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Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday. Nove — . . ~ 1 ia | ~ é ; ‘e Che Ceaee" World. Such Is Life! | E ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULI , - | Padtishes Pally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos to 63 Park Row, New York. RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park tow. | B y M auri ce K etten, J. ANGUS SHAW, Treasure 3 Park Row | ema LITZEN, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row macro yn oe 6 ie, FoptsOnige ah Nee You as ReconaClare Meu ae Pre | is : O tbe,, Evening | 10 gland and the (or Ow | ECTLY OF Au Th salons Your, betel atom rr i) EXQUISITE, ' punts Rakewirs | eecveceyeer sce OBE0 | Boy Bonthis _ _MIds LOLa IM GONG To DIE | OLUME 82....... NO. 18,341 ass : Cowrite 11k, uy The Fe 1 Ub, AFHY Nye, Mure. World] int tenii xan nian = —_ | he Now17, A New War With diigiand, | SEE NGLAND and France wefe ut wai Mach tied vo crippie over a A DISCERNING POPULAR VERDICT. ed = : ly ; dt commerce-at sea by blocking all the enemy's trade wita neutral HERE the issue was clearly presented New York has vot \V4 ~ nations. In pursaic of this plan Bri cruisers vegan to solze f teht. " Wi wate tha: bad Legislat nd | K America’s merchant ships, and British captains claimed the right it alas Ute el JO Sat ‘ na Sttrhinadlns | to search any United States vessei for supposed deserters trom the Britisy \ control of the Assembly has passed from it. McCooey and navy. . Cassidy named a ticket in the Second Judicial District weighted down This was bad enough But worse was to follow. England carrie’ with the Willett scandal, and it has been repudiated by majorities! away American sailors vy force aut compelled thea to serve in the British that recall the year of Maynard and McKane. Even Queens, corrupt navy, For the best part of a year wore than thirty Americans per momta Were thus setzed and “impressed” into power a to prevent this. And land knew it. Our navy was still too small and weak to cope witn tne mighty British fleets. Nemonstrances: had no effect. Daily our nation was insulted and bere seemed to be no re dress. Then came the crisis , Admiral Berkeley, who was in com:nand of a British squadroo off Old 7 rm aboari merican ship Chesapeake ENAS Oa rere dessriare, from tue Miuglisb navy, and he demanded that sey be sivel Ce To MAKE You Commander Barron of the Chesapeake refused, declaring the four sailors were. +, in) not ‘Britiah devertere, On June 2, 189% tne Chesapeake put our to sea, The | WELSH RAREBIT English frigate Leopard was sent in pursutt. She opened Ad (O10 YesTERDAy gland’s service. We cad not the and misgoverned though it is, has contributed to the lesson read bosses that dared tamper with the bench. Tammany triumphs in New York County because its enemies named a ticket which in neither auspices nor personnel showed enough superiority to the Murphy ticket to clinch popular conviction. ‘The fasion cause relied on bargaining and on “availability” rather than om a commanding appeal, and lost because it did not greatly deserve | to win. The campaign points to Queens as a ficld for arduous political labor. For the first time since consolidation the county has put itself right, rebuking Cassidy while rejecting Willett. In this vast, inor- ganic borough, made up of factories and farms and commuting vil- | lages, public opinion shapes itself with difficulty and has not yet dis- covered strong leaders or evolved a good tradition. The movement that shall reclaim it will command « wider audience than successful edministration in most American cities of the first rank. Ho OLD GRANNY LEGISLATION. E’= little while some one has a scheme to found a national a) ire on the Chesapeake, crippling her and killing or wound- ™ Srownise | ing twenty-one of the Chesapeake's crew. Then men from Our the Leopard boarded tne shattered Ameriggn vessel and memes dragged away several of ber sallors tv ferve in Engs fy land's navy. This in American waters and during a time of peace! Over our country swept 4 clamor for vengeance. President Jefferson knew,we were in no condition to 4 fight England, and sought to calm the angry Americans. But he ordered ali British ships to leave America’s coasts, and ordered home such of our vessels @s were in foreign ports, He also forbade the United States to trade with Europe. This meant that England, was to be deprived of American topacco, cotton and other articles which had become necessities to her. Such an act might well have ‘ought England to her senses, But, unluckily, it also spelt “poverty” for thou- nds of Americans, Merchants, farmers, day lavorers, shopkeepers—men of ail Unes of industry—saw ruin descending on them. Jefferson himself, most of whose income was derived from the foreign sale of tobatco, was one of the chief sufferers. . It is hard to be a patriot at the cost of one's daily bread. People who relied y for a living on Ame export and import trade with Europe did not relish f the idea of going broke. So the “embargo” was eluded, and goods were smuggled back and forth between America and England in large quantities @ We had no effective revenue service to block such smuggling, and the Govern- ment officials were often bribed to permit it. Because of this lack of patriotism . on the part of our own merchants the embargo failed. Jefferson and others were " impoverished, and the war was merely held off for a very few years. Our coun- marriage bureau whick shall sanction or forbid a wedding from card-index data. Or somebody wants to institute the bachelor tax. Or somebody is perturbed at the impudence and mendacity of children and wants the authority of parents superseded. | ‘ People with such notions awaken a quizzical interest because | _ their views are unusual and seem novel. As a matter of fact, they | _ gfe not ahead of their time, but behind it. Their schemes are sur- | | vivale of classical polity. They are of the progeny of Plato’s Re- | public. The pattern of their ideas is to be found in the legislation of Solon and Draco, in the sumptuary laws of Roman emperors, most || - @f all in the system of Sparta, a state which “besides being censor, pedagogue, drill sergeant and housekeeper, was also universal land- lord.’ § Modern political theory has individual liberty for its keystone. | It holds there are rights which the State does not create, but only secures. It assumes that the State exists for the sake of the indi- \ vidual, where the ancient world assumed that the individual existed | f0F the sake of the State.. Modern governments serve society, where | ahcient governments ruled it—or rather tried to rule it, for Augustus Pa could forbid Roman matrons to wear gay apparel but could not get his own nieces to conform. The aim of modern policy, as Woodrow Wilson has said, is “to create, the best and fairest opportunities for the individual; and it has LET'S HAVE A WELSH RAREBIT 7 try did not stand by its President. And as a result our country was forced to pay a terrible price for its failure to place national welfare adove desire for wealth. The United States had waxed prosperous. ‘The nation had “taken on fi and hated the idea of returning to the lean, fierce years of warfare. To prevent such confilct ft endured bitter insults from England. Men were still ving who had fought at Bunker Hill and suffered at Valley Forge. But the newer generation seemed willing to endure almost anything | s0oner than to exchange a warm fireside for the rigor of camp life. England realized this. Her bullying tactic e redoabled. | __In 189 James Maliison, Jefferson's political disciple, became President. He was an excellent statesman, but lacked the genius of Washington or Jefferson, Moreover, the task before him was one that might have baffled a far greater ian"he Great Britain refused to make satisfactory redress for our in- juries, Her warships cruised off our ports, capturing our vessels and sending them to England as prizes, British emissaries in the West were stirring up the English newspapers abused and ridiculed the United One such paper said: he Yankees cannot be kicked into a war!” But England was mistaken. The long series of outrages broke down at last America’s love of peace and stirred into fresh flame the spirit of ‘7 And on June 17, 1812, we declared war on Great Britain. Our navy then consisted of c twelve large ships (with 300 guns in all) and a few gunboats. The British navy ree | had 90 warships and 144,000 men. The outlook for our country was olacie SHH SHKAAASABAAAAIAAA AA AAABAAAAA AM | —— jome other, time I will quote you the sald the Pompton Professor to Mr, Jarr. “Coleridge was interrupted by | & bore and never got to finish this beau- | tiful figment of his imagination.” Mre, Professor Ponsonby: Pomfret burst into tears. “What haye I done?” she cried, “that | T should ve insulted in this manner. | discovered that the way to do this is by no means itself to undertake KY H . > the administration of the individual by old-time futile methods of Mr. Jjarr cores eavily QOe\ HLOPICS, ah ianship.” ‘The Goddess of Liberty carries a torch, not a broom: | Cc 3 Ak. aot my eet ben call ; ee hip.”. The G y togely not 8 epee asa Claret-Punch Builder ~~ Vaior Vindicateat sorts Malahat, eg wh Ok oo | stick. She is o radiant young woman, not a nagging old one. HE chip bed struck on {ceberg and seemed |™ un pot a conard, Really” Late , yO LS OEE AAALAAHAASAAASASSSASA DABS IAIBA BIBS |'T fn lgrae. danger ot woking The capa | Me abled ert tint the i « t ers to the in own an. is no hope rs i “Oh, Mra, Pomfret, it must be @/know.” Here the birdiike bride of the | guage, ‘Kubla’ Khan,’ was composed DY | stooo, the oficer to. weir ations, and bum | {0,00 {at lide blood irl wish the Live dreag, MAN’S INHUMANITY TO MAN. feo much pride to you to de (great man sighed. the poet Coleridge while under the influ- | made buried, troubled tip between toe brvigs | nei,tue'® 1 ihe corse, whetLer wi lkte tf F : the wite of & public character ‘The Professor seid nothing. Mr. Jere ence of & marootic, You know how !t/ Ror "Morton Hobbe-Mortor, a. Hritisn eres rape arena fi MERE is a paradox behind cruelty, and the excesses of Italians 1 suppose 90," replied eghve4 ba Hd petgates ue feta dae ger eared aia arias ates j AY ftir of two score medals inctuling the Wrong Conclusion. LA +n rinoli ; : A MB do wish Po! “No! p + ‘stately pleasure Seas . nat pare ne beer pres f in Tripoli and the excesses they fear in reprisal both 3 ‘Would be tu some other business where | sr. Timete lb ype 0 Fy “ponay, please Zone Throw VOUT aed ae ea ea tog a cba Min socal By ' leclare it. Men do the most atrocious deeds not when confi- eo many women wouldn't be asking for | the goods.” 0 fer back!" interrapted his wife, “it | Hobbs-Morton caught him by the aria apd witl usiy dirty. \ dent b ’ san afraid; and they are wost vindictive when they vac Weeka ch Bis Eas: Way, the pave Wey 8. 700 Procenoor.eptted Ot cues wens Fk Nd pacha g his ries RR ee i aie ssa Weer avpened to, solled copeitign if F ; ; y * almost bald, and when I get requests injat fessor gave her such & B me jeneiaia. cree Jer iat oer nts aud aeuy bio ut to ‘tw kikchem. te / what they call a religious motive. letters I cut up an old switch, And |lips. cn ike that he /@rank another glass of punch and con- | {mt ts there no bove,”” ‘ou incorrigible boy!" she exclaimed, as soon ‘ es . ne ele | ‘already this fall I have used up four! “I never tasted pun + tinued: ‘The captain was firt disgusted and then em- Jas she saw tho basin of water ia which he had Roth the religious motive and the motive of fear are on view; fore,” he said. “What have you 60! qertart, Alph,_ the secred river, ran amperated. 4 performed (the reuuired “ablvtions, "ow ithe in ‘Tripoli, The Italians aro afraid of the private vengeance of m — covyrstt, s01t,.by Wye Jarr told him, but omitted to men-| «and Tak cy tuniae pet wou nave | 05 haat *aud"ou sta the medal or moni go manage lo get your Laude 00 hostile: population, of the arduous toils and ugly chances of desert ad just finishea make tion the bottle of cough medicine, whIch ‘got them braced up too high,” continued | 42044" brave that, "and 30M, are more ats ignantly Answered Jimmy, weabed ay tune ©) campaign. ‘Therefore, they kill with a ferocious timidity. They are ms ane x t punch, when Prof. | thought when they got keepsake locka|he had added for good Inet petits. the human canary. coward then all the women al put toge fu that water, tou!""—Youth’s Companion, 4 ‘ * A ' AO ine caret eee of Pompton |f that color, The Professor's wite! ‘So it has everything in it but 1 The Professor took another glass of — 5 afraid, also, that a “holy war” may be proclaimed against them, and Ponsonby ig id was evidently aware of Mrs. Jarr’s|cotic?” said the Professor. punch and went on: 5 vy ‘ i “ etait i * i | " “And that reminds me you're not ‘ ! 4 The mercenary soldiers, the “free companies” of mediaeval Eu- | marked the Professor gentally, as ra | te cent. narcotic. he Ma Manion Fashi J 3 H - a ¢ iia up in the outside | 0 ‘8 \forty per " wearing suspenders at all; you've got on | d | rope, were godless rapscallions, yet the enpital charge Machiavelli hail: Maree at Be coi. WN a Pies a sray 1) _wepeaking of neraiie onninoes the |S belt! that's what's the matter,” his| ns I : : j any | jan: ' . fe 2 | brings against them is not of cruelty but of clemency: “They uso | ,,t apailered tb MeL Ore bid Oe ey halk 8" te. deagest. kind, "you |{maginative poem in the English lan- wife continued. 90 occurred to him night for um- every art to Jessen fatigue and danger to themselves, not killing im |the umbrella, It the fray but taking prisoners and liberating without ransom.” Gio! Lek auld Wy, # bee of the oth professonal soldier is never so cruel as the fanatic, for the latter | tenants saw it first; #0 he took the um- imse! 2 ve dn -marindtte: F brellt and put it in the bath tub. may assure’ himsclf that to save the soul it is permitted to Kill the | ""fyt yutn tub, by the way, 1s the most | body. Yeeful adjunct that housekeeping Anas I igi i | ration, vill handily hold the Fear and religions motive—in these cases indistinguishable—He |e eee eae the, bottled beer and ice to keep the bottled back of all those cruelties whic }look, after insulting me, he has ignored | h in primitive societies have stamped | beer cold. when a large and thirsty out variation, have compelled conformity, ha Bachelor Gi nekar’ party 18 at the fat, Beslaeh & QC ! € bag NG |me by siting down in that chair and | stereotyped custom. bath. tub makes a handy spare bed | } zrelem Rowlan ” jeoing fast asleap!” h don't lke Mrs, Jarr regarded her husband with « ‘ > vas extirpated in belie i e en a relative om you don’ | The man who did not conform was eatirpated in belief that his inno: et _ a lone | Gopytlabte 11h, by The Press Publishing Gor (The New York World), norrined took Age cetcegh i vation would bring supernatural vengeance on tribe as well as self. * “anyway, Mr. Jarr put Prof. Ponsonby ‘4 USHING into matrimony is like hitching your |yuncn?” ane cried, Ponfret’s wet umb tla in the family ay R “| h tut hile such thousbts crossed wagon to a star without putting your run- “Never mind that,” answered Mr. bath tub while such tho crossed HE apron that really covers the gown 1s al- ‘ ways needed by wom- en whose occupation means danger of soil, This one is sure to become a favorite, It can be made in sev. eral different ways so that it suits all tastes, It {8 cut in one with the sleeves, but with seams over the shoul dere so that it is easy to make and is shape- ly, It includes con- venient povkets, All durable, simple ma- : nines ning gear in order; it always leads to a |Jarr. terials that are used me his mind, nes ined the visitors in time emash-up. jand let us try to revive the Professor,” | Tor aprons of the etna to hear Mre. Jarr say - . “Gertrude, take and empty out tbat | re appropriate, but tters From the People | - aaa . [yunch oe te tre win ome nt b ‘ Oh, \Vhat's the Use? If Heaven is a place where there ts no marriage, it is just possible) PCat | ue ol bone with “ » What's se that Hades is a place where there is no divorce. | 1 of Pati | The apron can be B le Right. y dered they have to provide for old age, pat 2 The Angel of Patience. made with a front 01 EW World wher teacher is pensioned beside: ; waar at is out in MP eCIe TST ofise © pear la sentenced | obtaining long vacations on full poy f Somehow “temperament” always appears to go to a man's disposition Pp wine URE: Paid uae pleco oF in two loces te Ate imprisonment he only has to|would like to seo all classes bene tod and to a woman's hair. 7. Sree ome No power has The backs ari Pie J {Or give us back ov ct arate and there are shoulder and under- serve twenty years. B says that a! by the pass man who is sentenced to life imprison- equal work ie of the “equal pay for or ac ment has to serve the full term, or ais \mAtaie | Marriage would never be a failure if every woman, ke the family cat, And LT le iain al x arn aeame, until he is pardoned. CO | poner of The Bvening World would take her petting as a matter of course, never return it and never| A” ere. Found OF sauare Rock thy With a AEN : aS cis ‘ ms nmed wit! é Where con I find details, about the Mary islibh. inkarmas tha account Biven o¢ - \There's rest in his still coun: The high’ neck in an: Sa etsomaeat: naval powere of the world his accident written by A. U. Lees When a high brow falls in love with a butterfty, who doesn't know @| He mocks no grief with idle ished with @ collar, |Nor wounds with words the mour: : ‘ ‘ For the ai é bi, (EAC ROS Bare with him that. son | nterogiyphic from a hatpin, it is not necessarily a case of mismating, but! ear; aise willbe een ‘ ¢ Yonkers, + | thing si vl done te we further merely Nature's little way of equalizing things. | But ills and woos he may not cure | + ye of material | go te waitor of The rening World: VM hia ooh alates rina | He kindly treins us to endure, inches wide, % yard 27 for trimming. Pattern No. Tie is cut in three sizes, small 34 or 36, me: dium 38 or 40, ‘large 42 or 44 inch bust measure, Feference to the Equal Pay bill for! ojaey with many simi cases: which teachers, how about the other women’) jaye vocurved during the past year, 'Th- women teachers comprise but a Many people have suffered some dis Mon of feminine working ers or oll in having not only thetr ry ous other parts of the! where the bili will benc”' any but teach- ore. anxious to wid the public in every way, mple.'T would suggest that small safety ruo- While they may not all have the chility| ber bulls be attached tu the protruding teachers the p:inciple re-lends of hatpins. I hope that this may pame. And how many re-| further rouse the pe interest tn the . a | ease of this poor sufferer who so mirac. ey for equ” work?” Ii viously escaped total biindnesg in the right eye, and I trust tha sate Ne Hes @ teacher! which 1 ' Don't conciude that a woman is angry merely because she bites her lips; \ it may be only a way of showing the dimple in her cheek, Ange! of Patlence! sent to calm |Our feverish brows with cooling balm; To lay the f ome of bepe and fear 7 ere » be 7 ii 0 7 And reconcile life's smi and tear; The difference between a philosopher and a cynic is that the former| AP’ irony of woundes pride to stil declares that the happiest day of life is the day before the wedding, while| And make our own our Father's will! the latter avers that it ts the day after the divorce. '@ WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BURE Donald Building, Greeley Square, corner Sixth avenue: and Thirty-second sireet, New York, or send by matl to MAY, MANTON PATTERN CO., at the above address. Send ten cents tn: coin or stamps for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT~—Write your address piainly and always apeaity aise wanted. Add two cents for letter postage if in @ hurry. | thou who mourned on thy way, FI With longings for the close of day— fomen will be voting before, A bachelor is perfectly safe as long as his interest in the yame ts|He im lonminge fe ine oe { deeper than his interest in the girl. And gently whi Bear mn, _— up, bear ‘The dear Lord ordereth all things wi)!" 4 c0ng im the heart te worth two en the progromme, po 2 ain ab: He—That doesn’t bether m they den't vote AT the next