The evening world. Newspaper, April 15, 1915, Page 22

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\ } } omen es pone PLAS Pemered ot the Poet ory Owreer ow Wie Tne hee tee! Wort tor « or erate ote ‘ Bot now what happens? the Stock Exchange run aes benp! Bethiehem Steel, a #t the extent of bundre solid information or fact ehange Governors Who says the Exchange is otherwise? —— —-+t- HEB KY? Fulton Street Repr befo: allowed to discuss location of stations hearing. isfy them. fight has only begun. and professional non-workers. the country. Yorkers have to pay thelr bills. When news that the metropolis has boasted a Hotel de Gink spreads throughout the land, can anybody wonder if the advertisement | Jarr. produces results? ship their unemployed to #centre that seems to make a joke of pro- viding for them? “The wintering in New York City of the hobo clan is going to] Mrs. Jarr, In Joyous tones, after kiss have grave results some day,” declaros Magistrate Cornell. They ar- rived last winter by carloads and, despite the pleasant weather, few) ing the children having thelr dessert | of them have left us yet.” The tramp temperament easily absorbs 1. W. W. doctrine, ‘The We've Just gotten throuxh immediate result is intensified idleness. violence and crime. Keeping up ap A wecret ne in if two know It ° fe the man who tries to fool himself. —Philadelphia _inoulrer. should have been done ‘Toledo Blade. 7. Why fs it that a child studying mu- sic always stops so long to think before picking out the wrong note?— Columbia State. Te Philadelphia by Trolley, ‘To the Ptitor of The Evening World: Will some one please tell us how | na! much it would cost to cover the route | bui from Manhattan to Philadelphia by |12, 1770, The frat newspa; trolley car and ferry and the route | in Amertca ter, April 2 this are in existence, and length of time? Cc, MeL. Another “01a” New To the Editor of The Evening Wortd Thave noted severfl references late- ly to old newspapers. 1 have an or |, iginal copy of the Boston Sentinel, ublished on Saturday, Nov. 14, 1795, Benjamin Kusseli in State Street, ton, Mass. It !s now somewhat frayed and brown with age, but in a frame can be easily read. One learns bas declared war on the Kin; Prussia.” ~" of eustom, lik faqui esitent $0 peoperer 6) Pare Row Severe © Pare Rew 61 New Tort as Qecont a” or Pogtens tow GAMBLERS STILL. Doepite © bronere are cag fome the ‘iret opportun ty ro it inte e gambling b . The scrutinizing of prices, the gation of properties, the fixing of real velues—can enybody discern tee worthy Lunt ue the wild mo of the past fow days? t never p fremrped to three times ite normal price, overbought and overeold ' of thousands of eharce kwerybody wholly in the dark ee to why stock whieh speculators, broken 44 1-2 early in the year ehould, in lese then four mont rutin zing valu The simple fact is the old game w on price of the hour and minute is everything haven't got to men who never expect to tov etead of tangible property, quotations Instead of money earned, money made The tame old leopard and the same old spots Why pretend Instead of profits, winninge BROOKLYN FIGHTS ON. will find it hard work to persuade Brook ymite that more girders and tracks are better than light and air io ntatives of civie and property owners’ associations went the Public Service Commiagion vesterday and protested vigor ously against this monstrous injury to their borough the advertised purpose of the | he majority of those present let it be known that nothing | but the complete abandonment of the third track project would sat-| Brooklyn is now thoroughly awake to the fact that it has been ‘Bing! Bang! Bing! mw Mee te Pew teow ‘ wntries (6 re | 4 @ dividend, te suddenly spon not an iota of touch I Values are nothing. The Men sell what they t they buy. In Nobody was |< | he Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday. April 15. 1915 Gre e6Mity ation. PETAMLINITED BY Jorn PULITEN® Peruabes Detiy Pecans funder by me Hy » a By Robert Minor The Story of Lincoln’s Deat ee nl | ! A Netwne! Tregedy Whose SemiLomenary ts Obsersed This Wood . ED By Winfield M. Thompson neh (0 te Fete Teen No ¢ THE PRESIDENT SHOT DOWN ve r er ’ vy " venereal a Me tren nduis for a A « sfernoos jrant had wald farewe se et ef and before nighifall le boarded «train for Philadelphia HEKe oF omg ranston HANWIHILE ¢ nagers of Forde The 4 advertived that the M Vreeident would wWithom that evening ® performance at (heir house of “Our Amerie nett of Laura Keene Rather than dis cided to attend the tt Lincoln th point the theatre pe and pul etre Without Gen. Grant Te fm invited & YOURK couple of the official sue Ho Harrie, daughter of senator Ira Harrie of New York Major Henry KR. Rathbove The theatre management (No. 7, on the balcony leve oe & by beat and her Aanee, on receiving an on the right of neing (he furniture, 7 d draping the bos with flags OTH'S preparation for hia oriine fet B haunts, and Were carried out with su familiares at the th The work in the theat [by Booth, He knew + the workinen had gone, at supper time, it ae slipped through the darkened th him there; but @ hole was fitted behind the door openti back of the by With n order f © Pros tents bow pared it for of Washington el into lite dally habite ag Hing dissembling, that tre Maw NO TeMSON to f preparing the Pres @ house so Well that A waa not watched yoitnew When able, the assassin x tre to th odin the pan from t ny on the ne end of the bar ina hole dug in the p! wall, and the other pressed against the side of a panel, the doe he opened from with . These hinges don and the bar taken dow and stood on a dick rece behind the dor, Booth left the ¢} a “ad HE President was lite in reaching the theatre, As he entered the bem the action of the play ceased, the audien nd cheered and the orchestra played “Hall to the Chief.” 10.10 o'clock the asaaasin passed into the the His hee , n 1 the absence of the | soe nge: sident's guard from his A glance thror ne aasiussin that all four of the per easily pu box were pre- door showed | occupled tricked into accepting a plan only half revealed at the outact. If public opinion cannot halt the outrageous scheme of the B. R. T. to choke Fulton Street with steel so that it can run heavy freight trains through that thoroughfare for the benefit of the Long Island Rail road, Public Service Commission, courte and Legislature can. The) Mes. Jarr Pats Emerge On the Gentle Art of Hospitalit wae putting them to bi | At this instant the voice of Willie! ciety people after this!” declared M Jarr was heard in the hall, He was) Rangle, when outside The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell “I'm through with four-flush a0-| “Lead me) with and outlasted the brief, sharp report of the pistol Thon softly opening the box door jthat the door would open to his t peed nous upon the carpet behind the stdent’s chair, The actor on the | fnished a funny linea line ending with the we | It was the Inst word Lincoln ever heard spok Th another instant Booth aimed at his victin of his loud, clear voice uttering the words * fonder and ssly the 4 mantrap.” s —$ 4 NEW YORK A HAVEN FOR HOBOES. IGHT to the point is Magistrate Cornell’s warning that this city is letting itself become a regular winter resort for tramps | Tam The story the Magistrate tells of a North Carolina town where | «in the authorities cheerfully passed along a freight car load of forty hoboes bound for New York could be matched in almost any part of New York is the only place that lets them stay, and New Or is it surprising that smaller cities shamelessly | beet stew for supper. ‘Tramps and I, W. W. leaders should be forcibly ‘persuaded to choose a new place for their winter meetings. longer they stay here the harder it becomes to deal with the deserving unemployed, and the longer grow the city's crime records, Hits From Sharp Wits rances ts the first 12 for eome one to repay @ loan you ‘to those who haven't much of any-) did not expect ae else to keep, . The reason some men are able to — nave money after marriage is that they | “Do walt tll people who come to see It ts never easy to find a good ex-|have some one to do It for them.—| you have time to Ket thelr breath after | Ww eure for not doing something that | Philadelphia Inquirer, o 8 You can make something of a nit) cards!” with a kind word, but n prefer to use @ club, ‘Telegraph, A man fa often known by the r tives he keep: ence. In Cranford, N. J., are ° ber of New En; UB isc bearing 4. ‘ne is a Boston Gazet “Swords and Plowehares,” | burd enough to keep a Ki from it that “the Empresa of Rusals | 7 the Béttor of The Brening Worid If a dozen or eo names of Polish) that Mrs. Kittingly upstairs, with no All through the paper the| towna mixed up in the war we: 8 printed in the old-fashioned | stood and "* But I found upon| fastened to them, the combination iry t my paper is quite mod-| would make a ripping good meat. @re compared with others in exist-' saw, in @ row “There they are now!"| Into an excited a Then Willie lay said Mrs Jarre ax the bell! Gtants’ chane “Hurry up from the table, Jarr returned. everybody!" she added. And then] “Where are the ehildren?* plaintively, “and I distinctly satd ‘after | Mrs, Ranyrle, er’ Mrs, Jarr ann h, never mind the Rangles,” said | ——————— Mr. Jarr ‘They've had their muvay | Maven chore len Reflections of a Bachelor Girl haven't, there’ plenty here What's By Helen Rowland the use of putting on airs for old rabt, WAG, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) friends? ¥ | Yui man who regards matrimony as a joke has a sufficiently keen ment aw to the} sive me fl’ cents!” gon until Mra,| down and kicked, Mr. Jarr was called upon to take punitive measures, and the Rangles declared that they muat go, they unced that the girt| really must. ‘They meant tt, too. asked away and talk about you," sald Mrs. | “And, anyway, we only have By this time the Rangles were at the portals of the Jarr flat. “Come into the front room!" said| “Those are the kind that will go | ing Mra. Rangle and shaking hands sense of humor to carry him through all of its sad vicissitudes, with Mr. Rangle. “Mr. Jarr ts seo aii Considering how many things a small boy carries In his pockets, tt's astonishing to see how clean and neat and uninteresting he keeps them after he has grown up and married dinner, of you've had course? ophere'a an agreeable change in the weather, Isn't there?” ad Mra.! Rangle, ignoring the re park about The dinner, for the Rangles hado't dined and they expected a repeat of the| a invitation. If the average man ever succeeded tn finding an “ideal woman,” ac- ‘At thia juncture Mr. Jarr came into cording to his description of one, she would bore him to death with her tne front room. "Glad to seo yon goodness, frighten him to death with her intelligence and sicken bim to folka!” he aid, heartily. “Come on | death with her devotion tn less than a week out in the dining room." | eee ‘This was a dangerous spot, under Garhalday GAC hop babe la vorn hin qaoweninegies thinking e/ninn hak | the omancen, 08 Mire. dare KNOW. |... con anmed bachelor. ‘The children were not through with ; The ultimate results are The man who fox-trots beautifully reminds us that one may do @ lot of things well which are not worth doing at all ‘The only way you can avold giving | Pore offense to #0) saying anything to ‘The doggondest fool above ground | Journal te by nat their, dessert and Gertrude had not} person them.—Albany | cleared off the table “Oh, you Just want to get at your ol4 card playing!” cried Mra, Jarr jaa burned-out tllustons, ien a man turns the bow on his hat from the side to the back and climbing the stairs. such a radical concession to “stvle” that all the world te staring at him. pst people} ‘The Jarr children had now come eee Madelpbla | sunning in to greet the visitors and,| cre Mrs. Jarre could sound a warning note, the little girl was hugging Mrs. -—Pittaburgh Bua, | tangle and the little boy was on Mr Kangle's knoe denianding five cents tn | a whispered “aside.” “Look at thelr hands!" cried Mrs | Jar. “Well, look at thelr hands. Don't haw! There is no way of pleasing a man! hurt his vanity; if you fMirt with him you shatter his {luston: marry him you “wreck his life.” and if you | the same time. Betty Vincent's Advice to Lovers, jand Weekly Jour-| look at me!" ered Mr. Jarr, "I'm not | MAN should not be too ready Sasol dated ins | °° Bim: tor oer BATE phorolate to think that a girl Ikes him ten | pudding op thelr Aan norte only for what he can give her should have seen they were washed.” |i org nnn girls of that wort, Tam Now the ng while she Is aro 1ntil she lets bim understand other wise, | K." writes ind am tired out wher r for home, Recent rvant girl is never blamed vd ny reprints of t, as far ay for anyth sorry to say. Rut T do not believ: seat to a lady, only to! able creature; because she bartered best Tcould, but sueceeding | JUSt 4s Lucius Hemming came up to they are so nitmerous as some eyni Ys able ores parte felings as [eeae eis known, almost no originals Pat caraie (anly aeonnaiit lh dittara hey are so numerous me evn her remark to her companion, herself for a house in the country, « | kody (euetaale, BABE OM: [Re rtesacn ania aharniy young men think > aank into He fell retinue of servants and a limounine. WY. nor in the hotel: F knew they | This, nieed a surprine, Mra, Pronoun or Advert 0 BPM . ‘ A girl ts alwa ta certain have fay to) Again, there is a young girl of my| were in Chicane dy eosuid, "When did © the Raitor af The Evening World | “Don't you think Gertrude has advantuse ina friendship 9 vf acquaintance who had been very une | “ewe didn't sou tell me so before | Kindly give part of speech of nough to do? T was in here see nan. Ahe conn Pea a etaied pans uwere a gentioman and the lady! kind to her old mother—the mother | we came down’? 1 can't: understaag nornin dane replied peech of the t feetly 0 1 simple things for vigarkat 4 pinched and it yA fi here Lueiis Hen yo ve been CA a Mira. Ranels, and #00 might | foe 1 H " A vulgirian }who had pinched and saved to give | this air o! eoy where Lt H i vou © been very ‘aned sitar garg tee, | Me eno ME Rang and YOU MIKME foar lest people Gncluding the young | : her every chance. And now that the| ining is concerned a caring for my brother's vee have looked after the children! It's man) suspect her of “running after Po K" writes: "Is it good form te her grief and long. | turning ¢ 1 keep | him. Consequently, if he loses bis! ask a young ian to position, or for some other reason photograph after we hia expenditures are curtatied, she) writing cannot xo fo him and say, “Never few Inexpensive gifts? |mind- Ut ike you Just as much." & Then she smacked the children and | San’ » this but not a friend Neverth s the man should give led them away to wash thoir handa, jetit of the doubt and as FOB Mr. and Mra, Rangie assuring uer| sume that he ls Uked for bimaelf you wish, only one. And yet there's people like cbildren, who keepa two or three!"’ that we shall not be friends again. Certainly you have a right to tor the retarn of your photograph @ handle ) ‘ } 4k, WS by The Wee Pabiishing Co (The New York tecuing Word jengaged in a passage of arms with) back the beef stew we have at 11H Jarre had invited Mr. and] that the children hadn't harmed them | Gertrude, the lieht-ranning domes‘ic. home Mra. Rangle over to spend} in the least, “1 want my fi’ centa!” he howled.| “I wouldn't have minded their hav- the evening. Mr. Jarr and Mr. Rangle then got| “Mr Rangle said he was going to|ing dinner with us,” said Mre, Jarr, | Love ts a sacred fire which God puts into every heart; and when we) ittiude toward It; and eo reaches make a toy ef it, even for a day, we pay the penalty with scorched hearts; “Ut muennitely. You and your old | has the tailor sew an extra button on his cuff he feels that he has made | If you ignore him you | “! Oh. yes, it Is easy to be both a man's fdea!l and his wife-—but not at | | “I work fourteen|and who was now the “happy wife | | send back my| ing are more t have ceased Should I return to him a pay! L am sure get away with it.” Trite as it may Kw snd you may send back the gifts if} to get back to tte whol T the shot Lincoln's head dropped forward and to one mile. The assassin dropped his smoking weapon and, ‘lrawing from its sheath EGC GAL SOC ee cL @ long knife, advanced to the front of the box ‘np ' Major Rathbone attempted to atrike him down, but Hooth thrust j Street, “but you can’t ask people to) savagely with the knife, gashing the arm he raised as. guard. eat beet stew, can you?" | ‘Then seizing the front of the box, the assassin vaulted over the edge, | “I'm asked to cat it!” growled Mr.| though retaining his hold to break his fall. ‘The heiiht wis about nine feet at him | Jar. As his feet cleared the rail one of his spurs siruck the frame of Washington's i ae = = bertree caught int , draped flag and caused hin to pitch forward and r f + ai strike the stage heavily, first on his left foot, and then on all fours, |Do You Pay thel TICE? hootn's lett tex was broken, but in-an instant he was up. RARE MIRE ; ‘ Rathbone, paleyand bleeding, appeared at the front of the box and cried. | By Sophie Irene Loeb, | +s:op tat man!” before any hand coud siay him the assussin strode actons | Coppright, 1910, b) The Prem Publishing Ue, | the stage as he had often before trod the boards in mimic tragedy, passed \ ‘lie: New York Brentng Worid) |nike the wing izuck aside 5 municlin who accidentally barred his way, ay 3 and gain e back door of the theatre. | Bat oe Seer ar | His horse was there, held by a half-witted Ind; and with a curse and « 4 h kick to him, Rooth swung himself quickly into the saddle and rode rapidly a man does @ small, mean) away from the scane of his crime. : act he will pay for it some | oe day. If a ruler does a great) wN the theatre excitement now followed the stupefaction into which the and terrible act he will pay for it ] awift action of the crime had thrown actors and audience alike, Men some day, If @ nation plunges into rushed upon the stage, and into the alley, to find the assassin gone. war it will pay. Ha debt will be) Cinergy pounded at the barred door to the President's box A surgeon climbed | collected promptly, | up the face of the box, and inte it. | These are the words of Henry Ford,| ~ ‘phe atricken President was laid upon the floor, and as his head was the profit-sharing manufacturer, who | pillowed in te lap of Laura Keene, his life blood staining her dress, surgeons knows men and their mistakes, This | opened his clothing and sought the wound, It was found at last In the head,’ old-time doctrine, of courae, has not|on the left side, and was quickly seen to be fatal been worked out with mathematical | At first it was thought he might be carried to the White House, but the precision; but the history of every-| Surgeons forbade it, and he was removed to the nearest house, This was | day experience records that there in| directly across the street, a modest dwelling, the home of one William Peter- eer tiertrage sen, a tailor, Here, ‘na little hall bedroom on the firat floor, ‘he great man One thing is certain—that im the| 4 lald to die, (To-Morrow : course of human endeavor the hope paeriins | of reward and the fear of punishment play no small part in the every-min-| ute activities of the individual. ‘There The Death of the Emancipator.) My Wife’s Husband = By Dale Drummond Ooprright, 1015, by The Press Publishing Le, CHAPTER XX XI. tproud, displeased look Wee eal HE day of Jane's return ar) on her face Mr, Hi mimin rived and I was at the sta-|to be having dinner with hig atte, B tion to meet her, White 1/1 came to Chicago with my sister, couldn't honestly say € hud) Ms baby and a servant, he was . Pt ’ er .7 they came \ missed her particularly! yexterday, 1 belleve press “wake Up,” as it were, to your pear r "You in Purpose; and thus it ‘reogunds te | was too busy—I was glad to see her , You know a oh about it, per | you. and the boy. Dorothy was with them, AR a yeu (his ker how jong they ‘The other day a man complained| jooking well, although she was on|“M Mig it say | bitterly Of @ one-time friend who had} ceytohes, and she sald she was feeling) os song to live bere, suddenly foreclosed on a mortgage| °P™ : and wrought such havoc that the vie-| nicely. ; had never recovered from it.| We all went \p to the hotel to 4 vet he rides around in automo-| iyncheon, then t put’ Dorothy and) biles,"” he said, sadly, “has the be ag: He was to of everything and life seems so easy |JobA on the train akan te Uke for him." Had this sufferer known | stay with Jane's mother until) we wo he took the the truth he would have realized that| quite settled. Martha went over te YOUR Connie ae eer epatty the very man who had caused his} the house at once. The furniture | ew has i with tt, [ suppose! str r ; mr yaded that afternoon, 40 ppose! Stra ruin was the more unhappy man of] would be unloaded that afternoon Shance” should rote STRnee, thet: is one homely truth that cannot be eliminated and is explainable, It is this: if you do @ thing for good your own attitude toward it creates in the minds of others ite good in- tention, and in Cura influences thelr | mw York Hrening World e returned coldly, the If you create 4 wrongful influence, those whom you are trying to tm- on the sai train; Since when?" hey decided to do 40 ago, Louisa tol nming had a chance to con Mis 48 advantageously, And as ti Pn anxious for yeara to live 1p nothing to do the two. For the child that he loved] she could make herself perfectly Com} i, “Gone vou think” better than anything @lse in the world le. ( on" y any: Was belng slowly, but surely’ taken | ©Ratwe went nto the hotel dining] ,,,OM. ! don’t know anything about it, away from him with a dread dis-| room 1 heard Jane give a little gasp of iy business anywa; ne eng in the direc-| But Ido think that you are be she was looking. 1 saw Luctus disagreeable as you know howe jup= tion she Mind his wife, both in evens |POKe We drop the Heinmings, ‘They Bemaress Atting at one of the tables, Seem to be enjoying themselves, if I Faroe know the Hemmings were (4% Nett" And Jane turned to tell the , oy ireing to nide my| Waiter what she wanted for dessert ase before his very eyes. Another man once told me of the woman who had “wrecked his life” of surprise, and, vr.” 1 saw this woman ind she is @ most mise » of anoth 1) long si here ‘en >; mother is gone, “in the first place 1 didn’t think of | fe, an she can bear, it, and then, also, J didn't suppose | dew lderment And ao it goes, Indeed, indeed, you | you would be interested, Of course | W In the vernacular, “you can't|1 had no idea we would meet him,” | tive ABhere'a more to this man than I| That accounted for the likeness that ‘as moon as you get very far | know of!” I stormed, still in an under-| had \npressod ioe when 1 first saw from the littie old golden rule, |tone. “Did he know you were vom-| Mr. Prentice, In spite of myself T ; you have to pay--sometimes dearly— jing, and did he come on the same|seemetSbound to be entangled with me pre-|train with you” the Hemmings ) me “Do have @ little common sense, (To be Continued) ie, then seeing my My halt-brother's I should have said, Mra, Pren. | seem, boincts,

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