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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 8

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Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
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Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ASBURY PARK EVENING PRESS. SATURDAY. AUGUST 5, 1922. grides from first to eighth. rom first to eighth.

Begin- 1 th Indian Child Life, by LUllOnal UlgCSl ning wi work and all new men preferential treatment, the Portland EXPRESS insist, that "to go back on those "BEGORRY! PD LOIKE TO FIND THE MAN WHO DROVE THE PEACE DOVE OUT OF IRELAND. I ASBURY PARK PRESS AND EVENING NEWS. J. LVLE KINMONTH. Editor and Owner.

Deminc, Mother Stories by Maud LINDSAY and Mother Goose illustrat- PLEDGES AND PROMISES MADE crtainly not a fair, if in-ed by Arthur Rackhan, it goes on STRIKE BREAKERS ARE BINDING 11 an horMt- Jo- thru The Snow Baby, by Josephine Railroad. Th.m at Th. Be- i tb FOR LABOR ILLS ru i ovum U4u poucy in k. ri. Published Daily 03-7 Mitt.son Avi, Abury Park.

N. J. Telephone A.Bury Park 3000 Member cl A. N. P.

fi. and the A. B. By FREDERIC t. HASKIN.

D. Peary; Stevenson's Child Garden Vere; Alice in Wonderland; Kipling's Just So Stories; Robinson Crusoe; Uncle Renws; Hans Brink- Entered at the Asbury Park. N. J. Poet Office aa second cU matter.

ier; Little Women and Tom Sau-yer. MAIL. SUBSCRIPTION: Dally, one year Daily, one One weeK- I Of course every lover of books book or two I 7T nd children can add a i give the unfaithful worker! Preference the Door for Troube Later on rj over the To do to wou Editors Point Out. be to encourage future strikes and President Harding', espousal of the make lt 1f not impossible to senority right, cause of th. obtain whn a strike uke railway shopmen meets with little ap- proval from the newspaper, of the The Paso TIMES is convinced country.

With hardly an exception- that jnsistanee of labor leaders they are aligned squarely behind the on questions such as this "is driving railway executives In their position us near to th sjoption cr a arge that the men who came into the ser- body ot trike aWB an1 judicial pre-vice as strike breakers shall have the and not improbably to the es-promises made to them when they tablishment of industrial courts to were employed carried out to the let- care Ior 8uch matters. If society Aabury Park, eaiuroy. 1 which he thinks simply must not be omitted. Grahame'S Wind in the Willows; KIPLING'S Jungle Books, Huckleberry Finn, a good volume of THE VETERANS' BUREAU tv. results of the investigation WASHINGTON.

Aug. Tolerance is a virtue too little practised In labor disputes by the parties directly concerned and by the public which suffers inconvenience, hardship or actual lot as a result of the controversies. Intemperate condemnation of one side by the other or by outsiders is altogether too common. Facts are missuted or distorted thru passion. Opinions are based on pre- Judices rather than on Information and sound Judgment and conclusions 'are formed that are premature and ill-advised.

These are statements made by a I man whose prefession has brought made by the special committee tne Tanglewood Kiwanis club demonstrate the imper-, cannot protect Itself from the rapacity of labor leaders in any other way it will do this. But if it ever should come to that, we don't need two very good claims for any such list. Children of city public schools have been having supplementary reading for years. There is usual ter. borne papers sympathize wltn the strikers, and express the hope that the Labor Board will be afforded an opportunity to come to their assistance.

The great majority, how- guesses to teil where strikers In a ative need for a radical change in government methods if justice is to be done the men who are suffering from disability incident to their military service in the late war. It is little short of national disgrace that a government of the size of that of the United States should persist in its disregard of the just ly a fair sized library available. A ever, hold that restoration of seniority seniority right controversy like the him into close contact with the con Saint Patrick hJT DRWiMG THE St4fKKeS UUCJ i A 1 1 .4 aHJ 1 V- ......1. .1 1 iMuiuui siaib iur luc uv) auu lia i.fiina iv me men wuo Dimufc suuiy i present one would get off In the in the country schools may be con- wouia open tne gate ior very serious i pinion of the New Orleans TIMES trouble In the event of future strikes sidered only a good beginning of bigger reading opportunities. flicts between capital and labor for several years.

He went on to say that one of the great needs of the present time is not only a better understanding by the public of the problems of industrial relations. In fact, until an enlightened and sound public opinion has been established PICAYUNE the contention that the roads can discharge new men "is not easily answered. It may be suggested that breaking faith with the few for the good of the many would be Editorial Mirroi of thi. character. A few hold that the labor board should allowed to settle the question In any way it sees fit.

"In refusing to grant the strikers seniority," the Brooklyn EAGLE believes, "the railroads are actuated by claims ot tne men health in its defense. No lack of money can be offered in extenuation of the miserable delay which has attended the adjudication of these claims; inefficiency and indifference on the part of those charged a payable price for peace. But can I there is little hope lor anything even assurance be given that peace is buy- approximating permanent industrial ble at the price?" The Minneapolis Tence. Hence it is urged that the citizen WHY MAN WEARS IT. Why do men wear coats in torrid weather? What became of the shirt sleeve style that spread before the JOURNAL recalls that the strikers who is sufficiently interested to discuss the railroad strike or the coal with the administration of tne vev bureau is alone responsible.

sible I war? the desire to penalize the unions, If they cannot wreck them. The government has not hesitated to decide i the priority of coal shipments and is in a position to exercise effective con-; trol over all freight and passenger business. If the existing emergency Justifies such drastic action it would seem that the labor board should have had warning of what to expect along this very line as "the rail managements even set the dates publicly after which these rights would be forfeited by those not return to work," and in addition "abolition of seniority in the opinion of the Philadelphia PUBLIC LEDGER, "is a No matter how wide the agitation or the discussion of the abolition of the coat man comes back to it and offers no explanation. Is he such a slave to custom, to fashion, that he cannot bear to be different? Yet he the DOWer to dpcM th nrmrlfv (if is all the time harping on woman's In tfle measure of discipline. The roads have taken a stand on it.

What slavery to the mode, ville SENTINEL "the irony of the strike, and to express his views with respect thereto, should take pains to inform himself as to the essential tacts in connection with these great labor conflicts. The fact that he has been inconvenienced by the dislocation in the transportation industry does not Justify the conclusion that either railway workers or railway managements are wholly at fault. Nor does he finding himself with an empty coal bin with winter at hand warrant an off-hand Judgment against either the miners or the optrators. In any event, damning and execrating one side or the other will not help him nor anybody else. Free and easy criticism of public officials who are dealing directly with these controversies is another evil of they ask, about the remaining and ragged remnnts of lingering discipline on American roads, if the rail roads must take defiant men back?" If the roads now are forced "to re for the injustice to which the soldiers have been subjected.

One of the most unfair aspects of the whole situation is the fact that action on any case seems to be obtainable as soon as political influence is brought to bear. The veterans bureau evidently gives its attention to cases submitted at such time as meets its convenience. When a claimant enlists the aid of his congressman, or senator, however, there is a change in the bureau's attitude. The bureau then promptly begins to function ort the particular case under discussion and action is invariably secured without further delay. In this way cases that are not especially deserving are often railroaded thru while those of more merit continue to be delayed because the claimant does not care, or is unable, to bring political pressure to bear.

store seniority rights, the Bangor COMMERCIAL declares the action An Indianapolis man offers what may be the real answer to this clinging to the coat. Everybody knows the mystery of the contents of the small boy', pockets. This Hoosier suggests that man never outgrows that habit and that he sticks to his coet simply because he has to have pockets to carry all the Junk he thinks he wants with him. Woman has handbags that carry the few articles she deems essential. Can anyone Imagine a man going around with a handbag over his arm? He'd rather swelter and melt In a coat and have the pockets.

PASSAIC HERALD. which complaint is made, as it militates against the creation of that intelligent popular sentiment that "would be but placing a premium on a strike and lead to similar situations whenever demands of the union employes should not be granted. And in such case any attempt of the railway managements to fill the places of the strikers would meet with certain failure for any promises of permanency of employment would not be considered binding." situation is that the seniority Issue "has arisen since the strike was called grew out of the strike condition" while the St. Paul DISPATCH points out that "restoration of seniority rights would mean the immcdaite discharge of thousands of new employes to make room for the strikers. If such a concesison should be made to the it would be extremely difficult or impossible to hire new men in any future strike or to induce any old employes to remain at work.

Every strike would be 100 percent effective at once if the workmen had no fears of losing a preferential right to work. Every strike would be won automatically as soon as declared. There would be every chance to win by a strike and no chance to lose. The difference between such a condition and soviet rule would exist only in name." I 1 of the labor unions declared within should support those in authority. These officials are condemned for in DUES the last few days that the newspapers and press associations of the country were in a virtual conspiracy to misrepresent labor's cause to the Any reader's questions will an.

swerea ny une ASDury Parle res Information Bureau. Fredarlt INTERNATIONAL VILLAINS Director, Washington. C' if a two-cent stamD is enclosed wit the same, from virtue's path we then withdraw, and play an anarchistic game. The law prohibits stealing hens, and tho this fills my soul with woe, no longer to my neighbor's pens do I with sacks at midnight go. The law proscribes the Demon Rum, and tho my thirst is truly great, I make no bootleg guy my chum, but seek the hydrant near my gate.

Let us obey the law, my friends, in all Its curves and hooks and crooks; and if at last our patience ends, its ours to wipe it off the books. By WALT MASON. (Copyright 1922, G. M. Adams.) Foreign Opinion the query.

The bureau canno. glv, advice i legal, medical, nor flnan o.al matter, nor undertake exiausr ive Give full narre am address, fteply will be ssnt dfect nquirers. action or for whaver action they may take, and all this without rime or reason. President'. Trying Position.

For example, President Harding's position with respect to the rail and coal 6trikes is especially difficult and trying According to their personal prejudices people denounce him for favoring labor or capital or for failure to adopt extreme measures that appeal to the individual as highly desirable and efficacious. How often is tha expression heard, "I'd like to be in Harding's place about 24 hours I'd show 'em!" And how seldom have those who indulge in such ex public and were constantly distorting the news in erder to create a popular sentiment adverse to labor and to the unions. "If anything happens that is favorable to us you never see a word about it in the papers," he said. "The press associations won't carry the story and the papers won't print it." All employers and all leaders of labor are not so blindly prejudiced ns these two men, otherwise the only None denies the magnitude of the task of the veterans' bureau. At the same time none can deny that in the more than three years which have elapsed since the World war came to an end there has been ample opportunity to organize the bureau on a satisfactory operating basis.

f.Visno'ci in the nersonnel of the While there should be exceptions in the case of men who did not par Q. Is the name of Alar Dale, the dr matic cricttc, real or a.numed? H. 1 A FRENCHMAN IN "DRY" AMERICA. A writer in the weekly Opinion who signs himself "Nantucket" writes an entertaining account of American prohibition as it strikes a Frenchman. He declares that It is "infinitely easy" to get alcoholic liquor anywhere in America, not only from the "private stocks" of a friend A.

Alan Dale is the pseudonym of 4 Just Folks fred J. Cohen. pate in the strike whose absolute seniority cannot be challenged, the New York POST believes that "the new employes, the strike breakers, can Q. Has it ever been kid or suspe eo inai me eicciricai ciRiuroances companying the Aurora Borealis mlf BE GREAT THIS MINUTE. way capital and labor would ever be brought togther would be in a head-on collision.

Unfortunately, however, these two men are multiplied many times in the industrial world, thereby bo attempted commuiicatlons tn certainly be satisfied without going Mars? SS. J. R. A. The naval observabry says thatl far as known, no such theory has over tne heads of returning strikers.

(which is not always so easy, either) Some compensation can be found for I but "over the bar." bureau is necessary it should be made at once. There is no justifi- cation for a continuance of the present slipshod methods which are daily working an injustice to disabled veterans who deserve more at the hands of the nation they so well pressions thought out ways and means of doing what they advocate or considered all the possible consequences! Taking over the railroads or the mines, or making men work against their will, or putting an end to law-j less outbreaks, are talked about as if thev were simple tasks that the been held by it has lfj been recognized that lome connectj rxi3ia ueiween sun JulJ miu cicvi.11,. adding immeasurably to the difficulties of those who seek to preserve peace or to reconcile differences once open conflict has been precipitated. Everyone who has undertaken the role of mediator or arbitrator in a "Everybody predicted that home-brewing of beer would be the commonest form of evasion of the law," he says, "but it has turned out otherwise. The process Is Intricate and The picture producer Is now impaled on the horns of a novel international dilemma.

He cannot afford to lose the foreign market, nor can he sacrifice his American audience to retain it. Righ't here. the complication in villains faces the harasesd maker of scenarios. To attempt to sell a film to the Japanese in which a son of Nippon does anything that Is not heroic and inspiring would produce a riot. A German audience will have nothing to do with the picturization of a Teuton engaged In reprehensible acts or plotting deviltry.

Stories of black-hand atrocities or Camorra blackmailer, are taboo In Italy. Paris would howl down a picture wherein the eons of Gaul fill any other but brave and noble and virtuous roles. Yet naturally American audiences don't want all their villains to be made In America. How to fashion the new composite International villain is the big question of the moment. He must be found.

A film picture without a popular villain is a drug on the amuse-ment market. Will the picture villain of the future have to be a man without country? LOS ANGELES TIMES. disturbances on the earti. Q. How much ground must be dev ivof to cemeteries ln cities in proportion This Is wha't the world Honest effort, honest speaking.

This will earn its brightest shilling: Labor that Is patient, willing. Not the brililant deed and clever, But the steady, sure endeavor. Unto God and duty loyal That Is what the world calls royal Heed me, son, and never grumble At a task because it's humble; Just remember every duty is the seed of greater beauty, And the history of glory Is a very common story. Every crown which man possesses Symbolizes small successes. results unsatisfactory.

On the other 1 president could undertaKe ana ais pose of any morning between appoint-j labor dispute knows only too well the population? G. L. E. A. If 4,000 corpses are crowded an acre, and a mortality rate of 15 it was fund that wine could 1,000 be assumed, then rearly four ac ments with his cabinet ministers.

"ai mere are iwo siaes to every case, Settling strikes Is discussed as if it i and that neither side has a monopoly could be accomplished by executive of light or of virtue. In the present flat Usinir the armv is advocated as railroad controversy, for instance, per 1,000,000 population are requl annually to bury the dead. Q. How long did It take to revise Bible? A. B.

B. if lt were a mere matter of calling the seniority right promised them." The Baltimore NEWS, however, sharply opposes this line of reasoning, arguing that the railroads are on record as having pledged "that the strikers would not be considered more absentees, but as having definitely left the roads' service, and that any man entering the service would automatically acquire seniority rights over anyone-former employe or not-who came in after him. The pledge ought to be kept. Even if the obligation of honor be overlooked it ought to be kept on the grounds of national expediency. Labor troubles are not going to end for all time with the settlement of this one controversy and It would be mighty foolish for the nation to place itself beyond power ot convincing appeal in A.

The work of revision was be June 30. 1S70. and comuleaed June 1884. The revised version of the Testament was punn.saea in and the United States In May 1SS1 A DEBTS AND ARMIES There is much that is worthy of consideration in Senator Borah's statement concerning cancellation of the European debt that should serve to set at rest the agitation which is afoot to have the Unied States write "Paid" across the notes which this ration holds against France and England, its principal debtors. The movement to have this country cancel its claims on foreign powers is founded on the premise that by eo doing the "economic rehabilitation" of Europe will be speeded.

Here's the road to high promotion: Unto duty true devotion. Kmall the task, but gladly do it, Tho lt Irks, be faithful to It; Never try from fame to borrow. Never wait for some tomorrow Or a test, with greatness In it-Do your best. Be great this minute. (Copyright, 1522, by Edgar A.

Guest). tha Old Testament In May U5. Q. Is Pat Kelly, wha is running United States senator In Michigar Protestant or a Catholic? G. D.

F. A. Mr. Kelly is a Protestant. He tends the Methodist church, Q.

What is apple must? E. R. A. This Is the English terra for frr ly pressed sweet apple Juice. Cider NICKEL SMOKE COMES BACK.

URGES CONSERVATION OF WILD WOOD LIFE England, corresponds to our term hi future crises to its reserve labor sup elder. emphasis is frequently laid on the fact that the shopmen refused to abide by a decision oC the Railroad Labor Board and went on strike in violation of that decision. Those who make a point of- that should he informed that the first refusal to abide by a decision or order of the board came from the managerial side when certain railroads undertook arbitrarily to put wage decreases Into effect while the board had ruled that euch action should not be taken pending Its hearing and determination of the question. Later other roads Ignored or violated other rulings or decisions of the board. All who discuss this rupture ln the elations of railroad management and workers should also know that there is nothing In the law that requires either side to accept or to abide by decisions of the labor board.

Again, In the case of the coal strike, those who criticize the miners for not accepting President Harding's peace proposal should understand that as matters stood the miners had practically won their strike and had good reasone for not wanting to take Q. Who was the founder of the That is a laudable reason for can-1 and id Chicago i. it. herald. From Cook portation out the police reserves to quell a near-riot among baseball fans.

Most unreasoning and unreasonable of all. strictures are passed upon the president that are predicated on the assumption that he is indifferent and uninformed, As a matter of fact he could not be indifferent if he so desired and no one is in a position to be so well informed as he is. This is not only true of Mr. Harding, but it would be true of any man who occupied the executive chair. "Taking sides" Is characteristic of the American people.

They do it In sports, In politics, in religion and particularly in labor controversies, and there is nothing half-hearted in the way they do it. Having espoused a cause or an Idea the average man wants the wide, wide world to know that he is right, why he is right, and what he thinks of the other side. He is a free thinker and he. believes and indulges in free speech. He is so certain ot his own convictions and opinions that he has little respect and less tolerance for those of others.

Examples of Prejudice. cock Dynasty? L. F- W. A. Chandragupta also known as Sa celling Europe's obligations to this 1 county news that the shop hei(J by tn, Strept J0URXAL rocotuss, founded this Hindu dyna w.naows are the nickel country and were it the true condi aboue 320 B.

C. He was the grandfat of Asoka. Q. Is the cottonmouth a moccasin be made readily from dried grapes raisins and 60 New York has become a wine-drinking city. "This wine Is sold at $6 a gallon at the present moment.

And sometimes more. "It Is generally made with California raisins, bu there is no reason why French Chambers of Commerce in the wine-producing regions should noy study the possibility of shipping grapes to America In cold-storage, as well as raisins. This would help offset the losses to our commerce amounting to tens of millions of dollars annually resulting from the prohibition law. "Raids on hotels and restaurants are frequent. Hundreds of bottles of liquor are confiscated and the proprietor fined.

And then he goes back to the trade until the next raid. "There is a little Italian restaurant In New York whose proprietor tells me: 'In Italy selling wine is not a crime, and so if I am imprisoned here for selling it I won't feel dishonored. When I sell a cocktail for $1.25, about a dollar of it is clear profit. I send my profits to Italy, twenty lire for every drink I sell. Before the war it was hard for me to earn five lire a day In Italy, yet my wife and I lived happily.

In two years we will go back tj Italy and will be happy again only this time we will be millionaires. Hurrah for prohibition and exchange! "The New York police, who are mostly Irish, don't appear to approve of prohibition. They let the prohibition officers go about their business, but don't seem to help them much. "Smetimes a restaurant-keeper Is caught selling alcohol and bis stock is confiscated. It Is loaded on two wagons.

The wagon with the smal-er quantity goes to the police sta- a copperhead? B. I. K. A. Cottonmouth la a common namei The wild game resources of the United States have a value that seems nearly fabulous, Dr.

Barton Warren Evermann, president of the Pacific Division ot the American Association for the Advancement of Science, declared in his address at the annual meeting recently. He cetimate. the annual kill of game worth: Deer, rabbits, game birds, fur-bearing ani-male, $10,000,000. To the wild fowl the southern states for the mocca smoke in a profusion of shapes and varieties and that the return is being trumped from billboards thruout the city. It was sure to hppen.

All over the country protest, have never ceased since the five center disappeared during wartime. And the clgarmakers themselves knew that it was to their tion of affairs there would be less objection to the cancellation project Europe, despite its advertised desperate need for "economic rehabilitation," is able to construct and maintain huge military machines, Senator Borah points out. To put but It is also sometimes applied to copperhead. Q. Who were Darby and Joan? A.

Darby and Joan were a man- counle traditionally reported to lived In the West Riding of Yorksli in the 18th century, and were rema and animal wealth must be added the value of our great coal and oil fields the matter differently, if Europe, t0 bring back the Ave able for their long and happy life gethcr. would Mirtiil it vf L'sar 88 soon ey could the chance of having the fruits of A man of great responsibilities in the industrial world once indulged victory taken away from them by an arbitration commission. They had Q. What Is the best kind of dairy tie? C. L.

R. A. The best and most profitable br of dairy cattle has as yet not bi agreed upon. Each of the dairy bre' which asserts that "when a contract or a promise is msde no president has the right to break It. Businesi men refuse to have dealings with the To the men disposed to work the government says: 'Go work for the roads and help keep trans-j portation going.

But as soon as the emergency is over you must step aside and give place to those who have at-: tempted to cripple the business but whom we shall now welcome back and I kill for them the fatted calf. Tour I work is done, get Never again could a strike be broken; the halter would be tied around the neck of transportation with the free and given to Gompers and Jewell. As for the resulting effect upon the investors who have furnished the money to build and equip the roads, look at Russia. What are Russian railroad stocks and bonds worth? Restoring seniority would be like sowing dragon's teeth. The price Is too great." Recognizing that every individual who remained at work deserve to ben Its passing may have helpej to boost the cigarette ln its sudden and spectacular climb Into popular favor.

Many men smoked nickel cigars and for military equipment and devote its resources to "economic rehabilitation" it would not need to assume the role of a bankrupt in deal- fought a long and trying fight and surely were entitled to all of whatever success it had brought to them. has its strong claims to highest md mry were gooa enougn for a and each has Its enthusiastic advocati At the same time, the friends of ing with its creditors, the senator nickel, but later concluded they were Q. What will keep white silk fr turning yellow when washed? P. N. A.

While the result cannot be gu; in a tirade against labor unions in general and labor leaders in particular. He was so vitriolic and so sweeping in his denunciation that one of his hearers finally asked him if lt were possible that there were no good men among labor leaders. Profoundly serious and with measured words the captain of Industry replied: "The only good Indian is a dead Indian!" On the other hand, a man who has been at the head of one of the largest anteed, usually rolling silk garments a Turkish towel as soon as washed 4a keep them from turning yellow. Thjl may be Ironed in a half hour or can left for 24 hours without harm. continues, and he is on firm ground.

1 gaoa enough fo reight cents or a The Press has little sympathy for dime' the plea to cancel Europe's obligation The elsar' an'1 not th to the United States. Nor has it an overabundance of sympathy for the 1 I 1 corners upon the smoker something pleas of Senator Borah that arm-! which the cigarette does not confer ament be reduced. The League of Give a down and outer a rigar and he Nations, which the senator from 'hakes himself together a little; his Idaho fought tooth and nail, would flnKerg stray toward the armholes of have brought about the concerted 1 hls vest- ive h'm the sense of disarmament of the world which i But the cig-Senator Borah now pleads for s0 rP'y his hunger for to- eWW u- YORK HERALD. uons, me oiner atives on to an un- lg noted tnat some prohlbitlon and natural gas, forests of hard and soft woods, our hundreds of species of valuable insectivorous and predacious birds, and the rich fisheries of our Atlantic and Gulf coasts, Great Lakes and Interior waters, and of our Pacific coast and Alaska. This very richness of our natural resources has had much to do with making us the most short-sighted, the most extravagant, and the most wasteful people in all the world," he said.

"Every effort should be made to maintain In profitable condition these valuable assets." He told how they could be conserved. Forest cover must be maintained. Swamp lands, marshes, ponds and small lakes that cannot be converted into more valuable agricultural land must be kept in their natural condition. Stream polutlon must be prohibited. Cover must be provided for quail, prairie chickens and pheasants.

The migratory bird treaty act has already resulted ln a great Increase in our water fowl and other migratory birds; its rigid enforcement will result in still greater increases. The enactment into law of the "Pub-He Shooting Grounds and Bird refuge Act," recently introduced in congress, will make it certain that there will be splendid wild fowl shooting for many years to come without any the miners should understand that if the worker, bad been conceded everything they were striking for a national agreement, the old wage scale, and the old working rules they would be no better off than they were prior to April 1, for nothing would have been done to cure the uneconomic conditions in the coal industry. Without stabilization of the Industry and without some solution of the problem of the non-union districts, the lot of the union miner will never be a satisfactory one. Thus the case is made for tolerance of the rights andd opinions of others in times of open conflict between workers and their employes, and for the development of an intelligent public opinion that can be brought to bear when needed. Known destination.

me resiaura- i offlcerg on tne moAe9t saIary of tw0 teur claims it is sold by the police to or three thousand dollars a year have one ot his competitors. I don't know bank accounts that at the whether it is true, but it doesn't i Mt I'HUIJ HI Ull iWJ U1UU3" seem unLkely. and in a single year. When Ques efit because of his loyalty, the New York WORLD suggests that "there exists a broad middle course of action in the way of settlement. Many of the old places have not been filled.

Many of the old places haje been "Rare are those who endorse total prohibition in America, apart from the propagandists who obtained the passage of the law. Numberless tiiiic uine js 6ound sense in Senator Borah's latest utterance and those who favor The trouble with the average writer is he can't taken by men who are Incompetent are they who evade it. Moralists and would not remain long there any- sav thls flouting of a law engenders how. Broad grounds thus exist for disrespect for all law. the cancellation of the European debt I the period on his FLOU-will do well to forget the senator's IrA TIMES Union.

tioned they say they got it by speculation in Wall street. They are dismissed, and replaced by others equally badly paid." The writer then goes on to describe the new rage for winters in Cuba, summers in Quebec, and the various means used by smugglers-fast automobiles, airplanes, motor-boats. In conclusion, he says: "I confess I have no fondness for whiskey, to which my French stomach won't accustom Itself. I mur Sacramental wines are not prohib working out the issue of seniority past record for bitter partisanship and turn their attention to the lopic which markes his latest Rippling Rhymes THE LAW. I don't indorse that traffic law which holds me down to 30 miles; it makes ited.

So one often sees a sign like this: SACRAMENTAL WINE Furnished by Rabbi. "I don't know whether this obliging gentleman is really a rabbi, but if I want wine I have only to drop him a line Inviting him to come and see me for 'sacramental mur inwardly, when It is offered, that i a good glass of Vouvray or Beaune would suit me better. And most Americans agree with me. Another Girl says she killed her for her sister's sake. Must have thought her sister would look good in black -SPRING FIELD NEWS.

England wans American laws. We might give her some we don't use. JACKSON CITIZEN PATRIOT. Emma Goldman's absence seems to be greatly in demand everywhere. NASHVILLE TENNESSEAN.

rights as between the others at work (and the returning It Is a Ju- d.c.'al question that can be settled In reason and satisfaction, as thru a reference to the Labor Board." The Wichita BEACON, in this connection points out that "the seniority rights Involve the proposition of service pensions and other privllege coming from long service with the raiiro.id companies. in restoring seniority of course the railroads also would have to restore the Jobs of those who quit. This would put the r.c".v out of a Job." This being In -New York you get letters en constitutional amendment permitting serious effect upon the abundance of the various species. The natural resources of the sea the whales, fur seals, eea otters, sea lions, and walrus, are all In danger of serious depletion if not extinction, Dr. Evermann warned.

An international treaty similar to that of 1911 for the protection of the northern fur seal and the northern sea otter, is Mining i-aiiiogues oi aa khius ui and wine, would satisfy them wines and whiskies, with rather 'comnletelv and wont ei.r ih. TTnii CHILDREN'S READING Dr. John J. Tigert, United States Commissioner of Education, has planned a "two-foot" reading list for country schools. Three feet shorter than Dr.

Eliot's famous five-foot shelf, the space is rather crowded, but the commissioner has done well in his selection of books for it. stiff prices attached, but no name sta- of the moral elcknes. that "mm or address. my spirit sore and raw, and from my map remove, the smiles. I'd like to send my old tin bus like streaks of lightning thru the town, but Law is sacred to the cuss who would enjoy a fair renown.

And so I drive my creaking van within the limit Law prescribes, tho I am dubbed an also-ran by all the whizzing speedster tribes. My face is always sad and dour when to the road my bus I take; I'd hit up 90 miles an hour, but 30 versts is all I make. For if we break thru any law because we do not like The same day your tele- prohibition has broueht on But the slVinriff Tira Kfnoa 11 hca In his campaign for re-election if -J -1 TT I I 1 phone rings and an unknown voice says, 'I am the bootlegger whose catalogue you received this morning. Do you want You prohibitionists have not yet realized that the draconian severity of their law defeats its own purpose, and roroes people to become brutal alon. "Price Advances In Shoes" head- oicau iu xiiuuiu aaminisiration bride '11 promise t' love, honor obey, an' before th' Icin' is cold on i necessary to save the southern fur seal, the southern sea otter, the whales and ie other marine mammals from total extermination.

so, ar.d the roads having unqualified- The list includes books for all i footed. give your order and the good are holies instead of drinking like men ly promised ail men remaining at, delivered within 4S hours weddin cake she'll flatly refuse leave town la a day coach. I ot honor and good taste.".

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About Asbury Park Press Archive

Pages Available:
2,394,076
Years Available:
1887-2024