The evening world. Newspaper, October 14, 1907, Page 12

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ie etn ae a Perna Te ee ener eee Mamet Tremaine nea The Evening World Daily Magazine, Monday, a matotid The Day of R aN ies. ihe Day of Kest \ ¢ OT - By Maurice Ketten. Pwetiebed Deity Kxow! sunday by the Press Tublishing Company, Wes @ 2 ©) : £ Park Row, New York. zi 1} FOOER FULITEER, Pree. ¥ Fan 121 tirvet, «2. ANGUB DMLAW, Gon-Troue., Fi Woe f18 Street - CHATS up? Entered atthe Post-Ofice at New York ss Becond-Class Mall Matter. : { CANT 1 HAVE Subscription Rates to The | Canada For Roald and the Con- . \ HE Pinctan Hill and the Borghese gardens are Rome's two fashiam = able drives-and. promenades. In the afternoons, during the seasem, both are thronged with vehicles of every. description, from tumble down cab to crested landau, Pedestrians of all grades of life line the | Walks beside the drive. Up to.seveh years ago +at such times would note a stidden air of expectancy pervading the crowds. Carriages -would-draw-_to-elther side, Idlers _wotld halt and “come to attem- |Hon." ‘Along the broad thoroughfare anopen victoria would dash; scartet- -Hiveried—coachman—and-footmanon-the-hox.Two_people—a_man and a _ | Woman—oceupied: the interior of the carriage. ‘The man was short, spare, ‘xWarthy, with a swecping white, mustache. The -voman was singularly begu- ntful; golden of hair, indescribably sweet and womanly in feature and ex: - ; Queen Margherita of Italy, Of the two it .was Margherita. who. drew S a very. Inthe’ throng. Cynical, tired, dull faces would light with gee- ae, 7; y é uine adoration as they gazed on ‘her. A thousand hats were ra‘! | SUPPOSE E WHAT S-THE f LUSITANIA: _ thousand heads bent*in reverence. Her Majesty smiled graciously, bowed - | \ Mal ERSam | | SHEISA : to elther side—and the carriage was gone. ae : ( you? - F every woman were a business man “household “problems ~~ would be — “greatly simplified. The mere stat _ment of this paradox explains how futile it'is for man to attempt: to} ~ solve feminine problems:, sue The electrical exhibition at Madi-7 ‘son Square Garden. was a maryél- “Joug demonstration of the lengths to which masculine ingenuity goes | in trying to make-voman's work ; f easy. The first thing that the ofdi- | YOUR ae Rt OMEN AND You Don*r f ‘The King and: Queen of Italy took their dafly drive unguarded and openly, Margherita greeting her ardent subjects if each were a dear nary man does when he is con-! oF HER WANT ne To READ ; ‘ > } H frtend. Yet in her heart ever was the tear of fronted with the doing over again; i ; | | LOOK our of THE : ; © death. Not tor herself, but for the husband she | he_sametabor_is to-seek-for-a-machine-23-2-means-of + es Ps x : i loved. And that fear was one-day to be terribly neat | \ re < : ; —}—fustitied. -No“bungling chemist handiing deadly from the dull drudgery. es ess __In every brancl-ot work done by man labor-saving machinery does | _. most of the toil. Instead of shovelling earth by hand there are power | ‘coors and dredges. Instead of the sledge hammer there is the com-! pressed stir—drilt= Instead -nf-the-tivetérs'-gang working-by-hand-there-is ~ -a-little machine that-puts-in-rivets ten-timhes as-fast. In-weaving cloth, , 'n making ‘boots and shoes, furniture or anything else where the labor ‘of man is used the genius of inventors and applied capital do most of ~ the work ~~ — Fs “The farmer-notonger-cuts-his-grass -with-a-scythe-or-his-wheat-with| -fradi*. _He ses_a mowing-machine ora reaper and binder _ oe | explosives stands In more-ane danger to tte amt ————— than did this royal couple. At any tum “ig the road Death might spring_upon them. —ret (with smiling faces and seeming unconcern they drove gayly through the __ crowds, fearing to let any <ritic glean the idea that Italy’s sovereigns were jafrald to trust thelr lives to thelr Joyal subjecta’ care. When at last Hum- nee : : bert was shot down by the Paterson Anarchist Bresct in 1900, the attack _ ‘ ¥ kan \_ could scarcely-lave-come-as-a-eurprisé-to-his-loring cite —It_waa-the third ; {attempt of the sort. Buch area few of the joys of royalty. |. Margherita was born im 1851. She was the daughter. of the Duke of Genoa, youngor-brother to King Victor Emmanuel. Her, life was from early. childhood a series of sorrows and hu:aillations, Her father died wher she | Was but four. Soon afterward her moter (sister of the Kjng of Saxony) = so disgraced herself by a public scandal that she was banished from Italy. i +Margherita, wlio was sent to a conyent to be educated, grew up keenly alive ‘the stigma attached to her family. But far worse humi{Hations were in ir he ney ay ie name aSe = The hay Joager has taken the place of the pitchfork. ing: i inet . ine rs Ue WEEAEET ieee long. Victor-Emmanue}, alfded by Gartbaldl, Cavour and Mazzint, had freed ago! ne a : : Ou, aay ae T [italy from Austria's grip and had united its petty states into one new, wité_goes on doing the household war t sa i 4 . 9A compact nation. In so doing he had won the disapnrovaj of the Pope, who ie. rk by the me. is d = a - my. = — — excommuntcatad him — When. Victor" Hiimbert—reached—a—_martiage.—___~ Emethods that‘her mother and-grandmother employed. She makes bread! * ~ by hand and laboriously kneads the dough. She washes the clothes in a/ tub, scrubs them by hand on a s¢ashboard and runs them through a} " Ghothes-wringer, She washes dishes by hand and wipes them separately | ewitfia towel. She sweeps the floor with a broom and scrubs the kitchen | on her knees with a scrubbing-brush. ‘ — Fn soRt jable age it was hard to find a suitable wife for the young prince. Few European sovereigns cared to give their dauchtor's hand-to-a-man whose father was not only excommunicated but whose thronc was too new to be sie lee 1 ett 2s in, Marghertta. a , F 8 |. It was a love }ynatch so farcis she was concerned. With Humbert-it was more a hiatter ‘of policy, as he was violently in fove with anothor woman the Duchess of ) Lita, The Italian people from the first were devoted to thelr ttle goldén:” hafred Crown Princess. She worked among the poor, gave liberally to charity and was looked on almost as a saint by the peasantry. The old- time aristocrats who rather scorned the bluff soldier King were also drawn at length {nto giving him their-loyalty through sheer admiration of ‘Margherita. She was as accomplished as she was good and beautiful, As 2 ‘a linguist, a painter, a poet and musician she was unexcelled. Into the coarse Htalan- court-at-the Quirinal she came asa sunbeam ip a reck or dirty fog. hed Victor Emmanuel, though @ military and civic hero, was rough {n manner ‘and vulgar in his tastes. Humbert was dissipated and ungovernable. It ae has been sald of their court that it was a mix. ture between barroom, barracks and dance hall. Its -ruling spirit.was ono Rosina, an ex-circus ~= a girl._They Duchess of Litta also flaunted her’ Berroamn, Court”: —fatcinatiod there. The-place..was unduly_made ae tp Or tien Mtoubdttul character and--women- of. B | whose character there could, unfortunately, be By Roy. L: McCardell ste aoust. into sock surroundings came—and suttered—the pure girl . - wife Margherita. Even uncouth old Victor Emmanuel was at length 80 2 |touched by the dignity and courage she displayei. that he forced Humbert if lit the city Mat, Tabo d by if waler, gas stoves Md compactness, but the household work is done by hand the same as ~-tnjthe country. If it is not done by hand-itis given out. a Laundry rhachinery is confined_to the laundries and hotels, both of e_Jarr Family’s Daily Jars vy xy x a é : . ( CAN'T pronounce bis nuinc,"’ sa! Jar, ~al- eey vee!” | h men run as a business. Baking machinery, power kneaders, biscuit ° “J thougty I mippose It aa no fainsoeasel sul, they sige wesaisey ease eevee i a . |to accord her better treatment. Hersparnetstnn in the garessot forbes %, R A 5 ¢3 . “ To = ¢ y ty an th hs d rst adopted fina) won s Foll-and-pie-makers-and-the-like-are-found-in the bakeries which Will Gott, end yet, nine times out ef ten, It all endai— "Fes, I do mean you!” sald Mra Jarr. “Don't you ever speak to me in that ence modest heron Rene ana rom iud labtcvadrecotsthaliili/erhe couple were very happy together, They had one son (the present King 61 Italy), and In” 1878, on Victor Emmanvel’s death, Humbert “came to the throne, = 2 5 hertia‘e forepieht ana —dinlomacy that the ————— ‘Unhappily. Yet, with all their money, would think: (hey | tone again” could get along nicely together. At least they do not have) Voll, don't be bothering me about your foreign noblemen!” said Mr, Jarr. to_worry abeut where the money for the butcher and Laker'| ‘‘What-do I care absut them! They marry for money and, as I anid, after the fe coming from, end it te an old-saying that ‘when poverty te-them,,t-lsa wonder they hava any reapect comes In-at—the door love fies oit—of the window, “And + aa Sao anata : yet you see people with money just as happy as peuple whe asked Mra. Jarr. q haven't any, although that may be because married. th 2 14 Mir. zs qeoney-are-more talked about, and if they. get along nicely! 4 nica | fotos ee re Stearate arate {ore Alan't leat {80d improved her people's condition. On Humbert’s death she relinquished nobody totices {t at all_but if they do not the papers/ very long. We don’t leve people we abu i to. ber daughter-I-law (he title_of Quren, bit among—the—pepsiace—at— oe a sive columns and columns of space to tt with pictures," "T take It all back 11 spoke crossly," aald Mr. Jarr. “Dut it makes me sick {Arse she has never lost her immeasurable popularity, Though her hair “Now that! you've stopped for breath, may I ask what| to see all the fues thal 1s made ever thess international marriages. I'm -not|43 now white and her early physical charm is gone, she is still known at you oa talking about?” asked Mr. Jarr. interested in them.” s ; home as the most: beautiful aswell as the best loved of all Europe's Innum- “tt -you were polite enough to pay attention when I/ 9 “Am Ir’ acked Mra. Jers. “Do 1 Fai = even | ctable royal personages. : 4 . 2 you think I'd go out of my way,to even| ;EDCAk to you-you'd know. what/I-was-talking-about!!: sald Mra_Jarr. | attend. ona_-I_only-asked you _hew.the.Count-pronounced’ hia nami 2 ——“Sherlock Holmes—couldn't_make head or tall ef iL” replied Mr, Jerr Ao}-! “rym sure I don't know how=he-propaulices it.” sald Me Jat emaly—U WHAT are-you_talking-about?” —!Wall,_ that ta no excuse for you to talk Iike a brute to me.’’ sak Mrs. sd £ xy 5 Saveeing 2... ‘Why, Gladys vender) By mere 5 quickly. ‘What ts it to me whe Gladys Vanderbilt marries?” tained a few hundred of these de- : ee ee ee esiA Ast Sore ta alata 'lcuese Nw Gil Tight, Fant ea ee Tien then olt-Pee:-are:-setiefied -t:mo,'l-eald-Mr-—tare— = se ae Teena Me ‘On, don't do Liat!’ said Mr, Jere Buccs ft w all right, just @/ . +7 enly hope they'll be happy, though, don't you" asked Mrw Jarr. ‘There! S——fASY) Ways cook, dish eva v Seats = : Ja no reason why they shouldn't be_happy, they are young-and jove each other, | as washers which any one can run. al! thought the Olchesw of Mariborourn would be ho nappy,” anid Mre—sng iva very romantic, you_can't denythat.” ieee = aoe ane = 3 y uf wat Jarf eentimentally. “It looked lke a- perfect’ match. He had the title and: sno oy os ” G ¥ o> floor swe fi * 1 deny nothing,’ said Mr. Jarr, “Lat the wedding-bella ring ou floo epers and scrubbers and had the money, and thay were both young and good-looking, and his-name was|—. “nut you needit be eo indifferent.’ anid Mra. Jarr. -“Our daughter many ottier little contrivances whica jensy to pronounce, bec LLG RTA knows there are a lot of hatels called,the | marry a ttle when she growa up, who know 5 2 us panes : 3 : feat : TMariborough, one In New York and one at Atlantic Clty. And, then, there was|” savoli. In co dow " 2 need only connection with an elec- Ramesh eeleown:tovrerenalstact ong tric-light socket to set them going. ~ - In the hotels and aparinient-— own and conduct, not in the housewife’s kitchen. Women d not take to labo: i is many and Austria. In y's development ys al —By- Nixola Greeley-Smith._ i ,° MAN-in Indianapolis has wer to the charge oF haying his affections allenated by his mother-in-law. ‘This is not the frst sign that the strongest antipathy - vn the world, that which haw too frequentiy exited between “4 man and his wife's mether, is growing less, ‘Tho mother- in-law joke {a vanishing from tie comic papers, and we 6 uo longer hear so much of the me in-law wrangle ir dower," zai Mr. Jarr, [no-doutt about-his title and—his manding—but looked how it turned out!" | "Oh, whattethe difference?” ‘auld Mr. Jarr ungracicusty. ‘Those, foreigners a Ore bare so toadied after in thls country, that it Is no wondw they Haye nothing but 2 eeealh i 25 : |. ——A Sweet Singer of Eighty-Six. contempt {or the rich Americana they mect. If one of them marries an American houses whi ‘ girl her whole famuy—mothers, brothers, alstere—regaru hii with such awo and| . the ‘tribulations of our friends. her that long-abused = “houses which men conduct many of- deference that he can't help but balfove all thelr money doesn’t pay him to: the) OD SAN women of oehty-ols years canleins) and lt ia-remarkable, (ndeod-: aiail Uatis| pou elke Gascre Ua lSEA NCO IRIS Leaner eae these “devices are -already instatted: vacrifice-he-is-making Jn marrying among puch-stot of bounders-and. sycophants, FOr ORE eee COLO RE LAIR eye) Oe nile’ es (ou te pened ot priaaners) “ander her dominion. Which ts it?_ 1 am inclned: to believe. -Of the ‘hundreds of wometr who (i TA = I éon't blame them, ‘Thy think more of tie Ue than they do of their money. | yay) and can 'b-wole ewectly and fecllNC ent ranceting iz. Bangor Aaiitive fuubiigation’ of maniac ban 2 = sa sane Sr Why i Wee printed tnx thecpaperaithat one:Engiish Jord held up-the ceremony Jo And sane A solo emeetly and feclingly and” with vialble effebt on the For though selected by inscrutable mtto the Electrical Show the majority-are interested in seeing how} til! He got his money first from the bride's tath ‘ Sea : = ms : 5 Zac ponerse ra pecan pfowarfare, .man.isiodubliakiy-tep bor can be saved and hoisehala ‘werk t INE, y Gladys Vanderbilt ta a sweet gir @ Mrs. Jarr; “and they_say is ot { TE SAN EC AIDE HOsenokd— work —made-casyoand attractive; But this is 8 Tove tinh, DUT NOM wT parE Hie Hate THEE WAT aa ee ee ee as Q how many of them will avail tiemsélves of these conveniences? fgtri-must marry a foreign nobleman‘why doesn't ate marry an English one?” A Straw Clock a = the man in all history that I most thoroughly understand and sympathize wee tions now being hoki in Berlin. A shoemaker named Wagner, living ints the Hebrew Samson. I don't mean that I admire him moat, but that on} ' yi faal performance, of pulling the pillars: of the house -down upon himvelf-and the | bride around.’ ; made entirely of straw, The wheels, pointers, cane and every detail are ex-| Philistines, the willingness to destroy ‘himself that his enemies might also | “That ts only one form of brutality,'’ sald Mrs. Jarr, significantly. “And it | clustyely of straw. Wagner has taken fftteen years to construct this etrange piece periah essere to me the most feminine thing, and therefore the most understand- | 4an't much worse than talking at @ woman like a brute. And that's what Amari- of mechanism. It keeps perfect time, a Berlin report says. [Pere by women that ever @ great man wrought. | The “Third Degree.” ‘The fourth half what is left and On the Edge of Commuterland £2 “£2 By J. K. Bryans : by that sign she conquers in the domestic row. More particularly If, as in the ffe the Editor of The Wrening World: apple. and the Atth halt what ts still | In labor-saving devices shcul ems be soughi. Letters from the People. u rit “An, -don't bother me about_{t!" said Mr, Jarr, who wasn't feeling {n a very N EXTRAORDINARY addition has been mad hth id the solution of many household prob-| xocd humor, -"It_maxex ma sick! They want the title and they get It and the! A ede tothe exhibition of inven- : : \torelgner wants mondcy, and if he domt get ithe generally kicks dis fulr young Btrasburg, sent In a clock of the Krandfather shape, nearly six feet nigh, |case of the mother-in-law, she brings the experience of a battle-scarred vetfran jto the fray. ‘ § ° ‘genttimentally considered, x man's mother-in-law should be numbered emeng hie dearest possessidns, For waa she not the author of the Hfe which {s the i . crown and glory of his own? A i Bur too often It ts dimcult for him to rectnctle the actual mother-in-law n Who can explain the theory on which | (iit AMG one-half of an apple. Divide ——the Amer tenn pottca Juatity ttreAppi| Hew ee he there won't he any Jost }, iy les did Th. t 7} oR ENS —— - ~ cu eee 4 ction of the “third derreet’ Do not | start before Palvder thentay® at the as tet ra Sg SE - baa Kis Wits and-opanty anu the English principies (and I belleve| | od ye 5 who scolds his) servants, brow ns De and UNpeOTS Bint also the French) of cautl: : ew Bright it’ g d y ; With the {deal of whut the mother of hia wife should be, | saiec atiliie fiimpsora bie arrsat ina Wants to one aie! : ‘The trouble lies in the apparently incurable inability of parents ¢o @&fferen- “anythine he may say will be used | Te the Kéltor of The Evening worg: tlate between ndult children and toddlers of thiee ant four, In the sverage Seainst him’ and advising hls keeping.| A correnpondent asks: jmother’s eyes her daughter {a not grown up merely because she marries, On Ment apoly equally toynrisoners arrest- | Stop growing?” Here Is the contrary she focla that a new toddler with a more imperative need for ef in this country? Axain, is not the | C##%: Iam a boy fifteen y | guidance hes been added to her family.’ It our parents would only let us grew _& Principle in existence here that a man |40 Pot smoke and £0 to bed early. sti} tup.much trouble might'be ayolded and many other problems besides that of the . fe-not-mutity -untit he has been tried {1am only 4 fect B inches tn height, oul mother-Indaw successfully solved. and proved rullty, and that the onus Can I increase my helght? Lp. D. SS e ©f proof Hes with the courts? How ‘s| Join some good gymnaal Day : i Bent eae roriminale wheateeroateraat tnatanice) nnd. the Instron: | lence and the Mound Builders, ulldased, threatened and v | YOu exercises eapectali ne! ea rebe RSINFE er Miriener ee caenteaen S| aikned to incredae the stature, nn) 4° | FTIR spending three months travelling in Manitobe and Saskatchewan prost confess In search, of traces of the prehistoric mound bullders, Prot. Henry Proatration « confess A Montgomery, of the University of Toronto, has decided that this tive force: with half |mystecigua race inhablted the continent as far north as 10 miles above the i {nvernational boundary line. Mr, Montgomery, .who has devoted twenty-five — years to'the study of, mound bullders and clift dwellers, says :he belfeves the “How can 1| ® different ears of aga; ere | on is wrung from UNBERIY(Giela, mpatent detoo- | To the Editor of The Bvening World: int of the | Aw A teacher who has had ten ypary! 1d thery he experience, I dinagreo with Goshen Beotland Yatde mon. w necessity to wring confessions trom the sioner Jonas when h M walliy or suspected tp Uhl auto date Ate NO UNMAY. weboolgirla, Tees, the [Yoana bullders were related te the ollf dwellers ot New Mexice’ and Arisone atylo? * ©. Tay | taugat girls, and to my mina there e and to the Azteca of Mexico, aya ial ax many unruly girla aa boys, An Apple Problem, | TEACHER, the, Milter of The Evening World: : Insomnia, : ~ Muzzling China’s Press. : apes Here's A brain twister on dividing - i Ex ol iT pen a fete om Sane as: |oe ae asa oT Brana meng oe JN “cere ae Miter Pt nd Sonne, Dm ining Ine wo : by ol ita al lons. The following « itted SI wili give the first friend one-half of| how to break uj ‘ | ram, : i ip sleeplessness ‘S ¥ $ earth ue ee he apples I have now and four apples. been troubled with insomnia Tal igahete of Waser nike oy sea MUL rine ea lot SIGH eae ek sas pew cleleel i rnsactroul poe eect a - = ae ore (Mbaieocond triend half the applop L haye | #!x months, I and probably many ot cotenauy act of city chaps came out | them mew clothes! Wh 4 “Gosh! Whi terd . p new clothes! en you get 4 three apples, Thin’ a hal | Would be plewsea to hear trom CAMs | yesterday an’ I sold ‘om my back| ther tks ‘it take orkers Fr ea aig Mr ctr oo sre fo bang iat” "YS Boake 7 se i ther matter? Is the

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