The evening world. Newspaper, October 24, 1907, Page 16

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World Daily Magazine, Thursday, ‘Dally Rxcepi Bunday by the Press Publishing Cempany, Noe bi is Park Row, New York. (POMPE FULSTHER, Prep. 1 Frei 1H huvet, T,ANGTB MAW, Boa Trees. 1) Wert SMutered at the Post-Office at Now Yerk a3 Seoond-Class Nali Mf jon Rates to The Canada For Fnglond and the Con- World for the A } States, —- £8 erat, sea. NO- 16,865. i sera} NEW feature of bank runs ts their feminine element. In the line*al the Knickerbocker Trust Company, —._-on_the® corner_of Fifth _ cn) vase, sam Sze i fA FF Ga) Ss S across from the W rf, one-thi _—— were women. TH athelsdoa : i +. Almost, all ‘the banks and. trust Beers ° companies which have offices in the yésidential -sections—make — special: ‘—provision for women depositors, Iz ~ many downtown banks there are-* ae women's ‘rooms, with separate tell- attend to them and thelr accounts. Some of the bahtking offices The Sacred Elephant. By Maurice Ketten. me ght district have even more tixurious accommodations tort © women customers than the big millinery and dressmaking establishments. | Maids are in attendance. There are parlors with writing tables, station- ary, lounges, comfortable chalrs, telephone and. messenger calls and all- Evidently the women of New York must have a large amount of money of their own to make it profitable to cater so expensively to their’ — banking special_bank hooks and check books are provided for! qwomen, ‘with the paper and ink in shades to- match: the-requirements of their taste. : ~The scores of women stepping from automobiles and cabs to go into he: Knickerbocker Trust is proof that many women in that station of life fave separate banking accounts of their own to which their husbands | the wiittes: MW RECEIVING | H ~ SS aN WW {RE im . ; But the officers of these banks seem to fall to make provision in a Financial way for the great difference between womten's and business _~ men's accounts. A business man Is tied up to his bank. If he with- rawshis deposits the bank will stop his line of discounts, _If he lets ‘balance drop his credit correspondingly drops. If he takes part in.a run aaa penal ecal that again: ijn: bi future arpieations for favors --EC- PALL a MALY, i¢ ai The credits on women's accounts come more from deposits than By poal: Mccarce! . discounts. They. put In money or checks, not notes. They rarely have _#ny accommodation to ask. The bank hasno hold on them. Women's accounts differ from business men’s accounts in the radical; Tespect of their not being reciprocative. | Women’s accomts are so profitable to a bank because they bei In cash. Where a business man deposits notes for discount to hic cred | Mrs. ce st_compantes.t O-you think any more banks or trust companies clothes when they marry, be will close up? Jar, It's pretty serious, 1 tell you.’ “Who-was smiling?" isn't it best to put a c Tarver" y HONEY TH iste OTA Danks or Hee tse else Kerrey —all--tale " See Taha fi [white she'd be wenring the asme'one she'd worn Ap many times before. Bath Nr, CA: PUBL NOTES — _ CARRYING WATER To THE ELePH ANT,- Bank Flurries-Don't Ruffle~ to get any more clothes after they marr Dear mel! isn't it tercible!"! sald that {t's anything to smile about!’ said asked Mrs. Jarr, “And {¢,I was, matter? Hesides, I her money. ight face on the be adds-to-the- bank's “liabilities withiout adding to Its legal reserve, A air __._ woman depositing $1 upplies t simen’s depo our busi. | } When we came awty, otot_of-aira just because they have ‘A feminine | #F her. vomen are more emotional than men, with less business ¢: pe ¢ and more prone to follow one another's example. mm on a bank-displays the same : mental_sienis-as-a-feminine fim on a bargain counter. This applies to the majority of *fwomen's accounts. . The minority. are of the old style trust accounts where a widow deposits her life in— Surance or the other proceeds of her husband’s estate in order to secure trust company interest and io he assured of 2 safe income. The amount of, such a deposit in the i savings bank {s limited to $3,000. In’a trust company there is no limit hersfore. widows with estates. larrer in-anzaant than-the s: eestriction have gone to {nist compani On stich as thesé fis Clasi heavily. eee tters ——_—_. Le sui hard umes, = Jerr. Inews eo good In dressmaking, trig buithe mowt expensive 5 mmed with fini: to get a dress fox aid Mr. Jarr with a they_are Jarr testily married, s why I suy*it's_n k = from the People. Drdokiyn Women's Bene fa of neu hn ts ot that» ® promin clearly sho! perio ray Make ii fe the Mattor af The Nvening Wi: ; In trenalt’cn the BR. T, {t hay] often occurred to me that there is a! eal of diferense inthe m | which different individuals of the ¢ le sAX accept the roffered ae. { muat bo conceded epted with wane how companied by a. smile und a you,’ the act appears more wort tho reint o of the fellow oO it. But a self-impor! courts’ a who would © ome] 00d game js able to stand | somely powita herself | Stapleton, ca apd. an plain I led to ttt it th make @ fellow kick himse! vely and resslva ut (ho tt Nis seat Mm future nines 1 ‘entails fair damee) who mir + Clate. politeness, PR: a fan dball. Masidbea ‘To"the Ealtor of ‘The We tie Betior of The Evening Worst | Klodiy + Handbell is a frat-class game. Vor!to be Pres! Kteanislilp Weeords r Well S| Ta ine fate ¢ i rer that Tryiurt your aides laughing,” aast-Mr. Jarr. | women in the stores you wouldn't any te the real ls «0 very_expensiy all genuine Ince this in this. world to t You wouldn't take tt so cheerfully, eald] OT, SEUNG TO f with vou. You've had pretty good clothes, haven't you?’ cause {t's a question whether they'll ever be able "Oh, they are sjire of what poor old papa can do for them, but they are willing to take chances with the husband, jus j “They take chances, all right, in most cases," replied Mrs. Jarr, that's why { can't fee) as sorry as you think I should for Mr: n Bhe's-never known how it—feeis—to not be-aile—to_go_anywhero jher—women_ate’d..meet would have nuw dresses they get the husband?’ Btryver losing ‘jthe post, the sculptor, the man n that! 3, HETTY GREEN Geclared some time ago that tha [VD isternationss marriage le a criine, If abe be right the crim2 is one. which, as Sir Peter Tease abs > matrimony, carries the)punishment along with @ ~~ Whe persistence with which the American giet ef weal takes (mio herself @ title, in the face of the disaster waa 40 frequently attends’ such arrarigements, ie amasiag. Personally, 1 would rater take @ chance en the poorest, Meanest specimen. of Atietican manhood han on emg foreign tenant of a title that ever lived. —Husbanda are valuabd{e not ao _much/tor what they (9 es for what they may be made, and Americans supply the oat. rawoinaterial, They ars malleadJo. | hav an American man who.-was not visibly benefited by gotting-. Ter ieatried, . even ‘though: ; the murtinge, < proved uthasey én i( in nweetiress and. tenderness that wears away the rough edges sigr'a-character, sometimes {t'lé harah Giscipline. But whatever it mag :- it improves him, : at ee ; | An American woman expects to be the oompinion and. triend of her husband. {Only tn exceptional cases. tw she his. bank socount. In concluding « titled marriage. - the te-neariy-aiwe, encount amd-seldom the friend or campanian The two most spectactlar International marriages ‘of recont times, those of Aina Gould and Consuelé Vanderbilt, ended‘in Cteagter after jeirs of. smouldering discontent, . : s Sees ‘The American eririt tein evers phase ‘a revolt:againet the Europren spirit. Gtrin~who--helve—onee—breathed—it—into—thetr—eoule_stific and amother in. the | European domestic atmosphore. The mselowt Amorican wife is an ebsolute monarch compared with her European prototyps Bhe expects fair treatment from the man she marries, and the whole welgtit of American opinion ineures !t to her, even {f she personally 1s recreaht. There {s no such silent force behin@ her when she marries a foreigner nnd lives {n.a forelgn land. She must eccept the minor posttion of the foreign xifu and suffer the dictation of his family and the [contenptnpus patronage of tte friends, She haw soté -her-American “birthright for a mess of pottage—for the crest pn the plate;-and—the-pottage; when. sh ‘comes-to tate i, 1s so-old-and has been so badiy kept tt has weeviis in it. Altoxe*her, tha international marriage may not be a ctime, an Hetty Greeat than@ crime-dt's 9 blucter, sO} Count Maurice ” ~~” De Perigny Writes for The Evening Wor Id cn Man's Love and His Ideals. IRE -EMILY-GU-RERT,the "Botleau Girt**ané- Philip Botlean were quiet-. ly married on Oct. § at the Little Church Around the Corner. The in- tereating fact, is that the French-American painter became enamored of the typetrested by himeeif, from the model of moet of his studies, and he confeased thet frera the moment he met Miss Gilbert he knew that hers waa All artista dream —f-and-mei-atier-an hier! | that means everything to them—beauty, awestnens, light, thought, | 80 along looking for a aupreme type of womanhood for —thelr_ pletures, without renlizing that tt s the hunzar and ‘neglisg of thelr hearte—net_the fanciful creations of brush nnd brain—they are trjlng to realize upon. Thia j {deal has Improved the world's test verse, the world's best melody in sound, jon canvas or In stone. She ‘s the perpetual and cheering dream of the artist, lence—indeed, of x!! men. Enduring master- — [pleces tell of her power and brief tragedice writ on tombstones point to her mocking eluslvences, Happy—twice happy—Mr. Bolleau to have captured his {deal and—safely caged her. That is what we are all trying to do—even the riost practical an@ sordm of us, We ars conatant{y sweeping the frmamegt for the one glittering 7 Siar_uup_there_thst belongs_to —iia,-and—when—we find it how—quickiy and-how, | woh out with our marnet.to grab St. Lucky se when we get our shisertenabeast dream t it thing mething to cherish Instingly? BomethIng that makes us, who ere still walting for ours, wender that we have to wait and 2 | lke this ‘Word, “dea” It means #o much, It means everything, esprciaillr } when It finds n pli in the heart. It Is the-sum of all happiness—when it tines true—-the sum_of all Auman hope, All the poetry and beauty of life spring from and enwreath {. How much aweeter and more wholesome than the wort | Vafinity’—n pariah sort of term—which, in epite of Goethe and Pinne} Earle ras hate and dest! == “And that's all the ut the things I needed, suppose we Fi nD Teh HaVS INS Dark oy . an E-saté-teoMrs.Rangie ee leaking RE Tt what people get for putting on & litte money!" “And yet J felt so sorry | ene eTe tet “Whore ts It?! asked Mr. Jarr. “You never mind, but its say hink there | chamots bag around my nec! “Mme. Flanagan tells me th 0 never) “¥du'fd bette and. that _wemen aren't satisfied with any- , too. Bhe says that you never eee a more. In fact, with the exception of people will be thin in Une and got thinking they might ‘And aren't they r ng ir money well, hi?” year, Am! everything What linings am findings cos snver, ‘it doesn't matter how hard times not stinted! —= W¥p lke that!’ sald Mre: ne anything but ‘int mysett ince I was © wonder girls try to Ket a goo" outnt of (“THis Cove for Music “Macpay Yorsit?! asked pay, even i¢-he !a one‘y husba "Somebody took twenty dolla Wasn't tt your” "Yes," said 3 RK VCS ———— PLAYIN YOU LIME p=—f-OHt J JUST rather JES « Gite L Pie (Ey hanks 1 got," sald Mpa, Jarr “Rupps 2 agar. = had acraped and aaved and put the ‘Gb —t-taven't spent it all," sald Mra. J: d better off than I am,” wald Mr, Jar out of the banks. spend St az to lose dt askol Mrs. Jarr i “Maybe,” replied Mr, Jerr, “As~you have sa—m to-rMglit to the theatre and then buy Us a good dinner : s “Don't you. think the gentleman should | the biggest ‘Ehat's the money I’m-saving to Nebraska in as Tertitories anf th sald Mr, Jarno - arr with a knowing look. “I have — = x {ing {n—the! * out of my pocket," sald Mr. Jarr, By_F. M_ ¥ cox ta iu) NOTE:-TRIGS FILAYING BROUGHT DOWN mth! 5 emer epee ere 4 — TRNSTUR Jas ELERY TT }TO LE PIANO PLAY 2E TEVA, 1 LE gos DOOR Lint sald Mrs. Jarr, “I'm wearing {t in « “"pat I muppose theta tot-of jt ‘¢ you are thinking, and especially those that stood} partner, you know. thoy'll be out spending it, take! us out “Own up. puy-something with.””| sot Berkley {oq country, let the people have it or not, just as they cvanted, { ~ Billy Brown, the Springfeld, {llinols, druggist, who does the talk- . Lincaln‘? series which Ida MC. Tarbell.ts.running-in the— American Magazine, ‘You ain't no, kee how that’ bill stirred up Mr Lincoln. jUN never forgit how he took tts passin’. ‘Twas long Seek In the spring of thes ‘em was settin’ in here tellin’ stories, and Mr, Lincotn was right ‘die “of “one when in bounced Billy Herndon—he was Lincoin’s la | Hia eyes was biazin’ and he calls out, “They've done-t, toys, They've done It, They've upset-the Missour! Compromise. The Kansaes Nobraske. bill te ‘ at epee “For a minhite everybody was atill ax death—everybody but me. ‘Hoorah!s T callz out, ‘you can bet on Little Dug every time,’ for I” was a Democras na,barrin’ George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, I thought Dougtas wae man God ever made. Didn't know no more what that bill meang jthan that old tomcat in the window, pas {. “Tfoorah! I says, and then I-beppennd to look-at Mr, Lincoln, — “He_was all in a-henp, his head dropped. down. on_hia breast, and there he and hever spoke,and then after a long time be got up and went out, Never |Anished that story, never said ‘Good-by, boys,’ like ho always <td, never took notice ot ce_gray and storn, and his eyas-not seein’ Ce pare ae Pointed Paragraphs. “ ATER Is music when --tounten= liye rg ba [eee er) . * the advance agents of hard = Seta Tear iim oe ieee Usually it {x the green youth who paints the town red. * ° s . * os Moat of us expect a lot of things we have no reason to expect. * * Mustard plasters also come under the head of drawing materials. * 8 Pantaioons of a justice can hardly be termed broaches of the, peace. * *. * e times. Pawnbrok U ‘A man has no right to stone his wife, but he may rock his baby, Pen eine ere eer 9 ‘Astronomers and theatrical managers are always looking out for new. stars.—Chicago Nowr. : 2 yen Jail-Grait Floturished. (Cologne, German: a well-dressed priso: beret with attentiona from tho warders, engor for hls patronage. ‘Thelr object was to aot ca inlddleren betwoen him and his relatives, They would convey letters, money ‘and food, and for theso services thoy recelved their reward from the relatives er the prisoners, They placed fond and letters In thetr boots or under the mate tress, but it was in.money matters that they developed those practices whloh finally got them into trouble, The money given to them: for the prisoners fouid ita way not to those for whom it wes intended, but into the warders’ pockets, One poor girl, whose lover waa In juil, they swindled out of her last penny, ‘These jailer were in the hablt of having jollifications with the prisoners..One warder ‘wan so friendiy with a prisoner thit he used to gocupy hia cell at night ead rend the prinoner out to mount guard drosscd in warder’s Uniform, SEIS UaR eer gabe NNT TE Science’s Odd Feat. of flow pf an artesinn ‘well a simry- plan 1s to lower fiuld te a depth of, say, 600 feet, and then electricully explode @ cap to|burst the bottle, ‘The time required for the fluid to ap- pear at the aurfacu gives an accurate gauge as te the velocity of flow, Neca d

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