The evening world. Newspaper, July 5, 1918, Page 14

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SS i | ] TABLISHED BY JC WH PULITZER Published Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Conipa 63 Park Row, New York. RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Pack Row. J. ANQUE HAW. Treas Amociated Prem wo Mt or pot ot VOLUME 59........ THE PRESIDENT AT MOUNT VERNON. ITH a concentration of phrase which admirably fits an ever increasing concentration of national purpose, the President, in his Fourth of July address, put the ends for which the United States and the other Allies are fighting in four brief para- graphs, and then reduced the four paragraphs to twenty-three words What we seek is the reign of law, based upon the consent of the governed and sustained by the organized opinion of mankind. | If any hopes were entertained in Berlin that the United States might be persuaded to look with favor upon an early session at a round table where peace could be “negotiated” by old and trusty} methods of statecraft, such hopes were routed by the President yes-! crmiited te visausscevusseeesNO, 20,778 terday at Mount Vernon. | No compromise. “The settlement must be final. No halfway! decision would be tolerable. No halfway decision is conceivable.” } The ends of the Allies, declares the President, nnot be, achieved by debating and seeking to reconcile and accommodate what! atesmen may wish, with their projects for balances of power and of national opportunity.” Such projects are the very essence of present German policy. | Despairing of conquest, a German military dynasty now count: on reconciliation and accommodation to save it from the ruin certain to engulf it once it is beaten at its own bloody game in the field. \ But it must play its chosen game to the end. The President lays) down as the first thing to be conceded to the associated peoples of the world “before there can be peace’: 1. The destruction of every arbitrary power anywhere that can separately, secretly, and of its single choice disturb the peace of the world; or, if it cannot be presently destroyed, at least its reduction to virtual impotence. Neither the Kaiser, nor his Chancellor, nor his Foreign Secretary, nor a Ludendorff, nor a Hindenburg, nor any part of the German people that puts its trust in military autocracy exemplified in an Imperial German Government as now constituted and sustained, cau make any mistake as to the meaning of these words, There is to be no bargaining with Militarism, no diplomatic diekering with its representatives. If it will not abdicate so long as} its fighting machine can still be made to function, then its fighting] machine must be utterly and finally smashed. ( | That final smash is now the surer by 2,500,000 Americans under! arms, 1,019,115 of whom are already overseas, The whole world knows how they are fighting—nolody better than the Germans whom they are fighting. ; Aad million# more like them are going swiftly and st the front—unti! the job is done. “The settlement must be final.” * adily to] Tt will be final. Friday, EDITORIAL PAGE July 6, 1918 Engraved for All Time! tars By J. H. Cass ine Worud) RED CROSS el | PMD Sor By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1918, by The Prem Publishing Oo, (The New York evening World), “The Ideal Husband Is the One Who Comes Into the , | House Promptly Every Day at 6 P. M.—and Goes | Out of It Promptly Every Day at 9 A. M. SG" MES I wish somebody would ask us to “hooverize” on HOLIDAYS! Because A “holiday” simply means that half the world has to SLAVE In order that its better half may loll around and be bored to death, And that the Lord of the Manor will be at home all day, And the Queen of the Kitchen will be out all day, And that you'll have to do HER work with one hand, And amuse, and cajole, and fascinate and wait on HIM with the other! @) And no husband suspects it, But every normal wife simply hates and dreads a holiddy! Now don't say, ‘ Well, for heaven's sake, why did she marry him?” I'll tell you why. | She married him in order to be SURE of having him around the house | im the evenings, NOT in order to have him around !n the daytime! Because a “crowded house,” as every woman knows, Is any house with a MAN sitting around in tt all day long! And if you will listen closely, every week-day morning at 8.30 You will hear a great, deep sigh of relief going up from all over city. It Is the sigh of the WOMEN closing the doors after their husbands! { And Mrs. Browning was all wrong when she wrote that the test of }love is to be able “to muse all day on an absent face,” | For the REAL test is to be able to smile all day at the face across the room! And to go loving a man through years of separation 1s far easier than to go on adoring him in spite of twenty-four hours of proximit And to recall tenderly “a voice that is stilled” Is NOTHING beside listening patiently to a voice that is continually | wondering why dinner isn't ready, and if you are ever going to have that | chair fixed, the | And why you can’t do your hair in tess than fifteen minutes, and | where you keep the mucilage! | And besides. 1f “woman's place is in the home"—then man's place !s in the OFFICE! | And any woman would rather try to keep a pet elephant around the | parlor than to have a husband there all day. | Because all you'd have to do for an elephant would be to pick up peanut shells and feed it hay. | And an elephant wouldn't be continuousiy trumpeting for a pencil, or a | fresh pen, or a hat brush, or the bicarbonate of soda, or the bay rum, gy the peroxide, or the telephone book. Would it? { ‘And there isn't any elephant in the world ‘That would take up more ROOM | Than a HUSBAND—®n a holiday! And It’s sad to be married to a naval officer who is never at home— But it's sadder far to be married to a poet or a painter | Who is always at home! For the Ideal Husband is one who comes {nto the house promptly every {day at 6 P.M. | And goes OUT of it promptly every day at 9 A. M. ! And you KNOW it! MAKE IT WORK FOR THE STATE AS WELL. TATE COMPTROLLER TRAVIS i izt : 4K y, S issues a statement recognizing - 1 5 j Peace : a 6 i : jwhite triangle of a face upturned in| Courright, 1918 by The Prem Publanine Co. “What is @ tangle britches?” asked) but ingins an’ bread an’ molasses ef the obligation of the State of New York to pay principal and By Marguerite Mooers Marshall [the moonlight, are electrig realities, | MLE Sik ene Wei I thet bay, | it was a friend droppin’ tn interest on all outstanding bonds of its new $150,000,000 Barg, eibeasind ta adhes azo Se ree Nope ree Ne ¥ Ay ay Mah vor 8 a was a holiday dinner at home “Them's what some people call! But Mrs. Jarr was speeding’to the a é , 5 | 8 % ow , earlic oves—-Rupert ‘ : sede ig thevina © , of th Canal, and to provide for upkeep of the great waterway over whici| NOA=TRE WABOW: spoken for tim. ae Sou anbuee only bh eco pala iy bi Aiehisttehdaa dl ae y Sven yom - wido put > F before they go into the hot grease,” | Up the stairs by this time. Ped: atity ee Mh esters | HE young unmarried woman us-widow, It is safe to say, but she no ‘ me, Maw? y 6 S ; eral authority has exte nded iis control. sally: viaWa tha, wiks@ in. the lebodla bal ; tombs the poor, dim, last seins) Maat i vaid Mra. Dusenberry. “And I'll bet it now voG ate at dinnen® @ harel Interest, amortizetion and maintenance ehurges will make the ofMng with da suspicion, tf! It was Carlyle who observed that AgiTeNS, pinkish dust above, By M cried little You children never had any, Nor any | voice was heard to say, “1 know you “4 7 | i sha ‘The d c Lis corn pone wi r Ya!” Ps er. ' State’s Cana! bill for the fiscal year which began July 1 not far from . not with actual | youths between the ages of nineteen pastime! ad, doyish i tien Emma Jerr, bouncing up and |CorM pone with cracklin’s hilae bh By GIB “Wau onl raas im | hostili con-| 4d twenty-, Wo nterned in But ¢ ~al is wer” ‘ ‘i “What's cracklin'’s?” was the cht! i take pot luc! $11,000,000. hostility. 1 con enty-six should be in his—an, ts Love ! down with the petulant impatience sal BAAR Th ttl hast | sider this a mis-|barrels—fed properly, of course, bUE| And, happily, he doesn't know that |#0 noticeable in children as well as {x 18h query that followed | aa And the speaker, who was Mrs. at so little progress has been made toward securing to this| taken attitude. In| their youthful erudeness and ¢ he will “he in ninelesn-twenty, |excited simians in the soo at feading | Dusenberry moved Mise J dratch, the lady labor leader and Commonwealth adequate return on its big investment in waterways! my opinion we all/celt isolated from contact with bifsy vou ever hurt a bit time, ORR side Gt Ten AE Lhe. VAIr GIDORE TUNERS BUR roeat® bor 18 vyahiad : b rwaya! owe the widow—|folk whom they annoy. Instend of| ,, The last and supreme advantage of table, while Master Jarr sat on the | Mrs. Jarr to the dining room. A is one of the instances of administrative slowness and inefficien h on FenvISRAL| TATEOLA A: Well-FONIALES (ROGletY OF j the widow as a sweetheart is that] “Law bless me exclaimed the | oth or of her. | “Oh, don't apolorize, don't apolo- ng TS ‘ ) he professional| barrels a well-regulated socle! - she serves as a temporary tnocula- | titie old rc ana. “Why % a Fa eae : . ne @ which it is hoped the accelerating influence of war may render\ widow—a debt of{ Vides widows to protect it from the/ ton against matrimony, and at the| qs eg indy from sean a tict|, CCrAOMlln'a sis the tittle bite at ment) eine! t eee vour husband ain't home, obablete. : | a agratity Milder | extegiousness of the uminature jage when @ young man falls in love ple gyal _— one a do?" that gits cooked crisp and hard when |® id Mrs, Gi ng little heed to c f Ope, y aw e vay 1 yp th ntroduc g tc C H . ith F | 4 , than the dove,| The college widow—whose title, 1 ine! WIR Ooh me Rene) IK SOUr Bare maw 1h "| folka is trying out lard at hog killin’ | the introdu iving to ‘omptroller Travis comes forward with the pertinent reminde » | 2 good thi reason ts T want you to sit by me, Don't) e » “But | old Mrs, Dusenberry, hinder 1 ope wiser than the! ist, does not mean that only coltege! not so much that man ay : cari time,” explained the old lady, “But T} is " Q This former source of revenue (the oid Erie Canal svs ce rpent, she ia| boys choose her as a sweetheart but| himself ix too young to marry as |" hy Wintel” repeated Miss JATr. | orgat you pore. deare win'tnoverbeeni| TAG Nes Ite Ak the ‘ofioe) tes tem), from the beginning and up to the tim h se that the 1 io whom he of right be- No, by y “ killin’ time and had | "sh xplained Mrs. Jarr, ’ y ne of its discontin nore val e than u college educa- | rat that herself is an alina |) ie ‘ ‘ on “pees ound at hog in nm |) eee a Lore a » jor s too you and shy prop- | fir cried the boy 3 “When women get the vote i uance, in 1882, contributed nearly $125,000,000, or g . an, When he mater, a liberal education--first of alll erly toc ‘ fresh pork and milk gravy, and cora | te a : 1 25,000,000, or a net profiy ‘on to a young man. hen he has a liber: acatio: of alll erty to cut him out of the herd. lena: 7 tem." | through the nation husban, ett over all costs of $87,019,038,19 inatriculated in her university he is| teaches her young lover manners and| A widow keen a from marrying| "Now {€ you both ain't g00@ Ti pone with cracklin's cooked in ‘em.” | MrouRn ine nation husbands will not Why shouldn’ i moot ready for some other woman] sentiuental self-posnossion the wrong woman, As for marrying | Won't stay for supper at all, and You! savor, we can git a pigwle and keep | Pe tute a4 the olla.” sald Mrs. Grateh, hy shouldn’t the new Barge Cana! work to pay for itself andl, st ready for eet B \ oe | him herself, it tsn't done, A woman | won't have any of the cookies I made. 1 4. the fire ape." said the little “The wife will work beside him at the vie 1d t hi : ‘A ’ EWG ty mare y example, subtle SURKeSON |) who hag mastere truly the tech But it y ‘ee fea) 4 I'll come ove: i on e i A i | office.” yield a return on the millions of dollars that have been spent on | untiohe diae. hadi ems a leven, when necessary, direct precept, | nique of being a widow is Venus An flee Mette th sp a tanain (Tare Eith “Mame folks Beeps ¢ saaphcocsel NEN In taking over the mar ment of the State canals and tolla the! #weetheart ale eve making resembles }*2° Showa hin how to make a pederiln! manne should she do as Bie Say and cook you some tangle | pa rots on the firc atoane bee Latin ye na ee of the babies 4 ‘ani dl te | swe Ma 5 inate wech Ww. : Mrs, John Smith! es. bet # had a little alligator there | then?” avked the old lady from In- Federal Government can, of course, reimburse the State for part of tee emorts of a ehild who with one |hN yp ach without stammering, sso eseicets = lant summer, 1a alligators good to| diana, z the interest, maintenance and carrying charges PANY ON Anant plekel out c tune o5 an aEERAL| TTT Ut Eorabling aver a ohain svee| e eat? othe” cobtloxeney, of; ohlldren! map * i i reve! « g. pilanthropte . over hair, eve at? i r A The F ; A clever, charming, pl : be remote, Children will be onl: e Federal Government can and should do | how to dance lightly along the | ‘They are rank pizen; all them for- i a ¢ I more: widow teaches him the use aad mean- & | ya ¥ ; viewed fro: jonal c chowld ‘ : \ , ’ Diapason, Trem-| C48" of the precipice of confession 0 1S our amesake: eign insects ead old Mrs, Dusen- | Viewed trom a rational and biological hould use its extraordinary powers over all railroad trang-| We Of Vox Humana, Diapason, Tr without plungtr t have! | he cut some dread for the | Doin of view,” said Mra, Gratch, “And i oj ¢ - } r 5) oto and all the other stops which give} Without ever plunging into perhaps ; * . ae ” berry as she cis nome NTs {the 8 11 look after them.” persion, freight routings, rail and canal charges, rail and canall varwts, volume and expression to the | fatel depths, | Famous Characters in History and Fiction Who Have Borne | cniiaren, indiana style. (This 1s done | The ee Bee am ee ee Sguipmcnt to as ¢ Now Ks dps Psp Also, this sweetheart teaches bir + , , by holding the loaf against the chest | State is looking after a lot o stem in a mensure that will ; re ae renW ay! " " uccessfully as Dales Berra the Same Given Name as Yours. {ener Th them pore little biographical children asure that will mean permanent dey pm call her philanthrople Ase 7 7 ud ae ip Ai now!" snapped “10 wou } F r ent thereof} } es! b ring that be sca) é ' “There, I do declare, I've cut you | Li dal : A 4 r | ; 7 5 sy ste ering = th a business-as- > David Parra tu d ere, oO J 7 en ¢ pore he e in the interest of the State and of this great terminal and seaport city, ae ae & ommon sense, or even Mf 8BO) Uv young American—the thrilling By Mary Ethel McAuley. paris: Lil dull Sra Admiral ‘stepmother’ bread’ slices—too thick,” |" mothe be ran mus 8 dhe upor ee ; ai a nited States Na ‘ . Mrs, Gratcl fled with While the Barge Canal is being made to ser H J" tw inereiy a good sport, she never Pere) iovicaiion of sex. The man in the, Oxaricte 1918. by The Prm Pabisunt OO | ivit gy, i the old lady, “Although why M4 ratch amiled with @ me 8 F 4 le to serve imperative needs! manently annexes an adorer in the) (i) : pe LE Me lh det ivil War, and although by birth and ene osnich.valices ‘utepmother | &UPeFior alr, Even blologteal bables of @ Nation at war, the foundations can be Jaid for an immengelytearly twenties, ‘Therefore all ber in~ y neeknyaiae who loves a hapa | DAVID marriage a Southerner he fought an tier , sat sien seats to me thin {did not interest her ay much as beng . a J sey g. experienced, sophisticated wom- é a ; nread’ nno. Seems to me 7 : 8 enlarged cunal traffic of freight, food and fuel at rat ial, |struction in the geno art of loving lightly old f A ny ee have peon| the side of the North. David J | i not much of ‘am would be |* suest at meal time 4 ' a tel at rates whieh will} Papen an slightly older than himself quaffs | ) famoux Davids have beeM made a fortune in patent medicine | Hees and py “ * >_—- lower the cos! of living in the most populous section of th {but prepares him for Ja heady draught of romance, | vectors, the David Warfleld who ing pavia Colton made a fortune in| stepmothers would give, 4 - vf OUntTY. | “phe godde know not nor worship; iy : H ‘i id De ‘olto om i io RY the ing 2 a dol ¢ — eS clon of the conutry. rye godders 1 know net nor worshlvi | At, geventoun he dreumat costatic ia one of our bert American nydraulte mining, ADavid Hume, the| ast then a ring came at the doer |First Thames Steamboat, “A Le aca ticp nia visions of the tender passion, At}actors, and the other David Garrick, "sootchman, was one of the world's | "4 Mrs. Jarr Jumped trom the bs HE first attempt at steam navi Letters From the Pe ople denne me wun linenuyetice or four, “sho sudden |the most famous of all Bnxlish actors | grentegs higtorians, and David Lave |!" 2/0" oe gation on the historic Thames ' en this “yo tives & iu natehing of glance with s:vouldering | payid Belasco, while an actor, 18| ing vs! eh. deart® ah 6Hled, OT do HOnN historic Thame: ” Aa aah sians ieanieaais ee . ee eee ee ae Peta: tia: citaan GP matt fineoee avid d nEstone, another Scotchman, was a . eae was made 17 years ago, Te the Kain of The Keooing World 4 You shoula m not be conseiously grateful to « . + HET identified with the stage, bein 4) zrear missionary and explorer. {it's nobody coming to dinne ; eral years bofore Fulton nad 4 - , » you orm | . : - “ ywright and producer, The} tertrude’s out and the table ts ig Won made his Mot long as you ran in serial form | kucha vs spineiess cre | : eh at playwright and provuneturn of| 2Vingatone had set bia heart on| Oot Bay ot ai ree mmo fern [Memorable trip on the Hudyon in tho ea y, dunner Depow 1 consider | (hankful ay lets C onan Ly oy | e H a d V ision | ee csigert pluses, that | Conducting a Missionary expedition to eae Seen eae eoaereatrenicee?® | Clermont. Jbis epochal trial trip waa one of the fh t store you've | i think of ‘eter Grimm are SMR i 7 Ci cl iy sy bis bag h the ios 4 hi dhe was very much disap- | ‘ . . dismissed with a few lines by th : ; | ede. Me avid eld fa- | No arie, yo t goin’ to put} e ib to a friend of mine in tho United |10 keep in tires, a country home, and Ictory on LAV @} mous. |don Missionary Sociaty was going to |O” SUY1e SCLTINE Tikka ae anked [tented account was as follows: “An BAN y Nal tae tact hace: fall tae beac te pecan ee Bae t st, 1917,|the lone £ was so impressed thas 1| David d'Angera wan one of the) seng him to Africa instead. He ween on? eee ee docinee. |oxberiment took place on the River Kno ¢ he hes comp naratetul t sar, © leas as so impressed thai 2 oat industrious of ‘ ~~ told Mrs. Dusenberry do declare, | “>? obtain this st in book form man THANKFUL tecling drew up a statement t some such |sreatest and — mos! sailed from England in 1840 to Africa, Thames for the purpose of workin, NN "a a feeling t e folks p e Oo ch fuss and fe - ca BEA Finds Profiteces Stl on the Jo a Nninunication’ had | *¥ent would occur there. and had it} irench sculptors, Ie made a #Pe-| and the first two years Were spent in | (OKs puts On so > Suan ane Cath |barge or any other heavy craft Pity the Poor Landined. * Tee ne fo me of which £ hdl uy y wie with tie dut ADE “| clalty of tombstones, and when you travelling around the northwest part| 0.1 4, more like a movin' pleter |“xalnat tide by gncans of a steam- To Whe huditur of Tie & World ot jong ago We Were Bung to put (ad pack one word which 0 ay ination bt etry [walk through the Pere Lachaise or the | of that country trying to find a suit-|MOn Mm mer A Ne BE engine of a very aimple construction, A see that one of your readers is) all the 1 piMteere om foil ana! ae ia any iy that word {20W #1 months dater the whole Haltan| Montmartre Cemeteries in Paris you) apie place for a ment. Once he |*How than Jest iain vittios TOF plain rhe moment the engine was set to Die akeus ii seni having \uverveeey was balbe bo ot 4 os ' Kn ans ling fell back, NOW iL dandoned suet wit wee that about halt the tomb-| Wns attacked by 4 Hon, whic | people ri s haree we ' , javery bo « qUnre Inever fo ths bewt of my be vive positions upon this gtre was attacked by . which crushed | P°° : work the barge was brought about, been increased 60 per cent. Ungrate- |dea!, Now we near nothing of Jail) ae et ver Leard the word be-|which was sald by millinry crfticn te [stones Of the Kreat men of his day) nis tert arm and nearly ended his ca- ‘Oh, why do people come at Meal! answering her helm quickly; and she ful man, don't yon know that the /sentences and ail of those :n author. (ist! Mad RENEE ane ihe name |B stratexically almost untenable, yg| were done by d'Angers, reer, This first trip to Africa lastea| time?” cried Mrs. Jarr, “Why don't) made way against a strong current, eer landlord needs the money? Hejity sum to huve forgotten the pro: ne a eet into my study the| Aching more should ovcur (L write! David Wizzio was one of the many | alx years, and after his return to Lon-| they let one know ahead? I'll fo In/at the rate of two miles and a haif a. a rd a nae # $30 Bj tee t he goes bu nh He Raya ed ant jooked up}to the name ‘has heen tulle’ renee | overs of Mary Queen o ts. He} don he soon went back to Africa and|and entertain whoever it Is, and you/an hour.” This steam craft was a age, and his taxes may buve in. |Picxine public pocket, Wha tne index ¢ aiaa. There was} tied presuming that some friend in | Was an Italian from the City of Turin, | continued his exploration, Joined by| close the door and make the children) mere makeshift, and not to be con- @reased that much per wonth, Ang jueed ia (his country | ‘viave’ wure enough, aad | noted that |the beyond Wan forecasting the oom-|and was employed as her vecretary|tantey. On one of his expeditions keop quiet and do Not rattle the|sidered a real steamboat. The een. Mra acre iontt tea hace |cauht eeake at hapa wo {WMA ety the front fine, which at | hipe, however, that Tore Whe mieat | cor forelen sorrespondence @nd 8180 | into the Jungle he died, but hia faith. | dishes. tenary of steam navigation on the Makes about 100 per |that is Shit iii oye conlity that tine was victospusly advancis that some crowning victory of | *® 4 musicitr jful men preserved his body in the| “I do declare, {f people ain't un-| Thames was celebrated In 1915, ag it money? And to think | mean tis: seme tot much Pag tine could, hs wine te mere aes | he Allien * thiy spot may justify! David Bruce was the Scot who in-| sun, and carried it across Africa to/ neighborly in this town!” remonstrat-|Wwas in 1815 that one Dodd brought that you object to having your ven! |that the Goverament will dv anything rhinge, tan that wat ANOuG Tel) | Set curines the Atraaae Way in whieh | yaded England in the thirteenth con-|Zansibar, and from here it was sent|ed old Mrs. Dusenberry. “Ax ‘em to|a steam vessel from Glasgow to Lon- # 4 FP al sd oes Ww, laboul extertionate prices and those think how any military event of con-| From “The New. Revelation,” tury, and David Lloyd George is play- to London and buried in Westminster|dinner, gal, ax ‘em to dinner! Ijdon, Since then the Thames has who extort them, ¢, but none READER, gcquenve could arise th 1 Vlas Mh Six Sweethearts of Yours @ir Arthur Conan Doyle The Jar Y'\ng @ great role in England to-day, Abbey, : By Roy L. McCardell Family wouldn't care if I hadn't anything never been without steam vessels,

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