The evening world. Newspaper, December 18, 1912, Page 26

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

—_e | f | ing World | j ESTABLISHED BY JOSPPH PUMTZER. | ed Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 53 to r 7 Ecol Buin Park Row, New York. 1 The Even LPH PULITZER, rh Row. i PENOUE AULA. Treamuren, ¢1 Park Row ToHN, See THE BEAUTIFUL JOSHPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 6 Park Row. | 200, SHAWL | BOUGHT i the Poat-Office at New York ap Second Mater, FoR AUNTIE Gubscription “Nat to The Evening) For England and the Continent an@ World for the United States All Countries in the International and Canada. Postal Union. Svsdve $2.50] One Year........ ovee $9.78 .80|One Month.... + be NO. 18,744 | VOLUME a WANTED: SOMEONE. R. FOSDICK may be right when he says we can’t have eiMi- | cient city government with apathetic citizens. It is never- theless true that great cities have owed their greatness mainly to the imagination, foresight and disinierested devotion of men in power—officers of government who looked far and honestly | into the future and planned and wrought accordingly. | Have we many such in the government of New York? j It is true that in a democratic city no man can work without | public sanction behind him. Yet does anybody doubt that public Opinion hereabouts would enthusiastically follow the lead of big ideas | and wise foresight—if it saw any such and could unhesitatingly trust them? Mistrust rather than apathy is what ails us. Lamenting the $10,000,000 stolen by ‘I'weed in building a court- house, Mr. Fosdick exclaims: “What we need is someone to translate | graft into tuberculosis, which we cannot check because we have uo money, and padded payrolls into infant mortality, which we have because we cannot control the financial means to fight it.” What we need is ‘someone,’ ” What this city needs ia men in authority who will restore the instinct of confidence and trust. We are fast getting to a point | where we cannot conceive a city government whose elements are not in a perpetual state of sordid, selfish clash, No wonder we “dann | our officials too much.” We yield more and more to the conviction that the only men that can be in office are those at whom we must | look askance. What we need is, indeed, “someone.” Tt would be a fine thing if New York could turn itself over body | and soul for a few years to a commission of wise, disinterested meni | whose only “jobs were jobs of public weal, and whose favoriie “graft” was beguiling the public into spending its own money for it own good, We might not have a chance to do much “governing” for | # while ourselves, but we could at least acquire the blessed habit of | Delieving there is somebody we can trust. How 00 Yu Lice THOSE SLi STockinGs, AREN'T THEY LOVELY 2 HAND PA “Two For #50. Met Give Trem Sid Cousin BELL AND | BOUGHT THAT TEN CENTS TOY For THe KID ---2¢e—____—— “GLORIOUS! HE Coal Trust decision is a great victory. Everybody must see it. Attorney-General Wickersham says it is a “distinct meas- | ure of public relief.” President Baer of the Reading system vaye he is satisfied. \ Special Assistant Attorney McReynolds is jubilant because “ihe Government has won,” | } The Goal Trust has also won. The Coal Trade Journal says there will be no drop in the price | of coal. | A big operator says it will go up 1 per ton. A great victory for all concerned, “But what good came of it at last?” Quoth little Peterkin, “Why, that I cannot tell,” sald he, “But ‘twas a famous victory.” } $—_————-- i \ THE LAW. \ “The streeis of New York belong to the people and | elved Mr. Jarr and M ‘Or, Daily Magazine. Wed i BY w Pree nt (The New York Evening World Sarr’ rather, he received Mr. employer and tolerated Mr. Jarr, nesday, December By Maurice Ketten Ed AT THOSe HANDIKER CHIEFS Fo hoe HAND EMBROIDERED AREN'T THOSE EXQuisiTe SEALFuR Lint sHieY ARE FoR NG BIOA4 Pain MOTHER. Mr. Jarr Decides It’s Better to Be a Live Poor Man Than a Dead Rich One 2..." PFFISIDSISSSIISS F99FIS99ISSSISSSS SEISGSISSSIGSSSOS Had it been a capitalist or @ penni-) “The Kingfish au Albion Is generally less but well dressed foreign nobleman, | good here, and we'll have a plain steak. both of whom would have snubbed him | That with a salad will do, eh? Not very : | ", as the hall boy took Mr, Jarr's| wit open disdain, Mr, Jarr's boss!hungry, eh? Well, It's a good th cannot be parcelled out, hired or given by any authority | vercoat gingerly and the boss's |would have roared for the best table by! You should never take a rich or heavy by wayof special privilege.” | $i,a00 sable-lined outergarment with |the Fifth ayenue window. cheon at midday, Sometiing simple, yy, 4 jawed reverence, the hall porter gave| “Do you like vintage wine?" asked /something simple. Then one Is ready No owner whose property abuts on the street has | jthe hall boy a glance of sneering sig-|Mr. Jarr’s boss as he scanned the lun-\for a course dinner in che evening and | nificanc any more control over the street in froni of his premises etapa than any other citizen.” 1912, * Publishing Co, boss did not even need to eon menu. “I never take anything ja bite at some but a dry sauterne with luncheon.” jafter the th julet and se atve, eh ct place | ry ss Wort itell the club steward to give them an| Mr, Jarr implied that the sauterne, “That's the way I prefer it,” replied “No hotel or theaire has the right to permit any NING back in’ the eray wnips | OOM ure table In the grill ro When | would suit him too. As a matter of fact) Mr, Jarr. hiell tngieente oe ith ee 4 : | cord upholetering of his boss's “e,£'X¢ ® Poor relative or retainer a | Mr, Jarr very seldom did order a vin-) And this was true enough. He to vehicle to stand in front of the premises waiting for | lnousine, none the ideasing (Cet we do tt with more or less r tage wine at luncheon—or breakfast jsomething plain and simple fur lun- trade, |tuwe to the cheufteur with ite ivory | ealnt dinner either, cheon—say sinkers and coffee or beef Mauthplece, the cut glass bouques hold- | er the gold-faced clock in its flat muro. Age, and all the appointments | of comfor, for personal town travel ot} do, Mr. dary seurmured tol Thue Ohief Magistrate McAdoo. who organ police traffic system of New York Cily, THE FACT. wed the the wellet rrrnnnnnnnnnnneele Memories of Players —-- and beans, in all th that the white-tied qu serve their ten-cent portio * He didn't go to the theatre or opera often, and when he did he also took a dainty minutene ol. ee SPAY GRAN: ic aes meeif: i bite afterward in the private hall, as The streets of New York, which belong to the people, loaaaieineston anieeetntnsllt | re H Of Other D ays. the communicating crack In (he wall ts are let for money by hotel proprietors, who designate ex- | ‘Then his gaze fell upon the troubled | THOMAS W. LE Si called in Harlem flats, acily what cabs may stand in front of their doors for the {countenance of hie bose sitting. beside KEENE. i By Robert Grau. i ne, the: iunoheon) Mr. Jars boss, and he added to himself But you'd never think I to look at i then!" | After many checks, owing to conges- {ton of traMe on Fifth avenue, and thet service of the public. ‘or these special privileges the favored cab companies pay the hotels $250,000 a year, Copyright, 1 by The Press Pub was HHOMAS W. KEENE'S careor modelled closely on the satisfied that he was mak’ tan jeventful day for his employee, discoursed alibly on the beauty of service, the duty jof one man to another, “Yes, the working classes d , rd i Co, (The New York Evening World), Irving, who afierward be- leader of the English stage. BOE FeAl his $250,000 the cab companies take from the | rant Storia of & Tot of ‘untiin Unes maintained by Forrest real career began in 1873 when| ie ona: tie employer Has tremendous ockets of the public in fares four times high as the ; MlANUGRiapenian. toe and McCullough. | Keene's reall he followed Join MeCutlough in tne! yeireu Ry caine eaninyseenae Pp p es as high as they the atreet at the slightest opening in- SS name was Thomas I. Eagles-|management of the California ‘T peliepemplanen ny. Phe: employee: hae need be. stead of walting for a cessation in the|ton, Though starting ws a supernumer-| or muny years ae an actor aro no responsibility, He looks at the clock, ‘ iIine of equipages, the bos tmp: ary at Niblo's Garden in 18%, he b ved hia . p{teaves hit work, and that's an end of Independent cabs at cheaper rates have no standing at motor car arrived at the Dodo Club—jcame one of the six great tragedians te manele My vee viral fl the cares of the day for him, But the hotel doors. he mont exalusive ich old men's hone of the last half of the nineteenth cen-| with incentive and ef whom Keene oncg [employer has the worry and respons'- n New York, |tury. He was also the very last of the| said: we once) Diity of Keeping his plani up to effi Bur A dull-faced hall porter, who was the| Forrest school, leaving no or, Myeranio dine pultiee , ciency and his goods in a profitable a pride of the club because every mem-| Asa lad 1 was wont to so to Wood's Ay ae agit NM Bay of me ‘He is marke: twenty-four hours out of tie he favored oab companies are content ver believed he was really as English | Museum (where Daly's Theatre now! fee 1 he -— in? woo Ditousti: © shall gays ~ che “ hid OW} feel I have not Idvored inv. 889 ; havhotalnare eontant ay he looked, and as overbearing to the | stands) at Oke A Wik. nee ave. net isbored: tn. vain | Mr. Jarr could have told tum that 1 ‘| MAE MACYAALL RAGE EAL een he teats RAGA Rees Harel BUE (eRne wanceetinel to Alandicg™) Ge gantuvag had te were TM Why worry? Sone n that! atone, ‘The last twenty years of hl } ies ners as his manner indl- | pemarkable vo npany whieh ins q " ” ins |= iy activity are replete w ‘< ——-- oe ——:| *|ciuded Louis Aldrich, Henry Lee, Oliver] tiie frat genuine whit was nigra ng hours and getting his bread and | Byron and Dowinick Murray. 5 del! p afierward, se annnnnnannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnste Ge > Byron Boston as Coupeau in Assommo' t | Hiood Reason Two performances were given dally—| hut Keene would not. modite me, Ute coffee? Any sweet?” asked etters From the People} and very ten © aerest, Bay was) tet, Would Eat Madly he cone yeh” gh Wall wl atk aroun 0 RARE A ARORA POCO ODA ARA ARAN Presented not only every night, but at] imatum is perhaps due the fact taat te club. The waiting Ist of the Dude | the inees as well, How rehearsals ; sp ae : ub Is the largest of any in the city, A “1 Cam Go Him (ne Better’ | they were for nome tint Ineffective. He ee » accomplished may enix te cone| (?.c1%,00 become henceforth a onal couse has to die bstc y me To tae Editor of ‘Tae Evening World passed a supplement to them, which \ = ay Oh @ CON! dart actor, | member & now He G, @ Faber of Calcago that! completely anawered his purpose. 4 [dectured. And yet It wao in this orel A, it nappened thle remarkable ret ber can be admitted, A waiting list of in ninety-elght years, or the yeur 200] iis iast he exempted from the meohint | [Sanization that Keene gained ils] ergyat of the wot attracted vant ateons 700,18 rather tlattering Weill the Agure ten will ve written wx tlmes) tony of {ie former, after one manth BYAB en experiance, tion from managerial sources Wee ae, |ihe foremost men of the city are on jn one day In reference to the date] ait itevkguardy and pickpocn oe In the Ave yeara he played at Wood's, | cole was one of the millionaire circus! *°. 00, memuers of this ! "te mem Now, I think I can go him three better] asy there wi 9 and plokpockets, Next Keene assumed aver one hundred dit-| pore Peary aire clvCus Heyship is just 1,90, and it i always nota ii & golden a 1 actors of this pe and he saw fn rr) and nine years sooner, for, In 2001, on| genament to be Pa FOnk Poles Sach season, And What ®l ireane the coming tragedian, Cole's; tt January the first, we can write the! that sluggish organ into a el range, what versatility! Fancy 81 idea, however, was that Keene s iy etuee Mi. —dart that doopite the “one” nine thmes: Firat, 1-1-1, then * SUFFRA 2. [Player appearing as Jack Cade One! submit Hl aait in be nianee 1h Ny Jarge m ership and the eagerness of A. M. and 1-1-1 A, M,, alee 1 PLM, ded ve er GE. | {night and as Pantaloon in pantomime |. give Meld eae et In UU thousands to join, few seemed to P.M. and 1-1-1 P, M. ‘. jowanee, } the next, or supporting Lydia Thompson ,, if Fie lavail themselves of the privileges o HERBERT D. OW, To the Editor of The Evening World | In “Ix!o Forty Thieves" and “Ptue | “If You do not make more money thea their membership. No: a avul Was in Fourteen-year-old Pit Ldvingeto! Mrs. wants to know what others, Heard one week and the noxt playing @1¥ of the other tragedians in any one the porary, not a soul in the ert gale sisaries ( - Plats ee | have to eay about ‘a wife's allowance,” | Macbet), Othello and Richard UM, ‘oar, that year T will release you, | Two Old forsiis slumbered In Jeather sh School, New Brunswick, T am alngle, therefore do not speak in| Yet this merely indicates the wide, Keene agreed and contracts were jotaira by the front window of the main | A Tip From Olden Daye. favor of either man or wife, Hut 1! lrange of Keene's work for Afty-two signed. William It, Hayden. a reiative hey’ Woke tp when a pretty we oon ‘Zep Poenina bya dia. | MRK her Idea GF & man paying his wite| | Weeks In the year, In such an enyiron-)0f Cole, Was the ostensible manager, | woman tripped by holding up her skirts, pal doctors are @ salary te ridtouloui rtatniy, a man! n ¢ ra of Theatrical people were horrifled to Th ryly ‘ 7 Ment a dozen of the stars of the stage ney cackled dryly anc Pe ee ivy P. U. @." of the olt the stax Phen th ackled dryly and became ee oes poe, ‘ae Pr. Praca does not marry a woman to be lot that day ad their careers mouided| Mthosraphs, scores of different kinds| moribund agaln. slowly bot surely into shape. ards hold his job du [and in every color of the rainvow, vole place w upho! Appendix” of local affaire--would tt nother a salary? True marriage ix a thing | Iodia Thompson advised Keene to & ,l representing Keene tn various Sho 8° | to Rt coon bp Une Maren ba well to enforce laws in @ Cashion | of a lifetime, and what belongs to to Tandon; also aiding tie actor with! Pelan roles, The campaign of advers! t's eat honor \o belong to the modelieg after the foliowing? 1 copy | belongs to the other also. And unl r influence, In I8Tl-2 Keene played inj Using has never been equatied | Podo ¢ "sald the boss, vom an old book: “Henry IV. enacted | # couple can come to thie cont “Why |e the West called ‘wild??"| var Jodvamas in the Ei nh! Starting in 18 Keene had fittern! massed they had better not set masied at all, an #, wiih moderate success. @ome sumptuary laws, prohibiting the | before bhey are “It probably heard some ce the) provin tse of Gold and Jewels in dress; but | | things said about it in the East.” a his supporting company was the late Man. He died in in| Years of prosperity. [Le Qecame a rival his thought was, “I'd rath poor man than @ dead rich one." Aeeeeccesonecoosesossoesosooosoesoeneoecesaesoessge |oiner ved In it. k lunch places | Mr. Jarr shook his head in assent, but | be a living | PTO eke STATE BY - , 35—0O REGON— " NE Motto: Ee rT. {e) HU “The Union.’ pb Bays? ER OUR stolid Indian chiefs, travel ! stained and weary from long jour- neying, stalked into St. Louls ove day in 1832, bearing loads of rich furs and strings of wampum, which they offered in exchange for the “Great Medicine.” When they were asked what they meant by the “Great Medicine” they explained they re- ferred to a magic book which they had heard called “The White Man's Bible.” In far off Oregon they had been told of the Book, and thvy had traversed half a continent of wilderness, bringing all their wealth with them, to purchase a copy. The story spread throughout the East. And etraightway parties of missionaries flocked westward to carry Christianity to the Oregon savages. Two women, wives of missionaries, were in one of these parties and were the first white women to cross the North American Continent. The chiefs’ Journey was thus one of the important causes that brought settlers to Oregon, (Awd, indirectly, It led to an off-and-on thirty-year war be- tween the settlers and the ravages.) Oregon ad been opened to settlement for some years before the missionaries and their followers came there. Lewis and Clark had explored it, And John npany had built “Astoria,” a trading: village, at Columbia as far back as 1811, Even earlier than that, in 178, a Boston sea captain y, had discovered the mouth of a huge river 1 had named it after his ship, the Columbia, Cook anj other explorers, too, had at various Jacob Astor'x American Fur mouth of the the The Chiefs and th named “Great Medicine.” | (in. —— times ran slong the*coast, In the sixteenth century Drake had claimed the whole region in Queen Eliza- veth's name, had called it Albion, and had had a hot fig two with the Spantards, who claimed it for Not less than four nat! ns, soon or Afterward France also tried to seize It. late, squabbled over Oregon. Russia's cl@ms about led to a war, So did Englane Indeed, at one time it was arranged that our country and Great Britain should as: Joint ownership over tt. Oregon has from time to time been a very holly of contention in the diplomatic wa Up to 186 all the United Siates territory on the | “Oregon.” What the name “Orezon" comes from 4 been definitely decided, though there are f its origin, ain. cifle coast was known as 4 what it means has never no less than twenty different versions exon included all of the and north of the After the Mexican wer 0: vited States west of the second paratle!, Silees of iand were taken away, new Territories, until, by 189, when Oregon was admitted to the Union as » State, it was cut down “320 Acre ——_—— rf Gold and th to its present limits, Oregon was just beginning t» grow part of tte inhabita ‘This and the “Don: when the gold fever of 189 drew away a s into California, Then gold ‘as found in Oregon, ion law"? (whiten settler 220 acres of land), turned ve eves the tide of immigration to Oregon again. And after that the growth was steady and swift. Mining and agriewltur d to great industries, na séries of flerce wars with the Shoshowes, viocs and other savage tribes failed to check the State's steady advance, += The Man on ithe Road hy H. T. Battin, PRL LLLP LILO HALF-A-ROOM, “L made sure of the key and got un- RAND RAPIDS ts no pla rrothe covers, In a few minutes the 664 for the hotel beat," said Peunaing on the door vegan afresh, 1 i WOru Creo. te, WB «four voces outside, People began | y wih ” tae door again, but 1 attention (o thetr efforts, n the key fell to the floor three husky porters and nin the 1 and } of travelling found the usual furniture convention en. | q | man wit ip in hie | When I got to my rocm there was au-| hand. the around }the room and jeft the little map alone “rE otu tr doar and | with me hopped Into bed in short order, for was] “L stll without moving a muscle Ured. Mm about a Jialf hour the tele- the door was closed. ‘The little phone ell in the room began to ring. |™4" put out the ligit as I hopped out of bed, He Was too small for me to It woe me Piwae bore turned | ie aot went io the phone, By thle 1 for dreamland again. | tine [was ho’ Some ong was pounding on the door, 1 Halld!’ Teale. ‘Whole thle-man ia t him pound. ‘Then the key began to} my room? rattle, but I smiled to myself, as T knew] "Mr. Levine of Chicago.’ a volce ree |T had locked the dooy and t the key ie i Bi as hin fi The poundiag ce na}! iM you be responsible for y Ju blr » ae is ring again, ‘This | tinge?” L shouted back, ee ene pees | Mr, Levine lay as still as Thad white 7 " st vou | the rough necks were In the room, He Hallo, Niy don't YoU) view 1 was looking for trouble jopen your wnothes mau aay came che reply assigned “1 jumped in and listened. “He's got a swell chan I repi “No sound came £ n the other bed ‘Don't bother Tam i id Tland 1 fell aslee stening. When ! want to go to sleep." woke up Mr. Levine had disappeared. 1 "Ch yle rates,’ the volce ess he judged me by the volume of | answere a quiet getawa AILOR styles are always becoming to the schoo! sirl, Here is a frock | that is very simple | and tom yet | exceediugly rt, tne a all the latest The three. P siirt Is laid in verted plalt at each side and one at the ei ntre back, so that while it gives straight Ines, it provides free- som for walking, The Dilouse gives the jn- verted plait effect at voth front and vack, and the dress can be finished with eyelets and lacings or lett Plain with equal pr priety, We are wea: | ae Breat many long ets Just now, but the time ts not far df tant when the shorter will be in de- ‘und, and this drexs can be made tn elther way and with elther high or low shield, 60 that all tastes and all needs can be suitad. Blue serge Is the ma- torial filustrated and the collar ts of darker blue broadcloth banded ‘ith white, Serge fs the Unquestioned fay or. ite for dresses of this kind, but the model van be utllized for an: seasonable — materta., and it is by no means necessary to confing tt to blue, Vor the 12 year size the dross will require % yards of materlal | Pattern No, 7695—Girl’s Dress, 10 to 14 Years, i : 8% yards 36 or 3 ards 44 Inches wide, with ty yu inche: : idles yerdn 44 s wide, with ty y i Inches wide for the collar and 12 yards attern No. 7495 ts cur iy sizes for girls from 10 to 14 years, } Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN BUREAU, Donald Bullding, 100 West Thirtzssecena eet aN site Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-secona airest New York, or went oy mail on rece! stamps for each jattern ordered, es OF (#8 eente in eotn or IMPORTANT—Write your addre: mize wanted, Acd two cents for lett: | se plainly and always specity er postage tf in @ hurry, 1 a

Other pages from this issue: