THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAU PORTLAND, SUNDAY , MORWNG JANUARY V 1903 .jLmmmmtmm. MS sa r , r.. p n.- .. . v 'it. . ii J 1 . v. 1 i ii 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 i - I. 7 i! v, V Jiliif Ricli Burglar's Crime Charged, to fie . Spirit of an fctmoDian Criminal Mm 'r: ''t ''i-'i.tt-rjv?Z-..; oiuUitr Th ruJt wm aa Intana ecrudcenc '6t Interest In th wboit general subject, with the speedy, publication of the moat 'remarkable of all, caaes, be cauae reported directly, and tn complete aelenlflo de- , tall, by the phyalclan In attendance..- The aubject vaa a young, pretty, cultivated, mor ally auperaenalilv American girl, who waa obaeaaed . by another peraonallty that forced her to do all man ner of , undignified and ' Ill-bred actlona, repeatedly overcoming the moat desperate efforts of her normal nature and will,' and dlaolaylng extremes of 'passion, ' petty, malic and distinctly vicious tendencies. Under . t&atmsnt the girl actually developed a third person allty, almost as pronounced In well-defined, distinct ! traits, as thasecond abnormal nature, i 1 $;. : v ..This case acquired such v wide notoriety that It set up a whole series of Investigations, followed by the publication, about a year ago, of a novel by Gelett . Burgess, in Which the heroine's' dual personality di lemma gave rise to some romantio adventures far less 1 astonishing than the "simple and. unvarnished truths already established by science.'' - i : '." , Puring the last five years the worlds of advanced thought and of experimental science have been 4n the ' qui vive for 'discoveries' which shall. In the spiritual , plane, equal If ot surpass in Importance the recent demonstrations of the amasing properties of the new; metal, radium; the remarkable achievement ef Pro-' feasors Pierre and Madame Curie, in Franoe. Flam marion laments the untimely death of M. Curie, who," like all the other great ,mlnda of science, participated - in the studies of manifestations of mysterious and un- Mrs. Bomadka, wbose Intelligence made It apparent Ji-J.7J9-JJL 3?,. her that all her former life and all her husband's Carea 7QSOWet &?ri&ojBitefzs Soul mechanic who shed his personality, one night at his. New England home,- as a t snake sheds Its cuticle tramped southward to Philadelphia, and for half a generation conducted a business totally different from his own trade, under a totally different name, and with a totally different personality, so far as his , knowledge of himself was conscious of his person 'allty. . - , Mr. Myers adduced many other cases of undeni ably dual personality, and still others of multiple per- S IT POSSIBLE for US tO conceive m" 'I Survival rxfter Bodily , , v.- , Death-V the, outcome, of years' of close scrutiny of; that a White, Wdmatt, beautiful, CdUCat- , the labors of the. London' Society for Psychical Re- . A tht, tt, In', m.tJj( A .J search, with which he was so actively associated, was edt wealthy, the loving wife of a mod- glven t0 the world, v s ; , .r em millionaire, Could develop.' by slow and " " " included , the . famous esse, first reported to a . ... - .t - 1 t i ..meeting of physicians some years previously by. Dr. irresistible evolution, the SOUl Of an - Oban- & Weir Mitchell, of Philadelphia, of the New England doned, criminal, ignorant negresst '' ; ; And, if such a thing is not only possible cf conception, but literally true in fact, what woman living, however high her morals, her culture or her position, can .assure herself of immunity from the abhorrent obsession of some other appalling identity, as terrifying to the normal mind and spirit as this of the degraded negress, r which has fastened upon brilliant Evelyn Romadka, the wife .of the millionaire trunk manufacturer ' of Milwau keet , : ' :" ' ,' -.:v. . The convicted accomplice of Chicago's negro burglars 'and sneak-thieves, she is now serving the indeterminate sentence of from ' one year to twenty years, to which she was , condemned, upon her plea of guilty, by fudge Brentano. ' . . '. , ' - , - ' The physicians who attended her 'in 'prison agree as to the obsession; and one of them goes so far as to declare his conviction ;that her case is one long relegated by science to the limbo of antiquated superstitions, that passed away when demoniacs find sorcerers . became the laughing stocks of enlightened 1 humanity. - ' Evelyn Romadkcts fall, from the heights , wealth could not avail to seoure her acquittal under the evidence of gjillt which had been secured against her, made a full confession, the facts of which have not even been questioned by, the judge who sentenced her. No more graphic, no more appalling narrative of misfortune could be given She says: ; A i EfiD ASTjRAY BX ACCIDENT "The newspaper stories giving graphic accounts of crimes made me want to meet realrooks.- I hadan idea that I would be absqrbed In the stories a real live burglar 'could telL , t. "Albert Jones, the negro man, came to do some ..cleaning for the woman from whom I rented a room. I saw him and asked him the time. He drew from his pocket a woman's Watch, and with It, Inadvertently, a woman's diamond ring. He glanced at me surrepti tiously and stealthily put it back into his, pocket V"A strange thrill crept over me., and i did not hear him tell the time. I was thinking fast. Here was I face to face with my dreams, so to speak. I became I I UfL0" -. t I III I. ' t. I ! ' imVtHiMlllll ' !f ! I 1 . 'I H If MI ''...J.l pi '.If Ii J P , - i r ' "i i . i . n" it? wyyMy:' y .m vt,,vvvvi...i'v''i 1 1 J,. f . 3 calm, but with a sort of ecstacy. We were at the door of my apartment. I pulled him into If . : .. ' " believe you are a crook,' I said, and then stopped him as he was about to speak and move away. -Stay, here. t said. 1 have wanted to meet a ' burglar or something for a -long time. I am Intereited. I want to know yon. I will not give yoa away.' ; "I can tell you some stories about stealing that will make your hair stand on end,' Jones told me, or something like that and that Was the way we be came acquainted, x ' i '. ' . "I talked with him, getting ' the stories at first hand and not from the 'yellow newspaper any more. Then I planned with him to try ray own hand." The noteworthy feature of, Mrs. Roraadka's confes sion Is that she Is absolutely unconscious of any other personality controlling her normal nature. She saw. when- she made it, only with her own natural brain ISKORMofibeML of refinement and happiness to the depths of 'shame and degradation, has been made no torious throughout the length and breadth of : the land. But the mysterious and terrible in fuence that has clutched her in the midst of Vicr wealth and her happiness and has encom passed her destruction has, thus far, failed ut-, terly to be comprehended in the full measure of its dark' significance to the rest of mankind. i -' 1." 4 4 " 'y K:al MIATAL? m?&t&m:yyw and spirit blaming herself, giving a perfectly natural ': r and lucid account of the fall of soul, such as a pni 7 tent might, have glvn in the confessional. Such complete forgetfulness of the agencies of ob session is typical of many subjects. The dlsoovery of their peculiar form 'of obsession Is, usually, made by the nurses and physicians In attendance, as It Was . made in the Instance of Mra Romadka. -, .1 ' In prison, after her arrest she raved and pleaded for the companionship of negroes, talked the, lowest and vilest negro dialect, and referred constantly to her husband as podr white trash." Dr. Alsx Ous tafson, an experienced alienist who attended her there, was positive la his diagnosis, - v , , "I am sure," said the alienist, "that this woman ta, possessed by an Ethiopian spirit, which has absolute control over her actions. , She Is absolutely Innocent of wrongdoing.. except when this spirit overpowers her : wni and forces her to do Its bidding." ; v Dr. Sheldon . Leavltt, a well-known practitioner, connected with many medical societies and several Chicago hospitals, called into consultation, found him- -self -constrained to admit that the ease of Mrs.. Ro madka confirmed , his belief in phases of mentality , which are still disputed by the majority of his pro fession. ' .-''.', V This la the first example of obsession, or ofpos session," as Dr. Leavltt prefers to define It of a whfte woman by the spirit of negress. f - Can It be that In-every white Individual.' there re- ' mains enough of the common ancestry, deduced by science from the discovery of the specimen plthecan- mropus itrapanensls, ' to permit of an 'unforeseen, overpowering uprising of the germ of a conquering negro soul? : And can' It be hoped that science. In Its broad and beneficent range, will ultimately find the means of safeguard? .' t , . , ,. A 9 . LL Italy, ,.t turning its apprehensive gaze upon .uiovanm (JiohtU, the prune min ister, ' now quails in the terror of the ' belief that be possesses the evil eye. Italy., where belief in thn viTpva is (1 dwwc, -areeu. can me mooern inieueciV; as laitn ,n the existence of a personal devil, has compel itself to admit so much as the possi- ' hfl(J ita most -h'roni it r.r .KMin. 0f5- NX.T by the adducing of many other cases, upon the authenticity and genuineness of which 1 .i sty of the horrible phenomenon of Waich beautiful . trs. Romadka is the victim. :' ; Religion, throughout all the centuries, has Insisted upon not merely ' the possibility of falls from grace end virtue, but upon the certainty of inevitable catas trophe without; divine intervention and constant hu man striving toward an Ideal of perfection. In medi eval tiroes, and as far back as the days of the-Re-deemer himself, possession by demons, with' exorcism for the casting of them out Was a master of com mon. faith, If nowadays many deny It was a matter of knowledge."-;-' '';nl'!Ji:.!'SO:, -.i: Science, after a long and total denial of the super naturaleven of the preternitural has of late found It expedient to broaden Its own narrow limitations. : IVhere It Insisted, upon cutting the wonderful and the Incomprehensible, out of religion. It Insists how -upon its right to absorb all ot them into itself. Bays the great Camilla Flammarlon, in his latest work. Mysterious Psychlo Forces." in which he adduces the ' Ions and patient ' investigations of Sir William Crookes, as well as hir own: ! "If the forces of which we are "to ,treat are reaC7 tury cannot but be natural forces, we ought to admit -tion aroused into a dread whiph refuses to abate by tlie long genes of deaths and shocking misfortunes- that ,l have descended upon successive members of .the prime minister's cabinets. s The recent end of the , minister of public ' works, ' Emmanuelo ; Giant urco, in the ' prime of life for he had just passed the half centuryby - the agency of - thafmost ' repulsive of diseases, - cancer, marked the . seventeenth man upon whom - a blight of some, sort by- many regarded as the t i- prime minister's - destructive glance has fallen, ; " f Italy r is asking itself : "Can this ' evil eye, which overlooks all the affairs of the nation; have " cursed the very land itself ts Does the earth trem- - ble and vomit forth its lava fire- because he gazes upon it too fixedly!":' :'.tv ' v . irtsciecfty ?xer Ja?Ai f7rA habit as the connoisseur of eyes. " . ' But none that he will conjure upthe piercing, black, close-set eye which he thinks of first or the pale, chill ing, habitually antagonistic, eye. or the slant-lidded, glint : Ing, secretively Insolent eye which he Instinctively recog nlzes as treacherous will be the evil eye .of which Italy stands in awe. No one has yet lived who could define the evil eye in words 9 color, form or expression. It is there when it Is therethat Is all. ; . u ' " r ; , It may be brilliant and round; It may be long and dreamy (of regard; it may be black or brown, behind lashes scant or sweeping. fl Yet In Its blighting depths, al though the soul of its unfortunate owner be a well spring' of love"for his kind, lurks some evil, blighting genius , whose presence every Italian intuitively feel- hn ; temperament are capable of awakening among men of . all classes, his care as prime minister of Italy must ; have ended with the, first suspicion. that hewas cursed i with jettaturs, or the qualities of the evil eye.' ' ' -,t It has. however, happened that as the list of the un fortunates In direct association with him grew long, he v ' xouna increasing difficulty In replacing those' whorp un : expected death or grave, prostrating illness: took away , from their duties rf state. Among the victims, was the postmaster general, Stel-' lutl Scala, whose sudden death shocked all hW colleagues; Signor Gallo. scarcely inducted into" his labors as minister of Justice when he was found dead In his bed; Slgnon Rossano, another minister of ; Justice, who -committed suicide, and Masalmine, minister of finance, who died of paralysis In the Chamber of Deputies, .stricken with ln stant death In the midst of an important addresaV Signor Glanturco,Vwhose death of cancer has startled Italy, himself succeeded, .In the ministry of public works, a minister upon f whom heart disease fastened, forcing; .. him Into private life. The most famous of ministers' of finance, De Broglle, has been crippled by acute rheuma - tism; his successor, Wollamberg, Is Insane. ' ; MAN AFTER MAN SUCCUMBSi Ony a short time has elapstyf since another minister o? finance, Majorana, selected by the eye of Ololittl es-:. peclally for his youth -and etrength, was debarred from his post by . a sudden cancer, against the dire ravages of which he has struggled, hoping against the hope that failed Glanturco. , .' Prenettl, foreign-minister,' stricken with the hemor- ' malevolence -Is visited upon all who sustain the ruth- rhage bt apoplexy; TIttenl. ioreiim minis ter. trfakan with less glances long.v ' ' j , , , - , 'ordinary cerebral hemorrhageman after man. they have Some Cur ious Facts PUBLICATION recently1 Issued by the Central Es-' peranUst office In Paris shows that there are ts Esperanto ; societies throughout the world, and ' thirty-eight Journals 'are published specially devoted t(T the propagation of the language. ? ,; ; . Only one, on an average, out of every thousand mar rled couples live to celebrate theft golden weeding. The empress of Japan is a great advocate of the spread of education in her nusband's dominion r-Turklsh women do-not come into -controi of thelfTBri. - vate fortunes until after marriage. They can then dispose of one-third of It (without the 'husband's' consent - l BIgamlsU In. Hungary are compelled to submit to aJy' odd punishment: The man who has married two wives Js legally; forced to live with both of them in the, same ' , house. ? ' N 1 - ' i" i The throne of Persia, known as ths Wonderful Pea cock Throne, Is probably the most costly in the world. - It Is literally covered with Jewels, and is valued at be- What Is considered to.be the largest telegraph clr , .' cult in dally operation in the world is that between Lon ' don and Teheran,, the capital of Persia, which Is some , 4000 miles In length. The line is divided into twelve see-tlons.- , In Sweden the ptiblio houses ars closed on Saturday v payday while ths savings banks , are kept i open until ' ' midnight 'No government can force a man to ave his moneyj but this. Swedish system at least encourages him to deposit H where it is most likely to be of use. " Egg shells as gas mantels is an idea from Germany, ' The contents are drawn or blown out, the ends are nestly , ' cut off, and the body of the shell is fixed in nosltlon Ilka si ; the regular article. The light thus Obtained Is very good, - " while thenew form of mantle is much more durable. . i - There are.no newsboys In Spain; women sell news papers In the streets... ' ; , , The, queen of Norway takes a great Interest In- book binding. ' The collecting of beautifully bound books Is one -of her hobbies. , The eye-of Premier Glollttl shows a broad, level orb. under lids significant of equal firmness and intelligence. It Is what a Stevenson might have called "an emlfiently human eye,'-beaming with perceptlveness. lambent with active thought kindled always with some spark of the genial that makes a man likable. i; It Is precisely .the quality of "likableness" which has aistinguihed an the unfortunates who have boon doomed succumbed. r' The first, envelope ever made is kept tn the British ' U It to the curse of Giollttl's Jettaturaf AH Italy" . In marriage announcements In Spain the aks of both says scexplalnlng the discrlmlnatiosTln the natures of nartlM are-vivmi .- t.-f ;. . w theafflictions sustained by different Individuals, and the intensity, of the various plights to which they have been reduced, by the commonly -accepted belief that while few, if any,' human beings are totally immune against jettatura. all have various powers of resistance. T to earry about with them, from cruel cradle to merciful i No one blames the unfortunate premier all 'concede O AMERICANS accustomed to look directly Inlo the eyes of , every v .human - being they : face a practice which, test "of unflinching courage as it. s . absolute pr.nciplethat everything is In nature. levtl ZTmiTtt S iB ... i Xli J have shown in anotoer work - . rlpUons. might be WcaUed as the peculiarly evll eye. It as in I03 that Myers' monumental work. rHu- -because the American may be acceptedTfrom his naU.nai grave, the awful burden of their own windows to the soul. They have had countless friends; they have been devotedly loved;fand theyhave beheld those who loved them bast whom best they loved, perish before their lethal eyes of theery love light that Inspired humanity's noblest passion. i . - ' Had It -not been for the supreme confidence and th extreme affection which Premier Giollttl's character and she created. The average weleht of Ivory obtained from a atnviaV elephant Is about fifty pounds: t " , , " The license law in Sweden forbids any one to buy dnnk without buying something to eat at the same time. ' The machine which cuts up wood to make matches turns out 40,000 "splints," as they are called, in a single minute.v. . '" , ! ' - . . History is taught to young children at a school tn Brussels by means of dolls, which represent great men and women in characteristic attitudes. ; In parts of Trance it Is net 'an uncommon occurrence ...hu . JtM. ........ tnnlii.lt... V. J.t . - . I . . under the .curse of .somec monster to hu-j, many firms making a specialty of letting out his motives to be above reproach and ' his supposedly malevolent Influence to be Involuntary. ;;i,-fV; . ''. , . But with the people at large beginning at length to imagine they discern some relevancy between his alleged evil eye' and the succession of misfortunes, that have i befallen the country, it seems to them Bow as though Nature herself - w