The evening world. Newspaper, February 23, 1922, Page 24

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Am Chemical Am Sug Am Bosch M Am Gan“ Am Can pf. 100 Am Qotton Oil... Am Drog Synd.. Am Hide & 1 15% am ts am 101% am 805% am tional. 4545 Ain Linseed 01) . Am Locomotive * Allied Chemical ‘ Am Safety Rasor. i's 4 40% Am 8m & Ref pf. Am Steel Fary Am Sugar Am Sum Tobacco. Am Tel & Tel... 119% ‘Am Tobacco,..... 14944 Am Tob cts B Am In France Am Wool . Am Zine 0.0... Anaconés ery ‘Ameo Dry Goods. 56 Atchison Atch By pf wiGcewl Atlantic Pru Baldwin Loco Palt & Ohio Rult £ Ohio 5 Peth” Bteel Meth Steet 8 p « Reth Stoo! B Hrookiyn fT... Rreok RY ctf 0 Barnsdale Calif: Packing Oalif Petroteum.. Canadian Bac 6. 140% Cent Leather F Cent Lenther pi. 67 Cerro De Paseo. fis Chandler Motors. Ches @ Ohio Chic & Aiton } Col & Bouther Col Gas & El: Columbia Grapho Comp Tab & Rec Consol Gas Conrol Textile Cosden O11 Gorn Promucts . Crucitile Stee! Cuba Cane Sugar e Sug pt Amer Sug Davinon Chemical 41 Del & Hudson... 11 Del Lack & West 112% Dome Mines 4M Endicoit-Johnson SI n Famous Players... Famous Piay pf. Fisher Body . Fink Tubber .... Freeport ‘Texan . Genoral Asphalt... Gen Asph f Gas Wil & Wik.. Great Nor Ore yan Sugary Guit States’ Bivei nC HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS. Theatre An exchanj nation. _505 Fifth Avenue 225 Pifth Avenue 50 Broad Street Tel. Broed 7150 ately “4 Wh in & St Louls. tep tron & 8 Royal Puteh SY d Air Line pf mart St Ol of NJ pf «| for the eh Course Dinner $1 Luncheon 50¢ Excellent Cooking and Service Chinese and American Dishes Special Menu After the BANKING AND FINANCIAL. The function of exchanges Exchanges give ten-fold power of service to the dol- lar, mobility to capital, and flexibility to credit by attracting and distributing the combined resources of many individuals. itself does nor buy or sell anything, It is solely a market place for securities. For more than a cen- tury, the New York Curd Market has thus served the And Jones & Baker, nearly 40% of whose new customers are introduced by old customers are “information head- quarters” for New York Curb Exchange stocks. An interesting booklet on this market and its development will be sent on request New York Offices Jones & Baker York Curb Market Direct Private Wii TREN Tel. Mur. Hill 7120 Members Neu Tel. Mad. Sq. 1377 ty reat Publishing Go, Work fram tt midnight to 8 morning is not attractive mont ambitions, but when work became a necessary factor in (he achievement of an ambi tion, Frederick Wedge went right to it He admits that it ould have gone pretty hard had not the woman who inspired him to lift himself from the prize ring kept on saying: “1 know yowit win The chapter of Wedge's auto biography printed to-day covers MS) hie last wear at college, as a senior at the Cuiversity of Ari ond from which he was grad. vated ith the commendations of his professors CHAPTER x, ony | MY SENIOR YEAR AT THE UNI- i VERSITY. By Frederick R. ("Kid") Wedge. registered as of Letters, at the University vona, J wax in sight of the go still trying after ten years of mar ried life to keep my promise to th one who had believed in me all the when in the Colle Se terrupt it 1 several tim HL had held had faced social ostracism because shi chose an ex-prizefighter for a hus band The love and fai carried me safely through the y of San Francisco. When our ment was broken and T. went to liv on the ary ¢ outcasts of society, T learn fold life no longer had any attraction the woman he loves, he should never mi p him before n ri him after they are wedded |SHE TAUGHT ME LOYALTY TO | MY COUNTRY. The right woman will keep a man joyal to American: institutions he ‘amily ties are bonds that lead to greater rest of Mrs. Wedge's intense de have me graduate from col ed me to forsake !oenter the Nation's vice nh womanhood made te get that Americ one that was & ‘The White Plague was the last | great interruption in my. strug an education, [am sure | | never have been ible to have fought for my life us 1 did ful enrour nent of oni who bravely smiled — throy he t ways saying: “IT know you'll win Prof. WH. H.‘Tesler, head ef the De partment of Education at Arizona, tr run a mile from work withont to atfend his eight o'clock ¢ in history of education. ‘The | professor was very Kind in permitting | nw to come to class eight or ten min lites late every mornin TOOK MORE STUDIES THAN RE QUIRED. } All my university profess | very kind fo me in my strugste | 1 selected a very hard course and was taking more! units of work than quired to Iwate, Every |period in the morning was filled with Jolass work and one period in the afternoon day in Dr, Brown's Jelass I fell asleep from exhaustion, 1 jd afterward that whe Jthe students was endeavori Jme the ne said Isleep: he has worked sleep will do him) more good than nny Jiectares’ I've alw thought the | professor was inighty charitable I wish tho young men SPRING BLOWS ITS OLN AND WITH A TEMPERATORE warmest Bebruary Valsteud smoke, aud TWO COPFINS « | a ow PATAL MISCL acess resulting from stepping on a | and hit aim tn the ev | RUM SHIPPED (ROM CUBA $25,000. eo COULD Tt five same flaw | a PEE OOW Putran € Th outa ¥ the spou Fi DRIZE RING * HABVARD ] How I fought My Lumber Conap fo A “A College Degree FREDERICK R. (KD) WEDGE. | Copyrig wo, (New York Evening World) The War Acquaintance Renewed, Princess and Vis- count Meet Frequently at the Houses of Friends and He Buys Chesterfield House, Most Pre- tentious of Town Residences. war was not ether by Princess Mary or Viscount | He knew too that Princess But even for a long time | Connaught, whose father was brother| of the British public lp King Edward Vit, she cousin to| It was the war that effected it in the | close, nobody, unless | Fb: lloRns coe the, RRINGURS, one of them, knew what im- ad been made | ‘The first real gossip was laspired |, These precedents tended certainly quently seen 1 purchase of Ches-| | terfield House, one of the most mag-!to exist between the daughter of RRs ae their shopping together ;|in? Old Rone many grand) King and a commoner among his|\" ant Sen S |subjects. From time to time, at long| Pictures of her were more frequently vindows and the newspapers were encouraged lish anecdotes about her which were > “KID WEDGE : i the Viscount’s btain an education. » would enter the ARLY fourteen years had N passed since T met my wii { nior ts and of Ari- Then the knowing | add one and one at|the Viscount met in the great y and before the|in Mayfair and Helgravia, and again hip reached the stage where | teey had hor either a family to help themsely interested in the 1eies of man’s intel-| achievements. years, My preparation had been in- | but through |* \dfastly to the | *! desire not to disappoint the one whot* mnt to Harvard the record | hows that J studied Latin, PART FOUR. Engiund termination of 1) and worked of a fine woman r of social service work in the underworld THE DEFINITION OF AN EDU- CATED MAN. ns fixed in| tion in Ir his mind; at least, »m so from What followed, In what|there was » they were Inspired by his re 2 of Princess Mary and that! ty in Mayfair} n indication that | me An educated | mr r jal important dinner ‘ he "among the | athat the aruseratititn last tor an advances ed degree || for me, Unless a man is strong lett to conjecture enough to live a good life without that ind universities | ° educational ty. If the assurance of her love ind faith is not powerful enough to ¢, then that beautiful faith and Jove will not keep Pe family, his coveted position Kin father occupying the of Aide-de-Camp to the rly opportunity to renew his ac- mbitious parents want their sons to have go out of college undis. even if they ined and uneduc exclusive society of rd of Prine leisure club, yndon had 1 opportunity ‘KLAN AND LAW CANT COEXIST, SAYS JUDGE Vexnas Jarist the mother | 1 for law and order. pthred ¥ n who is now nounces All Simi- Ine Secret Soctetion, Feb. cannot exist in with the Ku When we talk of mon making the! cowboys out in upreme sacrifice we sometimes for-| from: si Avieona wists fF came ‘Teddy was the only ame nderstood us and worked OUre interests.” community Klux Klan cleties, District Judge Turner assert- could not but feel that tigate ‘the had it not been | masked men uinistered several flog- education, Mrs. Wi b OS SHIP NEWS I INFORMATION | | 1 toe d Dean Henry W. Holmes and | Dr, Bneliss of Harvard that 1 worke a| Jat switching cars, My former in | structor told thi that 1 Buls'| Begins _| The Eveniia orto |" Monday WAM. 10. 0.00 AM 12.00 M. WAM. 15.00 MAM, 12.00 M. TERHOUNE i EVENING WORLDLINGS le uty wars Reynolds B, EXCHANGE 0917 14, up demand fruit was acised in the railroad yards | a a a es * ir brief acquaintance during ;declaration that she would never| Square. and there he died allowed to wane | marry any one save an Englishman, It was a singular coincidence : ball is Mary and Viscount Li of| should have caught the Lord Lascelles must have known it, | Princes atricl, | King George, had married «& HM" \moner, He knew algo that other) out of the seclusion vy the first! Princesses of the blood hud married; Palace and made her *| Veyond the narrow contines of royalty, | Ure to Londoners to narrow the social (or unsoclal)| Prince of W popularly supposed |! his runibout distance which ye reet s and | U8?! uses | intervals to be sure, the Prin weciln Reston and the war to talk| Widely copted about. — Perla t would | DEMOCRAT. 8 been unnatura Attention was particu ¢ ofticer. | As Princess Mary had set her heart} ty jer new democracy, x upon ms shman, and| marked departures from as Lord Las les was one, he evi-| not always natural LE war seryice}to undo t noto: and of the gre this would] whom he owed his fortune ad reputa-|afoot across the ¢ -unel If ever} V. A. D., instea a landlord hated by his! royalty might society vined the he had } é he YY 1. ry. As es GS ae Mary's secret so- | the Grand n, Ne TWO KINDS fo. Also iL wus re nen tox trot aft » PAL 1 Another story told that time, had so. hi MADE HIMSELF AGREEABLE TO, ber accomplishmen den tenantry, a cour taking for any relative of Lord anricurde. He called the old ten ants together, told them quite frankly |W. he understood what their 1 been, and said matters would | ad} father were erc very }ehildren drove unatt ferent now that he was landiord. |the state carriages in When he left the tenants after his}erssion. ‘This cansed oup,|speech to them, to which they had|undria no end of « up 1-8; [listened with open-mouthed am) knew her ¢ tehildre 38-4. |tent, they cheered him lustily ot So the story g ‘imme, | ‘The tenants were overjoyed at any | put Prince ree une 19, up 1-8.) ehan from Lard nricarde This | the car OPENING, | old gentleman, for his riches, hau | Mey from the 4 “en a ragbag for years. His cuffs; More room. Priy hd the bottoms of his trousers were | tive coronet on ose who passed the vent, dowdy | brothers mac Hite old man. sitting e benches in R y that this dusty 1 Belgian cables, | to de strug nt's Park ever |b unkempt Indi- | le 4. Greek} of the kingdom, Ne | ey have recognized the peer in the | with demand suffy figure eating a couple of | replaced on her head COE aM ‘ndwiehes on a bench in the en| Her accomplishment B40.caft) 5 opposite the exclusive Turf} retold; she y i { edt vaneed a ten ne \ ‘ { when st ut tnyved to & thiree-room fat in Hanover| tieie was every likel jo | tion to ma elles) HOW THE VISCOUNT GREW IN imagination Tuckingham the streets with the occupying os they may have! THE ROYAL MISS BECAME A or a national | taiked about themselves, ‘Th » Society matched ihe princess | not h the wealthy your youn dently determined to be a good one.| royalty moved. It wa re-) Kor ono of the first things he did! when she worked at rol at thejat the close of the war was to seck\during the war, she een Park to Dev tojonshire House, headquarters 1 of in i heen supy A WEDDING Gir OF WEDDING GIFTS SHOWN IN THESE PICTURES. ONE SHOWS THE ~ RINCESS RE- CEIVING THE GIFT OF THE WEST NORFOLK HUNT, THE OTHERS THE TRIBUTES OF LITTLE LONDON CHILDREN. no unemployed ex-suldter wazad How this w ed the mid-Victorians! SONG MS MITE first time was that when nal] at Sandringham to the model dairy there enantry that one Vor tfairymaid costume used te Chinvicarde. He was so dls ‘ make little puts of his tenantry that Parilament) garne breakfast iim to sell a large part of his her const j minded one-day that TENANTS. ‘to be King of England To counteract the sinister Clunri- | time, replied gloonil nunty Galway to visit the down.) Tam 8 UD-|WHEN A PRINCE RODE UNDER THE SEAT. en Princess Mary ed in*191L the age While on the Aboey in ¢ nd his hats rusty. Pew of {her best to look dignified so much n one of the | particularly the small ones: Yowith them ne lost Chestertiol and it we was one of the wealthiest | which the Prince of Wales picked up would |from the floor of the n assumption of As He Proves His Sympathy With the Tenantry on His Irish Estate the Princess in Many Ways Shows Her Very Real Democratic Leanings and Sentiments. x * x would carry out her determina- 'y an Englishman, FAVOR. Al the sume time, Viscount Lascelles s achieving @ considerable amount of publicity. Ptetures of him as the rivhest titled bachelor in Engiand were to b cou much praised turf w entry into racing was heralded by his purchase in 1919 of a two-year-old, found in the public prints, His with his Irish tenantry was und his doings on the always alertly watched. His alroy, for $50,000. Also he again came into prominence when he pur- ‘chased, for an enormous sum, one of the most sumptuous eighteenth eens + tury mansions in London, Chesterfield HA in South Audiey Street, facing Hyde Park Anecdotes o were told of him, many @f them tending to show that, fled, even austere as he now 1, he had unbent a bit in hia rday One published anecdote recounted that he and a friend were © held up by a ‘London constable it for kicking their tophats vlong Burlington Street, just off Pieca- duly. In the Police Court next morn. Ine Viscount Li les indignantly otested to the Magistrate that it was Elta [=| ich must be f Sba9, Ox SEY MOOR OF THE SW: NORFOLK Fox HOUNDS] GIVING TO PRINCESS HIARY, FOR A PRINCESS ARE kicking and that well his business and not However, a lesson on ment was read to him by the and lie was fined for the prank, AND THEN THE GOSSIPING BE- GAN. WHY NOT? \ int Lascelles's purchase of festerfeld Hous once set the rs and all the families with eli Jaughters wondering wheth s meant the rich young Lord con- templated matrimony, If ‘ie did he said nothing about it, Chesterfield House was certainly an extens e establish- ment to be conducted merely for tie sccupaney of a lone bachelor, It was Lord Lascelles was homeless, for there were two magnificent estates n his family's possession, Harewood House, where his father, the Earl, lived, cand Goldsborough Hall at Knaresborough, which had been rent. d. Lord Lasgelles was heir to both ric House Wes assuredly a we Y tting In whieh to place the laughter of a King after marriage, o nany sup even 1 uy lace, Surely, there was something more an coincidpnee in the purchase at a me when the acquaintances betweas Pringess Ma und Lord Lascelles had endshin whieh was a} vdy causing certain heads ana mrues in London to wag. The mangion, one of the most dig nifled London residence was was the home of Lord tl 1e wrote *« counsel to his rawing room have long years, prae- ities of the Brit- own Prince of pled it duving his recent 1. It is tilled with al- works of art, not a few vided by the ed for its grand vugnificence of the niantel ia the drawing room. (To we Continued To-Morrow,) immortal lotte In its state

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