The evening world. Newspaper, October 31, 1913, Page 22

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EST ABI x Published Dally Pxce ur pan » Now. 68% RALPH AN S SITAW LITZER OsErit the Post-om " te ted Statew OW do the independent lawyers of this city feel about a return HOW WILL THE LAWYERS VOTE? of Tammany rule and Tammany methods? H Does the average lawyer who has to earn his daily bread in the courts want the complicated machinery upon which he is de pendent tinkered to suit Tammany ends? Does he want his dealings with the Bench delayed and made difficult in a hundred petty ways because Tammany has its friends to consider? Has he failed to anpre ate the progress made recently in ex pediting executions, injunctions and similar business where delay in the past was notorious? Has he not blessed the reforms made in the Registry Office that now make it possible to count on a return of deeds and mortgagen , within seven days without extra fee? Wonld he not be giad to see like improvements in the Sheriff's | office and elsewhere? Or would he rather find himeclf up against the well known methods, the exasperating delaya, the favoritism and the fees insepa- rable from the one policy which Tammany recognizes—Fix it so we will get ours? Why should the independent lawyer vote himself into a semi- bondage to Tammany? ——— <4 2. McCall calls Sulzer “a poor, misguided man.” Correct. + A DIFFERENT TUNE. HE chastened spirit of the New York, New Haven and Hart- T ford Railroad shines through the assurance of President Kiliott at a transportation dinner in Rhode Isiand: “Should competing carriers, either rail or water, see fit to invest | their capital for the purpose of adding to the transportation facilities of this region, this company is not going to fight such a movement.” A very different tone from that of Mr. Mellen and his Wail street eponsors when they were laying hands right and left on every | steamship line, trolley system and electric plant in sight and all Wut proclaiming that New England belonged by right of conquest exclu- | sively to the New Haven road. | Stockholders of the New Haven must rejoice to hear these long | unaccustomed sentiments of “live and let live” issuing from executive quarters. In the old days, when the New Haven was a “competing | carrier,” ambitious to be first of all a railroad, stock sold at 259. He was. “Illiterate dummies” are also ioose In this campatgn—take It from Joho H. Delaney. ———— ++ ——__ PART OF THE CLEAN-UP. FFORTS to suppress illegal registration go steadily on. Twe Grand Juries are kept constantly busy and a score of indict-| ments a day is the average rate of progress. A close lookout | for “colonization” resulted in eight indictments in one lodging house on the Bowery and nine more against occupants of another house close by. Forsyth treet alone produced fifty “boarder” complaints and thirty similar cases were reported in Monroe atreet. The city does well to get after clectiou frauds in the heat of the | campaign. Data obtained can be filed and used later to wage @ war ef extermination on professional gangs of guerillas and repeaters, New York is in a terrific muss of campaign clutter and dirt, b: at there are cheerful signs that a process of genuine house-cleaning i ie| m foot nevertheless, and the city will come out of it like a brass kettle after a scouring. Another Lie Nailed.—Headline, What If we run short of nails? ef e NOT YET. NOTHER mass-meeting of waiters finally resolved to abolisis tips has gone the way of its kind: It failed to come off. The International Hotel Workers’ Union thought they had worked themselves up to the necessary pitch of courage and de- termination. A petition with two thousand signatures was waiting to go to Albany and ronse the lawmakers to pass a vigorous measure against tipping. Then, just when the waiters were nerving themselves to final | concerted action, some tip-loving miscreant stole the petition! Where- upon the union breathed a deep sigh of relief and elid back into the old ways, soothed by the not unpleasant sense that fate is too much for it. Every waiter will tell you that what he really wants is fair wages. So far the anti-tipping theory is excellent. In fact, it would be perfect but for one danger-—it might cut off tips at ee 4 23 It'll be a creepy night in the W ewan if the spooks are half way on the Job. feewers From the People can go sailing past one waiting in the rain and cold for a oar, ‘The ventilation ie oad, too, I think. MB, The State Labor law tat went into effect Oct. 1 requiring ull employees in mercantile estabilsnments to be @! lowed forty-five minutes (or inch | Te the Editor of The ebould beneMt Use wealth of thousands. Thirty minutes was formerly @ strict | rule in many cases. And crowded ree- ening World: wwer to problem of 1 cattle Kinds, wold for $100, I beg to were: of variou! wtate that ther taurants, causing delay in veing served, Sat OD each eee BAT | reduced the actual time for eating to; 5 at 8100) each , (7 @ point positively detrimental to health, |} 4t #00 each ’ This ive Jus end splen.id law. Let te dope it will be strictly enivrcea, CONSIDBKATE 8HUPPER, BR. T, Grievance. \ To the Lditor of The Krening World Vs the Balitor of ‘The Can't we Bet more care op the B RK Which is the | '%? The new care bold only just s0| both in area and [many, aud & ie conductor pleases he New York or Greater Leadon? Total equais 100 ¢ | b 8 MILLEN, 1 t clty ia the world, | Pex being decided her pratue of it several tim: _The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday. | of fies Hubiisinng O@y that a midnigat tango tea bo given in honor of Mrs Jarr, the next thing to do was to rs. Clara Mudridge-Smitn declared, think it As it was her own idea, she repeated Mrs. Jarre as the guest of honor war In the hands of her friends, and her ls made a great clatter and fuse over it. Mrs. Stryver gave a tea and ft was dociared thereat that the tdea wan delightful, Mo. Cura Mudridge Smith save two teas and a matines sea one of ‘he problem playve- how te horrity with Rut, party to n problem hetn out being ratded although the | Their Hallowe’en At ARRANARAARDRRRRARAAD KARRARRRARARRRARA D2 ns» RRARRD 118 ToS (Cavan ! eee, » By Maurice Ketten How MUCH DID YOu Get? | iduight arr was tho on tea in honor of Mrs. great topic of Har- lem's highest social circles, the tme and place for the midnight tango party | had not been decided upon, “Somebody ought to do something, I'm such @ poor hand at arranging deta! Mra, Mudridge-Smith declared. “And | am no hand at ment!" protested Mrs. Stryver. ain 80 anxious to do everything to make | the affair a great success, vut the state | of my bealth Is such that really"— She inferred by this that the | work or worry would bring about @ pse that would necessitate her go- ing to some tashtonabdle sanitarium and | Diary of a By Alma m: ib, YZ wertenly bara to rase; money. Evverybody seems to und itz a Job, 4 kant even | make ennytuing of @ evap! now-a-days, Pa ways | sneuliA vowt money vein skares, Ma | ty got he nwvbit uv askin me to wate Uli neat saterday fer my wlowance. Hits From Sharp Wits ‘There doesn't seem much jeft tor New York to brag about but Impeachment Proceedings, big murder caves and @s- caped Wunatica.—Auguata Chronicle, . . There aro a tot of men, the Cincinnatt Enqulrer, who are al- ways waddied and bridied waiting tor kome one to drive them to driak, bers A German prince ts trying to obtain & loan of §, ndoubtedly he {x already married, Ka Stace Journal A “Get a Gown to Fit Your Mind," says @ headline on the women's page. It Jooks as though some of them have Deen doing !t.—Augusta Chronicle, 7! 6 Wonder how many fond pa named their children for Sulzer.—Macon Telegraph oe inte had wilt Dr. Friedmann rays he is back to this country to see how his pa- tlents are getting along. He'll have to | burry,-Cleveland Plain Dealer, . Always Ann ali put Into @ hole by an undertaker.—Deseret News, c 8 3 A St. Louies woman intrusted $23,000 to a lawyer and got back about $3,000. ‘ Attorney couldn't havo been feeling very well that day.~-Philadelphia Inquirer, ‘The chestnuts are refutadte evidenu- pointe out |e coming | Owr bired girl kant even skrape up 4 Jeent tw iend me and the grocer an tae | Lootchur is always comin arownd tryin | to kollext. | Sig us the ownly bloted millunac 19 owr nowss, in ner nn bank shes got ! ano kunauien Gune an she thinks pheg got @ dollur aud a hat eo iran lvans in mas dresser buy she aint Cause won day just aftur pa wuz bales | jenn powt it Not growin on eee the lawndree come and mu swiped the dole }iur and a nit ais thinks wed got |} But 2 woownt shuee, Ob BA hee got her trovles an anny Way is 1s 80 subey. She han sit an eer a mikkers | Wurth of jelly beans rite under ¥ buce without enny uv em chown ber, {\nenn pa goed to palikal ineeting Ae Wares & big Bold Chane Wita & bidK hus thing vu it Othur Wines he Wares la fob cauze 14 more Kidswer out ne pec yul gotta wove substansnul and Pospeius vi poUKal Meetns an @ god \ Watch chane with a blak onus thing oD A makes yuo WOK Like Wa An then bes Yes an it arayes Bo pritty ovur yer Korporasuun tovan Lien pa RENKUIse What due Has siaried But L nave Wanuured tar frum the text, 2 wus sayin money Wus werteniy {hurd to rage av pa Had an ea uv }wiitin fer ine movie pikehures ap he jiuid tiv wea Lo ma 4p teu me oie him what she (het uv Wie des ang then Ley were oft agent Au ai tie Une b wep KWiet buts wus Minkin At WoOdInE be Bo Wurse fer me Luu ary it myself a0 | Koud rae cum caso dep Iverskales, 90 altur dinner 1 went population, Greater| that the early bird did not fet all ihe wp te inp room to Maik up & movin & worms—Mempnis Commercial Appeal piksnure an | wot ev exaciied 1 begin | then, of course, she couldn't attend the have to stan responsible for fair land with her presence, let her, the | everything . tank -| said Clara Mudridge-Smith, attend to experience trying to c the bother of It. fron women to make up de Mra. Jose hine Blesrtnzton Biotch.| Mee, ryter tnully was of the oath: ths noted suffragettes leader, was called | ton as tho affalr was Mrs. Coppright, 191, vy ‘Phe ree suditebing Co, (Tue New Yorw Kventog World), |skueel on em an ho POOP FOR por ror ror rr eo OPO PO OO ee, 31, | waged tn one form and another for nearly four centuries. (1913 (Cane CAUSES# Coprngnt, 4913, by ‘The ree Uubdiishing Co. (The New York Kroning World), No. 6.—‘‘Love at First Sight” That Led to Centuries of War. NONDALMONTE DEI BUONDALMONTI, @ young Florentine nobleman, strolled past the villa of Fortiquerra Donati one day in 1216, Altruda, the matchmaking wife of Donati, called to him from a balcony: “Whom have you chosen for a wife, Messer Buondalmonte?” asked Altruda as the youth halted in reply to hor call. Buondalmonte answered that he was betrothed to the daughter of Oderigo Giantrufetti, a close relative to the powerful family of the Ubert!. Altruda, turning back for a moment into the house, summoned her own daughter to the balcony. The girl was surpassingly beautiful. At sight of her the young nobleman quite forgot the woman to whom he was engaged and fell in love at first sight with this new beauty who was smiling down on him from the baleony “I had been reserving this maid for you,” said Altruda, noting fur+ tively the havoc her daughter's loveliness was working on the man’s heart. “It Is too late!” sighed Buondalmonte, “I have no choice now. J am already betrothed.” “It 18 not too Inte’ coaxed Altrida, “Marty my daughter. | damages the Giantrufett! family may demand.” { 80 Buondalmonte de! Buondalmont! married the daughter of Altruda Dona exerting the girl to whom his troth was plighte And therevy he supplied the cause of one of the grett- est wars of all mediaeval history. Oderico Glantrufett! was mad with race at the | heartless jilting of his only daughter, Ha fled for | counsel and ald to his great relative, the head of the Ubert!. The chief 1 Oderigo to avenge the atain on his family by putting Ruondalmonte to Geath. So, on the fickle lover's wedding day, @ picked band of the Ubert! and | the Glantrufett! murdered him. Instead of ending the troubl increased It, for {promptly {t started a dlood feud between the families of tie Ubert! and ths |Donati—the latter not relishing the Idea of their beautiful young relative | being left husbandiess, by murder, on her wedding day. Flercely waged the feud between the two strong families. adually the | whole city of Florence was drawn tnto taking sides with one warring claws or the other. From Florence the strife spread throughout all Italy By thts time it had taken on a@ political significance, The original cause of confitct Was half forgotten, and the quarrel had become almost purely one of polities. The Donat! belonged to what was known as the Ghibeline faction and the Whert! were members of the Guelph party. The Guelph-Ghibeline wars had Jong waged in Germany and had even extended Into Lombardy, But tt nad Temained for the Uberti-Donati feud to carry the War through Italy and tnto {ts longest and flercest phas Here, briefly, 1s the Guelph-Ghibeline sttuatton from Duke of Suabta, Lord of Wiblengen (corrupted into “Ghibeline") had quare relled with Henry, Duke of Saxony (a member of the Welf or Guelph family) over the imperial crown of Germany. Conrad, head of the Ghit elected Emperor; defeating Henry, The Guelphs refused to recoentze him, and factional strife set in. Nobiemen tn other countries, as in the case of the Voert! and the Donatt, Joined tn the dispute. The Guelph-Ghibeline ware soon died out in Germany, but In Ttaly thay Germany wi in “Measure the overlord of much of Italy. The Italian cities that hated German rulership took to calling } themselves Guelphs. And the Pope also supported 3 the Guelph cause At Pavia @ Ghibeline league was formed to back up the German Emperor's authority, Civil war tn tts most merciless form rent Italy. The Guelphe represent. Ing “Home Rule" and the Ghibelines toyalty to Germany, the factions weile nigh wrecked their fatherland before peace was fnally declared. In the latter half of the eighteenth entury a trace of the old Guelph eptrit flared up again tn the patriotic movement to cast off the Guelph yoke and to make Italy @ free and united nation. Few people to-day realizo that the cause which led to Italy's freedom had its indirect origin in the jilting of a Florene tine girl. 1 will pay any ODI The Revenge of a Jilted Girl. 8 esd thie aseassination merely its start: Conma, The Guelphs and Ghibelines, eee “AB, Govemor,” he eried, “delighted wake Mrs. Jarr Is Now About to Pose as Fair Harlem’s Tango Queen FALL HLLKLL HAHA ALLS IIE SSLKSAS ARAM But Mis, declined the honor having all the work and worry tn | Rut she informed Mr, Stryver that ie| the matter, "I assume.” 8! said, |Clara Mndridge-Smith was toadying to “that the expenses will vé def b {Mrs. Jarr in the hope Mrs. Jarr would |a pro rata apportionment of the ox have her meet the Presidentess of Costa | pense, This will mean that Rica, when that personage honored our | will tango zaldnight tea. modoty | on Mra, Rlotch was hatlod as hav Jarr uld atter a Ing great oxcsutive ability and @& &) tho details, ‘The lady wrrived at this modern business Woman hecause ane | 60} clusion af. Me Mudridge-8mt had rae of a woman's change In Yonkers onze upon a tim been n Bote ib nator of fdea, Mra. 0 an? all the others mor ested had sidestepped the trouble ‘and | expenso in arranging the preliminaries - Q and in post of honor crestel for was an tas’ of love for him, him, the Indies said, and they all knew he was SUCH a hand to manage! Little Boy Woodward Mr. Jarre was trapped; he saw whither he was drifting and all that sort of thing, He knew tf the offair was a success Mrs. Jaifa women friends would tako all the credit, and {f tt wore 2M al! blame would fall upon him, but he saw a chance to wrigcie from under the deadfall, said, “nothing w wld give mo gr pleanars, But don't you ace Tam placed aktin it an there wuz kowboys in tt an| ° pritty avon the room begin to look like sumthin had happuned to it an then pa| apeered at the door an then sumthin. happuned to met But if yuh expockt to maik a suces in this world yuh gotta malk up yer mind to get sum hard nocks, so I stood it like a stolk an I saved the piksbure in my brane an im goin to send it to- |!" an embarrassing p Lod Ke woul morrer tf 1 kan swipe @ stamp frum |!0ok as though I vere giving the falr, owr hired gir. and to my own wife. Don't you | This is the story uv tne pikshure: When a person any 8 "Don' 3 you | A pritty girl frum new yawk goes owt |!t Is but natusal for one Ko tenis a | west to see her bruther and he je a|! never thought of it ip that lightl kowboy. An sie is all dressed up in a| When as a matter of fact, there wae no Mmght at all. ‘Yl tell you what we'll do,” Mr, J white dresr an pink ribouns an 6 vides up from the stashun on @ bron fan the bronko tries to thro her but sire | We a Ld une fe ohancs 9 Bee te | stiks a hat-pin in him to matk him bee- | |" lo one ne $e Ny have hisseif, Well her bruther is a good | Case of a flasco, un Dinkaten would sowboy and the othur bad kowboya| very man ¢ nee ont ae | hate him vee-cause he wont steel kattul | the very person to attend to a y ‘Me knows body, he knows every- thing, He ts our office efMfict: cy en- uineer and his grasp of detail ts re- markable! The ladies did not care who had all the bother s0 10: as they had not, ao + received the sugge fon that Mr, Pinkston take charge with great en- and all started to interview that very suitably Non. so they go an lock him up to a shed dee-cnuse they think he ts goin to| urs the door but 1t wont brake an Just then up rides | his sister with her pritty white dress | dyin in the wind on the bronko. Ab but what has she got hiddun in her bewtiful pink sash? It is @ gun, « Vieshus atul what she has brung | frum new yawk bee-cause the cop on the beat told her to pring it an she up an fives at thc bad kowDoys an she pike em off as neet as buftlo bill cause she has tok lessune in i she releases her bruthi afternoon that thi gowned for the coming occ: When Mr. Jarre succeeded tn locating Mr. Dinkston he broke the news to him abruptly, “It will give .ne the gre t> arra for the affa’ | Dinkston, “When? Very good.” | “To-morrow night!" cried othe ladies, The idea! We haven't a thing | to wear! And Mr. Dinkston cvs him: 14 an eMciency engincer? Go find him tell him Priday night 's unlucky, and to put it off at least two weeks!” | But although looked for everywhere ‘Ms, Dinkston could not be found. an be the kattul an the man gives em the pleasure id Mi ‘To-morrow night? raunch, I gess mayve ‘hat aint sum exscit'n movin pikahure, 4 bet all kids in the gallry will holler, Yuh eee sumdouy n the family has got to raze money an) ems the ree-sponsiblity wrests on tL am kontent.” (nats @ net one an | jus bappuned to soins Of 1 twa) “BO yee (Gee, | ov Language of the Law. come you t> our Uttle town!’ Turing to the, L termseae at times itabie to botuer | desk, he shouted: “A room with bath for the of 08, 49 no wader that ose: | Governor, ¥ stump mime of the colts] The Governor leaned over and whispered ta te thelr war into ti ear, Tbe expression on the clerk's tace News, Tae other lay Mamie | changed to one of wwe disappointment; he nefore due to the man at the desk and called the. bes howler th “No bat for th jorerner; the Goveras doesn't nowt @ bath! tedelphia Record, po tdee pass then teantna Natural Query. ie the opening i National cone two dovtacevers on the main floor, @ tery devout Catholic anu the vtver pce Real Reson Had One ie. of a Western State, a map ot | was eaurioos we flown the aisle to @o 0 S anctwo holding ay Loura@ yer tested actoas t ith a ewngeer in tla galt, ‘The chief clerk, who bimecit on bis ex | “ites, Jim, be sure to foueh the Cardinal wren quaintines ant boasted that he never! be goes out!" forgot @ face, burried to greet the distingnimned ; "Woat pocket Das be got it omy" ested Him risitor ‘poarely.--satuntay brew v re con. » and this eo utiliged t travelling, for motor- ing and for general Knock-about wear. Scotch cheviot ls the material shown hei but for coats of th: Kind are used @ vi riety of fabrics, thone of rough finis' be: given preference, ho’ ev iere the collar” and cult made of the material, but @ food effect can be @b- tained by the use of @: contrasting one, and broadclo') makes a effect on the Tough material, or the collar and cuffs could be made of .e ame edged with fur to be smart. The fronts ere loose, fitted only by means of Carts at the shouldars, and the backs lapped to form an inverted plait so that the coat is mple and comfortavip th time than it takes the prev i Drevailing- r the medium size coat will require 6% yards of material 3, 4% ards 4, 6M yards (2 Inches wite, with % yard 4 or 69 Jnches wide for the collar, cuffs d belt Pattero Xo, $088 cut in siz to eee measure, ‘tterr, No, 8063—Long Coat, 34 to 42 Bust. Culy at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION me BUREAU, Donald Bullding, 10 West Thirty-second street (eppa- te ate Gimbel Bros.), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, Oviaie }New York. or sent by mail on receipt of ten cents in coin er stampe for each pattern ordered. ‘Thee DMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and alwaym specify Patterns. fize wanted, Add two cents for letter postage if in a hurry,

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