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found itself caught at last between two forces—one outside, one in- UE iw! World, BSTABLISHED BY JOSEPH PULITZER, Daily Except ooneey, 4 the Press Publishing Company, Nos. ib « vark Row, New York. FTG MTA resent ark Row JOSEPH PULITZER, J a ‘ark How. MEMBER OF THR ASsoct rep papas od Tee ten erage 18 pie nda ele VOLUME 39 Secretary, 63 signed an armistice at 11 o'clock yesterday morning and that hostilities had ceased at 2 o'clock in the afternoon was signed and sent by the President of the United Press and ' HE cable which stated that the Allies and Germany had | | the chief of the United Press bureau in Paris. | There could have been no reason to believe these officers of | an established news organization serving newspapers all over the | United States failed to realize their responsibilities at a moment of supreme significance to the people of this country The subsequent statement from the President of the United | Press that Admiral] Wilson at Brest had also re: the signing of the armistice adds substantially to the basis upon rived word of | which the United Press may be supposed to have made ite an- nouncement. s under | In justice to the American publie the cireumatanc which the United Press cable was sent from France should be thoroughly investigated. Even to anticipate the event in a matter of sith moment would be a grave imposition for which those responsible must be called to account. But the full truti is not yet revealed, Parts of the German army and navy appear to have been functioning the wrong way. The Perfect Military Machine hae slipped a lot of Its cogs. | en THE PRESSURE FROM WITHIN. | T 1S now plain that what French, British, Belgians and Americans | under Marshal Foch have been doing for the last four months to) Germans in France and Belgium has produced reactions more} formidable than had been realized upon Germans in Germany. Reports of riot and revolution in German cities, mutiny in the! German army and navy, with Kiel and most of the warships of Ger- many in the hands of the mutineers, artillery firing on revolutionists| in the streets of Hamburg, while troops ordered to quell the revolts throw down their guns and refuse to obey, indicate that the German, High Command has found east as wel) as west of the Rhine urgent) reasons for sending that white flag delegation through the Allied lines. The Foch pressure from without has doubled the pressure of derpair and revolt from within, The German militarist party has side—combining to crush the last remnants of its power and prestige. To make things worse, Bavaria, whose frontiers are exposed to the Allies by the terms of Austria’s surrender, appears to have shown itself move and more ready to break up the German Empire and make # separate peace. With Foch and his advancing armies in front and hungry people} determined to have peace becoming daily a strong from nee bebind, the German Government finds nothing for it but to kneel, | hands up. It is now possible to read between the lines of the re mation in which the German Government urged upon the German} people the need of “self-discipline and order, uring them the! while how deeply “the Government and the commanders of the army| nt procla-| Women Who Found the Way By Sophie Irene Loeb Copyright, 1918, by Toe Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) N one of the busiest centers of the city, at the intersection of Broad- way and Seventh Avenue, there is 4 little information booth, It bears an attractive sign and informs the men in uniform™ that the end fleet want peace.” “They want it honestly and they want it] & booth has been | erected for their oad | benetit, A splendid “In all parts of tae state and empire we ueed the main- \4 committee of woe tenance of public safety by the nation itself. We have cou- | men is in charge fidence in the German people. It has proved its brilliant | 2 Yesterday 1 talker qualities during four terrible yeats of war and will not allow Seon memenomy with nome of them «itself to be driven senselessly and uselessly into new misery {and looked over the register, which by vislonari jis a human document, arin naunes | Meaning: For God's sake keep down the Bolshevism and we will PAG eCHR yeah sariion ake | ‘get you peace! ——-++-—_——. \the world safe made that shows the big effort nec for democracy." Daily some heartrending appeal 1s Be glad today your job is not in the Street Cleaning | f - 4 eles . - |searre is especially worth while, | ITALY COUNTS THE WINNINGS, ii! te stirs eo a young man and a young woman jn a small town ON’T overlook the inventory of what Italy won from Austria! in the great,Italian drive just before the armistice, | One 4uillion Austrian $5,000,000,000 | worth of war material, including 200,000 | and 6,000 guns, is| prisone and B) the reckoning to date, according to a despatch from Italian Head-| w uarters in Eastern Italy, | Since the beginning of the war no action has in the same space | 1 ‘h cal Me wait ianan \ t It was agreed that be should en- of time shown such winnings in prisoners anc booty, | nist, She was willing to get some The amount of material captured affords a new measure of the| work during his absence, but the on the Austrian military power immediately punishment inflicted preceding its surrender. | It will always remain a singular circumstance that at the very! mojrent when some of the super-strategists of the Home Guard were “assuring us that Italy would figure no more in the fighting, the Ital- tans got the signal from Foch and struck the sudden and terrific biow that put the left arm of Teutonic military power finally out of business. ‘The rehearsal was enjoyed by all. | ee aaa Belgian Crown Prince Veteran of Trenches at 17. | OWN PRINCE LEOPOLD, old-, both of whom are also est son of King Albert of Bel-|cated in England. The Crown Prince , and whose oMicial title is |!* the hero of bie schooltellows, not _ slum, ‘ 5 » Is of royal bloo of Brabant, has just passed bis /i5 ‘thar he has seen real service as teenth year, He has been at-/a soldier. Early in 1915 he was per- school in England, but 0M| mitted to enlist in the 12th Infantry, has worn the uni-|and marched in the ranks with a of a soldier of the Belgian irife on his shoulder when the regi- and has lived at the front with | ment reviewed by his father and the King who is|mother, After that he took his place | try. Thelin the trenches where he served for four months. He was on several oc- casions under fire, and 1s said to have twelve, |siood up under it like a man, being edu. | over, | wax expected, married, They had very little with | which to start, but they had love and | youth and ambition, And they needed | litle more, He had a modest job| enough to make a little home, And they were very happy, When the broke out they thought it all They had no close kith or kin, and both felt the call to arms. great worry was the little one that How would she man- a uly this man love and duty Yet he enlisted, as they were both certain that a would be found, She came to New York, where he was stationed | preparatory to departure overseas. For a considerable period was torn between Facts to Remember Jive: BAY, lying entirely with. in the city limits, is large enough to contain the whole Island of Manhattan, with about 7,000 acres to spare, Greater New York has $000 avros of parks, The Bronx leads with 8,959 acres, Manhattan comes next with 1,460, Brooklyn has 1,141, 1,000 and Kicnmond 140, Queens This town had already begun to be cosmopolitan when it became Eng lish, A dozen and a half languages who had a spacious house in the coun- | t ‘Friday, Nove | EDITORIAL PAGE | mber 8, 1918 German Eagle Feathers! cist, 1918, by The Boog Tih ng 02, (Phe Now York Breuing Workd,) unea- sav she was able to work, but an pected illness took all the little ings they had except the one $60 Lib- erty bond that they had managed to buy. Then she went booth to ask how to dispose of t Liberty bond so that they would ao* lose anything, During the conversi- tion the whole story came In mediately the women will found the way. They nged for the young woman to be eared for in hospital and assured the that all would be well, and that they vould look out for his wife while h was gone. A few days ago the littl mother gave birth to twins, In the mean time the women had been finding the way. They found 4 good woman to the information elt out witiy arr husband ry, who also had no kith or kin who was lonely, So the the two litle ones were tr and and to mother nsferre ha KARR IOM ® Marriage—How to Weather It By Helen Rowland Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Mvening World.) —The “Best Brand” of Husband HE best brand of husband on earth—certainly the best for the Amer. ican girl—is the “American Brand,” Patented, U. 8. A. The imported husband, however excellent a man, however charming, however polished, 18 inclined to have old. fashioned ideas about marriage, women and the divine rights of man, which jar the democratic soul of a git) who is not accustomed to “Kaiserism” in the home, ard Inspire her to Bolshevism. But the American Husband: Where else, in all the world will you find one LIKE him? Where else wil! you find @ husband who will creep out of bed in the morning, take the ice off the dumbwalter, tip-toe eoftiy into the kitchen, make the coffee, and come in bearirg his wife’s breakfast on a tray, with her mail, and ter wan noliove® cigarettes—simply because she happens to have a headache? Where else will you find a man who will work Ike a stoke: downtown all day in order that his wife may drag him out to her Seet- vate box” at the opera (which he loathes) in the evening, and display ie diamonds? Where else will you find one who will pay his wife's tran portation to Reno in order that she may tell the judge what a “brut % he is—because she happens to be tired of him? Where else will you find one who puts all bis money in his wife's name, always gives her the m: comfortable chair, is perfectly satisfied with one hook in the closet * one drawer in the chiffonier, and meekly asks for car fare out of his own pay envelope? Nowhere, save in America—but America is FULL of husbands like that! I could name a dozen myself, just off-hand, blese their hearts! Yes, the BEST BRAND 0 husband on earth fs the American husban! ‘nd, better still, there are fifty-seven varieties of him to choose from’ For while all good, typical American husbands are alike in their de votional attitude toward women, they differ, according to locality, in the: methode of showing it; and the American girl can choose her variety according to taste. The Southern man, for instance, is apt to be more romantically or rentimentally devoted, more practised in those tender, protecting, lltit» ways so dear to the heart of women; the Northern man is inclined to» be more solid, and reliable, and thoughtful of the future, sometimes more genuinely unselfish; while the Westerner combines many of the virtuca of both, and adds thereto a broad-mindedness, and a capacity for belur a real CHUM, which makes him the ideal -husband for the modern gtr), Then, there are the New Yorker, the Bosto.jan, the Chicagoan, the San Franciscan—all perfect dears, in their way!—but to MY mind, the best | variety of husband is to be found in the small or medium-sized town. Tho big-town man {s apt to have seen too much of life, to have been te and pampered and beset with temptations; in short, to be so “bache?~ ad p orized” that he 1s hard to domesticate. New York {s full of “marrtet. | bachelors": potentially good busbands “spoiled-in-the-canning,” Hke over~ | ripe fruit, you know. Yet, there 1s no man more generous in mone; matters toward his wife, nor more lentert in little things, nor more @1- t--tainirg, than the average New Yorker, your husband according to locality So, choosing is merely a matt.v of eelocting your favorite “flavor"—a matter of whether you prefer to be ted like a queen, a chum, or a baby-doll; to be courted, consulted or to be flattered, cherished or pampered meun to insinuate that 8 saints ire oddlee Heaven knows, I do no ALL American hate bands are angels or stained-g' Many a girl marries, only oo find that she has been entertaining @ devil (instead of an angel) un. awares, But I am talking about the TYPICAL American husband, the AVERAGE family-man whom you see trotting down to office every morn. ing and trotting back home again every evening; the only real SLAVE this Land of the Free. And@ say, again, with my band on my heart, whiskey) there are NO “bad” American husbands? SR than others—that's allt (as someone has sald of Some av’ a little BE —————= By Roy L. M er cCarde!ll The Jarr Famil this lovely place, and will there be} Covsrig! Ta te ite Bros Pumuning OA. Tend the giaan cronte: blow: oUt (m0) 4° bot a eit abies died a cared for until father comes home York Eveuing Worid) all helps aes” Gaelic ar mane el eee from ia oe eat a lskineste thee picking up since the| 'T gusse you are the only one that} “Sure!” Mr. Slavinsky continued eee ie i ee lsces it that way,” said Mr, Jarr. Then Berry gimme a fine cigar, »nd came from him in’ thankfe s of e autumn and early win-| sees | bs ce: |S eAld it ARAMA Ae what had been done jay well be im- ter armistices, Mr. vin-| 4 was the reply; “but every why cigars was ot y ey ways broke that people give you, an agined. sky?" asked Mr. Jarr, chcerily, as he| body sees it a different way tere : i aaa people give you, ant This ie only «ne inmance of what| encountered histneighbor, the elasier.|is the feller what {9 an wnder-| 8 suid because people was broke why women can do when they have tue) "“Pre-bellum business goo¢ taker next door to me. My! I mats dh Hud to you: maybe; and ¢ 18 will, Soon—perhaps very seon—thou- “Business isn't bellerum, it's bum,”|my throat sore coughing for that i id there by! $ a trick in every tied sands will be coming from the other] replied the glazier fellar, just so he'll be sociable, He mt uodertasing ' and then T agherl side, Many of them will be matined] “Me, he continued, “only it is] thinks T influenzas. Sed Bay again and then he tr and wounded, The families that lave | fashionable to put in glasses on top of] “Tell me about your influenza, You bia had : i en walting, struggling along unt] furniture tables { would starve to] got rid of it, all right," said Mr], aerial My penal : 60” return of the breadwinner, may |death, Winter is too long coming. | Jarr, winks. es Palio as 1 st compelled to suffer considerable | What we need is lots of snow and al” wy giant nave it at all,” replled | infuenzas emkidembe Tw re ho Iships until their breadwinner is] big strong wind.” hevginsien) ‘But only avout weak | cso ni’ and cece would cou : stot his p nthe world. “Not for me uid Mr. J “IJago Lam taking out an order fr] treat SHAE good ia et woul There is much to be done. There] don't care for snow and wind.” a gloss what le broken in a china! oem a 3 0 do it ire many Ways to be found, The war] “You would if you was In the g1a83' closet up the street, and I see Berry,| 4 Le? ; has made woman come into her owa.] bu: 4," said Mr, Slavinsky. “Comes the pin rtaker, standing in his door. ree aas asked Mr. Jarr we big opportunity for real help—the | a snow and the boys throw snowballs,’ and he looks as though business was | heat ahal os ae rage my ‘head individual ald—is on the way. it ts] then my telephone rings to ask me to/ good and he wanted it to keep #0043 | Siavinsky, with w atch. tee sail real war work, even after peace has} come around and fix the broken base-| ind me, you know, I'm always the| cue me wife tells 1 he “It's all b com |ment winders, Comes a strong wind| eller to do a good turn by anybody| ue mY wife tella his wife about hep | father’ and mother’ golden wedding Whys and Wherefores of Love and Matrimony when it don't cost anything, 80 I] wo was to” coughed for Berry and that makes M j him stop me and shake hands, Gen-| Mr. Jarr’s gaze bespoke his intcrest, and Mr. Slavinsky went on erally he only says ‘It's nice weather, “My wile ; iS ite : ain't | tells Mrs, Berry about the gol , r, , ’ 7 J : ain't it? or ‘It's bad weather, ain't y about the golden ws: ‘o. I—Why a Man Needs a Woman’s Help When Choosing a Wife it? But when I cough that way he| @Qg, and how another undertaksr such @ fine woman, and when the|Svftens when he comes in contact}asks me into Gus's to have some- | Sends flowers and fifty camp chairs By Fay Stevenson | meeting tool e he any es|W the weaker sex. Man believes s, Y » going to do, fo people to sit on and don't | meet nok place how many: wiv thing, like you are going to do, for rneeple ‘ik t Copyright, 118, The ag 0. s ” , ‘om and eleve e is! ” wf - vare of y, because ple si i brim : | hav said “eat” and promptly dropped ut ¥ in ‘ ap He R Lae ie you ain't a tightwad, you don't sare have. golden’ weddings atone be New Yo Ne dAnUMIntanOn® what she poses Ie, 0} what kummel costs, you're a sport! | ‘People like that undertaker,’ my OMAN Jerstands woman.| You can cheat a woman on stocks] plerces through the surface and sees} «yo, Berry s ly! what 4 bad | Says, ‘you could die aby ist ei his yhen one woman meets an-|and bonds a good deal easier than a] her as she is. Women send out little | cough you got, Mr. Slavinsky!? And] telephone number in case anything woman, Greek meets} man, but you can never cheat a woman] words and phrases which catch each!) gay, "Yes, it don't em to get no| happened to Mr, Slavinsky, who das a Gace is a certain look, @/on another woman's character, If]other up as the spider sends out Little lpetter, and I'm going to see the doc-| “But didn't she know Berry wos certain feeling that pas between | there ts a mouse e room a cat{ threads to trap its prey, And n@} top about it, I think its influenzas, | treating you for your cold ee wae them which mere man can never} knows it, white the dog sleeps quietly | word ordook from one woman m 40-| and very dangerous,’ “suret” was the reply. “That's why, quite comprehend, A woman can|on, and if there is a woman about} other will “let the cat out of the bag.") 7, . My wife dont like me to go in Gus's a “Berry says to me: ‘Take my de- | eve omebody else's expe! see another as plainly as she can/any woman its keen enough te “sige| Now, man is not looking for any Berry says to me . a ven at somebody else's expense, still, is s . ‘| vice and don't see no docto: ey | if friends invite me, what can I do?" see her own image in the mirror, | her up" in one good glance, side of woman's nature but the side] Ye Sh Gone ny they don't do you} “You can refuse,” suggested “My ) sensible woman ever tries to fool| ‘The feminine instinct is to surren- [she chooses to wet forth, It ts woman} ONY None Mn aoe dare, " another; she never poses before an-| der fully before her own sex, just as]who plans to make herself what man) | But Mr. Slavinsky said that in timos other—for wotnen meet face to fare! | the private citizen surrenders to the} desires. If a woman finds out that |" eats fos not ae ure Bobodaia The woman who is ever foolish enough to try to pose before another, or pre- tends she is something entirely differ- J ont from her natural self, is as foolish as a fly who tries to tango before a spider's web, But woman doesn't often wy to pose before another of the fair sex any more than she tries to stand before a mirror and tell herself that her eyes are brown when they are blue, You can't wear gingham and pretend it is and you can’t wear paste dia- monds and pretend they Neither can a woman paint he plexion or color her hair and another woman not know it! satin, are real com A woman does not need to know another for a number of years to form an opinion of her--one glance will do. How many men have said were heard in its streets in tho final days of the Dutch ascendency, | \ they wanted their wives to meet 4 man likes a domest bookish woman, she rave over the highwayman, When a woman of questionable character comes into the sence of a good woman there is # »pping of the eyelids, a] pl he has been known to overestima value and to misjudge with woman she never fails, before blind man, that creature Who is so sure of himself in the business world, ventures into matrimony, let him present his in- tonded-wife to some good, wholesome woman who is entirely neutral as to his motive. No matter how hard- the of man very apt troduce all his male and got the opinion “peach” or “mighty he introduces her to will get the truth ‘ore, another paan's wife because she was hearted @ man may be he always ing. joys of a home tic will woman or proval of the weman he loves from a woman he admires his married life is to be ideal. He might that she fs nice," but rant and or the ures of reading even though she in- friends to her when a{ “Yes, doctors and undertakers never] feelings for nothing in the world.” Whale Meat Newest Delicacy an unspo confession of “you know my type.’ |detests them, But she cannot do this 2RHAPS woe have whale ,¢tnning or freezing for food, At our Perhaps that same woman will pose|to another woman, One question as P Pry BIG: OF & whale atonke [HADEN the mene Ih handiea’ty paste as a moral woman before a preacher,|to how to make a cert ain dainty or before long. -\ Canadian whal- | seep epannes, and te this end we havo but she shrinks from the eye offabout a certain heroine will bring out]... company has been canning whale|to the considerable expense, sowing won he ty MOTOR: |meat for a number of months in| Mammal, many of the whales brought Woman is always a good judge off And so if @ man wants to know MS] }yritigh Columbia, In a letter to the|!Mt0 our’ stations ure unfit for food, character, Her power of analysis, of | wife-to-be as she really is he needs|Gommercial Intelligence Branch of pa they are womeiimog captured ot Intuition and of natural instinct usu-| the help of a sister, a mother or altne Canadian Dep’ rtment of Trade| whales t ag he SE and ly exceeds that of man, Although} woman friend. If he gets the and Commerce the company says: twenty-four hours are ney lod aver this purpose, Samples of o product are only now being went eet to prospective buyers, and we have not at present made any large in this country or the United § although we have shipped 1,000 c: to Samoa and Fiji, For the frosen “Owing to the demand for whale meat for food we have erected a can- nery where We expect to pack 30,000 to 50,000 cases ot whale meat this a|season, We have erected three cold storage plants to handle frozen whale meat. We also own ani operate two! produc® however, we aire 4 one woman ho| freight steamers, one of which has @| orders for over 1,000 tong, the buna se One nod or one|cold storage capacity of 600 tons, The} which is being shipped to Bostow wink from another woman would save many a man years of pain and eufter- species of whales taken on this coast yleld three to twelve tons of prime High ge meat, and only the prime meat is|to the present we have put up about used by us at the present time tac 1,000 cases of meat at our cannery,” Our whaling season opens aor: April 1 and ends about eee hte ess shed