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sad rae a) 1 Can You Beat It? @ THE SANE FELLOW WHO OWNS THAT LAND WE CAME ACROSS 1S BUILDING rid Daily Magazine, Thursday, February 6, 1913 | Chats With Great Men! of the Civil War: Copyright, 1913, by The Prese Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World), Biorld. PULITZER, suing Company, Nos, 53 to : @ By Maurice Ketten ESTABLISHED BY JOSHPIT Pedlished Daily Except Sunday by the Press 63 Park Row, New York. a RALPH PULITZPR, President, 63 Park Row, J, ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row, JOSHPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 6% Park Row, TRIS AUTO BELONGS HIM, Too IT'SAN IMPORTED ONE,6 CYLINDERS r z “THIS HOUSE FoR A i. Entered at the Post-Office at New York ae Second-Class Matter. 5 SUMMER Bubscript: Rates to The Evening;For England and the Continent and) RESIDENCE * j World for the United States All Countries in the International Gen. Pickett and Canada, Postal Union. sees $9.75 85) .30/One Month. VOLUME 55... cece eee eee eee ee seceeeeee NO. 18,797 FACTORY DOORS LOCKED. N INVESTIGATION made by members of the Committee A of Safety upon complaints of garment-makers disclosed a number of violations of the factory laws. It was found that doors leading to stairways and means of exit were cither locked or bolted. This means, of course, that in case of fire in the inflaro- mable material of such shops we should have another horror of girls locked in a room and burned to death. | This is what we get after all the indignations, investigations, ™ass mectings, committees, resolutions, bills, acts, ordinances and statutes; afier all the pledges and promises of every sort of authority; after all the guarantees and vows of the managers or proprietors of such factories; after all the fervor of public opinion roused and fired by prese, pulpit, bar end social organizations of all kinds. We are ; jast where we were before the Triangle fire. There is only one way to stop the violation of law and that is to punish the violator unfailingly, promptly and severely. The issue presents itself once more. Here are the violations detected and capable of proof. The guilty parties are known. he next scene should take place in a court room—after that, the jail. — oo THE PROPOSED CHILDREN’S BUREAU. INCE so many persons who have given years of careful siudy S to the child problem in New York advocate the establishment of a Children’s Bureau clothed with authority to deal sum- marily with many phases of the complex evil, it will be well for the | Legislature to enact the bill and give the plan a trial. It appears on By Mrs. $90000000009000000000009 8 13.—GENERAL GOUVERNEUR K. % WARREN. HEN General Craighiil of the Pngines W Penriment responded to the letter o introduction from his brother, Rev, Jame B. Craighill, for many years the beloved recto OO? of our home church, he brought with him Gen eral Gouverneur K. Warren, also of the Engineer Depart:nent. I was glad to sce them both, but I greeted with even more than my wsua cordiality the grave, quiet, reserved, heartbroken soldier, General Warren, an told him how delighted and honored I was !n mecting him; even though I knev that if it had not been for him and his knowledge as a great engineer then @ been no third day of Gettysburg, making so many orphans an causing my own Soldier a lifetime heartbreak. "he sadly, quietly replied, “I suppose T did make the third day possible for just as soon as I got on top of Cemetery Hill and saw that Little Round %o% was unoccupied I issued orders for its occupation, and I wasn't any too aoon either, for in @ moment more your soldiers would have been ahead of us, Yot know I did not arrive on the fleld until the second day and General Pickett eam, later than I did. I was saying to General Craighill as wo drove over here the our two most conspicuous battles, your husband's and mine, were Gettysbur/ and Five Forks, and I was in every battle of the Army of the Potomao tron Bethel to the surrender, I believe that, too, is the General's record with ti Army of Northern Virginia, s {t not?” “No,” I said, “he was severely wounded at Gaines's Mill, shot through thy shoulder, and was absent while his wound Was healing. But he went back to &t command two months before he could use his arm or wear his coat-slee' One Sunday afternoon a week later General Warren called again, bringing ‘hia charming wife and two children. After a pleasant visit they suggested ¢ ride and we drove through Soldiers’ Home, stopping to sec the view almow opposite the Scott statue. To entertain the young people I told them an old Pacifle coast story of Gem eral Scott. When he was receiving the honors on bow upon @ rope under which the officers of the , which the General {gnored, attempting to stride over It Being unable to make his left leg follow his right, he commanded first one ant then another of his leutenants to pass it over to him, all of whom became eu denly deaf, not wishing to go down in history as having been the leg-bearer ol General Scott. Finally, catching the eye of Li nant Snelling, be commanded: “Lieutenant, hand me over my left leg, sir “That was like the old Scott strut,” sald General Warren, “He had somy spinal trouble which was the cause of his tnability to lift ais lect les over, The | same affliction prevented his mounting his horse. He was a Virginian, you know, And your Jackson, who made the soverelenty of the States a part o his Presbyterian creed, won his first honors under Scott {n Mexico, Your Gen eral Lee was on his staff; do you remember the closing Ines of his letter te Scott In which he resigned from the jarmy: ‘I have devoted all the best ft my life to my flag and, save je of my native State, I never in desire to draw my sword.'” ‘And you know, General,” I said, “he was appointed by the State authorities as Commander of the Virginia State forces and did not enter the service of the Confederacy until the State troops were incorporated into the Southern army.” “That 1s 90; I never thought of that before.” I dia not see General Warren again till he had answered the last roll-call. I went to take some flowers, in the name of my own Soldier, to this othe~ soldier whose still face even yet showed the marks of sorrow and wro: had suffered in return f brave and honorable se-vice for his q AT'S HIS YACHT; HECOMMOTES WITH IT EVERY DAY Pouce |CAPTAIN WHAT IS THIS LITTLE MAN GroiNCTo BE r the face of it to be an improvement on the present method of bringing sy children before the courts in cases of petty offense, promising to bo j prompter, cheaper, more efficient and moreover to relieve the child 4 from any stigma of trial and conviction. | The single question of truancy in a city with so large a school population and so many temptations to vice among idle children on (| the street, is in itself almost sufficiently annoying to justify the pro- ‘ : vision of some swifter and more potent method of dealing with it. It is stated that during the past year the Board of Education sent out ny over 1,300,000 absentee postal cards and truancy notices at a cost of ‘ more than $25,000, with very little result. Parents, unfortunately, | cannot be always relied upon to help the authorities in keeping the j children at echool or out of mischief. Too often the home influcnce counteracts all the good the schools can do. Some authority more potent and more perfect than any now in existence appears necessary therefor, despite all natural objections to creating more Bureaus. A child whose perente will not correct him must be corrected by the city. That's imperative. —— ANOTHER METAPHYSIC FROM BOSTON. BOSTON bigamist who appears to have practised that iniquity with distinguished suocess, told the Judge before whom he was tried that whenever he had a new sweet- i heart he would take her to a cemetery, show her a grave as that of his if first wife and then propose marriage. He was generally accepted. i This is a new one. The influence of environment upon tho feminine mind when she is being proposed to has long been known hen I was giving my lecture on Gettysburg, the dear widowed wife of the wronged hero of the North sat in a box to my left and her red and white roses were the first to bless me. C ekeh ol ah ek akek akel akal kak akekakakakak al akak sk akak akek abel akak waked Mr, Jarr Finds He Hasn’t Enough Cash to Live Beyond His Means Cr Por rer ttt fk al hake ketet al Lalel alk al al al af al af al skal But I, would love to WRITE |Jarr, ‘Every time 1’ read about a bank failure or a bank employee em- Dezzling I'd got so worried!" ‘Those are the responsibilities of id Mr, Jarr, solemnly. et all We'll open! replied Mra, Jarr. “I've always wanted a bank account, Clara Mudridge-Smith has one and Mrs. Stryver has one, and tt looks #0 to go to one's birds-eye maple or mahog- any boudoir desk and take a pen with y work that doesn't pay," “I'd rather cash other made out to me, than make out checks for other people to ants 1a, wd. pre. (plgues 0 you don't put your name on the back! money in the old banks?” asked Mrs. | Mr, Jarr, & ges will do, In country towns the men make the venture at the gate 66T\ON'? you think we should do| 277° 7 ro "We'll do nothing of the kind!" repited | jor clothes, &o, You have seen the type, It came within the knowledge of the|a lot of people. But if you had a larger ® ug! RAL RAVE? iby have, wy Ranghter! plumage there will he a premium on the home plumage. We have | | he tHowEnE that becaus she lived up ovier woman, for the pre mather saw jeelary 1 weulan's F hate to owe ange] Divtarwe Love resteth upon the rock of faith, and Rim whom thou tevest § "many pretty birds in our forests whose feathers will be in demand ail othera should or else (hey woman who knew the ways of the| "We can pay all our outstanding obli- | 11¢ ghow trust Dlindly unto infinity. " if the richer feathers of tropic birds are not to be had, Until we are| li wrong side All who ca orld irl, eaw | gations be? at aye got ore oul ‘Art thou jealous, oh my Daughter? j sure we can protect our native bearers of fur and feathers let us not [nt or be forever CONDEMN Se eat ais eaten cat Weil do nothing of the kind” eaia| Then flatter not thyself that it is love which atirreth thy heart, - o he too hasty to protect the foreigners, her eyes. hese and optimism and forgivenese—put | Mrs. Jarr sharply. ‘We'll buy eome For jealousy is no more a part of love than Beclecbub of true religion, | ething of the world with its In @ word, she saved her at @ eructel | put money in the bans. x meee it's pe Then thou art deceived by false signa ements, and forme! her time, Th 1 tronger on account | worst thing one can do y cash for “s ai e here no misused - L etters From t he P 1 . eee tat formed her time, THe ei wet one enough te tal leverething, ‘Teen one can's got ereast| For True Love seeth with clear eyes, and there ts no misunderstenging “5 co Dp e 8 what tt mea her mother what the other had done, | when one needs it. | therein, sT ett nan, after her first feel-| ‘Hut, oh, r! If we put money tn the) Verily, verily, perfect Love casteth out all fear, alk doubt, at rivalry, ” A Quarter's “th , Jeach wing fi te * ' efected. Bho | wank do you think the Biack Hand will 11) geooit, all suspicion and all selfiahners ’ ogee Renee “w toning Word | wiped * el " pare € Se the a f her narrow |tetdnap the children cts Ita roots are deeply imbedded tn the common carth of fricndahip, but Fd the umber 13 on (he Z-cent piece. Mere the word . — gy OR ee aa | A WATCH SILENCER. its branches toww lu the stare, Gnd Livseum will hyper, and dreams ond fe exactly toe way the le appeared |’ EGKOAT. | don't hear much more about .. 4. wn te Soot ationntive ena sot the BETTBR| piecing a watch under @ tumbler near | visions and aspirations im The Evening World sume pears ae) Teceday on Roth Dates. ‘the bread that motner used to »,> war not Without REWARD for the bed of a sick person will give him) I charge thee, my Daughter, consider well mine admonitions, ang accept On On American quarter ihere are 18) 55 v0 Bailes of The Rrwning Wort moke,’” ver PAY Mo whe Sressed Decomingly MORAL THE MEST JUDGE WO HB |ygiiet from the ticking, which 19 fre | soning else. 1 letters in the scroll heli tn the | On what dave of the week 14 Aus. 1,| “Ne, we only hear new about the and wowetinrs crimped her hair | WHO Is ACQUAINTED WITH THRRER+ lquentty very tying to bighly sensitive | For there is NOTHING “just 68 9008" in ali the world. Selah! desk; 19 margina: feathers in ' 104, ond Jon. MO fal? =. BM. | vote mother wants O - Haanva sho would not be parted. She built up) a - only wonderin, it 4@ the COSTLIEST. , ,poses as to amount to an absolute inhibition of import. One of these | mother, still, don't you think we should | tabiet of right and wrong, acted te wy a8 Rel Teebea Sih 7288 gh EP ee oe err 8 {t hath cost the King his throne, the slave his life, the saga ; gentlemen argued that the proposed exclusion would drive such plum-| ort, Watt of cheP Auey OF gome it herself, insisted on her children fol-) Sy ofttimes many childish pranks were | wa haven't. tdletudents of psychology. Romance writers bring off such climaxes either in scenes of beauty or in those of hilarity. As a rule moon- light is preferred to sunlight, twilight to dawn, but in emergencics or doorway just before saying good night after a dance or a walk home from church. Under such conditions total darkness is not dbjected to. Shakespeare represents Richard III. as proposing to Lady ‘Anne as she was following the body of her husband to the tomb, and as boasting afterwards: “Was ever woman in such humor wooed, was ever woman in such humor won?” ry The Boston example merits consideration from novelists seok- ing new situations and from forlorn bachelors who have met with repeated failures in their love making. There may be some relation between the mind of a new sweetheart and the grave of a supposed first wife that is worth seeking out. It may not be only in Boston |™! the spirit worketh thus. A LAW THAT MAY REACT BADLY. NUMBER of eminent gentlemen representing the New York Zoological Society and the Audubon Society have urged the Ways and Means Committee of the House to impose in the new tariff bill such heavy duties on bird plumage for millinery pur- age out of fashion in this country and thereby save money as well as check the killing of birds. This is one of the cases where zeal is liable to outrun discretion, (It is not at all likely that any law enactable by Congre and enforce- able by our courts and juries will ever prevent fashion from making | use of fur and feathers in the dress and adornments of women, They lage too beautiful, too becoming and too costly for women ever will- ingly to abandon the use of them. If then we shut out the foreign ® mother-of-pearl handle and @ cute Uttlo check book and draw a check. “I hate to go to a bank and cash a check, because they are so fussy when something celebrate the Increase in salary 1 Mr, Jarr almost said “got,” but cor. | Nf in time to say “recelved." “recetve” @ salary and tend so in- to By Sophie The Story of CE upon a@ time there were two women, The two women lived in his clutches on 14 to have “accepted a ‘These subtle distinctions were not in Mre, Jarr's mind. She was simply con- centrating on the extra amount that ecrue to the family revenues, sald Mrs. Jarr, finally, “T think we might celebrate It by putting it tn the savings bank every week. Not this week or next week or, maybe, the week after that, but every week when we same alr; but they were very DIF indeed—which ts a common everyday occurrence, One woman was & so-called prud That is to say, she had all through Mfe lived in a nar- row little groove, ‘from which, though ofttimes invited, ‘gued Mr, Jarr, “while there nso of kinship to the Money Trust and a wholesome dread of social- iam inspired by opening a savings bank account with an initlal deposit of, say, $10, and a blographical sketch of ons self and the maiden name of oni thing? owing tt and judged those about ‘We'll open a bank account, that's | hor accordingly. The New Version. Sho rarely swerved an inch without alley-way of thinking. She would look askan. hen any o did not come within the precincts of MER tabulated virtues, \tiht about her head and thought that | women should wear only certain kinds Fables of Everyday Folks. Copyright, 1013, by ‘The Prom Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), FERENT women! |ihe narrow confines of her Itmited little id anything that For example, she arranged her hair ‘The other woman was one who had cash. Besides, if We open a eavings bank account we can't check against it." “Then what's the use of putting the drene Loeb. Two Women. constantly her severe critic, She was forever’ observing the actions of the the same town, In fact, they were other, and when they did not meet with neighbors, They!her APPROVAL whispered it to her saw the eame sky; | neighbor on the other side. If her dress they breathed the) w home en hour or two later than | prude woman thought was “a perfectly proper’ tine, whether she knew the | REASON for it or not, another mark went against her and perhaps was voiced at the first opportunity, Now, the prude woman thought ehe had her children following in her foot- steps. Ami from all appearances, @ far as SHE knew, this was the case. But. many other women like her, locking at things from her angie, and having put an tron wall around herself, untold to the mother for fear of the |puntshment that must follow in the breaking of the rules, So they grew. Eventually one little secret led to an- other, So It came to pass that a daugh- ter of the prude woman unwarlly being drawn into dangerous waters from | which she would have with di Mfculty ex- tricated herself. She was starting to 60 the youth a! not SEE the breakers ahead. the gin! on « afer path, ‘The prude woman, ber neighbvor, wae | TATION @ little more modish or she came | when you don't need them?’ asked Mre, way she should not and in her, But I'm gure we don't. Of course I owe "Oh, dear! I suppose so!" whimpered . Jarr. “Well, we should have a little celebra- tion of some kind—go to the theatre or out to dinner or something,” suggested Mrs, Jarr. ‘The last time you were Promised a raise of salary of $% a wear we went out and spent $0 celebrating it. And then the increase was taken out all night celebrating the itner ;you didn’t get!" “Everybody we know believes we've 0% a whole lot of money. I don’t know how the rumor started,” said Mr, Jarr. “I'm held up by ‘shoestringers’ every time I stick my nose out of the house.” lightly that ¢ is but an idle pastime. stronger than steel. “Why should you buy @ strings wincing ? Jar. “And who told'the people who | %0n7 them. com id merable captains of industry in this town who know how to make @ million dollare for you if you'll only invest @ hundred dollara in their schemes," ex- “They ere called plained Mr. Jarr. thee. - ‘Well, I don't understand these finan- | *#amps cial matters,” said Mrs. Jarr. “It's not so wicked #0 long as we don't lve beyond our means," said Mr, Jarr picusly. - “Well, we are not doing that,” ven- tured Mrs. Jarr. ‘We haven't money h to live beyond our means. It lot of money to do that. The ‘9 live beyond their means, but beoause they have lote of money. Ma conscience, theortes without discrimination. PRICE! the butcher, the Baker, the grocer and | WORTH the things the children and In and we'll - { £ Copsright, 1018, by The Pres Publishing On, (The New York Evening World), HAT 48 Love, oh my Beloved, What is Love? W For one shall tell thee that it is but a figment of the imaginas tion, and another that it is temporary insuaity. One shall cry ditterly that it is a enare of Satan, and another declara But, I say unto thee, TRUD LOVE ts none of these, but a thing whtch 4a rarer than radium, purer than unalloyed gold, finer than cobweds, end Behold, there are many IMITATIONS of diamonds. Yet which one LAkewtse, there be many imitations of Love; near-love and flirtation, summer love and infatuation, spring dalliance and sentimentalism, And each of these 1s unto Love itself as a rhinestone unto the Kohinoor, Then, hearken unto thy Mother, the EXPERT, for, behold, until thow hast once looked upon a diamond a rhinestone may, peradventure, dassie I charge thee, heed not the scoffers who would tell thee that love aa CHBAP thing, like unto a paste jewel, and more common than trading For tt cometh unto each but once in a lifetime, and, of all thinge in the MMe wits, the genius his glory, the patriot his country. The wisest man shall pay for tt with his freedom and his common sense, hie sleep and his appetite, his peace of mind, his pride, and oftentimes wea /X It te disastrous unto coiffures and shirt bosoms, unto curls and careera Glike, It demolisheth rufics and ambitions and shattereth reputations end Yet, 1 say unto thee, Lord pity him that hath not known it, for ¢ fa , Dost thou MISUNDERSTAND and yet pretend to love?