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orem emenpicennrttneen tinge ge ieee. stent fe ere ALAR ES TIEN LD NR aM Pe NAN NOY ete he Ae te rer serene eee — pelpeamenbeneee : THE srENiNG WORLD, WEDNESDAY, ea eeee ee 1941, | it is a brand-new kind and likely to cause lots Of | === === - ! heart-buruing. Pp I On T Thi k! nah |S;UNCOMMON SENSE OSG ren I | OF course, it? may be urged that Mrs. Harding utting t nic 9. } | By John Blake, Mai Gay Gites Ghiss se the Pre bunting | ‘ heen a Mrs. Senator and has friends among the | ————a= -——_— —_——-—— a _ = | i Gcrinatel saad helo armas Company. Nos. 53 to 62 Park Row, New York ladies of that exclusive circle, but is that any excuse RALPH PULITZER, President. 63 Park Row. hat ' S | ‘ J, ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row for what might almostsbe described as “social Bol- JOSEPH PULITBER Jr., wecretary, 63 Park Row shevism’’? as dead Foes ete toe rae ® Is it good poll How will the ladies of the exclusively cntiuen use for repubtieatton Laxstvatxetl 4AM cemn deapstehes credied to 11 oF nor cunerwiie creuitea in tae pepe, House take such discrimination? They have been Gnd also the local news publishea herein. ___._| jealous of the single step of precedence which the a , Senators’ wives enjoyed. What will they think if A GOOD TEST OF BAD LAW. the Senate ladies are elevated two notches above T 1S fortunate that Attorney General Newton and | them on the social ladder? Morris Hillquit, attorney for the Rand School, have been able to agree on a statement of the facts to be presented to the court in the test of the Lusk | WHERE IS THE LINE? law requiring licensing of schools. | HE regulations issued this week by the Treas The issue now rests on the constitutionality of | ury Department permitting physicians to pre- the Lusk law which the Rand Schoo! has challenged c P 4 by refusing to take outa license. The case need not scribe wine and beer for medicinal purposes under go to a jury for determination of the facts. Preju- Ihe bighteenth Amendment and the original Vol- dice in the trial need not affect the issue, and the | Stead act are a shock to the Anti-Saloon League. ease can go directly to the Appellate Division tor a But they are nothing to some of the shocks the hearing. Anti-Saloon League will experience when the com- The Lusk law is a tad law, as are most of the | mon sense of the country insists upon going back faws introduced by the “Silver” Senator. If it is = fat to the i in- unconstitutional, the courts may administer a well- |” Eighteenth Amendment and finally determin: ing what it means, deserved rebuke to the sponsors of such legislation. | EMBARRASSMENT. The man who is embarrassed usually makes a show ot himself. If he is called upon to speai he gots up, opens his mouth, eaye @ few inane words and sits dowa. The company decides that he, ts a fool “ H6 may be. But whether he ts or not, embarrassment will make him act like one, Embarrassment prevents many people from making good impress sions, and good Impressions are of the highest importance to them. The able, intelligent, usually alert person who is embarrassed may appear silly and futile, while ® very mediocre person who is self- possessed may pass for a far more able person than he Is. Embarrassment 1s a soctal cafe dition, Yeu are never embarrassed whem | alors. You are never embarrassed whet. among the members of your family or persons well known’ to you. : Embarrassment is due to tear of the opinion of other people—to @ If itis deemed constitutional, it will be time to move t the Eighteenth Amendment says is this: jack oP eonddunds lh your SUE for its repeal. | ‘After one year from the ratification of this to convince them that you are of But the principle of this sort of censorship of article the manufacture, sale or transporta- any particular Imprtance, inion is so re} nt to American ideals that it tt 4‘ Get rid of It, if you suffer from opinion St cepuBue America} ! eals ; t ion of intoxicating Mquors within, the im- it, a8 soon as possible. seems more than probable the courts will rule it out portation thereof into, or the exportation Get your mind off yourself and as bad law. thereof from the United States and al) terri- what people may think of you, | and get it on the subject you want = tory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for to talk about. At the end of his long speech on the present beverage purposes, is hereby prohibited. | Remember that whoever you may | happen to be talking with is @ hue | man being like yourself. | If you have anything to say to | him, say it briefly, and as inter- estingly as you know how. You may be Impressed with hts importance, if he ts what you catt a “big man,” but don't be afraid of | him | In one respect you are a good deal | like our neighbors the dumb anl- | mals, We despise the animal who seems to be afraid of us. | We receive on equal terms thé { antmal, whether human or quede | ruped, who ts perfectly at ease in our presence é | If you suffer from embarmss- | ment in the presence of strangers | go oftener into the presence of! | strangers. | Habit makes all things second | nature, Mix with people and you | will Icarn not to be afrald 01 em, Self-consciousness is a dangercus state of mind, It hinders many careers. It may be overcome with a Itt effort, and the effort is well worth City Administration, ex-Goy. Al Smith suddenly sueaialne TAU tor bethought himself of something that had al- nioxicating liquors —“for beverage pur- most slipped his mind—the Mayor! poses. ; —~ | The Amendment has from the beginning limited NOT SO EASY NOW. prohibition to liquors which are intoxicating. DMIRAL HORTHY of Hungary is reported to The amendment has from the beginning limited favor the selection of a suitable “Isie of St, | p ion to intoxicating liquors which are used Helena” for the future residence of Charles and | for beverage purposes. Zita. | Since the Napoleonic era so many changes have come that it will be far more difficult to find an island of absolute isolation such as St. Helena was then. The aeroplane and the dirigible have compli- cated matters. The attorney of the Anti-Saloon League has him- In gael time a little whi guard sufficed | self heen forced to admit that the definition of in- to guar rsican on the lonely South Atlantic | toyicating liquors contained in the Act of Congress 5 ' . ating OTs SS island. Would it to-day? Would it to-morrow? i ie ca instead of protilbiti ly b ee " St. Helena is about 1,200 miles from the Afri | “> “0S &NS INS Pr i ming om iat can coast. Even to-day such distances over the that are intoxicating, prohibits those which are not open sea are considered risky for dirigibles, Bur | intoxicating. aviation improves so rapidly that an inaccessible isle | (2) It has coerced Congress into disregarding the of exile to-day might be within a day’s journey next | words of the amendment which make prohibition Nothing could be plainer. But what has the Anti-Saloon League done? (1) It has coerced Congress into defining as in- toxicating liquors which are not in fact intoxicating. year. apply only to intoxicating liquors for beverage pur- putting forth, It almost begins to look as though there were no | poses. | { safe place these days to keep a King. | It has coerced Congress into restricting the use . TO MAYOR HYLAN: WHERE DID YOU GET Whether Zita uagged Charles or Charles | OF alcoholic liquors not alone for beverage purposes R. MAYOR, you ask the people of New York to Your plan may be a good one. THAT WORD ? dragged Zita to the second attempt, the flasco | but for medicine. re-elect you. It may be the very one tor which 6,000,000 people are | * ~ this time is pretty certain to be final It has sought more and more ruthlessly to in- You tell them a chief reason why they should vote for | waiting. — } Curfous es famine =e frir e upon the rights of a profession which pre- | you is that you can secure to them five-cent fares It may be so obvious] i i J f hi” . | ly an improvement on the Transit | {viend, the word "mammoth." Back THE RICH WILL SIDE-STEP IT. scribes alcohol not as a beverage but as a necessary | This must mean, if it means anything, that you have | Commission plan that public opinion will acclaim it as | }°%° begin: by the! Damee ge ENATOR MOSES'S plaint that the new tax | help in relieving human suffering or fighting human | @ transit programme such, Bates Seecriben some nope yee bill will “soak the rich” may be a credit to | disease. \_, It must mean you have a definite plan of action that But, Mr. Mayor, miiace and what IS your plan? animal wh his heart but not to his understanding. | _ Somew here or other a line will have to be drayn | W#! stand up alongside other suggested plans. _ The Evening World herewith invites you to state i ver ; Keeping the income tax high isn't soaking the | beyond which neither Congress, the Anti-Saloon Five-cent fares do not drop out of the sky. Neither | not in a hundred words or a thousand words but in as |, ce i ‘ rich. Not while there are, roughly, a score of bil- | League nor anybody else can stretch the meaning do they sprout from the ground. much space as you need for a thing so important to the |!rench scientist Gallicized it samto YY } lions of exempt securities calling the money of the of the Eighteenth Amendment. Five-cont fares depend upon (a\carefully thought out | futurejol the)city: os A eas called the mammtota wealthy to tax-free investment. | The Anti-Saloon League has already tried to readjustment of existing traction conditions. The Evening World will gladly give to such a state- |e .mantu" (which means a roth. Some of the advocates of the “soak”? bill may | Stretch it into a tyranny over the medical profession. | . Any pledge or profession you make, therefore, regard- | ment from you the position and prominence it deserves. dweller), because they took the i Rrrieite: they are aooumpldiing gat they) sant | The Anti-Saloon League would gladly see “for | ne HFS een fares must rest upon some plan already ma- The Evening World will await it in the open-minded Bnet ne i at abe a 1g matlo m ree Actually, however, they are enacting ‘a bill to pro- | beverage purposes” interpreted to mean a tighten- : Series ae Mi. May: Wigehe of oN hope that it may prove the best transit plan yet put for- | cany specimen of the mammott ts- hibit investment in productive business by those | 1g grip of restriction and taxation on every gallon hi Pe UU Mee ava CUaas OF Nee Lark || ward eee are Gone nites on pasliaeane who have made and lost great sta that « | of alcohol used in the arts and industri whose votes you ask are entitled to know your plan? You ask voters of this city to accept you as the cham- | tact 43 to bone, hide and hair, ghd great sums in that sort of | ©" | et SAR SERIES, Don’t you think they have a right to expect from you ion of the fiv. t fi that tie) ‘Tartar Ivemvecresd ie business. It is a bill to restrict the investments of | The Anti-Saloon League has shown i s ; i om P 9 HVOPCRNE IAES. selves on the meat that had Yeo ents of gt n itself per- | somethin, th di ’ ; fhe wWealthyy nat to tax the incomes received Wi fastlg prepared to make the Eighteenth Amendment : i ing more than mere denunciation of ather people’s What do you offer them, Mr. Mayor, as your line of | preserved for centuries in na’ abr 's A dd. ) i ig plans? Fa efrigerator. 4 For a year or two the higher brackets of the in- | nullify the Fourth Amendment, which guarantees to | ACTION } rigerator. come tax may yield a diminishing revenue, but ere | the people security against unwarranted search and argues appeals, actions in court ind ——= = {and before referees performs may long the cow will go dry and the C milkers will be forced to new economies, to new Dees the Eighteenth Amendment mean what ¢ Ere 7 Wo Id R d sd barely get by as it is. Gear! fteal Estate me 4 . a eT weve © 1 draw alg 40 harge of real estaie matters and taxes or to increased taxes on the lower bracket Says? or doe mean anything the Anti-Saloon tom vening or ea ers, ind ae tow: craw migra: Epa alll ‘Ten-Minute Studies Genneoea Vrosen Ange. exes or stroxt ww who linve worked for many years | and park open ind water supply of the tax schedules. League can prompt Congress to pretend it means— hand have th io heer “te r i . S 5 : t Ww, L ‘ the choice routes ever f N k Ci proceedings aff ng property outside Considering the records of all Congresses, it is , Tegardless of what happens to the rest of the Fed. | ‘hat kind of letter do you find most readable? Ian't it the one | inke as high as $0, So you ace the of New Yor ity |] cetiecity. ; Asaktful If the econor int hi eral Constitution ? that gives the worth of a thousand words ina couple of hundred? =| b's condemn the milimen for | _The Division ot Water Supply Beo- hy \ economies will be effected. If the Hoo Neat There ie fine mental exercise and a lot of satisfaction in trying te Reber petite Tititinne tea ce | | Go vernment Gries title thi vroberiy cutalae bv: 9 rich are freed from taxation by forcing them into | he ; ation still has a Supreme Court as well as say much in few words. Take time to be br: «varies no milkman ever aia or will | city for water supply purposes. exempt investment, it will mean that the small tax. | 1 Anti-Saloon League. | forget them. We saw them during | “New York, Oct. 21, 19, 7 Bi AEE teatime Waatee | Ciocceaings to revie AN yers must pay more, either in consumptior os | When the test comes, where . 5 the war on Broadway and the side 5: . the property acquired are also i@s- pyr | Pa) consumption’ taxe Pnust eee ere will the Suprem The following is submitted streets panhandling and asking fare Conds Restaurant Prices | 8y Wi.lis Brooks Hawkins. | signed to this division. or in higher income taxes. Dour v the line? |to “165th Regiment, A, 2. |to return to camps, so that they | To the Bair of The Evening World ‘ pais teh barat evita at @ ‘The Division of tract Litigation i . . z a ae - jcould jol eg! 5, he e > ° ig is the nine rst article o pot only conducts Buch litiga b If the agricultural bloc wants to “soak the rich,” ——______ The veterans such as he claims to] could Join thelr regiments, when the) Some time ago the aublect of | serieg defining the dutles of the ad-|is chateed Me Re aNorIvEA at Ge j oe c want 5 It's easier to g laoett 5 be, and men who did duty on destroy- | regiments i ghey were | * ai ea ies rices was Under! inistrative and legi ajtracts and advert ts, approvab it must first get rid of the exemr s—in- aaa Ated 0 get things into the Congres- leyaiciaamvarte end ai\iconica’ crobie | kavites ton means: d she (Rere | discussion, and apparently nothing to ms irotius a at kd ; opicers eee ee nue, Spproxss cluding the farm loan bonds. onal Revord than to get ‘em out again or ‘ships do not receive a preference |by the boatload going over to Goy-| "sen same was accomplished, ward Of wo York ORV) charge mec DS, appro . . ah a eanen ee over aen who ser ved in the army and/ernor's Island as slackers, escorted] |, ne cen ie etill tee forma nee Government, r nents and opinion work. ~ = who did not do any hagardous| there by policemen, of or Iso for mille Pie ts) LA P. Tort Division 4 : ala TW, 5 ‘All this type of soldier received an| !9 cents per portion, &c. W DEPARTMENT, title implies, to-a Rs beer is good for the sick, what « pint TWICE OVERS. + uc a not give him preference ovef| honorable discharge from a lenient) With many of us on reduced sal- Divisions and Bureaue addition, inv of prevention? 66TF preser pt b 4 |men who were taken to army camps| Government that did not wish to) aries, does it not m possible that 3 which may = iption beer is permitted, Prohibition |bvy the back of the neck or slackers,| brand them for life. ‘They can enter | these milhonatres could, even if ‘ollowing are brief \" } a outlin rv — will be knocked out. We might as well Rho siso received an honorable diss] a civil service examination on equal|Strenuous measures have to be! sities of the various i Division of Affirmative SOCIAL ABNORMALCY le Hen ant a8 try (0 charge trom a lenient Government.| terms with the best men that a , be induced to come back’ tous divistons arged principally with th : regulate a powder keg in hell." —R. F. Hutton of Anti- |'t absolutely ignores the wounded “stake Ge nt produce Bi at Ent ar Bate forwarded to tite 1 iS Z _ 4 * +; e an's a ice and k' is | lot time that | cit by other cit - LL the talk about the Harding devotion io Saloon League in Wisconsin. ten, whe imust compete with them) Toke ee Oe eendm@ent and aup-| thes abc rule that one mus | tae yranchise Divist z Seis. “normalcy” i on. equal rege Pollee D HSS hereby th alta at least ate Ww rth, or in The Vranchise Division repr Transit 1 cy” IS oper ubt now, he . * | The men of the Pollce Departmen: \ a plan whe 0 worthy re- | 8 Ss worth, or in} ai. desea ransit Litigation Presid y pen to doubt how, The ‘ land ‘Fire Department appreciate tho| ceive consideration and keep dows} other words, the: {make out | he city in all matters involvin ted for rpose of in- resident may be sound, but Mrs. Harding is a pro- E of the darkest pages in the official history | set¥ice that members of the 165th ang | this other element who wore a unt-| a Check for leas tan this amount? | | service rendored and the rates charged | vestixating and = actions A . ; . dur- | form rom choics com- | es and do something to al- | ,, ms elootio tie - sins brought on claims fo: pe Hes gressive. She believes in changes in the established of New York was written when the Socialists beara ian he ec pulsion.. ge ae en Ae aM _ =e Ricey gna ees : ahs seek | subway construction, oie: m vould be t ie 81 WILLIAM B, O'KEEFE. C cup of coffee, tea o:| “2 he is mt m ay he Div on of App is has charge order. / were ousted from the Assembly. Are we about to re- eee ae anor would a ewes = | glass of milk will be appreciated, thr | al, other public utiiity matters, of ull appeals ex those’ in. tax Mrs. Harding’s departure from the days of 189¢ peat that outrage here?" —President La Guardia to the | +: \nsteud of opposition, The Mu ns Side, | 10-cent. piece of pie, also the 10- The Division of Taxes has charge of | “45° condemnation — proceedings, doesn't consist in her ac . |! Board of Aldermen Major Gen. O'Ryan, 27th Division | to the Editor of The Evening World | Price buckwheats will Dut | proceedings involving taxes on reat) SURE of ude proceedings and sn’t consist in her acceptance of a handsome | ’ hs and Col. Whittlesey of the "Lost Bat-| In the New York Herald early this|™aterially. | 0 4 a, +N. | ina personal property and on wpecil|rany civil service matters ange sealskin coat from St. Louis Masons. Not by any oS tallon’ Are 665 Bet. thle fe week was an article written by| New York ; | franchises [inrelnncoun Negi ee Oe : ~ Ba aed “ce ISINES. asnengmens for peee a Nath Elkins, who represent ee | The f fG@oner) 1A | ‘The work o One Gap means. Her departure is far more radical. She has | ‘FR US!NESS must 40 on. The Gorernment | “hieht Americas gion pain Nave| ii “conpanien of New York. and im netiert Reise me | wlich uni to immodate upe| Se ea al he stellata | i ff come out against It for the same rea- i" x + ANd | To the Editor of The Evening Work! hich is under the immediate su A ative ic assumed—or presumed if you are the wife of a a me ay to function and will do so.”-— fons. 1 Neard that the American | aig knee, for hie untruthful | WAT al the tae. COeuk: Mayort-siaian of the Firat Abaieian? cel Jor a great aw office, enn Cabinet member—to give the wives of Senators lorney General Daugherty . | “Sow, Munfortunatel there are cer- | the conditions of the niiikinen, I sino et twat my i Zon Coun, handi the great wavity | Bureau, toy ‘the Resovery of eid " | > vi ho ar od at e vere | sho e-clee! owl c t not come withi ve Bureau for That strikes at the very foundations of official W ra fo show the great American people | the Government bit who use these ed man have fiv Jent Weayar We #ver’ had : mitted imnuir : uty desevibed py thelr ; : +a b R heroes, and by recount 7 ln 1 ANY rent tins ee mes ane Ue haw ont da | ra , 1 nity da ts e va ‘ Washington. The very idea—a mere Mrs, Senator A al Hakim has nothing in commen — fiton p . sid ' Non 1 1 «tenth it renin ne H Ansintint ¢ amnoration Coonagl 7 uth democracy, just as 5 J ‘. for *w w rf ' ned te ayor's office, the superior of an exalted Mrs. Sec Wh han cibhind a eens agri het Gtryan cate mT win ap eds x DAN we as wr to Matters relating to the Boag ever a ing ” oe ing in common with reaction.” —Poal N, | timate them, re ag to impore a reduction ap the traction system? }) alsu drafty ordinunees at ducation, two give thetr entige heard of such a thing? If that be “normalcy,” — Miliukoo and Nicholas D. Avksenti¢ff. faw. them Armis at ih: New |aniarios, Bhowid they ‘eucosed-in- aL W, RILEY, ‘|tlve bills, prepares or passes upon assigned “te trang’ Gnd several am ' f Fore. and it will take a lone while to ducing my.Day it would be impossible’ Woodhaven, Oct. 24, 1931. \ieasem onde. 0. drafts pleadings |ae the Lasaleten® ‘UINe sessions i A ~ « = ————EE f) .