Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
) Published Dally Exc SOBER PULITZER, Ben Subsert; One Month. VOLUME 4D feller have 1 articles on what a burden wealth on writing is and how great is the difficulty Wise giving money a few of Mr. € Here are qie’s sayir Wealth creases hun A philanthropist generally means with money than than in- a man more sense, To kecp a fortune ts scarcely less difficult than to acquire it Millionair gh Mr. Rockefeller is not as good a writes in longer ser things he says are: ‘All money spent Worse. While men of wealth control great s @o not use them for themselves _It is the duty of men of means to n and to administer their funds T..e best philanthropy who la re rare, s Mr. Carnegie. He Some of the orisms nees and not son ch to the point. tition is wasted and in increasing needless comp they cannot and of money the title to teir property § not what is usually called charity. All of which will suggest to the average reader a still better known proverb: “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” The simple way to prevent the predicament in which Mr. Car- negie and Mr. Rockefelle If there were universal justice, charity and philanthropy would become only domestic If the the Standard Oil has extorted were left in the people's pockets there they find themselves would be to be just. no need for their 1,000,000 of exorbitant profits which nes. There would be public application. would be more money available for domestic charity. Wh f, aoe ditt pAb Taman | Out in the Pittsburg district many workmen live in houses not fit | for a cow stable. The poorhouses and the public hospitals are crowded with men maimed, burned and broken down at the furn ces, the rolling mills and the coke ovens of the Steel Trust. This burden of publie charity would he lessened if Mr Carnegic had done justice in his steel plants, and if the did justice now.. Wealth does not bring happiness, Steel Trust to which he tra isferred them Nothi Justice or extortion or oppression ever ce Th millions of dollars can evade. “Millionaires who laugh are rar The trail of the millions of the Standard Oil is not of mirth but of @esolation. The history of Home- atead:is not a tale of happiness but of sorrow. ed through in- | idence wh is one of the laws of an all-wise Pr Indeed they What Mr. Carney and Mr. Rockefeller ean do is to use their brains and their money, charity, but in justice, there is-a trust, a tax that oppresses the pe an emash it and benefit wople. thesi resumes the trip at two-thirds former speed and arr at the des meateat mitt’ t mation one hour and twenty min it | Ctumn et 1 RUC Or . ‘ - THERE WAS ALITTLE MAN WHO HAD ALITTLE PLAN ‘To BE arne- GOVERNOR, RSE WAS A LITTLE MAN WHO HAD & LITTLE PLAN To BE 4 SENATOR Magazine, Tuesday, December 1, 1908; Little Tim. By Maurice Ketten. THERE WAS ALITTLE MAN WHO HAD A LITTLE PLAN To BE A CABINET MEMBER THERE WAS A LITTLE MAN WHOo HAD A LITTLE PLAN TOBE Vice PRESIDENT THERE WAS ALITTLE MAN \YHO HAD A LITTLE PLAN To BE AMBASSADOR. om “al . I'm not talising said Mr wi t's troubles arc > good FCA DELL y buy drin Saloon Man Gus Tells What He Doesn’t Know And Mr, Jarr Discove By Roy L. McCardell. There wa rd. mor bis world for “You toa lot you kick? Even if anyway," hi imypruls abou rous booze Jarr ury. By Albert Payson Terhune. NO. 5.--PUCCINI'S “MANON LESCAUT,”’ ‘ T the Gateside Inn of Amiens, France, one day late in the elghteenth century A drew up the Paris stage coach, From It descended three peuple: Manon Lescaut, a lovely young girl) her brother, a raseally Reant tn the © dished Mr, Jarr pretty to work for tand a wh they all So one day a is mor We can do without “I hire him to clean oy d 1 say to him, ‘O1 out the necessities fir: ‘Some fellers will tell you we t whiskey replied Mr, Jarr, “Whon ay crous. When times are i And s and there ain't the profit see Mike, rough ; Meyer and Ra 1 the floor 1 to say that I had a Job all the time there was so much talk and the bk Swede rhoving About dard Times, rs the Secret of Drink-Dispensers’ Success it my vii 1 runs ition ryt the detica sind of rummles second broomss ta sober feiler me. Sooch a big his money to go loon, 1 Lam the plas «just in time to Sehloss ana he bar broke, and s ing « No. repentance is of value without works. rit of work 1 yet, do you know, 1 boss, who “And then he s y, boss, I clean out place same as ! Backataslons “Ta sears ietnnte quarry over got a big order and needed a hundred extra!do Yack Yac in Pink Mink, Minnys ockefeller now destroy the system y } 5 me Y y York and advertised and went around among| ‘And tl should only do w ihaunderatandes Ahis epitaph: ~ - — - = ts al ae _.. The Ambitions of Sonny and Sue -:- By Albert Carmichael . Letters From the People mae ; pacha ei ches ' qee! THE BossLL try Men and Their Wiver. te. If the aneaiaant at WF YOU GET,| F285 GE ME A ane or Toy i ) DOWN DP ae RAISE FOR Oa ad . sala (eet Se GETTING ar SN cr ; (os MOMORAON|/ Me {| Borin $0 q ghey \ ) ty, A Joes \ EARLY it take ( y; Te AG HEARD e | | WA goind be fit TO HAVE A / / || Busy Day! ia) t \ YOUSE'S BEEN ) Kis I SUPPOSE HE'S f LOAFIN ROUND (==) wr BEEN OvT //f, HERE AN HOURS ag CAROUSING ALL vi ‘ amhier s LL PAVE TO Lon | pf 44 NIGNT | THE 1 rie fou UP AS Ach. A NG ee SUSPICIOUS, ) \ P Whe ; EE | #300 iar srs ‘ rain | " 44 na 1 y, y e A tren —_ an hour a Whe - 3 MoWA And is delayed thirt t ow” | au ® place and Clean it out! favorite dog. Jt bears this inscription: . Who Was escorting, her to a convents 4 er-General of the realm, wh fiariag in open admiration at Manon, But in the crowd of students and townsfolk han WAS another man even more struck by the intended 1 young Chevalter des Grioux, who was finishing ty ind Was about to enter the priesthood, Des Grieux duce himself to Manon white the ethers were going changed but a few words. Yet each fell in love with Soon afterward Edmund, Des Grieux’s chum, ¢ of De Ravoir to carry Manon away by stealth to P. raged the only post-chaise at the inw and the fastest lord have them ready in an ho dmund te Ravoir, the hd been throughout Journey It tae inn courtyard ‘This was the udent in theology und opportunity to intros p inn. ‘The two ex- At first sight. a plot on the part man had en- 1 bade ude e scneme, The latter confided it to Manon and e him foil It, He and the girl stole the chaise and ¢ © outwitted old Treas= eral furious 1 se vd De suit, think! could enrich him suaded the angry old t » join him tn tracking the runaway lov avoir, aided by Lescaut, found the elo; Des G ‘9 mor ad run low, and Manon wa ditfisulty to ve him to De Ravolr Ss) went to 1 reasur ral showered costly gi! money on Leseauts anon in the midst of all this luxury toshe still ken Des Grieux leux learned of her y Into her Y e. She greeted him with de asain be and soon tu apeaking Grieux to sail for America ted att spalr Manon was led and, and ing ain of t ship Missing numbers of thin Cirealation Department, Evening stamp for © number. op World, upon receipe of vne-ceat No One N ete Uniess He Chooses By John K. Le Baron. than when al uldn’t do for v be like A hermit is a social discord! 6 so constituted,’ s ck, “that we cannot fully enjoy ourselves hus. one found ompantonsh he fellowship fs well worth while y springtiz giime, fancted n one standing olitud There i8 no spot so lenesome as a large city There ts no in the forest as long as the trees are there, who called to see Wi the mald explained: ship of the brooks, the v companionship of th ural condition. rfalls, the sea, birds Isolation All nature is communal, Cattle herd, birds flock, bees swarm. Segregation is fatal! ' Byron's best friend was his collie, In rood Forest stands a monument marking the grave of the poet's ark a friend's remains I never had but one-and here ones arise, p lhes."? Landseer’s brush betrayed his affections; his dogs were his constant plays mates, No ington isltor to Mount Vernon ev fondness for her cat at man must indeed be lonesome who finds no companionship in books, “To be good company for ourselves We must store our minds well.”’ A good hook gives the hours wings. It is Lessing's opinion tha: “the most agreeable of all companions is a simple, frank man; one who loves Ite and understanuy tne use of tt Companionship is necessary to development. , Much of the “profit loss" of life 18 a matter of assoclations—and associates, Our social fabric is woven of the warp and woof of Fraternity and Fel- lowship. David had his Jonathan, Damon his Pythias, Hero had her Leander, Paul bis Virginia, Ml the wisdom of Diogenes could not make a tub a home, Upon the selection of our companions our destiny may depend. 1t’s a wise old saying: “A man is known by the company he keeps."* paped the pathetic story of Martha Wash- +2 By Helen Rowlan4. A bachctor lives a Ife of harrowing uncertainty, but a married man has the consolation of knowing that nothing Worgo can happen to hi jotting a husband may be an art; but keeping him ts @ science requiring deep study and uninterrupted labor. All that delightful mystery that once surrounded @ in appears to haye cxeaped through the Holes in hor peek-a-boo waist and Jash in her eneath stir Why all this bother about forestry Just becaune trees are becoming extiner, when there ds such a eying need for some movement wale will prevent elgihie len from becoming extine When a man begins to lose his halr most of his illustous fall out with ft, ‘The average man selects a wife as @ schoolgirl does a novel; he picks out one with a showy coyer and nothing much inside What @ woman needs for real success In the business world is not @ knowledge of office methods so much as a really becoming hat and a knowledge of how to do her hair gracefully. ‘The amount of encouragement which the average Woman thinks a ma requires is a matter for serious reflection om the part of the girl who posse: =o traativd Brother, basehidipn Dg tts aoa be Th asteatts yeas ¥