The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1911, Page 18

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| | } ed a a NS * at ™ od > ‘* at od a a Pi be " s wv - es « ° be * & 11909 a SA Che | BMorld. Nader PobMished Datiy Mxcent sunday py tne Press Publishing Company, Nos. 68 to 63 Vark Row, New Gus s and dreas, JOSKiad PULITZER Junior, Bec'y. wsdl ae ine Row, \atalbpiezs 08 Park Row fintered at the Post-Ofice at New York ow W Ibeerint io: Raw o The F— iy of Knalan: ct Cabeer eT ortho United Staion | AI Cucntrton In, the Invornatian end Canada Portal Union, on One Yen’ . sevesescenes C380] One Your sone Oo One Me WAR ON STREET SIGNS. an wnhappy scheme of street improvement that razed and porticoes at the stoop-line and 1k e dis- tectural accessories removed to widen Vifth ave did eneroach on public property, Bul they were sightly and contribut mate spectacles of che ciy, ‘The advertising on blank wa nices is probabiy in J ig not sight’) rough President MeAnen the ole improvement, has realized t The war a Now is the time example | authorizing anyboc nu which supports y cases equal inv iinance, is seen in s, and has undertaken the other. inst eves advertising is on. The J Il advertising on count has set a good drive it home. illegal troy it. ways and declar y to de! In this city much to abate a worse ne n be done under existing ordinances, for the scaffolding lectric advertising has been erected with small regard | | for the law. Wien other remedies have recourse should be had to the What is permitted here would not be been exhaust Aldermen and the Leg cities generally prohibit fencing vaca vith billboar Some | offer prizes for artistic advertising signs. Others secure the same re- | sult by imposing on billboards a “graduated, progressive tay,” so that no aigns can afford to be large, and the effort is to attract attention by, beauty a The County Council of Hants, Ki an ordinance that “no advertisemer one. nd, has made ill be exhibited on any hoard- ing, stand or other erection visible from any pubhie highy placed as to disfigure the natural beauty of the landscape From each of thes thing. Its signs, notably the fantastically changing electric ones, have | sachieved optical trespass. What should be most s odious or ridiculous. ay and so| forcign examples New York can learn some- ghtly, they make | - eee HE HELD THE PURSE. | ORNELIUS N. BLISS, for a space Secretary of the Interior in the MeKinley Cabinet, could have been Secretary of the Treasury in the Arthur Cabinet. good one, for the rugged old wholesale dry goods merchant who died this wétk had business ability, honor and some instinct for public affairs. As it happened, his only treasurership was in connection with the | Republican National Committee. Me held the purse in the Roose- | velt campaign of 1904. In that capacity he embodied, however un-| willingly, a sinister and cruel paradox of the time: He spent erooked | morey honestly. | | He would have made a sey It was crooked money, for it came from trusts and great corpora- ‘tions—came. in some cases under pressure—and was contributed in ‘tho well founded expectation that the Roosevelt administration would | be obligated thereby, Sor i : | of the word. it, for Mr. Bliss would not spend otherwise. He was a successful campaign collector, because con- tributors knew that none of the money would stiek to his fingers, audi 2) would be spent in accordance with the best political practice of the time. | Political p It is against the | law now for co 1 the law re- quires that the sources and uses of these funds shall be disclosed before | end after elections. Doubtless Mr. Bliss regretted that the better practice was. not enforced in his own time, as his friends must regret that the fame of the honorable old merchant is in any way elated | with the last days of a vicious custom. | ne of it w It was honestly » insurance mone: nctice has moved on since his ¢ ay. porations to give to campaign fund. ote THE HECKLING OF HOMO. Why drive the Federation of Man pine of the good women who want trying to do? In the Mayoralty campaign of! Je a point of interrupting each candidate at his NY crowd the mourners into the last ditch, as fo vete ¢ uTragette m: pursuing the Republican can setts from yy he a e and embar Massac! tions w! eto 7 assing him with ques: | eno place in his campaign, the home decays, peroration and derailing his eloquence by asking “How about yotes|timaet. “A man urna in ninety-five| WhY can't @ magjpoatter a little sun-| intolerable social and industrial condl-) «simatter?” asked Mr Jarr, “Cut for w 1 arte fd i 5 . : per cent. of hia money to hia home, {ine around his home and not be so| tions for her sex, then she's @ crank) yourself shaving?" oF Worcn quarteite of determined suffragettes in a high-powered Jand what doea ne get? Mo gets mise| Prodigal of it on the street and in the} and a meddier, and Js told she had bet-/ «yt ain't no business of yours," sald touri 4 late for Gov®or of | judgea roasted! a‘ complaints. Suffragists in| mands for things he can't afford and| th rie reewns wee als - ee A EAR INN __The Evening World Daily Magazine. Wednesday, Octo anne The New Handbag. By Maurice Ketten.. nae ven nae ee OH, THe MEAN LOOKING Dog! GET in THERE, F.i00 HE CAN'T HURT HANDBAG 1d REAUY VERY HANDY, GET IN THere | HUBBY, The Streets AREN'T “NeMeupHeup epnDSeveNONON esotevoseiotose: ASvgind MgDesngrrgagrgiggogengneg 9 spemeenepenst Mr. Jarr Learns the Fine Art of Being Unpopuiar NER MAA RAM MNAAAR TMM MATA ANAARA A RTM MAA AIO MAMAT they bounce! And the n.inute they are out of the house how sweet and pleas- ant they are to everybody! But where has a woman to go when things get on n't have a good nerves, when a husband finds fault have tt elsewh and she's worried with the petty cares > And he pushed back his hat, threw up| and the debts and worrles of trying to his chin, let a smile chase away his| make one dollar do the work of three! frown and stepped briskly, even gayly,} “Can she take her hat and rush out to Gus's cafe on the corner, to the saloon and tell ner troubles to Mrs, Jarr, who was watching after| her boon companions and drink the him from an aperture between the|money that should go to her family, window frame and the curtain, smiled|and play cards and have a good tims? bitterly, “No!” snapped Mrs, Jarr. “She can’t, ‘There he goes!’ she said grimly.|If she goes to a woman's club she's ook at him taking off his hat to Mrs.|called a busybody, 1 she 1s interested and patting the children onjin the suffragist movement and advo- and smiling at everybody!| cates votes for women to put an end to PP one worst ts yet to come! Za 8 7 And #0 tt 4s, for 1 have to go back home again sooner later, e1,"" And she turned from the window as| Mr. Jarr turned into Gus's, She was just as sure that Mr. Jarr was going to have @ good time as Mr. Jarr was sure) of the same thing. It may also be| gleaned that Mr, and Mrs, Jarr had just previously had one of those little marital passages at arms, euphemis- tically designated as “some words." “Hello, Gus!” cried Mr, Jarr. fully, as he entered his friend's refec- tory, he concluded .mentally, ‘4f 1 time at home I'll O11, by dhe Pres Publishing Co, (The New York World), s back was turned to him, Gus was scanning his visage in the mirror) behind the bar and holding down sev- eral strips of pink courtplaster till they caught fast to his left cheek “Aw, get out!” snarled Gu R. JARR came down the with hia hat pulled down o nis gle y brow, rp vd > wonder the saloon flourishes and | ‘tt As ne was saying to} the hen saloon? “ADI here she sighed. the good ti m, if the ter be attending to her home and chil- dren! i “Lf the men attended to their homes and children and—better still-to thelr Gus sulkily, And just then Mr, Slavinsky came Into the a bee line to the bar, without greeting either Gus or he gets misunderstood, he gets He hears nothing but peevish | He hears nothing but de-| “Men have If things don't please wives dare say a word to i i } y t " op | th way 0 od advice, ou wives, t would be a better world r, na id gruffly, “Schnapps!” this town have decided to accept the ation of a meddlesomo |e !# twitted about the success of other|them In the way of all pater er ese nies rine RecA Se? ey men ang the good fortune of other ho you, 3 visiting 1 Iman, who says “the thing to do is to impede traffic.” | women married to these other men! asked Mr, Jarr, longing for a genial at- The plan is srddenty to halt half a dozen hansom eabs in “On the rh what does he “4 mosphere. , ha ines i : and | gee in the saloon, t ct of the Refile ckions Ox A Don't speak to met” eaid Mr. Sla-| harangue the crowd that every block in traffic automatically as-|constant criticism of married women? vinsky, "You're the fellow vot iss to| 3. 4 | Why, he gets, for the few paltry nickels ° blame!" » ) int : ho spends, genial companionship, k | “Him? asked Gus, glowering at Mr. | © inen deserve all this persecution and discomfiture? They |imuiries ax to hly nent eiahia \ a | Jarr | are not bad fellows in their crude way, and as respects women have to|# % Ms Brosperity aad the a Sy i Fee aRA er RoR ey ny Ses Lk nat ei ; a of other married men, who h o Mr, Jarr, d | abdicate a yroud de: id tolerate more, They brave the elements or| hard ax he at home: flying to the sa- Bzelenm ROW, anel> ly, “and you dom't vant that Muller and| grub in the mone et that their women may “lie warm at home,” |!" arive dull care away Heppler should ace you, elther and when at eve they bull-penned by the brid seats. as they have arranged it, men to take all the knocks and win for women the leisure to become sole readers of novels and mag: GlLup the summer hotels, t» ma Man's chief outs speaking. The } any woman who has been proposed to will quieting meversal of tradition if help this eloquence. to tl start back 1 » po t ce until the fair shoppers have secured nes In the scheme of the zines, to monopolize the matinees, to od abroad. | le intere y and stumb vanity pul tgly at best, as attest, It V's part is to hind were a r rather than | Letters From the People | ‘ To Imp. the Speed, {The reading to be transeribed, If the To the Falitor of The Evening World inquiror can got no one to read to her A reader asks how mprove the then the next beat thing to do ts to speed tn stenography typewriting, vent, bu Ww a phonograph and and I beg tp offer t some dian Jers, Dietate as much wor fons. The Intenance of speed '™ or a8 Inders from can be arranged in several ways. Virs:, - y a modern dictation books by attending the evening dictation clase | ty ay | ritaee ae yak Brey of & g00d schoo!. However, as the in | nye 7s enkas aie Quirer says she cannot afford tiie, It issonine Just as fast us the tnquiver can out of the question. second, by havi ke tt, Renting a typewriter would gome friend (preferabiy one who 1s give excellent practice transcribing these familiar with stenography) read to her. notes, é LEWIS B.C. Brooklyn homes they are|grouci he Ket slap are! * “If a fellow comes in a saloon with @ at heartil told to cheer my tle Premera ate Consiga, WT The New York World.) Mr. Jarr gazed in such biank amaze- O want cn ideal husband ts human to get one iS! wont that Mr. Slavinsky explained. | superhuman, | “Don't your vite on the and go in mit this swell nan Stryver and the rich Smith sal lw ! vo: ge’ iT found here 6 : After all, why should a bachelor retinquish the Ym” Ane a The Differenc Bon ne A adutction of a tot of women merely for the privilege | give em etik books" — ieee “About pig—plas—or something | mit! they should have for a thousand! Lady Dainty?" replied Mr. “and her lace peignoirs?”’ f having one woman tell him the truth about himself? la Every man adores the fragrance of attar of ro: except the one who!" has recovered from a love affair with a woman who used it, darr, -— “Yes, and you get out of my Mquor o store before I hit you mit the night Love is a matter of principle and interest—but most men haven't any |e rr ea Gus, “Look how my Lena} principle about it after they have scratched my face when T wouldn't get Iher @ lace plg—what you call dt!”", ] Her head she turned aw 1 feared she'd answer But this she said, Just so ewny, JOH lost the interest. >_——_— “Why, John!” SPOKE of love to May, A woman always knows exactly what she wants in the way of a hus- band; it is only after she has despaired of finding it that she puts her hand into the matrimonial grab-bag, closes her eyes, and trusts to luck, Put a mon in his place and he'll stay there; give him an inch of pater }and he'll take an ell of liberty and soon begin to boas you off your own doorstep, Her hand I clasped. Alack, Of course she'd draw it back— 1 knew that well enough; And this was her rebuff; “Why, John! | No matter how insignificant a man may be, he always expects to marry ideal womans it never occurs to him, sumehow, that an ideal woman | fe uguatly soning. fara Idea mats I kissed her, Yes, T dared, | To brave her wrath prepared. In amiles her face was wreathed As this rebuke she breathed: “What Is the difference between) whiskers and a beard?” | “A beard le what you wear your. | A wife ts the dessert to the love feast, and an old bachelor is a man who has never gotten his just dessert, eelf, and whiskers are what th f Siige: CEN id Terrell Love Holliday, in Idterary other chap weare.” 4 woman always hae a reason—tf she can only think what ét fe. ‘ ' Paul Revere. | destroyed such military stores as the patriots had not already had time to hide, meme one crm ome ae rucoe ed cate! en ted mean Alert RGR te A a on mae ber 11, 1911. Copyright, 1011, (The New York World), No. 5—The First Blow for Liberty. STOUT, grizzle-haired man, mounted on’a big horse, thundered along the road from Boston to Concord, late on an April night in 1775. Whenever he passed a sleeping village or a group of farm houses he would shout a single sentence and dash on. And behind him, at every house wuere his volce was heard, slumber at once changed to eager, flerce activity For the message he carried spelled LIBERTY! A throng of grim, stern-faced men had come to America from England, early in the seventeenth century, because they could not win religious free dom at home. They were known as “Puritans.” They settled in New Eng- land, a region as stern and uncompromising as themselves. There they proceeded to make life unbearable for every one who did not think and act as they did, and to protest angrily against any effort on gland’s part to regulate their action It was only natural that among the New Englanders the flame of open revolt should first burst forth against the mother country. While the other cole ontes merely muttered in angry discontent, the New Englanders we fighting for their rights, In Boston there were clashes between the ¢ and the British troops, In one of these quarrels—known as the Boston massacre eleven men were killed or wounded, When the British sloop G satled to Rhode Island to enforce the revenue laws she was captured and burned. Other colonies continued to protest and to plot against England, Ww The Press Publishing ¢ tut the New Englanders to collect 4 am muni ad to drill wvies of militia, called “Minute Men, All these preparations were known to the British, who ms a ——. The Ride of resolved to stamp out the Revolution's first spark before {t should burst into flame. Gen, Gage, who commanded the British forces at Boston, learned that the patriots had hidden piles of provisions and weapons at Concord, sixteen miles to the w So on the British soldiers, under as were the prepa patriots, Paul Revere, a goldsmith, was chosen to bear the news to Concord and to rouse (he siveping patriots aiong the road, Revere galloped anead ot the siow- marching British troops, crying out the warning. And as he swept by lighte suddenly glowed in windows, Sleeping farmers sprang up and seized thetr mus- kets. Church bells were rung, Word was sent to outlying districts. From everywhere the Minute Men flocked tn, 1il-armed, ill-disciplined, but fearless and ready to die for the right. On marched the British, unopposed, until at dawn th Lexington re, ont en in front of the chu' sleeved Minute Men—tarely seventy in all—were drawn up. armed English veterans this tue group of patriots was kitten against a bulldog, But ew ingly. Pitcairn rode up to them, bawling Disperse, you rebels! Disperse to your homes!" The Minute Men stood firm. At an order from Pitcairn the Rritish sent a murderous volley of lead crasiing Into the awkwardly formed patriot ranks, When the smoke lifted there were nearly twenty Minute Men lying dead on the village green. Without watting to seize or slay the survivors the British pressed on toward Concord, There they opened fire on a second body of militiamen S he night of April 18, secretly sent out a force of 800 Major Pitcairn, and destroy the: Secret ng for this march they came to the e, Boston stores sof the y reached the village of a handful of shirt- Against the $00 well- bout as effective ag a glanders held their ground unfiineh- ‘Then they set fire to the Court House, cut down the Lab- erty pole and started back for Boston. Any fool can walk Into a trap or into a hornets’ nest, but It takes @ wise man to get safely away again from nt either, And this the British now learned to their bitter cost, It had been easy enough to reach Concord, by brushing aside the feeble resistance offered them, but to get back to Boston was quite another matter, For by this time the whole countrystde was up in arms, Into a Trap— And Out of it. From behind every wull, hedge, tree and rock the farmers fired on the ree turning redoo: At first the soldiers tried to fight back, but they might as have tried to kill a flying with an axe, The Minute Men offered no folid front. They ‘hid whenever the Bi the march began again the deadly fusillale from behind fence poured into their ranks, ‘Phe soldiers tried to m march turned into a run and then into pant the patriots mowed down the acampering redeoats by the dozen. Had not the soldiers met a strong party of reinforcements they would probably have been wiped out before they reached Boston, As it was, the glad news of British defeat at the hands of untrained Minute Men flew from Maine to South Carolina, rousing ever to fiery acuen, The first blow had been struck, The Revolution was on! ) turned on them. But the moment and wall was But soon thelr fight, every man for himself, while ‘ch in order. What Is Happening Here and There. MIGRANTS leaving Germany for fixing a screen to prevent the exit ef fewer in number than formerly jane In 1882 thelr number was above 99,0,] A spectal trati recently teft Natpodt while that of last was but 25,00 In leontaining a record shipment of wild ani« round numbers, Of th 000 the eml- grants comin > mais intended for a mena’ at Ham- to the United States were burg. The ame was do oby 23,000, ® ted by a hunting in Beitish German Bermuda will soon have a ealt water |East Afri raced elght giraffes, Qshing preserve covering an area offeleven h tw about five square miles, It will be made | twelve seve by constructing a sill of concrete across | thre n bushbuek, the single narrow opening which unites |ninete fifty antes Harrington Sound with the ocean, and The May Manton Fashions | = Aa semi-princess gored @ e HE gown peasant skirt mate with waist and isa Housed favorite. This one is equally desirable for the street and for the house, In the illustration it is made of taney. silk with trimming of ” plain satin and with chemixette and unaer-sleeves of lace but it can he made of wil or of wool serge with collar and sleeve trims ming of ratine or broad: cloth, or of — brocdelota with’ trimming of ratin or satin, or velvet, and be come ‘completely trans formed, It ds essentially smart ‘at the seme time that it is simple, inyolv- ing no dittculties, ‘Tha Dlouse ts cut all In ene piece and duclides only undersarm seams. “he skirt is xix gored und the front and bac form vox plaits, can bo st entire leng Mus. trated, or to any desired depth.” ‘The chemisette 18 adjusted under the blouse and under-sleeves are ate tached to the eloaves bes neath — th trina tig, Cream broadcloth on bine or brown serge or vele yeteen makes a most ef: fective combination and at is beth new tially cate, Lind For the metium atae e dress will require ? yords of mete 16 wd 1% varda 4 fnohes wide, with % yard hes Wide for collar nd cuffs, 1 yard for remisetie and under- Sleeves; the width of the skirt at the lower edge te 2 yar attern No, 71 tn cut in sizes 4, 96, 38, 40 and bust measure, O- as tneh je Gown.—Pattern No, 7156, Call at THE NING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION: BUREAU, Lexington avenue and Twenty-third street, or rend by mail to MAY MANTON PATTERN CO., 182 E, Twenty-third street, N. ¥, Send ten cents in coin or stampa for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always Aad two cents for lette: matinee peel size wanted, ‘ F postage if in a rrr een 88 000000008 rrnmnmrrrnrwrwnms SARRERR ET amRRER p= ha mern CARNES ED Aen te rey

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