The evening world. Newspaper, June 14, 1912, Page 22

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sora Che See awiorio. ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. + hi bUshing Com! Nos. 63 to Published Dally Broept Sunde: W the Tete bags ing pany, RALPH PULITZ, Preaident, 63 Park Row. | ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 68 Park Row. JOSHPH PULITZER, Jr. Secretary, 63 Park Row. % Entered at the Port-OMce at New York an Recond-Claes Matter. Ouberription Rates to The Evening} For Bngland and the Continent and World for the United States All Countries in the International ‘and Canada. Postal Union. $3.80! One Year.. 80| One Month VOLUME 52...... soe NO. 18,560 THEIR OWN WORD FOR IT! HO WILL nominate the Republican candidate for tho highest office and dignity in the power of these United States to confer? “Liars” —“frauds”—“varmints”—“betrayers of ninety million people”—“traitors”—“grand larcenists”—“party wreckors”—“passion érank committeemen”—“crooke joy-riding on a steam roller”—“hand- picked machine puppete”—“discredited, repudiated bosses”—Mmen who have no respectability to lose”! ! | How will they do it? By “theft”—“treason”—“corruption”—‘betrayal of the people’s interests”—“brazen offers of money’—“graft”—“open bribery”— “talking to the galleries” —“appesling to the lowest peesions”—“ao- cepting stolen goode”—“getting away with the ewag”—‘“damnable outrage”—“buying the nomination”—‘“violation of the precepts of Qeosoay end hozar’—“going the limit”!! To what will the auccessful candidate owe his nomination? Bither To “the perpstration in the convention hall of a system of intimidation and terrorization which might eeaily culminate in & full-fledged riot”! | ! To “the dirtiest, most despicable, most dastardly steul in the history of American politics”! 1! ———4 “OTHERS IN THE CAST.” Vv neglected now? Note the events of a single dey: The German naval officers say goodbye with a toast to American women as “the most gracious end charming im-the world.” Never e word for the men! Who are in the front line of battle against the high price of meat? Whom do the butchers most fear? Who trample on the etesk and wield the kerosene can? Not the men! Even a few country girl visitors from Oregon have to register & protest against the bumpings end bed manners they have euffered fom the New York men! Then the Colonel comes out loud and clear for Woman Suffrage and says he is sawing an equal rights plank for his platform. ~ And finally the President alfows he, too, will be a good euffragist if: the women really mean it. rn . «© OUTWITTING THE WAVES. PRACTICAL end sensible suggestion is that of Prof. Moore, A Chief of the United States Weather Bureau, to establish an , Tuternational Weather and Storm Bureau. All ships on the Atlantic would be reqiired to send daily wireless reports of weather, &c., either to Europe or to America, according to thelr position. These reports would be arranged and charted, the results exchanged by cable between the two continents, and vessels at sea informed by ‘wireless of the kind of weather to be expected in their neighborhood. In the Professor's sanguine view: “Tf the plan is adopted, so far as storms are concerned the crose- ing of the Atlantic will be made as safe as a short street car journey. Great ocesn liners which have but little to fear from anything except the most destructive gale may, by altering their course on receipt of the warning by fifty miles or more, escape a rough passage, while analler steamers and salting ships, by making » wide detour, may ee @ape possible destruction.” Such a plan even half realized would bring joy and relief to many ionsands of travellers. It seems a sensible and obvious means of ineressing the comfort and safety of ocean travel not only as affected by weather but also as regards ice, dereliots or other dangers. As this paper eaid when commenting on the Titanic disaster: “Everybody knows thst when a vessel is in trouble all steam- ‘ships within a wireless radius co-operate thoroughly, report to each other, indicate positions, pass on messages to the shore—continue, in fact, in almost unbroken wireless conversation, ; “Is there the same co-operation between ships of different Mnes im reporting frequently and minutely the position and cheracter of fce? That every captain of a big steamer gets many. messages about ice from other vessels is not for a minute doubted. But does he get all data from every direction that might be helpful to him in figuring oyt what lies ahead? Is there a systematic scheme of this sort work- ing between ships of all lines to furnish each captain the fullest in- formation possible?” An international bureau such as Prof. Moore proposes would seem a highly desirable response to this undoubted need. Letters From the People Ne, to Both Questions, hauled aiong on @ leash, but to get a Be the Editor of The Evening World: good Jong run on road or field, And in ‘Are all the Presidents of the United |town that ts impossible. Think twice, tates obliged to be Masone? And !s &/readers, before you cause torture to a ‘man debarred because of any religious|fine animal by Keeping a pig dog in reed from becoming President? town, poa CIDR, T.oc, One Reason for “High Cost, Dte.” ‘To the Editor of The Drening Worms: In our grandparents’ day a man with $1,000 @ year could keep hie family in comfort. His wife was strong and was not ashamed to do her own housework, Yen. To the Editor of The Evening World: Are marriage licenses necessary in the State of Connecticut? Ww. 8, r “Timing the Clicks.” ‘Bo the Kaitor of The Evening World: I once read somewhere of a method for telling how fast a train was going ming the clicks of the wheels. _ Who can ‘tell what that method ts? -Aleo I have heard that in walking along a railroad track . the number 08 rails you walk past in twenty seconds ‘Papresents the number of miles you are} ‘travelling an hour, Who can work out _ the caupe of this if it is true? DIRS. K. 6, ne money foolishly on dress, His chil- and went to work, enough amusement, except for ents. Parties were given. food, needless extent are the present high cost of living, Ghe 414 not look shabby, but wasted dren left school at twelve or fourteen If they went to je Or high school they worked way through. A church fair or @oclable or a ptonio or @ circus was the ke and lemonade were enough to a If we would live in the aimple, wholesome, happy manner of my own youth there would be ro shortage, And lots of trust magnates would starve to death, 1 thing, OLD-FASHI Every summer she arrives—accompanied by her Beauty, Wit and Vanity—creating sensations, breaking hearts, and sometimes becoming a victim herself! ny by The Press Publishing Co. New York World), can say what you please,” gaid Mrs. Jerr (Mr, Jarr, by Capyetght, 1912, (The oe the way, wasn't seying & word), “but at least my friends ere appreciative, end my friends do not @orget me!” Mr, Jarr knew that eome pleasant @rospect wees opening up. Hed it been @ny bother or annoyance from outeide ecquaimances Mrs. Jerr would have dest of husbands, with all due cager- ness. ‘Your friends ask you to go motor Doating on the dirty old boat ready to blow up any minute (that's if it would ron et all), but MY friends”. Mra. Jarr paused as though the @ivergence in the character, capabll- ities and intentions of her friends and bis friends were ag wide apart as the poles, Mr. Jarr gulped at Mra Jerre summary of the wholly innocent launch trip he had been invited upon by John- son, the cashier in his office, But he did not gainsay her by re- minding hor that Johnson didn't drink, that nobody else but her own husband was invited to test the launch, and that, besides all this, he, Mr, Jarr, had NOT gone on the motor boat's tryout. What would have been the use to contradict The ayiose ntl autoing this evening and to take dinner 1—HER ARRIVAL. Conn She New York Wold) What |confer on all such matters, and that's the reason Mr, Stryver 19 a wealthy man—have asked YOU as well as me. “But I noticed when that man Johnson asked you to go out on his palatial yacht, @nd possibly make you pay if anything broke on it, he never asked you if you thought I'd care to go Maybo it is just as well, I've read in @ paper about the gay doings on young millionaires’ yachts!"" Mn Jarr could not eee Mr. Johnson as & young millionaire even by the wildest stretch of his imagination. Nor could he visualize the 13-foot, one-cylinder launch ‘Bantam Chick’ as the scene of gay do- ings on the moonlit waters. So he made| no comeback. ‘Tis better thus. “Yes, the Stryvers have asked us the lady and etart something? man eVer wins a battle at home? “Well?” asked Mr. Jarr with due meekness, after thinking to this effect. “The Stryvers have invited us to go with them at one of the fine roadhouses near Larchmont or New Rochelle,” said ‘Mrs. Jarr proudly, “That will be nice,” replied Mr, Jarr. “Ie that all you have to say?” cried Mrs, Jarr. “ ‘That will be nice!’ If 1 were to tell you that I was going to expire at daybreak to-morrow and that the funeral would be on the day follow. ing you'd say That would de nice!’ You don't see the point of this at all, or you pretend you do not! Mr, and Mrs. Stryver—for Mr, and Mre, 6ti Copyright, 1012, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York World), T ia easy enough to woo her I "Neath the moonlight's mystic thrall; But the girl worth while is the girl who will smile When she meets you in town newt fall! Life is like a poem or a story; the most important thing about it ts not that it should be long, but that tt should be beautiful and interesting, Deadly Microbes. “Doctors aay that germs turk In every kiss.” “That'e right. Germs of breach of ONED, | promies eulte.” It ten't the unpleasant things that a husband and wife scy to one an- other but the pleasant things that they forget to say which make married life seem 80 long and dreary, In these complicated times it 1s no longer correct to say, “Are you mar- ned?” when you meet an old acqugintance, but “Are you married still—or again?” Oh, yes, ae the anti-suffragists say, all the laws are in favor of the cher- ished wife and mother; but just consider how few of us are wives and how few wives are mothers and,how few mothers are chertshed/ Alas! our children will not be able to boast of the ancestral home and the faithful old family servants, but will probably waz reminiscent over “dear old ancestral flat” and the “quaint, picturesque old janitors” of their childhood, A male suffragist is an obstinate person who won't acknowledge that there is any difference between @ woman and a human being, CREP RPP Or rl The Jarrs Start on a ‘‘ Pleasant Evening.’’ It Is a False Start. FRR RP RRR PP Or The Evening World Daily Magazine, Friday, June 14, 1912 The Summer Girl ( Womenleartbreahers =) By Eleanor Schorer BOTH!” continued"Mrs. Jarr, “There's REAL friends for you! That's the kind of acquaintances one can be proud of. So please don’t let me hear you my he's 4 swindler agam. People who have the beautiful home life the Stryvers have, | new that they are reconciled again— and nothing can ever make me delle he ever threw a plate in her face be afraid to, for thelr parlor maid/told our Gertrude that he went around with his face scratched for days just because he said something to Mra Stryver about her overdrawing her bank account)—and that's why I say you can’t tell me a man who !s so considerate of his wife got his money dishonest “I'm not telling you how he got It," ventured Mr. Jarr. “So long get any of mine let him sn ‘boobs and simps he wants t “Please don't use those words,” sald Mra, Jarr. ‘You haven't any money to intrust to Mr. Stryver to invest in the first place; and, in the second, they are charming people and are most kind to ask us to share their evening's pleas- ure!"" Mra, Jarr then permitted Mr. Jarr to make such changes in his raiment she thought sultable, and they walked over to the fine private house of the Stry- vere in pleasant anticipation of the en- Joyment to come in the company of per- sons both weakhy and refined, They found Mr. Stryver fuming in the hall in automobile coat and cap. “What's the with you again?” he snarled up the stairway. “You hob- ble around Ilke @ cow with a wooden leg! Howdy de!” (this to the Jarrs). | “By George! time 1'll| ing like this for that “Oh, ehut your big mouth!" oried Mrs. Stryver leaning over the balust: “Ain't you got no manners, when we’ got company?” Mr. Stryver regarded the company with a snarl and began to swear, “It looks to me like a pleasant eve- ning,” murmured Mr, Hedgeville Editor By John L. Hobble CK HENDERSON says the reason he has such a good opinion of his wife's first husband is because she has only been married once. R. DERKS has changed his mind about which is the weaker sex. His daughter can attend bargain sales without suffering, while his son gets hurt even in playing football, INGE Mr. Corne got over the fever he has been so helpless his friends him. OPS OF Tlistors® Mee Copyfight, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), No. 10.—Marguerite de Valois. ARIS and tho nobility of all France flocked to Notre Dante Cathe dral, one August day {mn 1572, to witness a royal marriage—ihe union of young Henry of Navarre to Marguerite of Valois, sister of the King of France. The young couple were nineteen yearg years old, and they hated each other. At @ point In the ceremony the Archbishop asked Marguetite if she would take Henry as her husband. Marguerite would not answer, but Glared in sulky defiance at the Archbishop; whereas her brother stepped forward, caught her head between his hands, and forcibly nodded it in assent. And the ceremony went on with no further hitch. * Margucrjte was still a mere girl, but she already had a ri affairs that was the wonder of the dissolute French Court. her victims, up to this time, was the youthful Duke of Guise, most powerful nobles of the realm. Guise implored Marguerite to marry She refused, ing she intended to wear a crown. Then Sebastian, hetr apparent to the throne of Portugal, sued for her hand, ‘The match was broken off because of the Spanish King’s obje . And Marguerite was forced to console herself with the petty crown of Na 5 Ter family arranged her marriage with Henry of Navarre without consulting her wishes, Bride and bridegroom were young, handsome, wonderfully nd cach was one of history’s noted heartbreakers. Yet neither wi ' a, fall in love with the other. Their married It:o began with disiike, proceeded mutual deceptions and quarrels, and at .ast merged into a cordial pla friendship. Religious and political troubles made the French Court unsafe for Hent He escaped to his own Iittle Kingdom of Navarre, taking Marguerite with hi Then the Viscomte de Turenne, one of Henry's stanchest political supporter fell hopelessly in love with Marguerite. She wearled of living in poky Navarre, and left Henry; returning to Pa There, the number of men who fell in love with her and their quarrels for hi slightest favors angered the French King, who sent her back to Navar Henry, who had heard some of the rumors from Parfs, welcomed her with fiero reproaches, She promptly resented this form of greeting by running away fron her husband; rallying about her a ‘little army of men whom her beauty hi enthralled, and declaring war on Henry. She was captured and Henry locked her in the Castle of Usson. Here, again her powers as a heartbreaker asserted themselves, She won the garrison o the castle to her defénce, drove tts Governor away and made herself its ruler i his place. At Usson Castle, sovereign. Henry became King of France, but his enemies in Paris were too strong t¢ permit him to enter the French cap!tal and be crowned. When at last managed, by an adroit change of reilgion, to outmanoeuvre his foes and gel himself crowned King of France, he would not let Marguerite snare his triumphs Instead, he divorced her and married another woman. Marguerite received from him an allowance (which she always greatly over drew, much to the grief of his stingy soul) as long as she lived. He and shy ‘becaume close friends and she gave him wise advice in the government of his realm, Meantime, she continued, in middle-age, to capture hearts with the same ease as in her gfihood days, Marguerite de Valois died in 1615, In her sixty-third year; her name having ‘become a synonym for all that was most charming=and wilful—in womanhood. The May Manton Fashions Just such pretty, cor Huthe frocks as thi one, It 1s cha attractive and sma in effect yet so simp! that It can be run in very little — tim The plain sleeves aj to the ar: vet the blo made wit front Jag tions, is tn ered edge. In the suiuate tion, blue and whi cotton volle Is pi with plain blue, bi @ dress of this kind c; be made from Preity summer ma rial with the colli and trimming of trasting material of coloi for years, she continued to reign as undisputed ID-SUMMER 1 contrasting rf made round or hi as tho yoke 1s used not. Por cool da; high neck and long sleeves are always sirable and tho sugi tion made in tho bai view 1s a good o1 the material bel, Ughtweight linen wi @ yoke or embroldel For the ten yi size, the dre 4 yards 4 inches wi ears. Pattern 7,467, Girl's Dr require 43-4 yards of material Pattern 7,467 js cut in sizes for yards 36 , 10 and 12 - +Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN'SON FASHIO: are trying to get him a Government Man surely was not made in the image of the Lord but in the image of Mammon, since the sign of his faith 4s the dollar sign, At thie time of the year a wife's distance lends enchantment—to any woman who happens to de in the city, Job. VEGETARIAN club has been or- ganized, The members have agreed to not eat any meat except from vegetarian animals, P) BUREAU, Donald Building, 100 West Thirty-second street (opp site Gimbel Bros.), commer @ixth avenue and Thir:y-second atr New York, or sent by mail on receipt of ten cents in coin stemps for each pattern ordered, IMPORTANT—Write yeur address plainly an always specity tine wante4 Adé two cents for letter postage if m a hu.ry,

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