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i Jory. zone' and his crown of Jeftries s ‘the brow of rthy man has ever Lt b ——— Post Omce at Now fcarrioe o any r"‘l [SHING COMPANT, fetors. excepted) at 4:1 in Church St p o Class Mail atter e Ctor paper to in advance. ath, $7.00 fofitablo nd Circulatlo n be T a§tan 5 Sork City: v adyertisers. city and Hartford depot he who avyweight as agaln gone to broken, and J was yesterday of the wo nd beaten individual from hgo, d by fur the m W “mist man_ L the days of his poverty he s is often less Poorest of tnowe NOw Feliminaries, rns in Australia, Inys o admire him for the op- Inalke money, and by con- y nduced Jeffries to his retirement and make ffort to bose on the inside say that fixed, phrase, f fighting a very & they | ds, disregard. training, and e date for the battle was away the-negro notified was golng 9,.a0 his best end:his €itle him_ to §ro was in fine condition, Jeffries was advised to fight for a few wecks, hnd went it he was going ferday the negro chdm- by arrogant individual: the courts nd he was prosecutcid ‘ue slave act and then has * best James J. is now on a more wor biatek s o be fighter, mg kinrai boxer. until a few money than He lLegan lite after and d success’ th side of cof his keap the that Johnson, thereby ; causing jes should be ready lmz into as he engaged in yes- ed. He could strike a oW, g enough to defeat his He did beat him ptil his vitality began to puent. | came the ‘and willing to adminis- nt, he sees " helpless. e do any into to too, and from t ite woman, cannot return to been ftiving h of wines and flesh that he 'had condition ever, but he could n Willard began vietory e be a prizefighter a man cruel disposition. even when Unless has no business en . Johnson had that also seems to sater Sullivan, Corbett, ffries, but he has some e flding during degree. thy Johnson for thousand dollars, is going back pigs and chickens: to do it, but he tinue his fast years and if he ong life he is apt the b [ppeared, Ince pion is ot get a great dea young ‘ehampionship he now | 0 earn a large sum not get turncd by come to him abstemious life e has the stren rage to 'or a long. time, N Uhllhl\ and he retain B £ there in the nd that the outc birel set of here. s a neighbo new Just now each side eetings and ther .~ This always one kind or anof ‘usually it is_the o or mooth over os huve not been . same good feeling as planned. ~ Some e been trying to & between officlals d a good effect. s ® n nsln: medium ver hoke and press ound on nuo at Hota- 12nd St. and Broad- Board Walk, “and experier years cham- agreed to ‘“lay in num- 1t was then training, the r in have here ¥ living political it would seem as mistakes jtain oIty the ack the rid, to- he nee He en- Lo he ur- ere to the to ing be hat this ! igh, ac- aif- for not his al He he ter- and it i as ! itz- and to he is | has to last and 1 of and the de- has gth, the | ring ome offi- two has e ! pro- ther ther re- Ber- pre- | men were | could not have aretully. £9'¢ “town havins value receivedy fdr every dollar ex- but fie methods employed what hdve raiscd the rumpus which §8SMeW on and which presages distuption before the matter can be finally * settled. that size it does not of a po- pended re In town of take a much | litical row to start something else and the step from that to open rebellion not very A been appointed to sort of oversee muf- ters, it have officials it will, neverthe- less, act as a safety valve and prevent any more causes for secret or semi-secret meetings. It would be a good way out of the dilemma far the town to be annexed to Britain and then the affairs would be handled by pro- gressive form of government in which there would be less liability to mis- takes such been complained is long. committee has and while cannot any power over sort of a New a more as have be oceasion of immediate 50 the next best thing to to wish the old town the best of success in-the scheme the management and there would no the There that of commit- pry tor the tee peet continuanc is ho of and be done it has adopted for of its own affairs. CITY FIRE DEPARTMENT. The chamber of commerce has dis- cussed the matter of the city fire de- partment and while no action has been taken its conclusions are some- what along the line of those of Chief Dame. The conditions in Salem which have been referred to are not the same as obtain here, but the city is not de- pending for fighting fires by its past good fortunes but on what a good department, its its past suceess in it ‘considers reputation being based on services. . It was not so many years ago that New Britain had no regular firemen and did not own ‘any horses either, while now it has a fairly well equipped department with regular men in ev- ery house, some good horses and some auto apparatus. It needs more and the board of finance and taxation rec- ommended that another auto truck be provided but the common council has cut it out and it seems as if this has raised more opposition than has al- ready appeared on the surface. The council, however, in eliminating that feature of the report does not say that the city does not need it but that it thinks at present the city cannot af- ford it, although it must keep hor: and fecd them, but then on the other hand it has been made pretty plain that hor gardless of how much auto apparatus may have because of its in- times of s are (o He a necessi the city ability to travel in storms. Another _Snow that to be forgotten muking comparisons 1s, that the factories in New Britain cquipped with companies there have becn factory when the blaze was foug! force alone, no alarm for the city department. This is val- uable should ba overlooked when New Dritain is being It should matter in scems are and Fivgs ht with this being fire some ounded service and never compared with other cities. not be forgotten that the city is malk- ing some progress all ‘the time, if not in one department then in another and that the finances will not permit of progress in all at once. 555 SHOVIES iSS AN NUMBER. novel SNOW Some arguments that are some- to times offered prove business there are a out of in the York: Sunday is reviving and that number of now than In New less men employment ecarlier yvear. when 36,000 in demand to shovel snow only 21,000 were obtained and one of the big newspapers there says the day more favorable i The fact that it wi impossible 1n all the men need- ed as cvidence that the maining thousands of men at some been for the removal of made purposely. snow wi o obf is taken re- are em- other form of there been 45,000 registered earlier in the season as wi. ling to shovel snow. There will prob- ably form ployed em- ployment, having be n dispute as to accepting this although there Is discussion as to the num- but is an occupation that a of argument no room for ber who registered, shoveling, a number to work ut for variety of reasons. In the first place it hard if there is doubt about it a query of those who have tried it as a duty they owed the city and cleaned their own walks af- ter will furnish proof. They usually complain of lame baclks, their kidneys ache and for a couple of days they fear that they have con- tracted disease from which they feel they may never recover, It woulid seem, however, as if the man who has snow of men do not care a is work and any a storm the | no work, has a even if he i family to support or single man and has no money, except such as he can pick up from femporary jobs when the ob- portunity presents itself, he might shovel snow as a choice between that and Ber- and perhaps hunger. If he doesn't and has good health then it would sympathy if becomes in nced of food. The lines have New York and the many of those who have been out of employment have sccured work and are earning their living. Let us all hope that this supposition is correct. he bread diminshed in supposition is that FACTS AND FANCIES, State Senator Hurley, of Waterbury, out of politie: me. With one finger “the game is no good. Journal-Courier. say up he : Haven New A prominent republican who has just come from the.West says that out that way they talk of the coming na- tional election in 1916 as likely to re- reat for their party the experience of 1896. On the other hand, a democratic leuder who has been out ag far as the coast is wiling to propnesy that if business continues to improve as it is now doing Wiison will be renominated and re-elected.—Bridgeport Post. Capital punishment is to remain with us in this state. It is safe to pre- sume, however, were old methods em- prioved and hangings take place in the public market place, as of old, instead of in the dead of night with only a few officials present, capitar punish- ment would fade away, or i more humane way of taking life than by hanging would result.—Middletown Press. Everybody should give the jitney o helping hand. For they may be a blessing to the community. Anything that will improve the abominable trolley service that Waterbury , has Leen subject to of late, will be much appreciated by the public. The trol- lcy service has been getting worse instead of better and apparently no effort has been made to improve con- ditions. We do not know who really is at fault, but one thing is certain— ithe trolley service in \Waterbury has been anything but good and if the public can give any encouragement to the jitneys, it should do so.—Water- Democrat, James J. Hill believes that the war will end in October because of the financial, physical and industrial ex- haustion of the combatants. It may, and then again it.may not. Mr. Hill is entitled tq his gue: in common with all of us. Still he scems to have some grounds for his belief and it may well turn out as he s is little doubt as to the )n haustion of Austria, Servia, Turkey and Belgium, When the others are brought to the same desperate level they may well look with favorable eves upon peace as the only way out f their difficulty.—Ansonia Sentinel. Much interest has been aroused throughout the state on the unfavor- able report submitted in the house this week by the committee on con- stitutional amendmenis on an amend- mient which would abolish the present age limit of 70 years for all judges and justices of the peace in Connecti- cut, df ' this '‘measure had Dbeen odopted ‘ten years ago in all prob- ability Governor Baldwin would still be a judge of the supreme court, and would mnever had given Connecticut our of the most important years of hig life as governor. Governor Hol- ccmb on reaching the age of 70 last November would® probably not have been nominated for governor, and \\ould still be giving his valuable ser- his de- superior es to the state througn cisions on the bench of the court.——Hartford Post. There is not much likelihood that a bilt will be passed by the present legislature repealing the death pen- alt The committee whicn has been giving hearings on the case has re- ported adversely. There is a great abundance of testimiony on both sides of this question. It is also easy to show that fear of death does not deter man from murder. Tt is also easy to show that in states where the death penalty has been repealed there is a greated number of homicides than in ates where it is the law, One ouble is with the execution of it. The great number of homicides and the comparativé infrequency of execu- tions is a surprising thing. in penology and judges of the criminal courts are not as a general thing in favor of the repeal of the law. It i3 ady nullified too frequently by various influences in which sentimen- tality is perhaps as operative as any. -—Waterqury American. iss Her, States.) He Forgot to (New Orleans He really mecant to kiss his wife this morning as he left the house to go to work. But he forgot. He was thinking of the cares of the shop, of the thousand and one matters which concern him in the bix world with which wrestles for living for her and the Kids. Anyhow, a said Lo himsclf after- ward, what's a ki It oughtn’t to take such a mere formality to con- vince of his Jove and trust the woman he has made the misiress of his home, the mother of his children. The chances are she never noticed the omission-——so why should he worry ? But back home a woman Wept, not because she doubted her husband’s constancy, not because she felt that he would not prove big and true and fine in an emergency, but because, womanlike, shut within home’s four walls, doomed to another day of petty routine, much of it to be endured all alone, she wanted that kiss 1 token and 4 memory —want- ed it proof that not in her case could the poet write “He's lost, you see ried me; Goodby, my lover, goodl Now if you, Mr. Mun, made such a break as that this morning do you know what you ought to do? Go home tonight with a present in each hand and plant two kisses where one grew be! he wept. , ‘cause he mar- he | Pshaw! WHAT OTHZIRS 3AY Views ou all sides of tunely questlons as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald ‘Phone Girl Saves Threc. (New York Herald) Miss M. M. Gildea, chief operator in the Flatbush telephone exchange, heard the faint but frantic voice of a He has quit (llfli woman come over the wire yesterday afternoon: “Clome quickly, Dr., Keves. is dying! The house is full of ga Come! Come!™ Working quickly, Miss Gildea found that the woman in distress was Mrs. Asad Khoure, wife of a musiciun, and that she was calling from her home, at 503 East Twenty-sixth strect, Brooklyn. She ulso discovered that the physician was Dr. Edward A, Keyes, of 219 Rutland road, and that he had not been at the tfelephone when the woman sent her eveiting Gildea relayed the message to Dr. Keyes and then cailed Brooklyn volice headquarters. Drs. Sage, Sted- man and Figley were hurried to the house in an ambulance with a pulmo- tor from Kings County hospital reach- ing there in time to aid Dr. Keyes in breaking down the door. Inside they found Mrs. Khoure unconscious on the floor, where she had fallen from the telephone. In another rcom was hér mother, Mrs. Augurts Horle, also un- conscious. As soon as all the windows had been opened to release the gas three of che physiclans began work upon the two women, while another sought the gas leak. Going into the cellar, he found Mr. Khoure unconscious on the floor, where he had been trying to repair a leak in an automatic gas heater attached to a water pipe. Mr. Khoure, who was in the most serious condition_ was sent to the hos- pital, while the physicians worked two hours on the two women before re- viving them. Recurring Fashijons. (Philadelphia Ledger.) The cycle of clothes completes itself with a regularity almost as unvarying as that of the seasons: but it takes vears instead of months for the old fashions to recur. When Nature maie a rose she looked upon it and pro- nounced it good. She reproduces it vear after year in unvarying fashion, but man is not content with the cut of his coat for two seasons in succes- sion. This is why it takes so long for the old fashions to reappear. They have to be forgotten by the mass be- fore they can come back, even in a form at all suggestive of their first estate, Let us take the cutaway coat as a type. Twenty-five or thirty yea 120 every young man owned one. It was usually made of diagonal worsted and the edges were bound with braid. The length of the tails and the number of buttons varied from season to sea- son, but the general style of the coat was unchanged for several Then it disappeared, though hot-house specimens were occasionally seen. And the fashion of binding men's couts with braid went with it. But a year or two ago the cutaway coat came back. The ear examples were rare as the first flowers of spring that show themselves when the sun begins to warm the sheltered places. But this year we are told that every man who wishes to be well dressed must have one, and they are all braid-bound, after the manner of their predeces- sors of the last century. Th cycle has completed itself. Next season we may expect the skin-tight trousers to ap- pear, for they completed the costume of the man of fashion in that far off time when the newly recurring styles last prevailed, and when the dandy, once known as a fop and earlier called a beau, was characterized as a “dude.” Several Batues of Winchester. ' (Pittsburg Dispatch.) : Several battles of the Civil War have been given the name of the “Battle of Winchester,” the first being that fought March 23, 1862, when General Shiclds defeated the Confed- erate Jackson at Kernstown, four miles south of Winchester. The next battie of Winchester was when the Confederate iSarly drove a IFederal force commanded by General Torbert from Winchcester, August 17, 1864, Again on Seplember 19, 1864, a battle of Winchester was waged, far more important than the othe with Gen- eral Sheridan in command when the I"ecderals, with a force of 38,000, gave a drastic drubbing to General Early with 15,000, the brunt of the fightin: being cn Apequan Creck. a short dis- tance from Winchester. Only few later Sheridan scored another vietory over ISarly, who had made a stand at Fisher’s 1Hill. The most fa- mous of the battles of Winchester which had their inception March 23, 1862, at Kernstown, was that of Cedar Creek, October 19, 1864, and which gave the Pennsylvania poet. Thomas Buchanan Read, the theme for his famous poem, “Sheridan’s 1id Cedar Creek is w stream emptying irto the Shenandoah river some twen- miles from Winchester. There had assembled a larger force than he had before commanded, about 19,000 men, while the Federal force numbered 31,000. Barly learned that Sheridan had gone to Washington and was thus led to think it a good time for attack, forcing a retreat in much disorder of the Federals, they having been completely surprised. A rout was averted by a rally or cavalry and part of the Sixth corps under General Wright. Sheridan had reached Winchester when he had word of the semi-disaster, and at once began his famous ride “from Winchester twenty miles away.” A a days { large number of the Confederates had left théir runks to plunder the camp of the Federals. Sheridan came on the scene like a whirlwind, rallied his tr-ops and routed the enemy com- pl(‘ll‘l\ pursuing them as far as Fish- er's Hill, his victory being counted the Mother j exploit of the Civil War, Sheridan recaptured all his 10st guns and twenty-three of Early’s. He then retired to Kernstown and went into winter quarters. Accumulad ns of a Carpet, (Brooklyn Standard-Union.) If that respectable portion of our ropulation that lives in boarding- houses notices ‘any unusual activity | these days, it may be ascribed to the news that a Harlem boarding-house keeper, just going out of busine found under the carpet of one of her rooms three bank books, showing de- Posits of over $5,000, which aad be- longed to a hoarder who died in Ma. 1903, He had died in a not in his room. But evidently bad confidence he would return to | the boarding-house in due season, since he had not revealed to the land- lady or anybody clse the hiding place of his treasure. Nobody should rashly assume that the bank books never would have been discovered if the boarding-house keeper had not decided to go out of | business. A carpet, even in a board- ing-house, might conceivably wear out entirely in the course of gene tions, Not that there is scientific evi- dence that this ever happened; but stlll it is possible to assent to the Proposition that it could occur. And if it did occur, the remmants, or de- bris, or whatever {t might be called, Wwould naturally be removed—say, when the next bundle day is pro- claimed, In that case, any bank books other treasure deposited under carpet by hospital, he or the successive fleeting genera- tions of boarders, back through the ages, would inevitably be revealed. But it must be conceded there is no Tecord of this event to be found in the authorities. It is only a sup- position, All we have to go on in forming that might be called the hypothesis of boarding-house carpets is that one boarding-house carpet happened to be taken up less than twelve years after a boarder had made it what he considered a sure and permanent safe deposit vault, When it was taken up, of course, everything which had ac- cumulated under it was disclosed. If bank books, why not jewels of price- less value, currency, pieces of eight and such negotiable treasure, as well as papers proving the former occu- pant to be an Anneke Jans heir or Jjustly entitled to millions of pounds sterling “in chancery”? Anyway, it is quite possible there will be for a while now a general dispositon to take up boarding-house carpets often- er than once in twelve years. The Maid of All Work. (New York Sun.) It does not need the testimony of the Public Employment bureau to convince the country that the supply of that priceless “ancillary adjunct” the maid of all work, general house- worker, bonne a tout faire, or what- ever name her angelic co-operation may have borne, is a thing of the past. She is no longer to be found. What remains of her in the waliting room of the so-called intel- ligence offices is but a poor substi- tute for her former efficiency. Aged conscienceless routineers and v, vouthful aspirants from the N)ulhern states fresh from the fields and newly arrived Scandinavians without a word of English on their consciences are the only substitutes for this skilful and satisfactory work- er of former years, And she has gone from the face of the domestic world just at the time she was needed. The tendency of the builders of apartment houses has for some time been to make the rooms for domestic use smaller than ever, So it has ever grown more difficult to crowd into them the two assistants now necessary to do the work formerly so quie skil- fully accomplished by one. disappearance of the generual heouse- worker is not the only loss to those housekeepers of limited means, Various conditions have brought about the extinction the velund maid of #1 work just when her ser- vices were most in dcmand. It is possible to earn quite as much with- out so much effort Then theve always the complaint tk the lot of the solitary scrvant is made inore difficult on account of lonelivress when but one is employed There has been no greater loss thun | the loss of her to those of limited means who wish to live here and have the sense of being in (heir own ‘homes, “Soclological vestigaters, always alert to find some cans <f relieving the lot of their feliow men, could do nothing more practical than try to train up a new generation of the maid of all work, She wouid cer- tainly find a constant demand for her services, and it is certain that they would be paid for at a generous fig- ure,. so great has becn the rezret at her departure at Kills Hare, J., York Hungry, (Somerville, Jailed. Despatch Sun.) Another rabbit kRling ome respects rivals the fumous scar Phillips arrest in North Plain- field, was up beforc Justice Peter D. Lane at Far Hills this afternoon, and as the prisoner had not the money to pay his fine he was sent to the county jail for thirty days, notwith- standing his protest that he was out of work and hungry and killed the! rabbit for food only s prisoner was Jasper Svarka, of age, a former farm hand been out of work for some Late yesterday afternoon | Svarka saw a rabbit near Short Hil and he hurleg a stone at it. 11 aim was good and he killed the rab. bit. He picked it up and was car! ing it under his arm when Special Game Wurden Churles Meyers espied him. Svarka admitted that he had | killed the rabbit and he also ad- | mitted knowing that tiis s “closed season.” Today the game before Justice Hills, who. when the were explained to him. to New hich case, V- warden arraigned Lane Far cumstances imposed a fine | { Tenny probab | came angry | a. | ulw vg § ke did not to pay the fine and for thirty days have any money he was sent to jail in default. Man Runs Auto. Times.) A man in wiose pockets cards ware found bLearing the name of Charles Leon Tenny of ¥landers, L. I.. drove Dying (New York {an autamobilc acrves the Queensboro bridge last night conseious from a stroke If the roadway d y would ¥ car invo ty.ninth street, hands were clenched tightly to the steeriog wheel o the machine thus was prevented f veering to right or left. He a few minutes after policemen seat, A hors ar - with a stop near bridge. ‘The while he was un of upoplexy. beon open 2 driven the » a3 his om died lifted drawn truck brought the its unconscious driver to the Manhattan end of the driver of the truck be- when he saw the auto- approech from the rear and When, without owing down or at- temptin to gc around elther side, rur squarely into the truck, the truck- man started cxpress his opivion ta tie driver of the nutomobile, but he noticed ti the mar head hung Gown and that he strangely unconcerned ahcut collision. He called Moter Cycle Policeman Gough, who found that the man was uncox sclous and apparently dying mobhile seer the “What's Golng On (Oklahoma Oklahoman.) Swift Wolf does s own cooking for himself and his wife, Bishey. Bishey is bland. Swift Wolf ‘buys all iis bread at Colony. Only thing he cooks is meat and makes pots of coffee. Annita Washee has gone out auarantine camp of Arapahoe sume grub for them, Paul Goose and his wife, Elk Road, from Clinton, visited Colony friends. Little Lake, better known as Mrs. Big Nose, has come back to Colony to visit friends. Mrs. Big Nose Is mar- ried to Old Arapahoe at Cantonement, and is making her home up there with him. Miss Jane Gray, field matron of Colony, went to Creeping Bear's home to see Joe Creeping Bear and his Shawnee wife, but Joe mnd his wife had gone back to Shawnee. Red Bird Foolish Bull and his wife, Prairile Woman, from near Watonga, passed through Colony on way to visit Kiawo friends. to with Noone to the Rescue. (Manchester Union.) It is an old and well established tenect of philosophy that the occasion always produces its man. It has been demonstrated over and over again and New England has a new demonstra- tion of it right now. The hearts which are worrying about rail- road stocks and leased lines may ceas to worry; the seething brains w]lh‘h are wrestling with the problem of rehabilitating the Boston and Maine system may cease to seethe. The oc- casion has produced its man. The dark shadow of bankruptey which has | cast great sobs of gloom over the Bos- ton and Maine has a silver lining, and the silver is at the disposal of the road and its owners, the only condition be- ing the transfer of the road, hide, hoofs and horns, to the possessor of the silver. To prospective receivers, the dictum is “hands off.” When Daniel Webster offered to pay the national debt out of his own pocket, he little thought that another New Hampshirc man « little less fam- ous, but not a bit less enthuslasticul- ly public-spirited, would one day of- fer to buy and finance a crippled raii- road in order thut the New England States might be sparcd the bother of legislating it barck fo sound hesrlth But the sprit of old ampshire did not die with the great ¢ under He ret the crample; the old stat: con- tinues to. pre {uge men of generous in- stincts to fuilow it Albert V. Noone formes member of the vornor's council and himself but rorcutly candidate for governor, is the Coand Samaritun. He it Is who comes with healing balm-——millions of it--io bind up tre wounds of the urfortneate railroad which fell ameng thieves and was beaten and robbed and stripped of Its raiment. TLet the innumera- ble trustees and directors and legi: tive committees and public serviee crmmissions and stockholdcra take heart. The hour of deliverance ix at hand, and 1t is not a receivar's hand, c¢ither. The Boston and nine in yvears past has reflected the person ity of a Frank Jones; it hus been the rlter ego of a Luclus Tuttle. We come to a time when an ert W, Noone, in il the disting hed ro- tundity of his manly form, would stand before an admiring world and “The Loston and Maine? That's The band wil now play that in- The band will now play that in- Hero Comes!"” o of Petersboriugh, now GAINING OF GROUND NO SIGN OF VICTORY | Outcome of Great Battle n Carpath- ions Cannot Yet Be Poreseen States Correspondent. ut Front, Berlin, Via. London. Apri! 6, 10:45 m.—Tho ontcome of the great battle in the Carpzthians which has lasted o0 mar Weeks cannot yet be forcseen, according to the speclal cor- respondent at (he front for the Tage att. He argues that the army tuk g the offensive against an enem; provided with rong positions to which it can retire when necessary ys Is the greater loser, and the ther it goes forward the greater are its losses. The correspondent says: Chere is, therefore, always the troubled ; McMILLAN’S i Don’t forget the new hm-ro for store closing—Monday at & ¥, M., Sutarday at 9:30 l‘ M., num- lnuu P M | Manufaciurer’s Sale of him from the | $1am1.49 CUT GLASS at i~ VALUES U¥ TO #2.50. Twelve hundred pieces | thig sale at The great offered lowing cluded o manufacturer's prices values in real Cut Glass the statc. The fol- items give you idea of Cut Glass Sale offering: over in some .this special FERN DISHES VAS JuGs SUGAR AND CREAM SETS BERRY SETS SALAD DISHES TUMBLERS IN SETS OF SIX CHEESE AND CRACKER SETS BUTTER DISHES CELERY DISHES OIL AND VINEGAR & ETC. SPECIAL WASH GOODS SALE 19¢ Yard for Regular 25¢ Values, 40-inch flowered and striped volles 27-inch poplins and silk all the newest designs and colorings. EMB, ORGANDIE FLOUNCINGS. Special at 39¢ Yard, Value 48c. Full nineteen inches wide in transe parent effects. plain mercerized striped pong in well based hope thut if the Russians advance by virtue of the masses of troops thrown into the Carpathians by them, they will have to pay dearly, and too dearly. Although the con- flict in the Carpathians ut present atty ng more interest than any other happening in the war, one must not forget that the wur theater in- DAINTY BABY At 49c and 6 NBAL, LACE FLOUNC 69c to $1.75 Yard. GOLD AND SILVER ILACE At 75c and 98c Yard, Value to $1.50, Ailovers and edgings for waists and ORIEN dresses. WOMEN'S “SILKO” SLEEVELESS VE Regular and extra be cach, Made of fine silk ized threads. ‘0. McMILLAN 199-201-203 MAIN STREET sizex, Specinl at finished mercer- other thesc than the Car- can have an In- s athian situation “The gaining of ground in the Car~ pathians by no means indicates vie- tory, for victory is nut won unti! the opponent is cxhaust Even if the Russians succeed in gaining ground at puints in the Carpathians, offense will grow more effective WOMEN VOTING IN MAYORALTY FLECYION cludes regions pathians, and fluence on th our Pour Candidales Paittfay Talay to e Choe wvutihve Yead o hiengo Chicago Mere quarte=s of a aliz than thres and woe today’s ele olt aurt n to or, vote e 1c at [y § aldermen rd and were on t ratine Wi, whom 146,815 wate women The candidales ! Ham Hale Thonspson Sweitzer (dy; 4 John HUI (pra.) Weman var time at xation pr | Tho were e may ot hert sur £: edmar (w tec the fret Chi- G ey oral'y n cago. THREE HOONERS WRECKED IN STORM Three lives Lost When Cralt Joses phine Pounded to Ploces on North Caroll Coast, orfolk, Va loss of t wrecking eports of nal lives and schoaners in recoived here were thi Josephine, North Creelmur TN Davii of Jos- additl threc storm were The lost men crew the schooner which pounded to pie Carolina coast,| C is among the coast guards rescued ephine's crew of The four.masted Thomas Moore wrecked thirty miles northeast of Cape Henry. Cap- tain Jones and his crew were brought here by the British steamer Mcre- zan, The a total coast near w rescued of eariy today s on the ptain missing. four ithe even schooner Willtam schooner Lorin wreek on the North Gull Tsland Her crew 200,000 BALES Hoston, dred thoust shipment gaged in today, with Edmondson OF HAY BURNED, Tex.,, April 6.—Tw nd bales of hay awaitin to Kuropean countries war were hurned here the warchouses of