The evening world. Newspaper, July 7, 1917, Page 3

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ONE DAY WITH WAR SECRETARY SHOWS HOW HARD IT IS 10 BE CIVILIAN CHIEF OF U. 8. ARMY — Secretary Daniels, Too, Puts In Long Hours Keeping Navy Fit for Battle. | and manner, generally sits on his right foot—that is, he puts sald foot and leg under himself and allows the other to swing over the edge of the seat. DISPOSES OF HI6 CALLERS RECORD TIME. It 1@ wonderful bow quickly he dis- poses of callers in this way. And there ts where the psychology comes jin, ‘When he allows a man in his private office alone the man aite down, pulls a lot of papers from his pockets and orates extensively, It is hard to get rid of such a caller. But }out in the open the innate courtesy jot the average American gets in its work, By Martin Green. orrespondent of The! (Opwclel Sevening Werle) WASHINGTON, July 7,—Between the hours of 12 o'clock midnight and 8 o'clock A. M, the War Department is @ lonesome place. It ts inhabited during that period solely by watch- men and records and desks and type- writing machines and oil paintings of | former Secretaries of War. Newton D. Baker, Gecretary of War, permo-|" Ai’ around are men standing up on ates the War Department most of the | their toes, as it were, waiting to make remaining sixteen hours of the day,/q rush for the man they want to talk and the honest workingman who 48-/t5, ‘This operates to make the per- pires to cut down his hours of toll! son who has, for the moment, the ear from eight to seven would probably | o¢ the gecretary, brief and pointed in drop dead of shock could he observe! nig remarks. the working schedule of the Cabinet! gecrotary Daniels works the psy- oMcer upon whose shoulders falls! chological proposition also, but in a most of the routine conected with| airterent way. When the ‘crowd in the preparation and prosecution of| nis outer offiee clogs up the passage he war with Germany, ways he sends out his messenger and Secretary Josephus Daniels of the| whole bunch into his | invites the Navy ts kept engaged more or less,| private room. There he disposes of too; but the big Job ts being done On| them after the manner followed by the other side of the State, War! Mr, Raker, and Navy Department Building, where Unless there is something of un- Secretary Baker holds forth. As @| usual moment on hand, the Secretary matter of fact, the business of the of War leaves his office promptly at War Department has assumed 80/ noon, jumps into his motor car and many ramifications that the substdi-| goes to his home in W Street, N. W ary bureaus are gcattered all over for lunch. Generally he occuptes | town. The heart of the system, how- | forty minutes In the trip to and from | ever, 1s in the suite of offices given| his home and at his luncheon. Often over to the use of the Secretary of|he is gone only half an hour, The War. {luncheon period is about the only Only the watchmen and the guards! time he has for association with his around the State, War and Navy | wife and three children, Building know what time Secretary) A woman friend of Mre. Baker Baker gets to work. When his cour- | called her on the telephone yesterday teously efficient private secretary, R. | and asked her to use her influence in A. Hayes, arrives, about 4.30 o'clock arranging an appointment with the in the morning, he always finds the| Secretary. “I want you to help me Secretary of War on the job. By the| get the Secretary's ear,” said the time the Civil Service employees of | woman friend. the War Department check them. | “I wish I could help you,” replied selves in at 9 o'clock the Secretary | Mrs, Baker, “but I can’t get his ear of War and his personal staff have | myself.” | disposed of a lot of work, | LEAVES STATE DINNERS TO GO’ BAKER NEVER WORKS LESS BACK TO HIS DESK, THAN 16 HOURS A DAY. | The Secretary of War has an en- Stnce war was declared Secretary | gagement to dine with other officers Baker has put tn a minimum of #ix-|of the Government or with visiting teen hours a day on weekdays in get- delegates from other countries almost ing rid of the details of this office, every night, He is always back at snd Sunday {s also a working day for | his office at § o'clock and then be- ulm, utilized tn cleaning up an accu-| gina the most strenuous work of the mulation of correspondence. Secre- | day—looking after the correspon- | wry of the Navy Daniels ts a man of dence, strong religious principles and will| Io this task, Mr. Baker uses two or three st not work on Sunday unless pressing »graphers and @ secr THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 7 1917 Romance in New York Not Dead After All, Both Kingdon and George Jay | Jr. Wedded Gi How to Support Themselves, | and Their Marri Alone, Were According to the Best American Traditions. OMANCE is not dead tn New York, after all. When, indeed, has love seemed so much allve among us as during this week, which has seen two romntic elopements in the Gould family, f wedding to Laura M, Carter of Woonsocket, R. I, to whom he was mar ried in Philadelphia Thursday | COCCHI MADE BOOK And the Two Gould Elopements Prove It ONRACES AND HAD js Who Know | ges, for Love | rs Geo’ | © By Nixola Greeley-Smith. George J. Gould, Sr Thebo “by Amer .NW.City ‘MOTHERS INSIST ON A “GOODBY" y Hedip uy mous equally for its millions and its love matches? Within three days of each other Kingdon Gould and George Jay Gould jr. have married young women who ‘brought them only the old-fashioned American dower of youth, beauty and love, George Jay Gould jr. was best man at the marriage of his older brother Kingdon to Miss Annunziata Laccl, a pupil at the Art Students’ League and formerly a tu- tor of Italian to his sister. The contemplation of his brother's happiness undoubtedly led the younger of the Join Military and Civic Of- sons of Mr. and Mrs. George Jay Gould to hasten bis) faints jn Demanding a National Guard Day. necessity demands, The War Depart. tary. The secretary reads the letter HORGH GOULD wae the only - | ate ment {s virtually a seven day branch MY, Baker dictates the replies while ber of the Gould family | Courage, qualities more necessary in) National Guard headquarters is virt : ho ‘is listening. In other words, he member 0 ° domestic life than men realize. till onal an heada yovern istens, for instance, to the first le present at Kingdon's ge, | the eine Sunn an warmed to-day with mothers, wives f the Government listens, for instance, to the first lett P Kingd MACHIAEG: (Inay aitempe do live Antcubh dreaty 1 to-d ith ! j Mr. Baker draws a salary of $12,000 Tread abd Immediately the reading i) nye Kingdon could not return the|years of marriage with women who|and relatives of guardxmen who concluded, he beg’ a ¢ Pale oF aes ne , « year. On the basis of the working answer, Then he dictates and the| brotherly courtesy as he was on his | possess neither. ¢ alle d to enlist Major Gen, John } ours he puts in, he isn't much better) secretary reads at the same time,| honeymoon when the matrimonial apices O'Ryan's ald in) making National paid than the skilled mechanic tn the | hardly ever tes than four hours and | reygr declared itself In young George's HERE has been some foolish talk Guard Day an occaston that will long He Si PREY Hise aay Bee eS 4 es UE as ely I ut the Gould boys “marryit romenvheraaeeithe Saeearaea navy yards; he is paid—reckoning on | ot onographers work in relays. veins, So no Gould at all saw Miss| RRiERldartheln dia cule Bat membered by t who ar basis of hourly to!l—a smaller wage The Secretary of War cleans up his! Carter of Woonsocket, R. I, and No./the possession of great weulth d: oon to represent the Empire Stat an the skilled rolling mill hand, desk before he goes home, He starts | 9 ty-eighth Street become | not permit a man to choose the wife on the battle front in France, ‘The r ith a’ cl ais | Seen eee h nts—df it does not guaran a ber of trades which in every morning with a clean slate | iki “ 6 wan doe HURTANIOS women ware Alsanpoinied da not pian. tn nurs, OF : . ‘ork. '2 80 far as correspondence is con- | Mrs. Georg: Jay Gould J | him absolute freedom in sha muerte fading Gen. OF: ” Nada Aina Ind ave established an eight hour work-| corned. Of course there aremany mat-| Each of the young men, however,! portant decision of his life--what aot Lisga) 1g basis, with a Saturday half holl- ters which must be referred to heads! carried out the romantic precedent ret | good 1s it? General had been called to Washing lay, hit the payroll harder, in respect of bureaus, but the mail requiring the r father, George Jay Gould,| An aristocracy of money is the most ton with tis chief of staff, Majo personal attention of the Secretary | PY hel f absurd and the most crude of all ari 1 4, and M i id, Jud 0 De labor yersO! attentic of ecretary | >? 4 6, Adich | & » most crude o aris- Olmstead, and ajor Kincaid, Judge #9 hours spent tn bi ner all out of the Way on the business| Who married, in 1888, rd Edlih | tocracies, and there 18 no aristocracy cauaeatl The Secretary of War appears tO) day of its receipt. We omitted to| Kingdon, a member of Augustin|of any Kind that can extend beyond . is thrive under the pressure, It doesn't| say, in its proper sequence, that the| paly's distinguished company ofj|a single lifetime or beyond one per Major Allan I, Reagan of — the \ke much observation to show that) afternoons of the Secretary are de- ors, and they followed in the foot. |S0nality. When Napoleon said, Adjutant General's office took care of eetpaatiera f detail, His business | oted to counsels with bureaa chiefs,| Players, and they followed an ancestor,” he said everything the callers, and in him the women eis & master oF dota, Fe the Council of National Defense and) steps of their oldest brother, Jay,|/can be said on the subject of uris-| found a hearty National nining in Cleveland helps him 4n | strictly army matters in general. He| who took to wife Miss Annie Doug-|tocracy, whether of birth or money Guard Day as sugeé 1 by The Vis angle of his duties. Gett into| also finds time to confer with the! ja, Graham, daughter of Mrs. Hu-|. Many more American fortunes can! Evening World. Not only was Major 5, it miht be stated that the| President and attend Cabinet meet- Bee re ih ae be traced back to Castle Garden than| Reagan for It, but he told his visitors ah heey ings. | bert Vos, a member of the royal fam- +4 the Mayflower rliest diree-| that he thanght Gen, O'Ryan would neoming mail of the War Department) “Th the early days of the war Secre- | ily of the Hawaiian Islands. tony ab New Vork Glie ahowa inal neltake Up tie matter ota ter Il oale o-day 18 probably the heaviest that tury Baker signed all the commis-| When the news of Kingdon Gould’s| possessors of the proudest Knicker- bration for our troops with the War ; Sr jovern- | sions office vic! ne ; + | bocke es were. sir hopke department. 41 ashington For, PUNEE ROY TIPADOD: OF ERM COVerns 1B: asa me ey ‘on en.|@PProaching wedding to Miss a where 16 Prater diner slatier at the War Department will ment. rossed commissions cannot be blot- | Was made public young George Gould) in this, of course, But there is some-| have sole charge of the New York MAIL IS ASSORTED BEFORE| ed, 4 ink must dry out, It was|was asked whether he thought the/thing stupid and silly in pretending |divislon after tt 18 mobilized on Y. |the custom of the Secretary to seat| would try to prevent the | Otherwise or in assuming that young | July 15, BP ea hae uimself about 9 o'clock at night at Sens ey eee eee eae with money which goes back tWo| MOTHER WITH TWO SONS on hb Onrere 2 , |a big desk in the anteroom of the of | generations should be barred by t o through all this mail. Matter ad-| Smee, roll up his sleeves and gail in,| “How can they stop tt," replied the|fact from marrying a girl poor | WANTS TO SAY FAREWELL. iressed to “Secretary of War" Is & While his secretary standing behind| pridegroom of three days la hig own grandmother wa ses Ha ats Totes oan utr | hi ' tters ich he dic-| say, he Gould boys have married a ‘ rally ,as experience has shown, stuff |} oh a0 | Lore) to bap TK Ca When people are in love—when the mania 3 tke Shy PL +4 ona Sal heen *¢ hat can be handled by the el tated at the other elde of the deak,|spirit’s there—you can't stop them.”| tions and according to the trad und shot out of Before the mail requiring the Seere-| ye signed commissions as fast as he| And he may bave had that ttle trip of the British leisure ¢ as well, It ‘ight bhai tetat fy tants ary’s attention reaches ‘him It 18|could write and) two messengers | to Philadelphia with pretty lttle Miss '8 the occasional Gayety girl aid that eho had ant nin a reding and relle : lal we | duced into England's famous 1 vad an sifted through several channels, Much | worked like men feeding and rellev’ | Laura Carter in his mind when he| who has kept them pee ork resiment and she boped ect enty | 128 8). Omari i BA! eg ny i ate h @ would not be called to t of the mail relates to subjects already |i ning him the commissions for his | spoke And any one who has spen As he Would foe be calles to fp n the files and this is handied by) signature, the other spreading them| But it 1s safe to assume that Mr aye at ‘ow port and looked over ith hahapnaal tat re 1G slerks or bureau heads. out along the floor to dry. Some-| ang Mrs. Ge Gould sr. never had exhibits at Batloy's STO eer ence catin cinnrg Nevertheless, the Secretary of War,|tines the room would be carpeted | 4 stigntest idea of interfering with | new blood | he wr > Pr tv n theso war times, 18 unable to touch |W) Coane the matrimonial preference of tneir Re Wa dso gt ia hla sny but the most timportant matters|PLENTY OF SIMON LEGREES) .01, jow could they do anything so FLEW FLAGS FROM WINDOW; rane Fae Sivpning wore. But hat reach him by mail during | Rane THE Witte GRARHING. tllogical when thelr own wedding was |cety ed at headquarte n the office hours. the morning long in the small hours of the ‘ on o »ve ma i Guard Day 1d¢ Many regular office hour In @ anorning| morning Secretary Baker goer home | He culmination of a match? EVIGTED BY GERMI GERMAN awe anne Ae he sees people, Often by eee | to sleep, His assistants say that no| scan Sean iin Theis a tt the anteroom of his office resembles! matter how late he keeps them, he T is the opinion of many persons meary to cail t ¢ ass meeting, In the assemblage! always on the job before they show I that ths sons of George Gould have oe ‘ a es ork for a demonatr ‘ 5 = » members of | Up in the morning, Uncle Tom had ‘ M Kee Put Up Colors a | Re Mannie SiEnalA Wheeled 6 these days are many members nothing on the Secretary of War.| Shown great sense in marrying W Ff pening. ) CA 9 le Becrsiary | 9 by 2 ‘ony Regular Army officer rank at Congress, seeking favors for rela-|\ncle ‘Tom had only one Simon Le-| the girla they wanted to marry with- as Hu From Mn aE TARA’ cantatda tives or constituents, Some of these gree cracking the whip behind him,| out regard to money or other small Street. He cod his ! N smen are stickers and take but every elfizen of this country 1s sent fom cate mal Gaara Dae it statesmen are stickers and take UP) oi ekers “boss” and is uncon-| considerations ‘eh they could) samuel McKee, an tronworke | S\Ones Hare # a great deal of the time of the Bec-| eaisusiy forcing him to dispose of a| @fford to ignore, Hoth took girls who|tne New York Navy Yard, with A soldier, e A uA etary. stint that piles up every morning| had earned their Mrs, King-| wife has occupied an apartment ain iametie F Along about 11 o'clock Mr, Baker,| like a mountain. = jdon Gould by tutoring In Italian, Mrs,| No, 291 Nineteenth Street, Brook 1, needs ch: 1 sained by experience, leaves his Pri-|o¢ the amount of work that pours in| dancing in Boston Tank Fewularly @ hat time. J m @ office and mingles with the on his colleague, finds enough on! ‘This fact al ets the newest | cently he was notified by V ; crowd in the anteroom, By that| hand. to keep him busy from 9.30| members of uid tomy teri ee ite pe nee ee ve ye % been. pretty well O'clock every morning until 7 o'clock | ™°™ : at No, 686 1 Avenue, that he m M ime the crowd has been prett every night. His lunch {# sent in| @bove the c husband-hunters, | vacate by Aug. 1. The agent & ness to 1 what analyzed by his able and diplomatic) ang ‘he ts it from a table along-| the pathetic y girls doomed to!no explanation for the order an to om New \ssistant, Mr, Keppel, a volunteer his desk, Only in emergencies! stark from & » season Me game than that he was acting under Y ‘ ebration dean of one of the schools in Col ut apparent fuss or excitement, but! Goulds was compelled to marry for al affair too Wend reporter lect tig s nia University The Secretary of the navy does not present the de-| ji, ‘ can be far| He recently hung the flags of E ss r War, obeying a huneh, as or, | Manda For DASA PeuENG. IAROD FNAL ean th if they had | Epeand and the United states from) @ SURPRISE IN PROSPECT FOR from Mr, Keppel, walks up to one of| the army ade ' : made more conventional marriages of | th} flags gave offense caine in GUARD'S CRITICS he crowd, shakes hand 1 sits; Of course the secretaries andthe disinterested quality of their| street through ihe wisewe thy ft ON 1 Guard f down on one of the leather-cc 1 Stenographers of the Secretaries of wives’ affections levees the German landlord al arade with k A wr, War and the Navy work just as hard . fects to the flag display, Mr hrown In to show ouches which encircle the room their bosses, Rutit is seldom that Miso the mere t of mu f 14 The World tnan t Baker, who is young in appours one of thgm résigue, wold support Widicales snrelligencs and have been good lodgers, eriigua journey, A seuwary niaditetimcntiecincmndcinciinsmaneah. “Unasedisretonantincin TO SOLDIER SONS George J. equipment will be in the respective armortes before the 15th and the men will make a splendid appeara The tacle to be presented by th thousands of young men and seasoned “vets” of the Mexican bor days | will, It was predicted at headquarters yesterday, surprise the most severe National critics and opponents of the | Guard, In | the absence of Gen. O'Ryan it was stated at headquarters to-day |by Major Reagan that in oll likelihood | preference would be given by military | men to a parade, It involves the least work in pre} short time, bui leas reaching than a review, reception or adinner, Its beneficial effect upon cruiting has been pointed out by en. O'Ryan, It will impress the greatest of cities, too, that the coun- try is at war, and the reception that the boys will get wil! do much to off- set the pernicious influenc f Anarch- {sts and anti-conseriptionists, whose | work has been carried on secretly since police and Federal authorities began keeping an eye on them, Gen, O'Ryan and his subordinates are in favor of making the celebra- tion Statewide. ‘There are four regi- ments In the State made up of reat- tered companies, ‘on these can par- ticipate, It is quite well known in vational Guard ¢ that In the small towns where there is but one company of militia the enthusiasi tho residents is about double tha the big elty peop GAFFNEY IS REJECTED AS AN IRISH DELEGATE candinavian - Dutch Committee Turns Down Former American Consul at Munich, STOCKHOLM, July 7- iaffney, former T, St. Amertean Consul Gen eral at Munich, and Chatterton-Hill, wn Englishman, have themselves on the mimittee as eland, John failed to impose undinavian representatives the of it would appear from a state ment by Chatterton-Hill published in the Svenska Da 1 His statement says Camille Huy: mans, Secretary of the committe ufter hoporably receiving Bt. John Gaffney and me, found it proper to warn the d ates against Germany's emissaries who are circulating about Stockholm under the pretense of bat tling for the oppressed peoples.” Chatterton-Hill also accuses undinavian-Dutch committee of de- ring to serve the endy of English imperialism and of boing deaf to peals for “countries oppressed by this mperialism,” such as treland, Indla Persia and Egypt. He protests against ccusation, inst St. John Gaffney and me of being Germany's emis SHOW THE BELGIANS QUR COPPER MINES Visiting Delegation Greatly Im pressed by Ricl f Mon tana Ore Be BUTTE, July 7.—The Betkian Wa Mission donned overalls yesterday and went down into one of t per mines that will contri uct to ending the war. ‘I n reached Montana he Northw The mining activity of ore called to Baron M f C H lustrial a ty Industria tarlly into se Kaiser, and of the ¢ that f lowed,’ Hoth among those ported th who rem fat h , when you have Don’t Forget when,you have pain in your stomach or bowels that Bell-ans gives the quickest and surest relief, It’s harmless, Get a 25c BELLANS FOR tration and is over in a| the effect of seeing lee State's troops en masse is more , Duteh | the INDIGESTION, POLICE PATRONS One Winner of 20 to 1 Shot Lost When Alleged Slayer Fled, Swann Hears, The District Attorney’s office is in possession of evidence showing that | Alfredo Cocch!, the fugitive mur- ‘derer of Ruth Cruger, ran a hand- book on the races in his motoreyele repair shop on West One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Street and that New York policemen were among his steady patrons, | Whether this relation between Cocchi and the polic was instru. |mental in aiding his escape ts now | being investigated. The new evidence reached District Attorney Swann through a man em- ‘ployed near Cocchi’s shop. He asked that his name be kept secret. Cocchi, |he said, was not the principal in the | gambling, but had a man of mean# as | his backer. The witn also gave Mr. Swann the name of a policeman who placed a $5 bet with Cocohi on a 20 to 1 shot three days be- fore the motorcycle man fled. The horse won, and the police man, it is alleged, is still out his $100. The Grand Jury yesterday heard Commissioner of Accounts Wallatein, two of his stenographers and Henry D, Cruger, father of the murdered girl, Mr, Wallstein and the stenographers were called in the case against Lieut, | Browne, who 1s accused of having |perjured himself at the Wallistein hearing. The presentation of the evi- dence against him was finished with and Mrs. Arthur Brown, who will tes- tty Tuesday. The accused Lieutenant again via- ited the Prosecutor's office and asked for the privilege of going before the Grand Jury. He expressed his wil- | ingness to sign @ waiver of immu- | nity, Mr. Cruger began the story of his dealings with the police from the time the girl disappeared until her body was found in the excavation, It was known beforehand that he was ready to tell of the manner in which the olice had met his suggestions that Ruth would not have stayed away | from home of her own free will, their insistence on the high moral char- cter of Coccht and the reports they made to him suggesting that the girl was anywhere but in tne piace where her body was finally found. Mr! Cruger’a testimony was not finished and he will return next week. To expedite the inquiry Mr. Swann has asked the jurors to sit an extra hour every day, But even if they do this it is likely the inquiry will last a month or longer. The State Department has in- formed the Prosecutor it is “hopeful” of getting Cocchi back, Cominissioner Woods, with — his hands freed by the ending of the Wall- stein inquiry, Is preparing to resume his Investigation of the activities of the Motoreyele Squad, to find to what extent grafting prevailed among the men. Te Liquor Sold Soldiers in Newburgh, . % Hears, | submarine warfare policy last Janu- SUNK BY TORPEDO Four Members of Crew Killed, but All Naval Gunners j Escape. WASHINGTON, July 1—~The Amer+ lean steamship Orleans of the Orien- , tal Navigation Company, which was the first ship fying an American flag to, brave @ transatlantic voyage after Germany announced her ruthiess ary, has been torpedoed and sunk by’ a German submarine, Four of the crew were drowned, but all the members of the armed naval guard were saved, The State Depart- ment, im announcing the sinking, withheld the time and place of the attack. When the Orleans, which was « vessel of 2,898 tons gross, formerly known as the Avellaneda and lator as the Menaptha, arrived at Bordeaux in February, she was welcomed witn & great demonstration. Members of the naval gun crew are William B, Christ, chief gunners mate, Lynn, Mass.; John E. Maloney, gunners mate, New York City; Lee Kichardson, boatswain's mate, Lake- view, Chicago, and Seamen Fred i. Despain, Peoria; Fred H. Freeman, Indianapolis, Vt; David M. MoCiena- ghan, Ciarement, N. H.; Edmond J, Norton, Bast Boston; Martin A, ‘Truss, Detroit; Kichard P, Waiton, Atnata, and Prank L. West, Midvale, N ine American members of the crew, with the addresses of nearest rela. tuves, w as follow: Thomas C, Sorenson, mate, Danish, naturalized; Hichard C, Boekius, sec« ond mate, Westchester, Pa; Herbert M. Winners, third mate, Highland Park, Ul.; Jasper Hutchins, seaman, New Brunswick, N. J.; F. A. Hil seaman, Spokane, Wash.; E. Gabrie!- sen, chief engineer, No. 643 Fifty- second Street, Brooklyn; H. L. Kelly, first assistant engineer, Baltimore; Samuel Ekens, second assistant en- gineer, No, 658 Fiftieth Street, Brook- lyn; L, J. Larsen, wireless operator, Box 136, Rural Free Delivery, Seattie: Henry ‘Jackson, third assistant en gineer, No. 195 Twenty-ninth Street, Brooklyn. Manhattan Beach BATHS “OCEAN bathing resort Sport Features | New Bath Houses Handball Courts alee Medicine Ball Basel Water Admission to Bathe Gundaye and Ioliday jays Days.’ to soldiers at tant Federal Attorney Roosa several special agents of the Depart- ment of Justice thither from this city yesterday. They will arrest saloon keepers violating the liquor prohibt- |tlon provisions of the Draft Law ly that SUNDAY Complaints that liquor ts sold open- | Newburgh sent As-| and | HOUSEWIVES OF THE LAND WILL BE INSPIRED TO READ IN SUNDAY'’S WORLD “the gingham clad _ soldier: in our homes will do as much to win the war as the khaki clad soldiers in the trenches.” So declares RAY LYMAN WILBUR, President of Stanford University and now the Director of the Conservation Department of the Food Administration. Will the Irish Win? Only Irishmen can settle the Irish question and make Erin a great self-governing democracy, says DUDLEY FIELD MALONE EDITORIAL SECTION TO-MORROW'S Sundays Week Da ‘Take Brighton Beac! ‘Traing at Brooklyn Get off at Sheep and transt Beach Car or take Free Bi he m y te Maa mata WORLD

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