The evening world. Newspaper, February 28, 1912, Page 16

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na 7 The Evening World Daily Magazine, Wednesday, February 28, 1912 aay - ooo; _——— a tre PAS cord. $= | Such Is Life! $4 (#=8er) $4 By Maurice Ketten ] ESTABLISHED BY JOSEP PULITZER Historic Sena ty ee Sony 5 Hn Fuses Ooms Heartbreakers } 3 Park To 0 | | mR NS RITAT Senten vane row (AES 5 RUN AWAY on 1 LL CALL WHAT'S THE You CAN'T Foot ME with By Albert Payson Terhune. | * JOsiaPH PULATZ © 63 Park Tow. . ’ ‘OLD FRc SUCH AN 1 ne THAT GAG, fea ay Ovi 7 As Seem a pa ! - LEASE yi { Mabacetpite et m4 PPR OF nine Tor veland as the Continent an are, saad U Covyright, 1012, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World), i peewee See auaiee seas A Cee Waar oc ae No. 16.—LOUIS XIV.; the Royal Lover. « O2.507 One Year. donner 90.78 T was easy enough for an old-time King to be a heart-breaker. | 201 Ona Month VOLUME F8.ccccccccessssssvevecsccvecs vers And usually he was, In the first place, he could buy his sweet- heart rich gifts and tax the nation to pay for them. He had the power to confer on her a title of nobility and a high place at court. His favor made her the fashion of the day and secured for her @ host of fawning and cringing flatterers. Moreover, the King had very sudden and effective ways of getting rid of any man who was daring enough to aspire to be his rival. And he could not be called to account for any damage he did to hearts or to lives, So, altogether, the love road was made extremely smooth for mon- archs. Especially for King Louls XIV. of France, who stands in the front rank of royal and historic heart-breakers, , He was a little man who wanted to be tall; an ambitious man who wanted to be supreme; a thoroughly selfish man who wished to be , known as the father of his people. Left an orphan when he was a baby, ve sNO, 18,453 A GOOD ROUND-UP. Pp NETS are pretty good gatherers. Twelve days after ee i @ daring $26,000 taxicab robbery from two bank measen- gers five men are arrested and the detectives have the whole! case at their fingers’ ends. The most interesting feature of the story is the way the police account for every movement, every turn of the auspected mon since the moment of the crime. One was arrested in the act of leaving the city, another in Memphis, ‘lonn. Jong ago tho police could | PLEASE LOANME N — the little King was broveht up under the charge of Mazarin, the stingy, crafty } have nab! several had they not hoped through the movemente of ON THAT GOLO BRiCik= ¢ vi (ene pg ol dened Rien poorly, mde. Alek seep Setween, served ‘shasta ana Bape / bed ) Laer STs reRS N'T You CASH THIS made him sleep between ragged ehects and lined | some to get the others. . | CHECK 2 his own ample pockets out of the royal revenues. ‘ Jt was @ good picce of work. Those concerned deserve duc 0e iS Touts, as soon as he became his own master, ext th for it. { A Boy King's 7} soon Hy 8 career i ey ann exer well ‘ d as of warfare, costly wullding operations, &c., that at When we think of thie great city of nearly five Ni | Extravagance. last drained France's treasury dry. Ile wore gorgeous ar y ly million Peoplo, | J clothes, doctored his handsome face with cosmetics amd with tts crowded sections and closely packed blocks; when wo think | f : Nga Ma wore high-heeled shoes, high wigs and high-crowned of the two hundred thousand visitors that lodge with us daily, ecat- { De bors Pier her Tyre held ri "i vi to y ef F \ x jr of any importance was with Louise de la Valltere, the téred about the atreets by day and by night; when we think of thot RB ? \ ant pretty, gentle daughter of a country gentleman. Loulse loved him blindly end hendreds of evil plans constantly batohing and gro " in this hugo, if devotedly. To her he was a demi-god; faultiess, wonderful. Louis plaeialy shifting mase—even twelve thousand police seem a thin guarant take the court wibearanle fer" her Lang, tookon-hessted, faner ci retired : oe | make the court unbearable for her, Louise, broken-hearted, deserted against wrong-docra elipping through. ee Ghia au Wontewer ecut Mile. de pntanges caught the royal fanoy, romped through @ goodly hare The police get plenty of blame for the rogues that get away. | of the tax imoneye, set a few court fashions in dress and wickedness, influenced ‘They dererve praise for a gocd round-up, eee) secured Government offices for her frienda and relatives at ¢h@ expense of worthier men; and, when her butterfy hour of favor was done, ‘insiniden | ‘went her way. Mme, de Montespan, a gloriously beautiful Marquise, as clever as she was “BE NOT DECEIVED.” falr and as evil as she was clever, became enamored of Louis and held hie affections for many years, But at last she grew to regarding herself as being | TT" is the headline of « circular found inserted in The World ety acre In the King’s favor—alwayt a dangerous state of mind townrd : ny’ ly except one's dog—and @he let her flery temper blaze out at him once last Sunday. It was issued by a clergyman of great pity too of r h F } i " | 00 often. She told him a few sharp truths about him Lou's, accustomed and geal for good works, the Rev. Stephen Merritt, to ad- in bape hed tey Memuic eke meek adoration di to flattery of the wortd at vertise his undertaking business. The title is taken from tho burial sated, But the tise of HETTOVAL Gaus hed i toe vaiieas Louis (OA service of the Episcopal Church. He meant it as @ warning egainst | Tee anaes A ' ; 4 ‘The King had married Henrietta Marta, an Austrian princess, who wee \ some former business associates. The World uses it as @ good lino pretty and good and very, very stupid and who {dolized her fickle husband. for the information of ite readers. It aske them not to be deooived Louls cared not a rap for her, though he always treated her with an unfailing 5, ., . ? courtesy and respect. After nearly a quarter of a century of loveless, lonely into believing that thie circular was part of The Sunday World. It! married iife the poor, foolish Httle Queen a! was not. Tho Rev. Stephen Merritt was simply STEALING ad- mune. de Malntencn had: bees, soaregned | 00) tip n King’s notice by the Marchioness de Montespan, who is | vertising! Rivals for the ner as too plain and prim and simple to figure | PINE Weel ete ea Monarch’s Love. a 1. oM Maintenon was the widow of @ J oki Scarron, H'stortans differ as to her } e In any case, she was @ startling contrast } THE DIFFERENCE. |to dime. de afontespan, aid ad a way: of soothing Laule's ruted self-esteem { - a i 4 Nee ‘ after lis quarrels with the latter. Gradually she won the King’s love. He { ON TRARY to what had been believed, directly the taxicab found her aloofness and cold propriety refreshing after the hundreds of women } thieves had got their $25,000 they gave up taxicabs and i wih had always been flattering him. And a year or so efter ais Queen's death | Louls secretly married li took the elevated uptown. ! There it is again—with wealth comes the instinct to save. Millionaires mostly use the subway. People with amall ealaries oll { about in taxicabe. Only the rich can afford to dress badly, go to This ts the last of his recorded love affairs, He lived on for many yeare; | to see the men die who had made his reign great; to see his best plane fall; jte see women Who had been bad and utiful grow (oad and ugly; to outiive j is own fascinations and magnificence, and to learn at last the bitter lesson that | tue and permanent greatness can never come to the man who has lived all cheap restaurants and save their money. Who are the people that | nr | tyand cut $10 bills for suppers in expensive placea after the theatre? e ° ond Copyright, 1912, SRE | eid the millionaires? ‘he Jatter are having crackers and milk | Love’s Nin e€ Lives ae (rae Re Pitti oo Be a The Day’s Good Stories at home. : | nie | To the man with $25 in his pocket a taxieab looks like a cheap! 3, LACK OF MASTERY. woman admires more than @ quiet, res-| to do, her love begina to grow less. in, ‘The man who says in the beg! | been half hidden tm esctuded pleces, bed been ‘ | aced at Last! substituted for the oll ond \ Ce, ec with 825,000 waves it by olute display of male mastership. When women get together tn their | ning i ; or 7 wreathe and were new contgaience. The man with 825, waves it by as a Inxury, Oo matter how vigorously de-| Not tho kind that resuite in @ hurry|heart-to-heart sessions it is of their| “Only over my dead body will yon Bae i ucatrate BAY, petit tate | oee ot oe ee ce ee | ‘ pa ear-ot 2 Meme N Aled, there 1s In all women,|call for an ambulance; but the low-| husband's severities, rather than their| obtain that!” ert isan eerltaroal 7, ateter,”” explained Der Little brother, | even to-day, a dormant atom| toned, immovable declaion that ashe /leniencles, that~they boast. And the] And finishes with | nor you're had that mlstetoe hanging up tor neatly | WOMAN AND HISTORY. | of the caveewoman spirit. In| knows is final. The decision that wiil| husband who has proved himself mas-| ‘Oh, well, it your heart's so set on| “W as an Dad as the woman x en © aingle customer, | who Jistens You're not up to date, What eal you want to de the cave days people resorted | not be altered for all the hysterical! ter in his household 1s spoken of among | it,’ &c.—Is los hand’ and | 1 to advertise,” twe came from, Now, of course, I see at comes from Cologne,’ "’——Washington pe Mut to 1, at the end the lecturer's Tae. |¢o physteal violence to prove atrong ad- ert Aes a) carta Seale enlendh a ait afl bi Cheek ' ————__ BE twenty-fiv atoat women { story ra hheon alte jeymnastics of which her vocal corts| his wife's friends as a he smug smile and flu is car | said HE, twenty-fi vest women in history have been sifted | mi Men dragged women by the|are capable! But remember that brutist Jew that a woman bestows upon a man! "Ob, thank son, sir for your tuminating | =A ‘Tragic Possibility. out in a contest carried on by the New York State Woman | not to make copy for the news-| Tt is not neces that a man have! mastery, When a man forces a woman| from whom she had just won are due{RmaTks, to Suffrage Aesoviation. them that a Wild) great physical bull® and strength to be| to ¢ y out his will just for the sake|to her satisfied vanity, not to gratl- } Vhree hundred and forty-seven lists |} Saented , {nfatuation flourished in thelr Yearts, | masterful. Mind and force of will are|of exulting in his power over her he's| tude or a great affection for him, iia ieee Te 2 per, Aunt Caroling, the cook, filled bie plate, | were presented. | And to-day that same apinit, Mitered |the two essentials And although tt iafa, brute! If you would keep Love from dying lieved in Si with choice bite from the ‘great b “hart | vuntless generations and mod- | patural for a woman to admire size and| When a man compels a woman to do| its third death call to life that spark of| Believ: igns. Uncle Leven fell upon them alien, } ; i \ { hrough est nuns Miss Susan B. Anthony and Madame Curie got the la yout crm ts fon ae 4 . erated snuch tn the process, shows it-/ prawn in a man, some of the greatest | the things that he honestly believes are| mastery that 1s youre by the right of | @ HE was « sentimental young git and de. Bonere, © stvud creed, Bie ber of votes. Of contemporary women Jane Addams of Chicago was | wit in the woman who glories in alwoman-tumers of history have been| right to do—when he overcomes her Iit-| creation. Most likely the Httle lady will voted much time an et the home decorations for Christmas, Her | Caroline solicttousty, “‘le you got ar paint sé far in the lead. Queen Elizabeth of England and Joan of Are were | man's frm mastery small, and not particularly strong, tle, foolish reasons and petty, feminine| storm about and finish by not spealcing| surprise may be imagined when he eame down- "Taint dat, Gif’ Calline,” eaid bins} “ ver mind how often you hear) A woman may love a man to d baa pad oak! i found the decorations | objections—and gains his point through|to you for a week! But all the while) stairs one morning and rorations nin general, and suffragettes tn tion, but the anoment she \ves that | right, ell as might, he's a master! | the love In her heart t# growing—she | moret around, ‘The mistletoe boughs, ar, pooh-pooh the idea of man'y| he is losing his grip, that he cannot] Of one thing beware, Never start out |{y beginning to recognize her natural! ———— thing that a real MAK r things he wills her to be firm and end py gractously giving master. i i f i the favorites of former d. ¢ | won Genius was admitted onty | part Biblical characters were exchides “if it had a strong influence ou history Exactly what Madame Curie’s “strong influence on history’ may be or prove to be is somewhat puzzling. In fact the voters eeem to have cast their ballote on stand-pat euffmgist platform and principles. | | Helen of Troy, Cleopatm, Madame de Maintenon and others in| the beautiful and frail class were not even among the “alao ran.” | Schooldays faces an OUNG girls and ve small women who find youth- ful models becoming to wel- } Yet if it comes to real influence on history-—! Beinchie PRE Ras, oe Maes n ts t P A ‘ IF | Was A DAWG oe roomy and Contin ; oe Ore Leyte —— — + - t it is not bulky, It v/ Der Yon Sweet Life a | taken pretty lines an! RESIDENT MBLLEN, of the New York, New Haven and | / Yow BET Nook Covey ty 4 \ : it ie Aumla “anau easy Hartford Railway, + “Bloss the commuter who will use bp Tuan, RIGHT AROUN’ @ ROUN’R oun’) ie ake mrerr: | the New York, Westchester and Boston line and get out of \e Tey Tied To MAKE ME GO, 5 shown, but there are the way of my freight and through trains.” ‘The President adds Arp UN RIGHT DOWN! ' ae many desirable ones t 4 \ . = ———— < \UeT ‘that may de used for : that ‘he could really afford to pay each commuter five cents to i aad =| Now Fatry, WHEN THe ( DROP! - x garments of this ktnd. CAT GeTs A BITE YOU ‘The cotton flannels are ride on some other road. What's a commuter among railway cor TELL ME AND VEL Mite id poeanent! . es TO charming in color an “4 corte ROPE. AWD TURN design, bath robe Men. iad TWE DOG LOOSE So's, HE yy ¥ . | kets are woven m CaN RON AT THE CAT % attractively, and plato NLY two days more to pay water renta for 1911, Wost sid Aap Mame (T JUMP» flannels indude a va riety of colors water is looking its blackest as a reminder, :| mii.) PuLL Tre we | "tie rope te made — ns . / KeTcn THE FIER = | with fronts end backs. & i | ‘Phe sleeves ere cut , i | with upper and under — Letters from the People waraane ‘sat Gelliee eters IF Dp with Die ouffe, and the collar is joined to the Apely to Your Co man, of the contest, ¢ neck odie ‘She fronts ‘To the Batter of The Evening t are apped } How can I obtain samples of garden |), 1 closing 1a mace wen to : seeds from the Government? bis partioular case exceed M4 the lett alde, 1 Wohi | comellten by A BY then he | For «ibe iter ag } “Hasor Golf.” owed & corresponding pe | be reg unt sed i +7) the Waiter of The Evening Work ' latitude example, 1 yards of material 2 K What "J, K. 2." writes on 1 ines, all told, ehould meas Os yards %, 4 yards 4 m of strokes with razor wi ° nty-four th and he can inches wide with % imgy take in the process of shay accomplivh the work with, pay, alxty yard 21 inches wide for “ ing fifty-eight as the number wale he| strokes, then a contestant, whose ines Alf personally took in the process, and #tut found 40 measure thirty-six taohes, No. 7240 1s ing that his ‘“bruder’ went him two @hould be aliowed 60 per cent. more en for misses 4 better, Gpeaking for myeelf, I think 4 Peaking lid BaMy. to equal the sk! | of 14, 1 and 18 yearsBath Robe for Mioses, and Small Women—Pattern take eomewhere tn the neighborhood of of “J. K, EH." You get my idea? Tne of age. 0. . two hundred strokes to shay eo amount of time consumed “¢ dimeult to conceive how t! | ocess of shaving has horetofore roa me Pg Ip) ns can possibly accomplish the work with | been discussed in these columna, but the Call et THE EVENING AmeiiO: ae BUBEAU, Dovald Building, 1% Weet Thirty-second street (oppe- the etrokes mentioned, Now, "J. K, b." subiect of the number of strokes taken te tte Cmde Bron), cormer M@xth avenne and Thirty-second strest, and his “pruder’ may have very small !2 the process will, no doubt, far exceed Ontme 3 New York, or sent by mel on receipt of tem cents in ecln faces, very steady nerves and cxcop: JB ner re Peg gM gorge wi | ™ stampe for each pattera ordered * tlenally dett hands, so that !t would bel ey yavor Golf, Then let ety 3 7} TMPORTANT—Write your addres plenty end always epectty almost useless to attempt any competi: |eeng im thelr scores, - Potters 3 ase wanted. Adi two cents for letter postage if in « hurry,

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