The evening world. Newspaper, March 8, 1918, Page 22

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| EDITORIAL PAGE | Friday, March 8 | - She Eveniwly Wtarls, By J. H. Cassel ie V7ar Medals. ! Copreteht 1018, . (Thy New Tork Ereniog HS ASHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, eeeeammpemene Publided Dally Excopt aby the Trees Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to ea ; i : of the Fighting Nations wv York Krening Work’) ‘ Coprright, Wid, by the Press Publisning bad Hee * Rist BiB 0 i NO. 9—GERMANY’S ALLIES { HE Dual Aus gary, maintains a list of famous dees OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, | ‘ | i jal Monarchy, Austr y AW, ‘Treasurer, 3 Park Ro RALPH PULITZUR, President, 63 Park Row. J. ANGUS SH 6 JOSE Pt AEA It cretary, al ees orations, notable among them being the Order of the [ron Crown, Pett A311 | which was founded by on, as King of taly, in 1809, Tre medal - is the tron crown of the ancient kingdom of Lombard), ribbon, Membership |s \ WOLUME 88....scccccssecsscccvsccescveccceccsNO, 90,683 | worn upon a yellow and bl | CAN THE PRESSURE BE TOO GREAT? soldiers and clivillans. Rarer still is the Order of Elizabeth Theresa for distinguished officers, the num MERICAN EARS may well be attentive just now to facts of i A white ber being fixed at twenty-one. A highly prized miittary decorati a and gold cross of the Order of Muria ‘ound Sey the kind conveyed in the statement made to The World's London correspondent by an American missionary, R. H., Markbam of Kansas City, Mo., who is on the way back from tlie! by that Empress in! 1/57. It is awarded to off Balkans, where he has been stationed for the last six years. | for parsonal distinction in the fle Another prize for @allantry ie the Cross of Merit, inutituted in 1848, FATALIST and tuvpired ete F ras ‘ A the belief that death in battle -Noting that Germany’s Turkish allies have been decidedly braced! With the infidel opens the O'ter of the fae up by the peace with Rugsia which puts within reach of Turkey the) @ates of Paradise, the Turk is a Third Clase, sturdy fighter. Distinguished military and civil service are rewarded by the Order of the Mejidieh, established in 1851, The medal is a silver sun with seven ra} the ribbon red and green, richest oil fields in Europe, that neither Bulgaria, Hungary nor even! Austria is anywhere near starvation, and that Sofia in fact “enffers, no more from food shortage than does London,” Mr. Markham goes! The Order of the Osmanich, of four classes, also on to state the plain truth: ‘ awarded to votb soldiers and civilians, dates from 1663. We must Bot base our hopes of beeting the Central Powers } The insignia is a gold sun with seven green rays, Worm on a greea ribbon, edged with red. on interna! dissensions in those countries. The strikes in Austria-Hungary are insignificant compared with the wave of enthusiasm which has como with the Russian breakdown and the signing of a separate peace. er. Mee ULGARIA fights beside her anclent enemy, Turkey, Order of the B Her highest decoration 1s the Order of SS, Cyril nleb. and Methodius, established . in 1909 to commemorate the independence of the fv Every day news from Europe makes the situation more grimly vation, ‘ : ai i i : | Courage in the fleld ts rewarded witn the Mil!- elear. There is no use trying to blink it: \ Jeary Order for Bravery, instituted in 1879 and : Success in Russia has strengthened the German war lords to an bestowed upon both officers and lee and the M. ; A i tary Order of Merit, In six classes, founded in 1901, extent that it is dangerous folly to underestimate. Every step in tlie! The tlustration ts the lowest class of the Civil Order ’ progress of German ascendancy in Russia lessens the chance of indns- ‘of Merit, dating from 1891, ‘ ’ ia rhide This ends the story of these bits of metal and sili, trial or political revolution in either the Germgn Empire or the Dua! to gain which men will gladly risk thelr lives until the Kingdom. The militarists have a new grip on the whole situation.’ day of peace shall dawn. Then, free from despotic i i rule and able onge more to see clearly, the enemy may ‘The trumpet call carries new promise of victory and conquest to, recognize as liberators the soldiers of America and ser Teutonic ears. | allies and together they will turn to the work of re- ¢ Daleuria i ; i i e pl le deso! e by eder Je ‘ How much added fighting and sacrifice this means for the} building the placee made desolate by w Chil ete oC Allies before militarism is beaten to its knees no man can estimate. | ; ) But that it must mean harder fighting, longer fighting and fight. | ing carried fiercely forward without expectation of help from forces ‘born of earthquakes or upheavals in the political and eocial struc-| tures of the Centra] Powers, no sane man can doubt. | Americans, particularly, must get it out of their heads that the German people are presently going to do something that will spare this country the exertion of its supreme fighting strength. That pos- . ‘Lucile the Vaitress By Bide Dudley Copyright, 1918, by the Pregs Publishing Co, (The New York Evening W. writer sayse ‘Did you ever ® “ce had a scenarius nut in here to-day,” sald|/hash ond other vi Lucile tho Waltress as) factory?” distributing 3 in a food ral 4 ; d the Friendly Patron prepared to at-|. “He sees T got him a he sibility—which has clung on as a hope in many American hearts—is tack bis roast feef hash. perspires at | lis more than ever remote. “A writer, en?” he sald. j!ne him did f ever write scenariuser. “That's what he imputated, On the |It captures my nanny some and I get level, that kind of guys get me/i fraction peeved. looney. They ought to be adjudged] “ Tush your noise,’ I tell ! behind the bars and incapacitated!ask me such cam there for the remainder of their non-| you got any brains t The only way to crush Teutonic militarism is by terrific pressure from without. ‘ That being so, if it is in the power of Japan to assist in shorten ing the crushing process, it would seem that American influence | lexistence. This one clambers up onto! ‘He pays no beed should be thrown actively on the side of any Allied project which | pees ‘and, when T go over the top|'Well,’ he says./'I'd advise you tw «> would put Japan in a position either to divert a portion of German! : 4 | to got his food respouso, he grins and|to tt, Iv’a a great came, ‘They tent Ly strength or to check the further progress | | says: any monoy tn dea them of c m hdgnes PIS Uian CE: MeEASE conn aagt aad t | “Just sold a scenartus for Carrie}arm, are they?” , ep ‘ ; y ‘grimble Young to act tn’ No, I says, the victhna Least of all, once more, after what Russia has done to give Prus “Why , } ‘Fine!’ I tell him. Then I get} get generous and the lady in sian hope and ambition a new and more than ever dangerous lease of 4 | practicable, “What are we solng % wie BSUS UO E ; ; A ; | er manntken, sweet-| “It was a broad bi life, does it seem just that Russian feelings should weigh too heavily snee eae {nner mai ct Ta a broad bin against any admitted service a Japanese military expedition in Siberia y i h at M P a Yr e t | h re r F 1 | | ‘“‘Don't rush met’ he tells me. ‘My time,’ he says, ‘Send tt or elsewhere on Russian soi] might do against the enemy. y n $ e a a m y |acenarlus 1s called “The Ice-Mau's|ture company and Like as | Daughter,” get a nice roll.’ . 5 rougl ou in a cool bh red, I 1 brace m: for a hot : cC | Brought you In a co! 5 t , SILENCE T. Wanted Me to Be y Roy Cardell ao ee ee ee ; = HEM. | boap al 1918, by’the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), , oF him to realize I wasn't dippy about | sometimes I eat them if the b i) toh 49, P é ; . it would make sore eyes|! ain't like Bepler, the butcher, who | ; aia? ‘ feanet ST nig’ ec ohbi , 5 oe | hig outside doings. So I get wageish | ain't too strong A Ewing § meeting at Carnegie Hall in honor of the Archbishop |Great Merchant's Parents Were Very Poor, but Eneouraged well to see you fellers| gets paid for the trimmings at thirty | 1" ia in a reception mode, “It concludes bis portion of the t ° ork was an impressive outpouring of the militant spirit ; 5 x ‘5 again!” cried Gus, the pro- | ents a pound and more fromthe cus- | ,,, * . Nant ane ‘ see: if fA ‘began gtd ‘ nee Him in His Ambition to Be a Merchant—How srleter of the cafe on the corner, ao|tomer, and then sells the tfimmings!, “.4#e® baby mine’ be shoots | entertainment. He orders beans and a] of Anglo-Saxon Christianity against Teutonic Paganism—for Ae dace aad bib friend angie 60> lil als canth a. pound or more” back at me. “Less me and vou nut! yysies himself with the mastitication {| this, as Elihu Root said, “is a war between Odin and Christ.” His Mother's Letters Helped Him On. tered Never you mind my business, you | Kid each other. Jokes are ail right 1n] of aid edibles, When be gets ,/ 1 . i af : lace, but 9 isn't no news- 3 $ | But among all that was spoken, and eloquently spoken, concerning SORTER TAI: 9 hm) Rreen' aeene, DCrbe Ha Fe Reon orate | "Yes, what's the matter? Have yor | nind your business!" interrupted ee tt ont saa a ene Rie Op , : ‘ > np | : a e D a t and ps vay Li ore ea 3 si A “4 been chucked out of your own home?” | Bepler, tho butcher. “When people, "1PIT ONN : ut | fe war, nothing drove more directly home to present American needs FRANK W, WOOLWOKLTH. |asked Slavinsky, the giazier, who had|ureake glass in a winder thoy got’) "man What ane ore apieaied Europe done. \ i and above all to the situation in this great city of diversifi ine WAS born on a farm at Rodman | more they turned me down the moré|been confabbing with Gus wher |to have new glass put in, no matter Pere” T make ing . “1 guess scenario writing people ny @ y of diversified instincts Rm ete icn A more vey i eae LJ s o fluously. Well, sir, tt bit him tn the aasdadie® PY aad interests, then the warnlas uttered by ; pees ey on I was seven year» | determined I was to get into a store. | Rangle and Jarr entered. what it costs, But when meat ts too | [UOUsy. im tn tel are decidedly * numerous, aren’ Trinity, against th il g uttered by Dr. Manning, rector of | gig we moved to Great Bend, N| Finally, in order to get experience | “Slavinsky!" cried Gus angrily |uear to ent, nobody eata tt!" | na lvanans eee Hee tamded | they?” asked the Friendly Patron, 1s Y, against the peril of persisting pacifism: Y., where my }t selling goods and in doing simple |how many times have [ told you} “Don't make so much fuss in here") 9? ann bey tank ates fore so than that,” replied Lu- i{ “Whoever now talks of peace,” declared Dr, Manning, “ts father continue. | office work, I decided to work with- | that if anybody ta to insult my cus-| nterrupted Gus. “My wife, Lena, Up). 0'.'T? Well, it ien't everybody |cll@. ‘Then she added: “It 1 i} Bo real ¢riend of peace, “ tocar, on farm |out, pay for the Station Master at) tomers it is to be me? You go te] stairs, | can hear her waiking around !0k*% am : a t time. to finish mine called ‘1 peace, no true friend of freedom, no loyal son who can write scenarluses for Carrie | Bet t be i} of America, Our danger to-day ts not from the Germans but ing. Great Bend, who kept a two-by-four| your own glass-put-in shop and in-|on her heels, And when I go upstairs| 101g young, Did you ever trv| Bus-Hoy’s Bride, I'll bet 1 make | trom the so-called cactflets, ihe American Boloheviki bs We were very |srocery store in a corner .of the | sult your customers so Much as you|to- ght she'll ‘ve me a calling down | 1" ki blo ts nes aoe ‘ home of those Marie Bricktords ast 5 in Bolshevik, who are or, I had uo | ‘eight shed, 1 became Assistant |jike, but don't Insult my customers |for all the noise what's been going) Writing @ photopmy , \ ‘ . ” seeking by peace talk to break down th t se a “I give bim one look. ‘Not me!’ Ll up and take notification, | we ‘eak down the morale of our fighting even an overcoa, | Station Master—without pay, That | when | am here to do {t!” on, especially when she finds out how! give ee od ' a to withst...1 the | was the nearest I ever got to fulfilling! “Don't [ want to make ‘em feel at] little has been reng up on the cash| e want no talk of negotiation or indemnity, no restate- severe cold ot |™Y boyhood ambition of becoming @| home here, just like you do?” ven-|register, Mor, if you will notice, aj) is j ment of war aims; we have only one war alm, the complete and winter, and halt | ‘@!lroad man, \tured the surprised Slavinsky, good business don't make a ‘ot of} Spen our aca tion i decisive overthrow of the Prussian military machine, {ts crush- he year I wen’ ‘Inally, with great difficulty, ke-| “1 don't know what's the matter | noise, I notice when we have noth- : fi c yay 80 en, cet in | t troubles I alread ti" 1 ‘ W . {ng defeat on the field of battle. Till then any talk of — barefooted, bu- |°&US¢ 1 was so green, I eucceeded on top the troubles ready go ing but arguments, that's all we do dangerous tanatlclom or thinly disguised treason. TY then Wier cause tho ane |SSKHH AY Bret roel ob \n Weber. |ramarued Gua gloomy, “Here is the |nare,” orking on a Farm No treaty 1s worth the paper it is written on, Victory ft pair of cowhide shoes my paront.|t°W in a dry goods store, Iycon-! war, and high taxes and prohibition, don’t hear your wife complainé } Regotiation, indemnity, peace talk aft if SOY Fira could afford to buy mo cach year | ented to work for nothing for three} and near-beer, and license renewal | ing,” remarked Jarr, By Cl MiB jmeans they will work much harder 5 ' alk afterward.” months, living on $50 which I had/ not go way, and my ol man ney " i vy arence Du Bose. tl ever would do if “ ted only alx momthe—the winte: , lvi {not far away y clgar “and yet she has every right to, an they ever would do if so much Every loyal American in the city of New York well knows ie |aentae ee jenved: tn fen. ys . Atter owe | won't extend me credit ninety days,! said Mr, Rangle. AVE yeu planned your vacation pay per day were the only inducement, ty onths I was to ret $9.50 per week. | and everything! And now Slavinsky i n,” said Mr ’ They'll te more or less green afd ut need of such a warning. Hardly a day goe y th | rough dey the atitate| y 7 - | OR) Re eet Aaa et Shin: yearr is eS eee ats? pee - ig y day goes by that the ear of| 1 wpa proneat vp ung F the striote Leaving my father and mother and| ingults my customers In my own Slavinsky. “She ain't got uo use for No, you answer tna‘gnantly. |! accustomed to farm work, but their patriotism is not shocked by the slurs, the suggestions, the insidions Bel a vane hierhige sree on ath | hace to strike out In a Lindy and |Place. I want everybody to know It} #0 proud sho Ia!" Wo are at war! The rafiroade are. spirit will make up that, Io a he tf need lo . jatdes a ar ce sd nO! ve ackle certa alo! vi v a zi en to y *, y; S 0 “" sure, a 7 arguments, the half-concealed disloyalty of men who would have thal teetecn ee tL eon & re | ie 8. 4 acuniy ‘ alana wae now that dan att 8 pi ael | ‘And good looking, too,” sald Mr,| swamped and Uncle Sam Is rinning | ineasure, at least. x } ae F he dest experience o t€ | business, and n Co | Benle sty MEN 4 he . grim busin ui purists. Nation buy back peace on any terms, ‘skate because I had no skates, Many | life, {t was the 24th day of March, . T gota bartender what can attend | Bepler admiringly ll bet she sy m for aim business, uot ¢ ane * Last summer the street car com These are the sinister influences that are working to undermino | “me 1 could hear the boys playing | 1873, bitterly cold, with three feet of | to tt, although Elmer, my bartender, | Woush® 180, vara as we say in the Bat sea a Weigle neg | BAhyY tn a tar Eastern city polled American resolve, weaken Amerie; 1 = . j baseball near where 1 way hard at snow on the ground, My father, wholi, nothing but a loafer what don't j Pier sion trade. i wou be 4 a Ks its emy 8 and listed all men who : ps PVE, WORROD AMPFOOD PUPPOR, jwork in the hay fleld, But the only was bringing In @ load of potatoes! carg whut happens, and never gets | ‘A queen among women, indeed!” kind of va atlon Fes ald been raised on farms or who bad The safety of the United States and right of its fighters overseas | Hme 1 bad to play ball was in winter took me to Watertown. | mad if I'm Ingulted or you're insulted | murmured Mr. Jarr. Au of whieh ti - ally Tyle [PYF Worked ow farms, Just as many to the support-that is their duc dem, ie igs {during recess, for 1 worked on the) Ag the sleigh drove away T could | 4. no's insulted!" At theso commendations of the pul. | anytling avout your i kes {Of these men as could be spared were eae : ir due demand that these pernicious aids| arm al) summer and there was no see my mother standing at the door, |", rie haven't o ittele |Spritude of bis wife. Gus grew eitj vacation? And yet you really Will’ encouraged to go to work t rachy to the enemy be silenced and suppressed, time for play. There ts nothing that | and sho stood there as long us 1 was| “Zt !# too bad you havent @ lttle | nuwed up, jneod a vacation of eome swrt Bext) on farms, In many towns and small if Sa wasn ate 1 have not done on a farm, in sight. of eee srioeeant nature,” Fe) wwen, 1 didn’t say she wasn't | summer. Perhaps your fucure etfl- | ciutey the heads of business houses = , aa | A me marked Mr. Jarr, looker,” he remarked. “I don't want| ciency will be lossened Ubless YOU) invited employees who rked 0 » 2 My parents did not ex; or want Her letters to me during the early) ™ 7 * i a i . | ; c o had worke Hits From § har p Wits | mo a make farming my life work. years of my struggle to make good | aa enny snug far Ae fo Batt jto brag about it, you Know; but I) do have one—a bat of fost and, most) on farms and who could be spared to T abt ; | They understood me well enough to| were the most beautiful, the most In-, pleas af DAVIS Whe. 28 MA can tell you thts much—when my! of ull, a ‘ul change of environment! yelp handle the fruit, or berries, o7 ferexe’s uncle met her on the street | poor chance of getting even that.— | PD°Y vena » hy mother ever wrote to| boss and it don't cost him nothing,” | wire, Lona, is all dressed up she can't| and activity. So why not plan now! potatoes, or grain, or Whatever crop the o ay and wanted to know {f| Albany Jou know that I never cared for farming | spiring, any 4 Ge “But if | ever was one ope be: ohe bad been-iil, but she said no, she| ournal, | | and that 1 should never be happy un- | her boy. {replied Gus, "Lut if I ever was 006 | wai down the street but what loaf- for a war vacation next summer? lin that foular sooth wan then was j servin se GAy.—|. ‘There peome to bes hand of evmpe- | iene 1 at least tried to fulAll my boys | = bit maoesnet ys on heey me he era insult her, she looks so swell!” | ‘There ts a shortage of farm lubor.| ready t{ eharvest.®Another varle Attebure th 4 | | ore vhat w e x “ 4 ate) nae t 1 alae ad looking Jass and | jgod ambition of becoming either an | me for ere ae Shin “a —~ ane Have, a care, then, how you speak’ Next summer and later during the/ation of this plan was for ail the Man Maras ooking: Klass.—Philadelphia |) ineor on the railroad or of getting | omen jurors corer heats heat tn ag of this paragon of ter CoD aig Mr. harvest periods, varying with siffereDt | creretiante and business men to agree on he és | cas Jarr impressively. “What would , in different sections, there will/to close their esti lenis ut opee 1s wei tax will ens tos Wee) into business—behind the counter, — | . , crops betes) « ia Record, | That man is genorous toa fault who. Sante : - F f Y ears Ago Lr i do, Gus, if she should learn of yOur| pe need tor many volunteer harvist| tain times, as locas evo; sencies . |never corrects t.--Chicago News, rhe beara ie pba bg uty : ‘ 8 inl peak eae meadspaturns carping remarks as to her temper.) nandg and farm workers. So, why Got | demanded, Since all the vid vou want a reod portrait of Gen, | oa brother an pould co e was LO} OMEN acted as ¢jurors either,” sald Mr. Slavinsky, yhen land if she should go out fom your) np i s Rolssaa wi y ‘ ) { v ’ 5 c he d [ vacation helping to save] closed no witned rai ‘ iil and trath | ‘Tho most unprofitable occupation a| play store: We often used to do thts, | America almost half @ cen-|; go around to put in winder gla98|iify forever?” y spend OT once eure eee | busiasa Wats Blas, chen ie print!—Momphia | woman can id Js harvesting Al grat pushing the dining room table! tury ago. The first Grand! giways take my little boy Iszy| «pave me, you mean?” asked Gus. ae AEQDE LORS NATE as pan ae man's nehamton Press. eek CRAihEn han 4 | ; rw 2, : a?" a 3U8.| no war? ommunicate with A Le. jagainet she hat ah Hier and Jury which included members of the) with me eo | can be cross with Bim /+we, 1 gucsa I'd marry again and!” Pernang the suggestion of auch “va-|cultural agents or th ' To-day food conservation | The more hose and the more wish-|then ransacking the house for every | “weaker” sex was Impanelied at Lar-| when the lady finds a mistake ta the | put up @ sign, “This Business Under | hy ay plead tll val] Help Specialist, or f ¢ 1 have a hard. |bone a girl Al more fashion- |ayailable article to be used as mer-| amie, Wyo, forty-eight yours ao. | pit, And then I say ‘Missus,' for It's! entirely New Management,’ bat, cations” will not, @ first blush; appeal | Help clalist, or wi rumbs from the |: dle #) > feels—-Memphis Commercial! The youns fell *4 » " ¢ - M entirely Ne’ J |to the farmer who, when he thinks of| representative of the Department of tilt Lake City | Appesd. | chandiae, © young fellow who) ‘ne Territory of Wyoming was oF-| generally the Wimmen what is around | 1497" | Lab It nat . ‘ ee 6 * — |eold things In tho village store was! ganized in 1868 out of parts of Da-|t- — y for glass put in—'Missus, don't —_——>___—_ | summer vacationists, hag in mind hot. ener Ht row con's Know who or Fis country {9 olentitut veg wlutt Boeaune a fashionable woman vine object of My euPTeme envy. | wots, Utah and lado, und one of the goold my ttle boy because T aiready | GITIE IN MILLION CLASS. | Neather, boaltorn Tle was freel wy Rite Afi ny, Mell, fe, Unitas ountry {s plentifully supplied | Weara a train 1s no reason why she left the public ac ¢ official ac Ne . » bas charged yo | and hammoe! oaquitoes and : ‘ sriculture, eee ry cig leptifully aunniied | weara,a train is no reason why she) at gixteen I left the public school | first official acts of the new Territors |done it, If be bas charged you for ITIBS having @ million or more | And BMOONS MO reat for'a week or| Washington, D. C., and thoy will out Maah's sarah td be that we’ don't phic Record, \and for two winters attended a com- | {al Government was to grant women!a pane of glass twenty by thirty! inhabitants are London, New * PT lohipie ein’ ta | ya (a taHEN With tha oroees eat Bere 4 Samson who can wield them.— ee as | merelal college at Watertown, After vote and h oftice,| when it's really only eighteen by | York, Paris, Chicago, Ber two. But the war vacat nls 8 wi | 200) a RNS NE proper local or y "hiladeiphia Inquirer. | When somebody's stepping on you shed an old mare to ac v yo! thus s the firs! ltwenty-six, don't et 1 had to cut eed aa eno different—they must be hey ll wap SeentAti ves, ’ a0 8 (t's no consolation to know you're a “® { hitehed 69 hdl Wremk fe SAUe agentes abil : thirt ur | Petrograd, Philadelphia, Moscow, work or they won't come J. And Plan that vacation--a war vacate Fee man who wants but little and {stepping stone to succces Bingham, ®4 drove to Garthage, yolng from | the States to give them full cuffrage |it down from twenty by thirty, and] Ruonog Ayres, Osaka, Conatantingy ‘ ‘ ; en es ae ar vacation: jets & be kuown that he bus @ ton Press, zi = AM store to plore to dnd @ job, The! upon cyual terms with u Vive trimming a dead lune to me. Calvutte and Eo Janeiro. thely mutive will & which —neat eu r ‘ —_ , ®

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