The evening world. Newspaper, December 14, 1922, Page 26

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PEN RICO NRE 82 SEN ER ENF BO RE TBE IE Pre EAN RE Y bat THE EVENING WORLD, New avenues for thrift do not harm the established” |? Copyright, 1922, GBarlO, | ierig er soie hice ara oa | ~=Opening the Boor ee ae Epoch-Making BOOKS ESTARLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. popular subscription to 1 ty bond. issues would | By Ti B Publishet ‘ Presa Publisbii : | " Comper, ager Seo on Now Yok. cause withdrawals, Instead, most savings bank | y Thomes Breqg (New York & ULITZER, President, 63 Park How. oe # Publisting is Gare Row customers bought on the instalment: plan and 63 Park Row. thousands of buyers ght to save and haye Copyright TOM JONES. Gibbon, the tilustrious author of the “Decline and pire,” sald in his grandiose yet earns avery ~ est fashion, ‘The f : Charles V. may dis ren in England, but the romance of Tom Jones will outlive the palace of the Escorial and the Imperial Bagle of Austria."* To Henry Ficlding belongs the high honor of having created the modern novel, that most potent of the agen= cles of civilization Fielding, before swinging into the place for which nature had fitted li tried almost everything and failed. When at his wits’ ends his friends got him the office of Police Magistrate, and for a season tle brightest genius in the British Emp! was forced to pass upon the dereli@ions of “bums and ears, thus making, tn his own words, ‘the dirtiest money that - was ever earned on earth." At heart a gentleman and fnan of New York City. Remit by Raprese| DEC! saving ever since phe ores er arpeewen mee Ihrift breeds thrift. | ife insurance docs not all of the Roman Em- lesson savings accounts. Building and loan savers usually have savings accounts as well SUBSORIPTION RATER thrift a helps every other : ontered at the Post Office at New York as Second ter. so F. ‘al sav uj ystem pay ya fai Postage froein’ tas United ‘state, outakde Greater New orks @ would a postal saving cm paying a fair Ope, Year fis Monthe One ont at are Femning World. $0.00" eb00 7 tate of interest Sunda rally ani 10 — Bu MISS M’COOEY'S ELECTION. BRANCH OFFICES “i HE Board of Fducation elected yesterday an ON, Wyatt cor asta, | WASHINGTON, ide; Associate Superintendent of Schools to suc- ‘ iw Ave. neat 14th and F Lg Ba Md aa ae | DETR IT, Gt Ford MMe ae | ceed the late Mrs, Grace Strachan Forsythe ROOKLYY, PARIS, 47 Avenue de l'Opers. The unanimous choice of the bo, ya Bide 17 Pula oe stieton St. | CONDON, 20 Cockspur Bh Mi = iy the board Mit Miss MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Margaret J. McCovey, sister of John H. McCooey, es Sars esta exclusively, atic a cots oes Democratic boss of Kings County. Names of other ‘this peper, and also the candidates, including that of Miss Olive M. Jones whose record and proved ability had been strongly THE FARMER BEGINS TO SEE IT. urged as fitting her for the position, were ap- . ay & ; i é F the United States is to abandon its ostrich parently not even presented. Nor was the advice Mg ies in international relations the of William L. Ettinger, Superintendent of Schools, change in policy must come from the bottom. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1}, iccessors of n their brett. lay World Only *Vnrice-A Week World. Parti f Woodrow Wil Aienedk sought. honor, Fielding was not satisfied with va Fi ww Wilson aligne : 416 egi ” diester ete con sabe (dae It is not strange, under the circumstances, that " a GW AerH La dintenic niece Wa eae the political leaders so definitely that reversals in POs) “Leia ns e giving up his distasteful Job he turned 2 the tone of members of the board who spoke yves- ( f ¢ ; one in sheer desperation, to _ the Senate are not to be expected unless forced by : 2 te NS F 4 ria Babtiwad OF eeHITiHey, terday on the selection of Miss McCooey should when the birds have been not only defensive but def One spring mornir were singing and the school childrer There has been no attempt to present C all~ ba AAR te UU Tae ie _ Th tempt to present the quali tered the sanctum of one of the lead- fications of Miss McCooey or her ideas of what id : ‘ ing literary lights of London, handed an Associate Superintendent of Schools should do, Y 7 ef . a ‘ him a manuscript und asked him to i i d fi f : 2 S we Pa 4 look through it and give him his opin- no effort to show why her claims to the place ion of its merits, In a very short were better than the claims of others overwhelming popular opinion in the ranks. The single exception to this rule is Warren G. Harding, who aligned himself with each side by turn in the gn of 1920, and who, conse- quently, can claim consistency if he veers his course to suit any shift in public opinion. It a change is to be made the driving force will ant time tho story was returned, with the following rather disheartening in- 5 The best the board could find to say i , ; ii Septic ik a i at “f woul: ee have to come from the rank and file, not from h " an : a : \ ‘i : f bape om 3 fyeitg? Pe at seen tees Mee cat A : acts is that whatever the election of Miss Mc- oe 4 ‘ . 3 f a é c er its presentation i = . those who held over from the era of partisan bit- | #°'0" 'S ree Sot ragaie - fs, ; ae 2 lic terness ftom 1918 to 1920: ried may be it is u uy way political 7 : . seroiectedi manusor pe wae inane ‘ . he protest is too loud. As a recommen Ce) . A E of . other than the story that was later on American isolation has been due to lack of un- ihe prove " otal tcl lot . re 4 to receive the splendid encomium it stands too much alone. A public that. still believes the public schools should be kept out of from Gibbon, A Mr. Richardson had in the mean- time published “Pamela,"’ which was derstanding and to indifference rather than to de- liberate shirking of responsibilities. A pocketbook issue is the best stimulant to un- | Politics is going to ask for more positive proof turning London upside down. Rich- that Miss McCooey is the right woman to succeed ardson was a staid, circumspect old " derstanding and the best remedy for indifference. A pocketbook issue is now acting on the farming sections where indifference has been most pro- nounced. The West is being forced to realize that *'Burope is not 4,500 miles away. Europe is at the egrain elevator nearest the farmer's wheat field. ‘This is a food-exporting country. Foods sell on a world market. The price for the 15 per cent. of suyplus production on American farms determines the price for the whole crop. It is the “abroad” mee ; ; ; the isolationists scorn that must buy the surplus 6 a Theatrical Producing Managers’ Associa x leave it to glut the American market and cut tion has adopted a ticket selling plan under oe price to producers. which a central ticket office and Ranch offices will distribute tickets for all theatres at a 10-cent Mrs. Forsythe on the Board of Superintendents. F ‘ Nepean . : a ei ey gent n, and the object of hats story Bi cote ; - ‘ . ( ; Be Be was to show how true it ts that “to That proof was not forthcoming before Miss bei gcodtini tobe lappy, elanne McCooey’s election. Can it be supplied now? thought he saw a chanco to have some fun with “Pamela,” and dashed off his first story, ‘Joseph Andrews."* Mowing ‘Joseph Andrews"? was “Jonathan Wild,’ and after ‘Jona- than Wild" came “fom Jones"—the ice-breaker, the first real modern novel, which held the mirror up to nature and reflected human nature just as it was. For Fielding {t was claimed thet “ot what he saw ho drew the living picture: It was said of Aeschylus, tho father of the drama, that ho took the gods as the characters, while Sophocles was the first to introduce real human characters ar 1 human concerns ; In “Tom Jones” wo have actual = Police Court and in the streets of the “world of London,” and never again By John Blake would {t be possible to find readers for a novel of the old type. “Tom | The police are out to get the jay-walkers. If the cops fail, the taxt drivers will get ‘em anyhow. TWO QUESTIONS FIRST. This is the fundamental fact that lends encour- - agement to those who hope to see President Har- y Prenum over the box office price. The plan is ding swing toward co-operative relations in inter- expected to wipe out the present system and From Evening World Readers netional affairs. gradually to climinate speculation in theatre Wheat prices and meat prices are making indif- | Ucket: ie By theatreesra! What kind of letter do you find most readable? Isn't it the one ference too expensive to be tolerated. This sounds like the promised theatregoers' that Ulin Warts Gta. thowannd words fae eauple of handeal? se millennium. But before we accept it as such, we There is fine mental exercise and a lot of satisfaction in trying bios hinodd bind tad Contac) bel Jones"? mado’ a new literary public ‘The ship subsidy is sidetracked. ‘To even up should like to ask two questions ¢0 say much in few words. Take :ime to be brief. ONLY SKIN DEEP. that could never again be satisfied the metaphors, will the Administration's Rail- 1. Is there going to be any limit to the initial Ro stapled verte TE TIGR SET lentoineton When we read of Hottentot warriors shot by the order 3] [{it.Ne romantic nonsense of carller road Bill have to be wrecked on a desert box office price a manager may set when he has | te the rattor of The Hyening World T speak of course of average metro-|% Of @ Hottentot King we are not surprised. = a Ilottentots are not at all as we are. Even when we read of Turkish ma down to Jack of civil island a “big hit"? New York is already being accus- As a young lady reared In the] politan conditions, not of rural or suburbs I know what “Ex-Captain”|Seml-rural districts where practically tomed to shows for which the price of an orchestra | go. about the majority: of girls in] #lt social life centres around the TRYING EVERY PATH. seat is $5 before the speculator gets in his work New York City to be true, The churches. A. HLF. WHERE DID YOU y GET THAT WORD? cres we put it ation in a race which has not had our voune ; advantages and whose members we picture, though erron- pee ene J DGING by the past there is little to hope from 2, Has a way been found to induce the “free- | lady of to-day who does not smoke, Neturning the Compliment. cousl ys iH bulgy trousers and red fezz ¢ MOR Tpar Rane ett iia highly de : ; r r of The Evening World: ave nc siti Seren tt Mos c ighly de- bars 4 ‘ Be ; pa $ ” s iheaheseinmpublic ake [take a drink or tell risque stories] To the Edttor of The Evening World , ce have come to expect atrocities even in time o ds i the pending Irish conference on ending civil | spending’ part of the theatregoing public to take [eee oe to be unpopu 1] It grieves me deeply to learn that peace from people who are not like ourselves. sirable process of “reforin” as a sort $ 4 i e 7 c CRO ough ie me vho w ed p is New York 3 s un- yi war. ; We its democratic chance at central and branch ticket | tr RN Es Tearcia ie neh vil want ; tele is UNG Sore banana ae But we gasp in horror to read of educated men, dressed In the face of its decisive mandate from the | offices of a 10-cent premium instead of making it [oy or PD aEer an oor ee Tein whom ho could respect. Doesn't] @8 Europeans and Americans are dressed, in frock coats and Trish people the Free State Government can not | well worth the speculator’s while to accumulate of patching up here and there in order to make things Letter In this world. Captain’ know that women are white linen collars and creased trousers and spats and shiny nee BEN. fogs ; . . Rie ' Precedent. what men haye made thet Bocenn hi SC OMeudaninbeothsnmen edieatedlan ae The word in its original meaning again offer “self determination” to the Republi- | blocks of the best seats to hold at fancy prices Pa heat ea enne Wane T would respectfully suggest that hel} ae the Hae shot , i 2 ‘ Sidresded 311) rites 7 cauclnimcractet) veachitte cans. Ireland has already “determined.” Nor lhe selfishness of the theatrical producer may The rulers of Greece brought their] read ‘Phe Advance of Woman" by i y i process than a mere patching up. It And when these men are not ordinary citizens, but mem- bers of the cabinet of a supposedly civilized and enlightened means Iiterally a making over, with |Jane Johnstone Christie, paying par- “To form” is a perfectly familiar attention to chapters entitled cat, the Free State Government reasonably offer a } have been a good friend to the theatre ticket |CovPt'Y Into @ senseless wa y disastrous results. Now they have | ticular share in the Government which the Republican | speculator. But the latter's best friend has been couted six of the leaders. All the) {Woman as Ruler” and “Man as} nation, the horror is increased. word. It toe to give suena aad " cuted ol » leade: he aaa ; . i GaN MOT enn fy ery rae substance to a thing or a though! adherents once had and which they repudiated. the selfishness of a substantial class of theatre- | cisizead Governments stand aghast Ruler! Weal Womans reaepene hes Thing like this do not happen in euperlce pnd in Eng- leTAietonat | mito eK /G Mewes aHAte } One thing the Free State can offer to the Repub- | goers not only becauso of tho many thou-| tas ideas concerning women will be|$ . 770%) "UC assassination sometimes revels in all countries §}ang substance to a thing or a thought ” mr bidels 8 y Ss - i : in which the veneer of civilization is not so thick as we Radicals of many shades of opinion licans: Forgiveness and amnesty if they will join pase DWE ge Tomas te oer Greeks who perished but be-] consid scably shanaee by a careful fancinasit have the authority of language on ea Bier =r sed her se of those six statesmen perusal of this book. : “ \ ‘ een dthag ambit t forces in giving to Ireland the Christmas gift it 4CHES AND PAINS British Government recalled its Am-] Most men do not think that girls But when the men in control of a great country can 3] thelr Bean avait ees most needs—peace and an opportunity to repair y, F ! ussador look “hideous’? when painted. They] order wholesale assassinations, men who fancied that they 3) ee ees iroments the ravages of civil war In Thomas 1’, Madigan’s latest catalogue of auto Governments are 1 to] don't show eee by ps Auer are civilized are forced to stop and think for a time. But most of us are content to in 7 4 tee es “ i sufle sueh things in the bud. After] shunning a ‘modest, refined’’ girl as ; ae} San nati + “ 5 i erpret the word “reform” in a srae- Let us hope some of the Christmas spirit will | 9raphy ts a tetter from Jeperson Davis, written in [Oe eee nro wont tol chey would the plague. It ts, indeed _ How dee p is this civilization that we profe sand whieh terpret the y rd rm “ | help counteract the passions roused b ts | 2882 refuting the “malignant slanders” of a “lying | travel’ comfortably ty nice place Dace that women sue COMO we imagine is the growth of many centuries ? tleal sens a estoy at Ee PRSMONS TOURED DY TEDrisals: | coundvel im which he goes on to say! ‘lin the tiesue | endiesn” conferences; and nt ‘Think of wanting to attract a man How long will it withstafid popular passion or anger? and counter reprisals of falsehoode * * * he describes me ux engayed in | dently they are threatencd with belng| A rattle is more efficacious than paint. How easily will it be penetrated, even in our own coun- A Plea for Help amntme me a game of draw poker, a game which go far as T kno held responsible! Did "Ex-Captain'’ ever meet a man try. if publie indignation turns against some particular men $ POSTAL SAVINGS INTEREST did not then (1834) cwlst" Peer ied uri ea Gta ata Tre a eeenen {3 believed to be responsible for the failure of the country in From the Cancer Hospital of the } ellow-countrymen to war “to fig ion is an earnest one, ; STALL 3/ ; : ; fs > dari of Relief, who are in West- ‘ Can it be possible that this favorite intellectual | to the last man" if afterward ag Hee eq cauay cand wainai|ay Saab : ae a Barvants of Relies, e NCLE SAM'S postal inspectors are constant- problem of the army post is so juvenite as all that? prectous life would be endang 1 like to find one. Where is the We cannot help being optimistic enough to think it chester County on one side of the val 1 ly ow the watch for frauds committed P Heware of the preceden n who can talk about anything but nu endure longer in America and in England than it en- ley at Hawthorne Y., comes the A SIMPLETON sell? dured in Greece, ns ypeal, The Mother M gh use of the mails. But Unele $ 1 " » \ Par bes ox-Captain's’ views ; followin.“ BPDSR mf | But Uncle Sam, him: The man at the shellfish stand suys tha ar Yew York, Dee, 19, 1 We can see “"Ex-Captain’s views We have seen these nations in a great war—and always snsa Lathrop, who signs ft, t« ilty of one piece of st Basie ne : -y clearly. We fecl the sume way 7 h & ? Alphor rT gu one piece of sharp practice against | abousas popular as oysters. They are mu eel ap Nee vers: ales RAPS CA is OR the idea of savagery even has been repellent to them. Tyihorne Lat Gauglter ae ho trust him most \ . Viditor ef The 1 World ‘ Men have led to meet public expectations and have Nathanfel Hawthorne Vhere & no other way of describing our pres The turtle said, when called tov slow AER PAS Amba Hal ae lost battles without suffering the death penalty To the Uditor of The Livening World yostal savings system. The money on deposit Just because he couldn't go a ‘ more wnllueen ning We It is well to remember, however, that civilization is Vire daily — threa cancer i tthe di { I Give ma the legs of a centt) | T have read 19 slit NWhachelor| “eps Captain's’ statem not only a yeneer and that unless all educated peoples striv patients of the Boling gn i od al Paneth Bpravec 1 lerefore ¢ La , ined mode: r . ; ; he sister-nurses are bring to Leia Lanois Then Vl show you stunts in 8 ‘ i 1 K UPT having met one ref m ! mo aa # 1 to make it thicker and thicker the time may come, even ia Th ees ean aon eit it bs : Nerest \ tat hee A ather our Jus Ni h dea . ’ ; rs raise eu » th id a € a fair return in rest as an incentive to thrift atest, bu hae ig rather a 1 he ra ie SAN es lands like ours, when it will be as easily worn off as it was 3] pyoor house in place of prasant nally the interest paid on postal savings i if nh put Philadelph n elled to agree that their con: [ote eae eee Twas uw home gitl,|$ in the country which was more highly civilized thou Wooden Rosary Hill Home, holding “i 2 per cent t s nadequate rate i$ paid only Juhn Wanama hept it the ‘ pee aio increase] \aver having had to go to business years ago than it is to-day. betw forty five and ¢ ity deutttute j { ae | | ‘ ‘ He nee Mts nteteny » that a < ee) iarried very happily for [PPPRAP PPAR DOLD DDD DLE OOD, Fe) ad women © a cree » who on deposits left for a iull year, so the average rate . vonian like myself (be non-user| £ ins i ay ye husband (who waa oat — have nO. ari nde hil t the patrons of i than 2 per cert Some things are worse that hereof ) afte f c ' Hoth WH} ceventcen years my senior) died sud WHOSE BIRTHDAY? jthe French throne was disputed be oe a he y iia tn Gane ' \ ie med in an environment of shaven | ® : ay bap Canad aay Pld ae ist ay 5a vont : Uncle Sam makes a huge profit on the land Other, are worse than som ebrows, pertected lashes, permanent sei ty Thad my parents to DECEMBER 14TH--HEN jen : Foul Ms Malou Ab RUE POR | oor. ah tie pasanent Ree ers to whom Lnele Sam loans this mon But to me th ret of all thing and VERN OD: ck colored] ome to and they are taking earo of | KING OF FRANCE AND NAVARRE, | protestanism he was, in proof city 1 ne crected, even latger prolits—all this at the expense Is th: habit of chewing gum “oe aye ae peeqanghter while 1 go to business, fealled the Good and the Great,| ceived at Paris as Kin aulekly donating $25,000. : id eats) BhAved V tel the) Ny am very happy and proud to con-|was born in Bearn, France, Dec. 14, | treaty of peace was ¢ Last evening, as severil times in dp tle Bvery once tuo while we shear tt ec, Reh ena anna pesticked, | ae myself u modern girl, consid-] 155%, and y 14, 1610. His| tween Spain and France, and in the|the past, this country her dt nt ' rrate oh lea ; 1 noute , Reve wed Indies | ony refined and have gained the re-| mother was a Calvinist and to remove | same year Henry signed the edict of | threatened wit! truction by i eng fohman. Why should they CONAN DAS Sy OESY ODS Us When i tor all the men that work in the| Henry from Catholic Influences took | Nantes by which religious Nberty was] brush fire, raging toward it in a high Pale BO) Pas WHELe DOF OWE On * | pearerergy paecepcar pts sR rtpeaesiorl| him io La Rochelle, where he joined| granted to the Protestants. His relgn| wind, and was only saved by th bonds or { term note | Mau: makes himself; for don’t you ser riety come rom. Camradeshin and} Oli ing the pest elght months 1|the Huguenot army. The Protestant | from then on was characterized by| sudden response to our call of a down | a ay : ap thal iaiter way fro » x] Durie ie in contact with different| party selected him thelr chief but, be-| general prosperty. He encouraged In| neighbors, uniting witl the men of mmeeni dy Stall. lniefest rate on postal ss Dipire, minch as a} iie an, Bs Cncaye tO be In orinte-but not amyehern ecei| types of men and some of them ara| cause of his youth, Coligny remained | ternal unity, built canals and high-/the home to extinguish the flames ings comes from the savings bankers who fe . i - ng dari nd vile, but that 1s no reason| principal in command, In the great | wa) established commerce, im Have pity upon our very sick ing ! ANE | ar | en I go to a wr © occasion-| base & P} el ber . Jonation { tl } | 1—William fandolph Icars ally. T wo alone: wherene the wamton:tvhy I should condemn the male|Massacre of Saint Bartholomew proved the tax laws and opened new| people, we beg, und send donation ieareee rene Aamouer bankers who want tc , M Lady hath much company ot tented | Mx as “Ex-Captain” has condemned | Henry's life was spared only on con-| sources for. the accumulation of for our building fund, whichashould bx berrow the fun ute below the market level Hanes 1h hit OL UR to dauba butt aie e cl anlne dition that he embrace the Catholic | wealth. When the fanatic Ravaillac| completed by spring ' j ' Who fa th ve nt Lam not a desirable puttner age | I feel very sorry that he 1s so un-| faith, which he apparently did, How-| succeeded In assassinating Henry in] MOTHER M. ALPHON LAH ‘ by, ibis uae ‘ ' cea 1 check My corsets. (Creounes, wi1| fortunate in having met only one type] ever, upon escaping from his captors| 1610 the people became delirious with] ROP, O. 8. D., Treasurer, the Ber lish. They are There is no harm say Woedrow Wilson 1s “cominy bac vous plait) and expos ny back tol of girl. 1 feel eure if he would look} he promptly Joined the army of the/arief and wreaked fearful vengeance! vante of Rellef tor Incurable Can t et und agencies of thrift ny dO “ the watat It I not sean oe ihe right kind he would meet her.| Huguenots, When Henry 111, died 4a | upon thes murderer and his symp, cer, Inc., Rosary ill Home, Haw. seats ok tea sch ied . hag he had gon JOHN KEBY good, nuy, It Ie being merely decent! New York, Dee. 8 WIDOW, | 1580 the right of Henry of Navarre to | thize | thorns, N.Y, a F

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