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n “Herald. HEnALD"PvBusmvn COMPANT. Propristors. 4 dntly (Sundav excepted) At 4 at Herald Bullding, 67 Church St ¢ the Post Office at New Britain 't&_a‘ra Class Wail Matter. v carrier to any part of the eity nents a weel, 65 cents a_montr. beczintian for, paper to be sent by madl, payubla in advance, R0 cents s Tonth 37.09 'a year. e _onlv profitable mdvertising medtum in the efty Circulation books and preas Tocm mlways open to advertisers. Herald wlil ba' found on sale at. Hotas ling’s News Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- why, New ¥ork Ciy; Board Walle At#jave answered l'ml laatlo City, and Hariford Depot. TELEPHON stness Office torial . Rooms ber ‘of the Associated Press. aciated Press is exclusively entitlad |0 the use for republication of gll news nNflthd to 1t or ‘not otherwise cradited I3 this paper and alo the local nows bublished herein. Wha,t have you ddne for liher- y? JIfimothing, What can free- flom 'mt‘an to you?, - J-W*ILLIAM JL BRYAN. GOODRICH. qrmm&%w Britain’s oldest in- nwg-x nry Goodrigh; will be 94 ra old. Mr. Goodrich is active to ammshmx degreg, when one con- irs His ‘age, and he would put to mé many a man younger than he Nately Those atreet score of years ¢ or more. passy his home on Arch S0 ‘him daily ‘about the prem- | cutting the % or even sawing bs ‘off ‘treby. - Mr,> Goodrich is ad- od "and oved: his friends and &t@&' bv thes dnure community. *‘charifhing characteristic is ;x.:ism, and’in fact’ his hale hearty condition at the age of 94 be traded to the cheerful view™ e on fife he has always taken. In | weather, or in_storm, Mr. Good- Has Always Joaked for the silver i utq ® wy cloud which’ passed ms 1ifg is devoted to abous fym. ® justly preud of its 5 ang sthe Herald' begs to accept it felicitations fo- P }vith the hunW! of - others to.| Howill be shmgred Spohhing to- | T is ravely. nerm(tted s to live th!‘mkh a century, it that js My @podrich’s . destre, esldentsof this.dity. will be unan- 5 in the hope Lha,t q;my -1 ed him, u = sterday was'§lie second.anniver- of ‘the death”of Lotd Kitchener, of Great Britain’s most’ tamous lost his"life when the Hampshire, aboard which he proceeding on a secret mission, nk off the Orkney Islands, would have said Great Britain's famous warrior, had not the now at the head of the British s shown himself to' be a worthy r of Kitchener. of Khartoum. the lafter's death’ was anq , @ pall of gloom: settled for le over all the Allied countries. s generally thought that Great n would not tecover forya long from the -losg. sustpined through eath of Kitchener, who, after st Englieh expeditionary army’ en almost annthilated, raised a orce of 5,000,000, which he ped, drilled. and prepared for It was most natural, then, 1gland and her Allies' ghould the of Kitchener a atastrophe, but the indomnit- [British Wil asserted itself and the ‘nation adjusted ifself conditions. Sir Douglas Haig harge of operations. himself qualified to be ranked JKitchener and other famous generals. The war had to go ter all, with Kitchener, i fors, who loss as or with- e was only 2 man, and subse- events have shown that some- ot always be found to fill a place, no matter Row great an zer hie is, or Jiow enviable a tion he has madeé. Kitchener . but the armies he raised still splendid tribute to his military And when the final victory b, history ‘will-net fail” to.give ner all theé crddit ‘due him for bt in Winning “SPARKS” VOGKL. east one German '»Eboat com- r in charge of Hun gul ?mev- n Atlantic waters hes / zZound b calibre of our wireless ofera- ‘When the steamship Caroiina liited by a German submarin: message “Sparks’ receivhi [Don’t use your wireless—we. hoot.” But he knew: better p trust the word of & Hun, He his contempt of the skulking by flulhlng the 8, O, 8, eal, as plcked o and he has | # When, ths avhich out, lhy the 'Cape May statio Germans catght the flashes wos gefiantly sending began mg" at the La howeve the Inasmuch’ th “Sparks" they Not “Sparks", later, remarked could haye they wanted an attempt scare him into’.de out further know olina and incident a shot struck, he telling. of that struck in as steamship hiad anly to, eyidently t part s to ting from sending They didn't 1g remained for or eir mes; ¢ atihis the would Shar until Carolina’s skéd ks then b key Cape, fust tdtn appeareg and ordered him' not to' on the grounds that it might $n- lives of the danger the who could expect no mercy ¥ submarine commander if ordegs were disregarde - “Sparks”.and the cant ship, Th himselfr: among the last to leave the wireless operator proved He was calm in a crisls, hero. g vhat to.do, and did real knew just it gardless of. of a ruthless foo. . He efther, to go back to the opsrating room and tear up secret nayy. code books and other yaluable pape which - would: have geen choice boo for the Hun raiders. % Tt/ ne dan't know the submarine commande now the stuff our made of. didn’'t for get, -kno operators are 4 hd before, SAUERKRAUT ABSOI VED. Iver since the war began,, poor old aut has been nccusedydf heing | For thal reason thds favor- sauerlk German, ite di of many Amgrican homes, it has'Teappeared camoufage name OF. Llhl?ll\ ?gv.hough under the cabbage. ism_was ill-ad¥ised or ' not. ‘eauer- kraut suffered considerably rom' the ignominy resulting from mef,( adlega- tions that it-came from Germ W the food administratidil Was Gomiy to its rescue. Mr. Hoover statcs publikl that sauerkraut did not originate Germany, but in’ Hollgnd. it is pMmarily a Dutch dish. Hoovef assures And so long” as Mr: ug. that we may eat 1t without Igla\-lngl Qur- selves llable to the charge of being pro-German! we 'shal ' welcome 1t bhack again to its favorite place on our u. Now:if Mr. Hooyar gould oniyl establish an aliby toptkauekara\;?'s_ al- 1y, «he frankfurt,—~but.that is_Roping §gainst hope. - mey Lan éVav Savl nge Aragq 3 prepagihi. Week, Juna "o.')a;,\ B Mfa m Bcl?ofl"‘ mother ing after of Muck P _ “Carmen Rejetied B Headline. Perhaps prefers Il Trovatore. el - The TFrench tanker | reported. to havé dodged from a Huh submarine, ing, we would say. is A man in Springfield . was 1 carrying false teeth every pocket Tf he should sudden® double up might die of ¥drophobia. foun in he The latest vietim of the Urboats: off Of course but then Germany tle thing like that orway isn't in the war, The Massachusetts Commissioner of Weights and Measures wants all food sold by scale weight. That ought to be simple so far as fish is con- cerned. A member of the British ment savs that the English are willing to converse, to negotlate, with German Add non-esséntial oc- parlia- laboring but Jabor classe not represenatives. cupations, k. E3 Now if we had those roast cat;u als, vessels of considerabls! size could go from New Englahd to Florida and thumb noses at the sea-sharks—New York, World. We would like to see avphotograph of a vessel thumbing her nose, A picKbocket arrested in Boston ag: mitted plying that “trade” but dented the pavficufar against ~hifit Which of @ man in Nghw Haven who wrote to a'newspaper Aas follows: “Your paper states T was ar- resigd drunk on That'y not ughl treet.”! chargee » reminds bixwell It avenae, was on Elm former Vice President Fairbanks iz dead.. The People 6t fthis country will ever rememter Mim as the first prominent’, Republican “'to support openly the President’s neutral poli- &ew. until April 6, 1917, and also as tHe. first to pledge him unswerving lovalty in his condyct of the war aftep cap- | w re-\ the promises and threats | wag banished from flu- table | Whether this kind of; 'zc'\lou? patriot- | . But' Thefetor * "*‘é‘*izafi.?,g Dxeellency | ¥ ; ial on haqw our shores is a Norwegian steamef, | doesn't mind a lit- | FACTS AND. FANCIES; it e E S uprisings and ecrop-burn: Uk¥Faine will hasteri the. all IMussia will again rally the Germans.—Buffalo I i Peasant jing in the Thousands of members} of the Ger- | man nbdbility have Peen lost-in the [ war. New the subfect of chief con- cern i How long will it take to finish, ‘the rTest of 'thé¢ burich 2—=St. { Paul Courier Pre; [ \Von: Hingenbur { been made ill by ar of Flanders. It is a wise Eu al who. can remefnber what w has poisoned.—Brooklyn. Eagle. German .army is now to three meatless days a jvee the. catless days for the Ge arrive, perhapg. we 8hali -have Andl they seem to bé of the New Y¥ork “'or(j, deny that they break S ?«h:m off, as they .al- w8 abide by thHem for a day’or two. New Haven Unfon. i said to have n ithe When mans | peaca. i he t’:c!'man “Ngy khaki for>Boy. Scouts Hat. No kigl\ing by Box, &muta €ip. Thetrs iy, not a surféce loy- ;Lit‘,-’-——B‘?ooAl}n Eagle., i The query “Why dces a L cross the road?”” never presented ahy dif- fleulty” th'the man whe has aigarden iwom the sppmn sideé.~Norwigh Rec- | ora. - Hylan of oblged to prelse hig | tion.—Springfield 1 Publican.& Gov. Hardingill® Towa a proclamation lish . is the state. WAy pature.steps %s Shortages . in, some |‘things. - Fou'glidn't notige any dan- delion shottagl. ald vour—Claveland } Plain Dmaler % v | «41}\" e “There Aré twgkindssof, peop\e who df no Telp to- America: Those Ho w’am to raR the war ‘and jthose fidm g lt— ’ Lo . a Amerlca s Nayogpften journeved to” R i3 pe abgutiathis e ofitife year, b cer bofobgvpt tBuch. a =« standy stalwa &lreanr ang for such‘a splén: did puidbse.—Térpnto Globe. » l‘ Wejf ragret” having spoken harshiy uhoue ghe'dandelfons springing up in e h » Tadlm, as#6: have béen mformc‘d L ihat dhéy can Bepanadés into wing i s Jad ntghtncaktaal - o g under p|ohibmo);glf}1:and *Rapids )m DS | with” Kan s,‘ a.fter all.—Providence QJo»urnnL Ay U af we mgst }{am% Lmtmnal trade- bnark®, as & spéaker tefls the Nation- al 'Asi-oc\a%on at'c Refal Drygoods I Dealers, why not o “dqllar sign? L Every rfee that: bys-Bur goaduwan | know what. that means befote ‘wag- ngncing 1y over.—Brooklyn Fag{ Geh. "Bennard] is notv commanding | 2 division'of the German army.: The general evidently”is gathering mater- the, war did npt turn out it wéuld, except fof its Cincfnnati Times-Star. as- he' said 'uwoflf1t:<_ ficldé which ‘kn@v— ne stee! 1 nn\dndel than the low: Philip | Gibbs in onnr»cbmmxncg 1fom% the front, smiling fields of anefent Pic- ‘ardy 5 “Which Knew. ne ‘steel than the plow, changed your ! your .reaping now ! That, men have Joosed ‘the heast fi'mt , used to be! { Ruin and ewrack as far see; 3 The burgeoning *bough Transformed to bursting shrapnel:. farm and mow, Grim torches to a new barbarity.. Broad, unkinder sowing and How as eye cam of blossom-laden’ | i 'Yet vou shall garner sheaves of gol- &en grain More precious than the harvest of old years And fruits more mellow than your past delight: ¥Far sacrificial blood has rain +JAnd youjare watered by i did tears Of jthose. who gdve their bodles for theu Right ~ REGINALD CLEVLLAND jn the New York Times. been your the qplor’x- As to New Factories (From the Sprimefield Republican.) ewspapers published in the Mis- Sippi valley welcome the‘order of fuel administratfon prohibiting thé Pullding of new factores or extensons, ‘exespt of fhe most umgent character, in New Bngland, eastern New York | Pennisylvania, New Jersey and Dela- hiware. The St. Louis. Post-Despatch, for examiple, sees Iin the wartime re- "striction “the beginning of new in- Qustrial’ develspment in the Mississip- pi valle® where there is amplg Toom; abundsnge, of coal and raw materials and new outlets for tramsportation. { The use of tha Westérn waterways | should he * corollary oOf ‘thig bar- red zome order.” ' The St. Louid ‘paper calls on the capitalifsts and manufhc- turers of the West to push the pro- | motion of war industries. Some seri- ous ‘problems will arise latér on as the result of ton much pushing in that direction. The Fast has ahout all it wan digest in that line - at present. Where the government takes the ini- tiative thore will be | i | i 1 Revqnue i!"mm "Incomes. (From. tne Y‘V‘kll $treet Journal)) in a heavy hurden the nnanun the changes in tax laws ig' pf intevest, If the werg rewritten in toto, as they should be, ourilegislalors might well rectify for in question of any the’ discrimination against comes i favor of those that are not, The present law unearned:, . incomes, pass apon) and supér-taxes!/ above thrugh w they payment of nérma “figure doorway, acertain through another paymént of workipg .incomes, are a flat penalty for being the fruits of ability | uscfuiness. Aldo, when disposed to add rofits and othér ta and production, wi advisdble: first to cemsider fcomes that neither work A cafe in point is revealed ceeding in the"Surrogate's ward, a young school girl with, a yearly allowance of $132,000, it the nor on Jourt $20,000, Liniousines, party dre robes, theaters and othe nnvr‘?nle< are mentioned &s reasons for thig extr allowance. - Doubtiess all this ma hproper in her sttiorin norma tut not now when we are womglering mands. Crogrder. Why not hing ‘to lhcomes? thing ‘essential, Tax them sufiféiently to discoutage &ons ymption - of! essentials, and after thht {s fuliy done, approach the duéstion earned-and th§wor (From the New fig incomes, York Tribtne.) the rich-that of, say over &, ‘peotfle With inc for ninety days. (From thé New York The. unforfunate ’'feature -of sitdation tis a't { botH the Suh.) inz out _after the incgme-earfler “dependently fnd” without any erence 1o edffn othery nPeéds policy affordf a surd tefaptation: evehtial jnjuktice Jo-operation twesn tHe mfl’orem’ goyernmental an- hovmgs( rquite essantial to falrna=~ atd vfflcM(- . this as in any other ficld. % (Brom - tb_e YSu A group ‘of i Sund ® on An i nterfield, Ke feny ‘were Balking othor “day T The goveritor pust | exprossed Timself*as in favor of the faxation of incomes. * thought . that if stamp taxes - ced on the common items of s the b dm) would fall mnn),\ 0;1 t,he great nspgner. * ! 'He: belieyed Fhat ‘the big m»om%e s'hfl'u!d be :taxeéi)ag'ge’v»fnr thegwar. ! But %tafd onet. ‘Took 'what f‘\g‘? ®ould do‘tp \Qu - {Twl don't preténd to quote the ghage of ;the answer exactlv, but hafifieo, here is ‘the _Bovernor’s m% lan F it onght to. do it to me. b stamp tax Any In one of the journeymen in the ycapital office taxes than 1. Few of thHem but have children sand dependerits for whom they havesto buy. the small necessities of lite——tgatches, otc. If these things ate made’fo bear the birden, then tha werker Actmally pays mxpre taxes fdr War purposes than T, whith manifstly isn’t Tight” would pay . New York's Bass. ”(From the Watertown Tymes.) % “There is'good reason why the opes season for bass should not begin nnth fJuly 15, a monfh later than gt pres: The state copservation @@mmist slon is ‘advdcating tais chénge in the #fish regulations,’ it ¥osed by no considermbie \fishermen. ent. and will e o number of The cxplanation given 1§ very reasonabie: After © the - female’ ha% . eggs ‘thg male watches over them tor, 10 days or two weeks, until such time as they have hatched and developed for a few, days, -When the young are hatched Father ‘Bass ig permitted to wander about at leisure, but until his duties as” guardian ¢f the young is ended he should not be ruthlessiy he- gitiled by flies, crabs, ‘minnows or worms into a landing net Fish cuiturists have shown that the batciring ; seasan depends upon tem- porature ‘ef the water, which In some parts of the' state, * especlally these northern ‘waters, i&/as late as mid- July. Therefor: ty consideration depends ‘thg on delayed especially iny New York , Bas¥ jre the. sport fish of our ['northern’ water. -There is nothing like bass:fishing to stir the soul of the real fisherman He is willing to walt until mid-July for his fishimg if it is in the interest of the conservation of the fish, The conservation commission makes a jogical plea for the bass and it should the heeded 2 hern Wircless Messages (From the Roston Globa.) 3's Ot course, the messgges exchanked hetwesn that new $2.500,000 wiraless station we are puttingsup i Frane and the new station at Annapolis, the most powerful radio station in the orld a o 1t 15 wleAr that incomes will come new fdr war. purposes, and thus the laws earned in- opens one door to icn { femvt to stop the (mnfl(u\ atkgeks” But earned incomes headed where after,, the sama faxes as non- s Jaid ‘uwpon. them, as if in punishment and- to ex- in- not e | in- fight? in a ‘pro- A boarder, files a petition to have it increased w es, dé,ncin £ imes, if the net.liguld income of the na- tion 'is suffir 1(‘7“‘ to meet the \(’afs de- Work .or - fight, ! says c{eneral #pply the; same Tay the hgaviest bur@ens on’those not deyoted o any- non- of taxing the It is cMar that all #he incomé of all " innamed & omes 1000 a jyvear-—would not Keep the wvar:Zolhg—our end of it-& the ‘national and the ;tatgf a.ufmow;xoé aregreach- | bed moré laid “her’, < been cited for leading Ris ml.(hme gun )on“pdnd .to the | ngrth side of the Marhe jv - an at- Auxious to Get m\o. 1 Line. « “Pars, Wednesday. June spirit and movale the soldiers wounded gin ' the, battle, 90 per cepg, ‘bf wWham cover, iv wondeifuml. Tha& tion they ask.the surgeon is: “Doc, when 3¥ill I be ‘able to go back after thg Gemman wHo fixed | me?” i %% Twe syoung privates | their tirn ta | enter room of a large Americ ans foday. Qne $aid: have been oy the #4op three and ‘it 18 the® greatet sport: T eyer had.'. Fix te up i¢ls because T want to go k after the = Boches again.” The second soldier: ®ho ous wcund in the thigi ‘satd “IF T do not verurn to thé trenches 1 have the,ftisfaction of kngqwing that I fi@.three-—two bayoneted and orie shots, I am satisf The soidier probably . will but ho will. ‘never crogs, with the Gernns again as lose his leg. § ri 5.-—The Amcncfln Cantigny will re- ques- were. waltlig the operating “n shespital in timges recover bhyonets he will French Enthrstastic. Over Americans, . London, Jufie "6.—The behavion of the American- troops at, Chatean- Thicgry has defpnstrated more than anything else that hgs yet happéned on fhe Ameriéan front the splandid | initigsive and enterprise with which |'the JAmerican army is endowed’ and | nothing has ,aroused the keener en- thuslasm of commanders, say8 the ¥ Mall correspondent ~with *the Awgerican army In France. He duotes rench general As saying that the Amerfean ‘spirit, and “enter- prise at: a»;g 1 momesft served to maintain B orale of the french troops.around Chateau-Thierr’ 3 The correspondent. :predicts that bmwch-will be heard of the deedsof: the Americans in the next few davs, and adds 4 : ! “Amlerican troops fresh .from the United States. continue to arrive with regularity AAnd in numbers maore than { sufficient® to justify renewed . conW- denge in' Hfe uitimate triumph of the Entente. The Americans at this mom= ent are distributed over a very wide frput. indeed. “Ins some\. sectors Pentire diviston form sne unit holding a cer- taln extentwf line while ™ Blsewhere ; {hey are brigaded with French ~and British. regiments. :In the Luneville and Toul keftors the Amgricans hold (’e,v diffion 1t sefentg completely dom- inated by.the derman agtilerys M. C. A. Workers Also Heroes. Paris, June 6.—American men and wompndattathed ‘to. the American Y. M., G A units with the French troops pifved_herajc paris-in the’y recent w- treat dast and west of Soisson# anfl one, Carl Lyttle, ofiNorth: Brookfield, Mass, ts belleved to Waye lost his Mre. Amid a rain of gas shells Tytfle went {into a certain burning villagg to ‘res- cue refugeeg aftef the' trodps « had ccme out. He has not beén seen since. “ ~ Y. M, ,C with tht troops during: guard fighting, gathering 1 buting supplies. Fouk Y. M." C. “men sined the stafk of a hise ! hospital, samped with iFyench®and = British wounded. and #vorked: 20 Hours a day as stietched beai Womentworkery particulasly tinguished's thefmeets Ong, Maria_ Herron, of (wjn»xnmxa sister- in-law of {nrm%& sident Taft, re- mained i a hit sefving food ‘and’ (i-ffim to the sofdiers until the village set-“on firg’> by German shells. Jane rtnn(r of Cincinnati on left s hut' at goissonsdh few hours before the Gergans entered the town. The battle sifuation is frankly sat- fsfactory, says & Havassagency review today, and the Anemy/temporaril least, 45 not likely” to make’ attacks all along the front oetween Rheims o1id ghe Oise. ¥lLocal attempts seem te indicate that the Germans have re- nounced for,the moment theiy pur- pose to win a decision on the ibattle- 1 picked ot their comnianders £ May 27. 2 £ % Revertheless, the newspapers | Ao not believe thay the German offen: siveis ended. The Petit Parisien thinks that Gen. Ludendorff 1s pre: parhte s blow which, he expeets will have (.amdigiousm ms. “ PUBLIC SONG FESTIVAL Ame: Y A, workers staved the rear and ! dist v 4s Open Air o at Walnut Hill Park on Expding of Flag Day. New Britain is-to have her first rublic song festival on Friday, June 14, at- 7:30 on the open gréund af Walnut Hill park. Preparations are- Yoing made by the committege { wloch J. A, Lindsay of - Land: Prary & Clark is chairman, for ' a ianging a musical program. W. G. Gibneyy Has.tendered the services of Nijs orchestra and it is hoped ° that sembers of the various bapdg in w Britain will volunteer thefr sn,\:v- ee in order that the singing Mas* ‘e properly directed. War-time and bpatriotic songs will be ' printed« on felders_and distributed without .cost [t0 those who go. jm order ‘that the publie in general may become famil {'lar with the songs our boys are sing- fng. “over there." 2 3 W. C. French of the Grammar school, L. P. Slade of, the High school an¢ Dr. F..J. Mann of the Parents' d Teachers' assoclation are work- {ns out the details by which the pavents will he interested through' the children of the schools, can | Army Paper Work, by J. A Moss. !'For thoge who have army régor: sJ dnd corms.)undencs 1n “thelr"carey’ Patte ng me Boche. by PhMip -Gib- s nA by I P Captured: Sixtean Months a.Prisoner | of War, by J. H. Douglgs. 7, | “A record of imprisonment:infone | of _the better German camps’ ¥ .. . Efficiency, a Play in One Aet, by”R. Davis and P. P. Sheehgn. .. bgc tre Fronl. . 3 Germany at Bay, by H. Magfall, “A study of th@ strategy.of the great war by a major in the, British ‘army, with an'introduction, by Field {diershal’ French." M Croup of Sgottist Graham. “Of the.famous. wenld, share. . , Mograph promine: Business of War, 1., Marco: Flaghes From Grasty. o * . i | Women, - by SHErry | 3 women ‘of. the Seqtland ¢an claim a generous | An inferesting series of | al portraits of the most "—Publisher's. Notice. e e w Johfi Websten and the! Wilizabethan Drama, By. Rupert Brooke. ““The dissertation with which author college, the won his fellowship at King's Cambridge.” . a Naval Power In the War €1614-191%,) by C. C. Gl . . » % Notes on Training, Field Artillery De- tails, by Onorio Moretti. 4 ‘Fo be used as a manual by offt- cers and a text by students, covering the subjects necessary to the mem- bers of 'battery, batfalion, and negi mental "details.¥—A. L. A. Booklist. A . e e Yo “Nothihg of Importance,” Eight Months at the Front With a Welsh battaliod, by Bernard Adams. . LKussian Poets and Poems, by Vad&ne Jarintzov. . % time and effort to secure the s of the manufacturers in tossani tulld up enthustasm among#the wl- nlo)es Practically ‘every, factory has pldng under way for fi \‘lg observa- tion of"flag day. It is desired thB_J singing will be a part of each separ: ate factory program and - that noticés be given during the ‘exercises of the | larger community gathering on ,the | some evening at Walnut Hill park. The committee solicits the * hearty support of every man, woman® and ¢hild in Yhs‘ Tirst zrea? public ‘inz. RELATIVES QUICKLY Ma] Geu McGafi Demes Delayan Forwardmg Announcemems ‘1 Wuaflngmn, June 6.—Maj. | Gen. MeCain, jutant’ general of - the &rmy, m.:fue a denial 1ate yesterday of | reports of untdual delay in the notifi~ cation of ‘relatives regarding cagaali | L‘rs in General Pershing’s: expedition | il France, The relatives, he explained, were, notified lmmedlatel) except where ‘clerical errors ‘in names/and ad- dresses, or changes in addresses, caused delay. Sometimes Genenal Pershing, for military consldevations may withhold a casualty list until mositive it may have no military value to the enemy. This authorized ‘statement sued by General McCain: “Relatlves of soldiers named In ¢ ualty llsts forwarded from 'Franci General Pershing ordinarily are fied by telegraph within twenty- A\m } hours. Most of the exceptions to this | rule are caused by clroumstances ove which the adjutant general’s office’ ha no control. Belays usually are due to ' these causes:d 20 that names aBd addresses through so many handg and America. - % 2. vIncorrect street addres furned in by Soldiers as their. emep gency . addresses. These mistaat’ occur’ fréquépbly in cases where' &l diers ‘have hgeh away from home a. do nét re-me.mber maet numbery, 't must pass 1 ofy farhilies | to: A= cs: othofthan thpso listed® by gl K G ‘'4, The, mfllonal ,\.neceesnvl cabung back (to ‘General PRershing to; verify a nam# or to obtain an address. The adjuf@gnt-general ‘maintaing for’ Ixerelses to Be Conducted statistipgd ivislon with a statt of e :xcers;fiu & corps;of stenographe fand dopylsts whichjgives all itg to the maintegfance of files of sok names and nddres?és This " d} notifies relatives. “Hach (onflngpn?ea,fllng to Joiy American Expeditionary Fore wards 4, ¢opy of Mts rester to jptant>general as it goes on ship is filed ~ in card bearing with_this ‘organiz w 3 of ‘a parent or; mher ré% or friend designated by hirh tified in emergency;. of the-individual desig fication. The ' capds Vatically. Tn ad th liste age maintatWed @n. A “When thE receives' a icasi Pershing, if @tely to thé each namé eal peditionary Fofd¥s is “Misted wit! emergericy address on flle in the-ca; i index it “As rapldly as the/new .list #it} emergency addresses is. built. up, ti - telegraph clerks get duplicatés Th. clerks AlreAdy are sub 7 1ist imnredt sion, , Here !'paigns. "1 cap, often” wi #telegraph blanks for - LEARN GASUALTIES “Judlicious and _ e whish serie fis a popular En oduction-1o certain Russiant: 'THo_ autho: kes her own '] ‘i' tions “with the Russisn it rather thanj duoing perfect Ayaglish transiatioh ~A: L. A, Bookliste, i .k vlq Surgeon Grow; An Ame: ‘. Russian Pighting, hy-g(o “He ‘served in thrae A iragto plotrbios aj; fighting Wigh g gvery possibles ha 1t ut shells; u nurses, amij 1&:\09“ ¥ S 4“« e tion, doctors, medicine.” . 0w 5 “Where Do You Stand?" A,.h Aml to Americané' of German O# by H. Wagedorn, ‘= | 2 “A “sane, reasonable 9.nd P "plea for loyaity. Fiction. F)roflx of France, by M. B "A smry ‘ with complogtions involving ‘a voung . Americgn, girl and mun., ot the best!or’sworst Gormdn. & a -most..noted French aviato of its typ@™—A. L. A. Booklll LR Gaslight SOnuu, By mnm.- 5 Men, Wom@man auns; by Sapper as ® jester is tymcs,l o&’- B Tery latge clask of ‘woldier-authorss but his literar: qus,m& ’B!‘pxgepflon“ al.”"—Spectator. P Thunders of Silence, by T. “Showing How to gogues.” S. Gobb. \ Treat ! i . Unwilling Vestal;’ by “A romance of the Ayrelius.” E. tim| Wingsiof, Youth, by Elizabeth Jord§ “Thé author's first long novel,r which she has put the sympathy ygith and its strivings, th&. h and the insight into, many différ phases of life w e short stories. o, ér's Note, dfer; the- nature of the. casualt; the date, before they. can, b patched. Filling 1n the blank they-get the telegrams.off as qtlo] as possible. 84 4 uIn addition to mmataining the speed, the statitical :division s plied with sets of f&rm Jetters, filled in :and maVedslyter, When fi ther dotajls™of a sdlgier’s. oon 1 arri i@ “After the cofinictd flfisufl.‘t)-- is read ith tife ! qmg;geum ad o, it is wi:fmam from P the newspapers-for & out of ‘respect for tives. . The . adjutant-g allows ample time mfithe'r ,3\; rece the telegrams so" th have tHgingws beforeyif: the Zem 9 “‘Aside from the l’ollr | 1ay already mentioned, the ‘onl ! Tea) for the faflure of relitives to. raés word at once is .milltary €0 General Pershing. mayy tion, ithhold “a nasmrx i Dfi:\'e it whl hané value kg the enemy.* Clerbeal Broors caused by the, fact i ing, Frapog? ovm m«&\m