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ee Botan 6 ORY’S TIMELY CARTOON. FATHER KNICKE-RBOCKER’S SPRING Publish Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York aa Secon DEVERY’S “SHOOT QUICK!” IS AN “Shoot, and shoot quick, especially on the Bowery,” is Devery’s s order to the policemen of this city. n, trying to arrest three men on that thoroughfare, lawle A patrol rew his revoly ng to break ind it docs not appear that the dit over the head of one of them who wa rand fir nst the men was not felony Hieer’s life v away. ‘The charge ag: yas in danger. In such icr if not more learned deceeeseeeeeees authorities than His Honor the Chief Justiec wi: vaw as rot of Mulberry Strect, a pol ciremmstances, it has been ruled by hi man who “shoots, oor auici? walneal ces ae ronicrmes. ¢ and shoots quick” is himself committing a Groner ee eremenenenen erime. A Deputy Police Commissioner who thus deliberately and vehemently ises the whole foree under his authority to break the fy the repeated rulings of the courts is a dangerous Taw and de official. The policemen to whom he ues this lawless order will obey it at their peril. A COMMON SENSE RULING. Tn admitting testimony as to handwriting into the Kennedy 1] Judge Newburger has simply acted upon the may tri n that law comnmon sense, Part of the proof which the prosecution must produce at a mur- der trial is motive. In the Kennedy ease the motive alleged by the proseention centres about a certain check which, according to the prosecution, was made by the defendant. NEDY CASE We anticipated blossoms and an earthly Paradise; Prerere-ene-0-0-e- enon one What we got was mud and puddles and a bunei of rainy skies. So we wait the month's conclusion, and tt can't arrive too quick, 4 man’s handwriting is just as much a part of his identity as his face or his voice. And to enable the jury to judge whether or not the handwr ing in ‘ 4 ats For the merry month of Mny this year hns sold us a gold brick. a question is Kennedy's it is necessary that the jury be familiarized a iehinbihiidteirieih fefeleiet with the handwriting of Kennedy. How enn this be done? THE PERPLEXITIES OF L VER HARRIET HUBBARD “AYER. tid a fine mie set ore ee Ot a ee K. First, Pam of a dif [the same age, Once we had a auareel| "These witnesses may orm nothan she and she will toparted is for awhile, but liter we =e ‘ . < 4 me unless 1 am afraid we} opinions are important only as the reasons whieh they give for those eCBusthinkit as Tdo net lave her oe . . you think eee ey [Opinions appeal to the sense and judgment of the jury. HL aE Phe jury, not the handwriting experts, decide for the purposes Ww . . . eumre . you do not love the girl that ta rea-}of the trial whether or not Kennedy wrote the incriminating check. BUTS eb ae a And as handwriting is, when studied earefully by an intelli- ly in aman te} cent man, a clear index to identity, if Kennedy did not write the TH Wile! Let the Man Do the Courtine. Deer Mrs. Aver: ‘There ts a young fellow | have known aince last summer. Then I moved, and since that thme he han been writing mo once or twice every week, and he has often called. But he doesn’t call regularly O sane young man, tt seems and I can't understand it. Me never would think of asking a girl marry him on 38 a week. Wait) are slow about speaking thelr thoughts. | Un! yeu are abl port a wif Flease advise me what ty do. AT ML | fore you think of tukins E advised, ant du not ne the | step i | right to inquire wh Kind to Be Croct in ‘This Case. | 1 ica gentleman means lio aha not be believed by the jury. Their made up woul be Yn No matter how larc shall always have the Ch way, and then get lost anid: ieleleiniel-teieieic ie rice KICKE 1 conspicuous the nes Idiot in our midst whe street signs may be made. we will ask s policeman the erful taf cheek the more diagrams the experts show and explain the clearer REGULAR SESSION. was found- crue : syria will become the jury's convietion that he did not write. it. kh Annine: “Centen De ely t are and wished to drive a young man away s man of twenty-one and when there { ha Aah A aitie staaeioter tetas ; belleva from a girl | mix st to her that] Fam engaged to marry a young lady of | love has gone. 2 5 A court of justice wishes to hear from] if the party wio kicks about the tele tir > part 4 abe should inquire of the young Kent Pater rite eeaealy tara Bi alba ise anGheCOntenieeleInt 1 ant man what his {ntenttons were any and every witne who can throw real light ye ry taterated on a ce HL. WILLEAMS. Let the man do his courting his own NEW YOR. K | YPE 5 upon the case. These handwriting experts, sie* anything about th at Unjust Women, Bway, If tt does not suit you, you wi Je ieee z ea telephone company he wo é ‘ sented te : adietty not find it difficult to relleve vo " . wringing forward not their opinions but the | gsour veins annoyed with f wort time ago his attentions. Attempting to force the muite but, powerful’ witnesses of the ind: |troust22) 1 onty: wim Nae matter ts the very worst polley 4 ~ EG x Ie - sees i 2 . wt SHinUMnini Make Up the Little How, writing itself, are a necessary part of every criminal ease in whieh | te v0 talogie thoroughly and ean f Fr sx, oe | i H Ireland. ‘ieged that when t linss on Dear Mrs. Ayer handwriting is an issne. Tam nineteen years of age and I dear- mundwriting is an issue | Klek Against Dine Laws. rs they were many tmes Jy love a girl of the sa We hat Su AES MSAGIG SHURA insta paITT RADI SGe of Me he hands fa little row and I left her, 1am long “ ” most «Aw there conductors iaeHilcaaker again. We NEVERTHELESS, “IT PAYS. alancera cel for the mone Kept steady © months, penta =e pee us tt is a rare thi BROK . ara nh or under certain: © to see the e her a Dayton, Ohio, is famous the world over for its model factory— aye thathaalnotiticen G letter. Tell you want {0 be that of the National Cash Register Company. LAR wek . friendly again—apologize for your x . ernoons on the building is set amid green grass and foliage; sanitation and | ——— ae “A GOOD SOLID ONE, TOO : ; ; 225) SES RE part of the quarrel, and Necessary’; 1! She will doubtl ht are well looked after; bathrooms, lunechrooms, elevators what moro hts her of women was § flerate of a conductor's a i om with eas make up. re chairs and a piano, a library, lecture halls are pro- SSE G77, iy f ARAN Pen ey pene Edad COD ETE OES Ga vided. In the workrooms are comfortable high-backed chairs with . 3 : fal = = Wek . er sir. Ayer 5 Pri ane into one of the most beautiful village streets , hot stools. foot res Se ataaiaient 3 given for the neatest homes have engaged to a girl with wh much in love. But there a EXTENDED MOURNIN I’ is not generally kn SI ir} turned a squalid such high far e only enjoyment they have om MK in Amer ys and holid Philanthropy? Not at all! “Tt pays,” ch Agatn says the President of the company. British regiment hax 54 ing for more than a fs the old Forty North Lancashire 5 wear black blended with the gold br: In memory of Gen. Wolfe, who was killed at Quebec. OR HOME Well, there are labor troubles in Dayton; strikes, demands, refusals; tinally a lock-out. ay take it for granted that omfortless barn; that the pro- whistling, guying, ins who annoy ery turning. y are to be classed. yw curs that bark ato At once people a thousand miles a the model factory will now beeome oe! (ff THE KODAK FIEND. pot Drietors willistel spending money on their employees.” There is —_—___—- even talk about “ingratitude. the watstling imbecile is tho a DRESSMAKERS. This ieee Fiend + What has gratitude or ingratitude to do with it?) Tlere was a most ardly freak. Now the splat up and down RTT Heated a" 5 f ers from Bellevue or elsewhere should The Evening World's Daily | Seek x his prey in Got mpany shrewd enough to see that short hours, healthful, pleasant A string on these freaks and supe Fashion Hint. s i T eae surroundings, instructive lectures—whatever helps body or mind— s tho nuisan RASOLAS. ( | ‘own, em They ia % Klek Agninse Horse Care, ! | Butlishould .welpray mean better produetion, mean economy. A dozen strikes, twenty bad utes pile ete To cut this chemise nightsow ie Shel loek-outa won't chango that fact. 1 kick against those antiquated veht- dium size, 6 prey to apprais' | Propel 3 ; i cles, commonly called horse cars, Ww: We'd send him to Black- a roprictors of factories anywhere may confidently follow the in my estimation they are not even good. yards each 0; if si le of the Dav sg eee ough for horses, Tam unable to un- ‘The pattern email} |f well’s for thirty « example of the Dayton company. “Tt pay hawbantunctocdn’ ite But since toward -GhiRGS ASAE SUrTer TE = New York can tolerate such relics as tho i % ‘ Now TO TEST s. ere tn fresh. Or shake the past and suggestions of the Spanish Ine we have leaned, : UST whon they are moat needed you| CEE near th roand If tt te addied tt quisition (inasmuch as trey are ine | We won't care a snap for may fall to recall the eastest meth-| pyit Rureyn like water. | Another 4 struments of torture) as the ol-fashe | ict shotie os of testing the freshness of egks.| frenheat will-eink first: thore foned horse cars now operated on anume snag In Uroaking bor of the crosstown streets. | hava ma why th s yet, but if ces In pertect and frame the your ha for use 1n heard various. re ones should al not been retired the sun| arate cup or saucer, fo that If not pe i i a ¢ aistinety | f fresh the contents T suppose you are very proud of your lineage. b, ty Ans Insolunle Citenlty : | valk, andthe without spotling th don't care to boast, but Fthink chat I can truthfully say that my family] void tke to be put on touch with tho | ol a Vit, the chances | omefet, or whatever js be! oWns as many railroad Mnes as any family in this country.” parties. who thoroughly underetand situation, as { will mysel¢ be glad VISITOR, ly Story ru 1 Mrs, @.eas-| plied, cold:y, “The delay was fortunate. was very young, and had peen raised | And 9 at Inst he roe up and sald, ‘This!—that he came—knowing that by to- me the opportunity to defer al without a mother. Lam afraid he was |{s enough—t will end It. 1 will go away | morrow he might summon strength to Jays’ wonder for yet another day, |a «mere selfish brute, and when to-day and will never trouble you! co"-— ! AIN'T 12 n-| Let us do it thoroughly while we are|he wanted anything he had to| again,” “Near cca RTT inted me—|doing tt. What shall we discuss that] have it. Te saw a «irl, and| Ho paused, and she stirred a little, but] She raised her face and looked at rer ee i alee Harding take you| will bring a pleasant expression to our| loved her, he would have aded [he could not see her face. him, Her Ips trembled like a hur An’ mamma says It's redder faces; that will make us seem not, through blood to win her—and won her.) “And s0, he went down to the boat," | child's, even while she was smiling at pe lel ee morely tolerant of one another, but ad-]1 think he was selflyn, even in winning | he sald, steadily; “but even when dis; him solutely absorbeg, devoted"— her, but he was beginning to he un-|foot was upon the gangplank he turned | "Ned,'' she murmured, brokenly; “the “Let us talk o® love,” she sald, with| selfish—he was beginning to be a nobler| back and ctood leaning agalnst some-| girl was very young and Inexperienced, boy—and there was great need of it. He nhing in his utter misery, because hoe had| Don't you think she ought to have a out to dinner, still, one}crimson over her pale face. “Remem-| thought that he was always good, and|all at once grown to ba a man, aad wax|chance to try over again? And you through it under certain ctr-| bering our desolate Gome—my desolate| who was always right. Ie thought that| suffering all a man'a agony, That Is & to the ur window the ne the hos! saing, and and smiled feo awk Ut te ime weross toh its awfully how people Her, spanked me «ll [ howl'd An’ den 1 stratched jt mo'—a An’ f d Y didn't know—that she was In the boat— inatances, One hoa but to remember] life—we can surely talk of that.” he was to be regarded always—no didn't) tho end of the story of the boy—except | hidden, away: at it is the last time he will ever be] ‘Thank: he sald, cantly, ‘“'Bhall I| think of regarding her. It js one of the| that the man looked up and saw that afiicted with her presence, and much/ tell you a story, In order to make {t| saddest things that people who love one| foolish little Mrs. Lessing waving her with Clare with Ray- ner of them came Rigdon, and Mrs mond Blaine, and ne % It made me des so awful mad; "Tause ev'vy body knows— The girl at che window had not changed| may be barne, Really I scarcely ex-| strictly impersonal? 1 will tell you the| another truly and tenderly can live to} hand at him from a carriage, and re- oe 8 © 2 « large) will de sent for 10) her position in the least, but Gen,| pected to see you hero to-night. Was I| mory of a boy,’ be allenated, isn't it? They sald bitter,| membered that doth of them—he and Laban tn} hooked,’ id her eyes wero at drow'd‘onimy: own nose vy . Blake was suddenly conscious that the|no: led to suppose that you were to start| She moved a little, enough to drop her| heart-breaking things to one another,|the girl—were to have been her guests rkling rt oe . : may: be doolanabue doen} manssy| —Kate Thyson\ Marr, ‘The World, ! lovely young face hed lost something of | (or Europe to-day?’ cheek to her hand. ‘and ft was because) the boy loved her| to-night. And such a hungering, came Sts color. 5) _U) “Ksatart to-morrow instead,” be re-] ‘The boy fell im love," Be said, "He upon ‘him to looks} be. 4 . Khas