The evening world. Newspaper, February 19, 1919, Page 20

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ESTARLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, Pubumed Dat Except Sunday by the Presa Publishing Company, Nos. 63 = Pt Buns bark Row, Now York. . 2 RALDT PULTTABR, President, 63, Park Row, ANGUS SHAW, ‘Trea Vit PULITZER, J MEMMER OF THR ASSOCIATED PRI Associated Prem is exclusively entitied to the use for remmblication of nates tole ue bot otherwise cmwiltad im this japer atdais the loral news pr VOL U Mi NO. 3 Ase 001 S> SMBLYMEN at A putt bany are considering ks on profiteering landlords in this city. owing "1 World’s campaign of last against the unlimited raising of apartment house rents in New Yor there has been a growing tendency to reg. Within just bounds as a legislative problem Before the cessation of hostilities other States and communi put into operation plans for protecting rent payers, especially wa workers, from the excessive demands of landlords. In Massachusett Kvening yea seo orbitant rentals. In New. London, Conn., an Adjustment Boar Weld sessions almost every day in the week, heard complaints ‘6 tenants and requested landlords to answer. atcording to Chairman Frankforter of the Federal War Labor Poli Sessad bane @Rough to bring an unreasonable landlord to terms: If the landlord refuses to answer—for he ts under no legal compulsion—or if he refuses to adjust fairly a plain case of selfish and unpatriotic rent extortion or other hardship put upon the war worker, of any nature will publish the facts so that public opinion itself may pass judgment upon the house owner. Rent extortion Practiced after the workers who have of war. Rent i ptocesses of post-war rm safeguards agai prices of food and necessities, , The coming spring and fal! are likely t Movement of rents in New York on the msua! Fe performed the duties and borne the bu rt of the \justment there is just as mu ble pa sa formida cost of living. In the economi inotheg upward plea of increased cost and higher priced supplies Tt should be possible to contro) this upward movement by some! J authoritative measure of what constitutes fair and reasonable ad- is Vance. Otherwise rents will be in many cases whatever tenants can bé forced to pay. ‘ A legislative cor king the problem in Spirit might exert a powe nfluence toward keepin heres Within bounds. It is by no means carly to be ‘ —_———-- +42 -— “Tam sure no suggestion of mine would modify in the slightest the views of the President, and nothing could induce nie to support this league as outlined in the proposed Consti tution or anything like it."-—-Senator William HK. Borah. It looks as if the President, the people of the United State and the rest of the civilized world would have to push on % toward permanent peace and security without hoping to sec the Senator from Idaho and some others like him until the Grand Banquet of Achievement where the credit can be aimed and the loving cups are given out. ° + WHAT BOLSHEVISM MEANS. F - i LD M Dusenberry, the little! Mr, Dinkston helped himself again to yp/— There lee a Reword at the Top for Those Who Work old lady from Indiana, gave the| the chicken and a few other fixites e@. ay F THERE remained the wnallest doubt that the tenets of Bol OME one signing “Executive Sec- | a salary of $1,200, who asks no ques- visitor a searching glance} duriog the attendant confusion | /B IR Griffith shevism are utjerly and eternally abhorrent to the fundamentat etary" answers an article I] tony and who also ‘saws wood, and ser her ste sayin ae ean ; “I just wish your father was | y oy ritte i ey Tan sears bettoaed mite wrote, appearir these | Whose ry remaing the same, "It's th ow with the big talk, to giv u both a good whip orid'e Authority en Successful Saleemanship. principles and ideals of Americans or of other self-respecting columns, “A Suc-| “As fo ‘standing the gaff’ 1am not{hain't it?” she asked, jerled Mrs, Jarr peevishly, The Evening Ws uae o! Publishing (o, (The New York Rvesing Werld) peoples, that doubt must be removed b¢ testimony submitted to the ul Woman/|auite what this means Mr, MicNacl Angeto Pinkston, | Gertrude's day out, and if | send then ‘ ling organization depends upon f :. ” i th he ha Mialhenvires is pion of the English | ¢ro; ‘6: tab: re) n any selling organiza Senate Investigating Committee regarding the position assigned to Executive. The truth remains ey it the file } i vyweight pion of ' i 1 aad | Ll the table thes'li only get in| Always Leave Them ° customer's good will and the & A eli : In this ar clerk who receives $1,200 a year \languag: nt into the | worse mise Mcbe: ne ey Te te gee themes cae > women in Bolshevist Russia. I told about a girl| simply does poutine work in the same |dining-room and graciously bowed to} And poor Mrs. Jarr, with the worry Smiling. PL aa gta oy each euataroae ' he socialization of women between the of seventee sn § had|Way every day, perhaps she is en-| the assembled company. j of having company added to the mis-| ; : of j sy lizat t t i teen and whose salary hi y, perhay | ‘i | pany n m HE geal beginning of ew ‘only ono purchase and never © thirty-two, whether married or uninarried, as provided in a decree been Inereased|titled to only $1,200 a year. | Mirabet Mildew, professional phiil-| behavior of the children, was ready to T is shrouded in the made any more. it's the repeat or- dasued b ‘ s fi from $1,800 to! The questions she iniht ask ber- |anthropist, who had also invited | weep. unknown past, Just when|made any more if ed by the Anarchist Soviet to which Lenine and ‘Trotzky en $4,800, This was ac> Acle are these: “What have 1 added | self to dinner, cave a searching glance} Buy old Mrs, Dusenberry brought} the cosmic curtain rose on the unend-|"" ns hee best trusted the government of the City of Saratov, is one of the most complished by Net) to my work to make it any better {at the new arvival—rival, Should tt be | the children to attention with dett and] ing terrestrial drama of barter and}, Ov), AT TUN Tis le Cel ke len aoe” Tevolting, degraded perversions of the sovial state that ever out. A a veing very faithful! than it was when I came? Have 1} the knife er the clive branch—war OF) smarting slaps, rushed to the kitchen|sale no man knows. Chas, we like to feel, after we have ray Ht Berna meraiee® and working in! suggested or devised a new idea, a | peace? | for the next course and brought order| ‘The patron godde ada a ° atic a : eaiakeil : 0 a purchase, that our trade is ‘* civilisations the Interest of her office, She is the| new method, a new system, by which | "You are’ for the Cause?” ask 4) out of chaos. must, I think, have been Euphrosyne, | "Oe 1 Barone, ‘these reasona. a With all their wretched pretense of word and phrase, the fram-! kind of a girt who knows how to Ke} not only my own ume and enersy | i arte ABH Saye one Pe What ix it you children want » of the three Greek soe nie salesman ehould “always leave them i ~ ers of the decree could not keep its brutal, ugly motive from showing | “Message to Gureia," and is able) and moncy might be saved, to say Vie e all aroun¢ ' aa She cried Mrs. Jarr at last, seeing that t! ytholog, phrosyne conterr «| smiling.” d ye i P at a Dl by Matand the gate” nothing of the office in which I work? | pointed to the very yellow OWN) argument was about to be renewed}on bank Bhe taught men t©/° 7. (0 nomen nature to “not sun t through. Legitimate marriage is denounced as the instrument ie aint AP ihe (Mabe to Gar-|Or have 1 been siinply a machine,| With Tobacco!” badge upon her) yorweon her offspring. smile, Monuments should be erected J. 4 street car after we have Ki “thanks to which all the best species of all the beautiful women | giv is aie 5 in which Presi-|¢@trying out somebody else's plans? | breast “Willie says the man’s nose is redder]! her honor. caught it” The tendency is for A ne 2 , 2”? . es ‘ f onte cing o| “Lama protagonist for all Causes,"| 0 4) 5 A sinile is a positively indispensable , . >. Bave been the property of the bourgeoisie dent McKinley wanted to deliver aj 4% 1 content in being just like that? a than the lady's and I fit ain’ts salesmen to lose interest after a sale BY ; , ; ' he| Have I looked ahead to see what| said Mr, Dinkwon svlemuly as he] ¢ : ( ; sset for any man or woman Who sells, , be X Bolshevism can prate of human rights and equality. It cannot Messe to Gen, Garcia during the) THe F looked ahead to see what | Ml ed his plate to Mrs, Jarr, cried the little girl “Who are tho) none ee etry and prose bave been |oee, veer made, This is the wrong f Me ages oy inciviag hee Par eaatnneee Seat cAniecoan War other work 1 might include or com- | Pa pis plate to Mrs. . funny people, mamina? Are they from! Reams of poetry anc Prose have beeb | attitude, A salesman ought to be just cover its hideous underlying horrors of lust an license, Notody. kr Saath Cakaia Cw he {bine in connection with any wn! The Jarr children regarded both] 4 circus? Willie says the arc written on the value of a smi : Me as «much interested in a customer It is the duty, of the people of the United States to understand | gomennay cucroated to the Presigent| “OTS? Or has my ambition been to[ Mrs, Mildew and, My. Dinkston with |” sash!" hissed Mrs, Jar, in great iu b enine folk arpa yeh se no has made a purchase as he Somebody suggested to the de 1 0 y started don’t see ave od the 7 those horrors in order that they may the more vigilantly and mer-|tt a oe eae” al which I was told to do}open di§favor, and they started a], “i don m to have grasp ts DasiuRlsracs Uiata ahouit helas ikke a , ' ne ae gilanily and mer-|that "at se ca ies | cept the weekly pay envelope | vigorous spat at once upon a subject} «ng you advocate aggression to the | TBE dictionary defines a smile 48 "4) soning of attention or service, i y sweep out-to sea every germ of Bolshevism blown to pwan" — woult ako 1 [a8 the measure of my work and|that gave them food for a mixture of] point of terrorism in your anti-ciga- od pA a 8 hae “pya| ‘The right kind of leave-taking will * shores. Rowan was given the message and | qapition®? laughter and protests, ratte cruaad asked Mr. Dinkston, | P'easant and cheerful aspeo! M°lmean that the customer will become without any queations went forth eas} As to “standing the gaff,” it means| «why don't you children be good] ignoring the child's remark, |“plaster-of-part wale aE SBR a booster for your firm, He will saaeaeninendies demereee delivered it to Gareta—after , Kinds) being willing to take responsibiity.| when yer maw has comp'ny to sup-| “{_ believ > ends justify the|*? make & pee ot apie? the per. [82k Kindly of you and your firm to G of hardships throw jungle were] 1t means standing trials " te alin: ai “ o. 5 a” r sw, “We | celves no one except, perhaps, the “|his friends, When bh z 4 ; Siinday morning the German Cabinet voted to reject the PR te wake there nee nding tricie and tribulu asked old Mrs. Dusenberry. | means, Mra, Mildew, "We| son who wears it. Deliver me from|i* jen her He, SARE! Teka % elt cAiresria fonihe senewalvae ihe ae fina , ASE . nie ‘t ,| ton It means bearing the burden of send both of w from the/let tob sent the soldiers—~it ARALidint aps yeh ns anything in your line he will at 4 meee yeni ng al of the armistice, Sunday nigt he moral drawn f this is that) whatever is entailed in the piece of|table if you do not behave!” cried|was a weakening of the Cause! f am| (Re Wiotles Pepe once think of you. “Always leave £ the German Cabinet changed {ts decision and ordered tha the average clerk, if asked to do any-| work asked rag en mT ) ting fusde to make it viola |e, some Ly who them smiling when you say ‘Good * the armistice be signed Who was ti Gea toy : re dare eharply collecting ENO 8 A ** | no real feeling tisn'tasmile|by++ remember, you Z e hewing how great is the superiority of the pr tG “Was I hired for} ha ge i the “gaff when he} sir pinkston gave a start) but see-\tion of the Constitution for men to) i way: it Page Bes noe 7 meee TaN # + 9 ai . c eat is the superic he present Ger jwaded through a swamp waist deop,ling i was the childrem who were so| smoke!” | believe it was George M. Cohan |. epee het Aeiaels i man Government over the old one in the length of time it takes John do it |when he ma river, when he sut-|treoatened, passed. his rain, | At the words “collecting funds” Mr. | vno aha Of hin DADUIAR aanea (Cee oe pega uy thoroughly to grasp an idea—and a situation did none of ¢ fered of hunger in order to] nt can. wel by », ag _a{Dinkston pricked up his cars pe Rene By a vvg |, YOu may cf on a prospective cus- ; Hae Shep CHER | » “[ can welcome you, then, as aj Dink Lb P oined t arase, “Always leaveltomer and fall to make @ eale, That Ge. Mas ee ee soine an ies sabi a 4 ta ee ; at {eat age brother?" asked Mrs, Mildew. “Would| “To what branch of social advances | ten, when you say ‘Good. Dm iy ; ave Lan he - i * ese r ch Whe MSUlh Not bo Ge call nding the gaff" means not get- you care to speak at our mectings?”|ment have you been devoting your |).*" ‘his ought to be made an iron. | future business, At any rh re his Letters Fro m the Pe A pl rn [Ae bdiias TSB ea Bak we ee tin , AS one It aneat 8 some qual-|" tstinotively she w he was a \aeitt'c Datla aire, Milas w. , clad rule for every one who sells, laced will iw valuable 10 you ané@ sous dt M not buy | ity of endurance eps you from theca upealker ni , “I am enlisted in the Cause of the| jt has long been an open question | SA a Pan Ghadors windsmith—a speaker, not a doer, he pen 4 Q a Rin wilh a Overchnrging Soldiers and Sa Another instance was (Kat ofa bare |e fo fone It An the foreat changing Hons every so often, It] wpe yery theme, ‘Down With To-| Propaganda of Plate Polishing,” re-/as to what is the most important . welt ae To the ¥ The Broning World |ber shop in which I had my hair eut.|, 2 eh n work - ius says Noth-|/ means being able to take criticism : ate vil rer eee ate moat |Plied Mr, Dinkston, “What is the|stage in the making of a sale, Some Gh Is there no way of stor jA sailor in uniform in the next chair} eon re ‘ lone an whe con| Witheus wanting to "wet even," ox a © would not wax platitudinouy,"| moat annoying work to women in the \have claimed the introduction was >a sale, you leave with different merchanty, barb was char 0 conta for Is halre| Pe ing ; bp wos ihe putting your hat and coat on anal! pe Mr. Dinkston, “but those who| household? The endless daily task—|ihe most important; others that the/a smile because you know that ae from tok advantage of our boys} cut (No shave, toilet waters or ex. aay sais ‘ © Bred’ \dlechareing yourself ie tute the arguments of the fatuous |the Washing of dishes,” Mr. Dinkston | gemonstration was the most vital; wave conferred a real benefit on The Wearing uniforms and in the Kervice 2| tras) 1, who had never been in the| "yeu t keep down interest, ine|, 282 Person who can shoulder ree |" Ong encourage the augmenting | Went of “The Propaganda of Plate) sti11 others that tho closing was the|man who has just bought your goods Rng in with a friond of|place betorp, .was 1 put ably Sr eeteSET TER | sponsibility stand The gE eee eee enetn, are, not expectes | Polishing absolves women from this! point on which success or failure|jr you fall to make a silo, you ehould Mtns in the we both went to] cents for the same servi sie eran tees + en a 8M! boing hired and not fired 4 Ae toa tt oY Ne “tas We scrape the plate clean at sod, leave with just as honest a smile nally gets Its own rewar 0 do xc t remune ; 5 ; ‘ as hones! @ local str p wanted to pur-| Now, as this barber stated after { May Ww hPa? n signing eoutiwail It is true, in some instances, that atl . om Ti meal time’ Mr. Dinkston i | Personally, T believe that the pe-|pecause you have at least brought chase a po aa (suede) gloves, sailor had left the store, “Strangora| Secretary” takes exception, saying mond oieres sg Riven good Bervice|” scortainiy not! You don't expect | rated with a bit: 68 Bream ETE |riod which overshadows every other |the attention the man you failed ana considering the price unfair, left.! we al iB Obarge $0 cents, but our} 1 know @ very rancnant Ble a. | na their efforts bave remain 44-1 6 to toil in the vineyard without rece |e good housewife has no dishes to}in importance is the few moments |to sell to the merits of yo > merchan= We returned ar later tolcustomers we charge the p . nized by unserapulous, unap Li id “wash after the sale has been completed,|dise and you know, or shoul ¢ e Rul who receives $1,200 a year, asks ompense—the laborer Is worthy of his rr . | 5 r should know, the sme store and found a different| price of 85 cents. ‘This milor eurna|no questions ai iia ¥ : preciative employers ea replied Mra, Mildew with a| “Humph erled | old ne rs, Dusen: Vor years I have preached the docs | that his good-will is of the utmost ipaesman was on duty. This friend|about $80 or possibly $32 @ month, the girl in your article dos, but nol ge canes Bond clerk can have | ay of her jaws. wey rere alte tenant Indiany |trine that the permanent success of value to you and your firm, Of mine having changed bis uniform|1 on an average earn $10 a day. one considers that a reason for rais-| ine es pl a tat att ahd it) sers ist) Hers 18!” cried Master|* ‘Then sho turned to Mrs. rans _— sivil : ne employer is unjust, act accord | ay "Nh ge Ke 3 r to that of civilian dress, obtained the| I told this barber that it was the,ing her even a dollar. imei ha smelde! .. Pea su Willie Jarr, | cia youll 8a: ties itn ots On next Sunday night Mr, Griffith will deliver an address before the | mame gloves for $2 which an hour|frst time 1 had patronized him and| “I know a competent socretary—ex- aa ‘ihaveeal eines | j WIws Bare ongt him 4, it would be the jast, 1 ALSO A RECONSTRUCTION PROBLEM. ways and means of ard the keeping of rents the Governor issued a proclamation empowering the Public Safety _ QOommitter to seize the property of landlords who imposed ex- The threat of publicity, Ges Board, who reported on the New London experiment, was usually then the committee without comment . does Mot cease to be selfish and wopatriotie when fighting is over upon war workers or any other “ns reason for ne boosting of rents as for a watch on the labor EDITORIAL PAGE | Wednesday, ean y, 19, 1919 ty 1918, by The teen Blt he Ree Yor: vent t k r 1 c The Worker Who * a Wins His Way By Sophie Irene Loeb The Prom Publis The New York Copyright, 1 ty The Prow Publishing Co, aing World), fore him, and if he has the real stutt| "His is! His Ist” cried little Emma sno snapped. ecutive, if bei choose—who receives! in him another papers Wi) poe it} Jars, And they went to @ clinch, while | thing!” \ The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell (The New Ye The Jarrs Have a Reform Rally at Home “The American Creed Written in Loving Reverence—and Dedicated to My Country By Helen Rowland Copy (The New York Brening World), BELIEVE IN AMERICA! 1 believe in American Ideals which nothing can dim or eclipse, And which at this moment are a Beacon, guiding the world out of chaos and darkness—back to sanity and safety! I believe in the dynamic inspiration of American Em thusiasm And in the TNT of American Energy! I believe in the American gospel American creed of SUCCESS, And the American slogan, “An equal chance for allt" I believe in the American Sense of Fair play Which sent us two-million-strong, across three thow sand miles of water To turn the tide of War against tyrants and bullies! | I believe in the Amerioin Sense of Honor and Justice | Which not even pacifists and profiteers, and propagandists and demas gogues and politicians can shake, or alter, or blind, or dedden, or sully! I believe in the SOUL of America! \ I believe in American Sanity, and, above all, 9, by The Presa Publishing Co, WORK, the of in American COMMON Against which the blind black bat of Bolshevism will beat its foolish wings in vain, And the poisoned barbs of the reactionists shall fall as dried leaves in the wind! 1 believe in the American Sense of HUMOR Which blossomed and flourished even in the trench and steady in the face of death, I believe in the great American SMILE—"The smile that won't come the smile that carried us “over the top” to Victor I believe in American loyalty, liberty, and brotherly love! 1 believe in American Life—— The clean, wholesome, open air, sanitary life of the plains, plantations, and of the bright, clean, surging cities! 1 believe in the American MAN——~ Square-shouldered, square-jawed, and square in all things! Born of the Western plains, the New England villages, or the Melting Pot of New York, And bred in the sunlight of Liberty and the free alr of the Stars and S and kept us san@ ott” of the Stripes! The finest type manhodd in the world! I believe in the American WOMAN and her Golden Future, Which shal! be to the glory of earth! 1 believe in their aspirations, their inspirations, their sense of propor- of vi, and their inherent fineness and strength 1 velieve in the American brand of Love—simple, sane, and spontaneous, And in the Americin Marriage, founded .on Love 1 believe In all beloved American “institutions’—— American schools, American shops, American plumbing, and Americas grate turkey. and gYeen corn, and rocking chairs, and doughnuts, nd vail tubs, and buckwheat cakes, and watermelon! I be e in American grit, gumption, and pluck | Which cannot be bullied, bamboozled or vanquishe |! | 1 pelieve in American Princi | 1 believe in American Visions and Aspir America! ~the Golden in the SOUL of AMERICKN 1 believe Land of Opportunity pelieve in Amen! th Evening W "They've eaten every. | Natignal Feder ation of Chiropractors at the Hotel MeAlyin on a Sol! Chiropractic,” 4 “How ta

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