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» FoR Na sae yacht gs on ap) err ya he ' ay FD | EDITORIAL PAGE apesueyy March 25- 1919 Wn \: teehee Fae eects Wena.) BSTARI ISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, aie by the Press Publishing Compeny, Nos, 63 te } ‘ark Row, New York ¥ seals ie tit ermise cred ~VyoruM toh NEW YORK’S GREAT DAY. HEN New York goes to bed to-night it will have lived through one of the greatest days in its history. On Aug. 30, 1917, the city bade its soldiers of the Twenty-seventh godspeed as they marched through its streets for the last time on their way to the task overseas. As it cheered the stalwart lines swinging through the same great thoroughfare that summer day nineteen months ago, strong bs was its pride and wish to see them go, New York felt the forward reach of its heart to this day. The people of New York knew then that they were sending forth as fine a body of troops as ever commonwealth gave to the armies of a great cause. All the faith put in these fighters by those who watched them march away has been justified a thousand fold. Offering its best, New York won a glorious return. For the proud’ place the Twenty-seventh has given New York | In the history of the war, city and State can show only the begin- 39, NO, 21,03 Cysharas A Pou Sy Bachelor Girl Reflections ” By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1019, by the Press Pubtts Co. (The New York Evening World.) OLOMON is dead—but there ae @ lot of men living who secretly S fancy that they could “str! jong” seven hundred women at the same time without half trying. And no doubt even Solomon thought he MIGHT have found a “perfect wife” if he had experimented “just once more!” No, Algernon, the best cooks do not cook gasoline alone; they cook with enthusiasm by whole-hearted appreciation, with generated ‘Try this on your wife, The Central Powers allied against proaches, Tears, Criticism, Jealousy, ony. No wonder the poor thing d In England they are talking again of taxing bache Putting @ tax on anything merely makes it doubly at- tractive--and any man will be willing to 60 without cigars in order to pay for his Single Blessedness. The only way to drive bachelors into matri- mony is to pass a law barring them from the Peete Love are Re , Time and Monot- 0 soon! lors. Nonsense! cabarets and musical lover looks at “ | A women through rose-colored spectacles, a bachelor through blue-glasses, and a married man through a microscope From the grudging way in which ¢ some husband | wives you'd imagine that they were afraid they comp! ly ment their m form the | Oh yes, the League of Nations, the wireless telephone and | York-to-Paris airship are all imminent possibilities~ but there | wibility that we shall ever discover a cartoonist who will draw of a married pair in which the lady is not at least two the New no pos: a picture neni tiesag?, - feet taller than h@ : ing of recognition and appreciation in this first welcome. | husband j ; In to-day’s welcome is all New York has been keeping and . diaceie ; i A One new hat doesn't make a spring -for any wyniat | storing up since that August day in 1917. idiot i j In to-day’s welcome is the joy of greeting brave men and’ H T M ' beroes who are also sons, husbands, brothers and fellow citizens. | O Ww h. e y a ad (4 G Oo od : i rejoicing of the city over the home- , In to-day’s welcome is the rejoicing y By Albert Payson Terhune toming of its own troops who played a never-to-be-forgotten part Copreigut, 1919, by the Pree Pablhing Co, (The New York Evening World in hastening final victory. NO. XI. HW wa vino Who Framed the Magna | arta. But to-day’s welcome could be no welcome to these men) eS oaenat if ‘ one man, more than to every one else put together unless with it went a deep and tender turning of all thoughts | was due the Magna Charta, the tout io atone iat toward the comrades they left in France—forever. | the world’s liberty. That man was Stephen Langton | Archbishop of Canterbury, Here is t ory of his There could be no honor for the Twenty-seventh to-day that Swine wae r h of h failed to honor first the Twenty-seventh’s immortal dead. The feudal system ried every country In Eu There may be missing forms and faces. There may be names | rope; & tenes whereby the poor peop! ach region were protected by the nobleman who overlord found only on rolls that are no more called. that region, The noble and his men-at-arms guarded Nevertheless the march of the Twenty-seventh through New | the people from robbers, &c., and the people in re t id a Inds of se ee D| e noble. e York to-day is the march of the same Twenty-seventh the cheer. | aeuiae A ihe ine a ie Serre wee shone eae turp owed ollegian ! ing crowds bade godspeed Aug. 30, 1917. In the beginning the feudal system had been useful in protecting It could not seem otherwise to any one who has felt the full the poor against foreign invaders. But ai last it had sunk to a poin where the people at large were little better than slay ° nobles i meaning and spirit of this day. Thus the nobles waxed stronger and ri and poor § weake There are no gaps, no changes in the ranks. To-day—and anti poorer. ay j f | At last, in the reign c entry of id 1@ nobles them forevermore—they are all there. | selves strong enough to de King himself | * ® Henry quickly brow them to terms by giving the ——- $= | } People Little ; plain people more rue N 4i he cared @t POOR TEAM WORK Better Than Slaves} all for the people. They were mercly his weapon : He Who Boasts y, | The Jarr Family StS erie hon ee ; i He ys n John came t Engis AGES must stay up and prices come down, rules Roger W. | th © abominably to people and nobles al wt Stephon Babson of the Education and Information Service of the a W oman »s | Ov e By Roy L. McCardell i MRE K RE THC Mioe Tithe ce eg Department of Labor: Seeteanhs 01 be: Wee Bveee eeaiones Oe. fhe) New Tere Brenig: Wottd:) bishop of Canterbury the King refused to tue Beales fi * Holiness brought sure to bear whict Jon cringt I want to make it as clear as possible that no !mportant B y. So p hie Irene Loeb Some Inside Information on the Prope: waent to’ the Papal wie Tnnaton pace uf ' hut. To wage reductions need any longer be looked for. In the first Consnieht, 1819, by tho Frese Publishing Co, (The New York Lrening World.) Subjugation of Husbands, Lated him more and more each day Diace, wages are not high compared with prices: Statistics 4 W "hi ’ | A PRING, with nions, spring| the mathematical proportions were! Langton quick udd to. tt ya by t sup t | A Worth-While M ever Us. Woman's NG, with spring onions, | ' ie ar aa i a hee 4 show that prices have advanced, so far as the cost of living is ; an o r ea a ° | blossoms and spring bargains, is | growing to such un extent they, be : a oH u ne . oppressert bs en bigs ! uid on ' i concerned, about 65 per cent. in the United States during the Name Carelessly. at hand—and Mrs: Rangle was | made her dizzy. | NEE er hey: ihe Hed es ‘the® fecn 4 were ca f Scretace ; iF war, Wage rates on the average have not increased that YOUNG woman writes me a long|be some truth in the story calling on Mrs, Jarr to show her a/ “Mr, Rangle and his friends ure 1.8 te unite in a demand which should fo. freed and fa via : oO : much.” A letter setting forth in detail her| At any rate she will know how |school dress she (Mrs. Rangle) had | very angry at the prospect of Probl | gop ait mon a bi ‘ a i friendship of three years with a! much her friendship really means to|bought for her little girl at the un- | bition. They say they only drink beer, Justice and liberty were Stophe ‘ Fre 01 : a The Chairman of the Department of Commerce Industrial Board | 134 o¢ oog education, ‘The man went| him in setting her right about it. |heard-of price of $3.98! | and they all declare that beer doesn’t | ne had labored tor the reht, And years he saw © tc @mxpects food prices to fall when “a reasonable cost for the basic | away for a temporary stay | Aw a general proposition I believe} “And you know, my dear, I couldn't | ct them," remarked Mrs, Rangle. make good with his lofty ideal r ffeod commodity, wheat,” is determined, ‘This determination will] During his absence a girl friend has| men who talk about women ought to |buy the material for that!" said Mrs, | “Well, something affucts them, thot I ly olden times ther had been js rough -hown on fiaw = i A . P , old the woman that ‘he bo: y said|be ostracized f t + to|Rangle enth tically, “A 1|do know!” jof the people, Langton now revised and improv nd evolve . bbe aided, he thinks, by a billion and a quarter bushels of the now Ves the woman tha m boastful Al Ki el Flt iy ab tn see hee ye fae Pan ior ? eee ene gaint uitehed something! from it a document called the Great Charter, er “Magna Char : 4 ; he woman was “in love with him,” | # bou othe i 1 o 0 hem! , Pius ile Gina Gob RORTARtRAA dilktioeg and ef ; 1 q wheat crop which will begin to come to market in July. | treating the matter very lightly hi wi \ Mrs. Jary hid all evidence that she | has affected Mr, Rangle?” asked Mrs. SUlk ne ene. 6 ereay mae aeian ee H : Ha i! Gentlemen who lay down the law thusly seem to get better woman says If every woman would forbid her|was not rejoiced to hear this, and Jerr. i ‘ : { keynote of a new treedom—a triumph : " . . 4 ‘ t soviet o sue a pe he would she was most chagrine: “Oh, Mr. Rangle isn't a drinking persuaded the ba draw ne 8 ! : 2 Bbedience and co-operation out of wages than they do from prices. | | [never heard bim say one thir es se Han ae aa CLEAR LABICADR TAA TiC CHBRTLENE man." replied the loyal re. Ranal Langton permuaded the barons to 4 ni 1 yan § ; ‘ disparaging about another woman won realize that this boastful busi Ve “ ngle fy ° ed . i L al Mra, Rang zs a sto e King z » irons had i Wages appear perfectly willing to stay up, with or without reason T have tried to ignore jt and pat |Nexs will not be tolerated jher it was only @ one-hour special | “That 1 will my he nae neve) ington Revises no inter n the we'fin the peoj un : But no amount of reasoning convinces prices that they should come| it entirely out of my mind, but the} [tI bad enough to suffer from an|sale and that everything had been jareak We mires oh As Mi Hb iu Gide et Laws pais ep NC ORREBL Eom, t re , let| UNFequited love ou he |Snapped up aken too much I ean PRCMUNS | Gan eeeeecne en caeal end ow Henry had vuneditie cise 3 og Vv own, feeling will pop up that I should tet|"Preaulted love without having t : , : N olub to thresh ti ‘ ‘ . Gansistently and progressively 4 him know it at least. 1am just dying!M4N who is poswibly the instigator of| In these bargain-sale matters the|~—Well, because I can see he bas tuhen| |) club to thrash the ni Npre. pI as Retail food prices, for example, in the act of recent descent Ito disabuse his mind of any such idea,|'t 8° about prating of his power ladies never advise their friends uni.t | too much,” ea oweaaey panipe wenpane to bent the King int sabininsion ; ‘3 @hrack a epring bottom that sent them bounding up again. Butter} put do not like to do things on im As usual, f man like this epcearare | is all oye and there is no possible | ache meray Nery selbas Pree Pagar HAR iOS ia An shee seared h i : to convey his attentions when in|echance for participation ‘s bg mare, 9 1m Seine 50 ex owe a debt that should never be forgotten, 1 f “ fs on the way to 80 cents a pound, pulse a ui : Piel forgotten, He mad “i . = ‘ae . P truth he is displayi hia vanity Dear me 1 wish you had let ine | Pass it off in a cheerful manner when | nor for nis fish advancemen ; a ‘As for the price of wheat, the theory seems to be there as every ie tt ies . he re } - T rage wou : The worthwhile man is he who|know about it!” said Mrs, Jarr. t-| he comes in late and finds | am He risked lif the hands of the vengeful King J j r to lift i ¢ ‘eat m with the mos! corn an 3 ays a s y ; bil vhere else that anybody who got a special profit because of war must jeontempt. | have n tor ray Never uses a woman's name care-|tle Emma is outgrowing everything “Wake. Sv then I always know he's | the yoke of tyranny from the necks of i ricwaite Sat dncaky , fred (d : page sialic | les: or with malice. Nor will a |she has, and I would so have liked to; had too much.” | his name is half-forgotten. oe a ‘ofit mea he ruin | eads. | 7 “Mr. R . . | _ be — as if the least disturbance of that profit meant the ra ny : reteset {countenance one who does {have got her several of them, Why Mr. Rangle's different,” said Mrs, _ . of the country. pil pe ery Meful fo you |!) phe “cad might well study Kip-|I declare, they are good enough for ng! “IT can always tell there's | Th ‘Fi ‘ Is reconstruction the process of protecting those who have gained |) \. 4, i sc in ih [ting’s maxim in such a ease | Sunday frocks!" something Wrong when he tries to} e Irst i. Making Machine } oa : A : ies R iy {| Ef She have spoken a word, re-| +f thought surely you had seen the | tea! in quietly HW first machine for the man steadily by war from losing a scintilla through the return of peace? | true, hy HS HID! member thy line are sealed aavertisement,” replied Mre, Rangie, | “OM Mr- darr ls that way, too," re | rete esi athe eta et Pa . i pp en eset aaah bbs hye f ‘ecg at ne MT) And the Brand of the Dog is upon | ells. “You look so carefully for| Pied Mra. Jarr, “But when he is 1 of an Amerivan, Samuel Slocuin,| machine began out pens in i » judge a ; rove! him by whom ds the secret reveuled ; Jalways know he has taken so much at 7 i { n nal ; ? | those things. Don't you remember who was born 127 years ago. As a quantitic nH } Letters From the People jena the talk ' Jif Bhe have written a letter, delay|wren tT nnented eteert ores tet | chat he's afraid to trust himself to! resut or hie Invention acack rons } Spann a 1 woman Ww tisfled } ia h bey bail “ ig « f iam. People be interpreted to another. Un-|, 7 ah aa | ot an inatant, but burn It badly last fall that you told me hey ave cunning, the) though made by hand tong | " 18 unk improved , fortunately, we cannot all go visitin pontlane h 0 jTear it in pieces, O Fool, and the} about the sale at ‘What-You-May- | proce f manufacture, the price In replying to “A Citizen,” relative |to the various parts of the world, so °°!!!" ° $ : ' m | wind Her mate shall return CallEms” But ‘when I got there it! Then sometimes your hus M, i accuse them, anyhow," aaid Mrs. Jarr. | wa ; " TEOUECUB TRAGEAT to suggestion that asociety be formed | our thoughts must be conveyed by |™°%'” ruck It there be trouble to Herward, and a | the day after the sal.” mine, talks too much and sometimes’ “1 do believe that those men take | dozen anclont Bgyptians 1 / to stamp out Bolshevism, would ad-|the artistic media of expression : Atter a three ndship i Ap he blackest can clear, “But, my dear, I am sure I did let (he taiks tuo littie?” asked Mrg.| something sometimes, when they /a brush ed pen in writing on . vise there ts an organization of thet} In art, us well as in politics, we | Dt fir ty con: Beran} Lal | while thy lipa can move or a man) vo. Know te time!" said Mrs, Jarr, | Hungle want to be cur t 1 ne delicate. membrane obtained by fe kind, in Brooklyn, known as “The/have been jarred out of our tradi | SIYINE NH 4 chanee bean | UAVS se Ment My dear, you may have thought! "Yes and sometimes he's betwAxt siroyy ull evidence, hk it best | unrolling the papyrus, « American Anti- Socialist League,"| tional isolation, And the result will | PBOceler you did," replied Mrs. Rangle, “but (424 beiween,” said Mrs, Jarr, H always charge Me, Jarv with jt Water plant once 3 tong thi oa and located at 361 llth Street, be good. The contact, the emuiation,| If 1 wer woman TW | F ] age wants .o pretend he's tired and would # No business to be out ’ and a J ‘ontact, e fation, as all over when you told m bs ws ywa he wi o as a AN ANTI. |tne compet will spur us to{until he r 11 would ask him] rom an nventor’ 8 lor at ledst when I went to the store | like to get to sleep, but 1 make him| jute when he has a home By tee 5g A ae of Nations in Art, | greater accomplishment Jif he made such ute 1 Note Book te eae! |taik wo me.” {certainly agree with you metal stylus’ was - io Te the Witlor of The Kreing World Art is nearer to the people than it} would make him u nd t ny | The honors af war now being} “Amd doesu't it make you mad when | Mrs. Rangle n wood eouted with I should like to propose a League] was before the war at strug-| woman's pride has been t \ ted more than 200) oven, the Iudies took up the dis are sound ad Mr, Jary Isher indy arked it, but A tha RIN oF ola th eenitne ate ate A of Nations in Art, It needs no Cov-| gie has shown up the sham of con-|that Ido not wa Tslendehin ota 1 of build beens nedeman tecite in bed without waking you?” | may be believed tis by such | ‘use became general. “iron. pens” enants, no drafts, no high court Of) ventionalisin, It has brought us face|man Who does nol leave matte twit oe MEM make you some te: said | 4s) Mrs. Rangle. “For, next morn- | disciplinary me that most mar-; Were made as early as 1 but arbitration, no machinery to cause de-|to face with the real, And it is this|love for the lady to deny or affien pe again Jous con: |Mrs, dart, Mr, Jarr says tea is the} !g, When you accuse bim of being ried men are kept tamed and subju- {he quilt held its voruo until the ate among politicians, It would ex-/new human quality in expression, Even when a ma ation \onty thing that seems to quench | oUt spending his money and taking | gated aot tiecnlnery for peu-mem ist solely in the mental attitude of the |this appeal to men and women in all! a presumption on his part ake th . si mackeltn Paar tone's thirst.” |too much, he wears an uir of injured | anybody All world. |w of life, which makes possible | initiative in the ma announ t eee eRe erate een | Well, I. must confess that Mr,| itnocence—when he doesn't get very - —_———— The war has undoubtedly brought |the League of Nations in Art ling the engage we Much me ' 1 t 2. 7 " dignant and tell y a | | i of? ns in J he eng n 0 Rangle likes beer,” remarked Mrs,| indignant and tell you that you wou ry [ P. rks the peoples of the earth closer to-| What a combination the frecr ming-, Important that f aj pounced in fone of a car. into which | rangle, “but T say that beer only! be enough to drive a man to drink ur ationa ar S$ gether, They have seen one another |jing of national characteristics in art) woman who i id should | louged baited automatically | kes @ person more thirsty, so it'a|if be had inclinations that way! ELLOWSTONE National Par at clone range, and the proximity has| would give What beauty and) be carefully gua 1 . . . | od thing, inaybe, it will be soon Vs the way Taggle a such was constituted by Cong. 1 @ivsipated many differences, Nations | strength! From the races would| She w nanner| | Hy using a enious machine 4) thing of the past.” | Ocvasion forty-sev years ago, tT which really know and understand jeome beautiful, deep sentiment and i u . or | Bouln umber company ts imprint |" ot think that's the reason that “Tho best Way is not to go to ale public playground of the whoie peopl oe meee Will not let unimportant | unrestrained emotionalinm; from the | he s 1 . her {every plank. that it sends out. [men want to drink beer,” said Mrs.| said Mrs. Jarr, "I always try to keep now an object of interest to ev © Glacier | Rationai characteristics estrange | ADKlO-Saxon, @ virile sense of ACtiV- | friendshiq h : Lee re Gos Jarr, "The more beer, the more| myself awake til) Mr, Jarr comes in.” tourist who Visits the Wost, includ Ranier in Wa then ity —all of thi climaxed by the sunny An ae Abinot has bean dey famous geyser diatrict the n California, th Only wy a fre h |wentus of the Latin ra nev lo * isa rly ‘ f eyeing | thirst: and then the more beer t¢ ‘Are there any times you can't der \iqnurone Valles and hundred } ‘ pase ee ene uy ny & Sree er nas of ari—| rane BOGAR VALKESE, mind and mike yelieve in him, If} gy tobacco avd oth.r| Make more thirst to drink fue! le asked Mis, Rang other interesting phenomena and Dakot Piatt in Oklahoma and mu , pcan one es uctor New Symphony Orchestra. he doeg not do this, then there may | perishable articles, [dew Here Mre, Jarr paused, we, "OR, yea; but the wale way is to beuuties of nature, The park bee an the Mesa Vorde in Colorady,