | ef the official, somewhat . ing in Cambridge on motor trucks, It tabi fs intended for tnterlinings for| teh died of a complication, He a tend it ts HIS welfare she ts looking And from over her shoulder will be 4 interesting to know that the road!men's wear, and possesses the advan- which these books will traveske by way | tages of being absolutely unbréakabd! of Lawrence, Reading aud Wakefield | unshrinkable and uncreasable World Daily “Magazine asked Mrs, Rangle sharply, without @ substantial fund of the The Unwelcome Guest. By Maurice Ketten. * * Of dead or doomed cats and dogs, no lows then { Ke Jarrs Try to Lure Cupid Aboard an Excursion Boat and Make Him Pierce a Perfectly Good Heart Sayings of....+.. MRS. SOLOMON Being the Confessions of the Seven Handredth Wife. Zeemuated By Helen Rowland, Coorright, 1911, by The Prem Publishing Os, (The New York World), B EHOLD, my Daughter, what te the greatest of off | human emotiona? For lo, in the daya when emotions were fash- RecA fonable, and {t was not yet considered BAD FORM to ROWLAND display a little human feeling, three wise men met to- gether to diacuss this question, « And the firet Wise Man spoke, saying That te HASY! For is it not LOVE which maketh the world go roundr” But the second crie “Go tol Love doeth not REALLY make the world go round; it merely maketh a man 80 dizzy that everything SEEMETH to be going round, Lo, what man hath died for lovef Yet, have not thousands died for AM- BITION®" Then the third mocked them, saying: “What folly ye talk! For behold, do not men daily continue to sacrifice love and ambition and reputation, yea, even conactence, for the sake of GAIN? Therefore I say unto ye, it te GREED which te the greatest of alt human emotions? Now at this point they looked up and discovered that, as usual, a WOMAN had been secretly LISTENING all the while, And they waxed exceeding wroth and much bored, and cried out unto her: . “Go away! Knowest thou not that this is a stag-party? Lo, what canst THOU understand of such things?” But the Woman defied them, saying: “Go to! I understand sufficient to know that ye are WRONG, one and all! For the greatest of all human emotions which consume mankind is neither love, nor ambition, nor greed.” Then the Wise Men were aroused and questioned her, sayin: “Tell us what IS it? And the Woman answered: “It is that which maketh a man to lose Ais interest in a woman the mo- ment he hath found out all about her. “It is that which causeth him to forget his amDition, while he Hngereth upon the street corner to watch a fire or a fakir, “It is that which maketh him to cast aside his freed and to part with his shekels in order that he may join a secret society or witness a prize fight.” & “Verily, verily, it is that which constituteth one-third of greed, two-thirds | of ambition, and ALL of love!" } And 80 saying, she arose to depart, But the Wise Men waged exceeding ° eager and ran after her, imploring that she tell them more concerning this mysterious thing and demanding to know its name. Then the Woman turned upon them and mocked them with laughter, crying: “It is that, oh, Stupid Ones, which maketh thee to pursue me with thy questionings. Yea, the GREATEST of all human emotions ie CURIOSITY. Selah! . Gi Legends of Old New York By Alice Phebe Eldridge Copyright, 1911, ty The Prem Publishing On, (The New York World), The Birth of the Water-Lily, | 70" 00, Sane heresit into te deep water below. | MONG the tribe of the Lower! The Sun plunged efter her and ewam Saranacs on the Lake of the wildly here and there. No trace of the Clustering Stars, now called| Bini could be found. He called her Tupper’s Lake, lived a deau- | n: Pleadingly, desperately; only the tiful Indian maiden—Oseetah | cliffs echoed his voice, Then with a breaking heart he re- turned to the village and repeated his tale. At noon @ hunter came into camp with strange tidings, Flowers were growing upon the surface of the water. the Bin, And when the young chief, Wayotah the Sun, returned fromm his war against the Tahawt Indians she drew aside and Ustened tn eadnesr and vain longings to his boastings. Finally, with a great heart-sickness tod | out for, reflected & mocking face—unmasked And where there is excessive splurge, noW—the arch-flend, ‘What Will the World Say?" \ Here ta the answer to the Plotorial| Put s tearstained face, pape cy ‘ell, Jane," en) inquired f the saddened servant, . gre wrong, 1 wes be San ee Gr tee Arithmetic Pussle: News + Pot — Yawl—Awl+Bee + Fork — Beet = Tork, ott —— ornate |

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