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} The Eveni She EF, wiord. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Pudlished Dally Except sund the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 68 to es Part’ Row. New York, %, President, 63 Pert, Row. AN ‘ 63 WY M PULIT ae rae Bocreiary, @f Park Row, Entered at Post Second-Class Matter, ql (@rbecription Rater to Thee ning] For Pneian? and the Continent and All Countries in the International Postal Union. World for the United States and Canada, + $8.60) One Year... «+ 8010One Month. dusevevecttiveemOr LONCE | MADE IN AMERICA. WIDE-AWAKE English ironmonger prods American hardware | manufacturers and bids them get up and gather in the} 20,000,000 ton hardware and metal trade for which Great Britain has looked mainly to Germany. | “The trade that six months ago wou ve cost /amertean manufacturers hundreds of thousands of dollars to capture | + Qleam mow be had for nothing but the activity of going after it.” More South American buyers are in New York at this moment ever before. They are eager to place here the orders that | pe can no longer fill. Another huge volume of business to be had bat the effort of going after it. (British Board of Trade reports for August show a decrease of in imports and nearly $100,000,000 in exports as com- pared with the came month last year. Cotton and woollen fabrics G@igne fell off $30,000,000. Who's to have this business? “Alreacy the demand for cotton hosiery manufactured in this # Qeuntzy hes taken an amazing jump. Last week New York City @hipped hosiery representing nearly one-half the value of shipments from the whole country for the entire year ending H 1914. These are only beginnings. As months go by the demand for Rmerican goods will swell to undreamt of dimensions. | JeTlow fe the time to get ready to meet it, to satisfy it, to hold it. ~siffhe trade of the world awaits a new stamp: ry % MADE IN AMBRICA. Py! - ++ —____ sf “Apparently the only excitement left for Wall Street ts to bet ite remaining dollars on guesses when the Stock Exchange ; ‘will reopes. ; —(e , TEACH CHILDREN TO GO MARKETING. ; shouldn't the public echoole teach young New Yorkers : Ww be intelligent and thrifty buyers? i ‘The Mayor's Food Committee plans to educate school |) ehildren im the practical end homely science of purchasing proper ag foods at fair prices. Gity youngsters born of foreign parents carry 7 dsqme from echool idess which set the etabdarde of the family and We turn the elders into settled Americans. Many of these children || — treined in American echools and Americen ways shop and market for their less confident fathers and mothers. It is eaid that 40 per cent. ef the city’s retail buying is done by children. ‘Then let the public echools do what they can to make them ex- perts. In another generation we hall hear less of retail price-boost- fing and extortion. We shall need fewer food committees to help the| —" a Warol ne ae Tas Sila Rede a — ‘When we have “neutralized” movies and censored biased Sims, shall we be indeed righteous and beyond reproach? —$-4 => —_—____ EVEN SHAKESPEARE! fe ore: ° ee a! to burn a British exhibit of rare Shakespeare oitfons |x" iets SSS means that German hatred of England forswears the lest tie. Pain hie ccas > dudsctiog For years Germans have outdone English in admiration an ash floorward)—Where dnd love for the great Elizabethan. Netive German drama has defer- fe this place, Tailette, any- stood aside for Shakespeare. In no country have hie plays Covet Hits Yoo ventas Wactahe* °* 2—Long May It Wave! fiat, way?’ A Mr. B. (with eoorn)—An; more reverently studied or more carefully and enthusiastically | tora xnow, by the sound of It, that it was in 08, German versions of Shakespeare are in many ways the finest ex-|, Mf. A“ WHERE in France ts what i of drama translation that - in any language. If Germany| Mr. B. (hesttating)—Well, it's near cast out Shakespeare, then nation is indeed far the border. Yes, I'm quite sure it's Bitterness. fone in ear the border Mr. A. (ourtly)—Aw, tf you don't know why don’t you say so? Why Gon't you say, plainly, “I don't know,” and be done with it? Mr. C. (going to A.'e defense)— Well, gee whis! you ought to know, if apy one does, Didn't you have a college edacation? What'd your Parenta spend all that money on you fort., We at had to leave achool to work, ee oo Now that the Allies have reoccupied Rheims maybe they ‘will reassure an anxious world on one point: Did the Germans @rink up all the champagne? ———-¢-—__ A BETTER CHANCE FOR THE BABIES. OBODY can eay this hasn’t been a good year for babies in New York. Mr. A. (pgeved)—Don't be a chump, The Better Baby movement started by The Evening| You fon's have geography in college, orld in co-operation with the Babies’ Welfare Association aroused et yh ay 7m y ings? big interest in baby welfare hereabouts. | Mee reed Tne rae twentysiwe, » - This week mothers of non-prize winners in the earlier contests Pr a at ie do fare registering their little ones in the Better Babies’ improvement | take saventage Of Ik and .bruah up ‘contest conducted by this newspaper and the Little Mothers’ Associa- you aioe Gon't even Pee ae Registration closes to-morrow. The contestants will be ex-| VteFloe (Ai she anotbeat'a in Gar. ned next week and The Evening World prizes will be awarded to many, of course. ; the babies showing the highest percentage of gain in health during the dial. ‘mooneh-Waterio's in Beipiam, dast twelve months. 8 Ss Sir Argon 4a ba Prize babies are good. Improved babies are even better. For country left, whynow "ae {B® Onl provement means that mothers.have learned and h i enh more. ne hy 1 ask. weou call yourselt ae juestion i cl y ‘. Tast week, while the mortality record of the city as compared Ardent “American, don't you ? with a year ago showed an increase for every other age, deaths among Mr. D. (coolly)—Well, thén, repeat ghildren under one year decreased by forty-seven. Don’t let the fig- Oo mhas you're so blamed briNiant, don't you? ru «Mr. D. (squelched)—Aw, you think the words of “The Star Spangled Bs Banners Parting right off)—"Ob, .C. (ater —"Oh, free slip back. can you ove by the dawn's early ligne, —_—_———— what 80 proudly wre balled at—halled ra T. R. will leave to-morrow for the West. Papers out there —enproud THR DRS prorsherra ail please, please copy. Chorus: (In cold reproof)—Gee, ee | YOU'Te & bum American! Mr. C. (nettled)—Is that so! Vell, I'll bet Ave, straight, that there {sn't one in the bunch who can go rigat through with them. Here's your chance, Any one, me? ie ah (There ich MUO voice mumbling @ oh tm Afrion, srs Banaras eke To the Raitor of The Prening World Mr. B. (suddenly)—Willle! Willie! T reed in @ magazine article that| “et out of bed. eon, and put on your robe, "i ou. the French holdings in Africa were| batliro rg,ie 8 Sore tottin’ Will Vande on the . B. (humbly)—Willle, wil you ower! please teach us the words of our na- tlonal anthem, “The Star Spangled Banner?” | Willie (disappointed)—Aw, and} wasn't there the day dearned that to the class, eatea 1 and when does it appear? 7 BRED. ‘The harvest moon is the full moon Pop, I the teacher Samay ew Creare nn ram anew te ent enen ng World Daily Magazine. Wednesday. September 16, Can You Beat It! #(«sis,)g By Maurice Ketten BACHELOR HELEN ROWLAND. Copyright, 1914, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Kvening World), OULD you your sweetheart's secret seek to spell? There are SO many little ways to tell! A hair, perhaps, shall prove him false or A single hair, upon his coat lapel! true— Sometimes man proposes—and then keeps the girl waiting until the Lord kindly interposes. Before marria; to make her look a at him. man “fusses up” when he takes a girl out in order im; after marriage, in order to keep her from glaring Some men appear to have been born just to “be engaged to’—never to be married. The average woman's life {s spent in waiting for a man; waiting for him to ask her to dance, waiting for him to call, waiting for him to pro- pose, waiting for him to marry her—and forever after waiting for him to come home nights. Most husbands have perfectly beautiful manners—which they never use around the house. So strange is the alchemy of marriage that the man you lead to the altar is no more like the man you lead away from it than the frock you take to the dyer’s is like the frock they send home. Time withers a woman's heart as it does her face, but it just seems to make a man's more flabby and susceptible. When a man says he will “love you always,” Clarice, he means “always"—while it la Hits From Sharp Wits. O'Dowd, By Exgene Geary, Contentment 1s found in not want-| Copyright, Press Poblishing Co, ing what you can't get. tie 7 teventna Wei)’ eee URE, all the papers Are filled wid vapors; Their flimsy tapers Don't light the crowd, ‘Tis a sort of star fare, Hope, unaccompanied by work, has often made patches conspicuous, eee Of course, it would be going too far to put @ tax on war arguments— but, gosh! the revenue it would raise! An’ never warfare, —Pittsburgh Sun, bi comes to carfare-~ eee \e. ‘sme friend O'Dowd, He's polite an’ witty, And can sing a ditty, Och, in New York City ‘Tis passing strange that the man who possesses tho cardinal attributes | of manhood—love of children, musi flowers and animals—sometimes beats Sentinel. They are very proud his wife abiwaukes en im of t thdsome roud The best service a knocker can do Ante, Cane clan, for his home town is to knock off The ey a ee Martin, knocking. ees Whe. a man becomes cross and e thinks he has Puritan Deseret Nows, eee ‘There are many men who say hoth- ing and yet are not busy at the wood- pile —aibany Journma, __ oe gure, Martin's serious, nd not uproa: H He's not notoridtas, thinking, winking, biinkt ‘ree wenneamane " ne ee y) Copyright, 1014, by the Prose Publishing Co, (The New Yosh Brening Werlt), No.8—BATTLE OF HASTINGS—Norman Conquest of England THRONG of yellow-haired, bite-eyed men emigrated from Germany to Britain, thrashed the inhabitants and seised England for them- selves. They were known as Saxons. | A band of Norwegian sea-rovers swept down on France ead bullied the French King {nto giving them the rich duchy of Normandy. They | were known first as Northmen, later as Normans. Many years later a weak-willed old Saxon King—-Edward the Confessor —who was childless, promised to bequeath the English throne to his distant kinsman, William, Duke of Normandy. William was a hawk-faced, unscra pulous scoundrel—descendant of a line of pirates, But pe had genius and @ goodly share of ambition. i When Edward died a Saxon carl, Harold by name, took the reins of gov- 3 ernment into his own hands and had himself declared King of Englan@& ” | William demanded the throne, Harold refused to give {t up. | William raised a Norman army and invaded England, swearing “by the splendor of God” that he would kill Harold and seize for himself the Eng lish throne. He kept his oath. It was one of the few thnt he bothered té keep. At the snme time a Norwegian army raided the northern counties of England, Harold hastily raised an army of Saxons, rushed it north to Stamford | Owes, Bridge in Yorkshire, and there, on Sept. 24, 1066, at- A Double } tacked the Norwegians. So long as the invadora stood ; Invasion, in firm batile array Harold could make no headway ‘? against them. So he pretended to retreat. The Nor- weslana broke up their close formation and gave chase, Harold's army turned, fell upon the disorganized pursuers and annihilated them. Then, without stopping to rest, Harold hurried Mx vepleted and tired troops south again to meet William, who had jurt landed At Haatings, Oct. 14, 1066, the Saxon and Norman armies n massed his Saxons on the crest vides of a steep hill, fac which the Norman host, 60,900 strony, was advancing from tt The stee Normans ct up the siope, Ahead of their front rauke rode Taillefer, the minstrei-inig! « his sword in the alr and eatching it again as ho sang bis Ho was the first man to be "AM day the All cay the armored N ranks in fury ag nun wail of Saxons that girt the h Saxons with their barking battle ery of “Out! Out! Out!" beat bac invaders’ charge. The Saxon axemen chopped to plece: Norman knights hemselyes st (heir line. ‘The Saxon archers kept up @ 3 continuous fire, Fully fifteen thousuiud N ans were iilied, and stil! that bristling line jof Saxons could not be dislodged from its position, An arrow put out Harold's right eye. But he would not leave the field. The Norman archers tried the ruse of shooting their shafts high in air, to come down on the Saxons’ unprotected heads. This wrought fearful slaughter, Yet the Saxons held their ground, At last, toward nightfa worked po successfully agal broke and ran, Harold, «uspe William hit on the same trick the Norwea Varold had all at once stand where they were, But, mad for slaughter, o the plain in pursuit of the flec Normane. 6 wha turned on them and put them i A Fight ‘out, Herold w Tl.a ormny was 8 and a Rout. wa to histor: named anneal wned Kine of Eng- land, a nobles setzod and di- vided Little by little the two he to hate each other and were jlish rate, Thoueh Saxon now there and then that modern Fi Tho the same Istand ceased 9 one--the present Eng- etiold of Hastings, It wae blended on the bi ad was born, n He studied the art of hea, in spite rents, who °* nd bio dreams, but and the advantage of “stand! in” with ¢ corner gro- cer, he ned a jot ag boy in a lawyer's office, His geod address spoke louder than the shabbiness of his clothes, for him at all, hoped that some day,| | Can't you imagine the rent? How, at when he grew up, he might be a gro- | With access to his employer's “Ary, AR brought the flag into the|cer’s clerk. Beyond this he did .not| Oren hic’ ouolowee aiaane Phedeed world. When men first began| even dream. call for him in vain, then find him to fight—and they began just} But Herbert had the ambition that with his nose buried in # musty [aw as soon us there was anybody to fight | walks hand in hand with youth, and| Dok. It was this that attracted Tea with—the leader of each litue band | he dared to dream dreams of dizzy) him to question the lad. Amazed at found that he needed an emblem) heights of nucceas—heighta whose| the store of law knowledge Herbert go round which his followers could rally | scaling needed the Inddcr of educa-|h4d acquired, he put him through a and that could be seen from a dis-| tion, i" course of preparatory instruction, and tance by any of his retainers and| $0 he went to night school. He ared, day laborer. To aucment the family income he was early taken from = school F i} , aud was found a fob as War lags jerrand boy tn the corner grocery, The British Union Jack, § | 7!* was partly @ strategic move on = |his parents’ part. It gained them By Eleanor Clapp. H thereto the extent of Her- | credit | bert's wages. His father, if he hoped ‘The Vee hing Ov. oT Nine York realng Weuldie later sent him to a law school. > day Herbert is his former employer's bring them quickly into the thickest; knew his dreams led into another| law partner. His dream has come of the fray. room of life, but night school was the| (°.,, Wich shows that It) pays for The early standard was simply a/ door, and he set about opening It. | has the will to help anake there Cony, pole topped with an emblem of some sort. Very early in history drapery was attached to these battle stand- ards to give them greater distinction. Then the standard itself was done laway wit and the flag affixed directly to the lance. The powerful aid of religion was always sought to give His grammar of the streets disap- true. f The May Manton Fashions LL the newest and most Inte: sanctity to battle flags. The flag of features re William the Conqus was sent him . Season are found in by the Pope, early English this costume. ‘There is the open tunic that ieee generously over kings fought under the banners of Edward the Confessor and St. Ed- mund, Henry V. bore upon his ban- ner the cross of St. George, while the} long-pointed end of his flag was dec- orated with the mythical dragon and the English flag carried this croas un- tl by the laws of inheritance the crown fell to the Scotch King James who became James I. of England. When these two countries were united King James commanded that “hence forth all our subjects of this Isle and Kingdom of Greater Britain and the members thereof shall bear in the maintop the red cross, commonly called St, George's cross and tne white cross, commonly called St. Andrew's!’ cross, joined together according to a form made by our heralds,” This is the history of the Union 6 sleeves and there is « high collar open at the front, while the girdle is wide aad extends down over the hips. In the picture, it combines plain blue Babardine with pi material but it is easy to think of it made of Wool over silk or plain silk combined with fancy or silk combined with velvet, for the model is one of the % available sort that # be varied again and again, yet each part— the tunio, the skirt and the blouse—is simple. ae skirt means only wo seams Binto twos and thd plain louse is an ranged over the chemi- ee a [og closed at the Jack. The word union of course ra- fers to the union of the Cross of Bt. George, the device representing Eng- land, and the Cross of St. Andrew, the Scotch device. The word Jack is probably in this instance derived from “Jacques,” the Latin form of James. The King ts known to have invariably signed his name in this manner as he was very proud of his learning and tried to display it on every possible occasion. After the union with Ireland in 1801 the flag was changed by adding to it St. Patrick’e cross, e three of & narrow belt benea: the girdle and the ait crosses of the British flag are placed is joined to a separate on a blue ground in the corner of a belt. bri, 4 flag. St. George's cross For the medium else, ie the straight red cross in the oen- the gown will require tre, St, Andrew's was a white Mul- 4 1-4 yards tese cross, and St. Patrick's cross was a red cross of the sa:ne char- acter, so these two crosses are placed one over the. oth eo red cross of St. Patrick the most con- splouous, "The white line showing on either side of this cross is al! that appears of tho Scotch cross. The red cross of St. Patrick is so placed that the continuity of its arms ts hat is, the white Is broader on ol side of the red than it ts the other. This makes the crosses easily distinguishable, a@d one can- not really be said to be on top of material 37, 3 8-4 yards 36, 8 1-4 yards 44 inches wide, with 3 1-4 yards of fancy material $7, No, 8,408—Gown With Russian Tunlo, 34 to 44 Bust.2 1-2 yards 36 or 44 inches Pattern No, 8409 is cut in sizes from 86 to 44 inches bust measure. New York, or sent by mail om receipt stamps for each pattern ordered. the other, as the red and white are placed alternately above in each arm @f the cross, DMPORTANT—Write your address size wanted. Add two cents for letter