The evening world. Newspaper, March 21, 1911, Page 18

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The Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, March 21, 1911. Stott. | | Wives Who Have Made Their Husbands Famous By Nixola Greeley-Smith, Gentle Spring. By Maurice Ketten. Pebmened Dally Except Sunday py,she Pres 4 bitshing Company, Nos. 43 to 45 | "ark Row, J » New I 8 ANGUS PHAW, Pres and Treas, | JOSEPH PULITZER Junior, Booty. 68 Park’ K 64 Park RB at at the Post-Office at Now York ag Fecor ACinss Matter @Badbseription Rates to The Evening, Por Fneiand and the Continent end | World tortie United Bates All Countrles In the International end Canada, Postal Union, Qne Zert, aC seeees 69.80 ae eReRING Za) v7] a seeo: Copyright 1911, by The Urew Pudlisking Co, (dhe New York World), : —— ra vot alls PLANTING Lady Beaconsfield. ] ania ZY # Benjamin Disraeli! had now married the exirenely weslthy widow of W; I] ham Lewis he might never have been Prime Minow of Bneland and eh | dem beloved adv o> | DEATH IN MEDICINE. | ble than anght elae, the rand friend of Queen Victoria Disraviis marriace was frankly oce of self-interest, He was thirty-fAve when the took place whieh insured his political future and the oride was Nitty. Ace ing to Mrs. Duncan Stewart, Lady Beacons: fleld Was originally @ fectory girl and ol: Lewis met Ree one day as she was going barefoot t) be. work, He educated*her and married her, dai and left her tich—@o rich that the keen young pulitical advent Disraeli sought her hand “My dear,” the eatd naively to one of her friends aaked her why sie was inarrying Disrwoll, * to me while my first hus alive know that he really loves ma Yot tour years before the future Lord Beaconsfield describing a visit to the home of his future wife, w husband was etil) living. wrote to his sK Hy | “By the way, now would you ike Lady Z for a aisier-in-iaw? Sie te clever, has $250.00 end ie very domestic As for love, ali Hed for love or neauty elther veat their wives or ve upnit fre es in iife, but 1 pever intend too oomrry for of infeweity Disrael) wae for a tine a ae retary to Wy With all hie t INCE life ts more v disclosures mado by T! lesa, if not fraudulent, manner in which medicinal prescriptions are dealt with by druggists coneti- tute by far the most important issue now presented ae to the people and to the law. The fact that but a emall percentage of the population of the city are sick or are in need of drugs may lessen popular interest in the subject, but does not detract from its importance. Whether the Carnegie Trust Company can be mado to pay ite depositors in full is, of course, a matter of serious concern in many @ household, but it is as nothing in comparison with the question whether the medicines sold to the sick are pure or impure, healthful or dangerous. This, therefore, is a crusade in the interest of life itself. It ie one that concerns every heart and every home. There can be no safety for rich or poor, no confidence in skill or care, so long aa death is allowed to lurk in medicines administered to direasa. On that point there must be honesty absolute. ~ 0 pe World concerning the care- them. 1 may sien, 1 am bein oot tives an nis Dome, ent, it te doubtful If Without Mrs Lewin s at ne cuusd nave Over come hle Inherited difficulties of prvers unt rae 4 Fae WO) at othere created by hip arrugut @ and Nis fantasti vil) foppas: aarkuce | | ! A Marriage “For Revenue Only.” none | Hie marringe a) once reiieveu fim vi @ Ge venuoue red THE STREET PROBLEM. | | his future Gy Curnienine mim the meana ol vevainina hi brea , The most fumnilar gory of Lady Beaconsed's cevouon to ner nusband OMMISSIONER EDWARDS, addressing the City Feintes that one day when sie was diving to the House of Varianent with Disri Who War about lo nuke @ very erlang wee Fer hand wee tertt- Club, presented a strong plea for more money for . at a m Tue SPring The Diy crushed by the losing of the carrtace the use of the Street Cleaning Department, do- YOuNnG MAN'S FANCY Fearful tem ce) russand mer . oom the ore he claring that the present issue of mud and the ‘ UGHTLY TURNS. wae facing ane du € ekeru ia ing bain in eve a. sot unt! after @m .€Tc. Disraeli s triump. from the physicia Though Dieraei: married trom fianaiy cone es net | ely fund of the su yle woman whe did 4 return to ler fe Wa oe eaiyed of lus atte w injury coming issue of dust are “squarely up to the Board of Estimate.” | This, of course, is but a new presentation of what Tennyson | wad been caAled to atiend DEE-LIGHTED ne genu- urately, Whone Weal!n and jen tervess sled 1 A called “that eternal want of pence that vexes public men.” Almost | Say it cL ARSE is oe a eee elie every issue of the municipal government goes up to the Board of Zea \ ed Mary vcr lt nthe vie aud de yo fe ko ine purmutt Fetimate sooner or lator, but the Board generally succeeds in 60 gee i LS ORANeI EE Rone te can nented on levte: Beaconadeid & wecnontuons cape playing one against another that without practicing economy on any for nard Work his Wife explained wt 1 aiwaye have supper for him when he con he and hight, lent, plenty of Nant Dizzy always Mkes light And then he telle me ali that has happened th tne House, and then f clap him off to bed.’ Surely a woman who was married for her money could wish no eweeter revenge than the desvlation of grief Lady Beaconstield’s death brought to the Tory leader “1 hove some of my friends wti! Thad no home When 1 tell my cor satisfactory scale it nevertheless keeps every department in a condi- | tion to explain inefficiency by alleging a lack of money. Other cities manage to keep their etreeta clean at a rate of expen- diture much lower than that allowed for the work here, but of course our conditions are different We lack water and hose for flushing and carts for hauling dust. What we lack most, however, is a city, Ke notice of me now," he said, “I feel as shinan to Arive ‘home’ I feel it is a hollow mockery.” ; in And no wife ever reveived a finer tribute than Mrs. Disraeli! when her hus government really eager to do the work. Bele 2 ea jpene sald ‘We have deen married thirty years and she Nas never given me a dail | moment” POSTAL SAVINGS BANKS. EPORTS from the forty-eight experimental postal banka opened last January are o excellent the offi- ciale estimate that if the system “should be pa- tronized in the same proportion when it is estab- lished in all money order offices the total amount on deposit after one year’s operation will be about ae $200,000,000.” On that showing Postmaster-General Hitchcock is quoted as, saying the success has been “more than could have been reasonably | expected.” ‘The saying sounds odd. Postal savings banks have been oe “Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” i What's the Use of Being Blue? There Is a Lot of Luck Lett. Rv Clarence 1. Cnilen —— THE BLOOMERS WAT FLOWER W THE SPRING =—S BASEBALL The Jarrs Have a Slumberous, Mysterious Guest Who Drowsily Attempts to Wreck Their Home Ceprrignt 1011, ty The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World) H® Inertia Germ ha Ipolated—and so w "t yet deen thare as big ae an Obdeiisk—and it’ blame it on easy to Minunize Our Own! pring Fever! — successful in every country where they have been fairly tried. It was By Roy L. McCardell the sleeper with disgust. “I had to)to you that you will avoid your Dink-) member him! When I toM you who —_— Our Ship hasn’: come tn yet—but she’ not “reason” but stupidity that doubted their success hero, hf 7 peeved ney = send the children to bed, and now it] stona in the future.” he was you remembered him well When you Crawl, been Reported! ae “as $ © up there! sald MI.) looks as though thie person te to bel] “TI tel you # was your fault,” eatd| enough!” C } Crawfish or Cry And now for the parcels post thet is to be so timidly and tenta- Jerr, and he poked Mr. Dank-| upon our hands forever! Now, 1 will] Mr, Jarr angrily "T would have never| ‘Yes, when you tolf me who he wan, Out, they've got) We never had any success Pushing tively tried! That also will probably show a success that will ex- G0 Fae at vy | REVO SAY & word against Mrs. Stryver| invited hin rere He's a hobo, that'e|T remembered him all right,” said Mr. your number! j Clouds Away—but oftrn we could tm- fi | Suess we'll! again when she pute on aire. Mrs|ail I want to eay to you that while|Jarr “But 1 pass up Henry I disown agine the Skies Underneath ‘Pmt eged what the stand-patters call reason. It has been so with every have to get him on| Stryver says that it ts the greatest| some of my friends may lack the re | Dinkston,” Wagn a man _ step toward a true improvement of conditions. The progress made < the sofa," he add- | mistake in the world to try be kind] pose that marks the caste of Vere de; “Why didn't you do it when he oame Learns how to Ge through with tt—not around tt! GAP WTENOOT ices ot us hve 0 lacking le Me etther Looking OF sense of Humor that we try to Hold Feeling Hangdog out on Ourselves it's a Cinch Ston somes that he's carrying Once we saw a Steeplechase in which Dead th? first horse + Come a Cropper was remounted and Copyed the ..ace! 4 to Mrs. Jarr, for) to poor relations or unfortunate friends, | Vere, my visiting lst does not inalule | her Mr. Dinkston was! They are never grateful, and they only| the name of Henry Dinkston.”’ sound asleep. get you into trouble and humiliate and| “Well, he t# no friend of min “Not in MY) emburrass you. I wouldn't have had|Mre, Jarr. ‘Tf I did ask him to call hou erfed Mrs.| the children see uch thingw for the|it was be: he was a friend of Jarry, sharply.| world, and I hope this will pe a lesson! yours, Oh, don't say you did not re “And let me say; —— er _ this to you: Don't you ever bring any ore friends of has always surprised those that prophesied there wouldn’t be any. —_--4.—_____. FOOLISH PREACHING. N eminent preacher in Boston {s reported to have declared ast Sunday that the city is “disgraced to-night?) What business had he to call? How dare he oall? And why didn't you say to him: ‘There must be! some mistake; you Were not invited wo my house and I do not desire to resume any acquaintance with you?’ i} ss “But YOU fnvited him to call, 1 Letters of a admirer,” eald Mr. Jarr, “I thought the| Soul aa K2cess Baynage! ° i A < n best thing to do was to treat him If we could Convince Others as enstly by a wave of criine, by orgies of society folk in, POY > M*EARaRM yours nere again! nicely." We demand that the Way >® 2. ae Convinca O reer oer ites \. leading hotels WeAwOie sek ch af » “Friend of MIN! ed Mr, Jarr ‘How dke & man, to blame the | Smoothed for US, but we don't care qoonotch Confidence Men! \, said and by women smo king ciparetion” in astonishment. “You know he ts no M re) da e r n MM a i a woman! You're al! alike! cried Mrs.| how much Dust we kick up for the This is an example of the kind of preaching | friend of mine, Why 1 never en re ; Jarr, “"T tell you, he t# no eoquatntance| Tratleral It's when we make a Detour around that lessens indignation again i -| membered the man, We met him on are eerie of mine Tf he Was he lan't now. He's & on agninet real evile by COMP” | the street and you Introduced him to By Aima Woodward YOUR friend." The Boste Man brand of Melancholy the Straight Road that we take Ying them with petty issues of manners and etiquette. When pulpit] me and said he was an old beau, and At thia point Mr. Dinkston opened his! yields promptly to Mussage by a Mal- chances on being Bogyed in the Quick- ( denunciation begins by declaiming against a toleration of crime and | ¥°" sprites him to c = ieee | Copyright, 1911, by The Press Publishing Oo (The New York World) eyes and inquired tf the ladies cared to| jet! mire! : ‘I watd ‘some time,’ whispered 3 t 4 > ashe pick wild flowers, —_— | a . bi | e i 2 i ou dear girl you! place, &c.," but around my soul there's 8 ashore to concludes by thundering against ten table pastimes, ft comes very | garr “That's what we eas ia Reels 1 were looking out a glorious radiance that shuts the world “Page @ walter!" he cried; “Page @! petter the Frecrations of an! some of us are Long on Imagination love to the ridiculous—is more likely to excite emiles than wrath. | Just te be polite, Do you think | foe a he time and” {| and te ne tat hy euardian anol Ar! want to oner a drink "FoR aeoweg Buemy (nem the Flaterin of, 898 shy on Hrnepreton If such preaching were confined Boston it w: n- | Mis sught he'd come? I didn Aidn't know ! “To think thet pe Me: Tene ierdantte ae rour-F end! pl preaching o d to Boston it would be no on-| me it 1 thought he'd come? 1 didn't Pat Nab happineas-happi- Mr. Jarr, “but 1 will order it, If I left|@ Four-Flush Friend! \-saienowidaan dawn that we amet h cern of ours, We would pass it without comment, But there is q/ even tell him where we lived, an your breety Wert ness such as comes to few mortals, I it to you w order you would do It on 6 > fed no Lan. |! about seven times too much, but our Ll pf estise : 3 con't Imagine how he found out of to make me fal! In| Imagine! the cheap. For 1 w yo, Edward] Dlowenes would have needed no Li : He ainsi Dla good deal of it in New York. Some reformers, indeed, raise as loud |. rao you twit me because he was sited aan 7 a rr: I " deled, tern had he been Looking for Trouble! surface consety hte ike @ bea! ' . ” $ Notad < Oh, Nell, I do love him-—1 do! Jarr; I know youl" he added ee cat against bel'eving It! t an eloquence against a hobble skirt, for example, as against all the | very fond of me when 1 was a youns And mother objected 40 at first, unt) Mr. Jarr winced, “You don’t know ‘i ; 1 girl, 1 cared nothing for him, Am I gy oy we tame ge Mig va the «me at all,” he satd hotly, "You're no| ‘There's something Tollow about the is | sins forbidden by the ten commandments, and then wonder why|terponaimie for hia going to ruin : WACEBIIAS tis Coma heed tela! od etna: Repentance that's. Hollered Down @ Some of us ait around with a Chtp on ; : ; " res ib fon A SIR 1G) Fath oe -|doorsit! of the poorhouse, But Dad, % : rail our Shoulder, defying Temptation to | the pulpit is losing its influence, He that would be serious must deal | cause 1 a him? But {t ten . ein r head, And dandy old Dad, he pushed my happiness “I did not say I waa any friend of| Rain Burrell | Kenook it Of! f with serious things my 8 His Deine Bers} aha, Fak wered my leat letter and | toward me with both hands and defied YOUrs. for I'm not.” sald Mr, Dink. icra? Wy us thing made him weice You let him arin to tell you more about the man| mother for the first time since the “tame #on, with crushing gravit suld I] Be Yourself fret of all—and then : FE 4 ~ Ree iwaees | What wan I to do? Throw him ou Attracted’ ma. T JHils dreamed | cat!” ineidant KNOW you, I pity your wife. From] Make Modifications Bverybody who baye a Round Trip t | asked Mr. Jar “And I didn't Jet him | u had known him all your life! We're going to have @ gorgeous wed the bottom of my heart I pity her." — Tioket to Heppyiand ecatpe the Retum * wae Toa the Dover DAE MOS Oe or ae eg Vd sent him to me. | aine-another's pride inetsts on thap— | Here she fished up |® dirty pocket | Atwaya tt te the Other Veliow'a:Fasls | Coupon when he, aaig there| i auld he was atra typhe ank- 40 you realize I ows my} and you're going to be maid af honor, handkerchtef and wiped away a tear. } Letters From the People! rein ine nina iat Move ci doy rare Powe my jand raw eine (pe maid of None, Manhrcint dn wined amy fe, | nenaannaeteneeneanannanascamenes > He ts y friend. Do T have friends 1 you, have 1? back with you, Jack and 1, and begin Stranger to me, but T pity you, You | C) cy i the that replied Mow Jas, e¥I0K, Wl fam isi be propored, and of! nin Utes He wil be truly the berinning ave io rad But” ao anaed sorte! | The Day’s Good Stories | “Reponder a1 Vous Platt nion to : . ~ | course I said yes, Oh, if you only knew of my dife! @ trembling finver at Mr. Jarr, ‘I wilt | JJoyed by Ihe Cure. {ow afro T was that he'd go back Nell, when hia arme are round me Protect you agalnat this man. I have a : Sed ies lhe ‘al | the rome of the universe fades into the friend who ts a lawyer, a divorce law. All Invall4s | By Spectal Messenger. know that they | teas lain awake fust/dimmest of backsrounds, We seam to Yer: A word to the wise,” here his) aia a eeuaties reien . a ancnr ia staring into the darkness—wond stand alone on a mo of happiness, Yolce shrank to a confidential whisper MEN the attice tor rg te et tid that after Prof, Aviom, haf muse Rmaiorent e | And now that dea m that I've with all the grind of datly extstence far, “® word to the wise saves nine.’ W broker lecked over 1] wit daughter of Christopher North, he vere Eve « P letiaena’aocme HeAnE rsely for the far belo “What's your hurry?" said Mr, Jarr. ‘why were you was, aa matter of course, referred to’ her | y for the far below us. id t ® econom Jiast_month has come I'd go with him to the end of things, “Here's your hat and coat, I'm oo sis OE aR a gash aa re, ee ; ; ae | Around the third finger of my left! and farther, if need be, and T guess 0rry you must go, but really’ — fumbling with hie cap , | must seat to him for me. 1 cod ‘not’ eum wat wee ha ere’s @ huge sparkling hoop that that's love, Nell, tan’ it? I must be-, ‘Sir, you Interrupt me hen Tae You did, eb 7 cocasion 1 cold | OR courage to epead to the profesor en this la: the world ra) that ‘ y 4 It! e " | ¥en, sir; you maid the on ston 1 comld | gubjer s aya ' fella the world In general that "a mar- real love—and It's come to me at last, speaking ¢o @ lady!" eatd a) pete Gi Tee aid Wk OR ees wee | fans taitu tee braces’? anid the body, By t" ela riage has been arranged and will take ['m happy. dear! ston, and what has that to do. with tt | “Then you had better go to him,” anid the aay ane being 4 vay ek s hire,” where docs 0 en Then he turned to Mra, Jarr and mie of those occasions, (| professor, ‘nnd 1 will wait here,’ prese: 4 ale Of 1 | d, “I have known Edward Jarr to the, Putte being apparently oo help tor tt, the lady rapa eae 4 ant . r @ childhood's happy hour." — Huattt-wio ik PIs ey be, properly exist upon, ' . | T h e H e d g evil l 1 e FE d l t or ever mind about your fondest Ja suid Miss Wilson, Neaeteal’ Gk Re oulerly F | hopes decaying again, or the dear Addressed .i.e Jury | room. vive? The presen | B Joh L. Hobbl gazelle that charmed you with its soft, ress Ae 8 | porgsnins Ground, the delighted eultor reed thaeg alms to secure » OW | yv o n . oO e j dark eyes. You beat 1)! furnish MAN who had never been in court before With the auth molimente, {se possible He « % sAMORE » * subway transportation,” said Mr, Jarr. A in his life mas rex fy ed a wit ™ ’ ! | eas in a cov Southern Indiana, Or he ie “braced” for an 4 . : [HN a little man stays single from the first thing they ask 1s why she was| “Ah, he fears the r being sworn he took a th his ha ‘ |W hoice you can bet that it was tho) in such @ hurry to eet @arriod, make, gentle lady! ren Aeaeet ati cto the Jule A Good 'rov der, x : i Etrl'a cholee. et me tell you the story of my past | who our remarks Cc PENT 4. DRISCOLL tala tha: ‘ he sry, ar washerwoman got mari Is an ¢ 1 | oe ELF respect ts of more importance | "4 then Judge between the man and | Ohi yrinem peued for a ent, but not com er cliente said to her @ month ray . f | ORIN KELLY says that water ta al than being able to s me,"" rambled Dinketon. COUld 8! rehending what wes said tin, remained im the the ceremony ands of Car ‘ pe ae {d, but it ain't no good | others wee us. tale unfold," — Hniapean | stam}? 708 Set on well with your husband, ah | i e s ii om ies | “Let him speak, unless you are afraid | | The wee Meo more oxpiiels ond sold | Mery aA appre ‘ | as @ boverage, | — hatiGen icon mush abous enuilt a. | “Speak to the Jury, artic men you on} On Jes, ma'am,’ wae the reply, No representative . “Love 18 a period of dotage.” — | — HH trouble with most poor men te’ si yar) sharply. Weert | eeaad' apciis’ femal: ewierved) aaa Bat ee . organization to establish a fixed | “With marriage as the one eure AVID CRAUM says that when he they want the best of everything “and what Mr. Dinkston said will be! ged eid, Good morning, gv:tleuen," National _me four_now places to bent ryt ye Livable acale of wages or hours, or a | introduces anybuddy to his wif newt nae a = Lead and everbuddy, ‘ eontinued in our 1

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