The evening world. Newspaper, October 2, 1906, Page 14

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The Evening Ww { “Magazine. . October 2, 1906: : Adow Different! ‘NEW YORK THROUGH LBA aD) ate Vind: Sat : - By J. Campbel! Cory. (2 eh ublshed by the Press Pubitsning Company, No, 82 to & Park Row, New York | == : = ie Me <F NNY GLASSES ‘Entered at the Port-Oftice at New York aa Second-Class Mail Matter, ’ : WEE | I'M BECOMING | Lpvin §. Cobb ww ; . ! | Laying It on the Cop—A Hen Lyric. } | ‘That's Hoy! eRe. DISS HEN. in doubt, blame the cop. ‘5 day, arconting to our newsy dailies, we have elther the best, the bravest and the handsomestl yi police force In the world, or the greediest horde of unlq = formed gortllas that ever grafted pennies off of sprained beggar-ladies. It depends on how the editorial writers eS 6,¢ MOLUMENAT Hcetccvesececiseccere. . THE WAGES OF SIN ‘Al Adams shot himself yesterday. The wages of sin alw; pay-day, ~ : ' \ ‘The money that Adams made from the policy game, from used for unlawful purposes and from his bucket shops did not pure ee immunity from public disgrace, dis- | repute and isc He preterre | Ve death to the reiter ame of his | ‘COMRADES f riches. - | The very virtues of Adams made{ CoM RADES ! him’ vulnerable to punishment that 2 ».a-more Stolid and less sensitive might have ignored, his children. - He ktieiy are feeling. : 5 But to the populace the pollceman {s ever the official gost. No matter what happens, he’s responsible, whether t he is or not. Its a very gratifying and comforting ar j BE OO rangement, all around, to have the policeman to lay, tton. With so many laying {{ on him he must feel as If he lived in a hen= nery and was the only nest. b “put why should we waste time considering the feelings Let us examine the facts: It ts a dark and 6urging night. of a policemaa?. 4 "EVER SINCE Master Reginald {s going home from ; , od tho : 5 a tho club, full of seéd-cakes and other stimulants. He has reached reputation was gone, but he tried to SEPTEMBER £1 point where all that is rober looks drunk. The marcel wavs K¢ opting A ; : rizon; the morning stars sing together, and a aay te Coe Mee 1a “athwart the eecthing horizon; the mo} a iikew!ae ps social penalty. the community in-| ! t ee 9 tad: 4, 2 | seeks to make two flat fee mt flicted--upon— Adams's sons and} ogives-a-creditatie imitation of-a bareback rider oy-a-green horee, Prom: | ‘the shadows emerges & plumber's-apprentice, who worked at the trade just’ ¢ | ‘jong eriough to know what gaspipes are for. ES OCT | ! Next morning we read in the papers that the police have permitted: © ee 3 <->... Z E +} dance; and the carth is-vold-amd—without-form; just-#3-it-was 69 the first t = aS : a j Monday. As our young-triend wafts for his house to pass him and vainiy : SoS : bad ] accoinmodate themselyés to a round world, hue, ~ daughters cut him more deeply than his own imprisonment in Sing Sing. | [77 e oe] Hi : - The pennies of the poor which Adams stole in his policy shops 1: the foundation for his fortune. His children. “to the: third and fou ~~peneration” will bear the brand.” prea All this about Al Adams ts obvious. Scores of pulpits will preach it Dozens of newspapers will’declare it. The public knowledge at once absorbs it. — >= But why should any distinction, moral, social orlegal, be made be-| tween Al Adams and.any other successful gambler-—~Edward H. Harrima for instance? ‘ | : Adams grew, rich on the pennies of widéws and orphans, but so did > Missionary McCutdy. He made money by speculation, but so does every | Wali street broker. He leased houses for immoral purposes, but so do] ; ites a SS 2 ENR Ts 4 7 soot the temporary power of § 5: / i prarithuileccuveraiiiarneys iiate Neh (E On But perchance the man on the beat ove while the cop, encumbered with a pair af foolish whi and with talla on it like a rdware outioft _jhis draped h{ppocket, th » performer ish fronmon (ot his own and Sis thescop-so-fiit-of-holo p Ameal ti lat the end of the thind week + Whereupon-everybody agrees that t serves him right. } A Vigilant captain discovers a training | brings bis reserves, batters In the coors, confise +eharts and—telephones, arrotts the propr } nants the pl many other landlords of New York. Even the Trinity Church Corpora-|. ——-tlon has not enforced the decencies upon some of Its tenants. a i y i g g LT = ; Forty-two Jolin Smiths and-one Richart tt Sin isan inexorable paymaster, bu’ the benefit of its payments as . S ~ g [Magistrate decld herecls a aurea & waming to others depends u i> Opini ‘ : : x : g Bwoar he actually . the 3 running re epends upon public opinion. | 5? | Forty-second str Some men are’ growing rich today by raising the price of milk. | Privato property. Jeslay_M- Oller { fi fe fs rah Or else a corps of erg the com --Oler-add, he-vahis-of-Amtericantee-stock -by-curtaiting } MEA CUT K |mander of the precinct di ute thatr last winter's ice harvest. Bread costs more because of the Grain Ele- | way Into the puol-room. 7 vator Trust. Meat and fruit pay toll to Armour and stigar to the Have- meyers. Salt, lumber, leather—every necessity of life is enriching some} —men-who, like Adams, found their fortunes on taking the ‘pennies of the multitude without giving a full, honest return, x When will these men be punished? When will their children be ee - When will society exclude them from ifs contact? THE MEN IN THE NEWS —Straight Talks to Them—By Nixola Greeley-Smith. ARE GOOD. LOOKS NEEDED d When will they receive their pay envelopes? i | To the Rash Parson Who Has Questioned | TO MAKE M EN ATFRACTIV E ? _It is unfair to single out Adams for public condemnation. He is not 5 ( { The~conditions which produced him have created abler_anc Woman's Divine Right to Dress as She Pleases, By-Helen Oldfield X more pachydermous men who live to continue doing harm. - 2 END GH ARD GROW DE Staat no mistake which men more freqventl od wy i 4 pat heard of you till yeaterd. pposing that: the-question The great lesson of Adams's fate is that the community hold in theii TUE FUNNY ing mek puts on) hia coe é ® than a story told of a visit paid by Wir. Johnson and Biographer Bo: sculpture gallery 3 oper?” as! Tor nude: bluff lexicographer. “J don't. The statue isn’t imp: are the pastor of an + I = | sted eels Clothe Rowley, are matters of olce of a husba own hands the power of retribution. The successful thieves: of th TIRES Gakuin r pense of right end wroua, A bathing 412 at d muda out of place as a bo , s . United States are not-many. They are a smail per cent. of the popula- lightly low-neck gown, and | FOWN On the beach at 10 o'c hiya eaten a Ithne fasiat ete Be if < 1 alot h thelr et-bdinding o: a fo nia far tion. Should the mass of the people treat them like {tual till you had clothed the . e 1 bb and seemed: ——except_thelrfaliow-r 4 Harriman, Ryan-or their children, the and their evil days draw nigh. date —y with-R {tore tian apt to b eral. And It ts f0 d_satisfactor: buffalo skins when antl 7 ft you will, Unies #1 o-be In tone mith Letters from the People. Asks About New York, ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: Can readers who have ma 1 atudy of our city } love with’ him» when the woman {4-9 nt foolish } An Older woman, even when Inituen thinks most of his face, It Is the me strength which = pe or tea a err vou're welcome to them, But touch our} Dem She delizhts in his height and size ani look ng chang | Take our political and socia! rights—you're welcome Diy OUT: ani dona mot carereh ther uraienaenine haere nigh our low neck and o peekec noe end_chereiswon\t:.be, snoush, of the Impression of mantiness and str and It is wonderful now 1 Mr. Rowley, to p on orthodox sermon : Mitac el Sari ACL TRAT RRMA TOUT, woman with men of But, after all, wat 1s most | man ts his capacity for love-mal genius Ix morély an Infinite capacity for tak he who takes the troublé.to woo. And a homely pesthr-thneentt tr youth up, relying upon Ma personal appearan tlon a9 his due. With nrost women sud> an alt upon the p ex to have. any man thin SANT KOeE, TO Bay THANE V8, 100-7 Indeed, kay a don offer of marriage from the min whom she ‘would ot Accepted shir Decatase he self too-confident of her assent Acm: | tenderness: and ardpr aro what make a+ Tore surely Sis own than anys And the homely mian not only may podsess the qualitias a-tha=h me nan 5 disies Instead § ask our em>\ | t.try to dress lege that there {ys no woman Mmerick concerning 0 the pure RTA a operon meek enough to That is a en you took part in a ligh |New Jorsoy hed heartlly applicable nothing is more per interest to all fhas the equestrian & <the-bloci neat forty-enrd who wing ts x s PS es them ina far greater degree. Little attentions. frer-devotion pon hendad alr of condescension.—Cliicago Tri dear toa wo! ne -tnaiead bune Ing to her feyel with an Betty VincentS # - « Advice to Lovers.’ Your tup~ ( RACE RIGKT BREE oue noel pe peace os “ip i B ‘ “ Wen never engaged, She-has no rinj Mare ine crane ate She Kept His Ring. « but Tigave her other presents.of value Bin Sees I thought slie waa younger. than @he roally is. Now “by chance I found that he ‘Is about three years my asontor, has letters from me, not love let= but still they show I thought much at th pg and my friend tried tt on. § Gl merry Still go out with h . 3g trot t It sincé then, and I am afraid 40 {nave since founda girl who one ask for !t--If I don't, -lo-youthink-she ; suit me better, Has this first fou) any | claim on\me? will think jt-48-in engagement: ring? | 91 Les ‘She certainty bes, You have mono} And what do you think I should do to) Ay Tepe eye foty for three years, “Roe. regain it? - iu. L. J. | aéfference Jn your ages is too slight ta The only way you can regain the ring) matter. If you don't love the girl teld lady who Is four ‘thonths my juntor, Not long ago I purchased a diamond | ¢ | AM very much fn love with a young has lowing variation Jer: What room on wh long, i tou awalla hes and tie 5 la to ask for it. As you did not give Jt| Her #9 and ask mer to release you. pie AneneR from NOTE? 6 2 z OTR OEE to her you would be entirely Juatived 18 They Meet at Dances. JOHN O'CONNOR : - : z ; doing so. te re Vrcalators for Plata, TO. Aj qf lI j h N k t F i AM t Uixteen and am 2, CON eee ne Two-Minute Talks wit ew Yorkers. ue By T. 0. McGill He Loves Two Girls. } ASCs stl ot emer remnie yaa se The | (4-r © mione Who represents a numbe Irfsh financial for New York, feeling repald a hundred 7 Brooklyn girl with ali my|& five. He clatne to:love me,\ I went #irad’ e [ don't want firms. Going back and forth across the |” i for the melee at noe having to heart and she seemed to Ike me) out with him only onoe, and did not limo. through the unpleasant experience rolllag sorans & - to ox ecvan 1s a ferry trip to him i TOciaat briaieansacicingre teh sta urna Unt about—two—months wxo.—We'|aea vm then for pineal a year T nave ne the | Phis summer we oouldn't get the} “When we left Liverpool we saw alfel) out and she hasn't spoken yet. | met him several times lately at dances, a ‘ ming ta te lterve up to‘ through the crowds that {crack New York-bound liner leave tue | Since’ then I have met a New Yorker | ae always acems to amc me to dance Told) ya aaiever Ps ing from abroad on the-pop- | 2 hours aeud Of Ua Dull ctmost hax double and she ‘#ays that | wren 1am about to 0 home. Do you ar ip the Bay ¢ un. gad § a -pop- nthe Ne Totels . $y & spaet t pans York t me any fia hie passengers on that | she loves mé, , WA} 1 take New York tmnk he really wants to dance with boupd boat ‘Por ‘try ‘tor Brogklyn-again? 0, A. and |New. ¥ |mo? He promised to call edyeral tutte, hardly 8 ng} "Sir ‘Thomas \Bhatigfinessy, the genius|\ Take: New York and save carfar | but never aid I love him yery m { ie yor n of Iteland's kbor f dan thansporuition, say. that, ‘land would to have my love way TAS pooise ant the Xt summer whi} see a Jot of 1 She Is Three Years Older, turned. How can I capture his heart tt setts Quebes: und trayellyraymeins. Wee . BROKEN HEARTED. Bie Little State! SAN rou | “Cho ono thing that improaset us mont (nd the thar DANSK EES ‘The advances must come trom oth Eventi RFE is the fact that we. h of our|there,. simply sbecntise JHAVE: been going with @ Young) one Ynan, You cunnot—pursve: Al 0 Even t y roll yesterday yxge Inbelled and st d_by the | yoyawers will do almost yUning woman for the -past three years. | ine next. time he asks you to = y i Cea fi store inspectors Tong before we were |uscope the crusiy at the Now. Cork perk Bometime J may iinvertet her thought| acoeptcand. postpone going, none LOT! . Ba Pn wight of Quel All we had to do’and the embarrassment of the ms hes, \We| the dance ia over. ; MOM. 4 ju%t the p New Yorker who Wasto eet off tue ship and take @ train rules Feed tain ght bccn Ninn. hrnobe L : * ‘ ie ahs i eh

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