The evening world. Newspaper, January 30, 1909, Page 8

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~The New SOU REN aK OIT]ON | so Tari, Published Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Compar Park Row, Now York. JOSMPH PULITZER, Pres., 63 Park Row, J, ANGUS SLAW, See. Nos. 63 to 68 Treaa., 63 Park Row, Mattor, at Now Yo as fecond-Clnge Mal nd the © * in the Int Postal Union, One Yoarsseses s One Month, rk oes: and Canada, . $8.80 ‘0 | One Year.. One Month VOLUME 49 “SOWN IN THE SEA.” EPLORING his overthrow by the i ye revolution ex-Presi- ya from Berlin: “I am convinced more than ever to- { Jay of the wisdom of the words great liberator, Simon Bolivar, when he was about to die: | ““T have sown in the sea.’” id By this Gen, Bolivar, who was! almost the George Washington of South America, meant to say BF that his life was a failure, that his work’had gone for naught, that the toil and thought of years were as if the waves of the ocean had swept over them and obliterated both the fact and the result. Nothing that any man does “is sown in the sea.” No man’s life can be so utterly wrecked that, like a derelict ship on the ocean bot- tom, it leaves nothing behind either good or bad. Civilization has been built up like « coral island with myriads of men relatively as insignificant as coral insects combining their labors | to rear a little higher the structure of life which exists to-day. Tnstead of « man’s deeds being sown in the sea they always raise a crop, for whatsoever a man soweth that shall he also reap, and the harvest is as certain as the sowing. The greatest trees do not grow from the biggest seeds, nor does the quickest growth last the longest. It is the simple deeds that last, the plain things which endure. A disappointed man like President Castro {s prone to complain. | : “My experience of nine years as President has taught me that true freedom is a chimera.” | | | | we sat, agents for ri wines 90 loudly he c A enorts of rage when brands called for their dn't help hear- It is a hone By Roy L. McCardell. Freedom is th i , 2 ornate life for mine, Doll one eternal hope of mankind, the innate longing which every man has HE ornate life for n 4“ I Paby'” sald the Chorus Girl, v ‘Thursday True freedom is not a chimera. ‘The Evening World Daily Magazine York Girl—No. 16. By Mauric ce Ketten. The Chorus Girl’s “C. D. Q.” Calls at the Sheriff's Dinner Bring Nothing Better Than Ice Cream and Lady Fingers and when !t was all over George wasn't keen to take us out to dinner, becaus he had been feeding himself all evening. Saturday, _Sanuary 30, 1909. Wall Street Never Knows When to Stop, Our City Judges Need ) Twenty-Nine, Millions Fine for Gas Kings, a wise move of that dker who retired from he d two milll- et of a millionatre—his bankroll. best he can do now 4s utter loud, ad when stacked 3 ome things play outié Look at the now me," sald man who was getting his on, On the day it was. NOW handed down the United States Su- Wall Street preme Court made a ruling which abs roker Who would solved the Standard Ol Company from be sattstled to | the trifling fue of $29,000,000, at t soaked against {t by that eminent and oy turn. $ fournaltstte-wise Judge Kenesaw Moun- me and Vi te Landis By that ruling the crore «couple ct Pres OL Company was $29,000,000 In, de Roose s e same Ume, following the news. mes ages to my feet and jump be that gus was legally worth but 8) cents Brooklyn Bride. per thousand feet, the price of the stocig “No man with a Wall Street training the Consolidated Gas Company Ww how ho money spel dropped {i a share in value. There are hey quit when they die or so,0n0 shares of that stock and the broker you refer to did standard Ol! Company controls the core an Ingentous get-away that poration, By multiplying ss shaves lot of er If A. O. Brown had o by $4 you obtain 4) loss in value ugh to claim that he was of shares. No wean ha business. be he hud Witnessed agonized ning on the part of the lawyers Consolidated, Wallace Hoppe aay er. § City Judges’ Raiment. ¢ S $ The Double Cross. § PE KING of the United Stat . te 8 eme Cor declared the a laundry man, “reminds me that “Tors rest they tell ofalthe judges City Court aspire to. | ¢ Y broker, recer ar black silk fe] retired, who was vl avidable aspiration,” agreed the of a legitimate double cross enginer who was getting his package by one of the biggest and most dar auch of the Judues'as are addloted gamblers: Phis) millione rayats and watstcoats such as habs when he had a can ally adorn the neck and bosom of my 1 Dine a robe always star ge giving him a lot , ass band tr The bie t gar tanxtous v 1 know e Was doing. And the young ker, deeming himself the hosen the financial wizard, was ly salved thereat and followed the f his supposed benefactor. N sitate to tip off his friends jas to ntentions of that legalized confidence 1 of concealment of some nature {8 almost “And all the tlme tha militonatre | ne ty for the preservation of the gambler was his real work under | public peace. [ would go further and cover, th okers bound to se- declare that bald clty judges should orecy sactions chrough lis! weer such wigs as were once affected by gentlemen on the woolsack, The dis- t of crantu ridges, bumps and ws made by some of the jurists on il bench must needs have a de pressing effect upon litigants who coma before them.” § ® ) fe Springfield, Ill, Wine. SEE," said the laundry man, ‘that the WC. T. U. ts protest: ing against the serving of wine cin Dinner to be held in, out of tt when he first fell over, but | Dopey saw George was bound for slum | berland and got the box of bird grave : ; ing Was painful to hear, But George and right after dinner people that has | we keep for the canary and sanded tee - for liberty of thought, action, conscience and opportunit night We took @® jay got himself so trained that he even had their cakes don't believe anybody down the sofa Bre : ae f ne BY r thi ye he ‘ ; we ok fn at ‘ qi Ve ROUTE nA oer as = " rs ay be er can & some was getting his package. ‘For this oc- i The only real chimeras are things of evil. ‘The good mareite tos ae ee turns his indignation to account and his| else in the world was ever hungry ‘A box of bird gravel comes in awfa I describe me as a male annex of i f ; mae ‘ ae : : Sher Rs Mish | snorts pop out as If another quart waa| ‘George was #0 overcome when We got handy at the flat. Dopey uses it as a v. oT UL Having o : i The evil dies out because it is evil, In the eternal pian one man is ner oe * Gok being opened, and them wine agents,| back to the flat that after telling us dentifrice, or when he wants to do a SAE COTA At Teenie fs t an atom, like a grain of the ocean sand; but, unlike a grain of sand the wine agent, pout, /* bis rivals in the gentle art of how he'd have st printed tn the papers | step dance and sing ‘Strolling on the Hh. eall wing, T Join with 2 i 3 rail the wine egent. boosting the grape, thought every snort 6 grand dinner was another River he just takes Up the rug and {acclaim any movement whatsoever } he has a will, a conscience and a soul whose expression affect not only | who te ane as four more dollars for George's firm. | triumph for ‘Perfect Brut,’ he fell fast | sprinkles the gravel on the fluor SOA tetas LETC ce the life about him but make up an inexorable part of the advance of | eardiis (onthe) Gal Loree eeey (ole teeuc ners laiithe.| asleep) one afainima: Dele Bra Dopey McKnight te his Uncle Henry's us oy : 2 . the human race : lery. I didn't want Tree 7 tte Sas ie REE Hen see tbs Casa ea Al nepherimenda tie Meese Aue Apes a a, | . I dl other busy little cups of tea in politics | netrioo: lhe OW ~ 3 is : {rloom nim. He's been happy asa lark be. se tc a is Pa to go, becausé, and high Anance ts on the Sheriff's jury u ——_—_——. ; , If all men would only regard that every good deed forms an eter- city digs. GEN pea HES (ies hee 4 20TY | Dopey had to alt up all nigh: (cause his old pal, the Musical Swede, | [oe My “Cycle of Readings 9 feo ' .nal part in'the uplift of mankind, wera tise theveoeal une Wecreiiisherital areaih ontanyaetion Kinsier m tor t eo eM The aesbines fe! age after leaving his Blackwell's ; aes i . | t S SB NR ben yyaw tiara ie i ; ) juries where T not to heed the Sheritt whe Devalse, CROtee a Reloccupy ng: Dep roar tone y Count 7 olstoy. pale done ag cherished memories, and not regard any life as fruitless, come from, they ain't contempt of court so long as they | Sf8: the second reason was that Dopey It's on the quarter-deck of a pay- = s ‘ i ‘because everyone sometimes dovs do have Grand pays thelr fines for not heeding them. |seeps sitting up Cabaieta wht cai ou-enter car. The Musical Swede ~~ Translated by Herman Bernstein, ~~ . = ! na G ’ oney— ts ole Jot | from long practice sleeping on the par Dopey that he always wan to \Copyrixuted by the }ress !’ubiisning Company, the New 7 ’ 0 le or just thing. we Sere McA ‘Jities and Gra All this fine money~and {t's a whole lot ‘ 2 : ’ or 1908. : some good, kind or just thing ranean! Eg abant chime ennUal anne rs benches, and ne can’t sleep in any other be @ conductor, preferably the conduc (Copyrinbted by Hertian Wernetein.) If all men would regard that ey is generally given at the one) "They Just can't spend {t all on eats; position. The third reason tor of an orchestra like Maur The Italicized paragraphs are Count Tolstoy's an evil deed or an evil thor hotel in town that has too big a political and drinks, and what’ t over goes George ts overcome by the toils of the but, when he couldn't get that “ original comments on the subject. soe pull to be indicted that’ term of court {nto souvenirs. The souvenirs this night and doea fall asleep and can't be | ductor on eet car did Just as well Nery : 18 yretards human progress toward for selling liquors to minors. Them jury) was big solid-silver vases and morocco iat Dopey ner to stand Dy as the And he worked nearly half a day, mind > \ { Ve ) linners generally consists of roast tur- and gold-bound telephone boc ‘amily chaperon, because while George you, But the Musical Swede told } perfect freedom they would he licaprer { onthe ‘ fs Amy's flance, still @ girl on the Dopey that company was sore at Land. ‘ ey and a profusion of celery, And the It alniost made us cry to see all that ‘ pey pany j Jess likely to do or to thi Lill of fare fe always printed in the| money wasted and us ladies not getting St#8¢ must let nothing ever occur that him anyway, because he had been late L AND cannot be a matter of ownership, + j The success or failure of any cal papers. It makes a bg showing |any of !:, Of course Amy wanted the | Would be the slightest reflection on her to rehearsals — aed 4 } ay ue vhen every item {fm given a lina to itself. silver mug and the book, but George ‘air name “Say, why don't they have Sherift's H tes was asked to what country he be JAN. "4 Mife depends not on an absolute lown to frult, cake and coffee. said that them trophies had to go to his “Ae I was telling you, Dopey sleeps dinners for ladies? We sat up in the W r y Virtue of his birth, he sald that he was } standard, because human But say, the Sheriffs Jury dinner tn] firm, together with the card, to ehow on the horsehair sofa altting up and, box sending wireless ‘C. D, Q's’ al @ citizen of the whole world, he considered himself 30. | fi ‘ e as New York has them Halshazzer feasts|that his wine had the call. because his as his feet are on the floor, he ain't in, evening, but all George rent us up was g resident and citizen of the entire unlverse.—Cicero, O . | fections prevent there beir |we was told about at Sunday school| wine was on the card, but the other any danger of slipping off, because that| ice cream and lady fingers | CARAS } i attack ; y 0 porsehalr sofa ie slick and smooth. ‘Oh, you kid! I know your office TT. | jsolute standards on a finite world hipped tike a) top, agent 2 wes t00 horas) aware! nr re habit na world “George's table wae right uilder where| “We oat tp there starved to death,| “George would have shot the chutes | hours!" F we were to suppose that the entire Inhabited world could be the property ottod Success is only relative. So is failure, The man who has done the| = Ee iy the tillers of the land, and that they have the right to its surface, then all? beet which his opportunities and environment permit has made the | greatest success that the y Surely I than to “sow in th 1 allows hin has done more Panhandle Pete Letters From the People The Mothe l¢ 1) i) 1) 5 Ne Fanit? { Fo the Biitor of The (EE, Dis v> TOUGH The “Mothers” TO WAVE TO SVEEP } against the bel 7 HEAR TONIGHY f expect advice an win out A but an unruly son could be Ie of BIT OF GRUB! spollt child ® \ ave only the: t 8 1 a generous | j " e as a friend up, it Is the mother’s fa x G ry prove “unruly ‘ ANOTH {EF WISHMAN, i: eee Eolenee) ah , What fs “Hardest? Langonaget Will scientific readers 5 \ . whether f pote — cloud water |# the clot reason? An Englishman's Plea on the ¢ d is travelling 4 ex ttan Mu um oA operator, and fams, who stayed public with ageous men are E saying that an equa would not have American ship with a: but I would Ike to Inrpress Americans who are pre the Baglish that we can \ At Any Large Rook Store. « her social aff ‘ at \ dings and ot uf wt By George McManus | those who do not till the earth have no right to it. Thus those who are noty * | ners of the ol: could exist on earth only on condition that the tillers of the and’ | consent to It. They would get the right to the place occupled by thelr feet only | on condition that the tillers of the soil would give thelr consent to It. Thus, ities 4 | they did not want to give them a place of rest, those that do not till the soll wold. '? | have to be wiped off the globe.—Herbert Spencer ee O from ownership of things created by labor, Take away from a man or a nation money, goods, cattle, and your plunder will end together with your departure, The course of time, of course, will not change your crime Into a good deed, but !t will efface its consequences, Bu‘ take away the land from a people } and your plunder will continue forever. It wil! be a new plunder for each com-, ing generation, for every new year, for every new day.—Henry George. WNERSHIP of land, I!ke ownership of elaves, {s in {ts very essence different DUCATI h HF fundamenta deception ites In the coarse and monstrous assertion that | the earth, given by God to all mankind, may be somebody's private prop-” erty. This is the same violence as slavery.—Newman. 7 ft PRETO COC n Enea ‘ F there is a man who has no right to land, then my right to land, your right... and the rignt of every man is unlawful.—Emerson. eer neers HE earth {s our common mother. It feeds us, gi and warma us lovingly. From the moment of our birth until the moment when we are set at rest in eternal sleep on its maternal ft continually fondles us {n its tender embrace. What Is there an replace for those mounts on which I saw for the first time the rising of the sun which awakened everything to new life? Mysterious and deep ire the roots which unite us with mother earth, and not a tree {s so soundly rooted. And yet, notwithstanding all this, people speak of its sale. Indeed, in our mercenary age land is placed on the market for appraisal and so-called sale, but the sale of land, which was created by the heavenly oreator, is @ wild ab-— surdity. The land may velong only to omnipotent wo and to e'l the people working on {t or to those who are to work on It In the future, It does not repres” sent the property of one generation, but of ell the past, present and future ge: erations working on it.—Carly I I that us shelter, gladdens us t CAN YOU BEAT 17° THANKS, cats | Das at T is amusing to think that there are people in the world who, having re I nounced all divine and natural laws, created laws for themselves ang. are obeying them atrictly—euch as thieves, for instance, ; N° ONE can have the right to the ownership of land. i" ‘ ve ’

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