The evening world. Newspaper, June 12, 1900, Page 6

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o> SIRE a mmm 6 THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 12 SS zuern. TRUST QUESTION CAREFULLY CONSIDERED, 7#2 Wir 4ND HUMOR OF THE DAY. 2 pang Conon be 4H POM, eed THE REWARD, NOT NECESSARY TO HURRY ‘ New Torr Sac rect Sa Fh orate at | HOW THE TRUSTS SQUEEZE WORKING PEOPLE. = a , “J TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1900. By JOHN SWINTON. —— | “HN ver (tudte are able to equeese thelr) party 1 the milla n closed in order topand many ther trust is of the Lge oe i 178 eof ee work more . the prevent strike hat was A for. ‘ UT J telligible account @ VOL. 40 .cs00 serves verseseee NO. 14,17 eT 4 4 ' v reas As a ” The officials of the ¢ any mate tt Known that | which Continental Tobaceo Trust lately dealt with > 8) or ali-arouna| the n ‘ o started Up again about hand ts factories at Detroit; but I guess rat o mid f thie month, and It t® reported that chat t wee Won as harsh as any other . int fred men were last week given employ Th ve been hundreds ¢ like those here 4 tat f them. | inentioned © the trusts took contro: of the y t etty hard experience for thou-lcountry’s chief industries. The trusts have in recent R . workers in the eervice of {years turned tens of thousands of working people j Jadrift without warning, in order (9 serve their own oe htd-t-? ts & terrible o Tt takes no heed of z suffering, It o nothing for men's ruin, it we lia reckicss of human iife. [t is greater than the lew, in thelr grip, The i a new) which, in truth, has (oo often bees its tool It te ine of ovr country, who used to tolerant. It ts intolerable. , ' 1 ieaapennenes | If the power, the lawlessness, the rapactty and thet The Homeless Dog-The lady ahead just dropped her i a? these stacements go too far | inhumanity of the trusts continue to grow for @ few pburee.’ If I revurn tt I may be rewarded with 4 home, | ‘ some etrange things | ¢ years more as they have grown during the past three thousands of wage workers P ior four yeare-af they capture euch of our country’s t and into help resources, products and industries as they have net leaaness by . ttle 4 oof | the people find no | wages nfluence the price supplies, oF to 4 y hulks of the modern rike specuat n stocks, or do “rig the market,” | the young and strong Ame that our a ’ Bos ry The vena! purbore | the land of the all-compassing Deciara- ¥ ‘Pardon me, bul would you honor me by escepliag a pliiful sight there was over in Br » pendence, will perish from the earth, the Protection of my umbrella? Monday when the National Sugar Refining Com. | P| while tte Max nation in servitude (l “Thank you. 1 wil! be home in two minutes” its works, after they had been ¢osed But why have the 5 of people now held uy 4 Hi ‘Tut we can walk slowly, can't wet « months for reasone known to everybody | © by the trusts put themeesives under their government CaReeentew ya anyth t the late sugar war i! land at their merey? Why do they allow it that their A BATES BEARR, . iy When thie Brookiyn sed its doors unex ® dally bread te held In the keeping of these ali-devour. Smith—-Why go you avold Brown? Do you ews hie telly, nearly six 1 sugurworkers were $2 elution? money ; ‘ road adel and th e kept drifting tl the T| The thing t# to be explained by the manner tn Jones-No; I don't want him to owe me any. Gea? 2+ seco ene ceeeees families of hundre m were on the verge of } | which the trusts came into existence, got control = , tarvation. When the doors of the refin $ | the generat 1 A LUCKY ESCAPE. \ pened again last week there wae a spectacie than that ui ‘ F ating to & America and to stultified humenity. they are strategists, It is also to be explained | by the} The Lady-Great goodness! A mad dog |s after me, | The plitable mortais were to be seen around the fac- | P| lack of perception and of sense of reason on the part tory full of Joy! They rejoloed over the premise of | of the masses of the community heavy and killing work in that dismal eugar factory As things are at present, where are the four er five 1 ral at wages Mved by tte onners Waant this a eoene sons of men now employed by the trusts to gor oe the merry darkies whom Mr Stanley saw in nt work of wages? Where ts there a refuge $| Atiicat igar workers, steel workers, tobaceo work ™™ i Take another case, and a bigger one. On the M4 of ther wage-workers for the all-controliing Reng *|ihie month, at South Chicago, there was a sudden! [ook at yet another case, the locality of which was * land unexpected shut-down of the mille of the Ili , Time was when « workman left one bose he \o Governer, Steel Company, w which company the fami! On Wednesday of last week, at the whim of wht for ano’ ame line of industry, or name of John W tes elated, and white trust, the Great Western Tin-Piate Works there, ¢ arted out for me part of the country where he PEPE ADEEEEEEEOD® | now g part of the great F ‘a! Steel Trust, Several | oioying 29 men, were closed abruptly, to the loss, the ht be needed; but that time te not at the end of ————e ithousands of nen were (hus thrown on their uppers! /alarm and the discomfture of the men. the nineteenth century, when the trusts are in the WHAT WILL CROKER DO? No « nation was given to them. “Where shall I go?’ cried Daniel Webster, Wasn't! satdle 4, The chairman of the Hoard of Directors told thei & queen of France who, when she heard that the) Mor should not have those powers HAT will Croker do with them? Teportera that the “shut-down was nobody's busi-| people were starving for lack of bread, asked, “Why which ¥ tricks with the price of ~Yes, the poor dear fel Unirty feet The public judgment against the ness,” and Mr. Mark Hanna said that the shut-down /don't they ent cake?” commodities and to play the deuce with the wages der, with the hod on top of Mim Mile leg pest In| %e2_for “business reasons,” and another tntereatea| The manner of the Salt Trust, the Whiskey Trust land the rights of was fractured in three places. knaves of the Ice Trust is complete. In - ——— —_—-— Mra, O’Meagher—Saints altve! Its @ mérecte the the case of the blackened and discredited blessed man's leg wasn't broken besides, taal uae esr SHOULD A MAN MARRY A GIRL IS SICKLY? SAVE LADY ENUNERRTONS Governor has the backbone to bounce HAVE LADY ENUMERATORS Bim from tho office he has abused and diegraced By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. “Phat ta right, little boy, You keep him off with With Carroll and the mere politicians of the ice | To the nattor of The Rrening Worlt But apparently you have not loat your heart, and jhusband so enjoys for destrable friends, and ts softhat broom while I hit him with my parasol.” gang the people cannot so readily settle. I know @ young lady and | think that I admire her |your head ts in an exceedingly clear and normal con-| properly proud of, and which gives him the sense of more than the average young lady that I know. There dition compared to that of the usually too fervid /having what we call a “real home.” A delicate or But from Mr. Croker's point of view there ought | o's: one thing that keeps me from taking any etepe | young man who {8 contemplating marriage. sickly wife can enter into none of these delightful re- WET His BATCE. to be further and severe reckoning with the tribe |toward proposing « “uulty,” as the young lady in| Iam giad | do not have to wound your feelings too |ations with her husband, and, most important of aij,}, PifMt Cittzen—The census man was on our block Which has irreparably injured the Tammany or-|queation is very nervous and very weak, and, judging | deeply by saying, as 1 must, that a eick wife te of | she x not stted for the sacred functions of maternity, ¢t-289: " 4 ganization and has dealt a heavy blow at the) {fom what I know, the doctor's bill 1s sometimes as |necesstty a sad drawback to marital happiness, Despite all that has been said to the contrary, 1}, 8¢and Citisen—-Was your wife out of patience with regular ae the butcher's. Bo you can clearly under-! A young man Just starting tn life needs in his wife/ maintain that a sickly mother cannot bring strong, ithe questions he asked? Great party beyond, healthy children into the world. And every child has Firet Eitisen-We; sho sated tim. s few, aad wo Carroll, the bungling leader pro tem; Van) @ right to be born healthy, heard he had to go home and go to bed. Wyck, the puppet Mayor; t'other van Wyck, the | When I say sickly I mean a woman who is realy}... ‘ Teceptive candidate—these and (he offending Dook | | thers ste. git and omen wan (hisn gle we ee AN INCENTIVE TO PIETY. fe bh 10 in fo their Commiasioners and other implicated followers of tiveness to be considered delicate. They lke the Tiger should have much reason for apprehen- to be thought frail and half-ethereal creatures, and sion as the time approaches for the return of the imagine {t te commonplace to be strong and robust. real Boss. | Such girls occasionally come to their senses by way of & marriage which calls out the true womanhood What will Croker do with them for their bun-| latent In every member of our sex, and, casting aside Ging? the affectation of semt-invalidism, -— 414, wholesome wives and mot When Mr. Countem was enjoying his tpquiaiteatal A MAN'S LIVING A girl who te nervous and weak may be Just that dignity in enumerator of the last census—— » and nothing worse. Sometimes there are causes for OSEPH M. PHILLIPS, aged seventy-two, these conditions which are purely mental, and the has just sold his seat on the Chicago subject, with a change of environment, becomes well Board of Trade and retired trom active , satin’ eid tt ae bing oa ae eye y e y in love wu Occupation. He is not ailing. But he has/ advance them to you as hopeful possibilities been in trade jong enough, and row hi As you are not, I think {t is your ducy to gradually will rest. Mr. Phillips has a natural ph! cease your attentions to the girl, otherwise you may Josophy of life which is worth considering, He learn to your lasting grief that the young lady : fections are 60 y engaged that a lack of rec cays: teeth deep! wed th lack of * . procity on your part may mean a life sorrow to her. A man should live largely os he was hones Now, HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. . snd the homely « —— —_-—— I thing the ordinary A GICKLY GIRL MAY HAVE TO BE COURTED IN THIS WAY. Sinn eats 00 much for his own wont. 1 ge to bed af Crapemakers’ “ Cantoacte S o'clock and Ret vp at 6 | eat breakfast at T o'clock. | stand my question and my position. Although able toa veritable helpmate Girle employed tn the crape manufacture in Europe ‘This meal consists of mutton chops, @ baked potato | support @ wife, 1 am afrali that [ am not wealthy! A true wife is not only sweetheart and friend, but| are under @ curious contract not to engage in any and coffee, My mes! in the middle of the day {@ 8) enough to marry that girl, for the reason stated above, | (he best business partner a man can have, for rig housework after their hours of labor. The reason ts fairly hearty one. 1 eat roast beef, potatoes and such) what do you think of my position? than one reason. Jest their hands should become coarse and unfitted for ings, In the evening | have a light meal. It con Jersey City, NJ. ONE WHO NEEDS ADVICE. She ts the one person in the world who can ex no | the delicate nature of chetr employment. Gate of cereals largely. — Interest outeite of his, and she ts in very fact his LasaRR pera) <a EPID ‘There o~ -—s ie 2 moter Pages I’ you were desperately tn love with the young lady self, whose honesty and fealty he may count THE FIRST ALPHABET. Teacher—I'm giad to eve, Bobby, you go to Sunday- pereene am my task would be a diMeul: one, for all tn instead of waiting, like some bad people stick to plain foods and they will be vastly! b people must agree that candidates for matrimony or sickly woman can successfully make 00000000 0200 reel sig ne ey Bee - He Gidn't calculate that the young lady might tare Detter off. _ 4 a ves aba canes | should on both sides be in good heal th Aner home the pleasant meeting-pince which a young . obby~Yes, ma'am. I always say a strawberry [the tables on him by arking him the same questions shirt; years olé I had copious hem: range and] festival's just as much fun as a Christmas tree. when she became an enumerator of this census, on wee ne 9 2 2 ene 4 ‘was « living skeleton. I am seventy-two years old NOVEL IDEA INA SKIRT. oon a a es erent BIRTHDAY LUCK, couple are leqnily married. What le the proper plage ‘There is a message in this for the rich clubman ~ aes POINTS a 7 UETTE in New York to apply to? Prue who “lives on the best” and wonders at his slug- inesday, June | ABOU of sags Gishness and constant indisposition. There is a Wed Ye J $3. Ul On what day 414 tas 1 Otew Year's Day) fall Sweeter message—one of contentment if he will If your birthday falls on to-morrow this te the What Is Second Mourning! in the year of 17? an luck the year has jn store for you. The year A aye that purple and black is second mourning read i eo—for the man who sighs because be can- and hour of your birth make no difference: Bias well as black and white, while B says that purple Ask Her. Rot live as the rich clubman does It ie @n evil day, 90 govern yourself accord- Diis the first osior to be worn after biack and white | I visit a certain young ty seek ve — ingly. Whieh wins? A. B.D. | have heard) in love with me, iw Your coming year ts fraught with evil, and Black and white are usually worn before purples | if it is so or not? La A PERILOUS BATH APPROACH. | misfortune is apt to come with « heavy: nd, | and shades of violet, but there ts no fixed rule in the T the foot of West Bighty-second street \s Sickness, bereavement, financial and business ‘matter. Black and white, gray and black and losees; loes of position, and mental affiletion. Be hopeful, and trust to a higher power, Thir- teen is an unlucky oumber!—Copyrighied by Bphina Magazine, Boston one of the public baths of New York. The Hudson River Railway freight tracks pass Defore the entrance to the bath. All last eeason the boys and girls going for their and diagk are all regarded as half mourning. Rew te Learn a Persen’s Age. 2! Where can I find out the year @ person was born Bin? LB OP. D | You would doubtless be able to get the information Rat the Bereau of Vital Statistics, Thie would neces- B | sitate some little trouble, but there te ne expense et- tached to the inquiry. — How to Set Table for Tin Wedding, Fish Scales Loosened. When removing the * of a fish the work wi be rendered much easter by dipping the fish for al @ moment into bolling water So AFTER THE STRUGGLE WO rivals tried to win ber hand— She sald them nay. But bade them prove their mettle and Return some day “When you have gone end done your best, Come back to me, And | between you then will choose- Tl give my hand unto bim whose 1 fain would be.” One went to war, and fought ait bled In many trays; was widely heralded, was his praise, other went in search of wealth, Me tolled and planaed, With honor for his stepping-stone He rose until his name was Known Through all the land. of Immortality.” Upon @ day they bent thelr ways pepe eptpenip nee UB ee quiet mak ant pa a Campaign buttons are too common for Back whence they came; prrmsod BBog Bo “To me the meanest flower that blows can give for the Democratic nomination for the that Go often le two deep for paral pert! was daily and constant. Ap-| same condition is to prevail this home-| This costume, of @ thin, dark materia! for Summer | re-| wear, exploits a rather novel idea in the skirt, The skirt edge is turned up in a fold, and the same en fe repeated at the foot of the skirt. The bolero te| place is | turned over with velvet facings and white silk strap- pings -_ oe - To Clean Kitchen Tables. ela, * ahs

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