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EE _ | j | } ' WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1918 “U.S. Planes Raid Berlin,” | May Be News We Will Read When Super-Aeros Start Getting Under Way at Mineola, Great Air Cruisers Wili Skim Across Atlantic and Spread Berlin in Ruins, Is Vision of Writer Who Takes a Peepat the Future—How an Account of the Exploit Might ARRACKS SPORTS DRAWN FOR THE EVENING WORLD BY LANCE CORPORAL E. KIRK, CARTOONIST FOR “TREAT ’EM ROUGH,” OFFICIAL TANK CORPS PAPER, CAMP COLT, GETTYSBURG, PA. Read, as Told in Despatches Yet to Be Written. By Willis Brooks Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) IANNI CAPRONI, inventor of the great Capront bombing planes, G predicts that airplanes equipped with engines equal in power to those of a medium-sized steamship and capable of carrying 4 hundred tons instead of the 1,000 pounds now carried, will be devel- oped within three years, (Special Despatch.) MINEOLA, L, 1, Aug. 6, 1919.—The largest airplane ever seen here mysteriously left Mitchel Aviation Field just after daybreak this morning. One high official, a civilian, whose name 1s withheld, would say only that “America has already accomplished what everybody a year ago thought would take three years.” The crow, it was learned, included several pllots, navigators, mechant dians and at least one high officer of the Signal Corps. Large stores of gasoline, of] and other supplies were taken aboard, This giant machine of the triplane) type is said to have a wing span of | Reichstagegebaude, in which sat the more than 200 feet, with one main| Bundesrat (Mederal Council) and the engine and one auxiliary Reichstag (Imperial Parliament) * operate each of the three propeliers.| ‘The Ministry of Posts, at the motor to cor- Rumor says it has a new landing de-|Der of Mauerstrasse and Leipsiger- vice, a reverse propeller which|Strasse, and the Reichsversicherung- samt (State Insurance centre) were brings it to a stop in @ much re- duced space. Also it is said to be provided with a recently improved partially destroyed and the Zeughaus (armory) completely so direction finder and the latest bomb At tidam the circle of palaces sighting apparatus, making it pos and parks surrounding the city suf y.sible to hit almost invariably a small |fered most, Some large factories in target from a great height. The now|the heart of the city were reduced silencer worked to perfection, The|to ruins. Royal Palace at the hum of the engines could hardly be|north end of I Brucke, the great buildings of the “Lehrbataillon,” the |Marbie Palace in New Garden on the | Heil » and the former pala of tlally choked down this plane can|Prince Fre Charles of Prussia easily make an a age of 100 miles |at Klein-€ among the an hour. At this rate it could reach | structures d ‘Paris early evening, or s heard 3,000 feet away. Local experts estimate that three of its six engines running par- with erick lenicke troye are to-morrow Despatch.) Berlin, if that be its destination, b Pat haa vr. Soiainhon Paatihd fore daylight next morning. |bombed Berlin. and Potsdam this (Specie) Cable Despateb.) _|morning landed here just before dark © AN AMERICAN PORT IN {this eveni Instantly all Parts FRANCE, Aug. 6. 1919.~A_ prodig-|fiocked to the landing field fous American air cruiser arrived and| | Although an offictal reception to the bomber's crew is being arranged for left here to-night. to-morrow, the streets to-night are be the one reported to have filled with impromptu parades, from Hempstead Plain, L. 1, yester- | headed by every available band in the It is supposed to sailed city. Hastily made transparen¢ er re Despatch) Jevidence French gratitude to Americ ig) {Fu from window. PARIS, Aug. 7, 1919 (2 P. M)~ |g stars and Stripes are scon every Berlin and Potsdam were bombed | where this morning, according to reports re-| ‘The crew of the great bomber con- * -eived he Switze ‘ons of (dole by the censor), mived bers vin Bwitseriand. | Neer in command (name do- T high ‘explosives were dropped with |ieted) says they encountered no seri- such precision that many of the Gov-|ous difficulties in crossing the At- P ernment offices and imperial resi-|lantic. | There was little | driftage ai Pets ex were de. [Some delay was occasioned by sov Genoese in the tw a : eral experimental changes of stroyed. Other residential portions | tide to feel out the best atmosphe |conditions, palatial | winds fully made | _ were spared Berlin's but the help of the up for this bh) trade great street of het goalie (Special Cable Dew public buildings, Unter den Lin AMSTERDAM, Aug 1919 (mid is strewn with the ruins of the |,,, populace of Berlin, par-| Royal the Admiralty, the /+ covered from the panie which Ministry of Commerce, the Ministry | has previlled ipa fll coy Be var, 5 is sf Public |MSNt besieging the Prussian Landt of War, the Ministry of Public) iiding in Albrechtstrasse, where the Works, the Palace of Prince Frede-| Kaiser, the Chancellor, most of the rick Leopold, the Palace of the Im- | Ministers of the Imperial Government Forel peror V yed 1 Office {and many members of the Reichstag jure assembled. ‘The people are of one iilam I ir demand perial Chan r, the and the palace of FE t buildings de are the Jany price ‘Insignia of Their Sweetheart’s Outfit “Sunburned” on Pretty Girls at Beach! Die Prion ate, HE startling innovation has just started at hton Beach by a trio of beautiful mermaids whose sweethearts are serving in Unele Sam's forces overseas, Old Sol, the ruler of the beach during the| hot su has been called wpon te in showing to ever th ure sweethearts of sold lhe inventive maiden hay the ordinary courtplaster and cut out ia of the ret ment or ¢ on to which their sweethearts belong. These are placed in oon spicur ured parts of the anatomy When the swim is over and the coat of tan { juired the plaster are removed leaving the white mark edged by t an Upon their skin ‘i can they parade at the ball in the evening appropriately and wearing the :+"nory of their most beloved where those w k may see. The photo shows the trio of inventive maider . othy Walker, Gladys Maynes and Reba Kanxors. They are Miss Dor- is for peace at] TH’ MAJOR SEZS Y'GOTTA SweeP UNDER Y'BUNK EVERY MORNIN'= | AINT Goin’ TA DO YORE WOIK ALL TH’ TIME- YO JANITOR! GET Y'SHOVEL GOIN'- WE WANT SOME STEAM UP HERES GET A MOP SPIKE AN' WRAP (T AROUND HIS NECK -_— Aw! WHATTA Y MEAN? YRE JANITOR OF THis JOINT AINT CHA? you Te “eM SPIKE How OFTEN bye WANNA GUY T'SWEEP? | SWEP" UNDER | MY BED LAS’ MONTH! », HEY Kip! TAKE AN — €ven 7 SAYS THIS yy IN HIS SLEEP b AY, a WY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1918 \Eat Plenty of Piain Food, _ | And Exercise in Open Air, Advises Mrs. Vernon Castle This Rule She Follows and Finds Beneficial to Her Health and Appearance—Overeating of Rich Food as Harmful as Excessive Drinking, and a Round of Golf, a Gallop on a Horse, or a Lively Walk Better Than Prescribed Exercises in an Indoors, Gymnasium. what they ought to be. I have no desire to eat rich foods in quanti- ties. One plentiful—and plain—mea) a day should satisfy any one, It j48 most natural and proper that that meal should be eaten at the dinner hour. It shouldn't always be the same, and it needn't always be extremely simple. An elaborate dinner—if it is a good one—will do no more harm {if it isn't a regular thing. Alternate that with the dinner which consists of simple food and you'll be quite all right, if you're like me, But rich luncheons and heavy breakfasts must be indulged in along with \dinners. With me my lifelong breakfast been coffee and a bite, while | juncheon is, more often than anything else, just graham crackers and milk, I am firmly of the belief that most of the ill-health and unfitness of humans is due to overeating. I am even incluined to agree with the opin- ion of my husband, who often said that over-eating did more harm than excessive drinking and was much the worst habit, except that a man couldn't eat himself into a condition when he would beat his wife. ‘As to drinking habitually and to the slightest excess, women simply cannot do it without paying a fearful price. Men, some of them, seem to be to do it witho suffering re from the effects, but that m T the matter of eating, I am fortunate to have inclinations which are not able and soda under similar con- here is a rush of super- blood to capillaries where back to the s the reaction r and weakness ‘There can be one question. n re habitually in ng drink and p their health nd good looks. If I had a daughter coming to womanhood, her rektail would be her last; ar is one mother to whor tion is borna here and she he it, I shall have |done a good deed in writing this; and so I'm going to make myself py in believing that several are ng to see it and several private to sweet young ow iperance lect: re going tc Plenty of physical exercise of the right sort to suit the individual ts absolutely essential to good health and fitne Again I seem to be tell- \ing you $ that have been dinned nto your ears since nursery days— but what awful and absurd mistakes people make about exercise. What Sood is exercise in a closed gymna- sium, compared with exercise in the open air? There are women who aking costly and er gymna- im courses who would be getting Much greater benefits in hanging out the walks, n exercise, f pure air ng some- the wa rr sweeping To get real countable to the sturdier physi land differing temperament wf m A man can carry the effects of nol wh n must pay for r indu effect which ly apparent, a here is a vast differ ence and many things but in nothing |than this, A man takes a peg after a round of golf. T' just the m n physical are she most always. Ked lungs fill r instead of on a horse, a g00d lively 5 companion are pictur- that will 00d color and fitness. » Ine,) between men women in more | ¢; e whiskey gives him ulus he wants—or, st seem: Let me ask man who reads this what the effect 1s when she tried a high ball or! Cowr to do so. Woman ‘a Many Talents Will Devote Them All To Canteen Work in France “T you going to France?” cities where munition plants employ | nix i Tears skidded down his wrinkled mush, he was a lonely yap. We lamped a strap sniper who had a bouquet of Anybody in each hand and four straps behind each ear. who Ho'd left the crool world years ago, weary of its strife, @ strap from an orphan Js a fathead of the fattest kind, We are after And gumshoed in the subway to lead a hermit’s life the strapiteers, saamameted ‘oes oes The cloistered years flat-wheeled by in silent, solemn spans, DESERTERS | Unbroken by the rattle of ec 1c subway fans; It pains the spot where our heart should be to see our patients Phe spiders spun their filmy res serenely in the subb, doueriina ihe @iracborsugs top ihe Ulises ‘The hermit gf the subway was sure one lonesome dud, We realize that there are ats on the L and no seats in the subway \ HUT--why desert the old Strapborough for a measly lil’ sea He hadn't lamped a single face In more than twenty years, Yhis is the time when all Americans should STAND togethe All he ever spotted were elbows, straps and cars. HBODORE P. BARK He hadn't clasped the hand of one friendly home town sap, 4 pL SSeS RE ics Because they needed both hands to dangle off a strap We want to apologize for stating that the weather !s Ekkxxz | — For twenty years he had been hiding in a Harlem slocal, For twenty years the hermit was a poor old homesick yokel, Umpghyz Woobluubbuxx, but that 1s the way we got it straight from a subway guard. \ Smith askec ss| Women ypsy Smith asked Mi Miss Babcock was born in Ashaway, ra Elizabeth Babcock,! Rr. 1, and a des ant of the Bab- after one of his ks wh m the “old ‘ stirring talks, coun Island in »w Miss Bab-) 204). aan cock had been /athlete ar She recely wanting to go to|her ba and masters’ degree France and do|#! t hers’ Ci Columbia f h “bit" for iT Univer ad most finished |e 4 a a . her cou n war work An indication of the season's dress | women, posed for the camera while{ The photograph shows, left to] Miss Alberta Crafts, Miss Adeline} \ time and — was |thon's . in society's summer gathering place|they were distributing “smokes” to] r Mrs, Josephine Wilmerding, | Briggs. Although no similarity of!” pessoa for | rota ; Jis to be found in the above photo-|100 marines, guests at the birthday Talbot Hanan, Miss Vivian| design is noted in the dresses, they Ce H SOPRSENDLYS of and was its |graph of six well known young| party of Mrs. John H. Hanan Baroness G. H, Dahlup,|all show the charm of originality. | ean i a) eee ee. et ifuaesapin ete “neste 2 pian aati ag Sy ap Ramet ap SRS ms sees = rs : | ~\ well as the next|¢!lt en numer- | Whoseer\ one,” was her an-| National ( ary Edue, OUR MoTTO: LATER EXTRA THE WEATHER: | sw ; th en “oR : ~y ” ee , 7 r | > she is all packed and ready i ur ntative o: E Pluribus Strappus gS =? am ( EKKXXZ UMPGHYZ go for the Y, M. C, A. as @ canteen |! nin of Columbia We Ne ul d) WV LN i) } WOOBLUUBBUXX! we But she is only being loaned At student campaign planned Be } A WY it \ >) | | B A y peta wc by John R ware “United We Stand’ » YY C ~) Qe Fe eter tne| Misa uatioe were he = : cha . - - = ~~ | living and social conditions of women |** ty of the PT T. 2 a Wt \, now , the Governmer uder of t o-Club ot te ee | Edited. by ARTHUR (BUGS) BAER eee r turned to the Y, W. GC. A.| Island Nor ‘School A tbe Bhode | —__— — ) ve time me lat Stielieaenaadieiidals —————— 1 that ‘nization turned to M » held t we n’s tennis cham | STRAP SNIPING THE HERMIT OF THE SUBWAY Babcock because as had the /Planehip at the Moses Brown 94 nool q t 8 " rn necessary experience. In this capac- of the New Bi perelage of | We regret to state that strap sniping still continues on the Bron The hermit of the subway was dangling off a strap, jty. Misa Babcock bas visited allt Aha Te ae nv nserva- | For twenty years he hadn't hea For subway guards dish up a 1 hf native la re spoken. ash of Fiji and Hoboken. The hermit of the subway read one of Sh About the million billion things in all the The hermit of the subway quoth, “By That is the first bull I ever saw what sign subway Hne Bunion's sacred corns! 1't have no horns! These were the last words ever launche His soul may have travelled north It may be in the subway, it may be in the L But we'll bet it's dangling from a strap in that well known place where | the cellulofd soup hound chased tho asbestos alley rabbit 60 far an@ i go fast that he had to pay two fares, BRONNIX, { from out the hermit's mouth, it may h scooted south, “ :