The evening world. Newspaper, June 21, 1905, Page 10

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PTT FA ee ee ee A Et Workd’n. Home ngfazine, Wednesdny vening, June 21, 1908. - ; we Hurrah! Emperor William Is Going on His Vacation! Lordososeoses POLDHLODSDS PHD OODDOOO OE HF PP DHGHOOOOGHOH HOHE OE HOHE TE DEG LODOOODOEGIL OSE SHHDHOEDPIHOHGDOSOOHOS A Woman Is Not Safe on the Streets. Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, 83 to 63 Park Row, New York. By J. Cam Pbell Cory. Mitered at the Post-Omica ut New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. VOLUME 46...... visesrereaes NO, 168,010 ? ‘’|A Vitascopic-Stenographic Interview with the Ruler . “VICE BUREAU.” 3] of Germany Which Demonstrates that He Expects Commissioner McAdoo is drifting toward the European system of establishing a special department as a “vice bureau,” Anything is better than the present system of regular round-ups of all women found alone On the streets at night and the resulting locking up over night in station- houses of many respectable women, If, however, the vice bureau is to continue the present methods of the ward men there will be no improvement, The system of official ‘Dondsmen and of forcing the women of this class to pay for the privi- lege of patrolling the streets requires more radical treatment than a shift- ing of police details. , \ The bondsmen could not know in advanee of the round-ups: with- ! out inside police information, There would not be a uniform failing of memory against the women who employ the right bondsman without police collusion, It is hardly imaginable that all the toll collected by the bondsmen is permitted to stay with them, and that it is not shared ‘with the police, to Rest Quietly During the Heated Term. By Roy L. McCardell. EMPEROR WILLIAM? A, A needless question, Who else could I be? Q, You are said to resemble President Roosevelt in energy? A, He resembles me In energy, you mean, _ Q, You also hunt as does our President? A, Not as he does As Ido, When I go hunting I kill thousands of pheasunts, hundreds of hares, dozens of wild boars! @ It must be hard work? A, It is, Tam sitting ta 4n easy chair in the forest. Fences are built In fan shape, and I walt at the Apex where the Jane narrows down to a few feet wide. Then an army of beaters drive in the game, 5, Ht must keep you busy? A, Oh, not very. ‘The game will not hurry, Next season I will have fireworks shot at them to scare them, They come "tp 80 slowly that the four men who load and hand my guns to me are {dle part of the time, HICKEY’S EXPERIENCE, Policeman Patrick Hickey, of Brooklyn, has been having an ex- { perience with his Equitable insurance policy which many other policy- , holders duplicate. Three years ago Hickey took out a $2,000 endow- ® i: f Ment policy, for which he paid a yearly premium of $146, The cost of | ¢ i. | Straight life insurance without the promise of a deferred dividend or | i i endowment is one-third as much, If Hickey had died his heirs would }, have received as much from a straight-life policy as from the endowment licy. | 4 ao ‘Hickey paid $100 a year additional because some agent in order to 1g ‘ ; get a higher commission talked deferred dividends, surrender values and | ? P other insurance rigmarole to Hickey and induced him to pay more. When | Hickey went to the Equitable main office to surrender his policy ha j}thought there was $400 coming to him, The Equitable clerk explained P ehat that was so, and if he would read the policy carefully and come | yh back in twelve years, as it said, he would get it, In the mean time if he | ¢ \ wanted cash he could take $206. ‘ This experience, which is not at all uncommon, enforces the neces- istty of every policy-holder carefully reading everything in his policy, fe especially the very small type. What he is to get is printed in big letters. How and when he is to get it is in such small type, hid away in many : long-winded paragraphs, that it is no wonder the average policy-holder ; does not find it out until he comes to collect. tt That Is one of the evils of the life insurance system) which should oN” be abolished. Hickey paid $438. He got back $206. The rest {s ‘“sur- plus.” Q. You are going on a short vacation, the cable siys? A, Yes; Tam go- ing to Kiel for some yacht races I am holding there. Q. How do you intend to spend your vacation other than by directing the sallors? A, Very quietly. I shall positively do nothing, [shall rest, Q. How? A. Well, tn the morning T will preach a sermon on my yacht, Then 1 will write some music for the Royal Band and lead the players while {t 18 being performed. Then 1 will change my uniform to that of a British admiral and visit any British ships that may he at Klel, | If any other nations have werrhips there 1 will don the admiral's uniform ‘The Game Will Not Hurry,” of those nations and visit them, perhaps pending an hour or two in the gun-rooms and engine-rooms of the various chips, telling the gunners and engineers how best to perform their duties and explaining the work ings of the machinery, breech locks and hoists to them, I shall then do some wireless telegraphing to my own yacht and show the various wire- less operators how to work their apparatus, After this I will win a yacht race or two and write a book, Returning to my yacht I will talk to my staff on world politics and wire {nstructione to Togo and Oyama as to MILK. : || how they must conduct their plans of campatgn. 4 ish the second offense with imprisonment Is an effective way : Q, It was supposed you were doing this for the Czar’s generals and to bk sige ai of adulterated milk The Judges of the Court of Spe- The Scyila and Charybdis of the fair in this metrop ean iiate aes for a while, but recently I have not been in communte ( fe F ‘| cation with . cial Sessions do well to make it move to the payment of repeated fim Are the scallawaggy masher anc the noddle-headed cop, Q. It you idle away the morning In this manner will you do anys will not be the only penalty. President Darlington, of the Board of HIBDOD_HOS HO oy & OOO PKEOOS EHD ine sa1eed thing In the afternoon? A, Not much, I may telegraph back to Bere Health, is also doing well to insist on the proper icing of milk by the rail- lin telling the Kaiserin ie hat to have for dinner and supper and also in« 2 . rm her how the clothes {n the royal laundry should be washed and m the farms to New York, foun mee Seah wich baie’ Gomthe faa to New York, | ede Said A on A the & Side JP XS ironed. ‘Then 1 say paint m pictare. or two and compose au" ayers ana " There is no excuse for a r i gn igi "NING of the vacation peasort/ walks nor exercises in other Ways In| spected, Merely another Instance of am turn to flirt with falr passengers on revise the military tactics of the German Army, design a few battle-s i * | ry ittle-ships : , ance, as for a few dollars he can buy an accurate testing apparatus which O makes pertinent the warning, |town can be transformed Into an Ajax|Q. K. proving to be N. G. front seats, for the navy and dictate to Irance and Hngland how GN ot) Morocco shall be y i ' be aN after | merely by change of scene is one he is ee ig g ll) Bratnatces vast tre rs n- ra 7 vii a will tell him the condition of the milk as he receives it. If every retailer vo, Don't overdo it, Theory that after Tey OY Move aiooroved withosec ane Intereating feature of the new are| gqrrssst for. @ vant tr vant gubway wr-[governed, ‘Then Twili shoot at targets, show the sailors how a would test the milk he receives and promptly prosecute the man from | iifty weeks of easy-going self-indulgence | cust of impaired helen, rope, formulate some colonizing plans and tend to the 4 % to splice rangements for the curb brokers Is that most moi ventilating and refriger- household arrange- ft ‘ a i the human system ean suddenly endure Se they and not thelr customers are to! ating de 1 be ins e er- | ments of the Crown Prince and his bride and design dre: BES : whom he receives it if it is adulterated there would be no occasion for the | tie human s mmountaln climbing of 28%] aid by a pubileher thet. “inothingl De conel i | ating devioss will be [nataiied a4 Bare ia ota design dresses for the ladies d small retailers to be brought to court. rowing or long hours tn the aurf without] goin’ te the paseword of the boole trate on 6 human, Regarding tho Subway, aeser. | ° pat . Dad teeulis is f denthe from ports from) at the present moment.’ Still consid-| Sald that seventy per cent. of holiday | thon of the Rapid Transit Commission's Q, ‘This will be about all you will do? A, Yes; 1 shall have @ ' the seashore of deaths from heart fali- ble bookmaking at the race track: accidents oce ‘om hou yuna: | ot er that lo —just idling, you know— i “5 ; every suinmer to petnt this warning. | The exploding boiler at One Hundred] to. “keep eyew in bes as Sytdenth hAURU Gert Indien \er™ Mr. Charles F. Murphy has gone to his country estate at Good] taea that the city man who neithee! ar Sixty-frat street had been duly in-| Seems eyuaily guod for motermeg Wal Rapti with ATP Hen wine MR Ground, L. |., for the summer, He took with him eleven servants, four | — = H a rd WwW or kK M ust Ww i n, ' horses, two automobiles, one naphtha launch and several carrlages. With | &24084909¢0004000000000¢ PLLOEPPIODODIDIDODIOD 06:07.54-44006 ie 8464 g e 4 : HOODODS By H. J. H A ; T h N ew It, i f e Pp r i nc i p ] e. ° H”” work wine, Soni is second, bli bactad The career of every successful business man preaches th By F. G. Long. q these and the other pleasures of a luxurlous country place he expects to enjoy the summer until the municipal campalgn recalls him to his work as super- | fntendent of the local political department of Thomas F. Ryan’s public ' utilities, " \i Mr. Murphy has not done any work outside of politics for some (years, Since his days of honest toil as bartender on Second avenue he ; b. has avoided the kinds of labor by which the citizens who pay the taxes| 4 | learn enough to support their families. The less he has worked the more | apparent have been the visible signs of his financial prosperity, © gospel of hard persistent errors, Astors, (he Goulds, y bad vot had work; that success can be won only by honest, enthusiastic With all their naturad shrewdness and foresight what would the the Vanderbilts or the Rockefellers have amounted to if + had bhe faculty of “keeping everlastingly at it MB carly and late with the obstacles In thelr paths? I do not belleve any man ever attained lasting: success through abliity alone: but we Know of thousands who, wiih only medion, ability, and tn spite of limited education, unfavorable environment, and othoe handicaps, have won marked success, It was not c! Which enabled. then to win, but hard work, saya H. J. Hapgood, in the Chicago Tribaine, On the other hand, there are examples innuimer: » |abiity who have falled elmply because they never vorked hard Byery man who hopes to make himeelf usetul in world and to win advances pment in his chosen line must have a sémilar capacity for work, No mattce how areatehis abliity, how thorough his education, or how attractive hie personatien tneSe qualities are as useless as a locomotive without fuel unless backed up by. Persistence aod energy. “WII he work?” ‘This t# the great question in the business world to-day, The anawer decides the employment of every new man and the promotion op every ld one, and appites to all grades of aerviee trom the common laborer ob the general manager, The men who succeed do not measure their waya on duty, whether, in or out of the oMce, Attention to business yutside business hours need not be the wo: ‘ which leads to nervous proetration, but the kind whte! Interested in his work that he will act in his own or 1 gardess of the hour or the surroundings, When given a task he does not ask: “Has it ever been done?" will M take?" or “How much will T get for It? He simply anya done I can do ft." This 18 the kind of worker who ts nec: ¢ | T pur 2£ ANINE LIFE RADNER MAY BE PRO= pean dati eta Pur BAT A ING RADIUM IN se A TUeR OF Say~ CEHEESE Sace. Jeeeopucey: @) i A) (ze wersa 2 RABBIT! ot) Ws nd of strugs ‘able of men of exceptional Where does he get it? Is he on a secret pay-roll, like Mr, Depew’s connection with the Equitable, or is it fortunate stock speculation, or the burplus left over from the campaign fund, or the profits of the Contracting and Trucking Company? Still, wherever it came from or however he b Got it, there is no doubt that he has it, millions of it, SOMEBODY PUT RADIVM IN THE 4 WHISKEY. P Mr. Thomas W. Lawson promises to continue his disclosures for q * some time and not to suspend during the summer, If the recriminating q Equitable officials had not been Ryanized they might have put Lawson a out of business, work by the clock, but are ale BiTS FROM CHEESE T HAF ONLY DER }. CHUBE MIT NOODLE Soop FILT YET-TES ? 1 UND KWICK J BLACE DER RADIUMS Yust A el LEEDLE SPECK— IN DER ‘ —— CHUBE— rrtitome kind h makes a man always so nis employer's interests ree Seven hundred Chinese went on their annual Sunday-school ex- »-~ cursion, The Chinese Empire Reform Association attended in full uni- | * form. : “How long "If tt can be led everywhero, Pur RADIUM IN THE STEW. AND GET A REAL Live OYSTER. + $2. Little Willie’s Guide to New York, '*The Finest Summer Resorr.*' . O*N ‘hare was a@ silly man who made a bid for {mortalitty by saying A race should be arranged between the automobiles of Mr. Odell and Mr. Murphy. Can it be that graft has infected a public school? mn Nu yoark {8 the finest summer reezort on erth, if that man had nevver : ] GASOLINE, MIT Said ennything else his naimo aught to go skreeching down the cori. | —. oa VOT. Not RADIUM = IT mix dors of ume as the gratest livving exponnent of frenzied fooleshness, a | h P le’ Cc MONEY! VUN Coc TAIL- Whoale lot of roorel peeple hear nu yoark called the flnost summer reesore | e e op e s orne r. I Yust pur UNO- SEE \72 s0 thay leeve thare cool houses with verandas and trees and come to nu A LEEDLE : yoark for a nice summer holiday and thay land heer on some sutch day as | Letters from Evening World Readers RADIUMS IN IF last sundy when the tee bolls in the reeridgerater nd collers look ithe | ee le Reis UND~ SEE — caymbrick handkerchifs at a fewnerel. then when theeze vizzitors start out For Coney aD SHeltt oe petweey different stat optimistickally to exploar nu yoark for the eeloosty summer reezort feetures To the Editor of me Bvenine Ww ind alist pans thay find thay have to ride in 8 tranes and chainge to 2 botes before thay i ‘aqua diane Aine 2) c ler He ee can reech anny of them. then thay say unkind things abowt the man who the mi ene kl eee a CS Eval! ie dene eunure malde up that foolish staltment and thay begin to wish thare extra coller ome ENTERS ATE ME a om ete wuzzent in tho wash. reel nu yoarkers are ajl wise to the good summer BAMMEEC aigntto nels Wier awneiy| nicaphore ne eee ae ad ate reezorts within 2 blox of thare hoames, but reel nu yoarkers Jonerally chaise SO0te ERD, Pera y : out of town when thay want summer served to them homeward ride of worm)-out women and C. H. CLARK in dilooted doases thay leeve the joys of heet prostrayshun to the roorel vizzitors, good an heet prostrayshun, A. P, TERHUNE, fired, fretfui brats Ranging rapid transit Mot out short the route to Coney and We we are ar Went Side Tough, here, why op, LIFE FROM Bou)LLON = ening World: Y tr ay ° nth the people of Wes — ee a Seely thi8 wort iste wien wen ge FH ein mre ee cee «ey The Laughoscope Je his is worth while when we re- Oh ara te 4 how It will decrease the fatigue of ay Ate We i 4 rth aveny NOOPLE SouP 2 J L Pp present long and dreary trip of “ toughs, waos 5 “How many fish have you caught?" | wito always calla my: attention to them y¥ two hours froin the upper vart A “Not one." before { have a chance to thinkmDee (rolt Free Press. "How do vou Ike the cheose, art? Manhattan, It is the double journey hs it ost wears out the women and idren, JR F, to Ch Sut Atr, | — pan upwer Alf. | Mf. diFrom six months to a year ts 1 ann “I thought you sald you had a fine mesa," “Oh, I was speaking of my Ine." ‘Town and Country, in re, Can: me for this neigh i asked the walter, } the Rdltor of The Evening World: |the usual term of mourn! ‘ ‘ eo «ee “Huh!" grumbled the high liver, ‘t i a gappoara, to mo tat renders might | aunt. fourning: for an John Butler Burke, an English scientist, has demonstrated that epcntaneoue Bho—They aay at Git eaet bused tan't halt tad," ‘ helt opinion as to the best way to yp _. Tobia Salar, lon together In a test tube and producing cult hat H ie always tho yarn) 3 “Very sorry. alr.” replied the waiter, ! Inte the Bubway. My idea lay At atbecga Bickle Hot a color. rt ts ene : bie G cultures that show vitality, \re you that pe Lae or | ag it It vas thorousnly ripe “ “iv uid Sa ii ll , sits : OR ll a MMM al

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