Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
" . animes MRT iA i Ne ae ' ‘ és oars b THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1920. . 7? € : sai — | LOGIC AND PROGRESS. —— | @he edehita Biorld, A Rises movement for an amendment to the Federal iribtla hat Ao By John -Cassél vie New Fork. Wening World) BSTABLIBHED BY JOSEPI PULITZER. Constitution imposing st laws for the ob- Publishing Yorn, | How They Started | By Appleton Street | 7. THOMAS A, EDISON. | ance of Sunday upon e is well under w Nothing could be more logical or progressive in the new meaning logic and progress have come to have in the United States, | There are Americans who do not approve of the | “#IONEST DOLLARS.” | Sunday habits of many of their fellow-Americans | HE Subway Sun quotes with approval an edi- | who play golf, ride “in automobiles or go to the | 4} torial from the New York American on “The | theatre on their day of rest. | Honest Dollar.” What more natural than for those who resent the | ery community in the Patk Row, 68 Park Row. ~ IDISON is a tele~ Graph operator—as well as the master inventor of the world, Several years ago, when some new mining discoveries rendered useless his long experiments and costly equip ment for reducing low-grade iron ere, and swept away his fortune, be |marked, "Oh never mind. I can get Job any time as telegraph operator $75 a month.” So you can put bi | down as a philosopher, as well, Strap-hangers have read as follows: way others take seventh-day recreation to put a Edison was first a newsboy on n ” ‘ + | Grand Trunk Katlroad out of Detrv® ‘There is only one kind of an honest dollar. | stop to what annoys them by the sweeping method isd Walle: wo Uniplopaa Hiied up It is the dollar for which we give a dollar's which has proved practicable? | himself a little chemical laborate ‘ | ‘ ~ ‘ dt sal tiaca in na corner of the baggage car. OF * worth. ay When Nation-wide Front ion was written “into | aay & Widen Tele thew aatiale ‘There is but one kind of # business tra the Constitution of the United States the bars were | phosphorus on ‘the floor, and set f —actign that is clean all the way throush. ‘ | to the car. In a rage the conduct: aa iba eke | lowered to other zealous groups whose chief aim pitched a boy and his belongin, And both parties i ages # 0 ne train, and boxed his ear i cay meeneien Wares zs in life is regulating the personal conduct of other thus causing the deafness fro a profit. | which Edison has ever since suf & * ‘ Py . . . people. tdPed. ey 4 4 2 * 1€ he young : ; Nothing is cleaner than business, if it be Zeal of this type grows with success. learned telegraphy, and for weve 4 a | years lived a roaming existence % on principles of just exchange of goods or Forcing everybody else to conform to a particu- : |kerving as operator in Various rai! | road stations in Canada and th | United States. One of his cariiest ir | ventions wag a ticker for recordir | stock quotations, which he devi | while employed in Boston. | this was in the hard times just @ |the Civil War, and suddenly Py service. lar standard is a sport which has ever-increasing As an interesting companion piece to “The Hom | >0<t for the fanatic. est Dollar” quotation, we regommend to the editors Accordingly, it is the most natural thing in the . of the Subway Sun The Evening World’s investiga | Word to find the Puritan Sunday movement ex- tion of the Philadelphia traction situation. pecting ‘its strongest boost from the Anti-Saloon Last Tuesday Martin Green told the story of the League. . Union Traction Company of Philadelphia, which “The Anti-Saloon League in several States,” says coltects.a réasonable dividend rate on its book capi- | pr, Harry L. Bowlby, General Secretary of the tal of $30,000,000. The actual paid in capital 5 | jord’s Day Alliance of 'the United States, “is rep- ; fety $10,500,000. Dividends are paid on 100-cent | Goring us invaluable aid,” “Gollars. Receivers of the dividends colect ‘on 34- OF course it is. gent dollars, and when Mr. Mitten wanted them to Not only has the Anti-Saloon League an insatiable me thy dig oe hag ort Gotlars” of | CT*Ving to destroy personal freedom, but, wnat is wa Are, $i far more, tit has built up for its purpose the most ‘= which - editors and sponsors of the Subway Sun formidable organization that ever frightened and o eat did the people of Philadelphia get for the coerced legislators in this or any other country. ‘ ‘money on which they are paying dividends but ‘Why shouldn’t the Anti-Saloon League lend its y-awhich never was paid in to the conffany? lobby to the Lord’s Day. Alliance in order to put © The same group of financiers which juggled 34- | over a new Constitutional Amendment, to. the 4 4 A ‘ phe ch ” 4 og gue rz psciryr san yes sa ate 1 greater glory of moral tyranny and fanaticism? | in New York. : as pay “honest dollars” to these interests, is it not in Time was when such a programme would have order to demonstrate the honesty of the dollar found an insurmountable obstacle in the instinct of - . ; measure on the other side of the business trans- | strong, self-reliant Americans to protect their per- = | action? sonal liberty, roe ‘ eer | Is the business of the Interborough propaganda That day seems to have passed, » “clean all the way through?” nig we ie eigen When the Anti-Saloon League lobby was jam- ' : ‘ - } oo? the Fe condi? clean ing@jew Yo ming the Eighteenth Amendment into the Constitu- 3 . otherwise 2 “Such an assumption will need nd little demon- | tion, the people of the United States looked on like | —— pet aie ne ty Bee chen : tration—and the Interborough whine is not con- | sheep. ‘i 5 fw re Like sheep they let themselves be herded and® From Evening World Readers aa _ ° UNCOMMON SENSE ‘ driven in whatever direction the Anti-Saloon League What kind of letter do you find most readable? Isn't it the one up everything and make York. He had to leave | Paratus as security for | onea, and arrived in New York pe: | niless, Seeing a tea-taster at work on morning of hs arrival, bo asked fe a little tea to drink. This gift of te constituted Edison's first meal her Two or three days later he wander: |into the office of the Gold and Sto |Telegraph' Company on the searc for a job. Suddenly there was gre: Jexcitement; messengers from vario: brokers and speculators’ off.ces b gan to run jn shouting that the tic) ers had stopped. Gold speculatic |was then at Its height, and the ure to get quotations was p “ling. Nobody seemed able |the ticker trouble until Zdison tp: |the proprietor on the arm and sa j*I think 1 can fix it.” And fix it } did, with the result that next di Edison was offered the managersh.§ of the o at the unbelievably bi salaty of $300 a month! His luck ba turned at last Edison has more than a thovear -patents to his credit in the Unite States Patent Office, including thé phonograp moving pictures an incandescent light. Though he ts no seventy-three y 8 old, he is sti busy inventing, and often works day at a stretch in his laboratories Orange, N. J. t Ten-Minute Studies of New York City Government 1920, by The Pree Publishing Co, we New York Rreaing Word.) ‘ / By Wiltis Brooks Hawkins. \\ GREAT AIR RACE. - decided to be for their good. , that gives you the worth of @ thousand words in a couple of hundredt By John Blake This is the forty-third article of sat Id : There is fine mental exercise and a tot of eatisfaction in trying | ‘ rani oie Hien Cunninn therdurenier Whe NE of the best boosts that aviation cou! And when the amendment became part of the i ew words. Take time to be brief. P . Ss Sua Ceratn | administrative and legislative of- at @Y his country,” is Capt. Mosley’s P to say much in a few word! y YOU CAN'T MAKE APPOINTMENTS WITH — , }] semlnitthetles and tepisatioe 07. ‘ in this co . i i 2 Anti-Sa- —_ | 3 My x have in ys Enh wea Constitution Ahey listened meekly to the Anti-Sa: ; , of Nations and President Wilson's|} * OPPORTUNITY. Oity Government. view of the Pulitzer Trophy contest which he wo loon League’s general counsel when he contemptu- |» te taitor of he Preaing World Adininistration from the Hearst pa- F i von have time CHILD WELFARE BOARD. sin a record-breaking race in an American-built air- an "i A ' ; I wish to speak in regard to an at-|Pers and other gutter pickings, but_ When you make a business appointment you have ti | seutsinasraleith tice trees ig ; Sane ete tone Agand erday. ously dismissed “the ancient and discredited doc- aw in your paper the other] '0¢, ee ee. yee Beer | to prepare for it. If you hope to get a job through it you 3) A pay consists of nine pigofeds Bice . hy y | tole I si | | evening about loneliness. coln and Wilson type, to assert them- | | As a resident of the city for almost selves, | A little group of wilful men,” . > | An average of three miles a minute is tremendous trine of personal liberty and State rights,” can bring your credentials and recommendations, and thin! ‘ appointed by the Mayor, at least three over what you are going to say for yourself. |of whom must be womea. They re- i peed. The airplane and engine that stood the test Americans used to think their characters were best | two years, 1 am acquainted be = headed by Senator Lodae ant bested That is always an advantage. Preparation is sometimes 3) ceive no salary. aes i i standards of air- | formed in freedom. They believed true stre many sends puthe gay. t Breyer rst papers, have com- 3 nine points in ten, in the business game. | The purpose of the board is to grant ‘and made the i will set new Bete asmen 08 one ene i acy nes Har wnbly to biamng) HAVE fame Deleley captured the eusily swayed But opportunity doesn’t make any appointments. |alowances to mothers in the follow- struction, y er H nd self-restraint learned by y best, but few s fo wan) s of our population, ani 2 = z ens ay ahaeevane 4 end a ey to keep the"United States abreast ce ‘ os eamed DY | itate themsely with a strangers ted States to-day, Instead of oc.|% You m@get it suddenly and if you aren't ready for it, it gocs i avai: ¢ pendant widen lout Pa The only w: ° p and 1 have fa wi the man to whom his liberties were guaranteed, am a young n meet any girls, ‘e place of honor among | its way, leaving you staring helplessly after it. & citizen of the United States in her Now they are ready to be led, protected, regu- | with warm-t we did two years ago,} oS _ of the rest of the world in aeronautics is to stimulate in fact, any fellows £ i : : ; it may wait 3|c¢wn mght or by virtue of her de- : tection. of civilization, is a Pariah Opportunity may be along to-morrow; ceased husband's citizenship. Ba the building and flying of American-made ma- ; ‘This unfriendliness’ 1 cannot explain-/ among nations, hated and despised for ,$ until the year after next. Very possibly you may have to |, To any dependent mother whose! Bi . Ad in which sci- | lated by any organized body powerful enough to | 1t ts the cause of hulf the crimes. Jf/our conceit and swaggering super!- yo out and look for it, as many successful men have done. }|hvsband is an inmate of any State 7 |} -*Phines by carefully planned contests, in which sci- ee ‘ + | you wish to eliminate crime and vice, | ority. 8 18s ty ibe the day }| institution for the insane or confined ie a o. 2 turn its dictates into law. uct more friendly to those about you.) “In closing, I may-say that 1 served | But even,then you will never know the hour or the day NDOaEL A AantenCONGE AVe ea arc or 1 ence studies safety as well as speed. ‘ Hare 9 pe. , LONESOME. during the war as an ensign in the |$ or the month that you will meet it. You will knew, however, $| more to-a State prison, provided such Dia i i an example Why shoulin’t they give up individual habits of 20, navy. My enlistment expires May. 4,| yee Sea 4 leat " ing wil . husband was a resident of the State y Bt i The Pulitzer Trophy establishes ‘ 1921." When that time comes I-am|% that if you are not in shape to seize it, the meeting © } | tor a period of two years immediately 3 which tha United States Government cannot afford Sunday rest and recreation for whatever rigid rules yon the Wert gthrough with the navy, At a later|3 of no advantage to you. | receding hig commitment, and whos. i . 1 ps | o Evening World: date, should th better and sa r The ow i ei ortunities child or children were born in the *\. to ignore, the Lord’s Day Alliance, backed by the Anti-Saloon many years been a0| people of the Reuncre Come io ine The people who Bovant itor tind hele PP . | United States and who had declared. ‘t League, can scare legislators into impos! hon th appreciative reader of your columns) fore and refuse to let the United usually do better with them than those who wait. for the | his intention to become a oltiven of [ite CAgUe, CaN Sea gisiators into imposing upon the | PP ing heartily in repay en s e run by crooked politicians, |$ opportunity to knock at the door, They at least know the 3! the United States within a ertod of dey STEWARDSHIP. country? naa | your pole; re von wilh grant | homecning corporations and the trish./§ ind of an opportunity they want, and can in a general way five years immediately preceding his > ition <, * eenial a elliianc Once, within limMs of justice and Treason, the F on a subject | pathizers, 1 am ready to re-enilist prepare for the encounter. 3. To any dependent mother who i« Seen CONTRAST to the renunciation of a million | 7 hi lic ined thei er- | Which Tam surc interest (0 | Until that time Iam through ; »Y et while they are seeking one opportunity another $/a citizen of the United States and a egacy by Charles Garland, we have the | citizens of this Republic determined their own per- | MMO hans of. y« PD. & S ; La agra d if 3| whose husband is an inmato of « dollar legacy by Charles yh sonal conduct , |e Vast evening, nied by MY! Brooklyn, Now. 20, 1920. ; of a different sort may come along. So it is ‘necessary, if 3) Q.it¢° institution for the insane o Sannouncement of John D. Rockefeller’s gifts to the Angee i fare j | wite, 1 wttended a picture i ; you want to get ahead, to be prepared for them all. confined under a sentence “ot Ave a 4 + a 2 Low y ti appointed zealots to | 8! and d he course ¢ d . , . Fi 4 “ee A ren e a Sta . Foundation fund in memory of@his wife, Laura chub dee peat ao norerua a ul aa saetormance a populgr weekly news|, ,,, -, Deadenina 3 By opportunity we mean a chance to develop profitably §/ ¥¢°"8 °c Gonendent widcer e's de. Spelman Rockefeller. whom the Federal Constitution lies open. feel was exhibited. Past of tile film |777% fii othe Route Word World some capacity or talent that lies in’ you. Ae Tony Can tere CGY O88 OF Spelma oo! ‘0 7 was devoted to scenes immediately al par 1 ante To a professor of theology an offer to go on a concert was a resident of the State for a‘ One need not indorse all the methods by which following the armistice, two years] With all my heart for having printed FP 3 " period of two years immediately pre- Bc ; 7 I ~ OBJECTORS LEASED ago, including pictures of Gen. the article touching upon “City Lone- tour would not be an opportunity. But a chance to deliver ceding his decease and whose child o Pine Rockefeller fortune was accumulated, One nee, THE RELEASED. |ahing, Marshal Foch and. aes » me ge Ry Hap sy Aeaey ei a course of lectures at a big divinity school would be an op- 3} chitaren were born in the Unite i ‘ ty ee inh ti PIN ery oHe ie. , leh ali ner hac e pic-| by exploiting orrifying ‘condi= j \ vho ols 5 \ndt even indorse the social system under which it CRETARY BAKER undoubtedly is glad io be ie Eve n thrown on the|tion existent In a great city, is able|$ portunity. . ee Loney alsa ot the United is possible to amass so huge a fortune. But it is rid of the “conscientious objectors, lseveen the ay Sieg |to Interest the humane pare of the You know, or ought to know, what you can do. Some States within a period of five yea undeniable that, having acquired the fortune, the In the very nature of the case, these constituted | {3a oe vulm neveral_thnes. in| brighten lonoly: lives—especially those | % day you may auldeny meet wit a Spense ee da it—or you Immediately preceding his death. © ave devi a eatin Gin chin aan Tha Bids ‘ | connection wit us other films| of refined, proud-spirited women, may go out and find such a chance for yourself. he Gnomiad bo’ the. tienen ee me Rockefellers, father and Son, have developed to an | a lem from which even the bravest would ie scenes and people,| would be ‘doing a noble work, in: n any event, remember that you must have the train- $| MUS Pe.,deemed by the eres a é " ip in the use 4 : Fa before have T heard such | d n any y | Chite proper person unusual degree the sense of stewardship in the use | shrink. Secretary Baker performed a thankless taneous exhibition of low res a certain form of isolation] $ ing to take hold of the new task and “get away” with it, $| mentally, morally and physically to Fe . 1 ; » part o an audience, vhile meg e as vitul surferin ae 4 , 4 “ Pe: . This sense of stewardship is precisely what | excellent, Certainly it was courageous. Hip park at At fine tor ihe to pbeeste | pacaay: sadurehdariie crenonee coos With your doctor or your lawyer or your employer you f| must be a resident of the. city and 24 " ‘ see dae . : : Wee Sian a of these er- | peas. ore 3 ie j 5 it i ‘ s ve been such resident for years Charles Garland fails to recognize, or is unwilling Secretary Baker has been engulfed by oceans of | the base, ineratituls of these, Metedleredible, meuns’ the erushivs cece can make ish Ape ene APC DEBATE Aot Oy ea panes: Hintnecistely oreceding the eypiion sas et i“ A Aa | leans va se oer 4 7 ¢ ¥ 1 7 uni makes no Se e 4 y seize 1 ” sis » pas received only mo he utmost skill and success | spirit and the deadening finally of ppor y F j 7 tion, page ‘ 4 criticism. He nas received only a ntinimum of a Mi pire f over 400,009 | Sven self-respect itse! Ties from when you meet it, or the meeting will be in vain, as far as An employment office is maintained §7\The Rockefeller fortune is generally supposed to | praise. : }men, who fought like heroes and for] past and present exp i mankaRnad which places in suitable en pohege fae ‘ ‘ F ‘| eg 4s held) back Germany's ORENCE RELMONT. you are 4 ¢ children of widows under the carg of the greatest in the world, Under the circum- No man could have evolved a policy which would | oye yemtil we niade up our minds| New York, Nov, 19, 1920 AR A the Board. stances, it is fortunate, indeed, that the accumulated | meet with general approval, P= 7 in. : = A Wartime and peace- | to go ut Sophie Irene Loeb of Tho Evening s too commoniy heard here that ¢ Tragedies of Opera. : World is the President of soar Abatth has brought with jt the conviction of a re- | time psychology vary so greatly that what the mae | we leans won the war., It sing Wot of allen-born parents were needlessly | penn and William Kavanagh the Executiv ihe Male ane CNRS aise Alas rt Nga porate We Nena ea UF r . |ghouted on every sidesand rammed ading the “Opera stories| sacrificed recently to the greed of the| |g > ry a ggi| | Secretary. esponsibility to society for the wise use of the | jority would have approved at one time the ma- | Nawn the threats of our former allies | 1 and noting the cruel end} almighty dollar 18 prof that laws are at saFact ee Ta rae Dat wie. Wr "i : -. But .would]of the victims of these world-famous | ™ a of motion pic- Health. te jority would have howled down at“another, . at ev iny war lof for us| "Grand Operas,” I congratulate my. | Tiowmted, 1B hundred® of because not was 41 miles, of which 37 were o a ‘ we ‘ ; 5 ‘ abe there have an ar loft for us MY-l¢ure houses everywhere; be By Al t P. So oJ teedt “is a source of Satisiuction that in ihe second the “objectors” themselves further complicated [to win had not hated Britain's Grand pelt that Tam B paok saan ond that, only are children under age admitted y \iber' ane uthwick 7,000 arches, 7 feet high mn x . ey lig . i Wi abet wpised England's glorious | for the r on that poverty prohibits | ott ‘dians, but, what is worse, ght, 1920, rem FUdLsoing Oa) bs £ eneration of the/Rockefeller fortune the sense of | the problem. Many, it must be admitted, were Wiech ane | mthiein bade te the walle lacing 60, wy family cannot Indulg Ps! HONE MN oteh to the children piAy® "fics es ont ‘Brening' World), ‘Tho Alpa, in Switzerland principa ship is s: veloped a 0Rn Jespicable racters, ers Were exactly e \he' he Huns at bay until we over- |in a taste for murderous, bloodthirsty . yould not care to witness. In- * . comprise abc mountains i Mhewardship is no less developed an rey ygnized | despicable characters, Others Were exactly the hetd RUM OF OMe nal me Bees | Uh eae a nae neiead en eaeae th at Tw Due BIL OATS ta Tcarea at| The Zosemite Valley, California, 1 “hight, the 1 than in the first. reverse, paredness? Not Jngland alone, but the! desires to viewing serlal motion elevating or moral plays, sumpestive & vale or depression from 8 to. 10 in Be, Hs of Mont Blane th r " tt ft i stically ; k ‘ france, glorious France, the only one | picture pli hich portray impossi~ re put on the screen to breed les- long: and out one | higher: . ope he METhe Rockefellers, it is reported, are practically Secretary Baker had {o deal with men’s minds |P AN? yiites prepared when the war| ble crimes and inspiro my children to | Pays Fe PUL On Khe soreen, te Lele |mi De BAe hh Hrs spew mit Is a sharp ridge Tike the ts iv The de’, dasuntin te ies dr , Sela ide of vrlki ql ; whe too the | ei t two-gun" men or other] by divorce or separation. o ei 4 pulterville, has|a house consisting of nearly vertlcs comment of business.” The ee : devoting nia ine and opinic “ar ow jou ide of prison, No Ce ies a aoe ian e | cational pernas'7 far to describe on screen|¥ery steep slopes about 3,500 feet a, ascent require al energy to the direction of the use of the incre- | general rule coul jo @xact justice. Secretary | ecessary room, It is | n actors si : ” *S.} now to make bread, .ow to build high. a perpendicular precipice, six or elght guides are say that each and every ilar to the if ment as it accumulates. Baker seems to have been guided by a constant f nuses, how to construct in height, @ rock almost perpendicn. | °°°#8**9* Al Allies, including the United | variety, foolish though they be, are | houses: hov ¢ in height, # cu . . es . me eee ec ane Th pera beh er ey ngrrepees : He Doe tite oF anther wan eruble to those which portray and | articles used in, aly lite = ae RS a ang gi atertalls| Tauterbrunnen is a deep part of an oa mr So long as the capitalistic system exists, it is well | principle to which he adhered steadfastly. © [indispensable to winning the war. It| wplify nd to the ignorant | foreign lands, where and How tie ait: | from 700 to 2,000 feet in descent, Alpine pass where the sun hardly @ > ‘that the mosi striking example of the great capi- | steered his course between the perils of Prussian- {jy all very well for the lower clasves aliens and offspring reveal | ferent peop! ra Bay ieee hines in winter - y and op- | foodstuffs | or apparel, under the i 4 . ‘d 8) f the Hoa: of Education, foreigners, to for ' exsion fir e revolting than in| auspices o ty i which ts the Staubbach, which fall# Bis avert ey iti pilrastan and| Beane of the auiston mage A COLONIAL AMERICAN cuble feet daily. That of Claudia was|over the Malm pxscipice, in? spray. other. Heats, the pro and con of Ue League! ‘The mere fact that young children} Brooklyn, Nov. 16, 1920. 4 railes long and 100 feet tied. Martin | Sock + woiue ne bap eee ' . It abounds 1 methods of Eight aqueducts supplied ancient} y Rome with water, delivering 40,000,000 erfalls, the most remarkablo of ; : ’ ericuns, mostly recently n PYalist Should setso worthy an example for, his | ism on the one hand and sentimentalism on the |@\itau" foreiiners, to form. |