Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Se ee enc thats > ee neinone f , i ee ee ee aes | RETAMLISHED BY JOSHeIT PULITZER, ¥ Padbushed Dally Except & o Fan hing Company, Nos. 63 to v York. RALPIT Pt Jont, 63 Dark Row. ANGUS 1,65 Park Row, ie ul 64 Park # MEMBER OF TIS ASSOCIATED PRINS voLUAE BI. ses ‘ Uae eee sever NOE BLOTS THE REPUBLICAN scintaieicai ENATORS LODGE AND CURTIS ard RK i f Senate ta action. Sens ( ation of « rine ndge-Curtis tel gram as having been ed merely t g that Senat until they d with scorn shonid refrain from pas Know just wha and impatience. Since when has a R opinion regarding any document or instrument an opis would P covenant it contains” nat to rea ed by Woo an Senator needed { an drow | Wilson because of a foolish idea that the thing must be read anil{ studied? | Maybe it will dawn on some of these Republican Senators t the real reason why they are muzzled scause even the most ral an leaders are by no means confident that tbe enti-Wilson Repub ) can make tlie revised covenant a party selves thereby to certain and disastrous defeat. The Republican problem at the present moment is this: Will there be more party profit in fighting the revised covenant! fs still a Wilson covenant or in accepting it on the to-by exploited ground that Republ nanship has de-Wileor ‘and reclaimed it? The Republican strategists would rather n hes been a chance to do a little canvassing Senate reconvenes. iseue without dooming then loud}. t dec bef before ide until and after the +< Admiral Mayo to Lose Fleet—Headline. | Demoting Admirals appears to be the American way of recognizing thelr efficient and distinguished services. As y we don't do with our Admirals what Voltaire said the Engli did with theirs—hang one every now and then “to encourage the others.” But our policy starts on that slant. ‘ THE WRONG WAY. HEN one of the May Day mobs in Paris threatened to co into violent collision with the police, a blind French sold climbed into a stalled automobile and caught the attention ‘To the Kaitor uf Tue Evenirg World | transac jons that our e'ty ts turned in- It fe with great pleasure thet 3| 1°. “political garbage can,” and only through your undivided and exce! Write this note as 1 want to thank| 4, position that we can hi ; and your assoc! for ws | opin ia Pe sy ua Ser patina eee eee EDITORIAL PAGE Saturda May 3, 1919 BY ica Cassel How They ‘Made Good _By Albert Payson Terhune. cht 1910, by the Preee Publishing Co, (The Now York NO. 29 “ ROTHS« WILD: Who Made ‘Good as the World’s Greatest Baxker. | E began life as a money lender in the to of Frank- fort-on-Main. That was his first appearar at least in the world of fiuance. He had been preparing for { years for this goal. } He had prepared for ft by working day and night \ us au employce in a Hanover Kk. There, even when | he was making barely enough pay to keep seal and body together, forever saving moncy toward -¢ the future carcer he bad mapped out for himself. Aud, Instead of squanderin his fellow clerks he sp study of the banking business. nover bank. lowly his 1 mastering the banking waa is seant leisu such time in makin wily he t tle pile business an Slowly he w theortes of nis own on the subject, which he intended some day te increased. work out. ily was preparing to make good. “Rothschild,” by the way, was not bis nama He was named Mayer {Anselm Bauer, You shall hear, presently, how he oh 4 to change tt for the name which he later made a symbol for anking. After hard years of toil, the bank employee had gether a little money and a great doal of knowledge, He dec both, ia his native city. So he came back to Frankfort; and there he opened i a little money-lending shop in the Judengasse, { He called his shop by a fanciful title—"The Sig And folk took to calling him “Red Shield," from this odd shop sign. Provently, he was no longer known as Bauer, but as Red Shiett—or (in German) “Rothsehild.” By this time, he bad won a high repute for bownnwerrewg, himself and for his small business, He won this Began Life e$ reputation as much by his absolute squat sas i voney- Len. } by his brains, He bated crookedness in any form, } erry Clients learned by degrees that they could trust Rothschild’s word and his business of none of his competitors, methods as they could trust those | Such qualities, backed by brain and industry, steadily Lifted Rothe sontia out of the petty money-lender class and lifted him to the pinnacle Jot his profession, His fame travelled far beyond the ghetto, He was making good, at a time when hundreds of tricksters und sharp-dealers were failing. He shaped his money-ioan establishment into a bunk ng house which soon was the foremost in all Frankfort. Then, for the firet time, luck Jontered into Wis life, Hitherto, he had made good simply by honesty ~~ © and work and ability. i Napoleon had conquered Germany. In 1806 a danny “French Army occupied the province Himks Cassel, The Elector (ruler) of Hesse-Cassel had ag a Reputo j ion for Honesty a fortune of $5,000,000, concealed ——ernrrry ois palace. He was in terror lest the French find and confiscate this money. } Remembering Rothschiid’s name for stanch honesty, tho turned the $5,000,000 over to ine banker, offering him the use money without interest if Rothschild would find some lit until the departure of the French, Rothschild calmly accepted the trust. safo place to hide He spirited the money away and release him since it would take him! ty at°% | some time to recover. perfectly tures to fill the minds of children with od Jimbs are left somewhere in Franc: murders and abductions.” yy : Yet he wanted her ao, and he was| ‘The least you cun do, you who stay| "Mweon't Otee, the fate Russtan mald,| oat acacia, ne velar ere. not to blaine for war crucities, Finally|#t home and are perfectly sound, is] oected off in a drosky through the! genet 0 ee ee pel | ne decided to face the meeting and io it ‘MM alone when they want) guess. eve Storm by Black Sergius, of the Seeret AAR RN NE RIOT IT NTT TM given our Wille an idea of tis room, and the other children pretend own ef the crowd. He said: | hid {t—some stories say he buried it under a rubbish heap in gunien, oy | or assed before the Kiector felt safe enough fre he F invade: 'l cannot see you, but I feel that you are honest working | Es pi rong tees Nees of his pole Re eee eens ‘ men and women. Let us disperse. | have lost my sight, but Rothschild and his sons, meantime, had been using the $5,000,000, on \ I am not sorry, for it has served my country and yourselves, | safe investme: in their banking business, There was no legal wa But I should regret eternally if French blood flowed to-day.” whereby the ctor could have forced them to give it back, had they ral chosen to keep it. And suddenly, instead of an angry mob, there were only Yet, in 1823, when formal demand for the cash was made, the bank patriots who bore off the blind soldier on their shoulders not only paid at in full, but added = eel of five fer cent. for every : > - - m had been in the possession the Rothsch On the same day in New York soldiers of the . A. wer | _ = — — _ — ——- Leatiiillal Ms LAD elesadickn themselves in violent collision with the police and even ee rou] A Gc r 1 a ie h 7 l ii h W t fm uniform were roughly handled. | L a n a ée a if ie a m L y u (63 i é é ai r e Ss Ss Why? | ° Co gE Ds ga Oi Cri led Soldier By Roy L. McCardell By Bide Dudley ie lawless £ Tt : AH iers rashly resolved thomselves into) ‘ Copyright, 1919, by the Press Publisbing Co, (The New York Evening World). Copyrtamt, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) @ lawless force, hat they did so with the idea of rallying agains J 4 . gp ange ile ai y ee 1 be . ig against By Sophie Irene Loeb ai Jarr Finds That Child Culture Pastimes May Apparently She Has Her Own Ideas About This vlessness does not alter the fac hey were 4 0; < 5 ‘ 7 2 f, ‘ ;, Tewlees force. In conflict with the police they suffered as any Li geiiged po hadith ete age lar salt Baars a Be Too Strenxous as Indoor Sports. Proposed Transatlantic Air Trip. he police they sufferec y olher Vv Hy "3 ” ‘i ; AaWheee ¢ ‘i u y SBESETOG GA ORY :0U! True Love Counts Not the Cost of War He ERE'S another indignant per-| Soviet? And was the dynamiting of | ¢¢ SBE by the papers,” sald Lu-)he does is to ‘try to tell me that a pa ‘orce must expect to suffer. | HE other day, as I was riding in| take hia medicine, whate it was.| son writing to the paper, pros | the Bolshevist Nut Sundae Assocla- cile the Waitress, as the| hydrophobia-plane is a boat that a __- The dangerous anti-American influences a st whict the street car, 1 saw assing | Whe: “Sh | testing against those terrible|tion done without any casualties siendly Patron wiped some} flying machine s behind it £ against which ese] @ passing | When he landed, he telog ed her} y pe soldiers rallied are indeed menacing. ‘They must be dealt with. bat] taxicab, i {to meet him and asked to marry her [axing pees ows and ihe Aste whe ever?” asked Mr. Tart neal aes off Mua lane i ef Ms ea Bool ee tee one quiet look of come | ‘i ack ol 4 , : The first thing | forthwith |they have on the minds and morals] “Why yes; a regiment of the Red they're tal @ a cean | te ‘ \ , they must be dealt with not by self-constituted posses and patrols of that struck my 0 snare of chi 1 Mrs, Jarr. ue's| Guards were wiped out by the ex-,air Might. I'll et we'll hear of one| “‘Say,' [ s, ‘where do you pick } 2 , He did not prepare her for his ap- | the hot-headed. They must be dealt with by the law an inte eye was air of perfect! right toa losion,” replied Mra. Jarr. “But Red/of those birds landing in Dublin,/up such ideas? How is a aeroplar j ) y the law and it vintad y a pa | pearance, but thought it was best for y pi ." replied Mrs, J d ¥ ator | agents—coolly, impartially, inflexibly. | crutches in the} her to get the shock and give her| “What is her heart broken about?"| Guards are SO brutal looking with|Newfoundiand, withlu @ month.|folng to drag a boat behind it whem = / ff | Mebeeh unaathccses and : corner of the cab. | yerdiot asked Mr. Jarry. “Has she invested in] thar long whiskers and then the| That's their rejective point, isn't it/ it is flying over land? | 8 horized and precipitate interference on the part of | On the seat I saw! 1¢ ghe loved him enough, he argued, | fl! and gone pocket broken, which} heroine, Countess Olga, was carried) not?” WAake Che Ge OF AINE seee Soldiers or civilians cannot be justified, it may be a measure of the) a eoldier and 4| she would act accordir He rea, 228 made her heart broken? She] off by the treacherous Black Sergius.| “You mean Dublin, Ireland,” sug: sie} he says, ‘when the sea js go | need of more systematic vigilance and action on the part of the O wil Bib tad HOF soned. that lie tind <aoed the: Boohe | Mould Maye Rept her ipo met OF | But whan did YOU me tt pesiag: the Feeney Oak CGN ar oenanlt too bec? I ] ernment against the anarchic, sed j | rm around hi8 and stood in front of death and had MOviNs pietures. Then wou! “I didn’t see that one," replied Mr. rite your own ticket—I never ; ee a laste surd just = archic, seditious and violent elements which} shouiders and they |come througit, und he would have to (Neither be heart nor purse broken.” | Jarr, “but 1 saw the others litte it,|did understand the Irish question, Pena ice Huet vepeegind oe have roused the anger of Joyal American appeared very liake whatever came. “Why do you talk so foolishly?"| mut what would you have substituted | Lucite went on, “As for the state of | talk didn’t bother me a bit. Then i | | | ame, ; if threw the switch and shoot the tral 24-5 = | hap | Of course the girl was shocked, of | °Sked Mrs. Jarr, is woman's pro- | for the child to play, if they can't| Newfoundland, it's funny, but 4 al- Heit ane train ‘ er 2 | sing the girl caURM | course his appearance ved her, {esting agminst the evil influence’ play the good old dime novel stutt| Ways thought ltcaaace place mhere og capyaraalt eno aato another tract. 8 that faint noise somewhere our old friend Carranza? « and evidently my unconscious |i here w ; tho moving ictures exert; 8he) that “a h ov |they raised dogs—you know, the! : o { r ? |but here wns @ fine spirit, she told 8 iat is now blamed on the movies? ¢ Pimnnae KE Coat ee ——_——+ smile, for she smiled back at M& | nim that Govsn't say she lost any money. She} “There are b ss that in-| big, black, shaggy ones that will bite anner, ‘what you going to } 4 iat nothing mattered, that she here are beautiful games that in-| oa } | In that quick transference of woud na ‘i only objects to cortain kinds of ples | cite the imagination of children along|¥°U in a minute, On the level, that ONLY THE ACTUAL TAX enought eperes us one lanend tn MOM! IMAFTY BIN NOW ANd He ee a aurona on [CU ete a atcck Raa trat“ene| what T thought about it But wiewy| "Tl take two egen’ ne sav sary | || . the direction of the crutches and then . the n children, $} s sha! society of Ch I heard {t's a regular peninsulter with | one on one sido and the other on the a Ini And a fear came over him, Goldicr |* 8 of children, $ y Society of Child Culture recommends: i ) HE Internal Revenue Burean issues a reminder to retail dealers! 4t te Seldier-man, as much a8 t/t ne . ne i ae : has ecarcfully inve ed the mat+! ‘There are those delightful games, for| real towns politicians and everything bare | { : i dl alors | ey Wouldn't you if vou were mer| tat he was, he could not stand pity, ae a F eraon can go blaw on| “Now, you know and I know, Uncie that overcharging any one of the new luxur ‘ hod he as \ : and he would not be married o ter and she has found tat the chil-| instance, about minerals and botany, | Funny how a py Mintcte Bp ehy on the new luxury taxes (so catied)! 1 somehow knew what that girl wae LIA OGr) BE TR REAR) GRE A Est Sug wild: Abate: tha: mmovitiel hey 1 such knowledge if they don't study | Archibald, that he oughtn’t to never may render dealer or clerk liable to a { of $1,000 j thinking, SHURE OF Ae SEB Ne ele ner eee BAR ce h “} r t hen th i: ve ee este Wat? are areioris | history, eh?" jsald that, It's old stuff, So I just | cea a es A ¢ fi f $1, aa one ane ginod Anse. picture shows that, whe vey oat strata, and havo lain for ages|? 2 nya te ‘Hub, yc ‘a! ene year’s imprisonment | he was trying to ke him fee! that |"gye wanted him, and she knew that | haven't the money. to RIS gel sarang coal foe nabes EMBL That | "Yes, indeed! beet te ral Bole heh you must ‘a! | ,The years of war greatly emboldened unscrupulow ail right at his side. cee aie mes |relgned, he would return to himsale, |febbere und notes and ounlpwe BOO) Bulletin for Child Culture, X aul meri | earoplane pen diet flies over bes | minstrel show twenty years ago,’ ag " ous 4 , And so I could go on and tell many | Indians and pirates and train wreek- | for, printed, The games the week be.) ® fe “TH have : ‘ : ? aie nome tt R handle alatuiees & roots begin to I have to admit,’ he says, ‘that in the practice of adding to every penny by which they were | To me It was a beautiful piety Inalancee On the od eee tatty | ore and all thoxe dreadful things that| fore were ‘Fricads With the Flowers, | {ore 1919 ends and the poste begin to] | lt have t® admit,’ ms ‘that \ Mie entfitad to-inovonan. the « ) oving picture, at which no one thee ¢ ab jokuken ure | write poeins about Little New Year| di ink you were twenty years ly entitled to increase the price charged the consumer from {wo! could take offense is all wrong for a girl 'to rise to a| Mey have seen in y and one child would be a ana | old. You only look about nineteen, *to ten cents more for their own extra profit, That some dealers wilj| Althoumh love is the loaf of Ifo and Merle occasion under a spell of | ay bi ant s se he ata Ro ae me Bi arte of tebe se : "They was a fellow in here awhile} “Well, what could 1 do? Him the i ' atriotism or p d jo r. Jarr ‘ ne stop to think | proug 1 historica ; » see @ similar opportunity in overcharg the tax to ignorant or| {Mc of Ws Reeds a alice, yet in th ATO USE ane ive 1 bd ee WF as aitiaven Gived thby Re re rob a ” a aes pms Se he al zo who knew @ lot about navagrat-| saying such nice palaver at me and dey g he ta o igne Doe eae eres f one who might later be a burden to! that children played the ere rob-| The dates o} ars 0! ose t thing} me trying to squelch him wit thinking customers is only too prot case of the crippled soldier, it is most |°P eel anarnpilee Ad GlRitGacandiiqware ltpenane is ling the air, I don't think, First thing welch him with wit | uni - ng custom! ; is nly too proba saiadid eles Mowind baw sank Hor Hesides she is doing an injustice | vers a I poll ; th deceit ie ay prone: Wop WP. ABATE: A a “ and Wisdom superinstructed with a ; ne long period of rising prices has had upon the publ Beets leu te ne {to the man, Jingians to no hanging | too. |= vais little pep, $ #0 sort of flovey that : 2 ad upon the public inind capped he might be pursult of 1" J ; rdens of Babylon were opened un-| “And 1 suppose our children were! he stars, and as they ihe ail @ perchological effec ae ainena He é et tt is splendid beyond all gm gard t lon 4 r 1 n¢ app! ‘Nd labout seeing the stars, « is T just tau 8 Py h logical effect h the practices of the prot | tev > a8 happiness, he wets naturally’| sve tor the individual wherever peas | 4 nity? I know | delighted ut taming the wild fows| were noisy about it, I jet them «o out| 7 on eee freer. People are so usec tA nelda at this ap thar} ieptehd p wave him sufforing 18) inte to whett lovo i the 0 ! \itul, despers jers?” ventured Mr. Jarr, lin the hall to. play it, So you see, by heigho! L saya, sipping bh pri f this or that has indeed a noble thing. he direeth t ® extra butter @ cor ont gone still higher the profiteer ¢ easily tt 5 2 re 2 eager {of the maimed one and make him fe characters long re any -| “No, Lam sorry to say it did nov ins |these science games do incite chil- i feaaelonepn he compliment. Mey ranind rales hor usily k on an extra and 7 now of ther soldier, & YOuNs| gop, his deformity in his efforty to | mated photographs were heard of. | terest them as much as I thought it | dren's mental faculties!" m exactly tweniy-elgh here an with countering much protesi,| *viater, Who had been wounded many | make the world safe for democracy. “Well, MY children sill nots” sald} would,” said Mrs. Jarr, “Willie want. | “1 haven't seen as yet, but Tl take) “He just looks up 4 ays: ‘Oh, T When the buyer is told t a Government tax, nis! Ue He suffered distiguration. His)“ Another thing of great iinportance| Mrs Jarr. “Of course, Ihave to take/ed to ‘be a nettle and stick pins 1 | q peek," said Mr. Jarr. wouldn't use the word “exactly,” It instinct of resistance is sti! ’ teeth were all knocked out and hit} ig ty wquetch ci in connection to the moving pictures, because | his sister, But the children do like | So he slipped out into the hall and | sort o' ties one down to fucis ae iahanias pvervhoay ia ti arm dimbled, but the doctors std) with the crippled onc they just worry the life out of me if t|the game in the last Bulletin, "The |tocked down the stairs, Johnny | weil, that bur r f , ‘ Ybody to inform himself a3 to the exact amount} he Would tn thne r pover completely.| sos: unpatriotic indeed ts the per-| don't, and, besides, nome of the films) Stars at Playtime'—that's the gumo | Qangle was rising up and down trom | another color. Now ng be en 4 application of the commoner of these luxury taxes and see : Te ne ie went a he was en-| son tops to gaze on the unfor-| ar al interesting. ‘There was one| they are playing now, I think, Little |q sitting position in a chair t the | lieve maybe I'm o wants * he is not cheated in the name of ar Pete A 6aged to marry a girl and looked for-| tunute cond! of one whe aa{ tho other day, "Phe Bolshevist’s Bride, | Johnny Rangle is playing it with | children had taken to @ lower landing, | oight—you know, j : f Uncle Sam for some dea . " no oN | i s A profit r ward $0 the say whee he sod re-] proved his patriotism by that very! in which a beautiful young girl, nare| them, and our Wille fag our little land he was chanting: “I see stars! | righ 1 will give him my hardest - turn and make her his bride, When! condition, ried by force to a Bolshevist, throw! Emma are greatly excited over this |] gee stars!" look, aR Rets | 98 nin Kay nore ee ship, he wu -| 1 am told that tho Vicinity of| 4 bomb at a meeting of ‘The Secret) FAM fle By hay Wad pee . jm Suddenly Master Jarr pulled the) wapiston atister, 1 enya, ‘Why Part cf Denmark Still Believes Dr. Cook Did It.-—Headl dered how she would take him in his/ one of the Deburkation Hospitaly tue! Soviet,’ because it had ordered her to] #rm™ with children they get to like Jehalr from under him and the viel! nouid I pay any atteniion to-your oT PANRAEN AUS! Bal J K Dic eadline, | present condition, soldiers With artificial ariny and leas| marry, @ conspirator he loathed, for] Mora! and Improving games Just a8! pumped down hard on the floor, While | yy net | ike , d in that oft-quoted state, He thought he would write and tell] MUS! weds cone cut after mighttail| all her love had been given v0 Duke well as those dre atu brutal ones the | with shouts of merry glee, Little Miss MUberng? 1 like men Ww - rains —_—_———— order to eacrcise 4 earn to’ use . ; he moving pletures inspire.” a ful of milk ‘in his) © helpers aD } haven't : her and let her decide, so as to save! thon. feta a learn ¢ Ivan, the banished young nobloman| "O¥I96 & Jarr poured a cup! af ; : » because of the motley gage of | Ys om s ‘ “LT suppose so," sald Mr, Jar. | 6, “ , pe the | 80t brains, but you couldn't bu; Letters F rom thai Re ‘ | nim the pain of discussing with ber| the ile carious i {or the old regime, It was MOST in-| , Pe Tarr. | face and orled, “ANG ROW YOU #08 TAL Ot Or litene tor a costie’® ede a 1e¢ eople. } is maimed condition, Stay away, gentle reader, It in the| teresting. But 1 do think they should| 120%, e.° tla” asipenomy OA aitny War Mir NARI RATAMAL Cd : ae Pliments Kvening World om)'7-Cent Doughbag Exposure. It is| Again he thought of asktog her to Most Merciful thing you can do, They| not pe permitted to h sving pice | Pee Mr, Jarr groaned and then called Imagine that squcichod him, > Donghhag Bxpenuri | thoowe such diity and indecent suffering enough in the refloction | Nt be permitted to have moving pic-|" «why, one child goes out of the! out: “Bay, my little lambs, run out | id the Friendly Patron, “Say, dearle,” replied Lucile, “you don't need much imagination to do that, All you got to do is close your eyes, whistle and run gisdtecn blocks, Good night!” on the street and play policeman and robbers! Some of you'll get spinal trouble from these refined and tn- structive ethical sports of child- hood!” ‘