The evening world. Newspaper, October 2, 1912, Page 20

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erage some nineteen aoa aS is F The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday. Octo 3 She CEE wrorid. !Political News 3 }0mtir! 84 By Maurice Ketten St) ‘ ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. tt t Bunday by tho Press Publiah| 2 Pudiiehea Dally Bxcep ipey, by tho Frvee genet ing Company, Nos, 68 to a PULITZER, President, #3 Part: Row. } soled HAE Fetcet TTT hoe i NOUORERS IW BILLS Bhi ill BY , TW cON. UNE Pe et Ag PEED | Ear] mw piso Tec tons SSS <5 QS <S QD ( , Copyright, 1012, by The Press Publlaking Ov, (Tbe 5 a4. > ae y Fai. MIGHTY prehistoric race of men ee ‘TS ALBANY : pe G oS A bullt huge olties, fortresses, temples an ME ADO0 TUNNEL LD iS - " Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second< lass Matter, F ubvecription tes 4 ‘he Evening; For Englani and the Continent and \ HWorld for the United States All Countries in the International =| q ané Canada Postal U: ' nien. $8.50] One Year. .80| One Month. (ot EOE Cd Rodeo nh TESTES By VOLUME 88.....cccsccssecsaceescdscececeseceeNO, 18,668 Be. PICKING “THE FINEST.” a ad you ever been arrested? If you had do you think you aqueducts in & region to the north of Mexico. We know nothing of this race—whence it came, whither it vanished. But ruins remain which not only sharpen the mys tery, but lend color to the old legends that this lost race was enormously rich and highly civ- {lized. It disappeared—a thousand years ago, or perhaps ten thousand—and the land {t had oo- cupled was for centuries a lonely desert and | wilderness infested only by Indians, wild beasts and serpents. i Then, in 1539, a party of Spaniards from Mexico explored it. Ancient | traditions that it was an Eldorado containing seven huge treasure cities, urged them on. They found no treasure—nothing but desolation ai: P warlike savages. So they returned, disheartened, to Mexico. Next year a | second expedition, under Coronado, explored !t and made one or two mill- tary settlements there. The place became known as “Arizona,” which some authorities translate as “arid belt.” The town of Tucson Was founded there in 1560. A village named Tubac also of sprang up. Here missions were estab! ml. And for more th Uttle towns—or mission posts—were the only perm: settlements in ail There reemed litle tempt colonists, and there was ferocious ant merctiess Indians in ali Arner! = eR eres could forget it?” The Bureau of Municipal Research hes started a post 4 card publicity campaign to show the people how patrolmen are ap- 2 pointed to the Police Department in this city. Thousands of post cards are being sent out bearing the above questions and many more suggested by the recent testimony of the President of the Municipal Civil Service Commission before the Curran Aldermanic Police In- ; vostigation Committee. 7 The milk of the cocoanut is a brief passage taken verbatim from the records of the Civil Service Commission describing the re-examin-. ation of would-be policemen accused of having made false statements. Thus President Creelman to a candidate charged with perjury: @. We eek if you have deen arrested, and you have to swear to the enewer, and you swear no, when you had been AiUiTieitT Lists ZT Centurl oyer uve A lund, torturing and massacring ul nds on. Of hd poplong ere tags settee use aaNet & be badge | Arizona's 72,332,00 acres only 5,000.00) were capable of belaz cultivated. There you think 6 men ligent enoug! Moeman dees not hnow what @ question Uke thet meane? 4. I know it q wes not my fould of the time. I did mot think that wae the Were Vast deserts, there was almost no rain. Fierce beasts and ercer redskiaé | scourged the entire tract. The science of irrigation, that has since made large blossom Uke the rose, wes unknown. ‘There were no | getting at the wonderful wealth of gold, silver, copper and pre | Mith which the district was so bountifully mupplied. And Arizona remained | practically @ desert waste. It was nominally a part of Mexico, Hut Mexico | did nothing to develop it. After the Mexicun war all of Artzona north of the < jto the United States, and joter, by the Gadsden Purchave, the revt of the future State was acqu When the “gold fever” of 189 sent people rushing | witdly westward to nia some tired emigrants halted in Arizona and, on the Gila River's banks, started a stock ralsing industry. They were the first permanent American settiers. And soon they made thelr Prosgence felt. They fought back the Apaches, and set to work colonizing their | wild home, In 1 Arizona wag made a separate territory. Up to that the it had been regarded as part of Now Mexico The Battle for By 1870 there were 9,603 Inhabitants in the rd i territory (far less than at present in the city of Mon | Statehood, clair, New Jersey), In 190 the populetion ,iad swell to 96,354, It was anything but a peaceful place. There were Indian wars, troubles with countless “bad men* and outlaws, and boundary difficulties with every adjoining State and ter: But little by litte out of chaos grew up a strong, | healthy commonweal: @. Why G14 you make this folee stotement? § 4. Thet is the only reason I can give. That te GR, Beoretery instructed to retain some on the # Mes (1) Now, demands the Municipal Research Buresa, “if you said you hed forgotten that you hed ever been arrested, would you expect people to believe you? If you were capable of forgetting it would you consider yourself qualified to be a policeman? Would you make i @ good policeman if you could misunderstand the questions: ‘Were 4 you ever arrested? ‘Were you ever convicted ?” Pertinent queries. The average citisen in answering them will speedily make up his mind on three points: (1) Having been arrested may be no insuperable bar to becom- ing a good policeman. But the man who deliberately lies about 1t under oath and then repeatedly shuffles and evades the question after- River was ceded WORSE TH FLY. Pal Per TatcinG Ike DIX our OF APPENDIX In 1891 Arizona demanded admittance to the Union as a State. The request 4 ward is not fit to be a public servant of any ort. {was denied. For twenty ye he struggle for Statehood continued, the Ati- : (2) The Municipal Civil Service Commission appears to regard | pscgHt Apuabte’ andl GUUikien: “AL lake, durtag lis) abt Year) tts" 1SP RETR a taking the testimony of challenged police candidates as a mere steno- nission was given, and Arizona victoriously took her place as @ State, na xtaphic formality never to be allowed to interfere with the passing if of such candidates as have already been 0. K.’d by “the right é an persons.” (3) With such an amazing recruiting system it is a marvel that the New York police fore is anything better than a band of political imble Wit. PEE Piao py ereghaaply Ny janizaries. The tat oralled, ‘IT am only coms,’ rejoined : -+- | at 1 am pot letting you '—Lanpin+ 4 } ie i rt \‘“ t worries Sim," eald the Te Ye OLD-FOGY-ISMS IN US ALL. AALAEHAIBALILIAAAAAAABABAAASA AS SAS | reviled tue miner, “it ts the beat} A Tragic Recitation. ; . . | ‘ Feat ae Joa MS: | THY any a otale Prone | oudoa Spe or, N OPERA entirely in Esperanto was sung in Odessa recently i ly ies to olay 4 Mite Joke on ber pate on the occasion of the eighth annual congress of Esperantists. The performance was turned into an ovation for Dr. Zamen- Bi hof, the inventor of the universal tongue. ; The event seems to have been, indeed, purely a demonstration of enthusiasts and rather pointedly calls attention to how little one has heard recently of Esperanto or Esperantists in this part of the srorid. Few people have ever believed that a scheme to teach the nations a common speech cah make much headway. Sensible and serviceable as such an invention looke, it is up against one of the to London recently and ted en porn 4 je. wide Englishman was weeping co au teem mowed," vemarked a French at hie illhyg Mr. Jarr Finds Out a Most hig ak a Amazing Feminine Secret! iro en ts ese te HALAL GAALSALLASLASISALLLSAAAABAABM IT ‘ the suminer and | smpany, | | “What is it you want me to get for! ain, hook up her own dress?” | you?" asked Mr, Jarr, the paychology of | mai Jarr, sisterly dislike being too great for hii. | * said Mrs. Jarr, “Did you ever! “f said diatinotly butter, hairpins. |e vio Po dal -< SEES “I'L hook tt now, volunteered Mr.| see an oid maid who couldn't do tt?) “And taleum powder,” interrupted! Tarr. “Ud rather get It over with.” The faculty of veing able to hook one's | Mr, Jarr. | ogc Neit 1 Rad Capacious Commandments. “Didn't I tell you I've got to go in|own dress in the back makes a woman} “No, not taloum powder!” mimicked | (myst a omty fais tte tank Gar ties un ie | gg A. LITTER and hook Viola Cackelberry's?’ re-|independent. She loses tho clinging | Mrs, Jarr. Sete ruth's Com, * impressive abe i! 1 campot une ud Frene, but I cam understand the tragedy er utterances,” “In that case, ols, Jarr, “and uw five-cent Pack bess of hairplog and some Fairybloom face powder-and hurry back to hook up my dvens!" sald the Pre ¢ Interested in knowing that sl my | multiplication ta) RL at cur moming service telephoned er, Ja . ‘ .. eRe turned Mra, Jarr. feminine helplessness that is #0 ef-| And she went minutely into the name errant the communcisonts weve eine. te Wines "Me + ., o vere being read, Wh last and toughest human instincts of conservatism and insularity. “Let her elster do it," suggested Mr. | fective with the men, Poor Irene!’ of the brand she wished, a description A Young Chesterfield. tortor read! ‘On thane’ two someenderen nae As nations rob against nother in modern life, laws, customs, ideas Jarr, “Well, if fate ordains it, whY) of the box it came In and the one drug) an i, oo rare an occurrence to meet a young| M,,0% te law and the prophets.” the litite SEED Be Hons TOD Ageinst one Enother aes hich 1 | “Don't you know they aren't speak-| shouldn't she be peaianedt What Seve store in the neighborhood at which it| 4] “Chstertiell,” say a New Yorker, “that 4 change far more easily than the languages in w! they are im=| ooyyn ryptisning Co | !N? In fact, T have to keep them apart/sie want to pick on her sister for? | could be purchased. I wish to go on record q tied x tthe New feet Wort) ‘to prevent them flying at each other and| Her sister cannot help it if she must ind don't get any other kind under| tet, c ‘ . ; : i ae , {seratching!* marry to have her dress hooked In th) any circumstances," continued Mrs. Jarr. | could imagine. - : Language is in fact still a kind of national pedigree and birth-|¢¢ QvHAI 1 hook up arr ares | “Who'll hook up the oldest girl's | back, and so retains a sri Bedi 8 “E heard those Cackelberry girls say! “As 1 was taking iar ware from the howe [ihiuk of all of them wi ; " ‘ . re askod Mr, Jarr, as Mra. yt on M ness that !s sure to bring a man to Hi8! ine. couldn't bear‘ hs | bol ad, who wes playing in the ball with | pup 1 fancy there must 1 me right of which every man is secretly proud. - Either we deliberately S Nites tocar thin Grin ci Ooee, eee eee tay wealtas bear Dairveiewe, | Sher bk ‘i Ee » ve sol knees to say, ‘Let me hook up your | make the effort to acquire another man’s language—thereby paying |!er second best gown with only th jong she can hook up her own dress. |dress for life, my helpless sweet ones” | ‘i : ssi h ebe could reach 31) lsh. That's} “What nonsense you talk!" snapped him the compliment of recognizing that he has a respectable one of |repk®, connected that ehe oh Se Sooner Le aid daclolntalana | : behind her own back. a sure sign sh going to be an vl Mrs, Jarr, “If there was ever a born his own—or woe stick to the attitude of the Britisher who refused é9, but walt @ minute!” replied Mrs.| maid. And if there 8 one thing that! torment it le that youngest Cackelberry ebzolutely to learn French because it wowld only encourage the French “I'm going in to hook up Viol®! drives an elder alster mad it ts to realize | girl. And how she hates her sister! I people to go on speaking it. In any case few of us take to the notion jever there such a rush, with Jack Stl-| pefor: mers, rose jiitely ant ovened cw door for een only used ‘Dream-of-Falr-Women.’ So me commanimentat™ pe Rag gn “ I'm golng to get some powder I can) “—~+~:—————~ = ne keep. Those girls have used my pow- der, my hair pins~and they go into my Ppureau and take my silk stockings. [Goodness knows, I wish Jack Silver would marry one of them right off and that the other one would go home." dress, Oh, dear! Was: that the younger sister will be married jnever saw #0 much animosity between @ wilt!" two young girls since I Jast saw other “ALD materiale combined with M ad Gertrude} «Ty aure sign of permanent single. | sisters together.” Ch’ * ised M: aaa ) < ia Ing an ‘ Shuck ‘em out!’ advised Mr. Jarr. | plain make som i of a brand new, ready made, portable, pocket speech despite ite ob- | can't have her| — ae j"What have you to do with thelr land- Of the prettieat drenaee vious and undisputed convenience. [eventos off that she’ enamine, avery ing an ellgible party, If they are two of the sea. This one 7 nl oh "m afraid to lenite i hu, Hever make ¥ excoile 5 r We need a few of these bedrock conservatisms. They protect | tne im the Kitchen an ie | aptierat, selfish snips, never mak-| 18 excoilent for small |go near her! And jovk at this house!) us from many a well meant scheme to simplify life by replacing famil- | Just LOoK at 1!" H iar habit d fools with new and south t that onl “What do you care for Jack Silver, if iar habits and symbols with new and uncouth apparatus that only com-|yy4 good enough for met” asked Mr. plicates it the more, Even the allurements of simplified spelling have | Jarr. ever quite wor over, The test Progressive V-wise Provi-| 2! Jarr only gave him a scornful | never quite won us over, fe greate Togressive an all-wise Prov'=| cignce in reply. Didn't Mr. Jae know | dence has ever seen fit to bestow upon us has never been able to|that places only look “neat as a pin [ing jhan tance t Wore. and young sits The “skirt “wives” tue 1c eifect yet the two are stitched tus so chat there ia vuly the weght of one kit The “blouse fulshed with one-ple siewves in the “{ style but they are iaid heir own beds, never giving you a} hankrupting us with long-dis- ephone calla?” | “Ie that any reason I should be un- worthy enough not to give them some assistance In getting settled In life?’ replied Mra. Jare. ‘Don't stand gab- bing there, but run out and get the , Pi he ja Uittle tucks at the i febat at when ynma men are around? things!" nner arms chat are both persuade us to go back o} » district sc! A , ‘ ! , to go back on the district school Whon thore uninarried men marry the Mr, Jarr 4id as he was bidden, Hel Rioty ene comorten| cmieatheeniacniichs teeieagnainnch |Places they frequent will only be set also went out again to get violet ex- terials that make a good 1 neatly again a# a man trap for other ahd Geld Apomslan, 404 Leah tol effect could be u » 1 " en nei ce ri 1 -, this way. Wool with READ and butter ten conis exira henceforth at the hotel de {mnmarriod mene ner of both Mise Cackel: | ? haa | ‘i or ner would be p; ; A J : | verrys, he had previously taken or plain silk co: luxe! Well, why not¥ If you want proof that New York hotel | _ tie eat it 49 Tony, the bootblack, to have the | nla aed fare is the best in the world, according to one of the biggest hotel- heels straightened, | rd couid Pie be used throughout tunic portion ts made in three pieces and t lower portion in. tw: but the front portion extended to form ti panel, The blouse ig mM glad there's Jack Silver at | sald Mr, Jarre, “I just beat him in, T'H be glad to see him." “YOU see him?" cried Mrs. Jar out and give the girls a chance!” E seepers, look at ihe prices New Yorkers gladly pay for the food, Ry the same token, to make | better, what more simple than to lengthen the bill? Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (Phe New York Wo r a strong woman-hater that has no turning, Now that men are becoming so frank and truthful in expressing their 7 simple shel oS soe ah opinions of women, some of us just yearn for the good old-fashioned liars, —_—_————— lepped ont efnet aA who used to tell such sweet, comforting fairy tales about ourselves. The Eternal. and the clos ng ls i “9 R. M’NICHOL is as sure as ever that Sodom was no worse T's the Eternal when the shad: | the, front. Thee nl dt than New York at this moment. It’ a safe bet. Sodom! From the charming way in which Pierre Loti manages to say Q tot | eae ier ee Big lone sleeve are ew = isn’t saying anything. ' of things that sound fascinating, but don't mcan anything, he ouaht to’, A soph eo | fomine, bul erally bes a i make an ideal “Lover's Guide, on ‘God, the unchanging, pitles like a father, | wtituted sand ene, a soenereneen nap hanes BEES Trust on, and watt, the daystar yet trimmed with cuits rT ; are 401 NE HUNDRED and thirty-two years ago to-day John Andre, | The civitized man is distinguished from Wa earned ones by hig) ‘gleam, | i major in the British Army, seized und convicted as a spy by manners; but the distinction is never conspicuous before a Trust the Pternal, for th® clouds that me aie wi corte’ ar \is ewn frank confession, agent and go-between of Arnold’s treachery, When a girt declares that she expects to marry both a lover and a| No more can move the mountains from Pee aS: = 4 hy rs was hanged by the American forces on the west bank of the Hudson provider, she is simply contemplating bigamy. If she 48 looking for Gay tree meee a oe tat can yorda Wt inohen' wide, a in the twenty-ninth year of his life. man who will pay her bills, and pay her compliments at the same time,| banish dina, as strayed 154 ie she ought to know that “There ain't no sech animal.” Light from Hils Throne or loving from onthe “nralett of ite iT Materta), : 7 ee fase | Pattern No. 7601—Semi-Princesse Dress In Tunlo Fattera Ne, reot CRISIS in the Balkans! ‘Chia time, of course, the real wolf! Marriage beging to be a reat eucceas when a husband and wife get Trust the Fternal, oh, repent in meck-| Effect for Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18 Years, {% Sit site for mina _—_ ot | over “loving” cack other sufficiently to begin to like each other a little, ness | years, aad } Of that heart's pride which frowns and a Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHI: “ vill not ylel low BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 Wem Thirty-secon: q Rie fun esa’ Dig Bile own orders wane’ i eae i oe Sate Halj the modern man's tife & spent tn devising ways to eave time,lanen to thy child heart mall come $ te Seite Gimbel Bros.), corner Mixth avenue and Tniripeccns (on. 8 ORE your wile waned 50 90 te ther half in trying to find ways to kill it, - strength in weakn New York, or sent oy mall on receipt ef a oy and the other half in trying vi . Obtain ‘ " on pt ef ten cents . | Asante. City, Mow did you finally pobre And thine immortal life shall be stamps for each zattern ordered, = cn a ‘ veness, | i aes revealed, Teese IMPORTANT-—Write your address ona H Pray see of July without {ts oppresstvencss, | "Soh, we compromised—by going! Love smiles on some women, He can't help it, when he secs WAOt! _Tittarn' p, aoxensie in Toledo [Petters {use wanted Aue ewe canto fer peinty and stware epectty D er without its nlerclis cold,” ‘te Atisntic City” they are forced to take, in the way of husbands, Blade ' " oy ey Pd “-

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