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EDITORIAL PAGE Friday, September 6, 1918 =| What Every Woman Dreams - By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1918, by ‘The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Brening World | VERY woman has her “Dream ad q Her particular vision of ‘Perfect Happiness! Once upon a time it may have been a vague and shadowy vision of ideal love, or glittering success, or wealth, or lux+ ury, or a home-——— A life-garden of roses and sunshine, with a Prince Charming always posed somewhere in the foreground, f" By Maurice Ketten it, WIR, br Yor The End ofa Perfect Vacation FSTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER. Wbtighed Daily Except Sunday by the Press Publishing ¢ ai sag 4 “ Park Row, New York. RALPH PULITZER, President, JAN SHAW, ‘Treasurer, 63 JOSEPH PULITZER, Jr. a MEMn Amoriated Prom ip exclusively entitied to the nse tor ramblication of alt ent Tt of not otherwise credited im hia paper and ale the local wewe published “al VOLUME A DEPARTMENT OF INJUSTICE. 3 HERE should be prompt and searching inquiry to lucaie responsi ‘ty for the gross invasion of the rights of the people of New York during the Jast three days in the wholesale arrest of citizens on suspicion of slacking in their duty under the draft law ‘ The Evening World has steadily resented the incessant aspersions +H east upon our community by perfervid females and members of Ama i | teur Patriots’ Associations that it was a draft-dodging, unpatriotic town. The contrary is found to be true. Division Superintendent De Woody himself admits that of the thousands coralle2 in this week's lawless roundup, leas than one-half of one per cent. heve turned out to be real slackers, This is a pretiy good bill of lovalty for a city concerning which {#0 many hard things have been said by observers too ready to assuine | thet every young man out of uniform is a slacker until he is proved But NOW Now, every woman's Dream of Happiness is con+ crete and definite! YOU know what every mother sees above her clicking knitting-needles— The smiling, victorious, glorified face of HIM, it shall look in that supreme, supernal moment when she shall clasp him—HER Boy—in her aching arms again! YOU know what every wife sees, as she gazes down into the flower- face and baby eyes that smile up at her as she goes about her house work— The vision of the perfect day when HE shall come back, covered with medals and glory, and they shall hear his step on the garden path and bis cheery whistle at the gate! YOU know what every sweetheart sees as she gazes down the long white road for the postman— The pictured vision of herself in trailing white beneath a marguerite wedding-bell, with HIM, wind-browned and khaki-clad beside her! And there are other woman-dreams, too ‘The dream “of the tired woman, who visualizes the day of ease and plenty when once again she shall be able to make both ends meet and to t otherwise. STOP counting the pennies— i As a matter of fact the burden of proof ought to lie the other! The dream of the spoiled and frivolous woman, who looks eagerly a. toward the time she shail once more be able to make her yearly trips to i; way round. This is a big city in a big country which is only beginning Baris ahd sped Hes Wibtere on thE RIVIORG ae to work toward a ful] mobilization of its man power. And dream, of the great-souled woman, who looks into the future with a The sight of so many apparently able-bodied young men sti!! passionate, prophetic eyes and sees A DAY of VICTORY and a World at rest—a world in which love and justice and joy shall reign forever, Yes—every woman has her DRBAM! And this is an age in which we make our dreams come true! And now ts the vital moment to DQ it! es For the Fourth Liberty Loan is coming! : It is the pivot on which hangs your FATE, and MY fate, and the fate of the world! Oh, yes, | know! You've bought all the Liberty Bonds you want, and invested in War Savings Stamps and given to the Red Cross, and you'y “got to get some Fal! clothes,” and to move into that new apartment, and to get the children off to school and—and—and"—— And, meanwhile, THEY are over there! out of uniform ought to be reassuring rather than otherwise when it Ys | is remembered that there are already a million and a half in service, | overseas, as many more under arms waiting to be sent and a Selective | Draft steadily at work to keep more millions moving, as fast as tie! | Nation can handle them, toward the front. | Overzealous and impatient critics do not stop to think that Tiresands are not in uniform only because uniforms are not ready! \ Sor them, not because they are unready for uniforms. It should be viewed as one of the most satisfactory provfs of) _| our strength that we have been able to make such gigantic contribu tions of men without impairing the outward show of reserves. Ostensibly the raid involving the high-handed arrest and im aaesieal han ai taatbatiseat nse anette May complaining that | | prisonment of freeborn Americans in the City of New York was under “and that they won't shoot another German until Uncle Sam sends , | ) } the auspices of the Department of Justice. If this be true, the De them some new fall hats, and that they've “done their share’—and all J | partment of Justice has become ieee quite the reverse, | AE iey are there--and YOU are here! ’ F é And YOU sent them there to fight to make your dreams come true! q , AMERICAN SHIPY ARDS BEAT U BOATS. And it's been easy for you, so far, what with the bands playing and P _ the shouting, and the singing, and the waving of Old Glory i | LONG with continuing Allied successes in France comes the significant announcement that submarine raids in American weters during the last three months resulted in losses of less} than one per cent. to American shipping. This despite the fact that attacks upon fishing boats and barges } bear out the report of the skipper of an American fishing schooner | sunk by a U boat, who says the U boat commander told him wireloss| | instructions from Germany were now to “sink everything in sight.” | —— But it’s not pitching in, but STAYING in, that counts! | It's not catching on, but HANGING on, that wins! It's not noise, but deeds--not words, but DOLLARS; not songs, but SELF-SACRIFICE that will bring victory —- And the more deeds and dollars, the more surely and quickly will come the VICTORY! The FOURTH LIBERTY IOAN is COMING! | And it’s‘up to YOU ‘To make your dreams come true NOW! New York Girl. Types ‘You Know |The Jarr Family By Roy L. MeCardel Of seventy vessels destroyed by submarines in American waters ly some twenty were of ocean-going type, their dead weight tonnag amounting to not much over 60,000 tons. " ‘ ae RA OER pes reve | tN prTIEht, 1918, tp. The: Presa Pubeied suggests that we could all order coal | was lighted with electricity. As to American ships, we have the word of Chairman Hurley By Ni 1X0 | a G ree | ey § m it h | % se et M s vanaas : alg (Phe New York Evening World.) | together ‘The 1 dealers y think] “We may be able to scare the coal of the United States Shipping Board that out of 277 seagoing vessels right, 1618. i ‘The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) fortune to establish a col for gives me pleasure to state.! woe know Mr. MeAdoo because we arc | dealers, but you know how the gas i , q ene. & Sonam m we are et | ¢ d com pi yu s said completed in Amotican shipyards during the last year, representing a} NO+ XVIII. The Professional College Girl women adou sixty years ax he, Me. met 32 lworkine for the Liberty, Loan, and | Annee abs ad, ee 5 A f am f ; ee 8. Stryver, “that | nake them giveMis coal resent knew how the gas com- (otal of 1,710,121 dead weight t only four, with an aggregate dc a] A” elt of girl cE a a we are not making a career of being ha eas ; women oll aduates ioariy Doan Gadles League’ 1A| RroRRAtior fell on dull eurs.! pany was. And discussion lulled a bit x : of colleges, graduate, enter & coll graduate at rhaps some justification or . « dozen 4 | t-| While tea and cak yere passed weight tonnage 0,131, were sunk by enemy submarines, to some field of usefulness, College men know and shun the| least excuse for being “chesty } itesuccess, [have dozens and others present lived in apar nile tea and cakes wer eS jozens of requests by letter and te und. Then the telephone rang, when they paid the rent nd Mrs, Stryver returned from tt to |e vcouldn't we get gas for cooking at | announce that Miss Florabelle Flint, de by Mra. ] whole rates or something Like | ficiency expert, was too busy to lint" asked) Mrs, Rangle, “1|ome to the meeting, as she was navan't \ coal range, and our fiat is | installing a card index system if an steam heated in winter, or rather it|}employment agency ra wed to be steam heated, but “Florabelle Flint IS a business Seen eter when there was no|Woman:" cried Mrs. Mudridge-smith, nay WAN “I'm to get 10 per cent. of any bust- At the recollection of how cold their Lene ona her. er nc nts had been during that first No, Tim to wet the per cent., sity all present, save Said Mra, Rangle, “She promised it er, shivered. But even as to me " " “If any one is to get it I'm the one, soon forgetting and nt houses and only paid for coal The shipyards of the United States raised their output ior| , August to 340,000 dead weight tons —114,000 tons better than tie! PS } *aly figures and 60,000 tons above the best-previous month’s record, | hich was made lyst June. profession ‘iege | Pemember that when | was a smal a similar din dd highly critical child, my fi graduate who | SeuUgHE tos tion she | an elderly fem ge man ephone from women who are just permitting — ¢ phone from men w ju women persons 10 forget | that they eyer went to college. It is “In one year,” Chairman Hurley points out, “America hal vie teins beeome the greatest shipbuilding country in the world. Our itr jee , No you may meet \. © ft yards already are building ships enough to warrant the statement,” My Heroine plows that the Americar \rmy in France will be supplied with all the ocean! Vv transportation it requires. If it be conceivable that any part of the German people is still under the impression that German U boats are interfering with the! te zy to become members.” or the wey dutiful commen does not relative by say “After all, she is a college gradu But [ was from Missouri ey educ | This declaration was n Stryver in her own handsomely fur reeely 1 as & preparation for achieve ment, but as an achievement in its Phe room ustn’t let a single one of 1 Mra, Clara M By doing that we will nly difficulty about that view} then. ‘Thousands of college women at if graduating m college | Mave distinguished themselves and | nd of life, life ougnt to ena | COMsequently, possessing other ol oe say oO girl of twe to public attention, they do not have | agente Te Vara, {to be heralded by their friends ae| “But who will we sell Liberty Ronds ‘cine | #Paduates of such and such a coi-|'°"” asked Mra. Jerr apartm lege. ‘Thous wartime ara | {he volte repiled Mrs.| Mrs, siry ield nodding and smiling] they shivered they cried “Yes, ye s the ims a luncheon or | Noize downtown in an | AMS office, Hut wher-|smnith or ft Jever she is, some ingenuous soul is}. sure to whisper to you. Miss Wel. | {tiné but ledby Smith is a high brow graduate “ {2 {hs Ht ull sociation exclusive.” | there. our, “She's a gradu lelitte, to say a fine n who are erazy to join nds of young girls fro you have to keep sare makin 8 NIXty-four it w Zue, of course, which women are admitted, | Stryver | verrying of American troops and supplies across the Atlantic or that|°f, Vassar you know fae ani attr Me Rabin eieie: chesec acre ‘las tro Mrs, Mudrida to signify to Mra, Rangle's suggestion. a eee Bie ects cece Germany’s submarine warfare is anything but a blunted, broken al hse siled Fei ninaes ee ikea Neate Keeping their eves on the {ature 20 jane: omreedi with fm jarter that the) “BYe Mis Bey belting te has been helping her with her houses Weapon, the above facts and figures should be conveyed into the| #wer BAY BO FH8: Ab 5) mush Johnson when he sald “a | 0 aSyuvenite: past Hy tam ele eshte eae Nearest Wears rs Be kitchen and her house | Work, And then, too, Miss Flint has { Fatherland by air route. . | “What has she dbeen doing since| vet ete preaching is like a dos dane - = ———-~ | been taking her meals with me since: With the co!srsal and multiplying burdens of four years’ war| wu, “ou inawie iL ara APH AG Ia ‘ Your informant trying to the utmost their endurance, it should be difficult, “t » alread Ay “Pare “a | mall Ae ousate stonin ont my M a ki 1 n g th e M fe) st of O u 4 Cc hi | ] d r e n [Index system ia. inteaduns Bee Mae | wartime she written anything -done . 7 : ‘ , : her success in acting | The typewriter she sold me ts a ‘ TRL seca stn nae tor con ney ieee | anything—diatingulahed hetecit in [ft® @rown the professional calles A Series y approve her on gi d b pay tor cont'y UW bogt campaigns against tieh any way; art, the stare Ce woman's own rather naive satisfa of Plain Talks to Parents the part of @ grown-up WOMAN. | perfect dear, and she sold me @ con- ing boats and stone barges philanthropy?” you continue wasp. {On With her performance, her stat By Ray ©. Beery, A, B., M_ A., President of the Parents’ Association “Well, [ should say you can act like|tume to typewrite in. It haa the = - eS | . , her der “ 0 haven't even | joveliest lace apron with it, and the —— |ishly, though you know the answer, |RUry in her degrer ’ ; Wilds sos abban bau ania ta Alia co nea (XE mea ros | , Hits e, ro Sh Wi Hy this time the ingenuous woul iv| Tbe girls still in college have no! Can You Make a Child Stop| Just a mi sene tbe Ghid 1 whimpered, and we're not going to| cutest military cap with gilt (raid \ m BrP its Krloved and shocked this ingenuous point of y The Crying ? jand both of you are in a very happy | ciner, are we? No, indeed.” smile,| gushed Mra. Mudridge-Smith Be ata Soldiers Pay Raised Nowadays the woman who did not! “Why, she's an M. A. Vasnar ee thal suas ane conta Le Fc aaente aoa before bidding her good-night, | oe" Mt et iG show her the best| “There's an old lady outside wear. { headline. p Kaiser can raixe her boy to be a soldier ix anf sales iw PUL, noise ittle boy | say 3 i Si : * | trust our boys to see that they earn, ing ea Mis i tamedy the deaelones the indignant answe jreives. In fact, by thei spiendid par | €4 t know called MY A ces T have somett cine [fine poasible, Make thia the barr) ing s shawl. Gaye her name's Crpas i—Pittadurgh Gazette-Times < go News. SPRSIARPY “But Muster of what Arte? ‘Thats | ticipation in war work, their extraor , d music; but all] he ¥ hay meting else |e.) Gay of her life, Keep lodging | berry,” announced the servant in a ) Moldii .. aE LAtndied what Iam trying to find out,” y dinary suce armerettes, they noise is not beautiful, and | good t you, You are now old iy. suggestion that) you both are | joud whisper ‘She says she has a dge cramps the hea sceasity's other chil : ul jou ertuinly the noise of a « g chik hough to begin playing like and act : is . ” Ecaktbeny Journal ls sag ity's other child is economy. | say, Getting no satisfaction from | "ve proved (hemselves, But the pro ie Tying child | eno begin playing like and than ever before something to tell all the ladies } 1 es any 70urns this indirect source, you tackle the | fessi¢ eas. gi Ie uot amone |e Ore ne: PME mals jing like a grown-up woman. Begin=\ y¢ a: any time she should start to| “It must be Mrs, Dusenberry,” gaid oe There is nothing |ning with to-morrow morning you J ith @ very optic | Mie Jarr professional college girl herself, (ehemy ery, approach her with a very op Saye He's No Slacker. Ne heart is torn when the casualty | transiate for you a Greek or Latin e love wn active outd o the parent and you are badly hurt, Of course, \f We |nandkerchief in your hand, 1 thought I'd jest run around to Be Be Mitton of The bring Wo ste show friends of @ lifetime as quotation not in the buck of the dic- {life is probably of st lasting more unwhole-|are badly hurt, we can't help cry>|unow just wait a minute. We'll fix] tell you all that the woman named Mr, Green's criticism anent the haying he supreme sacrifice tionary, she stutters, stumbles and {benefit to her, 1 ap ate this in lite F the child but unless we are we won't cry. this up in a hurry, We don't need| Flint, who has been selling you, Pumber of draft age men in this city | yf) °T pods BRURSuIn cheer ih NS finally confides that she's a bit rusty) more as flack so utterly the love and more generals) You are now big enough to act like lig cry any more at all, We'll just | things, is going to Chicago,” said old 5) } Pet in service is unca! for nies in the world ure not worth O” the dead languages. So you ask BURR anne Lae ae - Y disvomforting|4 woman, so mother does not want| ay it ai up right away. We'll wipe| Mrs. Dusenberry. “I saw the moving evidences a lack of perspecti In }a continental uniess backed up mor- her a fe nnocent auestions| gretted that 1 learned to walk. Con to every one with- | you to ery any more unless you have | inig little tear off and that little tear| Vans taking out the furniture and I individual cases he may be corre vlly physically, Ananciaily and In- about foreign literature only have | sequently, “ther odd moments, ! in hearing dis- | something to cry about, And you! og over there—like that—and then It; Went Up the street tojsee whet was but why bianke: ai) with the odious 24%) by the pec at home. ‘Me | ner asnure you brimtt!y t Pascal" | ‘ an a child's contin ry- don't want to ery any om unless A) ha ail £ ” going on, and she told me she had Peame of slacker? lack of uniforms | *Titer Was a non-commiasioned officer ll . BAS! | FOREN Mae AAS BRA Ape: nila P ' t t bah it a ; sold the furniture at a’ good price to Goss Rot iniply lack of patriotism, Mr, 2% the Mexican border in 1916, has !8 French for THe Last Supper.) day to had a baske or even 4 yme children become ex h you have something to cry about, do| Repeat the suggestion that it ts) 4 ) ut & good Bi Geen indulges in a surface judgment | Pe engaged in munition production Then you sound het on art and are|p aint casaaursliat at val Bite roducing varied tune eff you? No, of course not, All right, “ail over” until you see some effect,| 4 newly married couple moving in | Many of these men have conducted |” 1915, and at the present time is a bit astonished to over that she SMIGHAT TAS ARK: Mitt tira bald sven seem to enjoy erying. we'll both remember that, Beginning |phen divert. her nd to something | down the street, ace ened to numerous money i alte ne “ oman - . eaatinE At thinks Memling and Kl Greco “ 4 in outdoor sport, In ih A short ery now and then doesn't to-morrow we'll both try to be happy trom herself. “And she sent her regards, as she vee, many of them are Ve vision, But according to pA ti . i ri “ er lpg Lae ye Grean hele Acalaeker, Ge tee eign a »biles. Bnglish litera y thing sporty ut he b and) should cau the time and not ery or feel badly| Spend a few minutes talking with | Was giving up business here and @ome of them are more easential in NOL WEirng & uniform DJob ture is her special feild, she says ad pglish, For hoo slang is prcturesqu: piety, But the erying | at all the child about her progress for sev-| Wa Boing to Europe to introduce than khaki, atill others bave| Wants Batten for Classities Men, 8U"% *hOURh she does know thut|and infinitely varied uni to be | Mbit should be broken by all means. And since you are going to begin evenings at bedtime, Let her | card index systems to keep track of ages rejected for wervice on account | To tie bate of The Fring Work Chaucer wrote “The Canterbury | sure, sie belongs to the pale Our four-year cries |acting like a ady, let's havelbegin each new day with » clean| War visitors, and she sald i¢ any of ire rs BF Aperiect The de, |. Don't you taink a most eMcient way ‘Twles” that Sheliey deserted bis first) pedantic type that considers a sp the least provocatio sn some fun dressing up like a growns |siate, If she has cried during the | YOU sahed Fae Bone AeCMe Cones Bitmeeae are cleseined under the G6 | io remedy draft evasion would be the wite nd that " Keats died as the infinitive @ breach of public morals, | NOW when to au es one up lady to-morrow, Shall we? All|day say, “We had trouble once to-| that she said she had forgotten about DA Mr. Green objects because un-uni- | 4ing 10 all who register a Govern. T@SUll ¥ s say criticism in the| yet pronounces institution with nother, "Can you gi a plan tol right, if you act like a littl womantday, but we'll do better to-morrow, | it, and advised you all to forget it men still smile, Let him be | ment button designating their class? Suarterly Review 1 reak her of this habit? Ail forenoon we'll dress up in the|won't we?" The first day she passes | too:” serared that they will continue to | Ditterent colors Gould de urea for the Why should she be expected 12| Mowever, the professional college| If you want to cure your child of lafiernoon. 1 can hardly wait until {without crying epeak of it as a great eT ge Be Psy ght} SaiRetes tent n Coeten, aus claapea. Freee woul ¢ show at ney more? Don't. we all forget girl has no monopoly on blunted u's. |'¥ing, avoid what seems generally | to-morrow.” victory, Teil others in her presence | asked Mrs. Stryver Wil smile when they dig for it bie for the slackers te mamig hat we learned in school or college?| Ko why nag her on that acore? 1 10 provoke the crying, at least for | Then leave her to dream about the |that she has passed out of the cry-| ‘I'll tell you what!" eried Mra. to make the war puaaihia—until RMR cd aah Certainly we do. But then, we don't! suppose, just because «he makes me fow dave while vou are trvine teliden which ven have lodged ing etree Your saying so will help | Jarr, “Let's sell it to somebody who 8 why and drive thes to powe as highbrows whose friends men- | feel like nagging by her unsupported break the habit. Better also. speak | The next morning, almost before |ner to final TNT, A nthe . L Pe ad é Pe ek SEE cegeueers + SS ) eet erty Bonds with the money!” Aad it wea so ceagived, ee, now Ww use 14 and buy Lav«