The evening world. Newspaper, May 19, 1908, Page 12

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Daily Magazine, Tuesday, | a Oh, Pisi=? ish! By Maurice Ke t:n. 53 to B Publishing Company, Nos. th Street. | NO. 17,073, } i CCORDING to a Brooklyn clergy: | Women & WARWICK = man $80,000 was offered to ¢ IN | Pee Bete Senator for a vote against the anti- |CONEY = 77 Are aoe race track gambling bill, This isthe } LAND STUMPING statement made by Rev. Dr. James O. Wilson at a meeting of the Sun => St day School Union. He declined to HS vee’? give the name of the Senator or of “ | his original informant, but said that he talked with the Senator over the | telephone and received a verification | Al a of the rumor. ! i} WA Possibly this statement refers to Sy the same Senator with im Republican Chairman Woodruff and Sen- , REIS ator Agnew had conversations on this same subject. This Senator did hay to be put in the public attitude of making an accusation against Rees @ > i a bribe offerer where it would be simply one man’s word against another, D y j and contented himself with ee he titular head of fegmne organ- RN TOONS CORE Tae. =a a ization and the Senator in charge of the bill. | é The attempt to influence him was unsuccessful, as he voted “aye.” ry ce aN >| The amount mentioned in the conversations with Mr. Woodruff and — Senator Agnew is also considerably less than $80,000. The lobby methods used to defeat the race track bill at the regular Session were novel to Albany. Arrangements having been made through McCarren and Grady for seventeen Democratic votes, a Washington lobbyist of high social repute, who has represented successfully certain sugar interests for many years, appeared to look after the securing of the necessary Republican votes. de hired a house and installed several women well known in Washington. It was at this house where a certain Senator met some of these women, played poker and overslept. Y\** NEw incre eT AZ aaa The hope had been to keep him from voting “aye. In several] | ANO THE ey 3 NOREEN | for cases the atiempt failed. In the case of others the efforts to keep them SADE GAB! Koller Ee from voting “aye” were more successful. Very definite rumors as to the inducements used have spread in circulation from Albany to New York and throughout the State. One Senator is said to have received a loan of $3,200, and an additional loan of $1,800, and that further considerations were shown to his political boss. The vote of one Senator who voted “aye,” although his name ap- “We Can’t Help Getting Old, but We Can Help Getting Fat;” That’s What Mrs. Jarr Says, and It Concerns More Than Her. rs 4 ; against {t?" asked Mr. Jarr. Oh, not @ rea! camel!” said Mrs. Jarr. “But | peared inthe earlier negative proph- t Yea Beery lip fy eaaEnMn we Clean Giese een ecies, is explained on the ground By Roy L. McCardell. : ‘man when she's fat.|maching that Just shakes the fat off you vie . x OW well you're look-| And 1 di isn't the) ‘the camel.’ that his political boss, one of the “H ing!" sald Mrs. Kit-) most serious at's wha! hy don't you try ity" asked Mr. Jarr ious in the State, de- tin gushing the wor hank you kindly I'm not as stout as al most notori iS . Pes “Posiuvely, my Mrs, J ought they were to fight for civic reform that.” said Mrs. Jarr, “and I'm sure I'd get sic manded a price so high as to ve gained for women, aga’ the allot for w Mrs yver reducea herself by wearing a rubber ast saw you! Ag established in the ar suit." startling. This political boss thought ear aan ee : no, I haven't,’ 4n the army, to help tie) os st have looked like a deep sea diver,” said that Senator Cassidy was going to Mrs quickly I out the delays of investigation, not] Mr. Jarr. vote “aye,” and that the vote of his much legs I did a x without Investigation and then to) "Oh, you can't notice you Wear them under: ago!” make them self-supporting, and so| neath your golf cogs a all day tn would be imperatively Senator Did yor Jarr. the si said Mrs. Ja d me thet needed. Mrs. Jarr they say they are for, but unofficially! she would be so weak that she'd have to rest for ; fs ay tlonate #® and mutual { meeting places for women to dts-| hours afterward, and that, of course, made her stout Relying on this supposition he insistent demands that lies and ways of retaining their fig-| again.” stood out for such terms that when call on the er, “Did youy ure ed Mrs. Jarr. “\Vhy not get fat comfortably?” asked Mr. Jarr. . 7 hear w m they go to work? A Mttle hard work You men don't understand,"’ sadd Mra. Jarr, “but Senator Cassidy's vote was assured Sher etal ouiewece lock! wn flan,” asked Mr. Jerr | bve heen told that there {8 a new heed medicine that negotiations with him were dropped. It is reported that these negotia-] a»o was said Mrs, Jarr. “Tf hard work a 1 thin. T don't believe in those anti-fat ne used one and tt bits- aid be as thin as a rail.” uu @ald you were thinner than you|t tions have been reopened on the contingency of Senator Cassidy or some ed her terribl. other Republican Senator who voted “no” changing to “aye” through nh. The were last year?” sald Mr. Jarr guess dieting and exercise are the only sura “ Hers ‘ A . and, posi- T said that to Mrs. Kittingly, [ wouldn't give her|toings.’ sald Mr. Jarr. the pressure of his constituents. — : : seh Wine er double| the satisfaction of Knowing I was getting any stouter.| “I presumo so," sald Mrs. Jarr, “only after you The passage or the defeat of the anti-race track gambling bill is of » always get a double chin} © w. | fish L knew how to get thin; that is,| nave dieted and exercised you are so hungry that lees faving to go on any of those horrid dlets or] 3 at so much and put right back the fat you | ne up those exhausting exercises like riding the] or taken off. You men have it easy know it." “Do you t Mr. Jarr was drawn into the vortex of a Mg store and refused to believe he was happy, thougn and don’t as mean to] tale Jess public consequence than the truth or the falsity of the many stories concerning certain State Senators. Letters from the People. adays one hears of “girls eight or more. I'd 1? repcated Mr Jarr. ut ladies are rushing to Coney gn he wasn't fighting against fat Mr. Showemhow’s Trip to Coney Island -- By F.G. Long \ LerS Go 7 CONEY? I'L) SHow You How TO GET It) THERE EHps FOR O7 (HERE COMES “C MY CAR Now- Ir Fettled. Renders, in v age forms the boundary “girl” and “woman subject to mat age de come an “old A Poet To the Eater Tm looking for the man who b those Merry t ten-foot ld an't hink of a Mavbe » ated to nouwest eyesore in 6 FAitor of My father is was born in this country. Ar eligible to become a President United States? NR Chivairs, he nk as much y for strengtt erals had not Tr the Htc oft mar " ema J eeated during rush how ree 1: ne as a free and 1 wever, a y sea owerfil and pros } @ lady whom iy int tells nie fe | peroue aimple. knelt not a business woma n the o snuw at Valle ‘ ayed f hand !f a pretty typ or a come Fr. W } : ‘ G12 Feet t i A woman tak p ' The § urd H herse!¢ hold @ mans posit 1 Winat ts the heigt: the Binger @ther men instinctively fee! that she Building? a —E | Ginn vos. _— SOOHIOVS Nixola Greeley-Smith Forgiveness in Love. YOUNG woman has writ mea letter {n which she A dei Ss she ig utterly heartbroken at the discovery that ihe man to w 1) She js engaged and with whony 2 hax a past. The man, she say@, t only atter sie had learned of {t from and had taxed im wth it. she will never give me up,’ she writes her make or mar his future. that I will do anything h hir if it ia ssible for him to become a true, honest, real man again, how bright this world will seem! T want to do all in my power to help him, even though I can never marry him. I want to do what is best for us both, One minute I feel that I ought to stick to him, next T almost feel repulsion toward him. Please tell jeshe is very ni Admitted this another so ‘He ier “and [ love him so in this world to help what to do There are ldly ons and many them who will nen among at th lowever, It presents a serious problem, and one most disc © another per Every woma swer it for herself at one time ther. “Woman's of forgiveness,” And until the American y generally true. ver, to-day than at any time in the world’s realizing more and more that a spineless forgiy offense than the original crime to which It was ex! le for the writer of the letter from which I ife is merely I have forgotten. 1g AXIOM Was ve Tt is less true, an women we are [constitute a wo | T cannot ae said a F woman was evolved this dishea What she showd do. Men have created certain artificial standards of right for women. ‘They have talso certan ¢ v themselves. The young man who iiv A 1s deviated as much ltrom orain tandards as age with a past tt tenets of t sex. She cannot under- apprec undern levity and ridicule w the would-be of reforming the culprit ts tter to marry a man with man’s choice les 4 than in t t for his chol its before fh n, while Alfred, the concerning the possibil! It is ¢ @ of similar lurid col er more cot t family. C her. Reginald, has also sett! So far as her ingut concerned, it {8 only fatr Ja past than one between the twe case of the boys of the V of a wife, ts living happily led many sensational columns, model boy who made, according to family standards, a model marriage, has been sued for divorce Tf the young woman wil have this to consider. problem again and again. 1 toleration, and {t is a queston whet to reassure her. fut . and @ Ww ner flance, she } meet the same fe will teach her now with & whose case I am consfdering di he expects ever to marry e and experienc worth while to mately man she lov { course the same condition n ®& person she merely con ent to marty -+2—_____— Refiections of a Bachelor Girl. By Helen Rowland. SOULMATE t# the sai his feelings when It ig the wife, not the Lord, of a man; Providence put give the finishing touches to Adam 1 which a man easee 6 become an irritant. who makes a good Eve the @ with wife 4 for « Mttle vaca uke makes a man apprectate rs you to an old shoe like trying a new from a wife ts Idea at ily trunk is to wrap ttles ay ly in his wife's best and t in securely between © flatirone and her Paste ELEN ROWLAND The woman who allows her husband to go to Parte sone on @ business trip has more faith than even the ‘ and sympathy—all rotted into one, and uff that dreams are made of he must have ynversation ts Mkely to end two Jn any othe © of mind. { man's mendacity —__+4-—_—— on Two Legs. By Holmen Day. years the moat popula woodsman's Dank hy 1 two lege,” snys Major Holmes Day, author of Ul he was over seventy sold. Uncle Nate ym the Bangor and Piseataquis Railroad, run- and Moosehead Lake. Witn him rode tne wouay nemseives and made a racket on his train and no man ever raised his hand ageinec e out of the Woods with thetr pay most of » city folks would get ail thee on as they would get aboard tne a and driving cre he used to cuff them nto subm Uncle Nate. When the men can them realized from titer experience money away from them in a few days, As train they would begin to strip ten-doliar bills off thelr rolls and hand the money to Uncle Nate to 's for them—banking {t on call. hey never forgot, nor did he; and in all the years thero was never a dispute between Conductor Swam and any of his depositors, When they came back on his train they were sure of enough money for their fare and their tobacco at the jake outfitting Store, They wouldn't have known very well what to do with more." + The Stage Struck Girl Is O. K. By Margaret Anglin. j 'T 1s my belief that no Sincere-minded girl need be ashamed cof being stage struck—a word that ts 30 often used in a contemptuous and pity- Mi ing tone Any strong enthustasm tn any endea usually predicts success in that particular Ine, It is the girl who has the very woret case of stage mania who wins the highest thespian laurela and honors, The enthusiasm that sent Sarah Hernhardt when a little girl to spouting poetry on the convent wall is the Same great spirit that has kept her toiling day and night, year after year, to become the greatest actress in the world, ‘The stage does not want the silly, empty-headed young woman who fancies that she can float about Ike a bird of pamdise in a glittering bohemia The stage does want the amtytious, energette, high-minded woma willing and happy to devote days of hard sty months and years of disappointment, if necessary f being en- courage’ in her aspiration and I feel sure that there Is no greater opportunity for the right sort of studous, fine, splendid girl than the stage offens I do not say that {t is the most ennobling work for a woman. There are self-sacrificing acts In Ife higher even than the following of an art, but I do belleve that the right girl will find the stage as clean and compensating a field for a life career as any other that can be opened to her that who te will bear 2 | The ‘‘Fudge’”’ Idiotorial. If you cannot run an automo- bile roll a hoop! It Is better to DO something even ff you DO nothing. We have no patlence A Word of Encouragement 1908, by the Planet Pun, Co.) with people who Think nothing is accomp'ished unless THEY DO it. One can be very busy, Though Idle, and still PRESERVE Their strength. Mr. Artemus * Ward used to say that he could be IDLE for six months and at the end of the period be FRESH ENOUGH to go on for ANOTHER SIX months. Anybody can do This Life ts mainly a STATE of MIND. You cannot KICK a DOG unless the mind acts first, although the kicking is done with the FOOT. Our mind Is usually in a State. Part of the time it Is In The State of New Jersey. New Jersey is a fine State to be in when the Mosquitoes are aslvop. , (Capyrot & A, ao > A se sere a ~ aE EEen aoe Se

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