The evening world. Newspaper, March 30, 1909, Page 14

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I . \ he Evening World Daily Magazine, Tuesday, March 30, 1909 BP. She Lm Blorld, reneees 1) @ ¢ The New Way in the White House. |’ Less Moonshine Published Datly Except Sunday by tho Press Publishing Company, Nos. $2 to 63 | Park Row, New York. | i J. ANGUS SHAW, Pros. and Treas, JOSEPH PULITZER, Juntor, Seo'y, | By Ma urice K etten. H pen ark Rin eee a me Yes be Eo ert) ore atrimony ntered at the Post-Office at New York as Secon Subscription Rates to The Hvening , For England a World for the Untted States | All Countries in the 1 and Canada, Postal Unio One Voar..ss coseers $3.50 | One Year. One Month....++ 30 One Month. nd-Class Mall Matter. 1 the Continent ana rnational $’ By Nixola Greeley-Smith v \ DDVOOTOHHIGITOAOTOOSECHADDOOY 9 HO IS YouR No. VIL—In Which the New| Naturatty he dtd not know that the a girl was present. He b HAIRDRESSER, Ice Box Produces a Chill, 39 sie 1 smnsinings os the Yoae HIGH WAGES ARE CHEAPEST. DEAR nine pee | A | , : ] teebox the bride had ever soon—a ‘Astle, CCORDING to Mr. a Fe retains Spcir nen] The bride came out of ter house! of he exclaimed, enthuse dreams with a start gain still stood tn one Carnegio, the man | HOW Sweet corner of the little; “Yes It's great!” she echoed, but who knows as You LooK ith notable absence of fervor dining - room, be. | With a notable absence \ much as any one QOS "What's the matter w manded the cause after m' uta puffing and stra degroom, bi te crest To DAY, ol the ! else in the world DEAR Ineiet unused rou aiitit the about modern == MIU IST SSI) aif doesn't course, had discovered it was too big to go through the kit en do Tt had e bride's e. beendelivered suppose you thought Yceboxes wera mysterlousiy inthe moved in through the window like middle of the afternoon, The bride had ued, reluctant “ot not ordered tt. It had occurred to her t the $% we had saved the bridegroom had steel methods eee | Oharles M Schwab, AAT p= production is Mr. Sehwab ad- vanced the teehni- ail ‘7 5 ft one of his rare moots eplied the bridegroom, “I paid ‘ Hate bacaaiconlite of recklessness and had sallled forth to that icebox, You know, dear, the ¢ arnegic Com- buy things for the house. It was just) we had to have one,” he added, cone Uke him, to buy an feebox, she :e. | ciliatingly. pany and was one flected sadly as she watched the large Bh of the young men flakes of perhaps the last snowfall of 3 Ice in the Bath Tub, by Ta dbromyeat the season sift languldly to the cobbie- ONS who brought stones below. “Yes, of course,” conceded the bride, about the great Thelr apartment was {n a made-over ly, warly on a day like steel consol brown-stone house and contained no Ice. | "And again she looked through i : box. But {t had been one of the bride’s| the window at the sifting snow. tion, He resigned economies not ‘to buy ice difing the| Then the bridegroom lost his temper. matnroailen eerie winter, Thelr housekeeping was ao sim-| “I've had enough of in this lows CEE TE ple and Intermittent because of the res-| down Bohemian m he erfedy, taurant habit that still clung to them! angrily. no ever heard of decent United States from the days of thelr courtship ¢ human belngs keeping {ce in the bathe oO rege Crp she felt they really did net need [t. tud? because he pres When summer came, they had agreed,| ‘That was because you insisted on erred to have a steel plant of hi | anita vee they must buy an {cedox, Meantime) haying ice Saturday night," sald the | % ferre d to have steel plant of his own with no banker to supervise So much money must go In the bank bride, ‘I couldn't have {t melting {0 | Shim and no tinance com » or hoard of directors to overrule him. every week for tha purchase of ‘the the middle of the floor, could 17" | oe Bethlehem we mileue crn ntrontneroodiatoelaraguare ttle house In the country’ @or why The dride's tone was sharp. But sud- ae In the Bethiehe wy w he is turning out as good steel product they were saving, denly the memory of the little house B Bf » 88 the world produces. é Or of dreams drifted across her anger. i le shoul ( Hhorotore Tama Cite nih at 1 H The poor bridegroom! How sorry he It should be, therefore, that Mr. Sehwab is an authority $ The Dream Child. } Ee ea mie, Gain (ees ci Ge # wig for the apartment, surely, but it Voth on the t: He believes in a t of American workmen, wilt reduction. With free ore, free eoal and other rift on steel and on the ci was quite 8 real to) woud be perfect for the little house, And it showed that he thought about fy would be reared) yi. nome during the day. Perhaps, commonplace @ctuallty mised the bride, he dreamed about the wearing contractor and a ang Of iittie house, too, Just as much as she en, But as St stood now, not’ gig Oniy tits dreams took the more made with hands but with dreams, It J -nctical shape of an leevox within was, barring the bridegroom, the most tnetr means Instead of apple blossom wonderful thing in tl world. How f¢riezes and ermine coats that they often the bride had stood In the Jap- ldn’t afford anese room admiring the soft tones of | é - its old and kakemonos! How samaguatrheken ings ; pee mnaterials steel in the wor ¢an laborers can produce more st workmen, 1 } Ame everyth he asserts that “American labor can make the best d, and with it we can compete with the world. Ameri- } ina given time than any other snow that they can put out better steel than any others.” nn W TL but with Knien Without tls Troe, as t not only with s © tariff, without trust monopols and with should be, the United States pride at the duti would surpass the post the world in everything i i tally-ho pictures, 5 ) she avowed, Further on in his statement Mr. Schwab puts clearly a iost hae r since painted blossoms sa- the bride's tant truth too often overlooked jiored by I Mr. Schwab. “Phe man who is employed at a cheap wa employers and usually ig- Congressiicy ¢ | r the matter y earlier infants and makes blunders. Te cannot eompete with the man that thor- oughly under Great,” He Said. 4 stands his jas hess, 'T The Jarrs Go to the Circus and Now Willie Wants an Air Gun, For He and the Rangle Boy Are Going io Join the Big Show. it's Just $0 house. I shou workman mak the most mee for his e p \ By Rov L. McCardell. Jarr, “talk about the children, I want{I'll have to change little Emma's dre e boy's nde ¢ ed Nit It is true that we S hs © take them to the us because 1! again and put a clean waist on Willie Ho ypped his of peanuts and F SUPPOSE w thes’ enje vhe said Mrs. Jars. “I feel it in my bon ‘ ae 5 Pie “oT y'll enjoy it 1 to when I. sai alr. y pase pay our work was a bos but circuses aren't what, They've been so quiet out inthe kit a boy's self-posses- om they used to be." that T know they have been in. son imnoting the faranhens 2 wore money than Don’t Ridicule Your Boy dor des r “Why aren't they?" asked Mes, darr,/ Kind of mischief, That means the con! nalia of the strong men, he made talc eto, Hae What's the difference between them tor the strawberry preserves, or dart fo ivssene Feat you always have now and the grand old days when you|t pound Is. At stant (ho By O.S Marsden. eet ; were a t Aralanevepekstashalltcuel pronheteritl eraniiien erica der (ie te nsitedin ne reireiail hikcecaaec cee aaa oce eee aS aOR n tears because lis father critiels to pay the skilf k lemonade! Was both wept down upon then and the hys ANY a boy has gone to bed workmen tn this neighbor faltered Mp, After an entire change of habil al moth hardeienarled era eed hia effort at playing the violin; made fun of a simple little come erste magi made fOr nel Le cree etween them swept position or story which he wrote; discouraged his atter make some little mechanical device, or threw a wet blanket on his laughing J y get out for the cireus. “T want peanuts for the elepl: i! S gaid the little boy. ‘I'm going right up to the elephants and stick the peanuts up thelr sno! ghest wages, nen on horse ne been taken to circus, or is ge to be taken, I'm sure I RES CAARDELL want > feel that they are begga things that othe And it's a good thing th caid Mrs, Jann. "I remember t de myself. Ldran I was a little gi e me home right L Eee URNA AW re eer Aaa Mra, Jarr. “You must stop sotr r children acid poisoning, and that the coloring|¢nat awtul Rangle boy; he teaches you + matter was aniline dye, and that wasn't] the most dreadful expressions: na at his prediction of what he would do in the future \ man who has recently come into great prominence in his profession says that when, trembling, he told his father what he wanted to be, he was toll that a | aided vel! was the only piace for a boy with such crazy ideas, and that he wag Jocced for years to do that which God had forbidden In every fiber of his being, and against which every drop of blood tn him protested [oe she father who has made up his mind that his son mu estate intact, Is not In a position to de Low paid ot underpaid labor is the most costly A New E mill girl ean turn he grand entree ended W a hero in his own ¢ onished shane end of the p aslap-stick. | and keep h out one hundred Meco WIA 1 ev Boot fc either, What else did they “Ang 1M] jump right up on the ele- ; See very ouitset.—Success Mag : of?” asked Mr. Jarr have in the circuses when you were Aenren teak Rriaeed fests en the cirous were | special aptitude, Ile {s prejudiced at the very outset —Success Magazine, times as much people > What other people boy that they do not have now?" little sister. “And If you'll come near spread befo: 1 all the way a Goth in a day as My a SineE pechle UGE Tt rakee sine sells He Cont TEN Laan On TH sick him on yor!” a AY F ree vee OES 2 . . tired!" the outside any more," sa ir. Jare] At this dire threat of being harassed {ath by tel m of the old Roman 3 a Chinaman at a > F “It should!” said Jarr, with. with a grin bythe eleantle pachyderin at the Inatie| circuses: th city elephants } Notes of a Southern Journey —No. 3. ; land loom. Get- COMC a some asperity Other rp “No,” said Mrs. Jarr, “the big graft-|gatidn of her brother the girl emitted ity of wild beasts | ) WY raat diaaliie ae |, Hm a patient woman to put up with ers are all in politics, and the little!a dreadful wail, and Mrs. Jarr stopped ue BE ting ten times the wages, hor labor costs only one-tenth as much, The you the way Ido. Other people say:, grafters are hanging around saloons!and threatened to return home forth- (oecmmem) HF) dispensary still reigns in South Carotina—a disagreeable blot on a pity that man ¢ heeding men with families to spend with unless Willie stopped teasing his 1 the landscape where the State sells liquor in- packages for consumption skilled American workm: using the be abor-saving machinery. a Ce eT IE | oft the premises, This insures larger sales and more thorough intoxl- H tion than the ordinary par, There fs something forbidding abo = ilispensary, ‘The room Is bare but for a counter and the stock in trade, ‘agent is not an attractive personage, smartly kept like a good bartender, but is of morose aspect and chill manners, while the customers have a hangdog look ce in a citizen with an honest thirst. They slink in and out as if kg they are ashamed of and look the part of outcasts. Fancy drinks While there ig some yarlety of stock, corn liquor is the stan- pect for his wife money buying drinks,” sister and his sister ceased her crying, Are the children ready?" asked Mr, Alas, for the courage of boastful lit- | Jarr, hanging the subject tle boys! Led where the elephants talk about me, said Mr. “They've been ready for so long that| towered impressively in a close chained » item of day's wages, but the | : APSE SE costs less for an a forty cent a day hand worker in killed operative in Austria Russia or a fifty cent ac The cost of labor is no duct. M quite cut of f doing somethi that ratio, skilled American, ¢ Tatio of wages to pr abor, instead ¢ ng tl n the work: Narahannal . labor, in ng tl tin the world, is the cheapest, met ae wa eae pee Once in ghq Tyrant days of Tillman he took revenge on d'sapproving Oe SEES ~ Charleston by eutting off the supply of champagne, 89 that on fastivy occ: 4 E m i good oty had to mix apoliinaris and ginger pop to produce a tina hi) | s ines by sea through the Custom-House ard lets the Q t Charleston imports Its fine wines by 5 8 ts | Letters F £9 the Peo ple dispensary do its mischief among the poor, with the liberal ald of the “blind : y tiger” out saloons. p ; In the Southland greem ts missing from the landscape, Cotton ts a sun plant, ee Ohne so Jealous of its ground that not a grass blade or sprig of weed car sha ° Me ot ae : i scil with it, So all the tand is gray. ee ‘ Rice fs a great crop from Charleston south to Mo along the marshy ioe. nine she Hormer Gov. Heyward, of South Carolina, has es under cultivas vurabie se tlon and has succeeded in getting the English Lloyds to Insure the erop at a premium of $# per acre aks are the Antae.n giants of the Southern forest world. Huge of line of thelr vatt rs grow greenly on the great lower limbs, while fri) a erable festoons the Span 1 wray and witty gin the hand, a weird and vigorous vegetable orga \e pwebs of the distant view are very live an@ The live vd inassive | «, Delicate nit anchee droop it to the eye, but fresh and ! ) dwelling in the alr, The dusty ceautiful nearer by, showing minute blossoms and siiky branches springing frova entral mass, though there ia no heart Ascernible, each filament scene 6 ing to have a creativeness solely its ow The fig leaves are full out on the trees yy Charleston, They are no longer used A Boy's Walk for garments. 2 eo +0—___—— r There eB! 's G ies The Day’s Good Stories ‘ ays f t pA AAA AAPL t MI 1 J Airship Smaguters, Particular. Discounting the Future, and Teeth t ne 0 second courte of the table! YOUNG man of very intel f . Witle © was deing served A means, after the marringe cares f * . “What Is this icathery stuff?" presented to the minieer I ‘ Jomanded the corputent din large copper ce el ‘ t t sir, is a filet of sole,” replied! on the palm of his right ended us t ef n <4 e the waite master than nat . make it away,” sald the dorpul | Ive got, parson.” he aid, hall cease shaving an ae ppolnted look tn the mis Bow : ROD sea lt youlediy tars) mere dded, “If wa have any tender skin, a y nice piece of the upper, with the by tend them to your a ences, which & ‘| waste uf out of the country? ( RR tons removed. school. “Success Magazine

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