The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1905, Page 16

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by the Press Publishing Company, No, 59 to Gt Patk Row, New York ‘et the Post-Omice at New York us Second-Class Mall Matter, re lessee weneNO, 16,891, ‘THE CAUSE OF THE RUSSIAN PEOPLE. ce or to waste more men and treasure in a ruinous war, the Russian s rings with angry denunciation of the Government, At last the gag tas been torn off and St. Petersburg officialdom hears plain truths deti- Spoken, The Czar is not attacked by name, lemned and threatened. “Representative government” is the common cry. “The war caused bandage to drop from the nation’s eyes,” says the Slovo, the Grand ¢ Michael's organ, “The abyss is now visible and the nation cries The bureaucracy has had its say and has crowned its work of nal shame and humiliation. ‘The Japanese have not conquered the lan people, but an incapable and servile government of bureaucrats. hen follows a plain threat that once in the history of Russia a new sty was chosen by the Zemsky Sobor. @l@ M, Suvorin in the Novoe Vremya insists upon the Immediate sum- “umoning of a popular assembly to meet the advancing crisis, The Russ Jaims: ‘Sebastopol struck the shackles from the serfs, and Port sthur, Mukden and Tsu Island should free Russia from the bureaucracy. radical and lower class papers all clamor for peace and internal re- The army in Manchuria Is reported to be ripe for revolt, The work- imen of the industrial centres are planning general strikes, Revolution is ('the air—a peaceable change if the Czar acquiesces, a forcible one if he “Holds out for theories of absolutism. Yet Nicholas palters and shuf- ‘fles, as though his power were not fast fading. But what if Oyama strikes Mukden? Will the Russian people still leave the Czar any choice in rec ognizing their rights? Will they have the manhood to make good the » demands and threats they have been uttering for the last four months, or will they still suffer a weakling monarch to decide their fate from his prison palace of ‘’sarskoe-Selo? A i LIFE INSURANCE, Of the eight billion dollars of life insurance in ithe cltles of the United States New York has over a quarter. There is no community fn the United States where life insurance is so universal and where the aes people are so vitally affected by any extravagance in its management rorany uncertainty in its returns, y wo The opportunity to invest small individual savings is much more ~ Imited in New York than in smaller communities. New York real estate is so valuable that comparatively few men can put their savings ijnto the ownership of their own homes, Small business investments of ‘assured security are also proportionately less. Thus savings banks and ‘life insurance have become almost the only safe means of putting by $mall sums as protection against the future. ‘Savings banks in their investments are carefully restricted by law. {Their management is also regulated as that of a trust fund both in spirit “and in fact, Such a thing as a savings bank spending 90 per cent, off ‘the income from its investments in the administration of its affairs is hardly conceivable. Yet this is what the Equitable Life Assurance Society eid last year. Even more than a savings bank fund should life insurance funds Ee carefully protected because the money in a savings bank is the prop- of the living, subject to thelr watchful guardianship, while the assets a life insurance company are the property of the heirs of the dead, re WOMEN AND GOLF * ‘As the American women golf players successively go down to defeat the contest for the women’s championship of Great Britain there is the lation that they have yet creditably represented their native land sn the links across the sea. Behind the British golfing woman, as behind ie velvet turf of the Oxford college which excited the American visitors’ dmiration, there are centuries of endeavor by confrast with the two iWecades during which the game has flourished here. | But that so numerous a delegation of American women golfers could found qualified and ready to cross the ocean to enter into competition the championship furnishes gratifying evidence of the extent to sh American women have taken to golf seriously. The publication lAssociation revealed a surprisingly full lst of entries, The amount of | @ésultory feminine golf indulged in without aspiration for championship ‘bonors has become very great. What it is doing for the improvement of féminine physique and | perves and poise requires only a glance around to discover, GRADUATE CABINET MEMBERS, © Yengage in corporation activities In New York, He arrives by a route now me well travelled. What to do with our ex-Presidents may remain a nized, hgh finance. What the business college is to the mercantile house and the school of technology to the millor the mine, membership in the Presi- _ dent's official family is to executive place in the business world, And Cabinet members eligible for these post-graduate prizes, — ‘The People’s Corner. ation of Relationship, tor of The ivening World: ‘t relation {s @ first cousin to a ousin’s aon? Also, what rolation sg, firat cousin's pon to a first cousin's yon ARTHUR 1, ousin once removed. Second against Sunday baseball that will stana the test of @ lawsuit well conducted, the crushing of personal liberties, LOVER OF FREEDOM, town," The Evening W. ne incorrect to Canal Commisston, No, 42 | 4 Broadway. ) the Wditor of The Eventing World: here should I make appilcation for ition on the Panam nal, and re oan I got particulars regarding of the work, New York, fitting terme? Interchangeable Tiekets, To the Fattor of ‘The Evening World: Who can suggest more M. KF, ‘Toe Subway and the one management, nae Outs snes, falr and logical tha or 0! 9 Event tickets should j have the people b -| that a su mart from baseball grounds be- on the “L" nes were being pinyed on | subway, not Sunday the only day thousands of young and Tanarius, | are unde <uke and be good tlcket on the fe t should or an ' and {t would be conventent for au buy a string of tickets good on cit Lin Let the red tape be out out and on both While the Czar wavers between two counsels, whether to sue for) ¢ But the autocratic | & of which he is the personal head and preserver is scathingly con- | ¢ * swiftly in Manchuria and overwhelms Linevitch as he did Kuropatkin at | ¢ week of the season’s handicaps of the Women's Metropolitan Golf | ‘ » Mr. Morton, following distinguished precedent, leaves the Cabinet to lem, but the manifest destiny of ex-Cabinet officers is now well | ¢ The Cabinet thus seems now to have become a finishing school for | ¢ “Uncle Sam continues to provide ungrudgingly the tuition which makes | ' ‘Letters from Evening World Readers ‘There 18 no wrong so hant to bear ag| Dishes “Uptown” and “Downe| Many people use both roads, | ‘Welder DOODHODH?E SSOHHHOGOHHOE DOE LOSLOGH EOF SHPLIEGOS : A FrickK-a-See! By .J. Campbell Cory. 8020009 D0OSES The Equitable’s “Biggest Three,” Who once cut such a dash, Now wriggle while the Frick-a-See $ Fries out their unearned cash. vod cs June PHOVOLOTI SHESHHSOSOHD enin ite SOOGODZOTOSN ore ih 1905. __ The Trimming of Little Tim: ° —e 4 e——--_ A Vitascopic-Stenographic Interview withthe Pregt- dent of the Board of Aldermen in Which It Is Shown that a Crushing Blow Has Been Delivered at Our Civic Liberties and We Never Knew It till Now! By Roy L. McCardell. merly called WHAT is your name? A. Timothy P, Sullivan, ter 1own as “Bozton Tim,” but now generally Attle Tim,” Q. Waat ts your official position? dent of the Board of Aldermen of New York City, But what's the use? Q. What do you mean by that? Why, didn’t you hear of the outrage Now York City has suffered at the A. IT am Presl- hands of a Republican Legislature and a Republican Governor? Q. No; what is 1t? A. Well, I don't wonder at “Big Tim” Sullivan wanting to quit Congress and be a State Senator again. If tho “Big Fele low" was up at Albany this wouldn't have happened, fl Q. What has happened? A, Why, we are being deprived of home rule What is the use of voting here in Now York? The Legislature deprives What's the use of being an Alderman now? i was it? the cltizena of New York of the power of self-government. Who -will Stand between the greedy corporas tions and prevent them ‘plundering the peoplo now since tho Governor elgned the dill that deprives the Board of Aldermen of the power of granting franchises? Q. No one seems exo'ted over it tnt you. <A, That's what makes meiso blooming mad! What's tha use,of being an Alderman now? Q. What was tho use of being;an Alderman then? A. Look how we kept the Port Chester Railroad out.at New York because they did not come to us “with clean hands,” Q, Was there no “dust” on their hands? A, Never you mind. ‘hey did not mean business, Anywaye they didn't do any. Q. Wasn't it generally thought that the Board of Aldermen “held up” : | franchises till Murphy got the contracts? A. Yes; but that wasn't proved, Q. You think tlie Board of Aldermen thoroughly honest? A. Didnit wo investigate ourselves? Alderman ‘‘Reggie” Doull asked all the other 3 | and other mémbers of the Board of Apportionment, {s it not? A. Ah! but > | long, POL OLOOED OE OHIO PHIGLI POO ODODE OOOOH DD HOE HOLHODOD G1 GDBDHCLOSHGHLOHOIT DOS HOD HELGOPG IES HOS HHOOOOGIDOOE HD eS Se Nite. » romances from the!/a plece of china.” Ridiculously cheap from the Russian point of view. ee 8 In cloistered academic shades talents Rialto, but none more pleasing which would shine on Broadway, than those of the occasional rise °° 8 @ of chorus girls trom the ranks, Latest Instance of interest that of William Gillette's new leading lady who was @ dancer only two years ago. Oppor- tunity seema always there for the show girl to show the atuff of which sho's made and for the understudy to cap- ture stellar honors on the stars night off, Frequency with which they do so testiNes to remarkable capacity, | “One more setback for the Hall of Records,” , Thereby breaking all pre- vious ones, OERL a Another Maine man to the front, this time a# a possible head for the Equit- able, Rolation of the Maine man to thu Regarding stars, sald by Lady Helen Forbes that “the Lo: erican girl for @ society woman and as a society woman she ehines the bright- est star in @ galaxy of stars.” This testimony of an Englishwoman of title of different tenor from that usually heard from the women who have seen their wearers of coronete dazzled by these bright particular stars, oe) 8 main chance grows closer with every passing year, a) Discovery of another new star by a ee @ Harvard professor, QuosMon whether Btory from London of ‘$3,000 paid for ho has not missed his vocation in hiding| Only @ coincidence that the taking of DODPHOTDDGOODCIDOOD1DO98 HSOOOLOHOOHSDODOHHCHEPOOOHEDY ©4.O04:O.046:06 OOD Ex-Secretary of Navy Morto By Ferdinand G. Long. a Re 5 Se o* - on-n - 4 a o 5 : “To HARLEM IN 15 SECON era, WHEN HI ARRIVES THE RAPID TRANSIT SYSTEM? Said 2 on & the A&A Side rd made the Am-| qj; PLDDOHEHHOSOHHOHHHOOHHHOHGHH HID. Will Manage New Subways. a 60S the census tn New Jersey begins on the eamo day with that of New York, though ‘tho Jersey enumerators will count hundreds of thousands of pereons Who aro citizens of the greater city in 1 but place of residence, ees 1s Feat of the Brooklyn man who fasted for forty-five days seems less herolo jn view of the statement that he had previously accustomed himself to do without meat, tea or coftee, “No graft in Japan,” accoriing to David Starr Jordan, but the Sunrise Kingdom {a still in Infancy as a mod~ ern nation and its development not complete, ean 50] LLG | Q, But how long is the Aldermanic day? ‘A. Never you mind. suppose dishonest men were on the Board of Apportionment? a Q. Isn't that a risk we ran with the Aldermen? A. No, dent of the Board of Aldermen, and they were all as honest as the day is 1 was Prest~ Tho Board of Aldermen never cared who or how long they worked when {t was & question of franchises, We never granted a franchise to irresponsible parties, Q. You think taking away the Al- dermen’s powers a mistake? A, No; its a crime! The Aldermen only tried to do everyboty good, but what thanks do we get? Q. Do you want thanks? A. Well, there are somo other things we liked better, and fortunately we made the Pennsylvania Ratlroad and other big corporations prove they were finan- clally strong before we let them do businoss in this town. But who will Protect the city now? Q. How about the newspapers? A. They are no good! They always roasted the Board of Aldermen, and Alderman Doull {s centainly hand- some! Q, Yes; but handsome fs what handsome does? A, Well, the Board of > | Aldermen always did the handsome thing by those that financially responsible, Didn't we Investigate ourselves? * proved they. were Q. How so? A, That’s for us to know and you to find out! Q. Well, what are you going to do about it? A. We are not:discouraged, ; The Board of Aldermen will continue to fearlessly safeguard the city’s\ine » terest in the matter of permits for peanut stands, and wait till “Big Tim” gets to Albany and there'll be something doing! tal ee i He PUT *TORPEDO-GOATS THE Y euBways 2 Ll The Czar’s “Little Black Man.” : ) Sa, \ 4 Aldermen if they were dishonest or grafters and they all denied it Als, derman Doull is the best looking man on the Board, too! Q. But the power of granting franchises {s left with the Comptroller

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