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Wy Go Prom Pupirering Ommpany, Pane tow, es Ton ‘Pad-6@ee ot Kos eo Gecees<Rese Wal! Werte WANTED: A POLICE BOUNCER. , N Bt. Loula women are {nsuited by & mob which the city cannct contro! end which the Governor of Missouri refuses to sulxtue, In New York women are insulted and Gragged outrageously into court by men paid by the city, men weartng the police badge, men whose duty ft ‘sand whone pride it | should be to make the streets safe for men, women nd children by day and by night. Yesterday “Detective” Dinning presented two Girl prisoners palpadly innocent and pitiable tn their grief. Two or three days before “Detective” Glennon, like Binning « man of record tn fale arrest cases, aided freeh!y to his string of women Vietima. Refore the Police Board OMeer Ryan, of the Mercer street station, put wp yeetentay such ao shady defense against charges presented by & Woman he had insulted that President York or @ered information for perjury lodged against the Policeman's witness, Before ovr righteous indienstion enquires too fierce a glow over the St Louts outrages shall we not take steps to eave New York women fro:n the Binnings and Glenoons of the police torre? Is there no bouncer in Mulberry street? HIS morning brought no appreciable change in the Republican situation at Philadel- phia. The New York delegates’ caucus nomi- nation of Woodruff for Vice Preaident was not an earnest of what ta to come in the conven tion to-morrow, It was not an earnest of any thing except that the great game of “Who's the biggest boss?” is by no means played out. Roosevelt oti]! protests. la too much? Hanna #1 reduces language to vulgar fractions, Piatt and Quay scheme fn silence, and the wei! dis! plined G. 0. P. waits, preaumabiy, in eutniasive patience to accept what the victorious bons shal! @ Tt ts to Chis pass that the “national” convention for the eelection of the Republic's chief officers bas come. NOW THE GAS GOES HIGHER 40h | ' squares up and prances look at her husband and waves her hand) sheula / UBT as the [co Trust Impudence has abated | *!th lone days and nights spent in bitter loneliness, | You old biackguard! I'll teach you to| yells back, “Jest come over here, you madly about Bur Wiggs is qu:te as toward the hours, The awful Might is the Go wa # Se Soom After Grands a new outrage in rates confronta the New “rection and rearet LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. leay 1 only wash m'self once @ year! ol snap-dragon—you botied owl, you! courageous: “You only “ome over here, o'er, then. They meekly go indore 'o Death? York householder. Beginning to day, gas! foes up to $1.05 a thousand—a price per mitted by an {!l-/udged law. For about a year gas has been wold tn the city at 66 + Grate per thousand. [t wna a rate caused by war Between competing compantes, but it was not a| Killing rate. Bxperience and investigation have | shown that even at the low price st quoted the | iluminating Guid can be made and sold to a suff lemt profit, This established fact should and probably will be used as the basis of corrective legislation nert Winter, Meanwhile there ie ap- parently nothing for ws to do but pay the bills presented by the newly established manopoly | Reaping 0 careful aye to the condition and read- ings of the metere, lest we be pressed unwitting! y tate making ap to the combine some of the lost prods of the long (-<cen! season A FEW WORDS ON THE BLUSH. FAIR young correspondent on Staten [s]- | and is asking The Bvehing World to tal! her how to stop blushing Now, in the firet place, that ie something which cant | be told And tm the second place, we | don"t think we would tell, anyway Blushing, to put the case unblushing!y, is noth. | 5 to blush for, It is @ process due neither to art BOF to lack of breeding. To the greater number of owe who think they are amicted by it, blushing _ “Blushing te the color of virtas,” says one sage “ff Old, and another declares that “The man who fs not quite a bruie.” So the crimsoning cheek in either sex is esteemed an excellent by the wise. Really, it betokens « high ner- | ayevem, for the physiological explenation of fa that sudden emotions send the blood | $9 the fine network of veins that lice ee-| ‘Beer the surface of the cheeks. in the Jy @uffusion may cccur too often tor But the remedy is not tn any preserip- fome with experience, association Of greater self-; a the world.” fe mere jarringy premature than the £ ot | « a | eee et oe eee 2 ee ee It wee ttméd in the beginaing, but now its nerve People stare at them, sare at the billions of éellars confound things in ways that are confusing. They| If any of my readers can “make a rational guess” fe “hardy as the Nomean lien's.” Ite voice, once which they handle, stare at thelr performances, sare fall to make such Giseriminations as are necessary in| 1 would like to know it. feeble, has been turned inte @ roer of deflance It at the shackles which they eheke in the fase of the @ rational argument, Pee ad | formerty hid in the dart, but now it etalke abroad in community, and otare at the eufferere whese maagied | Por the same reason it ie that we are offered all BREEZY AND STYLISH. \open day It has the money, too, and doesn't care bodies are to be seen on the highway, the names of sorts of ue “remedies” for trusts, “Crush whe Knows it. & good many of whom have been collected by Mr. them out!" “ inate them!” “Kill them off ‘LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. | (eprright, 1908 by the Prose Publishing Company, MY. World) Lue gold, offer what pric © wanting? hi vi the benefite which he @etributes with « lavish hand and hie stable full of trotters finds herself alone and lonely more than baif of the cy tn realises, means wotul halt holiday with hie family, which he allows himself now and then theo the rich man does on his yacht with the gayest party of millionaires, spending more tn time of frugal toll, wedded as much geld as bie wealthy neighber. But he can give her @ mine of the richest, truest, deepest deepest depths in the cogy home-nest, content to be there and giad to brighten the long houre for her by his presence. poor man's heart t# apt to be true, for there are fewer temptations away from wi to women, but It brings tn ite train many « heartache and hour verse and wife are untted te better than a giifed pa! font with (he Family Gory Paper corresponding length ‘Dowsession— tne funny “Georgie THE PRIVATE TRUST'S TERRIBLE POWER # By John Swinton. In the aubject of editors, the eperches at meetings sundry poilticnl piatformae have given me nu proper sireet « ae deep aa a ‘ited of af high aso steeple are begin- ning to realize Lat @ new power which affects their en thing THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY BVENING, JUNE 29, 1900, WRITTEN EXCLUS'VELY FOR THE EVENING WORLD. Ts will net Rereafar be sesessary to abuse these u- APOEEEEE EOE EOF8 ROCHE ROR OD The masses of the people are just beginning to many quarters, inclu qror yee epgdiahuatbdey Pho neflrdor ephedra ald learn what the robber trusts how they do bust can you do it as things are? for the private trusts have ness, why they were creat what means they * second place, how d you go about hh? = halal aaah sie have obtained thetr po they ng their foundations, thelr framework, thelr ne ered te of the public at large velr money r power, the Repubil- oe re eee by sso the country that so many ows of Jersey, the Legtelatures ttone under which there have began to think of the subject. the politica) bosses, and both houses See et cent It in for this reason that there ts @) much coafuston retainers, pave brought « of thought in regard to it, | get letters and tract) aT ead toe ee from writers who have evidently not made a study Sas coe the cone of the various kinds of truete, or of the questions tn- oe oe volved In thelr existence, or of the profound and far- reaching influence they are exercising upon all of us. Many of these writers do not seem wo be aware of the methods by which some of the trusts were buili re manipulated, or the misdeeds which they been gullty Of, or the scandalous, vicious and criminal conduct by which they have gained their | sound theory; after thinking of thi ends. {done, thetr hypocritical pretenses, As the writers here alluded to have not taken the| creed, and their malodorous booty; I say I am dle trouble to acquire such knowledge as |e ebtainabie | peeet to guess that the human intellect te able te | HAD not known until the printing of these articles on “trugts” wae dDegun in The fivening World ho Very strong and widespread Is the ‘The ling Topeka, Now, in the Ges 4 che planks in ‘The trusts tries, hav tnd idem of tt But the letters that I recetve about {t, the tracts and ongress the third place, would tt be the best thing te @a, In of our « ave becom ArRe propor service, ap fay, to reg these worke: thelr own bt power bears whole community considering thelr agency in the direction of medhag ism. the economiaing of matter and force, an@ the of industry; consifering also the baneful rs of the paltry old competitive system whieh they are suverseding? 1 myself am to guebs, after looking at the trusts upon , Including the Inside; after in which they seeing the false anm nterest (hat inult! # of men have come to feel in hie great praction! question. I find that e'en (howe people whose thinking te not over whom they om ail other workere an@ upon the Ife and welfare their present nd thet nto existence K0d while before !* ls complete, but when the time of ne way of which (hey had not been aware | Ite completion shall come, why, then, ae the ol@ song ‘Though it took enape but recently it hee already! about waiting for th the resoures, the elements and the enginery | Tt perhaps. hat are needfoi t» mankind. It grabbed only one| It ie because the hundreds of trusts te about the manners and doings of the existing trusts, | find a way in which the economic idea at ther base and as they have not studied the philosophy of tn-| can be made conducivg to the general welfare and a4. dustry or the han@twork of capital, or the temper of | vantageous 10 the industrious and producing mille our society, or the condition of labor, they are apt to| lone who are now robbed by them. It ts but # guess, occa, hing et firet, but % Rae sow got hold of nearly every- day are nevelties, and rather stunning sevelties, £7 the public mind ts eo greatly bamboosied about i It te the private trust of which I am here speaking. | Henry D. Lioyd. “Down with them!" Buch eriea come te me trom| i THESE JOKES PERUSE, THEY LL BANISH BLUES. HE KEPT HIS PROMISE. AN OUTRAGE. 72 —_. Men of Wealth as Husbands, 4 OTUDIED LAPROmrTU, “Yes, my daughter's graduating eseny will be strictly Impromptu.” “Indeed tT’ “Yea, that's her typewriter you hear now, elicking of copies of the essay for the dally papers.” A DOUBTFUL COMPLIMENT, "' ” Wom tee eee Horee—That advertisement sald “Wanted, of c\agsical music,” and that old rascal ts playing A Hot Time,” “HILS we must el) admit that wealth le « good ing to have we know that the one great essen- nese le net purchasable with may—true love. Wealth can buy many lusuries, surround us with any comforts, but what te ft ef worth if love be tial thing to bi ‘The man whe bas wealth can find much to distract # attention from wife and home A host of con vial compas about him eager to share Club fife has (te own attractions, as hae his yacht He can find eo many pleasures outside of home, te to be wondered at that the wife he has wedde! Here ie & very popular design for a muslin waist, having a bolero and scarf ¥ffect in one. The idea io quite new, ae are also the dainty cuffs. The style is Very effective made in sheer linen and trimmed with deep ecrn lace, BIRTHDAY LUCK. Thursday, June 2’, F your birthday fails on to-morrow this te the luck the year has in store for you. The year and hour of your birth make ne dif- ference: Tt te an evil day, Remain inactive and at tend to duties, Your coming year will bring many misfore tunes, and the heavy hand of hard luck will presse upon you. Domestic troubles, business losses and cares, Anancial reverses with probe able sickness and ment ression. Beek the advice of an astrologer and act upon tte Copyrighted by Sphinx Magazine, Roston. 4 Sammy Loweom—tWeill, she's marvellously tke you! { never saw such @ resemblance Why. If you were to eee her {t would give you & downright shock! me? The poor man has neither time ner money te waste hutmertng Wile fancies To bim ee much money na so many houre of toil And footieh waste he ant in the years to come, ‘The poor man takes more real enjoyment in the DIPLOMACY. Census Teker—What te your age, madam? “TH Juat give him one for decetving me inte accept. Mra Neighbore—Did the woman next door give Ber} ing a position beneath my dignity.” jage? ~ eee te cceeeeeees Consus Taker—Certainly. LOUD DEMONSTRATION, Mre. Neighbore— Well, I'm two years younger than} Pearl—Were (he clown's jokes funny? ehe te. Ruby—Tes, he succeeded in making the Ion roar. eo emec eso +--- THE POWER OF WOMAN’S EYE; WHAT AN INFLUENCE IT H 4 fortnight than he will be able te save in « life He may not be ale te give the wife whem he has ve, worth more than rubles, from his noble heart's The poor man gite by hie wife's sie of an evening A companion In need te @ companion indeed. The 4 out ike neta for him to lure him and family Wealth brings pleasures of loneliness. They learn by bitter experience that the love of one ue, loyal heart t# better than all the gold tn the unt. you ever noticed how two next-) Then Wiggs roars, in perfect fury,| Then Boggs loses all control of himeeit door neighbors have a row? No? Well {fret of all Micawber Wiggs howls ou Then out come Mrs, Boggs and Mrs You come over here, and I'll chaw you ‘‘ome over here,” he rages, as he flings Wiggs, Each gives one commanding p wivout salt—Jeet come over! Boggs off his coat And « humble cot where the heart of the husband ta T Jost my grandfather about one month ago, but 414 ot 60 In mourning for him. Now I would itke to g@ to & party. Would !t be proper for me to go? AB It would be in better form for you not to go te & Come over here, if you're a man—come over!™ Then Boggs answers: “You feome ever here, then!” Lasre jem (idde7 writes tor The Come over!” And Wiggs shrieks, “You th come over here! You're afraid, you old curmudgeon, youl” 9 all; you Jest come over and—and-— and tha i bite bits off you! and he trembles clous from head to heels with rage. quarrel. LITTLE ONES LEARN MUSIC WHILE AT PLAY. x alm [ND eRe Ia il all ‘door Thats how two fero. Evening World by arrange. \ neighbors generally SORTING PIGS’ BRISTLES. N example of patient industry te the sorting of bogs bristles as It ts carried on at Tlentain, | China Each one of the bristies nas to be ploked | DENSITY OF HAIR. AIR-HAIRED people usually possess between 140,000 100,070 hairs on the ecalp, the number being about the same for man and woman. Dark- eyed people have, on an average, about 10.000; while red-haired people are sald to have only 9.000 hairs, But the latter apparently possess one great advan- tage in the fact that they retain their hair better, seldom becoming bald. DEVICE TO LOCATE SOUNDS, ! ut, measured. and placed in the bundle of hairs of — OF “GEORGIE.” THE AUTHOR | [> dt Lo holo } e } of ° (2365 8 + 23 @ Fs KPTPOARD CHART. WITH OteKe IW POSTTION ON LINES AND SPACES LINS OF BASS FTAFY AND THIRD PACK OF TREBLE STAFY WAVING BEES SLIFPED TO Rave Pau thier TION ALSO SHOWS THE DISKS IN POSITION ON LEGER LINES PEED EAAEDROEEI ? HE PERRET ED An apparatus for teaching music to Kindergarten children hae been devised by a Western genius. It consists of @ plano keyboard, @ box of lettered, fig- ured dial | Yalue of the different notes used im music. The ciefs ‘and the number of lines tm the staff are taught by | means of the chart and the colored disks. The chil- + & box of varlcolored time sticks, and dren learn to place the diske properly by means of rhymes like this In groups of two and groups of three, The Diack keys now we'll always see; ‘The white keys, we notice, stand in a row, the tous time values, Whole notes are represented by sticks of considerable length, if notes by sticks just halt | And the names of all we soon will know, a» long. quarter notes by sticks one-half the length of | By making & fort of game out of the study the the half-note sticks, @. The chikt then actually | pupil soon learns the principies of plano-playing and makes Yor himself pictures exactly representing the of music in general. THIS QUEEN LOVES FLOWERS | PPP D PR ee, \* HE Queen of italy loves flowers “Her Majesty i TOO LATE | [ ais athe chon eh Rn recently, open carriage which 114 ¥ dead Love came to me and said: 3 ye ae ae = bod Mbegriadicry- 8. E. KISER. H z “God gives me one hour's rest, peoMegy ll * ae 4 To spend wpon the earth with thee; tle the Readers of The Evening World who have enjoyed z How shall we spend it best?” ~ payee sketches which have been| ® b4 be turned to printed from time to time wil! be pleased to look “Why, as of old,” | said, and so crank Within reach upon *he features of the bright young man who writes! We quarretleg as of old; treremitted pe Mr. Kiser i¢ on the staff of the ¢ ; But when I turned to make my peace, ‘That one short hour was told. —Atephen Priitpa, Herald. Besides being « popular humorist & firet-clase port. The “Georgie” sketches have Deen put into book form, They will make Gne Teadlng. i RGR 2 quill :