The evening world. Newspaper, September 9, 1921, Page 26

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THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1981. ants and restaurant-keepers should have the ad- | ni ror | 10 vantage of that kind of regulation. | or . If the two-way rule results in the degree of con- ¢ Another Case of Unemployment eefilike, By Rollin Kirby Col. Watterson Answers a Few } PY JOSEPH PULITZER. gestion which prompted the one-way rule the ex- | ) Sunday by o Pre Publish! rt i 1 Y ! toe8 Park Row, Now York. periment will be short-lived ‘Marse Henry Sizes Up t - | Things of To- Day — —In- t | | 1 ial SAVE. TE THE SCHOOLS. cluding Newspapers ) the use for republicatios ace EVENING WORLD'S earlier forecast of | and Short Skirts. | - York's public schools when they reopen next Mone By Fay Stevenson. | WHERE THE DAIL CAN'T DODGE. day is borne out by this week's registration figures. | oe Te Pee Wea \ cg paragraphs fh the reply of Lloyd George It is estimated one child out of every eight will | “What is the biggest piece ot | to the latest note from De Valera gg the news ever printed in the pape: your experience?” 100,000 tions wifen Thee wettien bu be without a seat for full-time schooling By the furthest yet in tore ponsil the Dail Eireann to realize j lity and get down to cases. end of the year conditions will®be PSC first is: bi a state of things is a disgrace to the grea CHILDREA Col. Henry Watterson, the vet P f a ottleme whic ge | af New York editor of America, I had plann . To dveiine to discuss a settlement whien — | City of New Yor E To oe sh ei 2 28 ; " ave a hot-weather interview would bestow upon the Irish people the fullest It is a tenfold disgrace to the Hylan Administra- | eee ment thin the with the Colonel on journaltsm. But freedom for national development within tt ACCEPT . | Unad forgotten that the Colonel likes F jon, wh as loud omises ¢ ‘| rl empire can ) an that you repudiate all tion, which was loud in promises of what it would LF ( to take time for his answers. allegian the Crown and all membership do for the public schools | ie time for Ba anwar: in the British Commonwealth 1 HA TIME The Evening World's inve season of the year Col, Watterson and his wife have left their home a: SCHOOLING Would the representatives of the Irish people in an ie Fa: GRAAL OTR eRO UIA i state of the city’s schools has disclosed how fal Mansfield, Jeffersontown, Ky, (0 Hi oLDEMS SICA, CAM cast ele bitls SAME le 1 hol cee Hie GLa get a breath of cool sea air in the go-back to conflict hy insisting on such repudiation? 4N@ Hollow were the Hylan pledges, | North. And although the Colonel is Not it we may trust current signs of popular Failure to provide new school buildings; failure | in his eighty-second year I found him sentiment in the south of Iveland fo repair age-worn, dilapidated structures unfit to | A ea setako ls Leal the sun-partor of the Shelburne Hotei ut Brighton Beach. But when I spoke to him of a three-minute interview he good naturedly admitted that 1): would The other paragraph: You will agree that this correspondence has lasted long enough. His Majesty's Government must, therefore, ask for asdefinite reply as to failure to care whether the city’s children vet t! be used for schools; fai/ure to grasp the needs of the schools or to provide money to meet those needs; 8 snide ihaed | much prefer to make it a: .1c-day whether you are prepared to enter a nee schooling in safe and healthy surroundings or in | one, with only five questions per day to ascertain how the association of Ireland with - Rates Ware | “E do ni lente atiea Ke 1 eral jot think I would care to an ‘the community of nationg known as the British unsanitary, ill-lighted, fire-traps; Jaelure to care | ee ‘iy Swer fifteen sensible questions in iEmpire can best be reconciled with national whether many of those children get a fair share of | a three minutes," said Col. Watterson | aspirations | schooling under any conditions—these are Hylan bh Ma cll Ba ui To refuse in the name of the Irish people to etiér such a conference would be too risky a thing | & : , fay even the most rabki Sinn Fein leaders to think | There is no getting away from the stark truth of at the present moment. The Igish people are that Mayor Hylan’s fourth year in the City Hal! | nt pledged to self-destruction, finds his boasted school programme in a state of What, De Valera will doubtless do is to agree to t the conference, knowing that he can fall back later | ‘ questions with me, say, t-h-r-e-e 01 {-o-u-r days, PH mai the answers." And then Mrs. Watterson, a dapper active little woman, appeared upon the scene and saved the day. “You leave the questions and I'LL see that the Colonel answers them by to-morrow night,” @aid she. And he did. The next evening Col. Watterson’s grandson, Watterson Miller, brougiit the answers to me directly from the veteran's pen. They were written in a clear, round hand in green ink. “How long did it t Jailures proved by facts and figures. complete collapse In all the incompetence of the Hylan Administra- tion there is no blacker mark than the wrong done the city and its children through shameful, needless neglect of the schools. on a plebiscite to justify himself for a course that does not go the Sinn Fein limit. 2 0ee, IS THE G. O. P. ALL FARMER? » the Colone to answer these?” 1 asked) youns Ae . ri In the face of the indictment on this score alone. Watte: <CORDING. to President Harding: i ent on this score alone, | NOEs Dee “The series of measures looking to the ines more ene of Hylan are unthinkable, |sinned his namesake, “but it didnt amelioration of conditions in the great agricul- The candidate best fitted to beat Hylan is a man | ke him very long, 1 am certain | {fal industries would in other times have con- ‘stituted a striking legislative product of a year’s session. ‘These include the law for control of of ten years’ experience in the ‘City Government | He is a man who does not promise more than he because when he gets started he dov things mishty fast.” And here they are, with all the the packing industries, the Ket for the regula- means to do. He is pledged to do his utmost for Wattersonian spirit and forcefuiness | tion of grain exchanges and the law for the ex- ~ the city’s schools. He looks upon the schools as 1. What ix the biggest piece of news tension of credits to farmers through the War something more than part of the political game. He iver onnied tn thorparersiiniyour ¢ iFinance Corporation to enable them to carry itheir crops until the markets will absorb them.” ‘Président Haring claims credit for the Repubf- can majority in the passage of these bills, The claifn is specious, It cannot be sustained. The | non-partisan Agricultural “bloc” deserves all the credit—or discredit—for these measures. perience? will not lose them in the shuffle as Hylan has done. This candidate is Henry Curran, The: will to elect Curran Mayor js going to be the will to save New York’s public schools. The rescue work should begin in next Tues primary with a record vote for Curran. Col, Watterson—The pr Abraham Lincoln sassination 2 How has journalism improved tu From Evening World Readers j ~~ UNCOMMON SENSE pees ae and typograpni , s lly better printed ' The only other measures passed by Congress IN WEST VIRGIN What kind of letter doyou find most readable? [sn’t it the one By John Blake / y moprinted, which President Harding considered worthy of men- IRGINIA. | that gives you the worth of a thousand words in a couple of hundred? (ee eee ais sae $ Do you believe the editorial has } id ding consid y s ee i on | ; 3 (Copy! . by i. s ch sway upon the public of tion are the Budget Bill and the Veterans’ Buteau ECENT developments in West Virginia are There is fine mental exercise and a lot of satisfaction in trying : mid A Greets way upon the public as o : Fits. ; ‘ nue anything but reassuring. It begins to look as fe aay abbas ii iew Wore: Tere cine fore cre TRY IT AGAIN IN THE MORNING, aN 4 Bill, neither of which was partisan in any sense, PA al. sada all Si fins to Ic | ARanULeeosHiehive oonsideredieleck and the Immigration Law, which, in its present | though Gen. Bandholtz and President Harding - ‘The Woman F |faisers are hard hit, A ew men Ole a BUS are FEM ane grow iu at it If preventative and oracular, ‘The pub een wist OT: Wah wad the Editrr af The Bw World enough for their sheep to you knew a he facts about the “breakdowns” of which you is fairly “on” to the al “we shape, is a disgrace to any one willing to accept re- aig have been wiser had they gone through) with) |"“yrundreds (of thousands of young| expense of qillsing then. “They 1 read you would discover that other causes than overwork ; Bg ae aca ce sta claimed marti | loudburs' vlorado from a 0 ink of 7 sponsibility for it \ he business once started and proclaimed martial |unm: Bari ae were cs et fore tho [euerenceud brats) in Co prada ators brought about wostvor tient r What do rou shine of scare head. 7 A x e 0 Frane ere. womb Las was . N good deal may be pardoned in a frankly par- | kaw in the district, ' eves icaiaueestrnumer an es ana aeyoroppuaRisaay a ip era It is worry which makes students so nervous that they {4.1 ae Fears ene j appeal. It may be that the misappropriation | Gov. Morgan is reported to be forming a regi- sare and must remain unmar- to death, huddled ad fences can no longer pursue their studies. It is worry or illness which toe tdi tev Ravine Wen seudee nd mayer ny ‘ | ait Aa 2 ri These girls, who are and myst or under an odd tre ed ae a k nf e je c re of the’ record made by the Agricultural “bloc” will | ment of militia. He is also reported to be encour- |'Temain ‘wamacried” becauec of the Tavuitancthararaveny gets them! : Sees manito take long recatlo : ae alumna neh simplify the readir # 4 i vigorous prosecuti me ‘nore | War, are now to be taxed higher/met one sheep ranger who had left 0 ey re not half as = ; 7 is { help i in the New Mexico by-election. New Mexico seu i ey Reeueen a a0 is HN Miners | than the married men Who were ex-|the homestead and was going East } necessary to their concerns as they fancied they were. | 5. What city handles the ners best nov rac bee rolvi empted from § to the war b 5 fo: 7 hi Bann tee FE {primarily cultural. But will this same sort 6 peen Involved ain the march, See nada ener eeeriene a miees | Gaaiterata ce fee Hala SniceinlaceniuD| , There does come'a time however when the brain stay {| That Which has the best newspapers of! intellectual dishonesty have a similar effect in Gov. Morgan is not moving against the other |xirls were taxed double the amount /not much work there. Going over the $ nates and refuses to go on, l Wekswrnat don pons chink. of veaenre soe i alk ‘: rae “ < the married men were taxed during| Mojave Desert the temperature was) ~ ate i. other States and in future elections? fawbreakers, the mine owners and their binds of |the wan and now the income taxes 118 degrees, no sign of lite anywhe Sometimes this is caused by lack of sleep, sometimes $|sfories, cartoons and the comica aa The Agricul 1 “bloc” is responsible for most mercenaries. have’ been revised and these married |In Los Angeles 1 found it impossible} by lack of exercise. assets to @ paper? le Agricultura oc AS Tes Sed mem who were exempted from going jto get a job. Low wages and lon. Every one who has toiled. lo 1 bl They amuse the trivial and di 5 : # Some troops have ithdraw' y \to the war because they were mar-|hours are the rule. So many peopl ome rd. long over a menta problem rivial and dt of what has been done, and also for much that has ea te as ea withdrawn. Others may fled are given $500 more exemption | ser fiers brows Vint they aust work| 3} knows that at a certain stage of the effort the whole wiley versify and spice the paper. ngtgbeen done. Is the Administration willing to | De But a Federal force should be kept in the dis- |necause they are marricd, and the |for what they ean get, and they almust | $ becomes meaningless. 7. What is the future of journalisy, admit that the Republican Party has gone over in trict until Goy. Morgan makes it evident that pros- |hotential sweethearts who had to go|get the fare. Mexicans do all the That is the time to quit—temporarily. It has none. It haa reached Its limi ; bady and is now a farmer party, openly antago- eoution for disorder shall not be one-sided. Troops | te, the war Bgl ae Peavy maria Jape hotel ork (Cenery If you find that the answer to a problem you are work $/he public knows its “tricks” onl: use bec: e no! @ c > them); ry ii should not be withdrawn until Rederal Army offic [because t myenthpartail (ware wor onttnemichitarmalecdlontnse! ing on will not come, no matter how hard you work at aight, {| too well, 7 nistic to the industrial Eas' pareve Gal 1 4 v killed in the ‘an You beat it? groves. The Japs pack melons for 9 e it up and try it again in the morning. 8. Are newspaper women an asset ts Q If the achievements of the Agricultural “bloc’ be ad ample opportunity to find out what Sauna, Sndearas nt thave these eat ccnial bE rites 2 cents, hence ElecplovenityGivelyouribraitiamest: voutwil tnalene! F peas | are to be claimed as Republican achievements, the | Sort of a State militia is being recruited. the girls Who Fave so much to win| San Francisco iaa better town, put|$ the fogs which have ruined your perspective will all be Journalism Is sexless Wt. the je 1 lon't S| o e a ‘i - party must be ready to take the consequences. If the new militiamen are only the old crowd of eH fh aa bey PORE Ne they ee Rie By aeons fa oe cleared out the next day. Attack it anew and the solutior. aries ie aha ead aucailas j ‘ roughneck gunmen dressed in olive drab, the force IL. M. |'The ta Fe Railroad hires Mexi- will come qualities for a, ‘il Aer een rrp cata ea — cans on all its right of way from San Whenever you find that your brain is nodding, give it.» } | t/“round reporter? ; will not make for peace in the coal fields. The | Rullding Wages and Rents, Francisco to Chicago. Portland, Ore ; 3 gi Roa eee ‘The League of Nations opens its second session miners will rise again and fight it tare Vo tie Editor of The Evening World is a quiet place, fishing and lumber rest. It will wake up by and by and go to work now and en . Seinen s ¢ again ight it out. If Gov. | ‘ with the United States still in the gallery, d | I could hardly expect “One in the/ing being the chief trades at 87% for perspective and a sense of color By trying to force you will do it no harm, but neither "7 es it WwW 7 9 “ a a p, | cel er ho Seattle was very and effect. eal Morgan uses this new force as a power of oppres+ | uilding Trades” to agree with me.|iiiet, "No work. In San Mraneiseo|% will it do you any good. It knows its limitations and insists sion it will fail to preserve order | He probably popek to see war wages) ing Los Angeles foreigners do most upon them. 10. Is the _hetpenener the greates! TRAFFIC RULES IN. THE THEATRE ZONE. — FR ee ar ea eat List beitor acts aii tansgoc elise haa valli che Men under great strain sometimes work for twenty-four $|*dueater im the wor PECIAL DEPUTY POLICE COMMISSIONER TWICE OVERS. organized and unorganized labor) West can offer and lots more, and/% hours at a stretch, but they accomplish little in the last Ins loose: quperficial way it proba r LE COMMISSION TE! 7 “NS lhave received wage reductions and|New York has wonderful transpor- tivelve houre bly is. SS has consente. a or SVS Eas recopted n and must their}tation and buildings and people and 4 eee S HARRISS has ¢ onsented to try another sys- “cc HARITY work is part of the overhead in |“tiatiing the same as himaclf, he|jope and’ lote of one-day. tripe. to Far better if they limited their effort to eight hours, iL Wht meeiien “ot the paper di ‘ tem of regulating evening traffic in the theatre medicine and must be paid for by those who | iis mote employment in his line | ey Sov at a scent fat Los} $ with eight hours of sleep and eight hours of play, to give the $|?/R "ad ™ i gilt ‘ to-day than heretofo' es Angeles beache 75 cents ci the alleged news th district. have the means to pay for expert medical advice.’ — er to offices buildings or apartment [turn trip, 1am ghid to be back. in brain a chance to ae up. eae a Alleged pas of tee. aay It is another sample of the admirable attitude of New York Medical Journal. uukoacor His $40. d B56 tne al} New York resets nag HY Houtlus work can he parsued for many hours without ia pha iia la eae “Gaia c ameneet as ' : . A . | nonies?” | have reference to the so. P danger, and if you are healthy in body and mind, without ar} the old days? Commissioner Harriss toward the traffic problem. 67 DON'T have to describe th [ifited tenement house dwellers. who Immigrants and Jobs, fatigue. mALEEa ie aoe Fer eene i oO expe: rs r emes othe save to des © fortunate enough to have put| po the Editor of ‘the 4 World were imuny. ¢ Not He 4s willing to experiment and try schemes other cea e Heil ie them (meetings of the ute forfunsie “anouab ito) Rave. Buty beoheiol FT Ne ast Nes Hard mental work—creative work—can only be done , Raymond and Forney. In the than his own. | loard of Estimate) to you. You have all read ome ot. Uwit ee eee et) wok in America, and every prospect when the mind is at its very best, and it never remains at $|+ outh iutehie Prentice and John For * s . 4 ; ne Jandlord's elutches, thereby le wo Pp r e Kast, Sam Bow! f Broadway business men have complained that the | few Mayor Hylan presides with his gavel upraised. | \he landlavl's chutehes theres oy | oe Gaitional units we soo as the bar that point for more than a few hours’ together. PAU Me deere ad one:way rule is hurting their business, They have | really doesn’t sound dignified, however, forthe Comp- | nvnts which they now occupy, which| vest is over aud winter sets in If! Postpone the difficult jot when the mind begins to lag. ; vould compel a drop in rents offered the sugyestion that something more nearly troller to be telling the Mayor to use the gavel on the head eae ae aes like the Fifth Avenue regulation would be just as | % the President of the Board of Aldermen.” —Hemy | ee AUT come down uatil rents d 18. What do you think of the present day woman, with her bobbed hatr, short skirts and devotion to cigarettes? is the real truth, doesn’t every again in the morning and you will find it is far easies nthe]! 1id{ sane American know t tit is wron. na med | and an injustice to the unemployed of | . like a freak and acts Uke ; ‘ H. Curran. This is an excellent way to keep both] ‘America to be adding to the ranks of She looks nd acts Uke a good and would not deprive them of business. a items up. Liter we heard from Sur-| idle men and women additional thou- ; harlot. he merchants have a trial, C is r ntoga that labor would not stand for ds of immigrant the former be: - " 14. What has Prohibition done for To let the merc a trial, Commissioner | gg E are well in the saddle and the next meeting duction that point is @et-| "ye ‘case Is simply this; If all the | ped eins tere Harriss has ordered a one-month suspension of the { think I ha Anglo-Saxon sceat, meaning “to pay,” | the ncospapers? wn who the thousands of immigrants who enter | - will conclude the preliminary consideration | eeicna ‘ot ui the latter signifying a tribute al- at present f 1 < e ys sober aud made liars ‘ i ~ st n he country from now on are employed, tted to every man, according to his...) )! [Bq box AG oneaway rule, Before the month is up the Com- of the Revenue Bill.”’-—-Senator Penrose Be at 8 Pres} an equal number will be thrown out | |} |]| means. It was rare indeed that any|°"! Bp IARTBT PRB ORS: 96-5 FA missioner and the theatregoers will have had op- A 2 A ceived m 2 of work Crush, prevailing sondls | By Albert P. Southwick ene secaped aeoot treet 2 qumolent n h : y | tions. Wither that, esh arrivals | |! ©. 3, is possibly qui ifficult to 7 sportunity to decide which system is preferable. CO AMARUSO'S cocalicctdi eoremonan ith iach || maaan wall be marooned here, or thrown on| || CMe ty Reltbveatts Went || | do a0 to-dny, | aii chan tute Business men in the theatre district have a legiti- longer than those of any other tenor I have | iene Mic anoutd be borae in snindgiso that : | hor ed [thi tor tusphration? ‘ i + 4 + “seh en ia se nunvber rhers e f{ gab" is a slang expre: a ' z 4 eh a 4 le es ” , |the problem of unemployment isa mat-| The “gift o! te labor sas scarce in the set-| No man can write his best under al mipie interest in traffic ules, but the interest of the seen." —Dr. William Lloyd. pr eoee Bonita ria kat alas ne vat the Government should. feel {gion with a natural normal origin, f0F/tjements of Long Island and” trem|coholic stimulation. To write well one theatregoer comes first in the theatre hour. If it ch Fee ee Scenes of the ‘West andeitj much concern about. If the task of re \vgabi is a very old word used by the | the beginning slaves were required|must keep his head cool and his feet A ft for 'the| lieving the people who are hametess is | h. The Scots|for the work, the negroes coming|warm What you call an occasional Sakae! wit for the| rown on the shoulders of charitable | APs! Basont Bar gee the mouth, {Principally from the “West Indies, |insplration is apt to degeneran: into a : Ny for the land of n opportunity,” | organizations there will be, I fe employed It to a though some were from the Dutch|habituel stimulation and thence into a wants to save her face.” -Michael Collins. | \yo"experience has been as follows: | rible times ahead. Yet there should |hence “to gable." The French rr stations in South Afriea and a few = dropping of the delinquent troy SSary. one-w i ible "ro: ew Yo! ot < ed to worry when the G: so in the form of “gaber,” the verb| were native, Indians, brought from | the payroll. mind A for enormous crowds to get to theatres in comfort. | 6677 HE present is the reality with which we hace |eiut down, with no other work for the | ther flocks of migrating binds to ent: | ° jto = Duten and were wel treated, tints ie Fost snd bent wang: Se <) e raisers 0) rr » ya Drese! col ee being hardly more chat injonly oN a Sfia, two-way rule serve as well, then the mer- ” people. Cattle raisers would get ogt| the country at present tf than that @ny real 5: c to deal.” —-Eamon de Valera, ee sat 5 " 4 ; A Uf they could unly break even, She CHARLES MULBRAY ¥ ‘ s N / i Z were not for theatre patrons, business in that dis- | ¢6 IE°NGLAND wants a truce to-day because she |Reti, tin ane St trict would be so dead that traffic rules would be

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