The evening world. Newspaper, November 13, 1922, Page 22

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Che -CGeMiiig dtorio, ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. daily except Sunday, by ‘The Press Publicht Company, ‘ai to 63 Puck Row, New "York® RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row, 3. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, 63 Park Ro JOSEPH PULITZER, Secretary, 63 Park Row, THE EVENING WO ‘ SUBSCRIPTION RATES. entered at the Post Office at New York as Second Clase Matter, Postage freo in’ tao United Staten, cutslde Greater ‘New Yorks One Year Six Months One Month Evening World 440.0... $1000 $5.00 & Pally and Sund World... “12.00 6.00. bs ily World On 10 00 5.00 BS Sunday World Only 400 225 46 ‘Thrice-\ Week World. ':!! 100. World Almanac for 1 cents; by mall 50 cente, BRANCH OFFICES YPTOWN, 1103 1: bei tage is By Ave, Bae, 14th and F Ate. BROS dey ane ae BIdE.| DETR IT, 521 Ford Bide. ad Ave BROOKLYN, 202 and 317 Fulton st LONDON, 20 Cockspur 8t. * MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. s ‘The Astorinted Pres Is tm this paper, and also the local news published herein. THE ARMISTICE DAY TRIBUTE TO WOODROW WILSON. HE Armistice Day throng before the Wood- row Wilson home in Washington is one of the most significant facts in American life to-day. The yeast still works and may yet leaven the loaf. Last year the pilgrimage to the Wilson home was entirely spontaneous and unexpected. This year the demonstration was equally spontaneous, but it had become an accepted part of Washing- ton custom. A gathering next year and every year that Mr. Wilson lives is as much to be ex- pected as that the President will go to Arlington to honor the Unknown Soldier As the years pass—if Woodrow Wilson is spared —the crowds will naturally grow. Admirers from New York, Philadelphia and other cities will take occasion to make the pilgrimage of respect to a great leader To no man has been granted a finer spiritual tribute than this to the ex-President who went down—and has come back—fighting for an idea and an ideal that is to-day the goal of millions who would be in the throng before the Wilson home on Armistice Day if conditions made it possible: To prejudiced and unprejudiced observers alike it must be apparent that the Prohibition forces are exceedingly perturbed over some of ‘he conclusions they draw from results of lest Tuesday, NO MANDATE FOR A FEDERAL BONUS. ITIZENS of six more States have voted to make bonus payments to veterans Veteran organizations interpret this as a man- date for a Federal bonus. , It is anything but that. ‘On the contrary, the list of bonus-paying Commonwealths is now long enough so that the logical and fair course for the Veterans is to centre efforts on State action and abandon the movement for a Federal bonus If the Federal bonus should pass now, it would put an end to Stale action Citizens in generous States would pay the State bonus and would pay a share of the Federal bonus. Citizens in no- bonus States would pay only their proper frag tion of the Federal bonus. Cne citizen would pay 1 share and a half, another a half shar Yering in earthquake and tidal wave that devastated the soast of Chili continues to grow Luckily, American sympathy and aid for earthquake victims is in no way mixed up with the habit of sending unofficial observers to take note of other folks’ troubles. WHERE TARIFF TREAD IS FEAVIEST essing influence of the Fordney ep iepre: O McCumber tariff begins to be left in ihe country’s great building movement The marking up of goods on account of higher tarifi schedules is one of the reasons given for ne hold-up of $1,500,000,000 worth of new con- truction tor which the country is waiting Moreover, the kind of home building that has een checked is chiefly the kin the rent of which falls ow $12 or roo The boom in the more expensiy pes of apartment house goes on without much atemer Jere itt Zain herever the tariff gets i work it found to be, in its ultimate effect areful respecter of persons High duties have a way of skirung lightly CHEAPER TURKEY? Aw 7 Tt Thanksgiving just over the w¥ we read the welcome predictior st Tur will be cheaper this ye Here is hoping the prophecy is true. But lets overlook the propaganda value of such nent in keeping up the price ieving DP. by Expresr ed Letter. cor 38tn,| WASHINGTON, Wyatt Bldg.; 149th St, Neer) CHICAGO, 1603 Mallers Bide. Washington St, | PARIS, 4% Avenue de l'Opers. lusively entitled to the use for repnbli- pation of all news despatches credited to {t or not otherwise credited t provides On the question of cheaper turkeys, buying is Isewives are scanning will be possible or whether the family will have to F celebrate and give thanks for a duck, goose, or fowl. If Mrs. Housewife notes that turkey cheaper, she is likely to build the rest of her dinner around Thanksgiving bird. News get to the fam That establishes the demand Then, if the price goes up when it is time to buy, mother is very Hike skimp sor rather than to disappoint the family. profiteers count on this Cheaper turkey we hope for—but wait and see. Don't be too sure. RECKONING WITHOUT AL. E have heard a lot since last Tuesday about what the Hylan Administration expects of Al Smith in the line of scrapping the present Transit Commission and providing full right of way for the so-called Hylan transit plan. But we have not yet heard what Al Smith is going to expect of the Hylan Administration in the line of sane, business-like team work toward transit relief by the shortest, least costly route Al Smith is on record for the municipal hom: rule Mayor Hylan professes to yearn after. But Al Smith is equally on record against the pettiness, obstruction and political jockeying that have been outstanding features of Hylan munici- pal rule. Here is what A! Smith said only last about Mayor Hylan’s‘ attitude toward the Port Authority's plan for the development of New York Harbor: bruary “Mayor Hylan frankly says the city has been fighting this scheme for two aud one-half years; and now the city talks about the need for co operation. You can't co-operate with a man who has a blackjack In one band and a slung shot in the o' Did that sound like an Al Smith who doesn’t know his Hylan? During the municipal campaign a year ago Al Smith made a speech at Tammany Hall. He spoke for an hour and a half, with his “hearers eagerly waiting for some reference to Hylan. At the very end this is all they heard “The Republicans critiefse the Mayor becr.use he does not know everythtag about every de partinent, Whatever mistakes Mayor Hylai has made were made after the exercise on his rt of the honest impulses of lis heart Did that sound like an Al Smith who woulc welcome his second clection to the office of Gov- ernor chiefly for the chance it afforded him to seek to vindicate all Hylan policies and try to get carte blanche for every wild Hylan transit scheme? Did it sound like an Al Smith whose highest ideal of municipal home rule would be realized in Hylan rule If, atter Jan. 1 next, Gov. Smith sets out to 1 place or modify the present transit law in order to give the ci greater control of its traction affairs, he will owe the people ot the city two special kinds of protection 1. Protection against wanton waste of what has already been expertly worked out in a definite plan of transit reorganization rh} inst th \ treatment of Ny Smith's »rded Qpinien of Hylan to warrant conilidence that neither of these forms of protection will be forgotten Mayor Hylan may think no one knows better than he for whose benefit Al Smtih is going to \Ibany such as i that’s reckoning without Al Smith ACHES AND PAINS potent factor im politics than lignation ts a me tion Commenting upon the arrest of Sir Almeric Fitzroy to mis uct in Hyde Pork the London Sat- D iew observes tartly: “The adoption of Amer: im methods in the police force can only lead to fur- ther attacks upon the liberties of the subject and the amenities of decent life.” Hea There is no yreat mystery in the “dryne f Cal via and Ohic h growing States and 0 yard owners are ng as uch for their fruit as they « nmercial remaking was replaced by the hor It gets more like Pittsburgh every day in our town Think of the boss of Seotlund Yard, that perfection etective bureaus. falling a bo. poisoned y and puttin me of it into his unsuspecting . I like the sur I like the moou I like the stars abc But most of al I like to hear The softly cooing ; . The contraband “wet” ships have been released from censure and our “dry” vessels are arranging as far as they can to hoist foreign flags. Thus Pp hibition perform its perfect work | ple «cho point the THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1922. RRR ARAL PA RPA APPR PRADA AAA ARA AAD AAA ADAP ® From Evening World Readers What kind of letter do you find most readable? Ian’t it the one ¢ fives the worth of a thousand worde in « couple of hundred? There is fine méntal exercise and « Jot of satisfaction in trying to say muoh in # few words. UNCOMMON SENSE By John Blake Taks time to bo brief. preme authority compel preventive On all journeys it but to keep going : nd property. @ be compris allotted the average human being to go back And going back is not a pleasant business, It is discouraging to be overtaken by those we had left behind. It is disheartening to have yv duties that of the city having in charge State departments enforcement nces, the heads of the pri companies and resentative taxpe through disastrous conflagrations, the] the creasing toll of death and physical notonous, ¢ The difficulty The man or back—slipping gradually into the places that they years ago. And the slipping once begun, ¢ However, there is no occasion to be filled with discour agement over what other peop He who makes up his a only one for which he is dir to keep on going ahead, if he make the fight against laziness and conceit t rarely go beyond the stage of investigation and recom- There are many bureaus 4. The duty of the board to be th its attention is called to eeCTeeerers in any particular neighborhood which do conscier and painstak- nd that his particular life is the responsible will find it easy jone of thes ahead eneugh aken to remove are necess: attached whe such additional legislation necessary to bring about these ends . That it shall be the turther func n of the board to carry on tinuous campaign of public along prevention lines in the For these two are the worst enemies ¢ } progress bar disease or disability, whic! % Glegetrons It is true that the road becomes more travel as we go along. It is true that we gather good start which carries us to put forth the old energy. But the road a has limits. Sooner or later it wili run out slip down the hill. Determination vital, always It must be continued from the beginning ing years till the end, and the cad ¢ is no longer able physically to k y and poverty are at (he end of the nd poverty, combined with old age and discourage open and easier to This is in spite fact that the omentum once 1 long way 1 conference interests involy etd inoment! will begin to 119 Nassau st., Noy. 6, 192 Iwo Kinds of Love, ht not te come until onc “Yove is mort building and ts own decay love and ap ment, are tragedies indeed. To save one’s self from them he must keep on goir uses remov hardest to merit and attain them fire during the ere a $2,000,- the Rocka- Men Who tn Selene Have Contribu' mercial Progress in the they know not wi THEODORE BERGMAN Last Twents event the sub- ngaished Service hould like to see m: on on this subject sequent fire meeting in Madis to celebrate its twenty Afth FORESTER _ What the Bible Really Says About The Soul | By Dr. | Copyrignt we | aN 2 E. (N.Y B Amert ing Wor! Ambassador Harvey may yet ta to k the seclusion of « cyclone eel lar if the indignation of the feminine) portion of our population continues te rise. But while the greater part of his remarks are too silly to be taken ously, he is unconsciously correct-€> a certain extent et Mr. Harvey says that there is Bible record of is the Word: “And it came to pass, as her soul was in departing (for she died);" Genesis 35:18. ‘All the souls of his sons and his ds “And her bo hath bound her soul. . Every vow of a widow, and of her that is divorced, wherewith they have bound their souls;"* Numbers 30:4-8, 10, 1 “Her soul is vexed within het Kings 4:27. And Mary said, “My soul doth magnify the Lord; Luke 1:46. “Yea, a sword shall plerce through thy own soul aiso;" Luke 2:35. But this ts only partially correct. Theré is not a passage in the Bible which supports the popular belief that there {s within each of us, In- herent in our own nature, an un. dying principle, an “immortal soul which enters the body at conception or at birth and leaves it at death, and which is conscious, active and intel- ligent in that condition known as ath, or while the body is in the grave. This belief is the direct child of paganism. In the Old translation 7 romen's souls, Testament, “soul? ts a the Hebrew nephesh, which occurs about 700 times, and ia translated in a variety of ways— “soul 8 times, ‘life’ 119 times, “person”? 80. tit self” 19 times, ‘heart’? and “mind"' 15 times out 35 diffe and so on—in 4 ways. In the New Testament, the equiva- ent ts psyche, which occurs about 105 times. It is translated “soul 68 times, ‘life’ mes, and ‘ you’? once each times which ‘‘soul'’ and ‘'spirit'’ o¢- eur in the Bible, not once is either even implied to be immortal. On the read, in Acts 3:23 “® ) very soul whic 1 be destroyed; th it shall die, Bible, the ngible thing. It can be the sw torn nals have souls have not a soul; you woman and other = up on from head to fooy says so. It does not nythin F We read in Genesis 2:7 that Lord God formed man of the dust the ground, and breathed into his nus: t! 1 man be e record docs a soul inte athing trils the bre came a livir not say that Ge but that up im of the breat soul, a livin H ton ng a (Hebrew, neph as applied to man inl s applied to all orders of] creation. In the first of the » it ts] thir to Adam ; immortal, it logi cA fat Ambassador Harv 5 correct, and that no woman is im: mortal, since a different process wal employed in the creating of Eve ns ‘immortal’? and “im are not found in the Ol . either in our English ver in the ori¢inal Hebrew. In tht New Testament, one everal simil passages is ‘The King eternal, immortal, visible, only wise God; the Kin f kings, and Lord of lords, who onl hath immortality."’ I. Timothy, No one hes immortality here now, but we, “by paticnt contin nee in well doing,’’ may have it co} ferred upon us in the resurrectio| inorn, ¥ the voice of the Lifegiv shall call us from our dusty bec process which is beautifully desert aI, Thessalonians, 4:13-18; [, Ce thians, 1 Hevelsiel, S7:1-10, num elsewher WHOSE i NOV 13 - THOMAS BOOTH, celet can actor was born at and died in New York Cit He was cducate by his father, a famous » pearian actor, and appea lav performance for the Roston in 1819, During t ilness in 1851 he played ssigned the fo n “Ri The next year he travelled lia and the Sandwich Islan alifornia nis by the wa astern States: In 1892 he nanayer the Wnt jen Theatre, New broug t with muet Shakespeartan plays inanag e million-dollar Bo Thee tre did not prove a fin eal success. Such noted professto Cushman. Davenport, Waellack fodjeska appeared in his theaty Rooth’s name became as inseparab! ted with damlet’ as hi her's was with “Richard III." skill and brilliancy w remarkabil and he showed a refinement in int of iceling n Shakespear!

Other pages from this issue: