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ly 29, 1908. . rye . ‘ § (COC AOOE FOOLOODOO Tiny Jim Has His Say. The : si : ro) Pettus Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 62 to 6! By “Sear.” Dress -Mad & G sat j ara S ae 1) POMEPH PULITZER, Pron, 1 Rast 134 Seth J. ANOUS AITAW, Bee Trews, 90 Wee 11180 8 eee Wife Q YBY Ve w J ® Seeetan — haapes i ® 4 at the Post-Oftice at New York as Becond-Class Mat! Matter. SAY rg l? rs THe “MiT* e 0, ) 8 Ratered ] FEEL BULLY THATS ry 2 f q 9 ® Budscription | to The Evening | For England and the Continent and IM TRAINING io OY IStorx y orld. tor n the International Tnitea States A}l Countri ae Postal Union, FOR OUR views "a No, 9 in the Series of 20 Wives. ounce TEA $8.50 One Year 80 | One Month By Albert Payson Terhune NO, 17,144, } By Barton W. Currie, ONE ADVANTAGE OF POVERTY. RICH lumberman, George R. Finch, died at Glens FaJls several years ago. The doctors and the lawyers intervened and his estate has nol yet been settled, The» heirs and beneticiaries, preferring payment to further delay, have compromised with the lawyers and doctors, and now what is left will go substan- tialty as George R. Finoh willed it One of the lawyers, former Sen- ator Edgar T. Brackett, of Saratoga, who had already recpived $15,000 | for his services, wanted $20,000 more, He has compromised for $9,000. | Another lawyer who sued for $25,000 will take half, Two other law, ee NO. 15.-LADY JANE GREY AND GUILFORD DUDLEY, S HOPBEN- A SOHOOLGIRI and a mere boy, who loved her, were once used as | HAUER and) pawns In the merciless game of politics. They suffered the usual fate oer ees of pawns And that fate gorins cne of the saddest little love stories noted philosophers ; me BEE) GEOG {n all history, compared =o with The girl was Lady Jane Grey, daughter of the Duke of Suffolk., She han woman ‘s far) was wonderfully well educated, but had the innocent charm and simplicity ron oe Hs vt of a child. She was a cousin of England’s boy King, Edward VL. son of Mon argued by | Henry VIII. and Jane Seymour, dward was a sickly Ind; quite under the hese cynical gen-| Influenco of his Chief Councillor, the Duke of Northumberland. The Duke temen {bachelor} wag a wily politician, and sketched out a decidedly clear plan for his own or the most part,| family's advancement, He bullied Edward into bequeathing the English ind we can heat) Crown to Lady Jane, Then he married Jaue to his own gon, Lond Guilford ~ the wives crying| Dudley. The young couple were very much in love with each other and they are not nor) were unusually happy in their brief married life. But thelr love and happi- were they ever gentlemen) that all| ness did not greatly interest Northumberland’ He had other matters to women are bow-legged and otherw: think of, unpicturesque in conformation—whe: Soon after making Lady Jane his heir, the boy King pined away and | fore thelr madness for adornment. died. It was whispered that Northumberland was And there 1s more than the spleen Of & | ¢i waren) more or less responsible for his fatal illneas, At | A Plot for { Edward's death, the Duke forced the Royal Coun- y } AAAS i Bee pj fs, | misogynist In the Sohopenhauer theory. ‘Tha ancients held it pretty generally, ~~ % ante the Crown. c!l to proclaim Jane Queen of England, This was yers have scaled their claims for cash 50 cents on the dollar. Two doc-/| /” UUST A TOUENE [sae rae tata Cet | fone brani injustice. For the two daughtors of Henry tors who wanted $20,000 apiece took $7,500 each, and a more modest, Tn) Ais |veside an Ajax of Praxiteles and &| one crown pel Planeta tye onde rizabeiti-s vera still lying, mF | z Srories OF WITH YOU! ‘ ' sualdeln. ‘own belonged by right to Mary, daughter of Catherine of Aragon, $12. 000 doctor will take $4,000, ‘Ol Ms Hermes of Phidias. But c se ) d eld f 1 ¢ ; Vomiads MY TRAVELS I'm NOT THR! thal Woman qaslareated from (only, one | Und elder of the two half-sisters, Jane reallzed this and tried to refuse What did these lawyers and doctors do for the money? of tho multitude of bones tn beau-| 2¢ UNwWelcome honor of becoming Queen. On her knees sho begged to be dtu) mand anatomy Bhs doea {AIRY | allowed to remain in private life. But Northumberland explained away her Treated gallantly by that French | soruples, He persuaded her young husband that Jane was the rightful heir school of art which {s continually |‘ the throne; and Dudley added his arguments to the Duke's, Go {t was shocking Boston she at least possesses that Lady Jane unwillingly consented to her husband's plea, She tearfully an admirable fiction of beauty, fa ney couatty homeyand permitted herself to be crowned Queen. Gentle VataenoriniNer: Tork can tell to-day’| euch e Ato Laanicay Reena that If Dudley wished her to take aie ein se ee raeaae ay On July 20, 1553, tho girl began her relgn—a relgn that lasted just ten sreitanedes a bewilagneds : unoske aye: eke was fifteen years old and had no knowledge of statecratt, North- need or as straight-limbed, erect and Sain land did the actual ruling. Jane and Dudley were mere Agureheads. surpassing fair as a pertectly chiagled fe the two overs played at royalty, the old Duke and his Council ran Diana? affairs to sult themselves. Meantime, Mary collected a large army and The man who encumbers himself with | ™&rched pon London to claim her rights. Northumberland could raise no a Dress-Mad Wife perforce must specu- | SUMclent force to oppose her. He was captured and executed, leaving Jane ate on these things. Certainly, he dis- | 484 Dudley to bear the consequences of his treason. Mary entered London sovers that. Phy! bothers. hersei¢ | {2 trlumph and was crowned Queen of Eng] sical culture when ft ts Jane was overjoyed at being able to lay aside the Crown and Scepter nplish something more| She hated. She rejotced at the {dea of retiring to her country home with sical torture, Her mania} usband ehe adored, and settling down as a quler rus e, clothe. The form| But Mary would not allow this. She felt so insecure upon her ddees not suit her at all | that she dared not leave Lady Jane an? her husband at liberty to be ephemerally the | Br] and Dudley were arrested and cast {nto prison, There for months on, Her hips must be a la mode} they remained. and her waist de rigueur regardless of| It {8 passivle that Mary—merciless as she afterwar expense, pains and sleepless nights pon-| be—might have spared e two Innocent children’s lives, But a revolt, jdering on structural contortions and | headed by Sir Thomas \Vyatt and Jane's father, so frightened her that she aes | compressions, ordered the young prisoners beheaded. Her orders were carried out with : : | She rarely Joins her husband at| Needless brutality, A kindly officer, however, offered t J What Mr. Jarr Does with All His Pocket Money breakfast a4 It will take her a morn | /3t€F¥IeW with Dudiey. The girl refuse! cee RL aL Some of the lawyers contended that the will was valid and some| that it was invalid. Some asserted that the testator was mentally weak | and others protested that his mind was always sound, Doctors were) willing to testify on either side, according to whichever employed them There is no doubt that thousands of lawyers and thousands of doctors | fwould have jumped at the opportunity to draw up papers as to Mr.| Finch’s sanity or insanity, hypothetical questions as to whether he knew | or did not know what he was doing, and to continue the court Proceed: | ings as long as the estate held out. ‘d proved herself to ; ington buctlelcniberlarniorn Bullet "Since we must die,” sha said, ‘we must do nothing to weaken our ¢ ntkde he finds h dt courage. Tell my loved one that I send tim Is Something Mrs. Jarr Re ally Can t Understand. Wank a tleeniean ' Recseyeet! % idlss of farewell 1 should like to aan i fen ‘ore the oe rand her Fi The Price of { his Ire, but T could not endure t baraey he grief of the y yo ne “Well, you can get It changed," (i Y : 5 Parting Our enemtes must not be able to say | Willie can go out with you and bri fd Mrs, Jarr. "Little back the quarter, and {Tots on the avenue, Her supper con- If Mr. Finch had been a poor man one lawyer would have wound By Roy L, McCardell. See eee ee eee eee eee a ee eee Nariiee | eth Buse eee aH ax f ‘i o» & dall if he was good,” hn dea pacer ee y ng | . . verry ‘ vy lovers di t meet again, up the estate, and there would have been no testimony of any doctor 66 TY THAT are you keeping there?” ut want some paper dolls! I want some paper dole!’ French corset at Writhe & Squirm' Basen Le struc off, and his lifeless, bleeding boly was carried unless it was necessary to prove that he was dead to collect his life in- asked Mrs, Jarr susplclous hogan the little gir, who was listening eagerly to the con-| only Tt will Just do wonders with | PM Maas ue wife's cell, Jane kissed her hand to {t, through the et | ly, as Mr, Jarr, Ike a 8004 versation as all girl children do when thelr parents are dis-;my htps-Mme. Compressor has sent | D@M8, crying: surance policies. husband and true, handed over IQ cissing domestic finances, nomaniny. gown—I know you'll be Farewell! The best part of you {s already in Heaven, where I shall Beyond cavil Mr. Finch had a good business head or he could not Da Ape ane Bn (ey 53 “Yes, and give Emma ten cents, too," said Mrs. Jarr, delighted with it-Has tha baby gat | coon aie zy peels to leave you!” \ i “It's a five dollar bill," sa! + “as she's your favorite,” | {t's tooth—I think so—But John, I'm] n hour later she herself was led forth to dl : m Ean a money. He had sense enough to keep hold of veD Kase women! ive fot to bie “What do you want to take my money for?” asked Mr.| distress to death because the Merry | #he ae ae ® To those around ‘her is money while he was alive or there would not have been enough left Tansportation up and down town and Jace want you send Willle out with a bill and change It?”! Widow hat does not become me—tried “ngland’s welfare demands my death {t {s hatter to make it worth the while f the lawy nd the d i a little money for my frugal midday) Ang have him lose it ali on his way back?” asked Mrs. on fourteen to-day and brought homa Person should suffer than that the State's safety feat ts shea oe a of the lawyers and the doctors to dispute meals, haven't 1? Jarr in turn; “he's as careless of money as you are, No} three for experiment—Yes, and et Thus, on Feb. 12, 1554, this sixteen-year-old victim of the Ire gam his will and state of mind after he was dead, fare pets yeu reais wita YOu sive them the change, and if you see any fresh green cetera and so forth polities laid down her pretty, innocent iffe, dying on the eas ote This j neta’ ; ‘ ; thing from me sald 3 re hae com at the grocer’s buy a dozen ears and send them In.” For hours she will run on Mke al block as had Anne Roleyn, and outliving by only rae: his is the way with almost every large estate. _ Samuel J. Tilden's more than five dollars, it looked Ike © sy ai right,” safd Mr. Jarr, realizing the longer he| babbling ‘brook-—lingerie, corsets and| rhe loved, ng by only one short hour ¢he man will was in the courts for years. Almost every disinherited son of a Ha eae ea yea SX stood thera the more serloug inroads would be made on plumes, and plumes and corsets and saps * iy cted to save ‘ou fi very r x millionaire contests the will. Only a few weeks ago the will of the Eenamoneyit his pocket money, Ungerla It is very exalting and up-) Wfseing anmhere of thin errics | » Only a] y. i t me PHI h | will be eunpliea Prin i 5 " fn y th r ne lifting for the husband, who possibly} ptt "pon ape former chief justice of the highest court of Pennsylvania was set aside| “You know how much I get, don't gout” asked Mr, Jarr, “And I have a woman in by the day helping with the lifting for the h MMleation to Cirewlation Department, Event use the children soil thelr sum- regards a corset as a,device original) «¢ one-eent atamp. ng World, apon reeeipe n to expect one gir! to laundry,"| with the Spanish Inquisition. are i] { ‘: : . 7 ‘fF ony, very Sdded Mrs. Jarr. "So, while you are getting change, let| The brute perhaps reflects that Jim - ao There are many compensations in being poor. Not the least OL Sty, alseds seuaeeatee ys ite Tarr} “you are acting Very! viiie have a dollar and a helt so L'il have the money to |Dowdy, over the way, la blessed with America’s Bar aj C them is the feeling that the poor EE le ey errr racy woman when she's throush.” a wits who looks as ff she dressed gain Counter. man when dead will be allowed to clear ‘ - { lose It,"" ventured Mr. Jarr feebly [with the expedition of a fire horse it?’ asked Mr. Jarr, “I see other men who don't make as 4 an Fe , . ’ : ; - ” A cold, hard Mght came into Mrs, Ja Dowdy never does look stylish, By Frank W, O'Malley. rest in peace, and that whatever mpuch ee lidoland they.canialmeyaltasnyeitol t she certainly can cheer with her| y scandals there were in his life or ( " + ” it!" she sald with tense emph: "Yes, d that's all the most of them do," sald Mra, eae x ‘ er eatery . F that Englishman of Lowell's, wh | Jarr. ‘The kind of people who are always show!ng their The lIttle boy winced and said quickl: ‘Oh, no, I won't conversation and knows more about Roar anats 1 WwW weaknesses that dwelt in his brain will be permitted to die with him. Pr Tsitiaea al ‘ hi k Cr hildren than all the} nel t other way. ose !t! I'll hold ft tight and rin right back and then Ij bringing up c | Paik 4 ine ot tracey with hee, ca go out agnin and buy my ball.” | mothers’ clubs have forgotien, Salta con at she never has the change for carfare or ‘Such an unselfish little sald Mrs, Jarr, klesing| However, no man, unless he be a| st od Atlenic One of the most severe penal- tles of riches is the strife they cause, the family dissension they washing and ironing, be mer clothes so it is too i i ‘Well, I gave you all but five dollars, didn't 12” By his| associates, “Maybe you've made some extra money or had your “He better ) tose notion of America was that of. bargain-counter strung along the seaboard, found. on of the United States upon a giimpse from a schoom of money are the ki e soda water checks when we are together. If him; “never thinks of himself firs professional Bohemian, will offer a Tho Boardwalk 18 a string of shops on one alde facing the ea, and ou were a man that only showed your money I wouldn't So, followed by the youthful warders, Mr, Jarr went! briet for dowdy and slovenly feminine) they are, next to the thousinds of promenaders, the most Interesting things here, You may ha h care, but you are one of the softies that must spend It. I forth and changed his lone five dollar paying forty dranery, Every man should like hi 1 the towny shops back in Atlantio far that man Rangle and others cents for the corn, giving the children ten cents apiece wife to dress as well as he and she can| Avenue when you no y sported grossly material things like heads know you are just a soft wef, he ‘ a k nal ‘d; and {f the wife wants to hold| Of cabbage and aides of } mong the 4 ? | ike him when you are out, and you're the one to pay and g back a dojlar and u half to their mother for afford; (st ,among the Boardwalk shops you create and the feeling the rich man Mj gq (hl || eT pay my eho,” salé Mr, Jarr, “but I don’t shoot the woman In by the day. her husband she should strive quietly | will nd nothing on sala except g {n the world that you. haven't the has that what his friends care for i Wie A CHUN orten since 1 en married.’ The next day a forty-cent package c. 0. d, came while to surprise him now and then with Iit-| slightest use for, says Frank W. O'Malley in Everybody's Magazine. They've er Mr. Jarr produced the disputed dill It Mr. Jarr was present, and he had to produce. tle coquetries of drass. |tfrown away t note. Friday he asked for a quarter to get downtown. | But when she can talk of nothing! Japanese gimc “You had ten dollars this week!’ sald Mrs. Jarr se- ¢ls¢ and think of nothing else she {s| brothers are s money has been divided and the husband ver "No, five? Well, {t's all the same; five dollars {s a no better than a maniac. Rather worse.| who repeats the das though he were revealing a great secret sorrow, d that !s to see how much can be ca- lot of money with nothing to come out of !t! Oh, don't Youcan place a maniac under restraint, | Here are Persian and Turkish rugs, some designed and built in a post 1 one Way or another. talk to me about what you gave me! You didn’t give me) Dut there |s nothing beneath the skies! village like Bigdad centuries ago, no doubt, and many more that were designed eave a little change with me before you anything! Well, I don't remember it! If I did ask you for that can restrain the Insensate passion | there centurics ago but only recently have been bullt for the Western nich go downtown; I w to give the Janitor a quarter,” said anything you should be glad of {t! Please don't say an- of & dress-mad wife, As a type of|in the applied art centres of Camden, which Is in New Jersew, Toy-shops fairly Mrs, Jarr. regarding the money In ‘her hand. other word; I've got a headache! Here's ten cents; that's, undesirable wife she very nearly leads! gmbrace one another. Picture post-cards are even more numerous than around he Ny five dollars,” sala Mr, Jarr. enough, the way you waste money!” ‘the column. the Hotel Venus at Santiago—rows and racks of them that litter tables and cliny cellingward along three walls, Letters from the People. |Reddy the Rooter, rr wt By George Hopf.! Communicating with the Dead. COOLONT GIT =a er | By Sir Oliver Lodge. {AROUND Sou THE 10EA OF Cuean | || was a five de Now, with marrie. ladies there {s one constant plan, shops so that you the better may see the neas r studious a. spectacled and suave little brown the medium of a well-groomed white auctioneer, i is not himself but his money, and that even his sons and daughters Watch his health not through love for him but speculating on what willl ; come to them from his death, 4 Poverty has its disadvant and settling doctors’ and alien’ ven't a cent but Ind would pound to produce} ain s going $ ING WINOOWS IN | SP POSS-CORRESPONDENCE-that is, the reception of part of a message the. ball THE MIDOLE OF — , . through one medium and part through another—4s good evidence of HNL REve ROO: 4 THE DAY! UNHEAR M) one intelligence dominating both aut sts. And If the message ts nde NaNTIE coulall > fp HON | characteristic of ore particular deceased person, and 1s recetved i the elad A GEE, PEEK = through people to whom not intimately known, then it ts |AT DE RopES ‘ } o | far proof of the continued intellecti — So long as communicat | purported to be the survivi | we were by no means activity of that personality, vaisted of general conversations with whes ligence of certain friends and investigators, need of thelr identity, even though the talk was other re @ he 8 a wa of a friendly and intimate ¢ acter—sucn as in normal cases would be con- affiicted, due t e use of the type sidered amply and overwhelmingly sufMflctent for the identification of friends weiter, will they te mut Ite HI | speaking, let us say, through a telephone or a typewriter, We required definite Bhould be of Interest to ma chink eal and crucial yoof—a proof difficult even to Imagine, as well as ditticult to 1 mB feet supply. No In 1S86 and 1807, | The ostendble communteators realize the seed of such proof just as fully as To the F ev ” | | we do, and are doing thelr best to satisfy the rational demand. Some of us think "Is there , } pr fh what | they have already succeeded; other are stlil doubtful. a hibiting a ent | On the whole, Iam of those who, though they would Ilke to see further and t nn " "nga Fae ea ee — i eae | still stronger and more cont! roofs, are of opinion that a good case has i Ane ‘ 2 , z Sere REeP T. een OL oF Seanie SARE ten Bae out, asd teat aint fereeoviine forctralle at the present time 5 Baldwin , 2 Hanan PLACE! OH THESE STINGER AN’ THE GUY | tt Is legitimate to grent that lucid moments of intercourse with deceased persons 5 900 Miles. De AVEC EGA s 5 Ren |ON THIRD WILL SINK | may in the best cases supervene, amid a mace of suppleventary material, quite The Train xn) Ball Problem. the {Tho Bvening World ; gent! CLEET IN THE | natural under the clroumstances, but mostly of a presumgbly subliminal and lore ? To the Filitor « World \ e distance from New Ye evident kind.—Harper’s Magazine. ‘ its yack to te ‘ Bist eM [eee luis 2 | ii . ‘ ‘ : ORFUL DAMP. “ tee . a i the a 18 Forma of ‘ Gambling." Rate ANA = , : Names = ’ eis as at Tothe @ Rvering Word i Mr, Littleton’s Trenchant — it, ina ttt Vs eof @ far more seri ARTIN W, LITTLETON, the New York lawyer, is noted for jis trenchant rt been tt r t c than horse racing, M wit. i was . ’ ga e cha t | “At the beginning of hia career,” sald an Aliany Judge the other , { Veloc ¢ rriu ota day, “Littleton had an elderty, prosy, long-winded lawyer tor an opponent in j 4 breeze of sive nae | an assault case. 4 the ball w a wind “4 a | The elderly lawyer in his concluding addrose spoke for six hours—an tater i rh r S8 Fes ; minable, foggy, stupid speech. Then Littleton arose. He smiled sugntiy, looked f A ahead of ot t at Judge and jury, and said; ball is about fou es in wegat and tee . te g to “Your Honor, I will follow the example of my learned friend who has gmat 7) eomcluded and submit the case without argument.’ —Philadelphia Record, {242 wquare (ain space of times