The evening world. Newspaper, August 21, 1907, Page 12

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Pubtsdes Dally except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, No, 8 to @ Park Row, New York. * PORE YULITEER, Pree, 1 Kaen 124 Greet. JeAXGUS SHAY, Rost reas, #01 Weet 11418 Beret ‘Entered at the Post-Offlce at New York as Sesond-Class Dal! Matter, bor bngiagd und the C pele et toe ie ce tinent and All Countrt ‘Ev. ‘World for the Untied States, One year. wes | mt ne yeni © | She month: $3.1 One month.. 30 e OVER-ORGANIZATION EALERS in live poultry have “to tS. tablish Standard market quota- tions.” ‘This means. that , the farmers, who raise . chickens, ducks, ‘geese and® turkeys will hereafter get less and that the Consumers will hereafter pay more. The members of the Live Poultry Association will become correspondingly more prosperous - as the gap widens between what @ producer receives and what the consumer pays: This Imppened years ago with the local supply of milk. Af first the farmer received 3 to 4 cents a quart and the consumer paid 5 or 6 cents. Now the consumer is invited to pay 10 cents a quart and the farmer gets 24 cents or less. The same widening of prices attended the workings of the Meat Packers’ Association, the California Fruit Association and the Southern Allied Commission Merchants. It has followed every organization of either manufacturers or middlemen. The alliance between the Western Union and Postal Telegraph ‘Companies was promptly followed by an increase in telegraph rates. The formation of the anthracite coal “gentlemen's agreement’’ was Be! Prompily followed by increases in the price of coal. Since The Teather trace became “organized* the price of “shoes-has igene up. ©Since the copper trade became “consolidated” the price of copper | ll fond) ag sll li So with iron, steel, tobacco, woollen guuds, lumber, turniture and *évesything else where organization has become effective. The middle- men are all rich Everybody else gets less and everything costs more. To a limifed extent trade unions have succeeded in securing a partial dike advantage to their members. Where employers are not a trust, as Jin the building trades, wages have been substantially advanced. Where “émployers are a trust, strikes for higher wages fail like the recent strikes "against the Steel Trust. Organized labor is at a disadvantage with oj- _Banized capital in that hungry stomachs cannot long fight bank accounts Where there is no competition between employers a strike must fail. +——Either-everybody-must-hecome-“organized'*-or-the organized-middie- men will take to themselves a larger and larger share of everybody's farnings. If everybody were to organize, if all the farmers agreed on the wrices they must receive and ‘gave the rest of the community the al- pteritative of starvation, if all manufacturers agreed on the prices of cloth- Z and furniture and gave the rest of the community the alternative of ‘going naked and sleeping onthe Moor, how much better off would fanybody be? | If “organization” Is a good-thing fteverybody should be organized and ‘ body should overcharge every- ly else. If when “organization rcharges it becomes extortion “organization” has~gone too “already; for-osganized-extortion as absorbed to its members the benetits“of prosperity which sbould universally distributed. + With the trusts and the labor unions both working for higher prices, What is to become of the rest of us—the farmérs, the small shopkeepers, athe ‘mnen Gn salaries and the large class of unorgatized wage earners? They pay for u _— Letters from the People. authors Te Coleridge, ( nyson, Towel, les Holmes A Jup iden of Corea'n Prince. | Kingsley, We the Wlitor of The Evening World Recently we read t Cores while in thin « for death by the Japan He certainly has a very bad at ®raln storm. Ile seems to wish to sympathy in this country tor conui mot existing. I xh Tetirement to nome se SCHNAT? he may fully recover SCHNATZ. nations An Odd Assortment, A Queer Grievance To the Battar of £ a The Evening World's Daily Magazine, Wednesday, August 21, 19 ESS i ait aT ea a me Ba TD ETC Tae nL ee ee ee { The Mayor’s Chair. By Maurice Ketten. 1M GOING ,] ON MY NACATION, MAC TAKE THE CHAIR SS SNS UM GOING on ONY Vey iv S SSSSSESSEESSSS How to Keep a Husband + The secret of Ing ® husband's (or love ts one which matiy have implored the gods. tO VoUchsafe, fr Men metithics are like fruit—all more or lees worth’ a med by the sun of love. Courtship ts the fresh- Gus“season and nesticity is the practical kitchen In _#iich the keeping is perpetuated There arniwo kinds of hushand-keepera—the wife who preserves her husband and the one who pickles him. The former, by the warmth of her affection and the sugar of good-nature and common-rense, not only preserves her spouse's love completely, but he becomes sweeter—more lovable and loving as the aays Ko by, The latter, by the acid of distrust and fault-finding and a generous seasoning of bad managemont, keeps him—oh, yes!—but In such a sour and chilled condition thnt he Is too life lens by the process to even try to eacape from “the family jar.” Both these methods, as you see, have the quality of permanency; but tle results, how contrasting! Jellies and jams are also sometimes made by another rather unusual style of husband cookery with good keeping results; but the husband's Individuality is lost in the hands of this strenuous kind of keeper. His former nelf in oblit- © capture a husband—o! wife's) To hold him, nm yain, geen tranamitted inte a 2 2 x By Helen Vail Wallace, | The preserved husband is known by his impartial sweetness to all woman- kind. By the law of association, all women remind him of his one dear pre- server. The pickled husband !s known by Mis sarcastic acidity toward woman- ind in general. In the pickling process the sweetness of loye has somehow jel. The preserved husband, when lett a widower; frequently marries again. If, | on tals occasion, by some unhappy accident of over-confidence in the sex, he falls | into the hands of @ pickler, she will find him but slightly amenable to her siur- | por A thoroughly preserved widower ts eaid to be the most desir of all husbands oes The pickled ! fidence in marriage as a joy-bringer. ed man to the end of his days. Where does the bachelor come tn? you ask. Not having attained to the hon- orable estate of marriage, he has no rightful inheritance herein, But we'll class him—oh, yes!—as dried fruit! If he has been slowty and thoroughly dried in the sunshine of friendship, under a netting of kindly sympathy to ward off the fly of discontent that creates the worm of pessimism, he may be gently stewed over the fire of affection by an experienced cook—preferably a widow—untll he ts transformed into a fairly delectable compound. If ypu would keap the love of your life-mate, beseech the gods fervently to provide you.with all the magic chemicals to ald and abet the preserving process, stipulating, however, that they omit thé acid preservatives, “Lemons” or sugar; which are you? jusband when left a widower seldom remarries. He has no con- He not infrequently remains a thoroughly ‘erated. He becomes “Mrs So-and-So's husband” Reddy the Rooter. WHY, VAL, DESE. CIGARS GOIN’ TERF GET ME To jor’ C HER. DOIN’ WID DE CIGARS, Revoy? AN’ DE woIsT) Ever! low, and am b ares and wi: pointing u the ex-puginat, Fy 1 OF FORTUNE On ¢gempted to write my nam several oocanions ne on Av plece Of Paper and attach jc to the crown of fay hat Who Rain and Draught. Mo the Eaitor of T Lat summe: May from June til ening World: rained nearly every | August. This sum dry ¢ nally Klad to mony The “Autophobe "| To the Ee | If tho « Jin old” France t ould have co of The Evening World tile had pean vorus Revolution Poople wpeak often of | stern’ soca. On the other hand, | of our most prominent and moat |i)... lent may.were the sons of mints- | road. i Rots OF thoso sons of ministers: 8 oe R Betas havents. tee her: | iy folks and’ Cie), pedestrian the bistorina; thy poets : ie a Les) St badness of NOW WHEN Dé Boss COMES IN. FKOM LUNCH HELL TAKE HIS _ USUAL, SMOKE, SEE ? I MUST GO HOME AT ONCE, REDDY, ERE [ BECOME By-George Hopf: &2 & 2 | Now, SAMMY, YER DER W10 DE WILLOW FER A POIPOSE! LEAN ON IT, QL BOY, LEAN ON IT! FIRST INVESTMENT. Rolllnstone Nomoss--Wot would do {f you had a million dollars? y gumbob—I'd mpend al! but $999,800.95 for a glass o' beer,—Pbiladel- phia Record, Serna eee you the’ past, caused by speeding automobiles, + Kaiser Checks Autos’ Speed. HE German Emperor! has: fasued ordera that all of the numerous imperial | phere is room for all on the earth,” automobiles are to be driven slower hereafter than has been the caso in ‘This notion js sald to be due to NO ROOM, NOW! jDuting Charl {the crists had passe No. 26—-HENRIETTA MARIA, England's Frenoh Queen, UT for one woman Oliver Cromwell might never have ruled England. The head of Charles I. might have remained on that rather unworthy monarch'e shoulders instead of falling into the executioner’s basket. The later history of England, if not of the world, might have been different. The woman was Henrietta Maria, youngest child of Henry IV. of France and Marie de Medici. When she was sixteen (in 1625) she was married to Charles I, King of England. Charlea was son of James I. and grandson of Mary Queen of Scots. He inherited much of its grandmother's fickleness, tyranny and charm, and all his stupid father’s dull obstinacy and self-{m- portance. Thia combination a fow hundred years earHer would haye made him a fairly acceptible sovereign,’ But ‘early In the seventeenth century the‘English people were slowly beginning to wake to a sense of their rights. h reign the full, tragic a « came. Henrietta Maria's brother, King Louis Xi11. of Franc p ted by his Minister, Cardinal Richelleu, to refuse permission for Charles to marry Henrietta ‘unless cor tain changes should be-made in England's rel!gious laws. Charles, who looked on a-promise merely as an.easy way of atcorplishing his own wishes, agreed; and the couple were married Soon afterward Charles, finding this agre broke It. Hie wife was furious, and domestic ement inconvenient to|keep, f rife set in, Charles's favorite * Minister, ‘the unworthy Duke of Buckingham, was forever stirring up quarrels between the royal pair, and the first three years of their wédded life ~———————— A Broken Promise and were miserably unhappy. Charles tried In valn to { What It Led To. subdue his wife’s haughty, fanatical spirit. She, bane in turn, began to realize all too clearly that she d married a man whose word w worthless, | whose vanity was egregious and who was unfit to govern any kingdom. Had this mutual estrangement endured through life it would have been better * for both. But in 1628 Buckingham was murdered, and (with r> one left to ~ make trouble between them) Charles and Henrietta became devoted to each other. Then political trouble set in : Henrfetta had all Charles’s vanity and obstinacy ard encouraged him to regard himselfas higher than all other rien and as afipointed by God to rule his people in any way he chose to. His belief in “the divine right of kines’ was Charles's ruin, He owed to his wife's tafluence much of this foolish doctrine and most of the tyrannical blunders to which it led him, Prompted by Heurletta, he {gnored the people's rights and privileges, in- sulting and dismiosine thelr representatives, the Parliament. When hard pressed he would willingly promise all sorts of reforms, and as soon es 1 he cheerfully broke euch pledge. The people grew a. He They hatred” Without” r dt » ruler? If ever he had any doubts on the snbject his wife qu put them to rest. Yearly she mede dled more and more in politics and e rred up fresh complications. At last the crisis came. King and Parllament clashed once too often and civil war ensued. The plain people were rising to crush forever the {dlottc doctrine of the divine right of kings. Many Englishmen had found Mfe so unbearable under Charles's tyranny that they had fled to America. One of these would-be emigrants was Oliver Cromwell. But Charles had re- fused tm and-his party-permission to-aaii. Inthe first-stages of the war Charles was victorious, Then the tide of fortune turned In favor of Parlla- fent. Henrietta fled to Holland and > raised money and troops. At the head of an army she marched across England int and joined to hate him and tis Frena much Interest. For was he not 6. Charles at Oxford. But by the following year the * » royal.éause was so hopeless she was sent with her The “Divine children to Franc and never again saw her huw +: Right” Leads to band. Charles was overcame and imprisoned. He , broke them and was condemned to death pcheaded In 1649 and , England became a commonwealth. Soon Oliver vell placed himself at the head of the Government. letta had been recelved with somewhat chilly hospitality , Anne of Austria, and the miserly Cardinal Mazarin. ildren quarrelled, lack of funds harassed her, and altogéther her years of’exile were wtetched. She is said to have been married secretly during this (ime to Lord Jermyn, one of her attendants. This or some other : event estranged her children from her and left’her alone in her grief, At + length, Cromwell being dead, Henrietta’s elder son, Charles LI., was restored to the British throne. The ex-Queen received a pension of $300,000 and was ; allowed to return to England, But she found herself an insignificant out- , sider In the land with whose destinies and history she had so thoughtlessly juggled. Her healtn failed, and the lonely old ‘woman drifted back to France, where, in 1669, she died—half forgotten and still lexs mourned. Civil War. made a new set 6 8, The Jarr Family's Daily Jars. By Roy L. McCardell. GET THINK it's a good idea, a very good indeed,” I waid Mrs Jarr, 1 it'§ Just such things as that which show that, afterall, they are not as bad asca lot of’ ancering people say, Of course, I haven't time to hother with them. bur for all that, I've always held that (heres a good side t be doing « great 4 say, or anybody « them but what has a Kood purpose, although 1 will admit that sometimes—only sometimes,” mind you—they are not carried out. Hut the worst that can be said about them ts that they may cause extrava- Kance to those that can'¢ afford It, for {f ® woman {sn't dressed up rodody payn any attention to her, although I have known cases where having a good voice helps a great deal. ary ve you'd remember her name if I'd tell It to you, only I forget it Just now. No, {t's not Mrs. Donald McLean, but it's another one of those women who have thelr names in print all the tineralthough I will say they are all eager for newspaper notice, and Lise Devereaux Hlake always did say that ‘Ola Abe.’ the Wisconsin War asle, was a hen eagle and laid o, aithough I don't Jerow how owtve-eould prove it, because it's lead and: stuffed-and. in a museuns. how, and, although you might talk to me for a hundred years and say they do overdress, still there worse things than that, and « proper regurd for (presenting @ good appearance is better than oelng @ sloven and men are firet to there ix a good aide to to everything! And, any deal and, in. spt ys, there isn't one of . beeaul worse, are find fault If you are mlattern, isn’: that so?” “Great Scott!” exclaimed Mr. Jarr, in amazement, “Well, if I want to tell you something that I agree with and think ts a great idea, that's no reason you should at me and look pop-tyed as if 1 were Holy ito everybody's «religion sho’ re talked about in the papers, al- 1 be respected, although it ranting ilke one of the though my belief is that lors’ do haye fits they ‘are YOU UAKIng MIRTUT, WoT Cried Mtr Sarr, tye Oren eae about John McCuilough's ravings on the phonograph, but you beat it!" T was only trying to tell you about what the women's clubs have resolved," “You were not. You were talking about the ‘Holy Rollers’ the last time I could catch a word.’ replied Mr. Jarr, “ ‘Holy Rollers.’ indeed! said Mrs. Jarr, in surprise. “I Just happened to mention them, but what I was talking about when you had the bad manners te interrupt me was about women's clubs."’ “Oh, women's clubs, eh?’ rejoined Mr. Jarr, ‘Well, Jf you can tell me what you were talking about, or what you meant to talk about when you were talking about women’s clubs, without drowning me in the flood of your language, go ahead." “If you'd only have a minute's patience I would have ‘explained to you, said Mrs. Jarr, “that I fust read tv the paper that a very celebrated clubwoman— let mo see, what is her name? . here it fs, Mra. Anna L. Clark, has ha@-the Federation of Woman's Clubs adopt her resolution."” “What.was her resolution?” arked Mr. Jarry i ‘That's what I was trying t you when you interrupted me," sald Mra, Jarr. haa proposed the men all have ‘A Husband's Hour,’ " “That'll he grand!” said Mr. Jarr, “Husbamia are to have one whole hour, are they?" "Oh, not to themselves!’ replied Mrs, Jarr bestiif: “That isn’t tt at all, They are to have an hour that thelr wives will give them, because there has been, #0 muoh criticism that clubwomen neglect thelr homes and husbands, If they have any, but a lot of them are old maids, and so to repel this false insinuation, and {t 1s true in many casca, and [ know (t, they axe going to adopt ‘The Husband's Hour." Vhat will happen then?” asked Mr. Jarr, “Oh, nothing.” replies his wife, “Only during the ‘Husband's Hour tt ts proposed that wives will talk to thelr husbands," “What?! gasped Mr, Jarr. ‘Are they going to make twenty-flve hours a day?” “T don't know what you mean," said Mrs. Jarr with a puszled look. “But I think {t's a splendid thing, and Til give you an har. “Thanks,” sald Mr, Jarr reaching for his ride." Intended taking one amt maving a little game of pinochle with Rangle and a few friends at the Dutch- man’s on the corner, So If YOU give me an hour that will make two.” “fold on!" orfed Airs, Jarr. “The husband's hour ta to be spent at-home and-— But Mr. Jarr wan gone, e “Those clubwomen are crazy,” sald Mrs. Jarr, “What do they-know ebont men, anyouyt! From Reporter to Knight. Bon—What does this mean, father? Fater—Ah, that refers to the time there were any motora.—! the large number of accidents | pefore . Blatter, ena had

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