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wy World, ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Paeet Dusty Except Bunter by the Prove Pubtshing Company, Now. $8 to RALPH PULITZOR, President, 63 Park Row. 2 GU! \W, Treasurer, 63 re. Row, PU! R, Jr, Secretary, 63 i iow. OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, MEMRER meet TS te ees ctl” Tal ew ST ater end" ee toca! ewe eile WOLUME 59 NO, 21,112 TO THE HEART OF THE MATTER. 'E BELIEVE an overwhelming majority of the people of th United States have been in no sympathy whatever with eensational exploitation of rumors and reports regarding he alleged treaty leak. ‘Al most Americans have asked is to have the actual facts in fall view where common sense can coolly consider them. What ar: these facts ? (Mhe first and most obvious is that the most momentous treaty i: ' the history of nations is still unsettled, still unsigned. In a cablegrayr | reosived at the White House yesterday the Presidemt of the United | Btates, now in Paris, distinctly refers to the treaty as a documeni | the text of which is “still in negotiation and subject to change.” Tt is this incompleteness, this want of finality, winch has made it the President’s declared view, “highly undesirable to communicate fthe text of the document” and which leads him to say that “any one | )who has possession of the official English text hus what he is ceariy | not entitled to have or to communicate.” Speaking officially of the official text of a treaty in which other leading nations of the world as well as the United States are deeply coneerned, the President could not express himself otherwise. Great instruments involving important international adjustments have been treated with strict formality by those directly responsible for drawing them. They cannot, in their official form, at any stage be bandied about like penny bulletins. The wishes of the representa- tives of other nations as to publicity must be respected. The only publication of the contents of the Peace Treaty so far wathorized by the Peace Conference is the official synopsis of the ‘treaty made public by the Committee on Public Information. Obvi- ously no member of the conference could formally approve the pub Tieation of any further and fuller version of the treaty unless the ‘eonference had likewise authorized it. But Germany was not forbidden to publish the treaty as handed ‘to the German delegates or to permit copies thereof to go into neutral ooantries. Germany did publish tho treaty or parts of it and copies thereof did go into Scandinavia and Holland. Nor Mave the formal ‘Precautions of the Allied and Associated Governmonts to avoid | eonsiility or eanction for the circulation of the treuty text in ae their own territories prevented other copies from reaching London, E | Paris and America. f In the case of a document of such iniense, unprecedented _) imnerest the amazing thing would be that copies ehould be sold as ) freely as almanats in Germany while the entire public and press in France, England and America waited patiently for an edition with all the official seals. As for the copics of the treaty alleged to have been seen in i ) America, nobody has yet revealed whether they were obtained from the German version—which was printed in French, English and German—or whether they purport to be all from an Allied or When the Weak Will Not Fall by the Wayside, bu Pais t rye fee ae ey Peds reecation edeaonace ey Ae th Lesa atepeRr ey DEM ana ? ‘i y, “if it isn’t one thing | that ging so prettily in the next name was William 4 ‘i | American source, or whether they agree with the offivial text or Will Be Given His Chance {t's another!. Did you ever | flat, Her husband is @ busheiman ‘Thomas Jackson claimed # share in the discovery, but __- + 1 ™ ‘ E ol 5 2? | " r ~ ‘Pwhether they even agree with cach other. ‘The Senate investigation other day I was ins taotery (efferts shall be rewarded accord. | 0? such a landlord as we have? One) for s Fifth Avenue taller, she told Morton's is now more generally accepted than is either { 8 Where thousands of women’s| ingly | would think, the way be acts, we had/ me, but he isn’t perfidious at al, and of theirs) should throw light on these copies. ’ wither Re ate hits st don't want them to stand still, pei siete in bance vad and es ‘i » pays or eeeet pay the land- He began life as @ dentist in the days when dentistry was eccom- 1 So far e © copy o : 6 ike” \ | Decmuse they will be dissatiafied, and| SAS tO Move out'to-Gay, owing him) lord ite none of our business, : % ' ‘ ar as exhibited, the copy of the treaty picked up by th | shop prior to my/it ia wrong all around, | three months’ rent!” lthere! But what is @ dushelman?|Panied by enough pain to start a scandal in @ sixteenth century imquist. ; Chicago Tribune's correspondent in Paris which Senator Borul has coming, The matter] ‘Lam my brother's keeper to the} “Tt seem to moe that we could | I didn’t want to be inquisitive, but{tion chamber. Instruments ware i and ebay fay noes was in tte ‘ ‘ bad just been ad-|extent thi hardly owe him three months’ rent it|1 do know the Albions are not per-| early stages. The first college of dentistry had just been founded. ) 7 ab srced into th ha e P . in the position in which | a are er } foolishly and unwarrantably forced into the Congressional Record justed and the om-!f find myself, I have umwcan Dabiaa fF moved in yesterday and out to- | fidious!" Morton revolted at the need of inflicting so much torture on patients, ‘accords pretty closely with the official summary, ployees had re-| tunity to duy,” remarked Mr. Jarr. “At that “l don d he set himself to finding out some way of easing the pain. Nor did ) ) ’ ‘ y 90 adjust thelr demands | do not know what a bushelman | An One fact should be clearly recognized: The Senate of the United turned to work.|in proportion to what [ can do.” rate the landlord would owe us the| is, but ‘by perfidious Albion’ I mean | he cease’ from his researches and experiments until he had made good, : ) The decision had] 1 wish every employer could talk | MOMeY for nearly a month's rent—the | Angland, ‘That's what the Frenoh Up to that time the most agonizing surgical operations were pes # States has no right or reason to demand for its own uso any text of eon in favor of the/ to (his man and his employees, He | /*0@#onds always give you a month’s|\sed to designato her in the Napo-| formed without the use of anything to deaden the patient's torment, H Whe Peace Treaty save the one to be formally and officially traus- ee t would learn considerable as to how ihre Sea's tent leonic days, But now they are all True, the victim was sometimes dosed Into partial stupidity by tuge a ) M ad come to see | to satisfy his workers, ‘Not any more! They give you dis-| Ailies and love each other while they| draughts of brandy. But often this Increased his power of feeling pais | mitted to it aft he treaty has been signed at Versailles. — the proprietor ON) ‘The spirit of this employer iy nat- | P°%# BOW: that’s all they give you.| kick the slats out of Germany with] rather than diminishing it. Legs,and arms wets cut off S58 seks of teeth Deh ah tg ; oe “ another matter and] urally a part of the i Anyway, we've lived so long in this| Peace terms that Wall St were dug out—all without anaesthetics, Humane h 7 ses ‘ ‘ y instit s r reet gets a . i As to a “leak” which may or may not be real but which, plainly] was agreeably surprised at his views| the employees. know how he fein {Old dark barrucks of an out-of-date| Deck at before the Senate does.” Prenceneeienrennnny® Sactors (4nd -othen slentee Da eyeres. 18. veil and obviously, Senators lodge and Borah have been doing their] 4# Tesards his relation to his workers.|as to his relations with them flat that 1 wish we were dispos-| “I am not interested in Peace terms, Minis alge hiv ah th ee SEES SC SD nN: ee | ; 1 i the lit sturb- 4 ie eer D nfticting Torture he pUrpos: } sensational best to work up into a scandal that might serve the pur-| ance — rv ‘ . sai Dacia In the frat place, besides the moral | "ed! Why, up at 210th Street 1} except with the landiord,” sald Mrs.| banner? ‘orton begun by giving liquor to his patients } { Repub) ' _ anid PILLARS obligation, it 1s good business. ‘They |°#" S¢t Much nicer apartments for! Jurr, “And these are not the Napo- to levsen their agony, This failed, Next he tried } peees of Republican partiean-hip, the country is more and more = i ns poe shine Ry i napone, " o{ koow nat iC anything goes wrong, ae nome mney, with porcelain} leonic days nor the halcyon days, or|morphia. This, too, was unsatisfactory, ax was bypnotien, which he alse i sting . k "i jatter of c a ce of thi e best chance i) not slate or soapstone " . ! rou’ e But he kept on wit is experiments, ‘Thro over hi tical. A Sec State Polk declared ba + fay } n the anything like that m ,| datibled in ng over hit j meewtical, Acting Secretary of Stale Polk declared before the Senate kind, But in thie day and age it world for» fair agreement, since this| Washtubs” in at his real eatate Se Ril luorative practice he entered a medical college laboratory to continue his Committee yesterday that “there was positively no chance whatever | 4een't take long to get a thing ad-| DUC to make. a Oar Cone | pn ouldn't soupstone wpahtubs be | corner and pay the landlord the reat, | conroh for & true ghee tly, that small titi $ . * I ‘ justed.”* selence ‘8 COM") the best?” asked Mr. Jarr. “Then! since yo . He studied out the fact, presently, that small quantities of sulphurid that the copies of the treaty which have been shown could have been iH ‘ varie] , The world has moved on apacc,|¥U could wash the clothes by juat 6,204 sympathize so much with] einer could be inhaled with no great peril to the human system, and that secured from the Department of State.” 7 aa = oo et yet Justice is not crushed for a Neog runpin; the } 4 fede nb its use would throw the patient Into a state of unconsciousness, Morton j o State ous kinds of little troubles they have} ime L c i iu the hot water and rubbing | “gure,” uid Mr, Jarr, “I ¥ tracting painlessly a big back tooth from thi ‘4 * 4 P i I'll be com. | proved this by extracting p y ack m the mouth of a On the other hand, it is quite apparent that there have been | 24,hew they are settied nhs clive and let live” princip a8 family garmen(s agninat the 8040- | ing home with my @alary to-morrow | mun who had breathed these ether fumes, The date of this fret use of Se Bion ‘ Ta it all in all, however,” he) Ras come \o say, Never iin the hi bolt + evening.” anaesthesia was 8 a, 1946, ‘ ia a pleu en sources in Europe where copie casily be obtained| continued, “the biggest thing of all] %"Y of the world have the workers] “Oh, don't bother me!" inte tox “ Y known his discovery, he proved its worth by opera 7 i 7 id prainels ps pe hing of all! made as rapid strides in the interest " sale sot And pay the grocer while you are | ,, et tient, in the presence of a crowd of te § bepiy jewithout recourec cithcr to American or Allied custodians of tho] ™® employer is learning is that he| of their welfare as to-day Mrs, Javr Excuse me for being! avout it, too,” said Mrs. Jar, lessly on a tumor pa tet race Af ely doctors. b Mied custe 3 of Aho] | 7 n ‘ rud A'this le ¢ UE It, too.” sal J - 4 the process, under the name of " Btheon” and offered ity i an no longer pay, nor can he afford] At the same time, this emp! rude, but this is no time for joking!) — sy i " He patented ite wae, I treaty tc GBB IORENE Pay: TER. OMD D8 AR TPR CU TCL Egg ee pre Ran oad i exe madam,” said Mr. Jarr| free, to all charity Nospitals, i Th t and u wage in proper proportion tof (te, Peconstruction period will also| the month wad the landiord around 10 #0, since you Insist For some reason the discovery at first roused the wildest protests an i nese le lta as American common sens , i bring t orlm-| for the rent, 1 do believe t The next evening Mr. Jarr steppea| over the country, Then, as soon as its vulue began to be understood, his profits in business ciple worker must be) (°" '" SO BOMSYS HO ORMDHT to the real esta dozena of other doctors claimed it as their own. at sees them. Leet Ti etka the} Worthy re” and tere wie] oUt on the stairs the first mights| my ‘te te office nearby and} Morton's patents were disregarded. Not unt” ‘ 5 ther han relieve pete a . tere wal, | OVE oO , paid the rent to the agent of the x unt Be 4 Se 7 per 7 ‘ weed the individua; who|of the month so that he may wake | P@ Li the | arnmmmnnnnnen ® aftcr a twolve-yenr legal battle coulc “a The Senate investigation is under way. It should be shunted workman will dome to vealine, and be-| retards tho progress of the work to| people up ut daybreak like those|PTOPerty: Then the agent suggested | Discovery Aroused the courts to protect these patents, we ae piracks, liet Jt procood straight aheud into the heart of ihe een t tT” one, thet te, mat. make way for him who keeps pace.| andiords. in the old irish drumas| {M0Y dtp into Gue's and have a littic Wild Prote ever able to recover the vast royalties stolen me. 5 Pn er emee ee: On| SORRBY. A hire.’ ‘The thing can't) .064 bo applicable to both cides” ty | that I used to be wild about when| Something before Prohibition ended | mene him during these years of litigation. 2 matier uatil it has brought out such additional facts as imay sow] Possibly be adjusted on one sid like manuer, in passing it were worth |t was a Pay Your Rent or Out] Orever that refuge of the harred The French Governnent, meanwhile, ha, h P the truc nature of the tactics to which Scnator Lod i High wager and ineMciency willl while to note that when employers! you Go!’ and was always the hireling |e: Here they met Muller, tho] awarded cush prize to another man for the “discovery” of anaesthetics nator Lodge and his follow-| never succeed. ‘The carcless, unfit] he this man realize that y are . | efocer, a Man with a most remarkat ered Morton a gold medal for his so-called “ application of this ‘ ~ je{ their brother's keepe of the British Army and betrayed | esi ‘ : efused the medal, dec! die- fing have descended. worker, the moody or disagreeable f the |memory, for he knew to a ‘cent what Morton Ang —_ » declaring his was the “ai a ne, will gradually be replaced, ‘The! Not tall be the wesnide wee, Tul also | the patriots who, wouldn't pay thelr) ine jare bill was, Includi ‘i and not the mere “application, cal y ——| one uy Pe nee be ab os. airy fa | by the wayside but be given] rent to him and who hit him with| a ue bce ing the ba | zood. None the less #0 because others tried to ! Newest Notes of Scien SMD Gf COw BeMan Gti Coninenen clubs when he asked for it—and trish} “°C SNe from the week Previous, | vureie, Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote of his discovery red hie Ns . ance, reg : ¥ or res ‘orne bees “lWHY HE ATE THE CHICKENS | andlords always took the blood “And it's @ dollar sixty you owe m “The deepest furrow in the knotted brow of agony has been smoothed 4 Blectric fog sireny have been in Dritish scientiats have detected | ‘#ether because It is a natural law ty monoy of England, However, Chaun.| for them last rounds of drinks you| away forever a } Vented that can be beard for fuur-|'Mces of light m han $0 feet| 'o begin with snd Mike were passing a) SEPARATE Gia 1d Taine’ lowal to | had mit the bunch three weeks ago,” In his old age, after his claim had at jast been generally conceded, | mie under water “O> Cie other hand, there ts no buteher's shop where there was | °¢Y a : ; y tol aid Gus, “and ‘a dollar extry for a article was printed throwing discredit on Morton's life-work. Anger er a” | ee ate Ry 3 cae longer the question, ‘Am I wy 2 buir of chickens for sale, # real Irish St Bernard dog—which | ve ene tor u allver watch for the bene. | Abusive words brought on an illness from which the aged doctor died, ee A bicycle tire invented in Burope Nb on which figures arc! FY - buy them if you'll lend is one vnsolation! beg 0 ¢ ni e a . A 1 A “rc| brother's keeper The decent em me you t of the i: \ id 7 - ie made of closely coiled stec! wire, | Mde lo Move by electric motors have coupons,” said Mike, “and whoever| “Well, a landlord has to tive,”| 9; teomans) Widder, ‘which’ | same ; e. 6 | been patented “Ve! ployer to-day accepts the truth, ‘I\has the best dream to-night can cook! said Mr. Jarr soothingly, as Mrs,| Put Your name down for because you|Jarr returned home with $16 of his! “It's all right! I've paid them.” f gies pine attached to the rim of a} ea er am my brother's keeper,’ and it is then for himself to-morrow." Jarr stopped for breath, “and ours| “didn't know him, And here comes | salary and proudly narrated his finan- | Mr. Jarr "gad Rew plat! old meat firmly for| Electr § ‘ a. fe When they awoke in the m 5 ki aI 4 1 eee | “By laarving. ly fo Pmnernely. We Haape to carry out the real mean-| 5.1" Me iog his dream, © Morning | videntiy isn't in the pay of per-|Bepler, Maybe it is @ bill you owe! cial promptness. pla os 4 the week I let the yo ee sive cotton ‘ne the Susstion "dreamt that angels carried me|fdious Albion, as the landlords of| hm vich you want to pay him out of] wand is this all she money you SIV? the and meat bills stand and Ot. ain? carter’, al ae ty é nd milk and ice pay to a Roumanian scientis', am = perfoctly willing to seo{ up, Le DARE. i * the old Irish wramas used to be." — | the fortune somebody died and give to! me to see me through the week?" a Mrs, Jurr ‘Nowe Gary jams beds solely to & dectease in| Mult extracts have been found va}-| ‘Wat my employees get paid com- orig nd. Mine. want] "What have the Albions to do with | You" asked Mra, Jarr, regarding the $1) 02 have don © wha! a0 ule doe ndries in removing starch | Mensurate with ny business. As my! never Fae ot up, cooked | it?" asked Mra,Jarr, “Mrs, Albion] Mr, Bepler said there was a trifte| with scornful surprise, “How'll I Pet eo Mr. Jarr could see pe had sn nae profits. iner : ie bate tad aha Aagniccaitn bla . " for meats Ms, a 1 wus tbe } wit 75% sy mans ONDA Rona + ee haa ght ‘ i Dadar A seo 499.0 4. fe oupstnte, | wie Ben 8 ope (Ate teoman and Gertruag tye Mt . ROE AN oe bia bia ion b aha Bike i EDITORIAL PAGE Tuesday; Jume 10, 1919 as TTT ‘ Ned, abor’s Reply [E f The Employer Who Is His The Jarr Family Brother’s Keeper | By Roy L. McCardell 3 | Coprrizht. 1919, ty The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Brent World), By Sophie Irene Loeb Mr. Jarr Balls Up the Whole Domestic Fiduciary Coprright, 1919, by The ome Publishing Oo. (The New York Bventng World). | Situation t 66 “) ‘Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1919, by The Prese Publithing Co (The New Tork Kvening World) 4! Being the Confessions of the Seven-Hundredth Wife Concerning the Inconsistencies of a Man in Love Y DAUGHTER, who is so inconsistent, who is 80 astonishing, wha! if so contrary as a man-in-love? . Behold, when he saith nothing he meaneth exceeding mach. Yet, when he talketh much gush, peradventure, he meaneth nothing. When thou art cruel to him he is humbler than a' stage footman. ; But when thou art OVER-kind to him he is colder! than a New York spring and more coy tham a park squirrel. So long as he believeth thee to be toying with him} he pursueth thee boldly and imploreth thee to marry him. ' 2 But the moment he suspecteth thee of desiring to{ ‘imarry him he barficadeth himself behind a trench of: reserve and a curtain of caution, ethan GA kae He \s SO impregnable! He forgiveth thy most glaring faults magnanimously and is blind tp all thy real defects. i Yet will he cover thee with scorn and contumely at the commissionéet some chance faux pas and quarrel with thee bitterly over the way tin which thou handlest a tennis racket, playest thy hand at bridge or powdpr- est thy nose in company. Shouldst thou commit a murder or rob a bank, he would stand stanchly by thee unto the bitter end, Yet will he threaten to leave thee forever because thon LAUGHEST at him at the wrong moment or permittest the tea to grow cold or wearest @ gown a quarter of an inch lower than his ideais. He calleth always at the UNEXPHCTED moment and is astonied that thou art not arrayed and overjoyed at his coming. Yet when thou art adorned and curled and powdered and perfumed and waiting, he summoneth thee over the telephone at the last moment to say that he is “delayed at the office” and must break his appomtment with thee. ‘ When thou speakest seriously, he kisseth thee upon the chim and answereth in baby-talk, saying: “Does it bozzer its little head about ze naughty League of Nations?” But when thou babblest nonsense for his amusement, he taketh thee seriously and is exceeding shocked. He calleth thee his “Guiding Star.” and assureth thee that thou art th One Wise and Infallible Woman in all the world. Yet in the next moment he pooh-pooheth thine opinions, until thou, feelest like unto a babe with only one prain-cell or a candidate for thé “Home for the Feeble-Minded.” He is filled with bitterness and jealousy toward the chance stranger who glanceth at thee; yet is more cordial than a wineagent toward his one and only rival. He admireth thy gpot and the shape of thy nose and all thy foolish Uttle ways. i Yet the books which thou readest are always “piffle;” the plays which thou likest are always,“trash.” and not one of thy friends is “worthy of thee.” Verily, verily, in all those things which matter not and his happiness he is more tyrannical than a spoiled baby. Yet in all matters of great import he layeth himself dowa, a sacrificial MARTYR, on the altar of thy whims! ‘ And lo, he goeth all through his life, wondering why no woman “UNDERSTANDETH” him! Selah. How They Made Good | Ho By Albert Payson Terhune Copyrizht, 1919, by The Press Puptishiag Co, (The New York Brenig World), F No. 45—WILLIAM MORTON—-Who Banished Pain by Anaesthetics EX'T time a dentist's drill sets your nerves to dancing in agony stop for a moment to remember that it was a dentist who discovered anaesthetics, and who thus made good by taking away the pain from surgical operations. He was a benefactor to mankind, this dentist who His "do not concern” Shia I