Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPIT PULITZER. | £3 h e Er l a 4 u e! : oes : , By J. H. Cassel fe : ried - : ; ig : | aw Verily! But Lovers Are, When They Wipe Com} » Nos. & | ner fee pany, Nos. 63 to RALPH PULITZER, President, €3 Park Row, J. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Kow, JOSEPH PULITZRR,’ Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row. the Star-Dust Out of Each Other's Eyes—With Reproaches. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PIES, By Helen Rowland eat Ses. saatesicely enti to, the nee Zor, ret tion of a1 namp Aematchen mee —_ 1919, by the Prees Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) WOLUME 59... ...0cccsecveeeees senvesedueeeesOs 92086 Nay, verily! a Infatuation, dalliance, \magination, passion, young romance—these are blind, perhi KEEP THE NAME FOR THE THING. | gr 8 gop ih. NE-THIRD of the people of this city are tinged with ae 1, Love sees with the eyes of inspiration and the Bolshevism, is a statement attributed to Henry L. Slobodin, vision of seers A) { former Chairman of the Socialist Party in this State. Love sees more things in heaven and earth than ds i Prove how much he knows about it he suys Wisdom in his dry philosophy ever dreamed of. “han “Professional people and intellectuals with fixed incomes that the war affected little or not at all compose mainly the discontented elements, for they have been the greatest sufferers from profiteering and the high cost of living. They feel they have been bled white. There 1s much less compfaint from the working classes who are organized and can take care of them Love sees hidden virtues, embryonic talents, latent | powers and undiscovered charms in the Beloved. Love envisions possibilities, to which common sense is blind, and scales the heights, while reason is work- wasn Cotiane” ing Out a sclentific theory. Love performs miracles, while intellect and talent ie sites” | grub along patientiy accomplishing the commonplace. ] f i 08. Love gives freely-—and asks nothing. If Mr. Slobodin insists on seeing shades of Bolshevism in every Love sufters all things—and is kind. r one who has an economic claim to register he can have only himself | Love believes, hopes, waits—but never demands. 1 to blame if no one takes his consequent generalizations seriously. | For love alone perceives tie real delight of service and the poignant | The more the word Bolshevism is bandied about by people who , “ | Joy of self-sacrifice—for the Beloved, take the (oud! define it, t! ' ly it will} lied RS lait $y ‘ be ‘ ‘ k pier Love sees the beauty in a rugged face, the loveliness in @ toll-worn he te te ine it, the more loosel will be applicc x ies re P ‘ in | See eee ee ae ppl we ¢ + hand, the tender glory in a pair of tired eyes. ] ; to everything under the sun that contains the element of dissatis- : Love understands niotives,.sees the reason back of all things, and éis- f faction. | covers the beautiful thought behind the homely act or simple word. , The man who has a complaint or claim in an economic direc tion! Love sees all heaven in a single star, all earthly Paradise in a single ! fs no more for that reason a Bolshevist than is the man who helps human smile, all virtue in a single kindly impulse. 1 . : i ‘ \ Friendship says, “I hope, I think, I believe’—- Love says, “I know!” h t lican Administration thereby | ee eee ec arorusen) ona naeuen taatye) Love seeks the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow—and finds it in a marked an Anarchist. | sunset, a poem, a human heart. What Mr. Slobodin says about the extra burdens the war las) piled upon professional workers with fixed incomes is perfectly true. | And yet they paint Love with a bandage over his eyes. ee ‘ § ; | And he is called “Blind Love.” It is also true that organized labor is in a better position to take care Why? 3 of itself in the economic readjustments of reconstruction. | ! Because Love wears rose-colored glasses! — Because Love sees all things beautiful, and closes his eyes to all that But to sa: is unlovely and unlovable Love sees no flaws in the Beloved, nothing to criticise, nothing lacking. Love sees so MUCH that is good and wonderful that the little specks do not show, Love sees the COLOR of the soul, the GRACE of the mind, the LIGHY in the eyes--and overlooks the brush marks in the picture. Do not y, “He loves her—-but he sees her faults.” “She loves him: but she does not understand him.” Love never misundersiands. never criticises, never sees “faults.” Love is never blind—urtil selfishness, or stupidity, or jealousy, or time steps in, blurs the vision, and distorts the picture. | Love is NOT blind! It is lovers who are blind--blind to their own good fortune, to their own high hope and happiness. They are blind, when they wipe the star-dust out of each other's eyes | with reproaches, with suspicions, with criticism! Then love ihrows up his hands, cries “Let me out of this!” a | And depazts! For love will NOT look upon the unlovely—lest be get acid in hy perfect eyes! that professional workers who feel they should not} carry heavier loads in order that those favored by war may go 01) enjoying increased advantages are, as a class, “tinged with Bol ism” is untrue and absurd. These “professional people and intellectuals,’ as Mr. Slobodin : calls them, are not calling for the destruction of existing government or the reorganization of society or any of the other changes demande) by those who seek to tear the thatch from somebody else's roof i order to mend their own. The “professional people and intellectuals” are only desirous of obtaining fair and equitable readjustments under established institu- tions and laws which they uphold from profound conviction and faith | iy and which many of them have defended with their lives. | Workers of this class are as far from Bolshevism as the average honest ci shev- zen is from burglary. It would be just as reasonable io, —--—_--- ———--____ ae rer ow tome @ Betier Gali¢sman|he darr Family 3: Bor b MeCedell ‘5 fiat nlf . Copy riaht, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co. (The Now York Hvening Warld.) said: ‘That Kittingly woman ts go- Bp “tinged” with the inninct of thett | and Earn Bigger Pay | Mr. Jarr Has an Encounter With the | 0 tee arain tong! ‘Dear Bolshevism is too serious a thing to furnish a cant term that : B R , A ESL |me: 1 thought we were rid of her. I \ De hent jon the “reason why” type of sales arrle ans retiow Fert thought she had moved away! But ‘ iene ‘ | oy Griffith yen 4 can be flung at anybody and everybody who shows vigns of dis- ; Me y talk. S. KITTINGLY, the little smiled her sweetest. “Why, before I|{ suppose you have been chatting Sextent, 4 The Evening World's Authority on Successful Salesmanship. These facts, of course, are only blond grace widow who lived went eway, 1 thought you were try-| with her since she's come tack and f, Gnttith's Saleamand ip Column 1s 95 lished dais. lostructive article like todas's [general and do not apply with posi- ‘sstaite, had returned trom «| in ys asking her why she doesn’t to : * ‘ ee hentia Wah ck | stairs, € < g to cut me,” she said. | ng her y sl s! come The discontent of Bolshevism is a discontent which sees the! jimmie ti to sumer to ametiom cama, He wii be sled @ avewar questions addnwel 'y /tiveness to every man, In judging ern trip—probably Reno |” Spenpimel What nonsense!" replied see ust? J i A ; A : ; pr various kinds of salex posi- : ; ii “Not me!” declared the best of hus- quickest way to get what it wants in taking it by collective violeuw o Copyright, 1419, by the Preas Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) vee aA YA /OUa OONE ee sue Hee good mind not to speak to, Mrs, Jarr, warmly Oe eT eae Maa igs call” id | n. ~", % a » however, believe ould be sale . a th x . speaking to Mr. Jarr about you only | DAPSS “hee from soi.e one else. | Tall vs. Small. ja dealer's Benatar and remark I} guided by the considerations 7 (hs is ye , leer withl eae Saad the other day, and Mr. Jarr said,|!°™ going out! You can entertain her 7 | | want to sell you some shoes," almost | jo, we Jusness, when the little blond we Acs sal ahi ae lif she's coming in again!” T Sak it aaa aa 6:2 Benin: to write (ine artiola & |herewith to some extent, at least. Of Wak aan be the malian with: M ie i The discontent of Bolshevism is a discontent which ruthlessly iA DbUnE Abalone. Gahare ared the snerohant inte buying course, other considerations might 1y bi ‘ i ps ne ba ia Me i Kittingls? Hate we done anything (o|, (Xow say bere and you be civil 16 p overturns established law and order and culls the license into whieh | should have entitled it “Lion | ¥'t i a single bit of sales urgu- alter any a ular decision I might | eee ee coe eee ae eee | ofend her? “ihe jasi Hee Leaw her| ter cree won't be Hard. youlye bah Z R F . ie ia s ar ; Ment. make in accordance with the gener ‘ i ¥ enough to her when I'm not around, it plunges “liberty.” vs, Brunette." I am basing It on a! phe tall gatesman can “eet away”|fucts here giv Mrs Kittingly, the fair grass widow | sne ave me such a cold and distant | wide Lt) OTE don't be a hypocrite, don’t be twe- jletter received from M. A. Z. a few| with more than his smaller brother. | ~ bow The discontent of Bolshevism is a discontent which cares noth-|days ago. He got the tall and small | pho small man bas to be a real, 2%! | fageali” Said tw Sere, cong Wae ne . 4 F iy ‘This was news to Mrs. Kittingly 1 r * « and the blond and brunette some : r h | went out to tell the children to run A ing ior past or future. The accumulations of the former it con-| wnat ear pee taels iat | Karate dyed-in-the-wool salesman, He S u é€ Ss Ss L hp a e I | By ; a aie ; time she met nae Jarr, when! ypstairs and thank Mrs. Kittingly for ae | must “put it across” by the force of | his wife wasn't around, he was more the ‘ay andthi 5 abe bad sent sumes. Duty to the latter it ignores. 1 what | says: | ‘ | f ohh | PAS IORARY WE: SDE- SOY R808: BER: OP : y latte ignores. It asks only food and what a vould reapectfully request your | 2M WAaided mentality. Me docan’t| Or Making the Home Safe for the Family | ‘an geniai. them, it calls freedom for os long as its generation lasts. | cereus es Cul 4 ay rie have size to help him along. It is ° | “Well, now that I'm home again, I) Mrs, Kittingly came down in a most That kind of di ; doo eevtotieg ot feat rate notre tn, [easier to believe the statements of a| By Stuart Rivers |witt drop in to see you and the chil-’ bewitching costume. y hat kind of discontent is the essence of Bolshevism. eal fen ef tbe ry i a en | large man than those of a small man. | Copyright, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) \dren, I suppose they got the things I, “yoy sit right down there and talk P Nothing could be more different from the dissatisfacti viet | dec haa ve wcemaiu' |Your brain is more receptive. It, : i n lor ke = sent them while I was away?” said with Mr. r while 4 get the children t 5&0 satisfaction whivi salesman, 1t han been my experience | swum that mere bulk will eometimes The Furniture Polish That Works Success Mies caitlnais rela wanda niet (heal ine ie tke , urges men to improve their own condition under the protection of|t® find many people, pe micet| ak ae a areey Ren! of Dunks | fully—as Glue. | hearted as sho was blond headed, only | When Mrs, Jarr returned Mr. Jarr — | sates managers, prejudiced against i Sed | ep etiape . ae institutions evolved, strengthehed and made permanent in th ir} small mon and favorable to the tall, TS aw een iy eaperienoe: 1B. 100K: Es, Uncle Henry came down|started to get up, and the chair) being good-hearted) was @ natural had been telling some joke to the fair rag ie ggg the yo ing over the records of hundreds of | from the farm and stayed over| stayed right with her, and went too, | attribute, 5 li PEM. | salesmen, that the small man will| By many, the typical salesman {| mcuyure up about equal to the tall] night. He was feeling pretty| You know how a person is when ot the thing: repeated Mr visualized as @ rather etockily built! |bad about the way father’s patented | they spill a interest of econc man in the matter of sales. But 1| y, ach oe Te Sutil ae bs : ical |water pump wrecked his house, but | the'r coat justice but never sweeps aside law in order that predatory instire: ieee Waal and of the type last Men-) pejieve it is true that the small man! ne'g recovered, ut least they'd i must work harder and study barder, | may find temporary surfeit. “Yet tho man, with dark) wy about the blond a tr Trying to find “tinges of Bolshevism” wherever there is dissatis Rete -PAF:. Geni abe, Aeemy a. be faction—whether in New York or any other part of the Unite re rand aughing heartily The domestic baromete soft boiled egg down |Jarr. “Why, I had the greatest ditl- ty veered from “Set fair” to “Frosty, Y their suspenders snap culty in Keeping the children from followed by intense cold.” thim| just as they're getting up to dance | going upstairs and bothering you Sensing this, the visitor remarked out of the hospital. Uncle Henry and! with their best girl. Well, that’s the| since they heard you're back that her maid was out and she could ; jmother had a long talk, and it ended| way it was with Mrs, M sed and wanted to t hear her little dog just crying his tall plana Heo |up by mother promising him she'd | She didn't like Emma is just in love with heart out, and that she really must £0 A A ee agreed that originally all men were |never lot father pay another visit to) ahe couldn't the | you, and my little boy admires you sot» ber apartments upstairs, : : tie: seantal:familibeas made (ha wale] Cok, bia were ‘the farm, You couldn't call it brib-| chair again down, then a | much that were he some twelve years! The door Statee—is @ foolish job that can lead only to absurdity. Vgorous, brainy, aggressive, They |ery, exactly, but Uncle Henry left} couple of the oth arted to | older’ ‘hind the fair v ’ y ject of searching inquiry, Will you were builders, fighters, rulers, organ- | mother a presenta check aA TS | one another Bolshevisis kindly write an article showing WDY jgers, ‘They were produced in an en-! next day she went out and bot ibe yaaa ih rvedbagr ei a4 national experience; which modifies forms but never abzndons funda-| menta! principles; which changes Jaws in t | es and bair, should compare favor- ‘arthy. | were so ple und | you! Little ay anything to ma no sooner closed be- itor than Mrs, Jarr ‘Too many Americans are already callir ell-| Mrs, Kittingly shook her finger bust Into tears er rf . . ing salts, and they found they x Ps led. | “Why, what's the matter?” gasped x : small men are just good as the! wronme a Ania sah bas n 1 playfully at Mrs. Jarr but smi without knowing or caring exactly what Bolshevism is. Teil hineaivmoad. tahoe typeof Knal ente. wal h permitted only the/new dining room set—one of even't any too free of their own| New, Mrs, Jarr had been chilly for|the astounded Mr. Jarr . 7 1 EA eae li x aggressive to survive, highbrow kind, black with gold banc nairs eal . Don't ak tome! Don't you dare Don’t weaken the word by misuse of it. Abhorrenc telyae old achool?” The brunette was evolved in al some time past when meeting Mra, : C y . Abhorrence of what ts es ®lon the tops of the chairs and a ” spe o me 4 3 Bolsh ght not I have a suspicion that M. A. Z. is warmer, jess vigorous élimate, There | ouinted tne otha ada ar I suppose 1 should have stayed and | Kittingly, but she had noticed an old 19 Speak tom cried Miy: bats shevism is ought not to be lessened by indiscriminate extension sma!) and a brunette, Further, It, was less need of physical and mental | Pente i elped, but right away I thought of |beau of the lady upstairs paying at-. “You invite that bere ght a ‘ of the term to cover all sorts of smaller things thut it is not may be he has sort of an ar- exert.on in order to sustain life, He| gi. made father go to the mov b and wondered What he'd done, tention again, He was in the th sail SRN ee sort she is~don 2 . ; by ft gument brewing with so tall, | was not so bold and reckless as the wre ine moving men broupht iti nd him out in the kitchen, trys latrical business and liberal with Speak to ' fey Keep its full force for the ugly and menacing reality—of wii biond salesman. But he raises an blond; his manner of living did not ae Si A spear a i iy ai a at ny to mend a leaky water Kettle |theatre tickets, which often, in times an Bult alan oi ier ere, and 798 ‘3 * ‘ ore = auestio: ake sary. eo aaid BE . " ave with a stick of some kind of goo he! past, Mrs. Kittingly had sent the sur- to? y her 3 thank (od, there is but a manageable little throughout the long. Lgisbteia 4 ie ea veci| omeiaaites nave cimaya healmoreer @ tune up she slaire heuene Ga the aires Alukcga af dawn 10 she daira her,” replied Mr. Jarr in amazement. i Rae “ n the first place, let m ake it! c p alway °! tal cake copatohied ug uw pi je a) { 4 . . end breadth of the United States. ar that there Is no connection be-!a tendency toward education, phi. | °° es 8 Hie nee Beas “Did you do anything to the new] When Mr. Jarr came home Mrs, Jarre) But Mrs are ous rerly wer Sar ‘father's bee pretty qule ately 1 " = Sees sort was the sort he likes and why re! 1 n 1 | osop! and religio: » roo chal says 1, hand- . x tween tall inen and sma n and |oxophy und religion than blonds.| yr4 sfacCarthy’s promised mother| {ute Teom chair ys I, hand Pork TRA D8 Rots he UR One. ey blonds and brunette he wma! The four great religions of the pres-| 4. sue him for attempting her ng him his hat |would take up some of the paint if a| mae H ‘f Two great armies—the Army of the East and the Army of man may be biond; the tall man may |ont day world were developed by| with the electric bath if he speaks| N%" S4¥8 he. "Only clean them | person sat in it, but it didn’t that |/2DeF own homer tea! ‘q the West—taced eacb other yesterday on the Island of Man ne furniture polish I found |time; the paint took away some of |. 4nd then Mr. Jarr began to rave above a whisper, so he's been going ” at a Y abov L 8 paint store up on the corner.” |the cloth, 1 tried to call tho ladies’ |*t#t & man might as well be in the ide brunette, Some of the greatest| brunettes, The brunette 1s usually with men in history have been smal) men, | Not @ successful ruler, He does not t ‘ battan and fought for hours. In the end it was found im- around like he thought July Grst was " | trenches with th to possible to decide which had won the victory, which had done |Napoloon was a small man. So was|posscss the positive, dominating na-| giready We any lato Thes'vo got # vod movie down- [attention to it, but some way they |" notes wih the war resumed as ing heriph grerralyiireadied ned Ty SAMI E. H. Harriman. So is Gen. Foon, 1\ture of the blond, The unaianle| tL crusie Bf dan aéiae tak marner|OR™ w L “I'd go to seo it if I] weren't interested. judged. _ ig - e doze! Tl jove! ents of Mexico and Central 2 y were you. All the rue are stuck | showed father the chairs that . 4 that marched between 1 ; might go on and name dozens, That | Governments o| ete an aha cculA aheg ath that marched between them. But of one thing there was no | Goeumrtnocennarily: make the snail | America ure good illustrations of thla.| New furniti De ea aN eters eR siete SAC ocnatar tat heal anven mension the logy hd ) the largest sized memory that Father Kaick lman uny better, but it sooma to show! From these brief, general facts we| {nad to help around, so that's how |uiust have softened up the paint.” [be able to fix them with somo put | An English scientist has developed $ J erbocker has ever bad to find room for in his well-stocked hat physical size doesn't have a can develop the following: I happened to be there, Ciood thin Pather didn’t really wait for me to/ented varnish he'd seen downtown]! a fuel made from household refuse, i 014 noddte, great deal to do with uchlevement in| The blond ls of a positive nature,|1 was too, They'd have been sitting|fnish that sentence, 1 guess ho|the other day. Mother looked at him including ashes, paper and vegetable i > a ——~| this world energetic, bopatul and inciined to be| in the chairs yet if t hadn't run out{heard mother calling him and he] fo") JOUg | me a °4S) matter, ground into powder and com- Pe ° | Tho tall salesman has an immodiate | speculative. He is ruled more through| to the store and bought the gasoline | slipped out. After a time L went in|” Next day she asked me the price | Pressed into briquets, which are tm- os @ Answers to Questions paychological advantage over hia/feeling than through intellect. He| it way Mra, MacCarthy who first {and telped the ladies sit down, then lof a pair of handouffy, but she! pregnated with oll-tar and pita, ‘W €. ©. B. Dennon.—Lieut. Col Whit-) J. 8, No. 49 Columbus Avenue—A| smaller brother. Ho impresses peo-|should be most successful in selling| noticed that something was wrong. |{ ran down to the store for some gas- | wouldn't tell ine whet she wea thinks . 229 x R the highest medal |boy born in this country of foreign | ple more quickly and more easily, I|a line where much emotional appeal! @he had the seat of honor, hiding be- |oline. Te Eee oer ey thing te. father [bet allenbed ina san ee De **9 warded, namely the| parents automatically becomes a used to know @ shoe salosman—six|is necessary in order to secure the hind the silver water kettle, There Did you ever paint get reallabout it, but some way I think s| dust its bristles will net erdimaetl; | [ i Medal. et p by virtue of his birth, feet four—who, when be leaned over |order. He is usually aot #0 strong, wasn't enough of something and she sticky? You'd mic that cloth intends them for him, remove. 5H a8 RO ; * > man rare! he sopn ar Ward pe