The evening world. Newspaper, January 21, 1921, Page 30

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1 national tr ¢ of geireral WITARUBNLD VT JosePR PuLITAkn. ) Bwisded Dall Siadar by Tho Prew Publ. to 6D mark Raw, New Tere, be typical of the 5 the RALPH SR, Prectdeut 6) Park Rav. i ; fh J. ANGUS SHAW. Prewsurer, 62 Park Row, ve chara Which have‘ he psaple, i question of the Poresiry Assock- hecessary to explain why the tree is 1g ular variety OP "ur assoctarED Prune, Pee Acrectated ire {y exciustrely cmiind to the tm for PAD news Geapetence tre! ee to fi oF Mot cleerWie ereditre La thts paper ss the tora) mows vub.taed beretu. WHO'S BEHIND IT? a. public is with Mr. Untermyér in tis coat versy with the Legislature. * With good reason, tie average citizen casts about with an air of bewilderment and wonders, “What's up of many ht call on Luther yank {0 grow a national tree in which many wouhl be budded ' raftal on a single it all about? H is America's nation: r) The public is interested in housing conditlons. | some fram the compa: The rept bill is a monthly reminder. Tie public wants every single fact that has anything to do | cans eer ae ee with the lack of homes. ' © The record of the Lockwood committee is the | THE START Yanly argument noeded in favor OF continuing CONCRETE start on un historic ; ‘The record of he COmunittee is a good ang sut- A iettteates ing it the broadest pas: aime provided by yesterday's tuvor. ble report of the Senate Foreign Relations qrwers. There is nothing in the record to indicate | “ Tommittee on Senator Boraii’s resohution. < “that any honest man or corporation bas anythmg This resohution, when adoptad by both Houses of t6 fear from the committee. There has been no | Congress, wil! request the Presiden! of the United “Gvidence of abuse of power in the past to argue for | State ifmitation of power in the future. Pein Wha conspirators and cfooks involved in the + - ‘earamhitjee’s investigations have resorted to the , 1a \ \gpurts in efforts to hide their infamy. the couris have “upheld the committee. tue Governments of Great Britain and Japun, respectively, that this Govern ment will at once take up directly with their Governments, aud without waiting upon the vee : ? ieee ; action of any other nation, the question of o 4 The desirability of extending the scope or te vaval dicwrmament, with a view of promptly ¥ , $ nifes ti / hsousing inquiry is so cmanifest that the opposition entering into a treaty by which the naval H cannot fail to mystify. tid s ‘a § “5 * A ailding programmes of cach of sald Gov- ‘ . iv mittee wit LIE either’ the legislative com: ith heard spiestents: wit S GF Gkeal Belial a ae. Unterenyer or the Legistature as a whole does Jupan und the United States—shull be re good and sufficient reason. They will demand a -sdhution of the mystery, amd the demaad will be in ‘mtg uncertdin. tone. ‘a the form‘ finally approv&t, the resolution ‘The public wants to know, and the public believes | snakes no provistorr or suggestion as to the exact b mia. good reason that the Lockwood committee is | percehtage by witch naval building in future shall 4 Ee ts one best meas of stcuring the information be reduced. } ; It leaves no opening for preliminary hesitation the? ‘Tomms et hee, Lome tbh gemen or debate over the precise extent of the reduction, a@eydate then 2 fine in the case of » land either in Congress or on the part of the two mations | invited to co-operate with the United States. y to get the three powers | into conference on the question. * ” ‘fhe conference once begin and its purpose ac cepted, the details will work themselves out—aided and accelerated by popular interest concentrated on the outcome in each of the three countries. Hf thos tree sit the tier vations wit folow. (From Evening World Readers] years {yo ‘such a extent and upon such termes as way be agreed upon. UNCOMMON SENSE i ts otherwise labelled the Gmergency Tariff | afford to tum its back on a proposal witch means | . that géves you the worth of o thouscnd words in 0 couple of hundred? By John Blake 8M end. advertised as a measure solely in the in- | pilions of doilars in laxes lifted from the shouklers | There is sine mental exercise and a lot of sutisfection i trying Copyrigtt, 1921, by John Blake tevest of the farmers. of siready overburdenad, people: . | Ye cay much én a feio words, Take time to be wre! | BYES THAT REALLY SEE i ” ie acon pl ele cn en on Comvpetitive arming is a super-costly intermational | ro en suitu of te woning ete [ane ne und haw aroused t : Hundreds of men: piloted steamboats up) and down'the } A yes protected “infants” can palm m Ue | abit against ‘wtiich’ reason begins at last 1o rebel. Teo that Benj Fran of hundreds of thousas iF issippi River. Only one of them ever really saw the 5 / #~wmmeaswe, they will fave good reason to believe it 4 i ” ; uoted now just as he was b: She can still give Npag, 4 mt to “get away with anything” m the special \ To reject a first step toward sanity and saving | Gov , ab ts when it start vy by Me r ser when hh had As rotten the art of pilee: « f | tpecause that step daes not go all the way would be. | sof War Bavin ittees which took him two long studious years to acquire, he , i Cue ay Wage leap ater bene p trying to “13 could not forget the river. He put it into a book as he saw at @ penny saved is 4 pen’ creat apostle of thrift kuew own expertence t ing to do—tr lehe human side. America will hed their public madness. Let still larger plans for military seduction wait, ee - A glance at the calendar and the term of the is afl that is needed. pa s' néd.”” ved is two pence ’ , z, Daas /; 7 f i Neale owe NG.” pitty | More food to ure pe; The “emergency,” scoondieg to Me. Fordney, is | Navies are expensive enough. Navies are what | i2ple,siould be much more shetty ’ + ten months. The season when farmers sell sugar bore i raw geod a ne they | G Weets tas passed: Whutever farmers got for the have gone on increasing fastest and at fabulous cost 3 aS, “1920 is paid. The ris manufactured, | | becise nobody could see a way to put a check on | ; Atenamonth “emergency” will expire soon atter | the distrust of nations*one for another. | money to live j { the farmers’ 1921 beet crops are marked. Wien | ' The Borah resolution provides a simple, straighi- TS Aer eer aahe postane s sie power while ai beet sugar mills are ready to contract for the 1921 | forward move to get the three biggest aaval powers | fkbh easine ion seine ens a On sew ‘byllat 3 i ‘ AREY ana Gharatore lives ut the people who Top it will np oy wae Se prees jung to sit around the same table and see whether reason {the tonsue and theretore lv uses at bwioe thelk vaiuic, to tieets carmot be bought on tine basis o smh a ‘ J. HOWARD COWPERTUWAt'I and are now tection, the protection will have reeds canit cut down the cost of rivalry in the matter of New York, Jay. 18 1931 Pe OPN) arn Because ‘ection > » coTisiderc: A? ¥ ilding warships. A hi tyot: ‘fore.the sugar will be on the market. | pulsing va 4 eae totes Bear ot tee eretioe From the Real Ketate Boards, * This is the particular season of the year when a | To expedite this move by adopting the Borah | Many times 1 have oe Extitar of ya | bee Ps ° from young men asking wh your , ‘ten-month tariff would most benefit, mot the fanm- | resolution is the first duty of Congress to the peo- ri” ts lcommended the action of the ‘ ; ‘gis, but dhe mamsfucturers and wholesalers. ple of the United States and to civilization | sane eee enone pf Stato Association of 1 i . Here és an easily revognizable example of “farm- | Make {he start. | cellent eek. la | Boards t mayport it ing the farmers.” The advocales fave not even ‘pan overs. oh aki ieee cig poacher = i ; hoe“ ' can find in® home wher there are! bap i ! inchaded any new trlraming: ; 2 Benjamin Wranklin once said he'd like vo be two babies, from chop” Ud Repeat np ita sees i : ‘The real “emorgency” was fully and oompleieiy preserved in a cask of Madeira for‘a hundred — | ‘"}°nm good natured, considered very | credit to the up $ . wevealed last September when the sugar markct | | Yeurs or more and then come out and see how good looking, moderately eUucated, | forcing Now York men to their point said: i grandton, carrying out the notion in an imper | company. +I also go to my husband's | Lang Moses tad be: F sonation of his distinguished ancestor, stepped ffice and keop liis books balancedy intimatels : art al is vow mes prices betweca ont of @ cask tu front of the Metropolitan Mu ‘But Tam not happy a iy 1 ond See ig eg ra G. seam of Art this morning. Before the emer; band Ja not satisfied with me spose ; oe cma : Peer Ing Ben was struck speechless by what he saw | te Harping on what i tate, | Se . : ds . < | and heard we hope somebody warned him his | mother aad clever siste cal H “Some one,” as tie situation exists, means vd first thought must be to square himself xbont a oS abou t iwilesale sugar profiteers whose greed knew no the Madetra jaame gociety. Never do I get a word | which of praise or a little present once in hoynds when opportunity for profiteering offered. | — \whlle. My 1 How mmny voters care to contribute 4, cents a | 4 ‘ mothers themee! pound on sugar to assist this partloular Some one"? THICE OVERS. ete Sadie | Gish or pudding or cake, and | | SG LNG tke rothing. It's a great deal | neighbors praise me to their fri » MAYBE WE'LL HAVE TO GROW ONE. | sults ighbors, mostly grand-| by ¢ stop In and ask ‘s or that tasty State Association netion | se Clty fer than : on my good judement and on safer than getting married—but I’m going |nense. But Frietd Hubby aiway growls ood grunts, How car sf | lo take a chance.”—Mlle, Jane Herceux fim? Can any one tell me? M. k opinions in matter: rise T is America’s national tree? { ease wat ng real estate interests | x ‘ The Aresican Forestry Assuclation is | {ee chai tive asking. President Wilson confesses that he, for onc, | 6 E want Congress either to pass an anti- wrlisca - > is unable to mmte up his mimi on the question. lynching bill or pass a constitutional amend- | a8 i zniort, $0 on0 A DP) A referendum ouch as the Forestry Association fs | ment making Ipmbing @ Federal offense.’--Hemy >| children abroad. Tho held last Saturda foundation in fac’ : am ‘ No civilized Government at the present time can | ess of the sugar provisions of the Fortney Fake, if Uh si { What Ting of a fetter do you jie most readubie? isn't it the one the impression never was effaced. A number of years before his death, as he was sitting in his home overlooking the Hudson, he told the writer that he was beginning to see that river too, although he never expected (o live long enough to see it with sufficient clear- é | ‘@mpiling will hetp to focus atiention on the names |p Dolphin | her effort tn nok foottan, tion in tact, | 7? RE ase hate? 2 var 2nd erat bos Fin aping tn hee way ate | oe oil tat uae i oR dre 8 idum will en lher. the effect is intensif wuision were referred to a committee ie ? y fp ON | ° here Sb. | of eight, composed of four New Yor ig ree Safest. | S67 HE League of Notions already ts a living miei tek tint gnere (it® Prob, | ch incn ana tour men trom yurtud | ji i tlanth. r 1 stirs this | ch ot thelr findings | © | Take the common name of aimost any family of | thing ond having had so much trouble to bring | Acinntio. (PIO gin atire. thie 6 1, Sone bation, inten We i that in different paris of tle coun- | it {nto being, the werld is not going to kill it to fulfil ut me mpathy, Working urges | Bu naay were the unanimous report of | ¥ . f Mi "The g) h t alaudopted by the Board of Governors. ' qxerclied ber own sympathy, tions affecting the work of she, Lash: . Vase Is spi to tres whl: vary widely Sot teak. | a, eta mae idly Seamed TKN seh so that others could see it too. His name was Mark Twain, and his book is one of the great) American classics. Mark ‘Twain saw the sandbars and the snags, and the ripples and the night shapes along the shore just as clearly as his brother pilots did. And he made just as good use of his knowledge. But he saw, too, what they could not see, the mystery and t y of the river, Sights and sounds that they paid no heed to because they were not a part of their business were photographed on his mind so-clearly that ness to make a book of it. There are always things to see above und beyond your work, You may not have the literary gift, but if you’will! ti ed:plates in your brain, aterial for entertainment use your eyes, and use the sens you will supply yourself with 1 and reflection that will} 2 lifetime. Also by observing the beautiful and the mysterious, and thinking about them as you go through life, you will develop the best of your mind—make it appreciative of art and poetry and of all the really great things of dife. Material success is pleasant and necessary, but it is not all there is to success. We have seen middle-aged tourists, who made millions of dollars, travelling through the mag- \ificent mountains of Western America and observing only that there was too muclf dust on the ear seats for their comfort, To such men financial suecess brings nothing. They do not know how to enjoy it, and they have really you Learn to see as © through the world. It is a won- erful world, full of delight and enjoyment, If you can only teach your eyes to sce it, they will bring you a rich return as you travel, and reward you many thousandfold in the ats that are to come er? 2 yay That's a Fact’ By Albert P. Southwick Copyright, 1981, by the Prem Py Titie New York Evening Wi wood committee a savings banks and panies were Manhatian and Brooklyn ‘The bill preaented banks that had Rot aM quota on real . dar, who lived froni 518 to 459 our Long 4 : was unantmously regarded by Whinnes, et tong island boards, | the, Greeks as the greatest of lyric As tt would geera most regrettable | > to allow the impression of friction ae a hetween the up-State men and New) yp 1777, Marquis Lafayette joined York men to obtain, T am sure YOU) the American forces and the next will be glad to correct \t and to give! year France entered Into an alliance Cr Be Alar de [RO] with the patriots of thts country such distinction in the § haan clation. STEPHBN YATES, . : A easurer, New Yorle Btate Assoc! ‘the Muropean branch of the white tion of Real state, Bourde, race consists of the Teutonle taynily | No. 1—Job. | When confronted with FACT our | theories shrivel up Itke dry leaves [thrown into a furnace. |, We have our theory about the | "Good God,” and vet here in the good |God'e world is the tact of EVIL— | universal, persistent, stubbornly bokd jing its own in spite of all that hes |been done through the ages to cast jit out! |_ It is this astounding paradox that |forms the subject matter of the greatest dramatic poerm in the world yo—the Book® of Job. When the book was written no one | knows, whom it was written nu ell; but we have it and it elf. As Thucydides said it 1s an “eternal pos- | Session.” Vor eloquence, for deep, thriting human interest, for pictures of the beauty.and sublimity of nature ancl ° for the passionate appealings of poor Dumanity for some explanation of its sufferings, no other poem in wortd iterature is worthy of beng men- tioned in the same breath with it. Job, the c ter in whom the drama ceutres, afflicted to the verze j of distraction, is seated upon the ah ‘heap, and his three friends, Eliphar, | Bildad and Zopuar, come to explai: to him the cause of his affliction. | They are “the people,” they “know it jal,” and with wondrous eloquence \they strive to show Job that his mis. fortune is & judgment upon his sin fulness Job spurned the lanation. He would have none of it. Conscious of his integrity, he told them that their argut 8 Were “wink nd exclaim ing, “The words of Job ore ended.’ with a wave of his band he dismissed thei. ‘Then appears the young man Elihu Seating himself beside Job on the ash-heap he finilly einks himsel |down to the argument, the gist of {which is that Job's suffering is & | judgment warning him by repentance |to escape from heavier judgment jAppealing to Job, he pauses for an ; answer, but Job refuses to ly and receives the new light with silent in- difference. |. Turning to the three nds, WMhu to get them to join him im the tempt to silence Job's audacity in tioning the Weys of God, and in the mi fit aH a tempest of ali the winds comes and out of the tem pest God speaks (in the wonderful 38th and 4ist chapters, inclusive) anc. they are given to understand that the “whole universe an unfathomed mystery and that evil in it te no jnore tnysteri than the good and the beautiful. Here the drama proper ends, anzi \the narrative story is resumed to in |troduce the brief epilogue. In the epilogue God's anger is shown against the three friends because in their conyersations with Job they had not |said of him the things that were \right, as Job had, and they are com- manded to repent and offer sacrifice. Thus, to quote Prof. Moulton’s words, it appears “that the bold fait), ct Job, which could appeal to God against the Justice of God's own visi- tation, was more acceptable to Him than ‘the servile adoration of the triends,.who had sought to distort the tacts in order to magnify God.” Such, in brief, is the gist of this greatest of all poems. To know how to read the Book of Job and to read, and reread it until it has become a part of one’s intellectual life is te know the erandest poetry and the deepest, soundest philosophy to be |found in the libraries of the world. Sah at th Ten-Minute Studies of New York City Governmen 9221, by The Prem Publiesisnt Co. York breniag Work), | By Willis Brooks Hawkins. This és the fifty-first article of a eorica defining the duties of the ad- | ministrative and lepislative officers | Gnd boards of the New York Oily | Government, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, Vocational Schools. | ‘Three yocational schools for boys-~ lyn—are apen to boys who have com | pleted the elementary school cours» and to those not less than fourteen years of age who are not graduates of elementary achools but can pass an examination by the vocational schoof principal. ‘The course includes, besides: trade work, certain academic work such as English, trade mathematics, history, civics, industrial and com +o geography, applied scl- ©. The Manhattan Trade @ochool far |Girls is open to graduates of the ele- entary schools and to girls of four-; een who are sufficiently proficient in lish and a@rithmetic to warrant their admission. In addition to dress- making, millinery, power-machine loperation, novelty ‘work, lamp-shade naking, glove making and sampte | mounting, the girls are instructed in business nglish, business arithmetic, 4 conditions and trade etiies, , costume designing, designing: jand perferating for embroidery, tex- tiles, cooking, &«. Arrangements are made with de- ore, hotela and tiohl instruction f ‘on classes. Pupils so em- are permitted to attend classe; a ¢ew ‘hours each week, during busi- ness hours, without loes of wages. pare teaghers for the ele- schools there are three train ls for teachers, one each in ), Brooklyn and Queens, Of | (nvluding Germans and Engli i the Latin family (in- | cluding: French, » Ttaliens 1 Moldo-Wallachians); the Sla~ fan family (including Russiane \warlans, Servians, Croats, Tchecks: ks), Poles and Lithaanians) and the Greek family (including the Albanians) | Phichas (468-829 B.C.) was the | greatest of antique soutptors. He has | never been excelled in expreaving the \{deal of the tuman form. Was the architect of the Parthenon, Ath« | ens, Greece. Baoh (1685-1750) was the fouvder of moder orusic, Unequalled tn grandeur of reli¢ion*® music and com- position, , two in Manhattan and one in Brook-\

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