The evening world. Newspaper, March 7, 1911, Page 14

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 World ha, ese Tlorld, he Press Pir y Che Published Datly Pxcey a ANGUS Nehing Company, Nos 54 to 69 FAW, T r JOSEPH PULITZER Jur ‘ h One Year. One Month VOLUME 51.. «eNO. 18,095, DEMOCRATIC OPPOKTUNITY. FMOCRATIC Senators and Washington are going to be busy s next thirty days, shaping the party pol Representatives at itesmen for the ry for the extra session. The extra session will be for = not only on opportunity but a time of and —— in r , . =a = trial. They will control the House. They will be trong ww the Senate. By co-operation with progressive Repu they may be able to carry through the Senate a programme adopted in the House. Therefore the occasion ia for them one of far-reaching | Possibilities. The next Presidential election will be decided nine hand by the use they make of it. What share are the Democrats of New York to have in these icans councils 60 important to the party and to the nation? Tats wit == Is there to be sent to Washington as a colleague of Senator Root | |\ Oo THe TRicte @ representative of Democracy or an emissary of Tammany Never has there been in the politics of this country since the civil war a crisis more acute than this. The forces of national development are shaping an issue between plutocracy and the peonle. Which side will Democracy at Albany take? | WITHOUT REGRETS STIONS in Washington concerning the validity | of Senator Bailey's withdrawal of his resignation are interesting but not important. The Senators are | the sole judges of the qualifications of their mem- bers, and if any issue were made in the ease of | Bailey there can be no doubt his colleagues would refuse to unseat him. Did they not refuse to unseat Lorimer? But if Senator Bailey, in the unstable equilibrium of his temper, should on third thought decide to end all questions academic as well as practical in regard to the matter by quitting the Senate and politi cal life, there would be no loss to Semate, to Texas or to himself. The Senator is an able lawyer. He is a successful man of busi- ness. He is a clever politician. But his infirmities of temper, his nervous irritabilities, his violence of language in debate, his outbursts of anger in the Senate, and his inability to understand that people may differ from him without being jealous of him, unfit him for party leadership and for statesmanship. Therefore, if he should conclude to let the fight for Lorimer be the last as well as the latest of his | Senatorial performances, there would be no occasion for regret in any quarter. _ ot LORIMER’S ROSE WREATHS. ANY thousands of people in Chicago made a Sunday holiday to give Senator Lorimer an ovation on his return home. Doubtless if Dr. Cook sought a vindi Can You Beat It? aaa | LEGISLATURE | enim pen nag a Na a | lich een nrg Daily Magazine, Tuesday, 1911. Wives Who Have Made Their Husbands Famous By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Copyright, 1011, by The Press Pubieaing Go, (The New York World), No. VI.—Abigail Adams. HERE are kings and makers of kings, and though a cer.ain Earl of War wick ts known to history as the King Maker, many women have deserved the title; and no woman more than Abigail Adams, wife of the se ond and mother of the sixth President of the United States. ‘The daughter of the Rev. William Smith, « Cons:esattonal minister of Weymouth, Mass, and of Elizabeth Quincy, this most intelligent of pioneer American women could read and spell correctly when to do so was @ dang aud most unfeminine fad. At that time these rather general accomplishments ware rare, even ainong our forefathers. ‘or George Wasvington antedated Theodore Roosevelt more than 4 hundred years by evincing a Presidential partiality for phonetic spellings Abigail Smith was a thoughtful, well read, weil bred young woman in a day when the making of butter was held to be a rarer achievement than the mak.ng of epigrama She married John Adams in Octuver, 1767, when she was nearly twenty-three years old; and so by ail the standards of the day, was something of an old mald. In nothing was her superiority to other more exploited Revolutionary women 80 clearly indicated as by this—for the period—iate marriage From the day of their unton sve Was @ caim, intelligent balance-wheel for the iptelligent but irascible Jonn Adams. In 1764 when her husband was sent as the new Repubtic's first Mink: to Ergland Abigail Adams accompanied him, and, It is Very generally admitted by bietorians, was largely responsible for the success which paved his way to tae Presidency. England was feeling at that time about as comfortadie March 7, By Maurice Ketten. Tas Won't Do LET'S The KYO RAUUIC Jimmy OUTSIDE Renew, Where Woman's} and satisfied in mind aa was the typical father of the Wit Saves 3 period when he discovered that his son had gotten too big | the Day. for o\d-fasnioned family discipline—had found it out, by th Way, through the very unpleasant process of being shown ces} that the son was the younger and the better man, aS! Abigail was the diplomatist in the Adams family, and was often able to steer her more fiery husband away from difficult and dangerous reefs. Her intelligence and force and character are not matters of mere Kevolution- ary tradition, For her letters to her son, John Quincy Adams, were collected and published by her grandson, And nowhere in the annais of correspondence ie there evidence of a stronger, sweeter and more efficient femininity than hers. These letters are well worth reading to-day; and in them is @ proof that she not only did much to make her husoand’s fame, but also moulded the career of Joba Wuiney Adama. Her position as the wife of one President and the mother of another ts unique in our history, And to those o us who are too apt to fee! that at om the nobler feminine virtues, she is at onc + he new woman has @ copy- @ jesson an¢ an inspiration, “+ PaT WILLIAM : A Few Unexplained Mysteries of Sleep Ol one of the many scientific Our renee of time, S teries ‘hat still awatt solution. | str What it is exacty nobody knows, | We for instance, is nger When We are asleep than when are awa iments conducted many curious facts have recently | somo years a 2 4 number of men | been discovered aoout it by the world’s | and between the age venty | savants. and thirty showed ‘hat 69 per cent. of | For tnstance, when we sleep, the lower | (hein Were able to Wake up in the morn: | matt of us weighs more than the upper) "8 at any \d decided upon half, The brain is Mgnter and the iegs| ‘he wigat before. The resolve sees are heavier. Experiments nave shown | Wind up @ littie clock on tHe suycod- that if @ man goes to sleep on a bed | °C!ous brain, nded exactly at the middle point of | When the hour hi his welght his bead begins to up siowly | Ves. in some im, arny to the day sh up. and his fee: to go down, When he} h slid . Ks oa hs ag ie Halles awakes It is to find that als nead is get | ate ee is vans fay jen tn Wale Cle ng nearer aud nearer the ceding and arch tpartvorhan snares a feat his the floor. |rnis Is due to the fact that when we me. Kesvive some mo! |r d jin the da cation of his polar record by a well-advertised ap peal to the public, he also would receive an ovation in any large city in the country. The readiness to respond to appeals for sympathy on the part of Be And Giser leeps, A touch ui ihe toe wil waken yy no means a sign of either mental or mora | } efs| waicn carry blood to the brain. 30, in! {ge shoulder. aberration. The majotity of mankind applauds the conqueror, but ae | sleep the brain ts lighter and the feet! some s ientis.s hold that we do not t . ais ; made ; Mot only for the musicale, but , say! 40 there is ever a strong minority that sympathizes with the fellow who | 7% Yus'x%e"Fou'Wond want O* | Sorrow? We are parted, You will not them donate things; and also a tare ee ere oe ee ie fighting big odds, whether he be a hero opposing tyranny or a bandit battling with the police. The one type of man is just as normal @ the other, and in each cave there is, perhaps, an equal proportion of reason and unreason, By Roy L. McCardell. KS. JARR came in just at sup M per time locking so brignt eyed and elated taat Mr. Jarr kissed her thr once for himsait, ‘Those that are most assured in their condemnation of the bribery disclosed in the election of Lorimer need not waste indignation on | those that strewed his path with roses on his return home. The only | valid condemnation must rest upon the Senators who, though charged with the duty of guarding the honor of the Senate, permitted him to retain his dishonored seat, and thus made his rose wreaths the sym bols of a triumph instead of the decorations of a political funeral. she looked s0 nice, “Well, did you have @ good time at the bazaar?” he asked. “S'pose you're too tired to eo back again to- bight?" ‘Oh, no." said Mrs. Jarr. * Pov L M°CARDEE dace jo-aight and bring our 9 . ' ua . ub bi Mra. j_Cos Cob Nature Notes ji! fa a" Use iusband, ¥ OHNNY MAUER has quit cute) The retired farmers who make up| N° J didn't alg: Ms, Jerr. tng ice op Ten Acres, Now|much of ovr population are wondering ree — 3 Aare gs ee Cereal selee ald'is going 10 plant in te rien top ao, | ATE" when one, nests society people he has deposited where the Post Road used to be, Jt Is all ploughed up, ve fides, to the depth of some alxtesa inches for several miles, Corn would to preity Wel, some think, but others say sking personal questions. You blurt right out: ‘How's your wife? or How's your husband?!" 1, what of It? It shows @ friendly When the eels and shiners come vack to our ponu ater the i es out they will be surprised to ind it is consider ably suaser The trolley company, asked Mr. Sarr. Which is one of Mr. Me.len’s locai Loss: | WONG ve more ate (Ouse ws an impertinent ings, hus filed in several bun feat | PARE WMP Oboe 8 Tond tor Cate, 1 fraid.” said Mrs, Jarr Of AL 60 as Lo put io soine more awitcnes | ig oe ! ad to see ud not intrude upon the rixtcea-tout| Nearly all of our ts 1 art ing, aad highway left Ws oy siaie Hignwayuaa | SPOME 18 Neate and ¢ ay viking, “Hows Macdonald. The town owns the pond, and be raking up their front yards be: your husband? the aioresaid eis and atunere cannot |19Fe lems. Judge Brusa leaves the vis ‘ cold an Vote, hence inere uas out been any coin. |CCOF YF His bara open on sunny days a»: a co ned tone Pensauon paid sur the intrusive into | He Hens Can look oul, and the voice o my unfortunate his specnied roome Aduine In the crac Chan vecer.”* Abel muiust, sounds Uke Maude | ed-corn play caileu A Better Investment. People are saylug how wonderful it is that Mr. Melen aud the water company | So many signs have been put u> along CAD get any ining sey Want, While otuer | Mr. Lielien ® popular It. as to com 10lks are nur ev MuWed LO Wank auy- | pielely gout out the scenery, Even when ining. Pernups it meveral otoer per [Me tan Koes between Unrty-tve an Were Girectors in the trokey company, | tn ff the eye ve diferent. 4 with pul liow to Read Character, Miu. are many ways by which, Red palis deno:e a desire for command acler, fOr Wataave, Broad waus|epois denote good nature and biacw jus ita sacle naires catbon, inclined opposite, saya the Bosiun Glove, WO be musest anu unas Hung, BArreW |) Bieady, Widely opened eyes that are Ralls dene & jus DUL hot very |nut afraid to mect yours mean sincerity gentle nature 4 wre, dewire for scl-| and honor, Dut the steady, yusiw denote a eyes that look sd ' War ‘ ane kood aud faltering tha note ¢ en Vimean aa alert m wirals at you, 6 Ae ‘That tor a time benumnd us go, jeast, I like him and respect tim; that | without hurting his felings?” t ; “You say he ecorns to cell his Ede without love is as Rat and tasteless oa o dint an| 5 winter's cruel frost and chilis fs all, Would it be proper for me to tell | Do not permit the young man to call sa aaa ee at ad, pros | vote?” appetite Pass silent with the melting snow, him I do not love him? regularly—‘ell him you have otier en. , eyes show an ambitious natu “Sure. The most | could Induce — | sears, change ye to tiny rills You cannot tell the young man you do | gagements—or else let one of your par. 4nd of sedentary Badia! and » love fur activa, |him to do wae to rent it” From iistic Rirtasions sel) heartaches grow, Mrs. Jarr Plunges Into ‘ e@ (0 pull out your wat when iL comes round, You won't, except vy chan Another curious fact about that the further a part of away from the vrain the | | are asieep the blood in tue brain goes off | »%4 | co other parts of the vody, The moment the brain wakes to Iife again it draws | Charitable Finance! . | | dere we i sin s cae oe Amasses a Perfectly Splendid Deficit sleep is body ts § soundly te sicep in a few seconds by tgntly com. ally Heed siwep at au, Cuat it sa relic Almost any part of the brain may be | of primeval umes, When tuere Was no awake, several parts, indeed, at once, as artuncial ligot. some had to be found of passing Uwe mind if I tell you it is 4 very paintul subject and one that 1 try uot to dwell spon and one & 1 VER discuss them pay for advertisements in the programme. But the stingy old printer wouldn't let us have the programmes for the bazaar. Mrs. Stryver says It {s enough to mae one forego charit- able work forever when ene consider such (nui way fi . { and yet its owner may be fast asieep. er any circumstances’ ‘Chen they | til he got paid tor them, And we hadn't! the expense, ‘Things will be lively to- | \ man may talk, Walk Binks tbe wore Mibuiy Bud av ovine One talk to you for an hur about it and} taken in any money then—none of those Mish. Mrs, Diggett, who is the head hematical probleins, and yet be ery and aay they don't intend to sned) women would spend a cent, you know, of the Ant janibling Society, has do- Rated a Wheel of fortune and a spin- ring arrow and a very curious dice parked t safely in the land of Nod. One of C erldge’s finest poems—"Khubla Khan"— # single tear for her, or him, and that (he, or sne, has gone out of their live: because they and had especially the rich ones, had given their services | toFever, aiid are as one dead to them | worked themselves {o the point of Rer~) Kaho, the paraph rnalia of which was) Ae the Nork of a sleeping orain, The PAH INERSHIP, but if they ever cateh ‘hem with that| yous prostration going around threat-| Captured and contiscated in raids by | 4° tae sa eh ll | — Wretched creature they'll thrash him | ening the merchants that they wouldn't | detoct Replozed) by Het < epolsty, | RAR: AUER ee TIM COPIES EBC cic isiy Manned Bets abanenl or pull her hair, as tho case may be, if/deat with them if they did not donate| Isn't that sweet of her? UB dee FOUne WR He Ane men he | ie See Ung cincied: ae ae they were to die for it » When you| handsome articles and candy and cake ery, said Mr. Jarr. “But what) &% 4P one morning, He had writu ag | thought © 2 Meet society people, you must not ask how husbands or wives are. Waiting or one's cue in these matters is what did you do this afternoon? | “Well, I was at the tea tables," said Mra. Jarr. “And some outsiders came in the nightwhile asleep. Jn lavt, exactly Wat part of the brain it dy that does sleep it is hard to dectde, opera this eveniag? “4 Sirs, Ditto—\es, love, but I aave changed our mind.—Vuck, and ice cream." “What with the musicale in all the foreign languages they gave at Mrs. i» called ‘tact’ vF ‘suvolr faire’ io | siryver's and the bazaar, they should|!n and got some tea, They were @ lot | erent: sociery.” }have enough to build few sailor | °f those pushing women who come to| “Ob, ts It?” said Mr. Jarre, “Well, I! bungalows. Bh, what?" asked Mir. Spare: BGA thinking, becau: N not forget your warning when I Jarr, ey are treated affably while they e 1) fm with the modish throng. But NOW | “Oh, mo, There wan a defett of 31/#2E4 tones, that ihe soctety patron: | | BY ett y incent’s did the bazaar for the Bungalow Colony | from the musicale, ‘That's why we are| esses will t them up, But they | for Homeless Sailors make out?" |noiding the bazaar,” sald Mra, Jarr. | “fierwards find them elves cut, 1 te ‘ “Oh, grandly!” sald Mra. Jarr, ‘‘It| “Mrs, Stryver and Mrs, Vanswine have | 7° a d t | Was an assured suce We went to! been to terrible expense, personally. att said Mr. Jarr, | Vv 1 Cc e Oo Oo Vv ( T S e ; Mrs. Stryver then & the tradesmen we knew ai ve both gotten new dresses and ail the tradesmen we knew and made! They've « Meshal aks eee, ted by | taking the tea money over to the candy i ounter and spending it th ‘Then | Zhe Untelcome Suitor. |the ladies at the candy counter took | UITE frequently 1 receive ietters trom giris asking me the money to the fancy work booth how they may rid themselves of tne attentions of and spent it there; Mrs, Vanswine thea | young men whom they do not particularly ike, had it spent at the ‘Ye Olde Brass Take, for an example of wnat 1 mean, this iotier L re Shop’ booth, and so it went around,” ceived in a recent mail ‘The girl writes me: “Did you get the programmes from “A certain young man has cailed frequen | the printer?" asked Mr, Jarr, better way steadily—upon me for over a year | “No, we didn’t have the roney then this young man loves 1 | So, as the bazaar is only for one day, «it Also 1 am qu |we won't bother with them for to- g + cares for me 1» fact, night, Anyway, We got the advertis se. e cannot téil nim I do not lov ment money in advance from the mer- mn i Wien you Would tel me a i" Sint #0 tons."” a rousing success them, the) Now, my dears, this is @ very simple problem. Girls who feel this way about ’ sald Mr, Jarr, some inan who is in the habit of calling upon them simply snould not see hin It ta dificult to tell which ta hardest to endure ino | «Weil, wait till you seo me in my new ge often, It we entirely courtovut to reply that “you have other engagements” iusband—voptimism, egotism or rheumatism, | dress to-night!" was the reply “And, | when a man asks if he may call, and it is nox rude to ve “out Whea ne calls | while it is @ pleasant affair, isn't it Reflections ofa & & Bachelor Girl By Helen Rowland I might Now & fee o although he has sever told me go. © positive 1 could nev Rom re for nim as be Avidtabilie Vale OY die Aree A UMiaiid ay (he Dew 2S Mtl cours, | he ra t ner nif De does not ask me, so Woh cao discourace ais atten: H, yes, man was made in the image of the Lord, O tm spite of what he looks Itke in cvening clothes. banaar?’ ‘ Unexpectedly, If @ man “bores' you, my dears, sunpiy do not see him. American women appear to be divided into three classca—the woman | sweet %@ think ‘a ail for charity?” | pyar enda the matzer who belongs to a club, the woman who belongs to a dub and the woman who Z | ao. Simply do not ac ov marked belongs to Beeizedud, ABreath of Spring, | 4 Birthday. ve ag [Attentive from nim | GIRL who signs her tetter "le K| Doe. Nor Care Don't worry because your husband begins offering frivolous excuses for | | going out nights; wait untid he ceases bothering to offer any at all. A W." writes: | “A young man calls | steadily and we expect to oe ma By Cora M, W. Greenleaf. MAN who signg his ieee °M. 0. A Mot writes HE smell of Spring ts in the air, | some day. Soon he 1 to have a bil ‘ Saree i pave been calling steaaity y i I _ r s giv @ present. Woula |¥pom a young Kirl Wao seers to Uke me A black band on a young man's coat sleeve has the same alluring effect 1 heard @ crow caw yesterday, | and 1 wish to give him @ py Mint GUN Wee. 1 bon Veo ae on a woman Gs a “marked down" sign on @ bargain counter, The moiwt crown sod lies suing, | it be proper to Bive him @ silver maton- * bare, | vox or a watch charm?” for her and 1 wisn to it ier vw cols, Where dingy snow last evening lay; Since you are practically engaged to Kindly advise me now wo proceed.’ An English nobleman either marries an American heiress and “7 New Life seems spring: ‘every wise | nurry the young man it would be on, | Cease your astent ens ine annae for her or marries @ chorus girl and gets “done.” My Lappy, Wandering footsteps airay, | tirely proper to give him whatever you ¥ eraduaily, Do not do so aoruptly, wish, and 1 should think be would be |@# that may seem rude att very pleased with either of the two gifts |4'ttude toward ber, | you have mentioned, Joo Young. . GIRL who stens eu P, Thinks She Cares. A pee S09 oleae her lester GIRL who signs her letter “HE. Bo" "A young man has been call. tes Kon me stead! ® A “A cortain man thinks Tam in| 1 am too young to Jove with him, although I am not In the|tions How can 1 1" your past i} The woman who ts “wedded to the Cause of Suffrage” must find it| rather unsatisfactory not to be able to run her fingers through its hair and | 4 weep on ifs coat lapel now and then. | ter ts o'er, his fey chains s, melted, now are past, of spring o'er hills ang Ww Awakes the buds to growing fast, | life's sorrows, cares and patns only in memory can they last, At the altar every man exchanges rose-colored spectacirs for a magnify. ing giuss. my parents gay evelve such a et sand M know this | Into the past silp | =! Of hope thawed out, once more aglow; | Bor Jove Lim unless be aske you if you ents explain the situation te him iad. 5 Ue ES

Other pages from this issue: