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The Evening World's Daily magazine, Monday, |MRS, POTTER PALMER'S VIEW OF CONFERENCE _ Published dy the Press Publishing Company, No, 2 to © Park Tom, New York © Entered at the Post-OMice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter, jastical prope ol types rhaps, and _un- ‘ The ,vicar of St. Paul's Church, one of the eccles ———~of-Trinity-Gorporation,-makesa-public_appeal for the = writer girls from -wicked-emptoyers.—t i! » intentionally probably, this clergyman insults both young women who -work-in_the downlowil_of ers—and -fellow-workmen. ‘Phétypewriter- itl of New Yor neéd no rescue mM! yn. or reform: atory of any kind. Neither do their employers and the, men-clerks who work ‘at the adjacent desks. A girl who is drawing the wages of sin; | does not pound a typewriter from: 9-A..M. to 5 P. M..for $6 or $8.or! $10 a week.: These girls work to} be honest, niot to be vile! The scary let women. of New ‘Yor found | thsemrhere tim -at~typeasiter-desks.. 1 - = afd five-cent_lunch-c | ~. L1€the Rey. Dr. W. Montague Geer wants to fing fallen women} < meeding charitable care let him begin with the’ property Trinity Corpora: | _tion ewns.. Let him I6ok up the police. records of the low tenements on} Broome and Macdougal streets which the Trinity Corporation own: Let-him_go to the barrel-house where the tenant sells five-cent whiske: Let him read what the inspectors of the Health and Tenement Depart-° ments -say_of the-Trinity-hovels-on-thetowerwest-side— + Trinity is one of the largest landlords of New York—and one of the | Ht-fought tothe Gourt_ofAppeals_the remedial tenement Taws? - required by sanitary. conditions. It appeared before legislative com-| mi ich would -require-it to make-its -tene-+ == =ments-healthiul— lt-usestis-powerfal inluence to shirk-taxation. What becomes of. all Trinity Corporation's income? — Its rents} -amount-to over $700,000 a year According. to its last diocesan annual | i eport all thé money it paid out for charitable-or religious- purposes was $180,881.17, and of this $79,201.62 was voluntary collections, leaving only $107,679.55 chargeable to its great income. i ial SSaarst f Sas Where does the other half-million dollars of annual income go? Not for charityor religion. Those expenditures -are published, Not for : ‘repairs or improvements. ‘Trinity is notorious: for its Stinginess in this HA Part of it goes in big salaries to its lay officials. Part of it go --paying taxes on- chits vestrymen-have individual record titles. Part is deposited in a subsi ockholders.- eS Fhacpeecaran be, : corporation it which vestrymen eee * Where does the rest. go? What becomes of this vast income re- ~ z ceived in trust for religion and charity. : : Ss a z S Not designing employers, but bad homes, squalid surroundings and age ae nequally puz con! evil social conditions lead-women ta shame. And no landlord furni | AL Ee ame. + k ‘d ishes cms more of these inducements than does Trinity Corporation. The working Not a Socialis—but Has i! yomen of. New. York. have much more. cause to. demand the reform of | Found Real Motive and Trinity Corporation than has any of Trinity's vicars to appeal for their] ~~ Re FEE Rassesiene asaiese & Bs Life Work. ~Ralher-should-the-Rev, Dr Wo Montague Geer assemble the vestry ! oe and officers of Trinity Corporation and demand fronethem an account IS STUDYING MANKIND of their stewardship. “He should reat them the deatt-rotl of their lene: ; Sica ments. He should read them tlie court, police and mnumittipat department ds, and then he should pray for them. They need it, NO SOCIALIST, SAYS MRS. PALMER, ~— BUT LABOR PEACE PROMOTER BY MRS. POTTER PAL MER. : n. lam thaime Letters from the-People. renathing Tor Theoninta.— MFRS Mine soT Here s1s Sass th To tho Editor of The Evening V find Uie sma ae Gis venture to advise “insomnia si resETee—metiet—of— goming It T am acnurse and hay Kevanteen yeats of expe lost) pas @ feature, and it indicate: oration, when-fermed—ast ess one. st eonlsted my train b vgtand in & long ne to ed with the federation I will instrumen 1 in Bring- syed aind-the-public; Hen, Tuer Protest Against One Block, Altor of The Ev tte ee munication Railroad branch of the Erle. ma vecben teu Jee ROL b) ything on this dir 1 tothe saving bra money, Sche not, Just as it sults ‘Uroken-down train employ calling out statt gengets to mules strangers are adhered w Mrs, euch set all the w drivers and } stables in the sby mercy of other pay s unable z Pennies on (he Elevated. 1s ror J. ‘ ¥ 41 thr To the Eultor of The Evening World ons to meet at us Interested In| “If Still M UPS LOLTE Falter Asx LWo VI CWS OF FEEL VIS HE “IN HER HOME BETWEEN LABOR: AND CAPITAL’ SIXTY HEROES ~- the were rystainted Du ask pth n upon. Or Knit Palmer her #ofourns ological night? want din- not only in We want t her supertorit In hand to ass oy fused, lie condeseend other: Ucket) whiel ur y Mr loves worthily, the object of affection noce ¢ i oof humanity extant. 1t tx only in ca i m may bo centered’ In a person that 7 un coldly EB id who really cares for his wite wr Kox., Yeast even. he docs jot Nis jidmment In selecting ber in speaking of thelr wives. Whereis some wonten tik t ut wil stop to 1 andy aye th ably thinks wets tomt’ Inn t unis an i More BT. 1. noth Who Own Phin Voount ime some resting 4 f the Bi it Ode “nf 13 at Ne ALA SLes SURE ay ARE ee Aw the outpolring of a rather gushy soul, {t Ia an Intereathix phatern Parkway’ istal c t Sate t Lape: SAR ONS LON eC Me » proud knight used) that Mrs, Reader may be proud of, debate KWH), talon vf. the Pu “POG, K. bls sword to proclaim hie dame or damsel the Queen of Love und Heanty, 194 thouslt about ‘igcliut never eens wine brie aarat ha) i t , \ Fall her sex? arily seemy the of foolish tn- Ind now rages Son the elevated saving up A 1 Dae the pdimles they recelve to un) on | Bichose tot “and Patter tert f women? According to thelr story “the | S200 and t auestion Is anawered} traye game dal ¢ Vitra aaa Lhew Th . erie eet al Saempojee Why ttl 'we ate |wtHt e my F hic H By Nixola Greeley-S \ the company’s agents? I Ge cersglinceer ee fa . | S Hi sba d az, y ixo = Hale Fro ant aottel [ne Gh Pace lee ee for This Hu nd. wae. we By Nixola Greeley-Smith. : nd of Mra.) a Teader, 9 t beason husband of to-day should not seize Similarly the her the mont hink so Is Inclined to say so, If they enn't heir-hitshands® © moat sincera sion docs not read very well iu print, But lt was not In- document, on@ glad to have (TC Labies—iwin brothers—were thrown into the Iittle Italian rive jto the rulership of the walled town of Alba Longa. Amulus bad imurdered the latter's son and daughter, and now cleared away dis li Febauwle by putting the daughter's two habies-into-a- basket and t The Tudda Who Ation was no nearer solution than before. For the populace were near! a. Lihefy Lon_thelr left arms, prtrering 'O0-DA WHO MADE HISTOR By Albert Poyson Terhune.. ‘No. 1—ROMULUS, The ‘Wolf Boy,’? Who Founded an Empirg, ' Tiber one day nearly twenty-seven centuries ago. This was thj- way thelr-grent-uncle,Amulus,-took of settling their future }thrown the tins’ grandfather, Numitor, from his position of dtrlef, bi them into -the-Tiver,— : 2 The basket was caught by the rapid current and swept out ot sigh” downstream: But {t did not sink, Borne up by its own lightness, It wi at last cavght among Some (ree trunks at the dase of a hill. This hill later ‘célled the Palatine, anil was the site of the first city of Rome. basket upset, rolling the twins out on the wet sand. A woit-came_down. the water to drink, She saw the babies and (as has sometimes occairred {i other countries) carried them uninjured to her cave, where sho browsh\” them up with herown cuts. —— sil Re A herdsman named: Faustulus found te children there and topk-tl home with bim.- He called thein Romujus and Remus, and brought t! pas whepherds. | 7° ’ 5 3 They grow tall and strong above thelr fellows,-and_becam| leaders the herdsmen. A fight broke out one day between their followers qnd tl servants of their: grandfather Numitor, ‘the depose arora ea ‘ chief of Alia Longa, Remus was captured. Romuluj pothercdobinfrlauds anJ rushed to hts brother's r -Built-Rome. sue. In'the battle that followed Arawhis, their grea” Pa tinicle who had thrown them Into the Tider, was Killed: | Numitur recognized his grandsons ‘and would bave taken them back wit! him to Alta Longa. Rut, finding they were of royal birth, they resotved start a city of thelr wu. So they chose a site, and in, 752 B.C, set ador building what Is now known as Rome. a ‘ The ground was marked qut, and Romulus witha brazen plough drew -| py snow-white cattle drove a deep furrow of trench where the walls shoul jater-stand.—-He left unploughed syaces for the gates. and commanded thal no one should enter or leave tie ch {through those gate spaces, —T¢- ++ wake-sure-this -ondes-shonld not be disoneyed he set_a_man to guard thi trench, This man was the #vif{lest runper and most active athlete In all” Itatys His name-wae-Color..eram this our word “ce! is derived. Remu: fo had set his heart or. another site than {he oné chosen the city, mate tun-ctii these precautions and, to how lis contempt fe the trench, leaped over it. Uelev, in fury, struck hi fead with a spade, then escaped before he could-be-eaptured=-Romulus was probably not sorry r who nérwise have shared his rele, for hd aHorhe-pass-overimy-walis!'" ant continued the building of his new cits Hore a great dilienity-arose. !t was easier to build a city than to omy, with cifizens. Romulne had only a handful of followers. No outsiders ca to joln the colopy, £0 le tssued x proclamation (Wat all criminx dcbtors-and other unfort could find free refuge in Rome and would b eafe therefrom their en nil from justice. He made auspices_of the god Asylacus. Hence our modern word flocked by the hundreds to this refugo city, Tut the problem of popula airmen: -Seareety -aoweman could be found In all Rome. This defect did_not-discourage Romulus. He invited the Sabin a race. in! iting the nefrhbering countrsto_a religions. festival. In. o midst of the festivities each of his followers selzi one of the daughters of the Sabines and carried he. foeets pomeyst away. “Tho visitors were unarmed and could not Won Wives ene the girls. - Bur th : quick succession ngainst Rome. tus-beat-back, Then the Savines tried to win by cunning. Rome's strength was a fortress rock on the Capttoline Hill. They bril ‘darpela, daughter of the citadcl's commander, to open Jts gates to th She consented’ to do this on cendition that each Sabine :vould give what he wore on his jeft arm—in other words, his gold bracelet Aabines-kept—thelrshareof the bargain, Kor they not only threw bracelets, but also hurled at head the heavy shields they _Tha Sablnes_ th ntered the city.” Romans and -nts-men~ defen ther ‘es an best they Coutts Shite thr-pattie-was- ate heleht tae, who had been stolen from the Sabines rushed between the lines of col jatants and begged thelr would-be-rescuers to xpare the Romans, who! hy this Ume the abducted women-bad_grown_to love. ‘The plea, for the new husbands was so earnest that It touched Uie Sabines’ hearts, was declared and Nencetorth the twe nations dwelt-as one, Romulus | ing the rulership with T; s, the Sabine King. Bur soon Tatius df ing Romulus sole soverei¢n of the united people. For forty years he ruled—wisely, kindly and justly—and Rome. etendjly more and more powerful. But he was not content. Ono day whi the people were assembled on the Fieli_of Murs a violent thundersto! at above them. They scattered, running for shelter, In the confusio! Romulus vanished, Hts friends, whom he-td-derbtiess-instracted-ta=t ter, declared he had been ynatched yp by heaven and had become a god With such a sceming miracle to inspire them the Romans continued to fol jaw. their yanisied King’s “prec and considered themselves and -thelt city especially favored by ‘the gods. — What realy pecante: of -Romuly one knows, except that he sacrificed his throne, his home and his future,fo the good of his peopie. And,-in-consequence-of th: the greatest on carth, The Girl at. the Candy*Counter. By Margaret Rohe. {s-sacritice, the nation: he ha io REAUNE Mouse quentjon," sald the Regular Bighty-Centa-a-Pound Customer, gasping. “You Wave at times-a-ditectiess OF specth that positively startling. What has turned your thoughts to this} subject, and who has proposed?’ Poan take an lafeliigent-tnterest-tn condirions without: being! a party to them personally, can’t 17/1 have been reading fboat—an cast side girl who was (persuaded to marry a) an deepereiat iy loxe—writh hee She. n't -reekproce it he was so persistent éhe just had to yield at last He ther to love him : “\y nat Bort of Instructor did he make? askedsthe Regu- stomer, = = walt back with: her people #fler one’s week experience,'’ aald.the.Girl; “thats the answer. She found she waxn't any more Improssed with her husband than she had_been with her sweetheart. And there are lots of uch cases, not only aa thn eant eile, but on the weat aide, and on the Fifth avenie whloh iles—be- tween, 1 don’t belleve In (ie thing at all, It sotinds wicked to me— It's nothing} inore or Jess than a trtul marringe.” My own {dea fs that a man and a woman Mhautd be absolutely certain that they have a mutual love before they visit Dr,| Troughton,” " - * aon “ephen you don't cast your vote In fayor of trial marriages?’ asked the Regular Customer, symates “No Indeedy," sald the Girl at the Candy Counter, ‘They're not/my style at all, Tria} courtship Is much the better plan,” S If YOU Had a Wife Like This? By-Walter A. Sinclair. __ ee) B. Reader says his wife, Ella Rawls Reader, who knows nearly every: nee on earth, and has a “pull” everywhere, is the greatest (MA, body of iniporta ever,—Item,) é HW, Ella, oh, Ellat why can't you tell a folla 6 O When you're sure to tmaice him Minister of @tate? (What date?) ‘On, Ella, oh, Ellat say when will honors stellar : Reat pon your hubby's proudly, rising pate? (She's great!) diy , Ella, Mila! let mo.carry your umbrella, While you tell about the Judges you control, 1am on the Blla-yator and:yon're bound to-make,me greater, For Prime Minister of England ts my goal! fie Ob, EL “On, Ella, oh Eilat I'm feeling very well-aht y When you say that you will shine as only mine, ; per ar (Hoy. fine!) Leese 2 ON, Elia, oh, Ella! you passed each other fella— , Scotch to tea, you passed for me, right down therline, (Divi 5 Oh, Ella, Ella, Ella! I'm so proud that I coulayyell & Hunch cf hollers-at the dotlars you can raise, If you'll only .be the leader I will be your own IMirst-Reader, While Nelse Cromwell {a the villain of all plays.’ : 1 _ Oh, gentle Render, read{ng of! happiness.and