New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 7, 1917, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

- mi‘ é - H - £ e D PUBLISHING COMPANY. Proprietors. daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:18 p. m., Herald Butlding, 67 Church St. the draft in camp by September 1. ‘Within a year America should see the greatest army it has ever known, ever possessed. And this army can be ralsed in no other, way than the method employed by the federal gov- 1; in’ the long run that they have met their masters. In such case we can wait until after the war to learn the names of our heroes who succeed in sinking attacking submarines. There is no need for hurry when DAILY, HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1017. - SELF HELPS FOR NEW SOLDIERS SOON TO BE CALLED INTO ment campaigns as might be th destrable and mom,..::,, . nels as his disposal wonld by u 'tion of news and advertising columb thyoughout every.part of the coun Advice By United States Army Officer Which Is Valuable “at the Post OMos at New Britaln | ernment and which started Tuesday Becond Class Mail' Matter. y part of the city 65 cents a month. with the registration ‘of all available candidates, These candidates offered themselves. What matters it that they went to the registration stations under order of the gavern- ment? They are not to be looked upon as conscripts in the deep sense of that word. There was no other way out of the‘great problem that confronted the cauntry at this time. Each man who presented himself for enroliment received a little blue regis- tration card, a certificate that he’ had performed his duty. ‘And that card is a badge of honor,—the blue badge of honor, just as any wound he might Teceive in the line of battle will be the red badge of courage. It is only a cheap little bit of pasteboard that probably did not cost one-eighth of a cent for the making; but dollars could' not buy one from a man who knows the full meaning that lies back of it. On its face it carries the spread eagle of the -republic, and giving greetings to whom it may con- cern, attests by its very presence that the bearer “in accardance with the proclamation of the President of the United States, and in compliance with law, * ** has submitted himself to registration.” i "Those blue cards represent the heart of the nation.” They attest to the world at large that the men of the United States between the ages cf | twenty-one and thirty-one stand ready to defend Old Glory nmo matter what ‘round. w for paper to be sent by mail, in advance, 60 cents & month, have ' already FACTS AND FANCIES. § smly profitable sdvertisirix medium in t eity. ~ Circulation books and press 2 alwava open to advertisers. « 4 will be found on sale at Hota- 's News Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- , New York City: Board Walk, At- tie City, and Hartford Depot. o _TELEPHONE CALLS. Omos - When you hear a man pronounco it “T'peky” he lives there.—Kansas City Star. Why not give to all the socialists passports— without the return cou- pon.—Boston Tr ript. That Russian republic is a first rate debating society, but a disappoint- ent as a fighting machine.—Florida ‘imes-Union. Now it 1s “Into” 'instead of “out of” the trenches by Christmas.—Portland Oregonian. Admonition not to buy things for hoarding does not apply in the mat- ter ‘of the Liberty bornds.—Albany Journal. If you cannot serve your -country in any other manner, you can at least step to one side and get out of the way.—Paterson Call. k O | When bad men combine, the : must assoclate; else they MI fall one by one, and unpiticd Sorifice in a contemptible strug- The Chicago' butter and egg board hes forbidden the dealing in egy futures. Same action should be taken in regard to dealing with eggs of the hazy past.—Hartford Post. ~~EDMPND BURKE. i —————— . TIME FOR CEREMONY. £ in a lttle Ohio town there 's Young man‘named ¥red Bray. to the Grafton Times, maternal grandparents were in Germany. His grandfather, M Zinkieihidl)'was not only in Germany but he has made a visits to the Fatherland. thstanding all these Assoclations Bray decided to enlist in the nst Germany. Uncertain how ndparents would regard his de- p to wage war on the country of birth he decided to pay them a and find out. Anyway, it was ‘his farewell to the old folks. Reports from Washington make it distinetly clear that there is a de- cided objection to any tax that can't be passed on to the consumer.—In- dianapolis News. Probably M. George Clemenceau :;“l‘ti not be expected to know it, but e fact is that the R: sncrifices such defense may entail. [ 1'°, (I 2,7 (e eotevelt smavier The mothers of the nation stand in| Register. 5 back of their boys. It is serious busi- i ness, and every one understands what| It is now becoming obvious why it means. The men who'went to the | the German artillery fire is slacken- polls and registered know what their :m'o Tths}; lhl.vo to save ;h-lr :.mn\l— action forecasts,—that they may be wha: o blow up French fruit trees 7 th t.—] cut off from the pleasures of the By, (TRENR L T ity Times. moment, sent to the battle front, or put to work in the fleld or {ncwry for Uncle 8am. The mothers and fathers know what it all means. But they look back to the years gone by and take their consolation from the great deeds gone before. They say, “It is hard to do these things; but then if the American people of the Revolu- tionary period had not dome them, where would this nation be today? If the American people of 1812 had stood idly by and allowed our ships to be run aff the high seas, where would American rights have been in this hour? If the brave men of '61 had not fought against'their very brothers, where ‘'would the Union be in 18172" The heart ‘of the nation beats with the true pulse of Liberty and Free- dom. The heart of the nation can ‘mever be stilled so long as there are mothers and fathers willing and § y to lay ‘“‘such costly sacrifices the altar of freedom.” Abra-* ham Lincoln must be pleased with the American mothers of today, just as he was proud of the American mother who gave her five sons to the nation more than fifty years ago. x We'are always talking of the rights of the individual.. But unless the in- dividual has picked up a little sense, is willing to work a little and look out for himself a little, ‘he’ has no rights.—Howe's Monthly. ‘fold of what he expected to do, ther sald: “Well, Fred, g0 to shoot a German, ask “his name is Zimmerman.” g the grandmather broke ysaid: “Dén't do anything of pd, because he might shoot you " whereupon Mr. Zimmerman jimed, “Well, I guess that's right. Dbetter ahoot him first and ask et a All of which goes that this 1s no time to Buy a Bond. Uncle S8am ‘has bonds for sale Now is the time to buy, Let every mother’s son take one And that means you and I; Its a safe and sane investment But its something vastly more, It shows that each will do his part To carry on the war. How many of our soldfer boys ‘Wil| cross we cannot tell, But, this we know, that those ‘WIill do their duty well. \ And whether we must go or stay The least that we can do, Is loosen up our purse strings 10w And buy a bond or two. / i HEART OF THE NATION. m Lincoln, sad_and weary ‘weight of war,- oniee wrote ‘faother who had'lost five sons in battle! = “I, pray :that our y tather may agyuage the an- of your bereavement and leave the' cherishied memory of the W lost, and ‘the solemn pride “must be yours to have laid so & g° upon' the altar of A ) yhogo Buy a fifty, buy a hundred, Buy a thousand if you can; Lacking cash to buy the fifty Buy on the instalment plan. Take the cash you laid aside It may be for a rainy day, Just open up your purse strings wide And do it right away. » 'ete Abraham Lincoln alive today puld’ neoessarily cherish the ‘moble’ thoughts for the.mothers he ‘nation ‘Who have so willingly Fificed their sons for the cause of pdom. Not that there are any yet in battle under the ‘calors; mot § there aré mothers who have yet ourn the loas of their sona killed under the Stars #nd Stripes s war; not that there is yet for weeping and sorrow. But may be, and, if 80, the Ameri- i mothers of today will bear up er the burden just as the Ameri- i mothers of 98, of 61, of '76 {There must be sacrifice that the on- may live. The gallant array It may seem like a sacrifice To husbands and to wives And yet how small compared witn those Who sacrifice their lives. That liberty in truth should be Much more than just a name A worthless scrap of paper / Lost in battle smoke and flame. wrnn‘!ommq THE NAMES. HIn rofusing.to disclose the name of the American. steamer that sunk a submarine in the war zone the State department is’guided by caution. It is feared that reprisals of the worst order may be put in force by Ger- many should vth‘crew of this ship be captured. 'While the nationality of the submarine.is likewise withheld 1t is the consénsus of opinion that the U-boat belonged to the Gegman ad- miralty. Whether it was & German submarine or an Austrian boat makes oung men between 'the ages of little differerfce. 'rhe.imyomnt part goty-one and thirty-one who on |©f the news is that"she was sunk, y last stepped up to the polling while the American liner escaped and registered their names for | damage. amon call of the nation exem- It having been reported not long this spirit of sacrifice. Theirs | 280 that the American steamer Mon- salemn pride *“to have laid mo | 80lia was attacked by a. submarine ¥ a sacri n the aitar of | #rd. In the fight which followed, suc- “There.is. mo ‘one who | cecded in Sinking the German U-boat, the Imperial admiralty issued orders what the outcome : will, be. + 1s no telling what Sacrifices may | for 1t8 sérpents of the sea to. bend m | every effort to capture the Mongolia. ' ¥e. to be offered before this grim Mor r is over. Only this: we do know | Reprisal is the watch-word ‘of ‘Ger- Bt the American people have never | many. The case of Capt Fryatt is d in their determination to j®0 well fixed in the minds of the American people allow them to ithe ship of state free from the s that threaten to destroy it; that | fgrget the manner in which Germany demands satisfaction after having American mothers, and fathers, sons, and daughters, have neverx | been defeated in any given encounter. Ruthless submarine warfare is as' ‘back when the nation cailled for What has been true in other nothing compared to the frightfulness is true in 1917. of Germany’s punishment once an of- problem of raising an army in | fender against His Majesty’s govern- 18 no ean problem. | ment is apprehended. &g e £ of supporting such an Dealing with an enemy that know: i by organising and canserving | no bounds when reprisals are tons e e fdrce. of field and factory is | cernca it is probably just ds well that | I e e R er than the disbursement of | the State departmeént should refuse to | for other schools responded well and in_the fleld. These are the set | publich the names of victorious Amer- | Miss Wélinsky invited the Smalley ‘ 1can liners and their gun crews-who gchool teachers to spend a week-end S I whicly: glie™federal | dou 8 WA | in New York next year. 5 ment has had to grasp. After | stcceed In sinking German' sUbMA- | _After ainner there was dancing ‘for rines: As the war goes on we expec: Ibération the men at Washing- ¢z | an hour. ¥ that the expert gunners of the Amer- ded, as the nation wanted decide, upon the selective | ican navy will sink more than one or The first whirl of the whee] | two of these submersible boats. The ! _German submarines were very. very For liberty brave men. have dfed, Are dving day by day; Why should we then begrudge the Paltry sums we ought to pay. Democracy is battling with Oppression greed and wrong; Speed victory’s day, give while you may ¥ To help the cause along. W AM G. RODGERS. FAREWELL TO TEACHERS. Pleasant Auto and Dinner Party by Smalley School Staff. ‘The principal and teaching forcs of 8malley school motored to Greenwood Inn, New Hartford, yesterday, after the afternoon eession and tendered an Adlos dinner party to those of the téachers who are leaving-at the close -of the year. The parties were driv§n by the Misseg:’ Helen Sheehamy Genevieve Brady and.Adele Murray. % ‘After | hn’ hour's at the-Inm, dinner . was served: There .were American Beauty favors and the man- agement of the Inn added vari-colored offering. .. The guests iof the evening were the Misses Lolia M. Littiehales, - Hllen- J. Horsfall, Genevieve Andarson, Helen Welinsky, Mary Darrow, Frances Brady and Miss Genevieve Brady. A “ An original song, ‘“Vous ne nous oubles,” describing the results if they dia, was sung. Mrs. Grace Coholan RAZING BOOTH HOMESTEAD. “WWorkmen today began razing the hgmestead of the late Horace Booth which at one time stood on Main §cod before they went up agaiset the| froyy put of late years has been ob- deadly marksmsuship of American are’ on sccount of the erection of |t - there will be glory enough to % ‘quill trimmed crepe paper hats as its |- 5 Eligible For Service n America’s ‘New Legions. THE CHARGE. If a company is advancing to the firing line by rushes, the captain may increase or decrease the size of the] fractions he sends forward, as he sees fit, in order to complete or retard the movement. When the company forms but: onq unit of tho firing line, it may be sent forward by a rush of the whole—just as the platoon may be similarly advanced. The captain leads the rush of the company, and, platoon leaders run at full speed at the head of their respective platoons. Platoon guldes follow the line to in- sure a prompt and orderly execution of the advance, that is, to provent straggling or a sagging of the front. The advance is not limited, how- ever, to the methods described, as has already been explained. Any method may be employed which suc- cessfully brifigs the attack closer t> the ‘enemy. Crawling especially in surprise attacks, may be the most practicable and effective method to, be pursued, It should be repeated here, as in the first lesson in extended order drill that the use of the rifle s here assumed.. At all events, the Irame- work of extended order movements could be learned with broomsticks, while there is no method of learning the rifle itself, even to the fixing of the bayonet, without a rifle in hand. And it is not at all improbable that the recruits to the new army—at least & portion of them—may have to start training without rifles, unless the | NEW BOOKS AT Adventures of the U-202, an actual narrative. “A thrilling day-by-day story of a daring hunting raid of a German sub- marine, by the officer in charge.”— Publisher’s note. e s e Autoblography of a Super Tramp, by ‘W. H. Davies. “Life story of this young poet who, born among the English poor and for many years a common tramp in America, finally climbed out of the abyss to success. It is,'as Mr. Ber- nard Shaw says, ‘a placid narrative, unexciting in matter and unvarnished in manner, of the commonplace of & tramp’s life * ¢ ¢ Though it is only in verse that He writes exquisitely, yet this book, which is printed as it was writtan .* * * i{s worth reading by literary experts for its style lone.' A. L. A. Booklist. see Brazil, Today and Tomorrow, Elliott. . “The author is literary editor of the Pan-American magazine. This book is the fruit of seven years' travel in and study of Latin America, and two years’ special work on and in Brasil, where seventeen out of twenty states ‘were visited.” by J. B. Britain's Civillan Volunteers author- ized story of British volunteer ald detachment work in the great war, by T. Bowser. DR God, the Invisible King, Wells, “Mr. Wells has here set forth what he calls ‘modern religion,” a concep- tion of God as a pergonal guide pos- sessed of indomitable courage. The humility of Jesus Christ, the symbols and ritual of churches are to be left out of human life. Above and before all he recognizes a Veiled Being, whom the future may interpret.” e e by H G Italy in the War, by 8. J. M. Low. “A comprehensive study of Itallan conditions, strategy, fighting ¢ * ¢ An interesting feature of his book, too, is the Information that Mr. Low has to give us about Austria and the Austrian in the war ¢ ¢ ¢ This book is illustrated, too, with ex- cellent photographs from the Italian headquarters photographic depart- ment.”—N. Y. Times. DR Social Diagnosis by M. E. Richmond. “Explanation of the working methods of organized charity in handling evidence, and in the pro- cesses leading to diagnosis of gener- al'cases in special flelds * * * Author is dlrector of charity organization a partment, Russell Sage Foundation. —Publisher’s Weekly. e Standards, by W. C. Brownell “On values, and the responsibility shared by the artist and the individ- ual in raising the standard of taste in dress, art, letters.”—Putlisher's Weekly: 5 FOR TEACHERS . Agricultural Educatlon for Teachers, by Ryricker. e Begitiier'd Psycholosy, Titchener. ¥ R “Not a revision of his Primer, for not only .has the material teen Ye- | written, but the attitude changed, lesy stress laid upon knowledge, more dh point of view.”—A. L. A. Booklist. cee : Chijaren’s Catalokue of 8,600 Books, a guide to the best reading for boys and girls, compiled by Cor- inne Bacon. y ° “A most valuable bibliography of elementary school children’s books about such books. English Journal. c e Community Drama and Pageantry, by ‘W. P, Beegle and J. R. Crawford. Published by Yale University Press. IR Dressmaking, by Jane Fales. “A text book for use in colleges and 1n schools above the elementary grade. Contains more material on costume and on textile manufacture than production of ordnance In this coun- try s vastly increased before the first class im called to the colors. 'But no consideration of extendea order, combat exercise or skirmishing, would be complete without the charge. Even on an armory floor, extended order drill is usually fin-j ished off with a charge, in orler 'a inject something of the supremely exciting element of battle into what might otherwise become mechanical plodding. The charge 1s a rush—an eruption —into which all the pent-up mentai and emotional intensity of a battle may have an outlet. That, to be sure, is not the purpose of the cuarge, which is to expel an enemy ‘rom a given position, but it does becore & vent for the otherwise spippressed ex- citement of battle, and to that extent gathers In violence. Because this outburst contributes to the force of the charge a general shout is jmpor- tant. The signal for the charge, sounded from the post of the commanding of- ficer, is repeated by the musiclans of all parts of the line. The company officers, both the captains and lieu- tenants, lead the charge—the time has now passed for direction and con- trol and the necessities call for sheer | leadership. Therefore the officers precede their men, encountering the danger first. The skirmishers, with fixed bayonets spring forward togeth- er—shouting—and close with the en- emy. k 1]‘omorrow'g article will be The Pa- rol. (Copyright ,1917, by The Wheeler ¢ Syndicate, Inc.) THE INSTITUTE Baldt's clothing for women and less instruction on the more elementary details of garment construction. Both books have much material on pattern drafting and the use cf commercial paper patterns.”—A. L. A. Booklist. so e Farm Shop Work, by Brace & Mayne. e s How to Avoid Infection, by C, V. Chapin “A new volume in the series of ‘Harvard Health Tracts' ". e How to Develop Your Personality, by C. T. Major. .o Lip-Reading for Class Instruction, by L. I. Morgenstern. ' “By a teacher of lip reading to the adult hard-of-hearing in the public schools of New York City.” e Motivation of School Work, by H. B. Wilson & G. M. Wilson. “Suggestive as a fresh attack of an old problem of the teacher's, that of making the work in the various school studies significant and purpose- ful to each child. Based on twenty years of experience in teaching and supervision, it contains many concrete and helpful plans and hints for put- ting new life into the old subjects.”— A. L. A. Booklist. . e Plain and Ornamental Forging, Ernest Schwarzkopf. “One of a series of text-books for trade and industrial schools. Author is instructor at Stuyvesant High School, N. Y. by Study and Enjoyment of Pictures, by G. R. Brigham. “Discusses about fifty which show the progress of painting ® ¢ * and the ideals of the different schools. Aims to help the student not only to know ‘what he lkes’ but ‘why he likes it.’”. e Teacher As Artsit, by H. H. Horne. cen Woman and Work, the Economic Value of College Training, by H. M. Bennett. “Comprehensive study, emphasiz- ing what her experience as manager of the Chicago Bureau of Occupations has taught the author.”—Publisher’s ‘Weekly. FICTION. Confessions of a Little Man During Great Days, by L. N. Andreleff. “The book is about a little clerk who gets no nearer the war than Petrograd * * * with but one heroic quality his honesty—at least to him- self; he does not spare himself:when he writes the diary that no one is to see.”—Book Review Digest. “This diary of a non-combatant in- creasingly touched by war is one of the most remarkable books the war has produced.”—Saturday Rvelew. cee McAlfia;er's Grove, by M. Hill ' ad Nothing Matters,- ands other stories, FIELD. | ‘THE MENAGE OF WAR Willing to Help Government With Interal Problets Washington, D .C,, June 6.—Be- cause it believes realize that they are at war, Chamber of Commerce of the United for a nation-wi of in- formation to bé conducted by the gov- ernment. J The plan which is to be presented provides for the creation of a definite branch of the government whose job it will be to show the country, by means of advertising space in maga- zines and newspapers, posters, on bill- boards and the like, the magnitude of the task confronting it. / “The same fallacies that beset Bngland,” runs the appeal of the Na- tional Chamber, “‘are to be overcome in the United States. England, too, thought it would be a short war, months formation as that conducted by the English government when it came to the realization of what the war really meant. That campaign was immense- ly successful in arousing the entire people of England to an understand- ing of the war and to the obligation of personal service which it placed upon each individual citizen. “Present conditions indicate clearly National Chamber membership goes on, “and that it is probable the united efforts of America on & prodigous scale will be called for in the very near future. This means that the people must be stirred to a sense of their individual. responsibilities n order that their whole-hearted co= operation may be secured. This spirit and this ca-operation can be ob- tained simultantously throughout the country by means of a properly di- rected national campaign of informa- tion under strong and intelligent headship.” Reasons Advanced for Action. Seven urgent matters, it is said, must be made clear to the people if we are to get that unified action which s necessary to hasten our war ac- tivity: + 1. That the banks cannot take care of the bonds. The bonds must be bought by individuals. - 2. That conscription does .not carry with it anything of disgrace. It is as patriotic and much more effective than the medieval system. of volunteering. 8. That labor must be ‘readjusted on a large scale. It must be made more productive, and its varied prob- lems carefully considered, ; 4. That food administration will necessarily be repressive, but is in the interest of all. 5. That there is a false and a proper national economy. Business in war time is not “as usual.” 6. That the intelligent co-opera- tion of women in both direct and in- direct branches of war effort is ab- solutely essential, 7. That there should be a central- to war. This should be through the intelligent co-operation of the govern- ment, local organizations and em- ployers, War Possibilities Considered. “Aside from the question of short- ening the war,” the statement goes on, “there are life-and-death reasons why the United States should speed preparations for the great conflict. There are possible and even probable contingencies which might ecause United States to bear the brunt of the fighting on her own shores: *“If Russia should collapse. “If the British fleet should be over- come. “If the foot situatibn should bring our allles to their knees. “If great reversals should be met on the western front, < “If the submarine me: be not checked. “The impossible has happened 8o often in this war that any one of thesa contingencies is not impossible. The Germang should have gotten through at the Marne and captured Paris and Calais, and established control over the Channel. The English fleet should have annihilated the German flest at Jutland. The Central Powers should have been starved before the last harvest.” ‘What the Plan Proposes. Pippin, a wmag’mf flame, by L. EI ~ Richards. ¢ . 1ta.” : 4 . L ‘Wave: an Egyptian afterinath, by Al- gernon Blackwood i . “Never before has Mr. RBiftkwood written 'a novel that,comes-s8 close to the real things of life as ‘The Wave.! It touches persistently upon the supernatural, but .its visions are wholly sudjective.”—Boston - Trin- |- script. “A strange and, unusual book, full of insight and imagination. It is the work of a very delicate °literary craftsman, who is a past master in the art of elusive suggestion.”—Sat- urday Review. \by Bir H. B, Rubbish Heap, by‘ 4 . cee ‘Wonder, by J. D. Beresford “All- the -elements of wisardry in this story. can only, be d. It 1s told consistently with all the ver- similitude of a sclentific document As explained by Elllott H. Gosdwin, general secretary, the proposed -am- paign of education. should be consid- +t,as absolutely & from routine, press publicity ', and the ord)- nary output from ,the various. depa - ments of the government meant for publications in. newspapers and peri- odicals. It should be a definite branch of the government, under the direc- tion of the president, with a man at its head of broad practical experience in the use of the ‘means of national education, with a capacity for organi- zation. The director, in consultation with those who are shaping the main war —_—— ® * © for the moment, into thinking that he is having set before him the life"story of a prodigy that actually existed.”—Boston Transcript e Yeoman Adventurer, bellion of 1745."—A. Ly A simultaneously ¥ the oach campalgn would be desjgned t {impress upon the minds - and .th§" Pk work 1o ve wttecitve’ i by asbranch of the government backed by the government, controlled by the government, and financed by the gove: ernment and on thiv basis it would® not fail to impress people much mo: PHILLIPS REPENTS BUT ITS T00 LATE All who can give & ressonable excus and make afdavits to support will undoubtedly be given a oh to do their d uired : g uty as req: by. to a wilful failure to achool teacher, went to the: office of the United States Marahat . Power, in Brooklyn, and said he had not on Tuesday and fur- Tegister was ¥ ‘ Just one arrest in New York, dueif Herman P. Levine, thermore that there waa no law which could compel him to do so. He sub- mitted a long document to the mar- abal in which he Just his, on various grounds, one of them { all wars, particularly the present éne* With Germany, were wrong. Marshal Power conflscated the packet of docu- ments and United States Commissis e Raymond street: jall in defgult of $1,000 baik. - : §id Charles Francis Phillips, former arrested register Columbia student, who was it for failure.to and w] titude toward the authorites, repented after he was indicted by-the grand Jury yesterday. He went United States, ‘Diatrict: J’udtmfl: M. ‘Mayer and sald he was gliven the chance, to register. > he will have to stand trial, aithough Judge Mayor and Assistant United States District - Attorney Harold . A. Content stated that they apprecisted that Phillips had done a manly thing in finally his o Mr. Content ex| that under law Phillips would be auto is in the Tombs waiting trial for eny gaging in a conspiracy with three other men, also in the Tombs, to dis- suade men of draft age from regis- tering, was also indicted yesterday. He remains defiant, and as soon as the conspiracy against him is finished he {1zed control for the systematic sup-| Will go on trial for refusing to regis- Mm“!‘!i port of the families of those who go | ter. BUY A BOND OR AVOID MR. SUNDAY prisoner . - iy’ AL Hin ves Ky first. showed a defiant at- kv H it 4 | s % “Bily" Warns Lown’ Slackers * Away From Tabernacle - New York, June 7. passes and signed cards of admission of all colors and shapes will go completely out of style at the Tabernacle 1t Billy Sunday has his way. The one Treal entree will be denied. * “If you haven't taken & Liberty € & Loan bond you don’t need to come back ,' Billy shouted to his big audience last night. And while ‘the crowd cheered and & few hundred be- gan to:laugh Billy scowled and glaved to préve he meant exactly what' he . golngk to t this ‘Taber- nacls into the greatest LAl Loan ceniter in America,” he wention. “I think: I'll' have a subsoription set up right here on the platform, and then if you don’t do your part I'll ask for a squad of soldiers and we'll close the doars, and then you can either buy or spend the night here. It's dis-' tressing beyond words to think Amer- ican people have to be begged to feed and clothe the boys who are willing to die for our lberty.” { And while Billy was at it he stopped long enough to send his compliments to the Emperor of Germany, who Is fast usurping the place of the saloon- keeper as Billy’'s most hated enemy. “Say, I wouldn't do anything in the world that would possibly let ‘old Kaiser Bill get opie good night’s sleep” he msserted. “‘And it hurts me lke the dickens to ses him get even the least little chance to lapgh end mock at us- X “Russia’s uncertain position is the only thing that's woryying me, and I'm tickled to death that we've got Elthu Root heading = our commission over there. He'll line 'em up. But booth _: o . - 0

Other pages from this issue: