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USTAB! ' = Rated patty Laceve 8H a é RALPH PULITZI J, ANGUS SHAW, sure eEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secret MEMBER OF THR ASSOCIATED PRESS. lated Prose ty exclavirely entitled to the use for repubtication of ett ‘or Dot ciierwus crolited th thie paper and sis the local news gublished herein. » cur akraeaeye se sNO, 21,273 LODGE’S GLORY. 0) ——— watt ieee ee VOLUME 60... ENATOR LODGE climbs nearer and nearer the pinnacle. S With Pre able assistance of the Senate he has bound |" ; the Peace Treaty and the Covenant of the League\pf Nations and round with reservations until the mummified result must ©) Melight even his perfervid Republican soul. Aes He has succeeded by. devices for which Republicjns can claim credit in making the United States appear to shrink in'stature, til from the giant figure it presented in war it has dwindled to a ) pyemy—quaking, hedging itself about with safeguards lest somebody too much of it in peace. | He has produced consternation in the minds of French and ‘ statesmen—good, Republican-made consternation warranted ite convince European Allied Governments that there is something | more than a Democratic Administration to be reckoned with in the United States. a Best of all, he has taken the work Woodrow Wilson did in Paris | and undone and nullified it until the President himself can no longer / recognize it—the ruin being a Republican product over which Repub- ~ Hieans and all anti-Wilsonites may gloat. Yes, Senator Lodge is near the summit of his glory. He set to destroy. He has proceeded far with destruction. Does he see anything beyond? The.man who destroys with no it further than the wreckage is not apt to be found among those rebuild. “Is Mr. Lodge content with one brief hour—provided it is his? THE PRINCE OF WALES. ‘T IS an exceedingly democratic as well as engaging Prince that New York welcomes to-day. About the last qualities associated with him are consciousness of his rank or insistence on ceremony. Tnng ago this city accepted the verdict of the considerable numbers ide of the Atlantic who have already seen him that he is a thoroughly likable young man, a “good mixer” and all-around “regu- ler fellow who can rough it, shoot, walk or skylark with the best _ &fd who is frank in admitting he knows more about fox-trots than ‘ “pera. i‘ New York has plenty to interest an intelligent, wide-awake youth of this type, however much he has seen. It will take a genuins - ure in showing him its best. This Prince comes from a great democratic nation where royalty “does its full share. He has been brought up under a system that pre- something very different from “all play” for a Prince. His ibilities will multiply and grow heavier. He will never be y-five but once. ‘ father Knickerbocker is glad to have him for a guest while his iasm is still young and his heart light. A Prince can feel very HE Superintendent of Public Schools in the City of New York has taken steps to remove six public school teachers found to be enrolled and active workers in the Communist Party. Let there be no foolish misrepresentation of what this means. 7 It does not mean that the great body of public school teachers in city are not loyal, 100 per cent. Americans. » It does not mean that a public school teacher whose views are red to be untra-radical is to be persecuted and made a martyr. position of a public prosecutor or pretends to treat the holding radical opinions as a crime. ‘It DOBS mean that whether there are six or sixty public school ers in New York whose attitude toward the Government and tions of the United States is the attitude of the so-called Com- | group, the Department of Education holds such teachers to unfit for the work of teaching children who are to become the next eration of American citizens. 3 question is purely one of fitness for an employment the re- ities of which are definite and clear. A Communist teacher ore a proper person to teach children who are to be Americans | \Decause he or she refrains from expounding Communist doctrine in Hage ~ patriotism and mental and moral attitude as displayed outside the i “hired public servants—engaged or rejected, retained or discharged |e! according to the proofs they give of fitness. In passing upon their Maintain in their public schools teachers with avowed Bolshevik or one ultra-Socialist sympathies Teachers,” and which is devoted to extending the unionization move-|‘**¢ ment among public schoo! teachers in American cities, a8 ould have ful! bonefit of the doubt? meer that WTalurlo and at home with New Yorkers when he is the right kind, When Husband Dies A QUESTION OF FITNESS. |And Wife Remarries !zele ses. by his will that has a great big “if” in it, "he cloesroom. Part of a teacher’s qualifications depends on character,| 1 know of a woman right now, a three : dee whom she needs the money left b: > fitness, the Superintendent of Public Schools or the Board of Educa-|her husband, and which aaa rs eet tions only represents the public. to them, ibs Taxpayers of this city are not ready to pay $15,000,000 more to| Her husband was doubly selfish, |"0thing of her happiness, wife's remarriage, but fixed it so that his own children would suffer, if the hich professes to be “The Organ of the American Federation of |marry, being a good man, is willing to If there is another world, I do hope By Sophie! Copyright, 1919, by Tho Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) No One Has the Right to Live Another’s Life— + The Wife Should Be Free to Follow Her Own Inclinations 66] SEE no reason why my dear| lation for such a period as was not wife should not remarry,” is| intended by God or man, the statement made in the will| The highest and most binding kind It does not mean that the Department of Education puts itself |° ' G: Haussmann, a wealthy resi-)ot @ marriage ceremony limits the dent of Paris, FA contract “until death do them part.” Besides, wery often the very money this man elects to decide about, when he can no longer use it, was made by the wife herself—made by keeping his home and making him comfortable and helping him save; and by love and devotion and bearing with him, and Heaven knows what not. And yet he decides her future when he is no longer a part of it. Such a man thinks only of himself. He expects his wife to be content with only a memory, most often « sad memory, In other words, he wants her to live his life after he has fled. Such a man is the personification of conceit, He Owing to some es- tate he bas in this; country, the will Was filed here and the matter was told in the public prints. ‘This man’s atti- tude might well be reflected upon and emulated by many a man who tries to % prohibit the remar- of his wife by some clause in young woman, who because of such a| Seeks to perpetuate himself; his van- Tieercom, will lett by her husband is unable to|!t¥ !s of superlative degree, in that he ane ‘ marry a man for whom she réally % A majority of fathers, mothers and guardians among New York | cares, taxpayers would assuredly take this view. Publie school teachers are| She is foregoing another chance for believes that the very thought of him iy enough for any woman as long as she lives, He is deciding her destiny by his dole of a few dollars, which he can- happiness on account of the|not take along with him when he dies, little dependent children for| 1 can't help wishing there was a law that would prohibit a man mak- ing such conditions, By placing such @ pernicious provision he secures an Jinjunction on her very will, to say I think a man dies with much more honor if he leaves her nothing. If he cannot submerge his jealous nature, he at least leaves her free to follow not only put a penalty on the ‘That is as true now as it was last May when The Evening World, |™other remarried, by bequeathing the acta ian tee iDR}Y BRINE while urging better pay for teachers, drew attention to the amazingly romped 10 Ginger relatives ta euch: eo) Io the leet anelvel penecrcy hey * Fy 4 ‘e'" Ns lance, right to live another's life after they Fadical tone and policy of @ periodical called T 0 y rf policy « periodical called The American Teacher,| ‘rye man whom the wife wan‘s to|®#Ve finally lett, the burden of the little children have the woman forego the EDITORIAL PAGE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1 New York Impressions, : Of IM-Patience Worth Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening Warld.) Rr nA What a Visiting Ghost From New Amsterdam Thinks of Our ‘‘Red Men,”’ Clothes, Pro- hibition, Jazz, H. C. of L. and Uplift IKE my Cousin Patience I, IM-patience Worth, passed over more than 250 years ago. “In Governor Peter Stuyesant’s New Amsterdam, Captured by the English and renamed New York. When Patience, conceited creature, ‘ Boasted to me that she and Mrs. John Curran were going to pay New I decided I'd take a look at Its ‘Onin shows and wi Never AGAIN! There is no duckifg. and homes dnd clothes and: men amd stool for disembodied scolds, Spirits’ Special back Over Th I think of your New Yo 1 shall tell you_ wha’ In everything that counts You haven't improved ONE BIT since the last time I saw you, So there now! . We had Indians in my day, But your “Reds” make ours look like little white angels. The cruellest, bloodthirstieth Iroquois Was a gentieman and a scholar compared to an east side Bolshevik; Our Indians hid betiind trees But not behind lying propaganda; Tomahawks took the scalps of some of us, But bombs are likely to muss YOU up considerably more! w plenty of “waf paint” ee it on the cheeks and lips of our young maidens. I prefer the color scheme of a bravé on the war path To that of a maid on Fifth Avenue, seems to wear almost as few clothes as he did. K at what they cost! Your goodwives’ dresses have no backs, no sleeves and skirts only long enough for little children? .Forsooth, good Governor Stuyvesant would have set them in the stocks! Into the clubs and voters’ mectings and strange I have flitted, and heard talk on but one subj The “Servant Proble Serving maids were ever idle huzzies And hard to come at. But, prithee, is there no merouw in all New York Who can HERSBLF bake, brew, salt, pickle, preserve, distil? Nay, I forget—all brewing and di: in of cherry bounce and blackberry cordial and elderberry wine Was not discovered in MY time; even stern P Drank his good sqhnapps and brhndy. For our stately measures, trod to music, You have a madness Called “jazz.” For our staid, mannerly men-folk You have nervous, bustling, clip-speech varlets ‘Who know not how to make love or even how to make a BOW. During my recent visit, Except for one obvious reason, I should have been stifled in your subway, slaughtered by your automobiles, starved by your high cost of livin talked to death by your uplifters! As it is, my vocabulary is shot to pieces with your slang. I had even rather spend eternity listening to what my ‘preposterous Cousitt Patience calls her “poetry” Than spend it in my native New York with “modern improvements,’ For a perfectly good ghost! Good-NIGHT! ings of my sem Alling is forbidden you. rozen by your rent profiteers and “The Love Stories Of Great Novels Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) = By Albert Payson Terhune 13—The Prisoner of Zenda, by Anthony Hope UDOL# RASSENDYL was an athletig and lazy young Englishman of much wealth and of more love for ad- When he read that the new King of Ruritania was soon to be crowned, an odd whim sent Rudolf to the - little Balkan kingdom to attend the coronation. More than a century earlier the King’s ancestor had had @ secret romance with an ancestress of the Ras- sendyls’, and Rudolf, in studying family records, learned that he himself was thus a distant relative of the King. lize was that a queer freak of jouble, in outward appearance, of this’young monarch who was about ta be crowned. Yet, because of the ancestral scandal, he resolved to go to Ruritanta and get a glimpse of this left-handed + kinsman of his. Meantime, at Ruritania, the new King’s affairs were The King was a stupid and worth-- less chap. “And a strong element of his people hated the idea of being ruled by him. A conspiracy, Headed by reckless young Rupert of Hentzau, had been formed to destroy him, Hentzau planned to kidnap the King, just before the coronation, and to give out the story that the monarch had absented himself from the ceremony for some He knew the King’s disap- ance, under such conditions, would make eople rise against him. ‘The ‘plot was successful, so far as con- by the conspirators and tut before the public could get news of his absence Rudolf Rassendy! appeared in Zenda, the capital of Ruritania. The King’s few loyal advisers were frantic at their sovereign’s kidnapping, resemblance of Rudolf to the missing King gave them an idea. uaded Rudolf to impersonate the missing King for a week or oronation ceremonies. Duri) hoped to find the real King and to avert the threaten of adventure made Rudolf consent to the masquerade. The conspirators were aghast to find another King in the palace. They could not betray the imposture without: ingriminating themselves, and yet Rudolf’s presence there ruined their own dari Complications set in at once for the m beautiful Princess Flavia of Ruritania, the destined bride of the real King. Rudolf promptly fell in love with her. ‘And she had not been let into the secret that Rudolf was not he. found herself falling in love with the man she supposed to be her formerly detested suitor. Rudolf was not permitted to reveal his identity to her. ‘The impostor was winning golden opinions from the people by his He was undoing the harm the King had done and The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Coprright, 1919, by The Press Pwhilehing Co. (The New York Evening World.) ements Mr. Jarr and Mr. Slavinsky Get Together and Discuss the Trend of Education in These Parlous Times OW about this Neighborhood Club what meets last might? Zurus!” adked Mr. Slavinsky, the glazier, as he stopped Mr. Jarr on the “Mit moving pictures of fine day time for vimmen and ik in their sleep in at night. fate had made him the giving no warning of its presence till Just abreast, and then it clanged its gong so suddenly and so loudly that Passers-by beheld the curious specta- Jarr and Mr. clasping each other in the embrace of | fervent fright as they jumped aside. “Loafer what you are Mr. av ieaey, progressing badly. He Impersonates the Missing King . cerned the kidnapping. hidden in a dungeon. the first to recover unworthy reason, He was not addressing this remark to Mr. Jarr. Mr. Jarr could tell this because Mr, Slavinsky had turned to glance after the ambulance and shake his fist wildly in its direction, Then Slavinsky breathed hard and picked up his hat. “I leave it to you, Slavinsky,” re- plied Mr. Jarr. “Since the war the female sex are all wiki, wild women!” Mr. Slavinsky stroked his beard re- “Sure!” the said heartily. “Last night comes a fever tomy wife and the vinder is open and I should close it, and she won't let me be- cause she is warm mit the fever. say ‘I'm the boss of this house, yes, and I shall close the vinder!’ Do I The King was seize them amber- Jances vot is oitermobile. Out of pocket I am with money by them “And my oldest boy, Shid- ney, iss an actor in the m: ture, and his name changed ‘Sidney Slavin,’ doesn't he?” asked Mr. Jarr. “Yes,” replied the glazier, ‘but that ain't nothing nowhere at all to what call him. “But what's the auto ambulance got to do with his going on the stage and you losing money?” asked Jarr. : “On his education by the law school I lose ft,” said Mr. Slavinsky. Shidney, vitch iss my oldest ‘boy, should be a lawyer, this interval they h the c so and to go throug! revolution. Love jock Monarch in the form of The window She had always detested the King. “No,” said Mr. Jarr. stayed open all night.” “Who told you? Co' where you live?” asked Mr. Slavinsky, ula you hear it ly and wise rule. 1 und as building up a mighty popularity. ” This ah have amused him at any other tire, but now he had thoughts for nothing and for no one but Flavia. ‘At last the hiding place of the King was dis- At the head of a band of loyal men he risked his life to rescue the prisoner and to restore him to his throne. Rudolf did this knowing that thereby he was If the conspirators had been able to kill the King, then to reign in his place and could have married could not have been revealed. If thus wrecked his own happiness. eally was, and he told her he loved her measure, but she made him understand that y the King and to spend her life in working “No, but I know,” said Mr, Jarr, “and about this dress and fashion show at the Ladies’ Neighborhood Does your wife believe that if you didn’t apend two dollars a week on what you smoke that she'd have the money ehe wanted My little Izzy Now, of account Risks His Life to Rescue Prisoner covered by Rudolf, Shidney he ain't a lawyer, and when builder, the money I sue Rafferty, th it costs goes outside the family. losing Flavia. Rudolf must have continued Flavia, since the imposture the King to his throne Rudo! He told Flavia who he rv returned his devotion in full patriotism forced her to marr; for her country's good. And at last they agrt the best good of her father!: great adventure, and Flavia “For sure it is, such a thing she thinks!” replied Mr, Slavinsky, Ho! The Ambulance! Just then, as the two were standing by the curb, an ambulance from the hospital shot by them like a streak, It Started "Xana By restoring “Yes, but"——ventured Mr. Jarr. Home, Law and Physic. “Bvery family should have its own lawyers and its own doctor,” contin- ued Mr. Slavinsky. to have a son what js a grocer or a ced that their beautiful love must be sacrificed for * So Rudolf ‘went back to England from his ‘sacrificed happiness on the altar of patriotio “What good is it costs them nothing for what ‘But what has that to do with am- bulance autos?” asked Mr. BN rE cent i * . . legacy. herever qitestion arises w hether a public school teacher is'a| But as he has very littlegvith which qnough American to be trusted to teach children upon whom the |t® besin the mother is loathe to take The Lovi try must depend for future upholding of Americanism—who ye sisted: xed de Beau wld d Cup. ren, HERE could we find a substi- tute for the loving cup? What & greater power is seeing to it else would so admirably “fill mag Newest Notes of Science that this man is properly punished, | the bill" for an award that in its very sive bbace in stores @ triangu- Mexico has u 150-foot bridge across | He '* 2° only jeopardising the hap- | nature is a trophy, and, ornamental to Phone booth has beon de-|a river that ip bullt entirelg ot mee | Piness of the mother of his children; | any room, can be left where it 1s @ i hogany, but the children themselves. | constant reminder of laurels won? . ovement 7 ‘ 1 tal cup is 80 pop- A Berra phosician offers alr im-| Operated by a jong lever, anew de. | _“Uatil Death Do Them Part.” | i be mander the sata) ous ” Hed with padiuny as a new cure! vice enables freight car do jopened easily. that rs to be| Any man who provides in his will | ular even as a gift or token of @ per- sonal nature. For there is nothing bia, write, shall got son more appropriate as @ token of grati- ry is The Beyadorian Government has Gemianding that bis marriage capireat tude or esteem from one’s associates, aviation course to its milli- shall continue to the end of tl nothing morein ace h tho sen Saees ABER FAMOUS WOMEN to entice the secret of Samson's strength from him. * Delilah suc ceeded in a night under the purple heavens of the East where alone |the planets and their Maker were witnesses of the tragedy. ‘The reader is urged to study the magnificent Samson Agonistes of Milton, and to ponder the story in Holy Writ, the fifteénth chapter of the Book of Judges, the Big Baie of Samson's Av) > Biven-+Bam: Saraoon'e ay Mr, Slavinsky. “Ain't I telling you tation of a loving cup. Verily, the covers ultitude of graces, and that my Shidney was going to lay school that he goes around and prac- tises being a lawyer them days?” “How?” asked Mr. Jarr. “Follering the ambulances, training to keep up with them and get the vic- tim’s name and address and the vit- graces, ent sort, that it In the universities of Great Britain the loving cup ts still cafled the For it was to induce tl at the table for grace that the famous Margaret Atheling round among her guests, grace had been served, a cup filled with the choicest win to-day in England the custom is still observed, the loving cup taking its rt at every city banquet or feast at After officials Grink to the ie passed around HY did Samson? Many a man says that, ‘Why did I?” when Self-reverence, oup. Scots to remain self-knowledge, three alone do lead to sovereign power, Delilah, the beauti- |ful “girl of the brook,” Sorek (as tho original reads) was seen by Samson as he swung paat, going down to The date of this tragic pas- sion-hour is 1120 B. C, The Phil- et sale saan gig |ble bona explained Mr, Slavinsky. “Vell, ven’ Shidney gets so he can keep up with the fastest horse ambu- lances they put in oitermobile vones, all the money for his education is thrown away and he goes to be an sang Tennyson. ou could have gotten a mo- im," said Mr, oi dae, but pow ie been the othe it tainted ab Bo 4 had given Ke