The evening world. Newspaper, June 14, 1900, Page 6

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REGRET to learn that some persons have misun- deretoed ecme of the pasanges tn the first of these} articles on truste,which waa printed « fortnight! age. | THURSDAY, JUNE 1 , 1900, In trying te anewer the question: “What Ie « ss | Trustt’ | epoke of tt as an agency for economising VOL. 40.00006 verseeeees ss «6G 18,177 | Mth Inmenting pretection, returns wens, Cet or and > one will deny that @ trust is fitted to perform ervices ag were here attriputed to tt, or that better fitted to do them than they were done under the old ways of doing things The fundamental theory and the groundwork trust are all rie The trust, m or, 19 a device which, ae yet ts Its features and its nm that first article ynderstood by geome rea the framework of the of thetr formation, or the manner the methods in wht ey are manipulated. resulta of thelr operation. or the many evtie that grow st of them, or the ways in which the proper Intent of their existence ‘es distorted to the detriment of the | community Our modern trusts, though associated with @ sound M | industrial idea, have twisted that idea out hape | They are @ development, truly, but they have been | developed upside down, oe to speak. M| The iden of their being, !f rightfully applied, would be of immeasurable advantage to all the peeple, |OBERAMMERGAU' S CHRISTUSIZy 74 This fe Anton Lang, who portrays Christ tn this year’s Passion Play The Passion Play of Oberammergau, now tn prog: repeated every ten years. The actors are al! not speaking 0 the objec orking them, o: r the] t A PLAN OF CAMPAIGN. R. BRYAN said to a World correspondent f yesterday : ' “Our plan of campaign will ' be to carry every State in the Unton.” ' Bxesllent! | _ Om the dasts of the vote of 1996 Kato ie Repub Mean by nearly 50,000 plurality, litinote by 142,408, | Mageach setts by 173,265, Pennsylvania by 295,072, | _ Wiscoasin by 109,612. | Om the fesue made prominent that year New | | York went against Bryan by 268,469 plurality, | Dwelve States, with 144 electoral votes, were lost | te the Democracy over 1892 | Mf Me. Bryan could reverse these results he! Would be a recon!-bren\er for al! time | The point for Mr. Hryan to remember is that | WHhout the electors! votes of New York and cer tain of « sympatheti: ip of States his election fo impossible. Wil! he persiet in minimizing his Chances in this direction by {nsistouce on the fatal Populist money issue of four years ago? ° JUSTICE TO MR. COLER HERB ie nothing on the face of the Nehed charges against ny ler ( i to disturb the general belief in bis honesty . ie Mr. Coler is paying | w * yeiognomy " The play is of eight ppearing In It marked official activit public service His ‘Vestigation is a5 prompt and expected of a man of bis cour The Evening Worl be! HE] INFLUENCE 3 honest man. |) ur . deal i 3 pe pure weetly good she Is, t ¢ d h * above you! 5 earliest and mort th: att ces ud she ts q Prenat by Mr Mav x 4 Yet let thie ught your sad tb N * A wom ft ner lover BRAKES DOWN ON THE AUTOS. © 4" pat me a tee ; TIRRED by () vent t ‘ ek ot a x Mr. W. K. Vandert S add ra rae Palmer, In the Century ten days in alties ! “inte ereeerecnreercenees for overepeeting e pub ! fs an exce! to put the end Mr, Vanderilt in HE ¢ T THE friend to with the “UMBRELLA Jonineer over me,” ae that? r ellow e . ie borrowed my evening @ Wealthy offen ke Mr. V k © get caught ned when he asked for my um and sport. 1) t elf Hu ‘We guess auto ‘ Umite in Newport derear \ : yuu. 1A) ae ter with making a few y s ¥e bour eathes to a like reforin (n Now > Notad m trying kee wn getting spotle t Out the speed or rel f W )F 1784 D SED ‘Wrought in the spirit of ay FRANCE AND Ou RE NGINE S, f HE French M Yankee engines we do not apprec eholee of such efficient piay of excellent publi As We over here know o to be the best Be apology. To ws @echinery looks like a « taste and judgment. 4 However, if France \s sensitive nbout tt—which “ @he needn't be, as Muvsia and Pngiand buy our 7 engines, too—why, let her brace up and make bet Ger trom monsters at home. Then she will blow ' ' tives | & French Go ij come into . } ABOUT f 1 alw sbet didn't ” am ; : ny w , and | Oi” sicssme Be fies, | ponseas a friend who at various intervals is affiicted r ona, who ts the proper my susie th lateodues ae @ tae welt aus “ae the Nettle Then why wasn't I born before brother with sudden outbursts of temper which it requires all, . Willie? my kil and energy to quell. By nature he is of the) "Seeasen, 1 ee ee ire a see , Dest temperament, devoted and condescending, and in, The best man or one of the ushers should attend to| A small boy recently vistted a church for the first eT ee as at cane hae sol L the introductions hingedly hang & pg neg readers, can I totally abolish these heartrending out- “L Just went into @ big cupboard and sat o aaa LORE A oe Should He Ask Leave to Callt . : ” ——-— fe Mt proper for a gentleman + ' a m®: may call on her, or should he wa What are plentes** asked little Clara of her six-| +. a, pace Pry agg: ony ae him to call? jyear-old brother, “ a ¥ _ The moles are trying to undermine my garden. It te your place to ask permission to cal! upon (he | of Mpertor knowled spending the nave ered ia several ways to run them away. | young lady. It ie not considere! good form for «| 89 in the woods’ . |some other euburbanite please suggest some gure plan young lady ever to take the Initiative, and tt would, “Hut what do they pick?’ queried Clara, lof getting rid of them? T. C. BOWERS, be a breach of etiquette for her to invite a man to! “WHY. they plek nics, of course,” was the reply Lyneb’s, N. ¥. call upon her, A married woman or a girl's chap- > ¢.9 : . fron ts privileged to do so | When mall Harry did anything naughty his mother ; punished him by making him stand in the corner for & Wore o= Mayen, | Ave minutes. One day after an experience of this kind | tht Btttor ot Tee Rvesiag Acknowledge All Invitations. ye sald: “Mamma, when | get big I'm going to build | Ignorance of the law excuses ne one. [ts the case you refer to, 4 winter. | rene ae Vt die air, 199 degrees below sero, THE WORLD: .D: THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 14, 1900. Brae, GREAT TRUSTS ARE ALL LIKE HYENAS « By John Swinton. WRITTEN EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE EVENING WORLD. wh used for the profit of amal! gangs of letter on the crushing of the robber trust® and they are sufficient for that purpose if the courts, may be able to got it nowhere else Take ae am am mor ‘The just appiteation of the idea would noone to interpret and apply them (hat way. Bul Jampie the Ice Trust. Who suffers by the enormeus leniarge the liberties of man, make his life more $9494-600666600660-4606400006060060@ © Thorolt Rogers has said the laws are applied |increase in cost? Why, the people who toll from satisfactory, lighten his labor, cheapen the com: | y courte which are very soliciious for the rights of) break of day to nightfall, and «ven longer, to ear @ | modities whieh are om fal to him, lessen his suf “perty though careless of the liberties of the)dollar, And the grand ‘barons, who live in pelacss |ferings and promote his welfare to an extent which The court rules on all our interests, detors |land handle millions of dollars, smile and keep om tm he hae never yet known ening go and making the meet of the resources of | ) our contentions, and ts, therefore, absolute | creasing the price | think a the vice-president nature, re of mechanism and the industry of | But. the wronef use of the existing an oligarchy, with p wt to of the trust who only the other day said, ‘What éo man. | trusts ne any of these A breath from the ould | we care for the public or for the poor? We net In epeagtve thus, mart you! | referred to the prover (hing os while 4 e trusts into a fading reminiscence.” exist for them, but ives.’ That ts as much theory of « trust and to ite prime use as @ concentra. ening that they Mr. Robert Webster, let re repeat th®)as saying they don't care who suffers as long aa wwestion of the late Bow: undred ed, “What are they get the tis, Nay, nay, John Swinton, I do are worked solely the pr e leon” It woud © time had come ‘The tyrannton! (rust te growing ever greater, while) the masses are failing ever more under ite domina- tion (ON SWINTO! You need not believe, however, tat euch te te be : A the case forever Mr. Robert Webster, of thie city, has sent to this aos when the “beast grew nd man grew ever ine and | Our yeare, as though that un by angels or by persons of angelic na-|mising of force and the methodizing of production. ture. They are run by men wo are always on the| A hyena is organized upon the lines of law, order lookout for gain, The trust does not care for the|and beauty; yet Rockefeller wouldn't like the beast public, and why should it? Has {t not full power/to get after his baby, if he happens to be the pre when It absolutely controls an Industry? And thus, or of such « thing. being In absolute control, may {t not quote ite own for the matter now under notice, I say prices, eitogether disregarding the consumer? If a| though the prime idea of « trust, or ine logte trust charges twice as much for an article as the|!s sound and solid, the uses to which“it te often buyer had paid before, can he help himself? Of|by the buccaneers of our time are pernicious course he cannot. He must have that article, and | detestable. DEPUTY MARSHAL OF HAWAII Here is an Iilinols woman, Mies Lillie J. Ray, whe will accompeny her fa’ Daniel A. Ray, Juet ap- pointed United States Marshal of Hawall, to Home- lulu to act a his chief deputy at a salary of $1,600, sre not . individuals at the expense of the all-enduring ® you going to do about itt" [not agree with you that trusts are good things, im (| militons 3 Next let me give a show to a correspondent, Mr |deed I don’t, I think they are the most abominable T must hope that these words loom plain enough ® Samuel C. Feigne, who is one of those of my reader#/and accursed things that ever took root tn thie Many an {dea that mi 4] in tte nature ma 4 who have misunderstood the tntent of some passage® country, and I only pray for the day when they will be rendered baneful by ite * ® of these articles on trusts. | be totally wiped out of existence. Many a law is perverted egal maysters z ® After my statement that a“ logte-| So much for Mr. Veigns. Many a« true pr ¢ hie been falsely adminis | % 4 ally ‘ syndicate de Now then, my esteemed critic, f you have Gaiam tered ” » and economize power the trouble to peruse the four articles on the trust Mal ¢ gress have | ¢ z very sorry to say that | most heartily dis-|question that have appeared here since the fret one been selaed t " « istee with the worthy writer of that sentence, I]of them was printed @ fortnight ago, you must knew Many a ma cause another | @ » Sot only disagree with him, but disapprove of such| that in the sentence you have quoted | was speaking man has ¢ ® « complimentary and mild definition of the words ‘a|of the trust, not as It now exists among us in the Many a& one loean't pay Paul. o 4 st’ That definition might have suited excellently | shape of a hyena, but as a scientific industrial orm According to t d 1 there was a time in @ *® \f the trusts were ‘run’ by angels, But alae! they | ganisation, or a collective agency fer the ecome- é i r more and more 2 FS i a3 Tat WS SS ee GS GER Oh ey ee HAVE A GOOD TAUGH— TWILL TONIC THE BRAIN COURTSHIP IN THE JUNGLE. | THE SUMMER CAMPAIGN OF LOVE _ BEGUN. WE SKIRMISH LINE FIRST ADVANCES ortw QAOER Miss Monk Don't you think It was love at fret sight with us, darling? meeecencenceccce NO CRUSE FOR ALARM ‘sn Ray was a school teacher in springfeld, ML, nty years ago. Then jot Into polities and has held some politica! job ever since She was Senator Cullom’s secretary at Washington when she got the deputy marshalship. ee eee eee = BIRTHDAY LUCK. Friday, June 15. If to-morrow is the anniversary of your birth thie ie the luck the year has in store for you. The year and hour of your birth make no dif- ference: Care te advived in all affaires to-day Avoid changes, journeys and amusements, and look sharp to home affairs. Your coming year {9 not @ favorable one, and care ts needed. You will be too much given to pleasure and expenses and will suffer accord- ingly. Home disputes, sickness and some pos sible notoriety is indicated, uniess great care te observed.—Copyrighted by Sphing Magazine, Boston. Nett ett ett eet 88 ons ee ee =— WHAT A WOMAN THINKS. |’ {a better to be disappointed in love than in mar You rarely convince a women of a wrong opinion by arguing with her. husband 1s usually regarded as tne man who aiways lets hie wife have her own way. If you went to find a great many faults be om the lookout; to find a great many more be on the look fm. Pearls may signify tears, but there ts no woman, however superstitious, who would refuse to wear @ solitaire pearl ring. Bome women in a streetcar behave as if they were the only persons who had a right to be there and the rest were all interlopers. The savage does not consider the time wasted that he epends in idol worship. A true test of a man's politeness ts the way he treats his wife when nobody else | around A NEAT TRAVELLING GOWN. wit AND WISDOM 0 OF BABES. | asked the Bunday- police,” promptly ar (man ETIOUETTE | a # ETIQUETTE. |" 70 THE LETTERSevennis WORLD scale Now Nettle (aged fourh—You told me that ladies should Wants Care for Het Temper, To the Editor of The Bvening World re the peacemakers? endent “The Proper Introductions at a Weddies. 'awere ail boy on the back seat My wife and 1 ure to attend @ wedding My wife ts acquainted wi @ bride-t cu ee ft necessary to acknowledxe tn any form a wed-|a house with round rooms tn {t” “Why are [cor Mayer, whe wan Sey mang yesss op ‘ ro you ming invitation to church only le A.J. |to do that, Harry?” she asked. “Because,” replied the claim he @i4 not know it was wrong to Tt ts obligatory that all invitations to social fune-|tittie fellow, “then there will be mo coruers for my | cure stock in the tone should be acknowledged. There is no exception jchildren to stand tn” and retire those oe i $ Straw Hate May Ne Worn in Mourning. | Cam a man wear & straw bat when in mourning? aH

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