The evening world. Newspaper, July 1, 1908, Page 14

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The Evening Worid Daily Magazine, Wednesday, July 13 1908? Jj ee Shy, os 6 Lt 2 i ! CDOEDESGOTAOOTDDDOIG OHOSOHIDODOHODOOOAL Che LAA aield, Otf for Denver! Fifty : oy falas Great Love Stories of History By Albert Payson Terhune By Maurice Ketten. Publishing Company, Nos, §8 to 68 JOSEPH PULITZER, Pree, 1 Bast thd —VIRGINIA AND ICILIUS, FI 3AR-OLD school girl in 449 B.C. brought Nberty to A Rome. p price she paid wa rown life. The girl was Virginia. Her fate forms one of the most romantic, dramatic love stories in all history, Rome was In those days swayed alternately by two great political » THE WILD AND WOOLLY WEST <—_—K ASIC CHARLEY j parties, the wealthy aristocra’ known as "Patrielans,” and the plain people, who called themselves “Pleb: ius Claudius, a patrician, had persuaded the Roma ; | is a good | He says | ns to elect as their rulers a Decemyirate (counell 1 himself at its head, This council had crushed the lberties of the people. The plebeians had forme been represented (and protected) by two elected officers, called Tribunes. But the office of Tribune had been abolished. Appius Claudius and his favorites were allowed to misgovern the city to suit themselves. Some miles outside the walls one of Rome's two armies was encamped, In this army was a brave plebelan named Lucius Virginius, who had risen to the rank of Centurion (captain), He had one daughter, Virginia, whom he adored, and who, in her father's absence, remained at the Centurion’s oA @ house at Rome, unc re of her nurse. Young as she w i 7 love with her fath t fl of ten men) w x0 y T well Reduce fers of free rent and other induce- ments no longer allure the tenants. for they are no longer here. Thousands of owners will experience a set- | back which means ruin.” Undoubtedly the moving of tenants to the country and the partia enforcement of the tenement law do n certain classes of real estate. Speculators who have lx Lover, A Schoolgirl's | on In east SI each rease in t mortgage can make a profit. rents If high rents are desirable, if crowded fit, if commur transportation body, train s in outlying boroughs or for $ Vengeance - Those People Who Write of New York City as a Summer Resort Make Mr. Jarr, Who Is Figuring Vacation, Very Tired nia, in song, ctory and There is an unavoidable conflict of i Numerically there are a hundred rent p to every landlord. Including the women Office and factory buildings there are hundreds of peop better off if they had no rent to pay compared with one would he diminished if nobody paid rent, It is contrary to human nature and to business experience to expect a landlord to charge any lower rent than he can get. Rent, like the price of other things, is fixed by supply an The larger the area n yailable for homes the lower cause the supply is increased with- out ingreasing the demand. ee said Mr, Jar e lke , We can't walt till Mor Missing nambers of this series will be Med apen aps ! nto Circulation Department, Evening World, upon receipt mt etamy L) Cos Cob Nature Notes. n ta petter than haying no work and no wages,” said Mr. Jarr, better and cheaper the t inspec yrtation n THINK of tt!" said all we oan facilities the lower rents will be, be- it. But ase a cause the area of homes is thereby uy extended. , Landlords should consider tha equitat value to v ry th a 1 is the value ug : hey are entitled is the valu ye is eT Whee WOUldn a bar gackine i \ | Bren If 1 kn adn packing up | , created, and that power to ish Ere ie 1 nt thet,” ve Jarre y charge rent in ex return on the build provements is a legal one thing only i t this would come under the head of cruel and unusual sts of a long wood n the ends of two pi s Into the dust everywh where soineboly has spilled a lot of o the water curls up In little globules and rolls a we Reddy the Rooter. ra y to hide from the | 2324 so Erratic Publle Clock DP 1 at area thed 4 — To the F ar 0 (co, ] A Real School of Journalism, nn Ween 1 Jant, with a special telegraph service NS fel n, is the plan of the Board of morning. Department of Jo} m, ” |The “Fudge’’ Idiotorial, 9 ee ah ‘ ITT CT Everybody we meet puts up a | Phe North River Tunnels, g Kick about the Weather, It Is are eines Why It Is TOO HOT! We know itis, If =, kre soccia canto. whisved, unuer coming: T asked a tallor Too Hot. § we used profane LANGUAGE, ¢ ( the river to uptown streets in New| ent out of f A WacaRGheann which we do not, we would say ne al : : : een we Deer inecs THATS ITs PUT THE x |] (Copyrot, 1908. by the Planet Pub, Co.) {t was Too —— Hot. ‘ aeciain Ht eurpeece, ees Sean t gy’ We have often wondered why ve a [eowpy Deen Ceara “So the affairs of NATURE were not better adjusted, We do NOT throngs, who need 1 ALLY UE SV AS ie eect A NEED all of this HEAT now. If the weather was properly ad- ¢ 2 pe ea justed here would be less HEAT in July and MORE tn January, sapere, eee erauenteue ‘ y P Then everybody would save MONEY on coal bills and we would a cors of : not perspire so much. It Is HEALTHY to perspire, but very un- : : ae comfortable. We often USE UP TWO Shirts a day, we perspire a ‘ vit so freely. ft 49 not a 1 : : If ve could EVER get elected to anything we would try to | meen ee coe | ‘ i fix this weather business so the people would be BETTER off, Bra) ties ist tones If they PERSIST In getting along WITHOUT us they will havé to ead, But there sre thousands fy, intelligent, harmless dogs tha: ox: put UP with the Weather ; | a MIIURKD WLFE,

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