The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1914, Page 22

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eve ey wor. | ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. “Published Pally Hxcept su by the Press Publishing Company, Noa. 63 16 ‘ark Row, New York. Little Causes ®& em Of Big Wars By Albert Payson Terhune | Courriaht. 1914, tw The Prose Publidhing Co, (The New York Evening World). 65.—One Woman’s Revenge that Led to a War of Invasion. FRENCHWOMAN of matchless beauty and charm—Marle ée Chevreuse—joined the man she loved in a petty conspiracy Her lover was punished for bis RALPH PULITZOR, President, 68 Para Row. haw ala cg roth ae Me d JosnPH PULTERN, dre § 2 Na bark" Row. =~! You HAVE No SHE PAINTS EXQUISITELY Second-Claus Matter, A and and the Continent and All Countries in the International Postal Union, 99.78 RIGHT To STAY Si it New Yi to The Evening For World for the United States and Canada, VOLUME 51....... seeeeNO, 19,201 cet Ee _ a coamenemitnaennh against Cardinal Richelieu. share in the plot. In revenge this one woman was instrumental RESPECT F OR THE FLAG. | in starting a mighty war of invasion. The story is interesting. Here it is: ‘ . France was ruled by Louis XIII, a backboneless dunce. Louis and f HE charge that because of “advanced and socialistic ideas” France together wero ruled by Richelieu. ‘The nobles hated the cardinal FY public school teachers are Jax in teaching their pupils to re- —who cut down their privileges and cut off the heads of some of them, spect the American flag, needs more support than the mis- besides—and they were forever plotting to oust him from power. As fast oe ¥ givings of a single momber of the Board of Kducation, Nor is it bata e-tohefloriney F cuasaas ae CeceMt Ik biped Snaee Lees it, ith Bc vertain that the Board should immediately resort to mandatory meas- ist:ments, He bad fled to Nantes from Paris eee conspiracy blew up. i " » saluter y th There he was captured. And there he was condem to death by bebead- a ‘ ures and issue a decree that the flag must be saluted daily in the ing. Marte de Chovreuse adored him. Raising all the money she could tay “4 school room according to set form. hands on, she rushed to ewe and began to scheme for her lover's escape, Respect and love for the flag grow quite as rapidiy from natu- MY SECOND “THIS 1s MY DAUGHTER But before her plans could ripen the date for the beheading was set. : arn Eager in time she hit on a strange ice, Spending money, rally acquired knowledge of what it stands for as from enforced and bauowtTen EGGEN ICS IS HER FEMINISM. ' broadcast, she bribed every executioner within a radius of twenty miles to ie A SAFE WITH HER LEFT HAND AND. CARRY A PIANO WITH HER RIGHT ISN'T SHE SWEET SHE ALWAYS HAS A FIT WHEN SHE SEES A MAN. ‘SHE HATES THEM hide his axe and either to pretend ilinese or else get '® out of the way. When the hour for the execution ar- rived Chal was led forth to the block. But no one Cnr, COUld be found to strike off his head. Mme. de Chevreuse stood beside Chalais on the scaffold. Her beauty and distress, eo runs the story, prevented any man im the surrounding crowd from responding to a call for a volunteer headsmaa when {t was learned that no professional executioner was available, The execution was at a standstill. A condemned murderer was brought from the town prison. In returm for a promiee of life and freedom he consented to behead Chalais. The only available weapon for the purpose chanced to be a blunt carpenter's adze, With this the nervous and fumbling criminal set to work. Thirty strokes of the blunt adse were required before the head was severed. And while his life lasted under this horrible torture Chalais alternately repeated the Prayers for the Dying and breathed love words to the stricken woman who knelt weeping at his side. Chalais's death turned Marie de Chevreuse, for the time, into an incar- nate spirit of revenge. She vowed Richelieu's fall. Richelieu met thie vow by exiling her from France. She fied to the Alsace-Lorraine provinces. There she promptly enslaved the powerful Duke of Lorraine, her fascina- tions wholly overthrowing that usually level headed princeling’s sanity. perfunctory noddings that come to mean nothing. While we are teaching school children to honor the fli | it be a good idea to labor with their elders who see nothing offensive * in the use of the national emblem as a theatrical device to brave tip the dull parts of some cheap burlesque or variety show? * Saluting the flag in the schools may become a natural and excel lent custom. Flaunting it over the footlights amid garish and iv congruous surroundings merely to get applause from an audi ~. should be discouraged by the public and if necessary forbidden by i: eS 5 When legislators and lobbyists fail out there is a chance for the lawa. ag, wouldn't a . VANQUISHED. q@@veral other powers Ime Minister, the Among the allies were England, . F ; The Duke of Lorral bitious. Usi itt NOW REMOVERS grow bold and valiant in the reassuring Mme, .. ‘Chevteune perauased tim tious. Using that ambition ee ; \ lesser States ai t H « présence of spring. : ; AND THis 18 MY YOUNGEST Thanks to her cleverness ce niuch as te hie statecract, apverat other powers y Attack it before it has ceased to fall, advises Commis- HER NAME IS MILITANT. HER HOBBY IS SCRATCHING PICTURES —SHE IS VERY ENTERTAINING -SHE IS So FULL OF MISCHIEF. SHE WAS BORN IN ENGLAND Were drawn into the alliance (for which the English Duke of Buckingham, was also won). Savoy and the Republic of Venice, The French Huguenots, t were in- duced to rise in revolt. War was declared. The Huguenots and England tore the brunt of it. An English fleet under the Duke of Buckingham attacked Franee. Hi j wae repulsed before he could cain a real foothold on the coast. Minor baw battles were fought here and there, But the ware The Fall of chief interest centred about the famous sit of the La Rochelle. } Huguenot stronghold, La Rochelle. For a w! year awunverresoany Richelieu's armies besieged La Rochelle, Buckiag- ” ham's efforts to drive them back by means of an - lish war fleet being foiled. At length, in October, 1628, the city fell. The war was practically over. Richelieu had triumphed. But not before one wom chemes to rewags herself had helped to rouse half of Europe to strife and had left a U8sp scar on France's history. CHOICE sioner Fetherston in the Engineering Record. ‘Take it by the throat) * < and force it down the sewer. ste. It bas been demonstrated this year that even small pipe sewera can be ueed for the removal of snow, and as the max- imum rate of snowfall seldom exceeds one inch an hour or approximately one-tenth of an inch of water an hour, the capact- } ties of the sewers on the whole should not be overcharged by @ maximum snowfall. | In fact the Commissioner figures that from twenty to forty! i thou: nd men working eight hours in five hundred miles of streets ean sweep into the sewers an eight-inch enowfall for $75,000. “To do} this same work by carts and trucks after the snow has topped falling) P would cost between $300,000 and $400,000.” ‘To settle the snow) problem next winter almost before there is any problem, and at greatly ‘reduced cost, the city needs only to have forty thousand men ready’ ' for work when the first flake falls. | The Interborongh Bulletin, which is an outlet for the high spirits of the, corporation that runs the subway and most of the elevated Mes, has this month a pomo about snow 3 Snow in the open country js a beautiful thing, | When you can take out your girl to the sleighbells’ ring But when in the cities it falls thick on the raliroads’ track, It musses things up to the devil and back. A month ago snow was a formidable enemy. Already it is a joke, © Three months hence it will seem a priceless blessing. y 1) Hl Hie al My a A ui a [Words You Use Incorrectly COMPANY. — “Company” means MARRIED WOMAN—Why not “an assemblage of persons, associated " which is shorter and far more expressive? Why call her a married pany at our “There ts ai of persons at our house.” ‘The phrase is wron: fully applied when it refers to single guest. To speak of “keeping company” (in a sense of courtship) jis a verbal vulgarism and inaccuracy for which there is absolutely no ex- cuse, The speaker presumably does not mean to say that he or she is “keeping an assemblage of persons.” Romances of Models —— By Fameus Artists—— INTENDED. — Thi: is too often used to imply “betrothed.” It may have come to that misuse an abbreviation of “intended brid or ‘§ntended bridegroom.” But, in the sense of “betrothed,” the word “intended” is grossly misused. There is no such thing as an “intended,” unless some noun follows the term. Mother Monologues By Alma Woodward roe see Sec Coorright. 1914. by The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World) Will Grefe and the “Missing [Reedea should he prove himself her ‘ arent Daughter.” tg ‘rom Coorright. 1914, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). Reggie Runs the Bath. Rese 1s that mamma's face @esetinee’s ‘ powder that you have smeared all o~ the striking resemblance % ‘; ve over your fac: You nashty bey 2. o P| TRE— ' kee els ELL had the|Nell bore her mother the Chicagoan OU'RE v0 aweet to|'That powder costs two dollars a box, aan Hana clne OC a iuriature initio Rarer Tae TEER { | sweetest d18*| foc nnd witha nb ta P| mamma when/and look at the way you've tramped| ito say “We will advise together” or|thing that has matured too early. P| 4 ‘The woman at the bottom of the Ulster trouble seems to position of anvils wee perpouRh ohn, nee uae Se aes taking « Heute eee Tug Bad averyein MAR “T was advised of his presence” is|But the word “premature” cannot be i < + have stood pretty well toward the top. girl one can|broken up, Nell clung to this father reat in bed, Reg-| Reginald, because you know very weli | meaningless unless iia ito. Jn; [Sorseety uned in cererrlam 50 ha i - Cnily imagine,” with all the accumulated affecfion and gie! You take|that it is not the thing to do. It's ler “We wi ‘er counsel togethor™ | t ing that has not yet occurred aj ———— | y ©." longing of years. bad enough to tramp fifteen-cent tal-|0T “Counsel was offered me of his|may never occur, One cannot say begun Mr. Will] «ter father had not come to New care of her ant) cim powder ino the rug and hot have| Presence.” “Advise” and “apprize” |The report of his death was ‘prema- MORE ACREAGE FOR BEAUTY. Gref6, the ar-|York by himself, With him was the pet her so com-|it come out, but two-dollar powder—|@0 not mean the same thing, nor do|ture’.” for example, when the perso: 4] ‘ tisk \SBut) uns fon ‘of close friends of hia, and the fortingly. on, that's AlGRethon. too ouch Reggie! | “advise” and “consult. referred to is still alive. / iv : . ; ; | . » older man had made a pal of the when you're goo apa isn't made of muney, you| ——— ae oes Mt ILLBOARD and advertising men who are fighting the ordinance, derneath thisipoy. perha 5 enih h you ips Bring . . ps fate intended that tho )youtre SO dailing, dear! | Ii's lovely | know! * ie] amiab ror Ww u i nah 3 vhile, B ’ eo Alderma: urran to regulate posters and electric able exterior was a suggestion of |two should go in quest of one talte he lazy once in a while, boney,| Go out and wipe your face off and : ae B proposed by A mG ek P sudness and mystery which made you |find a daughter and the other’a wife.|but mamma has to get up iu & very then iet the water run for mamua'e signs protest that they arc constantly improving signs along; Ea “aesthetic greater play.” This argument is a winner. If a 3x5 poster is beautiful, then by} meking it 10x30 you get room for twenty times as much beauty That's arithmetic. : And after all, what is beauty? To a lumber magnate the shriek of a buzz-saw may sound more beautiful than a symphony, and many oe BS 5 eeaae ee Rodjn statue. ¥ If the city becomes beautiful in spite of dtself it will not be| because the billboard men have not had a full hearing for their eprightly yeasonings. But why do they insist that there is danger like her even better than if she bad name and that she had no family, but her confidences ceased here and her private history became a closed book. “Nell had been posing for me for about two years when one day«l re- ived a letter from a man in Chi- ago requesting me for information about the model 1 had used for the emblance to his wife, who had de- serted hint with their baby daughter ny years ago and for whom he had hed in vain, ‘The model I had used for the pic- tures was Nell; but in spite of the “Nell wrote to me from Chicago not lieved him a man worthy of our Nell.” known, t in a short space of time. particular notice of—namely, Examples of Descriptive Power by Gre Some Historic Word Pictures Authors. few minutes, because Auntie Alice ir coming to lunch, and mamma always from man to man, but which is more strange, and has been often t anything belonging to the infected, if touched by any other creature, would instantly infect and even Kill that creature And one instance of this kind I took the rags of a poor man, just dead, being thrown into the street and two hogs coming by at the same time and rooting bath. Just for once see how nicely ful little bath runner when you want to be, darling. (Pause) Reggie! What are you doing? Mam- ma can't hear a thing. Reggie! Well, don't close the door, Mamma wants you to leave the door open so she con tell when the tub is almost full jIt sounds kind of funny to ine, Reg. vie. You're not letting it run full You're a naughty, mischievous boy! Stop it this instant—this very in- stant! You'll get the whole bath- room sopping wet and, anybow, who ever heard of filling a tub that way? 1 think you want mamma to punish eems to include all the newest and smartest features of the The blouse is nt sort i i “ ; _ F ” they long afterward that she was going to you can do it, sweetheart, Have it 9 plines of “the aesthetic.” “As for keeping the billboards small,” they| be gall sunshine, quite teanxay [MEY Ree Vather'e young friend. And | han co fuse for her. What are 3u|the. right” temperature, not too het acre <5 ~ @° say, “our purpose in desiring twenty-four foot billboards is to give the) iuat "Nell Gwynne wan an assumed (oorty Wet! had sooo of him I be; Soke OOK hee pan souene and not too cold. You're @ wonder- that A of removable frill. which illustration for a certain story. No. 19,—THE PLAGUE OF FLORENCE, by Boccaccio. force, I guess, (Silence) Are you, forms a most become you! 6 ko~ 1 y The letter's writer said that os ,| Reggie? WHAT! Filling the tub ing. fr a manufacturer would rather see a smoke-wreathed chimney than a th The cituten ahnse thas he sil UCH, I say, was the quality of the pestilence as to pass not only] {tesele’ |= WHAT! | Pilling ing frame and the over the hips and the frill beneath the pretty fluffy effect that is so much liked. In one view, the dress Is made of foulard with trim. rae y you, Reginald. s that way. ‘ -~* of overdoing the aesthetic, turning Broadway into a dark and dreary ead her by. RMIAn HEE nae corecnn among them and shaking them about in their mouths, in less than an hour ‘ow vat Tun at bath the way you Wig of Fiala ae % i‘ \ . . e eo *hi- ‘don the spot. ought to run it and no more non- chasm and “making the city an enlarged Greenwood Cemetery forjdagoan that 1 could vel him pouring, ee Hed ithera of like sort occasioned various fears and|vense. I'm teally aggravated with oe aes | dead ones only.” They are far more winsome when they plead that} a8 I had no knowledge of the private devices among those people that survived, all tending to the same unc’ it-|you, Reggie, and I'm sure | sban't the net gowns are A : A! affairs of my model. About a week |Gnia and eruel end, which was to avoid the sick and everything that had|/ot you have your chocolate sundae adapted to quite dift- they are not aiming to suppress the aesthetic, but rather to give it later he came Hust, and 1 arranged al heen near them, And some, holding it beat to live temperately and to avold thie #ftarnoan at all, erent occasiona but more room to come out and spread itself. meeting at my studio between him| Otegea of all kinds, made parties and shut themeelves up from the reat) 11°00, sun, gear? Well, why the model is “equally i It Peforehand, of the world, eating and drinking moderately of the best and diverting |j.i% it? It Ought to = by ths’ time, Fite enone Tare Cates “ a Gh insemersctionme “T thought that perhaps emaclves well, { could have filled two tubs 8 wet right to Dunden Wer with a mae fe i votners maintained free lving to be a better preservative, and would feow net? You forgot to ue the thet could be w fie The committee in charge of plans for celebrating the 200th from the nowhere; but after having! park no appetite they wished to gratify, drinking or revelling incessantly | lug in? Come here to me! Come success. In t f Anniversary of New York as a commercial port are flabber- seen the Westerner T was so favor-| fom tavern to tavern or in private houses, A third sort chose a method |! mamma this minute. Yes. Here front view the tunic is wasted by the Mayor's announcement that the elty can afford to ‘ contribute only $25,000. How are we to celebrate the prosperity ably impressed by him that 1 de- cided he was just the protector Nell looked after at all, between these two, not confining themsclves to rules of diet like the former, and yet avoiding the intemperance of the latter, but eating*and drinking jn the bedroom, this very minute! Now listen to me, Reginald. This in the last time I'm going to speak hed for the rest of the day on noth- simulated by the of the flounce only My so still further varias aici A —— — “=| what their appetites required, Others of a more cruel disposition, as per-|to you. The next time, instead of 01 of the port if the port won't play the part? Hits From Sharp Wits, | ns the most sate to themsotves, dectared that the only remedy was to] peaking Vil Just spank You! Do you thie tosh mee tae ane ——— _ ~ Pp + lavold it; persuaded, therefore, of this, men and women in great numbers | understand mother? Now you go in- pretty silk and wool —— loft the city, thelr houses and effects and fled into the country. to that bathroom and you put that crepes had been used ‘Their terror was such that a brother often fled from his brother, a wife | "ie In the tub and you tet mamne dt with trimming of lace, ciuch misinformation comes from) eon hor husband, and, what 18 more uncommon, a parent from its own Bah Aan ne Sy eure in Oye The skirt is made tn Pee thee TOR hae ete amt lohtid, And many lost their lives who might have escaped had they been| minutes she's going to put you to wo pisces: “with! the tunic arranged over it it , . ape about which they are asked.—Albany and the blou: >. Minde's'Views'on Pelt valng of the words “please” or ‘thank | Journal, many Great numbers passed out of the world without a single person. Few] ing but bread and milk. Now remem. in-one, although, as & Fo the Editor of The Brening World Am against too much hu eee Ihad the tears of friends at thelr departure, but these friends would laugh {ber what mamma tells you, Reginald matter of course, t Joall the ae 13h Abn i 4 complaint againat the Ameri. |, Whe? & fellow iy busy with some. and make themselves merry, for even the women had learned to postpone “ONO AAS IRDA OVATE WORE FF aY straight lengths of the “Thank You" and “I Beg Pardon,” n public to say that they are not| {BIBS Useless he Kays it is better to every other concern to that of their own lives, Noa Basal: material mu be by Sophie Irene Toob. 1 am from| polite. They are often more aa thay | WORF oUt than to ust out—Nushville |" With reeard to the lower sort and many of a middling rank the acene| jaye Ys the hath ready? Ob, Tt Pattern Nes Fi BeaBeml Reincense Gren, soled, to obtale, ing Hindustan, Politeness and slavish- | the complainers. 8, C. MUKERJL,_, Banner. Re! 1g | was still more affecting, for they, staying at home, either through poverty |{¢o° Well, that’s more like ft, ‘That's neoded width, ee ness are altogether two different one anes Atudent in the Republic The whisper of Pleasure tx often | °° hopes of succor in distress, fell sick daily by thousands, and, having |;namma‘s Httle helper again! Now, @, the blouse and skirt will require 7 yds, of material 27, 43-4 yds things. [ have been in this country : PIAIOS, . more easily heard than the call of | Mebody to attend them, generally died, Some breathed their last tn the | isn’t ir meh Heat, sa: 4 TIM and or 44 in, wide, with 1 yd, 27 for band-collar and cuffs, and the tunic 114 long ‘enous to Judge of American ene Near Lae aa aa Atresta and others shut np alone tn thelr houses And Indeed every place |b praised for It tt yas. 21, 11-8 yds, 26 or 44 in, wide, with 11-4 yd, 36 in, wide for the platte by | , ng Wort as filled ne dead all the time and be—— lounce or 21-4 yds, of lace 7 in. wide for the gathered flounce ‘the Americans are impolite, Rather, Here is a question of interest: Al r 0 bop ethod now was taken, as wel of regare xa Oh! OW! Reggie! What's the mat- ¢ oe 2 Batic they are ¥ olite, gen-|rays leap year is every four years. aR aS Ceekaan tea Caer pity on ar meas for sh : at auborer RAY ae nae rerio ie ou te ee ee, Have, Bon pone Pp, Pattern Ne. GF18 is cut in sizes from 34 to 49 inches bust measure, < tle and friendly. In mere words they B claims that it isn't so, and say ob Macon ‘Telegrap! ip - . Me i Heal vam xo, darling! What is DA Mot: oxsrcas tnoir “paiitanens |that berean prove it. You mes nays | who buys it Macon ‘Telegraph tneet, to clear all the shouses und Jay the bodies at the doors. And every | jt? how over did you manage Call at THE BVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION metimes, but their congeniality,|est many by giving an explanation. People who borrow trouble y| Morn great numbers might Re seen Prouehs out iu this manner, front) to tall into that water? f SBE Oy jondship and sense of equality are ation, | People who borrow trouble need whenee they were carried away on biers or tables, two oF three at a time, {did It on purpose, Reginald, 1 don’t ‘| worthy of mention. It acems to me y pe called and sometimes it has happened that a wife and her husband, tw? or three | know whether to punish you or Bot, eve. more in action than in erica is w. upon to pay up, | brothers and a father and son have been lald in together, And your red tle hag run und apoile all na- 40 Many {man lonea moro time trying Such was the cruelty of Heaven, and perhaps of men, that between | Ai} the, water for mamma, Yee, f sav Tak ‘and go to bed on Telegraph. jundred thousand souls perished, = than it would take to! Nereh and July it is supposed and made pretty certain that upward of a fei cloth te

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