The evening world. Newspaper, September 5, 1906, Page 10

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aes shed My the Press Pablihing Company, No. & to x Entered at the Port-Oftice at New York ne Becond “ i “WOLUME 47 i coeeees. NOiC 1. — ‘be ARKANSAS'S LESSON. It is not so difficult to send a guilty man t t goes about it in the right wa Even petts t themselves at the jail di amor f n New York seems to iy pla United States whe the. process of sending guilty men to jail is n ce c aston, St Paul, Milwaukee, Toledo, Cleveland, } Chicago anj St. Louis men ¢ prosecuted f importance and standing are F and sen ng both Far-off Arkansas is now cleaning out its politica) lobby lobbyists and members of the Legislature to jail in an editious and simple manner that New York could readily imitate rk. Its lobby affair Arkansas is noi a rich and popul cheap chear Dinkelspiel, Ed 1 The Dis fees at ah the. Grand J was promptly iciet eotked Lelie indicted on the lobbyists’ contes secured by the District-Attorney. | One Senator has already been sentenced to two years in the peni tentiary. Five ‘ors and four Assemblymen are indicted and await- ing trial, Thirteen other Senators are in process of indictment. | te Crazed Fot a few years, at least as long as the present District-Attorney is In office, Arkansas will have no lobby and the members of its L egislature | will cast unpurchased votes How simple it would be to do this in New York! The Albany lobb) ‘The Evening Worla’s Daily Magazine, Wednesday, September. 5, 1906. _ The FIFTY GREATEST EVENTS in HISTORY By Albert Payson rerhune Wo, ~CHARLES V. and the Rise of a New Power. GORNE ora Ad wateles I No wonder 1 ¢ yh toge “Monte’’--- Who Wins? By J. Campbell Cory. looks mirrounded by dorena of no sat in @ mormatery cell make two clocks tok In uniaon,” he whined peevtahly. The old clowe ei, (9 make milliona of people think alike!" ago of Att K fancier wae Char woo had given up affairs Of wtate at m yee, and who was the two remaining years of his life Naatio retirement ertatn pathos power ever inh ruler of hy Ife had had omplaiat ate herited by mortal man, b century of expertences #uch a# lent t the clocks, Born tn 1600 to the mreatest cent + he had risen to helehts reached by no other Date ant had Hved to noo his most cherished plans tall to pleces Of Acme 2 titiee that Charies fel| heir to, asa mere boy: The \ MAUS RSA Navarre Gop tee ic ee the Kingtoms of to ees And :the rilerahip of « American posses: Th addition to - ; thy ! and at twenteen hen only nineteen, he was chosen Hmperor of Ger uohy y vast power to be a crowned King of It All this was an tmealou- | Dien, He ruled fore centred in one man, and tt entatied even vaster responsi: | (UAI Interest. ‘These face me which had nothing in common and no thes of mu- {national complications Of Sourwe, led to endless rivalries, revolt and inter. Moreover, @ th Francis 1. Ring SOTO0R Of outaide enemias rose against the yo ing of France, who had boen one of he competitors fer the Oonnay crown, RrOMpUy deciaced war on seizing the duchie A Five-Foid Difficulty to tt Mediterranean, m tvenr war wt r # afte but found favor with nelthec om ines his one set-back had } Feige 2 gel |} Crusm Luther's § tunes Me vas and misfor- Followers weasions to thie en Power and pos- would not o fortace ie the German electors denin the © held would he apitt 14 to hin worrles, Hente IT (ae a night man empire | heen those of Alexander and Chariemagne Ty rancie 1.) of France. backed by other rulers, in. fe ral important notably Mets Charl soueane Bo siews dl re Mate oak nd until 1870 1¢ rematned tn French hande sedis a le oO more throw of the dice against adve: eed inge between bie won Phil and Queen Mary of Enaland. thus forming ct e to * Ow M ple had no children to perpetunte ra Sen Peseta His most cherished plane set at naug rulded. by him in matters of relieion, bi ly tsvaded, his son Gebarred trom tnheritine hie ontet ation was too much for the old Emperor. He gave up hin teres ere the helm of state which would no longer obey his enfeeblad h in was that maddest of fates: The fat rr . neal, Tae LHe madeat of fate of the man who outlives the aragt- New York Thro’ Funny Glasses, By Irvin S, Cobb. Wonder Trips Around Our Town.—No., III. HE WIKK GUIDE—And new, gentle ranger, we have teached Park Row, sometime known ar the is notorious. Members of the State Senate whose expenditures are man The men wh are bribed> the big corporation lawyers in New York who handle th money and the lobbyists who do the detail work are all of comm welf, think about her gr After fifty years in the service of the Penn “eight of them as an engineer, William Peabody, of retired on a pension. Chief Stone, of th Trenton, é Brotherhood of Locomot average life of men of his craft as ten year He himselt { the throttle frattic tations. } for twénty years. Mr. Peabody must possessed in ar Not of The Srening Wards | ‘ 1 have bad elesteen years’ exper } degree those qualities of common sense and a quick and reliable mind,) ,, vedi tlagay baat Seaan MrcuTe (he iow York, ad can truthfully which, according to Chief Stone, are among the first requisites in a present traffic regulations railway engineer. The méh in command in our locomotive cabs are rated in the front rank arnong mechanics for their sobriety and intelligence. There is that are, in my bug, and and the order to Itke the reversed street ave street cars Stop ey will soon be ‘ nT ¢ n the wrong side. about their work, with its onsibility and its constant call] done pinces like Twen- t 1 nd Broadway, where for alertness, w to men] or pony esi mE a ae. macs | the roadway are toped off Mke lawn ° so 5 which ls nonsense. I They have hand. Such for the brain of a system of varied gy In his forty I perform the duty in| ans yimd It is the equivalent | me trucking pustness As to thelr opin- n regarding the traM@e regu ations, EDWARD GOODING, | na Grievancen. to hear whoudt Ike for the body | Staten the Editor of ‘The Pyening Wor his machine, in the am ¢ f pene win ¥ to the track that at . : ie hiasedi cae 2 him or te e gm vill x re inno by ir | change of action at) otaee Ian oe fl at | He had always to be master of his n ne. Ar risk four Hiner at we ire of plain grinding k f worke tt times their $1,500 salary, are well known to everybody ‘THE MEN in THE NEWS Straight T If Tals bark Young Man wiih the Bundle Heeds His Mother the Larder Will Not Be Soon Empty. knowledge. Selina ocean with nothing to vendor of collar buttons or pretenia, Kindly observe the How atsurd it is to clamor for more statutes and ignore the Ar D'= Mr, Josaph Gans: Other people Are congratu: oat gligh humble pie spreedtons upon ol features of those who pour by us th lel Ht * «tlic afficinte wit! jating you on your victory at U 4 re © been er great men whore bacon during their lives wae dealt | horde kansas remedy! How foolish it is to seek to entrust public officials wi srircicise vie udyour poten "toltie Pater d Fal TY nr Datars neha: nies Wie venen aerial Bee ee SEUNG atathteran “thes “senate s ities fOr corruption when New iYor 4 will tell _me the news ahd you bring back the bacon.” were mere poets like Poe and Chatterton, whone fate only good enough to more power and more opportunitie: f t corruption en New \¥ ; TEA Hated eeeiealeuasane 6 the anes’ KONA Boog orate at wee aly ae enough aoe histas an tanaae stands pre-eminent among the United States for the notoriety of .it an th eau fe tack the baceh 4p thelr zHotherd of wives. Sut they bad in Paintessy the river. It te lobby, the corruption of its politicians and the distinguished lawyers Rushed me t ne and 3 " ey Ain't wet if | known ance. One ecau of cromsing the i r ° ‘ r t y ‘ r fints, and your r for having tt there instead of| ooo, + finane % who fur st the y money: so Ve few t t t * was, ina 6 acon ue World can lavish on you B soc That vastowh mm wh! etches before Why is Dry-Dollar Sullivan going back to the State Senate? Wh r e he i : mu * » Your head, Joseph. Don't} 4 wemen are drawn info a mad vortex t < i 5 hin that a $5.0 ard Vaat : : . to the successful Net hat bacon Isn't good enough for & citcles, must be that fears fs there more money in a $1,500 State Senatorship than a $5,000 seat i rt ta'n b w? have ay, and not fighe for tt, either Congress? How are politicians in New York City able to spend Ww Leahy ‘ : t ; back a and let ber desl it out to you a ts merely © fs " y e bacon cone “ * streak wt fe 14 parcelled out to ts joven, t take trains gambling and champagne alone.more than their salaries? ¢ © travelled s Lots the t whether or not the bacon Is worth |‘ a the rive ang But no one will ever go to jail—lobby wyer, ins w ‘ : re nah irs hea > ve ard getting It; b # of thousands | | ance officer, bank director il : in 1 soul weu're | y is erforced y ‘ ve won the t Joseph on ad “ ne w t | v ‘ in so-eany; kee " " hav r f pan getting hot servers rrom |THE DIARY sw THE PEOPLE.| -——-— Piace of Pesterdd Faces Also am the home of the nowepaper beate—both kinds. ‘Through this nacrow byway there charge daily half « milion Brooklyn extles, dashing madly in one direotion in the morning and in mn in the evening, going even at break- | ready and willing to halt and ga groups of one thoumand or upward about every Them —By Nixo!a Greeley-Smith. he captured the whole ind before he knew it alks to for inst the bacon we sOBY “Pop.” intent in the study of then all find rich ¢ : Of that 1 have no doubt THE RUBBE BNECK te patriarch with the Rowing beard and fF shanks upon # heavy cane I presume? OF A BAD BOY. naging sditor ce LY Wanta) (Aw | IDE—Ah, no, fair rir; the aged . hi ~ ow | OUT THE SAME CLO LiKe a in the exchange caitor's desk that Rood n¢ Qf y. ‘ { wew? as omc 1} TALK! DAT CRACKER I No real exchange dito ar whty ye of ag Daas SAX Semin j GES EE TALE SA Who are ninety @ - £S 7 FFERENT once stiow me, pray, a ma fg hditor? THE RUBE THE WISE OUIDE—A: doot of yon highball bun color. Te RUBBERNECK—What! Mean you that mere child th the inflammatory sey took him for a head office boy, Are all managing editors ao young, then? a Wise QUIDE—They are generally caught very young, but, verily, they rapidly. eee RUBBERNECK—And what happens to them when they do ager THE WISE GUIDE~Tis a moving tale. They got td boot et ne nA Tein" NEw ) Benold here w, where he han by ames one now suing from he in in search of @ little Jocal ven! af and him another in ¢ the r I He AVETARE Perso; ! Mr. ed among A vy ye t \ ite or @mazed us scarcely less tt ngth Now the mind is quite as 1 1 senves, percept nd instincts as| ea fg the body in muscles. And n “ve r md W. COOK total or partial neglect thin do those of the physical fra ih Wemesiie Sneke | than all of us could be Sandows can we giants of ect: “But if| ren A eat aa ol: | we cultivate something suggested by the engineer's faculty of feeling the | MAt nit the 0! at the end of akidoo ¢ eu and it wud sem lowit “move” of things and of looking”ahead and abroad while we labor, we | korekt tu-me “write” was rin “rie” shall do our share toward putting mankind on a working basis of equality,! *¥ %* 1 *™* deem of fomeik woeln poner = ~, YER TTL Qowac TY BLANK, GLANK, ‘TWO-MINUTE TALKS | WITH NEW YORKERS Wow are You TEACH THAT PARROT BUC : LANGUAGE? ae | By T, O. McGill. there was no pubile APT, JAMES; and 1904 ¢ OB GROVE |ovent of importance whatsoever was witting where New Yorkers were to be found fortabl Up that you couldn't find Charie Lambert. cainst & Irke | He wan one of the class of New York ¥; i wottie of Water ere who give the hands of the eloek ar i { and watching the) awful chase trying to follow them Ip, « 4 low of & Per-' fhe pursuit of wealth and living as we: Aas eoto In front of! take It on Manhattan Island. Bigcheart: Oy pin nose yesterday ed, deop chested, well groomed and al- <a AN b when we Ways wilh A KOOd word tor everybody. px im with he shone among the high lights of clue hes wa : lerentyped f 1 the places Where men gather. fonaore a 1S FUNNY HTS ne uses ie, When he received various promotions MANY SA PARROT? Toe \ y haven't ANY-) ith Cie corporation ewan with evertq HEARD ALOT o oS thing '@ ey 1y Kuve hurrat’’ and was iad HAT GIRO HAS GOT ANY tie Captain answered alarme from an! Abou > he got tangled f n Nien POLUTICIAN T EVER HEARD 1 ROARED ee eer and: te | Nimes 1d when he “eet lone Via. ia pectin Swinweo Tem DEATH on | engine-house for forty years, ulikad of » Deri imion he Bok ' CUSSIME % MRVER EARD trying to wet used to the life of a rey/ into the on & rorapme, iL OK conbch powl) te ow SOME O THEN WORD | tired man ieee. es bad slodding | for . / r BEFoRg!! Wee; y oT eat thing I know.’ replied |Chariv. | The papers had him elt tn 4 oats Lh PAA GAVE Ss | “The nowent il Pabout-six ianthe ago, bit he waa Wels ¢ ls AsmAncd te Ws vata Ws VN.') WW meace ol }ine Captain, with his face alt \s) maved ap to Dannemon, the place t d : < |the news © man just told me that] prison made tamour,. where they aay \) alk oe ror’ “ap 7 ili Charlie Lambert is walking up and] tne pine wir will cute anything QrOw & Tus | Tha hitla bl mora and look.| !ea ¢ to 9 ation, down tbo hills Of Dannemora and look-| “er vbody hoped tor the hesteand { y Ing ike Anew man, ha’ hoard from aevers! men wha + Spvery one ka@we Charite,”” went o spped off to ae Lambert 4 purely on his feet, wetting bh Takk ane heokius very much the bert that everybody knows, and t Jae aires the Captwin hoedn't pelt you that he war one of the beat known of all | the city passenger agente for years, ‘Dnece Was @ period between about Lae

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