The evening world. Newspaper, January 29, 1912, Page 12

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World Daily Mag azine, The Day of Rest 3% Csisir2.- @iorld. 14D DY JOSEP PUT Maurice Keti al p< Ne VAM LOOKING FOR A Quiet) GO RIGHT UP To My i yer r § 5 PLACE To REHEARSE xX FLAT, You WONT -- SUFFRAGETTE'BAND . BoTHER JOHN Fatered at the Pogt-vMice nt New Vor i ail MY HUSBAND OBJECTS HE IS ASLEEP = Subscription Rates ; World for the tnited States and Canada. To BANDS nthe International 1 Union. mi [| , HERE'S Tur KEY a, > é sprang A man stending with his mother on the doorstep of their home was {| WIFE-MURDERER, condemned to death in’ court, A toward the jury box and tried to kill the jurors Shot in the abdomen by two men who ted him after the manner of Joab. A detective was deeoyed into a dance hall with a tale of riot and there mumeronsly set upon. ‘These are all local news stories of the day. om not peculiar to New York but rampant here as in few other , Paces. That is private vengeance. Lynching ix almost unknown in this town. Chiefly practised in smaller places where there are no moving picture shows and few opportunities for social diversion, it may be called degenerate conformity to local public opinion. Private vengeance, Manhattan variety, is degenerate defiance of opinion. ‘ Tn Chinatown, in Little Italy and in the American or American &» ized gangs of the metropolis there are men and youths who act as if there were no State, no aociety, no binding tradition ond the Sentiment of a short-lived play of two seasons back—“being true to © one’s pal is the only law we know.” It is the duty of the police and © the courts to teach them that there are other laws. astounding defiance of society cannot be blinked. i eerie ‘ THE AMERICAN DISEASE. “T": disease that has killed Presidents and Governors” ie what Gov. Dix’s legal adviser diagnoses the overwork that has sent his chief to bed. Tt may be called the American | In this favored Jand executives are expected to eat at one public dinner every night, and pay for it in words. They must, sustain the invasion of office-seckers, without stanch civil service bul-, warks to retire behind. The boss svstem localizes in the breast of avery conscientious official a wearing conflict between “gratitude” to a political chief and loyalty to common weal. These three causes, all gratuitous or wrong, make publ ordeal to any one whose constitution is not like the per “horse-high, bull-strong and pig-tight.” +o CROOKED STREETS. | "qr is well to widen streets, na Borough President MeAneny is doing, but in the name of that inonicipal beauty in behalf of whieh he} 4 offers frequent testimony, is it well to straighten them? Why; * etraighten Baxter street? Why talk of depriving Pearl street of its) horseshoe contour? | + eee . a _ The window of The Evening World sa & nm commands Centre The Gitl Who Needs the lob Gcetin waa street. The beanty of that thoroughfare is not in the Hall of Th CG Wh N d wise dat (Fiat : ords and Municipal Building at one end, not in Police Headquarters e irl oO ceeds the Job (» The Ke ite.) By Sophie Irene Loeb ** at the other, not in the Tombs Prison or the Criminal Courts whic Jy | err rrerrrnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn nnn nnnnnnnn nnn nnnnnAnnnnnnnnne nen nnnnnnAnnnAnAnnAAAAR AAAI stand midway. lia beauty is that it goes four different directions in- snide a half mile, There ought to be more such thoroughfares, not | They outline ac public The gangster’s YouR WIFE KINDLY LET US HAVE Your FLAT FoR [REHEARSAL MS JOHN. et || SHE SAID You WERE ASLEEP AND IT WOULDN'T Boer You OF THe BAND, DID You REHEARSE, low RE WAKE UP? Ni r life an t fence, on all inand: ten-hour-w-d y work ie t rd the WHOLE, ¢ ty the solution of the tirleworker, I ig not so mu stion as to w a strike mic way of adjusting tain His other night a young laundry #4 a Ww is awfully hard to liv striker, full of tae courage of her the time-to know you have te « tions, arose bef come (Just alwayn, A IUn a Mving death,” less. The slightest curve or angle will improve the aspect of a thor-| ES kare |e ee are Calin foes dtuals tay \ Hew the dec alving of actual ghfare. Mulberry street with ita “Bend” and the elhow crook of tnd tld. inet ana | upheaval which BEFORE had not ail | toa Besa Din SH et a PRE aneargheea |) <f Doyers street profit at least in picturesqueness by the deviation from On ewio) Chiniges Onme Home. th ttle s ° cals sate bt of | en It In MOST needed Hessler. tit a No street in Hurope with any pretensions to beauty runs in one In the MPO DUB ausnding toe ouh Own | 4) ana eeconaedlt | o that tf we must pay hale a cent direction for such a distance as Broadway between Bowling Green lbs eon" ae de ioaial i rare oes Fame ' 19 unwite mensure for you and. TOts pe tt TIE we swig) Out sand Grace Church, ‘The better European custom is to favor ¢ manded, “oaught |BORS, , . : ea Ste ean — Blvgacir feeoan (6) (iidtarny ot five © atreets and engirdling boulevards, ‘The Public Library and the Mu. HORRUINEE Hosslbned then doen Hviner Orn ATacalega prayer: [RMA ALcOherd: OFS BYMBAMHN auc {OC UlsanRIAyal: Wau), Change to. the ys nicipal Building gain in effect in that each hy interrupting a street xirlk come to the ttaelf, ne: SPIE CR ACTION: Tt is me and all of us slams and work in| ‘Thus, wih there being @ controversy! to aid int DUAL ~ closes the vista. a of the ORTETNETORN the ahope for altinds hin tk rking to work ONLY ten| seek to ALUEVEATE. the tra The cows knew what they were about when in their saunters they couple of weeks. | going up a ee | , ie Wp rears je our} parner—espeslally if those wage: * e* streets of olde “' Then they go back and «4 1 fo we ¢ that | wearing apparel fs a REAL NEED (ha s Le women who fl) a want and laid out the crooked streets of older Manhattan. MAN akiaa th Lae (HEL PAMINETBIKIN OL ITE Aare cm ho at ast [concerns EACH of um wenit confit en to the point of 2 ———-t9- - gon their wages. But tell you have come ty the itandde-! Approximately, the attitude of each| working TEN HOURS A DAY, » IN MORAL DISHABILLE, nfo 2 i dina ‘“t atches’’ ana Foliow the String! Coprright, 1912, 3 The Vives Publishing Co, (The New York World.) wt ) By Dwig | VER eight billion cigars and nearly ton billion cigarettes were S : h d h O made in this country last year. With Americans, smoking, Cc ool ay Ss ed not drinking, is “the king of indoor sports.” | recognition of a national custom and in advertisoment of a national * product that so many people are photographed with pipe or civer Maybe it is in cigoretic in hand or mouth, Most authors, it seems, are equipped “with a pipe when gn “yfponventional likeness” is taken, and the * atrical managers aré wager to get their faces in priat behind long 1) a + Wack cigars. m4 r : e Tt is not a pretty custom. The use of tohaceo with all its com *pensations is one of the minor viees, a form of indulgence. Why Would a on thereof ¥ «make a public exposition and permanent re Macreet person care to be pictured smoking hasheesh or drinkin, Zowetwes | 1? Think erate Would your yrandehildren dike a better than you one liquor or even esting an a tobacco pieture of yourself any father? Swe DONT Cane FOR a of your grand = HO SUGAR = YEoT STICK Yin: FINGER f Letters from the People aire “ee Wine é y / WE GIT UP ENOUGH would m Patcnes! sTeam in Tue Tea Fo he Br of Tes Wrening Wert he grape ey by) Any Time HETTLE ITLL BLOW Tne PRONG ouT OF To am 4 young lady nineteen years ofl eer money q' age and Have at present a very peor! ponse of the » Te SPOT. dno, 2 position, so I would Nke to be: Rika: esaacine TWAT OLE PULL The / =——~ gained buree, Do tseined norece arnong! of ion ens 4 \'strins —_ _// Hoe oer your readers think It [8 4 KOO PTOL Heing ov Aide 2 (1 Wore + eon? «And will they tell me hrety |or roy PATCHES 2 about the chances, work, rewards &6.4 | Yrumt, 1 oO Others may like to read the answers. joth BERNADINE. | ings, teach ux nothin pei Washiab City” Again, |@1vidends taken trom "ke Te the Kaitor of The Bvening World Bp car ae Trend the “Waahtub City” editoriat | Sa ' What would you do with the 45,000 Wd you induce the to take | id you throw then into 1) market, which you very To the Litton The ¥. Iebor know ‘s greatly overcrowded and hos we een for years? Most of the money | Uney earn comes from other sour p Mien the Loman wiere $1,000 ts the ti extent the a | being witneaned daily, May come. 1 agree with you that “houses | wy upporting tt, f vag hold" bread when made rightly {8 good |, wiclessine Neted ta, ne. bread, but I also believe that many of /who wre forsaklig they turers ous bakeriew make 90d breud, ud | mothers, : KOBE ¥. . ' ; R w 7H TAP TRE ium Ee RL ati ree { Historic Heartbreakers By Albert Payson Terhune. “+ Copyright, 1912, by The Preas Publishing Co, (The New York W NO, 3—LORD BYRON. S57 ME head of a Greek god—and a club foot. The soul of a yort—and the tastes of a Tenderloin rounder. Endowed with a genivs that sometimes seemed more than mortal—and cursed with a twist of mentality that alternated between buffoon and beast. True artist— false lover. These are a few of the countless paradoxes that went to make up Lord Byron, one of history's most noted and notorious “heartbreakers.” He was perhaps the handsomest man in England in spite of his de- formity, Scott said of his face: “It is a thing to dream of.” A woman who adored him wrote: “That pale face is my fate!" It was an age when inys tery and melancholy were fashionable, and Byron, ever a capital actor, wrapped himself in a made-to-order atinosphere of mystic gloom thet fasct- Nated ecores of romantic women. He also threw out hints of a dark and terrible “past,” the memory of whose criines weighed him down, As a mat- ter of fact his “past” reeked with nothing more thrilling than common dissipation, occasional hard drinking and a tendency to run into debt. Apart from there fa!lings he was @ tremendously hard worker, No man could bave written as much as did he in ¢o short a life and still «had a great | deal of time left on his hands for plotting or executing evil de Byron ‘ell in love at fifteen with one Mary Ann Chaworth, who sneered at him as “that lame boy.” He wos quickiy cured of his infatuation, Gut solemnly jdeclared that it “darkened meny an after year with vain longing and yearning | Protest.” After one or two more affairs in which he played a part not especial | creditable, ne went to Greece, There he met Theresa Macri, whom he immortal | !zed in his poem, “Maid of Athena.” Hut Theresa and he soon lost whatever | interest they may have felt toward each other, and she married another man, Byron went back to England, The Love of the | wiere, according to Elie, he was ‘esleged by women.” Maid of A One love affair after another added to his notoriety. ——— Lady Caroline Lamb, a beautiful and wilful women, | fell violently In love with him. Byron soon tired of her, but she refused to | follow meekly in the qrocession of tvis cast-off sweethearts, When he Jilted | her, she stabbed herself with a pair of scissors. ‘The wound was not mortal, | She recovered and wrote a novel cailed “Glenaroon,” In which she attacked hin With flerce vituperation, At one moment she would publicly heap curses and atnive upon hia head. At the next she frantically besought him to take her |oack amain. After one such appeal he wrote a curt refusal, accusing her af “truly unfeminine persecution,” and ending “Correct your van » Whieh ts ridiculous, others, and leave me in peace!" | Then, in 1815, Byron married, of wife who could have made him happy: first, was miserable. Byron wae errat lreains xcitable, Hie wife was prim, cold and lacking {n imagination and tact. As his valet once suid: “Any woman could manage Lord Byron—except Lady Byron.” Byron flew into babyteh rages, during one of whieh he th the fire and smashed {it to atoms with a poker. He shocked lils wife's hones onl by the tricks he employed to dodge eveditora, He acandalized her by this flirtations, Byron, on the other hand, had tuch to put up with, His wife could not understand him. She regarded “verse writing’ as i y pastime, and arked him when he was golng to leave off auch nonsense. S bits of acting and merctlessiy exposed them, She rok: inte the hidden love letters from other women. Once when he was t i. Exer: your absurd caprices on He picked out a Mive Miloanke, the last sort Thet life, almost from the very his wateh Into to nome iiterary friends and rhe 1 timex intersupted the « 4 lion, she aeked: “Do I annoy you, He nowled in reply: “Yes! Dame nably | When their only daughter was five weeks old Lady By ft ev ust | He begged hey to come back and wrote her one of his most beautiful poems, | winning, “Tare thee well, and if forever, m fare thee well lin the fe of a heartoroken lament, and tt n the women of ind against Byron along with the On the back of the latter he sorawled beef me ail that.” After this separation he won the heart of Jane mont, whom he prompily deserted. Then he Italy, wheve he wan cordially received by the Count Gucetoll, Byron rewarded the Count's hospitality by eloping with his young wife. Wearytng of work, of friends and of familiar scenes, 1 hé was gotng to fight for Greece In the war of independe waging agains the Turkr, He went to Greece, ready to shed bis i | fre "# holy cause—and spent most of his time makin and taking sea baths, while other men were battling f; the age of thirty-six, hie died--according to sonic accounts fro according to others from an illness brought on by drinking too mu in the hope of reducing flesh. It also enlisted public | to tears. | “Tn Cher ron announced that fe'x blood fu y vinegar Strange New Inventions. NUW electrical sokiering iron i= A stuttonary, articles to be soldered heing held against tt. A series of toothed wheele revolve and ©)op up the clinkers in an as. alfter ine vented by a New York man. Utilizing current om a magneto or batteries, an inventor has teought out an electrically heated steering wheel for automodiles, The under sides of the lids of a trunk that a Florida man bas invented are padded and open out to form a bed for une fn emergencies. Suspending a feed bag from @ bracket [on a kpree’s collar Instead of by straps | from its head, an Ilinola inventor be- lleves lesm feed will be wasted and an © more freedom of mo- tlon. Au attachment f cook almost anything as well as a gas Tange would do it has been invented by an Knglish: ra Gas jot that will One of the newest vacuum cleaners for use in houses where electric power 1s not available has a bellows which straps upon a person's back and is operated by a handle at one side to provide the suc- tion. Two Italian engineers Mving tn New York have designed a parachute to lift an aviator from a falling aeroplane and lower him to earth unharmed, The May Manton Fashions HE bath robe | | that ts loose a ample fulfils entia; require- Here is, one that {s finished with a kquare collar and turned-over cuffs that are smart and ot- tractive while they do hot In any way inter- fere with the sim- plictly. A variety of materials is used for such gowns, but flan- neis, flanneiette and heavy Turkish towe!- ing are the favorites ‘Toe trimming can be of contrasting flannel and ts trimmed with silk, ‘The bath robe ts made with fronts and back, The sleeves ari made in two pleces euch and are mod- erately full at the shoulders, ‘The colla ik arranged at der-arm seams, For the W-year size will be required 4 vards of ma 2d ds inches wide yards with rd of silk ‘7226 ig es for girls and 12 years Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANT PASH BURWAU, Donat Building, 100 West Thirty-second street (oppe- ete Gimbel Brow), corner #xth avenue and Thirty-second street, Obtain w York, or sent by mail en recelpt of ten cents in coin or stamps for each pattern erdered, ‘Thoee IMPORTANT—Write your address plainly and always Patterms, $size wanted, AGG two conte for letter postage if in @ hurry, SRTT RONAN ELE TT ONT ET

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