The evening world. Newspaper, June 27, 1906, Page 12

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The Evening World’ Deloria @upnsned by the Preas Podlishing Company, No. & to @ Fark Now. Entered at the Port-Omice at New York as Second-Class Mall Mates. VOLUME 44, 20.00 eeeeee eee eee PEOPLE'S LAW OFFIC In the L Jnited waily Magazine, Wed~és fle DA “ie Lo June 27, 1906.- ‘Wy the United States Ts What Tt Is Co-Day. FOOTSTEPS OF OUR ANCESTORS IN A SERIES OF THUMBNAIL SKETCHES By No. #3 + What They Did: | ate ee | Albert —ABRANAM LINCO Why They Did It What Came Of I Payson Terhung “ HEN I came of ago I uida't know | W Write and cipher (to th y h has recently secured ictions for con- 1 thelr days at plough- 4 lack of opportunity had no and Nelson Morris & d the freight brokers George and L. B. Taggart. s of $15,000 each were in nd the other| defendants rec jail penalties in| addition to fines of $6,000 and $4,000, respectively. The Chicago, Bur- lington and Quincy Railroad was d $15,000 for giving concessions, f In the Common Pleas Court in Toledo Prosecuting Attorney Lyman to ind the T 2 * am {ts motto, and tr WTaeroe Elected President for combining to the price of ice in violation of the Valentine anti- } trust law. The defendants were fined $5,000 and sentenced to one year’s p imprisenm: iE In Chicago District-Attorney Charles B. Morrison has been appointed Special attorney to prosecute the suits to be brought by the Government i against the Standard Oi! Company and the railroads. This signal honor ; i is the reward of capable work in trying the Beef Trust cases, } None of these ieople’s law officers is a man of h No one of them is a popular idol. TI are plain lav sense of duty who have done the work laid out for th their ability and energy. They have gone ahead and accomplished resuits undeterred by obstacles and uninfluenced by “clamor.” As examples of} modest efficiency in office they are deserving of attention. Vere ation. Z , ¥ received sovers blam ets with a high] Z Z ; EE 3 se : Nexentae atts n to the best of THE THAW-WHITE TRAGEDY. The murder of Stanford White by Harry Thaw is by all odds New) York’s most sensational social tragedy in a generation. To recall for} comparison the crimes for which Nan Patterson, Carlyle Harris, Moli-| neux, Florence Burns and the Terranova girl were tried is not to find in! them collectively so many elements of the tragic as are contained in this! assassination before a roof-gafden audience. As a murder, it had the! ferocity of the Ford fratricide, while as an act of revenge for domiestic wrongs, considering the prominence of the participants, it is paralleled only by the killing of Philip Barton Key by Sickles in Washington nearly] a half a century ago. TT en i By a coincidence, just as the criminal docket is cleared of one notorl-| Emancirss100 ates Constit 4 ous case involving “the unwritten law” this new case is entered on it, It Proclamation, 4 §s said that Thaw’s defense will be insanity. Circumstances which com.! Ee plicated the motive make its outcome more problematical than that of the f Terranova trial. Sickles was acquitted after a trial of twer ty days. j What is the moralist to say of the revealing glimpse the tragedy g of fast life in New York? In the light of the causes leading up to this murder was “The House of Mirth” or “The Wheel of Life” overdrawn? Or did these disagreeable fiction stories of contemporary society here deal only superficially with a realism which the authors dared not paint in its full grossness? Unfortunately a drama of real life like this Itbels New York far more | than the fiction writer can libel it, It does more mischief thin a “Sun, i hook, for it conveys to the outer world a misleading Impression of soci | | ia} conditions and one from which the city necessarily suffers in reputation. wan él EAAAARAAARA TARAS AAS AAALERTAAAR OR ALA NASA AR ASAD IAAT ASAA AS AREAS ALGER EANDVWAVEREEAS STOW ETES TEL UTA SSUES ESSE ESTEE SLUGS TUR LILTASURENSUG TEES AOSEESLLUNCE TS CEUEL LT LOTUS SENELTRES CEG E OAR GASEDNSTERAGONEETS LEGEND LEG TRUASUREGENT. LASUALEROUNTASSOR SECA R ACHR R ana nt neeaanatences nee Copyright, 1903, 1904. by Harper @ Lrothera) “T donht $f a man t before had been a) right and wrong. ieee asnered right. Hold-| ever we may pr to him as if she had. action fs always a choice * | A month ago—a week ago—T ght) a man who could talk like th for ¢ v8 cYer feCn n I have to-nigt ne sal Whatever we may say, what- es4 to bh WweNinic that our and wrong, have despised thought vy I know CHAPTER XXXIII. (Continued.) Eve started slightly. This | Unking of Chilcote's name with the most exalted} they overiook one moment of her Ilfe stirred her unpleasantly. Some} them his | Shows,’ t have done—t fact-the fact t That’s not my swift, unexpected fn doing one of {4 se than the tram- that streng wife! pling of others Into f Glimmering of Loder’s intention in so linking {t| !t; {t's the way it was put to me by one of Lady alfferent, I be! —I am con- t we o | broke through the web of disturbed and con Astrupp's party. yinced—I would have made you a good hu aclearr something | ing thoughts, Aguin Eve looked up, The doubt and question would have used my right to protect yc ee SEAM es i “You saw him on that night?” in her eyes had grown unmistakably. As ho censed gs a man c And now th. nddenty. “I't trying to! d | ¥ “Yes; and the sight chilled me It was a big} to speak her lips pi d quick. , nt lw —{ should like'— for you. Don't you see? Don't you unde { t drop from supremacy to the remembrance of—| “John,” she sald with sudden conviction, “you're ittle, “Now that T have no right to pro-) stand? The easy course, tho happy course, would } t everything.” trying tonsay; sometting—something that’s terri except the right my dove aly LN: be doles BAe an ee et a : tng F Inyoluntarily she put out her hand. bly hard. "d you as closely from all that is sordid as) gone; trading on Chilcote’a weakness and you } But Loder shook his head. “No,” he sald, “don’t] Without raising his head Loder answered her. husband sould guard hile wife. leeeercalenie BRC wOntERGan LimetveaTibRda tit k pity me! The eight of him just came in time. I| “Yes,” he answered, “the hardest thing a man re aro really only two broad {ssues—-! (To Re Continued.) had a reaction in that moment, and uch as !t! ever enld”’—— pat a 1 re be a ind Se — t was, | acted on It I went to him next morning! His tone was short, almost brusque, but to ec und told him that the thing muet end. But then/ sharpened by tn ct it was eloquent. Witho' —even then—I shirked being honest with myself.) a word Eve took a step forward, and standing I had meant to tell him that it must end because! quite close to him laid both hands on his shoul- I had grown to love you, but my pride rose up| ders. and tied my tongue. I could not humillate my-| For a space they stood éllent, she with her face self, I put the case before him in another Iight.| lifted, he with averted eyes. Then ver It was a tussle of wills—and I won; but the Mo-| raised ds and tried to un tory was not what {t should have been. That was) There was scarcely any color vi proved to-day when he returned to tell me of the! nnd by a curtous effort of emotion {t seem loss of this telegram. It wasn’t the feur that ines never before noticeable had form Lady Astrupp had found it; it wasn't to save the mo! i position that I Jumped at the chance of coming) “What ts {t?" I Dack; St waa to feel the joy of living, tho joy of t= itt! seeing you—if only for a da: For ono secont, he turned toward her, then us abruptly he turned tty away again, . ne “1 was still thinking of my herald, “T) th was still utterly relf-contred when I came to this A Thrilling Romance cf LOVE MYSTERY INTRIGUE | Will Appear Serially in THE EVENING WORLD Beginning SATURDAY, JUNE 30. The first instalment will comprise a large, handsomely illus. Se Eve asked apprehens{vel a swift, invot itened the pres THE BETRAYAL ] Imposalbl his hands pre. room to-day and allowed you to talk to me—when As I sat in the t T asked you to see me to-night ed at the , “all the pic! trated color supplement; club, I sha’n’t tell you the thoug od. Without desiring tt, with ¢ Doubt and Qu j “The Betrayal” is a story you cannot afford to miss sclously were !n my mind when I ¢ Yor, You must understand witho: “I went to the theatre with Lady tensibly to find out how the land 1 nt of ylew by th own mil d BY E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM, Author of nw thi y my 5 ne the fi n Loder’s knowlodee Mysterlous Mr. Sabin, A Sleeping Memory, Uon—really to kelghten my se: te at ' Senter | ue peal istntaten Mumnies } Fato—or the power we Ilke to cal! by i Ouch Rt LET, ; AthoaeReeneet The Yellow Crayon A Man and His Kingdom, owas lying in watt for me, ready to c w the unpardonable wrong that 1! 4 t co ave interfered’ giveth | Enoch ‘Strona : A Maker of History, {nterost In the portion of life I had di —the imperative duty of outting tt wWaen't thinking of the proof.” revolotion toyohed him with suddon potgn-| has eagaeera Anna, the Adventuress, row.” Hoe sald this slowly, as 1f monsuring each | short.” Ho epoke very slowly in a dull, mechant-| “Chen of what? Of what ancy; the real strength that Jay beneath his faults, word. Hoe did not glance toward Eve as he ee ve Loder was sil nt for a moment, “Of our love,"| the chival stirred at the birt under years of callousness, done in his previous pause. His whole manner Eve—her yes still wide, her face pained and| he sald ct dily, of a new emotion. The reso- Be Prince of Sinner: and A Millionaire of Yesterday, Seemed oppreased by the gravity of what he bad] alsrmed—withdrew her hands from his showiders,| Sho colored deeply. “But BUTT Nahas aeasa’ | Uution arena onTaReTER ta aecl LNA tem eA RRE sa L BUM tO 88% me “You mean,” sho eald with dificulty, ‘that it is mered; “why? We have done no wrong, We need | hud seemed well-nigh tmpossible, all at once took .

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