The evening world. Newspaper, January 9, 1919, Page 16

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1919 Will Be Stopped by Sanity,” _ Says Charles Edward iia “Sanity Has Always Come to the Surface in Ow’ “ Earthly Affairs,’ Socialist Points Out—“It W' ill, eee «|| H i \ “Labor in This Country Is Law Abiding; the Only} e) 208 Beckley Danger of Bolshevism Overrunning This Coun-' Whe irk Bvening Wor und it in a musty. ne Co, lee me gious and Do tt Dutie By Frederick Lawrence | (Tie New York Evening World) OME ona % try Lies in the Unwise Efforts to Deer rease|S ty recond-hand bookuwhop > Wages and in Unemployment.” Pea ual oun _ “Bolshevism No More M | JpyeW NIG =~ 7 | Than ay tale: Vier lich: | Vv YO} | “The Young Wikes’ Book’? | In a German Dark Cell st of a Series of Ten Extracts From “A Manual of Moral, Religious and Domestic the Rest Solitude, Darkness and Imagination Be the Same With Bolshevism’ It Will Be\ Duties” Written Seventy-six Years Ago, With Commentaries on the Subject Matter by Stopped Before It Becomes a World Menace. | Well-Known Women of To-Day. Henrietta Rodman Discusses To-Day's Instalment. SANUARY 9, 1919 A ‘How a Canadian Soldier ~ Resisted Being “Broken” THURSDAY, The Duties of a Wife ‘One Slice of Bread a Day, a Little Water to Drink; It Lasted Two Weeks, but, Though He Was Near the Breaking Point Several Times, He Kept His Spirit nig Defied His Captors to the End. to nati! y Marguerite Mooers Marshall the best of nd the wot ony. tees Publishing Co, (Tbe Motherhood, belng woman's chi OW that the war is over and the German prison camps cimptied we AEE REND sa eibebantt bel end N can read with loss pain and no Je ut it meant to be | the ages applied to husband Jas to children, When a woman b |comes a mother she is never who | independent n 19 belongs t t ifferings of orts and perils of the men a few in the claws of Kultur. We have wounded men, of the disco! in the trenches, but for obvious reasons ot Cop nant ty Th Some feminine hand | j her child, reaps her Dieasure $ stories from Allied o ered Lan HARLES EDWARD "HUE Lt. Mst—"sane Socialist,” if you long turned to dust, | land ambitions largeiy throug that} before the signing of the armistice, and so long as the > choose to bave it that way--writer, editor, poet lecturer, traveler, < penned it tn deep | 1 Husband was just ee er war Was going on they ma unhappy reading. C stout fighter for “the cause that need eta. ainet the wrongs, sincerity and de- hild. Permitting herself to be mere- The prisoners—or most of t t re- ; ¥ ted will proba vout rolemnity y reflected in him, be s servant . patty and comf t ord that need resistance,” when this Is printed wit : ceiving sympathy d ’ enty-six yoars ng {the humble sharer in his peace and ae vly bo on the ocean in the same ship's company with t f bal ' nak ae hee is being made up, 1 have Vinod r 2 imuel Goinpers, President of the American Federa- poe: ve lowes panes leaden ee f it than that contained in wok called Samuel Gor Lavine taUsenatloka are dog-cared. Many | manded (Jy she obeyed Aimaacauds OUR Bld US simu & ton of Labor, and other delegates to 1 wld at __ 4 favorite passage s bawl or whimper) wag the 1 he Nellie Fe Labor Conference at Paris, This conference should no {9 marked in ink easiest way of managing him, and written & Clun be confused with the ono which will be held at Lau-| e with age as the pre- was no other way cighty years ' p eanno under the leadership of Arthur Henderson la \t contains, Some young wife} ago of managing bir ed to| during the German alta 1 ¢ wh British Labor Party of the eighteen-forties has evidently | Ned a| stationed. He was wounded ju pture ial conference which Russell, Gompers and their) builded happiness upon it (her hus- a e was! charged from a German hos} ent ; d associates will participate in will be one which will try| band’s anyhow), And I suspect conspicuous, scorned of men and of} made three attempts to escay ¢ 1 bringing 5 fulfil the promise made by President Wilson in his) there i deer toda ba Matar jwomen, If she angered her liege! bin, down “the long road to freedom" an¢ F {tor sixteen months ¢ to ful he ¥ : ; of conductoreties and assembly- lord, or re ted against his eruel-| oe oo tivity ‘ speech at Milan when he said ; i ing | Women to whom the doormat ta the j ties or tne ies, she pWHare ce epee, : , i ae “The social structure rests upon t at WOrKIDE | wymbol of successful to go but OUT. Out td Beh dy Saba: ; ai world: that those working classes in the . | state - ‘ t peor not of them weh f classes of the world; tha eb ‘ v ey ; Jae : | We turn the flyleat upon which is | | cling Ww 1k cou vor u r Ree ot ss several countries of the world have, by their conscious} oy ea vod the presumably perfect wife | was to shut her eyes and t ‘i os sres of a community of interest, by their consclousness of a community of | ih dniateshadia and ube Toes (Bh a | vith . : apirit done perhaps more than any other influence has to ¢ tablish world to the presumably ideal | adjusting Shatin healt on @pinion, which Is not of the nation, not of the continent, but ie the opinion, | jusband—who has just given her the | a URLS SSPE OE CHIE: WAS SUt0G) BY | a t to 5 to ‘ ‘ Young Wife's Book to read. We! “LET HIM SEE THE SMILE OF UNCOMPLAINING RESIGNATION ON “omen atl pie made ade t r vaeit Lstenit ove might say, of mankind. ihc ern —|quote from the first chapter: YOUR BROW.” wearied them, They now r a| fa toning ¢ ‘ t sAVe were having a goodby chat be 5 i ‘i : bina nd comrade to a mere family out te friend \ : ad away and Laaked the world's distinguished diptomatists,| “The duties of a wife, like her rend . Pedi ‘ ' pen ope his ship sailed te of | happened along. Jaffections, must be unalienable, No bE aad ed abled Loa acted pnatskena ad teh farts 1 ott 1 whole day since we Russe!l what the just plain peop! ‘ to. BR 1 f you) ) k Jividual ent,{@™29 and that even the charms of) things, lot Wim seo you still wat -lone. And whenever w t iD the world had gained or were kely | ee ps ee isha Gableleneen side Hay itv pontine virtue, or the attractions of beauty, | ful in the performance of every duty | condition and wish to ¢ “ ‘ i ree Ubdeedet cl in from the war, ; : - : 5 3 rd are alike incapable of confining his!as a Wife, and doubly solicitous for] always do so. v LPR date to & t rot h | | Sai ire nawered; “the plain| Mingling Brothe They want bint cipation, and her happiness be the! aieontiony to yoursclt, LRM Wie weriee aeat eithgle ts a aren He a : thoug! people the | for their sideshow reflected biios arising from sharing} “{n bitterest anguish you may #e€; HONOR, although he may bimself|the auhor ot fe's ¥ nd w I sim ' Pre Peonie—the plain people are tl) “phere, laughed Russet merrily. | the peace of another. Hor cares also,! nim te with cold indifference,| cruetly desert these sucred posts. | (1 secretly believe sthe ti t | , cacao ladle sa ied Pa mer atand>| ones ne UF of # into 8) repost another bosom, are i=} ner whom he had mutually promised ts Sai } | | ata t ' 1 , wey ¥ Moa Ee I kaew people—have vee aoe Aegraal Ishevike panic pirit Of vested of half thelr thorns, and her! to cherish, and never forsake, for A 7 & mode of conduct, howeve ae en ee. He ; 4 y I should look like wh me 8 ia ky ni iadharse ¢ hiving, | Bumor dominate aie | comforts are multiplied in enjoyment! the blandishments of some fairer | aint ene ee si bag Ki hire \ would be pin thore higher standards of I! Mor ! Hifled DL) cng sweat ia remembrance |form, for the all t ple | gun bower) fromm) wallch one ' | ouiders, and ea, wanada. beitn CHON ‘ s Es ‘or the allurements of pleasur i ne ae is r H ee Sarees Heing ana | Minion he matrimonial duties of a wife|or tho haunts of seduction, © ¢ ° ek eine Lickel : ; : improved andards s amr |. “Labor in this country is law abide | ie ti, nost strongly enforced, for to| Mrequently and lengthened absences |" last | they must hereafter receive a wa “put a situation could your best and gentlest ¢ e- | expla 8 i . ey ; ; ca KEMeEHe t j*o he sald, “But o situa hers are added, by Divine Comman4, | adding to your anxieties, as well as le eta faltits wecall Filensie the gi sae or other form of income lhe o «1 that might precipitate a| t co also, Obedience! | his neglects, may steal the rose of | O'S veapaedlgael ea duleas : ; Liab | ‘sig HR AAsaidlehdn Ley e Pe ° “ltnat of obedience also. Obedience! | his . ste fess i S aeldarrdiplys n, their | eiudi ft i Bey the expen e new sland’ atate of Bolshevism a , Start not at the word which gener-| health from your cheek; and the|'Sd: and he throws you upon ' 4 Fi . bs : 3 4 ther Pittsbur Ke | * th d s Junfeeling world in the most desolate, | discipline, education, general welfare n t was al ara should come another Pittsburg ‘ally sounds #o harsh to the feminine| flower of happiness thus blighted,| ahs t a Peis 5 guewested:: ‘auppoan 6m ; ; 3 \the most agonizing of situations, that|A modern man does not scorn to get| ood-sized ome in 0} B aug p p 4 which was caused by capiti . but rather ask yourself if it be|owns ‘no second spring;' but oh! iy oh sabetad dinner on-occasion, £ 2 t ed ployers in the United States decline to | tonpt to wcale w down, or dimcult to pay It to the commands of recollect, I ardently entreat, nay| ® deserted wife, then dally, na y question of managit soul ‘ jen. 9 i eecomnize the Improved standards of fotner upheaval like the America) \mactions tne wishes of tenderness, |CONJURE you, that in this awful|Urly implore MET ag) Ul Pe eg er nae | ne See r 1 aing to pay the higher wages | railway Union strike of 18M, Pas. {TM [le Wikies ON trial You are exercised in those great} ful aids of religion and virtue In this /MENE oF broil t . ra Recossary for their upkeep?” ns wore Jet looae tien that It took nt oe wind hus-|ad Christian virtues, forboarance| Most awful trial ° © ¢ tit ot : pedal wrney won't dare to face the eritl- |armed force to suppress. I doubt it aract nus | nd fortitude, Seck not to recall the|S¥PPose that a husband's neglect ‘ ; ; “pnt | ; +|hand some shades arise (and be as- lina dut ‘ m a 160 per cent, all-wif Glam of the world,” said Russell. “But [armed force could be recruited to act! MNT AM every one some will appear) | Wanderer by even a look of reproof. | sd du o8 however flagrant and com- RU StS Rcttigaatioc wits 1 whe va fs leave out the word re’ and! now in the event of a recurrence of ‘ i Let him seo the smile of uncomplain- x, absolves a wife from the per- | @ Bitty tow ' wn, be tile Jot! Jit is a wife's hand that’ must throw und adjustment everything that savors of antagonism, | such troubles | ean earn he graceful voll of con-|'8& resignation on your brow, al-|formance of hers; nor assur the} $ t . at Iet us consider only the no of] * employers look to it that a gay ra » auffer any one} {2oush that of happiness can no fatal language, or more fatal fleas.) | 1 lif Iw Brotierly love that capital has lately ons of demobilize idier Tecate ieee Ietace oe longer be traced there. But above all | of on, | > fea 1 edy and well recompensed W V impunity to raise It When t awa first) The guard came, Mnaily, but wounded for lab aust be the sacred re sitory of his y Ero 7 My yy i" ud Be neriy. i o that there ls not too large a num= Must be the sacred repository of hls --AND THE MODERN WIFE'S THEORIE was ( - 1 Ir & word, ie to: : vanae ber of unemployed civilians, and most! !ttle | Imperfectio ac u t ome aries 1 oner to fill his pitchar at the @ meng. sounded Abate eden That ait Iibor ie well paid sightest breath whisper them to an- PON, this doctrine of lmitless) the above and grinned apprecia pede i ee i @beaker be the sur at whem | ; ps i other, © ¢ submWsion, we asked that| tively ja finest qualities : ' nee 2 ql capital led “a violent }and kept contented, ‘The only dan-! by q was the ! eforetime capital call f eer 0) Heldsovinn. cverransing tt But 1 must now, with tremb!ing modernest of modern wives,; “This idea of treating husbands | ™i! gedica! destroyer of organized s0- [KPT 0. tO eine ene vine efforts to de.jhand, reverse the picture; for, alas; | Henrietia Rodman, to comment, Miss sacredly,” she said, estod | ya TAL Oat ead see ciety,” the same Russell whom, nk crease Wages and in tnemployment,|it is the lot of many of our sex to| Rodman, breesing In from her day’ ir development some hundred 1 conjugal ? tloularly when he was st cand! * : vg not {Have also its painful duties to fulfil. | work of teaching “English and Ideas” | years or so, As long as their weak to her phy j «of New York, caps | Whether Bolshevism docs 0 sno! | ( @ate for Governor of Ne . cap i nerve ay Ob! may this severest of trials never|to the youth of Julia Richman High | nesses draped with ‘the and to her w } ital nded should be put in j come is altogether in’ th ands of | fy ’ 7 mead nae . emanded should be pu ” be yours, It is one of so strong a| School, would probably have given aj ful vell of conceal eed nol gown, I i ) erg mployers ; ip of | otherwise rendered innocuous? Yer itp ny cnded Bolsheviem in tha! nature that heart of tenderness | healthy shock to our gentle author-|not know they have t rai gees way, by 1 fg the same Russell, the very same |i iy crates aw far as our goodby And sensibility would break under it|ess of 1843, Flinging off her cloak] social and matrimonial chi i) vast numbers of t ar 1 Ressell who left his life's love, me) || cerned, but it did not eng! Were it not for the consoling voice of }and hat, running her fingors throngh| mains as primitive as a their opportunities, conditions a v Gociolist ty, when that party, | ; The aphe religion her short hair and spre: ner] "It le only by shocks favorable to women, and there An't_ me pet tg {Ol conviction that the spr f th to marriage, which doos not mear under misguided lesdeesin, tailed : | pernicious doctrir Kuropo needs| “You may find a husband not proof | good ground-grippers to the con | petitions that men progress in servi human . in noe become 100 per cent. American with | yi. suppression ussoll will do} wt the natural capriciousness of of the radiator, Miss Rodman read | ness, The avera um to-day a 7 t a Russell | ° . 2 shat é “ ec aca “SES siti ase c e avon c eve n t America at war, t be imoia Above {MS Part in that behait In full accor 1 - eee inaa (he deanna | Rene notte a ty above alt {With the precepts of H'resident Wilson.,and women in the vital management i e : SNE Ga RG } @ocialiam, my coun pee I asked Russell for a fa lof their industries in whatever ii sie - m m i n fer Re ived, the reat. Hs min j partics.” Hail to Iowa, mother ge to American wa aision ae may be qualified to ¢ er c e ys, evive s Ae sam : ae Upiean } euch @ son ve it Such 8 utterances emanat bi ne RR I have known Mussel! more thar core of years, Many a time he has/nas dawned fc Amparted his innermost political {deals | “Ideals have been bor to me, and I will testify that organized | er “Tell the worke om individual employers 4s well 1s employer org rizations signify ood germinated gocicty, established government, su-| which should capital toward labor that will fw to know that his most important|/and will go on and on, American| centur wotssion in Europe will be to use his} workers will not permit their im- ¢ @f which makes America loving Amor-| that will yield labor an income suf-| thing to say among employers, but I fleans have goose flesh creeps, Ruseel) | ficient to ntain thoir new stand-| think it the truth, Emptoye eaid: ards of }iving." | must be content to take tess and J “Don't talk about Bolshevism. Their} “Will emp! fafivence will be nullified by the com-| “I anticipa men sense of the working people as|of the w yers do it?" T asked. | por must have more, ‘The employ fits are $1,000,000 a year @ peaceful settlement 25, 13, 14 puzzle,” answered Russell, /of the Chamber of Commerce of the |» ag Sx : “Bolshevism will have its vogue. Some | State of New York deciaring that ‘the ALL THE FIXINGS. ‘Mood will be spilled. Difficulty may be |cheapest and best product 1" com: ITTLH Freddy had just been put { Met with in checking its spread, but| patible with the largest earnings of IL Ina khaki suit with long trous- $# will be stopped before it becomes a| Wage earners,’ of the injust @orld menace. Sanity always has come | pecting wage earners to ‘relapse to |] a man pow like papa?” @e.the surface in our earthly affairs, |a position where they are only a num- suppose 80," she replied. Jt will be the same with Bolshevism.” |ber on a time sheet or a payroll,’ 1, then,” he continued, “I guess ‘ "| 1'H take a dime out of my bank and Came an interragtian. A flippant|‘wage earners as a class must be go down to the barber shop and get Person, oven though be was one of given an opportunity tqcount as men | ghaved."-wdioston Transcript, » of ex ers. “Manm asked, “am | changed process of thought on the | t forever overlooked by labor, ‘The | } premacy of law equitably administered,| “To parti Y ed be quickly responsiv H fespect for judges who deserve re-| “Americar pla Jealism work ¢ nto b apect, justice, democracy have no|in tho ran,’ Ut Bocialist age?” 1 asked more valiant champion than he.|"American | hind English work out or the peace Phone very members of organized #oci-| labor, which has mac onress 1 pie ANA gata ues @ty who were wont to clamor for the| dreamt cf five years ago, but Amori-| soll, “It is a simple case of Hive and imprisonment of Russel) wil! be thank-/ean labor's gress still continues! tet live, We should have come to it go instead of waiting all} this tl powerful influence as a foremost} proved standards of living to dete-| ‘Then Ru atest Kid aeAasEMr ne American “sane” socialist to help stem | riorate, | experic nd study, gave me this the rising sweep of Bolshevism, “Employers must continue to pay | thouht As to Bolshevism, the mere mention | wages or reward labor in other ways| “My friend, this is an unpopular | | ze problem,” Russeit an- | will wo on say $100,000, The @pon as this war lunacy has dissipated |swered. “In the United States there |otner $ Tike palaeaa eons Itec [has been a revolution of thought, Welt. hia worker Phat is the simple “Don't you think that Bolshevism ig| hear little these days of ‘the law cf | solution of 10 Wage problem to] ip world menace?” J asked upply and demand’ as applied to| ¥@ch We must eventual ¥ come, It] { “No more a menace than the Frencn |Jabor, of ‘the cost of labor in the {MUL A wyalon Thal wil please | weign of terror, or the Commune, ar | RaRe of ‘labor is a com | their profits in the hundreds of thou the seven years’ itch, or the locust|be bought at the cheapest price.’ | war id millions of dollars, but pest, or the Greenback Party, or the | stead we hear of ‘standards of 1) +} they will accept it, There is no other Now Sung in Navy and New Merchant Marine « They've Come Down From the ays of Clipper Ships to Cheer the Lonesome Watches of viel Veet Ginenee aphs o ' Day . : righituly ! By Otis Peabody Swift. tare hb and Irish chan- {came cool off the sea, and the » blinkers Here is ono of “Pop's ade in Germany.’ | cost, 1919, w Tie Pm Pudiaing co, | UC but real American chantey | lights winked on Fort Hamilton, and vi Why demands, “do our au | Tue New York Evening Word. as come down from the days of clip- | we could hear voices, and the bark an dah edt writies think they can reform igs Limes are hard and the wages | per ships that ed from New Bed-|of dogs and city sounds from 2] ‘ § wt last, my ms n by throwing him into a dark o low, ford and Salem seventy years ago Pop would j ar circle topsides | **? adh nie dows 4 ewe and starving him Leave her huny, leave her. | Primarily the chanicy was meant | ut the g y hatch and grow! ana | d a tea ‘ It in our prisons The times are hard and the wages!to be sung at the capstan bars, the | courh, and lor if maybe we'd like | cHont de feel the horror of the ¢ low, | man-powered windlass with which the he would sing a bit | Once m “ when the overwrought nerve And now It's time to leave her. |sailorsy heaved up the hor, Hence hey were wouderful songs h | aca ‘ose an j AD Whe e distorted message n Since the day we sailed from Birken- | comes th ses, the|and we learne mt A bs new i hes in the grip | head \“heave ) that ends | roared vat t r And , b king, unreasoning, pan | They whacked us out of a pound ach st It cheered the men, and | flo Best of | lex 1 ” Y ran y fear—they would aboli t for | bread; jient rhythm to a heavy work where, was “Paddy In ° | Our work was hard and the voyage | hin was necessary in “break Tiaeriar lent tee at ; On the fourth day the eel was ligt was lo jing” the aneho: “un the mud oe Where tf A o . we received a little more fuod The seas were high and tho gale But at is a lonely Jif sea srsin, A‘ " When darkners slut down again fo ( Were strong Jeong is always compar : ‘| wd ree ¢ nights, On one of e food was bad and t w, | was 4 bells in the mid wat hog . ae ay wt 9 : t sentence the guard But now on shore again we'll g0; jcourse was set NE, with . i ‘ tho extra soup, "Phat The sails are furled 4d our work |. Iubbe low on the horizon, the heln al : . Vee © a ns relat “LT experienced done, nan would ere old “Admiral Ben- pre » tn at st men dread most of all And now on shore we'll have our fun,| bow" as he steadied her on, and q7 (He capatan, “hewre here aio ' el 1. It is he a famished Old Sea Chantey.* | perhaps make up a stanza or two of | (vn It sara euihy : 1 tt aws and tears, I writhed Once again the American flag his own at the expense of some bucko| py Po} : oe the floor and cried aloud in my flying in the ports of the Seven Seas, | Mate, So the . t failed But it | agony, while the cold it dripped and once again the old American sea] Of Rose . an 4} the y r t y face and hands. I do ne chanties are being sung in the fo | United States Naval v which one Ban Brobe a r t 1 said—I d t want Jof Yankeo ships all the way from| was used through tho war as a guard | ¢y, ‘wear yr carelen oft vw 1 r Hongkong Harbor to Port of Lon-|boat for New York Harbor, It was| 7 a Wy a iar That 1 1 up and sion jdon, These ning old sea songs|there in the summer of that 1) o ta ‘from New Y F y fist at tl neluding the were never written by any one man, | first knew “Pop” McKinney, Bosun's | for tlie’ * he from t le G r ». Twas not go-e! | They grew, added to and changed, as | M Ho was old and brown and | and \ hee But SIEM And, the last night of |they were passed on by word of] smi and searred by the storms of “fs he eks in the black cells, he j mouth from one old sea dog to an-| fifty years at sea. All day long he] aay newt away, 0, bi Ler, |N f he low ut oudly “A port of exulta lother about the foc's'al bunks, And|growlcd at our clumsy landlubber | A"ay, bewi ama feiber, Jo,| the ved hot foc's'al stove, filling bis | tion came to me. y—had —no- now with the growth of the new|ways, and our abysmal ignorance of blany, ghanties toll stories, | sme- tween pity quavering aid: ePadty co | broken met” American Merchant Marine they are] bowlines and marlino and hambro-|jost in being passed down, and then| Whack,” or “Reuben Ranzo” to the! nreo ‘Times and Out!’ is pub being sung again. Of course there'line. But at night, when the wind! the chantey singer will Improvise in| deckhauds of the watch below, by Houghton, Mifflin Company, - ~= ~~

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