The evening world. Newspaper, November 13, 1906, Page 12

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Published dy the Press Publish: Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as 3) = VOLUME 47 N’S_ RIGHTS. ss Cyiinia B——, writes To The Evening scan Women Suffragist “yequire to-be-tree-and-eq ‘As Jong as*men have a mon ‘¢quality. Neither are they tt fion of women will come thi the ballot box, : “Miss Cynthia iscright in her mal important fo ‘women P wareer, Iti sStitution “of the family is continue on the lines of Women_wvill-vo men wish to. vot | je of men, toward woman's suffrage [s, In the main, of indifference. ~All married mes know that women have thelr own y whenever they really wish to tk and almost all unmar- ried men are willihg that women should do whatever they wish, Women do not vote because not oné woman in ten has any desire to vote, Ina few Western States where, women voting’ is allowe: they take less interest in politic: in men,-and it Is more: difficult Ver the majority of. w me ‘The atti | 40 induce them’ fo come to’ the polls. Few have any desire to hol $f fice andthe sromen-wtio-do tun -for-offies find Heasier to secure t own Sex. Support of met-than—of the eters of thei se é Every time it has been proposed to a legislature or a constitution: convention in New York that women should be allowed to vote th opposition by women has been more outspoken and more influential tha ‘ion by men. Miss-Cynthia is right, but ber remarks about proposing w y indicate a possible reason for the signature s sie: ‘Mrs. Women do propose. Indeed, the gr. ajority of successful pr ~posals are made by women. The manwho triumphantly goes through 8 bungling ceremony which the ordinary novel depicts as a preliminary t : matrimony nine times out of ten has had en¢ouragement and tactful tt ‘Vitation: A girl is considering matrimony at the age when-a boy is hun, ing for his first job. F Men have to consider first how to make the money to live on, T them matrimony is not a means of livelihood but an additional expens seeming Magazine, | Tuesday; November 13, 1906. TRIAL O 1 MOVE THE F FREDERICK BLIRNHAM — PRESIDENT UTUAL RESERVE “CUCKOO!” By J. Cam js the man’s business, marriage is the woman’s business. She has mo time to devote to it-and to-think about It. = Of course, women do not make pedantic declarations, If the made as big fools of themselves as most men do when they think th are proposing a woman would only frighten away the man, just as so men manage to extract a."No"’ from, the girl,’ ho shad intended iu He a 3 afte 4 4S li © Jn all affairs of love men are the bunglers and women the expert “Some men have learned by experience not-to Bungle and to follow 4 Woman's lead. Such met-are saki-to-be-successful in theirlove _ But the average man when he marries gets-a-gitl who had decide $45 marry-him-—f-she-had-not decided it would require more thana. a —to persuade her. Even-among-those-primitive savages where the hu —.pand has-to run a foot race for his wife the different speeds of the pos ‘and to be considered after their Income-producing work. —Making-mone—[ pbell Cory. Love Afrairs oi J 2 to Eugene de E was the frat woman of the P with consplouoyis att i. ‘Man of Destiny’ > ; Ardent Love- —_——~-~-¢ (ev) DOD Ofo CT, by hivola Greeley—Simtln. NAPOLEON, Greater Soldier than Lover. 5 6 the world's rrentest sollte, BONAPART! sixteen. ly tit prisoned as.a Ho left his w Hortense, + of two children— brother Louls, King aly who roy of at i iy the Creo! e General for restoring oor h-not regularly beautiful, ¢ crude young Corsican love with her. A: fort. g they were declared lovers, y were married, wages The ‘young widow, (a fon, and Napolton feft & night after: their first y and ai March & i The h al ‘reall s that a loye affatr be- Martied Hie} reen Jose andthe Director, Barras, of Which the 7 First Love.) ‘jotter had rgely maponsible for her. ~ se, and teat Ni ® appointment as com marria. y was Barras's wedding gift to the bride, reveal as much, But wonsever the subsidiary: motives o doubt that Napoleon's love for for of ‘tho a: 1 Barras’a own memoirs r marrage’? Taye” Deen ther” ts 1 osephine was the stron of his life . tha wedding he loft f os to desin the Temarknble cam A Italy {rom the A d od army and while plane. t Mattlen of his career the young faults Ta teas _beantifqu) be not overngnxiovs, and y blood." te wrote, ‘A thoustnd kisses, and , less affectionate, tess good Your tears rob me of reason nnd t © eren Went a. KiaA to tie no another, rather flat, + him tha: Jotephine ofas @ t Incapable of sus- with bis award carved men. Napoleon knew it, even continiie hi 4 her and soured a divorce from her tn order 1, ptained tho senderest feel- et he forgave her- he ultimately 6 the end of Through many years of ma. he sumo tender playfulness, the same soll: itude that marked the correspondence sf the honeymoon period, In 18, after nine years of marriage and ut the height of his fame and power, ¢ wrote her from 3 t “Grand Empress! not 9 ne _yout departure trom Astras Dy. to Baden, to Svittgard, to h without writ us one word. Detgn from the helght of: your, grandeurs to occupy yourself a little with your slave, Napoleon.” Tho divorce of Josephine was the greatest wrong of Napoleon's life. He saeriticed her to his desire to have \ ehil@. His griet at paring from her was sir Raron Meneval, the Emperor's private secretary, who witnessed the farewell, vrote: “Josephine eagerly arose and threw herself, sobbing, upon the neck of the smperon—fe—preeeed—her_to-hia bosom with tia mast ardent embraces. In the m Letters to a Fickle Wife. AE and button a ‘Mra. Jarr. "And what's that ay-cail-{t} ora wh HERE goes Mra. Kiting! clatmed Mra, Jarr, ex “Why don't yo: mt it?" sald Mr. pin and—hook +t the street"——= Jarz. vords ure scandalous! "J made no all 4and you know tt! I natd THE JARR FAMILY % x y with a Teddy bear!\'ex- edly, at the window. tell her back and. “Women fuss around and ptimp rsolres eid hen go \oUL her CG hat is the man talking about?’ interjected Mrs. Jarr. “What are you talking about? replied Mr. Jarr, \\"T seard you get exclted about the woman going down tho | bare, or something You're a brute her: Jon os to Mie state-o o had a Teddy bear!" asked Mr. Jarr, yawning, ‘a new kind of a what-your said ore hed handk s-lts-name or a thingummy?” Ith lofty disdatn, uu are smart, don't you?" she sald, coldly. ¥ amor Isn't wo painfully acute! If women were as ling beer and acting crazy over p But ir women silly, as mon! aa Sible bride are always Moticeabte, No; Miss Cynthia, women are not debarred from proposing. . The have unlimited opportunity and they exerci it. They are not restricte to tongue and pen, the two crude implements which men use. The tone of a.woman’s voice tells more than a man’s words. 1H expression of a womtan’s eyes is more convincing than a man's 3 ——=favit A woman's-attitude, her-manner, the-wave-of-her_hair,_the wa! walks; her iitttest gesture, ts atts fore—effective—and the ~eonvincing than the most idiotic letters a man can write or his most lov. sick eloquence. iss People. _ Letters from the To-the Please siate the origin o WEST HOBOK draws He ma But he more serious appurten: es (Jack o° Lan &o. pains To Shut Out Notaen temmpe wd 1. another |)" @ne pillow x What do at pillow over the ie { Ing any Ne H i h a ehance of smoth plain, #0 poplo soy? PLAIN MAN RO PAE LORS Deere Nea or Improved Car’ Seryioe. fy mo furt trouble of that kind K ‘ AE Service, ow > the Editor of ji Unannitary To the E Way Iug-Heating. thelr dirty story windows two dozen w Jmagine PS i be! | "Oh. &! i done to This adminis a_rest!"? us a turn in cabs Jarr, yeh about lt, apd yet losing all they pet on it, if — sald Mr. of defeat somewhat mollified the good Indy. ‘of-wll the eily fads, this thing of lugging Teddy Seara around ‘athe ventured Mr Jarr, “well, explain ‘ungallantly, ‘Roast somebody else. bon, well’! st> What {sa Teddy bear? t Fou seen women carrying around these furry toy bears?” “That's nil the-fad now: “They take them sh them, fn automobiles; they bring 1 ng. They here: em Into restaurants; they “Sometimes I am) dress\them up in | Lvery Abserving w! idee of ‘Women cerrying around those E-tew a-woman with-one in the: Subway, ; Siren. Htowas-rhy 2 dozens of peo ott ding up.” uspiciously, paid Mr.Jarr ungractously, i iow, the closk department of a store getting a fur-l! ‘6,,and sho had a pocket in the coat, and it \bew a woman | coat made fbr her dog to men nose. ant that cuter’ ech: By Roy L. McCardell Yoy's clothes. It's a wonder you didn't notloe it. You'r you see a good-looking woman, .Though,-I must say, you But I thought, as it was holiday time, they 7: xtd,-and-she had-tt-on-a reat beside her while thought you noticed once in a while. Stanatry, | replied Mra tarr-cuttingly, “but Ide sen he setd-in-favor of suoh—e-siily thingadt {sa grea erchiot= with the dog's monogram Of WOM So Wipe te rte it. Why, dog gone it!''—here words falled tim tos an. ine mh xcess of her emotion sho fainted’ ‘After the divorce and Nepoleon's second marriage to the Archductess Marto Loulse of Austria, watch fave him the coveted heir, the Emperor continued to ne-taw Nepeleen's vrite to her. From tie moment of their separation Jozcp tar decline, ‘After his fall. when his fat Austrian wife had gone back to Vienna, Josep™ine- rote offering to share his gxtle at Elba, A few days after despatching the tter she was taken suddenly Ml, aad died tn the arms of her children, holding minature of Napoleon tn her hand, —Her 3 are said to have bean: Island of Biba! Napoleon!" She was spared tio crowning sorrow of Waterloo, Napoteon and Josophine loved each other as we oye to-day, without idealism, y sinned ‘for and against each other, and loved on. That Napoleon sacrificed er was the last proof of his love, as men understand it. As the least of men ‘For each man killa the thing hj loves, By each let this be heard. Some do st with a bitter look, Some with a fattering word. The coward does !t with a kiss, The brave man with a eword.” In his domestic relations the greatest soldier the world haa ever known was jot a brave man. Who is? Ne w York Thro’ Funny Glasses. » By Irvin S, Cobb. —— pund, I dont care even It It had enue, or a turquolae. coller—eithons \ made over int a TAR WO CAITY APVUNE BI pet thay mMntynt wtopt wn orphan, no children oftheir own, & anyway, Toddy bear tsn‘t-as-bad aaa dog.’ “Oh, it fants isn't itt" aneored Mr. Jarr, “Well, Til rush right downtown Ket you a Teddy bear, hey?” "Oh, you foollsh man,’ sald: Mrs, Jarr, “but it you tnslst?¥— Jarr_setred his hat-and coat. “Ara you going to get ine & bear?” shouted Mrs. Jarr after hin. | No! Doggone tt!'' tor oner” “wonder what he means! sald Mrs, Jary to herself. stand a man!”* \ “Well, you never mid J bo aten cAiTying one of those weopy-eyed, sick-looking Its dox~ | fe boote on Tike I saw on-one dog on Fifth ff the dog diea-you could have the collar ‘0 a bracclet--before I'd do anything ike that—and 1 think $f wome) | they hes shouted Mr, Jarr back, “but I'm going out and get loaded a can, SWING tothe depressing tone of cable edvices: trom —— the Furopean centres, the Jocal deconnd for titled. husbands has suffered a setback. However, the mar ot ander more TPETUNA WEnsatantts reports, ts bound — ‘to regain its oM-time buoyancy In due season. “When 2 nobie foreigner marries an American fortune, and, — tnoldentally, a lady member of the fortune's family, ths women of this town become divided into two classes, to wit: The happy two thousand who got Invitations for the wed- ding, and the pained two miilion who @idn‘t About halt of the latter division go to the church where the wedding taukex pince and show their true American hatred tor titles and veh valn pomp by, tearing the clothes off the bride groom as ho emerges, guiding hia beastecus bride with one -band-and with the other olutching’ mer fond father's oem utled check. eh | t 1 - —<—<—$—————————— | t ——— = Northing —piat— oo 2g SE OSE Sad Girl Wanted! & Ore ee Hoe: ae By RSW Taylor: at SAME SRN, THAD “TOS [ACHR WEY OF) Foy onn) = LISTEN! HE 15 era GooD COOKEE, Lope yiereoneia td lsh es elle Bo! UDINGINGEE AONE c KJ YUM= 004 ¢ JOHN ? BY INE OLD ONE— LUNG 1S THE GoODS! WE WiLL MAKE A } GOOD GIRL- OR MAN, ALLEE SAME LEAVING, Mum! NO HAB GooD PLACE FOR SLEEPEE WHEN SMOKEE HOP. NIN KUITCHEN} ner fined apa fo Uye decently We T (parlor cara, American’ yachts will compete, First Trans-Pacific Yacht Race. Hawatlan Board of Trade has given a handsome cup for a yacht race icisco to Honolulu next June. t race on record. It tr expected that cight Hawallan and It owill be the first trans Farmers Versus Agents in France. HULME there ere in’ France. 1,600,00 farmers who depend principally on W their wines. It és now proposed to cut off tese agents and turn \prpfits inte the pockets of the producers, f ccomonen ere santana eermimn netic vineyards for bheir Hyelthood, there are 600,000 agents who live by selling thetr | thelr boutored tieatten-a-tew- tricks with cards Grand fonty he operated in Weil street, instead of am! Our nowspapers sperk-of tt ee a union of two great houses The: brede's Tams-—— ly runs back fully four generations, starting with mn ancestor who fled to these shores because his berty-loving nature abhorred « lund that had eo many jets in It He laid the cornerstone of the fasntly fortune by giving the savages blue beads for beaver pelts and then getting the beads back on teaching the un- —awan-sise-tn-the skin bualsieas,-—- the Indians, while papa added —— zomewhnt-ta-the-sitm_total during-the olvil war by serving the army tn tts hour “ehowdy [Inte wrat wore out betore the soidiery could —get_theke — cout On; ‘The noble bridecroom ts precipttately descended from one of the ofdest ant muastiest Ines in the Old World. The plumbing tn his ancestral castle dates back to the time of William the Conqueror, when there were mo phimbers. By reason s ig beon tiected from the royal presence a_eouple of times, he may be: said to bea cousin of the King twice removed. He has the magnificent physiquo and frank, open countenance of n euspected Jockey on an outlaw track and the fascinating whiskers of an albino squirrel, ‘The ceremony uniting the American mipply with the Duropean domand ts, indeed, ressive one. ‘The solemn rites begin whan the bride's father tak the sor bandage off his roll; toring the @erlce the altar boya burn censors fll of real money, and the mounted cops ride down the enthralled populase | without. ‘The happy pair depart tn rtate for their future home on tho other side, to be greeted an arrival by \thousands of ‘hopeful tradesmen waying accounts rendered. fe In ‘a few cases St is fully three months botore Her Grace Gincovera that she Is married to a whited/sepulchre, and that the kalsomining 4s heginning to come off In large flakes, By the time all the whitewash -has worn away the noble sbarer of her: bank account no longer possesses any Interest-for-her,’ unless sho happens to be making a study of the lower forms of Insect Alfo, ‘Tho testimony tn the divorce prqceedings shows that ho has cared deeply’ for everybody's except hin own; that she has a disposition Ike an exposed’ norye, and that both of thom have endyed-a "M. and P." timo (which moans “monkey, 1qd parrot," oF, tn extremé cases, “Mathot and Parkhurst’), She re- turns to her native land with the proud distinction of haying exchanged ofght millions: of tainted but noverthaless cherished U. 8. enoney for an occasional wal- lop to the point of the Jaw’ and four years in a romantic chateau which needed | tho kind serytees of the Steamftters' Union, THE FONNY PART: All the other Iady-fortunes In her own set do the same thing when they got ‘a chance. By i Educational Semi-Millennium. N Dee. th 190, tt will be 600 yoars wince the University of Letpsto wns sore ganized by the secession of several thousand German atudents from the _ University of Prague, Arrangements aro already boing made to celebrate | ‘hts xeml-millennium by the publication of a massive work on the history of the igity and the University of Letpalc, . 2

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