The evening world. Newspaper, October 16, 1908, Page 18

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pe nerenrebene ee at z The Evening World Blarld, Peed Datty Lxcept Sunday by the Press Prbitehing Company, Nos. 68 to & Park Row, New York {RRP PULITEEN, Pros, 1 Bart 784 treet, J. ANGUS BITAW, Reo-Treae., 901 Prewt 11Fth Mtneet, —_ — Hntered at the Powt-Offloe at New York as Second-Cinss Mall Matter. ‘The Evening | For Engiand and the Continent All Countries in the Internation Postal Unton. The Cabinet on the Job. By Maurice Ketten, AFT nant MAN @Meription Rates to orld for the United States and Canada. «+ $8.50 | One Year 80 | One Mont Seaons: WeLUME 49.. — a CHANLER’S STRANGE BIAS. ~ Mr. Chanler is too courteous to go after the machine Repub- Tiemws of this State hammer and tongs, and he is too dignified to repr to Mr. Hughes, but he does not hesitate to say, as Thomas I. Rya might say, that the Public Service Commissions act confers fwonuch power upon the Governor. Subject always to the restraint of the courts, it is hardly pos- @Bl for a wise and honest Governor to have too much power in @eahg with public service corporations. Heretofore the power has Bem on the side of the franchise-holding companies. Created by Abereople for the service of the people, they were greater than the ede They defied regulation, They did as they pleased. They war accountable to nobody. They plundered investors and they Qemised extortion upon their customers. It is a strange bias, prejudice or whim, which impels an honest tpnlike Mr. Chanler to go before his fellow citizens with a plea @Msinight easily have originated in the offices of the traction looters. Th Public Service Commissions were created to perform a_neces- @sryiuty. They need more power, energy and devotaon rather than Jem They have a great work to do. Men who aspire to high ofice %m tis State, especially Democrats, should make no mistake about ‘imnaticr. : NEW YORK AND THE CASTROS. Mew York salutes Major Carmelo Castro, of Venezuela, who is : Berfor diversion, and only regrets that his gay elder brother, U1p- ‘Yi by name and dictator by occupation, found it impossible to wwme wit him. Cipriano’s portraits show him to be dark, inscrutable, olen, and possibly imperious and cruel, but it may be that they do Wniminjustice. Many a tyrant has been a good fellow who went wmg, and the despot business, even in Venezuela, must be trying to theierves. By s Cipriano Castro is a dictator who dictates in strict accordance wit)international law. A monkey is held in contempt not because he. a monkey but because he resembles a man. So the great pow- exsiate Castro because he does things just as they do. New York yrotl take a lively interest in him if he would join his brother the | Mar in the uptown district and devote himself for a few weeks to! plesure. He is the only man in the world who ever made Theodore | Rosevelt shut up, and he is the only man in the Western hemisphere whiever fought a trust—the Asphalt Trust in his case—to a finish. Nex York yearns for him. —___-+-___— HUSBANDS IN THE PHILIPPINES. We have an interesting sidelight on imperialism in the remark | of rs. John A. Logan, who has attempted to secure the punishment TR. KNOWS THE NATION'S BIG SOB TR KNOWS THE NATION'S BIG MAN ion FOR, Daily Magazine, Friday Set eae | WHITE HOUSE of in army officer for misconduct in the Philippines. “I want the word to know about thi she says, “so that ther poor women who haw been saddened by the conduct of their husbands in the islands may have some protection, In civil life such things could not go on,! butin the army it is different.” { Mrs. Logan has been familiar with the army for many years,| and if she finds that the moral standards of the service are different | from those of civil life it is because imperialism here is bearing the widow of | were satire purs and simpie. the bridge hav. FI But these who n Mr no sense of satire, The around and asked Mr. By Roy L. McCardell. Noes: tn the the downtown Wor | he Rangle, who was with | rig o tank up with that same fruit that it always has produced elsewhere. The the greatest of volunteer generals is not as young as she once was, but if she concludes to vo into t bustands in the Philippines wo order with as little delay as possible, nee THAW AS AN EXAMPLE AGAIN. ons, and als: , but have a caret” a good s affair in earn many nly wattir do well to put houses in ten Irland real estate: in rsey real estate! A. sard| makes l!fe worth t tying mh rare Ty 4 y come and h then x t nd t "That reform in the administration of justice, criminal as well as| NaTEEOL Mp @vil, is of paramount importance was shown not only in the trials of ae atbus 4 hie friends 5 ; Jorr t Thaw, but it finds demonstration almost every day in the legal pro-| (aan Nomae eeddings undertaken to secure the release of the prisoner. While | : : nejther the rich nor the poor should be denied a hearing on a proper| ale ‘ nA HS aa thowing of facts, it is plain enough that there can be no justice if| BY ay, esp t ° dhere is never to be a ement. Thaw has been an issue ever t they wor ~ ; 7" killed te of course, is the only explanation. | 2 en they got t ed ane, : Hs sinoe he killed Whi , of course, is the only explanation. | ig? re PANE RR S08. 5 7 in the courts as an example of the rich, Now he the power of inoney to ji Bor two years he was ex! degeneracy gs an illustration o defeat the ends of and degradation of the profligate is in view with and pe ustiee and public safety. It is an object le. Jarra Mr. Jarr Gets Into a Flatbush Crowd in a Downtown Cafe; 5 He Tries to Be Funny and is Made to Repent in Can 2 bore Mr. Jarr, bewildered dy nim from th: s which ought to bear fruit - os WHAT SUPERSTITION COST HiM. ; The d ished Italian music who refused to 1 (PUT ON A DRESS SORRY, BUT | CANT Work on the j z SUIT AND 60 DOWN TZ AND GINSMEYE ADMIT YOU IN THAT rk on the | TO THE OPERA SAYS THE PRINCE superstition, but fed that, having come ‘e OF re, HOUSE AND KEEP OF WALES WORE 1) ; rai : che [Sq ) YER EVE ON THE THIS ONCT all his i r apywa | : the sentiment tha {Se _SYVELL NoB’s —_— better 1 ee the new moot a Oia a : ye WHERE 1 CAN | lest Vet ho i \ GET A NOBBY I ANNTIAU SES feel better t one whole \ DRESS sum) TANNIN day " Es eae PRICES a Apne 7 Gps Letters From the People. | be? eae | - peers rs LA , | WELL, FOR THE LOVE NEVER MIND~ GO WOT DO YER & | M oF | WHERE on DOWN To SWAT } TINK DIS 1S—A | fF 30° | earTH pp You—! MILLIGANS BALL eC AND LOOK OUT \V 1 ridge Reads Mitricand 2 —— Rand | cen" Bare |e > pany | » take celegray October cent stamp 16, 1908. z Fifty Great Love Stories | of History By Albert Payson Terhune — No. 49— BISMARCK \ND JOHANNA VON PUTTKAMER, WILD, gay young Prussian officer who had set hi yr neighbors shast by his mad pranks in collegs and elsewhere chanced to meet a pretty German girl at a wedding 1 1816. She was Johanna vor KANT q er of an old, honoreé family. Soon after their first neeling this big young officer, Otto von Bismarck, was Incky mizh to be Harz Mountains, was his repute herself—looRed nemiber of th ne He pat party with Johanna in a/tour of dd devoted atter aye ho one—unless perhaps the on his devotion as serious ana’s father her cons jon, Yet suet girl was amazed at receiving from Bismarck soom af mal written request for his daughter's hand I felt,” said Herr Puttkamer, in deser{bing the matter in after yoars, as if so! one hid hit me ov the head with an axe,” \ghast as he was at Bismarck’s propc he old gentleman did not absolu decline it, Instead, he wrote dou und up his letter by giving rather grudging permission “visit of inspec to pay a sort of home at Retns Bann: fold. Bismarck at this straw of hope. { A Whirlwind j He was on the urrying to Reinfeld at once $ Wooing when disagreeable official duty suddeniy interfered, and Tom, the Impatient young lover was forced to postpone the At length, however, the time came when he conld leave his work. He hastened to Reinfeld. There, on his arrival, the whole Puttkamer family was lined up to greet him. 7 nd mother glared at him solenimly, and Johanna herself stood between thom, her eyes mode downward, It was an awlward moment—or would have 1 if Bismarck had permitted. But he did not. The swift, whirlwind decision that scored his later political triumphs came now to the front, and carried the situation by st Galloping up the driveway toward the walting fé s horse at the door, ran forward and flung his arms about Johanna; no heed of her scandalized parents; catching her to his breast and F vith kisses. After that there could be no talk. The betrothal w AN Ae fact Bis- ll the story with more delight than he toole victories, and usually he would wind up rm, he leaped from king 1 age used to Statesmansh himself to Johanna, playful side of Angel,’”* de- and lack o his official work went the accep’ consoling weeks of absence by writing long, a strangely gentle, affectionate, 's stern nature. They r Most Beloved." They the work he was doing, the peopl y of her “blue-gray-black milar remarks that n. In one letter he writes f the ‘Black Sun’ fs false. ye you not rather a darks with fragrance of flowers and heatzlightning?” To the end of their married life the couple wrote each other long an@ loving letters every day whenever they were not together. Soon after thelr wedding Bismarck began to make his name known to the world at large Under Johanna’s help and inspiration he put behind him his gay, reckless mode of life, and rose rapidly to international greatness. Johanna made his home & haven of refuge, guarding him from all domestic an- noyances ané looking with motherly care after each detail of his comfort. Once, for example, a diplomat called at Bismarck’s palace and spent am unduly long time over the visit. At last he asked his host: re you never troubled with stupid guests?” No,” replied Bismarck. ‘Whenever my wife thinks any one has stayed long enongh to be wearisome she gets rid of the tiresome visitor by sending word that she wishes to see me at once on a matter of Import- ance.” Hardly were the words spoken when a servant entered with a message Princess Bismarck desired to speak with her husband immediately on ing busin lover, ers sho are hardly to be expected from @ warm summer nigh A Wife's Inspiration. { rica will be supplied apon application Evening World, upon receipt of one- Missing nombe to the Ctrealation Sayings of Mrs. Solomon. (Being the Confessions oi the Seven Hundredth Wife.) Translated by Helen Rowiand, POMDOOPDOOOOOS212+ EHOLD, n what caution a man en dodgeth th thou inqulrest “Dost thou love me?! he reptiethy asketh, “Whom thou met h, “Wouldst the ave me ut other how art still Yea, the he hath told ed. And he ch kleth In his ‘or a man regardetl th warily the path of t the art of near-love-making 1s he an expert selence of saying much and promising t of coll a woman's questions as a trap ation, At even at the conve eaneth ow put a sea- nme ol love-tunes: “1 1 then unto ans y become a habit; even as the table repeateth he them by heart, but without heart interest \ married man talketh ke Laura Jean Libbey and [liner Glyn, that he is safe, a man’s name be Sinitth and his income fifteen per, though his den Indian's and his garments fit as hand-me-downs, yet he ree e be nga gardeth himself as a lamb which thou wouldst shear of his liberty, even as a rabbit whiel) thou wouldst ensnare. For every man thinketh himself a prise? Selah’ — e+ i Newest Notes of Science. } ” ~ ° iT the nume of Pasteur generally 1s assoctated with the treat- nT HO ment of hydrophobla which he discovered, he also discovered the way to kill the micro-organisms which sour new wine, and an effective remedy against the parasites which Kil) silkworms before they spin t At a « helr cocoons. ),000 the Fritish Admtrajty will construct a line of huge d to foree vessels to use a defined channel. Naval wn that ft 1s possibile for small craft to creep up to the ight omers « Me are inclined to the theor tliat the eighth satellite of Jupiter, discovered last winter, 1s the missing Lexell comet, last seen in 1779, close to the planet Paradoxical as it seem, farmers’ wives of Berks County, Pa., keep sweet co tly ft nter by salting it down In stone crocks or cedar tubs, England makes threepence proft on every shilling minted ime LAYS GOOD STORIES. entlemen, the foam {s not emel, Flippancy Easy. : does Mt crawl! ! Y HITCHCOCK, the brilliant b that wag very telling in @ Fe it n Bar Harbor ft wa bu n't the neo sm s » he tip F Mu k iteerignentich fioulty one can ur lecal Language. i ' r 7 ‘ OUR act stated the )xayer 1 of th intentional,’ willful, qsetinate, wanton, maltelous, fc 1 the teameter whe ng foam.’ Ked traffic for a fow momeat., "e eoture recited those ¢ uetie nme go to fall, boss, Yor P 3 in a scornful yolce, then| can’t clear me of all that.'=Jtenaem made the comments ‘sity Journal.

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