The evening world. Newspaper, March 16, 1911, Page 18

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aa | i NRT as z ’ eeahathagianat Gatun eee — o The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, March 16, 1911. Wives Who Have Made M uv e : Gre can Bh Bas Their Husbands Famous by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 88 to 63 Row, New ATE, Pres. and *: JOSEPH PULITZER Junior, Sec'y. i By Maurice Ketten. red at the Po nm oRate to The r Subserip: Fvening | Fo ., nal 7 laa Bd MATS Do SOMe roreng SEE By Nixola Greeley-Smith. LA eee 1)... aNlndnch A Aol \ARaRA aee Copyright, 1911, by Tee Vie Vublisuius w, (fue New Kae Worlds, YOU ME 51 —— Martha Washington. ¢ the presidency of George Washington were having @@, the victorious A an General wi greatest man that ever live Following the us irse of such df sions the argument grew rapidly personal, “Where would you be to-day," sald the advocate Washington's historical pre-em if it hadn't for Gen, Washington BANK BOOKKEF PIN the Carnegie Trust Com UT of the investigatic an of 8850000 pany comes the diace made by the Van Norden Trust Company and the } + lumph!" retorted tie douvier, scornfully, "Ww Nineteenth Ward Bank pat through a course Would Gen, Washington be if it hadn't been for the Wi Yy «so tortuous Chat it is nol clear wheth went ‘ nie : E SG " ere if a popular superstition to the effect that im WY Me 0 the treasury of the Carnegie Trust or into the ike Obn Lien a qobd tan dowik: t don nk ite al true, but admitting it, it must ais ye conceded Chat th nothing like a long “pull’ and a strong “pull” and a “p all together to bring talent or merit to the surface, And the “Widow Custis,” whom wae know and adi as Martha Washington, had precisely the sort of “pi George Washington needed, She had a great deal of mo and great deal of “fainily—more of both than Wash! Limself possessed—and the prestige of their joined fortunos was not wit influence in the selection of the then Col, Wast pockets of a high officer o coupan Other sums appear to hate followed courses equally mysterions, fo that, as one report puts it: “The bookkeeping seems to conceal rather than reveal the transactions of the company.” Disclosures of this kind enable outsiders to understand how it ton 1 is that cashiers and other bank officers eo ofien manage to rob banks ton as Commander for years and embezzle hundreds of thousands of dollars without being | ATE ABouT. ) . ABOUT. FINE Chief of the American forces, Hareead bi Uirdetore off oxkintdars: \ | tee Mucr Face | Face! \BREAKFAST! Her tnfluence was less direct than that of Josephine on career of ri . / BREAKFAST ‘ UA aa poleon, And under any other conditions would bave been equally true. The Intersi Commerce Commission found rairoad bookkeep- | bedish. a= WO It is not easy to make ‘hist keep the Ten minandments at the sai ing so full of concealments it was ne sasary to enforce upon the roads tim And Martha Washington k history making to George, The fair and fragile J her chavacier, and Marc the charming Creote, Martha Dand the commandm Ss sirketly and left | the adoption of a rational and uniform system, Why should not a} pine would have found it difficult to und Ad she been in possession of all the ts concerntt have classed her among persons unfit to kno similar clear and honest method be imposed upon banka? The thing is feasible, dige, who became by her first marriage Martha Custis, w ste born in 182 and was Cierefore the sane age as George Washington, whom met at the home of a friend where the young Virginian, while riding with mil vy despatches, had stopped to dine. Such was the fascination for Washingt visited her at her plantation, In 1769 she became the wife of tl TO-b, UPT. WALSH of ihe Children’s Aid Society desires fean and iived very happily with him his death int 8 a stringent supervision and regulation of moving survived her husband three years ulngton shared with her husband all rked among the suffering soldiers and es of the Colonial wife. boon poor Grorge Washington had inherited the & the Widow and was a well- efore was wholly disinterested, 5 ure glory. vardships of Vath ave evidence of all t picture shows because many of them have been found dan «oof their associations. President Philbin of the Parks aud Playgrounds Association desires to prour as places of resort and evil in brother when he met ates of a hy oo planter at tnt was undoubtedly time, His marriaze t a stepping stone to organize a large federation of clubs and societies to promote popular recreations in all wholesome forms. Park Commissioner Stover is ar- ranging for a scries of open-air dramatic performances on a large scale at popular pri |" Royal Children and How They Are Brought Upg By Henry W. Fischer Coprright, 1011, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York World), | * ’ use a street car. An automobile or No. 2. Royal Heirs im) ie hae is a treat for them | Austria. real, dyed-in-the-woo! princes and NS the Auatrian royal famity | cesses look upon vehicles as inetrumen| 1] the boys are rigidly seques-| of torture). | The three movements differ widely in purpose and in method, but they have a mutual relation to one of the most important problems of a big cily—that of affor ng place and opportunity for the necessary | recreations of youth. [t does no good to forbid an undesirable pleas: | ure unless a desirable one is substituted. Suppose every saloon and dance hall and picture show and cheap vaudeville were closed; sup: | pose boys and girls were made to keep to the streets and alleys and | other public places—what would be the gain? | The movement for a censorship of picture shows is excellent Unt even moxe excellent are the two that tend to provide betier recre- ations in reach of all and harmful to none. trated from non-royal young-|,, THe other day Sophie, who will “first princess of the blood when father aucceeds to the crown, was an hour after school ‘for being fresh and the teachers of Max and n | have repeatedly advised “papa” that sound thrashing woul do the do; world of g00d, No doubt they got was coming to them, for Francis dinand is a atrict discip!inarian, In this respect he follows the exam [of Emperor Francis Joseph, who | known to infiict corporal punishment {hia gtandchtidren and nephews whi jever he learns that such extreme m: ures are needed. Only quite recently jerdered an imperial highness of or thereabont (who had beaten a hou! j mada) to remove the uniform he wor jin honor of the Emperor's visit, to sters; each tiny highness has | tutors of his own; their | “exams” are private affairs, the di- Nas pansed uron their progress sing rv praises as a matter of course, and lus of youthful rivairy lack- ing) their talents, if they have any, do not fully develop. Francis Merdinand’s consort was & | governess—teaches to the oval girls of Austria—ere she became a wife; and |knowing the shortcomings of the # | tem, decided, when she had children of —~————e¢e oy ICE CREAM MEASURES ITH more than ordinary gratification the fore- sighted man looking forward to the coming of sum-}| —_ mer will note the order of the city authorities that | ice cream dealera must sell iheir product in sealed | measures duly inspected and found correct. ‘The | need of speh an order is proven by the fact that a single day of inspection found upward of nine hundred cans to be | fe thort of the | measure. | Mrs. Jarr Discovers With Holy Joy That She 7 tern decided, when the hed chilren of Has Cruelly Wrecked a Perfectly Good Life} corinne sess yrosioen of many {lustrious men and women Accordingly, when her first born, phie, Princess of Hohenberg, was five Copsright, 1911, by ‘The Press Publishing Co. a good wort for anybody!" wald Mrs, ‘But, Geewhilikens!” cried Mr. Jarr,| body. You are too selfish.” i are k (The New York World), Jarr sharpl “The fellow is a tramp!” | “Then I'm in wrong and in bad be- years old sho was sent to a kindergarten | +4 utprit over his knee and applied Ice cream is a luxury without which summer in New York would R L. McCardell | “So te a young Dink?’ Mr. Jarr! “Ah, who knows what he would heve|cause I have behaved? And he's all| to mingle with the other “kids” of the Been veseacels We devoid of half its charm, An cager populace may not get the | OY Be McCardell. | vent on, “1 think I remember him, too.| been, it—well—if things had been differ-|right because he didn't?” asked Mr. | Vienna Belvedere Quarter and, in time, After mastering the three R’a, Prine’ cass Sopiite will be sent to high echool, i j 44 Mra, Jarr. Jer. + | Prince Max and Ernest had the same leaping measure it desires, but a full measure it deser | said Mra. Jarr, with a sim-/t@k to an object Hke that, you would “By George! I think you mean ft, m not saying that,” said Mrs. Jarr. | wholesome experience. As, however, 1000 y> e waining school until ohe for. There is no use weeping over the short measures that evidently | pering expression, “you two| lave a few words to say!” too!” sald Mr. Jarr. ‘Do you mean to! with a sigh. “But you wouldn't hi during the first ten veara of Francis setene, aaamanen Sots ddA cd rs heated . i t 1 ‘ tle wi 1 should know each; ‘“Ffenry Dinkston was one of the|tell me you think you would have been | broken your heart or gone to ruin !f T| Ferdinand’s and Sophie's marriage, and. nurse. cheated appetites in past seasons, but all may chortle with glee at the aiace uaa ou ve at high school,” said| better off if you had married that | hadnt married you. thar Galen Gas ieakek us6e mney | AaCtae ee prospect of surfeit to come, friends: | Mrs. Jarr, “Ife engaged tn mercantile | wreck” “And ought I have done so if you had | ganattc and the children as exctuded | catlénk Wil idles hav & ValCaBiA Ue |pursalts and was doing well. And! “Ah, but would he have been a wreck | refused me?" asked Mr. Jarr. from succession, the imperial family re- : : Mr, Jarr, aome-| 30° ask “Certainty,” repiied Mrs, Jarr, ‘it is her husband both In war and peace™ what surprised at | then,” e Mrs. Jarr paused a moment,|{f he had married ME?" asked Mra. wnted : | fused to get excited about the innov mee te uote BF ee these words, mur-| “end t whe continued, great|Jarr. ‘I suppose you mean to insinuate | the greatest compliment a man can pay | 115), a w—and pays | 66 R. DINIKSTON, Mr, Jaret’ | Gee! If I waa to stop on the street and/ent a oho ~ COMPARATIVE EXTRAVAGANCES mired that ie | sorrow comme into hin Ke, that ne would bea worse wiesk?” [a woman | ,THat the vex-tescher” sand. nravent | sto achool, Latin nohoots wetvaral bet would be giad ine} “Oh, yes, think I heard about it,"| Mr, Jarr was bewilderad. Duchess of Hohenbere will mount the | Fuiblte setool, Latin schools univers AGISTRATE BREEN of the Morrisania Police deed to know Mr, | Said Mr. dary, ‘Tle was caught tapping ‘an you beat it.” he asked. “De pou | throne at the side of her husband the acnman acldlbes: ‘ . . inky ston wetter, ithe till in the grocery store where he mean ‘to say tha: He: Dinkston Is aw | moment Francis Joseph closes his eyes i Court, in he ring a charge of violating the speed law, brought against the chanteur of Supt, Walsh \ ease Mr, Dink of the Bureau of Weights and Measures, not only Sev t Mega, UC ue pe | friend of mine At was a man T low, It Is terrible to think that one te i i r H arried ee Jole fo a Id him for trial but declared a conviction that | 4Mably and tvirled a frayed and dasty | might have mares He wae crany|pernais reaponaidie for blighting derby in hie not too cle hands, |About me. | Career. In the Tall © got fired.” he is to-day Decause you refured him You forget,” said Mrs. Jarr very, “I do not say anything,” replied Mrs “that you are speaking of a Jarf, “But you have seen the poor fel- | gaeutl nadged® Wenateaa Kd sGuaan: “If elther of them shows reat tal now a settled fact. |for soldieing I will make him | Max, the voung man referred to, te |oficer,” says Francis Ferdinand; | now in his ninth year, His sister Sophia Rot. they must do without epaulets. ‘will be ten in July, the youngest boy,| This {s another innovation, for Ernest, will be seven in May next. average prince !s made a Keutenant Vive prop Also appeared tol {tion | Worked; and in providing the head of every municipal depart: | jerked down a greasy neciein gia! wan) “You're lucky you didn't marry hin, | ‘Hew about met” asked Mr. dart. 1 Unitke thelr cousins born in the pur-|i# birth, and by the time he te went with an aniomobile the city government is wasting money. ang high up over a etand-up celiutold | aren't youv’ raid Mr tr, «lp @) HOR, OUP T auppose YOU are all ple, the Hohenberg youngeters have | &* Max wears the insignia of a colo i | collar cracked and greea with age, and |W ttter-of-fact cone right,” repiied Mrs. Jarr, with an air nelther governors nor la se Nor lee | ON F 27 OYAL ai EN @ So, also, Congressinan Richard Young, in addressing the Hide Jen mon sentlee | (Neat: THA ROYAL CHIUDREN eo sure of that, ‘said Mrs, {that implled ye wasn't. “You wouldn't jsatd ve would ding bet “imp i 7 men in walting, They walk to school or! BELGICM,) and I ation at the Hotel Astor, complained of the un- And you must come and take dinner have thrown your life away for any- ’ a #0) me Yon't for ur’ add ere ee Qt oi of Congress, | 8ith, us some | Pan't forggey "a a ed Mre. Jarre he said, “has given you the most) And Mr. J New York strictures upon the extravaganer n dollar Congr 2 Re Ruoeled & good-by, and Mine eat at |Reflections ofa % # % hurrying on ee a ce —__ Bachelor Gir] If Insects Were As Large as Men liberal government on earth at Yor} a Coat Of BIO per capila, while New Jarre were once Nevertheless, Congress has not been as free with automobiles as has be heard Me. De f to din | NY \ RPETLE draw forty times| why thew never wi ‘They need 1 Rha Hoaed cae Aineenien| othe Wat ES tatives refused | isome. tin 1 to not t Mrs By Helen Rowland NS A ts own welght, A horse, pro-| much to eat, Tt ima cae of the com een the Lebel ROT MEN, he fonse fepresentallves velured | 5, w kushtgt a portionately strong, could hail | iv hen there came to be #on one to Speaker Cannon, and Champ Clark is reported to have pron « » “ ted to Cowrght, 1011, by The Pres Publishing Co. (The New York Wert), ve tons. ite iets n ® that ¢ y hedeahten i» a ' MW " L A 1 ls 1 hor he V the seercarfare a woman's most valuable asset is} s ld ¢ ma the e they began to eat of ins there Washington standar extravage New York |5 & hie lege unde I chives @ man’s is cheek MOHAN OL SAN 8 Baye cuewiey Bak Gn cine oes Bee o ive coded the siee ' ere Some denar eco teld le precaunan ‘to ne BN iy ed ee Mp. 200 tines f cag , ‘ i go d In a lie sy | Vh n vant uiae atin tar is tad ath. For a man, that would | There ts not encuzh food in the ments of the city government where automobiles are probably more |ahe had been cordial. ‘There was That tired expression on a bachelor's face is not 80 of any Kind to feed a creature that eap of nearly a quarter-mile. | conducive to riding than to business ae aan ne: often the result of brain-fag from an overworked mind | 1f @ man could travel as fast propor: | i) bie ™ . oh ipsa ha piyaee _— eee | TR heen tate eae us of heart-fag from overworking the emotions | tionately as a fly he could cover six, : Tate of inkests were created ‘to-day big an men they would svarve ina short T miles a minute If men shad insects appetites, says the | Scrap Book would be lively times in this world getting enough to A , From the fine old Dinkston family of In smart society marriage is becoming merely the intermission between Math a ° a such @ pro \- | Letters From the People| Pate. Aud he ad 89° «BROOME | ones gir es re some other reasons why ave ramained small. One Is re bese He cae | dragon-fly has deen seen to eat for : ache ga hanks Nuahed and her eyes Orightened, . house-filas inside of two hours, which | S'*® @ fought os her a am “ Henry has outgrown the promyes o| It rather spoils one's hope of Heaven to reflect what a lot of undesirable | | rich an If 8 Wan nee dawn te 6 re flere e most w Vo the Bad | inite Ne joka 11 me Ns people secu bent on getting there—and what a lot of nice men seem dent) EX STATE SENATORSEEDS ||| hears: nea ora wiste rons? whisien, | NSP men ever wove Known {0 do What ¥ teor | pented:.by old on going the other way. ; vegetables and ple, ate it up in five! eae one ; In fact, Henry looks to me SAYS | vies and ie a dinner iy some other insest lo . jie Sas : sees | minutes, then ate another, and kept os bach Aliad Ghitiautaric earth Apply eg Most men's love-making nowadays is of that vague, indefnite, “impres-| THESE DAYS WHEN OLD up during an entire afternoon, A chi D murine it a i i Jen is about the same size in proporti poaeniansatiipmaniangtaien Fy as aniae the. & . AY S800 gionistic” school, which keepe you busy guessing what he really means. ' TIME POLITICIANS GIT to men es @chousesy indo theaom:| V. 8. Military Academy, What le the never believe in dreswine ae nar tee - | THEIR IDEAS OUT OF | mon ‘“darning-needle,” and we Seven Wonders of the neceeary sep io take eee pie ih ie eoo:ntng AE baka Pa Somehow a woman can take the news that her husband has robbed a COLD STORAGE THEY eat it bones and all at that | World . ow ne. ® nT T of of th naect world ave! ° . In the World Almanar, eet eau tite tee Dank ov broken a tinh wuch more calmly than she can the news that he has, * Jeae i nares 6! he tnaaek 8 ave) i 4 To the bal 4 i : ee . | GINERALLY SEE ‘EM AU Digger appetites, A sikwern Krad | gg P WONDER where he gets Waere rvce lawe of " , " ee been seen with a blonde, { HEAT Jeats in its first month of 1one: New York and Nevada and othe . rs et ah -—— | SPILE UNDER THE } would be three hundred tons t Iwo Btaron’ MAY, | PORs EOMEAL: cage. and A nigh duesn’t object toa gut having a knowledge of the world: it's let OF ARGUMENT. jit were a human baby, 91 such clothes April 18-19, 1908, Dinkston® Dinke 1 Mr.| ting Jim know that she has it that shocks hia sensitive soul | Bini siya Bundred times 10 Iw ' of Thin Keeping Worst Y Tas vanesaly, as ean aia | The average baby welghs ab 1 we sh What was the date of the Say Fran- I! sat The ® Take DInkiion aho’ whe Lirentad for | pounds, 60 that if it ate in tie way tie | me cisco earthquake? LN Ta the word Mr. & Man's! buying lead pipe and brad from chil- Love is never quite dead so long as two people are sufficiently interested | ailkworm barby does, and grew as fast, I wonder if he thinks nobody dust Listent viotting card? gran who had stolen tt? Ol4 Dinkston| fo quarrel with each other. rome a eh old If aeuld be bianer Peots him To the Eitor of The Ereuing World day. who kept the junkshop on the side eee than any POs ave. ree , J wonder if sie thinks the powdi a fairy tale, doesn't show." And this ts the rengon why inseots| ‘I wonder if he wil! ever propose™ ave never been a4 Mg ge man, and Ohicage Post, I have read that civilised people have | ro the ttivor of Tae Erming World {street from where you lived when I f h Mespproved of women wearing hobple! 1 was born Dec. 18, 18M, Un what day | was courting you? Half the world thanks Heaven that oxtrts. ee Bw. | “It seems to me that you cover nave! Gmuccs itsel/, oS 's better half doesn't know how (

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