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HOME PAGE Monday, September 9, 1918 | [Original Fashion Desig | For The Evening World's’ Home Dressmakers By Mildred Lodewick Copyright, 1918, by The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) | New Fall Model of Modest Distinction. BERVE and Who the Czecho-Slovaks A By the Rev. Thomas B, Gregory Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Ov, (The New York Brening World.) © are hearing much these days about the “Czecho-Slovaks in Sibe * and it now and then happens that there {s no little humor mixed up with these people with the long, strange name. As a man said to me the other day, “Who in the devil are those fel- Jews out in Siberia—those fellows with the name that !s so hard for us Yankees to pronounce? 1 don’t seem to know much about them.” A good many are in the same box, so far as @ knowledge of the Czecho- | ‘Trained Commuters —switttn, 4h lbeaul! i ae os SEE nat DON'T THEY REALIZE ‘AT MEN OUR @GE HA’ LOST) ALL THEIR “FEP"— ~~ o—~ COD YA SEE 7% = you a Div You see THIS 32 THEY RE GONNA OORAPT MEN UP Tt 45 '—rcrs AN OUTRAGE 1 ——'AT “TAKES im you aN’ Om — ME GOIN’ OVER LJ Pry TOR WITH sande bXit PMY RHEUMATISM ? * Slovaks goes. ° , P WHY , “CHEN RE ~ ye Tika : jon are lead- Weili, the people with the name that Is “so hard for us Yankees to pro- ~ CRAZY! | Ing charactertatios of Rounce,” in the main are Bohemians, members of the breed of men who the fall styles, for | every woman wants to get as much wear as possible from one frock. Everything is dark, with no touch of white at the neck, though it may be infrequently seon at the wrists. And the lines are simple. | with elaboration of either tucks, straight WAY ‘VE “HAD INQI@ESTION =} GOOD NIGHT $= "Tw TRAIN sth hth ,10 YEARS AN' TM AN’ OLD MAN LEAVES (N 3 MINUTES! weak NOW AT 44 L— way £ md Pi ) WELL FINISH “TALKIN' An attractive AHEY'RE LEAPIN' ——- MEN OU Denes TH! SMOKER YT ¢ | Model that featdres Witt NEVER Ge aBLE ‘T' STAND Haba {one - wided effects uses the embroidery ‘AT STRENLOUS ARMY WORK 16 Weight lis tuate and its sleeves, In a rich, heavy do- sign, The material of the frock may bo all satin or a silk | and woollen mixture for the main por- | tion, with a satin foundation skirt and satin facings to the sleeves and sash strings. It is inter- esting to note that the sash strings ap- pear from under the side openings of the | tunte, with an ¢ | broidered or braid motif to mark it The same motif is repeated at the side of the square neck ®) | where the bodies ‘ | opens, and at t produced, among many other Mlustrious men, John Huss and John Zisca, the great reformer and the great General. After a march that makes that of Xenophon and the Ten Thousand | Greoks look like “thirty cents,” these Czecho-Slovaks are in Siberia on the | holiest of missions, the mission of freedom, freedom for their own dear | Bohemia, that has been so long enslaved by the Hapsburgs, and inciden: | fally, freedom for Russia and the whole world. The Battle of the White Mountain, or Bila Hora, which ended the political existence of Bohemia, was fought Nov. 8, 1620—almost simulta- Meously with the landing of the Pilgrim Fathers at Plymouth. The battle was long and furiously contested. The numbers were | almost equal, some thirty thousand on a side, but while the Impertalists | were thoroughly prepared and well armed and fed, the Bohemians had for | ® long time been suffering great privation, and were, in addition to the | bunger and cold which beset them, distracted by the quarrels of their | higher officers, But for these handicaps the battle would have terminated | differently, and Bohemia would have remained free and independent. ! In the history of Bohemia prior to the battle that ended her national | existence, there is very much to give a tingle to the most lethargic blood. Before the Battle of the White Mountain the Bohemians may be said to have had the “habit of victory” in contending againsg those who were trying to deprive them of their ancient and venerated liberties. In a word, there is absolute truth in the statement that in the long annals of military glory there is no name that shines with a more dazzling splendor than that of John Zisca, the man who may well be called the , Father of Modern Military Sctence, Lad by this incomparable battle winner, and others trained by him, the Bohemian armies were almost constantly victorious over the Imperial- ists. They were looked upon as being unconquerable. | No other people of whom history gives us any knowledge has such a superd fighting record. Upon more than one occasion did the mighty armies of the Imperialists break up and run panicstricken from the fleld Bt first sight of the oncoming soldiers of Zisca and Prokop the Great. Not until the Bohemians were weakened by the dissensions of thelr | leaders were they ever beaten by their powerful adversaries, But this splendid valor was never displayed except in defense of their | “~~ ora C) ~“ fy GG wai , ee - side-back, Under pores rea tingiin nigtd Mk to think as they pleased and to live { \ cuffa of raspberry or THIS DESIGN EASY TO COPY AT a 4 \ ' henna Georgette MINIMUM CO8 Reverting to the statement about the almost simultaneous coming of | = \ rep or watin * the Pilgrim Fathers and the disatter at the White Mountain, {t is queer, | |= : ad ae crepe , ton't it, that the Czecho-Slovaks and the descendants of the men who Z =. //. Tinsues Bale: Wate Tee aera founded this Nation, should be together in Siberia to-day, fighting in that | ) it = rato the’ undersklrt would of ecurse| Hack ellie Sraid. tem ntge an faraway land against the very same nation that two hundred and ninety-> - \\- be more sultable for practical wear. buckle at side of belt. An inverted eight years ago forced Bohemia into political r | ‘a j javery. And queer, again, is the fact that the descendants of the men who Janded at Plymouth, almost on the same*Way that Bohemia ‘ost her nationality, are destined to become the instruments of the restoration to Bohemia of her long-lost freedom, The Americans and CzechoSlovaks out on the battle line in Seria ought to be comrades “sure enough. | plait down back of dress . Answers to Queries. Fashion Kaitor, The Brening World: ng World 1 would Itke to me how to combine inclosed Feshion Editor, The Will you please advu make a dress of inclosed material materials for a gray oxford cloth, Am thirty years dress for my e, 6 feet 5 inches tall, weigh 134 | daughter, elghteen years old, Will | you suggest a | pretty style? My daughter is well iit, weighing 119 pounds, 6 feet 4 inches tail, MRS. T, W Use the plain had returned t ile of the ba t he had returned to middle of thy lant haat ian teens 1 knew the dan nd 1 . he knew the chief dan- attendant carr oi wae el A d F . . he pieced together the past--his as- might look up into the cool, starlit 4 The rest of the mala- of water from which protruded the iunise ann Siete n inds Himself flea’, touga (aslas SN GATAIES Bad dy'n course would be marked by aore- tin handie of a dipper, ‘The wight of | {4uC% : ae green Newest Things in Science service is owned government, and Mankok, the al, is only with an exch To enable automobile owners to t ’ YY t e atte ade ac! opened hrobbing eyes. « 1 And, now th dentity t night, a system B h HH S A ke And the attempt made his head ache opened his throbbing ey : iaentity trie care at nighe «en PTANaM a8 a Strange AWAKENING cer vines worse. wi vy v1, vowever, them with desperate hope that he ons Nmitless color combinations, w In one ha brimming patl cars may be raised from car roofs, been Invent lines in search of news as to the But by the time his Js were half ness and by steadily decreasing head- the water drove Jim almost crazy, | checks for foun- . £8 In Enemy Hands dentity of new regiments opposed to parted his aching eyeba tche, ‘Chere was no question of ath With a mighty effort he raised him-/ dation waist and ‘ Experts in the employ of the Gov = ee is comrades; his plan of getting cused themselves upon or even of Insanity self on one elbow und beckoned to} Cond re ae ernment of Brazil believe that coun- Copyright, 1918, by The Preas Publishing Co hold of the identification tags; his board ceiling. And in the the orderly car be. | and “two of the wr lie A a C € 7 old- o! e five Ge ry " ls . r “Wasne ° whe rom be- | ohec MM be sj try can utilize its own coal by using aio Baia, A oles ale a Sr eaeanre Suara y - up. of the Ave Geeman officers in stant his nostrils were assailed by the IM FRAHAM once more opened Pei, 6 ye Bedi A Woolas at gaa producers in connection with sta | former ingurance’ man. They: beceone PHarog de ype aidl eRe Mute the swimming pool and the capture of pungent reek of carbolic acid his eyes, preparing to meet the a his fe 6 | ehite eatin ni tionary engines and briquetting it Lor | good work om the other side, Then Bi starts on uw single-handed inapect their tags; his escape and the biding = "A prisoner!” be told himself in new ph ‘of war that had At sound of the German word the/ : < Tasciicuven nes opponte, He obtaina an of Place in the shell crater, and, last of horror, “A prise t war a Leen ‘thrust, upon him, Ifo ofderly turned and came quickly Pare - ter cha ok (hae Gan oil all, the battle with the murderous German camp hi Moxed upon the long low shed in toward the sufferer, Tho attends ; ning World: ‘ A woman is the pa man officers prescnily enter the rman police dogs and the rush of jfe shut his eyes Jor a few S0c> nich he was lying. The improvised Wide blond faco was t ed into a) ; I have five yards of phone in which the receiver and) a dash for the land, There he covers at him, nd he lay there and fought t eee 1 ned evidently been a cattle Smile of goodfellowshin and kindll- | / black eatin for areas ! transmitter inclosed within a gata gga do u et ot finally Jim had reconstruc terrifle t » of all bi the Wate<tee cn as, But now each "es# for the thirsty sick man who | [ i? horn, vat it can bo used sevorat| 3 awaiting nightfall dogs and © the entire day's work up to the le with bis own wren er Mee OTT ee ee nae hag Nad called to him for wat which T would Itke té | inches away nm a person's face - t the blow of AAD FINO Glin tha: unbaanon eg pee Om Ok ROE aeetet, _ Setting down the bucket beside | have made in‘a etylé , without holding in the hand, CHAPTER VII. butt had knocked him senseless, But o Jim's mattress, he led out a big | to last all winter, De gripped him, at this realigation ‘And in each cot lay @ #ick or wounded what had happened sin ce then? dippertul of the darkest fe 1 liquid, Ther not wish it elaborate, Blectricity is generated by a wind~ PRISONER! The memory of the gun-biow and of © serv wgling Leh a guiepei Ge te ; ronpta Maeeling at Jim's side, he deftly | mil so successfully at a German| @gmiM BRAHAM woke very sh from the heaviest and most painful the dogs’ onslaught accounted for the panic that swept him, he Niarede eee eee oR ere Mies A etit ERR UMM EIR G8 as T shall wear @ technical school that it ia estimated sleep he had ever known. pain in his head and the hot aching br nn turced Ne beaie and hin cours Ye, humentae Sus ces : body while he drank to business occagion- 7 nt could ply. 1h Shae : it and forced his brain and his Cour- of tne German lines, which served aa tata similar plant could supply jight Though his mind and body seemed weighied down b. f forearm, But—where was ho gen iy a tern calt He wes bee nied . 4 Jim thrilied sw atitude and | ally. I pave light and water for 100 persons at a cost first aid” stations for men WhO WETO ginn aring consclously he was all the me aware now? * t ne Kindly aet He . 5 e Bu ps he wa » sudden Ill- hair, blue eyes, fair of $12 @ year nead and of red hot pains which sho b ' t At once his brain gave him the hid. : eaieiae atricken in bu or by sudden I= aq heard that Germans were cruel | oe 8 wee / Raped mabbiblg pelaleal rovahibie:} ecus answer, He must now bea pria, morally waundod. In that case there royy phe barn, he knew, WO ® to prisoners. Yot this fategaced| skin, tall and slender. Tho head of a new toothbrush is 6o/ The anguish in his head made him restless, and it slowly srew more and nace mu w de® Pril- way no need to worry about pridon. Mon oi w atation for auch cases thi ee aa shaped that both sides of the teeth | more intense as the stupor lightened. oner in the bands of tha Germans, «oven if he should recover from | orderly was offering him a drink of ISS F and in line to go presently to @ G and that those of its occupants Who water with all initaiartantecs | ‘Tucks all the wes are reached 4 %. the handle} — At last he was waked by the sound of a man groaning, He i ko y the wound, hr able to find A palit a ant | low s or lotions | ij , aid Se 2 did not open iwan war prison! ° ‘i Rel ae did not die at once were passed on to pegs of a woman, Korg where] | Snitha aie of Nrintios with a| MS eyes, for his ds seemed leaden of weight, Hut as his brain cleared, he ‘To a German war prison very fome way to mako bis cap Ml Jase boapitals or to prisons. From he was, Braham mutterc ih — P x . one ¢ longed for strength and vigor enough to scowl ut the groaner and to t 1} oth minh cit Hrek him, Vor instance, he might tT td of oak bes Wa es ee siping satin, chem eee aim to be quiet, He found himself too tired to speak to th Be ee eect hat mane Saphee on (ha. WAY! t0:the pF eee EN ec aae Aeeccite SSeS ALG whito or dull blue yan aviator’s hands warm > Speak to the or even ¢ e h an unreasoning panic POPS on” Be acy could see r va & 6 ers | wi . vies invented a glove int | t open one eye to look at him, All he could do was to lie there and 1 ar tact end tru uci RE 8 MarQUle noe ti che Thee TERA eee Abe lat RBA cin eae al georgette or orgamdy, which are woven wires that are heated | nuyed by the groan From the firat Jim had never feare¢ WOUG BATS Ue at man soldiers injured in a recent raicd The sound of the English words had by electricity obtained through con-| Fearon gid not have energy to | aecth ate cian Mutttntion. “But ne of mprivonment, Yeu, there were SUN M0 ease explosion of some an electrifying effect on the orderly HOME LAUNDRY HINTS, tact points on the steering wheel of an ‘aha i 6 Neriing a dazed will power . ae plenty of ways to court death. In the °F else Burt by t rihly ‘ When you wash your muslin dres@ roplane, | Wonder whore he himself was or WhY he clenched his teeth und the groan, NA Md a horror of being captured PON OY Wore ve ee ney just American shell in their trenche fo shrank back from Jim as thoug bbe fap ey ee Tee maa | ny one near him should be groan- {ng 1 B : #0 and gent to a Boche prison camp, e4? i " i - Yankee had been a make a od la wash , 5 NE cease y mighty effort he © was hurt He could feel a bandage incasing j To ald in the capture of automobile ; nor why his own head and left now able to bene» fort he was yon, before America had entered tha Now bad a Hing head. Glancing down, he #nake, In his recoit he p * dress in cold water; do not pat &t tite thicves a Tos Angeles man has in were in such agony. Ho had yitence,- rear bis pain in manly way he had read with a shudder of Jim cailed upon his memory for pening. & solar wae from | Warm water at all. If the | vented a clamp to be focked abyut a ere in much ag © had sence, ‘The effort went still further j “ a had one ired from a saw his lacerated left forearm , contains a green color, add Ce jae each genes enough to hear the i eorinw hie brain, Bill too Ce ena ee arte dovior (tor use In’ had been received some sort of hasty dressing, “der joulders and cup of vinegar to the ringing wa { and leaves | man's groans and to be annoyed that . SUll t00 Germans, and a dozen times since “ ‘ 4 drake pnatche pper of water| @hould It be one of the gaa 1 an they broke tile cast to Spen Dis oy ed tO hig entlatment he ‘had sworn he would ‘trying as to the nature of head In the distance he sould lew from his eager 5, halt a cup of ammonia im | - rhe bl pee , Pemember what had happened to him. plow out his brains sooner than be Wounds), Applying the Information to rumble of heavy artillery, Krom the “As the arm on which he leaned was! last water will set the color, H ; 4 dec Why in blazes can’t the measly He was in the urmy. He was lying ee . his own condition, he decided his faintness of these reverberations, Jim withdrawn, Jim collapsed — { Biscuit Cutter Made From coward et hie teoth and ear Mit in agony on mime kind of cot or mute Ne MH resumably, here he waewa present eymptoma were those of & knew he must be several miles be- fis back on the hard mattrom, | Tbe) | The leather staing in yowp ae ” : paln in silence like a good soldier?” 3 et, umably, here he I oF ol Agpesacverthe jolt caused infinite anguish to his in-| stockings can read | Bell 4 es tress, That must mean he had been prisoner, and with no chance to avoid Victim of “concus f the brain. hind the German firat line trenches. jured head. Yet he warce felt the| using borax when washing them, - a lelephone 5 Jim wondered in vague irritation “ 7 Y , ith q : i i aD CRANGSES 30 28 rritation’ wounded, Yet he could not remember the one fate that had ao terrifled’him. He recalled the doctor's recital of As his mind grow olearer, Hraham pain in tho far greater agony of be _ N old telephone bell such as cun| “Here am I, in rotten pain too. But any recent battle. At first he could He was a prisoner somewhere inside the symptoms of “fracture” and of al lized that his lips were ing denied the drink of water for YE EDITOR BOLD. yN be picked up in any cleetri- | tons keep quiet about it, Why can't no: pecall any recent evénta of what- th was a 5! joner somewhere Inalde tne eye inon and of on or two cracked and dey and that his throat Which Ne so madly yearned: |) ous oia friend, Fred Wolster, Ofie cian's junk heap ily con Ae taaee ihe lene tinuen “annonce ner ure ¢ bent his crawling perhaps, the men who attacked him other skull-and-scalp maladies. None was parched with the 1 thirst gerly was bellowing. "If L had eased |Hisie Sun and th Fornee News, & 4 JUnene, varied 1Bt0 & tbr pile energies to bringing back what had had left him for dead there at the of them correspe withthe sort of of pain and of fever wently a your thirst [ hope my m would arrangements to 60 ever o>, serviceable bis- | got on Braham's nerves, and a gust ad had left ¢ your thirst { hope my arm would \ occurre edge of the shell-crater. There was pain he was now undergoing, But he German orderly, clad in a once white have with s| of crossness swept away some of the cuit cutter, was I lo know you were a pig of an , the near future, to eye man for the yf} } ‘ : ne o eg ve sta m tt does an who haa encoun acket nd apron, came clumping 4 ny things shown, Such a) pain-mists from his dulled brain, His» UM & SAS em : i over matter AinayeD mn ehance, aie , ines 's alt ban ae eR ket an PPLE rene American when you ware here o many Shs ae ONT dei for him to do any thinking at adl ) end the suspense Jim Braham tered serious concussion of the brain, down the aisle that traversed the in company with true men? goblatt it cutter will turn | mind eleared enough to let him locate With this exclamation of Kross Top Trai’ out a delicately] the dire jon of the dismal groaning tompt orderly lifted the dip the. American management < Shaped product.| And, to his shamed astonishment, he water, held it in front of Paper’ in about three, weel fb “. A wooden handle | suddenly realized that it was himself and slowly poure © Americans € f it on the eart In wild beast fury, Braham sou to fling hi If on the tortur) Boche. Hut th asked Fred who'd look after Ma the Sun and the News, he sald, {1 Know about the pape ne. boys, Ma can look out for. {She's looked out for herself and ful a surge of protecting har 4 that he sank back in y Tho orderly spat. contemptuously | Kone to marty @ Krench girl and, passed on down the double line | SON artine for the ob cots. lwe wish yim success.—Belding (To Be Continued.» Banner, Teemrone is provided by|and not some other sufferer, who whittling tt from} was making the lamentable sound, 5-inch length of broomstick, and is) Yes, it was he, Jim Braham, who attached to the bell by means of a bolt | was groaning at rhythmic intervals or screw. Several holes should be drilled | as he lay there, half delirious with pear the top $e Peril Sie secnne °f! the pain of returning consciousness, _ dermblod the edge is sharpened by #l-|And he was aware of a pang of selt- - ang or grinding.—wopuler Mechanics. | dimgust at the thought. THE LIFE OF GEN. PERSHING BEGINS NEXT MONDAY First Complete, Authentic Story, From Barefoot Boy to World Honors