The evening world. Newspaper, August 1, 1921, Page 16

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4 : \ ‘ | upon by those of Socialistic, Communistic The orld. } and Bolshevistic tendencies. o “The medical closed shop will not be ac | Shrastalinan 8% scene PrereEn. cepted by either the American profession 01 Published Daily Except Sunday by The Prom Publishing the thinking American public.” Company, Nos. 58 to 63 Park Row, Now York. { | } Colleyes and Universities Of New York By Appleton Street. ‘opyrit 1, by ‘The Pree Publighing + Wine New Fork Evening Would The Gaetan: weer THE New Kore Brening Wortd),, i RAGS PULT dani, 68 Sark Rew, Such comment merely obscures the real merit ot | 2. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 62 Park Ro Dr. Deaver’s case. | OR Nat deol emcees “The thinking American public” can readily see that a hospital rule limiting charges has nothing whatever to do with extremist social movements or the moot question of unionism in industry. The only effect of such comment is to take the NYTHING that savors of “going easy” in the | Curse off cuch words as “Communism” and “Bol- case of “Clubber” Tighe would be a serious shevism.” If the trustees of Johns Hopkins Hos- mistake for the police to make. | pital are social extremists or favor the closed shop, Policemen ought to stand together and protect | ™#ny others would find smal! opprobrium in suck euch other so long as the individual to be protected | ¢lassifications | is in the right. Police morale demands that the Dr. Deaver probably lost his temper and resortec force take care of its own—Init only so long as its |! Such comment as a substitute for other expressions own deserves care which could not be printed, and, naturally enough, fre MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. | Tac Associated Pres ty exetostrely entitled to the use fer repablicatict of ali news despatehes credited to & or not otherwise credited pape nd alt the local mews pablished herein, NO FAYOR FOR THE CLUBBER! eee No. 16—Pratt Institute Pratt Institute is the remars.oie {fruition of one man’s dream, [t owes jitx.existence to the struggle thai « | young man had to educate himse!t a @ practical way in an age when «il education was academic, That youoz man was Charles Pratt, who becene in time a successful manufacitce and one of the leading citizens of Brooklyn. He gave not only oi 5 wealth but also of his time « ‘energy to create hoo! wh young men and wom circumsti . If policemen go wrong, run amuck, become crimi- fais to cast any fight on the question of fee limitation Gee be ue buve the ch ‘ u ec he never had, nals, it is essential that the police proceed againsi Naira pera ee ed ee founned the criminals with absolute impartiality, OUR NEED OF CURIOSITY. as Pratt Institute, and the follv Policemen need confidence in each other. They aiso need the confidence of the public. Public resentment over Detective Tighe’s explott ts running high. A first effect was public resentment | October opened its classes twelve students. The enrolmen year is close to 4,000, and during thirty-three years since its esta! |ment more than 118,000 young jand young women have recci training there. URIOSITY, if we accept Mr. Edison’s view of the means of material progress, is 4 strong first aid to success. It is evidence of one’s interest in life, and so long and y iti iceme: j i ‘ wi 5 It was Mr. Pratt's aim—and in (1s an angry crowd of critics when two policemen | 4s jt continues active one goes about with the seeing atm the trustees have rigidly ucic arrested and very properly chubbed a prisoner in the | oy. and is capable of leaming. that the institute should reach help all classes of practical worh« both artists and artisans, and ( « its courses should be so conducted .s to give every student practical shi/ and definite training along some vie jlime of work, and, at the same time, reveal to him the possibilities for dc velopment, service and cuiture 9 fered by the most commonplace ta...5 The institute comprises = fur hools: (1) the school of @ne 1 Times Square section Friday evening. If the public gets the idea that policemen sympa- 4 thize with and defend a brutal clubber, there ‘s no telling when an angry mob may overpower a police- man doing his duty. Confederates of capture! crooks will try to use this feeling to rescue their tna full-page interview printed in The World of vecterday Mr. Edison made this point while claiming complete success for the plan of selection involving the use of his recently framed and much discussed questionnaire. Said the great inventor at his labora- tory in Orange + captured comrades. OP UH TLS mie GU SaUloWad, HIN ARG nevah | pplied arts, which provides: courses + 7 : e sl a iy y-seve: jin drawing, painting, commer ‘© = The opening acts leading toward the prosecution could be marked even ‘fair.’ Presently all |tustration, applied design an: ; of Tighe leave the impression that the police are applicants but thirty-eight were wiped away Bae, “GaDHtttONT Jewalrye Jalleues making it as easy as possible for “the Clubber.” Of these, thirty-two have been given jobs and smithing ond crafts, clay and ee If the police are wise they will change their attitude | Rye th Uareu Ue ncn micaue COBUthey have af hoveshold acionce and” aris, and prove there is no favoritism in the department. really made good. Thirty-two out of 718! jcourses in cooking, serving, dress Fi é hae . | reading these figures, we must bear in mind that scl) GeUL Lg bh fy io Atul Chet A policeman criminal should stand on the same “di ' tf F ing, aller aa work i ati aa e Fuis . si a re = househol dma i @) a «- plane as a civilian criminal. He shoukl be charged | the Evison desire was:not for answers to his ques ssiosl at aglenue ead” : | with the most serious offense which the evidence | tions but ror evidence that men had wished to know which includes courses chats hi seriou: s Cente ical and { warrants. He should be jailed. The prosecution the answers. he failure of 680-odd men who took should be as vigorous as the police can make it the test is set down as the failure of our educational i S aS xe Yf anything, the police should be more zealous in | SYStem. é such a case than in the ordinary routine of duty. “They (the men who fail) are our penalty for | For in the last analysis the might of the police force | ™king our schools dull. ing, machine i ctice and various o! and (4) a school of | r the training of libri’. is workers. In many i courses both duy and even: .3 lasses ure offered. A Site | All departments of the in ae rests on public approval and confidence. If this is | Nail is to be done; Mr. Edison does not HELL aoe Bloat aie Rai ara weniousie changed to disapproval and suspicion it will he had | t say. He points to what he finds to be the fact: Avenues, Brooklyn. Ther 1 for the police and also for the public. | That in this co mtry to-day “is far more opportunity main building and separate bu,!ai devoted to chemical labora the mechanica) and el tories. The tibrary i its own commodious building, ad serves not only the students of the nstitute but al - ency in the neigh vies Hh | than ability and that means bad things for RELIEF FOR | America.” HE S gen sig ten he d | Perhaps Mr. Edison’s basis of judgment, being | ss a A pig eras. tas id pan confined to his works, is as much too narrow as his emey in the oher, The way is ilfor Americantraliet for. | questionnaire was declared to be too diffuse. ; Cer- | Sie Wmetate lias co/dormtioe <a < ser acaias ‘ oat | tainly a good many industries other than his are | - Perio ia _|there is a thriving men’ wy children and invalids in famine areas of Russia. wee as \ | women's club, cach wit own his Hoover has assured the ean fe that going concems” with able staffs. i ° ows, Ppointed club house pre { funds are on hand forthe extension of the veiet work | Nevertheless, the high prices commanded by | From Evening World Readers UN COMM ON SENSE institute These clubs | and that it will start as soon as the Americans are expert Operators ct bie aisinesses nindicaleaanioy outside tue centres of ct { percentage development of mental and executive | Wheat king of a letter do you find most readable? fen’t it the en ‘ actually released. possibilities in the land | that gtoes you the worth of a thousand worde in a comple of hundred! By John Blake u Meanties i is to be hoped that Bolshevist sympa- » 7 ; ath eatedl There is fne mental exercise and a tot of satisfaction in trying (Qopsngh?, 1921, by Jobn Blain.) * < Frat How shall we keep interest in life more generally | H thizers at home and abroad will cease to criticise ; hee i : | #© Coy much in a few words, Take time to be brief. : was , . ime ‘ e inca cthiel Relies) Association’ andi the) Department of and lastingly alive in growing minds? How keep | — GO AROUND IF YOU CANNOT GO THROUGH. ete) State in their insist onthe: relate of the prise | Our youth tram reaching a point where it no longer |.) TRE wen cen esrer |men letters that display two-year old The object of going anywhere is getting there. | 88 s ence s 4 the Raitor of Vie Evening Wort inte! . th th fi g ‘ 2 P tuent schools ha : oners. it | wants to know, you know? | 1 think it would be well if the Heats COP eee Peru Ct a thelr, Ke ects eiricrtty, out of the way if you ean. The any oaeMer ata a4 . | ; x ; 5 f ; jorter the route the faster the progress ples Naren We have schools of memory, of concentration, of | Public fully understood that during! phey clamor a é at they 4 © progress. - - Such criticism indicates a total lack of understand- | i ; ; \the summer month we are haVINE gay mye TOT and ery for what they But don’t stop so long butting obstacles out of the ; ‘ | Secretarial ceportment, of office efficiency. |concerts at the Stadium, 188th Strect Cu Personal liberty," when they 3... that y, bject your: WHERE DID YOU GEi ing of public sentiment in America. Any attempt | Awisati venison inetructi fey atl afrordiigiay | seer a eee ieee ian. {Overlook the efforts of some to save ay that you subject yourself to unnecessary delays. WRG ¢ oolersied soher Io Resa Witte Mie, Harrisan | - That genius o instructive energy will afford us a ped Avustaraain pAvonues ot Ue BD” | their hea lthicromlinntcacealy polean It would have been possible, in building the first rail- THAT WOR . fe living and omnipresent School of Curiosity? [See 8 new known as alcohol. road over the Rocky Mountains, to climb the slope by wind- ig 1p! i M 3 Pi and other Americans were imprisoned would have | |Place every evening, including Sun-|" White arguing for “John Partly. ing ascents . 3) i } | days, y e ey eee Baer stirred up a how! of protest which would have been | eopanuees wines leer seater lear oe Gey (SEU, talk of the possibility of ; as engineers, however, preferred to tunnel in miny $ | ¥° Papier sata irresistible. | RHNECK NATURE, | e tN | Prohibiting chewing gum, meanwhile, places, thus saving distance and grades. beraa $0\ GRBBEA Le Een t matters not that Bolshevist philosophy may | (Brom: she Of Lauta) PoasDispatch.) lie area Ghia ue eaoele of course, grossly exaggerating the The tunnels os mpre at ag time, but they saved coal, 3] %0T4 fr Eva mora wa f gmk sala we “| _. The late Iitinois humorist, George Fitch, once made | are’ given in the Great Hal! of city|esning of the Eighteenth Amend-' $ and coal consumption lasted as long as the railroad did eae ae wg consider this sentiment an error. It existed and had | the suptie observation that it is the inveterate pref- | Colioxe. ment. Since the first road was built, millions of dollars have {| tat tro'lc fon Graensiine to be met by Mr. Hughes and Mr. Hoover. They | erence of a rain cloud to shy at a cornfield that it | PXervihing possible is done and no) The best way perhaps to illustrate $ been spent on it for more tunnels and mere eutofte letiattor ancee: cue nerronaok acted in the simple and practical way. Their offer | may be present at o ball game, Nevertheloss; base- |{ip to the highest Jet tho |Y Point in regard to abstinence is| Within the last fif 1 ne Lien Asana us > geems to have been met in similar spirit ball has survived with a thrift and boisterousness that | Cost of admission is very ‘moderate |= die case of @ dope tend who Hes across the Gres a Tepe emia omc recu mes ee Ell aG at SOU ey spirit. | (25 cents and 50 cents for most of|tinually eraves for nargotics (ditto ROS s s a © py ea Space re should be a rotuke to any faint-hearted who have | the seats), 0 that a large number of| for beer and whiskey with these anti« miles. It has already nearly repaid the millions of dollars 3! i been driven ingloriously from the field of municipal | people can ‘avail themselves of the | Votsteadera). When he is cured of | it cost by saving in coal \ opportunity to hear the very dest k : cl pnpiais sarcayarn 4 ; MUSIC AT THE STADIUM. opera with their summer scenery In a state of rapid | rer TY maratively. trifiag ox | his habit, he is eo thankful to the doc-|$ Yet there are still many places on this railroad where > | Reon uses the ; N another column Mr. Adolph Lewisohn com- | ¢¢tertoration. |pense In order to make this very |tor who made his present condition of | 3 it was impossible to go through, So the railroad went } frown upow aa ments on the concerts at the City Colleg: Nature is a roughneck. She loves to destroy, as | moderate entrance fee possible att jpormal possible he would do anything around, Saal 4 ye Ci re bee i present tine, when everything is ex-| tor him. : i ; Stadi she loves to create, She loves to dishearten as she | tensive, voluntary contributions are) ‘The same with soine of the Ameri-|, _—_‘[t_elimbed miles high rather than dig a grade tunne! $/ ,02e $0°2 “fo hid” f An increasing number of New Yorkers are attend- | solubility of stage makeups and fiddlestrings, With |twWeen the cost of producing the con-| liquor, but when it is taken away | ctreaely through Hhesbente ofthe mountains, : solubility of stage makeups and fddlestrings. | With |<ora'and me receipts from entrance] from them they tiaally get over thelr | t wound many curves whose straightening would have ic. spiri 0 . s Wee mucramin ee oe ase of selfishne: ‘ou will often come t in y : vhere $ | Teady-made from the Latin by vay | appreciate the public spirit of those who make UR | na gecone ast an if to OstABAlan TA corte aenenaanié Now York POUL LEWISOHN. | the man who still wante bis mip. Youl$ so. must make up SUE Baa ee Tae career unere of the Hatlan ee t the deficit resulting from the low admission charges. |- reguiarity, and then creep stealthily on an anraet | duly 28, [kro Se Rani. Gran ne Opal | 3 TER 0 3 sithe go ft pinaicaden oan The attendance this season is larger than ever | andience in the middle of the first, with her most | Profitearing: Bakers, \and leave it alone, Now isn’t it worth Canidae at nadid snide whiahiis r ——_—_—_—_ —_——- Ae : i : | To the Hiitor af The Bven ist Worl while to sacrifice that little drink to er them and decide which is cheapest in the long tefore. It should be even greater than it is. If the | capacious water basin full to the brim. She will Ne | “Your valuable paper. is to be life of a human being? run, | “Th v F »” Stadium were filled every evening the deficit would | I the bushes for a month while the strawberry crop | commended for its vigorous cam- fbition saved only one life, it Tunnel if it is possible, even if more expensive. But }) |] atsa act id be worth any probable discom- A , +. | burns up and while highbrows, patriots, philan- | paign, in having the pr probably be wiped out. The merit of the music | i -opists and acsthetes plan to explolt her graces ina |cream sodas, &c., reduced, so that do not tunnel if the work on the tunnel will not pay for 3 | By Albert P. Southwick . | y in the late war did the German itself. Coprrigé:, 1981, by the Prem . { Played should fill the great open-air auditorium. | pubtic park, and then, with a chuckle of fiendish |they aro no longer a luxury for tho show a lack of initiative—lack If you can go the direct way, go. If you can't, go }| ees Fete Watt nye ; | ae abl of pep? Why are murders daily com- ’ A ; WAGE eld ; pant, gp = a — | New York can show appreciation by occupying every | triumph, she will pounce upon and mock their awe- BIE ALHIME BOO Ba mitted? Why are there so many in.|% around, Bear in mind always that the object is to arrive }| ara aed A oes seat. Every programme is well worth while. some efforts, are ather commeds tien, Mains: Mere | sane? Why were the jails crowded?|$ at where you arc going. [erie Seah pe RTane-guOUt New. Yor | City is so hallowed by Revol {Memories as Van Cortlandt Pa The closing weeks, under the’ leadership of the Mobile nature: But aeifrtvolows asieheila in her |2o7 i> te which are to be had allot? soe ee ae cise dali he { 1 In war, an objective is usually determined at the front popular conductor, Victor Herbert, should attract | ongulém: she i equally iokiein Her taste tan ane’ lori @ “comnamntively) exerhitancltemph iia take) paison) waulonit ou mn of an army, If that fails the more tedious and expensive was on Vault Hill, to the north g tertainment and may abandon her gentle persecution | . nm ould be ¢, rs stop him? Liquor is slow, torturing f goi f is e r 2 | ‘ y : ae fncreasing throngs. In hot weather there is no more | with the same abruptness with which she began it. en eae es teeny pollen, 16 was BocUl tame We sronoed met Hot Bain erateeng ne cath a paneedy eee iW “eae Adee string af ea A statement too general, I will specify |! BEPH J. SPATIC se ‘ : ‘ is res Wi eral disse °o Job or the negro evangelist who, after spending |my mind, and that is BREAD, Your life is a fight of some kind, always. You ar. |Spuyten Duyvil Creek, whils the ai) o1 . three years building a missionary ark that immedi. | Why. do the bakers still charge 10 A Harsh Judgment. | | WHY “BOLSHEVISTIC”? ately flopped over for lack of ballast when launched, | Cone Gr wheat, Seon naad wien, the | Fo Wis Palit of The looming World . . ' rye and all other This is the answer to “Broke” R. JOHN B. DEAVER of Philadelphia seems | cheerily explained that the Lord was but testing his |Mours has dropped con in| the State bonus ae A fal price in the last year? True, the loat | straight through if it is possible, Vault Hill derived its nav to have been most unfortunate in the form of | f!th. ; isa little larger, but still not inahe| The reason that the bonus is not But don't waste your life trying to go through when 3 ancient burial place of the Vanity ins erfticism of the action taken by Johns Hopkins Municipal opera, like the United States, may be | proportion that flour can be bought | coming along is because the political it would be easier and wiser to go around, jlandts, [t was in this vault } ‘ : ate : wettest just before the drought. Let us hope the | fr at the present time gratters are taking lessons from a records of the City of Hospital, Baltimore, in limiting operation fees ad | combating an enemy which may be human nature or merely | Erepen and Amocrican (ATnies < natu You want to overcome it and go on your way. Go $j way to Philadelphia. : | eee loves to inspire. She has no respect for the delicate | made to make up the difference be-|can people. They have been used to ew York wera correspondence school in mathema- { hidden by Augustus Van Cortland, rrr | cently demon- thai he could 8 for 5 opera ts too good to be washed away. | st ‘ Aen 3 ae baker to $1,000. ufford to sell his br ‘ *, and s i ake a conifo: At the outset it must be admitted that fhe oppo- {Aoi still make 6 coms fics on “How to divide the money eben City Cloris, ween Machattan was jong themselves and still have with F, B, H. bowever, when he/streets on the east side have been, and there preserved unt! { Jof profit, But the profiteering bak me left for the veterans.” wants to restrict children from go-| safeguarded against motorists, that| restored, MA nents of fee limitation have an excellent case. It | CUGE, OVERS, [Suid net see: into: it And: be was! <a> MARNIE” |Ipa on the gutters, | ‘6, in mame only. What would you! rors f 4 7, cing | 6 ET all tenants get together and forma solid, | 24 ised uneler dire throat to desis Children in the stre Natumlly, 1 dont moan te my | think of & driver who detiberetely| “Mother's Day” ia on the nevi appeals to popular opinion. ‘The idea of charging | a a | | trom selling the nickel loaf | 1 eta, that ghildren be allowed to play on| throws down a sign restricting him|Sunday in May. On May ¥, 1914, len “ i ” “ ; | powerful organization to fight for their in- I think that every in this} %o rt # The Beenie World |streets like Broadway or Fifth Ave-{from trespassing the street and calm. | ident Wilson, following she agoption uF not “all the traffic will bear’ but “according to | terests."—Capt. Harry El ity would readily with| 1 wish to refer to the letter signed | nue, but there are certain sections |ly continuing his journey? a resolution by Congress. eae ability to pay” naturally appeals to the great ma- | shea J api 4 your paper in th “PR. HA" which tells (in pretty {°f the, city which are far over-| It is quite true that children ex-|prociamation inviting "the people af * Start a camp: Jority not in position to pay high fees. | bakers. rowded. In these streets the popu-| pose themselves to uselons danger as|the United States to display tet 667QHERE was no reasoning with him (Detective Brooklyn, iy lation is so dense that there is no| regards machines and trucks, but if|at thei: he whieh F. B. H. feels for the mob of|room to walk on the sidewalk, let|the driver will, instead of spanking Cape strong language) of the contempt other suitably a fees, ; : places,” on the following Sunday vitarlan vieewc Hy r ‘ people who beat Into tneensibility a}alone to play. Consider the children | children who in this wa, a public +} Prom a purely huma ewe pint there | Tighe) with words, and I ran into a garage Poteon.” truck driver who had just killed alof the east side. Why not, instead | displeasure, turn them ae ne Pe iene, eapenien. Ak Aa avs at much to be said in favor of the variable fee. | and herrowsed the Bigsest monkey wrench they kod aa | To's Rites of Toe Prscng Weld ix-year-old infant, of prohibiting children from playing| parents, Iam sure that the lesson | try.” ak ae F ie eens sein: | non ‘There appear unfailingly im every|. It Was absolutely wrong of the /on the street, restrict the motorists | will be far more effective tee But . ys: | most effectice.” —Father William Duffy of Holy Cross aiion of ha Beant World mob of cowards to manhandle a man | from traversing some of these places} [ hope that the east side will tn| Mosaic gold is the common name .*” rane RS ak \ : edition ¢ he Evening World trom! who had spunk enough to leave hisluniess it ts absolutely necessary? [the future be protected agains, tut! ino nny In, a een unfortunat t w je solzer Chure! Gisgruntied, self styled “hard working truck after the accident, 1 disagree Quite true @ smal) sumber of! ao. AD AUN ALA Mute of biGuiwede Of onercury. ue

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