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“~ * Gbe 4galarit. Published Dally Except Sunday 4 Press Publishing Cempany, Park Row, New Y JOBEPH PULITZER, Pree, 7 East thd Sireet J. ANGUS BIAW. See. Treas, £01 Went 118th Street Entered at Nos. 52 New York “lass Mail Ma E Post-Oftice a Subscription Ra World for ¢ and ning All Countrie: jona 3.50 0 One Year One Mo One Year. One Month VOLUME 45 ARON GUSTAVE FREDRICH | CARL VON SCHRADER is the defendant in a divorce suit. Von rader n officer in the Ger- man army who met the present wife in Switzerland, married her there and c d to live with her after her money was spent. S*- was an American woman, 3 widow who had inherited some property and was spending the in- come of it travelling abroad. | The Baron regards that he has| done nothing wrong in deserting his wife after spending her money. He says that before he married her he inquired of her how much property she had and she told him that she had an estate of 180,000 marks. After they were married, as he puts it, “imagine my rage when | found that 120,000 marks of the estate were in worthless securities, leaving only 60,000 mark 7 In other words Von Schrader’s defense is that he w that he is under no obligation to live with his wite unless sl the full amount of the fortune as represented. This is logically put in the Baron’s statement: “Why, do you t J would: have married a woman far beiow my class and ten years older than myself for any reason except that she had money? When I found that she had deceived me as to her fortune. why should 1 have re mained with her?” Certainly. When a woman hires a mau to be her husband she should ao more expect him to continue in her employ without his wages than she would expect her couk or cham- termaid to stay and work free. For a poor man to become the husband of a rich woman is a hard working job. He earns all he re- aes. Frequently he repents him- we of the bargain and would Prefer the smaller income at some better vocation, gets a husband by paying for him, the wcmand windled, and ne produces The Evening Worl dad Daily Magazine, Tuesday; June 30, lle Doesn t Want It, Ey Maurice Ketten. When a woman upon his time, services and thought is incessant. If, instead of marry- ing her, he had taken a job at digging ditches, he would have shorter ours, only ten a day instead of twenty-four, and six days a week in- stead of seven, besides laying off when it rained and the ground was | frozen, and he would get all he could eat with i ite | ¢ a much better appetite for his food. ie The big difference between the woman neronth i who gets a man to marry er for her monev and the man who gets a girl to marry him for , is that the woman at once be- Sins to deny the bargain and to in- that her hu d must conduct mself as if he had married fo ‘ove of her or for her beauty, her race, her wit, her soul,-and not t her money. old rich man gets a girl to marry him he ried him for. her is secure as he carries out his e bargain, so long as the ry, the yachts. makers are sup- b for an older man is more foolis for an older man to marry a your never thinks so. man Letters iron the People. A Humane Idea. Tt 1s a wonder steer clear of them 7 yu will pro Fo the Eiitor of The Evening World ani getianvepaysa tially, T think the plan of “Harlem Dri ® Kood and humane one gathering in all the poor old that have worked so hard for years and give them a cou home in their old age. poor woman wi cau wisn I could, as 1 love and cannot bear “Harlan Driver’ He sugg to see ds @ good, To the Eutit I'm so klad Legal Ald Society, No. ali takes an inte tr ' work The To the Editor of 4s eck After working pare uy one year 1 w wing 1 know was business depr w 4 asics 3 Heb the fe Evening World One Man's Advice, In the World tae To the Eat: e Evening W < . My advice e “ a . : ‘ ‘ KB, wre ; Je Editor of ne Wo } constitution wil we r side ef your profession, grow ana de 9 ean of ® become Nd at twenty, ‘This class of lawyers ta SJ** ou ° wen . Ta ta eco tan? well Knowa by stenograpners and they |” * 1 eee eoes Way OMe Cancaan Mrs. Jarr Needs a Tussor Silk and While Mr, Jarr Bravely Wears His Waite Jrousers Lowutown. * By Roy L. McCardell. bec H, dear, 1 simply MUST ge: a light suit or two O for summer!” said Mrs Jarr. These words are of ominous married man. He dare not run whe: cause that would prove he didnt love, any more. He knows he must stand on the fi wer aud seem interested. So Mr. Jarr signed to himself and ventured tne sugges- sion that it would be very nice “Very nice!" snapped Mrs. Jarr. “Dont stand tnere ollthering! How am I to get any s mer suits with all tne bills 1 have to pay?” Mr. Jarr thought it would be a good pian to skip the any ce- ul ‘Oh, you fo, do you?" week, when I tell you id Mrs. Jarr, what | owe “and then next and tnat 1 haven't enough money, you'll commence to rave and rage and wonder why we can't get along on what you ma e:'" “T won't say a word," said Mr. Jarr, “Go ahead and blow yourself,” “Would you get two of the linen coat suits or one striped Tussor silk?” asked Mrs. Jarr. “What's Tussor silk?" asked Mr. Jarr. He didn’t care. but if you'll ony pe patient, boys, and pretend you're Interested many a coming storin will scatter and go around by the southwest “Tussor silk {s the light allk like pongee, only more,” said Mrs, Jarr. more what?” asked Mr. Jarr, aticking to tt like a man, tor Mra. yarr was between him and the door. ‘Only more expensive, of course! said Mrs. Jarr, as if ame for tt 1 see a lot of women wearing dresses of brown and white, er coatn men used to have." sald Mr, Jarr, mildly. ‘ “Seersucker! said Mrs. Jarr, scornfully. “Yes, I used to see a sucker {n one almost every day some years ago," Mr. Jarr was te lke the Love In Darktown. Simply Must Have One, id Mr. Jar’, fetching this dismai joke across witout a smile. Bey you to stop using slang in front of the children,” said Mrs. Jarr. “You may think it's funny, but I do not.” f ng to get a light dress?” asked Mr. Jarr. Mrs. Jarr, emphatically. “I have been denying myseit % what you Want, and then comes the children, and 1 have a Mr, Jarr, t a single thing toywear for this hot “And the stores all have lovely bargains, and every lk or linen. Only the linen ones are get Jarr, now is getting Tusso} on. i see in t * said Mrs. Jarr. dis- “And th S are cut r! neath skirts?’ asked Mr. Jarr, in Jarr gave him a withefing look. me making if people d, “I suppose you'd like to see ate. fhe one thing the sheath skirt has em—they lave made {t the style not to wear pett Mr. Jarr assumed an alarmed !ook “Ot course, not for the linen or silk suits," continued M ats with them, But when I sgid the silk + c. They used to be fifty dollars, but I sa e. Lined with white silk and of white and ¢ 2 reen tn the trimming.” “And you need" vegan Mr. Jarr. “I need twenty-five dollars, that's what I need!" said Mrs. Jarr. but hoisted that sum to the surface ersation had him in such a state of warmth that he decided . Indeed!” £2 No: bu! Jarr, “One has were cut In haif yne splendid ones « stripe, with just But the cs to wear his white trousers downtown. Whereat small boys hooted him, and they sang “Willie off the yacht!" at him tn the office, and he upset the purple ink on them. And he was afrald to So he didn’t. w and The Courtship of Choimondeley Jones Beautiful Araminta Montressor,. w BY F. G. Long. 7 M155 MONTRESSOR, AH'S BRUNG You ER HALMI~ McK Fo! A LI'L “TU PRESENT: OW, MIsToH CHOLMON DELY, You Am 5O THOUGHTLESS, — | ~~ (orTis Be) ( Ante JES” ae cn rubies SWING DE DY MAMIMICK IN {% o— Nn DE SHADE OB iS DR) 7 08 00! APPLE, dE 7) \_ TREE: DE PLEASURE | CAE / See) HAG DES Nf AN MEY Me) PLEASURE 1g A y eee aes WR OB ER 5winG) 4 | AG i PF, ee Pt ey ae > 190 oe PODOMOEMOOOOONO oy Fr i oP : all 20 Husbands More or Less Undesirable Described and Analyzed By Nixola Greeley-Sinith No. 6—This One Is a Housekeeping Expert. O90 © OU see him on his way home in the cars carefully may be able to tell his wife she paid too much for the beefsteak when it is set before him at dinner. Aa the broker studies the ticker, or the basevall fend the batting averages of the rival clubs, so the Husband ‘That's a Housekeeping Expert scans the rise and fall om the price of butter Ess. “Porterhouse steak, 2S cenis a pound,” he reads and notes, Similarly he becomes a walking encyclodpedia of the varia- ons on the values cf cabbage and onions. He r s home, hangs his hat on the hatrack, searcn- ing the while for dust that he may with accusing finger write his name on, Though baiked in the search, ne is nevertheless, cheerful, for he hus a moral certainty that his wife 1s being done by the butcher and that he is about to convict her of it. Smiflingly he washes his face and hands. What do women want with all this scented soap? How much cheaper it would be to install tne ‘liquid vartety they have in his office, where a patent tilting contrivance limits the supply to the minimum of need? He wiil speak to Mary about it You ARE BEING ROBBED, My DEAR! YOU PAY 2% CENTS rved. His wife, flushed waits his approv: 1 1 she thinks so abso = | WOMAN, WH WAS THIS fa DUETS? 7 aS LAST ?(AR ty | Housekeeping have to wear smoke five-ce last year's cigars. Porterh ‘4 cents for of women do all day and similar « that the H ithstanding Husband Expert dedica the time and ts a H kel.ections of a beche:or iri, ty Helen x<owian4’ MAN loves a woman A dearly, thi When av anything he has did it, but that he Flirtation is love is like a who has spe studying the ( edge of Fr only languag Why should one want to punish another fer Stealing her husband? Isn't the -act that she has got that kind of a man on her hands punishment enough A man's wife is some: her presence only when it becomes aunoying or painful. + The Little Deer That Yields Musk, IBETAN traders vrought to Calcutta in March a large quantity of musk, I which is held in high esteem by the high caste Indians. The litle deer from which the musk is obtained ranges in the Himalayas and Tibetan mountains 9,0 feet above sea level, The male deer yields the finest and greatest of musk. ‘The deer are shy and alert, and difficult of capture. » to discover that the her lover rea.ly appreciates 1s bapy . WRLEN ROWLAND woman like his teeth, in that he seems to be aware of | The “Fudge” Idiotorial. | We trust our Readers have followed the HONEST COUNT of the Votes of the last Mayor- alty Contest, In which WE bore a MODEST PART! If they have, they will perceive that WE have been VINDICATED, and that but for the fact that our Readers failed to put ENOUGH VOTES in the ballot boxes they would now have a BIG instead of a “Little” Mayor. We promised our READERS they should HAVE an HONEST COUNT of all their votes and THEY HAvE HAD IT. We have made good! f We have also made a lot of Talk and a lot of Trouble! we have made it hot for “Little” George! Besides, we have established his size! We do not mind giv- ing out the figures, He Is four and a quarter inches HIGH! Vindicated. | Copyrot, 1008, Ly the Planet Pub. Co And | Sop COOLOLLLOGOOD.