The evening world. Newspaper, May 8, 1901, Page 10

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‘ MARRIES THE WORLD: WIDNESDAY EVENING, MAY 8, 1901. NEW VERSION OF “RULE, BRITANNIA!” By FERDINAND G. LONG. Cette 836 asoeQd4006 ‘|SENTIMENTAL SIDE ISSUES NO. 14.695. Published by the Preas Publishing Company, 53 to 63 PARK ROW, New York. Entered at the Post-Omice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. IN OUR MURDER TRIALS. Judge Newburger’s refusal to permit Dr. Kennedy to sit in court between the pathetic and distracting figures of his wif old father is a most sensible move toward restoring an atmosphere of justice to murder trials. The presumption—in spite of one conviction—is that Dr. Kennedy is innocent. ‘The presumption is that there exists a state and of facts which he eagerly wishes to be thor- tev or guaran} Oughly investigated in order that his inno- MURDER TRIALs{ cence’ may be clearly established. The pre- toveeeeeeeeeet sumption is that he would scorn the assistance of any devices & distract the jurors from a calm investigation and -2-0-0-0-0-0-0-0 0-800 > | IN THE INTER- %| cannot take cognizance of tho sorrow and sufforings of his relatives. 5 : 4 ot} 3] benefit of it. i ce If England’s ships rule all the sea, $-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0=6- And Morgan's Trust rules all the ships, “Rule, Morgan!” will the anthem be, > o to work upon their weaknesses. But if Dr. Kennedy wished to resort to such devices to save him from justice he ought not to be permitted to do so. The Court It is concerned only with the deliberate murder of Dolly Reynolds and with the question whether or not Kennedy swindled her, plotted to kill her and killed her. Another move in the same direction would be to curb the eloquence of criminal lawyers and to bring them back to the facts when they wander to make touching appeals to the jury to think of the miseries of the family of the accused. Slopping sentimentality is out of place in courts of justice. Innocent men do not need it; guilty men ought not to have the MARK HANNA’S FRIEND BRYAN. It is a long way until the next Presidential campaign, but this talk of men like Hanna and Fairbanks for the Presidency is si nificant of the situation at the moment. Only in an intoxication of commercialism could such men be mentioned in connection with the office of President of the United States. Hanna in a large way and Fairbanks ome MR. DRYAN, in a small way stand for the sordid in poli- PROVOKER OF 5 e And “Rule, Britannia!” meets eclipse. |} exrneuns asp { ‘es, for plutocracy, for the purse paramount 3 ere : s10-016-004.8090000002,|1 BXTREMISTS. } over and contemptuous of principle. “Prin-|% Sees een eoeetiehe Net ae ciple be d d; the only thing worth talking QUESTIONS OF ETIQUETTE ANSWERED BY s rd about is making money,” is the natural platform of any such man. HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. But even in this moment of money-madness the Republican B8n815-3-9 84-04 all cakes or thin bread and all you require, Jd Mold the Candy? The i Dear Mra Ayer: Kindly let me know ff It {a rieht to serve | cold roast beef at a home wedding | where a cold lunch {a served and whore other things, auch an turkey, ducks and | chickens, served? vox OLD roast (qa and ham are usually selected aw cold meats for a collation, but there no reason why you should not have roast beef if vou feel Inclined. Etigmette of a Wirthdny Marty. Dear Mra. Ayer: I received an invitation from one of my lady friends for a bir which [ could not at previous engagement, = me If you think tt proper to present. M I would be quite Proper t to Serve Cold Neef. ‘Ten and se Mea Ayer proper to take a box of candy to If a0, who should hold tt, ef Also, when #& vung man takes a lady to the theatre procure the best seats in the only $10 per week a Is the moat prefer- the afternoon or h 2G. G [" {s proper enough, although It ts not considered the very beat form, Let the indy hold the candy, tf she and {f tt Is more agreeable to are of It yourself. The young man who recetves but $10 HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. |, weok tx vory foullah to attempt the its of a mfiltonatre. within your income and make yor itures, Including theatre ardance with your postion In life. You will recetva much more respect werth considering and will be saved much more trouble and anx- ety. Tam not an onraman, but T should may whenever It!» mont agreeable would be isn reenbly the proper time to go rowing. ng of my stay | Ely T ehould what would fend the young Indy a. prese gifts of this kind should al voluntary. Je Dr0; The moment present-giving become perfun {tis in bad taste, Refreshments a Plenaant Civility. | , Dear Mra Ayer % Tam going to occupy a country where I ays boarded. Lots of people from peop! nted with the hands pointing at sev- QUERIES anv ANSWERS } enteen minutes alors CADET. \ OR HOME DRESSMAKERS, tier tue iterara. race, DACRE R that the J was it? = ts Suppe 1 Varies, The Evening World's Daily ;), Fashion Hint. Sunday, mal num’ 12 Yes Mere. Pace A READER. Ww wom eleetrocuted at Sing It fa 0 te Correc teh ts init Dw VMORO BAILEY, |r GRE LIKE HER. To cut this princess petttcont dium size § : inches wide, 61- when high neck 4 used, 65-8 yards Apely te Yours rs Mrs. DuMlckus ts very fh Why, | saw her a well enough en tare 8 ee ease ees | Does Sarah Bernhardt play tn Engiish? T was born on June 6 1841, What day heats of the heart tna | Stsenenonesrere-eeee Republic might well have moved his audience See HOU a Re nee emi (anthers tor light and leading that his audience only applauded, each leaders would not dare sink so low as to discuss such candidates That are wont to start in revels and to finish up in crimes. Se LED eaiorid. AY-DAY CHORUS AT BELLEVUE. By FRANK PARKER. POOd: oo * SOS We have practised on our patients till we're trained down to the minute; And when pay-day comes to Bellevue, most distinctly we are ‘in it.” So we'll tell our great-grandchildren of these happy, care-free times tei rans sek are oe THE EVENING WORLD'S BIG LETTER CLUB. Mr. Bryan is not hostile to commercialism. He is hostile to Closer Friendaty prosperity. By fighting every effort to bring the Democratic} 7 th E1Hor ot The . . . 3 Indl to see a plea for el party back to a poliey and principles that will attract the sane and tetendant Pa CeAUR ESAT CaAHUMINTS inna 8 en country. ? , ing in ideas that make every man} ie ay ingiian & with a dollar saved or invested look upon him as a menace to prop-|4s France spoke a kind ws {9 ie a. | lietle bullled Sp: erty and prosperity, he makes commercialism bold, encourages it} with our usual asinin! to feel safe in going to extreme: ungrateful and low. Let th a 5 P publica become closer and close; The strongest ually of the deplorable and only too dominant] henceforth and forev forces in publie office to-day is Mr. Bryan. Baad) a Une ening W uppeal to the sober, by pe Anent Ca Py the Elitor of Tue Evening Workt Aowhy it Is, but we Edwin Markham—*‘Man-with-the-Ioe Markham’—has writ- ort ten a poem worthy of a place beside or above the one that made him |!» bemoaning tal punish g-o-cec-c-cecee-c-es famous. He | MI, MARICHAW TAKES W viewed the gambling-mad —"Babel come again with Stock Exehange well for the crime or death woutd soon fr rather than to Kill them who are preju- inst this view LOUIS A, KERPEN. The Train Robbery. To the Eultor of The Evening Word: A story woithy of the James brothers |foats tn from Arkansas, telling of the of a tmin by ne roboing of tho safe and the shoot- Ing of two men by three masked ban- Such things were common enough | ishment shrieking crew to cut the dust and drink the | must go is undentab’ ? AGAIN, roaring wind.” He paints these gamblers |{)"_' Br tens Gree eee eereene } ate, Some any exist to-day {8 a scar on the face of fs exaential | cur civilization, Where are our police, ur Pinkerton men, our sheriffa? Where sonment woilld do Just ais the courage of train crews, passen- struggling—“And all for what? A handful of bright sand to buy a shroud with and a length of earth.” And having considered their ys he says: “Thrice happy they who, far from these wild hours, Grow softly as the apples on a bough; Wiser the ploughman with scudding blade Turning a straight, fresh furrow down the fleld— Wiser the herdsman whistling to his heart, In the long shadows at the break of day— Wiser the fisherman with quiet hand Slanting hls sail against the evening wind.” A beautiful, fascinating picture of the serene and shining days f the out-of-doors. It makes the city man pause and sigh. But— The Tough Waiter. well, Mr. Markham himself scems to be unable to get any nearer Thoasialwarthyrouth to nature than the populous parts of Brooklyn, OLS ae Fotham ‘Town. ST ee With Nie strident voice and his slouch- Sti ti H . : iride, Said Mr. MeWinley, pausing at the border-line of Mexico: He falides hts orders through th: “Phere is something in the traditions of this Republic, something in its precedents, that does not permit a President of the United States to go out- Jar the nerve side the United States during his term of office.” And his manner's ac tough asthe meat This touching respect for the precedents and traditions of the Uhatheiceryen: fun. 4 TOUE to tears, But he has made the country so familiar with the sight of himself reverently poring over the Constitution, the Declara- tion of Independence and the writings of the delighted auditor doubtless saying, “How like McKinley!” LOVE STORY. m, nanetally.”* have expected her to do in the Becond was mine, his wife's ut to visit them, tng | you oan induce your friends tw kee ‘wee all)uasito ehink. |< {your father Anding out what a miserable lone of Kenneth's uncpuntable friends |to converting the heathen, Tho men|ed to rush around the ta) the woman ho loved and who| had been solemnly sworn to keap the land women congregnted in the bad| him forgivingly, while Kenneth's con- mocame to the rescue as he Sather needn't know anything about | neth,"" she told him, "that ts, If! questions of his father in-law very; that old Mr. Harris wus presently led /of his stay in Mountainville. “It Isn't that I don't ike the old man, | quiet. I've got a ttle money on hand wide when low neck and|denrle,"" he told Marcia, plainly, I've saved out of my dressmaking enter. always Iked and respected him, even| prise and we'll do what you'd call ‘put- aisen 23) to 40) | when he raised such a row because you | ting up a bluff’ while father’s with us.” $ persisted In marrying me. i'd wel-| When Father Harms appeared his 1d, come anybody you loved, as you know, | daughter and her husband) were living ’ But it ‘breaks i end. atele as tee. enie memmestabia S) hotel Mountainyitle Boneted, and every; elder of the church at home that he was, itently that his daughter wai and secret of the deserted Uttle frame cot-| places were far too smart for old Mr.| sctenes smote him a little. But he pact- tage in Back atreet. Harria, and much maze wicked. The re- kilfully, into the bargain. home to hts daughter man unwontea! Ang when the sata father-in-law, credit the landlord of the Iroquois Hotel| “I think I'll go back home to-morrow, | cia a check for a thousand dollars and hinted at payment, and Kenneth knew | Kenneth,” he told his eon-in-law, shame- | himself a slip of paper worth o similar that eomething mst be done. Thet af- | facedly, the breakfast half over the next | gum, with instructions to wait no longer . for the Eastern capitalist, he tithe tenet. ‘de bees Q TERA SG sURHOR E SECOND SALLY. Mr, and Mrs, Kenneth Semester reside New York residence now- with every possible luxury and ;convenlencve to be secured by money at fled the conscience by making much of |! Kenneth parried the too-searching | sult of the afternoon's experiment was|the old man during the brief remainder | #day: ‘At the beginning of the third week of | “Ondition. shortly after seaching home, sent Mar-|¢ the influence of atron| innocent-and| sers and agents, that three men can thus rob them? A few more things b like the McCormick kid- nd our country will Gesery, Decome the aug! 0c! ¥ TASPATER. For a Mid-City Athletio Fiel@, ‘To the Eslitor of The Evening World: Why can't New York have an open pace somewhere in tts very midet (Ikke one of our parks below Central Park) where wo cin hold ball games, ath meets, te. miles “in ball: journey a horror. y not have a Pinnodrom field Hienithere, in our midst?) Who will a te Beate ESE CTENN, A Real “Defender. To the Pittor of The Evening World: How would it go next time to have @ cup defender that shall be made repre- tative of our nation by being built subscription from the people of thie country, and not by one clique? Let every patriot give $1; bulla the best yacht that money and skill can suggest: christian her "The People” and send her forth to victory! I and a acore of my friends stand ready to contribute #1 to such a cause and I belleve every man does: FRANK POLK HAR’ 1. Anent the Molinenx Case. ‘To the Btwor of The Evening Worlds ‘There !a now the usual revival of in- terest in tho Molinoux cas: Now. whether this man be cuilty or not, he has suffered too much by the law's de- lays. Over a year ao he was convicted. If guilty, execution should aave follow- ei. If a chanco of Inrocence existed @ new trial should have heen granted at once. In no case should ho have lain wn prison a whole year, with nothing doing, Lot us set some legal Carris Nation to Werk with a hatchet, smathing our eilly a LUXURY FOR OLD MAIDS. I" Sweden and Norway there are sev- eral old maids’ homes, and at least one of them Is a most attractive in- stitution. A very wealthy man, dying more than 200 yenrs ago, left most of his fortune to the old mnfds among his descendants, A superb home was built and furnished and managed by salaried trustees, Any old matd who can prove blood reletionahip to the founder of the institution Is entitled to a place in the home, She has a private sult of rooms, a private servant, private me-is, and ts subject to no rules save such as ordi- nary good behavior demands, : THE PHILOSOPHY OF A KISS. q E lingered ere they parted + Ne And besougit of her Bho faltering replied, $n, } A question ‘tls of this: “Would you reverently impresa ft On the forehead, 'twere respect; On the hand, it ts for friendship; Don’t you think you'd first re- fect? “On tho Ips tt might be ether, Or perchanco be both, or more,"* He paused in meditation tilt She thought him quite a bore. Then he looked; she stood before 4 him, Her little hat tipped low, Her hands clasped tight bebind her, Could’ he keep her standing so? ‘ _ Anse W. Wer,

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