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pan a ae Sete G REPORTS NEW SUCCESS DRIVES AIL SAY'SBERL Point Upon Which There Is No Conflict Reports Are Statements That Fighting Everywhere Is Desperate. Chief embellished hie brief statement of to-day with such terme he “hand to hand strugaies continuing without attempts.” Wood, British positions are under in- Cen Comat ven ated Nanette tacks in (he district port hegat mrutheas of Monasterseka broke dome Bib great eoemy lonmen” LONDON, We A Turkish army om srong now the rian the “defense despeten to the weenie Austrian pect, where nterimianion tol opporition” by he Germans and “deeperate enemy Just north of Longueval, at Delvillo tense pressure from the German linea, How eanguinary thie fighting along the line from Thiepval to Lonqueval has been was confirmed tn Hi opinion that twe or three German Temimente—preaumably the Branden- bargers—were annihilated in Delvillo Woods, the British Commander tn PARIS, July %—Two strong Ger- Getachmenta which attempted reach the French lines at a point of Vermandovillers, on the front, yesterday were re- Mt was oMoially announced by French War Department to-day. In tho region of the French fortrese Verdun two German attacks on Tedoubt In the ravine, south of , were checked, Frenaa, official statement says, made some { in the region of Thiaumont, Im the pector df the Fumia and ) Ghenotn Woods an artillery duel @atinues. » Fcliowing is the text of the French two Aviaior, with with Machine Gun Jammed, Rams Oppo- nent High Above Earth. » PARIS, July 2.—The Paris War OMice to-day issued the following re- Port on the activities of the aviators: “On the morning of July {7 a French acropiane piloted by BANS bsolutely Renioves j gestion. Onep es 2 HURT IN TROLLEY CRASH. BERLIN, July 29.—"#trong British @ttacks in the region of Posteres failed,” the War Office statement an- werted to-day. The text of the official statement given out at army headquarters to- day says: “In the Gomme district there was lively artillery fighting, In the Posieres sector atrong gin attacks failed. North of Bomme attempts made & by the en- bof ache were suppressed by ir “In the Meuse istrict there was Ro infantry activity. “British fire directed on French the civilian population ae. but no military, dam- K hostile aero} was shot down by full te trom our ese sree guns, It fell near Rolin. court.” ERMAN ATTACKS REPULSED ON THE SOMME AND AT VERDUN strong enemy detachmenta which | attempted to reach our lines west of Vermandovillera were repulsed by riffle fire. “On the left bank of the Meuse «Verdun front) a German attack Upon our positions on Hill 304 broke down under the right bank, two German he tacks during the nigh: against @ redoubt in the ‘ravine south of Involved serious losses to the enemy. “Our eran continuing opera- ton: ed portions of several ve trencbse ‘no north of Chapelle Sainte and in the mont work, the sectors of t Cherie Woods,” sf the Quartemaster De Terline attacked ® German machine which was 4 ing over Chalons, The ee wad ene opened st mao! gun jammed. Aight, enemy was in full “Two of our machines saw De Terline swoop upon bis adversary @t full speed, crash into him and fall with him to the ground. The French ak and two German nr: men foll within our lines, De Te: Md bape eee chines and b recelved the military oa Umht thirty. course of my machines were {n @ damaged con- dition, A sixt plane was bro July 3 our bombarding squadrons carried our @ number of operations, In all 207 shella were dropped on bivouses, depots and railway ata- ons on the bts ehem’e ‘e front.” $10,000,000 OIL LA LANDS 60 TO GOVERNMENT BAN FRANCISCO, Jul July 29.—Judge Benjamin F. Bledsoe of the United Btates District Court awarded to the United States Government to- day of Kern County oil t 10,000,000 and known h eCutehen Section, in the TANCE ouster suit brought Tatt withdrawal onder of A crash between two northbound Seo- ond Aventio cara at the corner af Fifty> sixth Street and Second Avenue to-day r hrew ge Fois: | janerchantmen were not THE BSVEWING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 329, 10 KAISER APPROVED FRYATT EXECUTION, "HOLLAND REPORTS Sentence Imposed Upon frit ish Merchant Ship Captain Upheld by General Staff WAND IS HORRIFIED | Newspapers Denounce the I'x- ecution-—Berlin Defends It as Lawful Military Act LONDON, July 1 According to # Feport from Marstricht, Holland, fo warded by the Hague correspondent of the Bachange Telegraph Com- pany, the question of Capt, Fryatt'e enecution was diseussed at the Im- perlal German Headquarters in reply to a tolegr from the Duke of Woorttemberg announcing the sen- tence and asking for ite confirmation ‘This was telegraphed tminediately by the War Council, which included Em- peror William and Gen. von Vaike hayn and other staf officers, all whom are said to have been In auree- ment on the justice of the sentence. ‘Tho Iritish public and presa to-day parched ite dictionaries for words of invective with which to brand (i many'a execution of Capt, Frya':. Universal horror was expressed, but the prese was almost unanimous in conceding the wuselesaness of re prisale in kind. It wae suggested that Great Britain should not “enter @ contest in in- humanity.” The most general agree- ment on punishment which should be meted out to Germany for exec tion of @ een captain who merely tried te protect his own vessel by raromiqg ® submarine, wae that the late Kitchener's acheme of for- bidding German naturalisation in Ragland and stopping ali German- British business intercourse for a generation after the close of the war, be adopted. A further scheme of re- taliation was suggested in the im- pounding of all German property in Bagiead until the end of the war, | tise “Atrocious,” “heinous,” “barbar- ows,” “deviish,” “butchery,” “das. tardly infamy,” “coldblooded Ger,” "vcruel traveat on the law ai tradition,” “calculated ferocity, “most brutal outrage of the war,” tg some of phrases employed uly 5 @ execution BE! witrtN July _%8.—Th lor of Capt. Chartes Fryatt, after « trial by court-martial, for attempting to Lgl, a PS ced ny submarine, denotes hase in the controversy over the wee von rights of merchantmen, German Government prise reg- ulations issued before the peeinning Sf the war adopted the bree e commit acts of war, and It revels to treat as pirates those attompting a0 to do. “he execution of t. Fryatt, Ger. man officials cont la in accord with that principle, which, accordi rman view, merely extends to warfare the principles already controlling franc-tireur activity on that this case will & definite clearing up of the Soeation” of mor- chantmen acting at intermittent times as war be FEAR OF SPIES BOTHERS THEGREW OF DEUTSCHLAND pe All Are Alert for Action by Brit- ish Ships and Other Sus- pects in Harbor, BALTIMORE, July 20—Fear of sples had grown to an obsession with cor- tain members of the German subsea freighter Doutschtand to-day, With two additional British tramp vessels in the harbor for cargo, and tho Brit- Isher Ardgyfe making no move to load, the Deutschland watchers de- veloped an unusual nervousnoss, Even trivial things worried them, AN expodition from their tug, tho Timmins, for tnatance, made a hur- ried trip to the long private pier to which press tugs are ted, after dis had be Instalied Thero, Tho nows- paper mon saw to It that np step was taken to remove the wires, for many knew that German influence had boen several days to clear away newspaper boata, The sailing time for the Deutsch. Jand is still an unsolved—an appar- @nlly unsolvable-—mystery, All talk is that she ts going out within a few days, but the truth ts not in the rumor mongers (hat swarm (he Mallir more waterfront, that they are not un- pout th Deutsohiand’s wi: men, although th not appear tnt fate of the ITEMS FOR INV! TORS. he contracts were closed Fri- 1 Up wo Com. | pelle, wh 000,000; Am de tra S1ocinth shelly, ate jater ae dante id, It te hoped in peat ree, here | |; covering that @ private telephone tine | § & operating aiong the waterfront for] ¢ men and prevent them obtaining| Oo i the] \ with the Deutschland | § AMERICAN MANAGER OF ENGLISH RAILROAD WHO GETS NEW HONOR PLEDGES TRUCE. WITH PNK TEA Milkman, Now Commander, Arranged, | STROK Be Lined Up on Dress Par- ade for the Occasion, ly Martin Green, , (Special ti Geragpengen of The M'AILEN, Tex, July 19.—& tog of G@iplomatio uncertainty overhangs the MecAllea camp to-day because of the desire of certain of the leading camp "| warriors to get into elose touch with leading warriors across the Rio rande, it would seem from the in- formation at hand that Brig. Gen, NEW BRITISH HONORS FOR H, W, THORNTON s\rmricn 1s nena ira tre om, | Idea of getting the boys owt of the American, Who Is Head of Great oe oy before Christinas, conceived " | some time ago the plan of inviting Eastern Railway, Now a Major Juan De La Flores, com. Lieutenant-Colonel, mandant of the garrison at Reynosa, A cablegram from Landon to-day |'0 eeme sarees the border ead take Announces the appointment of HM. W, | ta Thornton, the American general| Reymoes te about nine miles due Manager of tho Groat Eastern Hail-|#0uth of MeAllon, The Major with the ten-conte-straight-or-threo-for-a- quarter @ having been notified of Gen. Dyer's hospitable intent, ex- pressed himecif as delighted with the Prospect of surrounding some real food, but said he would require the permission of hie superior, Gen, Man- uel Lopes, In this state the nego- tations rested until word reached Division Headquarters that Gen. Dyer was projecting @ brigade reception to ® Mexican military leader, Possibly it ta against military reg- ulations for the General of a brigade to seek to open tea party negotiations with a commander of a supposedly hostile force without consulting with the General of the division of which the brignde ls @ part. At any rate it ‘Was semi-oMoially announced yester- day that Major Juan De La Flores will be the guest at tea this evening at the McAllen camp of Major Gen. O’Ryan, and that in honor of the oc- easion Col. Fisk will turn out the Seventh Regiment on dress parade, Col, Cornelius Vanderbilt and beaegd Edward Olmstead have been tloned ag the leaders of an escort to show Major De La Flores the way from the Texas town of Hidalgo across from Reynosa to McAllen. aque OF HONOR A FORMER PROSPEROUS MILKMAN, By what authority any military commander tn this district ventured to invite a Mexican commander over to toa has not beep revealed. It te paid that the negotiations were con- @ucted through Charles Beeson, an official of the Customs Service who is stationed at Hidalgo. It must be understood that the an- nouncement that Major Juan De La Flores, who until the Mexican revolu- tion involved everybody in our sister republic maintained @ prosperous milk route in one of the nerthern Mexican cities, would come over into the United States for tea, emanaied | | of the Engineer and Hallway ps (Territortais) ‘This appointment is the latest of | @ series of honors paid to Henry Worth Thornton since he left his Job as superintendent of the Long Island Tatiroad in January, 1914, to eo to England and run the Great Kastern road, Six months after his arrival he was appointed a member of the executive committee of rall- nagers, which advises the nt in all matters about troops and supplies by vail, ornton was born at Lay Ho was gro movin Mr. port, Ind., in 1871, from the University of in 1894 with the degree of Doctor of Science. He went into the employ of the efnnsylvania system and his was rapid. BRITISH INSIST ON EXCLUDING NEW YORKERS U. S. Ambassador Told That Thomas H. Kelly, His Wife and Joseph Smith Must Sail Monday. WASHINGTON, July 29.—American Ambassador Page at London to-day cabled the State Department that Great Britain sta upon excluding from England and Ireland Thomas Hughos Kelly of New York, treas- urer of the Irish Relief Fund; his as- metant, Joseph Smith, and Mi elly. ‘They will ‘@ England Monday on the American liner Philadelphia, Ambassudor Page has been informed by the Foreign Office that the decision to ko ude the three Americans was Trev . No reasons for exclusion rd the Irteh relief workera wan given y Ambass*“or Page, who said that eure their detention at Liverpool the Dritteh thor.ties had permitted them hotel without be- ing ractuall prisoned, Despite the apparently final decision Btate Department officials to-day still hoped the exctusion order, ta ight] from division headquarters, But even Additional representa-| 29 the information was being dissem. tions im benalf of the Americans we: sent yesterday by the State Dep: ment and also by the British Em- Dassy. WALL STREET Market remained dull, and price changea were small, American Steel Foundry moved up on report of large shell order, United Btates Steel kept between 66% and 86%. Until definite tesult of strike vote of railroad brotherhoods ts known traders will act with caution in making new com- mitment in the marke inated Gen, Dyer, and Major Warner Grando personally conducting nego- Uations with the ex-milkman, Major De La Flores came across the river on the ferry attended by his staff, one of whom wore a sult of pajamas, The other was attired in something more than fitty per cent, of the unifornr of an officer in the Ger- man army, What is puzzling the camp is this: Is Major De La Flores to come over this evening as the quest of Brig, Gen, Dyer, or the guest of Major Gen, O'Ryan? Incidentally there Is some speculation as to whether he will come at all, It is said that the object of the function ts to show Major De Market closed s| » showing ad-/ia Flores, right im the front of his for the tor number of) tice, that we have infantry, cavalry, artillery and automobiles in our army. Closl Quotations, Of course Major De La Flores knows nothing about the strength of the United States forces encamped in texas, all the Mexicans who pass to With net changes from previous closing. Ne rit cna, St » + Alile-Chalwers _. te r rte ge Leing deaf, dumb and blind, ARMY DIPLOMATS OVERLOOK. (NG NO BETS ON THE BORDER, The ttate Department may be over. koking some bets, but there need be no worry felt while we have diplo. mate in our army in Hidalgo Couaty, ‘Texas, and Major De La Flores ob- tains permission from Gen, Manuel Lopes to cross the river and take tea, Incidentally it may be stated that it Major Do La Flores and his state + ++! * Meh Oy AN GN Baiiwin Locombrre tas have the characteristic Mexican thirst, they are doomed to disap. pointment, because if the entertain. FES" SS Stn2e CELE £654. ment Is pulled off a per schedule, is all they will (oa BOSETESE ES FECETEOLE SEETEETESS Fe gaEEEECE FS ES FPETEE The cause o ji excitement that turned out the military police and frightened the people of McAllen early vestersay mornin himself to the sleuth of the anny police force. He oe T, | Ashan Bhaw, chief snatiene of wis woda water fountain in Mayor 0, P, Archor's drug store, by the fumes of Unduly stimua the Ice cream, FO jutce, root beer, guns and o' it refreshments he ym paewing over the counter, | Maurtes McAshan Shaw, boing just about to enter hie boarding couse, pulled out his automatic pistol and Conptied u inte the air, He ie that he has no excuse for his devilish action, ELE F PHF Het itree latte] ttltttet it tl teitie'+ +! Riidevster ve: Tenn Gopoer ray Os Hak isiee pa wu 3 3 din peLonacr| Boys of Seventh Regiment to, and trom over the border every day hy "6 ALL OFF « anne tie tne from Piret Pegs.) ———- " our employers speek for thanseives | NO OBJECTION TO wan s01NIN@ THE UNION, “We have no vilection to our men joining & union, They may join any, organisation (hey want, fraternal, benevolent or educational; but that organisation shail not interfere wit our conduct of our business, We hall Nght to the bitter end to main. | talm that prinety A number of Third Avenue em- ployers sald by the union or inere to be 200-appeared at the str headquarters and signed the roils, saying they had quit test night in aaticipation of the strike, Buperin- tondent Murphy of the Third Avenue Division ridiculed thie claim. ‘The effect of the campaign of the strikers to entlet the ald of the tra ling public of the Mrous was ¢ shown by the evident disinelination ot bersons to board the care, The wives and slstere of strikers gent througn the atreete and even made house-to- house visite yesterday appeailug tor & boycott of the Bronx trolley lines. Bympathisers who had imposed on themeeives the bardship of walking Jeored from the sidewalks at these who boarded the cars. UNION MEN CHARGE RIOTING TO GANGSTERS. Strikers who crowded the two meet- ing halls to-day were dressed in their Sunday best. This was in accordance with union orders, The union officials charge much rioting and hoodlumism to roughs in the employ of the com- pany who impersonated strike sym- pathisers in order to justity General Manager Mi in calling for unt. formed police escorts for all cars and asked the men to make themselves as, different in appearance as possible from professional trouble-makers. Police Commissioner Woods, to test the accuracy of Mr, Maher's statement that passengers wei afraid to board cars uniess there were uniformed policemen to guard them, allowed Chief Inspector Schmittberger to put twenty men in uniform on the cars of each of the Brong divisions. After an hour the Inspector reported the formed Patrolmen seemed to be attracting Ro more passengers <0 the cars, President W. D. Mahon of the Amaigamated Association of Street Railway Men and W. B. Fitzgerald, Chief Organiser, said they were grat- ified by the way in which the strikers were obeying instructions to avoid violence and to win public sympathy. It was inevitable, they said, that some of the men should revert to the old fashioned mob spirit at first, thoug) they heped the Bronx would see no more of it. PROMOTE STRIKE SENTIMENT ON THIRD AVENUE LINE. ‘The atriking motormen of the Union Railway gave all their efforts to-day toward promoting strike sentiment among the employees of the Third Avenue Railway lines, The Police Commissioner's order for the expulsion of all gunmen and thugs from the Bronx kept Li Finn and his squad, experts in a quaintance with gangsters and band- ‘ing them, busy through the night. They made repented visits to the car barns and the strikers’ headquarters. No gangsters were found among the strikers. But at the barns nearly a hundred were pointed out to officials of the railroad company, who, as they h: agreed, promptly dismissed ther Some of tho discharged guards be- came obstreperous and they were Immediately subjected to physical argument until they fairly howled their promises to “be good” and stay below the Harlem River until the atrike is ov Four and five blocks apart, all along the car lines, were posted groupe of policemen, constanuy in patrol communication with each other and also kept in touch by swift pa- trols of 190 mounted and motorcycle policemen, Every group was in touch with @ police or public telephone, ao that & small army of policemen could instantly be thrown into any block where threatened trouble was fe- ported, ice =Comamissaior Noon issued a a the attitude of the police toward the strike in which he said: the companies and the strik. notified of the employment and strong-arm men ‘oth promised not to employ any mon of this character in the future. ‘The present strike has not been marked by violence, but on the con- trary by notable lack of violence. ‘There have been a few isolated cases of care attacked, So far as ta in the pewrere of the police we within the mits pf aay me. ce will be vented and put do mr va ona in the Police Depart. mont have been suspended antil fur- ther not ene 47th PASSES YONKERS, Piteh Ca = Corte atter Long Tramp. ‘The Forty-seventh Regiment passed through Yonkers at 1 o'clock this after. noon on J way to Van Cortlandt Park, 0 ere of the command on ‘Dhey expect to MANCHESER, Vt, July 29, well Marston, Baltuarol, to-day two up in the Aret round of thi the Bhawanok If tourname gproent Lo" "Newman "Wnoaler | iawn. The ma jared for the third time on the south hole LL LT A A EE ‘CAMP ON BORDER tee ee SCARE OVER PLAGUE. 133 OE OF HEAT ‘SHUTS 240 MOVES; OD PER CENT. LOSS Under Ban Placed by Board | of Healt h | | CHICAGO, daly | FILM CONCEI RNS AID. Exhibitors’ League Plea to\w Health Authorities Has Had No Effect. ‘The etringent re tons which the Board of Health has imposed ov mo- ton pleture houses in Greater New York because of the infantile paraiy- | Gia goare has hit the eshibitore ee hard that the other branches of the Business have had to take hasty measures of relief in order to keep Many houses from going out of bust- Bese, It ts eotimated that fully 3 Motion pteture houses have closed tn the past five weeks, either because of poor business or by direct order of the health officera, Wusiness in the entire city has fallen off from forty-five to fifty-five per cent., on an average, the smaller houses being hit hardest and the largest ecarcely affected at all. Bome of the amall houses which etill remain open are doing but ten per cent. of the business they did prior to the epl- demic. In order to keep the ownors of these places from bankruptoy and preserve them as customers, a majority of the distributing agencies and manufac- turers have made big reductions ou the weekly rentals which they get for their filme under normal conditions, The World Film Corporation, whose exhibitors are all under contract tu play a certain number of that com- pany’e films, has nullified all such contracts for the time being, permit- ting those exhibitors who caunut pay their overhead expenses to closs down until business picks up. Other con- cerns are expected to take similar ateps towrrd giving their exlibitors an extension of time on their obliga- tions, ‘The five cont and ten cent movie houses have been hardest hit by the epidemic. Their patronage contains such a@ largo percentage of children that their revenues since children wero barred from attending moving picture shows has fallen away to almost noth- ing. The adults who used to bring the children to see the pictures are not attending themselves any more, partly because it was the children who fur- ished the incentive for their going at all and partly because they are afraid of carrying possible contagion away from the theatre. Many parents, see- ing the children barred from the movie houses but not from other places, have conceived the idea that infantile par- alysis originates in the film theatres, It te this discrimination against the motion picture houses which has led the exhibitors to protest against the Board of Health's ruling, The Motion Picture Exhibitors’ League of America takes the stand that so long as children are not barred from street cars, from Coney Island, from play- «rounds, and other places where they come in contact with each other, they should not be kept from attend- ing the movies, The exhibitors say that they take pain: keep their houses as sanitary any of the laces from which children are not Bai red, Furthermore they point out that children under sixteen muat have @ muardian when they attend the mo- tion picture houses, as prov lew, and that the guardians that their charges do not mingle with, other children, A committee from the Exhibitors’ League looked up the health records and found only twonty-clght cases of infantile paralyste in Manhat nm, north of Fourteenth Street and west of Sixth Avenue. They found but fifty-three cases in the Bronx. On these records they based a requost tw License Commissioner Hell that the strict ruling of the Hoard of Health be rescinded In districts where there ie no infection, ith Com- missioner Emerson declined to sanc- tion any deviation from the rule laid down, pet Nl EMPIRE CITY RESULTS. WIRST RACE.—For , three-year-olds and up). selina: with ded: mitle—Lit vurer, 118 a rother). "t to 10, 1 0 8 and out, | tar Gift, ‘116 o 6, out and et yh). WO to Timo, 1.41 3-5. Counsel Gainaborough tna” ‘Good ran, acheoilaiaiotanes SARTOGA ENTRIES. ff 4 ‘entries for Monday's races ow ap ttle Fane od ran qMiuk “ Ae as he. ey TOGA RACE TRACK, N. ¥., 1 al ait al iis a pee a teat ft usin Nese Sa Gap Kort IN MMODLE WEST; Bie CROP DAMAGE | Torrid Wave Stil. Stil Spreading Reception in wiued heaadl Pitegerait, but not ae © representa. | Small ienilh ie the Most; Death and Ruin in Wide Sec- They aust | tion, With Chicago Centre. To-day found ae and eortiog between (he why and Allegheny Mountains #tttt Nerina from heat, ot spell would comtinue Uae and posribiy oll newt A total of 188 dead and eral hundred prostrated was the taken by the beat oo fer io reotion Viret reports of serious dai | Crom the torrid w throughout crop district of Hiinvis came pours eas and Nebraska “ore lar information indigate to wilt under the gun aad drought, Reports of cool breezes deve: in the fur Northwest were made the weather forecaster to-day, Ho was held that it may develop clent strength to blow the heat ous of the Middle Weat, ury in Ch! jo was down o'clock this morning. Jt tarted an upward climb, Chi- death toll between midnight day and noon to-day was 07, dont reported try until to-morrow and its extension to the North Atlantic Coast States wan forecast to-day by the ‘Teather Hureau. The “Hudson Bay High,” which brought some relief throughout the northeastern part of the yet | ing its force before the from tho West, and tomperas tures will rise throughout the East to- night and Bunday, STATE TO OPEN BEACHES; WOODBURY ORDERS INQUIRY Move to Reclaim Public’s Rights Follows Mitchel’s Request for Action, ALBANY, July 2 eral Woodbury to- Deputy Attorney General leonard J, Obermeter, in charge of the New York office of the Attorney Gen- eral's department, to begin an ine vestigation as to the Coney Island and other beaches are obs structed by resort owners, Court action will follow, The Attorney General has taken thie step after a request made by the Mayor that the obstructions on the various beaches be removed, Title to the land is vested in the Stal according to a recent decision the Court of Appeals, CANADABARS N, Y, CHILOREN IN EFFORT TO AVOID PLAGUE None From ‘his Vicinity May Enter Dominion Is New Quaraa- tine Order, OTTAWA, Ont., July 2%—The Cae nadian Government to-day placed @ quarantine on children under sizteem years of age coming from New Yori City and vicinity. ‘This action was taken as a bar against the Introduction of infantile paralysis into thet Dominies. * You Ought to re at Brighton! Jo all the city aay ill fond a a eu hs, $1,80 Shore Dinner, 1210 830 P.M $1,00 Table D'Hote, 610 8 P.M. Reasons e LOVENA'and CADESKOFF, Busia Dancem, wid te +s toad RILORENCEF MAGDA DAHL, ALBERT FRANCIS WADE, ve |e Rarit MISS ZIZIANand ART SHELDON, Dancem, Boo! M. BASY'S Dancing Orchecars. BRIGHTON MUSICAL ———> __RELIGIOUS NOTICES, Eee maken two year \ val rer tae Figet tN We nO eiate