The evening world. Newspaper, November 8, 1917, Page 22

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Eveni ISTE SPT ME i STABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Published Daily Except Sunday by the Presse Publishing Company, Nos. 63 te 63 Park Row, New Tork. RALPH PULITZOR, President, 68 Park Row, J. ANGUS SHAW, Treasurer, Park Row JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr., Secretary, 63 Park Row. ntered at the Post-Office at New York as Second-Class Matter, Subscription Rates to ‘The Tvening| Mor, Enetand and the Continent and! World for tie United States ‘All Counteles in the Internauonal and Cane One Year.... One Monti. Vnton $6.00 One Year, .60/One Month eR OF THE A ue SOCIATED . | jaca el titled to the for ition of meee Settee Crete {ath paar td “also po aad veee NO, 20,633 NO USE POKING THE ASHES. VOLUME 3s... LOSER examination of the ruins yesterday made it tolerably C plan that Republican votes to the number of 60,000, more or less, diverted not from Mitchel to Bennett but from Mitchel direct to Hylan, helped on the catastrophe, If it is true that these Republican votes for Hylan represented a pre-arranged payment for what Tammany was expected to do in the dark to the Democratic National and State tickets last year, then it is clear enough who got the big end of the deal, and Murphy's repu- ation as the slickest barterer that ever took up politics as the grand- est of all business careers, is secure. But what's done is done. ‘I'hese renegade Republicans may presently have more than their own consciences to reckon with. Meanwhile the loyal anti-Tammany forces can find something better, to do than pick over the debris of their defeat. No administration, Tammany or otherwise, can take over the city government and build a wall around it. On the first of next January, and for four years thereafter, those who hold public office, whether a Tammany Mayor, Tammany Aldermen or the members of a Tammany Board of Estimate, will be! as subject to the pressure of public demand for honest, efficient ser- viee as public servants in their position have ever been—far more a0, in fact, than in former days when publicity was less constant and sidan. ee ete The organized protest less powerful. In ful! control, Tammany can’t do to-day the things it did even fifteen years ago. Not, that is to say, if sound citizenship begins at once to mobilize and make ready to exert its utmost power against, the firet attempt to put unfit men in office or otherwise drag the city government down to the old sordid Tammany levels. ee HONOR TO THE MOTHERS. EADING a list of those missing from the torpedoed American) R patrol boat Alcedo one is struck by the number of sailor boys for each of whom a mother is the next of kin. Of the twenty seamen missing from the Alcedo only four regis- tered with the Government the names of fathers. There is one who ias a wife, another’s nearest relative is an uncle. But of sons of widowed mothers there are fourteen. There is no reason to suppose this ratio exceptional or that American sailors who man other American war vessels and American soldiers who fight on land would not be found to include a like propor- | tion of boys whose mothers have given their all or their best in giving their sons. Even bare lists like this can bring home forcibly to Americans | the greatness of the sacrifice American mothers are making, also the sneasureless reinforcements of courage, faith and prayer that go forth | daily and hourly from brave mother hearts to the nation’s fighters on land and.s All honor to these mothers, and especially to those among them RA RE on ; the children in burglar Nenity of painters im ‘i 7 . 4 | FRIEND of mine came to me} floor sighed my interested ériend,! fold on to the coin. A dollar in sented Mr. Jarr with a pair of | ¢ of burglars or | Indiana were detail rt who have given from widowed lives their dearest companionship and the other day in great distress, | “and it will take some legal elevators| the bank Is often worth a thousend theatre tickets, and despite the be Or anything elee that the young | with great + Band 2 eee oa oy Fy ‘ ‘ | . 7 Ne ae ° vs iniouad a ot experienc x bes bs elish, anc | consolation, proudly offering for the service of their country life far| crying: “Why don't you write | to lift her out, and I doubt if uny-|in some wild and woolly landscape. | f#Ct that there Is a war tax of 10 per Pare ence without being | the children were balataanta pes "i ‘ " an article warn-| thing will move this man to give her : i , + to| ont even on complimentaries, Mr. | pea inet | dreams, . wig et j more precious to them than their own, | Te worsen tard the ceonee Recs In there days, if you have money to} Jarr said, ‘Hang the expense! Let's| MT% Dusenberry picked up th ke next an | Shee Nail | CTR Mead tarisphean crake OTT jaye oi ey Bonde, Not only | gee the show, although I hear it is 3 |srentne pap r to read something to! territying recoll BERS breakfast their ; Fis 01 lotism, 0} protes-| bloomer!” interest her charges when Mr. and F rrcae tons Were refreshed against the specu- | is one of those ‘No man's land.’ Some i} e ‘s and) when ¢ rud ne A GREAT CHANCE LOST. lator?” lace GHEE @aal peony Gouene ak a | tom |. Mrs. Jarr did not catch the import ue sb had gone. The heading, | that two ae th te bpp 4) A “ s tc Every dollar y 7 0! 2 ° ; * id the Stock Market!" in- ae »y the land~ { ‘There is elfew cents an acre—weres that she|, Yer dollar you invest brings you! 6f this colloquial description. She eara: Ka: ¢ ar] in- | lord, we 3 IR GEORGE REID, the eminent Australian statesman, has no Babee ae ine ee Aa AOre=MGres) HAE U9 cents ® yearmwhilla voit’ wai |ibought’ain dere meant the plot of |teFested her, but the context wa: Harel sven at the door and desired to, doubt as to the real reason for the German drive into Italy. my — housework.| ‘Oh, dear, dear,’ she wailed, ‘what | 4" the Government is behind it aij.| the play concerned reform in feminine | frelan to the heading—to her mind! At the mention of the pal | In on interview printed in the Evening Sun he says: She's lost a thou-|can a woman dc a Mimad cen protect hereslf,| attire, Ge busied herself for the ee pe ones ‘and she concluded | ing sent by the jandlord the cutee) , especially in these war times, by delights of the playh It b | there had been a typographical mix- Wess » children and = dollars! 1 can tell you what a woman ca | y Ate OF CRO! PIRY ROU, eing shrieked Fs rel | Si igtier lee a ve eae hothe ie throu « . ths| my deay friends ‘She oun take Ste finding tho safe and sane way to pre- | Gertrude, the maid's, evening out, and | 4P, 8° the old lady proceeded to de-| member is aus ee Gla they, Fee | the west to strike at Italy in order to keep Austria from suing cetera ee epee | marten ath ieee anne & Wtle werve her littio savings—and forestat; | maid's evening out being something /#Ant Upon bears and other wild ani-| ion and then eee weet the land | ‘openly for peace, How significant! The German blow was | spoons | ee Bes AOK later sorrow nothing can alter or change, Mrs. Jarr | 4lS she had known, from the pages |ing reprewenat ta ten anlord bes } brilliantly conceived and executed, but the Italfans were bang- lator. Do you know how long {t took | and refuse to obey the soothing words | Be, aL hee ants ng represented by the Janitor, in the } her to eave that thousand dollars?|of the scoundrel that yaiks abroad, —— _—$ $$ ’ {matter of roller skating in th ing by their eyebrows, Nevertheless the drive was a necessity | : I've seen bears come right into the| and king a he halls and proves Austria wes on the point of giving in. Thay Stiann: Fears |SRG. Peeve): on: Foolish anal ENOED| Val . Dees 2 settlements: in Indiana, in weather | sidewath wae, oe tte doorsteps and } ‘4 E F “She had two little boys to keep, | women. | ac Nelo! ll eTiec 1Oons \soutclike hia) When t wad veur nee” dewalk with chalk, } Sir George does not remind us why the Italians were “hanging| peing a widow, and by skimping and| ‘This is the species of the male that |dearies;" she began. “I've tae age.) The little girl threw herself in her A : ; —— Sane air Weaeceenan a A , een ‘em| mother's lap, screaming by their eyebrows.” He aye nothing of the ceraeatatiompta tay saving whe manage tcumulats|cauen all bariasten of 4 por By Helen Rowland [come rast inthe ig pont and| Sgr sae ae i Mate iad earlier made to convince her allies that without the help of muni-|‘™!* °¥™ ® . pa la Heh - — = — jcarry off the young shoats, walking | slammed the door tchen aad. § tions and coal she could not push further her campaign into Austrian| 7.” Into the rooming business, #9| ‘Thero is Ittle or no excuse for a Covstiaht, 1017. by ‘The Kress Puoiishiog Co, (The New York Brealag World) |of with them in thelr arms lke a|Gertrude to keep the paem nee ‘ P campaign into Austrian| ¢hat abe could better care for her | Woman being duped In. these day’ NE SWEETLY SOLEMN THOUGHT. nan, And in summer I've seen bears] “Hut they wore weinkets out territory. children at home, She “who runs may read,” and the OR ordinary people, Satan keeps just seven Hells ‘ome right In the beeyard, upset the| dears,” sald Mre, game t, YOur aay Nor does he try to explain how it was that with Austria known| “Sh¢ sot acquainted with a man| public prints are full of accounts of F But he bas @ basement suite, hives and ake the Kogeeeaee Mina leek eee ie a, in surprise, r 3 i : who secured houses to rent, fe|such mistakes made by women—mis- Whare\thars'e 108) {nated e° hes how they Sab dineaih : at she knew to be weakening and the Italians almost ready for a conquering march realised ahe had some money to in-| takes that are many times never A heat, Whe ares | A them both, and one was a very nice” , y 4 ° hat 4 0 ime " ae Se mf +H. ne je girl y ered | young 5 across the plains of Hungary, Italy’s needs were ignored and a great| vest, 90 he gradually dissuaded yer | rectified nd ee - a freezing torment, that the LAND. TE cave Maine ah tive ny. sini Ha young ma who brought all his wages % s y dwells, by ee: 0 @ young lady } chance lost. from going into this business and| Why should y t hearken to . fratd ware.”” a ¥ was engaged ta - suggested that sho invest her money| them? “But how will they know?" Where the frosty radiators mock his agonizing yells, Poege gt dla i the ittle girl be- | for her to put in bank till they were = a = eee Fe. 0 7 ' ’ 0 ? marrie : . = a in nome lots in the West, a place that | you ask, And in vain he stands forever ringing elevator bells “But bears, if you don't vex ‘em, is “But Mra. Dusend H tts F rom S h arp W its would yi@id her a big return if ste! The safe rule to follow is this: Be- : —_—_ playful, dearie,” sald the old lady. | iil! children!” Saleh ony old the; tttl nile, ware 0} 6 strange ° ay ves wings tc 7 rf y h alled @ Uttle . It is no longer safe for a lazy man| ‘The one time when a fellow feels bit y ay wie ee io a. io wh i war . dE ih y ; Ker Ww Wants t FE a ierpabsen dd ig the soul; marriage, without it, | “But painters !s the dangerous crit and ail entrance of the painters beh to loaf near an employment bureau.—|ho ought to be let down easy ia when| “It all looked good on paper Hae dai a yl an hal blocked by their fea Toledo Blade, he ts hard up.—Philadelphia Record. | were the lots and there were the bix| No matter how t he appears — The minds of the children reverted | tlons till ace grees ag) The shoemaker should be exempted| Strange, but mom all our good headlines about how this new to be pp ew muck 8 to make In Most marriages there is a second Wind of affec-| to artisans who spread pigments on| communicated with over mls tel | because he of all men is bia family’s |lutiona s ade after {t te roo late .| ton was flourishing and how « you feel that "it * to him; tion which springs from propinguity and custom, and | house facades, they having no knowl-| phone. The reassuring vent “ sole support. —Denver News: | Paterson Call {body was buying up all the prope oy that he is di 4a “favor, do “tren some will carry you safely to the goal of domestic content-| de of tho weirder form of this] from her that the painters eh 7 ee mi s @¢ 8 | around; and that now was ne} Httle tnvestigating on your own} ment—if you will only wait for it phase of animated nature—cubist or|to might be co inti Recah Occasionally you see a wom t) An unmanageable child usually be-| the'lepaund Ooor ee Patisel ' might be called panthers by some fuse tanle dons idee Mie cue OnEN tO RON UMRA RIL Dera nnt| to wet In ON fs 4 NCeOHNT, turiat artints people and catamounts by others, ‘4 ___ any donrnal a2 pee “Well, Lucy got in on the Learn something 6 man who ‘The most delicious thing in this life is not to meet some one who ad- 9 painters kill people” asked! When Mr, Jurr came home he waa it Letters From the People world. | nny 2s Te halng By J. H. Cassel | It’s a Girl! Copyright, 1917, by The Prees Publishing Co, no World Daily Magazine Americans A Under Fire _By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1017, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening Wertd), NO. 36—BATTLE OF MONMOUTH. HIS is the story of a battle where the sun as many victims as did steel and lead, For three years the Revolution hed The British held New York and Philedelphia. Philadelphia was too hard to hold. At any moment ” Washington might seize it or might cut off its detend- ers’ food. So Gen, Clinton received orders from British Government to evacuate Philadelphia and 4 take his red coat army to New York. To do this he had to cross Southern New Jersey as far as the Raritan River. And Washi! ay Valley Forge, heard of the proposed move. thet Clinton was coming out into the open, the a, last had « fair chance to strike his army on the and perhaps to cut tt off from reaching the second British force in York. ‘The time was mid-June, 1778. The weather was terrifically bot. hape there are many hotter places on earth than the flat inland region of Southern New Jersey in summer. Perhaps not.) The heat made the Brite ish march slowly. Clinton, reaching Allentown, suddenly changed his plan of march. He took a right-hand road leading through Trenton to Sandy Hook. On the night of June 27 he encamped near Union Court House at Freehold. The Americans, pursuing in two detachments, were only eight miles away, Orns © The American advance guard was commanded by A Tragedy bd Gen, Charles Lee, Whether Lee was a traitor in Dng« Incompetence. ? land's pay or whether he was merely an incompetent nanananananan® cowail, or whether he wished to lose the battle in onder 4 | to injure Washington, whom ho hated—is no concern of ours. For his duct at the Battle of Monmouth he was court martialled and suspended from command, Lee received orders to attack the British rear at daybreak of June 28 and “to hold the enemy in check” until the American main body could come up. The Americans attacked bravely. But almost at once there was ® confusion of orders and a general sh6w of incompetent blundering. Lee retreated. His men followed. ‘The British followed. The retreat” was fast becoming a panic rout, when the fugitives reached the advancing main body of Americans led by Washington. Washington halted the retreat and set the disorganized ranks in onder, Then, riding up to Lee, the Father of His Country for once lost all control of his temper, and shouted in the hearing of the whole army: rs name, Gen, Lee, what me this ill-timed prudence?” ( “Prudence?” sneered Lee. “I know of no © pos: that datanable Virtue than Your Hucoliencys > Domeetee more of Mastering: and turned upon the pursuing iH 8 i ii Washington paid no heed to this insult his temper, he set his army in battle array British, Under the mercilessly accurate fire of the last fell back. They retired to the point which |before the battle, | Washington was pressing on to strike a more | when nightfall made him halt. His men, tov, were scarcely stand. The day had been broilingly hot. | both sides had dropped dead from sunstroke, to h courage, Americ . ‘sy ns, the British a i suard had occupi vital blow at the enemy » worn out they could And scores of soldiers on oan Karly next day Washington ashington prepared to resi ¢ } } interrupted battle. But he was tov jate * indee eave § of darkness the British had retreated. By sunrise th of were wore many miles away und wate f i Neate : vom offeative | In killed and wounded, at the Battle of Monmout » Amer In killed and wounded and prisoners the Briton ua about reais (When writing of the Revolutionary War, it js Sareea English people at large were not our foes, En y ines the | Pitt, Fox, Burke and others | st statesmen— war and to the were strongly opp ill-treatment meted to us by Englanc i's crazy Germ. ‘ his pig-headed Ministry, ae So w thousands .of the Eng The Working Woman and the Speculator | | | would take charge of your money,| and when in the least doubt—DON DO ANYTHING Copyright, 1917, by The Pres Publissing Co, (The New York Evening Worid) THEATRICAL friend had pre- By Sophie Irene Loeb The New York Evening World meet some one who loves you enough to over the fool things you do. said tho children were right—bot! d i / ; | 0 overlook all had chased Master Johnny Rangle| painters and panthers were bad ps Ploase limit communications to 150 words | Give @ woman a nice, cheerful Ananta Mer that Ve q | 2d Mmself when the venturesome tackle, painters especially, for their Up to Sixty Cents, Kindly state price and where same can | } RScane Neate UNH Peel lane ROA Gn . s g nanias, who assures @er tha mus and | fads had endeavored to purloin some | very bills caused the stoutest to 1, ‘kaitoe Eeainn W harobtaines pe ae may not be ms ‘ ee 5 sully about twenty | the Lorelel would be commonplace beside her, and she will not be even| yermilion. quail, Wadiy me the value of a 3 x nv Wednesday. milady bly Me uses i obtain | two ates in ht mildly interested in any “honest man" that Diogenes might have dis- “"Deed and ‘deed they do!" said the = = = plece d ’ To the Falitor of The Kveakig W musk scented perfume t erhaps no tance In the| covered old lady. “And not ont 1 ' Hoch : only is painte’ To-Day’s A ' —— pe m "what day April shots ono \ nee, AS Sco wetrating oF the most ferocious of all yarmints, AVerEREY. a Kindl whethe | wuane Ga town in Chine byt A hich ple ee My | Every wife's battle of Marne means a husband's retreat to the| but they is treacherous as well, Many | ME. SARAH BERNHARDT ele poli So: come x” name of Tachlentu, which ts known) jtg parity at ret Some idea of | Tagiiamento, . a time I heerd tell as how they hol- | made her first appearance in Eons to Oe & orpRee: a / vhen the ao-ca tthe gateway of Thibst Out of fine the anerk of supply. ler in the woods jest like a young | America at Booth’s Theatre, orpedo i ne fred beneath selon ee Srey | © " i ing the mark ned from . site 5 8 hb seve: J ace, but the range of visi a ue aa a? | Tachienlu fomes practically the [the fact tha y export A man values a woman's love according to her attraction for other pels eat pave er fone searching, | thirty-seven years ago to-day, Noy, 8, bmarine is greatly restricted when It supply of musk. ‘This ts obtained from fom Tachieulu het war was| men; a woman values a man’s love according to his indifference to other ws it @ lost child crying in the | 1880, She broke her contract with the eee , PP only abont at ccording d its fire is mach lesa sa Gita: qale, imsais dias, Practioully 4 woods, and has been killed by the | Comedie Francuise in Paris and w: pedoes are, therefore, a & Ronem of the : +; She whole of this wer France ant | women painters, who Jump on them from out | fined $20,000 in order t, si he surface whenever & that such found principally in the region near wan nade Ate. ne. A very emall _ thar evanaii first tour of Great Brit ne make her ine Tachle The substa known | (mount is nufac 5 ett Tree aiD and Ameri, Not im Book For ta cares Mens ae i ste Pais 1 is es AL nee It may cause a man a twinge of conscience to find himself getting en-| ‘phis ferocity trom on high con-| a. Before returning oe abe is Co i uusk is Gd secreted in the ss 7 } r vd To the EAitor of Tue Evening World To tie Latiior of hie Kvening Wort Py of the deer during oertain | perimenter t tance, Ex-| tangled in 4 foolish sentimental affair, but the only thing that causes bin\| armed Master Jarr’s experiance with eit ‘South America and Kindly tnform that the President of tha of the y ‘and bs t tn amail'¢ i Mat DY €%= | real remorse is to discover that he can't get untangled |the painters of bh uaintance. | a Aci cpt Germany, pen Toor 2evures Who CP eh repseacre eerie re Thtlsk Rranualin oe tt be eae Mee \"They had called out trom the mort tle latter country, Sibert Payson Terhune, nerve ma. #1 saye that there 't# precious value the deer have been | io nt AT Maly diminished ia Pareeten hi ' kes | ladders, not like a babe or r ' te ok th ne Bernhardt waa.) The Evening World, have is no law prohibiting a third term. almost eaterminated, They ‘ fe nt tortappeared, ‘The | — Alimony (s the only Kind of "war indemnity” in which @ woman takes) OT Lo LL ut “terouivusly for wil! and ehe was wyrmnle yeite AteAtlG in book form. If e0,!for one man. ‘oveatures, never wore than threo (ne musk to evaporate! SM#8S | any vital interest Y mires you sufficiently to appreciate al) the clever things you do, but to ily By Roy L.. McCar | had asked Mrs. Dusenberry, the little | old lady from Indiana, to stay with dal ing details of the Further harrow cherous tx Master Jarr greedily, He remembered | duly inform: ered | ¢ ‘ormed of the a certain threatening decorator who beet a ‘nly welcomed wheg teed i

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