The evening world. Newspaper, October 28, 1919, Page 26

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EDITORIAL PAGE | TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1919) By J. H. Cassel Maxims of a By Marguerite ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZEN, A Blow at America! :cReth: Secretary, 63 Park Row, Bxcept Sunday by the Pr Publish ‘ mae... — _ ore Budased Datiy Breept Sunday hy the Krone Publishing Company, Noa 53 te! M ‘ Mooers RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row, der M d eM ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row O n al Marshall ————eee | MEMBER OF TIP ASSOCIATED PRESS Amociated Prem is exctisively entitied to the use for republication of all newp Arenatahes walt oo OF BOt otherwise credited im this paper and also the local news published here, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The A N efficient male flirt is the man who put the “con” in concentration, York Evening World.) No woman is so good as to escape a slight irritation at the thought that all her friends consider their husbands perfectly safe with her, Scratch a cynic and you catch a romanticist. When they asked the diplomat why he married a second time he quoted, “Thv triumph of hope over experience,” then added urbanely, “Hope is fulfilled!” Somebody ought to give us a five-foot shelf of the books a girl can feel safe in recommending to her mother. A woman's man is one part knave, one part small boy, one part worship- ping devotee. Drawing blood from a stone {s a process of childlike simplicity compared with coaxing a compliment from one’s husband ‘In a dull and dry world New York is the one cocktail left—and it’s turn- ing flat. For one man who suffers under “the tyranny of tears” there are ten bound by the slavery of smiles—and they hug their chains Add life's little ironies: the young husband who is alarmed by his wife's paleness when she forgets to put on her make-up. Wamen nibble gossip as daintily as if it were a maccaroon, dul men mouth it as a dog does a bone. Money makes the marriage go—crooked. OVUM OWOR reisceevsteresvuns Sah ves ve tb vr NU , UNTRUSTWORTHY. r the Senate follows the House of Representatives in passing the National Prohibition Enforcement Bill over the I’r the Sixty-sixth Congress of the United States will stand doubly + spnvicted of one of the most deliberate and persistent perversions of the legislative function that ever blackened the record of a law-making body in a supposedly self-governing democracy { War Time Prohibition a year after hostilities have ceased is thameless, iypocritical pretense. The President upholds nat nt’s veto. honesty and consistency by vetoing it ; If the two Houses of Congress override that i @0 doing they represent the will of a majority of the people of the United States, but because they still act in servile fear of a ful lobby that eve veto it is not because ‘How. They Made Good — By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1919, by The Pregw Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) No. 98-——John Jacob Astor, a Great American ‘T was in the last year of the Amsrfean Revolution that a German peasant boy left his native village of Wa dort and emigrated to the United States. The boy was John Jacob Astor. He was seventeen. The fortun he brought from home consisted of two dollars and a bundle of clothes. Astor had had sense enough to see that Germany offered no future which appealed to a lad of his brain and spirit. Stories of America had reached tie village of Waldorf. Yet it was not to America, but to Englan that he was setting forth, Astor said in later years, describing his departure from Waldorf “goon after I left the village I sat down under a tree to rest. And there I mude three resolutions—to be honest, to be industrious and not to gamble.” For two years he worked in London with a maker of musical instr ments. At the end of that time his assets were a fair knowledge of Englis and of such instruments as he had been working on and $76 third of his cash capital paid his steerage fare to New York, and anol! third went for the purchase of seven German flutes @inority which happens to have the most powe etecked the whip over the country’s legislators The eternal vigilance of that lobby was apparent in what hap pened yesterday in the House of Representatives directly the absenc of New York and New Jer There is no vigilance and energy like the vigilance and energy members of the House was noted, wf fanaticism in full march toward tyranny As the country is made to see more and more clearly the rank Wishonesty in the legislative attitude towanl War Time Prohibition, van thinking Americans fail to be more and more enlightened as to the real nature of the processes by which the National»Prohibition Amendment was jammed into the Federal Constitution, and of the spirit in which it is to be enforced ? ' If Congress can't be honest about War Time Prohibition, can! f it be trusted to deal with any kind of Prohibition + n cash, Or JUSTICE OR SPOILS? During the long voyage Astor made friends with a man who had been | garry 1 the fur trade, This means of livelihc ry 4 PANS le pre 0 ‘ e grievances ' pealed to the young immigrant as pleasanter an Y ALL MEA let there be a full hearing for the grievan { His.Only Capital ee ea Fe ers Cane ety arene Co Benga ty of the miners in the bituminous coal fields. Let the number Seven German Flutes.§ sought a job with a furrier here and made a emer ® thorough study of everything connected with furs, This was one of the chief traits whereby Astor made good—he nev embarked on any enterprise without first studying it from all angles and learning everything about it that could be learned. Thus he always em barked on his ventures with a full knowledge of thei minutest de At last, after long and hard apprenticeship, he felt he understood the of days’ work the miner can be sure of each weel:, no less than ‘wage e@eales, be exhaustively gone into. The last thought in the F lie mand is that men should be compelled to go on working in Ae mines or anywhere clse with no hope of just consideration for} On For a | fur business well enough to go into it on his own account. " | we He opened a store on Water Street, New York, in which he traded ur claims. ae trinkets and toys to the Indians in exchange for furs. At odd intervals he would tramp through the up-State forests with a pack of such trinket, | visitiig the Indians and swapping his pack's contents for costly skin Those skins he cured himself and shipped them to London for #1 He went to London with the first shipment and there built up a trade with | various English furriers. He brought baek musical instruments, tor wh he found a ready sale here. J H | He lived over his little Water Street store, meanwhile, ind his youns By Sophie | wife helped him with his work. Hit by bit the business grew. Every step was planned out beforehand New York City, in which Mr. Allen with infinite care and study, Soon the litt I hg » ) eee takes the Secretary of Labor to task | Really Survive Tren¢ =a Gant Hie shine store anged for @ more pretentiou \for his appointinént of Mr. ul ioe ohikeearreedas at No, 223 Broadway—rere later the old Ast ‘ | — Right there is the whole point: j Are the soft-coal miners denied a hearing? Have they no chance | z a ot obtaining justice save by proceeding to paralyze the industridl life} ~ ‘4 of the communily + ‘ a With the President of the United States offering “to appoint at ‘rom K V ening World Readers. When the Fitte a tribunal to investigate all the fucts with a view to aiding in| UT#es Sew York Sena | New York City, Oc earliest possible orderly settlement of the questions at issue | To Me mito fees } At the su vening 4 Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The Now York Fire House used to stand, The skins for wh , . ; kane ly A. Vacearelli on the Conciliatio Fea ya York Freaing World.) Hie eere eee OOOO OO Tne bee, shear a n the coal operators and the coal miner,” the latter can hardly | Worg, 1 have written to Senators | ete ig aia te ph en it He ' tor paid a dollar here were sold at $6 in Londen y that nothing will be done for them unless they fight | Calder and Wadsworth ding the |tongshoremen's strike, applying tol} The Fit Will Always Survive—But the Fittest }| corresponding prone) 8 CONEME (here were sold in America at a ; H v1) tatification of the treaty and the| Mp, yy tl 5 chaibes cpithale ¢ ae cm 3 corresponding profi Tt comes down to d question of what they actually want. Will} govenant of tho League of Nations. |ay gunman, thug, &¢ Ne cio Is He Who Looks to the Survival of the Weak. (ee une alee hee iad Hadaripted ig bere rire ecu oad aR poe as rads gt s o . 4 | Astor ships resulting in a profit of from $30, © $70,000, And all tt be satisfied with impartial justice or are they in reality reaching | !elesed ts @ copy of my letter If there is any blaine attached to | spare profits went into the purchase of New York Yeal santas. 4 ’ 4 4 vy ( Yours very truly, th a intment ccare! after something that has nothing to do with justice and that i R. J. H. BRADI (rad abst ere Metres ome ') measured solely by what they believe their fighting power can win} N w York City, No, 170 Broadway, |sume full responsibility. During a Oct, 11, 1919. | conference held when the adjustment "EW days ago I was in a con-;hivexs, the big boy protecting the| Was but one direction in which the city could grow. Astor realized th gested section of the city, 4]little one until he safe, before it was apparent to any one else, and he bought, at a low price, tracts noted a crowd yathered around) Might Does Not Make Right, | °f nd which were to be of fabulously high Value as soon as the fasi- a group of chil-| growing metropolis should expand far enough. f : Somebody in the gathering saic Yor - Ot fai ney ‘ em ? aor AY Nay a Chien me Atos at the differences of the Ratlroad dren, Some ‘here “The big fellow got way with it With a Hemet RICKS a erenneL oe ae rte aE anaae a neh j . 2 rere ioc Mad sgotia-| “tor James adsworth , jr. | Port eI ork were calling and laughingly adde the: ou ‘ Me Y a tne iar Many thousands ) Rafical promoters of currentytrikes have little use for negotia-| | Pa Oe ame and Terminal Workers was by abet ghingly added, “There's Tl of dollars went to other local benefactions. Astor made good. And he mes and throw- | ‘Survival of the fittest! 1 \ | “How true these words were the| Shared much of his fortune with the public : ing things at a r ry en ho Sbeaker did not realize himself. It ii small boy who! was an instance of the only r seemed detlaatly' vival of the fittest. Years Pe T h e J arr F am 1 ] iy to be standing hig!©@ve man exemplified the survival of the fitte 4 0. ate TE ground—a Com wnich he wanted ft ee co that By Roy L. McCardell mon scene that] He was master th hen of all he sur- lenin fh 4 Fi most every sad aa, 1 He cohausied etsimetinn Copyright, 1919, by The Pres Publishing [0 (The New York Evening World.) Senate, Washing-| brought about, at which Capt. Wm os What they are really after is not what arbitration will award| ton, b. c. A. Maher and the writer met Mayor it 4 Be ates eticia on indvatry combined with rattles infliction ar Senators: As an American] Hylan, the question of the longshore- tran; y citizen intensely proud of his coun-! men's strike was brought up, and I of privation and loss upon the community may yield, try, and as a voter of the Btate of susmested to the Mayor that | Mr ; : ; ‘ Now York, I embrace this oppor-|V@ccarelll, of all the men I could think ‘It is not labor’s demand for a hearing that the public resents. It . ied npn gk of, would be the most lik y to be —— ip labor's lending of its organized power to further the predatory |! deep re tunity to convey to you my feelings | able to bring about an adjustment of ret at the course you have’ this trouble, which has resulted in % 4 ; pursued in connection with the rati- Such great loss to all concerned. I! Saewiamenaigae as witnessed. within sight, With him might made| { h schemes of an element that makes demand for a hearing only an| > x Sigrid ‘ ee {therefore wish to absolve both the se ae right, si ade M in S h ’ ti leation of the treaty of peace ¢M-| Mayor and Secretary Wilson, If abso- Pretty 890%)! But civilisation bh r. Jarr in Search of Potted episode and a pretext in a series of outrageous hold-ups. bodying the League of Nations, | jution is necessary for anything in|bowever, the quarrel assumed, propor-| apace, To-day might makes rake oth i ‘ : ‘The records show that on ‘Thurs-| connection with, this appointment, | tions, and the others went at the little| when tt is Tignte An ee ee only Plants, Gets Planted in His Po | son . And the fittest is| + both of you gentlemen | lcidentally I wish to state that if it! fellow as though to beat him up. He] -day, not the man of might but wne| ; _ . What the country most needs to know just now is what sort of} day, Oct tribunal'‘responsi}le sections of, organized labor would recognize as|¥@ted 1 faver of the Fall amend- Ce iled abd Talstepretan te ion oa rieg | fousht madly S20: deaperetely, And) pe sf He eee any Wil act eRtenan ices haat iy How strong is the part of labor that only wants justice as dis reer meenntely: be eyed Pind Reider eae of | Out of the crowd came a bigger boy. hanes ‘and ‘fed. But lwayn ‘uke eben enty ahered aie ee vsPbate eeiean a quarre! with Moguishea trom the part of labor that is after spoils? se vaed Kerneamulie ahd Tote Gia EGC Reeve Caste cca eer ack ioe velie callecs owes meee re mae aE e Shuaeds Aue WHIT ‘what do you want potted plants] me, About Ruckatore Because, 1 wal So that more surely, more securely, | fF?" asked Mr. J look nice!” whimper ; resent, tO save ‘the American peo- | absolutely unfair and. unsportsman- ’ 27 C " That is the real labor question of the hour. 3 Pg | ns nan- | somebody your own size? Cut it out!” jright is becoming the “Do y: . le from that ridicule, lo lithe, Me, Vaons : ing the fittest Do you think I want them to make! ., Y m that ridicule, loss and suf-| like, Mr. Vaccarelli has never d dak Sh bathe buiting action io wialsuevval. in the y ‘On, d Mrs, Jarr a, by come, now," said Mr. a salad of?” asked Mrs, Jarr. “I want!soothingly, “I'll get you all the | fering which a rejection of the treaty | ni d that in his younger and irr » Bo help toward answering it y t 1 g he 1 e 1 | if n't believ js Some help fg may be forthcoming in the] must entail eee {sponsible days, he was known words by slashing right and left with wie neon Mune look into the /them to put in the narior. of courss.|ted plants you want, but the kind Miners’ reply to the President’s statement on the coal strike. Reerp raerem der ey eaten aicns Faby Deve taken Bers (En OM DDE aurm until he had defended) men ‘ail along the line. who ‘wil not| Tm passionately fond of flowers, and] Of weather Wo are’ having latcl vearse the y indisputable - lin activities pproved by church |the small boy, whose nose was now,stand a o " ook as if we should bu ' ments that have been advanced in, members, Mr. Vaccarelli should be|),< whone nose was now jatand “2, piustice in somebody try-|you never think of bringing me home| coogi afd blankets Instead of pate j y ula 8 bleeding ing to be the fitte: ene eee | f pain support of the treaty, for a large commended for the fact that he has |?/ecding |ing to be the fittest in the survival. |a s0-cent bunch of violets, even! of the sunny tropics,” hia . majority « o re » Bre daily ey - vap|, 28 @ word, he finished that fight for! ro % 4 a CAN THE CONSUMER SQUARE HIMSELF ? majority ot she. r ally, Breat dally be 0 able to ove reome the handicap | nim, He took the child by the arm The Honest Man Wins, ‘For why?" said Mr, Jarr, “Be- Tf vanigrday waa ‘ilk winiak iit ; fairly with tho treaty and freely elt= | through beng deprived of the joys of | #7 led him away, Only the other day a prominent|cause there are no more S0-cent no sign to-morrow, won't be like su: . , airly with the treaty and froely elr= | thro eing deprived of the joys o 6 Bin me 1 | ; ir ,|mer,” said Mrs, Jarr, “anc bi T APPEARS that there are at the present moment in Cuban culated those arguments “However, boyhood, and I dety any one to show Seen eres FOr taro on three) Pasi ie Oe ne ROW. O08 Ge Bia Bunchen or Violeta, and thoes. 20! would like to RAVE aéme hice herte) i : n view of the fact that distingu shed that his life in the past ten years or = ! kers, er to|Greek bo ; , plants, ‘There lower mark warehouses nearly 400,000 tons of eugar—enough to supply the! Republicans like Mr. Taft, Mr. Wick=,moro has been anything but upright, jgain @ higher place in the estima-|cents now are handed out by such Somewhere on the west site, iene! ersham and [ think [am correct in| just and honorable. O-DAY’ pt his employer and in order| grimy hands that one would be afraid | town.» > wes » down- - NS) reuren | ANNIVERSARY demands of the United States until the next cr p is available. | soying Mr. Charles BE, Hughes, have} T. L. DELAHUNTY, {ise Be might advance jbimaelt had |{o buy them, even if they were not al) ya an aweut jot Sa p 4 r ) advocated © ratification o © | Seer % . 7 © back. | ee ered, ey gen- ro . ; Why are these 400,000 tons of sugar held in Cuba while the advocated the ratification of tho! Secretary and Business | Manage prauai (ee tan dies cise rik | crushed and withered, ga they 20") sruntbled Mr Jar uble, 7 7 treat thout amendments, neither Consolidated Marine Engineers’ | ” le of the United States are being put on short sugar rations? of you gentlemen need have any hes aa em the man who really did all his work, |${‘t0's punch, at least, and 1 haven't|,, “Etell you you n not mind about | 4 have any hes-| Len. Ass'n No, 83, and President, | the 3 i) i 3 ; , ih Gh ita Ra seuak tenueie Mf ¢ MUN | proval to the same. _e New York, Ghote thi a plants! Better inve OG) oo manevenat e F Sahat 1S sip led : ‘al to. ae Tha o. 8 unscrupulous worker | Pants’, r hear the last of it if I didn't," said ugar Manufacturers’ and Plauters’ Association to the Senate Sugar| While Senators te, falter and stane By the Treaty. The Mormons. secured all the credit, *orOh, you haven't any money for| MP Jarr. “I'll make a memorandum obstruet, golden opportunity is alip- “ 4 J f it—potted ” away from the United States, 587 Hast 180th Street, ou?” said Mrs, | Of, it-potted palms, Wastigating Committee: 4 E To-day, Oct. 28, is the anniversary| The man at the top, being a just! tiowers for me, have yo hl '4y gaid never mind!" snapped » “Cuba {s willing, on reasonable terms, to protect future er Mth LAL OPH WES RT ns mar Me oe et [weet an ring is, HH, At War tied the quention By putting 4ha'righi 4ave teen busing them for somebody, | PAT sage contingencies, But the blame is not with Cuba, which should degree by our masterly and| ‘The following 1s a copy of a letter|over a body of Mormons comprising |wah {Rothe Plate where he belonged. |or how would you know how much lod mimerne, pele Ma darn “Bote Mattes MmealiabA Cena iie the Atnetichn ciatke: ‘a untalaoced decisive conduct In the war, ¢ sent this day to Senators Wadswortn| bout 700 men under arms, The whole |'Many, many examples confront uals} Gagtbay some for somebody, 1| "Oh, ail right then,” sald Mrs, Jurr Cuba to blame? Of course not. When was anybody ever to insor for V and Calter! enh at td ae a O:000 miserably | every day of just this kind of thing, | bought a buach of violets for you last | “Get nice ones.” ) ) “The undersigned, constituents of living. The “Mormon ¢ ping ee nnd, Without the means of No longer will good men. stand for| week, and that's why 1 know,” said] Mr. Jarr returned at a late hour me for the good old game of “valorization,” which consists in hold- Marine B your State, demand that you vo. for|its origin to RRten Ones having some one “who thinks he ls|Mr, Jarr WAL CHER A MURR aaRRee RRA ; | relation No ; : s : 08 trong lord it over the we 8 > etalned, muh dear,” he 1g back part of the supply of some article that people want wutil you New York, Oct, 24, 1919, |the acceptance of the League of Nu-| Smith, a farm {6 186. | PEs Calenvan aynry teat ie ane bo. lo Peddlers and Potatoes, with some difficulty. “Wash fh tions and the Peace Treaty without|He pretended to “visions;" he was|that no man gains ove Dien mioeres the patted a ’ Joined by thousands, and ‘two thou- | cuit} day's Issue |interpretations, reservations and | sand from reat Britain flocked to |{Cltsh telegraphic despateh from Wash- amendments, that is, the way it came] his teachings. He founded colon another fer| “That may be so," said Mrs. Jarr, | home wh eaxons, only because he has|“but what I am asking now is, will] ham, Her the strength and position to do it, [You buy me some potted palms for} “I said parlor? Jarr icily. °°N| T have noticed in yest rand fis e sure of the top price they can be made to pay for it? It has iid with. perennial success on diamonds, coffec, su palins!" said Mr i aM seat Bevis a ‘The man or woman who can stand | th herever the supply destined for given markets could be controlled, | N#te® Under the caption, Hg Mee} ol in other words, the way|here and there and his “Mormons” |the test ot stiffening “the Shackbone |. “Why'don't you buy them your-|\ “On, was that it?” said Mr. Jarr Wilson Scored for Naming Vacca-|'S, President wishes you to do, Went through great hardships for the /and stopping some one from stepping | self?” asked Mr. Jarr, "I seo the| “Uni! go get 'm, rit away!" ‘ Maybe the Cuban sugar producers will now be kind enough t me those “reasonable terms” and let the Am« “If you refuse to do this you will be| cause. He wa convinced at the next Senatorial elec-|in 1850. Salt Lake City was founded ople w y aBy 0 ough the streets every | o'cloc . tion how many people are in favor off in 187, Brigham, Young being ape (Mey Hage pet ie can truly say that | coming RARE IRE Fe Tee Uanah atte eG shot in jail by a mob|on another to make himself solid| Wagons of the hucksters with plants| “The florists are not open at 2 relll," to the effect that 8 ican consumer know | m ‘on his own responsibility, sald Mr ; Y : oI jthey have left the world a little bet- |da Jarr, “and, besides, I t much HE is to be penalized for letting his market get out of [ted In the Record a letter froin the treaty stand of the President, pointed Governor in 1850, Mormonism |ter for their coming, ee Not this time of year, you don't,"| who sold. vou Tiquer aguinet Gane “ 0 6 | ¥ Vote of the people in|the Attest is he yho locks to the sure iof the neighborhood have formed an| But Mr, Jarr only replie t 4 edian bonds, at No, 149 Broadway, “CAROLYN MUTH.” (160 , (Miwa Of the Weal, . —-» = '@abbngiae Aocleky and we bave sol-! was at > pada warden be gat patted, Seen ae u \ Nees pel i a ae mamas

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