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EDITORIAL PAGE | FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1919 “Now, You Try It” seen, BETARLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, About This World Gadlishe! Daity Dxrcept Sunday by the Presa Publishing Company, Nos 68 to sa ic Row, New York. 3 ‘ i RALPH PULITZD A, President, 63, Pare Row, 3y Sophie Irene Loeb . ANGUS SHAW, ‘Treasurer, 63 Park Row, Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) al HB mortgage of real living is only foreclosed when you make sosinvi PULITZEA:,' Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row, Interest too serious. ental MEMBER oF’ TMH ASSOCTATED PRmss, eet SR TY SUS Jette pads aremettttion ota ost yh] mony NS, EFeatest charity Is to give the aviation push when ‘it idan healt ecded. (VOLUME 60...... The only way to help people is to give them a chance to help themsel In climbing for the high road that will bring you to whatever you aiming, you have to take the bumps with the boosts, When the way of the conqueror is not paved with good intentions he ofte falls by the wayside. A reai human is one who not only fills a want but wants to fill It. Dispel loneliness by cultivating the pleasure of being alone. The note of cheer pays the interest of joy on demand. There's many a gold nugget in the rock that does not show itself at once Tolerance, tenacity and tact are the three rulin muses. Decorate the lives of the living, rather than the monuments of the mourned WHERE THE BARRIERS ARE DOWN. icy that labor in the United States ET us have done with the f gets nowhere any show at present without fighting for it. Whoever has Mad Martin Green’s recent series of articles in The Evening World must have been struck by the actual, cone rete| examples set by various Auerican manufacturing concerns in the establishment of a genuine partnership between capital and labor. The Jarr Family 4 From the co-operative policy of Marshall Field & Co. of Chicago in By Roy L. McCardell ; t @istributing $1,500,000 in bonuses among those of its 12,000 or more Copyright, 1918, by The Prese Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) | + — employees who receive salaries of less than $2,500 a year, to the sti Mrs. Jarr, Influenced by Free The i ‘ it completely worked out profit-sharing plans of the Lakewood Engineer: j Jarr, Influenced by Free Theatre Tickets, x t ing Company of Cleveland, ., the Browning Company, which mana- Becomes a Scoffing Critic. . ‘ factures locomotive.scranes in a suburb of Cleveland, and the Procter shih - | 4 ‘6 SRE are some theatre tickets, )be turned from their handsome + t & Gamble Company of Cincinnati—the latter a famous soap-makitrg | with Mrs, Kittingly's com- |4rtistocratic bore, denoted on t : : ae ; 5" said Mrs. Kite|Stage by a great deal of gold pai ‘ concern which employs 7,000 men and women, with factories and mills | ungiy's Gslseed Wei Pai cing. [au the Turniture and red plush : ingly : Mrs, Kitting- |tieres old butler entered, ft } ig various other parts of the country, and which has gone so far as to ly has another engagement and can't/down by the sad news, and st - \ : | use them, and she says for me to say) Waiting the commands of his f , admit three employees selected by vote of the rest to its Board of if you and Mr. Jarr would like to ac- |¥°! mistress, : : ; , ‘s going to tell him that . a Pa Directors—may be studied representative instances of the way Ameri cept them"— f | leave this place and cannot a e “Oh, thanks! Tell Kittingly ord to pay the old butler to but ; ean thought and enterprise have been abolishing antagonism between ; the interests of capits ‘ When, as under the Procier & Gamble profit-sharing system, it has been possible for an employee, starting at # working up to $150 a month, to acquire in twenty-three years $26,000 worth of company stock by t d Mos. /any longe whispered Mr, Jarr. @ mono-| "8ssseh uid Mrs, Jarr, upon he will say, ‘Let : in poverty as I bave “L wonder whom she's fooling now, | wes y lady; and as for wages Mrs. Kittingly, [ mean,” remarked |I have saved £1,000 in your serv « Mr. Jarr. when the door closed. | Take those, my dear mistress! “Now, don't talk like that!" said} And the Child, Mrs, Jarr sharply, “I have always| “What makes you say that |found Mrs. Kittingly a lady; 1 have| Whispered Mrs. Jarr. “Did you ot she is a perfect de Jarr, interrupting t Jogue of the maid, and the interests of labor, 50 per week and gradual payment of only $7,000 out ij A ‘ : z 0 ! - : this play before 5 of wages; when a blacksmith foreman now earning 9% cents an hour le Transits eae r tari : No, but 1 can tell it by the x { ; : i Aree RE vn : o ify anybody's sneers, his hands tremble,” said Mr. Ja sf can point toa block of stock worth $65,000 accumulated for him by the lot of people who talk about her were|And sure enough the aged servital ft accrue Ol fr i " only as well behaved and as good|made the proposition that he woulg firm as the accrued value of amounts withheld from. his pay and heearted and less hypocritical the |not only work for nothing but would x} ; ; ia Ab aie tien ‘ a world would be better off!” {return his back wages. This is a¥ , @ invested in the business during a period of sixteen years, nobody can “Oh, well, 1 only mean I fronder | ways done by domestics jn the drame Ae ; is tah Vhited States is whom she is ng ou non a ut not in real life! # say the barrier between labor and capital in the United States is inevit previous enxagem« nt and wh at the |The next scene depicted the de 7 ‘ gentleman will think who sends het|voted lady in humble. Id D1 fe able or immutable. _ the there tickets if he finds out she {stil wearing a costly pe aero eauly ot mean to cri jbadge of respectable stage povert 4 A ? H a ¢ akewe Engineering Ci y the generous grass widow upstairs, |for aristocratic ladies. 4 f labor? Listen to one of the Lakewood Engineering Company eim- but was playing for safe| | The faithful old butler now entere bs) ployoes : Criticised Though Generous. followed by a thin-shanked little i “Mrs. Kittingly is the only person wien blond curls, dressed in boy't ® i : I know that ever does anything for | clothes : At first we thought there was a joker in it somewhere, If | Inet aid Mra. Jarrwarmiy, “if some| A murmur, “Isn't it sweet, tht wasn’t until we understood that the company wasn't giving us of those cther people who talk abcut |darling!” arose from ail the womed ] \ ere only half as kind L would )!n the audience, anything we didn’t earn that we woke up to the proposition. rere nein criticiam in better part.| ‘Ten to one, a hundred to one, the 4 y ¥ Does Mrs. Stryver or Mrs. Clara Mud- |Stage child asks, ‘Where is my dead i Now we see that the more money the company makes the more dee hith ever send us any theatre | papa, mamma, was he killed in th tickets? war?" muttered Mr. darr, “But I've heard you say"——began| And when the stage child m: Mr, Jarr those very remarks Mr. Jarr siz, Nover mind what you've heard me Jered. Mrs. Jarr never uttered @ w! we will make, and, take it from me, we are after that little-old profit.” i i i ie’ ong workers is cond » to’strikes tha sa tied Mrs, Jarr. “Eamay have} till she got home. ‘Then she si a NO IT cape TRE Her ConUUCICOALO aL?) Kom BE let others prejudice me, but what 1 nty. and the next time she m¢ shut off production. Neither can it have much patience with te ! now say is 1 believe in taking pe Kittingly she thanked her fa i een ple as I find them tickets and told her the pli Mr, Jarr hel and the|proved only too plainly that no maa arrs in due time got ready for the|Was worth a woman's love, and wher |Mrs, Kittingly said a good man was he play was a hard luck story [srs Jarr replied that there was né colossal economic falsehood that slow work and short hours make jobs y « fer others. Maximum production comes pretty near being a steady From Evening World Readers The Gay Life of a Commuter 3 ‘ ope the s vail, The Problem of Help in the Home. — | ruise the cost of living if such a bill y had lost all and were to |such animal. ; rule the year round where the spirit of profit-sharing prevails, DROS PRN, Gal bel LL Would be Ganaadic, Whe ater ahilvine By Rube Towner The family had lost all and wer , Not that profit-sharing is immediately applicable to every indus- | To the Editor of The Evening World: would not be affected any with the Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) bonus bill, and facts show You it has d f 1 Tl 1 here Is one atrike that we do not | oe come down without ft. ‘The men try and every manufacturing plant in the country. lere are p) ages| near so much wbout these days, but || Congrecs who are aestast tne nilt | Raradise Millionaires aiid Committers ; ‘ ever ve practicable, . tone that has been going on for the | must not have had any sons in uni- 5 5 > 7" where it might never prove practicable, past year, It is the strike of the|form or they would surely fight for Face Hard Winter on Equal Terms pital is already feeling its way] family servants, cooks, 1 and |!t. Why don’t they leave Prohibition y is ) re iy | #lone for « while and pass a bill that “an other household help who p ally | vould tenant. the men: that gouent| (6 LL, boys refuse to work for any reasonable|and pled for tehir country? 7.55 to town started off like ‘Salts an Essential of Life’ By Dr. Charlotte C. West M. D. (The New York Bvening World) The point is that American ¢ toward partnership with labor, not because labor hus taken capital by Copyrta by The Press Publishing Co. said Doe, as the| Write a piece for the Paradise News about it.” Moose, “I'll read it to you: | ortain Other Mineral Substances the throat and forced that partnership, but beeause the sound busi-| wage, or in any home where they REGULAR ARMY. a bucking broncho, “it's be-dy, Ye Biready written a ptece,” sald alts, Lime and C : Da eal : A i - in are not given the full status of hon- War Risk In nee. ginning to look like we are up against Paradibe feller went downs to Necessary to the Development of the news of the plan appeals to American progressivene: Mhe instances} req guests, New York, Oct. it this winter—no coal, no booze, no his cellar ‘ ‘ Are! : p | rue Agent and a], To get him a drink all alone; HAitar of ‘Tho Bi , in the suburbs, it is actually | To the ving World peace, and a Revi od are found in millg resented by ‘he Evening World are only a few of the more conspicu-| He aap 1 shest authorities on that|Uents of the b i if " 4 PICU" impossible to wet any help, it has] Something ought to be done at|Game Warden living right here in} But when he got there the coal bin] PVHE highest authorities on Mal | ALT Ay thing Almoxt Like taking us in one comparatively sinall section of the country, been for over a year, But what is} Washington. It seems that even the | the village and everybody striking ex-| And the locker as dry as a bone.” th a peritors eh pannot ware |i thee tates ie Semeenae Gate ; ; . : ae SUhal wh help in the War Risk Insurance De- | ce: » only ones we want to 0.0n m," said Doe Neco abOen. CHU Panes sae ho: internal secrslons Gey om the point of viow of labor itsclf, is there zm ,|the answer? ‘The work and duties cept the only ones we Wi k im,” said Doe, “L have often won-| ; , poesia oi A gg Oey RAD fs From the } tac » is there nothing to be of the home are honored ones, the] partment bas deserted us along with |a gtrike—the Amalgamated Hot Air} dered why a man who can write like] Vive unless capable of metabolizing g.ands, besides valuable fea 7 e@4 for the wislom of letting profit-sharing and similar programmes }jite is—in my opinion—more attrac. ! our New York Congressmen, Dooling | Union down in Congress.” ' ey nis time on ‘caleium-lime. Of all the nfineral salty eT ts war thas brought to t rain playing he | reauirea by the system, that of cal-| notice o: qand others, 1h ye been paying in- | the world the extraordina: [tive and in far better surroundings “Hait of those guys don’ i ; ‘ ‘ know | nye! nd 1 le ipfluence of public approval and pressure as : surance two years and plied for is ‘8 a good deal casier to set| th * ost | ¢ 8 o Gemie wap me expand under the ipdlue t approval and pressure as against | inca ‘the life of factories and work [pean taney, eure und Applied fOr | wnat they're talking about," sald |money out of the heart game than ie Gleam, RS BNR) Oe [Ie is found most /qualitios of the Garmans, There «7% P ¢ policy of violence which discourages experiment and converts con-|190ms, But the girls of to-day re- ite to twenty-year endowment |Mawruss, who gave a cellar party |!8 to get a drink or a ton of coal; I/ abundantly in cow's milk, which, | bo no that many of & ag fuse to even consider such work. |oan't seem to get a reply. Filed a he President vetoed the War-|""*, going to say It’s like taking| however, is not the richest milk in eobee y are om, fidence into distrust ? Se ae OEE veblemte T anouid [nication Aug sent three months | ie" pronibition Act and greatly ro-|CAndY away from @ child, but any-| cinor elements: essential to growth. |traced to the nature of Lad ae ers solved this problem? TL should |premium, and guess if I die my wife Leah a ae . y who would take candy away . hb bey agi Picpttlats te “The more money the company makes, the more we will make.” | like to know, through your columns, | will he lucky if she gets the pre-|duced his reserve, thinking that Mie|/fiom anyone while the only substi-| Thus goat's milk contains ten times atutte, Tho ratinien ot nations ac A whether any answer has been, or can |mium. I sent no less insurance, 'Mr.| armistice would last until January, |tute is under the ban ought to be|as much iron as cow's milk. ‘The best |P ; yea ruer ars ; ( : A s mium, I sent no less insurance, Mr. | armistice would last ye Hie asinene wanes eh a - If only labor could apply that to itself in relation to the country’s] be, found, Mrs. AX. He lGurran is the sort of man we need |’ “No, and the other half don't know | "rested for grand lageeny.”* substitute for the fresh milk of f0atS | H16. Dheir painatabig axentionn, faa fi ‘ ‘ snd e's Office or Factoryt in Washington, and Iam with him a ¢ “Speaking about coal," remarked]. e i, Ite | Siig ae ) q & industry in general at this critical period, if it could be persuaded that The Bronx, Oct. 29, |Hlection Day J. J. CANNING. bia fey ¢ talking about either,”| 1.7% “E haye been tying to et-cral is cheese made fom he ore a ¥ slising the grave necessity for dr09 | a i : vorkd: . }sinee last M ft | value has nev S c \ omen d ? the whole trend of public opinion was never more favorable to its | 7 the Baltor of mae Evalue Word! high Tittle Beetitenn ener “Well, what can we do about it?" /oll and wood.” Out here we dove ber thin country, #0 the demand for it.ts Fee ee SUD er 08 8 toed BONN mo aving graduated rom hi ‘The Bronx, Oct. . » bd ‘ nies . conducted) m expel lon : claims where those claims do not go beyond justice and become greed, |school last June, 1 enterod a down- {To the Raitor of The Evening World aaked Jim Moose, [Fin to get our coal until everybody in| ni, and where there ig no demand |thesy vines. Cron tropon, w foodalt ‘L asked a prominent r wer the other day what they we to do and he said they were 5 to obey the law just as they ail Nquor But there are cer-| with vegetable iron, is the result «" years of experimentation by a G { nansavant.) So one of their nation foods, usually tolerantly smiled at b the rent profiteering landlords in the | there ts no supply. city have all got coul. iain parts of Europe, not Woes of the Rich, southern ‘ance and, in Norv town office as office boy. ‘ow, four Some of the worst. profiteers are| months later, | find that [ have not/the small shopkeepers, the littl slackening it, disputes and differences could be adjusted at a far less| advanced and that it wilt be @ long | grocery stores and — delicatesser if it could urge its demands without either strangling production or time before | can earn better wax places. 1 always carry home my ng pom ; Sia ts where goat's milk is utilized in this/others, is sausage, and @ form heavy cost to everybody—including labor. or get @ better position. One of Use but that dosen't esem to| lave been doing,” said Doc a TOU ate Ri 4033 Sug bohe ore alled blood pudding. It ae ; j friends, who graduated with me, has | bundles, but that doesn't seem to] “nnaida ya mean ‘just us they've |All, Set money and they buy thelr! way : rf 4 to go into particulars as 1 . Capital itself is beginning to take down the barriers and re-appor-| gone into a shipyard afd is now; make any ditfersnice, The pilve ia the) doing?” asked Mawruss lcald Mawruse “Stow thate wit cre | comage cheese is, however, Within ithe tremeodous iron value ef a rig pany making big money there, I have | N BR REO HEH OVAET = | ; vided : pie ay of (. at Wel ine reach of every housewife; it is,|food and tts effect 5 tion the profits. Does labor think its ultimate share can be as great | planned ail'my life to become a busi. | Where. All they want to do is to get| “If they mean what they say, we|ouxht to do, all of us—tf we have the | ‘he reach of ¥ teed betel upon the consti i 8 } i very last cent they can. Mrs. B. F ft " Ls a moment's thought will show, the es eases i 3 ness man, but the way things are | eve eycan. Mrs. E.F. | can get along all right; of course it's | cash" —— as 4 q t if, while it fights and grabs, it forgets to produce? now it seems as if it would be better A Boycot on Meatst going to be hard on some of the boy Yes," interrupted Doc, “and the] pest part of turned milk, and there- to get a Job In some yard or factory N York, Oct. 30, | 77! mean the addicts and habit lealer has the goal. The only happy] fore one of the most valuable of pee eel GUS S RESG Aa Will some of The Evening World|, ew Fore, + 8. | Phey can't get along on candy and) People in the country this year are : 1) as @ powerful in. readers advise me in this, and tell me | 10 the Falitor of The Brenig World | such epsitz, stuf our millionaires, the men who own] foods, as vwell as & “i , - whother it would be better to keep on| Lam surprised what American ‘ i ihe the big estates and get their money testinal antiseptic and tonic, We The sooner the whole question of War Time Prohibition Is here or go where I can make more | people will stand for. ‘The price of Mother Goose Revised, a ton at a time like we get our coal.| could all do no better than to con- . ner xo 1 peor H imei hiee aera ticiie a eupae | h H could a ‘he Mi threshed out in the Federal courts, the better, ‘That is the money? meenet Mela | hogs has dropped 50 per cent., but the| famine,” said. Charlie. “Now wo| cen eeoe the winters ed BP WHT sume a goodly quantity of cottage The Miss Gunnings. ‘ % raetervin igh = prices in the retail market stand the|could get along without sugar if] #0; a »| cheese daily, Because of its insipid SVR, never say “The Missi gne proper place in which to arraign Congress on a charge of : ee Brooklya, Oct. 29 | same rr b fore, Why don't the|they had let our national beverage eae ies the eat ianeee 5 are taste it requires seasoning, and is very nning.” That would Fetch 2 = ‘Vo the Editor of The Evening World: people get to her and stop eating | alone; we could get along without so > it, onel . : s av ane, X P 7 Tank dishonesty and abuse of legislative power, We have with us these days a‘large|meat until prices come down to|much coal or #0 many clothes, but | {°y,wrmed to see Mr. Myergelt, one} appetizing when fares a with teak all mt y were, and are, saitceneecaians number ef candidates for every kind | something reasonable again? no, they have to conserve on the| Community. Leek is in the list of vegetables that |ever shall be, “The Miss Gunninge: of office, all cheering for themselves] 3 ‘wrong thing, Somebody ought to] “ «1 ordered my coal last April,” said| contain iodine, Cottage cheese, eaten|For who r ors. the’ witching If the coal miners are offered justice without the need of }and preaching economy. But they Mr, Myergelt; “it's true I order it in| with uncooked green vegetablos, or | creatur Phey were Iris ent sort trom that which they reject? If the community pledges paying for that? G. ¥. Hi Ow Wt Started | rmine [A ,often sce Doc coming out of the| ter, and an occasional draught bf but-ldon In the ‘eighteenth cedtury theq r Miatais recrided ‘Ss kisce at ri Ht ‘The 19th Amendment Au Jeustadtl office Kicking becouse he can't set} termilk, is a repast that has remark: upset the town. ‘The crowpi in Hyd@ worker e kee work, is he equally en- Staten Island, Oct. 29, —a any coal. Yesterday I got word from|able food value, especially for the | Park stood on chairy to age them ag titled o the pvewing Wor 7 295 the coal company; they always notify | expectant mother, thalc:onloche drove to that aid after he has quit work and left the community To the Riéiter of The Breging World The Chinaman’s Queue, , -4rd them are forever considered out-| mo of shipments, Read it! And he| ~? i Abeth Gunniog wade e caeentietoe Here's my kick. Why do some per ’ te Le The Bones Need Lime, q made a romantic ses to suffer? 7 ist ihe a tumlan cle i | casts is indeed paradoxical. For the} passed the letter over to Doc, whom 4 eret midnight marriage in 1752, with, : Bona inalat on Smojng aT akish c'e- | TF the Germans had won the wary! pigtail is a sign of bondage, the eur- s known for many years, Doc] Certain salts and mineral sub-|the Duke of Hamilton, When he died’ ——_-+- arette or a heavy cigar in phone! would they have made us wear | mark of a conquered race. read: stances are absolutely, essential for! the Marquis of Lorne knelt at hea “ booths? Have they no consideration! ® pigtails—in order that they might| Centuries ago ancient China had al ‘Dear Mr, Myergelt: the beautiful development of the body, | fect—and got her! Her sigter, Maria For every person who can tell you wherein Ella Wheeler for the neat ty that must stay in) yoy thine k round| Civilization adl its own, But« every (his is to notify you that last week] Lime is needed to support the bony | Gunnin, as also married in 1752 ta ‘Wilcox was not Elibeth Barrett Browning, there are ten thou the booth for tenor iHfteen minute CH hat ay eer en Par Ded eae Side she was surrounded L. warrior| We shipped you one car of furnace] framework and for the preservation | the J ntry, Lf youswish tq our 7 Cow ? And would they have applied) hordes that coveted the riches and a of the teeth. The following list shows [see 1 traits you must go iq gand who will miss the former and never read the latter, Such For Soldiers’ Bonus, their efficiency to a new system of| luxuries of the more advanced people] ih hat med Mawruss, “what the amount of lime contained tn mhany [the British Muse uum and ‘the Boutq | Ps ew York, Cet punishment, perhaps, with a different| and harassed them continual! dT tell you common articles of die’ asington, Where the two beauti is the power of a poetic gift that aims no higher than the heart To the Editor of The Evening World number of ee 1 an perl Kinally ,overcome by & pt arian] “Wait a minute,” said Doc, and hej Cow's sallls, 346105 sire wbey ries, 483; | live forever—on the backs of two ps} . aa oticed a vhinta: : a Aeac in A host, the Chinese were reduced to a| read on figs, 400; yolk of ogg, 380; prun melled watches. So dainty, thes of the average human being--and hits it, Recently I noticed an article in) against our conquering masters? state of servility. One of the exac-| "We have just received word that]160; dates, 108; white of egg, it is cruel to mortal: J * your paper about the soldiers’ bonus.! ‘The zeal with which patriotic] tions of the conquerers was that. the| the car was wrecked and the contents{potatoes, 100; Malaga grapes, 60; fashion of the period—to A eran, PAT. in Conxtesa from /Chinamen cultivate the queueg that| men grow long queus by which, ag| lost py fro, Will try to ship, you) graham bread, 17: Dect, 24, | | your portrait done on the tay 4 r pe Blite made @ wide! they consider > they flew by on thelr horses, they | another car in about two weeks. THE. i en, ads 8 ittle wateh. zabeth “Swat fire*Boss,” roars Mr. Hearst. It will probably end statement, saying “he ix very much ms Bvetsnieed ie esd hesipae ds Ratlailin tose Una nd ethe nt hen iaes SLOWPOKE COAL CO." Ideal foods. Tt is the best natural | face looks at you from viene against the bonus, e claims it{ tinction, and the fact tha hose | creatures to swing them before them| “Now go on," said Myergelt, “why| weapon we possess for keaping dis- of golden hearts. The witch ith « slap on the wrist and a reconciliation—as usu ts would be # heavier tax and it would Chinamen in other counties who @la-| to the saddle or to cut off their heads, | don't you laugh?” Ylewed states at bay, Moat conatit- broke enough! 4 sil