New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 14, 1919, Page 9

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY. JUNE 14, 1015, CAUSEY'S VIGTORY Miss Emily Buckingham of Indin, 4 |GERMANS ANXIOUS 10 TRADE AGAIN| 1 Majority oii)u;going Mail of | Business Nature of Oceu- American Army spondence of The mail passing censorship 1p principa nptio United nce terials and av p & predomi- rveferring to d from indications it would seem that a great cloth being imported into any from France and Ass0- re- can made relating <o " nily has been of commercial States, letters F nd relations wit at Britain | Dealings in clothing m ticles of clothing tak nant place in the business matters, a | in the mail deal Gr lette of ied occu Gery Alsace-Lorraine The of | Winkel and Wi New York head hemical sshaden, works in | writing 2| con that nce | { | i | | of the Associated | | { | teilt. C p. m. Rev. James R. Morris will speak and also at 7 p. m. The puh- ] lic are invited CHAIN s i Advent Church, | Preaching by L. B. G o ———— South Congregational Church. o 10l5 A, m e Semestoy Red Are Gi Sunday= 30, Boysl divisign; Tl jng subject “Martin Luther the gant ~ i e I‘\\\?r\'{\(h‘.( o Mr. | ject. “Bffects of Missionary fforts, Zlms El‘mr [l s - Pe caosRIount BOSNR S i propinERC hsistan ity il (D Vi 12:15, church school, main division. Bible school at 12:15 and i 1 6:00, Assyrian-Persian worship. 7:09 class. Young people’ e >, . +18 g ple’s meet- | Young People's moeting 715 Wl een s et Cincinnati, June 14 Cecil Alger- | Italian worship evening preachin ki non Cansey the Cireat Unbeaten and | Thnesday Boy Seouts e, hig eight link victory chain weant Thursday 00, Girl Seomia T.18 — down before the ‘handoo” Friday | Union service at Sonth church Stanley Memorial Church. «the 18th and the Cincinnatl Reds here | Mr. Hill will endeavor to visit 158 | ‘The Children's Sunday will be ob- on n!:”d-“w Field yesterday Tho | following strects in railing next | served at 10:45 in the morning. The ants came out on the wrong end of | wee Wednesday, Chesiout: Thurs- | program consists of beautiful songs a 3 t6 2 score. The defeat gave Cin- | day, M 1dizon and Parkmore, and recitations by the Sunday cehoo!l cinnati an even break on the series. | On Thursday evening at 7:45 there : chyldren, baptisi A ol Defeat was all the more bitter to Me- | will be the Unlon Church Night serv- { cnildren, ,:‘E,“l;::,fn:r s MRS Graw on account of the victory going ice in the Parish chapel. at which Mr. | address by the pastor. Rec Aln M1 to Harry Sallee, his erstwhile hived | Maier and Mr. Hil will speak o0l Grian on “Tha Child and the man lim Sal kept New York hits | “The Joy that was Set Before Him i seattered except in the fifth and On Sunday. June 29, there will be Gy A I _ seventh inning A Red assault on | the celebration of the communinn ““_:hl"'efig;n‘l;‘t‘:d“’ “}’P’)N'mn r*“hfj(;: Causey and a poor peg by Heinfe Zim { This is the regular July observance . = "0 N wi in the fifth gave Cincinnati three runs brought forward one Sunday. = Mr., B0 &F 8:45. - All the young people and the spoils Tl will welcome an opportunity to , OF the church are urged to attend Pat Moran. the Erian Baru of the | confer with any who may be think- | 1he Girl Scouts will meet on Mon- National league. and his faithful [ing of coming into the church either 0¥ and the Boy Scouts on Tuesday henchman Heinie O'Groh were not in | by letter or confession , Cvening at 7:15. The Endeavo at the death. Pat and Heinie wer On next Sunday morning will be{ Circle and the Young Men's club will there at the start all right. but kicked | abserved the annual Children’s Day, | meet on Thureday evening at 7:20. themselves out of the frolic in the ' when the young people of our Church ! ——— = third inning. At the t of the |school will he present and assume the frame McGraw opined that the ball | greater part of the service There in play was too soiled and deerepit for ! will also be the baptism of childreu, | . : =allee to hurl at the well known |and presentation of testaments to 3 Giants. Umpire Quigley agreed. but | those who were baptized seven vaars Moran and Groh demurred. where- |ago | upon Mr. Quigley banished the belli-| Miss Charlotte C. Perkins, a Y. W. | gerent two to the hastile. Cuteo. the | €. A. secretary will speak at the Y. | Cuban Beau Brummel, went to third [W. C. A. on Sunday evening at 7:30 — 5 in place of Groh. The score | o’clock. and tell about her experi- | 5 Wiy o o G e D (‘:\rnlina,:P.J' Eg w P i S d Naw York 000010100—2 9 2 ;’\-. hich a vear ago was torpedoed anl | an rnes Oem 0]‘ eCOH Cineinnati 00003000%—3 8 | sunk by a German submarine off the | . . Carty: Sallee and Wingo | The Youns People’s Society of | - | Christian Endeavor will hold its regu- | = = Doak Holds Braves to 3 Hits lar mecting tomorrow night at 7:00 | Lieutenant-Governor Wilson ws St. Louis. June 14—Doak held|o'clock. The topic for discussion is— | the principal speaker at the annual Boston to three hits while St. Louis | “What We Owe and How to Pay it" | banquet of the Second Ward Repub- hit Demaree freely and shut out the | Reference, 2 Corinthians, 8:1-15. { lican club held this afternoon Say- Braves vesterday. + to 0 Hank | Leaders. Victoria Adams and Florrie [in Rock. The other speakers on the Gowdy was badly cut about the neck | Berglund program who were scheduled for ad- and shoulders by flving glass from a — | dresses were Mavor George A. Quig- window in the dressin oom which { Christian Science Church | lev and Senator George W. Kiatt. blew in before the zame. The score ; Corner of West Main street and | Governor Holcomb was unable to at- r. h. e. | Park Place. Sun Service at 10:45 | tend becausc he had to be present | Boston D0000000N-—0 3 0} m. subject, “God the Preserver of | at the welcome celebration in Bristol. St. Louis 02100001%—4 11 0! Man.” Sunday school convenes at| About 100 republicans left the city Batteries —Demaree Scott and | 9:45 a. m. Wednesday evening meet- | this noon by auto for New Haven. At Wilson 1 Tragesser: Doak and |ing at 8:00. The reading room,|the Rock a banquet was enjoyed at Clemons. | Room 304 National Bank building, is | Bishop’s. During the post-prandial e { apen to the publie daily from 12:00 | exercises. P. J. Egan. the poet laure- . Dodgers Lose Again. { until 5:00, except Sundays and holi- | ate of the city hall, recited his poem Pittsburgh., June 14.—The Dodgers |days which he was requested to write for are nothing if not consistent and they — | the auspicious occasion ran true to form here on Forbes | First Church. The poem follows Field vesterday. when they dropped| Chureh school meets at 10 a. m. | The Second Ward Republican club their ninth straight game Tt gave | Morning worship at 11 a. m. Sermon f are a lively set. the Pirates a clean sweep of the four | “The Necessity of Jesus to the Salva- | And when they turn out. vou can game series. To make matters worse | tion of the World,” by the pastor, | safely bet ogper wielded the whitewash brush, | Mr. Maier. Music for this service | A good time is assured to all those kalsomining the Dodgers 3 to 0. follow: who go. The game was shortened to 2izht in. | Prelude—>Meditation Kinder | They generally have something nings in order to permit the Dodeers | Anthem-—“Oh. for a Closer Walk g00d to show— to catch a train for St. Louls. Ch With God” Foster | To their friends who attend their an- Ward will join the Dodgers in Offertory—*Nearer My Good to nual outing, Louis today. He probably will sup-| Thee' i C....... Adams| Something more than the usual plant Malone at third. The score: | Postlude—Pomp and Circumstance | shouting. g h. e | march : Elgar | Politics are not mentioned. when they Brocklyn 00000000—0 5 1| Adult Bible classes moet at 12:15 go away Pittsburgh 1000011%—3 % 8 [p. m.; Armenian service at 3 p. m.; | Pleasure only, is their program to- Batteries—Cheney and Krueger; | Wednesday. 5 p. m.. Girl Scouts; day. Gooper and Schmidt Thurse 2:30 p. m., Armenian | Their committce have spared neither SENERR | Women's Bible class; Thursday even- | time or expense, T ing. 7:45 p. m. The mid-weck union | To make this outing a successful SISLER CLIMBS UP | service in the South church. Topic: defense & . | “The Joy That Was Set Before Him.” | Against the efforts of the remaining IN AMERICAN LEAGUE I Friday, 4 p. m. the Brownies; Friday wards five, 7:156 p. m. the Boy Scouts. Sunday, Who, when they wake up, are very -. = { June 22, will be observed as Chil- much alive : dren’s day and will be held at the| The ward committee are a livel rouis tRlazen dumps Bront VDOl rvoh hou s am hustling bunch, to Fourth Place As Batter— - And frequently offer the voters a | Trinity Methodist Church. lunch Other Records. | Dr. Ray B. Chamberlain, secretary | Tn the shape of a smoker-—they call . lof the Alumni association of Wes- it a rally Chicago, June 14.—George Sisler of | |, can university at Middletown will ! And on election day, a big vote they SeRbou e del s et noyine Mk nres cnlibo thilmornine fandinight BEECH! tally. he American league this week, ac- |, very capable speaker. { The democrats of the ward. they try OXdinE foNsVerd oSl noloased Wtod vl IATIin e uaiia] Ise rrica kil ] ibaRhetd S| to imitate nd including Wednesday's games. He | npo ohurch choir always renders good | But, usually the voters leave them dvapced from ninth to fourth place | 8 VIR CUU L O he no ex- b nE e mofig the batters. and took firat| .pton The Sunday school is pre- | Except. once in a while, some ringer onors as run maker from Weaver{ . iing for Children’s day, June 22 at tries to run—- F Chicago, registering 1 times 10:45 . m. The annual Sunday ' Then the committes, they hand him Eepdinel ba ther gl OngDN more | (opool pienic will he held at Lake ! a “bun.” Jenes. Colb, Detrelr, .8 Veach. | compounce. June 28 | The members welcome all who ar petroit. .351: Johnston, Cleveland = ? i L p46; Sisler. St. Louis, 345 Rice. | pegormation Lutheran Church. | And expects, cach one. will 1 7ashington, .340; Weaver. Chicago, | mqrinity Sunday. June 15. 1919. 9:30 happy and ga '83; nwln:_m ew York, .533; Schang, |\ o Synday school: 10:45 a. m.. |The Mayvor. of course. will have some- oston, .333; Peckingpaush, New |y omning worship. The pastor will thing to say. ofl 380, ddedeon St o e S0P I 5o e Ta nome lauring ) thekweelgg as What heshas to do for his raise Gabby Cravath of Thiladelphia, | " iy attend the meeting of Synod | o patinued fofleadibaitersfuiithe Na ikt xston S 0T And about his message. which pnal league . 1 - i being printed. Licadine Sbatlers I Cravath ”“‘“"i Universalist Church, | And which the “press” has nighly eiphia, .431: Young, Nc \'.'v\url{. 342; | Preaching services will be conduct- commended. gingo; Cineinnatl, Rousch, Cin-{ .4 j " the pastor. Rev. H. B. Taylor. | The building inspector will say a word fln“‘é‘,;:"‘x' McCarthy, New York, | {smorrow evening at 7:30 o'clock or two ¥ Tillams, Philadelphia, .381; | —_— The taxpavers association savs, he ovie, x.\‘:w ()fur)k. T_h. I\H: ‘(_}!"v | . Pirst Baptist Church. has nothing to do— Rueei r;{\m"'l:l;mm o i The annual Children’s Day exercises | More buildings have been crected, . i . will be held at the First Baptist since he got a raise in pay. RICE AND MORSE VICTORS. | church tomorrow at 10:30 a. m. Spe- | And x‘hr: num\n_ is increasing from o s cial exercises and music by the chil- | i day tofday i SRR at Bassford and Pianisani for the dren. C. & Lane, D. D. will preach a J “““]i‘m;‘m“ will soon be a happy New England Tennis Title. e q‘":‘d‘;"”‘:‘h“”:‘”“'”;“h:::‘fl‘;t”:d' e has becn smiling since the timo Harfford. June 14.—L. B. Rice and | on this dav. At 7 p. m, Christlan| e B. Morse, of Yale, won the New | Endeavor. Topic: “What We Owe and Sl gland lawn tennis championship in { How to Pay Tt." Leader. €. A. Lud- | a0 800G 0l o ool ables here vesterday afternoon when | vigson i s v defeated H. H. Bassford and — In the council, the ward is twell rep- Pianisani, both of the New York St. John's Tmtheran Church. { el anis clib, at the Hartford Golf club. | Children's Day will he observed to- | ana more petitions by the mem- e sqore was 62, §—§. 4—6, 6—2. [ morrow at St. John's Lutheran church. | bers are presented | Rice’ and Morse qualified for the | All children have been requested to| For the city's benefit and the wel- als by defeating H. H. Ilvde and: hring flowers or fruit. The morning fare H. Wiley, of Hartford, in the semi- | servica will be at 10:30 o’clock. Chil-| Of the taxpayers. they do more a1 round earlier in the day. Piani- | dren are to meet at the church at 10 . than their share Li and Bassford qualified s o'clock Alderman Spencer is on license and S ———— finance brWENTY-THREE TNNING T People’s Church. Councilman Fichstaedt, our salaries ~hattgnooga, June 14.—The Charta- “burt srreet; Rev. R. C. Steinhoft, | diggadyance ! bga and Atlanta teams hattled 23 or. Sunday. 10:45, morning wor- ‘mm(-yln\:‘\n.lklors;wrg is on ordinance ings to a tie at 2 fo 2 in a game ship: 12:15, Bible school; 6:00. Young| A0 ¢l it e ey ¢ was called becanse of darkness. | People’s serviee: 7:00, evening service cunclimaniGilfraisegiondnaraar ¢h made 18 hits i e bt ] et R T el 1 2 “C’jh services. -‘ v ;h Drevermeets | the city's laws, win Stand Trial for Murder. ing Thursday night at 7:45 o'clock And is always ready to help a good w Brunswick., N. J. June 14.— | ) - } cause. lard Van Krebs convicted for the | Emmanuel Gospel Church, The governor and his lieutenant ac- der of Mrs. Annie Richie here in | Milton S. .'\nj‘m-son pastor Con- | copted our invitation. 4 who' was committed to the state | vention day. Sermon at 10:45 by | anaq their presence adds grace to ne asylum escaped twice and both | Rev. James R. Morris of Passaic, N. | the ocecasion. figda captured in New Y””‘k" Praver service at 9:30. Bible | They will have something sood to king as a butler for wnanhyl-\fl?ml at 12:15 p. m. 2 p. m. mis- " say to vou Rilies today refused to apply for an | €lonary addresses by Herbert H. In defense of our flag. the Red, ination as to his sanity He | Hossler, Mr: Florence J. Hossler, TWhite and Rlue tand trial for murder, Rev. Richard Starr, Mrs. Olena, Starr, ®. 1. EGAN United States Army. this leather having | Vienna | the ! commercial relations be.w United States and ¢ tory of G newed, desires several hundred He believe for the ment about to re- order at once tons of phosphate: will be able to arrange | permit for this ship- Quotations f. 0. b. at Antwerp or Rotterdam are requestéd, payment to be made credits which the firm still America { In a circular trade letter, a bank in | Hamburg says t in event the Ger- man vessels surrendered to the Allies are not returned. it would be the duty of the governmént to replace the lost | rmany are ve to he import from has in tonnage. The letter sets forth also hat the shipbuilding industry is in position to turn our a million tons of hipping within a vear. and that ma- terials. such as lead. steel and copper, are at hand in sufficient quantities to carry out this program. Thoemakers throughout the Ameri- | can occupicd area recently have been buring leather scraps from the Third | been abandoned by the German army after the armistice. In Coblenz it is estimated more than £1,000.000 worth of leather was found by the Ameri- cans in ithe various storehouses of the Eighth German Army Corps. According to the letters, pears to be no shortage of metals. such as tin, and there = there Germany ron, zine and © enormous stocks of{ machinery of various kinds on hand, | Lack of coal and inadequate frans. portation facili such shoniage | of freight cars, are the deciding fac- Tors in curtailing the husiness and in- | dustrial activities of the country - | AMERICAN MONEY " ap- steel s, as T D TUCH IN DEMAND | i _ i i Bolsheviki Painted Everything Red | Until Paint Supply Was | Exhausted. | _ Princeton. N. J. June 14.--The | Communists, or Bolsheviki, painted | everything red In Budapest until the | raint supply was exhausted. according | o an American officer who recently | Visited that Hungarian city. This fact | was mentioned in a letter written by | another American oflicer attached to | the peace conference who wrote from on May 1, his letter coming through by way of Paris in unusually time. The writer apparently did d bevond Vienna, but information concerning fast not received the decoration pro- | his | of Budapest red paint from an- | other American officer who had just | returned from that city. The writor | said that American money was ! much more to the people of Vienna | than their own paper money “The dollar now s O kronen where it used to bhuy only five | kronen,” he wrote. 30 Wwe Americans | are all rich. There are five or six American officers and an American mission in Vi are well liked hotels. 1, and the rere, getting estaurants and people at us quite when walk down the sees quite a fow German and officers and soldier There is now, he for an outsider ito and that the Tnter-Allied Ex- | pre: whick comes through twice a week to Warsaw and has cars which opped off for Prague, Budapest Constantinople. The countr of food. he adds. thar weeks azo the Bolshevi diner off the train,” the diplomats must now food U. S. BEATS ENGLAND | IN SHIPBUILDING Americans | favors in | theaiers. Still stare 1 ar Opeualy we street. One Austrian on the street only Eravel ays, one way to Vienna, and so short eral the is tool allied own | arry thei On March 31 This Country Was Con- | structing Twice as Many Ships | as Great Britain. | London. June (Correspondence ! Press.)—The United March 31 was Great | the fizures | for the first | & ates was building on twice as much shipping as Aritain, ziven hy according Lloyd's Reg to te three months of 1918 The total amount of all shipping | under construction on that date in | Allied and neutral countries was given 96,266 tons Great Britain's share of this was 2.254.845 The United States was then building 1,185,523 tons of shipping | These figures credit the United | States with 75 per cent. of the total ! tonnage under construction in Allied | or neutral countries outside of Great | Pritain and it is pointed out that the | United States is now luilding 28 | '7in'\0= as much as it was in June, 1914, One London papeg savs the effect of S0 many newly built ships entering into sea-gning trade alrcady is being from $99 to $399. REMEMBER, Real Estate Is the Fundamental Basis of All The Bodwell Realty Company Nat’l Bank Bldg. MANY HOTEL MEN ARE STitl HOPEFUL Do Not Think Prohibition Means Absolute Ruin ew York, June 14.—Hotel the North Atlantic states groups with headquarters in metropolis who profess to sec but ruin ahead if prohibition is forced, expect to be doing busines the old stand in the day when the mahogany bar and the con- coctions more or less mysteriously mixed by the white aproned dignitary behind it become matters of history Tespite predictions of the city state bonifaces’ associations York that large numbers of host® will be forced out of business by advent of the *dry” regime, the jority of persons well informed ;arding hotel affairs hold to the ion that no such situation will velop. All alang the coust and ward to the Appalachians, they clare, proprietors of city, town country hotels, both of the comm cial and tov revenues from the larized dining rs, soft drink sale of parl llebeian soda fountain ar some in operation with suc ng to their owners vival of automobile half planned and, in gratify And a r which had less than volume last summer, was at the height s expected to prove factor in tiding the over the transition begin with enforcement prohibition July ignificant as ¢ of the wind crisis are editorials in several of leading periodicals devoted tel business, and reports of ing agzencies whose trade is jargely from ‘automobile The hotel editors, while hoping for the hest—and “the best” admittedly their point of view would be of the government entor emergency prohibition measure, gether with a court or popular sion nullifying the national tion amendment to look ace and prepare < resorts All sorts of substitutes for revenues obtained from the liquor tr suggested and the “live’” proprietor urged to quit worrving and et worlk The advertising v nmari contracted by the hotel interests oxceeds that of last year. in fact new record. The fourist houses particular, they state. have pl heavily into publicity, frankly ating a bumper season of automohile traffic and planning, through increas ed patronage and expansion in 1 cases of meal serving activities recoup the losses which will the banishment of Old John corn From “automobile rows” of dreds of eastern cities the word one out that people stand read: buy almost anvihing on four “The war is over” is the popular and enforced stay-at-homes of open seasons are planning to America ourist hotel men. it clared, have seen thelr salvation travel boom alveady barent in steadily increasing volume of traffic, and improvements ranging the way from enlarged hedroom dining room facilities ta installation of attractive lunch rooms and terias have been the result in establishments that hitherto wone along in a conservati fashioned way. depending on the for the bulk af their receipts. While hotel men in many have refe that trar time prohibition would not he made offect cquivalent rooms. in the situation ot to ntoxicants tea grills and majority period squz of st types, are mapping out means of obfaining from other sources derived Popu- dance even tl innovations already risingly those and cases ur the when war nt pot of w tl 1y in men of excepting nothing mpendingz touring normal America effort, outside of hotels slated bone dry to the ho- advertis- drawn taverns, fallure prohibi- readers operation antici- Rarley- wheels, recent in the spring cafs many sections ed vaguely to “assnrances DO YOU NEED AN EYE OPENER® to see the increase in REAL ESTATE VALUES during the next two years ? Or has the changing hands of three-quarters of Main street propert; last two months convinced you that— NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY Just think of it. being able to buy building lots only 11 minutes walk from center at WINTHROP MANOR, 15 minutes at LYONS TERRACE and Gardens at WHITE’S FARMS only 18 minutes walk during our TEN DAY CLOSING OUT SALES With $25 Cash Credits and on EASY TERMS WITH NO TAXES OR INTEREST FOR TWO YEARS FREE DRAWING of Punch, Berry and Water Sets ware Sunday afternoon at LYONS TERRACE, WHITE’S FARMS CHARD HEIGHT 46 Lots sold in three weeks at ORCHARD HEIGHTS where | above the mid-summen 7 during the big Aluminum and Silver- and OR- prices are only Independence Phone 1801 F. E. Crandall, Mgr Wwith the acquisition though no of liquor stocks period loomed horizon, boni- district, in bitterly as- STRATEGY SAVED - ALLIED MISSION Britsh Naval Offcer's “Bluf®” wes in the New York public statements, have sailed the prohibitionists. Thomas D. Green and John McE Bowman, president and vice president, respectively, of the New York City [Totel association, described the atti- tude of the anti-liquor advocates as i “not caring what happens, so long as it doesn’t happen to them At a time W | flow into legitimate channels,’ Mr. | Bowman declared, the hotel business i i | 1.~ "(lfmyrmnod by the spectacle of Archangel May 28 (Correspond- ] ruin” if prohibition is enforced, but ha ence of The Associated Press.)—1It ‘l.'«.».\cr:ml he did not anticipate success - was largely due to the “bluff” of | in what he characterized as “this lat- ‘a4 young Russian naval officer in i dispensed in the terpsichorean halls. est attempt of religious and political command of one of the lttle Allied fanatics” {o take away “more individ- | steamers on the Dvina river that the ual rghts However, he predicted original Allled expedition up that many hotels of New York city and the river from Archangel was not wiped surrounding territory would be closed out by the Bolsheviki in the early July 1, or soon afterward, if the war- phases of the Northern Russia cam. time “dry” law put into force. paign George A. Farnham, president of The Dvina expedition, 133 strong, the New York State Hotel association, ' went poking its way nonchalantly up | “refused to belicve” that either the the broad river aboard two or three { emergency or constitutional prohibi- funny looking river steamers, on | tion acts would become operative which field pleces and machine guns { New Tngland hotels, on the other 'had been mounted. The Bolsheviki | hand, are reported to be counting on | had taken the hest boats, Mississippi { the automobile travel revival to offset y type of paddle-wheelers, with them | losses under a no-liquor status, while |in their flight | in Pennsylvania serving of iced bover- | The famous 133 reached Beresniki, | ages to tourists and devotees of the |nearly 200 miles south of Archangel | dancing craze is expected to provide | at the junction of the Vaga river with { @ substantia] revenue. Philadelphia | the Dvina, without firing a shot. One or nearly a year has permitted no | night, all of a sudden, three or four vending of liquors in dancing parlors, | Bolshevik side-wheelers mounting big and back in the mountains where bars | guns came around a bend in the river have been few and far between in re- [4nd started trouble. When we fired cent vears. the prohibition law will four cannon, they fell through the have little effect on the conduct of ho- | thin decks into the state rooms of tels our steamers. Aloug the coast, from Atlantic City | A voung Russian naval officer, in south. the hotel men are working out { command of one of our little ships substitutes for the bar and the grill | with his own gun out of action, stood room. “We will give them dancing, { pat, with the useless muzzle turned morning, afternoon and evening,” said { toward the biggest of the enemy's the proprietor of a great seaside car- [ ships, and barred the channel whil avansary, adding his expectation, [our other ships retreated. which seemed to be typical of other Then our ver expedition got the bonifaces in resort cites, of heavy pa- | glad news that a British monitor tronage and good returns from teas, | sent all the way from the Belgian ices and other light beverages to be | coast, was on the way to help them. { The monitor crawled along the sand- Among hotel men and observers of | bars and got to Beresniki. The the business generally there is agree- | colonel in command of the river land ment that consumption of intoxicants { forces told me about it, a few weeks has been restricted by the high prices | later, when I went up to his sector resulting from curtailed manufacture | of the front. Tt was something of und increased taxation growing ouf of | A tragedy this first episode of the the war. If the necessity arises. they | monitor, but the colonel couldn't dmit, the < of leading fo the tea | help laughing about it rooms and soda fountains that portion The monitor steamed the of the public which still clings to j colonel said, ts cap drinks with a “klek™ in them will be | rowed over to my headquart simple one, compared to such an un- | The was on the job ane dertaking without the involuntary, vet | turally. allgwas over. He « no less liberal education in temper- | to stop a minute ance and abstinence imposed by the “ ‘Where 1s the enems world conflict. | fleet. and way to Kot- ans 2’ TO VOTE ON CONSCRIPTTON. of "t:“lzw‘ik‘ evi fabor Conference to Also Damand nemy fleet, Withdranwal of Troops From Russia. Southport. England, June 1{.—The ' Mmasked e river Labo onference to be held here Pank. dropped into the june 23, will take up importantInonitor. putting it out of commis- problems growing out of the war in- Jr"” and sending it back to Beres. cluding resolutions calling g the ““;: vithdrawal of troops #rom riussia in this episode of the mon- ondemning conscription. One | 1for that a younz R"mwh".a‘“xl‘fu—, n of the labor element deman T(”'Y,“:r”,’,‘n.‘i(v onganiisan iRy ot N o iy tak :"p\‘n"r in vm:lv )d.:“l‘!n Other subjects fo he voted uj 1y blinding the ot} this young sur- v the cont of industry, natio con calmly and successfully attend- ince, education. old pensions, | o4 to the monitor's wo d until he the scttlement of the la questior | fo]] exhausted and the delay in providing home (e s rhed Beresniki, on the railroad a little = command of nch had battled its WAL AFFECTS PARIS ZOO. way nearly one hundred miles to BT S O i saal p spiosenshaya San d AR DI s WA D) in the Paris Zoologionl sardens | fundra between the railroad and the diiring (he wau oA et cutiing e By including some v'.: a . " = > of the American sailors, was lost in the Hae Gunone made d PME|in the mud, when reinforcements. in the nuthorities fmeeine e the shape of three transports leaded vise to kill the poisonaus smakes. lest | With American infantrymen and en. {hey should escane and catee o nanty | Gineers steamed into Archangel ha Difilor fthelrivert Seinol ovarfowadini L Sl S i e FLORIDAN IN PORT. giraffes developed ch complaints | New York, June 14.—The transpert and died. Only the water fowl flour- ( Floridan arrived today from &t ished. but Coco, the baby hippo. thni.\'a?k!re with 1,791 troops, incluéing pride of the gardens died—of ennul, | detachments of the 148th Field Artil- they say, as the gardens were virtual 3

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