The evening world. Newspaper, January 15, 1912, 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)

a nen a 15, 1912 Monday, cere \ a \ e ESTABLISHED ic JOSEPH PULITZER. Pwblished Daily Except Sun e Pri Zrbpsniag Company, Non. ss Pa eg 63 Pork mh How. New- Yorke | a2! PULITZER, President, ¢3 Park gl ANGTA SHAW. Mreaausen, 61 Dati JOSE PULITEENE drs Becrevary, €3 atk Tow. —————e Matter. the Continent and Entered at the PostOMce at New Tork ag Gesond-Cle iption Rates to The Hvening@ror England pr World for the United States ‘end Canada, All Courristen ! tn the International Postal Union, One Year. 14 One Year.. One Month One Month THE CITY THAT SHALL Bz. | C* PLANNING is one thing and city building quite another. we. i AS New plans for etreets and parks and civic centres appear to replace old ones in the public thought and often to share their fate in pigeonholes. A varicty of euch projects ia in view, for this is an age when American cities manifest at least a paper in- terest in making themselves over into beauty and convenience. The most serious echeme before this city is the proposed park and county court house occupying both sides of Centre street and #0 laid out that the plot will continue City Hall Park, unite it with Mulberry Bend Park and throw into one grouped effect the Tombs and Criminal Courts, the City Hall, the new Court House, the Hall of Records and the Municipal Building. If Congress assents to tho removal of the General Post-Office building, which stands on ground leased from the city, this will bring together four park epaces and give municipal architects and landscape gardeners the opportunity of the continent and century. Among other ambitious projects are plans to connect the Penn- sylvania and New York Central terminals by a broad diagonal ave- nue; to arcade Thirty-second street west to the Pennsylvania termi- nal; to extend Queens Boulevard from the easterly end of the i [ FUT, Bit D baat Do You GET ANY HEAT UP HERE Tm 9 "ANY HEAT in Youn The Day of Rest Fa (» ‘ No, AReGulaR, COLo S Rage PLANT, Son Rag tg) ee The (Tas Kew torn Ween” | )# How 15 He HEAT iN YOUR F on 7. HOw ABOUT THE HEAT IN YouR FLAT, Jack 2 By Maurice Ketten e HEAT ik NOT! | { | tt jand skilful in the ry | The World’s w& w& w © Great Women By Madison C, Peters, Cops Hatt, 1012, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Wort). 5.—Joan of Arc.—The Woman Deliverer of France. IOAN OF AMC, oF more proper: ly Joannetta D: known In France as Jeanne d'Are, the Maid of Orleans, was SS born Jan. 6,182 In Domremy, Joan never learned to read or Through the influer f, who iad made a pil France. mage to Rome, she apent much of her time in | solitude and pra When thirteen she constantly talked ng vistons and hearing angels’ vhich told her to restore happi+ ness to France and give aid to Charles VIL, the weak-hoarted Dauphin, whose place was dn Jeopardy, These visions, together with the prophecy current in Lorraine, that the kingdom lost by @) woman (Queen Isabella) should be raved by @ virgin, helped to define her mission, Abounding physical energy, Intense mental activity ard an abnormally sen nervous temperament characterized r youth, She was an exemplary |g ahter, charmingly unrclfish, es |pecially proficient in household work | use of the ne |She decisively repelled all |mado by young men, and while per- ‘forming the usual round of her duttes was inwardly engrossed with thoughts far beyond the circle of her daily ‘routine. afterward, e of her, advances | Joan put on masculine dress and @ Suit of white armor, mounted a biaek harger, and bore a banner of her ows Idevice, white, embroidered with Tiles on one side a pleture of God enthronee on clouds, the other the ¢ ° Franes supported by two angela, to Gether with a pennon reprecenting the Annunciation, Her sword she de Ciared would be found beneath the altar in the Church of St. Cathert a equipped, she put herself at the of an army of 6,00) men and ad: Dunots, dn the res Nef of hard-pressed Orleans, She threw herself upon the English and fired the fainting hearts of the French with a new enthusiasm, The hardened soldiers jstopped swearing and gave up their jdebauchery under her pure presenc | After fifteen days’ fighting the English |were compelled to retreat, The French (spérit again awoae, the enemy was swept |from the principal positions of the Lotre, the village girl urged on the Dauphin to his coronation, and three |months later she stood beside Charles lat Rheims, saluting him as kin | Dunols prevailed upon her to remain |with the army, but her victories were over, She fatied to carry Paris, Other jexploits followed, Seft behind by her men, taken prisoner, she was sold to the English by John of Luxembourg. |Carried to Rouen, the headquarters of |the English, she was heavily fettered She sympathized with the Orleans/and flung into @ gloomy prison ‘The party tn the divisions which rent the | English, who had carried with them the EE kingdom of France, and at eighteen was |tale of terror at the strange witchoraft possested by the {dea t! vy which they thought they had been lealted to deliver her country and crown overcome, now had their turn, Joan her king. At first her pretenstons were |was (ried for sorcery and convicted. laughed (o scorn, but her persistence |Tho papers were sent to Paris, and the Queensboro Bridge to Jamaica, and eventually to the beach, thus es- tablishing direct connection between Manhattan's heart and the sea, and to construct an avenue midway between Fifth and Sixth avenues from Central Park south. Brooklyn has its own echemes to become tho Borough Beautiful, these including an adequate appronch to the asticn, ted to severe | of the University of Pi was unanimous that such acts and sentl- {ments as hers were diabolical, merited 5 ‘ ion and sent ation burning at the stake. Brooklyn Bridge, a Manhattan Bridge Plaza, a new court house and | JANITOR, ties fn the famous| In the market place of Rouen, eure various new parks and boulevards. | han ane je ant ade id bua A buble dpc mae So ing thal adeal-)Joan of Are, the sp Tho creation of new docks, eome of them on tho Kast River a je I erin black art, her wish to lead the Orieang, martyr to her country and her front if the navy-yard should be shifted to ommunipaw, the HEAT ? sy of her king Mi ae : ane Kin, u ce Mi ¥ Pore ee i ig i time, through the al¥ance i rin! disgrace y copatruction of a freight railroad on the west side of lower Manhat- \or Philip of Burgundy, the English had /ghameful brutality, the infamy of the tan, and the Jninaica Bay improvement, are enterprises of jinmonse lextended thelr conquest over the whole transaction resting upon the Purgund> is itw’s | of France north of the Loire, as well {ans who gave her up, upon the Eng- scope which are designed to ecrve the city’s commerce. All these for the most part are programmes and not yet plat-| forms. Under them is a financial problem which Inst fall's defeat of | the “excess condemnation” amendment to the State Constitution leaves unsolved, although @ law of 1911 giving the Board of Feti- mato great latitude in distributing aseessmente for improvements among abutting property, the borough and the city at large should help. What is needed, in « word, is @ modernized water front, diago- nal gtreets, more closed atrect vistas, architectural bridgo approaches and the correlation of municipal buildings and open spaces into civic centres, © $e DEFENSIVE APHASIA. HE founder of one of the memory systems current a quarter of a century ago was thus apostrophized by a London ne ebeeereonnenenece seseceeesorooeeneeeeesosososoeeoes Mrs. Jarr Welcomes a Guest, | and the progressive en- of the English rule threat- y disinemberment of the os Gutenne, croachmen ened the |iingdom of France. His Preference. surgeon fells a good Three other ia cod himaelt in the hospital was natural in different colors ther the depth the third was ail for bine ese: | and fire of the town, whi the clear, cool light of the harel, Atter thoy haa | Gihaseted Cheie eloquence, with the usual effect | ef confirming themselves in tletr original opinion: the fourth young sawbones suddenly broke don't care & hang about your blus eyes, or your penor lvrilliancy | lish who allowed her execution, upon the French who would not prevent the deed, and upon the French King, who laid nothing to avenge her { The Day’s Good Stories sir, That man bae Ydeen here. before, alveys alceps on th \ Moor, aiz."—Ch the tom and Represent the home of Th and | im hia quaint aquait? memories, To this old fellow ‘ Renresentatives chanced to addr brown eves, or your gray even! Just give me gore q ' “I pe bappy,"'— | Whether any battles bad been fougot in the i tinge bes — ity of Monticello, promptly recited the aged farky ‘bot sence de wah, eah,"—Nattnal ee Where Was John? ‘no, salt, Monthly, SAN FRANCISCO woman, whose 6 band had been dead some years, fete, whe podueel te bn otiibaies the apirit of her dead husband, dear John," said the widow to the epérit, you happy now!" “Tam very hay “Happier than sho naked, ° | But You’d Hardly Notice It POFISISISS IFS SITT PETTISVSFSSTISSSS FITITFIFISGISIGTISD | Dy this time the visttor was at the | Portals, and, being admitted by Mra. | iJorr, kissed that lady effusively and, sald paper: “Prof. Loisette, teach us but to forget!” Every logis- | | ion al , lative inquisition, every government trust prosecution declares that | nit ity o @ the lesson has been learned. Witnesses “do not remember” the de omy tails of transactions of somo while before, or even the fact of them, sanless memory is refreshed by some document of which the ang MAISOR ‘has obtaincd possession. This phenomenon may be called Defensive Aphasia. It is differ- ent from perjury, which the Standard Dictionary defines as “the wilful giving, under oath lawfully administered in a judicial proceed- ( ing, of false testimony in regard to a matter or thing material to the 4 issue or point of inquiry.” One point of difference is that the testi- i mony of the “do-not-remember” man leaves tho issue Just where it! ¢¢ was, where perjury changes the matter for better or worse, N': Strategic forgetting chiefly differs from actionable perjury in nouncea that there is no material way of proving whether the witness docs or * does not remember. Memory ia a tricky faculty. People fanc N the gray Vght of the early morn: ler faced t ven't you heard? We are separate ‘a terrible story and you will ex- jeuse me if T cannot discuss it. I never japeak of {t to any one, Don't ask me ally one doesn't ut they make you sit down with them and then they tell you all the detaile— asking you not to breathe it to a #oul. And you need not, Because they've told it to every else they know." When You Are Fa Married. Woosward Copyright, 1913, by The [ress Putdishing Co, (The Now York World), “Luxury-itis.”” LAD been downtown shapping. 1 was tired, digeppointed and cold—and there waa a dull night cleri ray worst bed in tho volee m #0 out of breath, for, really, my dear, one gets so out of practice climb ing stairs after one has lived in eleva- tor apartmonts! Hut I will say thts, that your little ft fs warm and cozy, fn the beds, alt," the pe Fon wouldn't on the left of * John replied, Foom U Were on earth with met” and our apartments—facing on Riverside Driv 1b is cooupte, als"? T know it ts By a man who sored all ight and was etitl at it ten minutes ago, His feat must be batier than mine, or he couldu’t ‘If you've climbed up these stairs to give at a maximim capacity’ of sound lant Femind me you hove a rich old husband | ———— and live In @ costly’ apartment on River- |sldo Drive and that we do not, you can | I wanted you to say it. You've been | spare your Mudridge Smith! down looking at gowns that would cost | You lived on a top floor in West Eighty- my two weeks’ Income; you have seen ‘eighth atree: and had to climb five no end of magnificently gowned women was tho anawer, “I am far Lapplee mew than Twas on earth with so fell the, John, what 4s it like in heaven feaven!"” John replied, “I'm not in beaven,” tional Monthly, » you know—have been Ike an ice ce during the terrible cold rpell! by The Pre Publishing Ce. y Mie Worl) i 1 just stay where you Mrs, Jarr, aw Mrs. | Smith Was ane asa Mr. Jarre tad | as though to depart 1 won't Want me, now that you've | pany.” muttered Mr. Jarre, “11 they got ¢ ‘ ; Mights for all the years I knew you be- HE tunic that remember a good many things that aro not so, and they forget many |" on IRAN 2h pounding tn the top of my4*tep Into their limousines, have leopard fore you were married. It kept your! I Js overlapped things that aro so. Our whole system of common school education darn win fact, T want you to be in the | HORA GRU WiehOh @ HORREERE eh reven Fake eA uA igliad Eee Sores 2 For, positively, | at front and 1y, as you to good | '9 cane. J oat you | you're getting fat back Is a new and Presupposes that memory will fail one unless things are impressed "2, °%.." call pass ine anywhere | “Pier make me a cup of ten," 1 |huad to atand coming up in the suinwa T don't know why you aay the cruel: | gracefulone. 22 nd you | called to Mary, “and make it strong, e noticed that your furs aren't J when anybody does ext things to me t! this instance it is upon it by reiterations, review, examination and penalties. Will the T want to 0, way you do, my | . Vist ey laden hats, cloth of |as allky looking as they were when you |dear M Ne aninane hha wecheee combiged come to see me, hi fsn't often, you v C rr! whin 6 younger | Ba Met man of middlo age who tries to jot down the facts of his childhood ee se et, Stay, Tip. Weta teen | RIA and heavy allk stocks |bought them, Am I right? womtan, I wasn't so fond of you I; ik pi mae recall one in fifty? tee you so seldom that When they do |Iea tnlald with Chantilly face butters | OF course he was right. wouldn't come to see you at all!” i Whole effect is . meet ine they areafrald to ak me how flies and bowknote, danced before my | "J on with @ curious) “Well, don't go rubbing !t in about | aye er Le A good many things done on the borderland of “law-honesty” |you a leyes. ‘Then I looked at my handbag, upper lip, “when I] your tex i dollar @ year apart- any j ati ‘ . wack . ‘“ Aer aus which contained exactly two dota |eame In you didn't get up to mect me said Mra, Jarr, ‘“Good- terial can be 4 are not put in writing or even in words. Their being is in the twi- i te BLN i i nd three eutwway tlokets. | because an wero resentful that T ness knows, you a t seem a bit Raa'| Y cnleeshe, cloths light of conjecture. ‘I'he thtimony of a Queens County politician is, They do care, hut they Nave tact. | 1 would havo wmiled {¢ my sense of |should appropriate your Ite and not |ptey for it all! tfase ds wine i int: idy ven These dav, unless ona takes one's hus: [humor hadn't deserted me, T would have give you, in return, Mmousines and} “Anh, I hy crificed mynelt!"” ex- Crepe meteor, mes= in point: “When Cassidy Jets you know thi p pny | These @ un} taken one'a iar. Auman He ti Loaedet ol ny + neve. par is i ane in p y } il hings, he doesn’t tell thom eee eee ea ‘shows nim, people (heen coldly resenttul if the patn had | jeopacd akin Iaprobes:” [olaimed Mrs, Mudridge-Smtth dramatte- | Sut an the. hewer in so many words; you sense them.” How can a witness swear to think tint a reparation ts imminent, 1) trrotbed less—sa It was, Tnearly cried! | I Interrupted veliemently, oR love !n a cottage’— edges of the tunic in tet Re eg i Know, for mynelf, that ff 1 don't see a) ‘Then, Just ia ** he maid calmly sald Mra. Jarr, “You were | are straight, bor= such 8 contract? Tt ia in this realm of fog and shadow that Defon- {ran with ver husband or a man with | aipped the Tast | {defnite, tt subconaciou: ugh to quit @ five room fat. dered tabrice @iso sive Aphasia becomos acute. Many men seem to have a constitutional hiv wife, Vm afvald to ask about the | d of my tea, jthere, I can’t blame you, Ts ‘And all the love in a cottage that wou! Mlunteatan’ chimes ; ’ ; Tet perRon. "Ped blew tn, a full Jove pretty th luxury, to y ikl be love In @ cote | cloth is trimmed ry * their o nc vy OY intne tho ale pore Ted blew tn, a ful {women love pretty nga and luxury 0 you wot! ry in immed. averpion to breaking their own necks by overstraining tho faculty of ask, the party tnterro- | ait hour eaelier | And don't you suppose men do? his!taga at Newport! Let me see your) priv applique. and recollection, mont you with a cold, t than usual, jvolce became sternly vibrant, handbag.” fini ts, lced “with vunded-hoart expression and 09%) Y giwayw meet ‘Ded, dear~l “You're looking fine!” said Mr. Jarr, frills, elbow __ t+ i 8g 0 at the door or “Don't } Who had stood by, waiting for a chance | Sipaven. ate, ged : jet least nait way | wey “Sand the latest t to groet the on't you sit | tnd are exceeding- A MILLION WORDS BOILED DOWN. Detained. }down the pall, To-ntynt 1 didn’t get up er told you Ldid, and 1 down and your things? | ly tas well ‘ ‘ - : nto greet ht tng you now becau: “Hunt ¥ always Lord Chestere | ve. OW to Attract Men and What Sort of Women Men Like are | nt over uit, Aide instantly ai |field when Clara Mudridge-Smith | related topics on which millions of worda are printed in this these | comeel! aad Mra Jerr, SURE Ubon : ; pe Ls a vat's the matter, de You feel | things myset?, 1 have to bear the shame But I notice if it's old town every year, some of them in other parts of The Evenir feverial! And why are you drinking tea t being able to give + duxu enderry, you let her hang her World. Lest among the multitude of counsellors and multiplicit a half hour before din jevery pretty woman ii t to exe shawl herself end are not 60 free with nl over the “Well, at least tea is cheap enough!" | pect, Men your complim y «. The tunic is councils women readers may become confused, the sum of the matter, “Whare have you heen thts after: | tell what the H van, iff a nice husband like fier'aiee and ieinea which after all is vastly simple, may be set down here. noon? he asked abrupt!y, |--they hate to | dare Tow "t mpeak that way!" | blouse, and " ahs nonping.’* jnumiltate them: the vi “You always een tisaed girdle Men like women who are feminine, who enjoy good health a | “How coutd you shop? You don't ee! | seives, 1 know I'm when T call, but I'think Mr, Jarr pe eat ) sly ow Tie xe Is close who are in love with life, So that she have not the positive hump of your allowance until Monday, and me . Bare | © positive hump of iow you con't have any money tote | * Pier, But som ever mind about his being which Thackeray speaks, a woman need not be pretty or witty or frooin thls wees.” | Sey. 4 nope (0 g0 ‘Mrs, dare, “Great good- . by “Whe y Y ‘ah . “ ol ¢ " | wise. But she must not be mannish, she must not seem bored —that When a woman says ‘shopiéng,’ my eal Aut Mas one got to watch even one's . dear.” exactly what | and when you are around, Mra is, eelf-centred—and her face and body must declare the good results ane nt carfare and a pow: | Why, 1 wouldn't Lave woune ith? It used to be you wanted a . iad | de rn Workle-and 1 didn't thi Aye y ssvand of your own, Now you want i ft inches wide, = of physical exercise. ‘ Mt gravely, {{1Ng for clothes, and there alt the thine | ory i | eh two yerda of § — - | “Joan, ¢ pretend’ or try to a joe had been longing for ni things! +\iast Why ar. T a0 fascinating? |Fancy Peasant Blouse with Tunic for Misses and Small { with me. We are supposed to be Qnd never bought them) asked Mr. Javr, with mock ¢erlousness, Women, Pattern No. 7247. Ph , and It lent fair to keep} ‘eho on" L told ntm | "Oh, 1 don't trust you, elther," sald] yoke and undersleove ; ein or to hurt me by at las’ t t sel, the glitter Mrs, Jar, | The pattern, Mo, 7247, 18 cut tn eizes for misses of 14, 15 and 18 years of Yea | nurcastte s. Won't you t jand the mpottixhis that caught me, Now, | “ifow good-natured your husband ts," age. tn the steady, strong suntig! All seoms very ta we are able ad Rood, If y ogre what is both you? I put the teacup down carefully dng an to fatto ny hate t know--I guess I'm a dea: “ frightful disposition, Paper Cups for Then ‘Te the Editor of The Evewing World The individual drinking cup is a fine | mere ‘dea, But 1 w could extend sust Mled w as a Iittle further. At theatres th seach cup i aah “What's b gall the visitor. \ because there's company," and te!l automodile, Mr. Boing out when you t of love, it | 1f some | Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHIE BURBAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppor aite Gimbel Broa.), coraer Sixth avenue and Thirty-second street, Deas trays of glasses to people. ‘Those and thrown 1 @iaeees may or may not be carefully |tray? The washed before being raillled for the neat | benefit great. the | 6. LAUER, JR wary thaw guess It was postponed on ac: come of the usual “ eount of the weather,” Jan: you tel! me?" he repeated, ie it's the shopping,” “Of course, I knew from the firet, but jim [smooth an at have been!’ Vm not tr hurts when I say truth 11 And Mr. Jarr went, feellng flattered | }to think he was still ome breaker. considered @ i w York, or sent dy mall en receipt ef ten cents a coin eg stamps for each pattern erdered, IMPORTANT—Wri! your address aly and alweye size wanted, AGG twe cents fer letter postage if tn a hurry,

Other pages from this issue: