The evening world. Newspaper, June 14, 1905, Page 12

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Fe SSPE eae (PadNated vy the Press Publishing Company, No. 63 to @ Park Row, Now York Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter, JUME 4B. .c.seorcncsscccenen onses sesssseeseseesesNO, 16,008, DANGEROUS TO THE REPUBLIC, {B's dangerous to the Republic that one man should control. afl-the! (public utilities and the savings of the people, So long ss Thomas F, Ryan controls and dominates the-Equitable| ¢ Wife Assurance Society and its related institutions, the Metropolitan Se- qurities Company, the Consolidated Gas, the Bank of Commerce, the Beaboard Air Line, the Tobacco Trust and other great corporations, no grant of any additional power whatsoever should be made to any of] $ corporations, It is enough for one man to control the surface transportation In Whe great city of New York, It is enough for one.man to control the gus and electricity of New| $ Work. It is enough for one-man to-control the Bank of Commerce end the Morton Trust Company, without adding five other great financial in-| ¢ power in itself for any one man. So long as Thomas F. Ryan grasps to himself all these powers the people should grant these corporations no more franchises or public utilities on any terms, ‘The lapsed franchises and forfeited contracts of fhe Consolidated Gas Company should promptly be reclaimed by the city, and the Rapid Transit Commission should notify Mr. Ryan that it will give no aid to the plan to consolidate all public utilities in one great corporation and.to use the savings of life insurance policy-holders to float Its securities, , The more water that goes to waste. the nearer is Ramapo. Oakley fs doing his duty—ta Ramapo. AN EDITORIAL BY THE COURT, The Evening World accepts as an able, eloquent statement of its own views the following opinion written by Associate Judge Werner, of the Court of Appeals, in the recently decided case of the State of New York against Charles B. Bowen, who was charged with offering for sale milk which contained formaldehydes “Among all the enumerated powers of emment none is more {mportant and far-reaching than the branch o tie pols power through the exercise of which the State seeks to restrain and punish the adultera- tion of foods and foodstuffs. Of superlative importance is the vigilant and fearless exercise of that power in regulating the purveying of milk, which is at once the most natural, the most commonly used and the most easily adulterated of all the foods and beverages of civilized humanity. “The crimes of murder and theft In their usual significance might almost be counted as virtues when compared with the poisonous adul- teration of foods, for the latter combines the felonious villainy of both the former, not against selected individuals, it is true, but against society at large. It is a mean and insidious crime, stealthily committed in the marts of trade by men who masquerade in the garb of good repute, but in whose breasts the qualities of honesty and morality have been stifled by the most de ble form on which the pharisees of commence wax fat at the expense of their innocent competitors and of the poor and helpless con. | sumers. “No form of food adulteration within the field of criminal chemistry can be more deadly and far ing in its effects than the adulteration of milk, Other adulferated foods and beverages, which are used by persons whose powers of resistance have been developed by maturity, vary so greatly in the kind and quantity of adulteration thaf the ill effects from their use may be considerably minimized or altogether neutralized by regular or frequent change of diet. t so, however, with the myriads SS es for whom nature's greatest food is transformed into an 1, flavored and preserved fluid which mocks at the pangs of hunger ¢ s of digestion either cheats them with the arpearance of t, and thus deprives them of nutritious food wh need, s their system h drugs that may entail upon the weakness and misery, “In the p of such a crime humanity may well assert itself through the v: i sin the enactment of statutes designed to protec ist such statutes and so-called common-law rights ils should not be so zealously hedged about I to render the State helpless to effectuate a great, by te just $ ‘indorsement of The Evening World's pure-milk | crusade, It says what the people batieve. | THE PATRICK CASE, If the Judges of the Court of Appeals had been the furymen in} the Pa { have been no conviction. ‘The Judges dis- agreed more on th on the law. Four Judges voted that there was er evidence to convict Patrick and three voted there was not, ne of the most remarkable of the many mur- s by the Court of Appeals, j cominitted the crime of murder in the man- ner finally testified to by Valet Jones. It is difficult to reconcile his in- tellience and cautious attention to details with the selection of such an accomplice as Jones. Coney Island ave been broken to harness and will pull cars, Mt ited for the horses on the east side car lines, should have some trahsportation novelties, Mayor W or, of Philadelphia, has discharged sixty-five city em- ploy rey were not needed. New York can learn lots from the aw ed Philadelphia, Frankfurters in Union Square! Why not add popcorn balls, salt- water tafly and your photograph for a dime? The People’s Corner. World Readers lce clean, but I algo save $30.40 fire, for we have no trolley sys- Letters from Evening wh f To th Auto's Side of the Cane im in street, ean “angle ed structure w. The Ir: should be compelled to tnspect the structure more thoroughly, as such oc- currences are a menace to the vublic, LEWIS. Wh ‘8 gor and learn we hiniselt?, He may cut off part @ otherwise mutilate him- the GC, Eveming World’s riome Magazin , aN PISOLODHOLHHISG HH HS HOH The de- | 4 d ingenuity which might be considered | ¢ A man when walking with ahold walk’ om tke ‘aide Wednesday Evening, June 14, 1905. 2995960600 O904O 9860006 O4-9040OO- a Ue the present practice of dry in Chicago, Anniversary of Slocum dis- cleaning In subway stations pas: | ager to-morrow finds that case in court sengens ere frat forced to inhale |also, Expectations trom the outcry of the clouds of dust which rise from the |® year ago that the anniversary would porter's broom and next to inhale the|find somebody in jai] ifave not been smaller clouds which the orter’s feath- ined, ; ae lodges from the iron work. Fee Cae sed reas primitive aa| XOX may take your beer with your | Harmiy they are unsanitary, It ‘es perfectly ans L shop's garden or not, as heard teaaible [ho elean the. WonWork, with yume oul all Fens: Hiuale) ovely hom damp cloths and equally feasible to re | 0 the accompaniment of incidental music move the larger deposits of dirt from | 60 steing, the concrete flooring by pneumaric suo- eh tion, as 1s the practice abroad and in| No number thirteen in the automobile the newer hotels here, Cannot Dr. Dar-|races for the Vanderbiit cup, those who lington's “rules for subway cleaning” | fear hoodoo numbers recalling that the | he revised to effect these reforma? tandem team bearing it at the Waltham oe races in 1900 met with a fatal acoldent. notice, When the Ferry Whistle Blows. POODODDDD $OGF54-6640-006-004-409.9OOH5-4-6OOH HE GOP HBO OO-9O9O9OH900 Said 2A on A the & Side Prxample of phystotan who dlarnosea @ case of tclepnone followed by Brook- [yn chotrmaster who engaged a singer Jafter hearing her voice over the wire. to Le supposed that @ voice through @ phonograph would jever secure its owner @ position oe e “Gaynor raps polive.”” of the nightstick by the bench on the heads of the foros has not escaped oe @ Series of gymkhana freak sports tor Automnbiics to be @ feature of the Agricultural Society's Fair at Mineola, victim, The Real Suburban Handicap By J. Campbell Cory. 620059002 90O0O0O00O90O 090000 0000000602064 a “ unfelgned apprehension when he runs Generally believed that experience on down his thirteenth . the public roads has made chauffeurs . oxpert in the Kind of stunts arrangea for theee contests, e 8 6 Seems that tt wes @ peach Adam ate and not an apple, and an agent of the Agricultural Department is searching Asia for @ sample of it, "Peach" with which Eve tempte him nowedays |s herself. ee ley Order femued by a railroad official on a line running out of Albany that “train- men on passenger traine must not go | through the coaches with overaile on, without first ¢aking them off.” Englisn rather “untidy,” as Henry James would way, but forgivable in view of the per- sonal Udinese sought, Increasing une Iroquois Theatre oase in court again! Must cause the supe/sutious chauffeur SEF 9O98FO94OOO OF 9 LOL O¢ DODD HUGO 1FOS 446000 OF 9G 91 CO9GOF JAGS' SAILING FOR HOBOKEN AFTER THE SECONO OFFENCE- TO ESCAPE THE JAG SHAME OLE JAG, JUDGE, Hic— GOT ITY Las’ YEAR i} ReEsuLyT JAG LASTING THE SPEAKING WHOLE YEAR.% FLAG DAY~- OF EACH YEAR3 THE 3 JAG LiIMiT MAY IN ONE LONG i The Three-Jag Limit < < By F. G. Long } THIS MUST B YouR THIRD ll an BE: A Sy Y iv) WHY. NOT HAVE A CIty JAGOLO.GIST TO PASS ON THE WAGs? HIS FIRST’ WHY NOT NUMBER THE JAGS IN THEIR ORDER: LIKE A few comical possibilities of the law suggested by Alderman Jonesy permitting every able-bodied citizen two Jags a year, but providing the full penalty for the third tumble off the water wagon. ” hi } |tace roads, let them walk, | them burn oil or tallow, We Tell You How We Do lt. , Vitascopic-Stenographic Apparatus for Long-Distance Interviewing with the Reticent Great—The Evem ing World's Vitascope-Stenographone Locates Them Instantly and Makes Them Talk. By Roy L. McCardell. N response to public clamor as to how it works, ati description of The Evening World's Famous Vit Stenographone, or ‘J.ong-Distance Interviewing Migr chine, follows: With it Jameg Hazen Hyde, Admiral Rojestvensiky, “Little Tim” Sullivan, “Mugesy’ McGraw, Joho D Rockefeller, {r., and other famous personages have been compelled to testify, There is nc “refused to be interviewed,” “declined to discuss the mate ter’ or “have nothing to say for publication” foolishness about our Vitae scople-Stenographis Apparatus, It locates its interviewee, holds him and makes him talk. Watch How it Works! There Is a Reason, Tho basic element of the Vitascopic-Stenographone {s radium, of course, Radium costs $6,000,000 a pound, or at least that was what we were changed for the last ton or two we put in. The price is somewhat excessive, which is due to the Radium Trust. But expense is a mere detail, We have friends in the Equitable and so had no difficulty in obtaining funds. The radium is contained in a retort in the chassis of the appearatiwe, This is necessary because the machine chassis its subjects and in all cases & retort is necessary, A paraphrase of the Hertzian wave, augmented by the radiations, low ies the subject. Here a duplex magnetizer comes into operation automatl. cally, A semaphore, brought into play by a ratchet and pawl, holds a photo» “it'e all very elmple.” graphic headrest with padded clamps in position. This {s focussed by elec trical cotneidence upon the subject, and his slightest deviation from the cleo» trical field controlled by the machine {s the signal for voltaic tremors. A centrifugal pressure of 400 pounds to the square inch is then exerted at the will of the operator, in case the subject or person within the sphere of Influence of the Vitascope-Stenoaraphone refuses to answer the questions which are automatically voiced at him from a wax cylinder, His replies are transmitted along the Hertzian waves and are absorbed by the receiving cylinder, and canned there in the radium solution for future reference, The simplicity of the apparatus {s remarkable. It never fails. The auto-telepath auxiliary working through a mercury transformer rings an automatic alarm in case the interviewee does not answer fully and frankly. The radiograph locates him, the telematic resonator and duplex actinte clamps hold him in place, The centrifugal pressure compels him to answer, ; the vocal diaphragm asks the questions and the transmission-stylographie cylinder records his answers. It is all very simple. Infringers will be rigorously prosecuted, ROY L. M'CARDBLL, Attorney for the Patentee. —_—___++-_____ Answers to Correspondents. By E. F. Flinn. ELAYED SUBWAY PATRON—The Commissioner of Water De». D partment, John T, Oakley, can be found at his office dally except Sundays between the hours of 9 and 4, except when he is af Mount Clemens, Mich., at Tammany Hall or attending the race with @ bunch of Tammany leaders, . 14 EQUITABLE—No, Alexander and Hyde have not fuity decided as te future ocoupations. They have received several flattering offers for vaudeville engagement in a juggling act. POLITICTAN—You are right; George B, McClellan does think he will be the next Mayor, Nobody knows where he got the dope, but Dr. Odell | thinks he has the antidote, t Bo aea te CONSTANT RBADER—Dr, Mikado is now engaged in making out hi] bill for the amputation of Port Arthur, Mulden and two fieeta, Da Mikado, like all spectaliata, will undoubtedly charge the limit, TEAMSTER—To cross Twenty-third street at Flatiron Builiing drive | * west through Twenty-fourth street to Eleventh aven.e, north on BDlevemsié: avenue to Thirty-third street, enst on Thirty-third street to Ninth av " south on Ninth avenue to ‘Twonty-eighth street, east on Twenty-eigait street to Sixth avenue, south on Sixth avenue to Twenty-second c east on Twenty-second street to Broadway anti then be on your way. traffic regulations. POLIOY HOLDBR—L The word “surplus” will most probably soom | become extinct, so why devote space to the definition and application of ttt 2, The Ryan syndicate is in control of the surplus of which you epeak, ' KICKDR—If the Subway air ig really bad, ‘let the public: osase patrom izing it, If the public objects to overcrowding “‘L’’ trains, let them take the surface cars, If they object to the blockades and crowding on the sume If the people object to Gas Trust methods, le@ (Monopoly Logic.) a SS ey Little Willie’s Guide to New York. “sOff Season’? for Gotham Husbands , HIS is the time of yeer when the nu yoark huzband and tl yoark cat wood be better off if they were peecefully klurofot thare fate Is simmiler for when the howse {a cloased and ma and the gurls chais off to the seeside or mountains it Is up to pa and the cat. | to enjoy a summer of mizzery, the cat is better off than Be for if you sen@ \ a card to the 8. p. ©. a, thay will send around for the cht when the hous@ {8 shut up for the summer and will feed {t on gas tillit gets a transfer to the cat hevven but thare is no sasslety to panelessly extract the life f pa so he has to hik to a halbedroom somewhere and ect at some hi for three months and get weekly letters from ma inclosing the bills gome klippings from commick paipers telling the wikked ways that hut, bands enjoy themselys while thare wives are away, how pa must geri with angwish when he recds thoase commick paiper kliippings and how Bm. must envy the cat who has been allowed to pass away In peece to happy mousing grounds, the best part about being a kid is that you d have to be a husband, good oald husbands, A, P, TERHUN®, | =a i DIAMONDS VS. HOT AIR, Grayce-4icorge says that I his soul hunger so thoroughly that need have no formal engagement, do you think af that?” Gladys—Ail i A NATURAL ERROR, don't bellove the elty T notice it has a clouded ampearance this morning. and tastes sort of—milky—and— ‘Mya, Starvem—That glass contalhs Siimeky; the water is at your boar 4a \

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