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nga ts , seats ER ie r Sigs “aie Jol) aa Hae ey ay AY pai ah ARE ss a \ > : + THE EVENING. WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1919. P2.GOV. COOLIDGE POINTS WAY TO CRUSH BOLSHEVISM IN U.. BAY STATE GOVERNOR URGES "lc Sl ee ‘inne DURATION OF NEN | *EFIRE THEY VIOLATE LAS Broker Left $1,000,000 in Stocks ~ Our Duty to Americanize the Alien Before os Reed fills 0 sas : xemption in Will, the Bolsheviki Get Him. Because Harry F. Morse, No. 3 Weet O the day's work. 46th Street, a retired broker, who Gee ~ The public is tired of strikes, and in the long run the wishes of the public prevail, Punish Criminal Foreigner So He «~ Won't Want to Corhe Back, Then. =2. Banish Him—Train the Newcomer in Americanism Before the Bol-| shevist Gets Him. | Oot, 9 last, failed to exempt bin wine Both capital and labor owe @ duty to the public, and the public will By Martin Green. ‘and her two co-executors from giving & |bond, they were obliged to file a ben@ © resent violations of that duty. | | There is danger in the growth of Bolshevist sentiment, but plenty of | (Special Staff Correspondent of The Evening World.) Gaprright, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) jfor $1,000,000 to-day In the Surrogates 7) Court, The bond was furnished by Me |r. F, Beardsley, Inc., of Liberty Stree | The executors are Mrs. Jane fey y lorse, the widow; Everitt Mant A £004 to overcome it. Donork Hilly aural Taltnd, beer Hereees That is the sound |p Vice Premdent of the Guaite ~ the distribution of Comp: BOSTON, Nov. 12.—When former Senator W. Murray Crane of Dalton, | Maes., enters the next Republican National Convention with the ease and | silence of nitro-glycerine oozing into the cracks of the door of a safe, and carrying the same potential power—as many, would-be dictators of the policies and candidates of a Republican National Convention have discovered—he will lead by the hand, figuratively speaking, a personality consider- ably similar to his own. Which is a way of saying that the Hon. W. Murray Crane will have, in addition to his own strength and political acumen, in the next nominating and platform- making assemblage of the Republicans, a regular old- fashioned candidate to offer or trade with, said being | industry,or thrift secured by law.” “No seheme of government in- suraneé dr aid is going to make | | prosperous. | “Publicity is a remedy with an arm longer and stronger than that of the law. “There is the same right to dis- Perse an unlawful assemblage of | wealth or power that there is to disperse a mob that has met to lyneh or riot.” “There is just one condition on whieh men in secure employ- ment at a living, nourishing, prof itable wage for whatever they contribute to the enterprise—be it bor or ca and that condi tion is that me one make a profit by it, basis for Educate those coming into our country as a means of treating with the situation. | Foreigners who break our laws should be punished here and then de | ported. Simply deporting is a joke. If they desire they can come back. If punished, they won't want to. Aliens dangerous to our institutions should be deported even if not guilty of breaking our iaws. | t ready to relish a diet of old- | Our first duty—to get the new arrival a job and make him a pro | “bout ready ducer; then educate him before he is gathered in by the Bolsheviki. Capital and labor are entitled to fair returns, and no more. Tru ry widow recites that her husband 9 anty The ; an estate valued at dver $1,000,008, © onsisting of the house, valued at $100= 000 4 winder in stocks ami 77 stoomentp The widow fi -fourths of the estate, the wealth and the only one. It cannot be done by law, cannot be done by public ownership, cannot be te re dl the bonds of the Standard Olt, Old fashioned stuff! think the people of this country are Granted. Many and railroad companter berita thre remainder being divided among two glg= j fashioned stuff. tors and two nephews Not what the worker takes home in his pay envelope, but what his wife can 4ut into the market basket with it is what counts | If people would only work the hours they are supposed to, there | Wouldn't be much trouble; most of them don't. industries against cheap imports. | Some one asked him if he thought the | tariff would be an issue in the next national campaign, or if the predom- inant issue would be the relattons be- tween capital and labor, Gov. Cool- idge said no man can tell what the| isnues will be, 1 eage “The man who ran against me for| jig { Governor," he remarked, “thought he! nor whimsically, chance to “but [ never get go to shows. The people want me to amuse them, it seems, by making speeches at and meetings and the the time I can sj Gov. Coolidge He smiles EM GATTLEe CO Platinumsmiths ‘ 630 FIFTHAVE. Jewelers dinners take up all © from my office.” has infectious | all over his face; eyes smile too, Phystog nomists teach an Anticipating radical advences in cost his we advise the early selection of OVERNOR” . the Hon, Calvin Coolidge, recently elected Governor of | , wan going to make lower ¥treet car| POmMA teach that the sincerity of} Jewelry for Holiday Gifts Massachusetts, practically by acclamation, GOO GE ANOS His wire’ fares the issue of the campaign. It 6 May be gauged by tho extent) Our Present Low Pri Calvin Coolidge—SOME NAME! No middle initial, palais inka atte. Minted | didn’t turn out to be much of an| °F the Participation of the ey brat Biv Thay id that Gov, Coo! FS builder of Here as a few evide: isa Just plain Calvin, named after the well-known John Calvin, and plain Coolidge, named after his ancestors, issue, It is quite clear that Gov ker and a Opposite St. Patrick's Cathedral or, “had nothing to do with industria! | earning punishment such as may Coolidge 9 infil is not infatuated with the idea of od d Coolidge have written that name high in the political his- | °°™ditions, except in an indirect way,| be inflicted by the courts. oes 3 : ~ “ tM nasette, valine to think of it, ndne eat ns Ferien although some labor leaders tried to| “There is plenty of law to deal with|Government ownership or public) leeted at random from records “tory @ ese make it appear that industrial issues | both classes, the dangerous and the! ownership of public utilities, but his! Public speeches. used @ middie initial—William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow ‘Wilson—not forgetting Grover Cleveland and Benjamin Harrison. Going back along this line, we might think of George Washington, Thomas Jeffer- som and Abraham Lincoln. This is a tip for hunch players to rethember about next June. Not that 1 mean to say that Calvin Coolidge is a candidate for the Re- ") publican nomination for the Presi- ‘dency. 1 talked to many men in Bos. ‘ ton who know him well and they ) agree that he wouldn't cross a room to geek @ nomination, and that in all seeeabtitty he has thought less about Bat peuseniicies of @ career in Na- “donal politics than anybody inter- “Industry cannot flourish if la- bor languish,” uspenion of one man's profits ls suspension of another man's were involved, “My re-election was an expres- sion of the fact that the public will will prevail over the private will One of the Governor's visitors re- marked on the thoroughness of bis method of concealment. “Yes,” said Gov. Coolidge, “I was up in Pelham, Maas., on top of Pel- ham Hill, But," he added, quickly, with true Yankee forethought, “that’s not saying that if I want to take another rest I will go there again.” This too might be charactéristic of Jlegislative record shows that he is strong for Governmental and state | regulation of such utilities. “I don't know of any business the Government carries on that couldn't) be as well conducted by private en- | terprise,” he said. “With Govern- ment ownership it would get to be a question after «a while whether the) People own the Government or the| Government would own the people.” A man who knows the Governor well told me that a few years ago| Calvin Coolidge, as Chairman of the Railroad Committee of the Senate, lawbreakers, if the law is properly ap- plied, Here in Massachusetts we have a Commission on Immigration to defi with the situation. The functions of the commission are two-fold, indus- trial and educational. “Our first duty is to get the new arrival a job and mi ducer. Then our duty cate him before he is gathered in by the Bolsheviki.” Gov. Coolidge believes that capital and labor are entitled to fair re- turns and no more. He is progre: sive in his theories as to labor's a] with plenty of room for switches and terminal facitities. all his energies are devoted to that particular job, or the phase of it that is of the greatest im- portance for the moment. Prob- ably he has never thought of the support the people cannot look OF WEARING APPAREL For Women and Children ‘Uitimately property rights and ‘ ersonal rights are th: |. ested in his future. But there is al- Oe ts iit oat es ne, the man, a politician, who, when he| rights, but he is not so progressive as [drafted and submitted to that body| ~ thing, The one ceenot Ge be 6g UNLOADING OVERSTOCK {ore the Hon, W. Murray Crane. In his public addresses, It ie: goes out to hide, selects a hiding place | are some politicians who trim their|the present Massachusetts Public| served if the other be violated.” | SGRANE LIKES HIM AND THAT plage egret on top of a bill, | ldeag to fit the demands of the labor| Service Bill, which ina pretty drastic! “Large profite meen lars ray: OF OUR MAIL ORDER HOUSE } MEANS MUCH. Characteristic of Gov. Coolidge was| _T8® Governor is as observant as a! vote, law. On the morning of the day set| rolls, but profite must be the re- : Nc do I mean to assert that Gov.| the short vacation he took for the|tf#ined lookout. Early in the inter-| MARKET BASKET REAL MEAS- |for the vote it « red to outsiders! ult of service performed.” Calvin Coolidge, now by reason of! purpose of testing up before resum-| VW ® slance of his sparking eyes ie URE OF WAGES. as if the railroad lobby had su re “Expect to be called a stand- AT TO OFF nerve and straightforward dealing in| ing bis duties in the State Housec|®¥¢Pt over his auditors and told him i meas sei sald Gov, Cool-|jn obtaining sufficient votes to kill! patter, but don't be a stand- politica one of the leading figures in| He left there last Thursday and hoj ‘#t one had not clearly heard what eit ‘© the profits of his endeavor, !the mehsure on the floor. A friend| patter, Expect to be called a the United States, has been or is | didn't tell anybody where he was go-| B® bad just said. Immediately he re- * t ts exerted to an honest purpose.| met the Senator in the State House.| demagogue, but don't be a de COATS—DRESSES—FURS compet of Hon. W. Murray Crane,|ing. His private secretary didn't| Posted his statement in a slightly Now you can't settle the labor ques-| “Looks as though the Public Servic: gogue, Don't hesitate to be as SUITS—SKIRTS—SHOES because I don't know that he has.| know. None of the State officers | /ouder tone. This occurred four times tion by raising wages. It is not what} j31)) would be smothered, Senato revolutionary 4s science, Don't hesitate to be as reactionary as the multiplication table.” in the course of the talk. Each time’ @ man takes home in his pay en- velope that counts. But I have been told that ex-Senator Crane Glogely following the career of Calvin remarked the friend. | “Who says so?’ snapped back Cal-] WAISTS—MILLINERY PETTICOATS—-SWEATERS knew. They couldn't reach him by telephone. A rumor that he was| the Governor was right Gov. Coolidge reiterated that be It is what his wife can put into the market basket has been for several yeara coming back last Sunday proved to be vin Coolidge. an has a spiritual nature. —| WEA Coolidge and that he is much pleased \sething but a rumor. It was not until{ Will not allow any of the policemgp with the contents of that pay enve- |" swny-ereverybody," answered Toles devand \¢ quiet resend eal A CORSETS GLOVES P with the career and the man. And! Monday that his office got into touch| Who went on strike in Boston to go lope. Neither can you settle the friend. \ the magnet responds to the pole. ate 4 when the Hon. W. Murray Crane 18/witn him, and that. was when he|Dack on the police force. “They labor question by lowering wages. It) Then everybody is wrong,” de-! ‘To that, not to selfishnean, let the CHILDREN’S DRESSES ~ pleased with a prospect in politics! caned up Henry Young, his secretary, | #bandoned_their places,” he said, “toj 1s most important that workmen have | clared the author of the bill. “The| laws the “that means something for the pros. ot commonwealth ap- pect as well as for the Hon. W. Mur- the public injury and have forfeited any rights they may have possessed.” atisfaction in what they are doing,| ji1)'5 alt " ; pm dependable, new, i ‘turn bill's al! right if they understand it eal.’ and announced that he would re! tune ampiovoreraen oetiio co y peal. pe A Socomany to the moment to Boston Tuesday afternoon or , and they're going to understand it { rey Crane. evening. He didn't say what train| From there the talk drifted into| ognize tho dignity of the workmen's| Won't be more than « handtel otj|H& DECLARES WORK 18 NOT A In most cases prices are belo Metther do 1 know that Gov. Cal-| he fi-|the relations between capital and) position. 1n the long run the sttugelo |, 4; et iG ie cet CURSE p Ww . was cothing on, and his big confi- g toitat faracn ne votes agai! . It's a good » A vin Cooldige has imbibed political! dential attendants Horrigan and[labor. Gov. Coolidge said that in ween capital and labor would be| pefore the vote Senator Coolidue sera seins See actual cost of production & <wisdom and acumen frdin the over-| Hardiman met all the afternoon| pinion both capital and labor ows a/ sattied by public opinion, which I8| yrieriy outlined to the Senate the yj Weve, in an See ques- TAlk: told. pon tial ek ebna te ahictoss fh towing fount of knowledge which] and evening trains. It fell to the lot| duty to the public, and the publicy| always sound when well informed. | provisions of the bill, its purpoaes | {loRs everything, | Sona ane —easy to select from the tremendous | “adorns whatever premises the Hon.| of rank Hardiman to meet him as although long suffering, will event- 1am not much concerned over the|anq meanings. My informant's re- cism. This in one of commercial bargains we offer at big savings W. Murray Crane inhabits, but I do! he reached the North Station, at 8.36 | ually resent vioations of. that duty agitation for shorter hours or the|*siection is that less than tem votes : ‘ ) know that, after talking with him| glock at night, all alone and carry-| by either side. Basically, the Gov-| riscussion as to what number of hours | \urw cast in opposition, critictams,”” DRESSES Velour Plush | «»-awhile, he reminds me of the former ernor said, the people are reasonable|a man should devote to his task of In all changes man has taken SSES OAT UN ‘ft pn yen eee Massachuetts Senator in that he {s) ‘ ; i iE | .... Kood story and can tell one. ay deep and wise and chary of con- versation and extremely careful ta his utterances. In casual conversa- tion the Governor scarcely moves hi lips. There is about his face some- thing that conveys to an observer the impression of repression, if the reader can get what I mean. He thinks and talks at the same time and doesn’t let his words x, ahead of his brain, 80 bd Lo politicians do. So far as | |B edn learn, Gov. Calvin Coolidge has never made an official or po- litical atement that he has ,? taken back or modified. Much has been written about the “Governor of Massachuetts and his career since his overwhelming re- election last week and the public is well acquainted with the man as the getieral public sees him. I had read <a Wet about him and involuntarily ““tformed a mental picture of him. With my first sight of him the men- ‘tal picture faded away. He is amuch <“vigger man physically and mentally that I had expected to meet—and a much foxler politician also, Gov. Coolidge is of the Woodrow Wilson aype, | rect English and he thinks .of the future and has use of the past only as it serves as a teacher, Wilson has a keen sense of humor and is witty in conversation, enjoys &| I doubt | if the sense of humor possessed by that he is a phrasemaker | and uses wonderfully clear and di-| President | | | alvin Coolidge is either keen or of- | “Sien appealed to. I am quite sure that while he might appreciate a funny ‘story, he couldn't tell one and get tho point over, But he has good old * down East wit and says many a funny thing without intending it to be anything bug a statement of fact. | Gov. Coolidge is to some: extent| like President Wilson in that he has a single track mind, but that applies nly to the work he has in hand. Tho ringle track mind of the Massach: on & wide rigtt or ing a yellow suitcase that must have cost all of $5 or $6. LET SUPPER WAIT WHILE SAW THE BOYS. ‘The Governor informed that several newspaper correspondents from other cities had.been waiting for several days to talk to him. “Send them right up,” said the Gov- ernor, and it was not until the cor- respondents were through with him HE | that he appeared in the public dining room of the Adams House, where he makes his home in Boston, and or- dered his dinner, It was then after 10 o'clock. Gov. Coolidge is about five feet nine inches tall, slender and straight. He is what they call out west “sandy |complected.” His hair is dark red and his eyebrows are red, and he has blue eyes. I would venture to say that in his boyhood days, yp in Ver- mont, he was a prolific source of freckles, He is a Green Mountain product, with an Amherst education, and he talks with the exact phrasing and intonation that one would ex- pect of a Green Mountain product educated in Amherst College. The first thing the Governor did after meeting the correspondents wag to produce a box of large, strong cigars. He didn’t take one himself. Then he sat down and allowed that he was ready for whatever might be coming to him, that the coal strike had been called off, and said he was glad of it. The threatened shortage of coal was to New England nothing short of an impending calamity. “Of cour he said, “the in- junction obtained by the Gov- ernment was the direct cause of calling off the strike, but the un- derlying cause was public senti- ment, which backed up the law. Tha injunction proceeding suited the situation. The public is id of strikes, and, in the long run, the wishes of the public prevail.” “Something ike your re-election,” the He said he had heard | dents. ed even. if they and intelligent, The flood of con- gratulations which has come ito him in the public press and by wire and telephone from Democrats as well a8 Republicans all over the country 'con- vinces him that the people of other. States have about the same habits of thought as the people of Massachu- setts. Then the talk turned to Bol- shevism and Sovietism, “| don’t want to be an alarm: ,” said the Governor, “but there is danger in the growth of Bol- shevist sentiment. On the other hand, there is plenty of good to meet and overcome the evil. We are a long way from revolution and the overthrow of our insti- tutions, because when you analyze the situation there are no classes | in this country, We have no sub: | merged class, MUST BEAT BOLSHEVIST TO THE| “A good Ad Paral say the most potent way—to treat with this situ- ation is to educate those coming into our country and put the education in’} the hands of those who are friendly to our institutions and want to’ per- petuate them, I mean that those | friendly to our institutions should | take it upon themselves to educate the foreigners before those who want to tear down our institutions can get at them, At present I fear the wreck- ers in a great many places have a clear feld : “As for those foreigners who break our laws, they should be punithed here and then deported. Simply d porting them is a joke. If they de- sire they can come back and our Im- | migration laws won't keep them out, | ment, ‘They can come in in many ways, and |industries at the same time, in so far | working underground may do a lot of | the day. If people would only work through the hours they are supposed to’ dévote to work there wouldn't be much trouble, but most of them don't.” Gov. Coolidge is very talking about the tariff. 1 wouldn't say that he ts non-committal or dodges the issue. He talks freely about, it, but he doesn't say very much, admitting that it is a subject to which he has not devoted much study. Purthermore, he says he is not willing to say much about a number of national questions, because he has not studied them, and he doesn't want to express opinions on subjects that he does not know about from the in- side. In this connection I may tell what the Governor said recently to an official who went to him to ask him |tu endorse a certain expenditure. |WANTS EXACT FIGURES AND} NO “ABOUTS.” “How much is it going to cost?” asked the Governor. “Oh, about $20,000 or $25,000,” the: reply. “You go and find out if it is to cost $20,000 or $25,000, or $22,648.59," or- dered the Governor, “and when you have found out come back and we'll talk it over.” “As for the tariff,” careful in was remarked the | Governor, in his room in the Adams House, “sometimes when the has been raised people have been thrown out of employment, and at other times people have been thrown out of employment when the was lowered “At the outbreak of the war we were suffering from over-employ- Here in Massachusetts the appropriation to care fér the unem- harm before they ure discovered, But be so anxious to come back. “Aliens who are dangerous to our institutions should be deport. ployed. Probably the tariff question it they are punished for jawbreaking | depends on our ability to compete before they are deported they won't | {of the world and care for our own with the other nations in the’ markets tarift | tariff | HAS NO TIME TO GIVE TO “FAVORITE SPORT.” Gov, Coolidge does not play golf nor does he fish nor hunt nor ride, He has no favorite outdoor sport—hasn't tume to devote to any. He says he hates work as much as anybody, but} he never leaves a job unfinished, and, he believes that if work is a man’s al- | lotment he #ught to devote all bis time to it, He was not’ addicted to outdoor sports in his youth and says his experience has been that men who| do not engage in sports when they| are young are not likely to take them| up when or after they reach middle age. He is forty-clght and looks 1i a woll preserved man of that age | There are no grey strands in his | smoothly parted hair. [lik theatre,” said th Special for To-day Assorted Frui Milk Chocolate Peanutines tx roasted to a t th a delicious held fast In a mound of v nutritious milk chocolate, A sending vety sweet that Is more than a || mero candy, It is an appetizing, nourishing food, Extra Special Extra Special for To-day and To-morrow Pound Box Milk Chocolate Plantations toothsome South, where the making of mol MILLER’S SIX CONVENIENT STORES but one step at a time.” “Work is not a curse, It is the Prerogative of intelligence, the only means to manhood and the measure of civilization. Savages do not work.” “I adhere to the Amherst doctrine that the man who builds a factory builds a temple. The man who works there worships there and to each ts due not scorn and blame but reverence and praise.” “It may be of little importance to, determine at any time just where we but it is of the ut- most importance to determine whither we are going.” x1 government cannot be found on the bargain counter,” “There isn k of 4ATLLER “Better Chocolates aka Lower Price” CANDIES and To-morrow A the sunny wes Ited to an art. Big ba. of molasses embedded in smooth. velvety milk chocolate that ia caxerly, | appreci- by "candy ig and minder o} forers small, $16.50 Values $9.98 Serge Dresses $9.98 $165.00 Values Odd lot DRESSES nis NV Pad Serge sizes, 87 Valuer 94.98 Muslin PETTICOATS Deep lace flounce. the 79¢ Values White Brocade CORSETS All sizes 84.00 ilies Values $1.98 Ladies’ Knit UNION SUITS $2.00 89¢ Values LISLE HOSE All sizes and colors. tlm 290 0c Values House Values Values $2.00 up Women’ Leather Vamp HOE Dull* top, militar Children’ AWE: Plenty of space, plenty of sales people— every convenience for selecting NO MAIL ORDERS FILLED Perry. Dame & Co, 142-154 East 32d Street Between Lexington and 3d Avenues i Pd Beaded Geo WAIST S Value 94.20$).59 cut to 's Patent Colored or White Voile WAISTS Wool Sweaters All sizes and colors 85.00 3-98 Wool Ser, Values SKIRTS Newest Models. 87.50 Values « $3.98 Choice of Trimmed and Untrimmed HATS Values up to $3.50 $1.00 KID GLOVES 50 $7.39 Values heel, all $3.98 $1.50 Values » Cot. Rib RS 19¢ Dresses $].19 é > | pay envelope. \ a ee —_ “The weakness of representative government is the weakness of us e ‘ imperfect human beings who ad i “Self-government means self- bi