The evening world. Newspaper, October 23, 1912, Page 20

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“The Evening World Daily Magazine. Wednesday. Octoher 25.1918 } ~ ¢ CES worl. win) $2 By Maurice Ketten ove STAM es Pottsned Daliy Hscwot wopsay ty fe Freee Fusing Comeany, Hon 8 to fps BY - " : eee pLBE Diy SOP HUNE ee mS “oem TCO tea fun bole ones C an aes we aor 7 Bubscrip' e World for the and One Year. One Month. ave VOLUME 88.... oe eee NO. 18,689 SHALL FAITH BE REWARDED? REPRESENTATIVE of the London Chamber of Oommerce who is now visiting New York, after the recent Congress of Chambers of Commerce in Boston, enys in an interviews fire of 1871. A visitor, expecting man turning over some tumbled bricks cagoan, “how eoon these bricks will enough for me to build with them.” ‘That old anecdote is perhaps the , stance of the spirit that has made Illinois the mighty State it is to-day. ‘When tn early yeats Indians massacred Illinois settlers and burned their homes the Tlinois men thi the Indians and reared new settle mente. When the British, before Revolution, refused the Illinolg colop- fate self-government they turted with ardor to the patriot cause, to help themselves shake off the British yoke, When the panic of 1837 smashed te State's fast growing industries and wrecked its budding prosperity, there and fearless pathfinder, who, tn the ‘ , claimed the whole region with thou- other ternitory—‘the Loutstans. Country” of “New France,” claimed far more than tt could tied. ah rule, Not until 1778 did the ot here Tree *| it was ceded by thot And in 1900 the “Indiana Territory,’ comprieing Indians, other future States, was created. le went of government ennes, Ind., and the firet Governor was Gen William Henry Harrison. , Territory of DMncie” was established. It included most o! Michigan and Wisconsin. And nine years later, with readjusted You Tiinols became « State. there hed been continual cashes with the Indians. In the sided with the Brétich. They captured Fort Dearborn, on. destroying tt and massacring its defenders ami the country for refuge. In 1831 and 1883 there were other serious Indien out- AND NOW 1AM A RETIRED WORKINGHAN could only temporarily check its advance. 7 ‘When the Civil war came tt found IMinols (despite the large element of Southern born people) loyad to the Ulon. And the Illinois regiments did vatiant service throughout the four-year conflict. Simce then the growth of the State has been little short of phenomenal. ie is now third tn poputetion in all the Union, and Chicago, next to New York, fe the largest city in America. The epirit that could go on unquenched through ene calamity after another has long since reaped tts reward. The Man on the Road By H. T. Battin. Copyright, 1012, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World). The Lucky Trip. counter where you drew an en VERY man on the road has|that was numbered from one to — may be called jucky|hundred and paid the number of ces! PESSOSESSES ESSE ES CEEEEE SCE EL EESES A trip y_ {that this envelope was marked. Thea i jowed what ize nui Mr. Jarr’s Yearnings ‘for Autumnal ie te ec) See | artnnit any ean ethene drew, if any. I drew No. 3% and ot] up all through the trip. Other times $5.00 worth of cigars. These cost me Scenery Lead Him in Strange Paths the streak comes in the middle of the aseveroereesesess cents. I tried it once more and drew; trip and makes a whirlwind finish to| No. 6?. This called for $3.60 worth, whiel Sesevsseseeserses (aoa marke Ee 18 Cleary CF “ “In Richmond, Ind., I had just ” pastui outh. Around him were @ wilder-)and forgot all “4 ‘One time I was going from Grand He could smell the fealilerg tahlebagge Teas of brick and mortar, the grime| wilds ond the chase e nena atte | Rapids to Fort Wayne,” sald the cut}#00d luck and almost as good at Indians burning brushwood amid ail the scenta|@nd sounds of the city streets, and | glow. glass salesman, “on the G. R, & I. I) Spolis, All this time business was that autumn eoatters across the woods|nothing of autumn really nearer than| “Hello, Landsman! What are you|#t in at 11.90 at night and put | cotonat Piaitrop dees and flekis the river far off fowing onward to the| doing around here this thme of day?"|¥P at @ hotel, Next morning I found| writing me nice letters, In 24, \ In his mind's eye he aleo saw the|sea, the blue sklee overhead and the} asked Gus. ‘Have you been fired from| °Very buyer in town and open for only one unlucky event during the dusky, russet, hazy hills of New Jersey goods. In the afternoon when I we! ee of that trip, 1 it happened, what was first ; to pay my bill I found the charge $1.75.|Cincinnat!, which ts supposed by Geis ela nes te cade na seven earn nmiled @ superior and pat-|¢. doitar for the room half the night| travelling men to be the luckiest on a day like this,” said Mr. Jarr to and twenty-five and fifty cents for|in the country.” Aimself, “Who would stay within four] “Of course,” spoke up M breakfast and lunch. ‘This splitting up wails a day like this of his own free|the neighborhood glazier, “a business| Of the night was something new to me the mature manhood of the|will 1s self-made convict!" man uptown here, things with him is|@t the time and I walked over to the Year es he had mown them tn his! And eo saying he turned into Gus'e/ qui! about this time. Still, if anybody | !S4F counter, determmed to leave some comes in mit a Jod of glass-put-in for| ™©T® money in the town that had me to go out on the old woman knows | ‘Teated me #0 well. "Not very likely, that,” he “What was this unkind asked the hatrcloth salesman. cigars I had accumulated on the trip,” Teplied the cut glass man. “Out in that locality, it was a kind ie 5 z 3 a B i i Trun| | 66 h ” where t en,” “They had a clger lottery on the ness,” sald the cigar man presertt. “Mit @ storekeeper who hi to work ma a * valiso containing negotiable eecurities worth the emot C eer Up, Cuthbert! fro Detore sayoreni ti after: ether 940,000 tm o Paris taxicab. The driver discovered it before atep and ebb pe Tr ery aig aR yao? people is in bed it does him good and tg i B® bts passenger wes out of sight, put on his fourth speed, over- fa er nore What's the Use of Being Blue ?} |e nim vn 10 come in ant get some The May Manton Fashions Geuk the men and restored the property. ‘The owner emfled his eatis- radient with) There Is a Lot of Luck Letft.} |\2 the atternoon,” expiained utter, the aR RCA Soeepeeniergd Rereiaerememanmremtememsaa groce! rose. that oe counted the money to make eure it was all there. Then curquetee sky and By Clarence L. Cullen. “Sure,” assented Bepler, the butcher. T closed for ite em vd ary ‘the chauttow's shoulder and said: “My man, you are the intersecting side ‘an fummer, trom ten til four, business (tie length at the is nix, and I lock fee box. Thi is al to © reward,” aiid pressed into his hand—the equivalent of ro alla oa Corareht, 3912, ty The Pro Publishing Oo, (Te Now York Wort) abate trae Karas eCniaa at or it eo@olier! Une of the dectiing HIN Habit begins to Make us, Some Men are wholly Unal day 1s still nix. I meld fort: ee.” look Hang-Dog, it's Time to|ferentiate between a “Mission” and a a Mapa Berccg The thing fn eyond that the dull green ; fou fellows meedn’t apologize to serme might happen in New York—has happened of New Jersey lay ina Gate Het Hobby! said Mr, Jarr, taking his pick of thie ‘iad can pores, WOR: finds of greater or lees value. After all, ts it just? Should eS Aneta -Remerege ' 0 th0) We know Plenty! ‘The Mildest-Spoken Man we Ever Bee ees Shee SL ae free lane qpened out and jaun- mot the law fix a definite proportion between the value of lost arti- that made Mr. Jarr : of Men, who hav-iKnew was a Boss Tentman for a Weet- eas nearby. "You all are od tn th (Gus and the reward due the honest finder? In London and Berlin parene tea seyeey ie ae oat| ite’ ee mene | Soi EE Ce iE era and have It prety dead | orisping beneath his feet Vield one of those Blue Clubs in « é é Se cree rea earn ae pentts maemo ‘The fader of a ee ‘etemn emvind ert, ne pA EO [agg i HRS ie ive oF cases ten thought of the dull red glow of thel nt Themselves,” but, — men in this town are the clerks, book- umaC Made thelr Hs-/ Our Idea of the Helght of Evanes-|xeepers and other wage slaves in shops and mercantile establishments down- town—poor devils!" Mr, Jarr spoke pityingly, for since the raise of salary of which he had been notified he felt himself tn the Around In the Shoes of some Big Pre-| capitalistic class. “Anyway, a man in ecessor, Manages to Get Away with It!/— big downtown establishment,” he — 5 went on, “has to do his own work. He When we're Afraid to Reply to the|ocan't go and hang around the gin mills ane, Bee erect by the High | Cross - Examination of Conscience, |and leave his wife and kids to run the ‘oat, sand it's Nourishing! | we're Slipping! business in the dull hours, There isn’t any dull hour for him." The Difference detween a “Ham” and| “ ad Actor” is that the Latter isn't |nei cape! cence is the Rosy Prospect one Sees Lar ee through the Bottom of a Glass! case of jewels and lurge eums. The owner pays as a matter of course. oe claimed within « reasonable time the article reverts to the inder, Tt has been objected, of course, thet euch a rule lessens the velue of honesty. But does it? The honest man returns his find whether he expects compensation or not. If he insiste upon making virtue ite own sole reward he can always refuse any other or give it to char- ity. It he is poor, and needs the money, he can take it without lows of self-respect, On the other hand, how often msy eome poor devil, sorely tempted, find thimeelf saved from’ the degrace and moral de- Ambition can! — Remodel the! somehow we can't Help Admiring the Merely Lazy,\m who, evi if he DOES Ratth but there's Littic! Around in the Shoes of some Bie Pre, Hope for the Born- ea! Sn- ‘atirt Alto. A crow cawed ever the pine trees, a Sincere Praise. ‘We Never Ascertain what Poor Pick- ore we are until we Try to Find the ‘Why shouldn't my wife run my busl- a ‘Basy Way Out! “ | 7 asked Slavinsky, indignantly. end oldery and to tae Necessarily on the Professional Stage! |‘‘Ain't everything in her name? If I weal after — die I don't get nothing and she get basement of keeping something he knows does not belong to him ltt erperionce, dy ong large, with Mimaiewa Maier mapkaianes abwave lavcesinina.’ iad hy the certainty of substantial and pertectly honorwtle gain in fol- 7 to Stick until they're Leaned Againat| Ua'® OF the Key! Raat tn Cette Sh ce eee lowing the straight course and returning it? Ye should establish P Too Hara! Some of us Never Find Out that Pig-|iop the cops is called in to beat him | headedness isn't a Sign of Character un-|up." | ti we're Almost Through! je spoke feelingly, Such an eptsode H had livened his domestic and business . There's Such a Thing as Valuing the||ife a few weeks before. Every Time we Make a Survey of! world's Opinion so Highly that we Un-| “And the wimmens wants wotes, Ourselves we Hind that the Last Chart) deyestimate our Own! too! snorted Gus, “They got every needs a Heap of Correcting! oF ne percentage of reward for the return of lost articles in New York. An Indeterminate Sentence Is tho Best that Indecision Geis! __ Potatoes are cheaper, But diamonds are dearer! Can't — thing, and they want wotes, Well, ee “Maybe-Land” will forever remain Un-| mine don't get a wote even If there was Some of us Indulge tn Remorse with) mapped! wotes. I'll show who {s boss."* the Hope that wo'll thereby Gain Im- “We know who {s boss,” grinned Mr. munity! Tt Keeps the Former Benefictartes of|Stavinaky, “A king of Germany in the saree ‘his Profitgacy mighty Busy Dodging the}old times proved that.” Sometiiues, when Things look Pretty! “Good Fellow when he Had It!" “What king of Germany? asked Bad, we think of a Lot of Reasonably | —— Gua “A good old-timer king of Ger- Call et THE EVENING’ WORLD MAY MANTOM FASHION Hew {BURBAU, Doneid Building, 09 West Thirty-second gtrest (eppo- ‘Lockstep To-lay—and then the @un| word “Inevitable” when we're Hunting|hed red whiskers. Wes it him? atreet, (Peepe Out! Si for an Bxouse! “I don't remember what the king - = — % gentleman's name was, but proved i ‘ , . ‘ When we Accuse Fate of Fromii I's only when we Basin to Find Gelt-|Mt by cows and horsen’? oni eobrt naky. je Up, we're Dodging the Facts of Forgiveness DiMouit that we Start a| But we heve to watt till tc-momrew Decent Fellows who are Doing the) Most of us Make Mighty Free with the|many was Frederiok Barbarossa, :

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