The evening world. Newspaper, July 7, 1921, Page 20

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arr Che evening ¢ Caloris, ESTABLISHED RY 7 thed Dally Company, » RALPH PULITZER, Preside J, ANGUS SHAW, Treasuror JOSEPH .PULITAE goeret AssootareD P 4 to the use for republication otherwise credited lm this paper MEMIFER OF THE Mee Associated Prew ls exe OF all news clesnatches ervdiied fo Wt oF not nd also the local news pubjsned herein THE RIGHT MAN TO TACKLE IT. EXPERIENCE any guide, the | ternity would be justified in laying long odds against a successful solution of the Irish problem. Time and again Irish affairs have shown promise only to go from bad to worse as statesmen and poli- ticians disagreed on terty betting tra- $ But whatever the odds may have been a week | i ago, they have been reduced. The change tor the better comes from the part wich Jan Smuts is | ; playing. | In Africa, in the war, at the Peace Conterence y and in Africa again, Jan Smuts has shown himselt | + a man of liberal views and marked persuasive tf ability, a statesman of the first rank, Without any t fuss and feathers the South African Premier has | ' set about doing what he can to bring about a set- tlement and peace in Ireland. His entry into the muddle may not bring the desired results, but it : il makes peace more probable, | Ve He is one figure of stout integrity and moral | Al conviction. He is one man in the British Empire | fi i deserving of the confidence of both the Irish and the English. in his venture. The whole world will wish hjm well deals on an empty stomach,” evening oO. P campa en re Mungry “You can't have i Ambassador Herrick said This helps to explain the G of 1920. ‘The party managers w patronage and perquisites, last | MUNICIPAL IMPROVEMENT PROVIDES JOBS FOR UNEMPLOYED. 2W BRITAIN, Conn., is making an experi | ment in tax collection and unemployment re- | liet. The city provides work for unemployed prop- erty owners. Wages are applied to tax bills. It is further proposed to provide work for un- employed rentpayers, the city to turn over the wages to the creditor landlords. This New Britain experiment is a step in advance. It entails a conscious effort by the municipality to provide work on pubke improvements in times of industrial depression. This is a practice which social economists have recommended, , but with only meagre success. The wisdom of making public improvements in times of industrial depression is obvious. But such a policy involves planning and preparation not otter present in municipal administrations. ; . : eo paises ats : There a fine mental exercise and a lot of sntisfaction in trying BHOINTERE st ED OR YOU'LL NEVER BE Ehespe tier agaruaee Hoglands New York has r ly had a lesson in the way | ratify the Versailles Treaty without reservations. to cay much in a few words. Take time to be brief. INTERESTING, London for a visit to Norma in whic) municipal improvements ought not to be But if President Harding fails to stand by the Uninteresting people are always uninterested peopie. If Peas AN “ Dra eran art ire ENV Ein a (orc eared : ai § Conand : made. A year ago, when building costs were at the | aioe part of the “existing treaty” and does not [ree tutioru: wie Hoang Wort ‘ you cannot interest yourself you cannot interest others. And § | much as he f apnea peak and workers were busy, the Hylan Adminis- binit il he Senate: ie will. put k if If it required the vices of only )of the Bight onth ir chances of welling along in this world depend pretty ——>———— . + : $ ee Settle, J sel rt ove ne rot c i) ; tration was determined to rush construction of a | SHAME SH Bike put hanselt ON fone audit company engaged by the} ONer when thousands of largely in your ability to interest others. WHERE DID YOU GET i 5 ; : rect) s the weake. 5 jable racillat- °| Anti-Saloui ague to col . ds Hi Frei Rat rari i on } new Court House which wasn’t particularly neces- | ras the weakest, most variable and vacillat ee a n Resrrnea ee we na bo for world and American fr The most interesting people ie w ba are those who THAT WORD ) 1 sary at the moment. ing Chief Executive that ever sacrificed national |parade and the number @ectified by | Ey ay a doing hing ett ? asin a sally ‘ 2 Ng AON : . aan . a that company was 14022, how i y cessfully do an important thing: unless he is enthusiastica 47—MEANDER. { To-day when building costs have declined and | consisteney and honor through tear of a few noisy, audit companies wotld it take to [against on shoul 3 interested in it, He ean, if he has such an interest, communi ne word "meander" carries a story,” many are out of work the same Administration is | narrow-minded obstructionists in his party, tionista were they allowed to vote on| Hague have rut Why not 2 cate at least a part of it to Ale rs. In that way’he can attract 3|of olden times. it is derived ang not building schools, which are imperatively needed. 1 inistration is it? that issue next election? 1 was not} knock out the “and Why 3 their attention and usually excite their admiration and tru straight line from the classic wr! inks ’ Whose Administration is it? de and noither were sev-|not begin now? s can we Ct 1 Columt id ue ! di 1 $ | —the works of Virgil and of the Greck If Hylan had planned some schools last year and er J.C. B. | defend true American rights, Ameri- rristophe olumbus would never have Pan ses poets, including Homer. Th ca diti 1 ci ne / « fis. nerics 0 “4 | s 8, fo, t more schools whenever employment conditions Br oklyn) July 5 jean fi foie me pens America had he not become tremendously interested in the eae i oncciat matter, d nied; and even aGourel Housé whe Whos averiate |e Bs hd belief that the world was round and that it would be possible, §|UMtvia called in ancient warranted, and even a Court House when unem- SAYS THE DAIRYMAN: tothe Hal laening Works ee tne ee aac by circumnavigating it, to find the rich Indies that lay on the rie wiser cline ployment became acute, it would have heen evi- One Congressman stated that one trap prominence. Sewers th Gilimaide: | 4 course that its name came to be ap- fa he milk 16 in Nav Oe hia felioe seaia ar oted eke ements need attention, public lied to @ similar circuitous path fa dence of competence and foresi Instead we SON the milk that is drunk in New ¥ Be bina ani a ' fal you eer See EL erations. aided res He succeeded in infecting rich people and finally the Bee ae eer ae The dune ae ye 4 sot imedale: 4 ‘ity comes from cows.” Prohibition could drink more in one See era ee Ure iti eae Tenis . : is Lo;ae bse RUM AR Helm ne have had a programme of meddle and muddle, a _S ty comes from co diy (han. Heo woulel den Anca gear | ER eae (nll (gucen of Spain with this interest, She supplied him with the country boy who is strolling aimlessly inal 4 ere thought-provoke: * ) funds t ke his first Fe ith many turnings and twistings perfect example of how municipal improvement Here is a thought-provoker, and he Voted against it. Also, Mt is "i commend the meddlers und 7 o m ake : his. firs vorag © red Oey A |through a leafy lane is said to be , id * » it? The s ant i said that a ve stocked NS’ these activitles, if ine m ut his job was not done wait h this. e had constantly $| doing what the river Macandrus ha: ‘ jot to proceed. Did ‘vou know it? The statement is from an |S 30, Pataagal % RRHTRND Ce sia # ; ee ought not to proce a ‘ ae ‘ cellar with $20,000. worth of “booge” work off their pent-u4 enthusias to keep his crew interested in his plans during many long $ [deen doing for these many centuries, The result is that to-day New York has not | advertisement of the Dairymen’s League Co-opera- [before voting for Proibidien. Now [am neither Rg man nor ke ofianil var uualaned He had ; k He Is sald to be “meandoring, { ! | ay as ht L : ian Mr. on appealing ‘sport fan? but weeks o ing over uncharted seas. He had even to make his quaint word 18 another iflus- enough ‘Shoolhouses and many of the structures | tive Association, Inc. {ies Uierpeoe eateries Rand: eis ani Lie buahee iheir interest triumph over their fears, and a man has to be §/ tration of the brotherhood of men and Daay) ae e dairyme sean tak. jaccept this law, It is ne wonder thi ser to tine up ne continuity of the current of time used for schools are unsafe and unsanitary. ; Homay seem that the dairymen have been tak- |Poithition tea joke. Huw much are dally seok interested indeed when he can accomplish such a miracle as Ae Anwa doer noe Mandate pune t | ing the comic sheets too seriously. Most city dwell- | money was handed pyar Cor the pass America Organizatir 3 iat. hrough the ages = fae y sage of this foot law? And who pald/ combat them | . . vere . . AG . ers know that the story of the little boy who pre- Jit? An investigation ought to dis-|~ New York, July 4, 1 If you are tremendously interested in what you are doing In the ‘continued clash between Senate and ferred his milk from a bottle and not from a cow | close some very intere news. aalinllereiation sou can invariably arouse the interest of others in it. House over the final shape of the Naval Appro- Sonnets * , New Vor GUNG HOGG T Wroame minaret tte ea {$ When you have done that you have won them, as every : priation Bill, the Borah disarmament amend- 1s an exaggerauion. . : s = What happened to the 200,000 peo- sman will tell you. ’ ment remains safe and sure. ‘There are still But this advertisement is something more than A Moral Victory. | ple who were to have marched What we call personality is the quality of arousing in By Albert P. Southwick some popular demands that Congress hears a statement of elementary platitudes. 10 is evi ee eee ae een tee ampione | Hue ARTE Vrohibition Paral on July § terest in others, The dull, apathetic, listless chap, who pays Comrisht. 1921, by the Pram Pu straight, dence of the co-operative effort of the milk pro- | snip has been hgld at Jersey City, at- | will explain. that there ire many $ no attention to his surroundings and hay no thought but get nila Sctenianiememiasie % ‘ ‘ ltended by represc io a cu ore thousands of people who oppos » day’ pasies ible i OILY MUDDLE ducers. It ought to stimulate something of the sort | tended by. represcniative American | stim gt didnot mare. Why |$ jes Snesuet Mis day's work in the easiest possible fashion $1 cortig metyn, a Dutch morchant f A i 5 Of cons fe avcla |i aur Ren alt ie morals) aidn't they? It ix either because they | 1 nee DS. a made the third attempt ‘ound 4 in the thoughts of the consumers. It is a clear-cut |e the world are none the worse for Gid not have the strengths of thelr At work or at play he is just an average man, neither to $|cetilement on. Staten Islan ; BSPATCH of two war vessels to Tampico | effort to go over the heads of the middlemen and | it. it is true that among the ninety | convictions | oF because they wer |} he eultivated nor avoided—a man without personality and }| ‘me from Antwerp : . f . , ousand people present © Go és d that they migh recornizes sonality ave. ‘de ' lends. pertinence to the consideration of oil | their toll-taking methods. ork, Mayors, noblemen, women of{in the line and 4 Sut as|$ without interest. Milcriee frame aireatenee al ne atitts sis i ich closes the advertisement; |uistinction, Ie lighta—and who | drinkers . Mhadob hunter whorforan inatantia tine eoade 640, authorizing him to take” | jaxes and tariffs. This is the note which closes the advertisement: | Move" “who' coupled the anipission fee | Not only did New York make a phe ; ean SES CCUG ULC UCTS UE parce ierite ae NN hor t War vessels are needed in Tampico, it is said, “When the milk farmer and the milk drinker |*\th desire. ‘They were s wonderfully | bad showing, but Jersey City, with]$ prospective employer that he is interested in what he wants 3] into a coloni On his jae ¢ ft : ‘4 lerderly low They were representa-|a population of 294,000, only turned ty do will get the job if it is there. The man who wants it hither m February, 1541, 0) | because of threatening labor troubles which may | know each other @ little better, there will be less \tive people of many countries. Tne] out 4,000 marehers, beh merely because it will keep him out of the poorh 1] 3) in which hes iied Was captured. hy i 7" 8 * n-thous” Jerse: ‘ity cume Baltimore > : . e oorhouse i rf ia capt eU ¥ affect American interests. ‘The labor troubles in | misunderstanding about this very necessary and |“1-amzholer-than-thous” say they |Jorsey Clty § oe en wine ‘oven get ib unless (here daa leave ahortare A ne MaeN | the “Dunkinkers." toxins all he had op im " . | tle the 7 * ere fo! 8 , # : | rd and, after “sad experiences,” turn are caused by a shutdown of American oil | valuatle food. Ri aie Tne Powe, Retwann Demneey re ee ee BEA saan fram this It ought to be casy to become interested in this world, $| reached his native shores in oe . shipments. The American producers claim they That is another statement even more provoca- | Dempsey which peraits him to retain | demonstration? Why. only on ° for it is filled with tremendously interesting things. Pick out Cornelis rele made a aeoaii ak cannot afford to ship oil because of the export tax | {ive of thought than the first, Menahinn ere (wie ae tee ooue a with prombition. people are satisfed} 3 one of them, or a dozen, and study them. The study will de- 3| temps and embarked With tne famue Mexico tevies. ‘They claim this action is not a even greater victory scored JAMES V. BVERARD. velop your interest and your efforts will, if they are sincere $| D4 gome Bods for trad aa ) s It is conservative to state that 95] New York, July 5, 1921 enough, interest you. Then you can interest others—pe rhaps ianhone hoycott. per cent, of the people of the world \ millions of others—and in that eve il 1 "), Fouching anos a A . | WINNE ro either favorable to or indifferent Irish tm the Revolation, 4 iat event you will have no further eo, Tenching. The tax, according to figures given by the Times A WINNER, areca hele Time. for chums | Te thy Faitor of The Reening World: need of lying awake nights to wonder what is to become $| {2mm on Aug 20. Lidl. yesterday, amounts to 4314 cents a barrel on crude | It is idle for anybody to gainsay, and ‘1 pio abipe that five per cent directly} A great deal has re ay appeared) § of vou, Tiere RAN ely ee Da 4 dato : ae igh Hab th . “tp dt i oppose 1 n other words, a great} in the press concerning the signers ; i entire Staten oil, Either this is prohibitive or else the producers would not be wisdom for Secretary Hughes Dae or aanaadcdle atavenGa Fo eee area | & aemeemeenennreennerennnreneernnrnrrnnnrnnncnnnas nd, excepting the bouwerie of i in the Tampico field are engaged in economic con- i ieee WRAP the seat hame of the Nats Te ae ee ntole dat nc he tecacked {who were Irishmen, Among them , ie = . . ee = | es Treaty, part and parcel as it Is o! Gu and tora bid nore or a} were Charlgs Carr of Carroliton,| was Amer mac le went | aten Island waa again ~ihabe spiracy against Mexico, ivetlengue ch NalGhe) Gow ut laniealGrad Ne nd : reaulty § Sho war of trish descent, his grand:| Ina speech in Parliament in 177% you Pe rE A HES UNG TGICO REIh ate ‘ aie e Tarif er Q - . fat viguanurae empsey- | father was bor and tthew | Lord Chatham said, “Ireland is with mentiey Med in. bis tet Congress would levy a tariff of 35 cents a barrel is not and for many years cannot be looked world's great ina era handful] born in treland onG ne pee h pat Hy ah Love i A s ealots who style themselves “re-| born in trelandsAGeorge ne Americ And Lord Mountic lavelte on imports of crude oil. if 4314 cents is prohibitive, upon with anything but abhorrence by thi Beet One Blt eft mnblves res | Oe nayivania was born in ireland ment said “You lost America tian claim ¢ catinetton eariainiy ine, th nik 5s | ereat mass of the people of the United Jersey, the ayor of |Gvo ud bern in’ Dublin nd." ‘ sl deed is preserved { i certainly a combined tax of 4314 plus 35 cents, dina : : eat ue aie | irctund; Hdward Rutledge of South! tn 4776 Ambrose Borle, confident a neinber ‘uty at Albany, Noy. or 7834 cents, would be prohibitive. The American BtatetmeNnw York: Her en ee Carolina, was bern in) Connat of the British Cabinet in t < ine saalane eres tt ” | Fo. i ; velieved asininity u hat the world majority re ond y, wrote: “Great nunvbor « cemy were ndians were always 4 market would be completely ,protected” and. the For rcs y \ Boralieved “wails: She SHIR CUNGY LES MORN Ory Anal HO ane Rnettah ‘hiatontan Hig) Bal uly Irleh, are in ell Staten Teland, In 166. thee eed = . ' +, | above deserves a prize. days r aay Rs tt erican Reve vel avnny Vh minisstoned of. lit Michael Pauw; : r ; yw “ iiatad aacrapidiva de of the ‘rete «CL prefer the {hook oA an Ther % 1 ortly ae American oil supply would be exhausted as rapidly ‘to pick an awarding committees we nee lank See rdatosmert''y uThoteriatio:| (Vol Uh. page 180), 91 In Maren, Jaa, Sir Henr mer Tish bloat in the Reve da part to David Peterse as possible, | no further than some of the most eminen) lead pad ee toriatic |» Sen edun ae sth vine in Amnenion. wiate. y HURT ATS ho. PHILLIS, Iie Pal sana ve a Cannelen American companies not interested in Mexican | era of the Republican Party (welt, as tbat assumed by the same lot when jace W lipole wiete that “ail @jund document to Lendoms “The emi- Brooklyn, July 5, 1921, liustly, in 1879, to Gov, Lovelace, | ; i | , t is is a a = aii = aan ee eR ee ee rene em ermmt nnn THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1921, — Oil fields want a lariff of $1 a barrel. no object petitive They have he Mexican tax which hinders com- the jon to But y hot want either importations. i big international an export tax or vould boostiipr decrease and profits comp import tax the demand decline. > Here we have the mukings of a pretty contest in It will bear watching. But how in the sf name of “protection” can a Republican Ad- histration object to a Mexican export tax which will keep oil out of this country tition with home production ? result which Mr. Fordney hope: tarifl pill. fy i) es until would because would Congress and out of compe- That is precisely the to attain wiih his WHOSE ADMINISTRATION? RRECONCILABLES or should President Harding have to have no irreconcilables wh¥ nybody make up his mind for him about resubmitting the Vers Treaty to the United States Senate? In his first message to Congress the President de- clared, as plainly as words could put it, his convie- illes tion that the wiser course would seem to be to en- gage, with reservations, “under the existing treaty.” Secretary Hughes may, as David Lawrence be- lieves, be urging the President that, since the peace resolution claims rights for the United States under the armistice and the Treaty of Versailles, it would be worse than inconsistent for the United States to to that refuse become in any degree a party trea But why should the President need such urging? He has himself been more explicit than Mr. Hughes in declaring the peace resolution insufficient ant frankly adding that “it would be idle to declare for peace with the Central Powers on the assumption that these alone would be adequate.” | separate treaties of The President cannot refuse to resubmit the ex- isting treaty without reversing himself. | Moreover, the reasons for being all things to all fictions are not as strong now as they were when the paramount Republican purpose was to hold those factions together long enough to win the election. If Pres message about engaging under the existing treaty now is the time to prove it and at the same time demons! ether this is his Adininistration or the Administration of a handful of rancorous Sen- I nt Harding meant what he said in his e ators who would belittle their country for all time rather than seem to approve anything in) which Woodrow Wilson ever had so mudh as a finger. Nobody expects the Senate as now constituted to The Guardian Angel vse 1 rte New York Evening Wort), lon ail By John C Cassel The Pioneers of Progress By Svetozar Tonjoroff Coveriate. Prem Publishing IV—THE MAN WHO MADE tal THE ENGLISH A NATION, lam the Norman his+ credit for that Iding of the To Duke Wil tory must accord the at achievement, the warring. peoples of Britain into @ na- tion, I w fore the “Conquer= off Pavensey, Mngland, in seething nd racial For centuries t jchor the south st of Britain suuldron of racid combinations. al rivalti KB Roman, waned ishman) as the power of t under Germanic ase Atigle, or Saxon, the reo ons blood+ tion ceeded empire saults, In his turn 1 quailed bt slaughts of the Dane Amid the confusion and shed a great factor in eivil the greatest colonizing and pioneers ing power in history —was slowly emerging out of the smoke and wel- ( had sues fle ter, What was needed wis a Cibo t hand that could build enduring instt- tutions to give char permane ne and unity to the effervescent Duke William had the | He had inherited it from a long series of fighting and a ering ances- | | tors whose origin stock came from }the forests and the flords of tl North, In the passage rations this ock had become partly lrench: ‘ untest between |the pe on either side of the English nel It a ‘ | somethin the stren: Roman- mstit become a factor in the |; the perical } most conquer Willian axed. his elaim to a th that did yt belong to him on lat bas the semblance of le He man tained that the throne sed him hy Edward the ad been proms Conte When the throne, upon the ¢ of Edward, went to Harold, Duke Will- am appeared off Paven the throne dele era battle wor lof both contes ded by the hand of « Norman arrow mht eye, one of the gr to Luke of history went Wil On the evening after the b Jcamped on the spot where Hur made his last with h carls, It is eluted by chronicler that ueror “Sate down to eat among the dead.” With the Rattle of Hastings William started the processes that eventually formed the language now spoken by | the greatest number of peopl, ov | the largest catent of terctiory, int tory, He save peace and the strength of steel to a race that was destined to dominate an empire on which the sun From Evening VVorld Readers |” By: J What kind of a letter do you find most readable? Isn't it the one that gives you the worth of a thousand words in a couple of hundred? “UNCOMMON SENSE ohn Blake by John Blake) never sets, He gave law customs and tradi- tions that form the warp of our own institutions, The final | William's theory \needed across the found in the fact and conclusive that hh Channel that, after the Tattle of Hi w

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