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TEPC CTE RII TS aan . sn ee + | ' | ' THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, DECEMBE® 30, 1919. | The ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPIU MEMBER OF THR ASSOCIATED PRESS, ‘The Amoigied Prose te esciosivels entitied to the mee for repabiiew | + Hon of all meme deapaiehee credited to Ni of mot otherwise oredited tm thi vaper and also the local news publiehed herein. FOR A STATE MILK COMMISSION, OV. SMITH’S Fair Price Milk Committee joins ° G John H. Finley, ex-Gov. Martin H. Glynn, George Gordon Battle, ex-Commissioner Day, Health Commissioner Copeland—all at one time or another| investigators of the same subject—in the conclusion | that the way to attack the milk problem in New York is to put milk in the public utilities class and establish | el oe Se wv LANS for a National Industrial Tribunal and gional Boards of Adjusiment evolved by the Pre ident’s Second Industrial Conference mark at least @ commendable effori. The tentative announgemeni coupled with the request for constructive criticism 1c 0k. | | lng to further improvement speaks well for the frame | of mind in which the conferees went to work, Whatever weakness may develop, the plan, without denying the final right to strike, recognizes at least four | highly desirable principles: First, Through the Regional Boards either side would have an opportunity of getting the merits of its case | before the public in a definite and impressive manner | TOWARD A HIGH COURT. [Tq ‘By J. H. Cassel Your Vocation By Max Watson Vocational Adviser Re-employment Bureau, N.Y. C. ie Copyright, 1919, by The Pres ‘he Now York Mreclng Werks O% Below is given an article of The Evening World's Series of Aw alyticat Descriptions of Vocations Suitable to Young Men entering trades and business. Study these carefully, weigh your qualifiea- tions, and find the work for which you are best adapted, ° eee eee without need for the spectacular but economically ex- a State Commission to regulate its handling from the pensive strike or lockout, \ cow to the consumer. anit Second, The right of each side “to present its position This is the kind of milk regulation The Evening) though representatives of ils own choosing” is clearly a th Gis Wade, at Aponeec Ls { World has been urging for three years, One by one sensible compromise on the question which split the} usually termed a helper. The usual | + the investigators have tallen in line, | First Conference. The employer is not required to age for a boy entering this trade is j o al TI x nd ¢ n . . ceo * f vi e1 el = 5 H Remains the Legislature. The Governor can be negotiate directly with men not in his employ, but thetradertl Shi. eal inlined; ae counted on to put in a stiff demand for milk legislation. | \ non 4 dispute is up for formal judicial hearing the fisipeh GEAMIne tik (eave “SSN GIR No opposition from milk interests ping abi the) workers may choose their attomey representative from union and works as a direct assistant, passage early in the coming session of a bill creating a to some journeyman plumber. ‘Thed Le TAN eathiiaics, the ablest talent in the country, Genin for: Wipers deena, lara state Mi ‘chalet i ame Third, The judicial character of the inquiry would! | upon the amount of construction, The, The people of New York have seen investigation! tong to put a premium on the services of the labor ad-| | usual time served by a helper is from after investigation point to the same remedy. They] vocate and correspondingly decrease the power of the | mene davis; Lua HiMoa aed ' are now enlitled to remedy and results. labor agitator. The agitator who plays only on the} |demand for journeymen. The helper f ; Si Sele | emotions would have small chance at such a hearing. | ‘is required to take an examination i “THE NEW POOR.” | Facts and logic would play a more potent part. UR Ge | HAT is the name they are known by in England. , He pia Power to ria Wek es yt aioe sraneht) thee “pte _mumber of rn hs . i's 4 HOOKS wo able the ci cpenings for boys in this trade, am British newspapers recognize and discuss them as Ks and papers would enable the Regional Boards to penings for boys in this trade atten advise the public concerning such disputed questions as | BLA T eA bE the Rb tat! a class, Punch cracks British jokes about them, But|* "0 >" ; when building construction is once ; . ability of employers to increase wages, hours and wages re 1 the jests are softened by sympathy. actually paid, and questions of comparati od 2. Schooling R d y jONS OF MAU }2 le . Who are they? They are the people who missed the rf ni questi mp ative production | perianal aaisel ebucatibe wo war favors. They are the people whose baskets re- chide seem to ba dental iruclive and : Jerable, although the lack of this mained empty while the baskets of wage-earners on aa ad a i ve Ue Hi te aN tect by vocational training, a siv 'S advocd eI accepta y the order to become a first class w the one hand and war-profiteers on the other were be-| | G eh ea i ae faa ance i 4 es ee ee ing filled with plums. They are the people who are ies a 3 . Be a - 4 levied a i ee lianle “costs aad “entud, SA now striving to meet a post-war cost of living with} ‘ sie ae ead a ar reson Tae waa. lengths of pipe for fitting, &e, ‘This t . . Fert cu d is ic ce. ee c airly good knowles | i pre-war incomes—and seeing their standards of living Tis Lis a Sonor ena fi 1 fay ene a ese Lisi): ' 2 rf + an moves ne direc y d by] arithmette } forced lower and lower in the painful struggle. irk tite A Hy ; direc “a baba sa ¥y 4, Wages. I Fi 2 Ev ‘4 ; giving lab Y I j They are salaried clerks and accountants, they are eae Ate Be Ae 2 se Raia Aa hth The wage for a helper is trom $16 bs " . . Ourl, where its cli could be a cated Ww e 18 we to sta f — widows left with small incomes, they are professional | ie 4 ‘ate 7 (i sy se i A he ‘ with th tai en sa i ‘ ull supporting fore: public interest and ion. creased 1 ie journe: f } workers once reckoned well-to-do, they are even Bish- porting force of public interest and opinion, eednd 445 th 410 DEE Weak, . i ops—all carrying the load of extra taxes and increased | 7 | 5 eegiekt } e 4. Type of Boy Best Suited for the prices without a corresponding increase in earnings or| HANDS ACROSS THE SEA. RING Our 9 oe ‘ : RING IN ‘ Hie umber'a work is hard and interest. * | INCHESTER, England, has sent its first city flag tf : es oe It requires a strong, ac | The New Poor in the United States are equally a class, to its namesake in Virginia as a holiday token! THE OLD : THE NEW IRGIIGUTOR MeL Rtie. caecurcerel | equally aware of themselves and their plight. They see) of friendship. The gift loses nothihg in appreciation = x HEP poe baat ee ia adel te : § : F i 1 of Duties. themseNes at a hopeless disadvantage by reason of a} because its value is purely sentimental, (ah Heiper-—the first duty of the spending power newly concentrated in hands for which) Winchester, England, feels in touch with America be- Hit He ity paste aae bes tte yes ' | it is a novelty and an excitement. Efforts to bring] cause it has entertained many A. E. F. visitors. Only Hee Te re learnacto cut ABuraraie . A ‘ es i ae wee if imaterial, He learns to t } down high prices are vain where so many persons} comparatively few were from the Virginia town of the pipe und make minor fittings; he + : whose pockets have been filled almost over night are! same name. The feeling is general but the form of ex- etn SiR io ey Sr Lie uulacty MHAue aapib CAlGme GE m : ava : A fl yearn teu ned a ¢ tor cutting lengths of pipe. cager to see how it feels to be extravagant | pression will localize and intensify the feeling in the, ; ¥ . (b) Journeymun—Duties of a jour- j Trying to explain the present high prices of clothing, | {wo Winchesters. Doubtless in due time the junior city | U NC MYM E neymun are to instal and repair all ai ), * . r es f ? ypes of plumbing and fixtures, | | i William M, Wood, President of the American Woolen] will find some way of returning the courtesy and so| 3 ich Bl | 4 Cine tee: Nisei | | Company, points to “the curiously insistent demand] strengihen the tie tliat binds. No Bi Tera kenny By John ake. Journeyman. { } for cloth made from the finest and most expensive] It is rather a pretty example of sentiment. Many aj Chacreignea ie nattet ne wie is pos GEPTING bateny OF PRISON ote pee ¢ y ) } Es is at the \ ' s peso! { wool: It is claimed that more pairs of the same shoes} cily overseas, in England and on the Continent, has aj'849. Sit Street and Central Park W ran ef i rereeH ta RT Tre Rman UL ur musluun u : A A ire ‘4 r ‘ ee en ninety-six families residing No. i6i Sherma D © can usually learn some from anybody ay We | can be sold at $15 than at $8. Luxuries sell at any| namesake here well worlhy of acquaintance. Why| ure an NRC SIX families resiais Heed Cry ARnG will take a bric® course of instruction from the jull-br ‘ f figuie, should not the exchange of such courtesies be encour-| Christmas amounted to $i. 1 will be} 4 t ef The Hvening W Once in jail he thinks of little else bul bow to : } No wonder the New Poor have to wear their old] aged’as a custom? Il is such international social ameni- sega oath igae woul ; priestly aii its oe: Every thought, every idea is centred on a means of escape } clothes, No wonder they have to deny themselves the | ties that will help to strengthen the League of Nations you eae pub ish this Tok nf 4 | i ‘To the pueeue 2 ae the t at of su Bs ne aa bo - i J ‘ . * . : . i paca , ted A A s ha w Tet nite w sxe appallin o je jae yreake i > things they used to eat. No wonder they must give up| by fostering real international friendships. eae LOA: ed in ex which tend to aub- | iin tien bum doaa anne quently can be done \ y wee comforts and amusements. No wonder they cannot) One may wonder whether news of the presentation) —:aptatuing the ixures. ert (he eh the tion of | To the man who enjoys the blessings of liberty, the job | went ieee aie pay the present price of theatre tickets. What show] was made public during a recess of Congress by acci- | pits tie i dcatulaleg Mat Nee piel oh al ure eS of tunnelling through a wall, one brick at a time, replacing the |7. Remarks ~ have they in competition with the spending power that] dent or by design. It would not be difficult to imagine | ning World, under headin Maving no Toapect. te ile ar and hiding the dust would be too prodigious to contem Lae tite CeeIBnitce dr teeaaleete $ ? | Seem to Fib," the writcr wishes to draw | Indi tty or property righ p nat the iponsibiiity, (of begs! : man ey SNARE: Senator Jim Reed's apoplectic outburst if he happened | oor" attention to the fact that the sun | CY, ave secured thd ao But the jail-breaker has an incentive. He concentrates all | foreman, or even a boss plumber, f ‘ th hind i . / ’ hat deprives m itor 4 providing hi willing to apply him Neither that spending power nor those standards, | to hear that an English flag was on display in an Amer-| ject covered $s not a point in pl ‘ men and won his energies on his own purpose. Nothing dismays or daunts$| self and acquire the necessary skill if s ‘osperity. ity} i ity. Pe Snelish ci rae: i i. | mathematica, bat a point in economies, | # Ha sntornation, | Coursen ia cline however, are proofs of sound prosperity. Prosperity ican city. Perhaps the English city was diplomatic re werningdes Wiich \qarseard th 1 wine, Constitution him, Pete ee marae ' i ‘ ing are given in various trade schodts cannot be made and maintained by the lavishness of| as well as friendly SSI GON. wel Uh ¥en batons: acquainted ; nd often, a Aer performing feats of patience and prodigies of nd can also bo secured ; classes suddenly benefited by a redistribution of wealth, -_——- he during very rece nig tee ae ae Ps diet OF oe eae ane a le urpusesLubdbsvill pay uatordl umber of semi-public vocational + Prosperity is not secured by merely lifting here and GOLD COACH OR BOX CAR. thas hve eyaadl ceseake (aLouecor tt 9 Jc Independence io elas Genk Shish demands conmaeratie ecuds et there Ligh Dialeauue. of wages shd profits al the cost of ANY the tales of wild adventure that have come eracusiai= a PANAGuSRitonor THAT pel Hf the = His whole existence has one end and aim—liberty, Every-31tont work will be of reat, ausiate ' Uepressed levels elsewhere. ee Aragon Ne oom oo a shear that with reduction ot Works | sie, omy arose METDBEN GRAWAM. | f thing else is subordinated to it. All other thoughts are shut out. lance in helping the boy to advance, set ; ' down from the carly days of our great Far West. |i ours and increase in earnings prow| 4 His every waking hour is spent in thought about the task he ——-—— ; Pity the New, Poor, but don't stop there, And of them all, is there a greater favorite than the epics | 4 H bly 1 duced tach i ; i ee ; pene F e |duetion invariably hy Wo redUced. |, yey ia vena vy: must achieve, i ee ee nae Tres Palgts ETL LO) DescansiGtre IN re gold coaches dit whiten the (reasure of the mines (Tenere? Out] in behalf of the American girl o He supplies the best lesson we know of in concentration "Gas Trsalment for Infieneay ' every economic programme that aims at sound recon- was transported to the railroads? | applied. ‘ ; | si to say Wat before persons ¥ And concentration is perhaps the most important lesson we can}! Dh, Alvander Gregor. Healt Of struction. ae tty oan niswionia anid trade, ed eke Nase een Naha a Aueckw cris Heeorevantaa iia ; ‘The New Poor have carried and are still carrying the| , 19 these thrilling fales the romantic characters were Sanh whysh'neAguted ant ; ina « Sih aan aoe wh Phere are fow-of us who are not in some sort of a jail, im-} [mavens may Be prevented by the ‘heaviest burdens of the war. No prosperity is just or the armed express guards who rode the trails om the jets ferent. conclusion” than hing, Shall not th ‘pesaid or ite goed by our environnfent, Sometimes it is the jail of poverty. | caretul investigation along that line. s i antain jteelfand - ‘che t coaches with nothing to do but outwit or outshoot the | one show! : sETY WINSOM )$ Sometimes itis the jail of failure. Always we are walled in by He noticed that the employees in gas Raa ec Deceerss 12 URIGIRIN TEI RAG RTOW Neher: 8 covetous bandits and hold-up men who infested the! !sbor and Wives barriers that shut us out from some goal of our desires, works did not suffer from influenza, Ua i try. Both bandits and guards were bi [present unrest in the Tabor move pan elie We can penetrate these walls if we are patient and deface his suggestion that gases mignt ; cu country. Both bandits and guards were brave and re-| prevent. iMac sure to blar : ‘atonal Amer’ Ztermined. But we shall be neither sufficiently patient nor de-$ | be used 4s a preventive. In collabo~ ; sourceful men, They were the real adventurers, armed | isting high cos Ug ; termined enough unless our will to escape is very strong. ition with Dr. Benjamin Moore he Th one thing to be said for that | ward trend of price any girl who live & 1 ean t ha aleeeant ares . to the teeth for duel to the death, [hy labor by pushing r othing but the things he mentions Concentration is extremely difficult, It means bending all} | 28/84 4 ™ thod for the slow : Bunk ve opal nias, Weey 1®.J0pkiue forth. the yes! hat was fifty ita andl Riad’ wat be brainless, heartless, thought-! four energies toward one purpose, rejecting every activity of} | 8% discharge of nitrogen peroxide Pacific. It ducked a lot of trouble, | Ah, yes! But that was fifty years ago. Civilization {ROUTE ROS fee Oy oer ee Phases e ploturkaanuationeit finubow Ged waniisiidan: nolals atike P at OTS) at a concentration fit for breathing, hate jand adventure do not mix, Adventure had a place in| to CoE aa ut one thougiit in her silly head, other= ee “ sae 2 directly assist us in what we are}| ana of other gases, such as sulphur j | 4 a No. Ste We could not be fond ying to de : dioxide, nitric acid and acetone. It a | GET DOWN 10 THE ROOTS. those days; but not now, Then men were men, and For Dien cant aimee No man attains a full measure of success who does not con-$| was found, according to a report in t i | their daily comings and goings were adventure, Adyen-| Laberge ipo paces ate, ubove mentioned, but t ‘ contr on the one object he has in life, The Journal of the American Medi- | j UDGE MAYER has several novel and engaging sug-| tare now is ancient history, Peers i you for yo RR OGnte hel AUR GaLuast RU TASiD weal tree The jail-breaker hay artificial barriers set about him, He}! cal ociation, that exposure, | gestions as gilding for his 8-cent fare pill, but the But is it? owners to provide anti-slip shoes 1 is made uncomfortable by bis surroundings. He is forced by $| these gases causes a great dimin, ry W.% ; } ; ‘ heir horses. It Is needed now solitude to concentrate ‘on tn the growth of bacteria ; pill is there just the same, | Only the other day a railroad train made up of|jorse owners will not see the i We who are measurably free have no such barriers. And} | ounedu (He threats and noses of H New York’read last week that fares on the elevated | plebeian box cars left Peoria, Trains lett Louisville, Si. {as an sean ml ee Aeieds until we realize that we too are in jail, and that there are bars ? During an outbreais af influenma te | ; } in Chicago are to be reduced from 7 to 6 cents because} Louis and other interior cities, all bound for the sea- lout Der teen crareyeta in and doors sta shut as from better things we shall never put fest min GN OR Ore Wee Side 56 amas i q H earnings are too large to justify the higher charge; | board, all loaded with liquor and—note the entrance of | 4 Phe avenine d forth our very best efforts, PE lat uepl i while the Detroit United Railways has just withdrawn! Adventure—all guarded by armed men, abidity - h The strengt the gas was ulated that odor was not , cht et. Flashes From Around the World | sc: me ad te fen min | | and of the 400 so treated none’ appealed yery slipper ped many 4 nt ‘picture its request for permission to make a transfer charge, | What is the difference between the gold coach guard trongly me. Or { . yer 1, ~ ’ . Fy a ot the past week be i stating that it tinds it can operate profitably on a flat! of the old West and the gin and whiskey guard of the horse toh W feet, m | S:cent fare, and even expects to spend $15,000,000 on| modem East? Not much, except that one lived in an- 8 hop. The ; Need for a Pled Piper. have been thrown up by the tide aul oan ond i ‘i improvements without asking for more than the present) cient history and is covered with the glamour ot f During, the war England ve 1 the Mersey aud Ribble, prov rs 7 Scent rate. | romance, the other is'a matter of the day's news oe hatritonig e areane came infested with rats, They NAG ceria Whee 4g Can nothing like that happen in New York? If not,| i; probably wearing overalls and wool mittens just as! rol’*h ay GnOstles anpointed to eprak | |. ie Je Binet Bee Ge | ee sought retiet in the water, has it been conclusively shown why? the gold guards did before romance covered them. in) eee ne tee eee bora We Blok phasis aceruiehers db Aw Aleninae’ ve s \ The Board of Estimaie is said to favor an investiga-| fifty years the armed guards of to-day will be telling of #uethen Rote nt gerehait ine HA RUGRLEO AGU SEA: Haas Ori rhe pict nt im ue A Ne nae Senne en ate Fi | tion that shall go twenty years back and disclose exactly | their adventurous ride and their grandchildren will ap- im wel! Bing prously, "eately more Man one pound each ave Santa Catalina. Cat. — tying He acetate seas a | how much the present of traction tinance in this city | preciate the wonderful tale just as boys now hang on] ,, very mn wat woman worthy of the ee eee oe Tena | MCR UM-SERaU Musica Nun Lan A vag “soing ba i ' $s affected lby overcapitalization and exorbitant rental] the tale of the gold coaches. inane Sree Recta ones Dante Maly CepaMred: Sul: Ady De atau a ae ea he torning. This wa in charges inherited from the past. After all, Adventure never dies. There is no end to 4 Sampo AGN ATOLL GUT lata tuenes: fiecuate, wweved without foeline ce There can be no honest, permanently effective han-| Romance. It is only that they change their torms and red) for. | Then | wil Bly IG fons NU RMA OIE Mle ee athe FE HTN OF Aen SSUU BO GN Gee a ae ot iuatehie. Catena w dling of the siiuatigg until the heritage is laid bare, [rea to recognize them, {tains for riend horee,! und afi pul TITRA ULE LLL aR RPE gi On P| WO worminule an ng the nay vies who had received