Evening Star Newspaper, June 9, 1921, Page 6

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THE EVENING STAR, . With Sundsy Morning Edition. - WASHINGTON, D. C. THURSDAY........June 9, 1821 THEODORE W. NOYES. .. .Editor The Evening Star Newspaper Company Busiaess Office, 11th St. and Pennsyivania Ave. New York Office: 150 Nassan St. Chieago Office: First 1 Baok Ruilding. Buropean office: 3 Regent St., London, England. ay only, 20 cents per month. 0O be sent by mail, or telephone Maln Collection is made by carriers at the esd of each month. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland ard Virginia. Daily and Sunday..1yr.. $8.4); 1 mo., 79¢ Daily enly. 1yr., $6.00; 1 mo,, 50c Sygday only. 1yr., $2.40; 1 mo., 20 - All Other States. d S -1yT., §10.06; m‘g only. et ir e C oaly. 1 mo., 8¢ The Republican Committee. The new chairman of the republican mational committee takes office with an experience which insures full ap- preciation of its responsibilities. As vice chairman he became acquainted with the duties of the chairmanship, and his promotion is a reward fori, 4 in ine event of a remodeling of { of popularity. In England he is a wel- | faithful post. Moreover, he will have the bene- fit, 3s will the committee, of the advice of Mr. Hays, who, although occupied ‘with the affairs of the Post Office De- partmegt, will yet keep up interest in his party. and be available for advice in organization matters. Mr. Hays in his valedictery said some very sensible things. The past is very fine, and seeyre, But the fu- ture needs to be carefully looked to. Because the country went republiccn in 1918, and smashingly so last _ear, is no warrant in itself for believing that the performance will be repeated next year. The next campaiga will have to be planned and condycted on conditions that then exist. ‘Those conditions will not be made, cannot be made, by the national com- mittee. In large measure they will be made by the administration and by Congress. If the President's policies and the legislation enacted by Con- sress redecm the promises of the Chi- cago platform and inure to the coun- try’s benefit, the committee’s work will be easy. Another republican victory will certainly be achieved. Otherwise, the efforts of the committee, no mat- ter how energetically made, will be likely to go for nething. As -usual, the repuyblicans are get- ting a good start. The committee is united, and early on the job, and evi- dently correctly appraises the job's size. . services in the subordinate Conferences. Conference committees seem to be echeduled for much important work. The navdl bill has gone to conference with House and Senate wide apart. ‘The general tariff bill is certain to need conference shaping in its more difficult features. while it will be @ miracle if the tax-revision problem does not make a heavy draft on the harmonizing ca- pacity of the men appointed to bring the two houses together on that. The peace problem may not prove so tough. Mr. Knox, the author of the Senate plan, is talking in a conservative key, and the House in conference may re- spond in like spirit. Such committees, as all know. do not admit the public to their meet- ings. Their agreements gre secretly arrived at. Likewise their disagree- ments. The confabulations are some- times of a very spirited character, and especially where disagreements resuilt. Some details get through the doors, but never enough to satisfy the pub- lic’s curiosity. A saving atrangement, however, is found in the disposition of conference reports. They can be openly discussed ‘when made, and in that way the public advised as to the gist of the commit- tee’s sessions. Let us hope that such may be the case this time; that all conference re- ports may be discussed with due ap- preciation of their importance. The country is greatly interested in the Navy and the Army, the tariff prob- lem and the tax problem, and details as to the action Congress takes on them cannot be too full. ! 1f Berlin undertakes to set the styles the Hohenzollerns will be willing, na doubt, to sacrifice a prince or two for service as fashion models. —_———me——— e Summer hotels are now preparing to contribute a few items to the list of housing problems. 4 The Patent Office. In the bill just introduced by Sena- tor King for a compulsory merger of the street railway companies is a pro- vision for straightening the lines en ‘¥ and G streets between 7th and 8th ‘which bears upon the question of the proper placement of public buildings in this city. At present the structure long known as the patent aoffice, for- merly the headquarters of the Interior Department, so fully occupies the space allotted that it virtually ob- trudes upon the street. The street lines are jogged out in consequence and correspondingly the car lines are turned out of their regular course. When the building was erected there ‘was no street congestion in Washing- ton. There were no car lines. No- DLody thought of car lines then. As the building was designed it should have had at least thirty feet more space all around. Had it been planned ‘with a lower main floor, with the prin- cipal entrances practically at the street level, there would have been barely room erough. But the elaborate southern portico, with its broad ap- proach steps, made an invasion of the street necessary, and the other en- trance steps ran close to the street lines. The simple fact is that the site chogen was inadequate for the build- ing. That was not an unusual fault in those days. and, unfortunately, it has. been repeated in modern times. It ‘was repeated when the Post Office De- partment building was planned and located, with a flush street setting. 4Also when the new Interior Depart- = ment was placed, with practically ne margin between| street and wall. It 'was, in a measure, avoided when the Municipal byilding was given a park- front setting, though the east, south and west walls were brought to the street lines. In the constructien of government buildings in Washington heneeforth Pprecaution should be taken te avoid this fault, to give each structure a park setting that will at the least not encroach upon the street lines, unless, indeed, as in the case of the patent office, a double squure is taken and a street is closed for a black. To insure such emplacements the plan was long ago urged that the government take the entire ““Mull-Avenue triangle,” ly- ing between the Botanic Garden and the Ellipse, and, treating it as a whole, instead of as a series ol city blocks, locate the needed public buildings upon it with reference to their immediate and possible future requirements. The §0c | government has already bought the western strip of squares and holds them in tengncy; that section would make & suitable setting for one, pos- sibly two buildipgs, byt not for the three that were originally contem: plated for the location. It is now proposed in the King bill | to move the sidewalk line on G street !back to the north line of the portico, 1in order to straighten the car lines, the exterior of the building and the similar shifting of the F street side- ‘walk and tracks is contemplated. This would involve a further crowding of the building itself by the street, a fault which should in no circumstances be repeated in any futyre public struc- ture emplacement and design. P Ses Trade snd Traders. In London Tuesday Rear Agdmiral Sims and Sir Qwen Phillips were among those who delivered addresses at a luncheon of the English-spegking union. This is taken from & press cable: “Sir Owen Phillips, president of the British chamber shipping, whe pre- sided, said he was not ene who ‘look- e? with a eritical eve gt the evolytion of the American mercantile marine. He declared thgt British shipping me should seek te work in ha: ‘eur comrades across the There is some expectation on both sides of the water—Sir Owen evidently knows of it on his side—that the de- velopment of & strang Americgn mer- ichant marine will not make fer good i feeling between England and America; that, on the contrary, it may lead to trade bickerings of a dangerous cher: acter. This need not be. There is room enough on the waters for the merchant fleets of both countries. And why not trade enough when the world of trade gets going again for the profitable operation of both? Business is businesg—sea business as well as all other kinds—end in its conduct call is made for vigilance, in- dustry, and staying power. But why should it mean war, or even bad feel- ing, for two nations to compete up to the hilt for business in a fleld open tw both, and cuitivatable by both to thw extent of their respective abilitiea? England is the older trader, and-tms done notable things in the sea-gEiry- ing line. We were good at sea-carry- i ing at one time ourselves, and shall | try again for a leading place. But our means will bg legitimate business means, and strictly on the live-and-lef live order. We shall strive with all our might, and in the belief that all our competitors are doing likewise. Back on the Job at Eighty-Four. Washington A. Roebling, aged eighty-four, was the other day elected president of the engineering and con- struction company with which his family name has been prominently identified for seventy-five years and notable since his father, John A. Roeb- ling, built the Brooklyn bridge. The newly elected president had retired from gactive duty, but the recent death of & nephew necessitated his return to the head of the company. There is something particularly im- pressive in this spectacle of a vetergn stepping into the breach caused by the death of a junior. The Roeblings have been remarkable people. The elder, John, did what was by some engineers believed to be impossible when he spanned the East river with: a suspension bridge. For many years it was one of the wonders of the west- ern world. Other big undertakings have been achieved by this family. Now the eldest of them all goes back to daily duty, degpite his nearly eight and a half decades. This case is a rebuke to the pessimists who aver that modern business men are, by their stresses and strains, lowering the aver- sge of human life. l A selfcensorship may be devised to protect the motion pictures from peo- ple who seek to utilize scandalous pub- licity as a means of bresking in. $ The tradition that @ man from Mis- souri frankly demanda *“to be shown™ jmay compel the Einstein theory to skip a number of towns. i There are doubts whether Lenin can continye to make his soviet history interesting unless he succeeds in lo- cating financial backing. e e e e s e American dye manufacturers “see red” whenever renewed German com- petitiow is mentioned. 1 ————————— Justice Holds Up Her Finger. Sometimes the law works peculigrly. While justice is in theory no respecter of persons—is supposed, indeed, to be blind—she occasionally peeks at the personality of the man at the bar and takes note of his social standing, to his advantage. There is the case of i Babe Ruth, for instance, the mighty { home-run hitter, the hero of hase ball. } He has a disposition to drive his motor car as fast as he drives the ball out of bounds. The other dsy he was ar- rested for the second time for speed- ing. The court had to be severe with him because he had had one distinct warning. So a jail sentence was neces- sary in addition to a fine. It was a most terrible ordeal. It was for one whole day. As a matter of fact, it only lasted six hours. But think of spending six hours in jail! To be sure, the “jail” consisted of a comfortable anteroom near the courtrgom; but then, the ball game was in progress during part of the time. Opportunities to accumulate four-base hits were passing with the ticks of the clock. At 4 o'clock the “day" ended, and then the “prisonet” was released and, with a special police escort to see that he was not arrested again, he went to the ball park, presumably within the speed limits, and got there in time to play a few innings. Suppose thig hud been a common or garden variety of citizen who had transgressed a second time, not a “hero” or & public character of the homer-hitting kind. At least a week would have been his portion and the Jail would have been a regular jail. There would have been no police es- cort or squad of honor at the expira- tion of the term. , These cases are not calculated to increase respect for the law. New York is killing people by the hundreds in the-streets. Speeders are taking toll of life at a shocking rate. But there will be no improvement in con- ditions so long as second-offense scorchers are treated differentially, ac- cording to their status in the public eye. Admirs] Sims’ Indiscretion. Admiral Sims is paying the penalty come figure. During the war he made removal of the south portico steps a|80od as commander of the American | naval forces. Whenever he appears at a public function in that country he is cheered and encouraged to speak. He speaks fluently and effectively. But he is not always discreet. His speech at London the other day at a luncheon was quite the reverse of discretion. It was, indeed, if it has been correctly reported, decidedly improper for a per- sen wearing the uniform of the United States and holding an official position. Regardless of the matter or the senti- ments, admiral has been called upon for an explanation. Unless the reports of the speech are incorrect he is due for an ynpleasant experience. Ne man can speak with entire free- dom go long 3& he in any degree rep- resents a government. Whatever his relations with the public erganiztion, while there is a relation he must curh his speech to conform to the public policies. Admiral Sims’ present offense of indiscretion is not his first. He has transgressed the strict rules of official propriety heretofore. Such uytterances might very gravely com- promise the government, but the promptness with which they have been challenged will in this case remove all political consequences. e The latest warld figure to be called to account by his physician is Lloyd George. The affairs of nations have called for almost superhuman effort on the part of men upon whom have devolved extraordinary responsibilities for thought and action. Lloyd George is one of these men, and the surprise is that the complete rest now demand- ed for him should not have been re- quired sooner. —_————————— Pueblo is already preparing for re- construction and will get to work a soon as any differences of opinion among the architects and engines have been disposed of. Eamammna The civilian guards of Bavaria have decided to disarm. The action must be regarded by thoughtful Germans as a triumph of common sense. —_———— Dictionary talent is again required to aid discrimination as te whether the word “lobbyist” is to be used as a descriptive moun or an epithet. —— e et The league of nations has enough material in hand to insume an‘abund- ance of discussion at every meeting. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. A Momentous Question. ‘What can we do to change life's plan And rest the tired husiness man? The stage is filled with dancers gay ‘Whose costumes make a Strange dis- play; ‘With comic pictures by the bale We seek to lure his features pale Unto a momentary laugh. ‘We put jazz on the phonograph; The world is cutting capers queer In order to afford him cheer, But private yachts and motor cars, { Luxurious food and good cigars | Are not sufficient to dispel 3 | This fierce fatigue of which they tell. Oh, ye who make the questionnaires, Let this great problem claim your cares, | Whose answer is so much desired: { Why are all business men so tired? Fixing Attention. “Are you going fishing because you need a rest?” “No," replied Senator Sorghum. “A man in my line needs a certain amount of publicity. I find that my constitu- ents frequently neglect to pay atten- tion to my most thoughtful speeches, but when I go fishing all the papers comment on the fact.” Jud Tunkins says the reason a speaker is long-winded is that after he has got a few auditors going he's afraid.to let them get away and think things over. Unsportsmanlike. 'he profiteer we must proclaim Attempts, remorseless sinner, To make his own rules in life's game And be a sure-thing winner. Classics. . | “Are you an admirer of the clas- sics?"” es,” replied Miss Cayenne; ‘“al- though I can't help regarding it as unfortunate that they are so much easier to dance than they are to read.” Past and Present. “When I first started in life,” said Mr. Dustin Stax, “I had to borrow money to pay my railroad fare.” ““Well,” replied the cynical friend, “‘history repeats itself. 1f you suc- ceed in boosting rates as far as you like you'll have everybody else doing the same thing.” P it was a bad break. Now the |/ Editorial Digest The Answer to Tulsa. Out of a mass of newspaper com- ment generalizing on the *barbarity of civilization” of the Tulsa race riot four points stand out: First, a demand for organized education, federal if neces- sary, that will counteract race-hatred; second, a call for more vigorous law enforcement and better policing, and stern prosecution of the guilty. The sane editorial stand of the Tulsa Tribune (democratic) has apparently done much to temper what might have been harsh criticism in the press, if this attempt “to atone” had not been visible in the words and deeds of the citizens of the “disgraced” city. The Springfield Republican (inde- pendent) calls attention to the fact that the republican party in its na- tional platform “urged” Congress “to consider the most effective means to end “lynching.” and this declaration, it believes, is broad enough to include * fresh survey” of the situation. An “educative process apblied with pa- tience, courage and organization™ great enough to create “an overwhelming public sentiment” against lynching, the Baltimore American (republican) | § thinks, is the only thing that will stop it. With this opinion the Jersey City Journal (independent) is in sympathy, and the Minneapolis Journal (independ- ent republican) also feels that “the fundamental education of Americans away from mob mind and action” is the solution. To bring this about the New York Call (socialist) summons “the whole working-class movement of the Lnited States” to “take the initia- while.the Baltimore Sun (inde- pendent democretic) insists that “the remedy” must be backed up “by a fixed and steady determination on the part of the people to master the race prob- lem on the basis of reason and under- standing.” i To the New York Evening Post (in: dependent) the question is “essentially one of efficient government and admin- istration,” and if the states and local officials cannot handle situations grow- ing ‘the uccentystion of racial ‘llvfllrl then “‘an irresistible demand will arise for national action.” The Tulsa Tribune (democratic) states the facts badly when it says the results of the riot are “an exhibition of one con- spicuous and hideays fact: That there is an element here in Tulsa that hus not been t3ught to respect the law.” ‘The St. Joseph (Mo.) News Press (independent) attributes the trouble “not so much teq racial intelerance 83 to a kind of blind spirit of lawless- ness,” and the Greenvillp (S. C.) Pied- ment (independent demecratic) consid- ers those “chiefly responsible” the city and county officers “charged with en- forcement of the law.” Had the polics ! and sheriff not been “negligent,” di clares the Pittsburgh Leader (progres- sive republican) “there would have been no gathering at the jail, ne fight, no riot, no murders. no destruction o the town by fire.” With this example | before them. the South Bend (Ind.) | Tribune (independent republiean) sug- gests that “every chief of palice and evary sheriff” new ask himself “how is my force organized to prevent a simi- jlar orgy of murder and arson?" Where impudent negro, a hys- terical girl and a yellow journal re- porter” can cause the murder of thirty | people and the destruction of hundreds | of homes there must be, says the Nor- folk Virginian-Pilot (indepepdent dem: cratic). “something fundamentally wre | with the police system and with the jpublic opinion which is back of that isystem.” Indeed, “wherever mob vio- lence readily gains headway,” observes: the Boston Transcript (independent re- publican), “it is the fault of our police system.” and while “ultimately perhaps | we can eliminate the fundamental causes of race riots,” the Baltimore News (independent) considers that “we | certainly ought to be able to develop pretty generally throughout the country a type of police service which will not only prevent race rioting from becoming serious in most cases, but will afford us eal protection as well ainst other kinds of lawlessness and disorder which we seem subject to.” ‘The Chicago Tribune (independent re- publican) goes back of the officials and the system itself and lays the whale itrouble to “corrupt politics.” king | up this statement the Indianapolis News (independent) quotes, in connection with it. the statement of the Governor of | Oklahoma, who has asserted that i either the sheriff or the chief of pofic had had “the nerve’ g therefore. concludes that “‘with strong, clean local governments there would b little probability of general rioting." The Columbus Dispatch (jndependent) echoes this sentiment in the statement that the “result proves Tulsa voters gullty of a very serious lapse in the exercise of their power of intelligent selection.” There appears to be some hope in the situation to the New York Globe (inde- rndam) in the fact that “‘with hearten- ing swiftness Tulsa has turned to re- This suggests to the Globe very dollar in e, £hts to be made individual guilty should As this seems to be the q dem and every punished.”” t attitude of Tulsa citizens the Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph (republican) has faith that there will be no immediate repetition of the outbreak. That the city in some measure ‘“can set herself aright before the world.” the Harrisburg Telegraph (republican) believes, if she sees to it that “the guilty are sought out to, the last man and punished.” To this the Wheeling Register (democratic) agrees. and it must be done, the Cleve- land Plain Dealer (independent demo- cratic) asserts, if the city is to pay the idebt “she owes to the people of the United States.” = = = E = = = = Many of the southern papers seem to feel that the north has not sufficient un- Scimitar (independent) asserts that “it, = = = = = = E = = = = derstanding of the negro, and while he is sometimes inflicted *‘with summary punishment™* there, the Memphis News- is aways with a sense of justice, how- ever crude ft may be.” The Raleigh | News and Observer (democratic) sug- gests that perhaps the blacks were in- cited by what the Mobile Register (dem- ocuuc{ calls “bolshevist propaganda that has been carried on among negroes quite extensively.for some time."" For the rest most of the sguthe pers hold views similar to those e ssed in the morth, The Oklahoma ty Oklahoman (demoeratic) concludes: “It Is true that strictly speaking this is but the law and all a white man's country, guarantees protection to all, should have it.” Statecraft Among Women. Instead of sounding the death knell to organizations for wemen alone, as many predicted, gaining political rights by women seems to have given a new impetus to such organizations unu to have inspired women to develop or- ganizations of such scope as they only dreamed of formerly. A growing ten- dency of women to concentrate their forces at Washington is shown not only by the purchase of praperty op- pa-{l- the Capito] building by the na- tionsl woman's party, to be used as its permanent headquarters, but by what some consider a still greater project. ! It is the establishment of a “glorlnedi clubhouse” in Washington, D. C."to serve as a home for all homeless na- | tional bodies of women. i This project includes a national bu- reau_of information about everything in which women are interested, and an institute of statecraft, in which almost everything & person can think of will be taught. Statecraft, as seen by wom- en, is a much broader thing than most Chambersburg (Ra.) Public Opinion.| terrible thase Tulss race riota weid ave been it ihey nad' oo: curred in darkest Bussia!—Cincinnati Enquirer. 01d houses are like garments. We! have to make them do when we can't afford new ones and go on trying to cover the rents.—Columbia Missour- jan. Men should insist upon a clause in the marriage ceremony whereby the briGe agrees not to seek alimony.— Knoxville Journal and Tribune. “Every normal boy of the $0's wished to be a pirate,” says a writer. The record of war profiteering indi- cates that many of them achieved the ambition. — Rochester Times- men ever thought of making it.—Flint (Mich.) Journal (independent.) John D. Rockefeller says he earn- ed his first dollar raising turkeys. Glad to knaw he earned ane of ‘'em.— Union. = Fal SV Circumstantial Evidence An ADITORIAL NVENTIONS often Today many of us need have explained to man the actual evidence placed the fanetions of the orgess before ws to make us real- of ks body. Mam wsed ize our duty te our eyes. his eyes thousands of Don’t just wonder if your years, before he s. Beed stientiem. Let sefentifie knowl. their mechanism. edge state exactly their ;lnn = condition. We are kere to make in to yomw just what your eyes do or do mot need. We invite your queries, the right road of optienl thinking. Our expert optometrists invite your confidence and assure you sight-satisfaction. “See ETZ 1217 and G Street See Belter” N.W. Made From ROOTS, BARKS and HERBS. The Favorite for Over 60 Years. If yoa want the best INSIST on Dr. Swett’s. Place your orders for Dr. SWETT’'S ROOT BEER in hottles, also for Fountzin Syrup, ! 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