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The Evening World Daily Ma ate BS aziori. BSTABLIGHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Published Dally Brcept Depsey, 7 gre Trees P 32f hing Company, Nos, 53 to, ge OE Setar aero Pare hee, -OF' New Te Loe q gazine, Friday, January 3, 1913 | ASOD she STAT Tam BY No, @—Tennessee. Motto: Agriculture, Commerce. OWN, DOW'T LOSE YouR UMBRELLA ————— Consright, 1913, by The Pres Pubtishing Co, (Phe New York Brening World), World for the United States All Countries in the International was once “Franklin State.” end Caneda Postal Union. . that It was the “District of Wal on en bea bie’ ton"—the first place, by the wa VOLUME 88.......csceceeeecseeeesseeeeeeeeess NO, 18,760 GENTLEMEN OF THE GUARD. HAT is the matter with the officers of the National Guard? | W As to the merits of the controversy now raging between | Major-General O’Ryan and former Major-General Verbeck we do not pretend to decide. One thing is plain: high official circles of the National Guard leak out dences of jealousy, bitéerness and wrangling over who shall wear, moat gold Jace. Such childish and unmilitary bickerings are unworthy named in honor of the Father Country. Still earlier it was a part of Carolina, It was a rogion where only the est could hope to survive, And it won step of its progress by bloody warfare. A little North Carolina colony crosses Tennessee in 1754, attracted by the beaut: richness of the new land, ‘Thid colony promptly driven away, with terrible losses, by the Indians. A second of North Carolinians tried the same sort of experiment three years Indians besieged their half-built village, but promised to cpare the nists if the latter would depart at once from Tennessee. Relying o Pledge of the savages, the pioneers sct out on their homewant journey thf ~ | the wilderness, and as soon as they were clear of their defenses the I $ officers, unworthy of the Guard itself. vateherea them, a . . “ . jut still another colony came from North Carolina tn 1769, and, under ‘ The rank and file of the National Guard are earnest, hard-work- 3 H THERE | Sevier and James Robertson, magaged to gain a foothold in the hostile ing, alert, obedient young men who perform diligently what is required YOu ARE LEAVING Battling for life with the Indlans.and in constant p of them and hold themeelvee subject to call. Why can’t their officers | YOUR UMBRELLA A Battle ana weal Mond gg orev oe ae DenNarer a emulate them, try to be a credit to them? Have these glittering ! : BEHIND for Life. (on in 1776 Tennessee acquired some sort of rude gentlemen-at-arms «o little to do that their minds fill up with envy, SIOBi ut se cecm Wocuecwa te te Oey waenent oc tom State and was known as ‘Washington County, N.C." Then, in 278, it , statehood under the name of “Franklin” and was for four years a State, {pg in 1788 to North Carolina's rule. | But the settlers hated the idea of dependence, North Carolina could | tect them nor give them justice. In 179 Tennessee wae ceded to the | Government under the title of “Ths territory of the United States ecu! | River Ohio." S!x years later it was admitted to the Union as career had at laat begun. It took its name from the Tennessee’ see” being the local Indian word for ‘carved spoon. From the beginning Tennesseeans were warriors. | try they have made a splendid showing. They battled in the Revel j that State sent many recruits to the war of 1812. Tennessee militia ft bulk of Andrew Jackson's little army that annihilated the British at thé | of New Orleans, In the Mexican war so many more Tennesseeans volunteered for service: were calleg for as to give rise to the nickname “Volunteer State.” In the war 115,01 of Tennessee's sons fought for the Confederacy and 84003 Union armies. It was a State divided against iteetf, and was not only-the ecede but the first to@e readmitted to the Union. ‘Tennessee next to Virginia was the chief theatre of war during the-fi ey, COnflict. One historian computes that no less than 6 and skirmishes were fought on its soll. It escaped the Pet bag’ rogime of the early 70's, but the war and the of reconstruction well nigh halted fts advance in wealts importance. until 188, since when its progress in uta mining and manufacture haa been rapid and steady. The State sent three Presidents to Washington—Anirew Jackson, Polk and Andrew Johnson, According to some chroniclers Memphis wae | #pot at which De Goto in the sixteenth century discovered the Misslestppt Fi The Day’s Good Stories Mike Amazed. Grew red with veration, For 6 moment ERRY was treating Mike to a trolley ride.| “Good heat rentuaita, | J. The conductor, @ good-looking young irish-| wasn't ehe cylinder, It was My eat Joe | man, came through, collecting the fares, Mike} oijing "—London Anewere, watched his progress with great interest. Pres jealousy and epite? Have they no occupation but intrigue? ‘The National Guard is entitled to better leadership. If this sort | of thing ie to continue, the State would do well to turn the whole or- | on over to the National Government to be put in the hands | f commissioned officers of the regular army who have some notion | of the dignity, responsibility and self-discipline of military command. oe LEARNING TO DEAL WITH MURDERERS TT" unusual record of convictions reported by District-Attorney In every war of Whitman's homicide bureau for last year includes thirteen convictions for murder in the first degree, more than twice as many as in any other twelvemonth during the last ten years. Of fifty homicide cases which came into court, forty-three resulted in JOHN , You Lost You ARE MISTAIWEN ji ) , A PARCEL ) FoR J) > convictions. YouR UMBRELLA UNCLE SAM IS These figures balance hopefully against the etatement on the other hand that gang imurders are on the increase and that they form a large part of unsolved homicides. ‘The hardest case to prepare is the sort where a group of gunmen lounge into the neighborhood of their victim.and open a fusillade, one of their number having been picked out in advance as the sharpshooter who shall fire the telling | shota. It is almost impossible to fix the shooting on the right man. | In fact, the gunmen have taken a hint from certain kinds of Lig) business: Form a corporation, jump on ‘em all together, and leave ‘er | to fix the blame. If they can’t pick the guilty man we all go free. Note, however, that last year for the first time in the history of this county four men charged with murder were put on trial to- | ther and convicted, Nine mon were convicted of three murders. | @atly he turned to Jerry with tears in his eyes. Py TERT 4 q . : “Jerry,"" be eaid buskily, “I've e hump in me A Personal Question. We seem to be finding a way to deal with crime corporations. | erveet.” 3 pa ae AR ee “What fort” demanded Jerry. Denver a few weeks ago & cchored | "Tis the gladness of me that's too big to | wally!’ said Mike, ‘Every American has the dig generous heart! D're moiod the poor young | folly wid the blue cap? “Ts beugin’ via’ THE BOTTOM OF THE CLASS. HE news that # British royal princeling stood sixty-fourth in Sl | Bo i. 1 saw him boda out tie bend Go nats. his school examination in a ¢ of sixty-five may be theer Pr HAHAISIASHABIIIRAIBABIAABSABASIAAAAA | im Rereorarttad be! ba ing to youngeters generally and even prove a balm to ihe Mr. Jarr’s on the Track of a Dark | tar rreeagal il "6 “ | Cosmetics. ITTLE Tommy, at the ‘movies, saw @ tribe Or and Baffling Domestic Mystery. Lr iirsin nen aust PHAAAAAARMAESISIIBISASANA ABSA BAA ARB | MOE the Martficnnce Of Me aint | & young matron, Clara Mudridge-) wasn't that she, Mrs, Mudridge-Smith,|dren and stuck in the house as much | their | Smith, looked pretty Mossy at all times—|had invited her on the telephone when,/as I am—and, to he truthful with you, | @#lping and tomahaw) wounded pride of fond parents, ‘The English’ newspapers are to be congratulated upon offering no excuses and drawing no conclusions eave that the examiners were “evidently completely impartial” We hope august papa and mamma took the catastrophe in the same n before going on the warpath—bel ‘and murdering, spirit, When the hopeful son of the family hereabouts comes home leh, what? at the last moment, she feared there| without the means to flo : ‘The next evening, after dinner, as the mother . yeh, . a P—how can rs ry 1 : “ ea es | entertained in the parlor her daughter's young with the baleful zero, the hard heart of the teacher, the incomy Mrs. J cudgingly admit that} would be thirteen e table, as that |I flop? Reese ne tae tee Cees fee Information Wanted. | Clara tatill there was some- | aplteful Mra, Stryver had inferred. “Your taste will teach you," replied | jrigit, | thing lacking. Clara hadn't the grand| During these remarks and these r {air, You, speaking as a friend, one|fections Mr. Jarr's get-away to Chu | muat be frank. Mrs. Jarr would say |looked clear and easy, but as he fum-|any woman I ever met. You lend dis- _ » aS | that poor Clara, while “smart,” just| bled at the hat raok in the hall he/tinction to the simplest things, You B Thi | lacked that distinctive elegance that if|heard the voice of Clara Mudridge-|can flop {f you want to, and you know Next Best ing. ® certain case tried in Missouri where the visiting young matron, ‘I always| Come on, mother,” he criel Led cheapo Nee thett of watch, the emtenpe, Md say that you have more style than | % this quick! Sister sing on the warpat Most conflicting, and, as the fury rethred, —Gan Francisco Chron } Jadge otmerred that he would be glad to the adjustment of eny difficultien that might, sent themselves to the mind of the jury, All but one of the jurors hed filed out of tence of the school syatem, and the political depravity of the city a all too often invoked to account for it. A sinall share of the effort expended in explaining why Johnny failed applied to convincing him | that he mustn't do it again, would do much for his character and cused, he had for ibe steamer that played its searchlight an three shipwrecked ‘an {mportant letter, he sald. chute (nithe fal ‘5 . : a Fe | some one—well, never mind who—had| Smith saying to Mrs. : itt HORT of breath, and angry wihal, the motor-; box, ‘There was on the face of the one whl ise parts. We shall be delighted to learn what they @id to the prince, lthane etait ‘Oh, well, never mind,| “But, my dear, you've got to flop! You| “Mr. Jarr, the eavesdropper, held on Sit amare from ‘beneath this eas, ad fe | mained an ‘xpreasion betomaing the ee - 1 Gn yy The aires | what's the uso to say anything? | really must!" tight to the hat rack, Where was the snag heat tana Natal can, | nerrtentty, AAD} Se meee. So Mr. Jarr wax going out to mail al Here was something Interesting for) wife of his bosom going to flop? If she | meet vine Nn Suictr, o44| Ip thet tay-epesiee tesa tie te ti neat THE HUMAN HEART AT ITS HARDEST M' JARR had beased to eter letter, forgetful man! And Clara Mud-|Mr, Jarr, If Mra, Jarr was going toj listened to the voice of the temptress, | man,” re: the hel with @ grin| At this the twelfth jasor’s face brightecsd, ridge-Smith sald that even with a mail| flop he'd better stick around. would she flop right there, In th osta Arms, where she| ‘But I can't! I simply can't!" Mrs.j privacy of her home, or was the flop-| jesides, it is) ping to be some mpecial public cere- of breath countenance, ‘Teo, Your Honor,” was his eager Sa ‘ame angrier and sborter still! “I'd be ewfd glad & you'd tell me wipether. 4 went to his head, and he’ prisoner really stole the watch,”-—Green Bag.!h-g boys in a battered boat flying signals of distress only to M&S Clara Mudridge-Smith waved her lived, her maid often forgot to mall her|Jarr replied plaintively. ‘ i moleskin and ermine muff at Hi I) ietters, and that was why Mra. Jarr/all right for you, golng tn soclety and|mony she was expected to participate | ~ steam away, leaving the unfortunate boatload in the dark- | ptaytut admonition, | ye eee hadn't gotten the Invitation to the din-| to clubs @nd all that sort of thing. They | in? ce | Ps Y i olf i rol. |, "Oh. you men! You dreadtul, In time, a fe igh ore, and It! look to you for it. But with two chil-| it ran through Mr. Jarr’s mind that h nese a hundred miles at xea, may yet find itgelf in a blazing searet. on ae mee cried arcly. ner in time, a few nights before, and It! look to oi cil | Ab ican gen Mr, artis) ale ‘woud | The May Manton Fas ions light of contempt and shame. Due effort will be made to learn he -orled archly at moat "lence 7 be up to next. Here they had just ite name, | Bectally” young ae se ° M rc) hiked to Albany in the cause of Equ: TRIB ' nts wll dee inge in (humane cried ancviy and—wat ot FT he ‘*Woman’s Movement [Sutras even ‘hough, to Ml thinkin 7s The capt ho deliberate Is away from human be’ | Bi Iderly husband was not je captain who deliberately sails away nu humar ings in| cried. But her elderly huwban; d J t hat It ‘cnn Miking te AMAnGASY ihem nanhere ’ an ust W M 5 s By Sophie Irene Loeb. opinion of his fellow men, He is only a few shades less a dastard | iaiter wine wih ens Stace Oe | ease Gh” Si Fos tale ae deadly peril, even though his conscience be of the sort that lets him | Present now | But what was this floppery? He must vee Mra, Mudridge-Smith had st [Fee crams eae Se 89 i . ’ ith act i vopsrigut, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Kreniag World), jreply. “You flop— Of course Mrs. | than the captain who runs down a smaller boat and sneaks away as | with acarf to mateh Copyright, 1913, by bli eee een Mre, ‘ecele oan't| sleep nights after such an act, deserves his punishment from the | dropped in” on Mra. Jarre to make the “No, Clara, I really think I am past | a, 3 fY Besid 1 this happy splendor, Mra. e| iF ‘ks in the future to save for the everyda: 4 fast as he can, ‘The same kind of craven re land — gee icine svdrideeBwith tod Telen ABAL F rere Aneta say Oe CREP Pdr a pa gu Year either, and T guess 1 deat went % No. ast his own or another's victim lying helpless in the road. Ore | eables, ‘n, {SHIP in the past. flop year, Tt will! pane ; Mah aay 1 | When she wasn't wearing them ani Accredited to Miss Ann Morgan, |SITE in the past. ae of the grow. | de Dut a passing thing, anyway. | terrible still to abandon a fellow creature in the lonely wastes of | PO ee akeet: them. When CRUE On ee ey te eats, ‘Comrary| “Don't you delleve that!” ried Mrs. | the sea! did wear them the other women spoke fea'a greatest f-/ OFT oynic, rich and poor are getting MUdridge-Smith eamestly. = “Hvery| nancter, 1D h@T)crogmR everyday, There ts a uni-|¥oman who can flop will flop. If you! misnion of help! versal undercurrent of brotherhood and|&@ unmarried you flop, but all the| with humanity. —gisterhood gaining widespread force. In-|YOURSer matrone wif flop. Surely, you | We hear of the|deed, there has been an AWAKENING, |#°@ Rot going to relegate yourself to the settlement worker | especially of woman. ranks of elipshod married women? With on the east side, of/ ‘The woman of wealth to-day {s a most | 70" alr and your figure you've simply the nurse in the/active factor in the progress of the | G07 to, flop. Aue ae home of the needy, | world’s work. She rubs elbows with her | at'e easy enough for you to say! of the Salvationist inning sister, and finds tt to her! ¥himpered Mrs. Jarr. “You, with charge whale nvea alioal me and SATISFACTION to Acounts everywhere and able to afford , hee are amanda \the new fishtails and everything, But types, with @®, She will talk publicly, argue with law- bad can I afford to flup if 1 wanted worthy work In| makers and spend pnitess energy to put | thelr everyday ex-|through some measure that will ceneftt Satonce, tt 49 COMMENDABLE, to say many. It is an EVERYDAY occur toe man do without, and Very often, however, it is the worth-| In former years the woman with much | | tate wid Mie, yer T didn't while means of livelihood, a part of the! money at her command was a secluded, | wee n eare hal ou og ! daily bread winning process. But with | protected product, whose {den of charity | And she arone to peek down the pri- Ann Morgan it is different. She could; was summed up in a check for a hoapl-|Vate hall, but Mr. Jarr sipped out and ; 5 the send-|48 gone, But all the time he was at) have spent the six weeks prior to tal or for an orphan asylum or the send-| 018 BANe ot Ole ee ead yi Refusing to save life when only an outstretched hand is needed (MP | sare op ates. angle is about the lowest level human nature touches. To euch as turned | could have told you, Clara Mudrisg: their backs on drowning men, mankind, though it might punteh in no | Si!th might have the finest things |money could buy, but money will not other way, has always measured out its full contempt. emartness they term however, all thought the Wrong Diagnosis. You know as well as I do, that it's not what one has to have but what) To the Kaito ; all over the | An or highways at one and the same time, not emoking on all ca elevated trains) confining thelr operatione to the centre | and platforms, That's well and good. | of the thoroughfare. A Jaw making it| Then, why does the B. R. T., which| mandatory to attach a fender to auto- | owns the newa-stands on the Brook-| mobiles in the years gone by would have | lyn stations, eell ct A tobacco to} been the means of saving many 11) it tempt | and would have resulted ina lease num- ber of people being maimed. I would We *0 hear from readers as to their Chrintmas in eae and comfort and jing of haskets to the poor by servanta |G! , 4 or iegs an thie subject. | Pleamure in the position of a daughter|at Christmas time, or any other indirect | wensarad What was the great flop, waadoes"tee Autos? EDWARD J. RYAN. | of one of the world’s rehest men means of pliilanthropy jmy Po ots ‘To the Kitor of Tee Bvening World : ‘The “Three-fifthe Pre! | Yet, of her own volition, with the| But to-day we are confronted with the | —— Tour recent eéiterial ander the cap: |r5 ine rssitor of The Breaing Word energy born of DESIRE TO DO FOR |aplendid spectacle of these women in Horse and Auto. iD answer to problem which read | “If three-fifths of @ plece of land coat $1,200, how much will two such pleces cost?” I aay it will cost $4,000. Gue ithe | writer) wanted to know where the catcn | was. Well, the problem says ‘‘three- fifths of the piece cost $1.20, and how | OVERS, this time was spent in re- SIMILAR positions going right {nto the 2 maining in an office, giving advice, call-|hovel of the unfortunate, studying the HE Government of Wurtemburg, ing conferences, talking to anybody who conditions of things, getting at the root | Germany, is taking steps to eub- | was lonely and in every way trying to lof the need and putting forth ceaseless | stitute auto bus Ines for all the! ry . conserve the energy and earnings of effort in this, that or the other|horse traction lines existing In the Pattern 7714,—Blouse for Misses and Women, the yoke and chemi folks who might he called upon to give|CHANGE that will alleviate distress or| country, and tt is .now engaged in| pattern TT14 1s cut in sizes for giris of 14, 16 and 18 youth, from thelr small store NEEDLESSLY, | unsatisfactory conditions. drawing up the plans for the protect. | Much would two pieces con You first) The very fact of this rich women he ‘The example by such women ta] The department has already entered Call at THD EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHIO} muet find out the cost of one plece. If} x .E of not @lving |tending to reach out to every other into connection with the leading Ger-|% Hew $pURBAU, Donald Butiding, 100 West Thirty-second 8-6 of the piece cost $1,900, 1-5 would’ ‘amp of approval onjter of wealth and create an endleas|man automobile constructors tn or ba te site Gimbel Bros.), comer @ixth avenue and Thirty-second street fed cost $400, just 1-3 of $1,200. And one} the 8. P.U. G, ldea which no leas pros:[ehain of endeavor that muat goon en-|to secure thetr co-operation in t Ovtata $New York, oF sent by mail on receipt of ten cents im enin plece would be 6-8 or five times $400,, “8 you're going to marry “friend of a friend” could take|ctrcling the realms of humans. enterp: and bide wil! no doubt be atampe for each pattern ordered, which would be $2,000, The cost of two! ! thought you sald your heart was exception to, And in this attiiude she ‘Thus, it is not fair to decry continu-|called for in the near future, At ‘These IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly ana always eopecity Sa Pieces would be twice that, of course, | broken!” And her associates acted on a theory ally the rich, Rut rather WELCOME | present the department has not made § Patterns, {nize wanted. Add two cents for letter postage tf in @ hurry, GHARLOTTE KROHN. | “Oh, | guess 18 wae Juet eprained.”, whica became a practice and promises the coming ef more Amn Morgans. @ny definite decteion in the matter, | « » 4 ' A