xxiv; bauai -ujitu-x-hu'S JfUltXlJLjMJ, UJtCi-JlliJiK 8, MEN, mean men, a gallery of them, hare In most eases been discov ered by women who began the analysis hi the home and surrendered their conclusions hi the courts. io iinMD is not a passing show; It Is an Irritating daily fact. If the evidence is to be believed. TT..h individual piainiui imnas ner experience is the most unpleasant; she Is convinced she knows the meanest man. The latest exhibit was found in Jersey City, where tne measure was taken by tne wiie, Jmra j. Freyer. Mrs. Freyer told tne court ner nus- band was an unreasonably jealous sort of a Derson. who in his tumultuous tor rent of suspicion not only robbed her of domestic peace and tranquillity, but who sacrificed ber personal wardrobe to his overwhelming desire to cms and humiliate her. His excuse was: "Nobody will look at her if she isn't dressed well, and so, Judge. I had -io do It." What did he do? According to her testimony he cut off the toes of her silk stockings, rip ped the trimming off her hats and threw the new winter shapes Into the family garbage box; slashed th laces of her corset, robbed her blouse of their hooks and eyes, took tne aoo ble out of her skirt with a penknife her gloves he made flngerlesa. her coats became buttonless; and, all in all, the home and fireside looked no Is the least like a paradise regained. She found she couidn t go out into the park and walk off ber vexatious spirit, as a modified baiome costume would neither be comfortable nor un derstood. And the Salome outfit was all there was left to choose. The Jeslons Hnsbftsd. "He bought them all for me," she cried, "and now see what has happened lee what he has done! I tried to tell him he was the only man in my heart, but he wouldn't listen. Why, If I take up a book or a magazine he become: so angry and Jealous that he snatches them away from me and puts them in the coal bin. No book looks the same after it has been in a coal bin. And to think I am the mother of all his children! Ain t that enough to con vince him I don't want, to go out and waste my time parading?" "You can t parade now," replied the man. Another mean husband came before magistrate accused of worrying the life out of his wife. She was fortified with complaints. "When I go to the theater with him I don't dare look at the stage if the leading man is on; he tells me I am in love with him, no matter if the actor Is one I never saw before; and If I do glance Just a little bit at him he pinches my arm so I almost faint. told him I wanted to go to matinees alone, and he said he was waiting for me to admit it, that I could go but that I needn t come back. He said I was leading a double life. and. Judge. haven't spoken to another man since I married." The cruel way of a man with the woman he has sworn to cherish and adore, or something to that effect, was also very well exemplified in the pa- metic uie story or a woman who for merly lived in Washington, but who now is an inmate of an asylum for the insane. Her relatives declare she is the victim of a man's studied and persistent cruelty. He cared only for juvenile Drains In woman; he regarded all women a dolls and patronized or scoffed at any sign or token of fem inine intelligence. IgBorlBB His Wife. They married In a Connecticut town when neither was 20 years old. They had been classmates in high school. He became a mining engineer, then a mine owner. - He met men with brains, position, power. He grew with them. He prospered. His wife endeavored to show him she was in touch with this growth, in sympathy with this ad vancement. The affairs of the world fascinated her, and her husband's career absorbed her. She sought time and again to show him her interest in what he was doing, but he met all her suggestions or her attempts at conversation with patronizing smiles or laughs. He never asked for or accepted her opinion on any subject. He treated her as if she were a child that never would grow into maturity. He gave no sign that1 he suspected the existence of a brain In her, no intimation that he wanted to discover in her any intelli gence. Her mentality was obviously a matter of small concern to him. In this atmosphere she struggled, hoping for some indication from him that she was mistaken In her anal ysis of his estimate of her. Her en treaties for real companionship were met with the same disdain that had so long characterized his attitude toward ber. Her endurance of the situation reached Its limitation; her reason that, had been scorned so long vanished act ually, but the man who brought the tragedy Into her life went on in his self-centered way, believing his dear wife Buffered from hallucinations and regretting his home life had been in terrupted by, as he said, the "sudden i A MATTER HUSBANDS. & Mnet ft. 1 1-;-. u tflAr Si r. "But He Wouldn't listen.' change in his wife's physical condl tion." It was the woman's relatives that put him in the mean man class. "What's the good 'o prayln' for the Wrath to strike im? 'Mary! Pity women when the rest are like Mm." The members of this Congress have Qualified in many other ways for ad mittance, and their membership cards are rarely returned definitely. I was luncbtng at the Colony Club yesterday the club, you may recall, is the most fashionable organization for women in America, and is support' ed by the wives, daughters, sisters and aunts of the well-bred and rich men of New York. "Bob has developed a terrible streak of meanness." said a matron, who lives one of the big houses Just east of Central Park. "He decided recently that it was a deplorable habit to serve any sort of a thing to drink, on account of the possible bad influence might have on Jack, who is now 14 years old. So Bob, in his pompous virtue, comes home for dinner every night, carrying full evidence that .he has satisfied bis own thirst for cock tails and highballs. He acts as if he . model husband and father, and struts about as if he hopes Jack will observe his good points and grow to be like him. "No matter if we have guests for din er Bob stubbornly insists that the no liquor rule must not be broken. she went on, "though he fortifies him self invariably at some bar on hie way home. This master-of-the-house busi ness, under the circumstances, is try ing to a sense of humor. His own in dulgences and his arrogance are un bearable facts, and I am growing more and more to dread the approach of the hour each day when he comes home to demonstrate his prohibition principles to me and the rest of the family." , Husband Who Haunt Clubs. He has a nature about as fine as Harry's," spoke up a woman at her right. "Harry is at the dub most very night; frequently dines there; Is cross in the morning; the children are afraid to speak to hira. He growls and roars, finds fault with the servants and is an artist in the making of the atmosphere so unpleasant that the whole household Is relieved when he starts for his office. Last Saturday night he never came borne at all, but Sunday morning at 10 o clock In marches Harry, In his top hat and frock coat. The first I knew of his pres- k ' & m f- it "Her Mentality a Maftef of No Concern. "All T H P Want i W M. .Eytfirtsr Paer : and ence I heard him swearing because the children weren't dressed. He was impatient to take them to church, sit in the family pew and promenade on the avenue with them model parent and all that." 'I don't think either of these men is teo mean to live with," volunteered another. "I have been married three years, and Dick never has got over an absurd Jealousy that he has worried me with from the very day that we were married. I simply can't gs to dances with him. At the last Assem bly he began a scene after I had waltzed with his brother his own brother, fancy, and a father, of seven children. He put bis heel on the toe of my slipper and pressed it so bard ne utterly crushed my foot. I wanted to scream, but how could IT' she continued. "Oh, the mortifi cation, the humiliation of it, and the pain as well. He said I liked his mother better than I did him. I told him he was a silly boy, and be reached over to whisper "Lies' in my ear; he bit the ear, and I jerked away from him. It was when I started to move that he planted his heel on my toes. Rascal Won Heart Coin. The meanest man I have eaceantered here," said Miss McOratb, ."was one who made ardent love to a woman with so much warmth and sincerity that she gave him $600 she had saved from her earnings and established him in tobacco shop. Then they were mar ried, the business prospered and she had visions of a home of their own, visions which he shared with her in conversation for about a month. One day he failed to come home for dinner, and she went to the shop with food she had prepared, only to find another proprietor there, established. The mean husband had sold out for JflOOO and gone. He never came back ana sne was not successful in tracing htm. While I was sitting by Miss Mc Grata's desk, a weary-looking person with careless clothes, topped with an animated hat, walked up to register ner alia. "I don't dare to go home," she said. Tie would kill roe or something." "I will send you to a lodging-house tonight while I investigate your case,' said Miss McQuade. - "You'd better not see him while you're investigating," returned the wo man. "When he's mad, he's dreadfuiler every minute, and he never slacks up in nis spite." "We will manage somehow," ' an nounced Miss McQuade. "That 'somehow way Ive been try ing since I married. We live in a house on the river, and when I came out today he says: 'If you show up again and cross the threshold, I'll blow your face off. Ill sink you and the darn boat, your face and alL I don't like your face, and I don't mind losing the boat to get rid of looking at that face.' Now, I ain't going back, just for the sake of being dumped into the East River. He didn't lie; he don't like my face any more than he implied." Drunk and Meanness. A woman who said she was born in Finland was another applicant for the "Help! help!" series. "When my husband ain't drinking he is kind and sociable and helps in the housework," said she. "But when he drinks, and it is once a day anyway, he gets what you might call drunk, be jerks at my- hair, twists my wrists and pulls my nose. I mind the nose most. I even put some cold cream on it one day, so his fingers couldn't get a hold, and then he hid my spectacles. can t see without them not as far as me to you and he put cold cream all over the furniture, because I couldn't see what he was doing, and when the cream was gone he used soap, and It ain't peaceful like that, is it?" Those are only two Instances in the dally grind of unhapplnesa and misery. There are milder degrees of mean ness. When a girl says to a man. "You mean, old thing" she might not convey the same definition of "mean1 that has been cited above. She really might be verbally caressing him and thinking, "You are tha dearest, lovelt est, handsomest thing in the world, and If any other girl attracts you for - a minute I'd fight with all my wits and cnarnt to noia you. Oh, yes, and she might use tha same expression when he calls a half-hour late to take her to the theater. 8he might think it also as ha. goes out be tween the acts, or when he suggests that they have a little supper and then when tney are seated among the crys tal, silver, flowers and music, asks her "What kind of a sandwich will vou have?" or "What sort of mineral water are you drinking?" Meanest Mast on Earth. "Mean old thing" may also be heard in polite homes, when friend husband has used the shower in the bathroom and splashed generously over the walls and floor, the bottles and the windows. Or when he this same husband or another fusses when his wife wants him to play bridge or go to a concert or lecture, and tells her he is so tired after his hard day in the office that all he wants is his evening papers and cigar; yet when a big light is pulled off, or the election is being held, he never thinks of his weariness in body and spirit, but comes borne in th early morning, exuberantly aglow with the fascinations of the night and In sists upon telling her ell about it. even to his losses. Somehow, men like to tell of what they lose rather than what they win when in friendly con sultation with the other bead of the household. There still exists the story of a man so mean that he gave his little son a penny for keeping the flies away from V lfC ?Tt-VLAjT C fdVt Wilt j KHIMKI.', Vm sic - '',ni 7rV -r. J A tV S - u l i. -ViF'tSK4. XfT'-l X1 itv , c ?Mr7r- , I 'That Terribla Looking Man." him one entire afternoon, and who, .ened In the morning, crying for the when the child was asleep, stole the I coin, was spanked by the father for cent, and who, when the child awak- having "lost" It. 1 nr biog: INEZ MTSTES OIIylMORO1 "S1 i EATS in the front row!" Starrow said jubilantly, as he detached himself from the long line of ticket buyers. "But I wouldn't have got them If they hadn't been returned Just as I got to the window. Want to go in now? "All right" Peyton agreed. It struck Starrow that his companion was not showing the proper degree of enthusiasm. "It's too bad It isn't your own game," he went on. as they made their way Into the little, dingy, dark ened theater. "Say, wouldn't it be great to see yourself making that end run?" "Yes, I'd like to see it" Peyton ad mitted, unemotionally. He did not seem to be in the mood for talking, but Starrow went on un deterred. "Heavens! You must be a homesick guy Harvard football in the biograph and alone In St Louis on Christmas. Did you get anything in your stocking?" "Nothing." Peyton's indifference was not assumed. There was only one thing he wanted. Denied that the best gifts of the magi counted for nothing. His meager response seemed to si lence Starrow. They sat without talk ing, watching the people come in. Over tha house lay tha quiet of a Christmas audience the pitiful quiet of forlorn kremnants of humanity who, simply to forget fill up a holiday with makeshift entertainment A woman here and there, sitting solitary In the stuffy looking boxes, added a touch of extra desolation. But gradually, as the "gal lery began to whistle and catcall its impatience, the place assumed the su perficial cheer that comes with noise. Peyton, swaying mentally In an over mastering fit of homesickness, tried te sret a Krin on himself. The depressed. weak-kneed-looking orchestra crawled from underneath the stage. Ah, there would be music! That at least might take ilm out of himself. But no: his homesickness Inundated hira in another weakening flood: for they had begun to scrape through a medley of college songs "Fair Harvard." "Boola Boola," "The Undertaker's Song," "Up the Street" "For God, for Country, and for Yale," "Veritas." He leaned on the arm of his chair, one hand over his eyes. The theater darkened. He took no notice. A cone of brilliant light shot from the balconv straight at the big white screen; wavered, and danced upon it But his attitude did not change, it stabbed the center in a circle of light and sip! Peyton sat up. There, printed on the white rectangle. as If by a flash of lightning, towered the stadium. Empty, its tiered height rose in a long, gray curve against the sky. A half-oval of the deserted neia stretched out to meet him. It looked exactly as he had seen It one moonlit night In a "daily" written about it he remembered he had compared it in high-flown schoolboy English, to the Coliseum. Curiously enough, he did not immedi ately think of football in connection with it Class day came back to hira, and tha incongruous aspect of the stadium as he came marching in with '07. Directly in front the students squatted on the grass. At the right forming a background for them, the "set" of the Greek play cut the grid iron In two. At the left plowing down over the crimson-hung tiers of seats from the hot blue sky, poured an avalanche of girls bunches and rafts and slathers of girls girls of all ages, girls of all sizes, girls of all shapes; blue girls and pink girls, green girls ad yellow girls, lavender girls and 1 brown girls, white, red, and black girls; girls in foamy, flouncy, petal things that were dresses; girls under huge, rainbow wreaths of flowers that were hats; hats under huge, lustrous bubbles that were parasols. He re membered that Lawrence, marching by bis side, had looked up and said: "Close as bonbons in a box." Pey ton thought them more like that mad huddle of blossoms In his aunt's old fashioned garden In Gloucester. Now the muti-colored throng were ap plauding '82, Jubilant on its twenty fifth anniversary. Now be could hear the cheers of '08, '09, '10. following '82. Now he could hear the roar that went up from both audience and alumni when '07 marched in. He could hear every sound of It; he would hear that until he died. And It was all over now the four most wondenui years a man ever spent The picture of the stadium stayed on the sheet only a short moment but j la that Unas -he lived over an intense1 afternoon. .The stadium vanished from the screen; now the biograph had them at Harvard Square on the day of a great game the old familiar picture ef an old familiar confusion. A pro cession of trolley-cars unloaded a mob of spectators, which ran like a flood through the mob of curious onlookers, packing the square and overflowing into its confluent streets. Everywhere swarmed boys selling score-cards, flags, flowers, badges, miniature foot balls, all manner of glzncrack sou venirs. The sputtering biograph flashed again. This time it was the bridge. with the same old crowd advancing at the same old snail's pace, and fling ing abroad, Peyton had no doubt, the same old jokes. The macnine, it seemed, was following that crowd. Now the boathouse slipped into the picture, now the training quarters, and now the interior of the stadium again. Not empty this time; the seats were ; almost filled. But spectators were still pouring out of the chimney-like en trances. The ushers . were leaping up the aisles, two steps at a time, de flecting the thick streams up, down across, into scores of tiny currents. At the very top a row of heads made black blobs on the sky-line. Above stretched the aerial banners that al ways grace a big stadium game. This was the enemy's side; banners bearing the word Yale, pennants displaying the letter "Y" proclaimed it The girls, beginning to roll them selves in extra wraps, wore bugs bunches of violets. As plainly as though the picture had been colored, he saw that their streamers and tas sels were of Yale blue. The scene shifted. Peyton jumped again. It was the Harvard side this time the flags, the pennants, the mon ster bunches of chrysanthemums, all shouted the faet to him. This picture vanished. It was plain that the blograph-operator had moved down close to the audience, and was beginning to present . a panoramic view of the spectators. Smooth as a river the old familiar audience flowed past him; the cheer ing section crowded with hats, line pin-cushions studded with black-beaded pins; proud fathers, prouder mothers, superior little brothers, excited little sisters; graduates, ranging from last year's crop to alumni of thirty yearsf critical prep-school boys, giggling, school girls, Radcllffe girls, all Cam. bridge, nearly all Boston, and a little of all its suburbs. Hi! Peyton was on his feet The panorama had vanished. Into its place leaped a picture of the Har vard half of the stadium. And the whole Harvard side was rising with the steady movement upward of a tidal wave cresting to break. All the flags, banners and pennants had cut loose to make havoc of the sky-line. On the gridiron, a half-dozen yell leaders, megaphones in hand, arms whirling, looked like mechanical toys wound up to work together. He could fairly hear the deep, "Harvard! Har vard! Harvard;" He knew what was happening. He had seen that mag nificent concerted movement many times. The team had cpme on. Starrow nulled him back into his seat UnheedlnsL Peyton bent forward over the orrhnstrT ralL bursting with eager ness. Would the picture ever change? There they were, running toward him over the field. Atar orr tney mi6 have been buffalo. Now he could make out the "H's" on their breasts. He caught a face here and there. The herd spread out like a fan and jtOoncluded1 oa Fas )