The evening world. Newspaper, March 1, 1918, Page 6

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f 8 Reduce Your Fat j Without Dieting ‘THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1918, PROBLEMS OF bai it WAR lu hoats operated during the past With a part of his crew be in an open hoat for five days. He WAR COLLECTOR CO NVICTED. c spite of | Cunetty 8 or Formed or : ed BReUTOn YY OTT he. suc- . Name to Get Fonds. Sinks essel; ‘After two months in the Years azo the formula for bid ee Willan J. 1 O'Neil, eharity nna! SSE ~ + - —————— | LONDONDERRY, Ire bal Seen sem ; Wry eon abtcts.” [a0 who made collections of checks | ind In the railroad train in the Unt-| France are fighting not only the Ger-|1—Capt. Erle Korowltz, who com — savest Bataee wvermon, STeser pe tell thelr | ffm John N, Stevie ow No. 120 Broad | P an a, Bur tf batacte «|manded the Hoch _ one of the Mowte Stara to Boom Third 1 Friends tell friends—doctors tel Wik Wan HOGI last AISNE betere| s that our people believe we | mans, but the natural obstacles 3 lapse Atnerione sine to fun the: ¢ ‘ atients, until thousands know and use Malo enerel Ne | A much larger force in France| tached to a line of communication | Ars ! = Wearne March ta-Mowing ry ike Malone in General Seastons of ASHINGT F this convenient, harmless method. They |) in he Abid: Santee: | in has landed. This @ not eald in| whieh cronses the Atlantic and t#} Mas submarine bio ° ~ ve at ae wf deh . sniteted tor tha , ee as they Hike, live as they lie, ane Indicted for having forged tho | spirit of disparagement ot tha|subfect to aubmarine attack; If 1|Mas Just died in @ local hosplia’ trom |, Hon campaign, Downs 4 ' still lose rheir two, three or four pour apt, Marka of the Ninth Const umber or morale of our fighting |tave succeeded in transporting, as it] Pneumon rid ek an in behalf of i fat a week, Simple, effective, ha Capt, Korowlts was on tho bridge ‘ an it ‘ a 4 ie : Tablets are se Tan TUAIK Staion | forces that havo crossed the ocean, | were, the idea that the war ta jn ‘ aaa ' 1 Pickford will a less Marmola Pri waaay a in is tr + a contribution. Judge Malone | ‘we jof the Rochester when w unk we viking in Eastern a large case for sold by all druggists. 7S, Or if you prefer you may write @irect to the Marmola Company, 864) have @ magnificent army in , Dut it is not a super-army, It pped Up to the limit of our ship Wrogress here and not in Carnegie! Jo0 9 jant, more than 250 miles west | a7) Hall or Madison Square Garden; If I have succeeded In impressing a few will make @ ¢ k imposed @ @@ntence of not lesa than tthe Middle Weet, urs and six months and not more ir yeare and six months tn Ma i the furthest west | speaking ¢ of the Irish Coa (Contirued from First Page.) Woodw A Ave. Detroit, Mich.—Advt. s Andrew Alexander 4 4 are to play a minor part and that t Jar o not justified under ordinary con. | ¢X!#"t can make a soldier out of a| f the American people: | : tw Are po os civi S I—Falth—fatt our y ‘ r D Sixth Avenue at 19th Street actual combatants Are politicians, re-| sitions in ngreoing with our vonera. °!¥ilian in a few months ONE—Falth—fatth in our arm 25 and 27 West 42d § ” |formers, faddists and captaing of {1-\yI9 statesman, Representative Joo DIFFICULTIES AHEAD AFTER! %%4 Davy. oMcers and men, and be dustry and that the most potent an n of Tilindts, that our country ARRIVAL IN FRANGIE | faith In those who, in the work- A Sale of Women’s Shoes at $5 a pair Not only good leathers well made, but smart high cut patterns on stylish modern lasts in all sizes and widths. Kidskin andcalfskin lace and button, with high, medium and low heels. Mail orders filled as long as ‘1... tures, State or nat! States, Jt is true that the war on this aldo, yin wo far as actual operations are con- | cerned, is in the hands of soldiers, put | there ts a wid 14 idea at home | that the poldiers nd are playing or |munition to uso against the Germans ts hot alr, Our army is the keystone of the arch of defense against German ag- |areasion, It is up to every American | | coxa, woran and child to ald in atrenethoning that keystone. It ts up to every Am | udices, tdiosyncracios and disposition jto interfero with the affatre of fellow citizens and keep the same jburled until after the war, | Above all it Is ne | every American bus | ibmerge his financi: and aspirations, and for workingman and salaried man to overlook considerations of re- | turns for his efforts. The United nal, in the United | EVERY AMERICAN MUST 8UB-| |MERGE FINANCIAL INTERESTS. | an to Dury his prej- | his| United States must stand should- er to shoulder to preserve the unity of grim determination which | is the quidin rit of our armed | forces on foreign soil, As an American ¢ on T hope I are pretty well fed up on ourselves jure be It from me to assert that we Canne \i0 “hell of a suocem.” Woe are not living to-day under ordinary condi. tions. | And the trouble ta that a conmider- | able proportion of our people do not realize that conditions aro plus ex-| |traontinary; they have not reached | conviction that the very foundations of civilization are in danger, Un- doubtedly their non-realization of the basic position of the United States in no war has been accentuated by the hardships, assoctated with extraordl- | nary weather conditions, which have, | po to speak, “busted right in their | face” at home. A heatless, wheatlers, | meatinss, lghtiows citizon of Now York, Chicago, Milwaukes, Keokuk, Kalamazoo or Atlanta may be prone \to forget that wo have an army in iy be pardoned for maying that we resources, but it has no equip- to spare, Because modera war- & trade, the inside o acquired by study and tratn- all our troops in France are not ant effective in defense or of- Wo need feel no shame on that | score. No system of military tutelage | | The trouble is—the funda- mental trouble—that we Ameri- | cans at home think that all an | American soldier has to do isto | get off a transport at some French port in the afternoon, eat @ good dinner, his shoes shined, leave an early morning call and go out the next day and | amputate one of the Kaiser's | ears. Incidentally, that sort of idea is not absent from the minds of all our soldiers in France. T have travelled hundreds of miles | along our Jines of communteation tn | Mrance and in the sector of military 1ctivity to which we have been as- signed. My observation and experi ence have shown me that the Ameri- can # upon reaching France which | ( Americans with the fact that war Is o be waged by warriors on the fleld f battle and not by elviilans and ivillan and reform bodies 3,000 te .000 miles behind the trenches, 1/ trust I may proceed to enunclate! what should be, In this criste—and It 4 @ crisis—the three cardinal virtues ings of destiny, are guiding our military and naval operations, We | are all right over here. Wo can give a good account of ourselves now and a better account of our- aelvos later, If we meet with dis- couragements our people must be prepared to bear them, Remem- her that In the early days of the | war the Germans were knocking at the gates of Parts, TWO—Hope—hope for an honor- able peace, not a peace at any price, The world yearns for poace, but not for peace dictated by an autocratic power which has turned the world upside down. T know thero {9 a prevalence of chilled extremitios in the United States, and the complaint is not lacking elsewhere, Let us hope Newest Spring ee Gowns =< Dresses Special Offering *— Complete assortment of newest models, made of Serges, Taffetas, Jerseys, Crepe Georgettes and Crepe de Chines. Wool Values 0 Unusual — Special Offering 1— S8ti is up against a tough game. France. that the cold feet patriots may be ‘. | does not become an tmmediate fight- 7 the lots last. | Our front over here is united. | Ican aay truthfully from my recent ing unit, de ta Just an arrival, thave, freed to the aid of crutches eo Unusual styles in Wool 50 Our reserves in civilian life in the mingling with the man on tho street 1) wi Nal that they may be unable to keep Terssy, Satina, Serged . Aa the people of the United States| UP With those who, with cleamess know, through the war maps, that tho so-called western front extends, roughly, along the eastern boundary ‘arked by extreme sacrifice, Crepe Meteors; balues | c France el ein r TURER-Charity—charity for of France between the Belgian and) toe, who make mistakes, charity Swiss frontiers, tt {# no violation of military ethics for me to state that! American soldiers, landing anywh in France, must travel pra of vision, sea the necessity of peace by might of right and, If necessary, by force of arma bul- w for those who, in the knowledge of conditions as they exist In France, strive to accommodate our sol- diers to those conditions rather Wool Georgettes, Checks, Satins Crepe and all sizes, Unusual Modet Pictured, $15.00 | than to conditions which exist in across the width of the cc Tulsa, Oklahoma and Laila, Ga. --Spring Suits——Spring Suits fore they can be regarded as essential) The United States is a world nation eci l G units in the busin tot ny now. We are wrestling with world S Ll P. d ts sinees which brought | Uo obiems and we must face them as | ‘Pp ally rice thom here—namely, fhting business. | the world in general faces thom, Before they reach the shores of! Yankee strategist who rides to his France they have covert, by land/office in bis automobile, clips the | and 3,000 00 le coupons o} is Liberty bonds, reads been done in Franco which doce not | through the mud on a country road|meet his approval, and clamors et The Dainty Boleros, Etons, Tailored and Sport models, braid bound, also vestee effect, developed in Serges, Poiret Twills, Tricots, Scotch Mixtures and Silvertone. A Special Offering of Silks in France a fow nights ago. Thin) {i@ Mme era noussnd miles, away,| 00 29” .00 (WHITE, BLACK AND COLORED) contingent wore rubber boots, ‘The | Wer, several, thousand ‘miles away, | 25 35 army could use more rubber boots. Getting away trom Oregon rubber boots we return to our pror sition that the soldier from the Unite 'Statea is just here when ho leave the transport, He encounters at once 4 condition of railroad congestion which will be discussed in a subse- quent article. Incidentally, I might say, the railroads of France, after |three and a half years of war, are handling transportation di Mculties much more efficiently than such it- floulties have been handled in the United States, and the French rail roads aro not all Government ow! and operated, AVERAGE CITIZEN HAS NO IDEA OF THE PROBLEMS, The first problem confronting our military authorities in France Is to get the soldier to a point where he becomes at least a partially effective junit of the Allied armies, Tho next problem to be tackled ts to house, equip and feed the soldier and keep him supplied with material with which he may slay or maim his en- emy. | | Speaking as one who eald au revoir! to Coney Island and Sandy Hook less |than thirty days ago, [ can honestly] say that the average citizen of the United States has no more tdea of tlon, Close study of sacred and pro- and|fane history will disclose that there [hasn't been a mir erformed in 0" | this worl clos . to be continued to-morrow (Saturday) comprises American and foreign Silks of superior qualities, varying in width from 36 inches to 42 inches. These Silks have been arranged in Lengths suitable for all purposes, and present unusual value at 90c. to $3.45 per yard OPPENHEIM, GCLLINS & 34th Street—N ew York ed The Wool Dress Goods Department is featuring Semi-made Dresses in two New Spring models Additional Reductions have been made in the prices of a number of styles in Women’s Negligees made of silk or crepe de Chine, some trimmed with lace. These are now marked, for immediate clearance, | the tntricactes of thoe problems than at $9.75, 12.50 & 16.50 (Women’s House Gowns, Third Floor) |crocodiles in the Yangtseklang are] blue or green or whether the Yangtse-| Klang 1s inhabited by crocodiles or| . goldfish. Unusual values are offered in LE nie anid nothing in connection Spring-like Clothes for Misses’ Spring wear Important Sale Saturday e ° e e Misses’ Spring Suits Chic Models Just Received Smart youthful models of men’s wear serge, plain-tailored or pleated with braid- trimming and silk overcollar. Specially Priced at 25.00 Misses’ Suits of serge or poplin in belted, ripple back, pleated, braid- trimmed or plain tailored models, some have vestee and collars of faille silk, Special Value smartly cut, and attractively made of fine-twill mavy-blue serge, in sizes for women and misses, very specially priced at $14.75 tho necessity for hospitals or of the} rime consideration of keeping tho} Idier who has come from 3,000 to| | 6,000 miles from home to fight healthy and contented, To my mind this as-| pect of the war ranks quite well up| 29.75 Semi-made Skirts {n several desirable models (plaited and plain), variously made of navy blue ae black-and= Misses’ Suits of Poiret Twill and} re the special need of the moment whe with the activities assoctated with ! , t n yhite checks and effective plaid woolens : ie #9 1 She ‘ Jiife Just this side of no man’s land Gabardine in braided, Etons or tail- | 39 : wallte SIVG, Piel ‘WOOeIE, ever there are demoiselles just emerging into ind shall attempt to make this/| ored models, plain and novelty silk 75 marked (due to incomplete ¢ exceptionally low prices of $3.75 & plain very shortly | FAITH, HOPE AND CHARITY OUR CARDINAL VIRTUES. | If I have succeeded in getting over the idea that our womanhood—or women whose slender con- collars. Special Value tours are hardly less youthful than those of their daughters. ea) armed forces in 4.5 Also On Special Sale Saturday Such clothes are ready in generous RED CROSS WILL RAISE Misses’ One-Piece $ Several Thousand Yards of nt sae a own at prices of st jently SECOND $10,000,000 = re Te aeases Wool Attractive serge dresses in slanted, embroidered and tunic models of superior tailor serge in navy and black, Dress Fa b F ics Campaircn for Great Fund Will Wress ir IcS Pag Sherr, Begin May 6 and Continue | Throughout Week, WASHINGTO: wide range to meet everyone's requirements. comp or example: Offering Extraordinary Values at » March 1.—The War wool mixtures and bla di te ches Tailored Suits ‘ e $28.50 to 118.00 Council of tho American Red Cross st th 1 e ; announced to-day that a campaign to 15 00 will be placed sale t orrow (Saturday), 27.50 to 85.00 — | raise another $100,000,000 would begin . te 1 erte ae ayn! . May @ and continue through that arranged in Dress, Suit, Cont snd Skirt Lengths, 21.50 to 95.00 — | week. ; : | Misses’ Afternoon Dresses in chic and exclusive models of Crepe de Chine, Georgette and Chiffon Taffeta, hand embroidered | 25 .00 i | and beaded in attractive Spring color. duoted durin, June 18, las uding silk) | at . . + «© ~« $20.00 to 130.00 paeiat: Nahi semant, Fir loor | Practical Coats, 15.50 to 165.00 ap eee pateey ea Misses’ Satin Frocks in smart braided tunic models featuring Hew us well as to the fighting men of the new long tight sleeves and deep cuffs of superior satin in 35 00 Lene oan Roun Ey: BU TOUNS RY ERR black and navy. Special Value . <> br (igs 3 olds ¢ Headuche aud (rl itaeasansicnionmcmeniaiertinitae Saeaseaaeeaapaeainaenebndniamaets oe Hitith Avenwe-Madison Avenue, New York saris passe, ae — . . % W, GROVES wanat |

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