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te eee si ! would come fo the conclusion thal manipulation of =e ae = ress : "airplay tothe uc vmatitis | Bad for My B meets By John MUSKAL CLASSI | (The New Vor’ Evening q et es ac ow chops | 4240 fOr Wy Business Sera tenth By John Cassel || | CLASSICS outa fens ‘wea: ountie ts Se ercae Peahihi Processes should be used only by men who know | fe << acc uae y by The Prox Publishing | ‘ — | os puaw, ee as han hoe: sommon sense that all ills are | V A 5 | 3. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 65 Par how . < , . JOSEPH PULITFZER ., Secretary. 65 Park Row traceable to the | | aaa daney New York Byening Publishing World) sa strict curd on evading under the ¢ public would actors either Fair play te a great mass of quacke name of chiropractic, Fa send a substantial percentage of ¢ MEMBER OF THE ASsoctaren PRESS "Tae Associnied Pres ls exclosively entitied to the wre fer republication yt otmerwine credited im this paper tm No. X.—GRIEG'S "PEER GYNT.” There are inany lovable characters | | In literature. Prominent among them THE VOICE HE FEARS. } to school or to jail | are Sinbad, d'Artagnan, Tom Jones, ISHOP THOMAS F. GAILOR, President of | | Huckleberry Finn and, last but not Adequate education might develop some compe- tent healers of a limited group of s from the crowd of incompetent meddlers. But, given edu- cation, it is probable mast of them would cease to | be chiropractors. © familiar nsical play love this, genial, miselicvous and philosophical | rascal, ‘The drama is an adaptation of an old legend and has the tang and |y spirit of wild Norway, that land’ ot the short, br * and the long, dark, dr Henrik Ibsen finished this work in least, Peer Gynt, T with Ibsen's the National Council of the Episcopal Church, makes quiet, dignified answer to the charge of William H. Anderson, State Superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League, that the Episcopal Church in New York City has “an unusual proportion of the wealthy influential persons who to-day constitute THE REAL OMENS. } ‘ 1867. In 1874 he requested Grieg to*® the main respectable backing of bootleggers and HE bucketshop revelations of the past few write incidental music for the pro= ‘duction of “Pecr Gynt" The com- liquor criminals.” Says Bishop Gailor: “In reference to what this Mr. Anderson has to say about New York congregations, I don't belong to New York. I'm here only as a guest and I can’t answer for the people of New York, but as for the rectors of the Episcopal Church in New York, I think they “Tepresent about as good a type of citizenship as there is in the United States.” Even William H. Anderson dare not challenge that statement. Nor would Mr. Anderson invite inquiry as to whether a majority of Episcopal rectors in New’ weeks have had one good effect They have put new interest and energy behind legislative proposals to protect the public against swindlers operating under a much too carelessly extended cover of Wall Street “respectability.” The District Attorney is urging laws that will put all stockbrokers under State license and regula- tion. Legislators are warming to the idea of a thorough investigation of the Stock, Consolidated and Curb Excharges If the governing powers of the Stock Exchange are wise, they will change their policy from protest to co-operation, poser felt greatly honored, for Tbsen was the most funous Norwegian au- } jthor. He was delighted with the eub- ject of the drama. At this time Grieg \ Was granted a pension by the Gov- ernment, which enabled him to de- | vote ali his time to composition, He | was thus able to concentrate on pro- ‘viding appropriate music for Ibsen's jplay. The first performance of “Peer , Gynt" with the incidental music was {given at the Christiania Theatre in February, 1876, with Henrik Klausen ‘in the title rote | Gynt" Suite tiful num! opens with tho Me : 4 A + “Morning in’ which Gries: York do not agree with Bishop Gailor that “there The more they oppase a separation of the sheep | paints a perfect nature pleture. Poer ts # large body of intelligent opinion in this country | from the goats in Wall Street, the more they will Auger Ho nad peeertharee nyse ns whith wants a modified liquor law and that Pro- hibition should never have been put into the Con- stitution as it was.” Mr. Anderson would not invite such inquiry, be- ¢ause he knows the most powerful indictment of his particular form of fanatical tyranny is found in the number of high-minded Christian men and wothen whose reason cannot be forced to approve it. He knows that a law that reason cannot accept fs a precarious law. | He knows he has most to fear not trom “wealthy Yackers of bootleggers and liquor criminals” but | | up for his early failures and had be- come a power umong the tribesmen, who regarded him as a prophet. As the piece is played he is seen standin’ on the shore at dawn, gazing dream- fly out to sea. ‘The slave girl Anitra, loves Peer, “Anitra's Dance” is a selection with” Oriental atmosphere. It is very ani- mated and full of color. The slave! girl tries to lure Peer by her graceful | dancing. | The death of Peer's olf mother is |deserfbed in a funeral march called ‘Ase’s Death.’ It is very dramati« and effective with its constant repe tition of the one melancholy theme, persuade Legislature and public that ALL phases of stock dealing need immediate and drastic treatment. Publicity given current disclosures of swindling and the results thereof is not starting a panic. It is only prompting a housecleaning. Signs that the part of Wall Street which calls itself conservative feared such housecleaning are what would be really ominous. Yap's Jap. WHERE R/SPONSIBILITY SHOULD } . REST. ‘A very thrilling piece, “In the Hal! | from a far larger class of intelligent. educated citi- | 1 THE legislati * of the Mountain King,” is the las; | A 2 legislative hearing at Albany yesterday number of the first suite, It depiets | zens of unimpeachable standing whose character, | usefulness and Christianity are of Peer in the cave of the Dwarf King. on the ‘bill to ic . make the Police Department who wishes him to marry his daugh- responsible for the licensing of taxicabs, the friends her standard | | than. h ter. When Peer refuses, all ther\ ; is. of the bill were out in torce. | dwarfs spring upon him and torment. { j That is why he never appeals to reason but only him, He cannot shake them off. The Evening World has long advocated this curb on taxi thuggery. Many other spokesms ry the public were present, and all approved. They continue to dance madly abont him ontil the hall collapses at the magic chiming of the distant chure} ‘bids reason bow and be silent. He dreads its voice. oe | | bells. gat | | Not a voice was raised in protest. | | Suite No, 2 is not as popular as thy i} ne | ‘i | | frst, It contains one v lovely When M@rch starts with pleasant, balmy The reason is not far to seek. Those who are jnumber, "Solver's Song In the - —<e weather on the morning of the first day and drama, Sol who has remained opposed to this measure are the taxi crooks, the small proportion of dishonest and criminal drivers, : : some with criminal records, who are driving to-day From E vel. in g W or Id R ea de rs because of faulty co-ordination between the Police What kind o! letter do you find most readable? Isn't it the one Department and the License Commissioner. | Most of the opponents of the bill fear to show | that gives the worth of a thousa: \ ords in a couple of hundred? their faces where they may be recognized. | There is fine mental exercise anu « lot of satisfaction in trying to The Evening World does not expect that police | “4” Teh in few words Take rime to be brief licensing will make every taxi driver a Chesterfield faithful to Peer, is seen standing by . the hut on the mountainside, wherg_ she has promised to wait for Bim. Edward Hagerup Grieg was born in Bergen, Norway, on June 15, 1843. Ai the Leipzig Conservatory he studie/ jcounterpoint with Richter, composi tion with Reinee! J plano with Moscheles. He was graduated witl honors from that institution. Wath d Nordaak he planned to found Jinavian school of music, The ‘then piles up snow the same evening, is it a lamblike or leonine incoming? MORE BONUS WABBLING. HE latest Washington wabble on the bonus question is Mr. Fordney’s statement that the | Present programme is to “work out some plan that | would not entail any large drafts on the Federal | UNCOMMON SENSE By Joh 1 (Copyright, 1922, by Blake A A New “Solence.” cause either by buying votes, or Sena DON'T SCRAP YOUR ‘TIME of Nordraak. at the age oj Treasury within the next two years.” in manners. Nor will it be an absolute guarantee Shah ariey! of The Evening World \tors, or in some such manner, 1 read ¥ - i nel ‘ f twenty-four, left it for Grieg alone:td 7 ia . 5 wish to cot liment yor m your | © one bo! 260,000, and uo « yver journe youth the city or rough the blaze the way. In Christla a This is in sharp contrast to previous statements | that no crook will ever drive a taxicab. Hee eee een eee ne eee eee it Calne tsline Tvndeedd Ht AGT taMTNGa A ustoal UAGKtke Ree from the same source. Unless there is a wiggle | But the bill will at least simplify control. It will | night's paper and to thank you for it. | OY on people busily engaged in scrapping their time He pondneied: Cros 1651 30 ea away from this last wabble, it sounds the knell of | make the Police Department responsible. It is refreshing to know that some| a yong Sin, ecmeciuily ‘ne the pres, Bonieiot then, ara dummpingiib tuselesily’ oi ward tales Sore’ wane cen tveieall ete ae the cash bonus. of the metropolitan papers are already |ent Administration owes its existence, $ till 4 or 5 o'clock in the morning. Others are throwing it $ gems. “The Butterfly’ is a pretty, ‘All the bonus schemes have provided for optional | The Brooklyn trolley scrapping programme pardag Aiilbade Sete her ia ee in a way to the former (‘var of the ¥ overboard on dull books, written merely to entertain during [tonecplcture of 8) ete eee settlements other than cash. Some of these have probably means that the Transit Commission Wee EGA CAE Mate, Coactc| WhY fal? Letts ao? « so-called idle hour. {| cession’ is a characteristic pleee, tn ! j seemed more advantageous to many veterans than | will substitute buses for some of the so-called fae eet eer acaitla tie mene BROOKLYN DEMOCRAT Most of them are serapping it by just standing around. 3 | which one hears the merry-muklig of ba cod toma, if Congress teniporizes by enact one-man, safety-type cars. ponies e Ls es Brooklyn, FRb. 26, "Standing around” ~-there you have the seeret oi a very 3 the Pi bapa haven pole ae ’ - i y . The change would be welcome. The jack- ay nenue Frou Wwelkes large proportion of the unsuccess in the world. Wine ae Like CHOpIA’ EA * ing only the non-controversial options, many veter- rabbit strain in the ancestry of these cars has Bomelot the/papers wash! to) (Minis YO alias atthe vantig Worlds In every village, in every even on the farm, men {land Dvorak, Grieg has immortall ans are likely to prefer them to the uncertainties caused no end of comment, Regular patrons is suMcient justification for the con-) y notice that all the “Marys” in the |$ hurry home from their work, through their supper | the melodies of ive land tomas ly delayéd cash bonus. are never affected by seasickness when travel- demnation of chiropractic that it is)world are going to give Princess Mary /{ jyurry to change their clothes and walk briskly to some ren an new and generally unknown and has|one shilling for her wedding present. | ART MASTERPIECES ‘If. so, the pressure for a cash bonus and the rea- UBE=cp) Foe sae: the condemnation of its principal com-!Now why can't every woman in the abevans wheis jpatess ee potheres together. tana te ial e ty _ petitor. Such reasons could not jus-| United tes give our soldiers one nen for the next succeeding hours they stand in idle ma ge Lohan will mote alg og tify that attitude for long, of course, Meth for their bonus? Why not.|$ talk or gaze at passersby IN AMERICA A y wo years would mean the perma- und I am certain that it will only be a| #18? BEd: And in the meanwhile Time, which they might be manu- ACHES AND PAINS question of a short time until the! press and public will see the purpose behind all of this slander. No self-respecting chiropractor would expect or desire the press to be “for” chiropractic as against medicine, By Maubert St. Georges. Ch by the Press Publishing York Evening World.) nent shelving of the bonus. But if there are to be no large drafts on the Fed- eral Treasury, what {becomes of the Lasker ship subsidy scheme of paying a cash bonus to A Nation of Whiskey Drinkern, To the Edi-or of The Evening World: I am joining the clamor of the far seeing and clear thinking people who beginning to see light regarding facturing either into dollars or into the machinery which later on might make dollars; is pouring out into the ocean of space, utterly wasted, Recreation and rest beth are good for men and women, (thie N “INFANTA MARIA THERESA— VELASQUEZ. * & A Disjointed Column by John Keetz. Why all the fuss about George Washington having is > i ag qd re err arkable Vela ey pe tedchaie!) Go bas: Giaaert RAC We LE ceREE ate teclie Coes ireah a Prohibition Tewsthat dose uot pro: but must of us get about ten times as much of both as we Rte Ne ion ane ‘yelengoas by a 4 ‘i Sas, ° and public to be “for" fairness and| mnit, need. doh ek Rt lt That also will have to be’shelved, Letters from Woodrow Wilson now seldom bear | iustice und honesty and open-mind:|"y remember the time a few shor: Taking out the average working time and time for sleep }| Mita Marla, Theres” presented (0 |p in 2 his signature. Instead, they come signed ‘John bated in muons Frets tag years ago when the reformers we and Beat there a five or six hours—perbane more—left the institution by M rs E F. Green: i a Randolph Bolling, Secretary.” 5 a crying, "Kill John Barleycorn and vw every day. Not more than one of these ought to be spent of Boston. nis portrait was origi- Mayor Hylan ss an apostle of sweotness and | fAndolob Bolling, Secretary.” Sounds like « thun- }outions have ween that this day 8] SiNave peace and plenty.” Bur ii{{ in absolute idleness. And every hour beyond that one ix } (nally im the Austrian Federal imp: «fl light wants the newspapers to boost New York. r peroach Os: meerd 16 yeems to me that Mr. Barleycorn has i . e ’ rial) Art-History Museum on the of his ear claims as silly as those the chiropractors advanc one tries to grab It off for advertising purposes. Col, |of their waning influence, 1 am not] the past which this law SUPPOSE 7C As Velasquez was descended trom in their f t. eae Harvey gets an invitation to a royal wedding and a |® chiropractor, but I know something | to save. It has proved itself a failure From the Wise MONEY TALKS. a nebto family. he was siven the ad: ‘ own support. Maine fish packer at once announces “Ambassador |" it and it Is bused on sound sense. | simply because these selfsame hard a | vantage of an excellent education, But when the Mayor goes to Albany and talks te his fellow Mayors from other cities, he gives New York an even blacker eye. FAIR PLAY FOR THE PUBLIC. EVERAL dhiropractors have approved an edi- torial printed last week criticising the methods used by the medical profession in attacking chiro- practic. ‘The editorial in question was in no sense an ap- proval of chiropractic. It was solely a word of f z “4 capita d no man of intelligence ever does that The painting was execujed shortly , i erance shown by some of the old-| Enough of a farce that jeopardiz: apital, an \Gafore the daria pt the ean ft caution to the medical profession, because it seemed fashioned doctors of medicine who see | tke liberties and comforts of many Fee eet ee aden ten that some of the doctors advanced in opposition One chiropractor commends what he calls a pol- iey of fair play to the chiropractors. The Evening World is vastly more interested in a policy of fair play to the public. Fair play to the public would, we believe, elimi- nate 90 per cent. or more of the present practi- tioners of chiropractic. Fair play to the public would require adequate “ Soe seeking Some Way out, even to stick The clear thinking, right minded i » decays the {40 not need—a pair of shoes, for in-place an article tw when proy education of chiropractors—for example, a regular ‘The big man heard him, took him by the loft car, | eee tne poor Demoonte. peanie should help end this conditian! , Herdenitig su crime decays the |°0 Be eet Pe ee would haveleare would have waved the origland ‘ led him to the door and propelled him into the oth : P : G heurt just us rust decays iron \ : i Meal medical course plus the specialized post-graduate other | Now, | have « suggestion whieh in| and an appeal to your Congressman saved the old ones, This ix true of| It is the 10 cents here and thew room with a severe kick in the pants. fa way might help. How about the] for a light wine and beer amendmeut —Plutare! that mounts up. Every 10 center is work expected of a specialist in other fields of medicine. In such a course = would-be chiropractors Some letters from Mark Twain are recited in an English bookseller'’s catalogue. In one written in 1902 he prescribes the watermelon as an unfailing cure for dysentery. Referring to a victim, he says: “I would have bought a fresh, ripe watermelon for a threepence and fed it to him with limitless prodigal- ity and had him on his feet inside of ten hours. Do you suppose the medical staff would allow Lord Kitchener (in South Africa) or Lord Curzon (in India) to listen to me? Indeed, no!” . Judged by his picters, Viscount Lascelles bears a marked resemblance to Frank A. Munsey Just soon as a man achieves a little fame some Codfish.” | MIKE MILTON, THE MESSENGER. A Tale of Wall Street and Its Wealth, CHAPTER IY, His first duty was to bis house. Hurrying to the office of the boss, in piping treble he told his tale. Angered at the indignity and at the cold treatment he had received, Mike Milton plotted revenze. 4 (To Be Continued.) new science of chiropractic J. LEWIS FENNER, D. C., Secretary-Trtasurer New York State Chiropractic Society. New York, Feb, 25, 1922 A “New Idea, ‘To the Edi‘or of The Evening World I (and thousands of others) would welcome a little defense of a body of men with a ‘new idea,’ the chiro- practors, Thousands of people bear testimony to the benefit they have re- ceived from this new form of treat- ment, and are becoming disgusted with the attitude of opposition and intol- in each new idea a little new evidence Fair play to the D. C's ©. Kk. SMITH. Vo Pay the Bonus, To the Editor of The ning World | ‘There was a suggestion in a Repub- lican evening paper the other day that in order to pay the bonus the Wood- row Wilson Foundation should ‘turn over its funds for that purpose, Of course, the present Administration is been resurrected with a vengeance, and instead of peace and plenty we ere having a mild revolution in the form of a crime wave. We are ce tainly having plenty of unemplo; ment, high taxation, high rents and living expenses, The moderate light wine and bee: drinkers of a few years ago are to- duy hard whiskey drinkers, We are becoming a nation of whin- key drinkers (and poisonous whiskey at that). . Whiskey is plentiful and easily o»- tainable while a good beer or wine ts not. for a few hard whiskey drinkers of vhiskey drinkers of the past are to | day drinking hooch and moonshine ynd paying a much higher price for w much more vile and poisonous stuf than they formerly drank I have noticed that) former mild men’ are turned into brutes aftor drinking the stuff they obtain to-day and consequently their families suffer a great deal more now than they for. | merly did money that bas been discovered in strong boxes, safes &c., in Pennsyl- vania? I guess that it wae to be used to help along the Republican @ill quickly show him the sentimen: of the public and bring quick relief H. SMITH New. York, Feb. 28, 19: ' wasted fordver, takes can be remedied, and can be made lessons, t is gone forever. gave you. GI RRR RRP RAR PLP LLLP if the Wasting time is worse than making mistakes. The mis are profited by, they But the,time that is scrapped never can be salvaged from the ocean of eternity into which it has been dumped. You can do two things with your time—use it actually i» add to your income, or to develop the qualities ‘that will add to your income by and by. If you do one or the other of these things you are wisely employing the capita) that nature If you do neither of them you are scrapping your Talents are best nurtured solitude; character ts best formed in the stormy billows of the world. Goethe, Dishonesty is a forsaking of per- manent for temporary advantages. ~-Bovee. The Sabbath is the golden clasp that binds together the volume of the week—Lonetellow, By HERBERT BENINGTON. | Copyright, 19: |many proper repairs will make them last nger, whether clothes, furniture or Automobiles. Often we have to re-'i byt WASTE. things—cleaning, (New York Evening World) 84 Publishing Co, | Saving does not mean going with- jovm things we need. enminating It simply means waste—knowing how to spend wisely and carefully. | How often do we buy an article we pressing Ringstrasse, Vienna The picture represents the day ter of Philip LV. of Spain and Bli beth of France, the Austrian Infants | Maria Theresa. She wears the regal costume of that period, with: ite rounding skirts and closy-fitting bed- tee. The gown is of soft gray, re- lieved here and there by gay touches of rose in the orngments of her dress und also in her coiffure, q Although this portrait of the youn, princess was mude over 250 yral ago, the flesh tones appear surpris. {ingly fresh, emphasizing Velusquee’s, mastery of color re ee He studied art under Francisco Per- lrera the elder and later became the ypil of Francisco Pacheco, whoke ughter he married When Vi | anez was only twenty-three years old Philip TV. called him to Madrid (in 16 and appointed him tmpertal r, and so popular did lie become, that he remained the favorite pain- ter of Spain until his death in 1660 °F line interest for a day on $800 at Iper cent, and if put in a Ber ( } nk paying that interest will yield self in sixteen years,