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The Evening World Daily Magaz tari, The Merry-Go-Round. OOOO SD DOUO EDO 00000000) ine, Tuesday, October 13, 1908. Sr OOOO OOOO OOOUUU a ey a ee By Maurice Ketten. : Power of tne Mv y¥ stic | (BERN PULITIER, Pre. u 9 East 00 irene, J. ANGUS BITAW, Bee.Trene,, 901 Peet 110th Stree Pntered at the Post-Ofce at New York as Second-Class Mat! Maiter @wbecription Rates to Tho Evening | For England and the Over “Woman with a Soul”. ntinent and : } orld for the United States All Countries tn the International ; ~ Pear 0nd Canna. |) ON Wile By Nixola Greeley-Smith je Month... 30 | One Month. OOOO NAOIEPMOOOODS = TOO COUOOOO | VOLUME 49.... . . NO. 17 Wo te the secret of the charny that religious mys- aoe ini — tles have for wo ; DEMOCRACY VS DEPORTMENT reely @ day passes without Dringing to Mght 5 . new evidence of the strange fascination which rellglousty r In the case of Mr. Chanler we have Deportment that is more Hndbrc silnidad Geil ey ol ote: GEILE Uda iL : \ Yesterday's papers alone told of the farewell sermon of 4 pronounced than Democracy. No one will gainsay the fac nt he is the Rev. B. 0. Denham, who had been tn a diy At in } 8 perfect gentleman, but cannot a perfect gentleman attack the wror t t community In F iso where twel yout coups the same hom! from which his fellow men suffer and at least show that he is not in with the Rey Whe: clitine (WENO Messiah, as their tive ini ena ceoare mere fugl- lespread phenom- irnessiy that he aly ed her It than | aympathy with the bosses and the exploiters who profit by thos: wrongs? It is a mistake to assume that in polities a man cannot be antag nees of a long exist reverend Mr. Dentaty zed the woman whose ’ i i iti i And probe y e 0 onized without abuse, criticised without virulence or subjected to ae? ie ue orca arbre pean sharp remonstrance without personal anunosity. The things that i i i i i J vy end then ecme startlit (:} ndal—such th lope- should be discussed in this campaign, both in the State and the ener ne eles pares eee ee and his sevente “mystic soul Nation, are of more importance than any man, no matter how eimi- attraction between the penitent and nent. They affect the welfare of millions. In the State where Mr. Chanler is a candidate for Governor abuses exist having the support of Democrats and Republicans which a true Democrat might be expected to attack. ‘The administration of justice is lax and slow, as is witnessed by the failure of the prosecu- tion of those responsible for the loot of the Metropolitan. Taxation is oppressive and unequal, as is proved by the crushing burdens born« by real estate and by the almost universal perjury which accompanies the escape of personal property. There are the new insurance law: to sustain and enforce, and there are the Public Service Commissions to uphold and strengthen, all menaced by Democrats as well as by Republicans. Cannot a perfect gentleman speak plainly on these sub- 1 much aware cf the power he could hut does t exert over a ¢ f woman as is hin consclenceless brother who What fs the secret of It? + It is not a power over all women. n, women and c lot, for Instance, declared that And !t may be that in this s the explanation of the clergyman wer he hystert n at men don stand her, where you send In @ e three sexes—n er brut the magazine the natural tenderness and s y of nature which frst urged © become a shepherd of souls the clergyman gives the woman victim of in- more attention than the rude every day man feels that he can ch work {8 largely in the hands of women. Therefore women, whime and preferences are of much more importance to the minister an to men y other calling jects without giving unnecessary offense? kes a cer: type of woman feel ortipat, the man who + ‘ rT 5 vhat 8 it avai ‘ r her soul and her tempers t, fe the man she {s certain to In the presence of such issues what shall it avail a Democrat t dian of her neuresthentc affecti Her husband, she feels, may cedicn’ K analyaos his days to her £ her cha te e, but he Therefore, into thd gain the applause of the whole earth for his polite behavior if by so doing he shall fasten upon his country for a generation to come thc evils of plutocracy and privilege? We need courageous men. We need men of plain speech. We need men who will be as bold in de- red recogn S or even mere for ons by devoting t of w 6 tellers, dd} > charity and the : fense of the right as the supporters of error are bold in defense of the wrong. We need truth more than art and justice more than ur- nent uv Ge eut) Ot - ie ean i as: with a * banity. The true Democratic gentleman in a political contest will bi known by his earnestness rather than by his courtliness, though that need not be lacking. Even in the polite world the man who stands for something worth while is more sought after than the one whose interests are centred in flummery. ONE COMPACT THAT WAS KEPT. We often read of lovers’ suicide compacts in which one dies and the other lives, the man in most cases being the survivor. They found in Jamaica Bay recently the bodies of a man and a woman who | 1 to comprehen Tt e State of Connee- we will elucidate 1 seventy-five miles. and owned by the New ve out the Indlans and sub- sie white populace a It starts at the Buy Rum and runs up against Little Rhoay on the east and the Commonwealth of etts on the north. Like all subject peoples, {ts newspapers sing in @ and always speak respectfully of their master. Charles S. Mellen permane’t Governor. Eacn town has a su’ nanent governor in the miles. SS CHICAGO | had taken the fatal leap together because the man was doomed soon | iy | \ e > tog ! | aa n of a lawyer known as “counsel fc If the town averages : to die of an incurable disease and they did not wish to be separated. SS 1 in politics he ts a Republican, $f wemocratic be calls himself a d If the conditions had been reversed it is highly probable that there, Ds nea here though pabees) namesKaty for nothing, ‘Counsel for the ; t the whole thing. Few of these sawyel any court work. Tnel would have been a dead woman to bury and no more, Acting upon task ts to giao franchiees ior Mght, power or ‘rolieys. scare or buy off aamncss the impulse of their own wretchedness, men do not hesitate to take liters and to ee that the right men get into the State Senate and Assembty, where the form of law-making im st!!] gone through with. The rallroad does j their lives, but in agreements to that end with women they are usu-| “Too Much Laws in This Country ” for Gus, the Saloon-Keeper; everything according to law. If there is no law to fit a current need it sends to ally traitors and cowards, In the Jamaica Bay instance the woman, ures erase bon cin ‘noi If any citieen shows signs of !ndependence or 3 ‘ y : 5 3 common honesty where “the s:oad” { cerned, he 1 y young and vigorous, with the promise of many years of life before | Soon, He Says, It Will Be as Bad as Germany Without Being as Good mince ls concern e is promptly hunted down her, went deliberately to death with her husband and there is now a eee aoe : Lish Kelly saw a big buck deer back of his ranch in Riverside, across the record of at Jeast one suicide compact that was faithfully kept. a he n nd. way, a thi creek from here, the other day. Lish took to his heels when he saw the noble By Roy L. McCardell. MANHATTAN’S LIMITATIONS. animal, lest he shoud be tempted to get out his $3.75 Spencer carbine and take » ‘“ OW you going to § mee , H vote?” asked = Mr. “The great fault in New York,” says M. Augustin Rey, a dis- lke some of the 1. O. U.'s that 1 have! out walking v drawer.” bad ain't so you were going to vote,’ my cousin E: ging the subject, fo Ill. Lish does not want to be wicked. Besides, he was pleased to think that @ wild animal like a deer should play around thirty miles from New York in @ place where so many Wall street brokers live, any one of whom might readily ke a deer for a lamb when business 1s dull. They belong to the same Innocent family. at the buck, which would be wicked, as the law will not be off deer until Jerr, ‘I see that a you, there are easy marke postcard canvass shows a tinguished French architect who does aot like the appearance of nlisliton (Gh enlentoc ten hundred| Le ney DS gate eects ; , ‘ Weneitta 4 : 7 } " ‘ A iotatulenta Grd de n 3 utlander from Newark, N. J., who said he didn't know this town that most of its streets run from east to west instead of and ninety-three thousand. Mr. Jarr. They t nny. ean eatin ny 8§ anything about fish! hired one of 2 Shoes “Ha,” ald Gus, €or it was lgaadmunaniiatielbremenyithon ici taieninreointarlaniacuen dan Any. oe th ng, hired one of Gus Scott's boats and went out angling for from north to south True, alas! too true; but why mention it Nat Namliatles (oated proprietor! S ) iskey man ine teerctet hee are Dey Pe tie | |Pasere d4e. came/in Smit afour:amal bongs pide AmDODDar AR eEnINg (thentystee, ; 5 : z ok at that pounds. It 1s heartrending to have these foreigners get away with the goods who was deing interrogate the Personals Li man Hughes stopping of creation it was ordained that Manhattan 1 old settlers like us have to put up with blackfish six inches long. . now? In the s : f 5 , that don’t count nothin’, + : e and I'm going te You Lars j should be long e Manhattoes lived up to their blue cause 1 guess ‘t was them for it, t there's t we in this countr des, If , Feat ueven isa suber oH Cos Cob, where the wealthy element Ive part oe A h fait Aletha’ » Britis ment souwenir postcards. I got n Ch if hmelz, once other i 1) jekiene time. hey may be rich over there, but they do not know grammar. The a and so di G h fathers, and when the British came they other man will 1 r | ° china and so did the lL ni ni 1 th ) Ronarechenguntneeinnes cious AA ii am nee an edad i S aoea a Arnage to in avy pears read: "Go slow.” Intelligent persons say it Wat 2 this way: "Go slowly." ice,’ and came near ele +found ihe habit so weil established that they did not have the heart to make a change. Some experiments have been made in Brooklyn ras Manhattan is concerned there is no) sand myself, this Summer, and I ain't elected to anything. But all m omers that go away ying me what they on nir postcards with pictures vf in the Catskills and the Ocean of beer | hous? court me tired,” sald Mr, Jarr. “What try for if you don't Ike the in morning and Staten Island, but so f hope. Hosiery bas limitations which do not apply to bed quilts. that T was clea Her Oriental Corner. House we want to run {t ourself,” nald G d to the police “But every — —— | House in Long Island. I notice this, that there ain't tberties | ony | . 1 Mberties in thts cou: tion 4 The secret pole: 7 Jany mountains by the Mountain House and no en de Gar PAGAL ON By Heien Rowland, WHERE SYMPATHY BELONGS. Seeane by the Ocean Housel why It ia? Vat?” | fay to escape tervice tn the army,” {oko trampling to lok foF work you have to get | (MPBQBHHE has never been to Bgypt, nor to Turkey, nor Japan; fs P ‘ u eve souvenir post .” sald, Mr Ie Pr: 4 omy at Seen re se a "| ' F The « es it to be understood that it has no! Jarr. w recast." i serve fetes Bae UN rai FSA trop eit a! Gam , ao! | I | Allabe:knows of myatio China's whatishe’s'geen upon a tan; u 3 j ord eae eine P Aegis pa é Yes, don't look out we'll have to do) | 1 Yet she’s very Oriental, sympathy wart, Tetired the Commander-in-Chief by you call ft,’ nth, which fs the same thing, that { ntry!” said Gus. next thing . andred and ninety You told me yourself every- we know as And a trifle sentimental, ess they w And the “‘corner'’ she’s constructed would convince the rudest man! a picture on ft and Remamber me to the gang!’ , Gus,’ and you n you know it's a cus: Ket r because the hand- which no on var ns to go e army. ! good as Germany, 80 I vad, Gus, “everbody has to’ gonal’s Liberty, I don't care what tic ee ay when you come down the street ut you know bally well what ticket There's @ couch in \t she purchased at an auction sale, it’s true, clothes’ on, and © ff you don't sata Mr. Jarr.’’ And a bargain-counter cover that's of every mortal hue, ch, the dienstmadchens, them's tno ure!’ said Gus, and he winked a slow, impres- And a lot of pasteboard armor, \ give you six pfennings if you'll | stve wink. “I ain't so big a fool as T know I am.” Tacked up by ‘this clever charmer— re ei — ~~~ | you can see the tacks a-shining—but what is that to you? 4 & re ae By Ty. Ss. Allen: There's a bunch of cotton drapery a-hanging near the apot, And some paper cherry blossoms in a 98-cent pot, And about a dozen pillows main strength, always be the United States makes as much ado over th be surprised. Sympathy should the President of {727.0 fication of 8) ‘The fis n if he | 22%” sal e who need it, V petty grudge or a mean revenge a8 might be expect those were in pursuit of a great and worthy obj ould go to headquarters pathy to bestow CAPT. WALDO'S CANDIDACY, A particularly dese Democratic candidat Goneroaaiia WHEN MY FATHER HAS DE DTS Lite in vari-colored billows, Capt. Rhinelander Wald h Di W to T TASES FOUIR STRONG (nen TER ‘That she herself selected from a bargain-table Jot. oe OLD KIM IN what a man can di ec, Capt. Waldo has pe Ue LOA BED ! But you need not coldly scorn it, nor look cynical, young man, t army record and he t p aeManaramant 2 Though the frivols that adorn it look so much American, 4 : ] - ~ For Milady knows that this {6 1 under Binghan ; and { 41E SHIM MAES Just the place for stolen Kisses, j There is need of youn nen in Congress, and t \ FES BRAGGIN ——e —— And for Orlental blieses give me Dorothy's divan. iH the Fifteenth is an district re is reas ee HIS FAMILy/ AW IF ME FADDER EVER believe that Capt a AGIN GITS EM ITee TAKE { a _ ; oe i : . MOREN . Fours C THE DAY'S GOOD STORIES. m the People. aa ee An Averted Danger. |close with Mr. Koopon then, I'm hee; Polttscr § Te VERY beautiful actress at & porn repe te ae Fo the FAltor of T ng World « BAK A luncheon at the Plaga told ® weg hag old Koo; rt a ‘APO rm a pon, the banker, ayaaee oan F arn WHBL Are ny | ; # % story about the late Raby PAAY| age ehclan chart Me meee one for ot oF eA "Yes, said I, and a very generous shipe? Who can su me f efore I went on the stag! she i particulars in regard t ¢ t PARE een ROSE CHI RIC eo One, too; but I prefer this office to his? ships n 5 nyer happened to fail, and I adver- And ip this oMce you shall stay’ Boe rr Ps Lad said Mr. Pastor, whimelcally, ‘We'll Apply by te e Mt ed for a new situation, One of those eae eee eee wi age tap ania i od who answered my advertisement was 4 Bila. all you somehow. Why, mg in ¥ ‘Walk, Walk, Wath My Pastor, and I put his name on my yerys jd, atl my money is 1p Koop nary ‘ ’ bis t 1 in due course called on him, an - “fi mA 4 But he 1 me I was too late. He “3 ; morning. He wae very worry, he suid. | 4g HAT’S all thet cannonading?® roe a Fula I would have made a charm!ng orna- W y are fring the salute nee ees : nt to his dull office. He paid several! of the States —forty-wlx guna’? . Jolightful compliments to my eyes, my "Wow! Did you hear that? The gam © building tha ast Mave been nuge % tr, my figur muat have blown up!” ‘ M D. see o . “I rose with @ sigh. “No, that's for Okishome."-Clevetam - | Well,’ 1 eaid, ‘I suppose I'll have to Plain Desier.