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EG hanasl : ) EDITORIAL PAGE Monday, July 28, 1919 _——- -—- -- - -— . eens é A ¥ Sayings of Mrs. Solomon: By Helen Rowland 7 [The Day of Res ‘ pie Let the Summer Girl Be Sung in Poem and in Story— fg But I Know Her Futility, and There Is No Dan- “i ‘ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCTATED PRESS, E | \Af in Her. r : ee SPE ATS SE LBS al om HATE op sd : aie a a te ee { OW, My Daughter, there came unto me a damsel of Babylon, arrayed ® VOLUME O0.s....sscsscceessessevesessasess ost NO: 21,160 N dene VO wok lest Die em bp Sem wed oor” a than an ice creafh soda advertisement. , } And I questioned her, saying: i} hs “How now, thou Tempting One? Why .lingerest thou in the torrid town, while the sea and the bling brooks and the mountain streams and the'water~ falls and woodlands are calling, and the fishermaidens of Babylon are casting their lines in pleasant places, where the fishing is EASY?” But she silenced me with smiles and answered me softly, saying: : “She,my Mother, Thou hast been deceived by false INDUSTRIAL PROGRAMMES. -NDUSTRIAL democracy—partnership in industrial production. ¢ They are already great watchwords of the post-war period on _.™ oth sides of the Atlantic. No one remains long ignorant of _” what they mean. ed From two interviews in The World yesterday—one with the : President of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, Sidney Hillman, TE) the other with Basil M. Manly, Chairman of the National War Labor “qa + “Board—the reader could select definitions and predictions converging 3 & o. oY Sands lotees rf hed wrrn re ae ede oes signs. Let foolish damsels answer the call of the wil has ae j att begin i ret cha summer resort and go forth upon the Love Chasé anf "seedy ta Tne ener erie curectien, tnd H the Husband Hunt in the land of skimmed milk and profi { ! ] & BAaGAGE \ ages are no longer to be made the subject of: bargeining N - artigclal honey. @oclares Mr. Hillman. “That belonged to the old days, wi the}, ‘But as for me, I will cool my forehead in the breezes of the root _ -union..was struggling for its existence. Collective bargaining was oo Babylon, and steep my spirit in the solid comfort of # ay part of that struggle. Now.the real problem is to ascertain how much vere H “4, } » “For, I say unto thee; it is not by the lonely sea nor in the mountain 4] ‘ oe a, sg ep we Ba y pe opecdenopnage fastnesses that the BEST fishing aboundeth and the Good) Fish are plen-, oa iy MET arly es tos. of am wintha'ts tance epee us liful; but In the canyons of Broadway and Fifth Avenue, where they have’ books to you, and we can decide whether my business can ' been left, even as the Family Cat, to seek their own diversion." afford to meet the advance,’ “Yea, HERD are all the tired business men, and the lonely bachelors, & “Now, on the contrary, it is Iabor and not business which and the summer widowers at the mercy of the cabaret girl and ‘ie root-- garden siren, and the flirt in stenographer’s clothing. jee 3 has the first lien upon, the concern’s income. The question is pi fo icager one of bargaining; it ts a-matter for scientific tn- “And sual I ieave MY Beloved, also, to be devoured and Yamped and annexed by one of these? , qalry conducted before an impartial chairman.” Chairman Manlf is every bit as positive: “Nay, verily! For there ts a better way. . “We must have a set of industrial principles, They “I shall let HIM go forth to the summer resort and care not, “1 shall eend him upon his way, rejoicing and without fear! ‘Mist conform to the ora of industrial democracy which “For the damsels of the seaside are covered with sunburn. and freckles and ennu! and limp clothes; but the sirens of the city are covered with’ powder and perfume and guile and impudence and fluffiness, © “Go to! Let the Summer Girl be sung in poem and in story; but I KNOW her futility, and there is no danger in her, “For her locks are always as sea®eed, and her nose a shining light. Her arms are as twin sunsets, an@ her throat as the Aurora Borealis, “Yea, though my Beloved wandereth beside her in the moonlight, he ey shall be perfectly safe! “and, when he returneth from his exile, he will greet me with glad- t ness and rejoicing, exclaiming: . “Verily, verily, Little One, thou lookest GOOD to me!’ ‘The industrial congress I have in mind will be which workers and employers may discuss the partnership of profits and management which must be ac- cepted to insure national peace and safety.” There is'the programme—thus far so definite and ‘assured in ‘its presentation as almost to inspire faith that somewhere in its un- ee era ee rns ee ore iy ‘There may be doubt whether the man who built the Great _ ‘Northern Railway system and opened up the Northwest, whose vast jects provided jobs for tens of thousands of people and homes millions more, would ‘have found his vision strengthened by tific into his dreams conducted before impartial boards. a . a Ty F Gry eel “For I shall be unto him as refreshing as a shower bath utter a 2 ~ Tt is a question whether, at a later period, the world’s greatest manu- dusty motor trip, and more bedutiful than a “Two-seventy-five’ sign gn a ‘ _ facturer of motor cars could’ be where he is, paying such astonishing long road. i ‘wages, if he had had to share all his earlier plans and profits with , abltoee he first amployéd, «Mhax! might bave been collectiv cautious, less courageous, shorter of sight. ‘tony There have been thousands of lesse' James J. Hills and Henry “Then, let the Foolish Damsel depart in the Open Season gpd Aesert in the hour of danger. Piss “But, as for me, I shall stay upon the JOB!” Ses % de, - Selah. ad _ sHords in the upbuilding of American industry, the ol ° ° ; : ; 4 “Aner wah te toadeing of Ameren open Thi Lucile the Waitress 8y_Bide Dudley} The'Jarr Family 8yRey_b. McCardell ‘rewards. have high—in many cases in ate. e of them Coppright, 1919, by The Prews Publishing Oo, ‘York Brening World.) may continuous less me Copyright, 1919, by The Press Putlishing Co. (The New York Brening World). ‘other. marrted’ iis had WW RGMRTY ated ty ae The Little Lady in White le Peatered by a Poet — |you cut ext your veury, itn poo ple eet ong: tin towel you cut out your poetry. It's punk. |Mr. Rangle Gets Occasion to Learn a Little Meta-|reovle set along tine together,” said 66/7) all the people I hate to wait| you better 'I sure would be your| “He gets off the stool and leaves in r. Jarr, “Well, this Jang saving COl\cn in here” s0id Logie tma| gabtors | ee aes char al apitae hore phor Is a Dangerous and Helpful Thing |nis use. ie must nave dean deeper Waitress, as the Friendly! “Well, sir,! It looks to me like he’s | Just side-stepping a tlp or gving to the VERYBODY who was anybody he blurted out. ‘Poor Se net ate if he went to the St. Vitus Hotet ‘tron tried to break his toast, “poets | getting fresh, I decide old Papa poet | doctor. However, he goes and that's was vacationing, those chained | Who'd thought te of bry i, Mh to commit the rash act, it’s such an, ive bodies of workers have achieved results on the same scale? jut me on the flooey worse than any| needs a call, so I freese up like a|the,finish of my woe.” to duty were nervous and irri- | never can tell! ota pelea 20 expensive place.” . «4. Some of the most significant sights reported from Russia to-day |°te"™” chorus girt does when she's asked to| “You don't like poetry, eh?” asked| {Able “Nation-wide cossation from meee ane by. brave effort 40k | “Die game. and expensive! | That, “So poets patronize this place, eh?” | eat a dollar meal. the Friendly Patrop. sooling, scothing rickeys of -yes- th: Sor my- motto, too," said Mr. Ratigte, “are the great idle factories the workers thought they could keep| ne asked. b ‘ “ ‘Mister,’ I says, ‘this has gone far| “I sure don’t,” Duct ted. “On, | EAE” Was Mr. Jarr’s solution of | pathetic nature, “Well, let's tell the bose—he's there. ) Going but couldn't. ‘ee “Sure! A lot of ‘em come in and| enough. You might be a poet, but|T can write it, though. Listen to|. Mven Mr. Jarr's boss was taking | | "Seshl atid Mr. ast, evabey, |'b. hia offi n't, ber” i Tt used to be a commonplace that the productive energy of|*4™!t + You know, between you) don’t get the idea you're the great | this: sues Voeuneersoceannee TAK ite. UNS | Se met GAAED the waiter, With dase OUT cae tae and me, all’poets atn’t willing to say| lover around here. You got about as| “‘I Joved a man in Kalamazoo. If uw ane. ae jarr. say Jenkins won't be ‘American toilers—down to the youngest apprentice—came from the | the * . But, anyway, Mr. Jarr and the boss, | Jenkins? He's been on his vacation |to.day, that he's sick, and we'll eall ‘i y ride old Pegoofus, the winged| much chance to know me better ‘as a | you'd ‘a’ knew him you'd ‘a’ loved him; nd is due back rk to-day. Can't ¢ _ ‘knowledge that even the lowest worker. could climb to the highyst|horse of history. And I'm to| rooster has to crow a tune. Why | too.’ both sore at a hot weather world, | and is due to wor up the St, Vitus on the telephone und , BAY bid bound 7 a vn were on the job when Mr, Rangle, | he be serious on his own time if he |jcarn the sad facta.” places and the biggest rewards. The stimulus was certainly no less|**¥ Poetry ain't much of a boost to a don’t you edt your pie’ ‘I wrote it one night in a letter to al {°o0".acy from his vacation, came in| wants to? Who's he robbed now?" iy Tesdie’ this vows: S| guy who's inhaling @ dime's worth of| “That could never wean mé away | girl friend,” she concluded. “Some day ap “H D mobody,®.- replied | gray nee uP the hotel and, "ater the rds were often excessive. beans in a joint like this. However,| trom my poetry,’ he says, 1 élongate it and make it into a| HUriedly, In a state of extreme agita- | | °F robbed | nobody," replied lhe ysual delays, succeeded in getting _ + Progress is —progress—but not when it mines its own path.|some of ‘em come right out brasen| ‘(Try it,’ t EAN tucte OTe oe ntietnesa’ tila, 684 minal”, Seeebbety in uitcing of Jenkins, not | Connected with the desperate Jenkine, | © Profit-sharing is ‘unquestionably the just and fair solution of many |&N4 say they got the disease, and now | “You sea, I'd had » lot of experi. | Sine SOF ® Damhel, oh Yespert’ _—Beriows Die your beams | ‘Yes, I've’ lett my wife,” said the present laborsproblems. But if profit-sharing is not enough—if|*%4 *#us one has the nerve to recite | thee _ Beeson ty Ph tag ; some of his stuff. ina ae to it bad S {; f i fi t “Then he wants to make a touch | 2a04 {t Cries ae pt, ; f tuft, If he's a tl com- sl ; control of a A aH craft is to be vested primarily in labor? he can go to it all he pleases, tat] Dlailed of appendicitis, laryngeetas ummer are O nrants waar ste ad Prispoe ent | tered me on vacation to play erdgpet =... When standardization reaches the point where in fixing wages|they tsn't nothing in my contract that|“n4 ® lot of other summer com- By Charl C. West, M. D. Jar calmly, with old maids and parsons, when x it ts ng Jonger a question of the enterprise and efficiency. of indi-|°M™* fF me being ghot in the ear- pralite. Well Be Grine nnd taekdes tha) ; arlotte ©. West, M. V. ten. |_“Thats all, eh snorted Dr. haa pees lively bunch of guys at gla " per drums with bum poems by bankrupt | Pie. Pretty soon he says to me: NFANTS, that is, children up to the age of three, require greater watch- | rengie, ‘well, you read this!” And|‘2® Place that played auction! _ *widnal employers or the relative productivity of workérs but solely! pean eaters. ‘This pic's pretty bad and I am|{ fulness to keep them in henlth than do older people, We all Know that!),. rasnea the following tele ‘on |Pinochle, And when we got home De ot “how much the industry can afford to pay.” wil the products of| We had a postin are tis mora-| Sete mad: It's Maveral days ci; no| © wen & child hes punted its mcond summer it wall onthe fot 10), ares T° and ahe found a Torgot to it oat. * industry tend to become within the reach of a greater or less |'%* 804 he like to stampeded me with | ™<rt te q ¥ An ae of consumers? Nevertheless, as a whole, théir plans, their projects, their ambi- +tions have provided work and wages for millions and built up indus- fries assuring future employment’ for millions more. Could collect- bs the cat when we went away, and”— if ery ‘ h organisms are so delicate and so sensitive that the slightest deviation from ‘Dear Rangle—aAll is over, the wa his poems: Rightot!’ Tsays., ‘Another plece| it which they require to keep them perfectly well may be the starting| end has come, have left wife; ‘But how about that gaping hole tn “Did he get mean?” would rob you pf your smocthness of| (int that leads on to a fatal illness. Kepecially is this true of a child's \ptest!-) will destroy self; gaping hole in |¥°Ur #!de?” asked Mr, Jarr, he war is still a blanket for’ all advanei “01 Bu! mind and put your poetry: talent on | 20'Mt that er ytohy) oun iMeed y Yt GRE Ree. 8 “It's @ metaphor,” replied J + Of course tl et excuge for all advancing h, ho. But Thad to squench bim nal tract, which is so easily thrown out of balance that most of the,summer |~ gide; advise office, tell Jarr; re- ;,, "rep! enkrns. prices. Nevertheless a public informed of the particular pi g| Pretty much before I could restore|the bum. Now, so that you and me | sickness of babies shows itself jn digestive ailments of one kind or'another.| mains at St. Vitue Hotel, ‘But I wrote my wife Lorebaae ae trial di th HAP PONE’? | tne pence ond dignity of the pings ra It does not necessarily follow that the child's food is at fault, although this “JENKINS.” -|4eed was done!” " * , of industrial democracy among the Amalgamated Clothing Workers|no sooner does be got a seat on a| | Newest Things in Sience | 1s more often the case. The trouble may have its origin in lowered vitality! |, 4 “What -did, he say? asked. €he —who are said to control practically 100 per cent. of the labor in due to exposure to the heat, to unsanitary measures surrounding the child, Pooh!” said Mr. Jarr. “Jénkins| agitated Rangle. rr r It is claimed that one of the new| lack of pure, fresh air and cleanliness, or to disturbance of its nervous |has been drinking backwoods bever-|" “#16 gays the wound tn ite shee i ‘i ea hs A . Genrest, ‘pions’ Sty ZEA fetah 16 to mo emergency brakes for automobiles | system, as ages ‘aud is raving, Is the telegram/, metaphor,” said ceed . ;warnings that clothing for which it paid $50 last year will cost $100 : . gan be ap) with the pressure of a A fact to which due weight ts not given !s that during infancy the de- | sent ‘collect?’ " “a aside, ic Pe Sineet winter and happy I'l we finger, velopment of the brain is more rapid than any other part of the body, there-| «no," said Rangle; “it's: paid, and jood gracious! As bad as that?’ * inter. “Well, on the level, friend and fel- VOR fore it is highly unstable and easily thrown “out of gean” "For this reason | don't ‘git there like that, so uncon: (out Ransle, Who will doubtless made low citizen, it knocks me a twister.| sojiena if ‘1 children require a vast amount of undisturbed sleep. The first few years of | orca We 1::tle knot uncon". most successful automobile manu- Here I got a human rhyming diction- F planning to hold an in- iif should be surrounded with the utmost simplicity and perfect peace, so | 0 ttle know the sorrows|racturer, since he only knows Ab® Letters rom the People Ary setting right before me. How.|t#rnational | exhibition of devices|that development will proceed quietly and naturally without the endiess| ‘hat crush our brothers down. Poor! meaning of a limited number’ of Mavet-ep.0-tale, born tn-Treland bet who tater |@¥@?, it sort o' rankles me and 1) ‘sete is fe: navigation along} hooks the delicate little system constantly receives from unthinking elders, | fellow! ‘Will destroy self, gaping hole! words, Secon: " , “Good gracious, then all is ‘he ‘Bititor of The Evening World: b ., | Commercial jines, ‘A thousand and one things are daily done to upset the child’@equilibrium, | in side,’ he said. Even now he may | over!” EN LEnS ess Chiction sob nia.| Bintan, '@" Go Otome ee tee ee te 8 bowel Fe ete Then we wonder why It \s fevertsh, why It becomes restless, why It-has indl- | havp passed beyond. “Have lett wite,|,."Well, Jenking, tt’ « good + J | gestion and why it becomes iil, h s r chance is ten to one ta beat. ‘ TAS 90d yon eat ‘pene with nour Singular of Plural? “ ‘Listen, Mister,’ 1 ways, ‘set that| 1D seareh itor sources of pbowphate| "yr Ai 4.nes but more eapeclally in warm weather, little children must |nojvenacm%® domestic trouble, Ij mails: tothe suburbs or aaywbere: / Knife. wong A a alae pee hid pot hore . ha pay By tl ote to shimmy music and I'll dance it for| fertiliser in’ the Netherlands phos-| pe kept quiet, Regular hours for everything should be rigidly enforced, and 4 Kindly "l eo f stool than he amiles at me and says: the trade—cannot but dwell with a certain thoughtfulness on recent| “I'l take some peach pie; #0, else these days—e' ting @ ° “Some domest’. troubl .| Week later, but you'd bett ‘ you, You know I love son; phorite fields have been discovered | at least one-third of their lives spent in sleep, preferably out of doors, Fresh, “4 uble, you sup: - we you’ er-be home * and proper. B, |following sentence be singular or| ‘Ha, ha—pretty good!’ be says, _ |n two provinces, cro alr ante like a tonic to its body. Clothing should be Nght, but protec: | Poe?” repeated Mr. Jarr. “How the why eth Of that letter $ duly 21. Plural—"Under the sole management| «*You don't mean your rhyme? I oe) @ tive, and uhder no circumstances should children under the age of three be | Uck« # could a man leave his wife! vised Mr, Jarr over the phone, Me ey “A” 49 wrong. “B'* in| Of John Smith, one of America’s fore-|ank, feinting alarms Tt aint even| The dendrograph is an instrument |€xPoved to the sun's rays. Cool, shady spots, well pratected from draughts | Without having some domestic trouble,| ‘That night @ telegram reached Mr, right only when peas are served on| most designer of young fash-| pret: 4! , that has been invented for recording | ®24 insects of all kinds, surrounded by an atmosphere of peacefulness, are| you suppose? Darn it! The women Jarr, care of Gus’s near-beer cayern ‘the same plate with, say, a steak,| ion.” Should there be an “s” added a 4 © | absolutely necessary to preserve the well-being of the little ones, will keep at a man till th of despair on the corner, It read as toes, Brussels sprouis, String |) aesimer? “Well sir, that blamed poet turns|sFowth and other variations in the|""' During te summer months the glands of the skin are more active, and| him to madness and he dese gan’ | follows: ; x ae. GEORGE BARTON, |0n bis poetry spout again, He says: |‘!megsions of trees, 4 daily bath ts necessary for health, as well as for the refreshing effect. | thing rash, and th oes some-| “Met postman at the gate. Wife — | What ts an Irtsh-Americant July 20. “Now, I am @ poet and, gosh, I OR Weak children egn be greatly strengthened with salt water baths. They are| solatle ctill choy eee sare con: | BS wige to it and all is lovely." 3,5 fhe Ratton of The Brenton Wort: Answer: Yes! can go it. But some of my stuff's like |. P&*# police have found that burg-| excellent for those with feeble circulation, or for those who perspire freely, | °1b/e-sHil! they marry again and re-|, However, when reproaches were you Kindly oblige me ky "n-| When Is @ Man Intoxteateat | your steaks—pretty tough!’ lars use stethoscopes to hear the In fact, salt baths have been fotind to exert a tonic effect upon the entire |P&*t the verformance on the next ire reaeeya: Coma eden chaeea system, afd many drooping children are greatly benefited by. home-made | Victim!” darkly of desperate deeds: by sea baths, They can easily be prepared in @ rubber tub of warm water and| By this it may he gleaned that there|Who could stand no more, and Ran- mnesorranane sea a alt ‘These te are simple, collapsible things, that can | was neither armistice nor peace in the | fle told his wits 08 cue came’ De up in @ trun ey look very much like a camp stool, oe aeere, ie ‘victlos: OF | con- Ihadoda wade ine anctod thtte tenes eel Cea a Lory gow BS ne Household for the time being, /jugal abuse stabbed himgelt witht & in the surf, This practice is attended with considerable danger, y me these two questions: “A''| To the Editor of The Byenivg World: “*T merely turn on my heel and do an | #°U%4s made by combination locks that a man torn in Ireland who| The answers you received on this|j-¢o-sopholas, E-fo-sophatil to the |? e@able them to open safes an American citizen is an| subject from judges, experts, &c., are ® kitehie-kitehie and grab off hi Lae “1B" aye ho isn't.| very good and the definitions, I think,| My idea 1s to get his tmouth full oc | 48 increase in parasitical dtweases 7 4 that a born in the|Come pretty near the mark, How-| food and thus shut off among English poultry and game < United Baten via Barents ls not| ever, Tconaldar the old Béotch magis-| Wel, when’ return 1 Sut the pie ha. | birds has been attributed to the dia ’ CY the heat} “While we ing b 7 geo pa Sra that's ne of the su: the child's head, and @re gassing here poor a nly, “that's a fare-you- Ameri- | trate has it down to even a finer point tribution of dust by automobiles. » uee o bend, the cold water upon its feet and less, | jenkins may be well; there no comebacks with ee rial BY bathe int} fore him and try to do a getaway. frequently set up severe intestinal trouble. Since a child's di; ps, may be croaking ¢ i p of iris descent. ways in the following rather q) nest | put i$ cannet t He eee ac ‘8 digestive this - taphor! tract is really the barometer of ita health, special care and attention must be | ®#281% dropping into tl» vernacniar| “This had sivea to tt during the summer months, "Simplicity of food ie necessary to | 2 his agitation, “I thought you were |on. Mrs. Rangle. that the texf tage porfect digestion. The body requires for tts development bicod of a good, | @ friend of his, being an office mate, |**. Rangle asked Mr, Jucr how nourishing and in sufficient amount, and this can be Lett metaphors cost and if they were dan- the feedings are correct. only be secured if his wife? Why, I always th rt a a SEB gives me a grin and says: ha tty designed stoctzie light