The evening world. Newspaper, November 22, 1920, Page 22

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© }}{{ companion propaganda sheets. protected, they will have but one answer. | eae eos cee een ey nee ‘ ine Because of the efficient obstinacy of Mr. Mitten, | oth with Neate Ul bey ‘ . oti stati 3 horn | uevertheless told ali that words co! . i the Philadelphia traction situation has been a t i | Fatalities in the latest reprisal raids in Dublin | ‘utter. At length one day one of thém {itt in the side of the higher-fare propagandists and thelr | i jciude fourteen British officers and ten etvil- discovered that jn the wall that sep- a dart ipekers, the interlocking interests of the traction | fans. Versions of how the ral fights started | arated their hotises and their rooms ie the tmancin: groups. ure hopelessly at variance. | there Was a crack which allowed { oe mee gs ‘i ie a ed in Philadelphia | Murder or patriotic justice? | them the pleasure of assuring eagh ; Bane. When finally the fare was clanged in F nladel The terms are interchangeable in seething | other of their everlastinglove, of mak- ‘ Hi the fare boosters immediately proclaimed it a ireland ink fond vows gnd of swearing faith- an for their cause and a precedent for similar | fulness in spite pf thelr parents’ oppe ing the ‘ . sition. These stolen interviews, how- F {iii dhanges everywhere. The fact of vn i was A FEDERAL RESERVE OF LABOR? | Jever, made the restrictions that f oe j i i in which the change x eree i sat rs : dt set 0 ae ! a i peey saverises. ite vente) x2 S -EAKING before the National Industrial Council, | pete dae ae Maly they de | ify, Was made was careful a iiedd Aioci of thie Hilf Immigration Commissioner, Wallis described jeided to meet in spite of all, Tey ‘ a is w: ativ ct = 7 fi vistas 4 ., | agreed to be ¢ Ni ‘ a \ i This haters the superia ie ret t a “plot” to flood this country with immigrants of jar ey nen aewe inert Nimiey 444; truth which the propagandists hoped to ila Kinde fablavcharacter | were to await each other at the foot a miliar w ss of most propaganda. ke bain i . " | of a white y tre . HA peek has eae Nora as 7 eh (i ving In truth, it should require no proof of a “plot”‘to |, Barly next morning Thisbe wrapped Baers en une oiiter side 8 Exposce as 0 ; move Congress, when it meets next month, to recon- | | tently: but of he nodes, cone ete tiEnk q {ii1 World’s correspondent, Martin Green, is exposing | (4. 0 immigration. policy | |the trysting place and on reaching '!' the Philadelphia situation, the natural effect is a | * an A | |the mulberry tree threw off her véll et 5 sat f even “whole-truth” state- Statistics of unemployment in the news of the day | j and settled herself to wait for Py- typ eaotion and a suspicion o} and the weekly immigration roll are the facts which ‘oy and a lion eho had just madeta i [iif ments in the future, faite ari Congress must tice) j ki! found his way there ‘to. drink ‘ f alf-iruths is e un- 5S : , 7 Thisbe saw it in time, however, and it To this nant ° h aia s ctr rae he Where is the sense in permitting more than 20,000 | r seded in reashiak iy emified w ae a eos ee psa miata ew arrivals each week to flood the labor market at | Phe beast fndine itseit cueccteRt tii Indulge in “‘cry-baby” pleas for i" a time when demand is slack and many are out {its prey, vented its rage on the Vé@ {i by the unfavored straphangers. of work? tent eres at? i ae witht nid Hi “If the Interborough has a good case, why does it roe if ; a | and claws. While doing this the bleed ie ‘ ‘ Perhaps next summer may see a scarcity of labor ft not présent facts and figures in a straightforward that remained on its jaws from its Pere wR ‘presen! ; hen t in American industry, Let us hope so. But is this lane Pieined: the, Vell: Creagh eae ' manner? Why does it not make a business-like and Ate ar ; After that it drank and then wehi cn ny a good reason for intensifying unemployment this away hits bonest statement of verifiable figures that cover the wien? ! After. a while cPyramus. are vediie 10 whole ? t nfession Nhe . ; he meeting place and spied the rént me yrange Mh athaiak i i a Congress cannot be expected to change immigra- ce get Me ae past sins secures = a i 7 | | ht came to hir t Th et ot bal Wababes 2 lange ri ls > tion rules every time there is a change in the labor | bestiitied and) oatrled rey Pearce oF something different and better In the future? market. But the absurdity of bringing in more wild beast - tt Why do we not have detailed statements of costs, ‘ sana, cere Instantly a terrible anguish smote rie Siat olid iia van erin? unemployed when we already have a waiting list of | bien. It was his fault that ‘Thisbe wan ie oa ve Lardoabl Appa Mieell e os icy | aPPlicants for jobs should suggest an entirely new | Topmy: kira euinmaatdloe iran nec eee Hi Until the Interborough changes its publicity policy method of regulation | terrible fate would never have. fallen tries “ th, the whol it! i h Wa Rae PANE, Japon her. It was he who had per- fy and Say Tey meee gts il bela fey Rules for admittance of immigrants should depend | suaded her to meet him, overcoming iit the truth”—for a change—the public may well be ne i é 4 Th A with his burning words the feeble 9b- on conditions in the United States, obvious jections she raised. It was for His inh wary of any.and all Interborough propaganda. : Ul RALPH PULITZER, Pi J. ANGUS SHAW, Tr QOBEPH PULITZER. J MEMBER OF THR ASSOCIATED PRESS. Tee Amoctated Prem ts exciusively entitied to the use for . Secretary. 63 ‘also the local mews published herein. HALF-TRUTH PROPAGANDA. | xT may be that the lhterborough deserves and ought t to have higher fares. If so, the concern has i chosen the worst possible method of proving the Fy case, NA bright wag once remarked on the three degrees To Bre esata oto, | repenriention ‘all news seapatches oredited to It or not .qinerwier credited tn thle paver continuous policy of the Museum to use for income of the Museum for administration pur poses must be increased by memberships and special gifts or the trustees must use principal funds which hitherto have been kept intact.” The curtailing of the Museum’s service to the public is considered only as a last resort. So far as the public is concerned, the question is simple enough: Is the Metropolitan Museu to be forced to make holes in its capital t o provide what it now provides, or will money—private and municipal—be forth- coming to keep both its capital and its service intact? \ THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1920 administration purposes only the income of h Ww ld’. 2 such funds, During the present year, and s0 sy The Bee tate € e or 8 ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZNN. far as can now be foreseen even in greater SEN 20s Prenee, We pg itn iwuste degree during the coming year, either the Oldest . Love Stories By Maubert St. Georges Covsritht, 1920, by The Pree Pub/iasing Om OTe New York Drouin World), PYRAMUS AND THISBE. HISBE was the most beautiful girl and Pyramus the most handsome youth in Babylonia, the kingdom of Semiramis, They had lived next door to each other from their youth and had learned to love each other deeply. ‘They desired to ii} of deception, “lies, d—n lies and statistics.” If citizens of New York put a true value on this | marry, but their parents refused Hitt horough has added a fourth, the super- eat 2 y asset i ir civic | thelr consent and forbade thelr is these the Interboroug! a great and growhg asset in their civic development, spanking ste aurmcatial ty lative use of half-truths in the “Subway Sun” and “—— SAVE IN HIS OWN COUNTRY.” “Immortality is as certain for Woodrow Wit son's speeches as for the meditations of the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius, who also stopped halfway up to the height. “One who secs this man, the only man amid @ hait of arrows, learns to doubt whether his work was ag bad as the chorus of hate and abuse now proclaims. When and where did high én- deavor attain the place on the first attempt? No saint, wise man, warrior or statesman ever great state. The poorest and the mightiest harkened with bated breath to his word which it out of his prophetic vision, Another will build if, “The parchment of Versailles begins to turn yellow, Only one conqueror’s wofk will endure IF THEY VALUE IT ARIGHT ih HE Metropolitan Museum of Art is une of the great civic assets of New York, ts priceless contents rank high. among the great if they mean that asset to be solidly established and procedure would seem for Congress to lay down broad and flexible rules to govern immigration and then intrust the specific application of these rules to a standing committee of Congress or to an adminis- trative commission of experts who coutd fit the rules to the facts a conditions changed. This is somewhat similar to the function of the Federal Reserve Board in relation to credit, that other essential of industry. Why not a Federal Reserve Board of Labor to govern unwise inflation of the ITH the exception of the Army-Navy struggle an outpouring there was! The great Yale Bowl was packed with 80,000, and crowds everywhere set new records of attendance and enthusiasm, Open play under the new rules and the numbering of players have vindicated their advocates and popu- larized the game beyond the fondest dreams of the old line plungers who reckoned in terms of one yard that gives you the worth of a thouse to say much in a feu; words. Take ‘spasms” with our friend G. W Schopenhauer, isn't it? The last time T saw him in print was lust summer, But it seems, as he himself admits, @. W. Schopenhauer is an idler who has nothing to do but criticise world in general and look at things If he hon- from a very narrow angle. won't gpt very far with a grain of com readily say that suc of which it is the fr Mr. Schopenhaur seems to have had What kind of letter do you jind most readable? There is fine mental exercise and a tot of satisfaction in trying Isn't it the one uud words in a couple of hundred? | time to be brief. »yees und other per abor, in behalf of the nts training under ons controlling | ntional stu-| direction of , Which indirectly bears the expenses of 4 lieva that if ’ and labor in general consider that if it had not been for the sacrifices and other hardships of the men training is disubled and desires to | trade, it » study ed with quite a subj the trade. lot of hard work in school, and to be ots NG From Evening World Readers! He wants more th. Because no way T ake an iv UNCOMMON SENSE By John Blake. (Copyright, 1920, by Johm Blake.) n his share. been and gets it. found to curb him, others ntory now and then and you will be sur- prised to see how unnecessary indulgences are profiteering on your general income. The mone victim yon spend to feed your vanity of another profiteer. to. keep up But it is usually more time than money that these profi teering habits consume. One of them, laziness, robs you of the advancement that would come if you did all the work you know you ought to do. Another, procrastination, keeps For a long while so strict was the sake, unworthy that he was, that ad run this risk d_ sacrificed é ly, unable withstand the sorrow 4nd remorse, he drew his sworl and, with a last look of fare- | well at the world, pressed the handle Jagainst the ground and fell upon it, transfixing his heart Had the unfortunate youth waited but a moment longer lifelong happi- ness might have been his, for even as he fell Thisbe, thinking that perhaps Pyramus might be in danger, came rushing down to warn him. The first thing that struck her eyes was Pyte- mus, pierced with a sword, his bleed to | | | a labor supply? — POOLISH HABITS ARE THE WORST PROFITRERS. gushing forth’ onto the roots of the did. : | w Je Success? Va tr udents. i 4 «, }| mulberry tree. “Wilson not only spoke but he felt and | To the hdtor of The Excuine Worle Ty tho b Touanate Wome ite Suprot heer ise man who preys on others because of his 3} Her cries, her tender calls, the thought as Before him never did the head of ‘a A SUCCESSFUL SEASON It certainly is long vetween May 1 appeal to ployers, em-| xXaggerated selfishness. | warm tears welling from her eyes ag at length brought Pyramus to for a (ees continuously upon his fare He opened his eyes atd | short while. saw Thisbe. Wonder first, then Joy gave fo the war a content and a goat and which, at the Polo Grounds next Saturday, the | winen ie was resting the white collar hi a nee eas eon they: ought to for what they eat and 3/2 cin them, and, disrogarding ker ff for an hour of humanity, appeared to break 1920 football season is virtually at an end. man, Bevpral besides myself repiied Education? The uppe 8 not for tan a Meet 1H Pye oneure reyes Bs here ie ae Fo whey had heppee apt’ all class barriers. Phy en Saturday was the big day of the year. Perfeot |‘ his denunciation and 1 thought h Jin “the trades ney S twush | scitiehreaee } iat meres fap eee imine ee gaw'the vell! [thought you were Peete coiled cae: he ieee tee M “football weather” helped to make it a great day in Nope Lut eases Jonn a Mmen of | However, we are going’ to talk about other kinds of j_dils eyes cloned again: ae cremen echo which roaring cannon could not drown ational sport, a fitting climax to an exceptional | piake's articies. 1 believe that every | (ne Me streets Look: Profiteers) to-day—profiteers who do you more harm than §/(0, fOfROe aasaar : rematns the most beautiful, the only great ex- season, reader of ypun estimable paper willl training) ahd “cnatle ta aaa thels al Mel gteedy monopolists in the world. | ‘Thisbo realized “what had _bap- perience of the war. East and West, North and South, the story was }®8?®e that Mr, Blake's artic are we te AG onae Pee anus hg shige ore hesacleia Habits beh hexs faddled the iy panee aoa Goratiodi that 1F waa ae “48 the Roman Marcus Aurelius stands at the Ae caine. Callertans: all mit andthe football fang the finest to be found anyw here nd} ployces and other people controlling pon you, demanding more than their share of every- | Pyramus was dead, For a while she exit of antiquity, so this American stands on Socisame Hegians, alum 4 S |certainly spur the reader on to do] Ppsres ani other people controlling d i |remained there stunned, wondering the threshold of a new world, He has painted gathered for the “big games” of the year, And what | better things, the pay Is of the price of your existence. what to do, Suddenly she decided without her lover Ife was not worth living, and kneeling at the foot of the tree where his blood stained the earth she began to pray. She | begwed that they might be pardoned | for taking their own lives; that they Wilson's thought."—Maximilian Harden, ed The fact is that rootball is gaining in popularity eatly got out and DID some work per- | tl! Of Us would have been slaving for with people of better incomes—is taken from your savings Hea a tc itor of Die Zukunft, a German, writing in Ger year by year. Football is no longer merely “Aca- | naps he would seo things in the|ocives uder movie cet bavi cas and cuts down your insurance for the future, & token of their love. ‘Then drawing y, 1 a rank [rare ‘al roader lig’ erag ' The ey . i 2 rren e | ths vord from the body of Pyramus many. demic The general publig with no cular cole | broader light that the average humar method of tr The money you spend on legitimate recreation is well | tte swor ras stage Partieular being sees them, Suce« from any that hos ¢ invested, but when recreation becomes a habit you are the ,| * pointed it at herself and in a few oe lege ties is warming to the game. ia it? A “suc viously wsed after a war ‘ 3 ? moments had been joined to him in death, nee the last part of her prayer has been granted (the berries of the mulberry tree, which before had been white, hawe ever since been red), we may hope that the rest of it was alse : a good education from the way he|refused the right t plete the i (i ore ‘ . 4 Ee granted and that the lovers are happy 4H collections of the world. In size, arrangement and | and two feet to the down gnd may the most. |writes and it surprises me yery mu in shops is very discouraging} $ YOU from starting work that might bring you success and 3] in the hereafter. wn aie ta Tee NS t he i ? eS that he should take the frouble i However, [ believe wher fortune, And while you may go back to sh the job from ena Bia. albeit iii the service it gives the public, it is worthy of the | beef win, write auch nonsense as hé does. It] emplo and others controlling |$ which puzzles me how he manages to liv labor realize that the laziness has lured you thing and making you pay far more than you ought to pay as the you can never finish a job you Wh biggest city in the Western Hemisphere. Football is no longer an intensified form of pugi- [Rnd be an idler too. Surely the neigh. | ltve whether they are workin haven't started. So procrastination is the worst of your “Th 3 F 3, Wu Last year 880,043 petsons visited the Museum, s It now has the merits of both’a game and a |Porhood, in. whlch ea RM RNAs et gee family of profitcers. | at sa act j eps nousands of these were children from the public These merits the American people are | suppose iit tases all ste with rn ahomn ail an +H ies and pubis anaienadioh, il in a maaeure celleek | By Albert P. Southwick RAs sasha: dita tole beac! ee stor baES, his world, and even did not fight for a few b ie profiteerin mat has been goin n in the wo sine 0 memes Who came wilh their teachers for instruction © appreciate in increasing measure lowed to exist BN SOLOMON HARI fie lwave: Burnelther of Giese lll have: auy efface ioe || erties a edie (Ue thei OK ¢ jousands. Hes ew York, Nov 920, 1 1, Nov. 17 : Py ahae 4 iy ¢ : | © wisupplementary to their school work, Thousand: New York 18 1 4 profiteering habits. Thosg you mustedeal with yourself, and $} The parade ground in Vi P '' more came for the Story Hours, the Saturday and TWICE. OVERS |’. AlApmeen st Hew dlevenne: Majority. if you do not deal with ‘them now they will continue to $|iandt Berets ground in Van Corte x Sond \ \ « OVERS. Parra cent Pin .* % ' y H it Park is the site of Adrien van > y lectures, the seminars for craftsmen anc : * . . babel J gids “ \" 6 World »rofiteer forever, r Donck’s “Planting Field" (1658), iii Sunday lettures, ninar t ‘ 66 TILL up the cells.” —Police Chief Charles |The able editorial in The Events Whieh ix the “Kreater t rout} $F uere he located his bouwerte. He #1? workers in shops, the special courses for instructors, a * World setting forth the imposs|bil the United States prope 1 | on nnnnmnnnnnnnnnANAnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnarnnnnnnnnnnnne s nid been Sheriff of Rensselaerswyck, Wii the concerts—all of which are furnished by the Filzmorris of Chicago. PLP RERE FRAT LAFOUBH Lin WROTE ee te ee eae | [eee ae a "| but his young and newly-wedded wife all 3 s r . z ment next year through the wrackin. | iy, the number of 1 persuaded him to try a new home in yj Museum as part of its extension work for the benefit a7 i i | DATOS De cenee oe Seay eal these houses are Dug-infested, n-| this inatter up I feel sure something! Manhattan, . (ms “ % y °, yeara, bs moraned the golde sanitary tombs, Durin, sum- | Will ibe done put a stop to the} reer £ yyy Of the larger public, injury that the Sinn Fein has wrought eee ee hy mer they are contaminated by unscrupulous. more than Independent| Pefore be had ompleted his ar- Mt The Metropolitan Museum’ measures up to New not only to its own reputation bul Jo the Cause is timely maf pe for he wines pe ew house lapdiord and land- [rangement for removal, his dainty He 4 aes headed: “Where Is excape pneumonla~—for ane? A VICTIM cottage burned down and, as it was ui) York. of Ivelard is incalculable.” London Times on Dublin ‘ “a0. is Se eas Te iekch ad eee een nae VIEES CNA cTipibaleee “haan COPANO is v York > its uty by the Meigo- | untap as yer. | aR one |s abhamed ‘to invite friends to vited his houseless felghbors to Bi But is New York doing iis full duty by the Mego assassinations. | nee hee UNA OU Cad oe te | To the Raltor of he Rr«ning Wor 1 and packages. it res | share his hospitality. A quarrel soon TP oy: toral : if either are de- | to ne F : Bee Hh politan Museum? A ae Jattention and which will yleld pain-| How many electoral voter nr jis a a ee ee fe | prose between the two Decatise ihe i i f 5 at < ‘i lewsly all the revenue needed by the} needed to elect a nominee fo! esl- |liv ; | Referring “Dead | host Wwsistec a ‘an der Done! hed as 4 ¥ This year th: Museum faces a deficit of $50,000 “ POLITICAL leader's first thought is for hi Sovernment. dent? a : sreat many of these landlords do! From the Neck Up," I would sa ‘at| Should pay to his patron the value of eye thi it i a aa Briefly, it ts t lect a t JA PUCCIARELLI | not give maid gervice. I know ofa | 4) d ay thot) te heuse. The latter retorted sharp. Ne o aa da f efly, 8 to collect a tax on magi eer. ¢ e' know Of 2 / tne 7 very castic. . J FS” 1 Next year € deficit is expected to be twice that sum. parly and himself, and he is compelled, if | money spent. * OM) 318 Bast 2 t, Nov. 15, 1920. |iandlord on the west side who leased ("7 Writer is very sarcastt |ly, and was ordered to leave, iit This deficit, President Robert W. De Forest states, The method of assessment and pro- a house at & rental of $2,000 per year, every voter's intelligence is wirey Ro. ‘To the Fditor of The Bening W id Mike to way a word in re- rooming house landlords. he desires to have his party remain in power to make the very best selections he can."--The late Joseph Cassidy in 19/4, His rent cannot be raised during the | shown ay his is we certainly will hav, ; term of the lease, but he raised the a wonderful four years’ Administee: | agen Kittt wha, was indebted te rent of every tenant in the bullding. | tion, | arent Ge barteeet nomen harm Asks over $25 per week for one cold.| Senator Harding has not been|ted bie creditor to purchase from the unclean room—more than making his) elected because he is the better man,| Indians a large tract of land and |rent from the proceeds of two rooms. | hut because the so-called intelligent| granted him the privileges of Ppatroon. cess of administering ts fair to all The principle {s eminently Just and | the burden universally distributed, ‘The collection is simple and easy I refer, of course, to the Tax on Sales or Turnover and I would _ jh Teselts from largely increased cost of operation and 44s RO Corresponding increase in the city appropriation.” Hit Although the Museum is reputedly rich, Mr. De Tils Forest has explained that much of its wealth is in to The Evening World has accomplished so much tn dealing with the New York I gard ” * * ad and I am sure your other !City apartment house landlord I am! WHAT is the small salaried man| people want a change This took th Co + ase funds The i ¢ which {s restricted t 6677 HERE are 50,000 Jewish families between would be glad to have you|prompted to write this letter jand women to do? He or she muat| The Republican’ party le noted for ip Look he, Barns of Colen Dons | Purch: iS the income of which is restricted to the inquiry which heads your| Why 1s It the reoming house owner |have a home. Is this rooming house | panics. Look out for another Du were in the habit of callin; Lf purchases. 50th Stree’ and 120th Street, and I dare say torial and tell them in your sound, ean rob the working girl, or small |landiord to be allowed his disgraceful, very person is at Uberty to ex-|this eatate the “Jonkheer's Lande + | graphic way where at least it might salaried man, “come from.” about it or done? WM. C, CORNWELL. orth j 42. Broadway, Nov, 17, 1920, Rt and nothing {is said |heartless profiteering? This robb One has to be|poor, lonely, hard working girl @ small fortune to rent even a he to continue his merciless ¢ CONSTANT READER. om,” and 90 percent, of If The Wvening World would take Brooklyn, Nov. 18, 1920, “It has some principal funds free from any not 10 per cent. of them are supporters of synagogue: er of press his ideas in the letter column, | Jonkheer belng a title which, i Is Why then criticise the paper? id

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