The evening world. Newspaper, November 14, 1913, Page 26

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, November 14, 1913 ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, | GEBliehed Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nom 66 @/ 63 Park Row, New York. Postal Union. Copyright, 1013, by The Prem I’uhitshing Go, (The New York Krening World), No. 12.—A Petty Order That Led to England’s Civil War. English King didn’t like his subjecta’ growing habit of emigrating to America. It not only drained the peasant and merchant ranks from which he drew the bulk of his reventes, but it seemed to him an insulting criticism on the way his kingdom was run. So one day in 1683 he scribbled hfs signature to an order forbidding a certain ship, them in harbor, to sail for Boston. He probably forgot the order after a day or two, in the slough of other blunders in which he was fcrever wallowing. He assuredly did not realize that it would have been a hundred times wiser for him to cut off his own right hand than have signed that order. For, indirectly, he had just signed his own death warrant and hed helped shove England into the abyss of civil war, wherein he himself was destined to lose his crown and his Hfe. The King was Charles I. Now, aboard the ship whose esalling Charles had forbidden was @ CERTAINGY, LONG LINES man who had become so disgusted with government misrule vise we To the average man it often seems that New York is too prone i AND VERY EXCLUSIVE had resctved to turn his back forever on his fatherland and to throw in bts e,ewap Police Commissioners at random from sheer force of habit— foreu: wen those of Ne Bngland colonists. LEAVE | ONE Wie men was @ well-to-do pies early terly years old, stocky ef build, with the idea of getting something different rather than something r . If there were anything in the theory that the beat Police od and puffy ef bg La hon Rae noisy! of Gua slovenly in rese with dirty hands and A Blovenly Unen. Gemmiesioner is the untried Police Commissioner, it would rule out f Gentue. é Rad [hg Alek en ry Coralie ry Uren Hegre he the: General. To many, however, Gen. Bingham seems to figure ~ panes te, empath, ie garrnrnn pPgeriitced bd @mong those who have had their chance—without having furnished can tee Be Beedh a ae ine ie Meat Mien lovaty any startling proof that they could make the most of it. influence with the plain folk of his own eort, the folk who were soon to wrest In any present consideration of the Police Commissionership it fs by no means irrelevant to note that Rhinelander Waldo has been 8 much better Commissioner without Mayor Gaynor than ever he $3.60 One Year... +30 /One Month, - i , ATZE ent, 43 > NE. BE IT'S EXCLUSIVE Ano BALE SY eee arranttt them am EXACTLY sun SIs” p> [wanranenccosin DON PAmke: He TOON JY | sosnen P ZUR, Jr Secretary, 63 Park Row, SHART LOOKING SUIT 3 " mee =o 5 . Baered at the Pont OMmce at New York an Recand-Olane Mate awa | [A THAT Witt GIVE You UBIEIRTAIP AN, SONATE RHUL, ‘World for the United States All Countries In the International id i i} WOLUME 53... WHY BINGHAM? ENERAL BINGHAM'S friends and admirers continue to discuss G his eligibility for the Police Commissionership under the Mitchel administration. The General was summarily removed from office by Mayor MoClellan as the outcome of the Duffy affair. Under the city’s charter persons removed from office for cause are not eligible for farther appointment. Yet, this having been a summary removal with- out charges or hearing, some people hold that the General is now per- festly eligible. All of which is a question for the inwyers. the reins of rulership from the courtiers who mocked and oppressed them. The ewollen-faced, rough farmer with the dirty linen and the arrogast manner was Oliver Cromwell. Aboard the detained ship with him were Hampden, Haselrig, Pym, en@ @ A number of others who were afterward to start and fan the spread of war-flame was with him. throughout England. King Charles, in cooping up this shipload of firebrands, ries of Nfe-blunders, a District-Attorney Whitman wants $10,000 appropriated to dig England was beginning to learn—what America later proved by a gtortows . fight for Mherty and what France taught her nobles by g@ baptism of bleed— that the people and not one small ruling class are the masters of a nation. King Charles's ohief idea in Hfe was that monarchs are chosen by God to rule kingdoms in any way they may choose. For centuries his ancestors had acted on this “divine right” bellef. But in Charles's day the people were awakening. Cromwell, Hampdea, Pym and many another were loudly declaring that no foolish or unjust King Z ‘4 out the facts about Tammany tamperings with State contractors. H Ten thousand dollars’ worth of excavating may turn up discoveries 8 that mean millions to the taxpayer. ‘ — A CULT OF HUMAN SACRIFICE. HE arrest of eight striking mail chauffeurs suspected of plots T involving dynamite and murder is another grim reminder for New York of the risks in a free-for-all licensing of chauf- feurs. Will the city heed the warning? An ordinance to bring the Juggernaut mail trucks under the con- trol of the city’s speed laws is now before the Board of Aldermen. The Aldermen are expected to act upon it next Tuesday. At last, _ therefore, there is a prospect of freeing New York from the terror of these huge engines of death which, since the beginning of the year, had the right to shape @ nation's course, Charles thought otherwise, When Parliament (acting as the people's voice), opposed him, he dismissed Parliament, a8 @ mother might tell a naughty child to leave the room, Parliament and ite adherents rose in rebellion. England was split tate two great factions—the Parliament party: and those who still clung to te shopworn belief in the divine right of Kings. Civil war set in, Uttle by Ittle the Parliament forces gained ground. In one battle after another—notably at Naseby—they thrashed the King’s armies. Cromwell,—whe had had no military training, but who was a born genera! just as he was @ born statesman—was one of the foremost figures in this war. It was he to whom the chief credit for the victories at Naseby and elsewhere were given, At his back were the “Ironsides," a body of invincible MODELS eee fighters, stern, bloodthirsty, relentless. anni ing At last Charl hopelessly beaten. He fled to the have crushed out eleven lives in the city streeta. of a King. Seetsh tok Feta Hie grandccthera mcther” Marto But'in repeatedly calling attention to the menace of ponderous Stuart, had been Queen of Scotiand and the Highlanders Were supposed to adore him. The Scotch, however, thriftiky sold their adored King to the English. Now that they had Charles in their power the Parliament leaders did not quite know what to do with him. They dared not let him free to stir up new trouble and there was always danger of escape if they kept him a prisoner. They settled the question in true “Ironsides’ fashion by, beheading him, Cromwell had loudly announced: “We will cut off his head with the crown upon it!" Cromwell was soon the sole ruler of England. But for a careless royal order, written a few years earlier, he might inetead have been tilling a rocky farm somewhere in the ishborhood of Boston, The Day’s Good Stories. The Prayer Monopoly “No; I want to eve the postmaster,” After 2 while the mam came beck end adied UDOE WILLIAM BH, HUNT 04.4 at © tuncb-lagain for the postmaster, eon the other 61 “He's not back yet,” the clerk told tim, “Es “The Chinese beat us in many things—they | there anything 1 can do for you, or can 1 Gell Rim even beat us in truste, Once, ta my boyhood, | something when he comes?"” (a New Orleans, I got to know quite well Yot] “No, there ain't nuthin’ you ess do, ead I amg, & laundryman, Yot hed banging above /wisht the postmaster wes here, I want to on @ mail trucks driven at reckless speed through crowded thoroughfares (he Evening World has pointed out that this is only one of the ways:in which New York needlessly caste itself under the wheels of the sll-conquering automobile. * _The best automobile laws are worthless without adequate penal- ties—penalties that mean something, penaltics that are enforced. ------Oej. Edward Cornell, of the National Highways Protective Society, Geclares that in this State “a reckless chauffeur stands four times the chance of escaping punishment that he does in the neighboring Btate of New Jersey.” A record of 1,131 street accidents caused by motor vehicles since Jen. 1 ought to open the eyes of New York to the fact that its present “sped worship of the auto is a cult dark with human sacrifice. . eel The specimen of new popular five-cent bus exhibited to the ALEOEERESEOESE SED COESPESESEOSESESS OEAEEERESESEEREEY Al Mrs. Jarr in the Jersey Wilds ron) yy S Encounters a Forest Monarch & BESTS IIITTSOSST FOFSS9SSS9ISISSOS SEFOSSOSTSESISETTS the wild grapes. ‘They don't taste “Suppose they should be poison! Let) to rub himself against the bole, shaking wood, that's a fact!” she added, for she us be careful!” cried ‘Mrs. Jarr. “Oh,/|the tree unt!l the nute rained down. As though in obedtence to the first|I know it's @ razorback hog because Clara Mudridge-Smith, who was picking! of these three wishes, a tall, gaunt, |it ls stropping itself.” up the nuts as fast as the hampering bristling animal came upon the scene.| ‘It's a dreadful creature,” whimpered accoutrements of very high heels to!It had such a fierce and unkempt ap-|Mrs. Clara Mudridge-8mith, ‘‘But, her shoes and a very long lower length pearance that the ladies all screamed| thank goodn Here comes our prm- of corset permitted. in wild m, However, the uncouth | tector, our n dog Hector! He will @ dreadfully bitter!"| beast did not bother them at all but} save us!" ger, who had bitten|after uttering a few contemptuous) Sure enough, Mrs. Wilgus's great e«z “Whuck! Whuck! Whucks!" began|hound bounded into the scene like a to de cooked and eating the nuts on the ground with| canine Spartacus leaping into the arena. +4 ' had eampled several. if we could only see some wild animal] "Oh, I know what it ie!” said Mrs. | te cot a quer iad +o Mhe @ calen- there's any mail for mo, and I’m gettin’ ta B {" town Is about the size of a trolley car. Query: Ought the streets “Wild grapes are not At to eat unt!l) eating them!” Jars, “Iv'a a hog—a ragorback hog! | 4; all writen cree wits awe charter, Jini. "—Keanman ity Sar | - to be used quite so copiously? cooked, Everybody knows that!" sald) abet f “ That,’ be answered, ‘ls a prayer-book, I tear Luck. ctf half a sheet every night and half . oH ‘ae .NEW YORK’S STUPENDOUS ASSET. Meuneeevmnnte |G wearers NLY a year and a half late the city begins to move into ita scrumptious new $20,000,000 Municipal Building. By the New Year it is hoped that the twenty-five floors of this pala-| “””""Yie'New Yor kratna Words tial ‘‘hotel de ville” will be humming with the work of the city's r ean i 8 : : I {im Peking had the monopoly of these prayer-buoks, playwright, When he prospars he eam- a copyright protected them, and any one who|eklere luck « kindly goddess; but when his wart 5 faila then hick srems to him @ epirlt perveraty “A monopoly of @ nation’s prayer! A monopoly | crus! and mean, of oll or ment or eteel esems trifling beside! ‘He regarde inck then as Tom Jackson'y wile, ‘that, eb?'’—Washington Star, of Lafayette, dows, 6 OU never can tell!" sald Mrs. ra lghtvof the de. th r ————— we Jacmon sald i“ morning at — ., 5 . jenerally boiled or roast-| great e ness, sight of the dog the nut-eatin Hang it all! While I was weeding 1 dropped thirty-six departments carried on by fifteen thousand employees, Y ave as ie snaiee Ca ie ee ed," explained Clara Mudridge-Smith.| Reaching the base of the great tree tropping ragorback hog erected | Urgent Business. ance ne {27,2 Order ie Tower a oo ae “Hoped,” we eay. This was the building which was planned to | ea aelikiy: (icone catenite the har-| 5° these er-er hazel nuts, or fberts,|from which the nuts had dropped, the|every bristle on his scraggy back and MAN called ot ington post Jewn, and I've been looking for it now over eit have to be cooked, too, I assume.” other day and asbed for the postmaster. | aq hour, It's gone for good, 1 suppose,’ be “ready for occupancy in May, 1912! Why wasn’t it? Ask the Vent of nuta and the vintage of grapes. ugly and most unpleasant ening) Degen with fire In his eyes and champing hts teeth he gave a couple of ees (eal We ies et om ‘oe eta ee granite contractors, ask the interior finish contractors, ask the floor|ner steer “Prenat eercer hi rneenat Saal eanss ‘sarwvban will be be int” wae adbad. “Bully tor you," onld he, ‘Where id gon contractors, ask the elevator contractors, ask numberless sub-con- Mas yu ag fer as the With a« vale of terror that noble ire pacroniiegelsy bs te pat oe cork ber ey pelle ao haretosted thie eftersems,’ ys raion the Comptroller's office. Every answer will be equally ealtereg rofualon over 4 ee Carer ett aty A ES SS ed razor back after him squealing with —4 ‘baffied rage and hate, said Mra, Jerr as she calmly resumed harvesting the nuts again, ‘I think that we should mak» friends with the pig if we want real Protection. He surely is monarch of the words.” "Yes," said Mre. Stryver, “the pig also proved one thing, and that ie that ret a a 101 em, ful, . Yet the majority of New Yorkers are so used to “hoping” alonz Heelies ig aise on ge their public works, so used to disappointments, so used to delayed |°f, a bushes near the path, contracts, so used to jobs that eat up money, so used to buildings built |1 nA Mae Nee lnae matings" for economy that prove prodigies of extravagance, so used to paying [Std Mrs Buryver: eentine Cer ene wae extre rent while new quarters lie idle and unfinished, that now they roaltied ae Figen iaeling Peds a only wait to sce this superb structure complete and in full blast to be'proud of it and no questions asked. The May Manton Fashions VERY variation of E the vest feature {s to be noted mm the new Viouss, Here is a pretty one that ean 1% the nuts are good to eat. Dear me! 1 be wom with open neck igi y > ‘ i Wi could vi sete, _ The most colossal civic asset of New York is its good nature, Hits From Sharp Its. byl) ba ae ad nine FWD chem +. “Oh, they are wild grapes, am right,” at the elongated Christmas comes but once a year, A German editor accuses President Cee bets tal el is i hed bey i and, if the long But when it comes it brings good cheer— Wilaen of having ‘imperialist: ¢ Tidant corpde eat henay i SnO6 Bre not tiKed, ‘Shey, SPUGS, lrlum." This is even better than hi i len can be cut off at the me and SPUGS. remarked Mre, Jarr, ‘never $ng rainstorms,—Baltimore American. foe eee meee err Snares again. een in the woods only an hour and we have gathered a clothes basket full of nuts, Come, girls “But we can't carry the dask: too heavy,” @aki Mra, Jenkins. “Empty halt the nuts out and fill the ‘basket up with wild grapes; they're light,’ gested Mre. Stryvs they beautiful? Aren't the: was going to aay “delicious,” but amended it to ‘Sut wild grapes were elbqws. ‘The blouse @ & good one for wear with the odd skirt and Also to be used for the gown of one matertal, In the illustration, one of the pretty Nttle flowered silks Is made with collar and vest ef Piain but it {9 easy te think of a great many attractive contrasts, Man in Cleveland starts an organine- tion to foster the smile. Stands to be & miccems if there aren't any dues. Letters From the People 7 Such things woul frowned upon.— There are a horde of mo. Milwaukee Daily ane modern dances ‘4 Ite awkward and ungainly, And ae they are falsely known as the ‘This is & mistake, The .ango ie not| {he impossible while in South America, F than £ can eusily recall) the trot. Let them be known by their | Dut We certalnly shall be dismppointed when our winters began much earlier. | rightful, eure T am aev- «? We don't expect Col. Roonevelt to do re old, But people whi ‘e “tango.” {€ asinine, names, v if he doesn't come back with the satie- few much colder and tasted much | turkey trot, the bunny. hug the arias [faction of having killed « bull with his than they now do. It was @/ near, the o : hare hands, acored tremendous hit tn old days when we did not ecintio walk, the hesitation, + they touched a vi For vests are being the kitchen alnk or any o § grand opera in Buenos Ayres, dircoy- R ing Day.| dozen craty titles. But don't leva mig. | ered the headwaters of the Amason, othae Sapket two py two Rika... 3s to be-|call them “tango.” Am senalbly eeti|Dlanted the fing of Armageddon on the uccesstul Ingy scoute and and handsome sitks ta : natead of the camper of pigs from a pen a hal-|NRNEst peak of the Andes and estab- n_turned for home, They really brilliant colors, ae) fn mid-April as now. Summers were) jo cry f."| tiuhed w record in the matter of cups had not gone far when Mra, Wilgus's ‘or the medium sige, 5S « F find our winters shorter | wate-Mrothers, Net Step-Rrothers, |of Brasil coffee at one sitting. Phila: egg hound, which had made a detour 172, louse will require ee mer than of olden days and tolls Kéiler Of Ths Beane Wee delphia Inquirer. of some four miles to escape the venge- 27-8 yardn of matertad b q@ummers cooler, The warm days If-a man's married ‘and has a son b tS 8 ful and Wremoible rasorvees hes, Spr 0 mot begin as early in the spring as 7, 17-8 yards 36, 184 f L4 in front of them. his first wife and whe dies and then| Several girls have entered the Toledo peared aoe Winter (real winter) seldom yards 4 Inches with 11-4 yards 37 for vest. collar and cuffs, y again he marries and has a son by his| School of Carpentry, Te it poasible that He was somewhat out of breath, yet much before Christmas, and the| xecond wif 0 id 0 w Rh not too much to bare his teeth at oi ey ilgae lated mae Mth @, should the two boys be| Women can learn to @aw wood and say bli shed by Pattern No, ' called “step-brothers" i . Mi " Jal 1. < them again and demand more Diack- is cut In alzes fro) $ Who can explain thin odd but] trye" prbrathers’ or MelEsbeaty Rothing?=Mempnie’ Commercial Appee! Pure ratcum . & Co_- matl in the shape of hincheon, But to 42 Inch buat measure. change? SENEX. How Many Minutes? It would not do a newly married man Mre. Jarr whacked the bullying bluéfer ‘Tange va. Trot. ‘To the FAitur of the Evening World any good to know what his bride's girl When autumn’s chill is in the sharply with Clara Mudrid) Cali at THE BVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BUREAU, Donald Building, 16 Weet Thirty-second street (oppe- L ate Gimwbel Bros.), corner Sixth avenue and Thirty-second etrest, Ovtete {New York, or sant by mall on receipt of ten cents ta cola op ‘nese vtemepe for each pattern ordered. IMPORTANT—Write your adéreas plaimty and always epeaiiy Pomeres {due wented, A44 two cents fer letter postage i in o hurry. ‘Bo Ge Réttor of The Hrening World What reader can solve this problem:| friends think of him.—Toledo Blade. B,want to protest against the name| “A shovels 1 ton of coal in 5 minuten; orf And winds from off the sea golden shepherd's crook and Come sweeping in much overcharged and ran. A few more rods away he With raw humidity; ‘ati! more loudly barked and yelped. Ah! then my lady's color blooms “The hog bes got him!” seid Mra. a8 usually applied to any or| B shovels 1 ton of coal in 10 minutea;| In an Eastern city it te sugeested @i ef & dosen foolish, awkward and|€ shovels } ton of coal in 15 minutes.| that the election booths, idle eleven The tango is| How many minutes will it take A, B| months in the year, should be rented Ae ruddy as the rose; Jerr. ‘unseemly da: py and pre' dance, and is a] and C together to shovel 1 ton of coal?’|out for chicken houses, or portable It's quite becoming on her cheeks— But Mage, elise Hector, had met ‘variation on ancient minuet.! | nit 2 a. PT. |garages.—Cleveland Plain Dealer, But not co on her nope, 5 _. lencteer oem, é } , oaants { ) 4 ‘ 4

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