The evening world. Newspaper, May 14, 1907, Page 14

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May 14771907. _ PORLOOESELBROQODDA LOGS © THE STORY OF a 6 The Streets & 2 & of New York By J. Alexander Patten. (An Old New Yorker.) (fhe Evening World's Daily Magazine, Tuesday; : | Alfonso and Victoria; Their Baby. By Maurice Ketten. any, No. 8 to @ Park Row, New Torr | York as Becond-Class Mall Matter, Bntered at the Post-Omce at ) @ we nicoineea ; —= ® MOLUME 47 o.scecceesie cscs conver NO, 16,702. HABLALS ' vA! DA! ~ ESPAGNOLA? y i've ONE, [04'DA ) 2) ALIMONY AND WHISKEY. Too ISTICE DAVIS, of the Supreme Court, correctly stating the law of this State, decided that a husband's drunkenness ig not sufficient ground for a separation with alimony and counsel fees. The wife complains early week-day mornings in order to go out for a drink before breakfast. ‘ if staying out late at night were a cause for alimony many wives could avail themselves. of it. If staying out until breakfast time Sunday morning were sufficient to dissever the marital tie the number of women “who could get a divorce would be numbered by the tens of thousands. It is not so remarkable that wives now and then apply to the courts for relief from their husbands as that more women do not openly ask for the legalized that every Saturday night for the past year her hus- band has stayed away: from home. He would ap- pear, drunk, Sunday morning in time for breakfast. |" He drank so much liquor that his physician warned him against the consequences, Furthermore, he was in the habit of waking up his wife at night and asking what time it was, as he made a point of getting up 2 WE?) —N (J™ HE WILL MAKE A BEAUTIFUL KRING, DEAR YOUR ROYAL HIGHNES: PRINCE OF THE ASTURIAS YouRm ILI 1d READY . | caRRamBa! ® wd No. 3,—Historic Lower Broadway. ON. PETER 8T VESANT crect- G ed a jarge white house outeidg the fort far his town residence, from which Whitehall street took its ee and from that period through all changes of government. the improve- | Ment of the lower part of the city went on, until) in a compafatively . repent period, business Interests, always close at hand, took entire posmeasion. Stuy- vem was the last of the Dutch Gov- ernors, serving with remarkabi¢ ability for seventeen years. His remains are in a vault in the church yard of 8t. Mark's Episcopal Church, at Buiyvee- ant street and Second avénue, which was @ part of his extensive “Bouwerte” or farm. A tablet on the outeide wall of the chu! rch marks his resting place He had a wooden silver leg banded with but the illustration gives the cor- Gov. Stuyvesani—1664. of his appearance as a brave der of the city and ali Dutch interests, His deecendants ‘ rretr the won args st aI | Stt1000 families for many years made the region about Biscal vente aa shicable bs uy * iocality, The vaulis of the Stuyvesant apy: ttn age ost always a failure : uyvesants ure ja St. Mark arch yard. A. T. To the wom m marriage is m uf Ke 23 For you Stewart had a vault there, and his body wa: Ronageinei hye Pani ledges The failure is not often complete. It has its a am sational way i 8 pS eee The ery and Bay were-the most attractive feature . oat ¢! o ir tiga Qualities. at ntiractive features of New York for saving side, Thé man has his mitigating qualities Henerations, At ffst the water flowed in some parte up to State street, but tt The children are a strong counterbalance to the man’s was filled In, and this street became the most delightful in the efty, Proud defects. And when the wife looks around and sees won man who far-strete could butid a ing and beau i sit at his own windows and view ful water her nds’ husbands and the disappointmen's of * Si ester Pei i nei ira thn taehlonabh paren ; vares a nbe ds the * faahlonabl park ; the married women of her acquaintance she usual walkin. Strang it tay now weem, in a : w Pager ” pode: : ; way thro y <3 promenade all through the concludes that she gets along as well as they do, a ping eietrietciron Canal eont aowes ty Gas ot the Ibeaseee Me a: tele and down to thi I Perhaps, in view of the fact that the majority of women do no would ve of the merchants, apply to the courts for separation or divorce, it might be more accurat ES ie Me Oa ee nd the whole spang ats f op than to call i The Battery had fine trees. waterside were stone posta, to say that to the woman marriage is not a success rather th wage picks ace wooden. railings, Whenever the-pullitary turned ott the parade was'éow to the a failure. The illusions, the visions, the desires of most girls take con LONG Live (ALFONSO. PIO-CHRISTIN tery; ‘Tole tide Of Taahion to the Battery never turned Unit the Ceatral Put centrated form in what they imagine their marriages will be. The hus band is always to be an idea? man—not in looks, per hays, but in disposition, in temperament and in h’ constant devotion to them. He is alway: always good, always strong, and with their aid he & always to be successful and rich. “That no man is or ever was all these thine women refuse to recognize until the fects are im- pressed upon them afier the marriage service, Ofter the process of disiliusionment is speedy, Sometime it takes ‘years before the woman sacly confesses t herself that even wilh her influence and consian efforts her husband will never be the ideal mai which in her girlhood days she dreamed of, Generaily, it is betier that the disillusionment should be speedy anc once for all, The wife will either quit and go back to her family, or she will recognize, that her husband is human, and that did he not fa’ short he would be much more uncomfortable to live with. An immaculate or perfect man wouid be THE IKING (new Rnsty? i EDUARDO~ FRANCISCO - GUILLERMO~ CARLOS— | ENRIQUE - EUGINO~ ° FERNANOO - ANTONIO OF THE ASTURIAS. THAT'S ALL WHAT'S your) NAME, EH? VENANCIER . PRINCE / \ » Was established, By the way Fast River, this great park was only an accident Was about to be taken under y consulted the late | Judge Milton, who advised the plan of getting up a petition to the Legislature for a park where the present Central Park ts located. He told the that he sent | Bien about the city to obtain names at one’cent each. The petition thus signed ; Nas duly presented, the law was repealed and another passed authorizing Cen- tral Park, which was not only @ blessing in itself but totally changed In char- acter and value a great section of the city Castle Gard a was erected by the United States Government tn 1877, and its nite was then turee hundred yards from the mainland. In 18% It was ceded to the city and was used as‘a place of amusement. The Jenny Lind eoncerts were given there under the management of P. T. Barnum with great success The building was reached by a long wooden bridge. George Law got up @ plan to fill In the whole water space and to include Castle Garden and very much Increase the area of the Battery. This work took a long time to do and was considered a mbney-making job. for the contractor. Although the water front was much Improved with a sea wall and goo! pavement, the Dattery was never the same attractive place, and the residential nelghblrhoed also declined, as bus ness wes laying ite hands upon it Next slevated railway grabbed and ruined ft An amusing circumsjance was the review on the Battery in honor of the Prince of Wa’ now King Edward VII. of E»giand, in 180. Major<Gen. Ban- ford was in command, and the review lasted so long that when the Prince rode up, Broadway, which was packed in the street and houses with poopie, it was £0 dark that he could not be seen. I remember another incident of a landing there: President Pierce came here to open the World's Falr tn the Crystal Palace, an [ron and glass building, which was erected for the purpose in the present Bryant Park, at Sixth avenue and Forty-second etreet, then far cptown, He was @ soldier and rode Bn horseback up Broadway, Just at Bord street a shower came a standing reproach to his wife. It is curious that this thought does not more often occur to womert—- WOMAN tn 8 Doun week cf < | ‘usband to.d m Was acquitted to write policy tickets and I had to obey im." A harge of writing policy tickets on the plea that her Of course, this St. Louis decision canact be taken seriously. We are human] on that wet him badly, but all the time the sun was sh « at the Crystal what a contrast it would be were al husbands to husband compelled her to do so, and that she had| sings first, and men and women incidentally, Even the orthodox and old-tash-| Palace, and when the President got thete the people thought he had fallen over- " vecautmed to love, honor and obe: ‘The Court held tha | oned who take the wifely vow of obedience with solemnity never interpret .t to | coard on account of his wet condition become models, Still, since women are less prone to self analysis than men, it is quite likely that many women never make an appraisal of their own faults and shortcom as she was acting under corsmand of her h Aol responsibie. But phrase springs to the lips upon reading of this de- jaton; What a enap! Under this ruling whenever a hus band wished to infringe the law he need only command his wife to do ¢ her to be acquitted on the sband she wa: | clude breaking the law I fancy as many husbands obey thi sas wives + bey their .usbands. Personally, I have seen far more henpecked hus ands than | yrowbeaten wives. And more men would be justined in pleading tmmunity from wunishment for crime on the plea that their wives commanded them than woul vormen In claiming they erred to obey their husbands. —_—— Ten Ways To Make a Woman Care for a Man and then wait ¢ rig SES) a what would Husbands and wives could, under this strange ruling, bat moral reeponsibility It would be interesting to speculate what woul lea Unat she had promised to obey him. It strange tn-| rom er as if !t were a tennis ball and they were players tn the ten- have been the result had the man in the case before tation of the law should be genercliy accepted ladies | ais cou | By Margaret Rohe. 7 te lepanitart 4 diy beaten’ hi hovering on the verge of er pation would do well to If obedience means exemption from accountability who would not be glad to] J sees ral: : Sa Justice Davis regularly and soundly beaten Nis tic twice before recutring the word “obey” be elim-| obey? The most recalcitrant wife m denly melt to honeyed humility tf by | = ~ aa py... every Sunday morning when he came home drunk nated from the marriages cere rin it will be im-|:hat process her husband must answer for all her concuct to the law, | No. 10-—After Marriage—Show Her Who's the Master of the House, : ¥ ‘ iy wel , The wanderer ecapting mazes of big depart eats Somehow wives whose husha ly blacke ummer dixpiays, sudd ri Git an tetra eahialans F' ee bi oe definite ides that you are the master “ 4 t t . t 0 e house 20 not permit any mere bay for divorce, and when hout paying for ther ea In court next Science and Rivers. fs i ygiostar tesa. th bin of ary 4 threadbare plea of | mania as her de- N human history a great river has sometimes formed a div line between 5 4 ™ 7 as bee! z he mo! q For play cards in thi the wife has been beaten the m mmaended her to ta em, ana that du- I peoples poss auite different characteristics, Dr. W. M. Lyons, Jr., has] wottles yourself on a couple of P aad Ret bebe oe d'scharge. h 2 discovered a similar phenomenon affecting sq in Borneo, He found book and apeak to her patronisingly of the edvant Par { lis py de OEE ee sew ee HEINE | e wince our Father Adam ered his famous ex- eight different forms of squirrels inhabiting the northern and western parts of} cultivating o.e's mind via ¢” literary route. \ . © woman thou Kavemt moe tempted me and I did the great tsland, and observed that # large river proved an effectual barrier | Ask her if she cannot compose herself ike @ lady an@ , ee {rem the Feo le | t ren Louls lad get back at him with her, in separating two distinct races. she pagth a proahots of the greatest einde ofene @ LG! § J le i RE oo ia sna seca SR century, You may be reading Old Sleuth yourself, but no matter. You are concerned with principles, not details, POLODSESESEEUS Newlywed to King Alfonso Point out to her the terrible effects bound to follow an in- See eenlonh ; dulgence ins love for oards, Old Maid, tf persisted in, leade Two Proud Fathers ¥ ~ *“" % % By George McManus: on to euchre, and euchre ts natural simple game of cards, You should not fail to emphasixe t ¢ Ul effects upon the You “What “COLLECT! | yome of such practices ¢ to ay And is this the sort of @ wom- | itor ut Soe Rvening W Sirus ade sas | and then who shall say how short the ano th oeaennh y eres Syl | pee IT's JUST BEAUTIFUL, fasion ical and the deqradation that follows in the train of that insidious | | fh ¥ f niin dil SARS Peet Renee 1 Jan [ have married! All day long I am working my fingers to the bone in onder, y a f u YEi EG RAM HE KING hat you and o 1 child shall have the comforts, aye, the luxuries of life, / ; pre ™ if man w ; and when, at nightfall, 1 come home tired and woary, what reception do I meet?” SCatmnt oe Fossa mar pa iI nnn rer eee WILL BE GLAD and whan nk Aghia | same Sethe red oad wears, SH roneniod Ata Sa opel bis. 28.4 ta cetera noe onetnene prorat 0 0s tot 6 oe | | TO GET THIS What reception, I repeat? Why, a wife who takes more pleasure ‘im the society poritions to € Ube Asas opaual e) 1 ¢ of books than In the tender companionship of her own husband, It is mon-ster prenen. StH por Se the 3 A. 4 oy ms penpreperyecencrenpeareerer aye DARLING! / ous, mon-eter-ous and I find myself wondering how long I shall be able. te ¥ exp “ ‘i atand it # wake Par Se | eve nlon he reel an J 190} ‘Tinie will bring her to her, senses, and she will fall on her knees and beg fot of Vighteounness . ¥ a megs iy WW adm AS giveness, Do not be too ready with your pardon or ahe will lose eight of the Freehold 4 i for a young ma: : extent of your magnanimity, Finally you may forgive her, but every now years | Pink for Girl; Mue for Boy, rhs shin fi oni Mme on a pred lthen you should give her a scathing look and sigh deeply, This will remind her T the B ft The Evening World al engin He is! ¢ lot her misstep and fill her with renewed sense of her debt to eo estimable @ ¥ ‘ 4 er . , Qedimase 5 ll That are the . a 4 . ; " spouse m | h ' " AY ha at the akove y > S822 ne Soe heist ari his k NV. ie are, Xe Quam. . A Satire Soe | oe Se cys mater af The Bening Worse “ ape Disde Bnincas fii The Magician Who Makes Singers. 3 read “An Offive Boy's at is “ “4 VERY Beptember Madame Melba visiiy Parts to go through her roles with By al) means let the of vist ale igh : Yiew wea « 3 E Madame Marchesl, « Melba, ~0 tapers on shorter hows. [f they # at of ¢ ’ fi 7° * haps very changeable in her friendships, even for a prima dcena, remains Dusiness aliogether it wil give the old - - _— < to ber teacher the most loyal of all : of forty and over (who, hw =< ¥ ) yh eS ‘The class-room in the Marches! home is to-day just as it was in the time to make room fo Aa Hhirpdl. Ww ~ — . VA Va | when the singers now world-known wem girls tn their beginnings, Ma@ame * @ chance to ve once wore a ving ziven yea f age « / | Marcheal teach ix days in the week, a# energetically as did nfty-two yeas rad « Me ta - Bnd keep themaclyes and their fam m the » | age, oe | alive sTEeD MAP h Te hog What 1 want, she sald lately to Williany Armatrong, who writes of her + % Mint t Office Boys A. % in the Ladies’ Home Journal, “is young, fresh voices. If they have never been np RA ‘ w rrelxn Warth About @4.m 1-9 | trained so much the better, but I want them to remain with me for two or three ard : the {The Prening ‘ en 1 can show what may be done with them,” Having read toe er inow “ Then @ifice boy want ourn regu: 4 inno ‘ | pupils from nearly every civilised country. But 4 erica and, winop yg lar like those of Maer ; Am ar gid 5 | Mia, furnish the largest quota i Geto (0 say that no doubt t ea 1 Rint | asters AS ORD ot acaclns, - 4 ‘ have been working br for Sivreet) Nutseanoes . pte tales sap aotna 9 A Strange Industry. ; , t an! Aw @ renidex @ upios EW persons ever wonder where clotiespins come from: few ever beard of | ey And knportant than th ig boy. ‘An office boy's “@Re of the beginnings of tie Ww were t | , c’ J B \ is ‘ Bryant's Point, Me, and yet a man there hae been quietly turning trees iy ‘ 4 ys into clothespins for years ana supplying (le World with them, amassing ip >| hee to climb. Om 0 fer. bars patience | paper ans some etreets| | the process as comfomtablo a fortune ax many» | makes in & more pretentious eh. Rasy ¥ en , ° Boyt 7 . 64? Why | business In some money centres, His name wie ne, and he bean wi © . apt 1A ar vapeh Reda old, disused mili and Biiter of The Byening Wore 10 block off the ie sidewalk in cer im (he aries tain streets, forcine residents who are i weer & beard passing to wie td bie ot Ab et?

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