The evening world. Newspaper, February 12, 1920, Page 19

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to Men an Om Public Opinion. Public opinion can change a much, _. “With public sentiment, nothing c: cisions Possible or impossible to be ex: On Pwo Great Political Parties. (@ two have changed hands as to extginally supposed to be divided, m4 rather harmless contest, ended in ‘@wn coat and into that of the other. ave performed the same feat as the fy this Nation, On Mob Law. e¢7T URN to that horror-striking @cene at St. Louis. A mulatto gain... was seized in the street, Gregeed to the suburb of the city, chained toa tree, and actually burned to (ath; ang all within a single hour from the time he had been a freeman attending to his own business and at peace with the world, “Such are'the effects of mob law, A such are the scenes becoming ore and more frequent in this land lately famed for love of law and 1. By the operation of this dbocratic spirit, which all must ad- itis now abroad in the land, the ngest bulwark of any Government, 4 particularly of those constituted dure—t mean the attachment of le—may effectually be broken p and destroyed. @ Méxican Policy. HIEIN I ask, is the precept ‘What~- goever ye would ‘that men should to you, do ye even so to them’ pre of no force? of no applica- “WHAT LINCOLN SAID a On Topics of Interest ee Copgrisht, 1920, by The Press Publishing Company (The New York Wrening World), Pry ee) Government rests on public opinion: Whoever can change) ” esd. Consequently, he who moulds public opinion goes deeper than he who statutes or pronounces on decisions. He makes statutes and de- nitw no child’s play to save the principles of Jefferson from total overthrow d Women the Government practically just so| an fail; without it, nothing can suc- ecuted. . , 6é{ BMEMBHRING that the Jefferson party was formed upon its supposed ™ superior devotion to the personal rights of men, Golding the rights of Saperty to be secondary only and greatly inferior, and assuming that the @e-cefled. Democracy of to-day are the Jefferson, and their opponents the mti-Jefforson party, it will be equally interesting to note how completely the principle upon which they were “I remember being once much amused at seeing two partially intoxicated en engaged in a fight with their greatooats on, which fight, after a tong each having fought himself out of his If the two leading parties of this day @re really identical with the two in the days of Jefferson and Adams, they two drunken men. But, sobecty, it is chureh, gr out of it, becomes danger- ous to thé public interest, he must be checked; but bet the churches, as such, take care of themselves. It-will not do for the United States to ap- point trustees, supervisors, or other agents for the churches. On Woman Suffrage. 66] GO for all sharing the privileges of the Government who assist in bearing its burdens, consequently I go for admitting ail whites to the right of suffrage who pay taxes or bear arms (by no means excluding females). On Democratic Institution “A majority held in restraint by constitutional checks and limitations, and always changing easily with de- liberate changes of poputar opinions and sentiments, is the only true sovereign of a free people. Whoever rejects it does, of necessity, fly to anarchy or despotism. “Among free men there can be no Successful appeal trom the ballot to the bullet. New York Democrats. ) HAVE heard some things from ‘New York; and if they are true, . might well say of your party ‘ag a drunken fellow once said p he heard the reading of an {n- } at for hog stealing, The clerk 4 on till he got to and through words; ‘did steal, take, and carry y ten boars, ten sows, ten shoats a ten pigs,’ at which he exclaimed, Well, by golly, that is the most y divided gang of hogs I ever i@ hear of!’ If there is any other ‘of hogs more equally divided n the {Democrats of New York are bout this time, 1 have not heard fee it Government and the People. HE legitimate object of Gov- efnment is to do for a com- nity of people whatever they need fmve done, but cannot do at all or t 80 well do for themselves in eeparate and individual ca- In all that the people can dually do as well for them- goverfiment ought not to in- cre, country, with its institutions, ngs to the people who inhabit it. éhever they shall grow weary of isting Government they can ex- ‘their constitutional -rigitt ding it, or their revolutionary to dismember or overthrow it. tHe frame of the Government r which we live, this same peo- ‘thaye wisely given ‘heir public Pout little power for mis- ef; and ‘have, with equal wisdom, vided for the return of that little their 6wn hands at very short in- als. While the people retain their ‘atid vieflance, no administra- ‘by amy extreme of wickedness fofty, can very seriously injure the snment ‘in the space of four Ts, yy Whould there not ibe a pa- t’cotifidence in the ultimate jus- ofithe people? Is there any bet- ‘Or equal hope in the world? Religious Liberty. must not undertake to run the 1920, by The Press Publishing Co. (Tee New York Evening World.) Who has Gecretary of Agriculture? js La Plate River? ted: recently? der’ made? What was th name raplin’s wife? . In what — city Trafalgar ne? nto Alles What newly eo QUESTIONS: ‘ Wheelers 7 fened; 4. Cu In What country in South Amer- What well known woman violin- chief who was beheaded after 1 war against the colonists in planet is an attempt What poem did Milton write in tructed Amer- railway passes through Mexico? WERS TO YESTERDAY'S rhinoceros) 8, un- On Capital and Labor. 66] AM not ashamed to confess that twenty-five years ago I was a hired laborer, mauling rails, at work on a fiatbout—jugt what might hap- pen to any poor 's son. I want every man to have the chance—in which he can better his condition— when he may look forward and hope to be a hired laborer this year and the next, work for himself after- ward and finally to hire men to work for him. That ts the true system. “Laibor is prior to, and independent of capital Capital is only the fruit of labor and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital, and deserves much the higher consideration. Capi- tal has its rights, which are as worthy of protectfon as any other rights. Nor is it denied that there is, and probably always wil be, a relation between labor and capital producing’ mutual benefits. “Wanting to work is so rare a want that it should be encouraged.” LL MAKE A A\4 POPPING CORK DocToR | CAN'T WAKE Lahn HUSBAND HAS HE BEEN ASLEEP D PROHIBITION CAME IN HAVE You TRIED NOISE To WAKE HIM >| FIZZ NOISE. CAN You MAKE ANOISE Litcé @ f | Mr. Jarr and His Friends Encourage Art, but ® R. RANGLP was loitering in front Of the empty store next to Slavinsky’s glass-put-in establishment, watching a sign artist at his work of decorating the empty store window with a depiction of a shoe repairing machine supervised by a swarthy operator in profile and the legend “Shoes Mended While You Wait.” “Well, I'm a union painter,” re- marked the artist. “T ain't one of them hoboes what have two styles of ME. United States Government] pum dettering and that's all. I got an art tmining, I have, They ain't nothing I can’t paint. I worked twen- ing and I've painted whales for soap and flies for screen signs—and the fies as big as the whales and the cows—and the ginger alé boy and the old malt whiskey mab—now deader been recently appointed |than a mackerel—and the guy with the backache—a@nd all the famous if there is anything you want, whether it's animal, vegetable or irom what cereal is the best face] mineral, I can paint it.” of the In-}| “Mineral sounds good; paint him on the winder,” suggested Mr. Sla- vinsky, who had come out of his store and stood by made to le? dim sneered the artist “M! Brom what country did white}, coal and wood.” with blue eyes originally come? a ee soles . Vell, Tony, the ice man, deuly in What continent do the Zulus Uv idiah aati cela 18] coal and wood,” ventured Slavinsky. Vhat is the stage name of Char-|Put Tony sitting in the dark in his ron a ton of No, two One ton of Tony's coal wouldn't The artist emote. his forehead in despair. “phey ain't no action in a ton of coal in a dark cellar and no perspec- tive," he objected, “No, no, Slavinsky,” said Mr, Jarr, mings; 5. J. P. Mor. J {4 Co.; 6. Mars; 7. jinrikisha; 8.|who had now joined the group, “the of California; 9 cut; 10, cedar; Pe ll a rs something with action | eoeyOedmans, 12, Fulton, ae Sawin The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell. Copyright, 1920, by The Proes Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). Not on a Non-Paying Basis. ty years on outdoor display advertis- | characters of hWwtory like them, and | ry © “Paint a feller running, in a red shirt, then,” suggested Mr. Slavin- sky. “And out of his mouth wolds saying: ‘If this glass breaks, tell Slavinsky, the glazier.’" The sign artist groaned, “And then some people wonders why artists drink—when they can get it!” he cried. “I tell you what!” said Mr. Slavin- sky, as though seized by a sudden idea. “Paint in a house on fire, That will please Claude, the firemaa, and the bunch at the engine house.” “I think something more cheerful would be better. Don’t you, Rangle?” asked M>. Jarr. “Sure said Rangle. “Something powder, and cows for malted mitk, | Pleasing and cheerful. “Well,” said the artist reflectively, “There's one I can do grand, of ampu- tations in a hospital—dbut I don’t think it would be the right thing for a shoe store and if I painted it on the winder here they mighn’t pay me for doing ite” So, as his admiring critics agreed with him that art could mot be done for urt’'s sake alone, he went on with his industrial commission of the man at the shoe repairing machine, foo Re cit Bay Newest Notes in | | Fields of Science | Tuberculosis among the miners has decreased since the introduction of electric power into South African gold mines, The passenger list of a baby car- riage muy be doubled by using an auxiliary seat to be suspended be- tween the handle bars, An English inventor's stove can be used as an open grate or a range, a water boller being operated with it in either form, A qetal frame resembling a huge bird ge which can be set up over # sto\® has been patented by a Tex- an foy drying clothes, ' The blouse at the left is strictly tailored and is suitable for any suit. tis ‘of white wash handsome vest effect; has reversible collar and long The blouse at the nght is of georgette embroid- ered in self color and gold It ws designed’ in 3 the new draped waist line effect, so popular this Both models are skown in the Waist Divi. {son of the Bush Terminal | you are strong and robust, otherwise By Herman J. Stich ut of a crowbar mind to make after month, HERE was a farmer out West who owned 4 And the farmer used to let the bars down and let the mule stray over to the mail » engineer on the trains used to get mad because time after time he had to stop the trains and hold up the passengers while he was persuading the mule to stay and play on his own sida And the railroad talked to the farmer and told him not to let the buns down and to keep his mule where it belong: as his mule. and he thought it was rrea und see the people get excited let the bars down and to let his mule other people's business. And one day his mule trav- elied over to the ruilroad tracks and between two mails, and a train came engineer was in a hurry, and a few seconds af that the mule was not worth anything all day long rub- af intent on rubbing it beauty of her bing her crow down to a ney mpletely deaf to the entreatios of he one dwy she was old and careworn her chunk of nd sho still had” Just as thick as refused to tend stubborn ma % not hold opintons—opinions UNRPASONABLED—t verybody detects Ite+ 1 bulldog and the asininity lanted himself tes Stubbornness is always futile an, 1¢times fatal A big man or woman |s always open to conyiction, There Prunes ; \ wen @ Chinese —- oe er THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1920 : Movie Fans Silence Is Golden, All Right, But in the First Seventy- Eight Rows of the Movie Theatre Silence Is as Scarce as Gold in a Dollar Watch—The Swell Movie Actor Is One Guy That MUST Take His Place in the Sun. « By Neal R. O’ Hara. Copsright, 1920, by The Press’ Publishing ©o, (The New York Evening World.) let a dozen film bugs into a theatre and the silent drama is a noiseless as # steel riveter. Silence is golden ali right, but in the Ba movies are silent so long as the movie fans aren't around. Bat first seventy-eight rows of the average movie theatre silence is as scarce | as gold in a doliar watch. A movie fan certainly stirs up a lot of hot air. ‘The film fan’s just as gullible as she is garrulous. She's the only one that believes what a press agent says about a star. That is, excopt the star himself, of course. You can make a movie fam believe that black is white if the argument concerns the movies. In fact the fans assert that that’s the basis of the industry—that black is white. If It wasn’t, what would a negative be! An anaemic old guy looks like old Uncle Tom when he’s viewed through a negative strip. And s ; couple of anaemie guys look like Primrose’s minstrels, Every movie fan has a favorite. The Japanese fans fall for Sesew Somebody and the ostrich fans fall for Muriel Ostriche. And some fané root for D. W.'s pictures like the Polo Grounds fans root against Clark GrifMith’s pitchers. And there you are. = Many a flapper’s jaw palpitates with pepsin as Her Hero stalks on the sereen. The real female bug forgives her idol anything, no matter what the scenario makes him do. She forgives larceny, arson and murder so long as Handsome Marmaduke lasts till the final flicker of the film’s fadeout, Some of the wildest fans even forgive Marme- duke for the shaved neck he shows from the rear. The swell movie actor is one guy that MUST take his place in the sun, You can’t take pictures on a cloudy day. Life is wonderful, the way the scenarios dope it. Main difference im the plots these days are the prices the magnates pay for ‘em. For the scenario guy the first 6,000 fect are the hardest. Then comes the same old final clinch that they used when Edison first made the movies move, ‘The fadeout is a close-up built for two, Also two minutes. Only films that don't use it are the news weeklies that show the latest railroad wrecks and the Old Home Week parades. Movie nut not only sees pictures—she collects em. Writes to her favorite and tells him she wants his photograph. Film favorite’s press agent writes for 50 cents to cover the cost of postage and mall- ing. Film fan complies. Malling the picture must cost 48 cents, for the postage is only 2-cent stamp. The star’s photo is personally autographed by sextuple rotary press with a capacity of only 86,000 signatures an hour. Photo's a personal message from the star to the sucker. And of the two, the sucker’s the more pleased, at that. Film fan reckons the studio of the bathing girls as the Garden of Eden. In fact you don’t have fo"be a film fan to think it's the Garden of Eden. Bathing girls’ studio is one place where the imagination ian’t stretched half so much as the one-piece bathing suits. . There are more fans for the beauties than any other kind. ‘The fans are, dyed-in-the-wWool aa the bathing girls’ trunks. When it comes to action, the California Sennett has got it on the bunch in Washington forty ways. Only argument about iy that the California Sennett has is whether it'll be a one-piece or a two-piece treaty. The Sennett has so far rejected all articles but one—and that’s the bathing suit. Bathing gpit is known as Article Y, on account of the cut of its neck. ‘ Maxims of a By Mee Modern Maid Marshall Copyright, 1920, by The Preas Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World.) FTEN when a girl is unpopular with men there is nothing the matter with her—except that, like Dr. Johnson, she does not suffer fools gladly. Every mother should teach her little boy to cook. If he doesn't know how, he will never get a wife in the servantless future, Why should any woman be simple and straightforward with a man, since he likes her:so much better if she is crooked and circum~ looutory? ee ‘When like mates like—then comes the tug-of-wart ‘The “clinging vine” styles are to return this spring. Wirst call for « sturdy oaly—and plenty of ‘em! A friend is a person who is not shocked when you say exactly what you think about clothes crusaders, the New York Assembly, the “Bitter Enders” at Washington, Prohibition, and the movement to sup- press “Jurgen.” If gver @ aewspaper woman “comes bac! * to a oulja board with a def- nition of heaven, she will describe it as a place where there are ne press agents. y Snow removal in New York this winter is a process as long and tedious as melting the frost on the heart and manners of a Boston man who falls in love—yes, even Bostonians have been known to do it! Diplomacy for a woman consists in being just as much amused, when a man tells her a “good one,” as if no other man had ever told it to her. 's liberty, when his wife is eternally vigilant? TALKS ON HEALTH AND BEAUTY By Pauline Furlong Copyright, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co, (Tho New York vening Wartd.) Fy ight hs . h Boudoir Exercises. Pocully by wornes and growin Strib (Continued) Complete relaxation is absolutely necessary between these movements CONTINUING our bedroom chair] ina it isa great mistake to keep on exercises, I have selected on |doing the exercises perviatentiy, ia to-day, iglerder to get them over in @ hurry. eney one to mastor yt Readers must remember that if they do not rest between the exercises most, lighter apparatus should be used, |i¢ not all, of the good effects of them about which I will tell you in subs@-| Will be lost. Practise these simple a articles. chair exercises just as they are out~ To-day’s exercise combines a deep! ir possible, so that you may watch breathing one and tt should therefore | and control the movements, be practised where there is @ current of fresh air, but not in a duught. the buck of the head and neck read- ond to these simple exercises Many aches and pains about the upper shoulders and arms and around Stand im front of the chair, take a| ily res . tion of air into the lungs, | because most “of them are caused by deep snhelation dn and then reash| Wood congestion, which is readily through "| pcattered through exercise. over and grasp the sides of the buck| It is really astounding how many of the chair. Bring the body to an/ common @ anise through sluggish db upright, straight position, with the| tion and physical exercise is the only shoulders well back, and gradually | sensible, lasting and hywienic method Litt the chair up unti] it ts'on a level to pursue to stimulate its action, with the head. As you biing the] ~ - = = chair up take a deep breath and hold ADVERTISEMENT. {t until the chair is on a level with!” PMlief From Windburm the head, then lower the chalr and}, cir when you wash exhale. with wepid water and pPek va ‘Dhis exercise develops the shoulders | It js better still to rub Vi and-back and strengthens the muscles | the skin of {acu and hands & arcund the chest, arms and’ upper rf body, It is a strenuous one, and bo practioud a is :: ik lined and in front of a large mirror, . leven serious disorders

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