The evening world. Newspaper, July 24, 1908, Page 9

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The mA hs dot Daily Magazine, FOOUOUOOUD eget Jul y 24, 190 8. | ~~ e Le) = = N = = Le) = —— | = ~~ as =) > Qu S =) a Lo) =i Q “ ik WD o> Y = o 7) ® a o -s = x: Qa Bi: — : = = “By Nixola Greeley=Smith SéPT'S 10 o'clock | -you must | go to bed,” said Mrs William | H, Taft with firm finality to her | husband, the Re- publican candidate for President the other day at Hot) Springs, Va. “But I am pay- ing for this air, this ecenery!” protested Mr. att as| “he settled himself more comfortably | ov a co than ever in his chair on the hotel plazza, Nevertheless, Mr. Taft in five min- utes was on his way to his room— and next torning, fresh and invig- orated by the nine hours’ sleep he had been made to take—was ready for another day of lively candidacy. The campaign has scarcely begun. Plans of battle have been drawn up, a few omers given, but the firing line {s quiet as a cathedral aisle. OIC eee) The Politician of the Family. WOCCUOCCOCe OCCU COTO OOe ey) However, when the fight hottest, behind the two leaders in the pattle Ww will be two women who, though “Peqoocacod900a000000 ~~ ‘epi erence in Religion. Tear Betty: | AM deeply in love with a girl. She t religion from me, se us to marry? W, B. Two sensible people can live together | very happily, each entertaining differ- ent religious views, A. Datiful Son. (petty: KR the last eighteen months I have een keeping company with a froung man of twenty three, who years my senior, His family old country and he !s con- ving requests from them mone which he does. ttle for por / in thi Arvously r fo send some Gihis, of course, leaves very lmself from his weekly salary. His amily includes several grown chil- dren, and they certainly get along with- | ‘out his help. Some tme ago he wrote them that !f at any time they required | money they should write and let him ‘know. ‘They take advantage of his “offer, and ,he, on the other hand, keeps ls word." T love him very dearly and ‘have good reasons to believe that the| ‘same |e reciprocated, As we intend to| he engaged soon I think that the send-| ing of money by him as above ex- ser Betty Vincent’s Advice on Courts ship and and Marriage $ YVLQO0000 00000000000000 2000 plained should be stopped and he say the same for the future, AF, It would not be right for you to in- terfere with the young man’s home ob- ligations unless you are engaged to him. 1 think his family are taking advantage of his generosity, Dut he shows that he will make a good husband, @s he ts a good son, When you become engaged to him tactfully suggest that he should tell his family that as he intends to marry he wishes to save, and if they | bom could get along without his continual help his chances of having a home of his own would increase. It is a situa- tion which requires tact, for It would be very unwise to antagonize your flance’s family at the very first. An Elopement. | Dear Betty: In love with a boy of twenty- three. I heard them planning to ype and have forbidden him the house. only objection to him Is that he Is wild, Should I let my daughter marry him, as he has plenty of money and they both seem to be In love? AN ANXIOUS MOTHER. No boy of honor would ask a girl to elope with him against her mother’s wishes and I advise you to put the young man on probation for a year, low him to call, and if by that time they still love each other, It would be safe to let thert marry, M Y daughter of twenty Is very much aa How MANY WAYS | : CANYOUREAD THE NAMEHANNAH? monogram contains all of the letters of ACH of the six little designs of We ‘E the me NANNAH, which may be read upside down as well as back- warg and forw: | Gam Gere many co It becomes @ very confusing problem to figure out wege Haceal ayy | thetr part In the ca: fs at tts) | . DOGCHCGQOOODG ipalgn may not be | spectacular, will contribute more than any other two persons to their auocess, Ono thing {s certain about Mrs. Will- tam H. Taft. It Is that she will not confine her wif Inistrations to see- | tng that her candidate gets hia meals | | regularly and sleeps nine hours | | twenty-four. Mrs. Taft can. give the| colossal candidate points on many mat- | \ters in politics—eo keen {s her inter- | est In public affairs that Mr. Taft calla }her the politician of the family, and | | frankly admits that he would now be sitting as the Supreme | | Gourt if she t muaded him , to | Temain In politics, | Mr. Taft will undoubtedly talk over | his speech of acceptance with Mrs, Taft, and be glad of any suggestions | |she may offer. He has a great re- | spect for her Judginent of men and at- | fairs, | Mrs, Taft told me In Washington bes | fore the nomination that she 1s gen-! erally present at the political confer-| ences heid in the Taft home, and that! sho was particularly interested in Fille pino politics wi missioner le Mr. Taft was Com- to the Islands, ees Routine in Taft Home. ees | The Tafts have breakfast at 8 o'clock &nd the candidate and his wife are ve Mkely to discuss the d gramme during the meal. | rate," y's political pro- | ++ No Cleverer Politicians or Husband: Managers Live Than Mrs. Taft and Mrs. Bryan, Both of Whom Have Helped Shape Their Consorts’ Careers. They Will Be Pitted Against Each Other in This Campaign, and ing to Note Their | Influence Upon It. It Will Be Interest- Tactics and Their | MKS. TAFT, She is progressive and highly educated, She has made her husband a | | politician. She (8 a better diplomat than \ The ia, Bhe ts “the polttician of the family,” Mr, Taft says. She was present at all political conferences in the Philippines, | She will help write he letter, Bhe ts fond of long toalks. MRS, BRYAN, Sha (s reserved, studious and in- teblectual, She 18 o law; She wae her husband's secretary in Congress, She 48 a charming hostess, She helps her husband untangle political knots. She rids him of bores. She probably helped write the Denver platform, She will be his trainer and coach in this campaign, woman that has ever entered the White House to be its mistre She Is a highly educated woman, and whenever | Mr, Taft ts In doubt as to a quotation or reference he has only to turn to his wife to secure It. In stature Mrs, Taft ‘s above the medium height. Her figure ts unusu- | ally good, and she has the appearance of a woman in perfect health. Sho wears her hair, which ts of a soft brown flecked with gray, in a low pompadour, Her coiffure ts guiltless of curls or any other artificial adornment. Her morning attire ts usu- ally a simple shirt walst sult, | [Ome A Power in Taft's Life. Anes She is very fond of taking leng walks, | but no other form of outdoor exerciso has any charms for her, She is utterly unaffected 1n manner and !s probauly very much more of @ diplomat than her husband, If Mr, Taft becomes President Mra. |rate will have done much te make! him so, She has given her brain, her care and her private fortune that her| husband might remain on the political | highway that led to the White House. | And tf she gets there, the ambition she | has had ever since her marriage to him| Mrs. Taft, should her husband be 3 A Story of New York 3 Theatrical Life, “The Chorus Novellization of Lady” Was Made By John W. Harding. ‘Coprrighs, 190%, by G. W. Dillingkam Com SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Faw O prien ws svauer of the vaorus at @ Broadway toeatre, 1p the chorus is her Younger sister, Nora, @ fovllah, seifisd gis Who la secretly flirting With Crawford, % Bae Vebout town. Crawd Daa ante 1g iy aperciuent to 1 ‘note, Paitcla follows her, there, lailory, and O'Briea, Patricia Nore trom Qiscovery snd averts a f between Dat and orator Mallory, ind! atricia at Crawford's, quarrels with fede Fa clengugemen: ls. broken, - Craw: fone after the departure of bla, un: iat esi ‘Dexina to think he bas beea | ies Nora sately ome fe ured ihe “rea Memily Narn of tse aot the younger: ence, Taen Pate the ir wanders hire about city, heart token "as (Dacre ae She fintlly goes Mallory and her mother not Pong Sher father thoy saw ner at Crawford's They consent. but Inalst that Nora must re turn with them to Virginia, Nora objects to this plan and pleada with Dan to change tt. yr accident of atricla’s Innocence nd bers Ruri forgive him. for douben fier, Juat then O'Brien enters, angrily with the $900 note and demands an explanation. CHAPTER XXIL (Continued.) “The Third Degree.” “Well, girl, haven't ye a tongue in| yir head?” her father almost shouted | and almost dancing with rage. ‘‘Who/ soigned ‘P. O'Brien’ to that paper? Wno | dared to use my name?” It was clear that, though the vellow dog streak in Crawford had impelled him to try to make trouble with the | note, he had been careful to avoid a vio- | lent scene with O'Brien by recounting the events of the event Mallory | plucked up courage. | “What'a the matter with you, pop?” he said. “It's her own name. It's | signed ‘P. O'Brien.’ Why shouldn't she) sign it? Why shouldn't she get money | from Crawford? It's owin’ to me, and what's mine's hers, Crawford an’ me's had a run in, I've quit him, an’ he's sore, thats all.” “It Was All a Mistake!” glance of gratitude | . Patsy shot @ toward him. O'Brien was nonplused. “What would she be dein’ with that amount av money?” he inquired. “Phat would be tellin’, laughed Mal-/ lory, ‘“Phat's our own little secret.” Mra, O'Brien came to his aid. | “Moind yir own business, Patrick,’’| she ordered, with her old timo doml- neering mani ‘a the excoltable man ve are, .ireerin’ all over town an’ us waitin’ supper for ye. Run out an’ jrush the growler if It ain't too late.” “Excuse § sy. ‘Twas all a mis- take, I see,” he said, preparing to do as he was biden. “Forget It, pop.’ ing a kiss on his lips, O'Brign, all cheerfulness, went out. she replied, {mprint- elected, will be the most progressive | complished. lop DDD 000000000000000000000 00000000000) ® w. | dear. when she was twenty-five will be ao By Ann Evans, NE 0 most potent though al- lent forces in the tion campaign | now beginning | will be Mary! Baird Bryan, wife of the Democratic nominee, During both Bryan’s previous | campaigns Mrs. Bryan has exercised an influence to which her masterful ANN EVANS | husband has never been impervious, | and already her power is being felt by those around the leader, ene Shares Husband’s Ideas. Rennes The forces which have developed Mr, Bryan from the boy-orator of 18% into the experlenced man of affairs, writer, lobe-trotter and organizer of the p ent day haye also been at work on his Ww Her ideas, her manner, her 5 ch and her dress have adapted themselves, with true Western keenness of observation, to the needs and sur- otethe! Presidential elec- | Toundings in which she has found her self, ‘Mr. Bryan,” his work and rest are) her spectal charge. At the strenuous pursuit of running for President Mrs, Bryan is her husband's trainer and |coach, so to speak, It Is thw devoted |triend who sustains and augments the |tremendous physical strength ef the | candidate. Her tactful presenoe Is felt |interposing betwean her husband and |any needless anxtety or annoyance, | | The editor of the Commoner ts unt | | versally accessible himself to any one who presents himself at Fatrview, Mr, | Bryan's Lincoln home, But of the | floods of visitors to the candidate, the | | unimportant, long-winded nulsances | Waza themselves cordially invited out to! the porch or the lawn, to join Mrw.| Bryan in a glass of something cool and refreshing, and the candidate ts freed to eld to more urgent interests, | Behind Him i nnn the Campaign. | Bryan's decision to conduct his cam- paisn from his own front porch will | mean no less heavy dutles for Mra, Bryan than those she fulftled on her husband's tour of the world when ane} was his amenusius and typewrote the articles ho sold to the newspapers. Her care and attention were a tower of strength to him; her campaign sugges- tlons and sound advice were @ constant | gulde, he forgive me, for I need It." “S-ah!" chided Patsy as she put her jerms around the old woman's neck. | “Do I come in on this now?’ demand- ed Mallory wistfully, For answer Patsy put out an arm and |inciuded him in her embrace. “This evenin’ settles It,” he sald when| he also had received the long, sweet {m-| press of the seal of pardon and her| mother had abandoned her to his ca- resses. "We'll take no more chanci We have waited on the future| too long, You'll come home with me now. es, Dan,” sighed Patsy happily, resting her head on his shoulder, “An’ # an’ the cows,” CHAPTER XXIII. The '‘Duke.”’ | HE days that followed the returft ny of Mallory and the O'Brien fam- fly to Maple Grove were days of worry and anxiety for all, The outlook (O00 0000000000 do0000000000000000001 The Guanie Lady CO0000000000000000000100000000,.00000000000000000000000000 | himself, |than one-third of their value, ance would have insured, was not precisely calculated to induce Jubilation, As the restilt of the sudden breek with Mallory’s partner hard times were at the very door and hovered de- Di ingly over the household. Craw- ford had lost no time In calling for a settlement of his loan and a dissolution of partnershtp, Mallory did not have and could not raise the wherewithal to [meet the demand, and the foreclosure of the mortgage was the impending consequence, The trainer was well,aware that the i \summary sale at auction of the horses settle down like a couple of Reu-j and training quarters which Crawford would insist upon, regardless of loas to was not likely to net and that would be left penniless to all in- His association Instead of he tents and purposes, with Crawford, therefore, bringing the substantial advantage ne} had anticipated and which its continu- for the busi- What a Whopping Big Hat! A HAT MINE FEET IN CIRCUMFERENCE, London is enjoying the bulge of the lover has pictures of some nine-footers End. One 9 fee of these tremendous umbrella in clreumfer The tail, aii: Ne alone Oe eee mites ence and ells for $55, ; but with plumes gail for $100. : , “God love ye for the good girl ye atunning in them—the short, pudgy ones “stand no chance whatever of wearing business dig hat, The number of Sketch just which are sold and worn in the West ike confections, y ) measures exa: {e reproduced here. Others no | willewy Hog $ are said to Loe more| DODOOOQOOOSOSGODOOOOOO" Based on the Play By James Forbes. OOD 000000000000; | ness was beginning to prosper, had left him tn a worse position than he was in before, He could not even conalude the | sale of Lady Belle, for Crawford's first move had been to obtain an injunotion restraining him from disposing of any of the stable property, | Reverses, | All the work of his life had gone tor naught. All his years of waiting tor Patsy in the hope of being able to win for her @ position of comfort and dig- mity had been spent In vain, He haa simply cheated himself and her of tre | happiness that might have been theirs | during that tlme. He ground his teetn | with impotent rage at the thought of it Nothing remained for him but to wrest | What bliss he could from the years that) remained by marrying Patsy at once and begin all over again the struggle for @ living by hunting for a Job, To renew, handicapped as he was, the pursuit of fortune which had eluded iim like a will-o'-the-wisp was not to be thought of, at least not then. Never for @ minute, however, did he regret his treatment of Crawford. With the certainty of even worse befalling him he would have done the same thing in the, eame circumstances, Patsy was for wating a while longer | and returning to the stage in the mean- | time, but this proposition he refused absolutely to consider, “You've sacrificed yourself enough for me an’ your femily, girl,” he sald, Vil stand for it no long: will get a place somewhere. hig businesa an’ ain't afraid to work, | an’ we'll help ‘om if we can,” Mallory had hopes that through Mo- |Govern or oome of the big men with {whom he had come in contact since starting in business hiunselt he | would be able to procure an executive [position in one of the more {mportant |racing establishments, and he purposed | Jin this event to take care of O'Brien, ZDOODOOS He knows | for \the gown and to wear Until November Fairview will be swamped with visitors. A brigade of felal pavilion erected on the lawn for (their entertainment, Mrs. Bryan has \already become the manager of a hotel Jon a scale equal to @ small hostelry In Now York, Besides her duties as steward to this transient army of political aides, Mrs. Bryan will fuldl those of a charming hostess, an Intelligent colleague and a diplomatic soothe: and adjuster of ail the shades and differences of political | opinion which will meet and war around her hitherto qufet end private farm- house. eeamaaaaaanaanaaanaoanaon! | Work on Denver Platform, ( eeeeananannamananenamnel Any politioal opinion expressed by Mra, Bryan bears the stamp of her husband’s full approval. How far the Denver platform {s the result of Mrs, Bryan's own opinions will prob. point for which Bryan has stood in his career has been the result of Tong and able digcussion with his wife, Her judgment hag tempered and Influenced avery step of his life, and her accom- lishments always stand ready to ald im, Her knowledge of German keeps him steadily conversant with German sentimenta on the leading Issues, She leading German papers every day. ~—eeeeee The Real Mrs. Bryan. Mrs, Bryan has a degree of A. M, servants has been installed and a spe-| ably never be known, Every political | translates to him the editorials from | For her husband's sake, after her mar- age e studied law and Ww mitted to th bar, In Congresa 5! Was | ray and secretary, taking down his speeches and letters {n self-taught shorthand, Personally, Mrs, Bryan 1s reserved, end of a studious, Intellectual type In appearance, Her dress 1s In good taste and rich enough to accord with the sur- roundings in which she finds herself, F E her jowele husband has A heavy carved gold comb doured halr. Her ment and ore fine made holds her soft pompa marriage, her engi {opal are her only rings. ‘Ten years ago she was old~ fashioned, |almost countrified, In her dress an | manner of arranging her hair, To-day she is a “modern,” —_—————- | Obliging Neighbors, 667 KNOW what you'll miss most | I about us," sald her neighbor, whe | was moving from the building; jour telephone, that you have bean | using. I shall never forget that night | you celled us up from somewhere where you had concluded to spend the night, | that you had left your flat unlocked and | were afrald there was a burglar In it, | Would we go and see if there was a | burglar in it? “Wasn't that a nice thing to ask us to do? Here I had to get out of bed, wake up the hired zirl and the elevator man and the janitor, and go look for that burglar in your flat! /nd after all the trouble he wasn’t there. “No, you'll never get such neighbors es we are again—such obliging, burglar | hunting neighbors. Never in the world!”’ May Manton's VERY fresh devel- opment of the ene piece feature Is met with enthusiasm This blouse ts one ef the prettiest which hae yet appeared. It 1s absolute. ly simple, involving very little labor In the mak- ing and absolutely none in the fitting, while tt ls adapted to all seasonable walstings and doth to with the odd ekirt, In this case it is made of ponges. Pongee la being extensively used this season for shirt waists as well as for garments of more formal dress, but lawn, batiste, mad- |The Pinch of Poverty, ‘The O'Briens themselves viewed the thing but hopefully, It was a very serious matiar indeed for the old couple to be deprived of the money which Patsy for so long and recently both Nora and Patsy had supplied. They {nad been able to save a little, It was! true, and the careful Patsy also had anaged te put some by, but their com bined resources would not last long. Thq house in which they lived with Mallory was @ wery comfortable one, Chey had becor ched to the prospect ai ds increased the parts, already Aled with grief at istortune whloh had svertaken Mallory, Teal _ca| t w eon key O'Brien, wh) given to 4 and that the » Crawford had arisen over patters, | (Te Be Continued) ras and linen all are favorites. The quantty of mate- ral required for the medium size ie 48 yards a1 or 4, $14 yards 82 or 21-8 yards 44 inches wide. Pattern No, 6041 ts cut in sixes for a $2, 34, 3%, $8 and 4 inch bus te TON FASHION BUREAU, ways specify size nted. id One-Plece Shirt Waist —Pattern No, 6041. Call or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- Yor. Send 10 cents in cotn or stamps for each pattern erdered. IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plaialy, sod al- Daily Fashions, No, 182 Hast Twenty-third street, New »

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