The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1908, Page 18

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he Evening World Daily Magazine, 3 | Horsemanship. —_ : , | $ ee Published Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 53 to P Row, New York By Maurice Ketten. The Presidents By Albert Payson Terhune For England and the Continent and All Countries in the Internatio Posta! Union iption Rates to The Even.og World for the United States nada, his Yentic. cose ¢ é VOLUME 4b.. (eR SES PORES OPEN AIR LIFE, ROM now until late September the temperature invites life in the open air. Few cities have more natural advantages than New York in the summer time. Indeed, as Henry Watterson says, New York the best place in the world for a man to spend his summer vacation. There will be more roof gardens this summer than ever before. It used to be that the only roof gar- dens were over a few theatres. Then hotels began to open roof garden restaurants. Now the newest and biggest office buildings pro- vide roof gardens for their {enants and friends and for the members of the clubs which fu nts drink, food, baths, recreation and, ona pinch, a night’ Popu | No. $6.—-GROVaR CLEVELAND—Part 1.— Winniug Hie Way. Twenty-second and twenty-fourth President (18387—). Large, heavily bullt, thick-necked. High forehead, deep-set blue eyes, aquiline nose. Brown hair and mustache. SON was born to a Presbyterian‘ clergyman in Caldwell, N. J., i A tareh, 3 The boy was christened Stephen Grover Cleveland, but ne Was soon dropped. He was one of nine children. His father—a scholarly, delicate man and a Yale graduate—was yearly growing weaker trying to solve the problem of supporting eleven people on a salary ot $600. |) PErom’placel(o place thelGlevelandsimoved! ‘There werercotuxdvies/ana | Rone too many comforts within reach of their income. Grover studied at | district schovls and academies, picking up odd jobs here and there, and at | one time working as clcrk in a Fayetteville (N. Y.) country store, to eke out. | expenses, When he was fifteen he was ready to enter Williams College. | Just then his father died, leaving his widow and children almost penniless, , There could be no question now of a college course for the boy. Work must ; be found, and at once, if the mother and the younger children were to be provided with even the bare necessaries of life. So en, without @ dollar in his pocket, Grover Cleveland prepared to wring a livelihood from , the world—not only for himself but for those he loved. All hope of college ; and other youthful ambitfons were laid a ide without com nt. His elder ees brother, William, was a teacher in the New York Instl- A Boy's tution oy the Blind Wier him Grover became clerk } Hard Fight. i and assistant teacher t vere, ff 2 For a year he toiled among the blind at a pitifully Narra salary, most of which was sent home to his mother. ter himself, he mped through t si. endance at the recreation as are these roof gardens, the at Then, seeking to b pie e roof g s of the poor—is more numerous. These roof i ' Serie velane ee oventinnt hen nat here Syracuse, Utica and other cities, The State gardens should be developed further and improved in their nature. There Sea a Sule ith couragement ng to find work, he star s ow in his lot with the newer settlements. He was now eighteen, He and set | out on his journey. He planned to settle in Cleveland, O., but stopped on the §s hardly a big pier which could not be provided at modest expense a recreation garden on the roof. At the wld be sold—sandwiches, tox | ttle-breeder near Buffalo. This uncle was com- q i a uaded Cleveland to stay and help him on it. The ice cream, salads, m \ job lasted six weeks. Then the lad found a place 1 as office boy and copyist with a Bu ecome a law This position se ) law firm. He had always wanted to to him as good an opening as any, nce to read law. He § ed on four years of $12 2 week, that money Went to the support terest in po He was a the polls every election day. he came of age. The civil war began. front, as such patriotism would have and the like at low prices their nominal cost would warrant + New York can learn in this re- spect from Paris, Berlin and the other cities of continental Europe. In‘ latitude New York is further south. In summer climate is warmer. In clearness of sky, in the same firm a: ie. to $:! The lion mother. He began to take h Democrat from the first a tin i858, whe dd to go to th freedom from clouds and rain, the | Attorney of Erie County. The New York summer is unexcelled. ) salary w mendously hard. But he was | vays had an infinite capacity for hard work. built te Cleveland was dr at best, e. Years pa could be pai sd for the army. He could not go, since his slender rely supported his mother. So he borrowed the money for ed before this sum and the $25 that had started him At twenty-nine he ran for District-Attorney and unning ahead of his ticket. He joined a law firm rotession. One member of a second firm he entered aw, O car Folsom. In 1870 Cleveland was elected nd wbn new laurels by the steady force and discre- -w office. hree-year term as Sheriff that he won the reputation nat formed the foundation of his future political rise, im as a man {t was safe to back for any office. IS1 he was nominated by acclamation for Mayor of But- ected by the li majority ever given by that city to a Mayoralty candidate. He promptly won the title of “the veto Mayor” from his habit of vetoing bills that seemed These European cities feel the 29) \ | necessity for providing recreation places for everybody who lives there, ER more for the people who have to stay the year round than for the well- | é ee) to-do, who can take long vacations in the country. None of the parks is utilized to the extent which it should be in this Central Park, at the Mall, does provide an open door outing but the park restaurants are too expensive for the average fami yy, and the only restaurant in Riverside Park, in natural in the world, charges pri Fifth avenue hotel, 3 was his future father | Sheriff of Erie Cou tion he showed in hi PANN aN People le id caters more falo. He wa to the automobile trade than to the @ rrr ith a bat } sneer h rupt o ravagant. Graiters grew ‘o hate man with a baby carriage. a |} a to him corrupt or extravagant. Gra 8 a pagel TES a —-— ee -- 2a Mayor ia } Maia Sotaini many HanGh lia politicians. But the people The Battery is another bea o > at xe discoverec they could trust him. He always upport. : ir Mr. Jarr Starts for a Funeral, but Gets in Wrong | bad Uno eee SIA irate ea Wie life to thousands if it were properl . Gms cH y an overwhelming majority, and brought to the Governor- Pee PIAS HAN VETE PIOPEt and Wastes His Melancholy on the Brooklyn Air '3.i0' se yrnueming maori, and proag 10 the Governor: spot ich could furnish open cient as Mayor, Reforms were instituted, expenses cut down and an era of a Mark's, Nice neighvornvod, 1 be Atlantic City board! Jarre, simplicity inaugurated at Al | walked to and from the Capitol. tive offices and talk with him was 3 a ng fearles ly every bill th public welfare. He w * road fares in New York ction by claiming that such enactment w; legal. work quareness” and genuine ability, this quiet, middle- beginning to make his presence felt. Shrewd politiclans all ‘4 Saw he was fast becoming a factor to be reckoned with, + regarded Mr, one who wi hed to enter the Execu- liberty to do so. He also continued to him dishonest, ex- d for vetoing Con By Roy L. McCardell. Mr. Jarr to ai e food a The Bat is one of the pre! and provocative of ©; tended By t wged man w over Amer o happen,” + uid ‘De pre- snapped the san¢ " never ved, After all I did for nim Teo, to cit me! oft wish & thourand and Kelections of a Bachelor Girl, miles awa © Oo to a fun 1 from the y h New Yo Mrs 1a i Ja sbody we know nd asked stranger took my m a pall-bearer, “hex pard the slg Mf supply of theatrical roof ¢ MD pan seta nue Eee a c But [f0 ger eee aa MTA) 0s aig nfo ft i smaller |” of Asht - “No,” snarled the sandy whiskers; “‘t yal of Vilas Canby, the religious money sw about HAT DO they kn n W y man who kisses a girl warn Y ively no. to trust any of the ot a relative affair, after all; it ts X minus e things you want, Heaven must be soniething like an afternoon tea, as far s the dearth of men is concerned, “ verty is onl ning but good of the popula profits i glared at the sandy whis d for Jenkins, put ers as the sandy whiskers glared at him, wondering n was evidently among the mourners! whether there was any forbidden joy in the world cletherroon) ast an {inclination to choke a supplanted the undertaker pleked up Mr notioned him to one of the latest che evi: | returned. \king belleved his story. A man always regards a woman who stays in love a lit. tle longer than he does wi vat nauseating feeling which \ person who has finished bis black coffee has toward an- other who keeps on eating. There was no escape for Mr. Jarr tll the cortege neither Mrs, Jarr nor hts friend Jen- design j When a girl can ge’ a man to talk about her eyes and hair she isn't golng to interrupt him to ask his opinion on @ | PELEN ROWAND jittle thing like the political situation, new thougat, or Ber= nard Shaw. Figures do lie; especially if they are the ones that express a woman's age—or the time a man gets home at night. and spor | ees) ae nn aye | Love In Darktown, x8 22 SNm3 “Lint "Wctwece, yg By FP. G. Long. any. The new Governor kept no carriage. He‘ pn to five cents. He de- * hetore dollar chasing! ea leanne Payee (aL SEGOTNTEN j 7 ; A man's favorite way of answering a woman's accusations 1s to tell her how | esaeae a EMG IdaMTU pIEREISCDDEN ICO | Ge peas Gal { HecwuPl cesT) | HELLUP! MSTOM LIFE-SAVERMAN]| | pretty she looks when ahe gets excited, } ; AH BE AS GOT KOTCHED 2 A man may admire a superior woman, but when It comes to marrying he ; We wea i MAH LIL LADY / / refers a goose who will cackle at his Jokes to an owl who is likely to hoot at 6 rs wom 6 60p (, | SAVED (Que ER CRAPIP. Too: pratetens | Matrimony Is the price of love—diverce, the rebate, The “Fudge” Idiotorial. anne 4 = MOVEd by our recent flattering mention of Mr. Darwin, an es- lf Men teemed correspondent wishes to Were know If we think men WOULD be BETTER OFF if they were Monkeys. Monkeys. > widely n001 ground fhe it seems the elty sh atier s for t groun DON’T You COME NEAR. THIS OCEAN AGAIN! grounds op much ) GET OUT OF THIS , ( OCEAN- TOU k105." eee : We do, Indeed! Men would be (Coorrot. 1908. by the Planet Pub. Co. much Better OFF If they were | Monkeys Of, as Is now so frequently the case! Senegamblan Forests. He does not have to work or think about his Clothes, He can despise Tailors and get along without Cooks, eee souiat iy ainilsaiier senate Nelther does he have to go to the Opera. or to Dinner Partles at tomers that they wi eau) Newport. cate whose piace 1 ae Although often seen in musical circles, the Monkey does not care for Melody. We may say en passant that the Monkey is a charter mem- ber of the DEPENDENT LEAGUE. He. MANOS fa, be his TAL! Oughs it ja not yet tou late good felds close to the schoo! W. W. DEMING, Wee every law-di De crowded out of the bi The brew pad distillers, I thiak, can remeay| Sone Sens nah pee ying tique The Monkey leads the SIMPLE LIFE In the depths of the , Monkeys. Instead of being made aw 7

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