Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
os PTT om ~ AY THE BUSHEL All of Them Teem with the Ten- “der Passion and Are Filled with Ecstacies of Beautiful Words. ROSY SNARES FOR CUPID. Votaries of Eros Do Their Best to| Win Prizes in The Evening World's Great Love Letter Con- test. body In Greater ftw tributary territory written a lo Brening W« best letters of this kind which might & mibmitted, B f love letters have | ome to the edit and It will take sev eral days to xo through th all. Winners of the prizes will announced A# s00n as possible—some day in the} Tatter part of the week “ competly letters are print heir pre does not mean that they 1 prizes. ‘They are sim, y taken evived and are presented as exan the variegated gushings and sooln Wooings which the love-letrer which closed Saturday nigit, nua tv duved, | “Heart of My 1 My Darling: 1 have just revetved your Tetier telling me what your lips dared Not utter, Oh, heart of goul of my soul. I, too, w ret ny heart and now thar 1 love you as sincerely, ¢ Pevotediy as vou love met 5 Dear your dear self speak ardent loving words that look so vo! paper Dearest, 1 fey my heart would} thirst for Joy tn my new-found happi Lean hd bat ane word to say and that, my darling Come You own ANNIK, Glendale, 1. 1 “My Ow yt Love Vout My Darling: Only now atter the day Je over and we are camping for Mght have I time to read your tet Gnd realize just what the dear w yi » wei 5 | mean—you are wearing my ring and? Walting for me. My own! How 1 lov You! My Edith! Only « scrap of paper! from my diary and this inch of pencil! with which to write out my heart to you! The camp fire dies down, my Ught is gone. T am the happiest’ man fy the Philippines to-night, with your picture and letter on my heart Yours: forever, RALPH Philippine Islands, in the fleld, mid night. r , (May Our Love Never Cen Dear: I saw you but one hour ago held you in my arms, touched with Teverent lips the satin waves of your hining hair, felt to my Inmost soul Your beauty, supreme and enthralling! And now in my quiet reom 1 tive @gain the bliss of vou. W. poor things to expre tion, my love for vo is my 4 one, T can say no more than this. with me this night that our love may never cease. HARTWELL, DEANE “1 Am in Heaven,” My Adored One: 1 thigk of you always, How can it be that you and I had not met before? Your presence seems to bring wit) it tho pure and satisfying thought that Whould I be able to win you our lives fWould be one continuous Joy. My every mbition js to have vou for my wife 4nd, oh, how my heart beats every time I am in conversation with yo I feel @s though I am in heaven. Now, dar- ling, write to me and let me know your thoushts, Yours deyotedl., WILL. Stamford, Conn. m of you, With Many Rarning Kisses? My Dear Little W Byeet, loving letter this morning. 1] Kissed it a thousand times, T shall not @iay long, Jessie. I cannot, without You. Business is very brisk and T am very busy. But I shall be back, dear, fn a very few days, Write me about yourself; sweetheart. With many burning kigses, with a soul full of passtonate and tender love, and with many thanks tq Him for our happiness, I am yours eVer and ever, “until death do part us, WILL, A Heart at Your Service.” My Dear Birdie: The great love 1 hpye hitherto expressed for you In- cefeases daily. ‘The more I see of you the more I feel myself every way dls ‘posed and determined to offer you my nd. Our last conversation has given atie the most exalted {dea of your char- acter, and if we are united I shall ex perience nothing but pleasure in Mving With you. T have indced a heart at your rervice. 1 could not give tt to @py one more capable to do honor to choice and family. I speak sin- -erely. You will do me a favor to an- jWwer this, Adieu, adieu, GR. 3 “I 4m So Lonely.” “My Own Dear Boy: Oh, love, how 1 Wish you were with me now. I am so I recetved your THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVEN Sa a7 ae aaa NOTED TEXAS RACONTEUR NOW DYING IN VIRGINIA. he three | tial blive, as to tones to awake 1 y t and me 4 were 0! Into you! heart's longing. 1am praying for your r back to your own true love Miw esuexe, nettir vignimees nwonknu eugnot uoy, voy dluow esue fo ym_ peed evol mr sa ebt tnemitnes fe taht ataeb re left me 4a sit « t art grow (OHA {et loved you. 1 answer, “Yo. Ist! est tht lny netter than Leg ay Ms dearest Isa Tle Tea) ne soon wn. HTHEL OA True Wo ” art: You p 1 with its noof a i woman's love. There is not ot this earth another love like ours. Only those with hearts pure and no realize | Ite magnificence. And like “the Ive and the oak,” may our love and sinvertty be strengthened by age, and our mutual support become greater, until the wood mania axe of death shall sever Us t from each other, but from a monot onous earthly existe to one of celes ke us exclaim in angel, “Together we lived; together we dle PRANK © Love. “Come Back to ¥ My Own Darling Joe: Your last let was so cold. Why ia this? Have uu met another whom you think mor than me? No! that eannot be, in left you vowed you loved me one. (Oh, thoae words!) Jor fore y darling, don't break my heart, It write to me that it is E whom you love and no ono elae, Oh, my darling, If you here that T could look up sweet face and satisfy m rn. Don't disappoint, but come JULIA W Looks Like Welsh—Can You Read mee Ym Raed Guilrad Lrig: Sgnileef fo ent sdnet erutan tpmorp em ot nil, heihw 1 epoh voy era nt a { noy ying tse! wuoy a wef sa yet uoy, ana a eurt ylnam trach e rof eeht. Sey, gnilrad uoy era ym tod, ym gnidiug tats, ent tengam dna nocaeb thgll fo ym efil dna erutuf ssentppah, dna T gnol rof taht otoym MAJ. onehw uoy Miw uoht eb enim “Give Me Your Heart. Dearest, Sweetest One heart to keep. 1 shall watch over It as the Moness her young, adore ft as 10 do not cast me idolators their Idol, cling to it as lyy the wall, Ah! beloved, off, to wither as the rose thrown by the wayside. Give me hope. 1 will ontral if It 1s you who hold sway over me, willingly accept my loss of self~ my beloved! my Idol! my godde “Slave and Sweetheart,” Dearest Liz: It 1s two days since last wo met, Two days did I say? God ars, How my knows it seems two pulse quickens and my heart throbs when I think of the night, with head with eyes blaz- at resting on my } {ng thelr love Tigh ised to be mini with the fondest, sweetest { mine, you prom Words cannot express the love I fe a love so deep, Ko sacred, so heay Vii close now nd guide yor gain and remain “Eat OTwo Hearts words of Jove ono vars until de hundred word wld Limite me Dearest Husband wish you we [want to lov almost impos love vou, dearest My Darling Kathry Hight, L write this let Ive me your since you cast mo aside. Id times! ‘Phis fa to reient and touch upon the How my heart beats Heetion he has ever given puny man to feel. ly that 1t seems to lift me above ordinary ws to try to ove. Knowing heart mu devoted slave AW ried. re to live and t on. aml { that my} true, 1 often hours we spent to thar you will ittle girl who ACE at an One? Sitting here alone when you ar and two he * thoughts ar Will the t n Tecan imprint « whisper mor soothe my aching Words. WALT would he fm lave for yon in The Bventng amount, Twill you. ADC “Your Loving Litthe Witeo? Sunday ts such 1 do wish we But before long shall spend them all tog And T shal be so happy here to-night! uth, ble to wait ty T think of you nd wonder what my boy would give worlds to for a kiss this very minute, 1 with my whole heart Re good, dear, All and a million kisses, Ever your her, won't and tt fools such long CARRIE. OMy Angel of Purity,’ Being lonely to- you, my lost my sweetheart, again to your heart. Oh! you who are the exemplin- cation of all that Ja pure and holy, take again, have suffered Oh! what Think of the f how you t darling, my. angel of purity, take me to your heart again GEORG “A Love Forever Cherished.” My Dearest Molly: Oh, have in my hV the love that rt for you! No book published could Ings that swells deep The moral of in- of gentle girlhood, what and who gives a love that will be forever cherished by your own RIG | froin classes because they have not been matdenhoot tacks of heart failure, and for some time |e ha# been kept solely on stimulants, Won ‘Fame by Hin Wit. § * you have] dken-hearted in. thts CAN'T LIVE LONG Famous Texas Story Teller and Bon Vivant Has Heart Failure at Hot Springs, Va., and May Die Any Minute. SOME OF HIS GOOD STORIES. He Made His Reputation by Hie Genial Ways and Wit, and W, Popular Abroad as In This Country. Word !* expected in New York at any the death of Col. Thomas P. Orn one of the last of the Southern generation famed for its e@hivairy, gal- antry and good stories, He Is at Hot Springs, Va, where he was sent from New York by Dr. Mor- ris, He Js suffering from repeated at- If this famous old charac should lose in his present fight agalnst death few men would be more widely mourned Probably no man in America is known wod liked by more persons than this red- hatred, genlal ‘Texan who has won his way to fame by reason of his ready wit and gental ways. though he served In the Confed during the civil war and later a member of Congress from ‘Texas, his nief distinction came through his good- fellowship, which opened wide the doors not only of all the lovers of Ifo in this intry, but thoae of the royal good fel- ws in Europe, And {t should also be said that “royal? is used here in its as well as figurative sense As a story-tel rhe was unsurpassed, Wut as is invarlubly the case, his stories lose the charm of bie personalty fn th retelling. One day when he was criti sising Mayor Strong's administration he suid Mayor had shown poor judg- m “And his faatt in this r me of Senator Jones's dv A fellow out tn Neva a dog—a bulldog, a fer Which his owner eald was the sr fighter In the State. One day ase passed through town, Under his pr: wage ted a mangy cur, ‘The bull- log saw him and started to eat him up. When the fight was over the cur was not much the worse for It, hut the bull- dog was a wreck “4 thought your dog was a great lighter?” Senator Jones sald to the owner, “Well! was the reply, ‘he is a great fighter, a h—— of a flghter, but he's a d-— poor Judge of dogs Squelohed: Two Fresh Chapa. Col Ochiltree’s intimates and most of the newspapers described him as a lar of colossal magnitude, One day when the Colonal was returning from the Sheepshead Bay race track two men ame into the car. One of them recog- I the ‘Texan and said to his friend: ‘ome here, Hob, I want to Introduce t reminds went on. irie niz you to the biggest: Har in the United States. Sir.) replied Col, Ochtlt rising with great dignity from his seat, "'T nds iHow none but my most intimate to refer to me in that manner, and 1 do not ard you as one of them.” TOM OCHILTREE |HOPELESS LOVE OF LILY VOORHIS Actress Who Sought Death by Poison Worshipped an Elderly Tammany Man Who Had Helped Her to the Stage. HE “MERELY LIKED” HER. Col. Asa Bird Gardiner, Who Will Defend Her, Says Her Act Was Not an Attempt at Suicide, but to Relieve Pain. When Willian Constance Voorhts ts arraigned in court to-day on a charge of attompting sulchte, tt Is understood that Col, Asu diner appear as her coun capacity of guardian for her, and hag had charge of the income which fs provided for her out of the estate of his old friend, Commodore Vou: Miss Voorhia calied on Cot liner Thursday afternoon to receive her monthly check and complained then of a aly in her heart. Me recommended her to 2 paysiesian, and it iy his opinion that she took the dose of morphine Which so nearly ended her life to quiet rd 1. He has acted in the physical pain, and not with sulcidal tn- tent. When Miss Voorhis recovered con- pusness at Bellevue Hospital she mentioned Col, Gardiner a her bost friend, It ig sald that Miss Voorhis's at- tempted suicide was caused by an un- fortunate love affair. To an Intimate friend she vonfided recently that ehe was deeply In love with an elderly ge tlemun prominent in polities and a for- ' Tammany office-holder, Despite - great disparity in their Miss prhis hoped that they would be mar- 1, and It was on learning that her opes were impossible that she went je Murray Hil Hotel and, att Writing a letter to her friend, took 100 rains of morphine. Miss Voorhis lived until recently at vo. oF West Forty-cighta street. The woman ty whom she confided her Infatu- lon for the elderly Tammany politicla ko to him of it, he informe tained a stage position through his in- terest ad ent! for her, He thoug might cool if she left the elty, arranged a trip for her, She away as long as she could a finding the strug: hopeless, back to die. Mynterious Man Calls A man who sald he was John Patrick, of No, 166 Huron street, Toronto, at the hospital to-day and asked pe mission to see Mrs. Voorhis. He was taken to the prison ward and had a fif- feen-minute conversation with the wo- man. As he was leaving the hospital Patrick was asked If he was a friend of Mrs, Voorhis, T have n to say,’ he replied. The adde ell, T wouldn't call if 1 wasn't Patrick was then asked regarding the story to the effect Uhat Mrs, Voorhis a morphine flend. He refused to have anything to say regarding the story, and aguin repeated that he was a frlend of the woman, —— STILL THREATENS IRELAND. The two men sought the next car, squelehed The Colonel told this story about him- + self “When T was a young man T went to the front with the ‘Texas Rangers, My father, a most religious man, gave me a Bible and told me to read tt every night. 1 promised, and when I next saw him he asked: “‘Have you read your Bible regu- larly, Tom?" Yes, futher,” I replied. he old gentleman took the Book, opened it and puiied from between its pages a $20 bill. Ho turned again and draw out another$20 and then another. “I'm sorry ‘ou missed this money 1 put here for you,’ he sald, and for once in my Ife L was speechless.” When the Colonel returned from Europe two years ago, Richard Croker was being denounced by the newspapers and the then Prince of Wales had turned his back on ‘Tod Bloan, the Jockey, Some one mentioned the fact that neitner of them would be Inter- viewed and that they were both alike. “Oh, no," replied the Colonel, ‘There is this difference: One ts denounced by the prints and the other ia renounced by the Prince.” He Was Game to the Laat. When he was taken with his present sickness It was after he had indulged himself in a cut of venison. When the doctor learned of this he blamed the indulgence and held up bis finger warn- ingly at the Texan, “Well, doctor," said the latter, with a smile, ‘it's quite characteristic my dying for a plece of venison." Even {lnesa and the shadow of death could not rob him of Ais humor, i ————<$—$<— 109 Unvaccinated Students Barred. CHICAGO, INL, Noy. 22.—Northwestern University has excluded 109 students va nated, Marian Again Accused of An- pying Civil Service Examiner, Mrs. Flora Marian, of No, 20 Hast One Hundred and Sixteenth street, was for the second time brought into Magistrate Pool's Court to-day on the charge of having written threatening lette Chief Examiner Ireland, whom she cused of preventing her advancement on the preferred Civil vice list of hospital matrons and nurses. She was held ‘In $900 ball for’ trial, but was paroled till Monday to enable her to secure a bondsman, Examiner Ireland reiterated his com- plant against Mrs, Marian. One of the letters she sent to him contained this sentence: “Three examinations for police matron to keep me off twice. Now you try It again and u shall not see another Christmas da ‘Mrs. Marlan ‘addressed the Court and said she had certain knowledge of one woman who could neither read nor write wiho was preferred to her, though she herself had been on the list \a long thne, ee CONDUCTOR HIS ACCUSER. Bookmaker’n Employee Oharged with Picking Pookets on Car. ‘Thomas Walsh, twenty-five years old, who says he $s a bookmaker's sheet writer, and lives at No. 461 Sixth ave- nue, Was held in $00 ball for trial in Jefferson Market Court today, charged by Thomar Sullivan, twenty-elght years old, @ conductor on the Forty-second street crosstown line, with robbing him of $3 while on a crowded car last night, Sullivan says he was working his way through the crowded car collecting fares, when he felt a hand in his pocket. Hie gtabbed the hand and, after a strug- xls, tn which men fell off the car, hand- ed ‘hig man over to a policeman, It {# alleged that, after his arrest, Walsh threw away a handful of coins, When searched {n the station hous $1.13 was found tn his possession. NG, NOVEMBER 22, 1902, MRS. SIBLEY’S DIVORCE SET ASIDE BY COURT. DEAD EN CANT “ORIN WHISKEY So Pathologist Declared, and on His Statement Jury Found for Metropolitan Railway Com- pany in a $20,000 Suit. MAN WAS KILLED BY CAR. The Attorney for His Brother Who Sought Damages Claimed Whie- key Might Have Been Given De- ceased After the Accident, Dr. Philip F, O'Hanlon, who as Coro 10,000 au- net's physician has perfor topsies during the past dozen years, gave It a opinion as an expert in the trial of a damage suit for the loss of a life, that no dead man was even known to drink whiskey. It was in the trial of the sult of Hugh Weough against the Metropolitan Street Rallway Company for $2),000 damages for killing r Owen last Feb- ary, at Madison avenue and One Hun- dred and 1 fourth stre MAS. SIBLEY'S DIVORCE SET ASIDE. The Decree She Obtained oh Charges of Cruelty Is An- nulled by Appellate Court. ROMEO, Mich., Nov. len, a mill hand, twent last night shot and killed Reed Cornell, action of the sion Clay Sibley will be given an opportunity for defense against his wife's suit for a Nmited divor a young farmer, twenty years old. Al- Courty ruled len was walking with a young woman Cornell alighted from a bugey|WELCH COAL STILL COMING. opened a quarr - Allen first fired his revolver wild, but the second bullet struck Cornell in the gion of the heart and lodged in the|srontenegro and Patria ha left lune. tered to load 11,000 tons’o: nell jumped into the buggy and to a physictan’s office, expiring before medical attention could be given Allen, who claims self-defense, is is considered a that the young woman who had ob-}important one by go last spring Mrs, Sibley ly mistaken his regard |hrought « t that her affection | husband was ordered by nd he | to pay alimony while the suit was pend- He failed to pay th A then, | by the Court and as punish he came | tempt a mained fing sums named ent for con- but that Mr, Sibley right the ground had been deprived of the The opinion Supreme Gourt reverses the decision of Justice Truax. Mrs. Sibley was Miss Carlle Weil be- fore her marriage her husband to defense. He at once filed an answ. tuted a suit The trial was sensational, Mrs. Sibley had cruelly aid that when she 1 to men's clubs change her vi Which was thr were estrang WANTS TO MUZZLE WOMEN. ed by Clothes- Bayonne Judge Bo it's too bad that there ts not sighed Re to-day. The spectators sympathized with the He had given an hour to hear- ing about clothesline quarrels and found impossible to shut off some have I undergone, and you have helped | women ‘who insisted on talking. IT’S DISGUSTING! - IT’S REPULSIVE! If You Have a Cold or Catarrh, It for Your Friends’ Sake. Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder Re- lieves in 10 Minutes. One short puff of tho breath through the blower supplied with each bottle of Dr. Agnew's owder diffuses this powder over the surface of the nasal passages. Painless and delightfal to use. It relieves instantly, and nently cures Catarrh, hay jhe, sore throat, tonsilitis and deafness, ‘Use Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills. 40 doses 10 cents. 19 corder Lazarus, of Bayonne, Court. it almost “Phe tr luded before Justice eenbaum and a jury in the Supreme urt to-day, Dr. O'Hanlon was called was WITH YOUNG WOMAN 22-0", ribs smashed 1 by the car, » Mr, Wellman on the doctor sald Keough liquor and suffer- ing from acute alcoholism when ran | i do’ 1 wably ve é nk. Slayer Alights from a Buggy and) aon ee oie ynmaranco of be- Without a Word of Warning IL of Mquor, have a from Fires on Young Farmer. iittie ‘patoloxist replied” In all my Jong pro perience known or heard of man drinking whiskey, and it 4 as a pathologist, that for one to Charles Al- three years old, Three Ktenmers Chartered to Sail for Bont LONDON, Nov The steamers been char- coal at New castle for Boston, Others will follow » American anines are able to demand. and Lord Ormonde are of pig-iron for Phila~ Th loading rest. delphis “One Penny Will Aid a fSick Friend. Will You Spend It? Write me a postal card to tell me who needs help, Tell me the book to send. That trifle is your part—all the rest is mine. Write it to-day, I will even dothis:—I will mail the sick one an order—good at any drug store—for six bot- tles Dr. Shoop’s Restorative. He may take ita month at my risk, If it succeeds, the cost is $5.50. If it fails, [witl pay the druggist myself. ‘And the sick one’s mere word shall decide it, Could I meet you I would forever convince you that I have what these sick ones need. More than that, they must have it, for most of them can never get well without it, I would overwhelm you with evidence, But I can meet only a few, so I say to all who need hel “Try my Restorative one month at my risk, Learn by a test just what I can do. If it succeeds, you are well. If it fails, it is free.” 1 know that no sick one can neglect an offer like that. : T fafl sometimes, but not often, In rare cases there is a cause—like cancer—which medicine cannot cure. But I have furnished my Restorative to hundreds of thousands on these terms, and 39 out of each 40 have gladly paid, because they got well, Iam willing to trust the sick ones to be fair e. wae a remarkable remedy that can stand a test like that. It is my discovery, and I spent a lifetime on it. My Restora- tive is the only remedy that strengthens the inside nerves. Those nerves alone operate every vital organ of the body. When an organ ig weak it means that its nerve power is weak. It fs like an engine that needs more steam, To doc- tor the organ is useless. The Weak organ will do its duty when given the power to act, and no other way can cure it. My success comes from the fact that my remedy always restores that nerve power. My book will explain it. Please write me to-day who needs it. | Book No. 1 on Dyspepsia. Book No. 2 on the Heart. Book No, 3 on the Kidneys. Book No. 4 for Women. Rook No. 6 for Men (sealed), Rook 6 on Rheumatism, MII cases, not chronic, are often cured by one or two bottles, Dr. Shoop's Destorative is sold by all druggists, Simply state which book ‘8 wanted, and address Dr. Shoop, Box 740 Racine, W We made cakes with Presto and were-delighted with it.” Thi were delicious, much ick 10 BR, -egth Ote-Mew York City. Oct. 8, 1903, jigneg)’ igned) Mise K. Lyeas, 1a nice indeed, delicious. ‘employ of Father’