The evening world. Newspaper, August 30, 1911, Page 12

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eter as ts NNT te In short, the managors sort ‘ine Cre CS World. Pormamed Paty Except sund &. ANGUS SHAW. Prov 63 Park Row: Entered at tho Tost-Ofice at New. York the ew bs and Treas, JOSEPH PULSER T. Junior, See’y. 4 62 Par . Second-Class Matter, tion Rates to The Lvening| For Togiand and the Continent and forid for the United States AIL Countries in the Intermational nd Canada, | Postal Union. tease $3.50) 000 ¥, 5 THE COUNTY FAIR. « begins, and New York town is right in the van. The annual event of we Richmond Agricultu- Society opens County ral to-day at Dongan Hilla, Staten Island, to run full blast until and {n- cluding next Mon- day, Tabor Day. Tt will be a blase Greater New Yorker indeed who cannot find some- * programme, which our local sents a year’s work of “expert Staten Island brains and experience.” Everything a well- Tegulated county fair ought to have, from State Governors to a thing to stir his pulses ir contemporaries across the bay professor dropping out of a hot-nir balloon in a parachute, and from an educational department to a midway, is promised, regardless of ox-| pense—to the visitor. Far be it from us to accuse any neighbor of envy, malice or uns charitableness, Yet it does seem queer that Dean Bailey, of the Cornell school, should come out with a ronst against county fairs in general just at this time, and pr to readjust the time-honored institution altogether. According to the > Dean, the fair as now conducted does little or | nothing for our social betterment en the horse-racing makes no bie impression in the way of horse improvement. As for fat hogs, big notice mumpkins and cornstalks nineteen feet high, and art works | in the shape of wax flowers and crazy quilts, you seldom see them now th ty. Instead, people rush about and spend their money on) freaks and side shows. Dean Bailey would have the “midway” | concessions cut out entirely, and the space thus saved devoted to| “exhibits of local farm stock and produce, things pertaining to homes and home life, to schools and school life, to farmers’ clubs and) granges.” Even the ghmes and sports should be such as to show the “recreational side of farm life,” whatever that may be. All this might serve to make us feel discontented Dean stopped here. and sore, Hut he is so wound up with his own hobby that | rides it to dea We can dismiss him without @ sigh when he gets into this strain, as apropos of how a county fair should be run: “Growing children is a part of farm work, and a good deal more important part than growing cattle or incubating chickens.” 3 The Richmond County Fair happens to be partienlarly strong i: the pouliry department, in which Mand ; n onto three thousand entries carnival and baby pars Le gees on and =) ver Vanderbilt reckons nigh Incidentally, there will be a children’s i Je, voice and piano contests, baseball games and cireus-like evolutions by the mounted “flying squad” of the New York Traffic Police. In all probability a licensed airwoman will fly in an aeroplane to illustrate female emanc ipation, calculate that we folks go to the wular everyday utilitarian business crammed t to get away from it. fair, not nave down our throat What is the use ¢ cational uplift. un Doubtless they are right. » me and money for a compressed edu- s some fun in it, withal? 2B EE | SHATTERED ILLUSIONS. WE cherry in the cocktail never saw maraschino. peach is out of a i peach is out of reach—we get the peacherino, what is whisk Real brandied No one knows Doctored and Y. Beer, likewise, is mysterious, éyed with benzaldehyde, all drinks ar : Coffee will make you wooz parilla’s a dangerous filler, Mold on a minute! this news, and not the b © deleterious, and poisons lurk in tea. Sarsa- Milk’s not all it should be. Water— A man’s thirst must be slaked. vz, Suppose be falsified and faked ? | Jless"—only 6 attempt ort of thing a tha Evening World eae Pubit hing Company, os, 63 to 63 | | “A Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), By Sophie Irene Loeb. W Tt cufio, IwANT MARRY MY IDEAL MY Sou. MATE A POET. VE ANARTIOTIC TEMPERAMENT. [CINCH A TRUTH THROUGH MY FEELINGS AND THEN STORE IT AWAY 1H MY INTELL HAVE | Mave “ MYSELF CLEAR? j “The slow, steady ‘savers are the founders of the big “(Women to-day are as much in line for making the big LEN T asked Mr. predident of the Citizens’ Say-| of thelr money, he has issued a rule relattve to deposits ings Rank, some of his ideas as| Mor instance, tt proves by etatistics| that states: to how to start a/that clerks realize most the value of] “Al. DEPOSITS MADE BY MT- Daily Magazine, Cupid’s Pranks. By Maurice Ketten. RRR errr norerees On For MY Sout Mate | AWOMAN WHO CAN CINCH a TRUTH THROUGH HER FEELINGS ANO THEN STore (TAWAY /N HER INTEWECTUAL CoLo STORAGE REGIONS. | ASCLEAR AS MUD, MI, VULGET You THE MAN You WANT Sure! EXTUAL COLD STORAGE REGIONS aa MATRIMONIAL BuREAU ERE 1 YouR BOUL NATE No, Sie , 1 FEED ON QUICK(AKO BE HAPPY MUCK, PEANUTS, AND RAW CARROTS 00 You Feep on Poems 3 HERE'S A POEM, DEAR HUBBY FEED yous Sout PUNK! with POEMS?! Don'T FEED ON THAT ~ WHAT IWANT IS RAW VEGETABLES - PEEL THE CARROTS OP QVict [WANT Some |FEED, Wwirey HENRY HASLER (President of the Citizens’ Savings Bank) SAYS: “ONE OF THE PRINCIPAL REQUISITES OF A CITIZEN IS TO SAVE,” “WOMEN AND MINORS ARE PRIME FACTORS IN THE PROCESS OF SAVING.” ~ fortunes,” “Clerks, according to statistic: sity for saving.” fortunes as the opposite sex. man actually becomes a citizen when he acquires a spirit of savin; application in this matter of saving. say the least. Aside from the usual as- sets and Habilities, {t shows the human game in this matter of saving to @ marked degree and proves that Mr, Hasler has an unusual personal interest in how, when and why humans dispose Another interesting fact ts that single women save less than single men, and my suffrage sisters no doubt recognize this as an argument for the equal pay idea, And Mr, Hasler, through Mes sta- tistics, has no doubt realized this, since century Henry Hasler, fo tune NORS OR MARRIE he the dollar—perhapa because they come he wom IN WI Reflections ofa fortune T think tt is the first requi- ne Vy, HOW TO START A FORTUNE “Small accumulations form the root of the big fortunes.” show the most propen- “Foreigners are founding fortunes for the future by their belfeving N AND COVE NRA oe By Ana Coppright, by The Press Pullishing Co, (The New York World), No 25.—T. W. Robertson’s “CASTE.” 111 nel HII i i wanting marriage, ren é F je Hy bi ft | i ti rf if lt i JHE Honorable George D'Alroy had a small brain and a big heart. He was an officer in the English army and was the only son of ]) the haughty old Marquise de St. Maur, The Marquise’s hobby was social caste and high ancestry. She was forever impressing on her son that he owed !t to Ais lofty lineago and excellent social position |to make a brilliant marriage. But Gee upset all his mother's calculations by falling hopelessly in love with her Becles, a pretty chorus girl. Esther and her sister Poliy worked hard to support their worthless, drunken old father, who was for- ever mortifying them in some absurd fashion. George confided to his chum, Capt. Hawtree, the secret of his love for Esther. “She is a nice girl, no doubt,” objected Hawtres, “but as to your making her Mre. D'Alroy, the thing is out of the question.” “What should prevent me?” demanded George. “Caste! The inexoratie law of caste The social law that commands iffve t0 mate with ifke, I wender what your mother, the Marquise Ge St Saun, would ¢hink of Papa Bocles, Imagine that dirty reMan—reeking of stale beer— that walking barroom—for @ fatherdn-lew!” But George was deat to Hawtreve arguments, He proposed to Miuthen Ghe murmured dountfuly: “Think of the difference in our stations!” “That's what Hawtree says!” fumed George “Caste! Castet Cusse caster” | Eather really loved George and after moch A Secret she consented to marry him. They went to live in Marriage. little house and for ——eed nother wae in courage to tell her of his marriage with a trl eo far below | A féw months later a summons came to active service in India with hie regiment. t once He dreaded to tell Esther of their approaching he wes trying to summon courage to do this, his mother was Marquise, hearing of George's intended departure for France and hed come to say goodby to her eon. Esther, not | her anti! George should have broken the news of his nxt room. | The Marqirise greeted her gon effectionatety and epoire of hie proposed | to India on active service. She reminded him of how brevely had fought in England's wars and warned him against falling | India, with any ane below him in station. The sound of a room {nterrupted her. George fiung open the connecting had overheard the whole talk, lay in @ faint upon the her up in his arma As she recovered consciousness he end tndignant mother and eaid deflantiy: “Let me present you to my wife.” | _ Refore the horrified Marquise couk question him, old etageered the room, very drunk, "Who ts this?’ asked the Marquine, recoiling in Gisguet from the @rink-sodden old man, “My wife's father,” replied George “See me to my carriage,” gasped the Marquise, “I am broken-hearted.’ George went to India, where the Gepoy rebellion was at ite height Mfonths after ‘his departure news reached England that he hed deen Killed in battle Esther and her baby son were left elone and pennilesa The Marquise to take the boy, for George's eake, and to bring him up as her own, on con ition that Hsther would make no attempt to see him. The young widow rejected the offer in anger and resolved to support herwalf and the baby dy going on the stage again. But stage engagements were hard to find. In the mean time he was in actual poverty, Forid Eccles managed to steal what little money she could earn. Docles had also intercepted and gambled eway $9,000 thet her husband had sent her on reaching Indid, When effaira were at their very worst, George DtAlroy Back from appeared. He had been captured by the Sepoys, had been || the Dead. mourned by his friends as dead; and, as soon as he could md 80050, had hestened back to England. Not knowing thet Eccles had stolen the money he had eent for his wife's support, George was thunderatruck at sight of her poverty. In the midst of thetr happy rounton, the Marquise appeared. In her joy at her son's safe return the old women forgot her silly pride acd took Mather to her heart, sobbing: “Dear daughter, we must forget our differences.” Then, to George, she added: 1 “We'N take her d and make a lady of her.” “We can't," replied George, "She's ready mnt is af right. It shuts the door on the pretentious and the vulgar, but ft should | open the door very wide for merit, Let brains break through its Darnerss and what brains can break through, love may leap over!” Real Tip-Toppers. ENATOR BROW: ho didn't ites om me whenever 1 had a glass of Oh, ‘replied, ‘T mean places | have tiles kinds o€ whne and nyt the men @wear,’"—Dutroit Free Press, Thus Mr. Hasler ts a real twentteth | : individual the victor belong the spoils,” and that any one, even a minor or a marriod | woman, has the right to sd usage of his or her moneys, and pre- | suming accordingly that the future for- tune-makers will be among tliexe seota. In a word, he does not agree that !t |has been altogether right in the past to that “to| y aw to the (The May Manton Fashions | UCH @ fancy finds many’ uses swered: “Ican give| in close contact with it and are com-| BE FULLY UNDER THEIR OWN | designate an tndividual as and t It {8 an excellent you of course the| paratively among the best savers. Of| CONTROL, PAYABLE TO THEM ON|add strength to this bellet is the te model for the entire old formula ‘Save, | course this fe borne out by men of big) THHIR OWN RECEIPTS WITHOUT | jowing item to those who would #ave fown and it eumves Save!’ Ahd I would | fortunes who have worked in this capac-| REGARD 'TO ANY GUARDIAN OR| «IN THE CONSTRUC or | GLA | her oa add that persiat-| ity. HUSBAND. 2 PIONS, | ent saving is the ‘——= | EVERY TERM tRING ‘TO A! only way. Aside DEPOSITOR WHICH IMPORTS THE | from making @ J ER ONLY, IS D2- | RA sil and wit! oat MALE, FEMALE, LODGE, INSTIIT ribbon, but a ators are i : - SOR wo mate ¢ At say you to the trans. t who " ” ree ty Str 1 >. combined, . Be ey fen 1 ‘rans: leollects stampa on an intelligent and| SOPHIC’ IRENE up of the citizen, a JATE BODY WHEN ACT OR av of the tabs t# nov jay ag ed and solely for the Lore ‘There ix nothing ——— | PEARING AS A DEPOSITOR, And distinctive, yet tho ine tenantorn|Sreceure ant mort tio ey nity that maken a man By Helen Rowland | thus he recognizes the right of every Dioune’in a apie oe we maeil O90? tangy Lo wc. | teallze his relations to the community af | Person to found his own fortune, which to make, Finished with a 90 The ridge ¢ as much as when he has begun @ say- lis a seourtty unto itself, and thinks this the neck and i ue us To the Ealtor i? : ia ing process. Copyright, 1911, by ‘The Press Publishing Co (The New York Worl!) | should be inst 4 early within the ; bp yi 4 @ | precincts of ly, o that each means so m g away |,, 7° orrespondent signing himself Fagan * the best Anarene. $3: e OLD on tight to your heart and head, around the precincts of the family, #0 that exch over east and who, tn all probanitity, |." § very pertinently asks where | 1" troup a Sa ee curves of flirtation. Paeneat 1; r : | of the fitted ip employed as far west as Ni ‘ana |e © at the Brooklyn Bridge : TOs TA LE Tere ae ‘allon | which can be used or Tenth aven to discriminate against Uaitea which is primarily a +a singte lotter--and about) Married People Save Less. | omitted aa Uked. It ts DAILY COMMU ders on the % Cropeing tha | cece cen & Business opportunity | A It ta only the shifting of a single nie ‘or at present,” sald Mr, If made w front an win s ae Abalial and asks what other rea is born every And right here {n a) $500—to make “united” spell “untied 1 saving age seems to be side. ks and f the Fait Evening World I think the police have no od — T have seen, the ees short | faa poabes g men and women betwe Aide-backs, Front and I have read with rest you ¥ | tine especially, @ atartting accumula- - ve ages of tw nd thir rack . | Pgpslel el pall oe Pg tere root M19- | tion of money ROWLAND It ts no longer au fait to tell a girl that you Tove | Aes of ten squares finished and I he Postage 6 Public Service law, rive TRON INVERT IGAnION ia that’ ¢ 0 D arr Avavarthe eile: Yut of Date? Doubdtiess it i by Anticle If, Sections tt | grANP UPON INVESTIGATION 1 ner; ask hor if ake could lore you, That's the latest metropolitan fashion | isnt the a arranged over the eide- 'e leng before w f sald law, which reads as fol- |i ROUGH MARKED SoistEriec: | Of putting the delicate question, at In the ; Paks of trimming are. ai verueded by something more exped mon carrier aball make | {orn secu nn op eee oie | —_— \ seta them, The ane MULOAHC device serving HYG, OF SAAR OBN 5 WHIOH 1 - Men, like anything else, need distance to lend them enchantment—and | ymade tn e stamp an eference or advaatage to any ' oe ’ ; aii ch, Anis ne war obviating the neces porpoka to locaijty, | the better you know them the more distance you are apt to give them, it “if post ‘king, &c., which, und the }'@ any particular des ptlon of traf. monte aS a pase bel ® 4 Aranent system, ‘consumes & great ceal|f° in Any reapect whatsoever, or to oe | Only a spinster can tell you anything about how to manage a man; a} thore who dc im SU 08, Ceara ca if time and occasions considerable delay |*¥0Ject Any particular person, or cor- “VIRST OF ALL, IT RULIEVER| wife is too busy experimenting to stop and theorize; and a widow knows| "No 1 do not” ar verde Moral ines h the tranmission of ma!) matter, al-|Poration, or locality) or any. particular una! he by r L : wide, with 1 yard of aedy there are scveral t of ma. (description of traffic to any undue or COMMUD Y OF PUBLIC | it's no use, | savers ried men and wome pk A andi vanaa a? jMines of this nature in ital |UNFeasonable prejudice or disadvantage AND PAUPBRS, AND I — | thelr saving comes out of @ nocossit velvet ribbon te trhn @ in France, Germany and Austria, |! ny respect whatsoever." B, B. F. THAT ONE OF THE Wonder if the prophylactic craze for individual drinking cups, indir| for saving that continuslty contro as ilustrated fio there are a number of skilled In- Former Reason In Correct, | NIN Dths COMMUNE Y | vidual doorknobs, c,, Will extend to the matter of individual latch-keys | (Me™ ERsGer Sa S Geed Seer Pattern No, 7110 is Perigo | To the Faitor of The Brening World a MMUN | rs , ee oh | the e end spella succes: cut in sizes fon a “a pied Ap bd “ ir by 4 Why, 16 freasiug’ 166 orang, ta east THAT MAKES HIM | for husbands and wives, But there! 4 wife is thankful for even so much | ute ig @ fallacy to believe in the ol, W Wi 35 and 40 inch bu Pig oF On » 18 | us mel! , m1 ¥ J {dea that 4 omy to marry and| Without Ce wit \ ited 1 e, my @ matter of time when they will | , elt the tee for the purpose | 5! PRICIENT, jas an individual toothbrush, a that it ds nomy to mar I © successful tn producing stamping |” r freezing the cream or to pre- It te serve the fce and make tt last longer? M, M vachines of prac utility, A cessa von in the issuance of postage stamps cUid not affect the values of philatele Pecimens. Furthermore, philatelists do ders solve th fot buy up “large quantityts of cur-| probiem? £8 idm, 6¢ ‘ent Jasues of stamps, tn anticipatign | 19s. 6d. Answer in English money, { thelr becoming obsekte and pric G, WIEDEMAN, Staten Island. An “Engl | To the Eatitor of rid Engliah money | the saving process that forms the foun- | of the ages, sexes, amounts, &c by our report for instan multiplied by £3| “The Lest Savers Here Mr which leo very interesting to note how two can live as true in the mi : | No, Clarice, there is no more danger in allowing your husband to em-|™ aa designaiea | Plo @ pretty stenographer than in throwing a lighted match into a waster basket. fortunes p the fortunes made li and sure of Maslas shun gualaieeeain The saddest sight on earth is that of a son watching his father maka & most unigue documens go @ [001 Of Aimeel/ in an Indian summer flirtation, the “But the great truth that shows how the process of slow, ng that cumulating a sum of tnoney which | turn made more and so on high standards were reached,” ly as one,’ It mmmnenen 3) WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION nd Twenty-third street, or send by past have been Y CO, 18 B, Twenty-third street, 2 4 teady wr stomps for each pattern ordered psulted in a address platy Add two cents for let and always v postage if in # Patterus) il the jherey errr, pen ene &

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