The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1908, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

' / The Evening Worid Daily Magazine, rriday,: juty s1, | A . 9 ry : 4 ‘ ‘ 4 OO00 suceonoowence Three Chairs” for Bryan.| This Wife Fifty ust) Et EL selquaiialaatl Can't Keep}, Great Love Stories Vd Yl Le a Servant} ° — of History Entered at the Post-Offee at New York aa Second-Class Mall Matter, No, 10 in 20 Wives Series | Barecription Rates to The Evening | For England and the Continent and |} By Barton W. Currie | By Albert Payson Terhune lo | | orld for the Unitea Btates All Countries in the International and Canada, Postal Union, One Year One Mont NOCUMENA0 ectevesissrissrcnicinisrunire NO) 17,146) pperirrvmams sensei seseaieesneniaeetent teeehicetsrucsds Det BUENO: HE Wife Who} “ig Can't Keep al NO. 16 —TAS30 AND LEONORA D'EsTE, Servant should A TWENTY-ONE year old boy—the idol of poetical Italy—fell in love ve in a hotel. But with a woman nine years older than himself, She was a princess; she never does, She vill continue to keep he a mere poet, He was destined to pay a terrible price for his ouse, At least she Presumption in daring to lose his heart to so exalted a personage. Peri vill cal it eens The young lover wes Torquato Tasso, son of a brilliant, unfortunate ouse, Her husband ytatian nobleman, Tasso was born in 1644, at an uge when Jtaly was rising alls It somethtng| ina far above mediaeval gloom to the glory of literary renown. He was a poet. You will find—the As ¢ mere child his genius drew upon him the wonder and admiration of vrofessional humor every one. In early manhood he became an honored member of the sulte ts to the contrary of Duke Alfonso of Ferrara. He had already written poems that have bee a yast number of come immortal (“Jerusalem Liberated” is the foremost of them), and was ON VUCURME happily disposed wo- | the central figure of the gay court, Handsome, accomplished, attractive, he REAL LOVE STORIES. N one day’s news there Is a collec. | tlon of real love stories which excel | the Inventions of the summer nov- | elists, | Miss Lottie Lee, whose father is a) Pittsburg coal man and rich, of course, was engaged to a dentist. { j She met a Congressman’s son whom men wio CA® keep hired girls andj won all hearts, i she preferred and decided to elope have one atways on the fob, They have| Alfonso, fasso's patron, had a ‘beautiful elster, Leonora D'Este. : ith hi | thelr trials, ves, So do the servants. | While she was much older'than Tasso, her delight in poetry and her bound- A wit Hey ' dh taf But the W. W. C. Le Bia ee ; less admiration for his own writings quickly turned the i Before eloping she went to her petuatly In tribulatton. You might fare | yoo > young genius’s head. Nor was She def to his sult, nd, taking off her ordinary nish her with a paragon fresh pont } Wg iReet and Apart from his personal attractions, the fact that half H Toom, and, ig FOTO ATY from heaven. She will try out a full) | Jj the women in Ferrara adored him and sought to win | liste threads, or whatever is the every flock of peragons and find them wants |" Hig avon helped to fan the Princess's fang’ Into ; i illionaire, she put| ing. Jardent love, day Stocking material of the daughter of a Pittsburg millional ons pul ween Chroniclers of the time differ as to the exact course of the romance, on her best silk stockings, This aroused the suspicions of her sister. The New Girl. Many of its incidents have been hushed up or denied. Here Js one of the i Why should a girl who intends to elope postpone pytting on he MeSH SN EE ' N/ ld a girl who intends t pe postpone pytting on her “How (s the new girt?” you ask) The Duke, finding out at last that Tasso was serlously In love with naht after might and day after day) Leonora, suspected that she had encouraged the poet, Fearing lest her Jauring the intervals when one happens | brother's anger might fal! upon the Princess should this suspicion be verified, to be on the works, | Tasso devised a daring course to draw the whole blame upon himself, He “She won't do at all,” Priscilla alghs. pretended to be insane—in the hope that Alfonso might think the love for ‘She hw too much waist for ™Y/ Leonora a partof his madness. This plan meant the ruin of Tasso’s high |eprons.” position at court, but the poet nevertheless ried it out. He burst into A good tooking hendmatden arrives. | conseless rayes, quarrelled noisily, tried to murder a servant, and in a dozen |Atting the aprons and looking mIshtst) other ways led Alfonso to believe him a lunatic, The Duke sent him to @ attractive tn her cap. You smile on) monastery to recover his supposedly scattered wits. Tasso, disguised as a lthe new one with approval, She © 8) Sheohord, escaped and fled to his sister at Sorrento, where, for the time, he next day. Presently a two hundred 94 ' pound Swede comes dinate tn | But his love for Leonora gave him no peace of mind, He could not lve ar COW ETTIG cui out of her sight. So back he came to Ferrara, By this time, however, ea Nan oing?”” sx Alfonso seems to have discovered the truth, Furious at the trick played Mae the Swede doing?” you ask upon him by Tasso’s imposition and equally enraged that Leonora should “Not at all well, Jack, She filrts stoop to lavish her royal affections on a poet, the Duke plotted revenge. He it | dared not have Tasso put to death; for the Itallans with the janitor, . ® 2 worshipped the luckle: th d would have resented “pine!” says Jack, “Then we'll stand | Renae shipped the luckless author and “would have resente in with him.” But the Swede goes the of Revenge. his murder. So Alfonso had him seized and carried way of the others, A German sitc-| 4 ya tothe madhouse of Saint Anna. There Tasso was | coeds and 18 doing well when the gas locked in a cell and treated as a common lunatic, The stove explodes and blows her heavily | affair was in this way effectually ended, for the poet was undergoing a |against the gins closet. living death and was shut off utterly from the outside world, It is not | "T will Keep no German disturdance known that he ever again saw or heard from Leonora d'Este. i best silk stockings until it ts time to 1 go to the train? Adolph Smidth was married without the troubles of an elope- ment. He had been a widower five weeks and felt too lonely to wait for the delays of ordinary courtship. So he. advertised for a wife. The advantages of advertising were proved by his receiving eight appli- cations, He picked out one of them and married her. Is it any more likely that ‘Adolph Smidth’s wife will at some future time sue for divorce than it, she had péen procured by a year's courtship instead of a prompt adver- tisement? | ‘ Fred Holland and Agnes Sexton were mutes. They met at the sea: | shore. Their courtship was con- in this hou Prisca firmly. For seven long years Tasso was imprisoned at Saint Anna, Then & ) 4 iy : The maedsct powerful Italian prince secured bis release, But it was too late. The man’s | ducted successfully in the deaf and | (ere ee) wonderful brain* was affected by the confinement and horrors of the mad- 4 dumb language. They were en- What Comes Next? house, He became a wanderer on the face of the earth. A dozen courts i ees were open to him. Everywhere he would have been recelved as an honored to suit, as/ guest. But he wandered desolately from place to place in lonely poverty, His health was gone; his genius was fading. At last the Pope sent for 4s far as| him to come to Rome, there to be crowned poet laureate and receive a large might w d n. It was a dazzling reward for his life work. Tasso hurried to Rome ’ | Sack ts concerned yee ep this honor, for a Married Man, No Matter What Sort of Bluff He Puts Up Sa EeStes BR Hungarian megeeax There, before the crown or the pension could be bestowed, the wretched only rema'n ; A} wanderer fell ill and died, By Roy L. McCardell, | ings!" said Mrs, Jarr, con-| Polak and a Polak a Hungartra. : it it wasn't about time for | country maiden !s bounced because she coe rT; HAT'S that you're wearing?” you to W asked Mrs, Jarr, noting an of 3 emblematic button on the any gaged for a day and then marricd $ blan delle fail A Senegamblan * before their summer vacations were Mfr, Jarr Finds There’s No Such Thing as Personal Liberty [she fnsins on weasiny over, | | earrings as big fy walnut This proves that the ability to] speak words of love and to hear declarations of tender passion is not 2 necessity to either courtship ot| matrimony. | fous pearl | yalgea and make a foot pats on Airs and uses even more Ini-| Minainy mambers of this series will be supplied npon application to dliticlans that never did, M@culate grammar than her mistress. | Cirenlation Department, Evening World, upon receipt of one-ceat keepe Irish, English emd Scotch all have] stamp. Y blemishes. You fall into the habit} -. John Sphilling has a beautiful mus- lapel of Mr, Jarr’s coat "sald Mr, Jarr. Mea Suiatelake Tana re fs “Button of the Personal Liba uae ie aires N a tache, He spent a good part of his Ha ecaitreirrea make bets ith voursel Cos Cob Nature Notes. Spare time combing, waxing and curling it. When he became engaged aioinedvanctheriimiient Rivne vaieata UxIRIng ROLE TH on whether i fc an Ny HM Bee can ; der Last week Eugene Chard speared 10 Capt Ree 4 3 ‘ 4 i ; cts belatitey ina or a Bridget, a Mandy o SSS_VELS are plenty in the river. Last week Eugene Char the girl asked him to prove his sole interest in her by cutting off the mus- WAMeia ase eater kale oh 1 Men dare, “wynat fo 1 al . | f] pounds of them which he sold to the peasantry for 15 cents a pound. tache. He promised while in her presence, but when he departed he eWNSETy Cla Weg, AP Ara) SS nTid ACERT SAT EE p lsfone: ning tospe said ns (Sor a ooeeimene te mach iaeprelty bed toc bussne, Beli epeetine: [be Rent word(to ih re oul fall Heal eh Y f Lae RAST CLS | nion with a W. W. KAS —|ff nocturnal pastime. A tin box containing a reflector and a bunch of ent word to her that it was all off. you'll tell me th sat dy OX | ou wil eet @ lot of experience tn B tamp: gs over the stern of the boat, The eels come up out of the der whose motto ‘3, Temprrance.’ Bu ive to the mottoes. On the cor youl be drinking all the time and get tc fighting among yourselves, and as for know? You are a Virtue—here Mrs. Jarr gave a most contemptuc | “It's nothing of that kind, at all,” said Mr, Jarr. uman nature, fanguage, and weird, X-|mud to inspect the illumination and get speared. The eel is very simply con tie dishes. Also \« into training | structed. He has a three-cornered backbone and nothing else but toothsome a bouncer, To begin wah, You MAY fosh , Cut up Into sections about two and one-half Inches long and fried in Poe Tae ae hee {cele and pony and able) utter is the best system of cookery, Fifteen or twenty of these sections make ' MIS. to speak only your native CoriMitieiiae? ware PEST sete RUE ia ne Messrs. Ritch, Lockwood and Hitchcock, our Temporary Board of Gelectmen, 5 steel muscled. possibly a trifle battered continue to show the same grade of ability as Mayor McClellan and the Borough This story teaches that a giti who desires her fiance to part with his mustache had better produce a Pair of scissors as soon as he con- Sents and cut it off herself. hear you talk people would think I was a ory man!” said Mr, Jarr. > here did you get that button; that's what I want to very queer! personal Hberty butt: i t off “Well, then, {t's @ new beneficial society which will march y of wenring it and thé personal and sci:red, and able to creak a smal a i j George C. Thomson had ai- four abreast dressed like monkeys in mourning whan you Hherty of not telling you! replied Mr. Jarr aheHy. eee atects and brogues, [Presidents In New York Lee dy AL Cals Ae Uta Mae ais ; tained the scriptural three score years |die and have a squabble with our minister at the church as At this juncture the janitor came upstairs to stop a leak- road through Cos Cob with Neighbor Rooreteliars crude ol, and after giving It " ye to who's In charge, amt I’m to get a $5.00 death benefit for ing faucet. In a buttonhole of his Jumper ha was wearing a Don't Get Facetious. 8 (Day con to. to settle CAL erally caver ee. Nt Min tree tt and ten before he went to board which you are to pay only $1.20 @ month, and so many peo-| Personal Liberty League button. dirt and gravel. This makes the summer-dwelling city folks feel at home, for 0 ia just like the metropolitan trick of pulling up the new asphalt to put down the [ple will dle and get the money before you do that they'll) ‘Where did you get that?” asked Mrs. Jarr. “What is it hava to raise the rates till {t Is $19 a week, and you'll have for?” to drop out, after putting In hundreds of dollars, with noth- I got It down at G ng to show for ‘3 hae janitor, “A brewery r of that sort, elther,"’ sald Mr, Jarr. tell him your name and where you vote from, and then he , with Mrs. Hezekiah Tillotson, a widow of seventy. He liked her cooking and to make sure of the You berome an export dish walloper.| roreotten sewers and water pipes—and about as expensive i J s about the) Not long ago one of our neighbors wrote to orestry Sharp In Washing» Vou SUS" Tron to tell him how to get rid of the blight which {s killing all the chestnut s down th: | ces hereabouts, The Forestry Sharp wrote back that he didn’t know how to bs Iquor store on the corner,” said ves them out, and yous | lected for dog-catcher,’"" veare, A retort something like this Il, “So they are given out at that place on the corner, are wil! be flung back at ybu. s | “It isn't anythin, et font ests thie: permanency of the home comforts | "Its Just what {t means, a ‘Personal Liberty League,’ fer an 6b) ue pees of ay uaa ee stop it, but added the information that the blight did not extend east of Oyster fe oy : ' r moa aiwviat 3 4 é 4 a i W, Cr Ke A. A s 7 welnte ’ fs So eodore Roosevelt order st of his boarding-house he induced her to marry him. She expected to give|, “Wat do you want to belong to a personal liberty feague “But what {s it for?" asked Mrs. Jarr. smile, tn fact, sho probs wont | Bay. We are all wondering 1 Neighbor Theodor a sevelt cath a (tate wp her boarding-house and to gi Rea aaa © Oy | for?” asked Mrs Jarre. The trouble with you {s you have too, “Oh, I don't know," said the janitor, “But {t's to elect amen to vou tae & Week, then and there. Jt seems there !s nothing left to do but to mov t up her boarding-house and to go to live with him. When Thomson dis-|much personal liberty. I'd ke to see women getting up somebody, I suppose, and when you wear it people come up fy> not mention casually that Mrs, {Nut trees east of Oyster Bay, which would be quite a Job, : oe covered her intentions he disappeared. When a man has a satisfactory |@2ything of that cort! I'd like to see women try to have a to you and say ‘That man Hughes is a bloomer, and he can't pohinson has Kept her Sele for two Lish Kelly's bull pup 1s learning to catch muskrats Muskrats have a mu p * | little personal liberty! When they do, poor things, there is be Bice nore delicate perfume than skunks, which were his former specialty, The fishing Is pretty good. Last Saturday Frank Seymour caught One weake boarding-house he had better let a/a pretty row! ff women acted iike men do, staying out Me a lfish weighing two and one-half pounds In less than two hours, good thing alone. all hours, going with all sorts of company they shouldn't they?” sald Mrs. Jarr, ‘Well, we'll see!” Ht CHasTinveMElenTaoLibaIne ReveaG} ee i x be seen with, and then call it ‘personal erty 7 ing into where Mr. Jarr was, she sald, ou take off to s as that Mra. Robinson. | will ‘All Riverside {s buying shotguns and shooting clay pigeons with them. The The First Baptist Church at "Oh, don't worry. It Isn't real personal lberty; {t's just that button, and don't you wear it any more Jet n7 servant own me the way that | clay pigeon has no feathers, This just a hole with a clay band around tt whioh Atlantic City wants Rev, John W.|something in the abstract,” sald Mr. Jarr. “It's to fight ‘1 won't do it," sald Mr. Jarr. “It's for personal liberty!" | gadte owns your friend, Mrs, Robin-|'s set on top of a spring and sent kiting up Into\the air. Some of the Rivere foag to accept its pastorate. TI 4 | against oppressive laws; {t's to protest against curtailing But he took It off, just the same. eon. Fresh! Well! Words then fail, |siders can hit the ring, but most of the shot go through the hole. Meanyille eG 10 Sekept US Pastorate, TNC the privileges of a tree-born American citizen; that's what ft There's no such thing as personal Wberty fora married mut the temperreure of vour servant. | there are a dozen new shotguns in the hamlet, Translent burglars can take -a Crosse young lady to whom the | 1s!" man. [less abodo rises forty degre notice. ‘ Prot, Powers, the celebrated naturalist and psychist of Norwalk, has bean Rey, Mr. Hoag was engaged would § lysis of th Mr ( Sy iaea dy of Pres. Moellen's car No, 889. The analysis of the making a blological atudy 0! ‘© that No, 889 was formeriy ae ig & Nose he ss Reddy the Rooter, ut wt By George Hopf. (ir2ts jiint sed Sint hua ir'vn pn ela and which salled the Sound for forty years carrying hay, live stock and potato: m tide to rail Prof, Powers has The deacons’ wives have consti- ; to Peck Siip, Just how she was transmuted fro Its, Tt hi i | { hemselv committee to} E REOOY,IVE LosT my ot discovered, but he Is hot on the trail and hopeful of results, ie succeeds : tuted themselves a committee to Geeve Boss LEFT HIS New HAVE You SEEN IT ? Pee Nee in connection he will undoubtedly be able to trace the beginnings of a persuade her to come to Atlantic Re HAA Ry REBEL EA Sir i q Ay olner arks In which Pres, Mellen carts the hapless commuters, Prof \) - > AN' HERE'S A BIRTH: eM ulrement of a new car by the New Ht If she would not move to move to oblige the deac Some years ago a sagacious man named Aesop wrote 4 number ot fables with a moral appended to each. If Aesop had had the high privi- lege of reading daily The Evening World he need not have gone to foxes turtles, hares and other lower animals for his material. He would find | Plenty to occupy him with daily human nature, Letters from the People. City. DAY POST-CARD-MUST BE 7 SS KIN” Powers has never been alle to trace the acq t for Rev. John W, Hoag, is she likel BEIEOSSRG IR THOAYEILU PSST RE MNGOCUT raven road pete Wig st ev. John W, Hoag, is she likel) : : TO LUNCH Now +-—_—__—— PEN. wel The Tryanny of Fashion. Gye By Eugene Wood. ) 5 Ay, madam, never look eo scornfully at me. Don't tell me that these wild contraptions are all worn by you to please the men-folks, vie tver a fashion anything but comle to the men-folks? Aren't they for \. everlasting making fun of what you wear? , We're just as bad as you ‘ are, just as much slaves to style, only we don't go at It tn 2h 8 slambang, Pa's-rieh-and-Ma-don't-care wa you do, sweeping from one distertion to another. And that's the sad part of ft, The changes are 80 micro ect, that life, for us, Is just one scapic, and yet so necessary to our sF 8) t Peer Bo tong, agoulzing worry, That man who looks 80 swell in evening, clothes: you . | MR. BOND, KNOWIN’ 1T AND IN APPRECIATION OF 600) Yi 4 think he's happy, says Eugene Wood In Everybody's Mugazine. Little you ~ Late Ferry B | Y D WUS YER BIRTHDAY MOOR THOUGHTEULNESS O-EYE ,OLPBOY PICK IT RIGHT OFF lvnow! He has just discovered that he's the only man there with a black tle on. fs te mt TAINMPEN Sacre toon top ee OFF ee PGS asi PLAYIN’ DAT Le When a woman's head-gear gets out of date she rescues from the wreck the tw ‘tat A JTAIN-PEN SACTLY “DAY COP DE KAG FER DIS BURG! nompons and the plumes, the buckles and the bugles, ribbons, rosettes, glass . i : a ae ER esse Ke herrles, and muslin buds al! kinds of ornamental junk that she can use an- a mt i 1 yevbos, ‘ther tims, She can pull and yank the wire frame into the very latest style: ’ < Sy, nobody'lt ever know the difference, But between fast season's «ilk hat and this minutes la take a om se ly eason's there Is je-e-e-est a leetle mite of difference that defles all making vt rete bea 4 aver, Tho little more, and of, how much it is! No guilty wretch caught in the { street at " act of stealing sheep can possibly feel more like a sneak than the man caught ways on time é a 5 ‘ eae sn't feel that way, the more shame Occasionally from two to six ininutes wenring a last year's hat, Andf he doesn't feel y me late in reaching I a Yes, him! He ought to, necessary, readers? Zz ) the F roe i ita ; “Seven Standards.” They Looked Like It. { why "have we ri re ns reli 2 ‘ ADAME FBIER, the famous New York photographer, 1s very fond of Why !s 1 nove ai 2 M Indians, When Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show was playing an engage. 9 } few hands? And i Pas Tiia lotions eimene ene rae: muaetar ment in the city, she gave a reception to the Indians, inviting a hundred " " 1 1 5 M -- ~ - 7 RE, ETI —— | lor more of her friends to meet them. ‘ ee, en an ; Whe f ‘ ‘The Indians made a gorgeous sight In thelr native costumes. Their feathere@ 7 ¢ ' Gite \ ; ; 1 ear New York x A Fiansana Ride. :wspapers Than Ours Care of Olive Olt. oad-dresses were particularly large and splendid, says Everybody's Magaaine a poor 7 m Nn » for t scar m ERSIAN newspapers are reproduced from handwriting by lithography, no LIVE One little white girl, who had been brought by her mother, and who had never have not often knowledge or e igascar may . E oll Is Injured by beins ‘4 We hav owiedg Patient Taeed 7 a ee y P (pak balay deed O HERE ent Jae by Deine ket | seen an Indian before, gazed with open-mouthed astonishment at these strange j pelt yaaa as for bed and we need |money to pay £ treatment | Maile from two poles six feet t in newspaper {s printed {n a roll so that the subscriber may table it should be removed to a | feathered creatures, Finelly she turned to her mother and sald, “Mamma, do iY ! ° n te Inspect, POOR BOY. |) ng and with « seas and feet res | tr Off and throw away that portion which he has read, leool, dark place after each meal, Indians lay eggst” ' « j ¢ Vaca iinet be | } ‘ . the - - naa gi .

Other pages from this issue: