The evening world. Newspaper, October 22, 1917, Page 14

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Department, a Tammany-protected system of bribery, jobbery and exploited vice. out of the best one New York has ever had, shall wo hand it back to ‘Tammany? we take the chance of having it become again a constant ecandal, a by-word to shame us throughout tho world? office. camps and will no doubt have a good effect in bringing home to the authorities a realization of the e have to be taken against this particular danger. camps amounts to, every ounce of fire prevention is worth many tons | ernment’s warnings to save food by self-denial, it not unnaturally seems that great inflammable stores of precious foodstuffs ought to| factory watorio, ‘ ESTABLISHED JOSEPH PULITZER. Published Dally Except Sunday by the Press Qublishing Company, Noe. 64 Park Row, New ik aL BAL on fot ITZER Santen, 63_ Parl Row. AW, Treasurer, 63 Par Ir, Secretary, 63 T rh How. | Entered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Claas Matter. Debeceiption Rates to The Evening|For England and the Continent and World for the United states All Countries in the International , and Canada, Poatal Union. One Year.. $6.00/One Year, 16.40 One Month .60| One Month 1.80 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PLUMS, ca Acivainely eatitind tothe ure for, republication of al} news, deqpaueen Ses credited’ t this paper and elo the local bews herein. ted Creme ie gt otherwise VOLUME 58.. The Amoct feetiited to it sesacccecescecoeveecegyeosNO, 90,516 TAKE NO CHANCE. he best Chief of Police HEN New York ever had,” on the authority of @ Van Wyck, afterward ran for Mayor and turned against Tammany, Charles F. Murphy had to take) some of the nastiest punches he ever got, from @ man who knew where to place them. “Big Bill” Devery’s knowledge of Tammany and Murphy was something more than the knowledge of a student and inquirer, Also “Big Bill” had no use for political generalities: ‘Wasn't I right about Charlie Murphy's Borough Hotel?” “Why is it every meeting of the New York Contracting and Trucking Company has always been held in the basement of Murphy's home?” “Look at Murphy's poolroom—if {t wasn’t one of Charlie’ I’m mistaken—that was raided on Friday, within a block of his home, Why don’t they raid the Anawanda Club, too?” “Murphy was behind Krincher’s poolroom in Twenty-third Btreet, between Third and Lerington Avenues, that was closed up, and he was interested in anéthor at Third Avenue and Twentyseventh Street, His man Dempsey had forty such places in New York.” “They—Murphy, Sulltvan & Oo—tried to bull me and bull the police captains and all down the line into standing for the Questionable things they were getting the money out of.” “There never was @ bigger grafter in New York than Oherlie Murphy.” Black pots and blacker kettles. A sordid era of graft, scandal and police corruption to which New Norkers look back with disgust, What had mado those conditions possible Murphyism—a Tammanylzed City Hall, a Tammanyized Police Shall the city risk a step backward toward that time? Instead of going ahead and making a still better police force Instead of police to whom the public can turn with confidence and certainty of help, shall we have tho old Ind that every one sus- pected and dreaded to approach? Instead of a police force that is a credit to this great city, shall Then take NO chance of a Murphy mouthpiece in the Mayor’s ——— Liberty Loan Parade Wednesday. Qualify at ouce ee FIRE AT CAMP DEVENS. HE fire in the Army base hospital at Camp Devens, Mas: which fortunately resulted in no loss of life, is the first serious occurrence of the kind among the nation’s great xtraordinary precautions that will In a city of dry, white pine buildings, which is what one of these of fire engines. One would assume, of course, that a most thorough system of protection, including guard, must have already been pro- vided against fire from any cause, natural or incendiary Yet in other places, where material of the great nation for war purposes is known to be stored or t value to the accumulated, there guard or care. It appears to be taken as unavoidable that 700,000 bushels of! mer hos def are surprisingly few signs of any extra t. ° 1 1 lof this country Tre nation eo grain destined for the Allies should burn up in Brooklyn, and that|/them, and the cal! each mor a few days later 7,000,000 pounds of beef should be destroyed by fire| growing more and more distinc in the Kansas City stock yarda, The other day I saw a huge To many Americans who are doing their best to heed the Goy.| suspended | be fore a la Want PERE re omen yo ae Evening World Daily Magazine Let’s Strike Back! 1917, co ‘ortd rk Brening ‘By J. H. Cassel “MM a »? NEW developed by the war. opportun’ How th will very future and ations sexi We got hi the nts of suffragist orators. crystallized it still tu nite call is sounding “One I—At Once. ding, pusand large! economic business ye- | A year aployed only a dozen women ity a duty*have been of- fered to determ oft ave rther. them, y meet It now | problem women tn work | down to something besides the argu- | Sunday _ Intimate Talks With Girls THE CALL TO WOMANHOOD. and broadening field for the women of America has been A unique eal ine the he A to the women | and, If nece eds | sign factory,|40 our part in the Women ago t hat | jacross the s S rT} H, DEAR!" whimpei Corps. In all that inferno of horror rogle those women worked for hours and say ‘Buy a Libert not one faltered unti! the break of the foggy morning showed that thelr task was done and that they could do no more, They tell me that tn every railroad any. station In France, between the tlers of stretchers, on which lo the] «faybe maimed bodies of soldiers from the front, you can see the form of a woman readjusting bandages, smooth- ing wrinkled pillows and helping the| So what's the u body nagging me about The Jarr Family | By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1917, by the Pre n't the mone: if I make a thing red Mrs. y Bond’ Clara Mudridge-Smith and Mrs, Stry-| Jarr. ver and all the women I know are| Club? Or the Daughters of Delilah?" on committees to sell Liberty Bonds, | nd I am sure I feel real unpatriotic because I hav y to buy little extra money we can," said Mr. Jarr, boss turned a good hurried trip to Buffalo, and I lied ik: Anantas for him—he should slip me on t surgeons ‘in thelr most gruesome | something extra.” tasks. As a woman, I am proud of| «Don't talk to me about that trip the splendidly inspiring record of the! to Buffalo, and me worrying myself women of France and England, disk ail that uiet end-all the next But I believe that the women of| forenoon!” cried Mrs. Jarr, “I don’t America can duplicate this record,/ pelieve a word about it, anyway!" ssary, surpass it, Wo will! «you'll believe {t when I coma »bably never be called upon, as &| home with a hunared dollars from nation, to undergo the same scenes of earnage and devastation that have swept Europe, but we shall have to; task of freeing the world from the shadow of autoc- | racy, and we shall probably have to send more nd more of our women as to bear Bonds,” It y Mrs, Jarr, ‘1 and say, very exclusive.” also, the boss for the way I prevaricates | for him, the old villain,” s, maybe 1 will, me a hundred dollars to buy Liberty sald very fashionable, ‘ou bring They are IT will be as well worth guarding as steel bridges or stone-walled rese in its force of two thousand workers their part at} She was interrupted by the arrival | and those were used In clerical duties Se trq of Miss Cora Hickett and Mrs | We have ceased to be amused at the|,, Ut What Is even more imperative, | Rangle, both wearing tri-color sashes How many little lumps in your sugar-vowl? | spectacle of elevator «iris instead of] "e Women of America will have to|and Liberty ond badges, and Mr aoe Schaal ca vette a |boys in our office buildings, and in| "UY to the guns at home—the guna/Jarr made a get-awa ie eal cities women atreet car con. |f ‘dustry, which otherwise will be] “Now don't come telling me I must * etters From t h e People vitor are being trained to take the} frowned by the thundering call of| buy Liberty Bonds!” cried Mrs. Jarr Plea for Play School With i posts made vacant by scrip. | Wat And it is up to them just how| “That's just what's worrying met” Plea for Play Schools, thout Arrows or Rays §25 to ee | they will meet yreme issue that] ‘That's what's worrying us, too, To the Exiitor of The Evening World | $100, hes of the men. In ¢ ‘ornla women : nd , The Federation for Child Study has | y, erate cee ae coming t take the place of men |! STWins always and everywhere | replied Miss Hickett. ‘The udve been trying to interest the Board of Maier inthuns (MEERA Ueda CAR mile aan ih an the sig | MOTE ANG more snant. The great) tisements tell us to buy the bonds Education to st play schools for! , ™ 9) othe ‘vaeiue of 9) more 8 hisforie oppor has been offered | f our ea a have 4 the bummer months. To prove the | Malf-dollar dated 1853 K.M.C, | ranches. It was up ti ao! A ee 8 F th u n offered | out of our earnings, and we have n necessity of such schools we opened | 2.t4n,7H6 sin United Sta |the work of the ale nap eae # have been flung | earnings Hudson Guild. | q. the editor of The brening World see the fruit crop spe wide for them, At list the doors of! ‘There must be sume way to earn tga i children ot settle could you publian tn SNAAC EE RISE Base th __.| the Doll House have been opened and | money, # lot of people seem to kn our play school. We'found that mor¢ i yen pubis When I fir \e CUMPMBEN| they have been invited to come tnto|now to cara money, but 1 de than half of that number were suffer pape MAby Hebrews there! posters of the York suffrage! the er { ity : Oia ith ing from malnutrition, and more than |4F¢ /4 the United States : a ‘ the great world outside, ‘The rest is|remarked Mrs, Rangie rm third from heart disease, Some | A READER, | workers, showing women laboring tr own hands, Jit's all T can do to sp nd my me he children ular and A Votnt of Gram side by side with men tn the steel | right, 1917, by tue Dell Syndicate, Ine) (and pay my bills with dt otherwise dised ve children | to ! he Evening Wor | plants, factories, railroads and har- | are the public sch Kindly inform through your| vesting fields, I thought they sve | - | 1 n me thre 0 i i ught they were a ; of the district, paper who ix correct, A submits the ore 1 5 rs versar Erubtout tate the bok ety streets for | Pastime acti ecene oi ase east te| exaamerated. But I know now they fo-Day’s Anniversary ___ their school vacation months. meet John in the theatr It claims | Were pictures from real life, It is our contention that most of|that the word “bound” In that sen end of mine, just ba Y Oct. 2 120 ye. \mense umbrella, and was suspended the fuventie delinquency cams that |tence means tht A must meet Johnel pcugtn tells mew thruling om} CY Ort, 2 1781, just 120 years ago ee ne ballool., The gas Dag ase come up in our Children’s Courts be-| 4 claims that the word. “bound” | Londom™ tells me @ thruling story of to-day, Jacques Garnerin, ®| cended until it seemed but a re gin in these unguarded summer| means that he may meet John a Zoppelin raid. In the crash of the French aeronaut, made the! speck to the thousands of breathless monthe. ; BW. | destroying bombs and the shrieks, first descent from a balloon in a para> | spectators. A groan went up whe Children improved morally and) ‘Thin usage of bound ts colloquial! of the wounded and dying, the gong| chute, ‘The of the para-| last the brave aeronaut was seen physically In our sch One of our fashioned, Also it ts t scending, for h. Ears gained eleven pounds, and we Whe ved te inte Uy ytet| of an ambulance sounded duily, Ag! chute was dt experiments of| tet before the did not send him to the country ld mean that the pers |!t stopped in the yery cer ‘of the pastian Lenormand, a famous! opene There was scarce sither, Our " ls over, The ox. king “must” meet Joha, and| most exposed district eigh " ch scientist, some fourteen years] of air and the balloon 7 than we hoy It cost us nearly |e je rect word khaki! eprang out, unde Garn attempted ¢o use the Ap 8 tar erie, Jane 4 only ‘ $4,000, and the bard work of many| Up to 81) Monday, ship of a ninth, whe . dire he | contrivan: I two He was ne the worse £ velunt TB, es To the F The Kronlng World work, instructing her rdinates in| !arae umbrellas for and! plolt, ar weeks W a a4 throughout the greate; wy Nov. 82, 1876, fell. *| Mrs, Kilroy Kenyon, sub-cominandant| tie tops a fairs, although its sui : SONIA WALMB, Becretary. OLD READER, |of the Women's Reserve Ambulance! Garnerin's paraclyute looked like an disputed by tho aviat Pubsisti ing Co, (The New ¥ “Would any Evening Wor of the women of the “All the newspapers | Wartime Knitting League know how to earn some money asked Mrs, “Or would the Helping Hand “We haven't | Meetings lately, been to any club except the Wartime Knitting League,” said Mrs. Rangle. “The Daughters of Delilah suggest something, Delilah of Sam- hair didn’t out she? son's “But I don't think she got paid for], it,” remarked Mrs. we all couldn't be Dinkston was and sald and no credit dispossess tak Jarr, “Then, too, lady barbers. Mrs. see me the other hadn't a penny, and was going to be She thought she might » in boarders.” to day she "ve got boarders enough with my | husband and children said Mrs. Rangle. “I can't see here I'd have room to take y paying guests In my small flat Mrs. Jarr suggested the Rangles| take a private ers, but Mrs, angle was of the opin- jon that must be some easier way to make bond money than run ning a boarding house these days, "Old Mrs, Dusenberry told when she lved in Indiana she used to kéep all the money for herself that she made selling butter and eggs and Miss there fruit. trom their farm," said Hickett, | Bu in a city flat house didn't y practical, ‘ you what I'll do,” said . “UN look through some f the back numbers of the Perfect Journal. There interesting dep Women Whe house and keep board. | \ face I tran What EveryWoman Thinks! By Helen Rowland_ Conyriaht, 1017, by the Preece Publidiing Co, (Ihe New York Evening World), F course, ) ( 1 should never make the fatal mistake of constituting mysel! any man’s “food censor.” Because any man would rather be stuffed to death Than starved to death—or nagged to death. And yet, I can’t help wishing that 1 could study a cross- section of the masculine digestion! And I CAN understand just how often a doting wife Is tempted to say: “Oh, dear! Don't eat any more! more!” Because the other night We were dining with some people ut a French restaurant, And while I sat there nibbling and pretending to do my “bit” And wondering HOW people could be so wicked or so foolish As to order baked oyster and turtle soup and frogs’ legs and goose livers and guinea hen and alligator pears and French pastry and caviare at such a time, And thinking how many Liberty bonds the price of thaf dinner would have bought, I chanced to glance across the table at HIM—and shuddered, To see him going straight through the courses one after the other, Without a qualm, without a tremor, without a THOUGHT Of what he would suffer in the morning! And I closed my eyes and reflected that, DON'T eat any) # HELEN Rowand though I DO look weil tn blaci I'd hate to put {t on—for such an unromantic tilng as « mixture of } frogs’ legs and caviare. . (Oh, yes, EVERY wife feels like that at times. When she watches her husband eating.) . . ND yet—and YET, next morning, It was I who awoke with a sick headache! And as I lay there pitying myself and wondering how HE had sur. vived, and if I should be able to get up and make his coffee, I heard him tiptoelng about—turring on the shoes, fussing with his razor—and softly WHIS 3 And when I had dragged myself out of bed and dressed and bathed my in cold water, I trailed languidiy into the dining room And there HE stood—radiant, cheerful, redolent of scented soap—— Fating a CHEESE SANDWICH! Ah, me! I wish I could study a cross-section of the masculine digestion! For, If the Government really DOES need more steel and tron, I am sure that {t could find vast, vast quantities of both In the digestion of any perfectly healthy man! But thé way he TREATS that he.venly bless Would make the angels weep! Ah, well! Perhaps, when the war {s over, The United Wives’ Association will To Mr. Hoover! nower, looking for hia ( buoyant, clean shaven end erect @ solld gold etatue ForWhom the ArmyCamps| Were Named , by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), -~CAMP BEAUREGARD, ALEXANDRIA, LA, T was Pierre G, T. Beauregard who, Gordo, ¢ withstood the first f the! Union arms in the and vie- ontreras and € the closing fF th fore Mexi b wounded. After peace with Mexico Beauregard returned to the duties of an engineer and had much to do with stvengthen- ing fortifications, particularly along the southern coast. He had just been named to command at West Polat when the rupture between the States, ‘hapultepec, In campaign be- re owas twice shock Civil W ereat tory for the South| at the battle of Bull} Run, He previous-| ly had held rank in the United States | oO City won a army and was su- per endent of the West Point Mill-| took place. ' tary Academy at| Beauregard rendered gallant service the outbreak of|to the Confederacy, Il health Rhine hostilities, dered his efforis to some extent, and he eauregard re-| Was compelled at one time to relin- signed when he |quish an active command. Then he saw a clash was Inevitable and| Was placed in charge of the Charles- threw in his sword with the Southern | ton defenses, holdin bay supertor cause, It ts this soldier that the | forces for almost two years. Charles- army cantonment at Alexandria, La.,| ton was famous in those days as the has been named, where the Thirty-| Seat of the Confederate blockade run- ninth Divis is being mobilized. ‘The | hers, and it was Beaure gard who in- troops have been drawn from Louis-| spired many of their daring deeds, He, jana, Mississippi and Arkansas, | found ships when the task seemed im- Beauregard came of a distinguished | Possible and kept up an intermittent French family that had settled in New| Communication with France! and Eng- Orleans several generations before. | 'and, obtaining money, arms, and mu- Through his mother he was a de-|Nitions to carry on the war, In reo scendant of the Duke of Modena and | nition of his efforts he was promoted Regelo. He entered West Point in his) t® the full rank of general teens and was graduated at the age| When Grant's line closed about Rich- of twent king second among his| Mond Beauregard hastened to the aid | classmat! His t command was in| °f Te, striking several blows that | the artillery branch, but later he was "ld up but could not check the Fed- faxrad (to ah eral advance, Afterward he enginecring corps. : was sent a demonstrated a quality for |‘? head off Sherman in the South and | leaders! that brought him many re atrived vallant! halt the invasion. ks. On the begining of| But Sherman won and Beauregard ar with Mexico, in 1846, Beauregard | !08+ He was ® man of fine intelll- natructio! ; rt @| Renee, great personal coura and, a for tthe) cxemplitied in the fullest degree’ thom at Tampico, and afterwar]) qualities which always have been ao he was present at the battles of Cerro ce} aking a soldier Aifalfa before a wine treatinent in cither Not, only MED E o ong if the price of food con- y produce that hae “she siuld w. tinues to mount. But let it! the taste of tea or fee but oae ot Utiful mansion filled! be said In haste that we may also en-|which ts said to possess a rich aw with works , opened a museum) joy the experience, although most of tritive quality, where H 4 [for the high )ol students and so-| . — A fae ea oorae ees toa and ciety people in her home, and served | ¥8 Probably h hought of alfalfa) coffee ts mor »olsonous, tea and dainty. refreshments, She} 8 grown exclusively for animals.| Alfalfa would scem to be the moat charged two dollars admission and) Alfalfa flour long since passed the i or a trom ete cleared ten thousand dollara in the) experiment Aighita hones nt Pha seanon. n has been pronounced of good quality Neat Sone ee “Phat's a grand {dea!" exclaimed | 4s been | dof wood quali n alfalfa fi the latter Mrs, Rangle. “Let us go teil Mrs.| and delightful taste; and alf n 40 to 70 per cent, the Btryvor al it it, She has a beautiful) syrup desery ription: | bread made wit W vomblneiianeee “But do you think anybody would| A movement Is under way in an| pronounced wheat bread, pay two dollars to see the atrociously Towa city to establish a plant for It ma fuifa flour alone, bad appointments in Mrs, Str: the special purpose of transforming not quite 89 good, i Miss Hicket alfalfa into edible products. Its out h ryver's ideas of art ! ] is a greenish tinge Nae e eean oe are put would include, besides the artt 1 some ‘praiaaien sure I'm willing to earn r cles mentioned, such things 4 eX 1 Manufacturers now buy Liberty Bonds, but people tracts, candies, cakes tea and mithatthawean pred ; who haven't money don't seem to vores, Preble prod flour know low to make any . ; ut they all cheered up mightily| When alfalfa leavea are baked tn possibl + weil when Mra. R rominded them thatea certain way tt » sald to make | hay pancakes for breakfaat fey Liberty Bonds would™ 11 excellent substitute fur tea or) sweetened with alfalfa syrup esol "| ographs and other necessities, "softer, depending upon @ different ‘served with @ cup of alfalfa cot

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