The evening world. Newspaper, October 23, 1919, Page 30

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ESTABLISHED BY JOSHPH PULITZER, @wbNahed Dally Except Sunday by fhe Prees Publishing Company, Nos 63 tc w. New Yor! Copyright, 1919, by The Press Mublishine Co, (The New York Evening World), \ ALTTaUS KITAW Treanor, 6) Dark Rowe | Being Divers Reasons Why the American | TOSENN PELITOSN or., Recreiary, $2 Sark New. Woman Should jake the Veil—And | MEMRER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, entitled t EDITORIAL PAGE | | THURSDAY. OCTOBER 23, 1919) One Half of 1%! — xv7tetha. By 7 H. Cassel By Marguerite Mooers Marshall Everything Else That Goes With i It. Dy dre aris | ‘BOt otherwise credit in Uuis pay OLUME 60.......... ee . LWAYS | I have rejoiced in my birthright MAKE ANOTHER EFFORT. As a twentieth-century American woman i To whom men must give respect and equality and 4 jou aud even @ vote SAD blow to the country’s hopes is the threatened disruption te _d ss ‘ | | 1 have pitied of the Industrial Conference owing to the withdrawal of the The poor, down-trodden, seiled and jailed Oriental wife, labor group. | Whose husband is wished on her by her parents and his, P ‘ 4 ‘ tn tn At A | 0 etition than in cut-price drug Public chagrin changes to public indignation aa it becomes ap- eg married life there is more competition Parent that, even in the view of prominent members of the employers’ | And who isn't even allowed a soul @8 well as of the public group, the Conference has not given labor a | To think about on reaching the age when her body {s no longer interesting. fair shor {Aren't men—Turkish men—the brutes! Sage But the other day sseees Dr. Pliot, the President Emeritus of Harvard University, cannot | 1 heard the TRUTH about a harem ‘ bul ‘ ‘ , F f lived f ronine months be charged with any lifelong prejudice favoring the claims of union| tee wnar eter Sai eatas ee et labor. Yet Dr. Eliot demanded that the public be fully informed | 1 don't BLAME her! of the fact that the conference cast more than fifty votes for the eal eg a harem myself, 4 ‘ z | nd STAY there. labor programme and that even in the employers’ group that pro-| It's the only life! Tamme was beaten by a vote far from unanimous. Now please don’t be shocked, A. A. Land f th 1 t his fi 0 i 19 | | For a harem nowadays is as proper a place 1 Monet ide Dheaadiveial het hged tall anedlcgin be Shute ticle gtd As a house in Flatbush or in Melrose, Mass of the break-up when he pointed out that both sides—employers and | A harem is singular, P pol pry’ | Jabor—have been fighting for immediate advantage instead of looking | ae a Taal any more, Not even dual. “ ahead to some solid and lasting basis of agreement. ‘That far-famed “essential monogamist,” Upton Sinclair ; Present strikes have been too much in mind. Permanent prin-! | Has nothing on the terrible Watched days . * : | Why do I want to hide me in a harem? ciples of future harmony have had too little calm consideration. | Whise'are 's0 ANY. Voukerd== The people of the United States looked forward to this Industrial | I should not be struggling with a servant problen: . . o : | 1 phind the veil, a Oonfe ; oxpec s. ‘They have f rex ons f 1 were behin' "ae ag eae idle ett me A bach A ie |The harem woman has all the servants she wants, with deep interest. Their feeling was well expressed by the Presi- To bring breakfast to her room and dust her furniture und arrange the @ent’s letter to the Conference: | cushions on the divan and do ee anEAe ce and wait on her by inches, % They haven't forgotten how to smile, Be eerncy Us (expetren text 6+. aypry Step Oil parties Wi)! And they cost hardly anything except their food, agree upon cach proposition or method suggested. It Is to be Anyway, the H. C. of L. never troubles the harem womau expected, however, that as a whole, a plan or programme can Her husband pays all the bills, de agreed upon which will advance further the productive if he doesn’t, his father or his father-in-law pays them: capacity of America through the establishment of a aurer and amare bad “sh labor j s evening's heavy, heartier co-operation between all the elements engaged ‘a In- | pein nive to the fat old bore her husband has brought howe to dfn, ie ‘Who MAY hand over a fat contract, “The public expects not less than that you shall bave that If he is treated properly, one end in view and stay together until the way is found lead- ‘The harem woman need only entertain her women friends ing-to that end, or until it is revealed that the men who work | With coffee and sensible conversation about the children and the men who manage American industry are so set upon | She buys her gowns at Paquin’s, ah it paths that all effort: | She eats all the candy she wants, ivergen' ‘orts at co-operation are doomed to | instead of dieting to keep her figure; — Ne a | She doesn’t have to fox-trot in tight slippers six evenings a week, Even now the public is loath to believe that the break is final. 1/0 cateh trains, . : ‘ om ¢ | Gr rid the subway, Tt has had faith that, in this of all countries in the world, industrial a rennet ; ; r put up with the telephone pest pees | problems might find at last their best chance of solution in theo} A ‘Or motor till she is stiff and diriy frank meeting of labor and capita! at a conference table. | Or belong to ten clubs, : i Nibebontcain | Or hustle for a living downtown If that faith proves vain, one of America’s strongest assets of | Or hustle anywhere, at any time, for any reason whatever. post-war confidence and optimism is gone. ; + |She can even gommit a crime, . i 7 : ‘And not merely be set free, as if she lived in Nassau County Let each group of the Industrial Conference re F E World R J ' See ek te tees Osteen mobo tet OT ES VELINE VV OF eaders The Jarr Family __[Bivsee rer ncaa punted tor ser aoa and do i P tow. getting together agam. | About the only disadvantage to harem life | By Roy L. McCardell | y Jatio : y y by ic 3 . > |%s that your mother-in-law and your poor relations i Give labor no ground for the cry that only by conflict does it) Letters to Senators, centuries, the butcher of humanity, Copyright, 1919, by The Be athe Co, (The New York Evening World.) Live with you ever got fair pla [cranberry Iron, Goel and Coke Cor-| when the ‘ltiseas of United State | « amnsrenennnnrnenreseornneennearnnennanreenrenensnoeeet | ven va, Tam Ft { play. men veiey Goal ene Coke 20 eal hae Ge eat at the present uM r rm i Talk re Th 1 Even so, I am firmly convinced aNtad A 1 | vet ©" ltime? A year or so ago if @ citizen r. Jar 8 ”y » Te is the only spot left in this sad, bad, mad world, a te | Pectigetiree case 1 about | Safed $100 per month he wax not x saat > Aueaele of Meas neatly ce ae a Mahe ae fe Hee profiteers, the uplift, fat, work and hus. : THE AMUSING SIDE. Peberiaal A your editorial about considered badly off. What does $100 and a Film Fantasy of Lucifer and Ladies. Hache Sahel rc eoiiad : el ‘ams to Senators to-day,|a mon’ joo ike when rents hich ands cease from troubling, y ? T have sent the following telegrame: | were formerly $35 have jumped. to| * * and ® WOMAN may be at rest! HE EVENING SUN finds amusement in the Senatorial| “Senator Jos. 6. Frelinghuysen—Do | $65 and $707 Why don't the Govern- “ce RS. RANGLE was at the|‘ea addicts pity his sorrows like the - . a not allow the I, W. W., Sinn Fein and| Ment take steps to offset, this mad opening of the big new |‘¢Vil, 80 to speak?” i i a ve eer situation: . profiteering by building Government moving picture theatre and ‘How do I know? 1 didn’t ask,” re- e e : Bolsheviki to lead you. They are only homes and charging reasonable rents? | s4 sayy |i jg Aes Desa cea ts plied Mrs, Jarr. “I only know Mrs. | Os ortem reciation |trying to help Germany and disrupt| Again, wherefore should this ignorant angle said it was grand, and tho| t- t pp Of supreme interest and importance is the virtual admis- | this country. Vote to confirm the| lass of labor, some of whom cannot | music and singing"’—— actor playing the devil, | mean Satan, gion that the fight for Americanism is won and thatthe opera- treaty.” read or write, or worse yet, speak our! “Is it a grand opera or a grand JUSt made your fi creep the way + I b b . language intelligently, be granted 10- | po dieters tempted ever By Sophie Irene Loe b tons of the league will be defined and curbed 0 as to meet Senator James W. Wadsworth Jr.—| crease, after Increase by the Govern. | Pigiure show?" Interrupted Mr. Jorn | wrompted everybody to throw things : fo boy dacs Wid) While you uselessly debate, the world| ment for work that is far overpaid? | yn. Mrs, at him?” asked Mr, Jarr | 1910, hy Tue Press ENbtisbing Co, (The New York Broning World.) every objection of Mr. Lodge and his patriotic following. It is Jatands aghast that parti polities | What about the man who works and oon, ae fren y te Artie “Ot course not! : var,” vt ‘A wi ten, t ty | Ps » + Ste ® we y Mrs. p j public opinion was all against them, They are dropping their | turning a glorious victory into defout | pared with labor who are | pulling down cents, with war tax, of course: and|l¥ affected. She sald it was a story | Hand, Than All the Eulogies Ever Written. 4 3 ‘ an at whe 2 ; opposition to safeguards, we learn from Washington, because by your attitude on the Peace} i.e overtime? Does this man with the farvea tone ie ie ay ‘patrons, |Voman is young. and attractive | 7 Bs 5 . " » |brains command the same salary or) pyery j\friends go about endeavoring to lead ; they are afraid of the country's wrath if the Treaty should be : HARLES G. ARMSTRONG. any overtime? I should say not. And Wvéesy uplnce 778, eprroeied hited astray. She should know; she STPRDAY 1 went into the of- wae, many, many ot. ye, beae the Lb ratified withent them. Citizens’ National Railroad League, | yet the laboring man is catered to by| you are charged twenty-five cents a|*#ld she has been married and di- fice of a prominent Commis-| Wefore they went. Only proron ne R Most encouraging is the new situation, It has its jae Increase after increase If he takes It cup for tea, und Mra, angle says |Vorrad neve vi Refore we had 80M®)_ woman wept bitterly because she a fost er asipg i Las amus- | y York, Oct. 21, | into his head to strike. Is this coun- | when she goes to the theatre like tiiis | “I didn’t seg this impressive picture very far in the) had given so little of herself to her too. To the Biitor of The Krening World: try going to continue under this class| where tea is served after the show, |of satanic sorrows," said Mr, Jarr, shad d VaR ene nna ing side, too. . * ee | conversation, he taken her for a " ‘ : |’ Wo have sont the following tele- |/abor regulation? It ts responsible for | she intends to do as she did to-day—|"bUt Jenkins, at our office, saw {¢ and | ¢|stanted, ax we often do take our It has, indeed. ‘The Evening Sun should open its other eye and! gram to Senators Wadsworth ana |? high cost of llving to-day. drink three cups, and so, you mightjhe said a lot of bother was made spoke to me Of) mothers. We know they will for- : A ; : j : hie telegram is sent by a Demo- apes : : r said Mrs, Jarr, vain of their good looks that nobody | ; Bent tom tee om ing nations with merely a downright “take-it-or-leave-it-we-know- |crat, an Independent und a Republi. |! enforcement is producing Very) don’t think that would be honest, al- need bother to tempt them!" Mrs. SMA ana yet in that) ment FRE Hsping lips. ¥ % apa y bes - interesting results. It shows @ r€-|though the tea served may be cheap Jarr interrupt “The point of the short time where-| peak a Word of Cheer. to-have i 4 haticall Lest D | : you've-got-to-have us-anyliow can, and we emphatically protest | or apie divergence of opinion|tea, and while, as I say, one 1s picture believe, is that the good .voe hare eone | have heard nothing) Oh, yes, we are very free with our ‘a What has since come over the patriotic following? Why have “##!nst your vote and position on the | oo ty aspirants to legislative office|Cbarsed a quarter a cup in the fine woman, the steadfast woman, is as- \Ver 1 have Kol i flowers and our fine speeches and Pp, ‘pe precalioa 4 \cetionaryism that has united to : other ladies drank at least five cups.” | ro {he lady who ts no longer young days of such kindness W pinay if these people we u to the Peace Conference? ; | wreck the League of Nations ‘Treaty || The fact is, we are up ena *| "But how about “The Sorrows ot lor upd looking need not Worry /o¢ course, while many appreciated wend Ba ten Beay eottn hs eee s, Have public opinion and fear of the country’s wrath had nothing | "esardiess of consequences. You are | tough proposition, either wity we look | satan ed Mr. Jarr. “Did the|” ,, $ ’ a‘ him and many loved him, yet 1 9M} ing word that reassures P I ) | rresteo tor the vote of New York lat it. ‘The Pronibitionists, although | = Pee} “And besides,” said Mrs, Jarr, not |Mm and Many NOt! At dreams] s, the glad " i} v a » " Bc ye gined the good : protest against your vote in the past = — kind T have seen, the husbands are he could not have imagin | : : * that, though it may be still possible to put over a few reservations or | pry uree you to support the League |Amendment by methods which are} }/ TO-DAY’S |] |such stupid men that you can hardly | things that they are now saying about}, oP 1. Staree W. Childs, of Nations so that this State may . blame their wives. rs, Rangle said } ‘ ann take it in. A few weeks ago Senator Lodge and his patriotic following were prancing about proclaiming themselves ready to throw a radically amended convenant straight back into the faces of the other contract- more of its members fallen away from their intrepid leader under the test of every vote on amendments that would send the treaty back to do with the obvious growing « nyiction of Republican Senators interpretations that will save the face of the Republican Party, the Treaty, including the League of Nations, must sooner or later be , only there the peo: ould practise more prin- HA thi : hearin Pi lowing the American revolution. rest among a very large proportion Tesetnblazice ended, for nobody would People Would Dries er ord when| their Hour fylends are dead, Will ratified in a form that will NOT isolate or handicap this Nation at] “AUC MANN, of the population, and some of them Pliny Fisk try to tempt a fat old thing like Mrs. we can hear it; when it can cheer) approving cheering words wi Sresk the start of the new era? HARE 1H JOHNSON POST, | ure insisting upon the enforcement of a PI i may, ¥, Mra, Rangle said, and she's |y sordid day; when it oan omitert ears can hear them and whike thelr rf “RE, all the amendments, This is a feel-| On Oct. 23, 1825, Pliny Fisk, a zeal- |" Jour troubled mind; when it can heal hearts can be thrill, It is at last percolating through even some of the toughest strata Homes, ing that won't down so long as the|us American missionery, died at Obesity’s Ethical Aid. |o wounded heart. And nol when ail bapple ied and made publican leadership overwhelming majority aris Brooklyn, Oct, 20, 1919. | 5, ol > ; Beyrout in Syria. His success in bis! “Then fat ts royal raiment when|!* sone and we np * | “Post-mortem kindness doe, of Republican leadership that an overwhelming majority of the Ameri-| 1. 44, paitor ot the Evening World: Prohibition lid 19 clamped tight. miusionary labora are not what nails! Worn for virtue's sake!” ventured Mr.| Help in ‘Times of Struggle. cheer the burdened heart; flowers can people, including a majority of the Republican Party itself, will] With all due respect to the article | Waa ere we alae 1 a9 sone Kt) the attention of the thoughtful upon | Jarr. 5, L would rather have the word of] 0M the coffin cast no trax’ ance back : 5 A, AN aac - i sv sd “Pic. | Permit a condition to exist in our t the magnificent perse vo | “It was very creepy, Mrs, Rangle! approval, the clasp of a syinpathetic) Ward over tha weary way. not stand for having the Peace ‘I'reaty wrecked in the United States | published in your panes Rptiedy Mle-| country which will mean continued ee a eee got these” inthe ,said,"” Mra, Jarr continued, not heed- peng ata moment when I need it} And who does not Rares? Senate. ture Constantinople a8 a World City| unrest and open or covert resistance | teeth of all obstacles, all sufferings, ,'26 What he said, “only it oecurred most, in the thiek of work and the —-- 7 r | Under U, 8." to law, with millions spent annually | qj) detentions, He is a rousing he |to her’—and hero Mrs, Jarr hesi-/ strain of struggle, than all the eulo-| THE SEATS OF THE MIGH The time has come, therefore, for the more politically canny} Before any step should be taken yf SUppreasion of such Feaiatance, OF forever along the path of effort, be tated. ¥ {gies that were ever said or written, CERTAIN Captain w. TY, among the treaty wreckers to plan how they shall presently explain | relative to the developing of any out-| Pace the whole question ip the) it letters, business, art, statesman: | ‘at occurred to Mrs, Rangle?” |” 1 would rather have @ single fower| AV ent call- that their particnlar kind of noble Americ: sm never really meant to wreck the treaty but only to speed it on its way chalked with al few patriotic emblems which they wistful 000,0 is only one way to do this—by the|gwn shoulders, So great was his!other of the dear old innocent days, sympathy at a time when Iam sad| When the fearsome cant 4} Ee. Mineltionn, thereby yl ihe Grand Old Pasty o few orumbe | RRee Heo ce alae this enter-| national initiative and referendum. |gpirit that he attained the goal of|that the tragedy would have occurred and sorrowful than all the sighs and finished with tho Captain ne had pubtionn, | vg and Old Party a few crambs' prise, and why not expend that same | ‘there has been introduced in both! preaching in Italian, Arabic, French right away if the man who played weeping when dy 1a cold, SP ihe letters House the ef vyvalit ty t ‘ ¢ cainpalgn amount right here in this United! jouses of Congress, at my request,{and modern Greek, Thus, the Rey, | Satan yt interrupted The And who wou His biothe pus missing " ¢ , My to butld Government owned |a joint resolution providing for ani Alexander lyvine, who, as a student,! trouble, if Satan had just left them The trou with inost of us i# about hia prodtes oshing “him Ab among 4 and it will nereasingly +0 as dwellings, 40 that people can live like |{nitintive and referendum amendment {drove a milk-cart and nailed his alone, would have all, occurred that, we have all these Kind things wir was w tein Tened if ie wengnk : hi Aaleer human beings Vherefore whowld|to the Constitution of the United|Greck grammar to the side of the quicker, Mrs. Rangle thought, if in the back of our conscience, and in tout fasil op, tardy recognition of pu opinion to which the Evening Sun ‘turkey mamve sha benefis ms un iced Btates, +4con a COXEY JR., cart, studying his vere is dim candle. Satan hadn't butted in," we don't bring them out until “ay © tayo. ot. But i have ali a begins more and more to tell, millions: ‘Turkey, which has| President National initiative and | light t dawn as the cart rolled, “Ah!" murmured Mr, Jarr, but in- still, small voice” calls us to ac-|been willing to give 6 ‘ Peck walt of Buvepe fr Langue, Ine, aloag the ways, ond “women do beat the devili” Noe ee Terestag edie Yened sna eee cee tee! UP my seas ly hope may still be reeog- | Calder (in compliance with the sug- | gestion of your paper) and believe that every reader shuuld get as many of his right-thinking friends to take ilar action as is possible: League of Nations Treaty. We pro- test against your representing the Bolshevik, Sinn Fein and political re- State throughout all history, and we take as much pride in its present of- ficlal record as it can in its part fol- live In, side enterprise, it were far wiser to make this United States a fit place to It would require $300,000,000 or per- EVELYN MACMAHON. New York, Oct, ‘To the Editor of The Evening World Your poll of ‘the Assembly candi- dates on Prohibition legislation and as to what their duty is in this mat- ter and what it 18 possible for them to do, they have put over the Highteenth constitutional and legal, have stirred up a feeling of resentment and un- nands of the people, so that they can decide for themsclves and thus make t binding upon themselves to abide by their own decision? I say, let the people decide, There say, she gets her.maney back and more!" “Why, she could,make a fortune at it if she'd go every day!” remarked Mr. Jarr sardonically, Fortunes in Free Tea. idea!” “The Gi restaurants, still It doesn’t cost near that much, or else this new picture | theatre couldn't afford to serve It, for Mrs. Rangle said that most of the} ANNIVERSARY, ship. Born of a very poor family, in fact indigent, he got his education by about nothing. And he said that the | funny thing was that the dame that | was tempted in the picture he saw wasn't near as young or good looking as others in the picture, One young | girl, especially, Jenkins says"—- — | “Oh, those silly young girls are so. sailed, “Well, that may be all right in the picture,” said Mr. Jarr, “but in real life the lady who 8 no heeding, “in the other pictures of that that in this picture she saw, Satan jresembled Mr. Stryve: asked Mr. Jarr, “Well, it seemed to her when the the severest self-denial, subsisting two years on bread and milk, and carrying the corn to the mill upon his ojd lovers in the picture met again in ithe studio in the Latin Quarter and ‘were so friendly and reminded each the late Borough President, Mr, Dowling. It is not yet thirty days since he passed away, ¢ive us, no matter what we do. And so we fail to do the many acts of appreciation. We fail to send the letter that ought to go We forget they need the word of love from their grown-up children, even as they sought the sound of endear- but eulogies of this man. Somehow I cannot help wishing that Dowling could have had thirty e he lived. our sad, shaking heads, and our re- gretful ‘words when they are no longer in our midst, Yet, if these people we have oulo- tidings of appreciation or the small token of remembrance, him, And also I ¢ "Do not keep the alabaster box pte nd also I ea s that) your love and tenderness sealed up nnot help wishi from a friend who thought of me as he or she was passing by @ flower- shop, than all the floral piec could cover my grave, | 1 would rather have one tear of! ing upon the village belle. The old man kept a very vicio e 1 - es that! house dog, and upon the occasion of, the officer's call, the dog was untied.”

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