The evening world. Newspaper, December 1, 1910, Page 18

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it iF § een ' Ghe Beles gatoria. \ \} Publighed Dally Except Suncey by es Publishing Company, Now. 53 wo @ 3. ANGUS SHAW, Pros. and Treas, JOSEPH PULITZER Junior, Seo'y. | 65 Park Ou Park € | wn | Pa nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn ‘ ent and ‘i crnationel | $0.75 rn VOLUME 41 SUGAR IN THE GOURD. p) EDERAL officials are said to have proof that the GF ; Trust woul ago have raised the price of sugar in thie country had it not been for a fear of imports from Germany. At the meeting of the Anti-Imperial League in Boston the secretary te- ported that, while renters of small tracts of sugar lands in the Philippines have to pay $1.30 a year rental of stich lands was sold to the Havemeyer syndicate for thirty-two cents an qere. ‘The two items present an instructive contrast. The Republican Administration has sold outright to the Sugar Trust big tracts of Phil ippitve land at le ing but fear of foreign competition has prevented the trust from im- posing upon the domestic market th An old Southern song said hard to get out.” Th is toroll the gourd about.” large tract than one-fourth the anr ual rental value, and noth- O,HE 1S SO SLOW DRESSING | HAVE A CIGAR — HERE he exactions of monopoly. y = 19 A PAPER When t) was: e sugar’s in a gourd it refrain way it out The Sugar Trust needs rolling; abt eld) éontinuous, severe, rough, hard, tireless, impatient, resolute rolling. | he 0 he THE DIVA AND THE CHIEF. | Bese the Chicago police forbade a formance of “Salome” in that city, Sh Ls second per- | and because the Chief said Miss Mary Garden’s dance was like “a | eat wallowing in a catnip patch,” the gifted Diva retorts: “This police person is unintelligent. He tries to clean opera. Why doesn’t he clean his | streets?” “So far as the Chief of Police is concerned, the retort is imperti- nent and irrelevant. It is not his duty to clean streets. But if the application of the question be made to the whole Chicago community, | andrto all other such communities, it is not lacking in pertinence any | more than in pertness. © Why should not city authorities clean the streets and attend to othér plain duties before undertaking to exercise censorship over the higher achievements of art and of music? To keep a city decent, well ordered, clean and safe; to see that its sewers are flushed, its streets swept, its slums suppressed and its homes secured—that would be better than stopping “Salome.” | Chieago should try it. THE DEAR BOY. HOw SWEe OF You To latce HIM OUT. BRING HiM Hone EARLY + THE PROBLEM OF PRESSURE. INGRESSMAN SULZER told the Postal Progress League that if it “could bring enough pressure to bear on the Postal Committco to report the Parcels | Post bill” he would promise that the bill would be enacted before the end of the coming session of Anan Congress. a M J b ym for the Hghtning, the volcano, the hurricane! Make room for : s Death cries out the drunken Neri, who ts overpowered by th It has the appearance of a gafe promise. But how much pressure a n r ) e a r r A r oO a d a dungeon and pronounced mad. Nice will‘it take to be “enough?” T M Wi . tf 1 4 A. . akes N e with the factle Ginevra, but his vengeance is ad Ay hae ee hey. Meet With a Delightful Descendant of Ananias. Fy etirass trea aruricted (a avery saa eeaventte This is not an infant issue. It was a healthy baby, alive and | ,*, As : ruel gibes and taunts. Kicking, away back in the days when John Wanamaker was Postmaster- |“, LA aatte i Hiss pee a , Meantime Gabriel, the other brother, ns t e and to Ginevra's G ak a oro te hay ae heat Consright, 1010, by the Here Mutiiahing Co, ytmpudence the wreng have hereabouts, [hans of Kerry. Yes, sir. But why do you the ‘Rock Cl Teiprealkiaaa "ana! FUAeaCGlaluey ya's Haine to eavange anit: eneral. It is growing a big boy now. t could have been pushed (The 3 ¢ for they think they are all decindints |] you ask?” replied the driver. jat night. And nd € ) other arms. through to the goal at any time under Cleveland or McKinley or| By Roy L. McCardell. er the royal family. te bh T thoualit 1 plas Stans yale eae AE GY er to set the lamp in its accustomed place valk. § ere nee! m P| 7 1B Jarrs, in company eT lariat Adathtt fsked Mr. White, nblance—in the tales you tell,” said | morning, And th e to he n roon Pressure means something more than a number of men talking Ps howling along from Cork to! ° oe didnot, renee the m ure {t was all very sntarsats y vere St. s long red rove steal 4 inevra’s rc Then he enters Ps ; , ri A *) driver, “but my great grandfather's}ing, and [ know it was all truc," said | stone, and the: daa: GEORG aboit a thing. It means strength and energy combined and applied Harney Castle! erst grandtather itd, Ie was his] Sirs dare eee alias dpe oeilvare lateputcontavan iealil with such vim and vigor, such unity and such concentration, that it | enlightened them| ime before the fort Hats ms around} “So do I,” said White to the} and here we are rs on the threshold. Giannetto, cool and smiling, stands in the py | bd wag torn down by order |driver, “and I th: very m shee Ries makes a force too resistless to be baffled. We wish the Postal Progress Ae rewards tie m." Not at all, replied the| Mes Gatrutnloen brother! League well. More strength to it! wrer King Buy relatives dn FAUGrnsy driven toUStI DE MRMIAG |S Oe BR DNGBRT | The realization makes lim really insane, and Glannetto's vengeance is 3 : ie ; an? asked Mr. to tell you the things that and pay etre . wan after ‘ea , ee, hereabouts, And * Place. 1816 Haig as ‘ i [ have already written In the article on “Fedora” my optnion of the cons aleys is related to the Minne- of fairies, too. an show | driver as d the ladies to : Af cavenwonwiien iiekenimantiawar than ther anivialhage ' emptible passion of reveng he als who MR. BELMONT’S DIGNITY aa hae} fen ——— jalight. dof i It is @ passion for savages—the perpetual children of the i ‘J i And there, high on a verdant hill, or : . and . | etc he rea quare towe! n " 1 1 UGUST BELMONT said to the Legislative com- the old times, Iealter idee elma cae cormeava an: » sald, men were mainly children under the Renaissance, And ; ha 4 “%, , | holds ut Misinan of pe . calm pleasure in torturing his enemies that you may have matteo that was asking him some questions abont a visover't t Love Songs Of % % Hf jauese™wiitimy s | ST NP nner hint suspected race track corruption fund: “T am called to hold a ¥ | 2% 224 | here to testify about something that it ought to be |‘ ee AO RNA She. A B a Cc h e l Oo r + presumed I would know nothing about; nor o back a litle, S, do I.” Janay not have heard “Mr. Belmont is right. It ought to be presumed that be knows | hg tne neaste tint the nothing about that, nor about any other corruption fund, And the | at night 2 eG - rir You #ee, it was this way: When the éame presumption runs to the credit of every other man, All citizens) ie. who was the recruiting se thowld be presumed to be innocent, and all legislators and other poli- | ticifis presumed to be honest, | un animal because he ti But, alas! sad experience has taught in cities and States, and in the Ieok of a mouse, cowgeils of the nation itself, that presumptions of absolute innocence Ors@s wil SL at ee ape ave as vain as assumptions of total depravity. Who would ever have eport for military | pregymed the things that have been proved of men above suspicion estar tanipey a at in this city and in Albany? te: oe | Mr. Belmont should excuse the committee; it was appointed neith- | 8% after the es both birds a Deasts hunted the bat being a | er to presume nor to assume but to investigate jaerter, nnd wo It is aa enid | ee - - - ———————— J abroad after night, when both bea Letters From the People! fs a great ment them that The Ship and the Ropes. w at the I s t 1 es AP To te Halter of T 2 W bat an ‘ und t 4 Int reply to * who asks wh ain ate t tm he ts| are the “main ropes" of a Sahein and eanika ty n of It and the thin| shit T desire to stato there t#| (usually termed “he lone ae . not in t " " yarns, ‘The colle : , ; the gaval service cor « his « | stranded rape, whi fie ody | tions. Aw to t a main jin the holds of the « in e t, 1 there i no such € a ind | of & tullrigued #hty, “Halyar ing bird i 8 a " Aiffewnt yurds are u a oe 10 hes thotkiy the med “runni tor t , a. kt ' rigelic.” ta “sheets.” Other | “fore fa) las! tate ero noren nh e running rigging cor tate of small linked |Tngs" oF “stops.” HARRY W | tha in Ireland? asked pestis th a “ahave or| EX-Master-at-Arms, dd ( ie ‘pulley of the yard to} Wants to ' etretch the “clowa" of the safle in| To the Haitor of The lve . shy : “wheeting home." His query be a| Can any travelled reudors toll me of | tc ! ther the Variation of un old catchword of the) we “linac and Bole a) conditions In) mead a i“ 7 ® | Western Utah? 1 am contemplating a where t! cn “4 pas wervice: “How many ropes d00#' try out there and would lke to know | took place. As for the Mght to nee a eallrtuxod ship need?’ None i¢ wie's gomething of the conditions. Alm please! wo war to tir King, that took pl (nothing missing). tell me Buch gear as are termed “ropes” are as there, what kind of ranches flourish BL B a Mountains You'll see no Vrens with the from the top of the B | beyant. TELL MR BILLY MISS GREEN ig WAITING FoR HIM HELL BE DOWN INA MINUTE, Mr. _The Evening World Daily Magazine, Thursday, December 1, When Man Becomes Womanish. }/ By Maurice Ketten. HIS THANK You, MRS BILLY HERE IAM. i HOPE \DION'T IREEP You WAITING TooLONcy, By Helen Rowland ~~ Cony right, 1910, by T rem Publishing co. (Phe Ne The Bacheloratya’, STEAMING lobster A bottle of champagne—and Thou, ELEN ROWLAND A plate of hot spaghetti, long and thin, A bottle of red wine, a violin, 1 temperamental maiden talking “Art!— To dine elsewhere—oh, were it not a sin? A dish of sweet A bowl of ya-ko-main, @ pot of tea, hop suey, served by Le 1 smiling Oriental gliding ‘ronnd— Well—feasting thus is good enough for me! Whether expensive, or the simple fare, Whether the right girl, or the wrong, Dining ‘most anywhere, in old New Is Paradise there, enow—and some to spare Faux Pas, 0 you remember that “break” D In talking the other d 4 Do you remember the thing you said lish way? vou made In that horribly { Do ber that In that dead and forgotten spring? nd shudder, The you remen poem” you wrote whenever you hear them quote silly and saccharine thing? member Do you r the girl you thought You loved, when the days were sweet? ind do you thank Fate that you were not caught, Whenever you chance to meet? Do you remember your wedding day, And ever, perhaps, regret it? Do you remember—oh, STOP, I say, And let a chap FORGET IT! MR BILLY SAYS HE WiLL BE DOWN RIGHT AWAY Ng BUTTONING HIS FATHER wburg, rightly done, Beside me, flirting in a picture hat— Were anything more perfect ‘neath the sun? <a ne Ne en RRR RR NL 1910. Great Men I Have Been Written Lxclusively jor The Lvening World | isi esc CUTTS + Gow ‘By Sarah Bernhardt _ Translated by Nixola Greeley-Smith GNA COATT NUT Copyright, lv, Uy The Wrese Wublsting Co. (The New Xors World, iGiannetto—A Study in Cruelty La Beffa" contains HE play of Yet i is little Known in America he most effective masculine roles in which Mannetto. The time is that of Renaissance, when the family of Medicl, merchant princes of 1 over that supposed republic with a despotism which even that which a multi-millionaire may exercise modern democracy Men develop under despotism the qualitica of children—or perhaps I had better say they revert to them. One of the universal qualities of child- hood ts cruelty. appeared: And in Florence at the time of “La Beffa," when nzo the M cent was doing the thinking for the n were ga‘, irresponsible and cruel. When 1 combine gaye'y and brutality they were perhaps t happy. And f tuat reason a form of practical joke. known as “La Beffa was extremely popular with the youth of Florence. Giannetto Is a victim of La Be He has been selaed of two brothers, Nerl and Gabriel ¢ est, ted tn « mack, in the Arno and severt ith a da He lets “I | wa pon “TE would” through years of il : when Dw the pete ‘La Herta affected INMY Tae) IT WAS WORTH IT] eee ITWAS THE GiRL| ISN'T HE BEAUTIFUL terically THAT MADE THE : owe a Waku HAT ADE Ti y own ® beau i antress 4 w must be wooed w h laughter, I |have dedicated my- self to—Vengean is to make nds with Neri at banquet where abriel and his and Ginevra that loves ¢ VLA BEFrFA 1 then persuades him on a wa: Aolles, r to present himself armed foot and with drawn sword in a gathering of the Medicis, who are De) ry The Man Who Wins Traits That Make for Success, And the Way to Acquire Them. Sweet One, y Emory J. Haynes. ountry hotel in o%as Califomia and gave his order for opp iisih, AWAY, Oy due Hress Muvueiing Co. (Tue New bore Word), Wines aa he toe The Cruel Man. : > passed by bis ree vor: nan : Iho as ‘ > f uel deeds are attacks on anim We all remember | j[How long have you been he thi h who, in our boyhood days, took pleas in robbing birds’ lise pe es en is ised nests to hear the di sful ery of the mother b There is a man i> you're not the one tha road who h his horse ake the trouble is | to one left before you came.” | kill the game he has w yut leaves the poor creatures to dle slowly of their " . | wounds, ‘The sliocking indifference to a pain 1s so offensive that the per- | - | ished by universal exe | Well Frotected. | to en, to boys, to the human being within his reach or | TRB elegance of the modern Main Line | rvision is very common, Have as little to do with s a man as qe home. lias caused possit nad at heart; he is decayed at the very core, He can view tho | ‘ broken body of his fellow whom his carelessness, haste or indifference caused to l ea ye suffer with 4 >. He is often unmistakably amused, or at least hie cold / arred recently’ at t | curtosit t sights of d s. delphia Times, payee > can enmesh. The bankruptcy of a neighbor delights the human of a prostrate rival with a gusto, and his moral- izing Is as Phe yyable Is the ec plation of his finan: r r irs ¢ lesperate scene where he refused nself Into thinking that It Js self-congratula- y the unmixed Pi exulta- ¥ a have come to do t Yes. Ww ‘safety that A ¢ bee of sudden passion, of natural yet uncontrolled a f i ea H t yne's own preservation. | Lobneiis iz aay slices 1 8 But we can only flee from the de | a vleulates toh for the pleasure he finds in thelr misery Y | Sport. ‘hore are husities’ men who Want no more money, but want the excite | ol i of downing othe They show real glee In the fight, There are pro: ‘6 FLL, Bll" eald Dawson, as he tet | gecury in thiele } who stab for foy they find in unmixed ervelty. ‘The | W yunia Meine!) mind of a cruel Woman 18 a mystery, We contrast her with our gentle wother ¢ Fine,” Hollowa: WA that new dog Wilkie and aro amazed at the monstrosity, ody iheg | In the successful conduct of lite perhaps nothing ts more Important than tho & verte’: aT Fictioway, “Peet te, sf at | {netinct that warns us to avold the soul that enjoys the sight of pain, The street pate heen for"him we wouldn't hare had any | has many. ‘The customers that enter your store have some among their number. eway at the fimt shot, It 1s a good world and there are more good people than bad, " l ene. Bier But of the bad the worst ts the oruel man, ‘ you

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