Show mtmWM jtfjj-s ' V ' MAGAZINE SECTION THE H s '? A " vs- t ’ ' " fl ' v'a ERALD-REFUBLIGA- N : 4V4-fe - — — - : ‘ rf iSwj ' ' ? i —5 - ' - ' - " ' - - SALT LAKE CITT UTAH SUNDAY JANUARY 28 1917 F r - i —r t j' - a" s ' v - ' MAGAZINE SECTION - ' ' V'V i 7 (' i ' V i - ' ' © UriDtffttOODfi ! UNDERWOOD 4 f i ' ‘4 'v ' jssf Sa I i O'--- “'t "JSSf ' tr- -- - -- if ft 4 t N f JS99BT ‘s v- ’“ is Spring ’' 1 a ' '‘V-- : iv'" ' ' - '' - n' a i' L’ “ i tSi to Be s WilIopenrromine '''’ : ' 'It' 5i 1n T v: - -- !: 'i "m V: ' 7' ' v '" ' ' - - “v S'iv- - i tfi r'j"V ' X V h' v ! T : ’''7 '’''18 : “"‘j V- - V 7 V &!' v J’ V' J t '' "' ?' ‘1-- ’ r ' V'' ' iyi --- - ’’ ' ' vv ' y ' o' ' ' ’ t- r- -i r ' - a- !''V t : UX’r it ’ I '' 5r' “ ' ‘ ’ ' r-r $3 K r Mrs Mary Flagler Who Has Made Her Niece Louise Wise Heiress to the Flagler Millions SHE tradses wearily home from —In the manner of a mil lion other girls— climbs three flights of stairs rickety with age and service hangs her hat on a nail above the mantel in her hall- bed room and then by the dim uncertain glow of a temperamental gas jet she luxuriates in the romance and adventures of the heroine of a novel “after her own heart’ There Is something more than ’the story which appeals to her It is the after-matWhen she the after-glohas read of heiresses and millionairesses of all sorts of plush carpets and sable coats of pearls and platinum of limousines and landaulets of castles for the summer and palaces for the winter of maids and butlers and footmen galore —what will prevent her from engaging In what is after all the greatest of pastimes? Dreaming of millions! Who hasn’t thought: “If I were a millionaire’—and who hasn’t figured what he would' do if he had ' a million? The Dream of Millions The home of every and has been designed and furnished through and through The modiste or the tailor as the case might be has ah ready been engaged in this fortune- - : fancy Everybody has decided ’what make of automobiles he or she will have and most everybody has a fair- ly clear notion that there will be a on the doors The yacht will be ready whenever the gay round of social activities at Newport begin to stale There will be trips abroad — London Paris Vienna Ber-- ' lln Budapest Constantinople — after the war of course —and who ever & ( - 1 ---- c:-- -- h ( f s ran dream-millionai- re dream-millionaire- Miss Louise C Wise Whose Laugh Is Happiest When She Is Watching the Joy of Children ss - - k felt to live in expectancy of Steamship Company the Standard such a fortune She built no Oil Company and other corporations Miss Wise will probably inherit ilie castles bought no yachts — magnificent Flagler home Whitehall Modestly interview' in the ’she discussed her life of 22 ‘at Palm Beach and no doubt will years and then she branched also be given the mansion on Fifth off on to the one subject that avenue now being planned by her - She is said to have paid f jg' nearest "her mind is 000000 It for alone the site of the great ' army Mrs able the mansion that Bingham r children' "“I passed most of my school will build on the commanding site life here in North Carolina’- - 8he bas purchased oh the famous she said “and after I gradu-- thoroughfare of aristocrats will be girl ated I went to Paris There the home of theM The late H Flagler was best I attended Mme Payen’s school where I had experi- known as the man who built the “Happy Children One of a Series of Drawings by Erich Kuithan Typifying ences I shall never forget: '“railroad that went' to sea”— the Miss Wise s Dream of a Free 'Childhood extension of his road from the I am finding now' how what I to: Key West— 46 miles by mainland ' schools is those Miss Wise had v dreamed two “That certainly will be a responsi- saw and heard in over rail the sea —being one of the ' me to of dreams' She had dreamed of having bility which few young women of going to be great help “Here is a matter which should most' stupendous and remarkable en- & million She had' dreamed herself this age would be able properly to receive the serious 'attention of Sineerlng feats of all history It is as a! fairy1 princess among the chil- - meet’s V ' that he paid $30000000 dren of tie poor Now that "one “I disagree with you there' Mrs every woman in my native state Do estimated of this road construction lor'ae dream is coming true the other must Flasler “Great wealth brings you know that there are no children’s spent approximately Some of courts in -come true too which is’ especially to others who have 100000000 in converting Florida J ' taken state women have in the my befair under the circumstances capabilities but whose horizon is the Dreamland Peninsula He cause if the heart and inclinations of nairowed through a want of proper the matter up and rest assured hito D Rockefeller was one with the pretty North Carolinian had been meansV lt was Mr Flagler’s idea something will be done in the near of theJohn organizers of the Standard Oil future I am not as familiar as l - of a different mold she would' not' should be and soon will: be with the Company and Miss Wise will inherit have the millions as the facts to be child labor laws of 'my state or a substantial interest in that corpoi i related will show: through the South Those are mat- ration Miss Wise is thedaughter of Mr ’ Her wedding will take place shortters which' require Immediate attenandMrs J K Wise' ' Her fiance ' ly after Easter' It is announced and tion’ MrLaurence Lewis (s the son of the ceremony the young The fortune to be inherited by Miss following Mr and Mrs Thornton Lewis of Cin- woman is expected to take up in ear-Wise consists of approximately $60 nes and"' White Sulphur cinuati O her cherished plan of devoting 000000 which rebresenta the value Springs W Va—and it ' was in the to mlllions be the entrusted to her of the Flagler estate bequeathed to to last named place when the two were of the Berests charity and par- ‘ seen o the great est amount of good - She th widow together often in outdoor sports to ticularly bettering the condition that the romance was first noted Is one of the brightest sunniest The Burden of $60000000 the children of the poor among The first public intimation that this young women you can imagine' but 'The to She a studious na- Is said be of properties Include the 2 am - glad to say a entire Flagler girl would acquire the- she 'possesses-0Iitu® Jor Florida" East Coast: Railroad tur? i£erIMU!nInfl Flagler millions was in last Novem- wealth of common sense” fond of outdoor x chain of magll!fl cent sports : ber when the announcement was At Mrs: Flagler’s wedding to Judge-thmade of i the ? engagement of Mrs Bingham a few days later Miss Wise hotels that have made the east coast it is not unlikely that she will be Mary Idly Flagler widow of the great was the bride’s only attendant' of Florida famous the world over 'remembered gratefully for genera- financier and Judge Robert W W What Mrs Flagler meant In her vast tracts of Florida lands --many tions as the girl who loved all chll- a and Bingham of Louisville Kyi ’ words of praise for her niece was small manufacturing plants and dren who dreamed of making-- them' former mayor’ of that dty? best demonstrated by Miss Wise her-- other enterprises and large blocks 6f 'happy and spent her millions mak- at York was in' New Mrs: Flagler self r when she was asked how - it stock in the - Peninsula & Oriental ing her dreams come true conthe time and when she 'had “ Whitehall the Flagler Palace at Palm Beach of Which Mary Wise Will One firmed the engagement and had Day Be ithe Mistress talked ' briefly of this renewal of her dreamed of having a million who childhood and the thousand "and one nouncement was made that the pret-- llooay8 romance with Judge Blie P°lnted to a portrait of hasn’t pictured himself limned t remembrances '' for cousins uncles! ty North Carolida girl who will be'BI“gliam ' a young woman ovor tho heiress-tthe Flagler millions against the landscape lolling in the nephews nieces and friends in hlsthe inanteIpiece' r:was goingto wed there was nothing mellow moonlight of Venice1 with youth and poverty? T has been estimated by a scientist of an inch per month working out at lhan of those bn the left hand and it a love WIlto soft voices lilting be said Miss of how Louise about Wise ? brilliant song as the the that in a lifetime of 70 years a three inches a year This would give' may be that the scientist In Perhaps Announcing the Heiress man grow8 nails which if it were him a growth of 7 feet ’5 inches dur- - has based his argument question gondola glidea 'noiselessly down the mington N C-- dreamed all those wedding would be or what a favor-on the dreams to preserve-theuncut ing the 30 years he lives between 20 slower growth of the left-halte she would be at Newport because bay?possible nails no children of my would reach the ? ?ot her “patricianheauty and south-kav- e In another mood the dreamer of The difference Is cf 7 ft 9 In and 50 Another curious point Is that the rate length r 'own”' she said “This is a picture millions thinks of his folks and his She really is goingto gat her mil-- 4 ern charm”-- — not a word1 : Exactly on what argument this 'In the other 40 years’ when the of growth of' the nails dependsrdi-stateme“ — he to is home friends the going give lion— not one million but many of It said that Miss Wise 22 years of of Miss Louise Wise my dear niece ls based it is difficult to growth is less rapid he would cer- - rectly on the length of the finger his family the college education to them of a for cultured Mr attractive K in r litL9 observation will show tainly produce four feet of nails so 'thus the nails on the two middle Wise say every daughter and Mrs J age provide for the brother about to grad- - No doubt ’she' will rem ember all sense of the' word heiress of the ma-- of Wilmington N C She Is the' that during the greater ' portion of a that 11 feet Is a better average for fingers of men grow more rapidly uate from high school the electric her good friends and loved ones-- r ' jor portion' of a $60000000 fortune youngest member of our family clr- - man’s life he cuts his nails' on an the capacity of a man than those on the' first and third for the aunt who was so good to him but how different can be one’s’ would devote her life to charity par-cland will eventually inherit the re- average once a week and at each It should be noted however that fingers respectively and these in of an the growth of the nailson the right turn are more speedy in growth in his days of poverty the library to dreams when the dreams come true? ticularly to relieving distress among sponsibillty that now rests upon me” paring removes va sixteenth ' A few weeks ago when the an- - children he presented to the home of his One of the Interviewers remarked: inch or the equivalent ' of a quarter hand Is in most people more rapid those of the little fingers' ' J -- and-aun- t coat-of-ar- prob-need- y 22-year-- - old '46-mil- e ’ - iSS: ) ? -- North-Carolina- ‘ ‘ ’ ‘ - - ‘ ! ' - - ‘ - -- V - “ n : - : - r Sixppose You '' - Had Finger Nails Seven - ” - nd ‘ - - - nt - nail-producin- g' e - : : -- -- - v5 — £ - ' - 'A- - ' - - " j- - i ' 5 |