The evening world. Newspaper, June 3, 1919, Page 22

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Baa.” EDITORIAL PAGE Tuesday, Jume 8, 1919 DailyeesMagazine Bachelor Girl Reflections‘ By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1919, by The Prem Publishing Co. (The New Tork Brening World). OST h@sbands occupy about the same position of importance around M the house as the Vice President of Germany. | “Reforming” wouldn't be such a painful thing- in a busband if he wouldn't insist on climbing up on a pedestal and beginning to give everybody good advice the minute he stops setting a bad example. . 18, Pitbliahing On, Evening World.) Te . ott Rew ¥ | Bettited ‘Dally Broept Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 63 tc » New York. President, ¢3 Park Row. ’ Pv! sods HEMT Seteesiats hel Fore MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRess. PF ge ER KB RR ER Ry Bead 7 WOUUED GB. cc cccicscctsdiccssdecccesessceus NO. 91,108 WHY WAIT FOR WORSE? | f OMB outrages in. eight American cities, showing evidence of! an extensive if not nation-wide plot, startled the country this, morning. | It was hardly more than a month ago that a batch of infernal | machines addressed to capitalists and Congressmen was discovered, in the Post Office of this city, while several more of the deadly instru-| | ments were delivered in different sections of the country through the mails. ‘This time the assassins did not trust to the mails. ‘They planted _ their bombs in person, and it was only by extraordinary good luck) tit the Attorney General of the United States in Washington, Judge > _, Nott of the Court of General Sessions in this city and Judges and others in Boston, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia and Paterson, N. J., were not killed in their homes. As it was, there were several victims. _ The time has come to cease speculating as to where the guilt ot} euch owtrages specifically lies or whether this group or that group of ultra-radicals and Anarchists are the more dangerous. ALL anarchy, ALL violent radicalism, ALL Bolshevism i highly dangerous at this time, since out of their ferment come these concerted and repeated attempts at wholesale murder. Many Anarchists in the United States are well known to the Federal authorities and to the police of the principal cities. Their movements from place to place are noted, their plans in many cases _ suspected. Why are they left at large? | Judge Nott was the Judge who tried the Anarchists charged with attempting to blow up St. Patrick’s Cathedral. The New York Police at that time showed no little knowledge of the identity, gather- ing places and habits of Anarchists in this city. It is time all such knowledge was used and used drastically for} the protection of the community. Lock up the firebrands and the near-firebrands. Where there is doubt whether an Anarchist is actually dangerous or only ‘potenti-; ally 90, let the benefit of that doubt go not to anarchy but to the ; Make an {dol of » man and he'll tolerate you; | make a chum of him and he'll like you; make a baby of him and he'll propose to you; make a fool of him , and he'll adore you. r The most dangerous germ disseminators, accord- ing to masculine scientists, are kisses and money. Oh yes, of course—of COURSE! The only “er in which a woman takes any real vital interest! Love is like @ telephone conversation. You talk to each other and you say things—but neither of you can see the other's real self, nor tell what he or she really means. Don't fancy that a man is in love with you merely because he has lost hig heart—wait until he loses his egotism. Occasionally a woman marries what she fancies is a “rough diamond” only to discover that she has acquired a rhinestone. After all—better be a poor girl’s cash register than a rich girl's door mat! How They Made Good By Albert Payson Terhune | Copyright, 1919, ty the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Byening World). No. 42—HORACE MANN, the Father of Modern School ' Education. ¥ teachers,” wrote Horace. Mann in the story of his_ cramped boyhood, “were very good people but very poor teachers!” Because they were such “very poor teachers” Horace Mann resolved that future generations of children should have the best procurable teachers and the best known methods of education, and he made good his resolve. | He was the son of a poor New England farmer. Ho had a passion for study and almost no means of gratify- | ing that desire. By odd jobs he was able to buy one or two books, and in such times as he could be spared fro; farmwork he learned eagerly everything his “very poor teachers” could tel: 'n m. But ali this left the boy with a hopeless yearning for more education, | Unable to satisfy the craving in his own youtb, he later made good by satis- fying it in the hearts of millions of luckier youngsters. By saving his scant earnings and by home study he managed to enter Brown’ University when he was twenty and to graduate with highest honors in 1819, Thence he took up law study and was admitted to tho f ———_-1+-+ —_ THE TERMS FOR AUSTRIA. panne |} Saved Mis Seanty T WAS a foregone conclusion that the peace terms to which me | Eaknings. i ban —r It 1s claimed that Horace Mann won 80 per cent. of the cases intrusted to him. He explained this by saying he never accepted a case he knew to be iniquitous, He was elected to the Massachusetts Legislature in 1827 and to Con- gress a few years later. Then, given his choice between the Governorship of Massachusetts and the Presidency of Antioch College in Ohio, he turned bis back on a politidal career and chose the college presidency, for by this time he had determined what his real lifework was to be, Ever since he had entered the Legislature he had been tolling toward the fulfiment of that early resolve—to improve America’s educational system. Says ‘his biographer: * “He not only labored to improve the schools and the teaching, but he gave lectures and wrote papers which showed the value of education and told what poor chances there were*for it in this country and aroused a popular interest in it that had never before been felt. “He succeeded in having the school laws changed for the better and he made over the whole system whereby children were taught. He made a study of the best educational systems of foreign countries for the pur- pose of improving the educational system of America. “Horace Mann probably dit miore than did all other educators , = " philanthropists to secure good public schools the ohildren of his ive country. Until this time it was impossible for any except Austria must subscribe would make further impressive changes ; in the map of Europe. At last the great unwieldy Hapsburg Empire, the Dual KingJom with its constantly recurring rifts and racial conflicts, is definitaly | broken up on the triumphant, now dominant principle of self-de-| termination. Of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire, with its 241,000 square miles of territory and its 56,000,000 population, there will remain! Fair only an Austria comprising some 50,000 square miles and a popula‘icn of 6,000,000. Hungary, Czecho-Slovakia and the Serb-Croat Slovene} State are henceforth independent, and other former Austro-Hun- _®arian territories are renounced i:. favor of the principal Allied anu Powers, to be disposed of as they direct. : The proud Empire of the Hapsburgs is reduced to a nation Uttle bigger than New York State, with a population hardly greater than One Way to Test Friendship By Sophie Irene Loeb Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), eather People and the Kind That Stick to| Mr. You Through Thick and Thin. WOMAN friend of mine has just | iayed in getting started for a boat | had an experience which she| ride, and again she took the mat- | 66 explained to me somewhat as] ter very ill-natured and the whole follows: party was spoiled, In a word, it| “You know Miss| looked to me that she was a ‘kicker’ | G. with whom T]all the time, Whe things went have ‘een friends} well she was friendly and pleasant, The Jarr Fanily By Roy L. McCardell” Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The Now York Brening World), Jarr Advises That High Balls Be Packed With Moth Balls. OU can't go downtown in that old derby hat now summer {fs here!” said Mrs. Jarr firmly, “I have been reading in the papers that some rowdies have been ai 1th men wearing hats ings quite a flock of tiny moths fly out. “Don't mess everything up now,” advised Mrs, Jarr, who was dusting the piano and did not the flight of the moths, ‘Your straw hat is anne > Only Wealthy Could ‘wealthy Education. t of season the closet shelf betwi t Get people to give their children the educational ad~ “4 for m long, long| but when she was a little bit put out |" on the cl she een my fox ° . that of New York City! tume, that is we|by waiting or when things did not| “! wasn't going downtown in it, I| set pinned in the sheet, and the chil- vantages which aré to-day enjoyed in every “For the rest Austria must surrender her navy, convert her oraisers| into merchantmen, break up her warships now under construction and pledge herself to build no more submarines; she must accord the| Allied and Associated Powers freedom of transit through her terri- tories; her armies are to be disposed of according to later Allied cic- tation and the question of reparation is likewise left for subseqavnt grammar school.” 3 What nobler epitaph could any one desire than this clear statement? And how better could any one “make good” than did the man who gave | to innumerable children the advantages which his own chfldhood had lacked? This is not the place to deal with Horace Mann's fierce battle againet human siavery during his two terms in Congress. His flery speeches em that subject have become classics, He died in 1859 before the dawn of the wer which was to end live near each other | go smoothly, she was just ‘impos- and have enjoyed | sible,’ and proved the everlasting wet- the same things | olanket, and have seen & “On my way home I gave her a good deal of each | piece of my mind, for she had really other for the past) spoiled a pleasant trip for me and _ several years, now we aro friends no longer. “I thought she was my everlasting | «7 nave come to the conchision that was just going to step out and get the evening ers, to see how Ger- many is protesting,” murmured Mr, Jarr. “You were saying fat was fatal tof health and beauty. Germany doesn't think so,” “I'm sick hearing of those old Peace terms!” Mrs, Jarr declared. dren’a winter coats, in the brown paper wrappings.” But at this point Mr. Jarr drew out @ handful of flaky dirty, gum- ming cloth debris from a hat box. The first moths of the season had chewed his stylish, genuine-plush last year's perfectly good hat to determination; her nationals guilty of war crimes must be sucren- ered and she must accept the League of Nations covenant, under- ‘taking at the same time “to bring her institutions into conformity with the principles of liberty and justice and to acknowledge “hat the obligations of the minonty are matters of international concern over which the League of Nations has jurisdiction.” iy ae There is no doubt that the Austrian peace delegates will sign. _ The typewritten address which Chancellor Renner read following the ‘presentation of the treaty to the Austrians at Saint Germain yester- | day was in marked contrast to the tactless and arrogant performa f Brockdorff-Rantzau when the German delegates received the trea y at Versailies May 7. ; “We realize we are in your hands, but we ask in the Rame of humanity that you accord us the Wilsonian principles, recognized by all the Allies, ta dispose of ourselves. “We trust in your sense of justice and practical spirit not to demand that we be crushed. We are disposed to recognize friend, but I found that friendship is based upon a little more than just professing it, and this is how I found It out, “We planned a Httle trip together for a few days and in that short Ume I found of what stuff she was made, When arrived at the hotel, it seemed by some mistake the rooms I had engaged were given to some one else and as it was crowded we had to take some less desirable “Bhe fretted about it in a most unbecoming way and seemed to put all the blame upon me, I presumed mext day, however, we met some friends of mine who igvited us for an automobile ride with them. & good way to test friendship is to find out how people act under adverse circumstances.” My friend only found an old, old truth—that there are people who are fair-weather friends. When all is said and done, it is easy enough to have friends when there are pleasant times, but the friend worth while is he or ahe who can remain friendly | under trying conditions, The person who stands by you and smiles when things go wrong, is the one that you love the most and on whose friendship you count tn the that she was very tired from the|long run, trip and did not take offense, The | This is as old as the hills, A wise old man once told me that when be found any one who professed @ great liking for him, he always took him “War was all I heard about before we went into it, and it was all we heard after We went into it—with your Uncie Henry declaring what he'd say to the German Kaiser's face when be met him—and charging us a dollar a dozen for eggs! And now the drives to collect funds for things —Oh, dear, I wish I could start a drive for a fupd for @ family I know!" “Where is my straw hat?” asked Mr. Jarr, fumbling behind the dusty hat rack in the hall. “I hung it here.” “Well, it isn’t there—it would be a| pretty sight if it were, and our Wil- lie knocking over the hatrack play- ing it was an aeroplane,” said Mrs. Jarr. “I put the hat away, If I treated my things the way you treat yours I wouldn't have @ decent rag to wear, dust! Mr. Jarr had paid six dollars for it two years before, and then had worn it but a few times, Look at that!” cried Mr. Jar, “Are they moths?’ shrieked Mrs. Jarr, “really moths?" “Well, they aren't nightingales; they do not burst into song as they fly away, do they?" retorted Mr. Jarr, But Mrs. Jarr had buret into tears and almost fainted, “And after spending nearly two dollars for moth balls and tar paper bags, too!” she moaned. “Oh, that's all right, dearie,” sald Mr, Jarr. “They haven't touched the moth balls or tar paper.” Mrs, Jarr rose in her might and anger and selzed the dust brush, and Mr, Jarr fled and got him out. May- be that was the chance he was look- in the land he loved, but not before his system of education had borne rich fruit from one end of the United States,to the other, Interesting Notes From Japan LL forelgn users of wood ofl © Paint for ship bottoms and varnish refraining from buying, expect~|can not be successfully manufactured ng @ further dec se in thelin Japan. While before the war price of this comgnodity, The pur-| Japan exported annually about $°),000 chases now bein) to} worth of ordinary paints, yet since replcaish exhaust 1914 It has imported practically all of eee its varnish and sh ‘Tho war has greatly stimulated the | United States and Het ag the ria be |Japaneso fo undertake the manu- |facture of leathorand several large factories have been established in Tokyo and other districts, Owing to| °T! large fishing craft and has otiaérs | under way, which are along ndition of the live. | io ware: the undeveloped co! bad the coast of Siberia. Catches in these stock industry in Japan, practically ali the leather used in the manufac-| "te? ®mount to about $5,000,079 a Japan has recently completeth pev- | “| year, Our own responsibilities and accept our share in proportion “After we were out in the country |away on @ trip where the two would | But maybe it would be better for me | ing for. jware Of & eae ua tie olaadaas eee . + with the other great powers.” jquite @ distance, something happened jbe alone for a considerable period. | if 1 wasn't so careful of the few duds| “Hello, how ts it by you?" eried | fore been Imported. - ; A ny ree 2nd Industry han is: e f ” | | ee built b; 0 rT Bra, £ 3 4 the car which meant @ delay of If he could stand for me morn-| 1 get! Then, perhaps, I might get |G’ » a8 soon as ho si%hted Mr. Jarr. | 5 be Y POPlar subscription in i The Germans had not sense enough to see that this tone was| several hours. ing, noon and night under various | some new dresses once in a while!” |“Want to buy a box of case goods| ‘Boots and shoes exposted by Japan | Tox yo, 4 . the one to gain them most. It ts to cost $500,000 and rill be ted after s:-ailar instit. ; in Anerica, dyeing amounted to 853,608 4.8 ‘and during 1917 to 987,471 pairs, conditions,” he said, “and still re main my friend, I know that I could count on him, but if he quarrelied with me and found fault, under un- usual circumstances, it was my cue that he might be a nice acquaintance in the passing, but as a stanch and put it away till next when prohibition comes? ing out my bottled stock.", eee “Nothing doing!” snapped Mr.! Japanese manufacturers of machin- Jarr, “I'll never put anything away, |ery of every description are directing not me.” \their attention toward China, whose “You ain't afraid of them reform- | demand is steadily increasing. Jap- 4 - Z : “Our host and hostess were very Having been brought to ruin by German ambition, wrecked and gracious and as it was a sunny day, tevaged through German domination, it is fitting that at the last) #94 there was no hurry for us to get Austria should give free voice to her own instinct of what is best| mot’ (hey “id evervibing to make the for her in submitting humbly and completely to the conseque: ; neces the injured car was being repaired at | of a costly partnership. Unstable at its best, the Austfo-Hungarian 4 Bearby garage. . winter I'm clos- “Where did you put my little soft hat, then?” asked Mr. Jarr, “I put it in the box with your win- ter-clothes,” replied Mrs, Jarr, “I wrapped it up carefully in a tar paper bag and put in plenty of moth | balls. Yes, I did find it on tas hatrack, pe fon st eee Japan exports bean oll chiefly to Australia, England and tke United States, and the amoun: exported has greatly increased during the past five ‘, " ” as . ? ia | ‘ude stone crushers,|years, In 1914 4 i Pe friend, that was another matter,’ . and I put it away, and !! I hadn't |e" @rresting you? I got some oid! anese exports incl exports were valued | Bmpire with al) its pomp and pretense is but a memory, | Cae OU SAGAS SURE MM DOE Tete aniataa: cas pcie ther anak It would” have. been destrryed | Kentucky left that is amooth aa silk.” | electric Gynamog, and Gas plants, = [at | -4.3% while in 1918 they wele Sart . nd |. She e hi pele 7 “Pp, ” 3, “The destruction of every arbitrary power anywhere that can beh par fered tate apyc id with friends but with strangers ag|by moths, for the people next door| | "Pack tt in moth balls then! vole ab rh | ‘There are 15 electrical undertakings jin Japan, including 626 power planta, P 42 electric railways, and 48 companies Phir! [a srpere HA hap ware de- 22 a ng the past operating both power plants and]. tramways, This ts an increase of 40|__" Be Smount of odnsumztion by snarled Mr. Jaret. vice!" “My!" said Gus, “What are‘ you so mad at me for? Why is it that old friends is always the bitterest?” i Aad, . “That's my ad- separately, secretly and of its single choice disturb the pence of, far. She wanted to know every little xe world,” was iaid down by the President in his specc! count} While how soon the car would be y peech at Mount indi Fry | done and continually spoke about fetnon on the Fourth of July last as an indispensable condition of} trouble with automobiles; how she peace. must be just overrun with them the way-the dreadful bugs flew in the window when | opened it to air the house. That's always the way. What's the use of keeping out moths well. Get into a crowd, and the person who pushes and pulls or who is complaining and blaming everything ! local weav:rs has increased by 20, . body is usually the fellow mpanies over last year. The total! ).: y Sat M ; F never liked long trips anyway, &c.|0n very \ nalaibnes Ieaintnin beeade —_—_— eo! bales. ‘The old For # century and more, even including the later years of Avs-'12 & Word, she made us all feel very |Who would not know how to be a Hg Fd Pl then? se DENMARK PLANNING SELF-DE. |amount of Invested capital in these Japan's silk tye te things et Vi i uncomfortable, and only as we sat|sood friend. wd PENDENCE enterprises 1s about $388,000,000, in. 2 hanging: Pee eemnys Vienna had been among the worst of tho, Gown to an ‘excellent @inner, net To retain one's balance and good|, Mre Jarr not telling where sho! ©. 4. in carpentry and furni- | cluding $199,000,000 for power plants, esnoriing ore silk in manufac l- papaee mm an aS ra’ erel, sinister menaces to European peace. jfar from the place where the auto-;humor under exasperating circuin- bee put. Bie Br Ny Ohta Mrs TOE ture-making have been added to tho | $"%000,000 for railways, and $178,000,000 eanserial, ‘ been complete—but it bas left fougdations moe eee fink repaired, did ahe|stances is not only @ fine test of Copenhagen Technological Institute for those rendering combined service! ‘The amount of Japan's bean friendship _ “The next day we were @ Uttle de- a wolh gaa : box couch the lid of that popu- ere ant lee output during but of individual character uit 0 irs sbi Drom lee 30 insentp 0 bows. Glens the past year o> Waled at 46,100,009,

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