' K"" W FTT1 ..J,.. ' , V'iK EVENING LTUDlGl-EEP-PHIUADELPHIA; WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1917 ft! - I- THE WORLD'S WAR Through Woman's Eyes By ELLEN ADAIR Baadad and Bullecourt LONDON. Mny 30. IMTEnnSTINQ descriptions of tlio Urltlsh entry Into Hawaii liavo been Bent homo recently by wlous officers. ....vi- nniil lmo been moro casual ..n our entry lnt- n.iKdacl." writes ono of than our cmr Wo ere f' ' JL. tint nulto B u r o whether o wero BolnB to bump up aBalnst tho Turk or not Ho hail slip ped out of tho Tel Muhnm m e d posi tion tho nlRht be fore, and after tho way ho had f outfit for every nameless ditch from Sheikh Sand to Shumrnn It was difficult to ho llovo that ho would leavo the City of tho Caliphs behind without ft last am bush ! "As a matter of fact two f-nuadrons of cavalry had al- EM'E.V AflAlIt ready entered, and Aur troops hart reached tho rltfit bank soon X Tin and were waiting for boats to !"., wo were talking about tho western front! when the colonel In command of tho vanguard said: By Jove I believe thoso fellows aft! bringing us tho koys of tho citadel I' "We saw three figures In black approach In long tho unmetaled road between tho Vailed gardens. As they drew near they waved their red fezes nnd called out to 'Good morning! How nro you?' "This bold, confident nnd familiar greet ln was amusingly unexpected. As wo rode on other grotips of Turks Joined them, nnd flHy nil repeated the same greeting. Then they began to cheer. "Among them wero glrl3 nnd matrons of fair complexion and unveiled an almost embarrassing sight to men who had seen nothing In the sjiapo of a woman for over a j ear beyond black bundles filling their pitchers on the Tigris bank. "We have been bivouacking out In a blow tn dust Wo wero dirty, imvynshed, tin- thaven, unfed On the whole wo did not make up a very Imposing cort'go for a his tnm State entry "Soon our Urltlsh troops wero cantering along Khalll Pasha street. Tho road was thronged with a Jubilant crowd. The roofs and balconies wero packed with women In bright dresses Children danced In front of us, uttering shrill Arab cries and clapping their hands "The street through which we rode tho only broad thoroughfaro In Bagdad had 'received the namo of tho local Hlndcnburg tn commemoration of the fall of Kut By a stroke of Irony this road, which was built to memorialize the British reersa at Kut, waa completed Just in tlmo to afford the Brttlih a passage through Bagdad " ON THE WnSTHItN' FllOXT Tremendous lights aro being waged on the western front. Bound about Bulle court tlio guns aro going night and day. - Old graves have been reopened by shell I fire, and the old dead lie among the now dead, while behind tho lines. In tho quiet countryside of France, birds sing in the ADVICE TO THE HOME-BUILDER OF MODERATE MEANS By VICTOR EBERHARD, B. Arch., R. A. branCi1C8 thick with applo blossom and wmi (lowers of spring. "A strange nnd wonderfut war!" writes n 'oldlcr. "Through all this tumult of snclls, horribly nenr to their bursting points, a military band Is playing! It Is playing meny tuneB, as in a country fnlr.i wliero aiay-tlme lovers dance. And all this sceno about mo is llko such a fair, with gypsy tents nbout and hobbled horses browsing, and n smell of run-scorched grass min gling with tlio sweet scent of wild flowers "Ono would not expect to find dead bodies about In such a scene or to tnko tea In a tent with two men who know nnd show by their eyes and by the way they listen all the time that at any moment death may spill them over tho teacups. "It was very beautiful last evening when tho sun sank in a tide of gold nnd tho snatiowa lengthened ncross the Cojcul lllver and gradually tho fleld of battlo paled In a milky. -radiance of twilight." Tho lighting done by the Australians de serves high praise. In particular the lighting at Bullecourt Is bound up with the Australian troops, who broko through tho Hlndcnburg line to tho right of this Ullage and held on to their positions with tho most amazing carnage. When I hear of thoso things, tho tragedy of It all seems as great as tho glory of it But through all the record of these dajs there shines tho spirit of Australian youth, those long-limbed hoys of the South ern Cross who never would yield, and who, surrounded on all sides, yet kept the enemy nt bay. AUSTRALIANS SCOBN FltlH AH Australians and I havo met many nro wonderfully careless of shell lire They do not seem to understand tho moan ing of tho wold fear. Day after day the Australian stretcher-bearers cross tho peril ous ground swept by machlno gun fire, nnd never falter. Carrying their burdens they Pay no need to bursting phella on either side, nnd quite regardless of their own lives, do everything they can to ejo their llying comrades. A friend of mlno has sent homo an ac count of a skirmish between airmen and earth men on the wtstorn front "A queer thing happened In tho sky above," ho writes "Tho battle on tho caith took placo Just before dusk tho dusk of a golden clay and It was at tho hour when all tho Allies' aircraft fly homo to roost after lone Journeys of adventure over the German lines, some of them with holes In their wings and somo with broken wires. "I watched thoso home-going flyers from tho alley of tho Cojcul Btver, beautiful aa swallows as they skimmed high In the bluo fields of tho air above white-cloud mountains. All their engines sang In chorus a steady, vibrating drone, clear above tho noise of the guna. "They had earned their rest, but did not tako It. They saw tho flghtinfl down be low British troops advancing In open or der nnd Gormans coming out to meet them. "These droes of aeroplanes did not con tlnuo their homeward flight They swooped low and circled round llko hawks, dropping tho last of their ammunition nnd sweeping tho enemy positions with a swish of machine-gun bullets' Men of tho air fought with men of tho caith in tho glow of sun set light, which was rich and warm over these battlefields. No M-cno could hao been moro gorgeously beautiful and yet moro tragic and terrible " (Con right ) LcU Lvmg tip Li Tc n ft House No. 3 A Dutch Colonial House mile Butch Colonial tle Is fust . .... icroni- -L Ing popular for tho small hnue In the suburbs. Charming examples of Dutch Col onial houses nro found In almost ocry lo cality Thero Is a distinct i-linrni surrounding theso low and comfortable-looking houses, an undeniable fascination about their er squattlness. From every point of cv thoy nro picturesque nnd eminently' homelike The steeply pitched roof coming well down oer tho first story nnd the sharp shadows caused by their wldo oerhang make a telling contrast to tlio puro white of the exterior walls The Dutch Colonial style of house Is taken from thoso houses which wero built by the early Dutch settlers Their distinguishing features arc the gambrel roofs, tho heavy, shoit columns and the small paned and shut tered windows In tho houso of this stMe Illustrated to day we have an entry hall from which the stair starts, serving the purpoao of a vesti bule, largo living nnd dining rooms nnd & well nrrnnged kitchen with the necessary accessories. Tho secqnd floor Is largo by reason of being built over tho living porch, each room Is of good slzo nnd has crosa ventilation. On the first floor tho combination of the living room, dining room nnd living porch, mnko roomy living quarters. An attrac tive feature of tho living room Is tho square bay opposlto the fireplace, French doors open to tho living porch. Thoso designs can bo llttlo moro than sug gestive to the owner A houo In order to scno Its purpose properly should bo planned to suit Intimately tho requirements of thoso who nro to llvo In It: It should bo designed both Inside nnd out according to their tastes, so that they will enjoy living there. Tho orientation should be considered In plnclng the rooms, tho direction of tho best view, the street, tho distance from other houses nnd many other things which when given proper consideration nil go to mako a successful houso Questions and "Answers Is built in furniture practical and ernnimlcal? r l. c. Yes, It Is both. ,It also adds greatly to the appearance of a room, causing part of the furniture to bo In clnso harmony with tho othor woodwork of tho room, and giving tho visitor a feeling of permanence ns to the occupancy nnd ownership of tho house. .. '" " WJS0 to build now with rrlcm nn hlnh as tln-y are? t.. 1'. D. it Is not nt nil probable that prices will over, or at least for a long time, go down appreciably: it Is rather expected that they w III go higher still l'osslblv tho sooner ono lullds tlio bettor oft he will be. It X .T A good Colonial mantel can best bo obtained by having a design cnicfully worked out nnd dualled bv a good designer or by having an exact copy made of some good old example. rrldny A Smnll KntfUh limine (Comrleht ) Soldier Weds Philadelphia Girl niUDINYJ, Pa. Juno fi. Frederick II Rehweer, of Lancaster, a fleld artillcrman, t'nlted SUtes army, stationed nt Fort Adams, it. I , applied for a marriage II renso hero nnd was married In the court bouse, Immediately after he obtained tho pa rcrs, to Mls Margaret F Stroud, of Phila delphia. .Tho ltev. Charles 13. Ivlstler. who happened to bo at tho cnurthouso nt tho time, performed the ceremony. Tho brldo Is tho daughter of Joshua T. Stroud, CI 25 Martin street, Philadelphia. RAY GOES SLUMMING IN CRISP MELODRAMA 'Tho Millionaire Vagrant" Clover Bit of Deception. Liberty Loan Movies n? the Photoplay Editor WILLIAM TTSNN "The Millionaire Vnarnnt." Kn-l!ecTrlsnRl. with Charles Hay. Stojr hr J. CI. Hanks. Direrted by Vletor I fehrtrlnr Sup-rvln1 hjr Thomat II. Ince. Photographed by Paul Kagter To say that n photoplay Is mechanical Is, In most Instances, to say that It Is good. Without smoothly oiled machinery tho best picture Is apt to run down. That la Just what "Tho Mllllonalro Vagrant" never Ante. It relapses Into somo sldi glimpses nt hu manity In comlo nnd overy-day guise before the atory has spent Itself, but at tho end thero Is n beautifully turned bit of deception on the author's part, and you get that little, suppressed gasp of surprise, which Is one of tho most important. If not tho most Im portant, phnso of narratlvo art There's nothing especially novel In tho conception of this talo, for everybody has seen rich Idlers mako beta (on the screen) that they' enn llvo on a paltry sum a week. The punch In "The Mllllonalro Vagrant" Is In the concealed Identities of tho characters nnd tho driving tempo and short, exciting cut ting supplied by tho director. Victor Schertzinger, who wroto tho music for "Civilization," hero proves his right to the title, director. IIo let somo gray. ugly, photography get by him. however, and some consorablo subtitles. Bay Is good. Ho al wa is. Movies of tho marching marines, sailors nnd soldiers who escorted Mayor Smith nnd other members of tho Liberty Loan com mtttco through tho Btrects In an effort to spur the salo of the bonds wero shown at tho Stanley last night. Thoy will be ex hibited thero again today nnd tonight, after which they will bo transferred to the Palaco for tlio rest of tho week. "What is this strange insensibility to spell ing that has always aCHtctcd the movtrst One can pardon some rfouif as to "neither" anil "till," but tnnen r thcatrn named after a famous actor announces that a survivor of the "Lufstanta" toll! weak, something Is wrong, llut after all, why bear ilown on tho earless cinema geniuses ichen so re rrrnl nn oronnlrnfloii as the State Censor Hoard lets "Homanco of the Jiedicads" get 6y 'tmt children I EpelUnp-lookt ew4 MM William Fox, who Is progressive 44 ' iciimem, even it nis stare or nrtM Is tho most purple In the world. Is , impetus to an excellent and neftl photoplays for thei klda. He the completion of a ten-reel MJcK i Beanstalk." Directed by the- Brothers, thin film ought to be remarMeVv Interesting, for the Franklins have 6n wonders In the direction of boyr fcnd fto-te Fans will recall "Let Katy Do Xt." "A Sister of Six" and other featurlnr cMMnm when the Franklins were with Fin JkMh to tub ntitncTitusa of "svXirS$ YOU AXD V ' ' latut o. Lady, for jonr weVfo, l'our photoplays I never shirk Out just one question, I Implore: 1!7io told you Hell was ten by four I M crcer fiM oore m Formerly flS up 1702 Walnut Stret Clearance Sale Dress and Sport HATS $7.50 f" 'Y A 1 I 1 r I L'TlT'T'fl f Di'UKl OUllDPS Crepe do Chine, Pleated SWrtl $25 to $45 Formerly $35 to' $75 DRESSES $19.50 to $75 Formerly $35 to $125 Smartest Spring Models. Im ported and Domestic Voile3, Ginghams and Georgettes at Special Prices fe E!i2B3HSisiaisi3iaB'srafoBaj3HSEEEJ5E)aia Farmer Smith's Column OUIt TIME HAS COME My Own Dears rprhaps you havo won dered In tho past Just what THE ItAIN EOW CLUB was for and what good it doeai or can do. Do not ask these questions any more. The world war Is now upon us and my own darlings nro prepared. THE RAIN'BOWS weie ready nnd aro ready to "do their bit." Tou must help at homo cheerfully. You must help tho wives, children, vvidow3 nd orphans of soldiers and sailors. Or Tou must help earn a mlto for tho Red Cross. Or YoU must have a garden. If any one of these does not suit you Wlte to me NOW and I will tell you HtteUllng else. Lovingly, your editor, FAIWinit SMITH. STRANGE ADVENTURES OF BILLY BUMPUS Dr.. BILLY'S DIG MEAL By Farmer Smith Trot. Trot, Trot. Down through the streets of Goatvlllo ent Billy Bumpu3, his mouth watering my time he thought of what he was loins to have for a good, squaro meal. It eemed to him that he never would get enough to eat after he left tho army. By and by he came to tho parado ground. were the Goatvlllo flagpolo had been Mteted. wliat was his surprise to see that the Pe which were to fly the Goatvlllo flag i lying high In the breeze beyond his ch. lis thought perhaps the committee M left them that way so that Billy could not reach them. Wnat did he care ! n v mors ho tnousht of the whole matter, Jf- Hungrier he became, until he went off row the woods to think It over. "I tell JW, there Is nothing like getting off by ?. wnen thcra ,s anything to bo one, he was saying to himself, when ho JW4 a familiar voice Kinging over his MM "Three little Blue Jays Sitting In a row. Along came n. Hop Toad And bit 'em In tho toe 1" wui "',turned his head quickly and saw 'er Jay Bird looking down at him" "That f beautiful song," said Billy. "I wish ?a ln ,lke that" .. ??b8 you C0Ul(1 If you didn't have TJW throat filled with fly paper," replied fin L ?y Blrd Ashing so he almost "'i on the limb where ho was seated. 3-w ln tne worl(' did you hoar nbout " y Paper business?" asked Billy. ! .J fw everythlng that happens ln this jWty of the country," said Mister Jay Bird. aow why you are here now, too j If you think I'm not a wiso bird, just try to cat thoso ropes on tlio Hag pole." Billy thought of a perfectly grand Idea. "I s.ay," he began slowly, "why don't you get hold of ono of those ropes and have a llttlo swing?" "I will, If It will please you. or If you want to mako ono end como down so that you can cat It," replied Mister Jay Bird. "You aro tho wisest bird I ever saw I" exclaimed Billy enthusiastically. "Do you think I am wiser than the owl?" asked the bird. "Far wiser, my dear. Xow, trot, or fly over and see what can bo done with that rope," said Billy, his mouth beginning to water, at tho thought of having such a long ropo to eat. "But I mus. have an Inducement," an swered Mister Jay Bird. "What's an Inducement?" asked Billy. "Is It something to eat?" "You must mako It worth my while you must pay me," replied Mister Jay Bird. "If that Is true, pretty bird, name but tho price, I pray thee." ventured Billy. "Wheo ! Where did you get that beautiful language?" "In tho army." Mister Jay Bird was silent for a time, nnd then said: "I guess I will pull the ropo down for you If you will say to mo very slowly You aro a smarter bird than tho Wiso Old Owl!'" "You are a Fmarter hlrd than the Wise Old Owl," said Hilly quickly With that the bird flow over to tho flag pole, alighting on one of the ropes. The Jay Bird's weight made one end heavier than the other nnd soon the rope was run ning through tho pulley at such a rapid rate that It dropped to tho ground as soon as Mister Jay Bird got out of the road. Billy started to eat the rope, but, try as ho could, It stuck In his mouth. What DO you suppose was tho matter? TO AID MRS PANKHURST Lloyd George Promises Facilities for Visit to Russia LONDOM, Juno 6. The Government has promised facilities to a deputation from the Women's Social and Political Union headed by Mrs Emmellne Pankhurst, the militant suffragette, to proceed to Russia to explain their views on tho war Mrs. Pankhurst last week requested passports from Premier Lloyd Georso for her party. In her letter she said that If the Govern ment permitted James Itamtay MacDonald, tho labor leader and his partv to go to Russia to preach "their unpatriotic doc trines" there c 'uld be no excuso for "hin dering patriotic women from going " rt YOU WANT HOT WATER s&5srs:aYiihout a hot Reck Ohio Junior Water Heater gves. unlimited boiling Shon.cUar' Write, call; TSckBi wos.Co. fthowroomi 0N.MhBt. end " Bpjlr, arch at, Wrn-rtWrfC ' isfipw MANDO Itrmoves siiperflunm hair from or under the arm. The new litis ronm make Mil prepa ration lndLpen'ftble. Sold Ijv flood Drill and Department Morn. For a Healthy Skin Use Frish-O-Lin A safe, efllcarlous rrema for kln and scalp with nplendld clearlns and soltrnlne complexion properties Get It Prom Your Ilruf rlt. He Reeom- mend. It. fiUe and SI.UO a Jar, Or tent prepaid on receipt of price. FRISH-O-UN COMPANY 438 VVliarlon 8trret, l'hlla. llMMirwL &L .ft w 1 1 r i iai ' Hruxixuiflray Milk or InfiflU & Invalid Substitute! Coil YOU Same Price A Nutritious Diet for All Ages. V.. Mnrllrlc's AlvVaVS Oil HMIO. BaEZXSssam rr 'ii-1 ' .-I -; mi mil in ii ii i ii w mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Super-Sixes Prov in Cincinnati e 'Endu mnce &,&!& r First Place in the Free-for-all Secondly Seventh and Ninth Places' in the 250-mile Sweepstakes made by Hudson Super-Six Specials iiu j 250 Miles---Average Speed . (Unliko'other cars entered in the Memorial Day Races at Cincinnati, the Hudson Super Six Specials were not designed as racing cars. They are the regular stock Super-Six Cars with changes that increased their speed and made them moro suitable for racing, but that have not altered their design, to All that was done to these cars could be done at nominal cost to anyone of the 36,000 Hudson Super-Six Cars now in use. Not Built to .Win Built to Endure. y There were many cars entered that were admittedly faster than the Hudson. But the speed a car shows for a few laps is not always an indication of what may be expected In a 250 Mile grind. " Hudsons are matched against the specially designed racing cars that they may prove their endurance. Whatever position they fin ish in is duo to their ability to maintain a high) speed without mechanical break down. w The Supef-Sijc motors are 3V by 5 inches in size xactly the same Size a3 tho motors used in "all Hudson Super-Six stock ? cara.I Most of tho racing cars in the" sweepstakes event have larger motors than the SuperSIxes and the'ears weigh from 500 to 700 pounds less than the Hudsons. Most of the cars en tered "bear .names that are not known in the field of pleasure cars. They are built solply for the purpose of racing. Hudson racing cars are built to (show Hudson engineers how to build better Hudsons. What 'McgriBe Expected of Stock Super-Sixes. All tests made by Hudson Super-Six" Cars indicate .what may be expected of any Hud son Super-Six Stock Car. Hudsons made their fine showings at Cin cinnati by staying in the race when other and faster cars were compelled to drop out. That is what you want of an automobile. You want a car that will not break down under stress of any service you will ever im pose, i Of course you aro not buying a racing car. You will never want to drive 250 Miles at a speed of 101 Miles an hour. You won't ever want to cross tho continent in record time and then turn around and make the round trip in 10 days, 21 hours. That is what a 7 Passenger Hudson Super-Six did. &. And you iles Per Hour don't "want to drive 1,819 miles in 24 hours afc a stock Hudson Super-Six Chassis did when it broke the 24 hour record by 52. But you want a car that will keep going as long as you will ever want it to go. j What the Hudson Super-Six has proved in endur ance in speed trials and what was proved in the Cincinnati races by the Specials, far ex cjel in severity any test that anyone is ever likely to make. . - . Any car will run well for o time on city Boulevards. , Any car will show good speed for a time. But what the car will do under rough usage and what it will do in a grind equalling that of the speedway are indica tfons of what it will do in years of service. " You would have been firmly 'Convinced or Hudson endurance had you, seen th.e Super SJxes at Cincinnati. - Don't think lhe Super-Six is aracing car. But racing cars must stand up under the hardest service. We arc merely proving that the Hudson Super-Six is an enduring Car. That it will meet every service task without disappointment or expense is what these tests prove. YccangetTa! Hudson Super-Six in aeven'different.bodytypea: Phaelon 7 Pastenger ,r. $1650 Cabriole t--3 PaitengcrX- $1950 ISpeedlerPjMjsngerilA;....,,il750 i Touring Sodanj... ....... .w ,.... .2178 XiMl. FSUCSS F. O. B. DETROIT) Immediate Dellrerr on nil Model QOMERY-SCHWARTZ MOTOR CAR CO. 253-255 North Broad St., Phil., Pa. rift i. piionk timer, iooo KKVTONR rilONE iiai i; zii j 'iHlli ;". I '(kkvLunchr-HoHif r Ofifcrl Egaain jL.&&kJ&idLj