The evening world. Newspaper, October 28, 1921, Page 24

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| Ar presence of harem had arrived, q ’ i . ae Bint of a Lele dg Mo | INORABOUT JERUSALEM: <= 22 } -+ fans, it was. ‘ol. Allen this die- turbance was racial In Ite origin, ‘but religious. And ho told us he was cabling to Washington about it that Zionist Movement Meeting With : eas i night. +Growing Opposition From thejias notices esus-eunrace | Mohammedans — Dangers Sure iP \ine itor any min, ammedans, ‘Th P or the Orient ting of the M jorganiaing ali rounding Jews in Mesopotamia. @ religious war between the and militons of M millions ammedans in t | was to interpret for me, down the hall | it of a Series of Articles | to the regal chambers. part of the wo ‘i “You must not stay long,” whis-| Africa, and the 2 the Jewish Problem , "His ixcellency {ish and all oth. is harem to arrive in@| “And these } dream of It too. had enough ev fore the door, a knock / dence since I've been here to be sure ini where a talljof what I'm talking about. These ‘The Evening) Young Arab by the window, dressed | Arabs realize thelr strength in num- sa? mice Btn Wuropean clothes except for the|bers and fighting ability is nothing World. white lieaddress falling to his shoul-|to be laughed at. Turkey put up no pcm as , bowed and motioned me to @|mean scrap herself in the last war. rtable rec~ 1 morn- mething equally dis- one can't be sure in chair. ollect ing, K respectful England can tell you that. Imagine them united with reiigious fanat- ies of Egypt and Palestine arid Syria and Africa and all the other A states from here to Arabia. T religion holds them, closer tog than any propaganda. And It sep arates them from us by a breach n amount of friendly national relation- ship can mend. They think different- ly from us they look on life differ- ently, And they will not, and we cannot make them, sulgmit to our forms of education. It is against their religious principles." “But how about Palestine?” “One reason! why the Arabs kick up a row over the Jews in Palestine is because the firm establishment of the Jews there hut such moments. Feinel, present King of Mes “the Arabs dream of a united State, of a conso!idated Islam, is, KING AND SECRETARY SHOCKED rously imperiled,” And from BY BLUNTNESS. versation with the King m-} Then in the excit few minutes later, it seemed | viously prer {de-de-Camp spoke truthfully. | 76 Aan tly It’g the easiest thing M1 the world) thought, “Will you be King of Meso- for gm American to tlk with Kings] potania?” Before it could be stopped in tle Near East—not morely look at| the question was asked—point blank then} as the cat did, but talk with/and without cmbellishments, then}. Thore are « lot of them run-|courae both the King and s around loose in that part of the shocked at the blurt nd whon they come to Cairo ssness of the query y excused from reply! » a matter ( at the tlme indignant toward for countenancing a man nent, every pre- on intended to ly leading, was aving the one burning co they! tel. She) stan, jeard'’s nch were ye the 200 piastres a day Biaiana medan states In this part of the coun. for the Kings to come in, whom they had exiled as @ traitor.) |t¥ nue ayer sat aoe ament Bhs i ewe, a couple of Ameri-| But this rough beginning gave time|not mix, re igion al Stele hs to recall the other information and|Sovernmental affair ; : cans) getting royal interviews every oncesin a while under the pretty thin pretanse of “representing the Amiri- an press in that part of the world’ which is true in So far as writing let- ters "back for the home town paper représents the American press, Off course, Emir Feisel wasn't a King at this time, but an ex-King withithe rumored prospect of getting another throne soon. The French had Fecently ejected him from Syria, wheie he used to rule, when they took it ovpr. EASIER TO GET INTERVIEW THAN IF EMIR WORE CROWN. Sajit was easier to get an interview ‘withyhim than if he actually ware a at the time. A neat typewrit- government and relimion run side by aide REGARDS JEWISH AND CHRIS- TIAN RELIGIONS AS ALIKE. “After all, the Jewish religion and the Christian are a good deal the same. The Arab realizes the gradual eneroachment of our typo of civill- zation on his domain. He 1s becom- ing more aware of it every day To him it means the loss of every- thing. The far-sighted and educnted Arabs like Emir Felse! and his father see the trend of things points to their gradual religious extinction. They must act and act quickly or their small principalities will be drawn more and more under the con- trol of the great Western civilization, split up and slowly throttled by Oc- cldenal influence. ‘Their religion {s at stake, And they.will not give up the dearest thing on earth to them wihout a struggle. That's my guess.” sort of broke the ice. things ran rom then on Speaking er, whom T sus- y idens of ot thr own on the side, am on my ¥ counsel with my father, the King of the Hedjaz (And incidentally the head of the whole Mohammedan reli- gion.) Thay just returned from England, where [have been on a dip- matic mission, My brothers, . 80 ings or officials of nearby Arab principalitic so on their way to this conference. ‘The exact nature of the problems to be discussed can- not now be divulged, but they have something to do with the consolida- tion of the Arab states.” ter full of @ lot of “Your Ex- cy's” and that sort of thing, and ing out the usual bunk about the can public being thirsty for of the Arab people and special instructions to see the fllustri- mir Feisel, if such were within poasibility, “What is your attitude toward the Jewish immigration Into Palestine?” he was asked. “That also is a delicate matter. JOf course, we oppose {t—strongly | We do not think the claim to that countr 2 Ww do all in our power to prevent their getting complete control.” JEWISH MOVEMENT TOO DELI- CATE A MATTER, “Does it interfere with your plans for 1 consolidated Aral state? “That !8 too delicate a matter to This conversation took place on the the wide veranda of Shepheard's evening before Zagloul Pasha great leader of the Nutionalis in Egypt, returned from FE where he had been pleading for tlan independence. There wero all sorts of celebrations going on in the streets—parades and banners and discuss apeeches and continuous organized © you countenance violent inter-|shouting (in English, for the beneft ence with Jewish colonization as|o¢ Shepheard's Hotel), “'Gypt for the evidenced in the recent outbreak?” |‘Gyptians!” and “Tong live Zag Pa Certainly not," said the King with | sha!" and “'Gypt and the Soudan are i proad smile Aa about a King, the nearest approach vill the successful colontzation| Col, to oge being William Jennings Bryan.| destroy the possibility of a consoli- ‘The it hadn't exactly been an inter-| dated Arab state?” view, one question having elicited| “I say that is too delegate a matter enough information for a book, to disciiss.” But when the time came I chain.’ Tt was apparent ganged in behind the secret who «i 4 sion;to see His Excellency to-mor- Tow jt 10. . Tiere were several other newspaper men! in the outer office of the ex- King next morning—King-elect, you vill; correspondents for London or Paris’ papers (legitimate . corre- sponfents). Thie crow! hiade me] fe anxibus, for np ‘> mo T had r “im 1" honest-to- nerd Ceiwurity before, less talking an a Allen, Indicating the mob be- ; ed: indepen: ' at matters in for the You remember the story of the Pitcher— It made a good many trips to the well and it came back in good order. “I can take care of myself,” it said—“they don't need to talk about risks to me.” But it went once too often. After that it was only part of a pitcher, and they didn't need to talk to it about riske—it knew. A lot of people won't believe coffee can harm them until it does harm them. “Nonsense!” they say, “it never disturbs me.” When it does disturb them, then they know. Often the disturbance which they then ize fs the result of irritations to nerves and “linetion which have been going on for a long time. If you have to lie awake at night and count the clock ticks, after an evening cup of coffee, then you know that it's better to be safe than sorry, — The risk of coffee’s harm is gone when the meal- time drink is Postum. Here's a delightful and satisfying table beverage, with charm for the taste and without harm for nerves or digestion, You know you're on the right road with Postum; there's never the possibility that you'll go once too often. Postum comes in two forms: Instant Postum (in tine) made instantly in the cup by the addition of bolting water, Postum Cereal (in packages of . larger bulk, for those who prefer to make the drink while the Any el prepared) made by bolling for 20 minutes, “There’s a Reason” for Postum Made by Postum Cereal Company, Inc., Battle Creek, Mich. he American press. }1 ba f t rat “elt one-foot-in- et manner L went back down the hall a crowd of black- eyed women, “ied to the eyes, were ’ g Into the room next door. ‘The ' ww THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER cp | King-elect of Mesopotamia. So that exchanges of greeting and felleita- | tions f the American te jthe J eople, ani from the I |Get Only Three and One-Half fing part time instruction. ures given out at the Board of Edu-| It then vac over his own signature to The World| the m lunch and/and girls are part-time pupils, Tho a week ago that “The children on, £0, to thelr cl an ey ba | ably dikerence 1h one goby four hours |left two hours for anotherjof Yastruction in one stretch, the and elght years of age." there 817,377 pupils on part time, and their | ages range from five to eighteen or and a strong one— - means a cracking up of the Moham- 7° Near ; s problems, by and larg . —_—_____—— or Frying Chickens 4 e).b. a al he disturbance ITTO! Ind that “they templated 28, 1921, wi ’ | three and one-half hours of ins | Y students are ready for their second struction a day instead of five. nibble at let ng. ih * ¢ | The following explanation of how Bo at 2 the X students end iz y >| iB exp sabes! MOW their period of learning for the day part time and double session work ap-| put are no cused until after NX 4 plies, with only a few minor correc: | anot half hour in the yard, park JA M ES Hons for Individual localitlos, to all) "the Mayor says, these children the inols of the city, There maylare in sehool—or the park—for five be an Isolated example here and there urs. But there have been only three st more and one-half hours devoted to lnstruc- or where | three and one-half hours, but these lexceptions are 4o rare the proposition | can definitely be stated as applying to » seats still ton X pupils |then + jall the 3 as not receiving full/at 12.80 and go to lunch, They re- \ GROCERIES i] , ey rere ‘Ja. | Ume Instruction. turn at 1.30 and play in park, play~ a Ln} Hours’ Instruction, While A part time school js in session from | ground or auditorium for half an : Others Get Four or Five. | 8,4. ¢- to 4B. M. The school is di-|hour when they again foree the X | vided Into two p , With one section | students out of the o7 pu. | tween § and 12 and the second section | ti 4.30. ‘7 PU! trom 12 to 4. { this city recely-| A double session school is in use| under the eyes < | from 8.30 A. M. to 3.30 P.M. But,/hours, get only talthough the pupils are under th ra of instruction a da of a teacher for fi Not only do the dou are in the classroo lents get 1 instruction struction for only thre part time s' ents, | and one-half hours as follows compelled to sh | So-called section X starts school/and to po j at 8.30 and is in the class until 10.30.| until their minds and bodies ates the classroom for out by play and study section Y, and goes, still under the jurisdiction of its teachers, to the| che But deapite Ai Vian's asser-| *uditorium, to the playground or to] ses F Mayor Hylan’s asser-} ii, park for one hour until 11.30) © tions on the platform and In’ a letter| when | At 12.80] acteri vn Sept. 80 there were 817, pils in the schools o off. | jurisdiction jours, the cially Usted as on “part time;” the | and receiv remaining 195,072 were on so-called “double session,” Of this number 122,305 were These are the fig- cation on the 10th of this month. worst n errone these ns. tion. ‘part time’—that ts four hours a day] period of instruction. But this instedd of five—number 81,952 in the | only one hour and a half becau' elementary schools, and not 317,377, | and that they are mainly between six | are twenty years. In fact, the 195,072 children on double session get even less in- struction than the 122,305 on part | time. As the Mayor said, the lat- | | } SPECIALS FRIDAY—SATURDAY 195 SIXTH AVE. BETWEEN 13TH AND 14TH STS. ter get “four hours a day instead of five,” but he either did not know or forgot to state that the double session students get only | mee | 8 is now the cause, | believe the trouble back in| mn is So much due to an-| LEGS CAN. SUGAR CURED reg. 225 Ib.| LAMB SMOKED HAMS la in Y section come to school 0 and start thelr first two-hour warm and still full of the breathings The Y puplis nquish the seats back to X classes and re- recelving continuous instruction be-/ sume their interrupted instruction un- So here, too, the children, although the teacher for five three and one-half session than but they are more frequently pone their second session e tired The question 1as frequently been raised, “Who are art time or double shar- boys for other gets three and one-half hours the instruction in two uneven doses. 92 SIXTH AVE. S. E. COR, 8TH STREET FIRST-TIME CUSTOMERS ALWAYS COME BACK FOR MORE 19%. LOWEST PRICES —at BUTLERS! ‘BUTLE cHoice !NS GOLD MEDAL Flour GRANULATED Sugar Asparagus New Pack California No.1 Tall Can GoDa WAFERS or GINGER SNAPS MILK 98 Per Lh. against the Jews as against | rellgions. No, looking at the Fresh Killed Roasting FANCY HAI FRESH LEAN 2 2. c and all of “em, ita my opinion |f SIRLOIN STEAK 28i.. ROUND KOAST 25%. 18i.. Lake View Evaporated. Tall Can 1 0 are all traceable to one Mohammedanism — the consolidation of Is! That ix the peril of the Near Bast ROASTING MUTTON or OXTAILS cause: n= FELATE or NAVEL CORNED BEEF 10%. |RITCHIE® CORNELL 138 West 23d St.—and All Our Other Stores +". Below, FOR ONE DAY ONLY To-Morrow (Saturday)—Beginning at 8 A. M. and Closing at 10 P. M- MEN’S SUITS & QVERCOATS Tailored in our own daylight shops in fine materials when we bought at low prices Think of it! Smart Suits and Overcoats for less than today’s wholesale production cost! We're giving you all the advantages of our maker-to-wearer system of selling clothes and also foregoing our profit. We are dging this for the purpose of creating a big business and mak- ing new friends. Wa WL N Not a garment in the sale worth less than $25, Many worth to $35 ‘15 Biggest Values in Ten Years— Ready-to-Wear ULSTERS and ULSTERETTES in Famous “‘O’Brien”’ Overcoating $ 3 5 These overcoatings are imported-——extra rich quality —and give that aristocratic air to an NV | overcoat. Wonderfully tailored. { Never Berore Sold for Less Than $60 N N Custom Tailoring Department ‘Ready-to-Wear De Luxe Suits Tailored in our own shops in the smart- est styles for men and young fellews. Heretofore Never Less Than $25 to $35 $20 Suits or Overcoats MADE TO MEASURE In smartest fabrics, made up in your favorite style by our journeymen tailors—perfect satisfaction assured. $20, $225, $25 YU NEW YORK STORES: BROOKLYN: 1387 Broadway, Bet. 37th and 38th Sts. Open 104 Flatbush Ave otaxssuste cd 1514 Third Ave., Near 85th St. d. BRONX: 251 Eighth Ave., Near 23d St. Saturdays | 493 Fat 149th St., Near 3d Ave. 691 Eighth Ave., Bet. 43d & 44th Sts. | 771770 P.M. 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MMM Brooklyn’s Biggest Credit House 219, 221, 223, 225, 227 164, 166, 168 and 170 Grand Street Smith Street Ccrner Driggs Avenue Corner Wyckoff Street T $49.15 | G ° $15 Down Delivers $200 Worth of FURNIILURE 100-Piece Dinner Sets ee our burke stock of Be le Bedroom Suites Solid easy terms, Prices for our plece suites range from OF down to... the extruordinaril of 5 A Men's and Young Men's = SUITS 26% School Suits for Boys from Sizes 8 to 17. All shudes, wt Suits 2523 In Sergex, Velours & Tricotines, VICTROLAS AT OUR GRAND STREET STOKE, Prima Donnas AT OUR SMITH STREET STORE, No Digcount on Talking Machines, ‘Skirts, $3.00 up Fall Dresses, $:3.98 Up Schoo! D esses for Girls from $6.98 uw AT OUK GRAND ST, s9 N SATURDAY PY ENIN: o

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