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Sh ON AL SN Ele AE | nite! aaeetiaineaiinaietinien..”..amaeneell 4 | | THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1916, _ ae it —MOVINGFORPEACE [Zhe Playgirl of the Western World, —_3"<wse'p'.tijsiats| pe zieetroce=25"=| CTE AMER WAS SINK SEES Se | eeernecnenn snc ecne orto AACR AACR CRC ACCC PCC PCC CCCLCAOCCCCCEOS Aud there te tle doubt thet eve has| THE MISBING TWO DECADES IN Stansted ‘ty ‘ie: anvhe ta peters __PLANISUNDER WAY Politicians at Washington Are Said to Be Busy as Well as ) New York Financiers, BRYAN ON THE GROUND. The Play-Girl of the Wastern World | Just a Bit of Broadway Thistledown, —INEUROPE; SECRET. | Is View of Robert Chambers, Novelist The Broadway, Gia «ag she Wants: . deserved much of this censure, [ul not all. Mr. Chambers speaks @ pro- found truth when he says the mating |Impulae is just as strong in tho little playgiris of Broadway it was in |any of their anceggors, and that St is {quite often the desire for love that |leads young people to Broadway, | What they want IS a home, the man that belongs to them, the child that [needs them, as Mr, Chambers says. But there ts this diMoulty. The hus- band they dream of must be ablo to give his wife @ new pearl for her necklace on every birthday, the baby |they imagine must slumber luxtir- ously in @ $200 bassinet. And as such | | | | | Yorn with But Anc Ss Imes women are mean spirits and beautiful faces. they are not beautiful very long. a lovely spirit must stamp the fm. print of its aweetness and goodness upon the body it inhabits. Perhaps the most peculiar characteristic of the playwomen of America is that they consist entirely of v = girls and grandmother practically no women b and fifty in New York ¢ face of the almanac, in th time, despite all the testimony of eyes and memories, the New woman has abolished the twonty years between those ages. he re. maina twenty-nine until sbe te sixty and even then eho attempts to look sixteen tooth of UNWARNED, ASSERT AMERICANS INCRE: Submarine Pounded John Lambert With Shells While Men Were Taking to Boats. Four Americans were in the crew of we could swing clear shot was through the boat. We ware all spilled {nto the water, without anyoody being hurt. Two other boats had away with all bande and they us up. We were in the boat the John Lambert, wa saw her set- tie and go down. The submarine paid no attention to us, having big= «er game ahead of hor. In our pres ence she shot and torpedoed @ French bark, a schooner, flying no fing and two #t@amers whose nation~ ality we couldn't make out, John Lambert was one of twelve steamers built on the Great Lakes for the French Line, to carry coal ? husbands and such babies are rarcly|" In the matter of her age the New| sixteen of th steamer John Lambort,|{hom, the Jann ‘Dari, 1On° we |met and hard to get, the playgiria| york woman knows only one branch] sunk by a mubmarine near the Iste of| John’s early in. November’ and. has + But He'll Talk Only of bit ig, Meng afer gaat, wih moral animate wutraction.” eat Wight om Now. 2% who arrived. here) fever Dec ead tren T eupoae Bh National Prohibition for Jmore and more that the dfeam of| younger at every birthday, so that] to-day ons the French tner Espagne |i." meen went to the bottom wae j love and home does not come true. eventually I'm afraid all women | from Bordeaux. 16 Lambert was fly- Which He’s Planning. Evening World.) WASHINGTON, Deo. 6.—In political Gircles of the capital and in Qnancial circles of Now York there ta the mothers of the young girla. Miss | America makes her own match, and ehe is coming more and more to in- sist that Cupid shall point his arrows | with diamonds of at least two carats. It is this hardness, this grasping for for this strange hiatus in the of Americag women who do not dare grow up be®ause they fraid men will conse to admire them tf they do, ert told me In Paris, Yvette Guill ones, no man of the world would think pounding the steamer with shot and shell while the crow was getting away in the boats, ‘Tho miracle of it was, he sald, that ni n waa lost, “it was 4/30 o'clock on the after- all been accounted for.” The regrettable characteristle of the| acquaintances will become vo young | ng the kt rs A scons American playgirl is her dedication |they will lose the gift of speech and} ink tie Trench fag and, according to) Harrigin'e home ts on Staten Te. to the dollar, In Europe more mar-| have to bo put hack Into their poram. | Pdwant Harrison, chief engineer, one |My ci 4 OCNhh, AmenCans, aoe By Samuel Williams. rlagea for money re ovatriven, 258s Pulators and wheeled about hy thelr | of the Ar aay ee fel fred Helland of Stanwood, Washy " , ‘ ds. warning » sul) Aland B.A. ookly CBpecial Staff Correspondent of The by disillusioned women in middle life,| Tho Broadway playgirl ts respon- | P™ No submarine condqued | and ©. A. Biggs of Brookly. ieonananettieieciiis $1,038,500 CARNEGIE GIFT, rich. BURGH, Dee. 6.—The Carnegie trem money, which makes the beauty of|of falling in love with a woman until] moon of Nov, 22° sald Kengineer|, PITS . ep et Feane SR Hee our playgiris #0 ahort-lived. she was at least thirty, and Gabriel! trarrteon, “that we encountered the| “orperstion of New York haa approprte Move toward the Huropean peace 1s I agree with Mr, Chambors that| Nicolet, a dietingulshed French artist, | inmarine, We salied from St, Jonn, {it S:088.600 for the usa of the Care fn the making. Wall Strect ts in- beauty of features in women t4 an| informed me not lone ago that women ae ercatins pee |negio Institute here, according to am 3 indication of beauty of spirit, and if| under thirty-five ar imply veal,” New Brunewick, on Oc 1, after|announcement made at a meeting to= quiring of Washington what {s in the the features grow less benutiful after oa > being converted from the Ameri antday of the Hoard of air, and has not been able to obtain a few years, it Is because the spirit Deckhand Injured b to the } n registry, with a carg wl H, Chureh, the any satisfactory answer. But vague acts peated oS qeeriore ties, Tdward Slattery, a de [of coal. We were ot A to put into} ints at proposals of some etill, : aclar 6 ita yuth for er repairs and it bints that posal f 111, wan right when he daciar Had Pipes Willan I h i 1 ity secret kind are in process are again Fi - week that @ woman shou rly, Sodey from: the Fisy was the day after wo left that port! current. She's Not as Worldly In full bloom of physical attractiveness | CON PAFES Ons | WN | that the sity wow wile, A stot wa and 4 vi i i at forty-five, If she is not—and she jie waa taken Tos: | fired acros# our bow and tmmedtatety | { , Tho presence of William J. Bryan] telligent as Her Paris ae OR BT Farely to With te—tt Is becadse ahe| ticawith a fractured. s th forward the bridge was torn away apm 3 at the capital, and his activities in pen yee . has permitted her soul to shrivel from [right Jaw. Jt ta thought ho will dic y & nocond “shot, All hands made Sister, but She Loves Beauty and Brightness and Is Ambitious for Comfort and the Money That Brings Comfort. oficial circles, are naturally inked wulainess « up with this hope, Nominally, Mr, Bryan is devoting his efforts to pro- moting his latest propaganda, prohi- bition. Whilo this is his new domes- tle policy, world peace still continues bis supreme In one Bryan has come back, «Today and Tomorrow Only at He left Washir and the State * Dipanioant u pea Thad. & bale Ago, In MANHATTAN T In BROOKLYN derided. Iie was chvorod yostentay|Above AM Is the Old 29 Wer and &. AROLAAN HALL 11 fice are. in Congress, and to-night he ts to be} Dominating Impulse to ecolaimed at a testimonial dinner In THE BRONX, 367 F, 149th Street given by many Senators, Congress. Mate and Have a Home " eon » fmeo and Government o@cials ) Back again in his role of an evan- Gelist, the prophet of a cause and a —The Desire for This moulder of moral sentiment, ho is| Very Thing Often Leads fecognized as possessing far more force than as tn. offiee-tecker or| Young People to Broad- office-holder. F He has nothing to eay yet on tho| W@¥, Writer Declares. “pubject of peace, bu with having knowl: i ing in that dircetion On prohibition, however, he ts out- spoken and « tack are to be the demon Mui. presented to Con » Is credited of what Is do- é By Nixola Greeley-Smith. | Robert W. Chantbers has discovered the playgirls | world, the charming bits of human thistledawn that blow from tea rooms | reacting | to restaurants, from restaurants to theatres, from theatres to cabarets, | humanity along Broadway. In an interview in tl rrent nume | the 3 ber of the Craftsman our most dextr t hus irembling with delight over the ht of Joy, seeking it at any risk, from it to essential fine if the occasion ts given of the western | thou tive. ‘Two Ines of at- in Congresa on 4 DIL to be One m, * these young . put the playgirl under the miseroscope of his analy tic | not all is desire for ) spirit and finds her not allogether without excuse tor ye nal beauty and com- F ae living ta ras—there 14 cho old fort ay insuring « ‘ : 7 impulse to mate, Indeed, | F has ¢ &: an every : Beh, UAE we desire for this very] se Ah always been the young ‘pla We notice he J leads these young people | has secured assurar 24 to-day because she is better d 1, more sure of but what they want tsa) aceMent, the propos! oe herself, more convinced that her wa right And) nome, the safe retreat, the man that} @ vote in the pre I1uo; \ that play is essential. You have alwa een her in| yy s to them, the child that needs} Committee on Judiciary, to wht ‘ } Paris, but there tho ‘play-girl’ has more intelligence, | them." Dill must be referred, will not pie evoeannsewer she 18 closer to the intellectual life of the nation THE NEW BUTTERFLY BROKEN hole it, » Cominittee ‘4m Paris, in Italy, 0 love of Beauty © ~ - UPON A WHEEL. | agreos not to hol off op; lavthe blood ean thes evePae tele G inqj-| Tam glad that so gallant and able & voto once the bill is reported us ‘culture, | alee iain “ie © the] champion as Mr, Chambers has en- t api 3 * tance, Herein America,! went environment would blossom out|tered the Mats in defenso of that . he second point of attack is wit d mind: surrounded] inte tne amen vult 6 a ome; much discussed, much denounced L b / @ bill now before the 8 provide lit a as Gk WASIEL OR OXHAVAE|teivere vacd thc Mane, Hee iva parsons ako. Meter ican\@lenn te toera ing for prohibition in the D t of prance, and out of t nation, It {8 the rarest thing in the}ever a butterfly was broken upon a} ‘ Columb. Shept 1 duet ambitic el 1, seiy si . Svory- | ; ! 1 , product a world um © young girls to find} wheel surely she has been, Every 4 comfort. They must — be rn Lat taste in huts to her taste in husbands, alias . and fed, they want to bi yc n the way that sho brings up her ind they feel that beauty and thesy can only make them happy nin|WHAT REALLY FILLS THE| ,@)2 "omo' sda Lines BROADWAY CABARETS. | Tomorrow, Thursd y FU January Prices! © do not, in our schools, Thirty days before anyone else thinks of making these reductions, giving you practically the full Winter's use of these handsome coats! @irectly ruled by Cor ment of prohibition would have greater Influ any State, Daily a slavery centred tts ef years before Con curse tn the D wedge. THE GOOD IDEA ‘ doz. 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