The evening world. Newspaper, December 11, 1912, Page 22

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ae t She as aaiorid. ESTABLISHED BY JOSPPH PULITZER, Published Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 53 90 Park Ro New York. LST) Dive NO. XXXII. BY N ATZOR, President, 62 Park Row, COME ABouT WHY 1 NORTH DAK T fo) 4 LaHR Feeiare ss Shek how. SIR HES Abays Don’ ENA ome grr paxor4| 1 BER Ly SrepH rnited States | AM Countries In the International ' DEAR, rable! de Corrie ‘Rew York “bvenion Won Fa $3.50] One Year. .tcrsesssss + $9.78 NDRBDS of miles of rolling pratt |My ba Br OER. running north into Canada and spread | VO, 18,737 ing out in every direction (except | cil macnn where the Turtle Mountain district o \ its knobby peaks skyward), and strewn THE SEAL OF LIFE SAVING. ) ( . ) prairie a collection of the most immense N VIEW of the deep and widespread sympathy with efforte to / \ W] on earth—farms that would swallow @ Eastern city without showing the added farms whose countless acres of wheat are the marvel of America and feed a part of the civilized world. Fleck this p fight the evil of tuberculos chould still think that only the wealthy can give real help, For it Nes within the power of every man and woman, boy and girl in New York to contribute at once, easily, directly, almost without J | with scores of new-born hustling towns, bind its once inaccessible distagp in this city it isa pity that anybody together with railroad lines—and—you have North Dakota—a State , brief history, but a mighty future. 4 The name “Dakota” means “allies” or “confederation.” It {s an indian word and was used to describe the Sioux confederacy. The nickname “ | State’ is also due to the number of these savages who for centuries infested tie effort, one penny or a thousand pennies to help drive this dread disease out of its favorite haunte among the crowded, hard-pressed . workers of the city. During the Christmas season hundrede of thou- , eanda, young and old, can lend a hand in a way both simple and attractive—with Red Cross Christmas seals. The Committee on the Prevention of Tuberculosia, which is mede up of well known physicians, social workers, heads of leading charitable societies and interested citizens, has devised this simple plan by which anybody can contribute, any day or every day, any amount, however small, without trouble and without publicity. The Red Croes Seals are one cent Christmas stamps bearing a holly-framed head of Santa Olaus and a message of Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. They are to be stuck on the back of letters, packages and post cards, From No. 1 Madison avenue the Committee issues them singly, by thousands or by millions. The returns go either to maintain and extend the work of free tuberculosis dispensaries, to establieh special clinics for the free treatment of children suffering from tuberculosis, to conduct fresh air classes for hundreds of chi!- dren predisposed to the disease, or toward additional hospital beds for poor consumptives. iv 1d $23,000,01 ke 1 i i North Dakota had’ had its start. In the twen! deiketntetas pd pads mite ia eee bid shal Now IF THEY, ‘T Bie, Jam GOING OH 2a! 1890 to 1910 its population more than trebled, in ihe latter year wane ith { ; EE THOSE HINTS ly ‘Mra : not gladly welcome a way to help reduce this terrible toll. MUST BE From now until the New Year a Red Cross Christmas Seal on THicic HEADED every letter, card and parcel that we send’ means in the aggregate thousands of dollars of substantial aid toward rescuing those in the clatches of the enemy. It is worth doing. These gay little stamps carry more than their message of cheer and good will. They mean Iffe, ‘hope and a lifting of heavy burdens of misery. Buy them and use them generously. nrc PRINTING FOR POSTERITY. T= who know are continually, warning us that our modern Apt win Dont Nou WOUL vine Cony: tbe) of North Dakota 1s the story of a dozen other Western @tites, Ite first real settlers were Soctch Highlanders, who came down from Canada, Tt BUCKLES was in the Louisiana purchase; and for the next few years at! or part jof » ON YOUR! ft changed (dentity with pu , ; IT Loup Seo For instance, in 1812 ft cae SHOES ? sections of it belonged in succession to Michigan, Wisconsin, lowe, Minn and Nebraska. Meanwhile the few hardy pioneers were forced to battle & their Hives against one Inélan attack after another. ‘The Indian troubles reached their helght jugt a | inatran the two Dakotas were organized as Dakota. ‘Tore in 1861. Between Indian massacres and the civil war, fee new Territory did vety little growing for several y: But the Indians last partly quelle. And the ending of the civil war gave a chaace for immita- tion. Then growth began. Soon a plan waa formed to separate North and South Dakota. Ag early as 1876 {t was proposed to make North Dakota a Territory by itself under the name “Pembina.” The scheme fel! through. But in 1889 the northern part of the yWe- kotas was admitted to the Union as a State under the name of “North Dakota.” Four years earlier the wave of Scandinevian immigration had begun to powr Owner, into North Dakota. The railroads by annual “exour- | A Trebled i sions brought thousands of new settlers. Tows sites : ; sprang up everywhere in prairies that a year or two Population. before had been desolate. the rounde one day he observed his thersidaeter hanging in the room, He inquired of the Woman © the howe if she had remembered ble taitrue- tions. - Speed Records. RY as we may,” says the men with the “ iridescent whiskers, ‘“‘we cannot produce, runners who can equal the records made by those foreign countries, Why, here's an ar | count of a man who made @ thousand meters “Indeed, aie, 1 d0,"* was the respome. “T'Kang to see it does not gst too high."” Good!" exclaimed the doctor, “And whet de you do whes the temperature rises above 40 do books and newspapers are printed on paper that will never find its way to posterity. Only’ year or two ago Frank P. Hill, Librarian of the Brooklyn | Public Library, tgjd a conference of fellow librarians that “in many instances papers ‘published within the last forty years had: begun to discolor and crumble to such an extent that it woukd hardly ‘pay. to bind those which had been folded for any length of time.” “In fact he predicted that Rews paper “which carries with it the aveda of early J decay” is likély fo’ return to dust in about fifty years.) °° English: librarians declare that “the ordinary novel printed on| ¢¢ e821 XOUR DOMESTIC DIF- 140 ‘net let your busbénde quarrel, It cecasion temporarily to avail herself of the servi of the butler’s wife it was observed that whea- ever the duties of the two brought them in con- 'funetiow this wrlde’s 'éyen would eine with extrazr- ‘afuary ‘devotion, “Jour, wife: seems wonderfully attached te you, “Why, what fort” ment.”* aN, ts / P aut ‘ mt great profit, travel to every home where Rs i te 70u, | *Vy, ven I game fo see you de tdder diy you _; “light, epongy paper has a life of about forty issues. In other words, ANY, OR ‘mise Gat OF takes ewe’ to make a buoceseful argu-| The railroad mesa gesotvea might: ith gnentin ettite SS Prysiarterphens hace | Seat RENT Sere Mt reper laa peepee Ao Mg : _ M yy - +. fi —_——_———— ees Is have eeen fit to make ¢hat a part} "+ i jered Thomas, complacently, 5 vert it ier unfit 1 agen and not even worth rebinding after vauorn > Of the rules for the antety and weltare| atwy'it fet eckenin'T'—Harpar's Magasien, | Ho™* fy edad Begs clrculating among forty readers.’ a - of their moving machinery, the safety EET Se TS n In thie manner : The American Newspaper Publishers’ Association {¢ a good deal the Colorado and ( ' ar seek gt re ee year Tough. The Three Bada A ‘. Southern Radlroad Pian reeet AiO Scams nary Sbaree) te HERR te 0 lot of injustice ia the world," | y OF DONAVARO tells « story of - worked up over this matter, and has set. Mr. John Norris to ponder : declares ‘wer <iien {t were a COMMON, everyday rule,| “T rachel hog al psesrwesiipd heen Which be got ls fire fob, Toe applied te 0 | ways and means to preserve or pickle newspapers of to-dey so that domestic _cenfiict Bae eee ok gtach ibltince ibe se rents le ae ia cage | 1 le ship,” He acid that be hnew eoeyfting | posterity may have plenty of our “current history” to pore over. bed a ae rooedure ts another question. I: may) Thos bmase ott there oe ted ie hich wat oe own sbeat © ved, fibegt Ste y he wife will have the prerog-| ging that they are vws,Sand wo] "yee on re We wondr what posierity vould say about it? Probably that i aoe yaar pe 3 } Bi ative of complaint tn eich cages to the| have to comiebech,”” replied the diaguated slinian,| yon” oiig, “nt ‘he captain wilh « ein, wae | it counted on us to hand down the facts in proper style. But we Peralgen in "4 | in J possible loss of the husband's job, —Clactanett, Beenirer, that rope there end I'll ira 3059 ie ny + fancy Poaterity might also politely heg us not to overdo it. ‘To have | uses the mew egy O 4 4a itt Penge tt oA pala A Thoughtful Woman. the rope malate und toe pointed to oc descend upon them as a heritage stupendous masses of imperishable | beara Wa caaséaiy 4g sis may, in truth, KEEP BACK the word! , ‘paysic1AN tells a story of a philanthropic | “"'rners are two of your ends,” he eld, een, daily newspaper and periodical files full of repetitions and reduplica- ~ domestic troubles § Of disapproval et cold coffee. On the Gostor ins Pennarivenis coal mining tows | gagdenly, before the skipver could stop bith, he ’ ‘ Ve tions of matters already bountifully preserved and recorded might Tee cae, ila jletredlaioe ches j saad strike future generations as rather too much of a good thing. on hie wind but his work, Otherwise Selection, elimination, condensation of current events are what | own eee ©, others hen teed make the present valuable to the future. Anything that tends {o| endangered. Worry end lom ef eleep render intelligent digext-making a habit and a necessity is to be grate- best ote me {fully welcomed. In these days of mountains and avalanches of cheap { novels, magazines and printed matter, increased each year by mil- i other hand, the husband may have a who presented each household with « mice] .icked wp the rope and heaved if overboard, may. | wilt ‘™Means of defense in showing up a nag-| new thermometer and told the people the necessity ing as he watched it disappear: another Sing wife by “binding her over to keep | of mattaining proper temperature, When making end to your rope,""—Boston Traveler. ————= 1012, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Rvening World). OMBTIMBS it is not s0 much a cold heart ds cold fear that keeps @ man from proposing, The morning ts @ precarious time. Sometimes a TRIFLING quarrel over a bit of bacon will make the whole day pst Spa i as miserable, unhappy and unprofitable. the line, ae C. W. Hgan Pree een The difference between an amateur and an expert at love making is Aue en ve his home ta more and Ohio Ratiroad ce-echoes the | that the former says “I love you” as though it were a jest, while the latter | het Cheerful mood suggested by the , railroad folk, Suppose one or two little HE Empire nights . “ * @entiment, aaying: ( “4 7 } lions i tons, there is blessed relief in the thought that most of it will| ‘Any married man who hes had quar- neue “Hove en ollvel” es though: were s.decleraiion of sternet devotion. pas 2 jaded Sg Pk ak Hho ig Pees - neg Se | Fy 7 “ retty mle, | by. op away to dust of its own sweet. mercy. pd am Ste ree Know. has. he pi The Lord made many colors—the colors of the sky and the color of the|umes. Whatever the fault ts, it is bad This model ts { \ ithout going so far as did Ike Partington, who, when he read |must be HREE trom worry. Clear up |fo#*. But black He reserved for coquettes, widows—and the devil. es alte aaa ‘Skouuoa stely ‘aimole, ‘soesie erything that tends to lessen his em- clency. The railway man that is har- assed by domesfc troubles cannot per- \ the Bible, tore out each page as soon as he finished it in order not i to lose his place, we feel that the speedy annihilation of much that : — Just @ Mttle sacrifi t forth at the Why does the best man at a wedding always go about with the air of oe Sime wvanetr the werleved . I director, urge the bridegroom to “brace up” in the voice of an| party, makes it possible to cope with the we read day by day nek by weak ith ‘tora PROPERL’ a cenere ie “bin y day and week by week is far from unmitigated mis- ta ed egal ha man to|“Méertaker and sign the marriage certificate as though he were signing a|>read-winning process without leaden ia vit try to be @ little more considerate when |deash certificate? feet and weary heart. vee he gete up (n the morning. Let him A ae t an ar . fgument. It is the big soul ee grumble because his coffee te cold. Nowadays a “good fellow" will sign his name to alntost any kind of @| who, owing he is RIGHT, Tots it «Oo 4t him leave his wife feeling cheer- note—ezcept @ love note. ' at that, without the human desire to tw, ‘Then the will be in ehepe for hin PROVE it #0. It is a give and take aya we . ork 4 osttion. ‘To give the word of cheer i “ ‘“WWivee ehould bear in onlad the ce- The man who has rung all the changes on love before marriage is not|PT°P ‘ Vet % mM p | 1 eterams.| who wishes to know whether his wife upon their aus. [likely to pine for a change afterward. He has usually fought so tong and|*?, nee”, the dave work with is cor ty which 1 ( ba [whould have half or only one-third the| *Ponaibll tainly no school copy-book theory, but ) As Thursday the ArHtetn | souey which remains after all debta | MtRds’ @houlders. Not only the hus-| hard to escape the hook that by the time he ts caught there ts no more!a practice most profound, Kmpire effect job. | tained by applying | beading over the gown and the beading with bon. ‘There are app-! arate sleeves that Just prettily full, pa these can be fi with bands * or lone edges, wi elther square or ro No prettier B antiverndry of ¢ © of F ead a band's life, bu: the lives of scores of ! pap pen tt ‘ o A ise soul has said, in the course vould be found, tekaburg by the 1 would! Tguggest tat he pee Dy ghey tpi Bo others, perhaps, depend on hte abiiity | 72M elt dm him, tin eriny han the wage dere of Company, a ste Ny tol en: {of $9 to 63 uw month, wy every xooa | tink quickly and correctly. Wives! — 14 remodelling the English divorce laws, WHY did they: provide no|_, “it '# better to forgive than to receive PRA iS wt a » Vol. ;Cvok and housek a" a aus aoe Ss “ m xf forgiveness.” sineers, who were present and crutsed | gq add Pura vsge relive Micky Ay pl An lowa Idea. escape whatever from the apouse who snatches the morning paper first cose the river da the penton oats and took divide tate wemmainder Then he wil be 4 Vacuum cleaner, which bus | 4nd then insists on telling you everything init? The Error. . dpe paid for work and she will be paid only recently come into favor, —z Gre 420 P, M. on Dec, 12, 1s, By publishing} H * i . Q 7 this you will do me # great fem my for hers, and the rest that is left over ‘wae covered by a ent granted The first sign of love is a man's wilingness to quarrel with you. As By Cora M. W. enleaf, hovld ve equally ehared. What. say |dn 190? to Dante! Hess of West Union, la. i filo ¢ vg |rorstve you? There ts nothing to forgive. her weader Mns S |His device was a carpet wweeper im {22M a# he remains perfectly polite he is not serious, But where there's| «rhe error that has parted us was mine, od and Friendly Advice.” which as i rolled over the floor a bel-| strife there's hope! And it must cast it jow while we live af lows operates to create a Mite Fe Across our paths that never more will Alas, you can have a pianola sent up on trial, but you've got to take a} twine waa one of those present on the oc: casion) and also to all the other mem- vere of Company H, who were present who " To the Eaitor of The Krentug om that day, AUCHAEI. HAYIG8, | "“1'swin to anewer our erroneous friend |4Us UP from the carpet and diech Siation BN. ¥. ¥. 0. | inet anka for good and trlendly adetos | 1t@ bane of water, the bellows 4# Iked, cotton are being muck g and there are the familiar patiitee h And Intermingle as we two had plan: &nd lawns. Member Company in reference to curing himeeit of haca | Wovked fram a crank ‘on one of th Ausdand oy trust. T made the error, but Fate lets it stand, For ihe wadiamsemlll Chances for M @rinking. I @o not intend to give him ceamricals : ae Rainey rip kG CER kaa th : ; | ener somblen those marketed to: . T was too hasty when I thought thet you ne gOWN \ il requiem me eto To Vaan Wa tvine| aver inowing tat & man's conscience broad flat nousle to mo Th e P Qo cket E ney cl ope di 2. Were one with me—could feel and {garde of cuatertal " i" ty yet ju , but i! oart-t nde A ce me hint opportunities there are in the heart talk in refwence to, hig tetter, | Brasped by one ef the operator's hands | 4. What causes Dowleggedness? + 6x. (What ts the moon?) A dead cin- ay cat earangiei tat wake tis Profession of mining engineer? How ‘rhe very fact that he knows bis course| While the other hand turne @ drite pul-| 638. What ia distitlation? | der, composed of porous lava; reflecting |7He Purity a! ing. Jong t the necewary college corer, lis wrong proves that the battle is already|1#Y eared by a rope with a fan, which| 589. Why are moat of the bones|the sun's light. Pattern Neo, Teae: &e,? [have « Kood high school edtica-| pair top and am employed in aswther ne at present. Qk. G Paterson, N. J And grand and beautiful. Forgive:me, friend, I put you on @ pedestal, nor knew | ‘The cruel wrong that I was doing you. rhahae ure ate @ucke the dust up into a receptacle car- Won, That ight of omntecteat|rieg py the handle above the fan, says | MOHOw? ; the Scientific American, A machine fol-} 584. How may an alcohol lamp Jowing this plan of more than forty| wick be made to yield nearly’ color- think good thoughts, concentrating his) years ago, if well made meohantoalty, 638, (Why must phosphorus de wept under cold water until used?) Because it | combines with the air's oxygen cut in three ‘siees, omall % or 3, me@am | 38 or 40, large 43 etal power within our consclences guide: to the right and trath, Endeavertng to und takes Gre from the ali wet fric- Pattern No, 7688—Empire Nightgown, bust measure, . Legal Ald Sovtety, 280 Broadway. | mind on something useful (o mankind | would present a good appearance along. | (¢## fame? ton, T loved you so that I was blind to alt R ont : ‘To he YAior of The Brewing World will doubtiess ll the vacancy caused by | side of the modern machines an@ doubt- 585, What are the most important} 82. (In, what direction does the mag-| ‘The little things that should have made | ~ Where can 1 apply’ tor i thoughts of drink. His leiter Indioates|1¢88 would give good results in actual] uses for common salt? netic needle point?) It does not point| me wise | Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASH free, or at nominal rates, concerning|that bis future wil be « success. His | #* ‘ ‘HESE questions will’ be answered | directly north and south, but toward | Until your heart was mine beyond recall New BUREAU, Donald Building, 00 West Thirty-second street my late husband's insurance money,! character {s meant for @ oetter life. All aT THOUGHT a Friday, Here are replies to Mon-| the earth’s magnetic north and south} And you revealed your true eelf to te site Gimbel Bros.), corner @ixth avenue and Thirty-second whieh the company will not pay me? | rational human beings have will power. Fin jOvaHT. day's: pol mine eyes. Elderly Aunt—My dear, I have just MRS. C. M. [Only idiots and tnsane persons have 638. (Why do grown people's bones | 680. (What causes eleet?) It ts enow| Forgive you? Ah! it’s you that must stampe for each pattern ordered. that has been partly melted by passing forgive IMPORTANT--Write your addres plainly and always A Wife's Allewan. non He only needs more enlighten- me he xt ai § bhe panaeen of earthly ‘lle through @ bed of warmer air on its way | The wrong that I must suffer while 1} § Pattee {aise wanted. Add twe conte for letter postage if in @ hurry, : we ‘cost from a man CHARLES BMBER. te sargh. . re, 4 Ontate New Tork, or sent by mall on receipt of ten cents in ectn og ‘These .

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