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; \ i ' i | ESTABLISIIED BY “JOSEPH PULITZER, Published Dally Except Gungey, by the Preas Fer hing Company, Nos, 63 te 63 Para Row, New York. RALPH PULITZBR, President, 63 Park Row. ' J. ANGUS way ‘Treasurer, ‘ark Row, JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr., Secretary, 63 Park Row. —— LE NOW aaa | MEMBER OY THY ASSOCIATED PRESS, sae ia sted Py fe emetet titted te tie rime for rebiication * evant ote * CudeKinalh 18 Ute paper and sieo the local news BrMlisbed eden esate tT) VOLUME. 59. : AN EXHILARATING SPECTACLE. KHILARATING indeed to the people of the United Sta ia the spectacle of a traintoad of alieu Bolshev ditators rushed eastward the conntry tot aded on outgoing steamers and dumped on foreign goil whence they came, The Seatt!n atcike has served one useful purpose. Lt haa shown! how much the 1. W. W. depends upon the aid of imported profes “reds” to foment labor trouble dd Statics, Officials of the United States Immigration Service have b img information regarding these i!l-omen tion of them are likely to be speedily restored to the Russian prov inces where they learned their Bolshevik trade. ona nthe Un “n for months past collect d Visitors, A large propor American labor is too level-headed to be led far astray by the, expert Foreign Legion of the I. W. W. Nevertheless there is no reason why {le bedevilments of imported agitators ehould be per mitted to go on produging even sporadic disturbance and unrest. The most undesirable alien in the country for the purposes #his reconstruction period is the alien with the wild eye and the glib tongue and the head full of clapirap arguments to show that work is folly where there is property to seize. Railroad him to the docks, ship him overseas and take good care he doesn’t get back « ead Speaking of dangerous aliens, who are bel The Labor Defender or Organ of Revolutionary Unionism, a new publi- cation issued semi-montbly from the I. W. headquarters in this city and described by Frederick Lawrence in The Evening World? Who prompts denunciation of the “slimy Gompers,” sneers the President of the United States and sinister hints of @ “long journey” on which our “real rulers” are to be sen Of what natipnalities are editors who urge upon “fellow workers” that “now !s just the time to rock the boat like hel! It's an easy ride from East 4th Street to the steamship piers. ® ————_-++ WILL HE STRIKE BOTTOM? | denied Saturday—that Danie] EF. Costigan, demoled Inspector of the Firat District, made 2,196 arrests during the year 1918, Police Commissioner Enright admits that he has not looked up the numbers of convictions obtained under inspectors in other districts in order to compare them with the number of convictions obtained by Costigan’s men. P*::: COMMISSIONER ENRIGHT now admits what he Yet Police Commissioner Enright, admitting le was grossly in error a3 to the number of Costigan arrests and admitting also that he has not even taken the trouble {o establish a basis of comparison for estimating the efficiency of Costigan’s work, ne tinues to apprais so Costigan as the “worst” inspector in the Depat ment and to call hia record “rotten.” Police Commissioner Enright’s admissions are dropping jim] lewer and lower. Will he strike bottom with the admission (lat Costigan’s record ie what he, Enright, chooses to make it? The Evening World's question looms steadily larger: ertheless con: | In dealing with gambling and vice, wherein did the Costigan Every Woman Should Know What Is Hers by Right YOUNG woman in the office of a | t position in the eyes of the law \ large department store wr will eman © women more quickly policy conflict with the Enright policy? CCE a It is not a Devery who now rules In Police Headquarters, nor is it a Deyery'’s New York outstde, +: EVEN AS THE WORM. SEW EDBA of the strike as a come-buck weapon for a A harassed and threatened community appears in the news from Germany In Duesseldoy the Spartacans at high hand and, the better to enforce their demands, seized hosiages from among the bourgeois delegates. Whereupon, accordin Berlin despateh, the whole bourgeois section of t ypu Duesseldorf “struck.” a's, publig sexs lawyers, doctors and even school teachers “wa t elt duties suspended. result. Was that restagrants #0 ¢ tres a well as schools had to close, while the halting of the ordinary ma chinery of public business and banking forced a quick shutdown of industria! planis. The Spartacans found they were a hundred times worse off when the middie class ceased to functton, ‘They hastened to release the hostages and Spartacan terrorism changed to Sy tear conciliation, Th suy, tremendo What a doublesback-« nethod of dea it ido strike + forever trying io gain its ends by striking AVS publi: convenience through the tying up of indispensable pab'i service! , Suppose, for instance workers threatened to cut off 1 when transit employees broog the banks closed their doors, th on the padi movies ¢ halted and the larger part of the community shut up shop and retir within doors, leaving tr to find food, am nent and en couragement as best { mig What kind of pressure would the strikers feo) from affiliated unions of other workers in such ¢ 1 One “su ‘commun strike ar nt ht of way for many a day questioned rig ELECTRICAL FEATHER PICKE’. OF INTEREST TO FISHERMEN Operated by electricity, « machine patented by a Buffalo inventor quick- | enable an Ty picks the feathers from pouttry | fish open to recover ewalio and gathers them by the vacuum pio eculing emp into @ container, {ined in 4 ‘ held open by on single impicment, er to hee ithe of cutting knives are com- | EDITORIAL PAGE Tuesday, February 11, 1919 1919 i ae it tig Om (lus New Yoru Lveniug Word.) Where Ignorance|How Great Is Loss | By Sophie Irene Loeb Constiah *. be The F 1919, by Th Vabiiahing Co (The New Vork Evening Copyright mew letter deploring the ig-| than 4 r one thing no women} 1 derstand w in legal and bust. b¢ ness mutters, She says Whether by their ave, if Not consciously, certainly isly, vlelded to the idea of 4 fa erned; for unul own fault vor tie quite recent times in other eountr: fault of others they | women occupied a position before ompetled weed them upon a bast 7 through on ty ace oppr nacrif i Wee sghicte lion Me f t t y uticle of ; ye i bs Ity, But almost at or panei ; 5 ast as one of the Having het nik wits Waa. ail. wh mi, ta More sterniy " © time when women cts equal with men in tt most comm 8 | dinaananananneenennne ‘ sae tw vt ki Iturbide Dismissed worke n depar ines me Aye from Spanish Army At luarbide b ind of the enlisted men Ae to ave ant } Barrabus, to which $52 eis : Bp ; on 1821, he pr if Ase UNless BY! Viceroy iawtantly sent ind wont over to t muny wemen commercial af. | 19 one-t ort ni ‘ MS yides vo join It je luw m Rebel Army Is Successful. la! t they rega s pan injust whove pr Wa J @ S| willing to pay to hear adr | ter 4 | Were Ended By Albert Payson Terhune No. 36 -The Freeing of Mexico From Spain if story of Mexico's long war for freedom from Spanish yoke is close akin to Cuba’ strugg' ighteenth centy s mixed up in the d could give scant heed to her American pos Mexico was neglected by t bome Government’. ently Spain sought war-revenues by saddling the misrule and usual result. ive taxation had their a second insurrect | . another began a} and tr the more vehement 1 Quarter century »pressing various 3 e of our country and He had sr to the rank of ight to tld and was dism Declaring himself { 4 chance for revenge. Guerrero started vera! fake b a's suspicions t ime to riven, AS Soon as and his fellow. ndence of Mexico, c1]S0, This Tc Peac Alter W. S. Gilbert—About Two Kilomet By Helen Rowland ‘ | Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Bvening World), H, this fs @ magic and wonderful age! O And life is a glorious riddle— When demagogues squabble, while Bolshevists rage, And we live on a red hot griddie! But, however the pessimists shudder and q You cannot deny that this world is AW. ‘To-day we may topple a king from his throne, 4 With a cheer and # jest and a jeer— To-morrow our laughter has changed to @ gro For we're robbed of our “skittles and ‘beer!* But whether it’s royalty, riots, or rum, You've got to admit that we're “going it SO) et; In Washington—militants lashing the air! woman’ In Jersey you can't paint your face! In Europe they're talking of PEACE every where— And fighting all over tie place! | But whatever they're doing, from minute to minute, | Ob, isn’t it GREAT to be living—and “in it?” | Bach morning you ery as you open your eyes, { “I wonder what happened last night!” And you scan every line for the latest “surprise”— | Aloveteast, a strike, or a fight! And you can’t say who's right, and you can’t say who's wron | But you've got to acknowledge we're “going it strong!” And just as you fancy we've found a solution, Bang goes your bubble-o-dreams! For some one has started a NEW revolution And smashed all our beautiful schemes! | But whatever may fail, and whatever survive, | You've got to admit that this world is ALIVE: You're thinking, perhaps, that the Kaiser feels blue. Well, he may-—and again he may not. ‘or, no doubt, he’s preparing te spring something new | Or hatching a roralist plot! But though he will never wear halo or wings, You cannot deny that His Nibs “STARTED things!” And perhaps YOU'D prefer to have lived in that day When people went yawning through life, And “got by,” somehow, in a sort of a way 7 Without all this scrapping and strife. i} But I thank the Fates—howe'er bitter cup 4 ! ‘That I lived in an age when the old world WOKE UP! 4 For I know, though at times I may struggle for breath, ‘That at least [ shall never be BORED TO DEATH! _ The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Cuprright. 1019, ty The Pree Publishing Co. (The New Yorb Bruning World). | Master Jarr Gets Uncensored News From Paris ( Dreamland. Pe ERE'S some marbles and two| Gertie Slavinsky and a few other H top: said Master Gusvie! has got to give us more Ltbentg Bepler, banding over the| Red Cross buttons or coupons? | plunder. “Now go on and tell us about} cause Emma told you about th t you dreamed last night!” babies and doll carriages. I we ‘The other children of the neighbor- | ing to keep that a sectet!” | bese gathered aro! Ma he little girls present showed4 gazing also with eager belief in their! appreciated the favor done Jai.) lanancs Bue anne Sacecisantar little Miss Jarr's disclosures delights of Parisian lifé trom: None of you ain't ever smail girl's point of view by gl | Paris, eh?” asked the cautious Mas- | Promising the ext sessment. pictures ia amed | schools in Paris to teach lessons I was in Paris, where President Wil. | continued Master Jarr, “The sel nd all the Kings who licked;is all nothing but moving pt the Kaiser, an’ Gen, Pershing! ' shows, Everybody | All shook their heads to s y that | butt and «our s was an unknown land to them, | @ookce here!” cried Master "Well, yon see," said Master Jart nsky, protestingly. “I'm pal slowly, “Paris ain't nothing like New|out all them Liberty and Red Qj re, gazi-g round the cirele of) “They has movin his young companions. For I dv son is, rimme five yor buttons T got from you and f “No, indeed, it ain't.” salt littl hat I'm going to get out of ti Miss Jarr, primly, ax she shook her! “Oh, very well then, Lazy Slavia head ¢ that the mary IT won't tell another thing about Paris assed ul lets g' Tm goin t for that!" there to get my sexe when tn Indigdint murmurs arose of grown up!” sides. And Miss Mary Rangle, al Oh, well, if none of you aint ne Amazon of the group, seized upoi le | Pasteboard shoe box containing usure of Master Slavinsky, alist of the juvenile commu it struggle ensued and nt Mr, Jarr, hidden and o been to Paris.” suid Master W rr, “1 can’t tell you nothing a it, because you wouldn't bel Untess you all give ading stamps » more dd marbh und jachs and Liberty Loan and Red | bearing all, thought she gould Cross buttons, like Gussie Bepler has, to be called upon to refifore o ‘Then Til tell you about Paris!” However, a ile Soviet can p bis the glamour of the mysters- | itself if it desires to do so, and ons and the unknown that the chil- | ter Slavinsky was fined five Ayan who bad veved in the Jurca’ Coupons for his unseemly inter dining room to hear the until now| ton, and a suspended sentence banishment (to be put into effec se he made another outbreak ecreed against him, 4 “Yes,” Master Jarre resumed, ris go to moving picture oft only hinted at wonder-tales of dre travel paid over the extra bucksheesh it a murmur ain't no policemen in Master Jarr. "The sty int wide you can play marbles and | tO learn their lessons, And ba ! and football and reller shu they have lessons to study at outdoors all you want to,’ the moving picture man comes te’ An’ every time a ves to hou and the children's «not the’ wtore to buy for ber hangs up a sheet in the dining poo amma the grocery 1 gives her a But fT won't tell any more ant baby doll and a baby doll carnage.” everybody gives me more buttons interposed little Emma durr, that the | marbles, , « might know she too bad And no said Master Jj dreained of the wonders of Par that's all I'm going to tell you a Master Jatr was about to rebuke Faris to-day, but anybody who ter severely for her inte to hear more can bring round th ctory remarks, Dut, noticing that tops and marbles and buttons tod they bad tremendot etver nthe t norrow,” other little giris 6 sent, he contented “lL ain't going to come ar erambled Master lazy Slavia Your dreams is too expensive. V 4 food Is a dream about Paris? about it But Mary Rangle and! something to edt?” hirnself by saying Emma, you shut up and let ine tel! Hisionc Printing Press Oo FRMNES "tS vy poln “6 ler-in-chief of the a ‘a salary of $120,000 a year, He soon over- SEO AaN sprig B eming critictam ts # the jron-clad tu w waat was left of Spanish power in Moxico; one garrison after an- PX LRA As r iby wih ® re tup the Willametto Thiver the. to men in the simpte af-|“ienorance of tt Ww excuses no rrenioring ta: him. mazkable history ip preserved | was shipwrecked, but after o tp aire of business ea lt taith woaey,jone: Therefore. ip this day of bus A; his) OREIDUIDRLIC AE enn 1y with Spain, but with rival face by the University of Oregon. | was raised and continued its joui Bu Sa Te ness won big thing is to know tions in Mexico. Iturbide On it was printed, seventy-three yers| Por nearly half a century it waa " a our a transaction before you! Kit Mexico, with the title And he undertoc »t t r of the Oregon use at Kugene, when it was presen Fi alot wade Empire » Spevt Tais wA3|to the State Univer Tao Unhy w we have a Payee “ba er neerr ere mune tin ue 1 1 Mexico from 1" r . " he! sity of hington at Seattle w r etunde n EDR AD ee Taina orougniy | Bandi the ob he vad created Mu an wa anss has a 1s old hand:prexs, wi ¥ ] iw . s amy i; dethroning > ' y by ¢ 1 t ) i “iin Lyne ae gee : r Arun Hhurbide, heartbroken, v re cher Swe | was used in 187 to wrint the en who ge " when linitate N v's “Hundred i ia Qrst paper im wo standards extst Hes at ae ag a ; Pec die oh of Uvegon. ‘t J Washington hand| Mrancisco, and. 4 whe" ued This, of course, te less true iv this! pouy ¢ Mas Aaivaciiiint: aan 5 or pre 1 Oregon Clty unt !| printing the first number,of the, Po country n anywhere and Tam con plest ru o consult some} soll. Qa July.d, 1838, eh was tried, condemantd gad shot—all yn tot came: the , When it Was removed} jand Oregonian in 1850, and the” tideay Wiel @ dear Understanding ot competent person when la double jaa. ‘ \ ( Pe ae \4 ‘begun, Wail belong Waooporied| paper in seatle in 1864.