The evening world. Newspaper, November 17, 1906, Page 10

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Daily Magazine; Saturday; November | The Money or the Law? By J. Campbell Cory. i Published by the Prees Publishing Company, No, 62 to # Park Row, New York | Fett Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second:Clxas Mail Matter. j - ‘3 | : ; - Vv =i e .NO, 16,624, 5 OLUME 47 NO,1 ; | By Lrvin §. Cobb { | The O19 creature in the centre has about one thousand million dollars, got J by his yenius for creating os. } { lls Income ts about eizty thousand dol | lars a day. He cannot give away m i as fasi as he carns It, the money-maku system which he has created {s so rich. The ittle man on the right is Judge Thayen of the United States Court, of St Louls. The people of the United: States A Pause Among Our Football Herose, tout -has-tost hla Athertoan meal vy our attention to our tw well that the unhappy e thin half the A-new-crime-has—beeit the crime of confession. And for t Taw, but by the necessities of High Fi “speedy. It was Inevitable that some ‘weaker scoundrels who do the in ther some of the smaller and of the High Financiers of this) sngry Castellane iene where to. ow Madame Aj and city should have twinges of-conscience. very i poy Men sbout iifreen dolara a day wo ii fits | | administer —Juatiee._He looks small av inic 6 them fit tools s impel them ay | physically, but he ts might ae Saree prone to yield to spasms of rem jee ‘iightlest monopolist, becau think What So It has always been with crit THe safety cf'soclety against} for the majesty of the law—teli ve bebn. sae Si i enforced. the less Th little nan on the left {s pless: because he expects the Judge to enforce the law, Ses This sult ordered by President Roose. | velt and begun this week-will be a Su- preme- Test of the Pow against the Power of- éno! | porate Wealth. than one man of men there must be-somé “= the:supremacy-of crime is that es require for-their commission, and tha weaklings or penitents. . Murderers, burg forgers, counterfeiters and! . like bands of criminals have been destroyed through the ald of thelrown) | =< *_. ‘members. i M | Without somé one confessing it Is difficult to secure. p e-the Influenza Holents mre able daily to eee 7 gravest crimes. Bribery it is almost imposs!ble.to-prove. without con-| = f . k 2 A PAE i y then 4 ta¥ing « twenty-mécute £ : ee Conspiracy {shard to | ride tn the s : a aan We are ; ow next yoek wil be one of the feed al horres i er that ts calcu without confessions. . Such). sful prosecut ; Gov. Folk! fully aware of this | necessity, and. their Imitlal steps} were to secure a, confession . from} some litte man’ against a bigger) man; and so on higher up, until the trail Tet to a United States ‘Senator sovernor of Mis. | pistRiey ‘Court comMoNn been’ the policy! cand ng officials and contempt for a man who turns als, the necessity for the ~ touragement of such beirayals has always been recognized. | State's witnesses have always been allowed to go free or with slight | punishment. Confessions have always been encouraged, even to the) "point of extorting them. | During the McCurdy presidency of the Mutual Life, when Henry H. | Rogers was chairman of the Agency Committee and George F, Baker of | the Finance Committee, one Walter R. Gillette wes one of the vics-| presidents, having general supervision of the agents and the minor ex-] penditures. One of his duties was to see that the minutes of the differ-| ent committees were kept and*that the business transactions of the Same pany were duly chronicled. zit f Naturally, Dr. Gillette knew about the Yellow Dog: Fund, the} ___<agency rebates, the legal expenses and the syndicate graft. He knew) | whal McCurdy, Rogers and Baker had done, and how millions of dollars) -——belonging to the policy-holders annually vanished. | : Whether Dr. Gillette had-an tack of awakened conscience ‘or! } judges. Whatever. nvay be rrot. And the lines une 3 the Meld a leg. And casuaky lure ss he teara away the whether he feared that as one of the small fry she might be prose: lags shalt-pte-proud and convicted; anyhow he want before the Grand Ju and started to = as he re- paaes SaTereT emiling confess. He had got as far as tefing zbout the Yellow Dog Fund, how; — — — a : f he had charge of its petty diskagsements, and-how false vouchers were . ieee , = = 4 filed and approved to make the books balance, when he was anne from Why People le n Love More Tha n Once. Cd By Helen Oldfield ___testifyine further. and promptly indicted. | co ee athica of love\there ta no question more fre an infatuation fannod by = masterful extibition of will power, sometimes amo end Lopate mere eamestly argued Shan this: Can we ing even to hypnotiam: an ardent admiration which cannot be warranted to laat cve-twien? Yet, for all this, the question is one whlch these are only a few of the feelings which hurry people into matrimony, to be ————e-. We All Love People or Things FE ae era tel Car eamointve avissers. coeetz=rectetted inter on: Opiebona ven] the) mibjet af searerine! one's Ast Iore for What We Give Up for Them. jen -End-women~ tyre © t-many_tmoa- a ze ae ar en aea eae ae sai ts — sItand alow that If Ia matnty a matter of temperament. The ® towhich one . By Nixota-Greetey-Smitt sires i eseeer ee ue *pegtns falling tn dove also has midi to do with the matter, aa] ee See ‘Ot 2 ey-omith.— nat comparative poopie carry thereat: —— = = Soret nieeres be g Saanaratinerttaketactancys The probabilly {# Maat a man’s first love, when tt is more thenen attack of 7 r pidertrtintire of (he Astor-family has just Undoubtedty young people, fondly in eve at the pregent | “sit Inve," ia the deepest and most consuming, Dut, like @ hot fire It burns of $00,00) for a ffty-foot lot adjoining y out soonest. This {s aa {t phould be, aince a youth when he first falls tn love home on the plea that {t ts the only ont, will aasert what they also earnostly believe, that a (yetnne geet at eSeo eee alee heres Have javed a. Parely tw old enough to marry or tn a position to support a wife | bas to exercise in. ora, they say; they perhaps may have felt a passing fancy But, after all, the strocg-st proc’ that meu anc women can love more than To this old Indy ‘Trixte’’ ts worth $50,000. Indeed, far for some one, bit love—no! They are firmly convinced that once ls affarted by the large number of men and women who marry after the | more, for she to sacrifice that vast ambunt for now no change can come over the epirtt of thelr ream. Geath of a dearly beloved wife or husvand. It would be unjust to say that thos | “he puodle's me D | hays never seen "nor have you. But we are Indeed, thir tn probably as tt 14 be from the lovers’ who make such marriages do so without love for those whom they espouse tn jd be unkind. not to-aay unfate, to themselves and the elther case, and the fact that a darge percentage of wun unfons are plainly, and affection to admit for « moment that any other love cleerly happy leaves no doubt that for them at least {t ty poasible to love more t has equadied thetr present devotion in Intensity than ono fault with women who marry widowers ts that they are prone to Pent felt concerning first tmagine th - husbands oompare them continurily wibh those into whos fh ften ia prod te hares—not to say misery, places they have stepped. It the marringe ts happy, noming of the Kind takes this passion vera a apeciea of obsession wh ts pot place, Moreover, the fact that a man prefers to marry again tw of ttsatt mmpte arise from soma spurtous emotion being mia- proof that he-loves the second wife well enough to fait her inthe place of her A pessing fancy born of vanity or boredom,—pradacessor.—Omicago ‘Tribune, 65 cents for him, 2 all of $650,000. Anything jp though but ore person ia mura that I Of course, Dr, Gillette is guilty, but if he is: guilty, how ab 1 r superior of cCurdy, Roge: d-Baker,tunder-whose petal ot xian y Dreaent obsec! acted? awe y lest yeara bat for the ble“over on my Mr oRagtie tat? : to be staken from the Metropol traction compan: oe next fat that crise d nuisance devteed bya honever the pump otherwise a prospect Mubulical landiont to dev toothaches and ho dnnan't break dowr or the furnace give out and tJ fikely at Dr, on ThE “Fucry Up’ New Yorker ** 2 a ee aioe Keten : pene ta to at lonst one tAPA, OU DIDNT AY Go00 BY Z Ne BABY for suibdening witnesses and buying Mr, Jerome sent Tillinghast to jail it is quit ~ ette, too, will be sent to jail. = If-anybody élse-thinks of confessing he had bett will go to jail, too. District-Attorney Jerome is ¢ notice that no crime is so heinous In this count confession involyes-the leaders of Hig be-so-speedity punished. t Hamilton, Fields, Jordan and other \ and_defy prosecution, scom at-the-en the éncomiums of McCurdy, Rogers, freedom from prosecution is assured-as is permitted fo protéct them, zi Letters from the Peopl that howling dervish across the — tes. ‘Though we wouldn't ners wouldn't leave us have on tn th: ez of them, their mot er look out or hs] LET ME ON 2 ICANT WAIT FoR THE NEAT CAR 1 LATE NOW ns your choloe may be, seems to them to offer you_the wealth. ¢ topax matrices, for htm. But it they wet -haw—erentiy—you would ment thal universes could buy the torn fingers suggestion thatthe treasuran of his old glovea fram you You ara luc! motl % ‘of BeSeUrt;, aw you happan—to—poasess-— such treasures, The poor old her Fifth avenue home has only a Uttld poodie—probably a of whimatoai-old-peodie et thatBut {ite tr tucky to bave even pootic to-leviah her n‘tection upon. lucky to have YEO,0e tor for him te playin. Jor we love people or things for what we gty up fer them — | Colon, Comma and Question Mark.” — By Walter A. Sinclair. ft m Nog D CC RPS 2 L : DONT Oe oT Re en SToP TwaT MORSE ~ HH mod no longer fills the air, the campatgn betng past, “ j Nhervapanere Comeay CANT you SbEL—— : neeueeee RAUT But-now the dirt ts flying, and you bet tt's flying fast. * sail The Deantan Word [Maina 0 Rv oS Ue For Theodorp, who's first {n war and first {n peace as well, if erneareg HURRY) G 7 Is flying ‘round the Isthmus now to eco and, hear and emvell. \ He zips right by the scoops, and goes to evory ball he’s bid, | In fact he's seeing ‘most es much as Poultry Bigblow did. not looking any of the wholes | 4 i int eninalleratie ses | Dig, dy! Root Kke 6 ptgt cae : | Japanese oe soveral tn-| Make the steam shovels go rlg-0-Ko-No, if 4 TUR AMES | Here comes the President's “Zone-seeing™ rig, roennered. has just to go { ci ZAg! There he goes, but you know Ma jod's big. i . Can't stop to #09 how we rest when we dip, ‘ ~4 Pg! wtth @ rdo-a-Ho-sto, ‘ ‘A Ilttle stop at Colon: for a perlod of rest. Thenytknp, state of comm, Teddy scooted for the wost. His question marks flew frédly {Yoln the moriiing until night, © ‘And the many exclainations showed bis happlest “Dee-liht! 11" t ‘And all the little school-kids lined at stations ‘long the way Sang loudly on the nation’s hymn. He only heard: “Oh, aay] — The Gould Wedding, | (Sinar’s { THIS. ST (A FIGHT? 2 YF ee 6) young lady cou free. t ot C ‘ te wey Girls; Mere\ta Your Chance. _ Sing! eng? Moke tho words ring, } Me | What 4f the train rattles by stth d “ding tr” i Q a um Here comed tha man ith more power than Mng, > one | gome Shake out the flag, to tho breeso let i fUng, /Itt wp the drum and blow hard on the fia a lie Zip! goes the teacher of stremuoua fe, : ‘ q a QUESTION: : fain the same boat as mesel—one who go m . assed bee never known ywims inten dare te. Ae ie aaa Na toa “oan, eae ik Sa v

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