Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, January 29, 1920, Sports Extra, Page 16, Image 16

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BRUNT
"ByF-ANNlEUURST
Annie Kineady leaves her husband
oecause he has gone hack to his
i former habit of drinking too much
'thico the death of their habjl. He
7iud given it up after the baby icas
' horn, hut has reunited it and tcill not
xign a pledge lnm'e goes to live with
a friend in Ht. Louis.
CHAPTER IV
JL The accommodation slid rustily
into (lie station. She found a scat in
the (1 n"H
coacli. T u o
air in there
hung thick
and enfeeous.
nud 'tthen the
ftVv s gSHb
walker a clay or two more, Sir, Foddle,
uhile you're getting well. You mustn't
overdo right off I"
"Some little bouncing ball, I am, ch?
Down on Saturday, right in the middle
of a mill-end sale, and up on Monday,
ready as n lighting cock for the begin
ning of the semiannual clearln'."
"Oh, Mr. Toddle, forgetting right
away und taking all sorts of risks,
when the doctor told you that excite
ment is dangerous and"
"Nothing is dangerous around this
here joint. Miss Annie, except you."
"Cut that!"
"What'U I say that was wrong?"
"Nothing, blit ciit it; that'tt all."
"I was only fooling, Anujc."
"What?"
"Miss Annie. I wn$ nulv foolinc. Miss
lraiu jerueu Annie. I liko to see ou get mad wuu
ovu t almost-' that rcd-halrod temper of yours aud
immediately, tho.o great, big beautiful "
ceiling lamps, "Cut it, I said." She moved back
with their from him ipto the gloom of halls and
& ic k yellow toward her open door.
w icks of "Well, of 'all the little spitfires!"
light,, began The. cry arose, thin as a quail's, and
to bway. fcho she turned back toward him.
sat on the "H was croupy all night, Mr. Fod-
red plush die; I could hear him. Did jou fix
t.eat,tolebcope up the tent over his crib nnd burn crco-
across heris-ote under it like T showed touV"
k u c c a and "Just don't know, Miss Annie,
r.VNNic HVnsT eyes squcezeu wnat s ailing the little fellow. Uot the
ugut against lamp alrighty ; but what does it mean,
Miss Annie, when his little body is hot
all over, not real feverish, but just hot?
Dry-like."
-. "I'll. see."- She wat. past him into
the three-windowed third-floor-front
and toward a oiuall crib in its corner,
lianrl iii nvni till Tut a if lmr 1ii(vn
he siid between moist j hit0 bauds, gripping its hides.
It ho needs a doctor. Jltss Annie, l
ain't the one- to snare enene
"tjh-h-li !" She raised her face to
him with her finger laid ucross her lips.
"He's dropped off again. It's nothing
the matter with the little fellow, Mr.
foddie, but just croup. M my little
one used to get just this way, too, hot
and dry-skinned, but not rial feverish.
jusc you ourn creosote xonigai again i
and see how it fixes him np.
He advanced toward her, sloughing
in his felt slippers the length of the
floor. There was a spaciousness and
an air of upholstered comfort about
that room, once removing it from the
chilly category of the "neatly fur
nished." An upholstred sofa, bulgy.
but spacious, was drawn out along
side a fireplace cut in a monstrous
Ttrmspn nml rising miserT
Across the aisle a large party with
ft heavy gold chain spanning a convex
waistcoat leaned to her with a queer
chirring noic underneath his breath,
his eyes, well imbedded in flesh, glow
ing acros at her in quick" appraisal
some Uid
Washington avenue, just above Jel
ferson, has seen better days. Its1
brownstone fronts, even in .bellicose ,
;... ,.!... f T.miis khnwed null- i
talettcs beneath ber hoops und traded
slaves on the courthouse steps', nad
upt the sagging stoops or the copings
bunk. Iustead, there were starcbly
curtained windows and the copings of
sandstones, even the granite parrs of
door lions scru6bed well into tie crev
ice of the carved manes and. too, the
carriage-step whitely scoured for ttie
comings and goings and doings and
dancings of the Papins and Chouteaus,
Garrisons and Chopins of those deb
pnair pioneer days. .
Then, because of the west-knd
movement, and because people are con-
etantly prospering or tailing "";" , marble mantelpiece and shaped like an
the street car franchise cutting througn , .. nnirnt rorknv mi
'the seclusion and a new kcrai ou holstPrMj iu carpt aud ;l ha0,.i,
lurning from a bionstoue to a vuue- ic1rs o Mf x odlIleS c.onDUbmi rn.
Ftone front age. W ashingtou a enui and a foldiu brJ s,lrcad.
just above Jefferson evacuated J uu &uns to conceaimene behind red rrp
slipped into decay "To Let began to curtains, A lambrequin with ball
etare from empty windows, doors sa- ringe hung rom the mantelpiece. Be
ged out of plumb, and the granite lions fore thig mantcli 5t3 pjer mirror 0f
darkened with humiliation and smoke beUer d&yg tnted tQ reflect the r0Qmi
from the new Jefferson avenue King Mp Foddie pausC( for view 0f Annie
ivuaniy ouoe tuwj. "." u... -- Kineady there beside the crib.
"If that kid of mine gets any fonder
'of you, Miss Annie, his pa'll get jeal-
j OHS."
"He's the sweetest little thing, Mr.
Foddie, jut the sweetest little thing,
and so smart for only three.
"Image of his pa."
"He he jut don't look onc'bit like
j ou. Mr. Foddie."
"There you go again, running me
Lucy Beasley, to whom life consisted ,""."" . T . ,. ... ,
of two frayed ends which ould not', l Y;.rl, frm nnnf
the floor to the othei just ho'ncy th
little geezer ho."
Sh. withdraw lipr Imnil snftlr frnm
the heart of the crib, but a little wail'
n with it. j
"bee, he likes my baud, and bhc
replaced It with a ttcmolo of great
pride hi her voice: "lie likes It."
Mr. Foddie seated himself- in"the
carnet rocker und fitted the .ten tins
4 of his fingers together- Ills mustache
so suspiciously lighter than the hair
brushed so painstakingly across the
thinning spot, raised ngniu iu n smile,
revealing u flash of teeth and ccllu-luid-looking
gums.
"So do I," be said.
"What?"
"Like it."
Her glance flashed to the door. It
stood open.
"None of that," she said.
"Why not?"
"You know why not."
"Xou great big beauty, you, what's
that got to do with it?"
"Nothing to you and lots to mc."
"You've left him!"
"Have not!"
"Whnttii ou call livinc nwav from
(him like this six months und trimmln'
hats ior u livin', I'd like to know, if
it ain't that? New way of living with
your man?"
"I know what I'm doing, What you
don't knqw about my business would
fill a book."
"Tryin' to reform u drunk, ch? Bet
ter try to run the Mississippi river up
Washington avenue."
"What do you know? Why, he
why, he niu't touched it drop since the
night I left, nnd I've got his sister to
protc it. He's taken tho pledge six
months ago und is as sound us a dollar
since I I kuow whut I'm doing!"
"Then why don't jou go back if
you ain't afraid? Why ain't jou fol
lowing up the postmark on them letters
I see layin' idown for you on the hat
rack all the time? You're so crazy
about him you wouldn't even see him
that time he came to town after you.
I got that straight from Beasley her
self. Is that jour way of showing you
ain't afraid?"
Bolshevism Rule of Ruin,
Slavery, SaysGompers
Workers Disfranchised, Funds Seized; Not
Necessary to Wait Longer to Form Opin
ion, Writes A. F.of L. Chief
(CONTINUED TOMORROW)
Copyrioht, 1020. Iu IVhccltr Syndicate
Washlngioii, Jan. -SO.-WrUhnt -in
the current number of the Federation
1st, official organ of the American Fed
eration of Labor, Samuel Gornpers con
demns bolshevism "completely, finally
nnd for "all time."
The American labor leader says he
doubts whether the propaganda which
emanates from the Bolshevist organiza
tion itself is more effective, than that
"conducted by thosq who claim to be
uitirely detached from Russian influ
ence and Russian paj rolls.". He sajs
ho doubts whether publications issued
by Russian Bolshevist ngents have as
great an effect in America as those
"which like to be known us 'journals
of opinion,' such as tho Nation, tho
Dial and the New Republic."
Mr. Gompcrs makes an extended ref
erence to the argument that the Ameri
can people know little about what is
going ou iu Russia, aud the argument
that it is unfair and, unwise to pass
judgnnnt. - -
"It was" uot ncce'Ssary," says Mr.
Gompers, "for Americans to know at
all times just what were the 'exact
conditions in Germany before passing
judgmeut on tie form of. government
existing in Germany. It was neces
sary only to know what was the form
of government and under what rules it
operated. We do not have to wait for
information- about the form of govern
ment existing iu what is called soilct
Russia.
trhonls to the corpse of jesterday, toe
rooming house iniadcd, the lodger fori
the night.laying a furtive head beneath ,
the high, calcimined ceiling of prouder
day. . . '
At 2505 Washington aicnuc, sinister
looking with its front door s-agging in j
like a toothless mouth, its indoor shut-
ters closed aud milk bottles aud caus
of the add-hot-water-and-serve foods
cf the lodger on the window-sills, Mr-. ,
Y and with our J
I Army Doctors I
cA fact:
At the Medical Officers'Train
ing Camp, Fort Riley, Kansas,
last year, the largest-selling ciga
rette among these thousands of
doctors and surgeons from all
parts of the United States was
Fatima.
FATIMA
A Sensible Cigarette
J'A1I the information necessary 16 the
passing of judgment on bolshevism and
tho sj stem of government and as u state
of society Is at hand from sources
that nro authentic. Tho plea of those
misguldedlicrsons in America who Fay
'wait for the facts before passing judg
ment' is nothing more than an excuse
whiclf it is hoped will gain time for tho
Ru9siau experiment and enable it to
spread to other countries."
Quoting from the new Bolshevist con
stitution, Mr. Gomncrs points out that
while the fifth pan-Russian congress
declares for n dictatorship of the pro
letariat nnd tho poorest peasantry, "a
great portion of tho peasantry is dis
franchised and tbe largest Bolshevist
estimate of the proletariat calculates
them as only ouq-fifth of the number of
peasants.
Quoting from Bolshevist official doc
uments to hhow the extent of massed
.terror by the Bolshevists, Mr. Gom
pers declares that "the economic con
dition in internal -Russia at the present
time has absolutely nothjng to do with
tho merits or demerits of the Bolshe
vist philosophy of government," and
adds .that it .should Jiavc no influence
in determining the judgment of any
person upon it as such." ,
Ho quotes as the most direct infor
mation a dispatch from Russian trade
unionists to W." A. "Applcton, presi
dent of the International Federation of
Trades Unions, which declares that
Bolshevists have rplit up tbe reserve
fuuds of trades unions, throttled the
labor press, killed labor organizations,
split up trades unions as a class nnd
put down strikes by "force of arms and
plentiful executions."
"In all concepts of freedom within
the American nation," says Mr. Gom
pers, "one fundamental principle is that
any Involuntary servitude, that is, com
pulsory labor, shall not be enforced
upon .the working people." He quotes
the amendment to the federal constitu
tion and adds:
"That conception and tho spirit of
that amendment have been entirely re
versed by the constitution of Bolshevist
Russia which provides for nnd enforces
compulsory labor Tho
nlea to withhold iudement is a" last des
perate attcmnt to win favor from the
American pcopia tor n system m govern-.
meat wincu by mo contcssion oi its own
advocates and defenders is foreign to
every concept of tho American republic.
We know about Russia. We know about
bolshevism. Wo know tho piteous story
oi itiieity nnd intoiernuce and we know
tho autocratic concept that underlies
tho minority dictatorship which Is hailed
to tho world by its dupes and advocates
as the most perfect stato of sookty yet
devised, Wo know about it and we con
demn it completely, finally, and for all
time."
CHILD DECIDES OWN FUTURE
Sticks lo Foster-Parents When Ac
tress Mother Claims Her
Baltimore, Jan. 20. Eleven-year-old
Marjorio Easton decided her own
futuro yesterday. With her real
mother, Damaris Easton, New York
actress and dancer, on ono side, nud
her foster-parents, Mr. and Mrs. James
O. King, of Cedar Grove, on tho other,
and Judge Gorter sitting in judgment
on tho picas oftho two sides for the
litllq girl, it was left her to wako lie
choice.
She will go back to the quiet, sim
ple life of Cedar Grow, i- """4
educatio;
miss Bastou and bet " finni u?a ttil
Biistanoby. New vL, "?
offer her. BufMlss Eastoil TPH
... v..ul ua uorn to her whon Avr l
fifteen years old. will ! be VhW
A't hiE "ton as .WVXS? U
said, a rails on hor W..M
andpap' TOnt to n
iuisa jaston was i..u
by the Kings toto'oSSo W
visit her daughter. r GrT to
VNshJUiB
fHf
1 555;
A Dress Suit and a
Shave Wont Dolt
To, be at your best, you must feel at your best. The man that
is magnetic, popular, successful is the one who .radiates vigor
and health. Nothing pulls a man down more surely more in.
sidiously than, constipation. The poisons arising from the
decaying intestinal matter take the color out of your face and
the "pep" from your stride. Kecp'clean inside as well as out.
By an entirely new principle Nujol will keep, the poisonous
waste moving out of the body. Every other form of treatment
either irritates or forces the system. Nujol works on the waste
matter instead of on the system.
Nujol prevents constipation by keeping the food waste soft,
thus helping Nature establish easy, thorough bowd evacuation
at regular intervals the healthiest habit in the world.
It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take try it.
Nujol is Bold by all druggists in sealed bottles only bearing Nulol
trade-mark. Write Nujol'Laboratories, Standard Oil Co. (New Jersey)
50 Broadway, New York, for booklet "Thirty Feet of Danger
A NewiSlethod of treating anOld Complaint
"MB t
meet, conducted a
light housekeeping.
rooming huut-c
Xou to whom light housekeeping is
but a card stuck in a murky window,
look to it well that you aeer know
nore. It is the hearthstone aud the
family board gone to smash, aud in
their stead a tin can over a gas jet ,
Women sick with the heaviness of
light housekeeping sometimes forget to i
turn off that gas. Meu iu such rooms i
eit through the long hours of out-of- i
work wnrkadajs, ofttimes p'anning no
good. Children xry here, uot knowing
vhy.
In her third-story-back, a slit of a
room overlooking a segmput of alley
nnd the roofs of the King Kuality Shoe
Factory. Annie Kineady, brushing out
ber flood of hair, heard one such cry ,
beat against the thin walls of her room
and paused with her brush held away
from her and looking back at herself (
in the square of wavy mirror.
Into the quiet of Sunday morning
Blow - clappered church bells rang
roundly. She tood there with her
head cocked to the cry. ber bair flow
ing down and over her bare arms and ,
more than ever brilliant in the meager I
room, with its tot still awry from her
rising, a table spread with hex poor i
odds and ends n toilet and a bowl and J
ritcher. Beside it a tin slop jar, and I
cside that her empty telescope. '
The cry, half a cough, ro-c again'
louder, und she tosed down the brush
and wound ber hair in Irs loose coil,
tdid into her blaek dress, with her neck I
rising whitely out of it. squirming to1
button it up her back, flipped out into
the dark hall, with the medley of.
breakfast smells oozing from every
where, and knocked at the door" adjoin
ing hers.
"Come." I
She did not turn the knob ; placed
Jier lips to a crack instead. !
"I don't want to come in, Mr. Tod- 1
die. only to know if the baby "
The door swung back upon her, re- ,
vealing Mr. Toddie in a gray and well- i
frayed flannel house gown, corded in
nt the waist, and a smile that lifted '
the looped-up corners of his mustache,
veil toward his eyes.
"Well, of all the high-toned little
Neighbors. Don't wanna come in!" j
"Me and Beasley are going over to1
the I.effingwell Church this morning. I
Mr. Foddie. only hearing the baby kind I
cf coughing " i
"Wonder you wouldn't ask a poor
fld widower to go along."
Why, Mr. Foddie, you yourself I
home sick from the store yesterday ,
end little Robbie"
He i-truck himclf roouodinglv upon ,
the chest und smoothed his bair. so '
pmoothly pomaded across u thinning
tpot anil three sliadps darker than the,
tuo-browu miiHtaelie. I
"Neier felt bett,r in my life " '
"Ileasley s-ajs that'b what ou always
ay after one of your heart spells, and
then right away start to ocrdoing "
"Never felt better in ray life Ale
for tbe storo tomorrow, lik' I'd never
been down."
"S'pose the fair's without u floor-J
Sfcv Viut enough Turkish" f
"" bi
wmms
mjtr j
B
The Other Woman's
Suit or Coat
MAT appear welt on ysu
but ln t It better to wear
one that Is mads FOR
jou one that will bring
out the bt polnlo of your
ritfuro and corn-taut the tie.
ftclB" Let ua tuke our
in, Bure
SUIT TO ORDER
Trlcotine $60
Blue Serge ..... . SO
Sport Suit 60
Coat
Camel' Hair . . . .$75
Hull
una
from jour
fiootle
25
Itoou) 5
behind Vluor
FRANK DI LUZIO
"! jniltrJU With Zi7l UlfHti'
tMN. Walnut St. Walnut 7471
A,im.i.M.iiiF..ji i " iijif' nnmijiiiw '
c
HTie House that Heppe
Founded in 1S65
uilA
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Oliver Denton Edwin Hughes Robert Schmitt Arthur RuHn!ii
Hans Ebell Alberto Jonas Arthur Friedheim Alexander Lambert
Rudolph Cam Ethel Leginska Heinrich Gebhard Gaiomar Novaet
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V" CS,
Is the Near East at
the Zero Hour?
t,
I
USTAPHA KEMAL BEY sets up a government in opposition j
to the Sultan's at Constantinople! Halideh Hahum, beautiful i
and remarkable woman leader of Turkey, calls on the people to
burn Constantinople before it shall become the creature of Europe s old
time diplomacy! Enver Pasha, friend and chief agent of the Germans,
suddenly reported out of hiding, as King of the wild Kurds! The native
nationalist parties of Egypt, Arabia, Turkey, threatening union and
appeal to religious fanaticism! And Bolshevisim beckoning alluringly!
S1A
The American MAGAZINE on the Orient
Contents of the current
issue of Asia
Men and Things ts the Turk Sees Them
Herbtrt Adams Gibbons
The Zero Hour in the Near Eat ...... Jactson FUming
The Sultan Lools Westward Philip Marshall Brown
A Mandate Does America Qualify?
The American Idea Can It Work ? Talcott Williams
' What We Showed in the Philippines Paul Monroe
Halideh Hanum, Turkey's Feminist Leader
Gettnit Emtrson
Is the Caliphate in the Melting Toil Frederick J. Bliss
Turks and Turks Theron J, Damon
New Trails in Trade. Lewis Ileek
The Weaver U. A. Noureddin Addis
Off the Map Into Afghanistan A. C. Jeteett
The Japanese Laborer ........ Sen Katayama
Hand Craftsmen of Japan Pictorial Insert
Mongolia The Texas of Asia Luther Anderson
China's Stirring Nationalism The Old Giant Awaits
Beneath the Crags of Kashmir. . . . ; . V. C. Scott O'Connor
Weaving the Orient Into American Industry
M. D. C Crawford
in its special Near Eastern number gives a
fascinating array of facts and stories across
section indeed of the spirit of the Near Eastern
masses silent victims of European imperialism
on one hand and of the unspeakable corruption of
the Turkish ruling class on the other. The
old lands of the origin of man are a boiling cal
dron of suspicion and race jealousy.
What their future will be, we m America
must help decide. Our future is bound up with
theirs. It is not merely a question of humanity
but of self-interest that compels us to lend a
hand. How they really think what they really
do is fascinatingly told in ASIA.
The Golden Highway to
' an Enchanted Land
From no other source could you get so
well rounded and absorbingly entertaining a
picture of these peoples and problems new to
America as in this magazirie.
In this number, Herbert Adams Gibbons,
famous American correspondent who knows the
Turk from intimate contact with him, tells fas
cinating tales of him that leave with you a
vivid picture of Turk character.
Jackson Fleming, whose revealing rtielej botrt tne
new
explode
Go to Your Nearest Book
seller or Newsdealer Today
LOOK through the current issue of
' ASIA and see for yonrseli how
filled with new Interest this magazine
Is. You will be trarelling on a broad
highway to a land of fascination. From
no other magazine, book or newspaper
can you get a cross-section view of tbe
new international order, the lives of
Oriental peoples and onr relation to
them, os that which Asia open up. Be
cause oar Jannary printing is nearly four
times as large as it was a year ago, and
because it is a special number two
magazines in one publication has been
slightly delayed, Newsstands have only
a limited supply. ASIA Is on sale only
at the best stands; get your copy todsyj
w -" in'
'
Near East you have been following inASIA this rni
throws a searching light upon the rising power oi
national feeling in the Near East, that win exj
if repressed.
Theron J. Damon draws intimate picture of tne tsea
who have been hiding all the way from Berlin to Constan
tinoplenew young leaders and the old false leaders who
are tevenstuy planning scnemes tnai ooac uo kwu.
And Philip Marshall Brown, member of the Peace Commission, tells the personal story of
Wahid Ed-din the nr Sultan who looks westward. But all this is just a beginning. Read how
Turkish wometvr-and men too are under the spell of Halideh Hanum, one of the most beaunful ot
Turkish women who long ago let down ber veil and is nowleadingherpeopletointellectualindependence.
. Talcott Williams, born in Turkey, one of America's leading journalists, and Paul Monroe, educa
tionalist, who knows how America acted in the Philippines, tell of our fitness as a mandate power.
Two Big Magazines in One
This special Near Eastern section is a magazine in itself. It is only a part of ASIA for Jinu,af
which has in its other pages a story by an American engineer, one of the few Americans who have been
in thecountry since 1840 of little-known Afghanistan now in the world's calcium light at war witn
Great Britain. The wonders of the plains of Mongolia as the next great supply of the world s nrc
as told by Luther Anderson, stimulate the imagination.
ASIA PUBLISHING COMPANY
627 'Eexington Avenue, New York
laPl
; ?'- -..
,aL
itl
j
; - t
V
.