Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A of Thought Criticise ‘the Methods of Business, the * Isolation of the Rich, the “}, Laxity of the Regard for Law, *Graft in Businese—A Re- “markable Deliverance by President Roosevelt—Says He's a Friend of “Sports,” ‘At m0 pertod in American history have men @o insistently chided the le and especially the rich in public as during the last few ithe, The “greed of riches" and Methods of the rich in making vee richer have been denounced Bad ‘The man who after acquiring Wiohes weeks to invest his enormous | @eplue in philanthropy has been se- werely condemned, while the lax of enforcing the laws and the ness with which the people dis- ‘Femara the law have been strongly in- vane upon, Ex-Ambassador Choate, etary of War Taft, President wevelt and such men as Prof, Ben), Wheeler, James B. Dill and others Mave ali lectured the people. The most Femarkeble deliverance in this line by President Roosevelt at Har- in which he sarcastically referred MA the “glorifed pawnbroker,”” Here are some extravis from the siden speoch: if in the public mind the career of the gohdlur is regaried as of insignificant ue when compared with that of a @lorified pawnbroker then it will with ao be made attractive 10 tie vigorous and gifted of our Amor- young men, Good teachers, excol- it Inatitutions and lbraries are all @emanded in @ graduate school worthy @@ the name. But there is an even ‘More urgent demand for the right sort student, very brilliant position rhowld have @8 an accompaniment an added salary, @ Which shat! heip Indicate how hieh . HIGH JOBS DEMAND the pontion really HIGH 1s; and it must be 4 tho efforta of the | $ SALARIES. { aiumnl which can ~——~_»~_»_»_—_~"* alone wecure such lea for euch positions. | & people, I think we are waking | up to the fact that there must be better | pay for the average man and average woman engaged in the work of educa- er But, of course, what counte in-| : tely more than any possible outside ) Feward Ja the spirit of the worker him-| self: The primo need is to instill into j Mid wiinds of the scholars themselves A | true “appreciation of real as distin- f Mpauishea trom sham success, ' ee woli YALL DENOUN {as a whole, MANY OF THE MOST INFLUEN- TIAL MEMBERS OF THE BAR MAKE IT THEIR SPECIAL TASK TO WORK OUT BOLD AND IN- GENIOUS SCHEMES BY WHICH THEIR WEALTHY CLIENTS CAN EVADE THE LAW, TOO MUCH LUXURY NOW FOR thone exceedingly rough lines of morality, the over- passing of% which means that the man tn in jeopardy ot the constable or? EQUITABLE, (| the shertm, But” “4 the nation ts batly off {f, In addition | to this, there {3 not a very much higher standard of conduct, a standard im: possible effectively to establish by atut- ute, but one upon which the community nd especially the rent leadens of the community, insist. “Take euch @ question as the en- nnn HE DID NOT MENTION “We can by statute establish only forcement of the law. It 1s, of course, ir ' draw—She Criticizes Bec 8 i Mrs, Elizabeth B. Grannis will not quit the Firs; Churciy of the Disciples © Of Chiist, from which she was asked af to resign last night, owing to a charge | ti she had circulated stories in the wapapers and elsewl detrimental the pastor of the churca. Rev. B. Q. ‘ enham, At the same time tat the P m@solution for Mrs. Granmis's with- @rawal was adopied the resignation of | Bthe @astor wos refused, hy “AN 1 can say,” sud Mrs annis an byening World reporter to-day, “Is that thouction against me has been ‘& very foolhardy one for the church. T shall go ahead, just the same as ever, A. have been a member of the church for forty-five years, and in all that dime T never missed imorn'ng service but > three Umes and that was oa account SOR Linews, “It tf» untrue that I wrote letters to Tongwanda, Kansas City and else MMhere, trying to sur up trouble against ‘the pastor," *) Deplores Pastor's Pos.tion, i Mrs, Grannis, who is president of the i: Purity League, says that her knowledge of the Rev, Denham led her to greatly | @eploro the fact that he was head of the church and she might have given Yolce to such an opinion, “My attention was called to the pas- | tor's character over a year ago," ehe Wald, “when he was arrested for unbe- fal éming condu Mr, Denham was not i held on the charge. | “As the hea f tho Purity League, t @id receive letters from T da re- garding Mr. Denhain's experiences 1n that town, but L never corresponded with any one in regard to them SE thtak it Ls a sham 1@ church has been dragged tato the prpers, and for my part 1 have done all T could to yableld tt xi} opin jones of Bie pot: p. "L had @pureh inset night. tat Prould be parsed asking fo thon, Padded Cauc: Pe what dy nM ke shi IP os Bus >» busy a] he past few an y Who does hut eye eyory are who out my life con te for puriis. end 1 do eoessary for me nh that seo prt tw oO Ante 5 Re ricie Us 4 S. GRANNIS WILL NOT ‘BE PUT OUT OF CHURCH. % ‘At Least She Is Steadfast in Refusing the Request that She With- Church Is Really on Trial. Her Pas‘or and Says my little con: | nty-doliar god serv.ce I g.ve | 3 1 coutribute to the | societies of the chureh and I have done | a great deal toward bringing people | uary T put in aye a Into membership, Her Charges D scuosed, “Thero Js no pereon Mr b 1 spite against | as Tam guns | Denham, wo far ed. the meeting last night all of Mrs. Aivs's charges agains: the pastor ‘ere thoroughly thresned out and Mra. and Hey, LB. Denham en- into a versonal discussion, My. ani Was vindicated, as he had been e awanda chureh In which he hed on the same allegations. 1 June 15 My, Denham decided to annctnsed that ne wae to cultivate oranges in Tiorlda, eting Was held at No, Xt street, in the basc= nt of the church, Robert Christle pre- The owing resolution Was entvustastica opted “Whereas, ain members have up dissension in this ehurely to t our paste ey. enjamin Q. Denham, has tendered nis signation as pastor; now, therefore, solved, That this church hereby es tis utmost confidence in ite Rey, Benjamin O Denham, a requests that his pastoral ‘re {th the church be continued.’ ers, the fol sed by wing reso a yote of 141, only nk That {t ts the senre of! ting that Elizabeth DB. Grannis should wi aw her membership from this ehureh - THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, JUNE 29, 1905. 1AM GLAD TO SAY THAT AMONG CE THE “GREED OF RICHES” “Wo are living in days of abundance, duced a p ’ mle” What Does This Denunciation Mean? “Now, whose fault is this? It is ours, society. “We ha the old-fashioned Ten Commandments honesty.” graduating class of Oberlin College. ortentously numerous class of American beiigs—whose whole strength and wit are sompletely absorbed in devising the means of spending any reasonable proportion of thelr income, \ “Their money has torn them away from the ordinery standards of home and civic life, created a “They new set of conditions for them, made them its servants, change their abiding place with the seasons, have no home and have forgotten where they vote. “One humanity. of the saddest features of lives pursued by wealth consists {n their trolation from Their sons attend the eame expensive academies, their daughters are polished oft at the same elite schools, their sons and daughters mect together, and they Intermarry and Inter-divorce, and the caste of the great rich emerges."-—Prof, BENJAMIN IDE WHEELER, in his add: “The very rich man who conducts his business as ff he believed that he were a law unto himselff thereby immensely increases the difficulty of the task of upholding order when disorder is a menace to men of prop- erty, ‘Tt 1s far more {mportant that they should conduct their business affairs decently than that they should man of great wealth who runs his bust- ness with cynical contempt for (hose prohibitions of the law which by hired cunning he can escape or evade !s |! a menace to our community, and the community Is not to be exctised if {t does not develop a spirit which ac- I tively frowns on and discountenances him.'"'—President ROOSEVELT, at Har spend the R ress at the commencement exercises at Dartmouth College. surplus of their fortunes in philanthropy. * * * Every ich Men Give Millions. the man of our own class and kind who pretends to be what he Is not, cultivated by the grafting bank officer, Insurance officer, man In power in financial or- ganizations—in foct by every grafter who In his dealings with the public departs from JAMES B, DILL, in an address to the exntoal contempt “ ibidons of the law whieh by hired, not fon is our opinion, yours and mino—yours of me, mine of you, ours of all the rest. to learn to recognize graft and the grafters—however respectable their disguise—and to pun- ish them, not alone by imprisonment and fine, but with all the might of the terrible scorn of fo: r those pro.| It 1s the fault of public opinion, and public opin We have to recognize that the seeds of socialism, revolution and anarchy are sown by These seeds are The economic conditions of the last ten years have suddenly pro- DON'T BE A “GLORIFIED PAWNBROKER.” {Remarkable Outburst Against Greed of Riches “Now Soys, IF You cant BE A SCHOLAR Oont BE A GLORIFIED PAWN BROKER® |HOW ARTIST POWERS VIEWS THE PRESIDENT’ of dam of dishellet in “Such a apirit may breed the de- } mand that laws shall be made even more drasttes against the ‘nm | br cfiieacy ABUSE WILL} or else it > DEMAND 16 ORASTIC | mit tawa, g EAW et es are ine here can be) ~~ tonly ng Worse for the community than onted cunning Le can escape or ey ejto ha profess loft p MY FRIENDS | NUMBER PRO- in @ pictinoe 16 our commanttys| inesie an WOMEaie Laleogn FESSIONAL BOXERS AND John D, Rockefeller to Yale oo $1,000,000 J wid ths Hiv I8 not to be ex- | arrow ‘le, as Ay) cut the other a4. | Graduates to Yale.......---- : = 4)000,000 ) CES ete Ne net wey clon teh nemselves off from communion with sfareiiaileisnyin [ aly fro on and discoun- | the men who are ac! y able to do Pe vOne ea EN elementary to say that this ts the frat || Alumni Association to Harvard. + 2,400,000 | torances him. Nees eae peat Nipple ay ae am gind to aay that requisite In any civiligation at all. But Mrs, Frederick Ferris Thompson, library building to Vaesar.. 600,000 The great profession the Inw| business, the work of the Brot sions. i. A great many persons in the ranks of | ‘ nto Wells College at whose pugiit) Tt te a sad and e men } TIRE OInC HAIGH Reet eslacetion Mra HATCONe of late Henry A. Mergan to E} BOiG0D Tihithererealion eriaumt lerith ae tmiaran Mc thane! PROUD OF drawn rem to forget that thoy should |f rota) cee cence cee ee $4.950,009 | * We ail know that. as as tmpractica alots, while the m HIS FIGHTER condemn with eanal severity thone yoare, many of the of ac gradually grow to dl a FRIENDS, men who break the law by com- pentiny and most highly laugh at all moral sense as an evidence eeeeeeeaeeeaed) mitting crimes of mob violence a) order fe a menace to men of pro} they should conduct their buat- members of the bar of impractical weakness, basehall ine n, those who le the Inw, or who) for {f the community frels tt ¢ ) Mean affairs de- jy ey atre of wealth make tt oe whone regard 1 valine, and whom tn actually br. it, but so cunningly | men dis PHILAN. } ny than that (heir special Kk to work out! “There are, however, two pointe in| tMFM TF remn ny good that they eunnot be discovered, the | themselves. ae x should pod and ingenious schemes the undergraduate fe of Harvard, Cittsenn, crimen they cominit being not) to assume (he dane THROPY spend the surs which thetr very wealthy ¢llents,, about wh! we have a those of phyatcal outrage, but thove | some attitude of condoning crimes of VERSUS plus of = thelr foaividual or corporate, can evade | to feel some neern, One Of greed and craft on the larweat| violence committed against the inter-|$ epaINTED fortunes in phiz the laws whieh et) veguiate | growth of luxury in univer scale, ests which In the popular mind these MONEY." lanthropy, Much iy > orest. uf the use ng We cat “Tho very rich man who conducta|tich men represent, Thia last BPN AG hes been piven to of Now y will have much gffect on this point his business as if he belleved that he !8 wholly evil; but so Is the at * those men and we ye vs hts Just so far as the alumnt hay thereby: Im- | Which producen it have a richt to demand muen of them he highly {hone ito. aeacchae /walet monsely increases the d!Meculty of the! Sie in return. Every moan of great of enxbling a ve in) serious ahd au ave pverrida or to luxury, and task of upholding order when the dis-| “It 1s far more tmportant that wealth who runs bis business wi LITTLE LLACK MAN HAS AN ABLE ASSISTANT, By T. By THINK OF THE PERDITION ~ Insists Upon Arraignment, They will, br vv to. prefer ehareos iQ Mrs. Grannis. I over haa been T absolutely th les that ot to say tlie.” added Mrs. Peters nersona who the stories ab Mr. Wea nh be found out to hy ht to be p t Mr. Christie Normal Colleme rend Belleves in Choosing Ha for Tenet Ue eames apoblan \ ‘Gold O HAROLD DEAR REFCRM BEFORE IT IS TSOL.ATE ! BRIGHT YOUNG MEN WHO HAVE BEGN SENT To A LIFE HAROLD MORTIMER! ‘You PLAYED THE RACES? Powers. ‘You BET YouR HARD EARNED MONEY ON RACK HORSES WHEN WE NEED IT So Much P THINK OF (e) THE WIDOWS AND ORPHANS-) O You DEAR NAUGHTY Boy! GIVE IT To ME T NEED A NEW HAT THINK OF THE POVERTY THE MISERY CAUSED BY THE THINK OF THE AWFUL, FATE ! THE AWFUL PIT the growing tendency in favor of all that mates for demo- One of our number, | T think the reat of u delight to honor—Col, Higginson— | |has given to our alma mater the Har- vard Unton, than which no better gift, | no gitt meeting a more 1 need. ff could have been given to the univer sity. * The second point upon which I to speak is the matter of sport. j T shall not be sua- Tho Natural Laxative Water was awarded the pected of a ten: i Te te Grand Prize at tho Bt. ATHLETICS deney unduly t Louis Exposition, 1004, SHOULD BE } minimUe the {m-| for ite Purity and Excel: portance of sport lence, Easy to take— KEPT PURE { T believe heartily | in sport. I believe J in ontdoor games, and T do not mind Easy in action—Ease for alletomach ailments, KING EDWARD WILL REVIEW OUR SEVENTH | First Time English Monarch | Ever Inspected American Militia, N 1000 Persian Lawn Waists (Immense Reductions $9 85 $3 65 54 85 worth $5, $6.50, $8.50 LONDON, June %.-—-King Edwara wil to-morrow inspect the men officers of the Seventh Regiment tional Guard of the State of New York, who are now visiting here, This t» the first time in history that an Eng: lish monarch has reviewed a detach: | arent of American militin. It ts an| || We were delayed in finish. honor which the Americans had not | ing these waists, hence the expected, and every member of the rifto| ‘ ; team and tho offlcers who are accom i swecping reductions, panying them ave ploased, The Americana In full dress uniforn, | will attend the trooping of the colors jut the royal birthday celebration to morrow morning, and just before the end of the ceremony will desoend from the atand where they will be placed 4, filing quietly into the mall, the ght officers and alx privates will forn, in Hine and march directly to the Pad ace, entering the fore court before tho King arrives, ‘At tho Palace they will form to the left cf the stite entnanc inner court. When the King into tee Palace rounds, Sey vA i fs fe, and thon Capt. f a Hands will approach His Majesty. and so)ule again and report ae to a reviow~ ing offlosr. —____- KILLED BY FALL. Workman Tumbles from Derrick at Foot of Fast 26th Streot, Charles Silver, twenty-six years old, of No, 186 Thirtleth street, Brook}yn, was working on a dorrick at the foot of Fast Ninety sixth etreety attan, when he fell and was Killed, ‘The fore- man of the gang of workmen was ar- | Magnificent assortment ; lace insertion and embroidered novel- ties. All sizes 32 to 44, John Forsythe THE WAIST HOUSE 865 Broadway, BRS 17th and 48th Streets ALL TOURISTS Should Take a Supply of They will find it their best} companion, It is always ready to relieve all bodily pains and produces a most soothing influence on the feet by either rubbing or putting a tablespoonful in SEND POSTAL TONIGHT Vor Circular and Views of Fonrna tn cr ~Mereha r 2 Sate s been boring an artesiog ol sounre here, and a sy Je ARS Be “Gold hae bean found in the sands! that are bot ory and a sone it marene he of ie) he would have been lynched in the eu ning lueation notice e ieky. u W IAL P m1 LIV, } j ¥ : RAM a ft fe een Re ER. South, and that he was iueky in having THE IDEAL P cia TO LIVE, without rubbing, Claima all of the ground now occupled | Rrroneous Statement in Reference | been arrontod In the North, Comparison ts chailerged with avery 1 br Newady's chief exeoutlve building. tae purniar’s kakianeel Judge McMahon says that he wan other Town Nite, Price One Dollar, SUNDAY WORK ng raised with the machin- JUDGE WAS MISQUOTED. In sente! ig Thomas Ho; burglar, to twenty yea >, @ negro ja tate Prison ‘ahen, in Gene as paying that |the South WORLD WANTS MONDAY WOND! the negro was guilty of crimes for which misquoted in this statement, but that the negro was gullty of crimes which galled for a severe sentence, He made no. ey ver to lyneh law or Rast Eimhurst, N.Y, City, two quarts of warm water, and taking a foot bath on the Hills at Picturesaue Pushing Nay! Half fone from Herald Square, Bach lot has water front urivitewes, Bankers’ and ® eras ¢ For Sale at all Druggists, ind at 13 W. 26th St, NLY, * ty . ”