The evening world. Newspaper, March 20, 1916, Page 6

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i S22 MOUS PLEA TO MILIONARES Bros, No. 645 Bast One Hundred and Rineteenth Street. Garvin became ‘Wedged between @ coal chute and his | National Ills at Repub- Tican Club. Refutes Theory Advanced by Publicist. How the workers of the country, by organization and eventually to prevent the accumula- tion of vast fortunes and, by steadily agitation, Ghe Player Piano that Satisfies . ie buy a Waters Piano or production, finally obtain for them- solves and their famiiles the comforts and luxuries of life, was explained to However, the gentlemen of ample means who heard the discussion have not lost any asleep over It. They were right back in their banks and offices to-day trying as hard as ever to make more money and still more money. The time has not arrived when one a sweet, rich, enduring tone that completely satisfies. plutocrat; In fact nearly all pluto- crate enjoy it. | The discussion of millions and mill- are the result of seventy years of piano making and are backed by a reputation for clean and straightforward selling methods. You can make no mistake in modest prices. The wedi feature of our monthly payment plan is—we charge for milMtonatres, | finds himself in a company of Repub- | and woolly | “Should Private Fortunes Be Lim- neep. there was very little national wealth HENRY LANE WILSO concerned in the plot to ASSASSINATE MADERO? ae since President Wilson took office, and before, hundreds of thousands of people in the United States - have wished they might get more real inside facts about the Mexican situation. Why was President Wilson so intense in his feelings about Huerta? Was our own Ambassador, Henry Lane Wilson, concerned in the plot to assassinate Madero? The time seems to have come to tell this story. It begins in HARPER’S WEEKLY for March 25th This story will take several weeks to tell. It is as exciting as a novel. It consists of documents and personal experiences. A long time has passed ince an equally important contribution to inside dramatic current his- tory has been made by any periodical. If you would avoid missing a single in- stalment of this story, it would be well for you to take advantage of our special three months’ offer at $1. The coupon below will make it easy for you to do so. Send no money now Simply fill in, tear off and mail this cou- pon. Pay when you receive our bill for $1 later. [ttt tcc ccc eee Harper’s Weekly Please send me Harper's Weekly for 8 months, beginning with March g6th issue, at special rate of $1 as offered in Th T agree to pay on re: amount. Harper's Weekly 4 381 Fourth Ave, te to be found on New York City i] ' all good news- | statds, The price t 1 i} t te ten cents a Name. . copy. Regular Bireet subscriptions are { five dollars a year ‘ Socialist Gives His Panacea for, REDUCE THEM BY LAW. Professor Thomas Reed Powell are demanding more and more as their share of the profits of their work of ; the members of the Republican Club| & extended. » sess aap ay Saturday afternoon during a joint do. | inSECOND—Ralee | right leg about, twenty. bate following the weekly luncheon. | & Ino! rom floor, keeping the knoo rigid an you can positively be assur : |8 pointed. Form lx email elroles with le until you are might feel ashamed to be called a fonaires at the Republican Club was led and closed by no other person than Morris Hillquit, the well known manufacturer of millstone necklaces Ho ts also one os the arch-priesta of the Socialist Party of the United Btates, and when he Hean millionaires he wears the smile of @ capable tiger surrounded by fat shah atl '&, Bennet, yay THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAROH 20, ‘Obesity Reducing Exercises for Women Presented in a Series Handy Charts CHART NO. 7 pauline Furlong, OBESITY REDUCTION LEG CIRCLING EXERCIGE—REDUCES THE THIGHS. 2 Co FIRST—Lle flat on fleor or bed, lege and arms THIRD—Return right leg to original starting leg Norrie im Bend two cent stamp té Miss uriony, Hvening World, No. 63 Park Row, N. Y. City, for each and every back number of charts desired, but order paper of your newsdealer in advance, to inawre obtaining com- plete set, Lettere not over 250 words in length Misa Furlong will answer on days alternating between publication of charts, besides writing articles bearing om obesity reduction, CHART NO. 8 WILL BE PRINTED IN THE EVENING WORLD WEDNESDAY, BETHLEHEM STEEL NETS $24,821.00 NA YEAR OF WAR private persons. He declared that a!a Jefferson Federalist and a Jackson person of superior ability ought to be; Democrat. gave the boys @ view of allowed a greater share of the Nation’s tic, “wid, nrough a pair of dark wealth than his less gifted brother,' say that the country was going but that the present system of wealth | the devil, but was on the road to the production was co-operative and so- place where Turkey is now, because 4 ‘ ndividual could create! e Sovernmental structure’ with its cial, and no Indiv! applied socialistic principles had be- anything of value without the ald of come so topheavy and cumbersome. the obscure working classes, No Lond Pa said Congress was half social- gle man, no matter how great, was istic or worse, worth as much as 260 men of average! Arthur 8. Kuhn thought private industry and skill enterprises would be driven to Can- ada and other countries where con- PRIVILEGED CITIZENRY HAVE ‘itfong were more favorable if pric TITLE TO WHOLE COUNTRY. | vate fortunes wore, limited. ts teres: | ited < no in t. be fea ie subject Of the] rhe person, who owns $1,000,000 may | ,,7net, MF. Hilladit with nie optt- Report Shows $175,433,000 ; . : ey ought to 1000, mistic tiger smile promised his Re- a ; Write for Catalog bo amputated by law because they | Pave earned it Fy Breit Re} publican hosts that the 12,000,000 Untilled Orders at Begin- were not honestly earned. He said al suid. "BY workers in this country would con- ning of 1916 Horace Waters & Co. jpereod =p) Justly eatitied’ only to| “The vast bulk of private fortunes Ly eA Nash tediend Gl ceociat | : : what he had contributed to natio: onsists of ‘productive’ ‘wealth, or! a Bah ul 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th St. |v onitn, and not to what came fant f ‘income bearing’ property, tines, | Purine fabric OF the poumey was |The report of the Bethlehem Steel ‘Theres Stores Open Evenings thevaxadtione Of others, a’ daslaren railroads and factories, constituting | 2 rauaed at that ———— a len or mortgag upon the sources and resources of the Nation's liveli- How to Fight Tuberculosis. 2) aoe 254 W. 125thSt., near 8th Ave, } {in this country in tne proper sense of eget The fact that a small portion | TAKE UP CONVENTION WORK. Dr. J. W, Carhart of San Antonie, Texas, St ; of our population owns private for- i dW, 371 E. 149th St., near ard Ave. | the ‘hai heey bya of the wealth! tines exprossed in hundreds of bil-| Repubticans Meet tn Chicago to{My#! ‘Since lime salts constitute three of the United States was owned by|jiuns of dollars means that @ privi- Arrange De fourths of all the mineral substances of the ieged portion of our citizenry has ae- quired sole and exclusive title to the country, to the means of living of the poople and con: ntly @ power over the lives of our citizens,” CHICAGO, M human body, they must be supplied in the h 20.—The sub-com- publican National Com- wmbled here to-day for the purpose of completing arrangements ee ae Mr. Hillquit said that an oligarchy] for the National Convention next June, |tuberculosle and other preventable dis~ of weaith wags incompatible with a| Letting of contracts and other details | eases te due largely to decalcified (lime popular democracy, and that the|connected with the convention hall ar- | lacking) conditions of moltitudes through- country would soon have to choose|rangements, It 1s expected, will occupy | out the civilized world.” | between the former and the latter. | the time of the committee for two days ss ls abet individual fortunes by progressive | man for the National Convention 's to to its combination In such i Hable, up for di . but the pre © the commit that « man to pres dy while temporary orga: zation ix being effected would not property tax, coupled with income tax, more drastic (han now in force, | { and @ graduated and heavy inheri- tance tax, This step would have to : be followed, he declared, by svcializ-j chosen until some time in April, when ing or restoring to the nation all in-| the sub-committee is expected to hold struments of wealth production, such another meeting, as railroads, mines, telegraph and| telephone companies and all indus-| trial plants, drugs. It la safe to o., from your drug- Prof, Samuel McCune Lindsey of Columbia University applied — first aid to the wounded after Hillquit’s bombardment. He said he was against fixing arbitrarily the amount of accumulation of Wealth, and that fc was as desirable socially to have great amounts of wealth as it was undesirable to have equal amounts of wealth, “But we cannot go ahead blindly on this theory,” said Prof, Lindsey, All Yj ¢ 7 bo ‘ 4 “ | Uy % %% y 44 ay if pat Orwealth and the stinulue whien | @ Qed MMMM comes from the extremes, The han- dling of large fortunes {s a form of| specialization, We must train men | for it, and educate them to the full! sense of responsibility, We should | develop by law businesslike methods | of managing great fortunes which | should be regarded as great trust | funds, | “It we need preparedness for de- | fense, the cost thereof should be put entirely on great fortunes, whose owners have et at stake and] should bear the cost,” Prot, Thomas Keed Powell of Co- | lumbia University, associate profes. | sor of constitutional law, sald the law forbade piling up cash by usury and | by prohibiting occupations and bus}. | nesses harmful to the publio welfare. | Ho said money making was also reg. ulated by public service commissions in regulating rates charged by public | service corporations, and that wages, | conditions of employment and oom- pensations for Injuries were prescribed to a certain extent by law. | TAKES ALL KINDS OF PEOPLE TO MAKE A NATION, | Phe ability to accumulate prop lerty ls based on the fact that we live | not 48 isolated individuals, but as a| community,” said Prof, Powell, “The | presence of the rest of us is neces- | An Unusual Sale of Sewing Machines At $12.50 and $18.50 We purchased a whole carload of these brand new sewing machines so as to be able to sell them at these very low price The ‘‘Halma”’ and the “Grant” Sewing machines are made by the Domestic Sewing Machine Company. The fact that these machines are made by such a famous concern speaks wel! for the mechanism as a whole, It is a dependable mechanism, on which you can do all sorts of sewing—fine or coarse, Agents Outside Greater Netw York Charge $18 to $25 for Them Automatio Litt, sary to any one of us, We have seen | Golden Apron what men in the countries now at war | oak Front, |have done in giving their all to their| Wood- Full Biz respective countries, It seems rea- Head, sonable to suppose that men could be work, Golden Oak found to give as much for the sake of Bal) Wood- securing the happiness of their fel- | Bearing. ae low-men as they would in wrecking Complete Complet destruction.” Bet of At- " Thon William Peter Hamilton, tachments Set Of ate editor of the Wall Street Journal, Was aah tachment read three double-column “galleys” ach Free with on the desirability of great fortunes, Machine, Machine, He pointed out the «reat deeds of Harriman, Hill and Morgan, and aad the rich were getting richer, but the poor were not getting poorer, Will- lum ©, Thompson, counsel for the You Can Pay On Easy Terms:— $2 Cash and $1 Weekly late United States Industrial Com- { mission, @eaid Harriman and other , i. : great millionaires had done much No Other Charges. With each Machine you get a set hanm a@ well as good. He said John D, Rockefeller and other millionaires were acting in thelr old age as if they wanted some other rewards for their Mfe labore besides money. He eaid running @ big corporation ought to be a service. of attachments and a FIVE-YEAR GUARANTEE both from GIMBEL BROTHERS and the manufacturers. Free Instructions at your home if in Greater New York, GIMBEL Subway Stores, Balcony 1916, | Corporation for 1918, the firs year of the war, shows that principally on ac- count of extraordinary profits on war contracts the net earnings were $ 881,000, as compared with $9, 1914. The report indicates, moreover, that thie extraordinary prosperity 1s continuing tm 1916, for unfilled orders om hand at the end of the year amounted to $176, 433,000. ‘The average number of employees in the year was 23,064, as compared with 16,686 tm 1914. Wages paid in 1916 amounted to $21,801,000, against $14,- ' 818,000 in 1914, Chartes M. Bohwab, Chairman, and EB. G, Grace, President, report every | department running to capacity ex- ) OMDt that of armor plate and say: “Your attention is called to the fact has, with the support of the Secretary lof the Navy, been recommended for {passage by the Senate Committee on | Navel Affairs, providing for the bulld- ing by the Government at an expense of $11,000,000 of an armor plant with a capacity of 20,000 tons a year. “This capacity provides for more age actual requirements of the United States for armor over the past twenty value of existing armor plants in this that @ bill fe pending in Congress and) | than double what have been the aver- |p, years, and if much a bill is passed the! country will be virtually destroyed. price than has been paid by the Petite ta Canpany ha, mor |S n'y gosta Wer pe than $7,000,000 now im in ite) fe paid for armor by Ji eu devoted to this use—and useless, Austria, Germany, France or ‘toe: lor any other purpose. jand.” “Your officers have appeared before ———— the Senate Committes on Naval Affaire nee and urged the defeat of the ° ‘ |measure, As ft is frankly Ruy that the sole purpose of the proposed f enterprise is that the Government may | i: scoure its armor at a lower price, Your hi officers have submitted the following | 17 proposition to the Federal Govern- '¢ ment: “We will agree to permit any welf known firm of chartered public ac- |; / countants to inventory our plant and | 7» make careful estimates of the cost of | (i? manufacture; with these data in hand | t\: we will meet with the Secretary of | / the Navy and agree to manufacture ¢ armor at a price whioh will be en- tirely satisfactory to the Secretary of the Navy as being quite as low as the price at which the Government oould possibly manufacture armor on its own account after taking Into a count al proper charges. As @ con- crete working basis for such negotia- tions Bethlehem Steel Company has offered to manufacture one-third of }:i the armor plate required for the con- ¢ templated five-year naval programme j (estimated at approximately 120,000 Worn when the utmost is demanded in Style and Quality. ltons) for a price of $896 per ton for ‘ side armor, as compared with the 178-180 Fifth Ave, 181 Broadway of $425 per ton now obtaining, | NEW YORK may be added that while au steel prices have greatly in- the foregoing figure at which offer to make armor for the States is not only # lower PRILADELPEA ‘Agencies tn all Principal Cities o! a we now United NSNQez “a, I hav Think Iam a lawyer. e smoked ‘“Helmar” They are even better today than they | Turkish Cigarettes eleven years. were in 1905. of a cigarette that tastes better every day for eleven long years! gentioman’s The mildest tobacco for cigarettes is Turkish, | The best tobacco for cigarettes ls Turkish. Qon’t pay ten cents for anyhody’s cigarette until you havo tried ‘“‘Helmar;’ a fascinating, elevating,

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