The evening world. Newspaper, October 9, 1911, Page 18

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“eee eommemmamn Se The Evening “World | Daily “Magazine, 4 } | : Biorld. | The Day of Rest. e Press Publishing Company, Noe. 68 to 63 Poblished Datiy Except Sunday py, tn ¥, tne Br . F f 8. ANGUS, saw, ot Fivean No eh PULITZER Junior, Bec'y. By Maurice Ketten. Park’ Row. jo a — - j Post-O1 New, York as Second-Class Matter q en Te Por guedivening | Por England an the Cont -—-——_—_— = -- a Worid ror'the ited Btates Countryenlin, ie dn | OWG Bust it! att BatwTue ae gre Free » 99.68 18a Sone : HOw CAN | \ Senor WHAT 2 THE MATTER. Ono Monta: sees T (3 fOHN WITH THE GAS STove 2? Hy ———— xo ARE A BATH REMEMBER THis (WANT To HEAT SOME a OUUED Ottavereyesssosseetessys+ i WITHOUT > | Fog occurance? WATER ary WASH Over Conyelaht, 1911, ly Phe Brew Pablishinge Co, (The New York Wort), seat = c > Ms Fs a ; | “- mp eam. Bee eave be No. 1V.~ The Dawn of the Revolution. Fi NEW YORK’S DOCKS. HI} ar : a HERE ONLY TALL, stalwart, Virginia boy, ecarcely of age, won for himself t . ka a A WEEK s much local fame by plunging {nto the wintry wilderness, in j © maintain commercial su- , December, 1754, and crossing hundreds of miles of forest, infested : yremaey a community must od by savage beasts and still more savage Ind{ans. f afford transhipping facili- py, He carried a letter of protest from Gov. Dinwiddie of Virginia to the ' ties as well as a market French commander on the Ohio River. This message was, in a way, the a Stee’ Pork in ths ‘Haale first indirect move that was to lead up to the revolution, twenty years Jater. fi rh ba! a It was the protest of inspired Colonists. And its youthful bearer was k market of the new world, destined one day to become the chief actor in that matured Latte ss drama, | but in its facilities for He was George Washington. handling commerce it is far | | France and England were masters of the greater part of North Amertca. F from meeting the require- : Along the Atlantic seaboard and for a very few miles inland, ching the | ments of ocean trade, Dock eT fringe of English colonies. Thirteen of them. To the south were Spain's | n ade. | - Florida possessions. (But even at that time Spain’s bolt was shot, and she Commissioner Tompkins re- | - - was no longer a serious factor in North Ahinoas affairs.) To the north, ports that he has on file| | 14" STARVED ! Tae ELECTRICITY HASN'T SENT gre ~\ in Canada, the French ware tn full control. ‘The Frenoh pioneers had ateo some twenty applications CAN'T You Coors ay Seen Ste be ir Wena - Wy [Pushed westward along the Great Lakes and down the Misslssipat River to the ] pplice | [ON THE AWEER AGO, ° WHERE ARE ALL pe a | Guit of Mexico, claiming the whole region as “New France,” from steamship lines, const | ELEcTRIC que THem Vie THe EASY, To MATCH OUR | There was a continent thousands of miles wide and q wise and transatlantic, wish- | Tie Te CHAIRS 7 New PAPER_ Preparing stretching from Florida to the Aretie, And there were ; fap a, rite only @ handful of French and Rnglish settlers to occupy ing to come Hg the port of | ha sci Ad it. There was not only room for all of them, but for a New York, or desiring further facilities for handling their continu- | Pe hundred miltion more. Yet, almost at once, the French k, nf the English fron Yat led ove ally increasing business. These are in addition to applications from if ans tieremen clashed. They quarrelled over boundary tnes and over fur trading rights, France and England were hereditary foes, and thetr emigrants here took up the squabble—in a vast land that could have swallowed all of France and England several times over, The French butlt a chain ef forts from north to @outh and seemet abort to rh the English settlers east- ward into the Atlantic, The Indians, too, ested with the French and added the horrors of tomahawk and torture to the w: Gov, Mnwiddte protested in vain against the encroachments of the French forts, hen the English colonists turned to the moth vintry for aid in their | hour of dang Rot England was slow in sending aoklienrs, mt when «he Atd send them they were for a long time too few for the tusk of repelling the French, | So the colonists were cast uj thetr own resources for defense agatnst their foes, It was a sharp leason, Dut {t waa the firet step toward Liberty, Up to this time the different Fnelish colonies ‘had, for the most part, Itttle in common with each other, Now, under pressure of a ppimon peril, they | combined against the French. The war taught them not only how to fight Itke | heroes and to rely on their own prowess rather than on English help, but It Is SHAKESPEARE DEAD? 4 Tre RaviATORS welded the scattered colonies {nto one compact body, with mutual interests, ‘ NOT bans claret learned to rally to dts sister ¢ Lea alt ‘ ne A : " : hen at la ly beaten and were forced to NDOURBTEDLY the rumors conyesteo ' x 3 leave England almost undlaputed mistress of Noreh America, 4t proved #0 66 of Shakespeare's death arc THEY oncy 7 very different sort of North America from that of ten years earlier. Tt was RALea SAAN Ful thay qr IN - no longer populated merely by English settlers, who Mved each for himself and " ea who called themselves “Englishmen.” It was made up now of a strongly united sist among our theatrical band of colonies that had learned to love their new land because they had fought impresarii. Some there to save dt and who were held together by tles that were @trong as tron, No : longer did they turn helplessly to England in every moment of etresa, They are who, while not pre- were of tested strength, self-reliant, united—a dangerous force to opposa For cisely calling the Bard a they were the nucleus of a new World Power. dead one, still declare that To kick a hornet’s nest is not exactly a eate or # ts ¢ sane pastime. Yot that !s just what the British Partta- his name spells bankruptcy. ment now proceeded to do, It besan to heap heavy taxes This pessimistic attitude seems to be due mainly to the fact that the author of “Hamlet” and the rest of (rictions on the American colonies. It for- the repertory, whoever he bade them to export goods to any country but Fngland Tt exacted duties on, all their imports and crushed cheir efforts at establising was, confined himself too much to writing for stock | Manufactures of thetr own. Then, In me the Stamp Act companies of players trained in the art of reading measured poctie | —— ee ee es - 7 7 lines, and failed to provide for the requirements of the “star” sys- Aepugapaeanenan rgnnypny eoNne Leg NANO MAMIE EOC EE Re UL Noe The DOVes GOP SHrories, \ The hornet's nest w: kicked, hornets were out fn nee tem that prevails on the entire English-speaking stage to-day. ‘This M r J arr Di iscusses | A Gentle Tip. Al Wake on Le e . | did, sow'd think there w local river and sound lines. There are still further applications from } various railroad companies. 'The plans of the Dock Commissioner, if supported and carried to the desired finish, will afford relief. He points out that 40 per cent. of water front between Twenty-third street and the Battery pied by railroad car floats, while above this point the proportion i much greater. The removal of this congestion will give the steam- ghips tho access they need to the city and multiply by many millions the trade from distant and coastwise ports. is ocen- ry ; Se SET all these impositions, But times ‘had chang ers were no longer mere submiasive Engitsh subjects. They were AMERICA TEED | to resent ft. Twenty rs earlier th have bor meekly was a serious oversight, from the necessarily practical and commer- | ba eve ha gto rf “ ‘i A TIP were sitting on the bathing beach at | trousers was michty thin inished cial modern viewpoint. At the same time the Elizabethan dramatist L ing eri ean a H as h, IT ae eee cack teens ct | is oes bak Sie halk, aa ws of three hundred years ago did some good work that was in reality aand wonderful” he aid, after @ ith great care there was an expression on hie MONE NOMENON NM END EONS jee ae Seoliee "ana toa tink | eon, at leat it mense, Net on Man Te live stage stuff disguised as literature, and as such it is so well pre- served that it is bound to survive for ages yet as a reserve fund ble fabrics unttl y cold weather, or the knicker- ers could De made of one ma- terlalwhilethe blouse 48 ef (Tho New York World) 5 ; i 5 * Copyright, 1011, by The Press t ‘ Lady Painty marr! ‘and t MAN can forgive a woman for buttons that won't nauguration of a =e special Shakespearian & gant eae A: stay on {f eke always weare the amite that] ‘of course she 1a" replied Afra. Jarre, Peet : me off, Rat ‘ r demt-dress gar- course, under the direction | : Bhs ae . ) Sady Dality's of Ben Greet, in the West ; ; ‘ ? therty atin with | oss y tering excerpts of “My Lady Dainty" to that word!" he said. Bary opie mead ime sm ey eats SS oe i i in| Mr Y “Never mi Weak elt. 7 en he caught « A canght uj! Lippin. r i: ch the theatre and ne star themselves will always have to et 1 ‘at . «| s cott's. 4 . which the theatre and the star tl 1 Hal ave to fa Skeid ver mind how It is spelt, replied The Texas Idea r } ‘My Lady Dainty in her matinee, arr, “That's how I intend to —<=>———— | 6s joh was in a Texas etty,!* ki ck upon. : convent, |t Sra, Jars went on, | sings for | awfter ¢ vith the Had Experience. cet "in otrin i ; Practically all of our foremost living actors and actresses, as it Ge tance eye dare yl : AT ee ater sald the teacher | wisely the ‘night efor swayed up to. thee desk & 4s, won their legitimate degree of stardom in the same great Shakes- outdone in such | for Lf It be winter or grapes! ne might be ied to take a broadaxe | vere tie tear : gy A perean roles which a generation or so ago lifted to fame such artists node by a mere |!f It be sp bl aed eed 4 r it she ote: BUY hie WRG SOnIY/ |= eae es * And ‘Gis ‘morning he t id both e rh resolve. ever . = . sa) 7 . ’ 1 1, brt he H i} even a white Ile ‘my ome st as Booth, Irving, Salvini, Barrett, MacCullough, Mansfield, Charlotte erlat and, brings the a ter she partakes of her dej |i satee sepey xeorblte: He eet nr eer at 8) Q ale jesk: psec we 2 ; ‘om My Lad a My lady Dainty nods to the m “Hab!” ejaculated the now-—what did I do Cn hman and Helena Modjeska. In place of these we still have such “4 mdence ¢ of Al brings a semi hing for you you *eaid 1, ‘you got drunk and shot | Dlassic survivals as Mantell, Waller, Forbes Robertson, Sothern and | mei. Wit, vty and ET ASOEG Sie OE | bret Mm Farr It tn gen: | (01,4, hed the teact 4 Marlowe and Ellen Terry—worthy successors, though not all the time i Be Jerally a combination of chiffon and lace, | «pecause,"* replied the bov, “if you wae my about enovnah?* \f yer see : 7 as : ends and is so fashioned that it 1s suitable to qaq's little boy, an’ sou heard what he said yea, Rat Twas } im commission in “the legitimate.” While John Drow parted com ; 1 sees We Worn to rocelve the servanta—to Aunt Eliza comin’ to visit ue with her chil peg ttt tne etmetaxi.* ‘cteweand 2 a4 i shits sconcerting communica: | whom she fasues he ers for the day. \en’ Aunt Kile asked vu weren't all Plain Dealer. l] pany with Shakespeare some years ago, many will remember his Or-|Ptier anxtousi ' r Di Se Cae ; ee el ALOE ni hecdny, 66 AvaHE 5 lando and Ada Rehan’s Rosalind in the late Augustin Daly’s produc ‘ r ; emit ff, ‘Or Claim Ma. ohatalaine ee aannge"<aaseaaas9<y aanesapdamaetar“akiarvr saakcboe, | J) tion of “As You Like 11” long after tho titles of what he has played [tat in asserts Ne 4 atch * hoarsety, an he] major domo, af butler and housekeeper, iT e Ma anton as ions i in during th t decade are forgotten, Mande Adams could only} s f ey, and | k ound thy fest my mt hia eves in gs faseination | ‘i ace the recollectic y prs et by suc pations as those f sp | ter come down t ottlee and ¢ a Apo velum 1 uveau riche and declasse | efface the r ction of her Juliet by such creations as th of her] te Maas tag ae i Nana KEnw the re hou an Rostand heroines and Peter Pan, ithe ‘ tf \ an Mrs, Jarr. since the acces- sult is ale Shakespeare is very mucb » in his literary incarnation, in r 1 admin Mr, Ja aga ways a good tiviti tl re ‘ nt real ¢ aL h one for the young- activities Behe” rece! stratelin bags 1 \ er boys. This one ortation by Prof. Bran- L neve n of ton that socte p= | {9 quite stmple and aap 7 anne id ere in this regard that will be found ap- der Matthews of Columbia ou t to be fashionable to propriate for many } ve : pc y! m er . For complete zabethan Whe . yi i have at least one child tn a family nat tals, vf a ¢ se i | crthere tn at this, and My school wear, serge bi practical ‘illustrations in | ‘ Son ATER Gea InFa nto at many boys ; : Sita and beautiful than ever) Ene Fee H the study of Shakespeare | My Li I not be adopted, but must needy ' and his contemporaries, | \ pare ‘ own!’ ' ' a tter how altruis ad divin a man's ; ia. = ay YRLEN RROWEANO. ter how a tiva Oa eae sy=) ‘\ Side Yo ( T 8 6 nlatttude toward men, 8 ow he never has a platonic friendship for a interrupted Mri Jarr, made with front tian A on in New N B Thi | homely girt “A biseu . byhipd me trud: and back portions 968 ‘ Ne s) ling. | 6 some for breakfast o ane! the neck edge York City. ext Best § | hing else T got to say coun be Sntahed i From the “Shakes- a ~* | A than casts a shovelful of ashes over a dead love and considers fred of hash $08 reaktast! either with «nooks i e Press” at S rd-on-Avon. is nuncee entally a Oe) ried, but @ woman ix con lly digging up the corpse to enjoy herself ound collar. peare Pre q Asa 1 aa n Announced len 1 Pek bbe estat Nature’s aenadtime: round collar, | 4 monumental eneyclopaedic bibliograpliy of Shake registorir [al iN al LD | ; | katnered into H} “every known issue of the writings of our Nation nad of 3 By. Gor MW, Siresnleals bangs. ‘The kntok- i ; } ' * | One of the liltle tray 8 al life is that of @ man whose artisti T tg almost time you were & iy : erbockers are corded opinions thereon, the F das ; levill ee ey mn awe! +» growing thin: ed at the sides orde P ‘ 2 . AV ideals are en ‘ eville, and the comic supple Prepare yourselves for bed and ele attached to uminous American annex, edited by a name deser Perr AY Ha vanh on grand epera, Ibsen and Omar | yo! en; nda thet po { W's fish stories are not atwa hout t that “got aw Ay oy \y that old favor about the t nd terrapin on which he 49) phen doe your holtda F t 1) } | | going to feed you after you marry hin You eildren ef the sun: Letters From the People gee eh ren ue pratt : P yy \y | Once a man acquires the impres hat a woman (a tn tove with Alm| your growth, your love, your tune | TASH is cut In sites s impossible for him to ge the e me arry some- Reakoe. aundaa whlch vous ‘or boys 0! and { Anata, ohtidren (Eta tmpoasiiie Jor niin to get rid ughishe may MOrry AOMe| And T somehow wenden which you Ilka! Boy's Blouse Sult—Pattern No. 7152, Ser eTenen, Ul 1 body else he will fancy she only ai he him jealous, the bes! A eof “Com 4 | - |Say your prayers, the day is ending; 19 “Tiow s i at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION 5 Cuddle down and go to sleep; ", Lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, or send by ndem HT e he n ike ane whieh 0) nt G oR rl caer | The heart of a woman is like af, h holds onty one pieture at uate ah ed on old Mother Nature's te mail to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO., 122 EB. Twenty-third street, stand taken by the English girl in thelr ance to t é : 3 a time, but the heart of a man ts Mke a blograph, with a change of picture | breant, | $ optate jx, y, send ten ts in coin or stamps for each pattern ordere d Perth Amboy school in refusing to rectte | oy the time ng making in ead “His father left him nothing, but os escry turn. Abdido !n her maternal love i} IMPORTAN vrite your address plainly and = alwa | the “Flag Pledge,” as I expect to apend| and butter ther 1. don’t think the he married a rich wife” peareees And slum! aed size Wanted. Add two cents for letter postage if tn a several yeate ln England, mmking my! English would be ao “Made up in matrimony what he| Vor at Spring’ hurry. Rese tere kn tho menctime and expect wenders eay? ‘ATR PLNW, | lacked in patrimony, eh?” | An ounce of aympathy ts worth @ pound of sarcasm in the love chase trem your rest. :

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