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— wo “ _— ° — Se — ——— a THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, JUNE 25; 1900, : TE WC HONDA JUNE SEs = he HH THE QUEER THING ABOUT TRUSTS|WIT AND HUMOR OF THE DAY. th pa geneaanl ‘Mien Sadi Ae 4 ei es | THE PERFORMING ELEPHANT SWINGS CLUBS. Sessa ge tactns tn re eeee | 0” governing trusts are able to exercise at loamy 1 do pe know how many } undrede of sues bed bd both Houses of ones sw the Brecutive Y, JUNE 25, 1900. pos rpg gg riccleage iA mt pte aA a Sa a —— F wee NO. 14,188 i setae Are Bo with the other ruling m csebo of ho paces. a ‘teceptad evy heavy eamessments upon the | try the ters turn out f Mice the po! a) yen will anuot privilege azation which thay pose which they are authorized to go into your see the community Suppose, for example they 6 or wheat, or # any other moerity, # se the price of beef, » r oll, oF tten thetr own treas- | 4 9 things must pay | ® r wo and to make you pay toll upon whatever you eat, drink, wear or use in any way The people are not e4 (> thelr counclis. ‘They eannot vote upon not allowed to take part tn any ne representation tn the trusts. The words of the trusts, which are few, are thome of the Bugiieh , pay, pay!” ai] different unter the old system of business competition, which possessed no privilege or power [as that of the monopoly truste, If, under the old system, any @ealer put ap his separate from that and stronger yet I hope that the foregotng statement ts plain enough, and that It can be understood by every one who may ‘ read it In Webster's Dictionary there are number of ‘efinitions of the word “tax I not only a eum f money asseased by “government,” but It may be 4 imposed upon persone by @ “corporation, society or company,’ and “eo « private association may lay a prices, he waa liable to be “knocked out" by @ ax on {te members for the of the assoctation omnpetttor . So says We If any owner of a factory aid that thing, he was ‘The taxes . pretty sure to hear from the owner of @ rival factory. than those | If any coal-mine 4)3 it, another coal-mine bose would invade hie market Under the disappearing system of competition, there was more or jess of @ chan. i} Under the trust system, fone; they are but “small potawes and few tn « hill.” 1 aay that it | very serio htt to at the : i doubt that the agen thie year will ‘Treasury at W The truste have unrestrained power #@ tasatton. ances are ‘argely ‘They fire ly of any parttoular kind of wares of goods and then they fix the price hat moet be pat¢ for such wares or goods There JOHN SWINTON, unchecked power of taxation to an tr * body, heck a em in the iaw PEO reTETetrt tote of to @ number of irresponsible bodies, described as There te no ch on them tn the thing that used | truste. to be called ) r in thome an- trusts ‘They have broken down that prime eafe-| These boties have become vo formidable, 90 extor- tquated and demand,’ which were | guard of American rights: "No taxation without |tlonate and lawless that unless the people can find establish a imo form go In our times and | representation some me rbing them they are sure to find ry » check at all upon) The Government itself possesses but @ limited] yet more t means of curbing the people, For, them ‘power’ of tamation. Tax bile have to be approved’ "the power to tax le the power to destroy.” weuta | “GEORGIE'S” PA oi EARLY MARRIAGES, 467 SE0 they are a lot of Tawk goin on About mar-| consent of paw and wanted Him to forget about It rid maw told paw t That's whare | IN GETTING, GET OUTDOORS. T'S a long while to nm, There's a of time to talk about that. let us counsel t When together now over something nearer ¢t Ps * paw says. season. Lot us apenk of getting outdoors, Wie oor mn people say folke ot to There |» more outd } yal arried Soon and Bome say they Ottent i ie Wall.” p sed, “I don't Mlatm them That's the ta J trying to get me [ else in this world enough | ft grate Trudiie with peepie these Iays Thay put It town harted by Saying houses be built to change ¢ ¢ of affairs t ff too Long. Look at Our patrunts, the way No. He wa And it Is so because outdoors nore necessary 4 yoost to Do You tdn't see Them watttog Around till ik tn His hand and @ 81 take medasun fir the Hoom mut Tleaum they Got to Havin uve yung Dream becoa. !t Ge Sian thay were afrade they mite mc — Mistake, No, Hecus my patrunte mite be Greavun for thetr ohild. , | The furst Time thay felt Like getting married thay “And dear olf randmaw, bow she yoost to Try to kot, and Lote of times Hefore & man would Get old | make me Glad by lettin me Rat doe nuts thi 1 would than anything but food. You can't get too much t of it, other things being e This ts partion it larly true at this hot the of year when the at-/ mosphere indoors so quickly loses the qualittes of| i life and refreshment. \¢ Outdoors |x full of lots of things besides inapir-| 4 way to bott! ing sights. If you could discov it apd put it on the ma * you would have a natural remedy for al! sorts of {ls which would surpass a]! the nostrums of man's concoction as ’ greatly as the sun surpasses Mr. Eilison’s best |» Bay : \ \ wowcnenwenwee incandescent burner 1 - , “Wher @e you think of our society ladies? ested ~ «| the hestess of the Iiterary ion, in whose homer she waa giving @ reception. “Parton me, madam," he repiiel. “I am enly « +) Writer—not qn art critic’ "HOW MEANI “A New York critic says there are 6,000 pergons in thte country who could have written ‘To Have and to Hold.’ “Oh, yes; that's the old story, They eould have written ft if they'd had a mind to—but they hadn't the mind.” ed to see a little newspaper ‘ about “The Secret of Queen Vietoria’s Vitality at Bighty-one?’ Well, it has ited & parasol inside of whi & paragraph velling ules of life laid down for in. The fan e worked | Her Majesty by Sir WilMam Jenner many years| "ple mechaniem. A recipreeating rod runs along qT rules call for the handle and connects with « gear whee! connected Gy Teese rules cal! with the wheel at the end of the fan, and ts Simple and careful diet, regu'arity and OPEN-AIR| eptnning by a single pull of @ ring near the paraso! HQ WOULDN'T HAVE BENUPS TRUNDLD BEDS LN THE HOUSE TO GO ROUND, LUKE. handle. The owner thus obtains shade and breexe at | UOCBOON wed NAST NANANIOPOOGT CONN IGOTOIIO D901" : 1 ot bel: the same time enuff to vote he wouldn't Have enuff trundle Beds in| get sick at the etummick and Haft to go te Bed, and And the last is very oo Np = ee (he Houre to go Round. Did ft Hurt Them te get) When I would upset the jam om the Pantry Gheifs t ost on the g > " Ei | Goats pestiue, "ane cts that ooo way tve.| WHY HE KEPT QUIET ABOUT IT | crerin ‘i’ te ‘Yigg manires Tast So wall co| sed wep eat teling sbew wenn ure evel Oo 0 But she gues outdoors that she may live to the AVID HARTTM was a good horse trader, but | lefore they Got to be the Hed of @ fambly. My Uncle Till I would Get to feeling Bad and Hatt to own up recent transaction in horseflesh shows tha! | lan got married when He wee Ate Teen and hie wife! That's why I aay the Boy that Hessent enny Grand Have you char story going arou THE FIRST SHE SAW. utmost, ah there are others who know how (o get the lone | waa Mfteen Her next Burthday, but she new How to/ pairunts le Going to Get robbed of his Burthrite.” e end of a horue trade Trim down « man's troweers to Boy's size all Rite,, “Yes,” maw anserd, “you sed that Once before, Let us take up 2 miracle of outdoors. There| Severn! weeks ago @ resident of Memphis saw a fine | just the etm | but why fs the boy egoing to Get robbed of Itt was Thomas H. Benton, of Missourl, who served | horse which he thought he wantet He located the It makes me @a4 whenever I think how the Ohfl-| ‘“Beoos they ain't agoing to Be 7 more Orand- tm the United States Senate when it was a house veper end sated the aay “ gered ~ Ks reply. | dren oh pig be Get Horn tn the Dim feweher| palrunts after white,” ~ cg Deepie keep on ot hi e fter looking the anima! over clorely and trying her] wil! robbed of burthrite. walting tll they reach Years Diecreshun Before Of giants. Rigtrtee can i 8 ee spend he eanetubed it: was & goed trade, and without] ‘1 dewt ose Hew i'l be Mad fee thee Sereevs| pevtne married. @posen @ man gets married when Statesman elites. Die bs more ago wrote a check for pi The nex! | weeor thetr parunta Don’t get married yung,” maw) He's forty and Then hie boy Watts ttl! Ie's forty too, as & conqueror of disease and of threatening| day he found that the mai 4 ae a bat. | told Him What Bho te His poor chi agotng to 8! doom? wut thie did not hinder t from her | “You wouM.” paw says, “if a Wommun could Look| ing a Grandpawt The turet Thing wo When Benton was twenty-five years old he had) ftnera! appearance He dr animal for sever’! | chet ike men with Reewuning powers and see things | keepagotng the Way they are now Grandpalrunte'll be’ the hackneyed cough, the ewests ant other) Verks, and eueceeded in a vg the admiration of | Where are (hey ennything That {s pleraunter for a| a Next Tinakt race of People and That's no way to je hackney ' aga, \ oa: nother lover ot horsefiesh, who made a proposalsto | voy than Having @ grandfawther? Boys that never! make the world @ Nobuller and Bett are. What Symptoms of that dread consumption which had | popehase Hfad enny grandfawther don't no What thay mist.| fokes ot To do t Get married yunm. Marridge ts Like Killed bis father, three si#ters and a brother Momphian, “I gave one-fifty, Put! (ook at me when I was « Littel shatver. My paw) a Dose of Caster of enny Way. The longer you think He—You mustn't belleve everything you hear about me. Ghe-I never hear anything about you except what j7ou tefl me. Nevertheless he ed a < any under Jackson|! yer for onea’axty-five. | cat co hammer the life nearly out of me when | would about tt the worse K esems and the more you gures — for the War of 1812. Hin d r, the widow of rospective owner looked acimal over and | rorget that He told me not to Do things, and ft offen! you won't take ft weewere USUAL WAY, ications . ‘ ded he had a bargain, Me paid over the mon makes my Hart ake when | look back and Think how) ‘The way to Do te shut your eyes and (nip {t Down) pigge—Ji Mngeria th ieee 20ne ©, Fremont, bas re oa ' he animal wae unbar |’ pad to sneak in thru the Kitehon when I would be| without Thinkin. That's my motto !o [ite Ma awe lingering rather long over Be cup} Bhopman—Here tsa nice thing tn revolving beet Rappened to him tn fhe service ; Hid was to run agaiost &| oct Swimmun oF fishen all Day without the ald or| E, in Chicago Times-Heraté. | Digge-Yee; and there wilt be a famtly jar whem he} sre —— a Being accustomed to walking, he gave up hie horse na then . — ———— —$—_——— ———— | geta home. : » are those revolving bookcases? to men jess able to walk. Al the tay's close ‘ ell over @ derrel. 7 mt day t " ' I thought they called them ciroulating Mbrartes found himeelt tn prot tration, an, having | DOYS" cme back to the Memphien wth blond in b THE SEVENTEEN-YEAR LOCUST’S ea Brought few clothes, was ribbed down after @ dip in| ere ‘ Jatehatetadatatatbatedatatedata totatetatabaAtatatitataat babel NOTHINO CAN MOLD IT. ‘Colonel, you know the mare you sold met” he be ‘oa failag ve ‘ Rishi be rah ‘ "a eo aly | 60D. "Weil, ahe'e stone bitit | | Mo recepcacie has ever been made with sufficient Wb Vigorous exercise in the oun, the sleeping in t rl t,” reptted th ol, with an easy afr. |. | stvength to resist the bursting power of fresen water, TO TH? mn air, thé plain food and constant r 1g down | “You didn’t way anything to me about ft," sald the |'y ~ ——- Senetags. though be Aid not have the word er, is! tae re wii 8 ly AN EVENING GOWN. EVENING WORLD Joined to an object In life brought about sueh healtn| “Well, al you fee Ne peer ag eg it that never éuri LS he D low whe sold ber to me didn't tell me a! it kage uring his whole life did my father dis fast conataded that he éidn't want |t knows.” Yeo tenté Raise ¥ wid aiueki He had discovered for himself the cardinal points ee ee eee oe eneee. Sad Sever hel tag ? return; the mest equabie health, the most re- js ‘Yeloing otrength, and his brushes were te him the ON OATH 3 intr of lite ITH pretty oaths the while she swore | e Outdoors always work as positive She loved m t, she loved H acles as thts (Oot, Beate ived cnunnae hn The wromtiing ten ar porary ’ EVOLUTION OF THE'WGEVED (GEN-YEAR-OLD LOCUST. BS wy me and died of effects ‘They toll the truth, the eth .|* | doing wane ob the arate we ‘ LEB FAIRCHILD —; | The seventesn-year joousts are around again. Buger.| within « day or two, it wriggiee te the eurtace and | Dg ae. 4 dos | *titlows people see ail sorts of troubles in the air when ‘finds s pups of shell coat of mati-into which it) more if people will get out into it all they cao|” pth dad cht 9 fe Reeth Bs he cteada septendectm appears, but entomologists de- crawls through « hole in the back It is then as big) majority. and open windows to It the rest of the time jare him @ harmiese creature that eate up no vegeta- as @ black beetle, The grub then makes ite way back | id ‘ 6 € A NEW GOLF SEAT. om and almply itves by absorption, as do butterfiies, | up the tree to the spot from which it dropped, and | > There's & good deal of nonsense tn ctroulation | without injuring the source of its nourishment, which there, in a day of two, it throws off ite shel! and begins | i he cone | \s sap from the reote of trees. | locust life, whieh laste fourteen weeks The female! Seventeen years befor® the lofust appearee little grub cieada lays #0) eqge and then dies. The eggs are laid irope from an oak of apple tres, falls to the ground | in oblique holes sawed by the female in the twigs; ond burrows ite way @ few feet below the surface, near|ten or twenty eggs are laid t each hole in forty about draughts. Of course, it isn’t right to aft and ————y get 4 chill by having the wind blow straight soroms the beck of the neck. But !t is a posttive 1; i Er Gin never to let the wind blow through the house the tree's roots, In emactly sixteen years nine months, | minutes {f @ girl to th absolutely at all. A draught of air properly applied fushes te pleases for herself, ime in the the indoor atmosphere just as a burst of water ~” time fm the lid 3 il flushes « dirty street. It may leave a sprinkling a in odd corners. But it removes an army qf microbes and germs Lat tm the outdoors as sm eosuntinl and daily tmetrument of housecleaning. if ? BIRTHDAY LUCK, ——e Tuesday, June 26. j r reer ee eee ee ee eh ee F your virthday falls on to-morrow ite ts the luck the year has in store for you. The year and hour of your birth make no dif- ; ference It te somewhat favorsdie for social matters, and you oan journey with ty Look well to finances, however, and tal 1 risks. Your coming year promises beth good and evfl, with the laifer more strongly in evidence Pay strict attention to your Amanctal matters, | avotd costly pleasures ant much will be al- This Summer seat for piagee or sitting-room te of! | cored. “As you sow, #0 shall you reap.”"—Copy. ‘Walk o whole ivt, and if you want to walk for | @° wp and ese the brown and healthy a Workmen adding tw> great tron arches |; From ot h Bicom from Joy's low-bending bought Qupld, drop 1 kiss—and now, Sweetheart, here's a health to thee, Drink che draught, Sweetheart, with met —Clarence Urmy. PPO CH Fete ree ret FOR CANARIES, the canary or any other bird kept SPT OE OHHH HOES oeseee ’ Positive pert! to the house. | willow, with denim upholstery, the feature being the |" righted by ing Magasine, Besten. whisking the gust | caddy bage, whieh finish off each arm. ‘The willow is (Tie fe aaa me SPORE OOEEE LED DEED OEE be ree Re Ree cory dhe A se be li o ine oe ehal. im the Deak, ihe food of «| stained green. Easy rs come tn eame Cosign tessher-a pene ¢ . HIGH WASH LINES. @rongest sentiment of the Turk is his reverence | salloens are weed for drying linen In Parts laundries, dl nee Ee Bors eet in ber meme Eiveniboo frame’ as attached too