The evening world. Newspaper, October 9, 1906, Page 14

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Daily Magazine, Tuesday, October 9, 19067 How'd You Like to Be the Tjeasurer + NEW YORK THROUGH oe By J. Campbell Cory. | Se aa ei i i @udiiened by the Press Publishing Company, No, 62 to 6) Park Row, New Torm (C2), Entered at the Port-OMice at New York an Second-Class Mall ; 4 Irvin §. Cobb NO .6,488, VOLUME 47. teers eee te eaeege ceteeeseeens ae JUSTICE AND CHARITY. i ay: drew Carmegie opportunely i h-American Re» view his 1889 article on “The Gospel of Wealth. The aptness of; certain arguments which Mr. Carnegie made almost twenty years ago is increased by the present conditions and circumstances. j The particular’ temarks of Mr. Carnegie to which attention is are hig views of the duties of rich men in disposing of thelr) ud the evil of charity as utilized g and purifying proce: isto St Joys of the North Pole Honey moor, T seems a shame that an Inland village, that hasn't = got so much ag a subway, should have beaten New ES “Fork-to-the triiy-ndorable-scheme-of going to the _ Polar Regions on a bridal tour, It didn’t even originats in Pittsburg, where bad Steel-Trust millionatres 60 “when they-diott their Hres-tn New-York were not propa—— erly spent. It originated, Le {t confessed with grief, In the Far Western hamlet of Cincinnatl. sf The Walter Wellman expedition to the Pole had to halt when the herole discoyerer, after travelling nearly ys North trom tiatttrx, tound himself exposed to —— e so rigorous and thospltable that he couldn't get a Turkish cigarette or his meais 4 Ia carte. He beat hig own rélief-expedition home by six weeks, “But the tender, trusting young pairs from Cincinnati and (Philadelphia who dare the frigid wastos, taking thelr honeymoon along’in feans, to heused-cold-or warmed np-on-en-olf stove, ax desired, never thing — jof stopping until they reach a point where a man yenturing outdoors with jless than six palrx of goloshes on wouid pe instantly selzed with a. baday cago of piker's instep, which is a sudden coldness Of the soles of the feet, common to poker_players and some explorers. 3 -—— Think of the Joy, ton young bride, of -having a trousseau made of wal- {rus leather, delicately scented with harness grease, The delights of own-— jing a going-away gown of rawh{de, tastefully trimmed with undressed sheep | pelts anda surcingle, ean_hardly ba-overestimated._And_then the pleas-__ | ure of shooting her s: ue on the hoof and capturing a fashtonable |mink boa while it 1s yet alive and throbbing! e And, finally, when they haye come proudly-home again, she with a frost- asi herein calle wealth and especially.the ineffecti ny the rich as a sort of sac es Sa s-point Mr. Carnegie says: #One; of the serious obstacles to improvement of our race” is indiscriniinate’ charity. It were better for mankind. that the millons of | the rich were thrown into the sea} than so spent as to encourage the slothful, the drunken, the unworthy. Of ‘every $1,000. spent in ‘so-called charity to-day it is probable that, — $950 js_unwisely spent.” | ‘It's becoming more and more the custom for men who systemati- cajly rob-the mass of: the community to give tithes of the proceeds of their thievery. : SSL tie rtf cates Sein 4 ~ te public opinion, an attempt to purchase good will by sops to charity | _- instead of by just doing and honorable living. | Does this kind of charity do any good, or does it warrant Mr. | Carnegie's condemnation? g t What avail is it to the woman who fs unable to support her. chi that the men who have enriched themselves ¢hrough the industrial system which oppresses her establish a foundling asylum? What restitution tsitto the victims of sweat-shops whose confine- ment-at-insanitary-work-has-developed -tuberculosis-that-a- free-haspitalt has been founded where they may go to die? 1 What real benefit to a drunkard's family is a free alcoholic ward? Colleges are good things. So are hospitals and asylums and the other great benefactions of modern civilization. But back of this ther ‘ must be an economic and social structure which does not produce paup: mpetenis, imbeciles and foundiings. (Anzac, Me {My SEALSIIN | (SACQue! ——— = res ed nose and he with threo toes Ina boric: o?’atcohot tor the whatnot= tr the drawing-room, how they will enjoy tooking fondly back upon that golden jera in thetr lives in the strange, wonderful Land of the Midnight Sun and | the Noonday Chilblatn. fi Z a “ | “Ah, my darling,” he will say, as he pinches the place where her shell-like | ear used to be, “shall you e’er forget that splendid morn when, together, wo %& at down on Degree No.-.023 minus-to-a glorious breakfast of raw. Esqul- jog, trappe and froze there?” aN EyETE SHE WIT MARE AUSWer— And NOW recat ny Two, the-forraey— ‘that followed after we thawed loose, and when, sustained and exhilarated by & pint of kerosene and my r of rubbers, we rambled o‘er the icy land- scape hand‘4n hand, untt s froze off. Truly those were the halcyon day js bound to come to ft. Already our, best society begins to p race when daredevil French riders of German birth smash and bystanders under the auspices of Mr. Vanderbilt and tha s' Aid®@Society. Soon the pleasurable excitment of going up Ina balloon from a gastank and coming down in Pelham Bay ts bound to pall. The favored classes who can extract enjoyment from breaking out of the lbrookiyn jail are confined to a few hundreds annually. j-*Opresently we will find New York soclety turning {ts cnergles and tts, m {aces toward tho helpless Pole : x \ i THE F Y PART: © while New York doesn't think up all the foolish and expensive ning money, it’annexes taem-all fust-as soon as they become and foolish enough. ce Now Yor y of the ¢ Such prevention is not the work of charity, but of justice. The Preservation of the home is much more vital than the care of the de 7 ‘ fective members of a disintegrated- famity._Conditions_of employmer THE MEN IN THE NEW S —Straight that ward off disease are better than free dispensaries. Sound primar) ‘ education is more valuable than free colleges. enable every workingnman to save for hi ways-Of spe Talks to Them—By Nixola Greeley-Smith. °"* To the Man Who Has Had One Wife for Fifty Yerrss © |s.', tnristy ana raster are eras Rake aii " TWO-MINUTE TALKS i “WITH NEW -YORKERS. While So Many of His Sex Have Been Wife Collectors. eae ) can afford to indulge the! ae eT Or NeGt Industrial conditions tha Tar preteraty opinic toogrternther wern-andet JGNATZ-GOTTLIED You hae. i ~ y Bctaans Detter Ber | D brated your golden wedding in the presen ¥ descend: a—ele c fe Men, women and children should not have to become panpers bef, they receive the consideration to which they are entitled—Foundling: hotuld-nothe-better-fed-ant cared for thar chitdrenr who stay at home Tren and tour ereatgramd Prosident Roosevait has-already At —mind—h spat youth WS such —as—was_down—there— en, team vidas F ae: °. tay martial In these 1 ; The readjust should be sy develop SiIdInGet ‘ Betas age Fae a be Aenean in a crowd {9 Compare them to any London crowd he e readjustment should be made by developing and: building Pheretore_je._me congratulat and one,’ mor ns acral = ce a) Wee seen without foallag ashamed , to the core. he home, the family and the individual American citizen. 4 saw women who looked ss eoweatth ha Other men-haye beén married f Say yf MAE || irresponsitle mut; ready to. ok if) . the-rich-menowd wr ere ere : The-rich many i come by increasing the cost cf nec expands to Sharkey dimensic zs aR Ratabastaupalicalt ough they were Intelligent, ‘voused*— essary-egmmiodities through discriminations, trusts and monopoly shoulc : qnarital success, femeniber Te coe are spate I ing up and down the course eee Terie intly of siete-eeven heads: aes around ‘Krugs Corner and Willetts turn. We saw men who were attired itke human beings snarling and yelping round at thr constables who were trying ta get into wuch Per- |) cee thom back from the path off sail Joh) danger (where there was absolutely no Keefer, of the In-} syoupa for them to be except to satiety, ternatonal TT OH their ‘nwine' appetites by rupbering). ” Corfipany, yoster-| J: was sickening and disgusting ta Let This Happen to You! “2 By “Pop” sy, nes oh Strode on Sey oan ee wife makes than you, For the has been a haven s ; y due to her ——— : t etters from the People ten de (9 Me cy untnsbionanyeFeneaay's [Att : © ~ . orcnicage prought by one of three lving wives of n dead | Dride n fe news told of a iaweuit a cnt x + NESE aaa aE eva the goldeneta agate, capo ot the -Pe -not-be-ahowed to-escape justice by throwing sops to-charity Z da of the potter, the shrivelied hands of the woman 2 and for you for fifty years. i ate the bridegroom and wish tio always Pullman The fen Problem, cat. angry at her To the Editor of The Bvening Worl hing for her victim, ro yaa Any. hen keeper will tell the author | broke away cheering the mouse for Across i hia bu ofthe hen problem that It Is Imposs.ble | haying escaped death this time ERY small are the armics of automobilists. He. was much in evi-/ “There ts no place on the continent i to calculate what “five and one- CHAS H. WILD of the jittle gove the cup race Saturday. |where they can hold a cup race and Ort. Bi Is Hallowe'en: That {The Even: ww Mand fractlon< See with mathema ‘Damphoola. Nathing—wilt atop. 3 pow!* watd Keefer | the mob from getting out and showing in_can watch a mob of jow-| off the next time the race occurs.“ anos ——y -jence,a GEE! THIS FRENG are thinking of the way the! @idge a mob as they did, for the event GU OLFARE SS cokers ated own at tHe Vanderbilt: has-been too (horougaly: advertised as Fierce tt! } j occasion Where pevpie can go-and be ai a hen does her exactnose then se fye-and-oene-halt- = fens witt lay one sixth exes Auto Races and Sayngery. five-and-one-half-dayea, if there ts nao i | | i venting Ben The RH m: wera injured or k morbid curloaity. For th 4<_Pesple toys is-ane t in race, Kame yacen-are-merety nuIty. AS be quite as The Campaign Cigar. -By Walter-A, Sinclair. eee say's R. Kipling--''a good cigar Is a smoke, fs nothing but woman,"' pays he by way of a Joke, ted a swell perfecto and Jaughed at the things that are. land ted tO-hig-firat-term as Presi- dent and ta his second term? 5S. M Can Vote on Father's Papers, 1G a fc te d the fearful and wondrous campaign cigar. = e—tite—seunie : : : 8 - € aH : rfuj. for_here is x ray of hopes ———— years old, am now twenty-eight, My if 4 who efforts -- = “ rot He eaninian cigar tea rope ra old; ow twenty-elgit. My |all niglit: to see tt ere i whe op. eft —- — e IPs eaucetinboreceits LH SU ea IAS Sued pS AeA Cast Pg eRalt ance {CZ DONT Know A Oulcur! : FROMAGE DE BRIE 4a cabbage wrapper, @ smell like an auto car,'* Treats rae x ns as 0 be Killed. Thax temyte | Germar i uring Daas { OF FRE VON SIEUR Ee AN" HAVE IT RARE II! | a eee Eee areanalthscemmneneleae New York Volunteers ¢ bloodler tha ‘ i ulate thelr ex- Ss mae oa ead L | the time is now ripe for the smoking to presetva the loafer vote, Oh n war ntinap esta tone ample. who was i ] GET! THIS “FROMACE \ i~ | irough the bur muy look Hke Pelee and the smell like a stable goat. Crete nTN | : DE BRIE” SouNDS. | hue Chinese have Fisen boldly to stamp out the smoke called “dope,” The Jaattrenn. TUicy the yolers, for a campaign cigar Is a rope, | To the Editor of The Evening | Cont of ridges, feried out who peer eerie OGTR EY SEES Ste vg ie pray ‘Doore are girls that might tempt a amoker from his worship of Lady Nic, Ant Sie gel Gage cine pga a ‘phere ave widows whose charma would make him abandort the two-fer quickg w she 8 She | Brookyn and Willlamsburg nd | f sper rides i is } i i ey ~ : But never existed dameel with charms that were so ‘neath par makes } tin new washtubs, spe ee paiva th alconmoret Arba | new washtuie, new: now long gid it taketo butid ine termes?) — Stop Laughing! a ee A a ere pala et , ainteaal Hee : | das for the reckless donors, thelr actions Inspire hope: ( = to haye bhe halls papered and palr | Brooklyn Bridge cost (ip to 1899) about| And Asaf il we ees Weeatie ine wake eater ia “4 i She lights the gas on her r early} KO. Ht was begun Jan, 3, 187, and| “Are You Interested in airunips, Mrs, BOREL Reve na ead canipalgn rope. a (wile mili daylight) and lets us ten- ) pened for tramme on May ft, 1a mi ' poms © teary ants walt until we can’t see our hands | burg Bridge, ex raaliiaate “He t deed, Mr. Swat r Q Before us pefare lighilng. gas on other ; Was about. $11,000 teva “6 unmarried daughter: Odd Directions of Crime Waves.. ‘ . { fs toa 12% . ver floora. One mors knock. She gos to] Gotham Manners, i Potency i aa a 3 i th@Board of Health and complains of |. a es Blinkecear se ls OH MERCY A PIECE) GINME A BIG DISH O FFICTAL statistics are exhibited to show the great Increase of crimes tm aerate bitte air Peer rar tea PLA aad pune re you blind or crazy, man? O'CHEESE. On CORN BEEF AN! the United States —espectally erimes of yiolence—that are anything but plum a I got up to give my se a woman | Dp. you r think Miss Heavythinge HEPA CABBAGE PAL It” facorable to the country when compared with the ‘records of other clvil« a handsome: figure? Ciinker— ‘somest figure that Pittwburg Gazette MES Tin the Subw (You see I'm fresh to | trom New England.) Before she coul ke it a fat little man allpped into {t He didn't look ashamed. She didn’t, jjook surprised. No one eise paid an attention, I got up to give a “‘womfn in tho," {zed nations. Thus It Js seen that whilo the ‘average number of murders and nansiaughters in Candi {9 15 pes cont.,/or three for 1,000,000 Inhabltarits, the number In the United States |x 9.82% or 129 to 1,040,000 inhabitants, eays the Phila~ delphta Record, In Gerniany the ayerage annual number of these crimes ts 24, or nearly five to 1,000,000. inha in \England 322, or teh per 1,000,000; In France 62, or fourtean per 1,003,000, and in) Belgium ninety-four, or alxteen per 3,000,000 inhabitants, it i There data, {f correct, reveal a great disparity Aas to this dias of crimes axnong the nations having the highest claims to clvilization, But assuming the oor reetn ‘of the datn in regard to. these crimes tn the United States, they would lead to erroneous concluajons aa to the law-abiding character of the American. without a careful analysis, While the average mnnual number of murders aud Vell, $1,000, I | Jennle—Did you hear of the awful fright Jack got on his wedding aay? my meat. She took tt, with-| Oitve—Yes, indeed. I waa there kid] a word, ard then glared at me 94] saw hei--American Spectator, she thought the raising of my hat| Sy an effort to mash, J gaye my teat) tim— told your father this afternoon Bridge‘ ear to a.’ Brooklyn girl looked amazed that any one should | tat I fairly dote on you | at did he say? | by in foolish. Tae crowd stared «rin-| Her—W. i i tmnt was 3 ata fivelesged hore | I) Him—That he woubt provide me with menalaughtera is 24 in New England, or 4.¢8 to 100,000 inhabltants, In the Middle aRengY sine A Pitas e509 eM@is tell Chelr| an antidote to-mo y in the $ 1 1 West ten to 100,000, itr The mouse, however, had di SUNG MOEH GTN GR OO Ie LER Reto AEs Plat nthe, sHADS. of {States $6) to 120,000 and in the Central Weat it rinee to 22.30 te | 100,000 1m the Southern States and to 29.42 in the Facitlo coast Staten Mbrough a hole eaten into ghe toast, The BPRINGFLULD MAN | creditors—Columbia Dispatch, cance ina ausrsit bonne mic perinnenieisg *

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