The evening world. Newspaper, November 2, 1912, Page 3

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PETRIE” RIND Pon wOR ecto C7 ETE «RTO Hg nn GASES THAT LED TO THE | H e CARNAGE IN THE BALKANS $<. | i Moves Made in the Troubled Provinces of, Eastern Europe Since the Turk First Asserted His’ Sway. (Written Specially for Fhe Evening World by an Expert.) ‘kan problem goes back 458 gating them from the Turks. hs mmed| With fonr vears of war by whic years, to the time when rei hot | Austria ifled” Bosnia and Herze-| rode into great cathedral chure! | govinu by the sword. ‘Their people t Mte Saphin and stopped the massacre of Mould rather have remained Turkian, eethe Christians who had taken refuge | They could get away trom the Turk, .| They feared they could not get a See rte tha. CApEUPS. Cf CONAN | From the ACSNAA) AMM thelr. tare ) nople by the Turks. + proved well founded. veg Indecd, it began long before that, for! OF course the Berlin Treaty was not befove the Turks could get Constantl-| worth the paper it was written on. It began pi Pople, they had made extensive con-} England had to threaten Turkey with | quests in the country to the West. Now, | her fleet to get little Montenegro's right | to wider territories recognized, with the command of the great city of} 3), the Byzantine emperors, they pushed tueir conquests with magnificent gour- ’ nd daring. Tie world knows how the high tide of the Crescent swept back the armies of the Cross to the gates of Vienna, to the Northern hills of Spain and throughout North Africa, while Mcslem raiders landed on every coast of the Mediterranean, But the change of flag did not change the ‘people. They remained Spanish, ervian, Bulgarian—whichever they happened to be. So in time the Span- Yards drove out the Mooors, having a ‘rider but stronger constitution, less sapped by luxury. In European Turkey the natives did not for a long time drive the Turks back, because they were di- vided in counsela and were kept apart by jealousies, But the Turk never ex- terminated them or sought to colonize his own people in their lands, ‘The ‘Turks remained a not very numerous race, a race of military conquerors, “proud, haughty, generous, tolerant of Other religions in the main, but spresd eit thin over their conquests. This was to be thelr undoing. They did not © ‘people the land. They garrisoned it. ¢ Unttt 4908, the year of the Young Turk rebellion, the Turkish army had never admitted the Christlan subjects of the Empire to its ranks. It included wild Albanians from the West of the Euro- pean empire; Arabs, Kurds, Armenians Who apostatized; a strange mixture of rages and tongues; but no Christians of the type who have just now proved themselves such wonderful warriors. What was the result? In spite of oc- cavional massacres by wild, Aslatic troops, and in apite of rebellions cruelly repressed, the Christians kept on breed- img and increasing in numbers, while the ruling race spent its strength in fighting and wasted its moral forces in polygamy. In spite of the purchase or capture of many women from Circassia the Turks have not for vyears.been a prelifia race, ‘though, they have become a very handsome and manly one; one of the best bred: in . urope. THEN CAME THE AID OF WESBT- In 1885 ria annexed Eastern Rumelia, be- to Turkey by the Berlin treaty; ‘t Was part of the “Greater Bulgaria” the Berlin Congress had broken up. The people wedcomed the Bulgarians as deliverers, ‘The powers made no at- tempt to put Eastern Rumelia back into Turkey; and Bulgaria began building up her magnificent army. CAUSE OF THE BULGARIAN.SER- VIAN WAR, The Buigarian-Sorvian war grew out of this annexation, Servia was jealous and was well thrashed for it, but this did not much alter the map. Neither did the Turkish-Greek war, later. ‘Th Breat powers would not permit Mttle Greece to be whittled down by the Turk, ‘but they did something as brutal. They denied the right of Crete, an exclusively Greek island, to join Gr nd they actually policed her fourteen years un- der the nominal sovereignty of the Turk, Actually, Crete has deen independent for years, governed by the powers through an appointed Governor. Only the other day she joined Greece after all by th dmission of her elected Congressmen at Athe! In 1908 the next big Balkan trouble came when Prince Ferdinand of Bul- warla took the utle, not of King of Bul- Baria, ax it {8 sometimes printed, but “Czar of the Bulgarians"—Czar of the Bulgarians wherever they might be, in- cluding those of Turkey. At the same time Austria definitely annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina, which she had held thirty years by the Bertin treaty, but which nominally still belonged to the turk. Rui was too weak just then from the Japanese war to interfere. | and su the theft went unpunished. At | the same time Austria withdrew her troops from the Sandjak of Novibaar, which she had kept unt!i then under her thumb as a right-of-way for a rail- way of conqueat down to Salonica, It is Not good for much besides that, and to keep Montenegro and Servia apart. That was the, situation up to two years ago, when there came into power inGreecea rian. This is Mr. Venizelos, He began bullding up the army and Navy “wit sonté success, as recent events showed. What was more important, he realized that ft foollsh for the States to fight for their nelgh- ‘bors’ Mberation singly. They must join hands. And they did. never have won their freedom. But | divided—have always succeeded In keep- | ing the Greeks, Servians and Bulgarians | fighting each other In Macedonia almost as zealously as they fought the Turk, each wishing to gec more than its share jin the division when it came, They have fougit not only by armed bands} a token of German aid, was & Bavarian. He ‘The present king 1s also German, as not a drop of Grecian blood. Roumania was another Balkan king- dom that won hef freedom fairly early in the jast century by the ald of Russia “Fashionable Woman Is a! “What For those evening costupes which are not strung from corsage to train with brilliants are sown with pearls, im man’s, more barbarous—barbarous even 4f thoughtless—than the recent Presentation in Brooklyn of a ical play by the girl students of RDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1943. THE EVENING WORLD, SATU FIFTH ABTICLE OF A SERIES ot “Yes, Decidedly, and a.Great Deal Worse,’’ Answers a Plain-Spoken New York Woman Copyright, 1912, by the Preas Publishing Co, (The New York World), ile << Great Deal More Ridic- ulous in Her Make-Up Than Any Savage, for' While the Savage Knows No Better the; Modern Woman Does Know, but Doesn’t! Care,’’ Writes ‘‘Mrs. H. B.S.” _ Woman Would Appear in the Street in the Low Neck, Short) Sleeves and Enormous Full Skirts Worn by! Our Grandmothers?” Asks “‘H. H.,’” Who De- fends Present Day Styles of Dress. 2 { . PEARL -SET PANNIER BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Are fashions for women barbar- ous? And are women themselves but superficially civilized? Mr. Arthut Stringer, in a recent magazine article, made’ the charge that women actually are not the softer but the more savage sex. Ani- mals are slaughtered that we may adorn ourselves with their pelts and claws. Mother birds are killed and thelr young left to starve that our hats may be more becoming. Mr, Stringer surveys the life of the fash- fonable young woman\from the hour! when her maid brirgs her letters and a cup of tea to her final flower- ing in a priceless ball gown and “pearls enough to outshine a maha- rajah at the Durbar.” We will have to admit the pearls. mM ARAN THE BURBAR ADAPTED struggled for a chance to chuck Baby : George under the chin. The other day a Fifth avenue shop window revealed a dinner gown of Magistrate McQuade adjourned the red chiffon, of which the pannier skirt dripped pearls from every thrend. worshipping party after quarte! | of an hour and called the case of the ERN NATION: North of Greece are a million Greeka|In another place a headdress and dog collar made of seated gold Buddhas, | O'Briens out of tte tur He By themselves, the ‘“rayahs’’ or bist under the Turkish flax. Greece|incrusted and joined with parti-colored stones, waited to catch the eye [muon tciined ve santas ‘4 v1 t 1 hem, a t was an accident whte million Bulgarians reaching solidly to| A despatch from Chicago the other! ly train. Any woman with brains occurred before and should never occur Nettle by Uttle the Christian sentiment) the Aegean sea; descendants of people | day told of a hat with a feather so long] can always dress well and becomin: again, but gaent Frank Harclay of the of Western Europe, as old as the Cru-/ who had lived there for centuries, con- that !t touched the hem of the wearce's| ly No matter “what is style” an Children's Foclety asked that they ik wades, was reinforced by the classic{quered but never displaced. ¥ . @ be{ Without making herself a target for held tn $600 bail untll he oe Leh sentiment imbuing the lovers of Greek] South and west of Servia lived a mille/ WN, and in cold weather could be} Ni Mint jgate theln tome conditions The Manis. poetry and art. In the bloody struggle|!on or more Servians under Turkish | wound around her neck a¥ a doa. } Mh Matabe gattettas/ tiingl: kieat feraie Dell them for ‘one aay, asking, which freed Greece, first of the Balkan fst phd — ke fal le Included! Mr, Stringer's article concerned .tse'f present thanhiond Ak. that. bo. HeaY —_> —— lsavina: tharbaby away folk die eer ations, tho Turks might have won| masstere, The Servians wanted to res! almost wholly with tho superticia) evl-} Romer nace 0 Ilitle iden of the hore . ae, pending ihe inventigaibon ‘once more as they had so often done but | : dences of woman's barbarity He ii rible Agures they have and wear Magistrate's Dignity Upset By| "Barclay hesitated, looked at the. baby for the aid of the Western nations. KEPT THE PEOPLES FIGHTING | perhaps have found stronger evidence of | sereenn’ styles which make thelr nat- “land ite mother, and then said he This aid was not only rendered by ‘the EACH QTHER. essential savagery in her psychology. ural deformities more noticeable. A thought George had better stay with his agiish Lord Byron, by the American! Only, until this present year of our ‘Woman nature we know is good-looking woman with a kind face pty The p pir iy peanlaget te Samuel G.- Howe (husband of Julla Lord the political machinations of the| mearer to child mature thas man's | ing manner may wear almost any- Policemen Tua edt GrBine waiieat one arene from many foes of Balkan freedom—chiefly Aus- | and the child is naturally thing without attracting unpleasant | . court with the baby bounding her Jands; it er by English | trians who wanted to conquer right! arbarous and crnel. Yet the in- attention. Of course brains usually | tice {arms and waving ‘da da’, to fleets and other signs the Turks could | down to Salonica and wished to keep| tinct of pity is much more deeply 0 with both these gifts, conaequent- | body in al not disregard, The first King of Greece, the Peoples along the road weak and| splented {m woman's breast than When Magistrate McQuade took his} ly such women dress becomingly. H. H., Plainfleld, N, J. Letters from other readers of Evening World follow. 1 would be glad to hear from any one who hax @ des clded opinion as to whether or not at to preside over the session of the! Harlem Court to-day he looked wbout, | Puagled by the absence of clerks from! thelr places and of policomen who are| ordinarily in a clamoroua crowd about : bi i $350 A MONTH, NOT WEEK. That's What Charles Farthman te ay Hin Wife, Mevertheless what could be Pout. | | Women's fashions ave barbarous; also | th Guo. of the ceneten tae | Charles Furthman, owner of a Park @ became first a tributary principality Of guerillas but bp esiaviishing schools) Aagetphi College in which a young | “Oen's fashions are Narbarous: ab |the door ef the complaint room trying! mow cote, hae beer Girected by en or Turkey, then a kingdom, King Carol, 1" which each nationality strove to}. woman impersonating an Auarch- right in declaring ug to be the more |! #dvance thelr canes der of Supreme Court Justice Gerard to Br Charles, a gallant German who in- 1 een ins eat ite Pre and Ly h i iat threw ® bomb at @ schoolmate [iii acy. { "Where is Mr erney?" he waked | pay nin wife $50 a month alimony, pend. epited warlike dash from a French jucciotism. davem the Hounantans tied, RO represented President Taft? SOME WOMEN ARE FREAKS IN/‘H¢ omy court attendant in “ght. ‘The, ing the disposition of hin ault for asso. other, rendered valuable service to the ig take a hand in the game, claiming | ©&@ the young college students of THEIR FINERY. tendant grinned lute divorce (rom her; in addition plain Russians in 1877 and in the settlement a right to a slice of Macedonia when 't| to-day find tarp ues nae eee No self-respecting |. “Pltying with the baby, Your Honor,” tiffs counsel was allowed $1,000, ‘This t followed hér freedom was con-' should be sliced on the ground of the| then assassination with whi i ear Madam: No self-1 hakelwetae | orden wan Gade: en conbant annslilanes * lo a silc her terri- vandering Viachs,"’ a people of Rou-| amuse themselves? mun—young or old—will look with | 7¢ answere i lon the speedy trial of the case. irmed; Russia stole a slice of The Magistrate raised eyebrows and tory In Bessarabia, recompensing her | Manian ancestry who are presen: In] However, this Is evidence for the| anything but disdain upon over- Ma y | ‘Through an error The Evening World thy another slice of Turkey in the Do- | 89me numbera tn the disputed ground. | prosecution and it 1s true that the de-| dressed. overpainted and overpow. |WAs still more puxaled, but sumpecting | while printing correctly the wbove fi wudja, the flat country on the sea next | Wit, it he Gesu — the lfense should have a chance to present! dered—and sometimes underdressed | that @ covert wssault was being made| yesterday printed nlso a headiing stat. ’ i {Turk lording tt over all in a sleepy ithe present Bulgari: sort of way, hot caring how much the also had won a precarious free- | Christians fought each other, so long Its case. woman who does not Let us turn to a letter from a believe that her ing that Mr. Furthman had been dered to pay $0 a week.”’ t —treaks who think they are making men admire them in thelr so-called on bis dignity by getting him to ask « foolish question, he merely ordered that ‘or. The error tn BUT! FEAR-BANG!--VOU | ARE ROBBING ME-BIFF! That’s What Benign Old Gen- tleman Said and Did to Incautious Pickpocket. ‘When the Bull Moose meeting at Mad!- son Square Garden broke up last night, a silver-haired, benign olf gentleman, | slightly stooped and supporting hunselt jmith a gold-headed grandfather of a | walking atick, came out with the crowd, Peering cavtlously ahead through his | large, round spectacies, he walked | slowly to the corner of Fourth avenue [and Twenty-sixth street, and waited | there for @ northbound Fourth avenue car, John McNally, who also has been known as George Rellly a good part of the time since 188%, when the police put him on record, looked at the old gentle man and his eyes lighted with Joy, A a usual thing, ol gentiomen with gold. hended canes have fat wallets and are not 90 wensitive to an exploring hand a younger men, nor have they the same power of physical rebuke. So McNally executed an artistic, pros wional ‘jomtle." kd gentieman came aware of Mc and persone standing near heard him way, wently } “Sir, 1 fear attempting to rifle my pockets!" The old gentleman then struck Me: Nally on the right eye, the left eye and the nose, When his time-criaped knuckles were brulsed he used the ca! Detective Tacakowski of the Ki Twenty-recond qtreet station came up and rescued the old gentleman from the danger of over-exerting, Also he ar- “l MoNally, lo not care to mt my name, om: | sald MeNally's victim. “I am} going back to England to-day and do hot wish to be délayed longer In reach- my dear xtandehiidre Turning to MoNally, the oll gentle: man said, just before he stepped on « rily ashamed f my} of temper 1 trust you are not | But the 1 gentleman's good wishes didn't do MoNally black eyes any More good than burying a plece of beet- steak in the back yard. At Police Head- auarters to-day he had a distinetly sec- Nd apperrance and a new respect tiemen with gokd-headed srandfathers of walking sticks, 1 ry N * (From the Atlanta “This new book of mi author, “certainly fils a tong-felt want. Then he “chinked" the windows with it and Iaughed at the winter wind, jon.) said the The annual mask and civic ball of th? Mor lsania Yacht Club, to which « t sports of the Bronx and Lon Island shores look forward with eage expectancy, will be held at Nibio's Gar — den, One Hundred and Seventieth street and Third avenue, next Saturay evening Prizes will be awarded for the fancies and most original costumes. Prof theatre It’s easier for a man to climb the Cleo- tra needle than to lend tobaccos with meaning. ‘se... Fatima, Turkish. blend Cigarette — the purest, choicest tobacco—blended with consummato skill, Conmneagmmeer, Delightfully mild — superb flavor. ( “Distinctively Individual” FOLLOWING SPECIAL OFFERINGS: Women’s High-class Dressesand Gowns for Afternoon & Evening; Blouses, Silk & Wool Petticoats, and Black Charmeuse. AN EXTRAORDINARY SALE OR Misses’ & Girls’ Dresses & Suits and Girls’ Coats. ALSO A SALE OF IMPORTED LACE CUR- TAINS, Never discriminates between or young, rich or poor, Ever ready to attack, it is a d if 1D 2B \ t “ODOL” as a It will also eading was corrected by the story dom; and like Roumania and Montene-/ ag he was not’ disturbed, Macedonia |8eX generally deserves to be called bar-( “fashionable modes,” Some women | the first case be called. A shabby pris- ; nevertheless. The Evening World Ways free because of her shelter- and Thrace—meaning most of Turkey |barovs dn its fashions or in anythingy make one think of a printed Pas | oner walked to the front, A to rectify it. Ing mountains, Servia fought back the |!n Europe, a space as bis as Now York lelse. She writes: in which there are too many dialles | "Who is the complainant?” apked the! v in her neighborhood, In the end | State—has been « pretty good Imitation and too many useless words of ex- ltt of the war of 1877 Tursla, would have /Of Made» for thirty-four years, by order Teen eerie atettisn | eutaie When” ine vaaramse (Mamet, aes an ea tel taken Constantinople with the aid of all of the Christian powers in the Treaty a cate ona | Painted themselves and went “on Ee native CANS sen Ae DROE there little peoples if the other powers “Now it appears that the Greeks, Se ards Ate prose ateany ne the warpath” they did so merely to Fpl why tan't he he snapped | hot scared Russia back: +The! yiang and. Hulgarianecthe Montenes| fF Woman barbarous? show thas Ley no longer desived {ihe Magistrate, - at of San Stefano that followed | grins are Servians also, perfectly p penda on the woman, No matter | wy ye peaceful, and not to appear | "Gites h © baby, Bulga a semi-independent, blooded—have agrecd to pool their| What Ix the style, some woman will | NULL “MOWAUAUEY @ WAmah raid the vincipality tributary to Turkey and: issues and conqu their adjoining | to the extreme in dress, Conse- | Sahl dvardvasean Hertlt The Maxiatraty anked the desk with | *signed to her territories running right | ‘erritory in concert. They are do-| quently creators of fashion conceive | singe cine: 1b will laprenad the flat of his hand. pee jown to the Aegean Se: oe te eee nian le for each fo) freak atyles to catoh thelr attention | goog looksqit whe has dnecand goes What ty all this baby business?” he | WICKED THINGS DONE BY CON.) *!"°* ne territory of its own race) and money. .But go back to our | vo) the warpath," looking for some |To#Ted: The attendant pointed to the} . " af 1008 (han tor leave a crc eRlte ee Rie? | mrandinotiiers’ time 48 far | ccoup yeas abundance of | 100" of the prison pen | Are You Still Buying Haphazard? GRESS OF BERLIN. }and then to leave a principality of Mon- enough, What woman to-day would | 1 an abundance sola daleht pyre aan aey The rest of Europe feared that Russia astir or Macedonia tn the middle as a se sae aca Ria ies spending money JOUN B. IR. loner Ga aaa ive worth eames? | Test Hub-Marks might yet Constantinople by. ald of the | Sutter, Ane Re wee 16 Io ay Masa rmous f |THIS LADY RATHER SAVAGE The Magistrate walked to the door and! In buying rubbers, use the same mtpuin ds Vie linerated little peoples | oie, omewnat Upon. thes toimeerst| worn Went Next came Use | AGAINST HER SEX. [took a peck, ‘Then he went right on | judg at hat Roveroa FOUF Bie Ro dnp COnstesg of Berlin. was called. | Wor ston how tan they. oan pet betore| foile trenching annoet to the buch COLT at dediy, {Inside and Ja half a minute was with afehase of shoes, Profit: by your. ex- Disraeli for England and Bismarck for! the great powers catch them and begin| Crinoline Cmagine thelr being | women's styles are barbarous and, [Circle of policemen, clerks . Mee Germany were the giants of the Con-’ to make peace on the old plan. in a bridge crush {f you cay) that Ghat lk worn icimadte bas a | Ing and squatting abou: « dim; Hub-Mark Rubbers this win- P cress; and they with Austria's ald did| Will the Bulgarians get Constantlnopl ieidell tmosnalsia teen the deh we pp Orne. Ineenen d, yellowshaired baby, ud notice how they wear, They these wicked things lin addit to the strip they desire and) oo. in isto the BANK DROE aint ea the fashi le wo- oehinn a who waw}are made in the belief that the pub- They sanctioned the robbery of Rou-|ought to have along the Aegean sea? 1 sa Tih, hobble |. ea ot is scandalously im- es mousta hes, eure and (lie is tired of risking ity money, om nanla by her ungrateful ally in the| Perhaps they never quite dared to hope| Most Wlgar meni modest sult of this fashion were and crowing and} doubtful rubbers and will be glad tol event Aghting about -Plevna, Russia, to get it. ‘They certainty did and ay] skirt."” and in 189 those bustles | or tigi: yen have "] ‘ outright, fa rubber footwear of a definite ‘They cut down Bulgaria to less than | hope and expect to get Dedeagatach as| reaching to the bottom of the skirt, | Carued Hee alien , ROU sera i tale Ph ee i ce i = hey allow ment 0 heli sah ay rier | 3. They gave Austria leave to occupy,| which is Greek $1 population though . rater i I ae eter Sid | fy W D intly with Turkey, the districts of| Turkish in color on the map. They | right to Constantinople as to Great iB aaa aS a Bosnia and Herzegovina, which were to | ought to get It, They ought to-get and | Bulgaria down to t ean, Their pe PHAN Le ead THAT thm faahlonanie (ah, Hl iain Turkish in sovereignty. | keep Crete, and probably will this tim | ple are not in the ajority about a woman Is a good < lade 7 He . They permitted Turkey to retain the| Right here is the one great danger to|in Conaiantinople, anywhere rit neds i uf Novibazar simply to ke ropean peac ja fight the | jr. hereabouts the Turk really has as} ae nd | een iterlogro ‘and Servia apart; for no! Ralkan allies to keep Servia from cloa-| goog a right to rule aa any one, le | nile Khoaa Oa pa reason; and this to oblige noting up the Austrian clalm of « right of | Paneer ani | RUS Ane: Navas ns no 4 Key but Austria, which was per-| way to Salo Whe anya Mech rome sis seepage Meeruene. area) tas tHe fap a in a po ited to send troops there to “keep | fight. Perhaps it is a bluff. are 5 on | ; \ order!” ja good many thousay 28 on ow suse !s not fit to rule —— ale Lepp » buehela \8 @ sop to sentiment they made the! the Bourses of A prany | Birope Many people think thet Ths " refused (9 ed vier hig oft Turk consent to “reforms” in Mace-| statesmen, who would give a good deal! Bulgarians will Le apt to think t Jue came last nl nn h the | eH These reforms, of course nev-|to know how far she will go. imft 40 rulo Conatantinople<i¢ t T h e Co m 1 n g aly a in knees \ to | de ¥ carried out, are the nominal cauge} Also, if the Bulgarians capture Con-| it, in thelr handsain. any [mice wien lie reluctan ded tf nie wil thn , @Y the present war. stantinople will they let themselves be| hands-lt would be one of the w over he mutro : 7a doe ght denon ore Out of that heartless Congress have| elbowed out of it, with 900,00 of the | greatest citi f the aw turnkeys® added that fro e asbirhy-four years of mas a iane t troops in Europe in arma? her pens Ee moment the any reacheil the stauiun Boston Rubber Shoe Co age, of misgovernment and tyranny, | js another thing many people would like fe — o-day all other busines# had been Inid . mee eed perhdtous conquest by Christians of ' to know. Red Cross Cou h Drop See Next aside, and everbody 9 gard hot ablished UNh: 1 Christians under guise gf prox hp Bujgerians have not euch @ good] Little Oweemests, vow eave & locked in @ cell had shouldered and Qi eee i condition. LACE PANELS AND BED SETS AT ATTRACTIVE REDUCTIONS IN PRICES, Fifth Avenue, 24th wud 35th Streets, Nem York. “The Malicious Microbe”’ man, woman or child, old dly menace to health and even The most dangerous of microbes which enter the system through the mouth can be rende-ed practically harmless by the constant use of mouth wash. leasant to use and delightfully re‘resh’ng. keep your teeth in a hea tiy There ‘s nothing “Just as Go:d” as “ODGL,” Price 50 Cents. At All Druggists and Department Stores. GEO. BORGFELDT & CO. NEW YORK CHICAGO SAN FRANCISCO

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