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Did bieod oe = Pn - oo ; ‘___ SHE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, United States? Do they expect “the flag to follow as he earhine Storie, | the dollar’? Co legesa e Rieu Ritea eet -dznnol | By John Cassel q Reranueetd or joserit SuLtTsEe. If aie their expectation, it cannot be shattered VANIER IS hate U; | eey A st et Bund by thé Pree Pobitehios pO quickly, —————— ar ratee er se Seater See,faee Eanes | too culckly, ’ niversities t RALPH PULITZER, Presitent 03 Pack Row American citizens deserve protection in other 4 y { Of Ni Ye k Goknbes POLATEOR. Se, bontclarr. @3 Park Rew. lands when engaged on legitimate business. But oie Ye i , $ y } ew ror ‘ American adventurers engaged in a questionable V2 yf a ty ‘i : ‘ ‘ rf B ey Mii diehsisbia' Weiaa ‘6 cosbacnly, tales vu dha tes, We nmnlees deal with the more than questionable Dictator of t y Appleton Street a Wt All wows Genpsichen ervdited to Mt or not otherwise oredited te inte pet (he Russian Soviet system should neither ask nor a oS SS Oe receive the slightest protection. j THE PLEBISCITE IN GREECE. The time to make this clear is NOW. A WEEK from next Sunday Greece is to hold |" THIEF NEW INSURANCE, a plebiscite on the question of restoring Con- = : | stantine to the throne, AMERICANS who pride themselves on being | In the press despatches from Europe there are practical should take a shrewd look at the ‘nal foundation of Columbia Univer- sity. A medical faculty was organ ised there in 1767, and the first repeated predictions that France or England, or both, may interfere and prevent Constantine from latest argument advanced by Mr. Taft's League to Enforce Peace for getting the United States into the graduates In medicine were Robert Tucker and Samuel Kissam, who re- ceived their degrees in 1769. returning to Greece. oo | League of Nations. ; oe would be a most serious interna- From the tentative League of Nations budget E The League of Nations has no function in the in- | Alling for approximately $4,200,000 for the com- ternal affairs of Greece. And if the League has no ing year, the League to Enforce Peace shows that rights, surely individual powers in the League have it is now possible to make a fairly correct estimate none. “of what the world will have to pay for the new | If the statesmen of the powers believe the Greeks | form of insuranee represented by the League.” | would be making a mistake to select Constantine, It . they have the privilege of making that opinion pub- | | i" Siar as to bbegienl the total cost of the lic. But once the Greek people have spoken, the gue by dividing that cost into a certain number The College of Physicians and Surgeons was founded separately in 1807 as a rival of the medical school of Columbia College, and by 1814 hed 80 far outdistanced its older competi- tor that the latter was merged with and absorbed into it, From then > until 1860 there was no medical de- partment of Columbia, but in that year a co-operating agreement was entered Into between the trustees of the two Institutions by which the College of Physicians and Surgeons powers should accept the decision. of units and then dividing all the member nations | became aMilatcd with Columbia. ~ This is an elementary application of the right of | into seven classes required to pay from one to | fai wns the Sausesarue aenMdialy F * getf-determination, twenty-five units each. merged in the university and be- a If the Greeks are so foolish as to restore Con- “If the United States had belonged to the | jeunes tet ER es aot staritine, they are, of course, liable to the penalties League from the start, it would have been | adic Ts caw oat asd parearet which may arise from their choice. If Constantine placed in the first class, paying twenty-five | the great university whose domain is provokes “threats of war,” it will be time for the units. ‘This means that it would have had to | a inaouebe Heights uae = i ¥ * remains in 6 old qu eaere to ce EG es faire oe pay $104,760 for expenses incurred up to the 59th Street and icestiriats Avenue, _ disciplinary measuires—an economic blockade for in- end of this year, and that for next year ii in the block facing the Roosevelt Hos- ‘ stance—to which qdarrelsome members are subject, would have been assessed a total amount of | pital. The group of buildings which The situation on the Aegean is entirely different $220,298." | it cocupies were given by the late w m H. Vanderbilt, his sons Cor- | neilus, William k., Irederick W. and George W. Vanderbilt and Mr. and Mrs, W. D. Sloane. The Vanderbilt |Chmc was built and endowed as a memorial to William H, Vanderblit | by Lis sons, The Sioane Hospital for Women, which adjoms the Clinic and is part of the college establishment, | i one of the must complete bospitals uf its kind in the world, ana repre- |sents gifts aggregating $1,200,000. M oer phtianthgopists tnan the erbilts and the Sioanes Lave been ~ from that on the Baltic: where gy ane gia In 1943, “during a state of absolute peace,” the ets Corerencih vtich i m aura Congress of the United States appropriated to cover according to the law. In the troubled northern the expenses of the army, navy, forts and fortifica- zone there is no Government and the League po- | tions and military academy a total of $219,214,155. Ice are merely supervising the plebiscite, which will In 1948, after a year of war, Congress had to ap- lead to the formation of a Government under law. | propriate for the same purposeS $10,221,234,435. “Such a comparison shows that belonging to the League next year would cost us almost | When the coat of mill feed mounted dairy farmers explained that milk prices must rise et ee eee } in proportion. Now that tho mill food cost. is exactly one-tenth of 1 per cent. on what we fornt it has ouulpment and resouroes lower, does the proportion no longer hold? spent ou armamonts during a single year be st Eas te te she vale Surerrene ot } Fi fore the war, while it would amouut to some- One gift that the college recetved R BELOW THE “DEAD LINE.” MOE UOG TMS EEC NEG A tthe speciat fesponsibiitien wnicn of what the direct cost of our belligerency reached in 1918." donors frequently intrust to it, is the research fund of $1,440,000 left by leg- acy of George Cro vestigution of the subject of cancer, Phe trustees of Columbia have erect- ed a three-story building on Listh Street and Amsterdam Avenue to BOLD safe-cracking job below the Fulton Street ‘“‘dead-line” follows hard on the an- ; nouncement that the old and effective policy of As an investment to lessen the probability of war “© Chief Byrnes has been resurrected by the present | and, so cut down the cost of necessary armament, police administration. how does that modest $220,296 strike the average - : ’ - ° Bice vate sine ee an partat hea ; F a” i nec, ; ; = == 2 SSS! Saar tre siiked: asia ed { The picked ‘‘dead-line squad” bras yet to gain the | level-headed American interested in any progressive a Ric thie highly leporlaut pices at re- search work. The alliance brought about between Columbia and the Presbyterian Hos- pital in 1911 permits the scientific and 41 direction of the medical, and pathological services of prestige which the Byrnes men maintained. Until Bait 4 . | | © the police again prove that robbery below the “dead plan to preserve peace and keep down taxes? From Evening World Readers Isn't tt about time to disentangle line” is so dangerous as to be unprofitable, the a ne! the League of What kind of letter do you find most readable? Isn't it the one thieves will not regard Fulton Street with their old | Nations from the late Presidential election and see | that gives you the worth of & thousand words in a couple of hundred? UNCOMMON SENSE , By John Blake. pect if it doesn't, after all, contain a plain business propo- There is fine mental exercise and a lot of satisfaction in trying hospital to rest with the College In any case, It is a question whether mere res! rs Nation cannot afford much longer : — ALL YOU OUGHT TO WANT IS A START. advantages in tralning young doctors. ration of old policies will ever prove an effective to ignore? : QheCent Collars. law or prevention to == In addition to this special arrange- To the Exlitar of 'The Evening World imes of our dead here Read the situation wanted advertisements in the papers. ment with the Presbyterian, the col- preventive of crime, Crimes and criminals change from year to year. The “uncrackable” safe of one sented on the staffs of and special hos- lege ter most of th Pitais of For a nysictans and Surgeons one must have preliininary ¢ jate education equivalent to the freshmen snd sopho- more years at Columiga College or any other first grade college. Women are now admitted same basis as cand They 1917, the Innovation causing consider- able stir In university circles, > Surely a majority of the people ot the United | 1 these days of falling prices and iders and to puni ear : la States are not willing to put an indefinite handicap |tnere suit reneaing mte nem thay tack sc, go, ERSTE generation is an antique relic in the next when F Mi ; i | Bpsniehs re As Ia eee N criminal ingenuity has had time and opportunity | their own commerce, surely they are not willing bring about a lowering in price. | = efor trial and expertment. to choose the expense of isolation rather than the | This item is the linen (2) collar that) ™MO Red Cross Hos Explained Why. In the duel between the Law and the Lawless, | economy of partnership and disarmament, merely Coe ee ake parses The y Red Cross (has s “ {been extended to France, Ru: the forces of the law must develop as rapidly as | to show continued spite toward an Administration | this collar (formerly S 1G) Humana given aleea al ctl Bel- - . fur- | the lawless devetop means of circunrventing the old already overwliclmingly beaten at the polls. lia ail a eaivanie tires Bel : Be fered since the great war, but what bout Ireland, where the Huns to- In the calmer judgment of these post-election | there appeared to be signs of a drop are burhing nly houses, ¢ Chief Byrnes invented the “‘dead-line” policy and . ae in collars, but suddenly and for some but whole towns? | made it effective. The probability is that criminals days, a new association of nations to supplant the | inexpiainea reason the price stiffened ng Red Cross funds to hel in devastated France, Pus: | today have matched each old policy with a new | Versailles League is more and more recognized to SR Eee now flatly quoted at 261 otner paces, why not. cons centa eac , They tell an interesting story. Thousands of young men ‘and women want work-—a start. Other thousands are daily go- ing from place to place looking for a chance to begin some kind of work All they want is a start. Andgghat is all you ought to want, _ If you are hunting for a soft place where, through the influence of friends, you hope to find rapid advancement, begin all over again, Friends may help you get a start, but they can do no more. Influence will be useful to you if it gets you a job. H, GOODKI New York, 3 uisvion to the College of If it stands by afterward and procures you promotion that rve it will only be a detriment, | | Wh 0 a Wh 0 you do not d Indeed, if it steps in and prevents your discharge when | . 8 : s, . clatms of Ireland to Red Cross ne- f =, method of circumventing it. be impossible. jyerhe factory cost of collars, has| sistance? Many songs. “ho you ought to be discharged it will do you actual harm. Nae | . : 3, + { is ee! rer ic re st et By t d ence pve - ? 4 | If the present administration is to circumvent the The Chicago Tribune quytes Lord Robert Cecil |at Troy. and this morning’s paper| Tose in torte Leow rendered toe Influence never made anybexly successful. For success America’s | » ‘criminals in turn, it must devise new, untried and qe saving in an itera a, 4 speaks of 4 curtailment In produc- | jess, ery day we read in the p comes alone through effort—effort to help other people suc- i ; i oe ann itis ales aavek ‘ As saying in an interview at Geneva: | tion of this line. Naturally we are} pers where the unfortunate people|$ ceed and thereby to get success for yourself. H ll f F \ ; eetin, atest developments | interested in knowing why some of a MIS peoe | A is for y : i Stats ea seek ee “America must abandon the idea that the Que large. purveyors ot merchandise | since ge tor hagution. it/% Do not forget that the only interest the world will have ee EEO Ge NE: - al cunning. rest of the world ts willing to scrap the pres- Rao Rte peandeantsipeit, desley 20 ' ist za a Cntoniat, Lat in you is its/hope that you can give it sonrething it wants. 1 duce the nC 0 ‘OC rf ‘Aberal surely legal to bi Ty ae ,, A i 3, te ent Lengue and to joln with her to organize the public beneft have not tackled | Sinn Feiner, If any country requcres That you can do if you are intelligent and industrious. OGER WILLIAMS, advocate of ; “I is better,” Calvin Coolidge telegraphed to this ttem immediate aid of the Amenican /¢ YOU can give it soniething new in thought, or better work of fellmags iiperty--9nd founder of |) the Mayflower Society, “to be In the wilderness | —-* NeW one. It never will be possible to get My white collare have seen their it ts the Emorald /Isic, | $ the same kind that it has been getting, Rhode Land, was born in Wales in i 2 | beat days, having m purchased | whose for over a ¢ ry. | i usar a teed 4 fs epee in eas i and master of your own freedom than live sur together again these forty-two nations for eighteen montim ago, upon my| through misrule and. misrepresents You can give it industry and productive ability—if you 3 {1807 and died In Providence, R, 1, tm | +. rounded ty comforts and be under restraint.” the formation of another loague, Also there ra, from servic: wit Fealall eon | tien, hay Up with Ar try. But you must try hard, for there are thousands of $|M@rch, 1684 While only a hoy he . | { oO wear J rayel and « ation at tt nds of “ oi ee 7 ss 2 oc u ttent is i Is Gov. Coolidge regretting his success in {e no reason for such action, since the pres Hered. though they may be, untll tol Scns LTA WaLeth. |% others trying to do the same thing, and they are all your eset Na hie chee i the recent election? “Comfort under restraint” ent organization oan be modified so that it “Gollan sa takes some sepa to!” New ¥ . Nov. 15, 192 competitors in the race for success, con eatsated him in the Charter H > veduce the price ~ | q i ; H would not be a bad description of the Vice ean or brne tail Cha ementnscis (Gaines e pric®.N PCONOMIST. e Hodges Problem, \ What you do must be done by yourself, without ontside 3] rouse Gchool and later m Pembroke ; Presidency. | ations awhioh the Ualted tates daanauaa | ses To the E The Evening World |} help or influence. You can go to others for advice when Cotege, Cambridge University, > { | ands.’ Defaming the Dead. ; Anent the Hoe problem jpolved | you ats puzzled, or instruction when you find that you have which gave him @ degree in 1626. He eS . No American denies that the United States de- Serie Ue bce yiae Pare GRIWIeR, Will Inne wiitoned litin much to learn. came to this country in 1681 after ae GAMBLING ON A GOVERNMENT. Bivee ta eset world ‘oeter Insured aeaiat : anlage Sy Rong at a ass — kind enough to advies But it is your mind, not theirs, that must tackle the prob- $|»@ving come in contact and oonfilct 3 Tatras 5 ini sires to B St inst war, Q 2 Hed: DY MG NOW FONE GHiniOn, iH the K ‘ hi 2 rome in vi i te ‘ ti 4 clyil au- D. VANDERLIP, an American mining en- The League is the one established it American on'Nov, 1), 1920, defending thar foblem was innomectly printed | dome airy fa zov a your daily task; and it is your mind, ay Sseass wean oe oF * | win ns ola ts Cag s e shed insurance com- Mayor Hylan in The Evening World article no! heirs, which must solve em, t { ; Ce sexed and explorer, clans Oshays nego: any—the only going concern | rH "avian, ke yy " : _ FB. HINCHMAN You have a right to expect a start in the world. You pepoeiton ee hed tiated an arrangement with the Soviet Government | Pan) ly woing conce | st hel avd been a ta hom thes Irvington, N Nov. 14, 1920. have a right to get the good offices of others to get you the }|teuble with the church and elvil of Russia looking to the exploitation of an area in It's bad business for this Nation to refuse to pay | Steered ns. their sccomplice th huge Proof of the Reading. 1} start if you ean. ee sibs LA tg Ppt vast ‘ Tish diniax ae a “Hobe of pulilty plunder, no Lockwood | Ty te Reiter of The Fxening World | + 1638, ss tern Siberia approximately eight times as large the premium. ° | Sornmititn would have aluged an ef 1 always enjoy reading letters trom ; A Aer that ae pone own progress. Help that you $a sebk 5 nesuge sre) mae Wyrenny 2 c State. . rn | fo 0 METS in D newspaper #er- | Evening World readers, but when | ilo t deserv vi li P a o 7 as New York State, W's bad business for this Nation to clamor for an |yant qt the plundoé-tund Would have | Evening World rosters Dae whe | not deserve will only linder you on your way up. panions he gought # place away from American capitalists are backing this venture . ; helt him up to derision or called Upon | errarican It givcd MC KTEAL JOY, ius | wnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnannnannnnnnnnnannnannanannnnnnannncnt | ine, Persecution of the Massachusetts : impossible new corporation, wie deied : T think as a great many would think and Plymouth colonies and named ‘ Through the London correspondent of the Chi- : ; While Mayor Mitchel wag alive, he} ao’ true American wii! appreciate his the alte he selected Providence be- ~ cago Tribune, Mr. Vanderlip has announced a great \What are the 's or the risks of membership ] was conceded to be one of the best} Hag and his country enough not to by bands of men who did Ka Klux | cause of oa . ere ogee r OER compas to (daca , in the League compared with the incalculable cost | Mayors New York ever had. ‘The/run Ir down and say disrespectful work, to i te bee Saaeelon OF face Seat campaign ropaganda to induce Congress to rec- seit s ' the dirt ac! ere | things against the head of the coun- one © peou: pee Ai 3 tig ish Oy a LD ehicoue Rud try and also against one of the the Indians and he divided thie ognize and reopen trade with Russia. ne cise Of “going Weaione'? jmade against him by tho New York | vObiest true hearted Americans, lik {American and Journal was aimost| ur president, Woodrow Wilson, . conclusive proof of bie merit; just as ‘The young man who signs his name TWICE OVERS. the Auiarioan defense of Hilan can| Charles Movie aye hereannot agree “Historic Pulaski,” as ite admirers |equally emong his Sowers. a jeefully term ft, the birthplac After two years the colony Ki" kiux Kian, is the capital of Giles| Rhode Teland "was governed by a County, Tennessee, and grew in tm.| Minister and three elders, bat in portance particularly from 1966 to| March, 1641, the Government was 4 Before thfs project goes further, the Administra- tion should annbunce its attitude. If President- elect Harding does not agree with the Wilson policy, #6 NBER since the early days of barbarian Europe |only do our Mayor harm. ("God do- with the young man wre mene nit) ‘The “Knighteof the: Wate Ce: April et nave reeulaiy organized, tn March, 1648, | ae ONS | liver us s a vate that malian? ae A cet, Elizabeth Wi . | he obtal = he should. make the fact known, | have there been guch wholesale migrations of ei ieee ere tines Se Ran nuaatie iain’ the sauine ne fh Smead rye i pales maine, thus wang. the Dralech ot Ther lish, Crown eh ere ee eee f 7 pape Ff een Mitche!’s patriotism in every lying 4 e » | most D0 of orders ¢ot ative towns Portsmouth, Providence and Newport \ ec oe to “aay a“ . guabrnie is a gam- population as thal which is now conlemplaled from | and sneering way: They palied hin tnd that the proof was given in the|the public actions of people in the i my full power to Tule themeclves In 1666 re and simple. It is a gamb! ot only 5 ” o “tin soldier.” He didn't have to he ‘s , y “hari South, more eve! han the Ku] Pulaski, rich in song and story; he opened Rhode Island to all seeking p Pu pe gamble not only On | Europe to the United Sta'es."—Immigration Com- | arated: It ts history how bo entt Let me say to this Charles Moore, 1| 7 0{N more Bo, even than the Ki)" "Pulaski, hallowed on the page of|relistous freedom and eapeotally to the mineral wealth of the land but also on the po. | toner Wall ed in the alr service and gave his|am afraid when he starts to ent some) Klux Klan, the latter cutive leah glory; those who were driven out of Howton. *. ’ - missioner Wallis, ‘ rs life for his country. Even the Am of the proof o} e pudding he is/ pearing from view after 18 he) Pulagki, God's blessing rest on th Ho wes frequently called upon to litical future of Russia, If the Soviet Government MST can was silenced in ite ,attac to muffer some pain and a little Knights wi } Pulaski, the garden spot of Ten. |paciy the Indians and to scttle both inues, it may or may not live up to the agree. | * . . Nom, pa he ce Danette rc: ‘ AEae fart Cent Pia | cans, 186 and rapidly nessee. bs eee aed hy ne _ oni hs 3 ‘is | 7 . ¢ end self, asoned and read Li eriwesvouinpe ‘ No ment. If the Soviet Government fails, its successor 6¢ 7 THINK women should serve on juries in all [newspaper diss up his Rave and ving, 1 agree the thr bags ek aes i Boars and Pilani the eit) of & princely hand; |to us and when in 1878 the State of n 1 Fi ” again vilifes him, calling im oo rican manner Wes vom Texas to ® Carolinas, wlaski, who gave the wor of de Island resented ti is more than likely to repudiate the arrangement. | hinds of cases. including murder trials.” —Mrs. jet seer ( ~ i the t| . puteatntice them tonn sche i he founder to ths Nation. whi now 7 arge-Sca ret cauel x ' roe | We decorate the graves of our he- | man, who made us proud o rhe “Pale Fi . ‘Co. .| Pulaski sent them fo man after|/standa in the rotut of ant as Eee. . ei | Bea Foes Sesnene si ies seins fit few See Tee nee Whe Senate MBS, CM, BLACK Hes Union ela “White Pulaskl, mother of th cel cae teateamanal Goa ‘ined ¢ Governny , A o 8 who would RS 2, BLA jt 5 anki, of the Ku Kiax e the memor! oo \ “sh y emt oft nine in a criminal case, desecrate these graves? Is there no! ew York, Nov. 16, 1920, | Brotherhood" were other names borne Klan. ‘. conception, } ‘ . aaa ‘ ‘ nineteen aghiyeinonceitoe yA sot ine * was is tne And. mph ot tna .