The evening world. Newspaper, August 19, 1907, Page 11

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y Published Daily except Sunday by the Presa Publishing Cotnpany, No. 62 to & Park Row, New York. JOKER HL PULITEER, Prec, 1 Kast 104 Birvet, Js ANGUS AHAW, Rect reas. 261 Wea th Entered at the Post-Office at Now York as Seound-Clans becription Rates to The Canada. or SGrening World for the : United States. VOLUME AS irises WIDOWS’ AND HO got the money? President Wintei fying that the Bo Ret vested - $114,638,829 in rails, ramsha trolley wires. Of sum of. money it issued bonds. for «$85,557,930, Now it-asks the Pub- lic. Service Commission to be leni¢nt with it on accaunt of thé widows and orphans who own the bonds. Also, according to President Winter's testimony he had nothing to do with the financial management, whi it ckle cars and sy OrMOUS _The Evening World's Daily Magazine, Monday, August 19, 1907. — “The Day of Rest, fc = aS pr By Maurice Ketten. —== Ce NONE OF, SO NICE Your HuBBY CAHE— Saino DEAR You Have oe es AALS THE OTHER Werner ote oeT CANES Good DAY oF REST AT % HERE 15 wow TING TuRtine ne NE : TMECOTTAGE —— C THE LAUNDRY - ICECREAM FREEZER? WEEK, Te 0 \ DEAR ¢ un!) No, 24.—ANNE OF AUSTRIA, Queen of France, y $a PITIABLY weak King, a tyrannically strong Prime Minister, andfan A rmbt foolish Queen: ‘This trio once made changed history fn They were Louls NUL, Cardinal Richelieu and Anne of Austria Henry of Navarre (Henry IV.) was assaséInated {n 1610 and: was.eme [gaeced by a son as incompetent Henry was great... This son, Louls XIL, jealled himself “Louis the Just,’ nn A name that found no echo in the hearts ] i his subjects,‘m~: of whom ‘secretly gave him far- atterlug appeélla- © “4 | tans. Under Louis's ow xed more and more powerful, mbitions. At last, out ofthe rdinal Richelieu, The Cardthal shrewd, heariless, gifted’ with a Veritable genius for statesmanship— gradually galned an ascendancy: Louis that-made the weak monarch A mere subordinate under Richelleu’s mighty lands. Then‘ he'put ‘down, hess the nobles y /) \swaying the King to suit their own selfist {chaos, rose the foremost man of the age—( a eae <= to: sult himse Only one formidable stumbling block stood in the’ path: Loans SS ats Sorte aN A TO HAVE —— yy ¥ U CAN'T M4135 iT E Freee of his absovute power, “And that-obstacle was a woman—Anue of Austria. ri -SYEARE oie WOULD NE AND Gain a UST-ACROSS THE LAKE Anne was the daughter of Philip III. of Spain. She wes married to PRs) (To Have x ArreR? SOING. 3 i ARAY F Louls in when she was only thirteen and he fourteen. Théir éldest dallas) son, who wag to win fame as Louls XIV. (“Phe Grand Monarch") was not born until twenty-three years later. Anne was a beautiful woman and IT'S THE ONLY DRUG STORE AROUND—, JUST A NICE ROW IGQY ‘Anthony N. Brady. : |. How has Tony Brady treated “the widows and orphans ‘ '* Tony Brady bought the American Traftic Company for $25,000} from H. Milton Kennedy and turned it in at $500,000. This parasite corporation now owns the power houses and power plants, which it rents to the B. R. T., and estimates its assets at $18,748,000. How many “widows and orphais’ did it take to amass these assets? ‘The traction merger has also testified through its officers to its sym- pathy with the “widows and orphans’ whose money was exchanged for its stocks and bonds. Any widow or orphan who invested in Metro- Politan stock is entitled to sympathy. Its Stock Exchange quotations have dropped half in the past few months. Any innocent investor confiding Tammany politician who lost money in this stuff acted contrary to The Evening World's repeated warnings to let it alone., Better play | against a crooked roulette wheel than at the game over which Ryan, ‘ Belmont and Brady preside. Roulette is a quicker and less wearis way to lose money. The question remains, What became of these many millions of dol- Metropolitan says that $2,593,000 was expended for electrifying one-fifth mile of Second avenue after that road was merged. To electrify 635) miles under the former management cost only $2,000,000, i Who stole the other $2,000,000? x ‘Who got the money when 275 new electric cars were charged for} Bonds were issued to raise the money for these thieveries. innocent owners of those bonds have a right to their money and to sen: ' Several years ago Col. Amory charged that $30,000,000 had been Stolen from the Metropolitan treasury. According to the testimony ex- ; Before he was re-elected District-Attorney Mr, Jerome publicly | ¥ Promised to follow the trail of- Metropolitan thievery and to prosecute the ves. widows’ and orphans’ money should go to jail, But will Mr. Jerome send them there? e If not, why not? = ‘Col-Amory-furnished-evidence,—-Mr. Ivins Is: furnishine-more-eyvic dence. It is pretty well known who the thieves are. They are big thieves. It is the duty of the District-Attorney to prosecute all thieves. No one else can go before the Grand Jury ‘unlesd tHe Govern rin venes, Mr, Ivins has lassoed the facts, , The jail waits. The public waits. Justice waits—and Mr. Jerome is taking another vacation, : Letters from the People. Te the Editor of The Evening World: WA experienced people’ kindly let me| boat. 1 know what profession they would ad-! im vise @ young man to st ch | they'd offers best advantages in SILAS G, CoOL, ; UNDECIDED. | ("Plenty of Time, Leta Ride.” Mo the Kaltor of The Evening World: IT heartily approve of the agitation to force Chambers street wagon traffic to Koop off the aingle oar tracks and to allow the horse cars to make U: ‘et trom Broadway 0 tho ferry in less ridiculoualy slow time. Let Bingham keep @ couple of traffic cops there for a| ja t tow days, Last week, on Chambera | O00 (0, ‘@meet, T<parsed two men going to the | | Old Age Pensloun, nd unable Rob old age of tracted by Mr. Ivins this is an underestimate. it really seems om true a4 St Is sad. | That is exactly what should be done. The men who stole the| Reddy the Rooter. G2 GD &x [errr lore polities without inane depen understanding —— 3 A Trick and How the subject. Hence she at once became the centre BRING ME z H of a score of petty et dangerous, court {ntrignes, £, \Some TAFFY : ides MigeiReveniged: { irrexicharmpwoninichellsn'a ver teotiaaiee longed for her fa¥or in order to win over to his polley {her powerful relatives in Spain and Austria, whose influc he dreaded. Anne pretended to be abjectly in fear of Richelic robag of office. She begged him to put her at her ease by: dancing before’ her in a harlequin suit. * Rreat man, thoroughly blinded by infatuation, consented. After the dance, in the Queen/s private drawing room, Anne jdrew the curtain aside, disclosing a crowd’ of grinning courtiers who had {vastly enjoyed the spectacle of _the terrible Cardinal capering about Hke @ jclown. It was a foolish trick devised by Anne to mortify Richelieu and°te lower the rising Prime Minister's self-esteem. It succeeded. It also made {him her deadly enemy for life Henceforth, Richelieu tried, by every means in his power, to injifre and to make Louis divorce her. It was a duel of wits between Qifeen Always she was forced to be on her guard and her life was rable—-Ineldents—of this deadly battle form the elfef th Three Musketeers. | | | fe power of the nobles and managed France's policy gt home and abroad: | ' Pa | | ce on France 's dignity and of his Dumas's 4 LOON'T THING You HAVE TIME To CATCH At length, in 1642, Richelieu died, and, next year Louis XIII, followed BEEN GONE ALL ABOUT iO MILES OUR TRAN Bac To N-Y.= WRITE the strange man whose ¢lave he had beer and-who had made France power- AFTERNOON — INTHE SUN, , SAE IF YOU HAVE ANYTHING SPECIAL )), ful despite the King’s weak incompetence. But, before his death, Louls had Hurry up! To SAY — RUN NOW fapopinted a second Prime Minister, a wily Italian Cardinal named Maza¥n, \ I NOMEAIL AtouT (sane eS ‘Jrhis man compared with Richelleu as a fox might to a lon. He had all ‘THE PARTY, a y p: the dead statesman’s cunning and none of his courage; all his trickery and none of his genius. Louis XIV., the new King, was only four years old, ‘The boy's father (urged to the step, doubtless, by Richelieu) had arranged in bis will that a Council should control the destinies of the kingdom > until Loufs should be of age. But Anne, backed by Mazarin's crafty advice, flattered Parliament into setting aside this will and making her regent ‘of France with full gowers of ruling. The way, at last, seemed clear for Anne. But she had, really, only exchanged one tyrant for another, i Mazarin was a singularly handsome, attractive man. He quickly won 8 favor and (according to most historians) secretly married her soon 4 ¢, after her first husband’s death. Then he con- Mecarinimenaiihe { ducted national affairs in her name and arcordlng WHERE HAVE You Ni Soe ou = Begs ae f ice ROW — Yes> WELL You Must GIVE UP YOUR PARTY to his own {deas. The nobles, crushed by Secret Marriage: £ Richelleu, rose to power again, now that they ~~ ——~* no longer had their old foe fo fear, © Magarin quarrelled with them, and a civil war sprang up, —This conflict was known as the “Fronde,” and had little national Importance except that It sent the scared Mazarin scurrying away from P: by night, in fear of his’ Ife. He took with him Anne and the iitte King, and-the Parisians woke up rnext morning to find themselves minus a monarch, a regent and a prims minister. At long range, Anne dictated the terms of ber return and finafly + ended the war, : mat Mazarin's miserly stinginess wrung from_Anne and the people alt the = ne ragged sheets. When young Louis came of ge, in 1661, he quickly an Jars invested by “widows and orphans” and other honest persons? The The Man Who Th j n ks Marriage a Jail ut By Nixola Greeley-Smith. menbgapostibleeang epithe rovalistamily) Ee Ee hed PHILAL PHIA man walked ont ouse &ty newly made He y, better mannered, more}end to such parsimony and began, in contrast, a career of extravagance Tian (ior Cl teeina waawlanavwan sal ihat ; | teseena her avomen. 1 him hang up his clothes|that nearly bankrupted France, On his accession to the throne Anne was aouthaclatwire nce baass alent brushiln the same place” Isifelt In hin oMice after he Kets {rement, where she died five years later at the age of alxtysftur, 1p so that his wife could be n rush ie same place is fel ofice afte f e wife walked in. "I've found you You can't escape me!" But he did, for the Sergeant locked him up on a cha ~f-intoxtestion, - “There ts no pence exclaimed. | downtown by the Iniproved 1 ethod of his dictation to his stenographer and his| having made a very complete all-around fallure of her life. | jon that she needs an extra hour off to go shopping, I think, generally kinder © considerate of thelr fed ones And every (mea man ma th ness and good manners an himself my be happy or unhappy, hin wife worthy or unworthy, but ‘act that the married and must learn the dally tolerance that ssociation with another human belng necessitates In t Hkens marriage to a J ie KOInE t omployecs than inma. me out of fail,’ said the husband | Just 1 Minute, Sisters! Briefs for the Housekeeper-Wife. peaking, marriage s ) need on ns like a Jail only t Sieh ons. Even the man ¢ jail, for ome per a ik dimost aw Rood fi By Helen Vail Wdllace. reat utter the 1, and son iow often we hear platitude that adlch: imea this world husband comes home is not fair, elther to yourself or him ‘ woman could. be co emperament. If he tx artistic remember, Four Qi. » no more old maids and the bachelor tax would never {Imes Important, Be always neat, {n any.case * the ordinary man the ordinary marrage !x about the best thing he can VOID ‘weariness by planning intervals of rest. To be tired out when your him happy, an| hw Inced that {t was equally good for women, there Study y husb: ® heard from| dress, ‘The rose in your hair ts o} Thix is because a hay rrlage {mproves a man by n nhappy one rubs off 1 edges of hin ter It Is very interesting 7 watch the gradual effects of w nce on the| mor Have all the disagreeable work out of sight before he arrives. This ts yque sineas, JOIN as unfair to burden Tim with «for him to drag hia business. reas home with him, Of course, mutual business thterests have a place ed. At such thmes give your undivided intelligent sympathyouhd By George Hopf): must be dis attention % 4 3 a eee Plan home recreations In harmony with his needs and tastes. Prcourae I} GOEL REDDY, DONT ~ your husband in’ every way to forget “shop'’ while at home. Change, not I be ILE - START E 3 ness, is true rest. Monotony js responsible for av rs . THINGS AGoNe! Don't have any woes. If you do don’t tall them (o hii Cr anybody): TER ME LIKE 1M GOIN? TER 3 GIT A HOLIDAY! P PRAENE] | sation a If the children chance to be a feature wit! homecoming by neat appearance and Iittle personal attentions,’ If not, train them {o'Iet him rest In peace, and do not peravcute lim yourselt] by telling yilm ail that they likve said-and: done during-the day. In seven caseh out of ten fatter kind of husband wants your undivided personal attention turned towatd (g-hressee- wef; Pent disappoint him. Attention to worrtea {s food for bogies, Ignore them, and they dle of titre — him: see that they brighten:diis Chelle Make your home a peaceful, happy hayen from all his business cares, au home may be the centre for a little heaven on earth; a heaven on tho inatalmemt n. You are the one to keep the instalments pald up. i view +o om ate Sentence. Sermons. Perea aaa ; So coe eaten HBP fortine of-ail ts founded on faithiin one another, xXIMP OF SATAN IX@#" (GEE How Luck: GIT!!! VAMooseE!! OH YOU,ARTHUR ! SWAT IT” | The people who expect great things of us are the ones who help us D0 ——-!1 x xGrY9s Ix tt JANA Dougy UNTILL You KNow FER KEEPS, ob Boy-LIFT fatateat thinea: Ty aoe i How To BEHAVE!) |B IT PER DE WHOLE CigculT!: e only people who insist on class barriers are those whi are too small to THINGS wh : : Ree >» GO0D EYE,o PAL,Goon EYE! cee dver them. of, ee a good Intont sticks fast in honeyed words of resolution, Be ‘Tho hypocrite's great business Ia to find tome appearance of virtue to Soyer every vice. It ts possible to be a connolsseur of sermons and still be far from a saint!) He who adopts no high standards ta thé only one who never falls, } Life's riches are In th fine dust of dally kindnessea rather thar in the: great nuggets of public charity, i y Bottor to die with empty hands and still facing heavenward than to with both hands flied with earth and. your back, toward Ged. —Chicnany ‘Tribune. 3 e SES URS gegen e eer ip an Science Finds Power in a Snowflake, Dick 5 cannot hope to make weather predictions accurate at all: mes, fop-tt W must Often happen that an Inappreciable cause may upset delicatelyibale ~ ed vonditions, For example, a atratum of alr may be very nearlyumpt- |” \ rated with aqueous vapor, while losing heat so slowly that molsture might Kor cane Fon A ESTA Wane Meee tea for'along time, and/in this condiuon le Is in such a atate of ws pites, a black dog to a white! pow ‘dirty! your clothes are. Won't| molecular equilibrium that the sropelng of fal ara snow hidevitt | tests have been extend-| your motier be mad, though, when you | produce a complete and widespread change. The cooling of the alr would ome?” a fall of mist or dew around the snowfake. ‘This deposited mist, sending?ite: ison ate won't, replied Willle, "Sue | into space faster than the saturated alr, would cool more alr and condense , bought a box of ‘Imperial Grease and} dew, and this would continue raplidly-until a complete chanes of condislox Dirt. Eradicator’ from a peddier last | heen brought about. Tima the tinlest fake at aow may paky thorortexer he ain't had a chance to : x ree Me yeutePalladelphia Press. off the atmospherio BUM ever @veyyeninene TAT ‘ 9% BUSINESS AND SCIENCE. Vs Mosquitoes Prefer Black. coded in demonstrat-| theory of yours? groes to. Care swered the ¢ Ml » and that axure, value as a su H a ly so, Confirming these. re- arucles, Washington | aulta on 10 mosq ea, a Swiss malaria expert has found that three-fourths : settle on gark colors, ‘ ae a pughiy, demonstra AS pe

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