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& Evening World Daily Magazine RSTARLISHED BY JOSHPH PULITZER Published Datly Except Sunday by the Presa Publishing Company, N $3 Park Row, ¥ ork RALPH PULITZER, Pri t, 63 Park Row, J. ANGUS SHAW, ‘Trea 69 Park Row. J JOSEPH PULITZMR, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Fe |What Every | } Woman Knows} By Helen Rowland. er ae a J. H. Cassel | Tatered at the Post-om Bubse:'ption Rat World for th # Second-Clasw Matt giana i the Continent and, All Countries fn the International Vostal Unto Copyright. 1917, i Press Vubliahing Co, (fhe New York Brening World.) AVE you lost a lover? ‘Then, be of good cheer, and weep not! ‘eae 0) One o~ vi Be Sonu: west lone Monta, Lereenat For lovers are Ike white bairs—there are always two wi er 3 : ssa Sabin | to replace one that {s lost. VOUMUME Cli iviVincirsieteas EUDEVS EVE VANE NO. 20,268 But, if you have lost a MAN FRIEND, Then, indeed, have you suffered a calamity. A man !s your lover so long as you live up to hig ideals, and do not shatter bis illusions. | But once he ie your friend he is your friend for” all time, No matter what you do, what you say, what you have, what you are, or what you have been! As a friend, any man can be trusted to the enda of | the earth » Whereas, as a lover he cannot perhaps be trusted around the corm | So long as a man %# your friend, whatever you do seems right, But the moment he falls in love with you he exchanges his ross ored glasses for a microscope, | And his one burning desire ts to “remodel” you. FIRST DUTY OF THE RAILROADS. 4 SERIOUS shortage of empty freight cars, rapidly growing congestion of loaded cars in yards and on™side tracks, lack of ships prepared to accep! cargons for Buropean ports, « ew succession of embargoes declared by the railroads—all point to the urgent need of some mind or group of minds big enough to gras} | the country’s traffic situation and straig At any minute clear trac quick mobilization of the nation’s fighting f n out its kinks and enarls, and ready care may be required for, ‘ t will be no} moment for excuses about trainioads of p and lard that block wines You can cali upon @ man friend at any moment and he will never 4 Now is the time for the heade of American railroads to gat to you, olf cether and display some of that co-operative efficiency they are| | But a lover does not appreciate importunate calls, i And he {s morbidly determined that you shall have “no strings” Upeut him To a man friend you can confess all your follion and mistakes, But to confess a weakness to a lover is to hand him a club with white | to beat you in the next argument. - i} A man friend knows all your faults and Joves you in spite of them. ~ He fs content to regard you as a human being, and to treat you ae 5 cordingly, ive wave talking about but which ie rarely seen save whon danger appeare in the shape of a threatened lowering of rates or an eight yur law | This time it is everybody's danger. The railroads must range their brane and resources alongside the rest to meet it. * a \ The German Government wastes ite tinfo proparing news ‘ But to a lover you are always an ange! —unt!! he discovers that you for American digestion, This nation has an aggravated case of | are a devil, a, as dywpepata. 4 He demands tat you shall stand forever on a pedestal, a ——— | And keep your halo on straight A lover exclaims, “How much you mean to ME!" But a friend asks simply, “What can I do for YOU™ A lover expects that you shal! share all his moods and fancies, But a friend is willing to share YOUR moods—and (o forgive eveate your caprices and your indigestion | Love ts a castle in the air, Built of moonbeams and roseleaves and dreams and imagination. Friendship4s a honse bullt upon a rock of faith and towering to the clouds, And sometimes you can climb up to its roof, “TEMPTING GOD.” OR American merchant vessels to sail in defiance of Germany's F submarine blockade and Germany's warnings amounts, in the view of the Berlin Lokal! Anzeiger, “to nothing else than most wickedly tempting God.” Starting from an immutable “Gott mit Une ogie leads to this conclusion From the German point of view, to condemn the conquest of : " i] premise, Teutonic Helgium and the practical subjugation of its people is to criticize ! arts aie sai be iatind ubt 4 \ : ave is the beginning of do . 1¢ Providential plan. ; | Friendship is the beginning and the end of perfect faith, and trust, am@ From the German point of view, to recoil from the drowning nding. ' You can tr a man friend with your sec your honor, and your life With everything except your heart And so long as fou can keep him from falling in love with you, of innocent women and children, to shudder at the slaughter of sleep ts, your Jewels, your purse, ng non-combatants by Zeppelins, is sinfully to question the benefi-, ence of the Supreme Power, ! Prom the German point of view, to fight for every right, every) You can keep him—forever! ‘ a surviving standard of law and justice that can be saved from the| Why, then, will a woman foolishly seek to turn a friend into a lover? present ruin of civilization, is to iry to thwart the Divine will | For the miracle of happiness consists ' So far, however, Providence has vonchsafed no sign to show that podlcrs dehaieehd tl eal iia + is committed to an exclusive Teuton partnership, or that the honor, aith and ideals for which other nations strive are not still f precious in its eyes The Oxleans and the Rochester, as they steam steadily eastward, ara, in the German view, “wickedly tempting God.” : In American eyes, with every turn of their screws, these two rave ships and others that follow them are at last proclaiming that 9 long as the American flag flies no Government ehall banish law Revivalists Of Former: No. 1X.—Moedy and Sankey. ! By Augustin McNally. irri mane pre Ae . +r Moody and Bonkey and paid ne and ‘Daughters of France Inspire Women of U.S. in W ar Crisi Days v S| n& God-given principles of humanity from the earth Splendid Sacrifice and Efficiency of Those Left Behind Have |*:r0\», and the two shoulter cords at \« ¢ sulcswoman. Binca the war | 66 [ ae Lela seine [attention to. the: Grice, Grameen s ’ the back of her nec ou tl n hav aply done double his familar hy ° othe ae aaa Given Nation Means for Victory—No Labor Too Hard for | (atu: r full, young th called heep that strayed away from | jucked with moh and Wome Abowe Why a United States Ambassador at Vienna Eager Hands That Turn‘the Wheels of French Industry. Bia Sen ieeencis Convene with, a A, the They ae cee Sa ae Reps | the “ahelter of the fold” and “was | 450,000 ns of all walks in life mt N ite shal effort each time she snips off a piece | fror So partner-wives | found” has long #ince been taken Into | tendel tings at the Hay: By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Of stesl fo pass down the line til {t lave acted ag the whole firm, in most | the hearts and homes of serious-riinded | Pa! het yurgeon's ‘Tabernacle, THE STATE A LAW BREAKER. Coprnaht, 1917, by The Press Publishing Co, (The Now York Rveving Worl.) becomes Aa alell. Sh Years instances with complete success. | persons all over the land. Above ten | Then no tack beeen ee Ferm ang siecinten arpa Vooualigie der than the spring Of 1 y ine! here are 30000 women CAFFyINg On| Mion people heard that hymn in the | started campaign in the ov@ intelligent service the HILE the State of New York has stringent laws compelling in dur- | Brookivn skating rink. ‘Thousands, ates and Great E among themselves as to how they may | deathieas women of France ine on ner . ‘ my is em- | United § bi : : f nay | dea \ i ere turned away nig n other employers to provide safe and sanitary workshops for | serve their country in the event af According to & recent report no loss is girl chose t 1g tol « n work, not| ing the thirty years’ work of the mea | q weeney peosanea and. bang i | declaration of war weu are wise « own accoré war hac nel mut er t nttmatoly |t , ni their employees, it apparently bothers little about such| they will profit by the erperence of (than 200,000 Prenchwomen are engaged | Husband, aha raid, and it Mee Wotan Rate ane cmme [Mts talcee ornare ie ta weuimatel 4 Pennsvivania, naliroad gta, regulationsein its own case [the women of Eurape, who for tio|in the manufactnee of munitions, Tn} could do nothing more to int sas housekeerang, copy. | 888oclated—Moody and Sankey an Gla te ie chlenee, Davee ® | wears and a half have been engaged in laome factories they constitute 69 per| ‘There are rtom n "i ng of confidential reporta,| Dwight I. Moody had some dim- , auien ney ae ; ; ‘ . | 5 lar 1 in New York City After an inspection of the Capitol and some fourteen other | *? hing @ similar problem. Ths follow | cent. of the total force At the pres | Parisian railways © are opera ihe. telephone exchange,| culty getting into church, They /at Tarnum's Hippodrome on the alte uildings, in which 2,187 State employees ate daily at work, the State| vice of the women of France Jont rate of increase It is estimated baal hasnt nde ag inh yagi ans ag orang | were atrict back in 1856. He had to| of, Madison Square Garden, pater daily at work, State | es F ‘ y hand he right into # front trench, and coo 4 «| made a return visit to Grea nm Industrial Commission reports that the State is guilty of 314 distinct | MM the very beginning of the|that in another six monthy half a stWomen deliver the mail for the regimental mess. Of course, | Walt elght months before he was ad-| 40° y 494 vey 7 ae ball re distiaet, war Fremimen have been] million women will be employed |n Women ir: n- | ther a eon a gallant quota of|mitted into the Congregational body,| ~ Yoody had al! the olations of its own faciory laws. The Capitol has not a single | poured into the maw of its de-/the munitions factofies, At the begin~ | Structive dentistry, AL ating lathes! nurses and women engaged tn Tolle though nowadays the man on the|the primitive evang val fire , , A be 7 : - 4 and) working with =m > activities he “Ocuvres" organizec : a i a alertness of those gal fire exit, new Education Building has no fire alarm| struction, ‘That | ning of the war there were no women | Eich ion \ ro doing an immense street, would conalder young Stoody | cane) ‘ally ad-| making shells, : iy si od material for most any al had 3 donk anh Hite. satéwilardivavot machine or tubavics clciiciea is generally ad Es : For many years, in cer ipa un dorful work po Bpe ntti (Ag eb the 1 : guarding of machinery and gf int sinirways| mitted, NoAmer-| Here ls an eye-witnoss'e vivid do- | 1 Frenchwoinan ; 3 neginning of the war the | Moody never complained of the loneth | 5 cd (1892) he was reste? designed. for fire exits has been amazingly neg! ! jean —_correspon- | #¢Fiption of a typical woman muni- | hushane ve partner, If hie ¢ ha nee have been sown | Pi tn eee coneldered it “rather ae. vy ho heed the call of - i 8 tion workor “somewhere in Franca”: | ducted taurant she was cashier 1 reaped by women, with some| Per P re eee he got in, this lay. {the wild and went to Chicago, hiring The Capitol,” says the report, “is badly lighted, il) ven dent or other vis-|“She stands by a ateel cutting ma-| If | 1 gtpall bank 1 assistance from old men. The! ere.” ‘But when he got in, Jas many hills as he could hit itor at the front} chine, and every half minute she! accountant or f gh i o man atarted doing things. Ira i} rod ‘lated, unsanitary, overcrowded, and {8 altogether no such hi failed ASHOWNR 1AVAR. Haw qraththe te nat] Gihek peatticHe he is man Ss ira caring for tha) Sankey joined him. fankey w 10mm Aa snere was ee ‘ ailed to re-| throws a leva ‘ar machine is not! other pos 1 une ear , u e em. The town w ride ee building as the State should require employees to spend #ix a se a very modern contrivance, and it) he owned and man f the Ins | d vg the intensive Tere ee eg pa Nie a There aaeatrnn D + hye ove days in, or such as the sweatshop proprictor is compelled und complete. dearth | fhten Tare te Oberaia th, At Sach | numerabie iittle shit "| 0 Great Re- | Wariaya “semua, Lover of My Boul" {day in the tentres, Sunday wag Re P the law to provide for his help.» There are offices in the Cap “Peper pr pelia) Se aL EAT der_the capital she acted as ve = | but it got undor the sktna of the) exception. Forepaugh'a clroug wagy UPB ripe SRR hae ah OF anlerbodis lcrowds, It was made for the times, | packed twice daily, Porepaugh-goull o} in which men and women work which have no windows wie in France — par — holy important work began after | have opened at nine on Sunday TMs rae at all fi ‘gage tcularly in the | Tl y e the Civil War. They made two trips | ine if his performers wor willing and ~ F as } 5 site Y rural distri ot =) ¢ ba } lto Great Britain, these Yankee re © crowds showed a desire for that ‘ If one were in the habit of looking to the State for model obsery ; sy ae xet | JE arr aml Ivivalists, and told the English and| kind of amusement before luncheons tor’ ness of law on for lessons Ann Thiiaee ie i the se ntiles wheels ; the baereanivd _____ -___ ——— 23 ty oteh and the Irish how to be pi “Tn sive t to you, Moody, on Suna my ative thoroughness, a athave been turn! he populatio Shey opened thelr first cam-| ay mornings," said the « ie night seem more shocking. Unf nately. howavey % nae ran " a, a ingly and we lly | Coerteht. 1017, 7 The Pree Pubiivhing Om | way, But didn't you ¢ cause they realize children never pete A Bo Mgpeerd A Ry ech pee replied alan a . , ue AEP PE ia Wahe Anitanaans but atl What Tue New York Rreniug WorlA.) think of how you follow Aro thank « mother for all she does for |and, eventualiy, went ont on the! Forepaugh got what he wae aft tw nment ha e » provide winy shining example fina OLD on there! erled Mr. | any t t P ‘at cae a oe slopes of Scotland. On @he/@s follows neia the > Phe the | 66 and pick at me and criticise ‘ y don Pp house be ti ta “Hat 14 ania igieet ies ortetataur, i the answer he answer is =digcairsen Ale paar WM Bya : ‘ pens peptic Ry ctirgny Algae above Holyrood Moody spoke, “Ha! Ho! Ha! ‘Three Big Show: H s lapses in these or other d Frenchwoman, burning up her youth ois tere ere eect ov " n : ee ci es 000 persons. a | Moody an the Morning. Forepang! excite no surprise Jand charm and beauty and love of 7 we ae | Picking and o! r kill them y pushed on to the heart of} in ternoon and Evenin iife atthe anost arduous and. alfade- [8tePDed Into the bathroom and turned |} guppone 4 Ives wit work and cares of {Jondon and opened i four months’ | M so Roy Wha he want Vor th star haven ‘ f nding lat na ne dare (Off the water with @ firm, final turn, | 7 y fam such a trial t 1 house uve resolved campaign of reviving mat Was filled | Moody had Forspalign rule ¢ one goes not te . HARMS Naber: Ova A nae °| phere's plenty ¢ ater In the : a ; Daihen zi ‘one sensation after another, /every way, an orepaugh di ievev one g to at x rporat It ig | burned the stake for her devotion |, re's plenty of _ Water i | to you And here M Jar 4 own lives in their own mic papers carieatured “these |know fi. ‘The rence wax a di rossible that, in . ne shai ante t to “la Pat i said Mrs, Jarr, "Go aheed and} sumed he A martyr ex s-) meaning Yarkees.* The dra-/tinction in min¢ Q i 1 ww has to similarly take ft." aior » dashed bad way!" snapped tuslled Pepa tnvolvéd in the world | 1c eat scott) Am I to be bossed,| ion k 1 the Mf REE Ter eee policed and drilled even when I go tol wrong a take a bath? asked Mr, Jay American woman that she of what I say Ht haania the bathtub and Young men think old men are fools; but old men know young men ary f the water And now my George Chapman. > “) 2 may equal tn loyalty, in efficiency, in Le tte | ron st he ] eop “You're using all the hot water, it bath 1d," he grumbled, | Amerioanteattion Prat on's emblerr 4 sald Mrs. Jarr, “I never saw people nanineehan W will soon be pve . foeliy OW » selfish as they are in this house} yon of 4 pcg what 1 DO] ready hurry,” suggest. | w pomp pall tanewinettts I don’t know how It tw, but whenever | gayi" eried Mra. Jar ; wjeaM a ; Americar A N ’ ' f L want any hot water there's never} that womar ; june | "Ob, it'a too tate now." sald Mr be A aL any arr, # won't h. time.” cm sor can t an | wom I cet he nid Iw i . i 5 used to" be sald that “verboten”! not deteriorate Chis cannot ey and « eve 0 v Do you want any hot water now? matter, but ¢ r Lk ally didn't wan was the word moat familiar to, Said of other beverages. tizen sho " ! 1 would have ed tt Asvilie jawked Air, Jor interviewed In the papers and toll | take a bath!” sald Mra, Jann, mana, but the “forbidden of | veryat in Gormreny gna wmost ante one oats ; Near nL ave Sige, 4 de neti wan thé-vepty, Gutlt, coeur caamiien: ore cai naa. | cae words Mr, Jarr lost hts . la ers rmany, and Is made prin. 4 being carried on rhe } r 1 of you ely ° hp ailantaven tania intapl | 7 , temper entirely and sald words he re- | Peaceful times has been surpassed In| cipally of roasted cereals, being Ned & ke ork: ° ; E iy ern men do not appreciate the old ek ADH SAA AS AE popular use by “ersatz,” which moans|in name only, ‘The supsient \ ne Slate, each and every enrolled I thought maybe you were getiing| fashioned kind of wife and mother.” | u . substitute or imitation equally short, but a substitute ihe P te i mical with the water I want to “Aw o oft ie ‘How-T-love-to > ‘ ‘ ; j pean found in a German-grown hi 4 " ave 68 & 0 s h 8 ; slong! The “something just ax good” of| the identity of which fh y fag nol lene In sly ‘ for fear We may have a water|see-my-name-in-print’ dames who ANY naines supposed to belong 1 has not ’ a by three feet, a Washing famine before the winter i over," : ; Sbad exclusively to womenkind have the imltator and the substituter has| disclosed, Wheat flour is timited, “t ; pales cars moor A 4 tell people how to keep a husband, | prises : aga | bread made of potato flour and bey exe \ BEY t ’ ality in. been forced upon the ‘Teutons by| bres made o d bs 4 A g for | Watters an his career a . art after their own ha t them, who e i eTemarchatin al it is ame the common “ergata” fox by. 4 " Lobe requi to | porte editorial writ “L don't waste any water, I'm sure,"| advise parents how to raise children |étance, the Lord Mayor of London, In | stern necessity ‘orced to do with-| the staff of life 2 ' ay | pr producing « ne. staff of the Washington Ntaten w sald Mre, J “L don't see why 1] when they've never had one theit| 1689, was Sir Patience Ward, while out many foodstuffs, textiles, metain,| Veriape the ‘most, remarkable at nudes: Vveip e vendor in his name) he was eighteen years old. He won|should not use as much as | want."|own; who offer suggestions on how| Eve Sliffhton wag the name ote male drugs and chemicals previously con- aeataeunan, 108 a5 ersatz” was thi a mA Ed thle tence dtu the | bia military title as & soldier of the) “1 don't see why you shouldn't let] to conduct a house when they live In| helr mentioned in a sixteenth cen. | aldered iMdispensable, German science) collect and purity. thee fat trong sine ’ ‘ \ ne + wtatem that he | Con racy, contributing to a Chat : ~ ed 7 . jtury wil Grace Hardwin, « land " he “ersatz,” with sewer T z from the. ta aa had ised and wpe the owner of tarooKa paper during the gtromehear| Me use all T want either,” grumbled! hotela! ‘They make me tired owner in this country tn the early | #® Lg sail ate WIth moval sewers, Thie iscavery’ waarmee e street was he flag show the States, and after the war joining] Mr Jarr, “Ll think tts Just because] “They know what they talking | days, was of the sterner sex also. or lees happy results. (Tater teporta hea an | Drenaa nem MUNDI Ke and min) | OT 8 eel. 1 think, tn waving thal | the ataft of a Nashville paper” Next | you tke to be bony.” about, just the same!” aald Mra | sti Although beer production fas been | ticular formts” nae rattan (ue DAES : a, i imagine, | a aa Fn Rhett hoon, citizens | yuar will mark the semt-cermenary | “Rossy? asked Mra, Jare In sur-|Jarr, “They probably lost thelr hue HE aren of England, not incnd- | greatly reduced in the Inst year, and| ficial condemnation aa being datgeea ' oldier, proud a } for a sight of the | cha of the Jouroal, whicn ‘wen| Prise bands becau: y would not atand | ing W s only $413 square the civilian population gets a very| Us to hestili. Many other food guhe: » from h f ‘ © \4 to nerve, Daeg tidated w he ‘Courier! “Now, don't get ma bald. Me. | thale-comstant faulechudinga and tre miles greater than that of New small proportion of the total output | *titutes hava enjoyed a transtont pal ’ . ® PHILIP KING, and the Democrat Jarr, “L @idn't mean it just that’ annies; they have no children be-! York Stata of German brew: the quality hea divcarded ag I ing in nutrition oF dangerous,