The evening world. Newspaper, January 16, 1919, Page 18

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EDITORIAL PAGE Thursday, January 16, 1919 | Freed From the DemonRum Ss Coparigh*. 1919, ty The Pree Pubbia’ (The New York Fire — orld.) ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Sun rb 1 @udished Daily Except naey by ihe Freee Fuviding Company, Nos. 53 t York. RALPH. PULIT: President, 63 Park Row. J. ANGUS SHA urer, 68 Park Row. JOSEPH PULITZER, . Secretary, 63 Park Row. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED Piss, omant oh ce not VOLUME 59. a -.,, By J. H.Cassel oxete entitled to the nme for rembiication of all ‘creditad ih this paper And also the loral wome pola a NATIONAL PROHIBITION. HANKS to gross misrepresentation by their clected represen- | tatives, the people of the United States are to see their ral Federal Constitution cheapened and debased by the National | } Prohibition Amendment. The Americans who framed that Constitution thought they were laying the foundation for the government of a free people. What would have been their ferlings had they been told that one day a/ epecial kind of fanaticism would find a way to use their work for the purpose of imposing its particular limitations of personal freedom upon every man and woman in the United States! There is not one word in the Federal nothing in its tone, nothing in the noble breadth of its provisions that can be cited to make otherwise than utterly incongruous and perverse Constitution, there is| ' the insertion of an amendment to regulate the private conduct and| | habits of American citizens. | { Nor has any other amendment to the Constitution changed in} this respect the character and purpose of the original to specific! How will an Eighteenth Amendment whieh des mvasion of personal rights and of Slate ee Ninth and Tenth Amendment IX. The enum shall not be construed to deny or disparage others by the people, ‘ X. The powers not delegated to the United Stales by the | Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved | to the States respectively or to the people. Into the Federal Constitution is being foreed a provision whfch, | owing to its peculiar nature, onght never to have been even fen «idered without the fullest opportunities for referenda ever prowaed | D the United States H overeignty look alongaide ration in the Constitution of certain right velained Through their indifierence and moral cowardice miMons of Americans have made it possible for a powerful lobby to do out rageous wrong to their country and its institutions When the What, in the name of liberty and justice, con we do to undo thi thing ? | It appears quite certain that no State referendum following ratification of the National Prohibition Amendment by the Legisla-| rir senses they ure going to usk: come to ware of the State can alter the effect of that ratification. The Fed \ era) Constitution provides that amendments “shall be valid to all : wtents and purposes as rt of this Constitution when ratified by } the Legislatures of three-fourths of the geveral States, or by con-! saa | a ventions in three-fourths thereof, as one or the other mode of ratifi- | vation may be proposed by Congress.” | Yor the ratification of the National Prohibition Amendment Oongress epecified the former mode. As the Constitution reade,, vatification “by the Legislatures” is sufficient and final. No matter | vhat State Constitutions may provide as to referenda within the State, ratification is, in lete when the Legislature jras thus voted. { On the other hand, it e National Proh Soosely put together affair eu + - ‘The Passing of the “Chew-Chew’”’ Man ~The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell 1919, by ‘he Prem Pablis The New York bvens this case, com wwe s been more than once ted out that a hastily and) of interpretations. ? An aroused and determined majority of electors might inspire Con p Iment us stands to a variety ug World | Fred, the Sporting Barber, Discusses Jazz Dancing By Sophie Irene Loeb and Bolshevikism. gress with a differer attitude when it comes to a question of en-| Copprglt, 1019 by The Press Publishing ( The New York Krening World.) . 4 ‘ ‘ 7" , > ; O you are ° s the *hoick!’" orcing the Amendmeni—as its second section says Congress and] The Man Who Left the World a Big Idea. 64 G0 S08 are SolD ge AROS UR RL Ae el Nie sene he States shall have concurrent power to d appropriate le | ORD comes from Copenhagen that is to say, that they originate in the sporting barber. "Well Thut's the office that you're Jerry lation.” that Horace Fe pany the Lat es ; ing 1 Slad you didn't wait till you go Vana nep to what's about to be pulled well known dietician, has now not only believed in ewing " " out there to be trimmed, Always] off. ‘The dips will pass you up, think- Su se e rees pOMsi by or Unis ainendment 8 ee er \- c » 1 but . uppose the force t nsib r this ain udment were to see | passed on. Al-|your food thorougiiy, but wus! Datronize home enterprise, get] ing you arc one of the mob and are t o repose in the Constitution iu “innocuons desnetude” or with! pough he has left|agauinst chewing your worries at @ll.| trimmed in your own town.” playing y, when you give them + teeth carefully drawn? Suppose they were to find themselves! See ee ee eee ee eee wired | aes Oarh: sorties. -Ditnwnle in noick.’ One ‘hoick’ is Info that ter all pretty much in the position of a Congressman who has got welfare he gave|me in good d for many a day, It : hp t Te acs ao : t a a Then setup add Fi j to the| goes something e this SAOURG tO DERE VASES PUFF SOE pel ll aot aE ere eave to print” but whose speech carries no further? It is not impos- or Miley ns | ih ms “ied sa is ee e had first given, that he was 6 ofr,” 4 : orld that is fun- can't be he cres ne ; i eible. There is also a Fifteenth Amendment. : a iv reeia 1c | wave all of the time, When the wave |°? % business trip to Cleveland and I you were sayihg something nel 11 of the time. t ° A : ; ; rene ai I, ould get @ haircut before he left 2 scheme you had,” remarked f | Not at all impossible if the Nation is stirred with the reaction % will never die—to 8 down, don't resist too hard, but oe ” : c ye ‘ ve it ie ould Mr. Jarre, “What ar tan't to quit| We produced by what has happened on hundreds of thousands of return Ps, Fletcherise—to|/s0 Hi the phate On ree ae cat a chunble With wm bil fe Her beck |'t00 lling and bid for the pocket- ; ; . a food | Shillow place until you again come ah al ‘ Was : W ng soldiers who feel that something has been put over on them| teesewernvoee OY OM Ot ay on Case gauy aieanetn T wish 1 ad the capital to do| picking privileges on our intramural i n their absence—stirred also by the energy of Americans at home| swallow it. At three score years and “nd shouting until you are again on) '* dees td ae Bs hae os thine ka’ Ps ‘Them street oar r e | if | ar " that erest," young Rocketelier, do you? i ving like it. stree: { who have had their eyes opened at last, if late, | ten he wes “over Wome oh HN This is certainty worth-white phite!whaves hiself? Ain't it funny, them |magnety would think that cheap j A longer but perhaps a surer cure might be to enforce the| Sree pea ccs Josophy, 1 is to say that you can't! that hag it, holds on to it, I" bet that | work.” replied Fred. “When they amendment. bial ium. tcher wett, 1|BAve everything your own way all the|Young Rockefeller has got one of |tet elght-cent fares nobody will have After a miserable experience witt s . | 3 knew Home J kia a period |time. You can't be hitting the high|them cut-your-own hair outsits, too. )any jack or Jewelry, No, it wasn't a " I F vasion, subterfuge and espion | tome nb nes he went into é Pood |SPOLS and occupy the centre of the| It's no wonder in Russia that what that at was new idears in bar- ge, the stealthy use of poisonous liquors, substitutes and drugs,! °% ~ ee broney es ae give | continually, ‘There aro times| tiem Bullshevicks call ‘the polecats’ | DOT bE: z t except water, in order to give . , “ ie. roce * said nereasing unrest among a majority more and more incensed by he eee if A eae Fy every | ¥uen the human must be willing to|is making themselv unpleasant, ‘ tO, painiess pr e aid Mr. A nave “ le 5 |so wh o de ler fs ne | es © prole a jot pole- arr. arbitrary curtailment of its rights, the country would be certain to|@ay for weeks He was the life of| °° = the qd S order to mm sored ree wn DO PF i rely x | “Not at all,” replied the sporting 7 ; a c [ono to meet the issue when he|cats, Mred,” suggested Mr. Jar | sshd yi 5 «xperience a violent revulsion of feeling. the purty. He always carried a flower | |, iain on the toy rel watt Mous| barber, “My idea to give enter- &. | ajrain on the top, Well,” resumed the loquactou: 4 ani ‘eure ye PT ‘ p his button! and laug "| Thus it happens th ; r 4 as saying 1|‘inment with every shave and hair- | It would have learned a gris n and learned it thoreughly: | Paryed that he | peomnt gel). te tr ep pene MABE URRY Rees |topperial Sedee: (2 Aa. SOYIRE cut, You knows oow the war ie oven ! The way to deal with one evil is not to take fvolish chances with|owerr, We lovingly cafied 1m (10 jt range jo through amainet al edd | eee aan een would buck me in| the Jazz dancing has the call? Well, i ql oY are erm f gh against all odds, | know, a bank roll—would bac Bs sete Le. all? ell, «= bigger one. “Chow geared rms 1 eat beside bim| Very: Very often the thing would] my dear, Betng a barber is not only of _ Sea of ‘Shimmie Shaving 5 Many, many . come to pass much quicker if they] strain on the brain—wondering | 500m d make every wop brush p L F at table and watched bim chew: ms would not insist too strongly, but ons the tips is to be—but it's hard boy double with a trick or muted ¢ etters rom the Peo p le jor Lond wnt Be Preached. Ip omer [rather let the aatural course to pro-| on the feet wolking all day on theso| Sd! trombone, whole orchester of ‘ _ wornls, when be ©leeed until the occasion was oppor- rae oore. f course, | them: en I'd have a buneh ¢ } From the Am Red Crom. charged with such —reaponathitity, » you chewed your food the more palin rey Smpor= | antiseptio tleq Asore. 0 wr8e) nifty manicure molly, aud ¢ Mh ‘Vo the EAtior of The 1 World ‘There was, however, a quotation trom |" 1 ae ene mation of what] there is pickings " bl ack 7 In a recent issue of your paper I] One of the publications of the Red | Mime and Pleasure you would Ket oUt] iy desired. A guy lenyas hia diamond pin faui|customer a Juss dance before and read a letter from Charles H. Winslow| Gres" Tnutitute, issued well prior too #, the longer you would lve. At) How many people I have known! out of his necktie when he takes his| iter every shave, singe, shampoo or of the Federal Board for Vocational | elinite action by the Government in! firat we wed to rowurd It as fome- lio auffer and lose out because of thia| UY o ; Ia neck shaved-_|#ireut, Good tc what? | Vapeation. If Lam not mistaken, the | phe poirert of tho disabled er.| what of a fad. But ite truth bas been | unwillingness to wait and to practise | Clr Of ae apgpeee ample pel “But it would “ th article to which Mr, Winslow refers is] over tonteetote ment was written | nroved over and over again, fhe aienea that Gardovas ce not caring if he got a oold an¢ Macibuank Wodlanit ite asi : owe entited “The Returning Crippled| months in. ade Oat least cit!” ais week a friend of mine has had| Horace Fletehe A would run into the fu. And I cops) jin ut Gon't think I'd trust Soldier,” the first paragraph of which | } t of Congressional a « is dead, but the kK, unseen by all. Iam wear- my eee eee ay there fornae nose ped lation on the subject of rehabilj.|an X-Tay made of his teeth, HAVINE world is better for his having livea, |e SPArK WI a | fingers to be manicured by a girl dur- nam En crite atutnine cadena, Ye pear Zour artiols simply quotes the |had a siege of serious stomach The truths that he expounded wili|'ma it for @ — pale Mg 8€C.| ing a dance a la jazz-chemise.” ne A ater 48 an opinion on the eri tL was ascertained that he| continue until the end of time it the poor simp don’t advertise or| vw, ee seal seme of the lists there are many! in genrral and ilustrocne te pole | trouble, Tt was ascertained ho] Soatinwe until the end of time, But the MDP CONE AG TETH Well," replied the sporting barber, maimed or crippled men.” 1 cannot] of 4 man newly disabled > Cline) chewed most of his food on his front |ieit even one preat idea &nd| nothing. 1 guess bi Ks 1 Sot! that Bolshevik religion, or whatever smd in this article much in the way of] opinion is a sound one, h anys ine teeth: that the food did not mix © eee Pinohed off bim in the crowded cars. i+ ig, is gomg to be the rage, As | f ‘ormat 6 7 aving . , " - é re ar tks tennant Pegieetid Poe fy When originally written, won| Properly with the saliva in the mouth A FOOD ECONOMIST. Thore's where the dips work, you! understand ft, them Bolshevik job Governmental authorities are doing the} results GPeration and Study of the|and that down ft went into the stom-| ¢¢ MERICA," sald Food Con. | know. cea bica will put a polecat—oh, yes, pro- work of rehubilitation ix not complete. | phe Red Cross jp senads and abroad.|ach im a state m which that organ roller Hoover recently, “ean| ‘But aren't YOU afraid of being| otary-what-you-may oall-it adminie Wis true that for vocational re-rduca-| of its staf! have Pad, PON bers | was not made to receive it. ‘The one send six extra million tons of| robbed of the diamond scarf pin) tration in office: and it will be moider, ion sole responsibility las been de! erabl ‘otic. 0 » consid- - rq 0d on walt for so ae sf . ; Baied ty Congres “to. the Feserai| Cmbe Practical experience’ in dealing] thin that the Gocler prescribed wan food abroag next year and stl have| whose owner yoo w Pa-| with ghot-at-eunrise trimmings, to Board for Vocational Education. It! hased on TU eee’ wtatementa "Chew Your food. enough left for home consumption, | tenuy? asked Mr. Jerr, any one who ts ‘boy joy,’ as they is also true, however, that the Ameri- nee can, I think,| T talked with this doctor, who visits| "But saving will be necessary, 1/ “Me? No!” replied the sporting) call it, enough to want his nails be safely quoted by the dali ry ; can Red Cross througi: its home wer-| An interesting” sidesery RS | many hospitals and whoes eases run|feel great sympathy for the young| barber. “TM tell f to the wortd, I! trimmed.” vice sections te rendering considerable | validity of they opinion von fae |up into the handred. fe told me|cook whowe mistress said: \used to belong to ‘The Gentlemen's! “So you are not for the Bolshevik?” assiatance dn the way of cooperation] quoted iy that the statement from, that many Doople little realize how| "Here, Bllen, 18 a baaket of| Sone of The Ges Houte District and repiied Mr. Jarr, as he arose out of cenitanaa af thaes pections haa been we a tal ep Tae ties me 8 been| much of their bodily troubles comes|quinces, We'h make proserves of|1 got to know all the mob, and how! (he chair. welcomed and has, in general, met] ications of the Surgeon General of vu, bolting their food the best pieces, marmulado of the they lift leathora~thnt's pocketbooks, | “Mo?” replicd the sporting barber. with satisfaction on the part of the) United States Ariny, Which nathan) But that imm't all thet Horace|others and Jelly of the cores and| and suptra-that's ket\les—watches—| ‘ly any of us tonsorial artiste boost- t Taters) Boars, na deals first with the crippled goldic- ana Fletcher gave to the world, He wes desloge aaah ania walie land sparks (hal's woarfpins, Bo | ing for them Bolshevik bearded ladies inte is Bo statement in the article! «tarts him on hls way back to eiviliin @ philosopher. He went on the theory Macon eee ati2a"" | when Lee any of them enertors In| from Maden? Sag, don't you know it aad gid Dinabiee ‘Mac haa “beag DOUGLAS C. Mf MUBT ALS that all our ils and thrills ore we ake our ar tho tla erowded aires! ear ant (hey etiex|amainet the Bolshevik religion to WNeCLOr. ealed “above the guillotine iine'’— Washington S le wewepaper vader wy ohim 1 just ahave, ebampeo ge trim the valrer a f er —_ _— = mnuanamsriss — proper Oifty-soven varieties of quatift |ProMendutions which I can best SIV/ tions, The eame might be said of |you by quoting in part from BIS Te | your cecounting work. If you liked ee better, you would probably advan: [ents has seemed to me wise to advise fast ou to find a better Held where tbe} At your age a man fs conservative tute mentality could co-operate in| He has to be, He has responsibil | ‘our busin and where your very ties, I wouldn't jump into anythin, \tine quality and lighly trained men-|if T were you, without due consid n Could find gratifying occupa-|eration, I believe that the best thing any tn my judgment the fled of for you to do would bo to take jeoe management, based upon a) course in business administration | Khoa not necessarily long| studying at home in the evening eee tion, one of the best fields | There are geveral good courses avail if aa able, It would be better Yor you : °N w, M fliib, T wou appre-| really, if such a course cost a great ite your judgment on the ywing,|deal of money, so that you woul yased on the above facts [have to pinch and save and den h the tleld of salesmansiip urself to pay for it, If you took a f ie re gales manage course r those conditions and | WW i rernualy tem kept ut it, it would develop a bulldo, offer s i tenacit ‘ould overcome ability warrant mak’ cule tree ce Lene ae roth of reconstruction |" 00 09 i aT SPIRO, If so, What kind of bs aahiiste are sincerely nd at m ees ,| Meant to aid you, Would it be to. [intensive | pred a Nuch to ask of you to keep in touch! study would you recoma with me and me know what yout } W. 4. D, are doin ha t wisest Jeu 7 : Bey avait how you get along? }f In all kindness, I'm g tel you} T’. Be—-In regard to your first que fiyst that you do not pe one ins | tior the proper time te te iatiedl w sale ) one dave already had a dispensable 4 ain a eand that is initiative, iy artiele fi yehological my opinion, You ne ot ‘ ty n ed in t “per op thiv quality—thts a of ss tw ay gn sour own two legs without de. article on this important pending upon anybody, For a man of 1 pot sure, but it ig aiy your education afd ability, you ave Ipression t book, “Pets not making enough money you | Crow wesmar out of print gure that tt jan't lack of monoy t You yl no's, New York varane things you want to do Mowin Chicago, ‘They migh 5 worrying you and making you 1 Wn | Fut rain yo, yous, instead of the monotony of your | “U4 & ublig Librar | Work? If you were getting, iet us| T. 12 1.1 f salesman say, ten thousand a year, wouldn't offered ‘ vou men like ve esent n hott ene ¢ You will derive you Jgreat dua neti frum tt agp Vecelionm: eayci a Lave (Oe spew gure 5 How Great Wars Were Ended By Albert Payson Terhune Copyrgt, 1019, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Krening ‘Werld.) No. 25--THE “WAR OF THE ROSES” T was not one continuous war but @ series of wars, with brief pauses for rest and for the gathering of | strength for new fighting. It was known to history as “The War of the Roses,” and it rent England with thirty years of civil strife. It began in 1455. Ite Last battle was waged in 1485. } Henry VI. was King of England in the former y He was a scholarly weakling, subject to fits of in sanity, and about as fit to rule a tumultuous people 4 those rough times as would be a consumptive cripple to compete for Jess Willard’s title. Henry's cousin, the Duke ot York, coveted the throne. Henry's srand- father, Henry IV., had dethroned. Richard I. York now claimed that Henry IV. had been a lawless usurper and that he himself, as oldest living descendant of the dethroned branch of the family, was the rightful betr o the throne ~ | In the first mutterings of quarrel the English noblemen took sides with the King or with the Duke: Henry's follow on opted as a badge a red rose. York's adherents English Noblemen chose a white ro us their ey Tius the forth . Take Sides. mn. coming strife took its name, "The War of the Roses. eee ntly, from diplom wrangling, the dis ite merged into a bloody war. ‘The rival factions met at St, Albans in 14 where the Yorkists won an overwhelming victory, This triumph made Y t master of Engiand. He took the title c {tector of the Realm until Henry should die, But before long Henry's followers raili the conflic omimenced In 1459 they were every victorions The crushed the enemy and drove the Duke of York out of the country into exile i 4 While pour old Henry VI. reigned in comparative peace on, in 11460, back came the Duke of York at the head of a strong nd the | tighting naga At of S ' York not only won a «mashing victory but . Henry wif. 1 dictated his own erm A treaty wa » where He as to nuin on the thron for lif dd was to be ected, a ‘ Yor This arrangement shut out Henry's the voung Prinee of Wales, from the eu » And Henry's wife, Queen Margar fused to sane tion ut In her son aA new army and uttacked the York iste, At the Batt » was triumphant and York was killed Once more the strif end, | But York's eldest son Kdward took the field as hiv slain father’s helr ' At Towton, March 29, 1461, he overthrew his foes reer and sent Henry fying fo afet o Scotland Edward Wins Back 3) Kidward had himself crowned, und title of His Throne King I LV A time reigned as undis But Queen Margaret formed an alliance with © t i of Warwick, and or ooh field y won am victory over Kdward, fc the ¥ Kin Holland. Henry VI was pat back on ron wn before, and wor s kin latter sor Margare ‘ow t For fourteen ye 1 migh torn the country usunde you f brother, Richard II But in 1485 Henry of Richm ft of Henry VIL) renewed the carna ne overthrew and killed Richard HL. winat ti the daughter of Hdward LV, I rn srty year War of t ysex was finally at an end a jj Salesman Earn Bigger Pay By Roy Griffith \ How And The Evening World's Authority on Successful Salesmanshep. Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New Yors s2vening Wortd.) ‘ Wr. Gr 3 column appears on Chis yaye daily. His artictes on sules ip alternate with @ question and answer column Wke to-day's invited to ask his a Lucning World readers ave in solving their | inahip problems, Adc him by tetter in care of this newspaper. Hts ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS. | AM au { man, 35 years old.) iz 1 knowledge necessar giving ] college graduate. Have been With| valuable character analyses, They i sent emplo: a large Cof-| cannot, however, definitely chart the | poration=for’ six rking WY-) human equation, Human nature is | self to my present position of book-|a'ways a variable. ‘The vocational | keeper-accountant Vv yearly in-| expert's advice is valuable, but {t ten't lcome of $2,000. ‘The amount of MY|ulvays correct. In other words, yor \ salary proves to me that I am Not) may have it in you to be @ success succeeding in business; I do not like) ful sales-manager, but do you also l weooun work, and the long hours|have the “something” in you whieh {of constant routine is slowly reduc-| will bring your ability to the fore in nervous system to a state of jaos. 1 want to make more money and there seems to be no chance iD profession? One good test is. Do you like the work of seMing and the management of men better than anyUiing else in the world?” If you do, you have @ better chance than if a character expert told you that you my ny present position, Recently 1 sought | well-known vocational expert. training, he made certain rec of a with the advi —— na,

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