The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1918, Page 12

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EDITORIAL "PAGE. Monday, July 22, 1918 ~ i, By J. H. Cassel AC ESTABLISHED BY ‘JOSEPH PULITZER Published Pally Except ee yt 4 the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 63 te Row, New York. RALPH PULITZGR, President, 63 Park Row. ANGUS SHAW, J. urer, 63 Park Row. JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr., Secretary, Park MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Asppctated Prom i exctratraly entitled to the me, tor remblication it Ge not otherwise credited in this paper and als the local news VOLUME 59 — — MAGNIFICENT! TOW of four barges—three empty and one loaded wth stone~- valiantly attacked and sunk by a German submarine whi» notwithstanding these tremendous odds, also managed to eet fire to the tugboat and force all on board the tow, including women and children, to take to small boats amid a hail of shells from the brave German guns! This superb feat of destraction cost the enemy only three tor- pedoes at $15,000 per—which went wild as even German torpedoes ‘ will—and several hundred gunshots! Has it come to the point where they get out the Iron Crosses in Berlin for a U boat commander who can report an exploit like the one achieved off Cape Cod Sunday morning? It looks as if German gnashing of teeth over the failure of sub- Marines to stop a single troopship of the great procession leaving American waters had finally resulted in an order to sink anything afloat that looks American. Germany must indeed despair of her U boat campaign if her U H boat commanders are authorized to waste $45,000 worth of perfectly i good Gerinan torpedoes on a stone-boat. eee er Genes ‘ ’ H BELGiUM’S DAY WELL CELEBRATED. ‘ EGARDING yesterday’s observance of the eighty-seventh it anniversary of Belgian independence, the Belgian Legation i at Washington announced the day before: ‘iF The Belgian army will celebrate the day in the trenches by | — killing as many Boches as possible. The Belgian civilian pop- ‘ ulation, under the heel of the oppressor, are forbidden by the Germans to celebrate outwardly, but they will do it in their hearts. The last time they celebrated openly the City of Brus sels was fined $10,000,000. To silent Belgian prayers and resolute Belgian patience, Rel- gium’s allies supplied the words, the flags, the demonstrations and pledges of outward celebration. All over the world Belgium’s Inde- pendence Day was remembered by Belgians and by peoples of tho Allied nations. i How should it be otherwise when Belgium’s wrongs repre- Hy sent an initial part of that colossal crime of Might against Right, the i perpetrators of which the Allies are determined shall no longer hold power over the destinies of a civilized word? There is no point upon which the nations now fighting Germany are more fundamentally and unchangeably agreed than the demand that Belgium be restored. There is no Allied purpose more clear than the formation of some league or international machinery which, as Mr. Balfour, tha British Foreign Secretary, said at the London celebration of Belgien Independence Day, shall make it impossible for a crime like the vio- lation of Belgium ever to occur in future, Pane an Oe ONY 5 arene em = t i. iho By Helen Verily, verily, there is but OW, my Daughter, there lived a be adored of men, And many men “Nay, nay! x And to another WL D "Go to! Go to! as much as she professeth to know But he fled from her, hastily, say “Ha, hal For, in this day, no girl CAN be such Now the damsel was discouraged! and was perfectly PRANK! For she Lo, when he spake of sentiment, and all mine ideals have long since be But the man smiled in his sleeve, igt, who seeketh to pose as a cynic!” her {nteliect, she sighed, answering: “Be not dovelved, I PRAY thee! little doodlewit.” only an exceeding wise woman would “Yea, verily! Circe! And the man laughed aloud in h And he would not be stilled until whi fascinate any mar deceive any ma For the last thing whick a man eé; Selah. And unto a third she assumed the v ‘ his coat lapel, role of Clinging Vine. Yea, she hung to : feeble-minded questione, and sighed that she NEVER had been kissed. She is a siren and a Circe! Nay, nay, speak not to ME of love! —for there is no sentiment left in me | Sayings of Mrs. Solomon Rowland Copyright, 1018, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) one way to fascinate a man— which is not to try; and there is but one way to deceive him —which is to tell him the honest truth! damsel in Babylon who yearned to Aud behold, she set her snares in many places, and practised all the seven stunts of woman. were drawn to her, but they FELL not, neither did they propose! And the damsel continued hanging to the family tree, until all her friends said “For mercy's sake!” Le, unto one man she sought to appear a sentiment- GG) alist and stained-glass saint. But he shook his head doubtfully and went his way, She {s too good to be true!” jaying: ahh she endeavored to appear as a Font of Wisdom, and a Highbrow. But he smiled behind his hand, and turned from her, murmuring: She ts all camouflage! For no woman CAN know pose of girlish innocence, and the nd plied him with ing in his heart: And I am lucky to escape her. an utter doodlewit!” And behold, when a fourth wooer appeared, she cast aside all her poses, cared not, neither did she hope, she laughed softly, saying: For | am a disillusioned woman, en shattered. Let us be good friends and said in his heart: “It THAT were true, she would not admit it! Alas, she is but an ideal- And when he spake of the beauty of her MIND, and the wonders of For what thou mistakest for my wisdom and wit is but a superficial thing, and I am in truth but a stupid Put the man congratulated himself, saying: “Now, I know that she is the most brilliant of women. For, verily, recognize her own stupidity!” And thereupon he kissed her rapturously, murmuring: “Beloved, hast thou ever been kissed so tenderly before?” And the damsel answered him mockingly, saying: Hundreds of times! And not one man have I allowed to escape my wiles: For I have been a siren and a is joy, crying: “Now I KNOW thou art a stained-glass saint and a flower of innocence. For if what thon gayest were true, thou wouldst not TELL it!” she had promised to marry him. Verily, verily, my Daughter, I charge thee, there 1s but ONE way to » 1s not to TRY! —which is to tell him the honest TRUTH! And there is but one way to xpecteth from a woman is the truth! The roar of the Allied guns yesterday on the Rheims-Soissons front, the further successful advance of French and American troops against the hastily reinforced lines of the German Crown Prince, the continuing development of the great Foch counter-offensive of the 2 ea ae ce New York Girl Types Von Kaew (Tic Jarr Family i ; vit . ou Coprright, 1918. by The Prem Publishiae Co, “TE wish you would do something of t By Nixola Greeley-Smith Naina NS BEEKEIC Resta ER e tt oeea ele Nee Vad PO ere Marne—all were celebration of Belgian independence and promise OCowaright, 1018, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) becomes abstracted, hums the alt RS. JARR gave her husband one}; wasn't that it will be a che | that in the end, with the independence of all other free, self-govern- NO. V.—THE MAN-SNATCHER the orchestra is playing and then Md Haas ee duels to go and take the children ta le ; line . 5 a ieenig ria G nsed sages ligt shila nstantaneous facial express: 2 : e summer, I'd tell him Sie ceoples, it aliall ba fdaraver aoc HE kidnapping of children ts r- | are popularly but wrongly aupposed| suddenly with delightful, child-like] "| farm later in the su . 1B peoples, N T secure. garded with universal hoiror| to be the snobs of sex, Charles Darwin] innocence exclaims: “How can you] Which signal Mr. Jarr read to be code! #21 we really couldn't entertain him ‘ ' a and 18 heavily punished by] in “The Descent of Man” called at-| listen to this music and not want to| (oF “caution, any longer, Haven't relatives a CTE y P ° a i ; y longer. > the law, tention to man’s universal tendency] dance? Do come Mr. Breeze; v-| This domestic wireless signal em-|tne brazen effrontery, especially the b ny a 1 ° rt o he b . @ MORE THAN MANY CRUISERS Hut the mor | to better himself by marriage as an| ing the other woman planted, dis-| ces a wide significance. For in-| -iatives one is not proud of? One's } f HERE b 12 es frequent crimo of | important element in sexual selection. | gusted and too proud to fight. Some-}%t4nce, when company drops in Un-l wealthy or high society relatives t SRE may be several opinions as to what sank the United States man - snatching} Realizing this trait the man snatch-| times, to be sure, the man refuses to barely ach aa sf wenn st never come to see one—and, what ir cruiser San Diego, but about one thing there is no. uncer- Gees unmentioned) ons first object is to convince her| be bagged, But rebuffs do not dis- Nantes” apa la h alll worse, never seem to want you to f Hanne ; on our statu y that she counts unusually in] may the man snatcher, fe B. Url od ccchiad come to see them.” ; tainty: The men aboard her went through the experience in a books, and un ever world they move. Women can do nothing about the| On the street it warns, “Don't] i you want?" asked way to uphold the best traditions of the United States Navy. ORMSLOR AG DY ON ee ere sae gala ore sophis-| man snatcher, We all know her and | speak to this woman coming ghtihes |e ene (aeusenctvase ele From the Captain, who stuck to the ship until she turned over— oy eR en tok Arie Ueated friend, I expressed my inno- ak of her to each other with Aa eS we eee Mets Cor caneatione of his good lady. thi ; . casual retributio ae ; i : > roing to cut he: v! ‘ ‘ climbing across her side and jumping overboard from her keel—to the| @: 8% Sanu rewrin ment best Bieta anesener aK siastina ada te alsa tek he Not being elther on the street or at| “You know wnat’s the matter!” re- “i gunners who stood by and kept up a fire for possible submarines| @*=!S2=="8 within itself, Yet Of 2 a ee ene oF aticu.| men. Nothing can save her victims,| the table, Mr. Jarr wondered what the| plied Mrs, Jarr, “Uncle Henry's the q R . . it is Just as easy to snatch @ man as 4 a AgECS a FP i z " i facial wireless message meant, But| matter, As I was saying, all onc's until the decks under them were awash, officers and men behaved] 1, idnap A rly valuable specimen of male, anyhow, The woman who oriticleca a moment later he received the sup-|shabby, uncouth, untidy, self-satis- ‘ ; ; ° ap a child. | Seg 2 , |is merely Jealous, as we all know, so | 4 ent la ab i d pete ‘ with that cool efficiency and faithfulness to duty which Americane| ‘rhe persuasive bag of candy, the betes sha anaored ey we listen to his rhapsody realizing} Plementary signal: fled, greedy, endlatagl BRAS Tee rep have learned to count on in those who man their warships, promised go-cart or bicycl a BE | aves cia Sere. he wry Now | that the man who praises one woman] “Follow me out to the dining room| in on one PLEA YOR SAY See Me. lls , All hands remained in perfect ord h i traction of the motor ride into wn-) i came nore from Chicago, New| to another always seems to her—in| casually, 1 have something to say to|and stay and stick until they almost ! s a perfect order at their posts until the com-| known territory, all the facile lures | York women impressed him terribly, then slave ie-aomettiing of canes | ved drive you mad, when they can sic | mand came to abandon ship, when they launched rafts and boats and/ 0¢ the kidnapper, have their equiv-/8nd when he found one who coull| | ee oe clear,| Hence, while the all-unconscious|they are not welcome and that you i § floated about singing “The Star Spangle ” alents in every man snatcher's Padang te dheatres and restaurans) yids open eyes. We never like an-|Unclo Henry was deep in the thrill-|are already crowded beyond comfort Fs pang anne cheering the v u a : fi Captain and the sinking shi il sh J 8 of tricks. And it requires no more | nodding ¢ wht and left aud) ciner woman for tho things a man|ing tidings conveyed by the local] with your own family! a, Pp an sinking ship until she went down, finesse to bag a midd 1 lawyer | saying, aon, or ‘Isn't! sixes in her because we too are be-|items in the Hay Corners Banner, “Just for that I am going down to It is an inspiring picture to think about, because it is full of the] or manufacturer and him for| Mr. How ne si well this aa hind the scenes and we know just|that had been mailed to him from|Uncle Henry's farm and take the tt she. lene: Ne: tnac : . A ransom by time and satiety than to] ing? or ‘erry Farrar seems a bit] how she produces her effects. “Wel home, Mr. Jarr strolled out uncon-|children and st long as I feel like ' f same cheerful, dependable, indomitable quality of American manhocd een ahae, ts the tortured | slimmer than when I dined with her jare interested, amused and friendly] "OMe, Mr dark strolled con en roniang slayiae lang, ue feats ! that is making its gallant and immortal mark at close grips with the| parents of a stolen baby Taek month oF Ehere’a Mew, AMOrs:| VAC AS DE Pede A (ROSe ONE DAES Toon Cat ig itt! be asked. "Am (ele comitieced toca one they j enemy in France, Men are, in fact, easier to snatch He ihe ae Ry eiy Bera The | Sher wo might as well at render him} to hit Uncle Henry over the head,| have only one spare room, and that| n ris ide { : dre! r eo they are aupsene: Be mip jeeled ove with vine leaves in his r ‘or if], him and, while he is uncon- ey pack us all in that, and the chij- Land or sea, surprise, accident or battle, there is no upsetting] han children, because they ar * tact that @ woman who knew every-|she hua put the mystic sign on hin | sue Bis eh ap cle roca eee | meee peers ME REE AS EHO peeeniy f the poise or darkening the spirit of these young Ame: ] much more caally Impreaed rel ody he had read about in the Cai-|the man snatcher will get him even | scious, ship him back home by ex-|dren have to sleep on a mattress 1 se NOMHE OMSE Cans, jare, to be sure, women with vague) Yo s thought bim the| !f we do watch out press, charges collect ?"* the floor like they did the last time } The country is gloriously sure of them jambitions to be man snatchers who] caso Sunday Be hought iP anime — ne — q % | greatest man she had ever met, fairly i e pride and confidence inspire: sthaik 4 | never quite realize them, but that is] &teatest man she had ever met, fa n | E The pride and onfidence inspired by their conduct under stross Serer eit thethads cre not sime|auished bim @he might pave pad B Andre Dupont } is worth more to the Nation than a hundred cruisers, | Ne ooruak, How often I have said] oF or a back like a dromedary, | a ing @) eep oO y P | a — aide dcigiaieeieeet tet es ey some Woman who asked me to} 4nd he would have married her just | 7 } Letters From th e P ] | interpret what He thought of some-|the same, And she may really ave | Ceoyright 1918 by The Pre Publidiine Oo, | Severe exercise or work in the broile|to the stomach, Fresh berries, to- Oe eect ieee ia accil) eople thing she had said—and whether 1] known some of those people too," my | (The New York Evening Worl) ing sun, matoes, lettuce, cucumbers, string | ey iia Pe here in Presenv? my only brother! thought he understood her, ete.: friend added kindly, lq 7OU would not think of wearing| If you want to keep cool on hot| be Ane, peas and almost all frulte ex ; somewhere In France. We are not on 0 y d baw 4 sf »sh pork,| cept pears and lemons are excellent at 5 ee ST mitted to send him any money cn see’ | “But be ia not thinking about you! «yous trom the West, Mr. Breese,” | your heaviest underwear on a) days avoid steak, chops, fresh pork,| cept Pears and I read Mra. J. M. P's letter with he in not @ baby co et | now any more than he thinks at 10 ihe man Roatnuen berie fehould| sultry summer day, and yct| Cheese, nuts, rich chocolate and alco Prag sant MOGI 18 i gech interest. 1 think the trouble in . but le every EY ote aay | M, about his dinner, He has rm You Weat-|many men and women. do what|hol. The chief heat-making foods are| Ice cream is very cooling if you do| ae that she and other fond relatives write n away trom home before | never given the remark that wor- | '¥e known it anywhere, You We L seh them a great deal hotter—they |fat# starches and sugars, These|Not overeat and then go out in the fy me reer lag egagodpeis i wee ", wae oe han liarly #ev- | ries you any consideration since you he wie ae os iis and foros, | mbKee to eat foods of high heat|tMings are necessary for the health [hot sun, for Ans oantalns maken, tall: whatever one has to say every day and e hax never re. | ut at first, do yc 0 | , lof the body, but they can be cut|0F cream and much sugar, all of which P S since he sajled.|/ made it, Men don't brood over us, rei or e tead ooling dish 1o ody, yc pe the ond of © week put al) the sheste {wT haven't | don't analyze and dissect us, don't {YoU Were 1s way you| value instead of cooling down to a minimum during sultry|@re heat producers, Buttermilk is a im one envelope and mail it? No won-| He gets noth: | NWaye MUmmeribg inv tha (ApS L all I Like Englishmen, | then complain that they \eeethen Thateeaict basing & hams taal MeAlLeul GURGAP deen Ten Ger mails are not delivered! If every ly or friends, keep us aways . lt remember the year 1 was presented | stand the heat." fae Pile ffee 1s comfor it °. soldier Was to get three letters a weok that there are a great, back of their minds as we keep them. HLA a heen a rae ean al eat fish if you can get it|coffee is com iB if you are ac- that would mean 3,000,000 letters per 9d much att Mat: | If you wouldn't stew over him quite /#t court, We spent a season in Lon-| qHogical, isn't it? But they have Fish has buik enough to sAt-|customed to it, and affects neither t collected, sorted, s all, It cer. | oe much, you would find life infinitely |don. One evening at Mre, Asquith's| never stopped to think that it ‘S| isfy the appetite, contains sufficient} your nerves nor your liver. But the week to be collected, « tamped, those ‘left | 8 A ghipped, &c. Iam the mother of threw | fi wome and | neta | more satistyin oh, no, It wamn't there; it must | food as well as olothes that keep#| nourishment and yet provides only 4|drink recommended by mest aucnane a u ; hat there ls no Ue between th have been at the Duchess of Port-|ys warm, There gre but four things ‘ t are emonade, Don't ma ory peldier boys overseas. My boys are my |life over thee ant fi Mrmeecc ine | cn successful sap analoher knowa » bee , yf Bork | per cent, of fat, whereas @ thick| ties is lemonade. Don't make it very all, but other boys are thelr mothers’ at breach leaves ample room| the simple, childlike fuith every man | ‘nd's” &c. &c., till the poor, bedrag- jWhich will raise the temperature Of | steak or mutton or pork chop will| sweet. A glass of cool but not heavily We Well. Therefore don't be selfeh about ey follows | haw in the woman who soothes hia {Std simple snale would count Venus the pody—the state of the thermome-| produce five times as much bodily| iced water drunk ry hour or so letters, Give thom all a chance to get the life of & soldier mites| vanity, and she holds no autopsies |'erself a poor exchange, ter, exercise, warm clothing and thc| neat, Veal contains only 7.9 per cent./on a sweltering day will save rane MM Me HH, O40 miles never hearing howe dear to! over past mistakes. Flattery ia her| Thereafter, whether the talk is of| food we eat, If you continue to feed|o¢ fat and most soupa not over 5. a hurry call for the doctor. Get Mell Fram Seldier | then, SEE 8 MOM From | ole weapon, but in order to make it}movies or of Mesopotamia, she yearng | the human furnace with unnecessary | chic esss, milk, potatoes, bread,| Even if you can well afford to buy 4 rots A SOLDIBR'S SISTER ; toward him with a wistful, wonder- | fuel during hot weather, you will cec- h vegetables and fresh fruits are | hs : : d ‘ °R'S SISTPR, | effective she must firat impress him |towa A | . fresh vegetables and fres are|bacon at its present soaring prices, tel teipalidheed Mert who h No Mail im Nine Weeks. with the power dnd value of the flat. }ing “What do you think, Mr, Breeze,” | tainly be subject to rush of blood to] aiso the proper diet for hot days,|don't eat it with your morning eggs, in 4 Bear sicos peated seas and are coy, | 72 the Rditn of Te Evening Wrtd faa and hangs upon his fa he answer) the bead, heat prostration or kindred | with plenty of cool, fresh water| for this contains 622 per cent, hen i pcon-| My boy has been gone eight or nine or first effort is directed toward |as if Moses spoke a new revelation |ilis, Heat prostration 1s usuaily| thrown in for good measure, Ent|units. Doesn't it make your temmer: rt stantly being urged at every turn to weekly wna ne een So her first effort : " x : pe fi Noten et seeelved any she is a person| {rom Mount Sina caused by eating or drinking things | spinach whenever you can. It is rich| ature rise just to read about it? Do Write often, even to soldiers whom we) mail yet. All other mothers get mail, convincing him that she is a per Ae not eat too much of anything. Over. do not know, that it gets a little tire: | but 1 have about lost hope, We write of unusual charm and position—po-| Perhaps the man snatcher stalks | that provide the body with too muchlin mineral salts, has but 3 per cent. celine suai ct tradi toe beak GO imme when coe koows from experience | Wort some ee ee eee 70M JNM’ sition, in most cases, being more im-| him at @ dance where he‘is more or|heat—then Increasing the abnormal of heat-producing qualities to the iy not wise in hot weather. Too rapi ee oe age | Won't some one look after our boy? rad thas Mf you do write they never get 4 MOTLLaR, portant than charm, For while women! leas happily sitting out @ fox treat! blood pressure thus brought about by pound aad ite bulk acta ae @ broom / / «| eating ie Likew! By Roy L. McCardell we visited there, when Uncle Henry wasn't very gracious either at our coming and hinted very broadly every day he'd be glad if we left.” “Well.” asked Mr. Jarry “shall I pack his soiled shirt, his bottle of bitters, his paper collar and his extra bono collar button in his blue telescope valise, throw it out of the window and tell him to follow it?” “Oh, I wish you could,” sald Mra. Jarr wistfully. “But I suppose we must repress such natural longings! “No, what I wanted to tell you is that you must take him out. Clara Mud- ridge-Smith 1s going to call in this evening before she goes away for the summer.” “Uncle Henry won't mind her. Why take him out?” asked Mr. Jarr, “Well, I mind him,” said Mrs, Jarr, “Clara Mudridge-Smith puts) on enough airs, with her fine clothes and her motor car and her apartments in the Highcosta Arms, since she married her silly old husband! 1 Jon't want her to have something else to twit me about in that catlike way she has of scratching while she purrs, What a quaint character your Uncle eats ‘ Tecan bear her Saying it! “Shave Uncle Hen A ry’s whiskers, have im clothed by her husband's expen. Sive tailors and he'll be a Oner look- 2s man than old Smith, And, even now, he's Not as much of a bore, In fact, Uncle Henry is rather an ine resting old fellow," ventured Mr, ’ Jarr, “Well, my intereat | abated, and as he whiskers, and as he pensive tallors, and Gon't intend to take hi can get him out befor, two-faced Clara Mudr bere!” This being final, Mr, Ja an air of nonchalance, front room and after remarked: “Let's take a little wi Henry. What say?" “I don't think 1 keer for : it," Uncle Henry, “Been on the ean day, and my boots hurt my feet on account of the hard sidewalks, Think T'll take ‘em off, anyhow,” ssh!" whispered Mr, Jarr, “] ‘ let Mrs, Jarr hear us. But ane! the corner, has got in some Jersey applejack!" senuine n him has rather won't shave bis Won't go to ex. as you and J m to them, you e that deceittut idge-Smith gets rr, affectin: returned to the @ few minutes alk, Uncle At these words Uncle Henry'g ceased hurting him and the two parted, But, of course, they ran into that charming young maj Mrs, Mudridge-@mith at the “ - a

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