The evening world. Newspaper, March 6, 1918, Page 16

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vs) VRRSSeRE Ist FF awe EDITORIAL PAGE Wednesday, March 6 4a, By J. H. Cassel leit, 19) : wat ‘on ESTADLISUED UY JOSENI( PULITZER, Purliehed Daily Bxoopt Sunday by tho Press Publishing Company, Nos 69 to 4a Park Row, New ¥ ts | ' “ GR, President, 69 Park Row, | JOSH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary, 68 Park How Triad o bristle MEMUDR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, eee Se LCT USPS Gly dete BAR THE ROAD. T MAY well ceem unfortunate that a practical plan to keep i German domination out of Asiatic Russia by sending a Japanere expeditionary force into Siberia should have been made with diplomatic difficulties and dangers. This is a seminder, however, that in epite of all that ha happenod, in no quarter has international diplomacy yet arrived at the bright ideal of openness and candor to which the United States has expressed the earnest wish to bring it. The mission of Viscount Istii to this country last fall may have resulted in a most satisfactory and cordial understanding between Ue United States and Japan as to the interests of both in China and the devotion of both to the same principles of peace and commercial! equity. But that, it turns out, is no reason why the United States, when the question arises of a Japancse move through Siberia against tl common enemy, must not feel constrained to hold aloof, registeri: s Rastern ally disapproval and leaving it to G and put the necessary hobbies on } One would think all the enemies 2 startled. into new cohesion and co-operation by the one co! of Teutonic success in Russia, If apy one has still fo be convinced of the magnitude of that) euccess let him get out the map and compare the combined area of the | ‘Baltic Provinces with that of Germany—not to speak of those yast | stretches of a disintegrated empire over which German power ean| find a/hundred pretexts to extend its “protection,” and from whi hy} it can draw untold resources of food and fighting materia). | Tf Japan can check the spread of German ascendancy in the East thould the feelings of Russians be permitted to stand in the w Have the Russians shown that they stand by their,p) make more trustworthy allies than the Japanese? Should we risk prolonging the war another five years to spare | what Russians may still call their pride? It was by the old diplomacy that the Imperial German Govern ment brought Russia to ruin. What cynical amusement for Beflin if the old diplomacy still ea tain to accept re vonsi bility | Germany migh y? | es an)| | worked cnough among Germany's enemies to leave the road to Russin and Asiatic conquest undefended. | . + | WELL BEGUN. EY it be duly recorded ond remembered that the first timet L women in New York voted for Congressmen, they polled aboy 90 per cent. of their registered strength aud nearly one-half | the entire vote cast. | Also that the result of this special elu: most critical periode in the Nation’s history to put into tin National Legislature four Democratic representatives pledged first of all to stand squarely behind lhe President iu urrying forward the war to a complete victory of the United States over its enomies, Woman Suffrage in New York can always point back with I odits first use of the franchise as a beginning stron Brag hypatriotic. patna = ~ = a ——— = Se My Matrimonial Chances Curiosities of U. S. History Civil War Might Have Ended in First Year if Federal Troops Had Been Armed With Breech-Loading Rifles. By Philip Robert Dillon Was reid Recording the Experiences of A Young Girl of Thirty » dignified and ‘ciniemnmtiansnisnineth Grtomensnahionn cents ; * | Oopyria’ WAZ By the Trae Culllahing i) eae ea 1d) By Wilma Pollock ee MBAR De} ee New Ki Aventng: | THOR to the present great war,} none approy ” ¥ No. VU. Episode of the Widow Who Still Cared @ showed Infahtry y fal them would lave MAMPAIGN in this State to enlist boys over sixteen years o ae + ; fre of the Civil War. tas anybody jm. weapons than ry f 2 : ’ i: Sedu a bi hs ‘ HORDE v4 et see n Ow le joture owing s . @ge for farm work is directly and seasonably in line with one met M cnough 't Ms i i ot ihe ct Wa ede oe fj 3 diers of the Civil War of the nation’s most urgent war needs. 1 (piv am a t iu WH ring dinskots us they »| “Atter a Pa \ Ge few weeks’ timo the farmers will Le demanding louder than i ‘ Se 4 tec M Moving picture producer wt Dreechi-loaders ig j rerio know how they can be expected to raise record war crops this) med néked Gerald to take me hon et aa : wae a Loreate sb ; 7 Aca } : : P cae onda AN ksbure” at anta \ 1 sense and expertenve gradua th farm labor scarcer even than it was last season, | iz st ia WT cghib GUATEOE AMA RerenmaacamiGlare LfOreGd @ vecsenitlon of the eaie ot Whe Secretary of Agriculture has already sent out an appeal to “Thy ' nt in the sttoct vars, transfers fOoNINd Fall fene intrenchinents pon [leass fire. By INKL the Spencer @he-country to furnish workers for the fivids, oe wh i nclalanay | away with maasine une L ating carbine had been Pr is h j ; : At the artists! com uxis, but n t He mon * ng forward in attack wtfle adop 4 the regulation arm for the | ‘ompt response is heard in this commonwealth from the Now ened ine tale eee | doalles (firing about ten times a minute, with |Federot cavamy, and by the fall of Work State Boys’ Working Reserve, which has the Stite Food Com, Vil Weste i to nee what | tion of never a ramrod in sight, and never year brigudes of infantry began tmission and a $50,000 appropriation behind it in a movement tol’! 2% Montes Sis F it up wit ale i ai re i A ith it, © \ A fa rs ‘ *e0] ulWays be Aye " b pouring the powder fu he muzzle o| is reason to believe tha mobilize at least 5,000 boys—3,000 of them from this city—into tral | yt aomle AiNans been ty much | Hayw SG heraeeiier jad! the Wedoral tutantry been anied F ; nore Kly when tify have mutual} “lves mi i why a deral infantry been armed fing camps from which they can be assigned to farm work, singly or acquainta » te cren b na of | lawyer Lh f Yet there wany thousands of fom the first with even the breech in groups, by the season, month or day. ext [asked Mr. ‘Po whether | bal { + haa Civil Wa Kdiens w yuld show loaders available in 1 the war ts . he Was relat Oo Bae: 1 mitts t «the movin: delure pro s how | Would have heen terminat ithin Here is a chance for hundreds of city hads to help their country |asanw. tte 2 mee CORD, ie ' al Pelee ie) mem a lil ee POEUN ANA WALES, ; widow, He hed oartiiv and sald ew el jouded and tired at Gettysburg— | yea and at the same time help themselves to the healthiest season's wo |" We are not related: @ust 1 n they were trained in “Casey's! W h amasiig vista thia Jast they ever did in their lives—work that will harden their musel the ne mame, 4 were | ' TGRHOR, HOW ADRS NMR tO: Cie OBES FER f Gon, Alexander brings } . ve " st one time ridge with thumb and next two ft sito u war wh rs redden their blood, muke better men of them and give them the!) weil Rt on ae band and ¢ pen ol Ms : * - vie) ; aN a ‘4 - ’ Hie " igh lasted four t WW) deeply ta love with hy volunteered Gera and place w ie teeth Wi yeas Could have been terminated benefit of a kind of experience no man was ever the worse alma » 1 have. ner lo. "But Lo was told Ars. 4 , they tore the paper (or all musket ear had the MOverraARE Gees taste of. HON widow,” cortridges re made of papt poured | y 1 breeeh-loading rifles for ita sot- “Back to the soil” is not’ for evervbody | ok mete » “Yen mW grasK W re aaah GA a tg aR I pi ball] diers! Why did not the Government F Noi Pe mee te ve long iron tamrod and rammee ab ba EPeee SE Gs hea every American had a practica! glis it otte ; sat Nid r It was : 4 ; SretcherEhA Dit & Derenadon tan ohn Shia i os * a ‘i quite evident that he w nig Wasn't such prot : 3 nanding treache voll there might be more true farmers and ger ifn »| infatuation for the wid : I, Wd never Rive w dan AL SRT ee SIRENS ANE pte: Hired) Ai es aystom of bureaucracy, atu. balance the millions whom—we are constantly told—city life, factory BARRY t devote bin ne. te chance. But Sis ts a da Hooker Aide Bugle aig ph on xhorane } . ‘ 1 —_— showed © y symptom of Anyhow, Ir bs ' 4 te sa Mos! whe s > sa aie i Wages and the movies hold in unbroken thral! Pad ddakade (ails | asioal show. Golly. 1 f than twiee in w minute. : . - % z in love was ft a oo sic 3 A rot 7 . The New York boy who will get out in the or ' “ CON | one If there were any breeeh-le x Th e ork b ho r n the and put his hand jquest worth having r si ; titles a¢ Gettyabure they were | ewest Ings to farm work this summer can earn good wages. build health these years, 1 determined 1 4 = : eves) ands of only a few dismountd caval- i . body and mind, help win the war and learn a lot of interesting SA aegis ud Cols between us tae ey St | enon Phere le noseccticreny: | in Science + t =m and our bappiness. ne | Fs a that may be useful and profitable to him later, | “i Pow |_AE is 000 of the wexpllable things | prone ses aetisicetiemmecemisioaes At it ten-th ionds ee et We of the Chyil War, ond appallingly sad in production of nota - - ‘etnts & i Ret Hae He} 4) ctive of this day, that tie {4d and Wales last year has been Letters From the People - asriver cake coy 100 |v iited States Government did not arm |Ofctalty ¢ ted at long Please Umit communteations to 150 words. on f MT ita 8 with breeeh-loaders until | i one-third more than the } Praines © et of Soldiers Abr | ures himseif. His exan t een-|MARRIEO PEOPLE THE GETTER| Alter threes years of bloody war, and) year and the erop on t o the Editor of The Evening World news is had but eastiy de H Pn TYPE }then only a few of them, | . «6 Every citizen is delighted to have! te To pattern after ex- r Gen, exander, & West) Now French automobile wheels are eed the accounts in your paper of |@™blea presupposes of Sea was chief: of ee ; ' sonditions among our soldiora in| Chars , wired ppened Te Y ebewery reer onapmeoname a basal Mi aU cola Me ALL cea France as touching freedom froi| ¥? red by spiritual cai {artillery t DS ANY! solid tires, the latter below slightly * Dgpor indulgence, fount the object | atra the moutha ef charact 1 and p_[ the leading authority In ordnance nailer and arranged to share the Was of certain sontimen:alists scan- | & | never be closed aa sa | Mw’) Gen, Lee's army, La his book, “Mil. t when heavy loads depress the dnlising the United States troops t#|%% Man struggion between two o p eusared at | cry Memoire of a Cuntedcrato,” hel tor NG eh A ary ll ales WP t on ary . or they are punctured. Of the two- jar and the drunk-| Leaman rs { writes | a fard—tho former i!» to bo loathed mont. | out how a ry 5 "In (of the Civ] s of some portions of South MM lures the Innocent for paattiny Wha tice op x Neat t pou y a le with the | Am preserve potatoes for months and tho subsidieed fuisifier la (ue atten Ded sworlng, ho KE W shaban hey,| Ward rssh aid Pe etimen ¢pp. seere: by! aliens most dangerous and doapicahio orea- ot The Brenig W y wan wateh+ sand caiibres Maser a th atetn ee thas ture on earth, § To sativfy bia greed The and without one per cept, of them exing Ar i ng them human jifo, What a wonderful de.| lexmay 8 1 of (onlogy ov ‘ ea vice {It would bo- instrament, Gil het jathereolu? |! hoy w D per 1. belng of! fy way of experiment the Austra. for hienitia loon 1 Like | Wee a copy of los > yd nuw o 1 smooth oom nent will Install two ma The PAttlonnake oF copperhead, the Mavirdny Vo but | ( higliew would ga 5%, which waa , » eclentist of that soun- ; soandal monygor's deadly alm iw lo de. | aoked wae the i f ¢ tied Staton | . 1 i POY every Creature Who (fare oppure | de 4 vid Gather w Ht way tens and arm for Untted os . ted for stimulating rain. eur: man whe indul, AN ine} and the Leaman “ knowlog ‘ 1 ps ng} were gevernl breast ating small |fn'l by iiberating bigh tension eiecs 4 Gppetite for alood oUlmue, 4 Kraven wit bum te wee me Agal. Bar! eon jarmd manufactured in ihe North, but! eri 2 the upper atmosphare, f Mrs. Solomon By Helen Rowland Oovariaht 8, by the Preay Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World). Y Son, hear now the ‘Ten Golden Rules for holding a Wife's love. Por what profiteth it a man if he gain the whole world, and yet have a little termagant in his home? But a DEVOTED wite is a blessing forever. I charge thee, remember thy wife's Vanity, to keep ft sacred! For lo, HOW do Tango Lizards live, if not upon the starved vanity of women whose hus bands have forgotten all the rules of the Love Game? ‘Therefore, pratse her without stint, and without reservation, and without Minit. Praise the color of her eyes, the softness of her halr, the smallness of her foot and the Iines of her figure. Yea, even though ‘ 4 sho welgh seven times seventy, say unto her, “Go to! Wee Somat F HATE skinny women; and a pleasing plumpness and cugves are more to be desired than sharp corners and angles!” Remember her nose, to admire it always! For even as the tenderest | epot tn a man’s make-up {s his bald-spot, so {s every woman sensitive oon- cerning her NOSE, Therefore, if it be not “cute,” it fs “classic,” and ff it *be not “retrousse,” it Is “characterful"—and there !s no such thing as “snubnose” in the bright lexicon of woman, Whatsoever thy wife cooketh and putteti before thee, 1 bid thee BAT it with hallelujahs and rejoicings and many “Oh-how-deliclouse For any woman will work ber fingers unto the bone for a man who “appre- clateth” her cooking; and in time, peradventure, she may learn HOW to cook. But a critic on the kitchen-hearth ts a disheartening thing! Observe all thy wife's clothes, to remember them, and fafl not to ad- mire the NEW thing whickt she weareth, But above all, forget not the | frock which she wore when thou first met her! Compliment no OTH woman in thy wife's presence, Nay, though | Venus herself should pass thy way, turn not thy head to glance after her, | And if thy wife praiseth her, answer her, saying “Pooh, pooh! She hath no PERSONALITY!” Pick not upon thy wife, nor her little failings, For ho woman | weddeth in order to be remodelled, but in order to be admired. Remem- | ber that thou hast not married an angel from heaven, but a human being, and that, peradventure, thou thyself art not a stained-glass saint! Keep out of thy wife's domain; yea, enter not her boudoir nor her kitchen without a special permit. For an husband that snoopeth 1s an abomination within the house! And a little reserve 1s an excellent thing. Remember the sacred dates of thy wife's calendar, even thy wedding Jay, and her birthday, and the day when thou didst first KISS her; yea, write them upon the tablets of thy memory, for thy soul's sake! For not to send thy wife FLOWERS upon occasions, even aa thon | didet remember to send them to thy sweetheart. For a fifty-cent bunch | of violets will, peradventure, rejoice the heart of ANY wife more than s | fifty-dollar washing-machine! Fail not to say unto thy wife, “I LOVE thee!” at least once a fort. night. Vor {t is not enough that a woman should know that a man loveth her, What availeth it her to know that bonbons are good {f she never |tasteth them, or that « sohg is beautiful if she never HEARETH it? Verily, verily, in a tuisband perfect manners are more to be desired ‘than perfect morals or a perfect nose; and a burglar who observeth the jabove rules shall be more ‘his own house than a deacon who \knoweth not enough to follow them! The Jarr Fa Selah! By Roy L. M Sayings 0 M | mily cCardell O18 Wy the Frees The New Yoru “ Iren got lonesome in “Why not put then? ak Be exclaimed asked Mr. Jurr as he | ‘Ta nd Mrs.| picked up the ¢ ate dining room,| “When they have company? When Re eeane in gumo of] their dear litte friends come to see ran Well, shall we " remarked : lavas want to| Mr. Rangle y Wealtan ceo prey Is” remarked| As he te Jace afte he knew how it would be, so why worry? 1 say, Joha-ni Don't touch ds!” Mrs, Rangle called ) avros t in @ sibilant whisper. Mast was not touching the rege ards, r Jarr was, Mrs “i s dJarr reached over and slapped Mas- Jarv’a hand s g thel ' © and Master Rangle t dren be ° gave @ shout of glee, which he hur- Ne don’t ery ' r anged to when he know m iren are SO ern eye of Lis father upon Ive w Mra. Rangle wasn , \ hold the cards; 1 wanna even the children « dea ecards!" shrieked little Mise nd benr off any palm for sensi- Mr. Jarr tried resignedly to | ens, remarked: “And SO the misdeal and thus re- | are mine.” Neve the little 1 of all the kings. \ oor Rangla and] queens knaves she had sorted out | Mr 1 tor let you hold HER rked Mra, Jarr how nicely your lit les arranged chairs the children for pee me of their elders e behaving," as way Misa Jarre d patiently | Once more Mr. Jarr d antil her father It the cards “Why hasn't the ladies got feet on} 48ain and her mother had banded her the curds, mamma” asked Lttle Miss] the cards promised ' lisare ly that all, mammh?” sho whined, Are we going te play cards or] “That's al! you can have till we are not?" asked Mr, dare through, my dear,” replied Mra. Jarr “Yes, darling, Mamma will let you{as she urling's goldet | d her cards,” said Mrs, Rangle to | curls, eae hes it Aw ant them then, ie Bs ards, toot" | crled darling | Nite Siena My beloved wife and enn e her some of your cards, papa,” | 27M narked Mr, Jurt, avising to | said Mrs ' his and mopping his foverad “What a stingy bit!’ ex. | VFOW, “also my dearly betoved neigh. Winch ined 1, when Mr,| BOF 1 th hildran, somewhere In Jarr, in despa her bait of | France ts ‘wotut Hero ait a ten '8 peace and happiness, but if this be Sea atte tua w them on] Peace and happiness, ship mo some the floor where in France, via the submarine “Oh, you naughty g ‘ ape ee And Mr. Jarr arose and Mr. Rangle And then, to Mr. Jar with him and went out and lett the ard and their | “Pick up the cards and Wives and ehit- ho child. She's just ne " rade ,f Whereat the children ; aK sly OVER the or it’s long past bedt : tho ladies fei) to eens io cards and and gousip, |- An Elephant That Caused a War ELIEVING that Buddha lived Plants in the histor: nelent vain in the body of a white|The Roman armies fed at the Ales elephant, a devastating war was | appearance thelr early conten fought in the sixteenth century | ith the Cart bs, but by the between Siam and Megu for posses-| use of torches earned to eae sion of the unhandsome animal, For|up a the huge beast. a generation the struggle continued | Alexand tered them in "bit nd jn {tt five kings came to the} cona : ai rone, only to die together with| ‘The elepha 0 thousands of their subjects, A white! prain ta aaa eee Mipid and Ula | hin size, o elephant is exceedingly rare, but 9] jarge sith + OnLy an \ ay & man's, but it ly albino and by no means ab ST oe en ty NER arenas [developed and few animals are bay snow color¢ 0 1888 num, Dot lintellikeot. ‘They are used more from @ religious motive, brought one! nt hurden in Indi reine * berate from Siam a ust of regaiiled with auperstitiogs oy, et |} Frequent mention to made of ele-'inoir drivers, '

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