The evening world. Newspaper, February 6, 1922, Page 10

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THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6, | ages. , or 7T)\ conditions of|not afford it, and sales are for the not think that Prohibition has |#ion days {helpful & want drinks with meals ere is no cted busines one way or the J. F. MACKLAIN, coal, Philadel- | wich 1 question that all legitimate hote peak do not obtain only in} most part to men with money, who > 0 Wy phins at the Biltmore—t belleve the) the West, but also In the mining sec- | will soon be afraid to use it, living up to the Prohibition Act W. B, JONES, Insurance, Lexing- workinen id fe Wik Weeks | Ww f, t in the r4 Another large item of expense {s the |sarky, Arspite ite activities ot other | ct torct Kisnppern to Bet Ce BE MADE EFFECTIVE. : * 4 of liquor by guests who nie ikl a " ‘ ¥y Able to Prohibition. " | 5 italy woome wan ine ny it) quys, is’ heartily in sympathy with | all they p but unfortunately| G, W, PLATT, stocks and bonds)| ALBERT H. SHIPMAN, retired fr Mathags to carpets and fu i ' Mibees DA PENA eenth | alt the t iy poisonous liquor. Be-| Cincinnati, at the Commodore—Pro-| business man, Palm Beach, at ths| i Pee eo gccree ene furnity vendment # satistiod| fore the V 1 Act became 4 éaw, | pibition has caused absolutely no im- | Biltmore—I have just travelled to New id Maaney would welcome the er and prosperous u present con-! the mer paid Off on Saturday.! provement int in fact, it| York from Arizona, and on the trains Jthink that Prohibition ne 1) tinue 1 oy cannot get Whis. | misses its beer, 1 think that. tak {in he banks, and conditions are bet-/—tn fact, dhe NSN uaa Mac SSG a 4 : Gy a BUNT desl Sige Medill bar ture oh obtal jould be left to the communit.es| Crime has increased, labor is J i i 1 th r th stim- | a pret feeling i or the mod!-|{n Spokane js against the be me Lag tokii {f one has tho| themselves for settlement. restless than before, and the condi¢ vidua ne very word ‘Prohibit " when properly used. |fleation of the present law Mauor. price, ith that condition prevaitiny | ; fe ontiokionn to the liter y-lovine Ame C. 8. F. M'CREADY, cotton manu.| CHARLES PETER, Mining Expert, SILAS W. ROGERS, Attorney | the law cannot be offective. TEhe ony J. W. WEST, Trenton, N. J., at the | LO Or te poor has not ig hype px people. ‘The Volstead Act lias facturers’ representative, Winchester, |Salt Lake City, at the Aston—Prohi-| Little Rock, Ark., at the Aetor—I/ benefit which has como fram it #o fur COMModore — Whatever good has | Hovery Wants a retum of “acrhane 5 might about a daplorable set of Ky. at the Majestic bition bus ina sense Improved condi- | think the conditions under the open) as I can peo ts to real estate owners | Come from the Prohibition act has | he modificatio 5 othe naent Tay ih conditions, whic s NOL. Improve eee ret lions i lie sialiey mining camps in|saloon were better than those of to-|whose property included been offwet by deaths und lawbreaking, Tekw draatio theasuses Ub which deteut ’ he ping the country on light wines |t , © Se Jthe West, In the larger the when dope and ‘‘white mule''}saloon space, DOH Ne eerie, ith everybody has tt | its purpose : and heer would golvehe problem, where 2 nf inen ways and t iaty-loxist, but I think that in time cond\-| rented to drug stores or ape atores, |i0, his home; everyone ts invited to! "Ele, SOULE, Portland t th : OLIVER JOHNSTON, Wholesale jaw, and (hen, unler the Kighteonth | ing-t cravime (or liquor, and. as! (ions will Improve, and that then pro-/and has in somo casee been divided |A"Nk from flasks, although Mquor aon on ks ed apd H land Retail Showa, Seattle, be the | Amendment \ad jw favorable ef- | they What they want, they | bibition will be a good thing, Arkan-|into two or three shope The owne, {cannot be bought In restaurants or|Astor National Prohibition has ne fi MAAS healiy f —— Astor—Prohibition has. nad our | fe f the youth of the| get. moo and other beverages sas wax bone dry before national pro- accordingly, has no more complaints] §°tels. haw Lai ae ge pec mae | rom Page Nine.) Hsection, in my opinion. The ciosing | sc T nefits of Prohibition | unfit for wi effect been very | Bitition, Then business was better‘ |about his property. While I believe R. SHIRLEY, manufact f nny yeara the ty Hues ha lee Bat } - aiwon Has takén away mute : © surface, ‘The im-|bal; they become sick, wild and un-| people pald their bills more promptty, | that prohibition woyld be a good thing | evaporated milk, St. Louis, at the|I do believe that Nk KERGAL DOE ths Ribition.” T think much of this nptation to drink, and more work- | provemer © noted In the South |euly, and conditions ute much worge|and conditions among retailers became|if it were really effective, and that|MoAlpin—There Is no ovidents ‘riconmanity, ta have meet for the eteimasioned ty the tact that nearls y ate buying hones now. Pub- | have beer years in the mak-| than) Prohibition. Personally, excellent. But under national promt |Nquora and saloons should be abol-|tessened liquor consumption ine a. crn tee vontty” cue Saloons in if @yery city has restaurants in whic! entiment was all against the ne Im { this time of busi-/f favor pestriction, not. Prohibition, | bition “white mule’ has been preval- ished, I think that the present law is! Lout: It {# a little harder to a. Beh arnne ha bee i oly fF ' Seople can secure what they want yo aigon. Now the men who come trom | nosx den the faet that labor {and would like to see modifying legis-jent, and all kinds are being manu- - Ls Me SR) { Grink with thet meals. Chie mata. Alaski—the loggers and fishermen) in the Sout accumulated a re-|fation. 1 believe that better condi-|tactured. Many who ne drank be- ; rally diverts from the legitimate hote) 82° (onmerly spent their money in| serve agaist ard times, something | tions woud come wicl a return of beer | fcre do Urink “white mule” now, ai- fe business the patronage of people wh, Seloons—invest it in something staple, never yypliehed in ante-Prohibi:}and light wines, both of which are|though I think that the workers can- é t i} on ond {ft is safe to say that the nd som oom 4) a off Son} n ons very ere ment of the Volstead Act, ur its abo MOURTGR pee Hrtaeaehs SUL RN — tead Act would be retained by | Monduy, ‘Phe same situation prevails |ialty, ‘The liquor nrovlem is stil one ; I jority of 160,000. ' ’ me th only dif c us oe worked ov | J _ LEO P, HARLOW. Attorney, Wash- FRANK Js LEE, salesman, Spring- | ference | faut that 1b takag| Coe mae ie | ° IN F) ington, at the Astor—1 think the/ field, Mass, at the Commodore—| then toi » recover from what|WAW HAS WORKED FOR BUSI- For the Dinner { peeing is too young for a cor. | There Is A Koad and a had side to| thoy dit NESS DEPRESSION. | “Where Economy Rules” b rect appraisal of its effects. Thus far.) almost everything, but T cannot ser LAURENCE MILLS, publishe REED, General Contractor, f Te -D. PO AN ion the principal effect seems to be a) how Prohbition has helped busine Washingtor, 0. C.« at the Biltmare—| chreiectewn, W. Vay, at che Mc-} 0 0 ay IN THE METRO LIT: DISTRICT 5 ee a de ie Everybody yio-|T don't think it has made the slightest | Prohibition has been wonderfully sue-| Aipin--Mvonshine has always been the seasoning of the is lates it, justifyirig himself by the | difference cessful in two ways. It has provided] problem with us. Now the traffic is| soup, salad, gravy, fi q act thist ft was put over on hin and| WILLIAM: T. LEE, salesman,(s ante moans (or the underworld til ore ent inan even and drinking | ead and ved aera ; that he had no yoice in the matter.| Bridgeport, at the Commodore—O/ | make fortunes bv bootlegging anc has|certainty has not decreased, — Jails 2 pe eure ae A highly organized and blatant ml-| course the farmer has benefited in it impossible for the workin | gre crowded in the State, and there ts the all-important factor. 4 nority was responsible. | tiave heard| many ways as a result of Prolibition.| man po get beer and wine He t/a very strong sentiment in favor of ' said in Washington that the Amend-j Ia nds are doing letier work. | really the only one who has suffered, | peer and wine. Prohibition has ment will finally be nullified, that| Ask rmer and he will tell you] for everyone cse seems te be able to Congress Will gappropriate less and) eo. The mills, the factories where) get wh he wants at exhorbitant worked for business depression, Tax- sted at seeing money payers are d less for its enforcement until it final. | numbers of men are employed, will | prices In drinking has now !lepent for enforcement without re- i ty becomes a dead letter, tell you that they are getting better | heennr wtilts, Sai $. G. HATFIELD, Denver, Col., at | S¢rvice| | PEOPLE IN IOWA FAVOR! LIGHT | J. S. ROBINSON, fruit clistributor, uce WINES AND BEER, | Spokane, Wash., at the Astor—I-think | MADE IN U. S. A. At Grocers and Delicatessen Stores E. Pritchard, 327 Spring St FINEST CREAMERY BUTTER Big Mealy Cookers =. Cookers B}- Potatoes B-Poiatoes 13° | @ Aunt Jemima | eo Pancake or le Buckwheat =~ FLOUR 12; BORDEN’S Seeded Raisins fed Raisins 1G: Farm Products Co,Inc. Sete see Packase (tox. Paige — ge gaa gs EY49° | NOW ON SALE | 5: HONEY 49° HONEY | Answers All Important Questions. |} B | O O nn 2 4 | 3 5 Our Famous naka * Brand oe | Almanac Heinz Baked Beans . ™"<an Qe | Life Buoy Soap . . *ees 20c Rinso . . - - .- + vks Ge | Succotash, Iona Brand . can 12c H.0.0ats . . . . . wks 13c | Strained Tomatoes, lonaBrandcan [Je Standard American Annual. Cracker ‘Specials ®o © © IES} Crystal Top w» 2D]. ce Scal Tea ,, 2'7¢ Macaroon rks GC Cookies Sandwich Snaps | ARMAMENT CONFERENCE. 1920 CENSUS IN DETAIL. ORANGE PEKOE CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS. IRISH FREE STATE TREATY. || ELECTION FIGURES of City and State. SPORTING RECORDS COMPLETE i ® © @ | ; LAST WEEK. 12 IN METROPOLITAN DISTRICT HI Copies on Sale at All 35 eat Mali . Hound zoe Ned “Mat ss 05 3 | Newsstands and Bookstores, C. , i 4 ‘ ‘ | By Mail 50c., Postage Prepaid ied a, han ce York. | | GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC & Yhhe World’s Largest Grocery House—-5070 Stores in the U. S. the MeAlpin—Peopie in my section of S- A. LITTLE, merchant, Dubuque, the country do not mind thd present) la. at the McAlpin—Prohibition has state of affairs, 1 imagine, because | not direttly affected business in Towa, | .H- B. MULLEN, motor supplies, | oot Becninition, which went into | liquor is 6o ensy to get, Prohibition| but it has créated a general discon- | Sioux City, lowa, at the Commodore— | oo” . a before | : i ut 1 to the friendly, hare {1 de not belinve that Prohibition has | effect tn th Welt Gal otha has had very little effect on business tent, infmic | Amendme phere is mor y’ conditions in Denver, because we| monious way in which Ness is {done us any harm, and at a recent | Amendment. is more money have no industrial foreign populat on, | Proverblally conducted in that State. | Meeting of the Chamber of Com- —— representatives it was upi-| In Cities like Puebdlo the situation | Dissatisfaction is evidenced, not only jlabor in our eection Is tar better off might be different, in the cities, but also in the rural dis. | Vorsally decided that it had done us| W. A. HAYDEN, linotype machines, ricts. Many of the lowa farmers are | Some food Most, people in the see- | + Ae \of Gorman descent, and heer and] tion, however, fuvor the gale of nee Baltimore, at the McAlpin—I think! wines have always been an adjunct | td Heht wine 4 that conditions in general are much|to their social dife in the } WALTER |. PAGE, ; Iwork- Aeeriear| ‘Worse now than they would have been | jt ommunitS isola from the | Smelting and Refining Co., Omana.| syre of the. cities, Molifvation | Neb.« at the Walderf—Conditions in | i 1 ce | if Prohibition had not come, 1 do not! know, however, whether the business | of fhe present law is favors pes were aso dierent from thee in depression itself resulted from it. | the Bast ow ork, particularly | eee elt resulted from it | MADE DRUNKARDS OF PEOPLE| ii, many visiting pleanttre. suckers CRIME HAS INCREASED AND, WHO NEVER DRANK. Jin the West, the well-to-do have | LABOR IS RESTLESS. | DR. W. A. LYNOTT, Bartlesville, | private stocks, not yet depleted. «Ch ‘Okla, at the Astor—I saloon was the gre JOHN J. HAWLEY, Kansas City, prohibition has made dran labo: could hay in } i rds Mo., at the McAlpin—Nothing can be) of people who never drank befor lies formerly came to us said in favor of Prohibition in its re-| after two years It has been found Borden's Grade A milk ~ amilk of exceptional uality ~ meets the lemand of the most ! discriminati: ‘If you are not ettin this “rnilke please “phone ; for our hy phinaihs age king for money with which to e lations to conditions in Kansas City|that Prohibition does not prohibit. T Laster the head ot the family had either and throughout Missouri during the! believe we should permit the m nent his wages or been robbed ot | past two years. Crime has increased. | facture and sale of whiskey, but not] them. To-day th new channels of corruption have been| go hack to the opened and labor is more restless and} ajeohol and hom discontented than ever. Most signifi cant, perhaps, is the increase in fuve- | + nile delinquency. Youthful curiosity | is constantly on edge as a result of} the unending discussion about the| Highteenth Amendment, and the spice oft danger in satisfying that curiosity is an adventure of the most irvesist- ible appeal. Youth was formerly pro- tected from liquor evils by laws vig- oreusly enforced and heartily sup- ported by public opinion. The Eight- eenth Amendment automatically did+ away with the protective laws, but the liquor evil remains and flourishes in worse degree than, ever during the! saloon regime. HENRY M. HIDDEN, drinking cup manufacturer, Cincinna' t the Wal- dorf—Business in Cincinnati is worse than it has been in many years, and Prohibition can be held responsible | for much of the depression, It is a} beer drinking city, and public opinion ig decidedly against the present law Baa tiquor has béen responsible for many deaths and much illness, Th only solution for ‘the problem is a} beer and wine modification of the nloon. People drink! ing money, Bat th brew and will con- particularly — the How do you judge shoes? Most people don’t. They judge prices. But that is like the tail wagging the dog, instead of the dog wagging the tail. There’s much more to a shoe than the price. There's leather, of course. There’s workmanship, certainly. There’s style. And there's fitting It would take years to learn to judge leather and good workmanship expertly. You've got to depend upon the reputation of the maker of thé shoes for those things. You are the judge of style or pattern. When it comes to a shoe-fitting, it’s important to accept the advice of one who knows. The makers of Walk-Over Shoes know what that service means to you. That's why you can’t buy Walk-Over Shoes at Tom, Dick and Harry's shoe store. Only Walk-Over Stores have Walk-Over Shoes. @ Walr-Over Ve New York City Stores 10 Filth Avenue, between 42d and 43d Sts. 179 Brow ear Cortlandt St, 1432 Broadway at 40th St. 252 W. 125th St. 1173-75 Broadway, near 28th St. 1625 Broadway, near 50th St, 622 W. 18lst St. 150 Bowery at Broome St. law. PAUL H. HUGHES, Magazine Representative, Chicago, at the Mc- Alpin—Chicago offers many more arguments against Prohibition than for {t. A number of prominent and | wealthy citizens recently organized | to lead a fight for modificatign of the Voistead Act. The Eighteenth Amendment has not had the support} of the public, and that has bred dis: respect for other laws. . United States mails, forn late, are now the preye of de criminals. Crime of kinds has increased; corrupt practices ave more widespread than ever befqre; ‘abor! 4 troubles are marked by extreme vio- nrcaul 4 el n saan st 7 ops rooklyn elrose Aven 5 . lence, and the list of drug and poison | Peery Bronn— 651 Melrons Axe i liquor victims grows daily. What can $65.7 Fulton St., opp. Hanover Place Paterson: It. the Prohibitionists show? 5406 Fifth Aveni Poughkeept in St . i j WILLIAM F. HUMPHREY, Attor- Rey, President Olympic Club, San Francisco, at the Belmont—! do not Complete line of Phoenix and Van Raalte Hosiery Enjoy this Delicious Hot Breakfast A steaming dish of creamy SUNNYCORN — the hearts of white corn firmly ground and steam- cooked by a patented milling pro- cess. Simply stir into hot water and it’s done, ready toeat andenjoy. Geta package at your grocer’s, The Patent Cer€als Company Geneva, N. Y: | | COFFEE | SUPREME | | A&P Sole Distributors 2" E23" THERE WERE 34 NEW ECONOMY STORES OPENED IN THE tooked Breakiast Ceres &

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