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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 26

Location:
Brooklyn, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
26
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

-41 4 I.HOOkl.YV DAILY KAOl.E. SEV YOUK. AI'UIL 1. My! Won't Somebody Be Surprised and Embarrassed When He Gets Home? iigainst the existing government. Nor is there any reason for compelling 1 the new Turkey tc recognize every 1 Tr; Mark aim suspended the Slur.

The Baltimore Pun. Mr. Hearst's earlier acquisition was established in by Aruuali S. who died in at 1 precisely the age that General Agnus ch.ise ir his retirement. His sou.

Kdwiu Kranklin succeeded him and remained in control for many years. The newspaper enterprise of ins i''ijfft tit1 hoi fittwiifu upon. suiiptisc fellow ffolins makes ii trumlrttti' kind" is the spirit or party heelers or one side toward 1 arty hocl-N on the oilier. It's pleasant W. note thai Thomas.

R. Kiriiy, for foriy years an art auctioneer, is writing liis memoirs. Per-I-it frankness will insure a largo sale for thr book. M'XDA MOItNT.v:. Antll.

Ktjtrrtd Hit' BrueUi'ii Po'-flue u. i as Mail Matte-. 7'IK ASSOiTAYKl KRKSS NKWS Ul'IlKAf. ftl" i exHtisiv.ly i- to tli? list- ft-r r'piihiii at too of all t'fs to. it or not oftK.wi trfdittfj in litis paprr.

and also tli. loi.al of spitrtatifond origin puli-IMirrl Ali risht of republication ti di.vnat-h.s are tffl. ht.t a eirii mion Lare-Pr than tli-it of ntiy other ii.e- Paper of ii i he lii-ins 1 a i a'tte as i- A ppa rt-nl. Wlliiatii Van Aritlen Me-tt-t-. President.

Herbert ilimnisou. Vne-l're. and Trea SeLfetary. MAIN cii'FICK. 'Kas' ttui ifim tfush ington ard John Telephone No.

tii-ilO Main SlBSi'Utl'TllJN' i rf- tints Paily. Five ents c.By Mail fOii'sui-: Btooklyni. yr. ti met I mo. 1 wk pilii mumiMmm COMING! WARREN G.HARDING.

T-k ty Stimiay. il2. .3 I'-ilv run; ('- A 1 01 Similay 4.lil 'it tt'i 8 JJotiday puje-i 1 tut rt 1 'rhuiMlay H'lic." ewt 1 i(l 7 I'. 4 Sttntrday I rtttnl I I 'o 75 1 4 Wed. or Fri Ti K.

4 t'oretsn Rates PoHtpaiil. and 1 4 00 6" Surd i o.tly I 00 il.tnl 1 00 i jo i Kt-ile Library. OCLVVLJ I t(rf hrary. eiept Aimantii-. 11.0."'.

laale Aiinanai; intltidtd. In Rusia even the "People's Com missars" k'lovv tvhal is hiRh art in tliiiii'i'ig. 01' (onrso. IsaUfira Duncan is "wi'lreine to Mosi-ow. Foot-grace tiinl lipiolstroitinoss have dotihlp ap- pral.

we view with nhirni th mateuionl tlitil thp Bronx Artists Guild has e. tahllshril a "Gentlenian's Sewing Gossip should nut be eulti Mitetl. It is a thing to be discovir-1 seil, even in women. Some say that Silver Jubilee is liliiRged. Mayor Hvlan hasn't decided yet whether to junk it or try heat to pass it on the theory that it's O.

p. despite expert opinion. He at least cannot see the plugged place. In the savings banks of the United Sitalcs are Multiply that by three and you hare almost 1" pay the national debt Jn- em-red for war purposes. Some are marvelously ing.

Bryan joins McAdoo in asking to I fi ve Morrison Shafroth named Senator for Colorado. A dual leadership of the Democracy is suspected, or r.fliunbratpd. Gossip may now do its lf.vorst. and former President Wilsou ill he the last to interfere. General Goelhals is quitting the -Plate.

Coal Administratorship with I'lMicrnl praise rather than general a i oyilrtntiation. He did his -Ansel could ilo no more. Angels even Icsh fn miliar with anlbra- ile. I'iMiniini us ml Hreproof fuel. The Tnkin Diet again adjourns in a Razors are not flying through tbe nli.

fur the African population of is negligible, but inkstands, weights null ash trays make a tine display. Nippon will not be long lieliiinl the standards of Hit Orel. 'That "only God can make a tree," Titian has learned from the Iftle Joyce Kilmer, a favorite poel. SlOtt.On.i in. Brooklyn and Queens 1 vttiultl "eotne up to tiic help of the 'r I.unl" amazingly, which is Scriptural- l.w proper.

The Mayor's deductions are all tvi'miu. MUs Dellora Angell. who finally go; V. Gates's millions, marries a a r'loonist. or i- ninrrietl to a cartoon jft, I.csier orris.

There's no dead lihnd to slop her. lint one fears John V. would not have approved. The "didn't do a thing" to Gates i.i his lifetime. I'n-ar.

M. of Wisconsin, repre- settling the noiital Hepublicaiis. has a bill ready lor presentation to double the las on the inheritors of estates pliove ti ml make it no When tb's i- a law there will be the lrue-t pa i iorNni in hpeoining 'leu tiuies millionaire. All America should be well sati bed to learn thai Louisiana's voters Inive elected an Klan antliilaic in tic Court of 'tite 'Ihe margin was a liar-low one. Imi wholesome sentiment seems to be growing, and Governor Parker niu-t be encouraged.

I I uollar of (lie excessive claims made against her by the European profiteers who fed on her corruption before the war. The world is more concerned with peace and stability than with guaranteeing the speculative profits of international gamblers. In standing for the rights of our nationals who have obtained concessions, our representative at Lausanne should be careful to insist upon fair play tor Turkey. Log-rolling deals by which Britain uud France support our claims in return for such backing as we may give to theirs are not in hurmony with the open-door policy. American investors and engineers are entitled to a fair chance in foreign liehR We oppose the granting of exclusive rights to the capitalists of any one country.

But we should oppose ith equal vigor any combination which seeks to take unfair advantage of Turkey's need of capital and international co-operation. MEASURES THAT SHOULD FREVA1L. There is no argument against the proposed amendment giving a four-year term to the Governor of this State except the threadbare one that four years is too long for a bad Governor to remain in office. The obvious answer is that while we sometimes bine bad Governors we have more gootl Governors, and the good Governor should not he both ered, as he generally is, with prep arations for re-election in the second year of his term. If four years is too long a term for a Governor because we sometimes elect unfit men lo that office, then two years is also too long.

If our one aim should be to reduce to a minimum Ihe danger from a bad Governor the term should be shortened to one year. Iu spite of some unpleasant experiences with our city government there is no disposition to reduce the Mayor's term to two years. A Re- publican Legislature re-established It at four years, as it was in the begin ning or Ihe consolidated city, after brief experiment with a two-year term. Why. then, should we show less consideration for the office of Governor than is shown for the office of Mayor in New York City? Also, it may be noted that the peo ple of Ihe State woultl not be with out, a means of protesting against a bad administration of the Governor's office, pending the election of his successor at the expiratlou of four years.

State Government, like National Government, is a system nf checks and balances and the can always impose restraints upon a had Governor by electing a Legislature politically opposed to him. They wouldn't have to wait four years to do thai. The amendment providing for four-year form ought to be accepted by the Assembly Republicans when they meet the Governor in conference r.ext Wednesday. Also, the provision for an executive budget should be accepted. Both amendments, have sound Republican antecedents and are backed by strong Republican Influ.

ences. No peculiar party advantage will accrue tn Ihe Democrats from their adoption. The object of both is more efficient nnd economical government in the State. Tbey ought lo go before the people with Ihe Indorsement of both parties. They would complete the reconstruction of the State Government on modem lines.

NO SOLUTION BY FORCE. Force will never solve the question of reparations. The forcible expulsion of half a million Ruhr workmen ami their families because Ihey refuse to do as Ihey are told by French invaders only indicates that the French arc becoming exasperated. Thus far their invasion has failed. The French administration proudly reports (hat it obtained some fen thousand Ions of coal and coke frotu the Ruhr on Friday.

In other words, it has taken them three months to get by invasion one-third as much as was obtained without expense before tiic invasion. And the invasion is costing French taxpayers one billion francs a year. A week ago the French were point witli pride to the ftu-f that their troops bad killed only thirty Germans Hie course of the Ruhr operations. Unhappily the rale of la-naltics fs increasing. Later dispatches tell of six killed and twenty injured in a single riot al Kssen.

Doubtless Ihe French can tow tiic German inhabitants of the Ruhr into ultimate submission just as the German soldiers cowed the Belgians, in long run an unarmed pupnlatfon is ilo match for a army. But every casually makes it increasingly difficult for any German Goverunicntlo surrender to France. Germany has never fell herself mi completely iu the right as since site btis organized resistance to the lluhr iiivasimi. No government could reverse present policy and retain a ma jorit.v Meanwhile nf hope comes from a meeting of representatives of jbe uorkcis chief countries "Oliccriieil. The heads of the otli'-ial opposition in Parliament of Britain and Igiuni have met lit Paris with repi-es-iitaiiws of minority parties iu tin- i.

bsiag ami the Chamber of Deputies formulate a joint reparations p.ilicv. They have agreed upon an inter! timial conference to caie cown reparation reduce intcr- lil'tl tit Ills. tt'l'lia I ioUa I to he am! i'lgiiun. and ic isiab'isb mi i bv a mutual uoimggi. ssioit pact.

iiiiitimm is i ncf, practical ler or I inter I ke il will be pill nloi llccl. The Km may depend upon how noun leaders of the Abells wa- never questionable and was never questioned. So the past lanishes in Baltimore and the present looms up. Mr. Hearst's ideals a re in no way identical with those of General Agnus or those of the Abells.

lather and son. Thai they are belter adapted to the age we live in is a common belief, which may be regarded either as a compli meut or an indictment of the age we lite iu. "HEATLESS LIGHT" A SYMBOL. If a French scientist has discovered "heatlrss light." no lover of humanity will cry "Absit omen!" As a symbol of wha' the whole world needs mere than anything else, the thing invented is a pervasive delight. Theology has always gone blindly, stuniblingly.

quarrelsomely ahead without such aid. The heat of pride i.ntl prejudice has often strikingly suggested a hydrogen flame which gives no light al all. Statesmanship has capped itself v.iih politics ami spluttered like a tallow dip. which needs the sunlight to be seen at all. Industry-organization lias shown heat without light, rather than light without heat, a condition equally in-jurious to employers and employees.

Let us trust, even superslitiously, hi ihe augury of a reform. Truth is light. Controversy is heat. When everybody is anxious for trulh, controversy vanishes. When everybody is anxious for controversy, truth is held in contempt.

Flushes of truth will eotne from tierce blows, but they are like the stars one sees after the head is clubbed, like the sparks from a blacksmith's hammer. You can't read anything clearly by them, and Ihey give confusion rather than en- lightenment. If clergymen ami Congressmen and captains of industry will learu th's lesson, half a decade will make the world a much more pleasant place to live in. As a slogan "Meatless Light" has an incomparable significance. ARE MEN TIRED OF LIBERTY? "Both In Russia and Italy, II has beeu demonstrated." says Dictator Mussolini, "that It.

is possible to gov ern outside, above and against till liberal ideas. The truth is evident to r.ll who are unblinded by dogmatism that, men. nowadays, are tired nf lib erty. Are they? If so. the slowness of France, Great Britain and especially the United Slates in getting rid of the lapses from liberty's principles incident to war is accounted for.

In all these countries formal bills of rights in one shape or another protect and conserve what has been named "liberty," Perhaps our pro hibition is also accounted for. II does no harm to think over Ihe Mussolini pronouncement. What is probably true is Hint there has always been a fair proportion of men and of women who arc happiest under an ordered life: women in convents, men in the Army or the Nuv.v. told what to eat, told what to think, told when to sleep and when lo wake, told what to near and what not to wear; asked to obey instructions. That, the number of such temperaments increases with the complexity of civilization can hardly be doubled.

Liberty "butters no parsnips." Let us cat nnd drink, for lo-lnorrow we die. "For forms of gov-crnment let fools contest: whate'er is best administered is best." For those who think and feel this way the history of the French Revolution menus nothing in France: the long struggle with I lie Stuarts means iiolliiiig iu Engl.ind. and iu the United States the Declaration of Independence is ut-letiy obsolete. But if you were to tell such a man or sii'-h a woman that be or she was tired of liberty you might get an iu ilignant re-poiise: you would certainly find your statement traversed or contradicted. So even if such men and such women were in a majority it might still be prudent for ruler-like Mussolini, indeed for all rulers, to avoid too much frankness, to veil their contempt for the masses that in Ihe last analysis must keep them in liower or turn them out to assume a virtue though they have it not.

and to talk as if liberty were still existent ami still popular. To quote Talleyrand: "Language was given to man not for the purpose of expressing his thoughts but for the purpose of concealing them." Mussolini is on the wrong track, lacticnlly ami trnl-eglcally. whether he knows it or not. WHEN LAUSANNE RECONVENES. How little ideali-rii has been associated with the Near Fast Peace Conference will become apparent when the Lausanne Conference reeon-venes.

The scramble for concessions which has been in the background sinet the liri meetings win then lie lonliiiued mole openly, ami United t'taM'S participation, while still iinof. will be more vigorous. Turkey has gained and no! lot iu tin- opinion of the world since the Lausanne discussions begttn. She has inaile a valiant snuggle on behalf of I'cr national integrity and inoepeii-iieni-f nil with the revelation of tie- material luoti-'es tioiiiinatiug tile pol. of the Great tit the Angora (, the demand; lllllcul well foiTlnled.

There is every iudi- I ilia i tir- key is V. ell-disno-eil 1. Wttnl 1 lie e-ilional anil rciigioes liis; il in io.ts osiabli-hfd on hi on Her so long as i they conduct no propaganda directed i I That morphine tlot against a hoy f-onator should stir the Society for I "no Prevention of Something or Other to ni-tiviiy. Cruelty to the young is at onto illegal ami unpardonable. A Salem, or Wilch-Town, woman leaves $10.1110 in her will to furnish stoves for the ''worthy poor." Part of the cash for coal would have won more hearts.

There are more than enough empty stoves already. DEFENDING THE SUGAR RATES. is natural that those responsible for the present tariff on sugar should argue that the rates have nothing at 11 to do with the rise of sugar to ten cents a pound at retail. They point to the fact that the rates represent a comparatively small advance ever the rates In the Vndorwood tariff anil are not much above those in the iniergency tariff under which sugar dropped to something like pre-war prices in the retail market. Therefore the Government invest! gation of sugar is not to be confined to an investigation of tariff rates.

It is to lake up the charge thai a eon spiracy exists among speculators to shorten the supply of retined sugar and thereby Increase prices to the consumer. If these investigations are honestly conducted the couulry will obtain much needed enlightenment upon condition which have aroused universal indignation and protest. Meantime it will be remembered that while the rates in the Fordney-McCumber tariff added not more than p. cent a pound to the older rates the additional tax was imposed mainly for the benefit of beet growers in the West. There was no consideration for the consumer.

A barefaced attempt was made to limit by ti enforced agreemeut the production of Cuban sugar, upon which the American refiner mainly depends. The whole trend of the high protectionist effort in Congress was toward in creasing the cost of a necessity to every household in the laud in order that enlarged profits might accrue to a small group of producers. The gospel of the litgb protectionist takes no account of the mass. It regards special interests as always and every where paramount. The New York Tribune, which hesi tates to blame the tariff for an all iance of four or five cents in the retail price of sugar, admits, however, that the rates are "excessive" and wrong in principle.

"They do not," it says, "represent a sound application of the protective theory. They will not build up our sugar production lo the point at which it is capable of supplying the home market. In the case of sugar a revenue duy is the more rational. If our sugar industry is held to he essential to national security and cannot be maintained by a fair revenue then il would be cheaper and beticr to subsidize it. as the franiers of the McKinley tariff law did in 1S90." What the country thought of "tln trainers of the McKinley tariff law." with their high rates and their subsidies, was emphatically recorded in the election of ISfM).

when the Republicans declared the issue to be "Bill McKinley and the McKinley and again iu when the Republicans lost the Presidency and the Congress on the same issue. The Tribune's reference is unfortunate. The people lni3 something to say at the lust election about tariff rates and about subsidies designed to favor the few at the expense of the They are not yet done with the issue. II will arise again next year. MR.

HEARST'S CRIP ON BALTIMORE. With the acquisition of the Baltimore American and ihe Baltimore N'ews from Frank A. Munsey. William Randolph Hearst establishes virtually a monopoly grip on the newspapers of the Onoli Ciry. He litis for some lime had a controlling interest iu the Abell Publishing Company, owning i lie Morning Hun and the Kvening Sun.

The Aiuriicaii was established in as the Man land Journal and Atl-I vcrtiser. 'Pc property was for seventy veals in ihe hands of the family of ('liarb-s en roll Fulton, who. being a warm T'nioni-f and friend of Abraham I-iinniii. changed ihe name iu the Civil War period to the Aiuer- had a unique record. Morn in Fiam-e and educated there, he had volunteered iu Ihe army of Napoleon HI.

in the campaign against Austria of A year later he was with Garibaldi's Flying Column in Sicily. Late iu lNiq lie came to the Cnited States, He enlisted iu the Durvea Zouaves. was wounded three lilacs and wen ja bi igatlicr generalship in the Civil War. He was always a conservative newspant man and the American was conservative. When he eut to Mr.

Munsey iu HiJI, al Hie nge if si', he explained his saving that dailies l-eipiireii va-l i tin invc-t iient to l.t i linos. up with th energy iu their va- heller to '1' hie. I. paper publ'shcd uianagcinenl. III.

i leave thclti to The evening by Mr. Aunii-Mr. Munsey to. mill a- tile Star. When leer both propei he bought also the Baltimore Now Ni miers Puppets; Pull Strings How much of the present European muddle is due to this system no man can say.

Much of It certainly Is, though Ihe news has usually held Lloyd George, P.riand, Poincare, Honar Law, Wirth or Cuno responsible. These men were, in fact, often nothing but puppets, with the strings reaching back to their respective House of Commons, Chamber of Deputies or Reichstag. That among themselves they have bemoaned this fact was revealed recently by Louis Loucheur, member of several French Cabinets, and candidate for the. Premiership. "I met Chancellor Wirth or Germany In the small boudoir of Lady Curzon in London," said Loucheur.

"Lord Curon, Mr. Lloyd George and Premier Briand were also there. We had finished several exhausting sessions of the conference without making satisfactory progress. "Chancellor Wirth nhook his head sadly. 'I haven't a free hand.

I can't do anything at all with the rteichslag'. This would all be so much easier if 1 could forget the he said. "Lloyd fleorgT. laughed and said he could do nothing with his Parliament, either. "And I knew, of courso, the trou ie Monsieur Kriund -was having with his," concluded Loucheur.

esiabl.shed her relations with the Vatican. Thai the revival of Rome as a center for a Latin union will meet opposition is admitted frankly by my Italian First of all, they see a contest with France over the rjtieslion of Rome or Paris as the cultural and political center, but are confident that Italy will finally win in this strugele. They upeak resignedly of the inevitable war with Rus-s'a. or at least with the representatives of the Slavic races in the west. Hut Russia, they think, will have her hands full with pressure from Asia, and Germany Is done for for many trciieralionis.

They dismiss KnglHiid as 'no longer a power on the Her orientation, they think, will be constantly toward America. That is not the way Mussolini speaks; it ia not the way uny sinple reNponsiblc government official ppeaks, must repeat. But It is what one hears anions nationalist enthu Hiasts in the Italian cafes." What Shall He Say? I From California to Maine The PieKidcnt will truth explain. Hut ont query's raising Cain. All efforts lit an answer vain If way-up polities he'd play What shall he spy; What shall he say? Shall defend the.

tariff craft. I mean the curipu i Koi-dncy draft That may not be the shrewdnai eraft Remember wli.it occurred to Taft If trump cards Harding means I play. What shall he say; What shall he cay? With hope or fear the future's bi-. Dame Fortune he must now Intrigu. If otiuni cunt dig.

With clubs should he attack the l.easriip? "Yes." some iH-tlaru, and somo Way." Wlu't shall he say; What shall lie say? On sliippins. railroads, oil The puzzle to coll and coil; '-'Lr governments us oppositions can udopt it. well he as leaders persuaded A PRINCESS OF THE ATTIC. Well might Peter Pan come down lo the footlights 1 1 lit separate the realists end the world of Let's Pretend and beg nil those who believe in fairies to clap for little Millie Pelroni, Princess Orell of the Knchanletl Attic. Millie is She is a Princess in her own right In the realm of make-believe, and lliose who fail lo thrill when the story of her light against the foes of fancy is told must be dull.

Indeed. Mrs, Petroul thought Millie wait until Easier morning to wear the line new shoes and stockings that had been bought for her. This was too nineli for Millie, who took her copy of "Robin Hood" to Ihe attic, where for three days and nights she reigned as Princess Orell, the most beautiful woman Iu the world. She icvealed her roval identity to Michael, her lO-ycar-old brother, who brought her footl. It was not until she was betrayed by an unromallc Eiiore that Papa Petroul found her (sleep in th attic on Thursday morn ing! Thus everything ended happily, with Millie triumphant.

For three days she kept all the ogres of reality and routine at hay ami proved herself a fil mate for Peter Pan or the culprit fays that live iu the treetops. She put to shame the sordid realists and proved that romance still lives and may be found if we persist in our hunt for it. She was brave enough to find her way back fo the almost forgotten kingdom of fancy, where any one may go if they have the magic key that iinloi ks the glittering portals. Admiral Sims declares: "There Is not a single competent military critic on any newspaper in America." To which the retort courteous is plain enough: "There Is not a competent clitic of journalism iu the United Slates Navy or Army." Illinois are asy. The Government of the Vulgar liul-gars has Jailed 'J0O "anarchists'' after a lot of bloodshed in arresting tlieui.

There may be cases of mistaken identity. No American could tell a BuL gar peasant from an anarchist without subjecting him to the third degree. One word for the French General Maunoury Michael Joseph Mauiioury who at (IT volunteered in for nctive duty, and whose vigor on the left wing did much lo the Germans and save Paris. Ile is dead al 71. Yoiiih nad no monopoly in World War heroism.

Anxious British newspaper warn I be Prince of Wales to quit pcriio is s'eeileebasing because of his immense responsibilities as heir lo the ihroue. Width l.nhoriics geiiera'ly tbiiiK is eietugb to make a horse jl.iugh. bin lt.inis:iy Macdotiahl doesn't crat a sniile. Ile knows his cue. One Mage In Jersey, "leas.

ille. ha- I'stnhlisln'd a legal speed twelve niilo an l-mir for railroad trains, and is Irving to enforce it on the Reading. If fiery oll.e:' village -rraiV should do the same, bow long woultl it take lo go from New York to Philadelphia? The question ill liself is a rcductio ad iibsnrdiini. China's fresh-water navy is thieat-cning to seize the sub revenues, aiijj. thing may happen when ti navy Is denied familiarity with the briny deep.

TROUBLE OVER PASSPORTS Tourists Warned to Investigate Travelling Conditions. Berlin. March 31 (H.v the Associated Press) Americana who arc planning an Inexpensive and com-iertable vacation In Germuny thta summer are being advised by friends here to investigate little before sailing. Visas for Germany have been surrounded by many difficulties since I be Ruhr occupation. The Gorman Foreign Ofllcc promises that bona-fkle tourists will hereafter be able to obtain visas with less but In the meantime tlie American Kmbassy and consubiteH are flooded with complaints from Americans in Kurope who art; unable to get permission to enter Germany.

A conference of the various German states was held recently in an effort lo work out a plan for simplifying the troubles of tourists and standardizine, the taxes on foreigners, but so far no agreement has been announced. Tbt! hotel keepers and steamship otllclals lire up in arms over the pn.ssport situation and the municipal taxes which have driven out foreigners, especially Americans, and which threaten to emply tho higher class hotels. The Berlin newspapers are complaining bitterly at. the vise rrgulations. and at the municipal taxes, which have hurt the theaters, cafes and shops as well as the hotels, but no relief is fn sight.

AIRPLANES ON RAILS fSfH'f'taf Correspondence of Thr Kaylc and 'iifi. hrdfirr; Copyripht. 1923.) March 18 Something nrw iti tho 1 tanspurta tion lino ts proposed as adjunct to the Olympic games next yen inasmuch as tho preat uthU-tir event will be Htagoi) in the Hubtirb of just outside of 1'ariR. inn) it estimate. 1 that 000 poisons will have to be there daily from tho I'reneli apital.

To aid in carfnf for that frame an eiial monorail in propos- d. The uiil. aeiordtng to proliminuiy plana, is GO feet in Ihe air. Tho roaches to be r-uspended from ii resemble, tho body of un airplann and are designed to carry 70 i-aeli. The motive power, hxtrieity, will be tommunioated to propellers on the coaches.

The scheme, it' adopted, will Rive tho world a sort ot uirpiano running on a iraek. It is estimated bO.HOO a day could be currier! on the monorail, which would carry oars running at a Hpeed of 40 miles an hour. The cosr of building tho Hue is computed at ap-ITOMinately Jju.OHO a mile, which would be much loss than additional tram lines. THE EASTER ANGEL ii. swept throiisli avons Like a white and shining cloud Ilia eyes lik two lustrous ann thysts.

His head, like a k'nfr's. heid proud "Kor 1 carry tho (rreatcst messap-t. That the world hat known." sab! Iu-. TliM man. from the awful curse of d.atli.

Is this morning fret-. So 1 mult as I I hi' loudituund "a 1-1 h. 'It -juif-i', h.r I'biiM is I'ur lis'iic from his slc p. In his dark. k-tnrnb prist n.

And Hi-. Hi'- I'Tut i- Lily, is. Of Hi the To b--ur rnuti't th. f- vinhnl nf Lid 's immortality," I 93 I I European Pre Parliaments Magic Bureau. 0 3 Hue Cnmbon.

By (il'Y HK'KOK. (Ntaff of Tlie JJofftc.) I'ai'is, March 1'3 If any net of a Kuropean Prime Minister fails to get a majority vote of hla Parliament the Prime Minister ba.s to resign. No European Chtef of State (save' Lenin and both dictators) hns term of odlce In which to form and carry out a policy. On the contrary, he holds his place onlj from moment to moment, like tightrope walker, and no matter how far-sighted nnd wise he may be he ctases to exist as a political force the moment his Parliament cither fails to understand or to agree with what he has done. I'ntlcr the same system, President Harding would cllht have had to resign on the defeat of the Subsidy, or tie would have had to avoid that defeat, by not proposini; and pushing the bill.

in tho post-war settlement there have been nearly always four and usually five Parliaments behind Ihe Prime Ministers Involved. A decided current of opinion in any one country could effectively prevent me Prime Minister from doing what bo wajited to do, and thus block cooperation among the five. A PAN-LATIN UNION VISION Trend of Thought Based on Hopes of Rome as Empire Center. By DOROTHY THOMPSON. (serial VorrcHpondrnce of The Kartlc and I'Jiila.

Lvdrrr: Copyright Home, March 10 To undurstand what t-'aseistic Italy really one had better go, not lo the Quiiinal, nor to the fount of official statements and. decrees, but lo one or another of tlie Roman cafes, where painters, journalists and olli cera forefather, and listen th-tv to enthusiastic dreams of Italy's futur In such a "ristorunte" met Ouido friiida. a considerable tiguro in Kmmin artistic life, the editor of 1 a. weekly art review, and Ihe director of ninny of Hume's ex hibitions of modern painters. He is a tpe of the Italian intellectual: painter.

Journalist, critic and organizer, deeply Interested in political matters, but more in the hum and philosophy of t-mbirions than in Ihe details by which liny shall be rea Hzed. Men like Uuida are important 'fascism. Ir is not a work" i 11 olass movement, nor. in spite of the fact that it draws monetary support from hat sou a movement of the. industrials.

They support it in the interest of oider and discipline as opposed to th imminent chaos promised by the t'om-munisis. JJut Fascism, as a pulitical philosophy, is supported by i he intellect uals. and it is not insignificant that D'Annunzio is a poet. tuido Cutda thinks Fast ism to be merely a prophetic manifestation of the coining Italian I-naissance, which is germinating; throughout tho land. Italy, eeonomieally revivilied by liie discovery of oil in Sicily and iron and coal in Sardinia, Is to be the cenl- of a I'un-Lutin union of the future.

Us spiritual foundation in the matrix of ancient, pagan, pre-l hristian Rome, or pcrhap il" the Church cm thereby i(. used to promote iif end Renalssa nee Rome; and Italy. France, Fieliiuiu and Rumania are tr cleave tojitther in one ureal bloc, fed and assisted by Latin South American and Latin North Afric.i. On the top of a eafe i table delightful and typieai l.oinuii druua maps of ICurope. elutitt- Fnslnnd's tinal isolation from 'h' Continent, disuoses of economic; MflleuM ies preaches the sospe! of raeial allianee.

Initio Ouidi; "We cannot lotpe. the iirlei nati'mul influence of the Chiiroh on the Latin raee. Kvtn tree-thinking Franco has rc- Mtntii nip nit n'-cssionnaire. not But must living men associate lie banker! as-nres ihe world tb-it the Baltimore morning daily with Afghanistan is too religious to lei Felix Agnus, who directed it- policy ihe Sov iet agents in. Kipling hadn't I practically from the time ilia! be inar-siveii in high an opinion of I be i ricil Fulton's daughter in Agnus piety of tlie "Bold Afghan." but may be hat is called the revival of Mo.

leiudom has made big changes. Why New Vi-rk University 1 re-lime; trv to do snake-ilaie--ing on the Brooklvu Borough Hall's steps? Iu the name of local autonomy and home rule we comment? M-otnpt arrests by rbe police. The suspicion that such freshmen chipped the steps is. however, entirely without continuation. Curiously i port a lit niea-Republican-DeiiKK-rals measures ha I.

"bile very im- being killed by iibly because anccd them, bad 'ler chance. The make O'Malley a bill, for ex inttrket and al-oli-h civil servi.e to turn all job- over to politi- Is not hopeless nif salary rais- I lie would not stir nalo broil: Hut tliinl.in is un an-'n1 toll. W'hLt sort of truth will smoo'h W'lmt sun I mu SliaU lie J. A. It..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963