The evening world. Newspaper, October 5, 1906, Page 18

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bnsbee dn mepnene ss ik Pvditwned by the Press Publishing Company, No. 83 to @ Park Row,.New Tore | * | Entered at the Poat-OMfice at Now York as Becond-Class Mal Matter. VOLUME 47... NO 16,481, LOCKING. THE DOOR. {all the iron or? in the Northwest. +The Steel Trust} Friday, Oct ober 5; 190067 = ning World’s Daily Magazine, The Modern Frankenstein, By J. Campbell Cory. edd a te | “You CAN'T LOSE ME WILLIE - Yohn D. Rockefeller sold t ore mines several years ago. The purchase of the Jar oly OF Tae is clearly. told in the financial cal umn of the Stin, which says: The big company has-now locked and bolted the-doop to competition no power in f aided by, the yy endless money n ever force it open. lis a natural monopoly, with “i mio-fegistation-other than the aboli of the trust and the dis- memberment of its properties can overthrow, What has been-done-in creating a-monopoly of anthracite coal will -now be done again with iron and steel. The prices to the consumer will be increased. The ¥ e employees will be fixed without com- petition. The profits of the Trust will be limited only by the paying capacity of the c ners of United Siates, £ Already anthracite coal sells to the consumer at seven times the labor cost of its p its Iabor cost. rSince-th necessary, and heated, it is of these monop< Where is tl Steel building material sells at three times tise—of -steel-in buildings ts -becoming—more—and- more building in the Northern States must be issible for any one to escape the ‘extortions to be permitted to continue All the cotton farms in the United States have a market value less —than,.the cap tust-_—A.corparation which would Obtajn control of all the cotton Jand would he able to double or treble A UCR NE Ey o With the door to competition on-equatterms-locked and bolted opportunities will there be in the future for small producers, an. nsumers of the United States will annually pay for rd themselves against such calamity! ¢ is mno-way to escape paying toll to any corporation whici ~mowopolizes any necessity of life. A monopoly need not be exclusive i thiris imant-the-exte mis inevitable. i The Milk Trust announces another increase in the price of mi {The} Ice Trust limited its prices this summer only by the paying oF of the public The Meat Trust, the Sugar Trust the-Leather—I ~ the host of little tru —notaas the tesult-of-tree-c of the consuming pubtic’s 3 iThe past five years have witnessed the beginnings of the great ) trusts, noi their complete’ development nor their full fruition. Some of the trusts have failed. Many of them have made. mistakes, to. their n_to_profits by : what fix their pri GREAT HEAVENS ! 1m BECOMING A. NERVOUS WRECK! Go AWAY - You NASTY CRIMINAL ! To the Cincinnati Bridegroom Who Went to the Arctic — and Who May Set a Fashion in Frappecd Honeymoons. EAR COL, D have come back from a four m: thd frozen about itif he aia. soit must hav y Tow detighted you ita, utely no other place to go! St post-honesmoon disagreements a_eent- uch less sudden the come-down. fre ned to-an actual @ to the MAX FLEISCHMAN; how n the chill actualities of to New York and the Var ides of the lonesome North t and most reckless amu Nt By so doing you im-extent-the-very wisdom to ail t0 d-no-fover hnd-such-e divin with its, accomp; ibe -consiigated-t pon and your su ht of three with the con - top of months plete certainty ing iceberg, ase by the Steel Trust of all the y dependent upon Irrupt public officials A monopoly based on nature's T Ww o-Minute Talks. with New Yorkers. By T. O. SOME SAS Si ondadk. aine tm: Tt seems |, ja N Drenker. | | at a mar and two ehildr my wife smoking and I have, to seoma an) thoug ttention’ to or extle Grievan furniture : he gave up t t Wiss quarrel | e'clook + theme of tt ta tt Several Thousand Years O14. 5 I ever noticed. th t tie does x nineshour site ta now fadT Tt not, ‘théntos used betore our the? © the custom is fully a old. ‘This 1 don't de- | you enlighten ma if tt ts Ca: really #0 Of as that? Heve HAN SCHOOL. . cs.care ———_HeFurns from> “7 (asso to Auto. McGill, < MARY A cocoa 4 GRADUATE HAR SCInG On OS BROADMAY ocsni't play | jert int a bie aid Char — turmed.trom a sum- jaunt around Crees ‘om weather 1 the | | | | | | | | A wan 90 heavy ow shoes to got | we got there | ed-rain that | roots aud | ple were | garing at | lors, whieh | had been | | which ts only @ je The FIFTY GREATEST _ EVENTS in HISTORY By Albert Payson Jerhureé | No, 86-FREDERICK THE GREAT: and the Rise of Prussia. imprisoned and in danger of death, was one day forced by tand at the grated window of his cell and watch his dearest ‘The boy was Prince Frederick of Prusait; tater known or Frederick the Ho had a sadde any om. Hfis fatt parent ok to study nothir unhappy boy, his fathor to friend executed. IL, besgar in hia kin srt-of—wae—— Tho ‘These studies thought uscless, Mearringed to itive Srederick (aucht in military matters. Ale. wearled by his father's viet and to take 1s most ints ght was she t the Queén » forbidden Ines in intervals of the detested course It was, In a measure, the old story of Peter Grea And It alnost had the s: ple climax. For, at In Ity, and resentful of the Injustice to whieh Frederick made: up hig mind way from the Ifo Net Ke with hie mother's friend. Tet and tt brought by devised. death di 1 that F nt to prison and Katt was p ederick Willam then de a) the pris: r 2°41 as od FEE WA Co rage declared he, would put Frederick to dor © with dimeulty Wissusdedrrom—the—plan, He cor himself with exiling his son from court; and. Int Frederick wns but twenty-one, férced him to marry & Prince's vel all rights to t Between Death and a~Throne. slightest iMking. For seventeeh } erick Myed tn seml-seclusion on one of his estates, only re when, on the death of his father, In 17%, he oame to the throne of Prussh¢. During: the forty-six years of his-rolgn-Predarick well. earned his. title af He fo a secondary German with a population 0. He new possessions, territory and power and tion of 6,009,000. wouly XIV. of F with great men who ma: over, unlike L Trounding ttmaelf prosperous, More- uld extend to the k arranged that his prosperity st plain people, instead of being maintained at thelr exp ‘Tho tair principalities of Silesia, ac fr to Frederick's teas, ought to be- Jong to Prus: 0, the samé‘year he became King, he set out to annex them. A two yours’ wed, tn which F ‘k's hardly acquired military educa~ tion stood him in good stead, For he was v esa was attached to Prussia. Frederick ruled Ofs now posses ; and, although a Protestant. allowed’ religtc Know- holics. ampalgn Ura. ening Prussia at This prea Au The Peace Pericd and Its End. a © x and. decistve power aed own_privaie_fortul of extadiiahine hia} the Hank » in repasry jances on afi troaty with ntinent State: ai ng what 1870, Groat died. leave his-ren increased In al v3, ; of 20.48 and-boundiess credit with ¢ oO hus, in his seventy-fourth year, perished the greatest of German monarchs, fa man whose father had thought him a fool and unfit to relgn. ———— $ JOURNALISM FOR By Irvin-S. Cobb: Lesson II, our Correspondence School of ine Writing we come next sub-heading, “Wed- purse. of study Magazine Swell BE: ybowtyteads—marriage stories—the bride's parents friend envie the bachelor | the divorce Jawyer hope are parts of 7 © astooiated in the minds f the reader with # properly ed rlage account. Q, Providing the weath sasonably clear, now shoutd the story t never shone upon a fatrer Wedding Morn, &e. (oes the bride Look? A. Radfant (NOTE—Thia term should be + the bride has a Shiny Nose.) - { bridexreem ociad ?APao. Cl Black. (NOTE ok may never bd earliest, account ‘otsed to the end that the Conven aok- weil sufice Rowan dan. Or m is described as wearing the Co y Ntgnty: dencriptive and-esssentin! oking of tradition.) 7 EC edding Vell do? A. It must Shimmer, (NOTE—All prop- rould be ex 1 Plain black or deep y striking, conducted Q. What ar cent up the simitox. Q-In-a ehurch coremony what tx done with the Po Pit —[t ere ara tera than three ‘er'y Phe answer fiint is served afer the cereme athe Heat Min toust Turned Phrase Q. How. does the Tiridegroom reply?._A Shy Hoppe 2 ThOTE Ae than §7.85 {t is well to Q. If The Happy Palr rer away on their me? A, An Extensive Honey? PRUCTIONS—Should the bride Young y Handyome tui trip longer than four days non Tour of the Larger Cites, room be a ahipecag clerk for Rusiness Man. ‘This will probe what doew H bec RAL 1D nugrocery firm r him as Ad lably be truc, as t noes are hi toup at 6.2) o'clock If he's a lew. chor teal) himoa Promising Young Pr: ntonnl Man, The ti Life, 1f whe belonsa ritable Work if et ted with for one of the H-the-nest wreand a-dollat a month, rin In something about ‘Tho He Has Fitted Up for Ils Bride. r you find gp opening, \ible-jolnted, fat adjective if possible. weddin \ to ‘a neighborhood whist | sho-goes to meetings the instalment house outft« mt a dott Beautlful Home 1 BOW, Whic IMPORTANT—W herg: slip in a compile If \t were not for ive: es there would be no occasion: te + $9 118 Fall has fell Cold acphyre Ail | Autumn in Harlem. By Walter A, Sinclair... iT The Harlem fat so ehill, unu ‘The tenant ri in hid might Rolle tewants lost thelr peat And lost thelr tempers. too. yBut what of loze of ‘Yo make the agent make it right. Yauy coal in-summer, wh ‘wont, heat the fat tats balmy clime?” Ho cries. “Oh, wait till winter the.” While on the radiator rests ‘The frost which on the pumpkin nests perhapa, muty sleepy. it's, cheap. And now, to keep that store {ntent, The landlords scof the frigid tact That Autumn's tauch ts on the town, It's turned ‘the green leaves gold and bro It'n turned afr noses blue in hue. All summer long at break of day nt, whith. Is. 6 of the world, "WHAT'RE YOU DOIN? THESE DAYS? Al CRIED, TAKIN’ LIFE EASY,OLD Socke|'BAWLED BILL. ‘The conl man came end came to stay, Into the basoments down his chute ‘The tons of anthracite would orot, , , The tenant, like the worm, turns, tom ‘The {eerai’a voice Is meek, not valh, For Old King Cold now rules agaim LITTLE LEARNERS, _— ne cement fatntel age IPIE-

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