The evening world. Newspaper, December 18, 1917, Page 20

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Evening World Daily Magazine LeTAMAmIED wT JoNRH Pvlstzen : Pusiithet Dany Lavept owed y ine Wisse Publishing Compan - ‘em a Row vowk : ; (‘i ai 0 Saas at Port-Offien a Babeegigtion Mates ng Oreniog ord tr the t ware Ont Cavate. One Tear + 400 One Teo f..,.. One Mono F ) One ‘ ; - WHERE IT IS MOST NEEDED. TATE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSIONER SAYER in couvinced that there is as yet vo rea! shortago of labor in New York but only ill-balanced conditions due to the fact that labor is badly distributed. Every dey, ho asserts, the public employment bureaus receiv lange numbers of applications for jobs and only a sinall bie at of the spplicants have been placed at wo j ‘ it rf } 7 5 “There is plenty of labor, but the labor does not baypea } as Bot It OG ‘ ' f f ; ue to be tn the places whore it te most needed.” 4 + 5 Everything combines to keep constantly before the country the vemiuder of what the principle of selective draft in ite wider applicu-| ten can be made to accomplish in increasing and concentrating tho, j nation’s productivity in time of war. y It is time the drafting of labor, which wes one of the most prom- {ang possibilities of the selective draft proposition when the country | first acoepted it, began to be more practically and widely discussed. The coal famine, for example, has brought out tho fact that shortage of labor and the Sixteen-Hour law are preventing the rail- roads from working to anything liko their full capacity at tho all- important job of distributing food and fuel to the American peoplo. The country needs a full force of labor concentrated upon the railroads which do the biggest part of its carrying. It needs to have those rosds worked twenty-four hours in the day and seven days in the week for the transportation of every ton that they can handle and deliver, | | If these chief carriers of the nation are doing only a part of what} | 1 they coulu do with more men to man their trains, then here is a place } for the se.ective draft to do its first big work for war efficioncy at | } home. | ye peerage i} NOW TO PERPETRATE A PEACE. | | HE Bolshevik trace with Germany—unhappily it has to pass| alyo as a Russian truce with Germany—is in effect. | 4 i During the next month wo shall have the spectacle of! ji vhe Red element of the Russian Revolution, an element whose leaders} ' have been saturated with German influence, endeavoring to perpetrate with tie Imperial German Government a peace the terms of which} 1a ehali fall short of outraging and exciting a different kind of Russian| patriotiem to the point of formidable counter-revolution. in » It js a situation at which the Allies can only stand by and wait | | to see what sort of Russia will emerge out of the wretched business } ond whether thero ie enough Russian stamina left to stick even to} ca gobo nearly. | Christmas Gifts The Jarr Family The Rolshevik rule is not Russia. But there seem to bo no} other forces in Russia positive or powerful enough to combine and| a n d t h e W a Y By Roy L. McCardell tave the nation from the ignominy toward which, in its revolution- . 4 Coorsight, L017, by The Pree Pubitntlog Co, York Bresisa Woeld } dazed .tate, Bolahevikism and the sly, persistent pressure of German | B h * | 66 HE weols before Christma: ff getting them until Christus purpose Lave been pushing it. | y Sop le lrene L oeb id » J | You'll huve'to taik with bia. tails | rf i 3 ion c ' ; before Christmas! we! So T have to destroy his faith | Th best that can be said of Russia at the present moment is _ Court 101T, by The Proe Publishing Go, (Tue Sem York Biowies Woe) . eevee ike cue Woliday seaet in) tie dean eid (ostnrer tue benaay| } thst she may have reached a stage deplorable enough to shock th a Ne me: the otter aay that might P yer wu couple of at ail, and 1 simply can't get my- on, do 1?" asked Mr. Jarr. | ni tle wom: with he | weoks' reet “i ie buttons ave th < " | better national spirit tHat ie left in her into an awakening that shall Peiaitakisa Une SauI’ UAPGWe lend tel GannGlt nlc die ee Baliove: ee POR Gre US FASHOE Lets tty ardly | wi ° un ¢ 4 fow days | sal ra, } carry scant comfort for those who have arranged thie armistice, | ek tor he And withal, thie Ite women eaid | cry is ch ieee retaken Ben LTAER i a big boy were night J turn on my Hitt bright lire sale - GANG 6) FORF BUR nb oaletg NO MEXICAN CRISIS. mer eta varn en my iti oat | aa comes A onc a oar, Bu the eae | a : Dowie Teast fos by som DL was a by wormed |t pica that “10 t NNOUNCEMENT by the State Department that the United ie pa vee $ ies io, and you | HM me betwaon ¢ ela Piece ae teeta States Ambassador to Mexico is returning to this country moms seer don’t kr ‘ nu ao busted hilmecit with the | chiefly to enjoy a vacation at Christmas time, and that he is h F ures In the evening pal m, “Wil to spea The boy turned pale, wond what misebie: in no sense making a hurried departure from Mexico City without | P a1 asLing for passports, ought to set at rest rumors of an imminent Mex-| | Leet Miss, re nae can crisis likely to call for the immediate despatch of American ama nee by. a troops. It was all covered with a black There ia no doubt as to tho origin of recent reports that rola-| Vell #o that you could not aro the health ti i ; at For poverty dvca not ilke to, seit was paramount anticipation ane en tions between Mexico and the United States are near the breaking | show itwctt, oe th . and a new ¢ that's point, and that intervention in that quarter must soon be added to| She did not want ans tty, this) Wh wanted way tho chanco—|@ne good t this nation’s cares and burdens, jue woman; she only w Ito wet | Yen, the Muuting cha Inte gic y eyes better so that sho could ge Aud the hany these days | Christmas The Imperial German Government would be exc seeding glad te nt too hi | back to sewing gn butt 1 poverty see the hcliday season in the United States darkened by an intensified | sewed on millions of buttons ‘for five dvd bali cM ee Mexican worry. {dollars a week. Sho was willing to NS. sh 8 anew everoont and a aul et clotbes | a ay ote wr A teew on many millions more, | he carrie on t rr Y Suid be d. Propaganda to s purpose is purt of the natural preparation, it) ut, alas, the one source ho: wnt clothes, that he got clothes ar would seem, for the new peace-feeler which the Kaiser is believed toliivet jood wan fa } eyes. ? vie . = dis a i : liiere ' ! Lave so beautifully timed for Christmas, | Wrox yours and years this | yoman i uatey fecal ta OiRAeris aia He (gala } Americans, lawevir: will accept the arsurance of the State De-| 2s? ‘ken care of old plo, and| he uldn't believe In Santa Clay b i when I asked her wh pirtmen* that there is no sudden or acute development in the Mexican | fou j sitnation, and disturb themselves but little over the clouds t man propagandists labor to roll up from the Rio Grande, if he didu't got teu.” “Do you really t r Willlo be 3 2” asked Mr, out with old uud this is a 4 vasior vecupalt hat Gor-|] “Because t people wer Jhelpless and needed mo, 1 | mother onve and would havo jeome one to bave been kind to he Letters From the People [omc f ly a Alte | ro a ble boy Real . F Me BIL? Bays “L think he belloves In Santa ¢ nero, 1EN'T any } ‘This woman tolled to save others 2 excep littio ehti- | } Please limit communications to 150 words, suffering, and sacrificed her own e = | before Christmas, anyway; As you aro a big boy, youl flecks Ata for the Poor at Wome, j and offcial roceipts will be aout tolatrenetir In tho process FORGOT HIS MISSION, Mra, Jars. “He will soe ‘tee arly Bie Neg, Fed) | To the Kaitor of The Brening Wor all responding i le ea OG M'CLUE caine into the office | enough to be distiusloned, : tae 4 Btupendous amounts ure being sent) BALIANGTON, pooti, |. 7” al L storday, laugniug ko @ gare| wo cin, I think it ta well rye ae } to relieve the suffering in war-| President th T# of Amerion, | 209, SeVed UP Sis monsy c the simple faith of our boy tn the unga—you | stricken Eurepe, The Nation's puran- | bank ss ‘ She Mad Ne) whoneo tho mirth?” wo fusinuated. | sweet old myths of the holiday sea. mma, are avs ; strings ve indeed been unloosed. | hee | Juith or Kin, and alwaya great) “Wait tl 1 wil you,’ stinated | gon." H get you it ult of clotaes We have only words of commenda-| 0000 i) not (00 late to write in| comfort came to her when she rex) Doe, “You know old Har | 1, don’t sco how you are golng to W:th long pants, mind you, and an iden for thie unprecedented generosity, Witch int ayer, sin, Publlo pervice flected on three Gr foun Hundred dole] idle wae, married, Dut Mal tiAe | preserve the swuet old myths of tho! “wmegat and @ ny OF sen To | Bot we must not forget those at our j1)° 1,8 mine World i» render. | Jara that seemed 10 safeguard bor) tiv, ‘Wrhat waa thd fellow. | “*" | Holiday keason eo far aa Willle eae ener the boy earnestly, own doors who will be in tmmedinte iif... %0 people in watching food s st charity of becoming a com-| YY alt ‘ned if you insist on giving lim y Kon, not for boys as big | and pathetic need during this coming /for this iat givicorn realty (iais# | aunity chars eal aon OASAIl eInGLAUOK (ae Mephied Mr. Jurt, | Christmas, yAction—becaure It touches ail of ug, And thon the er you becn atringing me shoes—w oa hi Is not the public at this time apt: {elo ays, he will got anywuy to overlook the many whose require- |). ments are just as pressing and whove ef hand Adam tha at | ay mr daily lives bank went broke, west that tue work vou! And all she wanted ¢ tive by organizing In ever to wee if I couldn't 6 So 1! truthfully ard last night! at any time of the year, ver told a le, t took 0 0 = hin § And f ¥ vlog he to stand by bis fuith in & 4, | dileama is proportionately graveition district in. the grratar cay s¢ the debris for her, voit Went, And santa Claus must the ev ' lilatory | ainong those who surround ue? It is.clvic welfare league, ¢ th 1 he'd Have | end eo Banta Claus mus ¢ Pod hetween y ne latory, 06 the | with the thir Santa Claus. Could 1, would I see concern and ask bin to these the Volunteers of America would render some present and prac- { Meal assistance in the wey of & bas- tit 8 from | ne dons sucededed. ~~ LLOYD GEORGE A COBBLER'S| would try ket of substantial provisions to take pa RRR Aer MY ROGET (Bh SORE GAS.) Wells: F can't got Mims motor NEPHEW. into the home. May we not hope that Ao Se eee 1 ber Pang Harry. | evel wn—t'm afratd of a gua some of the thousands who read your | as owl oven Wyo t out the ise, any at paper will send us something to ren- aselsta A the w ca haie gala aren Aviv LLOYD GEORGE was «WA Dra, D reared by hip uncle, @ cobbler, | Ger this practical relief? yout 40 koe Jarre bred ire motoreyele, thy and wa sblrod to study law H Checks osin be mage payable to to eo ello sail i out of Ue sd He's too yoy A to red oes the wrongs of allington Booth, No, 36 affect te uvers OF Fe ‘ for a usvotoveyyle, Ie neoda ot i jaoaw whom be jab ¥ blu people aime ry Et West 28th Birect, New “Yori City, lite, 3 to suve u tow dollars we eng Be vecas olives, aud 1 Yaya pus oyyut ‘Lib puutb. sy a ‘ Semmens Ee scien t [Fucsaar, Dec TT Americans » ® m Under Fire By Albert Payson Verhune 1 Tie Pewe Putaaning Ge (Ub0 NO. 61—-VALLEY FORGE ine Gararet tor yer eneeaies eouid rors. lo & vag after the the enemy. To Vailey For, his men. Thore, in tents and io spend (the winter, | A Winter of Suffering. nelr route could be t jane frost-bitten feet, For want of by their scanty frow, Cold and hunger ds | “In the crowded hospitals (whieh wore for the m or frail wigwamo woven of twisted | Yet Washington kept the: {Daily hls deill masters had counter-marching and gui ready to drop. ino wh! wot the etory of a bw rightfully to the ebtonicies, c Yor {t deals with the herotem of our ancestor our of the Mevolution and © enemy beld; aud from Val , tien, the Father of Min Country Tho woather was frig! t enough Ore or food or Waslington t m buey, theso etarvi them out on the parud i through tho Manual of J ‘t Wienge most une Under Pie” wler aogulel tine the mere presence of have infitetad. of tue t Tits 4 makeshift barr day “for Y ned | blankets rm of (he boughe) men etimes died at Valley got very at sae Wh have woo the blew slngia eirangy auetd Wastlugtow tured bis woruw r quarters, He ehove Valley wv lutering. Vor it was tot far wuich the Forge he could menues withdrew their hard. ® nur therm, iow ‘ saya Fiske, from bare at part tere log hut for want itraw to put between themselves and the frozen ground ou which they they i This severo treatment gradually turned the half-orgentzed fore bd into a Pann Nghting ma Bo the seeming crue! | Washington wrote to Cor | have here 2,598 n jotherwise naked,” | His compl. brought no good | pighimase of hunger ur Stupidity. !- Gordon writes: “Hogsheads of shoes and stockings and clothing and h was to do rote ery farmer ‘and merchant Onrnnnnenns, Le | hardships at Vulley Vorgo | i An Ast of Y ws clothes or firewood or mo And not ono of these supplics reached the soldiers, for duty because they ore bar result winter dragged 8 necessittes, a ssary Lo lying at different places on the roady und in the woods, perishing jof teams or of mon The Com eney or both, ‘The freezo because it wa too laa! 48 a strong faction that sought ‘0 quoty Fiske again: rtermaster and a deranged Ce y to pay the te missary Department a; 2y or stupld to feed the t movo Congress to act tn the heroes’ behalf, When ono thinks of there ead consequences w pmissart ass one ts stron the remark made by Charles Leo whon he a8 oy ‘a stable of etupld cattle that atu: mstern.” C tulssary let th troops st rought ef a sbled at every step," foot and on Uke story also eause our who heard of the tened to send food or to relleve the distress. provisions wore for want inted by Congress was rotten with arve and Washington could Vor tn Congress there his overthrow and hampered bis every hegigent Bachelor Girl Reflections By Helen Rowland Coprciut 10iT, by The Prose Publishtee Oo, (The New York Ev OW comes the merry Yuletide, when the chi stockings, Mother hangs up the holly, aud Mather “hus, body,.from the landlord to the iceman. t ge ‘ tea band’s intellect MUN Boe «dimmed wh; A man loses his Mustons about wor Ddady tecth, his sentiment about them wi th bis ton hair, aod bis curlosity about them with lity last br ren hang and ability ts apt to be wrap ‘There would de {ntinitely more cnly knew when to begin making lov hearthappioees in the Thia 's the psychological time empty hearth and the m: “camouflage.” A Dictionary df" Trench Slang. esian reac- ta) with | ns and Carine, Camel Brigade—Pritish soldier's des- gna iJ niry on oc. noe that the ves the men, Camion—A military truck. Camoufiage—v aking. A mako-be-| 1 Carry ‘On—To go ahead, Cauliflower—A special shell with small wirs wings fired from @ trench cannon especially for break- ing down barbed wire, cour he appea heat Cave Voute—Safety cellar for pro- toution fro plane bombs, C. C. S—Casualty cleartng station, Clariedles cal faction ek © wtroag defenders of Shells trom trench more Communique—An offclal report given out by the Ivonch Government, Congregation of the Archangel 8t. Michael—A semi-roligious reaction- ary Ru society formed ia sup- ert of the Cz Consolidating @ Positionrhe propa. tried man with ¢ of year en the of nly A counter a ag eats Word.) up their s up” everys sa big alu. The tax on @ dachelor's income fs not heary, when he looks at {t as “the price of peace.” rns : al a Just now a wife's glowing opinion of ber wus: suddenly a ehe Watches him etruggliug to te up a Christmas package that a twelve-year-old girl b ' Be could have successfully turned out in two minutes, if mea and women only Luew when to stop. pockets scare know r to envy or to pity each other. hanging eometiing you «a 1! can't afford 1 don't want from sow i 10 can't afford to 43 she still remem When ts a Me not a o Jour ud ground Constitutional Democrats—The most | arty it for 8 trl influential Liberal | Convoy—Navai encour Cook's Tour-—-An vffict ommixstoned officer arrived army no new a recently lost position, Crater—Hole mi plosive shell, Croix de Guerre—A Drench a for bravery. Croix Rouge Oren ohare D. C, M—Distinguished Medal, Digging In—Making protection while Ditty Box or Bag pti nder fire, Navy ter Sugar loaf mounds communicating widen. Doing @ Bit—An Dougheey-—An infantryman, | Dud—Origt Duffie Bag—A clothes bay, Dugout—An — underground against shells oy Lombs, ) Russie, hips. p over ® battle ground under the guidance of gcouts for the benefit of officers and. s of @ | Counter Attack--An Cerort to recover by a high ex- ecoration Cross, Condnes 4 trench or other m)—Re- elo for holding odds and ends, at polnis twenches service for the war, Dolly Varden—Hritish name for Ger- mun hanilet, Doloi! Doloi! (Russian) ~ “Down Down!" Corresponds to French "A bas!” ‘ily a spent shell, Now fring, by Germans Trommelfereu, D8. 1S Dlatinguignes Service Order. che, they prepared to\ \

Other pages from this issue: