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TT wae ape eT ee aR ; @\ I NEV : ‘ CAND a 5 ——————— Women in War By Albert, Payson Terhune | Coprrigit, 1918, by the M'ress Pabtisbing Uo, (The New York Wrentng World.) ! NO. 7--MME, DE POMPADOUR, Who Stirred Up the Seven Years’ War. REDERICK THE GREAT was a true Prusstan — grim, conselenceless, rapacious, eager to selze and aunex his neighbors’ lands and to crush out atl national liberty except Prussia’s, Surly and cynical and a woman hater, he letened with growing disgust to the stories that reached him ot the gay French court, with its pleasure-loving King, Louis XV., ahd with tho King’s still mare Weasuredey- ing favorite, Mme. de Pompt ‘yur. With all the detestation of bis own morosely sour mind, Frederick hated the brighter and happler court of France, Once, at*hearing a story of Pompadour’s influ- ence over King Louls, old Frederick snarled spitefully: “France is ruled by Louis XV. And Louls XV, is ruled Conmdent, 1918, Pree Bl ane CO, singgord.) . ESTABLISHED PY JOSEPH PULITZER, Pudtished Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to 63 Park Row, New York, RALPH PULITZER, President, 62 Park Row, J. ANGUS SHAW, ‘Trevsurer, 63 Park Row JOSEPH PULITZER, Ir, Secretary, 63 Park Kow, imc MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED Press, ot ‘The Arsoctated Prem te eredited te It oF not otherwise cree { VOLUME ry deapatehee ! STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSITY. MANAGEMENT, OMCULATION ao. negrinen AT TRE ACT OF CONGRYSS OF AUG. 24. 1912 OF THE EVENING WORLD, PUBLISHED DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAY, AT NEW YORK, N, ¥,, FOR APRIL 1, 1918, j fate a New Yorn, ‘ | County ot New York, =. Betors ma, & Notary Public to and for the Bite and county aforesait, parwomalty anneared Naiph Hulltsee, who, having been duiy aworn accotding to law, depones and aye that be te the President of the Prrwe Pubilebing vablishare of Evening World, and that the following % the best of hs Anowiedge and beliet, « tror statement of the ownership, management (and 8 daily paver, the clroulation), Ae,, of the sloremaid publication for the dale ebown im the above sandion, required by the Act of Aug. 26, 1912, embodied im section 443, Hostal Laws and Kognie- " yubllaher, editor, managing @tltr and bovine mam Publiner—™ o 09.6 Park Row, New Yor City, N, T y a worthless woman oT \¢ Prew Pubjlasing € lew York City, ¢ Pree Pubjlading ‘or ve 3 spech was destined to cost thousands of lives and to York City, N. 1, N.Y, How, New York City, NX. ¥ boa ¢, 03 te Financial Manager, UL Whive, Ghd 6, Tet tee ownen 1 (Gite oaimes and sluresens of individual owners, or, if « oorporatios, re fe the names aud addresser ol #ockir ing or holding 1 par cent. or more of Ae tate) suoons of mice.) Tue reas Publieioe Lo, yh Mow, New York City, N. ¥. Blow baiders: yrnvayer trusters of the cate of Jasrpe Pulitew Ralph Pouterr, 0968 Vark Kow, New Yoru City, N, X, Rerbert Vuiltser, 65-48 Vere iow, York City, My doses Panter o., Poet Disvaich, Mt, Low Mo, 8, Tost We known vouddoliee, sivrigagess and other security holders owning or boldiog 1 pee Omit, Or mete of tal amount of bends, wortgages OF Other securities are: None, 4, That the two paragraphs neat alors, ging the names of the At anf, cootain wot enly the list of stockisoiders aud security bulders as they appear but also, ih cases whup Ube stockholder or security holder appears Uubiee or Im aay otler fiduciary relation, the maine of the person mo parearaphe contain ite and beiiel as to the circumstances and conditions under do wot apimar upon the bo: ee ih @ capacity viber than that of @ dove tid Ras Bo Feason to believe tast any other persoo, aswcation of curperation has any interest, direct op fniirect, in the said etock, wuuds or otber securities thao ae go stated by him, G That the overage Dumber of copies of each ssue of this pubikcation sold or distributed, Which sec kuwiders and fore, bold #tock aud {change thé map of Buro! | by her wiles— ‘ Frederick had not spoken in private, but in the presence of a dozen people. The words were repeated to the French Ambassador, who quoted them in his next report to King Louis. And Louis,in a spirit of mischief, read the report to Mme, Pompadour. Then trouble Anns cturterrl, Beware a Woman Pompadour had a flery temper. The phrase which Scorned. Frederick had applied to her—and which I have here perm» softened for publication—sent her Into a wild rage. She vowed revenge, And this was ono of the very, few vows she ever bothered to keep. Austria Was mixed up in a dispute Just then with Prussia, Frederick was too strong for Austria to cope with single handed. Mme. de Pompadour showed how thoroughly she “ruled” Louis, For she bullied him into form- ing an anti-Prussian alliance with Aus’ She did more, Russia and Sweden nd certain German etates—largely e drawn tnto the alliance against Frederick. England and a few smnall German states sided with Prussia, And all Burope was convulsed in the throes of a mighty confllct—a struggle known to history as “The Seven Years’ War.” daalle OF otherwise, (0 paid subsenbers during Lhe ait moni yreediug the dale shows through ihe | - sglandas agiad THE PRESS PUBLIBMING O,, Ralph Palliser, Preadeny, | Bworn to and sulecribed before me thie Sun day of March, 1 t ani.) One woman thus had turned the world upside down and was drenching Europe in blood to punish the insult put upon her by a crotchety old cynic. Mme. de Pompadour's mischief making did not stop there. She imag- ined she had a real genius for warfare. (Why she should have thought so ' nobody knows, For sho wrecked every scheme KOMUND D, TITUS, (My commission expires March 80, 10) nnn" rnddertook to anage.) AS THE LISTS LENGTHEN. fe Fertune og ete Row told King Louls that one of his courtiers, on the French, the empty-headed Prince de Soubise, was a great ROM news that American reinforcements had appeared in the (terry general. And she persuaded Louls to give Soubise ; ; Apsara the full command of France's strongest army, ee British battle zone, the country #irned yesterday to the longest Soubise, at lier orders, aided by his own incompetence, led his army ‘ into battle against Frederick at Rossbach, Noy, 5, 1757, where the Freneh ¥ casualty list announced by the War Department for any day since the United States entered the conflict. Five men killed in action, three dead of wounds, 255 wounded, two missing. From now on, Americans at home must be prepared for thes: ; grim daily reminders that American troops are playing an ever bigger y part in the great battle; prepared to eee the Nation's casualty lists lengthen apd the roll of honor become brighter with the names of those who “shall not have died in vain.” As the country reads, can it fail also to resolve that—in so far as the swift rallying of men and money, the early exercise of the full national strength, can help to hasten the decision and keep down the cost in lives—America shall spare no effort, waste no hour, hold were not onl: ten but almost annt’ This was but one of several disgraceful defeats into which Soubiss | plunged his gallant army—at the instigation of Pompadour. Seldom has any woman been respon for so many war disasters as was she during this seven-year struggle, “80 runs an old chronicle—Mme. de Pompadour, early in hin war, decided to win herself a reputation for plety, In order to encourage he French troops. She studied several pictures of saints and angels and | Noticed they all wore haloes. So she resolved to dress her own fair hatr in jouch a way as to z ake It looke s much like a halo as possible, ther women followed her example, Thus tt was that the " ’* style of hair dressing first came into fashion, celine pean Bachelor Girl Reflections By Helen Rowland { aes | back no resource? ' Coprrigiit, 1018, by the Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Frening World.) The slower the gathering of force to rout the enemy, the longer \ HY should sentimental Sammy waste his time studying French? » the war must last. The longer the war Jasts, the more American man- eee He aE ae re artistically you don’t tiave to ba Ms We f j a d Inguist, but a go ar, hood must be sacrificed month after month to make sure the final) ye . ! i i vietory. ; : a od ee ——— — Real courage is that divine quality of self-faith which Think of that when the Nation calls for an immense concentra- | hd enables one to go “over the top” of all life's diftioultios, tion of power in the shape of a Third Liberty Loan subscribed three e fe) y (@) OWy unera S| (s] arr aml y without excitement, without hesitation, without etima- times over. | lant and without fear. Longer lists of American bond buyers mean shorter ‘lists of By Sophie Irene Loeb By Roy L. McCardell Sometimes the modern “tf! "6 & Masbican dead Coptrieht, 1918, by the Prem Publishing Oo, (The New York Brening World.) Coprrieht, 1018, by the Pres Publishing Co, (The New York F World.) Pei : ke Fa An Der” cnn make a divoress HE other day LI attended a| Ina word, we scourge our souls with OW that the “Saving Daylight”| “Be « sport, Johnny Ranwle!” ad- | ee ue? unscpaialinated Uttle “prude,” and make # Sercemeenrnrst terreno funeral and returned home with | the outward semblance of it all, In{ scheme haa put the clock} vised the chorus behind tho fence. | seasoned widow feel like the last yard of chiffon at « Despite the row it has started, Lloyd George's latent many reflections. One of them | truth, of course, we must grieve. No| ahead an hour, Mr. Jarr finds} "You're struck out fair and square!” remnant sale, attempt to settle the Irish question is as simple as short I will putin black | ome can stop that. Of course we nre|as the days grow longer that he has] “I won't do nothing of tho kind ! — Givision: ‘The Irish eball have Home Rule, but they must and white, The | miserable, and, oh, how we regret the | quite some daytime hours to see|Master Rangle was hoard to say. ‘T ! It's a bitter war that blows NO good! Since mobil!zatton accept conscription; Parliament can remove Ireland’ f gum and aub-|loas! Of course, it is dificult to see | places and things around where he}am going to bat till I hit the ball! made the picturesque soft hat popular, what has become of that terrible ‘ ted can fetta Fat % much stance of it is,| that the thing 1s inevitable at this | lives. way out. And ff it's ketohed I won't man-detacer—the hideous “derby hat?” resen' Biscageiid conscription, but {t must also grant “make no fuss|partioular time, Of oourse, we are| Thus the delusion of the daylight|,o out, efther!” Ireland Home Rute, ” }haunted with vain longinj ajon this fair spring day caw “What were you ing about the 4 ever me ka and at were you saying abou! ‘Unfortunataly there was just one Irishman who could have Of all thonerve-| Wishes that it had not happened. Jarr to loiter as he came hom deals of sportsmanship?” whis- Be, pacitatid hay shone eee $ Rot ever antl! he stops asking, "How ineptred Irish patriotism with a spirit big enough to face this racking, terror-{ But why, why add to all the misery |he neared a vacant lot surrounded | pered Mr, Jarr. beg you Kigreead ‘a ibe Sia Vela eungid eb agua Uittle feet?” and degina proposition tn the right way. When {t comes to making the striking experi- | that comes to us unbldden, by long |»y billboards gay with patriotic! “Well, my boy has the real Amerl- {inquiring “How the dickens do you expect to walk in those fool shoes?’ | Irish see broader bearings of the great confilct in a way to line ences there is | ceremonies that burn deeper and a!) | :osters advising us all to “Ring the}can stuff in him, just the same,” . manenad brave Irishmen alongside of brave Englishmen, no man ts more nothing to equal|but break the spirit of hope? After Liberty Bell Again for the Third | growled Mr. Rangle, He stands up for Think what it MEANS to a boy who has been brought up in velvet and missed than John Redmond. e that of some|4il, when you stop to think abou. | {dberty Loan!” and “Use Moree tol ais rights, YOW! Did you seo him who was “awfully bored” at the dulndss of home life, to sit in a muddy . patie. te | punerals as etili conducted by many! What the departed would have us? che Limit to Halt the German!” hej crack’ out that long fly?" trench and reflect wistfully that he would give almost anything short of | people, to may nothing of the bard- | do, they certainly would not have us Averd erate ot Sa friend and nelgb- “Get under it, Wille Jarr, get Un- his Ife and his honor just for a cigarette, a bath, a dry blanket, @ piece’ . o a r r, y. Rangle, wi is eyes | de: yi , £ GET AFTER THE FOOD WASTERS, “iim iver nave venina fo Brow ais unnecennry torre [bor John W. Rane ih ie ees anr i ented the south chore. of ple, and the touch of his mother's band! THINK what it meane—and | In this connection thousands of cases | bd i Fl a ott NEUGAer anc vet me see, let mo ser!” exX- nuy a Liberty Bond to help him gat back safe! WE DOLLARS’ FINE or one day’s imprisonment is the penalty| come to the Child Welfare Board of jee zaiher have i a simple fot eas hat eee, dandeliona?” asked Mr. | claimed Mr. Jerr, shoving Mr. Rangle — ” pein ) ; f hile ai eviate our agony rathe! . away from t 1c in the fence. 4 | provided in the ordinance finally passed by the Board of Alder-| ‘™!" bg eee paki pia ros trom | than accentuate it, “Rubbish!” replied Mr, Rangle. | uty Nhat tod ob or ie eal pea “Friendship” {9 that {deal Interval between the moment whea you j ; . ren, In nea v : A ea men to apply to persons who wilfully waste or destroy food. | the burden of the funcral seems over-| And to the thousands of poor wom-| But whether this, was what he fw }ne't pull it down, you betcha!” stop treating each other like mere asxjuaintances and begin treating each his is something of a come-own from the $50 fine and vel lating {en who must pay for an expensive; Or #imply an tmpatient rejoinder | Rut it must have been an off day other “like one of the family, @ay? imprisonment first proposed by the Board. But th | Hundreds of dollars are spent pinc- | funeral I say that surely your hus- Mr. Jarr wus never to know, for @|tor (hat infant prodigy ballplayer, erp Precome FOP y the Board, But though the| i. a minatone around the neck of tho | Utd Would not wisi to leave youlciamor In hoyiah treble emote thelror the hall ined out by Master ome of thete fearful ant wondenful catchascatch-ewn socks the girie panisiment is made only one-tenth as severe, thero should be no) tamily for years to come. At the} With such 4 handicap. Isn't it much |clreumamblent alr from within the/Rangie landed right into Master are knitting ought to keep tho men's figdting blood roused to the highest corredponding palliation of the crime. Public opinion ought to takel timo of mouraing everything gues, | Setter to remember those wo ovo for | nciosure, kite serapping? ine (J27F# hands and rebounded right out! rreh Rea in cnavine naitn hat @ t h 4 : | whether it can bo afforded or not. 9 kind things thoy did while they What ia tt, Kids scrapping?” n-' of thom, Immediately yells of youth- para es a i al & cert in ‘ood wasters shall find themselves| I hold no brief against undertakers, |!!ved, and recall them whon they |auired Mr. Jarr. |ful derision arose from inside the . strike a woman. Just tell her what you honest? highly unpopular in this city. | but many unscrupulous ones take ad- | Were full of life, rather than dwell o} ope, junior league baseball,” | gence, Never tl ph remand TR y think eba 2, at ft co . i mea | y @ are er new #prin, ! There may have been a time when half loaves of bread and| Yantagy of sobbing women in time of | Fan pha ag ” bidsohab perchance ms Re preity Pg ae Sie hanes | ,,\T have gotta have another fi’ cente looks like in bid es ow ’ dol .| makes such a sad memory remain the | scghumble, tt 0 6 ase) for the hard crack Johnny Rangle ~~ 1 ) are o rere son by wreat distress, when a dobt ts con: per 4 é i: C ” . 2 geal meat in es garbage cans were looked upon by some} frested that becomes most airticult | }Om4 eT Newbin' shone who go | ball Sees snipe Rite new ball!” erted the voice of A “Made to Or er City as gratifying signs of lavish prosperity. Such waste was nothing to! to ». Mo such poor women the | PPfer that we had tho funeral ovor,| “If youse has batted tho stuftin’ | Master slavinsky. “Them hard cracks a of th A ‘ hing to} to settle. To ? with as little fuss as possible, so that | out of your ball, youse can't have}is what busts dalle!" OST cities grow from small D@+; The site of Gary, named after the be proud of then. At present the family that throws away good) igh cost of ving ts nothing a9 o9M- | 6 mo using remembrance of! the lend of mine unless yous gimme! at BS e haul ae ‘ M BP Aiea Fa cares ibd; ba | band of he Hed Gee oe food is guilty of worse than waste. It ia guilty of failing the pared to the high cost of dying, Hut tem he weighed sleaeure cacnar| tney!” one high childish yoice|. * MA BOY MACE MOTE: 85 UD § a inction of beita| worth practically n aes falling i Nation’s fighters, failing the Reed Ni thy Nation,’ side from the pecuniary proposttion, | tren cant eB pieaaus rere eee erate aneve oe gen-| th siemens demend ar bf ae bea fan yon we ee | creat rat aves nen ie - , ‘ - ALOR, 4 ithe ba’ ocAUuse, As clatm: a res hl ; ‘and to return to the funeral I attend eer ot ‘ | , ne Z ' So far from being envied or admired, luxnry that takes the! ed, tho mivery that can be crowded | ‘ “o- j eral aaa sues cha tes | D2 broken two fingers in attempting founded twelve zeae aso by Hs oe ae ee Duild ite big atest , iy the ed, : + ops “Aw, Izzy Slavinaky’s a hard bolled!+, catch Johnny Rangle's fly. As United States Steel Corporation aud | mills, ary practically a suburb form of food waste is not even to be tolerated. Nor should anybody) inte, thie ceremony cannot be exti | Prussia i wice Pledged | een!’ oried a voloo Mr, Jarr recoe-!| Master reer tavine ae a at up to the outbreak of the war had, alot Chicago to-day, and ateel oan ba in any section of New York be able to claim exemption from thie pl mated, apg i Belgium's Neutrality | ni#°4 as that of the hope of the cuit of the bases, he made a ruling population of about %,000, Exactly produced there more cheaply than in ae Peat pace ye ag aN a HE firet treaty by wht | House of Jarr, Master Wille of ne was entitled to bat again, At what its population is at the presimt | Pittsburgh. ‘This economic condition poem for the deceased to be selected, and B Ait reaty by wi ch thé/tnat ilk. this, seeing no indemnity for the use time has not been officially staood,|¢xplains Gary's magic growth in ‘We have reached an age when streot solicitation, promis. the thing brings tou @ chief smourne | i ee ty ; of He txtum was “stingy! Stingy!" chorusod the ‘of nis ball, Master Slavinsky grabbed but many th Jn of citizens hive | {Welve years from nothing to a thriv. cuous ticket selling and begging shouid be things of the past,’ the horror of it, ‘Then re is tho a « aranteed by the Powers was! rest, ‘ it and this precipitated @ general peen added, and it ls not unilkely that | i city with paved streets, eleotelc From that sound platform Secretaries Nathan 8. Jonas and onstant throng of Visitors who come | signed by Great} «rt minds me of the haleyon days figh In @ few yonra it will reach the hun- | to way Rothing commercial Dulldings, Max Abelman are conducting the great $500, i to look upon the faoe of the de- | Britain, P Aus | cs cop eat stern. poult.” esld Me, el, you see, the boys haven't ee : net oe. ing of the big mills and ae tS a $500,000 campaign parted for the last Phen o ria the Netherlands on April 19, ) " stantial at's the S32 Umpire to pick o' Mr. Rangle dred thousand nar factories and its busy water front. which is to give the Brooklyn Federation of Jewish Chari the services for the many, many {188% This treaty arose out of a cone| ene” ein w + aod to abure | (aplalned to Mr. Jarr, wand 1 thin | — : ° , Mies baedda Rivcdah canis cones fcr fin ms inhepe- aber no servic 3 any, m, , abel 4 CON) same boyish way wo used to abuse the war spirit ia stronger than the! N Th S : ae Ai? A pela if money for its many b etions frionds who assemble and crowd the | ference held in Lo he Hel-! ach other when I was a lad, at this! *port spirit, don't you?" ewest ings In Oclence Grive closes Apri 15. It should go fast and on house. Tho good oN called to off. | F14M Question, by the ion oO! f year add at this hour after! “Walt till we see the big league} 98. tantad tanate dss a, been Invented the waste eliminating lines along which tt {8 belng vigorously clate tells about the vir of tho| Which the treaty of 1831, when Bele Une iis games,” said Mr. Jarr. | A Feeen ny Pe , G tonater I eae mn als es fh eich bathers cat e ? : - hoo! a glice of bread between two spring; plunge bensa he water, pone, | Aogegand, O08 SYOry 8n8 Of tec 18 a erence from Not exactly wt thin hour,” sata WAS ON TO HIM, Rica as that ibe heat oan aivika it LU ied : - —————- ae | axa in the heart of ¢ oe 009 tor ound the| Mr. Jarr. “An hour lat those} PH jate John G, Johnson, the | datire surface ae * as been invented in Iol+ Ste ~ : | dead person, Hor thelr lows becomes | powers rant o-be! nte-waving daylight “itlade! e : . . \land for manufacturing a food ‘ kro ‘ , | : ; untee alante-bellum, & 6 ht | Philadelphia lawyer, was once : eae pee od tor Its r m Shar p Wits | more Keon aa they aro confronted | treaty sigied the ea between | gaya." | engaged in a case where a cer. | A patent has been granted for a|swine from fh refuso that does not & lady correspondent of the Sun) Any old bachelor will tell you there| With the magnitude of tt. And as ho|{/\0 Ming of fhe Heluiins and the | “ave, no matter,” replied Mr.|tain cantankerous old woman bore! brush end comb mounted on a bax |affect the flavor of the pork, writes that ste does not like men who|are as many different. w |epeaka of life and death and bi ng of the Nethorlands, providing | } hich they fold ¢ Baran 8 100 rood. How sho inust like men, | children as thore ure children sings | ees oF tke ath aod bring | that “Helgium forms an independent | Rangle. “The game's the thing. witness for the opposition. llr tg teleost foil Maal lear rer bbe —Columbir (8. C.) State. hamton Press. © children,—Bing-/uq to @ realization of death our|state of perpetual neutrality. When ‘There 19 no game that Implants such| Her teatimony concluded, the old to protect them trom dust, ) ibber washbasin has been in. a se Paes eas nerves are shattered. ‘Thon come {the Franco-Prussian war broke outs! nigh idedis of sportsmanship aa) W2™4n proposed to leavo the witness | ? se 8 | vented for motorists or touristy that : Yor the war gardener the Govern-| Tickle the earth with a apade and! the funeral procession and tho gor-|{h@ Helslans feured that their neu-| ean why aren't the Germans | POX but Mr. Johnson gata: | Coyton's pearl fisheries are beliewed | is proof againet hot water and can be MutWimstet ahould provide the orter x the % ¢ : ( trality might be violated and ajpouled | Daseball. mans) “Hold on, madam, I've one or two! to ba the world’s oldest Industry, olded compact) 4 ‘ % p r of the|she will laugh back at 1 vice at the grave. There more hi x pactly for carryin, gat ne RE ad see will Taume back ot you with @ ‘ ore heart-|to Hagland, with the result that wn=|good sports? Hecauso they have| questions to ask you.” they have deer A an do thane eae al 5 : . Nashville Banner, | vending foolings are *xportenced, and other treaty of neutrality nego- | never played baseball, that's why The old woman did not halt in her 0% DAV? } Mucedonta tn rich in coal deposits, xi Beok and yo shall find. 'The fellow uwer greats some peculiar attua.| finally. the re are many f Dwore to dis. | fated and signe h Pr sand Maw, #amy dot, and t¢ I'm struck |eartur, |, os wl uot ean nany of which appear on bee tg who ue for trouble may get aj tions, Think of a mulo with w gaa vose of on the return fou the ceme- lain Phe preser an are tel ost I'll quit the game and take th re bs sis a ye! Driven by bicye is 4 face of tho ground, bi feeaic 0 present war has shown how |o# " yer questions for me, You ain't : gears ad & fs » but they nm Diack eye.—Philadelpbia mask ob.~Milwaukes Newa, _ Dh cunaencenna ~- Jwell grounded were her feang alrilied 4 boyish voic® Lou our widg"Chicage Herald, ‘- propeller, & miniature submarine hus Lave book sy#lematicaly developed yA , : \ ~ | fon ia i ‘vanes