The evening world. Newspaper, August 16, 1921, Page 18

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, — clit i di 16, 1921, or could have invoked the arbitration clause in its | contracts with the operators. The new Shipping Board took over the a iness | Stories Told by | The Great Teacher Gr-r—r—r ve wnat By John Cassel LeTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITARY of the old Shipping Board as a goin | Pudi Dally Wael Bunday by The Prose Publishing : ; PP ji at Le nor ag Temnes + ir i math ets bans Se Rese wa, obligated b = RH AW ‘Treasurer, 68 Park Row No administrative branch of the Government is tidy AE seat it OL a Sh supérior to law, even if it is headed by an adver THE RICH MAN AND LAZARUS. The story of the Rich Man and Lazarus—Luke xyi, 19-31—deals not with theology but with the higher ethics. Nothing is said in the story “bout heaven or hell, as those terms are diagnosed in the ancient creeds MEMIEN OF THE ASSOCLATED PRESS. ing agent from Chicago. ‘The Assoclaed Prone te excitatmely entimen to the ase for repabileation c news Cesnatohes credited to tt or mot ornerwise ereuited in paper and also the local newe publishea herein. The plain facts are that the attempted seizure ot the vessels by the agents of the Shipping Board \ " a ‘awless sort of proceeding. The best intentions TRADING TERMS? in the world, the most intense zeal on the part of I what tooks like an Irish impasse the wor Mr. Lasker amd his associates, would not make only hope that the offer made by Lloyd © violation of contract either right or lawful an! the reply by De Valera are in the nat The wiole Controversy is in the hands ot the ar | the contracts made af | in pores President, 63 Park Row. | | | Dives did not finatly land in endless Punisument or Lazarus in endtess ‘bliss. The Great talking ‘of principles, not of places; of cond tions that were fair, and of other rer w trading terms subject to modification and come courts mow—as it should have been in the first conditions that were foul—here in promise. instanee. Government business practices should set | nas earthly saenere | ‘ ‘ ; as ‘ fas he greatest o anthropists, Analysis of the two inain statements, and asre a high standard of honesty and probity for othe: whose supreme passion has well been garing for the moment Lloyd George’s most recent business. The methods of business piracy v hich ould give basis for such a hope. De Valera a ndoned—though wrongly—in private b sine tor example, does not flatly refuse some connee! have no plac? in the conduct of such an organization “A certain treaty-free asse as the Shipping Board. ish commonwealth group, with a partial League of Nations, we would have CRIME AND THE MOTOR CAR. been ready to recommend.” if fed (hat 7 4 . = aa r 3 { i eC TOURPs On the other hand, the six stipulations 1 Ce see ROMS no fet of Manhattan and the Bronx alone within six Lloyd George would seein subject to rev rea ter tia Nee ae for example the reservation in regard to pr ited just past Uiilt: have been stolen 2,491 auto duties or other ictions upon the flow of t motiles, valued at $2,434,000. port trade and comineree. ‘i It is evident from these figures that the motor te, now in full swing, conceivable that practical emcees hot see and insist that no pos new class et specialists in crime. ; ¢ frorty Irldy tari and trade Horse thieves in the good old days neither mult. i ever balance the absolute logs from plied nor prospered as have the stealers of horseless a continuation of hostilitle 2 attendant iso es. We read that less than half of the siole: eyrization of trade ave been recovered, : i Vhere are points at which the two: state dlong with a particular brand of thieves, ments could be modified and differences compro- omaiile has brought us the speed muanive, the mused. [¢ is to be honed that as the Dail meets fool driver and the reck ess driver, offenders the y calm counsel wifl prevail and that we shai’ number of whose victims in, the street or on the over the De Valera reply to be a statement of | OPer road multiplies on a startling scale. i the extreme pos . Moreover, the motor car has been developed into | Hovd George's final rejoinder is unfortunate but | 4 most elfective getaway aid to gangs of hold-up | not entirely unexpected. The British Premier was | Me" Who: ade salve lees Hilger tight plice as regards the Silesian tangle, Be. | &°. the exploits of the most daring bandits o* { fore his note was published, observers in Pagis hai cartier periods. | cast a possible effort to “save his face” by a YSN MIA Mie HLTA cll Add Wnsle ele: Wi | i automobile there are, to be sure, incalculable sounis | | { called “the intercession for human- 7 ity,” the Master's soul was harrowed by the spectacle that everywhere pre jsented itself to him in the world t» which He came. It was a world of glaring extremes when it came to human fortune Social inequality, prodigious wealth on the one hand, and squalid poverts on the other, stall-fed idleness » starving soul, were never so consp: uous before, have never been so con |spicuous since. | If you would know ali about root of social conditions that Jes looked upon, read Dr. John Lord “Old Roman World” and you will tind 1 bunched and jaid before you in a single view. And gazing upon it you will realize as you never di be fore just WHY the Great Teacher toit them the story of Dives and Lazarus. This iniquitous inequality in human condition, he told them, is wrong and cannot endure. There ought to be « change, and there will be a ¢ Dives and Lazarus are the names of conditions that are unnatural, unjust, infamous, and in the good time ‘come such inequality will be impos~ «sible. ‘The mournful, heartbreaking oo trast between grinding poverty and pampered affluence, some with so much that they know not what to do with it, and others with scarcely enough to keep “soul and body to~ gether,” is not in any sense necessary. \It is as needless as it is wicked. It results not from a necessity in alse ciation with the Briti 13 ananiclbicasastiaiiasiiin dnd res produced an enurely ri [the nature of things, but from ethic! economy, false government, a false view of the hu man family and of the Spirit that should dominate its members in their rctioy toward one anot In a word, the existe nonsters of satiety as Div miracles of want and misery as Lag arus, is caused nothing in tl world Ad-blooded Thiman ( turn to the Irish question. for good. would indeed be supreme tragedy . A were io be reflected in new knots binding The moto: car has worked miracles in trade and to the chariot of renewed civil war. tlopment, in promoting acquaintance batween in this case {he British Parliament has 4 diny to wiecly separated parts of the Republic, in relieving | intervene. far rural sections from the burdens of loneliness Before the ce is brok 1e people of boir n Isolation Me ; once were theirs . Ireland and Englmd should have an opportunity to Few of man’s inventions have proved theniselves register opinion at the polls. \ referendum ih free ade sefuiness and in social value more com. land and an election in England’ are in order, The pletely than have our motor cars. on the t of those who have the But we have abundant evidence of how littl: PEA CCH ID NS FAILS issue is too great for solution by politicians alone i ; ‘ ae = Z : chi th nto generosity, weight the good aspects of material things carry, in $ and the tnditf t the calculations of single-minded zealots of ratorm, | From ve § of others Into an active it the Silesian » of sucit und such in hey must and w I ly disappear 1 he the baseball pennant race aii hone abuse of those things. | What kind of a letter do you find most readable? Isn't it the one B John Blak brew recipes are to men as conversational We have iward that there still are peopls who | ‘Mat @ivesyou the worth of a thousand words in a couple of hundred? Y Oe : There is fine mental exercise and a lot of satisfaction in tryitt il always be ir 8 Coprrighe, 1921, vy Bia subjects so is the pending tength of skirts 1. the aw al railways in general when a cow is ket on Paris says “long,” but there is an encouraging Those who see in the motor car only a contri: ance chorus of dissent among women who have enjoyes — for slaughter and Satanism are mi ad and keep What litle haw | have clipped close, by using a clipper, PORTUN?!Y shall have leavened and Watch him for a few minutes and then decide if vou reduce w to the p: lid nothing, mellowed mings ing ther op- ing rates and en ety ; : : s | to aay much in a few words. Take time to be brief ILL TEMPER H skirt-wearing half of the population. a single track. if as . ; i ki i ” ubtless ¢ F ! ti . | An Advantas. nereasing t your temper is ill euPe it. While it is being cured key tae H Whether skirts are to be ‘long’ or onk Doubtless there are persons whose attitude toward tay ac laine wes : aes: Mfestimate ~ it ind ik : i ; i ” ; 7 . ed Bact | : 5 nd each istimate 1 indoors like any other case of illness fe q “longer” is an absorbing question these days whea the unhuny and, according to the genera! opine | Tm answer to RR sut barber | member fell over 5 It ; Beem are bopinitne to think fall oe t on, nec ry automobile is of tha fal rices, 1 wish to suy like him, L got Ss to it, are accustomed to fly into a violent at ef rage in ; e and ; ‘ 1 are 4 ng to think of fa ess an € t sam e | I used to go to the ba GaTnne anal the . public carefully note the exhibition made by some other mar Nena 4 winter suits, gert order jx ly for a hair cut and Ringe WAH schorhns cer b ough the app agar en, $ Gost me 90 cents. I bald | Sonne ue o has the same failing. the principle ot BQUALITY OF OV. H eeiik minutes’ work, Now I use my. do-anythine bacause’ they. woul waut to make the same kind of a spectacle of yourself. iy : doi ning, because the 1 u ects c ourself, vankind. 4 a ie ‘ being ablatto walk es ortunits razor every two weeks, clip my hair| Vig ee y ; : peal t ‘ea new-found joys of being able to walk or dane p ae ts as gcod, if not better, and am not an- |’ nt A a RAE ie Ml temper is not only unnecessary but actually hurt?) | 37 Sue mister MG i ce 2 hy, in these days o je eas anipul n ¢ o} b, aarber's chattc ave a oe cee oY a f “ run ives and with grace and comfort. Ni in these days of the easy manipulation, of |neyed by a barbers chatter, Ih bet} ugh and should be repealed, | $ to the man who possesses il. \ ir is seandalousty ig [but what is worse, the Board c tive will to keep the job, is there no toon |shop in two “Longer” will be better than “long.” Ina the leg ears and always | Violent anger breeds poisons in the system. It ruins di es pei ie mahonth ip met atation merehiitt neat, Get te men, f comparative is a better guide than either the py. ing, sey ng agitation for a constitutional these iplratee mimethele ot | j Anaivions whe and coll Nes gestion, and may, if persisted in, lead to apoplexy ee ree : lative. It is th Iden mean fetewee | ment barring the gasoline wagon once and for al agra 201 i porebelng she annual aa} | a A oe * : or the superlati t is the golden nean | ate, ee 7g 08 ga é | } ig mn mn and Now Yoru Aug 14) aries of skilled meahanics in th city’s | Recently the writer saw an important looking fat map Ten-Minute Studies the too short styles of the past year and the ank’s me from the list of things to be built and bartered ae BORE OA TA at Big mala ce Caeoe I) Wuies;a shot ona wolf mat h hi Renters of the “before the wat! andioh tha free? _ Renin These Days. aon) cu he pet diem meals of the g pill a golf course through his owl clumsiness. f N Y hk . rs of the “before the war” era. and |-ro se manor of The Brenne called prevailing rate of wages of | The man immediately flew into a rage and blamed his of New York City There is no particular need for a feminine declara- {2m your issuc of the 8th inst, Mr.) ia sidilod mechanics. OI enka, ra ce ding besi ' i ene: Hen ra feminine decl [stewart Browne wishes t% vindicate |8%,skilled mechanics, === | § caddie, who was standing beside him, for his blundtriug Government tion of independence from Parisian style dictation INDIANS-THEN AND Now, profiteering landlords, and in trying! and wisely economical City’ Govern- | $ stroke. 4 s Paris s ji e right directi ie af ‘to do offers Its to the public and until the city em- - i ——— oe fr ar Price Ay tho right areatlon ape weban ED ne a Woriausers|de) as well ‘ns to tho preas who have the| plos prohibited from voting At When the caddy quietly insisted that he was not re 3! when Paris says “long,” American women ought to e American Indian of to-day is far different from | courage to expose landlords’ usury-—| city elections, or, better still, unti sponsible the man ordered him back to the caddy house and By Willis Brooks Hawkins. Bete ercardion’ andi declare for nethedetermninatin the American Indian of fifty-odd years ago. Then |for it is nothing else. nants pay directly 10 the city one- P oe ae ‘ nt dd e elfxlete i most of them were what Is termed “blanket” Ieélena, Is it fair and honest to a n in alf or all of the realty taxes. The later came in to demand his dismissal This is the cighty-fifth article of 4 | e EX RRBnBa (oni trol per cent. to 50 budget is increasing annually by 4 . . crivs defining 2 duties af the | Today the real blanket Indian is a rarity and only cents and even more in many case a RONDAE ORD CH AIT oi DBian Fortunately for the man a friend so ridiculed his action }| Simstretive ant inca, (ne over the 192 ents On new lcase: a a] . population, and T en- s ieee er 5 dons ¢ GOOD POLICE WORK. | found on some of the reservations. He is a relic of [user the 1920-21 5 | ioe in ponnistion, and enciis tliat he withdrew the domand andi to-day he blaines himeclf $end boards of tle New York pin . days gone forever, and sooner or later such will prac- |*'\ive yearn ago I rented an apart- years from now. Republicans, for his mistakes. . | Government, © words of condemnation are too strong tor | tleally cease to exist, say those who are familiar with |ment for $41.65, Oe ea eet eoaitet Bnias Only those who give way to an 1 hi feel Board of Water Suppl nm i do a pa: ced to $57. his same all alike. S se g ay to anger do such spectacularly $| upply olicemen who tum criminal and club citi | Indian life today, For instance, the crops raised dur- | Xi" advanced jo for. | Tle | same f from chol Peat NRE CAB AHPERR RIG HV ss3lra: magyar! ished tn zens ithout provocation. This applies whether ing the fiscal year ending June 20, 1920 (the last avail- |any improvements, mind you, for $120. economize? he tax mone; iis composed of commi: the bullies are‘on duty or off able data), in Oklahoma and South Dakota by Indians ak Stig Rane aye th fhe) dhelre., The ee RAG They are infuriated first at their own stupidity and appointed by the Mayor, : See Oe Ot aM amounted in each instance to over $1,000,000, while |honest (2) landionl is asking. $140 to] New York, Aug. 12, 1921 then, fearing that some one will laugh at their awkwardness, }|°'iRally charged with the duty But the public should have an equal appreciation | the total value of Indian crops from all sources {new tenants, vent their rage at all who are about ther pelosting, And developing (an 6ddls aaa of good work done by police officials in running | amounted to $37,000,000 for the same period, hoe WReeRe ins Lee SE OTE lon: hey cet whether gece ck iy ; Nional supply of water for the city vi club citi: ake c in | In Oklahoma, the Dakotas and Nebraska the Indjans 1 into two, three and four fo tion it a ‘ 7 serve, which is the contempt or rom the four watersheds of tha down the clubbers when citizens make complaint. SD wae he mnt aked Mayor who is ter|% Tidicule of all who see them. Esopus, Schoharie, Rondout and who farm live in homes in some instances superior, Inspector Cahalani iS ve hb dilligen > mm! The above are a fe’ Fr 8." : Catskill Creeke he C. in ope fe tt z rae . eg ere Se" | as to comforts and conveniences, to the average homes |* unples of OER oay RPE ree eee te eeu Ml temper is well named, for the temper that is ill 13 ${tainn ey Se Bais is search for the patrolmen who participated in | of the white farmers of their vicinity. Especially are has Mr Browne to say 9 this? more, the control the suffering from a dangerous malady—a malady which de done. - i o 5 T D & - ie predicts lower rents for ewspap yeepul” have 2 the Polo Grounds | clubbing last week, and he de- | they fond of large, roomy barns for their live stock. |monts’renting. from $2,000 to. $20,000, the vovee : stroys the judgment and weakens the intellect, The development of Esopus Crevit serves all the public commendation due any police- | Up in Thurston County, where the Omahas and Winne- |How about the respectable working kefeller Foundation, for in- Avoid exhibitions of temp ia A has been completed and turned over *, a adi bago: » i man or the clerk re ving a salary ll powerful, id through ¢ er as you wou void small 2 man who does his duty under disagreeable circum: m live, there is on the farm of an Omaha Indian |O7"fom ‘$35 to $50 por week? Must | its stions, business and. social, nox, If vou(can't cure your ts hf ayoid amal oF SreraHOR to the Pepertmen, of stances. No patrolman enjoys the duty of gettin one of the largest barns in the State. Many have, to |he keep his wife and child in bathing| controls practically the entire metro- ! mper in a few days give it a ater Supply, Gas and Electricity, noes.) jo) duty of getting | marked degree, discarded “scrub” live stock and [euits and feed them on bread and|politan press, and any Mayor who is|$ long and protracted treatment. But keep it in the privaey of {224 Preliminary work in the Scho: a fellow member of the force into trouble. breed only the best obtainable Weror 6p ay idle pomkela OF EO Ok BARE ADR AMOTyEne 18 TAPS aur howe pending recovery, A me harle watershed ts well along. na a % profiteering landlords may be filled? | again it’ good and hard. The ¢ ‘ sails As for the two police bullies who were attending For the fiscal year, according to official reports, the {Under these conditions would Mr. ure employed is ambition. ‘The | It is not a pleasant thing to show uae AS MHRR remerscl OR Deore ¢ Ind of h Browne advise a man to marry? Will kept dangling before '& to show to your friends and at 3|Cree& Js the main impounding rese:~ th: game, the case seems clear. If any one igher indians of Oklahoma, about 16,000 in number, had tn- L | Hage: z ? ir, its wat comes aggregating 39 millions of dollars; in North the Legislature stand for such con- 0 eng a the Victim, and it} does not gain you anything but derision, which is not in the voir, its water surface of thirtee.s square miles being able, when filleq, to supply New York's average daily ee consumption of nearly 700,000,000 eserannnnnnemnonnmnrnnnnnnnet | calico tor more tian’ sik. menthe, Kensico reservoir, north of White ‘astle Willia P | Its remains are stilt lear visible apace Of 38,000,000,000 aeflons, What still exists of the ‘ Iso the Hill View equalizing reser+ tends from the fort to th voir, with @ capacity of 900,000,008 up” saves them from immedi ismi: : aor P . immediate dismissal and | pisces 9,000 received more than 1% millions; in Utah | 2overy landlord offering apartmenta| tine of our recent Mayora) the wife of|f least enviable, summary punishment, the public will have good | more than 11,000 received nearly 24% millions, and in {{2."eM! should be made to Mayor happens to be a_ social | di ions is on . books. The court should then decide | climber the tusk is easy indeed reason to demand the fullest explanations. South Dakota 22,000 received about 41-3 millions, The jon a fair rental for his house. Our present Mayor was immune to total income of the race that year was $72,696,431 I am commencing to have some|all these blandishments, and conse- *f . “d pant ta for the t quentl when they cannot use him Bince then the incomes have materially increased, |” a kOTIIEIL CONS they abuse him ve NOT AN EXPLANATION. | About 60,000 Indians in the country are engaged in | New York, Aus. 1, to sho HAIRMAN LASKER'S vitriolic attack on the | f™ins. Phe Ctey's Finn “That sq Fact’ By Albert P. Southwick him up as incom. | pigeaneate ches try to undermine him—an_ old. trick, | et ‘ é 4 So the American Indian is forging ahead as are the | To tie Faitor of j |] | pital tree li ia : United States Mail Steamship Company leaves whiaa “Mut taelsisn fromthe Clanket Indian co ite | Wid bine Ma ‘ eer: ante to. th Prime Ruining Co, | | nthe pas at | Se oae Aa te Bllrer: bas ‘ram the country as much in the dark as ever regarding | etvitized Indian was a long stride, What the next ntty |city'® equandermaniac expenditurest — The t designation of Castle | capacity of 400,000,000 gations, fhe attempted selzure of the ships operated by the | years will bring forth along the line of Indian educa. |PNEtH Hoard of Estimate member is The “Bulgarian atrocities" were in| Wilit » November, 1819,| A the various ‘developments ‘976 was ho Turkish War com-! ayia Cyprus, on the coast Ny completed and turned over to the Ary Water Departinent, the labora and one of the greateat| importance of the Bonrd of Water sh'pping company, tion is a sealed book, yet if the same average of up. jor Hiylan and Comptroller Craig “9 th two em bi ho have sho j If all that Chalrman Lasker alleges agains! the ; Duildine of character and industry ts maintained as | oiapicions of economy. | ndlord ¢ Hs, the ation, et al, a few of the ler| ‘The Rus |menced in 18’ a ts ly are lessened, though in} during the past fifty years, there ts no reason why the || Why blame Mayor Hylan for the|clal s+ : eu actors, died on Jan. 30, 1779, | Ste ee ae clal group who are looking to ewjof Asia Minor, was first occupied earlier days it wan t 0 cntlaw the there was jeri rOUNG ON | ynétans cannot compete in most ways, fifty years “prevailing rate of wage” law? For | York for easy money by the English the next year, leone ae s ‘ . no. | MPortant boards ry) Bre cat the mows eS ie three years the principal work of ROBERT SPENCER. roe e aries I. of England wae be-|ment. Wonce the salary of §12, which pping Board could have gone to cout hence, with their white brethren, labor unions was to pass weekly reso= (A Republican.) A passageway originally connected headed on Jan. 30, 1649, drawn by cach commissioner, Manny ¢ é | xe n

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