Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
j ee SS Zs Che orld, ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULIT: 4 f hed dally except Buniday by Te, Peat. Mubilshing pany, S38 to 63 Park Row, RALPH PULITZER, Presiderft, 63 Park Row, |. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Row, JOSEPH PULITZER, Secretary, 63 Park Row, Ly ‘Offies Order or B Books Open to All —————— a WBSDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, = = —- BUBSCRIPTION RATES. tered st Post ©! ew York Second Ch iter, Bese Pe Poss Uber ae “orks. cee Nee Pees: One Year SMa Months oF Mont Bh : vening World... % ilyand Sunday’ World 6.00 100 mally World Only... ., 3.00 day wis Passve 2.26 al 4 irice-A Week World . 5 ‘Wotld Almanac for 1022, 85 cents; by mail 00 conte, t BRANOR OFFICES WN, 1903 Biwey, cor asen.| WASHINGTON, Wyatt Bldg. SEM, 2002 71h Ave near | 14th and Fr te X, ts t,, Hotel Theresn’ Blox. { SIT, 621 Ford Bldg. : BRONX, dio F- wavih st, near | TN Uy" Gog Mallees, Bide. ¢N, 202 Washingto PARIS, 47 Avenue de lOpera, ; RY Palo MOPS CON, 20 Cockepur 8, : MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED hated jor suas ciated Prose ix exclysl led to une t gee aE Rew dcprtencs ctedlees or nok aeerwlen sredited ‘this paper, and sisd tbe local neqs published herein. ; THE U, S. SENATE. HE United States Senate is the most power- ful legislative body ip the world, ls ninety-six members control our foreign policy _ and can reject any legislation emanating trom | the House of Representatives. It was created for the purpose*of curbing the popular will. It often does this. t Composed to-day largely of stand-patters or j ‘ peactionaries, it effectively continues the oppres- sions from which the people suffer. It can only { be reformed by being replaced with men of bet- ter brains, better views and better regard for the general welfare. Next Tuesday will come a chance to put one man of the right sort in the seat of one of the wrong sort. ; Vote for Royal S$. Copeland and begin the good work of creating a Senate for the people! A WOMEN'S CRUSADE AGAINST LYNCHING, i j | i | { | HE project of enrolling 1,000,000 American ' women in an organization to be known as “the Anti-Lynching Crusaders” has been started under the auspices of Negro women representing most of the States of the Union. L But it is not designed to be a merely racial 2 ; Movement against what figures as a racial crime, and the appeal of its organizers for the co-opera- tion of white women throughout the country may be expected to receive a favorable response. The question of suppressing lynching is not a question of color but of’ good citizenship. It transcends social considerations. Certainly no more promising movement has ever been instituted for combating mob murder A national organization of women acting in con- cert to condemn lynching in principle and to in- vestigate cases where it is perpetrated, to expose examples of official Jaxity responsible for lynch- ing and to bring moral pressure to bear on Sheriffs and Governors to uphold the law, can accomplish great good. It is not too much to say that a million women erusaders against lynching can cope more effec- tively with the barbarity than any Federal leg- islation to that end can possibly do. Respect for womanhood is the pretended motive \ of lynch law, and it rests with women to repudi- | ate the false code of honor which condones the : commission of the worst of crimes in their name. Germany's financial records are wide open | to the Reparation Commission, Chancellor Wirth avers. | And when the commission gets to checking \ over the figures on printed money it is going to ! need extra wide measure adding machines. | Ask the mark-purchasing “easy marks.” They i know—ano CONNECTICUT. i UR next door neighbor, Connecticut, like > j New York, is electing a Governor and Senator next Tuesday. The Democratic candi- | date for Governor is David E. Fitzgerald, three { times Mayor of New Haven, running against | | Charles A. Templeton, Republican. For the Sen- ‘ | atorship, Thomas J. Spellacy, Democrat, is con- H tending with George P. McLean, the present Republican incumbent. i Two issues are before the voters. Mr. Fitz- ; gerald is opposing in reality J. Henry Roraback, | the Republican Party boss, who for years has | made the State an appanage of corporations. Mr. | Spellacy is the foe of the McCumber-Smoot rob- ber tariff. He has been making some able speeches, which ought to penetrate. } Normally, Connecticut is Republican by some + 6,000 votes, There ought to be enough thinking Independents to swing this majority away from bossism and set the State free, ae THE OPEN ROAD, HE Italian Fascisti have shown the world something novel in the way of “revolution.” True to their promise, they have “taken over the Government” without disturbing King or Constitution and without damaging anybody «ise @reet enough not to get in their way, Their tender Is pow mier, and some of the older political groups pave actually fallen in line be- hind the Fascist! bandwagon and furnished ma- | 4 terial for the Mussolini Cabinet P h ! copzight, om By John Cassel The scene when the thirty-sixeyear-old head of I ew: cron Fork Beealt teorty By Prean Pub, the Fascisti in his Sam Browne belt, sash and | eae ~ puttees shook hands with the King, apologized for his black Fascisti shiv! and declared himself His Majesty's “obedient .rvant” and co-worker for the regeneration of Italy deserves to go down in history, We hope the motion picture men did their duty. The new Premier starts work at 8 o'clock in the morning and one of his first official acts was to telephone his fellow members in the Cab- inet that punctuality and early hours will be the rule benceforth, Froek coats and top hats also. If there is a smile in all this, there is likewise an underlying sense of something valiant, straightforward and serious The test of the Fascisti is still to come. But even a cynical world can be interested in what is, in part at least, an attempt to cut straight through a tangle of inherited political factional- ism to find an open road on which government can move forward, COHALAN. URKROGALE JOHN P. COHALAN’S words are belied by his deeds. His candidacy is not a serious matter, but his claims and alley tions are. The product of a political machine and a ripe flower of bossism, he is now posing as an inde- pendent and asking votes as a “fearless foe of Murphy and Sam Koenig. How these two worthies must chuckle as he talks! His “independent” support comes from lay yers fed on fees and newspapers fattened with Surrogate’s advertising—a fine line of virtuous pretenders. His own Gaelic American is loaded with the “official notices’ sent to it from hi desk. If he has ever made a sacrifice for “inde pendence,” it has passed the observation of man- kind. There should be no delusion about his can- didacy. He is for Cohalan and nobody else MMANY-TRAINED. Synopsis of P us Chapters.—ilylan-ous oper ators, asked to explain their use of dummies, said {n substance; That was simply my method of doing it." CHAPTER III. “Why did you bring them (Brochard and Karsch) into the company,” Mr. Shearn asked Mr. Frankenberg, “and put them into a position to get two-thirds of the profits of this venture when they didn't put up a dollar and you put up all the money and are doing all the work?” “Why did 11” Frankenberg replied, “Because IT wanted to, I just did it because 1 wanted to.” INVALUABLE. 7 . WV] HEN fire was discovered in a Brooklyn From Evening World Readers school building yesterday 1,250 children and: forty-six teachers marched out to the street What kind of letter do you find most readable? Isn't it the one that fives the worth of a thousand words in a couple of hundred P in one minute. Nobody was injured. The parent There is fine mental exercise and a lot of satisfaction n trying who rushed to the spot were more excited than fo say much in few words. Take ime to be brief. the youngsters. . Out of the Saucer. certain extent regarding ‘faith heal- The public school fire drill is a great thing. [t |?» te eaitor of THe Evening World ing.” When Christ sent disciple does more than get children safely out of a burn- he) Haeiteb Are, OB ORU REDE Tae te eG Say Bienes Ee) Ok $ by j am prouder of the Mayflower than| ‘‘body"' he referred to. ing school house. It helps to make future citi- | iver He sent them out to heal the * . “soul,"’ to cure P| oft He ha zens who can be counted on for discipline and For years and years and years, my pied ie ee ene ieee men, self-control in all sorts of emergencies. women folk have been lambasting} doctors of medicine, to cure our No'instinct-is!more valuable in a bigicity. No |™° because tlike to drink my tea out} Bodies and protect us from cantesion Ws aan of the saucer. ‘aa IRI AE Or a ear effort should be spared to instil and spread it ; these grent men we would have bee Last night my daug Edith, ant] wived off the face of the earth lon her husband, the Doctor, took me ifago, “faith hoalers" and all CLOUDLESS DAYS. ane the Qalaworthy play, “Loveltinat | th retarenne to the minletare of the ‘The weather is easily forgiven for much that | had been told a lot in advance about | Gospel, their pay is very small, hard- fs bad in its habits, bee ie ott the excellent acting of the Englisl)|ly “enough to exist on. They work y Decatne it often makes players. | eubscribe to every word » | hurd for it, devoting all thelr Ives te amends so handsomely, it. T liked the play, but best of all ady for the elevation of mankind Ending with yesterday, this vicinage has been ilked the old London sollcitor—"socte- ney deserve to be paid. } leased w the o ty lawyer,” we here would call him- ii these pepple who profess t ned MASH FOUR: Oloudleea aays—the;trus! Cals for drinking his tea out of the sau-| heal should have some other way ot fornia sky, with @ dry atmosphere and brilliant cer! livelfhood. Let them give Sunday sunshine. Our cousins across the pond not] to that work, if It is done for the These have been given us by the bracing my have what they want to drink Jlove of Goa J . northwest wind which blows the cobwebs out of but they know how to drink Christ told his disciples ‘t¢ HOSEA STEVENS. |accept no purse or scrip,'’ and when the heavens and brings life and health to the New York, Oct. 30, 1922 he sald ‘The laborer is worthy of human soul. — his hire,’ he meant only Inborers 0 This has been a blessed fall, Who shal! now Preparedness, the earth should take pay, making . To the HAltor of ‘The Evening 1 Qistinction between God's work an: accuse our climate—or say thi % . Bot the ioak favored of eat os New York: ta Look at your hands, Mr. Editor: | che work of man F. Geb moe os there's blood on them. ‘The gory} New York, Oct. 27, 1922. x1 stain Is that of young .merlean man- — + fs isa bi Peasimintic, ACHES AND PAINS hood, It the pies our UfortDat ay ng ganar aha Bene Wei country is required to pay—and al- oh fayinent Charies Evans Hughes speaking in support of | ways has pald—because vou moulders| , A" ® txPAYe! and an intelligen Henry Oubot Lodge ts something like piling the South | of public opinion : f | citizen oe oa re cae for my Pole upon the North, It ought to produce a frost in | distinction bet nititar and | OD pocket, d sae aria ae si Massachusetts next Tuesday. “preparedness.” to me there Is very little difference Last month one of our foremost sol-| between Miller and Smith, judging by i diers charged publicly that thousands) what they are saying in their medi A careless man threw a match away, are sleepir rane ocre and meaningless speeches. They use We sent t “over . Oe a ‘ it felt fe lenven and apread to bay, unprepared ond untrained, | are two of a kind, only Smith is more And acon there was the deuce to pay— y were sluuehtere crude, more vulgar und doubtless less In a great big con-fla-gra-tion! pacifists, When you responsible mentally, They are both . cause you are preparing , i o edb he bosses and the "inte A weird Wyandotte Indian woman has place neeiliessly, thousands more of us in] Owned by the posses ay as is placed @ line noxt war ests,"’ and t are both running true curse on Mayor Harry Burton of Kansas City. Should Your editorial entiticd Needless} to form, a la the two old political think it was bad enough to hold the job in to-day’s piece Of] machines . writing, It e blowing ir. . Tha chrcniolelohia Houthar sar , again you would tose employ | It will make no difference to the # ehrontele 0) uthern social function save | your powerful per with equal skill to} taxpayers which one Is elected. The that “white and green mints were served throughout |urme us out to a the absole- | old bi-partisan robbery will continue the card-playing.” But, alas, they were candies, not ships and behind th millar €U0*) . jague on both of these scurvy pol that your present potic * fulepal You criticise Weeks, Denby, Roos? |iticlans who have battened for years . velt, Harbord and | t for at-|on the substance of the taxpayers Both “Al” and “Nate” are in the city for a week of | temating to teach us ‘sons they |Out upon them and thelr owners, | vtolent political exercise, They ought to stir the | have learned from ex ee UN Ped este a poe pepo 4, fairness I ask you wh knowled teach the vote for Mr. fown wp. It needs a dove of good, old-fashioned pot | of mititary and nava ra glea Cassidy, who talks common sense and foal excttement, n your editorini san: should be} has the courage to tell the truth In you H . preferable to theirs, ¢ ed on the}about the real issues in the cam- The hooting of cleroymen of late aroma to do con. | HOl! of baiile Fat | pices esigarourler CuehY, fanmade fined to thoes of the Kptacopat denomination, Pusieiaaninktohit wanes . the young mon v the |} Arm © Day, Now comes Major J. C, Hemphill in the Rpartan. | price for nat y 1 Why | to one tea f evening a durg Journal to say that Col, Harvey's soulless woman | 8{* YOM puMink ie aely GULBIS Expiaperal ye: UO Bs tBRe oe “are bad talk waa not new stuff at all, but the taking from cold earn Aldermen will pasa hy react ion ne atorgge of the same apoeoh made before the Woman'a weak t08 eg aad aati aah veer 1 Vere Haw nd deolure Now, 11, ice Day Ungiere:ty Olde]! New: York, fas: 18, 1000, ‘Con mar an : mn y ERANCIO GRC. . ach things bet JOUN KELTZ M. Dixon to a! Naw Mem Sot, 27, 1023, . THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1922, ome mental disease. For it is normal and healthy to accept life as a fact, to dmit that it must be lived, and to make the best of it. eee UNCOMMON SENSE By John Blake (Copyright, 1 WHY AR Mr. Kipling pictures the future as a place where by John Blake.) 1) WE HERE? “Each for the joy of the working, Each in his separate star, Shall paint the thing as'he sees it For the God of Things as They Are. Most of those who are born into the world begin to won- ler, when they begin to think, what life is about, and why they are here, Most of them solve the problem satisfactorily to them- aclves, . Some of them are not so fortunate, Lately a lad ef sixteen took his own life because he could not find out what was the object of life. Were it possible to learn, from’ an examination of the ‘rain, whether it is sane or insane, it is probable that such sn examination would haye proved this boy suffering from Whatever it is about, it exists. We come into the worl! ind remain here, and into us has been instilled an instinct of self-preservation which makes all those of us who are healthy minded want to remain as long.as possible. As to why we are here, a little reading of history will do much to clear up that problem. Great men and little men in all ages are here partly for their own enjoyment of the world as they find it, partly to make life happicr and better for those who are to follow. ‘All the struggles upward of the peoples of the past have made life better for those who are here to-day. What those who are here to-day are doing, primarily for the joy of the working,’ will make life better for those who are to follow. The fight for the Magna Charta has helped to bring independence and peace of mind to those living to-day. Ev invention, past or present,ehas made existence \ little more comfortable for future generations, Gradually the work which normal minded people do for the fun they get out of it is bringing the world toward civilization and toward a better understanding of life. It is a sour minded human being who cannot find some- thing to do that he likes to do and in which he finds happi- ness, That, and the hope of the future, is enough for most people, And it ought to be enough, seen ANNAN ANNAN NIAAA RPP PPP) . on the wing, eo tt 4@ with the From the Wise human mind—twhen at rest, tt Every day is a gift I receive darkens.—L. B, Landon. from Heaven; let us enjoy te-day Every man 4s a volume if you that which it bestows on mea, It know how to read him. belongs not more to the young than —Channing. to ma, and to-morrow belongs to no A mind is its own place, and in itself can make a heaven of hell, 4 grave, wherever found,"| @ hell of heaven.—Milton. preaches a short and pithy ser mon to the soul.—Hawthorne, one.—Maneroix, Good humor ta the health of the aoul; sadness is ite poison, Ae the firefly only ahinee wheys — Stanislaus, Turning Points in History By Maubert St. Georges Copyright, 1982 (New York Rveniag ‘orid), by Press Publishing Ge. THE BATTLE OF MARATHO! THE VOTE OF CALLIMACHU! As the Greek ciillzation grew Greek mode of government chan; Monarchy was displaced by the of tyrants, as they were called— who exercised the power of Kin without the hereditary right to Thebe men were usually supported the poorer classes whom they pi tected trom the greed of the rich m chamis, and.were bated by the as a natural conpequence. One of the most famous of th tyrants was Pisistratus, who ruled th city of Athens from 660 to 527 BY’ A good and able man, he was able) resist the efforts of his enemies deprive him of power, But when died and bjs sons, Hippies and Hf Parchus, tried to assume his post they were soon driven out by powerful enemies, Hippias took refuge in the ality a Sardis, the capital of Lydia, a sian province, and began to stir trouble between the Persians and thi Athenians, He thought that if could bring about the conquest a Athens by the Persians he would bi made Governor of the city under tht King of Persia and thus gratify at th samo time his ambition and his de: sire for revenge. He found that what he had se himself to do was not hard. Dari the King of Persia, tad just returne from an unsuccessful expedition 4 Burope, where he had nearly lost his life through the attempted treachery of some Greeks. So when Athenian| ships, In retallation for some Persian abuse, salied Into Sardis and set fire to the city he took that as an excuse to declare war and sent a large army under a General called Datis to eon, quer Greece. This army was to o guided by Hipplas, who as reward would be made Governor of Athens. The expedition landed at Maratho: a small village about twenty mila from Athens, in 490 B, C, The Pe: slans numbered at least 50,000, whi! all the forces that the Athena: could muster amounted to barely 10, 000. This army, which was dra’ from the ten tribes that composed tl population of Athens, was command ed by ten Generals, each of who took charge of the whole force turn, Besides these ten there was tl General In Chief, Callimachus. Greeks were stationed on hills th: barred the road to Athens and we! comparatively difficult to attack, Br ause of this, and because Hipplas ad. vised them to walt until Internal di sensions stirred by his friends in the city should break up the defense, the J Persians did not attack the Greeks, Wise in the way of Persian warfare, for he was one of the Greeks who had nearly trapped Darius im tho other expedition, one of the Athenian Generals, Miltiades, urged the Greeks to attack the Persians. It was a great thing to ask, for the Persians were considered the best soldiers in, the world and no one before had suc- eeded in standing before them, Th vote was split 5 to 6 among th Athenian Generals and the matte was decided by the word of Calli, machus, This man held the destiny of tly world in hia hand. Had he cast vote for waiting the Greeks avoul have been defeated, Greece conquere Italy overrun, and the infant stat of Europe bearing the seed of freeda ind democracy in them would neve’ have grown to carry their message the world. Callimachus's yote the other wi was, however, decisive. Under th command of Miltlades the Greeks ‘harged, the Persians crumbled b fore them and after a faint atten to attack Athens, returned to Perglg in disgrace. ———~»—_____ Dictatorship. (From the Ohio State Journal.) One of the most peculiar of phenomena of the day Is this rage dictatorship, the sudden desire of @ democratic people to put themselves under near-automatic rule as regards special activities, Judge Landis, of Mie course, began It when he accepted th position of overlord of baseball; © Wit Hays gave it the big fillip wh he beeame czar of the movies, everything and everybody, from ti restaurants to radio, wants a dicta! In some cases, of course, a dictator desired as a means of protection. The tendency is, we believe, gent ally regarded as a healthful sign the reawakened spiritual and mui fibre of the American conscieng¢ Rut is there not, at the same tt a acknowledgment of a most grettable weakness? Independen, and freedom with a just regard f the rights of others—these lead us opposite direction from paternalt They lead us to make our own 4 cisions and rest upon our own in vidual responsibility. The be go and obey and you will be happy s of administration of affairs 1s m @n expediency, not a remed: {mmoral and unjust conditions ery fo: permanent as well as for temporary relief, Education, of course, is looked to as the remedy for all things; buts we must think of education ty broader terms as including the tratn- ing that comes from independent cholce freely oxerted through genera« tions,