The evening world. Newspaper, December 13, 1919, Page 10

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THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, D A GRAND JURY THAT STALLS. | oer 7 : m GBori, | retrieve ination cont nee!» Shadow Boxing! «with ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. TheLove Stories | Datly Baoept Bungay by the Prete Pubilehing } Is it honestly trying to get at the things it has rea- of Great Novels .. ALPH PULATIER, President, 93 Park Rew. | son to pelieve are wrong in the present administration | -© xoBEPH PULITZER! Jr. Secretary, 63 Park Row. . | Of this city's Government? By Albert P. Terhune i " Or, having created a state of doubt and suspicion Coprrieht. 1919. br The Prams 0. ‘i \ ‘ 5 s . ‘New York Evening W D J i { ™ OO ine pt oH a aeagll ag is it only seeking to prolong the same until a legislative SS eS at re eeties 2 8S | commission put together under Republican auspices —— | can come down from Albany to the congenial task of .. NO. 21,298 | probing New York? | . The people of this city have been only too glad to} GOOD ROADS FREE. put faith in Foreman Almirall and his fellow jurors. | OV. SMITH, has called a good roads conference A Grand Jury in the County of New York has} to meet in Albany Wednesday to consider |°VerY opportunity to learn facts that point to wrong- aunong other questions the comparative advantages of doing. It has almost unlimited power to compel the} faces and 0 pay-as-you-go policy. production of evidence. tite! The Code of Criminal Procedure says the Grand we ian teow: 6 te eaiy| Uy not only may but must inquire “into the wilful A sound system. and nae misconduct in office of public officers of Be “ir New construction is a different matter. Following | Ye" description in the county.” Where the evidence 7 the lead°of Illinois, several Western States are consid- piety an the duty of the Grand Jury to return i large bond issues for permanent highways. These | Prompt Indictments. ; rot \o be burdens gral all but] hog public has been slow to believe the Lwhaedial Hoy atest be retired by a special tax on automobiles. In- rand Jury less conscious than other Grand Juries of} 4 dad of resenting this class tax the motorists generally its great responsibilities, Frankly, however, New York age staunch advocates, is becoming impatient and mistrustful of investigation favaiMinols assumes that motoribts derive both pleasure that hints, threatens, demands changes of counsel, ex- from good roads: The very plausible theory acts elaborate preparation—but does not investigate. of the tax is that running cost on paved highways is The Extraordinary Grand Jury cut loose from Dis- 0 much less than on unimproved roads that the mo- trict Attorney Swann because it felt its inquiry must | is money ahead by paying for roads which other! include his office. Gov. Smith gave the Grand Jury | wits would not be byilt, The decreased expense for| *0ther attorney .who he had every reason to believe uipkeep, tires and gasoline leaves a balance in his pocket would be acceptable to it, and now it wants to be rid) { _ after paying thé tak. It is claimed that*good toads of him. Meanwhile, it accomplishes nothing. | thus pay for themselves directly in the savings that] What is the game? 24— The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne; by William J. Locke ARCUS ORDEYNE was a vis jonary and shy school teach er; plodding along at low puy and snubbed by most of the peop! who did not wholly ignore him. Then, a relative loft him a big fo tune, and he came to London to live the life he proferred to all others--« life of luxurious bookish seclusion in his big new house. Almost his only | intimate friend was a dashing young Italian, Sebastian Pasquale. One day, as Marcus was strolline through a London Park, he was ac costed by a gloriously beautiful gir! who wore {ill-fitting black and who Jaccosted him with a queer foreign accent, asking “Will you please, sir, to tell m what [ must do?” . The girl went on to explain tha iste was half Kuropean and halt | Orientel, and that she had fied from Ja harem in order to escape @ hated matriage. Somehow, in borrowed clothes, she had made her way te England and, once there, had not the remotest idea what to do neat. So lovely and so quaint and helpless was she that Marcus took her home with him until better ar- jrangements could bo made for her welfare, In spite ot the odd attrac N t r e inspire hb ho treatc . result from their constsuction and that the community dune a Rte dee ~~ . acs for the ele hat. a sonata Maa bat n pre aga whole reaps a handsome profit without a cent of | "1 Bey aay ny power vt or a little ehiid 1 investment é : public good to wish fo see it functioning from any but And she--Carlotta, she called ber-’ a n ve ‘ fi if—-rewarded his kindness by a doz- . If automobile owners in New York favor such a — motives, for any but plain public cilite devotion’ that’ dalighiad @abhse i plan, the average pedestrian voter cart have no objec- Leah peer ns) juny ditls (os of cus almost as much as it embar , but it is only fair to mote that the situation here in een none et should Fe ee elem toes Je rather different than in rural communities. Our). i "th dh a re Pst wae : airs | engi (hoe: Shieh relent SRPIIG'S & | ' city. streets are all, paved and paid for, and a consider- Gils aie anbvles for ws Hah oe ay dat i 4 to stay on at Marcus's hous _atile. proportion of automobiles owned in the city’ are Ms sai fi ani J vi sae Slaba al el Aas ‘| Rpt suit whiets onus eitnee Tusiness vehicles and not operated on rural highways. | "8 Dee Vee pe ene Coboere o) far more than Carlotta , any nature whatsoevér—whether of person or of party. Itarning to love the e Be > ig -OUTWITTING THE BRITONS. Beaudate j « il TELEPHONE LOQUACITY IN NEW YORK, le insisted on keep : MIER CLEMENCEAU of France is in London! | rw YORKERS' (alk an average-of four minutes ; tien. he. sav thy. alae % I ri jinu ner, even W he saw this attitude . j conferring with Premier Lloyd George of Great 8 lade piqued and puszled her, ' : Forei inister Scial t for each conversation now, compared with two He Was glad that she and Wn 5 teeta vibes Pe eee minutes before and during the war, according to of- friend, ‘Sebastian Pasquale, got on i Bay's ot ie Albee ms. Com! ficials of the telephone company. What is the reason? | Malte aiuased ge aed _ prominen tesmen Natio : ¥ ‘ay amuse wiehting on this’ conference, the Manchester Guardian ; ae ner by her, She met few « ) ys: An answer would be interesting. . Uther friends, most” of : Se whom persisted in misunderstandin ; ! . “M. Clemenceau’s arrival in England and Are men or women responsible ? Apparently only che strange situation and im attribut departure of the American delegates from social visiting over the, telephone will account for the Spe ienher of Srila mOnyees a were significant and not disconnected. many long conversations which there must be to bring wr hen, one (aay Carlotta wenihed ji ‘id with fear’) f ” Clemenceau doubtiess comes to do what {up the average, considering that many business cals : pad by the urka trocaiwlees Oo eae ne tae eee ey acc. | Fequire only a few seconds. Has the let-down from 1 UNC 0 0 § E S E Ciitoes uvedta’ are eientoas Amarlen ‘ ahaa AAEM | Ordeyne rus » police, He ‘America becomes fess, the need of support | Wa" tension resulted in such loquacty? Did Knitting MMON SEN Of tne misang gir. He tortured ‘mtn ' this country grows, and may enter not induce feminine neighborliness even in New York? iy abn Bale | self with conjectures as to har fate \ mili and di iti Probthitte: would be best to pay a ten cent fare a in the harem. Vor, the first time be ieee Se itary a ¢ mtoumntio ayberes but | And now have the ladies dropped MBCiKnIttINg MoppdiES |! gS eon Cah vaane Neu york [tee company weitt Pa a i y gonn blake, | realized how madly he loved. her. Bey finhnce econcmt to pick up the telephone receiver? Telephone officials Clty, Dees oe wi rant fo ik rathor than, bo subjected Copsright, 1919, Bea ny, he ceased tle quoe! _ ‘Phere should be a fine relish in this for Américans] ought to have sdefinite ideas on the subject. They | “pri the sac or aicuneie beverages | Ness Inflleted upon Usnt resent WHAT IS.YOUR NUMBER IN THE PROCESSION? §|Cariotta’s disappearance. She. had _ ‘whose palates are like the Lodge palate. should go further and answer the question they have |is the chief cause of crime, and that |2™ not advocating a ten c Thousands of people are travelling the same way eloped with Rebastian Pasquale i ee; y, but if that is the only people a avelling the same way yor are And life toner seemed. un _~ | Obligation to stand by France shunted from the] raised, Eoeues will roll Goat or belleve it should be adopted going. You know perhaps a hundred of them—schoolmates— 3 | bearable to Marcus. He tried 10 take : ‘ greatly decrease crime, are assertions | My intentlo: ting these criti- F ea os : % f, ‘ up in his oldtime: pleasgnt book + |, United States to Great Britain—a load neatly shifted] — But perhaps they should have said that the aver-|Constantly mado by the Anti-Saloon |clsms of the present crosstown buses boys and girls you knew in your youth, .Some of them are be-$]|sh existence. But ho could not heen --4 American to British shoulders—what stroke ti tel is i hh call is f inc|Lengue, “What are the facts? Hore, t. see something dono to alleviate |ghind you in the procession—some arc ahead. Did you ever}|his mind trom “dwelling heart ‘ age time a telephone is in use on each call is four min-| League. at are the fucts' the burden put upon the users of | {take the trouble to find just where YOU are? brokenly on Carlotta. He began to could seem happier to those who profess to believe] utes, including time t hrough the call and .|!8 4 quotation from the Toronto |these different lines: ; — rae : meditate killing himself, os utes, including time to put through the call and to con-| (ie a strong advocate of Prohibi- ven ba uuany If you haven't, do so before it is too late. “Look up the}| thon, after two years, Carlo@a iB one aim has been to fool this country with} verse.” That would sourld more reasonable, At the | tion: UN BHUMBKY. 15 reople who statted with you—on even, or nearly even terms,$| came back to-him. She wea thity and __the*short enti. of peace? Present time it seems to take at least two extra min-| “Ottawa, Nov. 20~A considerable | - |} You will probably be surprised at the result, but very often sur-$| MaRkard and ji! Sebastian had de } for Lafayette—why hasn’t some United States] utes to get a connection. increase in crime throughout the Do- |, ue pastor of Tae heoning World | { prises are valuable. treating There had been no one or marked that debt “paid in ful?” iad , _{minion is shown by the Hive pr | Against the treaty—Every pro-Hun You may find, for example, that the boy who sat next to3| to turn to but to Marcus Ordey ne a - ‘The Public Service Commission began this week] fealine with, ertminil mitt the {im the country! is their’ motive! you in school und whom you always pitied a little because he $} ,,Ana Mirous [ook hen i rejolelng aan to investigate complaints of the wretched telephone office of the Dominion Statatician, saree tn NGoaty—Hvery sinn| ,#* 4 grind, is the superintendent of a railroad and well on his} There, spon afterward, her child wan + . t returns ere were iM ef ae by .. " “ - n died a i “ KIND TO DAYLIGHT SAVING. service that continues to try the nerves and patience | 4ocime Whe year SLT4T charges und | Feimist In the country! Ls their mo-| Way to be general manager, «© ‘i SIS RREN AE The Genatton aomnearnmaen 17,870 convictions for indictable of-|“¥e Americanism? No! His number in the procession is about 100 whi ‘ ' hac} ; ies the New York telephone users. The latter are not go-| 77.870 convictions for provinces, aa | Against the treaty—Lvery Bolshe-|% omething like 952. If you | Lae Fete fae er toaed | BeTgkTi¢g at the child's death, Rit : (EMBERS of New Hampshire State grange a nthat | fensea in the several Provinces, #41 vist and 1. W. W.! Is their motive |} something like 952. you learn early enough how far he has$| dy bit he nursed her back fo healt i ig to be satisfied with the explanation ‘that they talk | comp nares core, | Americanism? % urpassed you it will start you hurrying to catch up—provided $| #Md to sanity. refused to-put the organization on record as op-| sh 15,659 convictions the, year before, mainst the tr A Mudanity oeltG seg age te ’ And, with returning interest in to a daylight: law. : joo muc being an increase of 2,293, or nearly | poEbican politicians! Is there mo, | }2OU are not contented to stay where you are. lif, love came again’ to both. of os -saving law. 12 per cent, for charges. and an tn: |tivevAmericanism?. Draw” your own | You may discover that some other fellow is numbered | them. ‘The past was forgotten. Mar + |. Good for the New Hampshire farmers! This is “IN A GLASS HOUSE.” percent dor eonvictions during the [Soneluslons! |) | $15,042, That will excite your sympathy for him, but at the$} {ni ™n."tve infatuation that. bod H exceptional news and, may — that other agri- BUT HOW ABOUT CLOTHDS? yeernada has had strict Prohibition, | Works and the company they keen. JOA EqeRbTTISE you wonder if you aren't going back also. made her run away, with Pasqua!r, 4 e bodies will moderate opposition, (From The New York World.) with the exception of the Province BM. | 84 at too Y and holier lover ato i Rent Lae : Jn Of Quebec. which for @ part of the reryipped Hunt up these people and talk to them. Those who suc-}| ‘Mt Was '9 glgrity his entire Ife > “. “"Practically'all of the opposition to daylight saving It 18 discouraging that Bradstreet’s index number |%4q; allowed the sale of beer and A Premibitien Pleat, j ceeded willbe sladite tallivoulhaw they. auscssded: 10th ha: —o hme = from the farmers. Moft of it was the result of] of prices reached ® new bigh Dec, 1, having risen 131) light wines, @v7ie, SM Htronliion | Tie tae of re Crone Weide ™°" | 3man to boast a little and the successful find it very hard to re-$| The Best Investment. ‘ = ° cen ince Aug. 1, |. “The situation is ie 4 ina| . Woulda’t it be a mighty good plan| i c i i a iz ea 4 a . Daylight saving was put in practice.| yore because urgsaifor tia aniine. yea? Gave teen’ & decreases crime, why Das crime ea aay ood Plan) 3 frain from talking of their success. ‘ aI Ww" af ealeuiate to what ex. | Falfhers had trouble in getting help to work the cus-| trite tower than in 1918. Thi th d WHIDDEN GRAHAM. | Presidential campaign to use the Pro- | The failures won't know why they are failures-——but YOL ent the Bible bas carved ower than ings were on the mend, hibition Bill as a main plank in their} $ will, when you hear their stories, And you will learn as much the world's desiny? 1 Jong hours, They made the mistake of be-| but are so no longer. | ? platforma? et it fe Pan toa Wont Fee. thaim na en ab tian the sucenaeen . The fate of empires depends upon . 4 o ie people and see ho ill be aah : 4 | wing this to be an example of cause and effect. OE cay ped si gg gp i helpful sugges: | 207 Madison St, Dec. & | clected—Prohibitionist or Anti, It is | Renew these old acquaintances as often as you can. Take base Nene - {Farm help was scarce and independent. Farmers 2 mete atte Eneees oe lam AReb teak ecirtiog the waiter of The toeaing World: | | unfair to, the thinking reople of this|# your position-as the mariner takes his, Interest yourselves ing | , hivers can ri) ne higher than the Ame m » with ‘five mills, > e mont! 0 the present | & old by the* Govern. | x oA , aN source anc ver men nor nator } ° have had the same trouble under the old plan.) inet i¢ grocers and other ceyineh in Tere Mass. Pata as ate Te was | ment what their personal habits muat | $ the plans and the ambitions ae those who are going ahead.§ | can grow gr han their Books. ; ‘ | employers had the same trouble the farm-| do not stop kiting prices of the necessaries of life, the| hailed by some as a great thing, but RE Uae rant Rnd Wave Tage uabOee righ pp araey ae ai wale br fata ‘* Ail ot phere err eHeee erates 3 ¢ failed. s than we PSNETs / 47 On8 A iy by selves, All the everlasting mirror of A { - erbidid. Employees everywhere had power to dictate) Woolen Trust will open shops to supply these things ut Te ihre. monthg the buses have PoE site Prombition has beng |%us are glad of help when we can find it, flecting his potentialities ; ‘ Hours and did so, The farmers misjudged the reason, | Tessonable rates to its employees pan Ton Pimetiey We Teg ine | aera teane uel the | Whatever your number in the procession, you can better it} | tions, his weakness and hia otrenst J {| 2t will take a vigorous campaign of education to], | pohepsnng Or ater an the best cloul | gpportunity of eMpressing an opinion Herta) fen ft tas ee |$if you begin soon enough. But if you continue to drift hap-§ | forever igniting the explosive ‘offset this error. But the New Hampshire example.is| tieinice tine eee up abou chiefly of wool. The price of | ing a thought, which I know is not | milion and « half of the men were rard, not knowing where you are, and not carifig, you will} | of bis latent capabilitie 7 r . a . clothing has gone up about as fast as any others-—and|jsolated from the minds of other | overseas, h among the millic tead of among the millionai Good books are the world's ¢ etiéburaging. Daylight saving will noi help—nor | the profits of the Woolen Trust have gone up with it. pecale, Fa i a Fe Fach & chance to say what's democratizer, levelivr and uplis a farmer. His opposition is not so much| A® The Evening World points out, the net profits of the|,¢ rat, there ta an inadequate num: | what in a country we have fought | ~ — the poor m treasure, the rin ¢ awd as error. ” : msrisaa Weamen' Comeany for 4017 and 188 wore| (ta Gaman’ aaa 8 cecomis. ine a |” pe ea) Fe" | Commissioner for information | Nuppindas, the’ bruised tunes Mo nearly $28,000,000, or considerably more than the total Teraer Bummber of pet rae rg Why Clone Bathet as to where he could purchase the blind man's light, the whol vehicles than are J » to-day. h York, Dec, orld's niratios * | bidet hand preceding seven Hareles Secondly, the buses: oy Silt ad To tbe Paor of The Ente Wor ia : Al | paeinpen pai LIA, oe Wood. olny el the entarnal p e wrence grocers ai t ccommodate only 20 people - ‘ould you please te me wha e k sts, bu rv e of goodnes: Phey arou ° POLICE METHODS LAG. that unless fps of He ag ie reo eee fortably, and ‘ot any mes. bei right has the manager of the Mitbank | Fro m Arou nd | their pelts are of value land “rule Leb vinenraits action Y . ecklessness and carelessness wi Memorial Baths to close the baths to/| |) lo jong, outlook a career h LOSE on the heels of the report of silk thefts ag-| establish woolen mills. Ton leneae SEE OR alike rare Mune Hiei time World| Be ee STEN a me inistmnantn GEDIT gregating more than $1,000,000 in a year comes clwould doa “De Palma” much credit,{and “to turn them into a wet. wash | | \———————————————_______ Giant Crane for Navy. | the fuel of his intellectual vigor; hie i , ,000,000 NERVE, |but they are not supposed to rival |éestablishment? The baths were given | The largest = shipbuilding | can no more help their spiritual 6” | at ‘equally disturbing statement from the Fur Mer- (From the Philadelphia Record.) such. Third, the buses were intro-|to the poor by the Milbank Memorial Live in Portable Houses, | crane in te world has just been | Moral stimulation than he can he!) * chants’ Association. In New York City alone the) _ For supreme nerve commend us to Mr. William W. duced Pecause Of {he Gamene es SCORE ANT READE Rents in Seville, Spain, have | completed at the League Tatand | froghealie giving properties of & * in furs exceed $500,000. In a recent robbery] W% President of the American Wovien Compans:/panie of New York City. 1 should! soHOOLS TO GIVE EATING | ecome so high that poor people | Navy Yard, Phitadetpria, Ae a | “Good books are ‘priceless, yet th ~ v Mr. Wood is the controlling head of something over |like ono of greater ‘knowledge than c have been forced to movd out of\ | test it lifted two large railway | C@%, be had for the asking. A mun’ entire stock ‘valued at $100,000 was carted away fifty mills, several of the most important of which are|! te inform me as to whether or not OURSES, % | i Y | pockets may be empty, but hor tricks. ne |we are paying ten cents fare, Classes in “eating” are to be estab-| the city. Plans are under way | locomotives simultaneously lhe has to al the located in Lawrence, Mass. Now, Mr. Wood, with| Rogardless of how much we had||ished in three Pittsburgh schools, to| to butld a thousan® two and eer: Gur wealth; he can acquire all it ? ‘Development of the automobile has revolutionized] fatherly consideration for his poor employees, issues n|to endure while riding on the Fall: |inctude a course of study for both | four room municipal houses, | Gold Strike in Canada, [if ne will but stretch his legs and Binglary. Criminals have been quick to take ad- Yee that if grocers and other retailers in Lawrence /compare that with the jolted shoul- |malnutrition, Under the new plan of| and as there (s practically no | = A rush for gold elds that | Good books have long since censc:t a re of it, and the business has expanded, As yet lon't stop boosting prices of “the necessities of life,”|ders, elbows and feet we must with- | health education, which, according to| lumber in Spain portable houses recalls the days of '§9 is on in | being the potentate's ornament, <hey a: 9 . ‘panded, Yet! his frm—that is to say, the Woolen Trust—will open | ind While pleasure-riding on a bus. |the Journal of the American Medical! ig ye imported from the Manitoba, Canada, where “fabu- | have long since become every man's olice and the lawmakers have not kept pace in| shops to*supply th ings to | r Ordinarily, it takes from 15 to 2] Association, It is hoped eventually to| y J mn h | necessity. es ipply these @hings to its employees at rea-| minutes of patient waiting before one|extend to other schools, a pupil's| United Stutes fous” flelds are reported, Pure “If the crowns of all the kingdon ‘ peg fectin the technique of prevention and capture.| sonable rates. But clothing ts also a necessity, and, as|i# able to board a bus, as they are | health card will follow him through ends gold is said to lie atshe surface, | of the empire,” cried Fenelon, “wor so overcrowded with passengers that i lic sehool d ; £ 2 eee ods adopted in catching the night prowler with By ne of the American Woolen Company for 1917 and 1918| while the people must wait for thy | state, is not due entirely to povert; A business man in Melbourne, | From every direction stam jor ay igre of roading} would spine : ‘ 3 J " e C ped- them all. uN be Aarnneancod seey weer mae wie nearly Brcoon, or considerably more than tho| ext Dus, which ax a rule iy als: | Causes which contribute are Impro Australia, recently applied to | ee are rushing into the flelds | The best investment you will ever a the preceding seven year, yids wunaaary i falghs ouy that ‘t]and cag betwonn muainy'”” "|| Aha. American Resident Trade ,! and taking cata Shecm gis | gous Dgogunoy SS "OM POM seeiehtmemanesenaminmattimeignd citnimiaiameneaniaaaniic le een Y ~~ i

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