The evening world. Newspaper, February 18, 1901, Page 10

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T is a firmly establishe! and fright, exert an unfavor sence upon the health of 11 Sometimes the influence {x only tem-|largy class of victims Porary, but often It lea affections of the nervous system, sanity and di Ono bf the most potent factors b ing to that class of emotions producing ‘disease 1s fear. There are individuals with whom fear is a mania. Onw man fears the lows of his fortune; that of hin position; a third the of some member o jot fear ts formod by those who are In]t constant dread of some disease. But not only tho presence of disquict- ing symptoms leads to the fear ease. Impreasionable persons whe about the symptoms of a diser Mable to imagine the presence of nome cof, the symptoms and that causes In]ease may cause functional dlsturban them the fear of the dreaded di During an epidemic of cholera or small- “functional disturbances are capable Of) Sugceation, with or without hypne writes Mrs, ‘Thaddeus Horton, in the | Gctober, Ladies’ Home Journal. “It was) tt is Built) by Willlam Byrd, a Virginian of Cust Virginians. ‘The greatest of his many | ten love affair Claims to distinction was his beautlful and beloved daughter Evel She was educated in England, whither | f ‘whe accompanied her father o all of his trips as Colonial a fas presented at the court o She had many lovers and ‘Fo the Bittor of The Prening World: thelr opinion of a business man who made all employers in his office and factory work all day Lincoli Birth- day, and when one asked for the half Gay was discharged? This same man bribed the engineer into keeping the steam up all day by the paltry sum of HMA RRNA AGT By FERDINAND G. LONG. RRA AMARA RNA AAA APM NMR PATON AACA CONIA If you see a new specimen of the Human P.rker write to The Evening World about it. wiches other people have to eat. He handles every sandwich on the counter, smells {t to find ont if it's sweet, pokes his fingers Into It to seo if it is fresh, and in divers other disgusting ways shows that he 1s @ prize member of the human porker family. emotions, particularly su Preming nature, like gric sto permanent |rands wie tong: | wearched for any other | Strued into ath |persons of his family, and so] Yho under A distinct group among the victims o | droghobis SESTOVER Is perhaps the most se Deautiful of all the celeprated | Colonial homes of Virginia,” | | positly ale om of the over mo WRITE AN INTERESTING bETTE Had to Work on Holiday. selves, My oindid opinion of a many who marries a widow, eapectally If who | in hie senior tn years, ts that he f6 @ tit] mon relzres.” Some one haw sald Being amar-jor wrong, Im wi Will some of your readers express TS opinions of him, ‘This same clgineer all JF along refused to work, but at alght of ithe greenbacks (and only %) he was - - ape easily Jed to stay. Seo the effcat money | 6 °t, Eller of The b On some peryle! 2 WORKED ON LINCOLN'S DAY. ASE. ° ly affectepy proddis t that) pox many persena are serio h of a dee {by the fear of thowe «ise sorrow | ‘The open discuaston of degeneracy ne Inia} newspapers and magix viduals, | rise to a new never dev bee of hydroph persons who | ine] Dealthy dogs gly resemt is no doubt that the fear of dts in the human orga Whether thos e from men ofl pny with whom she had had a child but awoom she "for some sOURNE to arrange a Indifferent to the matoh, ars of thetr from Cousin Evelyn from her futher ¢ Martha Dandri tn love with of who and nus upon her by ded of a broken W rests in the old nda and family, heart, and her body burying ground at W ELEVATED PERSO (Written at 6 F the young man and a white Fedora 2 the corner of 4 car and Feb. 1, ut 6 F to a spiritual city he will get to the “He don't cake no notice of me when|to secure Nim admituun, Tm pushin’ de baby aroun’, witde thought! I wonder if he thinks I'm married.” Monday, tn this Ont hor-] have been tn v: THE . Wao Stood Up with a Bundle. subject for Bloomingdale ried man myse'f in the same boat with | Words to 6 of the | Mtand to- men, {f you winh to enter | acknow fag the woman | "lo ts etunding on tt. CE. FARR, who 1s old enough to be your mother The Stingy Neau Ag and cast your not for ono of the mafd-| 1 the % Also, reaiers, kindly express your, enly beauties of whom this work ts full,| 1 4m convinced there n JOHN E.R. c, | thing in the namo of John He makes the owner of It stingy, Whene led he usually y (of which he bountifully helped himself and, as he 1s of a religious turn of mind, during Lent ho proposed my denying mysclt the candy, and he «ould deny himeeit ciara, saying he would drop the money in a % bank which I had, and when it was full he would divide the amount between us It-no sooner was full) aod @ senior widow, past. Youn “matrimonial ranks" Ned and Mac, If the day of King Edward's corona- tion has not yet been set why not make it the eamo day on which McKinley will) be reinavurated? Surely tho Proaident of our semi-Republic and King Edward ‘: have very much in common. iquite agree wrth Carnegie In| stac are paddling in tho samo canoe, the young men of the present |Let Hanna and Chamberlain join hants ‘won Baer than them-Ipences ¢he aes. end, lifting their voices: Ned and ag of © may xr Jposition for that ab vidual. ‘That has | served in cases OF abnor blue | from imaginar: ree inn conseauien of fear requires a great deal af tact and firmness To ME such persor “| te tel y are perfect 1M) healthy agine the symp S| ioms of which they complain, would " them neither convinces nor eu 1 nis to apparently ac eribed by the pat and then i jexeminatio oritatty, tlent in an sbeolute groundlesmneas of his fear nvine Usually prote effectlye. sult a fengtous and esfperter *'A BRIGHT GOWN. sith gold braid WNBA AGA, ot UMAR RRR IA I REA AAAG ae RANMA ARAN a ibe pe eine tial Y DR. ALBERT MOLL, VIENNA UNIVERSITY. Many nz organic changes te not yet firmly: although tt seer quite vuthorit tend that q pretiis- rt ally existing, to make a thoroul hep manner of t Persons sufferin from fear ef ome ‘MARTHA WASHINGTON’S FIRST LOVER, | serious disease snout in reful to con fan. Quacks and charlatans may] stmed to be mor: she toa great deal of harm in such case hetr- | the miserable ones false and unlawful and war-provoking “benevolent. assimilation proclamation” signed William MeKinley and dated Dee. 21, 1898— could be brought together in one place, and that William McKinley could be dri ‘ country, An emceedingly attractive costume inay be made after the above design, 4 f a bright-colored cloth Published by the Press Publishing Company, 53 to 63 PARK ROW, New York Entered at the Post-om Becpnd-Class ball Ma’ CRIMINALS AS HEROES AND MARTYRS. FOUR ITEMS FROM A M’KINLEY “GLORY-BILL.” In this town, whenever a man with any influence whatever is put on trial for a murder or other conspicuous crime, we invari- Greet-merenereeees ably see a spectacle that would be Indicrous OWA OUR were it not so deplorable. CRIMINALS ARE : GLORIFTED. He is carefully trained by a sly, un- (resented scrupulous criminal lawyer. He shouts out, “My God, I am innocent!” He denounces the agents of justice as a band of conspirators thirsting for his ruin. He arraigns the District-Attorney as a persecutor with a mysterious personal grudge against him. His lawyer backs him up in interviews, signed state- ments and public speeches. Al] the/half-baked sentimentalists join in the uproar. And yoy presently ace a vory respectable public sentiment created in tho wretch’s favor. : Before he was arrested ho had opportunity after opportunity to clear himself. Beforo he was indicted he could have easily got off if he had been innocent or even if he had not been obviously guilty. At his trial ho dares not go upon the stand because he knows he would surely convict himself out of his own mouth. Yet you would think this murderer or robber, as the case may be, a much-maligned person who ought on no account to be punished. He is probably not guilty; if guilty, he is a decent chap in the main; think how his wife and children love him; maybe he was crazy when he did it, &e., &e. : : his would do great honor to our tender-heartedness were it not that we are overlooking the poor creature whom this man wronged, are forgetting that our maudlin, mawkish sympathy is an encouragement to crime. t only is public sentiment easily led astray in this respect, but also the law itself is violently prejudiced against justice. The criminal lawyers have altered it again and again, making more than a score of serious changes in the past twenty years, every one to help criminals toward immunity. ‘To-day it is not enough to prove a man guilty “bevond a reason- able doubt.” He must be proved guilty beyond the most unrea- sonable doubt. Tt is not enough to produce evidence that satisfies common sense and common justice. Evidence must be produced of such a kind and in sueh a manner that it meets the requirements of a multitude of petty technicalities deliberately designed to de- feat justice. Education, the inerease of good common sense, is the only rrted public sentiment. In the course of time we shall doubtless become discriminating enough to reserve our sympathy for the victims of intelligent criminals and to reserve our en- couragement for those who, though sorely tempted to murder or to steal, yet have the pect to refrain, As for the perverted laws, they can and should be remedied at onee, The criminal code should be revised—not by the red-tapists remedy for pery and the criminal lawyers. And the fundamental principle of revision should be that a man who has been proved guilty is presumed to be guilty, not pre- nnocent than if he had never committed a crime. Here are four items in this year’s Congressional appropria- tions for war: For artificial imbs and appllances, For headstones and burials. ' | For bringing home the dead. For additional soldiers’ homes. Suppose that all the dead, all the maimed and mangled, all the diseased and dying, all nd all the misery—all the consequences of that weed there to look at it. Do you think it would trouble him? , indeed. Ife would cast his eyes up to heaven and say in oiliest tones some of those copybook phrases of his about “the mysterious ways of Providence” and “the glory of self-sacrifice for Tle does well to have himself inaugurated amid the flashing of sabres and the gleam of gold Ince and the roar of artillery. He stands tho theory that civilization rides upon the gun- earringe, that shot end shell are tho noblest missionaries of progress and that war is glory. Pagel daeak Tle does not stand for peace and humanity FoR WIMSELE. H and civil virtuo and the other principles of freeeeeneeeeeees the twentieth century. How pitiful he and his coterie will seem in the perspective of HE ARIANG A MILITAILY | history—how small, how vulgar, how contemptible! th omy country!" of The Bvening Work! ust ever my Jolin Hen brought a box of That's how we ven't the courage orn while Agul- R TO THE PEOPkLE AND IT the heavens (a heavy lift. that), sing; the door flew open when the money | breeding place for various microbes, The Make Htny do as wo pleaso while the flew into his pocket. It was really|rear platform {a the only comfortable Rixht| magical, I thought he meant, of|place on the modern car, and I wish course, to buy me u little keepsake !n| you would urge the construction and smmemoration of the event, but two|use of a car which will be all platform, dvys after ho gleefully told me how he|having no seats and only a series of took his brother to tho theatre andjratis for hoalth-loving, clean’ mep .o blew him off afterward, lean against while smoking their per- JOHN HENRY'S EX-GIRL, | fectos, Yours, BILL, Here's an Odd Query, What Makes Us Greatt To the Piltor of The Frening World: <3 ‘To the Eder of The Prening World: 1 would be very much pleased to be} pray tell me, readers, what ts {t that informed by readers better informed! makes New York a great city? I, for than Yam if a female child ahould be| one, beltove the metropolis to be the allowed to be Kissed dy ao grown! greatent city of all the world, and once man? If so, how old should tho child] oF twice since’I've been tectated in the de when the kissing should no longer be} country have T.gung the good old son; permitted? JUBTYNA. |\epake ma back;to New York town.” A Rear Platform Fie Never since 1 reached this forsaken To the Edttor of The Evening Werld: Jeraey wilderness did I realize the smail- The heated car !s a nutsance, being | ness Of a great, city and tho greatness 4he-direst source of-colde and a prolific | of-a eountes.4owa, I ask our poor, way- ees LAN By KATE CAREW. a FARA AMAR RAGA AAA AAS SP RERASHE VUES see epeyee enn iene peppery tey ine eyes ES ae SUMP SMS ee a et eyes PSE ENS: pee Sees ENN ott A HAYSEED CHRONICLE. » strung on a sadly fr 16 che-ild" melodrama—such 4s, dmiration in the character of an incredibly generous ve known better than to live fn such a place, The next Millie James, who impersonates Simplicity Johnson (from y children on the stage this scason, but this is the only one Pearls of satire on village Hfe “I string of “1 “Lovers’ Lane.” and broad-minded clergyman, who ought to h most interesting member of the cast ls Mi the orphan asylum), fit to be seen or heard, There have been ma ANSWERS THE QI se vt st) OF HOUSEWIVES. over the top of the ple. Place again in ” oven for a few minutes for the meringue to brown. Veal and Ham Pie—Cut the meat into wide and over an Have ready half as much cooked ham cut up in the same way and six hard botled eggs, Pefore you begin the UESTIONS Some Fine Recipes. I wish a recipe for a good lemon pte | the use of corn how to roast a han and whether the strips half an inch before using: and for a good meat pis; alxo for cooking Brussels Make it by 3 and refuse bite alin n pint of water until you have up of sugar, one cup of Ww: tablespoon fuls rind of one arge lemon, and one soda cracker. rand the egg tos t and bones, ed, a tablespoontul of strain out the a emall onlon min Beat the sug: 1 the Julee and rind the flour with J m supplying the galt), and ok fve minutes before setting aside other mixture. plain paste, pour in the mixtu __ HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. quick oven for thirty minutes. jespoontuls of pow- For meringue, HOW TO SEAT 6 OR 12 GUESTS. e this arrange- nowith a bit of bu roof 01 xo on until ail the lemon Julce on an gives a dinner UPPOSE a wo! to elght peor and that there are four women; find four men fn the party. they should be seated at the table, Indieating where a lady should be hour and a half for two hours If lurge over Wd keep the oven ste: } placed, “G" the chatr of each gentle- jaye! |e the first hour. ather thickly dry, and cove: ‘a paste made of flour 4 it in an earthen dish and set moderately heated oven, | W take off the crust care in, the knuckle and rasplngs t of the ham, or Where there ure tw Plan will be found satisfactory: nished with’ cut vegetables, ¢ about four or five hours t Or if the hostess wishes to place a lady at elther end of the table this ar- e It. ‘Soxed In this way the flavor in mus than when both How to Cook Brunsels Sprouts.—O: quart of spre salt, one-half he hen put them h must be bolling. arter-teaspoontul them tn cold water, ie water, whi noda with the saucepal vered, twenty minutes, then ar bled Boll rapidly, & saucenoat of WIbb BE PRINTED ON THIS PAGE. Inj people, and who take overything tn thelg, Now, what should the working people! back metropolitan friends to eniighten y umbrella after it {x found again? New} the mean time he hus been making use ofsthe better umbrella which the Indy Rave him tn return for the one she lost, and has worn It to plece: greatly oblige me if they will send in thelr opinions regarding this Leta heur trom “Little Old N. Yorker’ upon the question of why it 1s great, and £ close, still whistling “Take me back to dear Broadway," and = hope {t will be soon, too. On An to the Fresh Young Man, To the Biltor of The Evening World: If the young mi 2 W YORKER. To Feed Hungry Animals, ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: If people would only help the poor ‘Think of the cats and doxs Why don't poo. n (or, T ought to sayh: ‘gnoramus) who camo Into one of the! ‘offices of a large downtown office bulld- ing on Friday ufternon, and In answel lto the polfte question of “Who shall ‘ray:called?” made an awfully ungraces ful salaam and sald “John D. Rocke- bowing himself. out, will call again my employer will break) his neck and throw him out of. eh twelfth-story windo: uals think that the: luen stenographers when they a But the |Girls, don't ith FAitor of The Evening Worl gp with 100 passengers was wrecked There the people found | clothing and bread growing on trees. ! Now, five of the 100 pasecngers took | everything for themselves you think the 9% others eaid to this?! Now, pleture to yourself that we are not driven on an Iskand, clothing, bread, &c,, do not’ grow on trees, working people have, to produce {t all.’ ‘Thon we find a couplé of mon who have. bis|had nothing to do with the starving In the atreets! Me eave what they have Joft from the tatle and place in the gutters at night? Think how many starving animals would on an Island, jer in ‘disgust, These Indtvid- A Questton of’ Umbretias, ‘Fo the Editor of the Evening World: If a lady loses an umbrella’ which she has borrowed, and replaces {t with be hpuld. the gentleman umbrella she Jost: demand ready, and be sure not to miss ke JOCKBE?

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