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The Evening Worid Daily Magazine, §$ . } | g by aturday, November 21, 1908. | The ToT | n Hazardous Busines Pudlished Dally Mxcept Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 68 to 68 iw Park Row, New York By M. de Zayas | PO PORRPH PULITZER, Prvs., 1 Rast 184 Btroet, J. ANGUS SITAW, Ree. Treas, $01 Weel 11% Ate Entered at the Post-OMfice at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. { Bubsoription Rates to Phe Evening | For Jand and the Continent ana} The Si World for the U tate ‘All Countries in the International — | ie Sultan of Turkey has re and cunddae Moat Unione ‘The Kaiser seems to be had his whiskers pulled by | Qne Tears... ‘ BH | One Year ao 9.75 | tm Duteh, He is now an “The Young Turks," which Hayes has as much right ne Month. 30 | One Month 8 | Emperor without anything sounds like the name of @ to\eea fr hen “ict Sete ahatmnne 7 a é i i her as other men have to . VOLUME 49........6. 5 tyes see sees, 17,289. | BB tor Kings and Emperers sel their ability to lay | “OEE oe 22 ‘ . = ¥ ‘ HOW MR. ROCKEFELLER DID IT. \ N JOHN DP. ROCKEFELLER’S = ~ ; ‘ | HEY haven't been doing ayWHEN SLEUTHS testimony there was nothing Rd eae et | DOIN TS e edifying than his deseri remarked the laundry man. | wLertad more edifying than his deserip- “The Kaiser seems to be in Dutch,” | 66 sald the “that tion of how he began to get eenes the ie who was getting his ; ree R m has or : ; package. “He now an Entperor dered his wipe the rich. When he started he had | without anything to emp. Bum “aye, {2am e face of | no capital to speak of, “only | ee ris eo Cece, Ue aren wnrareleed ° he cops ese % | $4,000 in 1862.” He made his AR | Btsetl to casey out the ‘asked the } " : Sts man who+ was tt s package. 1 colossal fortune, the biggest in et | “They | surround an open saloon, t the world, by the use of other! Pease J Mpettts > ed nine x Depart- e-cent, ned show. if any #m of oa, THe people’s money, other people's brains and other people’s labor. Mr. Rockefeller worked, but 60 did everybody else, and since Rockefeller had the majority of the only real ruler who see ne get ; Standard Oil'stock, he reaped for himself the majority of the profits. SUE MU iec earn : When Mr. Rockefeller started in the oil business there were name of Pr ited { many other oi! men. What their brains lacked was not a knowle PALS t of petroleum or how io turn it into kerosene but the knewled te He concen rh his people. ; how to get rich. J and lets it go at ‘ ; Mr. Rockefeller’s policy from the star# was to make other people's & fa Ea to) 00 bs : 1 money work for him. He made alliances with New York bankers \ \ ual vayisvexcentiigyt! who because “We were enabled to secure large sums of money at lower w ARE Bae Ee cian | ‘ | rates. than we could secure the same in the West.” He borrowed as THE KING TRADE. [ae Soa: @ could much and as cheaply as he could and from everybody who would ‘“ ar 28 ane 2 outs ’ a SURED loan it to him. ET ea eee EARNING A LIVING. eof a Yorkvi f Porty his emphasizes the great economic truth that not the rich but ey the comparative poor are the creditor class. The capital by the use pe of which the Harrimans, the Rvans and the Morgans have become so rich is not their own savings, but the savings of the mass of the people. The three big life insurance companies of New York have con- siderably more than a billion dollars loaned to or invested in stocks and bonds of properties which Harriman, Ryan, Morgan and oth rich men control. The men who saved this money get about 3! per cent. on it. The men who use it and, who control the properties in which it is invested get the difference hetween 344 per cent. and its real earnings. | ra fun in pull The Why should The Bible conde and mmens e ‘is C)areZayas 5 j = - Sen sts VY Wn | ew ° { 2 ate ! eserte £ F : sa DING er Army or: Human Meal Tickets cana The Chorus Girl Must St or Eat at H | : ~ > nee t }): I = 4 By Roy L. McCardell. Ethe! Barrsmors id, and hadn't come down to doing general housework yet, ‘ wn HOLE The cohen mal ae ; than) euenventia ee thing she knew she'd be ast to make the beds, a a home dilied and we at seats p to flat more to tp her, and how could she afford to and Louie Zinsh Bs mt WO. sie wasn't paid—and any as a colored lady with th nnections um y te “ 1 go on the stage, and it didn't behoove her to sacrifice her bed. she wore Mamma De E nsconibe’s evening dress to Hee i Ada Walker O on’s understudy had recognized - - E 1 is i nd-hand lady and she had been humiliated in Afro- dn the savings banks of New York City there are deposited : if anybody said a word to her she'd rough-house another billion dollars, accumulated through the thrift of compa 4 4 we pied z adn't no st th to it anyway, and, ign | : with place tively poor people. It is invested in approved bonds and mortgages. fed an as.” Mlammn De! Branscombe said) it was the) last time sheid 4 The people who own the equities get what this capital earns oyer een ase 14 ¢ er cent. interest the depositors receive Tbs é arom ps 1 she'd look around and adopt an orptian gin ° > ey) 2 , | the 31% or 4 p Barner cey rs receive, et | not for wages, but for a good home with refined people NO, 2-D'ALBERT’S “TIE FLAND” (THE LOWLAND). } If John D. Rockefeller had had to depend on his own saving 4 Y } neue ady rls a she wants to adopt a stout girl for ral EDRO, the shepherd, dwelt alone in his hut on the Pyrenees. He scarcely Bia | e neat and oblig family tha out. Swedis saw another huma sy twice a year, He hac er spc had doubled his capitai every five years. he would now be only an 1 : u j ee fs ee Fey HR eon on Car ene, Savin any AD are p } capita A ly ¢ i | : woman, nor seen one except at a distance. Yet every day he prayed axdinary one millionaire. And how many people are there in any apts M4 ; wa: fr Hy something flerce and Mamma that heaven ald send him a wife, One night he dreamed his prayer ps i * A » him e said he wou 't dignity n: was to be answered. Waking at da N hurle s e : Ls Ae caiaives : ; : : 4 ignify any lady, e answer aking at dawn he buried a stone into the air. Pusiness who make a net 20 per cent. profit year in and year out " aaa " 1 e by Wh, and he advised us to simply at random, to learn {rem which direction this future wife would appear. As the ) over their living expenses and business Losses ‘ nal f “herenaithaa Hs Bb ‘rane all t no alo © crashed down the mountain path Pedro heard a yell. He had almost struck ( j at we did werd a maid; fi It wasn't for him the Sebastiano, his empl rich owner of all the Spanish lowlands that lay at the After establishing the founda (sn eee : 1 advised us to get a social recretar Anes he P: 5 r ; : j ad et a socia ry, as every, foot of the Pyrenees stlano had climbed the hills to have a confidential tall ee eee ineloticradit FEATHER ITALERI A y oy tanya nsaacial i re . And the Musical Swede liad just With bis shepherd. ‘To 1 Ss amazement the master was followed by a fair g ne 0h : DERI LOUEE RAD? RUE MRB De BONE Ae PES HOM nea na aits LN Lele ceded a place to sleep. é young girl. The shepherd's astonishment increased when Sebastiano offered him Mr. Reekefeller took in with him sre Ane Baa ae All = iis ina r posta ¥ vl ane Sart Set. He says he the post of chief millep in the lowlands and promised to give him the lovely girl, aula ‘ to be poor and we should do some settleme! Marta, for wife. eauthincoentaditheioncsitianrintale ‘ the most expert oil refiner, the firm Ticreeinmoaney full] : h Apel Aper: Aad wei should doi anmya: sate ment work Maras rite, Tha youth accepted ih Bi position in a delirium of Joy and pre- : n SRA er APT x aun 3 eams of avarice o descend to the lowlands up his nevy employment and to celebrate Beatie arcallenidiiataxnonttoillibisis 1s Cra DUS salar ke Be ; WUREDOEEA ' his wedding on the morrow, As a matter of fact, Marta, who flercely opposed the i ‘ “ le gay fe he's all excited over Dick Croker o match, had long ago becor hed i jt Li 0 oy r ¢ : eae a : APTI H eats A ee s i : i ig OF Nhat Ri He's.al ; Ker coming & ago become enmeshed In Sebastiatto’s subtle power. The master, ness, another concern that mad Bn ane i i zo row i tbe Darky: n England, and Dopey he'll bet tt Wishing to marry a lady of rank, | ad now hit upon this scheme for ridding hime the best oil cans and expert coop- t the first time a hat was won or lost ho ovememnes | tets0f the manaant gir and 49 silence gossip, Pedro, of course, was ignorant of f ime a as 1 or lost on the horsescW Sebastiano’s di motives, ¢ © 2 Sy; “a eave ¥ F3 2 orlmp put by Gos “ pl g ers, He also took in veral Ae ff is ni 2 r nS ab sail by Gov. Hushes, because the last Next day in lowland village the marriage cegemony was performed. The | railroad presidents, giving thom Q ait nf Aa ‘i ae villag who well knew that Marta was forced into the union by her'fear of LEQAS i : - ! Sebastiano's rage, forbore to tell the happy bridegroom the truth, It was n 2 » of fitable « | i 8 M4 a side line of profitable graft. ihe and Marta were alone in the mill after the wedding that Pedro noticed ft With all these experts workin ely [3 ae) as rl was wretchedly unhappy. He tried to please her by giving her as wedding | BADR ae ‘ nt a silver coin, the only money he had r owned, Sebastiano had given for him, and cheap credit facilities. yy "1 ° it to him for slaying a wolf in fight. It was still stained with the gallant lad's t Aare ane ra ° Poway ra blood. iro talked to her, Marta began to realize for the first time that he had Mr. Rockefeller had nothing to do excc lat everybody 5®) Jf lan ‘) 1Me@5$ married her in good faith adn that he.really loved ‘Die'giviie hatred for Har worked in harmony and that nobody control away from him. “** ewes 5 1/8010 9 00s COR NCCEOAODEDS now huaband turned to pity, Warn out by: grief, she fell asleep at Jaat in her F ia Abn i 4 " chair ro stretched himself out on the mill floor at her feet, to guard her 4 ow simple it is to get rich when one Jooks back at the way it from the terrors that had seemed to fill her leart After a time he, too, ywas done as described in Mr. Rockefeller’s pellue: stir WE'D GETTER slept, °° pellucid te mony! TAKE DET “4 Dawn found the couple thus. Maria, awakening and seeing Pedro still lying (a ieiesecedl a JHE HOSPITAL! asleep at her feet, left the room to busy herself about the preparing of breakfast, : me While she was gone Nuri, a half-grown vi girl, van in with a gift for her. etters Fro mn the People From tho girl's junocent prattle Pedro learned part of the horrible truth about i his wedding. Still ignorant of Sebastiano’s share in the deception, he vowed to slay the unknown man who had caused Marta such sorrow. Marta, entering | nd ling her husband in eager ta.k with Nuri, was seized with violent jealousy, oe] 0 4 | a da often that ¢ loping mind nd in n L i iow O14 are The) oft an that t Gevelopins nt 1 and iE and thus knew for the first time that she loyed Pedro, But the shepherd, 4 Boa Rlier oC‘The Avening World: | |tellect, here atus c a eems havi & just discovered, as he thought, that Marta cared nothing for him, left the os nave left a i no one mill in a rage. Jane will be as old as her mother is on SoA AROS, RASS gue il) be aa old as her mother ts can say that she ie oy 1 Every Later, goaded by the taunts of the villagers, he returned to say good-by before HOP RUT RCE Tg TPCT leader apg has at least twc goins back forever to his beloved mountains. But Marta, because of her new RY eine Sie Mar el irs work after school li een dls love for him, bede the shepherd wait to hear her confession. He refused. The Martnafmativconaiciren anid ac Mary |\Tie Moreover, people a id, or desperate woman, eager for death now that he had turned against her, begged mri be tmantysone time das 2 Nidtia a ananndine nic Aitation him to kill her, Pedro shi ag back, She threw a knife befole him, and by works Os ei Jane was born, fend ekill they br ry auiltiaeeeeinen ing him into a blind fur ight to make him stab her, He struck, slightly 1, H. HANFIELD. HER, wounding hi then hurled the knifg away in horror, After a wild scene of E 2L1 hae ‘age and remorse, he bade her come With him from the lowlands to his own ee MR os RM mountains, there to dwell with him safe from further harm. She gladly cons nthe Malt of The Evening Wor 1 Te the Balter of The Evening World: - om 1 HOPE sented, They moved toward the doors, only to be confronted on the threshold by or manager of the ropolitan 0; tion of "She," by r Haggard neh, Be 1 NEVER Abe : or men f esropolitan Opera: t mbes ! ard 1S A SWELL Ger The master forbade Marta to leave the lowlands, and ordered his servants to a ouse Kae h ing ¥ Sic FOUNDRY | BETTER ! throw Pedro out. Pedro angrily insisted on taking his wife with him, Seb>rtlano, Working Girl ve. Teacher. NE day 4 BEY, soars josing his temper, struck the shepherd in the face. Pedro cried aloud in fury; but Fo the Esitor of ‘The World « ON Tt as generations of servitude forbade a Spanish peasant to raise hand against his I wish to enlighten “Working Girl vay Cu IMIAM BCHO aster. Marta, however, shrieked forth Sebasiiano’s secret and called on Pedro satan fitha thie inmasant dadvectan’ tenn ity, N to slay him. Pedro leaped at Sebastiano’s throai, but the master’s followers over- @e an instance of those who have “easy Another “Farmer Problem,! came him by force of numbers and dragged him from the mill. Sebastiano Mork, short heurs, high aalary and stil)! To tne Kolter of The Erector w laughed loud in triumph and caught Marta in his arms, ‘The maddenéd girl ere dissutisfied.”” Pernups “Working ro screemed to Pedro for help. Pedro, escaping from his captors, burst into the room + ey peer eg ey eb bendy oo a |and hurled himself upon Sebastiano, There was a quick, short struggle. Then the Siiitieee aes ca acuan neuen aeons ty master collapsed, lifeless, at the shepherd's feet. Pedro, drawing Marta to his ing for her profess Also, that, hay PWN breast, cried ing been « as a teacher, she is one o: * aaane Back to our mountains! To light and freedom! The wolf is dead! I have’ edaatantiy etiending courseaof lectures, |twice as many aan “9 sate him! te further improve «. aden her in-| id they each have ‘Minstng mambove of this series mer ‘be_seourcd by sending one ns eeaaananaier i 4 nei j Gallet. Considering ber work, which ww! ¥. H. OUNNINGHAM cent stamp for each number to Evening World Clrowlation - i} AEMAELL OD By ¢ \