Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, June 20, 1915, Page 1

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i PART ONE NEWS SECTION PAGTS ONE TO TWrY.ve VOL. .\li. \l\ — ()\l\ll\ i | THE OMAHA SU \I)\\ MORNING, ll\l, 20, 1915--FIVE Sk TIONS--THIRTY-E1GHT EXPERTS PLANNING | 10 MAKE WARSHIPS - SAFEFROM SUBSEA, U. 8. Navy Men Emp]nyed on Device to Render Dreadnaughts Im. mune to Attacks of Torpedo. DANIELS GIVES OUT SECRET Secretary Tells of Experiment in| Speech at Launching of Arizona. looking down, 1 v | LESSON OF THE EUROPEAN WAR NEW YORK, June 19.-—That Navy department experts are now experi- menting with devices by which it is | hoped to protect future American | dreadnoughts against submarine tor- pedo attacks was revealed here to- day by Secretary Daniels in a speech at a banquet following the launching of the battleship Arizona at the Brooklyn navy yard. After describing the work done on three of the five dreadnaughts authorized for the navy by the last congress the recre- tary sald: Secretary’s Remarks. | “fHle experts areat present considerin, the best general type form to the re.| maining authorized dreadnaughts, whllux experiments are being made with a view 0 thelr protection under the water against the submarine which has proven #0 deadly In the present European war. “The launching of this big dread- naught,” Mr. Daniels added, “is an event which tells better than can be spoken by any words the steady and orderly growth of the navy. Within the last year I have had the pleasure of witnessing at Quincy the launching of the Nevada, at Camden of the Oklahoma and at Newport News ot the Pennsylvania, and now today of the Arizona. Thid follows close upon the completion of our two latest dread- naughts, the New York and the Texas. To Start on California. “As soon as the Arizona leaves the ways we will here begin actual construc- tien work upon the California, much of the material for which already has been | contracted for, and which will be equipped with electric propulsion, being the first of the modern dreadnaughts of any country to utilize this recently té; and successful new motive pawer wh promises to be a revolutionary invention, It is estimated that by its use ths ofl- burning California, steaming at twelve knots an hour will be abie to steam for| daye*Tonger-tin éleven & toal-burning dreadnaught, and that during that time it could go more than 3,000 miles farthen This contemplates using only its normal bunker supply, but with its emergency bunkers filled it could steam an addi- tional 5,000 miles. In other words, the California ‘will be able to steam about twice as far as the Wyoming. The secretary sald that the “backbone of the navy"” is still the powerful dread- naught, but declared the navy was kelv-’ ing abreast! of progress in the bulldmg of submarines and destroyers. He alro re. ferred to the laying of the keel 2t the Igague Island navy yard today of the largest transport yet authorized by con- gress and of the development of the revy aviation school at Pensacola, Fla. German Aviator ! Is Killed During | Fight High in Air| PARIS, June 19.—The following official acoount of an engagement between a French and a German aeroplane was #lven out in Paris this afternoon. *“An enemy aeroplane having . been observed over our lines at Aspach, near Thann, in vpper Alsace, one of our aviator ser- &éants took wing and mounted, in thirty minutes to a height of 10,600 feet. At ——— UOR— HEAYY RAIN AND HAIL PLAY HAYOC Down in Several Spots of -the State Fndn.y Night. | RATLROADS HAVING TROUBLE With heavy and continued rains again Friday night over about all the country from the lakes to the mountaigs, the i Qmaba: roads. are finding themselves somewhat crip- pled and at the same time the farm- ers of the winter wheat and corn belt are crying for dry weather and sun- shine. According to reports to the rail- roads, portions of Kansas and Ne- braska were not.only visited by tor- rential rains last night and today, but by destructive hail storms. some two miles wide and ten to fifteen milés in length, northeast to southwest. earth and other grains practically de- hogs and In the town and out of chickens, numerous calves were killed {in the country all windows on the north side of (he houses were broken. The | hail generally was from the size of egys | up to as large as base balls. In some in- stances thoy crashed through roofs. Troes were stripped of their leaves and the follage of shrubbery and vines were cut off_and ‘beaten into the ground Hall Breaks Windows. At and around ' Hoidrege in Phelps county a destructive hallstorm passed over a large area of country early in the evening, beating crops into the ground and doing considerable damage In ' the towns. According to the Burlington's re- (Continued from Page One.) this altitude he engaged his enemy with & machine gun. “To this fire the German replied with his machine gun and one of his bullets struck the motor of the French machine. | The sergeant again ascended to a posi- tion above his adversary and fired, three bands of cartridges. During the third ) round the German aviator was seen by ! the Frenchman suddenly to throw his arms into the air. His machine then began to fall and it came down lke l‘ stone inside of our iine. “The French aviator came down under control. . Once on the ground he ex- amined his machine. ‘He found that bullets fired by his antagonist had per- forated his cylinder, penetrated the steel shields at the back of the motor lndi riddled his sails. The Frenchman him-| self was slightly wounded in the n'ck“‘i The Weather., Forecast till 7 p. m. Sunday: For Omaha, Council Bluffs lnd \'k‘!nll)" —8how: not ture. Temperature at Omaha Yesterday. lzour-. Deg much change in terpera- | YaacsweniiiBonaa TEOPEEUgraares CEEEEEEREEET EE | Comparative Locai Reocord. 1915. md . a2 % 3 il n‘ 00| Temperature and pmlpnmo- depar- tyres from the normal: Normal temperature Deficiency for the day Total deficiency since March Normal precipitation Excess for the day. 3 Total all since March 1 Deficlency since March 1..... Excess for cor. period, 1814...... % inch Bxcess vo|- car period, 1913. inch ~ WELSH, local Forecaster. - 1 10 | !‘ inch | inch 10 !l Inches . 129 inches [blue,” Hatchet Murder Suspect Is Being -Traced in Custer BROKEN BOW, Neb, June 19.—(Spe- clal Telegram.)—A man nnlurrlns the description of the mysterfous “man in supposed to be.the murderer of Ada Swanson, togk dinper this after- noon with a farmer at Lees Park, twen- ty-five miles east of here. Bheriff Wilson was potified, who in turn notified Detectives Murphy of Omaha and Church of Kansas City, who have both been here|during the day. The officers are trying to intercept the man before he gets out of the county. Flavin Conviction Reversed by Court FIERRE, 8. D., June 1%—(Special Tele- sram.)—The supreme court today reversed %2 the lower court in its conviction of George 0. Flavin on a charge of embezziement as treasurer of Pennington county and crdered the dismissal of the defordant. This was a sensatlon case in the Black Hills section of the state and the ap- ‘pointment of a special prosecutor by the judge to try this case is the main reason of the reversal, the court holding that while there was an acting mtate's attor- ney in the county, acts of a srecial prosecutor were a nullity. Steamer Dulcie is Sunk Off Suffolk LONDON, June l. The 2.000-ton British rteamer Dulcie was torpedoed and sunk off Suffolk today. The members of the crew with one exception were saved The Dulcle was 275 feet long, was bullt | e brought here for trial Windows Broken and Crops Beuten; In the .path theat wus beaten to the | lits entertainment of the delegates | Stroyed. It is reportéd tnat hundreds|to the_ national .convention, of the| €Veh Ipravelers’ Protective assoclation of | A firm here in Omaha manufactur. ing mill work such as doors, win- dow screens, -pedestpls and all in- | terfor finishes, . imcluding office, store and church fixtures. They have contracts now for about $7,000 worth of work and can close up on that much now, but can't afford to do so for want of capital to swing it. Tho men are bard working, Industrious and honest, but belong on the pro- uurh:{ end of mr. business rather than the office. f you have $3.,500 you. can t 51% of stock and have control of office and finances, rw further information abon LIYE‘ WIRES TELL OF OMAHA ABROAD Traveling Hén More Than Pleased with Hospitality During Their ‘National - Convention. 'OMAHA WOMEN LEND THEIR AID | | Friday night Gothenburg was in the path | of a hailstorm that covered an area | Omaha covered itself with glory and made for herself a-reputation | second to no other city in the world as a hearty and generous hostess in America last week. From last Sunday morning, when the !men and their wives began to arrive, un- til Friday night, when most of them had left, there wasn't a dull minyte. Every- body, from the president down, voted it “the greatest convention we-have ‘ever had and the finest entertainment any city has éver given us.’ V. J. Schoenecker, the popular retiring prosident, sald: ““We have nothing but the hihest praise for Omaha as the host of our conven- tion, and for the local post and the en- tertainment committee. Omaha will live in the memory: of - every -delegate for many years because of what it-has dons for us during this convention. Omaha even excelled what we did for the can- vention in Miwaukee." And so Omaha, in exercising the hos- pitality and enterprise which are char- acteristic of it, has, in the last week, done one of the biggest things it has ever done In the way.of advertising its beauties and attractions and advantages. Become Travellng Boosters. The 600 ‘delegates who were here and those who accompanied them, their wives and daughters and friends have become, each and every one of them, a walking, eloquent advertiscment of Omaha. These delegates will report the doings at the convention city to more than 50,000 each report will glow with a description of this eity and its open-handed welcome, its great. induvstries, its beautiful streets, homes, parks and country clubs,’ its big stores and. hotels. The national publication of the associa- Burke Is Accused 0f Taking $55,000 INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., June 19.—John Burke of this eity, former manager of the commissary department of the Pan- ama railroad. is charged with accepting graft amounting to more than $65,000 in two indictments returned by the federal grand jury and made public here toda Ricardo Bermudex, sald to have been a former governor of Colon, Panama, and Pascal Canavaggio, & former menghdnt of Panama, both now living in New York, were indicted with Burke, all of whom, with Jacob L. Sal have been indigted prevluully in New York. Federal Judge cls Wright of Danville, I1l., received the Indlrlmen s and fixed Burke's bond at $5,000 and Bermudez' and Canavaggio's at $10,00 each. All of the men are under bonds on stmilar indictments returned in New York, but it 1s understood they will #ince the fed- | in 1900 and owned in Hartlepool, Evgland. | eral grand jury was called In special ses- /i was last reported as arriving May 21| sion at the request of the Department of #! the Tyne from Rouen, France. Justice to make the investigations. members In their Various divisions, and | HOW THE KAISER LOOKS_TODAY-—Phoo made during the Kaiser’s visit in May to the military headquarters of the Crown Prime. At the extreme right is Prince Oscar, 2-CENT PASSENGER - RATE WILL STAND Supreme Court Holdl that Legis! ture Has Co-ordinate Right with Commission. :counr DIVIDED FOUR TO THREE (From a Staff Correspondent.) LINCOLN, June 19.-—(8Special.)— The State Rallway commission has not the' exclilsive power to fix rates for the transportation of freight and pasdengers, according to an opinton handed down by the supreme court late this dfternoon. The decision comes on an application of the Missour] Pacific raflroad to the State Rallway commission “for the right to raise passenger rates from 2 to 24 cents {per mile. The State Rallway commission |denicd the application for a ralss and [the rafiway company then went before jthe high court for a mandamus to com- pel the commission to make the order | {and it 1s upon this application that,the ‘umnlan of the court is rendered. How Coart Stands. The court is divided in ‘the opinion, three judges, Chiet Justice Morrjssey and Fawcett and Hamer, Rose, and Letton joining with Sedgwick, dissented The majority who rate at 2 cents ties the hands of the Btate Rallway commission and forbids that'body to make a higher rate. The judges dissenting are of the opinion that' the 1907 legislature passed the two- cent passenger rate blll as a temporary measure, and that when it later passed with power to “alter, change, amend :or abolish” any rate, indicated an intention to. rest in the commission power to chanae the rate. Upinfon in Nutsh The, syllabus of the decision is as fol- lows 1. The constitutional amendment CI'Q— ating” the Btate Rallway commission di not grant to that body exclusive powar Lo fix rates - for thé transportation of lrnnln end passengers. Const., art, v, sec. 152, 2. Under the congtitutional amendment creating the State Luw.y commi; it may fix rates only in the absence of - cific legislation. Const.. art. v, sea. i%a. 3. Statutes In pari materia’ must be constzued together. ©® power conferred in general the constitution and the State Rallway commission act does not au- thorize it to Increase the maximum o, senger rate of 2 cents a mile, as fixed by the le l!llurt in 1907, Const., art. v, gec: 19 Rev, 8L, 1913, secs. 107, 5106 and 5. A fcular intention expressed in a leg tive act. If in conflict with a general intention expressed in a later enactment, should be given effect, ing the later act to operate only outlmo of-the scope of the former. {Receiver Refused For Knights of Honor ST. LOUIS, June 19.—The petition for | the appointment of a recelver of the | Knights of Honor, a fraternal Insurance | order, was denied in the federal court| here, it was announced today. Judge Pollock sald the appointment of & receiver now would work' a hardship upon thousands of ‘members and said he | thought that if sufficient time were given, the finances of the order could bs r habllitated The court granted leave to the peti-| tioners to make a new application if the [lodge were not rehabilitated by August. | A final hearing will take place August 1. KING CONSTANTINE STEADILY IMPROVING WASHINGTON, June 19.—Slow but King Constantine was reported in a bulle {tin to the Greek legation here today from |Athens. 1t was the first telegram since [ the second operation, which announces a |definite change for the better in the gen- eral condition, accompanied by no re- ported manifestation of complications. concurring with | who wrote the opinion, and Barnes ' finds that the specific | enactment by the legislature fixing the | the bill creating the raflroad commission, | terms unon the State Rallway commis- | | slon by steady improvement in the condition of ! VILLA CHIEFTAIN T0 RESIST LANDING OF U. §. MARIRES | Maytorena, | Sends Thousand Men Into Yaqui | Valley to Oppose Coming { of Americans. ORDERS THEM TO KEEP AWAY‘ Admiral Howard Given Discretion as | to Putting Forces Ashore | | at Gunymn | WARSHIPS ARE ON THEIR WAY NOGALES, Sonora, Mex., June 19 Governor Jose Maytorena author- |1zed the statement today that |entdre forces under his command | would be used if necessary to resist |the landing of American marines on | the west const to protect foreign set- | ters of the Yaqui valley from :dllnn now at war. | A detachment of nearly 1,00 troops sent |to the Yaqui valley yesterday, he said. s dispatched primarily to protect set tlers and their crops from the Indians, but they had orders to resist any landing of American military forces. According advices Maytorena has recelved, the American warships under the command of Admiral to | day. The Villa troops disputched by the governor will encounter burned rairoad | bridges and other obstacles north | Guaymas. Warship Due Tonight. | BAN DIEGO, Cal., June 18.—The crufser Colorado, flagship of the Pacific fleet which salled from here Thuraday, should arrive at Guaymas, Sonora, sometime to- | night, according to last advices. Admiral companies of marines, four rapid-fire fleld guns and’ two automatics and a ship's complement of 80 officers and {men. of whom 0 are available for shors duty. The protected crulser Chatta- | nooga, whicli followed the Colorado, should arrive at Guavmas tomorrow morning, with 40 officers and men, whom 300 are available for shore duty. To Use Discretion WASHINGTON, "' June 19.—Admiral | Howard, in command of the expedition |now enroute with. relief for American wettiers in the Yaqui valley has orders that are elastic; in fact, he has no order to land a force. His instructions are to inform the chief of the that Amerieans and others “a”b’nr‘ mitted to come out of the district un- molested and If he finds it necessary to #send e force ashore to protect lives he has wide discretio: powers 1o to tax He has been ' ) A2 ritory and the Mex authoritiss have been so advised rom Washington Inasmuch as the Ihdians have also da- clared war on Maytorena's forces, of- ificials bere think they may meet some | American party. | Maytorena heretofore always |obeyed :the order of General Villa, to | 'whom the: situation has been explained, and Navy department officials do expect trouble. Landing Admiral How- | i--d'- forces to rescue the colonists would Iin no sense be intervention, Thera are | many precedents for sueh action. Becker Has Plea Which He Expects has | NBW YORK, June 19.—Charles Backer's | plea to Governor. Whitman for exscutive | | clemency will be made soon, probably the latter part of next week and will con-| fain & statement which Martin T. Man-| ton, his counsel, sud today should not only save his life, but set him free Becker is under sentence to die during the week of July 12 for the murder of Herman Rosenthal. Mr. Manton outlined Becker's plans for altempting to obtain clemency as far as today from Ossining after an Interview ir the death house with his client. Becker, with | virtually no recourse left except executive clemency, had finally agroed to have his lawyer place such a plea before the governor, Mr. Manton said. 1f clem- | eroy 1s denied then, Mr. Manton said, Bocker would go to the chair still pro- testing his innocence and in all probebil, ity leaving behind no written statement. What Becker's glea for ercy will cone | tain Mr. Manton sald he could not dis- | cuse n detall Mr. Manton intimated that the sugges- tion might be made to Governor Whit- his previous connection with the case, to pass upon the plea for clemency, the matter be given to the lleutenant gov- ernor for consideration. Mr. Whitmsn as | district attorney of New York county | | prosecuted Becker at both trials. | Mr. Manton sald Becker was ‘n hia| ueual frame of mind and liad not been unduly affected by the adverse decision yesterday of the court of appeals, Letter from Kaiser Hints that End of the Conflict is Near | PARIS, June 19.—Extracts from a letter |#aid to have been sent by the emperor 10 & personage connected with the Bavarisn court and published in Spain are reproduced by the Mat. The em- peror is quoted as saying in part “Our only object is a eace profitable for the German states. This peace may be concluded soomer than thought 1If it &ave for the time being only an incom- | plotq result, it would at least serve aw & prepagation for the future. It could be signed tomorrow If | wished. “When my august grandfather placed |the empire on fis present basis he did not |pretend to have realised a comploted work. The empire always is of growth What c¢annot b today will be achieved later. I"A( | Governor of Sonora, the | In- Howard are | expected to arrive at Tobarl bay late to- | of | Thomas B. Howard {s aboard, with three | ot ! opposition if they march to repulse the not | Will Set Him Free| they have matured. upon his arrival here | man that If he did not desire, becavse of | SUNDAY BEE THE WEATHER Showers SINGLE (OPY FIVE CEN TEUTONIG ALLIES ITALIAN INVASION of Austein, | which fs being pushed all alons | the frontier, in snld by newspapers of Rome to have reanlted thus f twice as much territory as was of- fered by Austrin as the price of | NG THE ISONZO fromt the bat- | tle on which hinges the fate of Anstrin has sent forcements of the finest troops. A | by Itallan and | Inflicted conatdernble n Austrian fortifieations rallway stations on the | Tsonzo fromt. | ANS ARE MAKING a dete mined stand In Galicla to hold Temberg, the the n armies. It ftted in Petrograd that the have retired beyond the Hine of lakes near Grodek, sixteen | A German sends the Russians are forti- fying heavily a line ten miles weat | of Lemberg. | BRITISH STEAMER DULCTA was | sunk today oft Saffolk, England, | by & German subma: All mem- bers of the crew but one were | saved, | NEW BATTLESHIP * ARIZONA LAUNCHED | American Man-o'-War Given to the Sea with Appropriate Ceremo- nies at Bronklyn | | MISS ESTHER B,OSS IS SPONSOR | NEW YORK, June 10.~The new battle- {ahip Arizona was successtully lannched at the Brooklyn navy yard here today. The Arisona shares with its sister ship, the Pennsylvania, the homor of hdnl‘ the world's fargest battleships. The | |Arizona slipped into the water at 1:12 {0'clock ‘The state, whose name It received, was represented here by o distinguished |delegation. Governor G. W. P. Hunt led |the official party, which included United | States Senator Henry I'. Ashurt and Miss | psther Ross, the sponsor. Secretary Danlels of the Nayy depart- ment was here for the launching, as well s Admiral F. F. Fletcher, commander of the Atlantic fleet; Major General Leonard and members of Makes Falr Throw. | Thé Arizona went into the river with the wine and water of its christon) iln rivulets down its | Broken bottles that swung' gbther ‘as’ ome- from the tasse| of ailong red, white and blue cord of silk. Miss Esther Ross of FPresoott, Arlw, the bat- tleship’s sponsor, made a falr throw the “ big hulk quivered and slid slowly | forward. The froth of the wine' spat: {em i) TAKE GRODEK AND KOMARNO TOWNS Austrian Officia]l Announcement Says Two Places Seventeen and Twenty Miles from Lem- berg Captured. TEUTONS ARE HURLED BACK Petrograd Report Says Force Which Crossed Into Russia Near Pruth Has Retreated. ITALIANS BOMBARDING GORIZIA VIENNA, June 19 (Via Lon- don?) —Grodek, seventeen miles west of Lemberg, the Galician capital, and Komarno, twenty mi'es south- west of l.emberg, have been taken by the Teutonic allies, according to an Austrian official statement is- sued here tonight. LONDON, Junr 19.—The forces of Russia are at bay along the Godek line, in Galiela, (0 the west of Lem- berg, where, with its vulnerable flank well protected by the marshes of the Dneister, it will defend Lem- berg, the capital of Galicla. Neither side, however, reports much activity during the last twenty-four hours, the outstanding claim from Petro- grad being to the eyec! that the Austro-Germans have been hurled back into Austrian territory, between the Dneister river and the river Pruth. “The French, according to the latest news, are helding the Germans to the north of Arras. They now occupy prsi- tions on three sides of Souchez and they soon may make the Geimen pesitions on this front untenatle in the view of Brit- ish obseryers. “Italy is attacking the Austrian fron- tier defenses with energy, but the only evidence of an advanehila the report of the shelling of the selleoad station at Gorieia, a fact which would in that the Itallan batteries have boen Yonsid- erable advanced. “Rumors as plentiful as contradictory, emanate from the Balkaus that the entente aNfes Mave offered Bulgaria yer- erous territorfal termws. which mpocial dispatches from Sofia dndlace touhe abeo- lutely satisfactory. Neverthelsss it I2 ovident thas ne astual allianey yet haa Deburslgtied no¢ Wl bs Bulgaria's nelghbors make the conoesstons It Las beén euullunuy demanding. ¢ Ruastan Otficial Report. PETROGRAD, June 15.—(Via Londonm, June 19, 5iéf &, m)—Admissions is made in An official statement issued tonight at | tered her gown and the clothes of those [ in her party. ) | From the nayy.yard, black with a nélt ay throng: from the spans of thé | Brookiyn and Williamsburg bridids, from | tho docks.and plers along the Manhaftan and Brooklyn water fronts, from ,scores of craft hugging the far shore of the East river and from every vantage point | of windows and housetops in the vicin-| | ity many tens of thousands saw the new-| est of American battleships glide down | | the greased ways. | . Bishop Atwood of the Protestant Epis- i copal diocese of Arfzona, in the Invoca- |tion, preveq that the ,\rlumu might be | ‘a terror to doers, of evil.” Three blasts | | from a whistle annoynced that the mo- [ment of preparedness had come. The signal was echoed from almost every steamer in the harbor till the crashing | of the aix navy hands was lost In the din. The bands united in playing “The Star Spangled Banner:” the ship trembled and {moved: the sponsor swung the two bot- |tles. They broke, a deafening roar went |up from the crowd and in a few mo- {ments the hattleehip's stern was cleaving the waters of the Bast river. It settled gracefully in the water and, carried for- ward by the welght of its 13,000 tons, swung far over in the river toward the Willlamsbury bridge. A fleet of little navy tugs drew alongside, made fast and started back with the unwieldy eap- tive toward the mavy yard docks. | Ships of the line, like the Arizona, are [built to give and recelve punishment in |#ea batties. Their mission has littis in |common with that of the battle crulsers which have been the largest ships to |engnge each other during the European war. Speed is sacrificed in the con- structicn of the battleships to welght |of armor, and against such & ship as the (Continued on Page Two, Column Two.) the war.office that the Russians have re- tired beyond the line of lakes at Grodek, than sixteen miles west of Lem- €, their ‘last line of defense In front of the Galliclan capital, The communi¢ation follows: “In the reglon of Muravieve and Shavli, and onsthe Dubyse, engagements on the 17th resultéd in no important changes. “On the evening of the 16th on the Bsura and Rawka, from Kozloff to (Continued on Page Two, Column Four) |Word Imported to Mean Less, Says Head of Ad Men CHICAGO, June 18.—~Advertising men swarmed .into Chicago today to attend the annual convention of the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World, which opens tomorrow. The convention will continue a week. It Is expected that 10,000 delegates will be in attendance, Willlam Woodhead of San Francisco, preaident of the association, said the con- vention would be the biggest in the his- tory of the organization. “Made in the U. 8. A" is the slogan the convention is going to attempt to put in the mouths of every manufac- turer and every consumer In the country, Preaident Woodhead sald. “The word ‘imported’ is not going to mean 80 much to nur peopls In the fu- ture,” he sald. ntold millions of dol- lars' worth of goods have been imporied into the United States that can and here after will be manufactured in this coun- try.” President Woodhead predicted that a great rush of business would sween the country as s result of a readjustment of conditions caused by the European war | s Week Beginning Jusie 2 |FREE MOVIE COUPON Admitting to the Following Picture Shows days named. of one adult GRAND cf-".ufi EH.H.-- l’l- lo M K ol lood for any “Monday night when ao- companied by one paid admission. ARBOR 334 snd Arbor Tour Favorite, panied by a pald admission. Good on Mondays and Thursdays with one paid ket ’rnl-ul‘ou n any Monda if accompanied by & pald admission |t This Bee Ooupon entltlubeuorwntrufickottomy one of these high class Moving Picture Theaters on the Present at Box Office with regular price paid ticket and get additional ticket free. MONROE|FAVORITE Blograph Day Hvery Tuesday. Good for Tues- days when accom- panied” by a 10c pald admission. Good on Tuyesdar evenings with one n:r‘ d admission.

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