The evening world. Newspaper, June 4, 1917, Page 14

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Fash ei . —— ay ny eo wth oceans ‘Published Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos, 68 Med ‘ark Row, New York. RALPH FUtsTARr President, 63 Park, Row. J. ANGUS SHAW, Trensurer, 63 Park Row, JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row. Entered at the Post-Office at New York an Second-Class Matter, Budbscription Rates to The Evening|For England and the Continent and ‘orld for the United States All Countries in the International and Canada. Postal Union, One Year. One Mo> VOLUME 57.. WHAT IS THE IMPERIAL GERMAN ANSWER? | E LEARN by way of Copenhagen that among the German people the question is asked with increasing frequency and misgiving: Why, after four months of unrestricted submarine warfare, is| Great Britain showing no sign of weakness, and not the slightest indi- cation of being any more ready to discuss peace on lines laid down) by the Imperial German Government? | When that Government reverted to murderous submarine meth- ods it assured the Gergmn public that the end would quickly justify! the means, that the ignoring of international and human laws, the sacrifice of the respect and friendship of neutral nations, was the one sure and speedy way of bringing England to terms. How is the Imperial German Government explaining to the Ger- man people the fact that the first of June finds the U boat campaign no nearer to starving England; that on the contrary its results are| becoming more and more attenuated, and that a constantly growing! portion of the civilized world is bent upon nullifying them? | It was officially proclaimed that submarine ruthlessness was a) policy to which Germany was forced by desperation due to the block-| ade tactics of its enemies. That policy was admitted to be extreme, but its effects were guaranteed to be certain and swift. No wonder the German public begins to be restless and dissatis- fied.| To stake all on barbarous methods only to find that instead} of achieving everything they have achieved relatively nothing, while} on the other hand they have arrayed new and tremendous forces against Gerrfany and brought fresh reckonings of odium and enmity » $6.00/One Year. $15.40 50} One Month 1.30 ie site DING Worl ica ita ce gins “B d Daily Biting to be reckoned with, ought to be enough to start even the hypnotized} Fatherland out of its long Prussian trance, Serbian insurgents appear to have been affording the | Bulgars and the Austro-Germans a chance to give each other | polnts on barbarity. | ———-4-- MAKE THINGS PLAIN TO RUSSIA. 'N the thidst of trying to understand aright a further influx of con- fused and disquieting reports from Russia, Americans welcome the official announcement that Mr. Root and his fellow Com- missioners have arrived safely on Russian soil. With each succeeding week the momentous character of this mission has become more and more apparent. If a disrupted Russia deserts the cause of democracy, the task of the Allies is immensely increased, the war is inevitably prolonged and the added burdens will have to be borne by the United States. It would be foolish to dissemble our real feelings. We wish the; Russian people and their new republic every success. We are willing! » to give them every aid and pledge in our power. But onr first and} foremost desire is that their armies shall continue to fight in the! common cause against the Central Powers, Mr. Root and his Commission cannot begin too soon to make it plain to all factions in Russia that no Russian nation which turns) out to be a quitter can have the help or the respect of the United} * States. The American Mission to Russia has a chance to achieve for} American diplomacy a triumph to be remembered for all time. But) for the purpose in view diplomacy ought not to be too delicate or} too indirect. oe Wee | NO SOUNDER CIVIC INVESTMENT. ARK COMMISSIONER WARD’S announcement of plans for a! housewife in comforta new playground on the east side of First Avenue, between) stan Sixty-seventh and Sixty-eighth Stre that New York is not going to be so pre ts, is a reassuring sign children, The new playground, for which the Board of Estimate has voted! $36,000, is to be made ready as soon us possible and will havggroom | veset! * for baseball, football, basket ball courts, gymnastic apparatus, swings and play spaces for simak children, and a pavilion, As the upper east side becomes more and more crowded, opportunities for recrea tion areas in that section should be watched or and seized The playground movement, in which The Evening World has for years past taken a leading part, need not stop or slacken becat of war. Healthy, happy youngsters are more than ever the solidest / of all national, State and municipal assets Twenty-five children were killed | 1 by automobiles and other! vehicles in the streets of New York last month—almost for sround is a direct safety move to every week day. Every new p! reduce such records ————_-¢-- “Qngland and Ireland may flourtsh together, The world is large enough for us both. Let it be our care not to make ourselves too little for {t."—Edmund Burke . Letters From the People at Get Permit Citizens Need No Permits, if He Wishes ter Zone, To the Eaitor of The Evening Wor Mo the Waitor of the Evening Work Does a United States citizen need Buppose that a man was born of! a permit or eeraeae German parents in Germany, 44 4 thro, continually resided in this country for |; the past thirty-four years, and was not living or working in passing on foot through a barred gone. SUD-| gone a passport in needed. poso that he had taken out his frst fer to proscribed zones here * papers thirty years ago, but not bis) nie iy neces A second papers (his first, therefore, He has a rman name A. M. W. Your question ts confusin, it you expect to enter the Eur an War you re. no per- for a eltizen, He Is an Bow "i having lapsed), and renounced B15 \qy ie gaijin ef The Euene N, 0 allegiance to the German Kinperor;| A friend of mine, English-born, hia Melther visited nor had communica-|peen in this country since tlon with Germany since com.ng here, | took out his first papers lun 1 and did not consider himse:f a subject a travelling mar has been unable of Germany, Would he he an enemy | to get his second papers. He has al &atien under tho laws of the United| ways considered and carried sims: tates, who should register as such, |# 4 good United States citizen : j) has never voted, Can you tell ior week a permit to enter the barred | What is ‘hin standing ut the ut Bones in this city? ¥F. J. M. time A CONSTANT KEADER f Sayings of Mrs. Solomo | By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1917, by the Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), ERILY, verily, saith the Cynic, wuy doth a WIDOW yearn to again? For lo, who {s so popular and so blessed as a pretty widow in second-mourning? Behold, she possesseth all the honor and glory of matrimony, with none of its sorrows and die comforts, She is admired of all men, and the delight of callow youths, She goeth where she listeth, and returneth wi she liketh; she retireth when she wisheth, a@nd, ariseth when she pleaseth, ‘ She breakfasteth in bed, and dineth at a DI FERENT place and with a different man every day” SL HOWLAND of her life, if she so willeth. 9 aR Moreover, she knoweth In her heart that when she weddeth a “7 time all this shall end! She understandeth MEN, and is wise to all their little ways. She knoweth that her second husband, even as her first husband, | shall kick the rugs out of place, and track mud through the halls. ) | She knoweth that he will smoke up the curtains, and throw lighted | matches out of the window; that he will fill her pin-trays with cigar ashes, and knock out his pipe upon her best mahogany; and that he will | keep the cook wavering between the verge of nervous prostration and the verge of departure, and the dinner waiting until it Is cold. She knoweth that he will be fussy at breakfast, and grow sleepy after dinner; and that he shall never observe her hat, nor her frocks, save when they offend his eye, or there {s a button missing. Yea, verily, she knoweth that on her wedding day she will merely exchange the attentions of all men for the inattention of ONE, and the plaudits of the multitude for the criticism of one. Wherefore, then, doth she desire to marry again? , | But I say unto thee, wait! Be not hasty in thy Judgment! \ | For a widow and her freedom are not parted for nothing. Behold, she knoweth all these things—and she knoweth, likewise, that it is vastly easier to sit up and wait for ONE man to come home, than to sit up and wait for a lot of men to GO home! She knoweth that it is Infinitely more comforting to know where and with whom thou shalt dine every evening than to have three invitations | to dinner upon one evening and none at all the next evening. She knoweth that it fs more thrilling to have a man adore thee one moment, and scold thee in the next, than to have a bore sit about and pay thee conventional compliments and feed thee canned flattery forever! Moreover, she desireth to have somebody to “advise” her to do the things which she hath already made up her mind to do. ry | She wanteth somebody to hook her frocks and powder the back of 'her neck, when she weareth an evening gown. She yearneth for somebody to worry about and to “sacrifice” herself for, She jongeth to hear some sort of noise uround the house besides the ticking’ of the clock. : | She pineth for somebody to COMPLAIN to when she hath a headache, for somebody to “mother,” somebody to scold, and somebody to remodel, according to her own Ideas, Verily, veetly, she wanteth somebody to “belong” to her, even ag she ; Wanteth her own umbrella and her own books, instead of borrowed ones; | her own piano, rather than a rented one, and her own garden, rather than the privilege of walking in Central Park! | And where shall she find all these comforts, save in a HUSBAND? Selah. ’ . . A Frenchwoman’s Housekeeping in Restricted Buying for the Table, Elimination of Waste and Utilization of All Remnants, French Housewife’s Meas- ures to Aid Food Conservation and Cope With War Prices and Shortages. By Marie Louise Radoux. 1917, by the Prem Publistung Cos This is the first of three articles written for The Kveainy World onal experiences as a French “War The two remaining articles will appear on this page this week. © sauce, down at that old office.” Nauld fire was too much prepared not witb a wo | mportant td! “That 1s so," replied the best of/enemy, and In buying meat it ts the quantity pressed from them by passing tuom 4 T that is abso- | husbands, “I haven't a thing to do/came up to repel i Yet i¢ bits of meat |>u pel the Boston Bosches used with mac- ; 4 ans or else ems |fast as they come out, The office|terminal facilities, yyed to stuff tomatoes or cabbage. | force stands in ine up to the news-|the grenade past the interco: Pe oes paper office, ke a bucket brigade, ma tit - ot less which the i s been saved for Soup line, as they come from the press,/enemy's third redoubt, crumbs {until they reach me, Then I read] Holke chopped meat and braised—that them with my feet on my desk until] middle distance, lettuce or romaine if days and stewed slow cellent vegetable. " remain they can be y make an ex-|aroni, spaghetti or t So too do the tops en with the present pri No particle of celery should ever be » in New York a cabbag The tops are exc for flavoring soups and sauces and (The New York Bening World), thrown away outer leaves ha Radous out of her pe’ chopped and added to the soup pot. by 1 meal was luncheon, which consisted war surprised France of two courses—a meat and a veget- » fire, the | day.” “Robert ma minimum quantity of wateradded and) “What are you reading?" asked] later crossed t en it Is partly cooked is transferred | yrs, Jarr, interrupting the details of} sixteen-ino ven and allowed to bake slow- Bread er! bs alo ba be used ae, tamateon eb scan odd /ing the offending sheet from his re-! enemy en peppers, luctant hands—“Oh, the baseball | next division up,’ d trom vegetables - arned at once the great economy ded meats, veal and lamb cut- for such dishes enabled me y, and I find that the American| We lived well and, consid- ering out income, economically. } My husband responded . ccupied with war problems} to the call to the colors, and, for * as to neglect ‘the ordinary needs of its citizens; above all, of its| early every woman in F an indispensable condition of existence, 1 [left Paris three why, can add greatly to the bits of celery or and the quantity such housewife always dries "the portion nemo r in the oven, crushes with a rolling pin and puts away | the blow fell in jars for such ded to the soup stock, what in| her brow puckered, "W. led hash, but if the | this shopped cold lamb or beef, odds and of a roast or of steak are chopped fine and served tomato sauce they will please every one. war I had thought thet To-day possible to pm the grocer by adding to it this} rice or vegetable stock rich in min- every particle of bread If too much toast or several pieces of emain after a meal these are New York ts families exist in France to-day on bread and s This rich country 4 to such a necessity wastes no bread/ even the water In| has been made morsels |” nothing like New York to-day, small toasted squares for soups. other item of food had risen to prices which would have been considered in- credible before the war and such lux- household which and which utilize: ® could not Hv their prepara- The water in which v effected | bility that it was evident the last) ne when my cook went to work tn a fac-!drive on the Polo Grounds had worn Say no more! was compelled have been cooked, mixed with milk in to do I stop the al way of bread and | Graw called on him to retire behind stables the lines, yhen - able to tull to choose and the best and to buy | repeated, looking the world knows as the "p This is meat boiled with soup veg bouillon cubes served with pic 8 an excellent soup, ends of asparagus which are never eaten should be to continue to simmer in the ag rigidly as 1 should since my mar- cut @f and soup Is served cl things myself I go from market stall to 1 1 could serve n # jogical and rigid ringd L had learned from her. ipplication of peetables are put through a chopper and served as macedoine salad or are | What You Need to Know © to go to work in @ munition fac 1 did not replace her solved to do my own marketing and to buy only the ab: About — eee l Liberty Bond | ie e:plain Only 2 per cent subscription follows: 18 of the total! +1, wouldn't be bas $2,000,000, 000. from June 15, b terest, payable bonds will be n Will be the + velory & good deal ot cent. | ad something intelligible to * EE stumbled Mr, Jar ey man | Tr, seeing sale and its object, nds to buy a bone of the bond the man who in » buys a $100 b | pay only $2 now deterred payment plan, mi is required to balance on June 16, 1947, jovernment re worth know- following tact patriotte rendered to the the rh is to join years ago, and thus began the al that Ameri- ogee “fought | Mexican Republic, Almost a year to shorten | passed, however, before hostilities a higher rate of interest, holders of| authorized for Liberty Bonds will be card to|* os of carrying on the war, It is just as essents the bonds be sold as it is that a's sons lay Our heaviest There is no United States bonds. They are per- | Japan Has World’s Tallest Chimney| 6,000 pounds per Five hundred and thirty | ool were used for reinforce- that has not deteriorated as mercile! HAT is sald imney in the en completed at Saganoesk!,| went go building © this, monster » smelting plant 670 feet high, has an chain of circumstances that c | ue 4 reader can go to the| James Knox Polk had been tnaug-| it is his duty t he years to come they see that » men who do &o are given every-| two days later the Mexican Minister} late foam over the bulwarks, The final remarkable feature of this) an investment cannot lose ; Bond the fullest hase of a|in Mexico, however, kept the Gov-| effect with an builders bave possible earths Working with mem- the Imperial resources and credit bond sold! until Pre of the American people stand behind And they are free taxation except inheritance or es | at ter! quake shocks munition for the men on the fighting in a position to put its th buy alinto effect, M the issue will to avert war to. the! peaceful purchase of the disputed s » means to go through | tions In Texas and California, ‘These sting? Oh, big league lingo where je neide diameter a foundation ¢ to design the chimney so that tt) Subscriptions must be made in timo| bs the Treasury ss ahead af ber. lefrorts fuiled and war began, thy victor: pressure on! p!ished _By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1017, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), mo look at the paper,)marked Mrs, Jarr, please,” said Mrs. Jarr. “You! paper again, have time to read it all day| “‘In the second attack, Perritt's for the when tho native troops taking up the except to read all the war extras as| Herzog tangoed the pellet with hie Kauff catapulted cating trenches. Fletcher's lo: . ax a to pass the fresh editions down the/to left advanced Herzog m3 pe and then sent a high explosive into the Casualties for tho, it's time to close up and call it al enem three runs, de a lob to left and he salver on Zimmie's ‘ h shell to centre, and two more’ runs were piled up before the could rally and smother the his business day's doings, and tak- news!" She glanced with disdain, and then | at stuft is he asked, as she read aloud: Gen, psreau was selected to es “Do you mean to tel “Besides,” it is very misleading, 1 Was to see a game last Week, and lead the storming party, and opened! was no shoo ee en reene ae jead the storming party, and opaned| jooting, and I want to tell you it looked ridiculous to me to see ble, grown men chewing gum, and Sliding in the dirt and setting their nice outing flannels all dirty,” “Outing — flanne 4 Pa moaned Mr, (3) Hindenburg line of the enemy, But they got his range and he was blown clear out of his trench, He put over |the first four shells with so much de- Sas “T will say Mrs, Jarr rete “Yes, I suppose so," said resignedly. “But I only Seats sty that tho baseball writers try to “What language ia that?” Mre, Jarr| Set @ little variety into thelr de- from the paper, | #criptions of the game." sreau, the piteher,| “They get & great deal of gibberts and Manager Me-|!nto them, I think!” suappea ure out his rifling, His ctorles were full of fosh, and Field Marshal Me- more; I'll say plenty!” h. orted. ritt assumed com- mand of tt c that “it me was batted freely Graw took him out of the box, sub- | J4rr. dad Mr, Jarr “T can explain tt all,’ 1 c vil” said Mn, “Why don't they say #0 in plain lever mind your explanations aa 7 glish, then?" asked Mrs, Jarr, Mrs, Jarr. “If you must kee, a, if it were| your nose in the papers all t Id in ordinary prose," sald Mr. Jarr something that is intelligible’ The id please listen to this," re- d her eyes gazed in fasei- [nation on the paper, “What interesty you now?" “Oh, liste ‘Yo-Day’s Anniversary I BPXICO declared war against} United States seventy-two} 1 uN" she sald. “Clara Mud. Smith's name is in the paper! sten conflict that was to result in the loss of a large and valuable part of the ‘The sensation fashionable fete fo: Belgium War Babi rtorially of the the relief of the ; yesterday was a and it was not|Plret creation called La Submarine, , 4 until May 6, that the United | worn by that dashing matron of the 4 \States answered Mextco's detlance | younger set. Mrs, Mudridge-Smith, ith a declaration of war, It was of wondrous sea-gri 4 8 S€A-green mar. urated just two months before, and | @sette, with a ruffie of lace to simu. gjactually commen work |demanded his passports. A revolution | hat to match was a conning tower ernment well occupled, and it was not] : omament to simulate dent Paredes overthrew) Periscope. The overdress — fei) lerrera that Meai-> waa|/in a shimgner of phosphor Ir its threat of war | effect! "—— escent feanwhiie Polk sought sane aai 1 to arrange for a nuff” crled Mr, Jarr, # Ob, baseballese where is thy m1 am. | President ‘nuff!

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