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FIN EA SRE TR a ante a are ~ Eun oo Cclaultes EDITORIAL PAGE Thursday, Fevruary 13, 1919 : —— — oo , Thi CATACS”©6=—= ULM a1lHow Great Wars sad The Colors Ratt: y J. H. Cassel} ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, : a | pues ont Br Soy fs enor, He —— — eel ere Ende Sung Fark Now. New Yor 4 RAUETOUS AltA er oS H JOSbYH PULITZDRG Jr are Fi By Albert Payson Terhune ~ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Covrrighs, 1919, by The Pres Publishing Co, (Ths New York Evening World.) PO Poy ee ety ee Fe RR i No. 37—THE NORMAN CONQUEST OE ENGLAND ¢ DWARD THE CONFESSOR, Saxon King of England, was VOLUME 59...ccccccccccvccccssccsvccsceeecs dead. He had no children. ‘Three men claimed the = n crown he had left. One of these was a fair-haired giant) COMMUNITY RIGHTS named Harold—a Saxon Earl and the ido} of the people, 4 ‘The second was a Norwegian Viking chief named Hare N THE great processes of reconsituction let the community | eee ‘The bel th a fobs and sprain . ‘ ; military genius, am, Duke of Normandy, known t come into its rights. , blie| fame as “William the Conqueror.” When the Duesseldorf bourgeois struck, when the public Harold claimed the crown because Edward bad be: officials, bankers, lawyers, doctors and school teachers “walked out,” queathed it to him and because England's rough Saxon J , , lawyers, 9 the “reds” found to their amaze that they were powerless to function | Population wanted him for their ruler. Hardr#da claimed it by virtue of , alone. They promptly lowered their flag and came to terms. 'an alleged compact. William declared Edward had promised the throne to So it should result wherever a part of a community seeks to | Harold had been shipwrecked on the coast of Normandy some time enforce its special demands at the expense of other parts. . : | carlier and had been captured by William, who had made him swear on the There is much in the British Premier's plain talk to labor in | Holy Relics to support William's cfuim to the English throne when King 4 Great Britain that may be pondered with profit by Jabor in the | Udward should die. Tnited States ‘ Harold took the oath and was allowed to go back to England, where § ' : | he proinptly repudiated his vow. Then in Jans Promising that the British Government will overlook none of the | Oannnnnnnnnnnnnnnannn® ary, 1066, Edward died. Harold was proclaimed 4 legitimate ways of aiding employment, pointing to an extensive | Budi che de Tue 4 manta Her hs Trane: i bey Petre, y, hotking programme already ptepared, plédging careful and fair | torn to listen to them, and both rivals made ready, j Tats ; ‘ to enforce their claims by right of arms, : ewtwbination of all demands, Premier Lloyd George gives stern | All through the summer of 1066 Hardrada mustered his Norse hordes, warning of what British labor may expect where @ demand All summer William, the Norman, mustered his knights and serfs for the a 2 ‘ view nét to obtaining conditions invasion, All summer Harold made ready to repel his foes, a “ie pressed forward with a be feir ‘wes | With 200 war galleys and ali the best fighting men in Norway Har- bilt4with the ulterior motive to hold\up the community drada swooped down upon England in the early autumn, He landed tn 4 . 1 i h t tha Fy Yorkshire and prepared to march south. Harold did not give him ‘time to “a not on the justice of. the upon the force why {do this. In a four-day forced march the Saxon King rushed his own army, 2 it”: : northward and met Hardrada at Stamford Rridge on Sept 1066, Y “ Gor In that battle Hardrada and his best nobles were killed and his in- é re T say in all rembcos, ber in Fi wr Sees her | vading army was destroyed. Harold won an overwhelming victory. But | g @ » We are determined to fight Prussianism in the industrial world « Harold had paid dearly for the triumph, for his army’s absence in the north | aa pp Cactly as we fought ips hee gba! arte had allowed William to land his Norman army of 60,000, unopposed, in P we “If all classes of the community are prepared to make the | Sussex, . 2 necessary sacrifices for the stability, security and freedom of | ageess db for breath, etal Uc his own od tata =) f i southward to the new invader, who ha intrenche nimself a ae <~ ipdustry, T am prepared to say, with fall knowledge of the con- tings, And there, on Saturday, Oct. 14, 1066, waged the battle which 7H ce juences, that no section of the community, however powerful, | decided future and the future of the world, J rd Re 11 be allowed to hold up the whole fiation.” | d his Saxons on ing the plain’ beyond 4s 4 : fi F . * orman arm He o his men to stand firm SAliere is strong assertion of community right as against the} | and not to be lured into pursuing the enemy down into the plain, On afténpt of any class to grab and hold the advantages war has put came the Norman host, chanting their Duke's French war cry. ‘The Saxon, in its way while it hands on to other classes its share of war burdens. Sie a Rie Ba Reman we cles GHe nur ea pura ese Uer min cht) eer Ob Cate __It is this community right upon which The Evening World hat In three waves the Normans surge! up the hill, their Duke at thelr imficd in pointing out that organized labor in this country cannot | arr torah ‘ike ae ‘ hell "s een Orta justly use the strength of its position to keep wages at war levels | William Wins foll#wed his gallant example, So stoutly did Whéte'they can remain only at the expense of other American work- CUD sda ayecna Nesdway Si eau buc salts Coane 7 {vi eee mn o headway agi . but fell back. ere forced down to lower standatds of living. | “From nine in ning until three i ili | o'clock e” writes old chronicler, Wace, » battle was up and epheeast of all should the community have to suffer from militant | oocn thin way and that} and fone knew Who Would, conquer eAd Fela mathods by which one or several’ classes of labor set out to secure the land.” a: J elves i H | length, see! that foree would not serve hin, William hit upon fog themselves, at any cost or, peril to others, exclusive hold on the | aha Ha wage an crdec and preseny his army began (o retreat, ui KAB gaina of war—or even to better those gains. = confusion. ‘This was too much for the Saxons. ‘They broke their impen= , 0 -Once give the comrhunity full realization of fts rights and its etruble formation und dashed down the hill pell-mell in pursult—and Inte ‘y PoP ie 3, ‘ ty . . : oN t . ° power and it is on the way to becoming a mighty aid to economic des na iaat was slaughter, Harold Was slain and his army was shate | Jaatice. tered. William had won the battle, and with it the English crown . ae oH Much ‘has been written of the sad fate of the . r Hastings, t thing that ever ha nd. 1 But that vigtory was the b eae tite the sluggish Saxons were blended with the e up-to —., AGAIN IN ERROR. f i tured Fr sa result of this blend and of Norman. prog: i HROUGH his secretary, Police Commissioner Enright informs , ace Pn se a Re he : Gi Sie ahi isea is Fit is | nations of the earth, ee. 7} the New York newspapers and the New York public that e - 7 ° | , f “the, Costigan cave le lose The W fG B hel Girl | The J Famil y ‘a ale Commissioner is again in error. ' , é orry O OSSIp a C é or l r ner f é a rr a l i “The Costigan case is not closed. The harder C igsi En- ; : i F | McCardell f , ; ‘ i , ‘ommigsioner En ° By Roy L. cCarde i ie right tries to slam it shut—the more is the public convinced that it envi van BY, Sophie Irene Loeb wiles R (4 f l (Z 6 t l Oo nh S | Copsrleht, 1919, by The Ry Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World) / must be opened and opened wide. Suspicion has a’ stout foot in the «What Will People Say?” Is a Phrase That Should ‘ | Mr. Dinkston Explains That Many Worms He f att age hyy ey aot may : by aides but the people of Ca No More Sacrifices B y Helen Rowland Will Turn Everywhere. i ci ave not tur: i i i i use P. opyright, Phe Vress Publishing Co, ( New York Evening World) tehing] They hud not long to wa eca \ ey rivite ‘Be i C ne Ree ISR tc airy tere, oles acmunistration HE following letter came to me} school chum. The school chum! & Wa RRS pyhaghston ls gh Lag viele NG te dab 66 7 SAY.” said a Labeler A a ean Je pais per }ivileged to act through a star chamnber, with the padlocks on when- T Pacer married, and this girl was, naturally, Some Side-Lights on Her Opinions of the Modern ] powdcring her \: wage quarter of 7, and the post i. aver. the public comes to ask questions. . “L find myself in an awful] often in her home. After a few years Man and Why He Falls Short or Comes Up to ’ , etree |i oan eee ne sas acches: ga eg Acting Mayor Moran refuses the request ofthe Citizens’ Union rest Oca lent ee eta lee Laatal abso the Exacting Standards of Matrimony Boe eae hat but olace you nave| Michael J Dinkston, knew the A public investigation of the circumstances surrounding the pinstean Saupe Mh! "Sa tusband Walled dines veacel uo ' Hy 5a tle love” between them/become such a favorite in social and | Jarrs dined at 7 # tion of Inspector Costigan. From Palin Beach come jellied erg, Ware Bo. S008 LAnE pA so-called. romantlo love ‘ and the oldest girl| and then asked the girl friend of his : eee eed ieildode hues in a family which) wife to marry him, as the, were both to cause them jealousy, suspicion and ennui, what good you lost the mother| very fond of each other’ and she bands and. wives could be! fa | “Well, you needn't wo recently, My step- | adored tie children, oe il 4 father expects me| But for fear the people “would to keep house for| talk,” and that they might say “un- him, Ms son and|kind things about her the girl re- Bolshevik-bohemian circies I ask | He arrived at five minutes before ithe dinner hour. Ho carried just yourself,” such a little pale blond manuscript |replied Mrs, Jurr calmly, "My home| case as everybody used to carry to Strange that a woman will go through the tortures!i, good enough for me, and if you| Washington early in the war to do of the inquisition in order to make herself attractive| were at home as much as I am|their bit and the Government # to man, considering how much MORE attractive than) you wouldn't be asked the ausaHiene Lhe Lie me ee lyor ep! 4 ir your re rks| After dinner th a me ne Leal made teria: elt ay ieee! igeeat those are Balatevis 1) the front room to hear Mr, Dinkstow “Civilization” tg the substitution of arbitration for|can only remember one evening Ww Und 26: weleripstUiGk saeney wore of the Mayor confitming the full authdtity of the man he put inécharge of the Police Department. Mayor Hylan is about as likely to Heed the request of the Citizeris’ Union as he is to be out when “Mr.qHearst calls for a “heart to gheart” over the purification of altics and what not in dear old New York. my two half-sis-| fused to marry the man. It certain- But Albany is still onthe Hudson and Gov. Smith is at Albany. ters, although 1|ly was a narrow view for her to take. Hf municipal government in this city has sunk too low to yield results |CoW!4 never agree with him while/The man's home was broken up, the Peete Nenana eit Omen nn ane en 4 hates . ‘ : tal ‘Boudoir Hoishevists, and that | proposition has the charm of toward an investigation of the Costigan case, then let the initiative |7'7 ne Ase wp ust woulda't | children git of aad ey war, of co-operation for competition, of eugenics tor |‘ i pasta Ten Gealdos, T don't (great almmpliclty,'" hegud ir, OAleaas : er any circum. | concern made miserable, ac- - as 6 f . Cae come, from Albany and let it come strong. Ppa Niall (atone ei snore ts was le mis c } sentiment, and of divorce for flat-lrons and arsenic, think 2 ever asked you re you| taking ¢ little blond manuseript i deal: amb! and in di . ‘ ; } — leolue anywhere to-nlahtt” case on his knee. “If you have won- ae dn jing with gambling vice, wherein did the Costigan ™°t!cr’s children, one of whom is] Now how much compensation did aria aeig Prtin cien'a esiDSidbiS TA aANSGAGE ing anywa re =n Be a ae if 70 Ware Mga P@licy, conflict with the Enright policy? seven years old and the other four, |the girl get from the knowledge that Yes, you d ji , if T may so speak, endures in t, it is because art is eternal tut er B en I see them fed, clean e 2 i! bone.” Somehow, who spe his life r issi ‘ i: “wh i ° ia » of her? | back| .” Somehow, the man who spends torted Mr Jf Commissioner Enright thinks he has shut the door on that i M and|the public did not disapprove of her oP F in re 4 ' well cared for I am satisfied, no mat-| How much better to have had the | looking up to a superior wife always seems to acquire a “crick” in bis qtiention he is mightily mistaken. It will hunt him upstairs and |ter what the sacrifice, 1 do not like to “[ have asked you, ‘Are you going . 1 * on shion is ephemeral,” love and protection of one man than | self-respect, to that Gus's place on the corner?'"} ng his listeners looked puzzled, down before it has done with him. see them go to an asylum, because my | the approval of the neighbors, What — replied Mrs, Jarr. Hus that Suasnen Mr. Dinkston smiled indulgently, og . conscience would alwaya trouble me,|have they given her {n comparison? A husband’s love is not dead because he has come to regard the ma-| was superfiuous, for, o ue a i WHE? elucldates®. continued an 4 and besides that I will be left ali] The (uth is they nod pityingly Id routine; it has merely gone into|where you were golns. ell, the}, “My great discove fy | tutinal kiss just as part of the household rout ; | Dinkston. My great discovery is of & Letters From the P eople alone in the world. I have nobody | about her and call her “the old maid.” |4 temporary state of coma, saloons will have to shut down soon, 1) | ii isic simplicity that endurest | SP cnarity Regine at Heme.” should liberty be trampled on by|{° tvfn to, as I have no relatives| I know a young woman who bore RN thank goodr , pa | What does a second-hand auxiliary i Dopeeti-or of Lhe Krein World: goms ignoramubes who cannot née any | here, but a world of strangers, the mest brutal treatment as a re So keen {s @ man’s dramatic instinct that he can go down on his “{ wish everything would shu Ba we as ] denen the article in your column | further than the end of their noxes?| “The people I ask for advice dis-|sult of a foolish marriage. In fact, be ees a v while he is secretly won- ffm fo disctiarged soldier who Was cattury Hite geese Lv teeth [courage me and tell me not even to|she even went so fur as to be the | knees and swear eternal devotion to one woman ‘Drgke, and agree with him in evéry|to this narrow-minded and un. |tTY: a4 we will never get along to-| breadwinner of the two by doing|dering how he is going to get away in time to keep his engagement with replied Mr. Jarr, ambiguous! ut | I think you should stay home this| evening, and I'l] stay home if you Ve gas we need any second-hand heater,” remarked Mrs. | Jarr, “Our hot water is supplied,’* a t that charity begins at nine. | sophisticated Way of thinking? Sure-| sether. some sewing by mail—all so that the | another, will | “Do not interrupt,” said Mr. Dink» a There is a lot of tatk about getting [ty the people hhye gone insane “Some people say it will hurt my! people around her would not know “AN right,” assented Mrs, 4 mi@y to build memorials for the|gABY real Amefican loves his frec-| reputation, Jart.\ston, as he saw Mr, Jarr was also ¢ : dom and hie ‘counggy,, to why. allow | living under the same her. plight It a man’ chews violet pastilies 1t may be a sign of Seve or mantis of “and we'll have the same agreement! about to speak. “Listen! We can i@ bE who made the great sacrifice. It | the immortn! w |. “Unity, Justice | of with im, and that people will} This kept on until her family learned | vanity, but when he gets down to staple things like cloves, or pep: every evening. Besides, I forgot to) fee the wrath to come! ‘The cost of : Wouts be much better for them tu let te Lanerty fof all, be stamped | sosslp. jof the true state of affairs, came | i's q sign that he is married. tell you that terrible tramy, Mr.|two lengths of garden hose 1s also ty the, Memorials go until all these boss | Hate brves ba tarda ei a “Do you think this will be so? As|to her rescue, and demanded that| _ = soiree wane — Dinkston, called up on the telephone | nominal!” a APE Bupplied with civilian clothes, £9 /and pow want to be good? F Bins! this means @ great deal to ma it|her youth should not be entirely gone h Hi f V d and wanted to know if you wanted| “What do we want with garden me that they car took for positions. I], F. M.c, |Ddelng my one chance to see the chil-|in this mistaken union, T e istory fe) eradun some money-1 whole lot of monsy.’| hose when we live in a flat and have |) - Wonder “if !t was this country instead | Us Wee Chyt .jaren taken care of, will you kindly| The fear of what people would say | ERDUN, battered into ruins; try, and it was formally ceded to] put he doesn't owe me a whole|no garden?" blurted Mr. Jarr. a ‘ope that wa» starving, w vald oc uf The Etening Word reply? was tho one thing that held her in by terrific bombardments and|France in 1648, During the French] 1¢ of money,” sald Mr. Jar, | “And a barrel, a good, sound bars Wyesive a helping hand as soon os| Clviltan sailors are still looking tor| 1 would say to this young woman| actual slavery, and yet after @ few | devastated by fires, has had| revolution Verdun opened its gates! «oh, pe isn’t coming to pay you} Wéserc, You bet they wouldn't; shey |Jobs, and yet any civilian ships of the|that as long as she can keep that| years, when this woman was free and a long and illustrious history. Its| to the Prussians, the commandant, Would wait until their own needs| United States that are aclected to| home together and wants to do {t, as|she found a real mate, she wanted |* ! lation, scattered far and|Gen, Beaurepaire, having committed @ looked after first. And I think | bring our troops back from France or| *he says, that the rest does not mat-|all her friends to know what a ter- tie POPU OP to-day the fete| suicide before its surrender. Four- that it is a shame that those poor|England have our civillan dallora| ter rible thing it was to live under the| “ae Wil Celebra | Verdun greeted the eretcetronr Re Paul at teen wie ee Vere bas Who Kave everything up to an-| thrown out of them and navyrcrews| Many people have worrled their| yoke of “what péople will say,” ene re at eat ncn |King of .Prussia with acclamation, their country’s call, are not ut in thelr places. British ships come! souls out and suffered endless gacri-| A very safe doctrine is to ligten to | V°™U™ ® seventh century Bishop,| 1,” Mr, Dinkston went on, unheed- back anything he owes you, but be's|ing the interruption, “Then we have got a scheme, he says, which will/everything for Dinkston’s Home-Made make us all rich,” {Constitutional Amendment Defier, Ree “Did you ever notice,” remarked | member how Thomas Moore sings in Mr, Jarr, “that it is the people who|his beautiful poem “Bendemeer's 4 latrewing flowers in his path, and) ee eee eee aver will have |Stream:* 4 atter first before anything 67 | jnrents ager hy Gay manned by Hrit-| lees for that old Dugxy-boo gousip, | tne “utill small. yolce Win ad Ria aeps 1D He AGI OUT. Th oa cntemuldeds temmmune cwere are (TREE Getney Mik ere eto | Mand the dew wae dietitied’ mcd angvoty le. R. C, |ttoops. Tf British civilian sailors are| ' should like to eee the term “what SS Te sient Romans, and it was a camp| Tested by order of the revolutionary) aie peapia rich?” | "Great Scott, man! Do you mean s “Linareer Rood enough to bring our boye homme | People will say” changed to “what A STARTER. fon the legions of Julius Cassar Trjcommittes, or government in Paris, ey so go to wooing before|to tell mo you have blue print plan’ BT hisaer ot re ee why aren't United States civilian salt: | my conscience will say.” 66777 HIS new manager may be ai| {O_O lesions of Julius Cassar, Tt! 64 convicted and executed. Ver- Nd out what Mr, Dinkston|to make illicit stills!” gasped Mae Maur var “ ‘ ora? It tw the wame way with French! 1¢ everybody would act on that woe S| was acquired by the Franks in the | re 'the Gormans|%O8 fad out what & is i ' , our various articles on Probibl-\yhips and Freneh civilian crews car- veg aan right, but I dunno, xth century, and by the Treaty of (U8 asain fell before the nS) wants to sce you about, He may bo Jar Fy ton “nave been read with much in- fying our troops. What is the matter | Abide by that decision of conscience, “What's worrying you?"| g4y at perin a dj tha advent if |during ‘the Franco-Prussian War) 2) put tramps often have brile| “But w © gus heater used abem “and sincere admiration. | With United Stated civilian crews that! the world would be & much better| asied the senior partner, RAE IE POPIAOG, DOTY GE She COMLRIRDE | nen, atten'a brave catenan tbe ware |® eh Bi, for?” usked Mrs. Jurt, her curlosfiy | Wh are these tow-down slackgrs | they GBP St Rlawon 3 6.888 spr place in which to live, and the indi-| don't ike the way he started off. |Verian cree GUnnitety reece | rlgoh of 4,000 surrendered, It was} "Air ttn. s sonteg utr, Jarn, | AroUseds - ' dual would be much happier, It ts] y ,| Verdun was definitely conquered by last place held by the Germans, The copper-tube coil It will are trying lo undermine Amér-| goyntries are depended onto do? Tho| *. PP §| You know the factory is in a muddle." | « the last place hi y : “ ne ) | ‘ n "| Germany, tncorporat: nth "i ‘i “ 1 So We must possess ourselves With} make the wo can be turned int sie “Liberty?” Have got our|hAvy is bringing back a few carg.|‘hi# constant apprehensive ieellng| «wen, jermany orporated in the @M-| and was not evacuated by the Teuton q orm—it can be turned into i each month, but it’ thkég over | Of what somebody else will thinkthat| “I asked him what was the first| Pte 284 Placed under the temporal) troops until the autumn of 1878.| patience till Mr. Dinkston comes |a worm,” explained Mr, Winkston- thers, forefathers, gons apd fought for it? of our When the Germans again attacked) with his brilliant idea to make us| ‘@%d if we have prohibition, many @ transports nearly veh day | has caused more secret misery:in the| thing to be done and be said to get a| SUthority of the Bishops In 165 wi worm will turn!” awa out'the eivil | Werle Pra could over be estimated.” eee rug for his ofce,”-—Louls- | Hfory IL, of France took possession vPro” shall ie penn” and “iby | wealthy beyond the dreams of ava-1 "ut “Mr. Jute sald this wae alt , GMD, know of @ young womas: whe tad | Ville Co journal, mrdun and the surrounding eoun-| did met. ts ‘rica ; P BETS 5 BA PRIM AN NIP AERA? 6 ge Se, ASPIRE ROCIO OO OR Te 2 ANNIE eee ors neler theta a es ‘ de)! Pier Bice LARA ENA ILACY 4r ONE ONTE nm ta