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« "The Evening World’s Daily Magazine, Thursday, os eit-_25, 1907; ; Ak le ae OPeBVRESRVDH @ OP PHBBVBBRE Che BR ania | Justice in New York. (@ SELF-EDUCATIONAL SERIES fp RSs soe ie | By Maurice Ketten, ‘ le : No. 14. sung names Gr htenne tr * Earthquakes % & — x le “VOLUME 47 gn sens avaces cnenaqaet ©. 16,688. _ a = oe ee Tilted ie ro 5-CENT FARES. 4 ar se al la | | WT Ey Gray) ||| |f8 a and Volcanoes? has passe aah | tee] See je - | Ge ee ‘ hanad by i [ i ST SY a SE & By her, M. A., five As crite tor Magazine by special ment.) no,” to 97 i | ehh n Copyright. Thiternationdl Publications, No ak GMs Aveode, Rew Teme bill now goes w Senate, ch so far this has chioroformed good the one exception of the at work moditying session * bills w Police bill. To limit fares in New York to a nickel is great moderation Based onthe cost of the service 3-cent fares would pay over 40 per cent. profit. {To carry passengers on the subway and elevated costs less than two cents, The surface roads cost to operate a little over two cents. These extra are what the Traction Trinity have capttalizet. They have no oepheric, | & d i Slecta} and ts practi world, as we now part of the : moral right to issue stocks and bonds against their overcharges than pickpockets’ trust to capitalize its profits. __Brery year it is becoming harder for the average man to five com- fortebty and raise a family decently In New York. Rents are-raised ly. Food costs more to the consumer who Yuys in small quan- Doctors charge higher fees. Furniture ts more expensive. Sun- Might-and afr, which showid be free to all, are cut off by high fares, which Keap-the tenement-houses crowded. ‘This little reltef of 2 5-cent fare to Coney Istand would enable-more familes to enjoy the great bounties which nature has placed at New York's doors. Now that the Assembly has passed the till, will the Sen- ators from New York represent thelr constituents or their proprietors? nited States and Canada, as we know, are - UNCLE SAM’S BANK. er our DUNG; at ine wort a wall may N the United States Treasury there ts @ greater loan business done than by any pawnbroker shop or bank or trust company. There has been collected from ; the people $169,407,000 more than the current ex- * penses of government, which, instead of being used ' to pay the debt of the United States, has been loaned to banks, which fn tum have loaned this money to their customers and kept the Interest. i Different from any other moncy-tender, the United States Government charges no Interest ons ' loans. A bank which owns Government, dity or railroad bonds can borrow money on them from the | Van oineaieels i United States without interest—that {s, provided it has sufficient influence. | DIRECTION OF BARTHQUAKE ¢ Thus a bank can buy New York City 4 per cent. bonds, turn those bonds [ease eo sea t over to the United States Treasury as collateral, and put in its pocket every penny of interest which the taxpayers of New York pay. 0 Direction of Fight angles ) Dying for Love Is a Myth «2 2 £2 «3 i WOULD rather die than marry @ man I do not sve,” ;ous consideration A Giagruntied deliver tn th 1 a] exclaimed Miss Anna Mercer, of Bayonne, whr, comting to yester¢ay's papers, was driven from home because she would not marry « wealthy suftor of parents’ selection. Bhe te the latest of a very long Li ee ¥ h 1 young women to make this declaration. Indeed. sion hearts have @ slight foundation, the as « and ' ment ehe expressed ts so old that !t no@onger attracts atten- | eye of the recorder. ner . The perhaps, the sensitive Jover dies a thous andings tha tion even tn the ¢hrilling melodramas to whtoh tt has been relegated. But old ee {t is, how often ts it true, or ie it ever true? . The banks are not content with this. Of the Government interest- bearing debt, aggregating $925,159,190, there are due in a few months $116,755,550, on which the people of the United States are paying 4 per cent. Interest. Any business man who has a mortgage on his house fall- ing due and more than enough money in the bank to pay it would draw sy and the misun ve been, has any man Shakespeare, who | Of course, If we b a check for the mortgage and stop the Interest. That is what the United stall aac Miles tithe yaaa ’ 0 earths é + on @mtistiG the percentage of mortality from heart-break would hte on greater thanif * States should do. This would cut off banks drawing interest from the than that from pneumonia or tuberculosis, But o { the realm of fiction is quakes, from the merast t wensible to man to the ? I know o teh wreck whole cities and eubtverge long ines te Government on the money they owe to the Government, These bonis | there & well-authenticated cass of death trom love-sici ; nene, and even ff such cases have been report they ‘eof are owned by the banks. They deposit the bonds as collateral for the Jected co that acientific investigation which would alone make t doans. Thus they draw interest on money they owe the Government. SSS et Thompson's Night Out & 2 { the superincumbent | On, sure of twenty or thirty tons to the » | ———__- {8 concelvabie that ever : BUT CAN You . PLAY THe FIDDLE : [LAT ace? | f f Cae oe ‘ py Se ample operstl oun sore was Taieed In Australia a last for the tace of the bonds the ( Aci tua abled tana tha open ment of interest and wou of the world. would be no res n of —_—_—— tH now and woul t P ; the Governme 1 st Pointed Paragraphs, , OME men look ae helpless a¢ © lost Gos. 4 } the taxpayers wx A S If any of Its o =) Oo {he paper-hanger éxpects pay for patting up at « hotet the bank . aah Everything in the way of trouble oomes to those who mate vidual w ; 27 fe WERRET Bony Lert MAN WAR DANGER C ry — , nie Ns / A WHURT YOU | (| {LUNATIC Or OON THR No, Cordelia, temperance drinks are not in the @ry-goods clase | Se MIM) a ae POLICRMBN AND elters from the People ¥ ious Sood t/¢ K | 4 Jd Je uw » 5 ee No, Alonzo, a man ten't neceamartly almple Deceuse he leads the ample life. A Slellinn t eee Ul if A get ael4orm Calla in love with « man unless there t¢ some reason why " the shouldn't. neces we And @ wise man never tells @ wornan with © baby how pretty some other woman's baby 1s There are lots of things chfjdren woukt never chink of dotne tf thete To Regulate C1) parents 014 not forttd the dotng thereof, When & widower takes another wife for better or for wore he shwayy a hopes that there will, be something like an aversqe.—Chicago Nows i . Another Dime Novel Hero Exposed. ' j K TURPIN wee really « most unromantic ruMan, who fret appears f& j Se D history about 1786 at Laughton, where he threstened to put en old Maw x : 2 1 ] | Shelley on the fire unless de gave him her money, Turpin's “sphere of a We 7 me LIMIT We HAD EXCUSED POINTED PARAQRARHE fluence.” says the Weetainmer Gasette, wae not Hounslow Heath, but lpping 5 t 4 ave an ‘dea you! man Wateryil Company! Angry Bont-Iaok are Ra fw ) | Porest; and the only true part of fe papular myth ts that he really did sheet : 4 art Hi! | T've the verra greatest resp omrade, Tom King The legendary ride to York on Black Hews wae pam i t ve : yy s _ Neseet Votunieorsianry, Heck, | 23,0! n'y pone and vet ge On| formed, if at all Switt Nok’ Hever, wee 18 mnt roves Rehatior on : ' . . ¢ apd & sure) when my girl's father came into the * ° | Manemwocs, but Ob, man, ¥ Lisi oi ¢ A M and eptablished om elit by appeasing qnwe evening Portgatsn a me oe Ad thet wi © ih t 4 ‘ . I e ulstie fan Frances ~* , Maa nna there wae apparencty te ¥. be erin {ot Vesting, Use, recsatindslis | poriops ona eset aghast anal 1 9 adel eoneeaoa. ore: ~ centage Sate eeu avatars if inayat dell wb