The evening world. Newspaper, January 5, 1918, Page 8

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Se See —— Frening World Daily Magazine | r ! Coprrtaht, 1918, S (@) by The Hem ablienicg ¢ ZL Mi ih Now York rening se 63 to ee ae agp , By J. H. Cassel, Americans B &® Under Fire ° ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Published Daily Except Sunday by he Press Publianing Company, Nos. t Row, New Yor RALPH PULITZER, Prosident, 63, Park, Row. ‘ soak SULTAN: see Berelah, Fark Tow | By Albert Payson Terhune i tered at the Post-Office at ivew York as Second-Class Matter, | Covrright, 1018, by ‘The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Erontog World), ion Rates to The Evening|For neiand and the Continent “and | 2 ‘orld for the United States 8 Au Countries In the International 4, ' NO. 56.—THE BATTLE OF QUEBEC. : ee ee ee tsscavens HIS fs the story of a battle won by an English General, i Ley Routh . eB lone Mont oa ! But the bulk of the men who won the victory for him were Americans—Yankee lads of farm and forest, hundreds of whom were to fight for their country’s freedom a few years lator in the Revolution. France and England had long warred for suprem- acy in America, By 1759 France's last remaining stronghold of any importance was the heavily forti- fled City of Quebec. Quebec—situated on high cliffs above the St, Law- rence River, and girdled by formidable walls and stoutly garrisoned—was the keystone of all France's power in Canada, Up tho St. Lawrence sailed the British General, * Wolfe, with an army of 8,000, chiefly made up of Am- erican militia and frontiersmen—Indian fighters, most of them, and deadly marksmen, In the town above, 16,000 Frenchmen under Gen, Montcalm held the citadel against them. For months every plan of Wolfe's to capture the city was thwarted. At all points ghe French stronghold seemed impregnable, By early autumn of | 1789, the siege seemed a total failure, Then it was that Wolfe and his Americans pertormed the feat of valor that was to panne @ make thelr names mmortal, The Feat That On the night of Sept. 12, Wolfe was ferried at- lently across the river, with 5,000 men, to @ point at the base of the cliff below Quebec, Here a steeply i¢ i Made History. j winding path had been discovered, leading up the | face of the cliff to the plateau above, | As there seemed no possible chance of an Invader trying to scale the | helghts by this narrow and perilous route, the path was not guarded, al- | poe there were plenty of sentinels on duty at tho easter approaches to the elty, | Under cover of black night, the five thousand assaflants climbed the } MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED Lalo ) 4 lust ret ititied to the for repubitca' jen ereettel OTe Stare createed fo iS Soils ts ee ent Mt Stat ale TORO Occ licecicccoscevesccooneseneess THE PRESIDENT’S RAILROAD PROGRAMME. “ ESIDES the assurance of immensely increased efficiency of rail- B road operation for war purposes, both the President’s address” é NO, 20,591 s to Congress and the railroad bill which gives concrete form, to its purport furnish the country with further guarantees as to the security and stabikty of values upon which depend to no small extent) tho regularity and strength of the nation’s financial pulse. | Not only is it proposed to assure to the railroads the average net operating income of the last three years, but the Government prac-} tically takes upon itself responsibility for all new railroad financing, | promises to pay a fixed rate of return “upon the cost of any additions or improvements made while under Federal control by the carrier! from its own capital or surplus,” establishes a fund of $500,000,000 from which to “pay the expenses of Federal control on any deficit of a railroad below the standard return,” railroad credit when necessary by purchasing railrond securities in and undertakes to support | path, 0 quietly that no French sentry hearl them, These were men who is saatied, | ier used to the stealthy silence of Indian warfare and who profited by the lessons they had | ad fro : . “No borrow!ng should run athwart the borrowings of the | if ne mnie of tho cliff i Creeping up to the summit of the cliff, they formed themsel broad part of the plateau that was called “The Plains of Abraham. front of them was Quebec, ata In Federal Treasury,” declares the President, “and no funda- . mental {ndustrial values should anywhere be unnecessarily {m- | patred, In the hands of many thousands of small {nvestors {n | up (ah aawa the French inside the city awoke to find Wolfe's army drawn the country, as well as in natloan! banks, in Insurance com- ba May ponding almost at their very gates—no longer far below and un- 5 able to reach @ pertious hel, on panies, in savings banks, in trust companies, in financial agen- Montcalm mustered his army—largely composed of untried recruite— beta irises to drive his opponents from thetr new point of vantage He led the ck in person, hurling bis forces against Wolfe’: y |a wildly impetuous charge, td Fe SLE GREY, | On came tho French, shouting and blazing away. Tho frontiersmen j Walted tn stolid silence, until thelr enemies were barely forty yards distant. Thon they poured a The Fall of murderously well-atmed volley Into the advancing Quebec, j ranks, And the next instant Wolfe gave the com- oon mand to charge. Before the French could recover from that firat men were upon them with bayonet and sword and cles of every kind, railway securities, the sum total of which | runs up to some ten or eleven thousand millions, constitute a vital part of the structure of credit, and the unquestioned solidity of that structure must be maintained.” | The rock of security and solidity is, of course, the United States | (Treasury. In undertaking to do what the railroads have proved themselves ineapable of doing, in substituting its omnipotence for their impo- tence, the Government simply puts behind them the credit of this nation of 100,000,000 people—a credit made unlimited by their in- dustry, productive power and tax-bearing capacity. No wonder the railroad executives are relieved and content. wonder Wall Street is enthusiastic to the booming point. “We are dealing with great matters,” the President reminds Congress, “and will, I am sure, deal with them greatly.” In passing the railroad bill, Congress will unquestionably carry out the will of the majority of American people to do a big thing in a big way; their will to back the railroads with the nation’s financial strength and resource in order to meet imperative national need, They take the risks, they accept responsibility for mistakes, they make good deficits, pay coats and protect values, . terrific volley, Wolfe's musket-butt, There was no resisting that headlong assault, French lines crashed the frontiersmen—a, through, carrying everything before them, Back rolled the French army In wild retreat. head of his pursuing men. A French bullet stretched trampled ground, mortally wounded. A frontiersman's calm, as the latter was striving madly to rally hi him, Both opposing Generala were thu Quebeo was captured—captured | Amerteans, _ The Seven Ages of Love By Nixola Greeley-Smith right, 1018, by The Prem Publishing Co. (The Now York Eveaing World), ' NO. III—THE PSYCHOLOGICAL AGE HERE fs a time in a woman's) certainly knew how to propose, An aint to proj I Against the dectmated sainst the lines and straight Ree RRS eS ~<a Wolfe charged at the him on the bloody and rifle-ball found Mont- 's fleeing troops, and killed No slain, But the battle was won n and largely through the heroic daring of | samen es! Honest Landlords and Heatless Days The Jarr Family — By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1018, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Kreaing World), ‘ . life when she will marry any-| there no doubt whatever that Who says they will not be entitled to demand that every bit of B S jhe I L 5 66] VE HAD a shooting pain In certain that he had neither wh thing; an bour tn a bachelor’s pangs accepted him. I hope for’ ee ; ; ' the last couple of days, erybod @ knew It," sald Mrs. | ; ¢ ; eaco of mind that she stuel ) $moreased efficiency developed in railroad operation under Govern- iy op le Irene oe oan pst Ser tae plat dies fs baer vat an MOR sL Pipes ob and did it cheerfully anda) A Sek Copyright, 1918, by tho Press Publishing Co, (Tho New York Eventog World), seen ‘ kup Fd. seid . vapid 3 a without running arow ment direction shall be secured for their continuing and permanent _ re it fin nka st Snctatie Pa \nother me much, but {t might terrupt me talking about people like lamp post if there ing ow much sho hated deing a MEW days ago there appeared |allow baby carriages to go out the .nething serious, and Mrs. Stryver! that man Jenkins, I will tell you that| is nothin, |? and so becoming more of benefit hereafter? these columns an article,| front door and thus save tenants “ometning dulluie, end Sine. meee eat mar i Sen aseas'| ing Morel one by neglecting the simple dath Toartions Landlords and Heat.| ‘OM sipping down etcep and icy says I should have an X-ray taken. Kittingly was worried about | attractive within] she might hove verkeene icon + | a cas back stairs. She had an X-ray taken of her ank hair falling out and was going sound of his plead-| Of course Curlylocks got tat-wittea i , sola ae en CR TaaoEes Whe I a dion and found she was threatened with! +5 nave an X-ray taken of her head, as well as fat-bodied through {dle- FOR THE NEEDY AT HOME | wie rikted Pam thelr Uulldings, ao that. ling arches, Clara Mudridge-| ijyt she tried Higher Thought in- ny? Because| rate, Fito bedi But ot say ‘ re eethee. with | area may be Kept out of di oh had: an fied pan bulk tead PA PSE their hour has| aged matron, suddenty imiuen oth y ginning Je » Federatt ho $ BeOS: the etreets, was being treated by her de “she was right; one's hair fa the 9 come. Tho psycho-| feminism, whc URING the week beginning Jan, 14, the Federation for the children suffer- | And then there are tandlords who! “\aretime knittlag nest thing one can’ think Smee ‘ 4 Tonle eee erebo-| cathiaing prients rare detsrantnea’ ! Support of Jewish Philanthropic Socicties plans to raise ing from cold in|do not puta widow out on the side |x ray pictures A afrs Darr, EET tem and they ay pe economically independent even $4,500,000 for local charities, a Bogue Se apart-) body and soul together and has been | seem to be the most p Listen, please!” said Mrs, Jarr Im-|no more escape marriage than a child | {t!" orrow tho money to do mont, : hese day ; |indoor sport able to rent Mrs, | The Federation aims to securo the 30,000 new members it needs | ton can be in winter at its worst, They should be in a state of mind to respond generously to this Jewish appeal for a fund to provide for the needy here in New York, where high food prices and coal famines epread ever-incre: in bis greed has given to the city free all its é@treets and street im- provements, public utilities of en- ormous value, its parks, most of its publio buildings and now supports I know of an apartment house where they have never provided \heat, yet every time a lease has been sufficient signed there have been promises and assurances that arrangements have heating showed me hers and tt wasn’t a bit bigger photo than Mrs, Stryver's. They ire queer looking things, and are very wonderful, although they are #0 blurred I can't make anything out of <-ray photograph; yet, just as I said, y all look blurred to me. “If the X-ray of Mrs. Rangle’ knee and the X-ray of Mrs, Stryver's t atiently. ingly tried (cau elude whooping cough or mumps,|__The psychological age—th Now gomos al ar these’ als not the landlords |My, Jare “Now, 1¢ you have a avila “ Sak hink y PSI which a wor pe a ; ; ot the 4 {igher Thought, end kept thinking| If you doubt tts propositic n & Woman will marry anytht bo make its total membership 50,000, but as tlhe membership fee is number of lot-| that are meant by the sufferers. BUf-|in your shoulder you should try O8t@-| 11.0) nop hate was perfect and glossy, |moment consider fh bitaateem eos sperine at twenty-six. BY this time ; be 5 ‘orers are always reasona es aa | a ‘ +4 si ek ? es riends have be, t only $10, the greater part of the fund must come from subscriptions, peaks me Pe see in thelr pain, they recognize the opathy, one : ta try) ett stopped falling out. your friends, Perhaps you have al-|her single state. The male sex tae i i i Wa Vast : | ww 0 em | of others. “How should I know I should try| «ywny don't you try Higher|ready considered the a man assumes that a ere is prosperity enough in New York among b Je if ‘ 1 Helne eh . ¥ mand have de- at she wants to be There is prosperity & k B both Jews and | signa, 1 Le (whlch dou Tie Jandiord who ts being critletsed | pathy untit L have an X-ray|pnougnt for the pain in the|cided that they can be accounted top| married and Is single merely through Christians to assure the success of such a campaign, means heartless landlord or honest | these freezing days ts t ked Mrs, Jarre. “When an| aaked Mra: Jarre only aa the act of God, jlack of opportunity, "You're an aw- { It would be a strange thing if, while millions of dollara are sent |!ndiord), reads in ae ap follows: |Cuseg rathor ‘than makes, good 0 De ROWE TRAE) will,” replied Mra. Jarr,| Have you not looked sometimes|another will ray neceon ents Ah aa ; ‘ A ‘Heartless Landlord’ furnishe know o do firs! 0 band to onder so ow "t From this-city for the relief of suffering Jews in various parts of war-| 45 ce Bete ce: ther tite savente |ARe NRA Coed ppb ies oregano eat A a8 Hetty 1 ft i hus and to wife, from wife to] Won der some fellow hasn't snapped 7 ; pe TE eRe ah f me the Y¥/can go to tho X-ray specialist who} hudband, and askea yourself wonder. |2°U, UP before this! stricken Europe and Western Asia, no help could be found for the|ana the city pays 75 per cent. of t ning” amount of fue lor her ankle and she knows a man vanegas' $10, BU &. OAR Ontae| “What in ihe Nae eee mee hing could be enore soul-biight- A : A ‘ ; . oe | Who does not inake any § . : 8 g § | a a > , and after a womaf t hungry and deserving whom this great and rich community dis-| State expenses, eo that property own | 14 qo somothing about it, who only charges tea dullars for 48 | iighop Thought tur $10. Stil, {f ono| beauty and Joy prompted you to take |imuny times sheds In the vier Th covers hourly in its midst, ors of Greater New York carry twu-| solution for temporary ‘ald, Dul who (X-ray, but Clara Mudridge-Siith | 44 Higher ‘Thought ono has ndthing| each other? What fatal folly led thet | ™Aatticd Just to” stop people “eee, Whe last week has reminded New Y ‘ +, | thirds of the State's burdons, Mees te sae er tee wnoriage ta cover} went to a hit eed specialist WHY | 19 show for it, While tt one pays $10| poor, driven man to choose that angular | Peruitting on why she 1s single, week has reminded New Yorkers how terrible destitu-| “re ‘H. 1.’ of Greater New York EEN Te gle ae MIBNE HAVE) cnarged hee thirty dollars. She) for an X-ray photograph ono has the! creature with the buzz saw voice for all jis 1 never so goaded, If a man the loveliness he might lawfully take for ever and ever? What midsummer madness led that stricken woman to lect that man with a face like a clam fritter for all her joy?” is unmarried the world assumes that it 1s merely because he ts wary and a gay dog, Nevertheless, wen, having the same horror of being forty that women have of belng thirty, rarely approach ing dis- been made to secure a large system and thus assure warmth, And no doubt they ask themselves] that Rubicon between youth and mid- dle-age without taking a anic- stricken refuge in marriage’ He ankle and the X-ray of Clara Mud-| ,\¢) same questions and are just as them. He has dono his bit, is dolng ridge-Smith's Jaw were to be mixed| much mystified as we are by the and will continue to do It. adequate|them, Still, as 1 say, they are won- derfull tress among the poor. "€ tel! cholo Having Perhaps @ few of mich people’ will J up, I couldn't tell one from the other,| choice they made. reached the psycholomie ——— “As you point out, the landlord and! y.oit py the present orlilear eendition “Mire. Ranglo had an X-ray taken ani ~ don't believe they could, The| Or they may have attained the| who a your Peres cheats Mek ghee the tenant have a common interest. |‘They will likely realize that {t 1a that bothered herao, 8 secret philosophy of the married—the won- A HARD WEEK FOR THE FIREMEN. toa Savant tae © seruen, Sore, |g ei pe reer saeco se, rialate can, of couray Dut, thens|ailonophy whieh eieriy women ex: takes Cagpata! taunt mnie ds ” Bhai eels Cleopatra to supper will ag doubtless many tenants move it over and 1 they charge you for diagnosing the} pri in advice to young ones, "Marry | yapturous 9 pper w wed # 4 , }may soften the hard heart of the fo places whero heat will be She tac knee, but the X-ray X-rays, and one has nothing to show] the man who do most for you| he nad Meals ie april flower. Once ET the city give an extra kindly thought to its firemen|L.' and improve their own lot. Move tor tn the lease B00 exclaimed Mr, in | whether you love him or not. “All| ful, of course, amt Le nt be bagals hs ; , etive| Out o oring. pre . Hy pa come to about the sa ect course, and clever enough to who the past week have had to do their work—perilous enough | °™* SEG UCM fa at ao eaits lesa nics Ol This Sutoriog. proparod “Xr views are Ol) “you have the ex-ray to show for | imitrlages come to atout the same/understand his cleverness. She must + iti i rei and wasteful of the H. L.'s’ property| i ve. AS the fad, indee © i) sgosted Mr. J “And as in- | has scents . ays be the best dressed w at any time—under conditions o: 0: ifficulty z it will not have been tn vain, As for| the fad, suggested Mr. Jarr, a I have neve epted this opinion, eye kph oman t any f extraordinary difficulty | and not cheat him so-often out of his |{ Mill not have been in vain. tenants, | will be vending tt , imate ex-ray photographs aro all the | bec the momentum of a great| fergie rein clothes that she mada and hardship. rent, Thus moro people would be- there iy something to be said about | ong every family tro t Will! ; you might as well be in the | love will opie along for years! aweet, but not insiphhe ir ae 4 + v, ‘g 0! a by pmipel | them, for they e ith DI oF begat c . ) dha] sh = f qa! id sipid--in short, * Daring this record cold epell New York has had an unusual num-|°°™®, aroesiahelb ogy s dia Pe Story, wre With us but that Is) avg X-ray albums on them abloue fashionable ‘and devi ort, 5 ; 7 would compel be ervice oo Ree era Manta ae gg matter,” wala Mrs, SNHTG dalla aha , has told us 80 often of ber of fires, due in large measure to the desperate expedients to which| nother states: “This company | uae ay erin ra Maly coun. ona 7 a R 1 the * ts 1 = begat bie aed eae hay ton of virtues and oP fuel-starved New Yorkers have been driven to get a little warmth in| placed its order for coal last April for | nding ways and means of relte ou to have an X-ray taken If the oF ene n yourself nome day; {Of te future against rainy day | Would lure Bima | tpmatriinony. “And — —_ ——— |} yo" : eer 3 ‘ + | of ol e and disillusionme © hear one day thi their homes. apartment GONEem, 67 ee ae E ki Cc | jeast thing {8 tho matter with you.” | ana i¢ you are and the dootor aends | "Ch, Age, ANY diate: tat basting red, and watt Batlentiye tat eee Through the bitter days and worse nights firemen have had | Dower that could be done, there are | SsKimo Va endar “r know that, It 1s just what Iwas you to have an X-ray taken you'll/ a few scoundrels, any man is the raw the paragon, Wien, she appears a ‘, one or d ere 7 ving,’ replied Mr. Jarr. "Je 8 | feel foolis! haterial of a goo sband ne an Seale ‘ho deseribed as a their powers of endurance taxed to the utmost. ‘Two big factory | unable to get coal for." |TPPHERH are many strango caten- | saying,” replied hth ment Seca * arr. “But | Be becomes depends rely on the| Winner really looks like a Derby fi aay in Mankat 4 Hoboke P B are Se enmna ike ‘poe’ has dara in the world, none of whieh {at our office had constant attacks of “I euppose so,” sald Mr. Jarr, “But | ni the cooking. And ale | 8! Her blouse, ike as not ae fires yesterday in Manhattan and Hoboken, following two night fires| paid something about tho shoe that is more interesting than that of | headaches and his hair fell out, too, {¢ you think you will be any better nan will try to be a BO0d | Teg ee rons her shoes spread in lower Manhattan, furnished evidence enough of what it means to DE Ente Lividentg | {28 Eskimos, ‘They also divide the| ‘The doctor payin e mu bi ers ni for it, and if you b toate SUE Ee UE chee ice alt & CHAnee. Ft scunda like Bateant Tele ee * battle with flame and smoke in weather like this, these landlords here quoted looked | ¥ear into twelve divisions and give a| X-ray taken, He did and took it of the fashion in not having been | mooi Ause marriage does |T™MPAK. Nevertheless, we need not ‘ " A ice 8 ‘3 ahead last summer and so orde long native name to each, Trans-|to his specialist, who said “Ther X-rayed, while everybody else in your) 41 offer the opportunities for] Pity him. If he had not me: ~ Fighting fire’ is an heroic job at any season. But when St has|that they have had some assurance | lated, these names have the following | pething there.’ " ct has had an intorlor view or two | yelaxation and consequ riora-| When the marrying mood came in rae i law at . 4 pply of coul, Of course, aning ; Salva wht 6! o at it provic an him he migh ame to be done in zero cold, in the face of icy winds, with water freezing | Fo A tee eee lanmtiorte onl a Om for troat:"| ‘AWellt” remarked Mrs, Ji ken of the oe ny wae rh - fe (er oe think the remit, | cltcus eid Add ated tis an ‘ alm s i i very a ho feel the responsibility ary rost “whether the specialist ‘ ars, Go and have a little X-ra: oe y te hat] whatahe is makers aed lady. An est aa tant as it falls, it tokes « bra bey and & degree of stout- peony aad who would be Twilling to oh, ay es or brains, Jenkins doesn't know," portrait taken for father and the | U2*. ; AY has a The peannince each. any~ | heartedness none the less worthy of admiration because all in the| {ove profit in cages like this i April, month of piied Mr. Jarr, children, Say, don't you think it | the Mother Gooke rhyme iim, He had to ordi ee ‘There are landlords who, when they | bearded seal; May, “month ot fawn. | Pied Mr Jarr, S eROF ‘ ete . X-ray family | “Curlylocks, Curlylocks, wilt thou ——e bse! day's work. . dio, even go fo far as to ‘make wills * Juno, “egg month;" July, “in "Hae went to a lot of trouble to aa.) would be nice t mune may temhy | be mine? TIRES THAT w. It’s been a trying seven days for everybody whose duties kept! to Bive annual picnics for thelr ten-|quito month; Augu oberry New Year calendars of? \q ot wash dishes nor fecd| cn ON'T PUNCTURE, A oat coe Pei ants. Also there are many landlords | month; Sept fa month; | THE DUCTILITY OF TUNGSTEN, | “Don't be foolish, It's a serious the swi n Towa inventor haa patented is ‘him out of doors. But no one will begrudge an extra warm vote of who will allow ehiidron to gomo into | Oct aber * 0 forms| 4 ploce of tungsten the size of a lead| matter," sald Mrs, Jarr, And she! But sit in a parlor and sew a fine] !9uld to be poured into qulonsabiin ( Tow Yorks fi i . ¢ heir propel y of dogs, and |around the " P Gaia oll 43 - n, tres 3 i thanks to New York's firemen, who have had the hardest week in the go not put up a eign, “No children | month”. tw pencil contains enough material for tly the ten dollars for STAY) | And. tend upon atyawbarsing «anna; fo the anolve tho sulphur end history of the Department, | allowed.” deer); De miles of flament for electrle lamps of |and later on tn the day pald the gas | gn (organ uke the rubber softer and more | ‘Then there are landlords who wilt! month,” ordinary alu. bill with the money, The author of that ancient tyre to puncture, “MMs, less Hable 4 che

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