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} ESTARLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. by the Press Publishing Compa: Park Row, New Tork, ee RALPH PULITZER, President, 62 Park Row, : SHAW, Treasurer, 6% Park Row, ATZER, Jr Nos. 63 to retary, 6 Park Row. ——————————__$__— es é Entered at the Post-om. at New Yo as Second r Mebecription Rates to Tae Evecing) For Pngiana ant the Continent and : World for the United States All Countries in the International and Canada. Postal Union, One Year... $2.60 One Year ‘One Month. . 20 One Month * VOLUM — ’ «NO. 19,967 GERMANY’S CHANCE. “g F THERE is anybody in the German chancellery with the eyes ‘ of au angleworm he should see that Germany's great chance has come. Again and again Germany has protested to this Government that) her lawless submarine policy in the war zone adjacent to the British Isles is due solely to England's illegal efforts to strangle German commerce and starve the man people. ' In a memorandum received in Washington March 8, 1916, Ger- many begged the United States to understand that “Hngiand made it impossible for submarines to conform with the rules of interna- tional Jaw.” Last January Germany admitted to this nation that international Jaw does not countenance the sinking of unresisting merchant vessels without warning. In its Mediterranean code, announced Jan, 7, the Imperial Gov- ernment, offering the most explicit pledges that passenger and freight thips in the Mediterranean should not be destroyed until both pas- sengers and crews had been “accorded safety,” used this significant phrase: “Submarine commanders have orders to conduct cruiser warfare inst enemy merchant vessels only in accordance with general principles of international law, excluding in par- ticular measures of reprisal as applied in the war zone around the British Isles.” All along the German contention has been that only because England violated international law has Germany been compelled to commit indiscriminate murder on the high seas. At the present moment, in the face of this country’s final and | imperative demand that this murder be stopped, it would seem that| German intelligence might dictate a cour friendship of the United States, would immensely strengthen ‘Teutonic credit in the eyes of the whole civilized world. If Germany were now to declare that, out of regard for the rights of Americans on sea, and for the sake of main principles of international law, the Imperial Government had deter- mined to discontinue submarine warfare as now practiced, leaving it to the honor of the United States to uphold international law and the rights of commerce impartially and with an equal eye to all bellig- erents—if Germany were to do this promptly and without reserve, she could achieve a masterstroke worth more to her now and in the fature than the destruction of a thousand enemy ships. ———__-4 = The city can nbw figure up for bow much this particular legislative session has bled it. That's about all the law-making body at Albany means for Greater New York: How much? SS RUSSIANS AT MARSEILLES. HE disembarking of Ru ian troops at Marseilles comes as one of the dramatic surprises of the war. Nobody outside official) war circles knew they were on the way. 1f, as seems most prob¥ble, the Rus ans sailed from Archangel they had a sea journey of six or seven thousand miles across twenty-| five degrees of latitude, with no doubt a big detour to the westward] they are perfect, to avoid submarines, + The fact that, despite cables, telegraphs and correspondents co @tantly at work to feed the world’s appetite for news, such a move- ment could be completed before it became known, is another indica- tion how effectively war-makers can still control the news supply and conceal their plans. | It is not certain that the force of Russians landed at \ rseilles was very considerable. Perhaps numbers were not needed. If al great movement on the part of the allies is really imminent on the western war front, it would be natural to have Russia at least repre- sented, Welcoming the Russian troops, G ». Joffre spoke of “our faithful ally Russia, whose arm are Wing so alorously against Germany, Austria and Turkey,” and who “wanted to give ther evidence of her friendship 4 rance fur nd devotion to tl ymon caus Politically, no less than from a military point of view, it would be desirable to have the three great allied powers si shoulder to shoulder by side and n the moment comes on the we 1 ern front for the advance they hope will put an end to German aspirations, a Villa has not yet denied that he is dead. Safety first Hits From Sharp Wits could be created with fashion plates| too | that would show human beings as - & 8 they are.—Albeny 1 dur w dint to hay finivhed his Sun, Aman is also known, ifeyou to think of it, by the Jokes he tells,-Columbia Some people's idea of a gentieman ee When. argument about reti celve’ their friends, ~ Philad a ~-Albany Journal . . . A real efficieney ex wld not A story may be doubtful, but if it| devote all his time to talking about harmonizes withou prejud we e e e bke to believe it is true Toledo Remember that ne Cases at . . . better than the other fellow Atehi Tats of us would be good men if we lobe. n > Letters From the People Whose Goodt tand'’s Kar s. To the FAitor of The Krening World elected) do seek t jects 1 read in ecent Hvening World thelr own? ” ing f LJ rid) quick reply MAGYAR, this quotation from Herrick “'Twiat kings and tyrants there's this Whot le the Fewer? difference known Ty the Bairro The Bveniig Wor Kings seek their subjects’ good; ty 1owish scventiti ders would rants their own.” Will any one within th sound of ir my voice be kind enough to tell us rmula fi w the Czar of Al! the Russias, the su fan of Turkey, Yuan Shi-Ka Gen. Carranze of Mexico, Kaiser of Austra, Ge » a Kaiser, i , 4 ting 60 pounds, at 100 H.W, Ht Jersey City, Nod. The Eve ' i 4 which, besides keeping the} ining inviolate earlier | The Jarr Family McCardell —— 0g Co, (The New York Kvening World — By Roy L. 1016, by The Prese Jubtisl 66] T does husbands good to quarrel wife's closest rela LLAB to be ihe ne Jarr was saying to rich and not have to seheme | cheap ! the Live and Let Live Sec thing to wear.” and that their wives you had | hip as much money as Clara Mudridge- | noon's: me Smith or Mre. thankfulness all the time believe in carrying a tiff Vd) tional ta side view of herself glass between room windows than either o: of them, that's sure ents thought tldn't have the » Mrs, Stryver has.” Rangle gets to start drinking wetion one Kets is craze like | and all the sati« picking at aman all What else do you ex per dimen, are very anx “If TE were rich?" fous to get an ¢ run too smoothly for them thes everything fo: because they are satistied have sn't do to be too nice | there ever to them all the time t what 1 would de sometimes when not enough to Jory, and one geist jeross and won't say Kuessing as | troubling a good wife, and as all men | have a mistaken idea that all in this EURIPIDES -Pop’s Mutual Motor. By Alma Woodward. Ye should think that a sensation only saw our wickedness before it {a/ to them right that they may think started a fuss in the house grammes and shi wo much trad harges $30 now angle went cause she needed a ple in moderate cireumstances Ud) ond spinach juice at ely situated w Clara Mudridge: sting) |e ods, 1s red, sug 19 | down to ning World Daily Magazine, Friday, April 21, 1916 Easter Reflections Bv J. H. Cassel hag , # sf Y Ellabelle Mae Doolittle — By Bide Dudley — ® | Copsright, 1916, by Tue Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World), | ight, 1016, by Tae Prew Publisting Co, (The New York Evening World), 2 } LLE MAE boo! , munity which 1s commendable in the | CHAPTER IIT have betier meat and better coffee, At this sort of thing can't go on.” with a heart and 4 | ext son, surprised the 1 on of the! Mrs, Skeeter O'Brien ague of Del- | Der our much obliges * After a hearty laugh lay afters: catied te ing by announcing that |a | Women’s Betterment 1 ntly at Wedn | Rhymes, each one to have its educa- j lows: jue, Flour comes from wheat 1 ia Called the etait of life ‘Twenty-five of the ladies had gath- | 6 fu! and douginuts’ and biscuite, ered in the hall when the poetess | Tring mother and. wife, came in and mounted the rostrum. | 4, She made her surprise announcement | 1 friends, ‘dren; Our streugt: and beauty ow urese Lia's very oneal, land paused to see its effect. Mt, ra chit Te Rocket's, “Er thin d Mrs, Elisha Q. Pere \) dant” kno fie oe He ominw at we tle, who was presiding, ‘t nt to thank Miss Doolittle in ad- vance, The beautiful thought embod- 1s but alow, bette wald Mrs [sire for ent of the com “1 don't know very woman wanta ts breakfast in’ little ‘o-day ha called me bed bed. Luxury, to the feminine mind, | fl ad [grew very angry.” an go no further, With that, of | gy crazy,” enid Mrs, Walt [oourse, comes limousines, lingerie and +f don't think so." returned the What all other feminine desires | poetess, pointedly. “I will now read 7+ — tyou a rhyme about sugar. Next to Necessity will (each a@ man, however slow he be, to be wise {flour It is possibly the most import. ant of the starchy foods She then stepped to the edge of the platform and, swaying her head from sid the following poem eof Sweetnens, feo The Press Publishing Go, (The New York Evening World) v1 home, Jette sent you from Cairo, UL, for Christing vu know the kind that} at vetically sealed against noting Vxiation a}, Ma, Ginpanentyy Oh, that stuf! rats in the divine « between | carbolic acid and the jodofor King ineontes. iirn yeture on the bum, you do. nade! Mil kat the mess me this t wy the mor Clot of publicity last week on ma jug fuel for automobiles out of w cent and didn't you? We mine. “Uve got t esting tre--fu seo? pu this pertume kills the ine srance, thus tf said Mrs. Hannibal Hamm hale a gale ea where L d! My next will be , please The p > rhyme ts herew perts-aee? And becau 18 gaso-| (ons yy ftine teowill ran ar T need | peistone, _poteine to great toothpick business isn't what “ wr ater Pov and Ma eneak from lie ” There isntt aliy more, ae ee» Say. i a thin fellow? nay) We tha 1 vert discuss him," replied wn t do Miss Doolittle haughtily. She the s su fault? you slid off the st and horing ( aguat) Fault? the piano, played and sang her latest a Re song. "She Married Him and Found att 4 right. Rut He Wore a Wig ‘ on w ta do Vhe ladies applauded with grea ipuuk American dyes en? 1 AL were pleased. { va! e | + nbers of | “You've got the right dope,” said “I move we slip Pertle | @ Voto on the suggestion t dit was carried unanimously, Miss asked! xhe would read them a series of Food! Doolittle blushed; then unrolled her jase | poems and lit into the first. It fol- fied in her announcement shows ade. { "L shall remember every word of ysier Bent when 1. "Whats, * replied Miss Doo- said Mrs. Keno fen Marks. “Isn't that delightful? [ al- ae sewers | . ways like sugar in) my chocolat Clair is Repel oa vy I guess I'l Ko to the drug Ma (shrieking) Milton! What and get one after this me “Pi go with you," sald Mrs, Buck Blucher. “L wonder what that clerk's cal aoread al his chap who got} name ean be?” “| don’t Know, but he's a blond, suid) Miss Doolittle. | atoes, Pay close atten- h print- the ex-|ed for the first time in any publica Wine!" shouted Mrs. Bunk Gallup. | The Bertillon system fatis when appiied to peas, and diners are forced i The Stories Of Stories Plots of Immortal Fiction Masterpieces By Albert Payson Terhune Coutiaiit, 1016, Uy Tue Pree Publishing Co. (Te New York Kvening World), THE MYSTERY OF SASSASSA VALLEY; by A. Conan Doyle OM DONOHUE and his chum, Jack Turnbull, were London boys With no money and no prospects. They heard wonderful stortes of the weaith to be picked up for the asking in South Africa's new settled Cape Colony. And they emigrated. Many a young Englishman got rich overnight in Cape Colony at that jtime, But Tom and Turnbull missed every bit of luck afloat, Men on all sides of them grew wealthy and went back to England as millionaires. | Yet the two chums remained as poor as on the day they landed in Soath | Africa, They lived in a tumbledown little hut in a desolate region near the head of a rocky gorge known as Sassassa Valley. There they did odd jobs for the neighbors and barely managed to keep body and soul together, One evening a farmer stopped at their cabin on his way home, Ht y was in a sweating terror over something he had seen as he came : a { wara through , just after nightfall. | He declared that had glared at him through the darktijes from the side of a rocky cliff, ‘Tom aprang up in sudden excitement and demanded to know the precise ution of the cliff from which the glowing “eye” had shone, » farmer, wondering at his curiosity cribed the plage, mtinued his journey home, § R they alone together when Tom turned 'to | his chum and declared he was going at once to visit the epot, | Turnbull, surprised at the other's strange vehemence, consented to’ go along. On the way thither, Tom explained why he was so anxious to find the mysterious fiery eye, | Diamonds had often been discovered that very large diamonds in the rough often give forth a luminous glow that can be seen on the darkest nights, He had a vague hope that the glowing “eye” might prove to be a diamond, and that their long rum of | bad luck was about to be broken. | In an hour or so they came that distr Tom had read the cliff. And there on the black surface they saw a fiery gleam. They marked a circle of chalk around it end waited for the dawn, By daylight they suw in the centre of the circle a huge lump of brownish mineral that jutted out from the face of the eflft, Through the brown clay shone something that looked like glass. With hands that shook Tom picked up a crowbar he had brought. Jost | underneath the great lump was a smaller knob of black rock. Resting bis crowbar point on this knob Tom pr the lump of brown mincral lose from the cliff. He and Jack hurried with it to the nearest gem expert many miffes y. The expert examined it. Then he told them they had discovere@ » chunk of saltpetre and that it was worth about $3 a ton. Tom in hia first despair was tempted to blow out his useless brataa. | Rut all at once he leaped to his feet and set off at top speed for Sassagma Valley, Jack Turnbull at his heels, Tom did not speak until he reached the ff. Then he scanned the chalk circle in the hope that there might yet be ann sa inmmond th and that he had taken away the wrong ip vueern r epee Don" t that there befi asked | ont you miss a thing that was there before?” Failure? & sack, ax Tom at lust turned away with a groan from his futile > Cwnnnnnnnns inspection, “The Iittie round knob we used as a fulcrum. We must have wrenched it off in using the lever, Let's have a look et what it's made of. After much search they found it in the rubble at the foot of the elift, , Tom eyed it closely then shouted: | “We're made!" | Imbedded in the knob of binck rock was one of the largest, purest @a« }monds ever found in Cape Colony diamond that spelt fortune to the two men who an hour earlier had been hopeless failu 22 | Man's state implies a necessary cu when not himself, hee jaw ja fin made; when most himself, he's worse.-BROOK Just a Wife--(Her Diary); | Chapters From a Bride’s Life-Story. Edited by Janet Trevor. (LY 2-1 have been studying mare] tM Wis sort of thing can't go, J @ for less than a week, but al-Lmuch longer,” I protested, thamtaig, ready I have learned somathing| Because she remembered him ag a ” about It, You can't worry too long) )* le Li fresh: vn Mrs. Higgins calle ‘ over any one problem, because an-{2!mM bv his first name and smile wheney comes in sight. “I’m Jem is sure to offer itself for Iwas going to say that Twas would be less lkely to tyour t To-day I hardiy have thought about st from me, ‘ atter, if vou don't care to tho girl in the red cape who haunted) rane the troubies’ said Ned inameare my wedding day, because I have deen] ily resigned voice, “Excuse me,” Ap so busy wondering how I ought to be-| before T could answer he had pushed & have to Ned at breakfast his chair back and left the room, Y I started to run after him, but mm | This morning when we came Jown- | eves were swimming and 1 wan bitlag stairs nobody was left at the long|my lips hard, Always, since T waa {table at which all of the persons in|little girl, I have hated to let other Neople see me ery. So | gat at our quaint little Maine hotel are | served. I sat down opposite Ned thought back over the scene th jlooked across at him with a chee whieh Thad just passed, lemile, ever again our |} He wasn't even looking at me. His]? pnd think out what was wrong. eves were on the tablecloth and he] Somehow, T had made my husband was almost scowling, fecl that T wasn't crested in his 1 wish you could get welfare, and somehow he had hurt taste of broiled beefsteak | me horribly | other pre he muttered, attacking a Presently T got up and went to my leath strip of meat. dt waant){reom. TF would speak to Mrs, Higgins, very nice, for here in’ Maine they [Of course, but not just now. T bathed pound most of the Juice out of steak |™Y #¥es in cool water and mended a and tho rest disappears in frying, skirt which I had torn the day before Ned sawed away for a moment, | cimbing over the rocks hon ste ‘anoth itburst,{ In less than half an hour T heard reat too it's the cold {Quick steps on the statrs, Ned burst limit, Iterally—tike dish water and {into the room, boyishly clinking two | burned brown bread. 1 haven't “a . "Come on, Mol- cup of decent coffee since I've been Us for a wild atraw- in this place. I can't drink this h If we get enough stuff.” He pushed bis eup aside so . Higgins has promined to |violently that it slopped and spread {make a strawberry ple.” in a large stain over the tablecloth, Por an instant he looked a Mttle | "sm so sorry, Ned,” began apolo- {embarrassed before he added, “Bay, | getically, LT hadn't made the coffee or} Mollie, 1 guess you needn't pase on fried the steak, But his tone madelto her that kick I handed out. at me feel guilty of both these sins, Even| breakfast. She's a good old @ort, his glance seemed eme. My{ But hurry dear, and get your the ened painfully and | had that! ‘an effort to keep my voice] That was all. Apparently he alan't steady even see that I been hurt, Yet Sull no reply from Ned, Then hefhe had never snubt me_hefore, cleared bis throat and said—in what] Well—t didn't ery again, He wanted I'm sure he thought was a 1, but; me to pick strawberries, But T can's, firm volce—"Really, Mollie, 1 believe understand, even now. Ned, deare Tt you'd better speak to Mrs. Higgins couldn't be cross to you when you About the quality ef our food, tt were sweet and kind to me—just bee ems to be even worse than usual cause [didn't like my food this morning. Tell her that we must » Be Continued Monday.) | Facts Not Worth Knowing. By Arthur Baer. Copyright, 1916, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening Wor Gasoline Will Kl mosquiturs, Lut tly about four dollars cheaper to let ‘em live. | A maneating shark will nut attack any swimmer wearing a sport shirt, The deepest spot in the Pacific Geean is three miles deep, but six feet is enough for the man who gyrates the buat to eut ‘em incagnito. Marksmanship tests the Virginia Capes show the only thing ow gunners miss is the toddy Wy Ry swatting one fly now you will aave litigation among 234,730,089 of hig heire in July. ) °