The evening world. Newspaper, October 4, 1917, Page 20

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Throwing It Back! = xurtn-. —— + - By J. Americans Bm Under Fire By Albert Payson Terhune H. Cassel ‘ j 1d Wil, by the Pome Pataowag On The New Tok Gremtag Wert, / NO. 21 THE BATTLE OF COWPENS. i“ T weed to be cnlled “the battle of the cowpens” Far it was foweht tn a cette pasture It eae one of the greet Lurpipg points in the Mevelution The fritien eerily ta overran (he Bouth, eweap tne ell before them They brushed aside or Gempeped ever) army the patriots could send against them. They carried fire end sword to »ireds of homes, Thelr brutality tm the ¢ ines wee unepeakable, Taptes (Americans *bo sympathieed #ith England) getned tn the slaughter VOLUME 5 ‘ AMERICANIZATION CENTRES. One Carolina woman who wae left homeless by TTENTIO the Pritich was a poor widow named Jackson, It was Wa | . uM ' thus her thirteen-yearold son And gained bis Rig . adewor \ve es first knowledge of war and bis batred for monarchy ©, , War i N snd opprensi Serhend Cn “m i 4 Is M. Alp fit Cornwall and Tarleton, the local British leaders, had the South at This Centre offers excelie faciiities for various clu hetr mer rhe American General, Gates—a drinking and boastful ta- th a pull—could nowhere hold his own against them, organizations, patrio jes, Red Cross unite, military mn Be Nathanael Greene to the South to feplace | groups and Home Defense Leng Phe building has a spleo tonce an 6 of affairs wet in, Mere in the story: did av m for large groups, t ateembly rooms and meet | reene’s sub dinates w brave cid Gen, “Dan” Morgan ot New 4 . a6 . was sent by Greene to cceupy part of the Spartanburg district q tag rooms for na. Tarleton at once hed against him with 1,100 pleked | The | - ‘ Jes the formation of a ved to drive him out of the district wits a swift, crushing Citizenship Class for foreigner 1 ‘ nour ents f 1 had about 1,000 men, but nearly of them were raw recrulte— At this moment there + / — mine and Wye like—who had no knowledge of war and q pubjic schools in eve New York were iN-armed and worse equipped. A large num: “ x . er in * ber of them were boys in their early teens, To As an important part of its Americanization campaign earl An Army of Boye $ ask such « rabble to meet Tarleton’s chosen vets resent year, The Eve + World ured the enactment of a to Face Veteran ‘ans in buttle was like pilting a schoolboy againag the “ agyhlh hen l 1 bli een ws Willard, Yet it was the best force Morgan State law which mah andatory t of public hoo bees as “i could get. To make matters worse, ‘Tarleton’s army civic tres where the foreign-born may meet and min yntained 350 men from the famous “Flying Legion, the Hritish army, while Morgan ha On the morning of Jan, 17, 4 the best cavalrymen in almost no cavalry of any kind. . Tarleton arrived at the spot where the patriot foree a him—at a thinly wooded and hilly cow pasture nat far from the N lina border, Hn y forming bis ranks, he gave the command to charge. With yells , ind laughter the British rushed to the attack. At the top of their lungs they roaved, mockingly, their old Grenadier marching song, which began: From such raseals as these shall we fear a rebuff? Let fly, Grenadiers, with the hot leaden stuff!" achment of sharpshooters had been pushed forward to meet the Now, by orders, these sharpshooters fired into the ranks of ad- Americans, that the former may come to see American citize the greatest privilege in the world. The law says public school houses SHALL insisting upon the duty of school by movement against alicnism | the public intrusts to them The City of New Y many of whom remain permanently shut off from the America in thereby to give special aid to the ial utilization of the property A ghar } vancing red ats and then fell back upon their own front line, : } 1 ‘ i ‘ ae, On marched the British, still cheering and singing. The Americans on | which they live by barriers of language and custom, has a task of : gg ap mdOD3 ‘ . gee ~ ~ Sats the first ne stood firm unti! their foes were within bayonet thrust of & h hould DIN. ote . j : NS them. Then, still by orders, they fell back upon the second line. haahivatio 5 h every r cipal dep: ¢ ould con- t 1 5 @ 4 ‘ é g wae pnd } bce thy si ; vile Girigeecigg: ot Americahization to which ry municipal department shou n ; : : : aoe % Here they stood firm until British pressed them too flercely, when bute its best offorts. 4 post af they retreated to the hill behind which their home-made cavalry wero | . , 1 : "he of Education can do most of al z poste: j The Board of Fducatior F most of all : Tho British now were so sure of easy victory that they ran forward in i The national spirit needs, as never before, to be purified and disorder atter the retreating Americans. Just then Bi itencd ntti: Americans fal ; about and began to pour The Charge That at close rahge into the disorgan- Turned the Day. ized British ranks, At the same time the handful —rrr of American cavalry charged. One line of infantry militia dashed at the British with a pell-meil bayonet charge as the patriot cavalry galloped forward. Tarleton tried in vain to rally his beaten men. Panic-fear swept them. They would not listen to his shouted orders, but dropped everything and ran like stampeded sheep. His famous “Flying Legion," too, lived up to Its name by flying helter-skelter from the fleld without so much as waiting to cross sabres with the American cavalry ‘arleton was wounded, and presently he, too, Joined in the retreat. ‘The Americans lost twelve killed and sixty wounded. The British losses were ) KiMed or wounded and 500 captured out of a force of 1,100. The Ameri- ‘0 seized 100 horses, 800 muskets, two fleld pleces, two regimental Js and a quantity of baggage. The battle of Cowpens was the first step in a campaign that drove the British out of almost every part of the South, This city recently appropriated $70,000 to be used for the s purpose of he The Board of Education should now be giving the widest possible volley after volley woial ping to Americanize its foreign population, + publicity to a programme putting every available public in districts where the city’s fore hool hous gn born are most numerous, into} the great and necessary campaign for an all-American America. + BURN WOOD. standar AILS come from suburban districts about, empty coal bins} and the high prices charged for coal where there is any to be had. Fears of a freeze in cold w metropolis because of a coal short ther in ices ace to the if. The Jarr Family — By Roy L. McCardell Enormous quantities of coal are lying at the mines, There is no LOVE VERSUS MONEY | many: ; } lack of transportation. Yet, for whatever reason, the visible s | so-called love in a cotta | t : there be such a thing as 1917, by the Pres Publishing Co, : |Promised not to be late to supper." | turned upon Mr. Rangle and ro- pply is (The New Evening Wo “It's eight minutes fast," said El-|marked sarca miaay fade t zi i ‘ast, tI-|marked sarcastically that he didn't scant and prices are high. 8 ye prone wble for Met eevee " a ea baad un iY Venera It depends altoxether on the other a es 8 some of this near-beer + Gus's amiable assistant. “We | see why certain parties were worried r i fb al ni @ take Into the cottage, all the breweries are making | keep it fast so's to get the customers | abc NW, The suburbanite, however, has a remedy denied his city brother,| lve happily? [tel poe Eat TH aa. | ot cone w t all the breweries are making | keep It f : customers |about time, “Wait till you do time, : if | or t m s 1 for 1 wii} Love, alone, ts a wonderful - now," said Gus, “There wen't | “t@rted out when we tell them It's|then worry about it,” added Gus, He can and should get wood. Heat pu duoutlGBRURee (Het eine leks fey Maia ea are iness—but why stifle Vee drunkards left after |2fet time when it ain't. ‘The police 3ut I promised I'd be home to Timber unfit to be used for anything but fuel abounds in out-| It the right way. |brothera and act as their house-| ‘he natural expression of love? is so,sore they don't catch no hoig-|dinner in time, lying sections. A cord of wood is the equivalent in heat units, roughly speaking, | ofaton of coal. A wood fire requires more attention, but it is more sald Mr, Rangle ut thelr suc-/ keeper. If my twelve months’ ex Why embark on thé most impor-|this war, what with the distilleries | lers or moldere cess depends a| perience shows me I can be your|tant partnership in our lives without] topped from making the bard stuff he if you're op good deal on the! wife, and run your home on your sal- | making positive, or as nearly so as) ind # that they pinch | good naturedly, noone minute after| “Ven you let the wimmens boss you around then always you'll get .ll the brewerles making near- other things that|/ary, we will be married.” |possible, that both of the members|... mit no alcoholic in it. But th PyRitcita hh cried Gua angrily. he vine of 1," ealk Gua: eee easily kindled and supplies heat more rapidly than its carbon rival, | they add to cheir| The young man demurred, of the pragpeotive partnership qual- if you put a pinch of salt in that re you the boss or ain't me the | Wouldn't let any woman tell me what 1 y h ; Kae supply of cash “Hut if we love each other, nothing| ify for the job they are about to un- | *4¥ 1 3 oN? hing. ky I should tell customers | ime I was hungry!" The stay-at-homes in the small towns should busy themselves in| A young man/else counts, And we love each other, | dertake? near-beer it's like the real thing | whether my goods is chenooine or| He had hardly made the remars getting into wood lots, cutiing up fallen trees, gather en limbs} and youys woman | don't we?" he pleaded. | if more girls lookyd on their ap-| How do you like It?” my clock fast!” when his wife burst into the plac and preparing in a practical way to meet any . fancied them-| “Of course, we do," admitted the | proaching married life with the same] «wel, said Mr. Jarr, “as Tom timer didn’t mean any harm,"| evidently from the back room = preparing in a y ‘a to meet any hah sucay \P 4 “ selves They will be surprised to find how much goo very much| prospective bride, "But love foun d ‘seriousness and earnestne: said Mr, Jarr, 8 s my } \ ays, " looks like beer, it Stairs, She rushed past Gus and | fuel is Lying around | in tove with one another, Lewis says, ‘It looks ‘ Jon sand won't endure, And L want| young friend, there would be fewer ‘ «it tastes ko buer, | ("Fe does # tot, though." growled | buffeted the unresisting Elmer loose, even in back yards, | The girl had made quite a success} married love that [ know will be | wrecks in the 8 of matrimony and | smells like beer, i ""*) Gus, 1 his life he has been tend- | mightily. in business Hfe. In fact, she was ne t me try my expel nent.” {less work for our divorce courts, but when you get outside of it, it employed as a private secretary and| Finally he had to consent, | ing bar, and never yet has he tend- “I can be insulted, can I?” she ed to his own business.” ask Incidentally, one of the big eco-|hasn't got the authority “And you won't tell my hus- head stenographer in a large office)* For twelve @ponths the young! nomic sstions of the day would be » that clock fast, Gus?” asked| Always under discipline, Elmer | band to come right away up to hie supply firm at @ salary of $100 a) woman kept tober resolution, goIng gotyed, Mr. Rangie, who had dropped iu for Only smiled vacantly and commenced | dinner, and you won't tell him to Munn: . nee scale thet tec or ; riggs month, ut proposition of home-making (Copyright, 1917, by ‘The Hell Syndicate, Ine.) near-been or to be near beer, “I to polish glasses with a clean bar| bring me ten dollars what I need B contly has ¢ 1 it will ‘ ip f sh butlding contents | he young man had a promising) and domestic management exactly as ’ towel, when I ain't speaking to im?” ently has been fected vil) ds. Pure olls, starche a Pee { , + : a — —" * | “od Leap aaclpes aed ots i ‘ ta mshi 304 Suk | fu ure, but, - ant tm his salary) she went at me problem of her es ro — See ap = A j “Stop that!” commanded Gus, “A| And, throwing Elmer aside she ols » protein at alland a Robin- | was only a few dollars in ex of Management—determined to master | [| ~ dozen times I tell y r went to th ih lst i esti : . . oy mes I tell you to fill up the fe cash register and took + @ out of steak or a portion of potat n Cruso: 1 starve to death if|hers. He wanted her to marry hin,| it as a business before she would say | 1] Bachelor Gil R eflections hott fori fli Ae oe " im, | it as ¢ \ , vottles folst and polish the gi out all the soft money, how many grammes of protein are con-| tin of purest olive atresia antertepea Leer levealur eA aE yal cant iia mec || Re oalen Rowland afterwolds, Anyway, as a polisher| “And my husband won't come to talned in either, The instrument is built | Maple syrup eushing from its siden | wifes e sila enerr ces jotted period § you are a bummer too! And he) ie supper wasp a ready @ halt } » the hungry ana no 7 HO: ABR 8 80 OG Ores ked Cy ol > 2) ‘ ur, and w s | upon the princ! oft familiar] eat selentitically ate, me Wishes 13) awe can lve on my income,” he gave an affirmative answer to Copyright by the Prest Publishing Co, (The New York ; jerked ‘tho towel from Elmer and i ea tal er ye the cat, J computing scale that #hows the cuss | and places tis sou town winner | assured her confidently nen GultoR an: cocday atter the Hj trouble with the truth 4s that it interferes with all your illu-/Mopped his persplring brow with it is rintale, the dog, 4s already : eer = amount of his purchas He frat a Junty the tare weight} Hut she had. received too 1 a|\ lapse of three years, they are one of| sions about yourself, ‘ | ahs Basis ane! got out the cop- | Rusia wale when the price per pound ts known worm thread at the le ’! business training to take proble-| ihe most genuinely happy couples I jer funnel and two big demijohns. AA ane One® Ore Puneen ms ; “ cae ‘ ight of ut y py ’ ve ¥ @ took , ttle q y, } From ®& dietetic standpoint it ts Sonia matteal thing sure until they were| have ever seen A man may read everything that ever was written Then he took the various bottles of |mer vigorously, threw him aside, \} meaningless to welgh food in uped dil to ewir save, | tonted That girlewns dead right in the SROUE Woman And yer Ket khow enough to PeCaln Sealskin Rye and Highland Fling, |S4ve Gus a terrific shove that land. LF pounds,” says a writer in Popular nine r Now finds the word) “{ have had no domestic or house. way she looked at married life, and { nt fe a vitat nesting when she ig “%4 the various other labelled bot-jed him up against the ice box, and |}, Selence Monthly. “The proper unit under the headiig ‘Calories’ and Keeping experience of any kind,” she|her story Iw one of the best anewers from asking bis wife a vitat ¢ Pa ae ter, tes Of Various brands of Scotch and | Walked upstairs with @ haughty | f the fuel valuo or energy. yiel tei oe s the Dum nswered “Lam not « tent| L know of to that eternal—often ine counting the sUltches around the armhole of @ sweater. |... ang proceeded to arrange for a | stride. i dower uf food is the calore. Lettuce an be ely on anot to answer your statement from infernal—question in the eyes of| * » {complete ling of genuine case goods. | “I's a good thing I ain't speaking contains sixty-five calories per pound K ch food must be A woman {sn't really born a “camouflage artist;” vno patent non-refillable bottles /to her or I'd have told her some- ' and olive ol] contains 4,200 per pound bs er or the machin, r she only becomes one when she discovers that she has were no enigma to Elmer, despite |thing she wouldn't have liked,” said 7 SWite differences are also found in w butter and broad teasine , W h at I a h oe = xX th Sen se? got to live up to a role that is one part angel, two parts the reflections of Gus as to his lack | Gus i} _ . y S f ‘ He, | yal 4 hourl and ninety-seven parts cook. es intelligence. With a rubber bulb chen an turned to the others, > . , Cae ~ : Sy ai » and tube arrangement Elmer pro- | "Since them wimmen's been going t setters Fro ae Now Puzzle ‘ie | 4 — . ag to Mee kbers i m the People izzles Scientists 5 Oh, well! a husband ts worth all the trouble and ceeded to baffle inventive genius in| tho war in Russia they all want to ado liad Pten for Mercy to Animals | sehen moans sacrifice, even if used only as a hand grenade wita the matter of patent nvun-refiilable | fight Be said.—"Kimer, make that : « Editor of The Evening Wor WENTIOTS ps " . bottles by operating on the basic clock the right time. I'm got; T note in The Evening World ie CLENTISTS long a ided that) saying that they had an unusual gift! wy’ > 2 e cook ty going up . " ry gla ) unust which to menaco the janitor and frighten the cook. } & 2 { Mr. Bennett says that Mr~Mitedel | arty : ‘ fi eo Miss Loe the dog has a sixth sense, Many | of intelligence, or were governed by| scientific fact that nature abhors a|to my Anion Fiaht now because I « i ¥ ; o animals in war time 7 beings a seem 40 D0 ne 7 : ee , acuum, am good and ready, not because I ; or bis friends had sent ers an eee human rs tot ns of past expe e. But it ., in ina ent virtue into a vice by carrying it ; i 1 i SMieeains to all enrolled Republican he. not mention the | soy this additional faculty. As proof|{!s easy to cite instan wane es Some people will insist on turning a vi 1 ficins wakes 6 bigct | Gus still had bis grouch, for he|got to!” _ throughout the city reques ¢ Of mike sce dow haw AN extra sense it la Sak io eee a have | t00 far; too much modesty makes a prude, too much religion 2 got, [to vote for Mr. Mit ey have the | sole eT : ee lo “feel” A coming eeont of| 09 much thrift makes a miser, and too. much cleverness makes a bore, T = . —. ret ‘oe Mr pointe o at on many occa s rt , ee a 1" x eve | i] , , i maries. To the best ny '. cruel driver, dogs avo been « 1 far from, Which they had no previous knowl sound oO» ay s nniversary edge this ts untru Not A BAYS they never jome, only to escape and return at) edge and which did not lay within the Many a man has married a gir) simply ‘because she happened to be the ee Thave been an enrolled Republican jately insist a ney eSEMOE 4O8O tho first opportunity. ‘his, it ts: 8cope Of thelr experionce, This abil-| salve with which he soothed bis feelings when some other woman had NGLAND has been the banking goldsmiths soon opened similar con- for many years in this district and! , Baa hey take any argu n be ex ined a 1 ity to “feel” things is given to all of} become an irritant, nation of the world for many) cerns. The Mint in the Tower of did not receive any | " or tele-!¢ uty halfct i i BnOUs sense of direction ts It ts tus in some degre For tance, we ‘ ure years, and London, until very) London had been the depository for grams from Mr eit ae ain doe 1 the peddler's thing 1 t ure convinced,: easily know who are our friends and If he had been writing in these days the poet might @ classified | recently, was the world's financial! the cash of the merchants until friends, but I did r © som SIREN OG Hol J drag py unces of ad though en word] the average man’s wh “a little Jigher than his motor & Ilttle ) centre, That honor for more than | Charles I, seized the money ag a loan, ona " 2 nine A requestir et Hi af ner uKh ‘ trom a crowd : ' } that would| tower than bie golf score.” year las devolved upon Now York: Then Any, trader began to deposit ‘of ‘or him believe th 2. | ony cin pen ‘ 1 might be attributed FPreve either assumpti Many of us because some of the greatest loans of helr cash with the Id: : i boper w !arou f ped m " ) \ | goldsmiths in Mitchel has givén New York G he | pu pAraialae ss en we of smell, but: seem to “fe the approach of dane sant tancerinie dean Gat man you refused looks back on you! the war have been and are now belng) Lombard Street. ‘The first bank in best business administration thi Fj th ab Jenne. debatut lxer or good fortune ‘ {i z . t to think of you now | floated here, the world was established In Italy in BMMEEEMAA in cangy yoars, If. 0) ag aly dl 4 URS Aare strange | Tuefully as @ lost opportunity; he ts much more ap ) The first bank in England was es-| $08 by Lombard Jews. The oldest broad-minded Republicans follow | ; k cored, 1 ‘ » per. Mental phenomena iste have | @8 @ RAFFOW escape . j tablished by Francis Child, a London |existing bank is the Bank of Barces thelr owa inclinations I seg! no rea- ease let mo know what a penny oo lox as a mal that | | of 1857 ig worth, with one who apparonily possessed « al ‘thea han eagle wp one and ue ‘cea printed of the canny faculty of f LK. other? E.W. events. ‘This might | golds wera n Now Everybedy goes through Ife desperately and fatuous'y tying to bs ith, who died Oct. 4, 1713, This | jona, Spain, which was founded in becomeq~what ie thie COV 4 How way of putting walt om the tail of bis Bluebird. pioneer financial institution was/1401, The Bank of Bay t pbened in 1663, and a number of rival lstaried 4m 1606 wins) Wem ecing certal @ explained by elected by @ large majority. on why the Mayor should ‘i be re-| yi¢ - e aacnaoee

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