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Salad at A N < ‘Po THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1922, If the farmer can he made to see that there {s = — ~ - — —— - — : cals Sit ‘ Mien: . rae Be Miorld, | profit In thinking about interna o Rance ‘ By John Cassel Limit of Police tional relations, getting the facts and working on he a Ty ev Right to Kill penn s APT ARRD BT BOM TIEN. | them, the prospec for agriculture will brighten and ——_—_—_— nae gate lag é Ceserears Nee b (s 0 Care Rass New vor the prospect for successful semaRvey will fade. Judge Rosalsky Explains How Far a Police Officer May Lawfully Use Force in Making an Arrest. J. ANGUS BHAW, Tremmurer, 09 Park Mew rent sttatatt instants Ne WITH QUR EYES OPEN." Ausdaten Pret sete euicek tm the M9 for republication SCUSSING the Arms Conference treaties sub- Si ha Sons Aion punteaee ans Lina hatate tar cal initted to the Senate last Friday, Josephus > Me = a Daniels, former Secretary of the Navy, says of the f. REACHING FOR THE HELM? Kour-Power Pacific Pact: Pe SPENT HARDING'S speech to the Repub- In charging a petit jury recently in the trial of Detective John P. O'Neill, charged with manslaughter in th killing of a citizen whom he said wa: resisting arrest, Judge Otto A. Rosal sky of the Court of General Sessiot “The only difference between the Versailles lican State Clubs is encouraging. Treaty and this Is that the Versailles Treaty | aahned: the law woverning: (ie eee It may be an indication that the Chief Executive + had all the natious of the world In it, which jdeadly weapons and _ protective fs tempering his steel for leadership in his party. would ave guaranteed world peace. This [measures by police officers. Judge : p he | Rosalsky said: We may hope that he has abandoned the policy ot has but a few nations ‘Gare seautn iG te ati (WpieRdion a “We have surrendered our sovereignty in harmony at any price. y the Pacifle and in the number of ships we He declared, apparently exteinporancously and outa nave, If we go into this thing, let's xo a the spur of the moment: | into it with our eyes open” “I crave the return of intelligen! conven Good. tions in the Republic. [ had rather have men | appeal for popular support on the pronounce- ments of party conventions, uttering thelr that we see the wisdom of forbearing to rub in SN eIeLL Torte Se ALGy way oats certain truths (hat can only prove irritating to many ‘ . whose co-operation sential. A change of one word in this paragraph would Se } i . ; have i wed it wonderfully. Substitute “honest’” Our first business is to get these Arms Conterence for eine ent,” and you have an excellent phitd: {reaties ratified by the Senate with all possib‘e intelligent, ve Y Has. A 4 es - promptness and good will. hy of politics. 5 cue 4 = rn " It will be time enough after they “are ratified 10 The Republican Convention of 1920 was “intelli- 3 ae ‘i . vanes a insist upon similarities and differences which in no geni.” Its pronouncements were not honest. Its a . ‘ ‘5 wise aker the fact that they are desirable treaties 1s platform was a catch-vote conglomeration of neg.- ; ; . far as they go, and that the United States cann tions. The plaiform makers were intelligemt enough aflord not to be a party to them, to win. The troubles of the Harding Administration are RESIS WAND Ucs SICH GNSS neu @rectly traceable to the failure of the party conven- thon to “ulter convictions.” may start or howeve: In its first year the Republicans elected on that their starl may be condilioned and narrowed by platform have carried out the programme—of | political circumstance, they are more than likely ww negation. converge ultimately in the same thing. If we a to sth party responsibility we mus? Provided such efforts are honest and in the rig’ Raves party Teadersiipy It inerconvemlon does wot | direction, there is 10 point in discouraging them }; provide principle, then the Executive must. In any | - i 4 event, the President or some other leader must be | '° much stress upon the inconsistencies of those prepared to supplement the platform with con under whose auspices they are launched, Structive efforts on the issues that rise after the Hvis a good deal to ask of human nature just now. convention adjourns. But such restraint for a time will be both wise Harmony may be puichased at too high a price. | and patriotic. Intelligent and honest leadership may be right or wae wrong, but it is helpful. 1 it vrong, it will beget GOVERNMED intelligent and honest opposition. Let President Harding lead his party. come to recognize the insufficiencies of ihe platform —on which he elected, he has gone a long way towand remedying the fauli . ¢ | i eee Ml ‘ capacities. In all that the people can individually | F rom t venin g W or ld R ea d ers the officer in such a manner or unde | ; Wrtay do as well for themselees, government ought not SS UNCO MMON SENSE Isuch circumstances as to furnish ti j THE FIFTH WHEEL. to interfere.” —Abyaham Lincoln. What kind of letter do you find most readabie? Isn't it the one pelle ee Daas reagopante nae - ais # for apprehending a design to tth ILLIAM D. KILPATRICK, identified as | that gives the worth of a thousand words in a couple of hundred? By John Blake ‘ | ra ae There is fine mental exercise and « lot of satisfaction in. trying to way his life, or to do him som “Operator and Builder,” writes in the Eve- | REMEMBER THE LUSITANIA, Bi odily harm, a he police o 5 a faa i Vj ‘. (From the Living Age.) | o sonable Ff aa fing Post ah article condemning (ax exemption on ‘The Weatmins Gkxetiscprinis ie following new home building. that a police officer may shoot ani kill any offender who may not yield to his command to submit to arrest |This is an erroneous. conception of the law. “The justification of a police offices ‘in Killing a person sought to larrested by him for a misdemeano' vests solely upon the ground of self defense. Av officer seeking to mak: an arrest for a misdemeanor is not justified in taking life, even if tl arrest cannot otherwise be effected, except where the resistance on the ‘part of the person sought to be ‘arrested is so violent as to put the officer in danger of death or great bodily harm, “An officer may not exert force in effecting an arrest for a misdemeanor, or in preventing an escape after such arrest, to the extent of employing « deadly weapon or taking a life, though without such force the wrong doer may escape. * * * “But where an arrest is sought to be made for a misdemeanor only, and the person sought to be arrested re- sists the officer by the use of vio- lence and force so that he had rea- sonable ground to apprehend intent on the part of the person sought 1o| jbe arrested by him to do some greot personal injury to him and that there was imminent danger of such desi: being accomplished; when the offic acting upon the appearances and con duct of the person sought to be rested had right to believe that he was in danger of personal violence {and that he in fact had reasonabi jground to apprehend that he was in imminent danger, then his act in kill jing the person sought to be arresto: by. him is justifiable in law. © © # { "Phe force or violence which ut ‘officer may lawfully use to prever the escape of a person arrested to.’ |® misdemeanor is no greater that that which might have been right jtully employed ‘to effect his ares {and an officer having in his custod |& prisoner accused oF a misdemean: may not take his lite if he attémpt {to break away, though no othe ;means are available to prevent his eseape. “If the prisoner sought to be ar- rested by the police offic But Jet's go into it with our eyes so wide oper selves with reflecting that however international associations to promote pe: 1 he has “The legitimate object of government is to do for a community of people whatever they need to have done, but cannot do at all, or cannot so well do for themselves, in their separate and individual attacke Keving the danger imminent thoi Cock- NO SLUMP IN THE ABILITY MARKET. such design would be accomp! ous the officer may safely act upon “Keep Them on th Vo the Editor of The Nan to you observed when Bourt out his” treme quotation from a recent issue of tue Revue Mili ening World ran He starts off with the statement that “the ‘housing | taire, the official organ of the French Ministry of | [ was rather surprised to see on perio Irish meeti You can always sell brains. provided you bring then, to $}pearances, and kill the assailunt erisis’ never existed” and goes on to denounce what | Marine [aeue eittoriel naxsia few days aka: | WOM an Cochran bee wonder ths the right market. lieden aaceer end cia KUM Wh he cails “the offspring of single tax.” | BN ee Oe en Viton an an hp ee who watlf Able and experienced mew and women are more in ie- {ie uatate,sithoush ma m . & . ' P ing ideas which are pRardin: e Z BM ory Sh than’ on the Committee tions with na hare nes than in good times, d yut tha he q a Mr, ‘Kilpatrick uss TARHIE instead of reason, fs made by Garnuea? of the Renate {the Trish." ‘Bourke Cockran who him said when he balke at ation It takes more brains to keep business institutions alive hat ec anieen * inate. wae fiction instead of fact, until he says: war weapon. The submarine war was com- depends on 100 per cent. Irish oratory the revolution for recoxnition of the 3. during a business depression than it does when everyLody { [fact neither design to do the sertuis “This milk-and-water namby-pamby ‘aid to pletely justifiable. * * * It ts time to Keep him afloat in politics assalls TN Whtend. to. be has money and is spending it freely. jieiesaineh OBB Rer hase ous le building’ has been as effective as the fifth also to explode the belief that the use of the |the Five Power Naval Treaty whlch here you are three days almos Hard times hit the untrained and the incompetent first 3) °"Cne taw does not clothe an offi r wheel to a wagon.” | submarine by Germany was inconsistent with jeaareey: to limit naval armaments, fig your slcsuait boiler on the booze § ‘The men and women who thoroughly know their business 3} with authority to judge arbiti The reference to a fifth wheel is truly enlighten- | the usages of the International laws of war- Lewin ae ae Ss is word for Ireland. When the Irie |g Keep their jobs. ; F ee iiloveneuceal ioe atereentitnes ing. Mr, Kilpatrick seems to know about as much fare. ‘This view, whica was circulated erron- genes ASRS itch you in New York they ought In the matter of brains, however, selling them is just as J] While COFateD in ne ane ner hia no $ ecously during the war, might dangerously | signatories As a 1 Irishman, to show you what they think of you,’ important as having them. 7 nt He N Pears is necessit shout the benefits from tax exemption as he dows prejudice Gur watlonai(Getensalin uel tature | who ought to be in the Dai! instead So that now you see The Evening You may be satisficd with your ability; your parents $| for it, and whether there was. suct: about “fifth wheels,” | + 8. © qbade gute unjontiMable to eon. jin Congress, Mr. Cockran is opposed | Worl unwitingly, heiped by te 3 may be sure that you are unusually gifted and competent. }|necessity is a question of fact fo The fact is, a fifth wheel is an essential part of tend that an enemy merchant ship should be pene peels with England. It 18 @ them the opportunt , ~ |} Your friends may predict a brilliant future for you—all of re Jurys ie be Rietilaad rome the wagon. It is the means by which the wagon is warned before being torpedoed. ° me ite sure that this eom- weapaltient eee whieh will do you no good whatever, Mee 7 te aeieiecualaranukeen enabied to change its direotion, to turn around. A What then of the Lusitania and the whole spurlos pitmant paid Ae Hours Goel lola same of posing de’ ltall aviators What you have to do is to con : the buyer of brains 3]to whether the necessity existed fa ; : versenkt policy Or were we merely misled into i j wagon without a fifth wheel would be unman- | moral indignation at these acts? The Evening World was a Keep them on the run ageable. great joy to that gentleman, It THOMAS J. MULLIGAN . ee Pa hi would be easily worth $1,000 to him} Brooklyn, That was the Case with the building situation to have such an article as that ap- | Building construction was going from bad to worse that you have the sort of goods that he needs. the officer killing, he is entitled an You haye got to prove to him that you can do some- 3] aemuittal. thing he cannot do, either because he lacks the time or the A police oMcer while engaged. it of ; arresting a person may exert suc ability to do it. Ma, . physical force“as is necessary to effec! You have got to show him that by emplo lis pi yed out. Don’t aid their plans uuse of ing you he mbitions, or pear at this particular time. More Sigerated Me when the fifth wheel of tax exemption was intro- ACHES AND PAINS tRa Gna tDinR, see jh venes! tet habilitate him in popular favor with Control Editor of The Evening World | ance he encounters, or to subdue | the arrest by overcoming the re: can make money for himself, or promote some efforts of the person he is seeking \) duced and building took a tum for the better. A Disjointed Column by John Keetz. the radical Irish In New ‘York and| ! it 8 an established fact that al} get something he desires which no one else can get for him §} hart oo tie Pivson ne ls meeting uilding to 7 ; abe se meree man or woman driving a motor yeni-|% quite so quickly and cheaply as you can. Nee tone Stik tore, Giatect tt If Mr. Kilpatrick is opposed to single tax, Ne | Sue nnnmnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnennnnnng | Ever since the fepublican and |cle is (1) in good physical condition One man known to the writer has made a fortune by $]overcome it even to taking the li would be wiser to keep it out of a discussion of tax Democratic conventions Cohalan and | (2) js thoroughly familiar with the|$ buying rare art treasures for the people of great wealth, Be- $] where the offender puts the life of tle Only a few months ago our sweet-scented subway |Cockran have been hell in disfavor ‘ ‘Calli 4 di . officer in jeopardy. The officer is nol exemption. “Calling names” doesn't discredit tax | was so poor that none would do it reverence, Now |by the Irish people for their be bound to retreat or give way. He hus ts nical devices whieh operate the|% fore he got his first commission he had to prove to his cl exemption. But if tax exemption is the “offspring | it is saving $4,000,000 per. Times change and we | De Valera and the vis spud fear Apel” Heat aro dein (8), ta)/s) that ne had paler pralie for that sort of aa than ey de a right to stand his ground and de 8 7 ‘i lican cause at these conventions. e to determine the speed of ay The ity market 1s never overcrowded, requently $|¢cnd himself, Nor is the officer called is ye ie chan wit i ‘ransit Commiss * P . of single tax,” a good many people would be in hee with the Rapid Transit Commission Cohalan was intrasted to present “lor truck through a recording appa-|$ happens, however, that great ability never gets to the right }]upon to show that the killing of th bd resolution calling upon the Ameri terested in meeting the rest of the tamily { Ochone! Ochone! O Brian Boru! Government to récognize the | | felon was necessary for his esea and that no other safe means w vpen to him. “The burden of proof rests with tl people in such case to show the ab sence of necessity to kill, on the par of the officer, and that there was ne us, and (4) is aware of the traffic ulations in fo market or never gets to market all, Self-confidence is necessary to competent work; it is still more necessary in selling competent work. If you hav you ean neither develop 7 y | pli: the intent to in their respective they've cl ri Le Republic with They neieNanged: cur cokers Iron orem ta tine! such a provision incorporated imthe| town, city, county and bd Republican platform. He dodged this | that person Sometimes after reading the Evening Post we think |4uty t had been intrusted to him. Jealousy and hatred of De V, | te, then s legally responsible fo! WHEAT PRICES AND WORLD-CONSCIOUSNESS. ability and ean sell it you will get along. But yility nor market it without work. arelessness on his or her part and the world is no worse than it really is, Danner rrr BATT prices inthe Chicago, market reached were his only motives: and “he should be aiven «maximum ponaity|¥ Begin on that theory and you will have Tess to worry about] te ts the defendant to tal HEA s in » E . yoked such a storm that he } by the courts for offenses they com-|3 in hard times. ‘i iv anew “high” Saturday. Good men, only, go wrong. Bad ones can't, dared since that time to addy AH limit, according {othe degree of thelr human life, . ‘avorable recept - open meeting of the Irish in the] ae. 9 This advance followed the favorable reception of * adie ps negligen: I WHERE DID YOU GE7 President Harding’s speech recommending the What the farmer needs most is an auto that will | It was the same with Hourke Cock 3 ‘ov oe f Usaha proving their ability to drive it i i - ran at San Francisco © dodged. | then, perhaps, the following proposed | PE heir ability dri | 4 treaties submitted to the Senate. eal oats, Henry F., please get busy Fan al Ban Francisco, He dodges. | ondinances if cnucted would prave of | Should they change to another make THAT WORD ? " . of car or truck, they must imme meeting ua sre in| veal value In lessening the fast ac ; are cumulating list of casualties to citi | Tiately “notify the proper authorities Jso that ufey may appéar for anot examination. Last week James R. Howard, President of the id an open Iris Farm Bureau Federation, said to a World reporter: | T° 8et in early we now announce without fear of {the Fast since that tin ‘ contradiction that the next President of the Uniteg |, Th® only hope of t "That's a Fact” | By Albert P. a Fact ‘ WOsHAneLe KCoprrigts, “Harpie.” a4 descriptive of a gra two to get|zens due to carelessness on tie part fea (The Now York Evening Asia :, selfish pe: 01 “ rT er m x sack into favor with of drive . < it ‘iy the Press Pubii@iing Co. ing, ish person of feminine gend ‘The United States cannot prosper unless States will be a Democrat. Han ly eAC@LIGH ahi Anyi (a) Every person applying for (©) Every motor driven — se) | is a word of direct mythological a+ and until other countries regain a measure of ish 4 s pli StU se MILOH BA HIGAT & *s must be equipped with a speedometer, | scent. The Harpies, |f we ar e- ,. bd old game of twisting the lon's tall-ea | drives y ; SONS A BOY I St be kept in good working| "“Plamond Duke"? was the name | Scent aT eIeS, e are to i prosperity. ¥e are tied to them in interna- | : erformance that rarely failed to] ectan's certificate irding his or hee| Which must be ker 5 king | Heve the records of mythology, w« ‘ ) Coming home from far away perfor L in ; HY ondition at all times. |conferred upon Duke Charles of fi 7 tional relations and cannot avoid contact.’ | find favor with the easily led Irish] general 4) condition, with ¢ 4 isan hi three falr-hatred maidens with ¢ . I asked the barkeep for a stew, suited whan mone Ue peel DAe Hetvausteas cag | GD. Every driver of a motor veht-| prunswiek, who died in 1874, the cel-| bodies of vultures Mr, Howard favored going into the Genoa Con- A tear stood in his bright blue eye two politicians have dene more harm | pt ects wh wo nter- | O rat. the trattle Feat - Sree vs of whose hotel in the Champs] They were constantly tortured ny fercaer, 2nd axed: ARIE SICEaly Goanieres “ei” (@ Sale fence ot which 1 ny, Baan auser At ai Seen Ata thelr local city and State Paris, France, were found, at freed an een f j y other influence of which 1 know.| petent driver of 9 ei ruck i ’ SLi napeesa et oar hunge! a ht to assuage b) “I wonder if we are noi too timid over here | * They Nave used and’ are using the| (aa) Any ‘plvaician misrepreannt-| HOPERE to he crammed with gold | hing thelr yicthme of every. scritt and whether that timidity does not prevent | VARK TANKUS, THE TIGER OF THE Tipe, {Irish vote’ 4% a means to promote | ing the actual physica condition | of food they were on the point of cat us from taking that definite part which the | . jtheir political interests. They "de- Jan applicant for a drivers Veenve in| +Die-Noraon ahi ag satin vvarertrpetip eens ye . x | . . z 4 liver? it over the Tammany. bi rder that he or she may receive that [to ine Yie-No-Mores’’ Was a sobriquet|ter how gluttonously devoured, 1 atreagth acd ability of this ation Suatity, \ Heing au Up-to-Date Pirate Tale of Our Own counter for the best politics privi is subject toa heavy fine, or Will you kindly publish the “collows conferred on the 48th Regiment, | lieved them of thelr abnormal cru Wheat prices and Mr. Howard's opinions on inter- MOLD RAI they. san seaure and ste ¥, generally Impriso pans DY deneriptions for Prohibition New York, during the Ctyil] ing. national affairs have a relation. Mr. Howard is | . the Jast two years got two judge-|be filed once a year with the proper | Your valued column: eee Now York ween the strocta of (i | 1, ite, ot back into the | authorities All those having licenses Promoter of lawtessn Radle previous to this ordinance must forth-[Offensive, Hypocritical, Intempe ships. Cocks mmany fold and also seceured moulding public opinion in the agricultural regions. | He is doing his best to teach farmers to think King Charles 1, of England was! metropolis were infested with bai “Old Rowley,"" after his CHAPTER VI. nickname The cleaning up of the tow ns’ certificates must | "8 “ There was a time in the history « | ‘ Splash! tin Congress where he may at- | with file their certifioute Rigoted, Idiotic, Tyrannical, Mlosical, t vorite race horse. There is still alhas resutted tn thetr gradual Papier i jonally, to abando idity and isolati ane tain political prominence by his anti (>) Every person driving a ear or Obnoxious. aseating. X.C, P.O, internationally, to a lon timidity and isolation, (Conclusion.) . I$ingish diatrthes, A gentleman known! pruck must paas a proper examination Hoboken towley Mile’ at | the Nowmarket}| ment from the public view, if Feb. 12, 1921, race course from the sume origin. their actual elimination,