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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, November 3. ESTABLISHED BY JOsMPH PULITZER Published Daily Except ba ge é hg the Prese Publishing Company, Now 66 & 7, York, Ate, puLt pet PreMaent, 13 Vark Row, ‘GUS SHA reasurer, 6% Park Row. a ‘ee PULITZER, Jr. Secret a Row, Entered ut the Post-Office at New York an “eoond-Ciase Matter. } Bubscription Rates to The Eveoing | For and and the Continent and } World for the United Btates Ail Countries in the International i} and Canada, Poatal Union, / One Year... + $8.60]One Year. vervivessiecs OR One Month.. + 80 One Monti. terescosvens 88 D MANY 4 GOVERNMENT? NO. 19,067 HOW TO MARK YOUR BALLOT. 0 YOU WISH TO MARK YOUK BALLOT TO-MORROW D SECURE TO THE CITY CLEAN, HONEST THEN Mark cach name in the errata Mean colums, setting © mark against cach name, with one ' exception: For Borough President of Queens, vote for Maurice BE. Connelly in the Democratic column. Do not mark in the circles. Mark each name separately. The voter intent on making up his own scheme of Fusion among eftices below the Borough Presidente must pick his candidates as he aces fit, But for the average voter who wishes first end last to vote against Tammany and for clean, open democracy of the best municipal brand, the above plan is the easiest and safest. — Who will envy (Murphy this heavy, haunted night before Philippi? ——- 4 ———__—. GREAT SPORT IN SULLIVAN COUNTY. INCE Saturday Sullivan County has been enjoying itself. Hun- S dreds of automobiles carrying fur-coated hunters with silver- mounted shooting irons pour daily into the district. Some of the huntsmen bring camping outfits, but more rejoice the heart of the farmer’s wife by occupying her best bedroom at fancy prices. The happy village grocer is busy overtime, and mystcrious cases marked XXXX encumber the platforms of the railway stations. Since Saturday it has been open season for deer in Sullivan County, and will be until Nov. 15. Wherefore the wily deer are making tracks for private parks and preserves, where they enjoy the protection of well-paid guards. And the farmers, with kindly foresight, are turning loose in the for- eats hundreds of cows thoughtfully purchased for the occasion, each bearing around ite neck a brass tag with the owner's name and address. The hunter from the great city to whom, in the fever of the chase, an excited cow takes on the semblance of a bounding deer even more readily than does a brother huntsman, will thus find plenty to shoot—and clear directions where to send the cheque. op * McCall says he will go golfing to-morrow. Wednesday should find him free to begin a needed rest and bethink himself how to be worth the $15,000 @ year he gets as Chairman of the Public Service Commission, —_ +4 THE YELLOW TAXICAB COMPANY. MPUDENCE and defiance of public opinion never desert the | Yellow Taxicab Company. Having cheated and robbed New Yorkers for years that it mighi pay its colossal contributions to privilege and hotel graft, it doggedly fought the first adequate cab ordinance New York ever had. It refused utterly to obey that ordinance. It took out no li- censes under the ordinance. It withdrew its cabs from the public stands. It never for an hour attempted to do business at the new rates or under the riew rules, Yet it had the insolence to ask a court to entertain its plea that by working under the new ordinance it lost money. And now it has had the further audacity to propose that the city shall cease to argue against its contentions and consent to examine its books under a sea) of strict secrecy! The Yellow Taxicab Company appears to have convinced itself that the way to get what it wants from the public is to show its con- tempi for the public, 26-2 - Hooray! After effction a Chicago banker, backed by the Gov crnors of Seven States, is coming to teach New Yorkers the wisdom of thrift, _— Letters From the People Wants to Make Use of “Musical Ear” in your city, but I a To the Editor of The Evening World ested in wonderful New York and its T have a remarkably sharp ear for | beautiful Art Gallery to make one sug~ music and can Jearn a tune very quickly | gestion in regard to @ fault in the latter, ‘and understand minor and major dhords| which I am aure many have noticed and detect a one-half tone wrong in & and would Le pleated tohave renedied fall orchestra on any instrument, Can | it iw tn asiona! lout talk.ng of some any expert reader tell me to what use of the guards at the doors of the gal- 1 ean put this “gift” or the best trade |teries, Several times | saw two or three ufficiently inter- w take up. Is there any money In plano of them together laughing and talking tuning. ‘W. P. |in oo Joud a tone as to distract greatly eye 7 Critictom, from my enjoyment of the pictures, It ‘To the Kéhor of The World; Je no more than right that guards and Evening Yesterday 1 made @ visit to your Met- visitors should here speak in the low- ropolitan Art Gallery. eet tones. LIB 1 am ¢« strenger ond two monthe devoted to apreductive vecupetic cisco Chronicle, the exheus of cheering,” Not His Treat. DRUNKEN wap by the mame of Riley A boarded a trolley cer, ond after paying his fare mede bimeslf epmforable, The comductar, after calling off the etrests, wae nearing © etreet which corresponded with the drunien man's pam, —>- — Who Is He? AST year I id pot want to embarrass img Det girl to make ber projnse to me, 90 aid: iL “Riley nest steak!” yelled the contactor, | tated her to be my wife, and she Phe drunken man, who was bad asienp, under. | would rather be excused,” and 1, like an idiot, 64 him as “Riley's next treat," rolled out: | excused her, But 1 got erm with the git. J Married her mother, Then my father married | Been Now 1 dou't know who 1 am When 1 married the girl's mother, the girl Decame my daughter, ant ried my daughter he le my | married my daughter #he father is my eon, “You're @ Marl 1 tested let,"—National Meath'y, IN THE SIMPLEST, SUREST WAY TO DEFEAT TAM- | | Copyright. 1919, by The Prem Publuhing Co. (The New York bvewng Worl), T was decided that such deliciour tea ] had never been served before, and as for the cute little brass maucrrs and the Chinese teacups in which the tea was Drewed-they were And no they proved to be when Mra. Stryver suggested that the gentlemen buy them and present them to the ladiea as souvenirs, And we will con supper of Chinese also declared, after an tnapection the kitchen of the Chinese chop suey | restaurant on the top floor of Hogan- imun's Hall and over the assembly room where the annual dance and re- ception * clation was being held. “But fiat,” sald Mr. Mudridge-8mith, rising on hin tottering old feet, “I pro- Hits From Sharp Wits. When a woman wante to keep @ secret fhe usually calle in the ald of her neighbors. 1 Telegraph. ee . Nor man nor woman was ever grave fully Jealous.—Deseret News. eee there's a will there are a Milwaukee Sentinel, ee Where dosen lawyers. . pher aske what has hecome art, clever chap who used to aay, ‘I gotcha, Bteve now the smart, exponent.Philadelphia Inquirer. eee If ever that foolish » s ould the ni cereus would be the avr Albany Journal . A pa eation of a somewhere -blooming riate Mower Man fn Paria is sé ave reported hin death in order to escape paying hir bills, high cost problem!—Milwaukee Ne’ oe e Sauerkraut {s quoted in Chicago at |$1T a ton. Still, if the people of Chi- loago weren't eating sauerkraut by the ton they probably would e doing something else . Lady Constance Richardson collapse! Topeka State Journal. ee who in the thunder am ‘My mother's mother (which 19 my wife) must be my grandmother, and 1 being my Grapdmothes’s husbaod, J vm th. ome og ieetchitnt nin ena need The Gentlemen's Sona’ As-) A ne eiaeeneyhiipnt emanate onan rena eaten i By Maurice Ketten| Corermene 1919, Pen jo y j) ZiT? TEED HD DOM DIY 9 PRRELEEREOFEDS ODA AERSERESESE SOD OLED OAOEOEOHSESSAA ODED The Jarrs, as Social Arbiters, Sail Timidly on Strange Seas DPPESGS FOSS IID SS FIFSSITSSTISISISSSIFOIVGIDITOI9SOD J with lr a vote of thanks to Mr. xeene from an extremely Michael a may an, er ‘ stuffed band extabtis replied that tion with Mra. of a dance down among the; The ‘order lance inside was cos-| now masees: mopolitan enough, and (Mere were plenty | Jarr's tango a band that is “In aocial as well as business affairs, | of tangoes and turkey trots, A be-|al! wolking brass blowers and fiddle Michael Angelo Dinkston is an eM-| wildering array of names of chairmen rubbers, At a lot of these rackets, jest Jolency engineer par excellence, A toast, of various committees pertaining to the! got up to mace the simps for the bar | \to him im tea for his brilliant idea of dance of the Gentlemen's Sons’ @ dance among the masses!” jteciation followed. This was given with a will by those) Mr. As-\and hat check privileges, the music ts Also the name of | stall, Pour or tive is reat musical Jobht Lawyence Cassidy as Floor Man-jand the is phony—fellers rubbl: aasembled to do Mre. Jarr honor, and| ager and a concluding note that the) hoss ti with soaped strings and on the floor below the dancing of the; music was by “Our Favorite, Tkey | givin’ silent imitations of cornet playing. masses Was now beginning. Mr. Laws | Rheinstein and His Unstuffed Band ef You see they can get hicks to fake on a | rence Cassidy (if there are any Cas-| Twenty Union Musictane” lot of bum instruments at a dojlar a@ aldys who ever become #o by discard-| “What is a stuffed band, Mr. Cas-/night, maybe, for thelr suds, while ing blouse and pigtail) now appeared | sidy?” asked Mrs. Jarr, turning to the | avout four or five regular musical gu) with dance cards gayly tho makes the genuine ragtime noi hed much Irish-Americanized young snipes Get! “Oh 1 see," said Mr. Jarr, “the or- cheatra haa a lot of players in it who only pretend to blow and scrape." “Sure,” sald the affable young floor manager. “They stuffa the orchester. aries SHA, Jo ib isan Peitian aa Go. fiue New Yow wiesisel ate | Hut this ts a full band. Whenever |youse 1s ready now, the Left-Handed | enjoyment made upon this fact In the brililantly lighted dance hall on the floor below a young man of Pleasant appearance stood in the cen- tre of the room receiving the felicits tions of his many friends, He was at- Ured in a dress suit of lustrous purple with a erinkly pink waistcoat with gold buttons Tle dainty patent leather shoes, ad tops of purple velvet to mateh hi ittlre nnd were secured by gold bute! tons of the saine design as hia watst- t's A diavond studded crossed the belt line of this magni. | cent young man, and diainonds biased o» his hands and cuff Unks, Hts left hand was carried in a eling made from a large purple silk handkerchief. Mr. Lawrence Cassidy led Mrs. Jarr and her party up to this personage (worthy, as Mrs. Stryver whispered, of being known to the Presidentess of Costa Rial and introduced them This wax tho Left-Handed Kid, name no wateh chain [into a ferment ea S/AUSERTAPAYSCNMTERNUNIEL | Copyright, 1913, dy ‘The Press Publishing Co, (Toe New York Evening World), |No. 7.—A Stateeman’s Blunder That Led to the Revolution HORGE GRENVILLE was a bore. To many people he was @ joke, as well. King George III. of England grew to regard ! him as a pest and, according to our chronicler, “to feel a kind of horror of the interminable persistency of his conversation.” | “There {s perhaps no one,” says the eame authority in speaBing of | Grenville, “who has been at the head of au English administration to | whom a lower place can be assigned as a statesman.” | The George Grenville thus flatteringly alluded to was the incompetent | whose actions led to the American Revolution and to England's loss of her |New World colonies. The blunder whereby Grenville achieved this mighty result was the passage of the Stamp act. For many years England had enforced laws by which stamps and stamped paper were used for raising revenue, Each stamp represented @ tax for a certain eum—a sum that must be paid in order to procure the stamp. Such stamps were ordered aMxed to all grants, licenses, appoint- ments, concessions, wills and other legal documents; to playing-cards, books, pamphlets, advertisements, &. The stamps ranged fn price from 6 cents to $10 aplece. Though the custom had been prevalent in England for a long time, where It had called forth little worse opposition than a chorus of heartfelt grumbling, there had been no effort to apply It to the American colonies. It was rightly thought ty: Fngiand that the colonteta needed all their resources to bulld up thelr own communities; and that as they were not represented in Parliament and had no voice In the British Government, ft would be unjust to saddle them with this heavy tax burden. Several times the suggestion to extend the Stamp act to the colontes had been made. But always it was vetoed by some clear-headed statesman who chanced at the time to hold the reins of power in England. It was first pro- Dosed in 1732; ba the famous Minister, Horace Walpole, refused to carry It through, sayti @ the taxation of America to some of my sticcersors who have more courage than I." Equally far-seeing and prudent was William Pitt when, question came up again. Pitt replied to the proposition “I will never burn MY fingers with an American stamp tax!” Then George Grenville, Pitt's brother-in-law and successor, “rughed in where angels feared to tread.” Grenville, who was ever the butt of Pitt's sharp humor, put through a law !mposing the Stamp act upon the American colonies. He adited, by way of excuse, the claim that this tax was necessary for the ‘raising of a revenue “for defending, protecting and securing I1\« Majesty's do- minions In América." Grenville hit on th’ . In 1757, the same Plan not to help the growth and tmalntenance of the colonies, but hecause England's treasury had been drained {n carrying on costly European wars, A Minister who could solve the knotty financial problem of the hour might reasonably hope for future favors, even from a King who was already trying to get rid of him and whom his conversation filled with “a kind of horror.” When the news of the Stamp act reached America it threw all the colontes Everywhere the tax was denounced as Iniquitous and unbear- able. The stamp officers were shunned as moral lepers Mectings of protest were everywhere held. Armed resistance to the measure was openly threatened. Pulpit and press thundered invectives. James Otis sounded the immortal battle ery: “Taxation without Representation is Tyran: As fast ax the bundles of stamps reached an American port they were stolen or burned, A Congress made up of delegates from the fanny furious colonies met in New York and loudly asserted i Mourning ' the rights of the people. ies “Stamp Act Day’ was observed as a season of un! pe ane Wwerreee versal mourning and fasting. Bells tolled as for the dead. Funeral processions talked through the streets Flags were half-masted, dirges were playe’. Newspapers bordered their pazes in black Courte adjourned. Ships were held in port. All business came to a standstill And these signs of public grief were unconsctously: made to Kerve as mourn: {ng for the death of England's power in Aierica. For the colonists’ righteous indignation (instead of dying down when Eugland hastily sought to retrieve ner error by repealing the Stamp act) grew stronger every day, until, In less than a decade, all the thirteen colonies were in arms against the mother country. Long before that time George Grenville had been turned out of office and ad died, But the fruits of the blunder lived onto stir up an eight-year war to turn a group of dependent colonies {nto a free and mighty nation, 7 The Dollar Mark. ANY peuple like to think that the) Then he got the clue When our Span- American dollar mark is @ cor-|ish colonists first wrote the word ruption of the symbol "U pesos,” one of which {9 about a dollar, Others have held to the old historian’s| they spel out tn full. ‘Then it got idea that It Is a replica of the pillars of down to * When !t was written hur- Hercules, Prof. Forlan Cajort of Coto: | rtedly the and the “a were super- rado has knocked all these pleasing | imposed, as he shows from ancient wrlt- fancies in the head by proving, with| ings, and gradually the dollar mark ancient manuseripts, that the dollar came into use—"p" was written over "s"" mark is really 4 corr uption of the old) Say Prof. Cajort: “It has been estab- breviation for peso—a dollar, | I!shed that the dollar mark {s the lineat Prof. Cajori looked over thousands of descendant of the Spaniah abbreviation nuscripts to get at his facts, says the. ‘ps’ for ‘ that the change from the Sast Oregonian. We started with the florescent ‘ps’ to $ was made about idea that the dollar mark was an abbre- ty English-Americans who came in bus viation of the word “dollar,” but, as he ness relations with the Spanish-Amert+ says, “we had to throw our idea over-| cans, and that the carilest printed dollar board as a useless burden.” mark dates back to the year I Fashions T HIS bodice makes an exceedingly charming, even ‘adorate effect, since the drapery’ is cut with etraignt edges, it can be made from flouncing and whatever is made from flouncing {9 simple and easy to adjust. The foundation te @ plain blouse with the snore sewed to the To give the effect oa the figure, this blouse {a cut from lining ma- terlal and the centre pointed peplum in * srate and attached to Varda 44 inches’ wide in full Mr. Clarence Hurley. Bat hie aspect was allan, even to b's holee of festal colors. | “Ip the Jookouts on the job? asked the Left Handed Kid of Mr. Cusskty ‘| hear the Boneyard Bunch is com- ing to crash the racket.” “I guens you're heeled for ‘em,’ torted the Chinese Irish-American. “'Ab-so-luteyy!" replied the young man r purple, “But you'd better put dese tadies and gents behind the sheet ‘ron re- PN by Have - A-nearT’ music Co tables when they blow tn." Dinkston rapped his knuckles pst the flagdraped table near hin | My love is fair, my love is sweet. the hal Tt gave a Ah, how | love to sip # though fenced The nectar of the gods distilled with} on the stage the other night. Probably Mean her ruby tip. “I can see an exciting episode or two overcome by gue due to adding rose hand, | heave is on the taps," murmured Mr, Dink- another vell to her dancing cost “ ye that would ¢ ston, “But on with the dance, let joy a | a » ae. 3 ‘ow Cast S slesl a ten = __ 20 waredineds” ’ with 3-8 yard 18 inches wide for ay) front and back perde fee es wide for 1e re ¥. 17s Yards 6. inches wide peplum to teks as shown an the nig ure; $18 yards inches, wide to thax with high neck lone ui lee’ es. Patt 1, MOBT ip eut in from 34 to 42 Inches bust measure, Pattern No, 8057—Fancy Blouse, 34 to 42 Lust. Cali at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION $BUREAU, Donald Building, 19 West Thirty-second street (oppo- te site Gimbel Bros.), corner Sisth avenue and Thirty-second street, Ovteia gNew York, or sent by mall on receipt of ten cen:s in coin or 4 Teese § *#mpe for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always specify fiz0 wanted, Add two cents for letter postage if in ® hurry.