Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
A \ \\ WAY f AWS) a \ NAG AQ AS AK A AY \ SF PAS SO RSA SPAA \ \\\ \ \ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1919 —_—— a ! Women of 1819 Wore 100% More Clothing F BUT, SAYS WOMAN PHYSICIAN | Women of 1919 Have 100% Better Health (> S¥™ "i jpy or fy Ove I ai lhl XIV. If You Wish Him to Forget the Price of Your First _ And the Woman of the Immediate Future, Dr Au-} BY AN EVENING WORLD MAN } Spring Hat, Tell Him He Looks Like Napoleon— ; gusta Rucker Predicts, Will Be an Active, Useful| | Any Man Can Be Won by Intelligent Flattery, Person, Garbed About Haif Way Between the| , M and the Poor, Patient Plodders Between Office, Be Over-Woollened and Be-Starched Man and the Hf 0 l d U n g t h e L un e 0 n t h e Ve 8 l e | Home and Savings Bank Deserve lo Be Vlattered. i Wisp -of- Chiffon - and - Diamond - Shoulderstrap ne How a Single Regiment of the 77th—the 305th—for Four Days Held & | By Nixola Greeley-Smi 4 sys . a | % mith. Lady of the Ballroom. # a * Alone a Position Previously Held by a Whole Division, and Proved obde 7 ry By Zoe Beckley Its Mettle in the Face of Hot Fighting and Heavy Casualties. zi |< Copyright, 191%, 6y The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York ¥ 4 W" do some women find it easy to marry three and four hus- bands, while others never receive a proposal? You know Copy 1919, by The Prem Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World) tee i at | PANY of the women were gowned, or rather ungowned,” says; By if M. Loughborough | ee = Mean ee of him. The others pro- that beauty has little to do with it,” a young woman said to “ce : all ak - of the young | (Former Captain, UV. 8. A. and Intet-| |e ee ——— eae Vises We Banas | [oc ee oe, wo O83. BOHR me the other day. 8 Paris despatch describing a ball given in honor of the young | {" "rier Captain. 1S Aw dnd tn % Zed NARERS EX ERAVERS | |had happened. Here was discipline | Pie ean Ak VERTIY ke (lite do Wik iy Ce Prince of Wales, “to an extent showing they have solved the | (J70n00 (tier eee auinting Co tte Wee ee al 2” sow 7h combined with bravery. The troops | M sis i calabs in wbhon dik Ahad whe problem of how to cut out enough clothes to be really The Now York Yvening World.) YOg Tm INFANTRY Arwen Mh Zeoaw! 4, amantey A 2 | [had learned to take shell fire of this | * brains count for nothing at all and that domestic accom~ in the mode. How these shreds of fabric do not fall) oP. M, Aug. 1, the regiment | ; i = furans (| AovAN CE kind as being “all in a night's work.” 4 plishments, which in theory all men praise, are in reality off completely,” adds the distraught writer, “is a mys- continued its advance toward raed Dt The men in the front line lived in| bh. of slight value in their eyes when they seck a wife, : tery not given to mere man to unravel.” the Vesle se ind that night funk holes which were dug by them- | = But the answer is very simple, neverthele The Now this really does sound alarming! Will the next} the Ist and 8d Bat-| a selves, During a gas bombardment a | woman who finds it easiest to get a husband is she who " 5 > ete a tallons went into re hap from the east side in New York | wants most to be married and consequently makes the step be what a trained nurse whose experience gives re i prostrated himself in his funk hole | prakinat atest (oc pliasa Wien her authority to make comparisons recently told me, pele j egg eurenan ale s i The 24 Battalion a gas shell fell between his | She may be beautiful or homely, wise or otherwise, i. ¢., that “men are inherently modest; women immodest, ame up the fol- le It was a “dud” (i.e, it did not ; ; - | diMtoh th * i Their clothing will soon have to be regulated by law. lowing day, ‘Th explode), but so at Was the Strain | #*owoneney but she must know how to be agreeable. ith many Jf it were not for the law the fashionable woman would not wear clothes at all!” ‘Are we on the verge of a back-to-Eden movement? Is the familiar (in statuary) Paul-and-Virginia costume imminent? Will Fifth Avenue | under which the soldier labored that women this is an instinct, with others an art. Nearly poldier labored tha he suffered 4 complete nervous ‘eeai: jall unmarried women practise it in some measure. ives who retain the down and was carried awa ir husbands are those who keep on being charming and appre- f eclosed h Infantry re Neved the 4th Divi- sion, which had fol lowed the ¢ yb + >>: fa victim | love of tt ive after the life mortgage has been fo nd hell shock.” Capt. Seibert of the | ci: Headquarters) Com ' | ay 84 ‘0 be able to pub- | — ee heal rata. whine? pial agit " pany, 305th, was| day T hope to be able to F soon hallmark the sandal-and-wisp-of-c biffon as the Only Correst T hing? + ‘ bi tie Eun moves i Proceeding through an open streten |! esting statistics on num- | Plodders between and home In the past decade or two we have id was thorough- OCCUPIED BY Py F % strete t ’ : nds | and s gs bunk? netimes won. shed successively the “winter flan-|some physical examinations, Dr y exhausted and GERMANS i 3 n iS heard the whine of a big | > f men who become husband ryan ne rey ile r 7 nol,” the under-petticoat, the woollen | Rucker took ne up with her to the depleted in num one The shell fell ARRS ERO CUS! WODTRSE II id Bude lacted: (tthe SOR stocking, the starched “white skirt,"|Y. W. C. A. national headquarters) bers, in two feet of him—and failed to|#hrewd enough to detect in them a | Tal AY aul tate a Hale lode. He went on about h the percale lintng and the high-necked|further to prove that not just the fo give an un- his bu blouse. For these stuffy sartonials|Workaday woman, but ALI. women ” derstanding of the we have substituted the all-year-|“re coming round to an idea of ac-|desperate fighting that followed, a round undervest, seevelens and neck-|t!vity and usefulness quite at vari-) brief description of the country is loss, the fluff-silk petticoat (or none|4N¢e with the Ideals of the diamond) necessary, ‘The V« a swift-flow- At all), the silken hose, the “envelope” (shoulder strap lady who languishes be- jing stream, ran through a valley, \blance to Napoleon Bonaparte. | Of Its financial maintenance had been any girl who has hooked her |PUt Upon women, and how many of in | US would have married at all had the hot, shell and gas that New York| getting bim in th bout; Ceremony PiRced Upon Us the: ObNERE heroes were born Lieut. Luther J,| | offer this poignant piece of advice--- | tions men accept without a second Calahan of the telling hin he looks like Napoicon, | thought ORE MGT a ARTILLERY 5 ness, See SHATEAU © $7 It in the midst of this inferno| fish b neing diffi is exp Sanitary Detachment, n | 05 > | ghtl ie sentence - | task your wife or sister), and the|fore her mirror eusing: “I've cut my! one aide of which wus the Village of] 305th, had a first aid station in Vitle.| Even if he is six feet tall, has sandy | How lightly they ence them > Georgette blouse or one-piece frock so|*kirt; I've cut my corsage; I've cut! pazoches, held by th rm al ey On the night of Aug. 14-15 the| hair, freckles and a Pekinese nose, | Selves to a lifetime of cheap clothes a Jab pretegtboty poem it|my hair; what else can I cut to beline other bak of tha wae On| }Germans bombarded the place with | £0 ahead, He will like the compari- |4nd fifteen cent lunches! “How cheers a nde RenpasBhr ct Leal Se Te ihe castade’ | Whure sare. choker arid aera ie ven Aaa | sas and high explosives, Soon dozens| S00 all the better, fully they submit to the inevitable we are NOT!" emphasizes Dr.|°H strung along the curb of the] na zoches, was the wrecked PAs i satel Wounded men were in the first aid| I have interviewed hundreds of |!gnominies of a job that cannot be ‘ ‘ “Y" building. ” h Wa ecke age of cll a } | station. Calahan found it en in my lifetime and to-day the |Jeopardized because of a wife and a st. 1 youplec > 808 a S CONSTANTLY. A c it impossib np omy 1 Augusta Rucker, Director of Phys Weromen from the: leisure class,” it. Thibaut, occupied by the 05th. DAMES ae SHELLED BY to attend to them with hig rst thing 1 do upon entering the | baby and home. How loyal they are, €al Health in the Social Morallty) oiiinea Dr, Rucker, with a wave|O” the Fight of St. Thibaut was| | Reemeorac | Fa GRR AN us. aatucery on, so he tore it iy a aise { selentist, doctor, captain of |How splendid in their silent ded| Division of the ¥. W. C. A and spe-| 0 her buckskin glove toward tho| Vi estvole: also held by the gosth.| | HEADQUARTERS #7 { td to the root of the first aid station, | finance or even of a di uished | tion to women who quite often accept Bonaparte. Sometimes to be sure I] ‘There are, to be sure, | undreds of SOs " en- oO eft o Phiba ° OShSOSE. , - > ARTILLERY pepielist in -the ilts vd belorwers| ss motors. “Not that there is much of As ie loth of MH. Thibaut was a) Brenner) Say eral at her own office, No. Kast! ‘leisure class’ nowadays, But the|*reteh of woods. A roadway led| | + hae ehh / B4th Street. women who own those cars are here | OM St. Thibaut up one side of the ut. Culahan, with Private A Cotter, climbed top of the —= —_< in thubraldatvon’ Wie tort ans diaetainlatha re is no por- | thousands of women engaged in sup- | “What seems an alarmingly deca-| other to help the wae-earning| alley to the Chery-Chartreuve Road CHERY CHARTROUWE Rog e™ on bs s, Troops of 308% | tinguished “ie ane Y wh aay we bust, At any rate, if | porting other human beings with the dent tendency among women !n the) woman to put herself on a sound|*84 the Village of Chartreuve, ‘To go| | SHBLLEO CONSTANTE— WiLLeD MERE ey turned to their 4 end: Leh =X ww of idéas iw slow or an exag-|8ame matter-of-fact acceptance of Matter of clothes is really only &/ physical basis, or to get unpn such| {TM Chartreuve Road to St. ‘Thibaut| | SS Bonen SWELL FIRE WHILE tinued at h a aullee Us ete cree: | eirated Mai discretion prevenis [burdens that husbands display, but 5 sort of last kick of a dying idea. The/a basis herself, right in our gym-|along the thoroughfare mentioned, it NiGuiTey OX MAKING RELIEF him. For this remurkuble decce | the subject from talking interestingly ‘they did not choose burdens delibere & idea is that woman has no vate at] nasium, was impossible to escape German ob- Asnorcanes / —- duty he -recelved 4 43 Govnslonito | os Soa" Only ta. ekeliim tt ur jately as men do 7 Bere ber own rer ee ny se un tell you"—— Dr. Rucker spoke] #ervation. | ay Service Cross aod “| intere ing study of mn, Ov| To my mind every husband is a i. h conviction, “women are realiz- | In Bagzoches there was a large cha Meantime the 302d I irse every one must of the | hero, Sentimental as women are, I §) | Through the ages she has had to al-|ing that they must have something |teau, almost on the banks of the Workitw right with tha interes me emblance to tap the 9 of | think the race would surely die if its Se 2tre man in order to obtain a living.| more than mere clofhes, mere physi nd the Germans used this for} had their Lee 5 Nal e and « if leas flow | continuance imposed upon us the | Bhe existed only in his reflection. cal charm, to be interesting no maghine gun neata, sniping posts and ie hinee On en cae cave Te Die itlen thy starch ; price 5 matter of course. Fo “Bhe used to think by being 4) days. This idea has been budding a | si artiller Direct sie ena is ‘Seon “ phe Wit and, were exposed | Kt, nie = Mate ih Livery wo oe in NERReReL: nnow P etiaging vine she attracted and held! iong time in thoir brains. But the war| oches was a bill leading Hee tong| 2 ane Fay De AMER: WANCHA eee cal tp. Hoar that | this aa well as Ido. She knows, too, ae ee eee hag DrouRDL 1¢ to full flower. Tpilateau. In order wo rout the Ger=|MAP OF THE VESLE SECTOR, WHERE THE 7/TH DID ITS FIRST Siw York fine piece ef tose |Joun W n | that marriage offers to men no unique MERs csdurance. Gradually she some ney" at baat 10 nd the | mans from Hazoches it was necessary | REALLY HARD FIGHTING, DESCRIBED IN TO-DAY'S AND TO-MOR- | |)°)). Ou" we than het opines | every > Is ew Values, that everything it provides MEA Gabe ahs could’ not Nold|esmeuide alka the deck coor aa 1t7 ive them up that bi or back| ROW'S INSTALMENTS: OF CART. LOUGHBOROUGH'S éTORY, Grlln ad vant . infantry | and onc ted you may be had by them outaide the ine into @ valley on t ft With a detail of men y of the _ Capt. Crawfo: * keep on chatting about the resem. | stitution, That is why the practical man's interest very long by fainting| that you can't quit f the village. | awford put up a keep eh . n » brik h it readily, They! ry Pirasdi: ae | ectly under the noses of the plance to win his heart woman of past times was so willl Pend teare—which were part of tfe|have formed the habit of comradeship |i ne strong position | containing a fine looking old church, yton, well known as a vaudeville} guns but it soon afternas blang man) St | os fait eT jo lager meat 1) ‘ol4-fashioned allurament. She begari| with men, too. d you for the Boche and a trying one forus.|the altar of which had been looted | act New York, was kill: Clay-| wrecked b: rash: Flatiery ols the wheels e mat- , ned, And you cannot be a! pore the German y ‘ ihe Y ‘ artill 1 I . wat concede his superiority and put him 1 to go in for baths and athletics. Ax| man’s comrade unless you are phy-4 spy Me an was making bis! by the Germans, while gacred paint-|ion hac brousht many w laugh from | the Pore Cee CTW EOrd ee een eee ne flatter on hanes, but {to Werk for her. And why the wife fp been as her body woke up ehe.began| wically as well ua mentally sound, | MOM (erPerate stand. He was hurls] ings were torn from the walls, Other} th n by his singing of ‘Oh, for the] tO the 4nd Division: Cant read | self renpecting be Matter a flance, but) oF to-day who wishes to keep her shedding her frumpy old clothes. If you knew how many pathetis ca: ing big shells day and night, He was|desecrations wore committed in that} Life of a Fireman.” He was an un-|Fetra. of the engineers wie eae | ee on ee leave 10 | husband will tell him he looks like “It was a mighty good thing for|of married unhappiness I see in the |COUMly throwing gas into our po-| church which cannot be described In| pretentious chap who showed himself | structed a bridge across YO, f2R=| job of soothing 4 h Vs vanity |Napoleon, Jess Willard, Francis X. Woman to wear fewer clothes. Her| course of my professional work {tions His aeroplanes flew at wil |print, Afterward headquarters were] bra: o the last, | Poaito Villena vote to another woman. And in a tthe | Bushman or Douglas Fairbanks, health has been 100 per cent. better! among women who beg me to ‘make |e? Our Hines and either machine | t to Chartreuve Farm, which] Here was where the Tith Division) gogiy eq, ote ens i SAT LIP 2 01M0 08 hacen a aaa aida | We) wince she abandoned Saturday night| thom over’ you would beliove ine {SUMNEd OF bombed our troops was bombed nightly by Boche aero- | was put to the real test of its mettle, | German lines near Bazoches ta mentee | WbOn the Inconsistency of man THE WISE AGENT: . | D2) Baths and fanne! underwear and took| when I say that the purely orna-] TO Make the situation worse, the | Plan and here was where it showed that| for the body of his Captain, who had | But man's inconsistency, which his | ¢¢q 7s.” wuld the agent, “your to daily coo! sHowers and silk or nain-| mental woman has become almost as) German knew every inch of ground| Meantime, down in the front line)it was made of real stuff, In the been shot down n On German ma. | Vanity causes him tO: ORAMEETR LG, 3B. car has been ordered, But #00k ‘en velc extinel as the dodo. oceupler us, because he had ye. {OUr men Were going through @ living} tirst twenty-four hours after it went | hogy. Hayes dex Pr “haves to find the quite often the result of a starvituy I'm afraid you'll have to “Now ax soon as she gets rid of the| “phe first thing 1 tell then is, ‘Be {tt Wong that route and had mado| hell. St. Thipaut, Villesavole and the|into line, the 3d Battalion had left} chine « pu mna- Tego. Any wernan can amuse any | wait wevoral weeks for it, T've just fdea that men admire artificiality ¢ ‘i mn 1% ‘Bey ands where we were making our(stretch of woods were ‘being shelled] only two officers out of twenty-six| At knows how to flatter him {"ecelved word from the factory Saas yourvelf Stap being what your naking our nN ’ 1 t a pe they haven't a Jan ready to ship.’ More than wholesomencess—and 1 will t r stand, So it was a simple matter for!constantly, with gas bombardments| who were fit for duty, Capt, Henry | Mew nd if a husband ‘ares | ’ don’ P modiste and your shoemaker and Uve 1 r for i ¥ | oe his Fe Hie fon't want a sedan, take my reputation as a physician| woman ucroas the hall thin him to get accurate artillery ranges, {early in the morning, Patrols sent|, Katon, New Yorker and Harvard} omcer PAD AAS EO ler a roadster. fe that the grand majority of them do—| ought to be. Exercise and he el oli If one man waiked down the roadway out by us found the banks of the|man, led his company across the | movement PGI2GIn 10) HOR youl Wo. cal nee ie she wiil be HERSELY and not a mere ry : toward St Thiba the Germa Ve trewn with American and Ger-| Vesie on the left of Bazoches, and | Would, if suce - for SY VSEY (Os. .@ y Big nat mot the Exercise in itself forces a woman Be | the entire battalion hungry man is uch for food nd 1 hope it'lt be ~ Feflection. to dress intelligently, Cleantiness oc | WOuld “smipe” him with Austrian 88's) man dead Jestablished a position there within | Coived a citation And. wit Houle 43 (ai eady by the time she makes up your 3 “And since the natural woman re-| body affects the mind, too, ma (S8-contimetre guns), or the one-| Our casualties ran into the hun-jonly a few yards of German funk} Cro Be Continued ‘To-Morrow) eur inka thoy Hot be Nate /inind that you ldn't have any Guires exercise and occupation the} a jot snappler! No one doubts thay |PuNd cannon, which fires a one.) dre Lieut. Peter Wallace took out] holes, (Funk holes are small lines of | -———— bss Wibese BE is cady, honorable |other kind of a car."—Judge. Game as the natural man, she will! both exercise . eucie pound explosive shell 1 pats ol of cight men and all of them| trenches.) ‘This in itself was a big Y reach out for it and got it, and enjoy a poli Phe J06th Infantry 1 the Ves The bodies of some lert : the q . n more popular than they used to be . pth d ry held that wai the Ve 1e bow some | undertaking, and the surprising part 0. e é ‘ fave it. And no woman, | guarantee ‘ i la ag gh Ae net had held 1 was ever heard from Major Sloune, 1 ling t 4 Y, 7 iho has a healthy mind and body will| Poms ,'* Boine down into uny wort | Oe ental h rape Pe Bech lid Me si bain One eg aC How One Soldier Lost a Leg—and Didn’t Know It! Wear decadent clothes! She will be 1 Mareuil-en-1 into line Sergt, Jerry d fait ‘atin ; n Mareuil-en-1 nto line Se Je Roger D. Lapham, Capt es King was ta ur ay un-eyed. ) befor get away from t PRS pea & bunier of work, not a hunter of |, “Clothes will not have to 1 SA caval ve oe H He sat down, wearily, on th eat pple aa M))ule that they'd fire again, dut dep Men. She will imitate the producer, | @ted: If any type of women havi mies ie i” . Tt AipAiie Mhil Gol aim adbare © t ‘ laa lg eae Bape id “ty Thay wine have been pretty not professional sc tendency to do away with clothes al f h 3 (OYE } | A BE Oty DS Ab Oh Sen vers, since STS Ba: YO yu will have a wonderful) good Germans, Maybe they thought the profensional socia! parasite wciothex als! The Spirit of the bth. i. conlane font laaianiy tell oe an guia’ anual ee] elon New York when $00 dale wan uty ae te eam Being on her Aying way to make|tosether, it ts not the bullroom type : ; f nervy, for later when our ’ ‘lita Sa xs Bairccn: Woman Lace maingtivn This pocm was awa nd prize ina cont ynducted in | he endeared himself more than ever] side him, Ther trace of the | get out," he was assured, ‘“Phelmen took that dugout they found —— — FS alec arp epee aes France by the 77th Division t men. say sangfroid which marks the offi- | wounded men are ts of honor} 200 Germans there. But my greatest EVENING WORLD , wht py Bey ey lear at he who tights ne'er r* four days of valiant work | cial camouflage of the wounded man | everywhere erase ry ; 5 VEN Ge tery than in complete cand If any By Sergt |. Simonson. ver | . r was that they'd get me before PUZZLES. a eae ee ee sah see ee rar the W9L was Feieved, retiring to tha | prepared for public scrutiny, Visit= | The touxcled head. with its crown |{ reached our lines. 1 didn't want to ne @ Gurden-of-Kden ime. 4t | a Ordnance Depart t, S05Ih B.A The motto of tt 1 game Fe f Dole, and t 306th, 807th | ing ho! st the hospital were over, |0f waving hair drooped. The blue] pe captured. ; iden ¢ eit is muck | | ; ROM all the pa normal it rd Ost into tine, 1 ;|‘There was no need to play the game|eyes gazed with mute eloquence at eats ry By Sam Loyd. more apt to be the business and y Borie alah wan dat y| Then followed quick the V« A prelnsgencep toe ee ae vied Fike talents te EIae ‘4 Wika fee whieh sloened Snare vase be After I'd gone about 200 yards T Bt, % | fessional woman—the woman like me hi 1a . ye was reiweved | now BE ped, " | 4 . found a shell hole with two overcoats Their First Cane. les . ur Hisme Th dhaiMiphb And the UNA ofthe Win | iow ao you.der! Jlow the knee, | ‘anes, who insists on comfort, convenience : ; Padre Parent ns. E and the line of the Wh], “How do you do’ anal UNot til I’ get @ wooden leg," he| {it and f laid there éor « day endl HBP boys were twirling thoir| safety and cleanliness because shi The call of freedom, in Ales Aided me eT ene | was extended to cover Wismes. The) The grecting was unexpected. Tle ares |night before the stretcher bearers Se aces That on ve: |itua work 16 Ao Ana maui te ok ne, Brought forth our lads to do and "e 9G |s08th suffered heavy isualties.! man on the chair looked up in. sure | al hommes, trareay(#0uNd me, At the dressing station marked to John: | best all costs. But don't be alarme dare eng 9 thelr namos Every man in Company H ex sne | prise, then clasped the extended hand. | | Dhaba Ue: Ry Bie he tragedy! ney roid me I'6 be able to get Maat + S) °My «cane is We oun be both sensible and womanly | They were so young, these | But in the Argonne, far from home, sant and one private was gassed. For one arrived in Amerion aa oraranwace ian to my company within a few weeks hale an inch ton t one and the sam And They proved the trust well pla pany 1. also suffered severe losses, | you do not look very cheerful,” the “ i i | The doctor said I'd be runni i i i me nd vory boys 1 es i 4 as 7 site | said. The Germans had been sur Dg around Beer than yours and SS an ae ee Per lahls eres tere tapers pipes | When the 806th went back into line | speaker continued Wh i fendi wnt mang had Deon SUr-| a good as ever. So 1 took the : ip in the me Ria REMRNT GE tke decks | Bras r , ick there who could not}Aus 20 @ double system of inter- | trouble? Aren't you glad to be back?”) Leanna tic and came through ‘fsa nee : finn } imediate fu- | ‘ | gade reliefs had been arranged smile lighted the pale, refined we | several days the propo! to my ture, then, I take it, will be an active, | But down in Upton thése ys, hen The. tender, |them. Another corporal asked me to they kept telling me I wane is to your between the over-woollened and 1 trays | frenh | F34 D Would -colleve She’ |senaitive ipa SOmMpreeees D & ABLNE | an we ea machine gun opencd| Ke to see my foot, I told the ere height, The two starched man and th p-of-chi % They fought in cold, in mud knee high, | 306th, and t Mth would relieve the { told of mental as well as physics! | * ¥° area fan ELC RAUE TEES ; ss van and the sp-of-chif- |. ; ; i r did the SOS ne evening the 380) suffering. The large, expressive eyes |"! chal 2 if wanes together are fon-and-diamond-shoulderstrap lady | Th ned was learne n | Hut ne'er a murmur did they make DS th ; One even eh sth was dn ' Th r rial with me was killed, 1 have “Why, you haven't any foot there, Just equal to my height, which is sx | of the tm Personally, | believe | in Bouge they stayed ew the devil's hour was nigh; [coming up for a relief, advancing in | grew suspiciously mols that it was fortunate| old man.’ he said the whole problem could be scived ir| ne ey stood it all for freedom’s sane, | “shell fre form p that is, each) “Who wouldn't be glad to get back] he suggested the expedition and not Haven't any foot!" I repeated, What is John's height? men would only tell us which they | Where sand and sun and disma “ } t an five yards from the other, 80 that to the United States," he said, softly,|) or ¢ would have re sible| thinking he couldn't be in earnest i +e the girl in the talioren | JUSt hardened them for work sut Phe world is tree, [if a shell fell among them the casual- | “but I was just getting so Teould get] for his » The hardest thing} ‘Wh 0,’ he insisted, “There oe Answer to Distributing Wealth. | uit and qrmmmegremmers, the “in lime, & Man's Cull pes would be minimised, -Phey wore j around. op 6 Now they are e in the war f tar { there, Didn't they tell lows who were] you when they took it off? pro Rie (dohn's age was 495-6 months; |gowsed” sdy of the cosmetics and sot RE PCE Parr} Pang drt ttare meters ood eri ee Lorraine's fair hills first ms usec on d ” 0 ht, they hope to ]and close to Chartreuve Farm a shell tt me back bed in, I been “And the ‘d bes PP James's 365-6 months and Joshus ie a rl} And right, not mig pul ck in bed again ve hurt. vere I'd been thinking all the © 286-6 months, hy eet the ood et wrapped between Cunh | se burst and one man fell, mortally im bed for months, now,” he added, “I was hit in the foot, but I started| time I was going back to my company) es benediae! ' | When on the battlefield they came Will rule this world forever mete.’ wounded, A Corporal and two men! with @ sigh. “Jt will be months more! to craw! back, expecting every min-!in a few days!”