Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, April 7, 1913 The Day of Rest 3% «<= e2:. 8% By Maurice Ketten {|The Stories of —— ee Famous Novels ‘ante \ By Albert Payson Terhune THIS 19 THE QUIETEST \ PLACE on EARTH ] ESPABLISHDD BY JOSEPH PULITZER. aten, 8 Wally Except Prose Publishing C 2 } Podiihet Dally Sunday by 4! pycse Fublishiag Company, Noa, to Opies Bis sie arearuree 63 Perk Row. . ANG! . 3 Park Row, JOSEPH PULITZER, Poe etary, 63 Bark Row, tered at the Post-Office at New xork as SecondCians Matter, Spat to Hove ‘or Ey id and the Continént and All Countries in the International ,.4 Postal Union. “| + $8.80 One Tear, $9. + 80)\ One Month. See rece eeeceeewens . NO. 18,85' | A FADING CRUSADE. E may have no grand clean-up this April. Li appears the | W Street Cleaning Department, the Department of Health | and the Police and Tenement House Departments were + feekoning without their host when they proclaimed the cleanly ern- | sade without assuring themselves beforehand that the needed money | would be forthcoming from the Board of Aldermen. | Thus we have another illustration of “that cternal want of pense that vexes public men.” | New York has lots of money and lots of good intentions, but | eomehow they do not co-operate. The money goes to tear up the Greets with whirling motors, the good intentions go to pave Hades. | Thus of our winter's talk of a general spring cleaning nothing | uy come to fulfilment and only the desire remain to be counted | @e virtue which we would practise if we could pay for it | (cinetencimatibl id cxcetneemenene * THE CASE OF JOHN PAUL FARRELL. 5 A’ the Coroner's jury had found that the confession of ' Covmright, 1013, by ‘The Prem Fubtishing Co, (The Now York Evening World), | No. 6.—THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS. By J. F. | T ‘WO Indians and « white man crouched stealthily among the side bushes in the Northern New York wilderness one fo 1767. Me 4 The Indians were Chingachgook and Unons; the. amore of the fast dwindling Mobioan tribe of the Delaware : the latter his only son. The white man was Natty Bumppe, » hunter and trapper, known to the Indians as “Hawkeye.” i The trio had every reason for caution. For they were in thé’ heast | the enemy’s country. The French and Indian wer was raging. The | founding Indians, except the Delawares, were allies of the French asf dendly foes of the English colonists. i | Suddenly a group of ‘horsemen rode up to the river, led By am | sulde. The ridere were Major Heyward and Alice and Cora, the two | tere of Col. Munro, Heyward was escorting them to their father, whe |{m command of Fort William Henry. With them was a half-crased | clan named Gemut. | The party was far away from the trail it should hewe taken ¢: reach ie | fort, For tte guide was Magua, a hostile Huron chief, who was leading the travellers toward bis own village and captivity or death. A Treacherous At sight of Hawkeye the Huron vanished te cum | Guide. mon @ war party of hie followers to capture the | Owe 5 travellers, Hawkeye and his two Mohican frienés: barely conducted the riders to @ plate of defense | tne Hurone returned. wkeye, Chingachgook and Uncae fough hn . savattion Web oxheuttes noae fought off the enemy until their ews @ilte ‘Then they slipped away to the nearest fort for ald. In their absence the twm eirle and Heyward and Gamut were eetzed by the Hurons and borne awey te the direction of Magua’e village, Magua had once been flogged by Col Mumre and had stolen the Colonel's daughters through revenge. Hawkeye, reinforced, followed the Hurons, recaptured the prisoners an@ te® them safely to Fort William Henry. But their respite was brief. The hostile Indiane surrounded and the fort, massacring most of its defenders. Alice and Cora were agaia away by Magua, ‘Heyward, disguised as a French officer, entered the Huron camp n° |of them. A tame bear followed him into the cave where Alice was cee net the supposed bear threw off its turry skin, revealing the body Ba | Hawkeye, wines | By Gamut’s help the two men smuggled Alice away, ewathed in a blest, Cora later was found end rescued, | The girls were placed for safety in the care of a friendly Delaware Gita, Magua demanded their return to the Hurone, The vencrable Delaware chief | Tamenund, ordered the prisoners restored to him. heal Before the command could be executed young Uncas was declared hereditasp | chiet of the Delawares, He could not revoke his predecessors order. But Be John Paul Furrell that he made the bomb that killed Made- line Herrera was invalid and should be repudiated, the Coro- wy eee is reported to have said to Farrell: “I am sorry for what you s have gone through. I am sorry you were kept in so long; but the | : éals of justice, as the police and District-Attorney’s office were trying | fe eee that they were served, made it necessary for you to suffer as) you did. I am sorry there is no way to compensate you for the time you epent in prison, but there is no way to do it.” On that showing there is a good opening for reform, Miscar- | flages of justice in the case of men without means are becoming | frequent in thie country. ‘I'here may be no power in the state to wemedy al] the wrong done to Farrell, but there is surely a way to find out how his invalid confession was obtained, and how it stood the test of examination in court. It is sheer stupidity to say “the ends of justice” make such wrongs necessary; that there is no way + to guard against them when a friendless man happens to he suspected of crime. the Preoiplos, ——— | ‘WHERE IGNORANCE IS FOLLY. ; D ver at an economic conference in Philadelphia the Over the ledges of a rocky Bil the Huron bere his captive in that wild Might, Uncas in hot pursuit, | Finding himself on @ precipice with the Mobtoam diese tehind him Magna drove hie knife through Cora’s body. Uneas leaped seross the intervening chasm cf rock to grapple his gos. But be missed his footing, stumbled and fell head long at the Huron’s feet. | Before Uncas could rise, Magua'e temehawk wee buried in his back. . As Magua turned again to flee Hawkeyes eifie epoke and the murderer tf), dead, his body bounding downward from ledge to ledge inte the depths below, Old Tamenund, mourning the elain Uncas, cried aloud: “The palefaces are masters of the earth, My Gay has been long! * © @ oft have lived to see the lest warrior ef the wise race of the Mohicans!” i high cost of living, President Miller of the Bronx added a} new point to the long controversy by saying: “The New York | consumer pays high prices for food because conditions are not made known to him. I have known cabbages sold for a cent a head and spinach at 10 cents a barrel that went to waste simply because New Yorkers knew nothing of it.” 4 Here, at any rate, is an evil for which the remedy is plain and practicable. In fact, in a land where publicity is so easy to gain f@ Pr and where the value of advertising is 80 well understood, it is strange | Mr. Jarr Seeksto Performan Actof | Too Much. ORMAN WHITE, who wae im the politiaal N ring recently a6 @ Bull Mouse, eld thts Kindness. It Won’t Happen Again. |N ime wmu's ni uce, ou me ~ 98999098589d8d9d0 1999899989999909099959085998989TTT | Heres 180 Hor: 1 GAOAASAAASESEESES OEOERODESELES OEE S SOEEEESESE OH ES SES such conditions should occur with any frequency. | It may be no individual market gardener nor produce dealer | wishes to undertake himself the cost of advertising such bargains : ‘ A new baby arrived ot 0 howe, A litle and would rather throw the food into waste than to advertise it at Anlaureka\ with thirty cents te: laoene \waltnan A other day,” sata Mr. Jerr, | at’ vas been tha ber 0 Ga omer ves eae low prices, but some of the many co-operative associations might could desire, ‘phen ring me some—um—er—oh!| “ ‘Been working here fourteen years |made much of ber, but when there was @ new i ris 1 “Tripe a la Creale fresh?” asked the|cuss it! Bring me apple pie and baked |jand nobody loves me’ stunt? asked | beb7 she felt rather neglected, find profit in handling the business. ‘To throw cheap wholesome eatin Bene Johnson, as the waitress brought the| “How are you, Mary?" « visttor eset of hes ame afternoon. “Ob, I'm all right,’ she sai,’ “except that 1 eos ns ———~——+ |_ “Yea, didn't think hie work Was @D- | tik ‘there t too math competition tm thie Drociated, Well, it im't. Neither is | ong," "Lowell Sa, food away in New York rather than iake the trouble to let conenmers ladyin- | “Jenkins had an awful outbreak the|viands and punched thelr checks, know of it is reactionary beyond Egypt. ~ : ‘“ymeterre’ to pity the workingman, The adopted favoring a complete separation of the administration | ‘But there is more in life than Just | sn must wuffer if the clause table, they deciere, of the water front from the internal city government. 66 This comes along in line with a movement to take control of | | . public morals out of the hands of the police and vesting it in a board |® Copyright, 1918, by The Prees lublish ing Co, (The New York Evening World). THE SOLUTION. the ‘man higher up" and everything bwages,” ineleted Mr. Jarr. "Doesn't | trey won't suffer Cummaive—<heg, eas! will Mr. pcan | 5 A youra nor mine," declared Mr. Sarr. | as i Dialogues "I tell you, & man who works on sal-| ' WHY IS A CITY GOVERNMENT? | Dom he ois eee ary doo extany Sanka for tne ond) Crocodile Tears. es ; Y the members of the Maritime Exchange a resolution has been | | sare Na. mary, thevee,” ene: Se “ithe asrocates. of thio chumy”* be said i | “3 un awful bug, this little hom: in-the-country thing, ein't 1 asked Johnson, the cashier, nd Mr. Jarr seated themesives at 27 yy? Shakespeare say The laborer is worthy | have to pass the euffering on to the workingmen,” aghast)—Why er-er, I euppowe lor nis hire Gmator Bryan, with « grim chuckle, added: vive got to talk about some-| “No, it's the Bible,” replied Johnson, | “It's like the young ledy to whom ¢ friend anid: Jones's fat, 00 P, tering)—Hoello, honey! | @o—| (sourly)—You seem to} thin, ; lunch counter, 5 you know. who had a baritone voice and eang in| distinct from the general city government. | well, 1 don't know,” ead Mr. Jarr, | be tna pretty good humer.} Mrs, J. (between eet teeth)—Well | choir in the Bronx | - Various other departments of municipal activity lave in times 9s # looked carefully over, the bill of ate, (auprned why m0 [yon preter the" term,” sore, deny [nately aoe tet aes esos || Lhe May Manton Fashions: . okie ire an en lect id if sek a " 3 pest been turned over to special boards or commissions. So the new | apple pie, as usual, “I'd like to have |I came straight up from the office. |powerful than any of these. And they lonce in a while,” Mfr. Jarr went on. | projects are not revolutions nor even innovations. They have the|®, little place in the country—for the |What makes you ask that? go about their work in a vilely sur-| ‘die gete a short-arm jolt in the ribe % , ren eummer, Yuh know, I pity Jenkins all) Mre. J. (coldly)—Oh nothing. reptitious manner. And you, YOU, arelevery onee in @ while at OUR shop,” merit, however, of raising a question whether it is worth while to|winter and envy him all spring om (Me, 3, epprosches Mra, J, and embraces her,)/one of them! aad Johnson, se he made his beans 4 * maintai: i : A summer,” Mrs. maintain a city government any longer except as a body of fanction- "!xinds me that we ran away from {nese (mpatiently)—Oh, for good-| Mr, J. (ungrammetically emazed)— |gory with ketchup. don't get mushy! (eubdtly). | wr aries to put on display on civic holida wink. Think hell be gore? It strikes me you're MIGHTY oonald-| stra, J, (petly)—Yes, you! U've been |anow® Jentina ey go think eee 4 y ee = taking? Same old thing~ erat 4 bridegroomy this evening. |aguring tt all out in my own headlog ptm, Make him a nice Iittle useful 7 A 1s extremely. i. ——— Ked beans and apple pie? Tensile, Ii what have you been up to that youl tor the pam few days. All tt needed laresent, or something. Oh, nothing Sef strajeht ekirt thet eam pa feel I want something different t-day" ‘think needs squaring” was confirmation. To-day I KNW |comtly, you know,” he added, seaing F dA ba either | tuck $ Le tters From the Pe op ] e ape wenn gun behind fe PMR aie otf i ciet cuel something was xeing to Pg aapel 4 Johnson edge away; “but if the poor : Hitte Bong that oe 4 1) aus he eens. janes nlc ap Gy cause one of the pictures in the parlor |o1q gink was to croak we'd send flow- nade with Yrotelles ALLA LPT ODIO Gropped right off the wall, for no Unta blouge can be & Warm Weather Grievance. lessness of trying to olap # allence on manager was standing nearby jtentive enough and the next you accuse reason at all. And sure enough, in ers, wouin’ we? a ¢ with w tucked ; Abit walt- “Well, then,” continved Mr. Jern gathered tront p ‘To the Riitor of The Dreuing World: the early morning howte—t and, anyway, ah of all walt-| me of being mushy. 7 : , x iy Warm westher draws near. Thet! janitor, the whistling aig eae ors to boost the wares of the establish- the mext mail, THIS came “why not get him @ nice plant for hte one vow 3 ie . Uelly)—Say, don't try to pull pri 2 mata of meane apartment windows will soon be! yngling milkman, the banging gar, TON’ ‘They seldom have to eat the ea me, ft won't wo | Gees cm oe eeniene, ont Soe tetle geeten, Se the sea id ner up, and that means sounds will travel 4 ‘and a long association with dyspep! One nw time—o ti wildly before her astonished musbant, eho te " taslly, And that qrsane thet the tired, |coner’ Bee tay eee ba oe for Patrons makes them callous to human (Gown sen Once upon & time-ut nol TE Oa ee enw) tel) you whet—he'd appreciate some- Nervous, sleepy oF sickly people will be| conaiderate of each other I {auffering. Mr. J. (thinking to placate her)—Tne! Mr. J. (wiping his mustache)—And |thing we bed grown ourselves more aM kept awake late at night by pianos, | enough to have to live the. oe re “Spring lamb and mint sauce, pretty) 06. looks lovely, What have you What may that bet than hae ing be Boss ig ows ¥ ay | ” 4 Johnson. ? : Mrs, J. (ohrilty)—Thet te @ letter eome |am no boy Bui myself, but , phenographs, cornets, merry choruees,|of a flat with good, toot’ aske done to itt Mrs. k @ooee-necked solo singers and orying| py laseatnie mane ch ee [ne waitress Averregis§, ag. 8ll 81° gave. J, crrowning bieckiz)—Hret @ |Rindhearved orton saute Gaeuyy jam © vader io) fees Wiee fy (ere } babies, The only persons in this llat of Medical Kthica, "|e ~enmamaeal es Tel a ee era ich ae peste who are exouable are the abies. | 7, . 4 t . Mr, J. (amtadly sampling the soup)— @ation of HON Dss HUSH, ” |Rreen. 've often ad ; it grows ties weet (ater 0 P. 0.) are wantonly | gn nian Wont: Kind Helpers. |My! The soup is excellent (o* which you're a membor, it seems) #0 strong and healthy, I think berries Your recent edt . | inaking outsances of themselves. 1 am| mince” teria) on ‘Medical not @ crank (1 think), and I realise I am paying for no apartment in the house ‘but my own, But I believe in “Live and let live.” Go I make this plea for | Mre, J. (smiling Ditterly)—You're @ was the snake in the grass that put come on tt in the but I am not ‘wary ad actor, James—you overdo the Mayor on the trail of the dancing |sure. I only know it {6 green all the jthings, teas, Poor things! So abused! Wifey |yenr round except in autumn, when tt | | Mr. J. (blazing up)—Who's acting? wouldn't stay at home and be hubby’a|turns @ beautiful gol! and brown. [What on earth are you getting at? slavey, #o hubby goes and tells the /It'x a stunning steht from my window,” was very timely, The police system isn't 1-2 with the system as fostered and encouraged by (sometimes) | the incompetents (who contribute « larger percentage than most people real. | pe _ “We'll quit early and pull a die bunch | considera +. ff you've anything up your sleeve, xo Mayor on her! qi oewe 00. 8 pases Sess faa) of Dhyslolans, and who are crying | on and spring it, What hypotheticat, Mr. J. (angrily)Let me see that [of {t and send it down to Jenkins by | by dulcet melody. I realize the hope- ee ae $0 Grommet them in thelr ac grievance have you got now? irid:culous paper. messanger, and won't tell him who it's x. | Mra, J. (furtously)—Hypothetieal in 3, hands it over, Mr, J, pemmem i |from!” gald Mr. Jarr. ‘Then, when he deed. Well, let me tell you this: if wtany, then breaks into hearty taughter,) ‘gets to Dragging about ft later, we may I'm going to do anything to spoil Mra J. (frantically~-How DARE you |hint there is some Kindly feeling among another person's pleasure, I'll do it lausb! loMce-mates, even tn cold-blooded New openty—not fo sneaking around, Mke Mr. J. (between gesps)—As usual you |York.” @ thief in the night, about tt! haven't read thie thing to the end.| So, after they returned to the office! Mr. J. (putting down his epoon)-—Say You will eee it finishes by saying that, |they kept aloof from Jenkins, Weren't | fon't you think that if you tried to as long as the Mayor has put the Id |they going to cheer hie heart anony- | explain the situation to me, it would on the dancing teae, “come to ‘Dia-jmously? Then why get mushy and jsimplify matters wonderfully? mond's Dance Dispensary’ on Four-jhave him euspsct? | Mra. J, (boiling up)-—Just lead me to and trot to heart’s| They raided the luxurious evergreen | Queer Superstitions. PBNiNG an umbrella in a work-, certain to find a customer, while shop is an infaliable sign that the| moistens the inalde of the Goon ame thoughtless one will soon receive | the Up of her tongue, the purchaser A militner who ts unfortu- nate enough to ft on a bridal hi | , i at and | seamatrons places a hair in the; yet) 19 condemned to lonely apinaterhood nth street; any garment she is working on! for the rest of her days it! Pm’ full of explanations, T am! HAVE A DANCE HALL Jon the vacant lot in the Bronx and | KY Posnoni ti Mt v7 ” together ta, for) Only I can't trust myself to sneak just Y YOU WON'T BE MPMS- |sent a bundle of fine plants to Jenkins z / & aign of w |now—I might say something I'd be TURBED! Sessions, $1.2 per.” by parcel post, sorry for. Mra. J. (fotled)—-Really! You don’t] But the next day, and for some days Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY of work ts certain to be 4 ‘ ir a te ‘I Mr. J. Gronteally)Oh, don't spare me, say! later, they Iny around the house. BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thin @eener or later, while ihe dr | sow ro on Friday c ‘. > iT pray, T daresay Tam equal to your Mi. J. (meditattvely) Say, 1f I only !Jenkina, too, phoned in concerning h's to alte Gimbel Bros.), corner @ixth avenue and T)irty nd hes patience enough ta put aoe A hymn w working Jaught get hold of the fellow who butlt | indisposition a day I § iY y i New York, or sent mn rece!; fe con) will soon find a fiance, | the’ industslous mudinetine and ihe “Hew often do you dig up your obtate by mall on rece'pt of ten couts in oolm “Mrs. J. (growing = eloquent)—Well, stamps for each pattern everybody's reviling the Mayor, 1 IMPORTANT —Write your address plainty wage ‘They're all talking of the police force eine wamted, ‘dda tue cunts tor lover postage in a teraae