The evening world. Newspaper, September 14, 1914, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Sve |Esihfar world. ESTABLISHDD BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Dally Besept Sunday by the Frese Pabiishing Company, Nos, 63 te Greatest Battles BAL ATEN Penn Ia ee AFwe tans | Fee In War-History JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr. Secretary, 6 Park Row. Tite SLEEPING’ SIM Mater, . By Albert Payson Terhune. fer the United States All Countries in (dena é Cuppright, 1814. ty the Prem Publishing Os, (Tho New Tork Broning World). $3.80] one Ye 0. 5 NO. 7.—BATTLE OF TOURS, That Saved Europe from the Saracens. ‘ A SHREWD—or fanatic—Arab, in the seventh century, claimed to BE BB. cc sceeesssees seceveececececseesNO, 19,382 WAR ATROCITY STORIES. TORIES of atrocities committed in the course of the war which ‘ate now being pressed upon the attention of President Wilson ~ by the contending peoples are designed not so much to arouse | eympethy with the sufferers as to excite indignation and antagonism | agaimet the powers that inflict them. Belgian envoys would have Having conquered the Orient, they warned to Europe A host of | €8 condemn Germans. Kaiser Wilhelm would have us condemn) s | (Moslem Orientals) crossed the Straits of Gibraltar from Africa | jinto Spain. They conquered Spain, then swarmed across the Pyrenees z effect, however, is going to be quite different from what was ae ae ear sasuit ty cil Go Sane No considerable number of Americans will be led to be-| Led by thetr gether port abe thay biteh 006 ‘on ane the people of either nation are brutes or that they have, another anc prepared to found Mosiem colonies throughout France and Ger- malignancy of devils. The stories will be to most of ug only new) ice was to destroy Christianity and to make Europe of the appalling effects of war in releasing the brute instincts | Martel, a Frankish duke, mustered an arthy of Frank (French) men. Take the incident which ex-Senator Clark of Montana! for afier having investigated it—that of a Belgian family by German soldiery, the father shot to death, the mother | to « chair and constrained to witness the violation of her sixteen-| ~ year-old deughtor. Such outrage is not characteristic of German any! ‘gaere than of other soldiers turned loose in war to plunder and ravage | | when out of sight of their officers. | _* » The one-plain moral is the utter hideousness and deviltry of all ‘widespread invading war, and the responsibility rests not upon a 7. ‘but upon the militarism and the secret diplomacy that make) | @aeb ware for the sake of kings and plutocracy. *. CAMPAIGNS OF JOINT DEBATE. 1 ETERRED by the refusal of Gov. Glynn to debate with Mr. GF Hennessy the issues between them, Mr. Sulzer has challenged be a heaven-sent prophet. One of his eyes wan biue and the other black. Also, he performed o few neat, hand-made miracles, went iato epileptic ite which he said were inspired, and was a bore | demagogue and leader of men. So he easily made millions of converts to | Bis new religion. He was Mohammed. In time he died, but the faith he had founded and the power it entatied went on. His followers, the Moslems, spread through the Kast, everywhere | carrying their strange gospel at the point of the sword. Sara Martel's army as it drew near. For two days, on the banks of he Lotre, the battle waged—the battle on whose outcome hang the fate of Christendom. Martel'’s army was made up of | disorganized clansmen whom even their leader's genius hed not yet been | able to weld into a perfect fighting machine. The Saracens, on the other hand, were veteran warriors and greatly outnumbered their opponents, Moreover, their chief, Abderrahman, was @ general in whom bis followera trusted as they would have trusted in the Prophet Mohammed himeelt. Abderrahman had led them to victory after victory, and under his guld- | ance they had been able to fill thelr camp with captured plunder. Here ts the story of the batyle of Toure, written by @ Saracen historian a very few yeara later: “The Mosiem horsemen dashed teroety and frequently forward against the battalions of the Franks, who resisted manfully. And many fell dead on either side until the going down of the sun. “Night parted the two armies, but in the gray of the morning the Mos- lema returned to the battle, Their cavaliers had soon hewn their way into the centre of the Christian host. { “But a false cry arose in the Moslem ranks that some of the enemy wae' plundering their camp. And all the host was troubled. And while Abderrab-/ peo strove to check their tumult the warriors of the Franks came around A FINE LAZY Mr. Davenport to « series of joint debates on Progressive . | femnes. Furthermore, the campaign manger of Mr. Hinman has sug- TIME SLEEPING ) = | gested that Mr. Whitman and Mr. Hedges join with Mr. Hinman to ; @ special train and tour the State in company. His argument ~ te that « joint tour would be more economical for the candidates and more convenient for the votere since they would have to attend only | one meeting to hear all three aspirants. q While it is not likely that these suggestions, whether put forth as challenges or as invitations, will be accepted this year, it is just: es.well to keep them under discussion long enough to arouse « popular | sehtkment in favor of them. Joint debating is the best way of doing | popular politics. It comes near to bringing out the truth and tends “And he was pierced through with many epears; so that he died. Then all his host Ged before the enemy, and many died in + An tovasion We signs” Driven Beck. Thus ended the battle, and thus too, ended the | Saracen invasion. Never again in any great force did the Moslem army recross the Pyrenees, The Saracens lingered on in Spain for several centuries longer, but their hope of making Europe a Mohammedan continent was forever lost. The Franks claimed to have killed $75,000 Saracens at the battle of Tours and to have lost but 1,007 men. This was a palpable lle. And so such ie was needed to add lustre to a fight that saved a continent. ot ITI oe wey Wi, Ever Hear of a Zebrule? “te diminish personal charges and counter charges that do not affect ERE is a new animal. It bas| {ie most intrictable and tbe largest the main issue. Moreover it gives every candidate a chance to reach Gubbed tt the bier mere cre, we & burro freak from ‘te "the care of the opposite party as well as of his own. It was the pre- Ever since the sebra became known |fresh from the poundings on ier Wailing custom before the civil war, and if the people demand it there have been attempts to domesti- | shouted Sxbortations of tourists, be- ’ i cate it, but in vain, says the Ameri-| i). dam, and s new breed began they can bring it beck. : l can Bor, ‘The Gort was made | meat farms at Baivovilin Aids nets Wit, Wisdom rT Mollie of pen pong pte Broetpeyed Pa ati oe _. MONEY WILL BE SERVED. ‘And Philosophy STON The Movies {|unstw suture ty ornune « with| porate Waly (ctrt, epe-ceret statoments made by the president of a theatre ticket OF |} —By Alma Woodward— _$|8,0¢re™_ ut tee eer ot ine eran | @ borem and Tost oe tee oaas Po agency, in an interview published in the Morning World yes-| THE TRAINING OF AWIFE. ert presage 724 | nes a temper i.clf, A sobre bas a| Cotte are easily broken to their halter e ili : Somme 328; Wid me ‘Wee and to a yak they retain terday, it appears the number of persons willing to pay big By Xenophon. james worse one—one practically untamabie the markings ed eae of the gobra, prices for reserved seats in theatres is now so large and their willing- (From the Resnomlst.) & LOR 2—The Reward of Art. and the result was that the cress. | Zh0 color ei the seen cet eee pees is 20 liberal with respect to price that theatre managers, having | “| HE Divinity bas fitted the HERE ts sure some kilijoy is Lage colnged . Less pried ger ypc of the burro; the flery exp still be 4 . fi body and mind of the shade from the doodoo| of no value beyond @&-/ one of intelligence, however, has be- ‘become aware of it, require from agencies that supply this demand man,” said 1 to my wife, ° world shedding ite pale|bibition purposes. Then the Govern. jeome more aiisble, and yet practi. bonuses that vary from 25 to 100 per cent, of the advertised price “to be better able to bear By HELEN ROWLAND. green infuence over my rove| 25a ‘that experiment wes conaust- [et ‘ihe rebra fematne pie Satara i cold and best and Yes, sir, some . Since the it jeved } two dollar seats. Instances are given where agonts have had to healings ena mlsany cae ae peel colored ohes, Tow ctr: ene | 0d scientifoally. Glace the sebre sly ment that this nee eaeas ein ees 8 much as five dollars for such seats, and in one case the theatro| that he bas imposed upon him the Copyright, 1014, by the Pras Publishing On, (The Mow York Brening Worlt). penalty I plese I guess, on ao-| untamable, it must be crossed with} @ Siete Se. Rocee mere. for je agencies ake as many as $40,000 worth work out doors: and by having F two @ wise girl 5 |oount of my exceedin’ tempr’ment and nature of the sebra would be| harder muscles than a h it required th to tak of evils, girl will choose the richer. fery nate : , ° ne horse. it bas seats before the play was put on. formed the body of Se woman to be oe siby my. desire ty seal mien, ces the minimum. The Govern: | the mules power for work. revith he “Oy * bi bear reises, hi wus way. wwe _ Tt is thus apparent that the evil of ticket speculation is much ped iapegig. que grry cen hee The only taste some husbands and wives have in common| movie actors has got # used to peo- oe tbe ocky Pemeniaia arre, Shen | Ste new, Seen i 8h oe « ‘like that of tipping at fashionable restaurants, So long as a con-| thé duties within doors. But know-| appears to be a mutual taste for Mving apart. ple staring it don’t affect us no more'n| A Grevy sebra, the most vicious, in riding. 3 able number of rich people are willing and even eager to pay | us vant Me i athe ee —_— ' pod eecngtat Sed ees es os aeen ier | for epecial privileges, managers will not hesitate to profit by.| of rearing young children he bad also After all, success and failure are merely matters of view-point. For| street to lunch. The placé is run for _ - fact. As many remedies have been suggested for ticket apecn- bestowed upon bar & greater portion| instance, you can say that a man “tailed to win" e girl, when you really | us by the company and no one but ug The May Manton Fashions Uating 08 for tipping, but it is doybtful if the ingenuity of lawmakers | ran’ io Deg e™'Y UFO OHaDriNe| moan that he “succeeded in losing her.” iaakeaciee put a stop to a service that money is willing to pay for. The one| “As the Divinity has made man and ’ asinine Why, I seen the time often when a T oe a & plan for people of moderate means is to cease competing with aman periners 08 {t were, dn their| It ts no safer to judge @ woman's morals by her front hair than it te |whole Legged cide some Up Ike ballet ‘as ee f psn and no longer frequent places where plutocracy sets Be ahareta in bodancid a ati a {| to judge an artist's talents by his back heir. daneere, me La ag one neve ae fs. Tile season tt ) pace. tastes becom ta han one Os ——— only time when the line was drew was This one Divinity very qualified euch to do with Before s.arriage, a girl keeps tons of monogrammed atationary, scented | when we were coing “Lady Godiva” reater faciity, for it is more becom-| with violet sachet; after marriage, if she can't find an old pad around | ‘2 four reels, an’ the star bad to bor- oF. | ing to the woman to stay within row the director's baimacaan to go doors than to roam abor the house, she picks up @ stubby pencil and writes to her husband on 7 tters From the Pe 0 ple} un it ia less creditabio to remsiu'ne! the blank side of a millinery bill. food. | But that's all. ‘Well, nh Saredeablonable fags este! we was eee. to what the Divinity bas fitted bim Many « bachelor has been driven to matrimony by the utter misery Tige Lily,” in atx reels.” By oo with broadet 2 Sere tore Cranky Husband, | longs to the United States, and when| 19,40 he will, while be violates the| of having nobody to blame things on but himself. dosen't it strike you what & and cuffs and no mae EE of he Eveving World: ane ryt was it acquired? w, Mm, | order of thin Seen oly Dot escape title that is? You see there's th: ie material cour ee | MFIUL wome one kindly sugnest a cure| Manus Olid Attendant Isleta of) toe Meee nether rand will pay what was once a pippin, foneral ratte Coat © fee cranky husband who comes! Rose, became a Raaesation wah int] Gwa duties ‘or. of interfering wie Of course married people are dull, A few years on the briny sea of liner, ip. looks, aif Say and dev , ey tt q every evening and starts a row | ted States In 1899 by Virtue of their, | those Of his wife, matrimony washes all the color out of a woman's personality and most of | ust like.® tiger tly, food to tonnat one for Volver, ‘wad | Without cause? We have been mar- | Partiie treaty with Germany and| no pe duenarcs neDes appcars to| the brilliancy off a man's conversation. fer troubles and tt puts ber dows and broadcloth ts 1% oF | ‘Wied fifteen years and have a home pom Gproved ‘by the Divinity ** are oo aed course, Well, anyway, you e'n Sonn re greeny ps of our own which I have helped to| . , ‘obblers’ Was, “And what Duties,” inquired sr materi for and work for, We have two| <2" Mer ot The Dresing Word wife, "bas the Queen’ Bee to perton, A man's logic {s nothing but ® sort of near-silk substitute for a| | So, they call her the “reek Veter are ave Peres ment ete dre pabhan IM some of your reader: kindly | that she shoud be made an example | Woman's heaven-sent intuition. fos 6 she's pretty far 2 fa By oy with the Q ‘thelr (without thanks), My tus. |e me know the formula for cob.| fof,the work 1 have to dot — one of her pals—see? Well, say, if I and cuts, of° ‘will never allow me to go even onl FX, | within’ answered L “doee ening *e hen b ¢ to, but when he least have to tell you, it was a beartrend cloth, would mate i 4 five-cent moving picture show and O11 om Satin, fn neon Re he idle, veg not allow A man doesn't marry w! 1@ ought to, expects to. | makeup I slapped on my gesich Sitremely beats ties ie a neve! ig jh TW) the Raitor of The Ereniag World: to thelr duty those who pole RY Fillegetal of belles gone somes, Ge would be Moadal r leave an ; and we haves wood, class | Wit some reader tell me why abfoud:, and whatever ach of them ay drapes that gave. the pacha te ; Tith the oiler } he never looks at, but |/O!} runs when painted on satin, ag | DfDe® In she takes cognizance of it that "Silence 1s golden” stuff clothed soutache oralded wi in kitohen or the bedroom |*h# has happencd several times, peng | Mets te eae ree the Jungle Tales for Children this-here lissome form. some pblled over ‘ Aisagrees with everything. PE eee ae iat. iene ten ua tt Aa I said before, my temp'rament {or eoutache ts ‘ang : : TIRED WFR. | eater nee Gome "abo dispenses. to each best 15 —By Farmer Smith—— gust plays the deuce with my nacher. fetes ot Fa Samoan Islands. @ Balitor of The Frening World: just due, She also presides over 4 lon, ways 08 and te 0 gw opener moked PP oe cakcmmatrnd woman | eanraieg, othe, Sty tet 2d ME ates ale pets ra iaine C * revoked by her subsequent marriage? | they may be formed beautifully and Copsright, 1914, by the Prees Publishing Ce, (The New York Mvaning World), go tolunch. So I meanders down the ‘ ENGAGED, Cc erp oe me ee on, te AMMY GRASSHOPPER wae sit- Mister Elephant. “I will say where| street, just drenched in at : Bolanca' —————. | properly reared; and when the yo S ting on a blade of grass singiog|to run the first race and you can| 80’ the next thing X Know a, tres : - ‘are grown Up and fit for worl to himself when be spied Mister/eay where to run the second.” Geeipated eleeve and is makin on Hits From Sharp Wits. she senda out @ colony of them under | riephant coming. “Just as you say," replied the! tise like unio’ me in, P femme, seeder * younger! “Whoa!” shouted Sammy as toud| Grasshopper. An’ would you belleve it, that guy comes to many by chanoe,| wholesome liver. — Milwaukee sen-| bees.’ be : « he could. “We will run from here to that| succeeded tn hauling an’ get- “ always give themselves the) tinel. ‘Will {t then be necessary for me,"| as 7 ey ting a fine put on me, then the eee * 7 ve Mae ance things?” Mister Elephant stopped short and | tree,” sald Mister Elephant. manager had to come an’ get me out. “i eee teiKte? our temper, even if the other He AL iad ag nat home acy {looked at Sammy out of bis beady ny agreed and they started | Just fierce I felt about it. But what “Wisdom 1s the ce name for ae k ie takes) {o'send out’ such of the laborers as | eyes. y while Mist. oe hd uu must exercise & watchful supe: when I struck for a raise on the 1 ed the Grassh 5 side A grouch gots what is left after tendence. Whatever is brought in. | Mister Elephant to opper.| dowa one, cream has been skimmed off the ‘ait to the house you must taka ie “I can beat you running, even if I mh} course Stiater espbant 7esches you fe, tn a fe fh epee, pretty’ . of human kindness.—T-ledo Blade, of it: weatever periee of it is re-| have funny legs,” said Sammy. the ~~ 3 Where shall we run now?” Ee so, An’ I'll be swissled it they euaal wks asive dan a acc usually Sau Whatever should be lala’ by ~~ Pye Fett to bag ol “Lave run up this tres,” sald didn't, go. sn' dock, me for holdin! up take account of and ° Blephant. “You, gammy, not even smiling. r) ire for three-quarters a ron must ge ee worry, svt optimists and always well wishers, | Sater Bs ae ¥ on keep it 5 f 2 9 ® yin could you do’ have business to do. In the house] “What funny legs you have!” sald reek ioe it Sammy Baa to ment Be Pete tes tien a Re and ” . win!” exclaimed Mister Ele- | hour. up| are not as big ase minute, = ‘That's recognition of skill, ain't tt for a year, for example, may not be| “1 can beat «| phant. 5 7 It used to be that manners ma: pended month, you running @ race,’ “wall, Shue wi y. guees| What? You might just rell be Hot earcasm| the man. To-day it le motors that bien ty Ry (Zou must be replied Sammy Grasshopper. my legs aro, Se RNs aa Cans | aah te theienmease Weal trait News, proper condition 4 "vata. “All sighti® Al right" sepited| are to you.” — worth nothing to you.

Other pages from this issue: