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EDITORIAL PAGE Boe IDYANTNY OZAllln: Wednesday, July 24, 1918 fetane, | Sayings of Mrs. Solomon’ (Tim New York TARL ASIURD BY OPH PULITZER sur by the es Publishizg Company, Nos. 63 te : = | B y: H € | en R fo} wl an d k Bow, New York. | r . Prosifent, 63 Pak Tow. : Verily, Verily, a Man’s Mind Is Made Up, in Advance, Con Sr meeretary, ot Park fi eal ant e Ag A Oem f ; ; | cerning Everything—Save Marriage; but a Woman's a } | Mind Is Never Quite Made Up Concerning y aii et ors ae Sia Anything—Except Marriage! VOLUMI Copyright, 1918. by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) ¢ : ae vty : |X JORILY, verily, my Daughter, all the ways of a man are wonderful ~ in bis own eyes! But the ways of a woman—who cam fathom “THE FINAL PHASE.” them? WO million American troops in France by next fall appears » result of War Department plans outlined by Seere Behold, I watched a woman sorting melons in the market place, And I observed that she selected first the worst of the lot and cast it aside. And again she found the next to the worst, and then the third poorest, and cast them aside, and so on until there remained but ONE melon, And this the woman purchased and carried home with her in her knitting bag. And the curses of the fruit vender followed afte@\ her, but she smiled tranquilly as she departed. the su tary Baker yesterday. That means that before the present fighting season ends Gen » to use at least double the American force now ac-} ittle, reckoning the latter at about one-quarter of| Foch will b engaged in | the first million Americans in Trance. hters are now being transported across the Atlantic at the rate of 300,000 a month, the Parliamentary Secretary to the “Brit Shipping Ministry told the House of Commons yesterday If 250,000 American troops thrown into the fighting Have created a balance by which the Commander-in-Chief of the Al'ied Americar Sano, ” And I watched a damsel in a ballroom. And lo! I saw her turn away her partners one by one; first thes’ forer is heen enabled to take the initiative and produce in ten day ‘| awkwardest, and then the stupidest, and then the homeliest, until there such tremendous and far-reaching ehangesa in the situation on the | was but ONE left. westorn what may be expected from a rapid doubling of th And with him she danced joyously all evening, though the others fob American fivlting strength in France, backed by 3,000,000 mor lowed her with looks of reproach and wonderment. Americans who will be in training in this country by Jan. 1 next? | And I observed a woman among men. And behold, 1 saw her cast her lures without discrimination among: the eligible and the Ineligible alike. And when a sufficient number of them had been blinded by her beautyg or gas-attacked by her wiles and her flattery, or overcome by the shrapnel of her wit, she took them prisoner and proceeded to discharge them, on®, by one—first the MOST impossible and then the most ineligible, and so oA | until she had but ONE wooer left. | And HIM she married and was content. The war correspondent of the Cologne Gazette answers the que tion when he says: ‘ow begins the fina) phase of the war, For the enemy 1s now pging us to put Yorth our very utmost effort.” The final phase has begun, and indications are that it may dc fast and far before next winter puts a check on extended war operations war will necessarily end this year. But the first of American force been applied with such telling effect, f the American people rapidly to inerease that pressure to almost any intensity is go undoubted, that, despite oscillations, the scale seems certain to hang heavier and heavier against Germany with each succeeding month, to almost And behold! T said unto a woman of Babylon: “How shalt thou cast thy VOTE, my Daughter, when the time cometh ?* . And she said: ‘Shush! “For lo! I am ‘flirting’ will ALL the parties. “And each one of them thinketh that I am ‘HI “But when the psychological moment arriveth I shall judge their cana didates one by one, and cast aside first him of whom I MOST dfsapproveg, |and so on down the list, until but ONE candidate remaineth, | “and for Him shall I cast my vote, whosoever he may be! “For I know that one of them MUST be chosen!” Verily, verily, political candidates are like unto melons and hus ‘pands. NONE of them is perfect! + And a woman can only “pick over” what is offered and select the best of the lot and the LEAST of all “evils”! t | ‘And NO man can know until the last moment how the women will votes For a man's mind {s made up in advance concerning everything savag { necte | marriage, but a woman's mind is never QUITE) made up concerning any -” thing EXCEPT the fact that she will marry! | Selah. + NO MERCY FOR THIS SORT! HE ARREST of eighteen raincoat manufacturers charged with swindling the Government by putting shoddy material, infe- rior cement and uncemented seams into raincoats supplied the Army goes to show that Federal authority is alive to the duty of ‘protecting the Nation's fighters from the meanest kind of man the country harbors. The raincoat makers involved in this scandal hold Government contracts totalling $10,000,000, which is one-fourth the aggregate - value of contracts let to date for furnishing raincoats for the Atmy. The Quartermaster’s Department has been receiving complaints from Gen. Pershing regarding the quality of raincoats supplied. The American Commander in Chief finally demanded that no more such coats be sent to France. Investigation disclosed the same old sordid methods of fraud—|-———— i substitution of sleazy material, workmanship—with the usual a Bec Jer i Co tay aps I c W y Oo Y k G 1 rl Ty p e S Yo u K n Oo W | T h (; J a ie ie Fa ml | By Roy L. McCardell ors and contingent fees for intermediaries in the securing of cou- y va ’ {fy about) worldly. Of course, them folks that treo No. VI.—THE GIRL IN SEARCH OF A CAREER Art students are not so fortunate. 1918, by Tue Prem Pubiisbing Oe , “Wal, you needn't get hu ano | worsdlzi” Gt cas heen tole, tha ta. ry ‘ People expect them, some how, at (The New York Brening Worst) it, young man!” snapped the old lady. | waa very music jayed ‘Lida Lee, Whenever a nation has put through a colossal job of the sort the By Nixola Greel ey-Smith some time to make a living. Art may LD Mrs. Dusenberry came into | “You might be doing wuss than play- aaa ik uh a et hetlen United States is now bu ith, it has had i Copyright, 1018, by The Prew Publishing Go, (The New York Evening World.) be Jong but music is eternal in its the parlor of the Jarr flat and| ing a steam pianner. I Hs ie a| sic i ei nere x s its i rah ia sh : c pr! ten ort oO: sic. eg) all usy with, it has had to deal with a greater or DR clothes proclaim the «irl in] Novaes throng New York. One en-| preliminaries, The art student has a saw Mrs, Gratch and Mr.|wonderful instrument, and 1 of:en |ort of music. We ginerally stuc less amount of such swindling. search of a career, Sheisnever| counters them here and there at| few. happy years at the League, a| Pinkston, Mrs, Gratch's husband wonder rich people don't have ‘ein Moody and Sankey's hyuitis, Americans to-day demand short shrift for it trimly tailored, seldom com. |juncheons—over-regal Brunhildes for| fling or two at the Fa Ball, and (advanced wives do not take thelr| tootin’ fer ‘em of an eventn’ when all) | “But how about the war songs 4 Chasis thei Goreraiment da ted h ‘ 2 pletely hooked. If] whom some fond and fatuous father | then there are persons base enough to | husband's names) were there. is quiet ang Teattul of way: t saat yr wad (on ta nian,” copllaatiear f mt is bad enough. Cheating soldiers at sho i musical, her | or husband dreams and toils, Meeting | wonder why she doesn't go into ad-| ‘The old lady asked if there wasto States Army don't have ‘em lola lady, lly ‘Round the Flag the front with paper-soled shoes or leaky raincoats—making profit Nfe is tn constant] these men, hearing their pathetic] vertising or fashions, if she can't get|be any music, Mrs, Gratch sniffed | the Germans with gavel enedsan cite of be danger from tax!- | credos sal ’ ‘amp, ‘at the knees of the women | anything else to do. ‘Then, too, you|disdainfully, while Mr, Dinkston,| “So you like muste or notse, Mrs cabs, for how £1 | they support, one wonders sometimes | are expected to sell a picture now and | poet, philosopher and philanthropist—|Dusenberry2” asked Mr. Jarr, whow she be expected to) why any man stays away fromchurch.| then. Philistines. among your ac-|all endeavors that’ seldom pay— Was very fond of the plain old lady. perceive those daily | so often I have thought as I listened | quaintance may even suggest that you| clutched firmly at the piano stool on) “I always wanted a parlor organ, perils of life whileltg their proud boastings: “It's all] do portraits. In one way or another|which he was sitting as though re- but somehow we could never afford | all her thoughts are] vient to believe in her, but why re-| your friends put you to work. solved he'd fight to'the last against it,” was the reply. “Nowadays one| focussed OM HET) ice Jonah and the whal If you write, your product must|@ny musical interruption to his ready can get all kinds of musical in- glorious debut » To be sure, the girl in search of a| have the baptism of print before you | {OW of conversation, ‘struments by paying a dollar down thy Metropolllan ©" career, at least the musical girl, gets|are taken seriously, And if you model] “Some other music bealdes chin and a dollar a week all the rest of| ae rots ae a smattering of foreign languages} everybody expects you to exhibit be-|music would be nice,” ventured Mr. Lae uy in ae per | Indoor Baseball Gamew ME. way twenty yeare DS gs | oven if she forgets the English lan-| fore you can be called a great sculp-|Jarr, “Anybody here rag a little?" | families in Indiany only had accor- i saa MME. TROTZKY AND HER MILLION, |_ anit orton sm asia arlene or quane, and her epelling, in her native| ton, ‘Nobody takes as an excuse tor| ‘Doesn't that young feller play?” | diona ef they was pore and parior) Played With Fruit. coat over some a plenale | | ’§ lac! O a a y, cans ef they was rich. Did you ever ay A Ab ‘ ner | tongue, has all the originality her|a woman writer's lack of success that |asked Mrs, Dusenberry, pointing at organs ¢ h. Did y | ME. idpcthnec , wife of the Bolshevik War Minister of Rusaia, hand me-down fron SAY Ghee talent lacks she can’t get ahead because she is a|Mr. Dinkston, “He looks just like a hean‘My Pore Nelly Gray, played on Jar Rubbers. was reported yesterday to have arrived in 8 RPT bakit ad rartilaael tit ante pera ’ ) n Sweden with out of their discomfort and suffering—is a dastardly crime that sickens the people of the United States and rouses the and action. Let the law do its utmost to these army contract swindlers. Public opinion onght to find ways to make the country too hot f others like them. : sit mp, ‘Tramp, the Boys Are Marching,’ and tech, bute they'll all be popler again in Murepew ‘cept to one party, and that's thaw Kaiser.” And all present, even the grouchwy Mrs. Gratch, agreed with the prosa phetic old lady from Indiana. —o m to anger | hw bellef that it once! In my next incarnation T intend to| 00d Woman. ‘Told anywhere aave in| feller I seen play the steam pianner— 2n accordion t ised ne ner, ANY of the thrills of baseball upward of $1,000,000 to spend on propaganda rae aes taine Vincent Astor. who | make studying for a carcor my tite| musical oF theatrical circles, much a| ‘Way Down Upon the Swance River'| “Them high-faluting op'ry tunes dou nny. Valaxparlanseaibytralce Me; same dey tha Btute Dergctnent ot Wy : see se Mato war work. ‘Thus ar-| work, And [think Tam going to pick| tale 18 hooted. Yet I have heard it| it was he played—in @ circus p'rade | bring, ars y fruitejar rubbers at a bourd y ‘ partment at Washington received | *°! - for any chance| music. Because no matter how long | even from church alngere. in Taylor Township, Indiany, before | 40¢ igid Gait tat canralent “aA lamund eae ey x ; rayed, she is ready : Sale further confirmation of the poverty, starvation and financial ruin| opportunity inualtar on ulAy: I should live without making good, 1] So if Iam to live again I want to be |! come to New York, |, Mrs already engulfing the Russian people, should be sure of a little group of} a musical student, and IT pray that! “I must disclaim any efficiency as tiently, This was asia at 42 by 2% inches in size and the ple who would always believe in| Fate will throw some fierce operatic | an extorter of cacaphony on the calli- | Versttion away from tie na diamond is 121-2 inches wide. The not, For operas |e and go about among men preach-| ogre in my path, so I may toat}ope,” said Mr. Dinkston sourly, ‘The | terested her. = Mr. T een Nee “and the real{ ing the gospel of my musical great-l through life, supported, believed in,| technician who edified you upon tie | his lips. Listening dries the throat t ness. and with a perfect alibi, occasion in question was not I." But Mr. Jarr was interested in these nd at sym nase teat ee oz Rm ita Bb ee se shiaebaediee) details of another day. So he re- marked | and delicatessens of the Bronx 1 know one ambitious girl who W h | Y N k D) “It was too bad youggever got a The former Czar of all the Russias is dead—deposed imaprisaced’|cor ace sa aah Seat fe} S our amesakeceér | parlor organ, if you wet fond of mu- pean : rk , oned,Jon save for tho fact that it has} : i ae ; =e ; murdered, Be Mi th has disappeared, his wife and children are|rought hundreds of foreign musi-| Famous Characters in History and Fiction Who Have Borne | ithe, BAG int. 10re wore Charen Gielg Ucuhen'T daa lteanl Bina WAtiva prisoners, = / » Russias—follc ae wawal cla o New York, making the way i hap Pe ; arney, aries @ Bold, Charles . r <a the Ru las—following revolution and betrayal +) restate my een SRR e ea the Same Given Name as Yours lox and Charles, Duke of Orleans,|aving talking machines and plan- all but Janded them in Germany's lap ge Re s q y elf: ‘Wal, they’re are now destitute of food| she regards it, therefore, as one more \Many years ago America rang with | nem, lsay to mysel 5 and money, tacle in tho path of genius—one | By Mary Ethel McAuley \the name of Charley Ross, a little|Tsht, but gimme a $80 parlor organ, Gratch rocked back impa-| indicated by the sketch, Tho t You see her among the standees at A couple of years ago Mme, Trotzky, then known as Mrs. Ana-|'he Opera House, if she is not very tolie Braunstein—her husband not having then « name of T'rotzky th bide then stamped his Preferred| are the movies of music, ‘rolzky upon the age—was spending what was left of hie|music lovers are to be fe $10 a week income after the rent was paid in the curbstone markets| Phony concerts, re musical and you a us and oratorios. i Copyright, 1918, by ‘The Frew Publishing Co, (The Now York Evening World.) with a good tremolo stop to it, a-play- Bu the Trotzkys are doing well, \more detriment to her career, | CHARLE: ites aan chariee cans. tev whe ool Kidnapped fore le me Fatie amnees ha Balt Which proves again, it’s a poor revolution that can’t This career may be of two kinds es : Charles Baudelaire was a French 4 eae S| knowed was too busy to give way to ] ition that can’t revolve the| vor there firat, the career of tho | HARLES has been a name great found, ees . LS ne cotta achieved by a few hundred earnest in music nor painting. In music |!n india, wher i ~lages in history was Charles xu of | °° sire nee ” “| top of the board, and the width of Letters From Pp ae and gifted students out of the hordes] we have but two of the name tha: Hee SHE ABS DO. DORR Rie | Sweden, As a boy he did not show | °” Heraeire BATE: DION EME ALIVE hg Dane lines $4 11-8 inches, “The eo e that crowd New York annually, and| stand out, both Frenchmen—Charles | '/ters ro wy himself to be disposed to state mat-|\ > : Rin finan aa ne coach's box is 3-4 b inches, Thin " howe et Mall) can ask now. They ecas go.o09 | second, the career of studying for a|Gounod and Charles Satnt-Sacns dati of Binsr Alea FOS into) ce out cored over the expiults of POD RE NERS SAIN Aa ihe home nigie suould: be fiEhan Te ths Mébed at Tee Brettae Wei men & week, Why not see that their | career. which may last ten, twenty, |Gounod's greatest work was “Faust,” ratios Peguy, French writer, xitiea |Aleander the Great When warlScn'Ps to. Shoe ‘ation or ‘Holt (square. Picture hooky are screwed As @ Constant reader of your paper | Ml 18 transported in quick time too | thirty years-—Jjust » long as the] but be also wrote “The Redemption in Pegg ele Charles Tal leyrand | broke between Sweden and Denmark] 1). wort,’ so most anybody could tet |"? the board, and the various plays allow me to ak your help for our dear | AN ANXIOUS MUTHU™' | Money from homs holds out, Remit-/and “Mors at Vit" Baint-Baens has) ot nian who | charics assumed command of his) wnat they wu mot aes Sou a arked in the illustration, ‘The boys 4,500 mi ¥ us well as for(TM= Soldier Got None of tty many, | “Nees WFuns for the first few years] written many oratorios and eytn- | P48 penelibeaeen the French, (2?my, and also assumed those Spare] 71") olsical family by the ‘dellutle played by two persons, ‘Taey thelr anxious mothers, 1 received «|! Y& Malior of The Evening Want @""lerom father’s grocery store, are con- | phonies ee ap ver eaetad ny es tan-like customs which distinguished | (0 1 hyuent to number the ebildren’s | Std ut ten feet away and toss ies from my boy dated June 16 on ALE » it that soldiers in France | inued from husband's pharmacy. For! 1) 146 world of painting we have rate ee iat ia rains him the rest ot is Nite He Fav UP! einger nails when they took their|! Sr Jar Fubbers: uatll ne rings 48, trom “omewhere in ¥rance.” recelve thelr mail? Gen, Por.| the carcer of studying for @ career) 008° Non Pe lian; Host Bie Bead, and tourists in Tandem tthe use of wine, and at night slept! fis june on them charts,” three outs,” “three strikes,” &e, If He writes that he has not heard in|*/D® says to send ch letters to |doe8 Rot halt the emotional develop: | ae eat ne a verioany ran an ‘ he piace "®lon the ground or on a floor, with only |" " Mae Rte a hook marked t" is ringed the More than two weeks from home, )t@ soldiers, but what is the «se | ment of its followers, They marry, aan poreaeenny ecpeas fae, aereesree execution took place, Rik iba MPAA Hil Hila Arakawa es You didn’ + way Sealine those rubber is removed and placed cn first Bince he left in April 1 write four let-{Won they don't get them? Have | drag through a year or #o of domes: | ON nt ee rat An| Charles Pratt founded the Pratt] of the plainest, and consisted of a| 44y%, or songs Like they sing now?"| base, If the next play is four balls ters a week and send him money, but , Pee Writing ulariy saree or fuup| ticity which they find insipid, sooa | #Fehitect, but also wro! ery 6004) institute; Charles Dana was @ great|ptuo suit with copper buttons. Hardy, | asked Mr. Jarr, the rubber is removed and placed on I don't know if Le gets it. Tam sure eee Lr] wah lay soldier don't | inoculate their husbands with the | ook on mytholoxy. editor,’ and so was Charles Dudley|brave and reckless to the extent of| ‘They had songs justas vulgar, We|first base, The ring on first it would be very little for the country {an influential paper like The Evening | {ver of thelr ambition, and put them] Charles Dickens ts England's first | Warner, Charles Coghlan was one of|folly, he inspired his men with de-|heerd as how sech things was sung] then advanced to sevond ba 4 do by way vf repaying us for our| World will be able to remedy. this | to work for the New York teachers to] novelist, and one critic said of him: jour greatest actors, and Charles Dar-|yotion. His sojourn for three years} with them female minstrel ghows}on, The board may be painted in ate sleepless nights and days filled with! Por mall service, This would be| whom, of course, the musical Wives! te has not only pleased us but has|win sald that we are descended from|in Turkey was one of the freak ad-| which all the men folks sneaked over | tractive colors, and a wire frame with anxiety for the welfare of our poye | pelning the people at home as wou | return, softened the hearts of the whole gen- | monkeys, and wrote a wonderful book | ventures of his life, When he died,|to the Taylor Township Opry House|a net attached to the bottom provided to that they and their mothers re- jjkes to think that they are Teumeien, How many of these hopeful, aging | eration.” Charles Reade was another led “The Descent of Man.” Charles|killed by a stray shot, he was|to hear,” replied the old lady from |to catch the rubbers that miss a hook, . s a all we aM, would-be Galli’ Curcia, Powells and! i0giish Charles and eo waa Charies[Caffin 19 « famoug American art mourned by all his followers rh Indiana, “but they waa considered!—Popular Mechanica, tay RSTRNT 20 soon apg ees Se gh )