Newspaper Page Text
(Columbia Will | geek Solution to; g.CL Problem | i facts Relating to High Cost j ;0f Living and Other! Questions of Day Will Be j Compiled by University I ?_- ? '?a? Qty Officials Are Blamed _ I fjr, Batler Explains Plan to Give Public Accurate Data on Important Questions Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, presi- j ?eat of Columbia, announced yesterday tust through its Institute of Arts and j Sciences the university would under- , take during 1920 the task of assem vh'n" end disseminating the facts r?-tJ-site for the formation of a fair tad intelligent public opinion regard- I ing the solution of such vital prob- I lens as labor readjustments and re- I dsction of the cost of living. "The labor question and the question ! of,the metropolitan food supply, as re? lated to the high cost of living, will particularly engage the university's at .t-Btion," said Dr. Butler. "It will not da, as regards labor, to invoke legal processes after strikes have occurred," he added, "nor will |he prosecution of a few profiteers have any effect to ?srd the redaction of prices. For re? adjustments of permanent character in both eases, it is necessary to base pub? lie ?pinion on fundamental facts, and it is the university's purpose to supply those facts." One ef the prime reejnlsites of the present situation, as it affects the city. Dr. Butler said, was to remedy the lack of foresight on the part of suc? cessive municipal administrations which has resulted in placing millions ef people at the mercy of an antiquated sad "bottle neck system" of food sup sly distribution. All Try to "Pass the Bnck" ??When anything goes wrong or goes badly in our complex modern life," Dr. Bntler continued, "the first thought of many of us is to abnse somebody or to pat blame somewhere or to propose tt> overturn everything with a view to j ??covering whether the situation which confronts us may not be either remedied or avoided. The university point of view, on the contrary, is to ( try to get at the facts. In a demo- I eratie country like ours we have only ' one court of appeal and that is an in st-ncted and informed public opinion. ? Our whole fabric of government and society rests upon the assumption that : the public opinion of the whole people, if informed and instructed, will make ! a sound and correct judgment as to ; what course should be ruisued in the i public interest. About thirty years i ago. when Abram S. Hewitt was j Mayor of New York, he proposed that the city of New York, instead of charg? ing rental for its piers and docks, -should take them under its own con? trol and allot them free of charge to the various shipping lines and ships that might use them for the taking on or discharging of cargo. "Of course there was a howl. Mr. Hewitt's suggestion was hooted at. Nothing was done, and to-day we are j confronted by the great question as ? to how we are going to maintain the I shipping of this great port; how the eity of New York is to keep its su? premacy as a shipping center, because ; we have a problem directly in front of ! ?? without funds with which to solve ] H is a large way. Transportation Problems "Daring the last ten or fifteen years there have been expended perhaps j t?WjWO.OOO or more to improve the passenger approach to the city. How much has been expended .in that period te improve the freight approach ? How nwh has been expended to get here neiB quickly, more cheaply, more con wai-ntly, all that great mass of sup BKOOKLYN advertisement PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS OPEN EVENINCS PLAYER PIANO New ?A8? HO*_-THJL_r PATM__--T8. *??<__. Cov-r. 13 Player Rolla and Carta*o Included. 495 575 PLAYER $ PIANOS New BaSY *MO?rTH__Y r__T*__E!CTS. *?<__. Cover, la Flayer Boll? and Carta*? Included. Inrll-i-j-?n-v ?tooU Ma?--. Carer. ?W?lUCling <__-__?e Thl? Week WUb ?_u__ Cprl*nt Flau?. 2 Used UPRIGHT $4 AA PIANOS at $1y0 tl M?-i_jj tntil Paid ?"*?*' v ? Used UPRIGHT art* a PIANOS Under *Zli| * Hmtiiij l'util _*__._ ****? v 4 UPRIGHT .?A Ai" PIANOS Under *225 ? Mentstr Cam F_Ud " ^ ?UPRIGHT ?a.A PUNOS Under $250 ? nmahiy Cat!, raid. am**r ** V1CTR0LAS $25 opio $300 HANOS TO RENT 60ETZ & CO. ?W7C0UW STREET sp-_?vvmi_ii_i mi HAW Tho photograph shows students In Cairo, Egypt, taking possession of streetcars and running them wild through the principal thoroughfare. This was one of the many incidents which made things lively for the British troops policing the city. These disturbances followed the Amritzar shootings and other racial differences. plies which we consume and all that j still greater mass of goods which we manufacture and ship? I am disposed to think that a very few million dollars would be the answer to that question. "We are neglecting in our city pol? icy the large point of view. We are steadily refusing to exercise the imag? ination, to have the foresight to set in motion an effective plan so that we shall not be living in a serie? of con? vulsive crises. "We are endeavoring in Columbia c? . '" . ? ??,',?? - Junior Red Cross Wins Gratitude of Europe's Children Dr. Haynes Expeets Its Work Abroad To Be a Factor in Maintaining Friend? ship Between Nations Dr. Royal S. Haynes, of the Atlantic Division of the Red Cross, who has just resumed his medical work at Columbia after a year and a half abroad, ex? pressed the opinion yesterday that the Junior Red Cross would prove onj of the greatest factors in the maintenance of friendly relations with Europe. The gratitude of the children of the war-swept regions for the aid extended them by the children, of this country, he explained, was the basis of this hope. Bonds Unbreakable Dr. Haynes was associate director of the Red Cross Children's Bureau in Paris for several months, and also served as director of Junior Red Cross activities. He said: "Through its sixteen or more relief enterprises in behalf of children in the war-blasted lands, the Junior Red Cross is proving a-great stabilizer of popular opinion and is cementing good will between rising generations abroad and the rising generation at home. "I have brought back to America the fervent assurances of many thou? sands of parents and children that their gratitude is of the everlasting kind, and I am profoundly impressed with the belief that the bond of sympathy which is being established between our children and foreign children i= un? breakable. _. ?.. "From Paris, Lille, Lyons, St. Eti? enne, Marseilles, Brest Toulouse, Guise, Nantes and other places letters have poured in, expressing the grati? tude of parents for care bestowed on their little ones in another enterprise of the Junior Red Cross which .was to take a thousand wretched children from these towns into the country, and in one month's time make new be? ings of them. Educate? 60 Orphan? j "The Junior Red Cross has provided for the education of sixty war or-, Phans. It has fifty French war wa3fs in vocational training schools. At Nieppe the poor children are receiving noon lunches at school. "There are 1,000 children taken from the cellars of wrecked homes through? out the war-wasted area of France who are being provided for. In fourteen Belgian villages between 2,500and '5 000 children are receiving school funches' Two hundred little one. from the 'lost villages' of Belgium?those completely wiped ott^emMpbjthB Germans-are being fed, clothed,, ahel ?ered and schooled through the aid of the Junior Red Cross this winter.. "1 brought with me, too, the grati? tude of the 500 little Bohemian starve? lings who were taken into the SlovaJc an mountain, for a two months' but ing last summer, and the thanks also Of children scattered all y?.1*?1* and in Albania, Montenegro. Serbia and Palestine, whe're the influence of the Junior Red Cross of America has been felt. Poland eoon will be included in the Junior field, also, for we have taken steps to aid this winter some 3 000 children of refugees in eastern Poland, where suffering is unspeaka bl^The value of this activity funda? mentally is beyond calculation, I am sure It will contribute in an Impor? tant way to the future happiness, of all mankind." Printer la Left $250,000 Utica Newspaper Compositor Made Rich Man by Will SCHENECTADY. N. Y.. Jan. 3.?Dun can E. Fuller, a compositor in a news? paper office in Utica. is the chief lega? te under the will of the late Dr. Rob? ert M. Fuller, which was read to-day. Besides receiving-outright 10,000 and the doctor's personal property in this city he will receive a trust fund from the residue of the estate, which, it Is estimated by atoraey?, will amount to $200,000. Uvane?e Arrest 2,000 to Prevent New Corean Ontbreak WASHINGTON, Jan. 8.?Wholesale arrest? have benf made in Corea aine? December 28, without explanation, ac? cording to a cablegram receiveo t?-d*y by th? Corean commission Tier? from .Shanghai headquarter? of the provi? sional government for the ??????>???* Car?*, The arreat? included thirty women" leader? of patriotic ?oeietie?, moat of tb<sm Christians, th? c?ble ??id, and more than 2,000 men mi wm? tatom in the Buddhist headquarter? in ?Seoul. University to do what we can to throw light upon these questions, and to bring to the university teachers and investigators who will put us in pos? session of the facts. I trust it will not be very long before we shall be able to add to the school of business an officer whose special field shall be that of the study of marketing and distribution in order that, in scientific and scholarly fashion, leaning upon these experts wherever found, we may bring that in? formation together, put it into form in Lutheran Church Gets 211,000 New Members in Year Baptized Membership Is Now 3,652,010; Total of $3,811,982 Was Spent During Last Year The Lutheran Church In America has a baptized membership of 8,652, 010 and a confirmed membership of 2,451,997, according ot the Lutheran Year Book for 1920. The book, the work of the Rev. G. L. Keiffer, finan? cial secretary of the National Lutheran Council, also shows that the church membership in America increased by 211,000 during the last year. The mem? bership to-day represents a growth of more than 50 per cent since 1900. In 1638 there was one Lutheran pas? tor and a congregation of fifty mem? bers in America. To-day there are 9,731 pastors and 15,638 congregations. The total value of property is $144, 746,061; the total indebtedness on this. property is $7,154,899. During 1919 the Lutheran Church raised $24,587,329, of which $6,880,153 was expended for benevolences. The Lutheran Church in America maintains sixty-two orphans' homes, with a property value of 3367,133 and with an endowment of $702,472; forty-eight homes for the aged, with a property value of $6,031,031; seven homes for defectives; nine deaconesses' homes, valued at $217,786.35; forty seven hospitals, twenty hospices, an immigrant and seamen's mission and twenty-five miscellaneous institutions and charitable societies. The total annual expenditures of these during 1919 was $3,811,982.93. A corps of 2,587 workers is employed to maintain them. During 1919 110, 810 persons availed themselves of the help offered. A special report of the Year Book Indicates that the Lutheran Church provided $1,358,691 for welfare work for the soldiers and sailors, and that in 1919 $556,732 was provided for re? construction work in Europe. Trouble in Syria Ends French Statement Says Row in Baalbek Was Small PARIS, Jan. 8.?An official statement concerning the recent incident at Baal- j bek, Syria, which corrects the infor- j mation contained in a telegram from j Cairo published in London, was issued here. What really happened, according to | direct information received in Paris, I was that a French officer on December , 15 entered Baalbek, which was occu- j pied by Emir Faycals troops, as a liai- ; son officer, and was obliged to leave the place owing to the hostile attitude ; of the Arabs. He returned next day ; to Baalbek with a small detachment ' sent by General Gouraud to insure his I safety. When about to enter the town I desultory firing was opened on the de- ; tachment by about 200 natives scat- , tered in the ravines by the road. One ? French native soldier was wounded. Since that date there has been no j trouble in the vicinity of Baalbek. Emir Faycal is still in Paris, where friendly conversations relative to the future organization of Mussulman I Syria are being carried on between ! him and Premier Clemenceau. .... ?? Canada Labor to Meet Union Leaders Want Legal Status in Dominion Explained WINNIPEG, Jan. 3.?A national con? ference, of delegates representing both factions of labor in Canada probably will be held in Winnipeg the latter part of this month. The purpose, ac- j cording to Ernest Robinson, secretary of the Winnipeg Trades and Labor Council, is for labor to ascertain ex? actly what are Its legal rights in Can? ada. It is the intention of backers of the movement to have some of the best constitutional lawyers in the country at the conference to explain labor's legal atatua in the light of the con? viction of R. B. Russell, strike leader, on a charge of sedition. i ? No Cut in Rail Rates MONTREAL, Jan. 8.?Indefinite continuance of the 28 per cent Increase i in freight ratea on Canadian railroads, eetabliahod by ah order in council i Auguat 12, 1918, waa announced to-day by the Board of Railway Commission era. The original order, a war emer? gency meaaure, expired January *? . * . Another Paper Raises Price HORNELL, N. JT.. Jan. f--"?? Evening Trttmna-Tlm??" to-day an? nounced an increase to three cents a copy. Prohibitive oo?t? of p*PM ?n? other materials made the' advance nec ?Mary, ta? pubUshar ?aid. which it can be taught to others and communicated to the larger public." BROOKLYN ADVERTISEMENT German Books Being Bought By Foreigners Scientific Works Are Eager? ly Sought Along With Art Works; Depreciation of Mark Speeds the Sales Practice Causes Alarm Berlin Writer Fears Effect on Learning; Natives Hit by the Advancing Prices Special Correspondence BERLIN, Dec. 10. ?The great de? preciation of German money has given persons in foreien countries a favor? able opportunity to buy German books and works of art, and they are making use of it on a large scale. Both books and pictures are being bought so rap? idly that the newspapers have been raising a cry of alarm over the per? manent loss of these things to Ger? many. Librarians, scholars and book lovers have also taken the alarm and are even demanding that a law be passed prohibiting the export of books published before 1870. It is especially scientific works that ase sought by the foreign buyers, and among these technical and medical works are preferred. A Japanese com? mission is now traveling over Ger BROOKLYN ADVERTISEMENT many looking for opportunities to buy entire libraries, for which purpose it is amply provided with funds. It re? cently bought in Leipsic what was re? garded as one of the best and most complete collections of books on miner? alogy and mining that existed in Ger? many, paying 1,000,000 marks for it without the least hesitation. The shops of the secondhand dealers are being ransacked as never before for old books and rare editions, and it is growing to be a more and more fre? quent thing when one goes to buy a book to hear from the seller that it is no longer on the market. Among ' others it is mentioned that the orig- j inal editions of the works of Humboldt, Helmholtz, Liebig, Mommsen and Vir- | chow can no longer be bought. Such i books, too, cannot now be brought out | new except at great expense owing to the high price of paper and labor. And all new books now coming upon the "market are printed on quite inferior paper. In view of these conditions the prices of secondhand books, especially those of scientific character, have been rising sharply for some months. A writer in the "Frankfurter Zeitung" fears that this whole movement will have a permanent effect in narrowing the circles of German' scholars; that learning will become more and more the privilege of the few rich men who i are able to afford the luxury of ex | pensive books. This writer rejects, j however, the proposal to prohibit the I export of books. He thinks that for : eign countries would meet this with retaliatory measures; also that it { would not be possible to maintain a i sufficiently close watch at the fron I tiers to prevent the carrying out of 1 German books. He suggests that the I German libraries be supplied with enough money to buy duplicate copies of such works of value as are still obtainable. What has been going on in the book trade is being repeated in regard to paintings. There is a remarkable de? mand especially for canvases of the ' Munich school, from Spitzweg to BROOKLYN ADVERTISEMENT ?& Fulton and Smith Streets, Brooklyn, N. Y. FUR SALE Beginning Monday, January S, 1920 OUR Annual January Clearance Sale of Manufactured Furs offers an Exceptional Opportunity owing to the High Quality, Magnitude of our Stock and the Great Reductions in Price. Furs will cost far more next Season. By purchasing now you will Save from 20% to 40% LUXURIOUS FURS Eastern Mink Wrap Cascade effect. Valued at $4.850. Special Price 3,750 Broadtail Cape Full length, large cape collar. Specially Selected Skins. Valued at $3,750. Special Price 2,850 Broadtail Wrap Reproductioi) of French 'Design. Valued at $3,750. Special Price 2,850 Broadtail Wrap Deep Collar, High at Neck Valued at $3,800. Special Price 2,500 Broadtail Dolman Luxurious Collar and deep Cuffs of Hudson Bay Sable. Valued at $4,750. Special Price 3,750 Broadtail Dolman Hudson Bay Sable Collar. Valued at $4,000. Special Price $3,000 Hudson Bay Sable Wrap Trimmed with Tails and Paws. Valued at $6,500. Special Price 4,500 Hudson Bay Sable Short Dolman Trimmed with Tails Valued at $5,000. Special Price 3,500 Eastern Mink Cape Coat Hip length. Large deep Collar Valued at $3,250. Special Price 2,450 Russian Ermine Wrap Cascade Model, full length Valued at $2,750. Special Price 2,000 COATS, CAPES AND DOLMANS Including Paris Models and Advanced Midwinter Styles in Every Kind of Fur. FOKMJ-KI-Y BEDUCED Hudson Seal Alaska Seal Nutria Caracul Squirrel Mole . . Russian Pony $350 to $1250 625 to 1850 , 340 to 850 , 375 to 1275 . 675 to 975 . 650 to 1250 . 175 to 385 ODD COATS, CAPES AND Large Assortment in Various Furs at practically SMALL FURS . . $275 to $875 . . 450 to 1500 . . 225 to 650 . . 285 to 975 . . 525 to 750 . . 485 to 875 . . 125 to 250 DOLMANS: One-Half Regular Prices. NECKPIECES MUFFS rOBMEBLT BED UCED TOVWEBUX ?EDUCED $50 to $1 50 $37.50 to $125 Hudson Seal. $45 to $ 85 $35.00 to $ 65 30to 125 22-OOto 100 Nutria. 35 to 65 25.00to 50 50 to 250 37.50to 175 Mole_. 65 to 100 37.50 to 75 45 to 145 25.00 to 110 Fox (Black and Popular Shades) . 50 to 125 35.00 to 110 75 to 160 SO.OOto 125 Pointed Fox. 85 to 160 50.00 to 110 50 to 250 38.00 to 185 Squirrel (Natural and Taupe).. 60 to 125 45.00 to 85 25 to 350 17.50 to 275 Skunk. 45 to 125 32.50 to 85 Russian and Hudson Bay Sable; Silver and Natural Black Fox, proportionately priced Odd Neckpieces and Muffst A large collection at about half price NECKPIECES, $10 and up MUFFS, $12 and up SETS, $22 and up SPORT and MOTOR COATS _rORS-___R__T _.___. irCKD Raccoon ... $325 to $650. $245 to$450 Natural Muakrat ... 245 to 850. 185 to 650 Nutria .... 225 to 675. 185 to 625 Leopard ... 225 to 500. 175 to 400 MEN'S FUR-LINED COATS Made of fine woolens. lined with Marmot. Collars of Hudson Seal. Persian Lamb and Beaver. ?For? merly $185 to $800. Reduced $136 to $226. Fine custom tailored overcoats of Irish Friese, Kerry Homespuns, Scotch Mixture? and Fine Ker? seys. Lined with Muskrat, Nutria and Kink. Col? lars of Persian Lamb, Narria, Hudson Seal, Bearer and Natural Otter. Formerfy $866 to $985. Re? duced $260 to $726. Stuck. Lenbacb, F. A. Kaulbach, Leibl, Gr?tzner, Defregger, Albert Keller and Oberl?nder are also in great favor among foreign buyers. Prices j have, of course, been driven up to what seem dizzy heights a* viewed from t'#? I German standpoint. A small genre ! picture by Spitzweg, for example, was | BROOKLYN ADVERTISEMENT aaf^ recently sold for 85,000 marks, also a small landscape for 26.000 marks. Paint? ings by the old masters are also in great demand at fancy pnce?. Recently a Tintoretto was sold here at auction for 255,000 marks. Only a few years ago it was being offered by a Hunich dealer at 23.000 marks. BROOKLYN ADVERTISED IENT BROOKLYN'S BEST KNOWN PIANO HOUSE ONE PRICE?NO COMMISSIONS WHERE are you going to buy your PIANO This decision is one of the most important you can make, because the kind of service that an established house like the STERLING Pi?ano Company gives is a very large factor in the continuous satisfaction and pleasure to be obtained from your instrument. To serve you as Piano specialists means a great deal more than merely selling you an instrument. It is after the sale is made and you get the piano in your home that our real service begins, because we are inter? ested in the satisfaction that your purchase gives. The range of prices is so large that practically any amount you may have determined upon will buy an instrument of established value and reputation. Our business is done on an absolutely one price basis, every piano plainly marked so that the prices, the same to every one, can be known to every one. Our salesmen are employed on a salary; they are strictly in our em? ploy and have no money interest out? side of their salary as an inducement to make a sale or make representa? tions to you which are not strictly true. If you do not wish to pay cash you may purchase on our liberal monthly payment plan, which is made fair to both of us. 1 MaV-Mt JTatton Sfc, O?*. Haoovw Flmco. BnoUtb. V. T*t?iph?B? lie? Mala oouaeta ail 0*?artm?ata Twenty-seven years ago The following advertisement appeared in The New York Tribune, when a want ad. cost only five cents: "ENERGETIC YOUNG M A N WANTS SITUATION AS BOOK? KEEPER; CAN DO GENERAL CLERICAL WORK; WILLING TO START AT $12 A WEEK." To-day the "energetic young man," still comparatively young, occupies the finest business office in the world, in the highest building in the world, president of the largest retail business in the world. The "energetic young man" is Herbert T. Parson, president of the F. W. YVoohvorth Company, pioneers in the "Five and Ten Cent Store" business. Since the day the "energetic young man" inserted the above advertisement in The Trib? une, and secured the position with the F. W. Woolworth Company, the cost of Tribune want ads. has increased, so has The Tribune's cir? culation, and so have the opportunities for ener? getic young men. If you are looking for one of the big op? portunities, why not read The Tribune's want ads., or better still, telephone Beekman 3000 and let us insert an advertisement for you and send you the bill after insertion?