The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1916, Page 18

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see } | v% ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, PuPishod Daily Except jay by the Press Publishing Company, Now. 6U fo 63 Park Row, New York. ’ RALPH PULITZER, Preeident, 63 Park Row. J. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row. JOSEPH PULITZHR, Jr., Secretary, 63 Park Row. Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second-Class Matter. Owderription Rates to The Evening| For England and the Continem aed Werla for the United States All Countries ia iO International Pos! vi Ly end Canada. GMO Teah anaes sce e ees ees ee sss cns 69.60! One Tear. nesssaesees ~ 09.75 + .80/One Month, « 86 One Month... 0... WOLUME 56.......cccccccesceccscescssceseeses NO, 20,009 HIS OLD FORM. HAT portion of the Colonel’s Kansas City speech which dealt with big business contained some fine specimens of the old time Roosevelt “balance”: “The great business men,” declared the Colonel, “must recognize more and more that there must be full and frank Co-operation between them and the Government to secure the Public welfare. On the part of the Government this co-opere- tion must be given with the sincere desire to increase the efficiency of our industrial organization, not to hamper it, and with full recognition of the fact that much of moderna industry must be carried on by great industrial units, The aim of the Government should be mot to destroy those units, while encouraging them to regulate them in the interests of the people es @ whole, “At the same time the big business man must with equal | frankness recognize the fact that his business activities, while | beneficig] to himeelf and his associates, must also justify them- selves bY being beneficial to the men who work for him and to the public which he serves.” Of course the Colonel knows his country and its laws too ‘ail to think that trusts would dare to exist to-day. All euch long sinco} turned themselyes into “great industrial units” worthy of any states- man’s interest and respect. These “great industrial units” have their obligations. At the| tame time the Government must be careful not to hurt them. The! Government has to look out for the public welfare. On the other hand, the “great industrial units” must earn profits. Big business | needs the country. But the country can’t get along without big businese, No living man can do these balancing acts better than the, Colonel. The trusts, if they were alive, would appreciate them. Will the “great industrial units” fall for them too? —_——-4 MORE PLAY STREETS NEEDED. _ | OR the next three months the streets in crowded sections of New York will swarm with children trying to get as much | out-of-door life as the city affords, \ Tor two-thirds of these youngsters there are no recreational | facilities, no playgrounds where they can be safe from the constant perils of traffic. | Two years ago The Evening World started a campaign for more playgrounds and “play streets”—streets to be closed to traffic and! given over to children during certain hours of the day. Last year some thirty streets wero thus reserved and many vacant plots were| made into play areas, Result: A marked decrease last summer in the number of chil-| dren killed or maimed by the wheels of automobiles and horse-drawn vehicles, | Police Commissioner Woods, who has become actively interested in playground protection for youngsters, reports that this season| there are 167 streets which could be closed during stated hours each day and used as play streets, All that is needed is money to pay for attendants and super- vision. The Parks a hefore July 1 in order to open up more streets and vacant lots for} ween nd Playgrounds Association is trying to raise play spaces, in Hugus Hall on Decoration Day, I Was expected that the poetess would. furnish a surprise or two since she Who'll help to safeguard children whose out-of-door life in hot weather must be chiefly spent on the city’s pavements? ‘ The Evening World Daily Magazine, 5,000 | the lalways endeavors 1 My Hat’s in the Ring!” «xmzha, By J. ~ Ellabelle Mae Doolittle — By Bide Dudley — The Jarr Family — By Roy L. McCardell — “L thought so!" said the voice, At that point Miss Doolittle held up one hand and recited as follows: Do not juterrupt, Veh son that I won't move into it?” she said, “T didn't know you were going to ments, including elevator, money than we pay here.” for to be “different, Friday, June 2, H. Cassel| where you can get a flat big and fast Ned bright and with all modern improve-| one of his quick simi less 1916 The Stories Of Stories Plots of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1916, by The Prevs Publishing Co, (The Now York Eveuing World.) HIS DUTY. By Octave Thanet. MOS WICKLIFF, Iowa Sheriff and peerless in his trade of man- hunter, was the only official with cleverness enough to pick up Dave Harned's well blurred trail and to track him westward to the very frontier of civilization. Harned was a little travelling photograpber. In self-defense he had killed @ drunken giant who was beating him. He could not prove the self- defense, and the deed had a look of cold-blooded murder. So he fled. The dead man’s mother offered $5,000 reward for the capture of her son's slayer, And Amos Wickliff began his search for Harned and for the reward, He did not find his man for five years. Then he located him in the Far West eettiement. | Harned had married happily and had one or two pretty children, and was making @ good living by photography and by farming. He was much beloved by his neighbors, especially since saving a fellow settler’s obild et drowning. + of Harned at once recognized his pursuer when Wickliff strode into the farm house, Ho knew too that Wickiiff's fron sense of duty would put brib« | ery or persuasion out of the question. ‘ | } Track i | Down, iy i ‘her, Wickliff agreed to this, and as the day was far epent permitted the prisoner to wait until next morning before starting back for Iowa. Their talk was interrupted by a neighbor who galloped past, screaming that a band of hostile Indians had escaped from the reservation and were | bearing down upon the settlement. | Instantly Wickliff took command, Ordering his host to place a big of whiskey and some glasses on the sitting room table, he sent Hamed the women and children into an adjoining inner room. ‘When the Indians broke into the house they found Wickitff alone in the | sitting room, sprawling beside @ whiskey laden table and apparently very drunk, | Ho hatled them in tipsy welcome, bidding them drink with him ané ea~ | uring them he knew where there was plenty more whiskey when thet {should be empty. Harned, listening, realized they would not kill Wi | until they had drunk all the whiskey he could find for them. | Presently the savages had drained the jug and commanded the Shegtf! to get another, Hoe reeled toward the inner room as If to obey. Then darting across the threshold he barred the door behind im, The Indians with whoops of fury rushed at the door, thundering egainst ite thicte panels. { “They're dying in there and dying fast!” muttered Wicklif, es Se and | Hamed prepared to guard the quivering door, The hinges were smashed and the Indians poured into the reom, Wide Mf? emptied his revolver into the charging mass, Harned, with a hatchet, ! smote fercely at each foe that pressed over the doorst!!I toward him. | Suddenly the onslaught ceased. Both rooms were full of dead and dyiag Indians, Harned looked at Wickliff {n amazed inquiry, “How did you do it?” he demanded, “Doped the whiskey,” answered the Sheriff, “Cyanide of potasstum frome | your photographic drugs. Even if they'd killed you and me {t would have Bererorrrororreg Worked before they could get the women and ch'ldren.” |} A_Flahting ? To an unasked question In Harned’s eyes, Wickitf? | Chance. € went on, scowling fretfull: Aeneas nica ip ta Seeltallie Tl have to leave you now. I know my duty, I never went back on it before. But after fighting tozether like we have I'm not up to any Roman soldier business, I—I guess duty's a cursed blind trail.” With a curt nod of goodby, he stalked out of the house and set forth upon his return Journey to lowa—empty-handed, —————$_<4 2 —___. It is not posterity, but your actions, that will perpetuate your memory.—BONAPARTE, Just a Wife--(Her Diary) Edited by Janet Trevor. | Com right, 1916, by ' CHAPTER XNXI. Mrs. Harned that her husband was @ homicide, but Breas P d finally copyright, 1916, by The Praws Co, (Tho New York Evening World.) Copsright, 1916, by The Prose Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) CG. 15.--Ned and I had a party noting had never LLABBLLI MAE DOI ‘Cackar, not to prulse him, and I find HEN Mr, Jarr came home the room to it, it’s no more modern and) toeday—what I call a two- ay on, {nthe days E the poetess with a heart and a| Hod Phickley pickled and in a talk- other evening Mrs, Jarr in-|hag no more improvements, Why party—Just ourselves. mbition, And tt is @ | ica auiae at enone al res BRT ea Baal ada Ey formed Mr, Jarr that a newly Move into another fiat in the sam@) J: was @ glorious morning, and not Laden higiiaeem Dethi Sons ‘and Daughters of | flow of soul If he ts to be intercupeat | Married couple had moved into the|/house? When you do move, move! go warm as to make moving about weiting on. fT hadm't meee Civic Progress and Patriotism, held|!'!l try once more, 1 feel patriotic. | fat below, “Do vou know I believe! good and proper further uptown, |disagrecable task. At a lato breuk- time, nearly a ir} tem. tun— it’s a hoodoo flat, and that’s the rea- looked up suddenly, with | hen I bad learned of bailiwick,” together. dying In my “Let's run away “Nobody |he sald. noyance, my offer to POLLY. MOMMAtibRAebAL LIA GopaMon be) Mike edie tem move into it.” replied Mr. Jarr. “I'd like to see m: move away I'll duck the office and we'll go some | | he seemed pleased at my Sieemeeieveaditiaensciacienen at thé occasion be, Miss etalk t0 = y x t and listen in gl “Oh, I was only thinking about !t,”"|up there away from all my friends|Place on a boat, some place that's oe a pan “ia Doolittle did not disappoint the large 5 a y wae Working it out,” he WORD FROM SHACKLETON tunience,. She introduced the prinel. | gTunderous applause followed. The} she said. “And, although I'm not al just to please you!” said Mrs. Jarr. AO EMDLRAING, Hae VeKe SOME lcontidently “t's hale’ written Meee sina ciation F of Pol speaker of the day, Mayor Cyrus | yay geet and bowed to Miss | pit superstitious, not a blt—except, of| “What did you want to move down: [MAM et. go ty dern Island,” 1 Whed fae mugke material to colleat, IR ERNEST SHACKLETON’S mossage to The World from|Perkins Watker, with & neutly word. |poqitte It was a graceful thing course, about epllling walt at tho| stairs for?" asked Mr. Jarr. “That |volamibeded utepity, Hon Wear iabied| Warn std fv stared thowgnige off Port Stanley in the Falkland Islands brings the welcome news ae Pai Ly ufnaes| sn8 3 “Punk!” sang out Prickley, table or walking under a ladder or) what I can't understand!” FG ia Raa | which Mi y at that his party is not lost despite the failure of the relief (Hale eld cipal he fe waiker> Haag eentanlG rene (SMe, & are en 0d Tl analy hacause can't wet, our! trees and flowers, had buena {avorit| # f “AT . Orel ulker order onstal rown to ved in there, but tha’ elleved it} land h f 1 nee | . mino s a at sesh ? After the Young Men's Chorus, tea | rary table Bro mo ndlord to do a thing for us,” re-|one-day trip of mino since I was a 8 hte expedition which started from New Zealand toward the close of 1914.|py"{" sins Pettibone, tho tonsorial Shins Ne cane ante tes pera ia was unlucky.” plied Mrs, Jarr. “The woodwork of little girl, Ned remembered it, tov, want to ‘spend my lise see: Shackleton’s ship, the Endurance, was crushed in the ice last |**tist had sung @ stirring song en- October and he and his men drifted with the ice for more than five! t months until they landed on Elephant Island. These twenty-two men were left living in a hole in the ice cliffs “in urgent need of rescue,” while Shackleton, with four others, sailed away for help in a twenty-two foot open boat across a thousand miles of desolate ocean. The incredible patienc time, are what always impress one in explor: the vast distances, the long lapses of f down four times, but he subdued hig} “T can't see where you would have and readily fell in with my sugges- oh if . the flat needs painting, the parlor and | joy, o the whims of a lot of Fs itled oh 1s the Brant nara man by lying flat on bis back and] gained anything," replied Mr. Jarr,| bedrooms and dining room need re-| When wo reached tle island we Wererical overimaginative “soalety : eee nuctihie Drolee Gp tec ee dtp The | tbeing a floor lower down isn't any| decorating.” |malked up and “across its shady wtih cea, ‘but I heeee gee Me " the fight, “Tho whole town ts talking, | this flat, I understand, and tt isn't as]and paint for us in this flat how |” one-step in the quiet open-air wens re ie then. | They're etmply Be eg ee There is much indignation, light as this one. There ts no more| could you make him do it in the flat dancing room. I dared Ned to go on n't afford to throw awaye= Poll of joy and | below” asked Mr. Jarr. Speaking too much is a sign of vanity, for he that is lavish in On Uinneceweaty BOL tis And give atteuuon to iw the merry-go-round, almost the only Just n “wh festivity in sight that seemed to he | T want to do ts to put am “He has to paint and paper the flat end to the most flendish sufferin, in ; doing a rush business, but he sald the world, ¢ 4 +A audience applauded with great words ts apt to be niggard in deeds,-RALEIGH. below and make tt look nice or be there were some things a rising young) {) ave peor aa pd ¢ the custo and all were pleased, — The = a can't rent it," replied Mrs. Jarr., physician owed to his dignity even on ‘ ry, an an- Jayor arose and bowed, First he ad- 1 heir mental and ns inside th } “But, as he told me himself, so many & aby of ; ee ue & visit to the pain, but before T get throug Pare ions inside the polar ure 3. me : } Swiss youelle: nwever, Uggest an absolutely new . ; ; | ee the. ¢ families had moved out of that flat A : ; ¥ new treatment c f sone o l . the fine poem, } | Then wa wandered on, beyond the, fT am certain, so fa zs vireles, Months of imprisoned drifting, months more ashore waiting yy, fhe said, “My great Making a Hit By Alma Woodward fis tho floor below and he had to ainusement reervation, into a fleld | manty.can be, that Tame cy aebyBt for ice to break, the utter impossibility of steaming in straight lines est hope is that L may be able toy @ ue io If go. mony tmep thet bel bnpk woe Just bie countsy. & leld with | track.” e° R 1 } \ ‘an 1 p to its wi i Copyright, 1910, by Tho Press Publishing Co, (Tho New York Evening Worl couldn’ ord C ything for & boundary fen ov own owith| “Ned, what a splendte a or making dates with anything less than a year’s leeway—all these Mpecch!" yelled Mis, Skee ‘ s oe vk Evening World.) [couldn't afford to do anything for © boundary pd oe tes A : hee an nid dream! : inevitable in trackl lar p ” | O'Brien. With Father. look how neat his hair is the other people in the house.” Fee TET ne gaat jueem Nyphe flooding 4 eae RTO AHOVIEBLIS in TRO ORR ROBE 8688; Miss Doolittle rapped for ord CRA) The. Groen mat Piensa gl nes ra “Why didn't you threaten to move our sandwiches and drink the cottee | ad feared Diy nee The cable from Shackleton is as that of an who had stepped | O'Brien, who was with tis wif a Rave et se © a oe Tint Hat ate, eet at if he didn't paint and paper for us?” a had brought in his travelling ar F professional Jealousy . 7 : . hor iid push in the face, Mayor h from bia pastel a n sk, the cover of which made a cup) He is a really big persone off the world for fifteen months, Even though he failed to land on Walle Pin : aekseuned the audience | mR vere ee “a see and nny Page ano TO hi hi | Wacanerag Rekraen us jstoute if again, | ona) ae ' 3 pod is, G. (gazing at the vacant and things, Show me) oh, I did, but he's used to that," imperceptible degrees our talk N s Polar Co: e ‘e honed cross ai nne {as follows: (gag! oun a pea ie 5 By !mpercep Ps ar (Do Be Continued, the ‘outh Polar ontinent he hop 1 to Toss, full akory, Of Hin ORG NAt eo ciare explode! | chatr)—-Where's Freddie? your hands, Freddie, se ant qy,( POUL Mra, Tarr. “He's been a land. ,) experiences is sure to prove a thrilling record of adventure and Shoot off t Roman candles and 1 Mr, G. (calling) — Freddte! lord a long time, and ho knows paint- | F N Ww endurance. jtew aieroeieral | Thy ie the dey "| ‘ome to dinnor! Your soup's getting ing and papering for old tenants don't acts ot orth K now ing eiaibiieinmeers oe. satpehs Finley pre (fox * G. (hurriedty) — Did you get make them st anyway, to do q h got the wrong heliday, ain't he has hal « fleet bands all black and Diue play-| ony redecorating in an cooupled flat | By Arthur Baer Hi F Sl] Wi ‘i ming from the | iM tw enters blithe ing baseball, daring? Any regesors f | Coprrigit, 1916, by Te Press Publishing O>, (Phe Now York Eveuing World.) its rom larp 1ts mn ee Mrs. (smiling fondly) — V Mr, G. (sarcastically) — Why would set a bad example and all the | peoguae her talk aoe : a ~ {color wa tio e vi « fr ‘ ” . be e he ng sui Some men just naturally feel bad,]understand is why a fool man never| ‘The Mayor frowned slightly, but | Well! What a well-groomed little | Cer combination? He got them other tenants would want it done, So 9 while others look that way because their wives have usked them to bring home a few things for supper. . can learn how to hold the baby prop- erly.—Columbia State. eee Don't ridteule other people's ideas, | ‘The man or woman who complains|Try to have them adopt yours. much of being misunderstood has lit Ca gna tle to offer to the understandin Albany Journal. Some people fail they preach, becau: money,—Omaha V w to practice what they need the ITerald, . ee A fellow never realizes how many close friends he has until he wants| na man clamors for personal to make @ slight touch liberty he usually desires to infringe cf on some one's rights—-Nashville One of the things a woman can't Banner. | Letters From the People Monday Holidays, |change would be limitless and inval- tor of The Evening World | uable ‘This applies especially. to the Just a tow words on the subject of | Working classes, who, forced by the celebration of holidays. ‘The: ombie Seacanity to tot! persistent opinion frequently expressed that it|CP'#!m subsistence, would weloome | with unbounded joy an occaai would be very advisable, convenient | week-end vacation ‘or ‘about three and salutary to celebrate holidays on | dayw, which time they could pend in; Monday has my moat hearty and en-| the open and regain part of their vi- lc approval. Neefless to say | taltty lost &y unremitting lahor in a the benefiis derived euch «! congested dita ae [11 shoot a nickel,” black playing baseball, Didn't [ tell you never to come to dinner without scrubbing your hands with the brush, Prederick? Go, do {t immediately. [ should think you'd have an innate sense of cleanliness that paid no attention to the question, “We are gathered hore,” he contin- ued, “to show our patristiem, Get in the gue, T say, and eho: “All right!” said the same votes, |boy we have here, to be sure! Sit | down, dear, and take your soup, I know you don’t Hke it, but Della has picked out all the tomatoes, and, any- that come. he does Ike every other landlord— | nothing for the old tenants that stay and everything for the new tenants And be gives the new | 009. ones a month's rent free besides, and ATURALLY a girl shrinks from the wat N twill too. A Kansas genius has invented an end seut trotiey It ts just one hog wide and fifty long, car for end seat "nt we're going to have strawberry} Mrs, G. (as Freddie disappears) —L ar aang Tho Mayor was slightly Re eee ae eee eres | guarenaateon had Gen i phere =o! oo T srea thinkingte== About 172-8 out of 186-8 shopgirls are chewing gum experts a <i i My fr ert Ail aa Ae . niiness’ when you were “The thing to have done,” said Mr, — Fe RTA D pain iaaiinetun SaUAgan leet ra ola rat He Yaad: dat Jarr, with a grin, “was to mave out | A Wampusrille philanthropist has thrown his magnitioe (aie opne at Craps KO ONL tn t approve of that method. It ree} once! this flat into the flat downstairs, | and will permit the public to use all the ants they can cate ley be ind iroogan's saloon bribery. The boy ought to} Mr. G. (oblivious to the reiteration) got a month's free rent, and then, | all he patriotic when yy OUR l—1w rough. That is one 4 } 0 "8o you know where to fad it, ohm | take his soup for threa reasons only— | 7h MAS OeUEn Faas 8 vnw (hing after the landlord had repainted and | By giving att the vous new Sunday shoes a Gooftown man hag mad avked the votea, jode because it is nourishing; tWo,|the ono thing that leads a man to Tepapered this fat, moved back here js. zappy and furnished the village with music at the sane time a ‘Tho Mayor merely frown, 4 child should eat anything| success, It's what 1s cullivated|and gotten a month's rent free in the | esa eee }not tell vou how patriotic 1 feel," he | flier ren a, | by—— ‘old hom | wid, ‘Tecan hardly make the words Placed in front of him, aod) airs, G. (her goat thoroughly |S srk , sept It would require great decterity and practice ta eat hurd pain ae eS use you tell him to, | aroused)—Say, vou should have 1 £ RONG? TDONEDE (OF CORI FO ouak o 60u a ene “Last night Grongan's you | (tucking the napkin under|q political speaker, or 0 preache marked Mrs, Jarr, “But, as I said couldn't talk at all," the voice chimed | Freddie's chin) 1 euppowe you al-|tho provident of a ollexe- you just that flat downstairs is unlucky, b in ae H “He ; r v ate things beeauso they Were | Jove % anit on ae ov in sonveis cause most everybody that moves in| The joke about puttiug a chameleon ona So plaid orig 4 in 1967 "Who is aneaking?” demanded ing whe nO t {tion without really saying anything, “ ‘ “ayy giev ¥ — - ——~. ie Mayon eaiker IE Quer, PU, Ware eight tn dio Ts thorough. Ie may forget, it can't pay thetr rent and huve to| . ree onesies [od Pricey.” rapiiet Constable your mother to find out a tow things! [But when bo is told to do a thing move away. A lady that lived there | cause the flat downatatrs was a hoo-| "What has tist to dy with wom ey Pelee Brown tr. (. (gnoring the chailenge)--| explicitly, he does it. Ireddie is;and moved to Ninety-first Streat | doo.” plied Mra. Jurr, “Thy bud luck gate What's wrong with hin?" Freduis, let me eee your bands close! thorough! burned herself very badly while; “But she a{dn't burn herself while | lowed her, ed tdon't want 4 bud SBame thing!" | up Preddie (piaintively, fram the baths | (eet © feathane with ggeo-|ehe lived downstairs?” ventured Mr.| thet @at because 0 povanta “TaAies and gentlemen,” eta the Mra G. (coming to the resoue)—He|1g0m)—Mamma, do | wish my 'cleaaing som heya » |e moveoutatiin \% °° afield to Mayor, firmly, "I came here to Dury | Washed. 1 beard bim myself, And! wrists, too? Une and everybody anid it was,be- | Jar, —_ @ out of it! bs pate. » All he begged was that the Sheriff should not eel} should leave it to Harned himself to break the news to ', ws

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