The evening world. Newspaper, April 3, 1914, Page 26

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday. April 3, 1914 She efibsin Biorld. | Little Causes ®& | Wena any EES FE POON ET, a 18 m Of Big Wars} . RALPH PULITZ: ent, 63 Park Row. J. ANGUS SHA’ H PULITZER, Jr. | at the Post-off; New York os \ tes to. The ‘fvening| For Enpland and ¢ | By Albert Conrriaht. 1014. by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evenine World). 68.—A Snub to a Savage That Led to the “Pontiac Com spiracy” War. SCAUSE a savage insisted on spenking of King George of England as “Uncle” instead of “Master” and- because he was heartily enubbed for so doing. the “Pontiac Conspiracy” war scourged Canada and all the Northwest region of what is now the United Payson Terhune ‘World Zor the United Btatos VOLUME 54... . cece ecseseeeeeeeereeeeeseeseeNO. 19,217 SD _- WHY NOT BATHS AT THE SCHOOLHOUSES? T I8 on easy thing for a new Health Commissioner to put a sample of the East River in a test tube and declare that all river baths must be closed. Three months from now, when the weather is sizzling, thousands of people in the city—particularly the children—are going to find it @fuelly hard to be deprived of the bathing that gives them their best hance to keep clean, cool and healthy. New York has no wish to question the wiedom and conscientious- pees of ite experts. But it begs these gentlemen to go slow until ¢ they have convinced themeelves and the public that the danger is i gotually sufficient to warrant closing the baths. ‘ They admit that it would be hard to prove that epidemic or Risease has been caused by bathing in the rivers. For years millions have fought off the eummer heat in the waters around the island r soho Puce without dire results. The tides that lave the shores of Manhattan / i See Oy al aeanied is niieante wal fi tre strong and swift and at certain times of day it is hard to believe : r — and be vowed be would prove tint ven setng and st that the water here is so much woree than at crowded beaches. a vassal, fo he summoned hia own nat If henceforth, during the hot weather, densely populated Man- vesthea were tans stone fore ertched wt trv sone te sent. battan is to be quarantined eo far as bathing is concerned, it is time | Ana Ponta set cut to denroy thea forte, The ue to th forty strenaty to consider ways and means to provide bathing facilities for those who the rest. And at Detroit the sachem resolved to strike in person, tannot afford to go often to Coney. Watertight floating baths with s fresh water sual in from the city mains might help. 2 One thing is sure: Special consideration is due the children. His plan was simple. With a band of picked braves he appeared before the Detroit fort one day in the early spr:ag of 1768, demanding to be ad- Upon them the heat bears heavily. The habit of cleanliness ie, more- | over, a part of education. States. The savage was Pontiac, a mighty sachem. He and his braves hed fought flercely for France in the French and Indian war. Then when Eng land won Canada he became the loyal friend of the English colonists. Indeed, More than once he saved them from Indian massacres. And Pontiac was @ friend worth having. | But the English did not understand the art of making friends with Indians, The savages had gotten on finely with the French. But the English, by deeds of cruelty or of gross tactlessness, were forever rubbing them the | wrong way. | For example, Pontiac regarded himself as a wilderness King. Whee the English explained that King George was now monarch of the wilder- ness and of everything else in sight, the sachem politely agreed that George | might perhaps be even & greater King than himself. And in view of this, posaibly, he referred to the English sovereign as his “uncle.” ‘That did not sult the English. They pointed out that George wae not Pontiac's uncle but his master. And they not only snubbed Pontiac for saying such a thing, but they set about “teaching him hts his “place,” presumably, being that of a vaseal COMMISSIONER mitted for a conference. Major Gladwyn, who was in command of the gar- rison, saw no reason to refuse. And the conference was appointed for the next morning. ! That night an Indian girl crept unseen to the fort and warned Gladwya j that the Indians attending the conference would all be armed; and that at e signal from Pontiac they would throw off the blankets which hid their | Weapons and would proceed to massacre the unprepared garrison. You MAY PASS |, As a result of this warning, when Pontiac and his men filed into the | fort next day they were met by the entire garrison, under arms and ready 1AM GOING IN Your PREDECESSOR | to fire upon them. The plot failing, Pontiac withdrew from the trap in BUSINESS ON YOuR WAY OUT which he was so nearly caught, and laid sieze to Detroit. Meantime at other places a similar scene was acted. At Fort Mack- | {naw, for instance, several hundred supposedly peaceful Indians invited | the garrison to witness a football game just outside the fort gates, During the game the ball was kicked as if by accident through the open gateway of the fort. The players rushed in after it. So did all the Indian onlookers, Then they captured the stronghold and slaughtered or carried away the whole garrisot mn. { Eight of the twelve forts were taken by the Indians; some easily and some after desperate resistance. Along the whole border A Trick a bloody war was waged. But Detroit did not fall, It ‘That Failed. § "esisted Pontiac's alternate craft and violence. And as » Detroit was the key to the whole situation, the Indians were at last beaten. They tired of the long confilct an@ in 1765 made terms of peace. An English trader soon afterward offered a barrel of liquor to any one who would kill Pontiac. A Kaskaskia Indian won the reward by creeping up behind the sachem as Pontiac was walking through the forest and murdering him, ‘FLOOR PLAN OF PUBLIC scHoo.. [Words You Use Incorrectly HONORARIUM. — “Honorarium" | “votivus” (meaning a vow). Thus @ does not mean simply a “fee.” An| votive offering is an offering made as “honorarium” ts necessarily a “volun- | the result of a vow or a pledge. And tary fee.” In other words, a patient | unless an offering or gift is the result may, out of gratitude, give his doctor | of such a vow it ts not “votive.” an ah eile’ Bee ee conten mare facile) ae brad not the slang Ooprright, 1914, by ‘The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening Work), @ a delinquent patient, not for rase for drunkenness) Is supposed jin Seana, ON. she Pre Remsen Os: CFRe: eee That Romine We) “honorarium” but for his “fee."" by most people to imply merely a The Young Widower. Cily gpotied cur peacefulness by get Hide-and-Seek. ks, dear? I know you ha’ REPLICA—Perhaps not one writer] plunge into water. That, however, Is HB baby girl was ni ai hi wanted to marry rs aan, wereld dag, Won't People look at pictures lots and lots|in ten uses this word in its correct|not the word's chief meaning. The ae oe that he was a nasty, ho! i, of times; not only once. Well, if you| sense. People seem to think that| dictionary defines it: ‘To atrike with only three weel y much in love with me and be- it, pet? All rainy and wet; | dont want to do that, why don't you| ‘replica’ means merely a dden violence; to rush with speed;” old when she was ered seven mont! ufficient time and {t keeps my darling in| Play acted vous es Aetetiihl atl its use in @ sense of immersion being eft mother . 0 every le boy has an electric train, “replicas” of old masters’ | secondary. sone re ma d| Jt 7a#. provoking situation, for T Sep Bowee) Gat He ewful) Oh, papa hasn't brought the new ba d that “replicas” of Colum-| MIGHTY—Mighty” means “pos could not remain in his home know- lonesome and miserable, | terion yet? are to be made. A rep-| sessed of might,” in order words, young fathbe r/ing that he loved me. isn't he? If the weather man only| Well, why don't you—What? “possessed of great power.” It hardly knew] I reluctantly gave up the care of| knew how terribly unhappy and ‘ac work done a a ead| Mamma play with you? But wh: me hand that did the onninal® means nothing else. Yet, first in J which way to the Httle baby as soon as he was|it made Georgie I don't think he'd| could we play, sweetheart? Mammi the hand which | plantation negro slang and later fn able to find another nurse. It was|send such bad, naughty weather, do| doesn't know any Proposals of a Trained Nurse By Wilma Pollock — Mother Monologues — By Alma Woodward — SIDRWwaLkK< The Evening World suggests that the city make every public school- house include s bathing pool. Im the plan of schoolhouse that now prevails a spacious entrance mes. designed the caravels of Columbus ts| colloquial talk, it has come to be Sore sith: this. new semponebility sf the only thing I could do, knowing | you, sweet? oe sour ploture| anasseek? Oh Georete, Rowsat work making coples of them, | ured incorrectly, as @ mere superie- basement not want to marry him, y don't you at yor jg and too old to play hi VOTIVE—Any free will offering to| tive. To say ‘It is a mighty moun- coert is o conspicuous featare, Why not dig out the of this e $$ qq | On eon, she in, dear. Well, y a worthy cause 1s usually referred to| tain,” for instance, is as absurd as court, install » substantial water task, partially floor the court with glass, ital since ite birth. The widower, ling baby, you! So you think yourl/as a ‘votive’ offering. This ie|to say "Tt is a mountain possessed of i " qnd maintain throughout the summer a public bath for school children of | #uccesstul and popular writer and ke core of the baby. The bathing tank could be required as part of the equipment of every| He ow: 4! a charming old Colonial 7 ning the river bathe may bu a reese gaint dou It il Sed wry analy "Waiey eons See eines ere osing e river me! B be ; 5 f \° equally « measure against the health and comfort of thousands. It|brigntneal into his tonely “existence | _22.—THE CASK OF AMONTILLADO, by Edgar Allan Poe. | ma'll be “it” and you hide, me Historic Word Pictures| |izctnc, ff fey st os | | = ’ having plenty of money, engaged me {So Examples of Desoriptioe Power by Great Authors yousmart child, you, Mamma ba in ones. farm hoi } In Westchester. I under- Ready, now? Allright. Now mam- HE skirt made A A A ‘ by cheering him up at meal times, TOOK from their sconces two flambeaux; and giving one to y is not for the city to decide upon euch a step lightly or without utmost) "Wien ‘no resumed his literary work Fortunato bowed him through several suites of rooms to the arch-|™nn Sng {0 find you. I hear you we A page) thought and effort to provide new and better bathing places. he told me that he had been used to way that lcd to the vaults of my palazzo, I passed down @ long |in a——Oo-o0-h! Oh Georgie, mamma the newest, ana thie Beep aen Mey and winding staircase, requesting him to be cautious aa he Mt ber ankle sgainst the rockin one con be ceed ane et followed. We came at length to the foot of the descent and stood | chair, » it hurts awfully oft th bit tae? a Ore aay, fried her criti: |together on the damp ground of the catacombs of the Montresors, ‘There you are behind the morris chair. pager pa Are you a would-be Police Commissioner, or a could-| let him read his manuscript: ‘The gait of my friend was unsteady and the bells upon his cap fingled|Now youre “it. ‘This time you'll Jace iilustrated, oF it ——t —____—_ and I assured him that {ashe strode, “The pipe of Amontiliado,” said he. “It is farther on,” said 1.) Never Ong mo. vee uly bere pone can be made all of jadly assixt him in this way. At the most remote end of the crypt there appeared another less} (ha ise) " one material, or one ‘ GET TO WORK EARLY. From that tim spacious. Its walls had been lined with human remains piled to the vault ° tunic can be utilised for the fashionable . net or fancy silk in combination wit Plain, or, indeed, the umerous duties were thoue of pri- | overhead in the fashion of the great catacombs of Paris, ‘Three sides of this) O° deer! no fair peeking, Georgie, 7 é vate secretary. But the widower was I've got to find another place. Si: finds the pavements of Manhattan in poor shape. The|a kind and charming employer, and interior crypt were still ornamented in this manner. From the fourth the| don’t fit in that one. “ , bones had been thrown down and lay promiscuously upon the earth, forming! my head! heavy winter slush which the D. S. C. never removed at all] {he coulng baby grew more adorable at one point a mound of some ‘Within the wall thus exposed by the |the plano, skirt can be made i vel h tt 1 rT displacing of the bones we perceived a still interior recess, in depth about |told you she available for any from certain streets rotted the egphalt. Heavy motor trucks have} house nestling in an Pee ee tia Ta | four feet, in width three, in helght six or seven, to play hide-and-seek. two inaterials that | anade ruts in many thoroughfares. ‘he vibration of loose trolley rails) as one could hope to find, Proc ‘Herein is the Amonitillado, As for Luche: Dean SGIeG tye BUBBA, | ane contrast well and F< has crumbled the asphalt alongside and caused jagged holes to form) giout ‘seven monthn and he seamed |forward while f followed. inmmeicneig ar hie werlsn” he ae iootant he nna {aeat, J your little heart's 0, set’ on gue of the latest faint : i . . course mamma’ jay wi! rol “4 :3 beside the tracks. to be dwelling less and lesa on his be- | reached the extremity of the niche and, finding his progress arrested by the | MR ucieaaee aut only avers Nie ope Of the tates ae H Borough President Marke and the new Municipal Aephalt Plant| happy household, when he unexpect- hay stood stupidly bewildered. A moment more and I had fettered him to|whilo, Georgie, because* mamma has pretty in place of the lace illustrated, The edges of th tunics can be fi ished in several ways —with cut hem- stitching or picot he granite, In its surface were two tron staples distant from each other |to go to @ dance to-night and she about two fect horizontally, From one of these depended a short chain,|can't be all banged up by the from the other @ padlock. Throwing the links about his waist it was but the |furniture, you know. work of a few seconds to secure it. He was too much astounded to resiat.|,,1 tell you what: T'll let you do all “The Aen i It's more fun to hide wien ejaculated my friend, not yet recovered from his 1 be “it,” anyway, Mam- have plenty of work cut out for them, and the sooner it is begun) === . the better. Hits From Sharp Wits. What has become, by the way, of the plan for relieving traffic - on strangulated Fourth avenue, just below Thirty-fourth street, by|,,4°,cptimint: as we understand tt, “True,” 1 replied, ‘the Amontillado.” As I sald these words I busied SOURS ie BBy: ea tre Sie. piekna tent 5 i t OF it : a, YAS ste frills, pinked out moving the tunnel entrance to a point north of Thirty-fourth etrect,| when he wets the worst of It-—Colum~ | 1 ate among the pile of hones of which I have before spoken. Throwing | Teady! I'm coming, (Mamma ruches of the ma- where the avenue is twenty-five feet wider, building a smooth ascend- . ° © them aside I soon uncovered a quantity of building stone and mortar. With [hunts in divers places for five min- terial, or they can be lined’ with a very thin fabric of eon- ¢ ; na dy j ' Standing on one's merits ts good, | these materials and with the ald of my trowel I began vigorously to wall up | utes.) ing grade across ita entire width from Thirty-third street toward Mur-|yu: moving on thom is better.—Al- | tho entrance to the niche. Where are you, Georgie? Where ray Hill, thus throwing both sides of the thoroughfare open to traffic?) Pa"y Journal, | A A succession of loud and shrill screams bursting suddenly from the {on earth can you possibly be? I've This plan, known es the Collis plan, had the indorsement of| We never can have much hope for| throat of the chained form seemed to thrust me violently back. For a brief |Kmnen Whar oe ihe mace bad oancbes , 1. nd in the closets and behind all the ; lhe er can have much hope for! moment I hesitated—I trembled. Tho thought of an instant reassured me, aa Mr. McAneny, when the latter was Borough President. The opposi-| is My Home” on Sunday and then|! Placed my haad upon the solld fabric of the catacombs and folt satiatied, [00% Sn chairs. Georgie, where are trasting color, and this last often makes an exceedingly at-—+ trnetive effect. The ee) . ! é skirt is made in one ‘ tion of the late M Ge. anted ite adoption, goes out the next day and forecloses |1 Feapproached the wall. [replied to the yells of him who clamored, I re- [Sor mh fiy"l mive upte Well thom, aeaces Ginten: Rhee of the late Mayor Be prev * Ly a a 1| the, mortxaxe on the iittle neat of a sohood— tI surpassed them in volume and in strength. I did this, and the |don't irritate mamma any further, fran’ 8nd Ue 8 ; is now President of the Boa: lermen and| poor widow and her fatherless.—Phil- | clamorer grew still. but come right out like good boy. Hox pinit at tae Emr meeneny 1 2 mb ct : «| adelphia Inquirer, It wan now midnight and my task was drawing to a close, Thad com-| Georgie, did you. henr mother oes oe still a member of the Board of Estimate. Traffic on Fourth avenue is oe e ain} Pisted the elghth, the ninth and the tenth tier, I had finished a portion of to, your T sald Spa MEDS. matharod at the up- . imereasing every month. When the proposed viaduct across Forty-| Old Can't never moved @ mountain | the just and the eleventh; there remained but a single stone to be fitted and fpsiptal yh BOS FOmIDe ‘ nd id ot ae of the Grand hea Station ie completed, con-| Ror levelled & nit never pat FAY; | pinstered in, T struggled with its welght; T placed it partially in its destined | Goorme. | She's Koing to count to five sine The titre eat @eeond street 1 ' piered, Gipeer Ber ewe al position, But now there came from out the niche a-low laugh that erected quire 44 yar necting the southern section of the avenue with the extension north j ee e@ the hairs upon my head. It was succeeded by a sad voice which I had diffi: Pattern No, 8225—One-Plece Skirt, 22 to 30 Waitt, aterial 27, 2% ‘ A ‘ In this loving our neighbors aa wo| culty in recognizing as that of the noble Fortunato. The voice sald So! You've disobeyed me. Now| 86 or 44 inches wid; the under tunic 1% yards 27, % yard 86 or 44; the of the terminal, Fourth avenue will become one of the most travelled] |, 17 (hie iva oe ely be reel. |he! he!-a very good Joke indeed—an excellent Jeat, We will have man right out this minute and be! upper tunic 1% yards 27, % yard 36 or 44. : porth and south thoroughfares in the city. procity.—Deseret News, laugh about it at the Palazzo—he! he! he!—over our wine—he, he, he! punish gave you your choice. oe ‘ 1 . 8225 is cut in alzes from 22 to 80 inch t me The Collis-McAneny plan ay aaieeod ae lilacs waa et aio or the love of God, Montresor, Dip YOU HEAR ME? O} ou think Pattern No. js cut in sizes from oO nches waist measure. . It is better to have one good idea I said, “for the love of God. T can't find you to punish you. Is Cal: at THR EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION in the hands of the City Plan Committee, to which it was referred} and carry it into effect than to nave} nut to these words I hearkened in vain for a reply. T grew impatient. | hatr'and I'm’ going: to elt right, In ew BURBAU, Donald Bulling, 199 West Thirty-second treat <onpo- i ka T called aloud: Fortunato.” eat One ta Cae 6, ee Siar is te Seite Gimbel Bros), cornog Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, in February from the Board of Estimate, Wouldn’t it be # good| about them.—Albany soureal, No answer still, My head grew sick—on account of the dampness of = H hi 4 then he'll find you for me, Ovtais fNew York, or sent by mail on receipt of ten cents in colm er “ides to hurry a vote on the matter eo that the work of taking the a some bs int of view nowa-|the catacombs, I hastened to mako an end of my labor. I forced the last fo that T can aunteh you, Thee, young ‘Teese temps for each pattera ordered. ’ ut of Fourth avenue may be under way before the enow flice| days ie the small hole. tn the high [stone into ite position, I plastered it up, Against the new. masonry I erceted | man? IMPQRTANT—Write your address plainly and always ‘ 7 fence the ‘el und ‘baseball park.—Ma.- | the old rampart of bones, For the half of a century no mortal hae disturbed Aad over Mvingrowm sed the AGG twe cents for letter postage if in a ’ eae ; ; _ A them, In pace requiessat, wots hare

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