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The Evening Worlds. Daily Magazine, Tuesday, December Ii, 1906. a | “When Ye er Civan cae a Plenty.” Love MW rears co ha Ls A y Zitrola ELEM Sheridan and Miss Linley. u (C>AWELVE o'clock. You unconstlonadle creature, to I make me eft up thin timo of SAY MACK’ (oEAR ME’ HOW DISTRESSING )- \ NOTICE BY THIS MORNING'S. TY 1S TO CONTEMPLATE THE a ZL s : : PAPER THAT A POOR MAN witH uTTER DEPRAVITY OF THE LOWER ANG ene oa 9 | ALARGE FAMILY HAS BEEN ARRESTED | ER—ER-GARCON ANOTHER | IN NEW YORK FOR STEALING FOUR CENTS- WORTH OF SUGAR FROM (a) COLD BOTTLE as HURRY THE SUGAR TRUST ot let me Oh, my y I would do this yaelf, Indeed, my Bense to you, whe word from yc are the tyrant, Inde not equally , Tam n you or writing to y ng, when we falwedin great deal about you. sR. xald ahe wae mare you and I should make @ match of It. Nay, so aa!d the whole world was of the opinion that we should be married {n less than a month. Oniy think of bright Hev' and the Sugor Trust robs Privilege of robbing tt national committees be (recalled, fixed the sugar sc Txust wanted. them. Thus the Sugar Trust ¢ Aaroenble t r hap: Reivers dear, dear lo ot 2 .Servator of property inte So Linley, “the Nigh of Bath,” to Rigbard Brinsley Sheridan, secretly her husband. }3 | Their coi had teen @ most romantic ons, Miss is ley’a father was a composer of muste , and Elizabeth's voice was considered = 4 | 4 though a married man, made bas Deautiful as her face, which Nad made her the belle of Bath. Ghe had meny. I 5 is attentions that she swal- © terms {s} EEE) |{ “The Nightingale} Wed © email phinl of inudanum me found Jn the fess, | zane ps } tom of Bheridan’s sister, Ser most totimdte friend, 14 | < Bhe récovered, however, and Sheridan proposed that og oeociaenmcmnanaes a) she fly with Min to France and remain there tit pe anger, from which her father seemed unable to protect her, was over, The two young people proceetiod to Calnte, where, to prevent gossip, they were t Hie, married. Iguorant of thia proceeding, the young lady's father fol- ioredh er to France, and after promising Sheridan that Ne might some day, ’ sont to aecept him as a son-in-law, took her back to, Jingland, The defeated Capt. Matthews pubkshed a letter in which he called Sheridan Siar and a scoundrel. The !atter cia enned, him to a duel, They fought, an@ dof it she exclaimed dis- Bt luckily the ejaculation was sét ner is.a very big thief. | amsburg and Long Island} as Sts biggest | crude, raw) sugar, on which iff is low, is} anal into refined sugar, on which | the tariff is high down to gxcttem Such monopolies as the Sugar Trust a high tariff 1s| AGnaroh upaNlenty wees 5 seals ‘ necessary to enable them to pay their workingmen high wages. In its alviliacelnatitarrrrasCalsiaincs reel pits mar see senusstiia Williamsburg refinery the Sugar Trust pays its workingmen a third of Bee Once, after a jealous quarrel she wrote to Sheridan ‘ epee ae ‘ou ere sensible when J laft Bath (for France) I had no idea of you but what a hod-carrier receives, “Less even than what the traction merger | a friend. * * Thero are insurmountable obstacles to prevent our ever pays. being gg even supposing I ovuld be fiduced again to believe In you. * © & 1 c i “ My father, before e t ved Almost all these workingmen are unable to speak English. That Is hanmarinesapeaarpanos for ae eneieiiied EBL areeceree 1 , : . ¢ n & 5 what enables the-Sugar Trust to hire them cheap. One of them was | i j efitvetiah ieeen eaten cree vanoaen are: auucn dee versa tokeveseehis =) Dadian. Sap ei Le 5 aPapettic ee bea ety 5 a $ earnest request, but he urged my promise {a such ; s Gustav Slavinsky. His wag for fourteen hours work a day were Bei z © O'a' inannersthaba couldiinot retive’ tor eee his cat ; gm week and the privilege:of scraping up soiled sugar from the floor to 4 jen Ho has rated mo two or three times since wa have been here. He ' ivilege is ngt 9 young man, T believe a worthy ona When I found tate: 4 sweeten the coffee in his dinner pail. g 1 ‘ my, 1) Z reso! ae I resolved to acquaint the gentleman with overy circumstan of m; 5; . . +e rf + 7 Ifo. ce y Slavinsky has a family, a wife and six children. His seven-year-old Z io, T did, and instead of inducing him to give moe up, he !s now moro ear ' y Ys J Z iireevens nest ¥ i . , 1 buy a00s birthday was, last Friday. The family could not afford to uy g But Sheridan'a love conquered tn the long run, and a« year after thely white sugar and Slavinsky had arranged to save his portion of the floor’s te romantic elopament hoe and Milas Linley were remarried. es xd cas aay , A Thet fed I a4 ‘. Scrapings to take home for the children’s birthday party. He had saved 5 Niece: Saari s ee Sripneed an aen ne bested nent $ i “, ei Ri . Re aaa (4 ith n hi 4 ma ‘i rare always beget by bills, a week, keeping his portion of sugar ina box. Friday night he emptied Hh “An you know," wrote the wife to her sister, “poor Dick and I have alwa: SF Paes ‘ ei struggling against the stream, 1 bl xe the box in his dinner pail and started home. : dhl mee he bptrentiek cco lar Sv ast Coskal CHIC ICI) The watchman reported to the superintendent that Slavinsky was © end of nineteen yenra of happiness, and for soma king s I with him. verintendent called a iceman and | tate, threa years Iater, +m he married 3 taking sugar home with him. The superintendent c: policeman a Jane Ogle, @ dauster of the Dean of Winchester, whea-he was Waceieeed : she but twenty years of age. Shoridan loved her very suffered the same Vicissitudes as his earlier and roma ingale of Bath“ BETTY © VINCENTS ° (eBADVICE*LOVERS — The Choice of a Husband. O many girls want mo to tell them which of ¢ choose for a husband. Their own hearts ares guide, provided the men chosen are hard working and can support them, No amount of love can Justify a woman in marrying a man who cannot support her. But no amount of money and no extreme need exouses her for inarrying a man she does noz love. When she does It, she concronts the inevitable penalty in the future. A mn expects his wife to love him. No matter tress ahe may be, she cannot long docaive him as to her state of Tiago far oftenor turns a woman's indifference to hatred. Unless had Slavinsky arrested. He was locked up from Friday until Monday morning, when he was discharged. He proved that the sugar was his own. In any event, the sugar was worth not over four cents, and Slavinsky, had served four days in jail, one day for each cent. At this rate, the distinguished life-insurance officials who gave Mr. Bliss the policy-holders' money would serve in jail 14,870,250 days, over forty thousand years. 2 jallalae At a hundred times discount from the rate meted out to Slavinsky . Se eS : RE PL ay pases the railroad rebaters would all receive life sentences. The Couple Who Marry Without Money. # — By Helen Oldficld to be regarded as phenomena]. When people they hare no right to shirk or to Jay event tat others are ave ta be borne alone Modern life tx extent_and ‘arer. ‘The, possess luck is so rare.as 9 eee at least,” most people will agree! In real life s that to marry solely for orkily gain is a mean and | Marry they a. Gespleable deed. ‘Those who apparently marry for | Upon other should money would no dowbt unanimously repel the accusa willing to bear )t fn ation, and claim that they haye but follo even though bod; h Tennyson's Northern farmer gave to feeling. jon ti at c . be m to b eretted lon the eat: tor nh see sealed yes maker ate necessary factora in lite, an pecludpesy: and), wary and) nent must be reckoned wi! you don't love any one i . j ., e subje Nothing mak Slavinsky had nobody to go on his bail. No District-Attorney ac- a ene tauilcoaaente rays ase Ls companied him to court. No distinguished counsel pointed out that the | » progresy of tril ted me out to a boy lve ts rr ho knew who I re } nything elsa on earih confident that wut we have Tolube us LOVELO: man has not law was not made for such a criminal. No police magistrate obsequiously ; awaited his appearance. No writ of habeas corpus was sued out for his | rellef, : Oh, no! Stlavinsky was poor, Ignorant and nothing but an ordinary fborer. To jail with him! ast a lawyer of ‘Yarted experience and-keeping company y who lives In hax asked me to buy 1 T couldn't get f | hie tdor cannot Tove ;| present, has f But as love yor th have been er to walt for b ia also {t worse than de: among thi aus, I am forever sper se good We 1 Jay down % ee RpOH ROMS Hugo, “ang. money on her, Do you think ft wou'd right for me to buy the furs until T ecome engaged to her? GM way of m ‘opriety, Wants to Keep Company. ask a yoman to her lover, howev p his own head passion o: Letters from the People. S822 wealth are purely relative terms, prone to rhe may water, woven years old and desire to-meet n—youns teddy o {5 about twenty-three vears old. pose owen a 7 nd some women | \ ‘The “Omerritten Law.” man even ff the ran has comm’ A zt eat fnot that at h other for yea Sethe Ditty of The Byening World: muréer. I do not belley th. There is no changing would ice some information se to | est type of ofvilization would be a will “unwritten ina!" Does {, mean} ing party to a turer of a human be ur bominonweaith, tn the range} either by our man-made laws of dnd emplitode of tts legislation, has nut | Btate, by a mob or by a laws enough for the protection | son. The deed seems ¢ ali its ottisens, end that any f00l|no matter by whom comm! would appreciate hut course T shoutd wire zg By R. W. Taylor. ‘It’s a Foolish World, After All! « Love at First Sight. . | dan constitute bimeelt —lesialator, W. 1, Newark, N. J. | § = Feet AGARE MONE furyahd hangman by meying 4 ae |fiweie, aoe ie You | (YES" THe BEST TANG ME (a (600 a Garr, \ | GIT UTA may wat! Daarigtey ; wnt On my way home from LEE ARE ESAS |PREALLY > THINK CAN DO 15.10 PART! o0DBYe stun Avie SaVeereln AM a young girl, etxteon | x fhe West the other day 1 mete man | %% the Editor of The Eve 2a ULL NEVER SEE YOUAGARS Se } JOE! BYE FOREVER” J || CAN'T You-Ste so, and-am-a utudent of “| ie : rwho geld that a multimillionaire, « A ——_—______ | DON'T FEEL LIKE/ - bine time aio T saw @ young many As 305 avs Keven the gel 40 lone: pretty and well-dressed woman, and 4) ae L FOOLING? BS sat sieliisen a8" he Lingle : ! ma ti vou. 2 Tha 2 with @ potitioal pull could do al- &. } > Ses —< = “ ya on, A \} \| © Any meaning tb a young man King hotd of a young Indy’s arm while out walking? A friend of mine it means they arp to be married: ‘Primitive’! New York. To the Bdltor of The Byening Wort A sicot storm tled up trafic in Amer- tenia) Viewsat, inost progressive sity: wa uoduaint= ed w! ? him quite often and| ‘There ta no meaning at all alana I know he has noticed me. I even know ‘to {t. It la not considered good form. a the Chasing Your Hat. ke By Walter A. Sinclair. HEN {oy walks catoh you and cause) you to fefl. Bill that 1s not bed, for st's over wo qnick— | ‘This prank of the weather when eiewalka are slick. The stunt that wil! make you’ fee! foolish and fat J i ~ en Yfis TS NOU, HELENT sh [it Doesnt Aine ee BE RIGHT) UL 120 SORERUS, These wild, windy mornings 1s xtrat Patra ee OVER~ THERE'S ||TO_ QuaR® chasing be [po 1c iu | SOMETHING a : | iia Piaiar e i I NANT TO SAY \ When, stepping through tce-crusts,* you Tk) ih wet mlush, Clear up to your ankles, it makes you sey 'Tushi" it makes you quite angry to see one foot wkate ‘The opposite way from the route of fla mate Phe trouble ts owe} before you aay ‘Bcat!" And not long drawn out like when SES, RIGHT AWAY !/ ~ e to hear your Ahan batt © Oh! wild woes of winter, what worse them than this, To chase your loose headgear, to grab and to miss, While every one smiles, while some openly To eee you just mies {t and chase it once’