The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1921, Page 30

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ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Published Datly Except Sunday by The Press Publishing Company, Nos. 52 to 63 Park Raw, New York. PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row. M PULITAER Jr., Secretary, wee rome ATL RRR ‘THE. EVENING WOR LD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER DUA ae 28, 1921.7 competition. His higher manufacturing costs will be balanced by the higher freight costs of the cen- tralized trust. This tendency has not been marked as yet, because the country has been going through a period of indus- trial depression. But with a restoration of easier Who's Boss fe New By John Cassel 1921, Eta, The People’s Bookshelves How New York's Great Public Library Serves All JOSEPH PUL bait ntalt ATL Sed Bibl credit, such attempts are sure to crop out if freight ue | Who Seek to Learn. MMI OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, rates hold. , Rsrasien ‘The At ted Press ie exclusively entinea to the use for republication | i} en credited to Mt OF nov otnerwire ereuitra Im tmis paper news publishea herein, CHICAGO HAS ONE, TOO. EWSPAPERS and the public will watch with interest the libel action against the Chicago Tribune brought in the name of the City of Chicago by the Tho: n element in the City Hall. It is inconceivable that any court or jury would Indeed, some of the near-trusts have already ob- served this condition and are building branches to forestall small competition. But when the trust is forced to this sort of business it loses most of the advantages of the trust form of manufacturing. It is obliged to hire managers and to manufacture in small-scale plants. Under such conditions the small plant can compete Fe eee tn ce Do you ever apply for @ book im the big reading room of the New York Public Library at 424 Street? Have you sat at the delivery desk, waiting for your number to flash on the indicator? If so, you may at times have become impatient and in- clined to wonder what was the cause ot ,~but if you have actually taken note of the time by your watch you will haye discovered that after *] .° | | with the larger organizations. | all you have only waited trom five ty care to set the precedent for such a muzzling of the to eight minutes. When you consider i t stricti ight of critici that your book has to be found press, so great a restriction on the right of criticism | LMGhg Heatly 6 TUMOR AC Oe of public affairs by aiert newspapers. Still, Mayor Hylan ought to watch this trial with Interest. If it should happen that the courts pun- ished the Tribune, the Mayor of New York would not need to inake himself ridiculous by public proc- lamations against “hate-crazed” and “disloyal” news- paper publishers. BARGAINS—BUT NOT FOR UNCLE SAM. HE financial columns of the Times report a rumor that “an exceptionally large order for Liberty bonds” is giving the market its strong tone. “This order is reported to be for approxi- GIVE EACH AN “ANGEL.” [' the city could be sure all the stock market ventures of its high police officials were under auspices as happy as those Special Deputy Commis- sioner Allan A. Ryan provided for his Chief, it might have less to worry about. There might be a certain impropriety in such deal- Police Department were finding it possible to achieve desired standards of living without swelling their incomes by stealthier methods. Unfortunately, the market is not always favor- able to the plans of men—even though they be high i volumes, the service seems quick, rather than slow. Look ut it wnother way, There are sixty-three mies of shelves in the vook-stuck under the Main Reading vom, If you were asked to pick out a certain book from a row of books xiy-three miles long, how long do you think it would take? Actual tests in the library show that twenty to thirty per cent. of the books are ready for the reader lose I He could instruct his Corporation Counsel to sue |than five minutes after he has filed Pali tt ” oe P ’ Vs ‘ Jilis slip. Sixty to seventy per cent, ‘i and make them pay for their “mad fury. ings. But if they were uniformly successful, it {or them are seady in jess than ten | i fi inu w ninety per cent. of i would at least give hope that the Big Ones in the | them are d d in less than fit- | teen minutes. The general average ts About to per cent. of the calls take over fifteen minutes, eight ten minutes. nine ‘This long wait may be due to « number of things. For instance, a reader sometimes falls to make out slip correctly, or the books are don the shelves, sengers do not al- mately $14,000,000 worth of issues and to lice officials. Th ay a sad ile e the zeal and intelligence : represent a large estate in the Southwest.” police officials. ere was a reminder of this sad | | could be desired oe ‘The progress of the new Revenue Bill at Wash- | fact in yesterday's testimony before the Meyer—| | ‘the library, itobert W- Py 5 | en ade a study and an- ington is reason enough for the strong tone of the | committee. Wee ronbaa ofipating the market in Liberties. It would not be surprising if many wealthy investors had placed orders to buy It was the needy state of Dominick Henry before and after his conviction for perjury and while he was te lysis of the pri book to the reader. He says “It seems to luke about two min- utes for the slip to reach the proper stack floor after the reader has hand- all the Liberties offered, provided the price did not 5 i i it In at the desi he Pub - , P P suspended from the office of Police Inspector which, logue Room, ‘There are seven mount too much. \ soni - fic ors in the stack. Two or three according to witnesses, caused the Italian-American | minutes more are needed for tho If, as is proposed, Congress frees al! the Liberties from taxation without regard to the total income Steamship Line to feel he ‘deserved its aid to the enger to take the slip and get » book, but the longest time of all— i i} i to eight minutes—t, ent i received, the Government bonds will immediately | tune of $1,000. | the journey of the book. from the * become the choicest investment for persons of large stqck to the delivery desk in the income. Even assuming that the highest surtax will not exceed 35 per cent., it is easy to see that a tax-free Liberty at 41, per cent. is better than a taxable 614 per cent. tnd. Tax exemption of small holdings of bonds is open to question. Exemption of large holdings is unques- tionably bad, whatever its immediate effect on the bond market. It would serve to transfer taxation from the shoulders of those best able to pay. It would be better by far to let the bond market drop back a few points by defeating this proposat than to strengthen the market now at the expense of future capacity to pay off the bonds. FROM ALBANIA! TRANGE that, of all nations in the world, Albania should appeal to the League for pro- tection against Serbian encroachment and breach of the peace! Albania has the reputation of being one of the most belligerent spots on earth. Whatever the issue, Albanians have been accustomed to fight it out. When the Albanians have not been fighting external ‘ fares 5 regime. ali the peoples of the world here. There Which tenants know. nothing. No ~ trouble with a balky engine. The average car owner might ee {i tile and auoreeding (Bre aggression, they have been good soldiers in the armies RUS have been more crimes—murders, fenant now? what. It is to be a spend a day on the same quest and fail. ce Aa aes erp secre ¢ + - +. at toe hey . . a * Jandlo: and lo Bt own on as the: * ere are fo’ two ges le: of other Balkan countries. Some of the best Turk- Decidedly, there is just o1f@ way to maintain a fair | rebberies yan suicides coms (ute tecanin Mine Bie Wuraes eines By a touch of the tiller a good yachtsman can take ad ennkecaiae Ouia We ement eienialk ich fichti tear i darn a ae Sor eater Wie c f adoptio he too, and perhaps if the tenants saw | vi i : : ish fighting units and Turkish leaders have been | average of virtue in high police circles: Se ee ee ee eee eee ee re ESET aa DY crenee oF a nuse gtamine ARG Win A) EBts) charged not only with thelr mainte- j recruited from the turbulent Albanian heights. When neither deiensive warfare nor mercenary | We recall that during the earlier trial of Police Inspector Dominick Henry for alleged neglect of duty—on which charge he was acquitted—much was made of his stock transactions. These showed ap- parent losses of some $47,000 in two years’ trading, whilea $12,962 balance against the Inspector on the books of his brokers was written off by them to “profit and loss.” See how different it would have been if Henry hat had some one to bring his deals out on the sunny side of the market: He would not have found himself hard up when he got to the Tombs. The Italian-American Steamship Company need not have felt itself under obligation for the “good advice” Henry gave it when he urged the appoint- ment of former Police Inspector Adam A. Cross as head of its private pier police Citizens of New York might have been spared another reminder of the way police administration has reverted to old habils wader the Hylan-Enrighi Provide the whole top of the department with a flock of infallible “angels” in Wall Street. ‘Dy he Baitor this count Wipe ou ment and More Hai What kind ot ‘letter do you find most readable that gives you the'worth of a thousand words in a couple of hundred? There is fine mental exercise and a lot of satisfaction in trying :0 say much in few words of The Evening There is nothing the matter ry except Amendment, Prohibition has no place here because the Constitution invites 1 t the Eig legalize t Federal control, and a happier ‘Than Good. ening World Readers|j (sn't it the one Take time to be brief. still taxes go up. Where is the land- lord going to get the money? -Ten- nts say landlords are making money, | ut in Many cases they barely make expenses. Tenants think they can figure out the expense, but there are | ny things repaired and renewed of | World wits the Eighteenth nth Amend-| it stands to-day and had the bills) trafic under coming in to them as they come to vople , the landlord they wouldn't be so un- | hte he | redding room, as the electric elevators re not adequate for the service. he city has authorized a new ele- vator for this service, but the funds allowed were based on pre-war con- ditions and now are not suffictent, Until the allowance is increased this much needed tf toward better ser- vice cannot be installed.” Ten-Miaute Studies | of New York City Government UNCOMMON SENSE By John Blake (Copyrtgh', 1921, by John Blake.) EASY—IF YOU KNOW How. With little effort a professional golfer drives a ball three times as far as a beginner can by using all his energy. In the profgssional’s hands the glub hits the ball in the right place at the right time. The skilful chauffeur can almost instantly detect the The same puff might blow a bungler . nut of his course. Most things are easy—if you know how Cort ae Pont rene Works By Willis Brooks Hawkins. This ts the eighty-seventh article of g series, defining the duties of the administrative and legislative officers and boards of the New York City Government, PLANT AND STRUCTURES. Bridges. The general duties of the Depart- ment of Plant and Structures were outlined in the last previous articie ot this series, Further details were nance, but with keeping them in con- dition for traffic and with opening and closing the thirty-two bridges ae Ss ae ai sec we will be. Make the business legal | Just. | és soldering offered sufficient opportunity for whol2- _. |the name au dny other business by un|_ As long as the world lasts there wil It is the knowing how which isn’t easy. which are movable, as required for selves with’ war in retail quantities, village aga i br. Wilbur F. Crafts, Superintendent of the week, like any other busin | spirit? It seems that discontent and | Geniuses are people who know how without learning. Some ba cee sees ith 4 vv aie oe = epee International Reform Bureau, commenting on The license to traffic in_ liquor] hatred are spreading more every day. But there are not many geniuses. : portant Ceperunent TORY. geen village, clan against clan, chieftain against chieftain the Ku Klox Klan, saya the suc should be issued only to persons of SUBURBANITE, " 2 . from an outline of Its special activi- Bain Bee cuurchihlBeace wae aioe | » Bays the success of the good acter and not to thugs — The trouble with most of us is that we want to know tes with relation to bridges during and church against church. Peace was almost | membership drive “shows that Barnum was uit - thro: and political heelers |. Byening Sonnet how when we begin. thia year. They wera: unknown. mueh too conservative when he said there's a Be ee a ee eee nae eek Mocde Eh Riegel @xpiained We want to start climbing our mountains within a few : Peat ae Ween TiAt a ‘ § . Akar Hora Covarysait i the amendment. They killed the bu: As Mr. Morris B. Siegel explain s Dredging and starting the Inita The Albanians were inveterate fighters. In Al- bs borm every minute, ness themselves In not living up in your paper a few days ago, the New rods of the top. wor}s in the construction of the briice the laws 1 hat regulat 1 the busi bania a larger proportion of the population “died IDE OMS a AnD ABS Diin AA expert iwi it made a legitimate business | Ys evening schools hy We want to play difficult pieces on the piano withoni }/ovet East Chester Crock, along tho with its boots on” than in any other country of hess. He knows. Without suckers, “reform” unde: leral control, but not under | Of nearly 25 per cent. more pupils this troubling first to play seales and exercises. line of the Boston Post Road, wich Burspe : ne i would languish and the professional organ Baie SUnEEY vestnrnilan Go (he ery hae pistes eee ee We try to overtake success with a running jump, in- bridge will be opened for trate Dee, sige! e stora tio: nis fac ec} | Sra th . i oe al AE z 18 izers would grow lean and forlorn. jobes igono berbpe would make a hap-line circumstance of stead of stalking it painstakingly and learning just how to }1.4 iL ees nace Gace eS pier people L remember = th days 2 ke it sure. s y o 0 Sa 5 z = we had a dozen little beer “stubes’ |and the well known evidence that New make a . . ies enaeee caer the elven TRUSTS AND FREIGHT RATES. BEANS AND PSYCHOLOGY. the east side atreets, all doing a| York is 4 growing ity. | Newoomers ‘And that is the reason why about seven Meche ineveryy sine eee cent aa oe ante 7 a Krom the Rochester Demoe d Chronicle et little business, and nobody was | from foreign lands who willingly w1s e i ’ very ONOPOLY and “trustification’ tabs - F «irra ine Rochester Democrat and Chronicle.) | pete up SN NeA ana aiareatae fel toriearn the sliish language go to ten make pretty bad failures of life and why only a y cradle avatar and ustificatior abor unde low many beans.can a hungry man eat? Will bis | shoots in onde! few attain any success worth the name. M done to-day th to get not only | They were wiped Widening of the roadway and mak- the constant disadvantage of changing con- | capacity be appreciably greater if he Knows that he [out by an advancing price tn the elementary education but See Watch two experts play a game of billiards and you ng tuniergus alterations on the enst- ditions, may have all he wants for a stated price? Will tha |Neut* Now’ the corners are. wiped | Thursday evening, social entertain-|% Will be amazed at the miracles the balls perform for them. 3) iid and canal sir Waal Raw/Hiehi(rslen{ ritearave eneagh to wort | New York restaurant keeper who advertises “all the | home brew has the business | ment Take a cue into your own hands. Imitate their motions fic congestion at the an 5 beans you can eat for 15 cents” be forced into bank- | | control of the Hqnor traffic his is a g6od plan, as it favors the f bs You will get no results at all. of the Manhattan Brid big business w ted manufacturing | ruptey? One's ti : ‘ uurify the business. I the pur-|problem of Americanization and ct as far as you can, You will g Fie haaavot uli Conatruction of a To: 4, 1 i pres Sie rat ae to these profound ques | pose of the amendment wan to make ship. But there is something re- The difference is not so much in the hands of the ex [to and south ot. . single small area tions would be to predict disaster to the venturesome | Us ® better pm it has failed atlinarkable now wh is omitted t + A 3 prot : n their brains. |r ae en . ; . . was the real purpose of the amend-| {hese @hools and which [ am. ab! Peete Ad i ate ve spur leading from Trostification” and concentration flourished under | Host. But psychology, which knows more about hu- | Meno wi dak Pron arty [to pointout. It deals with the limit Their brains you cannot see. And only by the same 3) 1 traffic cong low man beings than th know about themselves, says lin this country tor ye ibition F It WAYS |iion of the social evening Thursdays patient practice they have undergone can you make yours freignt rates because the savings fro jarge- : meer gs from larg the novel offer of the bean emporium is relatively | flied at election yet it accomplished lig twice a month instead of four] } tive the | Commissioner scale production offset the freight charges on the afe and 4 {ts purpose, How eame it? times, as previously, and besides the ike them, . hi Bei | as a member fection cra ‘ A eayerand: sane Prohibition may be all right in a/searcely few days of assistance in Being a billiard expert is not worth w hile. cing an Sinte Bridge and collection of raw material and the distribution of For after all, a bean is a bean whatever the price, couniy we re then 4 but one eon, IKaneR kee hak Ulin Insutfictent expert in your own Ainatiar Tunnel Con n sion, whose activities the finishe. vdus nd the capac ‘ mt it has no place in a country of) for the start needed by beginners, 2 A r . Jwere centred on plang for the pro- the finished product . : ana the capacity of the human imagination and eye 18 | many peoples As a matter of fact, these schools are Know how to do that, and you will have no worries for posed vehicular tunnel between New Now there is the possibility that higher freight | of%e™ bigger than the human stomach, Which was an ace ae ata ie she pene: in function only halt of 5 week, the future. Bear in mind that knowing how means years | oy f Wa ow Je nei ‘vo Vi rates will more than balance this advantage in some | CDRervation our grandmothers used to make in less | And ieasen crium., Prohibition. hus | Monday, Tuesday Ene YS nae of effort and persistence and refusal to be defeated, You 37], !enuiry to the hivirite Drive Vine dines and open the way to renewed siition by elegant terms when we were children, Jone more harm thyn good. It hus we ask the reason of these can't know how in a hurry, and nothing will be easy until of Manhattan tis s ae wa), ewed compelition by “All you can eat for 16 cents” will lure its thous |e! mn a t a ne of us : It alios? If these | m noole acoom- von do know how Details of other duties of the De- nlants serving restricted territories . i has, In fact, been the cause of erime aiseworthy work, why don't|§ > * } partment of Plant and Structures wilt small f ants serving restr ted territ ries, sands within the hospitable doors. And yet, unless | and invited others to violate the law.|{iey give us a full week of study? Be found in later articles of thin In such industries as meat packing, shoe and | the price of beans soars skyward again. the 15-cen; i Mt B hetiky Henry ne ‘aid: | Woy don't they offer us a day more, serles. 2 See i ‘i "Give me liberty or give death"? | say, Priday evening»? And finally, 1 == - ~ any leather, woodworking and others it has been the cea ae SATeRR WH hols its own. And so will GEORGE MARTIN. | \t veully a matter of economy or cus- | made ity own bed and now refuses tol a RH RRS rein bia’ caw quaterials might make <everai railroad a paghett! which this same restaurant New York, Sept 20, 1921 tom that classea cannot be given in| sleep in it. no ‘onciad.” but tt 1s not so and trips in going through the intermediate stages of offers in unlimited quantities for a stated price. ndlords Are Homan. the rest of the vacation days i the week? On the other hand, we have not Kot “That's a Fact’ y for a soldiers’ bonus and , he never ma any such claim, oe Many a small! boy at seaside resorts has been lured | 1 the Raitor of The Evening World IN “ONIE velfe 5 The first white od ¢ bd o wor. ¢ ie Breaing Worl RAYMUNDO DF FALCONIERI, v for the welfare of those who 4 - 1] man who lived om | ‘manufacture. A part of the product would be sold | by the eye-opening advertisement which offered all Having read the numerous articles | New York Sept 18, 12. need it as bad, if not worse, than By Albert P. Southwick the present site of Kosten, Mi > st emer ee a he ead . ate anf daaret in your paper by “Rent Payers,” alsc ed Russia, | Copyright, 1021, by the Pres Publishing Co. ; Pin the vicinity where the raw material was produced, Tie BSS URN ee Ae tay nlapl Sad {oJ naving soen the oarliun in The ives Mnuny tc BpKnde Tollea eaple: aa Ghasitan ly. COP Eig Nek York Brenig Workd) iooated \ ight che 10) 4 te could drink for a nickel, | ning World of a week ago, portray |e je gator of be Brening Word : 4 = | po Sean Woe total of the frelght charges would not be | oF soy orice, was about two glasses, or possibly re TN SS ARO O8 Be | ae i ens to me thats good deal of {Sint tee, advertising, they may | ‘The revolving turret for battleships] (nat tle Indians cath | Shawmut, Tho | excessive. of a third, Of course, among every ten persons who | of Mo are outrages, Mant quai | the taxpayers’ money is being wasted. | derive from that, would not lend an|was patented by Theodore Ruggles (ye Nui vases, streets, Re HERS use Now the case is altered. z . : r , Tt lees Ta OANEPE ORAS Ut | phere it : ex-service man enough money to pur-| Tumby (who was born at Dover, N. gut New Isnwland, and there tsa town j e ca d Freight charges ar¢ | respond to the invitation, there will be a glutton or ave all classed as terrible peopl cileve Europe of some good-for-| chase clothing for himself to enable|y. on April 6 1822), the Inventor, In! and river of tle name in the southern excessive—in some cases prohibitive. two, But what they consume over and above the | past two years hing ips. him to start a job where he could) is6o pricsson used the model of this, palt of Worcester County, Maas, near there ard two aiden to every farn enough money to repay such a for lave stigutions furthering certaln economic emargin of safety wili be made up by the Rhode Island, A Such conditions mean opportunity for the small and the tenantyonly gives his eres loan, turret In building the Monitor, the] no . erty other nine who fall short of their big ideas on the “He never writes about the in numittess to relleve the pres-| But we are living in the age of first turret battleship in the world.) phe word “knight” Is from the manufacturer who cam localize production, manu- subject. And what better and cheaper advertising [sulting nuues he calls his landlord sitwation of unemployment, the| Prohibition, and that means hypoc-|it {s popularly ‘elleved that the) Saxon “knicht,” a servant, which is facture and distribution. He has a new margin for * | And although wages are coming down | money go..g for red tape. | risy. G. ‘Swedish inventor, Ericason, designed) the origin also of the modern German many people the turret as well as th asm could a coffee house buy than this kind? are out of work— For relief in starving Russia, which , New York, Sept. 40, 1031, rest of hie} “Knecht,” @ man-servant,

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