The evening world. Newspaper, February 20, 1919, Page 20

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BY AN EVENING WORLD MAN WHO (Former € et what ludicrous sight as he walked about with a life preserver belted ¢ his overcoat. What he saw was a smooth expanse of soa, with steamsh , one being with ammunition. ing majestica!l convoy was the Unite lowing day heavy swe from sea sickn one kind of illness r too sick for duty blew the) whistle the various posts a No soldier ever knew whether aril! meant th a sighted and the or it was an ordinary 3 So generally t! their posts with as much a the others—and collapsed on a railing when it was over He told them review and the “We on th iret of the Na sacrifices lh was service. Archbi stood on the During the sermon, as during moment at sea in th a there Me Henry," shouted an irrever. was the ever-pré v submarine, a remin given by sailor at the stern over a launching depth bom contrivance was a sul © gur know.” ‘The New Y “sea wolves.” Half zen r helmet, strap, were alwa nd aA W 1 A starboard sid r tas faise alarms given | te debris in the water which re- at his tormentors and wall wembled a periscope, a "wie r i= "an 4 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1919 — WITH WMHs A CAPTAIN IN THE 305TH INFANTRY. ‘*“Going Over’’ With the 305th Infantry on the Cedric—A Brush With a German Submarine—The Landing at Liverpool—How the Dough-, boys of ‘‘New York’s Own’’ ‘‘Kidded, the Natives.’’ By J. M. Loughborough A., and Intelligence Officer, 804th Infantry.) Vrow ‘ Tho New York Krening Worl ain L HE periences of t As soon as he boarded the big steamship he displayed delight and! curiosity, He wanted to explore every part of the Cedric. But Col. Smedberg, who, after winning glory, on the fleld of battle, was promoted to the rank of! in was ordered below decks as soon Cedric sailed and was compelled to rer on during the entire voyage follow. Our couvoy began assembling just beyond Am lightship, and then the dou to come up on deck. He presented a strange and soie brose Hut a real submarine ure oard learned that s Australia. had been wirelessin Code mes in German were 5 g draft, cap ace daily at dusk and received the four hours. Here was was all a very fine beginning i. are ue eo voyage, although on the | “crows the ocean, and it wa ge pal te i that if the Germans knew of B would bend every effort tc countered and most of the New York | 1° , t efore had diers, who only the day b L soldiers, wh aed Oa are became more pronounced such elation, wt iva ih fate 1 Frida when the Cedric sprawled abou \ ured t he zone, Amer join the convoy on that ¢ United States Army Ate ? pn & yut they failed to appear in the morn- ng. In the ternoon, however, the; 1] hands were 5 + the eriods of the day a 4 ame galloping along , ee ote cuantioned by! tHe galloping along through the unceremo: : for the “abandon |4Ves—British boats—and the * On tle tor ee eg aiways|*ubsided, 1 came up aguin t igh tied rn the “tubby"-took gs craft filled with atmmunit ort to nunition, »f the soldiers to a Lav of th ace ed along at ten or this narine had been practise affair or Sir Ernest Shackleton was on board | pees but if you are be- : w iw ' linpression that the ship has been lhe Pg! pedoed nL w t Bi 1 ed ntry officers as- amazement that u 1 a u" ts below dec ¢ prot. | 2nd ordered the men to stand at civ bunks, ‘They were , Marehed up on deck. It was wa nal Army ihe traiuie craft sent Up @ red flag, indicating a expect much | "UPMms had been sighted, and of the American soldier, You are the re other ship in the fleet followed AX * | her example. ie aoe: | The yedo boat against a common foe. You have] ‘ vedo boats raced around been taken from homes, from good} ''K® bounds after a rabbit, occasion. business occupat t as were} *!¥ dropping depth bombs as they men of Eng rst hundred] Y€Pt One of them steamed astern |, thousand, You 4 na great} sind n boat, where it was batt If grief n to swerve suddenly and then | of it all; I fecl that 1 tam drop a bomb, A few iinutes later it nw | be Mt of the con And yet, what t small, black Mug, which could be made in such a cau I mean that a submarin to you ry; be t ed." After that the yourselves, and you } 1 Was doubled. r."" He then of 1 the men, wh " . k or knelt while he prayed crowd pa y imp what, to The sur £ st glimpse whiskered En lishman drove rd car down on the dock topped it with hop's snow-while halr er deck and at ceremony, ponded s not Henry, he alarm, " " i Bob hook bh at ee ee ee The 77th Lea ERVED h, 807th and 308th had sailed previously. It is with the ex New York soldier on the Cedric that we will dea! General, was and is @ strict disciplinarian. ain there. He ed to don a life preserver and keep it Not until after the Cedric had passed Sandy Hoo}! were officers or men permitted on deck. The reason| for t obvious. Germans with field glasses mignt and report, and submarine attacks would be sure to oy was permitted! tuide | Joped on April 24, when officers on ymarine boats |} ked up, and Measure Your Future By Your Fingers; Short Fingered Folk Most Successful: They Are Usually Born Leaders of Men, Fearless, Determined, Hate Details, But Grasp Eagerly at Large, General Conceptions. Napoleon, Roosevelt, Taft, Edison, Mark Twain, Peary, Types of Short Fingered Men. ty a4 we rections to certain submarines pried One of t oMficer instructions for the f wenty- royers were sched- and a makes them valuable rule based | And ing the voyage and tf the fleet back, @ picturesque sight deck, There ia umn of water int OS” rans Lesion) usually are gifted Walt » them faith Frederick | oiq sand grasp eager! s the band belonging to a| were An i mined command resp »wed by those of weaker and s Short fingers also are to be found | tingers. Long-fingered naturally 7 aft ind his finger tips are wide. we have never had who § “read in it” North Pole reach the These Famous Men Like Your: Are the Fingers of Any of and ry Was taken up e English who were | — you} t mptu “Ford joke" know s club ed away, But there were many Liverpool folie poomed io view the entire affair as!demonstraion. ‘This probably waa] sible. ° ving France for Home PHOTOGRAPH OF AN INFANTRY REGIMENT OF “NEW YORK’S OWN” DIVISION LEAVING AT ARGES TO E mbined wit indolence, hand . but the red hat 1 was that of Mark siveness und splendid Whitman, was an nd 0. hand pre end: ngers of Richard Watson hort and blunt-tipped pression of the hand of Com- t he has short ng to note that |aue to the fact that the « Jcased and the Liverp ful t All hoped that the front The tain sped - zh ENT TT v EBRUARY 20, CAMP) weEN NTRAIN FOR BREST, FROM WHICH PORT THE BOYS WILL EMBARK FOR HOME.| The Average Man Knows mouaonrevey mine e wedding. j about women hearts knows that the most s becuuse men and women h Words have indeed different meanings to oman who ¥ that her me tudent of palm -|do not know what despair me am nut cut down by one tendency ' into vileness of which she does not | even dream, tin different f working ped at some ion that an idle phrase spoken } by her had heare nto baseness, 1 vbulary that anything is wrong when! masct grin answ ther Amer poken. ¢ forced to learn that there is hid- me under the most inn word, and she takes refuge in silence | or arms herself with the 6 when he grasped it for; pon of contempt Only the woman who Is absolute! loquent! ignorant humor of this underworld is thor- Robert. | oughly slender fingers. g-fingered hand of aid that two tage the long and seague of Matrimony is decency of speech 1 believe that comparatively few husbands realize that between the point of view of the most broad-minded woman an@ the narrowest-visioned man there is worse than folly to expect a wife to cro indeed, men who feel that it is one of the m duties of a husband to act as cicerone * barker who proclaims unctuously to wide-eyed rustics the phantom follies of Chinatown The husband of the Victorian era found his fd * marriage in a paraphrase of two lines of Dryden He drew an angel down.” And then oftener than not proceeded to blackguard the a her all the vile club stories to which a wedding ring had given her a rueful) tribution an I gu fM will say that the V an gen sshkdiod n might experien ic ity eco discovering to-day any “ nde mateh every doubtful an L v ut men a y ! ene ely prove th mee have never been able to inspire emo- | Whom ¢ 7 woman worth while is n who ha uly loved ul concerning them. ‘1 hom women have shown in the air sinner among us may ©: tnteiiirence fail to see the point of SUB= Fue ene which we to a ten-year-old + he tradition that woman ha vumor.) ak the same lan m, One of the most countered 0) is the reali- nt gen- be, and indubitab’ she will be ed by degenerate rsons man nen n difficulty, but t Xx joke. living who ha me at the p con n distorted by co |laugh they d course y be so thor- | the ant t c nerat folds and greasy | good or usy grin after sh t I be adually, however, she rvation ent explore the of the conversation and| guage. protected from it. That ts|not dream say the most important con-! expeditions. Beene hae Carter has been called a sculptors} It iy int ng ago as 190 udied Peary's hand de that he wo n record that one g1 a young woman] ness organizer had long fi ,{erican department mined to} petter with his two co-work one hundred yea eile aa wal actin ane By Sam Loyd. ‘Philly”’ and Back. blank books, In the machine shop Sires Ase they carried on their labora made the acquaintance of Car- los Glidde ventor wh | mechanical spader intended to take | ce of the plough, Glidden be- interested in the numbering i of miles per hour? swer, because it is the idea of inv tish countrysides, in which women 2 prineip! » three men fe began work, pivoted types set 1 both arms and shrieked | ' (To Be Continued To-morrow.) Typewriter First Invention of Three 2 first really practical type, valuable ntion of} rated in the three residents of Milwaukee, | fairly well 8. W. Soule and Carlos. pidit was just fifty ¢ 1 tht they comme t f on a machine which, whon | Jam De n 1867, had the mor who joined to write at fair Latham i first mac Sholes and Soule conceived nting a machine for , another Milwaukee in- was then working on a| miles an What was average and suggested that ‘he might be used tn de 4 writin Now we must achine, Sholes | interested in the idea, ond le suggested] The five IN DOUBT ABOUT A JOKE, DO! TO YOUR WIFE.—X1. Just Two Kinds of Married : Women, Those With Whom One Discusses the Weather and the State of ‘Bill's’ Health and Those With Whom He May Discuss Everything. Men and Women Speak a Different Language, So the Wise Woman Sticks to the Weather in Conversing With Them. By Nixola Greeley-Smith copyright, 1919, by The Praw Publishing Co, (The New York Bren } of the most important contributions a man can make to the es a chasm which it Substitute “Seeing Life” for “Seeing New York” and one finds the ideal of a certain type of “She raised a mortal to the skie weather and way for a man to save inderstanding by to refrain from initl- ng her into sewer as oblivious of them ag venom of a rattles 1 baby is to the alone had the powersey ver would have bee e business off far too serious to such jokes, to be n't like them, heart of eve y wife weeps every {time such follies assail her ears, and is wings before his face when begins, “I heard « last night." ed of urging the married women of rk legend of childhood, article fa merely a plea for arp wea-|a decent vocabulary. |unnecessary for the average wife to sewers of life or lan« And the husband who wanty to protect her from “sewer rats” will of taking her on eucld deas which were incorpo. . s 7 aled “Phe Vather of the EVENING WORLD \pypewriter,” although he shares that , wan PUZZLES. speed of and returned over 15 miles per hon the same course at the rate of 20 number ed a partnersiip | Answer to Tipping the Conduet colts Agsregaling 94 coals n a circle, Sholes}must have been a 50-cent piece, two nyented the letter space device, and |20-cent pieces, one 3-gent picte and a | Godden also contributed @ mumber of | vent, ‘

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