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3S Saar The SAMY World. ESTADLISHED RY JOSEPH PULITZER. Pudliehed Dally Except Sunday by the Presa Publishing Company, Nos. 53 to 63 Park Row, New York. RALPH PULITZPR, President, 63 Park Row. J ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 68 Park Row JOSEPH PULITZER, 'Jr., Secretary, & Park R ——— ‘ork as SecondClaas Matter, ing] For Englani and the Continent and All Countries in the International Postal Union, $8.50) One Yoar..... $9.78 .801One Month. a8 VOLUME 85... .0cssccccssocsccvsssososceveseeNO, 19,417 DISAPPOINTING. é | ers in Manhattan who took the trouble to qualify them- Entired at the Pout-Office Budscription Rates to The f World for the United States end Canila One Year. One Month selves to vote at next month's election fall ten thousand short of the number entitled to vote last year. a little rain on one registration day? As compared with registration totals for 1913 Richmond loses’ *W11, Brooklyn gains a meagre 363, Only the thriving Bronx shows a spark of political zest with an increase of 1,569, | Last April, when voters in this State were asked to register their | will as to a constitutional convention, eight-tenths of them stayed away Why? Because of The Eventa g World Daily Magazine, Monday, Octob ( | MR JOHN YOu HAVE BEEN A SOLDIER = TENE, DO THE SOLDIERS SIT Down To EAT WHILE THEY ARE MARCHING 2 iS say, Ss ereuamenans aah. ele . Coord, 1914, 1 by The Pree Publishing Oo, (Tee New York Brening World) By Maurice Ketten Da THE SOLDIERS SToP FIGHTING WHEN THE DINNER BELL RINGS 2 Zl (F ALUTHE SoLdieRs OF ALUTHE COUNTRIES er 193 1914 in War Hist By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1014, by The Pree Pubiieing Co, (The New York Evening World), No. 19—BATTLE OF SOLFERINO, That Freed Italy. “ HE map of Italy early in 1859,” writes Crane, “was a crazy quilt ! of many patches. The peninsula was cut up into little princt- | Patities for little princes. The mill{ons, who spoke one tongue and cherished glorious traditions, were ruled as cynically as if they were cattle.” And in the same year was fought a battle that paved the way for a free and united Italy—the battle of Solferino. Since the fall of the Roman Empire, so ran the old sneer, there hed never been a time when Italy could be called a nation any more than a stack of timber could be called a ship It wos merely a collection of petty states, | most of them lorded over by Austria. The one really independent section of Italy, in the middle years of the | nineteenth century, was the little kingdom of Sardinia. Victor Emmanuel, grandfather of the present ruler of Italy, was King of Sardinia. He formed an alliance with France (ceding to the French his own ancestral estates in Savoy by way of payment) in an effort to make headway against Italy's = REELS Wee oe | tae a battle aft her of the brief 1869 gn the Itallan and ‘ In one battle after another of the ef campaign e ja ib from the polls. Out of 325,000 enrolled voters in New York County WOULD IT SToP THe French troops beat thele Avsttan foun, On Jane $4 cans the cHiaie \ less than 43,000 recorded their wishes one way or another. WAR 2 | Marching from the city of Milan, which they had just captured, the italian, i A ; = and French armies clashed w! e Austrian hos' Popular self-government hereabouts has spells when it belies its see Tec}, Was advancing against them. ‘The rival forces met on j . popularity. That constitutions leave electors cold is bad enough. Contiiet, re a hilly stretch of ground near tHe ee CB gee) But what about a State election involving important issues of economy | Gannnnnnnnnnnnnng ales eoteneune ot wae — = t and escape from the sordid toils of machine rule? alata army was commanded by Emperor big n vscad de if re i" . ‘ r’ *, | son. LJ eo » an As New Yorkers watch their city forge ahead in size, populous- | Setnebearee led by Napoleon III., Emperor of the French, a ing ness and wealth, are they content to let political responsibility | Victor Emmanuel's Sardinian army comprised the allies’ left wing, | dawdle languidly behind? | while the centre and right wing were chiefly made up of French divistons, je languidly an | The Austrians were 160,000 strong, the allies about the same in numbers. | + pean pincenecmiainsing ie pelt gary dawn on June 24, 1889, the battle besan, and for aixteen hours raged, The weather was clear and murderously hot. The Renate turned a Goat ear to the cotton farmers, Full | Austrian Waperar sovent We Peet too Reece wat sane ga Balisrine by, dake i of their product, maybe. | flanking the French right wing and cutting the allied army in two. Napo- |leon III. took measures to guard against this latter danger and to capture a Solferino at any cost. . DON’T ASK UNCLE SAM The Austrian infantry charged in great numbers in the effort to spit fe) | the allied lines in half. Napoleon III. threw forward all his available regl- A ” JOHN, I'VE BEEN READ | ments, Including the Imperial Guard, to block this move. After flerce re- NENT the announcement of the Administration that, despite OHN , ING | slatance the charging Austrians were halted and driven back, though thelr ith reonnlly: expeamed disapproval. of a Af 1 ti ABOUT THE CENTER MARCHING ‘hill batteries scourged the French ranks at every step of the retreat. H corey oe pproval os @ Morgan loan to! THROUGH THE MIDDLE, The French tried to carry these batteries by assault, but were repulsed France, American bankers can lend all the money they like | PLEASE EXPLAIN IT TONE with fearful slaughter, The attacks were renewed, and little by little one s battery crowned hill after another was stormed by the French, Around the | to belligerent nations 80 long as they take care not to pester the Gov- ON THe MAP redoubts on cemetery Hill (the Austrians’ chef stronghold) the fighting ernment for an official 0. K., our revered parent, The Morning World, was longest continued and flercest. But at last this hill, too, was Saptured, fe i 2, tee 1 m th that day the Fy ‘h in di s f dest: tion. The aohaeed iy nien 7 of he —— taken by The! eecaculunp ct Napoleon Tit and an aurerionity.ct iv urme'e copdarai saad when it said (apropos of the proposed Morgan loan)”: and guns were all that saved them. The right of private citisens of @ neutral nation to lend On the allies’ left wing, where were massed Victor Emmanuel's Italians, \) money to belligerents is as well recognized in international law as the right of such individuals to sell coal to ships of war. ° t! s To discourage loans while exerting the battle was even more stubbornly contested on both sides than at the centre and right. Not till late in the afternoon could the Italians make headway against their enemies. » ,, At last the whole Austrian army fell back. A ———~———r~ © blinding thunderstorm and the utter fatigue of the H 2 the power of government to the utmost to encourage the sale } Victory } allies permitted them to withdraw in safety. But they } of our surplus products in belligerent markets {s neither Sand Liberty. 2 eft behind them 22,537 dead, wounded or prisoners to sound business, correct sentiment nor true neutrality, With all respect, the reconsidered attitude of the Administration ja even more a direct, frank answer to a query of The Evening World, “ln that the latter laid a finger on the precise weak spot in the organ loan programme when it asked: J{ bankers in this country wish to make loans in Europe, why don’t they go ahead and make them? Why seck a Government stamp for them? Why force the nation into a position where it is bound to Fefuse ite official seal for such a transaction? : The Road to Reflections of Pop’s Mutual Motor the allies’ loss of 17,191. The battle of Solferino ended the war. Three days later Napoleon IIL dictated peace terms fo his beaten rival, Francis Joseph, Tho first great blow for Italy's liberty had been struck. Chapters from a Woman’s Life By Dale Drummond Copyright, 1014, by ‘ue Pram Publiaint Co, CHAPTER XcVI. (The New York Eveving World), come home so despondent and dis- p ti | By Alma Woodward | NE morning 1 received a tet«| COUFREH, he had been ¥o variable tn : : Serer anf emrrmcresmts Ne ns moods that Ls knew hi ; romotion . peaenoerrsges dee fooht rapihin telling weal er ue RUT one epota, eenaae 4 *., Am enthusiastic American student hopes the destruction Why Tom Roe. ~ h ] ening World), hae ahe Wad “entlo(pated’ a] like thevole daar haope! SeaMiaNteT te of art in Europe may start a Renaissance in this country. No a ac e€ or T The Frankfurter Feast. ‘ visit to us, But an invest. [mayne wih the mien cee 7 harm in having a try. How do you begin it? ee ae eal “ NEVER could understand | ment father had made, whiell ap tee sons; the next morose, not noticing i oo hy people choose a hot | time had secmed perfectly safe, had them nor me, Butt —_—_——4+-—______. bad i three young men, to, whom! By Helen Rowland summer day for a pienic,| proven otherwise, As a result she! thinking as soon as he began to make > we will loan this familiar, Ss BARGAINS IN FOOD. ; «& ARKET BARGAIN DAY,” inaugurated Saturday at the become an exceedingly popular feature in all the new city marta, Many of the farmers and carriers sold out their stocks before npon and could have disposed of as much more. One hundred and combination of names to Protect their real identity, worked to- thbse boys were scarcely more than “apprentice” hands, They worked. along together for about @ year—maybe a little longer, Copnght, 1914, by The Prem Publishing Oo, (The New York Kveniug World), Don't fancy a man is in love with you just because he discovers that you are brilliant or beautiful; wait until he discovers a dimple in your cheek that isn't there, when files, I heai orating, is for outdoor eat of a fine scheme to-day. I mosquitoes would lose quite a substantial part of and ants are having ‘Old when the days are crisp and invig-' and my home. afrank-| nicely, but 1 must forego the pleas- furter feast. You don't take a thing) ure of visiting you. all night in New York her little income. of four nights a week, But, as usual, she HERE are lots of ways of killing a man's love—but the quickest 1s| trome Week,’ meditated Pop. “This wrote cheerfully. H in with him, bue sether far down the ladder in a big | ther, the fall of the year,| © hankful to have my health Occasionally he would i Queensboro Bridge market, drew a big crowd and should mill which employed “hands.” And by smothering it to death with kisses. kind of weather, the fall of the yea: I am thankful to ha Tas © voll Of Hila ASB? By being very eco- | rd nomical I shall be able to get along | last nigh your share of what I won t You will have to me, and that as L had half, 1 with no raise in wages. They were from home excopt some paper naps to come to or sack excialmed, to ay “bile, we witht never fitty barrels of-potatoes at eighty cents a bushel melted away from a| learning more and more all the time,| ‘To make a man like you, praiso his cleverness or his character; to M9 No fusw—seo? Then you stop) srvor reading the letier. “L don't #oe Seatnse what he won, perhegn beens single stand before 12 o'clock. Lamb chops at ten cente a pound, | >u! Bs rouch as bargains in the department store. Borough President The Evening World has pointed out before, the way to get the belief of hard times out of the minds of hundreds of thousands of people here and everywhere in this country is to make a bold slash at the high prices which high speed and tension during the past few yeara have fastened upon us, Bargain days in the public markets make the best possible start. Letters From the People ee ¥ flied. contented. Then one day orary position offered with much tter pay, and he took it. When Dick's mill laid off hands that year Dick was one of the ct Harry's job didn't last as long a nd he, too, was job! t the mill wh had hoped, And their positio ‘Tom still worked hi “Hand Tom well, any young fellow likes to keep hoping {&. @ little fatter pay 1 ‘No, resist, Harry stayed, but he was dis- lugged right along. Harry quit. are and the more chance I have to make a record and the nearer I get to the head of the promotion line.” And Tom has “stuck” for a number "sald Harry. | coming around begging for the leash of love and the muazle of matrimony. » let's stick here; A tem- with vanity. long since been plentiful. make him love you, praise his shoulders or his eyelashes; but to make him Never tell a man more than half the truth—because that’s all he can swallow ata time without elther choking with indignation or getting dizsy There comes a time in the life of every man when he discovers that just being “on the level with himself” is worth everything else on earth. A coward {s not a man who Is afraid to take a cold bath every morning, ! but one who fs afraid to say that he is afraid to. i and there's your pienie!" forks out of twig! ft and you have gourmands or gods! things without undue suffering.” jat the first delicatessen, buy a couple drive to a choice spot in the woods, shut dowo your car, gather brush and her 4 round-thip ticket as a surprise, | dry leaves, bulld a fire, make long gh» could then make her expected roast your frank- le, split your rolls, | much as usual, so It would be Just the p in some inustard— | time to have her. feast for gourmets, | tj4q mot They tell mo) isfaction, 1 straightway dismissed it that out in the open that way any peak can eat a dozen of the blamed | {TOM My MC ted about it, until 1 “Goodness!” exclaimed Ma, licking ‘The fire was crackling and apyrting the justice of your mother having to . perhaps because when he lost mentioned it | © it ; | of yards of frankfurters, a dosen long’ suffer for the wrongs of others! I) eon. rng y, tha u with a head of cabbage thrown in, proved an attractive offer. Butch-| envelope. adore you, lead him to a chafing dish and fall down and worship bis| ros, naif u pound of butter and a/ there ever IVA SAB Aen enna | Wat'tieht whieh she told me! en ersand egg dealers reported the best day’s business since the market el oy. iiss Rue hate, Pi SOSEING; sepa Pete of muster: OE ae ns Welly we must UY Aer money, euil trom ‘making al mene Ea Hm golng to quit here. I can next door you annex a dozen bottles) now whe won't accept money, BUC) TT Ire atvented my dinner invitee : i Feta at pa ts inthtont ae ® ” i i Sing the saree. work.” | Keep a man on a long rope of platonic friendship and he'll soon be| of beer, put the plunder in your car—| there are other ways. ; i) est the housewife every bit tion, a little to my surprise. ‘And he looked very serious as] Lui. toe to my surprise, really 1, too, felt | gi) t o have an extra nice 0 4 my letter, inkine i “Well, what—anyway, how’ be-| he returne y } saab ner, thinking please Jack, ; : A j —maybe our raise will! Aviad badly at firati but ufter voage | Afterward we played bridge, ‘thies Marks and his committee have hit on an idea that can be widely ex-|come—and they know us here and There never yet lived a beauty specialist who could make her own com-| 8@" * mother’s letter again, I made up| umes T played opposite Ned, and i 4 ye i ” i “Wait a minute,” Pop shortstopped | cheerfully she had written, | made UP) 10 way just uw he had alway: ; zi Ailey " we're fairly sure of keeping our Jobs.”| pexion behave, nor a woman who wrote expert advice on “The Gentle Art | ably wouldn't |W? 4 Ways been. a tended to increase popular interest in what the city is trying to do to} But Dick wouldn’ y : her, “I was just taking a breath, You! my mind that it probably w We nad ‘a delightful ng, Mildred 3 cut the cost of living. ten cents a day wi of Managing a Man" who could make her own husband behave, | make much difference; mother's wants | nte | carrying hore @ considerabie amount Luter 1 would send | 2°00 “share of they winninges although we always played when at home for comparatively small sume, “I am so iad you and Ned are friends again!" I said to Jack after they had all gone, “What a nice time we had, I was giad Mildred won, It will make her feet pleasant toward wat | were so simple, vieit, 1 was not entertaining as Having thus set- | '» trouble to My own sat- | m my mind, Not so Jack. He “I thought !t would. That was the quite lost patience with him. reason I let her win,” returned Jack. t been able to see Reason ' It 1s hard for a woman to hate any man when she stops to think what y As yet T nad a0 | Mildred was 4 notoriously bad hile Tom kept plugs ny jounds grand! Let's ask losses had made much dif. ver, retusing. to ba discouraged, “Tne | helpless babes they all are—any more than she would hate a baby for putting | it UPrters, and go do that to-mor- | that Nis Townes Ml ey noted: wo 1, | Barer atctnce to here bee iat Jack longer I stick,” he said to himself, |{ts hand into the fire or falling into the soup tureen, row. And 1 take Jimmie, too.” | instead of curtailing expenses as 11 semark. “the more apt I am to keep my job eared he would insist on my had fewont on inthe same old way. ‘Our dancing lessons continued and we had been to veral parties in ‘We gradually resumod our former cordial relations with Ned and Mil- dred, I thought Jack even more wing that Jack always kept bia, friendly with Ned than he had ever been. We often spent an evening with them again, either dining at their home or at some smart res- taurant, *nd going to the opera or play afterward, Sometimes when Jack and Ned went out together Mil. dred would join me at the hotel and we would chat and visit just as we used to, until it was time for me to retire, when she would return home, While I asked no questions, I was sure that Jack wns either getting money from Ned to carry stocks oF that Ned rying them for him, I hoped the latter, as if any looses were made they would not fall upon of alcohol he wouldn't worry over the absurd rumor that raw fruits litting rolla with the only unbroken Oe eek O show me how i r. Mitt, sho Cotton Fashions. to eae he. funny ‘Ittle forks!” border unless this is of drawn work. | giggled Mrs. Carter. ; ‘Tho white volle curtains with drawn| © op picked out a forked twig, work borders are quite ns pretty as|jabbed a frankfurter on the wwe those of net or lace. Among the cre-| prongs and handed it to the lady, tonnes are many of the now black| Suddenly there was @ squeal 4 =| And white effects carried out either) | "Oh, the fark went and Sunes, o . in_stripes, checks or a border, nd the frankfur' Mi ane The shops are showing large as- 8Moh, ob! And mine just did tho qexed any one since you lost uo sortments of cotton portieres in me. | same thing this minute!” walled m:.|;yuch money because 1 was afrald sheets, and I think I'll look at some] cerized and printed and in And in trying to adjust things Pop, you would grumble at the expense,’ cotton towellings. If I purchase a| fancy pillows there ts every oppore good quality I imagine they will give | tunity to select handsome cotton pil- rk ven by our Torrace Mag at as our turn to enter- tain them, but when spoke to Jack ¢ demurred, ae ewalt bs while for that, Bue, Givo a dinner party first, You haven't had one in #ome time, Let's have} some of the crowd In to-morrow night for dinner and bridge, “Very well,” I replied, pleased that he had suggested it, “I had not of years, Dick and Harry still are “hands,” shifting about from mill to| * are soaked in alcohol to keep’ them | mill, ever at the lure of some transi. fresh, Of course, all of these state. | toTY benef, Tom t* a foreman, And he says he's going to stick until he's | 66f OTTON draperies for mine monts refor to vegetables or products | superintendent! this winter,” I overheard = a vivacious young house- keeper remark the other of vegetative growth. Occasionally | os - = Hits From Sharp Wits. day iu.eno nf our abopa, one sees a human “peach” In alcohol, but that isn Her companion replied: "Yes, I camo downtown to-day to invest in a lot of To the Editor of The Erening World = 1 have read that in the United States « billion is one thousand mil- Mons, and that in England a billion ts @ million millions, Is this correct? c. J. M. 205,780 Square Miles, To the Editor of The Evening World What is the number of square miles in Texas? K, M. “Hidden” Ale: ‘To the EAitor of The Evening World soaked ther here EDWARD ©, KING JR. “Sweet” and “Root” ¥ The average man would prefer to ratte pilex ot Rea mesiid faces have no following than to have tt Please give me the correct pronun-| Confined to bill colleators,—Macon ciation of the words, “Suite” ang| Tesraph- let his slide into the ruins. “But stopping all entertaining so | ‘woe can't go on wasting ‘em Itke! gyuddenly is the best way in the world eo. Pe mi j lows for every room in the | this,” he observed, “because I'm hun-! to jet every one know we are hard| Jack. In reply to the queries about al-| “Heute.” Are they of French origin?| A man may casily get a reputation | me excellent service, and I do 80/ jn the art Tinbroldery. donates [ary Fcould eat all I brought my-|\ip, Have a nice dinner and invite)’ My senso—my moral senso of 2 A. G, {for stience If he talks only when he| much want to help along in this cot-| there are stainped pillows galore und| eeif.” Ned and Mildred Somers.’ : and wrong—vwas at this time strangely cohol, I offer these answers: Lread Ts Wilaw ni Ren has something to say.--Albany Jour- | ton movement.” cotton fringes to finish them off. Fifteen minutes later there re-|° 7 was too astonished to speak for|perverted. I knew Jack's father had made with compressed yeast docs ae piel . tte Mary; nal. were 4 ‘This seems to be the strong factor| Now Is 6 good time to replenish| mained three of the original frani-|q moment. Invite Ned Somers, when! gambled away a fortune and then eontain a portion of alcohol, but all |7 "he Milter rening World: the “linen closet furters, One of these was burned brittle, another was raw on one side and black on the other—the third alone was possible, It was divided into five sections and we all got a hat Is, to purcha heots, pillow ci towels, &c., and on though we all profer IInen the moat of us have to content ourselves with cotton when It comes to bedding. And the hematitched or embroidered that is now so encouragingly increas- ing the sales in the cotton depart- mont of all our shops. Women are turning their attention to cotton goods as they never did before, and How can I see a copy of a Sunday| A. lazy man Ma st ? work in a word on hi paper published in July, 19107 =| Ror Ae Vv. G eo 8 A train of thought Is often more Jack had not been on friendly terms| killed himself when there was danger with him for so long! I scented a|of his defulcations being discovered; market transaction, but as Jack had| but I never thought that Jack was in tically forbidden me to question|any danger of doing as his father had said nothing of my suspicion,|done. In the first place, Jack had no of the alcohol is dissipated by the Heat required to buke the bread, Teu, @effee and cocoa are cntirely free from alcohol, as neither starch nor willing to n behalt.— ample, on 1 wed so long aince Welve agen thert fortune; and all he won was just so ‘ ; easily wrecked than other trains. they are beginning to realize the| cotten sheets and pillow cases a: ! It sounded ™ easy! o'd! 1 don't know if they will come,” much more for us to spend. It would @agar is present in these beverages, | 7 the Editor of The Eveving World eee event possibilities in these fabrics.| really very pretty. At any rate, t ‘a’ thought It'd be so blamed difficult? | suggested, enable us to live just so much more gpd as <:cohol ts formed from starch On what day of the week did April] A srood deal of the present unsatia- | ‘Take, for instance, In the drapery de-| we lay in a stock of these now we| Wouldn't you think that any old foo} “You can find out by asking|handsomely. Of the moral effect on @ sugar exclusively. Alcohol could| 1% 1499, fall? B,C. | factory condition ts due to the ten-| partment. Thero are beautiful | can have the satisfaction of relieving | could roast a frankfurter on a stick? them!" Jack returned shortly. Jack I never thought at all, Ever since the night when Jack had eds (To Be Continued.) dency of folks to become grouchy.— * le Bon Macon Telegraph, | ‘To the Kditor of The Evening World: serims and domestic chintzes and cretonnes, to 6a Botniog. of the dvysd variety in madras in floral effects, the distress of the South and at ¢ samo time encouraging home indus. joaned 5 memvidentiy not,” murmured Ma, with “Ret be present in a dry or powdery Molasses does not usually ————— try. An extra sheet or a few pillow | bitterness and Innuendo. f : , Me " stgtt ¥ MW “Jimmie, go up into that there orch-| isn't grammatical,” reproved Ma. mi That's what we get for thii alert, althoueh it 1 poe-| In the word vywaat” te she oy" cfu ans tifuy a uasulymi ag conronunnal denene,nc {tint | came fat Mac Reacts |e aad i cpsiat| MEAs pete te anarenad | Rest tocatare ras, "Ww end > gadoe Me] ™ Laat 9 fr'so because ho wants it vo be #0 ‘The ecrims Yn floral olety, ¥! breezes and Albany Journal, P ‘a this idem may be carried out in ye be suimmn. bros +t er ‘a’ brang