The evening world. Newspaper, December 21, 1900, Page 8

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f ‘ i} un Hf fe" other shoulder all the way, ss nna he eotelolelele me RY’S DAILY CARTOON. Ghe Slumber of the Just. njelatotetstobalelalntnteleteleietatetet eee CONSTITDVIAN NO THR DECARRATON 0” MDE PENDENCE bon’® Cur NO (Ca. GRreas | Y, | ANY GEN easing i THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING; DECEMBER 1, be Jelstolotalelabtolateloteleldetetel neteisied t 8 only a glimpse ; the friendless sick is savage, malignant, fiendish. | ities, he Corl. vou 4 "NO, 14,061, Published by the Prem Publishing Company, & to @ PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-Olice at New York as Becond-Class Mall Matter, BELLEVUE DOCTORS MUST BE The community is profoundly shocked by the glimpse—for it at the interior of the Bellevue Hospital. In their benevolence the people have poured out their money that the poor in need of medical aid may have the same tender and skilful care which fhe rich are able to buy, And now they find that the wretches whom they have heen paying liberal salaries to act as guardians of the unfortunate poor have been treating their charges as a loyof drunken Apaches might treat a luckless prisoner, The comparatively few instances of inhumanity that have come to light make it certain that these so-called “nurses” have been habitually cruel; that they have tortured hundreds of the delirious and the insane and tho helpless; that their customary attitude toward Broken bones, TORTURE AND MUADER IN THE NAME OF “HOHANITY,”’ co ie broken windpipes, battered faces, murder— The nurses had a free hand. No one controlled them, No one disputed their obviously fraudulent reports, No one heeded the screams of anguish echoing through the Wito Altus corridors, the agonized appeals of the helpless REALLY ; nespossintar | Sufferers for doliverygfrom those torture cham: Groeerorereeneee® lors, miscalled hodpital wards, WHO IS “NO ONE?” WHO I8 “NO ONE,” MR. KELLER? You are investigating. You are fully alive to the responsi bility that rests upon you as the head of the Department of Char You know that you employed those fiends to guard your) leleloleleielolotelololototetoloteleieloiiol> Heistoleleleletoolelobeletetelelolotelolototeloletotelei-tatoioleiotetototototetetotetolebotetotol WEALTH AND THE THINKING WORK ONRY t# the root of evil when its possessor makes bad use of St Money tn the source of al) blew ings When ite possessor makes good Use of, It. Everybody wants more of it Whoever has a wad of greentacks Auoked away owns a portion of the ful Nena of the earth, ‘Dhe millionaire wants more of the fulness of the earth and 90 doen the clodhopper, ‘The United Btates increases In wealth faster than any other nation, It rates @ bigger crop of millionaires than any other on, and produ merehant princes galore, but the redeeming fea ture f# that the intilionalres And pleas tre in dietributing thelr portions for the public go0d and do it in thelr life time and not leave the work for heire and executors. Many follow the example fet by Peter Cooper and, like Helen Gould, find pleas re in making the lives of others who ro leas fortunate, sweeter and better, Rich men realiao that opportunities that communities have made possible have made thelr fortunes, and \) giving away thelr fortunes they are only returning to the community ita own i ¥ & x J an he grew or the Biate of Pennay! Ata time when there » 4 to be A] vania aranted him a pension of HL a world’s famine in lent Drake, a] year Connectiout Yankee, saw oi) the eur Now we have the Standard OU trumt face of the water in wm small river In} that reaches into every hamlet tn the Weatern Penneylvania | abi there Wae | land John ob Hockefeller owns an ocean of ol) beneath Lie aurface of | $20,000,000) of the stock, whieh ta worth the earth, Hoe went for it and found tt, | in the market a share, Ol dividends He had no destro to get rivh, His only | during the past yoar were at the rate @mbition was to give tight to a dark |of 6S per cent, ‘Phe lamp thats ened world. He lived many years tn the | burns on my table pays irthute [ Oll rewion, and took as much interest to] 1) Hockefallor © prtee of oll in the produotion of oll ax though he [high enough to restrict consumptto NEW CENTURY’S FIRST owned It all and a crank went in the th DAWN: Views ¢ For f MAN, SOLON CHABE, ‘They called him a fool Wut he Was a welcome of all the people and Where It Will Far of Solon Chase, Who Ran resident of the United States. but it might be out In two and leave a big margin of profit, If John D. Rocke foller elves away millions to endow tn- stitutions of learning, and In charity, he {a not returning to the community tte swn in eo large A degree as Col. Drake ‘id when he “struck te." . nr) When the Amerioan working man who thinks while he works, invents ta Dorsaving machines, he whwittingly ‘ay® the corner-atone of trusts, At firer laboraaving machines were small ef faire, t now labor@aving mac are no costly thet they oan only be ut. teed on @ large soale by large eorpor ations The cost of Keeping large Indus (rial plants equipped with the best ma ohtnery t# immense and can only be Undertaken by concantrated capital We have now the beat equipped plants in the world for (he manufacture of tron products, texttle produote and all other produocta that make life aweeler and ber ter which would not be ponsible under individual ownership, Henoe the trust has come to may It Im patd that the United Mates as a nation has thereased in wealth during the last decade $26,00,000,000. We are in the etromgle for thie great wealth Some fall by the wayside, but many great fortunes are bullt up, The man thinks while he works has mate thie country (he workshop of the worl snd the man who thinks with his money has seized existing conditions until now we produce all of (hose things that make life sweeter and better with lewn sweat Jof the brow than any other nation on the face of the earth BOLON CHABE, tn Boston Herald Heat Touch and How It Will Creap Over the Farth F the change of the centuries took | from the south upward Atty minutes Ht wilt be flowing over | place at elther of the equinoxes Now, there Ja no slong tits ne] Tdon'e Head and down the rugged sides March 2% or Bopt. then, since on| from the Antarotte Cirele to Antipodes! of Table Mountain those days he earth's axis te at right | (sland, hence thie tiny epot of earth] In twelve hours and twenty-Ave min to the plane of the orbit, and| will fret aes twentioth century} utes tt will have crossed Montmartre equal day and night all over! dawn, A fow minutes later Bounty Tsl-/and touched the base of the Mitte Tower world, the matter would te very} and will seo it Then it will sweplin Parts, Five minutes Jat 1! have decided The dawnline would| along the northeast const of North panned the cross of At. Paul's and be colneide with the date-line, and from) and, New Zealand, then over Vanua flowing up Fleet street, in seventeen pole to pole the firet sun of the new| Levi tn the IMji Lalande Next { will) hours and twenty minutes from the time Century would rive at the mame moment | abhine on the weattered coral tnlets of the) tt crossed the dawn ine it will be flow But, unfortunately, this ts not eo, and | Bites Kroup, and after travelling about| ing round the feet of the Statue of Lib: the consequence Le that the line of dawn, | nine degrees more to the north the Heht-| erty, and tn three hoare more a wll ae Mt ewoeps rund the earth, frst] ede wil) touch the cromsing of the dawn-| have reaohed the Golien Gate, Thence Rouches the date-line to the south of tho! ine and dateline at 6 o'clock { will cross @ stretch of ocean unbroken @quator, and then gradually creeps up| ‘Two hours and five minutes wil have! hy rook of ialet back to the dawn {ir this line tt!) i leaves it far to (hie north, | to pass before tt hes the banks of) and so will be accomplished the ev Bo the first mun of the twentieth century Will rise on the pinces along or near the date-tine in the orler of thetr positton, PROPOS of the recently revived Maousslon of the benefte and buses of phynleal exeroisa, Jultan Hawthorne has taken up as follows, in the Philadelphia North Amertoas, the Gonwideration of what custom dors for| « men. "I could tell of an ederly gentieman | of wixty od, tn nomhern New York, who Gtank whinkey every dey, and always had 2 olay pipe in MMe mouth, who slept when he could and took no aort o oare of Himself; who one day put on his left shoulder a plough welghing 2% pounde and carried \t across country thirty * titles, fording a stream on his way, and Feached his destination without having halted or shifted tho plough to the "Ho did not feel that he had made any violent exertion, and he lived to be _Mihty. But ne had dem up and out and Abyat, doing such things, since his boy- food. What he did every day nea ) ynatter of routine would kill an ordinary man, but so would his diet and general mode of CF kill & man who had not himeeit, inside and out, by violent exertion. Mo and whiskey, ‘and beans, tobacco and rum—try Greek professor, and see! | the Yarra. late hours, yet tho temples and and Your without any exer if me man who be a 1t ® of plain fabric, covero’s with de- Ih atx hours and twenty-fve minutes tt will mild the palaces of Cwloutta, ANOTHER WORD ON EXERCIS r food and in and morning of the first wentieth century From day Pearvon 6 In nine hours and) Magagine for January Hegin Karly and Right, Saye Hawthorne, Old Age Will Greatly Profit. doubt @ man of sound constitution may |it up ttl ¢he end will lve at least ae endure till elehty clwe, ff he abstaina from po long, and live more in a minute than ther case tn a month, the It gine exercise in hia childhood and keeps! the exercise is absolutely, eo long only a |as sed to tt There te an old sol VELVET GOWN Mer of fortune now living tn Mextoo who all hie Hfe has maed up and down agakn iseames oan,” "A Ban Francisoo man's wite Gnd} nigns in panne, The yoke and sleeves makes no difference how violent HANHOF Of] punishment ahe ever had, and it would mior'a medivine chet! make no difference if whe waa five or has] To the Batitor of The Hvening Worlds separated from her husband because,| A she @laims, he threw Bolling water at) te coat o! patients, Therefore you must ask and get an answer to the ques tion, Who is no one? It is soon answered. The “no one” who permitted and, in effect, aided and abetted these savageries is-—resident doctors of the Bellevue Hospital. ‘These resident doctors are constantly on duty, They know, or ought to know, the conditions of the patients from hour to hour. They note, or ought to note, the changes in conditions, If patients are tortured, must not the resident doctors know it?) If patients are murdered, must not the resident dpetors know it 1} Patients have been tortured by the score. Patients have been murdered by the dozen, Yes, Mr. Keller, by the dozen! ‘The fact already lies near the surface, And, if your investigation is at all thorough, if you follow ‘THM DOCTORS ‘ mu CRAROR. up the deaths in cortain wards, if you compel [ererereeeeeee® the nurses not implicated to confess, if you put the resident doctors upon the stand and force them to tell the truth, you will find out that murder has been one of the habitual causes of death in the Bellevue wards that have male nurses, Rosident doctors have known of these conditions, The visiting doctors have suspected them. | , THD GUILT OF of AV eet, se 1900, HERE THE LAUGHS COME IN. & ; 00" UNEQUIVOCAL DISAPPROVAL. Sinday-Sehool Buperintendent-—Roys, {t's nearly Christmas, and T know that Dut of the goodness of your hearts you will all agree that 1 dit wisely when 1 des clded that instead of having a Christmas tree this year we send the money to ald the heathens, ENOUGH, “Goodners me NEWS ITEM. OR, HOW ANTIST INDIAINIS itt }@ court # accomplishing reat results.” NOT IN FORM, “T've asked you to marry me, Highup. I'm a plain, blunt man, liye | “Tonly want your daught THE FOXY EDITOR "ive you some work? Yes, I think #0, !f you can #ult us. holiday drawinge—something new, novel and out of the ordinary Young man, can you support @ fam oir.” TOLBOARD MET HIS WATERLOO, T want some specie "In the Christmas drawings there must be no Santa Claus, reindeer, eetghm, may have startled you with my ness, Take your time to think about It Ive a standing offer.” “You'll have to make it a kneeling . | freplaces, chimneys, pine trees, leebergs, toys, holly, plum pudding, boarw heada, waseall bowls nor Yule logs, and no enchanting maidens nor passe old maids are to be drawn in the act of inviting onculation by stayding beneath the mistletes, offer, Mr, Wellon, before I can even consider it." eel COMMON EXPRESSION Now, Mr, Kellar, it is not enough to dismiss and proseonte the brutes who have tortured and murdered patients, If you stop there the same conditions will return, You must investigate and punish the implicated doctors, On the face of the facts, these doctors have nije cir duties, have winked at torture and murder, have signed lying death cortificates, Who are these guilty doctors? What are their names? What have they to say for themselves? Woe believe that you are an honest, capable, conscientious offi- cial, We believe that you are sincerely in earnest. We believe that you are not to be restrained by “pulls,” by political and social influence in this matter. } po YOUR DUTY, Go straight to the root, Mr, Keller! Pil wR, KELLER! lory and disgrace there educated, trained men ' s aay who have betrayed you, who have betrayed the pooTORs people, whom it would be an outrage to release ee ee a ’ rer bab upon the community as practising physicians, Make an object-lesson that will stand for years to come as 4 in overy New York public institution, neces ’ snes THE PEOPLE. renee eet fore 1446 $900 divided by 14-6 equate #900 times S14, equalling 107 1-7; $0) minus 1071-7 equals $1986-7, the cost of the horse, ‘Therefore the cow comtw S107.1027 and the horse $192.8 6-7. NEWTON FAL Ask an Expinnatt To the Bilitor of The Broning World In angwer to the young man's letter in which he says his wweetheart has re- cently treated him coldly T would sug eat that he frankly awk her the reason for thia sudden change in her behavior toward him. A BYMPATHIZER, feores All ¥ Solons. ‘To the Editor of the Brening Wortt; warning to every doctor etree ates | we LETTERS FROM Pete en eren tee tete te tette tate A Domentio Jam, To the Bitter of the Rrentng World. Our seevant eri broke a number of pleces of beo-a-brac. T wanted to dls shargy her, She pleaded that she would be more careful in the future and help repiace the damage if we would not dis sharge her. I asked her what she meant y “help replace the damage,” and she enid he would gtve 810 from her wages, The damage amounted to #5, When her month waa up we deducted the $10 and gave her the balance of her wages, which ae refused to take, eaying ehe was going to leave and wanted hor month's pay, whieh we refused to «ty N@w nho ts suing us, Did we aot right! i he earth like & steam engine, sparing , ng |_1 went to the atx-day race at the Vinwolf tn nothing, performing readers? Kindly give us your Advice] qian 1 paw @ jot of half-dead, y ineredible feats, shot and about this matter, R.A. B. haggard, sick-looking, worn out oreat- howt to pleces in various Published Sertally tm Eventing jures wobbling along on bieyeles’ They who Now teaches fencing as a World, were exhausted, Injured, used up, L ployment, and at over elmhty years of he Ptttor of The Kvening World used to go to prige-fetite before they AKO ie quicker and joss Hable to fatigue - i ou tell me If the book called “Tn | became illegal. There | saw men now than most of his young pupils Hie Stopa, of, What Would Jesus Do?! and then get @ Diack eye, a bloody Then thery js Eriesson, the man who was ever published fn a eerial form? nose or something of the sort, by a wilt the Monitor, who exercised violent JOHN C. COLLINS, padded glove encounter lasting only a y ail his 10, and died at the age of few minutes, They were none the eighty of an avctide Hut the woods| Marah Measares for HttWl) worse an hour after the fight, Yet are full of such instar and they all Danghier, our legal Solona at Albany forbid that toll (he same story, Begin in childhood To the Pattor of the Breatng Wort exhibition and alow the murderous and exercise a) your life as hand or as Ih reply to Daughter Meter in which | six-day race, Funny old gvezers, those mildly a& you please, only keop on ox] pho gays that the daughter who slapped | law-butiders of ours, aren't they? Laka led let be Aid You Will (UMM Hor father’s face did right, I would say P. H, RBHAN, JK y ost apan. And meanwhile this f abo was my daughter she would habit of « your body ray herself’ in receipt of the severest The Betre Detter To the Raitor of The Bvening World Tam a young man of eighteen and 1 earn $9 a week, My parents charge me % of thia for board, make me save $2 for clothes, let me keep $1 for expenses and twenty-five years old, elther, A FATHER. Coat of the Two, it muoh me ln then expect me to turn the extra $1 over to them. They are not poor, and I think it no ealk to make me give hem the extra dollar I work so hard to| wash with « cloth hour-glasses, forelocks, wings, # ‘Time huatling about on bike, skater “Stlcking to his post.’ we VANITY WOUNDED, Candid Friend—t think young Rymer, the poet, felt hurt mt a remark you made the other night a ut | His Companton—-What ald 1 say? y one Abakespeare Dear Mea Aver Kindly print a rystem of doing houses HOW TO DIVIDE work-what T rhould do on eagh day | the week tn onter to Keep the hours | otean and still have a Mttle tine to my- self, 1 do not wish to neglect my work, but I don't care to atay in the house | all day, ax T have beon doing for the past two years. I have a baby a year oid, My washing I will send out dn the future TRUE WOMAN toflet mmediately upon rising, It {* mot expected that the little housewtie shall be arrayed in boudotr finery, but at least she whould present herself In wholesome freshness to her husband and baby, for bablos Iike pretty, little mothers better than caress Ps of all, make at least a neat | | ty ones ‘The Kitchen fire is the f attended to If you use a gas range, brush the duet from {t, Ringe out the tea kettle and, after lotting the water run from the cold water pipe a few minutes, fill the kettle, Hght the fire, and wet the water on to rat thing to be HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. Bweep up the kitchen Moor, open the Window a little, closing the door: Wash your hands earefully, put on a fresh apron and give baby his bath, which te better taken at this time of the year after the apartment i woll hea which is rarely the case in the early hours, Baby, bathed and refreshed, if he be not a spolled young person, will forve breakt Clear the table, sort] immediately fall asleep for a good long the dishea and free them from scrept | nap, of food. Put the spoons and forks In | Now ts,your timo to put the bathroom pitcher of hot water, Put the dishes!!n order and to dust and set things to fran the tablo in a dish pan of hot) rights generally soapy water A clever and industrious woman wit ‘Now go to the bedroom, shake the pil- jows, turn the mattress and make up) heat Put your Srenkfast dishes at the back of the range or in the heater to arm, } det the breakfast table, Prepare and serve the breakfast, Take a moment's time to run inand throw the bedclothes ‘oft the ted, spread them on chairs, open the bedroom windows and close the door, in certainly not more than two hours the bed, Dust the room and put it in} and a half, order. As you are to send your washing out, Return to the kitchen, Anish your! Monday should either be @ day for sweeping the entire flat, or for cleaning the refrigerator and china clovet, which need a weekly overhauling In order to keep them in proper condition, Or it may be a day devoted to mending and dishes, put hem all away, wash kettles and saucepans, Give the surface of the range a quick and soap and water, then polish ft. rt and hang So That the Mistress of the May Have Hours have accomplished all thewe dally tasks | ». “When those are completed make me some New-Year's Day aketches without resolutions, and no Old Mathes wr flying machine!" Flat of Pd s for Dally Diversion, {ng at jenst once in two weeks, ‘The anit bert done the day after the sweeping tT er in daily uae should be cleaned 1 week, It f natural wood, tained they must be wiped p tw times each week and ‘oiled at least nce a week If your husband comes home to lunch+ e which ls rarely the case in New York, you can easily arrange a quick luncheon that will be palatable and not take tore than an hour to prepare and serve, A iittie wife with a fiveroom flat and A oneyear-oll baby should be able to do all her housework and have hours of leisure each day — beautiful hours for Alng and self-improvement and for outnide, healthful diversion " Dinner should be a matter of thought am) careful preparation, The husband who works hard alt day for wife and baby has a right to expeet * A well-cooked, attractively served dine ner, and the clever woman {e she who | in addition to an appetizing meal offers in her winsome dnd charming self @ | reatization of her husband's ideal wife, | Who does not forget to be a prosy, | sweetheart a4 well, HANRICT HUBBARD AYER, a emme PAnLON MAGIC, OAK « plece of thread ta strong § salt water, dry it, and repeat two * or thred tim When thoroughly dry tle one end to a chandelier, and on the other or lower end Ue a ring oF some amall but not too heavy article, It is now ready for the experiment, | Get fire to the thread, and behold the | ring does not fall to the floor, nor dives the thread break, ‘The explanation is: The thread has in reality been burned, but the salt’ with which the thread waa saturated forma a sold column, and that sup- ports the ring, Varied experiments can be made, using several threads for one article, and, In fact, many others which. themselves to the rendém,-.

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