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MM: Dn Bil. 09 The German of the Future By the Rev. Thomas B. Gregory epynaht, 1918, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World) NE of the “Corresponding Editors” of the Koelnische Zeitung, a bright O particular star in German journalism, has made a picture of the “German of the future,” the Teuton as he will appear after he has been nicely polished off by attrition with the forces of Culture versus “Kultur.” | And here is the picture—of the German of 1920 and thereafter: 1. He is fairly plump, but in no sense fat. His mighty paunch has dis- | appeared. His great, thick jowls and ponderous double chin are conspic- | tous dy their absence. The “intellectua) admiration of the fat belly no | longer exists” with him. [These are the very words of the Corresponding | Editor himself.) | 2. He “walks with body straight, face calm and unmoved, and with economy of all gestures that are not absolutely necessar; (Te words | again of the Corresponding Editor.] The goose-step is no more. The lordly etrut of the superman and world-conqueror is nowhere in evidence. 8. He has experienced not only a physical but a mental change. He is “reserved,” almost shy; a modest violet, fairly shrinking from the vulgar | gaze of the world. [This seems too good to be true, a consummation de- ‘voutly to be wished, but a pyschological transformation 60 wonderful that St bears all the earmarks of a “camouflage.”] 4. He “repays politeness with politeness, sees everything and forgets pothing.” The bluntness, vulgarity, insolence, God-Almightiness have all disappeared, and he is outwardly and inwardly just like all other reason- able and decent folks, whether Frenchmen, Englishmen, Americans or what not. Such ts the charming picture of the German of the future, which the @mlable and obliging correspondent of the Koelnische Zeitung has enabled us to look at a year or two in advance of the real thing itself. Well, {t is good news—news that will bring joy to all hearts, Teutonic and non-Teutonic. All the world loves a lover; and we may say, with equal emphasis, that everybody admires the human being who fs plump without being dis- gustingly fat; who walks like a man and not like a goose; who is modest rather than obstreperous, and who treats everybody with the politeness that is born of the spirit of brotherly good will. Beyond a doubt, the “German of the future” will like the new deal after he gets used to it; but it will como pretty hard at first. Ever since he broke into the light of history, in the days of Tacitus, the Teuton, espe- | cially the Prussian part of him, has been quite different from the man painted for us by the Koelnische Zeitung. It is not necessary to go into all the details of the picture of the German fas he has been up to date. The whole thing is famHiar to everybody, and ho further elaboration is required. The new picture—of which we are given an anticipatory glimpse—ts pleasant to gods and men, and may its colors never fade. It has cost us a fearful price, but in no other way was It attainable, | A new picture we simply bad to have, The old one was unbearable, The bare sight of it was driving us mad, unhinging our reason and forcing us | to suicide. The world, Germany included, will feel better with the full advent of the New German—the German whose “rule or ruin” spirit, stubbornness, | vulgarity, egotism and vanity shall have been knocked out of him by the | only thing he could appreciate—the armed might of the Entente Allies, Vegetable Canning Recipes Issued by the U. S. Department of Agriculture Wormatiesiin Glave: |liquor which almost covers them in BLECT firm, uniformly red, ripe|2e Breviously boiled Jars, Partially | tomatoes of medium size. Put pie gates dealaprg (process by boiling) tomatoes of median me oilimg| Pint Jars for 80 minutes, Cool and| est for leaks, water for minute, then plunge ea Glininepebane av cannes ia into cold water for a fow seconds un- | process pints 10 minutes under til skins sily. Remove and cut 41 eight-pound steam pressure. out the core with a slender poin one HERE ARE SOME MORE STAMPS . STICK’EM ON MY THRIFT CARD i AM SOME SAVER. HAVE CUT DOWN ON LUNCH, Movies, cant Ae HERE IS YouR O, RE HOME PAGE Thursday, Jume 27, 1918 \ By Maurice Ketten | | HAVE SAVED A LOT THIS MONTH —— Goad! [AM GLAD TO SEE You ARE SAVING JOHN os LAM Proud You. i rap oe A OT OF STAMP, LET NE SEC YY THRIFT CARD STAMP on (T . YES, IT'S YOURS , \ | Stuck YouR. STAMPS on MY CARD BY MISTAKE CAN You BEAT IT! knifo without cutting into the 6e cells, Peel promptly and pack into Previously boiled quart jars, Add) one teaspoon of sugar and a half tea- spoon of salt seasoning, and fill the jars with a hot, thick tomato sauce, (This procedure economical, be- cause each quart jar will give whole tomatoes for salads or baking and a tomato puree for soups or sauces.) This puree, or sauce, which is poured ever the whole tom is made by cooking until tender, The seeds and skins are then removed and the pulp ts concentrated by boiling it to about the consistency of ketchup. Place cleansed rubber rings and lids om the Jars, but do not seal ughtly, Put iss SYNOPSIS OF PRE (Copyright, E. Nar Hopkine, ‘Texas Town Marshal er) m y What Followed a Bold Hold-Up and a Long Flight for Safety. EDING CHAPTE ore elects a Mexican Martin and hie Leu, This results In the filled jars on a false bottom in al Milling’ of ifaokins aid nothe ; enliats. the, servicer of ack Hiaines to'mis" with ana Geet tat Tak - 4 Water bath and boil (process) for] vut of a jot 4 or ares TRC ad thirty minutes, counting from the] Hruwn’ onder the enginee ty maga Hrown undertake the 100, time the hot water bath bogins to boil @round the jars 46 wr one boll- ing is sufficient. As each jar is taken from the boiler seal it tightly and CHAPTER ¥ YCAMORE when cold test for leaks, Store in| men, Then the engine puffed, cool, dark, dry place, Test again the the coaches began to roll and, Next day for leaks, and if any are as the express car trundled found add cleansed new rubber ring or top if nocessary and reboiL If a steam pressure canner is used process quarts for ten minutes under eight pounds steam pressure, TOMATO SAUCE OR PUREE. If a more economical uWizauon of space within the jar is desired concentrated mixture of tomators can be packed. This also provides for by, Sycamore sheathed his guns with @ triumphant gesture and swung up on the rear end of his treasure shit. Just at that moment the conductor, not knowing what was the matter, came rushing out of the station, wav- ing his lantern frantically. The moment the train stopped at rendezvous Sycamore was off and ning for the vile, First he fetched four or five ties to make a step beneath the high door; then, as ack Haines filed by with the engine a Wore the uso of small or broken tomatoes} crew and the mail clerks and went ‘and large tomatoes unsuited for can- Ie fuard the approach, Syca- re passed the dynamite up ahead ning. of himself and leaped 1 Cut the tomatoes and add 1 large- : ns tly into the car, There on the fu er side stood @ized onion chopped and 1 cup of|two safes, one locked and the other shopped swoet red pepper to each) if Open, and as he louked into the gallon of cut tomatoes. Cook until] for it was c smn deemed, Aender, put through a sieve, and add|money, He reached for his knife and dne-third teaspoonful of suit and two-| ut into one, but as be grabbed out eee? = a handful of coins bis rapture began thirds teaspoonful of sugar (mixed) liq subside, 1t was money all right, to each quart of pulp. Cook to the] but silver money, and Mexican money ‘consistency of ketchup, stirring con-|@t that, en tGusand dollars in stantly. Pack hot in boiled Jars and | Mexican silver, @ load that would , oF nae Rak 18 yreak a mule's' back and was hardly process as for tomatoes, worth carrying away~that is, if a PEPPERS. posse was after you. The best sweet peppers for canning %, Kites grunt Sycamore . ia a ; . no heavy bogs aside and are the Spanish varicties known 48) went further into the safe, ‘There pimientos, The fruit of these peppers | were packages of all discriptions has very thick flesh, tough skin, mestiy heavy and small--and these is comparatively smooth and free| he grabbed out in-gager handfuls and ol converted into bf» mick, So much, from ridges, The bell peppers *} then, or the local! He finished with not muitable varieties for canning, |!t allickly and turned his attention to through sefe, which’ otters i" should be ripe, sound ad . of doa Pepp Ae " Les a: Ae more fitting return. It was a larg tree from bruises, Sort, usins the/and ponderous affair built to. wi whole peppers for canning and small] stand dynamite, fire and wrecks, or broken peppers for products suca fitted out with a time lock which was aa sauces, soups, chutneys, and Dixie} °t '0 open at Mohawk, sat Syca- h more's time was tov valuable to wait pare for peeling by roast-|wpon any such a mechanism, and, all 1 hot oven for 6 to 8| thin aving been prepared in ad- yelish, Pr ing peppers in minutes, being careful not to allow vance, ho laid four sticks of giant hi to scorch, I cut out etem, | Powder on top of it, all carefully tied them coreh, 1 + | together and equippec with caps and sods and pack dry in flattened | Cu " n of wat No water or in| he layers. us@d in the preparation of these pep- | se soning nixed up some mud on t n » round, » SDRAM we Canvas, chunved up and plastered it over the charge A minute later the tuse was agui- the processing brings out a thick the {urwek, tering—he ran out across the prairie and then 4 great light flashed out night, the earth beaved, explosion rent the alr, A sec@ds later and splinters of wood began to fall, but when he ran up to the car and swung his lantern inside the great safe stood firm and solid as adamant, and a hole in the roof of the ¢ ed the course the explosion had taken. But all was not lost yet. Sycamore had six sticks of dynamite in his powder cache, and, hurrying out to where it was’ buried, he wrapped it in a sack and carried it back to the car, Once more he piled it on the safe and connected the caps and fuse and then he Joc about for some- thing heavy enough to confine it. He Kicked one of the sacks of Mexican pesos, Yes, they were heavy, fully ixty pounds to the k, and since there was gold within the safe the silver would be no more than an ante to sweeten this fabulous jack- pot, So he reason nd quickly, for the time was pa and lifting them one by one he p five or six of the sacks on top of the giant pow- der, Once more the fuse hissed and sputtered, and this time he ran far away even then the explosion was deafening and the Mexican pesos, blown sideways through the car, whistied by him like shots from a eann ‘Phen a hail of them began to full, Mexican dollars from high up in the but Sycamore did not wait for it lacken Once he swun and roof of t ished. Mt hole lad been blown in the back as well and there before it, crushed and dismantied, stood the throu {ts top broken, its mas sive gd With ry of delight Sycainore Brown ran back to get his pack-sacke; then with both pairs of them 5 over his arm he swarmed up into the car and stuffed them fuil with the ire, Bags, bundles, pa- r flat cka th looked like sheats of bills, everything that he could find in the seatte wreckuge he grabbed up and shoved into his bags, and © when they hung heavy and he heard hig partner's hail did he tine ally quit h ing and think about getting @ But now he shouldered the bag: for they were hung together in pairs id went % down the railroad track to Haiuee woo fdseiis Ui Wik eb Dok track,” he heard Jack say, “and st there, and the first man that starts the station will git a bullet in his back.” ‘Then he came running up through the darkness and made a grab for the gold. “Come on!” he cried, shouldering a ir of the gacks as he ran. “You waving the sheet of yellow paper above his head, “here's a message from sheriff I dunno,” said one, “he was hero @ minute ago!” dollars the and pockets full an posse rode back {v Lhe station followed him off to the north, Chief of the detectives Slocum ar- rived on a special that came pant- ing in from the West, and the first thing he did was to make every lob- ster shell out his Mexican, down to the last dollar, Then he cleared the of Mexi spoke up nother, Well, who'll take this to him?” ap- pealed the operator, "I t Nh, pec nonkeyin’ around here for an back to iny w gy sround entirely, allowing no outstd- hour oo se tate n's hands Cry to come ni d began to search cee ectneii Aa - 7 for evidence, With him in the spe- CHAPTER VIL What does It say?" the crowd clam~ cia) car were the two express mes- 7 i Ore de eteente! ngers who had been robbed, the T is one thing to steal a big jag _ “Train robbed at Sand Tanks." read Chetveor and a squad of railroad d of money, and another to get SY¢ eo, "BUMMON oF nd BE OR tectives, ‘There were other men also SO dau eet grounds by daylight. Wire whieh jcctves. ae ta eet away with it; but Lum Martin way they went and follow, Dillon, pooh, drensed roughly enough io pas had a plan of flight laid out that Sheriff.” for hobos, who dropped off fhe car would bate an Indian trailer. Due “Welk” remarked Sycamore, an the Wireating crowd, to anvop for news south of Sand uks lay the head- fol Pw gown, € ens t OAD ate Then Dillon, the sheriff, and his 5 he G Bi 7 2 ee ee fas, oe) posse rode in from Gun Sight; and quarters of the G Bar outfi nd wants to volunt for this posse Cer LM MATER ARN HIRT EAA! beyond that the Mexican line, South There was a rush to sign up—and deputies Analy. BD tnad eer thelt also, as well as cast, lay bed of yi t Killed some 4 me oe a ~ trip to the North they found some- the wet weather ! now! baked aq fo % CADIAIn AE brofeayttion® thing big going on. Nebody knew would not dent it by so much as a tering for guns and pistols and wild, 7 lars had been lost, Slocum was te at ipts to catch bronco horses footprint. ‘There w mounting and &' ie paste R Ah id whoa working frantically to get a clue, fae noun eng an" of big pastures in the dark, and whe What's matte th you, riding in hot haste when Syca Lum Martin finally rode in, leading yuwer eoujnea Tin tha wher aan ree Lum? inquired Dillon, the sheriff, rown and Hai reached their two horses for hi mutics, he Was what'd you go chasin’ off up. the horses with the money bags—and they in plenty of time to lead the posse. — eor2 We found a trail here leadin’ rode due south ney had been yer when they Srrved Gm to she south Peeted until they reached the dry b ures Bagel Be agin pe “Well, that's it, then,” agreed Lum, Y y pul bo the mene of the tubbery gmeting wearily in his saddie, “Lit n they whirled and the sun was over the mountains. tel) you, Dillon’ he went on aa Si n, never drawing rein t vd rode up th trac ke in the cum drew near and fixed him with ita edd ans re ported (rire. £4 a thet marved. © his hunter's eyes. streets were bobbing with lan- ceeding at a canter when suddenly Sn*cramore waa t goin’ ¢ terns and the b ghts of the Cow of th pped short and eos, of bu end WOR te Rane Bal eatery i ‘ pay ‘em a cent, 7 nute we got Ranch Baloo a an exc flung hime his horse here they began scramblin' for Broup of citizens summoned hastily “Look at th he 1, holding inoney, 'n ravhc n see ‘em spoil from their slumbe t that Syca- up a battered dollar d then there 4 : ; Ba + ¥ 1 th e thing for you and Slocum ore and Ja rn nea vother man 4 em off and hit out for th SROUEH 50. be seen, Hut Bs. Hoy os ' They had en- mountains, How'd do, Mr. Slocum! fe Rareae tie Nats tp) e hest fringe of that He nodded fa arly to the head lark forms dis to and fro like in esos which had fol- detective, whom he had known in his sects around 4 They rode t can brown's last shot, messenger days, and Slocum wit cautiously then, heading straight for they worked up toward the tho sweat froin row anil war the lone adobe b n they mm-centre the pos became at him again, Ho was a small, eager made out the t Lum, tmoralized, It w +a band of boys man with a shock of grigaled hair that sneaking stealthil them, at a money 4nd Alm Mate atood straight up trom his broad fore In one hand ne ful of tin and his ster 1 brother officers hye 4a pair of eyes that stood clothes and in the their glanced back at thom with wells wide open, like owl's hats, which they had left at home simulated disapy ul as they dash “Lum,” ‘said the detective, coming for the occa forward to the scene of the wreck. over to him, “you're the mag I'm “You're late, he whispered, ittered Lum, jooking for.’ grabbing tue xa mbre ntered Uppers — He beckoned him off to one side Off their beads ming on th car, “you shore where they would t be beard old ones i But you did and laid the whi atter before hin and boots , now -and ¢ hurriedly 4 “Now bere,” h ided, "I've got me yore other on and cha r ound and trom. a description of t two fellow selves over to suloun, Here, bin out all the eka you can abd and that's about I have got. Just gimme them bags turn we'l lead ‘em « the north. look this over and sce if you can horses low 1 you keep them As deputy posse that guesy who they ure busy over t While | go and bide came out fr Hackamore He thrust a careful description ot this plunder!" ¥ ised wel it ae sleuths t the robbers into his hands and waited It was a wild-cye f at re far from being a ess, Even impatiently while he pored over it; bunch of men t t 1 r m Ma \ led @ halt but Lum's educ rugh he care when, with ull t fu a ever in empty his loot fully conceal act, had bee hasty arising, Jack “ a the t ng did not im- completed in 138 and the paper More butted into the i p ead of look- did pagal fovitation Joon and asked what was all t ur r with an eye “Un, wh d this citement. A chorus of different & n oof erin say they had? pretend- swore conveyed the gener eu tha tot ing to squint at t-writir Number N be eld tu and, “High hats spped Slocum Sand Tanks, the pa ' x t sth “high crowned broad brims, and robbed and t ! 1 out the turned up along the edge!’ cars blows ' 1 up in the sly, There “Well,” anawered Lum, handing the telegr ung ru ‘ net » deny him when back the paper with an air of finality, ning in, j ~ I “Wherg's Luu Marla! Martin } vunced his * cvacuslons, and wall thelr boots and i that's t was as cowboys, because them fellere wear be jeried, a The Evening World's Kiddie Klub Korner Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Copyright, 1918 by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New Tork Brening Workt), DAVID AND GOLIATH UP TO DATE. AISER GoLaly Drawn by SAMUEL REISIG, aged ten years, No. 1565 St. Mark's Avenue, © Brooklyn, HELP THE BOYS OVER THERE. Some of our boys are now in France, Help them by buying a few Thrift Stamps, If it's only one card that you fill, You're doing your bit to conquer Kaiser Bil! We must all do our bit, you see, To help our country fight for its liberty, We must help in every way we can, Oh! I'm so happy to help Uncle Sam. | Written by Julienne Warshaw, aged ten yeara, — . a. Cousin Eleanor’s Klub Kolumn forgotten it and probably never will. You must have stories equally em- tertaining to tell me, and just to seo who can write the funniest story and who can draw the funniest picture about classroom happenings we will have this topte for next month's con- test, We ought to get a pack of fun ‘When I was in a primary grade the and food hearty laughs out of such a teacher once suid to one class: “Who contest. I am sure we will. rere can tell me how peanuts grow? We ohildren raimd our bacds ready|_ 150 T0me Contest Grawings and qe) says to answer, but one boy seemed #0 ys on the Spirit of the Fourth of July are so good that it ts hard te de- teacher sald, cel LB eehdiye ee boa cide which are the ten best. It takes “They don't «row, Miss Kirk,” he! “me time to judge so many essays n and drawings and feel that cach cow- answered, “Men make them 0 [BO i, work nas received an equal share corner.” Tt was the funniest thing that wae Sc, Stentien Gnd conaderation, Gi Dear Cousin Members: | AT was the funniest thing that happened at school dur- ing this school year? ‘There | must have been @ great many things done and maid. These things would be very amusing to other cousins and grown readers. Paturday you may read the names of said during that term. I have never the award winners and of the oyusins who have been given honorable men- tion for their good work. Cousin Eleanor. A VISIT TO THE MUSEUM OF | NATURAL HISTORY. NE bright day in June we started off for an interesting visit We were @ jolly buneh of girls and boys from two of the clas in our school, bound for eme of the sight-seeing places of Amertes, Chattering and laughing joyously we reached a large building and ea- tered to lose ourselves in its wonders, And oh! how great they were! Beam: tiful Indian paintings on deer skins; mall, soft, deer-skin moccasins, leg- Bing and dresses, beaded with beauti- ful bends; light frail birch bark ca- nothin’ else, What kind of spurs was they?” “The man that got on the engine had @ pair of long-shanked ones, with a rowel in the shape of a star’~ “Thats them!" broke in Lum “Them fellers was cowboys and I miss my guess a mile if I can’t trail ‘em to G Har headquarters, down there at the foot Them G Bar boys have been raisin’ Cain around here for years and it's a wonder they hain't took to trai robbin’ before this Come on, let's foller them tracks!" noes and warrior weapons t They fol 1, and when the bare- | spoke of bygone ages. pee. Ear oe foot pony tracks were lost In the hard John, do look at this cruel sealp- floor of the lake the posse kept on to ing knife; docs it not. make you the south, where the G Bar boys suf- ed timid little Mary, CHAPTER VII. | hot oouree, be HRBE days after the great nold- | S28 you say to these bows a up and while the country was|jonger” °°. ‘hese bows and arrows, still seething with the exelte-| These and more were the remarks ment of the mad pursuit, Lum| made as w om case to cage, Jlooking at th ities, Martin elded to the impor & M i : iA 5 yh! what a pretty birdia” Msped tunities of his partners in crime and |yittin Margery as she regarded @ beam- let them come out to the house | sieut bird of paradise ; “Well, where's the swag?! demand- © white bears, whales, elephants,‘ nd 4, as soon as be arrived striped reptil with beady — eyes, Se ee Ae aes Se Ue AE Praneing | BrCty birds, butterflies and last bat | Ind rowtles were about as if expected the walls to|a long t membered, It was a de- give up armed men, “don't talk ao | lishttul 1 we fe ey ye Sat , ; : : tee, | utken a urd “seeing Amertea,” loud- this town is allve with d | | should suggest that when Sciaaie Cou visit resting places. in gimme my share of the bov- | New York they tell the Klub about tt. rejoined Haines, “so 1) Written by LOUISE B., MOLEM- something to travel on in| pid, No. 24 City Hall Place, ase T should have to skip Lawaee, Jack pre ed) Lum PENNANT WINNERS. ‘ “don't you never think of driftin fame Warner. aget 0 No, 7 Se those detectives would follow you a| Ave eg Yering Kaplan = town, No, wir! The thing to do Is to Tal" ie wa , yore business Nov 92 "Am Thvoaktlye. jon't say a word—don't look like! @ you knowed anythin'=and wh NOTE TO MEMBERS. tise you do, don't spend no m wa hikes od a pall ‘That's the way they ketch all Ra BY” mN BY” bold up they h nh em when they DRAWN BY,” what we call pend their money ece ww “full credit.” It means Well, whatd we git the money ut the written or drawn con- for?” enquired Haines, ing up a bution ia original with the hit and swagKerin, wuess met? cena: nd th susin Bleanor, wo as Kot thing say i or, has received a certifi- ubout this let's have w look at it, ation to that effect from the par- anyhow! p iT of the contributer, ‘Sure, Lum," chimed in Sycamare, | P “let's git it out and divide it, any-| he I want ww know how m vol 4 4 os HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB AND ‘Well, boy OBTAIN YOUR PIN, pacing to and Beginning with any oom. here's near it oat @ik of the con: Ke, Seb 315096 acc eae « ae el a Neil oe ing Worl Is dio Riss Park Row yur cache. I know My, with « ote im t cum, and I tell you ye mae stake ; 1s man to monkey i su, RG "and with wait a while AU oti W mxieon yom of "No. I'm darned if I will ier oar Kl Vis ong ae wk Haines. lve work soy wna tim gen’ 10 have “a To Be Continued)