The evening world. Newspaper, January 26, 1921, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

. oes roth arte THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1921, LORD MAYOR MACSWINEY’S BOOK A DYING PL escent pimaccenemesnsinees VA FOR IRELAND: om ——_ 4 —e 4 “REL AND WiLL VET BF FREE: Perfect 3-Part Dress for Women Is Here © | WANTS STOLEN Saou aoe LIBERTY I$ INEVITABLE,” LAST rie WORD OF MAYOR MACSWINEY ‘ THEY’RE WINE NOW ! Pit and It’s a Real Dress and Not a Uniform —— "OWN HOME 3 TIMES. . Starving Mayor of Cork Saw Erin| Owner Says He Will Take 4 That, for Stolen Property Must me Be Wetliened, Confesses It and Says He Neva ¥ Fim etiiseen tia ronences Went to Church, Which Calley 2 Volatead Act interfered to-day with the return of Sharp Comment From Judge. stolen property to its owner. Stephen R. Green, eighteen years oldesd | TWo boys stole thirty craten of | Of No. 323 Schermerhorn Street, Brook-"* | grapes from Abraham Zeering No, |'¥P pleaded guilty to attempted areal: 137 Havomever Street, Brooklyn, | 2&fOre Judge MacMahon, in Brook r : Qounty Court to-day. He admittet.s and sold them to Jerry Flerello, | having attempted to start fl ae 4 | Ny BLOUSE AND No, 452 Metropolitan Avenue, who a cade a i MI three occasions in the basement of hiss AKRICKERT oes! converted them into wine, home, The boy Is under-sized and am © | { Ee - s The boys, Isadore Levy, No. 309 | der-developed oa Independent, Happy and at Peace | ren -\ For The Bouth Fourth Street, nad Joseph | JudKe MucMahon said he would een . . iy Psy i i) Paes } - ¥ So. 107 Fuses . the boy to some Inatitution where Be. « | T Gokistein, No, 197 Roebling Street, ith Neighbors—Look o Men Ca ratte reets | might receive proper medien! attention! eighb ooked t , oe. ! || GARMENT: . . have pleaded guilty, ut that doen | “The boy afimitted he bad never ate tended church, which called from the wants his grapes back—not any | Judge these remarks: ‘The wealthy: old grapes but his own, no mattey |class, with wives filled with vanity, @ what may be their present state [Who find their best occupation in pre of fermentation. viding graves for their pampered dogits © : und pet cats, are paganizing the world, The law says stolen property |i Christ came upon earth again Geo must ‘bo returned, but the Vol- | would not be allowed to occupy a pew p ~ ntoad Act says this particular kind |\n many of our churches, Amid the of stolen property cannot be trans. | rustle of silks and satins, his seamless ” rred without @ permit, and a [tunic would be looked upon with dis- permit cannot be issued, dain, ‘The grave lack of religious trairie® Ing for our boys in this countey in tw ‘The police and Federal authort- ‘catise o fmost of our trouble.” on Both Sides to Bring It About. By Martin Green. One must read to the end of “Principles of Freedom,” by Terence MicSwiney. late Lord Mayor of Cork, who starved himself to death in the hope that his act might hasten the freedom of Ireland, to find the mes- sage he probably meant to leave to his countrymen: “Let us grow oig with our cause,” whote MacSwiney in the shadow of the opportunity that arose for him to make what he considered the | supreme sacrifice, hall we honor the flag we bear by a mean, apolo- getic front? No! Wherever it is down, lift it; wherever it is chal- lenged, wave it; wherever it is high, salute it; wherever it is victori- ous, glorify and exult in it. - “At all times and forever be for it, proud, passionate, persistent, jubilant, defiant; stirring hidden memories, kindling old fires, waken- ing the finer instincts of men, till all are one in the old spirit, the spirit that wt!l not admit defeat, that has been voiced by thousands, that is noblest in Emmet’s one line, setting the time for his epitap! ‘WHEN my country’—not IF—but ‘WHEN my country takes her place among the nations of the earth.’ ASK WAR HERO’S RELEASE. | MRS OWEN KILDARE, VICE PRESIDENT oF THE AMERICAN 0 “It is no hypothesis; it is a certainty. There have been in every _ | «PRINCESS LeAnne pen pth GEE generation, and are in our own, men dull of apprehension and cold of | Legion Post Deck “Siip. ON" A THREE PART DRESS? AND AS COLLAPSIBLE HAT heart who could not believe this, but we believe it, we live in it; WE Convicted for Father's Offense, | FORMING KNOW IT. | Five thousand members of the Ameri- THIRD can Legion in Jersey City to-day # ‘it + “Yes, we know it as portant it, and as it en be Paiiey ae cutitibn stactiauting idee Jameel lal a. morrow; and when the historian to-morrow, seeing it accomplished, McCarthy of Special Sessions to release i q “ Tf] will write its history, he will not note the end with surprise. Rather | John M. Hamme! of Hoboken, a wat THe FIRE DRIVES 35 QNE-ELEVEN Will ne marvel at the sov! of constancy, rivalling the Dest traditions of | He" commend by Kine Alvcr. WhO) Ao gene INTO ICY STREETS cigarettes undegenerate Greece and Rome, holding through disasters, persecu- | "1% Convictel severdl weeks amo for) Pavey es | " tions, suffering, and not less through the seductions of milder, but Jumes J. Sheridan Post of t WeSen Water Freezes Quickly, Hampering meaner, times, seeing through all, shining clearly, the goal; he will’ eg err nc tay Firemen—Victims Had No record it all, and, still marvelling, come to the issue that dauntlees | Warrant’ on ‘which young MHumnmel wa | ‘Thine to ‘Dress 4 eae of highest qual- spirit has reached, proud and happy; but he will write of that issue, | aro AM Sjcume my ior, Nis, futher, eS Abs! fered at an unusual NEV bi he nishme nionded 01 iceman me: a rol 1 because— LIBERTY, INEVITABLY, to two: words to epitoming the Rissory of @ y uphe ider Hammel, 1¢ 18 natds cons | Hamilton Avenue Station saw fire com- We were able to buy certain people that is without parallel in the annals of the world. siete eee 18 Hovoken. he ing from the third story windows of No, fi firge 'y This Is the peroration of a poet, an ts ‘Lost ‘atin eT Ny ep . za_| back to hi dimott ai nd | #46 Van Brunt Street, Broo'lyn, at 4.16 ine types bacco formerly Mealist, a dreamer, wh8 possessed,| the Irish people, As T have pointed) ‘mows “Lost Battulian New Garb to Drape the Fe eee eet eee earns candinued |A- M. to-day, nnd forcing tho front shipped acroaithe Atlaaite Ocean out, the Hibernian Order, when creat- nevertheles, a meno of humor, 8] SU en ay once 9 poten: werson, | WOMAN FOUND DEAD INPARK.| male Form Divine Is Sen-| re Kitdare. "And yet’ unere ts no [door aroused af ed to the airee the feaning toward the practical, an i-| but Ireland has discarded that and a sibl alth q i artistic or otherwise, to the public. I : : sight into human nature which fl-|other such weapons for those with - sible, Healthful and Pictur-| artistic or otherwise, to the pub! three small children, i Sitch anos ng Got the Goaeniee Left Home in Weehawken Last ae should think a simple costume like} ‘phe flames Jumped to tho third floor Ne eee un {tee repunlion Evenings Unvally Carried Money. | esque, and Its Component | this would appeal to every woman in| 5. xo, 444, next door, a Spanish bound. pages of the whic 3 the world.” s} bs “For a time, however, Hibernianism| The body of a woman, identified by ar f nls; “nicker-| Then Mrs. Kildare handed me al!n® house, occupied by thirty men. been issued by E. P. Dutton & Co,| oreated an unnatural atmosphere of|Mrs. Carl Bergen of Weehawken Parts of Blouse, Knicker nted sheet whieh iw called the None of the boarders had time to dress Trade conditions prevented Europe from taking it—this ‘was our opportunity. From this tobacco we have made One-Eleven— and is dedicated “To the Soldiers | sectarian rivalry in Ireland, That has|that of her mother, Mrs. Johanna Re bockers and. “Slip-Over” Ject" of this new dress reform and When they reached the street police of Frecdom in Bvery Land." The} tow. pipet apr ged ghot eee ine naster of No. 80 Fulton Str Ww Will Not Exci P- _ |gives the gist of the wholv mutter, men alded them in Muding shelter with | book is a collection of essays, most of] Articie on religion it wasat ite hoighe (Hawken, was found (rozen this morning ill Not Excite the Censori-| 1 reads: ame object of this ore | {rletds except two, who found abelter I which have been published from] and this fact colored the writing of {0m the ice on the lake of the County! ug Criticism & Clergy- PAnieacioniaballl Cae stintete are | the Hamilton Avenue Station. time to time in Ireland and Eng-| the article, On rereading it and con- | Park at Woodbliffe, N. J, by Putrol- ergy: & ty p | Firemen had difficulty because the . Rem tistic and utilltarian dress for : 1 for book | sidering the publication of the present | man Fischer of Union Hill. men, Club = ¢ Society Ache fend, ‘They were revised fc work I was Inclined to suppress it;| Ars, Bersen anid her mother had Ie ot Society) women ana lls, thereby reduce | Water froze almost as fast as it fell, but : . me % _ ing the high cost of living, insur | confined the blaze to the two upper | form by the author in tha, twillght} put decided that it ought to be includ: |home last might at 6 o'clock (9 dos ene ing domestic tranquillity and rie: | floors of the three-stury housos | of his days. Od because it bears directly on: the shopping and was m the full Of Site By Fay Stevenson. ing the health standards of the ae : ‘ i large sums of 1m POLITICIANS AND RELIGION TO| ‘Yi! of materialisin in religious bodies, [-ink large sums Of mone hin which is a matter of grave concern 10 | found only, $24 In money in A It! The pertect VRnane ween IE Al Connecticut Posts Vote for Donan. a ; ‘ STIR DISCORD. e' religious community in the pate ts ‘on the ice of the park, “TM ‘s8—vconsisting of tion 1I—o influence women, HARTFORD, Conn, Jan. %6--An on Doubtless his last written expres-) world.” which, it is stato 1 unlikely plaice blous kers and a “slip-| through Intelligent dressing, to | nouncement was made last night that sion of length dealt with a subject! WHOLE BOOK IS PLEA FoR |!or ner to hav ___ ove he dress which it is hoped} ¢liminute worry, nerves and fret- | the State referendum of the American which {s so intricately involved in| — will become universal and is NOT ting over clothes, and to educate | Legion Posts on the queation of » bonus vty t the question of the struggle for Iriah | Le UNITY. ' perative, therefore, uh we ao) Ade! dnitorm NOs - pars tape pegererane tee value Of @ | resutted in thirty-nine posts voting in eligio Space is given to this addendum, as| clare ourselves and know where we 4 ivers ‘orm of dr Michtben woe te independence—the subject of religion, | ,, SPUns 18 Riven saneya written sword) stands And Z tand by this principl Think of it! A dress which much Section I1I—~To induce all wom- | [ver and eighteen posts:agninst, Thir- i This was a sub-title in the book, IN! t the Lrish and to the world beéause | no physical -vietory can come talked about womanecan wear end} ¢f to join tn extending this work; | W-slx other posts in the State did not "111" Cigaretten, you can get your the pref appears the folowiag,! his book is tora great extent a plea|for ‘spiritual surrender, Whatever) not be censured by clergymen, club-| thereby promoting happiness, ef- | record thelr vote idgeport, See aE ion the dane i which is of particular interest oo for unity of action between the Catho- | side denies that not my 8! women, aduloty damea or even’ tier ficleney and humanitarian fellow- | Haven, Stamford and Norwalk 1 sch blood In New York: | #¢.South and the Protestant rth of{ Absolute se tion from ng and, | kimes ship in all women's Interests and | voted againat the bonus, 5 those of Irish bloo > + | trelund, Realizing the dissension that |MacSwincy held, wiould not only bene-| OWN husband, has at last been cre-| inducing loyalty to the ideals of i “"E wish to make a note on the) hag peen fomented by religious differ- | fit land but would be of inca sleul ated, the Constitution of the United \, article under this heading (Religion) | ence, he advocated te is Avold) iw oR misconception tion with boldness and fairne: DUPPOSE OF a a c r hout ¢ jong people lutside Ireland, purpose of at what he callsfaven without King the ques-|able benefit to England, With Eng States of America. land holding 1 BAR, Thanks be to The : | ‘dering. the fee, League, a new organization for dreas-| THE “NOTHING TO WEAR" BUGA- “internal unity.” “When in difforenc omied that there ing the woman of to-day In a way| BOO 1S DONE AWAY WITH, ‘In Ireland there is no religious ty js accomplished,” he wrote, “we| never can be peace between the (Wo) that will be decent and pretty at the] “Perhaps the econ dissension, but there is religious sin-| are within reacu of freedom.” countries. | woman's dresg” has | this new dress will ay cerity. En merican Dre: Jot fre ; sper go| Same time a sh politicians, to serve| "No grave question,” he wrote, “can | “No one,” wrote MacSwincy, "is sol )00” 1 re Ireland, have Pe Settled by ignoring \t. Since it|foolish as to wish to be forever at| been sol the end of dividing Ireland, have jy our duty to make the war of in-|war with England. It is unthinkable. | wishes it to be worked on the religious feclings of dependencda reality and a success |» the mest beautiful motive for] ‘This new o! the North, suagerting te GREET OF ie ie ee vet intent thanon i eaves jiverty | backed by the Goneral Federation of longs for wilks or satins, but simply : Saye Guess ta ail y lk ion [standa to benefit the enemy tec nanta CIUbAtioe aiiee that everything she his’ is old fast Catholic ascendancy, T i oh and give every latent suspicion an of injuring him, If we want to in- th men's ¢ ee by Miss Anna Brown| oye I¢ women wore m scl as now and there never Was any sich) oecavion and a field, We want pri- | jure him we should renuin as we are| Of the ¥ C. A and Miss Edith) consisting of this slip-on, kalcker= dunger, but our enomies, by raising! marily the man who is prepared to |?"q menace to him.’ Lomi ty Feces Posture | BAd:G blouse; Just as A man | bockers: e Cl wed discord In the North! fight his ground but Is big enough in AL FRIEND) Meeting | woars a suit of clothes consist of the cry, sowed ¢ heart and mind to respect opponents |"/RELAND FREE, A RE. trousers, waistcoat and a coat, I think 6 woman,” resunie That is, provided she |? aived, | n > anywher has nov ion which w!to &he does hot mean that she HB. Aliman & On. a few with the aim of destroying Irish) wno will also fight theirs. In the OF ENGLAND. | ‘ "and emark would never pass her| unit Integrity and courage of both sides| MacSwiney held that Ireland as a) who saw a P 3S AN, * - “It ‘should be borne in mind that] is the guarantee of the Independence | rree republic will be more of a pro- ree-purt” gowns exhibited, the s the same Way with hate. We Mi SON AVENUE - FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK se ihe! Republican atandavd ow an | On BOs Won to England than she is to-day,| future looked exceedingly bright. what we call the ‘collapsible| / tes hk 4 * Benes io TAPER OAD & a Sere MaoSwiney in his writings mani- ause’there would ensue betweon| | ‘all about this wonderful hat, which is merely a soft, becoming Thirty-fourth Street Thirty-fifth Street first raised in the field in Ireland, In) rteq no hatred «for England | ‘he two countries an agreement, tacit, | ‘three-part’ dr . @ to} shape which can be fitted to any the rising of 1798, Catholics and Prot-| ind trom hia tone it may be aaatmeg |porhaps, for sclf-pravection, | With| Mrs, Owen Klldar WOmante: ta Bhar cen akon te North were ui 1 he fore-| dent of The Amet estants in the sdom gained for. Lyola three-«¢ ted in| thad even as he was dying in an Eng- | (1 nered, Dent on one side, tuna | the cause. Belfast was the first home| lish prison his tdeals overmastered w an understanding between the Niecy eredeets off her coat}it down in the front or up in the| ¢ Remublicanism in Ireland. This is| 8 resentment, riendliness be- | new republic and und rr ang mood before Ie. eaid, although (pao , She cam pack It in her sutt-| of Republicans f tween neighbors," he wrote, "ie one| “We must re he wrote, “that| lave one on,” she eaid, although |eage, tuck it under her arm or kick the truth of the matter. The present} o¢ the natural things of life,” and it{the number of people who have defi-| at first 1 mercly noted that she wore | it across the room and {t Is always a ws{a@ simple litle dark blue charmeuse | heeor strong, well developed aay. ‘n are comparatively | and georgette cr ing, cute little hat savage is an unnatural thing| was his ambition some time to help | ni wathnie white waa | Whee poker oe pe affale whic s ‘ sked Mrs. Special for to-morrow (Thursday) 5 ot land's enemies to hold| bring about a state in-which England |against our © _ Idare how the gh lol Madonna erie tcand Ircland would become friendly |small, This small number embraces | both chic and conservative, ay or the extremely, wander one her in Subjection and will disappear | ON Toe Sea eaglish Government, that com- ven she unfastened a few snap- fare in this knickerbudker, slip- entirely with political freedom. MacSwiney was for war with Eng- | mands forces obeylag it without rea-| pers, pulled off this slip-on bina- on affair, she declared: “It has hi howev in our day,| land when the step becomes necessary |son and influencing the general ms uss | t af at Hig ape ener a wrote eae Bia gon Age is made tee spy effect and this is dis-|0F gTews out of an accumulation of jog people, whose general attitude | e and stood before me tu her | sure, Kives a woman those One unhappy effect and this is dis: | tiuations, He considered ireland aa |inaeciwon-—adrift with tho ruling|Knickerbookers and a blouse, The} graceful Greek lines and Is meant for 9 q sm, he English ruling| for a fair war. The martyr to tho Irish cause was | niade of blue satin, reaéhing clear to | forty." ving, for their own politi-| “1 find in practice everywhere in| strong for the “dreaimers, cranks and |the shoe-tops, fitting into the ankle as corrupted the Orangemen | Jrejand—it is worse out of Ireland—| fools.’ In his opinion. th so | Snugly as a man's puttees, making it| WILL SHAKE OFF A LOT OF ILL- with po and flattery, enabled them | the doctrine “The End Justifies the | designated are the backbone of a/| possible for a woman to mount, street NATURED Gossip, to establish on ascendancy not only) Means," he wrote in one of hia es- movement #uch as Ircland is under- | Cars, climb stairs and even eroes her over Ulster but, indirectly, by their entitled “The Basis of Freedom.” | move en CS: those who| limbs without feeling the slightest! ‘This new organization has a pledg (sizes 24 to 44) vote, over thy South, This becoming | |need to blush. The blouse was low] for its members to sign, which . . . i some ce vat s- N FI trim to meet the winds of adyantage | 2 ae p fr ime y ich re Py . ge. Intole me alneors but mis; |JUNCLEAN FIGHT WON 18 WORSE) tom) ty ‘lax—get nowhorg, in Mac-|cut and can be made of any desired |" Jon the American Drona Lu in new models for afternoon and evening wear " 4 . Swiney's judgment m au y ention of ering the | organization | tnow ng” ‘lone party will denounce another| In his book is an appeal to the|NOT A UNIFORM AND CAN BE) Wcts. In my association with for discreditable tactics, but it will| men of Ireland not to bang hack WORN ANYWHERE. members. fi wil: (bee IRISH RESENT ANY SECTARIAN| have no hesitation ta using such ite | mon Crivation or danger because of| «you eee t can wave ti noedi| fUaio Meanie tare eet act aes MOVEMENT. self If tt cam thereby snatch a dis-| their women. He expressed the con-| no petticoats and even slip off my | { will endeavor to. promote happiness 4 ° Was cinicattechs a. wort On| able victory, So, clear speuking | yiction that the women of Ireland—| outer street garment when ut home,” ; Te ineaGed: and good-fellowship at al times, with | r | a fight that is not clean h have shown .n history—will | laine: wih Freemasonry to counter the hs ¢ ag they ha Jexplained Mrs, Kildar, “My d the true American spirit of Ae ise Wreemasonry; bul fikee | HAS eH Bubs vactary’ more dis-! you be found want ng when their) js ay conservative and ¢s uniform as| general welfare U selikatatiics: G 4 € tricoti taffeta 4G Ora mm, it was a political and not) Pete bgt en need their atc a man's sult, Lam ready for an : After reading this through T asked lese wns are made t ieta, ghifon @ religious weapon. | “f make the point here because we) MaoSwiney believed that the Irish|naon tea or I could. ¢ Pose tele Ma Gly Sede These Gowns ar de of tricotine, ta .¢ ’ ‘ ia 4 political weapon it| stand for separation from the Britieh [language revival was a great factor! dance, I can have us many dresses eure extended all throug last years of the movement. in Cork, for completely controlled the city life, but | lish power h the rapid rise of the Republican move- | our foreign will refua Oo hes pepe re 7 hroi ) ee +4 Ireland in the| Empire and because 1 have heard it] in arousing the violent stirring for] ay 1 choose and of any combination any Amen 1 ROAR OR to, (Rope ‘) crepe de Chine, embroidered net and georgette n Parllumentary | argued that we ought, if we could, | freedom that Is agitating Ireland to-| my fem nine nature craves, from satlt ‘imply because [ have heand of 90 | ample, it| make a foreign alliance to crush Eng- day. “The Irish mind, he wrote.| and serge combinations to velvet and] much unpleasantness among women » (in Ireland), e Sean do itself justice only tn Trish.” | chitfon. In summer I can have|and of club life being broken up be lien were engaged in| The Iriah propagandist play-| linens and organdies.” ise of this Idle gossip about The value is exceptional ment brought about the, equally rapid! crushing freedom elsewhere. When | wrights, whose works brought about] ‘'T Mrs. K said that the] clothes,” said Mrw, Kildare, “If wom- fall of Hibornianism sich a question js proposed it should | disorders and arr Now| Goneral Federation of Women's Clibs}en can forget clothes and stop talk. | * “At the present aim it nea as little| be answered, pichauah se time is) York, arial hed no! rd] had been plannir ment like thit|ing about them 1 belle: we #hall) @fluence in the public life of Cork as| not ripe to test it reland were |the cause of Irish freedc Mac-|for years but the dress had always} have a much happier world.” e ¢ , %, Bir Edward Carson himself. ‘The|to win freedom by helping directly | Swiney's judgment. He was an| resemble! a uniform or mannish rai | Loud ‘applause from Friend Flus- artment for Women’s Gowns, Third Floor) great bulk of its one time members! or indirectly to crush another people | apostie of sincerity, Perhaps the kev |ment like Dr. Walker's. And now | pand! have joined the Republican move-|she would earn the execration she! note of his written message to his| Miss M Rhoaels has de In the mean time, who wante a ment. has herself poured out on tyranny , people is this paragraph: thre affair, which 4 perfectly good slip-on made of some- “This demonstrates clearly that any-| for ages, I have come to see it is ‘Try to get sincere men on one| the feminine and still is conservative | thing soft and pretty, a pair of satin thing in the nature of a sectarian _ Basgible for Ireland to win her inde- side to understand sincere men on and modest. or serge “knickos" and a dainty little| movement is essentially repugnant to’ pendence by base methods, It is im~ the other side,” “No one can expect woman to go higuse? 4

Other pages from this issue: