The evening world. Newspaper, April 23, 1919, Page 26

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ISTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, Daily Except Sunday by the Prese Publishing Company, Nos. 30 Row, New York. President, 63 Park Row. ‘Treasurer, 63 Park Row, . Jr, Secretary, 63 Park How Publehed bo te WoMnEn oF THR ASSOCIATED Laser Tie Ase inted Drom the se for ation of a1) newy daenatetiog edie ty 0 or Tie Ue oval news [rdliutiad Reron ‘ — VOLUME 50 21,064 se NO. NOT TILL THE DOORS OPEN. O LEVEL-HEADED AMERICAN will let disquic dissension among the delegates at N Paris convine prac or a general ¢ imate agreement is t publicity given to proceeding * the ence » nore as been t plorable in its effect of oading the cables with rumors and contradictions. Facts, favorable or unfavorable, have lost their force in the | What was stated on credible authority one day has been offi-| { tally denied next. by would ealously made admit accruing to the President ent confusion has been worse country whe it not, or hose in this who, pr they artis than Tt any ¢ uf the United States Republican had a field of anti-Wilsonism newspapers day esterday. The Sun was vindictively happy over a report that the President ad undertaken to form an alliance between the United States Vrance to protect the latter against future aggression. The Tribune | uried the League of Nations, stamped on the grave and unfolded | peace programme of its own. Yet the same day Washington was officially advised by a cable vram from Paris that the President is considering no alliance, secret ven, Whieh might in the slightest degree conflict with the funda- nental principles of the League, of Nations, and assuredly no deati: accompanied the text of the revised covenant of the received yesterday at the State Department. Whatever Italy and Japan are up to, it would be foolish to con- | at once y mean to go. Americans know too well the conflict, the bluff and the compro- nevitable in the forming of any combine where divergent in ate ertifi ue which was far the how | s are involved. The issues at Paris are the biggest ever. What more nataral than that some of the bluff should be of corresponding scale? lhe game is never over until the play is done. ‘The wise man will not predict the finish from what others hear hrough the keyhole. Time enough when all the cards are on the table and the doors opened to the public. T eres NO UNTRODDEN PATH. Hii} SUGGESTION of Nathan Hirsch, Chairman of the Mayor's Committee on Rent Profiteering, that Congress amend the Farm Loan Act to include financing of home building is a A ray Saas ‘ ” cd t sign that the present housing crisis is slowly but surely turning pata Ss Os s Just as usual { American thought in a direction whither the experience of other i an ee a Pro AE, eR Le a cauniries has preceded it The Jarr Family How to Bea BeiieFS pesca Father Up to March 31, 1916, the Public Works Loan Board of Great B R L. McC dell Britain reported 7,640,597 pounds ¢terling of public money invested y Roy L. McCarde S a l esman Or Making the Home Safe for the Family b g in England Copyright, 1919, by the Preas Publishing Co (The New York Evening World.) B Stu t Riv $ im housing in E i M 5 y ar er . rs. If ‘Vhe Belgian General Savings Bank, up to 1913, had advanced 8. Jarr Decides That Prevarication Is the First a nda Ea rn igger Pay. Copsrigh*, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Breaing World) 159,012,589 francs for various housing projects resulting in 57,300 Social Law, | Like a Bad Penny the Kitchen Artist Turns Up Again ON'T you think it is ttl t “Ww * sald M irr softly, “y sER " t ” dwellings housing some 300,000 permons. AD, Tee asa fer patina tee Se a By Roy Gnffith ?M MBER, me telling you ho pretty tickled to get rid of her F le dark for sewing rking woman an am - of the kitchen encum- Ra e r’ r ‘The French Government before the war had made available asked Mr. Jarr cheerily, as! SGA LUAGRIE een we ie Copyriaht, 1919. by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World ee ane ta Hs Se stlatcee Pneicoms, “nerd Yaa 5 | “ prance hat ame, ¢ - 100,000,000 france for housing. he came home the other evening to| ba and not acknowled y : | customs and preferences of the Latin | oe : . 3 fare ative ey ps 0 8B AEG er aeleee South America. pace; nee thelr good points, be ready | Mother's invitation, to pay us a visit?| F even pointed out the houses Hatimates of the amount of money the former German Govern- | 41. t.. wari, ig ht of tie oblll spring! net , OMR time ago I asked readers of| ty accept their point of view, and he| Atl how the cop came breezing in and| Rave him the number of the flat an@ ‘i ‘ ‘ ‘aning leh je ch ring be a me poner any . ed he; ? Coo! fall, anc th father look! ment invested in homes ran as high as $200,000,000. late afternoon | ce thin newspaper to send me Any | must be able to bring his house to see | Med her for his family? Cooks ar i : Aw x Ae looking right at i ; P le Rees tia ‘ A ation they might have in| business from that angle. scarce in our part of the town, Say,| im, the cop had the nerve to write it These are facts which should be repeated and emphasized until Nn m thish oom bush so prick ving f and selling South American| cr h Ahad dd ¢ success in| that cop thought he'd found a gold)! down in a little book so's le . . . was thie ng reply; and then | wea working ma hc and be ‘0 achieve argest SUCCESS pee COR: AS eT pers | Sant foeue tt Americans become familiar with them, because they demonstrate | i) yi wy.’ j ; o ee ea with tt ot nt \ sy ls 8 a widespread inter-| south America a salesman should be| mine, and bh even friendly to de Sey ie ee ; ’ wir vis good lady with it, the a ages en 4 n America a s iy . : ; About the middle of the next 4 that a Government housing programme, national or local, as a] speaking as though she had a mout » dress like | St mon esmen as to the trade | thoroughly cosmopolitan. He should father’ when he took her down thr Se pone nouehied sens i 4 opportunities there. This article 18] ho able to ; alt erent | stairs. We were friendly too, You! oon mothe Mrs, Ho a 7 0 “fad” ful of mush, because she really | ess and wear babi there be able to adapt himself to different | 8 y 5 eae ab Later pousy bag was Pig er 1 Aoi mouthful of pins. : yeh ume kind of He and ¢ ne are | 1 from letters received, from | nationalities and customs, seeming |see we knew Bertha—-t was wes abs - beige ’ es » ue in year ago e Evening Wo) poin ‘© lessons American | ii iy tw p ‘ . rsonal files and from my own| and feeling at home everywhere. He|roustabout's name—better than b living room, the doorbell ring, iv ; : . “What say?” inquired Mr. Jarr tirly well-to-do men wea and feeling at home every . t Act aneearan’| eommunities might learn from Government housing of shipyard) Mrs, Jarre took the pins out of her “Well, cheer up," sald Mr, Jar «| Berend investigation, Necessarily It) wit have to meet and mingle with| cop did. I'd been eating her coc apa ny nad e a Fs . . : : } pane a biel a elias BRL i bse 2 much condensed 6 c a 6 0 e at gives P SUG Oe ' he cop, - workers and similar great housing undertakings into which the Gov-| mouth because she wished to make Worst Is yet to come, Bact iss old | MM" er ge ae ae wd bal LLM almost every country on| for three weeks. And that gives sou! 1? im mals momen the oe : os jog, | clear to him the matter of her wifely dy, I did a little bit of extra business | ¥? OU ORs RESOREN SD AEE SRER: | Garth) & pretty good idea how Mrong a tone) ee ante o; ates ernment was drawn by the urgent needs of large scale war industries, | ("0 1° | . Wilear ethan WeaHay that ene | 4. He must be more a merchant] stitution I have too. 1 jee ae ane Bah mya. At the present time it would be highly profitable for Americans | «1 was nayiny this work was 1 y and he has promised m From the export manager of a large than a salesman, He must be able to] Yes, even mother sald we were in| 0)" 2% hes nied ae ere cop, ’ an hig nr wean al romig Adi led , ABD A ‘et 2 Riot wl he gives Bertha a shove throu to review those lessons and get all the practical suggestion there is|particuiur,” she sald in pinless @ hundred dollars. You [New ROSTT OF & list of size up affairs and come to a per-|juck, and that was going some, bo-| 1" 10 8 a MIG oni Scnie Gia ita it and buy anything you want|°Ssentials which a salesman must] sonal decision without having to con-| cause the responstbility fell on hor) 'N@ door, <i in them. SeeABliC ny, O18: tadtals : : ie | possess in order to sell South Ameri-| sult his firm, He will be going after|snoulders to keep her offspring froz What's all this?” father says, coms me sto mateh it and I'm na @ ‘ ai can trade successfully, The list is|pig orders—the small “picker-up" i ing out of the kitchen, where he'd rowing the skirt and I'm putting Won't that be splendid!" satd Mrs starving to death pattie mF "i given here, with additions and amend- | had better stay away, AeA (ane van | been trying to wash the “Radium BUY EARLY. sleeves in it so T can knock a turn cr|J@tr, brightening up. “I can get a ’ jhe y But you know how tt Is; father can) pines on ty ih ; wo out of it. 1 am not no f ‘ W spring tailored suit of covert | ments sleaned elther from correspon-| (In this country if @ man gets ®/ out q jinx on anything. Why, you'd| wwnat—wng enc ITH $116,000,000 subscribed up to yesterday afternoon, | i) occ women, lhe clare Madainn {cloth with gaiters t toh and the |{ents or from my own files and in- §300 order he feels he has accom-|ne surprised how father’s luck runs; ilcae mother gasps, ape : id 4 1 y Ag some Women, like Clara Mudridge- |¢loth with gaiters to match and ‘ire en Fsiaipeians : a . + | pearing on the scene, ‘it brs New York can claim a feir start in the Victory Lodn| smith, for instance, who got a {dearest lite hat I saw downtown the | Vela venes 5 . plished something, Ip South Amer: | just the other day he had a scrap) "1 pa, ne 8 Beem ea ' tiawe URsablaverscnve : jother day. I paid two dollars on the | _¢ A knowledge of the Spanish lan-tica, an order for $800 is nothing.) with the bank people, claimed they| ,,,. s70 come back.” says Bertha, drive, ‘ oid page peal iv a a nu i SMA aut aaadiln G6 Tit Ie away tor guage; the salesman need not speak | Business men there think in bigget|were short a hundred dollars, went | ul why didn't you keep hert’ But the city’s pace ought to be greatly quickened if it is to tuke| Late oe ¥ Se a t ebaie nieeal t yout Wiomatically, but he must speak | figures, ‘They conduct business 0M @/ ang put up a kick. Now, if it'd been | MotHer asks, turning to the cop, ’ sleey ked Mr, Jarr. you | Mme hink it's real sw of you to sitio / oe : de ait » NOW, ro be rea MF mee ts proper place in the great campaign. tear tl ut : » you are ving to give mo the [i Erummatl ally ane his YoSeaLASy largo scale.) me, I'd have been satisfied, but not |... pedain ghbsey ayn the cop, ; ; Tera ae : should be sufficiently ample for all] 5, The sulesman's firm must place] father; he insisted until they finally | 8%° ¥45 such @ good cook that I felt hat campaign is a camps 0] e righ ish| “I ripped them ¢ » buy a ne fit. Goodness ‘ ‘ : a + UD y Ity . : Phat campaign is a campaign of dollars to put the right finist sate HER hem ONG ed’ it! But then that | usineen purpones, {full reliance in his judgment and be|went over his account and found |8¥!tY In taking her away from you, on the work American fighters have done and done to the Nation's oe Neat am ; iby Pe wie j qe will pe well to learn both Span-! prepared to back him up. He must|they'd credited him with $488 too| Besides, my wife threatened to get a sverlasting honor ike aed tt waaan NG no) [ib and: Forty Heme the} pari travel like a gentleman and enter-| much. When he got through he even Ate (as I biti manage—that is, if | . 16 KOWwr was so the commercial language of Bragil.'tain like one. wad them fan hie hank ooo) didn’t bring her back.” He turned y York x to be at t ne forefront of a drive like that. ea prnartengeriitus ord However, Argentina is the country! 6, His firm must grant credit of at| That's the way it waa about the|t? f@' and added: “If you hadn't Ve way to put it there is for individual New Yorkers to forget| “Mow ld you come to rip out the |{ this timo Ti get A} wherein the ereatest distribution of jeagt ninety to 120 days, cop. If It'd been mo that hed seen |SiYen mo your address yesterday I'd ¢ that there are banks or big corporations hereabouts and to feel the | mye Lat Sou, Mave auy acvid ‘ 1 1 Mr. Sarr aoe rete ier years may | (German manufacturers formerly |that cop standing on the corner look- | never been able to find you." SEO Naw Works cacia seutite ak ihe Moidnal aoe OR NG HERE as it aay ty et e in the next few years and sold goods in South America on|ing up our street like he was trying to| “But now I'm holding you reeves x8 q sting on their individual sav : Listen to t ried Mr ; . hoe poled | stabil the commercial language | twelve to eighteen months’ credit.|remember which house we lived in| le for the girl, and if you mistreat igs or power, varrimpatently, “Certainty 1 did not : ae einen a A | They would take a note for the|I'd have turned around and walked | her I'll give your name to the Society : t rall communities already show a distribution of MAY" any ae area odgel ld Pn ele team now | gti must ave the fectings and amount of the purchase at 12 per|the other way. What docs father do|for the Prevention of Cruelty to Ani+ v Rio ine een ere S r ur ye i vining of a gentleman so as to COn- | cont, They would discount these | but spread a grin ull over his face and | mala” he F ider than that of any of the earlier war loan, m d new rug in th 1 . 1 by ia t 8. pany, 4% Mrs, Briskett: did) the i ‘3 us in the | quot himself with courtesy, tolerance | py, t a German bank at 7 per|wa : No one sa M ft smaller communities—twenty-five ¢ } | time. she ft the Fi parlor Willie Jarr and|ang t Hh fOUAE Le Aile to win eee ete Der }walts right up to him. one said anything for a time, ft valler communities—twenty-five cities anc he car back Aries bad Me Bi intep Wawona lt: cent, thus getting thelr money] “How's your cook getting on?” says|then mother speaks up, looking at tov ! ond Federal Reserve District, for example—sub ee UF ‘ BHU aire. B : Sd al lb apitntce Pe 2a se one) at P wane — 1 as i promptly and making an extra § per| father, friendly like, “Say, we were|father, “Did you give this mam our Aways Ww ere all this lor COMO | secure their friendship—busin cent. American concerns can sell = - = = | address?” she usk: | t during the r t ay | f the campaign.) Mr. Jarr ” Mra, J pt i aMr. Ja : | | Latin America is at least 60 per cent. south American trade on the same| veloping at a rapid rate “Why—I guess 90," uays father, “E 1 ( ee k has a big total to roll up, but it has Kev adv 1 orn dre ng! h Me Kk fora an + | friendship. credit terms, taking a note at 7 per] ‘The only points of danger, from a| thought may! ye 5,500,000 pr rolling. ie be r YON Wey hai i (As preparation for selling in nstead of 12. ‘These notes can|pusiness standpoint, are in the coun “ , Ob ! 5° mut he did ¢ tut | gave you at money t » " 7 7 ? S i. ‘All rij » Bertha,” mother gos ried 4 s uh ‘ Kt i south America, a sales ould counted in New York at 7 per Ye sa ha Glau goes on ' Nowhere 1e country should the distribution of the Victory Thad ‘ ' f a new and & New la peli ssigibeny dee tte ae punted 1 . rk at 7 per jtries of Central America, The Gov-| without letting him finish. ‘I'm glad : i t i . v t A things you needed,’ | profitably spend some time in selling cent., thus saving the purchaser 5 per/ernments have been unstable and you're back; t Wider than among these 5,500,000 people of Greater New | cause new st Ves are in! Mr sid M the trade in the southern part of the jcent) probably will be for some time, This| your room wy Pu TaN Oe ve Yr brought up in surroundings that teach them early to know {2° ¥°"! "Ol, never mind me," said Mrs. | United States, There is great simi-] The salesman of South Amertcan| makes credits doubtful and collections |°;. + You can make some of $ ; ; : : T never ¢ Paden’ thal L rd the shirt and pulls ity petween Southern trade andthe {trade should be familiar with the| unc, those nice biscuits for supper, and ng when they see it, and who have beer ' € Ww sleey r 1 utet 4 it | larity uncertain, ; yy nM een closer to seme of , y tL went \pohdit, Chink Minitcige-tidien | trade of Latin America, In the North ‘laws of the various countries. There! 1¢ is only a question of time when|7°u She says to father, “you can eat A nepiring and moving realities of war and victory than any other | out shopy ha 1 k wed 1 has just | a always in a burry; ‘are laws which affect selling, Some] america will open the way to closer | ry, OMe” oni United Stat th women € emt 6 er business and talks fast. In the |countries exact a leense for selling/ang more lucrative trade relations|. "ther tried to get the cop to stay It e individual New Yorker who can pile up N Sor kont 1 ae Leda: jum more slowly, Mak- | goods within thetr boundaries, There|with South America, The chief arti-|4"4 protect him, but that cop cer nal } ‘ k ho can pile up New EE caciant mak lenin an pene spre b sain . omes more or less are other laws, cles ne are foodstuffs, machinery,|tainly had a mean disposition. quota record time by buying Victory Notes as early as he can clothes they were on mino—and on the |W ‘ of a social ceremony, He must take} Argentina is the bost Meld for Amer- |farm implements, matora--sleotric and was even laughing when hi ‘Oh, | told i Basolin ui AT cies. | down stairs, vet to them, [clothes of a good many other women | OMe ald in | time to make friends with @ man be- |ica, The soil and climatic conditions (hardware, railroad equipment and rs, and if that wasn Let him step right forward and begin out shopping the same day--if that’s|no sin to tell fibe a ‘® | ore attempting to sell him.) most nearly approximate those of the |practically every manufactured arti-|'"® Insult to injury I don's! @ny consolation,” EDITORIAL PAGE Wednesday, jothes to women better off than in . eee Be PB nN Rh TE NE ET LET April 23, 1919 wo PEACE. vt CONEERENCE) ae a nreappuanasiantad 3. He must adapt himself to the United States, The ernest ELL LLL ANT What Every | Woman Foresees: By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Erening Wort.) It Doesn’t Take the Seventh Daughter of a Sev enth Daughter to Predict What Will Happen When July First Really Arrives, F course, O I am no Delphic Oracle, no Sybil, no Palladino— And you don’t have to “cross my palm with silver,” Nor to hide your wedding rings or anything. BUT, It doesn’t take the-seventh-daughter-of-a-seventhe daughter to predict with positive certainty That on JULY FIRST About four million men will come home on TIM for dinner for the first time in their lives! About three million of these will casually reach in their pockets for a clove as they near the house-—« And then withdraw their hands, with a bitter sigt, About two million women wil) forget and gree their husbands with the usual kiss of welcome—an@ sniff of investigation. About five million children will wonder what makes papa so impatien® around the house, About half a million cooks will “give notice.” About half a million stenographers will burst into tears and rush | out of the office without stopping to give notice. Several women who have been wont to blame all their husband@ |faults on ex-King Alcohol will be astonished to discover that alcohol wae |merely the key which unlocked a man’s real nature and let out all his ;matural meanness, | And that without {t he can be just as grouchy and unreasonable an@ cranky, if not more so. | About one million bachelors will begin to wonder if the sweet do mestic life isn't the only existence after all, and will decide to marry and / settle down—— Because there's nothing else to DO—and no place to go but home. About a million wives will declde that they can afford to take a nic@ | long summer vacation at the seashore, Because there will be more money in the exchequer— And so much less temptation in the city, About two million men who thought they were desperately in love will discover that it was wine, and not love, that was making the world 60 ‘round! Several thousand telephone girls will be astonished at the suddem dearth of business between 5 and 6 o'clock-— The usual hour for breaking dinner engagements, and for telephoning | wifie that you won't be home. At least twenty thousand society matrons will wonder how on eartis they are going to manage to “put over” a successful dinner party, With nothing to make the guests forget the horrors of the food, And the deadly dulness of the company. Hundreds and hundreds of New Yorkers will decide suddenly to lead the simple life, Instead of waiting to reform between the last dose of medicine end the last breath——— | And the rest of the world will go right on loving, working, marrying, |dreaming, flirting, fighting, divorcing, eating, laughing, weeping, hope ling, struggling, living and dying: “ten aodiane cle except shoes, what Ls,

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