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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, poneeonemeenr 1921, ’ ' PE CBlorld, ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Pudidiod Datiy Kxcopt Sunday by The Prem Publishing Company. Nos. 6% to 63 Park Row, New Tork RALPH PULITZER, Premident, ¢3 Park Row. J, ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Now, SQSEPH PULIFER Jr., Socretary, 63 Park Row MEMIAN OF THE ASSOCLATCD PRESS ‘The Avsoctated Prem ts exclusively entities to the use fer republication, 8 cli news deapatohee credited to It or not otherwise credited te thls peggy and also the local mews pubilshed berein | have been meeting and negotiating on terms which are rationally possible. Economics has stepped in where politi¢s failed Granting German good faith—which has been questionable—it has been highly improbable that Germany could pay in gold anything like the sum imposed by the recent ultimatum of the Allies Ger- many has to pay in goods or not at all. \f French statesmen have finally come to a realiza tion of this fact it means that they will now per- wo TR Me New York The Pioneers of Progress Svetocear Tonjoroff XXXHL—THE MAN WHO TRIED, | TO MAKE INDIA A NATION. | Phe rule of the Moguls in India is @ record of crimes. ‘Yo this chronicle ‘ ! i fof violence, persecution and (ntolers ' “THE CLUBBER” MUST GO. foree educate the people of France to the necessity ance under the impetus of Mosler f . of such a course. zea) there is 4 conspicuous exceplfoa. } S charges multiply against “Clubber” Tighe In such a common understanding of the ineseap. | |That exception is the ba!f-cea'ury f ini y York crystallize " ; " interval between 1536 and 4 ' the opinion of New York crystallizes | able facts resis the only hope for real peace along prising the reign of Akbar, the third t lighe must go—not only out of the Police De | 410 pine | Saath Bn weiee partment but also to j | | Akbar ie an Arable word ual means N ‘ Ss Te ‘ection tor its Police De- | = i “grea ‘The third Mogul imperor TdH, Needy & pond of "Ue Mew” Ane | ENRICO CARUSO | [debris eapartes k partment. The city is proud of “The Finest.” Ami | a . ‘ | lego gaa tne the city wants “The Finest” kept as fine as may be HE most wonderful tenor voice of this genera- | ny RIGA Ine Guestaiment or fWaM : i s ion is st revel ae ed ¢ incest The cop on the comer is a good sort. He is a tion is suilled torever yee BONG tel ; 2 | good friend. He is worth knowing. Because this Whether Curtiso was the greatest of all tenors RI AAA” AME BRUSHES Se is true in ninety-nine cases out oF a hundred it be: We teave it to the musically” erudite to dispute over. jstrove to make India a veils Hes i ici blic pp 4 i f ‘ ¥ oqual riguts to the Hing hooves police officials and public prosecutors (9 One thing is ceriain: In the last twenty years no ee make short shrift of criminals in the tanks foman voice in the {wo hemispheres has delighted sue of the rematknole x Tighe has had “pull” in other years i - Aber cOScenpiEs bol Whethe Tighe eee pul more ears oF been more witely celebrated and eign: iT telativély unimportant. What is important now Is ’ that he shall receive prompt and adequate pun’ ment for his misdeeds last Thursday. The Police Department must not try to shield “The Clubber.” A CONFESSION FOR PROFITEERS. 66] AM faced by two facts of business,” says the proprietor of a chain of candy stores. “One is that for several years we have been getting nearly 300 per cent. on what are called luxuries. That has been the profit. It is undeniable.” And forthwith, this dealer in sweets announces a sweeping reduction of 50 per cent. in his prices. If such a confession is good for the soul of the candy mar. it will be just as good for the soul of the meat man, the vegetable man, the fruit man the eggs-and-butter man—the whole company of those who serve their fellows with supplies ai a price. In profiteering there is no distinction between sellers of luxuries and sellers of necessaries, between men who practise extortion through ice-cream sodas and landlords who apply the gouge by raising rents. The public will wait with visible and audible im- patience to hear the avowal of the candy man echoed and to see the example of the candy man followed by dealers in goods more essential than is confectionery to the daily life. If there is question as to who shall most becom- ingly set the pace of reduced prices on necessaries, we suggest the retail butcher man, whose charges show little or no effect, thus far, of the fall in the wholesale price of meats. acclaimed. As an operatic artist it is easy to say that Caruso ( had no. the intellectualtty and finish of Jean de Reszke, who siands nearest to him in (he memories of opera lovers now living. Gvanting this, it is the more remarkabie that the exuberant Malian with his lack of polite education and his temperament of the happy peasant never- | theless won through by sheer artistic instinct to high success in widely different and exacting opera roles. | As the boisicrous Canio, in the earlier part of Leoneavallo’s “Pagliacci,” Caruso was Caruso, | Yel he made an impressive Rhadames in ‘“Aida;” | his Rodolfo in “La Boheme” was romantic and j poetic; his Des Grieux in “Manon” had both grace | and elegance. ; We speak, of course, of his acting. His voice | adapted itself to whatever role he sang with the | mastery of its own superb natural quality, flexi- bility and perfect technique. Caruso proved himself all the greater artist in realizing his limitations. The spirituality of a Lohengrin, the sublimated passion of a Tristan were not for him, Neither coukd Jean de Reszke have come within a thousand miles of Canuso’s We were not quite right in saying Caruso’s wnice is silenced. The reproduction of that particular voice by mechanical means is one of our modem wonders, From Evening World Readers He abolished the compulsory sures, the vale which condemned Winda widows to be burned alive on the pyre@ that devoured the bodies of taeir husbands, and permitted them to re {marry if they wished. He forbade the see into siavery of prisoners captured in wa He forbade polygamy. although he himself maintained a weil populaced harem He wdm.tied Hindus to the highest oMfices of the state on a footing of exact equality with Mohammedaas He enunciated the broad dictum, unique in the history of Mohamimeds anism: “Persecution, after all, defeats i own ends; it obliges men to conceit , but produces flo successful wars. But the ni Freeman pays the following ( me and the spirit ¢ were sabdued oniy tc them to 4 far better sway they had known, congue: be vecord cruelty, pillage and exploitati ia But a vividly which the aliziiened : owing the Britieh introduced in Inia wo centuries later—-the Mogul petors reverted to their old intole: practices, and the European conquct- ors found in India not a united na- tion but a faction grievousty mis- Mling # great majority Akbar's works died with he man who tried to | the \burdens and brighten the lives of a population of 200,000,000 people, habiting « eign = cfon® him; hten but in- territory of more than seis ik in- {1,300,000 . ,uare miles, deserves to be * That distinctly lower rates on meat are possible ‘al "2 bie musical Ae vocal or in ranked among the world's pioneere of ‘ and will be profitable in all shops is proved by their | STumental, has been so superbly recorded and re- UNCOMMON SENSE be establishment in a few shops produced througi: Edison’s famous invention. If i } Every man complains of taxes. The weakness | the talking machine had preserved no other voice | vue Fe eee ee ee ee ae a hanieah By John Blake ‘Where New Yorkers é ery mi Mp iains) ne ** | than Caruso's it would still be one of the modern | ‘et ofvee you the vrorth of a thousand words in a coupie of hundred? h | of the new Administration at Washington fies in marvels | Thera is fne mental exercise and a lot of sctiafaction ir trying opyrtsht, 1971, by Jokn Blake) 1 Tread. its thus far ineffective facing—in Con: the posi- ‘ mason te say mech ina few words. Take time to be brief. A up ae \ j ts thus ing—in Congress the pos No echo, however, can ever replace the vibrating | CEs SLOWING DOWN. le CHERRY STREET. t tive disregard—of the Nation-wide demand for the | jeatity that combi ed the rich cl f cimaian Rew one UROIeE fompuy, ve ; | Cherry Street in its day was one of ; hat oy pee reality mbined the rich clearness of a trumpet, |...) A Wee ine bonis to. becused AEnuters base is always the foe of progress. Human nature 18 not 3! cre most aristocratic streets in Lower | economy titat means reduced asses a the smoothness of velvet and a poignancy that | Have read with interest the letters|bonus, But it didn't take a syndi- $ disposed to work when it doesn’t need to work. |New York. At the time, however, tt |' Yet there ts no tax more burdensome—and more | cite the hea i i published in y paper regarding !cate of New York bankers long to Often the writer or the painter who makes a competence WAS pretty far up from what was con- { F - lutched the heart of the listener like a hand. sell $15,000,000 in bonds for the pe y oppressive to people whose burden-bearing capacity TI w ly Ca i 7. the action of a business firm in di8- Soidiere’ bonus in Michigan. reaches the stage called slowing down, | stlered Lower New York in those days” fi 1s Iimited—than that witich is levied in overcharges | ;, here was only one Caruso. New York Was, |couraging bobbed hair among its ALSO BROKE. People say of him, looking at his paintings or reading | It led up to Cherry Hill, 0 named be- ; ‘ imi 7 tha A nO} 4 indeed, fortunate that so much of the vest of that |female empioyees. | agree that such New York, July 26. his books? z © $) cause on the hil overlooking the sur- across store counters. glorious voice is a part of its musical hi action was ill-advised and uncalied } ie "ET « A wont rounding country was the cherry or- st ical history. _ The New Aleazai He was a one-picture or a one-book man. He isn’t as bf ey : ¢ The candy man’s confession fs tardy. “Several ae eee ene ten tbe. TAKY 4 Wi on the ferry. come out } good as he used to be.” Cpe ee steal eh os i i i i he : aweyer A d see Jerr: adn . : elancey, Mayor e city, years” is a long time to be consciously reaping 300 FORD AND THE BARCE CANAL. hleve that your female tenders are, itm baemaon the Job with « bright | This is true of so many men with whose work you are 3) tnore, and the character of the neigh- wi per cent. But in its utterance, at last, it is en- foeaeren! 7 wrong sen ines So Ke ot Jasiance ieee ent SE ea cneee cities te figulliae het to name them is BBNECOAIRET went borhood may be judged from that fact, } couraging. EW YORK STATE may congratulate itself - an oaeive ae diserim: aie the tall, nee in hem orer in pour atin 8 jouw no’ see a Aaa | for in that dee day e be a Delancey p a » & © dari en ure subjected to just such asin- Where I'm running the new Alcazar. icularly prominent among them are half a dozen playwrights was in the parlance of this day going 0 Let the ranks multiply rapidly of retailers ready | ° ina Henry Ford has decided to try bundling |ine and arbitrary. reeulatic We mock at the law by the wide open! 3 \ ho ones ind great epatatlon Pees rome, It was dotted with fine resi- y| New Yi ‘ i 7 erator i door, 1 . - ies i A z : ‘i } to make manifest each the discovery that he has a eee ali ea and New York | For example, wy an oper Com: There's’ nothing to bide and noth-| heir case proves the contention we are making in this Pee eae obi eh Sera aca at | j ! . articularly hot day last to book, ; 13 article, i 4 heart! peas, on) 8 perry dite ry 4 a flush with it. The st: } t + |gummer, 1 was told to keep my coat So come on the ferry, eat, drink and| er Se ee a . e street, whilg t! : HE most amazing tum in the trial of the Chi- | C™ed only a minute fraction of the freight that | were ailowen ty reinove thelr coats TUTE, corms “| words and action; third, a detailed knowledge of stage tech, $!siways was considered’ wie venta 4 3 " ‘, while at work, or work without | Dp of giuss, ‘ ' ; b 4 : alw: was co! ered wi politics b cago “Black Sox” is the report that some of might be transported at low freight cost. Wearing theif coats, (And this when /, ‘There's pictures adorning the walls: 13 nique which can only be learned by working hard at re- andl 4 Judging by th st, it ble to it was 90 in the shade!) m here day and night to gre : 1 1 dvi h hani f the business. At the time of the signing of ths { the indicted players are planning a SNES PY IG Bashy i. easona SUD OSS WOUNDED WAK VETERAN delight) ; hearsals and studying the mechanics of the business. ‘Declaration of Independence John ‘ RAR . % that railroad opposition accounts for part of the fail- New York, July #0, 192 SIBK Out aur enters: Ti anewer That acquired, plays must be constructed scene by scene }$| Hancock lived there in No. 5, and fy tour of exhibition games if the court fails to convict | i canal as a freight carrer” Bat more is ‘ there's tgttl or your snerry, tor|$ and line by line, always with infinite patience and attention $ Stat from his home in Cherry Street \ them of the charges. a tless dh i lack of initi tive: fh f ree till ater oe ecina Waedl | cocktails a cherry, lo detail, ‘ticipate im the fight for freedom front % It should be clear to every fan that the tefense | “ubtless due to a lack of inittative on the part of |™\'sm in favor of United States At-| There's lemons and limes to suit The successful playwright makes a great deal of money, 4 |fngland. | Hancock was certain no { has offered no substantial testimony to clear the shippers. Few firms have traffie enough to war- |toroey Hayward's statement of the here's art in iho shaker, with a|$ often a competence from a single play. lyor independence, Dinougn’ Heaney f : fone rant special equipment.’ And fewer have been pre- {7#th inst. on prison terms for soda dash of Jamaica, ‘ With success in his grasp he is indisposed to do the 3 hie influential neighburs were not. 4 layers of ‘throwing’ gamés. The more important fountain tax evaders. It is a sur-| And time is no factor, I'm never : 4 | Later on another citizen who bossed a Play pared to take the risk. prise to me to see how easily the in haste, laborious work that goes with successful playwrighting. He $| Now York and died in prison for loot : part of the argument by attorneys for the players If Henry Ford will show the wav and make the |(verament officials can be fooled. UN thrill you and fll you, I'll piease slows down, He puts less effort into his next play, He leaves (ing the municipality hod his bes rf A i i x q . ) onder, for there is no sys- you ‘und e yOu, . Fi 7 ji }ning politically while living in No, ‘ was devoted to showing thst even if the charges | os eat oethaps others will eam f his tem attached to their business. di with tne ‘neat’ and best in the|$ 0 others matters of detail he ought to attend to himself. Cherry Stree! This was Hill Tweed. ’ were true the defendants had not committed a crime | XP 1», pelnap ts will kam from BIS €X- jigs, It is high time that they got » land; He listens to flattery, reads press boosts, and thinks he $!He was a long time after Hancock, &} a alsin Perience and follow his example. If Ford can make | wise, this “kind of trickery has Let me show you my tricks and the} i. 4. good as he can be. |but the street was still a good one. ¥ punishable under the Illinois statutes. . 4 . been golng on since Une war started, magic 1 mix, , a : toh thi ‘Tweed ran with the Fire Department c. nder a lewal technicality does no , | Such a service pay, regular commercial transportation {ana not only in soda fountains but| At your service and yours to com- And in a year or two you cease to hear of him. Of the district wae ae Guiet ond, Gace ; Escape under a legal alty Goes not mean | iil be encouraged (ol arake the {n-all forms of taxation, Our Gov- mand ‘All men slow down if they do not continne to speed uj: $ it am asset in polities, . ’ acauittal before the bar of sportsmanship. concerns wi encourage make venture. ernment officials know it when they | Have a meal or a munch, or @ fine it is a Yule of life (At No. 17 Cherry Street lived Samuel ; n ; Teer) Recently a specially constructed “train” of grain | leave these business mento their own |, Broudway lunch, iP ane ge ba 1 ; hat he did GC. Reid, who designed the American f Under such circumstances a “barnstorming” trip ’ Ogee ie honesty, Kew business men in these! ‘There's a snack in the kitchen and William Gilbert wrote better plays at sixty that he did. § flag as ir is to-day. It wasn't until « g would be worse than foolish. It would be actually | Pres towed by an “engine” tug made the long | whole United States can truthfully 9.620" yme and there's reason |$ at thirty, But he never slowed down. If you are ever suc § thm ii an rhea’ another, “Rech | ae ” | trin from Dututh to New York without the expense |? iusiness ‘was earned honestly.” anghners Jaw isa treavon, 1% cessful, as we hope devoutly that you will be, keep on into Cherry Hill that the character ot OU. . Rage aioner: Ke : ; And wit against wit mus' found. A cucdel G , ili the district changed. Tener sup. Baseball fans have neither forgiven nor forgotten | % transferring the cargo en route. New York will | ,,Haty Mmoncy has ton’ miny & Man | cites tne fineat of wine I eerve|$ being successful, Don't slow up. The ability to be successful} ret ne old ‘residences and” they as fans have giv hor forgotten await detailed figures of expenses for this venture, |by sending them to their ruin. Iam| while you dine, is rare. You ought not deprive the world of what you can do ire there to-day—some of them not the black crime against the game which these men Th ibitit is t it Perh 2 hi * lindeed mortified at the way our There's, barrels of ale and barrels|$ if you keep on trying. very good tenements, Bt every new . * Ne SSH 1es iS. 5 S a ficials ¢ . AIL th ye~ : i an hen son old-timer . perpetrated in the 1919 series. The first bamstorm- aire inspired ‘Fe PITS ernaps thls ax Pi ee ie ellecied if they ronly | There's plenty of ice, enough to five {used to more The last onc of nove tk 5 id Ford. used their heads on a simple system. suffice, 2° | Was Charley ite, the famous ing game, wherever played, would be likely to re The: most eurpdsine feature of ha Ford vaguppose it's the old etary of “pol. | I'm easy to find, for I'm anchored i referee, the dean of men in his bo-t sult in a storm with the players as the centre of the Oot /SUIBORNE :SeAnure € Pord an | sic. Uf you're in right you don’t! right here. tion in somewhat the same manner, ‘ ness. He was born on Cherry New York, July 28, 1921, | $30,000,000,000 as indemnity. No ences ox the foes of Sati, Saas A Coaeal | doubt Germany would have agreed , [/ x coding to paimietey, ie 1c. Z : FACING F, ane New ork: The & Deler, ‘To the Falter j'o a delay, espectatly after Secretary | By Albert P. Southwick fe iedientes trivoliens ip panos ACTS. | It has always been a transportation axiom that 0 see eines ee oy — FX | President Harding appears befor: [Melee aamuces Shen ep eins | dence, and if mpatalate, dramut | carals were show as compared to the railroads, that In regard to the ex soldier mening | the Sonate and appeals to that body . talent ~~ despatches to The World yesterday promise much for the peaceful rehabilitation of Europe. One from Berlin tells us of preparations Ger- many is making to pay indemnity to France in com- nouncemeni is that the manufacturer expects to beat the existing freight time schedules between Detroit canal boats were practical only for freight which did | not require speedy delivery, | pay, but collect from the public. J. M himeelf as World on July 2% Broke and out of work. our bonus. Surely it is due us, and i 7 | i9en, eae to delay the bonus, declaring that a/ would have to wait several |say I am in the same fix as he is,| bonus would increase the cost-ofyiv- | before we would be in a position to T can't see! 1 | why they are delaying in giving us| HPRMAN BORSIG JR. | New York, July 29, 191. ing and would be disastrous in other respects, Also Secretary of the id delegation having just presented | him with Germany's demand for say | “That’s a Fact” | Treasury to be such that Germany | years | pay, | “Speaking of indemnities, do you |know that Germany has agreed to 4 | Hl John Quincy Adams, sixth President of the United States, was born at Braintree, Maas, on July 11, 1787, and | Ha and died there. ee 6 The spire of the Cathedrat of Notvs Dame, Parls, France, is 244 fect in height, while that of the Cathedral o¢ If Ford can beat the rail schedule, does he pro- died at Washington, Feb, 23, 1848, In Canterbury, Englan 285 ‘ ne nd, is 35 feet high Hy 5 i pow that times are so hard our| Treasury Mellon prepares a etale-| raise and pay to the Allies an amount ‘ihe election of 18. the ‘A medities produced in Germany. pose to improve canal-boat equipment, or are the ponus would surely come in nice to! ment with a lot of figures on it to ital to 40 per cent, of its estimated | TQ Cm The te Saye pan, the lower part of Van Cortiandt The other from Paris is to the effect that France | railroads falling behind their speed records of other ™Any of us that are up against It at) show that the Treasury is unable to RAUOnsl ett sn atinn co the /Adama 84; Witllam ©. Crawford, 41,, Parade Ground, still stande they hoe ; * | ‘ 7 | pay out any money to veterans. maria. bas refuscd & ve its former ‘and Hen rT ere toric mansion erected ‘ has eed s y | years? Why is it that they must fight this | PAY world, has refused to give i 3 m pry Ola) Ae there was not in 1748 by ae e agreed to accept half its reparation payments | oa ; i anlae wor nat sent {tht Xn court? Aa "proke" anya. the| I wonder what our esteemed Presi. soldicrs an amount equal 19, 1-7 Sf any majority, the election was dvcided | Frederick Ven Cortlandt, who mar ran commodities. many ¢a hi = al xperis people voted tor it; fe majori’ 0 jone in case wy a, Gen 3 pH, or te q t » the sentati: 1 Pt y. er of the anw © ye i ii is s ‘ BY SEES NE TESUIS 0 mye MED) | Perea eee athe LasWiction voter ey weud pave ie A at ae re bad probably would have tad to pay tn by th Sours of Representatives, and | cestor of Chie? Justice Jay. He refers : Here is real hope for economic rehabilitation and wil! be important for the State, ¢ and the ‘for it; the Governor signed {t, and, 10st the nates ng its the event our boys bad fallen down | Adams was chosen op the first ballot. to the building tn Kis will, witee ‘npg sous Away af as the fol Ho 1t4n ret Bieomen duly bly Lamhe Boe ecmund Gages os Ne bend wo Bouse whieh 4 am avoul Ansaluge = : —— . mecquenaseusnenteras é ts castes i til] they must fight in cour: about it, ! presume, to be consistent lie would ‘Thase stranen reconstruction, French and German spokesmen | P. ee York, Ome report Was the cave addressed the German deiege: - ieatnaaiiietill