The evening world. Newspaper, August 2, 1907, Page 10

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SE ROTTS ERAS oma ARMOR a The Evening World's Daily Magazine, Friday, August 2, 1907) The Vacation-Bluff Store. aS : > orld é (For the Convenience of Stay-at-Homes.) Dally except Sunday aged Serpette ed Company, No. & to a By iwiceerates reetten! Paik Row, New York. > POREPH POLITE. Pros, 1 Raet Tire. SLANGUS ANVAW, Rea wean $01 Week 11908 Beret. ss Mall Matter, Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Cla that life-and-death machine known as Statecraft, and wes crushed. She was Lady Jano Grey, heroine of one of the utterly pitiful trage- dies of history. t ‘ When Henry VIII. ended bis miserable career he left three children, Mary, daughter of Katherine of Aragon, his first wife; Elizabeth, daughter of Anne Boleyn, his second wife, and Edward, son of Jane Seymour, one of hig four later wives. Katherine’s marriage to Hepry had been annulled #3-HHegal, thus depriving Mary of her right to the throne,_Anne had been _se-—— cused of high treason. and beheaded; her daughter EHzabeth also being de- ciared out of the royal. succession. This made little difference eo long as. young Edward lived, for he came to the throne while a mera boy under the , title of Edward VI., with every prospect of a Joug life. But within a very short time he became an invalid, abd jt was clear his days were numbered. Then his councillors, who had guided the boy king according to’ thelr own ambitions, grew alarmed. If Edward were to die chillc«s their perlod ‘of influence and power would be gone unless they could secure in his place some other puppet whom they could easily manage. Chief among these councillors were the Dukes of Northumberland and Suffolk. They began to look about for a successor to Edward. Their choice fell on Lady— Jane Grey. i Her only clatm to be queen Jay in the fact that she was one of the great-granddaughters of Henry VII. Yet, with Mary and Dllsabeth out of the way, her right to it was fairly strong. Strong enough, certainly, to serve Northumberland’s turn. Jane was the ® daughter of the Dike of Suffolk. Her parents had treated her harshly from babyhood, but had Was Queen of England} given her so fine an education that when she for Ten Days. was only fourteen she was one of the most - learned women of the day. At that time the ~ famous scholar Roger Ascham visited her father, only to find that all the family but Jane were out hunting. She was sitting meekly at home amus- ing herself by reading Plato’s “Immortality of the Soul” tn the original Greek. Northumberland persuaded the dying Edward to make Jane heir to the throne. She was then married, in May, 1553, to Nor humberland’s youngest © ‘son, Lord Dudley. She was barely fifteen and had no choico tn the matter of her marriage. Two months later Edward VI. died. The Council, headed by Northutnberland, kept his death secret for several days in an effort to arrest Mary and Elizabeth and thus leave Jane without opponents. But Mary, hearing of the plot, escaped and made formal demand for the crown. Northumberland sent her an insulting refusal, and he and the Council pro- — claimed Jane Queen of England. Jane was aghast with horror at the idea, refused the high honor thrust upon her and begged Suffolk en her knees not to force her to become ruler of England. But her husband and parents and father-in-law bullied and cajoled her into acceptance, So the child, ever obedient and gentle, sub- | mitted tearfully to become Queen of England. She began on July 10, 1558, her reign, which lasted just ten days. 2 For Mary, gathering many of the nobility to her standard, marched om London, Northumberland went forth to oppose her, but most of his troopa [deserted and he was captured and executed. The Council, in terror of their Hyves, revoked their proclamation which had made Jane queen and declared Mary the lawful sovereign of England. Jane joyfully laid aside the crown she had never wanted to wear and planned to return to her quiet girlhood life. But Mary would not permit this. Jane and her husband were seized, put on trial for high treason and condemned to death. Their adherents were imprisoned or executed. Mary 1s said to have sought to spare Jane’s life, and delayed putting her sentence into effect. But just then Suffolk and Sir Thomas Wyatt i > Hees an insurrection and attacked London, ~~~ > This revolt was put down, and Mary, in terror, {we to Pay with Her’ ordered Jane and Dudley beheaded. laud abd = : a iption Rates to The Canada. MnaTAlt O ore 1 WANT A TANT ENOUGH World for th Sin} ) SOmegH! SUNBY IGET SUNBURN | Ualied Staren | One year. Teoh) REECE Ap JOMATCH TAN PASTE ta Pin a |No. 27-LADY JANE GREY, Pathetic Pawn in the Game of . 43.201 One inont te? te ASU PAY COMPLEXION CHESTanb Pace TR a Tae | Politics. me UN, — EASHORE NOE a little girl was caught, unwillingly, in the mighty wheda of A PEOPLE’S PARK. Cy —WERYBODY is in ‘favor of The} Evening World's plan {o tum} Coney Istfand's burned district| into-a:Peaple’s Park, The Board! LP 5 : of Estimate should act promptly = APanaie ii _ before rebuilding has: added to the ea eetullil| "price which the: city: would have a cul i vil tt a ‘45 large, but the greater part of se iil i ; dt 4s practically. unavailable for [ee AH ag til | | | recreation purposes. Central Park SUMTER ENGRGERENT | tp LOCKS oF “ : 5 is'a show pla¢e. For any one who FoR SALE. Crear ? Alas: a 63 fowns a carriage or automobile and who has the money to go to the ‘expensive restaurants, whose prices are as high as Delmonico’s or ‘Bherry’s, Central Park is enjoyable. But about all that a man who works for.a small salary or wages can get out of Central Park is to take {his family walking through it.- The Bronx parks repeat the defects of Central Park in that they do furnish pastimes. An elderly man may enjoy sitting quietly on a bench, but younger people, especially children, need something to pony them beyond reading and contemplation. \ What the city needs is recreation grounds more than show parks. There should be low-priced restaurants, where good milk, sand- wee eee i Little Country Giri Ril be had at méerateicost.. There should be picnic pavilions, where | ‘could bring their own luncheons. ‘Phere should be ball. grounds, | - Coney Island better supplies the demand for a recreation than any of the present city parks Is proved by the much larger that go to Coney Island than to Central, Prospect and the Bronx S 2 BARGAINS IN FISH YARNS., | NATURE FAMES, ETc. ETC, , Setting the Broken Heart. @9 GY —_—_-BY Nixola Grooly-smitn Life for a Throne Jane was Offered a chance to see her I 16 that She Did Not Want. band once more to say farewell to him. But Barn nnn he refused, saying she feared the interview would cause him additional grief. Thus, unselfish to the last and thought- ful only of the just misfortunes of those who had brought such sorrow upon her, Jane went bravely and uncomplainingly to her death, She was be- headed in the Tower of London on Feb, 12, 1554, her husband being exe- cuted an hour earlier. ms Bchool girl, queen, wife and widow all within one brief year, Jane was but sixteen when she laid down her blameless young life as a martyr to others’ ambitions, a sacrifice to the neartlesa monster of royal diplomacy, No woman less merited so horrible a fate; no saint was less guilty of wrongdoing than the helpless girl known to history as Lady Jane Grey. = ns, What people want on a holiday {s to be iriterested, to be en- to be amused, to be doing something, not to'sit Idle, with only! difference of environment between their flat and their holiday. © ~The two dest sites are the Coney Island bumed district and Black- *pwell's Istand. ‘The city already owns. Blackwell's Island, which should The Coney {sland People’s Park should beat once begun. {The spirit which the bumed out property owners manifest:{n this pespect 1s commendable. They recognize the public needs and they express x -wiltingness to meet the city-half way in fixing the price. ~~~ » «Something should be also said of the manner in which the bumed ‘business men met their unexpected calamity. The fires were still ting when many of them started up business agai The cro" hiccame ignorant of the extent of the damage found stands hastily | eretted over the ashes and the remnants of bumt stock displayed at souveriir sales. ° ; iB HOW'IT WwoRKS: UMAMCER ts not amly the silly season, but juiged by | twenty years later he fails to recognise in the stout, red-faced lady at his wife's S the usual record’ of every day's news, it seems t0/tea this same Bhe who made the starlight of his boyhood unt) she recal be the sulcide season as well, Almost every day We| herself to his recollection. No woe however deep or black Js permanent To- yeaa of a man or woman self slain for the love of another. |dey’s tears are to-morrow’s laughter. The broken heart like the broken leg “Warn Weather seeins KOC SUIY Co Tduse Tove In the teman)ts-somettmes stronger after the plaster of time has peced tt together, heart, but also to foster love melancholy, Woes end| Time and exercise are the consulting surgeons in the delicate operation of blighted loves undoubtedly seem much harder to bear|setting the broken heart, and they have bever yet lost a case when given a when the thermometer soars and sizzles in the August | fair trial i yun, ana more than the oniinary mesaure of philosophy —————————— ‘The possession of an analytical mind is a good antidote Strange Items of Diet. — By Helen Vail Wallace. to the love melancholy tbat in the summer months besets RTH AMERICAN Indians eat dogs because they love them eo; alse be- with, mo one is really without charms. Nature ts ve: the star-crossed lover. 80 long aa he can say to himeelf, cause they are conventent, and, moreover, eccording to Harper's Weekly, spate the trl who a Diain-featured always elves a mental ¢ raps: _*iDo I really feol thin way because Arabelia rejected mo A ae Just 1 Minute, Sisters! Briefs for the Plain Girt. I Sharm of mauner which she-heree!t-does notsss in her mirror, but whi ae one of the many, ‘George C, Tilyou, whose| emp ad ramet Se eee eee tskatas ta Keonly felt and appreciated by her compantons, 2 Bier; ark had for the greater part _gone_up n-smoke-at-2-toss} ; Sermanenty Bitgnted heart tsa “potty thE wit sleep and eat | thirty-stxth-of the are and contains KUOUL Ghe-thirteenth of the population of i 5 A: : fibes i a pt i by Sens Pepe are the empire) 12,922 horses and 87s dogs» This ts an increase of 2% horses nee # (The plain girl cannot sée how her face lights up in conversation. She has en fo long as it is given enouxh exercise no matter what one's sentimental troubles fray be. Once in a very great bile perhaps a physically healthy person oom- mite auicide. But suicide for love or any other motive seems to me a sort of charm of unconsclousness. especial charm—the ms Dress yourself all the more Inimaculately if you think yourself to be ptatn looking. Take extra care to exercise pentifully, bathe often, breathe deeply and eat slowly. Ofvhundreds of thousands of dollars, speedily reopened what was left vend firoceeded to the best: of his ability cheerfully to entertain his oga over the year 16, .n all Germany during the year 1906 there were slaugh- tered for food 162,00 horses, This 1s an increase of about 20,000 ever 1905, and of Y ike him di ‘Mlosaae, It tn a sudden domtruction of the sense of the future, a cutting | about 47,000 over 194. Complete figures are lacking in regard to the slaughter of patrons. Such a man and the others like him displayed the'real American mented ne moctal perspective that ordinarily enables ua to ree tho flowers of | dogs for food in the German Empire, but fragmentary statistics indicate that the Spiritdn their hopefulness and their hops and happiness blooruing In ‘the fletd of to-morrow which we must live |toal number was about 1.00—probebly moro rather than less. In the city of wv i t throngh the darkness of to-day to possess. Chemnitz alone 698 dogs were slaughtered in 1908, an Incremse of 88 over 195, and Megerace 0 Overcome, disaster. They . ™ sane lover realizing that nothing in the world {s final, he wil! realize | during the same period 1,070, an increase of 81 over 196. While thése two Items dad tisen by thelr own efforts from trom bis own memories that the tragedy of the prosont, needs only the softening | show an increase of 17, the total number of animals slaughtered for food in “the ranks, “and when fire levelled light of s few Years Upon It to make the comedy of ‘the future. How ty the | that tity Curing 100 was. 1,8 tees than: tn 106. Saxony alse oonwutied 314,000 “the : frame of mind of the youth paring from his first love because cruct parents |hoad of cattle (steers, bulls and cows), 422831 calves, 1,113,714 swine, 204,082 sheep them ry at once proceeded to rise are Ing him away to school? How amused ts the man he becomes when |and 14,247 goats. in» Mr. Tilyou, for example, be- a 7 ‘gan, asa boy Séling sea shells, with ddy the Rooter. i &2 : : &R &2 sa barrel for his counter. He rose 11 eee Never mind about your features: keep your thoughts sweet and unrelfis® Good-natured helpfulness has won more hearts than pretty features ever aid. Pretty_faces_withont mental sweetness. appeal to the artistio mind only and wehe ‘om affect the heart. The pretty girl is aften too busy belng pretty to be ume selfish. Is that it? ee a or some Fédson, men often select the plain girl for a wife, while he- pretty aiater “waits a apell.” The o-called platn girl in the charmer of charmers in ‘the cyes of the right man, Be sure you wait-for him and “live happy ever atte to be the proprietor of one of the ; ‘4 ONDS, RET! tialf dozen largest entertainment re- HEAVENS! WHAT AILS \=1c M1 OVER M CUR ona ee ear “ASAE RL SES pacar : NW YQU; REDDY? 4 [| CAME Wew!D” e a ; 2 7 DE H-HEAT a ABT friends should be slow to dlsagres, F ‘When a man earns his money he never has any to burn. ‘Bustnear is business for thoee who mind thetr own Quriness, ; dito tens of thousands of coming American citizens, who will be sturdier, 7 Ja Jun ihn papier; sp, tha Wee oper arate got ft, a thier, more alert and more buoyant by reason of the days of sun- % Sie Senay ted ome 5 ERO ROTI OCH TAY ERE ue y y - ) y 1 dollar on ehorve race than wi! aphine, sand and surf which the city of New York will provide for them Fi lQ ‘ : SE oe men would rather lose @ dollar on @ rece nami teat Bonen “Hf it does its duty. f E ‘ ‘Perhaps you are right, Corelli, in-your. theory that laundries Gate back to « A People’s Park will do much to p MISS ELSA!! Anstil this same American spirit : scone er the fron. age. 5 es L tt 2 : -Kdam never had. odvaston to.try to expisin the presence ota ttomt hair) sh ‘on the sleeve of his cont. i » Letters from the People. Be at aust exter nts ar ces : confidence in her husband. oe ‘There can be no effect without a cause, When a thing 1s offered at lees ‘For Amateur Detectives, the art of music thoroughly, ean teach than cost. there 1s e reason for it—Chteago News, pase Satter st mes ventne World: the use of an instrument which he him-| f x i ~ * 4 Teference to the great number of | elf does not know how to play simply M 2 i 4 od , Midnapping ceases lately, I would sug-/ by belng an expert reader of musle and| — What Vv it s° Did te the R ilroad a esuvits 0) a ads @est that parents (or In fact anybody at the same Umo posmsosaline a perfec: | TAKE HIM HOME MISS j vt eat ee as naaclaeanieat sa for sernp, Hy clair that} auch a} ELSAT ANDOU CAN GEEIME Si<K? ME HW impression that the railroad up Vesuvius was destroyed by the recent 1 et cannot teach such an instru:| Pras fret comparatively recently G@iaiice around for any suspicious Jook- | ment, because, not knowing shore the! we aN NOURSELEL Weelraesa tr ON Ge ecavttone ta pertiy-comrast aad martiy.tneornect: mhecel ere is set ore APE Doreon they May soe on the block | different tonew are located, he By following up such people's move- | tench another what ho himself 4 Ments they oan discover what those per-| know. H. DVORKID / ons are up to, Ang if necesnary notity | A “Stubborn? Huaband. the police. pi WHEL Re | ro the Baltor of Thin Brenine Wo Apply to Commandant, Went Point. | aii vers tial Uiborn ti niaband > du that it's all riht for a HEAT? WeLL, IF 7s) BLEACHERS! SEE? he enly.one, began at the foot. o% the crater cove and about £90) feat above the _ igea, and was a cable road, asctnding 2,700 feet In @ distance of 18,000 feet neasty to the edge of the crater, This road, according to the Railroad Gazette, wae completely destroyed end the powerhouse at the foot was busted under eighty feet of ashes, now mud, Whether any part of the plant under the ashes ta St for further usa is not yet known, The oable road was ¢ormorly reached by ea excolent carriage road, whiot~-Was replaced a fow yours ago by a tramway partly worked by adbeston and partly by cog-wheels. This road was damaged — aomparatively little by the eruption, and most of It has siready been reatored, and padbengers are oarriod to a: point whence a climb of lost than an hour by @ practicable path brings them to the edge ofthe new crater, epee 4 jean possily an Joonvince him t 7) form, Howe West onier so enter W MoM your Congressma ‘@ani n- yesterday he just ‘as Peociee fren 687 of| much about that! sort of tal J ‘ | bout the ng as I “nha }did, and not 1 could say would To. Make Copper Like Steel Beane Se Sues Hy oe is” nome “atl OPPER {8 stated to be no bardennd as to take a cutting ody 1 & molten state, about’ 2 per cent. of potassium ferrocyanide,. Hike me ig snow ‘fim’ nome authority | Bs: | ars ~ : shat would substantiate my. ort 4 ; , s : k De: AjDo please help mo out, roager . es , 4 2 4 i , cop prod may, y

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