Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
re aie’ v* . : —— ' — ae ~r rey : The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, August 17, 1911) Save the Water By Rolf Pielke The Jarr Family. Mr, iare Joins the Ranks of Heroes and His Son Qualifies for an Ananias Medal. at tte Fost-Oftice at New York + eter, 0 Eve Hittand aad tho continent and Sed states | AM ria in the International ‘ost see $3.50) Ono Year... + 86] One Month Coprright, 1011, ty The Pres Publishing Oo, (The New York World), felves, They whould consiter they tyr By Roy L. McCardell. in &@ vale of wicked and that the LD Mrs. Dusenberry, late of In- | go to a vale of tormint!” diana, whe Mved on the ground! The Iittle Slavinsky boy and Maste floor of a flat house down the | Rangie picked up thelr cigarette card street, beheld in fled off, but old Mrs: Dusen front of wins | berry held on to Qfaster Jarr. dow M Jare| “How's your poro maw, Bub? ahr playing with |asked. Johnny Rangle| Mastor Jarr anid his poro maw was and little Teast] well. “How's your tive old lady. maw all right? with the! Master Jarr wae @ flat-dwelling child small colored pie-| He understood the ways of those who tures that are/tried to “pump” youngsters for the packed in cigar-| gratification of idle curtosity. ette boxes. “My paw found a million dollars last These cards are | night,” sald young Jarr, with a sly look more or leas edu-/at the old iady. “But I wasn't to teli cational in their nature, ranging, in| anybody.” Pictures and accompanying descriptive | “Do tell!” cried the old lady, on tip- matter, from the portraits and life and /toe with excitement. fou must be @ Datties driefly told of prominent prise] good boy and mind what your parents fighters to the flags of all nations. aay. What 414 he do with the money? Boys of the age of Master Jarr and| Where did he gh ft?’ ehe added, his young friends are not greatly con- | eagerty. cerned in the subjects the carde are! ‘He got it from a burglar,” replied descriptive of, but the possession of| Master Jarr. ‘A burglar broke into quantities of them ts conspicuous evt-| our rooms to steal the money out of my ence of Juventie wealth. Denny bank. But I jumped up end ‘The boy who has the most cigarette grabbed him and hollered for my pop, Pictures {8 the local young person of and he come running in and grabbed means, for the propaganda of socialism | the burglar with one hand and choked makes no headway against the capital-| him and took a mililon dollers from istic ried among the tender youth of |him. Pop's going to buy an automotile our land. “Highty tighty!" cried the lady from| “What became of the robber?" asked Indiana, coming out to the front steps. | the old lady breathlessly. * “What you little boys got? Sunday ple-| “Pop and I carried him down to the tures tiver in a bag and chucked him tn,” aw," aid Master Yarr. ‘“They|vaid Young Truthful. “He hollered |ain't no pletures of Sunday schools, |dreadful, and the p ‘ce com | but Izzy Slavinsky has a whole “What did you ,fo then? inquired | the capitois of the United State: Mra. Dusenverry. “I got five hundred baseball players,"| “My pop rolled up his sleeve and aet chimed in Master Siavinsky, “two hun-|the police if they wanted to fight him dred _wilq animals, fifty rulers of the| or be friends with him," went on the world and”— child. “And they trembled and sald “Well, you ought to be ashamed of|they wanted to he friends. ‘Then we Yerselves, little boys Ike you all!’ tn-| went to an ice cream parlor and boust terrupted the olf lady. “Fer I can see| tee cream for all the policemen and we you bin gambling with ‘emp. Let me tel!| got a tud and filled {t full of ice crea yer what happens to sinful gamblers! | and the policemen helped carry it hot My husband's step-brother's boy, a| to my mamma, and we will have | young feller only seventeen, an’ Ezra cream now all summer But you Dibble, the constable's boy, an’ Widder | mustn't tell anybody, because we @ Dingle's oldest twin, an’ Ike Sowerby, | raised our hands and swore not to be who was born in the pore house, was the secret!’ Playin’ ‘seven up’ in the hayloft of bless the child! I won't say a Ezra Dibble's paw's barn one Sunday—| word!" cried the old Indy, with mout Sunday, mind you—and ft was struck by | agape. “This is a dreadful wicked ott Ught'ning and they was all called to a/I hear folks trapsing the streets til better land Ike the si long after 1 o'clock. Here's a pen’ : for you, Bub. You come ard tel! me VOLUME 52........ . EET ET aR Seen | THE TALL WHITE TOPPER. | ILL the tall white stovepipe hat, | for men of fashion and im-| portance, come back? At the present moment it would be al-| most as much of an anachronism | on Broadway as the Scotch bonnet | or the pearl-gray derby. Worse things than the “white” topper have reappeared in the Fall styles after a generation’s retirement in innocuous desuetude. Of course it is not hygiene, nor comfort, nor common sense, nor even essential decorative quality, that puts an article in style, especially as regards | maeeuline wearing apparel. Nevertheless, we may note that the hat fm question has the indorsement on at least two counts of headgear authorities in England, where our models in this line come from. | A New York hat store, as a boost for this revival, displays a pictare taken at the time of the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition, thirty-five years ago, showing Dom Pedro of Brazil and a group of prominent citizens all wearing the high white cylinder. Accom-| panying it is an excerpt from the London Lancet, in which the wriber wonders why the aforesaid plug was ever discarded. “It was light to wear, cool to look at, and—so long as there was no black band to suggest that the wearer was in mourning for the last remnants | of his respectability—its appearance was cheerful.” Straw hats, the medico goes on to say, are too ephemeral. The soft Panama is all right in its way, but it is expensive, and from the medical viewpoint it has a drawback—that is, its tight inside band. Whatever type of hat is worn, the lining should be soft and elastic, | so that there is no constriction anywhere around the fevered brow. | ‘The Panama lid violates this principle, because its broad brim and | large surface of attack offers an aeroplane spread of wing to any | wust that may be stirring, therefore it has to fit tight to the forehead. There is not enough air space in the crown above the Lead, either. In short, the tall white hat of our forefathers has virtues which our up-to-date tiles lack, and is at once sportive and dignified. King George of England is liable to wear one any day, and then it will “We're Just playing ‘Hi » what else goss on.” ular here. If ever horse-racing comes into its own again we can has got to match the heads or tails tr! thing! Johnny Ri: hardly do without it. turn or— dime when T told h aw A the Inqutt ‘Dow he treat your pore $$ > THE MUSICAL DREADNOUGHT. HOW TO START A FORTUNE (| 25.82 5/520 HE question of theatre music is| Copyright, 1011. uy The Prose Publisning On, (The New Tork Words, ieee mS ier die aes Gromer “Opportunities Were Never More Plentitul Than Now,” Says THEODORE . s with a new twist to it. At least but I'm h a pension and one prominent metropolitan man- 4 hy, N. VAIL, President of the American Telephone and Telegraph Companp, Legends of Old New York ager has demonstrated that the i “ane fell re tdouel ae Uk i Toa By Alice Phebe Eldridge playhouse “orchestra” is super- i ( ipieranaik pigeon cries, ‘the world owes me a living,’ must scalize at least fluous, except for musical produc- i: “The epeoialiet in hia line ie the man who reaches the high places to-day. ee atid oe teas ae ee tions. Even melodrama has out-| “(The orying evil of the young man is laok of application. ae Crazy Polly, |dinner being se grown its traditional “slow music.” : 4 “‘ Broad success depends upon eingleness 37 purpose. BOUT the middle of the last cen-| give them what they Yet inasmuch as about ninety- “(Every individual must account to society for his acte, He simply cannot create a A tury an old’ and’ withered women hope of their speedy of ninety w: world of his own and live in that world. burled from an ai But no—the bottle nine of our hundred theatres still : ‘al house in White Plains, and often, and their + w sue A“ i ‘ ; ‘(A fortune tteelf lies in the measuring up of a man’s full measure of capacity.’’ Fs zy Polly" she had been | Polly oa ne : soe consider it obligatory to unchain called, but Polly Carter was her name,| At last, though was fall ili L h ‘ the “William Tell” overture, the} cooyrigue, 1011, by The Prem Publishing Co, (GAIN, REGARDLEQS OF TH® OTH. tx0 this first of all. failure les in the disability of not rec- pee ees oe as fatr and bad a they tramped into the hail eoxtet from “Lucia” and “Medley of Popular Songs” between the | (The New York World). ER FELLOW-MUST EVENTUALLY| “THE MAN WHO CONTINUALLY | ognizing opportunities.” Re ar ae Mae ee ies Le enue 8 eure ae relieG DUR RAYS ical ai Auth banaue anton that tian GHOW HIS HAND. IT I8 THE|CRIES ‘THE WORLD OWES ME A| “What would you suggest as means Wile ult, , ideas as they opened the acts, the musical director and his band constitute a factor that has I b SPIRIT OF THE TIMES. IT IS PER-|LIVING’ HAD BETTER TURN THE |for thir -ecogniaing of opportunities?” I Continental Army, so, when the British |door, the seniov oficer, sian up, to be reckoned with. By Sophie Irene Loeb. |iiirs Nor ROALIZED AS POIGN-|QUESTION AROUND, IF HE CAN'T |asked, lines stretching out from New York City jasked the tine “a i . 5 | FORE 1 went to see Theo-|AnTLy aS IT EXISTS. DO THIS HE SHOULD’ AT LEAST WOULD SAY IN ANSWER THAT | encircled her home, she was alone most) The officer adidresse), tie drunkenes The trouble is that in this reckoning the American Federa- doro N. Vall, President of the | «pyery day we are weeding out that|REALIZE THAT HE IS THE COL-|MAN CAN MAKE OPPORTUNITY | of the time. of the party, staggered up the stairs to thon of Musicians, allied with the American Federation of Labor, | American Telephone and Tele-| wnich has a personal, grasping element |LECTOR. AND THE INDIVIDUAL |HIMSELF, THAT HE MUST KNOW | The English oMcers treated her re-/the land 1 exclal:ied a graph Company, having heard | gna make that element account to the} WHO GANNOT COME TO THIS|MORE AGOUT SOME ONE THING OR | spectfully, but they had an annoying) “The cursed thing's stoppell asks for more money thah the poor managers can afford to pay, with | much of his methods of busl-| majority, For the world daily demands |REALIZATION NEVER CAN HOPE|/AT LEAST AS MUCH AS ANY OTHER | way of appearing at any moment, de-| Then with a maudlin laugh at fie -tigkets down to $2.50 and $3 per. ness and achievements, I expected t© | gccounting, This te gaining ground con-|TO ATTAIN FORTUNE OR THAT|ONE. HAVING THIS KNOWLEDGE |manding refreshment, which she felt joke, he drew his sword, exclaiming ne n . see @ Man of the Hour without @ min-|trapy to the pessimist, and we ore| WHICH MAY BB TERMED !T8/TO UTILIZE FOR THE BENEFIT OF | compelled to furnish. “Tel never go nt drove | At this juncture a Tonawanda man comes forward with a new | ute to spare—an individual with thelevoiving and tolerating nothing but ,COUNTBRPART—SUCCESS, OTHERS—THDPRE [8 THE FORTUNE | put one rainy afternoon the door was! through a pane! of tie « invention that combines in a single instrument organ and piano, |*P!"It of command uppermost. clean, honest principles. “But he who comes to know that he /OF EXISTENCE. IN OTHER WORDS, | qung open by a tall young man in blue| As the three passed from sight, Polly A ‘ - ; 1 found a white haired “man who “T gay all thie to accentuate the fact /can of his own voltion rise, or, in the |THE MAN WITH THE RIGHT TRAIN? | and buff and Polly found herself in the| with a sickenlny heart, ran to the clocks sirings and wood winds, bass and snare drums, and doubles in the | manner 1s at once matural, uncon- | hat the young man who starte out to-|vernacular, ‘fall down,’ is the fellow in|ING WHO RECOGNIZES TRUE VAL-| trong embrace of cousin and flance.|and with trembling and stunbline fr \weeses, The independent managers are looking this musical) ned, unassumigg; who radiated &|¢ay to make his fortune must realize |the line of march. His king does not (UBS OF MEN ND THINGS AND An insistent rap came upon the door.|gers opened the door iter lover fel 1 ut oF A cokimmolate vsiae it ea 4 otelkelrenke | bigness of spirit oa big as himself, and jthat the underhan@ hurry-to-fame meth. | travel the line of feast resistance, Rut, |CAN PROPERLY PLACE THEM—HE geyeral British officers were without, |forward into her arms helena G teadnoug! over an contemplate using it as a rikebreaker in who talked without any assumption cf 04s of procedure that might have been a | on the contrary, controls any force that 18 THR TOPNOTCHER. | demanding dinner. something thick and dark er aroun) case of need. authority. forceful element of the past ts « thing | might cross his path. All of this ix contrary to the Delief "With a kiss and Iaugh Polly pointed liner teat feos tha a a They might do worse, This condensed Marine Band and Phil-| ye Proven fe, thears’ that the men jof the past, Thinle Ploodiide of Snpaxtnitity the plunger. ‘The big thing ia derived [¢0 the tall old clock upon the statr-| The Britian offcer was right: the olay ey mig! c his ¢ sed } L who do things are the eases to ap-| “The present era demands this etrict | “For this man, opportunities were|the plunger, The bg thing is derived ianging, Lawrence Carter stepped in|nover went agnin. And the hoautiti! harmonic Orchestra probably is no more mechanical that the gow He Aes {0 ecaaeey: re accounting so aurely that he better real- never moro plentiful than now. But by syateciatived | pon ienas DEPENDS #4 Polly shut the door. jatrl's mind never recovered trom. the average theatrical six-men-count-em aggregations. It would | ana knew how to may tt. Perhaps in - = . ~ ON A THOROUGH UNDERSTANDING When the English officers entered they shock of her love:'s death Anew! he purpose of drowning the comments of the suall| thts subdued undercurrent of strength ' Aud L al 8 ) es the secret of his success—in the portion of the audience that remains seated between the acts. On| steering of that which he undertakes. the road it wouldn’t object to travelling in the baggage car, and would | He might be designated as many ‘, : A years young, Vor, being on the con- farther aid the managerial economy by not esking extre allowance | {ious line of the human ra for a sleeper. recognizes no crossed wires, e+e | He talks with a wealth of experience back of him and the exuberance of OF WHAT YOU WANT TO DO AND! - HOW TO PO IT. BLEMENTARY KNOWLEDGE 18 A PRIME FACTOR. | THAT Is TO KNOW THF EVBRY- | DAY THINGS THAT GO ON ABOUT | YOU AND TO BE WILLING TO TAKE Reflections ofa BACHELOR GIRL By Heien Rowland THE STRUGGLE, THE CAPACITY TO DO GREAT THINGS EXISTS lnvPRY MINUTE, RUT NO MAN CAN Losical Theology. Force of Habit. h N AND MAKE A HOWLING A eee Taurean eee A (oDereD ie CHIVALRY WITH r CLUB. ee ee sc iscat- ganeatn’ S$ WITHOUT PREPARATION Virginie, His theology and tree ia Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World) i” Su of the Summer Widower (on gazing at a| ve | @raspedd the 0 the co down 4 of him and waited what he wanted AND TRAINING AND A WILLING. | human nature were oftes very original, as $ TO STRUGGLE. following anecdote may prove, Uva he anukt siumale oh gentleman thus eccomed the old preacher day > 5 » 6 Mr. Vail aft T put th iT u T" Brooklyn Bridge crush has been quelled by Capt. Edward Mt Vall after, 1 put, the question to kitchen full of unwashed dishes): Bourke, and chiyalry—police compelled—seems like a charm | your conception of a fortune means. I ained without struggle. “Now that my wife's a ’ oo" - fis en, Valling, I understand you believe every wom- ‘annicas Sete ite at work. | Would designate success tn Ife ae for- | ‘Of all glad words of tongue or pen woul Was aver made without extreme stru Hing, 1 unders Ma pea Te pears | yantiee, St tat 59 AN , Li. The gladdest are these—She's home again! ale ae WA of another: he kaee a It’s “Ladies First They get the seat, and don’t have to de-| “Now, the fundamental requirement —_— | way to fit the back to the burden 1s to | Love is a chemist, from whom a man demande an strengthen that back with knowing the “4deal," but usually ends by accepting that old fake,|“"Y and wherefore of everything one | on eber readin de Bible how | é | ce » and fo otace ‘were +. mand it. The car hogs beat a mad retreat, the gentlemen can |r success In life and for the prote ats ee ie tion of soctety is a thorough apprect stand it. tlon by every individual of his respon- “Oh, yes, U'se heard of thet; but what does doos. \ o : na Mibility for every’ act made vital by an | ugome , that prove’ A Maybe the system will extend, until it’s 1 one-sided—mere accountability to society for the result Something juat as good. | Mere Ambition Is Not Enough, ae. 160, Vane bar Rr ty eae ‘a man be treated as a friend, and seats FOR ALL provided of every act nus ee P | ‘Some go Into tt blindly with the hope | of any, Aca) vere | n ; - — ~ — a In truth,” continued Mr. Vath “a A wife who can wait on herself and will wait on herself will always | of real reward looming up in the recesses | um font | ‘No, Ivnever dd." fell, den, ash, de odders has sure got ‘em fouth's Compani man oannot start out thinking that he | de allowed to wait on herself. can create a world of his own, make! his fortune and live happy ever «after. of the empty brain, The prime evil of — the young man who enters the busin world cf to-day is the lack of . " jealous; shed the man. | ° |"Phat is « fallacy unrecognised by many | DOM't shed tears ovey a man who makes you Jed! |tlon, preparation, thoroughner , | who seek so-called fortunes. [ambition, perhaps, but without mining: | e Fy e'ness to etruge@le to gain the desired en at Forty. Jwoman rather than the young aint ot A Mum Must Account to Soctety,| Absence makea the heart grow fonder, perhaps: but tt also makes th el There ts the great thing. He may World eighteen’ In my line of business L have) ‘The truth is that each man must! head grow steadier, and cures you of that dizzy feeling caused by the ine), i, ambition for the big thing but | tion, he grunted, “gimme some—some, aw, x evan! “Ham and!" the girt —_—_—S_ Quaint Indian Name, | evrsei" arian een so PTO telln, tn bie “Romantic | Ae EEE 4 Otero's ideas in one aver at | Mghty Queer. y 7 dian, » opportunity study them, and I account to society for every act of hts, |toaication of propinguity. tack the ammunition in his make-up to | the home of a friend, a jover of all things In your paper on the age whcn woman ts yuld prefer the stately chaperon and society will tolerate nothing toss, ighet fight for it, and there you have the | Si.eniored the in of 6 qentimnts Eioms titul, y of the young childish debutantes | And TSH mere] i ite ica at 7 ia Mente uite in accord with the sta protective wings. ea eeeee eiiitaae nay taco us| It gives a girl silver threads among the gold to marry for a sweet home fallurecthe, fellow who whines that ey ue, haat iti of th, indian, crt Anas & wach 6 t pens of “La Belle Otero.” Yes; a worm 1 think a middie aged woman, well! present this accounting | life and wake up to find that she has merely joined a debating society. Mane man does not measure up to his | and streams, and be bas bed toe, oid . bag ie ur realdent, vl i between Hnlety aed forty bea By but plainly sowned, lb more beautifull IN OTHER WORDS, HE MUST BE na full capactty—he does not realize hin | Wan be noeand, tal Cle to MAT Drush, ssh,’ answered tlie ca | Gereourse, 1'do not count the profession-| i}, "Yes. a woman who has gone SFLN AND ABOVE BOARD ALL | — plirtations are the sentimental small change which most men offer a Deraonal responsibilty, In other words, | at 18 le alo raph toe came WN A GUE sass tim to. came and ‘Whit . col 1 ved | throu 2° way Me, 2 BE-| ‘ 7 4 he does not realize it ! t yt hype " chicken-house to-morrow. i ; ese: Aled je oa wall ereaey oa tar ba life a tte rey. Knows how HIND A SUBTERFUGR FOR LONG, | @oman in return for real love, | process. He has no singleness of pur- Ad what do you call this placet” my frinnd men ones pimerny. sfiices BatatMe piack and the mature wom fand 1s full of captivating ohonma,(THIS 18 A ‘@QUARE DEAL’ AGm, nome | pose. * replied the old. Indien, = "Ah don’t believe, ab, ANd engage Ale Bali j the so-called “old maid,” she knows how to use. Such a| AND WOR TO ANY ONE WHO Ifas Tt is hard to find a “sweet, old-fashioned woman,” nowadays; but then, ‘He wantr to be tha receiver in the lere wi pew, romantic name that prom- ‘eatyrngy dlgst ou ea he = gee Fespected aud often lau 1 is beautiful, and any man with ACH UP HIS SLEEVE! THE | most men aren't looking for a china dol, with a mechanical heart, copy- service and tranemits nothing himself, | tm) possibilities, | / ‘Myetumt’ What dow | weshor” t pn ine Young men 1) general. I myself (alretined tastes and ‘education must ike WORLD WANTS TO KNOW, TO BE! DOO, Smotiona, a brain that can be turned om or of at will, and hatr and He pave no toll to the world, but wants |g Aah cM, “a aaa Yaa, mab, & powe'ful good whitewasher, ah; youmg man of only twenty-six) ha her, 1 think, in preference to the young, SHOWN; AND THE MAN WHO PUTS eb : les ma fe bd 4 4 to travel long distances on the road that | wale cae se aa 8 ws Dect here ond we but mighty an que ‘ebout @ chicken-houss, mh, q tem; never get rumpled or o} url tends ¢o success.” i a) } Tene