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Image provided by: George F Johnson Memorial Library
JOHNSON 0ITY -ENJDIOOTT RECORD, SEPTEMBER 4, 1915 ^^(Contlnned ttptsx Page l; ,wa>!_»5.i«iaj. * i .. .... this Section) ^Sreqiiired for a good voters as are re - ^quIr|d;»ifor a good mother. outset Miss, Todd depicted *ttie condition '\of\ affairi In ^ilRomlaiietore the fight ot-Buffrage j^asTg^anted to the women, how graft K'l'^sJl^-^/vaient' and how corruption? upper hand hi all political of the'-state. Finally, when iWSggraft and the corruption had be- gssggqinej.so onerous to law-abiding cltl- sslen&ftliese'inen rose up In revolt and \jPygpthre^y the bosses and placed In \ue^controT \of the state men of fore- l ^^lghtfand men of Integrity. Then the ^p ^a^oi^was given the women that they r|migh¥jshare In the responsibilities of |&^Bfa ,'te; as they did in the manage' jyrienV of-*their homes. ^fii^making the demand for the bal-| RJjfiBS Todd stated that their op- . onents in California came from the ljom'es^of th e wealthy and from the ilumBljthb one because he looked up ^^wom'an as a slave, the other be- i'u8e|fietplaced her upon a pedestal pj$jji ^jC($io&tng tint to b e 'petted and fei ?Jjf ^iajid played,\ or to b e 'kept ^fibi^g^ltp a stove In a kitchen full '^f|Wlesfe 'But the Vote which gave the -ln California,\ she same vote which ha s 'gft^/thiSm, the vote In all the states 'nMfilc &iyomen have the ballot; that JtUiB ^OteJ 'ot men who love an d re- Vuiein and treat them a s equals, .. n Ji$Tio_ regard women as human fbetu'gsj endowed with common sense, iffdj^pable ot helping in the better- *i \in $and the uplift of human life.'\ ^0'men.fifluffrage ^dl^isf^he BE THE STONE jAbthe Stone. Opera House for Mon- Aw^aS 'd'Tuesday, In addition to a very ^flneJ ,Ta'udevlllo show, will be seen Sam ^Bern*ird, jaugh producer. Sam Ber- it&tte^rrfipresslDle flng ol comedy „. fi hnn^pt^e Famous Players Film Co. ^ndujea^-'to present his unequalled |SrTh -p'royoklng talents on the screen majlcesrlils-ilrst appearance before the-] ^mcjtjgn^publlc at the Stone Monday 5W ^ano^uesaay in a four-part THin \trav- ^^jty^'e'niitled \Poor Schmaltz.\ ^Fgr^JVednesday and Thursday, a ^i|aanous;btg four ploture, \The District ^^ttbrdejv\ from the famous play of 5«tho'j8atn'e name by. Charles Klein and ^Miflsbn Grey Flstfe, is nnquestion- fplblK&tiie most gripping drama of pl^erlcan political life yet written. It i^^da^itself espeplally to motion-pic- \•^tul^prpduction because it calls for jy^entyV of action and exceptionally l^lever, acting. A notably good com- rfrt*anjS?6f Lubln stars were chosen to this impelling photo play, whom ar e Qeorge Soule ISpefiter -In the title role, Dorothy Ber- Helen Knight, A. H. Van 'jj^urel£, as the dupe, and Charles ^^andr-lta the grafting contractor. ^^AjKlSas the play fairly teems with ''tensed incidents, this cpst makes th e Its splendid opportunities. Friday and Saturday there .TrUl£.be another splendid vaudeville 'show 1 - The motion picture will -be ^Ti\5?^IaJesty of th e Law,\ starring f/ ^ol i 'g?-'Fawcett Matinees daily 2 30, l ^ffi^seats 10c; evenings, 7 and 9, ~~rl8el !a '0c-flnd 20c. mm VANDYCK i CJ&ence^yanDyke -will continue' a,a oprle{o ?rot> the 'b'....K, Vulcanizing tfilsjis'sue of The Record he tells- ^.^ttg'planto save monet on tirerf: iS '^tm^ri-one' plan works woU.and; ^?Seans*Qt great sav.ing.to the.'mo; if- - ; -i SHEbDON IS GONE AGAIN Hm FRIENDS IN A HOLE *, Q.' b. Sheldon, of get-rich-quick \time has gone again. ?,ThIs time, UB formerly, he shook XiTa dust ot these parts from his feetsome after alleged heavy losses in stock dealing. Sheldon departed some time Thurs day an d bis Intimates know nothing of hi s whereabouts. Some ot them, however, would like to learn because they have lost more or less good coin of the realm b y reason .of his^opera- tions.\ It must be stated though in justice to Sheldon^ in this connection, that the receipts he gave those will ing to entrust funds in his hands for speculation specifically stipulated that all transactions were at the risk of the ma n putting u p the money. Shel don had everything to gain and. noth- j lng to lose by his handling of funds thus acquired, Sheldon returned to Lestershlre months agQ and started in on ,a small scale \playing the game.\ Those .who lost money through his opera tions years ago seemed to either share the blame or else he wa s suc cessful in quieting any great distur bance that might be raised by mak ing the statement that h e wa s back In the .trading to re.Qo.uE.|jonner losses and that he ln^ded to repay every person who lost through his transac tions in former years. He is said to have made much money this spring and several local men are reported to have made a \killing.\ Lately, how ever, things went bad, or something anyway Sheldon is gone. LITTLE* DESIREE FOUNDED FAMILY ARE BUSINESS GIRLS GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS? 'JI .tell you. Jack, It you would wed, Just got a girl who lets things-run; She'll keep he r temper like a lamb, And help you o n to lots of fun. Don't look ifor money, style or show. Or blushing beauty, ripe and rare, Just take the one who laughs at fate, Who laughs and showB she doesn't care.\ died domestic science in many schools of that kind, offering the course o t complete home making, stand a chance of running into family trou bles with their husbands only once In one hundred and six times, It ha s been tabulated. The gjrl who does not take this work may run Into domestic trouble one time in seven. While medical examination is requir ed of all brides and bridegrooms as is now advocated, medical require ments will be for prospective bride grooms alone. The girl will be There are more business girls at the present time than we ever knew of in the -past. They ar e sensible, go-ahead girls, whose thoughts are not entirely upon men and marriage 1 obliged to show that she is a trained from start to finish. Most of them home maker have b y ambition and close attention,] Happy marriages result most al- attalned good positions, earn enough ways from good housekeeping. Thej to pay well their expenses and pos- 1 yo ung business woman who still! sibly to put by a little for the pro- keeps her position after marriage and' Is deeply concerned in running her househoud a s It should be, quite often verbial rainy day. It is' usually the girl who makes a good living in th e work-a-day world who comes In contact with suitors meets bear with disappointments hard to She cannot be a t both places and hesitates over offero of marriage. I To one or the other she must devote There are numbers of men who seek I her best energies. Her business al- fo'r wives- but who dare -not- Incumber | ways keeps her altert; everything themselves and their modest incomes' must be centered on what Is to be by going to the altar with young 1 done there. She Is tired when sh e women who ar e not willing or capa-! enters he r home at th e clOBe of the ble of making brave self denials, if! day, and begins to pick up the duties aged be, for love's sake, in their early, thei'e which face her o n every side married lives. I Something will be apt t o go wrong They want girls of wisdom, with, with the best regulated domicile when common sense and prudence, fairly, one's away, something will grieve good housekeepers, careful managers, 1 the hearts of the loved ones there while they are striving to make their who have waited for th e step which first hard start battling In the cold came at last. Throwing off ha t an d world of keen opposition. They fight cloak, ber duties begin. If she ha s a shy of proposing marriage to girls happy song on her tips and Joy in her who are influenced wholly by fashion, heart that she is able to lift a help- dancing or flirting, gay or aimless, lng hand, all goes merry with he r If Who has not considered that the dear she is thankless for home and love, one whom he would marry may have that which cheers she never knows, to prepare daily, with her own hands, j The motto should ever he on Hps nieal. pudding, darn socks, or trim! and fill hearts with love and content a lamp. ' \There's no place like home.' There IB a reason for curtailing, every unnecessary expense In the' John A Snyder, a Harrlsburg (Pa.) household, If the first struggle of! letter carrier, who Is 60 years of age, marrjed life would b e a success and 1 has left for Los Angeles, where he bring cheer, to the tried hearts that 1 will marry Mary S. Stemler, formerly of that county The pair were en gaged when b e was 18 The \bride-to- be is now 56. • in after years would not be forgot ten A curious summing u p reads that numbers of girls who \have stu- Napoleon, greatest of modern co n querors, made himself an emperor and made his brothers an d two of his marshals kings. When hiB empire fell these subordinate sovereigns were shaken from their thrones—*1I except one. The throne of Sweden, an d that alone, i s still occupied b y the dynasty founded In Napoleon's day and b y hi s aid. Strangely enough—romantically, if you will—this the royal line whose first king, Charles John, was Napoleon's marshal, Bernadotte, an d whose first queen, Deslree, was Na poleon's earliest sweetheart. Sh e was, . Indeed, hts betrothed, from whom h e I sought an d obtained hi s release only . when h e ha d fallen under th e spell of I the fascinating widow, Josephine de I Beaubarnais, with whose sophisticated I charms young Deslree Clary, no t yet 15, could not compete. A recent French writer, Jean Marte- lot. In a little study of Quees De slree, ha s related the story of he r three notable suitors an d her mar riage. He r father an d brother were prosperous silk merchants of Mar seilles. There were four daughters, two married; two, both' B ^ry pretty, unmarried an d a t home—little De slree, accompanying a sister-in-law— whose husband, in the confusion of those troublous times, ha d been ar rested—to the office of the representa tive. M. Albltte, to ask hi s interces sion, wa s by accident left forgotten in an anteroom, where she fell asleep. After sh e was queen sh e told her chamberlain the story. Wakened b y the sudden closing of I a door, she found herseM alone in the i dusk and, a strange msn looking at ' her in surprise. Much frightened, shu I explained her situation, an d he r ani- j lety about he r brother, whom she thought in Immediate- danger of the guillotine. H e reassured he r an d of fered to escort her to her home. They become good friends on the wa y and she invited him to calL that he r moth er might thank him for his kindness, j adding that she should like to b e able to tell he r friends the name of th e gentleman who had protected her \Very well, you may tell them tint my name Is Joseph Bonaparate,\ said he. That is th e way the Clarys and the Bonapartes became acquainted. Joseph called an d soon became an intimate friend of the family, at the end of a few weeks he ho d proposed to Deslree that h e should marry ber as soon as sh e wa s 16, and! she* had! consented. Soon h e brought Ms broth er Napoleon to call an d he, too, be came a frequent visitor \His arrival,\ Queen Deslree relat ed, \made a change in our pDms fo r the future. We ha d no t kmxwn- him long when he said to u s 'In all well- managed households either the hus band or the wife must be th e on e to yield. Ton , Joseph, have n n decision, of character, and neither ha s Deslree, while Julie and I know very well what we want. You will do much better, then, to marry Julie As for Deslree, she «h\n b e my wife ' And that was. the way I came to be betrothed to Napoleon.\ Joseph did marry Julie Clary, but after Napoleon's defection. Desltee, from among many suitors, chose, no t unwisely, th e rising young soldier, Bernadotte. \I wish Deslree happiness if she marries Bernadotte,\ wrote Napoleon' she was Queen. \I never touched my from Egypt. \She deservesjlt ' | liarpischord afterward,\ she confessed She wa s playlcg an overture from \ \for I thought that a Queen should the opera When the news came that i m >t nlay badly.\ Have Just Returned from New York's Millinery Style Centers a We are showing superb line of the most exquisite Autumn hats at prices buyers can well afford to pay. Come in now and look over the line J. FEINBLOOM'S MILLINERY 114 Court Street Nea| Security Bldg. ISave Your Old Tires ^TONE-OPERA—HOUSC O. S. Hathmway Mgr. FrmdOBleu Rmm. Mgr. hmmm ^* \WHERE EVERYBODY GOES \ Next Week Photoplays Are All Superior In Quality for the ;lait :is Tear ^iand ,l»ll «v«, \ '\ honorable ^perfectly,' mralUbuelnei andflnancltlly-aWf jparr Uom made by'.hu nrmJ; - • COMMERCE,** Monday and Tuesday Pirarnount Days Daniel Frohman - PRESENTS In His First Screen Appearances '^PoorSchmaltz\ feOnejof the foremost variety triumphs of the age. Wednesday^Thorsday \Big Four Days'* Lubin presents Chas. Klein's famous play SAM BERNARD T nine Mfidr Attorney\ The greatest of American political dramas. An All Star Act FHday and Saturday Paramount Days fosworin presents the Eminent Character Actor 6E0R6E FAWCETT -IN- 'The Majesty of the Law\ A most enthralling story superbly presented by an admirable cast Keith Vaudeville, Mon., Tues. f.r' Will be A Sensational Arrangjement s\ Specially Engaged for Labor Day. Wed. Matinees Eyery'Dty at>2:30 Evety Evening at 7 and 9 BalOTny^40c;i-tower Floor 20c o &M-xvizwii&^i;^ w -F- — ^j ^&i &si' ^smsisu: .-i^«» i • - *u »-?VBWH FRONrT SIX. Near Mam* 1 CUT TIRE EXPENSE You can get one of our \2-in -l\ Tires for less than half the cost of a new one. SEE US AT ONCE 0. K. Vulcanizing Works Clarence Van Dyke, Prop. BINGHAMTON | '->