The evening world. Newspaper, June 6, 1905, Page 10

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York by the Press Publishing Company, No. § to 68 Park Row, New Batored at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Ciass Mail Matter, VOLUME 46. 4b sesseesessseeees NO. 18,005, bbtspseteneesesetly ee Sees SS EQUITABLE ACCOMPLICES. 1‘ Sam Lobley, who stole $27,816 of the Equitable policy-holders’ money, has gone to Sing Sing to serve an eight-year term. What power is keeping Sing Sing and the bigger Equitabsle rascals apart? A full list of the accomplices in the Equitable loot might explain the delay. 1. A full and honest public investigation would reveal the accomplices. FATHERS AND CHILDREN. ‘ Happenings in the family of the average American citizen rarely get fnto print. The children are the immediate concern of their own parents, and, although the problems of family life are of the utmost importance, every father and mother have to work out these problems for themselves, (The news of the day contains many different solutions of individual fam- By, matters. i John Guadio, of No. 412 East One Hundred and Fifteenth street, was ‘out of work. He had five children—four boys and one girl, While he was laid up sick a sixth child arrived—another little girl. Guadio thought fver his inability to provide for his family, and he came to the conclusion that they would be better taken care of with him dead, He took an ok povolver and shot himself in the head. i Joseph Kirchmier, of Pittsburg, has been married twenty years, He feu painter and has worked steadily at his trade. The same day John (Guadio shot himself because his sixth child had arrived Joseph Kirchmier applied to the Pittsburg Health Bureau for a certificate of the births of his weventeen children. He will send a certificate to President Roosevelt and ‘ask for a medal as the record father of the United States. None of his ‘geventeen children is a twin. In the twenty years of his marriage there ave been only three years without an addition to the family. William A. Glover, of South Orange, has a little boy of five and a Hittle girl of three who like to play with matches. They built a bonfire on the bed and were spanked for it. A few days later they set fire to a par- lor rug and were spanked again. On the day that Guadio shot himself the two little Glovers set fire to the house, Finding that spanking had had no effect, their father took some of the remaining matches and burned his children’s fingers to teach them to leave fire alone. The children are scarred for life. The Children’s Protective Soclety has had Mr. Glover arrested. Mr. Glover has been for twenty years superintendent of a Sun- day-school and in charge of the infants’ class, The little children and Mrs. Glover take their father’s part. Morris Smith is a cigar-maker and lives at No. 4 Pitt street. He has ten children. The eldest, Cella, ran away from a cigar factory, where she ‘was earning $0'a week, to go on the stage. Her father had the police bring her back. He says she is better off in a cigar factory at $9 a week, with the prospect of $12, than she would be on the stage with a possibility of $50. a When electrical engineer Dammann returned to his home, No. 35 ‘West One Hundred and Twelfth street, he found his five-months-old baby, Ralph, dead from gas poison. The gas in his flat was turned on. The new law about the quality and the pressure of gas has not yet gone into effect, and as the result of the poisonous quality of the gas his baby is dead and his wife is in the Harlem Hospital suffering from gas poison. John Zeller, a well-digger, of No. 280 Cooper avenue, Ridgewood, quarrelled with his son, He brought home a dynamite cartridge and ex- ploded it in the kitchen, He was the only one that was killed, although the house was wrecked and his son was injured, These are a few of such family happenings. It is only when things Itke these occur that the newspapers chronicle what is going on in the six. teen. million of American families, RAINES LAW CHANGES, |” ‘Atthough the amendments to the Raines law will have no great !m- ‘mediate effect, their provisions are of future importance, Any taxpayer may require the Department of Buildings to inspect a Raines-law hotel ‘und to report whether it complies with the building laws and hotel regula- i Buildings which have been used continuously-as hotels since before are exempt. The object of these changes In the taw Is to weed out from the hotels fuftti all-night and Sunday privileges all buildings which are not fireproof ‘and which in other respects do not comply with the building law’s hotel fication. The enforcement of these amendments would drive out of business the majority of hotels with liquor licenses. The limitation is that ‘ will be taken only on the complaint of a taxpayer, and In the neigh. ‘bo where the Raines-law hotels are most prevalent there is little Ukelihood of a taxpayer complaining, ” {' he Japanese certainly are polite, |. To goon a newsboys’ picnic fg. a good cure for despondency, ' ‘The old Lighthouse Building at the corner of Greenwich and Vesey . streets Is to be sold, Few of the old downtown landmarks are left, The young man who is charged with grand larceny, burglary, bigamy, desertion from the Navy and jail-breaking rivals an Equitable official in the number of charges against him, New Jersey, too, ts taking a State census, If the census were taken during office hours and at the place where the salary is paid New Jersey's Jimereana waicld be much less and New York's much more, The People’s Corner. Letters from Evening World Readers Defends Staten Island Tr it. ‘To the Editor of The Bvening World Jabex Graasmere complains of the low transit to and from Staten Iel- and. The distance from the Battery to George, 8. I., Is five miles. Where ferry-bonts to be found thet blocks from the Stapleton station J.B. FAIR, The Janitor’s Black Lict. To the Haltor of The Evening World: are will go a mile in two minutes?—faster than the ocean greyhounds go on open @ea. And even if such ships were in operation, can they Imagine the risk of collisions around the Battery, where ugh collisions 04 low boats of nies docking th boy. If you happen to be on the Jani tor's black list you can walt for your mall. I have seen a letter carrier hand & bundle of mail to a hall boy who was Playing ball on the walk. The boy did not stop playing, but gave the lettors to another boy to hold. There are letter- boxes in some apartments, but {t saves the carrier lots of trouble If he gives the mail to the Janitor, who thus gets a nice chance to get even with tenants, FLAT TENANT. ALPHA—The Legal Ald Soolety ia at Broadway. Where would the interest on this money come from? It takes me thirty- c the Bostery, to the Ci ca ibid La yw ! + ( Spiv cuRVes A SPECIALTY arariave 56 P98 COS Se CCEPTANCE by the British Aci- jeulogist, Pat Bheedy, “was as good as A his note,” But it was in Jimmy's bonds criciet club at Lenox, with the|in which police and public took greatest understanding that he will play on the | Interest. ‘ team, establishes an interesting prece- o 8s dent, No record of an American diplomat | Togo" now the favorite name for or statesman captaining a nine while in |dogs, Well, perhaps, that Rojestvensky office, though several have graduated |ald not win, ae his name woyld be too trom the pluyers' bench. Perhaps nec- |long to fit any canine but a dachshund. essary to admit that England, with tts oi oyRe golfing Prime Minister and oricketing Ambassadors, 1s gtill a few points ahead of Amertoa in devotion to athletic sports, ee 8 ‘ “The word of Jimmy Hope," says his bassador of the Presidency of @ Iowa preacher proposes to ‘make the poor people feel that they are as wel- come in church in overalls and jumpers ag in Prince Alberts or Tuxedos.’ Ret- erence to Tuxedos may be intended for POOOH404 gnrLe BLACIMEN ee +4 |? very door of my house, which ts four | Y Letter carriers often hand over the | daily maf to a Janitor or a small hall| % To-day have 04: aa 66 Men By F. G. Long. Chiengo members of the congregation. | eee Be POGLPEDINEGSEDOSHEHID $606 H6-4006H96H91H40F HFFHGHOHGDH1GO1-990OEHHH9HHOG9OF Struck Out. By J. Campbell Cory. > DPOEDDOOHEL4 SOD DOEHOE-HOOHOF HG D9F HOOD HHHHHE HOPHGHHOD SEMIN DOGO HH OGIHE HOHF906409H0H4 $909 0090500H9GH 999 Said A on A the A Side xg to have indorsed the substitution of wood alcohol for Hme juloe, Prescrip- A beer extract now manufactured #0 | tion counter errors which result fatally strong that a single drop added to ice should carry a eseverer punishment for the offender than now rewards those water produces a ‘glass of pure becr of the finest grado.” Sone;hing moe meant by “taking a drop’ than used to be the case, ‘Dog beats express train.” wanna express train, though, eo 8 Lacka- In glying druggists the right to offer the customer “something Jvst as good," the courts, however, are not understood mistakes of carelessness. oe 8 And yet that coll mo: the worse of a horses, sok “King Alfonro, on a charger, hero of the Paristans. a strong sentiment in the © professor who jorse trade could probably tell you all about the orlgin, habitat, anatomy and characterlatics of in, high-brea RUN rench Re- public for the man on Hoveeback: DSEO, ‘ NOS Weer BLACK MAN All peoples’ Little Black Men got together To plan to keep their victims In hot water in hot weather, LODPEEVOVODOED ODO OV OHV ES IIIEDEL OOF D9E9 04 6 OUPHTTO9G, 00909499009 00000000000006 Get Together. ANU 4 @ q » | York said we could get nice quiet in- » Jexpensivo rooma sultable for un- | chaperoned girls, 1908 The Girl from Kansas. She Resents the Slurs Heaped by the Effete East Upon Her Sanguinary Home and Recites Some of Her Metropolitan Adventures. By Alice Rohe. ES, I'm from Kansas,” adinitted the Girl, “now please don't make the time-worn remark about that being all Kansas {8 good for. And don’t tell me that every- body comes from Konsas who is lucky enough to ese cape, I'm tired of all that business, thore 1s one thing that wearles me it Is the smug sate isfaction of your thoroughbred New Yorker, “Why, I'd like to know where your little Old New York would be if we Westerners didn’t leave our prairie homes to set the pace for the strenuous life. \ “Of course New York ia the hub of the strenuous existence, but what makes it so but the awful hustle everybody has to get into to keep up wita the Wild Westerners you superciilously smile upon? “You say Westerners are self-confident? Well, why shouldn't they be? They can come here to New York and get half-way toward the goal of their ambitions before your Roya! Smugnesses wake up. Why, thero wouldn't le any East If there wasn't a West and we cow-whackers didn't come on here to keep you ‘stepping lively.’ "The only things you regard as necessary are a pedigree and a pult, The pull always goes with the pedi- gree. We little sunflowers from bleeding Kansas come here and show you that a few things can be accome plished by push “And, say, I suppose you think Kansas was discovered by Willlam Allen White, You never heard of it before he asked ‘What's the matter with Kansas!’ Well, that’s just like the whole lot of you, You think there wasn't any creation outside the Isle of Manhattan, and ff there was {t wasn't worth while knowing about. “Oh, I'll admit we don't change our clothes with every movement of the sun and thore are a few of your smart ways we're not onto, but just “Yea, I'm from Kansas.” | give us a chance, ’ “Why, the first day my chum and I struck town we went to the Im- perlal, where a lady friend who kknew a woman who had been to New We made a ter- rible faux pas when we inquired if the $4-a-day rate included board. Why, we could get board for a week out in Oesawatomie, Kan,, for $4 per. Anyway, we stayed one day, 80 we can always point to the hotel with a nonchalant air when our Kansas friends strike town as ‘our hotel,’ “Yes, my chum came with me. She thought she'd go on the stago. “We Point to Mt as ‘Our Hotel,’” She has a lovely voice, Used to sing of the High School gave her a lovely letter to a man who has an office in the same block with Frohman. “Me? Oh, I’m going In for art. you just know how to work it “Come and see me. We're stopping at a theatrical boarding-houee in Thirty-first street, where the landlady gets insulted if you ask for a key to your door, It's lovely.” . r : The Man Higher Up. By Martin Green, SEB," sald the Cigar Store Man, “that President Patton, of re Princeton, in a talk to the students, says that the meek are not “No,” replied the Man Higher Up, “the best the meek and humble of heart citizen gets these days is a good, swift kick on the ankle if he don't clear the way for the chesty hustler. If you want @ plece of the earth or anything else in these times the way to get It ts the rest. ‘There is a place in the United States to-day for the strictly honest, conscientious man, but the place is a hole in the ground, ‘The individual who won't take advantage of his fellows, pays his bills because he feels that would wish to be treated himself, struggles along with the tip of his nose above the surface of the sea of life until he gets tired, gives up the strug- gle and sinke, He leaves his family the legacy of a good name, but now body outside of his family knows it. newspapers noted his demise to the extent of from one to three columns, On the same day scores of honest New Yorkers who never did a wrong act in their lives and wore out their rainds and bodies struggling for their families passed {nto the great beyond, The only record of their deaths “People read admiringly about the deeds of a clever crook. When they read of a man who lived up to the Golden Rule and died in the almshouse they remark ‘Poor sucker!’ and turn over the paper to seo {f there is any- thing new about Mra. Chadwick, The best paid lawyers in the country are Graft has became a National joke. The young man starting in mercantile or public life to-day soon finds that to hold his Job and the good will of his eminently respectable boss he has to forget what he learned in Sunday~ school,” asserted the Cigar Store Man. _ “The honest man never has any peace of mind,” explained The Man Higher Up, ‘because he {fs always worrying about how he {s going to have the worst of !t handed to him the next time,” ’ Little Willie’s Guide to New York. Lowers’ Lane. ¥ you wauk aloan and very quietly along the bypaths of sentrel park theese warm eavninga you will heer from varyous bentches along the verry thick mud and then you will know you are in luvverg lain, luvvers lain is the-naime of about 28 paths in the park that are infessted by peeple who hayvent got anny better sence than to think it {8 fun to kis @ girl and get # halfnelson on her waste and say bugghowse googoo words to her breech of promis sute but it izzent half as mutch fun as it 18 to strike @ buntch of matches as us boys do whennevver we pass by thoaze daric bentches and then, Hssen to the luvelk swanes sware at us and heer the girls skwowk, 1 shood think a grone man wood hay 2 mutch sence to in the Baptist choir, The princ!pal That's a good game to work here if ———++: getting the earth nowadays.” run over everybody in your path that you can run over and run around debt is a moral obligation and generally tries to treat his neighbor as he “Jimmy Hope, the retired bani burglar, died the other day and the appears in the Bureau of Vital Statistics. the lawyers who can giye competent advice on how to chloroform the law, “The peace of mind of an honest man ought to count for something,” ee route a suxession of sounds like a man drawing a rubber boot out of that are lyable ‘to be printed in the nugepaipers when she instichoots the ning spooning with » allly girl when he mite be ad iy Anyway, if 4

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