The evening world. Newspaper, February 19, 1918, Page 16

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)

ana rr» “ee i Tord, ESTARLIS! SPH PULITZER, | veer wany meer iar Park Kow, New York. President, 63 Park Row. f reaourer, 63 Park Row. LER, Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Kow. J. ANGL JOSEPH PU — MEMEEK OF THE ASSOCIATED PINS, ely entitied to toe wae te iteation of all newp Aewpatahen Aapociates Pom i yen t pry ator arermabeation ri Rey eredited to Tt oF not olberwue crelited {0 ts paper aud ne local news put) lahed vv.ee INO: VOLUME 58..... MORE MARCHING AND MUSIC. HE city looks week when i 20,636 veward with special interest to the holiday thi will have a chance to cheer the 7,000 boys fron » are to parade through the streets of thei Camp Upton wh jome town and show What the National Army looks like after five vonths of train ready the Mayor Committee on National Defense is at wor | ra and near relatives of the soldiera with the upplying fathers, m ards that entitle them to “first ideration in location along the ne of mar ‘I miblic can be relied npon to help the police waking sure fa mothers, brothers and sisters have places, where they can get a proud look at him.” It is a good idea to have two lines of march, one on the east side and ar ron the west side, bef the ‘troops converge at Fifty ninth Street for the grand swing down Fifth Avenue. As much of Manhattan as ma be glad of the opportunity to greet this) parade, which so wel] represen ¢ fighting contribution of the whol ity, including a battalion of colored lads who have been training at Camp Upton. | But, like the earlier one of Teb. 4, this Washington’s Birthday parade of National Army units through the streets of New York ehould be only a precursor of many such spectacles to be offered to New Yorkers during coming weeks | Too great insistence cannot be laid upon the desirability of | giving Americans in this and other cities more frequent sight of the nation’s troops at their best. ! In the first place there is no stronger first-hand evidence with which to convince the country of what is being done to make Uncle “am a formidable fighter at the front. Recently obtrusive fau't- inders and critics of the War Department would have found fewer steners in the country at large if there had been more public parad- g of troops already well advanced in training, | As to the moral effect of military parades, even more can be! said. Curious testimony to the essentially peaceful character of the american people is to be noted in the slowness of their leaders to! vppreciate the stimulative value of martial spectacles and, particu-, Jarly, of martial music in war times. | The imagination of those charged with the duty of stirring the, feelings of the American public to a patriotic pitch at which it will) alist, subscribe to Liberty Loans or buy War Savings Stamps inas zarely yet risen beyond posters and various forms of oratorical and type publicity. The cities of almost any other nation would have long since heen arousing the war enthusiasm of their populations with daily rades of uniformed troops and with the constant ring of military swusic and national airs played by bands in their streets and public squares, New York is ihe largest city in the United States. So far as tnarching and music go its patriotic demonstrations since the begin-| uing of the war—even allowing for a winter of severe weather—have | heen pitifully few and far between, As spring comes on there should be a change in this respect, J arades onght not to be limited to holidays, There should be plenty f band concerts in public flaces—daily noonday playing of marches ind national airs, for example, by a yood hood in City Mall Park What is the Vederal ¢ shonld co-operate by Terad e ns often as possible without hes he expen ernment ing over Expense of this sort is certain to prove gerd war businoss The wer in loyalty, confidenes, stions and War Savings, Americans are not so different money may come back a thonsand times Liberty Loan subs from other peoples that the’r spirits fail to rise or their patrigtic pulses refuse to beat faster and \oTe generously they hear the tramp of the soldiers, the roll of the drums or a burst of marti laily routine of life. Hits wher nation's al music across the “rom Sharp Wits Jack Spratt could eat no fat oy wanes! use matusall meatiess or other day, for a man of Aor ann Are maturally butt size he'd H Ine and sond dt alll ignore kite others: show. their | away. Milwaukee Nows. Puetey Phtladelp in Record se s ; An antom We think very latest kick ki i In Cupid with a swagger stick iit may —M his Commercial Appeal. mortgage. It's a waste yy ee ofl ratsing st of time to repent hair-| Sweet #10 bald-headed men but not » News Dis Weet as tho: adversity, | 40 of sugar People » ; ad Letters From the Please Umit communt ‘ations to 150 s of wm Stroll in New York. | Oppones 4 ata | ee Appointment of Married f The F | Womnn | House's advice to pedes- | to the Elitor ot 114 joe ne about crossing streets at cor nare te of course correct and ought to Ip lessen accidents It 1 wee thore point ts 4 afoot to ap. niurried women es are s Government ould not do, howeve w the y mind, the appoint Magistrate's ‘advice ptr with #0 d women at the pres Any Caleless chauffeurs swarming very Unjust, These und the city, The other day 1 howe husbanda are in Goy- ne from east to Madison Avenue © undoubtedly ure re- 4 86th Street, and as a southbound | tment from thetr hus tr stopped at the corner I wal.ed on he States east sidew kay From B woman cr ed the slat, the west jod the for m the is state- fact that I know ra niddie of the av of many & teachers who h cllowed Magistrate House's advice | been aw: K ADP ent for seve } kod her right, It might oral yea: Why does not the Boa of Education appoint. Ene ae As tt happened, she who are in gery hatr’a breadth, when; Another unt ave been her Inst look If I had not shouted to her te th od the atreet | uae (ne achools of N Py NV mo to Wait behind, Making of th pit benuitene, satis nom, pasaod (he whe are at training, ‘These prown track, and [are required to teveh Afty-two heure ame dashing downtown Aur o# torm of five month es, which In noon overy day |Now they nye be ved Ag aude midy oxcop © police, im tuten, They In charm of @ from, und aman who doom nlaen nnd require tn do the work oF bo puntehod. nm out of a emaly low pay the question ve Jook ¢ ho right or of 7A eenta a doy to the Inft when you coma to tle The renaon for the dear Rilddle of the «iret You myst look ‘trutming achool contnente rte ak both ways, and if you ponathly ean pnt the harap tunities effared In turn your oye to the right and the ‘orld and Denise ened your lett oye {o the left, wa nich the te : better, at's put a atop to the o% " r Ail parse fear who will not obey tho law, |) Hoard of Wducntton, 'TRACHIEN EDITORIAL PAGE , February 19 ' Tuesda Coprrieht, 1919, $e Tie Frew Piviishlng Op, (Tho Now York Evening World.) Starting Something! Byj. H.C Americans =) assel | B Under Fir | By Albert Payson Terhune NO. 74—SHAYS’S REBELLION. HB Revolution was over, Our newly freed country wi @s weak and as exhausted as a typhoid convalescen' and just as crankily Irritable. We were tree, But we werg dead broke, Debt and poveriy were rampant. Trouble set in. Massachusetts had been the leader of the tion from the very first. And In Massachusetts, after the war, the hardships and ill-feeling were ke est. Taxes were hotly resented. Labor was arr against capital, Then {t was that Daniel § launched his flery little rebellion, Shays was a Revolutionary Captain. Also he is a firebrand, He flung himself into the turmoil # @rose throughout his native State, and presently ‘became the recognized leader of the malcontents, Thanks to his war training he knew how to recruit and drill his f lowers, Soon he was at the head of an army of more than 2,000 men. and his fellows set to work trying the sume tactics on the State authori that Massachusetts had used against the British at the dawn of the R lution. For a time he was successful. Shays's rebellion carried all 0 Militiamen either sided with Shays or else sympathized so strongly with grievances that the State could make scant use of the National G: services, In the summer of 1786 the rebellion broke o1 Shays and his subordinate leaders sought to lyze the local government by preventing the vari courts from sitting, For example, the Supreme Court was to sit at Worcester, Mass, on Dec, 6, 1786, Shoys, with about 1,100 picked men, marched upon Worcester and took forcible possession of the city. He broke up the court's session by selzing the house and holding it with an armed Ruane Massachusetts Legislature, badly scared, took steps to redrene the’ insurgents’ so-called grievances, But the rebelllon had gone too far tobe’ stopped in that way. Then Gov. Bowdoin called out the entire State militia and added to their ranks a special corps of Indian fighters, Nominally the State now had 4,000 men In the fleld. But all of these, could not be counted on to serve ‘with any efficiency against their friend! land neighbors who had Joined Shays's army. Shays led his forces from Worcester to Springfield, having swelled ranks by another thousand men under two of his lieutenants, The Sup: | Court was about to convene at Springfleld when Shays reached that elty o1 | Ghristmas Day, 1786. He halted the court's session as he had done | Worcester. | Springfield held one of the most important of our country’s arsenals, Ht | was well garrisoned, but Shays resolved to capture tt for the sake of ree vot arms and ammunition, He felt he must act with spéed, for wo} had come to him that a large body of militia was hurrying from Beston | oppose his rule of the State. Col. Shepherd, In command of the Springfleld arsenal, refamed % ete Shays gave the order to carry the arsenal by storm AP ane The Rebellion Is Begun. Ro naaanaanananad aoe tried to frighten the rebels by firing a satvo of weer" lory over their heads. Trying to Bluff ‘The rebels charged. ‘They were met by a turfops the Rebels. « volley of musketry and cannon volleys, The fight | was short. In spite of Shays's efforts to hold his | Carr ts the attack, they could not long stand against merciless fire from the arsenal. |e Phey broke and ran, many of them shrieking "Murder! Murdor!" in wid | parte Nor could their leader threaten or cajole them into returning to the assault. | wn upon the baffled rebels swooped the troops from Boston, 8! could no longer control bis frightened men or check thelr retreat, In fight they swept out of Springfield, hotly pursued by the State troops. ‘Throw; a blizcard the retreat continued, unth the troops overtook the fugitives agd received thetr willing surrender, | The rebellion was over. Shays escaped into Vermont. | not only a pardon from the Goyernment but a snug Re as well, Later he obtain! olutionary penaieg ere The Worker Who Stands The “Gaff” By Roy L. Copyright, 1918, by the F ‘cc D’ you belleve in Thought | opathy, because she was THINKING ‘LOTHDSSLANS Holder that will e . Wired auked Are. tout satecwathy. Hal CLOTHBS-LINE r tha erwise the same, i By So phi e Irene Loeb « eee eae bel ae Aout “athe pathy and all her hair Geib the. like, slphtar an GES a (Gael UES, Be: sa Eyes SeSMaE OD, (ENS Kew Sore: Wrvelee: one) thing about it." said Mr. Jarre. “What] “And how changed it was!" said Mr. atlases increas tot two| Teakettle Cover Held by Dent HE Uitte tailor was fitting my) Ina word, they don't stand up and |ig jt? sort of a mental massage Jarr in an undertone, Ce eet oerices 7 i sult, Hix mouth was full of| take the batting. ‘They are “touch’ “Mrs, Kittingly says everybody | Mrs, Jarr didn't heed this remark {'TE? sereweyes, & is se a ae ent in Edge. ning. While he was on his/and forever are wanting to bo “con-|who tw ignorant of the good it does|and weéht on. “Ah,” sald Mra, Jarr, Pt and a plece of hard wood about) : | sid . hey iy | ue ; ‘ hes long, 2 inches wide and % O prevent kettle covers fro knees adjusting the| sidered," and yet they are usua | hinks {t's massage,” suid Mrs. Jarr.| “that's why they believe in osteop- 9 Stee ext neasleerom (aed. then hanaee { somebody | tho least Jerate for the hard-|. ome vinthy!: They imow e s sige Bron) ¥ ale en poe Maat rut ep aeivn| Her halr was falling out ed metlan| why! They know If they get tee palace from bae“burned by henald oe at SHIT eon action. wlth hate. Niterrible, She tried everything 8! is hones twisted osteopathy a eu Popular ‘edenes | cnping «teas, make Kmail Gang ee co re. 4 Ronee vould think of, even kerosene and| them, When you go to an osteo) Mawthiv: the edge of the aid ag. shown eane js Mrs, Jones's now) So Abram now commands @ R004! massage, And she even went to spe-| ne kneads your bones.” First, ait a| heit? jaalary and tho reapect of his employ sts; ant one of them wanted so] “I meed my own bones, thank you," Re enilpagaamine et In the right |e because he his ¢ ith them— Altona. ty said Mr. Jarr, carriage bolt will! hand top drawer of | M been whle ¢ ft.” | he couldn't think of it?” inter-. "sald the osteopath kneads your ich Ham's sewing ma-) He has a farily-—an interesting fam-| wioied Mr. Jarre, |bones, kneads them,” said Mrs. Jarr. eels penal . chine,” Abram an-| ty. When he Eni hoy, Just ‘an’t you be sensible one) “By bones you mean $2, 1 suppose?” wroush 1: One! swered |turning fourteen, there wax love in| tay? i a Hane lexwecaiea tank I need that ©2Fner, about 1 inch from the end Soonia mentee Arter ho had fine] RIM volce and pride in his eyes, He RinNel’ Aske i ay AG aE aed and 4 inch from the side. Now round er he ha ’ that’s the way you always act when nd of bones: te ane auownn g the length ve skirt | 848 plann be ! for w : a selure!" exclaimed Mrs, Jarr, | 0% the corners to the shape shown ished adjusting thy « th Te waaitmlititia to I ed I go to speak to you. Maybe what 1 I do declure!" exclain tO. aigtAbe INeet) “OGHAW TENE: BOneWes he ar stood back and critically ob-| edu say isn't Intélligent enough to inter If all you can do ts elt there and vod tt t, Heaaw another] Hon so that th 1 be easier | f , es | gibe at ine lke a clown, 1 *%¢8 Into the clothes post far enough aR Od tBD. me Sa mh : OY than 1 of r oat you, but at Her you sree al Hi oe bs see out to some aatoon *Part so that the wooden block will place that needed to be fitted and pro: ; \ : urteous, even am only your| wish you wolld go 0 OMe BAlow: ity i; Sa ey prepa cooded tn his task j, 2. couls reflect that we With the kind of people you prefer!" 4 wal A : na HRI RS oy Nt, | Popular Mechanics, In setting the M8 Nene might well puraplirase the Biblieal ey take and “At 1 Mr. Jart, “you can't y should be screwed in until the) it, piace, arrange It so that the deat Again some one AbTaMs }torm that the ¢ f the fathers oid . aus " entres of the eyes are about 1% ‘ | vel Jur easily cide which you would prefer ” « at the point opposite the spout. Mrs, Smith wants White) often visited t nildven, And Finn Ouelo Aleraen y ; go or a physical one MChes from the post. Then place the! tnuy when the water is poured frei colivrs made for her dre Abrain’s son w t rent bse SPRAY LS OSESE 58 DERN Me ete ak : den block between them. Line] os bra ton us ke eap . ie . ateopath? They both knea the kettle, the Id cannot easil; “Very well,” he answered aul ut whet bean | wn In pationes ee" tepiied Mrs Jarr, “but you have | with an osteopath? ‘They both the hole with the scroweyes and pare v making a note: of it tle book | and porsove an you suy something ¢s-| or pee ee to both,” aig msert the bolt i ; which he drew from ' f *AnK ‘i ne | Deciaily rude and offensive tha uN ka to go to both, 1 fe ges 1: dha ; . "N i ue ‘ tor this the proprietor le r ‘niin? { i t hope Funny, Mrs, Jarre dubiously oN iy ba i. ny se pe ls Combined Label and CG ot long \ f or for hin jeuanye ; | Fe aoe ey Me. Jarr and eallied | ID the clothes lino In the space be > caine by and alas Abram, did you! tet am r } y ie TAs eis tween the screweyes, Pull down the Pad for Preserve Glasses. | promise Mrs. Brown's dee for Ca at hte 1 get hing the corner #ho ra-|CM again and it will wedge ftxelf NHAT and convenient method next Wednesday 1 purr FIM onaretne : “solemnly promiged “&alnat the clothes line with a grip A of making @ label for Jars of TYes." he answered nam fuer Cnn ee emia eee rein te a knitting party with wome Mat Will tighten as the load grows preserves, or elmilar prepari quiet way. “It will be don eae ; hee ina M eip : tons, to serve a8 a tab for removinj One after another came t m for | Unde ' added signif- A need he sureast nels A 5 nt oa LABEL HANDLE t te re ind they went downtown shop dap , ; : ij this, that and the other thing. And] unt iM Jarr. "Waving you ee ak SEE aa orukel|| lS Edge of Table or Window. T could neo that 1 like a rock mae WOMGH'S MARK! RAY Of SMU fun and didn’t cost as much as the N troning board te usually most Wor many years A # toiled A ra Mr. Jarr - mri end is set near a window or ih thi Sting anise ; ees eclae WAVING Your arms wou't make you is : thee couvee cf linni: tiie amunges ‘| ae a : In Science aversation Joss vague and rambling Corsicans Hard Fighters e nonron af lah Phe: @rrmat» ind he is one ! f t Ities are than 1 Wr © you going to wN THE matter of utter disregard sinnog with this im mi and other helped to make here teloph appreci- say i hous ire? for death, of completo forgettul- jiteresting features were added, says criminate and = parti ree ae feetele ell you that Mra ness of self, French ofcers aziee popular Mechanics, The top is of When I asked it ; ineaw to Kittingly Was going to try tt on hb hat 3 superior to @ll the usual type. Arranged underneath him to have some one ca j cverist in trentyl eee ne 1 she hadn't made other soldiers Impetuous | it ty a eross cleat near one end, Holt- the time he answere up he nda 1th nd vindictive, pee Y ed through this are two clamps which stand the ‘gaff’ you e 2 @ her bale wae 5 Cian » ferocity that blind yult, You must get 1 t practical gas couldn't have much on her nd n to any thought of danger, He- f, y muat bo willing t as je eng ‘ od by a Swiss) could she? a 4 Mr. Ja he this, they are Intensely proud they come In oF wravely stood up and waved h and the fact that they come from the them.” $ | “I do declare, Edward Jarr!'' ‘said island that produced Napoleon, and ye ct In the worda of this wor Kern im a omalll nig wite, “Sometimes I think you cherish above all else the recollection aise anoret of MANY A Aico be clamped 9M aren't tn your right s. You act of the military valor of the greates lish, Is shown in the sketch, hy to stand tho “watt ako thinga— . Me @ echoolhoy, Why don't you have of Corsicans, To them cowardlce ” E |Pepular Mechanics, The tabs are o@t to go through, It tw #o in every walk| A recent gover conaua ered~/aome dignity? You with children the unforgivable sin, and to falter in “mum || from tag board, notched, as shown, of tifo where thore aro oer, When ies fae ‘ horses and) growing Up around you, too! the face of danger !s fo win the eter- jand bent on the dotted line, Whi they “arrive” It I not from tnok put] ase muicw | °F am not doing anything to stunt ral contempt of vove a long and war- C28%Re the edge of the window sill|melted paratfin is poured on top }labor, Just aw 2 wrote about Galll-| A devieo to un attached toe comb | thelr growth, am 1? aaked Mr, Jari Ike history, nor Ja this the fl ime or table, They are clamped by low-| the material In the jar, the tab ts if. Curol a short Ue Giro, Khe wae able| has been iny » did thought cure bring |back Mra, Kittingly'n m “No,” anid Mow, Jare, Kitting- ly thinks montal healing aid it, but abe wives part of the credit to oste- sito to permit men to, “Hut, con riand the "gal out hal with many is t ey theve fe a worry and wuccumy © Wearinom, to their ow The trouble will when aooordingly ont oe Nall# are arranuwed in paraliel lay- ore for packing by a magnetic ma- @hine invented by @ Bwisa, Ta Lae Family os Publishing Co, Helps for the Housewife. A Block of Wood for Holding the Clothes Line Taut. and the top, The lower end of th leg can be fitted with a sliding a justment, tf the board is used at @ ference belghts, the design being ott McCardell (te York Evening World) they have fought aide by site with ering the log from its folded position, |Dedded tn it. To remove the paraffin the English. For @ brief period. 18 underneath the top, ag indicated, The|cover intact, a pointed knife is run the olghtoenth, in of Oreat Britain, bolts at the clamps are adjustable] around the edge, or the glass warmbd’ under the p for gripping various thicknesses of|sufficfently to loosen the cover, whith the pe noknowledged George : Ti ge wor Kine. table tops, &o, between the clamps] is then easily remwved, 1

Other pages from this issue: