The evening world. Newspaper, July 25, 1922, Page 26

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUR8DAY, JULY 25, 1922, SA Zs burning in the subway and that their wiring b Eanes arate tea = = ei a -- Cie ROG, ee Senate e Oa | rea Ye ou Beat It! ogg ~=-- By Maurice Ketten “| ||| Zpoch-Making pets ° ommends alterat the wiring of cars so that By Press Pub. Co. BOOKS ee Eee te tae an, etn the main power currer 1all in no case be a mi : Published dally exeent Sunday by, The Prom, Publishin - ‘ , ~ y " ie Company, 83 10 63 Park Kow, New York brought above th 1 floor WHY DON'T MS Ls 4 7. The report also says that if a means could be You GET J ANT AHUSBAND $ Copan 1022 (New Tork Brening * Park Row, bd found for safely cutting out a car from the power NA te) NING WORLD current at short notice, it would be welcomed RRIED 2 ne ON “THE PRINCIPLES OF GEOLOGY” Mfice Order or Registered Letter Surely such a means is worth secking. Every How long has this old grit-ball of an” an earth bean rolling through space, anyway? When those of us who are now getting old were little children they used to tell us that the earth was only rks from a short cir- force of the power cur- bound to increase the the current is cut off second 8f continuing tirew cuit, with the treme rent making things worse danger of panic. Dir TUESDAY, JULY SS = SUBSCRIPTION RATES. tered at the Post Otto at New York ae Second Clase Mattar. froo in the ‘United States, ouiside Greater New York Evgning Worl OR, iret — oF Month and the fire becomes only smouldering, the alarm about 6,000 years old. 100 te Dally Wor vite als 8 of passengers can be more casily controlled. We do not know nor did teachers LAN a id I f 1 saved in shuttin know that a great Scotchman, Charles World Almanne for 192 Midi std lel, ; hic Lyell, had ulready published a book BR! LUCA MGM LEMAR UL Rn AL ke which was destined ‘to revolutionise @ Bldg. tisher ERROEN: 1203, 1308 Brway, cor stn | WASHINGTON, Wyatt ble than all the fire estin ; and exits that the world’s thought upon the subject Ave, neat) 1th and F Ste 2Hh St, Fey I There Bids. NETRIIT, 621 Ford Bide, can be pravide of the earth and man and their re- BRO! 149th St, near! CHTOAGO, 1603 Mallers Bide. spective ages. PARIG, 47 Avenue de l'Opera, pective ag TAS 202 Washington St ‘ebd 817 Fulton se vised LONDON, 20 Cockspur St. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Breas is, exclusively: entitled to the use for republt: ches credit ise credited of all ews despa ed to it of not otherwise ‘this paper, and also the local news published herein TEXAS AND THE KU KLUX. N the inconclusive Senatorial primary in Texas ] Senator Culberson has met defeat. The Ku Klux Klan showed formidable political strength. A “run-off” primary to decide between the two leaders will be necessary. The “run-off” gives Texans a real opportunity to defeat the Ku Klux Klan. In the field of six candidates the first and last were Ku Kluxers. Together they polled only a trifle more than a third of the vote. If Texans will concentrate on the Ku Klux Klan as the sssue in the “run-off,” it ought to be possible to defeat Mayfield and his masked gang Texas, in the Ku Klux effort, faces a situation transcending party lines. North Dakota faced WHO IS “THE FARMER”? FARMER 66 HE FAR) 2” is a principal feature in si the debate on Schedule 11, the 1922 version of the notorious Schedule K. The 1910 census, the last on which the report is complete, enumerated 6,361,502 farms. The census also enumerated 50,000,000 sheep, or an average of 8 to a farm But the sheep were not evenly divided. 610,894 reported ownership of sheep. Wyoming and Montana were the principal sheep raising States, reporting more than 5,000,- 000 In Wyoming 1,043 farms reported sheep, in Montana 2,252 The 10,000,000 sheep in two States were 20 per cent. of all the sheep in the country. The sheep raisers in these two States would get the benefit of 20 per cent. of the tariff protection. But compared with all the farmers in the United States, the sheep raisers of Wyoming and Mon- Only each these HELP NE Do THE HOUSEWORK ONE WHO WILL WASH THE DISHES AND AND NOT BE Too FUSSY AROUND THE HOUSE ONE WHO WILL Cook HIS OWN BREAKFAST In the “Principles of Geology,” published in 1880, Lyell proved that the geologic past finds its explana- tion im the present state and tenden: of things, and that in what we sco going on around us wo may behold tho processes which brought th: earth to the condition in which w« now find It A century or two ago the presen! earth features were supposed to hai: originated suddenly; the mounta ranges with all their diversified form of beetling cliffs, deep gorges, thun dering cataracts, trom the slopes and smiling valleys, the lakes and rivers together with all the other earth phe nomena, were the result of cataclysmi: action rather than long, slow, natural process. From Lyell's book the cataclysmic theory received Its death blow. ‘The book showed that the great geological changes had come about as the slow operation of natural laws, by sub a somewhat similar situation in the Non-Partisan tana amount to the minute fraction of six one- ONE WHO W/LL sidence and US Bena eve ie ents, springs and tides, League struggle. Republicans and Democrats | hundredths of 1 per cent ren pr joined to defeat the league Texas may well follow the North Dakota ex- This favored six one-hundredths of 1 per cent are to get’ one-fifth of all ‘he protection. Less SALARY AND LET ME GIVE ME ALL HIS heat and the various other physical neies operating through countless res, Having established 80 much, Lycli ample. If Mayfield can be defeated in the “run- | than one-tenth of the farmers will get all the mate \etmp oes hie) noe tone e f ' ‘A the age of the earth was to be off,” well and good. If not then enough Demo- | benefits of wool protection BOSS HINT Feckbied «Hoe in qhowanayy Gut JA crats should join the Texas Republicans and make another determined effort in November. Discovery of a clerical error has reduced the reported indebtedne s of Allan Ryan by a mere The other nine-tenths of the farmers—not to mention the non-farmers—will pay from $1.62 to $5.70 more for suits, coats and ulsters, as the im- mediate effect of the pending tariff. This is the Tariff Commission. iundreds of thousands, it not millions of years, since practically limitles: periods of time were required for th production of the observed facts. In the Bibles of the year 1830, the margin off against the opening on TUbeYEE S121000000 estimate of the Federal rse of Genesis, was the legend: TOO UE Winter tes tho is “ ie "4004, October 18,"" which meant that A good many of us would like to wake up Mi ly He ietaale Ho Sais Ne F m that date, “God created the some morning and discover that our debts were Is “the farmer” the one-tenth or the nine- heavens and the earth out of noth- , $14,000,000 less than we supposed. tenths? Is “the farmer” the 610,894 owners of ng." WHY SHELVED? HAIRMAN HOOPER explained yesterday that President Harding had taken from the Railroad Labor Board the negotiations in the railroad strike, and that the Government would handle peace efforts direct from Washington. sheep or the total 6,000,000 and more farmers in the United States? Who is “the farmer?” Eamon De Valera is reported to be looking pale and wan. A good sign of the returning health of Ireland. rom Evening World Readers UNCOMMON SENSE That old legend amounted to noth- ng after the publication of Lyell's 00k; and the age of the earth was nt of as being inconceivably The “Principles of Geology” also completely changed our thought re- garding the age of man on the earth The “finds” in caves and river drifts ind alluvium forced the conclusion that the human species had been on Wh h ike bi ki P; { 4 Fy this pl anet for many hundreds of When the strike broke President Harding pro- EFFICIENCY. What kind of letter do you find most readable? Isn’t it the one thousands of years, to say the least. claimed that the voice of the Labor Board was the : that gives the worth of a thousand words in a couple of hundred? Not the least amazing of the results voice of the Government In what way has the Labor Board lost that voice? The Labor Board is truly,a spokesman of Gov- ernment, including both the President and Con- HE Government of the United States has asked the British Government for its co- operation to check the smuggling of liquor into this country through Bermuda and the Bahamas. There 1s fine mental exercise and a lot of satisfaction in trying to say much in few words. Take time to be brief. “Pity Ignorant Old Age. To the Editor of The Evening Worl competent hands as William H. An- derson and the god fearing minis- (Copyright, rT By John Blake by John Blake.) MANUAL LABOR. The man who is ashamed of manual labor is merely of the Scotchman's book was the radical change that it led to im our thought of death, When Lyell was born practically verybody believed that death origin ated with ‘Adam's fall’? in the Gar- | Vashi i re 3 len of Ec some 6,000 yea z0. gress. The members of the Labor Board are ap- per State sigan nt at sania is ; tay for several years taken mus tera) of tie cape! ‘ ae thelr Ge Boren ut ee eg 0p Ae ‘ i F an ad rs in the Christian churches. F ‘ As 4 nas : “5 pointed with the consent of the Senate. In it we reported disposed to aid the Federal Prohibition ae Sopleaaure tn re sheet Kee Wile We Ais on. ihhe onbiecl, The man who fancies that manual labor will never lead 3] pang that convulses the frame of have what should be a focus of both executive enforcement officers by suggesting that, instead various subjects let's do away with tobacco, indecent ) anything but more manual labor—perhaps a lifetime of every created thing, every passion or “, . fot th “, . to the uplift of his fellow man and 3 A nstinet or cessity tha re es and legislative powers. If the President, faced of the “three-mile limit,” the term “territorial | yoman. While they are all very good, tele ae roneas oe Punany) (is a very poor observer. . fegpaene E aaneay Sean a . . mais a. i d sements. Remember the fate of s, aah an : A to: By ane a ‘0 death, by an emergency, feels the neea for more vigor- waters,” including an area eight miles from shore, ene it is Darang Ue ‘eo paeea odoin fandacornnera Wit nersenelly No man does his really important work with his hands \ ut the fruit of the disobedience in e i horoesh k the Labor Board | Shall be agreed upon to facilitate the search of Saree Or on Ee eee ee Oia | Mould like to see a man like Wilbur The hands are merely tools—as much as are the saw Berantge, ; jus action, why does he not ask the Labor Boar ig bd Ua} Glenn Voliva, Overseer of Zion City, id hammer and plane in the hands of the carpenter, or th- But. in Lyell’s book men became to publicly recommend the course he should fol- low? Such procedure, would strengthen the Labor vessels suspected of being “liquor runners.” All this is merely anothe~ reassuring sign that departments of the United States Government are Age" is timely and convincingly true. On reflection, such essays should serve as a source of inspiration and stimulus to the youth and maid in quest of things in life which must at the head of our Government and then we would have a decent country to live in and raise our children. A BELIEVER IN DECENT LIVING. rush in the hands of the portrait or landscape painter. Hands can be trained, of course, but it is not the dif ference between the hands that makes the difference be 1cquainted with the fact that count- s before man made his ap- pearance upon earth, death raged ind revelled among its occupants; and Board. But if the Labor Board is to be set aside | duly and dutifully sensitive to pressure from the |With udvaneing yeare be a boon and] Thompson Ridge, N. Y., July 22, 1922.) tween men; it is the difference in the brain that is behind Eiaginat coRAn GH or piece tee: whenever serious trouble impends, it might as Prohibition Power—save in one direction. a solace to them. Young people AS SR the hands which directs and controls them. t was in full force when the masto- well i E 1 ill b ke Somebody is sure to point out that while the who are thoughtful of their future} ., in. saitor of The Evening World: Watch two men digging a ditch, One of them will do don and dinotherium were masters not exist. Every quarrel will be taken to the would fare well to give the pen of{ "NG doubt you have been annoyed nore with less effort than another, although he has th the “plang President. It is easy to imagine what Republicans would have said had Woodrow Wilson similarly slighted a board created by Congress. “Usurpation” would have been the mildest term used. But in shelving the Labor Board President Government of the United States is grappling with rum carried by ships of other nations on the seas, the vessels of the United States Shipping Board are still selling rum in order to induce passengers to embark in them Why not arrange to have all liquor seized by Blake its due consideration for their sakes as well as the pleasure tt will give in imparting the knowledge ac- quired to those not fortunate enough to follow him up. Hats off to our favorite essayist! J. J. O'SULLIVAN, New York, July 22, 1922. by being obliging and passing pop bottles along the line to some one while you are witnessing a ball game. It invariably happens that while you are passing the bottle a good play is executed which you miss. You immediately cuss pop bot- tles and the fellow who sclls them. ame sort of a spade and the same kind of hands to direct it But the better man is using his brains as well as his vands and is getting more out of the job in consequence. A year or less later that man will be making more money. The capacity for thought in his mind that enables him to use his spade more effectively will enable him to direct other men when the chance arrives—as it will. ale WHERE DID YOU GET THAT WORD? 192.-OBSTREPEROUS. The obsolete English word, of clas- Pa 7 febaid inj . ape) Prohibits Talk.” torre ofan) Hid Hee 3 nee sic origin, to “obstreperate,” meant to - Harding is only running true tc form. He didn’t | the United States from ships within a three or |_| “Promipition Tate BiG ken ey nee ant ae So much more profit is to be made out of brains than $ | make a loud noise. It originated from back up the board when it had a serious com- | eight mile limit transferred direct to United } “ai this Prohibition talk in your} pottles were thrown at special police-|$ out of hands that no employer can afford to keep a man $|the Lv! cle “ob” ( t), and plaint against the carriers. If he had he might not have felt the need to shove it aside now. States Shipping Board vessels and sold thereon? That would be efficiency. columns is extremely tiresome to the really intelligent readers of your paper —the law-abiding element who uphold the Eighteenth Amendment and be- men, and on several umpires and players? Empty pop bottles are left care- lessly in the aisles or rows of seats occasions at with a brain at hand work, There are in the world thousands of men of distinction who work with their hands to-day and will always work “strepero” (to make a An obstreperous therefore, is one noise, to roar.) man or woman, who pursues a ¢ 4 2 lieve in its strictest enforcement. Some one steps on one when leaving with their hands. course, or refuses to pursue another | Bordeaux Opposes Tax on Wine.—Headline. HEARST’S POWER. If you had a wayward child who in-|the grounds after the game 1s over, Among these are painters and sculptors and pianists {| course: noisily and demonstratively, } Remember how Newcastle has always felt To the Editor of The Evening World: sisted on eating more candy than was|he or she falls, and probably a frac- in laboratori P oe whether as a result of a violation about coals, * Did you know that William Randolph Hearst is | good for him you wouldn't allow him |tured skull is the result. Some time ind many men in laboratories, Ree EHEnissnth Amanamantion nae, one of the twelve men in the United States whose in- |to do so just because he cried for tt, Jago I attended a baseball game at They are really brainworkers, of course, but so is every The direct ancestor of our word dividual incomes last year were over $5,000,000? wong yaa? “Phen! Wir. ih Reavenl§ Mbbela mela, & botte: sail dren an|s. man who employs any working tool intelligently, whether $ | “obstreperous” is the Latin “obstrep- EVEN A FRACTION OF A SECOND. No Wonder this professional “friend of the poor” |B2Me Pay any attention to the irre” |upper landing and struck a spectator) } he be swinging a pick or carving a great statue. crus," which undoubtedly figured in HE Transit Commission’s investigator re- ports that the suffering o1 passengers in the thinks he can buy the Democratic Party of New York State and never feel it! sponsible who yelp for whiskey when they are wholly tr- responsible ard unable to take care of on the head and inflicted a nasty wound, No attempt has ever bec made to prevent a recurrence of the Perhaps a majority of the railroad executives of the present time have been manual laborers in their day, but i! he police records of the Eternal City. But there is no evidence that in those unrestri ted days more names with . ONE DEMOCRAT WHO CAN'T BE FOOLED, |themselves? These poor weaklings}above by putting up wire screcning was their brains and not their hands that got the the word “‘obstreperus” against them Lexington Avenue subway fire of July 6 cannot | yew york, July 24, 1922 must have strong-minded men and/it was Just a plain case of negligence|} j,¢omotion. got them their § | vers entered in the police blotters of ” . i . 94) ERR women to safeguard thelr interests be- on the part of the managenient ; Rome than are now entered with the be laid to poisonous gases generated by pyrene - cause they have not enough will] Here's an opportunity to do the They learned to make the brain the boss and to force it © legend in the police blotters of ’ y a same leg p lotters fire extinguishers. ACHES AND PAINS power to resist temptation. I say| public a favor by helping to get rid to do the real work. And in doing that work it got the New York. In the opinion of experts from the Bureau of aad that the Government is not severe }of the sale of pop bottles at base-|$ development that meant promotion and success. qian esas Mi ‘ bie Sixty years ago the War for the Union was in fult Jenough with them when they break |pall games. Surely a human life is To be afraid of manual labor is to be af: WHOSE BIRTHDAY? ines who have examined the conditions and of | giost, The country is now engaged in a union war, |thi8 splendid law. Every person caught | worth more than the revenue derived et is to be afraid of any ies 4 physicians who have studied the symptoms of the ep iy eat 4teelf, * | violating it should receive a severe |from the sale of pop in bottles, labor, and the labor-shy man is likely to remain at very JULY 25—THOMAS EAKINS was fi ease! i Thad Goee Matory repent SAeN: sentence—sent to jail for a long term HENRY J. KOERPER. laborious physical work all his life. born in Philadelphia, Pa., on July 25, % sufferers, smoke from burning insulation plus to meditate on his weaknesses, AS] Brooklyn, July 23, 1922. 1844. In his youth he showed great natural panic were enough to produce the ob- William Alien White 19 doomes t0 sllence nhl hig |for thell, femilea=any family that 1s rtistic ability, and acordingly ho q ” for trial in October. But think cursed with a weak-knecd, rum-suck- | Child Welfare Board, 145 Wortt a 2 ve ¥ served effects. There were no symptoms of phos- ne enigt WAI AE a atgt hath What @ Jing head could well afford to dispense | ro the Baltor of The Bvening World; went to Paris, where he studied under gene poisoning, lot of free sp a ! with his society during the time he| where can I apply for the Widows’ Fai] | “ems, almost incredible that one and|the best known painters and also Maver ‘ll, of 4 hi was serving his sentence. Pension? M. B. 8. “ce a ’s a ‘ac a Nae dozen of eggs could ever have} worked for a time in the studio of a yor Hylan will, of course, denounce this re- The Austratian Platypus at Bronr Park now eats | They are making a big racket Ries a t ||| sold tor 2 cents (a penny), sculptor. Though eminently success e y ‘bringing Pro! " . all branches, he specialized port. fifty shrimps per day and seems to like America, Jabout bringing Prohibition to a vote Barbers Profiteering. 8 th i I | Ca eae ful in all f : ia ctite this election, Stuff and nonsense! | ro the Editor of The Evening World By Albert P. jouthwic 71 : : ' painting portraits, and his fame @ent the Mayor's plain and paramount purpose passed by the voters of the rural] wish to give some facts in reference ————— ~ rand iy called “Lake Poets’? of | produced in this line. A man of great was t ye that th Vee suaearae ! Now a lot of up-Staters say they are not for Hearst. |gections of this country, who, after|to many barbers who are taking ad. onethihe ote eaten te Inventi ven ip doyle ao as to prove that the Transit Commission had Hit the bar'l again, Fingy! all, are the only clean minded, healthy | vantage of the public in charging ex-| Provisions were very cheap In Iro- | 1 ve a SURAT in poetry,|many directions and depicted on can- been subjecting the public to the risk of whole- . ens of to-day. Booze swigeing.|orbitant prices for hair cutting and|land 180 years ago. ate Dublin | oe tite." sober draba and grays} yas all Sie modern sports, the Nowra . * r A ay “ cigarette smoking, dance Mzards of | mas: Even Second Avenue and|News Letter, May 8 17 states and early American life. As a result sale suffocation in the subway by permitting the The Ziegfeld-Burke excitement continues to grow. Ving pig cities haven't sense enough| Third Avenue shops have the impu-|‘We hear from Derry (Londonderry) . oe of his training tn sculpture, his can- ¥ wrong kind of fire-extinguishers, his denunciations | How hard it is to keep these show folks hitched, to vote on a question ag big and|dence to charge what a first class|that provisions there are as cheap as| "Gotham," a colloquial term for the|vas figures have a sculptural ap- will be taken for what they merit bd nol as this on hotel of this city charges, and then|they were ever known, there bein» y of New York, first appeared in| pearance, and his work is so anatomi- ; ; Bigy: are worth, With the coat mines, the railroads and Henry Cabot | 1 8a¥. keep the Eighteenth Amend-| insult a stranger who complains. twenty pounds of meal for ninepence, | “‘Salmagundl,"" by Washington Irving} cally perfect that he was appointed The Transit Commission investigator recom- Lodge on his hands, who will envy President Harding? [ment |p the Constitution, make the] Barbers of to-day don’t put up thelr] twenty ounces of butter for Sropance and Herma K. Paulding, and !s sup-| professor of a on oa ; | | bode , ' as ? Taws even more drastic, and put the|list of prices, becauso they over-teightcen exes for a penny and pota |pored to hint sarcastically at theo the Pennsylvania jemy of Fine mends that emergency lights be kept constantly JOHN KEETZ, power of its enforcement into such Icharge VERITAS. ‘toes for threepence per bushel.’ lt worldly wisdom of {ts inhabitants, | Arte. ’ ~.

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