The evening world. Newspaper, June 26, 1906, Page 10

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E k ; ' be fT VOLUME 46. ..sccccossescosscseees soses oo oe RRR rR World’s Daily Magazine, Tuesday; June 26; @wbtehes by the Press Publishing Company, No. & to @ Fark Now, New Tou | Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second-Class Mall Marter. FIVE CENTS TO CONEY ISLAND. New {Montclair has won a fi Mic Service Corporation w on The Ev Montclair from fifteen t as that between Brooklyn Br ference that the with Brooklyn. long-haul traffic profitably for ten cents the Brooklyn ro; to draw from, can do so for half that The double-fare extortion in Broo! of a five-cent rate from the Bronx to Coney Island by) the new east side subwa. his will mean a twe for a nickel as agai he existing rate of twice that fare tance. That a responsible company liminary offer throws light on road has abused to wring double fares It supports the position taken by Chief Eng to the Livingston street franchise for by Sustains his recommendati the agreement of the Brooklyn Rapid fare on 21! its lines, Events are fast shaping themselves to end the two-fare impositi It is an anomaly_in extortio: should have gone long ago. the Brooklyn company submit to the inevitable and come d fully or wait till the pressure of public opinion forces from it the cent fore from the city to the sea ich it owes to its patrons as 3 of simple justice? n up in the offer } jectors of for | AMERICAN UNTHRIFT. Mr. Rockefeller tells a French interviewer that “Ame people spend money too easi! He holds up to their co example of the thrifty French on whose domestic economy credit of the:nation rests. It is forthe American workingman to ask himself warning is deserved. He is earning larger wages with grea men in similar occupations anywhere else. The $20 to $35 he rece at the end of every week provides him with home comforts and huxuri Such as a generation ago those following a trade never thought to indulve in. To compare the $8.40 a week eamed by carpenters just before the War or the stone masons’ $9.50 with their present wages is to gain an idea of an increased prosperity that amounts to affluence. | But what are they saving? Could their rainy loan as in France? The increase of $86,000,000 in sa ank in a year may be pointed to with pride. But this was for the en’ of New York, and,represented an average of $43 a year or 80 cents a week for 2,200,000 depositors. To instance only one item of larger expense incurred by the Ameri- can artisan it is significant that the present shoriage of stocks of woollen goods which has led the factories to.start up a month ahead of time fs attributed to the greater demands of working people for better clothes. But the outgo is not confined to clothes. It extends to un which no substantial return is derived, and raises the qu liberal spender is looking ahead. Is Mr. Rockefeller right? AASARAAUAASRAREVARGSSTAASAGAA NOOEA 08484: a © SVALAY a WANSAAANALANATASAS TALENTS LATAENTR DEE USOGANOAARE STATE ESTA MON EREDS TES ESTOS asQuerader (Copyright, 1603, 1904, by Harper & Brothers.) ' CHAPTER XXXII. § she finished speaking F ame in her thoughts or her wo: watching und Hstening, there was a per-| ¥ {lous meantng contained in both. | “Thankfulnes he repeated slowly. y stirred sense of responsibility pity and sym- pathy were gradually rising, He had never seen| 2 Eve as he saw her now, and his vision was all the! did clearer for the long oblivion. With a poign sense of compassion and remorse the of her youth came to him—tho youth women preserve in the midst of the world w circumstances have permitted them to see much but to experience little, “Thankfulness?” he sald agnin {ncredulously. A 6ight emile touched her lips. “Yes,” she an- swered softly. ‘Thankfulness that my trust bad! —the vioie heen rightly placed.” awry fr She spoke almply and confidently, bubthe words| edge of {' struck Loder moro sharply than any accuea’ With a heavy sense of bitterness and renux tion he el slowly fory d. | “ye,” ho sald very g what you say." She had lowered her eyos na he came toward 4) Hinireanday her; now sgiin sho lfted them in a swift, up- Svard nce, For tho since he hud! entered the room a slight look o: and ur ‘ness showed !n bh gald, don’t For a moment h found his first explanation ove guddenly it seemed to him th: culty was more impossible to st here to-night to tell you some Jast, “but so far I have only s: “Half?” “Yer, hal avoid! of the need for expla speech. | nate “A fraud Hke mine,” he eald, "has only one! pad wafeguard, one justificatlon—a boundless aud. ity, Onos shake that audacity and the whole mo- tive power crumbles, It was to make thn awlacity ‘e did not lower he: To her there was no suggest! “T know “you don't know Ho repeated & the question word quiet . r conse! on, he plunged {nto ra: cation was uf —somet Possibie—that I came to-night, The ¢act that you ‘@iready knew made the fplling easier—buttt al- position, i ning of the tunocence that comes not from| < ignorance of evi) but from a mind singularly un- Amposr!bio—to tell you the truth and make i im-| contam!nated—tlinded her to the danger of her Loder, wattipe apprehenstvely for ome aid, Very Hard Boiled. By J. Campbell 1906. ? NEW YORK THRO’ FUNNY GLASSES on PEAKING of Insects, have y ae mace {s being all cluttered up » Borys By Irvin S. Cobb. = paris getting + / | 0 , so here on Lobstor Istar t you ean't t \ lead log without \ ; / \ Western becomes the Ka We jer. \ / } the West until you re arid / HARD-BOILED EGGS | 0 \ <a queens his sleeve thot tlemen from tly Neverthe f ndard Ol] dirse ess, the pests with the soft * who were ¢ | vyolces are getting comnic the time ont Big lt out a lunch the up time & that sets orter has to swe Wea down collar bordered along t! closin ds | fessional Westerner {s now almost as fa Zone as the hangle bracelet or the elbow ‘The best nuthoritfes are divided on the question of greater calamity than the Frofessional South #) | Southerner, who was first discovered and taker the more n esque views of Js | rest or ust ciated of to boast of the rich and vi harler ¢o qualify for the Pre 1 ans ew called down, but come the by-product and bec hatl the barkeep as “pant” a: nh to sit down on a ret uished product is certainly a » quarter-sawed oak as long ‘t know any bett “Shr! I y part prl- i 1 tion al prop he f 1 he's i 4 ta { | ention 1 the | {hy ton boy ir ty was serving on the j . and didn’t care whom hand way to the Iimp fn voice that cannot be he How should bar rafls and that h TT =~ The Protessio nd Al Hen, Lewis's bcoks. nn | F aldet a aat extorts a LZ ay h men as Frald As h s 4 competition a tr wave of foy and e the second it the first “T knew ft, but it m ; I was ell toa h i n, I touched we drove home I cidence of my life, traffic of Picca- that night, Bur rienced the strangest co! You remember the block in th dilly 2" led n Eve bent her “Then {t was only-only to stand well with me?” “Well, when I looked out of the carriage wine |“ pelleved {t was only the desire to stand well! dow to discover its cause the first man I saw was e My fi with you; I believed it until the night of my wns one of se: speech you can credit anything so absurd—! (To Be Continued.) 8 been my att! aoe le EET a | A Thrilling Romance of LOVE MYSTERY INTRIGUE Will Appear Serially ia { eee THE EVENING WORLD Beginning | SATURDAY, JUNE 30. The first instalment will comprise a large, handsomely illus- trated color supplement. | “The Betrayal” is a story you cannot afford to miss, ~ | BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM, opinion, became on the first night. You aroused it by your] Author of lack: of real it more strongly, though more obscure-| The Mysterious Mr, Sabin, A Sleeping Memory, Is crossed the nu underlying antagonism, On that night, ) The Traltors, The Master Mummer, 2 2 miracle he aught her hands. I did not know !t, I took up my position The Yellow Crayon, A Man and His Kingdom, Hie have been trying to!|—I mado my determination, Do you know what Enh istronel A Maker of History, thing of confideme e you the results; but I| that determination was he Prince of Sinners, Anna, the Adventuress, i shall be quite plain with She shook her head. and A Millionaire of Yesterday, > you. “It was the desire to stamp out Chilcote’s foot- “From the first moment I took your husband's} marks with my own—to prove that personality Place I wus ambitious, You unconsciously aroused| {3 the great force capable of everything. I forgot > 4 the fecling: when you pronght me, Yratds’s: meas, tq reckon that when wa draw, largely, upon Fate { aj ~ Viieoinss m i

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