The evening world. Newspaper, June 9, 1908, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ey | Pie Spirit on «oo, By Maurice Ketten oe Crees) TClorld, Portinea Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. §3 to G) Park Row, New Yoi 3. ANGUS SHAW, Bee. © gOSErH PULITZEN, Proe,, + Rast 124 Street — aa = eee aeae > Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Mat] Matter, «am Gubscription Rates to The Evening For England and ihe Continent and | ea World for the United Stat and Canada. All Countries in the International Postal Union. + $8.50 One Year eaet80. One Month 13 oti TAKING A CHANCE. ARAH KOTEN shot and killed Dr. Auspitz Sunday evening. | Miss Koten was a hospital nurse. She was employed by Dr. Auspitz last fall, and last month the doctor was tried and acquitted on her charge of assault. She told the Coroner “The courts would not de- fend my honor; 1 have defended myself.”’ A year ago another young wom- an, accompanied by the man to! c whom she was engaged, went to ' Br. Auspitz’s office amd tried to shoot him. She also made charges t lgainst the doctor and that time also he was acquitied. Several years be- fore a husband obtained a divorce from his wife on the ground of her i nduct with Dr. Auspitz. | i Sarah Koten will now be tried for murder, probably for murder | j in the first degree, since her act was deliberate and premeditated. i Will she be convicted? | On this point should be quoted the proceedings in the case of Rosa- | tio Moranno, who was tried before Justice Aspinall, in Brooklyn, and ac. | I quitted of murder there. The verdict of the jury was suggested by the «Court, who said: : ae “It is also plain from the evidence that the man he killed was an| aaindesirable citizen, and that his demise was probably a benefit to the | e2eommunity.” f “Under the strictest interpretation of the law it is no justification to. Kill a man either because he is an undesirable citizen or because he has sassaulted a woman. Certain kinds of undesirability are defined by the | ppenal code, and suitable penalties affixed, while for assault the penalty is snot death, and Dr. Auspitz had already been acquitted. al » I Batatee 5 Technically Miss Koten is a murderer, and following the letter of the | aw she would go to the electric chair. | Of which there is not one chance in ten. 3 The general feeling is that a man who has illicit or improper rela- | i tions with a woman takes the chances of whatever consequences there The Jart Children Furnish Excitement by Getting Lost; Then They Furnish More by Letting Themselves Be Found }may be. The wrong to the public is so small in comparison to the | as Pin CO Ne gununedowngatathe icormenzand ixcentc ‘01 indivi ‘ ruirat eee F | t .to go there," said Mrs. Jarr. can see them!" Wrong to the individual that the minor offense dwindles in comparison By Roy L. McCardell. in that house “The Black Hand doesn’t steal poor people's chil- with the greater offense. Toy ead der tell ‘said Mr. Jarr. And he did, but dren,” said Mr. © That undoubtedly will be Miss Koten’s plea when she faces a jury. sé W dren?" asked = Mr. visiting t ana Fe Atal SRE Bea As HO Os ’She will claim that the grievance was individual to her; that she had aie eee Sane] aomadeat ap Dred yaree Ul biinwa something Wen Ney ert home the other evening, woman “They ment ago,”” “Maybe WI! has happened t gone when t m! I might have known in this were here just a mo- sald Mrs. Jarr fe fs taking a Ss ught in vain the redress which the law Provides, and, that recourse hav- ing failed her, she successfully undertook at her own hands the punish- 4 tent of the offender. y Were so quiet. ‘They 1 the street. I tell the 7 een e ea bath." is no place to raise children," growled © has starving children she's not | to} 1, This is a different application of the so-called “unwritten law” than fate ta 1 85 testes o> pid have a nie Tace th ene cron add to the collection My talking oun,” sald Mr. Jare when a a 0 ak punis! Panta certo Rees aa be in no dancer.” “Don't stand there 1 Mrs. Jarr. j When a man undertakes to punish thing for him to do at any time of danger in the country," said “Run out and t or it he| saw them, tell for them!” “They may be next boy,” ventured Mr. J; said Mr: thout being driven to it with ty meet to look | club “That is not so!’ said Mrs. Jarr, up in arms at once. “He § just cries for his bath now.” $ tramps and cows in th an injury toa woman of his family, oun j because here it was the woman and snot a third party who undertook her own vengeance. door playing with thi little | | eassuring tone, “t turn up any t the children ment." But arr, “If they are not! are not!” : 4 ‘ “Ever since I bought that Ittle boat, eh?’ sug- imself and looked anxiously bitten by a mad dog they are run over by an What a woman of different life Bested Mr, Jarr. “He wants to sail it In the bath automobile or stolen, or maybe they have run awa and morals might regard as a mere pub 2h oie run away," sald Mrs, Jarr, you are so hb to them! But you never shall a ha ‘1 t you see them on the stoop when you | %0U save ping the other day, and, whip them again!’ Here Mrs. Jarr commenced to aioe seo Woman came: 18 Mecca Mrs. Jarr with a Reads fe caatecta polanachsens cry “calamity, as a blotting out of her voice.’ “Oh, nonsense!" sald Mr. Jarr. | Mr. Jarr selzed his hat, but at the door was | Tg + : I had I wouldn't have asked where they were,” It's not nonsense,” replied Mrs. Jarr. “You can't greeted by his oifsy s carrying a Teddy bear -the life's hopes, of her reputation and AUNT aes ythin ft dren by whipping |boy on the same floor had traded for little V her self-respect: dear! happenea |r nough.’ boat s ‘s . dei happened ay a nave 5 th Y A a dozen times and Lt wasn't| The sight of them so relieved thelr mother's fears . 1 Ee have been and put them to bea. Jarr, From her point of view she but he felt some com- has vindicated herself and inflicted a deserved punishment. Should everybody kill everybody else who is) ??P0°4 ist either “undesirable” or immoral what a slaughter there would be! | a rae ar ——-—— Love In Darktown. Letters from the People. — President's Salary, 850,000. To the w of The Evening World What is the salary of the Pres! Of the United States? J ted they them, they ould take took the yy take them out of the neig! said Mr Jarr. “1 suppose they are at the them!” now m said Mrs, ww | | | A1/STOH CHOLMONDELY You + ( 07/55 MONTRESSOR , 15 You AWARE (DONE SPRISES ME! /7 DO)| OAT AH'S ER. PAI'MUST?YAASM) | SEEM 700 —~ | AH KIN READ Yow LIL HAN? ( PEorcuzous! AN! AH TELLS Yon y/ UE . FoRCHIN’S © the Black Hand has stdlenithe Teddy bear to be Jarr, Joining her husband at the whipping as payment for the pleasit w By F. G. Long. The Courtship of Cholmondeley Jones and Beautiful Araminta Montressor. AWS GoT ER SUSPICION par} DIAN AM YOu. carr MISTOH CHOLMON [son Davi retary of War, un- Years thereafter, as President ant was a CSEES DAT LIL DARK pou in | arammaenaccoos, OOo. o. DOOOCOOCOCOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOL Nixola Greeley-Smith ON TOPICS OF THE DAY. DODOOOQOOODOS The Emotional Bread Line. YOUNG man reader writes me that he thinks a great A many young people are interested in the question answered affirmatively in the trite quotation, ‘*Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.” He seeks to know what I think of tt. If we consider only love in its real meaning there can of course be but one answer. Any thing that tends to make the individual unselfish benefits him to that extent. But love, 'n the usual acceptance of the word, covers such a multitude of Jealousies and petty exactions that it cannot, taken in that sense, be said to improve or elevate any one. To learn to consider another human being before gE sieacr= ‘imeelf, to control his actions, not as they may profit oF Ee injure himeelf, but as they may please or hurt a beloved woman, is of the highest benefit to any man whether he wins love or not. Women are woefully easy to win, however. And the man who falls to make the woman he loves love him in return fas generally his method and not her obstinacy to blame. In love, to be sure, there {s a sort of emotional read line, composed of men and women defeated at the game of hearts, who wait patiently for any stale loaf of affection that Fate in its charity may send. The wind that is tempered to the shorn lamb blows in the path of‘the disconsolate lover, a lady suffering from similar dlight, and straightway they tell each other their troubles and are consoled. Cynics may tell the anxtous inquirer whom I am endeavoring to answer that it's better to love and lose her than to love her and not be able to lose her. But let him not concern himself with such cheap wit Vanity 1s the collodion of love's wounds. Unless the cut be very deep let a Uttle of the gelatine of self-esteem be smeared over the injured surface and allowed to harden, and in a few days there is not even a scar to tell the tale of A blighted heart. Not unlike a treatise on the tender passion by Dr. Mary Crawford, our girl Ambulance surgeon, Is it? But whether expressed medically or otherwise, things. A sparrow may hop about the fect of a peacock view the spreading glory of his tail and yet continue to admire {ts own dull brown coat beyond anything in the world. A woman utterly without charm will vie with Venus herself for the favor of man. and cry “'f * at the goddess's serenely unconscious triumph, All because of the beneficent vanity that In love, as in everythi se, rules tho world Love temporarily obscures the glass of vanity. quicksilver off the back and turns {t into a winc able to see far beyond the personal reflection to w was once dedicated @x- eitialy ‘Therefore, any real love, since !t widens the hor ne of the lover, 1g an infinite boon, whether he wins or loses the object uf Ais heart. vanity consoles us for all To be accurate, {t takes the pane through which we are Gertrude Barnum’s Talks to Girls A Back Porch Pi cnic. T was a sul Hoon I posed in The starch t out of the girls are mad bec > far, or won't go furt tor . The grass {x too wet to sit on ag a s to make yout it, passing the tce-crea didn't warn them. No Saturday ine, portaole tent with wood fou th tho fecbox and water faucct nd read the poets that sing of woods withou bugs." “But.” T prote a "surely you like the co ne country,” Edna wered, “as the worl! gooz now, tho coun'r 0 most other good things, $s for the rich. ne best of the front steps, fire-escapes and ey Fa the banting cure for obes: A ey when I want a Surdcy Reflections of a Bachelor Gir, ky Relen Kowlani the modern love affair wo: $B, Cod recs [ nd man—Just dozes. A man doesn't need to swear 4 °xpress his opinion of her; he can shut the hind chtm in the morning so that !t so. By a man’s vows of devotion ye shall not kn the lover who promises a girl a life of roses !s usu. one who allows her to pick off all the thorns f It 1s so much easter for some men to ge to the ¢ a woman than to go to work for ‘her. A dark brown “past” is sometimes a good againet a black future; the man who has “seen 1 quite so likely to be looking for 4t The woman who marries a dandy soon Aiscovers that @ thing of beauty 1s not necessarily a joy forever. Man—as far as his opinions and emotions go—Is the noblest work of w MAN KISS DE, | BRIDE-FIN 2 Tl The President's s gress in 1907 app travelling expen: How » To the FAltor of The Will readers work out this ilttle prob- Jem? I have an article to sell and I Want $2 net. Th: umission is 15 How m lary is $50,000, riated $25,000 for his | rep President 1 ome the T will send a eral in the s | nar | ret are t prai on should be FX eS \ per cent h would T have to | @sk for the article so that it would fs i leave me §2 net after the commission 7? { LOUIS S. Views of the Cane. [eee nf Thi orld to visit thi “(=A AH SEES ER ETL \ £06 CABIN WIF ER CozEY > CORNAN -AN' DEY'S i t Tan \NUFFIN BUT SUGH s p/m i ~"e | Sa eae 6 SIN DE PANTRY- a A Nay eas children who suffe ————— AN? CHICKEN M PUSTOH CHOLMONDELY, ) AH'S DUSPEC TIN s : ve read that f @ren go to school daily w \. fast. Women physicians at t can Medical Assoctat! ‘ © WAKE UP! Yous : | A-DREAMIN? E | FIN’ A-HOLDIN’ ' | city to keep a y Amerl- one to two AN! WATER. ; Pare < | MILLION: AN* | are The pape 3 5 3 ex of Gen. ) bie tomb o morial Day} the - OF any—took place When Jefer- \ : \ Gra The ‘‘Fudge’”’ Idiotorial. Taking advantage of our ab- sence in Europe, we notice our “Little” Mayor Is suing us for the DAMAGES the city has had to pay on account of OUR FIRE- WORKS! It was not our FAULT that the flreworks BLEW UP! We did not TOUCH them OFF. We were simply celebrating our election to Congress by TAMMANY HAUL. Besides, we can PROVE an ALIBI! We never WENT to CON- GRESS after we were elected. This ought to let us OUT! If any- body should pay the damages MURPHY is the man. He got us into the scrape. It strikes us that this “‘Little’ Mayor is getting PRETTY FRESH! The next time we want to celebrate anything we shall STEP ona MATCH. That will make NOISE enough to celebrate any- thing we are likely to do from now on! weet & We Are Sued Again] Copyret, 1908, by the Planet Pub. Co.

Other pages from this issue: