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SBN AREA SP RR RT RR ea een were ten peers i Fvening World D aily Magazin For What? entha., By J. H. Caésel Fifty Boys and Girls Famous in History JOSEPH PULITZER: drs Secretary, €3 Park Row sir f se PES aL , me o : f By Albert Payson Terhune Ti Sedscription Rates For gland and the Continent and World for the Iited States All Countries tn end Canada Postal Except 8u ane Press Pudi! Cor Now 68 to Published Daily opt i) Sf 2. ishing Company, ; ) . No. 2—LADY JANE GREY. The Little Girl { i eo sesrasesvory $8.80|One Your. : : : HIS to'the story of @ hetflecs Ite girl Who web used | She How SSE Mae lone eis J , ao . » : ws tae bod uted ah Betemenee Sit nae van me Hao toe, : VOLUME 87. ..csccccsscdcscvscweeseesssevess NO. 20,147 | was Queen of England. THE WHITMAN FAILURE. She was Jane Grey, @ great granddaughter of Henry VII., Siete to parry Judge Seabury’s thrusts at the extravagance ‘as Queen. SOnSaeer et oe King of England; and she whs daughter of the Duke of Suffolk, a con- sclenceless old politician. Her father and gother felt no great interest in perl they left her almost entirely to the care of tutors. They of the Whitman administration, the Governor declares: bree Spoke to her, and they made ‘her treat them with humble rever- “We are spending more money on our school children per Such rare times as she chanced to be in their presence, capita than is spent in any other State in the country, but we are getting returns. We are spending more money on agricul- ture per capita than any other State, but as a result New Jane was affectionate and gentle, Her parents’ coldness out her to the heart. To console herself she threw hor whole energy into her studies. She had @ wonderful mind. In a century when the average woman could York ts today the first agricultural State.” that constituted “higher education” in those days is shown by our Good. But when did the Whitman administration inaugurate y y # i ‘ Ghronicler’s account of Jane's progress. ares _ for the State of New York the wise policy of looking after its school | ( PP! 2) ; and italian aad sane ad, gorrectnes :e not read or write, she was looked upon as @ prodigy. The line of study Noe 4 Latin and Paging: Bion! with ease and correctness. She had some children or in what eonse did the Whitman ‘Administration lay the; i ; fy £ Sccomplishinenta cant (thio 3 a a Gpautint antes at theae | foundations of the State’s agricultural pre-eminence. | ; j } enna icing Heacy VEL of eneavory miemory, Gilet. be « What have either of these things to do with more immediate and | % Sq . . , ‘ wy, three were, dentined, in Gaae, to fale Baelaud.) award ‘VI. | gelevant facte—the fact, for instance, that Mr. Whitman’s administra- NG 4 5 35 . 4 A Monaroh’s§ fame gd aoe ulead ped father’s death, tion made a hopeless mess of its first budget and saddled the State, , 4 i , ba Dincetchg two stare. "bute dearly loved Bie fi with « needless $20,000,000 direct State tax which proved a fitting : ante shrewd Diet Northumberland, who haa accompaniment of legislative waste and extravagance’? And is not the e m Sig weeting ‘otf lary ana iiisabows Bag Bee pong ee latter a more pertinent fact to consider at a moment when the taz- , ° bie senths and naming Jane Grey as his heir, Ed was easily payers and voters of the State are asked whether they mean to retain . 2 ‘Now Northumberland had no personal fondness for, or | at Albany « Governor who went there admitting he knew nothing f . ey : ee Sees oe with tea Ticks cb Woes tate erst | about State finances and who hes found out little enough about them , et rm ‘ : f f Gey, beranged tee ihe Sitteen-yenrrola Sane should marey | since? : : ; ) vf : was solemnized at once, Unlike most unions ofjthe kind, 1 f When Gov. Whitman ran for Governor,” declares Judge Seabury, ‘ wee the fret jove of any Kingthe Heat real Dappivens © “he promised to do many things. Now that his administration is ; “ . ; had ever, come inte dant Us a ioat eal nearly over we are aware that his administration is responsible for no . $ next Fulec; that hia on son ould be Prince Consors, and that ees but on the contrary has been incompetent and| remained. was for icing Edward to sie, Pana Northumber one . 1 the wi led wi in a lously #1 ime. That is the way « constantly increasing number of voters, irre-| Yi; “ England. The sixteon-year-old bride shrank ; spective of party, have come to feel, Mr, Whitman had great chance Igy ; : g bigs fag Meg saeet otha Mg ne Serine t toa rive J to be a Governor. He turned out to be only a politically ambitious) § c f ‘ at rightful heritage, She herself cared for nothing ¢. ‘ ; : Z lusibn as Guilford Dudley’ manipulator of party forces working from the vantage point of the| ¥ y , , : OThe Reurt of | ? wBut S H periand | od her father and o Governor's atfice. i Fy X cane find obediently, ane dd aa they "bade her. he | sheng hes tty! fasgrored, : net Meely se Amprove Me, Wait) os a Tn state sho aun escorted from her country home to London; and there ‘ man, It would be im all ways against the interest of the State to - ‘ ‘ a she was tmed Queen, The people hated Northumberland and thi keep him there, . . . : distrusted any candidate of his, So not a cheer ors woving banner . Row | oa SUM ete aTay Une Inher fe broke dow and wept sntreting ¢ (CH é ; / : for father ond husband to Iet her go back to her owa home But ‘hey paid _ LONGER WAIT FOR NEW SUBWAYS. | Aga 5 rk eee no ged to her fenrAlpoading on ondon with an. army te 4 XPLANATIONS of why the new subways being built under, the | ~ — : , ‘ her own rights. Northumberland’s troops deserted to her, Ten after ' wards Mary selzed the capital without striking a blow. 4 dual contract system cannot be ready for use before 1919 will: gia} a ‘ d ot weit fe Wt ak, Then came punishment, for the conspirators, Northumbertand send later al have to satisfy the millions of strap-hanging New Yorkers to' Zain cx : Sata y aie Butfolk were beheedes. tie eixveen-year-old ex-queen waa lea forth : whom the new lines had been promised by July 1, 1918. Ss p Ot rig ane : ~ - fs exeeution of a the bie gl vee. fee Lane Was eS Hy RIS oe The Public Service Commission has a ful! alibi—labor troubles,| ? % «A Rees po . : : : : 2 Bp {DY oehy should Tsay goodby No fim?’ she asked wondertagty. “T am’ war conditions, steel and lumber tie-upe, freight embargoes, unfore-/ ae : DREN - a Bs Mi Beso - 5 going to meet_him again to-Sey = - seen changes of plan, and all the rest of it. The elaborate $3,000,000 diagonal connection at Forty-second . Bese Oy htae ae eae ae - SRE nina RES ef ; i t Prove De mo Street which is to join the present subway with the Lexington Avenue, L. ieee T ha cree line was only decided upon after months of discussion. The contract | § ~ @ erennmmnnnmnnnennnnnnnents AAA By Nixola Greeley-Smith ! By Helen Rowland was not let until December, 1914. Yet this is one of the most com- Coperight, 1916, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The Now York Kvesing World), Family Printing Piess Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Breaing World), _—_—_———_———r——<<reeee—e—eereomns> plicated, exacting and lengthy pieces of construction in the whole a > m4 he Dau; By Roy L. MeCardell. A MAN 4s perfectly satisfied with a photograph whioh “does him A to thg exact period of the origin | was not until Feb eens ions of a Bachelor Girl No. VI.—Joan of Arc. Joon of Are,|old, Joan, guided by the voi the cneantitc the Governor of Vaucouleute 4 Li 1 who made cscort to take her to tl iphin. scheme. The Broadway line is completed only in sections—delay in building a sewer to do the work of the one displaced in Seventh Ave- i justice”—b is of print.ug there is conmide: a oe France a nation,/ing year that her entreath Cong 88, byt Wem Wing Ga padi Spar &@ woman is looking for in a photograph is not ‘able doubt, the bibliographers, Sf ‘and whose name vailed over the Governor's poo dE a tue and wrangling over the question whether Times Square should be) an express or a local station heving postponed the opening of this im- ural * : | 1mN Mr, J h the who never by any chance agree upon even to-day Is a incregulity, and, accompanied |» Portant line at least six months, Some of the lines in Queens could | aiubalevsnlne: Atte, tar. eat Anything under the sun, belng, a2 rallying ory for PY AB escoit he provided, she eet eut ' have been in operation this summer if a longshoremen’s strike in the| her husband at the door and usual, hopelessly uncertain on this the soldiers of Chinon. Dan wes ashful man” to shine in @ dim |supject. There is but little question, | Gulf ports and « shortage of ships hadn’t held up the shipments of ties! sald: “Mrs, Stryver's mother is to France, wasborn| The Dauphin's fortunes were thea ‘ The man with savoir faire may scintillate Im a Mn] crowd, but it takes a g: i hemtea® Rad Gy “here” aed. tab Lae cozy corner, dearie. however, thet the Chinese, pre-emi- at Domremy, in| it thelr lowest ebb, But even the i and so prevented the laying of rails. And so on. | ciination of ber head indloated. the — . nent among all other ancient peoples Lorrains, in SR Se were net tonite win wees ; f Halt after halt, delay after delay—each and all, of course, “un-| Jarrs' front room, “aud she's the aw- ‘After a few years in the rarified atmosphere of ie tn vendve. Weniae, ed Bt pila She grew up in! help could come to him from “a eragi | sveidable.” Meanwhile millions of people stand on one another's ‘uliest old ag Riaeag eatin ait ea ve Lbened sei bien dn ee paeed than 222 several centuries before It.waa] | hich cate enut tha| wision’ At weet biey tcee aeee r *, ‘ ga03 f nantiene tS elieves that a “picture” is an: ng in » | known in rope. of war, th i tees and equeeze one another's ribs in stifling, germ-laden atinospheres, | wsxeq Mr, Sarr. "Why, ‘tin too much “music” {8 anything that is played on @ phonograph, | lock typing begins with an enter-| Dauphin, who afterward became | once Se, eae ee ane pres- £ | doping against hope sahil in maou 4 cares whether tho | nonor Ast tite 00 humblel” bus hala ’noed Atinar ia-a were of art” prising and retour “omeufie during Cuartee Vil. te teat dey. the King nized a: onge, though he had poe Heme . A % < Las 4 i i new subways are fin’ in this generation or the next. It needs | sare. Mie lannrolv, "Was ostllan 65 os the lenth century, the methods works disputed his| £foup of courtiers. Folio x faith and optimism to be a w Yorker, Nowadays flirtatios is merely the “red-tape”|°¥t and put into effect by nim being | France, Powerful duk la |the Stryvers and Mrs, Stryver sux Alinost Identical with that used down | rignt to rule them, and when Joan|Cident law schools and p ee through which a man has to go before kissing a girl. |to the present time. The Chinese ap- were called upon to deo'te whether Ww won Nan ken wate — pear to have carried the art of print see ee Haney oeaphin the| Zens mission wes from Seaven or HY SHOES COST MORE. | desu in a flat, it might interest her Oae consolation in marrying a bachelor over forty is that he has ees ghd prt Merete id contending factions were known (ps PK in po cmlarey bros you etal! E BEGIN to see why the price of shoe leather in this country, to bring her over. fought so long and so hard to escape the hook tbat by the time he is}museums at Catro and Alexani the Armagna: 4 the Burguridians, | $e." she over and over. a ome book i} inally her prayer was grant W is rising to heights that keop American families figuring| "14 to act aa if It wore not a slur] caught theres no more fight left In him = containing Corean Donk printed 10) tye Armagnacs fighting Yor Charles.| was given the rani of milleate pom . | when she said it, Her mother’s never ) 1 . Inv hh elde in turn called upon the| mander and a special sult harder than ever, types. Yet the Chinaman, tnventive| Each @! suit of arenor but lacking in gl! ages tho faculty of | armies of England to fight its but-| Was made for ion, clung to the original -plutt| Yealed to her that a sword be until sbe tries to persuade him to go out and argue with the furniture |Promression. clnat | tee a Ated 4 Henry V. of England—bluff would jbeen in New York before—alwaye $146,000,000 worth of leather was exported from the United | thought herself too good for it, I sup- re Every bride fancies that she has married the original “cave-mal : i ; found by sending to a churek et / . : a ‘ | pose, and, besides, a9 Mrs. Stryver tation of the Bible| Prince Hal—took advant of the| Perbots. ‘This was done ana the f States in the vear ending last June as against 857,000,000 in 1914.) oa after having lived in Boston, no} MOTEr® ° iy gp ate alatrciny hy *| warring dukes of Orleang and Bur-| sword discovered. Toward the end of | | Among our 1916 leather customers is a new one, Maly, which has taken! other place could possibly be of any cakceiaeiend a} ce, t2 1499 it was unawimously be-|gundy to conquer the country for Pipa ben of Are and « tew follow- ; © $14,000,000 worth. 20,000,000 pairs of shoes have been shipped from | !terest to her mother. After 's tow yeare in tho trepehes of a foollah mistrisgs, even & cow pace ae eta ao aurea Imectf. ye a slender, blue-eyed little | by water. The rv | this country this year for th of the armies in Europe, Tho De-|.. “What 4!¢ you bring her over for, framed gladly (9 the Sring-line oF éiroree Tru whose press at Maing emanated | gid vending her father’s sheep on| exchanged a shepherd's erook for a =! i 7 ans y OF Phe Mae OF the aFimivg in Hurope, fo De-t ane asked Mr. Jarr. “I wouldn't! — the famous Mazarin Bible printed in| fhe hilisices of Lorraine, w little girl| sword, announced her arrival to the i partment of Commerce report from which these figures are taken|cater to these condescending old | A man goes through life searching for the woman who Will be the|Lotin and owned by Cardinal Ma-| who cou'd neither read nor write, bee Rg Boe fy upon , notes also that the Chinese are giving up sandals and have bought|4 Breatest inspiration to him—and ends by marrying the one who is the] #arin. Dut, in that year was pub-| pondered, her nbs, the words of a (the mata), would alay them, ney : j . "Oh, she isn't condescending s0| est enigma to him . 1 } optiec ich she heard her peas-| Tho French garrison, led by Joan. i rora ue thine ames ae.rgany shoes this yeas 4s last. much; she's aimply an old erank and|* = she T wine admitting that the art ig ele “and mother discuss, Sh ceisehe ee Nollowed tv imine | i it i in, W emergency prices ¢ « ed on| ne 0 er," replied " bilo x ay, | oF rMost by & womnn, shall be|@t Orleans was follow: ‘another b Here it is again. While emergency prices can be counted on/nothing interests her" replied Mrs] m9 veauty epectalist says, “Many, woman's ‘crowntus glory’ Is ane overed at Maing, Germany, | eran ie tvingin trom the frontiors [at Troyes. And three monte inter © abroad the claim of the American consumer to the manufactured prod- | 48" ee Liebe : *| other woman's hair.” to Holland, Adraten de [of Lorraine.” When she was thirteen | Charles VIL was crowned King in # ucts of his own country comes second, Jf there aro shoes loft’ or if (04, (houmht sho might wet Interested ——-—--+-- Jonghe of Antwerp, writing in 1588, 'yoars old, Joan of Arc saw her Otat) |edit es evarias was waved te | y in the eliiidren Moderation ta the silken atring running through the pearl chain of | tells how Lourenz Hanaoon or Costor, | vision, It wee followed wt ittervall) Oy ni Ne ny Lorraine, > there is time to make more after foreign contracts have been tilled| “tas she?’ asked Mr. Jurr UU virtues.BISHOP HALL who in 1440 Was living at Haarlem, | by others, Ana Rnally, obo teetdon| ie tenia thal Joan’ nt 2 8 American customers may have them—at continually advanced prices,| "Ne 1 had to send them out. 1 : e oe fork o WHlk ETDen A be 4nd cut ye ifeavon and calling upon “her, to the Brophieey™ nad bean nea. | | { F . if told Wille to kiss hor and he flatly] ¢ eee e ne th ds ‘ pedo 4 ~ | te sna, drive the foe before | wished to ret er sheep. / » ‘ Nor is it shoes alone. We should like to see American producers oe ee oe eae ier aannnaen naa [even if he couldn't read of Write, NOF| «wwwennnnnnanannmnnnnnnnnnannn » | printed those letters on paper for| take up Aro dive Tih fe ie Ore) ve noe permitted to de.eo, Her ? F i c refused, of the hogs, either!" snapped the old r i : he amusement of children; that he|t Me Rheims Guthedra, | father, Jacques D'Arc, wae ennobled F | in more than one class lined up and tested for their patriotism. With| dg it for wen cent lady, To-Day’s Anniversary subsequently Invented @ printing ink | France, in {he Koti ci all] and the family land declared free of ; 3 ads, ft dice t a srica first”? Wi - - «poet | “Well, ten cents is a lot of money! tfaye you been to the theatres |’ Serre Land began to print whole sheets, his) Now way, 3 her, all | and rhe facaily Ja : ' wed seah9. Of Soest ty" Amarlea Svat? With how smagys “Profit | a child," said Mr. Jarre, “But why Gace sania lo Now York?” asked MONG the hundreds of Catholic| taventive genius carrying him on [human DOME WHE Yoitas. unseen,| Joan continued at the head of the 4 = first of all”? are we affiloted with this visitation? |atr, Jar et the missionaries Who perished In| first to leaden and then to tin letters; [Th a’ of common men. There aré| King’s armies, But her eter had SL See 2 [are Liat , Mr, Jarr, hurriedly changing the wildernesases of North| tat among his workmen was one | DiNNIN" Oo believe that the visions| waned, Fortune no longer: crowned yaaadipaint des <2 vey haia + pepamngeneetier wienaty —————= | What did you bring ber over for subject, i” sesh 9 orth | yohannes, who stole the type and es. | Persons who Darien” Naat vay the| her banner, and she Waa captured by i Letters From the People | “Mrs yvor was in a state of|” “No, Taint!" said the old lady. “4 {Amerteg—many of whom suffered! ciped to Maing, where in 144i te /Of Joan of Aro work tory ie) tng Burgundiana in 1480 and sold by a nerves, her mother always getting her| got out of the habit of going to them| martyrdom at the hands of savaggs|opened a workshop and published |mi oh. are others who see in her the|them to the Engtsh. The’ King of me jon so for aot hae to ws the] tnat way. Mrs. Stryver is reaily from fatter 4 wan a wider, Louise goes|~-one Is ut last to be honored | by an ost * cuban ABP bah tees =. inspiration of God, Whatever the England authorised hor trial for sor- 0 | Der Oe chnt | y y a » ; allus the Tract spanus. : on, a t-]cery, and she was’ r aa D.9 statement in| Kxample: An artic good family, for, as E told you, her out to them every night, without hait | Rome with the ceremony of beatileas | (eo ore than. three centuries the | source of her view with power and| Gemned.to be burned at the stake in i Were sone hie eae mother is from Boston} but Mr, |enough clothes on her, but they don't| ton, according to report, battle between the supporters of Cos. | rate Dems : Rouen, On May 30, 1481, this born- ' cat preat, { wise to ony that Bird bd bo-|Stryver is 4 vulgar upstart, And |tntorest me It is probable that Father Isaac] ger, the Dutenman, and Gutendorg, in 1428, when she was sixteen years blo sentence was carried , ew rules ¢ * *)\ Mra, Stryver has been very nice to] “We have some very fine churches|Josues, when the process by the German, rs mus ite Bh Secs al ow off on bis arithmetie. t wl c half of the vont | ¥ Hiessed Isaac Jogues has | bitterness and animus, | wil show why. jor 60 per cent.; therefore the selling |U% and why shouldn't she be? We're|in New York.” ventured Mr. Jury, npiaied, will be wccorded the} In 1462 the city. of Mainz was J gctme tne elles see aca" nh Sen rgura tou ent oY ™ TA ae oat laa ee ual Hanae a So hat ae | Sane Cutan tak Nal a The First American M, D. on), stateme: gard to $0 | monoy " calen It was on thal date, just| cluding Gu 4 state, ‘The per cent. of profit is alwayn es-|cents cont and $1 welling pene tne " Preachers? Huh! 1 ain't got no M —— WH timated on the costs ‘The cost ts takon|the ‘gain in 20 por as ee Ai | So Me Jucr wan led In (0 face afune for, themi” suid the old indy, PER Peer anaes Oat | Steen century tee bain he HO firet native of English-| governor of South Caroling, @ pos- Shy gh See a oa aia t that | Very old, very iascibie and very ugiy | |. ITE Saeu, “sxclaimed, halieuneon: Y., on the #lte where] founded by Gutenberg was car I speaking America to receive the| Hon he retained untli the Revolution. conts and sold for Bit 1s wid for|ho states that the pain in OO pos couty fee eel irae ay pres Mand eee gaa ee ene sentence upore tha Jesuit missionary, a Purene taskivtone tn Daa Melber Garey 08 Rector ef Medienne he -nseompanied “the. Sritten ‘ooops ¢ sin ts 80 por cent,; | murmured . Jarr. “So you fin a ” senten ok] 1D 5 te . twice the oo Ke hel yl id fhe | 80 per cent, of th should give th! Now York different from Bouton?” | imatantly Mra. Stryver’s mother was|shrino now. stands which 1s annwally|iands, thirty-one in Italy, thirty-one | was William Bull, who died in Lon-|to England, where he resided dur | 200 per e@nt., the differ-lghouid he 60 con ; ' “Boston nuthin’. I'm from Chicago, {at tne, Window. “Why,” she eried,| visited by thousands of pilgrims, | in France, twenty-two in Bpain and ees just @ century and a quarter ago.|ing the remainder of hie life. Law. rf 200 a u ¢ | onto A from C a —_—_——_— Portugal and two in England, e in South Carolina tn ro) nom 100 ber ctnh, Tepresents the |cont is 50 ch i the gain, {and If Louisa Stryver don't stop per-| {om this polat Mrs, Jarr and Mrs | eROUNTAIN, pen capa have a way| first printing press in England was a 0 ee ee Manhood went | (2, the English Colontes of ol aye ounth sink te ottnk a j spapeter 100 must be cor- | tending to be what 1 ain't and what! Stryver's aged parent talked dress, of balkifg that often is annoy. Ly 4 i Pad CA Nite eee is mutes im eace medicine, receiv fica of ohvsiostn puseess ie Come: whic! 7 a) bay (ae he ain't UM pack up dud. dress, dress excitedly for an hour, 9 earliest press in merica id 0 ‘oo!- Tl ell a I Oe Rack! We're from Chicago, amd: ite | cto tbo edge of the grave it Inter Ing, ‘Tho next time that hap-| was in 1638 Drought over to Harvard! ing his M.D. dogreo ut ‘Leyden. fony of Virginia for one year.” Bin ohn Pot, was the Weadest phy Sales Me if ber cent. except where an articie tion and a lot pio for the same amount ns pur- him Lon, to ie { este womankind, and then some,” pens put a rubber band around the] College, the first press in Philadel-| He practiced hia profession with eafeaaes husbind made his money in hogs, and . % rabbed good hold. It will ture Gt t im 1685, i a eonsiderable success in native he's dead, and T ain't ashamed of him, Ey fy Be OR Rad ide: - She ie ed Pi belles O98 ae eolony, end in 1746 became lieutenant peeret ig