The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1917, Page 12

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- - - - . mene - —_——— mous Ileroes ~ , Srramsewe ve : (Puree ’ Peed Daly Macey how wes! pore atine Company, Noa 68 te ot the l , S, Na vy PALE POLITE Prenton 6 Perk Row . . , Terhune Pr UE at te ¢€ , By Albert Payson T a! — Mile et Mew Tork an Recond-iase Marine : ; | Sabah, Giet, @ ten Dees Catilg Gs, Gin ten Oak Oaeng OU ; wre f No, 27. JOUN WINSLOW and the Smashing of the peerny . nat 6 & nen on Oe events Heo tone ' mie the srs M0 sirens one — hu 4a3 6 naval officer ehe bed t 7 — ; ond tm the ¢ Were ee y , , Jof the U. & warehis arge, he was 6 ’ WHAT NEW YORK EXPECTS OF THEM, 16 ten tasree Goued the Suskims tor the Stat New Y r venes on es, 4 Aiabame wa wh part, British mar ' . ra f . et in race emmunition we that the Empire State « . @ programme thet harbored ber = W of food conservation ar ¥ ‘ guarantee efficient co id run for to the Operation in thie commonwe with Federa acute for the pro “a F es tection of America’s food sup, ® | sae ten Masse oe ; Gov, Whitman does well to let it be known at the outset that he the Alabama had preyed uy During that time whe had mercham ships and bad | i i« will permit wo political t P |, Legislators arriving at Albany with specially prepared riders to be attached to euch « bill can check them at the etation or chip them home @ < amounting to $6,647.¢ ‘h $f thus deseribes th A Congress has furnished @ never-to forgotten con of } | Bhe had no aeknow not to treat @ food measure framed to meet the gr emergency » Sawer send ' ae adjudge her captures * roamed The people of this State demand something better from their! Legislature, | sienacasininessiil eatin | longing to American citizens, ber erican armed vessels From |the present war given “ald and France I thie, it is evide at U boat t not the first in w to a bet Another Allied drive begun on the western front unex Plained as yet in Berlin by a victorious Hindenburg retreat. wotally gland=did " e Alabama her to come out. THE DEEPER NOTE. On the morning of June 19, 1864, the Alabama «# ed out of part under the protection of a powerful French warship w scorted her far beyond the three-mile Imit As soon as the French ship had re the Alabama. Perhaps Semmes relied on hia French escort or on Mritish ships fa protection. Perhaps he underestimated the K i ps there wag hot room to run away, At all eve K reed dow! upon the Alabama, Semmes poured ¢ es at the Unite States vessel, ESTERDAY saw the beginning in dead earnest of the exam- ination of 75,000 young New Yorkers designated as the city’s! first quota from which men are to be selected for the se rvice| of Uncle Sam, Nobody expects the machinery of selection to work flawlessly from the start. There will be inevitable minor difficulties to be down upom This did not stop the Kearsar rush. She bt n tin THe adjusted, not to speak of trouble made by persons deliberately plan- Pimhed se at tee The Wen ¥ tow hae} ae ie on i vage yt poth ships n pg ina wide ¢ ning to throw sand in the wheels. waged hi p In those days, as now, Yankee marksmansh!p was deadly, At the end of an hour Semmes ran up t flag of surr At once Winslow gave the "Cease order, He drew near ta the conquered cruiser and prepared to lower a t rst _ then @ the Kearsar 1—the Ala- Weperennreeeneeaty 3 srepared toe, The round-up of registration dodgers, the cross-examination of | liars and would-be evaders, the handling of “conscientious objectors” are certain, however, to produce a noise and pother out of all propor-! tion to their real significance. bama open } Alabama Opens } Following © a dash for the safety Behind the confusion of running down the slackers, the selective 3 Ripe Aue ok - of Sob Nea ae yea ; ; tai | — The Arse gave chase, sending volley machinery will speedily settle into a smooth, steady efficiency volley into the fiying Alabama. In fifteen minutes Semmes he surrendered and that the Alabama was sinking. ‘This was true. Winslow found that the Alabu:na was shot to pleces, | Humanely he went to the rescue, He used ev to save the smashed vessel's crew from drowning. He took as imany of them on board the | ® signaled that thanks to the pre-eminent truth that the vast majority of young Americans are not seeking to escape the duty they owe the nation, but are soberly waiting to be assigned the parts in its great task for which they are best fitted, : “We are ready to do what is right.” That simple statement from the hearts of a young wage-earner, and his wife in this city, when they heard his number had been drawn among the first, voices a deep, dominant Americanism that will drown out the squealing of cowards and the cackling of conscienceless exemption seekers. New York should be foremost in sounding and sustaining the bigger pote. By their readiness to meet the test and take their| places this city’s young men can do much to make the draft appear) in the eyes of the nation more than ever what it truly is—a mighty | roll of honor. By Sophie Irene Loeb. Instead of the soft turf, green fields] creased with the trend of tir + and fresh air—that was the horse's| that the superior master of five Coupright, 1917, by The L'rme Pubitehing O% | particular precinct. when he first] may cause the horse’ Kearsarge as ho could and put the rest aboard a passing British ship, the | Deerhound. Semmes and his officers those: tablet aboard the Deerhound. Then Semmes induced the Deerhound's captain to Winslow's lawful custody and to a Britis port. In welcomed as a hero. After the war a bill was sent to England fc American citizens by the Alabama and by the re privateers, And Great Britain had the pleas $15,600,000 in gold for the privilege of having & on rived to be amon y him out of and, Semmes was all the a t of the An » of pay Iped our amage done to !o-Confederate our country ales, 3 so] Courant, 1017, by Toe Hrew Wubiishing Co, | has been offered $8 a day tn a antp- nses (The New York Evening World.) building yard ‘hing nice to ing you,” re« Jar “But it's bad soliloquy to | ¢¢ HY are you home go early} “Well, you don't expect to hire a the city with the It {8 all very well in July for Germans to wear paper (The New York Kvoning World.) came into existence—with the advent | change as follows in accordance with to-day?” asked Mrs. Jarr.| carpenter, do you?” asKed Me las What would 1 do in e ¥ ST wee en old e Cusik] of cor arc s rounk ol. c e pee dis “As fol unition works, I'd think or you can’t, shoes and, lacking these, to be advised to go barefoot. But | AST week when old Jimmie Cusik |] of commercialism he found hims: man himself expecta of & “I didn't expect you till se { asiihis A RRIAEeAR Gin waken and you mias- what about December? | took the reins in his hands to] in city streets under terrorlzing cx f they'd pay Ger & your usual time—too late for dinner.” “Great Scott! Then you are sore it me for being In plenty of time?” ried Mr. Jarr, ‘Won't nothing please you women folks?” “A Mttle rs arity would,” replied Mrs. Jarr, “But if you come tn early n the afternoon one day and away after supper another day, how can home night after vo | drive his horse car which he] ditions, is my Saviour, I shall not his done for forty In the winters the snow and sleet He maketh me to lie down in IN JUSTICE TO MISS TODD. years, It was for/ have been his undving on tho asphalt; | green pastures; He leadeth me be: the last time.} and in summer the intense heat in} the still waters, He restoreth m SepeeeAsA Air / The horse car] crowded areas has laid rim low. jeadeth me EVENING WORLD did an injustice to Miss Helen Todd} by assuming, in an editorial published July 18, that she planned te take a delegation of east side mothers to Wash- she'd qualify as an expert. She has been making ammunition for us for a year—she calls them biscuits!" "S-s-s-sh! If she hears you she WILL leave!" whimpered Mrs, Jarr. ‘On, dear, it's bad enough for you to home when you ure not ex- d, but when you upset the ser- r scenie i he would miss any ng y. pr eded to the nd promptly im one, A ext train 1s 6.13," sald the HL business went out] ‘The old spacious barn that was «| sumanity's amid asmallcan-| palace to his predecessor has given] “yea, though I walk in the shadow nonade of cam-} place to the narrow confines of th | of the valley of death I fear no evil, eras, and now it ; here it says there's a train * said Mrs, Jarr, looking up timetable, sa morning train, Bee, it i i ' ray | able where ev: Inch of space} for His rod and His staff are no . By t7| Yants by talking as you do, so t ‘A. Mt the gateman, ington “to protest to the President and Congress against the sending 19 relegated to] means more rent. Thus every minute | jonger raised against. me. ou espace A 10) NSPE § MOFEEN cant neae you And the Javes hel ah Rows Walt fa id ui 1 ° de is cross, anyway, 8 he hd t of young men of the cast side to war.” Miss Todd rec ently made an} the rear and wil! | of his existence is regulated from the rtrude is ¢ the h ” “Don' roy be e mised He prepares my food and anoint-| just waiting an excuse to up and hacen fle . nigiie sae ~ ie eth my head when £ am down eave us. Do you know what sor- || MT GerRIERE einem ee FARE “Surely goodness and mercy doth} vants are asking these days? And if|*? Spend the night with them at their 1 follow me all the daya of my lite” ‘ i Renee Seat co in Hast Malaria?" interrupted | empted ats, every lone com all t | you-say you can't afford to pay that (7 5 wpnat's why I'm home| Muter taking half a seat for bknsel Speed the day when this worthy |euch they'll tell you they can get and halt for his bundles. beast of burden, a8 a means of money] $4 @ day in the ammunition ites Were opened a vas ra, all) carryin, (for the train and prot only come to life] dollar mark standpoint. His loads in a fhoving ple-| have been piled high to get the most ture reel for fu-} out of him And all the humane or- almost without exception the mothers objected to sending their song) ture citizens to point out as past bis-| xanizations in the world have Feen | tory. o 7 ainst to war because they hud been taught to believe that our fight against |‘ MOSBIAL SA MAYO NIA SHON Ee BER: the G Gove May It be sald, to the credit of the| the dominion of dollars. fe usrman Soverament we officials, that they have at last ar-| It takes long, hard battles on the “T have told all my east side friends,” says Miss Todd, “that I} rived at good horse sense, When wo] part of these sympathizers to secure was standing for this war because it meant the survival of eve ything | think of the atored up and latent en- | lemtslation in the Interest of this pee 2 lergy that can be mechanically mi mal who cannot speak for himself. that we loved and cared to live for; that it meant more to us than|°"® “ |to take the place of the horse—energy] Occasionally brutal drivers are de-| human life. To President Wilson I said that the women of the east} secuted for thelr |that can't see or sweat or suffer—we| nounced and side were opposed to the-draft because of almost utter ignorance as| Wonder that the of torture has} abuse of the horse; but all this effort! to the cause of the war and I beg ged the President to send over into|"°* been over long ago for this faith- | {9 small in comparison with the many ; ful friend of man. wrongs under which he works, these districts people who would tell them why their children wore| asany, many letters come to me| When, ob, when, will the near ked to go and die; that it was for Russia’s sake and for safety here! from all sources from sympathizers] sighted business ian become mor in America, not for Morgan, and I asked him to give me some mes-|9f the horse, solleiting help for the) far-secing and change horse-power investigation of food conditions on the east side for the International] Child Welfare League, While making her inquiries she found that ee one been tac. | Carly. Jenkins says we must come Mra, dure | making, will be used only asa prop. |tories, Why, Gertrude says her|°Ut before the crimson ramblera are| two ie é mit them, erty of pleasure or for light loads, | brother-in-law, who 1s a carpenter, | 80D ° , rty of ple ht loads, | prother-in MESA aon eeanlahe Uwenih nal CMe ved at East Malart, Mrs. Jarr Was in a smouldering raged! Bone till red-nosed men like him stop] “phat man 1 sat with had mackerel rambling,” remarked Mrs, Jarr. “But| in: und the brine from. | 1 had forgotten all about going oui) Mes ruined my dress!” she declared, s nl ok said) Mr. Jarry there, Still, it will be better than a seat with’ forgo going out in wintertim Do you rr a pat of butter off where member the winter day we went out} sat and he carried a mess of Camem to see how beautiful East Malaria| bert cheese in hig lap, 1 got some of Goiyright, 1917, by the Vrew Publishicg Co, (The BGK BCG Rtera nae recuit that on mo, te { ‘ ” fal oene OR: AD af wel At this juncture they were |] OTB of Jokes are being written about the “rookies,” but somebow, It'8| nothing for a cold fog? How cold| by Mr, Jenkina on the plattorae ne | | awfully hard for a woman to see anything “funny” about a man In | their house was! We had to go oul-|he looked painfully after the out: : ardened commuters why “Morgan’s war. Bachelor Girl Reflections | By Helen Rowland York Evening World), 2 4 side to get warm!" in, “didn't know you wer gage that I could give to the w : | dumb brute whose duties are becom-| for motor-mechanism as the street kbhaki—to see anything, in fact, but a halo and an aura of heroism. “Well, ure Wo KoINg oUt to get cool L weh aie eat ge that I could give to the women. ing more difficult daily as progress] car company has done in sending ; moa now?” asked Mr. Jarr. “That's what 1 went to the smoke His message was this y to these women that on them more plods him on to Herculean effort, the last horse car to the scrap heap? What makes a girl miserable when she {s in love mp Heine sally Li to ealte Un oy tee whist and I forgot m than on any other source of strength we are depending for security| Especially 1s his hard labor appar-| 1 wish there could be a law passed {s not the fear that her sweetheart may kiss another | mogquitoes, and then the Jenkinsea|” “Don't you care, old top in America; that e hild tha . ent in a #reat congested community | compelling light’ service for this woman, but the fear that he will WANT to, will say they were the first they've had | Jarr. é in America; that every child that is sent, is sent to defend those that/ emt !9 & a neething city. dumb servitor whose woes have in- aici this summer, 1 don't want to get out? "But I do care," remarked Jenkina, | remain, and that the great thing that makes us able to go on is that|*"°? ** ™ iii taba tide A man’s idea of a “congental” wife is one who can| ive for gute’ Ge mney amaye takes) gadiy, “I was bringing somethiog me for a walk to show me the nice| for supper out with me!” listen to his club-room stories while she meditates on| little home 1 can get near theirs, at When they all rived at th we believe that this war will end all wars” | ae ‘ : i Miss Todd says that for both her trips to Washington she paid! To-Day’s Anniversary | . . & bargain for $8,000 cash, or If you]! Jenkins cottaze Mrs, Jenkins was to the future of the soul, and counts the eggs she is haven't cash you can get It for only| polite to scalp her husband when hi her own expenses, feeling that they were her contributio ayy putting into the pudding, twice that much tn payments—any-| came home with guests but no din 6 ) p on to the SNATIUS LOYOLA, founder of} Droseed as « beggar, he m: ti thing down, ner material, and he had to bie to th cause of democracy, | T GNATIC ie “ity sk te MDAIG, eulferine teu “It Isn't_me that wants to lve In| v utessen store, the order of Jesuits, began Ife] way back to Spatn, suffering severe t A grouchy man may not succeed in killing & WOM |the ‘guburbay” said Mr dare, “Ut'a| ant this lovely!" wala. Mrs, Jaren’ | aga soldier, In 1521 he was as-/hardsbips. Arrived in Spain, at the ARE Ye an's love, but he can browbeat {t into a comatose state, | you. You say you would like to live] “I've always wanted to Hye in th ‘ | in the defense of Bampeluna,|@ge of thirty-three: he resus nis there on account of the children—youl country, where you have fresh vege Letters From t he Peo p le | sisting oho. Peench when af cducation, which had been neglected —_— always tell the Jenkinses th 1 everything! A Wite's At, hawinicva | Spain, against thi 9 fro: ehildhood, and laboriously Domesticity, like olives, {8 an acquired taste. Some women take nine le ri the United States for Aritish subjects. | cannon ball fractured bis right leg] worked his way through a untversity if To the KAitor of ‘The Evening World |1f wo, tet me know where in this city and a splinter injured his left, He] course. He went to Paris in 1528, and |years to get used to a husband—and others take nine husbands before Am I lable to be deported to Italy | - READER. | was carried to the neighboring ae | APICES Other Abnsengs wih lua awn they get used to matrimony, if my husband should be called and) The British Recruiting Mission to|te of Loyola and in the weary chapel of the Church of sumone ae does not serve? He is ap Italian, | the United tates has headquarters | yonths during which he lay stretched|on Aug. 15, 1534 Loyola and tive ‘The average city man seems to imagine that planting a garden is a 2PORE the Draft Law went into/can't, A young man in order to be Tam an American by birth, Have 1/4! No, 280 Broadway, and ts making! on his couch tried to while away the| other students took the vows of celi- sort of cross between playing a game of golf and digging for fishing effect and before training camps | ° ee romulae nited {tates are bu lost my rights by marrying an alien? | every possible effort to ratae a large| time by reading the “Lives of the | iy ond the onexation ot) tor officers were thought of, therol si ycury oid and. uninatrieds Te aap te | M. F. Vv. | force of men here, ; * rus was planted in his Nhs : arene | WOre were many young men who tried to/are older than twenty-six you eoutd vr | Saints." ‘Thu Y and the conversion of infidels, Such ‘ceaasas Sera’ C f th sulur 1 hood | i The bill that would deport aliens; v ty-flve Cents, heart the seed which soon was to lead| was the beginning of the famous enter the oMecers’ corps of the reg tell a little false 1 for the sake who refused to answer th summons has not yet becc nm to his founding of the Hoclety of| Society of Jesus. The plan of tho Whether @ spinster {a an “old matd” or “bachelor girl” depends en-|army from civilian life in the face of patriotism, but you can't get out a ” Hue of @ one! yo paw order was lait before Pope Paull tirely on whether she thinks of marriage as something she “missed,” or as |% Kreat number mbaclee, ving a wite If you're married, military | To the Bat ‘The Eecning W ne a law,| Please publish the v @ question as to whether aliens, ° Hece dated 1798, ray ; c s undé ey ny eM ed." were rejected for West Vo! cause army office ore @ young man’ h nb valled to serve also | dg. | WOMAN'S head; above thie is written! Loyola was thirty years old when) it} hut on fhe understanding that |something & they wore not tall enough and who|who was married succeeded in hoi pha! "2 q fo ser Also # unde! 1 therty and, underneath, the date, On| he recovered from his injuries, He Stn uhetnenn ie the aly thee RE ® had themselves whacked on the head|coming a regular officer, That young” elded. wife's citizenship t# the) the tac Wy the usual wreath and one jeft his family and friends and made granted them a constitution; Loyola A man will spend a whole evening rooting for the Allies at the club—|in order to ralse a lump which would|/man talked matters over with his same as that of her husband. Sent, written in the middcaper. |& Pilgrimage to the Holy Land, In} Was elected President and established | and then come home and act just like a Prussian around the house, make up the difference tn helght.| wife. She was & good sort and cone Bekah Recvatitas. H Bueitay, . : tne Chu of the Virgin of Mount] at Ruane op S1Ceiot of tie rate wld inde welaht ana ated tonnage|was obtained, ‘The young wan "tote gf 4 fo the Editor of The Evening World: ‘To the Faitor of 1, ng World: Serrat he hung up his arma and/ of the * onducted ite is ci i Fatitor of The Brening Wo ffairs until, worn out with laboi . wl a by herolo feeding, his examinations, got his commission Would you please let me know if Kindly inform me on wigs day Dec, vowed constant obedience to God) *falrs unt gp OUs with labors ans Somehow, a man never can understand why, on the days when his|by heroic feeding, = thls nl lieutenant, and then y pr ns, he July 1, 1556, 4 there is any British registration in 9, 1866, fell. ~» © P. and the Church, at the of sixty-five, food disagrees with him, his wife and everybody else dots, come, but there jg one thing that married his wife all over again, ‘ ) t i )

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