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, EVEN Christian converts who were once M Ups ‘np Nien ih, ' 006-006-065 S-DG-3-0.3, MAP OF WORLD TO CHANGE. and there are now thousands hometans. will be more natural t should possess th: borders on the 5 1 Empire will then be continuous fr North Sea tot many bas already bullt ruiir Se \ our/own handy, But t “beyond the law, and Mrs | Peyond tho law |v that the law I do not admire Russia tn all respecin, but I thank God ever: that empire annexinz But thero time Th Many significant things w what haa just passed botwe empire will then han Mediterrun the Tigris Suropean gov "S LITTLE THINGS. few little smiles and a wit fl A few woes, A few Iittle words of praise; FA few little thorns with our every rose, A fow ilttle nights and days. ‘A few little thoughts and a fe dreams, A few little faults to mend; A few littie hopes with gleams, oA few ttle faults to A few little years and a tears, A few little pale-hued flowers And the end has come to t Uttle fears Of this great Ute life of A Cane Ney To tha/Diitor of The Weare forbidden to take the Law, ening Gne rf them. The reason such RO puntuhment a quate to 8 1 belle titled (morally if not legally) {law into his own hands. Mr. right, to my mind. He woul n Jess than a man hal he Iawitohis uid. He ‘that bit him, but could sho spots The Keller case tw slin- MARGAI lege, Pt tighkeepsie ett. her! geance w Into vides | U would not be ed tolInvoko the Jaw ugatust al Dot tral bo Set inh the ha by, ssenal will ure p many Agia the prover ert wh ter WHEAT city weat ja wuunds oduc ret for v nd well hope It Fe 1 sufte Band walts n wo are him, vestigation a gun and shoots am expected Ky which ‘ong months, » disclawed tt. NOUR to ke tes would if ‘i an fur ast crime, | out taking away any aman j«| Barker has 0 take | Prominene ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON. AFTER ALL. 7 & on, the south Empire rn will . Who has yet and p — COUNTRI Rereny wn in Afrise 1 the foo! countries NG WORbD REA knew Shi and wh 1y the mst tro in A good Wo! tn) ib Pan h for proof or the story, If n of G to coast Une sporting mble-down weowhat the eons sympathize with ven had the story been true he could have wreaked a dar greater ven- Was bound to make “The Paths of Glory Lead but to Defeat. nd have se ntrot Sulu ts a nation | ne, Nas Ae which « Dur- Mee Milas © visiting king up one of Es nae ae DP LRRD RHEE: THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 7, 1901 -PULIA MARLOWE, AS KATE CAREW SAW HER. VOL. 4l..... Published by the Press Publishing Company, 63 to 8 PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mail Ma:! QUEEN WILHELMINA AND SOME MINOR MATTERS. The wedding bolls of Wilhelmina drown the last ecltoes of the funeral bells of Victoria. A most interesting figure is this young Dutch woman, and no doubt hundreds of thou- sands of women who get their knowledge of courts from fairy stories and novels are envy- ing her. They don’t know that a constitutional monarch is a sort of prisoner of state and that this young woman never knew and never will know the greatest joy in the world, a joy not denied to the humblest peasant in her tiny little kingdom—the joy of freedom. She is good to look at—not beautiful and majestic and “queenly,” but a nice, fresh-looking, well-bred-looking girl. She chance to make any “breaks” that cannot he covered up. The Dutch people have been assured that she and Duke Henry of Mecklenburg are “simply crazy” cach about the other. There may possibly be a little something in this, although it is not com- plimentary to her intelligence and spirit to accuse her of being in love with such a dull, heavy, stupid person as the young Duke whom her Ministers selected as her official husband. He is the pitiful figure in the performance. The members of the Dutch Parliament pretended to be much moved by the senti- enthusiastically voted honors and titles to the German princeling. But when broad and still “HEINRICH DEAR” MUST ASK HIS WIFE FOR POCKET MONEY. him from the public purse were dropped the sentimental Dutchmen firmly refused to de- prive the Indy of the pleasure of making all the financial provisions for her beloved one out of her own little private fortune. “Heinrich dear” is poor. He will have to live upon the bounty of royal or at least very noble blood have tl high and noble courage By BISHOP J. A, THOBURN, OF M. E. CHURCH, CHICAGO. NoAsia the church has advanced the {not build rallroads unless they Intend to) pire of China, conalat ‘cross as the crescent has retreated. | « ‘ ot {¢ of Eastern and ral Asia; the E pire of tho Indies, onsisting of Southern Asia; the German pire, and last of all, a mighty empire in the teland of Australia, When peace is restored the Chinese will prace Christianity as no nation ever did before, The millions in that wallet empire will pour out {nto Born Africa and perhaps South America, They will not bother the United States, for the cht like the tropical climates, In Lorn with [te 200,000 square miles of jand and only 1,0 0 inhabitants, there Will be ample room The population of that land ts also kept down by the cus- tom of compelling each man before belng eligible for riage to kill some person and secu polished skull for his ec a bride's parlor ornamen: yunhels of} Austra. | y great oud never her hus: man, must AW J. wrinm,!? wildly: im Wed hus- 1 closer je grabs up dod. ‘Then an old green shade Is used Fant tea gown. The panel ts nik Kauze. ‘The clasp ts one of rand enamel rie the story in any eased by ape priesthood and out of decent ¢ Barker who im- Vilization. Barker ety the march a rele of of Oakland, N, J. Ave Accused Wrongly. {The Rveniag World: been accused crimes as Mrs. charged against Keller, a have been afterward proved absolutely Innocent. Jealousy, love turned to hate, or mental derangement occastonally caurg auch accusations. Mr. Barker should not have “lynched” Keller, The Preachor w defen! hima ‘LIONIB, Wife Should Have Neen si To the Editor of ‘The, Byeaing Worlds To the Bay Men hi of such Barker has 1 the men a ead ria aba ythe Law and driving his enemy | ‘her family name from disgrace, Binve entitled to a cha vit LEX TALIONI.” _ Granting Mra, Barkers story to be true: to endure it. ‘All well-wishers of King Edward should caution him against the advice urged upon him by Mr. Bryan and other distinguished unoflicial privy councillors to the kings and rulors of men. If he should try to free Ire- land, stop the Boer war, abolish the gold stan- dard and inaugurate socialism, he would surely King Edward’s business is to say what the peoplo’s Ministers tell him to say and to sign the papers they put before him. Original remarks or actions are not desired and would not be tolerated. Gpe-e-e~e-0n0-0-ene-ene—e > MK. BRYAN AND OTHER ADVIs- ERS OF KING EDWARD. > > STREET OARS A few persons were injured by the explosion of a heater in a cable car. This creates great excitement. Yet not a few, but thou- é sands and tens of thousands of people, are far | more seriously injured every day in our street " cars by the ferocious assaults of the microbes e that swarm wherever human beings are hud- dled together in foul air. If by some arrangement of microseopes the passengers in any ordinary car could suddenly see these myriad microbes at work, the terrified and shrieking haste with which that ear would be emptied would make a panic from an exploding heater look like repose itself. Never take a car when you can walk. The figures which express, these stupendous combinations in steel and in railroads are far, far beyond the power of the human mind to understand, Nor can they be trans- lated into any equivalents that are within reach of the imagination. @ » FIGURES THAT MBEAN No NG TO THE LIMITED HUMAN MIND. \grerereremeenenenonene-ond: It may be that there are human being: capable of dealing wisely with these infinities of production and distribution, but it seems most unlikely. Certainly it is dangerous for men to try to handle that which they cannot possibly understand. This may be a too narrow view of the matter. The race cer- tainly must have developed many astounding individuals when the directors of the Brooklyn Library venture:to demand as just a few of the qualifications in candidates for the humble post of librarian “breadth of vision on important social and scientific questions,” “ex- cellent executive ability,” “wisdom in practical affairs,” “great tact and skill in dealing with the public.” If the post of librarian can insist upon such splendid talents, will doubtless make a creditable monarch, whether or not she is in-| 4 telligent. She must mind her Ministers and she will rarely have a|: mental side of their Queen’s marriage. They |? broader hints about providing an income for} ¢ | of his wife. That is a position so painful that few young men not} x Terry, Weber & Fie} Jeffries couldn't make most stige tnat Julia Mariowe makes it in- | apark and trothal gifts with adora’ nt 008 SHd24980E00 o A PRINCESS IN- TANTRUMS. Bernhardt-and Goquelln, Irving and , Fitzsimmons and & When .Knight- 3 hood Was In Flower’ an intereating @ play—not even with the ald of a blo- ehipwreck, a-balloon axcension ing tolrnamem between {. Fitzsimmons and Mime, Bernhardt. s only by the force of cone of the fascinating personalities on the ‘0 acts, and after that idity of the thing arth and scarcely a her genius can atruggie Miss Marlowe Galette a! perfectly startling. re sm, uy the French King's be- neerity, to of tears 2SOF99SVTTDDE-D0-394-0- EBE-846-94-3-496-256-440000000008 1am a young girl about seventeen and considered by many people aw hand- some. At present 1 am stopping in Brooklyn with a lady friend. Each and every day a certain young fellow passes the window, and by the way he acts I am fnclined to think that he would ike to get acquainted with me. I ala would ke to know him, as he is a very man- nerly young gentleman. me how or what I can do to make his acquaintance. IDA. HE young man ts not offering ‘ou any compliment by his vulgar ttentions, The best thing you can ‘do ta to keep away from the window In the future. If the gentleman wants to make your acquaintance he will find a respeotful way of doing It, and ft will not be by any street fiirtation. How to Make Acquaintances, Dear Sire. Ayer Tam a young man, aged twenty-seven, tall and strong. 1h: earning $14 per we pert musician, [ would like to get mar- rled, but, In the firat place, 1am doubt- ful whether I can support a wife on my salary. 1 do not drink, smoke or chew. In the second place, flirt and very bashful, 1 hay aweetheart. Please advise RTEEN dollars ts certainly n large amount, yet 1 have known I married people to Hye on les« than that sum and to live decently and aap- ou are a membi fy Join som chureh you inekinany GENEALOGICAL. Kind:y Inform | HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. social clubs of your own denomination. If you are not a churchman, I would suggest that you go to the Y. M. C. and tell them your case plainly—that you lack roclety and that you want to e the acquaintance of young men mi and women in your own standing in lize. od ANSWERS THE QUESTIONS s# & OF PERPLEXED LOVERS. And there Is nuthing te be ashamed of in such a declaration. On the contrary, it in an entirely natural condition. As to your bashfulnese, that overcome best you must yourself. The best way to jession 1s to resoiutely mix in society. Your musical ability: whould be of great assistance to you In this direction. An I Dear Mrs. Ayer: T am In love with a young lady wt, hota a very responsible position ne> to where I am employed, and I am ver rious In my Intentions. She will ec cept my Invitation to noon-day lupe! and be ex‘remely. pleasant to me whe we meet. Yet when I ask leave to cal’ she always evades an answer. How ca Twin her? EROY. F I were in your place, I should cease ] paying this young lady attention, excepting In a general way. Bhe will imniediately notice the change in |your manner, and will give you the op- portunity to ‘ask why you are not pers mitted te call upon her. 1 think If you do not ask her to lunch- con any more she will be apt to in- aulre ax to the change In your manner, and that will give you your opportunity, lerent Maidem MEO(H Gs ARACTERS NO 1, The Rise of Mrs. Nation To Be a World-Power. = HIF rise of Mrs, Nation to be a T Le able phenomena spread on the pub- platter by blecding Kansas, Who A explain it? Mr. Nation i silent. ! predecessor in the wifely affections of Mr, Nation is dead. Where did she get that axe? Did the present Mr, surely the post of manager of a billion-dollar industrial combine or a two billion-dollar railway combine ought not to go abegging. Mr. Barker urges in extenuation or ex- cuse for shooting Mr. Keller, it Is re- markably strange that on the night of the occurrence Mr. Barker, on returning home, @4 not discover that there war rhmothing wrong wich his wife. Ho cer- tainly would have detected something unusual In her manner, and a little juca- tton’mg of the sort which, ha’rald, later elicited the story of the aspault from would have been fruttful of the informa tion at that time. If Mrs. Barker could have kept allont immetately ‘after the awful experience and entirely concealed her distrers, why In the name of comin acnse did she ever open her mouth about ne ‘0! WOMAN'S ‘VIEW, ‘A'Case of Wounded To the Haltor ot The Rvening “| To! tne Kantor ot The Rrecing World: |, If Mrs: Barker ja the hysterical peredn|, Io my opinion Mra. Barker aNdwed the the reports make her out to be and she, ; the Rev, Mer {1 underwent ne) terel! i (which [do not Lelleve), she did a great wrong t her husband by breathing one worl of the occurrence to her husband or to any one else, She wrecked hie whole f{irture happiness; whereas, by holding her tongue, she would have been none the worre off, would have saved her husband from sorrew and crime ant she, personally, had committed no sin, the question of confesalon does not ter the cage, An for the husband, {f he Had loved her or had had any senso of decency or family horsr, he would have kept the knowledge of the affa'r to him- xelf. and mot ;blagoned it abroad by a public shoating:, f CALVIN KIBBE, Hampden, Mass. Only. “He descended from an old vavallet DERS DISCUSS MRS. BARKER'S STORY AND MR. her mind, and In a fit of hysterla con- cocted that which she {magined. They yay that the Reve Mr. Keller overstepped the bounds of propriety a year and a half ago, and she acquainted her hus- band with the fact lately, Now, really, do you think that a woman could keep a at long? This Is 4 point In the favor, MARGARET F, | To the Fitior of The A clergyman jx the expec of the Moat High. Whosoever attacks the servant attucks his Master. To pubticly disgrace and shoot such x man —a minister of the gospel, a member of ! the: xrandest vocation on carth—and all on account of one unsupported charge, is a graye and terrible crime, Even au be posing) that: particular ‘clergyman to ally, Darkerhad!-no\ right,’to) cast ol malnistry in' general, omonds, Nation, with almost olarsic wisdom, n the arrival of the crisis when his fretptul spouse saw in the domestic mieatchopper the means of liberating a bewildered people and say no word, or was he speechlern because he feared ber aggressive tendenctes might be utilized on the conjugal hearth? If #0 it was a narrow cacape, and he knows i. “Come forth, Mr. Nation, and tell us all about it," we exclaim, anl we imag- {ne we hear the devoted helpmeet nar- rate the successive steps by which his wife has attained a niche in the Halt of Fame. Her houechold economy, it ap- pears, was close, but suMctent, withal. Her tusband did the chores, set the type, acted as steam engine for the newspaper press he owned, was pri ter’s devil and spread the posters. Mrs. Nation edited. Whenever it became necessary for some one to supply -t and, through it, on the. holy cause of m ‘itself. Kor fools are apt to Judge retiglon by its teachets. one of them Is unworthy they scoff at re- ligion, forgetting that If there were no real diamonds in the world there would ¢ Imitation a N CLERGYMAN, Teo Quick with To the Faltor*of The Evening World: Without stopping to conslder the truth or falelty of Mrs, Barker's statement to her husband, 1 cannot help thinking that Barker's attack on an unarmed man without giving him a chance to aya wy we tna case Uke this, in which the accus- Ing person is sort of particepa ‘criminis by_reapon of having kept. the facts, se- Mr, Barker world-power !s one of the remark: | means for the regulators who regularly invaded the nowspaper office, Mr, Ne- Uon: meekly offered .bimsclf as a saori- fice. ‘Thus, Mrs, Nation may have been tarred and feathered, beswitched and nearly lynched a ‘half dozen times—BY PROXY. Like 6t. Paul, she bore her sufferings nobly and without repining. But the time came when ehe dropped the proxy business, She- seized the hatchet and went forth. It {s related that the inspiration was due to her Gus band. Once when she was trying to de- capitate a chicken Mr. Naticn gave her some good advice. ‘Mistaking her grace- fol swirl with the chopper for aggression Mr, Nation exclatmed: “Maw, why don't you use it on the saloon-keeper?" Mr.’ Nation's ready wit turned the hatchet elsewhere. From that, moinent the saloons were doomed. The cam- paign is on fur better or for worse. When will tt end? Mr. Nation may have been asked that question. If: he was he probably repiled: “don't. know. When Mrs. Nation starts heaven alone knows when she Will stop. Not: on this side of—well— New York.’ EPHEMERIDES SELTZER. BARKER’S. CRIME. South in euch cases ts scarcely broad enough to cover his. MARRIED SIXTEEN YEARS, Why Didn't She Tell the Bishop? To the EAltor of The Evenras elgt If Mrs, Harker, of Arlington, N, o~ tells the truth, did she better fer own condition by, confesuing to her husband, And did she! better the Sondition of Bo: clety in, the. town-whereishe: lives? Or, still granting ahe ts: truthful, would ft not have been better for all, $f.the light had to be turned on, it she had first made her complaint.'to the Bishop of the diocese? | If he had-falled to take cognizance, hat ie pealed to Keller's chu ca now stands, (hore (a the charge, an denial; a husband ,in a. mii marked physically. for life; and Bome of these things | ‘ < n ¢ 4 ‘4