The evening world. Newspaper, October 17, 1912, Page 20

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FSTABLISHDD RY JOSHPH PULITZER. Padlished Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to 63 Park Row, New York, Such Is Life! 3% ( AE Te New York World.) ) & By Maurice Ketten J. ANGU! surer, 63 Pal ay al JOSHPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 6 Park Row, | | Mamcure Your own ! mt a i Tniered al the Poat-Office at New York aw Becond-Clasn Matter, NAILS, YOUNG MAN . IT Aus uy! vids i Bubscription Rates ¢0 The Evening) For England and the Continent and COSTS MONEY To HAVE H F World for the nited States AN Countries in the International SyYouR NAILS MANICURED , and Canada ‘ Postal Union, . $3.50] One Yea 15 (LOVE a Wage ove Tay ws (Lhe. VOLUME . . ‘ eevee NO. 18,68) PLAIN SULZER. MONG the growing certainties of the campaign must be reck- A oned the popularity, on-the-spotativeness, earnest energy and engaging sprightliness and simplicity of William Sulzer, Democratic candidate for Governor of New York. | He is brisk, he is agile, he is free as the mountain goat. He says, plain things with a ring of plain, kindly truth. He is refreshingly | “clean of the yellow stains of maimmon; the fleshpots of Wall street | know him not. Public schools, five years in the Assembly and eigh- teen years of Congress have heaped upon him the riches of experience ARRIED life is like writing epigrams—it looks #0 easy Gnd simple | M until you've tried it every day for three or four years. To tose one husband in the divorce court may de misfortune; t@ leee two looks like carelessness; to lose three is simply a hadit, ; Never keep tabs on a husband; if he needs it he doesn't deserve-@RG compliment; and if he doesn't need it he doesn't deserve the insult, id When a man urges a woman to be “reasonable” he must have ceased to want her to be in love, because no woman on eorth has ever been MROWR they on | if It may be bad form to flirt with your own husband in public, but 408 awfully good policy, because if you don't do it some other womap Ooh tainly wit, e | CAN IF. HE to be doth at the same time, only. He is now Chairman of the Honse Committee on Foreign | ISES To BRING: Affairs, and that office is no garage for chuckleheads. Many of the | HIS SALARY HOME Long-drawn-out love affairs don't have to be broken of; bills he has introduced have done credit to his intentions and to his “imtellects.” When he draws up political contracts those present feel | Gisposed to sign. The other night, for instance, he allowed: “I will go into office, if elected, without a promise except yp promise to all the people to serve them faithfully and honestly and to the best of my ability. I am free, without entenglemente, and shall remain free. I have no boss. If elected I ahall follow the street called Straight, and the Er eoutive Office will be in the Capitol. When I take the oath Of Governor I shall enforce the laws fearlessly and impartially, with malice toward none. “Those who know me dest know that I stand firmly for certain fundamental principles—for liberty under low, for ctvil end religious freedom; for constitutional government; for the old integrities, and the new humanities; for equality be- fore the law; for equal rights to all and epecial privileges to fone; for the cause that lacks assistance, against the wrongs that need resistance; and for unshackled opportunity as the Deacon light of individual hope and the best guarantee for the perpetuity of owr free institutions. “And now, my friends, let me reiterate what I have often ead defore—I am a Democrat, unafraid, free, progressive and independent; I have the courage of my convictions. No in fluence controls me but the influence of my conscience to do my full duty to all the people as the God of our fathers gives me the Nght.” More and more people feel that this is a good sort of Democrat to do business with. One thing is eure: No Harriman fund is waiting around to boost the Hon. William into the Governor’s chair or any other. That fact alone goes a long way toward persuading many EVERY WEEIe eag in the middie until they come apart, 4 Ddachelor's attitude toward a married man is something Uke that of the homeless street dog who gazes with mingled pity and envy at the pom» pered pet dog straining at his leash, The average man has so much heart that he apparently thinks it a pity to waste it all on one woman. Memories of Players "Of Other Days By Robert Grau {tT D0ES, NO. 4— COST MONEY Mary Anderson, To HAVE YouR NAILS MANICURED FLATS Are Too Noisy “Our Mary.” Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), \LTHOUGH Mary Anderson be- at a thi dollar-a-seat scale of prices. gan her unexampled stage; Abbey's contract with his new eter J career at the top rung of the) represented a value close to @ million ladder, she passed through all) dollars, Yet, as illustrative of the kind of the vicissitudes encoun-| of man he was, he offered no coi tered by less intrepid colleagues of @| when at the time of Miss ery precarious period in theatrical his-| marriage to M. de Navarro she tory. formed him that e had a Under the management of her step-|to retire from the stage for ali dime | father, Hamilton Griffin, the tall, seem- x jeer. | Mr. Abbey tried to persuade her 0 s0- _ : ingly awkward Kentucky girl with the) sume her career in after years. Bus voters that the job is worth doing. resonant voice undertook many barn-| when he eaw that she meant to keep halal storming expeditions in her native|her vow be released her from ell cen« State, and she was wont to pawn her) traetual obligations. Other managers KEEP THE LEAD. ITIZENS of the Empire State should glance twice at certain facts briefly let fall by Chancellor Reid in the course of his echolarly address at the opening of the State Education Build- ing at Albany. Practical free training in homely sciences has been an experiment in New York for only a year or two. Yet results already loom large. To-day AU pudlic echools, whether in cities, villages or rural Gatricte, teach drawing. Three-fourthe of the city schools offer courecs in manual training, cooking and sewing. One- half the village schools give courses in sewing, one-third in manual training and cooking, There are forty public indus- trial end trade echools with a day enrolment of four thousand @nd an evening er:vln:ent of three thousand pupils. jewels frequently in order that the transportation for herself and her com- pany could be paid for. More than three decades ago the late Ben De Bar, one of the best Falstafts of the nineteenth century, heard of a new Juliet, and he sent John W. Nor- ton of St. Louis to witness a perfor- mance in a small Kentucky town, Despite the inadequate support and the primitive character of the produc- tion of the Shakespearean play, Norton was so impressed with Miss Anderson's artistic qualifications thac he offered to assume charge of her future career. Surrounding the new star with a com- pany of real actors, himself interpret- ing the were not #o ready to believe that Mary Anderson was different from hundreég of other celebrities to whom the wre } the footlights was érreslstible. of these were wont to journey ¢hew- sands of miles to confer with Mme. @e | Navarro at her deautiful home et Broadway, Worcestershire, not very | i APAAANABASABIIAABAAAAAAASABABAAA BAS fas Grom Lantos. Mrs. Jarr Plays a Sad Role | In a Pretty Domestic Drama KKKK CK KCK KKK CK CK CK KCK KKK KKK EK CK ES point, “Just like one of the family.” Mfe is! Life? It isn't living. It le a “Of course, I am!" retorted Mrs, Jarr, | ghastly emptiness!’ ungraciously. “What do you think Lam] “On, don’t talk ally! retorted Mrs. others, he came back to New York com- that here was “an unusual ag tress.” In 1964, when ft became my provinge to visit Mme Path at her castle im swing Jelly bubbled up over the kettle and flared up, with a smell of burning fruit, from the gas flame. ading male roles, Norton, af-; Wales to prepare for another ‘“‘tampe ter @ preliminary tour of the one night! well" tour, I wrote to Mme. de Nevarme Twenty. § Gertrude knew the remark was not elling fortunes with fruit} Jarr. “Your life is full of ni jothes | stands, prevalled upon De Bar to permit) offering her $100,000 for a serles of atty eight village high schools have vocational courses in agricul. addressed to the burning bollover, It Motorcars and no worr Miss Anderson to play for an entire|readings. And, under the belief that i meant a malediction for the untimely Now, don’t be cross, dea said the I've always wanted a de: ttle in the leading theatre of St. Louis| money alone would not affect her, 3 ture, and twenty others give agricultural teaching of a lese caller. visitor, “Think how I envy you! You | kitchen, Ike this;" sald the visitor, in a acid Meaty pa ere pl ‘the |'oftered to devote one-half of the rots definite character, There are ten thousand pupils in evening jutting up preserves? cried Mra. |have home duties, You are doing useful | sentimental tone. “Why 1s it I never press in the Missouri city were in ac-|to any charity she might care to eles departments of existing day echools, learning the trade appli- Mudridge-Smith, coming right in at this | work in the world. Think how vold my learned to bea home-keeper, useful, |P rn” jung Mary Anderson as a gout Madam was still true to her cations of drawing, science and mathematics, These indus OME Hea crers too. taay.*cepited'| MUR ANG o2 the aucceneor of Adsiaide | This Id what Gia greatese, of al , . Neilsen. wrote me: trial, trade and agricultural schools have been developed in Mra, Jarr, “You had plenty of time and Nv as Abbey was) “While Tam proud to have received New York under the department within the last four years. Copyright, 112, by Tye ream Publishing 02, e ( on ues t Ss olenty of chances to be useful before ith ciignt, having made a fortune| such an offer and frankly T am nome Meanwhile the number of pupils receiving such training has Rag tl BL al you were married. But no, after your) 9. result of Sarah Bernhardt’s first too well off in worldly goods, my a quadrupled. The nezt four years will tell a larger story. The Ares pith bate svery oma Oo f C t irainey died, Aol your wate a Ate we Up ‘mertcan tour, He saw in the Ken-( 4s mapped out for me, My hom re ey > F centor of oe ooee Horror with howectanions 9" | rar OTS CA MCE) [rviscin'toaraing ovsen where vyon| (Ck SIA new, te ei oe ea cis on my tine nd’ oven i ‘schools. ruddy autumn every woman—excevt pa ER I A A Ry {ldn't even mend your own stockings! ely Sar eee d a + . : 4 4 * famiiy | '3 (Ss [BOARD OPERATOR AT THE HOTEL Ri \ So he negotiated with Norton and se- it were different a stage career would We take popular education for granted in this country. All chil-| pure, whe Wwe tn Re Hype es PHOTOG. ¢ AR ITHRQARD CESRATOR AT THe BC) i) Bo, nen Ne. 0id INaMy: On LABINE 8 Bat cured a long time contract. In one, be repellent. I love the theatre. But, year under Abbey's direction Mary An-| save for some charity, when perhaps I derson became the leader of the Ameri-| might appear near home for one oom. can stage. No other American actress| sion once In a few years, my publie ever drew the gross receipts to the box; career ts ended for all tim office that ‘our Mary" did; not even “M. DEN.” and keeping house, all he ever got to eat was canned goods and delicatessen shop | messes) “I think it's dreadful for you to talk jto me the way you do, Mrs, Jarr:” whimpered the young matron. “But I kettle, She wants to “put up" fruits She won't put up with dren are taught the “Three R’s”—with trimmings, and nobody thinks twice of it. Higher book-learning of Al quality may likewise be pro- cured hereabouts in any quantity desired. But teaching public school children simple things like mending socks and making puddings and | ¢ RAPHER. By Alma Woodward rig SOPIFIENL, 1912, by ‘The Pres Ts 1 Co, TThe N E eyed iy critically and with | another room. mpt. and vegetables York World), All the big bugs come | to him, They'd come lookin’ like they t Mra. Jarr was mak- jelly on the gas range. Her or the love of Pete!” she blurt: "e was red, two fingers were biistered, t-| was goin’ to atay a week, with hat-| suppose it's for my good.” Edwin Booth. Throughout her stage life Miss Am- hoeing potatoes is still new enough to be interesting, Also the idoa | Me" temper was on edge—for the deily ed out, “you don't} boxes an’ suitcases an’ Jewel boxes an'| “I suppose it 1s. But much good it] 1m fact, the only artists who could) derson was a devout church woman ‘ ' i F would not Jell mean to tell M¢/a couple uv Frenchies to help dike|does you! sald Mrs. Jarr, sharply.| command sifch public patronage were| She rose in the famous biizgard of 1889 that the public schoo) may at the earliest practicable inoment supply | Gertrude, tho ight-running domentle YOU'RE goin’ in} 'em out. “Now, don't try to fool. me. You| Henry Irving and illen Terry combined |in tine for 5 o'clock mass. And while shop training or farm practice to help the boy and girl who must ge Brn gg! Rea foe ae re ther ld BA run know, he wuzn't one uv them| wouldn't be coming to see me this time|and Sarah PARADE: “Our Mary’ an faue it we nscese ry to ream Bee bathrs thas Gave leatned to vilay to make {t onsier for tanec aol he asian, rosie (non rrr, that gets a strangle hold on thelof day, when you might be gadding| also 1s the only American actress to the route so that nothing would intese the Intelligence that Clara Mudridge- neighborhood behind yer ears with a about, but for something.” this day who could attract the public| fere with this custom. them to find a job and start them with the immense assets of intelli- view of my getup fron fandangle. He wus what they Smith, that charming matron of tae “You read me like a book!” said the i iti i and raised = my/call a CARELESS photographer. A| visitor, in a tone of intense admiration Rosie est / petit eae nee gent interest and ambition—this notion may be put down as an enor- OUnee aah, WOR at the door in her brows, ‘ dame'd come stalkin’ in between the|“I do want something. T want you to mous influence upon coming generations. Fe ee es (ear iNld “inipilinaton st On, them high) porteere, lookin’ Ike @ house afire, an’! teach me how to be helpful, how to te aisted, ' i New York State should see to it that keeping the lead in devising | Wout have Deen gratitying to Mrs. ry tee HREM Berane Pe ped dgedl aa ee 4 * . iat x . | Jarre, For, even though you have no “ ol lation where i oes and extending free vocational training for all her children remains | motor car of your own, It ls great social |ENTMMMaaRS Hike a iaappotated| "Ame rteke any ere aan’ movel* | make selly:” hi Polite \ sod she nd her eh 28 st inetio have friends who posses: f 1 pha hte my away they’ n hey) Mrs. Jarr almont blurted out the ter- it ess. | Papin one of her first and proudest duties, ietinchieb ia: NAYS Frlaaia: Hae eee vas! What's a woman got hips and) war up against a dip, an’ start tol ribie wecret that she wax not infallible] _ Chinese file Nene enue a in, hace ve tae of sieht taeammaenenied of the many people they take ridiag! goin’ to wear tay tel whe eee eel auike S xetaway. But he wus just/in preserve making, that her jelly would] Hat each should compliment the other and | in her yoioe, according to the Kenge ‘ ho €o not appreciate it, and never, | meant ar my belt where belts wus doin’ tt to get what he called a ‘nat-| not jell, and this was the second seeth- Riatecita himself and all his belongings. | 7 + she began to pave the way to October 17, 1586, died Sir Philip Sidney in his thirty-seo- Irae take you for a ride when youl meant, t0 KFOW aR Tong as there's a] ural spose.’ Then he'd soak ‘em alxty|ing she was giving ft. But sie fonred| y gunionary mio han fist eturued heard the {0 | ber husband that ber own old mu ond year, idol of his own time and boast of succeeding genera: would appreciate It, WAVE GE thie eee Bee {s genen to lose her influence over her caller, |, conv 0 an ie acefully shabby and ready tions. Courtier, soldier, avhol ‘ i “Drat it! erled Mrs. Jarr, as. the Me ls style is ever so much) ell, IT thought that wuz a real|the influence of # mode! housewife of hat is your hogerable namet"” . ‘. ler, acholar, poet, patron of struggling pe jmore beautiful than the hourglass sort|!ealthy business, an’ when he fell fer} the old school, My insignificant appellation is Ying $a," retorted Mr writers, statesman, Envoy to Paris and to Venice, eager ad- Hard to Tell Apart jof Agure,” I told her. “It follows the| me I begin to dream uv yachts an‘! «wot, stir this Jelly. No: take those | “Where is your magnificent palace?” } 2 is a new Varia bet ft wventurer—with sword flashing and lips dropping kindness and aural sinee of the body.” Tivealen sables, noone night hel cloths and pour boiling water on them le shack ts at Lung Pi." : bai les mr ee 19 resemnbeseail) ive halt ‘ e ‘vo derned close! vi #0 e: » 0 do, ous children?” ne oulden| jeune! courtesy, he moved through those “spacious days" of Blicabeth rned close! Well, that me extra work to do, ant he ast as childre : And set the jars on the cloths se they jail well enough when yun got a back- won't erack when I pour the Jelly in ground uy green hills an’ white marble © if T didn't wan't to see him develop the plates in the dark room. skied the Jawo for sevcral dayp and Uke @ young demigod. Uihls wa9 ay good a time as any to wet ab My “He was beautiful. within and with- Natu- “And is your distinguished wife enjoying good And she had seated herself in the attitude of a pretty girl poster on the| special fall number of a housekeeper's| magazine, and was peeling away when) the door bell rang. | “It's Mister Silver, mum!” bawled| Gertrude from the d | “Co! right in, Ji ! erled Mrs. Mudridge-Smith, “We're hard at work, but you musn't mind us! V ing jellies help?” Mrs, Jarr gave her SUCH a look. But that “I suppose because their tines them. For I think It's done." ——— ‘ out jelegant as well in fashion of person as in grace of mind,’ templea an’ winebowls an’ ton fights—| Tally T thought 1t wus goin: to be a! «ang can I ” heath” p . : be i el peel these apples?” asked | ol nd Plain His mother wosa Dudley. He related with pride that her but belle: me, akyscrapera need some-; 'ex'lar spoontest What's a dark room | ine visito: | “Phe old hen 19 pretty well,""-Cleveland Piao The Only Drawhback, father, her grandfather, her brother and her sister-in-lan Wehr Mpanny 19 ah ‘om oftepinethin’| [0,), SAS wee {Bane f esPD BV ATE" Jou curves!" so we got locked tn there an’ he eo so|8Witched on the red light. Well, say, | straight!” | that clam never so much as bumped “Exactly! she retorted in kind, “Not! "P @gainst me accidental the whole Jonly that, though. Look at all the guya| blamed time we wus in there, An’ all yer puttin’ out uv business, The firms| the Windows an’ doors wus closed an’ what make ruffles fer the insides uv|!t Wus gettin’ hotter'n James Henry waists, an’ hair mattressen for the bips,| aes an’ ho wouldn't let me out, an’ the petticoat people an'—" Said @ pencil uv Mght'd come in the I shouted in moet dee. |S00F Sa put the plates out uv busi refuse to be forced v9 1 > a Bek oH | “An’ then T upset a whole tank full thing by appeals to my charitable mei uy Rypo an! I 4 I wuz sorry, even had all died on the scaffold. His own father said of Philip, writing to a younger son: “Imitate his virtues, studies and actions. He ta a rare ornament of this age, the very formula that all well-dieposed young gentlemen of our court do form | their manners and life by. In truth, I speak it without flat. tery of him or. gf myself, he hath the most rare virtues that ever I found in any man.” He died in battle in the Low Countries. Having generously thrown aside his armor because a firend who fought beside hém had sone, a ball shattered his thigh and death followed. a * She Felt Duly Qualified. R, HARVEY W. WILEY said other day in Washinton of a canning a “These people, when tome of the polsnous chemicals canned peas and asparagus, laughed at us, anid we were ignorant and iuexperienved, pointed out that they had been many ye re mak-| business, and that they turned out many mil. | and preserves—Want to lions of cans a year, | ‘dt reminded mo of @ woman whom I once saw in my young daye feeling a dale a few * said it the sherry the friend sadly, (Gs Was as new ap a3 old as the egg. to we objected used in their ‘They T ture, You can keep on dislocating your|‘noueh df wurn't, An instecd ae | Mr. Silver already in the kitchen, | months old on bile of fried fidh tad ice. at, | elma the Hie body was borne home in a black ship, ecrose the sea and Glaphragm if you A, t onven Can lace) mughin' it up when he had a good| “Ah! he said with feeling, “There! measet its most unhealthy to give fis and} The ert J. Beveridge, up the Thames and laid to rest in old Saint Paul's, Al Eng. | Fonresit 50 8 hey Peale pa chance, an’ consolin’ me, he sald I'd) is something in the name of Clara that! pickie to #0 young cluld,’ | ueidibe seorter "Me continupds fond mourned, And “for many months it was counted indecent Now, go on and *\ make a swell photographer's wife—he|1s old fashioned and wholesome, just) ‘rhe woman frowned npon me, 01 tell me something 1, T think! like old fashioned preserving!" | # "Hub, she My interesting.” you try to teach me | ney fer eny gentleman of quality to appear at cow really s. or in the city | | | 1, that finished me. Any man| Mra. Jarr, whose name was also Clara,| ow to feed baben, Why, young Kelley I've h hus ring: dm Hight or gaudy apparel.” | “Gee, ain't you stubborn!”* |that ain't even married yet an’ can’t} took the compliment calmly, Duried serent——Washington Star, Cap Jou Nek me ave some detalle, pega, “The old Ggyptians used to write| “Co on!" 1 repeated j get temperamentally ina dark room,| “L might have known that minx had| rap tweed thaie lothete ok brleice” “He wus a photo; ree with a wicked scarlet Hxht blazin’ In| some scheme,” she whispered to Ger-| Unprofitable Retort. | ee “They must have had a lot of trou-|cited In maddening monotone, at Well his eyes, 1s too frapped @ proposition ble to tell the postman from the hod- | one on the avenoo, with a d nky dame fer me to tle my emotions to. be I ‘ carrier.” fm Grapes to receive the victims 10 | ree-aie " trude, “Her old husband ts in poor British troops, health, and she's ‘mendiSg fences’ «| the politicians say!" PASSED that womao in the second floor! erumbi And I think you ought to Te a aparument dowatown to Petticoat lane an able-bodied young man ike you, going (hie attesncon, with © wondestul pow besging fas cold detaliel' “edie, Peas ‘I een Seeman mnt nnneee aeneatnn - een SBS SAR SEEMED IT ETE nn antares AaB 8

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