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<a Che Mere’ orld, Publishing ¢ Published Daily Except Sunday by Park } JOSHPH PULITZOR, Pres., 63 Park Row. Ri Entered at the Post-Oflica at New York ns Secor Bubseription Heteg ito ‘The Event nited States ada. One Year.. ; One Month ‘ i CLAD L ; } St. Pa 000 t » $20,000,0 The law f of religion | that pre the greatest real estate corporation in New biggest landlords in New York. ‘Thousand to it or to its lessees, This rent-payi three-quarters of Trinity’s real estate i does not pay rents. Some day the Trinity Corporation not t¢ i yard. If it can sell St. John’s it i can sell Trinity. It can also sell i St. Paul’s, These plots, worth { only a few thousand dollars when 4 they were given to Trinity, may ' bring $100,000,000 when Trinity ; sells, f Other real estate corpora- t tions, whether speculators, in- i vestors or builders, have to pay f taxes on the real estate they | they carry. It is just that i should. The v alue of their prop- erty comes from the number of } people who live and work here. H f the only people on Manha i sland were the |i ' would be nobody to pa { Why should Trinity be per- mitted to hold these immensely valuable properties tax free until it } ) the unearned ement of the vy { is ready to rei & by other people's taxe The Evening gations. Tt se labors? Post publishes a tabulation of hat Trinity Church, at the head of We and other people's five clergymen and a congregation of 384, According to th cers mo of the people of Nev $1,500 a year more tion. St and a co ation of ing the St. Paul’s 5,000,000, t only $1 tion of the 06 member gregation amounts to n relig: ivileges reas, Paul’s has three cle ob. V property tax exe pany, Nos. 63 to 63 Mb Park Row, to the the Trinity congre each member of that conyrega “] : © cor $2,500 apiece. To hold $15,000 000 worth of property tax free puttir value in dolla and cents on the spiritual welfa of the 96 members of the congr MY “CYCLE OF READING By Count Toistoy. Translatea b Lerman Bernsiein (Copyrighted by Herman Hernstein.) Gluttony. LUTTONY, intemperance tn eating, 18 a most com? G mon defect. We notice tt so itttle simply because almost all are subjected to it. F not for the demands of the st 4 ] would have beeen trapped, and 1 not have sp is draw-n 0 chain upon our hands and the fettera on our feet. The slave of turely worships God.—Sadl. G OD sent food to mankind and the devil sent th ks T ts good if th ] faculties suffer Tal . ATCH your mouth hit W to eat when your i ave; even # F F s 7 NTEMPERANCE tn food ia not f not produce any rable ance in food # such a New York Likes White, Boston Krown } YME markets, notably New York f Beaton pre own Be gubstants \ | { ‘ \aaesitthan et ret m- thar i By Mau A Symphony. rice Ketten The Evening World Daily Magesine, Thursday, » March 4, ‘Mr. Jarr anda Few Boon priced GatherinGus’s Saioon | } And Discuss a Froper Aesthetic Sort 01 Name for It. —— nw ° By Roy McCardell. fe Th fr ©, den uy ave da mon to 0) nD Cu something that is the fs LI sald te re vounieae atest by it." sald Mr he - 1 Jarr, handing over a 50-cent piece and | Mr. be ele hat wi two dimes 1 ow sald t have som ey GA Ge said Gus. “I got “Hal No, 1. don'ti” to the brewer and iyMtiaineeotl nontl and that's cent the way it x 9 shoulk eat oeaiathne Gaal eAate lawns now that “Gus was kicking becaut I wouldn EN apes Mh UNG (ee was bad,” sald Slavinsky. otter give US 5 4 *- / the glaater, lear and bought something.” ; (Gey sn Kat iim | “You should get a new are wing the about now?’ rag “It aln’t none of patronize you?" We sot all we can ¢ way,” sala sal ta da saine ci Bepler, the butcher, put up last Saturday fine Inj now r should do {t again.” you treated last satd Gus And he rang up 70 cents on tne | would be better 1f more people come In | “L gota new sign °°! morning: and | ee s was right away better.” Covy Corner’ asked Gus. "It means 'T ox: | hange for @ don't care,’ n I do People will se business | “7 “Busines: sign,” sald “Give us the dice b the house,” in Brooklyn bre you ' ew has a u ; L nd he does a Ko: ness.” ie” what I have on the i 1or stgre should lave ‘There's. © place downtown called Bepler, aa he shook. the “ is {t?” asked Mr, Jarr, “The Retreat’ ‘That's a good name for box y a saloon,” said Slav “Tt ineans || “Tt'n got one now, a bad one,” said Mr. | us rr cents,” said G when somebody ated once he ““+pacause you loafers come here,” sak at It should be called: as if selzed wi it should be called “Gus's time," sald Indignant look at's wha him calls It now! an nen ee Lovie, the Bowler Watch ‘ Him Roll oi e's a Wo nde r i By Ferd G. Long Aen Loot JR. ROLLED THE ase SPARE. IT WAS Too 155 DCT You -OxCUSE ME oor 1s THE ANOoL ER (FOOLISHER KYVES) J MEN IT= \ARE ae DIAGRAM SHOWS How EASY FoR H/5 POF. HELLO, LOO). Ki. TIME! DAKE DIS BALL UND_PMFKE Al SHOOT. (Ir vos A ae Rrtlenn! FER Loos Ir vos Ay SIRINCH) 1909, BY CAN pret 9 pw NINOLA GREELY: Sih NO. ill, lee The Fall Moon, [iuennes abs as he world, min fole und 1 e yet making her nt. Phe cave man rose in th room's rt at the ¢ 9 Was never rich was J him. away sock tn the | ‘ ting to. her wing for food at learn t eve ler wo tarly des rt’ was pecu- of her and was always and without the pos- § out on the sun-baked yspect of bridegroom's q of the lit g on in her b nto that ¥ day to be prove inatiol a dip a in Just saved his & sort of adapted Pocahont ng she decided to seize the oc-] pire that offered by the bathing sult Then he and make it an actual test of her | All she agreed resc won't i -ly? The last word , for already her teeth earait » thought of the ley lyourtt duck me. , please!’ But the ald to the fish, suddenly unde w am I ey duck moe like that bride, “I'll never t acquiesced the r bride- take ouldera er, Sheewas not a ould not swim, beca trangle hola of © both go: a fright woman he did not worry least. And neither thought that they did for amusement that t was what men and women do all r sea of life » down under the beach Vas. ey Prauredienalprides fire. Acrosa, htul h the look lights shone \ edt the mirror and 1 - 1 iy) proph 1 t and ; Reflections of a Bachelor Girl. were yt is dificult to say wr ts tae greater optimist, vi the man who takes a cocktail the moment hia headache has worn off or man w marrica jain the Cay after she has gotten ber dt : One reason why men stand by each other so much TELENREXTAROS ory loyally than women do is lecause they HAVA t's acase of “honor among thieves” or “dtvided toe fa { bride spends the first year of her :narried life jearning how to ba and the rest of the time harning how to ba py with her husband happy without him. Many a girl fancies that she has fe und the way to a man's heart, only to discover later that he has been leading her up a blind alley. Men might keep women from overcrowding the good positions by mar ) all those who are clever enough tc hold them—but they'd probably or hat remedy worse than the disease. Devotion” in the average husband usually consist: merely tx a morbid lo open all his wife's letters and to know wher she has been every ryt desir time she gocs out of the door with her hat on You van always tell @ marrted man from a bachelor by hfe seedy ap- pearance, because any man considers that {f he puts on a clean collar and ne is almost too overdressed to go out with his wife, one giove, | It may be real love that makes a husband promise his toife “never <1 irry agait should die, but it's more licely to be real-determinatiox tht to repeat the experience. I ions rise in value from nothing to a hun ij bughond decides to cua for the allenatton Society is the vice of Ife. gS Bananas !n Massachusetts. <0 7IZARD BURBANK, of © rnia, Mectaree that it te quite withty the range WY ot roxn that Mansaohine mers will anon Iry ont banana VV oar iskk Wetare lene hb: Will Nava. perfacléd. ® anecleeiOL RARivATNet jusclous platntatn that will com to perfect fruition anywhere in New kn) ond, \i 1 \ Op