The evening world. Newspaper, February 12, 1901, Page 10

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se basal THE PRESIDENTIAL SPECTRE. SELF-INTER H |OBT. people object to trusta. Why?) Largely because they do not ‘i ‘own them. If a man really be- “Weves that a trust is a bad thing, and, were given a majority in- ‘ock, he can fairly call his bwnlobjection and that of men Ike Nii eelf by the name of pubite sentiment. f.ihowever, the critic t# trying (0 do @oing on a large scale, and objects tu y thelr practices because he ix ut the Joris | 4nd! of) the transaction instead of i ‘winning one, hia words count for no fing. No matter how many the Of men\may feel as he does, they ‘mo right to call their feelings by Dame of public sentiment; nor can t ‘amount of Il!-considered and [noperatly Begialation. It cannot de 1 peated that those things wh @repared to maintain ar ‘but not at his own, cou: forming tho general sen © @ommunity or jn producing Public movement. The essential mark uf a gentleman. @istinct from accidents of birth and clothes, of manners and spece' Geadivess to accept trusis, ev Qhey are personally a Lr FOUR PALATABLE PUDDINGS. ep aang) Mixotogether In ay [Eve's Pudding. © jasin etx tnrge ay} Dies, peered; i, | @hopped, the juice of a lemon and bait} @ sind grated, a good pinch of vault, ©. wo teacupfu's of fine bre: @ne toacupful of very fi @vet and u teaspoon Cs ) Boda divvolved in. sufficient Yo incorporate the whole Inte a Mass, Bir thorough “buttered: mould, and be of currants, ties ed and dried, | @ pound of seeded ralsins, quarter of al Sound of shredded cit Put all in aj taixing bow! and #ift over two teacup. 8 Of flour previously mitted with une | @ half teaspoonfuls of baking pow- aa Mix Fiveliredded suct, then stir in the best molasses und tw swell and add Sy to make a thick batt (@'pint should suffice. Grea: Ep mould well; pour in the battc Nsteam for four hours are approyed, atir a tablespoon- mixed powdered spices through ——_-——. in well a cupful of finely | & 5 g | BY ARTHUR T. HADLEY, In much w In our woctal and the foutt t< in 4 mien, and theref: prmer is no tase lefective alse honor, code and not in e the tase of the Hle one the battor dims pt Mas with sw strongly Muvored with lemon or ream together Railway Pudding of milk 1 favor with, n cooked divide oneshalf with jam and her Hghtly on tt, _Fria’s Pudding. prexs the Holl some apy 4s you de for ple sauce, Maver te Hd of this | PRESIDENT OF YALE COLLEGE. For a political jeader who has fixed standards of right, and a belief In the capacity of the people to accept those standards, the times are always ready, Calhoun and Clay and Webster and Lin- coln differed i” their opinions, but they ke In the subordination of the vt met and Mnally solved the problems of reteenth century te that which wo must carry Into those of the twentleth, POPULAR SONGS. “Take back your gold,” SUBJECTS OF INTEREST i@ Tarn the Hose on Carrie, WBlitor of The Kvenisg World: aM kept e valoon and Mrs. Carrie Ni camelto New York with her hatchet Teuld happen: , Wealth In his lite, g1 Sat t 1) would} mulut-milllonatros would do weil te Dithe aldowatk hose realy for the;fow the exampl nove men like Andrew) Carr world would be better of, 1 When lo step: he han enough. knows. oO set by Mr, Carnegte iatarm and promptty turn a full) and retice with a few millions, nnd not not colg Croton on the agitator ends. As atic is out on a cold prusade could she object? VEIGHTH AVENUE. \Mnow When ta stop, Miter of ‘The Evening World: $0) Your ‘question, “Has 7 Fight to make a profit ‘in amoney jn one day?” Hson Raza right (o make as yaa He likes, but Ido think HAW. When he vhas cnough, WAY Lo Aton stich When to pop ly. ir. Mor-, ae try ty own the earth, KR. 1, Melrose, N.Y. Anent That $9,100,000 Deut, Tw the Editor of The venting World: No man can honestly make $9,027.000 in e day any more than he could carry a third of that amount away personally if ne had ance, No man has a Hight to get more money In a minute! than he can count in a the divine command th of his brow m: cate. The nv money than hi his comfort and that of his family he is , because of lile: vfodling it:trom those wo go unfed and an ime legitimately for] ! ‘The world may not e thelvevery mau a living of the kind he {t does owe every man hin brew, the only thing which hue st command to » If you think ‘There misery tre pray fo that enets wala vl Ho te the Ghet Aan le hones! Che |x not. COMFORT, ‘To the Blitor of The bvening World: ‘There in a family in fn—man and wife. Th ‘They ha oni ven ax much washing and so mther, She ts beaten Can anything be done to com: ere to send her te school? hor wh can force her school If abe doesn't want to. CONSTANT. | [Complain to Moard of Education. he house I live a good Income (from *, whom they keep at home nd do moat The claims thore 1s no. one living send her child to OS PARR RENDER NAB & the Press Pubitahing Company, 6 to 63 t the Post-Ofice at New York as Second: CHICAGO'S GREATEST TREASURE— THE STATUE OF LINCOLN. When you go to Chicago do not fail to visit its beautiful Lin- coln Park. As you stroll or drive about you will presently see a statue ond a group of people looking at: it. Should the weather be bad the group will be small. Should it be a fine day the group may have expanded into a crowd. But, good weather or bad, there will surcly be a group before that statue. Join the group and look at the statue. It is the figure of a man. A big, slouching form, loose yet powerful; ungraceful yet splendid because it seems to be able to | bear upon its Atlantean shoulders the burdens of a mighty people. The big hands, the big feet, the great stooped shoulders tell the same story of commonness and strength. Then you look at the face. It is difficult to keep your hat upon your head. What a wonderful face—how homely, yet how beautiful; how | stern, yet how gentle; how inflexible, yet how infinitely merciful ; how powerful, yet how tender; how common, vet how sublime. Search the world throngh and you will find no greater statue than this—the statue of Abraham Lincoln, by St. Gaudens. It is Lincoln; but it is also a great deal more. It is the glorification of the Common Man—the apotheosis of Democracy. As you look at that face and that figure you feel the history of th ehuman race, the long, the bloody, the agonized struggle of the masses of mankind for freedom and light. You see the whole hfs- tory of your own country, founded by common men for the common people, founded upon freedom and equality and justice. Here is no vain haughtiness, no arrogance, no supercilious looking-down, no cringing looking-upward, nothing that suggests class or rank or aristocracy. Here is only Democracy, the Common Man exalted in the dignity of his own rights, in the moral splendor of the generous recognition of the equal rights of all others; the Common Man, free and enlightened, strong and just. The statue is in the attitude of preparation to speak. What is that brain formulating for those lips to utter? The expression of brow and eves and lips leaves no doubt. It is some thought of freedom and justice, some one of those many mighty democratic thoughts which will echo forever in the minds and hearts of men. Let us recall three of those thoughts: ‘The authors of the Declaration of Independence meant it to be a stum- bling block to those who in after times might seek to turn a free people back into the hateful paths of despotism. “That this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom; and that government of the peo- ple, by the people and for the people shall not perish from the earth. “I say that no man is good enough to govern another man without that other man’s consent. I say that this is the leading principle, the sheet- anchor of American republicanism." These were the ideas that built this country up from a few ragged settlements trembling between a hostile sea and a hostile wilderness to its present estate of grandeur. Not tyranny, not mur- der disguised as war, not robbery disguised as “benevolent guid- ance,” not any of the false and foolish ideas of imperialism. But ideas of peace, of equal rights for all, of self-government. Lead these McKinleys and Hannas and Lodges and Beve- ridges and other shallow admirers and imitators of the vices and crimes of European monarcheys to this statue of Lincoln. Let these apostles of Perfidy and Plunder look at a MAN that | Pubitshea by Entered | ! 3 * A STATUE WorTH LOOKING ar. rs OF THE spPmit OF THE REPUBLIC. Grete eee eee AB eererenenenee ened THREE oF LINCOLN'S oo DESIDE A MAN AND AN AMERICAN PUT chy seep eereneneree + they muy know how small and contemptible they are. Let them look at an AMERICAN that ? they may realize how base, how utterly un- wonhy of their country, are these hypocrisies and suppressions and sophistries; their plots : to degrade the Filipinos; their plans to break ts the sacred promise of the American people to the Cubans; their assistance to England in her war upon the repub- lies in South Africa; their schemes to waste the substance of the people at home and to destroy liberty abroad, to debauch the moral sense of mankind, On the most-looked-at wall in every American home there ought to bea picture of St. Gaudens’s statue of Lincoln. Tu the House vesterday it came ont that we still officially reeog- nize the Transvaal. We also recognize the Orange Free State as an _ independent state. Pa ITIATATLEO WS Why, then, do swe not, does Mr. MeKinley | BREAKING not, keep the nation’s treaty-pledged faith with FAITH TO j DESTROY thei? s nee Mr. MeKinley has permitted and is per- ting the violation of our neutrality Jaws, lus let England take from this country horses and niles, 170,000 of them to date, according to the official figures, to mount her troops in South Africa. : Tn this conntry alone can she obtain the horses and mules that will live in the South \frican climate. Without these American horses aud mules the British cam- paign in South Africa, which even with them is a partial and in- creasing failure, would have wholly collapsed. But for Mr. Me- Kinley’s indifference to our treaties, but for his friendship for Eng- land and his hostility to the republics, the Boers to-day would sweep unchecked throughout South Africa. VEGETAULE Poor, SUFFICIENT REASON. You can tell’ an English actor by his} Tess—Oh, she'll marry him, stride, Jeas—Why? You can tell a low comedian by his} Tess—Oh, it's a lide: ners. And the ham tragedian Jeas—What?, Nobody could possibly Is known to every man consider her shy, i 1 ie of extreme ahy- ind See: bbpeetitse and the toughness of isos Saree ee loxtremely, im ad b the urld deseri# of the West could be purchueed at @ Mero nominal price—at a HE LITTLE OLD NEW YORKER. FRA UG ff / A | & “f Se NNER EONS PEON OIE OO NOS Ne as wages ‘By T. E. POWERS. ERR R RANA RRRM AAR RARA IRI T HS RPA ALARA KAA RANAA AR AO MAAN AA AAACN RMN AA AN Ard The fat-dweller’s fond ‘of the fragrance of flowers, But his fat’s no Central Park; So he must dilletant on‘a rubber plant In his “Little Old-New York.” Sree rnnes MODERN COAL GLUTTONS, N the last ten years the race for the | transatlantic record has been far more interesting than any other pe- riod, for it has been In this decade that tae great cual burners have been buiit. It ta also the ‘“twin-screw period" of ocean navigation, and with the twin-screws have come greater speed, more and heav-| maki: f ier engines and corresponding increase o! boiler power. The American liners Pa: and New York wero the first to embody the new and radical departurus from the old methods of shipbullding, and In many respects they marked an entirely new era in shipbuilding. They were, from the firat, brilliant successes In HE GOT IT. “Say, ol’ pal, open dat door an’ gimme a handout, quick!" Now Money May Do Geed. a the Witter ef The Bfening World: read with much pleasure Bir. low- svgKestions to rich men for doing good with thelr wealth. But there is far better means of alleviating poverty and overcrowded conditions, Miles of price that with the cost of Irrigation and tmprovements ndded would still be less than millions of but poorly productive 1in4s In the East. Who has ever crossed the continent and docs not know that irrigation ip all that's necessary to make thoxo arfd places most fertile and pro- ducuve? There arc. enough of such lands tn the Weat to support! 10,000,000 of people and will at no greatly distant day support that many. Why not begin) h the hundreds of thousands living In, ae midst of watroundl nen Rt ee bught THE speed and seaworthiness, but they were also responsible for a new ern of coal consumption that has at last brought the steamship companies to the point where they are anxiously looking for some let up. The Paris soon broke the record from New York to Queenstown, in in much less than lx if 30 knots an The Teutonic and Majestic, which followed, though larger in every way. slower in speed and less expensive operating. With only 18,000 indicated horse-power, against the 3,000 of the Paris, the Teutonic consumes only 3” tons of coal per'day to develop her 191-3 knot: The tvo magnificent stearrers of the Cunard Company, the Lucania and the Campania, wich soon folowed the) Jaunching of the American liners, estab- lished new ocean records and new coal- uming Ngures. The Campania, with 19,000 tons displacement, had 30,000 horse- power, and developed a speed of 22 kno! with a dally coal consumption of abo 475 tons. The modern ccal gluttons were In full force by this time, and the steam. ship companies had to confess that the lowering of the revsord meant not only Jargee, ships, but ‘heavier coal cost. The Kalse' helm der Grosse, of the North German Lioyd Steamship Company, was) da: (AMEO OCEAN GREYHOUNDS. BY GEORGE E. WALSH. built on lines which fully recognised titin fact. She Is % feet longer than the Cam- panla, one foot greater in beam an@ has - 1,00 tans mcre displacement."Her fastea: trip was made at an average speed of 22.79 knots, coyering In one period of 2) |. hours 380 knots. Nevertheless, ber horse- power was rlightly les® than that of the Campania, being 28,000, against’ the lat- ter’a 30,000, and her coal consumption trifle ore, amornting, accerdingto the owners’ figures, ta 00 tons a days The Katser Wilheim der Grosse, the Oceanic and the Deutschland are the three modern steamers that offer the best comparisons and represent the highest effort of the best marine arch!- tecta of the day. Differing somewhat In size, shape and general equipment, they nevertheless present features #0 much alike that valuable lessons can be drawn from them, The Oceanic exceeds either steamer in the matter of length, beam and displacement, and has the same horse-power as the Kaiser Wil- helm der Grosse, but !s much slower than this former record-holder. The Deutschland develops 35,000 horse-power, against the 2,000 of the other two, and to feed the engines sufficiently to maintain a %-knot speed she requires the greatest amount of coal ever fed to an ocean steamer, HARACTERS No. 2, t. Puddefoot the Divine in His Great Poodle Feat. PUDDEFOOT, Puddefoot, where fore art thou, Puddefoot? to which the domestic bull pup might 'd rather be a dog and bay the moon, ‘This Boaton minister is a rare bird, for to be @ woman-hater belongs to many men, but to hate the animal on which woman dotes Is, indeed, to be a hater many times removed in bitterness from a persimist, for the average man can onty pity the thing loved by the thing he hates, The Boston divine js a married man, as becomea his cloth und creed. He in vigorous, well preserved and looks as !f he lived on more than locusts and wild honey. It 1s of him the story {» told that, relating a harrowing incident of the raflroad from his pulpit, he ex- cialmed: “And then felt relioved!’ I bellove the ewear by proxy of Brother Puddefoot went into the list with Uncle Toby's onth. There Is nothing like your viggreus swear to emphasize the man that is hin own man. Amt I'd rather be swearer for thin healthy Bostonian than be a receiver of dogs for the poodle market. By the way, doc! not the Hottentot isticg “Deliver us from the power s EPHEMERIDES SELTZER the conductor swore and I BY READERS OF EVENING physically and morally that they will not be living at ail? JAY BEE. A.Wife'a Duty. To the BAltor of The Evening World: In: the. United’ States the Inexurablo opinion of the public carefully circum- scr bes the married weman within a nar- row circie of domestic life or, dutl Is it’necessary that as acon as they are .to|he subjected to! the constraint of public opinion? Tt is {requentiy Imposed upon them by tne efforts of their own wills. Calle Preacher a Crank. To the Eiltor of The Rveatng World: ‘That noted divine of Boston, the Rev, W. J, Piddefoot, who so terribly ar- ratgned the’ Amer.can women through the columns of The Evening World, has an excellent. chance of being awarded the cake! of ‘all’ the fools: in erent ae tha, ‘WORED. best and must admirable traits in ‘}American und English women, which only a crank, bordering on IMlocy, can find fault with. Furthermore, the rev- erend gentleman Is talking through his beaver. What does his reverenco wi anyhow? If every pet animal, dog, cat and #0 on down to the canary bird, be exterminated, would that eliminate hu- man suffering? Would it make the poor Well-to-du? Would it provide work for the unemployed? Would It cure toper parents from drink? As no rule domestic animais are fed from the scraps of the table. Woukl children eat raw Oshheads and gnaw bones? Would the hungry allan boy in the clergyman’e pathetlo story have been better off it) the lady tn auger had not caressed - um? And) why are children: to beg in Boston?) Has Boston no socleteg, to plaiebiideen: re tere \¥, dees not 'y do ) Pls Lie

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