The evening world. Newspaper, January 5, 1912, Page 18

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aot e Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, January $8, 1912 ori ne "oie The Story Can You Beat It? 3% (-etc.-) ¥% By Maurice Ketten ae id i ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. ‘ (Peblined Dally Except day by the Preas Publishing Company, Nos, 63 to tI Pe ; 3 Pari? a, New Yorn "6 NEY | ( Of O ur oO u n : RALPH PULITZER, President, 68 Park Row | — C ANG’ 4G rer, 63 Par Low, pene JORMPH PULITZEN: Jr, Secretary, 68 Park Row, wi Pntered at the Poat-OMca at New York ax Grcond-Cinrs Matter, ption tee to The Hveninggror England and the Continent and World for the United States All Countries in the International end Caneda. Portal Union, e Year. + 63.60] One Yoar.. 99:76 301 One Month... 85 WWOLUME EBisvcccssscccosscccssccvecsvcvevcess NO, 18,000 f Covonec) WS See By Albert Payson Terhune THave To VIHILE HE SLEPT 1019, by The Prase Puttishing Co (The New York World). uae : No. 40.—Grant Takes Command. 2 \ 6 PROPOSE to fight it out on thie line ff it takes all summer! ‘Thus wrote the silent, shabby, cigar-smoking little man into whose hands Lincoln had just placed the fate of our coun- try. The “Iino” he referred to was the concentrating of all his strength against Richmond and ceaselessly hammering his way toward the Confederate capital. There was no longer a question of weary waiting and official delays. Grant wont straight and unhesitatingly at the object of his attack. Whenever his advance halted it was merely for the purpose ot clearing away the foes that blocked his path. But even this task took not only “all summer,” but all the next winter as well. While more showy generals had been heralded as wonders—and had | failed, one after another, to take Richmond and end the civil war—Grant had quietly been crushing the Confederacy’s power in the Southwest. And at last he was called upon to take supreme command of all the Union armies. He slouched into Washington ear eee ee WOULD WE USE NEW MARKETS? H* this town a policy as to markets? Should it build more, | or dismantle those it has? If it is to accept the precedent of Indianapolis and Des Moines it will build more. The open markets recently created in these cities seem to have cut store prices on butter, eggs, fruits and vegetables from 40 to 60 per cent. ‘A score of German cities have joined the market movement. Ac- cording to Farmer Fullerton of Long Island, “crops big or a small affect not one whit the cost of the city dweller’s food, nor will fn 18M; conferred with Lincoln and the farm conditions change it until Eastern cities follow the very general! || COLONEL, 7 feed death dete dll des dealt adh th Soashe Hid ROTHEE bh example of those to the westward by establishing markets within easy | NN WE GOT Him ‘ Pyle a Washington In a reach of city dwellers and their grocers.” {TIS q | The Battle of » hero. phi piers Yet the trend here is the other way. ‘The back files of news-| | [SX Sve Wileerrges.” | F the Potomac, and { papers show repeated demands for razing the “unsightly, ramshacklo, outgrown markets.” Certainly the razing has gone on. Police Head- | quarters has supplanted the Cenire Market, Oatharine Market has ern Virginia. d-barrens known as "The Wil- tle was wa Grant was pre a The two armies met th a deso dern * There for nearly thr tract of sa » days a terrific i \\ | Ni face to face with a Confederate leader of {nfinitely greater prowess tl j y P SN the generals he had so easily outmanoeuvred and thrashed in the Southwest, become a pumping station. Clinton Market was converted into etor- NY Lee, too, found that Grant wus of far different calsbre from the carlier conf ; age ground for the Street Cleaning Department. Three years ago NY Manders of the Ariny of the Potomac. It was the struggle of two wondrous ; f S military geniuses, j the Dock Department established the largest ath dump in Brooklyn | S Whe eatile SE Whe Yi eeriteha: Weald 10 tenet) Joua Ot 1th en Both. SAae : in the Wallabout Market, to the latter's detriment. ‘Tompkins Mar- | N Lee then withdrew to Spotsylvania Court House. And there, a few days later, " t "1 he If N his army ‘3 were aga eath el next launched his | ket is to give place toa larger Cooper Union, The fate of the Fulton | S pe id GOON tae rid Aaasnew Inecthetinen : 7 4 , Wah th the Ateine ferry scems to anticipate the fate of the Multon Market. The Dock At every point Lee contested the road to Richmond vit's advance, BF putting to naught his cleverest moves. But Grant ke ng away, un- Department has plans for converting Washington Market into an | elevated freight railroad terminal and for moving back the great West Washington or Farmers’ Market. | Against this policy of acuttle are to be set the Bronx borough | demand for a centrally located market and the project well under way for a $3,000,000 market adjoining the Bush Terminal in | Brooklyn. | daunted, In the first six weeks of this c the North there were many criticisms. Grant was denounced a’ But he had fatth in his own plan. And Lincoln had faith in him, On toward Richmond he fought his way. In front of Petersburg he was forced to halt, for Ite had massed the Confederate forces there. The place ‘was just then the keystone of the whole Confederacy. Richmond was safe while Peters#ourg siiould remain uncaptured. ¢Grant could not carry the latter city by storm, #0, as in the case of Vicksvurg, he besieged tt. Lee tried to make Grant r. Oo men, In a “butcher.” se the Petersburg siege ; What docs the city intend to do, or dors it know? Perhaps the clue is found in Mayor Gavnor’s letter to a women's elub which | G wanted more markets. “1 thank you,” he wrot tion, but we have open markets now. The Washington. Ttut the raid achieved Mttle and it did not budge Grant from his position at Petersburg. To prevent further use of the Shenandoah as an Inviting Confederate roadway to the North, Grant sent Shert- an to lay the whole region desolate. And Sheridan carried out his ordera | completely that 1t was later said: “A crow cannot fly through the Shenandoah Valley now unless he carries his food with him." | The Confederacy was stil! gallantly seeking to hold its own. But its back was to the wall, Its final doom was at hand. It fs almost as casy to wage successful war without guns as without money. And the South had no money. | The mlockade had cut off tts export and tmport trade, Common articles of dress were as costly as Jewelry, Confederate currency was so worthless as to give rise to the quaint saying: “We carry our money to market in baskets and bring | } jhome our purchases dn our pockets.” Food for the army was scarce. Uniforms were faded or in rags. The Siege of Petersburg. 7} by raiding the Shenandoah V: threatening “for your sugges- hief trouble is that wom. | education on that head | Women will not go to the markets, and Do you not think som 1} would be well placed these are no longer easy of acecss. Population hae grouped itself beyond walking distance from them | If people are to have benefit of market economies, the markets | must be relocated. I Not if all but foreign-born women are a n then, would it be worth the city’s while? hamed to be seen carrying a market basket or even a dry gooda parcel, Not if the housewife does her marketing by telephone—a custom that enables the grocer to give her the poorest value at the highest price. Not if women here remain addicted to those labor saving but not money-saving in stitutions—the grocery around the corner, the delicatessen shop and | The Confederacy kept up a brave front. But {ts power had become a mere hollow shell, as a dramatic event was about to prove. the great American tin can, It takes time and shoe leather and ay a As to Clocks. fet, Seviog eltee tis peseiess ol maa's ches, disposition Eveee ea iate Gieaaaeid alledkarletsly iP coeenGld acc T Fables tot Ryetyday Polka” A OMSCy Baphie Irene Louk iF A a, rt ce ehat ia ata | ext day wren he ‘ae Bow Ae waited Ge pallent bencfit from a market. | Fables for Everyday Folks |=} a By Sophie Irene Loeb | W the old-time friend, | enjoy | { ; i | ' i $ } ‘Ses,"" replied ‘Mr, Cumzox; Well, alr," the daughter replied, “to ¢ | Oa eewereetheeeereeeeer ee reeee eee pe reereeerrnenieennAnInnARnnnMRARRARAnBh’ | abou! as elegant € clock ae money will bus,” | the i | el. her hasn't bad @ taste of the Le twkes to be to his aoe (> Ht." Mo elaiins the above does not Is a autcide @ coward?” A puts) cover ihe point tu question. What do following thesis, which he) your yeaders ay? cat “You were once content with @ much simpler : ——_—_——<4- Copsrighi, 1912, Uy The Press Publishing CO. Panukes Keeping tabs on tds own particu: |1# not muah attached to a man BE-| Not long after, he invited her to #0! evar | Well, ees ala the, eat reat aeal 00 Szew, ‘ The New York World), Tur and of troubles nobody asked any |FORE marriage, finds ehe {8 very much | out—Oh, no, not alone, no, not but with |" “Oi cour, Nobndy wante to masts more thin |. 10 two facda't. the heart to ent STRICTLY WOMAN’S BUSINESS. ‘i QUESTIONS attached to him AFTERWARD, But] his sister and him-—all, of course, ac- a dollar on « clock that wales him up and. tcls cate ines we hades eet. 40, oat The Grass Wife and the Bach= |"). on: avout everywhere in true [even & welcome cricket at the hearth: | cording to PROPRIETY (whatever that Pim when to got work. | Ant, tgs 0, wits Metropolitan Magazine. ; iy - , b m . w vit ” Se el F women’s leap-year proposal privileges you can say about what elor Husband. butterfly fashion, thinking he had ful-|stone may change into @ worm thst | t»)—and ahe began to look forward with | to eo to work he feels more friendly end Mberal, ae * John Godfrey Saxe said of women making wills: “Why| ZANE unon a tine there was a[Hled HIS PART tn the scheme when |turne—toward another, pleasure to his calls. | atemineye eae Why He Left. ‘ Bay ¥ wen 8 t ny aa Was a RACHEL he signed his name to the bills of the| It came about like this. The bachelor) Now, this 1s not an UNUSUAL table. | Saving It Smiae BURNHASE tn a recent address in should they make what all their lives the gentle dames have hi ex, of course he Household husband had a bachelor friend. One In fact it 2 an evoryday story. For | a ng OU natceneer M paler said of sertoacre: rs i M 1 | er : : e old Yankeo farmer lay on his deathbed. : o a had?” Women have always had and exercised the right to choose | & wife, Hut} But tho woman, having by ages of ren maine ne pea tan eee e Pe ee ie eet e| fe as 2 far guue that the doctor td | armor, roomate sions of the Now ng a5) ; ; . dent been made to wear that ittle 3 6 . | Lis @aughter that els could indulge him nee @oil, bu men would husbands, The rife of proposal (not “right,” but rite) still remains Eat am Mc) A SWUiAL. wit Gnilh onhean dene: resi Miners ‘One day, when the bachelor husband | jy anyising ie nist onave in the matter of foot, | oun, fn the Detar aha iy "4 | °. ‘or o - me Ww! chelor frie | to the of wan payoy if posible, as | ™ ¥ y ts, with the man, but like many other rites, it is a mere formality. Hi two go /together, [min hat she belonged to somebody, | ‘The friend admired the china, the all-| caine home with the bachelor friend to | to the end of making him aivy if Dosible a8) Trg ae cree a ene any: Py What ina baohe-|Willyenilly, and that as yet the decrees |ver, the new porch and—the wife. It) gine, and the conversation of this. Eto ict cadene teed or if there was any | iveman from Porter's Take Will you be my wife?" bears about the same relation to what the ahiabana$ the sexes forbace her doing the | Was pleasant, for he war TELLING her| ana the other thing went merrily 00 | yee Ty appetite faucied. \eoturte Me mous Ca ae te lov husband A i. Meee Ril Thaae thie na hin | ue epee ee 1 tine | 82781, 19 New Enaand or Canady, | woman has already said and done as the court attendant’s clamorous bachelor husband t# an the man for fear of everiast- | how much he liked all these thingy, ORG) between the two, it dawned on him| ig a Mg |) <''Ground too rocky for farming, eb!’ eaid the ‘ w ’ Sie yi A A i one who continues xshiment on this earth of oura-|he showed a eense of APPRECIATION | stowty but aurcly that he was left clear | ° ‘who heard the oid fellow | MTV tS" exit the farmer. ‘I'l us ‘Hear ye! Wear yet” Wears to the judge's weighty “The court will iia prenupith at: of « nature not inclined to| which was @ NEW kind of a show for! ore of it. r ‘ag tine fruit cake. mad! "5 Peg A EM) b i The | re ° r becomingty the rose- 1 to produce an attack of ecute indiges: that you'r eran be in order. . Pe Fey eyo itietos Beege: j oeres WN ie OA Ttew pithy thes Ds Alsplayed a little interest in things oie meneered for the diselald he called | Hon Ina voaden Indian, ‘The doctor lieand of ft | vith a ebotgin.' "Washington eiar, ant "Peat } Teap year advertises a woman's right, but 8 not create it. firesa grass wife, that seem trivial to man but mean! sire sre wondered at the eparkle In her : The choice of a mate has devolved upon her just as any other fune aa Thus a grass wife, even though she !afUOH to woma' eye and the pleasing SMILI #he gave f H at | lg \ y and rarely came to the ONTER man. | tion devolves upon the person best fitted to discharge it. Women ar pie i (ENF fiers Sanwa ae cpa Seremrneneennanen Now, to be brief, it NOT too late. i mach better qualified than men to pass upon such mattors, beeause | LOEB t AUSK of en nnn nnn Annan AAAAAAAAAAAAAARAPAAPARARE LS For the grass wife not so new - vy give ore eoand thoug) dd heeanse these are oe t R green but that she recognized the cartiy ern | they give the m more fime and thought and hocatise these aro women’s) a... 1. 1, aay, thar having venwured “Cheer U Cuthbert!” bound values around the plot in which ee freee Sate a { primary interest as they are not men’s, Women shape and settle and won, the game being over, he res 4 9 she wanted to grow. sAnd the Jove ie dloomere t, t ! most courtships for the same reason that politicians commonly pre- |!/Bed te fils FORMER haunts, Strang r . had been planted in wr bale ouah the most practice eae Hef 2 Pi ee , to aay, there aro nome ten who go on What's the Use of Being Blue ?} | one naa marriea wai ; the in practtcal tha: / vail over “reformers”—hecause their wits are better adapted to the |the theory that getting rried, like Th I at of L L not given much ATTENTION, wear, 1 { q 0 ti |fixhing, derives tte matixfuotion from the ot o. uck Left. Go that when the bachelor husband With ‘the ne \ 7 end cought and they are on the job all tho timo, jpibpting ae i ssrape is rer than the SS Loe eo 8 7 “ realized the posetbiittien 9 he ee | mens ot fo rtable j Le Neale 8 geek | POSSISSSION of the Mah, Cul. wife he became the primeval, man ard | as, bs ¥ | is so, not long after having made the ly Clarence L. en. ' N, And at the game tin f | . wanted HIS OWN. «| i A PERIL OF TRAVEL. cateh he desired, and believing in the He saw that she Waa @ Women as well : f : . (hat woman Wants hut Tittle Copyright, 1918, by ‘The Preae Putiishing Co, (The New York World), as a wife and caine to realize that two pathic BY NE of the perila of travel in this land is hotel f Ta Tol Woohe went HIS AWAY, the lae you're not a Master of your Mis-) ‘he Man who Merely “Fills the Bill] may play at the SAME game, He will-| mus ‘a vanen ey ; a TN wa nealing that abe got that MMe) DO caoa, you'll be thelr Martyr! never becomes a Head Mner! Ingly lost his interest tn his bachel arate, sleeves! that | lette is ill from ptomaine poisoning contracted on his fer marriage M4 i ae —_— direction: shoulder |f { ; Me hunted up his erstwhile friends eee rection. " houlder line, apeaking tour, Togo was laid up at Boston by acute rea: |to wh he had but ly at nis | Second Wind! Hard to Land without “Sand! MORAL: DISTANC sleeves making one ! Iwo in y Ne hav " ‘eat Hs andace iat oa A siaihe dinner, eee beats Recond Sight betta CHANTMBNT, BUT > fasnton *pfeatt oe tion. jo eminent travellers have just succumbed to this malady. Mein inated inte thelr eacred etre | at the @howdown!| ‘Mhore isn't muoh Motive Power in |ppie WOMAN. will be found Ree When Thurman was candidate for Vice-President he collapsed from | ck ' ‘ea {chee “Everything is For the Best Doc- pig algae oa EEG He uel f i . ; d ror M 14 | trine! ‘ if stomach ache while addressing a New York audience. When Adlai ,Now.,°\e" though the hue and or ps De Bawied mo The Real Reason | " = d a rea| e matc | t Stevenson was candidate for Vice-President he suffered here from whould wear @ wedding Out than Muttered | No Conquest is too Colossal for the sg re taken to a show, } ii j $ Y . | he was WELCOMED Outt Man who can be Chirky with a Cold tn ou h , ai the same misplaced hospitality. Speaker Husted of the New York aig train Mare ene tho Head! ind dou lnwwecn, the. be way AAS i Assombly was killed by Western convention fare. nator Lodge ‘everybody ts ax busy as a boy keting Fate im one of) | Var ‘ie ae m ripe for kleatne i was prostrated with etomach trouble in his fight for re-election, A No Cause for Alarm Lesa NAM LS pie But you merely stand and } ‘ ‘ ‘ 1 be ‘ . ha oop . t ~ Say you've had a pleasant even Federal judgo in the Carolina circuit travels with a tent rather than | by a Man who), Hind ; Ak: ; Sons anind belts mee 4 hae oe Spt eoanhy I shorten his life by Southern hotel cooking. ‘The essential greatness Kai wa t , Pie | Douvie-Dog-Dared! Come, be honest, was tt reall | fo ad mR ft ‘ . ; cae ao | as | phat for Kisses you don't care, | children at. ai} j oft ‘T'aft the Traveller is shown by his surviving all plots to destroy Ay, rine FINRA ie METS DRED i him with roast ‘possum, alligator tail and other American “delicacies.” Makers that we've Known cared a Rap, Mr, Man, but didn't dare? i itic enoug! 1 left over f whether the Sun was Shining or Not! | y¢ you're sitting in the parlor | \} | , Why not intermit our alsorption in politics long enough to learn ny tay ea | Where the lights are burning low, — | } how to cook? Napit 1 rape rae Just Getting Ry’ ta the Prelude to! and you're stire that no one's near you | ———--—<4- ~ eeiitg ha Amina ala Gidltee od-Bye Who would ever see or know, armhole } HE MORNING WORLD keeps on demanding that Theodore t ever I that Barty: | Knocks are a Drug on the Market, je, Iustead of placed 1 a aa aa peg ‘ & Madit am AL begins 10 [ONE Boosts aheays Stick among the |yory tondiy, very Armnly’ ii Roosevelt give Presic ent Vaft a square deal. Was it for i vr | Staple | Round the lovely |ady's watst, | “it t gotten that Mr, Roosevelt wrote the “square deal” 1@ter and The Rioht Kind of a New Leat is} rane e, be honest, was tt real | shape, smoothis a ; ity ect? the one that's Turned Over Noise ‘8 Y | pnat for hugsing you don’t care * e Walst dine ij is reputed an authority on the subject? dhe on urn r Nois Ai oF Orel on ald you want to hus hen eens f id 5 Ae tte : shasd nicl | Mr. Man, but didn't dare? | are joined te a duet as wel ) Sart the New [Come now, make no valn pretenses, Child's Cress With Bloomers—Pattern No, 7251, and closed at thy are na Whe i | Do not say to me you wouldn't ry 1 of six sears of dreas wil require 8°3 3 . © Dinished Demol- mot aay a isl o re Wire of n oT | Letters from the People Worh Wihhe sear fins ene sh a Samant inchs will 2 9unt Sts 1 me | Mays ov Ie Queer how we can Always) YO not say to te you Haver years of Am O14 Argument Nevived. — the fear to face Wie things one distiies | Grou Beat the Boss to it in Knowing when \qyae en only went to listen Wow Snr | To the MaAitor of The Krening Worl: most, Aman by every deliberate action PA ehE rn PTR TPT {7 : , at te t } has in view what Vera Tast Bat. | Weare Entitied to a “Raise! To the lady play or sir A and B argue en the following eud- | econ atreet, tof ten cents ta coin or the Game! ne now, ‘fess up and be honest, vom the truth don't try to swerve, New York stamps for ea IMPORTA Vatterme, 3elze wanied, Add two cents for ietier p . Every Time we Determine t@ Sav They can Corral vou, but they \tor @ Rainy Day, the Bun e so] You were cager to caress her, claims fully covers his contention that Who ts righ can't Keep you from Finding the Strong that it Looks like it Never 18 Bat you didn't have the nerve. @ qulcide is @ coward: “Cowardica ie HR, Carlton Hi, N. J. | have Hole in the Corral Fence! Going to Rain! —Dewoit Free Pree, | » and always speoity 0, but the lawyers and witnesses awe Mf in @ hurry,

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