The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1912, Page 26

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4 She Fee aatorio. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. ark Row, New RALPH PULITZER, President, 68 Park Row, JANGUS SHAW, Treasurer. 63 Park Row JOSHPH PULITZER, Ir, Secretary, 6 Park Row, “Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-C! Matt tion Rates ¢o The Evening) For England and the Conti World for the United States All Countries in the International ‘ and Canada Pogtal Unton, ee + $3.50/One Year..... » &0]One Month. “MADE IN PARIS.” $ LABELS, imported in neat bundles, to be sewn on hats “and dresses made in New York, are coming through the cns- » tom house in ever-increasing quantities. The names of the ~ greét French milliners and dresemakers can be bought any day by ealets in this city and used in the form of gilt letters on a scrap of eilk to/“tone up” garments and hats “created” no further east than ‘Avenue A, In fact-even the Paris labels themselves are now made here and the big names counterfeited to eave the cost and bother of importing them. ‘ After all we deserve this sort of fraud. Why give way to an F © gberird weakness and worship for every scrap of silk and lace that 1 rts to come from the fingers of a Parisian dressmaker? Why a eternal infatuation for things “made in Paris”? For the few Be jes that really cannot be found at their best anywhere eave in of “French capital, we make hundreds and thousands in this country K it are quite as good and tasteful as anything imported from Eu- Bef . Why should it need a French label to,sell them? Why not a our own country the credit of these articles and admire them more? Nor is it only upon clothes that we stick a Paris label. How rh of the silly, tasteless, over-elaborate food served at ridiculously : prices in our hotels and restaurants passes under the name of ch cooking.” A man will struggle with a tough, dried-up, over- American equad and pay $1.50 for it without a murmur because Eeppears on the bill of fare under a French alins. This nonde- Mript, monotonous, international pseudo-French table fare has be- come a recognized nuisance at big hotels. “> At home the French people eat wholesome stews, ragouts, civets M Sdeliciously cooked and cheap. Do these simple dishes ever appear i our so-called French bills of fare? Never! Tasteless, preten- io Bes, over-seasoned distortions and extravagancies in imitation of Published Dany Excent Sunday by the Press Publishing Compan | Nos. 53 to ‘ork. he Evenin French specialties at preposterous prices are supposed to be what the ‘American wants. What he ought to want is to wear his own clothes, éat his own food and cheerfully dispense with all labels save honesty and wholeeomences. A) Eee nen) a COLD COMFORT. F Pres. MELLEN, of the New York, New Haven and Hart- ford Railroad, told his stockholders at their annual meeting that so far as concerns the recent cross-over accident at West- port his records show only one accident for every 3,000,000 cross-over ‘movements, and that “no automatic device that he knows of shows 4 margin of safety to a train than that obtained when an em- observes the rules of the company.” * his is much like saying that as for heart disease, hearts fre- ly give 2,000,000,000 beats before the last one, and the beat ‘for the heart is to have it beat regularly. No doubt the stock- ‘holders were satisfied. The larger public would have preferred to f that Mr. Mellen had not given up hope that science might still precautions against chances of accident and that, human facul- being not infallible, he believed in continually putting new ry between even the most trustworthy employee and the lives But Mr. Mellen was doubtless in a hurry to tell his jolders the good news that their railroad will probably not have ‘sell its steamship lines, and can continue to spend its zeal and in building hotels and absorbing electric light plants. —__-+ Take any brid, and put it in a cage, And do all thin entente and thy corage, To foster it tenderly with mete and drinke -? Of alle dvintees that thou canat bethinke, ’ And kepe it at s0 clenely as thou may; £ Although the cage of gold be never so gay, ; Yet had thia brid, by twenty thousand fold Ahi Lever in a'foreat, that 2 wide and cold ot Gon eten wormes, w 4 Ou GEOFFREY CHAUCER. da 1400, only “three months me: because tt 4 Was not #0 very lonk afterward a tha “WA some experienced readers kindly | ouitet came back, And I was tn his *évise mo a8 to the feasibility of driving | house at the reception we gave him rey from this section of the country | I heard him teli about thelr being in the to the Pacific coast? I am con-| Battle of Bull Run. hele eS World Dail Magazine, Frida Why Not? & essa: y] , RT Ae wae } butts. | ppBERTySOPDHUNE IN CAMPAIGN . . October 25, 1912 Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Word). BRITISH force held the village and | fort of Vincennes, the first white settlement in Indiana (Indiana, by the way, was then a district of \ | Canada), The troops had 20 ‘ thought of attack. They were merely there to occupy the only fortified spot for many miles in the name of England's King. Then f came an event that changed history. i; A handful of Gen. Clark's Virginia militia, surprised and seized vie fort, as well as one or two other rude Western strongholds. And that act saved the whole “Northwest” to the United States. Otherwise, at the Revolution’s close, the entire region would probably have remained a part of Canada. And the United States’ western boundary would have been the Allegheny Mountains, Vincennes was Indiana’s first permanent white settlement. Indeed, at the time of the Revolution, it was practically the only settlement wortky the name in all Indiana. During and after the Revolution there was one long, ceaseless succession of Indian wara that checked immigration and IN throw the settlers constantly on the defensive. ISTEAD oF But iittle by Mttle the wilderness was populated, And in 1800 “Indiana Tern- PURE HAVANA tory” was founded. A huge territory it was. For 4 tne cluded Tinos, Wisconsin, Northeastern Minnesota amd nearly all of Michigan, One by one these future States were cut away, untii by 1809 Indiana had ehrunk to tte Present size. In 1816 jt became a State. Meantime, tn 1810, the Indian chief, Tecumseh, roused the tribes against @he whites. And once more Indiana was a scene of raging strife, until Gen. Harrisen crushed the savages at the Battle of Tippecanoe. That was Indiana's leat grea¢ Indian war, though lesser outbreaks occurred for some years afterward. Indianapolts was chosen in 1820 as the permanent capital, It was a tiny vile lage in the heart of a forest, and no roads connected it with the rest of tee State. Even when the Legislature first met there in 184 Indianapolis had tet 600 inhabitants and one street. Indiana furnished 4,470 soldiers for the Mextoan war. When the civil war was imminent the rest of the country was wondering how Indiana wouM stead, For its population was chiefly from the Southern States. Indiana promptiy settled all such doubte by remaining splendidiy true to the Union. About 7 per gent. of the State's total maie population capable of bearing arms went to ti front (the larest proportionate number enlisting from any State except Dela- ware), and of this 75 per cent. more than 13 per cent. did not live to return home, Despite the “Knights of the Golden Arch’ and similar treasonatie seorgt societies, the State remained aggressively loyal throughout the confilct. Indew the supposedly secret plans of the “Golden Circle” were known all the time @® the State authorities, “ Sinoa the war Indiana's growth hes been rapid ema steady along every line. It has sent into the world durtag recent years a host of famous writers; more, perhaps, thes, a. GE) ce PoUTicAL BANQUETS 5 CENTS PER PLATE INSTEAD oF $5 —WHYNOT 2 How “Hoosier” Originated. AT THE END OF Te CAN PAIGN AN HONEST * has any other State during the same period. Among @ae best known of these may be cited James Whitcomb Riley, Joaquin Miler, Gen, CANDIDATE Lew Wallace and Booth Tarkington. iia aed sc ‘There has been much discussion as to the origin of Indiana's nickname, “Tip ” ' Hopaler State." ‘The word “Hoosler” is a Southern slang phrase for “rustle,” or Tube." It was first applied to the people of Indiana in 18%, | @o7A POCKET f ENCYCLOPEDIA. Covyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), 481. What is the difference between | 42. (What is the difference between adhesion and cohesion? Steam and vapor?) Steam ts invisibie, 432. Why are the bands on a tank | When partly condeneed in the air it ag De vi . Placed closer together at the bottom | 4: (What 1s Mughing gas?) A mine i ; CO RESER RTS LN z WaT than at the top? ture of one part oxygen with four ef ‘ 483. Why are sounds heard farther | nitrous oxide. Fables for Everyday Folks EA sOBy Sophie Irene Loeb im foggy weather than in fair? 42. (What ia the emallest kingdom in 434. What causes twilight? the world?) Monaco, 0% square miles 435. Why do carriage wheels be-|' "e% : Copyright, 1012, by ‘The Pres Publisuing Co, (The New York World), ‘ come “set” when the azies are not logan cetyar ine, itterent kinds of WHEN LOVE DIES A NATURAL DEATH. well greased? NCE upon a time there was ayfelt the JOY of possessing the other. ; blood of anger mounted her cheeks. Im-/ Many foolish women do, She saw him woman in love. Cupid had| But as Is often the case, the workaday | mediately her thoughts assumed CON-|AGAIN with the same young woman i coal?) Anthracite (hard) and bitumt- hous (soft). Forms of coal in transition eet ae state are lignite and peat. SSE questions will b ey 0. (W pyden Jar?) aimed his arrow and hit the) Period of existence called each away.|CLUSIONS, That night when John|and still kept her counsel, She grew Monday, Here are replies (9 Masi pa fen eee farees on eed mark. Of course|And sometimes it was many, many called she made no mention of the oc-/SUSPICIOUS ani then sho heard one day's tileity by. industion © ky the Ilttle love god] hours before they would see each other] currence, Neither did John. But he|or two things that set her WORRYING. se lt sapien sal always FINISHES | “8ain, wondered at her seeming coolness and|Whioh {s also another foolish thing a everything he be-} One day, Genevieve was strolling along |chaffed her about 1 some women do. fins, And so hie|tle street and suddenly epled John| “On, she said; and tried} @o it went on. No longer did she The Day’s Go d St $ shooting was com.| Walking with ANOTHER young woman, |to be gay. talk of beautiful bungalows and the o ories ery She beat a hasty retreat, as the hot! She determined to “WATCH,” asliittle lace curtains, &c., &c. She con- OS A ~ tinued to be “cool.” And instead of i mother used to sing him to ley, | sin ihe 208 wae Mise pcAkee ae ane te meOnly, Thing CONDO, | eet es et ies ees eae in dover eoouy 8 , would become irritable and BY were motoring indolently through the | won aa little Joun D, leamed to love win ihe T h e P a pe Tt 8 S a y that or the other attention, pee Pah bad peices ‘epg hel Peer, Temas wed a8 internist are fue tee eat! | The sudden a wild iis Lullaby of being loved wax By John Hobble The man realized the change and one| "py," juctt" ate ‘ciel, ‘native oe ad | motiont MEE OF NsiI,” crue cherished by both; day determined to seek the cause. S0| oioer, ahere we bolt sou waw 6 down | , and each wanted Copyright, 1012, by ‘The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York World), he pointed out to her how DIFFERENT | lions bounding along after ust to KEMP love| 6 ¢ HALTHY man opposes for personal use tt will brieg bad luck.| she had become and how much LESS) “If 1 saw a dozen lions bound: world without end, Amen and A-woman, cemetery." He might joy he found in her company thgn be-| me,” grinned the heartless wretch, the baby, shaking its litle heed ead in & wiveedling way, said |v 'Male it a quarter, ma, aud I'l) go! ‘ee Detroit Free Press, bes They built beautiful castles in the afr, oppose it for personat| The New York Giants were so cour-|{Te and that she continually wanted to snitarium, ee lovers do, He told her of w Infringe on his time—-his business tine, ; he had alwave held as an ‘tea homer | M8) Dut he possibly would not object teous they took the blame for their |:nitiKs om his time—his business thine, | ; Big Game. It went something like, this: to it for some of his friends, own defeat, when in fact the Red Soz|teeiings. N Savannah, (e., tome visitors chartered “We will have @ beautiful little pasties | were so guilty they could almost have} Of course it was easily explained. ‘id fellow aul potuaaa bungalow—just bullt for two (of course! “Girt heartbroken at lose of flance.”| been arrested., The other “woman” in question hap- interest along the route, de you know the time-worn cottage has Neko : | pened to go his way during the luncheon evoluted into the bungalow), Heautitul|7"ere should be an organization of| hour. And he proved to her how SILLY flowers in the little garden In front and | 9allant goung men to sacrifice them; But the man who told us to “Swat|all her worry had been. But he could| street cars running to and fro handy to| selves in marriage to any lady who! the fly". never thought that one of|not help seeing that JEALOUSY was a} they were neart Banno's place, wht four miles from Savannah, « squirrel appeared @ ou wuuld explain how that "said one, after they all had noties® wash loague relic in ts the ball . "60 you bar Ret to the city for amusement when i nag otherwise failed to procure for them could be worth $29,514.48. Part of her make-up, the little demon | pre ieee te thou the ald of en expres | we En 07 Gene oe one wants t6, Every conventence will| °@ . that she recognized and allowed to eat | yo, } "es, indeed, sah." repliet the neg, We be contained in this bungalow, so that} herself a husband, her joyous spirit away. r lence that followed all that could | tas baseball," —Montgomery Journal, dear Genevieve won't have to soll her _—_ “Woman gets divorce and $100 a} 1 assure you that & did not makelpe faint chugwing of the young aS — vonialpmaaal dalnty hauds with mental labor, &e, &e.| “Shakespeare's chair is found,” month.” She was lucky if she got that|him love her MORE, In truth 4t{m je working feverishly up and See-Saw. € ‘Boston Traveler, v a evieve, on her part, 00 outlined the 10 Onersee! covere i he bru 2 she wag|UESSENED his love. And though, inj PE eal Nite ny little accessories ore and atin ane bind A ceng to. Rane gleceuered mNON out ve le Brats wails 4ho tag this instance, it blew over, others came ry tastes ete Rog the facts that’ she would perpetrate in| */@ manele, married to him, up and mole-hiils became mountains.! When John D. Was Young. ents MigaRine feld, the bungalow. And all rang beautifully S80 that the wedding bells and the! Racca a gonat), Romaale’s pwrcaae | ge Maid be cite band for ‘me as a marriage bell (or eather as an! “Corrupt money in national poli-| Many judges seem to agree that it 4s Las baa did not come into being. The | of @ mine for $400,000 that he wold to the | fe here 1 struck ofl with pa the rs engagement bell, for the momentousl ping. Dy Rep ee os a : seule 164 woman lost. sheet "Tyas tor $80,000,000, a, Chrcage | OF, before T struck oll time had not yet arrived), BON ners Haing Okey was 190 oor (ant tent tO 0) dence that "MORAL: IF YOU WANT TO KIL! yoke colt, rater Uivery pevtaie, an apocrial ("aver t wrote for the magasioee idetatigbl, Now each felt that nothing on earth! TPE money. Neither churches nor] would prove embarrassing to the de-|aqi~ Gop OF LOVE DISPLAY THE story ebout the oll king, hard magesing 4 nig {OTK a friend of mine sneered down at « pabeh, templating tu this drive, as I have JOHN M'DOUGAL, would ever SEPAR \, for each | Charities will take it, and if it is kept fense. DEMON OF JEALOUSY, n Jolin 1, was a baby," he sald, ne ey rete tot and aad Byoung horeo that 1 wish to take to| —_ amaiomemean — — fe “Well, how are you? getting on with your the coast. As the freight on one horse | "% Rann ana nnnnnnn. bas thus shipped would be excemive and hye a Tin ar Tis tree Faslitine Oe as 7 or Oe, Ing the dangeys to which the| $ SaQe reat- ea erry % sstnt ny fren . t would be exposed and the EN “Why.” 1 explained, ‘the f of time consumed in shipping 1 * have thought perhaps by driving him as Tend them,’ " Re, Would reach Los Angeles in better eondition than if shipped. Therefore if is some reader who has taken ‘trip with a perhaps he may be to advise me briefly as to the beat i to take, the ten: f time that 4 elapse duriss such trip and the ee Ne cost of same, taking into con- jor that the necessary stops be made at farmhouses on the thereby reducing the? cost of such Buch o letter might prove in- y Teading to many, iy, N.Y. JH, BROWN and the an- regiment, th ninth tn the Civil War, lat I know about the subject they ornanlens the Metropolitan in 1857 the frst oapiain of the wecond prectict was James I » And afver the war had started da company and drilled them fay in Forty-nipth mreet behind Peliireh below Ninth avenue, And ¥ Seotch yuigerms, walle drili- WHATS THe no! We cor | ~ Z 3 5 , The Swallow. N matrer ! Dip . YOu TREAD STONE ; HITHER “We preirer Fi : W LeU RMINe whet MILES ‘To: ony A AUTOMOBILE pe A jow-lands with cobwebs ANO | WANT To! THAT 4 CANT : GET To THe — WALK A YHRD \ awa wood, the fast- AND Ride! Southward, pursuing the retreating sun Is not thy former haunt both fair amd Ke Does not thy rooftree shelter as tt shoul Thy morning song of joy had scarcely won My soul's deep Kratitude ere it was done; T wander lone where once I raptured Behind the tiled earth, tue sun declines Folded in flery clouds; the riaing cae n cooler reglons of the northland h Now, whither away? Thy certain sense divines Early departure tn such scenes ap these September paints upon the woods and akien, L, Rice,

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