The evening world. Newspaper, October 24, 1913, Page 26

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— ee emeetree The Evening World Daily Magazine. Friday: Sstober aoe 1913_ he SAE Otiori0. [Spolling the Feast 2 = on RSE ze be Mawes Rete | imate causes, { Publishes Dany | lay hy the Pre Publishing Company, Now, 68 a's HPlts pt Fe ae Prostdent, 63 Park Row, | by oF, 83 Park Row. } s0sEr it Pt MITE R J now, Vntered at the Post-OfMfice at New York as Saeond-Class Matter, fubecr!ption “Rates aly “Tie ening | For Hngians and the Continent and World for the United States All Countries in the International | fT Postal Union $3.69 One Year. 0, One Month. Copyright, 1918, ees ‘the Vrew Publish ing Co The Now Yuu 3—The Breaking of an Egg, That Led toan Indian War. S | EVERAL reservation Sioux Indians siouched into @ former's door. Vout ates H THE. JUGGERNAUT MAIL TRUCK. 1 WAS bound te happen. Worse will follow unless something | yard in Minnesota one day in the summer of 1862. They sa | there a nest of eggs with a hen setting ov it. An Indian picked up one of the eggs. A cautious fellow savage warned him not to break it, as it belonged to a white man. To show his contempt for white men {nu general, the Indian smashed the egg he held and fell to work breaking the others in the nest. Not to be outdone In daredevittry, another of the Sioux shot the hea that had heun seared off of her eggs. Whereat the egg-breaker sougiit to prove liilmeelf the more lierole of 5 “ ' | i the two by sending a bullet through the fa s ) remarked that the mails must not | : Vit Nearby. The notse brought the farme He was not even arrested. Tt was left chief. And one of the Indians rand and secure @ thoot the tuck’ mon dead. (F matit t race through the ree it ity killed a three-vear- in Brooklyn. Wiinesses san hour. ‘The driver stopped only which wes grazing miis+ ded to * cajoled him ovement League to somn mn the Coney Island Police Conrt. ile emptying his rifle at a dist The ‘I ening World has iasued repeated warnings of what is said to have finished by ou forest's e expected if these giant mail trucks continue to dash at terrific ip oe aehwa phere he ate ; peed across the city regardless of traffic and crossings. than they had int tho ecared aesaasing acute ed off In a hurry are reporte ve neighberhood could be * reservation and thelr tribal fn the red annals of border Brooklyn residents have long protested against the reckless raeh | t t a . vi u or de rt mail wagons through Fourteenth ata Reyee Oho ee ane lef, To-wal-all-tah-don-tah, who ts better kno: = near the Pennsylvania statioh, Manhattan, declare them- 4 ZS % 1 nintory es “Little Crow,” selves terrorized by mail tracks speeding to and from the station and = < V , He was hereditary ruler of the Kape ins the Stoux nation, Inot+ , . ! dentally he was a drunkard ard @ Dut a man of snake. the sulspost nee o, Pedestrians in the neighborhood of the Grand | 2 tke cratt and boundless energy. Kd to the Gove Central ave their hearts in their mouths whenever one of these great | AS e ‘ 7 “ . aa Vea aah to ae her Stony i vans hurtles through the traffic of the side streets, to gain a mie! ys ago a mail chouffeur in a letter to The Evening column, gave the drivers’ side of the case. q ° ® ® The reason why the mail busses race throug We chauffeurs who drive them have to clean up the mal every day before we can go home. The longer we take, the longer ve have to work. As It Is, we never work less than tweive q ours, and 1 have worked fifteen and one-half hours. 1 thought all ona nent contract were only allowed to w wt hours, © © © | public demands a thorough investigation of the wi ates mail conducts its transfer and wagon service in this city. loes it utterly disregard all traffic rules for safety? H United By what rig How many lives are to be sacrificed efore these huge engines of lestruction are brought within proper control? if more mail trucks and more drivers are needed, let them be supplied at once, ‘The United States mail service euts a sorry figure when it permits ifs anto-wagons to become inrtruments of terror and ) When th derere came to Littte white aettier's assansination, the wily ch new Just what sich an to the Sloux Nation and the chance tt oper oO mratify bis o quickiy decided on the course he would ti He called a and sub-chiefs and latd the story before t instant surrender of the murderers to the Minneso Crow and his faction overbore ble adv One tribe after They began t the warpatl ne the tradess and n spread on ony the fr sat voth the in xmall scalping parties for two t Wituln the next few weeks they changed ti lages into a charnel nouse. About one children were butchered. Hundreds more were ured and tort wae rendered easter by . Wehting In the esota, mustered a bo the envages And r destruction of peaceful villagers found tiemeelves milith tate’s able-bodied Sibley, firet State he ‘eld tn such on Sept. the dectaive # fought at Wood the 2 Indians massed And there ; e raatee New York. ¥ defeates d their rees almo: death in the streets of | Little Crow fied to the A patty rata —————_+4 2 he was shot dead. (iil # the Minnesota ate was not so IMs fot ‘ve wonder if Sir Lionel Carden, the British blunderer in Mexico, s any kin of Capt. Carden, of the English frigate Macedonian, who ntury ago wrote in the log-book of an Incoming merchantman an itation to any American captain for a tete-a-tete and soon nad the pleasure of being licked in thirty minutes by Stephen Decatur in the United States, PAARAAARAROOLANS. The Penalty $ of the Sioux. } annnannannnncorad ac and reseuing from ea) He als were trie and were publ mense seaffold, President i the remaining + last been pa CRP EPR RR RR RR RR OR OO Ce Oa ee Y Mrs. Jarr Now Holds Down the Job { q), were condemned to de > same > and on one all hie adv price of a brok pardoned ere bad “SOMEBODY'S GROGGY.” HE Tammany Alderman who admitted it admitted diso that “times ain't like they were. Vader the charges of Sulzer and Hennessy, Murphy anid MeCail stammer their denials and mumble their threats. Of Fair Harlem’ ft) Social Empress| Stingy, N | It was not always like that with Tammany. Assaults from the | SSSHAASFAALAAA ALAN MAASAI ASMA OO ingy fot Pious, { de, attacks from the street when f menduous, At silver five centavo pieces— Y feminine volves hu rately did, for half u|Value in rca! money two and a heit | doors and ever and anon Mr. Jarr|dozen of the proudest heads tn uptown | cents ea caught the words, in tones of worship: | soctety to buntp together, as those near-) A half hundred adoring eager ful awe: est hastened to pick up alther ‘kerchief | followed these bracelets. Mr, Jarr re-[tevliel the rercrond gentleman, “Did he es “The Presidentess of Costa Rica! — jor fan. membered Mre. Jarr had bought out tie Miain the reason why ho ot let sou pu ! Mrs. Jarr with her hair down in| Ever and anon, with a languid alr, }local silver artiticer's stock of the: | "Yes, sir, He said taere nara't * dat mmany doors and blinds} were suug and tight never bothered The Chief aud his trusties, General abuse never worried ‘Tammany. But when insiders turn State’s evidence, when men who lay 1e braves go forth in a rage to naine names and quote {school girl fashion (Costa Mica atyle)| Mra. Jarr would adjust a rose she wore | Port Limon, Costa Rica, for presents; | ft ts." Harver and arrayed tn a wonderful combination | over her ear and the broad sleeve’ of |and for the moment he imagined a di, a His Den. | Tsek next door, eatown one moraine when raat, cal the coneemation en eve cost hind J he remembere ht them to br ng | Copyright, 1018, by The Prem Publishing Cos been but slight (The New York Evening World), Mrs. Jarr ha home to friend: But Jt was evident she had changed from {hein is not general denunciation, at which it perenially smile jat in the back room, men who have smoked in the Wigwain and! Murphy turns color and fidgets in his chair. of Chinose kimono and Tur’ slippers, | the kimono falling back would disclose] tribution of them among those atic aa Hennessys and the Sulzers “know.” What Tammany fears with a modish skirt of black satin, had|upon her arms silver bangle bracelets|ing would take place. ‘Thoiy ‘ ’ \s HEN Bilinger tought his new i - ee WY nev ottn the erpenm undzruanion tha | 8 room Alt of his Gaa— be What Tammany dreads from the Hennessys and the Sulze 3 is NEN Mr, Jarr camo home some- A ° hot denunciation, but disclosure—diaclosure specific, detailed—dis- W what eariler than usual the D omes t 1c D ta | 0 g ues jo they do hare @ @o. commented the friend, beg 1 know what you aan, Did u 2 jit (mt exasiv q . other evening there were #0 her mind. For an lous lady near wife furnished {°," ne fn vlosure that tears down trusty shatters and sinashes open secret cup-| many swe!! automobiles and taxteabs in By Alma Woodward. lim gasped to another ct “e voards. jfron: of the apartment house wherein “The bracelets of rare Costa Pi | a sewing machi 4 . |e dwelt that for a moment he won- Copsright, 1913, by ‘The Prem Pubisding Co, (Tie Now York Evening Worl), coins aro trom the Treasury—gifts from | e==——— = Sueteeiecsnes why The Chief shows signs of wear and tear. \dered If a bevy of chorus girls had not On Second Th ‘ht! Sad: GAUL Ge. 16 the Presidentesn | cae AANA NeARARAA RRAEINRRRAD AERA NAAR ABNER —_t—— moved Into one of the flats and were} | On Seco! Phought ic. ae! MP. J. (Browing red above the collar) englhen Ie she coming-the Presitent-| The May Manton Fashions | giving 2 house warning to young men | spice neat ~Are you positive he 4 EVEN 11°" a Rie 1 hear only tho] A MESSAGE. {of money about town. Ke, J. nee up to lim)-Sh!| could do it? women vote and hold office theret Bid | @wmnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnAnnnAARAAnAnAnAnnn nnnnn | But when he recognized the electric M sh! Mrs, J. (scornfuliy)—I'm positive, ait | “other woman, | To ‘motor cars of Clara Mudridge-Smith Mr, J. (stopping ehort)—What's| right, T thought that'd bring you, Ho} Ssh! Mrs. Jarry hos a heada \ THE CHIET, jand Mrs, Stryver, and their gallue]the matter? Some one sick? could say anything he pleased to ME, |“Plled the We mustn't ask) q Fourteenth street: oung chauffeurs among those present,| Mra, J, (cautiously)—No, there's noj but the minute about Ber ene: werd the Presiden‘ess. y Things look pretty dubious te saw he was mistaken and realized |one sick, but the house {s full of ru’ YOu, wh: t fen't conuidercd good form in Costa 1 78 li : that thia was the afternoon of Mra.) Mr. J. (regarding her with susptcton)| Mr. J. tsternty)—He didn't say any | Pica t 8 the plans of one's sue I ayy * SOUTHAMPTON, : Jart's long threatened home-coming re-]~Mary, have you been to a bridge this | thing derogatory to your character, did |POMOrs!” ( ; apes ne nnne | ooption und ter 14 afternoon? he? What Is this man? A Swede ‘That’ 8 the real Coata Rican court . a | Fashionable Marlom had the upper) Mrs, J. (indiguantly)—Oh, I'm not top: [ ates, J. (confdentty)--No, { know he | comtum ait me other, ' hallways Dlocked, and as for tho Jarr|py, If that's what you mean. I'm just] ‘sn't a Swede, because he doesn't aay nt She ts going to peat” | ws Le tters From the People apartments the crush inside was tre-|iad. Llue, blazing mad ciear through! | "vane" for “been,” 4a the comic » esied soveral women near the Mr. J. (in diamay)—What's made you! Swedes do. I think he's Just plain |* Sttraction | In Montr by which the solution Im obtal 1 sla 75 gia Wap Ayeivan Reet Seis AE onke! Ang aih) To the Waitlor of Tae Kvening World sold a watch for #75 and made as Hits From Sharp Wits ste toetions are ane teat waning ne fy inton ae he Then Mr. Inre noticed that old Mrs, | 8 Ato Heres vwitrand the totladie Wht doce | thiv house In tun on the plans of ajis he? ( ‘ |Pusenberry, the plain old Indy from the front and te 4 tm Montreal, He will find the coat of| dollars, What did tt coat . , ‘ at Si OMAL nate cities hog h awe JIndiana, In her best Sunday hon fon ure slips To) living aud rent much cheaper than on PJ. SkEA, | Wearing watches on the fingers i ail | 2O0Ns ‘aan tne eyes cnins Ve | witditeomtadnse™ site etStinna Mts Merdte | black dress, stood at Mre. dare this vide of the donier; that a dollar) Temane ¥ ea. right for those Washingtes society iris) tng day and a time clock to Komp tabs sry cittrationnelsye Nora: were you | Pant buys much more than here And 1 be-| 7, te paitor of The Krening Who are not in the habit of washing! 4. delinquent tenants and they've got! pr Maas Shen MES hy yb eee ‘Saurvsaye f lieve the opportunities are somewhat! I would like to say, in reply to M. 1, [the dinner dishes —Pittsburgh Post | mas id ne threats of fines pasted on the fre es: | wa cupes and duimbwaiters and gas metors| N cneekly) Yt, sor, and an all-prosiding genius in the Mr (sslentifiea|!y)—Do iy known as Jantior but in this} you could repeat tt to m | ntly Deputy Potlve Commis | word? [sioner and Ansistant District Attorney conversation with the Janitor? better, becau: there are not ao many| Morrison's remarks on ‘Paradise for ed looking for positions, As to the cli-|Tired Horses," that it would be far| There are 20,00) Kinds of Lutterilies in mate, there ia not tie Intense heat dur-| better {f some provisions were also|the wortd, exclusive of the species that log the summer as in New York, al-| made for old men and women who have 4fe found only on Broadway, though the winter season is much cold-| spent the dest part of their lives in the vs you think | word for obtained using ceepe de for the skirt aid Nora (oventng up her own | eoinetines going an low as 14 de-|service of eociety, Their welfare tv| A hen in an agricuiturat college in| all in one—of all the impudence "ve had |—1 could, Ie sea the bell is po blamed grees below zero. But with the crimp-/ more Important. JOH, ALN, Oregon has laid 283 ewes in @ year! to put up with to-day! to fix thot amen ro { neaw in the atmosphere even thie in- Rockaway Beach, L, 1, | Votes for chickens. Mr. J. (plunging into the avalanciie of ability to do tht for Jarm worrit tod Y tensity does not make the cold felt ay Om Side Nearest C een words) What did he sa | Mrs. J. (triumphantly)—See? What monberry toatily { In New York at & degrees above. 1} To the Editor of The Kvening World: Congresaman Iobson, the greatest ex-) Mra, J. tri [did 1 tel you? Word for word. what's @ nulean >| have friends in different lines of bual-/ When @ man is escorting two ladien on |Ponent of the art of oxcuiation the world | fluency)—The first thing lie called up| Mr, J, (appronc evervbodt vlxe | ing the dumbwaiter “How ever known, haw just kissed hisjand said I'd have to take my Boston nese who have, I am convinced, done| the atreat, should he walk betweea thein |"® Mow Feral ob door)—Do far better than they could have in the| or on the side nearest to the curb? you know what nationality * ey oF | this janitor ts Nora, or what he looks | the assermblas Mr. Underwood, with a twent)-| fe off the fre escape right away | United Stetes, As in many countries C. HB, {pound brick,—Philadelphia Inquirer. I'd be fined 810, like? |dentesa's dow Whe ineutts! lg the Bngtien rule, An will per ‘The Latter 1s Correct, . 2s i dk: J. Unterrapting)That's right.| Nora (conservativly)--I'm not shure everybody with such charming frank | hape at firet find it somewhat dimcult| To ee Rultor of The Evening Word Didn't the men who carred all that| ‘Ten dotlars' fine for any incumbrance) avout th’ natlonal'ty him, but th’ | ess coy ue arenes to make friends, and thia le mors or| What 1s the correct pronunciation of /Money to Gov. Sulser have any} on the fre es other day whin he had a sight dircus-| The crowd sow started slonly to pore or fess true jn Montreal, where the Eng-|the name “Penelope?” A. claims it| ™stcher?—Aloany Journs Bre, J. (wide-eyed)—Yew, 1 know. But] elon wid th’ jeeman they thought tht |. 8 amen whe hi A mn te| lithe yard of lish and French speaking people go to| #hould be pronounced as the word “an- | 1 didn't put there to be an incum-|ice eart'’d be doin’ double dooty as a |" effort to 5 prea Hp ly w th | sounediy in rine wide tnake up the bulk of the citizens. Mon-| telope.” B. claims {t ehould be pro- One of the lessons of the Titante » brance purposely, It was raining +0! hearse, they did! ‘Th’ girl upstairs wag} Mere, Jarre were so berm! nelly igroed nohee 0 gteamehip| nicely 1 thought it'd get a th The noxt thing was about the ni hey fell tack in confusion. t doen it all mean?” awket sy, | bath. | tellin’ me he got his trainin’ as a) bot-|o0ouncer ina longshoremen'a saloon, “ ” 0 have been learned. treal is a hesithful city and not over-| nounced “Pen-el-o-pe,” with the accent s pine ¥ HLF. P| on the aecond ayliable. Which i¢ cor: |CaPtaln® when summoned by wiret BOOT te , in wlaen any GL it, [lett the passenuere of the Volturno to) ties. Ile said we had no business to tone an’ hae fists | hen the lust fawning woman has | , i ineheatrnay nee t a Ta 1908, é * | perish.—Chicago Now Ml up the dumbwaiter with empty milk Jdeparted. "What Presidontess Is thls | Pattern No, 8047—Two-Plece Draped Skirt, oP yen rae for i by OT D. A. R, Headquarters, eee Lottles u cniled for the garbage. | ists Ju tahes 9 ascond and more direct fook re talking about? Ate you to have | . Olt" | po the Kiditor of The Evening World: ‘There are now no cowboys other than| Mr, J. ( (y)—Nothing Very. tere | at the dumbwatter door, thew intersares) Any moh person to ment them Call at THM EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON PABHION fated with Brooklyn, &¢., and ca'led! Where are the h uarters of the ’ ter of o 1 WwW side? Mr, J. (taking @ deep breathy~It's ale | sceptainiy not! eaid Mes Jarr. wow Bulldi 0 West Thirt On 4 seen in the moving picture #hi rible in that. What else ie enti and BURBAL, Donald Gullaing, y \d street (oppo “Greater New York H. J. “Daughters of the American Revoiution” | Knoxville Tribun Mrs. J. (trying to prove her polnt)—1| ¥iy4 more eenaible to go to headquar- T told them, But the te site Gimbel Brow). corner 1 avenne a! . What pid It Cost? uM, eee atked him to come up anid fix the eles | tere with complaints. What's the use ciciety neaple ae {terlora vk, oF went by mail on recedpt o' pattern orderms Write jour address pia ten cents tu colv oF fe the Editor of The Lrening Work! ‘The headquarters of the Daughters of | Andrew Carnesie gi Can any reader solve the following the American Revolution at Memo-|*Do not hoard your million simple und interesting iblem, ex- rial Continenta) Hall, Seventeenth and |We never had @ thought ef dolag any } clearly but brief_, tric table bell aud he sald he was awfuie | of soiling one's hands with that LUM | sured they ate ly busy with ali the new tenants wants {of society? Il Inform the agent. (He | perior, Vi put the ing things done and that the poll was] exited Gerirude, make ore’ method D street, N Wee Washin ton, D.C, lehing tike that—Albany Journal #0 blamed easy to @x be thougnt even 4 igre juenange wgniican! GAR My head 9 epliiting:” at neronns . Y ia ly ond alwase specty if in @ hurry.

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