The evening world. Newspaper, October 10, 1908, Page 8

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i fvdtienea Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 53 to 63 Park Row, New York s {itt Ate, , 6 SHAW, ees Treme,, 201 ee AOBEPN PULITZER, Prem, 1 Rast 104 Street — hon ered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. @ubscription Rates ening | For Enala nd the Continent and World for the 1 At Countries In the International and Can bins Postal Union One Year. One Mont One Month THE HISTORY RY OF A “SNEER. “The Public Service Commissions are the creatures of my di tinguished opponent,” said Mr. Chanler at Rochester, “and cost $1,000 a day, and yet what have they accomplished?” 1f Me. Chanter will refer to his history of the Democratic party he will find that he ts repeating the mistake which that orgamzation made in 1864 when in its national platform it referred in similar terms to the attempt to restore the Union by means of At that time it Was costing 4 million dollars a day to support the contention that this is @ Davion and that the Constitution demands the loyal obedience of every American. Three years of war indeed had not restored the Union, but such progre: fices of one wore year the word Appor war. bad been made that as a result of the struggles and sacr annals of the Republic, meaning oue eountry, one flag, one destiny forever. Who would have it different? What Democrat doe: Hot read with amazement and shame the white feather resolution of 1864 adopted by so-called the rear when true Dem-! Oerats by scores of thousands wer front? } All of the thin now Democrats at battling for their couniry at the Ss conter plated in the appointment of the Public Service Commissions have not been realized im one year, but a beginning bas be and there is to be no backward step. ‘The problems of etlicient regulation, corporate responsibility and good service at reasonable races will be worked out in due time. Progvess The Pnblie men who sustain this cause and strengi The party to has been made ui the right direction. suc extent of their power will have nothing to regret. it and belitde it commit themselves and their derision. movement will go on to en it to the e who obstruct defeat and WHAT A BAD MAN MIGHT DO. Those who admire or fear President Roosevelt should let bim alone or beware of anti-climayes. tring to the use of Eseci power to poniinate and elect Mr. Taft, Mr. Bryan said at Chic Thursday: “If Mr. Roosevelt eam use hundreds of thousands of offire- | holders in this way, then a bad President can do it?” Most assuredly. | If Mr. Roosevelt ean send for Mr. Harriman on the eve of an| election and arrange with bim for the collection of $260,000 for use| in the last days of the campaign, a bad President might easily do} the same. « If Mr. Roosevelt can put a man like Cortelyou in the Bureau of Corporations and then make him chairman of the National Repub- | lican Committee, in which capacity his otiicial knowledge may be of use to bim, and after he has hobnobbed with the big tnanciers for some movihs and won an important election appoint him Secretary of the ‘Treasury, what might not a really bed President do? | In faet, if Mr. Roosevelt can defy Congress, assail the courts, | undermine business confidence, elevate favorites to high rank, perse- ente soldiers and sailors who do not Uatter bim, appropriate nationai zo on! warships to bis own use, deny to American citizens the rights guar- | apteed to them under the Constitution and the laws, pronounce men | guilty before they bave been cried, and in many other ways carry himselt arbitrarily and violently, it would be a sorry day for the} United States if by chance a hopelessly bad President should come into power. THROWING A POP BOTTLE. We regret to state, as the British generals used to remark afte: an engagement with the Boers in South Africa, that at the eonela one man of the 40,000) gle hit the captain of the Western team or That is what be did, but be did not intend sion of the tinal New York-Chieago bal] game who witnessed the str \ the ear with a pop bottle. to do it even angry, and he threw et candor | in the spirit shown by a child who kiel ich he bas | With | prosperit He was disappointed, s the object over wh fallen stumbled and to whom we wish long life and bim and all friends of healthy and bonest sport on the fact that the nervous and_ irritable New ¥ the yume euded. apologies to the captain, we congratulate forker did not Lappen to bave a paving block in bis band when ——— + + SOCIALISM IN THE COLLEGES. There i ff it does not always take strict account much that is generous and bumaue in socialism, even | of the difference thine and thine. When Mr. Debs spose to the Yale students as| though they were a class apurt he evidently forgot that he was ploug! | ing a fertile field, alism takes converts in no other quarter 60} easily as among the young and inexperienced. Our colleges send out Many enthusiastic Sox s every year, but the fine frenzy of most of them does vot i long all the buoyant youths who at one have embraced t had adhered to hor time or ano life, Mr any other man in America, Letters From the People. t through sion of more Debs would he in poss = thar rary ¢ Paulltzer Scholarship any vears must pase before Mr row: ae ana 1 be twice as oid ge hie son?’ Le Where can 1 the conditions ¥ = son's present ae and y = fat Sich ih A analenahinn Xi Wer son's axe 6 years gre awarded, snd can they be mas father's Ther the Spplied fort WM B af ihe en, Y—D=T (xd Por full information. write io secre —i) ie » O when stinpl Pullizer Guiding. New vork City x ther lve uges. “Now felts Urbyiewen , nt Fonte, sath 4 « fhe tvice t 8. Then @-x=2 Go the EAlior of The Kvenine World ar aliny S 2-W=0. XN there Wij) experienced readers advise me ts egual to 2). aw much money # girl shonla eer ft ARTHUR SILVRRMAN Sea cl ened adse ‘Seven Wonders of the Wore.” Bhould be at Lome tn te ev @ Evening Warlg ase ale the “Seven Woodera of and thelr location, i. F . o Pe : Answer io 46 ven Wonders of the Wer M@pthe Ralion of The Fvenine Works were: Toe Pyramids of Egypt, the ey : om of “alge. ahd hanging sardene of Badylon tus” stauing: “Mr. B was seven Temp ) of phe { Olympian Jupiter at 9 01d As bis fon five veure age: Mauscieum, the Cole y he we four Umes ap old How (he Foaive (iigatuou tox Was written large in the The New York Girl---No. | By Maurice Ketten. se 800 ee a5 OC THE BROADWAY GIR ‘The Chorus Girl Stole the Star’s Best Scene! Will She Go on the Road After That? Not She! woman's place to ight for the sanctity Ieestasd wasn't supporting ©ou and you wife would let ey Roy L. McCardell. | she'd turn her b K to the blonde invace the hearth a and, no ma n you without of tne home, never spoke W d fires udience and enecr and no true well met e rest of them — even Taft — ‘gers. But Hugh ‘there with the ideas. up for a “Ww laundryman, the Reno, “it Nev., courts haven't re- fused Virginia, Harned a divorce from her husband, the matinee dol, Mr. Sothern, be- cause she wouldn't take the trouble to go away out there and ask for {t per- wonally!"” “Ain't $t @ shame?" commented the man who was getting his Saturday package. “That Reno Judge 1s a reac- tionary. He is @ brake on the wheels of progress. Many, many years ago tt way quite [hard te get a divorce anywhere. Then, Jas times became more enlightened the way was Jened, and finally South | Dakota stepped in and began givir | divorces in rett or six months’ board |at a Sioux Falls | (Geonce ace ISP OCR ppeared, was takin in allowing a ff to file a petition atta Wand stake a lawy ts Harned divorce the frame-up for a div extended. In the ft would be er on ad F > is the be not going on the roau, kid anc thate fat’, tTimming ser good and plenty, but you must never break up tle show on ac- [° sald the Chorus Girl “Yes, 1 bad @ good part! count < r love affairs. That's the unwritten law on the stage with’ oun show) out whacls thelllusellof : But the way the star acted to me was only protes jealousy becau £ nobody sees you in I took the scene amay from her, and she knew it, and I knew it, @ just i “T saw the route, end it's all long juz and one! smiled and read my lines, because | knew {f she was that sore that she was r a Might’ standa: out througn Cblllcothe,, Ohto, and them) coming back at ma between the lines 1 must be :naking good, ¢ s 1 nther twnyard towne where a pair of cowhide boots ts showed !: and J knowed It a full be Stl considered jewelry. "So, when my lines was ‘The Duke, the Duke, alas! 's ‘alse!'—recitative No matter wi “I guess you seen ny 9! In the second act where I she'd say, ‘Your throat {s full of soubretta rust!’ or ‘That would + bett ate bral hee Directalralidratalianaiiercon Hammerstein's in a knockabout act,’ quiet-like, before she answered aioud svi (come) "Oh, yea, the spot iight was for as! what can | do? An unsuspecting maid, reared wild ae upposed to feed her in "and then I'd say, ‘Hes taise! i's false, fair ‘gone through, the frames have been extended. , {serve that the Turkisn navy has been facia! adornment of repiied the man who getting his package, “is considerec all to the alfalfa west of s he isn't making ro West on the Iuxuriance of his Jo time the street railway experts will produce fig- divoree would ures to prove it costs ordered out. They must have moved the navy with a derrick. The last I heard of It some of the Sultan's favors {te ministers were using {t for @ sailor'w boarding house. “When you come right down to cases | we are a whole lot like the Bulgarians and Bosnians and Herzegovinians. The same strain of scent t obtains here ree and untrammelled U. S. A. in the hose people over there want thelr old Ixing on the Job even if he has been throwing boots into them. And we as- similated Americans want our old bosses of po! on the fod although we g assured by our esteemed editorial avisers that we would be happier and richer if we would put our bosses on the bum and run our cwn political affairs. > fact of tho matter ts, we hike to be bossed. of us are descendar ged and ed for er the duke was fase Bur I r er tock ike ® plece of crmone Its on the ely s j nee : WTUCSCARDEED (Oo fldnt she «now Zompiain? What 002 vould thatwo against ne siar? But watt till I cate itias ran Siihatiints + A sees ti aie She waa always puttin bending’ And, anyway, 1 knew I'd got her goat a he madder she w aeenitinl : S OR, ai to play up to ner and that abe wanted a me, looking better and dressed !n more taste and with a better voice and sine i , J 13 / that i got off the key tn che dei, ‘I Bid You Bewar ke presence, and taking the scene away from her, the cooler | kep’, kid. ie 5 CST ay CRO. TGR? aah ee atured an tell you of ten “Don't you think I'm the only orphan girl brutally treated by the star ne : { live ones that come in every night to nee me in that ecene By rights [| It’s going on all the time, and if you watch closs you'll sce it, Wait till some Hs ieee ahould have been piaying ser part, and everybody knew 1 show comes’ along in which some girl, till then unknown, gets away with a mci er rire SD x rs rs ‘And say. the xay she used to pan me! “rierds of fe ir the stage hit that makes people sit up and take notice. SAUDE ES Boe t v a i box could near ner at it Mamma an in the stage box o: “It's a wise child that knows she's got @ sure-fire bit and plays tt down at neht witn 2 varty of friends and werd che hussy sald rehearsals and no one suspects, but wien the first night lets her kick in and vetmern ner ines and she Pranscombe did. when. steal the situation the star stands back, biting Her make-up off, take it from me she came nesind 4 he ne ale save co me? ‘Lulu ‘And, as Mamma Le Branscombe says, that was a fatal crack to muke how can van stand a 8 panning you In your at me about going better In vaudey For that same star tries out @ sketch test arene like chat ay to me roa usb jn the map and a 1 8's Sunday Concert at the Majestic and gets the bird pull her Peyehe knot off her. right there on the stage! tting the bird? Why, when the audience turns to tce and never Gj b N t N = A woud baee ton Mamma De Branaromba right there chat them giving | given vou a hand, and you know if it -mas amateur night there would be honts Cos Cob Nature Notes. away Ip the promptings of ap andiscipied in what effected her transit’ for the hook fram carrying a apear to the useful but at no time prominent functions of; ‘The management was sore at n.e because I wouldn't go on the road, but Silla i a aa ee on Broadway, and here 1s McKnight? Oh, piaying or otherwise lead a life of crime. He and the Musical Swede went over to wardrobe wam-a with she Whibur Opera Company in the old dove. Ob. yer, she might have quit comic opers far the legit. and handied char- parte all right after he got ‘oo fat for tighter, after tne gcene she created at Kernan's Monumental Theatre, in Baltimore, by acratching :he face Mf an uncerstudy she charged with wrecking her home-she was telling about it thar night. but couldn't remember which of her hughands !t was; but, as she aid, that didn't mvke no difference-it wan all off with her, It may bee, acter but one to see If irs true, “Say, itd, yes a mandolin playe’ he don't know somebody told hirn a turtle lived to be five hundred years where I'm ¢ wh ing to sta ust now all tbush F r sit cross-legged?” , | 120 between | ¢ Ve, Wien n EN HANA \ BEER PND I ONLY cat You DAI FOOL, IT'S I / \mpoosiPle f 10 POT! p= 10 go back to niano 7 ) be thinks of is his pets. exarmpl We ment i ‘ ; i é : ped | and stole a police dc nd yebaltsssealing Wises abe me ho vinaelenme | old, 20 he's Lougit called a “bureall | siar would be @ better title, tut when we accidentally hooked one in | ack of the reck Mt turned out to be what is called a ‘cur rquia | ee ———— Point and otier 1 er When wo ianied at ae Nant Ket sald pp! nut!” We did By George MoMenus # iind The Hudson are k fish tn Cos a fF INE fish were sn re alied mackerel and all fluwers eh You a cen , i would save a Two GLASSES Li OF BEER | Gus Seote says ry ‘ IN ONE Palin lke thi — Monday's putting In two new on-3, Our Permes ent ) are nore Permanent than ever. of who have paid rs 9 belong the Taxpayers’ Association beginning to wonder what we did it for. Some of us guess DERE'S HEY, how ABOUT PAYIN' \ FoR THEM! pe DE CENT I s that nur Wresident, Charles A thinks more of being American Pro! Moore, President of tha ve Tariff League ths n he does of the way our taxes are swiped, and does not wish to annoy Permanent nen Jay and mes who are prominent close to Charles F dent Mellen, who in his other troubles 19 Permas ent Governor of Connectiout, Lin Walsh Republicans. Brooker and F audition to oln Steffens has taken his mucks raking p t to Boston for the winter, The vacan in our midst hee beea filed by the return of Bert Lestoa Taylor, the commuter-poet, trom Pomp- n, N. J, where he has spent the sum. er accumulating mosquito lore for his |muse. Mr. Taylor t# wintering the | Steffens tom cat Romeo, who ts of too | frivolous @ temperament to enjoy Boss ton. Romeo ran away the frst day, bus come beck W breakfast

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