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Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, 58 to 0 Park Row, New York, Hntored at the Post-Oflice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. VOLUME 42.. NO, 14,867. WHAT WILL JEROME SAY NOW? ‘ In his unavailing effort to escape the force of the tes-| 4 timony which clearly traced the death of James Mo- Auliffe back to the West Forty-seventh street police sta- tion Dietrict-Attorney Jerome can only cry out that the |} ‘witnesses are “bums” and ex-convicts. What will he say now in reply to the clear and con- vincing analysis of this defense by an able and im- partial legal expert in this morning’s World. ) The conviction of Patrick on the testimony of a self- ‘oonfessed murderer is too recent not to have suggested Htself to the mind of the District-Attorney. { He ts not ignorant of either the elvil or eriminal pro- ‘cedure of this State. He knows that in civil proceedings conviction for crime does not exclude a witness, He Knows that the Penal Code declares that “a person con- wwicted of any crime is notwithstanding a competent wit- ness.” He knows that both Glennon and Bissort were con- vioted by the sworn testimony of women of the worst reputation. } And yet, knowing the law as he does, he has not only refused to accept the testimony of competent witnesses ‘but has used the power and influence of his office to pre- jvent them from testifying. | What answer will Mr. Jerome, make to the charge ‘thet if he had had such a mass of testimony against an ‘ocused not connected with the police force the testimony would haye been lai’ before the Grand Jury long ago? ‘What answer will he make to the charge that he has pet himself above the law Rain in the West.—The arid fields of Kansas and Southwest have been visited by coplous rain to savo the crops and also to head off a projected crusade of prayer for rain which was to have been started this week. It is, of course, impossible to prove that the rain Was not caused by the announcement of the crusade. the HOLLAND’S DYING QUEEN. { Wilhelmina hes been more than Queen. She has been ® fine flower of lovely womanhood as well as a pattern monarch. Her death will be a double loss to her people. And a pathetic feature of it Is that it is the price of the human affection which is every woman's by right of sex. ‘but rarely a queen's because of the considerations of ptate which make love a secondary consequence in royal unions, Her girlish romance of two years ago is now transformed into a tragedy, To die at twenty-two with so much to live for! "So much to do, so little done!’” The girl whom a nation had loved as with one heart had only just become a ‘woman What she was to be as ruler {s loft unrealized. The promise was great, but the fulfilment is denied the people that had hoped to revere her as mouareh also. There was a dignity of character with her beauty culinity of mind that gave expectations of a feminine William of Orange—onv showing in time of peace kit qualities equally helpful to the national greatness mas- Marrying the Harriers.—It bh) the police to imprese on the cr needed the intervention of s-country runner the fact that we are not living In the Garde of Buen, and that a * =} - ~ Turkish bath costume Is not the for Wg. : Sunday afternoon run thr he public | } ha wome rights whieh even the athlete entnalagt must } SOMEBODIES. —_—S— ANDERSON, J. dof Trooklyn, whore CELESTIAL SPLED RECORDS. Tay actoolan fa ninety years old D I wonder if Lean Jampsovaht! “Wow! wow!-those deuce epiur “Pll nevah try jumping again, dake, afayetto and @ Ab! here te nevah! A California University professor informs the world | 1°" Aaron Hire, Yat and] ¢ t ee neva that the Brooks comet is breaking all celestial speed ree- | p:4 4,1, cats, MISS Agi | 4 } ords. This newcomer among the heavenly bodies Vet, haw {uy her . ey discovered gyrating about the sun only two ¥ it in Lond: It now travels four times as fast as the fastest con CHOATNS, S58) JOBRIN In an) exes previously observed—outclassing all competitors of | [Ont photowranher and | wale! whom the telescope has ever taken notice. Just how musicia Many million miles a minute goes we do not DE WRT, GEN —~« nif know, but in the automobile parlance of the skies it De Witt, a famou Ad serves to be designated as the “White Flyer of the Bm- 1,10" wventernill, caus a MNON, HEV. THOMAS —clain oe. nid from some old newepa It must be a consoling reflection to a cel u) chant. Hooker ‘T. Washingt » feur that the: alw plenty of room fr 5 speed. No little boys » marbles in the atroet ever he A Impede bis progress, nor do thoughtle \ ; waa ' Jessly in the way fr ehind tr urs, 10) King of Sia very, | heaven's first Jaw.” but this has 1 to with | hod In J , | lage ordina: for the restraint " 5 , V. A " ax heen] + Jet or hindran the fh Hore’ ot . en “Yellow Perils” on t dway, and | WA as to be wished that 1 t eo to'Ro t ther te " f Uhan their vietiu ‘ y o OLK LATEST NICTORI eer) The capture of unnamed fort of the Mo t — SeUNetagcdatan one che of ¢ aoe RAILROAD PROHIBITION, y b Mind. wring end skil! with which the tuste Mr ' ! Vw een we tamilir 1 uw NEAR THE CRIB. { officer are ‘ } furnie) ; } ; es -the cousiry wil ref : ; Roosevelt in his effusive congratula . 4 , ; OF to agree With Gen Ohaffer u t . h z United Bieter wv * ” 3 : + ‘ ; Would wit ¢ $ REWARDS OF A STAGE CARILK ; “What le iene fom t ; "4 . . : u ; . . + ' | rr ; j ‘~ . apple ws y bd } 4 ' hee ied tele’ 3 Getews” Pius the weiss anthenting ‘ . sone reeoowey hehe eet PEE e eel TeeL Et eettt tT... Ga Giele, wens of thew wth wine og = me — oY a ~ her at the thenter wut we mr Ts | y | ET rR i} ~} porn she Pin) 2 Ss - or ’ ry . . " " 4 . * Henece mil eres + ened ot ddome taal ‘ ry . im Hthewe & tor beets + ananens oe ; net Ome e ’ ° f ' ware ' ‘ 4 “eo . aan nn ie hte hate i rear’ 0) ath Anant me BM hers! Mirerempmnre beet wr oom yd : . es 000) Gitte theme " Me ll eine prmrnaiiiiog | Pacers Se yw gon pokes tone hn ny on may buen letane wl 4 me | ye ome 6 ot bee | de ont ie pores thes ow se Whale AR arne eee Hee) hee Atntinne Ww! ana eine wntnnn tn hee Weemien hehe aug whee ae DLOORAOPODADDOIG JOKES OF OUR OWN} NURSERY RIYME. SeThere was a iittic clerk who played 4 the Motropolitan. And to do it he used mo < thought the bors }Qnut alas! Hig horse > among those that And now his malti's addressed to 3 gentle ward cure.” UTILIZED. “The Boers win because tho shades Bor thelr herole Dutch ancestors fight for them.” “That's a shades.” new use for Holland COURT NEWS. When Von Sapp was presented to Ing Edward he actually sat down while in his Majesty's presence." ee that lost him his standing A STEP. It's @ short step from the Stock Ex- change to the Curb." “And {t'@ sometimes a much shorter « from the Curb to the gutter BORROWED JOKEs. SPOKE. only dust," re who owed a two} 2 SORRY HE “After all, man is marked Reuben Rall months’ grocery bill. ‘t resemble will settle."—Chicago A COW AIN'T, “Me's n mighty hard man to get along dwith,” sald the practical politician Psadly, “Mighty hard,” |e hy honest.”* Toat's what makes and unsatisfactory 7 while he Insists on mething just because he thinks it In richt without walting to figure out 3 effect on his political prospects erratic ina $ what its * 18 Hable to be Washington Star THE REAL THING. “Tt looks very pretty,’ sald the swell Mi Wits Khoppling, “but Dit oertal Mah | Yaaay friend wear Ghe Funny THE STREETS OF NEW YORK, (As a Visiting Cartoonist Sees Them.) tose Paces arg) by SEEM YOR Sure Ting, im GOIN’ \TO MOVE To BROOKLYN Oh, the subway blows us upsvard, the policemen shake us down. And the auto teaches kids they auto move from Gotham Town; And the cars are ever full, although the Sundays all are dry, And every one can choose twelve new, assorted ways to die, . i A ‘ 2O9OOSOHDGOODOOD HO ide of Life. REGINALD FORGOT ALL ABOUT HIS SPURS. spiration, though this may not appear etween a pint and a@ quart a di OT a ees SECRETS OF THE HUMAN MACHINE. Certainly we are not all so hopelessly confused in our ideas of the human anatomy as the schoolboy who deciared that ‘tthe lungs ts wrapt round the stum- mick between the membrain of the dia- gram," yet few of us, perhaps, would lke to parade our knowledge of physi- ology, and fewer still have any Idea of the vast quantities of blood, oxygen, onic gas, &c., dealt with by the different organs of the human body in the course of a few hours. While you have been reading these words about sixteen tumblers of blood have passed through the heart. For every time the heart beats a small tum- blerful of impure blood is despatched from one of the chambers of the heart lungward, to be purified; at the same time another tumblerful of purifled blood kidneys every hour. Two bucketfuls of blood (1,000 ounces) pass through the ODpITY CORNER.) | EXPIRES ATR This picture shows the difference between Inspired and expired alr, The proportion of nitrogen remains tho same, but out of twenty-one parts of oxygen the lungs retain only sixteen, the other five parts going to form deadly carbonic- acid gas leaves the heart, to speed through the ystem. All that In one beat. And as the heart beats about seventy-two times a min- ute, it thus deals with about three gal- lons of blood In that brief space of time. In less than a minute—in less than half a minute—all the blood in your body has passed through the central mmimping station, the heart, This explains the necessity for {mme- ction In case of snake bites, Be- ne could move many yards in of ald the poison would have tra ed the entire system. A rather original way of committing sulclde would be to cover the body with A coating of gclatine, This proceeding would throw the 70,000,000 pores in the skin out of work, with the result that trongly resenting this ould shortly cease work. ‘These 70,000,000 openings are always at work pouring out large quantities of per- of Nauta. us Wilson reckoned that 0 of these tubes to every of the bedy, As each tubo} Is about a quarter of an inoh In length, each SndivMusl thus possesses a drain-| nd when one ts engaged tn laboriour work and during hot weather these! twenty-eight miles are busy pouring out © quantities of perspiration varying | imated that 2,000 people ing would give ¢ water by per: n nd nearly us much oa f £ carbonte told as there is in a hundred-weight of val Phe A POLITENESS BOOM. uncement was published tha 1 lady had left $1,000 to @ yor seller who piloted her across trange and novel politeness has been noticeable in London street urehing, Qne afternoon recently among thoae who received unsolicited offers of man in the etreet would stare, ssmiatance in Poa alone wore rong man from a music hall, two life Jardamen and a poll bit be even loged that hewmboye are having cards printed to eave time and rouble tn giving their addresses — DOGS DE LUAE ¢ Wu Ohlone de lume’ tn nearly £0000 oure of OW] our Hogy Aegres When this dog conaue wae! ciscws of thir Uaben jnany owners tas | 4 sucreied thelr darling * ae { the] Himenaibie porepir at oy de CAN YOU DO THISé and probably consider you a fit candl- dqte for an insane asylum if you told him that he sustains a welght of thir- teen tons wherever he goes. Yet, just as the fish sustains the welght of water above it, so we sustain the welght of the ocean of air at the bottom of which we live and move and have our being. Every square inch of the body thus bears a pressure of fourteen pounds, or a total welght of 29,282 pounds on the entire body. Neither can we relieve ourselves of this pressure with impunity, The bal-| loonist discovers that when he ascends to the higher regions. The pressure being relieved, the smailer capillaries It has been calculated that in one square inch of the palm of the hand there are as many as 8,528 pores. and blood vessels burst and blood ta suee from the nose, ears, &0. A glance at the picture showing the | huge chest containing a day's breath will enable one to appreciate better the evils of overcrowding in the slums. The chest represents @ volume of 400 cubic inches, and that amount passes" into the lungs of the diminutive man who stands and gazes awestruck at tho box. Indulge in active exercise and , Five ginsses of blood, containing thin ty ounces, the amount of purified blood riven out of the Beart while yeu | count four, ] one would require from three to four times the amount. And the meals we eat dafly, Just look at the picture wherein a’ mat a long pole representing the journey versed by each meal. It should be in Itself sufficient to persuade you against overfeeding, end so overtaxing your di- gestive organs ae chemt, standing 7 fev alae jue Oh WOW MbBOW! + bended tons on 00 eo |ieowly eold fe i ew i Yah tor ome inning iadhod ori = samnedle — ee Prev PL Ak TL ee ee en ee | ehsmy be thee Whehanry Meminly thine mune casiate gurtinn af the sons aud Ae tele wp wot 6 ane Ss . vat at I “~