Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BSTABLISHED ‘BY ‘JOSEPH PULITZER, Pebshed Dolly Except Sunday by the Press Publishing Company, Nos. 6: 03 Park Row, New York. oe RALPH PULITZER, President, 63 Park Row, J. ANGUS SHAN, ‘Treasurer, 63 Park Row. JOSEPH PULITZER,’ Jr, Secretary, 63 Park Row. MEMBER OF THH ASSOCIATED PRESS, | Associated Pree ip exctnelvely entitled to the use lor republication of att newp Acmatdben toi ce pot otherwise credited in this paper and also the iocal wows published heroin, _————————————— — ne VOLUME 59....... sevoesesNO, 21,046 PARADE THE 77TH. HERE can be little patience with narrowness of mind at Wasiington that refuses to sce anything but the difficulties] | The War Department has raised no objections of difficulty or | of parading the 77th Division in New York cost that are not far outweighed byestrong and special rguments for | such a parade—particularly at this time. To bogin with, the 77th is made up largely of men drawn from the | foreign population of this city. brave fighte These men have proved themselves | War has welded them into a body of stalwart, loyal ; Americans. Their families and friends are proud of them. ‘The city Saturday, EDITORIAL PAGE. April 5, i (The New York E By J.-H. Cassel eeyst Oe why) is proud of them. There could be no more powerf | and productive demonstration in the interest of Americanization than to march these soldiers of the United States—many of them foreign born—through the streets of New York, where hundreds of thousands of the foreign population | of this city will see them and feel the force of what their achievemen | and their honors have to say for full and loyal Americanism, | The Government of the United States has the strongest reasons for overlooking no means of reducing the number of aliens in the permanent population of the count The parade of the 77th Division, returning from the war with the glory of the Argonne Forest bright upon it, offers an opportunity to make a deep and stirring appeal to the foreign born of New York most of whom are of nationalities peculiarly susceptible to patriotic | influence through just such spectacles , To throw such an opportu jovernmental short-sightedies At a time, moreover, when Bolshevism is stealthily at work even | ity away would be a gross error of] in the United States among the foreign elements most casily reached by its propaganda, displays of the Nation's mjitary strength—par ticularly in the form of marching thousands o fighters drawn from the Nation’s foreign born—are specially needed. They warn the “Reds.” They turn the thoughts of many who might become “Teds.” The parade of the 77th in New York should, therefore, be con- trained and loyal sidered as even more than the just due of valiant fighters and the mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers and friends waiting to weleome them. The parade of the 77th and all similar parades in this great | cosmopolitan centre are certain to stimulate the progress of the| Americanization movement, and at the same time discourage Bol thevism. The Doctrine of Don’t Ry A Ann Re ——— ~ Suppressing Father | How They Made Good By Albert Payson Terhune k Copyrieht, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co. The \No. 17--AMBRGISE PARE, the Genius Who “Made Good” \ by Dying. E was a barber—a French barber of the sixteenth cen- tury—Ambroise Pare by name, All first-class barbers in the days of Pare’s youth were also dentists and swe- geons. In front of their shops they advertised thate surgical ability by means of a blood-colored pole wrapped in snowy bandages. (That is the origin of the New Yor Evening World modern barber pole.) Though the regular doctors of the Ume ‘oO sneer at these barber-surgeons, yet the common people preferred to go to the sign of the striped pole to get sed rather than to the high-priced and incompetent phys: In an era when brawl! and duel and street accident we so frequent the red-and-white poles were decidedly useful in pointing used their hurts dr cians of Paris, way to the nearest first aid station. Pare began life as apprentice to one of these barber-surgeons. Le had a genius for surgery and soon learned all his master could teach him. | He was not content to accept the fossil precepts Onn > oof ottiors, but insisted on thinking for himselt A Genius Anxious to think out his own theories, he joined for Surgery. the French Army and became a military surgeo terre Thils is not the place to speak in detail of the hor- rors which encompassed the sick and wounded in he sixteenth century wars, One of the mildest forms of surgical treatment was to thrust a wounded leg or arm into a caidron of boiling oll to cheels the blond’s flow. Wi upset just was at work one day in a ficld hospital the oll caldron a man with a newly amputated arm was carried up to This was Pare's first chance to make good on some of the theories he so carefully worked out and which he had not been permitted to try the absence of oil he tted threads tight ‘ound the severed artery, the ive laughter of his colleagues he thus applied the first ligature | used on a cut artery, But the laughter died when Pare proved the success of his experiment, and when he devised aseptic dressings for wounds in place of pouring ho oll into them he took a step in surgery which has s'nce saved many m of lives. He next proved to his incredulous colle s that a patient (when the doctors were probing for a bullet) must be placed in the & posture as when the bullet had struck him. In a hundred other ways he proceeded to revolutionize war surgery The soldiers adored him, So did the civil populace of Paris when ly turned to practise medicine among them, But the regular physicians re- declared him a quack and a sorcerer. They blocked the his best discoveries. As fa —ooorr* ness inc used, these doctors ev Looked On as a murder charges against him. F t Miracle Worker. in the right and bec trusted hin Orr they could do him n Next Pare turned be t ment of the ane Lunatics were treated lh y We ma ncled with heavy fetters and lodged in foul dat cou and @sewhere until he had law Pp ed which chair « the unfortunates and secured w and m f th . He epent his scant lelsure time in writ nd medical text books which revolutionized surgery and enabled generations of later doctors to follow In Pare's footsteps. By this t had won t! fidence not only of tie people but of the court. rong was the influence of the t universal co-operation in his tand that others, f regular physicians that he could not & rful work, He could not ma ” ow jing his written teachings, would be able to duplicate his cures, mablic looked on him as a miracle worker, not as a teacher. | In 1590 Ambroise Pare diced. The entire country went into mourning lor him. The mighty surge of public opinion forced the hidebound old | practitioners to admit he had been in the right and to consent to follow the | lines of surgery and medicine he had inaugurated. In his death he thus made good fir more than tn his lif | The Jarr Family | Roy L. McCardell . Copyright, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Ercning W \ | |- ia) | Mrs. Jarr Decides Not to Interfere in Affairs That Concern Sweeihearts and Mothers of Others! too bad| but she must he W. oe aa Sint) Aa eats 2 sya : * eis nS 2 roe) F course it would be have nother and If the War Department cannot see this, something should b By Sophie Irene Loeb Or Making the Home Safe for the Family | «¢ bbe etetale ae se aS Aelia 5 u / if Jack Silver married an ac-| maid and a Pekinese dog done to enlarge its mental range. Copyright, 1019, by the (ress Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World) B y St wart R i ve tress who wore tights and | You knoay, I was thinking of ces Dey ry y ¢ Vers shts thro er in| the si once an Trouble and cost are not paramount considerations when it is| People Only Learn Through Trying. Copyright, 1919, by the Press P ‘ The New York Evening Lay Harn pita . a alae Hee Sn ; ; 11 HERE is a mother in this city, &| There is a certain amount of gree ai % * ee, ml Pak \ 1 ee Be ROS SeoutOb lesson t bads a question of turning victory and the honors of war to full account | friend of mine, who is making |dom that must be acconied gr hea Now Father's Afraid They’il Take what any one can do about|matd, of course, and she was cra in strengthening loyalty, patriotism and citizenship for peace the mistake of her life in the|youth, Its natural demands in this Him to a “Nut” House. it sores ae forest Unoe | 0: £2.08) the seas y th me i But a ae sil soamace saayi nek he Gipee a : ‘The only thing to ¢ ca oi mothers I t asked such Parade the 77th. . be of her jr ; t may t be discodraged with-| PLL, say this for mother, when she| Women, It w ing to bee Fenty t reon and appeal to her better|outrageous salaries, Two of oF an Z children in one {out detrimen ia ale ate it affa rom: what moth PL A aa ales begets 1 &s rep a SF etna nonin aspect Childre: h steps in society, she steps t well affair, fr mother sald) | declared Mrs. Clara Mud-| that I took on trial as mothers drank, respe | hildren whose parents are 8 she can sling all the high-brow|and Mrs, Houghton-Simith was & 6 1 smith un veral others I had come to sce ; she a boy |called “strict” are very ofte ose | : ; ; ‘ ii : ridge-Smi and several others ad co) 0 8 The new straps with which the Brooklyn Rapid ‘Transi: Lie th ¥jcalted “strict” are very often those) names in tho social directory now) to make a speech on Woman's Duties |” afrg Jorp had “tho person” and! me set their caps for my husband at Company is lavishly garnishing {ts cars are much thicker nomen no elatan Ta iS ore Deven eue Om wisiauk taltering,. and) shales evant seine Wie’ Meant a aire wile HAsw DACtANORS|| frat aipnee Aud psared) Himttcs dol bh sul ose Who had to have o ie z. } ‘ie ff for th c veaiate Me Bere and stronger than the old variety which they replace, So, many ree et freite Hike u ne their fing.” reached paint where she calls a| She stopped f vother in her cary ying “I never heard of such things!” thanks! Pinan ine Pedi same with grown-ups, The | countess by her first name. TI all |and sho ¢ and shook «tt will be useless to argue With | orieg Mrs, Jarr, i mi ae ae looser ery of ee is often the | come from running with Mrs, Housgh- Ie or Jack Silver, I suppose,” his fore | Well, those are the fact ne doctrine of | very thing that makes whem do. The | tons s ants you to say n A ‘ ow an 3 Wa WHEN THE STABILIZERS GET THEIR BALANCE “owt hat a hig bat sprite analy th oth hee amma av ance tthe sa : mo ates ment ah inn A mt nu mane fa sit > h oraatloaliy jtaont daaieani oth he fame is infatuated he son." (servance of traditions that ira . pr . » st this ‘La Su- ee ; ee 1 Hetls cow= - : And what he sces In ¢ jand fast in the conventions of : HAT painful unsleadiness on its feet now observed in Govern- a | On the other hand, the doctrine of where all the trouble started. | car fel perba, the Firefly Venus, id Mrs.) ventionality. 1 suppose ‘La Superba’ Rey: : A i BiGs OF tne |do is an incentive for accomplish- er’ so muc prested in| mud Fathe fd rig r, “that's a to es me. | 7 bead a qrent stabilization of prices is largely due, thinks an Evening | This was most noticeable at @/ mont, It . 2 iy ne ae ~ eh» Mother's been : pon: Lpeer eas Gui a te aie Jorn, “that's what af satan ®, |bas a typical stage mother, who flac Beit cervacncndents lorauntlint \uetwran hose who aduira athakiog, not lobe sitde 1h which | * vites confidence, It in- | pink teas and “gatherir whatever could Ax it, and moti Sho's dull, slangy, not even ‘chle, 28/ter4 tne maid and then fights with hor ost correspondent, to conflict “between those who desire to{sathering not long since in Wiel spires nope, When people know that | they are, that she sort of neglected | tered at having Mrs. Hou, Smith | some chorus mirte are, And Jack Bil-| Jot nor nesiecting tho Pekinese continue the methods of Government business that were iff vogue |erom the others as to draw Penny they will not be stopped from doing | father, In consequence he ran wild nk fast) ver to lose his head over @ creature) 40) a. fr know she'll have a typical during the war and the men who have been asked to solve the prob-|to them, The most charitable ex be thing they think they ought to do | for a time, buying every new fansled like that!" |stage mother.” lems which tho thods | brought th t. and {Pression made was that th and that their good friend will stand | invention he could find she says| “41's only a temporary madnens, but |"80 MUN mother?” repeuted s whic 1ose methods have brought upon the ornme| MESON GATS. Wem Hie by the d go é | '@ do t or Jack ma c bike Set TEPER : f g pon the Government, and | rrreeee einead a ittle by them and go through with them, | 7 saw @ lot of packages all tied up @ down | while it laste poor Jack MAY MARTY | ees yore, would do so by wiping out the old order and taking the loss entailed} yet not even at the end of 1 RT si f helpfulness in the in prown paper in the kitchen on the weer and | yer!” eried the Younger matron, a ee ae ~ al aonclintabeoatanting or ' pap ea com, | direction of accomplishment Is e8-| top I ‘i didn't Ike to inter at 1! must see what we can do with the mae momen: te the iid reversal of the disastrous policies, starting on a new and just |evening were these children at home| ta nishod, nate . : x fees anuentie ng rt|person who has his fate in her Mrs. Mudridge-Sm basis. with the others, ; | : ; rupt mother, 60 I didn’t aa afi anal? “They come cheap—$10 a week, and The cause in this case is eas dven though mist y be! Then her happened to come in ¢ \* ? arting on a new and just basis is exactly what everybody who|fxed., These children are forever | made, the burden « been {day when f was washing the dishe oe wee pla yy] at's all very well to say, Ay help the! maids A Wack milk Arie ite y the 3 heave arth 4 jconfronted with the of “Don't.” | warned b: ue . t at the ©. [ate hw tO} how will we get in contact with this} cratic sta) comes deare: profited by the war is moving heaven, earth and the Government to ° \ | Warned by a “don't” ts so great at |and he told me what they wer | mother In't se ed 7 who poses under col- | Those hav accents mm Bvt . iy t play th the ne bor chil es a o ¢ z do nto such de. 8) " rst °o ‘ B WOMAN: 9 POS ‘es side aici js escape. So far there have been nothing but the most elaborate] yron thes are t ie ue Ly a ety 4 OE A Ce 4 | Thecthine at looked the worst to) ty Kick father in t 8 shta in vaudeville?” asked Mrs.| $20 a week and commission 01 ‘ ." they are told 0. lo th spair as to make hope dificult, if} me was the cleaning powder. Some- | b ¢ ; 4 t efforts to keep farmers, agec! manufacturers and the rest from|"Don't do that "Don’t join in the | not impossible, to rise aga : 4 NA . ele fe DM yorp, “I’m sure it's no business of; jewelry they pick for their daugiite:s - | | sa at echool—some right t ” | Hal te vee REND how T didn’t Ike the, sound of that) no geta a chance \ his | "nine, “But 1 still fect, as you do, that] from admirers, and other things. ‘The slipping an inch downward from the perches to which war demands | 840s &t sehoo!—come rleht home | There are those in the world who cleaning powder from the very first. | inys $ to thelr proper uve; he} yt Anta Tani Milver| Tia Varistocratic iach ellis st hy ‘ And the mother continues to tell] are forever trying to stop thin ; tame Chal ikl I it is our duty to save § e| aristocratic black silk stage mothers and war profits boosted them, | eying top things in| But it never occurred to me tha Jsort of gets lost, like he na th y. But he will] furnish th 0 them h fearsome things about! the fear of the 0 of fatlur might have fate of Mrs. Hot | n't thank us now | furnish their own costumes and lor mn ; A F | i A \ aatlure ight have t ate of Mr trea, blips erty Rate at sabia es The thain idea of reconstruction appears to be that the whole jth ts” that the children actu- | ‘They are constant ton-Smith mixed up it, ‘That's | FE unsweh NA GRAREA Toute F ee Ae JE thoy. Lava” Anan = bis couniry wil! be ruined if anybody who profited by war has te come | Mlly lose all freedom of on, Even} They are tite on where L proved that mother was r |tho t y 1 you'd! “it 1s a duty we owo to society and| hair and long aristocratic hands to down to earth. The problem is to adjust the burdens and ¢ of | (2. the week harmless childish activis | back from atriking. ¢ flelds | hecause she says no one really can|put a match t you'd sg our own conscience,” coincided | wear knitted black silk mitts on ' F ' 1 ee . biadiala | jes they practically outcasts. |of fruitfulness and the avenues of | understand how far-reaching father’s |.) aa Hou Mrs, Mudridge-Smith, “and, a show thelr old-fashioned they the war so that those who gained by it will lose last and least, They hardly know how to play un-| endeavor, It is wise to be wary of | iniquities are mith: stand ART * was | the tdea of Jack Silver marrying ask more. Ob, 1 know If the price stubilizers ever get a footing and a grip the public |'ss abcd dre seauaalecindy hem, Th the first piace it started te rain ' fancy me par i that -waNE | dre dare looked at Bear hey wiley a ie alabiiaing cache mies: of canleewlich 1 wonder how long tis mother ine] What this warld needs more than |and that made mother mad because | eon she Kay Bomethit “When you tried your best to get! "I guess you do know now retails at $10. at for stove ] } ee [anes shee If shel pnything else not achers’ of she wanted to wear her new spring | ha ed” im!” remarked Mra, Ju complet- | ridge-simit You know too ' etails at # a ton for stove sizes and which, the retail eoal | pro cods h fashion very long | “don't wetiea) who hat to the first annual @ ring of | u f r had to put lis foot ing her friend's sentence, “Well, Coie to Di " dealers are now advising their customers, will advance at least 10|'ey Wil need her forever, and woe) tet you how to d the Women's Club for International ee nin y rw, like |auteaa i's ~ here, | know we'll | better leave silver to |to the hen the day com a ‘ J ba ney as * nbd bd & 1 , i « J q o| may mak hin bette + oie | The First A 1p) : ’ oy Mrs, Hou hd wish we had attended t a P | thie ta al it is e First American Ventist \ t it that) way. ty voneerning ourselves! Still,|® woman of our world who knows SOME QUESTIONS. teat Aira If first American den’ to) not to be viewed with the fear that| They were both wi 1) what the!as you say, we must save him, But] everything,” To der Eddi sig aiys seen : | practice that profession ex-| Was quite pardonable a score of years | Poets call y 1 when how i ie What nonsense you t cried How iss it vea IT velcome myselluff nobody comes, und jter to le their childish | olualyely. waa. probably esr in Ms SO. eclens on : fast Bellin eR Oe ae | piesa van aamenody comes to velsome nobudd: 4 om ene rat inate inlet sh) Tones, who opened the pioneer dental | teeth, may be said to have ¢ t he eal to her better nature, | perity, “1 couldn't n Jack Sily ol PR Tt ie Fe la ed al Oe ie a aeie valditae tee rant [oftice in New Yurk 191 years aga, ac-|monced with tho reaenrches of Tirof,|#0 she could scare her off—do any-|if I wanted to, and present, efen lreatty de a ven, t ippearing in the | Richard Owen, who in 1839 made the| her Dolse A | * replied Mrs, Mudridge-Smith, | professional mothers 1 Vy iss it so many dings are wrong dot T cannot fix? pf don tewhen adhered at period first definite announcement of the or-| Oly you, they went to meeting. nd T suppose you know where to| because 1 found if 1 did on Vy iss it @ vorry dot Woedrow Vilson iss President of tne slow BUC IDA EOL EAROU OR in the last half cen nle connection between the vascular] Mother loaned Mrs, H on-Smith| find her?” 8ug 4 Mrs. Jarr, | stage I'd be lost without « Th the United States in France ven I am here to loog oudt for de DSFERY AY ‘i i dlbeteale ‘i te8 Rel hurabiye Hae became ahi tie cia sarts of the frame | nother sh but when was! «1, qo, indeed" replied the younger| are the business may ohiad ’ * very this 4 « \ % , turn . ~ U8. A nent ile B that time phy-land the hard substance Gf the toot! | soins out of door, she turned t@) matron, “My maid knows Clarence, | cicerones, and living, self-ev tos- Vy Is any>ings? VILHELM RUDOLPIYHOIST. Reread ci Nee vat ui atic iclans were called upon to pull ach- {The f in of dentists was| eather and say © \\Jack silver's valet, and Jack Silver's | ttmony to one’s respectability when —_-_ - gsi ae et Or A] ing molars, and at an earlier period | the Odentolog Society of Engl oe bara eae aeaet ava | valet knows her mald’—— in the dramatic profession or moy- : Active and use | set pi z eT mental diseases. I'm y haved ure sar 4 Peiuaa TO SAVE GASOLINE. A MOTOR TRUCK SNOW PLOUGH, | **!'" DOTEATS MEER MANA RARHASS . A It, EH years Mier By A cat on you. I'm Parl nineteen ein acentyeitardy sities te atnee cata avice| A. anc iioueh. to be driven by al scit urious, If these te dental work of to-day is a pupil the first of Its kind.) MN CAl On eee oe Sit) awhy, yes," sald Mrs, Mudridge- Ah," said Mrs. Jarr, “What is the mpbiles admits air to replace fuei fod motor truck, which he believes will Sraite a : ly satisfied he is) development of the last. quarter of a established in Ls on, ‘Tho first|~ \, - a . Smith, “a girl on the stage has to| stage—or the movies—without a rf prone to be not only a backward child ate 1 ; . Mother's been using that as yo thi id and mother? But, and 1 y carbureter. but prevents its \2°3| keep highways open in spite of the| but one who may keep his own century, Even now tho pulling of|act for regulating the education and) yioie ever since, and father hasn't |have two things, a mall ane 7 Fuh and t don’t mean ts as the cap by evapo on Vr heaviest snow eal, hes been bylit by a} sei IN any wisnetolng and not under-' teeth is rarely “painless to the| registration of dentists was passed] pentioned a new invention for a Motier An actress may not jars anja pokeoys advise you to go po jontana road engineer, stand that he is doing wrong, patient, but a visit to a dentist in 1878, week, engagement or @ second best dress, farther!” ‘ Ps, \ P| SR ES TI amines a as ee: —_ in (