The evening world. Newspaper, October 9, 1912, Page 22

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Che SEE aatorld. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Except Sunday by the Presa Publ! Company, Nos, 63 to PeMished Dally Except Sunday by the | oe Fydiioning pa RALPH PULITCER, President, J. ANGUS SHAW, Treagur JOMANU PULITZER,’ Ji ——_—. 3 the Post: oT ‘World for the United States and Canada, Perk Row. York an Second-iass Matter, ‘or England and the Contivent and All Countries in the International Postal Union. + $0.75 » 85 -Office at New he Pvening) Fi "... NO, 18,675 | NO NONSENSE. EARS that the Becker trial might prove another sorry spectacle | F of endless bickering and delay of the sort New York has! learned to expect in its big criminal cases ure already half- dispelled by the resolute, reassuring attitude of Justice Goff. In the first hour of the proceedings the Justice contrived to show counsel that no nonsense would be tolerated, and in the early stages | of the usual interminable process of picking jurors, to which the | prisoner's lawyers had airily allotted a couple of weeks, the Judge | announced crisply: “This thing has got to stup. Recently the method | employed in the selection of juries has become almost a public scan- del. I shall not permit it in this case. I inform you now that if tho box is not filled by 5 o’clock to-morrow afternoon I shall sit every night. 1 shall not countenance unnecessary delay.” Result: Tho choosing of Becker jurymen has proceeded on wheels. | Justice Goff’s words have a ring of special significance and wel- | come for a public that has not forgotten the incredible drags and detours of the Molyneux and Thaw trials. Everybody realizes that The Evening Why No WH’ rele ie OR SHIVERING: ALN Ne i + LINE FoR | OPENING of >| _ FONG (The New York ‘ WHY NoT SLEEPIN LOANED BY ScRAPPY | | tigat 3% By Maurice Ketten nit WHY NOT 4FTER AN STO So STATIS V.—COLORADO. aL BERLYSop HUNE. Motto; ‘Without God Nothing.’ The Press Publivhing The New York Works py OU will search long through the United States maps before vou find “Jeffer son Territory Yet it once existeds . Mand, but for a change, there would tov day would be a State in the Union bearing the name of the “Declar: ‘e author. In 1857 Colorado was @ waste land, branded vy Uncle Sam's experte as “uninhabited and uncultivatablea” and containing the merest seattered handful of pioneers. Four years later it was a thriving, rich territory, with a dosem fast-growing cities and a population of more than 35,000. And the key thag had opened the long-closed doors to immigration the same that bed opened those of California~-the Key of Gold More distant and less rich tracts of ground head jong since become settled and prosperous. But up to 1858 Colorado was left deserted. All tte Browth hi ome during the past fifty-four years, It takes its name froga the Colorado River (in Spanish “Red Colored"), Prehistoric people who were cultured and civilized once lived there, as the ruins show. But they had tong passed away before the oarllest Sponiards ome tered Colorado, The French passed it, by, and even the Spaniards Kft it practically unexplored until 1773, when Francisco We calanto led an expedition there, But the explorers went away without troubling to make permanent settlements. Part of Colorado came to us with the Louisiana Purchase of 180%, and Mextco ceded the rest efter the Mexican: war. Our Government sent sections of the “purchase.” Copyelaut Wealth That Lay Unclaimed. ut Tient, Zebulon M. Pike in 186 to make a map of He reached the Rio Grande, and during his Journey discovered a wondrouy mountain peak more tha aS NOTICE: Look caretutly at all the $10,000 diie you find in your change for a day or two. Somebody has droppéd nineiwen | *% ‘an somewhere on the Havana turnpike. ——_———+ —— -—____ OUR GREAT JOHN L. OHN L. SULLIVAN, farmer, exhibitor of prize pumpkins at J the county fair! From Boston comes the news that the forner champion is becoming more than ever the sturdy, enthuaiastic | tiller of the soil, the pride and envy of his rustic neighbora. “I am back to mother earth for keeps,” declares the famous swaggerer and all-night roisterer of other days. “No more Bohemian life with its bright lights! You can bet your last dollar on that.” We begin to be sure that John L. is a great man—as well as the most popular man of his day. Along with the big heart and the big hand and the big ways that made him an idol and took him through the “bright lights” and the riotous places, the “big fellow’ must have always had at bettom a shrewd, wholesome sense of tho sound values of life. A lesser man would have burnt up evon the force and fortune of a John L, Sullivan to the last gray ash. With, all his weaknesses the only John has somehow won through to a fine, | mellow autumn of rest on the bosom of “mothor earth.” The best of it is he ie proud of it The country is proud of him. ee VEGETABLES raised ty clectrichty dre promised by one o (He experimenters in she Bureau of Plant Industry as a means SE PeeTe OF... ree theantoneent ‘behne may. yet are reer er GETTING INTO ITS STRIDE. HIS is @ proud week fer New York. Rarely has the town I epened 0 “season” more briskly and auspiciously. October hes been showing eamples of the old invincible brand of fall weather, The World's Championship series of baseball games has the river alongside will lie, before the week is over, one hundred and twenty-three of our finest war craft with opportunity for everybody Dlast, and new plays end tuneful trifles are added almost daily. The first glimpse of programmes for the musical season indicates a daz- sling prespect ef concerts and opera. Politics, State and National, adout them, But politice or no politics, this city ts doing very little worrying Just now. Businces ie good. Tho sest for relaxation and amusement is correspondingly keen, The next three months constitute the time of year above all others when the blood flows fastest through our point to a record season of prosperity and cheer, —_—_ th TRAILING trains tktng trusty Taft truth-tellers to tackle ticklish theories try Theodore terribly, —_— eee Letters from the Peop'e Smoking on “1 PI walk in the Carl Schurs Pa To the Editor af The Kreniag Wor! asthe Kast Mver Park, for path ha Most of the “L” platforms are é Ne. This walk his bean used evenings oy Ue children of the neighborhood as @ @ort of wkating rink until a few days “#9, when We were tumed away. WI e right person kindly do us, the boys nd girls of Yorkviie, a good turn and crowded during rush hours, and when men light cigers, cigarettes and piper they endanger the clothing of others, to eay nothing of ig the nestrile of Ron-users with smoke, In this matter, ‘ as in the matter of putting fest upon PYMit ue to skate on the aforesaid rs meats, &c., offenders would he walk again? WAL, regard for the rguts of others, Soya’ end Girl’ Skating Club of America, Government Landa. ‘To the Faltor of The Evening World: One of your correspondents recently asked (or Information in regard to Gove If “George E." ix such a weakling that he con not keep his patience for a few minuter while walting for a tra and this is his own brought ws thousands ef visitors and is, in fact, « national event. In| to go aboard and admire them. Forty theatres are already in full | ate already tuning up te concert pitch for all who want to get excited | metropolitan veins. This week starts the ball rolling. All signs | Pu 00, 8 Mr, Jerr and Mr. Jack Silver A came down the staire from the Jarr apartments to sco Mra, Clara Mudridge-Smith into her motor car, they observed many of the leading citizens of the neighborhood going into Gus's, in fact there was quite a procession of them, Of itself, this sight had no aspect of novelty except for the strange circum- stance that the said leading citisens— and others—of the neighborhood, were fn such haste to get into the popular cafe on the corner that some of them were actually running. ‘This wasn't the usual way that Gus's patrons from the vicinity usually entered his retail liquor establishment. ‘Their usual method was to stroll oare- Jeasly past, as though taking the air for thelr health, and then, after a glance from the tail of their eyes, Presto! they had made @ Quick sidestep an¢ were eafe within, Another popular method of getting into affected by the leading clilzens of the neighborhood, was to Walk briskly by, a though on urgent business far Trial Marriage. | | AWAKE turn the corner without giving & at the local landmarks and then to the family entrance. to pop Mr. Jarr kept his glance down the A.reet, wondering why the citadel of Gus was being rushed in this most flagrantly open manner. It made Mr. Jarr so ner- vous from curtosity that he had no eyes or eare for the graceful way Mrs. Mud- ridge-Smith got into her automobile, the playful animosity with which chided Mr, Jack Silver. "You've been a dreadful boy,” said Mra, Mudridge-Smith to the sullen Mr. Silver, woll And she bit her lips even as s! ‘and, just for that, I am not 10 motor you down to your club!”” smiled, |closed the fact that the centre of at- 55, [S>-C6> let WOT TT Oe ee a i ee <Bx<8. A . * . | fourtee wu the Becker case is bound to command wide, even international, atten- ALLNIGHT WA (tT? MORNING BATH + | ‘Tite peak was named in his honor. liberals etc Nie tion. Peculiar responsibility rests upon State and city to make it a} re Sa == SS = iF Abate ag tte ae Oar same Lage bec ; i bf many @ gold é = i . minter, nd“ e's Peak or bust!" ‘ew Int hoge an chalet o fat model of clean-cut justice and despatch. Delay and bandying of tech- “|, WHY \l | (Often tt was a case of “bust” "As in the famous instance wf the wrecked mle nicalities in such a case inevitably lead to suspicion on the part of the | NoT | (great oe ae bore that slogan and which broke down and was left to fees A | decay on the plains.) public that justice is being somehow defeated, and that all our boasted | A ' | Stephen Long made another Governinent trip in 181%, discovering the pealt and supposedly incorruptible courts of law are not so surely protectors | yy, 3 that bears his name, and reporting to the authorities that the region was hope- been led to believe. | 3 Yy Y, Weo |} 2 | for John C. Fremont, “the Pathfinder,” to traverse Colorado in 18@ and in 1944 To such s suspicion the Becker case should not be allowed to add | iY 4\ b) lagi 7 cee ene oT ee eoneee Coens vice) irae Eee a featherweight. On the contrary, may the swift conduct and prompt | é yy eX Fremont's report was followed by the arrival of a few fur traders, whe — of = sti Ard ay clearing — procedure in this | jA V/ UY i i a= / | gala wear fouue cee ne. pecllig gladly ay ee Denver: at oer te eee ‘rom the cloud w! now hangs over it. TING LINE ICAN ag ba ty 3083 LEKI P@ROORERASAAAAEEOS SASEOAEOEERORSERE DEO OSS ESEOESOSOSE A Little Inside Story of a Baseball Ticket and a Poet) Senesseenscneesessageeessoooorsoossooooosooooooeoet for she knew and Jack Silver knew an@ Mr. Jarr knew that the reason sho would not take the butterfly bachelor with her) was because Mrs, Jarr and the two Miss Cackelberrys were peering down from behind the curtains; and Mrs, Mudridge- Smith, as she often averred, would give no one the opportunity of “saying that much, not THAT much!” about her. And all this while, and even as the young matron’s motor rolled away, Mr. Jarr was wondering what the deuce everybody was running into Gus's for. He grabbed Mr. Silver by the arm and almost ran with him to find out. One glance from Gus's doorway dis- tie bearoum, hail, nurse. » visable to use an incandescent lamp that has two filaments, one considerably smaller than the other, In this way a little light may be maintained all night at a trifling ex- pense, as the use of the smallest flla- Ment saves about 75 per cent. of the current required by the usual lamp. Two great advantages of the electric curling Iron are that tt does away with the dangercus alcohol lamp and tt {s al- Ways clean, The latest type of electric curling tron has a comb attached which |18 easly removable when ft is desired to {use the curling fron alone. The temper- (ure 1s #0 regulated in both the tron and the comb that It ts Impossible to burn the hair. The heated comb is sald to be of great assistance tn drying the hair thoroughly after tt has been washed. A four-pound electric tron packed in a hinged case for use while travelling has made \ts appearance. Such an tron ty handy for pressing skirts, trousers, shirt waists, handkerchiefs and laces, This fron ts provided with legs so that tt may be turned upside down and used for heating water or other liquids. An electric washing machine, with a wringer attached, that can be run for three hours at a cost of six cents ts now to be had. It ts asserted that this machine will do the family washing from three to sx times ae fast as it can be done by hand, An electric stove, toaster and griddl device, has beon placed Tt will bake griddle cakes in fifteen seconds and ts equally rapid in it» other operations Household Electrics By Stephen L. Coes bathroom or sickroom it !s ad-| Allow all this to come to a boll and see ess und a half pint of cream, serve immediately. During the ten min- ites the lobster meat !8 cooking the heat should be so regulated that the sherry does not boll, After the cream and eggs have been added the heat should be turned on full, and the instant the boll- ing point 18 reached the current should be turned off entirely The Chafirg Dish, HE possibilities of the electric chaf- Ble ing dish are understood by come paratively few people. In {ts con- venlence, and expense wite range of use and ease of operation, it Is unex- celled by any of the many household devices already at our service, Its tem- | perature regulation ily and post | tively controled, As every good cook knows, careful discrimination in the use traction, the cause of all the excitement, was Michael Angelo Dinkston, poet, paychic heavyweight champion of the English language. At first Mr Tarr thought that Mr. Dinkston was bdeing assaulted, but it was soon seen {t was but a friendly as- sault, “You get away from my friend,” Gus was saying, “I knowed him before any of youse did. If ever I sald he was ® bum It was only in a choke. “When he took so many crackers from the free lunch counter @idn't you ask him if his wife was @ parrot?’ inquired Slavinsky, the glazier. ‘Me, I always Uked him, and any time I am willing to treat him—when It's only the two of us.” “Dinky, old boy!” exclaimed Rafferty, the bullder, “put {t there!’ and he held out his hand for Mr, Dinkston to shake. “I always held that he may have been eccentric, but for all that, Dinkstom, old pal, I have insisted you were an in- tual giant,” murmured Mr. Rangle. “He may be a Glant, but I've bet on the Red Sox," sald Muller, the grocer, “But let him think the way he wants, he's all right! Who's all right?” and Mr. Muller gazed around. ‘Dinkston!” cried the throng. “And T want to say right here," said Bepler, the butcher, “that I never helped when Gus kicked him out of his ico box, and right now I will say that {f Dinkston steals anything I'll pay for ty" “What's all the commotion over “his fellow? I never knew he was so popu- lar," Jack Silver inquired of Mr, Jarr. “Hush!” whispered Mr. Jarr, ‘we'll hoar."” “We must return to Glory that was Greece and the Grandeur that was Rome to perceive analogy between the keen Interest of the populace in feats | of athletic prowess in the Olympiad and the Clreus Maximus in what, in patols, of heat ls one of the ‘crets of superior cooking. Short course dinners and {m= Promptu luncheons may be easily and temptingly prepared and served by the hostess herself, as an electric chafing dish permits her to broll, fry, saute, Doll or steam expeditiously on the dining or library table in th yuse or on the veranda, For cooking late suppers af- ter the theatre or an evening at cards this handy device ts almost a necessity, The electric chafing dish is now made in such a wide variety of sizes, styles nd finishes as to be within the reach of any one whose home ts equipped with electric Nght. | | Blectric Cooking Economies. A T a recent practical demonstration tn St. Louis It was shown that a roast of beef cooked tn an electric we might term ‘old Dago with zest that the moder Babylon approach the feats of sportive and yet scientific precision in handling of ‘he ligneous trunctuated cone and the spheroid of equine epidermis," said Mr. Dinkston unctuously as he accepted cigars and other evidences of hospitality on all and every side. “Sure, I sce ‘em, he's got tem!" sad Gus In a hoarse aside to Schmitt, the delicatessen dealer, who was the one cynic present. ‘He's got box seats for Mr. Silver, with an alarmed expror searched himeelt. je took my box seats for the World |champtonahtp Sertes out of my overcout pocket from the coat rack in your hall,” he sa!d to Mr. Jarr. bs Mr. Dinkston was saying, And then, as in Calffornia’s early boom days, money-madness did the rest, | From 1899 to 1861 no less than eleven bustling cities sprang up, Denver among them. There wae a flood of immigration. The wild days of gold hunting and mining towns were Mved over again, But the settlers had come to stay, and when the supply of gokl slackened the wealth of silver and lead held them, A State Constitution was submitted to the people in 1860. They rejected tt “Jefferson Territory.” The name wes later and formed what they called changed to “Colorado.” The “Centennial State.” went on unchecked. At length, in 1876, Colorado was admitted to Statehood; 18% was “Centennial Year," and Colorado was called the “Centennial State.” its population has leaped from 34,27 to more than 000,000, and ts mining towne {have become prosperous and beautiful cities, Za POCKET & VYCLOPE Copyright, 1912, ty The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World). $96—Why ts oak wood stronger than pine? 897—How long must a pendulum be to vibrate eizty ‘imes a minute? | 396—Why does the sun look larger in winter than in summer? 899—Why ie winter colder than summer, although the earth ts mearer the sun in winter? 400—What is the effect of sleo tricity upon water? HESE questions will be answered \ | Friday. Here are replies to Monday's: 391. (Why does sprinkling make streets cooler?)—The heat of the pavements makes the water evaporate quickly, and the evaporating water absorbs the beat | | | | | PAPAAAAAALAAPPL During the Civil Wer troops from Texas inveded the territory to seize it for the Confederacy. rado men drove them out again. Out one settlement after another. But the Indians, teo, were conquered and the steady growth of the territory The May Manton Fashions But the Colo Indian ware next wiped From 18 to to-day $8. (Why are two plumb lines never absolutely parallel?) As all plumb limes point directy to the earth’s centre, and as the earth’e surface is a curve, no two plumb lines can be absolutely pars allel to each other, 9%. (Why do clouds sink earthward in rainy weather?)—Because they are heavy with vapor. The air's density, be- ing diminished, is less able than usual to buoy up the cloude, ‘4. (Why does sugar melt sooner in hot water than in cold water?)—Hot water ts a better solvent than cold solids, The heat helps to break solid substance. 7S 996. (Why are natural waters never wholly pure?)—They contala various ime puriues from the rocks and banka, &e the style ts fig tleularly well adapted to the school girls, This one Is made with ® pointed yoke that ts becoming sirls’ fig- ures and be worn with @ patent leather belt, as iu this” dime stance. with one of the material, There are only three pleces tn the vont proper, and the fronts ave laid in one box plait each, the back two, then joined to yok The collar revers can be of material or wi Rive a dis. touch, One of new rouch cheviots the material Mug trated, but conte of thi nd can bem ° yo sacking, sergeand 1 materials the kona 1 the model ts also liked for velveteen end corduroy, On cold * the collar can be tonel up clomely wt the neck in place g rolled cordurt ‘Var and eufte of nth wou be 12-yeur at wilt Zequtiee of material rds 44, 9162 yards 1-8 va r Electrocuted Lobster. go, not as a mere spectator, but to tor better try to cu! estraint or go to & joven lost only 18 per cent. of Its weight ninent jand, If he will address the Deparimens of Agriculture, Washington, | PRE {sa simple but very s'il fac-|in cooking, whereas if cooked tn any vote my Mterary abilities to graphica‘ly eanitarium, PSYCHO, |D. C., tt will furniss ‘him with @ H tory recipe for lobster a |) ‘ow-/other way the loss was rarely, tf ever, Picture for posterity this cructal con- Cali at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON A Yorkville Grievanes. Pampilet showing amount of vacant burg prepared in the ric|lese than 80 per cent, While the cost of test.” > N FASHION BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 Weet Thirty. site Gimbel Bros.), econd street (oppo We the Eaiior of Vie comer Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, I wish you w and States in which lo- | ere to address Inquiries In fuel was lower than the cost of elecctric | o te ft asked eg World: jJand, counttes and, coun “$0 your actor brother Is out Of| snanng disn: Cut the meat of h the follow. | “Hie, anc you report work? | thought he was wedded to |ionster into small pleces and 1 8, 1 large them games tn/current necessary to do the same work, |eezara to each localtty. ‘ 5 New York, or sent ©y mail on rece! tng tn The Evening Worid: SORANd th each loeally, | alae Toman hie art? the chating dish with @ tablespoon {ul of {the saving in the meat was so great th The Ladies’ Home Journal,” said Mr, Saran fit Cae eaiias euacen Tamnle® 9f tan conte in sata ap How can we, the children of Yorkville, ,. 1," which he will ‘find sett, He wi But the managers and | putter, a gill of sherry and seasons of |electric cooking showed an actual money Dinkston, IMPORTANT—Write your ad aie dak enjoy ourselves? We cannot play Wall) Very truly, ©. Kk. \ critics manager to get him a di- salt and paprika. Let It cook ten min-'saving in this Instance of about nine "Gvod night!” and he broke away Hae wanted, Add two cante for letter postage if ine hug. @@ the streets or even make use of @| Prescott, Aris, Oot. & . utes and then add the beaten yolks of cents. dodged out, AAAARARAANARROORARR RR DRRRAAA eotAbepoe to, ty ; ? H

Other pages from this issue: