The evening world. Newspaper, August 28, 1906, Page 8

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kvening 53) One Publishing Company, No. @ to @ Park Row, New T ‘ont-Office at New York as Becond-Claas Mafl Matter vviried by the pre = htcered at the PAUPERIZED POLITICS. ' Eve . Id » his dollar and part of his time to the s vic i ¥ he belo I tsm cen ¢, j {k bI s she tate the So- cia.s ar ; h Mr. Wt ‘| w York City > “ from a i < a bareair ‘ ered Tam for Mr, Whit- since sonttr the comy and traction monopolies filling the treasuries of bath parties. If the political Independence of y community is to be preserved, its citizens must regard individual political participation as a sacred duty. They must recognize that no corporation gives to politics as philanthropy or through principle, but Gimply as a business investment, and that the return will be many fold fn its extortionate collections from the public enabled only by political favor, These corporate political contributions are the purchase price of ex- cessive fares, of bad service, of inadequate accommodations, of immunity from the law. The way to defeat is and to restore the people to their own is for every citizen to give his careful attention to polities as Bvery corporation does. Tammany was muc! Jar a montli assess “ee rads, insur nies and the ga + when Its expenses were met by a dol- t in than when Mr. Whit- Gey and later Mr. Ryan paid the bi organtzation was much closer to the people when its campaign fund was made of the small fontributions of the rank and file than since Mr. Hanna systematized cor- porate contributions. At is a hopeful sign when the Chairmen of the Republican and the Democratic Congressional Committees solicit one-dollar contributions The example which President Roosevelt set should be followed by ever) Democrat, every Republican, every Socialist, every Prohibitioni How Uarge these funds would be the picture tells. If everybody who voted Roosevelt would give a dollar, the Republican fund would be $7,623,486 and even-on Parker's low vote the Democratic fund would be $5 Aman who gives his money has a proprietary feeling which no pau- per holding his hat to the Perkinses, the Hamiltons and the other fat ‘dis tributors can have. He feels that his party is really hi non fnations are subject to his prior scrutiny. New York has forbidden by law corporate contributions to commit fees. The law should have been unnecessary, and it should now be vig rously enforced. The primaries are md McC! of Met gins and all t will be settled by es between Murph) , Odell and Hig- | fferent. hould ampaign fund. | ee VA) i Sana ll (© ldys Waily PMiagazine, “All at Sea.” Augusi 1O ‘I We ode oe ¢ ms | eee J ) B,FUNNY GLASSES ~ Lrvin §. Cobb By J. Campbell Cory DAMP NASTY Timely Thoughts Upon-the Seasons IT HERP ts a ¢ on fn some quarters te ree Foolish Se WEATHER - an being about all in. Such prognostien en f it ¥ a Bu ‘enoatications are t rom time to ' AINT 17 CHARLE time, hut ft is often well to walt for the official announcement be fore bringing the geran! m plant in off the fire-escape and ty ne the can | to the sere and yellow thatched Id of summer. That eminent prophet Mr. Richard Canfield, plainly thought ‘the Fool ish Season was reduced to one small stack of thin white chips as long ago an four weeks, when Higeina suddenly woke up with his shoes full of Jemon foe, and closed down the works at Saratoga. Yet since then some of the largest settings of foolish birds ever recorded have come off the neat. | Indeed, !t has been bat a few days, a period #0 brief as to be atill within the memory of @ city editor, since William Travers Je who works while he sleeps, was discovered crouching at the entrance to the orlffce | where Sheriff Nick Hayes had ooyly withdrawn himself, poklng straws {nto | the silent retreat and chanting that seductive appeal of childhood ‘Doodlebug, doodlebug, come out of your hole." ome, Then if was that so many of our best-posted politicians decided that certainty, after this, the Foolish Season could hold no more terrors for suffering and prostrate humanity. But within the forty-eight hours fok Those mighty front teeth, which so often have struck terror to the hearts of the foe, Demonal as well as Spaniard, had been at work again. It was not | Loeb who wan bitten this time; the dictionary had suffered and 800 of our | most cherished words had been mangled in such a manner that Noah Web- ula not be able to rebognize his ast na t failed us, c g the Declaration of In- e . ¢ spelled so as to make resemble the F fan National Hyma in the riginal . In phonetic unison the whole populace agreed that the Foolish Season had ass y reached Its climax when printed documents nist begin to look Ike Chaucer ang sound ike Hell-er 1s to that effect So eren now, as we file this message, mew ‘ rush has been by those who fled away to escape Its rigors T rch of the sum- tel is growing empty, although c with the safe in the office The sound.of the baggage ch and the volce of the trunk strap are heard on the Young women members of the Hi their bathing s ontaln. ub are returning from the shore with m¢ I imming < ts just I and their 4s full of plans for getting off the tan which they spent of much of pai money getting on But have @ care. dear reader, for him that t olden orown finish, like a Jungie sausage, and speaks familiarly o days at Newport. | Remember, you acquire the same brand of tan tn the bleachers at the Polo Grounds as on the eands at Narragansett Pier, and the man who has ha@ THE MEN in THE NEWS . Straight Talks to Them—By Nixo!a Greeley-Smith. t agin. his old hat cleaned with gasoline for the earl xaetly The Eminent Grizziv-Slayer, Who Is Now Eager to ag : tke the man who owns a Dew automobile Rememb Also, and Shoot Superfluous Letters Out of Our Spelling Books. Se eee GEE FUNNY-PART Hark The Foolish Season often lasts all the year ‘round tn this town nadet that the wortd 1 t as WITH NEW YORKERS, * take a strenu: Any city a e cit Sp rt eserves the kind OUR SUBWAY AND OTHERS hottest most pr slowest Batisfactory tha Mr. Fox me index York desperate, \ New t don aly old Bhuc au cal me » score ft “And yet, the huggy is the thing. a sub- may. By T. O. McGill. people give any leeway to a mai fo ng wrong with his works. In the da ie many an unpleasant word said that wouldn't carty « if the folks who hear ft would only stop to com sider that maybe the speaker has a bad Myer or that theres sickness at hie home” ‘Thus wisely spake Mr. James Crowity yesterday mom same started tn life as the assigtant to one of the oft veterans-of the tobacco business some years ago, and hap just climbed up quletty to the ownership of « busines @ LETTERS FROM py y LE. his own. » THE PEO as “What te the occasion for so mush philosophyT we — — | Where 1s \ sak od. yee 2) . “ — “| was thinking of that man who went out fust es yeu Women and the 8. F 4 c 7 om re 4 sy farey soantalsy/ 12 oRear\t “He came up to the counter and asked me for his usual order of tobecce end ‘ os —__—— oi handed me a bill of « iatge denomination in payment. I gaye him change to tiie : 5 usual way ‘and as he took it up he made « jong. low grow! Mike « bear and eaff ; N something about carrying @ load of money like pack horse, and generally out A a olf dot forced fasting tert © eal sswacks wore ‘such that ordinarily I would have felt offended at them, but I had read in the paper only « few minutes before he came in that he he@ id just suffered = big financial loss and that « partner had turned out bad. “Bie started the week with # sure enough Blue Monday and hed troubles, ead = ‘ I knew that he wast saying unplesment things to me ass person, I bad just ig $ happened to be the one he had come across et the time be couldn't hold his un- . pleasent feelings in check any longer, and I got the benefit of its fret tet off of team > aaa na doctor who is one of my steady oustomers tele me that half of the usty things that are in the day's Intercourse come from bad tivers and unyatched | ‘eres. He says that men do not keep watch on the condition of their nerves, | | pesdigpravel sy a man who goes through the business day with nerves on edge | woman because he won't take the time or trouble to stop ‘aad | st what the matter ts | @ so many men work like a horse to make money during the day that | they can afford to stay up at might to give themselves the recreation ar ane ° | they would get in reality by sleep; and when a man has gone through @ week with an Rverage of six or seven hours sieqp a aight he is apt to any a lot ‘y fo , lor things that he doesn't mean; and !f we would always ston (0 conatéer that we a " would save ourselves a lot of hurt feelings. 1 | : / How Volcanoes Are Made. , pubtiahed volume on Vol-) netrable, but when, by movements tn the Vs c. undertakes yreriying crust or otherwise, a channel WL} 1 canoes have eTUPuONS. 15 opened the magma may rise to « eS Melted rock suet as tx fung from Vewu-|aenth where It is surrounded by rock at [ [Rrra > > acces s requires a temperature of 1,600 de-|, lower temperature than the muitng 58 vee Su Leer rw ack Fahrenheit, so that tt becomes oint. In these ctroumstances «0lidifica- OF ‘ue IF Fatty 5 bins HAO Pe stbis nly tion begins. | SHIM DAY TREE ace MEAW ME OLO MAN | | Prom ail volpanoes large quantities ore of menm, of carbonte acid and other no & incger mol which | cases are ved, and the course of 1 remains solkl, because its tempers avery lay ream is marked by clouds i than that of the melting |of steam evofred from the coolitw lava, * ne to the pressure UE-| 1¢ the polidifiontion takes place un- 5 ¥ bf Wikie Jones ver Jer which tt rests, and below that again | gerground the ateun and gases @re em 20 \_ Can ey VER Goorsuf |thore must be rock or magma in as pelled, and, if there ts no free sacaye, . iv tc o. It Ie to this magma that Pi pressure may Increase tll |t becomes Ww » he primary source of| great enough to overcome the re- ty. At the same time |sigtance of the overlying rock and eo lead t© an eruption and the formation . whose charsoter will de Vos olgnee, can | ] ‘ lowing a champing ranind was heard jn the neighborhood of Oyster Bay. | " j

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