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\ NP AY WN AW MONDAY, ivid, First Han Story Of N. Y. Guardsmen in Battle By an Evening World Reporter Who Fought in the Line The Afternoon and Night Sessions of the Big Smash—Despite Murderous Enemy Machine, Gun Fire That Mowed Down Men by Squads, | the Americans Crashed Through the Line, Even Going Beyond Their Objectives. @# By Sergt. H. H. McLellan of the 107th Regt y (Bvening World Reporter Who & £ With the Intelligence tion of the { *' th Division.) r Copyright, 192 Publishing Co New York Evening W ve P, M.—-Our men are in Gouy, so Capt. Tupper (who recruited hundreds {J 4 of the men now fighting) reports. He bas just been there as a s aison officer. He reports that officers are few and far between on the field. “How's tha the suspicious inquire They are wounded or dead,” replies the Captain, hose dull eyes and drawm face tell the stor or at be bas been up against. Yes, there are many dead on both sides and 1,200 walking wounded were counted on the roads leading from the front. Guille nont Farm and Quennemont were bells, Our men a Jied by squads trying to silence machine guns. ‘Tank 2, . but were of no avail, % went in to flatten out the nest A whole platoon of our men lay dead in around the batch of nests. In the centre thr tain lay stark and cold. 5 P. M—Our men have passed the tunnels in the They have broken through cleanly and the 30th is advancing ahead Capt. Dunbar from the Brigade head- quarters sends a rider to say that the tunnel fight w: massacre. “I am sending this by horse,” writes Capt. Dunbar, “because one shell took off the heads of two of our despatch riders, Bonk and Beaver, and killed < <2 WS a cirele ir Cap: @ et. os ~ line. of us and encountering no tunnels PA LS, legs <— three officers right in the doorway of brigade headquarters dugout.” De- spateh riders! After all, they have it tough. 6 P. M—Col. Wainwright, our i | a apector, comes in with his steel hel-|2F¢ lost. There can be no ald as) met covered with chalk. He, has|'0Me as the exact location « rt be covered with chal a i been to the tunnels and describes our | determined. It would be fovlhardy to! ch to them. “We could just{fder the artillery into action, We a tne tunnels” the Colonel says,|@uld annihilate our own men. ‘The eThe y were still as wine caves, dark |AUsses send word that they are go tng for Gouy and the Hll-fated bat ing. Not a soul was in oa aoe ae f our men went {tation and if they cannot bring our | em. ew of our me " Merough them, but the masses went MCN back allve they will bring five t jermans for every man slain out of over the hill above them, There were canal bouts in the tunnels, and barbed wire tangled about the entrance, A that battalion. ‘The goth is trying to work up to Gony from the and British on the north will try ta south tank got up close to it and then burst Ona, British on the 1 sais into fi : : Page echt out bis between our lines and the lost men ee OF een aety n owe first thought. Our ae Geachine gun and hammered away a a ur wero. planes flew low over the sceno ang ate in getting drew machine a few Boche who were @hrough @ tunne) of nests. Men from the 107th shot 630 Pp. M.-C Kncaid bay just down two German planes, | SLAM A4S IN WHITE returned. He left his law books 9 (De He Comtinuc® To-Morrow.) | RRINGRS MEP ay the Judge Advocate’s office and went u -—— out to comn a batt whore . 5 h een wour There - Yeader vat ven vont” we Mourteen- Year-Old Pianist were only The Colonel's trousers are ripped and his face and hands shoes are Cov Won Highest Prize Awarded eee oes eines “hat the boss At the Paris Conservatoire ere in Bony; have passed through a | Bellicourt and Nauroy and one bat- tation has gone way beyond its on And Little Magdeleine Brard, Who Makes Her Debut Here| glans edge oo ~ se This Week, Also Won a Star From the Uniform of an were nowhere to be seen. Ou qvounded were still coming in in large American General. Ilere’s the 1919 Pajama G NEWEST STYLES IN NIGHT WEAR PROVE DAME FASHION STA member of the General Stat, After r dead were quit pumbers and our dead were F Thick, ‘The 10508, 08th, 10TEn and By Marguerite Mooers Marshall 308th Regiments have been on th AGDELKEINE BRARD is not}home played the big instrament in| Une at every jump, and the be om A u Muxdol 1 ehed y a com yet fifteen years old, yet she alon, jelein would) chuwl » whigh has re her nursery ar to behind TP posite affair made uj » from as won the highest —priae hee ¥ and bide goin @l! four regiments, The Australians | awarded at Pariy Conservatoire | {s door of wion se that whe rogged through us and are £0-! yng another p probably never be aerar mp she : aa lars wax impossible to re ear from the t he was ued fng well. Our| ft? Awarded to any little girl—the}unut her seventh birthday, Chen her group men in tl of fi ur} ms . | m dashed ax best they could. ‘Their | Star from the uniform of an American cr took her to the Barly Gone | men dashed a - Rombs were 4 reat work nst | General ASB : DAINTY FiGuREO Machine gun ne t ombed | Just be Mile, Magdeleine sailed | yy Y s y Hh c n _ SILK PASAMAS = and tt ‘ Kindly play some! hele way Screven rie ihe Hine: New York with hen tather, who ts] scuinn’ Mademolselie.” I ge wot tier! INL RLESH COLOR In their rvsn they ne machine | & neh deputy, and her mother, a 4 ‘ roca ad dy fees Aney are wWrte We ges pred! - peed asd Im bie!’ he exclaimed. ‘Who: | SN LIS FRINGE. Glade fire ut the A i Ked Cross at Bordeaux, Gen. Wintiela A hild ‘ | here were no f in| ever heard 4 chil playing these up. T Beott, UB AL w was stationed | goiy | TREE as the tunnels, t sure m4 al , tea down, |there, Wa. Jeligh th her pe 1 Ayed one ry pleces ley ¢ + : yi . We rejoins at ews, ‘The boya| formance that he removed one of the: t 4, ‘You are right ike Father, Like Son Applies rea t tre. They| two stars from hi pulder and decor. | !t I nee you to play scales, are weaken throush the conkre They | two sara from | } 80 1 never have, in all my lite To "CG I” and “Col I Mil fave busted the line | M eady has composed ° eneral an olonel iviiles the world knows it. Officer ak LI And the neat day when T wen’ pegs sup. Waathoven” ean ft with joy and are stlen | through the camp." said Magdeleine oe Mi Baashovert 66PPHE Colonel is a lot like the | the armistice he was sent wit? Det un officer who wore ot Aron R MMODIMAn fo he Gene tary miss Vienn poets when he saw my star‘ 7 SPARARET AR: Wolly wu nt he ha f SGualed nM 207th word " ' ne an inate t Thin iw the comune rd « famous who con ed gen who went forward in al fa is MOBS UD 30 8 GRD BRD ' t jo married,” itary diplomatic: oir W4 lan army corps at the axe of t rush have not at The | said urade, I salute yout’ And he! ; Ne A : It refers to Col, Sherman Miles years. Se astanes dros s that some kiswed my hand, too." ‘Tho litte gir) 7 as Y ild_t|and his father, Gen. Nelson A. M — men, presumably ours, were seen in] in knee-length frocks laughed delight fe ie vipat sitteddd wee | nin the vicinity of Gouy n back of | edly Mection ? ; Trevor dae pence |The General, now eighty years! Origin of the Almanac them, as well as ir ty Boche were] Mile. Maxdeleine has appeared i) Mv inusic too much, and 1 could ogg {Ot Nas long been on the retired list i Ave eritan’ a were Massed and « were surrounded, | this uury with the Paris Conserva | iay. enough time for my music and |P¥t the Colonel t following the path | probably compiled Aout a battaiion are t pred |" stra, aiternating a8 soloist) v1.4 to be married, I could not have|that the General marked out | Greeks of Alexandria mesh, ‘The seraplanes have sounded | with Alfred Cortet, considered the tore | ine patience to oall the cook up and| ‘The latest recorded achievement 1 | 100 and 160A, D. Calendars are mu their saxon horns over them ely Pianist who has appeared In| give her the menu, and give mylc Miles is the diplomatic victory | der the ancient 1 vin for flares to \¢ ate Aled Thee America this year, and a man thrice Jorders to the maid, and have con won only a week or so ago in stop. | Proctaimed t ne m.n° answer, Oftyan ant Ga, {er ase She makes her New York| toronces with my modiste, am very| ping the {ht between the Jugo. |Posted an na Ford. Ria ehine At alae) (nana th ke Wk Be BIBRA. FORO OR RDS gonte as Tam, and 1 only hope|Slavs and the Germans in Carmania, | PUbMe Place month aes oe suet or , el not ut all the conventional that when I die 1 may be Permitted |inducing both sider to submit their| (Us came‘ ends eee te salve co in another [ets Nervous, self-consoious child | to take my piano along to heaven, |troubles to Amerioan arbitration from "I call” or and tees fricors ask their |ETCEY: PUL & Slardily healthy Wttle | for L understand they only have harps| Col, Miles is only thirty-six years | 'RUS the word calendar was derived rae eee | been heard |Pat With red chooks and long black | there, and even if they have @ plano|old, but since his graduation from|PMbAably the oldest calendar in ¢ t P t Me aris. it might not be a good one and 1] West Point he has figured in the| tence Was found in the ruins ¢ from the N & I of all J ¥ piano, tie | Pompeii, It was cut up 4 square a | want my owr { important military events on r Peses A n next I But before this fourteon-year-old|the planet, He was the United States | Vek Of marble, upon ¢ ia of 4A en 4 w ' who wears an American] Military Attache to the Balkan states | WHlch three months are registered done, « Tupper comes in again}age that she cannot remember when | pects to make many more trips to|with Pershing on the Mexican tor. (covered the years 1475, 14% and 1613, she has had no sleep, nothing to eat. /phu first touahed the piano, at thr the United States, beginning next|der. And he went to France «| 48d Was Publishea at Buda, Hungary he line cannot be located, The men| whenever @ guest at her tather’s | year, ® 4! and wag published at the town of Buda, Hungary, WIDE AWAKE No. I1.-NO PAUPERIZATION OF WIVES. Wives of Many Prosperous Men Are Gilded Paupers— A Woman's Financial Situation Should Not De- pend on a Husband’s Mood, for Some Pocket- books Never Expand Though Thcir Owners Love to the Point of Frenzy. By Nixola Greeley-Smith Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing ¢ Th w York Evening World. LITTLE girl 1 know decided several years ago that she wished to A become a writer, and get herself forthwith to the composition of hort stories. whieb he would bring to eriticise. ‘Then some bod took her to the “tnovies,” and all interest in the tame business of literature ceased at once. Soon her talk and her dreams revolved exclusively about Mary Pickford and ‘Theda Bara to the total neglect of * ee her lessons and the growing concern of her mother. “Say something to Emily,” the worried parent ad- ired me finally. “You used to have some tufluence with her I've talked myself sick So, at the first opportunity, | discussed with a very much ed Emily the hateful subjects of arithmetic aa SEETS and French. She listened with studied politeness, and by a bewildering exhibition of feminine finesse soon drew from me thet I had seen and talked with the twin goddesses of her idolatry, and there. after gave breathless attention to details of what Mary said and wore. nd how Theda »ked and what | + Be ¥ aici akfa pal t the end of half an hour, vealiz-| alter the indignity of her situation "giet) ins that I had been flim-flammed by | Some wives of rich men do get the MB | the arch diplomacy vo frequent in iit. | tend y more to be sat t tle girls, [ exclaimed impatiently: | isfied wit im bs. km you know thut fatheM nd] 1¢ ig a common thing for tailors and . a Hoe Tf YOu won't | a kers in New York to refuse t y ns, how do you CX} credit to the wive men known to pect to live when you grow up? be multt-millionat Dine annnk First," said Emily, thrilled to bej dreay of wive Saw Pore whose Jasked the question, “I'm going to act | ,.,, to the: unsophisticated: repre in the ‘movies,’ and then I'm g01n8 | sent gilded luxury, who are compelled to marry «millionaire. So you se6 | through mise of their husbands to live the lives of “panhandlers,” con y was| spiring with their tradesmen to pre Tl! never n The argument by whi convinced that her futu er|sent padded accounts, borrowing might do her out of at te jmoney from servants or pawning a year unless she mastered the prin-| jewels for which they substitute re ciples of square root, and that no | productions ir : aire husband could be expe ted mien aire DusDaAS | And t ure thousands of women lw |by any little g did not U how t »00K | | masterpiece of extemporancous logic It converted Emily to passionate tn- finan tuation depends If be ney live ut ease: balan 1 check Was a iv on the jusband's mood. 8 feeling generous t Z| |tcreat in a long-neglected study, Pd suse pinch and echo nem, they ‘¥ T did not spoil my triumph by in’ him. In fi woman who has /y eck books to balance ing, whose husband and sons tuke \w SOO BVA RUAMAs | quently a gilded pauper. David Gras! niet nts! rappers N 6 Pe. WR ORGETE | ham Phillips told the story of her des- |», 6 to give them for fen\ BANS Emeroiceren | perate struggle with miseriiness in one | cartare and junch money dur the - BUTTER Lies or Nie’ moe JnaraMinnanorale—wThelcsae ee i fe ) OSE IN Paid." Whether Mrs. Laza- ad 4 sitting at the rich man’s table gets) AN ng number of men Justice involved in the ——_—_—_—_— : of wives, meet the sit- | 5 ° making a definite house ‘Quick Wit and Baking Soda oo eas see e ° which they expect no accounting. 1 Helped N. Y. Girl Save Lives (0... scone | Z re ref to do t iit ae ie Of Mustard Gas Victims «0's: Werieey . talist ts at fault i 5 *, Reading Anatole 1 e's “The Re- | Rernetta Miller, Former Aviatrice, Who Went to the ROR cleat thera taeln? artee Sent c as a Canteen Worker, Found Way to Meet Emergency my Bitoni ioe focussed itse n the follow senten When Every Second Counted. |most Fren Maurice hmen was care- OST foiks would cal! it courage, ng it ever since, Vor} ful of his money, but Gilberte did not} M no doubt, Miss Bernette stationed in the Paris | ¢bject to this, as she believed it to be Miller, formerly of New York, the Y. M. CG, A, Later] part of a woman's duty to know how und now of the Y. M. C, A. canteen s red to a sector near|to make a man give , nearest the front at a certain point ‘ont, Up there some one dise»v-| There is the old philosophy of the n Frar ays it is nothing of the|ered that Bernetta Miller wasn't] fnanctal relations of the sexes in its kind, She contends that It was only | afraid of anything. She was stationed| perfection, 1t ix a philosophy whieh and common baking | with a division of the army that Fritz | hi common sense ble women repudiate, refusing | had no occasion to love. Oo ang and cajol@ for money that Jid was to find] When the division moved on Ber-|rightly belongs to them. To “know Fritz shelled/ netta Miller went with it She has) h ow to make man ¢ "may bea rd gus that day | turned everything from barns to Ger-|necessary equipment for the under- and a number of men were badly | man dugouts into homes for boys of! world, but no wife should have to guxsed. They were brought to the|the army. She has slept on the safe| sink to such chicanery, first aid station just at the door of) side of stone walls in shelled villages! ‘There are men whose generous {m- Miss Miller's canteen, A lot depends! trom which every other woman had| pulses can be reached « through upon getting ald to pationts | yone, 8 as made doughnuts under | their emotions. ‘There are others quickly in these cases, and so Ber- tire ann colute over bontires,! whose pocketoooks never expand to netta Miller dipped her hands in ba ot as carried cigarettes to the Loys|the purcha of # dozen roses even 1u, to render them immune to/in the trenches when they couldn't|when their imaginations are stirred nd went to work, without) come out for them. Her ¢ m|to the ve of madness, There are to get the gloves always worn | oontends that she's the n/ just men, od men, noble men. n treating mustard Injuries, It is) pean | there allt rieties of men the how y of these 4 a K Hl rr eu ippens to believe in, But justice, whether or not she knows 1 v th a quantity Taking a Partner. ow ake him do it nd hair and a ie that takes 2 By § Toca ‘i — zt account. whatever falling shells, | by cam Loyd. a regular, unqueas was for an aviator ba p thel gn old firm of Dombey & Son,| #oned lowance her personal Rey eee nent ean oN te iI ee interest Was 11-4 times|Meeds as large as his income will for a time, though she never lost he s much inior's, Then it was, Permit. It means too that the allow. love ‘or it, and tried a number of | deci i to ta ance must be paid as inevitably as ther trades and professions, none of| Uncle Henr rent or the er's bill, not held which were qu sdventurous enough | Dombey to th ip in moments when he does not re Rants k a time| frm up. fe pa to be j and doubled when he ' 1 reporter on a New York|mont of £1,2 nie gene © hold- newspaper, and after that she did| which ¢ money and stopping of magazine work, and a bit of various | #um was to be coou s of domestic dis- kinds of business vided bDetweet Ine ave contrary to The Hague then tho United States went into} Senior and Junior Convent belong with sub- war one day, and the next Mixg Ber- [80 that the interests of the three|marine wart poisoning wells and netta Miller offered her services to] pariners in the concern would th ising of dum-dum bullets. overnment as an aviator, She]be alike. How should that 4 lone the root of three. earned that w en would ne be | be livided between Be an f ar marriages needed in that ty, and went to n Ain very Judge and pro- Yo M © A to find out whether er to the Grateful Son's Puzzle Moor will test 3 (here ve iything she could do in| young man was 19 years of {can be no real, permanent happiness France, She was one of the first} ago and figured his yearly keep ut|i2 a housenoid in which the financial women w!. came here to do anything | $228, Therefore, on his 2ist birthday }question is not settled in the pesime [that would be of use in the A. EB, F.| he would owe his dad $4,788, ning—and settled right, alhalth bid