The evening world. Newspaper, July 2, 1918, Page 14

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ee ee ee ee eee ee a SOR RM TS SR, DET OE eR SAE eta ESTABLISHED BY JOSHPH PULITZER. Published Dally Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Compeny, Nos, 63 te : 6 Park Row, New York. RALPH PULATZGR, President, 63 Park Row. J, ANGUS SHAW, ‘Treasurer, 63 Park Ro JOBEPH PULITZER, Jr, Secretary. 63 Pa MEMPRK OF TIE ASSOCIATED PRESS. " a - Pree etetasively cntitied to the ome for remit ton of al Jenretch rates Pelee LaSY salts saipe'cnd'nioo 18 oral owe publiohed Berean: ae VOLUME 59.... A GLORIOUS SPLASH! OURTEEN DESTROYERS and a fleet of Eagle boats launched the day after to-morrow from American yards will be the United States Navy's home contribution to the celebration of the Fourth of July. Ninety-three ocean-going carrier vessels, with a total capacity of 465,186 to ll slip down the ways the same day, as the United States Shipping Board’s part in the festivities. The biggest of these cargo carriers is the 12,500-ton Willi m Penn, to be launched at Gloucester, N. J. @fnto the waters of San, Francisco Bay will slide the Challenger of 12,000 tons and three more—the Independence, the Victorious and the Defiance—of 11,800 tons each. Big ships and brave names, befitting the purpose thai has produced them. American shipyard workers, toiling in shifts twenty-four hours a day, are making it possible for the Nation to celebrate this Fourth of July with the greatest launching in the history of American ship-| building—in one day a tonnage exceeding by 74,300 tons the total launchings of 1901, the record pre- year. A glorious aplash! ach of these fourteen new destroyers for the Navy will do ils part in hastening the complete collapse of Germany's fast failing U boat campaign. Each of those ninety-three new ca: means additional strengthening of the balance against the sabmarines—-new certainty that the great bridge between this Nation and its fighters in France ean never be broken; that men, munitions and food will continue to ross until the enemy is beaten, NO. 20,769 zo vessels And by this early achievement in meeting the imperative demanda of war new standards are set, new confidence born to assure a new era of American shipbuilding extending into times of peace The big noise that means something comes this Fourth from shipyard workers. ve them plenty of hearty cheers in return, onceemicemeitniemtt dp theestnceicenapsints Just to get up a proper Fourth of July spirit, American troops west of Chateau-Thierry shoved the enemy back last night on a two-mile front, taking upward of 450 prisoners and inflicting heavy losses. Amorican artillery contributed twelve hours of brilliant and deadly fireworks and thé infantry rounded ont the programme with forty minutes of successful attack and advance. s “Begin your celebrating eafly,” in France. "is the word among the boys oe EXTRAORDINARY SALARIES. | E HOPE the Income Tax collector has got his eagle eye! ee workibg in directions indicated by the Federal ‘Trade! %2 Commission in that part of its report on profiteering wach! deals with “payments of extraordimar: bonuses to executives of corporatio: In the case of the Ameriaan Metal Company, Limited, of this city, singled out as “an illuminating example of high remuneration charged to expense account,” the Commission names offic salari s and in some instances! -— prs and No Place for a Hog! | Six Sweethearts of Yours By Marguerite Mooers Marshall EDITORIAL PAGE Tuesday, July 2, 1918 es ‘of Spies By Albert Payson Terhune. Compright, 1918, by ‘he Prew Publishing Co, (The New York Erening World), No. 37—BERTHA TROST; The “Self-Advertising’’ Spy. OST spies try to make themselves aa inconspicuous at they can. They try to dress and talk and behav; like the average every day civilian—on the sane) theory that makes a hard-chased fox take refuge) among a flock of Sheep. The less conspicuous a spyy makes himself the less likely fa he to be discovered, | Bertha Trost was.a queer exception to this: usual rule of spy behavior. Purposely, she made) herself the most conspicuous woman in London, and ) for twenty years her audacity kept suspicion d@way trom her. Back in the last decade of the nineteenth century, Mme, Trost came to London and opened a beauty parlor on Clifford Street. She is said to have been sent to England as a “fixed post” spy for Germany. Al once ph» y.oceeded to advertise herself in the following odd wag: Dressing her prematurely white hair {n quaint fashion of nearly @ | century ago, she wore gatdy court costumes of the same period. Her | gowns were of flowered silk, worn over hoop skirts or crinoline. A huge GalnSborough hat adornéd her shapely head. Furbelowed and flounced | and powdcred, she presented a strikingly picturesque appearance. | Thus attired Mmggif'rost would take a dally drive through Hyde Part in a garishly painted é. carriage drawn by a pair of thoroughbred gray ! horses, The coaciman's Nvery was as glaringly | fname as the rest of the equipage. ’ (The New York Evening ! She Seeks Notoriety as a Cloak. Naturally every one used to stop and star , By making such a show of herself Mme. Trost was “smothering all danger of detection. It was sup- | pooed she dressed as she did in order to advertise her beauty parlor in Clifford Street, She also owned or rented a big house in Marlborough G. Hero she lived, and here she Inaugurated a series of entertainmen which were #0 | unusual and so artistically daring that many people eagerly sought invitee | tions to them. | Among these people as tima went on appeared faces which would not | ordinarily grace the reception of a profesional shopkeeper. Men of rank ta | army and in navy and In state begun to drop in from time to Ume at the | Marlborough Gate house. | | ~~ ‘There some of them talked freely and Mme. Trost listened with a show of flattering interest, In this way she heard much that was of importance in British political and military life, Her adroit questions bruught instructive answers, | "The money spent by the Wilhelmstra: Jin England was well spent. Sh | Germany wanted to know. i Th@ began the present war. Mme. Trost had lived for many years in | England. She was allowed to stay on unmolested. To prove her gratitude ! che pluned into war relief work, The chief duty to which she applied herself was to take wounded oM- cers out driving in her flashy carriage or in her motor car. These drives were beneficial to the wounded officers’ health, and the officers’ conyersa- F | tion was equally beneficial to Germany " It waa at a time when everybody was suspicious of almost every one " . And a woman neighbor, for some feiminine ‘eason, began to suspect Mme. Trost and to keep a sharp watch on her, Ths police were notified, ing at first to justify the ch beauty spec y kept an eye on her, investigation of her war charity. PAN se in maintaining Bertha Trost was learning much for Germnay that Clever Spy. But they found rges against the Presently they started iS Woman Suspects j an They interviewed several officers who had gone driving with Bertha, Thus th learned she was in the habit of asking such officers a lot of decmingly simple questions—duestions on details of war which would not at the average outsider, and which deftly sought to probe England's, in Se rw" er opadiamanatntiai military seor “ Jete. One night in the early summer‘ 5 Ferenc ieenele aed | ore long the case was complete. r NRE RIO oer ‘ Nig ame: Hertha Trost was arrested. She was not shot, She was not Se paneled | of Wimprisoned, She was merely deported—banished from the country » had tried to betray. of Women even to the point of “physical en: Courts and Treatment i By Sophie Irene Loeb sixty falls for that,” bis wife respond- | ed, wisely. } ming ¢ vow ¥ rening World), counter,” and that some men, equally “ile ' Copyright, 1918, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Frening . counter,” and th ; their aries and tantamount returns from interest, commission Coovriaht, 1918, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) At seventeen one does not ask of |¢¢ S women and mothers of men”! “No woman cvuld ever add * | forward, like the lawyer and bis client wt . - , Tp Val 7 2 eetheart spa 1 cen ay Supreme C " er with me unless] ,,,, : ove, ta ey t ete,,” with a specificness which should be as useful to the ‘Treasury No. 3—SEVENTEEN AND SACCHARINE. one ewestivett sp ie wl oe is the way Supre me aa Dhyelonl ¢nsount r heaves eatailonta ae Abel ike En their : i . t : ange , elligonce, personali at al- Justice Ford signified how | sho could show herself a bett vord and treat them accordingly. Department as it is interesting to the public. UST as saccharine is a substance | Not the fervor of puppy love !® ternately tantalizes and satisfies al tho fair sex is still|ner than I am, Ido not think MUCh) wHorefore tt 13 good beyond all The salary, plus “tantamount returns from interest, commis- many thes sweeter than sugar, | funny, but that fervor's stutterin& lover who already has drunk deep of | to be treated. of a man who would use violence | neccure that both of these extremists : ” . Sid : #0 is the romance of seventeen | expression, Booth Tarkington iS /jove, ‘This is the type that attracts | . san-| toward a wom: no matter bow » a stone wall when they come sions, etc.,” of C. M. Loeb, President of this corporation, which it ctl “Seven- | This was his an-!| on ne jstrike a stone e y “ isl . Mm » Which deals infinitely more sentimental than |caught ft to perfection in “S¢ a man in the decade between thirty- swer to a lawyer | sreat the provoca yt Court of Ap- |!nto court where men try to dispense mainly in sine, foots up to the snug total of $364,326.73. Vico Prési-! any ‘that compes| teen” Wis falthiat pisture Serie aee and forty-five—-the dangerous age who within the; 4 taf Lb Men conductors of justico—men who have not gone adrift dent Otto Sussman is down for $221,596.04, while Chai befo cist. | FOmprion oe AaBiaananee Spay Me | for husbands who chance to have| week defended a pene weg could eject men who|with mile-a-minute reforms. shila oe? the af eee ae By It ty so sweet It] Baxter discourses to his saccharine | married at seventeen! For them it !9| man who used} treet © pea scramble! It is worth wehile, indeed, that our ochsc 2 t ward of Directors draws $1790 4 hed ahead of women in a , ‘ t ‘aws $179,000 od 1 ts sickish to older] Sweetheart Lol jenough that she be “fair and kind | violence in getting | TUehed ahead Judges are still studious, and continue is another Vice President and two managers who get well over and more subtle] “I think love Is the most sacred | and young.” a woman out of | *o,Fet on atroct cart courts aré |to uphold the precedent of the ages in e & ell oF » thane nean real love. Love nank heave a 18 © uphold eeu if $130,000 each, aiid among ight other offieinis wy enna saa soul palates thing there is. I mean real love. Love! a. ove at seventeen, gloriously and his piace of bus + are keeping pace wit? |connection with “mother’s eex.'’ sc her officials who receive $50,000 Littl 1res|is something nobody can understand ‘ iB i ba 4 not behind, but are kcopitg | b or more is Henry Brucre, also a Vice President, whose eervia ittle 9 aie aed hey UnWwisely, is well, But It is more | ness, the lawyer! i opeeest Of course, ( um sorry tO! Ail along the line, from time im- him $82,810.93," te President, whose services bring FET en ee Ne chee dente fect ie, (aatistying to fish with a net for sune| Sembee arguing that al POR of tew of my sex WhO |momorial, the protection of women im $82,810.25, that! The sweet Son bee aa i ge in ever | beams, to gather the rainbow bubbles | Woman having full polith ma rants ‘hink they have gone so far “for-|has been of parame importance, } sy ; ; wove is something nobody ca a set nana Wa and’ orivilowes hia State sho pe ners 7 ‘a a i dese On this showing it will be admitted that, war time or no ware 4 have but one time in their lives, and |I*ft bY & wave on the shore, Gian 60 Se pi Lt ee he nee ward” in the govcaliod | reauallty Inot only to the welfare of the present i hese “gentleme: a ' as Pg wae ert Sf i |try to dom ate the saccharine | treated as a man, To whic Judee) vusiness that they demand for them- generation, but in the propagation of time, " : ‘ 3 ntlemen ought to rb along pretty well. There! | ety or shel t th y aon’ ave i then, why prob. {107 i ane, pe | answered: bas il crags appear to be good pickings in xin se rhe’sun shines to make a/ “bly they never wi m : ae ‘ 4 TE is s A Se } hee “ie 4 een oe Pale Necks and only | “lf a man really loves a girl, why, ge * dell Tt 1s a good time, too, for progres- ane ac the Federal Trade Commission reports that in cases) Imugentety to take ani warm man, (Red do anything in the world she| A By Roy L. McCardell sive woman 10) ste leak and: latan where the Government fixes a 4 mar, {aes | Ab aiddedis fp . Wanted him to. But if he didn’t, then especially in these war times, an nm TXes a de gin of prof hove costs r fiolete, forget-me-nots, th eis pietindae 1 ; « e j 5 i] P § aboy at kind, Violets, . forgetetn bebe he wouldn't Now, you take a man a 1 ’ |" fo it that our weaker members there is a considerable entive to a fictitions en} ;' great sca itself, are pale reflections | fed Jj around here are, Although Lwillad-/) Paks roe coon : H shhh pede enhancement of We ae tie P |like that and he generally do just | Convsright, 118 de The Press Publishing Co, } and I caught them at it red-handed J} ietanmerous to poke a child |#@ protected as they enter vartous Sosts through account ju, including, of course, “the padding) the tregee Dheve tka nen Filabout anything the girl he aovea (Ts New York Evening World) | wouldn't have known them. And if} mit it om Seite iothespio or any /Maustries to take the place of men, of officers’ salaries,” ie a a is r the serpent of e 1 wants him to. Say, f'rinstance, she /6¢ ‘M much interested it this new / airy Kittingly, on the floar above {ia ‘ne us w ae that, teatter, be-|_ Whe there are thousands of women Widied ar acl. cx He ? Nile, golden Helen “hers " wants Lim to love her even more than | league that's» bees recently | yadnt asked me if I would say, as a) Kind of a p! ice bane yen dy and Willing and strong enough , a gures thus slated and on record should #84. shadowy figures besid he eon athentnnee aiincas anveiine| started all over the country.” | hemsonal favor to her, that she had| cause, no matter ; to replace men in every avenue of be noted by the Income Tax assessors and checked up with personal | wemucy qlahtefooted | pink-cheeket|tike thag—and supposin’ she asks him|said Mr. Jare, when, after the chll- [been the whole afternoon with me in| may matob them, ther le A'WAY®lendeavor, and while there ure Indl- eee u ersonal | ¢ el eve man has love bs : | red, he sa something uncanny about the! tdual returns. | Sama Peete ' ved ®t) to, Well, he would go ahead and do|dren had been put to bed. b Ft) our flat and had just gono out in the | orn thing un on) a eetcohildren or |Ytuals here and there who boasttully eae-ar6- pr see oe ssh bleibt jit. If they really loved each other he around reading the papers and dis-| jane with the children, if her first Uneanny al EU NCSD prate that they are better and me Bro precisely ing profits which onght to he} The youth's worship is Incoherent.| would! What / say is, if {t's real love, | cussing the war news, aruists of the) Husband called her up on the tele-| Clothespins?” aa nt Me Jarre na {than men in certain pl brought to light and made ¢ y sliare of the tux load and probib! F ddened by the | well, its—il's sacied, because T think; Movies, — douestic r +] phone, 1 would have never hnows) ither,” sald Mrs dare, An iit may be true in some respects—yet « iis np baa tea sea ben of an elderly and unaympa-|that kind of tov always sacred, |fnance with is wite HER.” [FONE KERNEL MCh wake Rend yomy {ne individual may hold forth any pre! a ~— thetic family, Yet he has a miser-|pon't you think love ta sacred if It's} “A new league,” replied Mrs. Jarr.| otter pis husband?" asked Mr. | would only faye . Mi * Pe hinds me (Meribed rules and regulations in det- he sinking of the Canadian hospital ship Liandoy mie time, Me real thing Well, L never could see anything Jarr. “How can a first husband call; Usten to me, And that aper the|Timent to the common good. Castle, with a ruthless effort to destrey the Mfeboute, “i . formu| he lives a truth as] Even while he chuckled sympatheti-| baseball, It looks foolish t> me to #ee | nis widow up on the telephone?” that 1 was reading in the paper rible| I & word, not only must we con eget EL cpanel di Htebout and leave ! that joving, not be- | call Willie's. Song of Solomon, |a lot of grown Jayin gy with toy Oh, her first husband isn't dead. | other day about one of these SeFFI IB ne aheh ule soe the account of the U boats. It should we addons | hing. |@ virile person of forty curled a dis-| like children.” She's only divorced him," replied Mrs. | Black Hens el ag | At the Judge |Above, but they may well be empha. reckoning. a weigh beavily ' The lover a t vftind, tlufty and | "This tan't that sort of 9 National Jar, “And, aa he pays ber alimony, |e a pe ine tor murder, Bo|aised in thes ee by continued wad, dust and bitter , version of Lola] League I'm talking about,” said Mr! ye brute, Not jea you}| When he was tried fe R lenin! - sn th oe “ bbe ia m glad the little Bass-| legislation, if necessary, So that the this olf world and tn Jina New York | Ja “Ita an oassocialien being) know, so uch as sUspicious But, that's y 1am glad the little - sai Med i i j! ford 1 eye wasn't really injured, | Jud w ho the > into ai trean , vst rmed to cheer up people who have) Mrs, Kittingly says that, whil a] ford boy's ‘ ; t (eae " . ee - a rata fea Lawn precedents of thousands of vases Letters From the ] eople. The ro) an whe merely | “How could Ay fall for that?’ |sone and other dear ones ‘romewhere | him any oxplanation, | because tt would be terrible if hel pissin &| | iansenge of ussee ate City Kept tn Darkane ices! ms r receives love is no nore ‘ wort n France. It will bring people to: lan't« iiving soul can say] Staald lone bie slabs aad become Ape |e aan tees protective cones res Oe k 5 Worle | se ea hs ts protifeer by | than of tl peatrie ndy under twenty and over} gether who imay be congenial in} against her She was a| ‘lie at Pg pop rather likeable child| Will also bave the later opin in of | ainly agree with one of your] !@Mdiords fst bean the rent » the wean of inate hie | “Indeed, he's a rather ikea bl d é f ater opinion o | tastes; and it may be the means of int ity, from Chicago, I leas odiaa th 4 Fenders that we are burning 120| “sed to 628. Now {t has been made - Seeing cicceant #elal Fela tions Hut SHE pever seems to be| ®d sits on the steps for hours suck-|!aw-making bodies that this to-day many lights at night. We have no $36, end everywhere L look prives are lt b B : a Bi Pp (awe (a land inaugurate many, lasting trend: | : ing his thumb and looking as though |!s more Lnpertant than ever © ausurance whatever that the Gennan| Mat kit, Wh unoat Ut seven evident umber Drings Dig Frices in ermany ps, and be helpful to fiends and| "Blondes seldom are" repited Mr, | he hadn't a grain of sense,” ventured | , never must it be forgotten 4 ‘ ‘ Ont UF thaintans |ships, a | 3 rh f ° hat woman represents child- submarines off this coast may not{ing wn apurt inthote te ME Berliner Boersen s| «stor vate) {relatives flehting for tho freedom of | Jarr, “Brunettes are of @ more txo-| MF. Jarr. “And that also reminds me/that woman represents the child launch hydroplanes to bomb the city, |» Aes—is inno | Mies t prices of all] py t| the world.” ted dispoaition." [that our little Emma is biting her|bearing element of the race. During It would be an easy thing to do, and aise tn my re ar ‘ German ng to the| "YOUNG people, did you say? “How do you know?” acked Mrs.{ Bails again and J wish you would |the present, when thousands of men there is nothing to show that the 17 fae SPARES \ y astound he yt par 1,000 asked Mra, Jarr |Jarr quickly. "Take my advice and | Speak to her jare being killed, and the birth ques boats have been chased away, or thot. were ne somearls ttt he requir : : rend’ F Wa: [owe mot exclusively ung peo-| don't t lntaseaten in ‘oterta-| ‘“BUt what's all this got to do with |tion is now of paramount importans they may not carry out a new r at le bly end their eway ay east have | OMe F 1 take It, but any well-weaning, | ties as governed by the complexion!” | Your being so jn laraan 1B Y Mr ae lo ererel Sonate as it will be in any minute. Almost every day or) MAde much anon ynaiderably dim!nished Kan sles tau ce and the price jreiimed man or woman who needs| Mr, Jarr aasumed a look of injurea | Friends League or whatever you call jour own, rules and laws in the interest ing to earn nd the price | een : two we hear of boats picked up at Anytuing to earn i ‘. rehaaiach ; bi uerreien Nee A Tae tit ; : Sa Mrs Tare eontincear tae d Mrs, Jarr. “I'm sure you}of women are more significant than = #&, some with survivors and "hie Bre paged, The in rious} round wood, ‘This figure ts the fised!quuinted-quick club, you know,” ree} “And L wouldn't have known the | ae U2 RR Oe a OEY: Be ie ae ae ae : without, This shows that the Nith all our ex chinery ov fu © searcity ‘ the | ott price for sawed ash, but it! plied Mr. Jarr. | Baanfords, on the apoond Goor, is Mra, ree OOLY IRMA 90 Nik: © Poesen Be) | eaererore ik ta OF acess lene anae aoe are sul b Why bebe up yg Raverainent level, Indeed, it is a veri-| does not even represent the average | “Well, I've seldom found these peo-| Bassford hadn't come up to accus fo know 199 many pe aM t Soswalt that the fa sex be more oar ally } the olty and invite them to attack? |! 00K» to me omnbody RRrey veer a : ne i dlten Bia eet A iGUMintea ao ate TAIL ie ena CINE RALteS cna | do to make too fre h strangers. | considered in courts than ever before ‘The municipal authorities wad pr ale thia matter " ey Fi prices paid for ash.| plo who wanted to # BAIR Bo} our Willlo of having poked her little} a. 0. siways do something to em-|--meaning mainly in connection with Gitizens should keep every light ext'ns Wants New Pings £ nin t ple sumti- Pata sts (22 ($107) 1,000 feet! quickly were people worth while! poy in the eye with a clothespin. | sa you. As for young people, | {Deir physical well-being. ue guished that is nol necess ‘ Word " M fae} otaina swood is! knowing.” said Mra, Jar ave} jut Willie dented it and sald the} neue na noon eneush, est = —_ = CLTIZE funy | h ; nroa vane ydemand. ‘Lhe demand | jived in this apartment house five} Bassford boy was walking tight rope| ney 8 ene er INDIA'S COAL OYTPUT, on soiled.” Why i 4 pecially if the young man is in uni Sees coh: Raine iy to repair and pu oe (i wy : jr oak is capecialiy’ wavy, owing to] years and {have never had my Nose | oy wir clothes lines oa the root | Pens India has increased ffs annual eoat _». ee ee of 3h Nrening Word ss for everybc anew 2OW that do] tefoublediy “prices for cake wit Ga, | inaide another ily's flat in it. IM) 4nd fell off and ran the clothes pin| "1 guess you're right,” said Mr,| production to 12,000,000 tons, and ia One year ago I was paying $: ndoubtediy prices for vak will in i oud at in dey hinericwn fia not navtine! crease still further when the furni.| fact, if it hadn't been that the Bing-|in his eye. You would be surprised] Jarr, “but it’s a good idea, just the| introducing electrical machinery into nonth a ur-room flat in we h t 3. (ure industry resumes activity, | laps took our milk off the dumbwalier| what cry-babies some of the children} same.” some mines, q q ¢

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