The evening world. Newspaper, December 23, 1904, Page 14

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| DECEMBER 23, 1904. wll psy a a eve Shao Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, 8 to @ Park Row, New York. Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Clase Mall Matter, tr Wadl dows ie fot oe 10,652 bag al tio Fe months | THE NAN PATTERSON TRIAL, a4 8 question of law {t was not But in a broader sense there was @ very decided ques- @on of morality at issue in the haggard Florodora girl pathy im a juror’s face, The record of the year from the | footlghts to the prison cel! as ‘t was brought out In the, full and particular story of nocturnal revelry, loose mart- tal relations and sensual pleasure-seeking, culminating 4 of pelf-preser in sudden death and a murder charge, was one in which there was contained a mora! issue not subordinate In i importance even to the question of fact as to how Caesar Young came to his death. Only In {ts details and in tte tragic sequel was the story novel, The primrose path of dalliance customarily leads that way. But as an example of unusually quick transition from the champagne stage of night Tender- loin life to Its bitter small-beer lees the career of the de- fendant as detailed {n court involved a moral Issue of wider application than the direct {ndictment on which sho was prosecuted, . as WHERE SAVING IS NOT ECONOMY, Once more there is talk in the Board of Education of economies to be forced in the wrong places, The ex- penses of evening schools, vacation schools, playgrounds The Utter Folly of Tragedy. enlomen Nixola Greeley-Smith, One of thews, in New York City, ts j the w@ordid atory of the loves of a hotel | walter and @ qhambermaid which re- ' “Her morality {s not at issue,” said the counsel! for |sulied in the mulckte of the latter after Man Patterson {n his closing address to the jury. Ané} an attempt at Lockport, N. ¥ had rajected v ~ By Nixola Greely-Smith. was papir ed era trial outraged tral figure of cya eer te ADEA EE EERE EE EERE EEE EEE beer dR eter bees re OCP eee nee er Cee rn eee ee ro Mary Jane Tests the Proverb About Lis steners ¥ at ote s chront- 3 wo new swith ove rir al deter. mo- cen- which ts in —_ = Se | one pase a yaay | yt oe a woman, in the ANO I Gor’, (YES, AND | other murder, The je are but typical events of every- we But they reour ao often th banging on the words which were to convict or free her | we must necessarily infer (iat there are certain orises of the human heart with and watching with questioning eyes for a sign of sym- | wnt a Gil SRWAN GAIL OF arRtaGEY aa8 | powerless to iral, Nevertheless, avall us when in some perfidious man or woman, the case may be, it ts always well to asa ourselves if from @ purely sonal ty worth while It never is however badly we have been treated there i no man or woman on earth worth killing, Considering camed perpetrator of the crime and hie we nO one will deny that eventually the latter is by far the luckier of the es only once, more or less peacefully, um, two briefly chlef tarror of He ft would seen there la one Instinct which sctentists once the strongest our conscle standpoint the little expedition However much the any munler inexpectedi dea ther, ‘rom tells of the shooting of | | wealthy widow and another man by a young clerk whose address the widow two persons ies tn the antlot pation and this, !f it ts our fortune to be suddenly removed from ou aphere | of Usefulness, We are generally saved But the criminal, like the coward, dies (HER A DOLLS, ee DUSE S0/ BiG ‘ ome, (Gor HIM ) SLED! THATS MY ( pop vALein (LET ME that and ome Neat! ) cannot Whea, like Johnny, we prepare to get our gun and plant an avenging bulie Youll | You Dont DESERVE ,))| A THING You Too!! ~ “oe ) You pare we love, \I are )|( my You! /\ j most aus y The before hin death, If ha ls & and recreation centres may have to be cut down one- put on trial, he is pretty f third, It {8 declared, In 1905. Some vacation achools and 1)" . kid pata ne Per sh ; e ‘6 94.99 ‘ ; eoks 9 tt proceed m1 ; - Playgrounds, It 1s hinted, may have to be closed tn the the long monthe of waiting for the | Christmas Don t for Sweethearts. ote 4 4 ‘execution of his aentence he fesla the . ‘ ee pes ot Must eas: deadly electric Auld course throug ily Sgt) gt gts In the Matter of Christmas Giits it Is Best to Leave “Guessing About Them” Out. Such talk as this never should be heard, It would not ebrinking velns a hundred thousand um . es (JaPRDER IP SHE THINS,” be If public buriness were run on the same harmonious 1, ther te fist one thing ereater 2 ‘| / WONDER UE SHE THI) KS , principles as private business. Tho city pays enough for thay t! inality of murder, and that « '¢ (MY | NAME 4S CHADWICK 2} its educational system to carry every department without mate pi Bl, ‘ a interruption or “cheese-paring.” Its \eachers get higher SOME - * 4 wages than any others in the country, tis new school ~ am OF THE ‘ buildings are the costliest and heat. Any adminiatration BEST JOKES t fe short-sighted and lacking in efficiency which allows OF THE DAY. : the system in any particular to fall behind the high ; (Avrerearie) Me Standard set in these details. NOT KILLED ENOUGH i "i MAYBE? Before committing wasteful economy on essentials of 4), 4 \) ea Wher bieg, ‘ti wannit't Modern public-achool provision every effort should BO peatiato enue 4 Pade to Iimit expenses on the least important lines, If) She-in what way? t Kh true, as has been charged in effect, that the business —He—After the show T saw the fellow f Of superintending 1s overdone at some cost? And that ™) wes Kl bees act In the) | | ¢ ° b the number of merely clerical teachers {sat jeast Ilberal HIS BEQUEST, i It is weil to remember that the city is more Interested NgtecWhel A vous Hab uhelk ? fn reaching the greatest possible number of scholar® jaiye you when he died? . than it is In the collection of almost any quantity of ata—-Nothing school statistics, le-Didn't he say anything to ® re he passed away » Yee: he wald ing was 3 _ J NEW YORK REAL ESTATE. monet hadi tv Aili Mead |) | Seen oe. 2 RERUN. gE Out-of-town buyers come to New York to “stock up GEOLOGICAL, > ome os7 om every conceivable article of merchandise, Their Edyth—I'm surprised to hear of your JHE (MAY EXPECT pe) ME COTLY GIFT, owing disposition to visit fhe city In search of real- figeKement to oll Bullvon, Was he 7 “ aueeel G17 7 BPAPEL?) << - 5 dyfeAlepantaede eae aod the only man with sand enough to. ¢ (TEE BRACE UP) fH! 1 KN. ERE estate bargains is a sugsestive development. A year ago | ore . CAN. VVE TT, } ; A DIAMOND UNEXPECTED) @ Philadelphia merchant picked up two “parcels” on” \4ayme—o wt bias iheseaiy! @ 2 We Bin Lyfe NECKLACE upper Broadway at a cost of nearly $2, A Pitts- one with rocks enough to Interest me, 3 pts FRY 2 burg buyer has now acquired in one purchase three, “icase News . ( apartment hotels valued at $4,150,000. The fact that DAMPEN IT DOWN. ‘ where one of these palatial buildings stands the goat Fatah psa l cht ahead Drowsed a few years ago Is not more interesting 9 & Jr tae sm tinulderel teat donee phase of real-estate evolution than is this “deal” by an righ Sure! Vt tadring outsider, that'a what you mean.—Phtladelphia } The outside investor has, of course, been a factor in Utes n : } the real-estate market for years. He has come from B 4 le wl ia ie * Pittsburg to build a million-dollar residence on Fifth » ptemailind’ Ga ike eave avenue or a chateau on Riverside Drive, and from Bos- 9 ® hers, when | ton or Syracuse to build hotels, But his more general interva ial sori- ¢ Appearance as a speculative buyer, as evidenced by this ta, exclaimed a \ week's transactions, Is of peculiar interest. Not many RMOUOGE, WAY (NEY Cat thle ¢ \| years ago New York supplied the funds lor Western real- , i| r estate investments. The setting in of the curre n the . Other direction {¥ worth noting o 4 i SWEETHEART VERSUS THE ARMY, Usbines Senator Cullom has acquitted himself as should the Man that looks like Lincoln.” In janumerable stories of the civil war “Uncle Abe” saved from the firing squad Young heroes who had good excuses for sleeping at their posts, besities having pretty young sweethearts and «is ters to plead their Uncle Shelby” has saved from an assignment to the P John Pierce, who also bad a pr lippines one Private ty sweetheart to plead _ for him. It's & neat enoug.. little story as it comes from Wash- Aegton. Full of the red chee, Min- ‘ fs John's sweetheart—and binshes and of the she gave the Senator wien s: hristened him the { Minnie Swigert it Oid Man” of Iilin Almost anybody would eto have been Cullom, even to the extremity of look- Mike Lincoln. since this sort of thing has begun, where fs It to Has Cupid turned to the rankest anti-Imperialiet all? Are we to see the army of possession and Over far seas decimated on the plea that its ‘Men are needed to establish hearthstones Read then fied just will bring nan “highe by Me A dependent d man Mis. garnings ly In proport aders you tot all” posable the most de 4 and e World m every day Women’s 5 Questions and the Answers to Them ¥ ew Ww Fair Readers Seching Information Should Write to “Wonven’s Questions, ay Evening Lacks New York City." on to Sith, from 9 until “we THE # EVENING o: WORLDS & HOME .w MAGAZINE ws Liebe bbod idab > iw r w She and Kickums Overhear a Conspiracy to Make Them flappy,b t Can't Keep It to Themsel ass, ¢ HAVE Yo! + of the Stomach, a Know About Yourself, . NO 1—The Processes of Digestion and Valuable Hints About the Care * a a (Condensed from “Personal Hygiene,” by Charles Qy : Stockton, M.D, Copyright, 1904, by W. B, Saunders & Co.) ns in the mouth with mastication @né ine he saliva enters the mouth through three of salivary glands * womach, to whieh the food passes next, [9 & Museune® > lylag mainly on the left side o! y under the omach will ce 0 three pints 4, The membrane which lines the of a fluid known as gaatria de up of hydrochloric acid, ite chemteai actton om eas of digestion om the stomach t Gastric tes the pr pening known a@ s, the food nex Hall Intestine, © intestine Is about twenty divided into thr ae known as the die and the leu ed with giand® i deDOD 2 . la lady wear a hat at i iu those ure q . : Letter Paper, ANX1OUs oft a mond B M It Je more pollte to send carda of atevbte formation a plain, cooking 9 then MARY MORRIS NORTH 5 There are sumerous cook books w is : @ will answer pose that me ot . Melp” Wanted purchased a wk » Marla lat ; Harland’s Cook ‘ . N h r fl F. you , ih ont rhe " Reus think | #80 the W ver nd—in a man to use is White, in a Gi se Margaret Ferris,” of eee all coat or. tuxedo Wanted * Week. "Marparet Perr WARGARET Ris Never prefix “Mra.” In signing your name. If you wish the person to whom you are writing to understand that you Lace @ married wouma place your tui) Me, and Esa. To, the Editor of The Evening World: Will you please tel me the cor- rect form of addressing an savelope | ‘9 4 genteman frend. Showa it {s not bad form, but the he 37 To the Editor of The Erening Should cards worded 7, tM Ds eat the ha lannura Ae and much ) focementy. today Rah public now, though at aceg they are still ‘worn,’ World aM Reception Etiquette. giissed men are not wearing the fone when the vogue lent. Flowers are not often Home | Brooklyn folks home nights? We think NOT! 5805-2 4-5 3699-90003000 , known as tne ins the ree incestine, six feet long, rit from our save ten point out the idual system, The Jeocecal valve, i oy in < from for The appetite ts an instinct wh age forefathers, A normal a form of diet most nutritious to the indis testing Influence of mind, too, on digestion and nutrition cannot be averiooked. § x , excitement of any unpleasant sort wi 13 end to a he appetite, but will sertousiy gestion Fye-stvain will often have the saine il When required t ot the diet toa tired nervous system and an tre should be eate compos thus often unwise for adulte ea ah ire the funetional activities are suf! sed, or to eat a heavy mid-day mead whe ly lias weared the aystem. It ts bets tax i" r the chief meat t ” enioyed. Rat slows ‘ da few hours in quiet ? fore poling to bed As egulating the diet: ¢ te and occupation must he who does active outdo t work tes * meals ¢ » fats and car! re required; in hot cou! ganier For t ann the f Iy should de smo}! The ordina isiness or pros fessional m will d » breakfast yone of tw ed ewes or fivh, a rol or soine toast ond Eariy in the morning a glassfiti of pure water, neither iced tyisabie te five hours apart, Bread and Chaw the bread cares he Ik ides noe ght soup, bread and perhaps som@ m part of luncheon oF Dine five hours after and butter, a | farinaceate puddlag ma but not usually of dinner. ue constitut! can afford to Ine f lobster, welsh rarebits, &a, meals tf you wish, but do not use It te Plenty of water should be drunk datly, bu® between moals ty ba eal that an aleohole beverage fs une + its inebriating effects It often sertouse ink water down food general it n may be thrown Into a atate of sever@ P cel bath Some authoritles advise ‘ eat just afier bathing, Do not eat juss 8 oxerodse ct performance of the digestive organs? the abdomen, walet, &e., should not be constricted Se. To all perfect digestion the body ng and standing; the chest should be kept habit domi mu: not he allowed to sag. Christmas Sayings of Some Noted Thinkers, Christmas Child posseag of Bethlehem shine above my} a’Kempie on of regenerated feeling—the season for kinde ing, merely the fire of hospitality In the hall, but the genial flames of charity In (he heart.—Washington Irving, We make n great deal of peace with heaven; Christ made > much of peace on earth.—Henry Drummond. It Is good to be children sometimes, and never better tham at Christmas, when its mighty Founder was a child Himaelt, —Charies Dickens. I have always thought of Christmas time as a mood time, kind, forgiving, charitable, pleasant time,—Charlee kens Lift up your eyes to the great meaning of the day, an@ are to think of your humanity as something #0 divinely ous that It ts worthy of being made an off tk as a privilege to make that offering ; possible, Keeping nothing back: and then go the Spirit of out to the > pleasures and duties of your life, having been truly bora > anew into His divinity, aa He was born Into our humanity on Christmas Day.—Phillips Brooks Tibet Snow-Blindness. To prevent snow blindness the natives of Tibet grease their faces and then blacken the skin wll wround thelr eye@ t Most foreigners when exposed to the snow In Tibet weer colored glasses The Biggest Apple. Residents of Paonia, Col, claim that the world was ratscd in that district thin vear, Tt ts of the Woif River variety and weighs thirty-one and a quarter ounces, Fine large strawberries were picked in Paonia the third week In October. The “Fudge” 'Idiotorial ~ Napoleon had the We Will Our theory that THE HU- Brains to RIAN BRAIN was an the B R Ht ELECTRIC BAT« (Copyrot, 1904, Planet Pub. Co.) argest apple (= TERY and that ALL humanity was strung along on a series of INVISIBLE WIRES. WE THINK SO, TOO! We think, further, that SOME BRAINS are STORAGE. BATTERIES! We think OUR BRAIN IS THIS KIND of a brain! We therefore make an IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT to our Brooklyn readers: We have WILLED OUR BRAIN TO THE BROOKLYN RAPID TRANSIT COMPANY, to be used as a vast STOR+ AGE BATTERY! When our brain is put to this newer and greater use there will nolonger be LACK OF POWER on the B, Re J. Halsey street cars will not have to wat ten minutes until Fulton street cars are pushed up the hill | There will be POWER ENOUGH FOR ALL! COULD our brain be put to BETTER we thom getting

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