The evening world. Newspaper, December 7, 1910, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

: beniehenenthaininat apr cir eto ees eete senna ——————— gael The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wedn \ Putttdeed Deity Except Sunday by the Pree biishing Company, Nos. 83 10 Of & aque, 6A, Pree and Treas, mie PULITZER, Suntor, Sey —e day. December 7, 1910. Can You Beat It? rT 1) That Changed If History vs i By Maurice Ketten. tered at the Post-Omtice at New York a» Second-Class Matter, : b and By Albert Payson Terhune fortis Unived Seaes" [Paul Coun tn tnternntional Town TWANT Sone MOWEY. cae FF Bote, We, c1e SOE HONEY. dmenenie einniaaan ‘ aod janada., 2 5 Vm crointy ToDo MY ‘Do My a 328 Zehia: seeeeee . bow pd fa"; 4 X-MAS pe PING 10FA- SHOPPING BARLY Copyright, 1910, ts The Press Publishing Co, (The New Xork World), . How mucH 2 VOLUME : No. 8—A Wrong Road That Lost an Empire. ‘. a thick-headed field marshal had not marched along the wrong | road {n a moment of terrible crisis, the map of Europe might per- | haps be wholly different today. The Field Marshal was Emmanuel | Grouchy. He had with him 34,000 brave soldiers and 100 hiner | ‘ gh to turn the fortune of a battle that was just then deciding an em fate. Grouchy's stupidity was the climax of a series of seemingly petty “ite” y spelt Disaster. ‘4 Napoleon Bonaparte, son of a poor Corsican lawyer, had made himself master of France, had crowned himself Emperor and had conquered practi- cally all of continental Europe. At last the allied powers (representing almost every European nation) had combined against him (when his legions + ‘were exhausted by a long winter's retreat from Moscow) and had overthrown, him, They shut him up on the island of Elba. ” Early in 1815 Napoleon escaped from imprisonment and came back to ‘ France. The whole nation rose in a rapture of enthusiasm to welcome him. The GOLD PLATE AND GOOD DINNERS. PORT has it that there has been prepared for W. A. Clark of Montana a splendid service of plate to be used in his mansion in this city. It is de- signed for a dinner of twenty-four persons, con- tains 900 pieces and cost $120,000, Perhaps there is some exaggeration here. At) tie Ligures given each diner would have to use thirty-seven different | pieces of the plate, and there would still be twelve over for table orna- ments. That sounds a trifle two sumptuous even for a Montana man. | But in the main the story ie probably correct, and the service is doubt- less worth the price. allies, who had settled down to the hone -of a few years of peace, sprang to ve But fine plate doesn’t make good dinners nor good diners; neither | Paut Give NE MONEY. FINE tpeal ne We eagle Sui A Sailiant 4 pride aed are tauely itl chair oop al 2 ‘dows it give good appetite nor good digestion. The true epicnre can| SHOPPING EARLY, THOSE PooR maBana Ahad || Pian ef wii war, two of the allied armies reached Belgium ami find bliss in a simpler service if 4 viands z choice and the wines | You Now CLERWS |! ee Onerar inpia NoNes 116,000 strong, Was under come ‘Fare. So, too, the true reveller will ever ask for a merry rompany rather than gold plate. As for those that wish genuine happiness, it will be well for them to turn aside from all this splendor and eeck it where lovers dine on bread and cheese and kisses. | mand of the Prussian Marshal Blucher. The other, | commanded by the Fritish Ger | have waited safe behind « he did not wish to turn mLering about 106,000, was | al the Duke of Wellington, Napoleon might ‘ong walls in France for the allies to attack him, But \ rance into one huge battlefield, nor to de | fest of the allies could join Wellington and Blucher, . He hastened to moet the foe and massed his forces on the Belgian ne, aS On Wellington and Blucher did not know at what point Napol-on would break through into Belgium. 0 they strung their armica along .a g frontier. ‘This suited Napoleon perfectly. He planned one of his most brilliant moves, namely, to cross unexpectedly into Belgium, attack each of the two ope* | Dosing armles (which together greatly outnumbered his) before Wellington andi | Blucher showld have a chance to unite against him, and to thrash them seps § arately. al On June 15, 1815, the MF A HOUSEWIFE’S VICTORY. ECAUSE many housewives decided to eerve their tables with jam or oleomargarine rather than pay the price demanded for butter, the butter makers, dealers and retailers have come to an agreement to let the price down. Whereupon praise is due to the housewife and congratulations to those that like their bread buttered thick. Still, if the housewives persist they can do even better tha ‘they have done. We use butter in thie country to the verge of mit use. No other people are eo prodigal in consumption of it. In many ways it is employed where a little olive oil would serve the purpose better, be cheaper and more tasty. | We have been brought up in this country to live like prodigals, at once wasteful and ignorant, and it is difficult to learn new lessons. part of the noch army swarmed across into Belgium in three, columns. Napoleon, in person, hurled one of these armies against Blucher’s Prussians, who were at Ligny. He sent a second force under Marshal Ney against Wellington at Quatre Bras, He completely routed Blucher. Althougl Ney could not defeat Wellington at Quatre Bras, yet he kept him from sending aid to the beaten Prussians 4 | Blucher being disposed of and in full retreat Napoleon sent Marstial Grouchy & | with 34,000 men to keep after the Prussians and to prevent them from joining Wellington. ‘Then he himself gave chase to Wellington's army. Wellington retreated before him, turning at bay finally at Waterloo and sending word to Blucher to come to his ald there, As Napoleon saw Wellington's troops had ceased retreating and were drawn up to resist him he shouted in delight: “We've got them! We've got them!” | This was on the morning of June 18, 1815. Napoleon, still plann each of the two allies separately, attacked W & to smash lington. The latter stubbornly for Blucher to reach him, Na- 6. @ held his arc |) A Blunder and poleon counted rouchy's keeping the Prussians out i its Results, of the wa or else coming to Join in the attack on . But it is evident the housewives aré doing it. The butter cpisode is +t Weitnst For hours Napoleon continued his assault on Well- ington, causing fearful slaughter, but fail! position, Wellington, } reszed ahd could hold < jc longer, At last another army was seen approaching. Napoleon believed It was Grouchy. With this new help he could probably crush Wellington, But stupid old Grouchy had taken the wrong road and was just then far away at Wavre fighting a single Prussian detachment left there to hoki! him in check. The new army that hurried to the spot was the main Prussian force under Blucher. It Joined Wellington's worn out host and the two allies won the battle, forever” crushing Napoleon's power. Hed not Marshal Grouchy taken the wrong road the destinies of Europe might once more have !ain helpless under the Napoleonic grip. The allies haa? every reason to dé as grateful to Grouchy as Napoleon was enraged at him.’ THE THIRD DEGREE. But the blunderer was exiled from France for five years. N the trial of Hattie Le Blanc, at Cambridge, Mass., the judge refused to permit the prosecution to in- troduce the evidence obtained at the so-called “third degree” examination given the prisoner at the Waltham police station on the night of her He came to America and spent the period of his banishment tn Philadelphia.— ~~ | To the last he stoutly declared he had made no mistake. arrest. encouraging. We may not be able to bust the trusts, but thrifty, clear-headed housewives can keep them from. busting us. i g to drive the British duke from his If that be not good law, it is at least good sense and genuine : ry ;; ac extra-judicial examination by the police or by detectives of M r. a n d M rs. J arr A b r oa d The Day's Good Stories . persons arrested under suspicion of rime has become one of the All Aboard for Harlem, via Queenstown and the Subway! No Monopolist. Me the mation be ma dit, greatest abuses of our criminal procedure. Pehaps nothing unfair | fees ‘eng, reland man, according to the! ! Speak my lines and wait for the, or excessive was done in the case under review, but in many instances| Copyright, 1910, by the Prews Publishing Co. 4 “ , “T play the b forty times a day wot Ail right," mid the comedian, sorrowfull outrages have been committed in efforts to virtually extort an ee with Or" pedlgpiegre Aries Orman! tis bette Monel “Hasan AWast | ni ak Goria Geatont Fal Meredith, | an voor ye last “train goes ats midnight,” —lt- gross ly extort con- By Roy L. M’Cardell. | merism ot the metatiic muetc. Home,” and, gloriously, ‘Che Star| the sexton, “I'm always glad to. They) er teing disused js ail its bearings. | Congrats ee fessions, and serious wrong done to suspected persons. Py Peavieerarecti “We can't, we sat! tomorrow,” eald | Spangled Banner.” are always new and strange and sweet bape, father when be etvugit “hime of “an Promoted. In France similar examinations are made, but not by the police. I driver, halting his horse, ea ine are always new and strange [sie pe ay aged rel ive emall boy. of Nipiow: af die aan of the 5 7 ‘ . x the house had b ying for a little sister. ee which the ling the mary (The accused is questioned by a magistrate in court. He is entitled to eit COR aE a | and sweet to everybody, ‘They are like When aia that neo thse he nates A exes So ine Ene, ley Te a ., . 1 ar v , | knelt a1 id h, |, I am thankful, officers, particularity by the you m, counsel during the proceeding. His rights are protected. The “third ered the, steeple H ark to the ry | tie Aiea Bios vagten ima a En I'm mo pig. Gire some oue else a chance,” streean «(tice particular ng women degree” examination by detectives has none of theso safeguards. Dan- po pilecp ay er ged | eller's memory. They are worth walking A Long Walt. wal Cutting e bans who a a : in i 4 2 around the world on foot to hear. " aratulate the ollest daughter, who had lately be- gers of injustice in it are always great. From che of the K i tehen! hat night, with a new moon looking| COMMDIAN was rebmring his puttin a tne enenel ton chain in" tie came sre stands on, an old ° over thelr shoulders, the Jarrs took ed vy, [oD gg red ‘of Which was pres- feet aoe aed Inet mally thas o youne: e train from Cork to Queenstown. from the ‘book, ‘exgaed, Trewwed replied and built-up por- ‘Pres The author was h hak of tt—E am od. the business cen- — anenenepenepreras = on emo tre of ane town, By Sophie Irene Loeb. the entrance to Cork Harbor, a sea with the River YOUNG woman writes and begins her letter with “WHAT'S THE MAT. | §M@ between two hills, and here they aaah ‘ Lee flowing TER WITH THE KITCHEN?” Went across the Genving seneway to the somes eth play Feo. Pg raga i 7 bed through, bridged Sho goes on at length to bring out the fact that let a rich suttor marry | Seat ship that was to take them home. werkaw Brentag " MEARDELR and quayed, may ff motice that Dr. Lederle !s making a A circling flock of ten thousand never leas bride in any OTITER walk of existence and colder than in December or January, & & Baur . resting gulls wheeled and circled around e ft to @top the cing | with the thermometer below . When be seen. It ts either the natural sound. there is very little commotion, But let a man choose a ‘This : the wating ship. ‘The mails were being HE blow ig-a good thing. But|Merch comes in there wil etiil be| ne Poard of the hills on either sido or mala who has given some years of her life to SERVICE tn T board, the Jarrs stood vy the rail trimmed with else it fs the pure magic of the bells KITOHBS ediately is there a clang-clang of | PUt ie Bot look at the power houses, &c.,|severe cold. PRTOR 8. HOMPER, |themasives that makes them, justly Se are arn aes eva & clang-clang of} ana gaw the sun come up in crimson banding’ and @¢ Brooklyn en4 keep them all from| Eilzabeth, N. J. Maahl tho awadthat bella ba 6) che ' ir furtuar Gale te: Awe tesat coasdvaOne cnnatece avian And fuse @ soft old Irish] puttons ig mucitin cg Ce ae AE tne |. Trem City Hall to Tarrrtown, | world. woman has married the son of a wealthy house after tong, |‘°.c0 fell Upon thell gare | yom tad Just Gahere, which destroy the clothes |o the Editor of The Krening Worl ‘The sexton, a pleasant, plump man falthtul service therein; and STRANGE ‘TO SAY the| .., wont vou be taking some blac eas Be ani fhe Penetrate the houses? If windows| In reply to letters on long walk, I| of middle age, rejoicing in the name of family were agreed, satisfied, in fact PL@ASED, The | ticks home wid you es iust ta ome parts of Brooklyn are left open | have hace: tate # 4 Mr. Jarry turned and beheld one of the| place of banding walked from ¢ 11, | @ hero in @ love story—Albert Mere- other of a young woman brougit into the public arena|oi1 iris, women who come out. from Mie oe braid for @ short time everything 's covered | New York, to Tarrytown, N. Y. (a total | dith—came with the keys and opened with the stigma of alleged crime, Here the fact has teen ; eel SRR bial SUFFERDPR. {distance of about thirty-one and one-| the church yard gates. rk on the tender with Irtsh lace, bog) applied over a broadly brought out that the woman In the case had : “ ie te ae j ‘The Bread Line. fourth miles) in six hours and twenty| He led the Jarra to a side entrance of ineamied ti tee bitshon.! joak carvings and blackthorn sticks to| stamped — design. minutes. I left City Hi 4 b ell the departing tourists. The little touch of Ww Mes Ritttor of The Gunday Wortd: . I left City Hall at 6.02 A. M.| the famous ohurch and past the tom The writer had diltgently endeavored to do her work a8! «what good are they?” asked Mr.| velvet found in the 9 I question the bread line as a cure|*nd arrived at Tarrytown 12.44 P.M, I|of the man who made tt famous, the well as she could, having, she stated, studied the art of | yar, trimming below the 3 for poverty, as I wouk paregoric as a took a relay of twenty-two minutes in|arave of the Rev. Francis Mahon cooking with a view of doing intoliigent and efficient work. She resented the fact that the kitchen should be made the LOWHR LAYER tn the shortcake of life. In the main her contention was sensible and not without reason, Frat, last and always, ANY labor well done is DIGNUNIBD. Espec! It so in this land of the free, where caste is largely a matter of HOW you you.” Sut the mode) sults DUCT yourself. Nothing is menial in the minds of the right-thiniing. It is] Mtr, Jare, with @ sudden pang, remem-| poth the separate omy the snob with a get-rioh-quick attitude toward all humans, and having |bered he had ought no souvenirs for| waist and the en- “arrived” casts his eye of DISAPPROVAL in the direction of the work-a-day |Gus, the saloonkeeper, and his other| tire gown, and |s cronies, He got wholesale rates and) gdapted to all sox- The kitchen 1s all right, and the man or woman who graces it (Just that!) |,ook a dozen. sonable materials, with honest, fruitful endeavor seasons his or her worth in the world with the ne whistle blew, the tender backed | ‘phe waist is madc savory sauce of service that means SATISFACTION, away, the ocean steamer started— * ppendicitis. On the otier|Ddthe Ferry for my dinner and that|Whowe pen name was “Father Prou! ogo jarceoves the ae of |Drings my walking time down as above, | the man who wrote "The Bells of homelessness at a city lodging house FREDRICK W. UTIs, | Shandon.” which gives food and lodging without Tho sexton led the party Into the old requiring work as @ recompense and |echureh and up to the first landing of holds the spectre of the court and| On what wgek day did Dec. of the | tH belfry, and here, facing a frame Blackwell's Island over the man who | year 198 fall? H.R. H., Newport, R. 1, |? Which the chime rope ends worked returns too often. I question charitable A Schoolgirls Solw in, the Jarrs sat upon a bench and rellet of the homele! Mmits itself to one form of industrial! In reply to the problem about a mer- work, like a wood-yard, I question the| chant who sells an article for $2.60 which Judicial treatment of vagrancy andj cost him $2, * gays he makes % per Homelessness that fines a man a few | cent. profit “I've heard i said they'd cure &) collar and in the headache,” repled the old woman in a! cuffs is distinctive. Wheedling tone, “and you could bate a| qn this case the an a long time over tho head wid one) walet itself is made fore you could make him laugh at} of crepe de Chine, in so far as it | hearkened. opulace. pee Weiter of Tn Brewing ons ‘The Jarrs had heard Westminster | P°P, | chimes, they had listened to the famous | bells of Bruges, a famed through 1 to many others ype, and which ya fitted lnin, nd “B" ays he makes 2| {ned through BBR: BO Cooking 1s fast becoming an art, witi science the prime teachor, It is one of | Jarrs were homeward bound! fe oe, cae dollars or sends him to per cent. profit. I wis! yithat van] “Rather Prout’ mentions for the Pur- | the means by which Ife may be prolonged, And surely that is what we seck tn pease Sea anita’ 16 Gabe vhere much of his time is spe lis correct; because if the selling price | POSe? Of comparison in his lyrle pratses | jviry départment. Nothing MAY be of nobler issue, ‘The young ladies’ sem|- Good M ‘ ' a of fronts, Mdieness. Have we not had eno’ in $2.50 and the cost is $2 the gain Js 50| °F Shandon bells gee harles and colleges all have thetr departments of cooking with the dignified name | 00 orning! Galiarent ana Dlandly tinkering with the vagrancy |eonts reckoning ia on the cost, | BUt the poet priest was right, ‘There | gg Domestle sclence, | aL, oie phe teins 1 problem’? Ist not time for the mans | wiih makes it: 2004+60—1 or per cent. Mt bella that ring in an Even in our splendid school system the addition of this department ts a boon— | Prine Use all Ay agencies. which seek to ald or relieve DOROTHY WILLIAMS, rth y were cast 101 a godsend ; | By Cora M. W. Greenleaf. ranged on indl the homeless to get together? Where Public School No. %, Brooklyn, | Toucester, England, early in the seven- For where IGNORANCE has been BILIOUSNESS—now ‘tis folly to seek | OH MAG RATATAT GR Ta ded LPR eae) Toe fn the records of the last ten y« < vo | say aia nal ,] Wisdom. And she who runs may not only read but I RN recipes that have (e genie, B00N| sleeves are in one x in the city of New York, can we polr St, Anne's of Shandon ts an Hpiecopal | peen studied with well-aimed intelligence as to VALUHS to the human machinery orning, val hed tela sinaie comprehensive, movement | All Modern Improvements, | cnursh. tthe foundations were 121d, hows | ee ee ne eee oe ne ae ek Une. ingredient o¢ Ant pledges another good day,’ | piece each, Mnished “i for the treatment of homelessness and | pqWO Lise gis vont on the sidewalk in| Ver bY the Catholtes. love, that is often one of the greatest ties that bind [Sf Only waive TaIisily RP SPE AIGE 3.1) neg: " vagrane: L Ab Dorduestee, the other dey. Thay | were . veyard beside the ehuro is So that just Because money is paid for similar service, and the employer gets | , ‘The small things we ment $n the Ys : tee cuss tia oe ) Predicts » Hard Winter, (me ted ground for both creeds, and] VALUE RECELVED without defalcation, is no reason to put It down tn the| Te triflesah, those tell the story—| 1th AUAN TY Oe . tte atl the her i \d the bel of the belle he o1 h . | Small duties, small pleasures, smalt o the Paltor of The Kvening World We' use with all the modern im. os y roale of the scheme of things, | ¥ for the medium Thave reed a prediction of a mii | "Tue Mid wwe, | loved so well, lies the dust of the lyrte More and more is all Iabor becoming a matter of business contract, And the | |. carne, re ae eiae alze is 38-4 yards 4 Winter.” Being a clore observer of the| into the dir, ete, donee woo to] a 20, "0, ee the ust | Specialist in his line gets the large figures. ‘This is true with the culinary eon? | ay path to £ rar) oF eel Ae 4 or 27 inches wide, weather for tho list thirty-five years, |, “We've @# more than you hare, In our new ‘Sometimes T play them just for him.” tract, ‘The efficient cook is recognised and respected, e're treading to-day un Leone we're got erenyt 21-3 yards % oy . T 4p not agree with this prediction, 1] “What have you got! said Meredith, the sexton, softly, ‘1 Fancy Blouse—Pattern No. 6872, knew he must hear them!" Drudgery is gradually effaced dy sanitary aystems and labor saving devices, 4 id caste 4d inches ‘ . ne bi o lo The modern kitchen is a most PROGRESSIVE institution, And a woman who | Good morning! A fine time for starting! Oia. with 3.4 yard of ding and 3-8 yard of velvet to trim as {ilusti t Fee eee eee Man ENOM. | ean tn enumerate, We've gut tarnntne" | Andy roverentiy he touched the ropos: | must be self-supporting certainly need fell no compunction in “going into some-| ‘To look for the brightest and Dost Pattern No, O872 is cut in sizou for @ $4, 26, $8, 40 and 42 inch bust mesawre, ty @now storms the States of New a've we," and the notes of “Lead, Kindly Tdght" | mody's kitchen" in this advanced era. For most of the time it is more lucrative | In all that we meet with, imparting . York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania # sentiment ¢ aroun ts ‘ : | New courage to bear with the rest. vo got 8 mllment collar in our houe,| £9! fown around, a shower of eilver) and safer than many other fields. How Call at THH EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHTC maerreeer for the rest of December |. sound, What's the matter with the kitchen? Nothing! Hyvery daughter of us knows | Think good and sp:ak good and wo y= BUREAU, Lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, or send by “wih be mild until the Ith, with @ cold | “And a whoosit.” “Bellove Me ] Those Fndearing | something about Jt some time, : good, mail to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO., 182 B. Twenty-third street,$’ Soap occasionally. Thon winter will set | | This tase) the other ane, “What's @ whee | Young Charms,” “The Afinetrel Boy, We need cooks—yee, every hour, For, when not in the process of cooking, | And you'll find dt has been @ good) } Obtain IN, ¥, Bend cen cents in ooin or stamps for each pattern ordered. $ ”) dn with very cold and stormy weather, |) ‘a hole in the wall in the front entey,"| “Let Brin Remember,” “The Last Rose’ they (the real ones) are scheming for the next meal. de ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always' Jamvery wil! be a very cold month, with | mid the first linle girl, “And when somebody | of Summer''—all the heart touching Irish For be tt Imown: Watch out for the sunshine and glad- pecity size wanted, Add twe conte fer letter postage & ta af, ghe thermometer around zero, There 'comme ‘0 the door there's « bell rngr--and then! metoies of Moore were heautified hy the ‘WR UY LIVE WITHOUT FRIENDS, WH WAY LIVE WITHOUT BOOKS, nose, Patterns % may be @ break in the weather about nee an OF oniom be! BUY « MAN CANNOT LIVE WITHOUT Cooks!" Good niovning! It's far the best way. f "

Other pages from this issue: