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<—sS pind World Daily Magazine Che Emeiny wisi. |It's Up to Yo ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, — _ - —— Copgrigh!, 1918. by the Pree Publtshiog Oo, (The New Yer Brentag World), ; NAW: roa Ce ' | The Love Song of a Bride, Which Is Every Wife's. u, Wilhelm! xx Sayings of Mrs. Solomon Published Dally Except Bundey by the is Publishing Company, Nos, 63 to ———ae ~ Now ¥ tr, | HOLD, my Beloved, behold how 1 love thee! 6 7 ihe Pre — By Helen Rowland Budscription Rates to 7 B | Vo tie Continent and) y Lo, for thee do I live the life of a lIRDMAN! ford for the U a | All Countries tn fle Interuational > a Tot, Who hath heard me complatn? Aga $4.00) One Year malas 0 ‘When tho alarm soundeth at sevon, for thee d@ hi 601 Ono nth. I leap from my bed, cven as a fireman, and spring Mghtly into my clothes, that 1 may bo upon the sceno, to prepare thy bath, and pour thy coffee, and find thy hat! Yet do I love thee. Bebold, when the oven {s filled with half-bake@ cake, when I am tn the midst of curling my hatry j when I have but Just torn up the house upon cleanings’ ( & day, THEN dost thou summon me over the telephone, uorwonee saying: “Mcet me for luncheon, Little One! Yea, bo there in twenty minutess | | for I have something {mportant to tel! the | And lo, though the cake burneth, and my hair falleth down, aud the house be utterly destroyed, I am THUR, at the appuluted moment, half clad but smiling. Yet do I love thee! Behold, when the rain falleth and the winds Low!, aud I have ar- rayed myself in my most comfortable negligee, and am prepared to spend Is quiet evening with a fascinating novel, then dost thou rush ia, as the HE ASSOCIATED PRESS, led to the te ot a ot tothe ome fot eryeartes ot ter" Sere VOLUME 53. seeNO, 20,698 : “THE KEY LIES IN WASHINGTON.” Tis is neithor haste nor extravagance in the conviction that with the President’s new etatement of war aime as the United States views thom, comes tho best prospect the world has yet, seen of a near peace, | The speech before Congress yesterday was a great utterance—| great in the breadth of its statesimanship, great in the largences of! ts humanity, great in {ts expression of the most disinterested purpose | with which a people ever went to war, great in the simplicity and concretenoss with which it defines the specific ends that must be) attained for the fulfilment of that purpose. } But not the least quality of its greatness {9 Ite extraordinary timeliness, i It was only yesterday that the American public began to te! informed of the extent to which Imperlal Austro-German bungling of the peace negotiations at Brest-Litovek hed disrupted the German} uation, | Already a polltical crists of the first magnitudo fe threatening {n | Germany. Tho Ino between militarists and non-militarists becomes | more and more sharply defined. Tho Socialists aro rampant against an Imperial foreign policy which has outraged the humanitarian prin- ciples of the Bolsheviki. Clear thinkers like Maxtmfllan Warden are louder and older than ever in denouncing a ‘l'eutonio policy of annexation, ‘They) point out that the Imperial German programme looks to @ peace} which can be only an armed truce. | A German nation that has reached this point in the terrible lesson it has had to learn must find deep meaning in the President's | juestion: To whom have we Deen Metening then? To those who eryin, | “Come forth, come forth, my Beloved! For lo, I SHOW, and there are but ten minutes to spa \thou? For see, I am arrayed and WAITING! Yet do I love thee! } Lo, when I have just laid me down to “enjoy a headache,” then dost* thou come bubbling tp, with the glad news that thou hast Invited slrauge,» | GUESTS for dinner, and that I, thy Wife, must bo “the life of the party." # | » Yet do I love thee! } Yea, when I have fust eat down, to glavco through the morning paper, dost thoif not always suddenly discover that the ono thing vital to thine existence, thy penknife, or thy collar button, or thy favorlie cravat, hath disappeared from off the earth? Aud do | not always are {and search the attics and cellars, until it hath been found? Yet do I love thee! Lo, when I have labored all day to make the house shine as a fur- /niture-pollsh advertisement, dost thou not burst m ly tn upon ft to dreas for dinner? And, bebold, {n ten minutes the co resembleth {French olty, after the passing of tho Germans! | Yet do I love thee! ad | Vertly, verily, my life fs as an Anna Katharine Green detective story, | whereof NO man can say what may bappen next. Yor, in tho matler of | springing startilng surprises, Laura Jean Libbey 1s an amateur beside ve tickets for the Bebold, why tarriesd didn't come until thee! speak the spirit and intention of the resolution of the German | Yet, whateoever thou epringest upon me, I am always Yeady to meet ‘ Reichstag of the Sth of July last, the spirit and intentton of A jit Yea, a hatr-trigger hath nothing on MID! the Liberal leaders and parties of Germany, or to those who | FRENCH 3 , a} Sf - é Ten | For the life of a Fireman is a sweet and simple pastoral, beside the resist and defy that spirit and Intention and fosist upon cov y . F, « d 1 life of ANY wife! quest and subjugation? Or are wo listening, in fact, to both. | | Selah! unreconctled and {n open and hopeless contradiction? { — Dee There is little reason to fear that these quostions will not find | ce M 99 S 9 their way to those to whom they aro addressed. | a u n a y $s ¢ Too many Germans in Germany have already formulated them | . e 1 for themselves. Too many are at a point where they would willingly { | | lk / force other Germans to listen and give the answer upon which, as ntimate a iN) y be President declared yesterday, “depends the peaco of the world.” | THE GIRL WHO PAID A DOLLAR DOWN b: That is why his definite statement of American war aims and) | qr was @ tong time before I discov. | time that nether you nor your hui peace conditions, far more lurgely presented though agreeing in sub- | J fred the trouble with the Norris| Pand ts quite happy, that you arg ‘ J ’ , "i ¢ citing out o! 1 that you 4 stance with tho recont Britivh declaration voiced by Lloyd George,| — eae family. There were only two of| should, and T ‘dave been. trying i G : y Lo} them, to be sure, |my own uitnd to find the reason.” £ ' arouses at this moment a hopo stronger than that excited by any 2 | . s for the baby|think I know it now, It {is debt, Aia ‘ | t \llied utterance that has gone before. ec ven ges r@) ove e arr aml y { moment, In which her faco It is as if, through a great crack suddenly opened in Germany's @ year afterward i, Pirnasianchound national atructuse, the President of the United States By Nixola Greeley-Smith . By Roy L. McCardell ad been feady at just the right moment ¢o show the German people Coprridit, 1918, by the Pre Pubiiaiug Oo, (The Now York Breuing Wor Copreigit, 1918, by the Press Publishing Co, (Tae New York Wrentng World), —with convincing disinteres‘e’ness and inepiting appeal—the way} NO. IV.—THE AGE OF DISILLUSIONMENT. | VES GRATCH writes me from | frequent saloons,” explained Mrs. Jarr. i of the proverbial colors vt sow, Bho nodded slowly. you are right, We ara —flutty, fidgety | Mrs. Norris, real- | ly only @ strl;| she was about | mean just d i an awful lot for our cred tid to th of ° ; seats ‘ Tash " 0 twenty wh “L don't, 4 pe i fsfed o t teap- | Ctse she could make that Just wha i i joons, 0 way to buy articles you could Hos The key to the temple of penco, Harden writes in the current palatcnee th haf To she wanted It to be. Bul there ail Gonal Probfbition Amendment,” said) sailors going in you could warn them. husband alpay cash for wher the clark siced . a 5 Shires | resem biance to the dr ded and a y i) pad- | Th issue of Die Zukunft, lies in Washington. ine in “Madame| matrimony’ hognen Tin ded ond | Mrs. Jarr. “She says that tt ts dread-| Then if they would not be warned h ful to see men coming to the deputs| you could notify the police.” low-well-met type, whose principal | ¥°U that only a small payment down the buyonet-blue ¢: vuld never | NCCESSL.| you © pi y bis Some satiated | !ave Serene eoatae dinzer mas | With packages and suitcases of Iiquor.| “Do you want me to spend my time| object tn lite memed to Le in having La errata rat hp er ete AR a Ya! rest in the way most convenlent !o Duman deings wiii | #%, OF the roast beer cooked too | They have to carry « tag on the cases! hanging around saloons, outside or}/® S004 tlme. There was votbing| you, so much u week or a month, “|much, or the grocery bill too large. | and packages saying how much Ilquor | asked Mr. Jarr indignantly, wrong about the kind of amusements | But I have found thut people whal¢ be glad to leary | Tie ideal would not leave cigar ashes | i buy things on the dollar-dowa pia that there really |#round the house or burn he toto thom, But Mra Gratch were the) "You hang around them anyway, 3 he atlected. He was not @ drinking | ire puying @ g00d maay dollars be is a place, no Det tablecloth with a cigurette, Ile men should be inade to carry big tags|am afraid,” sald Mra Jarr. “Why,|]&D, was always on hand at the of-|fure they are through Ubst nelte Fe hat the {oud never forget to let the water | telling how much liquor they have! your nose {gs red now.” fice where be worked and always re-| they nor the clerk ever figured ch. matter what the) out of the bathtub and he would not|peen drinking over at Baltimore, or| “That's the cold weather, and you|ported regularly at home for dinner in nervous worry and gone: temperature or|Ko to sleep every night right after) yo” = in the sense of Irritation ard lstance from/(dinner. Far from ¢hat, he would let | Wherever it ts they drink and buy the koow it!” cried the exasperated Mr, | at six. that constant, awful fact of del’, Broadway, where |BOf Fead poetry to him fnterrupt |Mquor they bring in to Washington, | Jar “Dog gone tt! That Mra.| But there was an atmostphere of | that somebody else can come down If there is a lower, more dastardly level to which grecd oan g “lonly to tell her how beautiful ebe| for Wasbington {tself ts bone dry!’ | Gratch 1# sure some troublemaker! | Unrest, uneasinoss, repressed tension |!2t0 Your home aud take by lay F at “tthe G they oan afford (0 |jooked and what @ miracle it seemed | #J¢'y @ wouder Mra. Gratch docsn't| My nose red, indeed! in the house, as though both young} you ive ‘bought {ton the dolites sce! hi erate attempt to mule’ » Governtr y selling | " 0 an ras actually his wife. (si a _ 3 you © bough nm e dollavs end than # deliberate attempt to mulct the Government by selling he dlemppolones and fer sell abou {h ee arene alan te te a (MP UP and ask the tucoming travel-| “It may be tho cold weather, just|Mr. and Mrs. Norris were doing alto- | down plan and aia buck In yuue t fake equipment for the fighters upon whose health and enduring | | Women 1 vovond the tomb tdi, tich woman Married to a man who|!@r8 to tho capital,” remark )A3 you gay,” remarked Mra, Jarr, “but | fether more Wworrylug than was guod | paymicuts, vower the nation is staking its ull, we have yet to hear of it eee an ieiramest, aoa ey | adopts the eastest.w getting her |Jarr wearlly. “Minding othe: your nose 18 rod. Why, tt looks Uke! \orsonal between them, tor ha mac ie | ANeainra! Sie jeved : : A Ae z : to sign checks, But for a long time| wd | s ee cI Ww ta wat “ha ae FA LCMcAE Gan Gta Do contemptible creatures who make near-shoes for army con-| them tell the saleswoman who fits sho thinks it will. And “when he | Cora tee SUBSE Weeran's oe Aisoceverting @ com=| ite eer to 100k ct reo y jiittle | und she tind an tnat ; oY . . é c } a BOOK . jo | wit Ane ‘onan, | on tracts ever think what would happen to them if they could be con-| ‘elt Sloves oF the hairdresser who | fives up hope Of her husband, she be. | t purison to Mr, Jare that he atood|And I know it wasn't bis bablte-at | ments —$10 A 7 " el t ho: | lleves that eho has centred her ideals) “Mra Gratch has cause to be an east any of thou 4 - ee vat “ renews thelr marcel just how disap- | | ; Fe ast any o @ Which appeared on | a tiontli. fronted by amen who have felt those wretched paper voles collapse} pointing thetr busbands are, and |!) Be Nrone man, It la at thie hour/ ardent Probibitionist,” replied Mra.| sock sul and rubbed bis Sos tilllthe gurtace, | hard bus! " ie ; of disilusionme: at the | « ‘ . ed : ; ; veneath their feet pn a long march through mud or ip a desperate | neither Bocoacclo nor Marguerite do| Man appears somewhere and her \Jarr. “She had three husbands und|‘t had quite @ polish, Then tt loo! What then wags the akeleton in the| that woman sat down to the plana scare ite e ties at Gar talent then AMtGAtOR, Dad Re eee ae they were all victims of ulcohol.” more Uke @ russet shoe than ever, monet at she. rors home, never ap-|the awful spectre of the unsatislel ! charge across rocky ground ? \they exhibit for detail and explicit. | matter-of-fact personality with lov “72 bet they pover touched a drop| “!'m not drinking, and you know| Dearing on the surface, at least so fur) collector at tha door came to ner, | God grant the President may have lifted It yesterday, GREED AT ITS INFAMOUS WORST. T™ DOZEN PAIRS of shoes the eoles and heels of whtch were Sand.” i Dionde, hall-fel- | gests the tnstaliment pian and tells? j 4 filled with a composition of paper and glue were found by} inspectors of the Quevermaster’s Department among the|” supplies furnished the nation’s soldiers at Camp Upton. W & Woman who bought dow Then lilness eas period. livery tl. Neither m facturers convicted of turning out pa, iy faniclen, Tt dona abt teatter in the tit then recede” ould Mir Jury [1% I Dever 16 drink!” Mr. Jarr de-| Ss, visitors could see, but always sug-| She could not enjoy it. Aud, furs soldiers nor factory shoes for| nese. gesting itself tn uw kind of brooding,| thermore, the fact of the debt ne 5 least what he Is like, It never mat-|~ " lar , aso't tha ? hee val > Ui re that Minit inspectors accessory to the crime deserve apy- iF th mee tah ak Gia ierarake an | ieee ein Geettan cake eis ‘Maybe so!" Mrs, Jurr retorted, | ‘a ‘ed stoutly. ‘It it wi t t it) sinister background? Finally I di: gan to prey on her so that finally t 0) 01 e « nything t r th: pleased people lke Mrs. Grateb too|covered what it was, quite by acci-|sle and her husband determined ts thing but prompt and exemplary justice. Ans ies ie Gupmopatated 8 i ToUnGaUae. DF Leys, gor she sping ber ose Si ee cae e nnn Mas Guten | much, 14 be Just aw happy if there| dent when a collector chunced to cail| sacrifice tho mmall anount they h Pky f at the house during éne of my visits,| pald on the plano and retu Tn war times the career of all such should ond against @ blank| with @ definite ideu—an ideal 90 | “np te Masttustoned | was ono of the ardent workers who|Was bation wide probibition. Then if) There was something in the face of | they could not have music t wall—with a firing squad in front ndered and polished that ahe tilusloned in most cases! a4 tne law passed making Washing | Cold weather did make my nose red,| Mrs, Norris wien she answered the| enjoy without the nightmare of duot : ; : ¥ pein whether be weary, berd.|for a pew iiluston’ 770 Me 1OKDE) von the capital of the Natloa, bone) MY wife might aay it looked Uke full/bell that told me in an tnstant the| ticy wouldn't have any st all.’ j - } Sih ; "4 y» | whole truth, the glib, plausibic ra. Norris nodded. “I. ti . > boiled girts or the kind that| You are aware that the sun eet and| dry.” | worecoo binding, for all I'd care!” || TAoIe i Ane told the mam ene | Know what sie went through" ane L etters k rom t h e } eo le look Uke tri with evening | Bight came yesterday and for millions| “ang now she spends her tins iu} “! am glad to hear you say eo!"| could pay bim nothing now, Dut to| sald thoughtfully. i : ¥ P clothes, and whether be takes butter | of years before it. but you feel some- | 1. Tnion Depot seeing how ‘who |#2id Mra Jarr, “Alcohol, as Mre|call again next week, showed that ehe| It was not until nearly two yearn J Please Hmit communications to 15) words. lor syrup on biv buckwheat cukes, | how that to-morrow ths sun of love! the Union Depot seeing how wen who|') ee cn It ghortens| Was used to receiving this kind of| later that I saw hor again, and lt waa to @ Kreater extent. 1 sate alan | Ren, abe marries she proceeds to ft | Will stand stilt in the lieavens and it| want Uquor sil wet it and b NT cae life of all addleted to ik” callers and an adept in excuses to put|@ new woman who greeted me. [ Valuen) The a also | this ideal upon her husband. Natur- | Will be always noon {n your heart. If! 4 remarked Mr, Jarr. "Oh, w 9 iife of all addicted to tte ithem off. When ele came back into| knew at once that there was no longer It 9 & pleasure to } Uable susgention which | ally it'e too big for him, for ho is «| you are wiso and gi 4 your af-| those who don't drink {t eat it. Twi] “It does not!” sald Mr. Jarr. "f bold) the room T asked her, bluntly: |@ parade of installment collectors at Feb Wo pep Be a . ie Pe es gerne ready-made man and bers ly a made- sade ae ee Hd 1 and & a ver forget Mrs. Grateh’s plum pud-|®9 brtet for old Johu Barleycorn or| “How much money do you owe?” | their ho and that wey were uo tuni expressin Even orld should get | to-order Ideal. how to add, you realize that | De echolalia Malone Ausael PAY He: ax tal “Why?" she asked, after # startled | longer the siave of debt your work perforuied nn to provide @ fund | Now @ woman bee itved with her |tWo and tivo and three and one can-| dings and mince ples. Ble puts wo| 0! K ag Ae het Pu oa 11 your | tte plience, a |tonger the siave of debt, fii 6, in co-operati i of worthy dim- | ideal for yoara and years before her |Not be enything hut equal to the same much of the old stuff In them (hat ono nd Mra. G of instances where! “O¢ course, it's none of my Bus!-| understood what she meant « of No. 300 East’ si ip naute might be pald or| marriage, Sho knows him—stnce he | Ming, and you stand pat and let the has to eat them with water on tho|4lohol lengthened life.’ |ness, but I have noticed for some (Coprright, 1918, ea tae ‘ Re cl apd ie J. M. lis the creature of her linagination—tar | cond Mluslon dio of atary “seg “Tell mo and I will write them to! a fT ial eA ap eda one Vow better than she will ever know her | You think you can get a sido, ne neta aa iy ¥ a val or — ihe tty ‘ : v |busband. Sho his had innumerable | sult from three and ¢ \ wrmabe unuioal" sala Mra ger . if that will please you," sald Mrs. Ss vs n . 7 hae peed aie hy : \ is Mord nothing {conversations with him, kuows just | f > Blin anfire tone, “etre: Crash waa te | uperstition in the lrenches nellvity in thie , , t com in Ossining? | Waa, Docks ho likes, what actresses te eccond | hel th Dh 1" Mr, Jarre went on, “I read LONG with the spiritual re Ing that all gold t s ninden Muarsing 18 and 44 [BS ‘admirey--of course he does not ad- : nd iho rest of {Mice enough to help mo with Phunk Whee Lusy lena ivnene| ONG h , iting that ail gold bo surrendered ' t 4 nt |imire any of them too much, Iter |» eT » voutreelt and| giving dinner, when Gertrude was | (P Feb rai vival duo to tho w {to the contral authority, of at teas ulat nd 10 ce fae Mate [husband does not lovk tke dim, but |W your fri u have found 4) sok, and whe oniy used brandy to tho |S & i PRR Me 7 Gave & . nowal of guperatition, Nor! intent fall into cnemy hander { 1 unions Lotion buvey a Ree: | eho ta resigned to that detteit,’ The {diferent : . er gaat Finite pl *lhim fifteen minutes to Hoish @ Mask! wp ore is this seen more frequently | ain hemy hands ‘ t pular customer they |{deal was @ Dronch viseomte with ut you have not found tt, And the | Mince plo and pu it in Tie pilin Puls) 1 nad om him,” telat aba iacmte es earned Pos f uw French ine he | Will sell on! Alf pound. buyonet-blus eyes, an aquiline nose, | Fetson Is that illusions are Ike the | ding sa to please 4 Vor eh Nien dass anented at din datation a nan “mo he tguting them | fantr: ft ro to put » } MRS. In Ww. golden mustache 1 ow yoloe that A shells of which Limerson sings in| told me it was against her principle bs Sess 3 welve st without exception | oe te vont ean ‘ before that } 5 {UL ERnRG, SED emo ween He epolee bead 3 laud sho uever had brandy suuce for| Ucchot asgn ald to lodgevity, every soldier cherivies the thousbt companions chided wiry iy Hie | blevementa. b. W Wasts Sorvice Badge? ner be is as opine Hep tame her own husbands. And, gl contnued, "I koew! iat he will not be Lit. So it is po! finalty gave way. 1 Calls the Eventuw World Valr. \Siuehing fountuio aod the Disne (sem | “Here pow, she 0 and saga] t®© fellows who were going to Lus|qimeult matter for bim to believe, moraing be put on the To tho Editor of The Evening World 4 Il of lungucrous violins. ¢ w | eat you spoke so 1 i ? r but they gel to drinking and} iat some talleman cuu help toward Sook. netors tn * left, ot ree cartainly easure Bhe gave Lim & red rose ¢ r orld warwat” | the mincs plos and p ug ssed tholr sup, That ship was tor-/ nis safety. Mo may not actually be-| First his platoon, trea he fair spirit with which y in th answer and be Kissed ber fin, a} * e vd edoed bY submarine and all aboard) je. “. owers~| batallion, uw le div the article on the Socia for seven ty s wea honorably dia- | Now tiie man she married p repos od to | LIKE A HEATLESS FLAT, | Sxed you Thanksgiving that heres i Sie Have: saat ts Sas a aga be tn heocmite a te Wis edits Re Jacob Panken. Because of tie po. | changed « unt of dimablit 1 |ber in @ taateab with a “By tbe way, WR. cold Is eo {ntendein‘the-eis| ¥® 1 to help tn the good wo " stows SAvob (kitopaia | ee Wee See Pe BODREM ID BURY, titan od tradition ae Utica) connections of Judge Panken | though unfit for services my trouble ta | before T forget It, will you mar petite my a the Sl Sbo aske if you will go arvuud t . I don't belleve & wo oF i" sald! one, bo reasyo . lecrwine that ertas ei at the Vreven he is either entirely negiecte pparently T am! me?" mapner, that took a) the ro | berlan forest region that now)? ¥ so arvund the) stra, Jurr. “Anyway, T wouldn't buast| "among tho Freneb it te held par-|tman who rubs ere Bie dave tne discredited by st of the papers Tam oftentimes mance out of the ovcasion. And then 4nd then treo splits epen,| sity asd watob ret a about such frienda: Lsuinsies aunaia cere oe hind ble curs matter how good a wervics ha n 1 the service. be told bor how much bis lnvleuns | making @ notoe lke tt of n| they do not serve soldiers and s —— sul P ae . A Ae , Just wher perform. it ts almost always falsely | we ktnd of an story yielded annually, wus | 1 Ids “Pd be a nice one to do tt STANDING STILL coin th one’s powsession when gu peed ‘ kag hh noted er > ehow thit the gested that they ston soine a4] trom the dod ‘ 1 1, dou't like to be frequer “SOUR or five centuries ago it was| into battle ane Ih ony avis . # at tonal triad bh rarebit, aud or that a fats tery . he “4 a _ eearth | me4v8 good luck, several tinplies an] And then the cer s PAB gay iy Meee teen of eo" te wear [from the ground, often leaves be-|matoons!" sald Mr. Jurr, catabing the general bellef that the earth | Mette Boos oe de” hie pructicn grow ltt ty deed ee uONY Bs ‘ , aant Rieee 'hing a k wif ay did tv move at a It waste such proportions that tbe Gove uf ad geabeclully good-to eatin »-CAVALL TAN: r Po: Wedding, Lenerer, Gadecned dee aveller Mio b ducsn't want you Uppowed etatlonary went mide wudgppcwd to tue arwy, lus 4 giuss ly belug dled,” ite '