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t ee She Cseniig World. Poviewes ie b> et ‘ on atone ony rem Row ’ : hark hee e fice at New York as Revond<%ene Me’ ° Sitor Wreltend ot fete 4 uniniee tn the International . erate Peetel Uniew Pee Teer tt te) Ome Tear One w Month Vou NO. 198 — A GREAT SUMMER FOR NEW YORK. WwW . 1 We etion inter bares The Fvening World ertin ‘ ‘ ally t by va nvte abroad w etay in t y Mort of it w be spent on these shor Where’ and intry resorts throughout the land ver before nobody doubts, California ia running 6 shone whieh will attract part of the crowd -@ com Hut the people whose chief delight w in the what will they do? | part ’ rtain that this great harbor eity, With ite endless list of attractions, ite monuments, ite nearby beaches, ita ng, cool hotels, is going to be @ summer stamping ground thie year for thousands and tens of thousands who in other seasons have! passed through it only from termina] to terminal or from etation’ to pier | New York never advertises, never puts up ite prices, never gets dull, Americans who miss Paris and Berlin will readily convince themselves this year that there is no place like New York. | A quarter of a billion dollars extra vacation money to be spent im the U.S. A.! This city can offer good value for ite share. ( ot | The Republican Party of this Gtate te Hable to get its clothes pretty badly torn at Syracuse, Better have a barrel bandy yean capitals It becomes more and more —_——-4¢ -————. IT RESTS WITH GEORGIA. HE refusal of the Supreme Court of the United States to set T aside the conviction of Leo M. Frank at Atlanta on the charge of having murdered Mary Phagan, although accompanied by | the strongly dissenting opinions of two Justices, is nevertheless final. Due process of Jaw is found to have been observed. Despite allega- tions of mob influence the authority of the State courts is scrupu- ously upheld. Nothing more is to be expected from the Supreme Ovurt of the nation. But what about the State of Georgia? Is it content with the mere confirmation of the constitutional rights and responsibilities of | its courte? In the face of grave doubt and criticism from sober- gp eine all over the country, will it send Frank to the gallows? To tt on to remain under a darkening cloud of suspicion that Peajudice, racial or political, tipped the ecales of ite justice? Georgie should ask itself these questions and soberly consider not enly what is due its own dignity but what it owes to the honor and goed name of the nation. —————E Awtomobdiles killed four persons and injured a dozen others tm and adout the city lest Sinday. To go forth and welcome the spring used to be a peaceful rite performed with safety and pleasure. The motor car has turned it into an orgy of Geadly peril. See WHERE IT IS BUSIEST. IMPOSING half the maximum prison sentence upon Arbano and | | Carbone, the two anarchists who conspired to blow up St. Pat-| rick’s Cathedral, Judge Nott leaves the police less ground for complaint that the courte do not back them up in a war on bomb- throwers. Polignani, the detective who uncovered the crime, is freed from el blame of having instigated it. The evidence convinced a jury that the two convicted men were alone reeponsible for a dastardly attempt te destroy « building precious to the city. The public need therefore withhold no jot of praise for a creditable piece of detective work. Ita success should encourage more of the same kind. But the glory of frustrating bomb attempts in Fifth Avenue must net turn the police from a similar duty in other parte of the city, Who eaffers oftencet and worst from the bomb-thrower’s attentions? The qmmall shopkeeper in a humble street. Protect him. Let the police attack the bomb industry where it is busiest. The courte will do their part. —--+ Billy Sunday says he wouldn't walk across the street to get a-call to save New York. Not even if it included an invitation to run the newspapers? be TALESMEN BEHIND THE TIMES. ‘That a prejudice against common law marriages, also the belief that a wife's affection for her husband cannot be ap- praised in dollars and cents, caused the rejection of a whole panel of talesmen in a Supreme Court case, proves again that certain theories of love and life never get down to the solid strata of the community. In the case in question a rich jeweller !s suing a doctor for $50,000, alleging that the latter alienated the affections of his young wife who has been living with the jeweller under a common law marriage. Thirty-eight average citizens declared their disapproval of such unions and the other twelve refused to admit that stolen affections are worth money. This may not help along justice, but ft is at least evi- dence thet common-sense morality still runs strong in the deeper currents of American life. Nor is it a bad guarantee for the continued success of our jury system that the minds of most jurymen are probably more or less old fashioned Hits From Sharp Wits Mo crutch or cane gives such sup: | suggest the tan of rugged health and port as the standard of righteousness.! in summer she puts some sort of oe e | white stuff on her face to offset the & man with money to burn can| effect of sunshine, warm the cockles of the hearts of his aed} frfends if he wishes to.—Deseret News. Another queer turn of fate fixes penne Loess things so that those who need friends the most usually havo the least. No young man looks perfect to the | pnijadelphia Telegraph. he wants to marry. . . . mother of the girl . i, The most unappreciated valuable Te fellow who starts out to find a| service is that rendered by the alarm new home always discovers that /clock, eomebody is living in the house he eee wants to rent.—-Toledo Blade, Some persons get a reputation for TE rofundity of thought just by talking Jen't winter «ar it funny, but&in words in bunches ‘that don’t | the advertisements for a sale of paint, ittsburgh Sun, | . ERs A Ce —_—_— By Roy L. Copyright, WAG, ty ‘The 4 RS. RANGLE came panting | into the Jarr home carrying most carefuly to her breast an odd-shaped package wrapped in newspapers. She was also in an almost bysterical con- dition. “Ob, Mrs, Jarri” she cried, “I'm Just #0 upset I don't know what to dol And I'm just as sure as I can be that I've slopped some of it on my dress, because after you once open them you can't keep them from sloshing if you carry them! Of course, it doesn't make any difference with this old dress, although 1 wouldn't want to spoil it just through carelessness, although they say turpentine will take {t out and the stains won't show!" Mrs. Jarr had motioned the caller to the front room, but Mrs. Rangle shook her head in the negative, while votcing her woes, and led the way to the Jarr kitchen, where she put her package down on the table, She now carefully removed the old newspapers while Mrs, Jarr and Gertrude, the Jarr maid of all work, looked on with breathless interest. The opening of the wrappings disclosed four quart cans, the tops of which had been cut open, showing that cach can con- tained ready mixed paint. A considor- able quantity had spilled out into the paper wrappings. “You know how I thought our bath- room would look 60 much better if it was all painted white?” began Mrs. Rangle. “So I've been looking in all and when I saw an advertisement yesterday: ‘Best quality of mixed paint, ¥ cents, former price 29 cents,’ 1 went right down to the store, The paint they were selling bad been on some shelves near where a water pipe had burst and washed the labels off.’ Mrs. Rangle stopped to get breath, and Mrs. Jarr and Gertrude gased from the troubled face to the paint ip sisterly sympathy. | “The salesiady was as nice as she | could be!" Mr. Rangle went on, "Of course, as she said, she couldn't open all the paint cans for me till we came to white, but as white is the lightest color she thought if we'd weigh tho cans in our hands we might tell which was white, So we picked out four| cans and I brought them home, and) when I opened them two of them| looked white till [ stirred them, and |then J found they contained blue paint, and the other two contained red, and, of course, they are not reé turnable after being open.” “Are you sure?” asked Mrs. Jarr tp deep sympathy. “Some stores are The Jarr Family lebrated Case «0% 4. The Evening World Daily Magazine. Tuesday. April 20. McCardell @ Puplsning Go, (The New York brening Work) Very obliging about taking things back!" “This store won't. I tried,” sald Mra, Rangle, “and you are alwaya so handy with leftovers and such thinge I thought I'd bring them over to you and see !f you could use them.” “Hem!” said Mrs. Jarr thought- fully, “You say two of the cans looked like white paint till you stir- red them? Why did you stir them?” “Well, I don't mind the 36 cents,” “but you know how Mrs. Jarr Sits in Wise Judgment On Four Tins of Colored Paint) the men are. If Mr. Rangle finds out I've bought something I can’t use, ) just because it woe cheap, you know what he'll say!" “Oh, don't 1?” remarked Mrs, Jarr. “Men think they’re smart! But never | mind, dear, 1 hear that there is @ poor family down near the coal yards, | and they have had a great deal of sickness. Let's take the paint down there and give it to them. We are both members of the Helping Hand, you know!” | “Tho very thing!” said Mrs. Rangle, enthusiastically, So Gertrude got an- other bunch of old newspapers and | wrapped up the paint cans again, Copyright, W018, by The Pree Publishis HE other night | went into A restaurant. It was a modest place—that is, peo- The Woman W ple of moderate means, bual- By Sophie ness mén and women, came here regularly for dinner, I found a table and was looking over a menu card when a tired looking woman came in and, finding no other vacant seat, sat opposite me, The waitress seemed to know her, and I learned from their conversation that the woman was'a steady customer in the place, She opened a newspaper and began reading while abe was waiting to be served, Pretty eoon she offered me « part of her paper and then began to talk. I felt somehow she was ¢iad to talk to somebody, and in the course of our dinner she told me . mething about herself. “I live alone,” she gald, “and I come here for my meals, It t# a nice, quiet place for a woman to come alone, am employed in an office during the day, and for several years I have lived alone and eaten my meals alone, with the exception of the few times that 1 go to visit friends. “I just hate the mealtime because it accentuates my loneliness more than any other time of the day. I don't seem to have time to cultivate friends, and i often envy that little group of four girle over there in the corner who seem; to have such fun during thetr meal, “They get so much out of it, If it ts Jonly in talking about the new thin, Many a time the woman alone that are on the menu each day. I| might, with profit, heed the old tn- don't mean to say I do not have! junction, "Seek and ye shall find.” =. ho Lives Alone Irene Loeb 16 Oo, (The New Yor Krening World), friends, but 1 have got into @ groove for @o long, being alone, that I am not able to change it, And the sorrow of it seems to grow on me. I wish there was some Way in a great olty like New York to know other women similarly eituated or living in me neighborhood; thet at least we ight eat together.” And why not, dear woman? Per- haps you do not lend yourself to forming such comradeships as would make life more pleasant in the long run, At least, people who live by themeelves should not always dine alone if they can possibly help it The convivial spirit that permeates a meal is certainly first aid to digestion, and every business woman who bas no family life should oultivate it, some way, somehow. © seen @ Dumber of stenogra- phers or saleswomen have the hap- pleat time together even at the hur- ried lunch hour, They look forward to It, having arranged to meet at one tabl I believe that there are bun- dreds of women, espectally in a great city ike New York, who are miser- ably unhappy and lonely during the evening repast and at home ip their little rooms. And how easily it could be remedied if they would but make the effort! Lonely lady, If you cannot make friends with girle at business, there are many young women's assoola- tions, where surely you can find on or two congenial spirits that are as lonely as you are, who will welcome knowing you and joining you at meal- time. Little Facts Worth Knowing M. Whitney, Cal, {@ 14,601 foot above sea level, Baltimore's muntelpal debt ts nearly $76,000,000. One-fourth of the Irrigated farms of the United States are in California, Forest fires in 1912 caused losses In Pennsylvania aggregating over $50,000, ‘ Australia {# irrigating more than two million acres of grazing lands with ar- testan wells. The St. Louts zoo has |: specimen, a mountain 1) for a decade, ost its cholcest » on exhibition By Maurice | friendship had become @ pressing need | us to each other, There were #ix thousand robberies tn 1912 in Philadelphia, 95,428 arrests and seventy-two murders, 1915 one Ketten! his devotion Reflections of a Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland nore sw o rene yarns " or eile « mee *en Dea sting yt a * that be wants to marry ber The y fora ® an t ' t ar sixteen @ girl's {doa of a " 4 smart hat y ndvertiseme fifty-cent ar at ® departn tore ‘The kind of man who can win can way gothing at all with great irs ' ry \netinet, - oo, tee before he ma x ote on raise a man to her own level seems “ ne hand while be wh ke an advertise vintage wine, and a charge account) ; - ; most any giri's heart ts one who patic intensity aud say it often. into a ten-word telegram. LD age used to be regarded as an incurable disease; a time to be looked forward to with hor- ror; a period of useless cumbering of the earth. That bogy \# scared away by the testimony of some of the living celeb- rities who have left the Bibitoal “three-score-and-ten” landmark far behind them. @aye Jobn Burroughs, the great naturalist, at seventy-seven: “IT am in better health and more able to do my work at sev- enty-seven than | was at forty- even or at fifty-seven, &£ have produced more manuscripte dur- ing the last three years than dur- ing any other three yeare of my life, and of @ kind that bas made unusual = intellectual upon me. “Old Age is not such a bugaboo after all. He is, in many ways, better to live with than Youth, because he leav you more at your ease; you are in the calmer waters; the fret and fever of life have greatly abated. Old Age brings the philosophical mind; he brings a deeper, wider outlook upon life; he brings more tol- | erance and charity and good will, | 1 did not squander my youth in demands excesses, and hence Iam not bank: uot in my old age.” Amelia . Barr, the novelist, while Mrs, Jarr put on her best bat Who 1s six years older than Bur- and went with Mrs, Rangle and the Toughs, and Who writes six hours a paint day, gives this recipe for staying e voung in the eighties: ¢ “Thave constantly given my mind plenty of new thoughts; and thie Wit, Wisdom and Philosophy. ON een THE DEATH OF A FRIEND. By Xavier De Maistre. HAD a friend, Death took him from me. He was snatched away at the be- | winning of his career, at the moment when his mental diet has kept me young, It is routine that ages. Even in my OHAPTER XXXII. HAT my first patient in Chi- |) cago should be a relative of @ man I so disitked was th irony of fate, Now, for pro- fessional reasons, I should to my heart. other in the We supported one an- hard totl of war, We had but one pipe between Us, Wer. obliged to change my roanner and drank out of the same cup, we slept po » ittie more tactful. I bated the beneath the same tent, I had seen thought. “I have been caring for Mrs. Pren- tice,” I told him, “but bad no idea she was related to you.” “But don't you remember, Geor interrupted Jane, “you wrote me that Mr. Prentice (I don’t think you called him by name) made you think of Mr. Hemming immediately you saw him?" him amid the Joys of our winter | “I am told there is quite a strong ters, to eee him die when he med | resemblance,’ Hemming rejoined, not full of health—this was indeed a blow, ing for me to reply, “yet I have But hie memory lives in my heart| never been able to see it myself, But and there alone. He is forgotten by allow me to compliment you, docto those who surrounded him and who Mrs. Prentice says she hasn't felt have replaced him, and thie makes, well for years, and so naturally |e his loss the mere sad to me. most enthusiastic over her new phy- Nature, in like manner indifferent |sician. It was fortunate for bor you to the fate of individuals, dons her | happened to be on the train." green spring robe and decks herse) thanked bim coldly and he re- in all her beauty near the cemetery | sumed: where he rests. The trees cover them- selves with follay 4 Interweave | the birds warble un- him exposed to all the perils of a dis- astrous war, Death seemed to spare The tumult of war and the en- thusiaam which possesses the soul at the sight of danger might have pre- vented ms sighs from piercing my heart while his death had been use- ful to his country and damaging to the enemy. Had he died thue I should | have mourned him less, But to | } Hemming will call to-mor- ooking ‘To-night we thetr branches are going to the theatre.” Gor the leafy sprays; the Insecta hum —"Why,/so are we," Jane told him. among the blossoms; everything| ‘Then: ‘Tell Louisa I shall be very breathes joy in the abode of death, ‘And in the evening, when the moon shinos in the sky and Tam meditating fn this sad piace, I hear the cricket hidden in the grass that covers the silent grave of my friend merrily pursuing his unwearied song, Tho tnobserved distractions of human | beings, as well as all tholr miafor- tunes, are counted for nothing In the grand total of events, ‘The death of a warm-hearted man, who breathes, hig last surrounded by his affectionate friends, and that of a| butterfly Killed in a flower’s Iip by the chill air of morning are but two similar epochs in the course of nature, Man is but a phantom, a shadow, mere vapor that melts into the air, But daybreak begins to whiten the sky; the gloomy thoughts that trou- bled me vanish with. the darkness, and hope awakens again in my hear No, He who thus suffuses tie Ba with light has not made it to shine upon my life only to plunge me Into I the night of annihilation, He who has is. spread, out that vast horizon, who raised those lofty mountains whose fey tops the sun is even now gilding js'also He who made my heart to beat and my mind to think, | never worn and I should like a chance No! My friend {snot annghilated,| to alr it; another is that I enjoy being Whatever may be the barr/rs that with some one besides a grouchy old separate us I shall see him again in| doctor!" the last laughingly. another world. |“ “why weren't you going to weer “Ah, bave you your tickets?’ be , ‘and what are you going to @ popular actor, our box?” ‘The; about to object, of room. We have night. no guests for to- Do come!" looking not at me, but_at Jane. that will be de- “Ob, thank you, btn tame” “We will lghtful!” Jane responded. have finished immediately.” “Very well, Mrs, Hemming will be pleased,” this time looking at me. "We will meet you at the carriage entrance in about twenty minutes,” and bow- ing gracefully he left us. “Why did you accept that man's {nvitation?” I asked, so soon as he waa out of hearing, “You know that islike him, dislike to be where he “Oh, for several reasons,” Jane re- plied sweetly, “One is 1 like a box seat; another ts I have a lovely dress mother sent me last week that I have Dh pices ‘he “Old Age” Bogy My Wife’s Husband By Dale Drummond == Copyright, 1915, by The Preas Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), u knew Hem- “Wear this in an orchest and stand in a crowded lobby wale you are trying to get it? No, thank 1 don't have #o many dresses j of this kind that I can afford to spoil sivep I ain often think IT know when T rest [da stantly proved pntally Getivity infuses life into overy of the body cise destroys all personal fem; and What passes them and the soul I do not care te’ say. “I keep my health because I keep. not my illusions. I will that every one is false. I delieve that hope teils a flattering tale, or that friendship 1 name, or that true love from earth and that the fea God has vanished. And above all other reasons for my good health I place the vivifying power Love 1s life.” Cardinal Gtbbons, eighty and in the prime of his powers, “T believe firmly that the critical time of Mfe for the making marring of a sound constitution the period of youth, The weakness are sown in the systems then; by irregularity of life, ticularly in the hours allot I have never swerved youth are: Scared Away As far as possible avold anger or worry, for one howe of such debilitating mental exer A man may sometimes suspect that a young gir! ts fMirting with him, Just for practice; but when a widow smiles upon him he ts flattered to know that he has received the seal of approval f & connoisseur Lota of people's notion of a “good dinner" ts omposed of dishes | that you can't pronounce before eating and { afterward No man ever wrote his wife a letter when he could compress all | busy, I, that & magnet- between, believe will not js only & has ot ir of love. yeara wccde Regularity of moderation tn eating and ing; exercise proper to my age em@ profession; avoidance of and an ever-abiding trust in providence. avaricious in the matter T have always i of ‘Early to bed’ te the wisest ef eaws for him who has do and ambition to do it that with me, before ming was to be along’ you! it in one evening.” “Don't be silly, cross, “Mr, you intended going on the the clock, “Come along, them waiting.” ing how strange it was mings should h eat Mr. Prentic halt brother, 1 tiled sii jane and Hem: Well as to listen wad” seo Hemming’s remarks, when the theatre The house was filled wh yet gone up, miration rip; thrilléd with Jane who had caused it. The play was fine interested, bu: with equanimity, the psy, Was over, but noyed when Jane accepted I. invitation to supper. “I Intend to accept every I receive before the doctor she told them. “I suppose in a big city he soon will time for me, He has t famous now you know." “We all Rope and Butterworth w cannot con considere question," Ive even fa when your plea Hemming bland such ideas in Jane's head enough of that kind alre; very |dea that she or any be of sion! social dence That her Pleasure, of my career! “Of course it won't hurt !t so as it ts worn for Lucius Hei at Geor, "we seemed Chen oed not to let me be emming has a bor where we will not be crowded, and a comfortable limousine to take us to and from the theatre, I'll bet a nickel and I would have been a sight!" gath- ering up her gloves and fookine’ at T can these on in the car; we mustn't kee Mrs. Hemming greeted us but directed most of her conversation to me, leaving Jane and Hemmin, talk together. I was abstracted, thit Ma happen to move to Chi- cago Just at this time; that Jane had Rever mentioned it to me; and Hemming’s 1 tried to itsten to what ilsten "and reply to “itfe 80 I was relieved =! was reached, tered, although the curtain ‘and a litte stir ot one pled over thi ae they looked at our boxe fee believe N be famous, I wanted to choke him for putting . more moment than my pr aspirations should take What rot! (To Be Continued)” 3 well! t, mming, street car, cordially, the Hen. en ween. | net yy =x. I was pride for a for I knew only too well that it was and finel: Usually I should have een iatnanee it to see Her = Ing over ‘Jane, loc:sing at her. bese shoulders, into her lovely flus was almost more than’ 1 could beat I was glad whem again ane Temming’e invitation ‘ets busy!” now he ia = 1 have no ° become Dr, but f me being sure ie in | ly replied, | She hi ady, on could ‘oft her all Dreads | )