The evening world. Newspaper, February 4, 1901, Page 8

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SALOONS D number of saloons to the | | Taalgons In them. - N.Y. have the same relat » saloons. averaging a fr: F Rochester police arres ho ment arrested 237.1 for drunkes ‘alx other citles of the United ain proportion to popu: In -its proportion of saloon. many saloons as Hoston has. fonty a little more tha: je police. Only thirteen citi Btates having a poy SIRT | Outdoor Shaters. Kiak, First, the skating yiehe city aye to Hepitcon park, De one :Wo! 0 Imioor gkating| he ce akae in the park. Bec- 7 people’’'are a ttle back- Mating. for thelr rights and|’ Ke the public Park Board ‘put to them. HENRY BLITZ, Harlen. Ghould Be Kept. ¢ of The Evening World an who when a boy of ‘his. mother) never fob g at the age of THE ~~ SX HSGRDTIA DSL TTITIITTOS THEY KNOW HE HAS IT. POS882O8¢ j thes WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 4, 1901 t HE LITTLE OLD NEW YORKER. — By T. E. POWERS. “ ~ VOL. 41. Entered at the Post-Office at New ‘|MR. M'KINLEY’S PLOT AGAl IS A PLOT | joint resolution of word That the people of the {xiar | Independent. the United States hereby disclaim any disposition or intention to exercise ‘That sovereignty, J ton thereo ir control pet ert Seber rrerorsyes 3 $ ? +9 Vc better settle. ‘Spose Albert Eddie neede the money!" O NOT AFFECT CRIME. BY REV. H. C. KINNEY, * = OF CHICAGO. prove beyond ohalienge that there Ix no t tlon between the num- the eltles and the those places.-HENRY cctor of Moly Trinity dlitles of the United States ber of saloons in ennees and for crime, and Lam prepared "to ay that the arrests made tn these <cltibe have no relation to the number Hpiseopal Chure! For instance, Chicage and Rochester number of fon more than 38 to the 10,000 of population. But while , only 73.5 per- song'in cach 10,00) for drunkenne © 43.4for other crimes, the Chicago « WGA. for other crimes and misdemea: ‘aking the figures for Rochester, Cc. KINNEY. ininiieteieste} Of there thire three cliles showed fewer arrest! teen foricrimes in each 10,00 of population, G5. An the Chicago Nguren the clty ranked ©) forty-seventh In the number of arrests for: drunkenness, forty-first in 4 for crimes and only thirty-aixth arrests tn each of drunkenness Taking Boston, with its 14.2 saloons | from a oe Chicago's 34 in the 10,000, Boston h foe. 829.1 arrests for drunkenness to Chi- se cAgo's 27.1. With nearly three times as and Atlanta, Ga, are two Gtunkenness coming to the notice of Atlanta has only WOO or more exceeded the records uf persons for al} cuunes, w | L.ltet to ewoh IS' SENSE OF FEAR Ing Instincts among birds is the sense of feur Phis) feeling of fear is nut ap. Aa birds until ten or twelve days ‘AM perching birds ac. of fear at from eight 10 ‘after birth; and this instinct he controlling factor in the This model belongs to guard of the thie color in ave taken offt. | Be ey Ngures only, and pplique trimming ts o rker velvet and gold galloon; the vest} sandwich with rye bread, a couple of n novelty goods with turn- period of two month ist stam for thems: NTERESTING fb Ive am 1 do my mother Is allve, world break (hat that {t im one of in @ man’s Ife to keep n promixe made it experiences of the bird Jessened or increased by cir- Is of romestucked silk, Mfe, and, though my) vat) fonot for the | wittin » for 1 think Krandest things 1 should ke to hear the opinions of readers on the old saying “See a pin and plek iC up and all the day you'll I believe also that the vin should have the head point towand You to be effoctive. the other day, heads directly pointed at me, and up to date have not had any good luck. fact, 1 think tad luck has been tn the OLD SUPERSTITION, It to Disrespect. To the Editor of The Eveaing World: We all know the man who never gives up his seat to a woman standing dp front of him, and sometimes we can A Chance to Do Good, ‘To the Kéitor of The Evee'sg World: It will not be wo very long now until ‘bright Spring days will again cheer us. There are many people in this day ‘with leisure time who nre anxious to do good.’ Let cach one of those who have the fitness in character and phys!- cal ability give an afternoon of each week to gathering fifty poor boys and together in his locality, and take them to a park or anywhere else where they can have a fine good time in the outdoor alr and be under the eye of , Mhelr benefactor, Many of tho: I picked up two Did he not at the last moment buy the two Democratic votes found absolutely necessary to secure the passing of the treaty—one with offices, the other with immunity from further criminal prose- cution for violation of the Federal banking laws ? When his “imperialism” cases were coming before the Su- preme Court of the United States, question whether or not he was a usurper and lawbreaker, did he not give to the son of one Justice of the Supreme Court a high civil] PINK PEAU D€ CHINE. _.| oftice in Porto Rico, and to the son of another Justice of that same "ALOUIS XIIL COAT. ~ Published by the Press Publishing Company, 63 t« 63 PARK ROW, At 11.24 A.M. on April 20, 1898, Wi President of the United States, signed, and by signing made law, a “the Senate and Honse of Representatives of the United States of Ameriea, in Congress assembled,” which yf Cuba are, and of right ought to be, free and MINATION When that Is completed to leave 14,4 Yori Second-Class Mat! Matter. NST CUBA AGAINST HIS COUNTRY. liam MeKinley, as ed HEPES EE ROEOONDIOIEDEOS over sald Ialand, except for the pacifica- [the government and control us the to its people. + . Is there any doubt about the meaning of those words? Could} % F “SAY WAVE é a pledge be put in language clearer, more binding ¢ 3 (uo Man~ YOusHEARDY $ _* Why did we give this pledge? % | \canr soa, (Soh TT GOES ¢ Because if we had not we could not justly have made war|% \SEE You LATER $ - jupon Spain, We would have gone into that war, not as liberators, ’ not as the instruments of justice and humanity, but as common « pirates and thieves, plotting to steal and stealing another nation’s $ possessions which we coveted. $ Our pledge, and only our pledge, gave justification, character, g honor to our war. t Finally, those same resolutions gave to “the President of the ; United States” full power “to carry these resolutions into effect.” = They “direeted and empowered” him to free the island, to pacify |% % it and also to leave it. S2 3 Cuba was “pacified” long ago. Yet Mr. McKinley is still in] % $ Cuba! > And he plainly shows that he has not the slightest intention of : leaving “the government and control of the island to its people.” $ On the contrary, he is evading the duty put upon him by the resolu- tions, is declaring himself ready to repudiate. He is “prepar- 4 : ing the public mind” for the breaking of the solemn pledge of the $ people of the United States. He is seducing Congress by his famil- 2 a iar methods to share with him the responsibility of repudiating the PS, pledge and dishonoring the nation. } i This is not the time for mincing words. Mr. MeKinley is not i the man to mince words with, x Did he not prostitute the Senate of the United States by ap-|: Hae US eS aa — f pointing Senators to act as his agents in negotiating that Philippines of Connad: Beet=cnd=cabpagenarat so heee fivat ie made nismarn: treaty when in their capacity as Senators they would have to pass] % And though facing tiie glass-eye ball from his breakfast to last high ball, 3 upon it? Pe Yet he’s thankful for the life he leads in ‘Little Old New York.” ‘ Did he not reward one of the Senators whom he thus prosti-| “2?¢22 #463 we2020 0890068 OLe-¥%: POPPE COOL OOOH £9 S299OCS OOOO M tuted with a life-position on the Federal bench? SOME OF OUR PET PE STITION BY JANE GORDON. Did he not try to bribe Senator Hoar, leader of the Republican R le FIRST ARTICLE. opposition, by offering him the British Ambassadorship¢ Fass Gael dell ada thet they, selves and) . hodtal of tricks orabun-| I know a man who smiles in @ su- ! Did he not purchase many Senators, both Democrats and Re-| | many women, aniff at the mere idea | our i etenselessi nogan} SoTemsuistoans Sy tat boning Ceealantns publicans, with Federal patronage and with commissions in the army Sieve Pripar aaerh faplh aah shoulder cibleniineea Test aa ye son when T thappentes Mectateeesines for their sons, brothers, nophews ? nearly everybody cherishes at least one| And where ladders are found in a|chair in motion with my band or foot j pet muperatition and ives up to tt. Or down to it, Take your chotce, Mt {s any bellef that there 1s good common sense at the bottom of most superstitions. There js almost always a Very good reason why we shouldn't do certain things, quite irrespective of the bad luck which is supposed to follow. For {nstance, we laugh at the man who refuses to “walk under a lacler.” But if we were to walk under !t our- Perpendicular position, there bricks | he will spring up like a Jack-in-the- and etones and mortar and shingles are | box, exclaiming “I say! Don't rock @ often found also, vacant chair. It's awful luck!" Take that old familiar saying in re-| How do you explain him? There ts gard to “whistling gitls and crowing | the same foundation of sense umerly- hens." Isn't it sensible to suppose that | Ing both these superstitions. Instead of ‘they will “come to some bad end?" Why, | spending an hour or more over our ‘ certainly. One thing leads to another, | manicuring on Bunday, trying to beau- and if a girl has so little regard for the | tify and “pretty up," we should be at- nerves of her family as to indvige in| tending church, saying our prayers and that excruciating exercise called whis-| thinking of scmething holler if less tng, Isn't it natural to presume that | ragged than our finger nails. she will soon be capable of doing any-| And to sit and deliberately rock an thing from beating a snare drum to|empty chair, which would be quiet and running for office? {noffensive tf left alone, 1s to place any involving the gnal decision of the Att as Att ‘And if a decent respectabie hen were [ordinary brand of nerves on the rack court a commission in the “imperial” army? to so far forget herself as to give up|and to proclaim ourselves sadly want- ’ +1 a . 1 ii o her cackle and cultivate a crow, might |ing In that repose which “stamps the One or pos! bly two of these instances might be passed over nach ag Iepleallpz intent ibett reraceck|| care loth Verovdet Vere as “inadvertence. But so many, and the repetition of the offense would be wrung with great precision JANE GORDON. in every crisis—there can be no doubt anak dewnatch (ot sthatl] shen weuls ne “ns in every © a . made to drag out a wretched existence A a “ All these instances taken together reveal the plot and also the In a dime museum? y 2 1 Yes, I am convinced that every one Is ABSENT. plotter. more or leas suporstitious. Ye oi . : : A y mutter thing about nopnand o The nation pledged itself to get out of Cuba. In its very En Hee anes eivor} ireeE out DREAM of thee, Love, in the i villi *Kinley— hints in regard to “appalling tgnor- ] sunlight, a Vv pledge it ordered W illiam Melinley he and no other—to carry Lea CRAB CEC Utasae rece arhenii he Tarsuniar/ heer Dest raeets that pledge “INTO EFFECT! Dreaxs a mirror. the moon; ; : If only uld be consistent! But|{ And each paming thought He has not done it. Hé refuses to do it. He refers the mat- iheciwon iene tie Rat Hecere teenie ld ter to Congress. And he is seducing Congress. palette nights igelar{aeee: 5 ae The question is not as to Cuba, but as to ourselves; not as to NEWS BY TELEPHONE. W a 4 cs C5 N Budapest there {s a news telephone, There's a hue of thy cheek in Cuba's freedom, but as to our own honor or dishonor, faith or un- Jena {ts object 1s to keep {ts 6,000 the (rose; : Bile 5 acribers supplied with all the latest From thelr beauty and breath, faith, probity or perfidy. ‘ news. The service has a main wire 168 In Ife and in death, If we as a nation break our pledge to Cuba, how will we as eailea In length, and It ts connected with Some hint of thee ceaselessly Perr hn . . rivate houses and various public re- flows. individuals dare to prate to the children, the youth of the Republic, Se ane Fintiig ith ihe msrnkag (aaill ty about truth and honesty ¢ 9.30 In the evening twenty-eight editions | J I areas of thee, Love, tn ys os - f of news are spoken Into the transmitter pleasure, Shall we permit Mr. McKinley to make of this nation a self-| Tats evening gown ‘s of old pink peau| by ten men possessing loud, clear voices, I sigh for thee, Dear, in my confessed li I thief? do chine, The decollete bodice ts cov-| Working In shifts of two. The news, ia Ft confessed linr aud th erea with a bolero of heavy black lace, mular programme, aa vith] } For thy presence I long, as the SaaNEe i indeaer which fastens a little on one eide with| has been eminently successful, lute for a song, FAIRY IN DISGUISE. A LONG LOOK AHEAD. Jewelled buttons. IPTY SLEEVE: Or jis spleen earth for 4 ‘The walter girl was undenianly pretty,| ‘Dr. Fourthly, do you think people in] The wide corselet girdle ts EMP s ES. be and she did not seem to know tt. the next world wil! follow the same oc.| Mousseline de sola wth long PITIABLE question of fashion has I ro from the music and laugh- “What a your order?’ ehe agked the|cupations they do in this?” in the back, finished across the bottom just been decided in England. ha eiideer ot tavala tea B ve, silent man who had just taken| “I think It not unlikely, 1¢ the occu-| with a ruching, ‘The aleoves.are of the ‘There are 30 Many officers each Te i irear— neat at one of the tavles. Pationa are useful ones, and {f they|Peau de chine, finished at the elbow) of whom lost an arm in South Africa re het eo princes : ” f vhy | With @ frill of the same. that the quesifen came forward how eo Fring ae ve titoad, A rouple oF | dy younask ee Tem On this earth. Way) es tint haa a deep flounce of the|the empty sleeve should be worn. Fash. And a day from thy side ts a doughnuts and some coffee, *Recause I waa just wondering how | 1, fon has Secited s uF, and, the gmpty, year, “ginko Switrerian’ on rye! she}much Battenberg lace my wife would sleeve, “fitte Mau Ram DanearntplnRed ~Samuel Minturn Peck, ped. ehrilly, “ainkers! draw one in|turn out If she had nothing else to do| * the cuff showing, mi Ly aval” for a million years.” j ine de note on the left aie. to the breast. Fs TTER TO THE REOPbE AND IT Wikk BE PRINTED ON THIS PAGE, to this are able andy sympathize with tis apparent lack of he Mttle expenses which be necessary. courtesy. But when a man will delib- erately sit tn front of a girl who is manding and ogle her out of counten- ance, there being no escape for her, he iw the very hetght of a nuisance, and a crowning object lesson of the depths to which a man may descend. OBSERVER. ‘The Use of College Education. To the Efitor of The Evening World: ments of the education obtained in the public schools. Oftentimes after a boy {5 graduated from school he thinks “he knows It all,” but there he ts sadly taken, for he has a great dea! yet to learn, and that learning ts obtained by having @ college education, Young men, | which I consider incorrect. Driv-,deavor to touch upon the aubject of Mr.)to know how lady readers would have If It tn possible, go to college and make /ers should give their horses three meals} Bryan and his newspaper, The Common. | choscn regarding the supreme hour tf use of vour time while there, for in after!a dny, the meals composed of rye and | &. He Intimates that the feld of | they could be beautiful for one hour of life, if you have allowed the opportunity | oats mixed together with a small quan- | “Age! 4p but the resort of the “ui thelr lives I would eay that I certainly ob i c ."" He knows not, or graspa| should choose the hou! to Ko to college slip by, you will certainly | tity of water, I, LAPIDES, successful, t it of first meeting regret it. CHAS. E. SCHWAGERL. 183 Stanton street. Soe eaerers gitelsen scarey ret the man of my cholce. JOBEPHINE Which Is the “Bigger!” Scorce the Man Who Swears, = /for the armor of perseverance agninst The Percentage. To the Editor of The Evening World: Te the Editor of The Evening Worl: dl iter and priyation—privation of pos-| to the Editor t, Will some of your readers kindly de-| ‘The most hideous form of vulgarity sible ‘Intellectual accomplishments and| Stipe Rrening Worle clde which ts the bigger man—one whoj that man can be gullty of is the taking! privation of possible comforts, Mr. Jones | “vu! ering your reader's question as te ts four and a half feet tall and welghs| of the name of God in vain. If it be| grasps not the variance between ex-| Pcrcentage of proft made respectively 200 pounds or one who Je six feet tall| wisely considered, Is there anything that| pounding amendments to certain ever-| °7 #2!¢ of three pairs of shoes, will say: and weighs 18 pounds? =D. W. M. | go savora of folly? Behold what rever-| prevailing principles and expounding| if,Re buys @ pair of shoes for $1.50 and A Boy Wants Hereses to Have | ence Is shown an earthly potentate; and cotyped remedy to diseased souls, | vote raphe $2 he will gain 60 cents, ‘Three Meals, thow much more worthy of reverence la| Mr. Bryan {a consistent within an ex-| Trin tug coger eth, Of comt peice, ‘To the Kéitor of The Eveaiag World: the infinite Creator who has cal:ed this}alted civic’ sphere. The legitimate| seus eh ate snotber palr for $2.0 and Why don't horses have thelr regular | little world of ours into existence! “agent” Is consistent within an exalted| which te 35 per cee. een conta, PHILOS. |civic sphere. Why should an evangelist} ene o Der cent. of the cost peice. meals? If drivers would give their 5 If he buys another horses regular meals they would be- Auent Sam P. Jones. be otherwise? A. MANTOR. | setts them for #4 he pairhtor, Fp and come stronger In the future than at| ro tne Rdltor of The Evening World: terme: Bivat) Meeting, which 1s 14 2-7 per cent. of ‘coat’ petes, present. Ihave heard of many drivers} yr. Bam P. Jones, evangelist, has| To the Editor of The Evening World: Hope this explanation will give twho only give the slaves one meal a'teaped from out bis element in pls en-" Jn reply to the gentleman who wishes’ information,

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