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Che Pabliched Dally Mxcept 4. ANGUS STLAW, Pree end Tre 63 P R Biorld. anday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 68 te 68 Park Row, New York JOSEP PULITZER Juntor, Bec'y. 63 Park a, —_— - ~ —___———» dat the Post-Offico at New York as Second-Class Mattor, Th stion ston to so Evening| Por England and the Continent and ond tor the. Uniied wiates ‘All Countries In, the International aad € da 1 1 Union, 0 Your One Year oe me Month Oo} One Month. MANHATTAN BEACH HOTEL. Y the time the snow flies, prob- ably, nothing will remain of the site, and the recollections of a third of a century’s seaside sport and festivities. When Austin Corbin, senior, built the begin- nings of the big caravansary in 1877 Coney Island was a wind- ewept No Man’s Land, where no- body thought uf going except for shore dinners and surf bathing “in the buff.” But the fortunes of the place rose with the horse-racing carnivals of Gravesend, Sheeps- | head Bay’and Brighton, until on a Brooklyn Handicap or a Suburban | day as many as 10,000 diners sled on the famous broad veran- dahs, “swept by ocean bree: The breezes are as strong and as salty as ever, but the prohibition of race-track betting has taken the | wind out of the sails of the hostelry as a financial enterprise. The recollections of Manhattan Beach clustet around personali- ties rather than events. From the old registers of the hotel a fairly complete Who's Who of politicians, racing men, “sporting” brokers | and stage celebrities during mote than a quarter of a century past | gould be compiled. In the musical hall of fame the names of Patrick S. Gilmore and Anton Seidl are figuratively graven on memorial tab- lets. It was at the Manhattan coneerta that Gilmore realized in| actual practice what the ecaricaturists of Paris used to ‘attribute to! Berlioz in wild extravaganza—by punctuating his grand climaxes with | the firing of cannon! “No Dogs Allowed” was a regi m ion that held with ironclad force at Manhattan, in contrast to some others even more important that were practically dead lettered. When the late Col. “Bob” Ingersoll, | of agnostic persuasion, arrived with a Newfoundland big enough to tow a ship into port, Mr. Corbin said: “Sorry, Colonel, but you'll have | to choose between that animal’s company and mine.” Ingersoll stuck to the canine, and put up somewhere else. | All is changed now, and the modern cottages, boulevards, bathing establishments, esplanades and sea walls that will face the Atlantic in place of the old-fashioned wooden structure may be taken as typical | of a younger generation's stepping into thé shoes of the bygone. +2 LOCAL LANDING OF COLUMBUS. HRISTOPHER COLUMBUS has sighted land, and even now is in parley with native chiefs of Man- hattan Island, who show such signs of friendliness that soon the great navigator may set foot ashore. He has come across, and he expects the Manhattanites to do the same. In other words, the municipal Board of Estimate is to-day deciding the fate of the money appropriation asked by the Mayor's committee to assure the educational and spectacular celebration planned for Oct. 12, which will be the first civic recognition by the City of New York of the anniversary of the discovery of the American continent by the said Columbus. Manhattan Beach Hotel but the | k ’ * . Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing On, (The New York World), By Roy L. McCardell. 66 BLL,” id Mrs. Jarr, “it you will be foolish, and won't be satisfled unk you get into trouble and worry, having none at The school children of New York who are to participate in the | fetes know more about geography than Columbus did when he started out from Spain to sail around a world which his esteemed con- temporaries insisted was flat. But he set an ever-living example of courage and optimism, and it is not hia fault if there isn’t room! enough for all the children in our public schools to-day. By help-| the present except the worry that have no talk “All I want is some sincere friend to advise me, I'm #0 innocent of the ways of the ing them to learn unforgettably the lessons of Columbus Day, Father wore yoeraiee Knickerbocker will be in the.way of making graceful amends for ee) oy ee on ekimped school facilities. Mudridge Smith, . the young woman married to a rich old Anu sgibiidianiiede cee gentleman N view of the already polluted and unsanitary condition of the harbor and river waters around New York City, it ought ndt to be necessary to y legal warfare to prevent the New Jersey Pas- saic Sewerag Commission from boring a $6,000,000 tunnel from ra : ip i He |the world and all {ts soulkilling con-| js remark did not appear to excite | seem to be particular nowadays. | ventionalities,” sald Mrs, Smith, with the Newark Meadows to Robins’ much enthu: in Mra, Jarr. She "A woman never feels that she t# really attractive untit she has used | {ROME eke » 1 : only replied, i y Ser 4 Reef in order to make our Upper | 0h teryed: wvell, what Gertrades the | everything from the corset to the curling tongs in trying to impress. Ma Well, don't do anything rash until say inte Shh an sit hang | : ce. anted that he was made in the imag | you meet Mr. Dinkston,” sald Mrs, Jar. Bay an inter-State dumping light yunniog ses tis entered. and nature; but a mat fakes if for gr + |"Phe women who have dared of recent ground, We are living now in|f' oe fh pore! God—and lets it go at that. ‘ have taken to tmpoverished poets i, 4 ' g 2 n |!s here ‘ ; ‘A man's idea of being a model husband is to do nothing of which A well as plumbers and gasiltters. Mr. the second decade of the twen-| "Oh dear” dais Mra. Jarr fat toe | wife would disapprove—if there 4s the slightest chance of his being found Dyinkgton is Hable to drop in any time. tieth century, and it is high time that even dwellers along the line |e the two weeka when we were away, lout {Watt for nim. ? ; ee) Q : —wher an't| “I do declare!" ay ef the E t wind of the fact that modern science has found two, When T begged him to do so, and now, On, yes, a@ man sometimes tells a woman the truth—when he can it td se aes lie eats eauid . i x ride when T have the place in good order ¢ convincing ipaurgen: J elkiin the mos br three nt wa ing sewage Ir Hous and inoffensive and my fal cleaning alt done, here he | Mink up anything else more convine a cold-blooded manner. Have you no . ¢ 1 ‘ A ¢ pourted, fweals at all?” y means of purif o the an be gotten ric | sends @ paper-hange A fool and her money are soon ¢ 2 ledvo ne by mea : » that it can be gotten rid of in its, ® ine aga | Seaman dhdienis a oe iE bave® tha: GlAstaanianad’. aaa own immediate ne ; | ; x sald Mrs, Jarr.. “If you'll be wise you'll From this us from every large city that has water fronts Belief. Ancient Parasols. (ton, suhag id ays: follow them, too, Me ects op. ’ ‘s ae be . . HERE came & woman singing down the tar . . r a Speed . " e. book Ww * (From the London Chronicle.) Here's a sainple Grom a text | “What are they? asked the visttor. am of waste out, sufficient to poison the surround- T Be SST EM: One 7m ber Yous Parasols, when they frat came tnte|geaghing table manners at the State]! eTney consist mainly In belng patient Frain nl) caine 1 RR ie y | At spring's new leaves Abont her fleure hung | use, must have been cumbersome, Henrl! Agricultural College: ‘Do not, for 8004~| ang i¢ you really can't stand your hus- to spoil pleasure parks and bathing beaches, damage property | sete Withee Rohe Hetlenn, writing in i878, speaks Of &| ness sake, use a pleos of bread to,n0 (enc, You Feally can't stand Your how values, and endanger human health and life. These dangers, as well Inet Taughter' was her Moot | Parasol as capable, Kenerally, of shel|the last of the gravy or sauce, Take [40% Ht full oie ihn le } i h 4 only that— 0 " ‘And| your time when you eat.’ Say, what| j 1 bank } iy that tering four persons from the sun H Cini ical ss the approved methods of protecting river and harbor from this shear thee auminiahna in olrounstara a'ye think of that? Abe Lincoin wopped | f muni w BAL DOR. Pet tne wey his corn dodger in venison gr anc : . taenace of municipal refuse, were admirably explained and illustrated the maceial tle of the heave, trate nanped hiv Buckw neat A Religious Discussion. st spring in the Public Health Exhibit of the Americar se emt ed velvet parasols, with ey le syrup before there was, ih Tilansh Ghia: ta leans aast spr 2 he Public Health } t of the American Museum of gold fring : by Tales Oo] eee eee er the sisslawippi~snd | |). eeesty eas Ceamaen tart Craaae History. | My" banner fashion tr ry, At got into pretty good company ‘fore it. work homas Diggs ‘| My garment, invitation to the wala h mak . hen choeaite ed. ‘The pioneers sopped buffalo | and the Rev, Mr. Thomas Belford, and the result Jersey ought to send for ie ouahte thet teiet themaetven ebeat | tat time it was p , Of tt was (hata warrant. was sworn, out for the re i [Moe ye of athe may berths “tla bridge in Paris, to hira « paragol at! meat gravy off'n tin plates when they | verend pair et Thomasee for having created. the eee isco a = I cannot tell; 100h im these eyes and. uses; one end and posit it at the other, | were chasin’ the Indians from the prat=| racket when and where they did. They got into a | Mear thou my rotce, wince at these age-old looks, | (he charge for the accommodation being | ries and breakt wod to make the | discussion over a matter of, Seripture-prewumably A SUSPICION. ! BELLE’S IDEA, Wear thou my smile.” Then did she dispoear, (a sou, Under the Regensy fashion went | farms, and they were pretty wood citi- | 02 the prevaution as ta, whether Jonah wae smal. mit myself to become the! «n, has been going atety gor | Reins, me iia eath and ag! [to the other extreme, Men's parasols! zena, ‘Say, don't you think it'd be better | ional», % Teport states @ave of a hadi lasts and Crafte.” ‘ALitimd a) * | folded into the shape of a three-cor-! for them fellers to put in all their time that one of mor out 6, knife, ria “Don't you? e ou y hier twice once more, red hat and could thus be carried | at college learning how to put Kood hog | cuurch, and. it logked as ing, Uo out Don't you? T had an idea that you! wy. % i on ' a Nev table ta | tie other Rev, "Thomas Theo : ad become a good deal of a slave to) “What's her tdeat? | Penelghts, beyeuds wD Ae eller Mel iat elegantly urider the arm, Ladies’ piras| gravy, and plenty of It, on the table to fitads aie aiaatregntoo, aod 1 Looked a ¢ he habit of boasting about your) “She declares that it takes both art! Fo,neghis.berond: “tam Bellet, Bolf Sols were hinged so that they could| pop than to be worryin’ how they are | surgeon Gr an underatar mip needed ght” aay ength of will’ —Chicago Record ays to capture @ buss | All full ama hscees, | wy pend Ne slip into the pocket, for ladies sad going to get It into their systems in a! i fis hated aud riba | ‘he ot Boston Transcri -.F v = kets th to please society folks?” eomebody.—Cattlesburg (KJ.) Sorel, a | Mery Byerley tb . pockets then, way ‘iddiesticks!" said Mrs. Jarr shortly. ‘What you don't know, Clara Mudridge mith, and what you didn’t know, for that matter, I could give you no tnfor- mation upon, As for advice, you're like all the rest of the people who ask for it, If it's the advice you want to hear you'll follow tt and blame whoever gave it to you if matters turn out badly, And {f it isn't what you want to hear you won't pay any attention to ft, any- way.” “Twill 90," chimed the visitor, “I'l do exactly what you say, because you are my dearest friend, my only friend!"* Poet or Plumber, Which Is the Preferabie Affinity? | Mrs. Jarr Counsels Caution in Either Case. Sure to Pass. ‘ By Rolf Pielke, ont ununthaP Ml “Do you want me to begin in here, Indy?” asked a stalwart young man in White overalls. He stood in the hall- way peering in, Behind him stood, atacked up, @ astepladder ond a@ folding table such as is used to trim wall paper upon, = * "Well, I suppose so," sald Mrs. Jarr, “out I wish I had had word of this. Here, Clara, help me take down. the Pictures!" Young Mrs. Mudridge Smith buckled to with a right good will, while the eyes of the paper-hanger were upon her in open admiration, “Who's the swell Jane?” he whis- ; to-da, Pered to Gertrude, the maid. “She's; “We are in revolt,” said Mr: got ice enough on her to light up &| “We seok marital emancipation.’ dark nigh! Gertrude informed the} Mrs. Jarr sat down on the plano stool artisan that {t was a very wealthY| and looked her visitor over with a cold young married lady, glance, while Gertrude and the paper- “What a stalwart and manly young hanger prepared the rest of the room tallow,” sald Mrs. Mndridge Smith to| for the onslaught of decorative art. Mrs, Jarr in an admiring aside. And| “Loo here,” said Mrs. Jarr to her © gave the paper-hanger one Of her | younger friend, “if you want to do me sweetest smiles. a favor, while you are determined to Mrs, Jarr was shocked. “Clara Smith | maxe a fool of yourself, find a. ‘soul I belleve you'd flirt with a messenger | mate among the tradesmen of this boy!" she declared, “What's the Mats | neighborhood. I owe quite a bill at the ter with the young married women of} nyrcner's, and sugar and coffee have 403 See ce gone up so high, not to mention other staple groceries, that if you will insist on being a fool please elope with my grocer if the butcher don't sult you, A paper-hanger will do me no good, nor a | plumber, either, for that matter, as all the repairs—that is, when we can get | any repairs made—are patd for by the || Indlora, “The janitor, too," continued Mrs. Jarr, “1s a fine, manly looking person. Copytight 1911, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). | He drinks hard and chews tobacco and T love @ woman is human—to keep on telling he also beats his wife—she perhaps ts Smith. Reflections ofa BACHELOR GIRL By Helen Rowland her ao ia divine. Bee eee Same emotional plane with Being engaged without a ring is merel¥ | 4. ivtning rash, We are dependent giving a man an option on your lije without requiring | on him for so many things. any evidence of good faith Miade ai See Menke von: ali’ A man ig like a baby; all he needs to make him erat her Hen ec would think was jus " perfectly happy is to be given something to chew on, pot Pein iy Be eee and allowed to go around the house smashing things, fs Ary ort ihe tblnae te tee ee Perhaps divorce is becoming so popular because a foto months of Oth | reading in the papers about ‘aMinities’ mony looks so much more attractive than @ lifetime of nar: haa turned your head to Every woman is looking for some “particular man’ the janitor over before you ROWLAND “At least those women dared to brave fees. Wage business. torttes to ow Mayor for @ girt with He can find plonty charged an enormous price. We 35 cents. Bhave, 15 cente; bdutiding were out, away and left her in Ontcago. arrested for disturbing the peace. 4 young girt proposed to James lock of her hair. avwiten, By Sophie Irene Loeb. ND now we have a Less Lonely League, which was formed, ac- cording to the secretary, because ‘New York is the loneliest city in the world.”* She says, ‘It Je such @ tremendous place and there is no adequate so- cial organization, Boys and girs come here year after year and disappear like dew- drops in the ocean. ¥ Either they stick SOPHIE IRENE closely to thetr LOEB work and = lead Narrow, sordid, monotonous lives, or else in a fever of disillusionment and | despairing loneliness they plunge into & vortex of vice. This is a very good movement, but {t 1s only ONE organization and solves but this question of loneliness for but one hundred people according to the present count. Of course we may have other chap- ters of the mother organization in the time to come which niay alleviate a social condition, or more correctly UN- SOCIAL condition, which every one is nome time or other called upon to in the humdrum of ONE | might be reckoned with with prof! Loneliness, like fatlure, when all ts summed up, I3 ONLY FOR THOSE WHO RECOGNIZE IT. For instance, a man the other day said: “I am more lonely In @ crowd than anywhere in the world.” ‘The reason of this 1s because he ts not interested -n that crowd, He is not in ACCORD with it. ‘Who {s more lonely than a fellow who knows nothing about a baseball game in the midst of a crowd of enthusiasts, jeven though they be his friends? All of this tends to show that this feeling |{s largely due to not being tn close communion with that which tt ABOUT | one—and in TOO CLOSE communion with one's self. While Socrates sald, “Know thyself,” you and I and all of us know that it ts | bad business to know one's self TOO | WELL, so that when alone the attl- | tude is by myself, of myself and for| myself. There {8 no need for this, an4| | the Individual who 1s Inclined to be} lonely may cultivate a spirit of action to make him strongly SUFFICIENT unto himself, As Btevenson says, “We are In such haste to be DOING, to be writing, to . BAKEWELL eoys that many pastors’ wives get their ‘vin money from wedding 4n6 we thought the pastor was the ne man to de Denefited by thie mer. Witten Mummy of Arkonees City Mr. Wateon complaine that he went into a Ddarder shop and wee 908 @ shave the other day and tt cost only barber (tp), It just happened that the proprietor of the ehop and the owner, of We \ — The encke charmer who was here last week claimed that Pick up the wildest of enakes without being ditten, After taking @ close look at her we don't diame the enakes, — 4 woman comes to New York ond has her Ausdand arrested who veR that's no place to leave a lady. . Now some one proposes that huedande de tazed. Not tare¢—retared. “4 man tn Ohicago kitle Kimself before a mirror.” Many othere would commit euicide if they should happen to look themselves in the fece. In Denver a man suffering from asthma coughed eo much that he wee, In New York they arrest you tf you don't cough, The actor says he wouldn't marry the girl tf she Rad sent the wack a Matter of Habit?}: i Copyright, 1011, by The Press Pablishing Co. (The New York World), tlence of eternity, that we forget the be gathering gear, to make our voice Practical Demonstration. noike at midnight in one of bie 1 roo! gentleman thpto thinking to take the bur | Sikes, however, to be the owner of the house fully | befor ” pening he was looking down the wuzale fue that you are at my mercy?” | Yes." replied the house owner, | And also realize that 1 could aboot you dead | Javier trembling affirmative, trembling affirmative, fYoudid mot hear’ me cuter the house?” “Well, if you had your windows fitted with one | ot Ketchum's new patent this | wonlda’s Dave happened, ("at the Rowse owner hid owooned.—Idean aud a Joni j pane shol ‘mne at Well |somewhat puazied, iy Tt an agent for | 10 cente; porter (tip), 10 conta. , RB. Hackett by letter and inclosed “ « audible moment in the derisive gle ip ONE thing, of which these are but the | Darts—namely, TO LIVE. We fall in love, we drink hard, we run to and ‘ fro upon the earth like ¢rightened sheep. And now you are here to ask yourself if when all ts done you would not have been better to sit by the fire at home, and be HAPPY THINKING, “To alt still and contemplate—to ree member the faces of women without desire, to be pleased by the great deede of men without envy, to be everything and everywhere in SYMPATHY, and yet content to remain where and what you are—is. this not to know both wise dom and virtue and to dwell with hap Piness? “After all, it is not they who CARRE. FLAGS, but they who look upon it from a PRIVATE chamber who have the FUN of the procession.” And Stevenson knew whereof he spoke, for HE had been with ¢he crowded crowds and alone with his loneliness, Thus you and I and all of us are inclined to call tt “loneliness” when are not in the whirlpool ef social activity. When there are #0 many truly absorbing possibilities im the “alone time” which wants but @ bia of CULTIVATION to prove! to dwell on the great COM. HIP of printed thoughts te keep the mind from dwelling on one’s self, which is the real ci of lone. Mness, Interest yourself in the world about you. For it Is a very big world with a very large sky. gAnd you may walk out in the open at any and all times. As to this, the same Stevenson says: “A walking tour should be gone upon. alone because freedom ts of the es- sence; because you should be able to stop and go on, and follow this way or that, as the freak takes you; and bee cause you must have YOUR OWN pace, and neither trot along with @ champion walker nor mince. in tim with a girl, And then you must be open to all impressions and let your thoughts take color from what you see, You shouldbe as a pipe for any wind to play upon. Certainly we need companionship, ate version, change, recreation—but “there oments when one wants to be So, summed up, loneliness ts a mate ter of HABIT, Times without number the FEAR of being alono has caused more suffering than the actual bel also the seeking of compantonship that marred rather than jnade, And often at such’ timer TION proved DISTRA( DISP. D VATING THE ING ALONE, ATTRAC. ON, Took a Long Shot. HEN Joseph F, J: ingt ston arrived In Want Cot the Vatted Sate ‘lo and room a) bel ‘ Ores well" comme