The evening world. Newspaper, October 15, 1918, Page 15

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Gi we mM Sate Bachelor Girl Reflections By Helen Rowland Onppright, 1018, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The Now York Evening Work!) EXT to woman, the hen appears t be the most joked about being o*. | earth and the most unfailing source of inspiration to the humorir‘s, | | Now ia the golden, gladsome autumn, when the Bavage sits around and y,runts while his wife dors the Garvesting—and the civilized man stands around and swears while his wife does the packing and roving. Somehow the woman who refuses to tike a man's name when she marries him seldom seems to get much of anything else out of him’ Ten years ago women were crying for the chance to work “just as men do.” Now a lot of them are vainly sighing to find @ man who will work just as hard as | they do. Ever observe that when a wife begins boasting about her husband r list of his virtues consists almost entirely of the bad things he ESN’'T dot” ‘There ts the same difference between a bride in a pink satin boudoir p and a wife with a dust-cloth tied around her head as there is between husband's honeymoon smile and his coal bill grouch. A girl's anxfety to find a trusband depends entirely upon whether she ks upon marriage as a prop, a shield, a crown of glory or a chain and ll. No girl ever seoms to realize that it is a combination of all of these. Dear me! The Kaiser must have been going to the “movies” @ great Heal recently. He has just discovered that murder {s immoral! None go blind as those who WILL NOT see that the quickest and surest way to peace is via the Liberty Bond booth! HERE if I could help it, she aspires to the | Wouldn't have the chance. 1 want very | Advice to Lovers By Betty Vincent I distinction of being an honorable ||" know 1 am at least partly in tb is one thing which tne] promising that, gentleman will make a point of doing.| wrong, But I am rather proud, and If he promises anything to a young| hate to make an advance for fear 1 ‘ woman he will keap bis promise, pro-|"0'gi0n aa yet of 1 desire to be ree: | Mate vided it is at all possible. He willl onciied, “What do you advise me to| | OVER . keep his promise even at considerable | do?” | Now | discomfort and inconvenience to him-| De not allow, your silly) pride to he. Vg poll such a delightful friendship self, and if there is some really £004) Ty most quarrels neither one is en- b reason, euch as serious illness, to jus-|tirely to blame. Since you are willing to admit that a part of rested with you, write the tle note apologizing frankly temper and asking if you may come and see her. If she is the right sort f girl, I think you will find her ready to meet you half way and help you tify his failure to fulfil an engag ment he wil: give to the girl in ques- tion the swiftest and most complete explanation of the reason why be could not do as he said, offense | La lit-| for you: | Of course promises should not De] torent the disigreeable. interruption made easily. But to give one’s word) to your companionship. = to @ woman and then break it is an — FOURTH f “ “ ‘ LIB ERI 144 almost unpardonable sin. A woman a C. rites ervey friend's | QERTY LOAN, 9 | brother is ve service, and is at} Jedges a man according to the} one of the camps not far trom wher standard of honor he’ maintains] | I have met him several tim toward her. If he wants to stand and my friend has suggested that I well in her eyes it is up to him not] v!h) Mer Ket up lis Chuan Me ae to sully that standard by evasions, Woy it be all right for me to do unpunctualities, broken appointments this? | Pitch in him the and best | and similar infractions of the given it would word. r rtainly nia ve “G. M." writes: “Iam very much in love with a young gentleman whose feeling for me is the same. As he 1s in the service he does not see me very often. I have asked him if he will uot write, but he always tells me of his \ating to write letters, and asks me If I do not trust him without writing. Ree tells me he does not even write Ae nother, but 1 think his reason for not joing so is because he sees her more often than myself, Ag we are secretly engaged, do you not think he sho! loves me? Peat Gets ‘His First Taste of War And Finds the Business A Man’ 's Game write, as I know he (aa | you tell me what I might do about Wus matter? The young man is playing a selfish part in pot relieving your natural} anxiety by letters during his absence. | Tell him that if he ly cares about! you he will do this thing you ask, | | A Quarrel. “R. PL” writes: “1 am very much in love with a certain young lady, and I believe my affection is returned, al- The story of Private Peat has been screened into a special Paramount Artoraft picture, now being shown at leading theatres. (Onpyrigbt, & Duplap.) BYNONSIS OF PRECEDING CHAU TERS Harold @eant, Canadian, joes tbe Down) know then he “Disappointed 5th.” There was also the Strathcoma Horse , @ few hun men entitied to wear what now amounts to a badge dis- We "ye Gor'eN OX THE RUN. UNCLE SAM | “THey ARE LICKED Goao ano PLENTY! il Whit! Hl I HAL HEY THERE! DON'T GoTe SLEEP! | CAN'T FINISH THE JOR Without You "iii cauinsctereanlin Sa WH HI ML though we ure not either of us ina position to think o! marriage just yet |e ie le meat wo Ragan z But for two s we have bee hove taken as CHAPTER I ut my friendshty as I in hers. Continued. ester have quarrelled-—really about N one of the leading British : pare at all, There was a jealous third pei Weeklies there app 1a son, and things that cach of us s rofeoting rather kes x and went to h and by my! Ww aos h ou — — be wake ob get lo France 1 “hh op ail who proach In the Tongs for Removing Clink=| 30 Par 'bRioasivie for him to I +r forget the day our captatn inguish one person from another, broke the news to The tears ra ers From Furnace : ong be ceard foulsteps com- down his ct he waso't t FE householder who has at- rd him y a os oi yen Who joes there?” demanded most broken-hearted to know we w em ptod wo remove olinkers to be divided, because ¢ Parkes from a furnace with a poker + wag the an- (now Colonel) was a real and gen will appreciate these home-made ui f die had taught us all h Fugilier: all's well.” to love him, fore ~ 7 teps sounded. On in laie December, while pr pr 1 oO “Haltt Wiho goes there?” at y Ore Bt e 8 $ é “The London itegiment.” § . < er coed “Pass, Londons; ¢ . = Se thay Who oe rere? Miemnied i) nadians; all's well.” : —O61A% OF mano v November tario, since k.iled action, while give the 1 ed ‘tection to the} pactalion, made 4a wi e speech to band fron) tw aapert Lads, the king and Lord Kitchener to form tae The} and ull the big-buge are Ang awe guficient plas Locaanics. ives, men, I want to see you ‘ e real soldiers, When they wet re, for the love o' Mike, don't call me Bill , . . and, for God's ke, don't chew ‘tobacco in th hing that never WHAT'S HER NAME—PEAT?” A War Story}). sneeze go SVs be ee ci a jebout a mt Bix bayo: wi atin ? Vaneouver ney ror Oke , t Ni the 1 ‘ y | hind, were in the Sth, 7th, 6th and 10th Bute _ W je suit and, all the men ‘ths ¢ y hope you've Take ol Lr oemeuciy hedc Sth, th » } of the irst Ca an Contingen Hea ppoi At wor frequent be KUpL iO resus au fe were The 5 ‘ ( DE MAUPASSANT 3} | ore \asucd a cloth lnpslette or #nail enough in camp, Take the caso of hope 10 PPR MIA TGhe Maes be Hak dicta hana Jguoulder strap: the infantry, blue; the th Western Cavalry, who could Dur that didnt mend matters, was made up of the lath, lath, 16th THE — |the cavalry low with two narrow sport the honor of their full ttle oa HENe hintae Gia igemat io Eruat and Asn Battalions’ alin last piivate = | bi ue Stripe the artillery, their Bhoulder straps in bold yellow rf une Ww should inclu ied auoh aplendil old resuncnts aster Story Teller Bnd. the ‘modical corps Asti Tle waa. hog! wuot had fo 4 a, Wbioh should Inluded auoh splaadls old rogunants was told that these | leave horses behind and travel to flchts t the 9lat Highlanders of Hamiiton and given to distinguish us from other france to fight in what they termed = The Ist Bri consisted of men Vancouver, and the Black Watch of NEXT SATURDAY 2@| contingents, To-day there are only “mere” iniantry, ‘To this day we of the Ist, 2d, id | SORES OF 8h VARAOUS AN OG je Mean Woes ap the far eastern men in this It seemed to us poor devils of Infantry, All of these battalion: came from Ontario, The 24 Brigade ‘ofthe WAR The Evening World’s — Kiddie Klub Korner © Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Copyright. 1918, by The Pres Publishing Co, (The Now York Evening World), BY DONS EF %, Gs THE BOYS zu Cousin Eleanor’s Klub Kolumn who love her splendid world. She provides for the wanderer, Amidst and above the yellow, bling leaves of a ctuinp of white rest of a beechnut t Dear Cousins o’ Mine: Be us tell each other of our visits to the woods and fields and wat we found and what we learned as green as if it were m there, I'll go first and tell you about and its gray bark singled it om among its neighbors. a pleasant day on which a chum and sea Lian ne tune maliarel 1 went into the woods without taking @| the shiny husks and rummaging In morsel of lunch. We wanted to depend| the loaves under the spreading arms upon ourselves to gather fruit enough| of this tree for the amall, triangular nuts which had already been released to make a tasty repast, It was a bully experiment! Of course, we had gone but half the distance intended when we began to be concerned, very much concerned, about the midday meal, Tramping docs quicken the appetite, doesn’t it? Well, we kept our eyes p 4 for possible food as we went marching on through field and woodland and over wind- spt knolis, My ra” (wo called each other “Vard" Uke real hobos) spied a little, sturdy apple tr almost more amall limbs could hold. So we re ita great burden by four fine apples 4 continucd onr walk, feeling « with the knowledge that if we fo nothing ele there were two apples in each knapsack at least. But Mother Nature ts kind to all by ripening. We split the shiny, dark coverings and released th twin nuts, which were too, though wtill Inside the thick r tive husk, go that they would be lighter to carry and would take up leas room in the packs, I was inclined to think that mine was the best discovery because the nuts very tasty and nutettlous: but “Pard” sald that the apples were od, or better, when it came to lunching, though each ate with relish, of the other's fare as well as of their own, 1 silently some de- ous looking red b , the name of which on the bush under ‘j]and dined. ‘They might have polsonous, though, so neither dared to laste them until a party of twit. tering feathered friends it upon the from their husks old Sth that everything was going wroig. The uult lylag next to as, the 17 attalion, Wax Quarantined with that terr.ble disease, cerebro-spinal mening Vor a few days we buried our le Zon. Speaking for mys lutely un t most of the men were 4 cond). tion, Jt cua be understood then that when drafts were asked for, to bri ing for France up the reginents leav to full strength, there wos @ inad scramble to get away. Without even pis: the surgeon, 1 finally drifted santo the Battalion, arily known as the “Dirty 3 This battallon was made up of the o's Own, the Bodycuards and idier Kegiments of nto, 1 landed in on & Sunday afternoon about three o'clock and was lnmedt ately told by the quartermaster that we were leaving for Br in a few hours, He told me that 1 ne omplete chvoge of equipment, At his news L because wo far had a ur battalion, \ known as tho 1 knew that the ace , OF web, equipment could tive servic not be worse, Phe rush for equipment issue was like a tnclee on the front Hine afte a charge, as [ found out later on, There were some three hundred men newly dratted into the 3rd batulion; there were some three houra in which rot our equipment and t. As it was, many eenhorn type mare 1 in «ki n ' p tin teh une 1 parts of t t nomuch ¥ be heard t were bELng ugh Engand and into as wo marched; w 0 hbor, On 1 through ‘an@ mud again, At times 1 4 to our knees as we plowed our way to the railway, where trains with drawn blinds Before we thr ch a terrific el storm brok ver ua; the thunder reared and th Jichtning split the sky open as though Heaven itaelf were Makin @ protest avainst war We finally embarked on His Maj. OW. coty’e Transport CHAPTER 11. FEFORE sundown next day we sighted land. We steamed slowly into the port of St, — This is a large seaport town near the Bay of Biscay, on the south- bush and refreshed themselves be- fore continuing thelr journey, ‘Then w that the berries were harm- and could he eat as food. r the first taste vara” and tixfled to leave the bright red berries for the birds that passed by on their travels. Now it is your turn to write and sof your trips into autumn Tell us what you found, you saw and the games yoo wont wor coast of “rance. Why in the 1d they wanted to take us all the Cousin Eleanor. way round thore, I don't know, Iwas BUY BONDS. told that we were among the first] The cousin-kins should be so fond British troops to be landed at this} f ali their friends who fight beyond eee Te m our land victorious And keep our banner glorious, As oon as we disembarked from That each should buy a bond the boats that evening, before the dose apd be aes: fore we left) rots help each one who bravely coos ocks, we Were Issued goat-skIN /in Freedom's cause to fight the fous coats, The odor which issued from] And do our service cheertly— them made us believe that they, at] For one cannot act wearily When ht of Fre least in some former incarnation, had m glows belonged to another little animal familiarly known as the skunk, Ugh! it was apparent that the secrecy of troop transportation whieh held m eld also in’ France . t have k A wondrous thing is one emall box It is a magic fairy wand That gets our men their guns 4 clothes And puts them on the ship that go: Acros the ocean pond, England 1 io let us doo} bit to-day we meet the p the ae son their way J When mimy gets p win the war and buy b this article of combustion] You hear the call, so let's respec wants another. It is one And act without delay. puft too mnany we our first] Ry THOMAS DAVISON, aged fit- wan to buy clearettes—but, na | soem, . The eveninis our arrival we . bonrded the little trains. To our sur-| JOHNNY'S WARTIME TA and to our intense disgust, ¥ Fiv not even the pasven, Five nick provided tn England and Ca One quat , i p ay little trains, + Sixteen ‘Thrift Stamps—One W. 3. little, and in the co 18 interes coaches, but box ¢ one tin hat n the wide of the “wheel 4 life of an “Hult chevaux par ordi 3¥ WASSDRMAN, aged these are not ordinary times ok Bo Instead of elght horses they put it of ua boys in each car ESSAY CONTEST. ked out well enough, though “Why T Le the Kiddle but the un four Thrift Stamp . much ft $1.0 were three days and three nl while passing the @ city near Rouen, we had @ glimpse of our first h soldiers, came home the first time, wounded ren us thouxh war ous then for It seemed to a tot Iw fairly sick at heart when L saw ¢ Frenchman with both arr and with bleod pou or, Evening I understood that were coming 63 Park k from the fe New York ¢ Solssons, the git st Closes Oct cht of t in their med a fur lot of fight these poilus, with their red breeches, their long blue coat pinned back from the front, the little blue peaked cap. and their long black whiskers. [ was horrified at the whole sight, For the first time Lasked myself, "What in the world are you out here for?” There must have been many of the HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB AND OBTAIN Pa dt PIN. naing with 3 boys who indulged in the same vein ; { thought, to judge by the serious- 48 of the faces as We proceeded and left the Frenc spital train behind. On ning of the third day, as we puiiod slowly tnto the station at Strazeele, we could hear tn the dis- tance the steady rumbling of the big guns at the front, ' (To Be Continued.) \ Au decoune wiesnbore wine diver era Kiub Pia and ime vertificate, : é coupon no. 38O i Pye

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