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t a“ ‘ zine, Friday, October 18, 1912 4 The Evening World Daily Maga ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. | Published Daily Except ender by the Press Feliening Company, Noa, 68 to rr cS BY | ALPHE PULITZER, Pi c a Hl TZER, Pr gf, Parte Row. SIR. woud Sorry, LAD: ‘ f sosben AUR areata oe atk how. ToERPLAN You WHY ian ote [* LBER LY SOPHHUNE Bh castrate te Enahel Por deaner te Pitas waa || (COU SOUS TE INTERESTED Justice, Wisdom) PN P. ue World for the United States ‘All Countries in the Inte al WOMEN ? ALL 0 Conran, 1012, by The Pays Hittin Co ye zn eon " Peep HILE all the tvelve other origthal +301 One Month. ' colonics were flourishing and pop t ulous, Georgia was still a deserted wilderness, All around ft were fast growing settlements. But, for some reasom, Georgia remained unpeopled. Not until 1788 did the first white ploneers settle there. The other colonies had been founded for various reasons, but Georgia's @tart wan due to philanthropy. A bdenevolent project wae M formed in England to provide a home for the British poor and for certain continental sects tha’ » re persecuted. Georgia was chosen, Parliament voted $50,000 for the purpos*, and Gen. James ‘Ogle thorpe was put in charge of the entire scheme. ‘The colony was named ta ‘honor of King George II. ‘ Oglethorpe, with 116 emigrants, landed in Georgia early tn 1788, and founded the City of Savannah. New omigrante came out from Europe apd the colony grew. Slavery and liquor were barred and tive laws NO. 18,684 THE LAST OF THE CONSTITUTION. AYOR LUNN of Schenectady and the four Socialist orators | arrested at Little Falls while attempting to address the striking employees of the Phoenix Mills are bitterly resent- ful. They threaten to bring five thousand more Socialists to the scene and fill the jaile of Herkimer County. The rights of free speech ‘have been violated. The Constitution has been abrogated. t Mayor. Lunn declared that he had only time to mount a bench and utter one sentence from Abraham Lincoln when he was muzzled and | ~_™Tt is an outrage,” proclaims the Mayor. “In my arrest every constitutional guarantee has been violated!” Smashed—even to the preamble! What would the framers of that noble document have said could they have foreseen that, after | all their efforts “to establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, pro- | mote the general welfare and secure the blessings of liberty to a themeclves and their posterity,” anybody would doubt the wisdom of \ i Ietting the Mayor of Schenectady climb on a barrel and preach the Qospel. of sullencss and discontent to men already troubled? ef ee “A Device for Finding Cyclones" reads a Herald headtine. Who the Sam Hill wants to find a cyclone, and if he did find one what would he do with it? ‘ tp GAMBLING AND GOVERNMENT. Aes YEARS ego an English government was not SIR, MAY LHAVE Two MINUTES oF Nour TIME To SHow You WHY You SHOULD VoTE FoR. WOMEN 7 1 Can'T SPARE ONE INSTANT MAM stead of cheatins them or driving them away from it. He invaded Fiorida in 178 with 1.00 white men and Indians, and eelle the Spantenés, $ hi = “DON'T WANT To Tare bt AS Possi®te sich BE AS LONG AS Ov UKE I'VE ME TS BURN (Am DEEPLY INTERESTED, ashamed to be a common gambler. Oct. 18, 1826, the last State lottery was drawn in England. The government lost @ revenue of 300,000 pounds sterling per annum. Few English- speaking pepple of to-day realize how respectable the lottery has been i'some of the most brilliant periods of their history. One of the first great English state lotteries is recorded in the _ Feign ff Elizabeth, when “s very rich lottery general of money, plate * and certain sorts of merchandise” was set forth hy Her Majesty’ Ai C I ‘ epeciel order in 1657. The greatest prise wag reckoned at 5,000 i" ; {> pounds, of which 8,000 was to be paid in cash, 700 in plate and the Y . ; rng the Bpaals-Amerieng vest-“in good tapestry mect for hangings and other covertures and _ certain sérts of good linen cloth.” Four hundred thousand lots » were offered at ten shillings each, a certain number divided inte halges, quarters, eighths and even sixteenthe ¢‘for the convenience of the’poorer classes.” Every kind of persuasive advertisement was to t be usdd “to provoke the people to adventure their money”; and when subscriptions were elack the Quean jpsued an argumentative procla- mation setting forth at length the advantages of the scheme “so that any ocruple, suspition, doubt, fault or misliking especially of those thet might be inclined to euspitione” might be dispelled and “every- body have his reasonable contentation and satisfaction.” ‘ ‘In 1012 James I. “in special favor for the plantation of the Eng\ Beh Colonies in Virginia” granted a lottery to be held at the west end of St. Poul’e. They were frequent in later years with prizes of all-sorts, from money and jewels to collectione of armor, libraries & 5 0 The Jarr Flat Is the Storm Centre Of About All the Trouble in Sight 99990990900000008: PSSHSOSSO COST SONS SHSTISIOTIIOSIIRS knowed you'd be here! And I knowed this party would be here, and J tele- b: ne J Copyright, 1918, by The Bros Publishing Co, (The Now ‘Zork World}. ¢ Kitchen unaware of a ring at the was no more room in the kitchen. bell, and Gertrude, who had been sulk-, Realizing that trouble must be avert- i ing by the t asain d Daughter, heed the counset of thy Mother, the MARRIED WOM&ME @Ad even a park of deer. In 1699 a lottery was floated with a capita! rg ) Aatedecieke ree tniatihaiin eae a Mi gy Moye gil pal ba omiedeayMuing eqgettgy, See ror M For 10, thaugh I have hod but ONE Nusdand, yet (¢ te euficlonty ize 6f a thousand pounds to be won at the risk of one penny. Each ‘Oh, come, I say!" expostulated Mr. | fussed nervous! ‘take! Oh, I wish Mr. Jarr were here!” since AFTER marriage ali men resemdle.one another, even as 6B. cost that trifling-eum and-only one was to win. Giver, “Clara and & ere ¢id friends, | whiskers, cried poor Mrs. Jarr to Mra Mudridse-| shop after the 5 and when ehe telephoned that you Smith’ |. “Don' p 5 Ware, waking Wanerven anal wanna ve lant Gio es ie bereaee ‘0 go out there!| 7 charge thee when the honeymoon ts ended, and thine husband eomel Parliament passed act after act authorizing lotteries for revenui. patty. they ware) Weriak: ‘Don't mak H eae t eae - In 1736 @ measure went through for building « bridge across the & great tark to come end help you"— “put tle aid she cack that more| everybody ‘io this fat and the Ba neat | unto thee aoying, “Lo, de a SENSIBLE Uttle woman! Cease the tight Ae ‘I met Gertrude out duying the grapes | company and more trouble were com- |door will hear!” of thy stays, and oast aside.thy satin shoes, Fling away thy false courte, e Thames at Westminster by a lottery consisting of 125,000 tickets at yesterday,” whimpered Mrs. Mudridae-|inz, tor just as Mire. Jarre had cohvinesd | But Mra, Clara Mudriige-Gmith’s hus- COMPORTABLD ctothee, For thow knowest I love thee ; five pounds each. So successful was this venture that others were! copprigut, 1912, ue a on | en Oh thnk sun @ thing tho indignant old gentleman thet ahe Wand peered frigntenedly down the hall. Hela ee hestive ANP os ee ag perl ctroeep lerdal peck eanctioned one by one until the bridge was finished. Great munici- Nida Mpie quite an| _“WFetch!" orted @ voice tn the door | him Pad rapa eg Alan cacy [eds cea cclergh byl ad Eyre Ore é & pal undertakings in London were financed in the same way. So it “W ‘old fashioned party here in| "47s an turmed to behold the pee ing her od baa, @ Gramatic voice was | know te person who telapheged me; I For so TALEETH. every mon. he kit " cried Mr. Jack \ a couldn't tell her voice-over phone. ? went on growing in ecale until Parliament in a spasm of virtue abol-| gi... 1 ‘he Ritchen!y cried Mr. Tals] nusband dof the young matron, ‘And Te caught you dead to rights!” | but I see cow that {t's the same er—er cree passa abd noth yay eee 2 make bed Meraste r) = ished lotteries once and for ell. Mike thiat"* Poggi Beg Mpls cen a |_at was the of “Za Superba, the | young femaie who te now making such | 2778 cna Sherr. fonen ets Be tonne te wenee i One way or another, it, *ffank and reckless betting, under the|,An¢ the only wali-to-do bachelor the Pane Hees Me aera abe: Ate Noih snatrton: Cage: Apel be Nee fur. revel f@ the Cireet: fe ORE Mra, Jart was a wretch he did not eay. . “ ° “4 Jarra knew swept his “1 shall go to my husband!” the volce| ther wamen, phat ore NOT “senstdle,” but escosdingly frivolous. flimsy veil of speculation, or mado more respectable in forms of Clara Mudridge-9m ; bl adi nl baad Gites a 4 Fenians “industrial venture,” at all times and in all countries the human in. |J¢iT; and the cooling ginsses of STDC) aiver again, stinct for gambling finds its satisfaction. To-day the Italian Gov-|ealis “ihe stationary weantube:" |, But Mra Jare, tn an endeavor to nip|te answers 0 - ernment smiles openly upon that instinct, conducts public lotterics .|*“Swhat—whet © surprise! Lat ue aii |Guperta. t knowed you was connie for the people and turns the proceeds to public ends. The French ‘sali the mossy soenes I want to|@0.in the front room!” jme: I've hed you tretied by Piasttsky's Government treats gambling with austere tolerance, holding itself|0°,imantt geen if he ts old and gem. ROE RHP Geo ge tere) Aland: Bye: Deneere AP SNF sensation in private tfe, of Mrs, Mudridge-Gmith was heard , @ man admireth @ sensible women, in . ‘why, Birdie!” Mr, Stlver was heard |#8y. "Creature, T do not kpaw you!” For padalahin'y ue rest wer P “Oh, you know me all right, and 1)""" worsover, whqn he eafelteth the oirtves ond attractions of the LODRSP women, eng oryéth out against the tightness of thy shirt and the loudnessef thy perfume the ehowiness of thy hate; when he wrgeth thee te wear high collars end tong sleeves, and to adondon thy “girlish color,” seek met, to argue with Dut go thy ways untroudied. know you! Ain't you satisfied with Gmith. ‘Mr. Silver, I tool eure Mrs. Jarr would prefer you to take your severely aloof but collecting big percentages from the profits of |erous with his money to you, thet ts no ao}s| face away!” For, in the ABSTRACT, every man adoreth a simple woman, But in Me casinos and gaming tables:wjdh which to build echools and hospitals. | have no right 10 make @ meeting place R i g ht to the P oint ! Mere. Mudridge-Gmith cushed into the] CONCRETE he preferreth o Bird of Paradise. In the United States, even more than in England, we frown upon vu wack aiyes of my housel It may front room and Sousa? senlainied Likewise, when he pratseth ECONOMY and the Frugal Wife, think net : ordinary gambling, forbid it ce flog it—thereby driving it to al and Mrs. Jarr glared around with H&S Electoral College seema to be, It looks as though the war correspond ae ™ 7°41 to charm him by Genyjng thyself a new gown that he may afford a new over ach ah ' Ai ‘dlgnation. th ' . ‘ < " od BSI :\coat, or by remodeling on old hat that Ke may purchase o mew tive for Me 5 dangerous and, menacin! in low haunts, behind closed doors. | “Cun wuariige-smith gave Mra, Jarr T BS RAR Sa) fen BOR | 904 Tal one fp cake ioe eneenere Oss | TS ceneietieeine lmater eer, The Wail street kind we honor, worship and encourage. The country |e baby stare of muld-eyed innocence, | ball team. while Jack fiver, who was carrying his o— little good from either, ‘ yellow wtoves in his right hand, was a0| The French are reported as becoming + Which nation has the beat of it? Astonished that he slapped the gloves| more gouty.» Any nation would fee! that against his derby hat, which he was| way if ft’ made a safe of its stocking. i ee And ae etene, fase wes ca Mra} For 6 man's love eydeiéeth longer upon admiration than wpon gratttuée; foago's social reformers are inci-|Clara je-Smnish's a p dente” sommceving’ e Int es cootio| °F knowed TIM tan veoro ager” aas-|One Ne GOREN @ Wite accreting fo Ner eupenetvencst, OnE net eooRMing ee light. ed La Superba. her cheapness. “Before we were \married, my dear!” Nay, verily, in the dull gray Ufe of the Busy Business Man, there must de ever a bright touch of color; and tf thou art not the light of Ate estetence then wil he seek the light eleewhera, ot holding in his left hand, And In so do- . Montenegrin troops, if they intend ¢o}mtammered the old gentleman, almost jfng the cane fell from under his arm! One good thing about being an aviator cut off the supply of Turkish chrarettes, | pulling out his beard in his agitation, The Day's wc, Tw Mow tow te ee * jand broke one of the Jelly Jars, fe that the fller never has to give any |... isi (0 do considerable Gghting in| ‘Dan't speak to me!” orled his in G Ledisi tat tsi thas U‘The noise and contusion made all in/ot his time to insurance solicitors, |Now Jersey, nant Ure, “All man are weetchest™” | { 4n6 10, I eRarge ye, remember that he proferreth ahoaye a meury unto ood Stories ee @ necessity, a decoration unto @ thing: of utility, sweetmeats unto gruel, and — incense unto common sense, Por hie , theories regarding WOMAN and Ate tastes in WOMEN differ as the nigh? and day. Selah! Mr. Hoodoo! Ee {-alStitar!| BS He Could Make Good Ever PRE aE TREN 2 a ron ‘VR Oot my MY Poor PE.LOow! PERWIt vi er we hee iy 6 ere eee on Ute eter roaaes ‘ive Aa te oer eae ta AWitd STAKg ME FORA Easy eee siDantiat VeuA ORBAN | srouen” in Sapan ring te Keraae DUA Wrought in Japan during the Japanese Emperor's reign te thee Drought about by the abolition of the sumptuary laws, Witty years 6s Japanese could ep a ameal, Tide'in a conveyance or wear @ garment without considering whether the law would be offended, Whatever a man’s rank he might not have more than twe. kinds of soup and six of other eatables at his ordinary meals. Minute regulations were in force as to the quamtity of sake allowed at an official banquet, high Gignitaries deing Mmited to three and these of inferior rank to ewo. use of sedan chairs by men was stricted to the aged and sick. 4 Doble! man of the highest rank was mot el lowed to spend more than #8 on « dress, for his wife, and the lower erders had’ . fe atvuse te Gress bitte ” i ixed according to thelr Incomie, ’ — { © ¢