The evening world. Newspaper, March 5, 1921, Page 10

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> ean bam ene pm omomen ter nr yor SaenrPTTer -~ ‘THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAROH 5, 1921. PRESIDENT HARDING'S INAUGURAL. T ONLY one point does President Harding’s inaugural address hit hard ground: The country must have a new protective tariff. Save for this landing, the Republican salutatory, | after the manner of inaugurals, airplanes smoothly cS “I Do Be Next Time” oN ak ig, ' TURNING THE PAGES| =—SY— r = HE Uttle rose that's budding over matters international and matters domestic in “ry , i get j ‘ie ahy $ @ way to please all. yi ie ad ye al | Hy) 4 ; Upon my window ledge 99 high Ts firat to hear the music sweet You play for children on the street. So out I look to catch your eye And read its asking me to buy ¥) Your tunes. Alas! so poor am I, There's not @ coin; take, I entreat, The litle rose! I pluck it with a tiny sigh, ie But toss it gayly. See it fly In flashing crimson to your feet— A living billet dour discreet. Now in your bosom let it die— The little rose! A little song to the piano-organ girl, clipped from “Pearls and Fome- granates” (Putnam), a book of verse by Dorian Hope. eae Seeing the Worst of Democracy--- Pausing for @ breath in the fiction run of his “A Case in Camera” (Mac- millan), Oliver Onlons writes this bit of blue philosophy: I always have the lurking feoliny that Democracy would be ail right but for its numbers. President Harding’s words about “craving friend- ships” and “harboring no hates” will be liked in quar- ters where they were meant to be liked. The oki by should not wesnaghes ode aie Ped declarations against “entangling alliance with the am ipa destinies of the Old World” will refresh the ears of In clear and vigorous language the President ex-' the “bitter-enders,” while the assurance that Amer- Yposed the fake features of the law, both as a revenue ica is “ready to participate in any seemly pro- ee vena” Me deeds gramme likely to lessen the probability of war’ - will cause Mr, Taft and other pro-League Repubil- Etetencs foe Ge ordney til would cone frm | ca © ow with new confidence that Me. Hardg | the sugar schedule. “ meant what they said he meant. | Im brief, he outlined the changes which the last | AS matter of fact, President Harding’s inaugural few years have made in the commercial situation | address gives no indication of what he means to do of this Nation. His fundamental proposition is un- | about the League of Nations, ’ answerable: At the same time he does suggest the hope that E Sincnsiaer Ge canawir heh pti caaa be ee. he now inclines to larger views of internationalism |. pared to buy from her, and if we wish to as when he says: - bY saat caw. alco ba Legh ooh saa “We recognize the new order in the world, 'N THE press of inauguration activities the coun- fi ucts, we must be prepared to welcome com- with the closer contacts which progress has ene, rata ime, Thow admirable are -modities which wo need and which Burope wrought, * © * and would gladly join in iis ‘syudementat an hockcree will be prepared, with no little pain, to that expressed conscience of progress which Proess bee put’ Rtn Potten Com send us.” seeks to clarify and write the laws of inter- vert its votes, not into effective ac~ tion, but into arid deserts of sta~ ‘Ustics—! ‘Two men can make a holy friend- ship; among three there can be & . veotal understanding; but ten will "He exposed the inconsistency of this law and the | national relationship.” “War Finance Corporation revival On the domestic side the address is full of com: i | | ‘pdvocated. He compared the proposed schedules nek ever winnow the wind with. talk, -gountry rebelled. * Harding says: ; If Mr. Onions were an American ‘This veto message is a clear statement of fact, “I epeak for administrative efficiency, for pees of an English pessimist, we < should say to him: ‘Packed %y sound economic wisdom. Kt is an Hghtened tax burdens, for sound commercial COLL da abatat. We, heceter ie analysis on which the Democratic Party can well practices, for adequate credit facilities, for better on the next Congress, And it's ‘afford to rest its case, certain that time and events sympathetic, concern for all agricultural prob- only two years away.” “will vindicate its truth, lems, for the omission’ of unnecessary inter- ore Miss America’s Good Times- -- Giving us more “Hail, Columbia!” in the current Harper's: W. L. George observes: One of the most interesting fea- tures of the Am ference of Government with business, for an ; is 4NTE ‘RC SKA CONTESTS FOR end to Government's experiment in business we aE ae ‘and for more efficient business in Government t - administration.” P abe the aor ghee per ipker He does not say how or when he will start out ‘of New York and Chicago, the intercity tourney at | '© aocomplsh these things. It Is @ remarkable thing in an American summer hotel to see the owners of automobiles Alling thelr | the Brooklyn Ice Palace this afternoon should be He neglects to say that for two years the chief eee tee iris, watle * | only the first of many similar contests in ail sorts | of them were urged by a Democratic President upon fab re ae river cor score aaa: ing than the — bread-and-butter miss. Except in rather fast lr cles, she seems in America to be almost entirely ignored. Everything goca to the girt— money for college, for training, a Republican Congress that took no heed. He omits to say that a Republican majority in the last session of the Sixty-sixth Congress, with the ’ a ‘ thy ll social consideration she 1s encour- ea games | lection ‘but of the way and Republican victory se- |—* ‘ fin! i Felli ts hes ah een met _— her mischievousneas, and enjoyed red, could find no bett for its time than the . her youthful petulance. Se ot ool’ te thet | footie Fordney te oa = |From Evening World Readers It is rather regrettable In a way, for It leads to the Sonciuaisa ae: “PF Engers song after lessons are forgotten. . Yet, as we have’ said, the tariff is the one thing UNCOMMON SENSE Hie Ap EE omene S204 S - What kind of @ letter do nina readadte! This would be sad for the young New York and Chicago are neighbors and rivals. | upon which President Harding f1e8y vou find most f Ton’t it the one that gives you the worth of a thousand words coup! undred| matron and bad for the young miss _ $0 are Philadelphia, Boston and St. Louis. Young- , Phone © tae wonter anerviee onto ie of esuteniion mfg ore By John Blake usc were Ae ae ee ‘sters are youngsters, whether they grow up in cities touch concretely and with plain words yesterday, io ony Gitoh tae few taavdd. Sabo tne bo Xe trying (Copyeient, 1921, by John Blakey What we hopefully understand is | fm smaller towns or in the country. Athletics are | _ It had already been announced that President Har- | — ALWAYS MAKE AN ALLOWANCE FOR REPAIRS, 3 | ‘at it is not the Amasican tipper _ & desirable and worth-while feature of school life | ding’s first care after\taking office would be the |rormeriuoretine Eeaine Wous — |te ant bie dt rents from one-third You are # machine and machines wear out. You have, { |our English critic. children go to school. The spur of com- | formulation of his policies, pres a erepapnits en Hal Praeaiee be the mere privi Reales a eee advantage ster man mare machines, in | Might-Have-Been Friends--- is the life of athletics everywhere. No dad. them to be tha readers to express themselves through| Does Mr. Daly know that Single peirs are made automatically and usually without-cost. $1 Pi ew!" cme expect ‘0 be more than adum- }its"columns, tam taking this oppor-'Taxers believe that the best use of|$ But that is true only up to a certain point. Seabees Sbg ole Be vig mae in the March Seribners: ny to New York and a chance to match skill i = ae seth Now Yor Shock boss ete brated In his inaugural, and his adumbration con- | Tau, % making known my eentl- the land can be obtained only under After forty, though the mental part of the machinery & ‘ 3 : | Is there anything in life you re- ‘ ; I have alwaye been ambitious and every person will have the right to ought to be better than ever, the physical part begins to $/ than the peopie you have extraordinary for the Chicago youngsters. | ‘ined much that can be hailed with satisfaction. | nave worked very diligently, with the the exclusive posession of his tand,|% wear out faster than it can, be replaced. = creed it colt romsen ‘ result that by continual self-denial to do with it as he pleases, so long i j i had not preven ‘our getting off “trip to Chicago would mean as much to the local and rigid economy I have managed @8 he pays the tax that is levied upon That is the time when repairs cease to be altogether the bus “and following ‘her home a THE LOGICAL COMPROMISE. to Save several thousand dollars. i) Fao furthermore, the owner of automatic, And if you do not take care to find out when whe ec had fost, your epeart to ; . ase axe ; hy re of her voice : 7 ol \y AYLIGHT saving for the State is doomed by |iana was acquired by me only as ajhe be’ taxed on his improvements, It is wise in making up your budget to make an allow- There is the Mad: , | & up y 4 caught yours when th for the winner of to-day’s contest. It hopes that repeal of the Daylight Saving Law. tine a reicap tog Shera ebag et Rotem, ac Goines es ance for repairs. This allowance ought to include enough ‘this will be a starting point for other competitions For political reasons, the will of the minority is ]1, was compelled to exercise discre- tenure offer more security to private|{ money to have a doctor look you over once a year and to guard indulged in a wi no one ise In the car appreciated; you D a Kindred soul, ot — " i ate t V3 him, ‘open to all the school boys of the cities. imposed on the majority. The result is. another osha hg ag se lg el Paris ainete tae tk the only ecrocurel? Pre’ ‘ee aapeye pele ae age ays en you have heen getting. nen 12%, 3 and worn ginte Neith , |value, Remember that the Govern-|€conomic argument against the men- fo not think that after forty you can work the same you passed e atro@t, end. felt er New York nor Chicago is so poor that | triumph for the autocracy of organized minorities. | Tidnt'or the United States recrenised [aces of Bolshevism and Socialism, for|$ length of time and do as efficient work in it as you did fodabtiy with unalterable convice annot afford to finance an occasional trip for*) Fortunately for the city, a local ordinance prom. |me, as the sole, rightful and legiti-| Which the single tax has no sympathy that the mere mumbling of : mate owner ef this oll. The land is|°F leanings. PUBLICUS. when you were thirty. names by @ mutual acquain- ‘most able young athletes in its schools. ises a continuation of Daylight Saving. The gain | mine, to use it ax 4 please, and to do ingual Righia ie Ashlee You can make just as much money—probably more. ag all that wus needed for from the hour saved will more than balance the in- | Si, {t 48 te Sarre pen, ewe To the Editor of The Brening World: For if you worked hard and wisely at thirty you will be he acquaintance ei ‘ . jane in |in land and private property in| S0me of the high school girls of this drawing dividends now. 5 t aitl ap wenttae PENNIES FOR FUTURE WARS, convenience which will result from mixed time in | Muses. Just_as 1 can clainy posses: |clty are beginning to wonder why the But if you are still thirty or under, or even thirty-five, $ 2",.2 ding, of a sens the neighboring towns and villages. sion to an ordinary commodity, so 1|Girls' Branch of the P, 8, A. L. docs y of duty ew Englan 'O ONE gets any satisfaction from the penny- pinching collections of the so-called war taxes. * . |can establish ownership of - start the repair fund right away. Reianbe. But there is no good reason why the city shouki |tion of the earth, No restriction is|"0% change {ts attitude in regard to Take longer vacations than you have been taking. Get Or, as it might happen, the Vole y i H 5 laced upon the prices that the store-|!Mterscholastic athlefics for girls. i , > ‘. stead Act ». Every one the penny or two added to the be satisfied with a condition which leads to con- |{eeper ‘charges, and so no Govern-|Several of our leading commercial Antares ia taae will keep you busy, but restfully busy, during + us fusion. Congress is expected to meet in special | mental regulation of the rents I/tirms have women's teams which|$ he week-ends. , Bellets of Then and No Bost of soft the 2 or 3 cents added to A ., should exact can be possibly justified. | ia, other firma, but the h A trip to Europe may look to you like a terrific expense Letina 2 session in about a month, Representatives of the |The determination of my rents is an|P/2¥ h fe high acROOh TS ae oF § lif lones 4 . nie Campfire tales of the Great Went y admissions, the odd change collected . iti he E inallenable right. girla of this city are compelled to ut if it saves your life, or prolongs it ten years, it will be Cees eee aE N son sales of proprietary medicines. urban industrial communities of the East should ant, thete, cfack-brained Single }content themacives with interciaas cheap. ler at séatligny? ty yee J i < 1 we . | Taxers, Mesers. Geiger and De Leeuw,|games while their brothers hel; rad ; : . * 5 aemilian); by John J. ; ae “But they are ‘war taxes.’ We have had our make a strenuous effort to secure passage of a Fed. ETT aaenth oe of the land Geet coe ens hae Rreiners help to The same thing may be said of a journey to any of the 2A eral Daylight Saving Law applicable to all the East- | have obtained through superior abllity,| I wonder if some of your readers|} wonderful places in America that you have not seen, ny. one present who _ ‘war and now we have got to pay for it. But never ern standard-time. belt and ownership of which ts sanctioned, |who are interested In giris’ athletics Look on these as luxuries, and the cost will seem pro- ra ‘of that. terrible | again.” That is the general attitude of those who sctually, conseoed Py our Sront Na- |e if they. bave Y Aieet Coe hibitive. You will never take them. But Jook on them as teran, from the, south: Such 7 . |tlon. The value of my land is coi ‘4 0 pay their pennies. a law would give the maximum of advan- | fitany increasing, and the only wag one who would like to hear thoir|$ necessary periods of repair and you will see that they are % P ‘ tage to the greatest number of industrial workers |1 can regard this increase is as ajviews on this subject, nod investments: Actually, what sort of “war taxes” are these? ‘i ; fair return for the sound judgment| It seems to me one of the best 8 dere) * A ale ‘What war are they paying for? They all go into who are employed in this area. It would not incon- |and business sense I employed when| places to try the present ‘popular It doesn’t pay to break down at fifty, Life isn’t worth ; : age igh ;: 4h ights” idea is in our schools ivi kdown, But it is be’ ivi A th dominantly agricultural sections of | Purckesing my land. ‘The single tax| “equal Fr! living after a breakc » But it is better worth living at | the Federal Treasury to pay expenses, , What be- vacaaranghad mae ; zx ; had seen one with his and could describe it in every var, ot only had he seen one, but when he and a companion ronsting a goat away down der, near the Spanish Peaks, a ; rae value} Where our future citizens are trained. /otegh P yor "Gomes: of them? the country. oe es Nanas aaah te RO fifty than at suey if your machinery is in good order, far Garcaghe had come bounding into ; it A 2 robably foresaw would rise. you know better how to enjoy it. appeared—all with in- Federal Daylight Saving in the Eastern time beli |P"am glad to say that our states- Find Oat First. , z peoeneete Sa) EHS |) © In round numbers, 74 per cent. of Federal receipts i “0 to pay for past wars, 8 per cent. for general run- es ec eee 8 per cont. for TWICE OVERS. |auo, ihe, exinting economic state, of mon ate yational and that they real- | To thé Editor of Te Evening World Establish your repair fund early and don’t be afraid T have read with great amusement|% to use it, It will save doctor bills and hospital bills and, per Mr. F. Daly's criticism of the single haps the worst thing of all, a long and miserable old age. tax, but I confess there is difficulty is the logical compromise on Daylight Saving. 2, prosperity and that can promote th Eo giate donne yned repel pier , NOs. (A meisonh "Wels: trom ; i rther development his “land of|no opposition that could be deemed > of its nose shoul- 7, in 1920 the penny-pinching taxes produced a rev- | 66 (UR supreme task is the resumption of our | ie ee ent tel worthy of the name. 4) World was discovered, greedily seized Words F; : 1 pat Shsrenrigr It wom a tent, _ “Snue of about $120,000,000, or less than 4 per cent. onward normal way.” —President Harding. 2 ROBERTS, | The only point that he tries tol vast tracts of virgin iand and main- ords From the Wise any ‘bear the deponent had ever > — wo ined the m e v e, of what the Congress just ended appropriated for thekien ¢ he Single Tax. land that belongs to all men” °"|end strength. Reading 49 to the mind what | Sid was ame an to, tine era i the of 1922. To the Editor of The Byening World Am [ not right in answering him| After the feudal system was abol- exercise is to the bod; into the e rart. : year 2. ‘s OT one of you can wish for himself a kindlier Does Mr. Daly know that, quite the that all men would Work on lund that |ished and the Innd was, distributed peibodighorts ba vw. Ag by However 1 , i {belongs to all men? ‘the former serfs, ccord= alth is preserved, cagne, se The 1920 receipts from these pennies amounted fate than I would give you if I wereomnipo- |C0B'"r¥ 10 te belie, that the single J At Dresent wo see that the land be- fog. to, F. Daly, no one would have! strengthened and deslotratca: se |) Bote een nny ues ; longs to a favored coterie. We fi ed because th ° ‘ ae ean sete ary fess than one-quarter the proposed appropriation | jnt”— Vice-President Marshall's Fareicell. an the economic foundation for our| that thia select clique has alwava|eiy of them. But I hardly think that) te other, virtue (which is nealth | {2".,the old veteran, | His memory i the navy which failed to pass yesterday. Government, an association of busi-|consisted of those who have not|Mr. Daly would try to substantiate} of the mind) is kept alive, che tallied the Munchies, 7 ee ness men comprising over 15,000 large| worked but who have lived on the|that fact. hae ener nd what were the Munchies? ‘aking such figures as these, the man or woman HE has failed concerns have urged the adoption of | fat of the land, who have gathered in| Our frend states that he Is igno-| ‘hed and confirmed,—Addison. Why. they were a tribe of white ho is pinched for a penny here and 2 the “cc Government has failed to take care of its | the Ralston-Nolan dill, which embod-|thelr unearned increment and for|rant of the single tax. Then the log- me 1 ter than Americans. $i y re insane and has the ies the principle of the single tax? whom all other men have toiled and |ical thing for him to do would be to fost people lose huppiness ay down yonder beyond well ask where the money is going. left their treatment to private | “Does Mr. Daly know that, because |labored. We discover that these |write to the Single Tax Party Head-| while chasing after it, for one ‘country. tea d 3 of our present system of land tenure, | privileged landlords are the repre-| quarters, No. 3% East 18th Street, and A fr The old veteran had mat @ man Tf Congress were to cut down the bills for future | "4 charitable institutions and to the State." —Dr. over 400,000,000 acres of land are ldié |entative deacendants ot those who |reccive information about it. Aner] came ates ean mtment ony | whe hadinot ony fein conn, PeE ne and unproductive because they are|were powerful and mighty in the|that he will be able to criticise it in- where but within himself. r hs, wt . and maintain other necessary taxes, woukin't | Thomas W. Salmon. held out of tise for speculation? Does|Dark ‘Ages, who later became the |telligently and we will be able to re- Sar eon ; At fad thasowack te be possible to do away with this -pinching? cae he not know that the only way to get|lords of the manors in the feudal|fute him accordingly. Let those who L. M. Noticli highly clvilized people, ' Ste other ots, 4 theae coat ui Fiseap to were oe oe lays: in co, Saree preven, wpe were Feeeoap ens, 2 the | do pot enoe what the single tax is Sell warrant. | Men of 1921 will laugh at these @ owners pf the land to use It and/deplorable abuses and “enclosures” | find out about it and see what their vel morris & mon ip ole yarns of near a cent — ; ue war taxes” | 66 7 FOUND the President-elect unpacking some |s0 be competid to omploy labor? |in the land tenure system all over |attitude then 1s. "Tl singed; ii! matched, ho ig | And silll_boleve in hnodads, the ly paying for future wars? ~ ‘ Does he not know that the majority | Europe at the end of the eighteenth | | GEORGE R. GEIGER. | © sackted.—H. W, Beecher Fordney tariff and the Master Mind + ~* trunks.” Elmer Dover farme’ tenants and they ‘century, and who, after iow jumbia University, Feb, 26, 1922, i : Q im petty crimes, Pe ryan ve ‘ ‘ eee ee Phe ie y @ } ? * a s Aa

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