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eS aoa The Evéning World's Daily Magazine, Friday, sung 22, 1906. How Bitter. Wy the United States Ts What Tt Ts Co-Day. By J. Canipbell Cory. | TOOTSTEPS OF OUR ANCESTORS IN A SERIES OF THUMBNAIL SKETCHES Entered at the P New York as Second-Class Mall Master. —. - a ns 3 a a "Ee 7 ‘ uv ds VOLUME 48,. : sesees ses «NO. 16.878, | hat They Did; ¢ ary: % Sie i Why They Did It ‘ MoE “CLAMOR” FROM HIGH PLACES. | Wait Gale OF TE "Bi ay, and I say ét in all ser- ’ | i UC SUC O DEUCE ODOT) usness, that these packers in Chicago | Mills edt clecnccstog ithe : | By Albert Payson Terhune. thas od more to advance Socialism | o . and Anarchism and unrest and agita- | | OE SHUI UGC oD yee * ; t all the Socialist agitators 4 | No. 4 SB POTN + a A £ f stand to-day between the oceans.” . os | No. 41-JOHN BROWN and the Approach of Civil War. This sounds suspiciously - r ¥ of Colontal happenings, ¢ evolution, of tne t clamor.” It is $ A M Esiioetiv ts a0 M1 Action has er zed Into History. - 1 like one of those “attacks on s | ne Nar it _ e br w br and every Presi- Cassatt publ ning home from Europe to in- Henry Cabot Lodge. teas Si is charges of graft in tl ee * ennsylyanta. And it is; but with the difference that the man who makes the attack fs not a magazine muck-raker or a demagogue crying denunciation of capital. It is the senior Senator from Massachusetts, the successor of Web- ster and Sumner, who brings this grave indictment against predatory cor- | porations wh y their defiance of law and contempt of public rights do| more to foment discontent than all the agitators, |becn sold as slay The nation is hearing a surprising amount of this kind of ‘clamor’! e ® try, us the dw oon fi high c. Ss Primary Causes ¢ dition tw ed a white Hut as ume tom high sources. It emanates from State and Federal Judges, from cf the Civil went becar t ' ant ‘commencement orators, from Senators and public men. It has become a War. i bi : t : eee tions against corporation dishone Not to be lightly ignored. When the leaders of the party to which the lawless “vested interests” owe their existence begin to indict them at the bar of public opinion it is time they gave heed to the warning. 80-CENT GAS. The gas decision in the Appellate Division of the Su has been reached with a gratifying absence of delay. | The decision {s in effect a considerable victory for the public. While not materially conflicting with the Federal Court's protection of the| Trust against ruinous penalties it extends to the consumer an equal pro- tection against coercion by the Trust. The Court empowers the con- sumer to tender payment at the existing rate and denies the right of the} company to shut off gas or otherwise discontinue his service by way of | retaliation. According to Justice Laughlin’s muling the law must be pre- | sumed to be valid until it is adjudged unconstitutional by a competent court. Pending that decision users of gas may virtually enjoy all the priv- ileges of the law as enacted by the Legislature. COMMENCEMENT GIFTS. One cannot but wonder, such is the present vogue of commence- ment presents, whether anything will be left for the June brides after the sweet girl graduates have been fittingly remembered. But, for that matter, is the crop of Junz brides as large as of old? Certainly their pre- eminence as the month's most radiant product has been diminished since the girl graduate took possession of the scene in yearly increasing numbers, | The growth in lavish expense of the commencement-gift custom is one of the phenomena of social development. Time was when a few roses or books sufficed to satisfy graduation demands. is called into requisition to supply costly trinkets, the an important item of his season’s trade. Within pe mencement as a gift day has come to vie with f tum with Christm: It testifies to a national and characteristically American spirit of open-handedness. | ADAG 0080500099098 10090000000090000 08 kee ees RNAV DAA OEUAAEEEA TEES ESTEE HOTELES TEREST STSES TT ETTES CUTEST UEUTESOTTTESUA TETSU TE TORT TERT SOTTO ETT ETS UT ETE N TERE VADER VAASE A EAASOAETE TEST TTS ONESTAT ORAS TR TAN SA TERRE tee ae WalaSquerader by Matherine Gedl Miu 1 may presume that he does see, Lennie.” “Exactly!” Again Kaine chuckled. “And the Right! ‘Well, then, as I say, these beggars /point of the joke ts that the wife is the least larky ge identities. They’re as like as pins, andto/person under the sun. See?” all appearances one chap's the other chap—and| A second hot wave passed over Loder’a facet : the other chap’s the first chap. See?” | sense of mental disgust filled him, Thia th , Wes Loder laughed. The newly quickened interest the wonderful garden seen trom another etand- was enhanced by treading on dangerous ground. (point! He looked from Lillian, graceful, eceptical “Well, they change for a lark, of course, but/and shallow, to the young girl beside him go nt note of t of ga 3 sty and dupli me Court And the beon allarnately pratea os ndemned as a r wnd @ ardent discipics seeds We t ever the “comprom! A Mad ce | to Free the Slaves. Hrown paved ; et so madly 18 accomplishmen: at the nands of 1903, 1904, by Harper & Urothers.) “Quite. Don't CHAPTER 3 46 HAT is the play like?” he ha led as bh t es social trivialities bored him (Copyright, ‘ou think 60, Lennie?” | ngreed, 's so very light nd yet 60 tyn ex- “Then my tmagination was! nt the piece was seriou uiled again, “Wh: night they were intolerat He had ¢ but all at once tt see re Was no oppo- your sense of humor? The motive of the play ¢ |there's one fact they both overlook. They're men,| ene HERRETHE EO OaGaT Ee This, ; (es A WanEG ara al lyou k 5 . i ” en, was love y @ Wo! nont. Lilli d_him; her cars- /bare all geri : jzot new and they forget these little things!” | 1° world that accepts, judges and condemns Jess gracion ring of him for Loder look n at the progr bo- He laughed delightedly. ‘They overlook the fact slang phraso or twol | Very slowly the Te jthat one of ‘em has got a wife!” ceded from his face. ‘There was a crash of music from the orchestra. Seen ths end of the story?” he asked tp g ILoder sat tral, . . strained voice, Loder sat straighter in his seat; he was conscious “The end? Ob, ead nt cocina that the blood had rushed into his face. a mess of things and the bubble eae, makes “Oh, indeed?” he sald quickly, “One of them) “And the end of/the wife?” had a wife? eke? (To Be Continuedy 2s tween his hands. “What ts the motive asked. | ved her fan once or twic Kaine, migh spurred 1 his own—to meet the chose to he girl lool had heard of } y upon whatever ground 1 th s at that prec le current of Le and like a se Tt ara etter than t G course? was attract- | THE BETRAYAL A Thrilling Romance of | LOVE MYSTERY INTRIGUE | Will Appear Serially in | THE EVENING WORLD Beginning & again h 1 feell | thro : SATURDAY, JUNE 30. had brought him there to 5 ‘ : §shed with him—had « The first instalment will comprise a large, handsomely. {lus him for the day's ex 1 | trated color supplement. pocdles, her Pers’ y ae “The Betrayal” 1s a story you cannot afford to miss, at once the ne “ i ed?" he said ick “ ner ha i , ‘ ction goaded! 1 : Paaen yy Ohaundesd ne said a ckly. : Oneof them kad a te im BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM, glanced back to where } i ‘ it It ETT Tet fan, her pale, ed to the Sdeal erous, mysterious garden wh inderstand th he sald pleasantly, | Author of 0% uckground Pre on his face he ty 5 tehed have read Have you read the} The Mysterfous Mr. Sabin, A Sleeping Memory, of the by The Traitors, The Master Mummer, “Wha fd hat M Mary tyn interrupted, The Yellow Crayon, A Man and His Kingdom, ote of| H t n't read the Enoch Strone, A Maker of History, ; “Outline the story for him, The Prince of Sinners, Anna, the Adventuress, \d, “I love to see other people tak- and A Millionaire of Yesterday, ced at her admiringly. “Well, to [2 eee i: ndpoint, fle it He was n vague i opie cea : I agu jest for th er to his question. See : akes a € i mens; A had been struck in h For a second or two Kaine continued to survey re 54 i ae $ cur i 1 re sponser to it. For}the house; then his eyeglass dropped from his eye begin wit he sald amlably, ‘two men, an artist ! Fy . "Erench, @ first Ume it occurred to bim that love—the]and ho turned round, end @ millionaire, exchange lives. See?” . = ~a