The evening world. Newspaper, November 19, 1908, Page 18

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»ya° and the reat of the outside public should always buy when prices are ao earens aera ~ 7 Se World Thursday, ~The Call of the Carcase. By M. De Zayas ai sa Nove The Evening alishing Company, Nos. 65 to 68 Park Row, New York ) FOREPA PULITZER, Pron, 7 Rast TA Stree. Axcts amar “Ent oat New York as Second: ae @abscription Rates to The World for the Vr § and Canada YE One Yonr..... “One Month... Sevauiasseses ‘ on —— VOLUME 49 ‘ ses vs NO. 17 . 01 ree 11018 Riwek Mall Matter. nent and Thternational ered at the Pe voning { Wor gree: se ree ..,. KEEP AWAY! BEWARE! DON'T BE FLEECED! | - EED out of Wall Street! sat oe Lag Prices aro high and all lambs i otf Are requested to come and be x shorn. tee In reply to any alluring cir- tips from brokers’ ewars or touts or advice from get-rich- quick friends, ask them to show you the prices at which stocks were selling a year ago and the prices at which they are selling now. Then inquire why you high and should always sell when prices are low. That is what feeds the Wall Street gambling game. me The next time Wall Street lambs are shorn they will be entitled to as little sympathy as the purchaser of a gold brick or green goods er the man who thought he was a wire tapper’s partner. >a About this time last year the biggest Wall Street gamblers were : deding up with stocks at low prices. The Wall Street banks were t cutting off the legitimate discounts of manufacturers and merchants and increasing their stock collateral loans. Everything was cheap, and socording to Wall Street news it was going to be cheaper, so that the lambs who owned any stock were encouraged to sell. Now the reverse process is being worked. Prices have been marked up as much as 80 or 100 per cent. With all that the lambs sre notified that prices are going higher. Prices may go higher. ier = They will also go lower. This editorial is not a tip for anybody to speculate in stocks one way or the other. It is a warning, not a tip. How the ticker quotations of stocks can be fixed the testimony in the Morse case showed. And Morse was only a second-rater. He was an amateur compared with Harriman and Ryan. | If Morse could mark up the Ice Trust stock to about 90, to what | price, either up or down, can Harriman mark U. P. and Ryan mark Inter-Met. ? C) de Zayas | There’s NoPlace Lize Home, Sweet Home! But Henpecked Mr. Jarr, After Careful Search, Discovers Several Excellent Substitutes said Mra, Jar, shouted Mr. Jarr ‘I'm going out—and By Roy L. McCardell. PaO UNeR YAO Weil, I'll stanc And he was gone. ‘If a man want worms.” said Mrs I try! The turthe into Gus’ In Inspector Byrnes’s time, years ago, he made a rule that no” ordinary thieves shouid be allowed south of Fulton street. That role gg Pov! Footmess’ sai is not necessary in Wall Street r sce al except for the protection of the ordinary thieves. rosharply. “How | see the eyes sew- out every sing! I wish I was mend for her out of 1 f I can't s 9 for those < as knows ed to The best thing for a man to do snitieny,; sald Mr. Jarra the with his savings—and every man If 1 was onl: te : ling she fust gives th th a who had a broken should saye something—is to put ASAD otis part in a low-price, long-term life insurance Test in a savings bank and the If he is policy 1 pork < 6 said as “enation risin: ne, and king at in business he had better keep Ins io Here uh any sazzinz money there so far as the volume Ta 1 only fazzal y \ man like you should On, ly. “What of the business he does demands. have nev led. All you care Gus's, to hang around made y re . ee 4 that awful Dutehman’s saloon with your Mr. \ He w Tf his occupation is fixed so look far ahead he should te ea aes ‘Sa oA - Dee inte tegen alent ae vs buy his own home as soon as poss him at that old office And th : mninist > “4 . - nar M Oh, don’t say a word,” she ge ee Consider for a moment how ma other people’s homes are a ees ; P nd do aa you 7 represented in the automobiles, th K T Suppers ang ‘i “ita oY H Hon € ] Vy 0} oIsé an les, the champagne which Wall Street enj ILLIAN C, GILPIN, who wheeled her baby carriage through c Pp n of North African ttt i Harper's We a pleturesque description of Alex he predom characteristic of thie nouncing bis wares in hant sung up from a low wall to a hideous of noise; they do not howl quite ‘The writers of letters to this paper de profitable horse for the farmer to raise the prices at which thoroughbred horses a wey son Square Garden with the 1 L Hah , A of " reet sales i hes r \ t 12 en vou please, and copper saucers, Cucum! Ge the Twenty-fourth sirect sal ree es : ui : Ro mien you Dike, Ans |eappar AMHCATE:. CHORTIIARD AP on G clapping in cadence, the hysterical shrieks « arid “0 ° cits, or soks, as of more or less ill-treated . Letters From the People (isziecie mer sects sae aes g sold thi their quota which truck horses bring every day a pungsters, and, a I have ever kn Dre 5 . f : : tm ie ... It Happened in Kidland -:- -i) 0-0 + os Pigs on Brondwayt F r a } eee sie te I read so Prince of Wal: visited New York ©! in 1860 hit rela hb y thea, more than once obstructed by t his seems to possible. Put 8 of New York in m“aily strayed 1 large (Naturally, 1 don't East Broadway and Mar Gumption at Tot To sufeguard t mobile acoldents, be to me that if cape of motorists « accidents ha F happened were lessened 4 | accidents by careie ers leas quent. Why allow the us : tpdistinet sixt vied near the ¥ ) dust and untis . f eer ie Agures op taliboarcs of ey cave and land meaus * 7 rt | yourself to death and er—i'm tryin’ to save your life! ‘ t smoking my cigars ur nals been appointed postmaster!’ aaratinl ‘Good! Now I want have te rput any stamps on de youses” eard ma you were by pleasant OWS ara By J. K. Bryans. He ts one of the 419 | | ) +h lle knows Greek, Lat-in, Sans-krit and au the live lan-guages, and | ‘ letters | sends 19, 19087 mber DODO OO GUOOU0 _ The Story of the Operas : By Albert Payson Terhune. §: NO. 1—SAINT-SAENS’S “SAMSON AND DELILAH.” THRONG of weeping Hebrews filled the public square of Patestinge great city, Gaza. ‘They were wailing for the lost glory of Israel and praying to Jehovah to lift from them the cruel yoke of their heathen Philistine master rough lamentations rang the clear voice of Samson, Ma- sung Hebrew giant, bidding his people to hope and to call upon th to cast off thelr bondage. Samson's appeal was drowned, {n a flourish of trumpets, Ablmelech, the Philistine Governor of Gaza, enter ©, followed by his men-at-arms, The Governor bade the mob disperse, telling them Jehovah was no longer mighty to ald them and that the Philistines kod, Dagon, alone was powerful. Samson, in horror, at such blasphemy, tm- plored the Israelites to rise against their heathen masters. Abime.ech hurled himself upon Sameon, sword in hand. Samson tore the; yon from his grasp and with one blow latd the Governor dead at his feet, Then, at the head of the cheering Hebrews, Samson swept the city free o: Philistines and took possession of Gaza in the name of the Most High. As the victors gathered tn the square to celebrate their triumph the doors of the temple) of Dagon were flung open Deillah, beautiful priestess of the heathen god, danced forth, followed by @ rain of Philistine girls, Around Samgon she danced, showering on him every atluring blandishment and whispering him to follow to her home in the vale o Sorel, The Israelites cried out in horror and bade Samson turn his eyes fro her beauty. But the young conqueror scarce heard them. He was enrapture enslaved, by the loveliness of the dancing priestess. * * * Deltlah waited long at her Sorek villa for Samson's arrival. Tidings we! ne day borne to her by the High Priest of Dagon that the young Israelite was} Irving the Philistines like chaff before him and was freeing Palestine from thelr rule, Delilah readily promised to ald in the High Priest's plan for captur. ing him. Night was closing in. Thunder rolled in the distance Scarce had the priest departed when Samson, torn by conscience, yet scourged forward by infatuation, appeared before the villa. He | ome to bid Delilah a last farewell before devoting his wii © to the service of his people and of vah, But at Deillah’s ardent greeting and her his good resolve faded, He consented weakly wp her plea tha her the secret of his victorious power. ‘Then—his vast strength, his holy mission all forgotten—he fell easy prey to the band of Philistine soldiers that had silently crept upon him through the gathering darkness. * * ° Samson, his eves put out the Jehovah for stron confession of love he ta his head shorn, tofled at a mill in a Philistine About him, from every side, swelled the groans of captive Hebrews whose trust and whose country he had betrayed. Crushed, heartbroken, praying to Jehovah for forgiveness, the blinded giant worked on. Suddenly guards en- tered to bear him to the temple of Dagon, The Philistines were holding a revel there in honor of their victory. To inerease the triumph they demanded that fallen conqueror be dragged before them Accoringly, Samson was led in. Amid the Jeers of the PI priso: listines Deillah love and boasted of her conquest e High Priest, ye downfall of Jehovah's chosen people, tronicall = Sam- son call now upon the God he had betrayed. To the taunts o Samson paid no heed. With bowed head he was praying to Jehovah pardon his ) save Israel. At length the High Priest commanded him, as @ fllation, to offer up a sacrifice to Dagon, and tad the blind giant, h supported the roof of t! offense and crowning h led out between the two huge central pillars wh temple, t all might see this final degradation. st wild prayer for ars. Jehovah miraculously restored rier strength ghty effort Samson burst the pillars asunder. Amid the sh lers the roof of the temple crashed in, burying victors and victim in one utt} 8. seized the 1 With the rev struction. ae SY SO By Martin Green. Winter's Warning. é len haze of autumn the Winter's ot | { HROUGH the go! I Posts crept Stealthily, steadily, day by day, an tcy herald swe down to the smiling 6 sharp, of things that hay “ver lakes and hills and’ valley Sounding a warning, clear o to be. ey wt a Of the long, slow weeks of shadow when clouds shal! wrap the town dripping garments of snow and fog, all white, or drab, or brown; When the hard reign of discomfort shall hold relentless sway, Taking a tribute of health and lives-—a tax mankind must pa a a a and who has given heed? ters warning , tleh and well-to-do—th #8 poor, God help € and The Manhattan Primer. ‘ see the High-brow. He {8 en-ter-ing @ gun store. Let us watch his meth-od of pro-ce-dure. Ob-serve him apend-ing mon-ey like a drunk-en sail-or Now his mon-ey {# all gone and he is try-ing to trade a li-bra-ry for, sich-el full of dy-nadmite cart-ridges, He does not ap-pear to be en-tire-ly famil-lar with the use of weap-ons. Nor is he On the con-t full of roach ex-ter-mi-na-tor. He wears eye-glasses and his chest meas-ure-ment ‘s thirty-three and o1 half inch-es Phe size of his col-lar is four-teen, but he wears a large hat 1 His main phys-t-cal exercise ts put-ting on and tak-ing off his clothes OQ" y, the dead-l est weap-on he ¢ r hand-led was a sy-rinj Ju-eld-ly ex-plain just how na-ture par-layed a chim-pan-zee in-to an A-don-ls, In lit-er-ar-y cir-cles he is con-sid-er-ed @ head-!in-er a-mong the er-u-dite. He has writ-ten six vol-umes up-on the stren-u-os-it-y of the but-terfly the pawn-brok-ing In-stincts of the bee. When he writes his name, fol-low-ed by the de-grees which have been co! fer-red v on him, it runs over on the next page. {lls voice has oft-en been ratsed in ad-vo-cac-y of tie plan to turn our batet! ships {p-to ex-cur-sion boate and dis-arm the army. Hun-dreds of Chau-tau-qua au-dl-enoes have list~ at Any Pric Then why 1s he purchasing guna, howitzers, revol-vers, am-mu-ni-tion ed to his lect-ure on “Pei oth-er appur-ten-ances to slaugh-ter? I-lege pro-fes-sors who have been in-vit-ed ac-com-pany Pres-l-dent Roosevelt on a mas-sa-cre of wild game in Af-ri-ca, Who In-vit-ed them? E-ven-tual-ly St will be put up to Loeb, flections of a Bachelor Girl 4 By Helen Rowlan4, » With Lineoln, that you shouldn't he people all the time; but somehow it never o to him to class his wife as ‘people.’ When & man actually proposes nowadays, his wou should be taken down by ® stenographer and placed in Metropolitan Museum among the other curiosities. Perhaps the reason & man's heart doesn’t wither lke @| | woman's Ja that he spends so much time preserving {t in alcohol There ure Umes when every wife has a dark suspicion that when the Lord moved that rib from Adam, most of the soft part of his heart adhered to it. Don't hold @ eat or ® man too tight; nefther of them ever could endure the f vg that he couldn't get away If he wanted to. Somehow “woman's sacred influence has a good tncome to back tt up with, All men are equal—except in @ bathing sult. Tob nted in love it ts ne ie always eo much stronger when svary to have been married at Vhen a man writes another ‘vemptations, beeing to boast about the temptations he has resisted name Upon his Mat-because @ strong man doesn't even

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