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- THE EVENING. STAR, WASH]:'NGTON, D. C., MONDAY, JULY 18, 1921. ' THE EVENING STAR, With Sunday Morning Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY. .July 18, 1921 THEODORE W. NOYES. . ..Editor The Evening Star Newspaper Company Business Office, 11th St. and Pennsylvania Ave. New York Office: 150 Nassau Bt. Chicago Office: First National Bank Ruilding. European Office: 3 Regeat 8t., London, A The Evening Star. with the Sunday morning edi delivered by carriers within the city at nts per month: daily oaly. 43 cents per only, 20 cents per month. Or- be sent by ‘mail, or telephone Main . lection is made by carriers at the end of each month. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. Daily and Sunda; 8 Daily only. .1 3 Sunday only -1y, $2.4 All Other States. Daily and Sunday.1yr., $10.00; 1mo., 85¢ $7.00; 1 mo., §0c $3.00; 1mo., Army Team Play. Gen. Pershing, in the order issued Yyesterday to corps area and depart- ment commanders anent the need for unqualified harmony and co-operation between the regular Army, the Na- tional Guard and the organized re- serve, demonstrates the quality of ad- ministrative leadership #o vital to peace-time organization for the defense of the nation. Aware of the fact that, in the final analysis, he as chief of staff is responsible for the success of a great national undertaking and knowing that that success can be achleved only through the engendering of that psychological enthusiasm know in military parlance as “morale,” the general enters upon the task be- fore him with the determination to build national defense upon a firm and sure foundation. Certain old and shaky timbers in the structure placed in his hands must be torn out and re- placed by solid supports. And the general goes at the task with the di- rectness and courage of a great sol- dier, confident of success. As the order in question implies, there has not been, in the past, that degree of friendly co-operation be- tween the Regular Army and the non- regulars essential to full efficiency in the military organization of the cofin- try. Regulars, conscious of the in- evitable fact that they know the game of war better than “part-time” sol- diers. have evidenced a tendency to sneer at non-regulars. The latter, smarting under slights real or imag- ined, have drawn apart unto them- selves. Jealousies, * antagonisms, rivalries have been planted and cul- tivated. It is an unhappy yet withal a true fact that the great effort of the nation in the world war was, by virtue of the resulting condition, less great than it might otherwise have been. Gen. Pershing, recognizing that fact and knowing that, when all is said and done, the security of the nation depends more upon the development of an efficient reserve to the perma- nent establishment than upon any other single factor, is determined to purge the Army of this serious com- plaint. There can be no doubt but that, when he shall have done so; when regular and non-regular shall work together in mutual and unquali- fied harmony, and when efficient “team play” shall not be lost through ill-con- sidered partiality or bias, he will have rendered a service to the nation scarcely less important than that per- formed in his successful leadership of our armies in France. The Senate. ‘Mr. Coolidge had a lively experience the other day, and probably enjoyed it. Who described the vice presidency as a prosy place, without inspiration or excitement? Let him withdraw the description, study the Senate, and be wise. There is entertainment of a high order in presiding over that body. At times the gavel becomes a mere ornament. When twenty senators are on their feet, all speaking at once and demanding recognition, what is the gavel between friends—or enemies? They hear it, but heed it not. How will the news affect Mr. Mar- shall? Make him regret that he is nog longer in action? Make him repent of the jocose “digs” at the Senate he used to indulge in? He was brought up in an atmosphere of strenuous politics, and at an earlier time was a’ strenuous performer himself. If this sort of thing continues the House will grow jealous. For a long time it “held the horns” for breeze and “pep.” It rejoiced in the reputation of being “the noisy end” of Congress. It confessed judgment. It was big, and proud of the qualities associated ‘with size. But of recent years, the Senate, small by comparison, has staged the exciting scenes. Its galleries have often been crowded when announce- ments of debate had.been made. The public scented something worth while; and as yet no disappointment has been registered. The Senate has invariably come up to expectation. B Attorneys engaged in litigation be- fore Chief Justice Taft will have be- fore them an example of the ability to enjoy success modestly and to meet disappointments with fortitude. A Pioneer Locomotive. Ninety years ago this summer a ‘wonderful machine was put into use on the Mohewk and Hudson River rallroad, the first line in the state of New York. This machine, the De Witt Clinton locomotive, drew & train of three coaches. In September it made its first regular run from Albany to Schenectady, a distance of seventeen miles, in the phenomenal time of one hour and seventeen minutes. There was great rejoicing at this extraor- dinary feat. The progressive people of New York proclaimed the wonder. as destined to roll back the frontiers of America to illimitable distances. Yesterday the old DeWitt Clinton, with its original coaches fllled with girls and men wearing costumes of ninety years ago, was run up and down the tracks of the New York Central over a space of twenty blocks, making the run each way in about nine minutes. This was the formal beginning of a trip which the pioneer locomotive is to take to Chicago, & ‘where it will be an item of & pageant ; of progress. The Clinton will not, 4 make its way across country under its own steam, for the pageant is to begin July 30 and there is no time. Fur- thermore, it would considerably gum up traffic. Yesterday one of the big mogul locomotives was spun past the lumbering old machine, just to give an illustration of the difference in pace. This modern engine is longer than the entire train of 1831. | Those who foresaw the opening of the west by means of the railroad were not quite justified. The railroad followed the pioneer. It was not until [inent captain of industry. long after the prairie schooner had rumbled its way across the plains and over the mountains and through the deserts of the west that the ‘‘steam horse™ The trails had been established years before the rails were laid. Had the opening of the west waited on the rail- roads the history of the United States !would have been considerably dif- | terent. But the railroads have played an ‘exknordmary part in the development of the country. They have made pos- sible this great Union of forty-eight states with closely allied interests, with Intimate communication, with a constantly improving understanding and with free intercourse. They have caused the growth of an industrial prosperity unparalleled in the world. They have permitted the exploitation of American resources with great profit to the people. They have been the means of transmitting intelligence by the spread of printed matter over an enormous area. The sharp contrast between the De Witt Clinton of 1831 and the mogul locomotive of today is an inspiring ex- ample of this development. In the National Museum in this city is a relic of those pioneer railroad days, the “John Bull” engine. It would be well, perhaps, some day to fire it up and set it in motion through the streets of the capital—if a proper gauge could be found—and thus give an illustration of the means of transport of nearly a century ago, hailed by the people of that time as phenomenal. Terrible Suffering in Russia. Reports from Russia regarding the conditions of people are of a kind to arouse the most profound sympathy. Cholera is raging in some sections at an appalling rate, and without any organized efforts to check it. The sea- son has been extremely dry and the earth is parched and cracked, the wells and rivers drying. The crops have been practically ruined over im- mense areas and, according to a late report, it is estimated that no less than 20,000,000 people are on the verge of starvation. They are de- scribed as subsisting mainly on moss, grass and the bark of trees. All cat- tle has been slaughtered in the stricken districts to provide food. Refugees are flocking into Moscow and Petrograd, already crowded to economic limits. A state of panic appears to be prevailing. And the government is helpless. Only through outside agencies can aid be given to the stricken people. In this catastrophe the Russian peo- ple have the profound sympathy of the western world. But how can it be expressed? Reliet work cannot be undertaken on a commensurate scale because of the political situation. The Russian government is not trusted and cannot safely be recognized. Without doubt the soviet at Moscow would be glad to have the United States or other powers ask permission to con- duct relief work, for that would in- volve & measure of recognition. Even if it were not for the political obstacle the relief of the famine and cholera sufferers in Russia would be a task of extraordinary difficulty. Trans- portation has broken down to a point where it would be almost impossible to get supplies from the ports into the stricken regions. It would be necessary to accompany yellef workers with military guards to prevent them from being overwhelmed and the sup- plies wasted. This would constitute, in fact, the military occupation of Russia, the consequences of which cannot be measured. These horrible conditions in Russia are the result of the demoralization incident to the breakdown of govern- ment and the substitution of soviet ruM, Probably Russia would have suffé@ed both from disease and famine in an¥® ¢onditions, but not so hope- lessly as ®i'h the entire political or- ganization disrupted and controlled by a handful of fanatical theorists. { The United States Tressury has some delicate transactions to con- sider which revive the old maxim about robbing Peter to pay Paul. f e s VT . N U .. MO . S [ s S T . . N . LSS o, o S S . 1 0 0.0 N .18 S ST o LSRRI . e SO, IS0 T Mo ORI, AT S e s R VL PR M W 0. 0 K A5 LR 2L L L, T, SO, Considerations of commercial ad- vantage have so often led to conflict that almost any kind of & war might be referred to as a “trade war.” ‘Whatever de Valera may think of London's politics he cannot complain of its hospitality. In the face of easily ascertainable facts, some queer statements about tariff history continue to do duty. Take this: The Payne-Aldrich law of 1909 was the cause of the repub- lican defeat in 1912. On the contrary, it did not enter into the equation. It had cost the republicans the House in 1910, but the party split in 1912, which let the opposition in, had nothing to do with the tariff. Taft and Roosevelt were both protectionists, and had fallen out over another matter. Their combined votes exceeded by a large majority the votes cast for Mr. Wil- son. Take this, from a statement of the minority of the ways and means com- mittee about the Fordney bill: “It is false to say that the majority were commissioned by the people at the last election to revise the tariff. . . . The tariff was not an issue in the 1920 campaign. The people did not believe they were voting for a change in the tarift.” No? But the ‘platform upon which Mr. Harding and the present Congress were elected reaffirmed the republican faith in protection, and pledged a re- vision of thie Underwood law on pro- tection lines. It may be true that the large num- ber of democrats who voted the re- publican ticket last year had in mind |resl weork must have been done only the repudiation of Wilsonism. l)mkullllovd.' 4 made its appearance there.|ar But would the republicans have ral- lied to the support of their party if the platform had been silent on the tariff, or equivocal in its deliverance? Hardly. Such a tariff pledge as the platform carried was essential to re- publican success even at a time when the opposition was wabbly, and wab- bling, on other questions. The Size of the Job. Thomas F. Ryan is a very prom- He has built up a large fortune from modest beginnings. He knows the business game, therefore, from bottom to top. His views as to vzlues and prospects e highly regarded in the business world. Mr. Ryan sailed for Europe Satur- day,. leaving behind gome expressions as to the general business situation. He thinks the country is on the up- grade, after a trying experience, and he predicts an early recovery. This is taken from an interview with him: “Evils created in seven years. largely by a disastrous war, cannot be corrected in a few days, but a spirit of determination and co-opera- tion on the part of all will help to bring prosperity much sooner than most people think.” Patlence is absolutely essential at this time. It is not even good politics to taunt the party in power, as some are doing. “Why don't you fellows get a move on? Where is the reform you promised last year? Reduce taxes. Revise the tariff. Slash the appropria- tions. Restore the country to nor- malcy.” As Mr. Ryan points out, and as every person of information and re- flection must concede, the job is mot to be executed in a few days. The ait- uation is the growth of years—seven of as momentous years as the world has ever known. At most, we can but make a start in the right direc- tion, and then keep on keeping on until by safe governmental and busi- ness processes welrrive on Easy street to take up our residence there again. i An assumption that the prosperity of America depends on the prosperity of Europe will hardly go so far as to call on Uncle Sam to guarantee sta- bility to foreign governmental enter- prises which have been wholly mis- managed. i $ The fact that almost every country is figuring on {ts financial transactions in terms of dollars again calls atten- tion to English as spoken in Amer- ica, s the language of commercial interchange. i The pleasurable expectation is con- fidently entertained that the rumor that Caruso has lost his volce will soon be followed by the press agent’s assurance that the calamity has been averted. f The bond stealing messenger has put an end to the assumption that most financial depredations are com- mitted by “old and trusted” employes. i The rallroads have before them the task of regaining the summer pas- senger patronage that has gone over to the automobile. i China demands to be heard among nations. China has tried the policy of philosophic isolation and finds there is nothing in it. Statesmen whose stituents re- sent certain lines of nomy will ex- pect Mr. Dawes to step forward and take the blame. The railways may yet accomplish a reduction in the cost ‘of mileage books to correspond to that in the price of meal tickets. i A peace conference brings immediate assurance that all the important na- tions of the earth are on cordial speak- ing terms. { SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. Too Much Kindness. Be kind to the hornet; be kind to the fly; Be kind to the ant that creeps into the ple. ‘When & reckles mosquito comes buzz- ing keep cool. Be patient in all your remarks to a mule. Don't cherish a grudge toward e mouse or a rat. g Be gentle unto the vociferous cat. Be kind to the weasel; be kind to the bear; To the chicken hawk flerte and the lynx in his lafr. . If I've got to be kind to all these, I ‘will sy, T'll never get into the 8. P. C. A, Jud Tunkins says a special delivery letter is worth considerably more than & quarter if it's as important as the girl who receives one usually seems to think. “You ought to have a chauffeur. Can't you afford one?” “I might efford the chauffeur,” re- plied Mr. Chuggins. “But I couldn't afford the kind of a car, he'd want to take his friends out riding in.” The Tariff. No tarift have we seen of yore Devised with such precision That it got well to work before Folks called for its revision. Zre ey Perquisites. “There are very few perquisites now-a-days.” 1 “I'm glad of it,” replied Senator Sorghum, “perquisites in the old days ‘were regarded by too many penuriouf people as an excuse for holding a pub- lic servant down to an inadequate salary.” The Burly Buccasnus. “Pirates had to be expert navi- “One would think s0,” replied Miss Cayenne. “But judging from the stories of buried treasure most of their Editorihl Digest Einstein on Main Street. |l Prof. Einstein's alleged criticism of America’s intellectual “goverty” as re- || ported in an interview in an Amsterdam newspaper and later denied, made him, temporarily at least, about as popular in America as Carrol Kennicott was in Gopher Prairie, if the editorial col- umns are a basis of judgment. There are, however, writers who feel|that the discoverer of relativity spoke Sound if unpleasant truths just as Sinclair Lewis has his following of good but self-criti- cal Americans. The New York World (democratic) sees fit to comment on Prof. Einstein's remarks despite the denial for, If re- marks, “it was bound to follow if only to complete the Berlin scientist' experience with that of other celebri ties who have visited the country. They come, they are feted, they de- part and then ensues the criticism that has to be disowned.” Eut the ‘World doesn’t take the professor's charges very seriously: *“It is only when a visitor from abroad voic such views that our national se: tiveness reacts to the charge and :re main streets bristle with indign: on.” The professo; analysis, it it is bona fide, “app to be uncomfor- tably near the truth,” in the opinion of the Chicago News (independent), which goes on to point out that. in- telectually “the United States is a rather high table land, iIncluding many individuals of many types and classes. KEurope has education emi- nences, representing select groups of highly cultured people that far over- shadow the broader but lower Ameri- can level.” there are “hunks of truth” ‘main street,” s0 there 18 says the Buffalo Times (democratic and “instead of glowering at Mr. Lewis and scowling at Prof. Einstein, the part of modesty and good sense would be to see what can be done to remedy what is awry in our national habit of mind.” Perhaps the one point im the sup- posed interview which has brought forth the most criticlsm is the Ger- m; doctor's use . of the word “‘comic” in connection with the “en- thusiasm” which Americans displayed in his theory. “The professor’s laugh is wrongly placed,” says the Boston Post (independent, democratic) for “the joke i8 really on him. No Amer- ican cared a nickel for Prof. Ein- gtein's theory of relativity, what- ever it is. We were just out to show the professor a good time" and help him along with his Zionist campaign. As to his other comments, they are “merely the stock ideas” long “ped- dled around Germany” to prove us “barbarians.” The Hartford Times (democratic) is another to suggest that the joke is on the other side. ‘“The scientists™ regard his theory seriously, says the Times, but “the ordinary individual finds in it something to make fun of and, above everything else, Ameri- c?nlthfllleve in getting & laugh out of lite.” The New York Mail (independent) addresses the critic as follows: *“No, Prof. Einstein, you should have hewn to a line with more curve in it. It is not boredom, but a sacred thirst for everything worth while in life that animated the interest in theory. Possibly there was a great deal of pretense about some people's under- standing it. But, men and women, we were interesteq in it because of a childlike belief that when emi- nent scientists say they have dis- covered a law which upsets all we have learned In school we like to give them a run for their money. Nothing that is human is outside of A special plea for o lite,” which the doctor is reported to look upon with such scorn is made by the New York Globe (independ- The criticism may have held good “fifty years ago,” it asserts, but no longer. It continues: “Scientific students are no longer attracted to middle European universities. The post-graduate physician has a better chance in New York or Baitimore. Boston or Chicago than he would have in Berlin or Vienna. But why multiply detalls? A learned man spoke without thought. Still, in so doing he provided entertainment for that America whose boredom so awakened his sympathy.” Maids Modern and Mid-Victorian. Mrs. Kendal, whose charm is still ent). remembered by playgoers of a past | generation, but who today resembles a Du Maurier drawing and wears a bonnet of the mid-Victorian era, de- plores the modern young woman. The twentleth century mald, she tells us, does things that would have been considered outrageous in Jane Austen’s day. Then, if a girl received a proposal, she promptly fainted. “In Du Maurier's age the pretty ‘Ask mamma!" Today the poor dears say: ‘All right, old bean! ™ ‘Some of the foremost British art- iets, however, have been quick to champion the modern miss. “In M Kendal's day women were pretty, says Ambrose McEvoy; “today they are returning to the Greek type, and are beautiful. The throat and neck of the modern woman are more beau- tifully formed, even if slightly tan- ned, than were the snowy throat and neck of the Victorian woman.” But one needn’t be a portrait paint- er to agree that health and girlish grace are preferable to the languor and the pallor of a bygone age. Beat. rice can be auite as sincere when she says: “All right, old bean,” as when she lisped: *“Ask mamma,” and faint- ed. Freedom from tight walsts and conventions, indulgence in golf, ten- nis, boating and bathing; an inde- pendence and a breeziness born of her new-found freedom and her commu- rion with the sun and wind, even at the expense of sunburn, have made Beatrice altogether charming. We wouldn't go back to Du Maurfer's monstrosities any more than we would go back to horsehair sofas and whatnots.—Rocky Mountain (Denver) independent). Soft-Drink Profiteers. It {8 one of the most cruel advan- tages of the public, taken by the con- scienceless, to impose a price for various kinds of soft drinks so high that those who have but the pennies of the poor cannot afford it. In hot weather venders of various nauseating mixtures succeed in palm- ing oft on their clusters of tiny cus- tomers chemical assortments that put to shame the rainbow and may meke the children sick. They need the constant surveillance of the police, and they are a menace ell the more serious because with their cheap, un- holy messes they can easily undersell those who provide pure fruit juices and properly carbonated water. creature said: t the fact remains that at two and tl?lle times the prices that used to be charged the profits of the dealers in ft drinks and their concomitants, sfich as the_dab of ice cream, are monstrous. In the days of reckoning the obliquities of the purveyor of soft drinks who is putting it over on the public in a season of drought and heat, coining their necessity into his , will come in_for his proper ownl‘l‘nll:nt in due season. g\lbllc n in any b ess, great or ::E\‘lnlxl? cannot forever be defled.—Phil- adelphia Public Led? (independent). A wage scale without & job to go with it_does not weigh much.—Pitts- burgh Gasette-Ttmies. man’s idéa of unrest is to n-‘nht:"\-nov to keep in the shade.— Toledo Blade. Nowadays hi nding he_ lets them get di- v:?cpo’d.iAml-:tl Journal. The Milwaukee Journal prints an article on “Milwaukee's Water.” What a come-down.—Minneapolis Jo ‘We have only two Smiths left in Congress, whicl explain why they are so into plowshares—Omaha A man without a fault is like a girl without a powder ere ain't no such animal—~Wheeling Intelli- gencer. ok ‘The man styles are shock- 1 s wiltag o b6 & Shosk -bnrbmnbllflmm 'Public Opin. on. i Y 5 News ||l | | | | b b | i I | | | | ‘when a novelist wants a i h may long beating the swords| i News. ! ey Established 1861 = | W, B, Joses & Sons M | - Corpes F and “Eleventl Streets Linene Store Closed 'Satixrdays During July and August ‘Summer Furniture All summer furniture, including natural reed and willow, porch hammocks and porch rockers, 25% less than regular price. Greatly Reduced Our entire stock of decorated fiber, reed and willow furniture, 3313 less former prices. \ . A Few Examples 6f the Many Attractive Specials in Our Refrigerator Department: Oak Case Opalite Interior, Regular $104.00, Special v . - e—eavsmescsans. $65.00 Oak Case Opalite Interior, Regular 108.00, Oak Case Opalite Interior, Regular 96:50, Oak Case Porcelain Interior, Regular 105.00, Oak Case Porcelain Interior, Regular 69.00, Oak Case Porcelain Interior, Regular 85.00, Oak Case Porcelain Interior, Regular 102.00, Oak Case Porcelain Interior, Regular 105.00, Oak Case Porcelain Interior, Regular 90.00, ~ 75.00 65.00 70.00 53.00 59.00 69.00 80.00 70.00 Special...... 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Special, each.........50c Bar Harbor Chair Cushions, cretonne covered. Special, each.rmec. cee.. .$3.75 Snow Flake Summer Portieres—Silk Stripes, Rose Blue or Green. Regularly $4.50. Special, PR - o s i S o b e /< $2.98 Stenciled Crash Portieres—Plain grounds, 234 ‘:;’bng. with woven design in contrasting both sides. Regularly $9.00. Special, "b --00¢-0--m‘0~-~—<'0-0d—d¢~---m 36inch Cretorme—All colorings, striped and figured designs. Regularly $1.00 and $1.25. Special, per yard . —ccese e e e e e e ceven T5C and-ecru,good quality. Special, per yard... 15c cotorree Visit our rest room. In Our Linen Shop 200 Bleached Pure Irish Linen Tablecloths— Heavy Satin Damask. Seven designs to select from. 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