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RRA SSE IIa eg DO A aol (hei are ‘canned,’ out on bail, or on duty in farther | Flatbush? Not for mine. I'll wait until they get the By J. H. Cassel vie Limit ! eRe | force recruited to full strength again.” few York. | So it has been found necessary to postpone the re iti — Ginter eee Pagal eption at which a pair of testimonial “bracelets” were | oa vark Rew |to have been presented, It is feared that the punch simak OF anim ARSocIATED Fumes. | prepared for the delectation of the guest will ferment Albert Payson Terhune and develop an unlawful “kick.” The janitor of the, 3 4 Copyelent. 1920, by ‘The Crem polishing Ga, Tombs may he forced to give the building another | - — — x ‘i ro clean-up in preparation for the party. \ ‘ . acy f |\No. 61.—A FOREGONE CON- — By A HARSH ERA. Be P. S.—Late reports indicate disagreement in the Police | CLUSION, by W. D. Howells. G T was of course possible that friends and supporters Band over the programme of welcoming music. Some Florida Vervain and her ompty- si of a man whose private fortune is estimated at ead Hatt, the Conquering Hero Comes” Others pre: |headed mother lett their_Providende, E vould spend without his knowledge up-|2" “Hail. Hail, the Gung's Alt Here, | |R. 1, home for a year or so of foreign $60,000,000 would spend ; 4 Will Nicky please telephone preference? \ * \travel. Their pleasant wanderings ag wards of half a million doilars to secure his election to | | Nast brought them to Venice, where United States Senate. “Ht was possible that an overwhelming belief in the BETTER THAN BONUS PLANS. | desirabvitity of making this man a United States Senator might blind him and others to the minor fact that the Jaw of the Stale in which he sought election limited the ‘amount that could legitimately be spent in his coud Las. sin these columns © paign to $3,750. All thinking Americans must deeply regret the con- Neither of these possibilities carried weight with the ditions which make it possible that such a letter could Michigan jury which found Truman H, Newberry and | j,. j Sixteen of his campaign workers guilty of criminal con- Spiracy in {12 Senatorial election of 1918. © Nor did these possibifities present themselves in an ranoes : ; ; © ‘exfnuating tight to the Federal Judge who imposed Mr. Davis's dispassionate review of the cold facts is #to¥ Senator Newberry the maximum sentence of | enough to rouse the fighting blood of every citizen— \they resolved to spend the winter, There they met the local United States Consul, Ferris, an impression - able and sensitive young American, 3 Who proceeded at once to fall in love with Florida. « | Ferris found occasion to see her al most every day, and was her escort to @ hundred places of interest fm the wonderful old Italian city. Steadily - \ and by comfortable degrees the ro- mance was drawing toward an en- + Sagement. \ | Then upon the scene came an usd wi Vivica ahh) Italian, Don Ippolito, Ippolito was a gloomy and eccen tric genius. He was an inventor of much talent: But luck had been against him an& he had been un- able to get a fair chance to put his in- ventions hgfore the public. “AS he was eternally hard up for ready money, he was glad to accept an offer to teach Italian to this rie American girl, Florida Vervain, and trouble set in, Florida learned the new language with surprising ease, and Don Ippo lito was a good teacher. Presently he became an inspired |teacher, too, “For he had fallen in |love with his pretty pupil, and love [lent skill and eloquence to his teach jing. Now, Florida was not in the very least in love with this eccentric far In fact, she was in love wit! although she herself did’ not | yet fully realize how much she loved | the young Consul. | But “Don Ippolito LETTER from Mr. A. P. Davis, Director of the United States Re lamation Service, is printed written. No more damning evidence of the breakdown of Congress could be imagined, | 0,000 fine and two years in jail. | and particularly of every veteran, (> "Tt will be admitted in Republican circles that the er) pyischarged service men have an equitable claim for , @ harsh one. i * The law and the courts can not be relied on to give the benefit of the doubt to money when money is! ~ charged with buying its way into ‘the United States} | © Senate. + © What will the Senate do? ‘ ‘ Will it only begin, through its Privileges and Elec: | tlons Committee, the postponed job of recounting the ballots in the Newberry-Ford Senatorial vote? Will it proceed with an investigation of the charges New-| herzy has made against Ford? Will it take direct | action to define the status of Newberry? Or will it) wait for the convicted Senator to carry his case to aj _ higher court? | SAmproper use of money in elections is hot peculiar | Govérnment favor. There are grave economic objec- tions to bonus plans which might increase living cos No such obidctions can be made to reclamation plans. | The Nation is crying for more farms and more farmers ohn le to produce more food and cut living costs. The Nation ent ita one is facing an alarming drift from the farms to the cities. ¢ Secretary Lane prepared a comprehensive and far- sighted reconstruction scheme which he presented to Congress long before demobilization commenced, He urged it with every power at his command. Congress was deaf alike to his recommendations and to the in- dorsements of the service organizations. Soldiers re- | ceived preference only on projects already under way. | fe ae Mr. Davis's letter tells the story. Service men who \ bt filed at North Platte put up earnest money. Many | Ss interesting ’ é nis a 4 pe i iN “4k [ana clever. And she was more and | to the United States, but it has appeared from time a wasted money on travel. The Government offered \ \W7"2 ~~ | more often in his company. Verr articula CI s sp ol ' ’ ' = TY ers e le: | time as a particularly doubtful and suspicious spot ©"! them a gamble in which the odds were 42 to 1 against " lag cl oleate Roel li ned ee | the later pages of this Nation's political record, Espe- them, an od | Don Ippolito. Failing, he began to ty 4 A f i ASN in e™ ‘ | sulk, ahd to avoid Florida as much us ieacally has ble Hue eu ie aeons tr Mek ber It is not that the’ United States is ungrateful, jhe once had striven to be near her. ather countries that one of the eran ata we "| that the United States is governed by hack polit ee Bane Lssabatl Gites ha F ates Sen- ea : y | 9 the girl his great plans for piacin RR or ve acs 0 be SL Tc GHA There is no opposition to the Lane plan. At least none | his ihyentions on the markt aie dares to come out in the open, Yet the politicians . | Hopes of deatnitas fanie trom ken ~ -Hthas been demonstrated by a Federal Court in Mic i ator is ability to put up Money in large quantities, ‘ igan that money doesn’t buy a seat in the Senate so dilly-dally and play politics and deny these service men | f a8 ; j i the right to continue public service by producing food) (gage y | Florida was interested at once, an | the more Ippolito toid her about his j{nventions the more she wanted tw i . help. him overcome the obstacles —eksily. on a great public domain which might be brought into “a ie a j which kept ae f ee ~ ©The Senate itself should promptly take every Step) sroductive use. | Bene dade nee change, TINY. oH i v7 jonstration, tori : : : guve Florida an ide i its power to confirm the demons | In the editorial article to which Mr. Davis refers The) ———_—— as fe ——- —— —— /"She and Mrs. Vervain were about Ne: ; Evening World said: ee ——$$______ — | 9 to ae Med plead Phe suaiesed He | tha spolito go back to vidence fer, ¥> Y. W. C. A. WEEK. | If, as 1s anticipated, the demand greatly ex- FROM -EVENING WORLD READERS N M N p vith them, and let i is E By NE ceeds the supply, it may prove something of a | PL et bs : : basco eM av ein ann 3 HE work done by the Young Women’s Christian) shock to Congressmen who have been holding up ii a ay ee se | Be Johne Blak and bring Association is so well known and so praiseworthy | the reclamation projects. To the Editor of The Pay Want ee thy oor WoRRinn: tharteune foun 8 y (Copyright, 1920.) ease “Ippolito was overioved by. the inc tipat it scarce needs emphasis. The size of the task at) Mr. Davis's letter should provide the shock. If Con-| ,8° far as 1 know! ‘The Evening auth sg. number have resigned| “TEMPERAMENT” IS LACK OF SELF-CONTROL. citation. In the ‘test flush of Ta n (i . ‘ | World is the only newspaper with spac wtp pea happiness he confessed is love to present would undoubtedly be a revelation to many. | gress does not feel it, every citizen ought to make sure| enough decency, Wonesy ana oourel ernmene eteren vinterpecrine Thee If you are a Grand Opera singer you can afford to be srida, in a wild scene of vehenence | OWer years were growing years for the Y. W. C. A.| that his representative “hears from home.” The Amer-| “ge to expose the big hogs. But be- worth? a temperamental. If you are a hod carrier you can't. etace love him BRE loved “| t ‘ 5 reg a 7 t Tha se Bi e) 2 vi - Te e: is e a » e ny oe ae Dra Ae ee | Ifshouldered heavy burdens, met them and reached out jean legion should go gunning for the obstructors. {Og Salen CAUSE ADH Ge aay LE mot in war work: durleg tbenwan Te pecament me meres a peuiecent? ‘ 1 he alan mee * “aS f, = | at awit 4 at . feel that 1 owe an apology to that ani- |) ” Ned a bs " be: eee destruction of his high hopes | years havé witnessed a threefold growth. New de-)in these first drawings and for those who want farms fyal,"Tor he never minke to, the level | My, ate. cutting off of the| ¢ She says so herself in explanation of her peevishriess. wan too, much for Ippolito, “His un | partments have grown to proportions which dwarf the) but did not try because they realized the odds against of fhe human species because hypoe-| 240 bonus by Congress Will mecesel- Bat when she ceases to be popular, she ecases to be }|Palanced brain gave way, and he ' Ate sy, , ‘ogance, cI » dis-| tate many more working at n! ? 5 ‘ ., a Pewee z 2 Killed hims “entire work of a few years ago, In 1919 the Y. W. them. j honesty and cruelty are not part of| A study Sf oouaitione in Hyd offices lemperamental, Nobody is ever te mperamental when an Vlorida, shocked by the tra y B. i REBES in 1914, and turned | it 3 Y $k al AURAL AR pated Mie MNCHTINS Woanin’ Gt Wik | Menchate’ “Aascclat Aafia you fa ; are temperamental it is time you were Dr at TREAIIER a: Brehariva: Wad: tHieNs ‘women, five times as many as in 1914, and it and pay for it” should be a winning slo inteds in the yeaa World of the | Morcha Aaaution Se cus Patt Seon youn guard:: Peniperament ia aot tolerated in any but Siunei away 20,000 for lack of accommodations. Shock a wayward and dilly-daliy Congress into| Nichols, the altruisti Yop! many not know now. | the great, — x This work takes money, For this reason the Y. W.|action, Hee aoe ciate ESE ROdy Bar. 1a | Gochory, and Thu theunneccaenry ems A temp¢ramental bootblack would soon cease to have . ly y CG A. is appealing to New York this week for a fund e enough to make a cat laugh, As ploye s ppolnted quran She wat, if any customers, A temperamental child is usually spanked ria é hough one had not the right to speak | there are any, but try to do justice to ‘he eealinel empe anal a the ef $1,500,000. Any excess will be put to good use. : though one had not the right to speak! tnose who Rave patriotically servea| ¢ Until he realises that temperament and bad temper are the i Bee eae ould ide. tt salmiurn “FARMS FOR FIGHTERS.” tlemen are about their integrity? 1|their country for years in the face of} $ same thing, and both are nuisance: A ° Certainly New York should provide. the mi arity, (72.the KUltor of The Evening World write to assure Messrs, Masten the discourugements we have met, | Don’t ever get the idea into your head that you can nniwersary *Contributions to the Y. W. C. A, are not charity.) ""sty attention has just been called to an editorind in| cian intaligenes te understand that | : — excuse rudeness or irritability, or jealousy, or infirmity of —— Most of the activities of the organization are nearly if| your issue of Feb. 7 entitled “Farms for Fighters,” their clients are perfectly honest trom | Bem. (he Varetermee temper on the ground of temperament. DEATH OF LOUIS IX. KING OF Mi és a legal standpoint, and that some peo- The Evening World: People who control themselves get rid of thei e ~ “not quite self-supporting. This has been read with great interest, and I note the] }je are sufficiently intelligent to un- | read with great pleasure the t daa eacele wie ac 5S eir tem- FRANCE. t For instance, a third of the money to be collected | following statement: derstand what they are from @ moral | article written by a yan calling bim.|$¢'Perament. And people who do not control themselves are Louis IX., Saint Louis, died on standpoint. ‘ “Re. ss "Fh of little use to themselves or to anybody else. | this week is to be used to provide housing for girls “If a host of ex-service men file for home- ‘Cantor, nowever: compel mactowey [eee Tecormed Drunkard.” Brom bis ¥bgas March 33 in 1 He died at Temperament is neither a sign of genius nor of talent his second crusade. He ‘ ec These ei vi i f steads on the North Platte and Shoshone pr that they are no worse than the shef- | letter It looks to me as if he ts still : Ae 3 , of talent. Aft on his ‘ond crusé | earning small salaries. These girls will pay running) ects, it will be rather clear evider a of ig hy field Farms Company. 1 mention this| drinking, perhaps toliet water. Just It is always u characteristic of spoiled children, who are, as $) iad displayed the magnanimity of the | expenses of the homes, but cannot provide the purchase | ae id sda company because at the present mo-| because this man made a fool of him-|% a rule, stupid and selfish. | hero, the integrity of the patriot, and i. - soldiers wanted and did not get.’ ment it is the Worst example of hu-| self does not mean that we all do the It is natural enough f a rome | wopher f 5 ; athe n hu- | self does 3 h gh for a man or woman who has made $/ the} | money. Even with such an ambitious programme Th enlinen Dave Siow ‘cocurred thetlt d in the public eye. The| same, I am not a drinking man, but a “gainte Chapelle,” a chapel ‘of y oa Of fae tha’d ator Yt hese opening: Ky ERO ROBE A a RORY Farms Company and the }1 think Prohibition is the worst thing| § 4 Success on the stage to be temperamental, but they suc- Notre Dam was built to ecle __ there is no chance of meeting the demand for Y. W.) sipie to state the facts, We have only brief reports by ya are part of a very ever happened to this land of|$ ceed not because of their temperament, but in spite of it, }) rate. the, r A. homes for working girls. wire, but these give the principal information as follows: | ! Meee ea bee l ene ane aoanuuen, was mood enovatt >” And’ their fits of aulkiness whenever they arc crossed are }|'h® Hoy anh, \ — Gifts to the Y. W. C. A. are a form of community] On the Nofth Platte project we had to offer seventy: | unfortunate crusades: » the stupidity and greed of the|should be good enough for their not at all to their credit, back with aim the Crown y, W. C. i i H ine irrigable farms, For these there were received make it possible for them to n, We do not believe in the corporal ish i {as he believed. The Kin ent. Y. W. C. A. girls get immediate returns) ™ ; here. et sing obiects i - : poral punishment of chil- as believ The | Walked meen. ' a 5 ducation and con,| Witt ® few days 3,296 applications from that many shtemnt, thesemen atte secretly med saint saya that Pro-|$ dren, But when we see “grownups” who refer to them. {| mirefored throve Paris, earryin in jobs, living quarters, efficient education and Con-| corgiors, Each application represented some small labor | re iC a , the theray erawn he ded with envy. is a gem in archi will pre-| everyone, but T know of many cases selves as temperamental and believe that incivility, ugliness Sainte Chapel genial friendship. The community gets immediate | ang formatity but, more important, was accompanied by | Vail just, 0 long, as society has the whore it has done more harm than! $ und disregard of the feclings of others is due to their tem. } | tecture lis walls are a glass. i i i y jignoble ideals which characterize 1 1y 0 ome o' rand- 3 ; Sati $4) ne stone tracery is a rose returns in better and more intelligent workers, fa substantial money deposit, The number of applica: | {£)\" : eal a ee ee eel) borament, wa feel that i gard spanking now and then, ap- } {ana thorn. During the Great War “ah last analysis, however, the big community] tions represents on the average forty-two soldier appli-| | All honor to The Evening World) years old, has been kept alive on a plied when needed, would not only be a good thing f i | g Paris took out these walls ae rie ast ¥ e y cants for each available farm. The regulations. per-| f9F }t8 courage in battling for small amount of whiskey, and just Bi g for their intstimable beauty a ncreted , friends but would make them far happier themselves, LenB RS 4 gain will come in the next generation, Y, W. C. A.| girls are the coming mothers of Young America. In| right! BE. because ont pa Sa quart rc danger of the Zoppe- mitted filing by mail, but it was estimated that close to We een kine eae his 5 a ins : 2 } be thousand of the applicants proceeded to the project mage A Ditetent In * pines: shortening her I do agree with * Louis LX., one of the best pt ne ' their children the community will reap the full harvest | to view the land and attend the drawing. This probably "be the front Bae ay to-night’ ee eaves ch 3 Pinte Me tbe This ety fervent Petts, Waa a < ‘ . je fro page of to- ne was ever draggec © one with. —- . oc and, as 1 reea s man of ferve E |. of the Y. W. C. A. influences, physical, mental and) involved a total expenditure of $100,000 or more, largely | world you publish an item to the ef- | out hia own conse ha bs come, eatebiimod: accep ng (vent Ns : eeu pean risk, | srrong will and executive ability. He # 1 you's © tho ef Ht ealeula of a8, ° or the y » common ste y a bre sy \ spiritual. wasted because of the small number of farms available, | fect that Newbury, Mass. has gon Pe eb ale woth Wnla cane} f business done, as correct, the re-| Went on a Cividend DAPIE, haat defeated Henry IT tk S¥. W. C. A. delivers day-by-day results for the requiring the rejection of the vast majority of the ap- | wet for the first time in 259 years. You ‘¥. W. C. A. de y-by-da) s fo t sults covering the five years were as/19i7 panicky conditiona in Wall must be very hard up for wet victory | bim in the same class follows Str smashed its market value Hotel Rates in Peking, ‘ plications, ‘ : % t overloads his. ste a t $75 | : . . = ay newa, when’ you crow over such a ‘Surplus afte wn from’ sbout $75 a shure to le aa {money spent. The big returns from community in-| "In the case of the Shoshone project there were can ulorious victory ax this. ‘Phe. vote Know ‘that the “Reformed MBAMT then OO, It took herve toned ce | 4 danuury report = from * ‘ es oN eg) that ana aolltare new : can buy decent clothes nd if those who "1 80 no 20) pep yes the rates in one __-vestment are always too far away to see. Not even siderably fewer applicants and we had a smaller num. | shows that one solitary new funy he has eut out the booze. investment curr PRO NUE AL a Rea aes BR ee the optimistic founders of fifty years ago could have, ber of farms available, only fifty-six. For these 540 drys who voted last year did not yote|! never drank im all my life and I ‘. . . rare | ws “ >: ately cants his yea Behr y the question aet- | must &till wear an $8 suit. He alao imagined the service which the Y. W. C, A. was ready | Sldiers applied, or approximately ten applicants per | tilt yur Meret tt, dnendmenr, | writes he lives in a better ualeitere ing $17 a share (but! 9; » large els as ranyin ee They ace rare out! of the targe abtele aa ranging a edly not profitecrs. It has taken five| from $8 to $18 per day for one 1) years to put the intrinsic value of the ty room, includin to render and did render during the World War farm. Here, as in the other case, it was necessary for) i). jot it slay settled; in other word., | hood since Prohibition, I know some we divide the earnings for the | stock at that fleure HA I REAONeD Rie 3 to $25 rn ae ae f iho leach applicant to deposit a substantial first payment having caught the train they had no [very fine “neizhborhooda whore al five years—-namely, a total of 85.01) Now, as to saying that because | meats, and from $13 to Lie ‘ ees na ahh Saha tekst need to run after it. If the wets can| saloon was located on the cotr cent.-by 5, we find the company | there ern a “jump of L547 per} two in a room, The monthly | toward the coat of bullding the irrigation works, console one another with this kind of NOT REFORM paid me and the other stock-|cent. in earnings for which smokers | lea cuero a/Al (un a4R6 ton @ “NICKY"” HESITATES. | These two openings received extraordinary publicity, pews they are we Help your-| Philadelphia, Pa,, Mareh 17, 1 “ra a little over 7 per cent. which | had to pay is almost too obyi- | 7/08 Were sep id 4 | due to the fact that they were the first in which a pref. | self eee bee : a s certainly. not an exonaalye rotura jou ion to need refu-| single persoa and from $225 to i pe ‘ A ask pig tise " . | Bayonne, N. J, March 18 1930. Tobacco Products’ on the par value of the stock ation price of the goods| $4590. fo, o. A suite of rooms 4 ISMISSALS, indictments, resignations and trans- | erence right was given the soldiers, Doubtless this stim. _ Wo the Kditor of Tee Evening ‘The fact that [ took the risk of my | manufacture the Tol $40 fi F abe a eee fers in the Police Department are always unfor- ulated their inquiries and applications, but on the other | it the New Workers, The manifest unfuirness of your|investment and bought the stock at] s hus been advance for one person was $40 p hand, where one went to the expense and trouble of | 7? te Miter of The : ; alleged profiteering of |1es8 than pur (as it can be bought) learn, in no case over 25 pe rcent.| day, or $1,000 per month; and te—and doubly so just now. I have rea¢ ed with your _ é ay ow) has nothing to do with thi geo] This is where the smoker comes in, | Ral ae oie i < applying formally we had inquiries from hundreds of} articles on t Stee mith RUE lthe ‘Tobacco Products Corporation, | OW) has nothing to do wilt the @enr | indus T look at them now and heron; 70" @ party of four, $55 per day “For, be it remembered, Nicky Arnstein has not yet others, many of whom were doubtless discouraged when | 40 you realize that: published to-day, compels me as al stock at one time went to 140 on the | the war, Brloes bear a vory favorable and $1,350 per month, These A etic ultcal . L are " steady, | stockholde: that corporatic - | marke! ose estme: eo} comparison to the situation +4 ca pict | Aécepted the more or less cordial invitation to a recep- explained the facts regarding the small number of farms are & great many steady, | stockholder in that corporation to re- | market. In these investments on y A in-all) prices are given in Mexican and sincere workers in the|sent the perversion of the facts as|must take the chance. The man who|!nes of manufactured wares, It ri tga by the police. available and the vast number of probable applicants, ivil service and your articles are|you outline the Ought at 140, oF at any other point | 'ooks, indeed, as if smokers hud bo:ae| dollars and, at the rate of én Nicky consents to bé entertained he expects a. P. DAVIS, hurting then very much? 1 made an i stment in the To-jabove par, and stbll holds his stock |u very light burden of the conse. | exchange prevailing at that RB oodles | Phat most of these men are working |bacco Products business soon after| gets in dividends a proportionately [quences of wr, although in every ae ie hs caateniead om “i ” Director U, 8. Reclamation Service, Department of the | ut the same salaries they were recely. |its orgimization in 1914, For three | less return than 7 per cent. on his insg item of tobacco manufacture rising time, wow je eg nt to va guest of honor. “How,” he must be asking Interior, ing in 1812 Lefore the pigh cost of | yourm the common ‘stock 1 bought |vestment. If he bought at less thaggcosts of labor and,raw. material com! | about 15 «per cent. more i blade ? uJ . a : Washingion(haaren 11, 1920 MUR iaadovty of chews ary ating fi weld uni thd busines’ could ber [fairly eaited te Tt ie took tho PNow Yorks Maren 18, 1920, "7. | United States currency. article on the