The evening world. Newspaper, October 10, 1919, Page 34

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ESTARLISHED BY JOSHPIt Datiy Except we Fark Row oe Te Suet Crmeany, Now 63 to ANGUS, KaTKwe aon o 4 gost PULETZBI ot, Secretary, 6 She ow, MEMBER OF THB ASSOCIATED PRESS, * any ead coli! 1h seid ce, Ms Pade eatin, VOLUME 60......... Fou vey veel 7 «NO, 21,234 IT CAN’T BE MADE TOO CLEAR. HY HAV _ and paralyzed shipping in the Port of New York? 2 seventy thousand longshoremen gone on strike / Why are steamship companies forced to cancel their Bookings for passengers or freight? Why are thousands of carloads of perishable foodstuffs tied up for)lack of workers to wnload them? 4 4 ‘ i Why must New York bear the enormous losses consequent upon thig Vlackjacking of its commerce? a Is it because these striking dockmen were working for starvation | P 4 a Is it because, no one would listen to their grievances? | Is it because their accredited leaders advised them to strike? Ne, no and no. The National Adjustment Commission had already awarded the | New York dock workers increase of pay. Their further claim® were sure of a hearing. Their own union delegates had voted to abide by the wage award) ‘of the National Adjustment Commission. The longshoremen violated the pledges of their own unions, repu- @iated the action of their officers and walked out AT THE BIDDING | OF I. W. W. AGITATORS TO WHOM THE WORDS “ARBITRA- DION,” “ADJUSTMENT,” “COMPROMISE” ARE THE MOST HATED IN THE LANGUAGE. President T. V. O’Connor of the International Lougshoremen’s ‘Association speaks truth when he says: “The I, W. W. element defied not only the officials of the union, but they defied the United States authorities.” Listen to the following from the I. W. W. circular addressed to} the Harbor Workers of New York City, purporting to tell them “why the last strike was lost”: “The first mistake was in exempting boats working for the United States Navy, Army and Shipping Board, the Depart- ,maat of Charities and Correction and the municipal fer- an er on “Their second blunder consisted tn coming to an agreement | with the United stated Railway Administration, * From the I. W. W. point of view the most fatal of all blun-| ders are: * (1) Consideration for public need, however urgent or vital; (2) Respect for the Government or for any of its efforts to improve with impartial justice the relations between employers ge Workers; (3) Agreement of any kind that stops short of delivering thdustry into the hands of “one big industrial union.” THE IL. W. W. DECLARE WAR AGAINST EXISTING) ‘TRADE UNIONS AND TRADE UNION LEADERS BECAUSE WHE LATTER STAND IN WAY OF I. W. W. PLANS TO SUB-| VECT ORGANIZED LABOR TO A NEW RULE OF RADIC AL| DESPOTISM. What would that despotism mean to industry? Russia supplies the grim anewer. Only a few days ago ‘lhe World correspondent, Arno Dosch-Fleurot, sent to the United States | “ithe following evidence of what Bolshevik Russia has done to the| a ‘Russian workingman : “From the beginning it has been evident that control of the factories by the workmen was bringing about the death of industry and was making of the proletariat, instead of an army of workmen, a reserve force for the return of capitalism.”"— haces in the Novaia Zhisn, 8 “Our life has become intolerable; the factories are closed; our children are dying of famine. Instead of bread, they give us pullets, The right of free speech and free assembly no - longer exists. There is no more justice; we are governed by men in whom we have no confidence, who know neither law nor right nor honor, They have betrayed us and sold us back into serfdom to maintain their power.”—Bolshevist Workmen's Protest. ’ DOES THE AMERICAN WORKIN ‘AMERICA? THEN HE MUST RAISE-HIS OWN DEFENSES AGAINST THE RED-EYED RADICALISM THAT IS STRIVING TO DIs- q OREDIT AND DEPOSE THE PRESENT LEADERSHIP OF ORGANIZED LABOR IN THE UNITED STATES, HE MUST FIGHT IT OUT WITH THE PROFESSIONAL _ AGITATORS AND STRIKE PROMOTERS WHO LOATHE COM- OMISE BECAUSE IT LESSENS THEIR POWER, PRE GE D PROFIT. HE MUST GET HIS HEEL ON THE NECK OF 'THE BOL- IST MONSTER THAT IS TRYING TO DEVOUR AMERI- LABOR *PREPARATORY TO SATING ITS HIDEOUS ITE ON THE WEALTH WITH WHICH A CENTURY A QUARTER OF INDUSTRY UNDER A STABLE, RE- CTED GOVERNMENT HAS BLESSED THES NATION. HE ISSUE CANNOT BE MADE TOO CLEAR. ‘1S ORGANIZED LABOR’S OWN FIGHT AGAINSY I'l ; AysID RERAD DANORROUS ENEMY. + | | | | GMAN WANT THAT IN ROHR <tcomelly shade ‘lay WU Le Out of the Way! I’m Leader?’ . an gee Sanne toe cieht 1010, by Ths Tent (The New York , «,, By J. H. $f Caneel WHAT EVE SAID About Paris _ By Sophie Irene Loeb | HERE sex is the keynote of existence. W Where many young women “toil not, neither do they spin, yet Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed as one of these.” | Where women ponder not what they shall wear but how much, Where the American pays the fiddler while Paris dances. Where titled people meet in studios, tell what great men their grand- fathers were and then whisper: “Lend me five francs,” | Where wit is only recognized when it has a risque turn. | Where life is one mad maelstrom with an undercurrent of mirth. | Where wives support their hifsbands in various ways. | Where suffrage is replaced by cooking schools. | Where the marriage tie means freedom. | Where wine, women and song are the three ruling muses, | Where nobody throws stones, for all live in glass houses. | Where marriage ig merely a matter of law and where love is merely @ i} matter of form. | Where @ man and woman may suddenly annoynce: | Society answers: “Entrez, s'il vous plait.” | Where vanity was born and never left home. Where the music halls bear the unwritten invitation: “ Where nothing is = sible but virtue, The Jarr Family — “We are one”and Take your choice.” | | By Roy L. McCardell | Copyriaht, 1919, by Ths Pros Publishing Co, (The New York Kvening World.) « - |} Economic and Industrial Unrest Now Manifest Themselves in Mr. Jarr’s Business:Circles 4 ° 66 ITH the high prices of; he thought he would have to lay everything, nobody seeming vome of the salaried loafers here," | ty CANES We cds aby eG lied Johnson, o want to y * “Ho's a fine Bolshevist!" growled and everything, no one [meet seems | Mr. Jarr. nyway, he should have to realize the value of money. Why, do you know, I'm the only one in our family who tries to save a cent,” said Mr. Jarr, with “I'm-a-s00d-man- but-I'm-not-apprectated” air. “Do you save any money?” saved his money when business was 1, 1 haven't any sympathy for a man that lets his chances slip to put by some money.” “It's a queer worl “some people, have appreciate it an it’ ea Ring for the office boy, asked old man, I want him to open that ues the bookkeeper. window o there, it's awful close said Mr. Jarre, “Who can for this time cf year cannon oR ° ¥ to,” jays? But I try to. Obliging Mr. Jarr. ‘There's nothing to it," remarked | Mr. Jenkins, cocking his feet up on | his desk and lighting another cigar- Jette. “Lool: how we work, while the | boss has it easy out at his fine coun- | try place in the summer, going away in winter and riding around in his | automobile at all times! Lodk how | {h°.q03)3 save anything,” said Jen- we work for salaries that are mere | kins | pittances, Labor is getting its share) "So If am," said Mr. Jarr, “If T [and more, but we are not, the) erect think aned apend inane | philanthropists preach to us, ‘Save! “Did you ever try her with w thous |Save! Be thrifty!’ I'd like to see | sand?” asked Jenicins: them save and be thrifty on our sal- | ; the thousand,” re- “Get up and push the button your- i" said Mr. Jarr ungraciously. “Who was your servant last year?” Not me!” spoke up Jenkins, “If that’s the way you feel, you open it yourself and keep the darned old office cool. “You were saying that you were the only ope in your family that Ellabelle M By Bide Copyright, LLABELLE MAE DOOLITTLE, the noted poetess of Delhi, kicked the dog off sofa and lay down. “1 am 0 tired,” she said. “Why? asked her mother, Mrs, |Clarissa Sigsbee Doolittle, “You haven't done a lick of work to-day.” The poetess got wp and kicked the dog out of the room into the hall, “How can you say that, Mother?” she asked. “Why shouldn't 1?" ‘The poetess went out into thé hall and kicked the dog through the front door onto the porch. “Becayse you know I have written 4 poem to-day,” she said. The Poor Dog. “I wish you'd write one entitle ‘How I Helped Ma Wash the Dishes,’ " growled Mrs. Doolittle, Then she went out and kicked the dog off the | front poreh. Miss Doolittle put on her hat and went to Hugus Hall, where the Wom- |an's Betterment League was meet- ling. She was mad at her mother. Promptress Pertle called on the fair girl for a talk, Miss Doolittle leaped onto the rostrum and it was plain to de seen she was thinking of some- thing. “Ladies,” she ssid, “I want you to know it’s hard work to write a poem.” ‘There was applause, “Yours must be an awful job,” said Mrs. Cutey Boggs, who possesses a sharp tongue, “What?” Miss Doolittle shot the word like a bullet, She was gowned’ in beautiful weeping willow tapestry, fluttered with gingham streamers. “Cutey meant yours are so good they must take effort,” said Promp- tress Pertle, “Now, don't answer back, Cute Angry at Mother, Miss Doolittle then told how her mother had accused her of shirking She was angry, Suddenly she curbed her feelings and smiled, “Now, sister members,” she said sweetly, “I will read you the poem I wrote to-day. You wil) see imme- diately that it takes hard work to write those kind of poems.” Miss Doolittle cleared her throat with a cute “Heck-haw.” Then she read the following: | Girla, do not powder and puirt, Tt t not mice to do, out " w mak ape Spits et ee ee ee the parlor} ae Doolittle | » Dudley ), by ‘The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Hvening World.) rls Look Better if Their Faces Are Naked,” Writes the Noted Poetess. That is my worst complaint About Dethi maidens true; You are no oil painting, Set in a lovely frame; Girls should be very careful From Mexico to Maine. Shot a bean in a bean shooter, It hit our preacher on the head; Teeney, stop it, you little snooter! But, getting back to face paint— How much better we look If our faces are merely neked, Like jish in the babbling brook. With the finishing line the poetess stepped backward, bowing in a friendly manner and blowing her nose, It was @ triumphant day for her, The ladies applauded with great gusto, All were please [ Do You K Know That— Coal deposits have Been discovered in the Andean foothills of Argentina. A noiseless pneumatic _riveter squeezes rivets into holes with # pressure of a ton, French scientists have found spec- troscopes quick and reliable for an- alyding mineral water. A toy motion picture machine for home use has ‘been invented that uses the regular size films, The Brazilian city of Para is plan- ning to sterilize its drinking water with ultra-violet rays. For easy access an electric deliy- ery truck has a folding dashboard and @ step mounted in front, It cost $3,000,000 to bring the elec- tric power derived from a waterfall 90 miles distant to Bombay. An trimmer has been man, electrically operated hedge with reciprocating knives invented by a Louisiana An English inventor has brought fout an automatic electric recording target for indoor rifle shooting. A gas stove oven with which food can be baked and boiled at the ‘same time is @ Cajifornian's in- | vention, | | ° . . “But it me aries. Did you Mipok: up thoes /sn- vay women talk about seve voices?” ing. [t's the lust thing they think “Ah, bother the old invoi¢ said | of. ‘Thair idea of saving Is to bus | 4 aa won't be here| something don't need be | Mr. Jaze, -"Th> boss won't be herej ine think they ure getting lt —— _ -— — | to-day’ ‘going to take it easy,” | bargain,” and Mr. Jarr tilted his chair against sre t the wall and yawned, Those Were Happy Days! “1 used to ha ‘Mother each id a little spare money Mow Your Own Lawns rt ‘ petore I was married, sald nkins “as T was saying.” Jenkins went|gloomily. “But now it's nothing but chalet C.west MD. on, “there's, nothing to thin” thing Work. from ‘Weekeend. to" Week=end, é veg te eto save, There's |*d wetting older und poorer at it Copyright, 1919, by The Prag Publishing Co. (The New Yire Bvening World) Of @ poor MAN trytaw tO | Keoptng | fl, the tine § mph an Italian who jobs around keeping | “Who was it that said that two Spasmophilia —Tetany lawns in order in East Malaria where|can live cheaper than one?” asked oan i ers nike Mrs Jarr, producing a hast dollar t HAVE uently alluded to tne! there may be slight facial twitchings, | 1 live, and he offered to Nap Tash Ace ToMeiIaE : : fact that during babyhood tho|or momentary rigidity, or uncon-| mine for three dollars @ week, ‘No,’ | uq y of mankind," res nervous system is highly un-/ sciousness, so slight as to escape the inks [, ‘I'll save that three os ee = They matched, and | stab! a ee | unc ars a week.’ So I go out to mow the| Jenkins lost, stable, and many infants éxperience | unobservant lars a we Fo ak 18 mom ee | Fe eee aaeinelTaithal, “ta |spasmodic seizures of one kind or an-| Nearotic children should be care-| lawn, get myself all overworked, my My sister's child, Teency Ricketts, | can live AS eheaply as on Mr. said other upon slight provocation, The! fvlly watched for every manifesta- hands blistered and my head aching Jenkins, as he got his coat and |above term is now employed to cover tion of nervous disorder. Neurticjand bumps the lawn mower Into @/ hat, “That's one of the baits of the several conditions seen during the /Childrenare usually strongly individu- k that busts it, If the Italian had eet Le mantrap, But it’s true period of infancy, in which tetany, | #lized, even in babyhood. The hun- | busted it T could have Onarged Ab) SORE ai nine ven ctiele hardciot true croup, convulsions, and so on |dreds, indeed the thousands of against him.” in life, the two victims of unjust make thelr appearance. +/Neurotie children in whom epilepsy, “Say, Johnson," remarked Mr, Jarr,| social and financial condjtions wen Some years ago an emigent medical |s latent or manifests itself in other turning to the cashier, “have you /0ut to luncheon and after that shook a fi pout | lice for a quarter a side, with vary- authority discovered tMat children| Ways than convulsions go unheed- heard the boss sax anything about) ine results, for two hours; and John- who responded to certain eleoteioat| ed until the disorder ix height-| any raises for us? Everybody's get-| son, the cashier, who left early that currents are normal, and that in-|ened by some great emotignal ting them.” |afternoon to bowl with some cronies vu Not a word except what I told you! uptown, felt a martyr because he wax ‘ago, that business was so| back from luncheon before they were and a hero because he didn't betray them. fants who reach to lesser currents | Strain or an illness such as whooping! are in a condition, either latent or | cough. ‘An epileptic may never pave active, of apasmo flulia, @ convulsion (fit). In its place there | It is a test that should be resortea|™#Y be outbreaks of uncontroltable | anger or fury that are really maniacal RGU AIL ARESOIS BURST S000 1,” character, there ani: trequentiy Yulaive @migures of any Mind, Mepe| ital serversions’ which are. re. clally is the case ip artificially £04) |. 40q as temporary viclousness that babies. These little ones quickly re-| the child will suture, : cover from all symptoms of @ con-| precocious, Dantes require tw week: bad on account of not being able to | get any goods from the mills that JUST A FEW PLAIN FACTS careful \ vulsive nature when given human | cvarding and skilled moral manaac| milk, It has been found that me! ment, 1 have in mind the case of a MAY as well recognizo ¢ so msinisinta salts are lacking in the brain of these | yoy now serving a prison term whose ‘WwW the start that the only ¥ A ie infants, juncanny behavior before the twelfth | in which credit can be ad the “legendary” queen Spasmophilia. jmonth of life was reached delighted | tended to Europe as a whole is by Bway 8 eetyon was an The tendency of spasms (spasmo-|his parents, He developed masked | tne Government of the United states |g hy sy borers Nees nadnessar philla) occurs in children from the | ¢Pllepsy, and became uncontrollable, | itse1f, says Forbes Magazine, The) (0° 00 Cll o ullininls an ee fourth month to the second year,) Tetanus, only way in which the Government] (10 Wile of Ommes. g goog ae rarely later, | Tetanus, or lockjaw, must not be | of the United ‘8 can secure funds a he elf leda fortorn hope aris 4 The entire trouble in all these cases | confounded with tetany, Lockjaw| for this purpose ment ot 8) pe Rename tortors hope agg nst is doubtless of gastro-intestinal oFi-|gccurs in infants when surroundings | Government loan. Such a loan’ must] ((° )™'M Mal intuit’ th Tine sails gin, It 1s of the utmost importance) are dirty by injection of the navel|be put out at a rate of Interest: oid io ade ner his queen, Omnes that all babies showing this tendency | with the bacillus of tetanus. In the sufficiently high to attract money lee ae pata I i hs Lig be examined electrically, babies the first symptom is refusal | which would otherwise be invested 1M) 10111 coiwimis ruled the Butin Meant |to nuree owing {o,spaum of the Jaw. | the securities of private shiscael if 1iunded Babylon, conquered Persia und Of course during the early years|eMedy for this diseass, and of course | ROW ebtainable at prices while YICS |icsvot, ang made incursions into In immediate treatment must be insti- | higher returns thap our Government of infancy the child cannot state the} tuted in the hepe of saving the the | ene dia ‘where, In peronal combut with sensations which ‘usually presage an fant's life, while the entire hygiene of | nor words, the Government of | SU he was woiided oncoming fit. In very young babies! the child must be reconstructed. | 2e ounes : 1 offer to its|82@ died at sixty-two, Builder, 1 pe aat Bick Ale : Ao jaca acetal he mom sopeameerenne we,» (the United States would olter ror, Chatmer—a great woman own people a security in a form 8 i It t rted By Gaceibs which they have been trained ss | Huth. H Ww S recognize ag the best in the world oe ae ect He O a Neustadt] | ised on the collateral security of a| | Ra eee WS ai “ 299| the romantic bit of history that is| foreign Government, secured in turn tits hale mone Why Is It ‘Battery Park’? | Si\ncoiea in the name, the story that | py the undertakings of groups Of|i. pam tne eet Shei OW many of the battered be-|it tells of the early sxistence Nd} usiness men in the country of such he acy EO rrapgen per hi ae Spl aes H Inga who find rest on its| struggle far existence of the city that! eroign Government. ‘To express Itliiveq in 1922, C. Clinging to he 0 Q ¢ 22 linging to her benches, how many of the)" mhreo years after the first visit of |in still another way, the credits | 40.460 mother when all elas forsoct tourists busy with their cameras oF! Henry Hudson to our island, a Dutch | sorely needed by > Would Bel nook ine” youthtul ote the blase New Yorkers, unthinkingly | colony was formed 90 se tite Of oxtended directly to the people of Eu- |” 4 gn h hat toa ioe ya attery Park, Fi \ comes with that broken mother into eon for la Hamne? from fear of the encroaching Mnglish,| own Governments and that of the|iuna of Moab. She goes humbl To a, Psycho-Analysist springing | the settlers lived in a state of con-| United States fate aHMCRolaaTi at goee mbly “Battery Park" most of us would|stant trepidation. To protect the! Europe needs help. ‘That helo must | Mle old to gloan Worn attor th os < 4 town a fort was built which stood|come from the United States, It Is|reapers, ‘There her modesty atirncts andwer “Bowling Green tatue of! Viiere we now find the Aquarium.’ not forthcoming through the me Vig aideniion of ha waaline acc, Libegty” or perhaps “Henry Hudson."| Xn it is from the battery of guns bi MASTALOES, «IE l'mhs lovely. love abenes rites tice AN of which would \udicate to the| which was erected there that we have whould come through the intorven-| — 1" (OVS ONG Bien P, A, @ normal mind and correct|the name “Battery Park” and that tion of Governments, aided by | Marries Ruth, and from thelr union associations! But it would also th- vicinity. is called trained. busineas men, working for| was descended David, the ancestor #@ dicate that we ure not familiar with uch Governments, Mary, the Mother of Christ. fais ta te 3,

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