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! ' ; ; 4 Hi : id | Gt the Post-Office ot New York a Gowns Clase wo Prestas | For, Sagions Se Mat we pateens ont wantaiee Jn, {pe inieract onal eel STE SE re vee NO, 00506 VOLUME 68....... MUTINY IN THE KAISER’S FLEET. ra pe reveals a rift in the OTINY on German ware armor that may well route the Allies to fresh courage aud resolve Che Imperial Gerr Government, it was assumed, could at least smous fighting machine. Yet, dis cipline or no discipline, it appears tome of these perfectly drilled wnils of militarism can still realize at moments that they are human beings witih # claim to life and happiness beyond that which an ambi- tlop-consumed autocracy recognizer The trouble in the navy is the result of ideas spread in Germany from Russia, declares the Imperial Minister of Marine. igh ‘The explanation seems reasonable, aleo significant. ‘ Ivan calls to Hane: “How much more of this can you stand? Flow much more will you «tand? If Hans answered only from the fields or from the cities of the Vatherland hope might till be long deferred. But with Hans an- tweriny. at the risk of lis life, from the ordered decks of a German battleship, who can say what may happea—or how soon? ———— + Coust wpon every Pp Judge Hylan says he “will take orders from no man.’ Perbaps in an catremity be might respond to a suggestion —— DID VON BERNSTORFF KNOW? TIMONY which tends to prove that German conspirators T placed bombs aboard the Lusitania to do tho dastardly job a German submarine did first, raises a etill uglier question as to the limits of outrage to which the Imperial Government and its agents carried their plottings in this—then nentral—cointry. If it should be established that, at the time advertisements “appeared warning Americans not to sail on the Lusitania, Count von Bernstorff, the German Ambassador ot Washington, knew that bombs were to be placed on board to destroy the vessel on the voyage acrocs, then the crime of the Lusitania would loom, if possible, larger, with a yet blacker element of murderous premeditation rough has already been disclosed to show Americans that the Imperial! German Government deliberately treated the United States as nothing more than a convenient vantage ground from which to plot, murder and pay money to its spies and agents. There would be little surprise, only a grin tightening of deter- mination on the part of this nation, if it proved that the sinking of the Lusitania was planned with a double concentration of Tnrperial German ruthlessness and diplomatic duplicity. By this time we know the marks. eseninandeciiaiais anicgstesianeiisans Who said ft wasn't @ series? | ALL-WOOL FOR ARMY AND NAVY. HERE will be no grumbling at the decision of the National Defense Council and the manufacturers of woollen goods that the army and navy shall have first call on all-wool clothing. Tf it proves there is an actual shortage of wool and therefore a limit to the number of all-wool garments that can be made, Ameri- cans at home will have but one voice as to who shall wear them. Winter is just ahead. American fighters on land and sea must go through their first experience of cold weather warfare in trenches (perhaps nearer the front than practice trenches) and on wind-swept waters, amid the ‘icy sleet and slush and the dead, penetrating chill that are more constant features than snow in the winters of North- ern France, The British and French in the trenches suffered terribly during the first winter of the war, before they learned by practical expe- rience how to drain trenches and before their equipment was better planned to meet the conditions. The United States has the benefit of that experience and its lessons. Onur fighters should not have to face their first winter with anything short of the most complete, up-to-date cold weather equip- ment that can be supplied. The Government assures us the American Army and Navy will he the best fed of any forces on lund or sea They ought to be aleo the bert clad. The “all-wool” th 1 y wear shi ve all wool—no sub- stitutes or “nearly-as-warm” ’s accepted +. COLUMBUS. “What treasure found he? Chains and pains and sorrow Yea, all the wealth those noble seekers find Whose footfalls mark the music of mankind! "Twas his to lend a@ life; ‘twas Man’s to borrow "Twas his to make, but not to share, the morrow.” Letters From A Plea for Nurses. Yo the Raitor of The Evening World Your editorial on Red Crose nurses is a masterpiece. My wife !s a trained |? nuree, 90 1s her cousin, and a nioce is in training, Tho hospitals aro call. |!" tel ing for applicants. Let the People |beattn in tbe performance of dut PROPESSIONA Wants Mik Mot {lk question and hits Why ta it \\ home, after! tat hundreds of milk bottles couting me, ) many years of investigation, call your {us vente aplece van be gathered at all attention {to the underferding of |)! pater re 4 person could Murase, syotang’ in our hospitals ye cee wvery asavtine af Pa of iAet nutrition ts essential to main- |, se baits i BES NA tain good health in this profesvion,|U02e OF bottles H oehtan.. Ne Why should we not insist that toe ee out on, ory atone Management of hospitals lve UP tol ii. aii oo i a nik comp were compelled thelr contract on the question of i) took att, 1 Proper and sufficient foot for young the cost of girle who often sacufice life ant bottles would not less? Bhould they not be compelled to do got 8.G. | i SAV BANK | ¢ I) NGS By James Coprright, 1917, by the Prem Publishiog Co, (The New York Brenig ou NO. 11—CAMP McCLELLAN, ANNISTON, ALA, UR YEARS before the Civtl War opens’ George B. McClellan re tired from the ariny with the rank of Captain. He had seen muc of war and felt in clined to the pur- confilet of thres American observers with the British during the crimean War, he j m ~~ had learned the profession of arma in stern wchool. McClellan was an enginect as well, had surveyed railroad lines, mapped boundaries through the wilderness and helped to spread ci tion in the far places. So he turned to busl- ness and became a railroad oxec! ‘Then war between the States bogai McClellan immediately offered hie sword and was named Major-General Mexico, and as one) C. Young manded at Antietam, the tirat victory | for the Union arms, But be etill was | in bad favor with power political | jelements, which avcusea hit 9 rifcing the fruits of tls vietory by hesitating to follow tt up, The truth eerns to have been that the fight was so nearly & draw that Meciellan | would have courted disaster by any ake it decisive, In any event he was agein deprived of his command, ‘once more the Army | of the Potomac wallowed in defeat Theres was not a ray of light until Gettysburg. That was tho supreme effort of the Conteder worn itself out in the face of #0 much hard fightin ‘The Democratic Party nominated McCletlan for President in 1864. He resigned from tho army and entered |the lists against Lincoln, losing by a vote of 000 against 1,800,000, | | Afterward b niified with eo neering enterprises ond held sev 4 being elected Governor New sey in 1877 MeClellan had a large popular fol- dowing that believed he could have directed the war better than Lincoln or any of those in power, in 8 ot of Volunteers. It was for this citl- gen-woldier that the army camp at Anniston, Ala, bas been ) Division is now bely tere, composed of tro! | Jersey, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware and the District of Coluinbia McClellan struck the first succes biow of the war for the Union | venting what !s now West Virginia ‘trom falling tnto Confederate hands In recognition of this auspicious b ginning be Was transferred to the Army of the Potomac und on Noy, 1, 1861, becarme Commander in Chief of |the iederal for Bull Run had just been fought, the Government and | people were stunned from that defeat, land tho hour seemed dark Indeod for jthe Union cause, Melellan set him self to the task of upbuilding an army that could win even after it had lost. Discussion has not ceased even at bis late day of Motlellan’s fitness to While he was training b raw troops and slowly moulding them an offective force, the whole th cried "On to Richmond!" Mo- llan cautioned patience. His en- emles called it temportzing. He was |forced to act and began the pei jsular campaign of 1882. Disa ator At no point ¢ forces. make on the thirtieth day of McClellan wa shelved. troops were gathered for a rushing blow, but the blow never landed, Bull Run was fought again; again the Confederates won, McClellan was recalled, Te com- ‘eels When | : Collide 4 recent Issue of “Fight there 1 a letter written by a soung offlecy of the Royal Mlying is in whieh be describes @ ro- awble incident “I bad often wondered what It would f Uke to see a machine coming straight for one and to know that a collision was inevitable,” says | this officer, | “I bad the experience this after- oon, only the collision did not take 1 wan on patrol with five machines” over the Ines ay, Loam writing this like @ j novel, butt feel Nhe it—and hud gone Into & cloud bank “Just before going in Tt saw the bux on my right turning to cross In front of mo, All of a sudden I saw Ja machine Just (be same as my own appear out of th» cloud about fifty feet away, making straight for me. “Instinetively I jammed my nose hard down and went uy near @ nose- dive as possible; the other bus did the same, J turned; tho other turned linto me, T was in a cold perspira- tion ail by this time, so ought ‘Her fl am going 4 well ba complete it Lwent, We got and biff! my ma- rage in the elouds 1 like a nightm seo that muchino do- ing ity utmost to crash tuto mo. “I think Lean say I have had the full horrors of a collision tp the alr |and T ean st | tradictory By Copsnaht. Ly the Press Pubvelis STAYVER was s@ying to} “e me today that sho won-| cost.” Te wae ait wat y times they were even startin, t was all well enough when it was dered what was the cause “Why didn’t you buy a Liberty At the Snails of the wie eat just on the surface—when the other of most of the unhappy marrisges,”| Bond then?" asked Mrs. Jarr fenes daeriad . y jgirl had to make the real sacrifice remarked Mrs. Jarr, apropos of| “Because I hadn't the price for the °"C® Adopted a pronounced ml'itary/and she could have the glory without nothing. | sac- | where married coupies have thesame| got Liberty Bor tastes in common, and sometimes I think {t's because they don't have the Same tastes In commen.” “What do you mean by # statement?” asked Jare. Well,” was the repl. havo the samo tastes in common they | get Jealous of each other—say, where| husband and wife are both actors or| artists; and when they haven't the, same tastes in common they bore) each other,” “I don't thing it's a m ¢ e,” remarked Mr. Jarr, it is a matter of distaste way, I never considered marri: a) failure. I consider it a success, in the! majority-of cases. Like In the busl-| ness world, we only bear of the fall- ures, and wo do not realize that to au) occasional fallure hundreds of suc-| cessful firnis are running along| smoothly and making money. We hear of an occasional divorce among thousands of Lappy pairs jogging along together, and then we moral tre, | “Well, Um not morallzing,” re. marked Mra, Jarr. ‘I was wonder ing if any unhappy wives leave home because for days their husbands think of nothing and talk of nothing but tho baseball games.” “The World Serle: asked Mr, Jarr dolefully, for he had lost al! bis} bets. “{ don't know what you call them,| but I hud boped over till next summer, Suppose 1 had been crazy to seo those games?" “It would have done you no goo'd," sald Mr. Jarr. ‘i couldn't have got you @ ticket to see them. Twenty dollars a scat is what they asked for last Tuesday—and then it rained,” “And I was glad of it,” sald Mrs. Jarr, “In these hard times, with the cost of living whut it Is, to pay that much money for going to seo a ball game, I think It asin. It wouldn't be vo bad If {t were grand opera, where at least you soclet) smondy but « ball game, the Idea!” “Yes,” said Mr. Jarr, “you could without its actually takiog pla gct @ Ulberty Bond for whut two |t know ts all the baseball was|o (Tee New York Evening Wo to the “Sometimes T think it 1a/ tickets,” replied Mr. Jarr. » in the first issue could buy some Jarr. ‘Clara Mud- |ridge-Smith bes a ‘Byy a Liberty a con-| Bond’ sign on her town car, and so Mr,| has Mrs, Stryver, and everybody else| Most talked-about girl in town, and making | @pparen “And I wish I agaip,” sald Mrs. economy, people to advise economy afford to be economical nen who can't Instead of appeal afford to ‘buy Issue would bave been sold quicker. | {n love, 1 saw this miillonatre family going around when they|speeches for Liberty Bonds. young millionaire makes the loveliest | speeches advising Liberty Bone and {t only for effect—that if the sudden It is all very well for euch | war situation had not afforded ber an , they can| opportunity for new and daring cos- nk if a lot of people w’ 1 to buy Liberty Bonds would buy | to peopis|@ promising young man of the city, The Jarr Family Roy L. McCardell rid But I do|tumes and » can af-| held no interest for her. them and wertes would have “But we One the his In the moving pictures, work-|evening Bob appeared at her home, ing in their vegetable garden raising| his face shining with a great euthu- 1elr own vegetables, anid everybody | siasm. sald it was real nice of bim to set such a splendid example of doing his|for you, darling, bit, But fathouse?’ “SUll, you must admit wealthy people could do worse than |» ltt that where could our family|Sallfo as he led her raiso vegetables, on the roof of this| shadows of the moonlit veranda. the to show poor people how to be cco- nomical,” remarked Mr, Jarr, r. “I don't When very sald Mrs, Jar admit any such thing! rich people are economical, and most | mei of them are not only economical but stingy, at least most I met were, they | the fact that I could subordinate even Ket @ great deal of pleasure out of 1t,|my love to the call of my country,” But they don’t have to be econumiteal, | he told her, have to be economical, so | Poor peop! it'y no pleasure to them, In ¢. curs to me that tf the very rich peo- | Sayings of Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland 50;7, Oy Gee Pree Puntenins Co, (Tue Hew Tort Being Worm, m7 Daughter, for which ons among 70 would not rather fe | “etored” than President? Now, & matron of Babyion came » “Vertiz, vertiz, it te ‘shored wite, “Tet, alae, 1 have no wish whatsoever to treat mind burband a6 « lackey and au aonet, neither to piace mm foot upon his neck. “HOW, then, aliall 1 be ‘ “Yor i have observed th wires. | “And, if 1 seek to lace spon a pedestal, wilt Be ‘one cone NOt reciprocate by plactng MU at « disadvectage—evem | to the background, where 1 may glorify Sim by contrast? “It 1 speak wate him with words of honey and feed bim with compile ments, will he not soon BELIEVE mo and begin secretly to wonder how sue a5 exalted combination of beauty and Intelligence as I[L should ever have married euch « modest and insignificant person as myself? “If I cling about bis neck aod do the tender and devoted, will he got soon be surfeited and within « fortnight bored beyond endurance at my caresses? “If 1 applaud his wit, will he oot in timo regard me as the ‘Joker’ an@ | seek to make me (he object of bis merriment and the butt of bis dazeling ecintillations? “It I eek his Judgment and fatter bis totelligence and admire hie tastes, will be not soon conclude that | am « doodiewit and wonder bow I bad the brafns to ‘appreciate him’? “It I approve of bis ralment and his way of doing ble hatr, will he not constitute himeelf the family sartorial censor and spend hile di {ng to pick flaws io my apparel? “Yea, verily. For, alas, | have observed that unto a man Love {s but @ minuet, in which, when the woman taketh a step forward ME taketh a step backw: “Alas, alas, WHY must marriage be always a monarchy {n which one boweth down and worshippeth and the other sitteth upon a throne and issueth commands and criticism? “Yea, WHY must a Bride always choose between sitting upon a foot+ stool and standing pou @ door mat for the rest of her life? “For lo, RECIPROCITY {s my middle name! nd I should rejoice to be permitted to adore mine husband oven | as I would have him adore me. “Yet I have never beheld an ‘adored wife’ who did not keep her fds band upon a leash and make him to lie down und roll over and jump through » 4 hoop and sit up and BEG for her approval! erily, verily, I have never known a wife who was both tender and | cherished, both unselfish and indulged, both devoted and ‘adored.’ “Hast thou, my Beloved? ' ‘or praise goeth unto a man’s head and infateth {{. but contumely maketh him meek and tender and pliable “And WHY {s this?” lah. ito me eaying: desire of my beart to been Adored’? o vaya of men with thee ‘““Ma’’ Sunday Intimate Talk TWO KINDS OF PATRIOTS. | OCIALLY Suallie Fenton was one! sacrifice, of the leading girls of her com- munity. ’ S nd to bid me godspeed,” tn answer Sallie flung herself into the Louse in a storm of hysterical tears, protesting that he had been basely deceiving her—that he loved the old army more than he did the girl who was to be his wife. They managed to quiet her at last, and Hob took lis departure, a gad- ened ond wiser man, t , t was true then—Sallle's dizpla: er to sot the lead! patriotiem was only another ot Mee nd to do and| fds, adopted because of the oppore = things vo, tunity tt gave her to do and wear ‘ things out of the conventional. When much out of the| the real meaning of patriotism struck ordinury that at|bome sho was not ready to respond. She was always just a little bit ahead of any one clso in the newest styles, and {invari ably the girls tn r set waited for pia? sowmane” but now that she hen o submit to the same 8 to which sho bad been urg- friends and acquaintances, } was quite @ different mat- costu: nd plunged with the fervor | the hes. of the latest “fad” the taek of| ‘ | inspiring recruitin, ] Clothed in the most daringly h costume she could wear iu p © without, criticism she became th | F r girl of quite 4 different trpe and from quite a different station in soviety. She was king for ten dollars a week a6 a stenographer, and for ncar- ly a year had been engaged to be married to @ young man earning twenty-five dollars a week as private secretary. She was a quiet, unobtrusive type, @ little brown wren of a girl, who al ways effaced herself In tho of those more aggressive and. fog.” ‘ She bad never y seemed to revel, io | comment she was creating. ‘There wee those who said sho did the “stunts,” it would have At (his time Sallle was engaged to 4d a word to say tbout t6 bigh ideals of patriotisi \with whom she was really ve o really very much wie ee gave the her thought sha matter a second His name was Bob Owens. One| Gut when Frank, the young man to mn ghe expected to be married, came to her ono evening, and aske: her advice aa to whether or net ee hould enlist, there was no besitalion mm her part. Sho drew him to her iu « swift, passionate embrace, softly patted him on the head os only a woman “I have @ wonderful piece of news " he whispered to out into the bas | have enitsted!" jcan do, and told bim that she would Sullto shrank back from bim with|s!ways bo walting ond praying for , terrified gasp. | bin “Why, we were to have been mar- | jy )ie eae Ne fad, No pretense about HEL patriotism. It was the real thing, When I boar @ girl exhorting loudly in publle about the call of the q and seo her flaunting about the | streets in a modish uniform, I a} wonder what her attitude will be when the personal test—the int rat heart-tug comes to her, te pe Patriotism always shows ite real Tqualities under flro—never Leta ( ight, The Bell Sradicate, Ine) jrled In June!" she eri earth do you mean?” Bob stared at her "What on with astonish- “| thought you would be proud of “I was sure you would be the first to see and apprectate my -|n fine Ing all t | very latest styles in evening not to mention the music of Caruso; I wouldn't Interfere with thelr leas- ure that way, Let them give me (heir money to > then they can economize for me, 1 am tired of having to economize so much for myself. But, even tn this, the wealthy people have the best of It, They tuko pleasure tn being econom!~ cal and have moving pictures showing how economical they are. I'd like to have opportunity to be wasteful and extravagant for once in my life, But, ure in the moving pictures as ‘Mra \Jarr and her family, weeling money clothes and luxurious food, do- * bit for war-time extrava- the But Mr, Jarre said nothing, He would have Itked much better to have scen the World Series than to buy a Liberty Bond, for while a Liberty Bond bears Interest, it isn't as excit- Ing as a championship game. | ple think it so grand to be econorutcal | wasteful with and | 4s you see, | will never be able to fig- | c OLUMBUS Day, October, 1s the anniversary of the twelfth of the discovery of America by ‘hristopher Columbus, in 1492, The anniversary js now celebrated a9 an as {i - established holiday in more than halt |°Fally Belleved. ‘The great discoverer of the States of the Union and in} (.\{%% “ened bis name “Cristobal | Brazil and Costa Rica, A movement |name has always b has been afoot for some time to make | terosa the date a general holiday, ously by all the peoples from Alus Pan-American to be observed simultans- rtnership betwear and Northern Canada to Patagonla| merchants, Coton and on emee and Terra del Fuego, ‘What could bo mote natuete Within the pat fer years soveral {quires tho historign my Mataral” Mh new theorles regurding Columbus, quent nuptial arinershin’ a subsen have ten aired by historians. Prof. | siuco tlie Jews of thea dey eee eay Arriba y Turul, « noted Spanish bis- lit point to cement tony ey mpage Le \torlan, bas written 4 small volume, partnerships “py wie" industrial — § Other historians have trey ae eee! 1 pumiened, several years ago, in which e attempts to prove that Columbus Anniversa ry | Was a Spanish Jew, The Spanish historian Ey {backs up his statements with mene jold documents, that Columbus way born in the town of Pontevedra, Spain, and hot in Genoa, a Colon,” and bis mother’s maiden een given as Fone urul has the town archives of a slooument showing a Prof, | discovered in Poutevedra © tried to prove (hat be wae @ Corgican, \ endouvere *