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SO eR 8 = ern ne Sania: er etane lhineimmaeenes tee cee 2 ge me naman ~~ —- i “The Evening W ‘ orld Daily Magazine, Monday. November 10.1913 SSTABLIGHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Petia’ Daily Basept Gusany wy ae ed Patines Company, Nea 66 &: WRONG NUMBER, ey LIVES WN “THE FLAT ABOVE . 1AM JOHN a SL ttl ls Ri Becond-Claas M. re Oe te Ter Rnsians and jontinemt ané Weeld Ger the United States All Countries in the International ond Oenade Owe Tear ccse. ce. VAN NOT AS I MARES MOSN: ‘Tey THe FLOOR BELOW Postal Union 1818, by The Prom Mublishing Co, Jno Year... oo commseone Coperight, The New York Evening World), ae ee 10.-A Squabble Between Two Children That Led to WOLUME 64..0..0.s00secsnsommessceasneseeees NO. 19,074 rant Wor. = WO little Itallan boys while playing together one day in the thie KOTOWING TO OUR IDOL. ERIOUS explosions ke that of Saturday which occur periodi- cally in “Gasoline Row” (as the automobile shop section of Broadway has come to be known) are regrettable. But sewers full of inflammable gasoline drippings, heavy man- hole covers that jump sixty feet into the air (and come down again), late glass windows crashing on the heads of people in the streets, slums of flame that burst from the ground in the midst of crowded Qrafflo—these things must be accepted as awkward but inevitable essompaniments of the automobile. Me suggest to the motorcar dealer that he ought to take care miiere his waste gasoline runs to would be to insult the trade monarch @@ the moment. Now York would rather be blown to atoms than teenth century got into a childish squabble over some toy. TRE epat led to a long and bloody war and to the founding of two mighty political parties which exist in Italy to this day. ‘The boys—Lore and Geri—were cousins and were members of the pow ‘erful family of the Cancellieri in Pistoja. In the course of their dispute Lore passed suddenly from words to blows, by slapping Geri across the face, It was an era when a blow from the bare hand was regarded as the deadliest of insuits. Even among children of the nobility this rule held good. They did little or no fist fighting. As soon as they grew old enough to handle cold steel or rich enough to hire assassins, there were more drastio ways of settling grievances than by pummelling an adversary. cairiages when Geri was slapped he did not hit back, but ran home and | told his(parents of the horrible affront that had been put upon him an@ | incidentally, upon his whole family. | Lore told his own father what he had done. \ matters over, ‘The father, hoping to smoom® nt Lore, posthaste, to Geri to offer the owner" jogles. m its sacrifici: and kot to the euto- Avenging When Lore, shamefaced and rehearsing over and over hate o ccintille fro ings owings an tneuie. again his apology, arrived at Gerl's home hs was met by his victim's father, Geri's father calmly declared that ne mere apology could wipe out so deedly an insult to the son of an Itallan nobleman. The offense, he added, could be washed out only, ; in blood. Accordingly he seized the pante-stricken Lore and cut off the ohild’s right hand—the hand that had struck Gert. | . Lore's immediate family retallated by starting a blood feud against the family of the brute who had thus mutilated their young kinsman, In private hands we let the auto ran over us, msim us, kill us. be Hoensed Juggernaut in the service of the United States Mail we Jab @ terrorize our etreets. In the guise of a taxicab we let it rob ™, tnsalt us, mock at our laws. Small wonder then if we only smile shan ite eacred oils go on the loose and blow us to pieecs. Ger!'s family entered a lee right eagerly into the spirit of the feud, Ogher families—friends of one or the | othar—took sides inti! the whole city of Pistoja was split In two hostile factions, ‘ —_—__ | One of these factions took the name “Bianchi” (“Whites”), in honor of Dons aes ‘The of the ts not nd up in the question biter we of its lead The other party was nicknamed, by contrast, sether Pojeeertd Pi NpRr ry 0 to St. Pet urg only tong ‘Nert," or “Blacks.” (Tae names “Whites’ and “Blacks” appear henceforth a j wfaath indell plans jersbi through Italian history, thelr adherents fighting on opposite sides even do: A enough to brighten up his social standing and learn the real taste to the Papal revolutionary ware of Italy during the nineteenth century; ae of caviare, But hints of bargains and short-term contracts in con- | representing to-day two opposing political factions In Rome and elsewhere), r m the ‘of Untted States Ambassador are not seemly, | The conflict, which started in the slapping of Geri's face, quickly spread and chould be cleared up. It ts not to be delleved that President | beyond PistoJa and throughout Italy. The Donatt (Guelph leader) of Florence enrolled themselves on the side of the Blacks; and the equally warlike Ghibelline {Wilson had the faintest inkling of anything of the kind in Mr. Pin- THAT TACK [clan of the Ubert! espoused the cause of the Whites 4afs case. Despite all that folks are eager to tell us on the subject, F Thus, in time, the Blacks and Whites were dragged into the Guelph-Ghibelline .. We Mrefer to believe that the Diplomatic Service of the United States WAS For ME wars that devastated Italy; and thelr fortunes became more or less merged ts not yet conducted for the accommodation of society pushers and ALLRIGHT | with those of the two great parties pressing b The Biacks in a few years raised the “Italy for —— A CONTINUOUS CASE (CONTINUED). Gov. Felker of New Hampshire turns Thaw over to tho Inited States Marshall, Nov. 18, the fugitive, instead of being any nearer Matteawan, will find his case launched | in the Federal courts, where it may cruise about for years. f So long as Thaw can command money to hire lawyers there is iy) nothing to prevent the affairs of this degenerate from cluttering the t courte and costing the country thousands of dollars, until in the i course of time the Supreme Court of the United States is invoked t te settle the wretched business. The technicalities of the Thaw ones since the escape from Mat- | teawan have passed beyond the ken of common folk. The general eS ee public looks on in open-mouthed emase. Only lawyers and Judges oes a enle May Baan e aseets 1 tha can duly and professionally appreciate the dexterous turns and twists = eens | ARN Cas Hite. Slated at (oe wale by which plain justice is being eluded and outwitted. Or FECL KK CK CK KKK KCL LLL KLE CE LE KEL ERS PP The average citizen can do no more than note with awe and Wal fo} I} Mrs. Jarr, in Her Role of Arbiter, Whites fought to make Italy subservient to the | So violent waxed the Bi clashes that on i_they overshadowed for a time Guelph-Ghidelline ware The Result themselves and led Pope Rontface VIII. to call upon the ei a law, French King in 1800 to help in restoring order in Italy 3 pannen? ‘Tis dragged France into the war, which blazed more merrily than ever, and at last led indirectly to the death lot the Pope. It wan a civil strife that separated families, divided hitherto united ofties and well nigh rent the nation asunder. Centurles passed before there was final cessation of the warfare that had started with one little boy slapping another % | __ Has His Limitations. | 2 Gomaine ure eke OWN fp Zanensille, where 1 used tol te acon ar a) Calling the conductor, she ald: “Young 5 conte 1 take two of Wot talk, and that he di urderstoud the superior wlalam Automatic Cattle. admiration how the SRA hla oventey walt : OF res N Atiauia man tens # 48 sensieg expert tains to keep him out of jail when he doesn't belong there may be Changes a Few Social Destinies «:*" fitter” Sie ce te ae used to the eame purpose and with even greater effect when he does, BILAL KAAASAAANAAASAAAAAAAAAASAAA AS shan Swe, be toca i maker for that dress for that party. I the country place of some friends.” “Nobody will be there,” replied Mrs. u Who had deen est “Your new dreas,” spoke up Mr, Jarr.|thought you wanted to wear It especially | Jarr, f ¢ bis dwelling, piers (FBX —Bverybody rejolces over the two girls from the United States {) Jo | "You were fighting with your dress-|at that affair?” “You sald everybody would ve there,” wil bring li Y co ee ee '@P wlio were enatched by Col, Roosevelt and his shtpmates from the Jaws mumbled Mr. Jarr. . ri Def venderille tm Rio Janeiro. Maybe coming back the Colonel can They would if I went. If I don't go tet tte e * do a much for some South American girl on the downward road te 0 cabaret career in New York. ——<¢=>—___ WHY IS THE TICKET SPECULATOR? 11—A BOY AND RABBIT, by Raeburn. At the Royal Academy, London. (Sir Henry Raeburn, Scotch, 1756-18238) dealer in soctal des-| tinies!” said Mr. Jarr admiringly. “It lan't that, exactly,” remarked Mrs, Jarr thoughtful: be found in any locality, ” milk have milk The day They Were Cheap. N elderly lady from the eomntry one ly ors Pt es NVESTIGATION of the ecandal of ticket speculation at the time euskal A oo wat ented Witee, CANCEL | ef the World's Series “reveals” what euch investigations uaually| \XJ to mention nat aur, donsine nad mn ee reveal. invited the family out to East Greys are impossible, we tad eter! Sle walkol wral mies tafore racing she" ei first time she | — No, T think it will be, car line, It was the adap fb car, She stared wideeved at eversthing sl aw, ‘then her gaze sto stay aw lovely to go nutting,"” “And dit walnuts,” dart. My dei cntld,” replied the fond mothe! e@ are going to the woods; there are no walls in the woods,” ‘Great Scot The @td ite beet, the people who received their pay itty Fling Nail Geeks torn Meketes at first hand from the management used them or sold them |‘% childish sles. 1. a honor, bet efter thet the beg obody, of ‘That will be grand!” eaid Mre. Jarr. “It was very eweet of Mr, Jenkins to eaures, being able to pute finger on a rogue. Year after year, reviled | eet It, We can camp out in the ema ruffled manageré of college football games investigate their | gather. have sme ce two ot those elon w eign, elie read i sald little Miss fleket sales with cimilar results. District-Attorney Whitman wants the Board of Aldermen to pass @m ordinance stipulating that all tickets must bear in legible letters and characters the price charged by the management, and that no pereon chal! sell tickets unless he displays the written authority of the management. This would apply to theatres, concert halle, circuses, &c. Such an ordinange will sound good to some people. But to others it will seem @ flat infringement of their inalienable right to get what they want when they want it, provided they are willing to psy more than their neighbors for it, and to recompense eome other fellow for taking risks. Therefore, they will find ways to get around apy such lew. The ticket speculator will become as extinct as the dodo when the public solidly and seriously makes up its mind it doesn’t want him. Letters From the People Shelter for Chaufeurs. of streets i* would be pardomable, but ‘Do the Btior of The Evening World: 1 think the streets are not cleaned Just A law being tn effect compelling rail-| subsequent to this periodic deluge of ‘way companies to enclose frent of trol- Horses Miid great diMfculty in ley care to protect metermen, I think | struggling along over dry pavements; that law should cover autemobiies, 1f| but whem it comes to wet, filthy road- mot, why? I was almost run down lest | "42% Progress ia almost impossible. Au- oy temobiles ekid; pedestrians soll the bot- @aturday by one of thove owe 9 er?! tom of their dresses and the bottoms of a epntions aes ant Be he ss trousers; walking acrons the etreets i» the car itself I have been told that| AMON | dH at these enclosed car bodies are called ‘to- withthe-chauffeur” bodies. Can. | 7 th Paitor of The Prening World: — ‘owners of care be compelled ¢o| Readers, what ia the ditfereuce in a oth the public and their chaut-|@Fe® Detween three square miles and J. M. F, | three miles square E. H. de Already a Citheen, To the Editor of The Evening World If @ man t# born in the United States and hie father is not a citizen, fa {¢ necessary for the man to take out eitisen pape: the age of twenty- one, or ie he a cifisen because he is besa te ke Vaied MEd Ee red and black vegetable beads I bought in Jamaica, 1'!] take one to Mrs, Jen- kine!” ‘Why, I eald 1 thought you had an engagement and we wouldn't come, “Ian't Mre, Pishford Grey ‘ou @ reception at h apartments in the Highcosta Arma Sun- ” need a good rest, Go we'll ting party. I'M telephone the Le ‘irey ‘Woman that I find it impossible to at- tend her affair, as we will week-end at Hits From Sharp Wits- The report that the California prune crop was @ failure seems to have been @ practical joke on the public —Phila- delphia Inquirer, . ‘Word comes from Paris to the effect that women who want to de in style will have to wear clothes.—Toledo Blade. eo e.e to prevent anybody else from @nything.—Albany Journal ee e Asa rule, the people who start ‘anti Kinaing clube do not need to.—Chicago News. oe Woman, aged eighty-two, pl wolf every day on greens in Paria. May take up cross-country hikes next.—Milwau- kee News. eee According to somebody who thinks he is an authority, there are 63,600 ways of dying, but none of them looks good to us —Mempils Commercial Appeal. 7 ee Viennese men are trying to introduce the fashion of “decollete* shirts for dress, Just as if any one neck and bis wishbon —Paile- to see about three inches of a Oopyeighe. W408, by The th (The New York Brent By Randolph Colclough Wilson, | trae se the exquisite and de! cate “Boy with Rabbit’ ts, very few know just where the original painting bangs. It ts in the Diploma Gallery of the Royal Academy of Arta, on Piccadilly, London. Haeburn rose rapidly to the point where he was the foremost portrait ar- tit in Great Britain, and like other Kreat artista should have been elected to the Royal Academy, But the c mous And fashionable painters who p the Academy withheld his elec: tion for r that he would settle in London and fect thelr own prestige. Pure jealousy, and well founded, for you think walnuts grow on be you ttMnk chestnuts grow on chests “I know that hickory nuts grow on hickory trees and beechnuts grow on beech trees,” sald Mra, Jarr calmly, “Well, if I thought you wanted to go nutting I wouldn't have refused Jen- Kins's Invitation,” grumbled Mr. Jarr. “Dog gone! If I can understand this so- me at all leave it to thone who do under- stand it, my dear,” Mrs. Jarr remarked in her best Prealdenteas of Costa Rica manner, ‘Don't you see, If I go to the person hurt be- cause she never asked me to her literary afternoons before. So if I firat accept and then send regrets she'll see that 1 am hesitating os to whether I shall take her up or not “phen Mra, Suryver and Clara Mud- ridge-Smith wil! think T am too exclu-} sive to go to the De Greys’ and that !| would have been too exclusive to have gone had she asked me before, und it will make t when, as a fact, I am exclusiy “and yet they won't dare ask me why, at will be admitting ivey tee the De Greys take them : T hep | aloof, 80, you see, that 2 thnk {t will be best to go nu‘ting with the Jenkinses, don't you?" ‘Blessed if I do!" answered Mr. Jarr tn 106, ‘he was. elpoted, | There's too much finesse, or, as Mr. Academician, with the coveted privilege] jiouyer would way, ‘stalling.’ about this of adding R. A. to bis name, | woclety game for_me to wet hep to It." ‘The others had nothing to fear, for| sg. usa tt i “Blodger?” repeated Mrs, Jarr. “That he went back to Edinburgh, and (00k) re ee gs who used to. beat his his time about painting his Diploma by ‘a mbei Picture, The young boy, lounging grace- a4, 3 Sete sn cuneee fully, was a member of his own hous ecuplng. hg eburn rried a Mrs. Les-| es hold. Raeburn had married a omanelnn, there Was No “No, I considere and, e ith two daughters, One ve a eee inarried a Capt, Inglie;|do vet. But, In the abstract, the lower 2 ‘on, Henry Raeburn Inglis, In| middle classes ARI amusing.” And she powdered her nose with an air that said “It takes ali sorts of people to make up @ world, you know,” {of the present picture. Aa} @ portrait it is much softer, much mild er in Weatment than most of Raeburn's works. and doubtless the fact that the! So for these reasans (only Mr. Jarr boy was both deaf and dumb had gov e- can't figure out the reason of the rea: thing to do with this departure from sons) the Jarrs will week-end with th tae ectieve waned sania depkinees ond ge BuMing Bear Nutley, | ee CHOOLGIRIA S always find the loose cout that can be slipped on rape idly the best. Mothe ers will like this mode el because of 1 har extremely smart, ord heck finlsh makes e special feature bee cause the coat that can be buttoned up when the weather tp vold and opened oO au ane in extreme y practical, Belts m, fairly be sald 4 at this seas a the belted back te fashionable, but if fop any reason the plaim one 1s preferred it cai be used, ours, Corduroy and the like, a8 well as to the more familiar cloak. ings, Velveteen with collar and cuffs ef broadcloth makes @ very beautiful effect, if something warm and more wintry te liked, the edges cam wil be Anished with ur. For the twelve-vear siz0 the coat Will ree auire 41-4 yards of materials yards 2 NOUN ig cut ta sizes for girls from eight to foure teen years of age. Pattern No, 8068-—Girl's Coat, 8 to 14 Years. Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION Mee S$ GUKBAU, Donald Hullding, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppo- te Suite Gimbel Bros), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, Ovtata $New York, or sent by mail on receipt of ten cents 1a coin o; r ‘stamps for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT—Write your addrems plainly and alwaye specty Pottores. Seine wanted, Add two cents for ktter postage if in a hurry,