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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, January 20, 191 a “§" Matter, Pop?” = #3 « BY «# jsttithal « Bo» BY x Cy The High Cost of Living * 4d How to By Madison Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World.) ~ NO. 1V.—DISTRIBUTE OUR IMMIGRANTS WISELY. URING the years from 19% to 1910, roundly 9,000,000 allens came into this country, With 91,972,206 of population, from Europe and landed here w figures of tho Bureau of Immigra 6,000,000 people came here from Of these upward of 6,000,000 went into Yerk, Pennsylvania, Ohio were licked up by the mines and the manufacturers, @amers, not food producers, wage reducers and not wage advancers. ces, cles grow and farms are blotted out. As manufacturing ad @ fecent New England de went out of boing. Ev The Solution of a Problem. ‘The wise distribution of our immigrants, settling them on the soil, rather than crowding them In our cities, is the solution of the !mmigrant problem, We cam mover have too many good immigrants. The farmers’ difficulty and discour- agement are due mainly to the lack of help. re no better farmers than the Hungarians. fer our mines, to get money quickly. And they send 115,000,000 home ‘The same is true of the Italians, who know all about frutt and truck g Adi told, our immigrants, who are largely birds of passnge,—(600,000 going back to Furope last year)—took home with them $50,000,000, The Greeks and Italians are waging their wars on American money. If these sturdy men of the soll were settled on our land tiey would become permanent citizens, and patriotic men, For land ownership, a stake in the country, creates an interest in the country’s ‘Ther welfare. I know no more successful way of makin, encouragement of an immigration to our minos and factorle which sends the earnings tome. I would like to see our Chinese, instead of run- ning faundries for which they are not fitted, become truck gardeners, ing vegetables is a science they know to gserfection. Japanese. Lands by the thousands of acres in Connceticut, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, within one hundred miles of New York City, can be bought for $1 the acre. Those lands, in proximity to a population of ten millions to be fed, ae iying idle, Two-thirds of the lands ever within fifty miles of New York ave. unimproved, while lands in the far northwest Canada are advertised In our magazines at $3) an acre. When the Land Is Well Farmed. I know good Jand near the market ts often «expensive. intensively ed, Will pay well, regardless of the price. worth nothing, You can generally buy the whole outfit for I It pays Detter to hire or buy an acre or two worth $1,000 if market than buy a farm for $0 an acre far from the market, earth near the city, which can be rented for a ong, worked without butldings and its products sold without delay, is a fact reformers should instil into tho minds of the newcomer. And our immigrants are beginning to prove here and there, by intensive trucking and specializing with up-to-date-methods, that there are a living and liberty on the land, wet after the land-gra est land in Callfornia and Oregon—22,500 great as New Jersey. ‘One hundred men in the Sacremento Valley ha ecree—ranches from elght to one hundred miles in extent. tates in America twice the size of Belgium, bigger than the combined area of | New HHampehire, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Delawara, The more than 160,000,000 acres of land which have been illegally or collusively appropriated from the public domain [ would have restored to the peopi I srould not only ‘have the Government gtve some acres to our immigrant would have the Government ald the farmer, and to loan him the money he needs i and the harvesting of his first crop, industry, all other industries depend upon tt agrboulture prosperous and every other industry will flourish, from the National Treasury to promote agriculture will, lke the dew, return to revive every other industry, Advance agriculture, make prosperous our farms; and our cities and towns will grow, our merchants will 3 teetart the tilling of th: Agriculture ts a basic and we will all have cheaper food, Parents’ Wishes. marry if the man or @ young} com- most marry betc ing of ag certainly marria against their par: | showld be mature enough and wise enough to make the ‘nal dec Ufe without the assistance of Lasten to the advice of your father and! mother, They have your best interests! Ne heart. But, after all, tt ts you who! re choosing a life partner, not they, { affecta particularly question, whi WOME Gee Gurus: H-€-89 Reduce It. neatly une in ten was hin the decade, According to the fon during the past six years over ‘ew England, New Jersey, New nd INinois, Hardly any went on the farms. They became food cun- mney emokes out a farn treating, not only in Now and and New York @iana, Il!inols and Iowa, American farmers go to the Dominion, fhe less than 103,844 of them crossed over the line into Canada, ‘The farm is re- but in New Jersey, Ohto, Ins AKIN a HH at i a nation poor than by our present in immigration “Ui. The same ts true of the Bobby!" cried Bessie, “I am so frightened! We have no light Bur a little bit of land, Large farms are oft “4 even see the Hush<a-Bye Book.” than the bulldings, “Don't be afraid!” piped a wee voice nearby, “the Hush-a-Bye Book is here all right and I am inside tt, “The trouble ts”—— Bing! Rang!! Boom!!! Bessie jumped a foot in the air for fright! “Wha-a-wwhat was that?” she gasped. “Don't be so scared!” the voice said impatiently. little boys who just fell into Hush-a-Bye Land.” Just then three lights appeared in the distance—the Husha-Bye Book opened to page 6 and out stepped the owner of the wee, wee voice, horrid before the kiddies fall into it. Just aa the whole world would be| Tarzan of gloomy and hollow were it not for the Hght the kiddies bring into it. But mind you, it 4# only the good kiddies who bring light, It t# a omile thot)" yiow may we Jt makes the light. A little bit of “nal ‘The old time farmer had three to five acres to the cow. i$ was only three has Give cows to the acre, Instead of producing $100 worth of product to seven acres, we are beginning to produce $70 to the acre. treok crops, the {mmigrants who have been induced to go on the soll are produc- ing four truck crops to the acre, Japan, Denmark and France show us what a patch of two to eight acres will do to suppor: a family, Get After the Waste-Land Owners. To sive our immigrants a chance to get on the sot! © want th bers, ranchmen, and railroa the land and fraudulently inclosed it. One man “owna'’ Intensive dairying Then the Fairy Lady touched each tiny, upturned face and sent them amiling into the land of Open Eyet Instead of four acres to the jovernment to! which have appropriated /599,000 acres of the rich- square miles—an area three times as are alngle es- repeen eas Betty Vincent's Advice to Lovers Bro, ROLL RUDELY, Re Porsen HIS POP THE WITH BLOWS AND Only be open and aboveboard—and| walt till you are of age, HOULD two : yy S young persons| Suitable Behavior. “PF. A.” writes: parents of either! young lady, one object to the|men do not c marriage? | this. I do not think! ou either a young| do? Keep your dign woman should|mind what the men think, ‘I am a rather quiet | metimes I imagine e 10 meet me because of } But T am ashamed to ac What would yeu advise me to ed manner and never "T have a gitl friend ot if| who is luring all the men I know away What aball I do?" No one can take your real frienda| and don't bother about the is|from me. ents’ devires, jfrom you, Bet after twenty-one a man pr woman | others “What is the signi. fa stamp placed upside down others.) on a letter?" Isions of| flcance BEAVTED TH ROLLA. a | oa HE Fa. DPIR Beets <) We SEe THE! MOOFED AND TAILED AND HORNED, 5TH ROLL« WITH SHAPES TRANS FORMED, REVIVING BUT posed to mean “T love you." Tam engaged to alask her avout any though I have heard stories about | and believe what she te can I find out it) or just disinclined. night she wouldn't let o Yow should decide for yourself this! her it she wouldn't let me accompany her, though I don't know why. “A. Bt writes; “Two young men are one shows move affection than the other, “A certain young girl age abe loves me and 1 have teen tak- 44 you are engaged to her yeu aneuld Pe may Bave deen tired or worried, By C. M. Pay = WILL THE AUDIENCE KINDLY REMAIN SEAT WHike A CHANGE 15 BEING MADE FOR JHE NEXT. PICTURE BY ELEANOR e SCHORER. Hot Like Any Story You Have Read TARZAN OF THE APES By Edgar Rice Burroughs. The Romance of a Jangle Man and a Yankee Girl. (Copyright, 1912, by Frank A, Munsey Co.) SYNOPHIS OF GREORDING CHAPTERS. John Clayton, Lori Greystoke, is mazconed with Allee, ‘is young, wife, om the wildest part ot the rican Cont, Ne ! $4 Alice balla fade hut, there wale Mite son w . ome pl Ss domes apesciesany, Sine tee ennet ee in andere ant oa, tania te ‘Tarean slave Tublag. @ so the 4 to. bill “Habor, ‘the "¢eer, Years, terrorised ‘the fondtes ‘bacty, hittin i 3 3 © rapidly 414 Tarsan of tho the struggling black until he had him by hie neck in mid air; then Tarsan, climbing to « larger pulled the etill thrashing victim well up Into the sheltering verdure of the tree He fastened the rope securely to @ etout branch and then, descending, plunged hie hunting knffe into Ku- longa’s heart. Kala wee a’ Tal examined the black minute- ‘had he seen any other hu- ‘The knife with ks sheath ught his fancy; he appro- A copper anklet also took hia faney, and this he put on his own les. Ho examined and admired the tat- tooing on the forehead and breast. ‘He he began once mor@ ‘you were the very first ones) oarvetied at the sharp-fled teeth. He with us, and it is 80 dark to-night in Hush-a-Bye Land. I can't|to come to Hush-a-Bye Land this evening and you were very cross and|investigated and brought no Hight. Hush-a-Bye Land ts pitch dark and gloomy and hollow andj feathe’ ppropriated the od head-drees, and then he pre- pared to get down to business, for @ apes was hungry, and meat of the kill, Jungle ethics permitted him to eat. by what tleman and the training of Nght up the world with smiles, your parents and playmates feel just a8! east? 1d cs you yourselves did when you found no light in Hush-a-Bye| Tubdlat, whom he had hated and who had hated him, he had killed im fair fight, and yet never had the thought of flesh entered hie head. been as revolting RERANCH SOR ORRE: to him an te canntbalism to us, EEOC ELAS: But who wae Kulonga, that he wild things of ti upon one another to satiety the crav- of hunger? a sudden @ a#trange doubt stayed Ddooks taught And was not he archer’ a man also? sudden @ qualm of nausea overwhelmed him, He did not understand, hereditary inetinct, ages ol4, usurped the functions of his untaught mind and saved him from transgreasing a world- was gnorant, to the trees again, CHAPTER X. The Fear-Fantom. ROM a lofty perch Tarzan viewed the village of thatched huts across the intervening plantation, He saw that at one point the forest touched the village, and to | this apot he made his way, lured by & fever of curlosity to behold animals of | his own kind, and to learn more of their ways and view the strange lairs in which they Ii His Ife an « the brutes of the jungle any thought that 8. Simi- these could be other than ene rity of form led him to no erroneous conception of the welcome that would be accorded him should he be discov- zan of the apes was no sentimen- lrapist. Ho knew nothing of the brothers Ihood of man. All things outside his own adly e with the antor, the ele- tiiaed adl this without malice To kill was the law of the knew, Few were his prim but the greatest of these and Kill, and #0 he accorded right to cherish the same even though he himself bject of thelr hunt. both, put do not know which one vose. What do you advise?" If you ery not sure that you love om em, » @Pproached the village of Mbonga he ‘i was quite prepared either to dill standards, this ape-man with the heart noted “Dear children, when you are crose and naughty—when you do not|snd head and body of an Englieh Did men eat men? Alas, he aid not know. Way, then, this hesttancy? Once more he essayed the effort, but of @ ‘All ho krew was that he could not eat the flesh of this black man, and thus & wide law of whose very existence he Quickly he lowered Kulonga's body to the ground, removed the noose, and took His stra fe had left him neither ‘morose nor bloodthirsty, ‘That he Joyed 1 Killing, and that he killed with a wugh Upon his handsome lips, betokened no Innate cruelty, He killed for food han the other you do not love most often, but, being a man, he some- aiiher enough to marry him, times killed for pleasure—e thing which no other animal does, for it has re mained for man alone among ell crea- tures to kill senselessly and wantonly for the mere pleasure of infileting suffer- ing and deat And when he killed for ort ene, he did that aloo without hys- teria, but it was a very businesslike pro- ceeding which admitted of no levity, Go It was that now, as he cautiously nr ni iF inital fl Ht i Ht j i bi j ii ik tt fi i ft 2 & 2 ry if iy iF | i ! bi viii | a 5 te killed; not the little arrow, merely & messenger that the body of ite victim. How he should ike te Nave those iittle dentt-fealing eft the woman would only leave for an instant he could drop gather up @ handful, and be tack tree again before she drew three Ae he was trying to think out pian to distract her attention he ‘a wild cry from across Wooked and saw a buck tng beneath the very tree im had killed the murderer of Kala an before, fellow wae shouting end apear above hie head. Now again he would point to something on the ground before him, ‘The village was in an uproar Inatantty. isnt i : j ui clearing toward the excited sentry. After them trooped the old men, and the ‘ women and children until, in a moment, the village was deserted tad found the body of hie vi : that Interested him far less than the ; fact that no one remained in the vil- lage to prevent his taking a supply of the arrows which lay below Mm, He dropped to the #ro \l beside the caldron of poison, and stood leas, bis quick eyes acanning th terior of the palisa: No one was in st upon the open doo hut. He would t Weapons hung against the w: spears, strangely shaped knives ple of narrow shielts, In tho centre cf the room was a cooking-pot, and at the far ond a Miter of dry gras cov- ered by woven mats which evidently served the owners as beds and bed- ding. Several human skulls the floor. His eyes rested way of @ near by ¢ a look within. long apes felt of each artt= ears, smelled of them, y through his sensle 1 nostrils. for he “saw tive and highly tral One by one, as took each article from the walls, he placed them in a pile in the centre of the room, and on top of all he placed the cool and on top of this grinning skulls, up the head-dreas of the dead ‘Then he stood back and surveyed his work and grinned. Tarzan of the apee was a joker, But now he heard without the eound of many voile