The evening world. Newspaper, August 11, 1908, Page 10

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4 a een 2 , / ms 4 ne- Evening World Daily Magazine, tuesday, August 11, 1908. SSG SE REESE eae nano ren J a Tied Published Dally Lxcept Sunday by the Press Punishing Company, Nos. 53 to 68 k Row, New Y POBEPH PULITZER, Pree, ‘ ran O81 Wan th St) aah “Entered at the I Socord-Cinag Mall Matter, Budseription R i rd the rent and World ¢ M5 too Internationa One Year... One Month... VOLUME “v. —— oe IZZET PASHA. Z7ET PASHA, best hated man reputed to be the in Turkey, is said to have sought refuge in this coun is credited with a career yn and coercion wh a mediaeval tale of Ovi of coru ental intrigue He is gating the Arm te directed the secret prosecutions in the palace of the lich hun- dreds of con- demned to exile or death, He drove 25,000 Mohammedans from their homes and abetted the horrors in hree wives, but the fact is not essen- has no North Dakota, Macedonia. Incidentally Izzet has t tial in a citizen of a country whicl His accumulation of $15,000,000 on a saliry of $10,000 will appeal more to American interest. For one who comes heralded as Turkey's most audacious grafter ihe sum is not large. There are perhaps a thou- sand fortunes of that size in the United States which have been amassed legitimately. Izzet has acquired only the elements of corrupt finance, But it is evident that he has acquired them with a thoroughness that will enable him to multiply his millions in this land of opportunity. Other illustrious exiles who have found an asylum on our shores have been content to pursue a modest vocation, Garilaldi eked out a living making candles, Izzet's talents entitle him to enter a higher finan- cial sphere, The man who is alleged to have sold the franchise of the! Damascus surface road for $250,000 and forced the projectors to pay him tribute has a future in traction manipulation here. The palace offi- | cial who disposed of royal decorations for a price is qualified to deal with | legislative committees. The ability shown in accumulating millions on, a small salary is not at present available in life insurance, but an open- ing awaits it in the chairmanship, of some board of corporation directors. | ‘What Izzet mainly has to learn Is to refine his methods, They have hitherto exhibited a crass bluntness which is contrary to the spirit of American institutions. America has no place for the bowstring. Here the object of a man’s personal vengeance cannot with impunity be sewed up in a sack and cast into the river or put out of the way with poisoned coffee. The attack must be made indirectly on his reputation or his Property, and the victim deposed from a railroad presidency or ruined in| business. Massacres do not go except in the regular line of railway operation. Izzet must eliminate such methods and confine himself to the pred-| atory pursuits of peace. To become a true malefactor of great wealth and increase his fortune to a figure respectable by comparison he must learn the subtleties of syndicate participation and the art of rebating. | He must study the theory of holding companies and learn in the matter’ of selling car line franchises how much more profitably and discreetly | these things are done in New York. The report that Izzet has invested his funds in American securities indicates that he has correct perceptions, and the scandal of his adminstration of the Constantinople Tribunal of Commerce shows him possessed of the essentials of success. Altogether the outlook for Izzet in America is bright. He may become if he will an ornament to high finance. He has only to mod- ify his processes and adapt himself to his new environment to make a name for himseé in a field to which Turkey is only a ten-acre fot. Izzet, if he avails himself of his opportunities, may rank himself among our first families of million- aires, and ally himself through his daughters with the princely houses of Europe, | Letters from the People. | Origin of Barber Pole. fo the Editor of The E World What's the origin of the stris @ barber's pole? J, FOLEY, Barbers, in old t Lo sta- under a eons. The red and pulled her poles are said to have been s her, the blood and bandages. days five Pratae for Editorial. ishing « of your pap outrageous to t way to get at charging extra Hot Summer, Cold Winter? people. Here's o t ; Ny hand and vigor to th ain that penn t ; " 1 ae Vane ¥. ; on meeord that editorial M. VAN V In old times @ hot summe: Shaving Made Easy. a cold w I that wor fo the Editor of ‘The F zW so this i I read of a scient In answer to ; Weey eee shaving, I w following: Sony ting a few drops on brush, and | am s w shaving more easy and @trong beard and slave every was da \ oO rapnipere eo ninaty horse-power racers are deputy aeherifs, and if they are stopped they ia total loss. Can All This Be True? € VOODOGOODODOGDODOOHT OOO OO Wives: ot- -t Or, Why the Hearth Loses Its Lustre. | The Roosevelt Farm. By Maurce Ket en. OOSEYELT FOR A BOCASANTER LIFE e o at DOLE DISOOOWGILG- FoR THE FARMER ry STs (NEWS ITEM) 2 < ; By Barton WwW. Currie yaa HGH demanded that George turn over every vent of his suary on pav night, “Mother said for me to ask you," she smiles, “as I am the best mane ager.” Of course he admits she is a charming manager. ‘To deny ft Is to Na municipal confess that he sowed execrable judge I into whieh ment in marrying her. there daily roll "I will glye vou all but my club dues carloads) and clgar money, dovey,"" he coms (No. 14—The Wife With the Chicago Temper- ament, so many ot sup: perce: s it is not Dromises and passes over the stipend. He is lost. ing that a Bing! He has fallen, lh age of the tation should ate some- por thing suggestive f great ndus The Chi- then, is hog everything In ago idea BARTON WV CURRIE < and go after it with a voracious “Woot! Woot!" Now, when dealing with the e nd theet al feminine, { and to mention pork. s there who has ven- | 1 matrimony who eqn so Temperament in cer- question ‘he cons tainly crass e wives? Who has not seen big ves dinine with their little Lusbands, | the little Musbands timidly and fur-| ively nibbling, the big wives: sur \ But the wifa does not need to Bet | ain the Chicago Temper sometimes is @ tiny Nt! 1 she somet{mes has a ve e for food, Her te and dominion, however fs She Takes You to the Show. power able You will hear women sneer at Henry Yecks and Harold Punys, but they A few months she will the club dues and fo him to quit smoking. Inside of @ year he must go to her each morning and ask. my cartare and Janel m ave demanded “Woof! Woof!” sniffs Julia spending po much on vour | Here ts a roll and an orange |my brother Charies eats his lu: jNo use arguing that Chartes Is a dvs- |pentic and a disciple of the Russell |Sace theory of giving every penny a ) before parte close shave and a s ‘ing with It, amp | Once a wife has fled a ne on your salary the hurdles fo ua} nt ke of vour eon day ween a bank avcount, bale ena! jthe betantial’ s Jany Anna Held shows Jor dream waltzes. She He Is Lost, Jtake those in at matinees, Likewise che selects Jarr Tells Rangle What Millionaire Deputy Sheriffs Are For, Pow ad they fen to woh tow ee Mertncnn Ri After Which They Vainly Try to Sell Gus an Abyssinian Rat Hound wry is yee teen sien ic uit te aneny te an e say they are chasing maletactors, And tuat’y why Ricaard Harding Davis = — Sato ieee [ta sndee free country, I don’t think!” gald Mr, Rangle bitterly, "Let's ry By Roy L, McCardell. S Mr. Jarr came down the street after supper, taking the air, he was aware of his friend Rangle sitting on the stoop In front of the flathouse where he re- sided reading an evening paper. “New Yorks win to-day?” asked Mr. Jarr, “I didn’t hear." “T wasn't reading the baseball,” said Rangle, ‘and anyway this isn't the baseball extra. I've been reading go get a drink.” “Gus was telling me he hadn't seen you for a few day's—got credit at some other ginmill?"’ asked Mr. Jarr said Rangle, “but I'm cutting out that Dutchman,'* | hy?" asked Mr. Jarr, “Weil,” aid Rangle, shaking his head, “I've seen saloons that had a@ sign | ‘A Fried Oyster With Every Drink,’ but with every drink Gus serves you get an insult, I'm not going to spend my money with a blg-headed Dutchman who imagines he !s doing you a fayor, What makes them like that?” “You don't understand Gus; he's all right,” sald Mr. Jai | The Laconics of Lady Aurelia. | By Leita Russell, # HERE are some people who never learn of the harde ness of the world unt! they slip on a bana It would be untold misery for a woman to have @ new gown If there was no other woman sie could flaunt “You went to nhout mg Davis and his millionaires being : eae ena ctita I Wentshester County. Funny that (sh nim along, See that mutt?" Mr. Jarr pointed to a woebegone looking feitetores spl ratte ; 5 rowling ne: ' F ded. MP ek ‘Officer, do, MOnBrel prowling near, and Rangle nodde RR eu oiicatdenta rae ai ace see ate eter e sie te EEO CECE Get a string,” said Mr, Jarr, “and we'll take the dog in and kid Gus that climb out of the w META eo : " {t's a champion rat dog maybe sell it to “Are you the goat for that sort of thing?” esked Mr. thought this a good {dea, so with the dog in tow they entered Gue's jf Married life often begins with silver and cut glass and Jarr with a sneer. “Don't you know what those fellows ait si) ends with broken china Ee eben oer Pe ee veney want to pe, “What do you think of the dog, Gust asked Mtr. Jarr, geniatty Some fellows propose to a girl thoy have a crush on, eA dy ALLER act C URS ern 2 as, to tell you,’ said the pre looking over the bar. others get a h when they , Wisilent vand\ efficient Vofticcys, of the llaw;, whose names are’ terrora) to) evi) f in rat hound of the purest breed,” sald Mr. Jarr, Every power !s dangers to. br 3. If you are ao doers,’ isn't that 5 7 | in't seem to be unduly excited, and Mr. Jarr continued an adept at filrting, be careful whom you flirt with. It ie Mr, Jarr’s contempt was a wondrous) thing to) eee “You know whet that dog did? He was taken up in a balloon with a rat, S7Resieetices eadge arte (to Mae CME dy Hedin ‘ “AL that eort of stuff kes me sick!” he sald, "They got deputy sherti? ang after the balloon had gone up a mile the rat was dropped over. A half] LEITA RUSSELL ty ITNT Mer A : married man badges so they can scor aro nd in thelr autom les and no get arrested. mile furt up they dropped the dog, and he caught the rat before he touched Some men are prow of the fact that they kick when anyt 2 - I was out riding {na friend's automobile Sunday in Westchester County, and the ground | ieee ye cence ; acu then as we came down the hill past Ber: Roosevelt's house—that's the President's “Vell,” sald Gus, calmly, looking at the dog again, “that was his business,”’| ‘ peat d hing. f coustn—Chief of Police Marks, of Pelham, stopped us with a warning that we) = “Don't you want to buy him?” asked angle | Why can't wo all be happy? No matter what happens, there is still ou vere gedng over four miles an hour, Just then a racing machine came tearing, No," sald Gus, “What good Is he to me?” hopes and our dreams we can believe will come true down the at ninety miles an hour, taking the top layer of the road with} “Why, you've got rats here, lots of them," said Mr. Jarr. eee ig eee pha st {t, and my friend 4 that driver wasn't arrested.” | “Aoh, yes," eald Gus, with a cunning look. “But I ain't got no balloon. I wasn't he?” asked Rangle. “Chief Marks éaid it was Jack Stone, the Wall street broker, and that he was a deputy sheriff of Westchester All the rich men out that way that own on hii, bet you can’t bunko me.” Then, while Jarr and Rangle were trying to convince Gus the drinks were the Adyssinian rat hound got at the free lunch, and in a moment it was Cos Cob Nature Notes. Smeg EOPLE who have seen both say that Mr, Cob {8 just as interesting as eruptions, while it emokes all vhile and ‘blackens hood just as the volcano does. Indeed, the e dwell nearby feel quite at home. Every llttle while there comes @ tremendous bang, followed by @ flash and a fizz, which means that the men folks will be late to dinner. Quite often the Horseneck electric ligist plant, which Mr. Mellen recently acquired, slips a cog out of sympathy, and papa has to feed his face with a candle. Mr. Mellen {s so busy pleasing William Rockefeller and |J. P. Morgan that he hasn't much time to think of us folks, though he is careful to get our money In advance. Uncle Ben Wilmot's parrot 1s dead. It was a nice parrot, and for many years |was the only nolse In Cos Cob, Then a pianola came, and after that George | Boles's donkeys. The parrot competed with both on equal terms, but when the | two gramophones came Binile gave"it up and died i In epite of his protestations, It begins to look as If County Judge, Permanent Selectman and Senator James F, Walsh wae going to be torn away from: Horses neck and sent to Washington as Congressinan-at-Large in place of the lovely | Lilley, who 1s to he made Governor. Very few people know who the Governor of Connecticut {s, but James's fame !s wide, It looks at’ first glance like an effort to throw him down and take a lot of his oMces away from him for wider diatris bution. If he gets to Washington Joe Cannon and some more of the slick ones had better look out. Meanwhile, i will be sad In Horseneck. People will then | appreciate the struggles and sacrifices he has made to keep the Temporary Se lteormen in their line of duty and to secure justice for his clients. ‘The prominence of Cos Cob as a literary and artistic centre has obscured some of {ts other claims to fame. Beside harboring the power-house, mentioned above, it affords a home for another great railroad ian, whose name !s often alluded to lovingly by the commuting class, President W. H. Truesdale, of the Delay, Linger and Watt, does not abide upon the road of anthracite, but at oosey Cos Cob. Here, amid peacefi surroundings and in a truly lterary atmosphere, he reste and writes the beautiful poems about Phoebe Snow that have made him deservedly popular. In spite of the common impression, Mr, Truesdale is not the real author of “Beautiful Snow." Phoebe 1s quite another person, ——— 4 The Church and the Clergy. ODELLED after the great Taj Mahal Temple at Benares a Hindu church has been bullt and consecrated at San Francisco, being the only one, eq fat as known, In the western world. F The average yearly salary of all ministers dn Indiana ts $588.39, i Oklahoma, although the youngest State, has % Catholle churches tn the care ot 76 priests. Mellen Vesuvius, and | | By George Hoof Could d PI ween oh Pine-need And be & Porc-u-pine $2 (ft 4) I) @ =o Chi h i ‘The Protestant, Catholic and Jewish denominations of Oakland, Cal., have i Pte it a Di neh ed oagantged der! Obs “conatitation & society of the pastors to help along the f cs chureh work of the city. , i} $ ———

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