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“oe ESTABLISHED BY JOSEP! PULITZER. nane Pettiones Daily Ex000' by the Press Publishing Company, ef tN Row. New York res : 2 7. nates. EULATSRR, Presid | ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, iW, sosbr PULITZER, Ire Soorelary, @ Park Row. Ny a jh Office at New York an Second-Class Matter. G@ubscripilon ‘Rates *.0 Tie hivening For England and the Continent and World for the United States All Countries in the International on and Canada. Postal Union > J Year. $3.80] One Year... y Month. vee 8010ne Month BOTH INTACT. , OTHING could be plainer or more straightforward than the 4 *President’s official etatement of the Administration’s reasons ia M for sending the Atlantic fleet to Mexico. He informs the country that the Tampico incident is only one of a number of significant signs that the de facto Mexican Govern- Ment is putting off the United States with apologies where reparation ‘end self-correction are called for. “Untoward incidents such as these 5 fhave not occurred in any case where representatives of other govern- | mente were concerned, but only in dealings with representatives of — the United States.” The moment has come to make Huerta understand that watch- fulness and forbearance are not weakness or timidity. This is not the first time a leader of low standards has mistaken courtesy for, cowardice. With the fleet headed for Tampico, the thick-skinned a Mexican General is likely to feel the prick of the reminder and realize | hie mistake. It is his own fault that he faces the downright demand I) @f w great power for an expression of respect which if its due, It| . will be equally his own fault if he forces us to exact it from him. | Copyright, 1914, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening Wortd), EN used to make love in grand opera fashion, but now they court to ragtime, marry to De Koven and divorce to a tango measure, Nothing makes an intellectual woman feel eo cute and fascinating 8 to be told that she has done something “silly.” A man {8 60 “reasonable” that he can hold a cocktail glass in one hand and a cigarette in the other while he leans across the table and discourses. scathingly to a girl on the folly and moral depravity of the woman Who smokes, | The happiest wife is one who regards her husband's follies through & | diminishing glass and his perfections through a microscope. : | In the “close corporation” of matrimony the balance of power always, goes to the partner who has the biggest balance in the bank, no matter | who calls himgelf the “head of the house.” ° | A man will cheerfully eat an eleven-course dinner, beginning with @ cocktail and ending with half a pound of cheese, and then go around look- | ing as injured and reproachful as though his wife had wished his indiges-" | tion on him. e | “Beauties of the soul” may be all right, but they soon lose their im+ spiring effect on a husband when they are encased {n @ soiled kimono ama: |an old pair of bedroom slippers. | a Whatever happens, no one can say that the United States has | When a man has reached his third glass of champagne somehow he _ Geparted » hair's breadth from its policy. Up to the latest moment it j eee always imagines that it 1s “love” that is making the world go round. bas maintained its dignity and its desire for peace alike intact. , = 3 ~ at w=}: —- : When Actors Were Vagrants. Ts first regular theatre im) mendous scandui, which resulted im “Watchful waiting” sometimes calls for “full epeed ahea: th BUILD BATHS AT THE SCHOOLHOUSES. | HE incalculable injury to the happiness and health of thou- sands that must follow a wholesale closing of the river baths during the hot weather seems to have stirred compunctions emong the Board of Health sanitarians since their recent summary condemnation of bathing in the waters surrounding Manhattan. Next week the Board is to consider ways and means to protect and purify the water in public baths with the help of caissons and filtration machines. To cut off all river bathing because of sensational reports of danger without first taking steps to provide at any cost new bathing facilities, is bound to work infinitely more harm than good. During all the years that people have bathed in the rivers it would be hard to trace a single epidemic to this source. On the other hand, whet will be the effect upon the public health if habits of Cleanliness in hot weather are to be deliberately discouraged ? If river bathing must presently be forbidden, then let the city at once take steps to provide other places to bathe. The Evening World| | has already suggested a practical and economical plan: r The modern city schoolhouse is built with a large entrance court. S tr alg ht Fr om Excavate this court and install a sanitary bathing pool, leaving the court partly floored with glass and fitted with overhead awnings. The Sh ouider Baths added to the schoolhouses would cost comparatively little America was opened in Phila-| the suppression of the theatre in the delphia 360 years ago with &]| Hub for nearly half a century. In’ performance by the English company | 1740 an attempt was made to opes brought to the colonies by Mr. and|a theatre in Philadelphia, oe Mrs. Lewis Hallam. There was bit-| promoters were arrested and + ter opposition to the erection of a] over to “keep the peace.” In 1750 the playhouse in the Quaker City, but] Nassau street Theatre, a converted permission was finally obtained on|storeroom, was opened in New York. the condition that,the actor: In 1752 Hallam e over with “nothing Indecent or immoral. company which seen in extem- first English drama in the Daltpes playhouses in New | World was given by Moody, an Eng Villlamsburg, Va. lish actor of Irish characters, in the | fore the pla island of Jamaica in 1745. Four years/to inaugui , later Otway’s "The Orphan” was pre-| nights ‘n America’s first real play- | sented in Boston and caused a tre- | house. Chapters From a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond Copyright, 1914, by The Prese Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), CHAPTER XVIII. “Even if he should, we could not TE conversation Jack and 1| ‘ake it, Sue. I have no money to pay moving expenses, I stopped and ] had had anent George Lan-| gave the doctor ten more and told * don and his wife had left out I anne think you were very me nervous and worried. A/ Well, and he advised your coming in cold chill had gone over me|‘® #€e him. No, dear, you must De i ’ content here a while longer. Ant Girls Ignorance Of 3} won sack had declared that under don't sce anything the matter wie | the same provocation he would do as/ it, anyway. I think 4 tty com. The Value of Money George Lundon had done and adver- | fortatie* he finishe tod oni [Some Historic Word Pictures Ez am; of Descriptioe Power by Great Authors tise his refusal to pay his wife's} It WAS comfortable, And had It ; Success Talks to Young Men. i bills, , the shame of it! But in-| not bee an) avd be convenient for thousands. Public school baths would do} omer, 1914. Yy, rE en, tie Go No. 27 By Sophie Irene Loeb. oad of it making mo rescive to beling Dre. Gonete aint aa oe pave ‘ . New aing . lo. 37.—THE SACRIFICE. From “‘A Tale of Two Cities, more careful about getting in debt,|should have been better satisfied, more than anything else to make bathing and learning to ewim what — Ccaagtae ane: aoe “patie coe {it only made me more careful about! My whole point of view was ate they should be—part of the elementary schooling of every child in mete P ieraptretiuses 5 by Dickens. "ithe New York vening Weetdhe® Keeping the, knowledge of what I had |torted because of my pride—my als. are ‘at wor! 7 ay da ‘row Jack, e t a ‘ich The Board of Health cannot afford to overlook so desirable a men who would never filch an- with a slight, girlish form, a eweet, spare face in which there $10,000" reread ie eee hid We iietne: Cit posemulates Ae hav aacunent pnt tt wa yr means of getting more use out of school buildings which at the same|°ter man's property, but have no wras no vestige of color and large, widely opened, patient eyes , . \ , et, rather pealed to t¢he|# fast—and to get Jack to help me|mind. And we passed a quiet, rather moral scruples against stealing his Tose from the seat where he had observed her sitting and came : work out a problem thit was getting | uncomfortable evening’ As he kissed time goes « long wey toward solving the bath problem. time. to peek: to ae F ssaictsaichl ms oe te Senay me ood. night, Jack sald: ——ieneeennpbeenaneseina: _ zen emonde,” ehe jouching him with her cold hand, “I'm crease ne 5 “Too bad, dear. 1 wish I could abe aeeay Worker time Is & valu-| . poor little seanstress who was with you in La For 000, “When asked t00T, tS se dppalling. "No wonder 1 |tumentic apartment for your sake; but ; : : Nie can't!" and his sigh was . on Long Island and the rain mixed ‘em. A natural highway. less interruption of thelr work there-|think of plotting with @ poor weak little creature like me? If T may one 3 $10,000 tee emsall| CMY. Rumband was ao kind ang| SUNY feline Untit T went to sleepy — ei fore steals from them dollars and|with you, Citizen Evremonce, will you let me hold your hand? I am not he sald: thoughtful of me 1 should have had/the door himself and dunned me in cents, afraid, but I am little and weak, and it will give me courage.” 4 no fear to confess what was more/a particularly nasty maner, After Wh ‘4 As the patient ¢ Ufted to his face h dd GRAFT A MUNICIPAL LODGER? _,,..20, sss mother man's time, by | aod and’ then asionahment. He reamed the workworm. bung worn OLITICS and graft have been ster boarders at the Municipal Lan La conversation soves ha feed pou oe @ying for tim?" tas whispered, a a Lodging House, if we may believe the special investigators| work thet concerns either af them. te “and his wife and child. Hush! ¥ who studied conditions in that institution for the Charities|*lf-branded as more than a “time| Ob 70U Yen ee Po8 OOM Tou, Dave mand, atrengert? “Really I do|my foolishness than anything worse.|he left | got all the unpaid b not know at all.| But after eae a NG ware eee and counted them ~ Ce Mech Helen Landon jshtened me, My ni T am entitled to) ade me tell Jack I had been run-lon edwe, and’ I broke down” uttesie wer allow-| ning bills which I knew I bad no way and was crying harder than Trey ance. I do not/of paying. He had, of course, been) since I had been married, when there know why IK need| Joking wien he told’ me what he did! wan a rap at the door. Supposing it thought 1 had ‘ ~ Department. thief.” He is stamped as a man whuse . ° . . {t, but I do,” she sensed’ ‘vein ot seriousneann ieee and ‘opened tt gs NG, a i F own time is witbout value; @ drone) Along the Par! ete the death carts rumble, hollow added aweetly. there w: certain—I was going tO! was Mrs, Somers, - , Charges are made that Tammany has lodged its heelers free and| who has come tdly buzzing into a hive! tumbrils carry the day's wine to La Guillotine. PRA AAR “WEE IT re cresteea went ga, to explain | say, hardness, but strictness, la the) “The front door was open, 0 1 for indefinite periods in the East Twenty-fifth street building; that|°! workers. He etands at the back of the tumbril with his head bent down to < tathavell turned away for political reasons, and that the Meshal s 7s freee neeinemy sr gourane with a mere girl who eits on the side of the cart and holds his records of the house and of some of its inmates have been falsified. | workers when those fellow workers ae The tumbrils begin to discharge their loads. Crash! a head ie held up,|or not the parents of this girl in- Grafters and light-fingered specialists are said to have been so active| “eer? over” in work that must bejand the knitting women, who acarcely lifted their eyes to look at it a mo- tended her to have such a sum for done, he steals tim t only from ment ago when it could think and speak, count one, own use, the fact remains thi fm the Lodging House thet they even skimmed the cream off the| raiow workers but trom bis explorer The supposed Evremonde descends and the setmatress le lifted out |she hae little or no conception as to for | after better word—in Jack's make UD; | walked right up,” sh » eomething I imagine t seme, 8 forgive me fat cor nani (rou must George Landon possessed, ey ing, but I thought I would surely find aerpeiea a fault lander the cir- | OU, !2,” ahe apologized, rele am so glad to vou,'* . cimiances? surely wan 808 CHO08 aga ty any ana gif Neg Uae) “prot Wen reer gto Sather up the bills From this time the bills in my b ren, drawer became an active lipped off my lap on to that the young woman could not live in her “accustomed luxury” unless the allowance was increased. Whether 5 p en I went to the door, morning's milk and stole brass nozzles and couplings from the|ss well. That ume is being paid for] after, him. hyd Re eclea Caeteen, Pace Pogalig [iyo Raa but | ing. “No doubt her parents diet Tithe taney the darling!" she exclaimed, fire hose. "wurthermore he 1s stealing from his| whirring engine that constantly whirre up and fall and she looks ines tie | Aunne during ‘their fetime. “But nas |The Baby mate Fienae wine couek : ‘ +s yo: |fellow. Workers © measuratte amoune| tere aut thanks hier “ Ks into his |there siways comes a day when one| Banks for enother day each week. I| cnt, "40%, Made friends with her at There are many sequestered corners of the city administration |of their efficiency by bampering thea: eet Gris) dak kame T RO mist, Aeure Sor one a cel A Bapkvegun to look thin and pale, Ti fenenine” tae foe", oforrin where patronage and petty graft sprout like toadstools under a| turing out thelr work. rd 22 Componet, for 3 am ate fnoush|ict her como the first week, then! have when they And it reacts upon himeelif. tis|Baturally @ poor little thing, faint of heart, Nor should I have been able|‘@ Pave 80 much money that she may @isused bench. It is not impossible that the Municipal Lodging|employer, observing, a: Th! ‘igot to reise my thoughts to Him who was put to death that we might ieee |2t, need to know the value of it,| 840 Phu think she was coming rigbt | new acquaintance, ‘ tong, but kept the money and Wd) Go right on with Such cases are rare indeed. But no|°% if instead, Ith your work,” she young man not only frivols intead bope and comfort here to-day. I think you were sent to me by Heaven.” go th th life abi the work myself in a sald to me. “Don't let me feel I have we management may prove to be one of them, trying to keep busy, but interfer “Or you to me,” says Sydney Carton. “Keep your eyes upon me, dear |lqnoren? Gnd careler absolutely! “Where's Mrs. Banks?” he asked) interrupted you.” And ai ot with the work of others. I cannot child, and mind no other object.” ul ignorant and careless as to the use| when he came home early oa the day y nd did I tmagine without bringin; ford to keep him in my employ. He “[ mind nothing while I hold your hand.” self as well as to ot ere. {8 stealing from me—doubly steall: Any eo can spend mo: and - Have a map of Mexico handy. If a young man is not a The two stand in the fast thinning throng of victims, but they speak a; ee ty 4 2 young worker wee wore alone. tye to weles to volok wend 6 : oe iis no credit to do ao, nd Letters From the People merely an idie visitor, he is an in-| these two children of the Universal Mother, else #0 wide apart and iffering, | cret of avoiding terrible traged! Amether Plea for Patriotiom. Joy of it). But everybody sat down it, or did her ti ring Ihe had told her to ke there. this I had laid’on the tablets ee The question was pected, an “Oh, I wasn't doing anythin, [ stammered: eens had @ bead- Importance,” I hastened to 80 glad that m ornit |, you look as though you bad | ished and that my. home looked some kind of an ache yourself! I melle fresh and dainty, game home ae gt 59 take ou gut. you have a very pretty home, but 3 wee ted ahous yom wi your taste that was to be Suerie Borch climber, none the leas| have come asia and to rest on her bosom, Every AE oman, rich or poor, a time-thtef. ah “Brave and generous friend,” she says, “will you let me ask you should uy Parents or guar- re "ao Wo the ant, (hod SUsEAra” bet last question? [am very ignorant and it troubles me just a little. T here | 18n8 that Futhleasly'to spend money his attention from work, @ cousin, an only relative, and an orphan like myself, whom I love very is ons: 0 as resrous habits indly. ted,” she said look Dear Jack! The only doctor I neet-| "But you were feeling eee eee: dearly. She ts five years younger than I and she lives in a farmer's house youth Bay ‘eh ae Ae me & od was one who would pay that pile| something when 4 aly Stee T came in. in the Bouth Country. What I have been thinking as we oame along and|evil, if Properly planted with scods o since our talk been | news, hop f bills. very economical—almost stingy—but is A hat I am etill thinking now as I look strong face is this: ity it be “No, only my foolish: Bo the Editor of ‘The Evening World: Rs Mae eso § of a repetition | Hits From Sharp Wits. panel really doe: pot to the poor haa tay eee to be a Snes thee of lite, that ahelters and ee eee eae mete Ntnee Me vd augres trembling! bs I am a “patriot” and have) girl tr Te my detight the oo in all ways to suffer leas, she may live a long time—she may even live to|_ While Soe sieee mwbo hoards up his| couraged instead of helped me. en St the many times been alone in paying] ple In stood before he was hait| Some men u wealth so that eirs may quarrel right,” I hastene: the bush league | be old.” able to win the prac-| “What then, my gentle sister?” Pre dmited, pet if one enends Ohta? being in audiences of old-timers who Wonderful way he played the song.| tice games against the champions “Do you think"—the uncomplaining eyes in which there is so much ile the aun is shini: how r I do wish people could | when nobody's looking and the scores i Gey while ae, BOW afe supposed to be educated in pa- fem through my eyes! It od pa don't ‘count,-Boston Transcript, endurance fill with tears and the lips part @ little more andtremble—“that | then if to-morrow ia the “rainy day? It seems the young c'! ve {t will seem long to me while I wait for her in the better land where T For you can't always tell its ap. Mi are more loves to thas fay (nee | ore yider veople feel ten times youn; bilauis + v “Tm all 4 to say.| be! sis Mee cuomack to get to Genes had ‘sobbed. out “ait ths hy wanted wi Fry | story. ing about me. ‘ory. The unpaid bill ; bi let Jack know, our o “Well, you don’t look it!” he an-/Mrs. Landon, Taok's savin wy Lo @me respect to our flag, in spite of through the repetition, due to the| teams, a! 2K swered. - . de the same ‘if he had the sim Y ‘ am sure, Sarcasm may adorn argument; it| both you and I will be mercifully sheltered?” proach ve |e" But tam," I insisted. “And, Jack,|gon wnten: he neiitd, the same rea. x Pre Ses, th orien Pictures | u beautiful inspiration, | cannot take the @ of argument. ve cannot be, my child. There is no time there and no trouble there.” ain that abe ov Je10 ma fe other I do wish you w a gree to the|/had—my saying I would Niven Wes " . Pet aerincd anh teal tans T hope T have expressed my senti: (a ‘You comfort me so much. I am eo ignorant. Am I to kiss you now? her Easter hat. This took the wages | Ciiftons an wt joo! st t apart-|with a man who had so humilieted & up with the light of 76 ments the way I wanted to. Bome persons’ temperament is such | Is the moment come?” of nearly three weeks’ work, “tne ment Gertie told me about, mo--all—e thing that had so wor. oe OP we ae tt 5 WILLIAMSBURG GIRL, | that the only way to prevent them ry. nd who was with her, with the| “What's the use? TI can't”—— ried me, n—when she isk & ,1 from doing something Is to tel) them 8 she asked m iasen his lips; he ki ; they solemnly bless each other, The| same, salary, stated that hers juat|, (It won't do any harm to look,” Tltelling her the pitiful amount which : . “And Gertie thii ; ‘ | they tauat do It . apare hand does not tremble leases it; nothing worse than a aweet, |Cost #4. iin xoung woman had, be: LOR cece a peauenon nel ea so unhepp ad Which was making.« It is so hava to se c . bi She next before him— " Xe Be T temember only | tion tn wae Yorke . It is very dificult to become well goes i@ gone.|and had sent some Easter wearing | time of year. (To Be Continued.) p n| rested for doing nothing, The knitting women count twenty-two, apparel to younger sisters at home in| —-—. tish Columbi. ae, “1 am the Resurrection and the Life,” saith the Lord, “h he country. with the balan ae Stara aud Stripes, and | where 1 hav can carn very | Wishing, always uselens, sey 0 Lite’ saith the Lord, “he that believeth |the country with the balance of that etl 4 en} in me though he were dead yet shall hi » and whoseer Ni A e weeks’ pay. cents cheaper than the accustomed'rive home. And, hay at a vaudeville show whore | good wages nd pave, iaote ‘than ik | wore when it's turned backward. | jloveth In me shall never die 0 live Whenpever liveth and ber | these, wir} with the 440 hat wore a|price, | This benny-wise-pound-foolish | money’ ‘ar yateris er a en woh r, y kins ‘The murmur: shabby sult an not present nearly |attitude toward money is also the re- | what she REALLY DOES w, ved that un | of work, even If it's ver: ch di tent comes of mal ng of many voices, the upturning of many faces, the press- ‘ant. os Suan ¢ pH ele y herd. Wil Much discon pleasing ing in of many footsteps on the outekirte of th wd go that it swells for- | %, attractive an sult of NOT studying values, So that altogether it is pearance as wise hay that one although she told how sh Also, there is the young woman who | young woman who think: = er prod ous vlghtnaibeay ard in & mass, like one great heave ef water, all Gashes away. Twenty- cera two strest car fares to eocse buys the things on the spur of the|ahe lets the dollar Out of her mae and Journal. three. 4 f they were selling gloves a moment and regrets it after they ar-/and-dhusamres later sonves’ ty 9 B the majority stood to pay (thinking of