The evening world. Newspaper, February 25, 1913, Page 16

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ning World Daily Magazine. Tuesday February 25" i ia eee me e a The Ev 5 Che -CEIRS ator. The New Art @@iacttiths./@@ By Maurice Ketten ay x ats With Great Men mm» oi the CivilWa By Mrs. Gen. Pickett cnet 2008, YT Wane ; 21—GEN. JOHN C. BRECKENRIDGE, a y g ‘ Confederate War Secretary. ROOT AND HAMID ON THE SUFFRAGETTES. 5 B Ge POST epponite here, wou ray 9 an eet \ hn C, Breckenridze, the last Secres TOR ROOTS argument against the suffragettes that “in | John C. Breckenridge, ti tary of War in the Cabinet of President Davis, S politics there is struggle. strife, contention, bitterness, heart- | “Yes, General,” 1 replied. ‘My Soldier@ biMhine. excitement, agitation, everything which is adverse to Ch ‘ TaTAnLAntrED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Re Published Dati t Sunday Pri sbiishing © y, Nos, 53 iy cept us by Be. Kea Fork hing Company 08. to Geren Sot President, $4 Port, Row. JosnPH PULITZER, retary, € Park Row, hen = ee) Entered at the Post-Offic Matter, Continent and AN Countries in the International _, Postal Union, $9.76 + 36 Ved LesaIVELNONLECN TS VxeNOr LOOLO o-oo -- bedi New York as Secona.cii Subscription Rates to The oA England and World for the United States and Canada, + $3.50' One Tear. teseeese 20, One Month 1d the Chief Justice were warm personal fric and the Picketts Marshalls are closely related by blood and marriage. . y r ive if i @ connection to be proud of, fo Judge Marshall was one of the mest . the true character of woman,” would have been more effective if it inal Dar Grnity haa Ghar BAA. 305 JOUER) CAG Will over OCU: GENT had not come just ai a time when it costs more trouble and strife to | \ acquired by him as Chief Justice, He possessed, as some one has said, ‘dl ’ | i i e oe statesmanship of jurisprudence.’ ” keep the ballot away from woman than it would to grant it. More: AOE PUL TO ic Cotte cokndad ba G8, au 1 Coil rowerni eh OE aver it is to be questioned whether there is more heart-burning in | | of the family legends if you were not such a good story-teller yourself.” 1 encie rhe o y hav ‘Al the more reason that I should enjoy your story." politics than in society, w he re women admittedly have a right to rage WYitl, GUL Dueeatt. and Was, JOQSMIAL. Rabwber Ware COpeAtN AK MAY and rebel as well as to reign and rule. The gaunt form and meagre face of the Chief Justice seemed to indicate that, , of ' Se , i int | in addition to having descended through a long line of thin ancestry, he hed But the chief interest in the Senator's statement is the point | HVOG be 6b fal cha: wan Of Lomemivea Newith, COL, PIMIL eh the HU of view from which the “true character of woman” is estimated. Ho | hand, showed in his portly form and genial face the effects of generous living will have it that for woman “the true government is the family, the | and years spent in echolarty leisure. The same differences were apparent im / every part of their establishment, even including the carriage horses. “ ‘Good mornin’, Marse Joba.’ “ Good morning, Dick. What's the reason that Col. Pickett's horses are so fat and sleek, while mine look lke skeletons? They are not haif fed. What becomes of their food? “Yes, uh, Maree John, dat’s eo dat dey ain’ ft But you en de Kunnefs Moughty diffunt yo'se'fe. He w'ars fine clothes, fan-tall coats wid buttons eet fur apart en 11'l collars en lace ruffies en knee buckles. Kn you, Marse John, you don’ keer what you wars er what you eats, You w'ars plain shirts en - linen roundabouts.’ VICTIMS OF THE LAW’S MISTAKE. “eThat’s 20, Dick—that's oo.’ ‘Den ag‘in, Maree John, look at you. Is you fat? T*: STORY of the two Italians who, after having served threo | trne throne the household.” A like view has just been presented in | “So noticeable was this dissimilarity that it led to unpleasant suspicioms an extract from the diary of Abdul Hamid, published in a Berlin eet Dick, te Ry ty Tn LI eae eee review. The dethroned Sultan, mocking at Western civilization, aska: u f pong som fer Dick to gelve (lb Sew prokiom which Gufed Coredt a\ “Which is the more sacrificing and the more beautiful, the Oriental : J Principles and precedents. ‘ woman or the European?” Tt is an easy question to answer. But the Western woman is no longer content to base all her merits upon sacrifice and beauty. She demands at least a right to have a vote on the subject. ‘No; decidedly not’ “Den look at missus. Ie she fat? years in prison in Connecticut, have now been found innocent | es th Marshall is certainly not fat’ of the crime of which they were convicted, adds one more to | Mat FOU IS kb Wonk kd & basepala the rapidly lengthening list of such instances of the law’s mistakes. {Dat'a fo same cane wid we-all's horwes. Dey's no’ fea’ tak we-all i, Tow It also emphasizes the need of come sort of legal provision for aton- wo SFR: SAMMAGS AT SERBWISG DRE ILE coneeea that cee pela ing as far as possible for the wrong. In this case the consequences Mead het need ary ene You may go.” ; were grievous, for report says of one of the victims that while he has sabia aee TObMGUE WOE Feu aIROa Vat TANIA te con tote cee been in prison “his wife and two children died of starvation. cae pier raren creas orator, Aa thacsa bly) I asked, There appears no possible way of guarding against such mistakes. Tidy are Rete ATS THEE Bae, ATE, Bataan aC Genie ee Onr courts and Jaws give as much protection to men accused of crime “You should know,” I replied. “For you are classed as one of the great as is compatible with any effective system of bringing the guilty to| justice. It is the misfortune of poverty when a suspected man in our courts cannot make clear his innocence if he be innocent. But that does not alter the obligation to atone for such wrongs when they oceur. We are enger to punish the individual that wrongs society, and common justice and fairness demand a remedy for wrongs that ones.” ‘T am not one. T do possees the first and most essential quality of oratory— society inflicts upon him. : ————<42—__— his countr: sincerity. For I cannot affect an emotion. I might make @ sinile come before THE MEXICAN AND SERVIAN PARALLELS. Col. Breckenridge, who was the competitor of Lincoln and .Doug the tears are dried, but I never could make one ‘take up arms against himeelf.’ Ess with a howl of indignation over the killing of Madero lac in the great contest of 1860, was considered the handsomest man acenes I ever witnessesd in the United States Senate. I had made the greatest speech of my life, one to which I had given great care in preparation and de- Uvery. It was in justification of secession, “In the second of deathless silence which foNowed my closing word an ef- ficer in the fatigue uniform of the United States Army, who had neither the voice nor the eyes of an orator, sprang to his feet and, without a mov ment’e preparation, hurled at me in defense of the Unton words of such lquid fire that they burned mine to ashes. A few weeks later that officer, Col, Baker, on the battlefield of Ball's Bluff, sealed with his blood his devotion to I was foreiMy convinced of this in one of the most impressive and dramatic and Suarez in Mexico, clamors for American intervention as | ——~—— = _ in the United States. His face was Iike @ beautiful cameo, his eyes ; Mt re wi enifinant. Hae a power to overthrow, punish and reconstruct. Virtually it ila were sparkling and expressive, hte figure war marr He won aw is declared that since we have set up and intend to maintain the Mon- @ Pr 6 Otnenaneneseononesoncconcosconoooscocsoooooscesoses | NGM conversationalist. He was ve Treat he vhe n roe doctrine we are bound to interfere in any American country Ww sy Mr. Jarr for Once Holds the prelate clini lat oe ron serine our youngest Vice-President and won ges 7 ; ; ; Senator from Kentucky, whenever riot, insurrection or revolution disturbs business or leads ’ ° , tr But for secession he would have made to the kiling of one of the contending Presidents. Precise Cen e of the Stage ® fame and left a name greater than i . si aa | i . ' : even that of Jefferson, Am an officer Europe, however, did not intervene in Servia when King Alex: he had lttle opportunity to win dis- ander and Queen Draga were agsassinated so recently as 1903. Yet + the “Concert of Powers” has over and over again proclaimed super- PVSSHSSFSIISIFIFS F9SISS9S 999989 99T95999900999908999 deep concern, and ho replied, right off:7 be taken ill just this time when our] And he stepped out softly te tiptoe “That's what I said to Jenkins, and 1| spring ordens are #0 heavy.” past Jenkins and remarked in a low think you should tell him #0, too! If] “Shall I write him to that effect?’ | voice that the old man had heard what finction and accepted the position of Secretary of War of the Confederacy in Its last day: vision of the Balkans, Great Britain did indeed for a time refuse anything happened to Ed. Jarr tt would | asked the casnter. o he, Jenkins, had said about poor E4.| He was one of my Soldiers warmest 4 i; ; rs 7 ea serious blow to this firm.” “If he has brain fever he would -|Jarr, and he, the boss, was mighty eore| friends, and even in the excitement of recognition of the new sovereign, and there was much talk of bring- “Well, I would not go so ly feel cognizant of the proof about it. if | the evacuation proved “ite Iai, to Say that,” replied the toss, wishing it] plied the boss. ‘Find out just what his| This started things nicely for Jenkins. | that friendship by sending a messenger to be realized that the only realy seri-| condition ts, as there are some {mport-/ And in the fit of nervous agitation that|to me with an urgent request that I ous blow to the firm would be something] ant matters I wish to consult with him | followed he blotted his ledger, an inci-| should allow him to take me to a place happening to himself, about {f his condition warrants his be-| dent of such tragic import to book-|of safoty. I replicd that my Soldier eee Pudliehiog Co, “However,” added the doss, “tt Is| ing consulted.” keopers that Mr. Jenkins contempiated fad left me in the ancestral home to mg World), Very inconvenient that Mr. Jarr should’ “Very well, self-destruction for a few moments and | stay until he came for me and while I balanced his steel eraser, although 1t| thanked him most warmly for his were @ toss-up whether he would| kindness I would not go, scratch out the thot or scratch out his} We were afterward very lad to MA},GEN J¢. ‘existence with %. meet him in Canada when hee war in RECKENRIDGE, Finally he decided he a4 not know! exile. His brilliancy and charm won many frienus wid Wuew Suiieit OVOR ‘the exact location of a vital spot near Many @ day In an alien land. ing the assassins to justice, but nothing wae done. Tt may or may not become expedient for the United States either Ry) alone or with other American powers to assist in restoring peace in Mexico, but it is not for Europe to call the game or to umpire it. | S43 7 Let Europe attend to the Balkan stetes. The work will keep her yi * paid the cashier, ‘E news that Mr, Jarr was threat- ened with brain fever caused quite @ stir at the oMfce, True, Jenkin: on the bookkeeper, had taken the news THE SUNDAY SHOW ORDERS. Migare wetting brain fever? He hasn't busy. the wherewithal!” 4° : enough to the eurface to be reached by | ~~ 2 =a ONCERNING the order that the law regulating Sunday per-| This being conveyed to the boss by ; the one-inch blade of the eraser. r 5 : Johnaon, the cashier as ‘pretty good 5 A few minutes later the boss came out If Your Voice Is Tired Wh formances shall be so enforced as to forbid dancing and acro- |thing,” ‘was received by the head of F Of the office with @ gloomy brow. And ’ y batic acts, while permitting singing and ecene shifting, there |the {*™ with anything but apprecia- ithe Stoomy brows instantly became the pre- E ' oral Lr A ging The aif g» there |tion for ita subtle satire ‘ if vailing expression throughout the es- Not Let Your yebrows Talk? can be none but words of commendation. he differences between | Tho boss (but this is strictly entre @ tabushment, When, with the air of one | © wenn? a song and a dance are intelligible to every mind that believes it right ous) had been called “# doddering old | if KD ‘ who must say something to lighten the IRST aid to the weary talker: | ‘rainbow pace, for the eyebrow a killi : dodo" by his fair young bride—Mrs, ha general sorrow, as mourners are prone | } Let your eyebrows do the | pa e al upward movement to hang a cat on Monday for killing @ rat on Sunday. It is equally | Ciara Mudridge-Smith—that very morn- i ¢ : to whisper some extraneous jest as the ] talking, No, it isn't a merry] trom joyous excitement and a downs clear to such minds that it is prejudicial to the public welfare to jins. ant ae Aaa or jarted the day . ALi nel beaters shuffle by, the boss re- gulp one ‘pace Hy no catch} ward movement in ertef, An eyebrow ” sven very cheerfully for him, * n! mm he had had a great time ‘o it, It is an idea, wh-oh Is straight dow: oO over watch a man do a handspring on the stage, though quite in accord | Besides, as head of the firm, the star r j was ei at a cabaret dinner the night before, | For six thousand years, maybe longer, | shadow the eye proateate Monee pes with civic ethics to watch another ride a horse in the park or to skate. ed the establishment, so te speak, the Gg ‘ “These Mttle colored celluloid balla were |the eyebrow has loafed on the job. | pearance. * : ri private opinion was that he should All ordinances should be construed, applied and enforced with (get all the laughs in that extablish-, Covrrigte, 1918, by The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York Evening Word), istrfuted and thrown around,” the|Nearly every other feature has had to ‘boss went on, “but I tossed a French |hustle for a living. But the eyebrows |downward Ine fro: yebrows slinting due regard not only to the intent of the framers but to the spirit that ment: Business ix business, and if any G2 ie tne ne cc verity pee SY Se whom 6 man courts te “tRetvont which struck De Brie, the Apache|huve ant back and looked pretty ani|ierearing stares of anxiety. 1 mae informs them. As a fool should be answered according to his folly, cia! establishment the boss 1s to do the NE AOE AE Re Paces le kne nen: He. ame eyes. ip zl ae stet Noee Tear BAYA Reh EET act cette ees AY so should a fooli#\ law be enforced. Distinction between tweedle- |° ne is sak hs tis hae The modern woman spends her days at the altar of Beauty, trying to|!t but I told him he was lucky hel body could think of any Job exactly id them toxether over tho bridge dum and tweedledee in morale and manners and sins and pastimes that a jest at such a time sand upon eat Time, The modern man spends his evenings at the altar of Beauty are Creu i ee Doar a Ps siiee se Naan as wo tra at Hep enaeee y ioe may be overlooked six days in the week, but in the Sunday ordinances tue 4 Subject was unkind aud in bad trying to kill Time, : brain. Peete etety inten gent hearing oan be s lt of let it be clearly drawn. | Johnson's grin changed to @ look of! oe esteatee Sie. vm he iam and the pudd sata Hei) way bia way henceforth, are tie pee other sie masterpiece can give ciation, which was suddenly checked| A grand opera singer tells in the Cni- | Ou an Idea of what eyebrows can say," cago Tribune how tt is to be done,| And !f even you happen to be sitting Through Giraudet of the Paris opera}? @ dark veranda in summer a little @he has learned how to symbolize “a| Phosphorus rubbed on the brows ought A girl carries her sentiment around with her all day, as she does a love j letter; @ man tucks Me away in @ pigeon hole, somewhere in his heart, unm pil he gets ready to take it out im the evening. ie -|to do the trick and tre Most young couples “lock their hearts together" so carelessly that thoy eeneie iets eae iy Piralal fon everwarn he she Sted Youn |have to rush around and find a lawyer to hunt up the combination so that “It was not easy. The muscles of the — ‘To the Raitor of The Evening Please ask your readers to solve: A barn 4s bullt in @ field; grass all around, ‘ A cow is tied to a rope 100 feet long. ‘The rope is tied to a stake at one corner yf the barn. How many square feet of @rass can the cow graze on? J, BULILITIVAN, World Almanac, Page 564. ‘To the Editor of The Brening World: Where can I find out in full how an@ where to apply to have @ story copy- righted, also the fee and a few lines of information? H. F. M, , be placed tn conventent places wherever ice skating fs indulged in. When tho tco breaks and some one sinks seldom indeed does any one know where to find something to help the unluaky one out, Sech Places as Van Cortlandt Park, Central Park and Crotona Park, as well as Many others, should be properly pro- vided for much an emergency. Swim- ming is protected in all public places. Why not ice skating? The cost would de a trifle as compared to the benefit. IN, they can unlock them, ‘Poor FA! Poor off chap! murmured |¢¥¢brows do not respond easily to the —— v' led once for three Jenkins, and he could not repress a/ Will, and I strugsl No, Dearte, the average man isn't conceited. He merely knows that he | tear. hours before I could imitate the figure ‘ / og lira Baaecereer apr But it was the blot that had ntarteq| MCN depicts an acutely satirical eye- has unusually fine judgment, a thorough knowledge of fe, an uncommonly brow elevated at the outer edge and good appearance, and an ¢rreststibie charm for women, Heigh-ho! ‘Minvell" abd che howe, “it te moot une | OeTeS over the nore, "A drooping eyebrow, being expressive ' tad fortunate at thie time. It brings mat-| o¢ ratigue, is affected by blase persons. Canal, reduce the number of locks from At eighteen a woman's greatest asset is beauty; at twenty-eight, charm; fers te & standetiM tn Mr. Jarr's depart-| minis lowered eyebrow fe the aspect we Awantzstyip we seven, thereby saving Gt thirty-eight, tect, and at forty-ci hd, money. ment ‘ace about us most of the time, espe- ours from ort Colborne to Port weeta) forty-cight, money Tui, oMee force watied to vee waether| catty on people oust thelr youth. The Dalhousie. Tt will cost about $65,000,009, eo bows would state it . Jerr thful ‘brow is highly arched at ~ The world is like a cat (or a man): Feed At and cater to it and tt WH |mhenad be commured for this state of| Som aistance from the eve and perfect | tolerate you; caress it and pursue it and it till turn its back on you; tgnore affairs, but the boss, on reflection, had/in symmetry. The eyebrow typical of | come to the conclusion that {f train! youth and innocence 4s seen on the Itt- Odd Facts (From The Wort Almanac.) The Canadian Government has de« cided to deepen and widen the We New Guinea {s t) the world, havin square miles. Long largest Island tn area of 823,000 Island is a dwert pease _& Cabbage Compl ist and it will come purring to your feet. fever threatened Mr. Jerr it was a trib tio girl in the ‘Rroken Pitcher,’ by dn sompar son, having but 1,36 » %o the Kaitor of The Kreaing World: ‘Fe ho Rilies of Soe Broalag Wane | — ute to the tremendous mental strain Greuze. : z On what day did the 5th of November |ine commission honew — pnageand A girl likes fo stand on a pedestal and issve commands; a widow is wise | cose appication to the wholesale woo! nal auahene! ob haauiinlatialcane ie ees fall in the year 198? = MICHAL & | ing ghipmente as they de net tring the enough to adorn a foot-stool and sing pacans, len business may c siderable distance from the eyo Itself} oven 2ho national holiday —not White Plains, N. ¥. Sr ae ee en eee Ce "TH Fo up and see him” said the and arched like the eyebrow of inno- dence be he 4 ye cence, er away the ey | the 4 GHORGE VAN BRANDT. | cents « head. If cabbages were offered Moat women fight the battle of Ufe wlth curling tongs, powder puss and|grern ie ® here fallen on the Aring /cence. The further wuay Hie exebrow | the nearest approach Perils of Skating. at three and five cents, could mot aff 4 Meanwhile the hero falien on the fir- tng line was fighting off brain fever by heating himecif at solitaire in bath|expressive as those that Ile closer tojton im crow eize of the e: But eyebrows placed orange aticks, = ‘Te the Kditur of The Brening Wertd: these be sold that are now being fed to] “He never wastes a second mak- in this way by nature are seldom as| The dome of the ¢ Few days pass during the winter but | chickens and pigs? Sere te « chance for |ing up his mind.” ome socident mare the pleasure of ice ' the Housekeepers’ Ithtek “He dosen't have to. Hie wile The average engagement ts more of a surprise to the man then to ony! a, oa, bts ‘and can be slevated ot will Vroedo fa by 4 bronwe statue of Pe ei ag omen em ee ane (0 up foe hem, |PeM Ht O O cscneans vine a ej" neni 82. stmoem ip he Sano Hashem O° 54 S" peven teat talend cas aa yet * an : Sanita netnnnEiememenenenmeeenentieeieemnstemmeesntememen ante « y * - 4 ‘apitol at Washinge

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