The evening world. Newspaper, September 9, 1907, Page 10

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Che Publishes Dally except Sunday by the Press Publishing Conipany, Mo, Sto Park Row, New York. (EE FOKErN PULITZER, Pree, treet 74 8 J. ANGUS ANAW, Fee Trees, $9 Entered ho Post-Office at New York as Seco: fall Matter. bscription T Canada, cs and the Ci ing We Th:Countri 16] One 3 [one m ens in Jersey - for_an_injunctian_to restrain his wife from nagging him. the thought an injunction would b useless and.that ‘no judicial powei could silence a woman's tongue. The Chancellor was righ Mrs.: Abbott took her’ inning after” her husband failed, and a suit for separation, She 5 ed that Mr. Abbott was cruel Ho her. His answer was that the cruelty was on his ‘wife's side, that “Bhe nagged him incésstntly and that even when he had gone to hed wand was asleep she would sit on a chair and poke him with an umbrella “sthat he might not be able by slumber to escape her incessant conversa- “tion. a ‘ After awhile Mr. Abbott consented ~to the separation, should have done in the first place, and then thought that he would have “speace. But his wife insisted upon turning up from time to time and con- Ginuing the nagging process. Even when Mr. Abbott took a young woman on an excursion to *Sandy Hook, his wife invited herself to go along, and explained from time *to time to the other excursionists who and what her husband was. wv ‘aggerated case of nagging. Few wives nag their husbands in public. As a rule, the nagging wife is over-amiable to her husband when other people are around. She speaks to him then as /"dear,” “darling,” “dovey” and other endearing epithets. When they two are alone she makes up for her public affection. ; Nagging is a solitary vice. | That is, seen at ils worst there are only two parties present, the nag- per and the naggee.’ At times children are made an audience to nagging, but it is, rarely done in the presence of an outsider or even before the household servants. Nagging women are generally well to do. A wife who cooks the meals and does the laundry and chamber work for a large family rarely has time to nag. She is too busy doing useful work. Most women have a-great deal more energy than mdn, and where that energy does not find a legitimate exercise in useful employment it seems to find an outlet in the tongue and to make a safety valve ef the vocal organs. There is ‘no escape from it, and e e The Evening Wor ise: Chancellor’, replied. that het 1d@’s Daily Magazine, Monday; September 9, | The Affinity Wave By F. G. Long. CANT FOOL ME, JOHN HENRY) NG: KNOW YOU Ftd ts JON [7h belo ONS Cee DONT You DARE TRY THAT, AFFINITY DODGE ON ME/ | i HERE, IVE HT THYS THING & FIND THE WIFE CAME BACK. | BALK UP! YOURE TOO LATE/ Je Puy AWAY YOUR EMIMELINE. FOILING THE PIOTHER-IN-LAW. Your. PIE 1S PUNK ~ NeT HALF AS Goon. Sy Tavt. - THE AFFINITY CURE. . What. ds Love? that is its worst feature. !t beg in the morning and arrives at a high “working pressure by the time a husband has to go away to earn the money to support the nagger, Dur- ing the day the pressure increases > in power like the steam in a boiler ,.., when the engine is not running, and at night wien the husband comes home he must suffer for his wife’s = day’s deprivation in her new opportunity to tell him of his insignificance | and many faults and shortcomings. ». Whe naggercumconsciousty says the same thine-over-and-over-agai aiwith a range of synonyms so vast that it would take an unabridged dic- ‘tionary to contain them. Whether the husband retorts orally or is silent oN pike little difference. Either is an aggravation. If he ilent it is fittributed to sullenness.—tfhe talks back it is because he is disputatious. S There are several rem excellent, Period termittent. Poverty and adversity are oth a@ woman has something real (o comp Of all worldly weapons a woman's tor the mast dangerous, and in nagging fin e Prettiest: Girls. {To the Waditor of tog Necd ay 1 | hears BROOKLYN Dorn. in > Wall Street Gambling, te an A was born Mush on New Houses, Even: aid Wavelling through rural ne!ch- forhoods lately 1 have noticed thay 4] York Sp © which Bamber of newly coroleted houses | eam king of a gaine on a 1a: Dave « Dish stuck to ther ridgepoles, | \ AMDIER, ‘ wr pas - te cent odltortal in ¥ World, has S IR JAMES CRICHTON ition by saying that brain storm,” rit a might be, and Tea3 art or two to his t what his {den the most definition of Jove. He said The man w h sometimes proves plained his st cerebral com:no- beloved object I asked a iman with a jdidn't know, fur thevman waa talks about ‘winning’ women Is ignorant of the real meaning of loy said k undertaken was the most selfish and unnatural of passions ex= by saylng that a woman in love didn’t want the Fa thougtit of his own, and that If apb-had her and a stirring of s0: dormant assoctation way he would in the round tower of her hea by an appropriate afinitive impresston."* fattened ges and baby talk. lifles this complicated and more | All of which is perfe: not being satished wr NTs explanation, tls Love?’ And, putting aside the y woman as the answer to » name that ry, I se love tn ita myself to ha ai al named Prometheus was punished by the gods tor flame at which all the cold discomforts, the ehill to-mparkiing peace. It 1s the lamp perpetual of of ruby light to heaven, not unlike the red lamp one seca | ch ts never allowed to io and the highest ways of life, the meanest and lowllest; le of the wise and foolish virgins meant stmply that some Mp oe. «teen ing cbrightiy—tor: theoco the oll of unselfishness and devotion and sac nis coming as similar foolish virgins do to-day 3 dept pte: he D ThE Mingo DY, LELAND, AND I'LL BE A FULL-FLEDGED COON—DEN WATCH ME MISTO BONDS, REDDY AM Sick JAN’ HE Do, NE Ax al By George Hopf BRING IN my LEDGERS LELAND. Im GiT-L |TIN NEAR | DE BALL ET ESPERANTO —> <a ES FER ONE} 5 BE NOW, JACK,MOISTEN DE GLOBULE GOOD, Ob BOY— HELL TICKLE OE BALMY! COME oN, YER GoT_HIS NANN de D~~?? & 2H-0? AY! | Sovereigns) been much better, By Nixola Greeley-Smith| x . to be fed andjand was almost forced act. And it seemed to me that Love, not genius, ts the | ynt{] 1790. Five of her sons won distinction as soldiers and her own namo ment Lhe bridegroom, | ¢, and some | No $3--FILORA M’DONAILD; Who Saved ‘‘Prinoe Charlie,* LOVELY Scotch girl, born {n 1720, has won immortal fame and i has been made heroine of a hundred poems and etorles be- | cause she saved the Iife of a man who did not deserve that any good woman or man should raise a finger {n his behalf. The girl was {Flora McDonald. The man who owed his life to her was Charles Edward | Lows Philip Casimir Start, grandson of James Il, and nephew of Queen Anne of. England oa The British people had wearled of the fickleness, dishonesty and tne competence of the Stuart family, Mary Queen of Scots had been beheaded, Hor gon James, first’ of the Stuart Kings of England, had amounted to — ttle.” His son Charles I. had ruled'so badly he was deposed and executed, Charles 11, eldest son of Charles 1.,;had been a dissolute, {neMcfent King, and hi8-brother, James II., who had succeeded him, tad’ made. such a muddle of-hig reign that the people turned film, out in favor of Willlam ef Orange: “Nor had Queer Aune (James's daughter and last of the Stuart So Parllament had cut off the Stuarts trom the royal descent and given the crown to Elector George. pf,Hanover. But James IT. had left a young) son, who strove in valn to Interest the various foreign powers in his cause and induce them to lend an army to placé him on the throne of Great Britain. He falled In this attempt and lived in a {ttle sotht-regal court of his own at France. ‘But his son, Charles Edward, known as “Bonhte Prince Charlie,” had other ideas, 5 Charles was a handsome, brilllant young fellow, well educated, skilled in m{l{tary matters and endowed with all the strange personal charms that Oa, Maile the Stuarts so dangerous. Incfdentally, he | “Bonnte Prince i was a drunkard, a profilgate and more or less of an hie aJlround scoundrel. He crossed to Scotland, early in i Shall 1745, when only twenty-five years old; raised some Son—————~~~~~~—~~ of the Highland clans in his behalf, captured several cities, and with an army of 6,000 marched on London. But when only two days’ journey distant he was forced (by wholesale desertions and by quarrels among his advisers) to retreat. The Duke of Cumberland with an English army pursued him nto Scetland and,-on April 16, 1746, Inflloted such a crushing defeat on the Scotch, at Culloden, that Charles's hopes of ruling were forever wrecked. The beaten prince fled to the mountains tollowed-by-the enemy, and with a price of $150,000 offered for his head. It was when he was in these dire straits that he met Mora McDonald. Flora was the daughter of Ronajd McDonald, a clansman of Clanra- nald. She was born in the Isle of South Ulst, off the Scotch coast, In 1720, Her father died in her infan Her mother married another McDonald jand moved with her new husband and Httle daughter to the Isle of Skye, where the girl grew to womanhood and won wide fame for her wit, courage and-beauty;— After-Culloden,—one_of Charles's companions, Capt. i knowing Flora’s reputation for daring and cleverness, came to her and explained his master’s danger, asking the girl to help the Prince to escape from Scotland. Flora had no personal interest in Charles, whom she had never seen, and did not think {( worth while to risk her life or freedom Jand her family’s security for the sake of aiding any strange fugitive. She refured. But O'Neil} well knew the marvellous fascination Charles exerted over all women. So he craftily arranged that Flora and the Prince should meet, The girl at once fell under the magic of the Stuart charm and promised Charles all the aid in her power. The pursuers were hot on the young man’s track. Flora disguised him ss a woman, secured passports for herself and her “maid” to go to Skye, and conducted the refugee thither in safety, hiding him {n her own house. There Charles hid undiscovered until such t as his benefactress could take him to Portree and sce him safely aboard ship. But for her he probably would haye ended his worthless life onthe headsman’s’ block, instead of living for ly a half century: longer im % ® Continental Europe as a despised, brutalized debauched, Thre Journey, to f Flora wis imprisoned for her share in the escape and { America. remained a year in captivity. ch as she had loved Charles, her devotion to him w that of a servant toward a morarch rather than that of mald for man. For she soon after- ward married Alan McDonald, a kinsman of hers, and in 1874 emigrated with r so many of her fellow countrymen had fled attes Cuttodon that-Geelcyas_by that time t ommon language in six counties of the colony). The McDonalds settled in Fayetteville and, next year, Alan helped raised a Highlander regiment to fight for England {_ the ‘American Revolutionary W |" Flora sailed from Charleston on a British sloop of war for Scot- liand, On the way the sloop was attacked by a large French frigate 0 surrender to superior numbers when Flora McDonald rushed on deck, her gray hair flying in the wind and a pistol In {her hand. She shouted encouragement to the sailors, fought side by sido \\eith them, and, by her gallant example, enabled them to beat off the enemy, Her arm was broken during the battle. Wlora lived on tn her native land had become a household word for romance and heroism throughout Scotland. ~ In dying, Flora McDonald begged that she be wrapped for burial f the sheet that had covered “Bonnie Prince Chariic™ during ttlabrief-stay jat her house. After a long and happy wedded Ife her thoughts at the Jast | were all of the unworthy prince on Whom she had lavished her girlish herd worship. 3 More School Days. : By Walter. A. Sinclair. "School begins to-day."!—Item { OMI children. Get busy!’ reat are calling this morning, 1 £4( Kids nf nd-clean—or were clean we mean— | a Starting with faces forlorn. {So small red gschool-house awalta then: Nothing but ant-hills of DHeK; No school-yard gate (which rhymes well with “Iate”) And nix on the hick'ry ck. School days, school days, Dear old Fads and Fool days, “Modelling, sewing and do-moes-tle d felence(eailed .cookis.s))1t's also allek, se ula AS 8 You drew with cray-ons, learned to sew, oo I was taught dancing, saucy beau! , Of books and of figures naught we know When wo are a couplo of kids, Come get your putty boards ready, sharpen the carpenters’ tools; ‘These are tho ways taught In these doys Di at our swell public schools Get out your-outfits for tatting: get out your casos of ralnts, Slates, paper, books #re efvon the hooks, ‘And ence comes the same complaint: Fool days, fool days, Cootng with cool days, Singing and sculping and how. to kick, All elxe but writing, arithmetic. Yuu learned to paint—an well we know; T learned to model clay just so, But we couldn't write “Yes” or ‘No, ho! ho! When we were a couple of kids. (er VICTORIOUS | . HIS OW, TERESTS. ee GOR ened Animals as Mechanics. ONS : { | T fs only within recent years that men have learned how e pd Nenka Way ao, eaten diAyotsleuTh oliy, miet one day dn the a te f KY OCG Ete ses andl sy, neartily at that ancient fest. of i other structures of cement. Thigcartts pvobably yet in a crude stage, and) Borem‘s? yh the first, “1 o|o by and by mankind may learnt use tie ihatetal in vastly more skilful and| Wise—In self-defense, © y Kate McAllls- KeMiclent ways, Jenks swallow's skilfully built hor we take into consideration — SAME OLD CROWD, well with her pointed bill, I ‘Who were with you on the plen ‘The usual contingent. Our alaters aod our cousins and the ants.'—Baltls phoebe, the rubin and other more American. and otherplaptfibres,-and even atrings, through thelr-concretiona:of mud./ “But many of the lower animals” hayk for ages been making their houses of] Wise mud or of similar plastic and hardening substances, saya St. Nicholas. The cliffy Would have repeated the thing. think- Imagine a boy or a girl trying to make such a structure of mud: and handling NOT K jthe material only by the ald of pointed pliers, Yet the bird does it and oes It BEnINGEEROMISE: bankments, you have probably noticed. that the workmen first put in several iron rods to increase the strength of the wali, This is, praotically, what the es; if I hadn't Inuehed so he ne Js indeed a wonderful structure, espectally when] ing I hadn't seen ¢ho point.—Smiles, the slmple way in which tho bird does the work, SER eel ‘Don't I give you all the money you n nome ce ture: n some cement structures, especially in rallroad em-| reaien her hustand complained, Sentence Sermons, HORT prayers may go furthent. To love tradition is to limit truth, ‘A xood many resolutions die of heart failure. A big shingle often hides a mighty smell business. No man possesses more religion than he practises, When men say “our faults” they usually mean yours When fear gets into the pulpit falth goes out of the pows Bmiles help, but It often takes sweat and tears to keep Ife munwhiny. Some ure more anxlous to forget their sins than to have them forgiven, Many a man {s shouting his convictions to drown the voloo of conscience, You cannot enjoy riches until your happiness 1s {ndependent of them. —Chicago Pribune, Ps Seacrest, Superstition and Photography, niasiecdaranne? Ti from India: ‘The curious fate of a photograph taken in the mills dure 1 Ing the late factory commission comes from Bombay, It contained wm party of three Hindoo women wh0 quite understood the taking of a ple- ture and came with alacrity dressed in thelr best; they were taken (na group with peveral Mahometan men, Alaa! The canons of decorum were broken, When tho photograph appeared the lurking objections of caste took oonorete mhape. ‘The abameless ones were boycotted, no one would go near them or touch them, other women would aot allow them to go to the same -wolla for water, tail holders and shops refused thoke wares. Finally tho injured women patidoned "Yeu," she replied, “but you told me, before we were mgiried shat you would, mwanted.—Chicago, birds do when they mix a liberal supply of grasses ‘cive me all x mh fone ofthe agents of the mill to apply to government for the retum of the nega) tive, Thie was Gens, th: offending Splgjtdiagea ae thefiusbands 4 ahd gyas:tmmediately daxjed in pieces.

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