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EDITORIAL PAGE THaPeCays April 24, 1019 f ‘ “National progress was checked; the people were enslaved; the land's | fandlords, here is the City of New York with a $13,000,000 court alowly growing civilisation lapsed, into hop: onfuslon. Groaning B age i" under t e of 8 ¢ russia still, w the rest of ‘ bouse site which it has carried year after year at enormous cost, the world moved on. T Mongols, and accessors, the Tartars. i gacant and unimproved, with no plan or prospect of building. Adlahagei ; ; holly t ate Lidia —_—— i Why doesn’t the City of New York build on this court house Now ye y un idea of the problem which confronted Ivan—the i problem whose clever solution won for him the title, “The Great” } @e a grovp of model apartment houses for workers and thereby He began with his own ¢ Moscow, building it up by degrees. saree taht . fi Then he made alliances with the stronger of the neighboring states, wheed ; _ Hemonstrate the possibility of furnishing clean, attractive city ling and outwitting them into joining a confederation, with himself as tha’ } Gwellings at reasonable rents? confederation’s head, By force of arms he bullied the weaker states into joining his ‘ A 1 he proceeded to strengthen and solidify the newly combined H fame set new housing standards. to them to his will He made the stricken land an : Model municipal tenements can be as much credit to a city as sete nei He made } e made Nis position stronger eeeaanmnmmanaaedt) with tho Byzantine roval en Makes Ready for Russia Byzantine i for War By 1478 he felt strong cnough to Bothering the President by cable has been frowned upon oer oe ae ; But dt begins to look as if @ plainly worded, uncensored cable Loft daca to Paris re Burl tart Pa | ernment sent an envoy to Russ tribute and te jo Paris re Burleson might be a wise and needful act for those erintend a ceremony which had b « s for the ‘ ‘ who have the Wilson interests at heart. purpose of making the sn tulers do } i i The ceremony n the displayin ha | to the Russian m n order that they mig cfore tt ' portrait and kiss it } SSISTANT SECRETARY KEPPEL of the War Department before and to kiss, there was a decided n A intaitha! eee 4 to L. B. Franklin of the War Loan Organization of the it upon th. or and spat on tt! ‘Treasury Department, April 19: wt ie Co ee tae nentt nT eee ih rost ¢ ; ove sel4e p 1 at “I am glad to be able to tell you that Secretary Baker ere put to met urvivor was sent ba + since his arrival in France has cabled that the 77th Division Khan to report wh + is scheduled to leave Brest between April 17 and April 22, | oe Avocet shen Seebde ecre inclusive, and that {ts several units will arrive in New York | to ay “hisult \ A mighty: batt F within a period of six days, making it possible to have the n the bar \ 1 ns thrashed them vi } Division parade.” iy : ying back to their own land ) . _ 7 7 wh + hae Werte 7 Russ fre Ivan had made go Hoe ? his Jon | J. ¥. Kerr, Adjutant General in charge of officers, Washington, ve Lg Pak ME. iolicrien CAE Tae . reign iny ypbuiding and ‘civil gin antlers tbls : fo Robert L. Moran, President of the New York Board of Alder-| > ro 5 = - meer = ; ] April 18: : . ; deo, Ap % uve eserter . By Sophie Irene Loeb e Qn amily By Roy L. McCardell | “There are several reasons which have forced the War ; Ter tr ether rantiva cad eee pees Grandpa net acne raat Memattwent to declina tc authotioe a: pated ef the) iii | Coprriah a by the Pree PubMshing Om (The New York Evening World) charity of other relatives and friends; Copyright, 1919, by tho Press Publishing Co, (The New York Uvcning Wurld.) t. Grandpa bought ‘Going fo 4 _ Division as a Division.” The Law That Should Protect the Happiness byt In most cases they become pub: The Jarrs Discuss the Dances of To-Day and the ‘ ae ceoeetre ae ke ea he be . Ae | ae ic charges : been a harness maker and he knew F Even allowing for the one day’s difference in date, these con- of Little Children. It seems to me there is no cad Art of Yesteryear. they wore perfect works of art be Gieting statements are fresh evidence of inexcusable lack of under - MOTHER ot children com-) As in the caso of the woman who|low as the man who st a a doubt you'd like to dance | Cause there wasn't @ bucklo missing A . ip Py : ; Plains bitt of her writes me, where there are no funds |of caring for his c Mr tae, ips you do. How do1| 0” the harness of the plough horse standing and ‘sgrosment in Wer Department circles as to the plan of ability to find her husbund| with which to find the husband and|no punishment too aos pee a enilde not going | in the group. parading the 77th Division in this city. who deserted the woman has to finance her family | I should Lil ear “Amd as for iWeigtng the Baby In view of Secretary Baker's announced intent to have the 77th claiming ha tias well as to foster it, Lore a 5 "da Lild t to?” asked | ou er was called in by mamma (nits brought home, if possible, in a period of time that would permit Tee ee al ‘a eae e ; ee “y si rae ; uc e pid-ones. 1 fo: InaHece 1k BAG: He Waid the ean ah 5 Sadie “) eho foun n some of the older an ne sania) ; cn: “Well, during the winter when so the grocer's counter were perfec! 1 8 Division parade, Adjutant General Kerr's statement of April 18 that everybody | r man crimes, Mor by a Ait eee eae en tiwat rel io men were around tht t that, but poses ah j , wenld seem premature even had it not been directly contradicted next has beon too busy | bettar 8 conne lo Kills tho chances of ixious to have s pre children have hardly denced at all,” | could teil that every button and ever + sf vith war work ample, yenmar ler ond robs them of thei M } ince those am ¢ t r Gag by both the actual and acting heads of the War Department. pie phy : br RS faery : What do 1 kne bout the Ms Mae dark: SOUS sions Ties a0 Wie Bhoma 98) the) Bhaud | ; pay any attentic reported to the authorit tural inheritance—to bo happy and an have become the rage in 80- er was exactly like the rea \ Confusion in this matter has gone far enough to her. She " immed y ot ha love othe: nees, excep at T see m at t vine . 7 | gh. her, She says 8 nediately and t ve ove of @ mother and poled Mr Jar “And 1/clety I know the children will be! thing I know you may taugh a The War Department owes the City of New York an immediate war work more | deserted woman and d sleuths out | fath ; Fact. 1 tt 1/ dancing them, t them, but they were ay natural as definite assurance that the 77th will be paraded here as a jmperaaat ti the find tha husband and find him | aa Nes siop d - war work my ‘They look “Ate the children going into so-| photographs, and the only reagon | 8 Seontamen ste happiness of iittie|they do. Even if he has gone to {and listen to these woful waifs whi ciety” asked Mr, Jarr. n't ask my mother to give m: ion, and that every official o: de ant Haas tee ‘ other t ; he | through no fault of the ° ’ : ; bly B: ery f the Department has been so q children? ay ner country they secure the ba i paclati ie A sib DW RAN A ft me am “You know very well what I mean,” | ‘Welghing the Baby’ or “The Meetins festracted. ‘How is it when @ man commits 4 incans returning him and settle |fatherless by one wh clety fails But } 1 YOUDE | was the reply. “It is just like art pics| 4t,the Stile’ is because the clothes ov ; t. ‘ pe murder he can be found if he skips | the matter iby + ing that in some |: follow. people dancing th said Mrs. Jarre. and statuary. People get used| th women are now #0 dowdily ol ‘ Laelia away? Also when a person kidnaps| Way he makes his proper contribu- ‘ = piscine ) those things und see no harm in| fashioned thatethe statuettes look ike | i Selfishness and ambition may play the bolder game at @ child his photograph is put in all | on to his offspring | T R if Wi ra 5 oe eae ea be aened Eat ialieea tee the peace table. It has yet to be proven that disinterested | the po’ stations and elevated As i ere, the Woman must make (63 Oo m Give e O O ey Jancing thi dreadful dances and | Sidered high drt in their day!" } Justice does not hold the stronger hand. trains, but when a man de offe of com nt, order his ~ , they will np harm in them | y, don't you kno-~, I believe tha J = | children and goes away and unre é which many a w is B y 1 ames C . x oung because they sce everybody dancing |i why art unadorned never goes ou! away five years, they wi She dreads Copsright, 1919, b Press Publishing Co, (Tue New York Evening World them." style. Figures with no clothes on ‘ ONLY ANOTHER CRAVING. He to find bim. 3 am s \ 1 therowith, How Everyday Expressions Had Their Origin “Well, then, What harm will Angra are always up to date,” sald Mr, Jarr i jan t weem to have 1 way the law becomes HUE i ; i t be in them?” asked Mr, Jarr, "You| “I don’t care to disc o of oof: ; * SR never was a seu story in| from t opera n them scuss such mat T THE opening of a local branch of the Association Opposed |te make him » rt 5 | h the crow did not gather 1 upor { ut say yourself that pictures and stat- | te remarked Mrs. Jarr colds ‘ to National Prohibition one of the speakers said: | Th 8 00) able anand toe cw awe) anda would uary are so common now that nobody | "The children might hear us, bu! | woman's contentions as A = ww iy * | e t sed | “Societies havo been organized for many years and ee irateta ntry to pur t RAYA. IASH OF BENE! ADM PEFR ART RD ns . : ee PUT lin aad atthe (oehah Gee ele eee ) ng laxity in o , | sta f nj cast e Venus of Milo, anc ne | coming e to Stryver’ have been working in devious ways to take away constitu a fleeing husband and make mr It non and i other drink ever its name suct eee 1 tra 1 1a t ft V a e i 4 j ieee ne es me to Mrs. Bir ver's | ; " h SEMMOR ANS COUPES: | odd: way n the middle of the eigh Greek ¢ 1 days of notice the childre n to of| protest against the modern vulga tional rights. They have worked cunningly, and in campaign: sponsible for the livelihood of bis de- | 1 ' 1s sorrow enough | ud Bi aurea the vag, juat|it iw that L heard them tell old Mra, | dance vue : of exaggeration and falsehood have managed to influence the pendents . ter not put to the | “°Or co ae ck ev eae nd Dusenberry that the arms were Nor dim nee aaa ce ; : ; lawmakers of the land, inducing them to pass laws to correct & lawye ery n be the Aid the| Save mite hate cen nae rf y arudeat Gind; the| broken off by Gertrude,’ When f was. super eed i chimerical wrongs—wrongs which did not exist in fact.” leaving f We in an off ea V her 4 | grogrom breeche which he com yw t sk Well, it's no worder they sald] ered sinful by chu ta) are t Say rather to “correct” existing wrongs by setting up far find a } and who left wif 4 c iG ent t i sition | vractically all of th “8 resemblance t which w th Mrs. Jarr. “Gertrude | Aige | ter ones i : vise Anat All the Rage EeBe FORE t 7 OMY sea ee of corded mat word | favorite ¢ Greck theatro-g: y parlor ornament 1] ‘round dances, li ware arenah gree tives have joined to raise the money {community care is eliminated sey “ He “goat from which ; se GP igey ee is 5 Bu being adapted 1 6 du H p t and thundered at, and mee A Nation-wide movement to lift the rican saloon out of its |!" order t at th pay unne rain, ‘Tt 1g bly | WS ‘ And t he husnt broken protest against them w aioon out of : i ‘ grain mg bab u y Ki protest against the 1 @egradation and depravity could have been successfu parriod xt e ies yf ti le Class ca eel ‘0 oF y un | uette of the Venus of Milo misbpin' rgetaielg- ome, carried ured for at e © authorities in ries an ) 1 my r hana t denhit yunce, so he ) gre she first saw it led my . das G@hrough without one hint of Nation-wide Prohibition purse hia ca t only act in defending | BONNE 8) A tt tO S08 | treatme a SRA Cabal santa ogan ed fab Ads cra Oe But only N won wide I nN promises that tyranno ie ; (ai isin en sept Mee humani- |, doubt this diminutive would have | uP A that she didn’t break it, and it was no| now waltz and fox trot and see n Gaterference with the personal frecdom and habits of others which |{uworites aoe eae uation io such that these {Deen lost to fame had not the Admiral use her of having donc hann in it,’ 3 @ drunkard craves drin} : ‘ | too much rum. is he ordered them “And t was the samme : the | Jarr aw those danc . r : ee i | ” c earn to mix it with wa aq t y you broug some t ting at Mrs. Vat The righting of a wrong js not enoug ma fination. May The Satisfied sromptly called the mixture “grog,” alied my attention to the the « 1 erty ) promp , | she hir Yeast have power over others. The of { such power upon na VERY once ° we ¢ day who have the abilities of a) he cocktail is going out of fash é fact that it had no head when you} ‘ r vou wew minds and natures is to pro forms of intoxication far } E across a who gets the| Franklin or of an Edison, But either| now, but name is a pleturesque| cf one in lo brought it asked if Id +] it was. The suggestive @angerous to Nation than t ORION TAF TROT | notion int head that if he beca’ f luck of will-power or be ich we may re-adapt to some| sire, And we have tend to make whoever we it] danced by a couple called “ B ae : AA EAS econo, ne earns enou 1 alive it cause of their supreme satisfaction the new drinks that are certain to] io signify stingines ie from replace it with a good on. | eeler i they “i ut for them the power is the thing. ‘To help them to that |#* use of going n life as they find it, they make no | appear along with the coming drought, | »oney, 1t would be t Vhat has become of the Rogers | !€s8on to tea mt ciety pe ewer no wrong is too small to attack, no wrong t¢ ‘7 men like njamin t r uttempt to put their able shoulders |1t was first used by an American} indeed, if we spoke of a young groups, ‘Weighing the Baby,’ 'Going| Pie: And as Mrs. Stryver is too stou ; at tO] gulton, Marconi, Edison and to the wi progress and thus to describe a heartening| to-day as regarding his best girl w for the Cows,’ ‘Faust and Marguerite,'|t® dance shew Whirling x thers of their t had F eine world know on of gin, rum and ver-| cuptaity nd all the rest? asked Mr, Jarr,| Wheelers’ to dance t her hou same ide “ would t 1 Man laugh He hit upon the unu Me Latins have given a very, After the dancing and ales, wines de c ® a have r r edt th en ‘Ou of cockta s dese Q | t th ' U0! nd ciwars are abc ve will h rt Little Facts About Wes A nave ¥ menage 16 y pon: even dei 2 yOu, aekta i Le joxpreeal rm in w to con me. ORG iu are ak Me i ri] "Ob tb se, I'll go," ga Any u a wy ¥ , rag eg: nker, expla at} nive, We generally ewhat| they come bac h atyla. with Ly tt Would tempt a saint HE United Mint coined | named “Ainer was built_at Porte. tar i ane lpg oh tan feet Like @ barnyard improperly hepire, | Victorian virtues? Will we prize them | "What sa asked Mra, Jarr last year 25,628 picces of po BD : 4 the year 1741, Pau \ 1 s ved to be cock pruning himself in the sun, with] 1t derives from conniveo, meaning to| More if bits are ken off of them?) * Vitu the re And $3: 03.80. i nstructi instead of ele nd honored and reapected. | 4. hia tall athers erect as a sign of] pring the « " sether, as in falle| ‘My mother has severa Roger + exit 1 | Imports of coffee into this country | Cling on horseback instead of ir Meee eae a jaye thag Pride and independence, ing ageep, Bo that one who connives| Eroups" said Mra, Jarr They are t think that man takes any- % i Re |have increased a hundred u ion | of a comfortable Pullman, i you wish to make things Ifyou should approach some opera! at an evil deed literally closes we] Still very highly prized by all her| thing serious, not even serious frst American man-o'-war,| pounds a year since Aug. 1, 1914. There ave many people Living to- than the, are, star who had just completed an aria cyes, friends, because every detail is so! things!" sighcd Mrs, Jarr, . ‘he Winning Hand! While tenants are being driven into the streets by profiteering Make it a strictly paying enterprise that shall at the same Bousand-room hotels de luxe. | Copyright, 1919, by the Preae Puibliahing Oo, USTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, | (The New York Evening World) By J. H. Cassel By Albert Payson Terhune Gane Dally Except Sunday by the Peas Publishing Company, Nos. $3 to aaa ES Susatcan, 50; Ww 6 Sun Pama Co (ae hen Tuk bine We TALS TLS GAW rect ban ioe NO. 25 IVAN THE GREAT, Who Lifted Kuss'a From Bondage fa JOSEPIL PULITZER,’ Jr, Secretary, 63 Park How. VAN IIL, “Grand Autocrat” of the petty Russian stat MPAMIER OF THR ASSOCIATED PRES, of Moscow, sat in his throne room one day in 1478 1 Prem ig exctorively entitied to the use for rormbiloation of at) nowy Aarnatchew with his courtiers ranked around hin. Into the room i at cnelited th this pager ood ais "the local news pall wild heres | ee = was ushered legation, headed by a gorgeously VOLUME 59 deovvecoens NO, 21,065 lad envoy é The envoy—Aambassador plenipotentiary of the ; Great Khan of Mongolia—stepped forward into the We WHY NOT? open space in front of Ivan ne, and held up ¢ : view a vividly colored portrait \ S SECRETARY of ¢ Housing Commit t th ve At sight of the portrait all the envoy’s followers Reconstruction mmission, nitect Clarence S. Stein ed themselves in humble adoration. Then en 5 ‘ t pause, ¢ whole future of Russ inakes this comment on the present housing crisis: esha de os shed ilar Due trembling in the balance. On Ivan’s next action depended the fate of his i H “There is not a single civilized country except the United country = ' tates where something in the line of Government financing Russia had been ov d, many years before, by the iy Golden Hore f Monge ja st | {ef house building has not been tried. England has lent she aid : a 50 ; eBbee {|} millions to its builders and the Canadian scheme is only an Neissikind: wad reduc 4 fathewiaid 46 4 1p of subsidiary atates. # extension of the English one. Massachusetts has already effort to throw off Mongol yoke had resulted in disaster. i amended {ts Constitution and has bullt some houscs at Law- en was born Ivan IIL, rer of the state and city of Moscow. Ivan . to unite Russia once more into a mighty nation and to free it rence and made them pa wal we ore from the Mongol tyrant | s oe oee—neon~rm*™>SEOE™ .- t was a emendous life amb Facts and figures upon which the above statements are based it wa tremendous life ambition, and one : pad Ivan Resolved tof that sec foredoomed to ghastly failure, Bu | Gave been repeatedly urged by The Evening World ever since a year Free Russia 1 . stuck to it through countless setbacks. Here i ¥ ~—_——eeeeeeee the t of his mak | tye, when it began its campaign against rent profiteering. He was a wily po far too wise to show | his hand at the very beginning of so desperate Russia was sunk 1 | , Another thing The Evening World has pointed out: into semi-barbarism and was cowed by long years of erushing oppression. ‘How They Made Good Slowly but steadily he welded the scattered states of Russia into one