The evening world. Newspaper, August 29, 1907, Page 14

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& é day by the Preas Publishing Company, No, & to « Published Dally excep? su : Park Row, New York. IT SAPA AND MAMA TAKE SNOOKSY. To SEE PLAY! a Pee ASL RUA, Kerecd pee 201 he Post-Ofice at New York as BHeound-Clasa M Canada ny: ‘on Rates 'to World® fo: United State FOUL es lacaee month, One year... nin the busi cial teeth: “Re-t combination “of ma turers the Tooth y began competition. on’s: business dwinjiled.. He dic fiot know anything else that he could transfer to and make a Miving So he, killed himself. 7 —, Every trust leaves such @ trait {The bigger the trust the wider is its devastating influence’and the long the roll of its victims. Doubtless nine out of every ten, readers of the Utica paragraph telling of Charles G. Eggleston’s suicide did not know before that there was such a thing as the Tooth Trust. Only by causing failures, suicides and sorrow can a trust succeed If several manufacturers combine simply to avail themselves of the economies of a larger and broader organization there would be nm change of which either the public or other manufacturers in the same line of business could complain. The people who produce the raw material would continue to receive prices fairly remunerative and profit- able. The consumers would continue to buy the manufactured article at a fair. profit over its cost. The smaller competitors would continue to hhave that share of the general business to which their territorial ad- wantages and their personal management entitled them. But if that were all there would be no basis for an inflated cap- ftalization, for promotion profits, for syndicate participations, for bonds. debentures, preferred stock and common stock. There would be no speculative profits, but only an increase in the legitimate profits. Therefore, 2 combination, to be a successful trust, must begin by destroying legitir-ate competition. 3 When legitimate competition is destroyed the price of raw materials gies BAGY, SEEIMAN WANTS TIAKETS! 3 Daily Magazi : 4 piss bred ehh het PEPHPPLSOGLS Heh Hh MHHHH HHH HHHHH HH SHH UIHOHPLOD HHH H HohoHoh oHooohohs & eb. ‘Their Baby ey By George McManus a YES, Manas \ DARLING LIKE To qo To THE THEATRE t TOODLEUMS TICKET WANT To Give uP 9? > 1 8 F The Newlyweds ‘ mnie ne Thursday 1907. | WANT THE BEST SEAT You HAVE ! YOU KNOW. MY BABY —— NICE SEATS. | So BABY can SEEt » NOW SEE YO MADE HIM “CRY 1° I le DE TICKETS 4 mT (efeitos) a) ee TICKETS 29, SddD HAVE You ANY SENSE 7 COULDN'T YOU SEE HE d DIDN'T WANT 9) TO SEE Your} GUM PLAY) ¢ y. Cj =f Bi -A TICKETS Jal hildren. and the Sugar Trust do now. fixed. Thus the trust absorbs the profits of the producer of raw materials, the savings from combination and concentration and all the enhanced price to the consumer, as the Steel Trust does to-day. It makes mor: profit than all its wages and salaries. Nobody gain: but the fw promoters and speculators. The people | who-buy the bonds and stock when they are issued lose money thre: =—<frnes out of four i the trust-is-a--success its promoters lower-the The price to the consumer is arbitrarily \ happy disposition. avold an argumen ire constantly w hock or anger bi Baty; tet dim-alane. the F would y for all? He never or if Tam ured She says I do all my work—wash, {roi 1 80 as rthing {3 Kood or well cooke: fown of an eveming to ta But even my respect for y of my lving with thinks to take me out or even to church: neye: He comes home at ¢ then goes to bed ve the dishes to do, prepare the three babies for bed and numerous other things to do, arid yet he complains if one cries and disturbs him, as he is a very poor sleeper. nifled and quict and Jealous of me I was not my natural aelf, for I was of a w Iam quiet, and I have learned not to say anything to n any woman be pleasant and Jolly and natural when you to make db Us. lindifferent Husbands and Discouraged Wives ERE {a a letter from a discouraged wite which, | seems to me, Voices the unhappiness of a great m women. “At twenty-two I ma { mistook esteem and gratitude fot love. rom his treatment that he loved me, yet I don't know why ise he should have asked me to marry him, unleas he knew {would make a good housekeeper, which I pride myself on ‘ite. We have been married five years and I have three | 1 ewing and all ave been to no place of amusement aince last September, All goes in the business, and I have to ask for every cent I get and have to tell for what I need it. ind eats Ms supper and smokes, same thing always. lef a man forty-four years ol}, anz 1 can’t think now At first he was so dig can and for the sake of | m is going. Now ag: ne come to see me, for he would be so unpleasant to them and they would bore him so. Now, can you advise one tn such a plist This seems to me a moderate, acrsibie and fair presentment of wifely griev- ances common to nearly every household not founded upon a strang and enduring ove, What {s this particular unhappy wife going to do about it? | If she takes my advice she will keep on being just ax g00d a housekeeper, but | will buy a-new door mat and cease-being one herself. It Is wrong for any woman itterly to submerge her identity, her thoughts, feelings and opinions tn that of a ¥en It ts an bad for him as for her, for {t destroys all tie charm ae may over idve held for him. I think she should make ‘friends in her church and entertain hem in her home inthe afternoons. I rather sympathize with aired husband's ersion to company in the evening. This man seems to care for his home, inas-| ch ag ho spends all his lelsure time there. He !s getting toward middle age and naturally qulet and settled in his habits, This wife of twenty-seven may find him lacking In buoyancy and Interest, but It seems to me she has n cliance to be young with her three children, She must try to get as much Joy as she can from -aring for them and seek entertainment in the society of women friends she can and should form.- She should ask her husband to make her a definite weekly allowance sufMfctent to her household and personal needs. She ta entitled to tt, and would obviate an endless series of petty squabbles by insisting upon having jit even at the cost of one grand row. She should not be a meek echo of his opinions. She need not thrust hers upon him unlesn they are asked for, but she must cease suppressing whatever charm and naturalness she has She will be muuch happler, and her husband cannot fal to like and respect her more fo i So long as she does there can be no harmony or happiness {n her household It would be better to talk all the matters she has written me about over with kim| frankly, amfably and with the firm confidence of the wife who respects hersolf and.who makes her hushand respect her. 1 The Treen! market value of the stock, in order to buy it back cheap. If the trust is so mismanaged and Jooted as not to pay high dividends the outside Public are the last people to find it out. The insiders get out first. The inventory of Williszm C, Whitney’s estate was a premonition of what happened to the market_values of Metropolitan stock and bonds, and Fhomas F. Ryan's trip to Europe was proof that he had cleared his saf2 deposit vaults of speculative pieces of paper which might require his personal Presenc2 to hold up their Stock Exchange quotations. In the increased prices which they pay the general public are prone to feel that they are the chief suffer- -from-tnists,—Fhey-are-not;-No: man has been driven to sui reason of the additional fifty s which theLeather Trust makes a pair of Shoes ‘cost. No smoker has been __dtiven to his grave because of + “poor cigars wich the Tobacco Tras is turning out; they rather ten: save him from nicotine poiso! WAIT ON’ us! INA HURRY U/? TAKE IT! TANE iT? 0 M To OFFICE | MAY“ MUST GET BACK 2 “CT Bill Hustle, of Harlem. £2 £2 &2 By. Methfesset, TO THE OFFILE} by causing him to smoke less. ~The men whom a trust pres extinction are the small comp: YOU KNOW MA BUSY MAN ?- i ae like Charles G. Eggleston, > have spent the’ yes building up a} little business, whose whole capital is tied up in it, who old t start over again in lite, and to whom nothing § left e i ident, icide or th, poorhouse | Letters from the People. ‘ Slow Cortinndt Street Hunts. ning World work then An Odd Voint for Dine fon en wi Hap F & few of many tne pit } Y9 a Can They Count #1.060,0n0! an bre 5 Picts ve nu Diehtoing ; xp ia : bank twenty-five da day? If not, in hoy nd German money, iad t standard coins « « about a foot 4 mo ting I'd ike to rying In de pumpkin pie,” ‘HUSTLE To THE OFF\CE ! NO USE, CAN'T WAIT, GOT TO MIT the ne {ror hen | at between tie shoulders Which acts Ike a Wine A finger jioweyer, he ‘got mixed up with ed in this rlure iba 4 Vutonte, und a keeper who Imirted 4) some frienda while saying good-by, and Wh Key In the junction found that the bec dbent the key merely b¥ sbrugsing way woon in such a condition that he Remarkih the liner P in the sky ahead I can at least, | Nows, to der lett, w Sout) ong is Kreat Oddities of Science. yeetle fomis on! net was a mirage acen recently by tho passengers on board delphia, when the French liner La Lorraine appeared upside down The vision continued fer an hour and a half. Be voth at the thme and there was no sun, An exchange of wireless messages | 1177.4. When he did ¢ wan for beyond the horizon. Although the vessols were | asked hi! boas spt *hloago, the parsengers could be anen walking on the decks. TOSTT ¢ A wtev) bar ts drawn injat one end of the machine, Isvuing at the other |cnd in the form of a stoel-link chain completely assembled. | of manufacturing none of the metal is fost, the welgnht of the pletion being caactly that of the metal Its body, arrayed in black and white, tx nearly | ot poisonous, nor is it Intentionally fer ch ua, v 4 Back, Back to Duluth, + TORY was told of a man who fad cured a position in Chicago and wan Co leave Duluth to go to works ardens ts the Gotlath ne Landon Zoological fig rotten trust, Idiun't care whether he went that day or jthe next. So he hit upon the brilliant idva of vending a postal to hia new. ém- ployex, aaying he had missed a ox2use for not, belns ra The sea was Yes," the boss 4 ¢ card all right but What J can't understand Is how you could miss the train whoa the card didn't.”” the Duluth mader- See hau ot machine has bem perfected, ways the Chicago In the process @hain upon com- By Nixola Greeley-Smith | Delia, the Devoted. HE mother of a seven-your-c bed, hysterically feeling Gis p { know wah once Hove. exar T temperature, until at Uitte pate "Mother, he said. ¥. if you wil est apd pur ing out my tongue nnd ing my wrist. snd j { lot me alone TU get to sleep and reduce my own fe T told that story to some the other evening and one of then: spoke up with feeling ‘I wish my sister Delia could hear th “D she confided to me, later, x Mhe dovotet sister. She keeps house for my us tl {most get a fever. Tom likes t Gim think he's tever he mays a: Koes. ie art MIN aloud, out-of-tath: s-fot-to-hrer ~Aad-Delin-aete— ¢ he was John Stutrt MIT % he When she trembles for fea tre or ton well done {en't growing h Mo's got mice ple ant tm to have another plece. The doctor says he wouldn't drink coffee, but Wella, she says one cup won't hurt xt me he's 4 terror, moan- ‘ng and groaning about how he never_tlept, and about his etemac T pity his wife and children If he gets :narricd . Too Pluch Petting. “He'll never amount to shucks with health like that. Mother was embitions for Tom beforé she dled. Ho was a fine chap then. Ho used to be In politics, but Delia fusses about his xoluz to meetings, She gett out his slippers and sokes up the fire an} says how cold it 18 oUt, 50 ho leta the meetings slide, ft the'd go away und leave him alone,.ay that little fellow aaid to his mother, he'd ' xet all right again. There's lots of good in Tom." : As I Ustened I could fairly, see that solf-abnegating sister. And I wns giad that ono member of her family realized the danger lurking In her devotion, ‘Beware of devoted Dellas! Pince sentinels to round the alarm at hor ap- proach as‘tho’ she bad the plague! She may be just “automatically self-sac~ tifictal“cur she may betong te the odious troop-of philanthrapic- females-who selfier-- onsciously wear crowns of thorns believing them hecoring, Her mvek aoqut= “sconce; her adorations and devotions threaten us body and soul! All over this ‘and, devoted mothers aro making weakllngs of tholr sons, devoted sieters are making bullles of their brothers, devoted wives are making invalfds and bores of thelr husbands! These pests destroy our homes with whining children amd tyrannical fathors; they make egotists of our friends with cheap pralse, they do yauch pur citlzenn with mince ple and coffee and debilitate our heroes with SRS stippers- pores * Too Easy a Life. T kiow a girl who Js drifting in the Notwam™~ and jetsam of yoctety aowan stream to our underworld of sorrow. At home yho' had a “oonsecrated” mother, At boarding-schoo] she was the pet of her class, in society her friends were slaves. ‘To-day her youth and beauty are fading fast. The ines of her faulte grow deeper, Her willfulness loses ts charm and her eelf-pity grows over more repollant. The mischievous mother {x dead; tho shallow schnol friends are scat tered, the.nelf-enslsuved followers have revolted, Fickle fortune no longer strews her path with roses, Wildly #he dashes hither and yon In vuin search for foo@ for her vanity and draughts of her former pleasures and powers verywhere she ts now avolled, dented, scorned. She {s « cripple without @ ru Those who devoted years to weakening her moral fibre are no longee near; hewlldered and helpless, she stumbles and falls. Who is to blame? Would that we might all learn the wisdom of the Uttle seven-year-old whe sved his too-atteative nurse! When ald low by iife's ills, when Matless, eats overis, slek or sore, we too often submit to mintstrations which but mr. i bility to copo with the ordeals against us, ‘ i J that we could see, from childhood, and clearly aa dit that Uttle pat the powers of recuscitation within us, and rid ourselves. gently but Army, of "Devoted Delias!" * How Some Common Words Originated, OULTRY, according to the definition given In one standard encyclopedia, in P cludes “the whole of the domesticated birds reclaimed by man for the make oftheir flesi and thoir eggs,’ The word comes from the Latin “pulsua,* which could mean a young horse or donkey as well'as a chick (the English “foat® ) In akin to this), through the French “poule,"*l tow}, But It'ls ourtous thas. “poule « try" has no French veraion, the nearest equivalent being tyolaile’ or “wikewum de basse cour? birds of the low yard. German, in its descriptive way, knows poultry aa “federvich/* feather cattle, Luculins, the Roman general, brought tie cherry, tree Into Europe after his compaigns'jy Ala in the century before Christ — The name of this favorite frult comer from Cerasus, in Pontus, the old Aslatliee> kingdom south of the Black Sea, The peach, which fs *Persioum malim*t (the Porsian apol). the pheasant (from the River Phasis), and jet (from Gazas) Asia Minor) are mmilar instances of Uitnge named bY the Ttomans trom Oriental drigin and entirely unrecognized as Oriental to-day, Potatoes came ty thls country from Europe, which got them from Peru, whence the Spaniards cane ried them across the Atlantic, The name, in tts oristinl form batatn, wos applied firat to the aweet potato, which had @ tropical origin, but accounts differ ag ty: whother {t tame from the East or (he Went indies. ; Its cousin, the yam, Ieae favorite {n nearly all tropical countries, 1¢ Rrowy a huge tuber and bas — high. | cliinking vine which requires a pole to i{s acrobatic feats ypon, ‘Nag 7 f jaa corruption of “{ngot.” ' Hyed from “odmb," therearly wight Door" of “near farmna. ~ iz

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