The evening world. Newspaper, March 30, 1907, Page 3

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Cli siattteen at lee Hiatt iat on EL tated on ee a on CLEVELAND TELLS THE EVENING WORLD « Home Life by Nixola Greeley-Smith ; Inspire Him in Declining Years. ef a monopoly of it, AND THUS HAPPY AND YOUTHFUL. ‘Finds That He Has Not the Monopoly of It That He Thought tie Had—Clings to} His Cherished Privacy, but Subject of vases Young Fotks Arouses- His Enthusiasm.) — By Nixola Greeley-Smith. ROVER CLEVELAND came G down the stairway of his beau-| tiful Princeton home, one| hand clasping the balustrade, the!” ¢ holding bis spectacles and my | note. I was sitting in the wide hall of| «- the Oleveland home- on Bard lane, having been asked by = very apologetic mald to. do so because I], had happened there on a” house- cleaning day. It was yesterday— and the furniture hed been moved in the hall. “The ex-President came toward me and extended his hand. “They seem to be house-cleaning,” he sald, with a vague deprecatory wave toward over what looked Ike! A maye-meeting of rosewood ana! “brocade. ~~ : 5 “{ am not sure I can do anything for you, but come In here,” and the etalwart figure of our stalwart ex- President turned toward the dining- room of his honie. “You must go in the Mbrary, 5 papa’ sald his ghter, . Esther, now fourteen, who suddenly GROVER CLEVELAND. appeared in the door and-spoke with Protas cares | proroener the assurance of a well-beioved child] (SRW sremzeewens eateeser, indulgent father. i : \ Mr. Cleveland smiled and, which was like him, went on in the dining- I followed, and forthwith discovered why we should have gone Into| Ubrary. eldest’ as 1006 we wren ncese ane and linen knickerbociiérs, standing with his sisters in a small r the dining-room and saying in plaintive and very audible acce! LUNCHEON WAS READY. Weland children were quite as-obviously ready for it. They had been ping [nthe yard with cther children when I drove up, but almost imme! ely the little group separated. First Esther Cleveland came in, fixed hair hurriedly at the mirror in the hallway, and went out again, a ik, vigorous, unspoiled schoolgirl, simply dressed. Then her-hounger entered, executed similar renovating rites before the) i. fTen't Uinner wekdy yet?” : not to edy anything to the public at this time. And the hung ehildren-waited his word 4nd my departyre.— T had never seen Mro resemble his published portraits. None of’ to intrude upon the privacy which alone has kept th ROeUE Pi De them) creat man gives, and that-I bave not found in his pictures. ness the children of great men much in the public are apt to develop. But the Cleveland home fs eo essentially the home| children that & would be impossibly for me to give any {dea of what! Cleveland's life at Princeton is like without referring to them. first thing I saw when I drove in the Cleveland gateway was the! ‘land children playing on the lawn. Almost the last thing before Mr. Cleveland walked with me to the front door was his nine-year-old son, begun. stout now. His compl 4 ew Shop of Smith, -Gray & Co. ; doors, and his eyés have on occas madistinet Uyinkle. T igyecting te the youna mon ell over Aiarica WAS WILLING, .BUT— _HIS PHILOSOPHY OF YOUTH IN OLD AGE Pen-Picture of the Former President's Cieveiana’s Biribiay iessage to Che Evening World. | Furnishes the Key to Sentiments Which Among the thousands of hind and congratulatory messages I received on the|| occasion of my seventieth birthday Was one from an old friend in Bujfa!o, whose years || {} number many more than mine, Who congratulated me upon the fact that I ‘thad a great | aeal of the boy about me yet.’ And he added: ‘‘Continae to be of the boys and even “CONTINUE TO BE OF THE BOYS,” {| play With the girls, and in this way keep young."” of life. But I thought I bad moré WECEOF THE MLL DEVOTE PRESIDENT SOON gagement of Miss Rob- inson and Mr. Draper, “Mt This ts my philosophy of a pleasant énding GROVER CLEVELAND. —~ 6 Long are to be 1 nounce to-day, though has not been made p parents, Mr. Draper the late Dr. Wilt scientist. Hig mother was Miss F Dana, daughter of the editor. ie Harvard graduaty of the IX class | His younger brother, Paul, attends the ‘oton, school with one of the Toose- | velt boys. Misa Robinson, whose mother ts a [sister of Prestdent Itovsevelt and’ of | Mra, William | Sheffield r entrance Into society years ago’ when there w: i for her at Sherry’a. Presiient and Mrs. Rooseyelt are very fond of her and have enteytained her much at the Whke House. Shi ts popular in Washington's smatt seto} ‘Miss Kobinson's brother, Theodore Docgias Nobinson, married @istant cousit, Miss Helen Roose [TROUT SEASON IS OPENED AT SUNRISE;| At Least 1,600 Izaak Waltons Went island Last Nightto Be Early at Brooks. The trout season on Long Island opened thia morning at, sunrise. Only @n automobile race could attract suca a@ ling as wonded ite way to Long Isi- and tuwns from this city last, might. Every diltle hotel, and many of the big ‘ones, fron .crowdet with anglers last night. ‘Ac leaat a thousand visitors were on hand for the opening gay, Gen. James B. Poapsell, of Gler: not f: years, last in: paking ready to be out on the brhige at uppe: Cave Pond at daybreak. He and can spin trout yarns na long an Mout as bis doublemashed rill lina, Richard Folsom Cleyeland, a splendidlooking Mttle boy, in a white shirt] I quoted from Mr.- Carne Military Telegraph Corps: thear men xay * is dreadful and riches are corrupting." of the shield or ¢ that there Jn very little that the other hit, that It decreas. Bi The iable was cet for luncheon, which was obviously ready, and the A WAIL FROM RICHARD FOX SOM. _ The tragic ecarhestness of the tone smate my conscience, already stirred said Mr. Clévelan(t, 21 to misgiving by the sight of the waiting butter balls on the luncheon table, melting inexorably even as I tried fo melt Mr. Cleveland's determination |impelled Mr. Clevel mother’s family. “I made up my mind ito tell you, Mr’ Cleveland, that responsible for my being {n| % tel iad tents Yeveland before, and to me he does not greatly Fesen x hem that Ihave seen does him. justice. For his actual’ presence cefiveys a sense of majesty that-only a es s The reference 2 term as President; Mr. Cleveland, just, past his seventieth birthday, looks to me Ike a very happy man who has been a great man. One cannot be actively greatsCleveland would remember it. But I think he did. He smiled deprecatingly again, unsheathed the pencil he held and began to write for five minutes. When he had finished h. handed me the manuscript. “Can_you read it?” he asked. I sald very confidently 1 could,'and I did get a good start and first three lines’ of bis very fine handw redithe But .aen I broke down completels manuscript}, read it to me, painstakingly wrole several words that I might identify them, and handed it back. appears in The Evening World to-day. I thanked him and rose. _ “No Uthographing?” he safd, warningly, as he walked into the hail, way. Which is the reason {he manuscript is not reproduced as Mr. Cleveland} x better in every ped, your foul breath will gradually leave you, the watery } the crusts_in—s I_ promised. And then Mr Cle. :land sald good-by, she hungry litte Cleveland children had thee! nase. the constant u! idhd ts appelte was appeased. 7 and actively happy at the game time. Mr. Cleveland's days of political activity have long been over, but he hag about him now such an atmosphere of screne peace that one Is tempted to.B¥lleve his happy days have hardly I had always thought of him 2s a yery stout man, He js not unduly jom.has the ruddiness of n man-who {s much out- Ll asked Mr. Cleveland to give me in commemoration of his scventleth ji B wav W. , [birthday a message for the American boy. | I, hit justeread his speech to At road Y Ely and arren St the Princeton students on the. occasion of their presentation of a loving ae eup_to him. and I tuousht he mizht be wililag to give a tore extensive! a n Tuhcheon, and Ri gie's speech at the dinner of the United States e other. I have lived on both wealth can add happiness, read Mr, Carnegie’s speech thts morning. The pencil! he beld in his hand was stfll sheathed in a littl Suddenly the conversation took an accidental personal tarnrenet land to tell me that he was distantly related to my Wspaper work.” ACT WHILE PRESIDENT. was to a political act of. Mr. Cleveland during his second very trivial to him, but, a2 these things happen sone uportant to some one else. I did not know even whether Mr. {ng without hesitating. Mr. Cleveland smiled, took the i It soon appeared-that he was-more than willimg, but not Just now. Moreover, he had given a Cleveland promise, which the ex-President’s ad- mirers regard as a, bond of fate, to make !t through a particular person not Mall are personal. ‘SVS WOMAN WON settled out of court. That Mrs. Hall myselt————— Cleveland asked’ hopefully, after he had explained t know.” 6 There wah a pause. lect, I don't like to discuss things superficially am writing his remarks as nearly as possible’ verbatim. SIGNS OF A NIBBLE. nibble. “Your pi girl, docs it? TI haxarded. paused, tantalizingly,~ an interview with Rockefeller. I hadn't seen it.” | making money is news to her closest “Can't you evolve something from your inner consclousness?” Mr. | crtends, “I might,” I conceded: “hut T would rather you would evolve something from your inner consciousness, The public is more Interested in that, you $30,000 IN STOCKS Mrs, Hall's Mother Tells Daughter Secret in Fight Over Estate, “I have some rights,” murmured Mr. Cleveland, clinging desperately to his cherished privacy. “But ue subject of boys interests me. I sald in my address to the students the other day that I feel young at sevent: jDhave breathed here an atmosphere of vigorous yout. + lebt to them |: |greater than any they conld feel to me. They have given nie new interests. But,” and here spoke-Cleveland the fisherman, Cleveland the companjon on long fishing expeditions with the late Joseph Jefferson, whose portrait hangs in the hallway of the ex-President’s hdme, “I aon’t lke to nioole at a reatened suit between “MF Cleveland did fot mean to hazard a pun, and T did not see taste panes? just now—when 1: 18 too Inte, Besides, he really sald “superitvially,’ Aerie operetta was learned to-day that the late Mra; than $0,000 made Street specul: |. Notwithstanding this avowed dislike to nibbling, I was beginning to feei that I, in the pursult of the interviewer's craft—which has tog much In common with the fisherman’s for Mr. Cleveland to dislike it—had a for letters of administration mise doesn’t prevent your saying something to the American!than $140. Miz ‘Tosetts. = counsel, Nathan Rijur and |. ‘Mr. Cleveland smiled broadly, a twinkle came into his eyes and stayed | Osborne, presented an affidavit to Juv. ithere. He turned my opened note, which was lying on the table) over, pla -{ tice Fitzgerald objecting to th int: | ling the blank side up. He took’ out pencil from an inner pocket and mont of the husband and twveatet the | \d, ment of the husband ne 2 j speculation which | ‘Some, one came out here.the ‘other day to ask me what I thought of | greatly increased the estate. Mr. Hall's | [attorneys, Gerke Gordon Battle and “Perhaps you saw what Mr, Carnegie sald in the morning paper?" And} Charles Sinsheimer, made ready to con- ad revealed the | alleged to have | iscolve. The @ WHITE re! beara the slentiure of & W) GROVE. ne ivndrels of choppers vielted tho new | heen 90 muccessful that the company, |. A New Color for Worten’s Shoes, re of Smith, Gray & Co. hy yas | tough alway tive In su Mra, Whitne OWN Open’ to the public § | matters, n Induced to establis ; ie ail In vhardwoo 5 { pa store ae Fea Te aha eyes Wamn penal able ‘women tn Paris. Mra, Whitney fa{ hurat, Riverdate-on- Hudson, 4 prune: oe } i coreced with | ndw in Parts attending the openings ana} According to the manager of a cleaning | Desese gu cesar nai BG cE eeTIO®. OF | axnipits of Felix, Redfern, Worth and establishment on Fourth avenue, the i a stores, the will maintain tho | 70 doubt that golden brown ts the éér- . Brooklyn and on kt-Broadway and for selling j rect ehnde for wortien’s footwear this tallor~ } season. if we roy judge by the talk of At the omy gre cohen ara™",.| MRS. PERKINS LOSES RUGS. | Brains ‘Repaired Grapc-Nuts 10 days’ trial shows. “There's a Reason’ a eimgand! TMey Are Stolem trom Express | Wagon During Driver's Ahsenec. “Five valusble rugs owed by Mrs. George W. Perkins, wife of the former : he well-known authptt | Vice-President of the New York Life another sore in the downtown district | !t¥ on style jn drems, will have an article! Insurance Company, were stolen from Breruotieg building : section of Manhattan, tn the next issue of “L’Art de la Mode." !an express. wagon late yesterday ia’) oa atredt and Broadway. Situa Tho, store ocvuples all of the ground which she telly of the remarkable} East.Thirty-fth street. The rugs were} lone Of the busiest corners in the ¢ by t and’ the interior | vogue of hrowa mhoes among faahjon-| in shipmei t#) the Perkins home, Stons- Brera eesnatan feat, Mra, Tojetti's objections to 3Mr. It is probatle that the case will be ee te Wak Street and organ & Brother Storage Warehouses AND Moving Vans, 223, 234, 230 & 255 eis c ity ke ehtire cbars of souwrals ta PoUNE Cy, Larabee Ba aa, fnet Miles for pac! ehiiasy ‘nla = ‘orpaments ed, boske fre tam ~TORENBRIDE STOLEN St Friends Announce En- Corinne Dovgias Robineon, niece of Prestde it Roosevelt and daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Robinson, of New York, and George Draper, son of Mrs. Willam Henry Draper and a wrandson of the late Charlee A. Dana, {| the ‘remainder of his Ife to finding his ppiost. son. Dr Marvin sold hls farm—to} ® youngest son of m Hfenry Draper, the 4\rrrat 1 would give S00 Catarrh Treat- They dons quence, making tis a0 over again} It was the message which| sneering will be: stop! | { you good. whatsoever. friendship; 1, also, Wath Yo introduce it to those who have not yet tried it, and ETS] that my Tmmense practice ts built-up, the targest practice, the present time ‘(for 4 | 1 ers, aT “SHECHLST RADWAY & CO,,-55 Elm St. N_Y.- pharmacy the following: LFETO MT three ounces. De Shake well In a hottie and take: & teaspoonful dose after enck megl and at bedtime. ee s :'The above Is considered by emls nent authority a the Mnest pres jr Dr. Marvin Sells| Farm to - ens Be Free to Search for His Bov, scription ever written to rellevep® Rackache. Kidney . Trouble and Weak Bladder This combini mixture should act on the elimi: native tissues, of the Kidneys to) filter and strain the urle acid and) other waste matter from the blood) DOVER, Dal., March 32.—Dr, Horace N. Marvin, whose folir-yeat-old son, Zorace N., Jr, was kidnapped from his home at Kitt's Hammook, pear here {which causes Rheumatism. ha cota | | Being eomdosed entirely af ves- Molt | fetable ingredients, It 1s. harmless and inexpensive. _ Mix ‘some and give it a trial. * son, Howard. Ss Ube cert PEs “high he volice are more convinced than | 4 nended. It is the preteription of; i ever that If the kidna, did it ooaied trian Nhelinaicnberncel venice | Jan eminent spectaltst, whose en- Hammock, have agents there at Sure reputation, it is sai work. Miss Lucy Kitten, jthe schoot | | tanitehed by It. her who came upon two mysterious - men in the woods near the Mary in home on Tuesday iast and Tanita threat- four weeks ago next Mon his farm and says that he yw: last | ound | was /ciroultted falso repo: chily night that t Thirty Years at This Address. | Thirty Years of Honest Dealing: Thirty Years of Honest Clothing, Spring Styles : MEN’S and BOYS Clothing. Harris Cohen & Bro., Dear Ed =: 1am reading your paper nd see some funy things tn} it, but iast night ve ween the funtest | of them all. It ts that Mr. Hammer- stein ts an Italian and his e is Os- | caruso Amer Welt | that sounds; pretty good f but his name ts as much Osca ‘Tellapaloosa. 0: itean and no Gree ever Is a } Chim} “airs? at ok Whe aay tng 168 & 179. Park Row. truly, A PRIEND OF MR. HAMM New York, Maret 24, 19. MY OFFER OF MARCH 23D Received With So Much Joy and Pleasure by Catarrh Sufierers In the March 23d issue-of the Even- ing World I made the following offer: ister, | menks absolutely {ree of charge to be distributed among the readers of the Evening World. That offer has been re- ceived with so much satisfaction, 30 many welcome and pleasant letters have come to me from it, that my heart is filled with Joy. Lam more than pleased that my feeble efforts to do good to my fellow human beings have beens the means of bringing a little more pleasure, ‘a little more happiness into the. lives ot so many, and | am aiso pleased to say that I have got the means whereby lean bring happiness znd pleasure to many, many others.’ Therefore, 1 have decided : to repeat the offer. 1 am, sb iesteaat cath. sroamcemrent.- Pe 1 will give away, absolutely free of charge, 250 moré of my. -famous Catarrh treatments, that. treatment which 1 have proved to be the best that was’ ever formulated for Ca- targh and allied zilments, that treatment which cured thousands of suffering ones who had given up all hope of ‘evet Knowing a well day Bgain, because they had tried so many a.tvertised remedies» stments to no avail. Ht ; panei for-it. It consists of three pars. 1. Internal or constitutional treat- ment. 2. Inhalation. 3. Germicide. Disgusting Symptoms Disappear re nis is your chance. If you are skeptical, if you have tried hi ie eretits Mo avail, all you have got to do is to take this one and sea’ other treatinal difference in its results. After its use you will feel livelier, brighter Lan bay Your nose will be clearer, your throat feel good, tha reyes, the-continual succession of col: y se of the handkerchief, that bad taste in the mouth mor- sar kt cing ir your , Ounsant. desire to tear -youn throat, al fhe i tohy the wii go one by One, some faster some slower, but ail equally Sure {days of youth, free from all care and pain. A Free Gift for You discharge from you! ke-this_offer_of a free gift. wholly fromemwr desire to de 1 want Fh money for it, you will be bnder no obligation ta me 1 do- want, however (when: you are cured), your good-will and want you to tell your friends of what my treatment has dona ~~ Remember, tom: he cure of Catarrh), vide world. 5 the welt Meader, this is the opportunity of a lifetime; let if you may néver have such another again. Don't au seet! just write to-day, Either send a postal card Scar name and address in a letter, and you will have g ay ¢ famous Threefold treatments by return) mail, AAPROULE, 210 Tote Bleg, BOSTON” of anything on the North American ontinent or in . Fuiness of othe I rust of | Fyxnl ek far etal Fata ant Er Timbs, A. few Anera of he above dis- AM drug Cos dz mall. For the Entire Family, Down Per vand 50c Week tna Parchase of $10. FURNITURE The Sunday World’s Want Directory makes more “Offers of Positions” | than any other. two | ‘medizms in the universe. | js by no-means-a-cleap-trestment2s-you'wilh——_— swill-once more find that Javous, lirely-tedling,_same-#5-79a———_—

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