The evening world. Newspaper, November 1, 1918, Page 20

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‘TABLISHED ‘by JOSEPH PULITZER. Y Publishing Company, Nos, 63 to Published Daily Except unger by she, Brome Feepushing mp RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park J. ANGUS SHAW, 08 PUL alt Sores te THE DEBACLE. HE collapse is in full progress. Official announcement is made of an armistice between | ‘ the Allies and Turkey, the terms of which can scarcely be! 4 less than a complete Turkish surrender. The Dardanelles have been} opened, Turkish armies in Mesopotamia have given up. Germany's second ally has gone down and will count no more in the conflict. With a total of 45,000 Austrian prisoners in the hands of the) Italians, the Austrian Commander on the Italian front is reported to! have sought an armistice, his application for which has been sent to the Allied Council at Versailles. ‘ That Vouncil has found an auspicious moment for its sitting. It has only to take accumulating proofs of the military defeat, and downfel] of Germany’s allies and use them to add overwhelming pressure to the demands it makes upon the weakening centre of ‘Teu-| sonic military power, Collapse of the outer defenses of that power has been sudden ps end swift beyond hope. So swift it seems the end cannot be long! ; deferred. MEMBER OF THB ASSOCIATED PRESS, excl ogt ve! Pog dog) to the pee for urate, of, “celled th this yaier nod iso "te ve ——— | FOR THE PORT OF NEW YORK. HE ehifting of all Sound steamers to East River docks in order) to leave more pier space along the North River for ocean-| goiug cargoes was one of the proposals to be considered at! a conference scheduled for to-day between the regional directors of | tiansporta':on lines having terminals in New York and Murray Hul- bert, Director of the Port. It has been pointed out that five North River piers used by the New Haven Railroad for its Sound steamers might be taken over for the loading of vessels carrying war materials to Europe, Every conference of this sort is sure of the interest and—in so far as its general aims are recognized—the approval of those who earnestly deeire to see beginnings of the long awaited improvement of the Port of New York. ~ How imperative has become the need of that improvement must be borne in upon the mind of even the most indifferent New Yorker by the plain fact that above a score of ocean steamship lines have Geclared they must abandon New York and find eome other terminal port unleas there is a quick change for the better in conditions here. While it may be exigencies of war which prompt immediate development of port fac’ , there is every reason why the momen- tum of the movement thus started should gather force and continue for the future commercial growth of New York through coming years of peace. The Port Director’s recommendation that the North River pier! fie Lifted the Lid! TZoceay se EDITORIAL PAGE Friday, Nov ember 1, 1918) Ceannati= by The Tee rae Hillhng cn (The New York Evening W. yon.) By J. H. Cassel Marria ge—How to Weather h- sf Helen Rowland Copyt /45, by Lhe Mress Publishing Co, (The New York bi og World ) 1V.—Turning a Lover Into a Tyrant ROM slave to Sultan”"—"From courtier to Kaiser!" ‘This 1s not the tide of a Laura Jean Libbey novel; it's merely a description of the transformation of the usual husband—“after taking. And, in nino cases out of ten, the WIFE Is re sponsible for that transformation. Nine men out of ten go into marriage blind to all a woman's flaws and prepared to play the role of adorer. “I'll give you everything you want! I'll do any- thing on earth you ask, if ONLY you'll marry met” This is the average man's attitude toward the woman he has ect his heart on winning. The “Anything-YOUs say!” attitude has been that of lovers ever since Adani so meekly and cheerfully bit the apple. And most of them sincerely mean it! Why, then, the apparently startling change after the honeymoon? Simply because woman, in der eagerness to show her gratitude for such devotion, in aer anxiety to please, INSISTS on “spoiling” a perfectly good husband and turning her lover into a tyrant. Simply because woman in her passion for self-immolation insists on pedestalling the man she loves, handing him a sceptre, and imploring him to “cut and dry” her lite for her. How? By CONSULTING him in every tiny detail of life, as though she hadn't a rational working brain-cell to think with. Then she wonders why, at the end of a year, the only sign of individuality she has left is her tooth-brusa. Consult your husband's wishes, tastes, ideas and opinions in all things that pertain to his comfort and happiness. Certainly! Ask him when he wants his dinner, how he prefers his eggs, how he likes his cuffs ironed, and how he enjoys spending his evenings. (Although, even in these things, YOU probably know better than HE does just what he really wants, and how to make him happy.) But the woman who consults her husband on her OWN personal affairs, who permits him to choose her hats, her gowna, her complexion, or her servants for her, to snoop around her kitchen and dictate in her household affairs, should have a guardian, That 1s why second marriages are so often happier than first mar- riages. When a widow remarries she restrains her impulse to rush to “John” with a tremulous “How DO you like it, dear?” the moment her new gown comes home from the dressmaker’s. On the contrary, she emuggles wear it, and then “flashes” it on him without a word—just as she used to do before ehe married him. If, or when, he happens to observe it, she merely shrugs her shoulders and says, “What, THIS thing, dear? Haven't you seen it before?” And that settles the question. There is no room for complaint or argument or criticism. The gown is a FACT—and a fact is something which every man accepts without question. A woman never asks her SECOND husband if sae has on too much rouge, if he thinks her | hats too young, how he likes her to do her hair, or if her skirt hangs right. e lets him go right on thinking that she is “perfect,” as he did before he } married her. She knows that he fell in love with her for what she IS, and she is not going around begging him to make her over into something j totally different. She is not bent on turning a worshipper into a critic. On the other hand, I sometimes wonder why any man permits his WIFE to choose his cravats, tell him when to shave, select his friends, annihilate his cronies, dictate his pastitfes, and make his home a cross be- tween a reformatory and a jail. Why MUST a woman always insist on mak- ing either a mollycoddle or a bully out of her husband? That is not making of marriage. It is making a purgatory of it for one and a Ger- pire of it for the other It’s up to the WOMAN to choose whether she will spend her life 4 bully, a mollycoddle or a MAN. Never “CONSULT” your above all about your clothe: alienist husband about your own private affairs, If you MUST consult some one, ccnsult an t to canned salmon, the most easily “spoiled” thing on earth te a MAN! at Canal Street—now used by the Street Cleaning Department as a dump—be immediately rebuilt and extended to give 1,022 feet of wharfage, is only one practical item in a programme which ought to} have behind it every interest, organization and citizen that has the) welfare of New York at heart. Readjustment and extension of docking facil lags ies, the plannhg of lete lighterage methods hagee transportation improvements to which New York should be devoting: Oper: ita best energies. Hasten such improvements at once for war, but plan them so) that they are certain to be continued and enlarged for the permanent vot you,” prosperity and pre-eminence of the port after peace returns, ee ph ele RR, poing COOL WEATHER OVERDUE. HE fact that the charge against an apartment house landlord Oct. 22” was dismissed by the court, which accepted the land. Jord’s plea that he could not get his furnace fixed in time, should) the « to heat premises for which they are responsible. They have had plenty of warning of what would be expected of went “By 1 got to admit I answer is * jand that was mostly noise | “Who was the conductor “Say, listen earry no comfort for other landlords who on Nov. 1 are unprepared the © " railroad New York by the Friendly Patron new fuel and food terminals and the elimination of cumbersome, obso- 4 lump of sugar left by a 5 we'll soon be he replied. “Are of Grand Opera came from Lucile, do [ like it, to get an answer, artial.’ Mt had ‘Cavalry-Man, Yous e, it was in haffer that w hangs st took to se the cor don't quite “but if you you're certainty I only this was a show. some sort was put on for dialect Lucile the Waitress ning World) said Lu- as the »priaced an who of loading and unloading—are harbor and, 4 eccupled the sea haters to oe through it! having - ‘@ here in this man's burg again.” “Yen,” Gr you # de-| And that seen one not a Rush the Ttalian and ve sround thi 1 just the thing was like.” uctor | meant the man get} a couple of earsful of this rociety harmony.’ “*All right,’ he says, ‘but I'm sorry I come. I found the tickets.’ “What if you did? I tell him p your equilibrum—you'll live ext time I'll keep what you said movie show,’ he grunts. Well, sir, pretty soon the singer chops off on the tune and I never heard such a hullabaloo as the audi- ence set up. Somebody up in the gal- lery begins to call him Bravo, I look on my programme but he ain't down there under that title, so T just | figger it's a pet name or something. Everybody in my vicinitude but Petey seems to thing It's great, so I, not in wanting to an adverse in fluence, clhp my hide, too, Tt gets Petey sore “Control the hooks!" he growls This is awful and y pu know it.* Exercising to Prevent By fide Dediay | he Jarr Family “‘Listen, Petey!" I says, ‘I'm ashamed of you. Who knows but| what, a’ y back, some of your kin sung in and Opera?’ "Not on your life!’ he says, ‘But I doa uncle that sung in Grand pids." “That was plenty. T wait till the lights go down and tell him to come on, We go out and slip into P Cline's place for a lay-out of wiches and the brew gets to be the dear old boy he always was.” | “You don't like Grand Opera, 1| take it,” said the Friendly Patron, “Listen, dear one, you take it; I'll not stop you,” said Lucile. timme the good old drama with the villain getting his bumps and the nd- | and Petey soon | hero sav- ing the girl, How ‘bout some bread |Jarr the previous rainy week, pudding? Order a section and I'll try| First, the children’s school umbrella to cop out one with @ raisin In it} had gone, And Mr, Jare had heard for you." his tender infants accused of mislay- {tut Copyright 1918, by Tee tress Publishing Co, New York Ei Word 66 7-\N account of the influenza I think we should take a taxi cab," remarked Mr, Jarr as he and his good lady emerged from the theatre to find r&in was falling. ertainly not!” said Mrs. Jafr sharply, “We can wait till there is 4 and rush to a street car, But didn't you bring an umbrella? heard say ‘Bring an why You Mi Mr. me um- Jarr did not answer this ac- cusative remark. Mrs, Jarr had sug- bring an umbrella, but smiting of conscience, | gested they with a guilty Mr, Jarr had remembered he had } that had rightfully ! 1 to the t or of one ongfully be house Influenza By Rhoy ole, McCardell ‘She doesn't remember at our house and it would right if I kept it course, I wouldn't do such If Mr. Jarr's memory she had “kept it” for its rightful owner“*™™ for over a year. But, with an internal he realized it would be forever And so he kept jing it and had kept silent. ¢ rambled on ii »pping that bo! Jarr’s umbre returned the next sacrifice to male forgetful ness. | rtpude's local to Mr } she le serve it he nt-running bumbershoot ’ had gone which of But, thing.” as correct eat @ trom a8 never Working these undesir- bi up (from Mr at and never brought back t groan, among the missing. a guilty silence. “Yes," chattered Mrs, Jarr, “that umbrella cost fifty dollars if it cost a cent, But that wasteful woman and it] hasn't even missed it. I eappose sho or “regulations” to| has a’dozen such. For why shouldn't an umbrella while in uniform. all offe Mr n from the ast two umb Ja en from home | an umbrella a; n after al Silver was| bachelor left anyway val Re salty price ver, fr ck | behind hi Jack ne had But, the isn't serve wv, carry Then, from and then ¢ escaped unsee Mrs. Jarr One of had retained for id the the 7 for all ent creat she, when she has charge accounts 8 to great! everywhere? Still, it would have besn rr had jeheaper to have used it than to pay house with} sr reater, for a taxicab, | to bring it.” s one she | I wish I had thought hese umbre “Taxic women | Jarr, affec ns of a husban¢ ion of an umbrella | », and the other a n of the umbrella | Mrs. | bs are not dear,” said Mr, fearing to keep silent longer. Taxi rates are the only thing that sn't doubled since the war, Poor people should be grateful for that.” “Oh! I suppose that's why all sorts us tin er’s art, concerning which of people are riding in them now: it quietly into her closet, lets {t hang there until the occasion comes to | . pe: them and plenty of time to meet and overcome the “shortage of whe led the orchestra Jarr had comforted her conscience by | replied Mrs, Jarr, “It is no wonder . . him! He was all right excepi $ rere «| Saying to herself she was “keeping” | , can be recommended for the building Mrs. Rangle came home in one labor” difficulty. With a serious epidemic making comfortably Sia It Maureen Tike ub B Ber Narr M ac f a dd en e 4 t for Clara Mudridge-Smith, 4 day » but no doubt the most Ibe fore yesterd heated howes doubly necessary, a landlord should be required to fur- BE YUM y Put s | ! , teniay. I was wondering pete? | y , q my mind he couldn't ‘a’ been married (Author Macfadden's Encyclopedia of Physical Culture — important movements for this pur-| This umbr s of superfine) who had paid for it. She has found nish stiff proof to support a plea that he has been unable to get his No married man would take chances Seventh in a Series of Ten Articles.) pose are those which bring the tis-| Silk, with close rolling ribs, and 'M [out taxicab fares are still cheap and ) furnaces in readiness by the first day of November pale i Ag er ages ia hued + to 1018, by The Preay Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) sues, muscles and } around oF ving ' aes ripe w he OE ENE she will be riding in them all the biden 1 ee of vigo » in- i 5 sises use| the spine into active us at the top with and beautl-| time now!" L The 8 siaoto ie ee Ald eethare Ph anise i ree of vigor is safe in-| Vital body building exercises use] the sp gph Hahah pentestl| The fact that Sanitary Inspectors were on the watch and did gramm ye the noxt might a shor inst almost any dis-|up surplus fat, They change the} The human spine bears the same) fully cut cairngorm or Scotch topaz.| «7 won't kick; I'm for the prole- not hesitate to make charges in the case of unheated apartments last sugut 8 ety ed, eae , Sans e. A big, fleshy man is tak-! character of the blood, They call| relation to the body as the trunk of} It was umbrella that Me.| tariat," remarked Mr. Jarr, “You ywonth no doubt had a salutary effect in persuading negligent land- |, A Sey 2 Fyae! Ade Ba en down by some ailment, and with-| upon the nutritional system for more | a tree does to its limbs and branches, | a ' ton had trailed Mr.) know I have ays said ‘the poor owe oo Bee A new Orenesin’ in @ day or two passes off into the! of those elements that are esstntial| Make your:spine strong and you) Jarr to secu | should have appendicitis, too.” P lords that it would be safer to take no chances whatever in the firs t) leader or the bay wouldn't work. | other world, People say he looked|to create vital cell life, and as these | thereby make every part of your body| To Mr, Dinkston that umbrella rep-| “1 suppose so," eighed Mrs, Jarr, . cold spell. : ‘Oh, it w ais Bre * nigat Pena the picture of } But no sens- | elements circulate throughout the en-| strong, Therefore all twisting and resented solid and liquid sustenance | y s of Mrs. Rangle becoming ad- After tha warmest October New York can remember, a “nip” ed —_ ahve daft bay be | ible diagnosticlan could possibly put] tire bod: ¥ part of the organism | bending exercises can be espe slally}of from one to several days, And) dicted to taxicab riding and luxurie oy Ls dus | Bo! rie ig fo : Atulr in’ thea man of this sort in the healthy class.| is improved thereby, The nerves feel | recommended. | pursuing Mr. Jarr d party six!ous and cos operations crossing : j f fruit stand wage to his lady loves! 4 yarg cumulation of flesh {s| stronger, the brain clearer, Even the| When taking exercise remember the|!ong hours, he came in a side door| her mind, “but what 1 will that ‘ re ory tells mo ary inter doll {| always dangerous, ihe vital organs| character often becomes more stable| necessity of continuing each move- /just as Mr, Jarr went out the front,| do the middie classes? “Thank good- ot in a crap game afternoon ani dt ent unt ee of fatigue Is in-|and snatched it just in time from| ness, ae a etters F romt h e P eop ] 18 Cine fame that afternoon and] are, to @ certain extent, hampered in| and dependable, You feel more sure| ment un Vat ling of fatigue Is in nnd snatched ist in time from ness, is stopped raining a ne tic aa Wibcat\eciiin ar wean Gane) et Cook ae attan tha chow their activity because of the accumu- | of yourself in emergencies. duced, If you take one movement) where it reposed behind the lower| Mr. r felt thankful, too, 4 . or wail | 'y' Bar The Breaing Word: is iecisees Tara chaee oie * lation around them of fa tissue.| And yital building exercises will|two or three times and then turn to}rail and just beneath the upper, | Anyway, the contrite Dinkston con- of 5 ere'll we chew? he asks, Hs i , en wes differ-| Wi Nl these orellas his| fessed all the y ele ttiser of Ths Seooning World I have a family, consisting of my! qt get, my x Wan m min. | TB? blood contains too much fatty! also add tissue when one is too thin | another moyen cutee uses ditt Ae M3 it a : th umbrellas off his ns d all 1H ry next day and eold T have read with a great deal of|husband, myself and two small chills | ute, you poor fish!’ I reply, sort o' | SU2Mance and less of the elements) to be healthy, ‘The tendency of any | ent us eh you will nof secure muc haa “00 on his consclence, Mr.| Mr. ee i pawn ticket for Atty interest your article about the con-|dren—ond child a year and a halt! gentic, ‘Don't you hoar that guy up| 220% Which life depends, [neste whlob adda to one's vital vigor) Bapeti h6 1nm IF fo Uke era Tarr nad hailed 8 taxicab and) Camis. and Mr. dart broughe ik home tract which the telephone trust made |0ld, the other a baby #ix weeks old. | {h2e winging? Where's your senae| ® healthy man need not be of the| is always toward the normal, In| Wiles Unit tell tisties are Shalmey {hustled Mrs. Jarr into it and took @ scolding from Mrs, Jarr with the Government and wish to ; eave bar Perens 6 one in ae of artistry? If you want to talk|St¥nound type, but he should not! other words if you are too thin to be| have secured the stimulus that comes| “Of course it Is cheaper to take a| PCCHUse he might have lost it when Q 7 4 a 0 | 7° ave secured the stimulus that co F i Peel ci 4 thank you for your public spirit.| dealer in Jamaica, stating my need. |about chewing why don't you go out | ScCUMuIALe a large amount of surplus in good health you will add flesh. If] with use to the point of fatigue. | taxicab than to ruin my new hat and i‘ eping A for Mra, Mud- The New York Telephone Company | He refused, saying that as I had not jon the sidewalk? |tissue, It simply represents @ load) you are too fat to be healthy your| 1 especially recommend the follow-| this ¢ although goodness knows pete . has made {tscif impossible with gub-|iven my order until ®eptember Tied dont pat blak he aaen that the body has to carry around.| wetght will be reduced. ing: 1, Reac down. int prince the I've had the dress long enough," bee still keeping i seribers by arbitrary rules and un. | WOWd Bare to walk Haul, Desomber. ‘What of it?” [ says, ‘Ho's a big| TR® tendency to put on superfiuous| ‘Tho exercise that 1 am desoribing| (KeTs UNieT the from ritty| #8" Mrs. Jarr as the taxleab took DISTINGUISHE Just tariffs and was easily the worst-| ment, er ‘was indifferent vy my {singer and an artist. Hang off your flesh was acquired by our ancestors| here will be of value either for in-|to a hundred tt t,| them on. “But somehow T can never! © oi baa 4 SERVICR, hated profiteer in New York City|appeal, and informed me that I would | Bowery training a while till we get| ™@"¥ senerations ago when there| creasing or for reducing weight. Pos-| turning the head fa nd| make up my miind to do so. So dont on MUEE ME MINER! when the Government came to its|have to wait until such time as the | —————————— ——~-——= | were prolonged fasting periods dur-| session of normal weight means that] looking gown nul ya the say to me to-morrow that I must let “The mphill, Pa, Fescue. I hope that your disclosures| dealer could send mo coal. I under-| NEWEST THINGS IN SCIENCE. |ing which the body had to be nour-| the body should be rounded out to] firnine to the ott With | YOU have two dollars because you Saceq te see eer President Wilson Brill nosis: ue to throw tight on the | io a fom A statements made 1p | Stray trie currents from a rail. | ished from within itself, This ac-| such an extent that there are no hol-| feet far apart, bi: hit a the head,| brought me home in a taxicab." i nene a or. pare ° Miner Mulling Suppression of the patents for auto-| tion similar to mine or who have! Tout tre rer aun este counts for the inclination to put on| lows and angular outlines, When one! bend down as far as you possibly | And Mra. Jarr leaned back and ane) ‘spin with & Yengonnce, + for overcharges. There is no reason peal 6: anoe, 44 seperienee [6 to the! they have shed thelr leaves in the fall, | Weight carried by the body is nour- Jergy. One is often dull, tired, lethar-| Chin on chest, hands interlaced | maiachh conveyance, For once Mya, rire oF the Halscr in tho back. except a desire to swell the expense | go much sickness prevails, it becomes | An inventor | Ishment that can be used by the body| gic, instead of being alive and en-|hind head, press forward 8 euch velicion ano aus) President's apport was irae i Mune count why expensive stores should | necessary for ail, especially the wi to be eo mounted in Heat Pah in case It cannot be fed by the stom-/ thualastic, and when the weight is/ sgainet Cog need with Be grein h ed Joyed them to the utmost, aug ona loaded $91 ton: ed and and of tender years, to keep windows as to enable mon to soe just | #% Dut we do not need such re-| incgoased tp the normal, a change for| Dring ead Lat har tware Aetuat Mie) ot wae thinking of bringing that | ye it ard 12 Be ina vr140'a record, . warm, are they to do it/, tp, jhow they would look if they were|#erves In these days and they are a|thg etter can always be promised, }ead to the right and then to tae In handsome umbrella I'm keeping forlords, He wan at Sie 4 forrege iA |* garments displayed, | detriseens to ua, Return and repeat, Clara Mudridge-Smith,” Mra, Jerr! TH ARI Le ere are all sorts of exercises that . fe wig —

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