The evening world. Newspaper, April 11, 1919, Page 28

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f ’ : Fc merece sete I I EN Oa ee ee se ee ~~ — ‘ 4 . Bs fester a ba j : te ae PF EO eS FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1919 ‘Bolshevism” Nothing NEW World's History Reveals It Age-Old After-War Disease Under New Epidemic Name HAS FOLLOWED EVERY BIG WAR; HAS ALWAYS BEEN STAMPLD OUT After Franco-Prussian War It Was Called “Communism” Following Wars Between France and England in the Middle Ages France Had Its “Jacquerie” and England Its Jack Cade—French ‘Reign of Terror’ Was a Form f “Bolshevism'’’—So Were Outbreaks That Followed Our Own Revolution and ‘the Post-Civil War Recon struction Period Disorders. | ut Here HE sceret is out the secret of how to make a spring theatre bonnet out of your hu band's old silk hat When New York women saw th Dublished in The Even ing World of Mile. Marguerite Namara wearing a fetching new hat made of pictufe | President Wilson's old silk tile, they By Albert Payson Terhune |tooked with eagerly apeculative eyoa Coprrtcht, 1019. by the Pree Publishing Cn. (The EOPLE are press-agenting Bolshevism as a brand-new international diseas and wondering morbidly how it ache, and it Is out—in the usual triumph of law and order and of Progress. There ts nothing new about Bolshevism except Its out regularly at the close of nearly every great inter national war in all history. For example France blazed into so<alled “Communism.” Com- munism was golng to abolish rents and taxes and gov- ment and was to be a godsend to the man who would rather steal than work. It was put down as soon as it had fairly come to @ head. It was put down eo hard that It never came to life again In France until ft changed its name to Bolshevism. About 7,000 Communards were killed and nearly 40,000 more were jailed, and law and order prosently emerged supreme. When we had won our own tn-| folly of fifteenth century Bolshevism. dependence, after the American Revo-| The foregoing instances might cas- lution, the same disease sinote our|fly be multiplied by fifty to prove country. There were revolts, upris-|that nearly every great international ings, conspiracies, echemes for the| war has been followed by agitations | doing away with taxes and with other| which were Bolshevism in everything | Governmental rulings. Shays’s Re-|but name. And there is not a single | pellion, the Whiskey War, and half aj solitary instance in which the Bol- dowen lesser outbreaks marked the|shevists were not put down, soon or virulent course of the malady here, | !a' with a hand of iron or by na- for geveral years, off and on, after|tional common sense, while law and the Revolution. Our forefathers|order and progress continued their stamped ft oat by force of arms; and|usual victorious way over the Kol- the Nation went on. shevistic obstacles that had been The fall of the Bastile, in 1789, ; reared te obstruct them. and the events which followed it, History has always repeated itenif. | were a war in themselves. And out) There is no logical reason for think- | of the swelter arose the Retgn of ing it won't keep on doing so, Bol- Terror; which was, in its principles,|shevism is @ virulent disea But a form of Bolshevism, ‘This same no free nation ever died of it, or w: sort of mob rule was attempted again, more than temporarily dothe! at the close of France's foreign Revo- thereby. It is entirely curable, Dr, lutionary Wars. And Napoleon shut Law-andOrder has never yet lost it off, with scant ceremony, by turn- & patient =» York Evening World.) Jat the silk hats of thelr husbands, and said, “Now I wonder HOW” Knowing that no man’s hat will be ts going to come out. It is no more new than is tooth-| safe but then the moths might eat coming out" as it has always coine | it this summer, anyway—The ing World yet Sven cepts the respons! bility of publishing exact directions! for transforming a man’s silk stove-| | name. It was old in Bible days, and it has Pitee| into an Baster bonnet The creator of the original design] 4s Mrs, Thomas Walsh of Washington, When Germany overwhelmed France in 1870-1871|D. ©. The Red Cro. 6 of which} she {s Chairman recefed the old silk tile of President Wilson. after the White House iiousekeeper had de clared it unfit for further useful ser vice, The hat wa: some time, and there Mrs, Walsh de. cided to make it useful as well as ornamental Here's what she did: First she care. fully steamed the hat and proceeded to peel off the silk, as if she were Peeling an orange ‘This silk was then cleaned and pressed, Every inch | was used As there was no practical method to utilize the stiffening in the crown, @ shape of crinoline was fashioned and the original silk was sewn t It. The front was decorated with white satin and pink rosebuds. A poke here and a twitch there caused the soft silk felt to fall in graceful folds. and then two streamers were added Behold the Victory Bonnet of 1919! It was bought by Mile. Namara for| $30, and it has just s to Mexico, where she tory satin dotted with rosebuds, cut Tile Made a | Dazzling Spring Bonnet How You Can Work Over Hubby And Have a Snappy Creation Yours! ) jlook YEA jaudiences do d on exhibition for| | will plead guilty, it must be the be- [ginning of the Iron Age, when the iron of growing old enters into her soul. From forty to fifty probably FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1919 of Woman No. ¥, THE IRON AGE From Forty to Fifty Is the Iron Age of Womar When She Would Set Back the Clock of Her@ Years—It Is the Dangerous Age When the I of Growing Old Enters Into Her Soul—S Belongs to the Army of Occupation in t Beauty Shops--Yet the Iron Age May Be t Age of Freedom -Magnetize It. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall Cobyrtebt, 1919, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World.) Tom are no women of forty in New York. During my ten years in the city I have tried, with the low curiosity which anim: every piece of sociological research, to detect one female violation of the taboo against two-score. Neediess to say I have failed True, the permissible number of birthdays is stead- ily rising. Wight an was like Barrie's Rosalind—she had a long twenty-nine. The other day I heard of a crime pact between two un usually attracti and intelligent women, intimate friends since childhood. They decided to be thirty: four, from now to eternity, each to back up the other's go every wor ‘yan perjury in case any one were rude enough to ques- * tion it Yet, to admit truthfully one's age is to pander most successful:y to vanity. After coming out with the horrid truth to nine audiences) out of ten, one can sit back and purr an accompaniment to the chorus, “Ob, bught it! You®@— Perhaps the kindly perjury, ver would havo S younger racio © to be made. Sh « of the pro: bu p alarly if they | 2.0) . ee cla, She Because forty is t e elfense tO) ciency—ualthough never the “barker” |which not even the modern woman nt s. She holds record for the making of surgical Iressings in the Red Cross work- room. he ts deft and ttreless tn the many activities of a soctally-minded is the most dismal decade in a wo- man's life, Karin Michaelis wrote a| o¢ | much discussed book about it, several! peace.” In her mothering brown lyears ago, calling It “the dangerous e-—under the prettiest of purple age” when no woman id be 1 | hate—about her tender ciouth, thee 4 BONNET PRES: wi sous/, ere likely to commit the supreme folly! + 1 of her life—a marriage or a love af-| escaped her long ago. fair with @ man younger than her-| A friend of mine divides the Mfe self, There is something at ouce pitl-jof a woman into three ages, instead ful and repulsive about such a union.!of seven in graceful lines to the ankles. Black satin pumps with rhinestone buckles accompany the gown, and another ac-| cessory chosen by Mile. Namara is 4 Stick, six feet long, inlaid with Per sian ivory and topped with a brillant- ly colored tassel Perhaps it is impossible to a silk purse out of a sow’s ear, is perfectly | easy to make out of a silk stovepipe rather full over the hips and falling| a millinery “creation. DE ONDER Woop ‘with a man greatly her senior, #l-|tion." she says; “then the period of \=onaacmennasanens rted with her| , to sing. With| it she wears a gown of black Vic-| | mercenar jthere never was a young man for|to run itself and [ | whom ther H jine romantic attra simple and | woman fifteen or twenty years old ing bis artillery on the Bolabevists| and hammering them into submission. | After which he built up the Bol- | shevist threatened realm of France to greater strength than ever befora Our American Civil War was not an international conflict; so it escaped | Meany, St tas Boleneriseis beirsra (3 By LIEUT, EDWARD STREETER of the 27th (N. come at the close of such wars. Yet the history of the “reconstruction | Mlustrated by CORPL. G. WILLIAM BRECK. period,” after it, shows what disor- | ‘A Bertes of Letters to “Dere ganization and turmoil are to be found in the wake of war, and shows PRE MABI | a how certain is the ultimate triumph Were in the same place we | was yesterday. Id know it now with my eyes shut It looks Nike we was mov- in but Joe Loomis says thats fast the water goin | past the boats, A | fello told me we | was in the Gulf! stream. If we! are its some creek cause you cant see no banks of mane government. In the middle ages the war be- tween France and England dragged on until both nations were exhausted. Then, at its close, the “Jacquerie” sprang to life in France—as they had done after other French wars— with a code of crazy lawless laws that fairly out-bolshevizes the Bol sheviki, They were erushed, with fearful slaughter, In England, after that eame long war, the Bolshevist rising was even nore formidable. One Jack Cade lifted the standard of rebellion against}, We been on four days now, Im established law and order, in 1450,|besinning to feel like the Ainshunt| He found the times ripe for nis|Mourner. We lie round on the floor! Bolshevistic teaching. He declared |°f 0n® of the lower piazzas all day there should be no more rents or|“"4 read books from the library taxes or stable government or jails, | Most of them ts about the lives of| In brief, he preached much the same | {tS whats dead. ‘That aint right neane doctrine do Trotzky and |" 4 bunch what expects to be with em any minit, Lenine, He and bis men celebrated the dawn of the new era by plunder- | Once a day we go up on one of the| ng the homes of the rich and by |UPPer piazzas to exercise, A folio} whole vu Then the Gov- |Might as well try to swing indiun| nly laid its hand on|¢lubs on the 6 o'clock subway, ‘The| bellion and smashed it fat, OMly exercise you can do without! Mable" from “Bill,” the Rookie-—His Further Army Advontures. “JOE LOOMIS,” Yours till you here ot erwise, ‘ elf was cut in four pieces | Knockin off the head of the fello| = aceal and his head was exposed to public |"¢Xt to you is eyes right and eyes BRE view a A 8 reminder of the left. I fea the same way the =| The Captin {s always talkin about : vee i -_|goin below. Seein how we all Red Cross Built Hotel IN| any minit, it aint n eatin ry Dank for 1.200) in about It He says to me yesterday, ith, fix Up A list of spaces for nt Days all my men down below.” Aint that the Captin all over, Mable? He won't are rubbing their |be satisfied till he has em all tagged that the big |and numbered and doing squads east | built by the | and west in Davy Jones Lock Up. he American Red | Joe Loomis has his girls pictur Crows for visiting American dough- | pasted on the back of his tin lookin i an honest and truly reality. | giaas Ho’ lies on bis bunk all day | or somethin ataqueb ib an: bau Ahldy {4 |sapin at it. Some fellos make awful) Ono of the boat oMcera is called the were required te pany {eBt dave | asses of themselves about there girls.| xecutioner Ollicer. very day most . on the! Angus MacKenzie, the skotch fello,| he come \ Champs de Mars. ‘This speed stunned | had the mirror shavin the other day.| hour earl SECM Hige, me nas P ey u *hrugging | 1t swung round while he wasnt lookin| way those fellos use there “ . us A 1 > place in an|and when he looked in it again he| Nobody dasnt ndict uh I effort to understand, 1. Many of | got an awt art | { t abe ‘ gucas thats tho way these boats make m now refer to , 7 mn fer to the Americans a8| ‘They havnt sunk us yet Magicians, A California man, Capt. | there just foolin with us. Perhaps it C. Ross Corbin, was in charge of the will happen to-day. Don't worry dom, though, 1 guess | Knights of Columbus must have felt when they was discoverin North America, Just sailin round in circles and wishin they had never left N.Y. Were n through an awful bumpy part of the ocean now. Joe] Loomis says theres a lot of traftk | through here and these big boats cuts jit > 1s, Mable, Its gettin colder all lth tim: 1 wouldn't be surprised | if we had got turned north by mis. take and would land up in Labordoor | than himself. His marriage to such a|be a prettier name and thing—t | woman might very well be si in the opening formula of r | tra over with quick could have made contracks like that when I was home. mo and says “Your contrack is up to- | look at him and say | "You must be mistaken. This 1s yes- Joe Loomis has out that if we keep on losing time | well get there last winter. Angus MacKenzie, the skotch fello, says theres no danger in that though, |and get it If a fello came to clock of our years—although it is what} ang opportunities. It can be donc | terday.” { before, who rub off surplus chins and| hips, who j theyll go ahead for a while, Angus says set us back half an hour man out of OF. tain of Youth, A nickul never meant nothin Vicrory | | to me one way or the other as you! ought to know better than any one. | Iant tt a cheap way to Whoverize| SUPPLEMENT if tt keeps on bein | as cold as this he aint goin to get off | j when they sink us Joe says that granddaugh me when F He says he rather | drowned than get ice water and | the rest of the war, | Well, Mable, I got to quit now, | fighter needs a lot of sleep, Yours till the war end have & cold for Ja bit later, by reducing everybody 10 | Betsey a common den VHOERWOOS LRP ERWOoO ion Slang_ ‘That's Me All Over . 1010, ty Frederick A, Stokes Oo.) Aviation Con-VASS-elling. ERE’S a bona-fide up. Thats how ignorant that | ukes without ¢ “1 gotta little ad. for the paper,” “An advertisement?” It’s about @ frien: Ill pe pleased to take it.” “Just way Uriah Umson |: to the ground; | ° | stunts near the groun ‘on-VASS-elling ? What kind of a bu “It isn't a busine: I'm so sorry records so often, Mable, When they |con-vass-elling.” see they aint goin to make a record they just shove the clock back, Id go ever in nothin if 1 was the Captin Youngstown Telegram, k for his ‘ap, \eoman in her town to whom every-|P¥ any Government. tt will ena bombs of twenty pounds| killed, |church. And yet “her ways are ways 4 all her paths are quietness holly responsible fur the things lis nothing of the strain and fret of woman who w not take life urally, who clings to the painted dow of youth when tts substance In the Iron Age woman is mos Sometimes a girl falls deeply in love| “There isthe period of prepara- though it is rare that she finds ing happiness with t mmolation, in nursery and kitchen; of elation, when r need ourly pose |attention and the house has learned an do w ' 1| please—the things I have wanted t do all my 1 For every woman t Nove nd finally the s such marriages are not inevitably children po lor J sordid, But J ext an ounce of ge on toward on Age mai med up| Age of Freedom. There is the fr ul estate|dom—if she will but accept it—fi to be be nd money nsfers, “For one dollar and other| ttre derations.” tt any co duty whi but scarcely less grotesque. It ‘ nn 1 not disregal nuch against the course of nature as| There the freedom trom domest if a pin ould tt out pink | burden v freedom frot and white blossoms, or a 1 me le ex ng tyranny of t 1} ends normally with t hat bring the at should begin chi as. When the Government tells us to do so we the livin room, but we cannot set back the ing spo soph mind. Magnetize your I can set back the clock ir wise appreciation of its immunit: so many women try to do in | Iron Age. EVENING WORLD They are the great army of occu-| PUZZLES. pation in the beauty shops. They sup- port all the persons who make com-| plexions and dimples, who promise to| By Gare "Loyd make two hairs grow where one grew How Old Maids Shop. oraa\data @rnklen, HREE funny old maids went market to buy a turkey, to Bet Carrie: "N f you will contri half of your m 1 will have enough to buy turkey.” “I make a bet offer,” said rie; “for if each of you gives jthird of your money I could @ the bird," un make the best offer yet," for if each of you chips just one-quarter of your money will be able to buy the turkey.” ba cost less than four dollars, | i Lalways have felt that h story stake in the sex of F y It was a wom Arabella Age who sailed in au ‘Yhe fashions of last few years | have been nothing less than a god-| send to the woman in revolt against her Iron Age. ou can’t tell the back view of grandma from her @ man remarked to ifth Avenue showed a hort skirts, And the uniforms for women, which came Jouble cordon manage to purcha ninator of un tiveness, were kind to the woman between forty and fifty Yet please do not accuse me of girding at her! Just as tron is the most useful mineral in the world—of far more benefit to bumanity than Age of trac what must have been the price for it? ANSWER TO PUZZLING PI gold or silver-so t CARDS woman t age of most? Three of the embossed cards, fi astalr and balanced — accom: | two-er 1 ones and two of the mment. rea her | print peak of power in Fruit-Age, there yet no reason why she must begin to yet ne eogamn way the cet bAElD + Coeat Aporenviaiiaal ses b fortieth birthda Ne ee ive ical usaf ‘| forGovernmentRoa and the most ripely charming woman HE United States will have snow entered the Iron Age several total of at least $574,000,000 rs ago, Before forty she had to co-operative road bullding dere If to the of herling the next three years, ac All daught rnd to the ni- to the tern ! TEAW NEO officia pitality and othe ponsi- | Ac’ Tae Wederal part of this fund Hon int of funds is the lar number of years she has been the appropriated for a similar p A the Gay nent to ¢ ‘body comes when there is a piece of | iuiiding programme auiet hard work to be done or a! never before equalled, y out a roay 4 magniti

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