Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Che Cicnjng Glorld, | ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. (Pudlimed Dally pt Sunday by Tho Prow Pubdlishing Company, Nos, 53 to 63 Park Raw, New Tork RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row. | J. ANGUS SHAW, JOSEPH PULITZER Jr, Secretary, 63 SSOCTATED PRESS : Presets epuiues to the use for republicattod @F all news despatches crediicd to It oF mo otnerwise erewitea Ln tae papgg Gnd alto tw iocal news pubilsbta herein 2 — | PAROLED! ORE murder—a double one the paroling of a known criminal with an ugly gun record Two of the ¢ are dead, are fatherless, because was paroled from Blackwell's Island anJ left tree to get a gun and go back to his old hau’ Here was a criminal whose record stamped him + as dangerous, who carried a .45-calibre automatic pistol concealed in his belt, to be reached ough aslit in his pocket, when he went to make his “good conduct” report to the parole otticers! Artested on suspicion of being implicated in a new crime, he pulled the gun and killed his captors. The record shows that the police have done their part in dealing with this “gun-toter.” | What about the courts? The parole system is an excellent thing when wisely and carefully applied. Indiscrimir.1tely used, it exposes the community to the same dangers that come from promiscuous bonding of proved criminals. | The parole system, like the bail system, needs stiffening. ‘Treasurer, 63 Park Row. Park Row. his tine—due to | etectives mort effi lice widowed, ent p twelve children | » “bad man” two wives ar a notorious neg EXTEND THE HOUSING LAWS. NNLESS opponents of housing legislation are ' able to disprove the figures presented yes- terday by Tenement House Commissioner Mann, their, efforis must prove futile. | Agcording to a survey by Commissioner Mann: ‘There is a shortage of 80,000 apartments | right now, as against 70,000 last year. Were | thet made up, we ought to have new build- ings each year with from 20,000 to 25,000 apartments.” Aaron J. Levy, Presiding Justice of the Munic- | ipal Court, considers it “very essential” that the | rent Jaws be extended. No one is tn better position | to speak than the man who pas had supervision of | administering the laws. It may be true that a surplus of “luxury apart- well Coim- Amer Britis sympathy with Irish as as in the cour monwealth, aspirations in compr A FAIR QUESTION. “At there no high-minded Republicans in Pennsylvania?” The Evening World asked sterday, commenting on the relation between rial vacancy in y the Newberry case and the Sena that State. The question, we are reminded, nent in New York. In Senatorial polls, the two New York Senators Newberry supporters, If so, are they representing New York Republi- no less perti- e generally credited as canism? Do Republicans here favor the confirthation of the purchase of a seat in the Senate? What will Wadsworth and Calder do? That may depend on the interesyprivate citizens at home take in the issue. It is not too late to show the real sentiment of New York, Republic of letters, tele- grams and resolut#ns from individuals and from Republican clubs would have an effect even on | such‘ good organization men as Wadsworth and Calder. What do high-minded Republicans of New York propose to do? Will they Newberry without a protest? If Senate seats are advertised at auction, Repub- licans in New York cannot escape a share of the responsibility unless they use their influence to the utmost in the next few days. A deluge accept th Withdrawal cf the navy's request for the lion's. share of Jacob Riis Park is a good ex- ample of the influence of « united public senti- ment in New York, The pity is it 1s not united more frequently FAR ABOVE FACTS. ELLEVUE HOSPITAL reports 2,381 alcohojic patients for the year 1921. In 1920 the num- ber of such cases was 2,091. { The effect of Prohibi non alcoholism seems to be progressing in the wrong direction, | Dr. M. S, Gregory, who has charge of the psy- chopathic and alcoholic cases at Bellevue, says that drugged and impure liquors are producing a far | ments” renting at $50 a room exists. There may be a good many wretched $10 a room “old law” apartments vacant, But the “in-betweens,” the | great mass of tenants who pay from $12 to $20 4 toom, are facing a situation as serious as ever. The rent laws must be extended to protect those “who have homes of a sort. The tax exemption privilege must be extended | in an effort to stimulate the building of homes | until the crisis has passed. Charles D. Edwards, President of the Ney York Real Estate Board, denies that an emergency ex- ists. “My mind is closed on*that.” The minds of tenants are “closed” too. They know by bitter experience that renis are oppres- sively high and housing generally unsatisfactory. Between the two types of { mit the Legislatyre cannot have much difficulty in choos. | ing. Mr. Edwards ves in Connecticut. The tenants live in New York. In Manhattan they comprise 98 per cent. of the population. | closi more serious type of alcoholism than that with which his department had to dealin the days be- fore Prohibition, when comparatively pure liquor could be bought. He adds: ainst the corner saloon in all I believe that regulated by the “Tam phare wines, its beer and light Government, well would tend to solve a difficult problem." The trouble with Dr. Greg . Of course, t he is only an expert in close contact with condi tions which underly the problem and therefore the last kind of authority to be consulted regarding its solution. ~ Prohibition prohi Why insult it ¥ ry i its by intuition. ( h facts? Hitue s with that wonderfully Japted picture “ackie Cod y Boy" on Dee. 30, ‘The ¢ bulletin jlochi newspaper of According to a late of the Japan Tokio recently mnaire to Japanese women te king the phase of life that gave them the | ety, the most pleasure. Of the replies, 980 said that wearing a fine kimono gave them the greatest gratification; 720 held that theatregoing was [MADR CKK KAREN HH SOOO O00 0 RE Oe ee Ee EH As He Reads the Meter _. Tan eeonte wre 'Foreign-B orn CIOROINI CNC HORTON TRICE ETC ENERNHLIONC EL IOCISCINRCAORCOneION CALC inne emma oeteure | Ameri ca FAM RMRE He # MLK ROR holt 3 soe tog fo ee hare, AL od From Evei. ing World Readers) THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, What kind ot letter doyou find most readubie* that gives the worth of a thousand words in a couple of hundred? | There ay much in few words. Take time to be briet An Outing. and that all toototase: ng Worbt Drink ts arte ank you for your ex- | hut attrib in so entertaining t did have and wer was a real RR TOLENOd a ppy with it all, it ng to them, We are indeed very tative, | nad. for you are doing a not the HELBN P. M'CORMICK, | po tion wh Chairman Brooklyn Catholte Big, Sisters Gates Avenue, Bro: | great conflag leate “Perpetu n uw fine mental exercise and a lot of satistaction in trying to millions vhink ursed thing, kkiyn, Dee. | Anderson, and his Anti-Sane tion, _ 1992. by Ta isn'tit the one criticisi he md dinner Later on ne but in angry op- spreading Mike e ready to suffo- “[mpregnable” Bill League [oaaaaaaaaanennad UNCOMMON SENSE By John Blake Criticism The has been thrust | other child who ir « he Vubilahing ‘opyrigm, 1922, by Joha Blake.) x ‘both Americar MIRRORS. jTaune devuted much i wnklin x, Lane had mai not only easy but natural. We were born . anu te tim 1a , Me evement than the stimula baby loudly criticises the world into which ee ee ee ceinianoes, cweatise his littl body is uncomfort:t ’ 5 erie 1 oedu he would have always « carries his criticism tu his parents’ tact. of interest in him, Children eriticise other children for faults and for ignor- . By ignorance they mean that the other children do nut happen to know things that they know. learned that cows give milk is superciliously critical of un- agines that the only function of a cow $| HAM MRR HR RE ORE RR PRR EO By John Cassel | By Svetozar Tonjoroff | \ loopyttahte 1 wt York Evening World) B Vubilsbing Co, XIX—FRANKLIN K. LANE. To Franklin Ki Se of the Interior during the belongs the dit of a share in organizing the materia and spiritual resources of the country for the struggle. Born in Prince Init, Lane was aremts to the Br ehildhood—anad neisco, AS Western as a paper publisher In Tacoina, and thea 48 a practising lawyer in San Frans cisco, the Canadian immigrant idens tified his own interests with those of the country of his adgption. Lane's campaign aguimst graft im Edward's Is'ind tn brought by his ihe Coust in his grew up with San 4 reporter for several newspapers, news- San ranctseo and Caliiomnia forme an interesting phase of his public ac- tivities, His growing weight with the community in which he lived was in- dicated by his lead of the rest of Loe Democratic ticket by 60,000 when he [ran for Governor of Callfornia in |1902. As a member, and afterward | Chairman, of the Interstate Com- merce Commission in the Roosevert and Administrations, Lane emerged as a wal theure of grow hg proportions. Mis achievements im disclosing and suppressing the rebac ing tem form a conspicuous phase of his work in dealing with the road problem. | But it was not until he was ap- |pointed to the Department of the In- |terlor by President Wilson at the be- ginning of his first period in the that Lane obtained fuil his powers of organiza- lishment. rtunities was the conception of the House for White potentialities no Alaska he « 1 for a song from a in 188% Behind the great project for the de Mt this empire—the Alaska put the full force of and the machinery of ity P his. office. Kor the purposes of the war, Sees retary veloped qualities of fore 4 » and leadershi» that added tly to the power of America weign batuetlelds as i But it w in an even moro far- aching puase ot complex. na~ ional pro! —the } of nation uilding—that the tmmigrant from the I 1» of Canada displayed a power of comprehension and action that made him 4 ullariy valuable asset of his ountry. artmental reports, espe~ second half of his ins Seeretary of the Inve as no preceding the following at cities effort to combat the 4 co-ordinated local, State ent of nad ed atime, » entitled t }buniders of An rank umong actual comments on | WHERE DID YOU GET THAT WORD? 120,—DEVIL. \ child who has 1 their chief joy; 100 preferred “good things to | f MARLE DORA? is to moo and to wear horns ‘The theological conception of the If You Get Enough to Stack, , ent” But fitty, found tie most: delight in | “More Clamps.” } wu Hill, tone leant es As we grow in stature and intelligence and acquire what hea Bai Sbs are sesh aes ome ope-made's serious biinder in coining | “winte Sey And Wiinty dno the Acgulaltion of | xo the maior of the Brenton Wet | we think is wisdom, we become increasingly critical. If we }} [UY “yea by i 5 . a wealth | “Criticisma hurled at you for your| A Washington Story. 13 learn how to speak grammatically we are intolerant of those $|"™ ‘i the new “peace dollar. | | s oalnat To the of The I 3 W 4 ’ Devil’ 1s an English corruption of ae Se unbending stand against Prohibition i hat Mr who have not learned the same lesson. atin Dinbolus (Greek Diaboloa), These new coins are “unstackable.” They i rca TO YON Heartaclt I heartily concur with wha r bolus D A thick he centre tt he edges. | 3 J jdo not appear to give you heartache | you, 0 McCaffrey hus to say in hi If we know another language we are prone to use it 1 from “ia allo are thicker at the ce han at the edges. EVEN UP. las we mge-happily observe by read-1 150" lice in the kivenine World and then in order to “show up” our neighbors who do 5} (2 throw) —that Is to put something ASEHS SAU Fa 078 T IS not difficul We: { : ing your snay editorial, “Move! But why, may I ask, does he direct not understand i Foy SUE SCART RANG CART SRC In the East the silver dollar is a rarity not difficult to understand the ich for free | amps,” in your issuc Tei eand sacs ate ; : ; . ain ie Mevil:. thers (Mom poi mublic hic ; : | it all against one nation (Britain) One of the stock themes of humor consists of jokes Devil, therefore (if we accept “Peace dollars” will be used principally publicity which moved Mr. Aaron Kay to lib We might s cotter : AOROR 8), of an « ividual of k Banks will 1 S Fifth Avenue |onat, when reas . # ¢ i ubout people who do not know things that we know. In fact, $| ‘and natu Se Peas 1 enn they “ill at have . Bee oe te Se: | becomes not only a eae much of humor is founded on a pleasing sense of supericrits f the masculine 5 meee SSRs) paces EMER T S00 Mr. Kay has been getting what he wanted—or | guty to oppose the cor Fe aus Continued through life, this sort of thing creates Pau einen nmele rir er ~, uty to Oppe Py ie yh n 31 ‘a OE a ie NDwover: die allven doe something similar. Every newspaper reader knows A warning against Mederaliaing au- Vortunately there is a saving grace in all of us humanity of either sex and of various ¥ regi .| now that the Hudson Bay Company is not | thority appears in the a grapny | Praise tit which enables us at times to sce some of our own shorteom- gradations of age. real money. It is in active circulation. ‘Thin- _ ies © NOC | of Thomas Jefterron, third President | , when Geors ings as clearly as we see those of others Phe Devils generally @ below. te edged dollars will be a rea) inconvenience to the Hudson Bay Company. They als know that inited St 1 worthe Werke ‘dieis . . masculine form. But patristic !itera- © ke jofrthe United's sag alt ture and common parlance are replete merchants and bankers. Revolution his IRELAND'S 1. BEGINS | learned a American vis If we are not mistaken, toured the United States tions to the Cove! were agitating the people of this Nation, De Valera’s proposals bear very much t LODGE. to look h De Valera thing or tw the while the Lodge nant of the League of Nations Irish President reserva- relation to the Irish treaty that the Lodge 1 q jons bore to the covenan The ay be “just as good,” but wre dif ferent. They do not represent the ques issue. They are designed to obscure the real issue, to set up factious differences and to divide support of the treaty on grounds of partisan prejudice rather than on the real merits of the question. Senator Lodge is not a desirable mentor for Ire- Jand. De Valera should have learned other Jesso in America, One is that if Ireland fails t a just peace and rejects the present treaty of such quibbling as De Valera “Document 3,” the Irish oe an a wel presen adence. } Mr. Kay has made other etforis names of reput able business conce own ventures. It is also kn of hi 1 that from me to ti courts have bad something to say Mr. Ka rard ta this practice lame Mr. Ka as been in the limeligh pplication of the eternal which justice is supposed to operate Mr. Kay has had his time of publicit " eserves a period of seclusion, It would be a salu- tary influence if the Society Cruelty to Animals Kay and induce the J His Weigh, A man wearing a heavy overcoat with interest the penny scale on the } of the Borough Halil subway station lyn last evening. Then he slipped ded platform in Brook- coat, hung it over his arm, reached ' pocket for a coin id got on the aie Af ¢ he stepped off he got inte the walted for hia train Question: How man gained wearing in SMR US Met Declaration Island? his now ind bores rk during | And if we can learn to see in the faults of others our wan Anotee| $ own faults reflected we are fairly on the way to a better and with instances in which the work of ‘ote at country | . . “ 01 evil | ats ded in {rasion must | piece of British propaganda that was|% a more wholesome understanding of life, PROMI g ays Sune BY. He DEEN e Wy jon must lic be put through wit na he a8 | be muse t dio for Itself dy teiahman named Hickey-a. de | The value of criticism in the world is ité helpfulness. sciicecasneciare [ear vor ivectly, amd | Scrtor trom. the. Tritist At i In the pitiless lampooning of social charneters and con- N 5 P. J ee eee etna | ten of Washington's sctinu Uitions the novelist secks to show to all men that their ows 4} From Nature’s Past on wi eeu reo athe [tion froin a serv ant detective characters are creating the same defective eondi- See {when to reap, : uy on whom the tender-hea tie : ! bread.” ft r this t NOTES = f Big L 4 wlesso erber! 80) # Ne was PE T on f: ° 1 AZar |The lute Wroivesor Munsturberg |G broperiy tried and hunger They often fail, but sometimes they succeed, If we stuc Era of Big ds roles ma certalis source suggests | Jf this piece of American history|$ our friends—or our enemies, for that matter—with a view —Copyrtaht, 1922, (New York Deening Wort only to fools the hasty annihilation | a" PUt jn the school books what a) % 4g seeing in them our own faults and their results we are he aE DINOSAUR, of the source before studying whether) rth toving Irish from the Atlantic|} ginning to learn, r : : greater evils might not result from | {Mtn On MR | atl We arevall abundantly supplied with £ Ameng the oldest retics of Ife exe {ts destruction.” i | °qread poftiy, Mr, MeCatfrey, ana Sats ae BRShiaD ppiied with faults. Those of us 3] yinitca in the American Museum of | William Howard Taft wrote: |know your ground before you try to] ¢ © ho-can correct our own by studying those in-other people Natural History are the saurians, or rR ae Me eee nate Mee take an attack on other peopte|$ will gradually come to a satisfactory understanding of the $!hzards. ‘The New York institution hos I eanct a. lane W by reason of the]! cover of your path N413 Husiness of hving ithe largest finest display of akulla tittons nrroun mmuns |e American Bag, |iimbs and large portions of the skele- condition 4 commun: BDWARD PATNI |tons of the gigantic monsters that held ty im whieh | to Be, 81 New ork, dan, % 1 | annnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnanannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnanwnnnannnnnnnne | oH on this earth and be- ame ie, worareementé : - | Came geological relies millions of years “National 1 would be Never Voted Wet or Dry, sus that the but before the people of Yonkers or| before the appearance of Than, ing step babkw To tue KAitOF of The Evening Wark volve about Balhae Auyway, it ought to be} Of these pre-historic lords of cren- | mittee of Fifty: In your issue of Dec, 29, Jan 5 | they voted for dry wet Congress; | proved or a stop put to hoodwinking| tion the dinosaur, or rile lizard, Aas Bette Graham criticises ye 1 e me he drys Won, he eays; ¥0 that] the people any longer. LEBERTY. "| ranged this continent “when the Rocky | Jsubdue the drinking passion, which | ts. asa, + esi oataad hould he good sporty and ac-] New York, Dec. 31, 1921. Mountains were not yet born and the Soar ee eeumet’ reaianion, whiet! the 28d, entitled, “Back to Temper-| cept the verdict now bare and arid Western plains | restrictive 1 . ance.” Your editorial, I must say,| 1 have been voting thirty-six years) Favors Release of Larkin. | were a land of lakes, rivers and luxu- | Dr. Bi in Popular] Was most admirible, but when youland never knew yet whether [ was} To the Eaitor of The Erening Warht vegetation,” as Dr. Frederic A. | Drugs iicohot and you| Say that the saloon ts gone you « for a dry or a wet Congress * James Larkin, « war-tt aria: a if Reet J Hi Feb dln ape he wrong, and nobody knows that aan pees anybody olse know A aN er Partie LT f tho largest of the dine on ter Mr. Graham, w One learned leaders said, “Don't = a en olested be judged from the fact tha Devon in “The Criminal and} Brooklyt y eo what the Prohib Ont ent anit vines of of one of tt ; salt nec BR ae . : an , will be clocted ; ast ight ofa fl a i Run \ th ' j ong. ¢ ures, the ; ‘ t ‘Theapenttis 0 s ostinated q \! iw v1 a Mis 8 to have } venty-five feet long and va ‘ \ ff sed I MM Madin Land wwe And the reason why nu t i . ; 1 me tt e yn of aw geopls do Ve people balers hal, eon of 400 weliem Ab Cay Late sen Naedh ablngdon Squase Jos 4 0 3h p Garber acid aa i ae ka bot ar aoe i igi \ 4