The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1906, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

collusion. ~ =~ —-fainted-and-impartial. ; intpartia a a t. and the wages of noarly all clnases aad @vdlshes dy the Press Publishing Company, No. 63 to @ Park Row, Now Torm Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Becond-Class Mall Matter, Ga aeees NO, 16,801, MAGISTRATES AND It is an interesting cain: pr MONEY. eged to have been coo—is the smapall police magistrates, cach c two-thirds. in number of th posed of by them. The used men are tried in the Court of Special Sessions or in the Court of General Sessions. The investigation which the Grand Jury has begun into the doings “of certain police magis s 1 foundation not only in, gen- s-eral public rumor .but. in. the al made by thé suspected magis That a certain magistrate rejects the bonds of everybody except a favorite bondsman is proof of favoritism and ground for a belief of par- jpation-in the bondsman's profits. That certain magistrates discriminate in favor of certain attorneys! f —aad-aiiain-securing=these-attorneys tnisiness-and-fees-ts eertainty-prooft -of their judicial unfitness and tends to-confirm an impression of corrupt That certain magistrates should mitigate the charge or finally wholly ;discharge-men- engaged in certain’ offenses {s apain k 1 partiality in enforcing the law. i That these things have habitually happened in matters before cer- (fain magistrates is a conclusive reason for the Grand Jury fully to! “Aanvestigate,-and-so-far-as- ties -withirr its power to purge the bench, The police magistrate is the only judge with whom the great _ma- Jority of the population ever come in contact. For its effect upen public confidence In the administration of justice it is fully as important that the police ‘bench should be pure as that the higher courts should be un { _ Letters from the People. i A Good Philanthropy. Piece of ribbon 42 inches wide would | “Wo the Waitor of The Bwanine Wor jSoveran area of SORU.92 aquare Inctica fn the past five years the coat of y- | ( Area of the -polel 2 Tie arses ot Roreased at least 15 per | pole and ribbon are the aame, Therefore 42 times the length-of the ribbon must equal tint of the pole, or bosse.s2 + hes__D: ide by 42 The ans squnrs-Incies _gome.of our wealthy inén-do not-try-to- ; ‘utla suitable homes for thesy young + nwomen, where they can get thelr roomm | 7 tne 5 and mens at tho very lowest prices | qn of'Jabor has increased proportionat quar a 4 Wornlered mat oF IOS Test <A i; Hat" Craomade, tor of The Pvening World: les in noid Warm sDosaibie, I Detlave that tn modern+ Ee io. z jamen wes plartable, edna} —_Diltings erected uurpose the: Fpasananer fur aoe a Regatta could be accommodated Peta veatc int 4 ety better than eobemtelns eee + winter, Tig @ handsome tayested in muc cold heads, Wor and start a warm ha tor? W { Up-to-Date Te the Eater ¢ Did Alde, { The Eventing W eve aRe t inches wide Avrapped around, t Of 6 Inches bety Pee) an’ be c 8 wide, fe*the problem now read; “Mow long trates of certain cases before them: | proof of lack of im-|] ——— UR PHY | THe ENEMY tFhese magistrates, being the next} 2 step in the criminal machinery after} he_police, have apparently in some} finstances imitated the comupt prac-| tices-ef the polices, 7 The- difference between the sal- ary of % police captain, $2,750, and} the salary of an inspector, $3,500, iS only $750, less than the interest at 6 per cent. on the $15,000 pro- motion money.__To make sucha z transaction profitable to the pur- _ chaser there must be an enlargemént of the field for unlawful income. ‘Naturally the same illicit transactions would follow when a polite mag- istrate Has paid for the political influence which secured his appointment. } = One specific case underinvestigation by the Grand Jury isa charge! ; that a man arrested for receiving stolen goods paid $1,000 for the mag- istrate to adjourn the case until the witnesses against him were tired out} ‘and then to discharge him, Z 4 The noticeable difference in New York crime in recent years has been . the legal machinery prepared in advance by criminals for their escape. * Pickpockets, burglars, sneak thieves, receivers of stolen goods and other habitual criminals have apparently combined to defeat justice. They have organized sets of lawyers and witnesses, They have in some se- cret treasury a large available defense fund. Their.means of escape when detected are-provided for in advance. 7 While the majority of the police magistrates are meén. of honor and Jawyers of standing, there are on the magistrates’ bench certain individ- ‘uals whose actions and associations are resporisible for the general sus- _Picign which attaches to their official conduct. IN PUBLIC” — ow Witterent By J. Camphell Cory. THE JARR FAMILY & 3f By Roy i. WeCardei ashe oN and Mr. Jerr met outatde te latter's offic other_erenti AT do I old Man,” sald Mr. JA | ET'S goinand have a drink," sald Mr. Hang! the theatre. TAVINg A TTS Dall wont prevent tat, Mr. Rangle. “Come on! One won't hurt you,” iere follows Tow married men fall, Vehadow of the gin-mill across what wo ae “eatd-Mrdarr the rail and hin elbor friend in amazement aaié Mra Jarr. I've UGimine 6 Ht been thinking hops on “His wife spends it, sata Mr exp! , but tn salutation, a cheerfil gentloman ‘n a tan overcoat rushed up. jaimad. the good word? Who's going to ‘ald Mr, Jarr, “and you're just $ becomes of ati the money a man say Jarr, “here's now!’ ‘This’ last was “Helle! ie & “You Just me foinus1 ey promised Pt 774, be homo early and take the missus and the Kids oul to) {ge reptter +2 and snewetn tho gsoon as‘ ht nthe bar. sNow,-I'm-oniy s when he | au sald | cating 4 adjourn , You join me, and “K.mentioned no name!" eald the cheerful man. io be elected asked Mr. Jarr. thé-newcomer, J've. heard in a long time! " didn't your her’ wolnw Have anothér!* acquaint dd he-only relinquished Uie bite. of tof paying for the next Mr. darr, when such a_pr. mo 10 supper and ten take my round, to hurr sald Roazely. Te Dut I avon't pl. dd to the next room, the char, rotten som: “they play pool out Weat.* Said Mr, Jarr. nd Jones, the latest comer, left the ald the bartender. ck In with th So Mr, Sarr, others and pa aside. If YO [et J HENRy Peck! How > | CAN You SIT THERE! gt en) AND PERMIT: THAT aM | AwruL ORGAN < f es} (GRINDER TO DIS =) TURB ME AT, 2. Um MUSICES -B See Ko? ae U Had a Wife Like This - By F. G. Long POT HAVETO FORE) et {worse the pockets, from also f other players, The lowest man_patd—for—the-drinte the low, ond then hurry ‘home. Mr, burned diny tn tho aining-room,- a | there on the tableowhich had he @ meal on jt, way a “reads z : Have taken in to moth | ho Mr. J. & SHow DAREL {You DESECRATE __}TH® SHADES © eis [Be HANDEL) BACH — S 4 Aone Jarr turned over the hom + And-then Mr. note was dated 4 Py M, Later he was very severe with Mrs. | Jerr becaus him and let him know. eald his wife, (SERVES You RIGHT, HENRY), 2) Peck! FOR PICKING Leite CELGT WITH A Poor ‘xe NORANT FOREIGNER, ©. OF EULTEL OE GUEST] & “Pot married | mon —____ PLAYING SAFE, | ‘What would you ike to be when you kre big, Tom?" “A soldier." “Rut you will be ind T of getting 4 “By whom?" “By the enemy." e (After a moment'a refleotldt)—' “Tut that’s a good whoers. and then there was a friendly aquabble as to who would) @ butting in and confs-| pastoboard under} ing waa pro: amily to the into the back and tet me la aunts t4;-9-Or 1p FN others not so fo: te, and the man 2. Dy adding -tho-nunibered—balle she path recolvlng a quarter *—shidren and gone arr gat down ome WITT * lettar continued: “Sorry | | you about the’ theatre: | Bur a4 baked’ cooler. and | the nk they would rather | go with her and eat them ang ko to the theatre some other ‘nigh It'ae the girl's da out You can go vut and get dioner' und come ¢or us at eleven, Clar Jarr noticed that the she hadn't telephoned to “*ThAUs No excuse for your drinking," “What's 2 man to do when he comes i 0 Jorr lost consistently. ie. be! a Jon for pridwa rakes Slat to: win Oel4| aires she could not encape with less than a page in nearly every newspaper tn E Finally, “after aorg. w 28 erie’ eae epands on thé point af homa. + 3% = = = ——___ Tt was after nine, -A- single tght t yours {x certainly the more dimeult, me early and finds ‘his house de-| will ev |'sertod and no supper, and no altor-}of bygone da. {native but to mo to your mother's and sher hard luck| mass plays Jarr, = his point of View Bo tmpressed him that for some hours he goonir—recfwomen 8h garded himself ne the most’ martyred | rights al of a morning. ‘notice a clouding up in the vicinity of Mr. F |real estate NEW YORK THROUGH. é 79 Levin S-CObD ya ‘ ag The Spider-and-Fly Classic to Date. |___ L this town the visible signs fall so often that tho- r i gular dope sheet contains as many false entries werintion vilition of an Elite Directory im Pitts ; and for steady use It {sn’t nearly as rellable ax the Gytisy Queen's Dream Book, ‘given free-with every dellar bottle of Sogwow Indian Tonle. There {s a claesic to the effect that when a grass= fed outsider goes against the bucket-shopping game of the great city he Has about as much chance as ar new pastor among a hostile Polish congregation in the hard coal region. On°memory's walls there ‘hangs a! picture of, ‘Tecumseh H. Fly, from the Deep Woods } dropping {nto the cosey little establishment of J. Algernon Wabweaver, in. the Death Valley end cf Wall street, and being divested down to his seco-* ondary set of wings and his garter buckles. According to the time-honored turning to Pawpaw Junction {n bis undershirt and afoot. ! V » But Jet us consult the facta, Every"now and then. thé fnanctal distrtet + is invaded by a gentleman wearing one of those examples of the glaziers art which prove so conclusively that the Brazilians are, ipdeed, an inge- * nious people, He !s the kind who can make the Rio Janciro brand look Ike! real jewelry merely by screwing it into his shirt. (His capital is under his. hat where nobody can take it away from him except by trepanning. He ts strong for the get-rich-quick promise and the get-scarce-quicker per- 1 formance, In Bradstreet’s he has a rating of XX—23, signifying the j double cross and the abrupt fade-away.' In short, he appears to be all to4 the Nquid glue when {t comes to gumming down his share of the current « fly crop, iM The Itfe-ltne of this gentleman {s presently crorsed by a pereon with a raw oyster eye and a saints-at-rest expresefon, You can gaze at him,and’ catch the odor of the new mown hay and the tang of the mellowing wine- * sep, slightly toned by ter rary association with our subway. He’ looks Ilke one of those people who wear health underwear and decide what | they'll eat by reading the br ast food ads In the street car coming down’: He ta plainly o star_ member of the class who imbibe a few — opedia Britannica when they want-a little light litors on such timely and § Family af Kansas,” by," stanzas_—out of ie-Eic; Utereture and write long letters to newspaper catchy topics as “A Defense of the Late Bend “One Who Knew Them Well.” i { He imbibes Brother Spider's lovely prospectuses touching on tbe merits ~ of the Dentist's Dream Gold Mining Company, owning properties of such » richness that you cay dig the pure stuff out with one hand and with the 7 other plug teeth with {t. He opens negotfationssregarding some of those « opular stocka now selling at cents a share but guaranteed to go * to $11,000 Inelde of ninety day : The jowelled highbinder bas a soothing mental visfon of Mr. Fly tate ing down from the kitchen joist the gray yarn sock containing the con tingent fund. It was laid by for a rainy ¢ he knows, and already he cam 4, y's domicile, There ensue oortain proceedings which a beginner tn the realm jof ~ finance could not understand without a chart. Often Mr. Fly pecomes Mr. + Spider's tocal agent in his home town. And then=— r THE FUNNY PART: ‘ is In about siy cases out of t Mr. Spider takes ejther the bankruptcy law or the first steamer for Algeria, and Mr. Fly adds materially to his ' holdings. Straight Galks to The Men in the News By Nixola Greeley-Smith. The Man with a Brilliant Wife. EAR MR. STUYVESANT FISH: A= brief notice In D yesterday's papers announced your resignation as vice-president and director\of the Ratlroad Securhijes : It was a very brief notice, for brevity has al e disth tharncteristic of your apa ippearances In print Financially you haye been one.of tho big men of the he number of people ta 1m Okano ta: pau! tothe’ circle or your personal acqua’ For you “have successfuny eluded the white 1 of publicity that shines upon the sensation- atts just 7 d-that-ts perhaps the most remark. ble of ents. 8 Deen always In the ‘papers, tothe unthinking you are an interview with Charles Fy g for the hour wheq I had Aver éveral years. 0 Isat on a ben Cer nd incidentally there aro millions of her—have been amply grat you whose exits and-entrances on the public scene have been quite without oroiestral accompanime nitty toths thousknds of readers {a -Whose homes Mrs some the. Aynoasmpof spectacular brite ancy. Yet ¥ ave never-once been celled "Mra. Stuyvesant Fish's husband, * and are a rare \nitance of a man whose own public Wontity has survived the possession of a clever wife, i Sarrled couptes nrero-invarinbly classified asain —Jonen'\end“Mr; Jones's {i Reka anna gM JM, OF twit on a re followed seperate rls witht east rae (ane e Hest points y can recall whefo husband and wits have followed separate orblts without clase { pacing mistaken for-ensh other. : if Tarr, and he 2 can rotire'from the idency of the Rallroad Securittes Company SOS eH Se gas than a hundied wor rte — setae de her lead: nip of the younger mult!-miltton- get into tho papers these days, but !t takes positive genlus to Any one keep out of them. And you have It, ————e EE “THE MAN HIGHER UP. By Martin Green. about hundred Buftragettes m ‘ omimons trying to make the states 1 the Ch Store Man, “th Fs nd rough-housed the House of men adopt a law giving them yotes. a “ypa all off." leclnred the Man Higher Up, You can't stop ‘em. When leas than a Sundred women can pul the House of Commons on the bum hollering for votes what wi} happen wan the crate atrikes New York, and a couple ot thon- sand females who have’ been tralning for years on the surface cars, the ‘L' lines ubway make a rush on the Cily Hall? There's nothing to it. ‘Wh votes this Ix golng to be « hot country to Uve in, Have youever met a profe! al woman politiclan? She tas a man beaten to a frazale Rhe can commit more kinds of assault and battery on truth than any man would tbe: brutal enough to stand for, but she's shy when she comes to telling other women who don't agree with her what sha thinks of them, She fella the truth then every time and presents ft In the altogether. ‘some men who think they Inow women because thay can button a sromants back without pulling her all ovef tho flat ventere to assert ehat If ; and the women. hay waist up th we ever women votes In this country tho idea, wilf prove fo he unpopular and be’ thrown into the discard with the hoopskirg and other rolica 7 ntually so men maintain that while woman fs galted naturally ¢o . awing, con, Josh otherwise make @ man foolish, sho ts bound to fall down on ‘As an indlyidual performer, \working with or& man, or eometimed two, or three, or, maybe, five, all sho has to do fs to crack/the whip. But i the , jould form a party, for instance, and proctalm that they wanted i begin geting, in concert, as tt were, all the wires they could qrouldn't make A hose-ring for a wnat, | ‘A few hundred mén can ket tognther, Net Ayo or elx days in nominating @ tleket, ronst cach other to a'bllvter from the platform and all make up after thing Is over and the majority fins wor, But when a lot of women get together and the majority wins the minority will never epeak to them again, Then tte « majority splits up into three or four parties and the minority does likewise, and the first thing you know toe husbands of a couple of the women moet In a quiet public place #ith n lot of people and policemen. around and caress ench other with billiard cues or bottles.’ ‘rvomen never could understand politics.” proclaimed the Cigar Store Man, et, | iget’ me wey Fl be the ep cunnycat Lot elaine thet away “Maybo not,” assented the Man Higher Up. . "Women don't understand 2, 108, version, tho moral must always show the poor, foollsly buzzing Insect ree” iy ne poor woman aind azine, Thursday, October 25) 1906 icsmenh i } ap < fa DITANt and faatfonable gPaR AN | w ok a 'e nf nA c:

Other pages from this issue: