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NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPT;EMBER writah HERALD PUBLISHMING ! CO)(PANY- Proprietors, ferald. Ued daily (Sunday | excapled) at 415 . m, at Herald Bullding, 8 m at Her ng, 67 Churo 2.00 Three Months TEe & Month tered at the Post Ofce at New Britaln @3 Second Class Mall Matter. TELEPHONE cALu nexs OMce fitorial Rooms » only 'profitable mvenmng medfum In | the city. Ciroulation books and press foom always open to advertisors. % g Member of the Associated Fress. Assocfated Press s oxclusively entitled 1o fhe use for republicatigm; of all news Tedited 15 It or not'otBerwise credited this, paper and alsay. local hed heretn. FIGHTING TUBERCULOSIS, The Connecticut Tuberculosis i State has announced that it putting into effect a plan to ight the “white plague” in its incipiency, using | commission the information that is fo:thcoming as result of the rejection of men the military ause of the fact that they were suf- | fering dis- | a many | young from service | bec from early forms of the ease. “In ment, 105t cases,” says the state- ‘the symptoms of tubercu- losis were vague and only par- tially defined, although they wer sufficient to lead boards of physi cal examiner: to assert that would be dangerous for the dr ed men te engage in such activity as strenuous - military. service. Their rejection by the draft boards therefore followed.” The National tion secured lists qf draft rejects for the whole country afd forwarded state | lists to the commissiohs for the differ- it ft- | Tuberculosis associa- | | | PLAN. upon the plan “for have furnished Senate with an opportunity ta dis- « VDERWOOD ANBL 1! ihe folfowvifs roduciion’ of the Plumb railroads, rernment operation, y P vergatile and confusing rmass onal views that are as numer- as the mm»ren& aspects ¢ 8, gue.- bt Natiors \onnu\er g ates = of the Ad- "O\r\rnmem owhership, TR hip., And Rl sorts of en, haye adkanced their | we areaveraging alolt te owne S in hegve es un&‘ “scheme per ¢ fing any { out successin arr affempt to and set aside for future ref- ce, ythe equitable points in each which may be later incorperated bill, it is to be congratulated. nd of the ordipary mortal tzsolnleh ampzed by o all of ,the 1S and, in ife am@zement, has little ortunity: 4 % ana uld, zl;erg"s$ mong’ the Senu a 3i e-jafia %he ordinary cardindéx &m dna that will be able to don- b up the essentials of the schemes will,” we -mayv- g savedawe may h.an Ldi\m\m‘n"hf\lhe rajlroad | ation, fWe doubt v much if any qfiucee is golng t 3 S that w,h: nece Jfieeohm on‘y thie a; choose. ii'\of Hhe Wb {g, (he labyrinth \lrlo,‘lle 0 exm ’Qfi:de‘;wugd in'a %cmh-umfln Has placed his £ o 41 umcnl Lribu ai to ! 3 wagoh {ing new™in, L rh haded to pmerigy many imficatiica) points i all - br the & ke of discussion lat! us | der the jqigufif g Mr. Tn- bod. Hie®ovic WAE outh iy the | hbintment o tribuna diseuss Mattdd” . The gioup of men Id have fhe “time to condd¥fhnd %pnonuuny to knagiithe faots.” should he'of such gghihre as'to | ble tosdustly act.upon the. de- | ds of either or tapital and be so placed a% to decide, | Iy, ‘witit_a' living wige, for the i is how far the employing inter- hay be quddl(‘tll“'uh this wage agd | | far the public is willing to go i | Ing rates to return-:a proper unt to the companies A | labor By, page the Olympic’council, fe- | hg, Gods from the heights, bring | from ‘their ambrosia and nectar | plve inte the mundanities of pab- frairs. Theirs is the oty jal Wwilness to our dilem) he only' @nes' capable ot out prejudice, upor oM {uest fo else.yhall we et a Body. of any aue Sxhutever, {oydec fomen tGus Guestion of o mm‘_;‘ nd the public (e Hoth ediately an'vfnmwrlu,u ed to sychia tribhalss the tor suggésts he %" I'eu,cll 10 ado \ corner *of the triangle ¥ e. If a group of individuag ginted hey wiu, collect )\ each in” rhe)r corper. blitician “toda¥ jwho is d by '}\y dgmp to fedabor may | | im-"| | i a l\ll‘rl‘ln supply? No. u,\ud g @0, placé for a f laboring (e rafiroad:dpman, may act v\hh “mvo on the af- of capital? V L that may see over his immddi- d‘who will be A¢cepted By publie (:s a fair- inded individual ? s the man®f the publie who feel the %lightened? pocker ght about t ¥ tc capital or Jaborand who igwill- o give from his own «Spply the other? yhere?) " o e are no two wa¥s about it. nderwood I8 seeking the un- etitally p'@ heeds a not gor ‘ret If thelSenate i | | the commis efuipment that will o | T dna SWaterbury A b Mot A rcenwich, nchester, ent Connecticut, the comimis the vivork of ll\':'[ and:large town | re- | ections. In ion in every city ince of the list of them out for atten- It venturSs that sixty will | states, agenc will take cogni jects and search tion, if possible per cent. of the respond to treatment and will be? through the recommended course exercise, rest and proper nourishment. | This should hold true of the draft jegts and others who have been found | to be suffering the trouble in | incipient cases that many restored to: normal acti re- | from early forms. Although thé Jistg.from Connecticu | are not complete fsowe of the smaller places not furnishing their rejections, states ‘that it .has'the names of the tuhercular'youths of the lavger places about thestite. u stated that the total m,\neher of dr: reported, from State of Connecticut,i Whi wilke jected the” tuberculgsis-wag 1,824." "One hune and.twenty-seven, the largest number| from‘one section, were from New Ha- | vehjBridgeport had 121, Harteohd 112 | 106. New Britain had | bt 31 rejects for this cause, Which is | fay: the best showing for The list is as,follows: ‘Ansonia,: 141 Bethel, Berin, 3: Branford, 24} Rnd:o;mn 12 Bri naan, ,3; Danbu S, agifovd., Enfield. L rora 110 Litehneld, "1{: Meriden, 8: Milford, €; Br ion ed men, thus far from sej by any city. | 3 | % Middletown % Xuck New Haven, 127; AN \ew Milford, 3 3‘ Tir @ (f Plymouth, 6; Putnam, 17; Saybrook, Sims- buryy1; Southingten, 1; Stamford. ; Thomaston, 4: Torrington 9; \'ernm\‘j.‘:l; terbury, 106: Wa- Ny, hester, inville, Portland, 9; & { § benefit to e community: from | o Whie wa\e facing of the, situation; mx_m‘l d* \~i.111,-flm work that the com- *may Dot be under- | estimiated. The fact that ty Dper cent. of those afflicted mhy be saved, if_ taken.in time, promptsiall €0 take dmmediate action ‘in'stamping-out the disease. -We have a basig upon which | to work, in thé ‘dpart Tfigures, ‘and | there are still many undiscovered! cases about us. Watcli gour health! REGULATION OF 'DIVORCE. be over before that divorce Stating there “Would 40,000 cases™ tried United States courts hefore the year was CHief Jhstice Charles W, Hoffman of; the ;Cincinnati court of domestid, felag adyocated the es- tablishukit Qf ¥ dmily, Saurts¥ before a ‘meeting ofithe unvnu n Ba( ®sso0- ‘giation andthe Amenjcan’ Institutaipf (‘Uhunul Law and Criminology: sessioh, at Boston. Was chamgcterized as rapidly growinig: and a*mehgce .to the community. Judges sh(\ulq‘be chosen and given the power to ackin cases where social evidence. might héydistinguished from | legal, Four Hundred thot: cases in one year #neans that double that number of individuals are affected by family disunion during a twelvemonth. The | 01t may lay with cither one, or both, 6 thé union.. Many children, which means further unhap- “piness, But, faking the ‘basis, there are eight hundred thou- ¥saMd Americans whe face a breaking | Puap of their homes every year, one in a undxéfl' ‘ot 50" inhabitants of this land over, tintes ‘there are adults as a! fteps. may: be taken to com- h are still a matter of douhl, n(u a' hard proapesition to han- dle. umad couple disagree seriously | ‘t\?ue qugn, or courty,that @mj’;fi*mgez er in any{hing outsidély ap Ratlier eternal dis: may | but than a good thing, we Have s it will work A of couples after they the kindly but we doubt out. may be havd had aniargument, "By ! consideration of a judge, that he will be abig to make much differefice*in the number of cu year. It is time far somé of jthe learned legislators to de/\qse further to overcome be 2"& a couple are mar- ried. It is time %hat additional proofs of good faith are required than s per obstacles are bt g 1 18 now. It is time that a period of troth | ting married after | to start soniething troubloy | We never heard of 4 'Space The divorce evil| ~ | It | ' When y | Ana | standardize, Howithin | minor part actors aréis réceive $35 a is made obligatory before the wed- ding. . The practice that some have of get- very brief inter- s respousible for many of our troubles. Mos ates do not require an announcement of inten- tions to val of acquaintance marry any period sefore takes place. a hardship for the | some to be obl | pass, say six months, of recogniz gagement life before the wedding were such a plan oblig avoid some of our ceremon; 1t would mean but, we would separation cases. tory FACTS AND Nowadays everyone- has the daily privilege of guessing who will be next Albany FANCIES. Journal. Congressional investigations sometimes have this good effec A food pirate can’t profiteer very much in the few minutez he is on the wit- ness stand denying the usual chauvge! —Kansas City Star. do The impression grows that the day- light saving- bill will come up again in congress along toward spring, and that the people of this country are not yet reads, because of the actioa of its haysegd”cofigressmen, to let it g0 to grass.> o8tofs Transcript, Strangé pul’ true—while . America is cordially #favited ‘to help recon- struct Europe.fpothing has heen said about Kurope helping America -with reconstruction. ndxville Jourunal and\Tribunc. E § “Where do New-Yorkers the fheaters are closed?” They go about their busineSs, and the tran- signt visitors who sfustain the theaters tay at home or clsewhere.—Wall treet Journal, g0 when g0 & “The fact that Mr: Bryan is already showing signs of his quadrennial itch {Bccasions no* was ex@ected.—Sprinzfield sur- prise. Enion, It Thase i thei¥eal dsys for tlis man who wants but little here below. —Arkansas ‘Gazette. An Austrian spy Camp Travis; bt has escaped from it doesn’'t matter. an Austrian spy who ‘spied anything of the slightest vdlue to Austr and /onyway, there isn't any* Au$irin.—Kansas City Star The suni. 0f*$3%000,000 is_asked to make _the verld & duvy: . Prehibition | isn’t s ither, when, it cogiss’ to. mmh like a dmnh n st )lm. F-Detrott Ne Can you think constitutional of a"more useless provision than that adopted b the Germans prohibiting Any Gernian from accepting a litle or décoration from any foreign o:- ernment >—Schenectady Union-Star. » OONLIGHT WOOI the woods by moonlight the wander-winds de- IN TH walked in £ where 1 Sider: winds, fiv, the moonlight exz‘.th\u the haun(@ till in the moon: Of fain¥fand fairy-like music, TWild and weird %eod“music, A® raydom “stirring the silence as walked to the woods alone. 1 “How stfange it is in the moonlight, %, walled in by the leaves and -grass, things go stalking the sha and you. think you hear pass! in the woods in'the moonlight, walled in by Liill and hedge, And, my thotights go up to the treetops, To the heavens tops, Winging ‘thru space to the edge of the " world=and there is no edge. When ows b tirem Alone above the tree- 5 gamewhere in the distance it - end-—but annot end: And my thoughts, all crushed and, Hewitdeea,. thet \dangot come: prehend; For the real of the great Lost Spaces come: back to the moonlight here, While thru moonlight A presence moves ness, As of One who walks in the shadows so close that I do not fear. it the woods in tlre in the dark- is good' to walk in the in the wonder-woods the cares of the day van- héd and. world thoughts arc 10} moonlight | alone, When are weight of the st negf and Start at a sound tWAEY is. gade, And Hst'to the-nightly music And the sound of the wind in the ireetops, 2 sense in the darknesssaying: “H.is T. be not afraid.” —8ERGT. CLAUDE WEIMER in_the Portlind Oregonian. TO LOWER PRICES, Sfney.—A step towardy lowering theshigh, cost of living was {aken by th§:\e\\ Zealand government by pass- ingda law restricting the exportation | f3hidesi® Manufacture of shoes and the use of ali hide e country is expectdd to lo &7ihesofficial prices of shoes consid- erabiye R CHORUS GIR will INEFITS Chicago, Sept. week strike benefits, m®mbers of the Actors’, Equity associdtion &n strike for several weeks, andounced today. They also declared they have “Justibe- gun to fight.” | ball is feeling the tweak given by Lefiect immediat FROM FUGITIVE TO PRESIDENT Such was the Career of Shola, Once Held for Murder Sarajevo, men who authorities rchduke president ment of Sept.. 3.—One were arrested b after the assassination of Ferdinand in 1 5 of the provincial Bosnia-He ovina recognized as one bf the I the new kingdom of Jugo-Slav is Atanasije Shola. was kept in prison at hard labor during the war. Today, in his office in what was formerly part of an Austrian palace, Mr. Shola described his years in prison and subsequent r to powe He is a Herzegovian; forty-two year old and considered to be a man of exceptional abilit; :“One hundred*and fifty-six of us were placed unger arrest in July, 1914," he said. %*There was no proof I was in‘i#ympathy, with the JugdSiav propaganda, but the au- thorities suspectdd what was in my heart. Sixteen ©Of the nien arrested at that (ime Wwere; condemned to death. excented, and ors in because of fhewemonstrance by,the King of Spain, but the prison itences were all made: cffective. ‘T went to prison on July 26, 1914, My celtuvas a small one—a ‘fneré cageyt and 1 kopt at hard labor. In Octobe 1918, the pegple of Bos- zovina, as in other Jugo= nces of th¢ Austrian em- pire, anticipated thedebacle empire; and organized % a council for the conduct of soon s the Austrian grmy councll came into ful gmecutive power and themen wronglysizmprisoned were liberatelg, [ v cd from prison on November 1. 1918f and almost im- mediatel; was choseh by the nation- al councif as president of the govern- ment ‘ofiBosnia-lerzegovina.’ y that the people generall ympathy ‘with the central at Belgrade. affairs. As were® J uso—Slavglm'Tmmn} : 25 YEARS AGO | | arom the Herald of that Date) A\ :~opz. lxa& Hart of thig%g nois «hmupx T 5. &%p hm" ot~ Walts “he law tage; ity N Admigir h;m%‘. ; fo il %Jolmwi}a Heinze ) P,.J ‘;mm will Thove his grocery busineséito his new’ building on Main et next week. He will give a danuce (o & number of his friends in the store next Tuesday evening. Walantie Muzym called at the town cléerk’s office today with am interpreter to get a license to marry Rose Kobus, aged 19 years, who came from Russia :davg. The, license was refused on rl being a mino aid that the couple nd the license ssucd totlay Miss Alma W and ““Patrick avekgone to New York for ay National Happenings. S$till raging—two more towns hom its ravages—latest offic of loss of life placed at #Thorpe in Wisconsin asks for fire’ ravage tained in 1893—millions wood and prairie land s caused by carclessness acres waste-— farm® 50° b@dies recovered work thisfar in the fire urtéen towns totally and cisterns full peoble escapg close to others perished Henry Irving, the English actor, hag ¢nbled 3500 to Mayvor McClellan New York be used for fire suffer -result of the destroyec of cargp spots Where to IN FOO BALL. Price Vale-Harvard Game Advanced 50 Cents, Admission Cambridge, Sept..5.—And now foot- the co Everything hing 1o, fing the grand um game has soared since hefore the wa and! initrveiite the wiclous cicele KA hit the Harvard-Yale football admission to-which will he § fall, an advance of 50 cents ow vious seasons nd there is the pos- sibility that when the crimson plays at Pringeton thessame prices will pre- vail The explarition prices as follows: have risen from $5 vears, jerseys ‘from $4 to $11, and | shoes ¥from $5 to $10. In addition Haraard will-hg¢ further hit when lurnber find labor secured to the 18000 extra wogden seats must take care- of t crowd the game with"Yale##In addition it cast Harvard $10.8/0 deficit to main- tain ‘its simple form of war time ath- leti¢s. Small consolation is offered football fans in the fact thai no war tax will be charged th lofty perta pre- for' the incre: Football prices to 310 in three that COW'S HORN POISONS, London—While Jimma Morhan, 18, was giving cow, a drink from a bucket the animal tossed its head and At&: horn injuved the girl's Cheek Four days later blood poisoning set in and the girl died. RICE TRANSPORTED FREE, Tokin-——In an cifort to combat the high cost of livinz, the Japanese zo ernment has decided to transport rice tree of charge, thus enabling it to be sold to the people at a price lower than now ask It was announced the new arrangement would go into now | govern- | He BT The deatHfpenalties were not | of the’) nationaly fled vth\s H but’| | | .| aven. | | -| nave wept regions | of | the forest | game | 50 this | d | build | during | 1. S, NURSES REFUSE| TG LEAVE WOUNDED. ‘American Women Decline to Abandon Sick Who Survive Constantinople, Aug. 12, (Corre spondence of the Associated Press.) | Two American nurses, Miss Margaret Mack, of Hillburn, N.”Y., sand. Miss Ruth Stuart, . of New York city, working for the American Commis- sion for Reljef in the Near East, de- Brlined to ‘abandon . {he . sick }&;mmml at Shushe, Armenia, {#hBving themselves survived a massa- | €re by Tartars of 700 of:the Christian after and’ | | inhabitants of the town, ageording to | & letted just received here by Major David G. Arnold, of Providence, R. L, director of the commission. fer read: : “Our doctor and nurses: the midst of the fight. but harmed. On advice fronu Beach 1 recalled the two nurshgy came reluctantly and begged: 10 r main at their station as there was an urgent need for them amcng the sur- vivors. The spirit Miss Mack and Miss Stuart have shown_has been splendid and I felt that thewshould be allowed to return if they went volunteers, understanding the They signed paper they knew the dange Wwere returning to thei Hiosen request.” 4 “umorous tou e ; situation ker at e & { "“)%’m‘nm\ working out from Oulou Kishlf a¥e covering a large territory and, "oBSlining a large expericnce, | Fheii*\ghief outdoor sport is dodging | ‘camel Yggins and leaping culverts. [ Coaxing Mhe Missing spark plug from its hiding lace vies with mending txun,&’.neu» with thread as the chief | form of recreation. There are ninety- nine neountains hetween Oulou la and Harpoot, each one inte ] by four valleys and a precipice is a rule that after the cxplosion of the twelfth tire each day the flivver Inocks off and its srs camp for the Yight, sharing their: pillows with any. ¥o¥ing dromedary In the vicinity, and giving o treat to the predatory mos- quitos that infest the country. There is;a warm box-car in Owmlou Kishla, afid a cook loaned to the commission Mr. Oscar of the Waldorf. His ,iucon andsychaufba ‘are inimitable, anshawe Bis hante or ad- On gour se (he' wi is mll of Wiy Qh,hmzh stop off samplé the don't talk to the cook.” chow. But remem- the last four menths the has lost three members; Paul D. Peltier, of New York witv; the Rev. R smrich and Miss kdith M. Winche Philadelphia, a nurse, who v the first to volunteer for typhus ridden Caucasus. Just before her death Miss Win- chester, in a letter from Tiflis wrote: “Tha\sights about us are heartrend: ing. A refuge two blocks from our of- fice vesterday fed 1,800 starving chil- We have been feeding them once a day. .And once a day the cart g®es around {o collect the eight or ten little corpses that have accumulated. Refugees are cating grass and alfal- fa. The alfalfa they cat raw; one can alway children nibbling at a bunch of it lile rabbits.” I'rom various points in Armeéni the Caucasus and jnatolie, repor been receiyed |from the Ameri- field workers. . From Batoum comes word that “‘there are 150,000 Greek refugees back to the city who | are gradually being pushed out by the Russians. Many of them went to amsoun. Thousands of whom fed at an Anlerican soup kitchen. Adana has 12,000 refugces and 18,000 more are in nearby villages.' NEW GERMAN NAVY ; 18 EXPLAINED were awere -l ey’ as effect that d that they Work at their ch o an is ralated Oulot K otherw by hla a and | ver, During commission by death in the see | can | Iron Torpedo Boat and Haff Flotillas Have Beén Organized Since the Armistice Was Signed. With Aug. 23 sociated | many’ schifis, recent American American Forees in German: (Correspondence of the Pres \n account of Ger- new “‘nav given in Mitt- a German naval periodical, & issue of which has reached headquarters, describes the. | iron torpedo hoat and Haff flotillas both of which have been, organized | since the armistice. iron flotilla” boats, which have maintaining order | térn coast of Germany, the | paver. Some of the vessels have heen used. on several oecasons for po- licing the port of Hamburg, .such guarding Allied “food shipménts the Czecho-Slovaks and similar work, during periods of disorder. Thej#otilla has its headquarters at Willtelms- hayen. A landing corps of abgh:860 men is distributed *among ~“tha 32 consists of 12 been on says |'* ©he | torpedo | gaged en- in the | 30 commahded by a naval lieutenant. | The clothing And arms of members of this landing corps are the sanie as in the ‘infantry. The Haff flotilla is supposed doing similar duty on .the coast near the ltussian Doun@ary, with® headquarters in IKoenigsbeps. = Phe | flotilla has ‘hen handicapped recently by -delay in obtaining equipm®nt needed to put the vessels in.comimis¥ sion. The boats are armed with chine guns and in Some cases, wit i 3.7 centimetre guns as well.. Thelo- tilla was organized” for operatien in comnection with the East Prussian Freiwilligs corps and was, until a few | weeks ago, rubject to the commander of the northern army » These two flotillas—excepting a few vessels which are either.gutief com- mjssion or of little or'fip e—constx. tute virtually all |ha(,d= left'in active to “be Raltic situation. | hoats, each ofiwhich has a platoof of | The let- ! in?t ‘Genarat | { up, patrol af the oc The McM ANNOUNCING NEW ARRIV/ MORE THAN LS ORDINARY INTER ew Fall Suits $29.50 ™ $65.00% ily ertove, . velours, tricotin sevges, OF (onw\du\ e mode ,and jersey New Fall Dresses Wool season. serges and tricotines mdderatély priced the D"“’ 9 or 4 Voile Dresses VALUES UP TO $15.00 Saturday $5.98 5t Your Choice Young Women Going Away to School and College supply of Hosidry, Knit Underwe Underntuslins; Handkerchiefs, Reasonably Ppiced af; etc. Silk Undergst- We hive the Will require a ments, ‘Blouses, Reliable Kinds, e e THREAD SILK HOSK: |4 $2.50, $2.75, $3.00' VOILE BLOUSE many styles pratty Fashionable Capes and Stoles OF MARABOU W AND. OSTRICH vith your ew Ifall Sule Saturday about a4 Stol Purchase We me Home Special Sale Prices $8.98 to $20 Each School Days Next Week Let Us Help Blouses, T Dress i Coat orty of Ahe Very you wBajurday Celebrations the thing to We will put Model Capes @ New Brit Just Newest wear on *all ring to Children /' with Sweaters; out ghe Handkerchiefs, you to fit ex, Collars, “MOTHERS,"” Hosiery, Underwear, Boys! Knee P'ants. Girls' Coats and Dresses, etc. JOHNSTON TENN]S CHAMP |IRIS SH DRIVE MU * BE COI\T;NUED Californian Defcats Tilden in Straight Sets On Forest Hills Court—Loser New Britain's Quota of 000 Has Not Commendspyiceon Been Reached—Meeting Cali- home supreme as the catest tennis player 1919, Willlam M. Francisco * defeated 2d, of Pl adelphia the final match for the ngtional & singles champion- ship. ‘Jn Bl ‘*ug.tmg the ; Phijadel- | o ohod vet. phian by scopes of 64, 6, 6— o Johnston plaged himself upon a tennis pinnacle, séldoim reached by —racket With Tilden he was the sole | r of 128 ulaycis who beghn the zgleNfor the title August 25. This field contained the Auseralian team, winners of the Enklish championships at Wimbledon, as well American conguerors in the Aumery expedi- | tionary fowrce tournaments abroad. Thus Jéhinston’s victo amps him unguestionably as the best - player competing in_any part of the world | his ve: The latest high Forest Hi Sept.” 5 fornia again is of thé world’'s g season of for t} Johnsfein of Sun Williafly T Last Night. Al the meeting of tiie Thomas Ashe branch of the Friends .of Irish Free- last night it \01"«1 to con drive thig’ been dom tinue the eit : was Irish victory of $5,000 It was also voted to give complete list of n . Tilden, in strafght sets i as quota bas not those wha contrib wied to the Th ! this money cat gliestion of who tuke when collected ered care of W sked Re York ¢ as <follows New and ansyw Peter, national p ¥ Magennis, sident; Naticnal Michael B..McGreil, New I tional Sedretary Diarmuid L, York city: National frank P Walsh, Kan Hon. gohn W, Goff, New Rt. Rev. Peter J. Muldoon, 1L; Rt Rev, Thomas Wasghington, D. Rt. Rewy J. Gallagher,” Detroil, Mic Henry A. Brann w York Hev. Gerald B. . Phl Pal;sRt. Rev. James W York tity; R{. Rey. Thomas Philadelphia.: F My # Worther, :Chicaga, Ll Hon, /Nl Johnston, who is'not quite 25 vearSwtydar, S5, 8w Mo.; Hon, of ‘age, Stated after the match yester- | Cupley; lwston, Mass.; F das/fhat he felt that he had mnever ygrke, San Francisco, played better tennis at any time -in | gpidin, New Haven; his career. As he éxpressed it, he | Grace, Charlestowy, “folt like a champion.” . Tilden chael J. Ryan, roborated ‘this ement when he Rev. Erancis X,/ “1' have never faced befter tennis Hon.. Cornelipdt my .ife. Johnston's game | city; lutely unBegiable Yesierday y @4 champion in-every of the word. an vice presi hewt champion in twinning his | honors played fully up to the standard . necessary {o clineh | sueh an homp?. ‘It is doubtful if any other temnfs’stay bhas ever shown a | betfer all-aronfid kame from both the standpoint #f stroking and tourt) st This, too, in the face of the | stiffest opposition that hé -has . ever | taced. ~ity Rt sdelphia, Power, New J. Hurtom Mary K. dc FOR \l‘Rs.. C(}% 3 Haneous &hnflle}\"m on Coondl jaty gron street la! of Ariends, merly. Bdiemua l*‘}"@fi % ' SHO' A mi | dered to Jhonge on by Cooney TROL OCEAN ‘The forest rang are now . taking! / besides yoam ing the hills and cies of Canadad. | Ellen \ powerful ‘seaworthy ‘launch of 80 monty tons burden has been hought and ft- | JoB ted up to patrol the Lfggmg.cdmpal alnn‘g the Racific coast RANGERS P Vancotivey, B. ( ers of'the northwe: man