The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1915, Page 3

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‘ “) (7 aos ae { ’ { — German Women Were Exe cuted in France, Asserts Rer- lin, Replying in Cavell Case. SHOOTING IS DEFENDED. — — Under Foreign Secretary Zim- mermann Says Nurse's Fate Was Hard, but Just, LONDON. Ort —Gen. von Bis. @ng, German Military Governor of Belgium, who hastened the execulion of Mise hadith Cavell, the Engi Muree, “after mature deliberation, nd Gen. Maron von der Lancken, (he Civ) Governor, who declined to Inter. vene at American Minister Bran Whitlock’s request, have been sum- moned to the imperial headquarters to report to Kaiser Wilhelm in por fon on the shooting, according to an Amasterdain despateh in the Daily Ka- Dress. The Datiy News’ Rotterdam ‘on good author ent, a few weeks jun cavalry offiver Military Governor. This in used in gume quarters here as basis for feport that Gen. von Bissing pos- Bibly has been removed, The same ccrrespondent declares this new off. cor bas made life unbesrable in Brussels by bis repressive measures, and adds that in Antwerp twenty. five persons have been sent to Ger- many to serve long prison terms. He woys the villages of Rotseiaer, Lo- keren and Ultichoe huve been fine 6,900 marks becnuse their authorities had not disc d sixteen pigeons in the three towns A despatch from Brur Amsterdam Telegraat says beraweig bas remin | tion that a proclamation | ordered that ail arms and ammuni- tion be delivered to the Ge aa au cn. | The General adds that persons who are found in possession of arms and ammunition after Oct. | 25 will be liable io the death | penalty or imprisonment for at leant ten years, | “ In addition, communities where| they are nd will be fined 16,000) marks (abe $2,500) for every vase. | An Ainsterdam correspondent of the | i q raph Company wires 1s of mil v 1 near Br eis and deported to Germany and that all 1 winna between the ages of seventeen and thirty-five are being rou Apparently for the same pu inhabitants have been told led up The | re hat taliation for visits of allied German troops are to be billeted upon them. An inspired statement from Berlin, airmen, | gent here by way of Ai dam, de- | fends the shooting of Miss Cavell as the head of an organized band of ene- f war, and adds GERMANS SAY FRENCH HAVE EXECUTED WOMEN, “Women also have been exe- cuted in France, as was instanced im March last when the German woman, Margaret Schmidt, was executed at Nancy, and in May at Bourges, when the German Ot- tile Moss was put to deat! Dr. Alfred F. M, Zimmermann, Ger- man Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, has issued an official statement in Berlin defending the @hooting of Miss Cavell, prefacing his remarks by tho statement that he had examined every jot of the evidence and found the execution, though re- grettadle, to have been fully justified In part, he says: “ET see by the British and American press that the shooting of an English- woman and the conviction of several other women in Brussels for treason have created a great impression and that we are being severely criticised Tt Is indeed hard that a woman must be executed; but remember, to what shall a state come which is in war if It allows to pass unnoticed a crime against the safety of its armies be- cause Committed by women? No law book in’the world, least of all those dealing with war regulations, makes For Constipation The trouble with the modern girl b thal fil of to-day and love and youth but hesitates * Dress Neat and Plain, With a Clean Face, the One! Advice of a Contributor | God Gave You,” Is the HE GIRL OF TO-DAY: t she get the gale Thew are the conchy De ~~ te “eer ee Who Abhors Make-Up, Offered Freely to Girls Who Seek Desirable Husbands. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “The girl of to deavor- | & man to keep her tr this work 4 an expert, and be mutual love and understanding enter into marriage. | Money gets the Ajong wit commertialized marriage. 7 That i# the indictment brought against the girl ot | to-day are Just as good, unassuming | tod y by an earnest and perplexed and utterly disillu-| and who! siove’ young ma wt and matrimony modern girl is t rather than a nece “What hos become.” he asks, “ot the girl who married her lover and 1S TANT AR A helped him overcome barrt who struggied with him through adver-| sity, who comforted and sympathizet with him, and whose love helped bin up the ladder of suecess? That is th burning, vital question with us youn, men who are ambitious and why musi grind away at our ks for three or four years before wo an provide a comfortable home nd Tiwary, ind us such girls and you will cease ask re are so miny unmarried, vl, pure and sweet, but with y on the brain’ Her WORKED to get where they re now; she expects a villa and 4 nuld to do her hair, And she inno inquires why [don't call nh calling means the tbe. and a cabar How can an ambitious chap save something for an emergency when half or more of salary goes for frippery? “[ do not begrudge taking out the girl I like, but the modern girl wantsa fellow to overdo the amusement side of life. Those ‘sporty’ chaps with the cute uch a differentiation, and the femin- ine sex has but one preference, ac- cording to legai usages—namely, that women in u delicate condition may not be ex ted, Otherwise man and woman are equal before the law, and only the degree of guilt makes a dift- ference in the sentence for the crime snd its consequences, ADMITS THAT MOTIVES OF DEAD WOMAN WERE GOOD. “Al those convicted were fully cognizant of the significance of their actions, The court went iptv Just this quitted several co-defendants only becuuse it believed doubt existed re- garding the cognizance of the pun- ishableness of their actions, Those convicted knew what they were doing, “| admit certainly that the motive of those convicted was not ignoble and that they acted out of love for the fatherland, But in war time one must be ready to seal one's love for the fatherland with o blood, whether one opposes the enemy in battle or whether one commits acts in its interest which justly carry with them the Ih penalty, Among our Russian prisoners are several girls who fought against us in soldiers’ uniforms, Should one such have fal- Jen no one wi us of treat- ing women cruelly, So why now, when another woman has met the death which she risked quite as thinkingly as her battle comrades? CONDITIONS PERMIT, EX LAX: The Delicious Laxative Chocolate ExeLax relieves constipation, regulates the stomach and bowels, stimulates the liver and promotes digestion. Good for young ana old. 10¢, 25c und SOc, at all druggists, “There ints in the lives of copics derat | individual a crime | whole, moments that make lyes, hardness, a duty for thi trusted with the safety of their own countrymen, Once und for always the activity of our enemies had to be stopped, and sentence has been car ried out to frighten those who might presume on thelr sex to participate In enterprises punishable with death, “It is claimed that the soldiers a: to the execution first refused oot and finally fired so fauiti the officers had to kill the ac- to that cused with volver. No word of this is true. 1 the offi » in which ‘at salvo, as the physician present attests.” point with particular care aud ac-) GERMANS AS LENIENT AS WAR) is succeeding in ber highly specialized Mne of en-| nh clover from the wedding day on. r system Is perfection in No more do ‘glad band,’ love and youth get ‘the h her wedding ‘ring the modern girl > the mint nm, Who signs himself “L. R. 8.,” and » has been thinking about the high cost of courtship He finds that the trouble with the hat she has made herself a luxury ssity. | mustachios and shooting cuffs, who squander their pay to show a girl a | ‘good tim * never rise above a thir- teen-a-week-clerk-job. “The girls of to-day are a success. | in obeying the prod of the brain (7%) nd stifling the call of the heart.” | Now, what do you know about thet? One thing seems to me ob- vious. The self-supporting girl— for whom | have a weakness, a you've doubtless noticed by thi time—is not likely to marry for money, and is likely to know | something about the limits im- posed by a small salary. The girl who handles her own pay enve lope, and who must buy Her shoe: and frocks and lamb chops and theatre tickets out of it, cannot possibly share the stay-at-home | girl's vague, happy conviction that every struggling young bu: ness or professional man is a Prince Fortunatus. man to spend more money on her pleasure than he can afford, who |marries for revenue only, doubtless jexists in the business world as else- where. She is a special type. It ts not the professional mercenary, how- ever, but the girl who simply doesn’t understand the value of money who makes most trouble for the modern young man before and after marriage. She lives in a comfortable, perhaps a luxurious home, she has always had every pleasure she wanted for the mere asking, she doesn't know how much work a dollar represents and how short a& distance it goes. ‘This girl's failure, in the eyes of such young men as “L. R. 8.," is directly traceable to the fact that she is an economic failure—an economic cipher, But not every girl {is that sort, Jere's a letter from one who Isn't: “Dear Madam: As for the question, |‘where are the old-fashioned girls?” |] would answer, ‘Right here—all jaround you.’ For the girl of to-day \ig not a whit different from the girl Jof a century ago. The modern girl's clothes actually take up less of her time and thought than they did in | great - grandmother's day, because clothes are simpler and not as ex- pensive, “Many and many a girl gos to busin or follows some pro- fession who is as old-fashioned and in a taste for home- Gs Sretei weny and the The woman who deliberately lures helping of a man gave his mone) | as the Eighteenth Century girl. | On her return in the evening, after a day's exacting work, si! jp with the cleaning y of supper dishes, &c. without gain, on holi- ¢ will cook, h much though she were be- the ar perience. | ma girl who loves clean, wholesome fun and who enjoys nothing more than a good, hearty laugh, but, on the other hand, | can't remember the time when | did not enjoy helping | with the household duties in my unoccupied time. “L have a number of male friends, and can honestly say that the most jenjoyable times of my life have been |spent In the company of my friends ile in my own home, and I think I an say without exaggeration that they have also enjoyed themselves, ax I notice they are all anxious to please me and accept my dad's (who is my chum) Invitation to “eall again.” "Kor the greater part, the giris of MEN'E Saft” AN RY Thy: Beier hdeeecery ates gy Ee he has made hereclf a luxury tether than a necreety t-< Gm of Torr at oo Etre She has cheapened coal | ajrich one by artificial ti | mee THE BYENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 2 sons of one of Mig Marshal See mOOr wre ww CuO wen “er “1 Am WOT Gong manar A wares CRS, some as girls can be, and I hope “J. 3." is fortunate in meeting my kind of an old-fashioned will say, “Let us stay home,” }he will be able to save his money and marry. Good luck to him, say I “PATHER'S GIRL.” “Dear Madam: The girl of to- has an idea for which man ts partly } to blame, She thinks she can land a maid of to-day . kenslble looks not at your powder and int. He asks, ‘Are you willing to take the chance of becoming my wife? The plain girl always saya yes, if she loves him. The modern, fixed- up mold asks, ‘How much have you got?" “So blame not the men for not marrying the beauty of to-day. D with a ol Uttle t 3 he is com- | manded by God will pick you out. 1 oe am nearing my — twenty-first year now and have been unable to find my better h IT make enough to support one, but Lam not going to | marry a powder puff. Tam going to furnish a three-room apartment and live with my brother, who is twenty Now here two are men giving up finding a wife, Whose fault in it? | OR. 8, | “Dear Madam: natural Therefore to fit highest t wife and mother should goal of every normal gi average girl of to-day does not represent the highest Xyne of fu- ture wife and mother, Conse- quently she is not a succes: “3, K, G." “Dear Madam: I would like to say a thing or two In connection with the girl of to-day, The girl of to-day is both a success and a failure; in other words, she is What she makas herself to be. I believe, however, that In nine cases out of ten she 18 a success, he- cause that {8 her alm “Now as to the girls who use paint and powder—these are the girls who are admired by men, and they are the ones that have the good times, Now- adays men do not like the plain, home girl, They do not seem to onjoy her company as much, although she Is far brighter than the paint-and-po' der type. Some men say ‘in the end they marry the plain girl’ I think they are mistaken, IT am a plain home girl, and like good times and men friends, as does the average girl, but_most of my timo is spent at home. as T find men do not want the home girls. But some day these men will wake up and find that tt Is the home girl that makes the best wife and mother. WILLING.” ——_—_ WILLIAM H. BURDEN WEDS GEORGIA GIRL New Yorker Who Won Amy Pro- motion in Philippines Brings Bride to Home in This City. Announcement came to-day from Atlanta, of the marri yesterday of Miss Lulu st One Hun red and Fortle:h Street, Manhattan The couple will arrive here to-day ind live at No, 600 West One Hun- dred and Eighty-third Street, The bridegroom is a brother of Richard H, Burden, one of the wealth jest and most prominent merchants of Macon, Ga, He has lived for sev eral years in New York, He served in the United States Army in the Philippines, and before he resigned had been promoted to the rank of linutenant. The bride is the nlece of the late Col. W. 8, Thomson and of Mrs \Iwonidas I’, Scott. Her family hag @iways Leen prominent in the bus peas and politics of Atlanta. A SUCCESS A FAILURE Momes Powoee Pure” a” Py gets the hand” frow Sem 1,000 IN BORDER HUNT FAIL TO GET MEXICANS |Bandits Who in New Attack Shoot U. S. Soldier, Escape Big Force of Troops and Ranchers, BROWNSVILLE, Tex, Oct. 25.— Virtually the entire strength of the United States border patrol in this district spent last night In a search for Mexican bandits who at- tacked a detachment of the Fourth United States Infantry at the spot north of Brownsville where a train Was wrecked and Americans week ago to-day. In the fighting last night Private Herman E Moore of French Lick Springs, Ind., was fatally wounded So far as known, none of the Mexicans was hit. ‘The scene of the fighting and tac tics employed by the Mexicans led army officers to-day to agsert tha the Mexicans engaged probably were members of the band guilty of the train wrecking and which fs said to have been led by Louis De La Rona, fomentor of the so-called Texas revo- lution. More than 1,000 troops, rangers and deputies who started in pursuit of the bands in half an hour after the fight led to run them down, There were possibly thirty or forty men in two attacking parties which attempted to ambush the soldier U. S. WILL TRY TO HAVE VILLA LEAVE MEXICO. three killed one EL PASO, Tex., Oct, 25.—The United States Government is to assume the role of peacemaker between the Car- ranga de facto Governme:: and the Villa faction in Mexico, It was learned here to-day from an authoritative source, Negotiations are soon to be opened with Gen. Francisco Villa by bottle Mayonnaise de Luxe SALAD DRESSING “Housewives are simply de- lighted with the different taste of this new dressing! Dotry a 10 cent or 25 cent ITALIAN ATT. ARE ALL REPULSED, Ad Made b Enemy ir nonee district,” « ys have been Mm y fighting.” | Former Tales of Being Avoided Ship, Are Untrue BERL Dr. ¢. N 1. . Oct, 3% bumba, (via former ton, who arriv tho United States, the following interview «o into detail, The case which were spread which re: © the opposite is true. My wif |felt ourselves under the nec who approached us. “You can say that not to us in every respect | Italian © 1 States ns should ent for » to go to Italy,” ment la nnounced. jure not provided with pai apply ata f eign port.” George C. Carother the Department of Mr. to the United States an asylum will be furnished h' a Villa generals who wish | wit be granted asylum. The Villa army in its entirety will d amnesty and full guaran. » given to every member. bo exrenc tees will . Your grocer has it. It is ready and it keeps,”— says Purity Premier ‘ nd-to the United States Government, the the Isonzo Val 4 the id all positions Or border of the plateau of I+ berdo in the sector betw Me Deiseibusl the battle undiminished violence ALL COURTESY SHOWN US ON TRIPHOME, SAYS DUMBA Ambassador Declares That on London) Austro Hungarian Ambassador at Wasing- here yesterday from to-day gave out “An to the causes which necessi- tated my return to Vienna, I need not has been treated so fully in the press that it ia unnecessary to review it. But If you ask me if the tales are true about my ed a climax in the rt that people on board the ateam- ded me, I can only reply that conducting ourselves with reserve to- |ward our fellow travelors, It was they only the Americans but also the British marine officers on board were moat friendly During our landing and atay at Falmouth wo were 4 with every courtesy by Britiab |ROME KICKS ON PASSPORTS. Americans are reaching Italy passports or with passports b ular officers to the passports 6 Depart- ‘Those who jorts prop- erly vised may be put to serious in- convenience and danger upon arriving ape State, who is said to have been commissiohed to present plans which the United States Gov- ernment has concluded with repre- sentatives of the Carranza Govern- ment. It is said that the terms which Carothers will present to Villa re If Villa will resign as commander- in-chief of the Villa army and come | absolute by hei nie eoup hond > leave rexico and come to the United Stat LANGTRY AT 62 F UKE BI seeeeee 666-666 6665665654 6556666600664666405006566086008 ‘ . ' . . + i dro oe nme. © Sheba ee bow ‘ Lady de Bathe Arrives Here for Tour—First Visit to America in Four Years. Lady de Bathe, better known as Lily Langtry, the “Jersey Lily,” is in America to remain until next sum~ mer. It is her first trip in four years. BLP. wore a semi-military costume of blue skirt and high-laced dark blue Polish boots, The boots were laced almost to her knees. Lady de Bathe brought over her own company of twelve that is to tour the South and West in “Mra, Thomp- gon"; @ mald; @ secretary, and thirty- eight trunks, The perennial beauty is sixty-two years old, but you'd WASHINGTON, Oct. 2%5.--Italian | nover think It. Jauthorities have complained to the| “I feel like @ big schoolgirl,” ahe }American Embassy at Rome that |eaid, This is the land of her adoption, as about twenty years ago she became a naturalized American citizen, That's never you play a favorit approval everywhere. When she arrived yesterday on the ul of the American line she with wide bands of sable, a short In this cartoon the RHEINAROON Is winning in a walk ; Rheingold's a bet,the safest eingold Beer | When you pick Rheingold e ae ndainet {ne fiela sa ing quality wine S. Liebmann’s Sons Brewing Co. the SMorming of Muxt 2,958 Prisoners Were Taken by the Germans. HAN Oe ite clone, j " Tew successes My Mus. . we wneed by the War OF a , ’ velane who landed at Cape Dome Nees at the entrance the Gell of ine. withdrew on shipboard Dvinaburg the \ (heir pomt ‘ we approached,” gaia statement. “Wee of Huemans were throws me mores au THOGHAD, Oy (Via Lon Buccenses for the continain along the en ith of Dvinek, while the forts being made by the in the vioinity of Riga have not sue. coded in shaking the positions of the Russians ab that part of the front rr authorities here re- roun a fi 4 that the capture of Huxt by the Germans tas t altered conditions at Dvinsk, the js atrong: the battle position of which eity remal of in apite of a renewal with furious vie er et ee BELL-ANS Absolutely «Removes Indigestion. One proves it. 25c at all } ~. i] e known to b Mmiseiarid bes

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