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——- ; i i ; “ The Allies can recognize no compact between plunderers and 5 tions marked for spoil. They can only fight on. The enemy's ©) Bonguests shall not save him from the final reckoning. Allied de- % ination is fixed. It neither fears the cost nor doubts the) jatgome. | ; ESTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, Published Dally Except Gunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to a rk Row, New Yor! RALPH PULITAUR, President, 63 Park Row, J. IGUS SHAW, Treasurer, iy Row, JOSEPH PULITY ary, 63 Parl MEMRER OF THE ASSOCIATED Pithss, ase " tor, of at Sore Me SCY US serene credited in this paper and also ass tata come EOF. Cissus ss svsvcseccocvousvaveveersscNO, 00,006 MORE SCRAPS OF PAPER. NE thing the statement of the Supreme War Council of the Allies makes clear: Peace treatics made in Berlin to fit the plans of the war) Tords in dealing with Russia and Roumania are no more permanent than so many Hindenburg lines "What Russia and Roumanin have been forced to do or sign has scant bearing on the final adjustments that will be dictated by the; ttiumphant defenders of democracy. The pledges of militarism arc erly insflivient to guarantee the peace and avcurity of the world, » Jr, Secret 4 ——- ¢ oo ————— Take note that when French war crosses are pinned on _ the bravest from Amefica, Abraham Blaustein Mnes up with the Donovans and O'Connells. + : MAKE IT UNANIMOUS. OW that Daylight Saving is a certainty and the clocks of the United States are due to make that profitable little re djust-| ment with the sun carly on the morning of March 81, it Dehooves a few old-fogey doubters and objectors to brace up and} “itlake it unanimous ‘Not only will the practical adoption of the plan put the Nation into step with its ailies in the great march against the Kaiser, but right here at home Americans ave going to find two thousand seven} hundred and fifty-three ways in which the new daylight schedule ‘through this spring and summer will give new interest to work and play. It’s exciting, for this country, this bold assertion that man is master of the clock to the extent at least of making it mark out a more generous allowance of sunlight and recreation time, in his day. For the first few weeks after the change is made every-| body is going to find novelty and zest in discovering what a rel: and subservient thing is clock-time after ull; how pleasant and etimu-, lating it is to go home from work in the gniddle of the afternoongand| how amusing to enjoy for the first tine in this latitude asta between 8 and 9 in the evening. | All this with the consciousness that underlying the change is! sound good sense and economy, proved beyond a doubt by the experi-, ence of other nations, | It need hardly be pointed out that any pig-headed person whol holds out against Daylight Saving and tries to keep his own private | ey) Copyright. 1918 by The Py Pabitahing Oo. (6 New York Evening World.) _By J. Ca ssel| Stories of Spies By Albert Payson Terhune Copyright, 1018, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). No. 7—HENRY H. WARD, American Spy in the Spanish War 1E Maine had been blown up in Havana Harbor on Feb. 16, 1898, Our country was clamoring for war with Spain. Everybody knew hostilities must soon begin. Tremendous interest at once centred about the movements of the various Spanish fleets, for warships and troop transports were about to be rushed from Spain into Cuban waters. Much depended on our Government's knowledge of these fleets’ move ments, Then it was that Henry Heber Ward of the United States Navy—an ensign and still in the twenties—hit on a daringly clever spy plan, The Navy Department accepted his services for the risky job and he set to work. Ward soon appeared in Montreal in the guise of a rich and lazy young Englishman who called himself “Hopkins,” and whe asked the Canadian authorities fer a passport to crulse among southern waters in his luxurious white steam yacht, He had little trouble tn secur- ing the needful passport. Thence he sail for Spain, His yacht touched at various ports there. The young “Knglishman" showMi a childishly eager interest in Spala’s | preparations for war. But he also proved himself an active business man, |for almost every day he sent market cablegrams to a firm of Liverpool stock brokers, These cables were not in cipher. The Spaniards trans- i" @ Mitted them without suspicion. One such stock if Mysterious Cables cable sent from Cadiz, Spain, read follows: —eerrr code to Washington: “Sell Jones 300 at five-eighths.” The message was forwarded to the Liver- stock brokers, who promptly cabled ia “Three battleships and five torpedo-boats have sailed from Cadiz.” saan ht? Prearranged cipher was very simple. Here, in part, ts Its key: “Se meant “sail,” “buy” meant “arrive.” Integral figures stood for bat- eee the numerators of fractions meant the number of torpedo-boats, cach nish port was represented b: , “ et mE A P ed by some proper name. “Jones,” for in- The yachtsman, with his innocent excitement over Sp. | his eternal fussy cablegrams to his brokers, caused much amusement {n | the rious seaports of Spain. His English passport wag surety of his |innocence. So was his artless manner. By the time the Spanish secret » began to think of putting him under surveillance the young man es id il away, headed for the West Indies. e ran — pool anish ships and into a Spanish-ruled West Indian port for coal. Th local 5 6 | authorities either had tustructions from Spain or else were suspiolous on eneral principles. For Ward's yacht was forbidden to leave port. That night, under cover of rainy darkness, ting for permission, His absen cables were kept busy notifying other 8; | A day or two later, off San Juan, a Spanish gunboat overha yacht. Ward and his crew were seized In the name of the King otal hold | Ward fumed and complained, in true British tourist fashion, at the outra “a of his arrest. He stayed on deck while his yacht was piloted into the | trieky harbor, And all the time he was shouting protests at hig i treat. mgnt he was using his eyes to the ig © vantage. Leeda } As a result of his unsuspected h rbor he was able to send our G: ful description of its twisting «on of its submarine mines, the positions and sizes of its The moment Ward set foot on land he sent for the Britis | that perfectly innocent functionary he hande aunounced: “Lam a Rritish subject, crutsing in these waters on m have been arrested on the high seas, The authority of G jbeen insulted. I demand my instant release!” | The Spaniards ordered him to show his clearance pa | port of sailing. oe oe eat “ none!” retorted Ward. “According to law, no clearance papers Jaren for a yacht whose owner salls from a port for a crulse wich the intention of returning thither, I had no intention of landing here. I was captured outside the three-mile limit and brought in. It 1s ap outrage!” The British Consul saw the reasonableness of this plea. So—reluo- tantly—did the Spaniards, There was nothing to do but to let Ward | depart. Ward sailed away without Was discovered at dawn and t anish ports, sed | wat Oe |$ Plans of the Harbor study of the jovernment a channel, the batteries, &e, h Consul. To d his passport and wrathtully y own yacht, 1 reat Britain hag fe time is going to Sind himself the most unpitied kind of an April Fool. Fs ae ta ee nae ae aipialreaensiecers inet ; A fow days afterward the spy reappeared at Washington and reported The milkman, the baker, the cook, the iceman and all the rest S t C; | . vy W k h | |for duty. It was announced that he had been absent on “lighthouse tnapeos have got to line tp March 31 and start even, Hl Ocle W ibe S in ar or. | (oH a IG iC i a m ] y “As a reward for his great services he was promoted a few montha tate aa © —_ | S h | B iL M Cc d | | to the grade of senior Lieutenant—the youngest man In our navy to hold i | that rank. | More books for soldiers and sailors are badly needed, | By Sophie Irene Loeb y Roy L. cUarde “ They shouldn't be locking long. And the selection should i» 3 Rose tins WAS, by the Prest Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). Copyright, 1918, by the Press Publish i me New Yor Evening How eel x _ " = MIEW weeks ago a young womuny certainly worth observing, She fb S Mr. arr rode downtown in “What care I if the United States clude the best of every kind, e y ez y &. pri siailbiaeniaeees i came to me with t following |siving up something. As she told the street car his eye fell upon] Steel Corporation controls all the ice ac e or ir e ections proposition: me: "TE looked about among my an accusative advertisement |cream parlors in the country?" Mr. | ~ 4g » Just fin- | friends, and many of those who were | reading; “You Used to Take Your] Jarr replied. “What do I care if the THE FOUR-FAMILY HOUSE BILL. ished @ course in ly did the thine | Wife Home a Box of ndy Before mmsolidater s Company owns all By Helen Rowland Pitslecciiremreuse Ceuniitise lates a eavaiir Gautnal « stenography anc ne and pleasure. | You Married i Why Not Now| he soda water fountains, any more Cage leht;- S018 bs toe. Prem Fuh ehing Oe) Gla Maw Seek Kradee Wold): ‘ : " § against a typewrtiing, J want 1 was sick to death of parties ar ye! wetalr 5 Beet Bon-1 re at iy oats that Standard ee gies MAN will insist on pulling the love knot tight before the wedding, bill—lutely introduced in the Senate at Albany and schedule 1 to bo directed |icas, arranged for war purpuses| He nudged hls friend and nelgh mera), the lelllpep, 9Y gles and yet strain like mad to loosen the marriage tle afterward, i a9 its . " ; ‘tie ae |» where I can best de} where tn some cases It was 9 per r *, Who sat beside him deep tion? | m for a hearing to-day~which would permit in this eity the con- my bit, I want to|cent. teu, and 1 per cent, of real{i! the morning paper. rtainly you don't care," reried version of four-story-and-basement houses into four-family ten ap work without pay.| service.” ” ook at that, Rangle! he re-| Mr. Rangle. “You never te your, The first time a girl marries, {t 1s because she 1s ments, with, it .* claimed, dangerous exemptions from the point of | pre are a great | while every effort, even If only 1 “Why gon't ou take you Hl gotten gains on vanilla ice cream, | attached to a man—afterward, {it is usually just in view of fire prevention and proper ventilation | astsa UMM s of War Greil nan cant, la worth will In tHe Wan| Vuweer ee hee oe cane Ona IB NAL aundate:on peanut Hrittleenowslt order to be sure of having a man attached to her, shi g beta a | mah) ganizations tha i he vee pare 7 Pi . "1 : ants \ re and is to be encou th ‘i 2 rv hee = The worst feutures of the bill the Tenement House Committac| "4% cannot attord tol erent margin of endeavor has not} 228, doesn't give me enous Never you mind about booze,” in- | Sometimes a man {s so perfectly healthy that it A ees hich 4 Pap ies ; i , ? . penta f e money,” replied John W. Rangle errupted Mr, Jarr, “Pretty soon there | m finds in @ provision which puts these converted dwellings outside the | pay tor pat nal as a se und n reached, es n the sphere’ “she gives You enough to buy | won't be any more booze and you'll makes his wife ill merely to watch him enjoying his class in which if is required that stair hallfand stair hall inclosures | bile eticpa rife Beni ta sieadlia ee Gls ne aN at want to Cikars and other luxuries you don't be grieving more than I will, What | breakfast. girl, Miss ® beautiful | emphatte t she did not want to )ooae ronite ‘: Ghall be constructed fireproof throughout, afd in the permission tol tace—had been @ socicty girl and had |replace any gir! that could be pald,; "cde replied Mr, Jarr, Taw saying to you is that you should . ‘ae pal " : Lh sates t MAL Ai ae ? Then why would it he better bring your wife home roses on her A Philadelphia man has just been operated on for ventilate interivr rooms of these four-family tenements by a light |®ever Worked In her Ife but she did want te add her mi t it for luxur SHE . OP i fi ‘ yd ? " BY sc ateahinn nae thre cooialiiae bi at aly ee economy to use it for luxuries SHE birthday or her wedding anniversary, | ’ swallowing a padlock, some nails, and a few hooks shaft only 4 feet wide and 25 square fect in area, extending to a women who are making @ spiéndid| 4 group of you “ne were ates we Tienes ‘aut ind ever and anon you should sur- HELEN momo and eyes—and the doctors say he will live. Pouf! h . » “Vittle } Ms group of young women from ce 8 ose tle, tactful remem- | prise th a box of candy." mere m depth of over 50 feet, and therefore “little better than a chimney Ventark tor tha: wax-women who. are| inevolal Arma have cared to wark on brances that sweeten life" begaal. ‘cot F w ita nae he * si in my | That's nothing to the hard things some married women have to swallow Given, on one hand, the steady movement toward safoty | Vie Up thelr timo and energies for] Saturday afternoon during thelr hol- Mr. Jarr, own way,” growled John W. Rangie, |Very day; and yet they go right on living. 4 ‘ ; is purpose, They cannot afford to i . : ’ ee eae t ler g : jah SAR end better sanitat afd on the other the constantly increasins | OU"? , idays and some evenings for this specially candy, eh?" was the re- | “I do not know who puts such reck- | ressure of the ¢ $ population on | meee 7 Bora ng all the people they can use and | same committee. That 1s a great, | ply You think the surprise of @ /less ideas in your bean, but t ke No woman ever really knows a man unt!! after she has divorced him— P 5 f th y's popula nowning facilities, no yeag goes, volunteer aid bas proved of great] splendid spirit, But I could not help box of candy to the wi ripsy's warning and beware ‘because, until she is perfectly certain that it won't do her any good, by without raising questions as to where restrictions ehall be tights] Yehee Seerereny I went in to sce} wishing that it would not be neces. life? Well, take my advice and | They parted, and met no more until | nobody on earth will tell her anything about him. ened and where relaxed in the conversion of wld dwellings into ten>-| {12 YOURE Woman. She sit side by |sary to ‘use such ald in v , Don't start anything you can't|tate that evening when Afr. Jarr | 3 1 ge into %-| wide with the other girla and I loarned | much necded reat of thin 1 finish. Have you been in the habit! oame hurr ; ° | FPR He Hue HERS 3 f ’ h came hurrying into Gus's cafo on the ‘ Da e beauties of the woods sider ments, me measure bearing on the subject crops up in almost! that she is the favorite of the group. |oonstant work who are of bringing home candy to your|oorner and found Mr. Rangle ther Nature ne ice itt ee ae tle aed Mai Hiv cea but the every legislative n. When I asked her what hours shelton to keep the industrial wheels go. wife?” | aean ge Rinne beauties” of Fifth Av Ap ‘e too artistic and efficient to leave things to The | ainst which the Tenement Hoy . F wanted to work (4s she Was giving}ing. The Government at Washing.) “No,” said Mr. Jarr And that's} «4 there you are!” cried Mr,|® haphazard chance like that, ‘at ; , ment House Committee now) her services free of charge) shelton has uited thousands of young the worst of it, I should have been|Rangio, © the power! ae your _ yogis ers i test appears, a ve ot before it, to go too far, anawe “L want to. ec at the} women from offices and ness en. /in the habit, and so should you," It iggestion, against all the Of course men are not as vain and artificial as women! ‘They don't in making things easier for realty intorests at the expenae of public | sme time aa the other sand TL] te ses, And others are needed to! “I! am doing my matrimonial bit me f. daniel tg ye rouge, and powder, and wear tight shoes; they merely chew cloves, have safety and health don't want to be treated differently | (ake their places by devoting my tire Income to that nee am ¥ S2° their pictures taken with borrowed fish, and fb about their golf scores, Jin any sense." They took her at her} xtany volunteer soc Nady who has honored me by accept. | hy) ; ; pperen un olunteer — socie have you hadn't mad mistake, {f and their income taxes, —_——---—----- ord and she his made good. ing all the worldly gocds with which | you had I rink what HAD — |W sprung up to do only war we : ; Aare er - ‘ | she has become “one te aria (Cee BP kibeal 1 did her endow,” remarked Mr, make your conscience re ! etters From the Peonle acc witw oaed her avour ir suet Nanciospped for. clerical bolp.jticngi, ever not golem. to deprivs| Ma rapes Me, Most of the men in the world are so charming that It Is a deep, dark Please t tone to 4 pen said, “ht ts immense! 1 wouldn't ex- [viet 8 Kitl Who has never worked ioe of any part of my hard-earned | is astonishing mystery where all the bad hushands come from a i ns to 130 word. ‘ : i ®%) and whi $ not need the pay can | . f 1 The Difference Beow a . sha places with any girl among ; aie; the pay ) money, which she squanders foolishly | “ + no as a mot lending bee chang train Serself to work in the common , hice - BOR Ney betas A, FO Aree Lo, OEM IN ti on rent, groceries, shoes for the ehil- | drink Standard Oil a The days may be growing longer; but everything else appears to ho : i ’ © com that such ex suah whine » bay Mitgur paper why we do not have| WA! le most She” gues! Of couree 1 have to wet wy earlier ih] In @ word, there should be no idie| tion or toothache, Uesides— "| NAPOlEON § DON, marriag Be mevice flags for those investing in| i who buy the Mm we th retore, | ane ‘ all can be used wides what?" asked Mr, Jarr. “rT . lesen ee me ; 4 mane in| Lalbes loan” thelr but at the end of the day 1 have the} with benedt in the big battle before) spesides, 1 will, not Mi ai | | 1e Eaglet Wilful waste makes soldiers want—and makes the Kaiser happy fén sufficient to show? “Further- 42d for which TeICE thee ee ate. Bet dokired Ra i ne ewer uid Hod her nicae! graspiyg monopoly. Why haven't | APOLEON'B son, the King of |= ee eee more," he states, “docs not a bond! yy, Mtcomacns world-the bond of Oy. hay helped.” ges uillay Wi Cite to Miss t an sutomoblie? Because J would N Home, whose f and pathetic syse : tA cn taich asa. cost Btatew Government, | day hi in vale: 98 T-— the girl whol have to purchase oll and gasoline, history has been immortaliged Chili S Irish Hero fending her son?" No-—never. 1 o &. | ai wii 8 lasik te Be al li JEL and the oil and gasoline ludustry is/in Edmond Rostand’s play "L'Aiglon" be realise that, he nde his m F virmer r Want “Combingat | - 7 Ciiseeic we controlled by the Standard Oi Com-| (rhe Bagiet), in which Mme, Bers ATRIOTIC Chililans yearly phe iaran soldier was elevated to the post we return of which he ts guarante T) the Bat Mresinn ‘Wont A h F i h A 49, BATHE A apaataiia ; ' serve the anniversary of the|of Viceroy of Peru, Bere of wintoh he te: guarantaedt? | tke Filter of The treine Word | Famous uthors in Frenc rmy pang—old John D, Kocketeller and | pardt and Maude Adams have starred, rve the an tae as Vie and in Lima he must bear in mind that she GIVES torial entitled “No. Sha qe ‘ that genial and rollicking gon of his, | Was born in P March 20, ISU, death of the Chillan “Father of | retgned with almost regal pomp un. her son, With all due respect to G Gsmusciees ihe ta Shut Dow ANY eminent French men of let- | vaculed by Victovieu Surdou, the youns Mr, John D,”" , Austria, in pis Country”--and his name is O'Hig- | til his death, ©, my bonds are secure, but ny boon having a surfeit of Suet nae ters are fighting on the battle | dramatist, Abate yout ratuaal pot wo.own |i His ging, ‘The first of this clan to gain a] Even more famous was his son, sddier brother, lont in discharge of combings as you suggest, and the front or serving their country | Besides M. Prevost, the French|an aute in South American history was| Bernardo, who, after receiving his remembered, #hall) main thing they bring with thom ts in other capacities, Pp. ites appetite, but perhaps the eminent*ls Marcel Prevost, the M. Prevost, now in his fever return, nary turn about ts fair play @ Service FI ry ee Flog for hat some of these non-es- Buyers, Ltherty Loan poct-novelist, Now, * I suggest th sential industries release the bolp flty-sixth year, 18 @ captain of artil- ©) the Baitor of The Evening World for the farmers, and they take 1 Nery attached to the for suarding A notice that w reader signing him-| combings. I saw a short time ago f th “a ee, et reader t a. I f r AKO Loris, He is ome of the forty “im- s ® to pur out althat they were eating crow In Ge at . ; ice flag because bo bas hught! many, I will mere'y state that t mortals of the French Academy, ) ClAIMIDg at ie oe ts airly ge ppl having achieve hat honor tn 109, erty Bonds, cial th Jing ts a falrly good supply of erow in this hieved ¢ the Goveroment bo ibe pountry. Tory Whe Le Wao bieeitd by bake tbe place rong “ 4 fi BM i 1 ati Academy tt Fort \t |v in tl anu [wil bas sever pobile because you can't af- | alo itary | ford it Rot to do with my clove per- Inclading Ment Bernsteia, | sonal friends, old Pop John D, and | na who is 4 gunner at oung John, a rat's tt Havre, the Marquis Iobert de |sely yeune Jahn, and what's it all . Reynaldo Ha got to do with buying bonbons for Parde or was, at la Argon nber of oth fume are a ies mea, » Is @ pri ts, serving Jour brides?” asked Mr, Jarr, “| y, Pran- | “Didn't you know that the Standard \! his mothe neer, and ponce control nearly all the ess Ma rench writers of | Ol gre ea i : Avy eb the ton that b France's fight: [candy stores in the country sked |} Linley Aig Lanes, aivaye oiet wile @ sel , afterward known as Am- | education sio, who was born in County Meath, Ireland, tn 1780, and died in Lima, Peru, 117 years ago. O'Higgins | went to Spain when a young man and| from the country end was appointed a trador in Chill, Ob-|supreme dictator of the Chillan ne~ a commission in the army, he] tion, His rule was benevolent and he y and in 17s8 was made is honored by the Chillans a theip Captain General of Chili, dn 1796 the greatest revolutionary patriot, in England, returned to South America to become the leader of the Chillan rebels against Spanteh authority. He drove the Spaniards became then