Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
bythe Zee "How. yess ba Company; Noa, 68 to 68 4%. ANGUS SHAW, Pres. and Treas, JOBEP! Por ZED Junter; Beo'y. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Clase Matter, Bebecription Rates to The Evening| For England and the Continent World forthe U ited’ States “| All Countries in, and Canada, ‘ostel Year je Mont VOLUME 52. $3.50) One rear. “TAMMANY’S GRAVE. MONUMENT over Tammany’s grave is proposed—but any pro- phetic inference from this an- nouncement, as applying to local politics, would be premature. The actual circumstances ere that the Bucks County Historical Society of Pennsylvania has closed nego- tiations for the purchase of the sito of the burial-place of Tama- nend, or Tammany, the legendary “affable” chief of the Lenni Len- ape tribe of Delaware Indians. This historic site is in New Britain township, and it is probable that an imposing and permanent monument will replace the loose stones piled there more than half century ago to mark the epot. The Tammany Society of New York City was originally insti- tuted in 1789 as the Columbian Order, with Columbus as its patron aint. But Columbus controlled little or no patronage, eo a few years later they adopted Tamanend, whose name was popularly cor- rupted to its present form. This big Indian is believed to have been ee @ contemporary of William Penn. However, there were apocryphal | histories of Tammany even @ hundred years ago, and theso represented him as a friend of Washington and a veteran of the Revolutionary | (War... On this basis it ought to be easy to figure out pension claims for his descendants to-day. If the Pennsylvania memoria! does not particularly interest Now ‘Yorkers, the Wanamaker Indian for New York harbor ought to, and doubtless will. Last month a Congressional bill passed the House providing for the erection here of euch a statue by Rodman Wane- maker as “a suitable memorial to the North American Indian.” Tam- many will hardly take more than the merest platonic interest in this project, though, as the monument is to be erected upon a Govern- ment reservation without expense to the Government, the site to be selected by the Secretary of War and the Secretary of the Navy, and a Congressional committee will euperintend tho construction, subject to the approval of the Commission of Fine Arta, . _—o JOHN D.’S FIRST JOB. HE edvice offered in @ recent Bening World editorial about “Giving One’s Self a Job” helped John D. Rockefeller years ago. On the 26th of September every year he raises the Stars and Stripes over his house to celebrate the anniversary of the day when he was hired to work for another man, or firm, for the first and only time in his life. He became a bookkeeper in the forwarding and commission house of “Hewitt & ‘Testle on the river,” and it took a year of working early and late, seeing everything, forgetting nothing, and never talking, before his salary was sdvanced to $25 a month. Then he began to save money, and before another year he had gone into business for himself. The rest is ailenoe, with the exception of » few vague platitudes as to “thrift and industry combined with business skill.” ‘This is very good es far as it goes, though one cannot but regret ist in order to get any self-help advice from John D. it is neces: to hark back fifty-six years, to times whiclt everybody and everything has omtlived, and when the Rockefeller financial standing was not aimiler to that which impresses us to-day. > As it is, the moral of Mr. Rockefeller’s little reminiscence would eeem to read: “Be faithful, honest, industrious and discreet, and the Company may raise your salary to $25 a month.” iv “Walking Weather.” ‘Bo the Baitor of The Rrening World: For the next six weeks or more it will be ideal “walking weather” on clear daya, The more long, brisk walks People take the seldomer they will need & doctor, In winter or in summer the weather ts bad for such walke, But now is the time for them. Walk till A Tig” Di tired (not exhausted), keeping the lpa | T° the EAitor of The Evening World) closed, breathing slowly and deeply,| 2 Nave always heard that 10 per cant. Progressive and up-to-date country and offers plenty of inducements pelos fore, Will gome one who has been to Argentina please tell us of his experi. ence and add whatever information he thinks of value? Others will be inters ested, Ww 66] TELL you, the people of this Jen are @ lot of boobs!" said Mr. Jarr, laying down hie even- ing paper and danging the table with hig Get for emphasis. ‘Please, please’ oaid «Mrs. Jarr quietly, “don't be violent and don't wee slang. The people of this town ere a lot of things, speaking in gen- eral, and some people, whom I know More intimately than I do the world large, are noley in action and un- eouth in expression, in particuiar. I euppose you are going to edify us all ‘with some moral and enlightening re- marke concerning Gaby Deslys. All { ean eay is that the new shade of Gady Deslys velvet is very beautiful, although it is very trying to eallow complexions, and Cora Hickett looks a sight in here. Why will some peo- ple" — "Why will geome people interrupt other people and prattle along about matters that do not !nterest those whom they interrupt?” interjected Mr, Jarr. "I was going to eay that the boobs in this town"— ‘Tt you mean ooblea,'" Mra, Jarr about your friends’ *hoobtes,’ put in, ay “What Keeping the chest out and the ahoul.|°f the Purchase was an ample tip (10) “I'm not apoaking about my frienda. Gare equared, If in the country and|°*?t® UP on @ dollar dinner, &6.) But| tm speaking @bout a lot of boobe and walking alongside a ratlroad track, |°NC° OF twice I have seen waiters look|simps who are easy marks in thi 1s @ good rule to learn your rate|#U™ and aurly at such @ tip. Thev|town, when you e’-rt in about Gaby of speed. The number of rails you |*°°M% to expect more, We have dia-|Hesiya and velvet and sallow complex- Dawe in twenty @econda will represent Seemed teh) ed i7e leave te to your = he number of miles an hour you 80, per cont, ts enue BAU? 7O0'REE coough tn for @ walter, why ie it antl A “Cement Gun, BROOKLYN PHYSICIAN, enough for a barber, readers? Yet a H® “cement gun,” a device for Rap |four-cent tp for forty cents’ worth of T Suiting canerstar ia: pues by come To the Faitor of The E shave and halrcut would be pooh: proseed alr, 19 being used by the! The pistol law is a fine one, And 1{ 2% 04 about that? Also, tf wel Quartermaster's Department, United hope it won't be a farce. Con ented |'? Ys ind wetter, Why hot "Mo the| states army, In the Hawallan Ialands, Weapons are no more needed tn thie) \""® how’ of idiocy and thy theland te proving of value in the ox age than are swords. And if to law | (Neier, the clerk, the grocer and) gtruction of the ordnance shop at Fort is rigidly enforced it will mean a tre.‘ S8F conductor, Ruger he following description of mendous saving of life as \ oll as a % MILES JR, the device used in Hawall ts fur- | dawn of better da What do others te, nished by Capt. A. 1. Putnam, corps way? Ch Ly | To the Ea World of eng ‘The Broken E-Strt I read out the “part| ‘The cement gun consiste of an alr Te the Editor of The ky me" » NIAtTY's Keystone pressor, # four-cylinder murine gano €an some mu 'e Equality, What eqifality 18 there in| lino ensine ty horse-power, ® string of @ violin almost always breaks |" PUP! getting a full education while) one-inch wire-bound rubber hose with before it is tuned up to its highest?| the boy next door gets only halt? Wel walle three-eighthy Inch thick for do. Just as soon as I put the bow to the| AM #pend money lke water on things|livering dry nd and coment mixed, String it snaps, I use strings which | that add to our elty er splendor| an ordinary garden hose for delivering ate supposed to be very good. To tune] and po: Why not cut down every| water to the nozzle of the gun, and the the violin I use a pitoh pipe, | useless nse until every child has| sun or nozzle itself. used also for the mandolin. I hope ex-| #°° ‘Cations and teachers for full| “A mixture (1 to 21-2) of cement and Perts will tell me some way to remedy | tim idy? Education is our nation’s| fine sand is delivered to the nossle at this defect, H. M, bulwark, We seem to be leaving a lot| thirty pounds pressure, and just before Chane the Argentine, of gape in that bulwark, “wart time"| being discharged is met by a circular To the Editor of Evening World Saps. It t¥ @ crime against education, | spy of water of thirty pounds pres My friend and myself, both young| against progress, against civilization,| $ute within the nozgle, so that the wet men twenty-six years old, with fair edu-|aguinst equality, against justice, What! rie projected on Surface to fations, are going to the Argentine Re-|do more lo: 1 readers say to thig? U8 covered. The water supply is regu Public with $12,00 or $14,000 between us,!1'4 itke to hear thelr views lated at nossle to obtain the ¢ @a.%e hear thet Argentina is @ very Aare, go, | Sonnlatency.”—Government Consular Re: OR orld Dat! fons and Cora Hickett and goodness knows what!" cried Mr. Jarr: ‘You a always kicking if a guy goes out to Gus'a and yet when I do stay in the house and try to have a little firesid conversation in our steam heated little home, although the steam isn't turned on yet, thie Is the come-back I get!” And Mr. Jarr frowned and took up his newspaper again to eignify that his feelings were hurt. "I do not object to ‘guys,’ as you call them, going to Gus's. I delleve I am right in assuming that Gus's is the proper place for ‘guys,’ sald Mrs. Jarr rr y Magazine! “They Ss re September 28: han’t Hurt You!” By Rolf Pielke SASSASAASABAASSAASATAALARAAAS ABABA Mr. Jarr Has a Grievance That Is Hard to Unload FBS EE EE EO EE EE 8 OE OT OE 8 8 SE 8 8 OS with measured calmnes: ing used sneer at Mr, would do well to emulate his choice dletion."* “I supp Dinkston, you mean T ought to talk “But I do ob- Ject to the vernacular of the gutter be- in the home. ‘boobs’ and ‘simps’ indeed! hear Mr. Dinkston use euch terms, You 'G and Uke Dink?" replied Mr. Jarr. to look Itke him, and I should act Ike him, too, and be too, and @ sponge and a loafer?” “It would be well for you to copy his good qualities before you sneer at his You never bad ones,” be all you say a: his conversation ays’ and “It charms yet ads it on is Paolo and Francesca RANCESCA DE COURCY wi ‘one of those tall aslinksy brunettes who drape so well on ernie Martin furniture. and her life from the moment of her natel debut had been strewn ‘With orchids and real lace—so, when {t came to a question of her marriage much wi expected of her. ‘There was a man she had met, a cer- tain Lanciotto Gates. He was any- thing but beautiful—that was the con- #ensus of opinion, He had the pale blue eyelashesiess eyes that remind one of those strange fishes that aren't good to eat. Besides which, he was short and stocky and pigeon-toed and had rather a curtatied nose that pointed as! am, not to |speak of a dejected underlip! BUT, France ‘a had been told that he owned pretty nearly all the ratlroads he would be the little god to whom all great financiers, the world over, would j#alaam, } At the time of the wedding she was elehteen and he forty-four, | Francesca made a ravishing bride and aa who stood at the altar peoplo thought what a pity it was that La jclotto didn’t look @ bit Uke his brothe 'Paolo, who had come on from the West |to be best man, Directly after a short honeymoon Lanclotto was called to the scene of | @ great railroad strike and he left the willowy Francesea in Paolo's care, Bee that she tsn't bored,” he or- |dered; “take her to lunch, tea and din- ner; take her to the theatre, opera and balls re no expens: And Paoto did as he was commandod todo On .he Avenue, of an afternoon, hin stalwart figure, sitting in a white touring oar beside the beautiful Francesca, who was beginning to affect flat, droopy hats and pendulum = ear- rings, became quite a thing to be potnt- ed out to sightseers, People began to talk—as people al ways will-and some slight wind of it got to Lanclotto's ears. He took the first train for New York and, arriving the mansion, sent for Ninette, Wranoesea's Premed maid, in America and that within a few years | 4 ceaca and gesticulated, Madame she wit ze ey zoo! monsieur, tt hia presence, Then a hero and her As he finished reading, he dropped the hook on the floor and, leantng over the | Mrs. Stryver's dea of cuteness,” rot dreamy-eyed Francesea, murmured ed Mra, Jarr, ‘A minute later she “One Kiss, Francesca m!a—Jjust one!" | me whe thought ttle pigs cute, to: At that, Lanelotto stepped melodi “Well, I'm worry that I am not more m at at fram behind the drape guarded in my expresstona,” said Mr. and aa Jarr, "But what I was going to say, If “Tako tt; ‘twit! be the last you want to hear tt, was thet the hat OF courne, Paolo and Franc sca were | chook Upping in the big hotels and res- erribly surprised Who wouldn't be taurants In this town has becon an tn-| r the clroumsta But before | roerable nuisance, I tell you I, for one, th ; h aa ohh e Ssponulele, tan: intend to keep out of them until the “T guess It won't take you more than “all look at ere an ‘olne, Oars Old Loves in New Settings| By Alma Woodward ‘Ah, monsieur, It ees an {dyl!! she the every moment Monsieur Paolo half shut—so—iike @ goo- An’ Monsieur Paolo, he look back the same way—et puls quelque! when no one looks, ah, ze burning heat of ze kiss he put on Madame's Mps—ah, fay!" Then, bidding Ninette be silent about Lanciotto crept some heavy velour draperies as Fran- lo came Into the room, Paolo bore under his arm a red vol- ume which Lanctotto recognized as be- ing one that had created a furor on account of the torridness of {ts plot, Franceson settled languldly on a pil- low-heaped divan and Paolo dropped to the floor at her feet. For the moment bere was silence. the rich, deep votce of Paolo sounded through the room, reading the scription of the first kiss beoween the quoted tn “Well, ing the boobies en asked Mri + “T was not nantly. An’ less think they from me. stopped Will house and ask behind message, dren. are, I gotcha Mr. Jarr. Mrs. Jarr. w Mrs, Stryver asked Mr. Jarr. for good and al sald Mri me, “Oh, that's !t, is has have to admit that. me ad Tarr, mitted “He he is erudite and eat charm. You'll may nut of the price of a | drink every time he gets at me and un- Mr, ut I don’t see how this conversation | gets sidetracked from something T've| o%q When I said this Jarr of boobs and simps I “I ought] been try to say. be a hobo;| town was full wasn't alluding to M ston any more than Deslys or Beulah Bi were you about to pro: and great city, since yo Sarr, cried wet Just to-da he wan passing her him come over as she wished to see me about something. And when ehe repeated her knowing how forgetful T gotcha, Steve, ey ne ford nael Angel I paper pletons jo Dink= to Gaby Cora Hick: | ett or Clara Mudridge Smith or anybody whose names and doings we sce| the fashionable pages of the Sunday intelligence what great matter of moment| ulgate concern- of tht are dying to tell me aa. Mrs, Jarr such ex Mrs, to teil “How do you know he did? Because she told me about tt. she thought {t sounded so cute," replied it was 22" was the reply, “You thought I wished to say something and you just wouldn't le y ite Indige “All T did was to object to your using slang in the house. are 80 used to St that you do not no- tice it, but the children pick it up embarrass me before people who do: Possibly you ms ‘ons Stryver me to chile asked Bald 1, what harm was there in tt if thought cute?" “I am not wholly In sympathy with “Is that the reason you don't take me Jarr, same fifteen minutes to get some clothes Into nap and catch that 210. for the {out t© dinner?” asked rg, Jarr Coast. As for you,” turning to Mran. | Mousht tt was because we couldn't af- peach, “vou nse too valuatie an avset {ford the dinner, You only need give the to me soctally and too pleturesque a| at boy @ nickel, you know,’ fismire for the head of my table for me| “Well the principle is the to dispense with, Anyway, a jury |8towled Mr. Jarr, —___. would award you too much alimony THINGS ARF DONE §0 MUCH MORP SANELY IN OUR DAY! HE] “Yes, that old Miss Parsay COULD HAVH STABBED THEM ROTH-BUT IT MAKES SUCH A MESS, IN THE FIRST PLACH—| Niagara Fall AND ‘DH PUBCTRICTTY, WH “The idea FORCIBLY MOST DESIRABLB WAY OF MAK- TNG OND'S EXIT FROM THIS APPLIED, Ig) WEARMOME WORLD! T TH in the country take her for Lineta Deaton, going to be married, And, say, she’ they’ The Right Atmosphere, really determined to spend her honeymoon at “Yes, she thinks it's the only place be apt to @ = bride.”"—Cleveland ‘ | feels that he is just on the verge of renouncing them, you know. men are a sad lot and all women a sad lottery. 1911 Reflections OF A paclbelor Melem IRewlaw 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Werté). 4 |) oe 49 the miracle which transforme @ fs] Ae fireside companion into a rounder. Flirtation and office work are the ott and water, owe, Which the devil sometimes tempts a man to try to ma To @ man, the most trying thing adout the modern woman te that eke simply cannot help having an idea occasionally. No, Clarice, married Ufo doesn't mean continuous devotion; t meosg 4 continuous vaudeville, with a change of moods every twenty minutes, 7 —_— Funny that a man who knows enough not to eat todeter salad totth ice cream never sceme to realize that it's just as dad form and just as dan- gerous to flirt with two women at the same time, Good resolutions are the soothing syrup with which a man puts nie conscience to sleep; he can enjoy his little follies 80 much more when he Mutual faith between husband and wife is Uke a cobweb—easy to shat ter, impossidle to patch up. In the opinion of a cynical bachelor, when it comes to matrimony ad Memoirs of a Commuter By Barton Wood Currie Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Wortd), fe iy | the furnace and then rushed off to the : hd ts eta eaie til wath town employment agency. You can im- Wh Eas agine,” he continued to rave, “what the DID not tell Hildegarde what was| perfection of this drug will mean—noth- | going to happen to the new canine 'jng less than putting the lelsure clase if the programme of Yellow Beard) o¢ the world to work and giving the Was carried out. | tolling masses a rest. if you feel at alt Her neighbors had | tagy to-day let me give you @ drop.” only hinted to her| 7 qeciined and then broached the sub- of the tyrannical) sect of my dog. Brisket emitted a eud- powers of the! den gust of laughter that blew out all Love - Your = Pets| i jamps under his various rug League. It would) ooke: have prodigiously |" iq gm laughing.” he then explained, disturbed her equa-| wngt pecause you look 90 gloomy about nimity to learn) tho threats of this Love-Your-Pete that “the unpedl-| Teague, but because T had a similar rreed purp Was). Conee from which I emerged with ordained tlie pig smile. You may have noticed swift extinction by| my mastiff, Bosco, Well, he was put the gas or powder- han for no other reason than under th and-ball route| iat I couldn't get any record of his because he! | anafather. This same Yellow Beard, and] Agent of the league, told me what would happen to Bosco if I didn’t turn therefore w Being unwi! him over to be painlessly demolished rowing details and take coun by gas. Naturally I refused to be bul- wife, I sought advice in lied." of my eccentric neighvor, T “And the dog catchers never both: Brisket. I found Inventor Brisket in his| ered him and the constables never 8 study, hard at work on a chenteall ay nim? formula, with two retorts and a) «7 should say not. All I had to @o strange looking kettle sizzling beside! was to tle a stick of dynamite to Boss him. Before I could present my diMecult| co's collar every time he went out. I ase to him he opened on me with a belled the dynamite ‘Dynamite’ and I few welrd all yas concerning the) nut a stgn on the dog which read, GLUIS: he) was mixing, "DANGER; HIGHLY <PLOSIVE,’ I've got he he sald, potnting to of course, the dynamite was soaked ‘the pink quid in one of the retorts, "a! and couldn't explode, but those dog volutionize fety. catchers and the constables didn't insinuated In a cup of know that. They couldn't arrest mi coffee wil! cause the drinker thereof toon any charge, you see, for they |e smitten with a mad desire to work.| couldn't produce the evidence. Now, | So far I have trie if you wish, I will rig your dog up in three of whom are » il in the hos-| the same way." tal. T ith went unasked| “Tha I replied, “but I will have ito the cellar and split three cor It over." wood, whitewashed the walls, (To Be Continued.) Spook Siories By David A. Curtis. |\Some 1h “i ‘The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York World). panded that he give her the proof she required, He touched her wrist and Instantly the sinews shrank and all the t, 1911, The Black Ribbon and the Wither: d Wrist. z mepOrRL TYRONE, an Irith N-| nerves withered. Then he warned her | ff bleman, and Miss ¢ °F not to allow any one to see the mark, I } (afterward married to jas tt would be sacrilege, Martin Beresford) were wards of the same guardian and as brother and sister at the In the morning she bound a black #ib- |ron eround her wrist and was never seen again alive without such @ cover= grew up jose of the eighteenth century. Hav-) ing, agking her husband not to | ing no religious faith, they pledxed each | mand an explanation, lother solemnly that the first to die} She also told him that Lord Tyrone would return !f possible and inform the other as to the truth about immortality, Not long after Lady Beresford's mar- rlage Lord Tyrone’s ghost apreared at had died on the preceding Tuesday, Letters that came by the next post con- firmed this. Time went on, and all the ghost had her bedside and informed ‘her that he|toid her of the incidents of her life was Jhad died “last Tuesday at 4 o'clook-" | tuintied exactly until she reached, as lThen ho told her that she would 4l¢/ she supposed, her forty-eighth birthday. lwhen she was forty-seven years Old,| She tmagined then that one portion of |adding numerous details of the life she|the prophecy would prove to be false. sould have before that time. She ref a to belleve sald and declared that it only Ba dream that she was experiencing, So to convince her he waved his hand and the heavy velvet curtains of her bed were Instantly drawn up through the }large iron ho which supported them | stm to belleve him, say done that in But when she spoke to a clergyman of her acquaintance about her age he declared that she was mistaken, "T have often disputed with your mother about your IT happened to go parish where you were born, I was right in the dispute, for you are just forty-meven to-day. ything he ing that she might have The unhappy lady immedtately eetired hee sleep, So ho wrote h's name in alto her room, refusing to receive the | pocketbook, telling her that she could|company ashe had Invited to celebrate not mistake his handwriting, Even that|the day, Sending for her son and Lady |was not enough, for she sald though |Retty Cobb, a Mfe-iong friend of hers, she could not imitate his handwriting | she told them all that ds here related. while awake she might do so in her} Saying that she would Inevitably dle bess that night she dismissed them, nidding “You are hard of dellof," sald the) them remove the black ribhon after | ghost, “I anignt by a single touch leave | her death; and then lay down to try ta a mark on your fle hat would con- | sleep. } vince you, but !t would trjure you tr-| In an hour ahe was dead; and, the eth Tt iw not for spirits to touch | bon being removed, her wrist was found ” |to be In the exact condition sie had hand and | desertbed. reparably. mortal fles t this she extended her Information, restaurant ocouples a butlding which was made of compressed paper. Recent heavy rains have caused water to flow over the Falls of Minnehaha for the first time In two years. ‘Tests appear to show that the wing will carry disease-breeding bacteria 300 foot, and even sixty feet during rainfed, Queer Bits of r has no to do with ri than the e. It is made ps of flax and 1” clgarette pi SR moon | from the shreds and sc hemp. have no} are made o Kid Th ep. Of each dollar revelved by the Though Saxony has been a ce: . mt 1 i atte New York in taxes two cents £0 to civilization for long ages, one-fourth Ne charity. th , ; f the kingdom fs still covered h fore { ‘The Chinese have prepared an int tonal manual, in order ¢ make. tha translation of foreign lan; tap — w alebone {ts not bone not a single one of the properties of bone. At Mambure. Germany. o faubionadn