Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
D PUBLISHING COMPANTY. Préprietors. Quily (Bunda, excupted) at 4:18 p. m. 4 Bullding, 67 “hucch 8t &t tha Post Office at New Britain BSecond Class Mali Matter: carr le::u- Pavanis in o in Mon! to any part of the oity jeek, 85 Cents a Mouth. er to be sent by mall IMPLOYMENT OF 'HI’bDRF'N Ihenever the question of the em- ment of children is opened for tigation and people are brought o testify the revelations are of more than passing interest. conmmission on industrial af- is looking into sthis matter at ent and at a hearing in New York erday Kdward F. Brown, Vice- sident of the Child Welfare league, e this statement: 3 I the last three years 1 have blgd 40,000 miles studying the K of children. I have seen chil- vearg old in the oystér -and W canneries’ of the gulf states; dren of 11 or 12 on the breakers nthracite coal mines; children vegetable canneries of New it and Delaware, and 12 1n the cotton mills "Even in this city chil- jung as these are at work omes, preparing dresses and e for the factories.” nother Witriess, a Womuan connected @ similar organization, sald that had seen a child of 3 years at rk for six hours at stretch ucking” oysters .and added it of fifty-one children employed in “particular cannery, . thirty-eight under 10 years of age, while the & ones of from 14 months to 2 1-2 rs were playing about in tbe cor- ors while their mothers worked, tending to ‘'shuck" oysters, too. his is a deplorable condition in hich to find children and yet there no reeson doubt the truth of e testimony given. Every time 8 questlon is aired the same kind “tastimony is repeated and there can no doubt that the conditions a8 represented. Parents must VBFY destitute or do not know their m“w N they send children so . #9 Work, at an age, too, when usu- A pral 1ah . a she to ure* it llfl its ‘strict enlurce . ready to resign, provided that at time of hig abdication Mex- i¥ pacified and the people ® are agreeable to the selection of goveriiment, Which seems olgh, hut Just how that condition 'gl-\, brought about js a With Huerta ‘but of the way ti mainder of the problem ought to ba' solution, Mexico Wil never v in a nroper aud peaceful movd ‘hile Huerta and his influence remain the country. It will be pecessary or him and the most of his followetrs. ountry and remeve 1l participation in it kov ven through suggestion, 5 It seems a strange 1 to ap- ly to people who now ##ntrol the jovernment machigery {# that coun- ¥, but there doed mot #bpear to he iny help for it wm’:he present \iMcuities can be overcome, there > hot seem to,be any grounds belief that. fedce Wil be maint, anently in Mexico. J#The ere are turbulgnt 16t, and o negurally inclined to be at | ith each other, but Just now, nancial conditions are in a wretcHed tate, the entire ry 18 in a dis- rdered conditfor: are. at the x;ha-t point. angf Yellef, must soon gome or business must suffer still jore, and the limit appears to have heen about reached; The mediators ve a difficult task on their hands a lhw are prob”din‘ slowly. There ald_not. *bi hesituncy in con- ransdonumon from . the ' 'y are runfiing thifigs in Stk nt, but ‘while they 8c9] now th-y ) ! falr leave ‘the from Mment, or ed le Y the NEW BRITAIN DAILY" HERALD WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1014, s STREET FOR PLAYGROUND. Chieage has evidently come to the conclusion that when it is a choice between allowing children to play in the street and closing it up so that they shall be free from accidents that 1t has been shall so that play- the open than traf- This what the street must be closed. decided there that ome street be closed from 4 to 7 P, M. the children may use it as ground. The children will use street anyway but if it is left they may be injured and sooner to take any ehances in that line fic must cease for the time being. is something new, but it shows a government will do when driven to it. children and for that reason ity ought to provide playgrounds. In the /Chicago street in question there is no room for a playground the schodlfyard and the people came to lusion there was nothing' else to do’ but to close the street so that the children .might play. Wil this action have a tendency to make the drivers of teams and . motor vehicles more careful? It might, but it is dif- ficult to tell in advance. When the conditions are such that people close up a public street so as to prevent their children from being injured or perhaps killed then the situation has become critical. The importance of playgrounds, which is the only rem- edy. in sight for such conditions, can- not be overestimated. * They form a problem which every city of any size must_meet as it would any other. Children must be kept off the street and the need of this is *emphasized every, day by some little one being crushed to death by passing vehicles which are often driven at such a high rate of speed as to make escape dificult if not impossible. Chicago seems to have found a way*® which will force a settlement of this great problem. a in TO WISIIATE AGAINST FLIES. | Britain is to be asked to against the fly. This move is being made in the swat campaign. The health department is going ask the council to pass an ordinance per- mitting it to declare manure piles a nuisance after standing ten days on to The public street is no place for | every | Far the first time in its history, New | legiylate | the ground that such things are breed- ers of flles and that flies are to be wiped out if possible. It Superintendent Reeks' plan to follow this proposition up with some rules in regard to swatting and he is hopes that his campaign will result in disposing of the fly or so reduc- ing his activity that he will cease to be the danger and nuisance that he is at present. Up to a few days ago it was said that the fly was less numerous than he used to be, but he has since put n an nppml(fl.e with his family and have been renewing old acquain® s and making some new since, none of whom, are'glad to meet them. years a ommpaign has been waged «the fly, but it needs to be up and unless it is no permanent et can be obtained. The fly has ‘become known as a source of dan- ger, a menace to health, and so long Ay s0 much money is being expended for sanitary purposes it seems au bit buz of tune with the whole plan not 16" he making a fight against one of the: main causes of the trouble at its source. » . . Tty reasonable to assume that the commo; uncil meet the health department at t half way in all fforts to Oft the fly and clean N every way. It is a te of the campaign In which 1a do lh('lr fair share ot l'ltifi!g and cleaning. = Panty and “Baggy Knees.” (Waterbury Republican.) % in Kansas City, the police de- pal ent officers lave solved the problem of pressi Juniforms by es- tablishing a cleaning’and pressing de- partment where police clothes will be cleaned and presséd free of charge The object of this ‘step is to remova all excuses for “bagky knécs' and other untidiness about the uniforms of the police department. Commendable as it is to insist upon carefully creased trg@sers, it is hard to understand wh; 0se In charge of olice and fire AFtments and those ho have ' livéfied a is ones however, employes have Iways Insisted upon the pattern of trousers which reguire creasing to make them look tidy. Frequent press- Ing and creasing of trousers, as all men know, wears them out rapidly, If any one designs trousers that will look well without creases and will not bhag at the knees, he is assured of the admiration and gratitude of all the men in the land, particularly of those wearing uniforms, who are now re- quired to keep their clothes creased and pressed all ‘of the time There seems to be no autoniobiles should be ass higher rate than real estate. That is why should an automobile be assessed #t -a higher figure than it will bring in the market? We know several ex- amples ‘of where automobiles have been advertised for sale at a certain ure] but which could not be moved pest | For the past | i Kopg- price fifty per cent. less. ve beeff taxed onfthe first operty of any kind is worth it will bring.—Bridgeport AN OHE FACTS AND F is to be this fall gnd those will he made candidates old. in of tion course there an elec- in this state expected to vote quainted with the the shore season is very is nothing so successful out candidates as a good fete.—Middletown Penny ac- before There trotting It water Press, les the the Charles W. Morse sa Mellen told only about half truth in giving evidence before interstate commerce commission, and he wishes the privilege of telling the other half. If he can unfold the sort of tale that he promises the saving of his life by release from prison to permit him to die on the outside may nat have been in vain.—Norwich Rec- ord. feature of Memo- rial day in Boston was the annual work horse parade, where 1,700 wor horses in various harness and decora- tions, according to the taste of their drivers, made a line that stretched ten miles and required four hours to pass the reviewing stand, occupied by the governor and mayor of Boston and other dignitaries.—Waterbury American, An interesting the assoclated com- munities have no reason to be ashamed of the tribute which they paid Saturday to the dead and living veterans of the great war. KEvery- where throughout the valley the exer- cises were notably successful and a credit to the citizens who had them in charge. There were no discordant rotes and even the weather man be- haved.—Ansonia Sentinel. We wouldn't give much for a twen- ty-two year old republican campaign speaker who couldn’t produce as good an attack on the Wilson administra- tion as the one that Colonel Roose- velt issued just before sailing for Spain, We would give still less for one who couldnt make out a better case for the republican party than the colonel made out for his bull moose. It is evident that something is the matter with the colonel. That trop- fcal fever must have got further his bones than he pretends. He Ansonia and has lost his pep, and pep was the most . conspicuous element in his pecullar brand of politics.—Ansonia Sentinel. The Summer Girl's Complexion. (Augusta Prescott in Mother's Maga- zine.) What are you going to do for your complexion these warm summer days, when dust is in the afr, and the sun burns at every turn? Never in the whole year are you quite so anxious to look your hest, as now! The quickest and most direct of treating the blemishes that come with the hot weath 1o take cach one separately and its own spe- cific remedy Powder is one of the causes poor skin at this time of the vear. this does not imply that face po are not good for the complexi the contrary, it can be stated they are highly beneficial, but one must know how to use them. Pow- der should be applied to the face on after it has been rubbed with a goc cleansing cream: and even then, it should bevput on lightly and rubbed in until not a- particle of it is v ble. Wash the face water. Use plenty of soap, lathering facetand neck with soap Jelly, rinsing ‘it off afterwards with hose. Let no soap remain but be sure that ing as many waters has patience to apply. After the thorough washing, the skin must have a little cream or a little skin food massaged into it. Then it is ready for further treatment. 1f the cheeks are thin, or there hollows in the neck, there is noth- ing so heneficlal as slow massage. A gentle “spatting” of the skin will de- velop it and increase the flesh under- neath. For a thin face five minutes “spatting” each day is advised. Where the face and neck are too fat a heavy massage is preferable. Tn- deed, there are these differences in the quality of massage: that while a quick massage takeg off the flesh, slow rubbing will develop it ¢ way, of a But vders n; on that daily in very hot the and bath upon the skin, it is removed by us- upon it as one are Style Plrates, (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) Perhaps the rapldity with which the styles in woman's wear are varled, or changed, or modifled, may be ac- ccunted for by the recent vigorous protest against fashion pirating, ut- tered by the leading style designers of Paris. The man who steals an author's story, the man who steals a rlaywright's drama, can be prosecuted and punished But how can vouw reach the man who steals styles? That is the problem which looms larger and larger hefore the doorways of the chief dressmaking houses of Paris. These leading designers are banding themselves together for pro- tection againet the common foe. They Liave no settled plan of defense, but they intend to hamper the pirates in every possible manner, They will en- deavor to prevent photographers from selling the amazing fashion plctures made on French race tracks. They will proceed agninst copiers. They may refuse to deal with cloth and silk merchants who supply the copying makers of garments with material, They wlill try to break np the nefari- ous scheme of securing a model o tume from’ its designer and then hav- ing a dozen, or many dozens, of coples made of it. In short, it is evilent that the lot of o fashion designer Is not altogether a happy one. It is evident, too, that legal prohibition for fdeas still falls far short of the requircments, Perhaps an unsympathetic mostly men—will not be moved by the statement of a leading ereator of Paris fashions that there Will be no great dressmakers left in the French capital in ten vears, unless something i{s done to stop the pirating. At the same time, these creators have their rights and should be protected. publc—— profoundly i of education, into | i lowed R N e WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of 't.lmel) questions as discussed. in ex- changes that como to'Herald office. Gompers to thg Teachers. (Boston Herald.) From w Cleveland on dressed by dent of the Labor, starts meeting held in Sunday afternoon, ad- umilel Gompers, pres| American Federation of a movement which is expected to crystallize into affil- iated union of all the public school teachers of Ohio. The immediate ob- ject is to bring support to the union- ized teachers of Cleveland in their contest against the municipal board who are trying to pre- 'ring to the union of the; now have a ss vent the trar such authority as over the teachers. Mr. Gompers in a characteristic speech, which evoked the applause of an audience of 5,000, likened the Cleveland school teachers to the col- onists of 1776, and the board of edu- cation to the stubborn ministry of King George the Third. He incident- ally suggested that whatever doubt there might be of the outcome of the warfare thus inaugurated, there could he none if the women were only possessed of the ballot, he believed they soon would be. Such a unionizing of public em- ployes, and particularly of school teachers, presents some very serious problems, Unionism in private busi- ness, or the so-called “collective bar- gaining,” has much to commend it Two sides then engage in a tug-of- war—capital and labor, or the em- ployers and the employed. The em- ployed are on the lookout+for chances to better their position: the employ- ers are equally vigilant to that this does not tend to lessen profits And the business only continues where the resultant of these forces stands over safe ground. Under public authority the contest is entirely one-sided. The union can have their own way absolutely Nq clective officer is going to en- danger his popularity by trying to Lauy the game,” as would a private employer, whose profits, or perhaps His very cohtinuance in business, de- pended on his not letting, his em- ployes carry off too much of the yield of the plant. Wherever public em- ployes are organized into a union, any eclective officer naturally cringes before them, The taxpayers, ically grumbling over the high of living, are usually indifferent the bearing of official pay-rolls their breakfast table. Public employes may us se cost to on safely legislative bodlies, town meetings and | them know the councils, to treat fairly and generously. We nothing of the conditions school teachers in Cleveland, would venture the prediction ninety-five per cent. of the teachers in that state would be glad to get into the service of that cit If this is true, the taxpayers of Cleve- land are doing their duty by group of municipal employes. The question of disecipline related. The effectiveness of our pub- lic school system is in many places already sapped by the inefficiency al- to persist in the teaching Of the 20,000 public scho. teachers in New York city, for ex ample, not a single ene has been dropped for inefliciency in ten year The mere statement of a case fords sufficient evidence of its surdity, No business on earth can run without the accumu- lation of a certain number of incom- petents. No reader of this newspaper would want to eat at a hotel, or res- taurant, which was so tied up that it could never discharge a cook or waiter for inefficiency. And yet, once a teacher always a teacher, is the rule of New York—except where some offense has been committed for which one could he courtmartialed. No farmer could run his farm in that No householder would en- gage a domestic servant on that basis. No livery stable keeper could do business with hostlers, no bank with tellers, no railroad with engin- eers, these terms And yet the training of the youthful mind would seem to require as much sustained sfficlency as any of these other vo- cations, The time will surely. come when this question must be ap- proached with vigor and decisiveness. The outcome of the contest in Cleves land may well be awaited with inter- est, municipal of that other force, af- ab- way. on The Kansas Wheat Belt. (Topeka Letter to Philadelphia Public Ledger.) A romance of belt with a love story woven into it, with a setting in Reno and Pratt counties, will be shown in motion pic- tures. Tt will tell the story of hard wheat, from the fields of headed grain to the hot rolls on the table. Mean- while, 202,000 men are required to harvest the erop and 50,000 must come from outside the state. The first fllms are now heing made of wheat field scenes in Pratt county. Later, those showing harvesters at work cutting and saving the big wheat crop will be obtained. The grain will be followed to the elevator and finally shown going through one of Hutchinson’s mills. Films will be taken at the mill showing the wheat belng converted into flour, then shipped to market and finally convert- ed into rolls. The stoty accompanying the reel one of romance. Jack West, a college student, has trouble with his fath and leaves home. He obtains a on a wheat farm in Pratt county film shows him with a harvesting crew. Later he comes to Hutchin- son and is employed as receiving clerk ut one of the big mills. Here he saves the life of the daughter of the milling company president, s ad- vanged to a position of responsibility, becomes superintendent of the mill and, of course, falls in love with the president'd daughter and eventually weds her. the Kansas wheat he chron- | trust | but we | this | is also | establishment | WOMEN'S COLLEGE BUILDINGS DEDICATED Ncw Era of Hgher Education Opened at Constantinop'e New York, June 3.—According to dispatches recelved here from Cons stantinople a new era in higher edu- cation for women in the Near Kast was marked today by the dedication of the five new buildings on the prop- erty of Constantinople College at Ar- nautkeuy, on the Ruropean shores of the Bosphorus. . Several Americans Americans who exercises included George A. tin and Walter B. Walker York, trustees of the college Mary Mills Patrick, titular head of the school. Mr. Walker represented rs. Helen Miller Gould Shepard, the donor of Gould Hall, one of the group of new buildings. The five buildings dedicated today form a semi-circla on a hill top over- looking the village of Arnautkeuy and the Bosphorus. four acres was acquired in 1908 and the construction of the buildings was begun in 1910. The late Mrs. Henry Woods of Roston was the first sub- scriber, with a gift of $50,000 to the building of the unjversity. Other Contributions Received. The other contributors were Mrs. Helen Gould Shepard, $200,000 for the construction of Gould Hall, the main administration building: Miss Olivia Phelps Stokes, for the erec tion of the Refectory, known s Mitchell Hall and Mrs. Russell Sage for the construction of Russell Sage Hall, a dormitory. The two remain- ing buildings are the school of edu- cation hall and the general academic bhuilding. The total cost of the plant to date approximates about $750,- 000, Participated, participated in the Plimp- of New and Dr. Not Barnes and Murphy. (New York World.) Making the usual discount for tem- | peramental exaggerations, what Mr, | Roosevelt said about the ‘“‘two-boss system’ in the political lite of New | York is in the main true. But when he appeals to “all right-minded people to act together without regard tg their ordinary party differences,” he undertakes to make a bad matter very much worse. If Mr. | lowed Roosevelt's advice were fol- “all right-minded” republicans would keep away from the republican primaries, “all right-minded” demo- crats would keep away from the dem- ocratic primaries, thus giving Barnes | complete domination over the repub- { lican ticket and Murphy complete | domination over the democratic tick- et. To be sure, the virtuous. might hud- dle together In the progressive party after Mr. Roosevelt's friends had nom- | inated his eandidates: but there are thousands of “right-minded™ republi- | cans who do not believe in many of | the main principles of the progressive party, and there are_ thousands at “right-minded” democrats who are equally opposed to those principles, { which happen to be antagonistic to their theories of government. Mr. Roosevelt asks them to abandon thelr party and stultify themselves in order | to give the progressives a temporary victory at the polls and to give the bosses complete control of all the party machinery. 5 This appeals to. us, Mr. Roosevelt's as distinctly Possibly forgot to tell him to use one ot favorite expressions, “anti-social.” Mr. Roosevelt's adVisera that since he went to Brazil the New York legislature has adopted a direct-primary law which gives into the hands of the vot- ers the power of nominating candl- dates for all state offices. If the publican \nominations are bad. the blame will not rest upon Barnes. It will rest upon the rank and fle of the | republican party. 1f the democratic nominations are bad, the blame will not rest upon Murphy but upon the rank and file of the democratic party The “two-boss system™ is destroyea %o far as law can destroy it. It can- not be restored except by tive vote of a majority of republicans and democrats. The only way to clean house state is for the voters themselves clean house at the primaries. If they refuse to do it. it s silly to abuse Barnes and Murphy, for their leader- ship will be no different in from Mr. Roosevelt's leadership. will control only hecause a majority of republicans and democrats want them to control or are too indolent and indifferent to throw off the yoke 1t is not the bhosses who will be on trial in the fall campaign, but the people of New York themselves, ana they should not be encouraged to shirk their responsibility. at Scl News.) re- New York in this to hey Cireus Da ool (Newark “Children who quests from their parents may be ex- cused to sge the circus parade,” the school principal announced. Here are some of the notes that were handed to the teachers “Please llve Pearl to go to the pa- rade 10 Oglock out of school.” “The Teacher of Morris's Kindly allow child to go home ly from school, so he should to see the cir ade.! “My Dear Miss— Kindly excuse Bessie 10 a'clock as to enable her to the (circus) as 1 know she will greatly benefit by it and oblige her mother.” “Dear Teacher! Please to The Parade of th let lizzie go to and Tuesday Katie for bring written re- Claws, time- he able us pa at arade et Louls Sircus,” Gou & the e Monday agsus perade the: Peray “Will you please 1kt Louts out at 10 o'clock to see the Surces for he 1s lva.ry anxious to sce it."” |URGES COLLEGIANS TO The campus of fifty." an affirma. { principle | | chippewa vouched | naval ENTER PUBLIC SERVICE Suprems Court - Jastics zAdcresses Usiversity Graduat ng* Class . Boston, June 3.—The participation of college men in public service was urged by Justice Wm. Renwivk Rid- dell, of the supreme cougt of Ontario, in an dddréss before theMiEmuduating class of Boston ‘Wniversity'today, “He who shums his fellows,” Justice Riddell, “May have a high mission, a lotty outlook and he may be worthy of all praige. But there must be some to mingle with the people, to know their needs at first hand, to take an immediate and not simply & mediate part in directing their thoughts and thelr aspirations. Is that function to be left to the ward heeler, to the boss who makes his living by it, té the party hack with no thought above the immediate success of some scheme ? sald Must Have Leader, “Some one must lead; who Is it to be It should be the glory of a uni- versity that from its Wwalls go’ forth the leaders of the people, The neighboring college which trained a Garfield, the venerable and historic elder sister across the way which gave this land a Roosevelt arfd that of another state which produced a Taft or a Wilson did not crush' in their minds the desipe for public ser- vice. “All the problems of government have not been solved; many remaln for the clearest thinking, the renun- clation of prejudice, honest und sin- cere determination to do the thing that i& right. A Séttle International Questions. “How are we to settle internatiohul questions? Blood and agony and death cannot be the final argument. War is unhappily sometimes not only right but even a duty. In the general case, however, of international disputes war can np more be said to be heces- sary than it is necessary for two per- sons who have a'dispute to fight it out with lance or club as was the custom centuries ugo in England. “We have four thousand miles of international boundary without a sols dier or a fortification. The example of two such nations as the United States and Canuda might well be fol- lowed by others and in good time it must and will be followed." . INDIAN CLAIMS TO BE 128 YEARS OF AGE Say; He' Johi Smi ays e's n _gl Which Iy Not 80 Improbable.— Was Once Mighty Chief, Minneapolis, June 3.—John Smith; or Wa-be-ne-gew-wes, for more than 100 years chief of the once powerful tribe of Chippewa Indians, who is 12§ years old, as he reckons'it, and whose existence us a boy 116 years ago I8 for government !'01'("'1\( is in Minneapolis. The lust of the great Indian chieftains of the coupr try, bent and shrunken by age,. Is still able to walk about. The lines that cross the face have worn so deep @ lines of great age never seen in the ordihary human countenance have intersected, until the face Is like the tracing of a brown net, and purplish color that fades to deepest brown runs through it. The chin and nose have drawn to- gether and what must have been the features of an Indian of the highest physical type make but a shapeless mass beside which two great ears stand out like fans as age has thinned the back of the head and drawn away the flesh from the high cheekbones. Byt the eyes are bright, the hearing acute and the brain alert Seventy vears ago., the old man \id, in the great battle at Red Lake between the Sioux and Chippewa In- dians, he fought, and for sixty years he was a warrior for his people in the combat for the hunting grounds. In the fall of 1845 he led his Chippewas to victory in a dozen bloody fights, but hunger and disease eventually wrecked the Chippewas and they re- treated to near where St. Clqud now stands MAY BE MAROONED FOR FEW MONTHS a by d man’ cross Vessels Cannot Start on Rescue Trip After Karluk Till Late in July. June 3.—Unless the of the lost Stefans son steamer, the Karluk, murooned on Wrangle Island in last Januar have already succeeded in making their over the ice to the Si- ber they will not be rescuea until July or early in Au- gust. Hon commons cation just lett of the reaching St duys ago, said available fc¢ Island are th oOnt men of the crew ot way coast late In n J. D. Hazen told the house of vesterday that a communi- recefved from Capt. Bart. Karluk, who succeeded in Michael, Alaska, & few that the only vessels trip to Wrangle Russian ice breakers ymr and \Waligrtsch, and the United States revenue cutter Bear. As soon navigation opens, late next month, these vessels will visit the northern Siberian waters, he said. Mr. Hazen added that the dominion department 18 now in negotia- tion with both the Russian and United States governments with a view to making the earliest possible arrangements for one or other of these 1McMI Beautiful Laces and - : Embroideries for Graduation Gowns Other fixings for this grand & proaching occasion for which we ha planned for months. You Can make your choice here from the most complete assortments, very lutest styles, at unusually low prices DRESS FLOUNCINGS. E The_ beautiful new Embroideries that are now on sale ut special prices. 18, 27 and 45 inches wide, Embroldered effect on Organdies Bwiss and St. Guall Lace effects. Sale price 35¢, 39¢, 50c, 69¢c and 85¢ yurd. Value 50c to $1.50, HAMBURG BANDS to match Flouncings, narrow and wide kinds, value 25c to 60c yard. Sale price 15¢, 19¢c, 25¢ yard. 50c SHADOW LACE FLOUNCINGS, AT 20c YARD, ‘White and cream, 12 to 27 inches wide, only about 800 yards in this special sale. WIDE LACE FLOUNCINGS. About 500 yards Including silk and cotton 'shadow Flouncings, silk chan- tilly, oriental and Mazure lace floune. ings, worth 98c to $3.50. For this sale 50c to $1-75 yard. i r 2,000 at 12%e Not unde kinds but . dajnty. .shudow an k ' lace edges wnd bandings. white organdie edg-.. ings, , suital for ruffiings and pleat~ ings. Y0¥ ) "WASHABLE SILK hCAm for graduation. -All the new efl‘. at 49c, 75¢, $1.39 to $2.50 each. g TEILK PATTERN VEILS in Shetland and Allover effects face and hat wear, 4vc, Te, 08¢, $1. each. Big range %Y colors, aleo black, - b¢ white. it SEE THE NEW FRAME VEILS J‘ 8 Each. The ve! fad. If you want be up to the minute in style wear of these mobby veils, PARASOLS FOR WOMEN AND CHILDRE Women's #8c to $8.95 each. Children's 25¢ 10 l\_&;u—h. Plenty choose from, to . 199-201-203 MAIN boats to rescue She men of the Kurluk, When Captain Bartlett left Wrangle Island the party were well progisionea and equipped for a | and no fears are entertained Ws ¢ men’s safety, DENT. June 3.—Edward K, pust year acting pres’ sident of the University of orth Carolina, was last night unanimousiy. elected rresident at_a meeting of the trustees, He succeeds Dr. Fran F. Venable, resigned MUSICAL AUTHORITY DEAD. Chicaco, June 3 . B. Emmanusl, ossistant direct of the Chicago Grand Upers company and & musical authority of International reputation died here yesterday. He wus 66 years old Ruleigh, N. (", Graham, for the 1 ZBY! NZKU \'I('“)IHO\ 8. Richmond, Va., June 3. —Stanislaus Zbyszko defeated Dr. B. F. Roller ,pf..v Seattle In tyo straight falls here Iut/ night, k) YOUNG TREES. The annual capacity of the fo! nurseries of the government ls abo twenty-five milligngyolng trees. ? e g COLLEGE ADDS FORESTRY, Cornell university recently dedicats ed a forestry building in connecti 4 with the state college ofplflcuu‘r‘ J