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ate srantsy Daily Except Sunday by the Press Pubiiching Company, Noo. 03 ty " a Fare Row, New York. . RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row. J. ANGUS SHAW, ‘Treasurer, 63 Park Row. JOSRPH PULITZER,’ Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row, MEMBER OF TAR ARROCIATED PRnas, ten of aft 4 ' fer, remibt “ Ie Steer Saye eae Shedlind 1S" Unie buen wed ion toe local ‘come published Vouput 09... By Albert Payson Terhune: Covvrial . 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), \No. 30—MARGUERITE OF VALOIS, the Queen'Who Dee clared War on Her Husband. ARGUERITY and a boy, both nineteen years old and hating each other like two young Wildcats, were united in the holy bonds of matrimofiy one August day in 1972. The boy was Henry, King of the French Province of Navarre, a down-at-heel yout of rotten morals and worse honor, who wag visiting the littering French Court at Paris in the dual capacity of poor relation and Political hosta; The girl was Marguerite Valois, sister of King Charles 1X. of France. Her persenal character was on a par with her bridegroom's, and she bad, in addi- tion, @ furious temper. Her royal brotaer, for political reasons, bad forced the match upon her. ‘ —_—— ————— = ——_——__—_ ; ae —— — | 1, Ee ene AR — STABLISKED BY JOSKPH PULITZER, i We Have Reached the Summit” a AY | W . m . a : 2 W ar | WHEN FOCH SPEAKS. oH T IS NOT extraordinary at the present moment that there should be power in the words of one man to cause nations to wax ’ yet stronger in their confidence, yet more confident in their strength. ‘We have reached the summit of the war and we are now going down the slope. If our ball shows an Inclination to go faster, we will let it go and heip it on. All goes well with us. Though they etill offer determined resistance, we are + driving the Germans to the Rhine. ‘9 | The purport of these phrases has come from the mouths of other, . tam. By no other could their meaning be made to carry such con- ' i Wistion to Allied ears as by the quict gentleman who uttered them | among his maps, telephones and cigars “a deux sous.” “i The Commander in Chief of the Allied Forces has been 60 seldom quoted while accomplishing his biggest work that when he at last permits himself to speak about it his words have risen to the | value of pure gold. If Foch says so, then it must be all and more than we hoped. 3 In one of the Marshal's sentences there is a grim twist of plan "and purpose as yet unrevealed: We have been through trying, sometimes critical mo- ments, but we have passed through them, and {t will not be 80 easy for Germaps*to recover after the bard events they are about to experfence. The last five words throw forward wilh a suddenness that is like Foch thrust through the German line. During the marriage ceremony, at Notre Dama Cathedral, the Arch- bishop, according to custom, asked Marguerite if she w@uld take Honry for a husbahd. Marguerite glared at him in angry silence. The Archbishop repeated the questfon. Still Marguerite would not say “Yes.” Whereupon her brotner e stepped forward, took her haughtily upraised head tn both his hands and bent it sharply downward Into what was-meant to express a nod of lene the ceremony went on. | | sent, ‘This beginning*was a fair symbol of what the couple's wedded life was to be. Henry took his bride back with him to his *‘ shabby little kingdom of Navarre. There, several outrageous flirtations with local nobl @ decided Navarre was a stupid place to live in, and she went back to her royal brother in Paris. But her dove affairs at the Frenoh capital so disgusted King Chartes that he packed her off to her husband, along with a letter which described some of her more flagrant amours. Henry rebuked her hotly for her conduct (which, as J have seid, was pretty much on a par with his own), and warned her to reform. By way of {reply she ran away from him. Marguerite established herself in a nearby town and openly declarcd war on her ‘husband. She called on all his enemics and her own admirers after ———eeeeeeeeer> Henry Takes Bride |} to Navarre, ¢ pre ee ten > eee to foin her In overthrowing him. , Nor is tho Generalissimo at any los$ to describe his impressions] Presently she had collected a formidable little army, At the head of i © of the Americans he has seen fighting in Frence. He has sized| j this she marched against Henry, and Navarre piigremonting ee ihsd % ‘ ap: But Henry of Navarre was the greatest gilitary genius of his century, ‘ 3 ; In spite of the small force at his command he met the rebels in battle, put i Their battling bowers are wonderful; the way nine i ® | down the uprising and captured Marguerite, ' Fi, Mit, ciitsotiue. yearn |s scape magnificent, | To keep her from starting another yar he shut his raging wife into the " ; heavily garrisoned castle-prison of Usson, There, by the charm she knew Ef A chief anxiety of the Americans, the Marshal has shrewdly how to exert, Marguerite won more than half of the garrison to her suppo: | observed, “is to make up for fost time.” That is the spirit in which they fight. It is also the sprrit in which one hundred million of them behind the fighters are launching ! ships, making munitions, preparing to find billions of dollars for ! > war taxes and still other billions for another Liberty Loan—working, ! i saving, heeding every Gove¥nment request that begins with “Help, ” Win the War.” + These hundred million are in a hurry to sce the war won, Assusance given them that Gen. Foch himself is ready to declaresthat be the German’ ‘badly shaken,” are “well on the road to defeat,” should ! | Then #he drove out the General in command, along with sueh of t)o garrison as remained faithful to her husband, and made her@eif ruler of Usson in Henry's place. Meantime, Henry was winning renown an w general and as @ statesman, Within @ few ycars, by sheer genius, he bad made himself King of | France—and, by the way, e governed the country more wiétly and justly | than it had been governed for centuries, He built War worn France into a mighty world power, but he would not let his rebellious wife share his good fortune. Brrr Marguerite Defeats | $ Husband's Army. Divorcing Marguerite, he married an Italian Princess and dismissed his former wife on a meagre allowance. > Yet, oddly enough, now that they were no longer bound to each other, | Henry and Marguerite became good friends. He often turned to her for | advice in political matters, and she was received at his palace with all tho . pe | bispéct due to @ Queen, redouble thpir efforts in men, money and toil to shorten that road. 5 NOT TO BE IGNORED. HILE thert is no rgason whatever for a public oe over Spanish influenza, facts and figures concerning the epi- demic are of a sort to persuade every one to bake a little more than ordinary precaution against coldy and against cantagion _ from those suffering therefrom. fi) hild By Sophie Irene Loeb The Jara Family By Rey L. McCardell |done together each will take the pun- ishment quite differently from .the os The Sensitive N answer to my article He came out of his illness a changed creature. Publishing (0, | won't pump the water out of stocks World.) Copyright, 191) time in his Uke at the door—seeing that he is there-- For the first “Your sense of humor fs peculiar, s@rves a more or less useful purpose.” in these | other, life he said he had found people who] OST SEE Wail Street is prepazing|saiq sir, Stryyer, eyeing Mr. Jurr|’ “In what way?" asked Mr. Stervers 4 ‘ With a total of nearly 10,800 cases of this influenza reported columns “The Crime of Cruelty to] One little girl will huddle up to) ave consideration to his feelings. H to make 8 pig: drive ote with no great favor, “But tous pro-| ‘Well, the wolf at the door kec 5 j at Camp Devens yesterday, about 23,000 cases in the whole army and Children," regarding two children | ner mother and try to apologize’ anti|told how when he was a boy his| yest telah wre ia ped moters, when the kimbs leave the /away shyster lawyers f4r one thin ot . . id ‘who were burned | rot it all “fixed up again.” But the| mother did not seem to know how to|%S he glanced up is De Street the wolf comes in the door. explained Mr, Jarr. “They say, ‘This the public schools of Boston, Mass., and New London, Conn., closed and tortured, alSiner, although fine in epint, is more|take tim. When he was burt or| caught the eye of his prosperous) «1 should worry,” sald Mr. Jarr.|fellow isn't worth suing! so ther because of the epidemic, it would be foolish to neglect means for number of letters neighbor, Mr, Stryver, sitting beside ; preventing ‘ts further spread. ¥ Health Commissioner Copeland is not shutting his eyes to the _ nation in New York Lity, where the number of new cas@s cach day is too faron the wrong side of a hundred. Although there is no plan to close the echools here, the Health Commissioner is to distrib- came to me. And now comes one from the West in which 4 the writer says “TL have in ow jdeeply wounded and will silently |erieve. ® While the fatter child would like to get it all straightened out and be friendiy again with her mother, yet the hurt as so deep within her and her pride jg so touched that it is wounded ‘he was called sulky and’ treated with disdain and disrespect. | He learned to keep things to himself] and was always alone—away from the other children, He grew jealous of them because | his parents. seemed to him to show “The wolf has been at our door so long that we've come to regard him : A I know; and it don't help My) ay @ sort of old family watchdog— business,” grumbled Mr. Stryver he * him in the street car, nd he is, too, come to think of it; he wiggled in his seat. “But Liberty Bing woir at the door has his uses.” bonds are the best buy, at that!" a. “They'll all jump in, I suppose, the i ryver stigred uneasily, Here was® another cdnfounded Socialist don't sue you, Bill collectors see tho wolf at the «, and they don't bother you so Much. The tradesmen See it and won't permit you to run up big bills, It growls at the man of the house as he goes out to work and Fe sald rece it makes him hustle, It keeps away | ~ , edd ad child who | difficult for her to be free in adjust- | preference for them, always referring | ju siandinen’s rand Eigapben these|!*Rding the blows now being levelled |fake promoters, poor relations, book | ! ute anfong school children thousands of circulars explaining the . Is nat burned or | ing her feclings, With one child the | to him as the “orosspatch.” Me soan| gays reniied Me, Streven, “Just {at Vented interests, Mr, Stryver felt |agents and other pests, No, the old | ; ee a a, st | t DI r n y ea L § . s part of tho humiliations that | wolf at the door isn’t so bad if 1 toms of the new type of influenza and how to ene maimed, just| trouble passes almost instantly, but) learned tq regard himself as suck and , 5 : pt was pare of | r t so bad if he'd ; nature and symp Ld if & heartbroken be-|the other takes it to heart and hugs | ‘crawled tn his shell.” een ene Wine tnowonty | {ding downtown in a street car in-lonly do one thing.” ; treat ate inet Why, the only As the years went by he grew more! commissions that the brokers have and more away from the family. All| been making recently have been with his loneliness and his disappointed | professional brokers, And look what nature he attributed to this seeming| the Federal Reserve's been doing!” her grievance close, And this very ahd | trait finds expression later dn the hurried visits cause such grief the] sensitiveness of the grown man and c@ild suffers keenly. The lonely boy| woman, which causes so much suf- stead of his automobile entailed, But he had not been using his automobile | gq, very much of Jate, SeVeral times he had noticed some prominent, Wall | ‘ ather rarely if ever cones ‘As usual in all real epidemics, the number of cases gf Spanish and influenza reported among the general public is no doubt copsiderably @welied by the habit of dignifying any extra severe cold by the current i? ig looks longingly at other children who home, those “And what thing is that he shou irregular asked Mr. Stryver. Keep the stork from flyjng in at : the window," said Mr. Jarr, : fering, While every effort should be] unwillingness of his family to be | Mr. Sarr could look at what tho|*teet operators enviously eyeing his | Mfr. stryver, who had wo children;® “epidemic” name. run to greet a father while he sits| made to overcome it in an attempt to] little more patient of his feelings.| Federal Reserve had been doing|®##0line tank, Waan’s Touch tmpreneeé by thin It however; that figures indicating the seriousness of alone on his doorstep dressed im-| inculeate a more sturdy spirit, yet it] While he,did not spare himself, yet | with equanimity—he had no money| @'! don’t follow you," he finally! “The wolf at the door sometimes ey . 4 ee maculately—as the fond mother al-|must be reckoned with and ap-|he traced all his troubles back tulto speculate with. Thrift Stam grumbled, "|keepma man from got bs a," ; | to : i, § ps and . a man going to the dog: Spanish luenza as s genuine epidemic come largely from the| ways keeps him—awaiting his father | proached with great care, icky _ military camps, where medical attention is vigilant and expert, and _ where there are gathered the country’s huskiest young men, who are not often ailing unless some reallyerampanf germ gets a chance wt them. ’ Whe tendency to pneumonia following Spgnish influenza has these childish days, | Liberty bonds were good enough for) There is considerable to be said| him, | morist friend of mine says, “The poor- about it, Wise parents who will study! ‘Well, it struck me as very funny,” | cst families always have the fiercest | these traits may mold their ghildren| said Mr. Jarr—Wall Street kicking | watch@ogs.’ But In the city you can't nearer to their hearts’ desire. because the Federal Reserve Banks wolf e “Well,” continued Mr, Jarr, “a hu- Tho child suffems the loss of a much-| Harsh treatment rarely brings the Mvered pargnt and the father lives,| best results, Sométimes a mere sen- | enjoys life With never 4 pang of re- sitive nature is molded into an ugly morse,” jand sulky one by improper regard The Mr, Jarr went on, “I've noticed that it's hard to be wicked on the cheap, Bad habits are costly; the lack of Sood money often keeps a gan out of bad company.” letter keep dogs so very states other ways well, by so the which sensMive children suffer just for the sensitiveness of the little one. | | I know a man who wes most un Re “I'm glad you take it so philosoph- “And I'm not interested in the wol corps of modern days—the Foreign| months a siege by 20,000 well-armed| so large was their number that, in wolf A campaign in this direction would make vastly for public health National Kitchens Successful in England oh. 8 ; ' : , aga , an - . ically,” said Mr, Stryver testily. “f a A 7, : {4s keenly when wounded mentally) lovely and unloved, He was crabbed only know that if the spenders have aM been emphasized. ‘The fever which marks the influenza leaves many| as those who are mistfated phys!-| and old and wrinkled and gray and orelgn €gion a orps @) a e V1 s nothing to spend, how can pecopla - i extraordinarily weak. They need to take the utmost care|caily, ‘The points are well taken. hadn't a kindly word for anybody, He é whom the spenders spend with have of themselves while they are convalescing. For @xample, I kpow of two chil-| lived alone and seemed to hate eve Ad roe aut Ley the ather| Jame ts. pay, ihonly ‘porelaed Merle Ey polensh: aes bad Tagan) once ~ any prosperity?" Gg . = dren, both girls; they are @s different | body and everything around him, One lay to indulge in one of its; can reinforce: h id | Marked thal ‘ ct a city, for) «phe snendet® never It To advise New Yorkers to avoid contagion by keeping out of er ment as can be and the| time this 6ld man fell ill and strangers | loudest cheers of the war, A|pyt a handful alive, the engmy|in his command were architects, en-| mes said Mr, Jarr, “I'm HL erate erowds is, on the face of it, absurd. rot to be very careful In her| took jim in to care for him, They|Undred veterans, bearing all the pressed home their final charge. | Sinem, builders and artiste a cabaret or a succeasful theatre, 4 But printed injunctions in public places urging people to sneoze| teatment of tiem weref very kind people and were |Medals that may be won in the French} ‘the Legion won honors in the) Oddly enough, many Germans fled]/1m not interested in munitions or % : 4 Vor instance, should she reprimand | careful to consider his shorte Army, had come to pay a visit. They| Crimean War, and in Indo-China a] the harshgexactments of their own ots." and cough only into their handkerchiefs would be the opposi f : Fe EROS RES other wer contragie, ie ry y he opposite of lyon of them for something they have in an effort to get him well were members of the most famous| detachment of 600 withstood for three | army (or #rvice in tye Irench corps. { absurd. : —— Lo " y n at the door,” growled Mr. Stryy Legion, Other sturdy soldiers may | Chin@e, , @ | i911, he. German Government pla-|+and if you rejoice in him I inust ae not only while the present epidemic lasts but at all times. think from time to time of g0in§) The Legion wax established in 1831.| carded the Fatherland with posters! ou, taste in pets is odd,” ? national restaurant back to the old job, or a better one, which| ment and have invited the public te Recruits must swear that they are not | headed, “Beware the Foreign Legion, HL “Well, I look at it this way,” said | ned ity doors several months | purs ssn SA hl after peago is won, but not these] French, but the only other require-|and the press’ficrcety demanded that ne "amid 4 i ¢ F Ss i pay baste street, ae hier fal sb bas Cvaie Piipapend PP Reniing, twenty-four hours a! ments are a fearless yee in aed it be abolished, asserting that Ger- ae Tass . tot of people can't stand 3 Hit rom har Pp Wits ase Migtarsvinw Catala AUntaeee RA | tharioae 9 pee Miiohens the|dax, seven days @ week, is their| body. To his officer, the newcomer | An boys, enticed into its ranks, were | PPOSPOr! Hs DUE Re i as adversity ts your father worrying this winter the coming fashion, is better than tie | restaurant yicided an average profit| public with meals of good aumtity ac {chosen occupation, “Treat ‘em|may tell, in strictest confidence, the| brutally treated, Perhaps, even then, Peeinee some oF MA TANS gat to a1 supply,” he said. pouselees, sleeve of recent times of more than $350 a week after meet-|a nominal price but aré ap a poi ¥ nq |rough!” has long been their method. | story of his past, but from that mo- | the Prussian overlerds were attempt- |5“ a Aad be didn’t know until next day |Petrolt News | ing all charges, including rent, at the |in a campaign for saving hundreds of| It Was not tho firot visit of Lal ment only the future counts. Mee of| ing to disrupt the most feared unit "Thag her poor old dad dead. ee ving hundreds a “It seems to me that you take pres as Wilts, sakeuainak Memes Ceas ent financial conditions very lightiy," pelle, may sing their old so) ‘We best you on the Marve, Legion Etrangere to this side of the same time keeping down the price of|tons of coal which ¢an be sunt , water, Fifty years ago they led the all natlons who flocked to the corps food served Italy and have been pictured both as heroes and of the French Army, Jacksonville Times-Union. tai ver to La Legion: Etrangere was not|Temarked Mr. gtryver, | An optimist is a pergon who would arg att Oy 00 the Aus In view of the fact that there will ——— army which ,set Maximilian on the| outcasts, It has sheltered many whe hohinned. It has eluate st oe oie eR eee Ee ena Mr, Jarr, ci: matrimonial agency LE hate we ane sania!” are be a shortage of fuel this winter in| IT WAS 8O SUDDEN. throne as Emperor of Mexico. It was|have fled from disgrace, but a far| break of war to admit a new type o ° will do us of the by an.o:d maid.—Philadelphia 3 Boston Glove, |.England, the national kitchens and HE was pretty and he wae hands| 40 ill-chosen cause, but “Camaron"’| larger number because the Legion|men; lovers of liberty, many of them|wolf-at-the-door set a lot of good it r 4 ‘ Pa Bee restaurants may bo.called upon to Meme ana i ae are on the banner of the First Regiment | offers fighting and adventure. Americans, who flocked to the aid|Government contro! of our war and | % eevee opbere Will be no Luanee in fall styles) increase their activities and do cook: | voted to each othor ax they gat|'@nks wip our Alamo, Near that| Well founded stories are told of|of Frence. Since then, from Gallipoli |food Industries and railroads causes PWhere strong men have wills the|the wnme oll model PMomphis Com.| ing, ollectiv tor a whole com-|and held hands and watohed Pia ll village sixty-five Legtonaries under] simple privates of the Legion dying|to Flanders, it has won honors be- to cease being the best é ones ha’ wishes.—C mercia! Appeu!, munity at a time, This scheme, if! play at the Cincinnati ball park. Capt. Danjou were attacked by a|in some far corner of Africa, who| yond anything in its sloricus history.| known watering flac in the world," + she bd ® put into effect, would save consid- | ppere's | jell tap vod horde of Mexicans. Forming a square|have revealed themselves to be of|S0 great has been the bravery of al! 0 sir!” said Mr, Stry ver, “If a fellow is able to recognize é re's Hal Chase on first," ob- rere “ saiy'h There 1s/Panks that comparisons are best|"Here's where I get off!’ Ais’ 9 civilined «nett 1] himself on Monday morning’ re. | eraple fuel and the cosumption of 4 |gerved the youth, “He's a bird, Ang| they cut thelr way to @ farmhouse, | npble, even princely houses. There 1s pe. Atlee, _ SSmnRrNOne “Ok. 2M j i but the first thing we look for| marked the Man on Car, “it js}and electricity for opoking purposes |there's Toney, the pitcher, He'll be our | Where, Just before @ bullet pierced his) t e anecdote of Uie pause at the grave bl ida ies tronte fauea : "replied Mr. Jarr sweetly; yi } morning is the list of those | PFoof that he lived an uneventful life} would be greatly reduced. In a joint | pest man Gitone long’ is brain, their leader made cach man| of a Legionary because no priest was | ¥h° 4 ieee “there's where you get off. tiood fe ‘and injured enjoying them-|°Y* 5¥44Y-", Toledo, Blade. letter to the Morning Post the Coal! “me gweet young thing gasped. ‘swear he would never surrender.| near to perform the burial service. A| The Legion will not retreat. “We |dav, Opportunity and vacant lots must| Controller and the Director of Na-| wee, 1 gues he'll be all ignt-~| Again and again they deat off heavy| comyade stepped from the ranks and|have run ones” ther eaying foes} In these strenuous times one mam ™ improved to make them pear Malev tional Kitchens have expressed thelr | but, ‘Arthurs thie Ss 80 sudden!" attacks. At noon a distant drum|read the solemn words, “I was once “from our wives @x eur ¢eseditess; jis as good as another ahd sometimes Chicago News, desire to co-operate in this move. Everybody’ Magazine, was heard, but, unlike the happy end- a bishop,” he explained. he's much better, roe that is emousb”