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ee SS * pal service certain to show the earliest and worst effects. | ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPIT PULITZER, Published Daily Except Sundsy by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to 63 Park Row, New York. ni : RALPH PULITZBR, President, 63 Park Row. J. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row, JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park —— ji RR MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRES, Amociated Prem is excurtvely entitled to the une for ranbiication of aT it ae not otherwise credited im Wis paper and ale the local sews published bern, VOLUM WHEREIN? HE demotion of Police Inspector Daniel Costigan without! stated reasons has NOT passed with the people of this city | for one of the normal, natural readjustments in the Police} Department. Police Commissioner Enright must recognize that fact, He must realize that both his action and his refusal to explain it are of @nature to arouse misgiving and challenge scrutiny. | Inspector Costigan was a Police Inspector who had won the} special respect of New Yorkers for encrgy, courage and intelligence | im the performance of police duties) He did notable work as head of | the Vice Squad. As an expert in hunting down gambling and] gamblers he is probably uncqualled. So far as the public knows his! record was without a blot. The only reason Commissioner Enright gives for taking Costigan from a position he seemed admirably fitted to fill is that “there were one too many inspectors.” Even so, why pick for elimination one of the best? | Asked if the demotion of Inspector Costigan could be taken to} mean relaxed vigilance toward certain disorderly elements in the city, Commissioner Enright is reported to have said that “he and! Bet the public This kind of talk has not emanated from Police Headquarters | since the days of Devery. It strikes with extra unpleasantness upon the car of a New York grown used to the developed under Mayor Mitchel’s administration. The public has good reason to be disturbed. Experience has taught that when there is a slump of administrative standards im the City Hall the Police Department is the branch of the munici- | is the best judge of euch conditions.” gh police standards Confidence in tae City Hall is at present preceded by a promi-| nent MINUS sign. Nevertheless there has been every wish to believe Commissioner Enright meant to keep the police force up to the high mark it had attained. AN the stronger, therefore, is the feeling of uncasiness aroused by his shoving a first rate Police Inspector like Costigan, perempiorily and without explanation, out of the front line into a rear guard. This uneasiness is not to be quieted by spectacular police raids on brilliantly lighted, all-night dairy reetaurants in Columbus Circle or elsewhere, where the peaceable, law-abiding citizen eating a bowl of bread and milk after midnight is liable to find himself rounded up as a “questionable character.” There are precedents and practices in New York police annals which the city hoped it had put away forever. Among euch was the practice of making a big show of police activity in conspicuous spots where it was least needed, while in darker, quieter corners vice was permitted to go on untrouble ong as it could raise and pass along “the needfa Commissioner Enright says he knows better than anybody “ @itions” in this city with which it is the work of the police ideal, After fifteen years of efficient service on the job, wherein did Inspector Costigan show himself unfit to deal with those condi- tions as Commissioner Enright purposes to deal with them? —_———— eee Letters From the From « Physician! {best Judges of what these laws shall eee tier of THe Evening World: Joonsixt, and that the kind of prohibi- |Uon necessary should be left to refer dso ‘con- Asa physician of many years| on were very wealthy and stupid except| the evening when he arrived on the should expect? I would de glad te standing, practising most extensively nd the pemor cate PIR re neath | a very few of the friends of her spin-| tecelving line. He wore across a Copyright, 2019, by The Prew Publishing Co, (The New York Byening World) w expression, He isn't 0! get your opinion.” ameng the Italians of the Greater arbitrarily deprive tho pone eee noo eats » may have! “rly clean shirt the broad crimson | y ° A . “ai A ° ‘ y near. His letter is so interest- iaiaell City ef New York, may I not voice|riht by & mwority vote of the lee inet si igh eat wealthy, {Fbbon of revolt! The Patrician put | The Wise Little Lady Explains a Few Points in Hislory ind wo entirely untrue—I aim ne above is a very remarkame my protest in their behalf against |'8tures, which is certainly neither| ape M J and | the moneyed interests present at ease, | 66 LD you ever get mixed up ina} hen why make a fool of yo If zit to you to-day, Hero it is: letter. It represents, concretely, the Mation-wide or National Prohibition? | (2°,Vo'@ nor the will of the people, | These last included Mrs, Jarr OR) oe oy whispering that it was geography argument?” asked | by to inform you?’ t t " A *|If the people vote in favor of Pro-|Mrs, Rangle, who, as Mr, Jarr and y sassy ade teitat| _ os t ina “0 "That? 5 You haven't, so far, written any- | attitude of many people toward the Admost from time immemorial the | hibition we wiN bow to and abide by| Mr. Rangle darkly suspected, dad the ribbon of the Order of the Iron Tolle the Waltress of the! hat's one,’ he says. * WhO} thing about different Kinds of sales- | S4lesmanship profession, ‘The atti+ people of Europe, and especially those {their will; but 1 do not consider it |scamotn on” the lady of the{OWl conferred upon those who had {Friendly Patron as he reached for William J. Bryan? lca: SEAGE ven this a great dent| tude is distorted and untrue The of the Latin countries, have lived, | {!F on fust that a law wach as this} Sor nenta, and so had received an|fained the notice of the late King | another bun ; ‘You mean who WAS William JJ i t. I believe a successtul | Writer of the letter is not, and prob- thrived, existed and reared their fam-|tach “one of ere oN linerty ot ea nton to the League of Nations| !lward VII. for thelr ability to atay] “I don't know exactly what you/ Bryan,’ I says, ‘He was the man wh in in one line might be an|ably never will be, a real salesman, MBes on the wine they are able to|should be placed upon the statute! party, with words and music. | up late, mean,” he replied, talked himself out of the t re in another, it is| Not everybody can be a really @uce Mitake for themselves Gb in which | ROOK 18 Which thay have ne oie) |pory: With. wor | Guests who had previously arrivea| “Welk an argument about the fa- ‘Good!’ says my quis 5 ain erent rer: ng | cessful salesman, Everybody cam thene countries abound. The very JOHN WM. PERILLI, M. D. Mra Jarr and Mrs. Rangio kept | were thrown completely In the shade |™0us old people of geography.” she, ‘Now who was John Alden poeeleaaiters sat at, Nu enOM achieve q fair misaauro of eucohamtne Poorest among them, if they have| Saewests G mment Ownership, | themselves during the preliminary) ©" Impressive presence of Mr,|S@@ ‘You know—like Paul Jone | “*re was the father of the butcher |™29 & peeling vs ing ball ot rn nothing else, sti have their vineyard |"? Stor of Tee Brauicg Word reception and bitingly commented a *\rhomas Jefferson and John 1. Sulll-| whose shop is under my apartment, | Wat be Is best adapted for—whether |S 0k (yar eagles tll lgp Mega In er té J. F's on the taste of the rich furnishings, | Pinkston, Other than these whis-| J» |e anoat (Atte dikN thoes abel ji selling books, merchandise, in-| ‘There are two types of people in selves the purest of body-building | Reduce Pronta” T wish to state that |the appearance of the quests and the | ered mattors oti 3 poy here | «you mean history, not geosraphy."| the “fu.” Of course, Ik Jsurance, service, bonds, or whatever |) the world—the thinkors ee = wine, which gives them strength and|{26re is absolutely no need for pro-|Aabiect henpeckery which Mra. Clara} were only two a aE? aid I right—let it go history,” Lu-| meant some other Alden, but | TONS WHALE GIASA Of pene | POSTE. ne HIRED BiAns WOES oem brawn to thrive and perform the most |" Stop the profit system and you| Mudridge-Smith’s elderly husband | sation, cile said, “I'm the most agreeable! funny as it may seem, I just couldn't | ! Me 1 feol inost at home, other pe ee he is a director, an ex- arduous labor. have Government ownensiip, Take, | Seemed to enjoy. Tho first was that these tweaty- little cutey you ever run across, But) think of any other that minute, | “T vlesman who {s versatile | CcUu¥e He can t he ther people bow Again, in the treatment of many | for instance, the postal system of the| That gentleman, a tyrant down-| room apartments in the Mighvosta | what I was getting at when you side-/ ‘This guy laughs at me ‘ n to sel] anything and to ap-| ‘0 9° things better than he oan de @iseases ‘ts uses are manifold; its| United Staten Is that run on the|town, where Mr. Jurr labored with| Arms rented for $30,000 a year! And,| tracked me was an arguinent we had| “ ‘Hat’ he says, John Alden was the | pr every type of person is 2 thom hime doer can accom: erative and corrective powers al-| Profit system? If that giguntic busi.| other wa slaves for him, but a| second, that they contained twenty-|in here this morning. <A fellow sits} young man who loved Priscilla.” ie or d 1 He isa us bn mM ae usd bis own personal most without number; therefore, dy a| Ne8s was owned and controlled by a/#ert at home, had stood out for one | five bathrooms, there being a bath counter and says to me: | “‘And I euppose Prisciila was t und wax born that way. T petlove | fort S.cannot BaD successfully | stroke of the pen to deprive the great! private system the public could not| tins and that was that, League of | even to the kitchen, pantry, and ice | hington’s Birthday will soon! young dame that loved Join A tw up ong | 208 other people quently be cary mass of your laboring people, espe- | * 4 a letter to any part of the Unit.| Nations or no I Nations, | box, doubtless, and two to some of|pe here, Guess I'll have to observeben? s been ‘h t ato | Beh bam fOr ote Put bim ous cially the Italians, of what is their | ° States for three centa By reduc-|the dance la mise should NOT be e bedrooms de juxe. In the H'gh- | it. “‘Precisely!" he says ‘Now you |t . na job whe we MUST deliver the “gtaff of life’ would be to strike 2) ors bs Mages Of organtmd labor| danced ta Arms oi 1 take a bath} “Why don't you go down and] got ‘em, 1 1 would never du by Gis own efforts “SuGee death blow at their liberty, as well|ers, will not and cannot. remude ‘As the guests arrived one by one| very hour of the day without wait-j cross the Delaware Water Gap? I] “+yes, I says, ‘I knew that years jeomplished musicitn, tt is fu brings home the bacon, ‘This latter ee their inherent or constitutional | Situation. If the profits were reduced| they were announced by @ but s one's turn, What more can|ask him, | ago.’ unt f man to anay'se| ie as much money pre ae aay right. | the organized and unorganized work-| who had for years preserved his I oney do? ‘Now, don't be silly! he saya ‘I] “Well, thore's one au ult lust oa much soney Broke bly: Aa sie Ido not mean to be quoted as say- | ji", we egerinees aeeer through | ish accent in bis employer's best Tho affair is very recherche! gai |bet you don’t know who Washington| jayen't answered yet,’ } a i ; : ust as high class a img that the States and the Nation | employment, ‘The only po pee (2; | brandy, and who had of recent dark-| Mr, Dinkston affably, “Sumptuous | Was" that is: ‘Who was Quincy Adams” | , ee RS ee a M Ho is uw Virile, red-blooded @ not justified in the passage of| the #andard of living for the workars| ly hinted that he would return to| without ostentation, elesant and yet| “Say, brother, tt sure gets my goat} +7 give him a stiff look. ‘Quincy |°* * gaye contiran aut cps wants ta wet into bie laws that will most effectively regu-| of the world 1s to have the Govern-| England in June, as this free coun-|with that exquisite distinction with-|To think of him aspiring that me,| aqams was a horse,’ I says, ‘and he ey pola gash ody 1 thick of it elf id of direct. late the traffic in liquor and put an/™ent run by the majority (meaning |try would then havo lost its liberty| out which luxury becomes flamboy-|born right here in New York, didn't) run third at some track with a na ! 4 vd beaded 5 rations frum a point of vam end to drunkenness, which any right- When this le “asoomptisteg EnOrty: | when it renounced its liquor licenses, | ant, and so maddens the ma Iknow who Washington wast Well, Vinge reminds you of pimples about | Would be ® complete failure, ‘ta The man who wrote the above thinking person certainly deplores, | have a Sovialistic dutocracy and har | However, he was still on the job] Tho Patrician whispered to the|Was Dutrifled with anger, six months aso, I know, because we | * Whousht OF starting oUF ip th ris the thinker type. He le aot @ut J do say that the people are the | an autocracy, C. J. jand newcomers were announced by| hostess that Mr, Dinkston had “the| “I give him one look. ‘Brother,’ I/ had a argument in here about that |" Win NO! BPaApOniaemerely oh man, him in the proper mannor, without an | air says, ‘if you knowed one-tenth as| steed. Now, will you} i? paanae cpa A oe at HRak (Day after rrow Mr, Grimith Answers to Readers’ Questions. b) to Shale. names. ‘The whisper went all around that|much about Washington as I do] fo nover saya anott il oars iia Obese acreriben ree iat ene cic ated MImAILcEialAnrUcaloaiaith chi (Milt, ise cemaiare’ Ok, etalk: was, After tho butler announced the! the newly arrived di tinguished. | you'd brag yourself to death, Now}y. gots ten utes after, and out seen oe : "EST hig holler printed tee Employment Bureau of the Pennsyi- | ton, N. J, en | nucet “never getting ono name cor-| joking Rucst of the evening had “the | don"t be simple.’ | he gous.” if | have } ‘ pporta ~~ vania it ‘ rectly whether with or without an| a{ . n e oP, a 01 o ch history?” he) « A t it Q : , sar igkan aN | READER The Windsor Hotel fire |b." the hostess would simper and say, | Hy kn oat Ht at pee 2 ee ee ad Ad. a ioe tt "fi Vriend te Hebi sree pave ARTE KNOWING, CLE Apply any day ut the Ped- |occurred un March 17, 1818, “How awect of You to comol™ | Wverybody having arrived, the| **Never min¢ ys ‘I got alty Patron, aaa aha nite ru hus boch Invented trae eae lied wader CHARL@S J. B—No record of such hgh ne me t would simperingly | noste is rapped her costly fan on her] pretty good Mne on all tho old his-} "sure," replied I eo “but I By Riiha Avera eal anicaraai , i inan without expert EB. JONES—Iron Trade Review, No. |a school as you ask for. reply: “I wouldn't miss your charm- | knuckles and announced that Madam | torians,’ wouldn't tip him c Quincey Ad a mwledge of photography, 220 Broadway; Irun Age, No, 239 West Cat Saal hg affairs for the world!" Squaliini, of whom Mary Garden| NV right,’ he says, ‘Now tell mo|!s @ Play, but I's called “guiney Ade | v1 sold notions to departs) ens by ame Bth Street. Pc pe ee | Spanysied | eae ippreseen. a prevalent and Geraldine Farrar were so jealoys, | who was Quincy Adams?” |itked ee Nave, what pballd tare old (iene er ie 20Rs and Repeaters OD are showing that pamen mun ct rtd the ma- hin 2 . pes Br eo Sexe would sing the mud-scene aria trem| ‘*You know, do you?’ I ask, spat epaine for you? We'rp: all het nres a Rp a husslepee 19 one of the bast onal anthenia ene ~abpeng th. £0 | Luckte Cette DME certainly. doe cece’ Of MAO every tang , “ua © culture ane i League of Nations party, with | President Wilson at the Peace Con- Pap aay Sq Ev ds dippute ia The Evening World's Authority on Successful Sak tmanship, We ies: fae veel Poteet aes: words and music, was well under| ference, and, more than that, Radars pag Calce ahithan the nave We Ganka ca, eo grep MT xed daily, TANICNC petition they bed 1s caset, et ME way at the sumptuous apart-| would be a stern reminder to Bol- ve coiveg one thousand a night or two| articles like tu-day's aiternaie with answers to questions which sau resiilt wha (hey aenended on mae ments of Mrs, Ch mith’s shovism that it better have @ C2rC! | Yhon gho sang in society. | readers of The ing World are invited to ask Mr, Griffith by letter. | creat extent, and it would have wealthy dushand in Oe ore Tho Paid Patrician lady who a#-) The Leaue of Natlons evening was| Address him caro of this newspaper. | Herculean task for an outsider costa Arms Apartment Hou sisted hostess e, for whlch ony rai reat ccouea):. There At . iis ees t > their confidenc r Aue tates arcivadiacd taieid the crowds Mee vecalyed: silt cwuaesutnority. totlcne Ge deuke Har cine sradcanec| Interesting—but Untrue. acc ae ed parlors brilliant with electric lights] Uus last statement and also for the HAVE ao habit r w T{ he's all right. 1 eoare y of) tach Peo ple trician lady > hint : ) fascination for shining through colored and cut giass| Whispered rumor that she, the Patri-| politics, and had achieved interna- nk, regardless, 1 bell who will ee I get more fun out of organis Mobes on the ugliest art objects that} cium, could have gone abroad with | tional social recognition at the same | 1 good plan, The average 1 or some one to tell at sa sules campaign, writing letterm, money could buy tt hae ae party, but had felt | apes i foe any on: iy oe Bea ss right ont | OF Calling upon people who have aent Mrs. Clara Mud! Smith recelyed jhee duty Lee Hue ee Peres es —— oor h something just for |!9 8M inquiry, At least I am gure of the guests, assisted by a very fatel’a se & bowdoly _Rolah Ma) he ’ Le ving that hig de-|* Feception, Would you sum me up whose terms “to lend an} might yet turn and uphold property ucl e e al ress a) Jas lacking persistence, that I was Lint were $800 a niake ané@ law and order, Mr. Michael &n- EDITORIAL PAGE) Friday, February 7, 1919 Sayings of | Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1919, by 0, (The New York Evening World.) Being the Confessions of the Seven-Hundredth Wife, Concerning the Deceit of Man, Which Is All Subconscious. my maxims, but receive my Y Daughter, I charge thee, scorn not M judsinents with understanding and abide by them. Vor not even a MODERN Dawsel, who readeth Free goeth unto problem plays, knoweth aught concerning men and their subtile ways until she hath been married to at least ONK of them, Verily, verily, if thou MUST “tell thing thew confide thy secret to a Bachelor. For a woman is as a paper bag whlch leaketh, and a Married Man hath no secrets from his Wile—save his OWN! Doth a man praise a damsel openly in thy presence, saying: “Yea, she {s a PEACH and a thing of beauty” Then For she is not THE one. Before Business - ae I charge r her not, endeth to yawn at mention of her name, saying: che is RAWTHLE interesting. Yea, she is 80-0.” | Ther For ho hath not told thee the half. Think not because two men jibe at each other in thy presence and rie y favor openly that they are RIVALS. Por, peradventure, when one of them departeth the other will lose im beware! » RAIL-ROADS erest and follow soon afterward, And th Ye ou alone of the three will reinember what they sald. when two women jab at cach other in the presence of @ maa dareth go FIRST. Vor eacu knoweth that at her departure the other will tear her limb “Poor girl! What a PITY she tinteth her hair the wrong shade!® | Iearken not unto the youth that sigheth, “Ah, would that I were richt® he ‘deth thy hand, nor unto him that talketh vaguely of what hw . ball do when his ary is raised.” shall discover that ye that day cometh, peradventure, he n tor car and not a wife. And a man who is in LOVE proposeth not upon the strength of his come, but upon the impulse, Hebold, when a youth sayeth unto thee “Do with me whatsoever thou wilt. For, alas, I am as putty im thy ce, turn from him, nor waste thy time jirl Tam hellproof, upon him, and bis heart is encased in cotton Vor his midd batting and his emotions are t H t to ecajole me, Woman! arth IMMUNE!" rayest thou « the battle or 1 have foresworn love forever and house the wedding decoratious. For he is ripe for lube that singeth in the dark, the Boche Ip! ter me. is as the h befor because he is AFR hehold, «man saith No woman can fld And the damsel saith, “No. I am sure not.” ‘or the deceit! 4 Win's deceils SUBCONSCIOUS The Jarr Family All Is Well—The League of Nations Is Assured! Copyright, 1919, by The Prew Publishing Co, (The Now York Evening World.) By Roy L. McCardell ‘How to Become a Better Salesman “cE, bamaing of. conven and Earn Bigger Pay Smith had busted right into the world is no that. What is] |iazy and not willing to tak elo Dinkston was the sensation of ee y a ing o the ; in receipt of a letter from a By Bide Dudley \n eye in Pathe that's | Of the fair young hostess's guests all knocks and setbacks a salesman