The evening world. Newspaper, June 10, 1911, Page 5

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pate ceenre nL THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JUN MOROAN'S STORY OF STEEL TRUST Stanley Committee Gets Many | Inquiries as to When He'll Be on Stand. | HIS “POWER” UP AGAIN. | | | | Identified as “Man Who Can| Change Conditions by Press- | ing Button” Without Name. | WASHINGTON, June 10—The stanley Investigating Committee will hold no| fession to-day, When It reconvenes on Tuesday Janes Gayley, former First! Vice-President of the United States| Steel Corporation, will resume his testl- mony. The committee ts recelving many In-) auiries as te the time J. Pigrpont Mor-| i gan will testify. I: ts obvious that the! whole country ts waiting with unusual Interest for the famous financier to bel grilled, Mr. Morgan's power for good or evil cropped out again at yesterday's hear. ing, although his name was not men. tioned in this connection, Pervical Roberts, a Stee! Trust director who tes- tiled yesterday, war asked by Mr. Stanley: “Is there not a potent factor, who fg looked up man of the world, who has group of’ business conditions, whose Py © touch is potential in the ralirosd busi. ness, in the manufacture of steel, the establishment of banks, whose influ- | ence extends throughout the Uxited | States, and who cannot only frame | conditions, but change them by touch: ing @ button?” Z suppose I have in mind whom you mean,” said Mr. Roberts. “We eed not call names, because I do not thiak mames mean anything. Whatever | there may be in his actions for good, | the mpbuilding of the country and the) , people in it, or for evil, he holds this/ position by reason of the qualities euumerated.” “That ideal ts the guiding factor ana all-to-be admired leader of this policy \ that destructive competition {s wrong and that harmony of thought and rela- tion between business men ts right?” asked Mr. Stanle, “{ do not think that 1s the result of the efforts of any one man.” was the } reply. ~ “Sq YELLS OF OLD TRADE WARS; AND POOLS. | Mr. Stanley asked Mr. Roberts if he had been-in any “gentlemen's agree-| ments” prior to passing of man law, | ‘here were a number of trade wars ad bu se would ex," said Mr Roberts. togetin and agree to ertain price, The rail people| There were others that did tt.| This was a result of destructive c q petition, ‘These arrangements were called pools by some. The conditions| were pretiy bad about 15/7 and 1898." Roberts admitted that the prin-| 4 cipal purpose of onts was a he aid this. , there were wrecks ail ald ‘he trade wars caused rula, anley asked If it was not a jon of “s ival of the fittest.” out for himself in soso days," said Mr, Roberts, mor was hurt just a# much as| saged in the fight ey asked how much stock | sunaylvanig Ratiroad Company ad in the Steel Corporation, or the Pennsylvania Steel Company. Mr. Roberts could not tell, Me eai@ shat he did not belteve tr transportation | Mmeo holding stook in concerns that | j make stuff they haul. i Asked if the Pennsylvania Railroad ever objected to three of its directors ' soing on the board of the United States | tel uswered in the negative. if @ question came up involving both, | the threo men would sot act in dnal capacities, a NO PHILANTHROPY IN BUS)- NESS, HE SAYS. Mr. Roberts said he did not believe ‘iat Mr, Carnegie ever saw the day (ha: he cowd make rails and soll them at a profit of $14 Mr, Schwab, he 4 said, did not take Into consideration 4 ‘ertain costs when he said raiis could be manufactured for $12. | “What change has oome over the| spirit of the railroads now? Mr. Beail’| | inquired. “Why can't they get these | low prices nowadays? Is it the same kind of philanthropy that actuated the } purchase of the Tennessee Coal and req Company by the United states Steel Corporation? " “E Go not think there ts any philan- threpy tn Wasiness,” said Mr, Roberts, “It is to our advantage that producing companies in our line shall be pros perous Better a lving plant than a e wreck that !s not producing. ‘That ts why the Pennsylvania is willing to make | reasonable rates for rails.” ] ‘Mr. Gayley wan heard before Mr. Rob- | ; erts took the stand. Mr. Gayley told of his connection with the Carnegie eor- poration from 188 to 190 and of the wonderful growth of the steel industry during that pertod, i “The price of steal ratia” be said, “was virtually fixed by the cat order | Tallroad, which distributed its order with three mis along tts Hines “Ww ny agreements between the Carnegie tee! Company and the BY other steel producing concerns?” asked Mr, Young. ‘In the olf days and under the oi¢ way,” mid Mr. Gayley, “wien all com- ‘panies were independent, there were ' perlods ef was that brought prices down | to all, i “Did the Carnegie Company ewe any | ef ite growth to this sort of warfare?’ Mr, Young ingutred. “Et 416 nod absced any ether oom the witnem, “end nevep ae \ ANNIOUS TO HEAR If Cupid’s Bow Mouth Is Disappearing By Marguerite Mooere Marshall. | Men Artists Grieve, but Woman Rejoices||strange ana Curious Happenings in the James Montgomery Flagg and Albert P. Lucas Won't Admit That These ‘Most Beautiful’ | Lips are Fewer Than} Formerly. While Miss S. MaryNorton Hopes This ‘‘Childish, Inflexible, Undevel- oped’’ Mouth Is Passing --She Knows Prettier One Is the Cupid's bow mouth disap- pearing from the face of the mod- | era woman? | Alferd Brala, president of the Royal Miniature Soclety of London, declares it is, and many English artists agr with him. Mr, Brala asserts that the business life fed by many women now- adays 1s depriving them of the cherubl- cally curved lips which their beautiful | grandmothers possessed. Yesterday I presented this truly tragte theory to @ committee of three repre- sentative Amer! rtists, James Mont: | gomery Wlagg, the iMustrator; Miss 8. | Mary Norton, whose portraits aro ad- mired on two sides of the Atlantic, and Albert P. Lucas, sculptor and member of the new Salon in Paris. Two members of the trio denied that there was any diminution in the num- ber of Cupid's bows, and the third frankly admitted that she shouldn't mind if there were. So let us all cheer “The Cupid's bow means as ua- moulded, undeveloped personality, because our mouths are what we make them—if velop at all. Think how absurd this ‘typically beautiful’ mouth would look om @ {ODDITIES IN THE NEWS| jon Air Cafe Opens. ‘The last touches were put om } Armenohville Room, the open ale. @ 4 ar the Motel Kr last night, and it thrown ton apactty ween five and Prey) + lred persons too’. dinner there at the same time, The room has been’ very | much changed with the tearing éown lof the old portico, under orders trom the city. In place of the portico @ glass | marquis canopy has been installed, the | whole ation costing in the gieinity Chronicles of To-Day. Shoe Tip Causes Fatal Injury, | ,*'* Her ehoe tip catching on a car track, |!" Mins Clara Higbee, daughter of the | (,; County Judge at Attantic City, fell) i "br ates ans |FORGIVE ELOPING GIRL? NO! The following day she could not get Andrus Wit te Miss Haw Mass, and Pres ‘ the Al Cole of Spring: lass on 5a graduate -—-———————_ —= PRIVILEGE TO PAY Our new ten year mortgage is the | most liberal mortgage ever offered to | borrowers. You have no renewal fees up and it was discovered that one « her kidneys had been displaced, The doctors may she will die, crensman TUM Hobbs Proves His W to pay for ten years. Poisoned by Licking Stamps. (Congressman John B. Andrus ot | You cen pay it off at any time on Miss Grace Hamilton, clerk in the | Yo"Kers ts not yet rendy to forsive ius | thirty days’ notice or you can pay post office at Fayette City, Pa, bas | (Mente Helen for hor secre! marriage | $100 or any multiple of $100 on any i case of blood poisoning from temps Government. ‘While her Up was ditstered It beca: .. | interest day. It tempts one to save money in ordet? to make regular reductions of te nat his) nformed that groom had sald that he had the for patrons of rot my for the joney, but t a | Infected from the colered inks of the | hat good prospects of hie own, the | MOrtgage principal. stamps. eee te Congressman s Nas : as Made to house owners in Greater bi ell, ho he has. je should be | Drowned in 4 Inches of Water. | sorry tor the notoriety that lus boon | NEW York in amounts of $10,000 | or less. Send to any of our offices Mrs, Susan Miller, of Winnetka, I'l, BW. Pete eee ee went in bathing in Lake Michigan with | 2 will forgive them. This is a for a circular. her two ohiidren, and after splashing De unacns 8 TinE GUARANT&E @bout returned to the sand and sat to say anything # it to # he fell face forward trom deart| money te not cons rant AND TRUST Cc? disease In four inches of wate a was not looking for a man with money, $ 4,375 10,62. ane AO ames Stern Brothers Announce for Monday, June 12th 4 An Extraordinary Sale of Misses’, Girls’ and Small Women’s Dresses, Suits and Skirts Pur for ene with manhood, bee fit | Cetera oo! prove his worth and then"—the Con. | Surplus (all earned) kreaman would not say what he bad in min ough her head was not covered it she was drowned when found, geen | One Woman Routs Beer Picnic, Armed with a rift Mra. = Tible MoGowan, a temperance advocate, broke up a plenic at which beer wes being served near Atchison, Kan. One man ineulted her by offering her a @lase of the beer and she chased hin Into the Missourt River with the mun. She finally jowed him to swim ou nd apologize. Dog, Muzzled, Commits Suicide. Henry Whit wood old dog Jack had to be muzzled in compliance with th New Jersey law, and the disgrace was too much for him. After vainly trying to get the muzzle Ll off, Jack leaped into Deal Lake and Aa a Said James Montgomery Flags HEBERT. R ‘ aie tina ee —— - . - “There are just as many Cupld's LUCAS, 1d t know that the age of wom-| rwing Marry Twins For Midsummer Wear ‘ bows now am there ever were, but nat-| cu cure ae F Sa to tave teauticarin ace| SAMMGA WAR’ Donne’ Sie c Greatly Bel Regular Va! urally, since that is the most beautiful | et = aA ei As yet to resulted in any| Leland and Lorand Tabier, partners rea elow Re; r es of all mouths, it is lkewtse the rarest. | ber of generations to effect any change she had noted the disappearance of the factal modifications. But surely I be-| 0 business at Adrian, Mo., were mar- | y = bes * \ led to Al | “The true Cupid's bow is the mouth in| 1 @ single feature.” Cupid's bow, she admitted that it was | Heve Uint by-and-by women will out- fie 8 Altes and A Moore at San/ which the curve of the Mps follow do you re the Cupld’s | not usually found in the faces of busi- | STOW the childish mouth, and that we'll} “4 brid , aap bow shows much charac Tasked: \ness sR Acie it outarow ¢ : dfs idegrooms are twink, as are the exact outline of a bow, even to th a s much character a n women, But ar from de over-Intense apprecia so the brides, and they wore different up-tilted corners, In fact, those cor- Aw Well, if you're talking about char-| ploring the fact. n of its beauty. And that will be al colored flowers so relatives could tell | ners are the distinctive characteristics | 1°°°" that's auite maak thing from) OTHERS MORE BEAUTIFUL, | 8°! ‘hing. which was Witch, the resgmbiance ts | + of the Cupid's bow. The lips are rather | wie uty 4 me op eee | SAYS MISS NORTON ee 's bow mouth will lant aa] #0 CloKe ‘ilk | | rs ‘ full, but the beauty of such « mouth) /Bevuty im act is a matter of Iino, and | long as the youthful, feminine pers Hes’ In the Mnes of the double curve | J, tha " ot the Cupid's bow beau-| “I think that there are other mouths | ity which {t represents lasts," observed Bridegroom Weighs 38 Pounds. Ie follows, the exact line given inthe | 20% Whether Yee iF in w mouty or al much more Yeautiful than the Cupid's | Mr Lucas. “1 eall It an extremely| "E HAd to take three looks before | FURS AND FUR-LINED GARMENTS Alctionary as a definition of beauty, anuj" a, | bow,” she dectared » ie, 18 & beautiful mouth. But it doesn't keep} 1 could see him," remarked Judge ; ‘ has the added charin of the symme! ‘eae ad bale) it expresses of char- | mouth that belongs to a child, It! its) beauty. Sorrow lightens out | Newcomer at Chicago, aftergnarrying | stored in accordance with the most medem and a) red Dry Cold of both aides. It ts unquestionably the| fe 4 'ene mnocen se’, (=) Wienind ja pier si seervee | ateinie: © ioe not] those curving corner ihe wodhs lo picks Balbir Air Methods, and insured against damage by Moth and loveliest f ry feminin exible, and the lps are frequently | «4 ‘ e world, anche Buckley, s: loveliest of all mouths, to my mind.) women” wow x y > | Reale, | 8 ps are frequently | “However, it is not the onlf tovely| The bridegroom te 24, Is flys fe at Very Moderate Charges. 5 ¥ ) X like feminine wom- [coarse and thi The very conven: 2 feet) GAVALIERI AMONG MR. FLAGG'S| en, x con't care te Ghh lachaed 1 eiehal acveuntieas of (ueccurses anaosn | mouth In my fig ‘Bestas | Digh, and weighs only 38 pounds. His! : * 2 * A * CUPID'S BOWS. masculine type. I think the athletic ihe gl aura and my we @ elon oe een 1D bride weighs 186, Special Concessions in Prices for Remodelling or Repairing Furs “Now look here"~and forthwith Mr.| Woman primarily saumick” A. (namely vatter pleas what geems to me a very begutitul ’ er ee during the Spring and Summer months. Plage dlsciesed a portfollo of famous| wom ’ ; mouth, though it is net a bow. tut} Doctors’ Trust Raises Prices. ‘ bi el should be strong and well, | of curves a modern beauties, of which a goodly ‘In the t will drew: ter you | the Ad of the upper lip follows the| The doctors’ trust, Manchester : number did indeed slow the famous| Beauty, she should postess curv. pauti- | CUFVE af the eyebrows; tho line of the} Conn., la to boost’ prices July 1., Th . g e3 | the upper jost thin and beauti Ju ° rienta’ ir lan: - ourve he had just deserived—"I remem. | rather than musi Bo you see Z| fully exh seen te little straight OS® IS repeated, and indeed all the] Mirth of one child will coat $15, But a Oo Rugs, Draperies and Hangings ~~ i | \ \ but, from the standpoint of sheer | ber that Cavalier! was among the ?a Rave not even any objection to the | tines at the corners, too, and a fine, | nes of the face seem to fall into har. more. Paina 70F only 8 | vored implications of the Oupid’s how. J tirm line on the under lip. T have seen | mony. n i ‘ of " “ ‘ Pr " 5 Ine on the under 1 ave M To cut off a fi » $10; aeldt- ij ¢ Thats atts rood proof that, the " ! can still tind plenty of them tn! just this mouth in several women of] “The ideal month $9: 60 teem | usass Sonera bc tee hee Mel Bip Until required in the Fall, at Reasonable Rates. 7’ Cupid's | sn’t. disappearing, don't | America,” led, with amy acquasatance, and {t perfectly ex-| amt part of the face, mote broken [at $5 each. Mxaminations for Inganity toles ¢ 7. think?” he demanded, triumphantly. verican girl ig! presses their sweetness and their} tone” Siar pont ¥ Articles called for promptly upon request by mail or telephone, " That's all rot about business life | the world—at ! strength. | So don't be discouraged if your look- hear fecting the mouth's beauty. In the first It doos me xood ta| “To me the truly beautlfol mouth! tng glass tells you that Cupid has for-| Girl Is Highest in Law School. West 23d and 22d. Streets place, how long have American women tn the fall and) does suggest these ae. It belongs | gotten to bend his bow, Probably he| For the first time in the history a been in the bushess world? About fifty | y pretty won in a str face, face manifesting would be a@ misfit In your face—and tt] the Albany Law 5 ool a woman ¢ years. It would take nearer that num- | Norton whether the chara behind tt may ried off the highest honors his ye be a perfectly good face, too, ho Bes Mnflot Weather SOLD WHEREVER YOU SEE A MOXIE SIGN LE Js TZe LDrinkg For mother may have Cleaned, Repaired and Stored ~ RARARA LR SARA OR EEN The Buttercup Song. As jint june by Marie Cahill Ail-Star Revivel of **PINAFORE”’ Now at the Casing — Theatre, New York. anther Feat rank Sonnet 3 it yhzaiotane The saritary conditions under which Menie it. pre. seater Moco msm Sarasa vane eee too Nea ears Words and Music FREE with To-Morrow’s Sunday World . - Piette ing re made sn ne —_e

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