The evening world. Newspaper, January 22, 1918, Page 14

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EDITORIAL PAGE Rough Riding! ESTABLISH Published Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publish .: #3 Park Row, New York. NALPIT FULITZER, President, J, ANGUS SHAW, “Treasurer, 63 3 JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row Watered at the M% Olfice at New York as Second-Class Matte Subscription Rates fo The ening |For Eneland and the Continent and World for the United States All Countries in the International and Canada Postal Union One Year . $6.00 One Year.... $15.49 One Month 60'One Month. 1.30 MEMBER OF TAN ASSOCIATED PRESS, ‘The Associated Press is exe’ entitied to the a for republication of all news deapatehos credited to {t oF pot oLuerwise credited io this paper and also the local mews publisved berela. VOLUME 55 +e eens deeeeeeeee +++ eNO, 20,608 MAKE IT POSSIBLE. USINESS in New York loyally obeyed orders yesterday and folded its hands. | For this usually industrious, hard-working cily such obedience could be at best no easy matter. It was a far from in epiring day. Nevertheless a vast majority of those affected by the Garficld decree accepted the situation in a sound American spirit A spirit, that is to say, which complies with The law, without surren dering either reason or judgment | ‘The order for the Monday holiday has been wonderfully obeyed,” declared Fuel Administrator Schley after he had taken a around the whol J retail districts of Manhattan. ale ar look There were violations. But most of these came either from con Pol | fusion as to the exact m «ning of the regulations, or from fear that the other fellow might be getting anfair advantage through favor or exemption. Before the day was over the ‘neral feeling grew that, if treated alike, all will observe “Garfield Mondays” with law-abidin cheerfulness. One use the public can make of the new weekly holiday is to) scan the horizon for signs that Fuel Administrators and Federal Directors of Railroads have taken a new grip on their jobs and are | at last handling coal and traffic problems with an i energy worthy of American executive standard iative and With the railway blockade as bad as ever yesterday, neither Fuel Administrator Garfield nor Director General McAdoo seems to have} Both were} Mr. Smith, Regiona| | Yirector of Mastern Railroads, could suggest only the possible efficacy of prayer. Heavy responsibility rests upon these coal and traffic dictators. | "hey should be made to had any move of administrative genius to announce. clinging to the timely excuse of the weather. realize it. Their energies need thawing! out quite as much as do cars and coal. ey were iven unprecedented powers. The country waited in in to see them exer: se Those powers with the prompt and large effi-| ciency which other Americans have brought notably to bear on b tasks a the World Seems Changed By Sophie oeb Now, when they have fallen back on industry and business to elp them out, industry and business loyally submit to the sacrifices | W h e | they impose. But all the more, now, have industry and business the right | to demand that these administrators shall give speedy evidence of | their capacity or be removed. ector General of Railroads McAdoo says it may be ee © Irene nee 9 the Prem Pubiab Tie New ¥ 2 Wont) , . is yeen inuch bet Mrs a he now we have sible to drop five workless Mondays from the Fuel Order. a DUBADPVUL thing happened | reflect thoughts, tur tad not «etl Guy ganitor seca on a spree all! wo: Kee to ar : ‘ the other day,” said.a friend @Uca pleasure ul of » tiem. here nls 2 ae SO GME More than to any one else, it is up to Director McAdoo and mine. 1 invested | 4, 4, rents AU IAG Beta even had laundryless Dr. rfield to MAKE it 1 { Ps he | it lls . ppv, | over ige-Smith's hus+! days! Did you know the laundry- . Ga 0 it possible. | arly alt the land every Tittle while my troubles! pand cats it, te hay been Intoxi-|man didn't call for your shirta and ~ 9 en and my law.| shake uff the chat overybads [eated for ins whole week-end and) eojtars because they had no coal at , phoned. to) HOW tbout then as 1 passed oy. will be discharged vundry last week? And this listening attentively to the demands of labor, new | ; soi ae Ht was such alamity becuse | ho'll be discharged, Clara Mud- | y ie didolt call becnuse (hé laune Cabinet in Austria-Hungary promises extension of suffrage, net me to;cume at ones, | had bulll aa much on this investment. | rid nith's husband?” Mr. Jarr ARCANE dOWnLE even excluding women, It will also abolish military courts Lenehan, Gis tah et the sound | 28Keds - “1 should worry!” said Mr. Jarr and substitute civil tribunals, tee ati, way alwasa| You know i mean Janitorl™ |Get out some of my summer shirts uvestmen ’ jov sae { Mrs. Jarr replied with some asperity.! ay soft collars. tice c Once let the dictatorship in the Ceutral Powe cane ‘i " x el nd my soft collars, 1 noticed a tot : . pass from ade it look disa 6 and I[*since there is cellar) of cellows wearing soft collars,” the r t " e) ones wore 1 of tie he war lords to the workers, and peace proposals will be nus yey ned to|the empty coal ke a sound box! “ang the washerwoman didn't come something more than “feelers ae. ~ it was with fear the very wut owas inf that causes the janitors voice ie sing }eoms yesterday,” remarked Mrs. ee | om ; a : iranian oy bright hed and ussumed a happy al; |and re-echo a nonmh he Ware shouts Jarr. “If Monday is to be « legal 1 quickly dressed and hurried to b ospher children's voices] ing in the Mammoth Cave SDs Colinay, © wonder ie that Will tHkas . baie s artic! from the outside were move sant ; ay, iW a Fuel Administrator Garfield draws $1 per annum for bis office, Every misgiving in the word ag eee” Cit a tittic: later i |cucky» or some hike that And) tnat Monday washdays will be Tue services. With all due appreciation, maybe the country might came to me, All the years tl bad thought that everybody was rejoicing | When his wife threatened to have him) ayo {ind a $3 man cheaper in the end worked #0 hard in saving this money With me, taey were ait in such guvd farrested for anabien and sees ctare,| "i Shouldn't be surprised,” said Mz. eared Ls ei. aepi ditties came before me on my way down Tough vou mieht like to kaewiee ons / yl ieee trom | Jatt: "Mondays have been our na- I ‘ | When I got into th ybway T WS) about this.” sad my friend, "so tpat pte sould hear the Jan: Fo NV that | toHal Waakdays for years and years, aes leelin, ervous and ed that L you could write eo und feli|the empty caverns down below that)y ye oung pr, Garfield, th uetters Fro he People eeling eo n a empty caverns down below tat! but young Dr. Garfield, the icono- m the cople | could hardly contain my seit otrere About Ik ay everybody was doing their DIE UE) cast, has made it workless and Please limit communications to 130 words, | “All of the people seemed to be star y ewlo me Cine ea ea tuire | Vee Willing to he ne Lae nip wasbless.” gai rule eps ra | ing at me. 1 somehow gob the feeling |ror and reflects just what you give, [48d his wife got into a, terrible ‘| “Will the pay for the days your o «to Yaphan . + Third ave Service Called 1 that they knew ut it, and were| “During the days of my trouplejand he's showing everybody ‘ ~ office won't be open for you to Yo the of The Eveaing W 1 | ‘ everything seemed gloc and 7 ol ife's teeth, which he) , ‘ 9 nie Tier of The Reming Worlds | Yo he tai bvening Wot!d Worried, too, It seemed to me that 1 everything seemed gloomy, and when | marks of lis wife's teeth, which Be} 9 tauen our of your salary?” pia Seneral seems to be tO Since the new express train the| would er reach 5 Eve. KS i 84 DrIBPU) (the janitor) says he will carry on] yy. ye) make our boys in c fo! 2 on the! would ne ach my station, Every and beaming world indeed, ; | Mrs. Jarr. take o sin camp as uncomfor- Third Avenue elevated rted the| thing seemed to go wrong. The lig But tho one big thing that, my [bis arms Ull his dying day’ ——~ “I suspect it will,” replied Mr, Jarr. | able as possible, Imagine a trein of Marlem have been getting| in the cars locked dimmer than ever! friend found was that the world had] ‘Well, the janitor’s wife was doing | agi 1¢ f mm not pald for working ervice that takes six hours ‘or the t ane be y not changed at all int © few days. >’ 20, J be wine (Hse eat org rs at is eful, We have| before, and 1 wondered why we dia | Por change Noneed har | Bet, Mtb toes’ bie/ OR Monday because I can't work on Beara eet. Neitinig Ae hae @ vouth of One| aot hurry cause of ov did the 1 wish the Tuesdays, | Monday, you won't have to pay the *y diy ina ann mater cei ifth ad} At last, when I was getting off, [| world know altercation a meatie esd. Washerwoman on Monday,’ ‘ ith rm on n ws| felt that ibe conduc a eying |. Ane womatiines people then,” said Mrs : j I'l) have to pay her ‘Tuesday, any eacuse for such a ay? aye mis 5 the Janitor wou some ; 8 wan anal kee ne and wa ely ‘ ue 1 © troubles to hacia cael Whatever day come to work ciakshe sien (an forlorn | almost fel up steps in alor eX sense of respon: a aldere a ny "said Mv “Ger ey Ye t gi t j aid ca B eyeaie wena ti That eter have | fee on ree ay “if be ii; it si, not do the washing. In fac a i New Yea Wo expre i hat ry person knows slad somebody enjoyed them, were aera sen eee be anne didn't Luk to on Me feel a {het tos etl Seen ear act unis diet gh you may only work five days / i 34 er + wo hey seemed Lo pass 1 . t later when {stumbled Mr, Ja week, our expenses Will be for ng train from New York pulled { ask ; enjoy them, 1 didn't even under- x ‘ i B é ble peo-g aud ne me. | 4 1 Joy 5 ven days @ week, just as they al. tt mp after 31’, M., which on ¢ | was sunerite » rige generally nobody [stand them, Vays were wu a wait at Jamaica for an eviate the 4 rae c way tol “We used to say that life was jus althoug his was not adver. Deon who, need | hly cold Wore, & w, | reflected |treat a tr eis to © ita chance i ¢ : . ie another emarked Ob, well, let's be patriotic and ve i Ami ie ay t Went along to right itself er rade the | ne eed OT eens us erful, As ine janitor's wife sald cursion fa Imagine sisters and rat Mert Hancock OR ui reaine cee AAR ARS hla, | isan s . body know | ye It would appear at en she left the teeth-marks in her kgs : . The Kroping ‘Weel It looked pre 1 ere wap a | fot? | ak isband's arm, t me do my bit! mothe who ee compelled to A saieellplthe Srtagy, Mes Albay wie ya Le 2 -_—— sade body cise loses their pay for stand e journey, fone of ; Ps locate : Th: : Ve ie ne syless Monday, so I'll cheerfully td A FATUR rt e Regula nd nal 1 went home sa " vnd ewest Ing Do you think Garfield loses his ‘ *, ha 1 oved can.|'® aot. « , Spectacies wing od lenses S¥sar container & yimatically pay for M sked Mrs, Jarr. the « : rae careful, 1 ‘ ‘ Ry * hd with #8 tis tilted to 4 conten { don't ve he does,” replied 1 s ne - twit b i ‘ 7 8 . and closes as the 8 i) Seaplane eh Hea easing it at are pra 1 frown F Ave ‘ 1 pheun m water oycty 1 I insecis evied Mrs. Jarr, "Then it's ARGO? tO Caeya: ts A € vest of the world us fa ; ty care ne in case! tight hay ve an ag . nough for him yal wituation why not blast out 4 osname ceoncarhad caaun wee Wearily 1 came He pO Lishman e jer wate The 1 en 1 by the vould be just @$ easy for him pnel for the barges with dynamite of the extreme weathe I Say oe Government, Tunis is n ducag if he was docked for every workless r other explosive? pels them to spend the on the tle ¢ more than 10,000,000 ga of ve Mon * ventured Mr. Jarr, i ‘ wav u For surg e a tourniquet bas 5 bag ¢ If necess t SaRiinh) shan barracks they mu Recerca ahi eae ea? | oll 8 year and expects w : asked Mrs, Jarr, cage a8 OWA amusements ‘Phe i ee an " a fle to more than double \ erl, fp floating ice, wh use false bows, | most desire ts m pind nierested in me a wen ihieateal bane: tha gaa anne thie AOURIS ER "Because he only gets a salary of neta) covered, on both tug. oats and suggested hy se al men et their Day scre nat h Ace press ne ot water bo 4 dollar a year, and that is at the rate Ps spa eee 4 he} "What was the ma wit 44 ¥ as pressing; A new hot water bottic, which also bout a third of a cent a day for vai ges? achmer ‘i a withing, | mused, Wid eve flrmly over an arte may be used to hold crushed ice, is Ae 4 - EE “Fy ene ing use ‘ ery working day,” Mr. Jarr ex. Mey uced cost very little paper in Ley ee eea niga Basel Lan maile of metal and formed ato Geraeia fr # A atie tha aimoulte or family ms \2 H Re en doer ea a bdemt Seely ang Pilined, “it Dy. Garfleid loses his pay \elp to selve the dificu ae bor seemed cold a “ made in England ndium | fe peer et for fifteen Mondays at a third of @ ousands tons of coal at ania’ 4 1 aE we SB an aid plant arowil’ hawat Adiat ales cent a day, that will only be five cents ater it seems outrageous to cciated and be “ph ' own tha " fe when he'll be docked altogeth ' M anata rage Si ceinen | h To ‘ sing acele lL knew there was @ reason!” c hut down ories, 5, . - rR 4 . ed in ¥ eve dents >» aut nte M Ja “Every day Dr. Gar th companying loss to capital * maven . | nd V und of suil, | h. vatonted elas stays home from his work he OBSERVE § HUAN fied ‘ im A.}on friends. but | could . to oblige a d 1 peed | over e cents in the carf ucock, > ling but my toubles, and | tbe cpcoiig ie the top of @ new wefore approachiog @ bauroud track. = aave ———— — — — — ————— ne, By J. H. Cassel’ Cops rat 1 be The Frese The Jarr Family Tuesday, January 22, 1918 Americans & Under Fire By Albert Payson Terhune Copsright, 1918, by the Preas Publishing Co, (The New York Erening World), NO. 63.—THE BATTLE OF BAD AXE, LACK HAWK was on the warpath again. This flerce Indian Chief had stirred up trouble, from time to time, in the newly settled Middle West, And in 1688 came the olimax, Breaking his treaty with our Government, Blact Hawk left his reservation with a body of warriors and returned to the eastern side of the Mississtppl. At once every available sollier and militiaman— young Abraham Lincoln among the latter—within @ hundred miles, was mustered in for the Indian war that was certain to follow Black Ilawk’s outbreak, A band of cavalry militia gave chase to the sav ages as the latter moved northward along the Rock River, The militia had no trouble at all in catching up with their Indian foes. But when they did they found themselves in the position of a boy who goes out to bunt squire rels and meets a boar. The pursuing cavalry ran, head on, into an ambuscade set by the wily Black Hawk. There, at Stillman’s Run, they were defeated, cut up, and sent galloping back in wild retreat. This victory brought swarms of new recruits to the { Indians, swelling their force to more than double its D eaeenaaaaamaal The Indians Gain Aid. eee original size; and filling the savages with a belief that at last they could thrash any white men sent against | them, Black Hawk led his red warriors toward the Wisconsin River, There a battalion of gold miners (who had turned themselves, overnight, inte cavalrymen) fell upon Black Hawk's rear guard, defeating it in a furious little battle, but arriving too late to strike at the main body of Indiana who had already crossed the river in safety. The remnant of the beate: vear guard swam the river and joined their comrade: ' The miners could not follow. But Gen, Atkinson, with the United State regulars and several militia regiments, took up the chase, After a wearle some piarch Atkinson overtook Black Hawk on the bank of the Mi ippi, near Prairie du Chien, Black Hawk, bard pressed, was ma ng ready to cross back to bis own side of the Mississippi and had already begun to ferry his braves acro in bark canoes. . Atkinson made forced marches to prevent Indians’ escape, But * 4 he might well have been too late, if a little st cannon aboard had not puffed its way up the river, Just the crossing of the main body of savages. In face of solid shot from the steamboat the Indians shrank from the peril of ferrying the river. Atkinson was close behind them. They turned aside and took cover in a great willow marsh, There, a day or so later, Was fought the famous battle of Bad Aze, The white men pressed fearlessly forward into the gloom and mire of the swamp, unchecked by the terrific blast of rifle tre and arrows launched upon them by their hidden foes, From one vantage point to another the soldiers forced the Indians, brushing them aside and keeping on, regardless of ambush and disadvantage of position, Here, once and for all, the campaign was to be decided, With frantic courage as well as with true redskia cunning, the Indians strove to beat back the ever-advancing line of white But their fight w At last a amboat with one or two ime to bead off ve Finn aeeaaaaaaard U. §. Soldiers Sweep On. eee men. ropeless, d them, Throwing down their weapons, they i scattered in ever The Black Hawk war was at an end. One 1 | day's hand-to-hand fighting in the willow swamps of Bad Axe had wrecke@ er the troublesome chief's p oon afterward Black Hawk himself surrendered. his raid were herded back on their reservation, terror of flame nic se y direction, power, The survivors of And the Middle West was d tomahawk once more free from the Bachelor Girl Reflections By Helen Rowland be P is casier to charm @ new man every day than to charm one mam anew every day. 8 Pubiisd.ng Co, (Toe New York Brening World) As ] tr ‘The man who likes excitement may woo a belle, ¢ but the man who wants real and eternal devotion should * bestow a@ little attention on a neglected woman, “The sweetest sound in the world.” No, dearle, nat Mother's lullaby nor even “the tinkle of the ice in the pitcher,” but the first soft, sibilant note of the iltti@ “Vabrenheit canary” in the steam radiator at dawa— on one of these cold and coal-leas mornings. Ah, yes, the spring fashions may be foolish an@ frivolous, but they add to the spice and variety of life, and without them we should miss a lot, including that fascinating guessing game, entilied, What are THEY going to wear?” ‘ “WEEN Romane “ | The sort of admiration which the average girl seems to covet is at |so much that which is bestowed on the Statue of liberty or the Vuaus {of Milo, as that which is lavished on the prize kitten at a cat show, | Now that women have the franchise and all that, no doubt a lot ot | husbands will be wanting to “wear the skirts” in the family. After marriage so many foolish people lock all their sentiment away in a box and then mislay the key. Usually a man marries a woman just in order to prevent any other man from getting her; but a woman knows better than to think that by marrying a man she is preventing any other woman from getting him. c Love Songs to a Janitor, “Darling, 1 am growing cold!” “Man came not live by gas alone!” f : — Uncle Sam's Weather Hoodoo Sam at the} dense for caused are crippling Uncl * the blunder ; which lost George Washin, needtul for everytbing ty run |toriany agree) might well have won smoothly, In almost every great |Our country's freedom at one stroke, crisis In our country’s history the |**eTtBs six more years of costly war, ay gh ane olesale sunstrokes ‘ weath a8 played our foes’ hand] movements of W ashington’ crass ane again) is, Dor example |the Battle of Monmouth, and a5 A record winter, for cold, all but!/made him abandon his plan far sane demolished the American Ariny at|ting the enemy to pieces before th J Valiey borge, A cold snap nearly :could reach the safety of New Yo: hd wrecke nie crossing of the Dela-! erring heat imr 1 th bed ioere 5 ait anen tee wah ic heat impeded the Ware, ‘The same cold snap froze New! or our armies 1 Cuba. in 1g; eee ork Harbor, so that the British ©! caused more death m 1898, and ablo to transport stores and cannon| <2 more deaths and incapacity across the ice between the Battery |'M4" did all the Spanish bullets, and Staten Island, A storm drove the Pilgrim Fathers A January thaw ruined the chance /® thousand miles out of their course | Army of the Potomac to cap-| 4d landed them, in midwinter, "s whole army on the Rappa-: Plymouth, when they had planned bs n 1862, and, thus end the} Settle far to southward. "Phat tree winter almost destroyed theta A storm prevented the reliet of colon , Fort Sumter bardment thus leading to tts bom-! So and the outbreak of the|to oy ther j1an is playing true : ancient form in sending w Civil War c# and snow to te up transportaties A tropical cioudburst almost fost and coa! ata time when trarageiee us all of Northern Mexico by soaking tion and coal are most nesses | the powder at Buena V aad reas ousary te our country’s war activities,

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