The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1917, Page 3

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oe a@ barrel! lt is due suc! IT $2 A BARREL: "BREAD CHEAPER? No, It Is Not, and Bakers Say ., $4 Drop Means Noth- f ing to Them. PRICES TO BE KEPT UP. | Won't Even Make Loaves Sa: Bigger Until Flour Is Still Cheaper. This is to-day’s best information for the housewives’ of The Evening World: Butter has dropped one cent and @ half in two days. It dropped half cent on Thursday. It dropped a whole cent yesterday. Ask your retailer about it. Tell him to ask Ma wholesaler about it. If the re- tailer does not know that there has deen a decrease in the wholesale pricea—ask him to look over the market reports of the Urner-Barry Company and P. Q. Foy's Daily Market Report. Eove are always plentiful. The receipts at this port for two days, Thursday and Friday, totalled @bout 17,000,000 dozen, There may be some consolation in this. There 4a what practically amounts to a private boycott against consump- tion of eggs. It appears that fully 50 ver cent. of the Housewives of this city have reduced their cog buying. The gamblers know this and they are worried sick, The respectable merchant knows the gambler is responsible for high prices. Here is a publicly ex- pressed thought from a high class ag dealer—its worth while. Read it; “Our prices are fully 10 cente too high to satisfy English buyers. They are at present receiving suf- Aeient quantities from Ireland to keep them going. The speculators @re all wrong.” It was signed by Charles F. Droste of Droste & Snyder, Think of it. Two months ago The Evening World stated that the agent for Great Britain turned up his nose at the arrogant prices Nxed on cons by a group of specu- lative buvers. And in spite of these frank admissions neither the Chicago Exchange nor the Mer- cantile nor the Butter and Egg Exchanges in this city have men strong enough to drive the food patriots out of business. It may ve that, as a butter man has ob- served, “sentiment” may do what the gambler and the respectable merchants have so far failed to do vive the American public a square deql. ne foregoing is rea y meant high prices, It was put up there, the top, just to show the housewive that The Evening World ts not overs | looking anything that vitally con- cer ning World story on the big ing the bread mak tory: ‘DROP IN FLOUR IS NEARER $4 THAN $2. The price of high grade four, kind ot flour your baker says he use to make the loaves you buy from the retailer, has gone down aimost $4 a barrel, the reduction is approximately e ments as Ward's, Abbott's, mann’s, Pechter's, Shulte'’s, é&c., say that they frankly admit this big very one of them admitted it. But lest cantanker- | dition, ous souls among the makers of our} “daily bread" the following cumpara- nitted with the Pillsbury corpor- reduction in the cost of flour, there be some dubious or tive prices were sub compliments of the ation: | Today Three wecks agp. Pilisburs's best 8148.00 bot ri | Bakers’ Patents 18.00 bo} 16.00» “You may say that reduction is near anything else,” 5 ager of the Pillsbury corporation GET THEIR FLOUR CHEAPER; | WHAT DO BREAD BUYERS GET? And now for the bakers; The Ward Baking Company admits the big reduction, but, in the absence | BAKERS SEE NO REASON FOR| of the general manager, George Ward, nobody would discuss prices. The Cushman Company admits the i through that “it did not discuss big reduction, but sent w an employ prices With newsp The man: mont of Fleishmann's said: “It pers. quite true, as you point out, that u price of flour. It is big ust there has been a considerable re tion in the Thergy’s no denying it. But you remember that we made no inc in the cost of loaves, nor did we r duce the size commensur prices that prey not think this reduction he permanent, the loaf will be bigger to be. Personally I do have two sizes of loaves, 10 and cents. 10-cent loaf a year ago, when flour was lower.” Before taking up the comment of the! hultes Corporation ! it should be noted that the conten tion of all the bread-bakers amounts to this: That they began cutting down the size of the loaf when flour There was reduction, but nothing, ‘Slaim, in proportion to the Manager of the was selling at $9 @ barre! radu they wholesale advances of fou A $1 a barr t nothing to them, But in curioad | FLOUR : re “France Bade Me Germany: as diplomatist, appetizer for to-day’s story on| statesman, that has been produced in| not pe American people, of German origin, liberty, asserting the rights of Ar at the moment when her ent 3 them. The feature, however, of to-day's food story is the reply of| the bread makers tu yesterday's bve reduc tion in flour prices. Before present. rs’ answer there is this to be said as an introduc. into the war would count most h many like me in France. lea the “There is another thing | wish to say, and oh, | 8, with fury. Russia is in- «AM procl Russia is a traitor, She [continued earnestly. “I have been ‘in made war and France, who w sprang to her ai sistance and to her own defense, | is ignorant the whole world | Americans could not ev knows, we were not prepared. Hoe had great reverence for the Czar, | this traitor country seeks his Little Father, the head of his re- make peace, Russian and /ligion. And then one day he gets the German soldiers exchange cigars and | news that his Little Father has been | Strous war only one thought consoles Liability to a year's imprison. compliments, Because of this con-|chased off his throne (qu'on a rosse millions of German soldiers | son Petit Pere were Mme. Bernhart's have been withdrawn from the east-|actual words), and he decided that ern front and sent to crush France. |tho Little Father was not such a bis They are ten to one against us now|person after all! And the Little for the last three} lather has lands which but everywhere France with | vided, and every Russian will get a : brave Ally, them back, winning more territory.{after all, not so much, then perhaps American troops reacn}God is not to be feared either, and France—I cannot describe to you the | justice and right are nothing, and chi Put that in your note book,| pledged to he Housewife! “Yesterday w a barrel; to-day we repeat it biish- leisoh- Eng. il man- | And it really means a saving of frc The Manager r of the baking depart |are hoping the new crop may warrant but there te with the nee the last raise, As far as I can see, bakers do is Kolng to Of course, if tt should It will have Would present reduced whole sale prices warrant a bigger loaf? | t think so. We reduction is big but not] }enough to warrant a bigger loaf, if this should be. pe nobody can tell what will | the present time we are making a loaf | 8T@Y and 17 ounces to sell| her thoughts crashed | really an 18-ounce loaf,” struck the Socialist conferen, There are fifteen ounces in the d twenty-three in the 16-cent loaf. The advance has been approximately 60 per cent. over a William Peehter of Peohter, Inc.: "Of > course you can never tell what com- | themsel¥ petition will do, but 0 at there 1s nothing in this re-| ists to meet with them and talk of| big as it 1s, to warrant a b ger loaf or reduced prices, Of cours \if four keeps on dropping I suppose | them! there will be a bigger loaf. We don't| like to | nt high prices or a smaller loaf. | and sh p in mind that while wheat has|try. Why, even the ¢ dropped, flour has not gone down pro- We on the east side poruonately, have had to raise th thi we sell bread by the y “President Wilson Is the Greatest Di- plomatist, the Most Remarkable States- man, That Has Been Produced in a Cen- tury. “I Proclaim to the World Russia Is In- famous; Russia Is a Traitor. France Will Fight to Her Last Man; to Her Last Woman; to Her Last Child.” As to Germans—“Why Should I Speak of These People, These Assassins, Who Jumped at the Throat of My Beautiful, My Heroic Country? “WE SHALL NEVER FORGIVE THEM. WE SHALL TEACH HATRED OF THEM TO OUR CHIL. DREN AND OUR _ CHILDREN’S CHILDREN. FOR US THEY WILL BE FOREVER THE _ISHMAEL AMONG THE NATIONS, THE ETER.- NAL OUTLAWS OF THE HUMAN RACE.” By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “ O, it was not my hour,” sald Sarah Bernhardt simply. “I knew my hour had not come when Viviani entered my room in Mount Sinai Hospital, where by every law of nature and common sen T should have died, and bent over my bed and kissed my hand. ‘It is France come to visit me!’ I said to him, “So I felt when the chief of the French commission * to the United States took a moment from his gigantic labors to come to call on a sick woman, France bade me live and America would not let me die.” Mme, Bern- hardt added: “I was so well cared for at Mount Sinai, And the American surgeon who operated on me per- formed a miracie. 1 am better fn health than I have been in years. Why, I can eat anything now.” And by way of proof, Sarah Bernhardt, great actress and great woman, divided a rich piece of cake into two pieces, gave one to her covetous Airedale Buster Brown, who sat ‘beside her, eating the other herseif. We were having tea in the suite which Mme. Bernhardt has occupied in Briarcliff Lodge, at Briarcliff, since she left Mount Sinai Hospital last week and where she will remain until September, when her tour, inter- rupted by what was believed to be a mortal illness, will be resumed. Below us stretched the rolling hills ee soar aes of Westchester County, veiled yester-| enthusiasm, the ardor, which the day afternoon by a heavy mist, at | sight of their American uniforms and Bernhardt pouted and} the American flag will send through railed from time to time, quite like a] every heart. little girl balked of a picnic. Actually] “I pray that your troops go soon. she had been deprived of her afte noon motor trip, but, except for oc- | will take three or four months to pre- casional cynicisins addressed to the] pare your men for trench fighting, shrouded landscape, she seemed hap-| but they can be trained four or five pier, younger, more radiant than she] miles behind the lines, and meantime has appeared at any time within ten] France will know and take courage There is not an hour to be lost, It from the fact that the soldiers of her WILSON DIPLOMACY A MIRACLE sister republic are on her soll, fight- OF STATECRAFT. ing with her for democracy, M glad you have come to see| “France will fight to her last man, me, for there are many things | to her last woman, to her last child! that I want to tell you.” began the] exclaimed Mme. Bernhardt with who has written the|t name of her country on millions of} numertcally, And the flower of our American hearts. your President Wilson is the greatest | niuses, have given thelr blood that ic fervor, “But we are not great “Dirst, this: That} youth has died. Our poets, our ge most remarkable | the i¢ as of liberty and justice may ish, he has guided the] “Do not forget that I say Russia ts including 40,000,000 | infamous among all nations,” Mme. into this war for] Bernhardt added, “Before they de- t-|clared their republic of words and ce clouds their Czar, pitiful tool of a WW-|German wife, was intriguing for ily is a miracle of statecraft, 1 84y|peace, And when I met that Ittle use I was of those who were | Czar ye Wilson, There were | man. Sago, I thought him a good We talked of politics, of his plans velopment of his country, a I thought him a dreamer, but a with bit- | dreamer of gentle, peaceful dreams. y 3RICA does not know that m it to the country, Mme. Bernhardt | Russia several times, [ know the | Russians. Tho Russian of the people nd brutal to a degree n understand. @ to be Ji nd, is beating} piece, and if the Little Father was heroes that have died are dead and ome, let us give our German brother a cigar } I have no words to reproduce the mm $60 fury of sarcasm which Bernhardt renity, took on the color of a storm |iashed sea. of Alhot's bakery Of] Bernhardt's eyes have all the chang- ing moods and color of t They are now green, now »pen, v Suddenly the swift htning of and at In the dough it is| Storm that had burat over huss kholm > ¥ side opinion from|5 # Frenchmen bave accepted ast side bakers | the invitation of the German Social -|peace?” Mme, Bernhardt asked me should be shot 1 sho 1a pistol in my own ha ot theao traltors to their coun Lund are bet than’ these men jalists support their Government wages. That is|'They are jingoes (tres chauvin) and stot the loag, | w they invited the French Social und, | ists to this confere they said loaf and a T-cent! "But t utter of Alsace-Lorraine will not be discussed’ dn other Live,’’ Says Bernhardt, “‘And America Would Not Let Me Die’’ lowering ugh the u know that men calling scornfully, “Ah, if T could only reach id WL PAY BON poe ARTY BOS | j ‘All Public Service Commission $ Employees to Subscribe to $ War Loan, Summer bonuses in the form of Liberty Bonds of from $50 to $500 de- nominations will be paid nexe week by New York insurance firms to their employees, no matter what their length of service. The first firm to adopt this plan is Chubb & Son, No. !5 South William Street, insurance | underwriters, Through Hendon Chubb, senior member of the firm, it Was announced that the bonus would be 6 per cent. of the yearly salaries of the em- ployees. More than three hundred will benefit under this arrangement. PESTOHETE DEG GES © 3 x : f > | Many already have subscribed to the 2 loan. Other insurance compani 3 > have agreed to follow Chubb & Co. 4 | plan, The Christmas bonuses will be o | paid as usual, All Public Service Commission em- 4 { | ployees have agreed to take Liberty °. ‘Bonds. At @ meeting addressed by $ Oscar Straus, Chairman of the Com- ° ' mission; Travis H. Whitney, a mem- . oe { ber; Secretary James B, Walker and g } - D. L, Turner, Chief Engineer, more é than a hundred outright purchases of baby bonds ww. made and pledges from the remainder of the temple received, The Public Service Commission Employee's Credit Union is handling the sub- a === scriptions and has offered to carry bonds for employees on small weekly War Department’s |)" ire 'afs: erouy of coners men to Official Guide for Registration Day take up Liberty Loan bonds Is the 1908 Class of Harvard, Guy Emer- son, Secretary of the Laberty Loan These are the official directions of the War Department for regis- tration day, June 6: Publicity Committee, who Is also Bec- retary of the Class of ‘08, announced LIABLE TO REGISTRY, All male persons (citizens or to-day that the class had made w substantial subscription, In addi- aliens) born between the sixth day of June, 1886, and the fifth tlon to this more than 100 men have made individual subscriptions. day of June, 1896, both dates in- cluded, except: Sears Roebuck Co. announced through its New York office to-day Members of any duly organized force, military or naval, subject to that it had taken $1,000,000 of the ‘loan for itself, to be followed later by the purchase of a block for em- be called, ordered or drafted into military or naval service of the United States; including all of- ployees. The New York Trust Co. ficers and enlisted men of the has taken $10,000,000. The United States Trust Company announced the following subscriptions; London, Liv- And then the French Government J regular army, regular army re- asked me to go to erlin and I agreed | serve, officers’ reserve corps, en. to do for my country what I had al- listed men's reserve corns, Wai Lo é git! Owsteo ¢ SARAH’ BERNHARDT: $ 06-4946-66-0-8.049Y6 4404-004 09449494949498O09OOOH 064664666 words, we intend to keep what we stole from you, so don’t let's say any- thing about it, but come and talk with us of peace FIRST HAND ACCOUNT OF A HISTORIC EPISODE. be ko was because of Alsace-Lorraing that I played in Germany—ye after many years of refusal 1 act in Berlin.” As the sun bursts forth suddenly after a thunder storm, a great light of tenderness irradiated Mmv, Bern- hardt's face at the thought of the lost provinces of Alsace-Lorraine. “You see,” she explained in her gentlest voice, “the Alsatians had begged me to come and act in Alsace. And I accepted, for were they not French in heart and spirit? But I received word from Germany that I would not be permitted to act in Al- sace unless I consented to appear first in Berlin. So I explained to the Alsa- tians that I could not come to them erpool and Globe Assurance Co., $500, 000; Brown Bros, $500,000; Memorial Nut & Bolt Co,, $360,000; Carnegie In- stitute, $250,000; Susan IF, Colgate, ways refused for myself. But I d u clined to meet the Kaiser. “onal Guard and National Guard | $250,000; Paul G, McIntire, $100,000 | “This is what happen : reserve recognized by militia bu. | Russell Birdsall, $100,000, Other su wer attended my first perform- | reau, the navy, the m : a na ware senadae user dt Wan waranty Chciopie ee y narine corps, | scriptions were, Oscar Alexander & coast guard, naval militia, naval marine corps re. Co., $25,000; United States Rubber Co., for itself, 31,000,000; Sinclair Oll & Refining Co., $400,000 for employes; Halle & Stieglitz, $1,000,000; Cush- man's Sons, $100,000; Public Bank of New York, $500,000, The 40,000 employes of the Erie Rall road system learned to-day that Pres ident F. D, Underwood had followed military plans in organizing them for 4 big Liberty Loan drive. The de- tails, worked out minutely by Mr. Underwood, were announced this great that when I left the theatre a | 10,000 Germans gathered and shouted, | Te8erve force | ‘Vive la France!’ and had to be dis ve and national naval volun- persed by soldiers, at night in iny | teers recognized by the D : ldressing room a very distinguished | partment i wavy De yerman came to me—the rarest thing s in the world is a really distinguished TIME AND PLACE. German,” Mme, Bernhardt interpo- lated, “but this man had been much in nee. He explained to me that it is the custom for rtist to ask © mec Em pe d then « hudience ‘is accorded’ "No, teal, | HOW YOU MAY REGISTER, |‘Never! That would be more than I Go in person, June 5, to the Jean My Government has not | registration place of your hos asked me to do that, That is te ; home On Tuesday, June 5, 1917, be- nd 97) M. in your precinct, If you expect to be { muc } smy friend JY V 0 be ab- ; tea ierman “and. sald | Sent from home June 5, go at once | morning. Not an employe will be sadly, ‘I understand you, Madame. | to the clerk of the county where | overlooked A divisional committees has been appointed for each operating division But it will be necessary for me to be you now happen to b |taken violently ill and to go home Jand stay in bed for a week, When » or if in 4 city of 30,000 or over to the city you have left Berlin 1 shall venture |f clerk, and follow his instructions; | of the railroad, These have charge of to recover.’ if sick, send a competent friend, | ull Liberty Bond canvassing. Sub Ber why should I spenk of these | The may deputize him to | committees working under them are people, ther assassins who || Prepare your card, responsible for driving home the Lib- jumped at the throat of my beautiful, ||] PENALTY IF YOU DON’T REG. shy an Fie ar sO Mrieclglieves | my herote country! Out of this mon ISTER, | intendent, master mechanic, division engineer and the heads of transpor- It is that at last the wonderful soul || ment; then enfore Hey Reeser ood maintenance iuoxd Ai GRAD eiiGiE of way departmen of France has been made visible t Conductors and brakemen will have j the world. Persons who say France weet | their own committee, headed by the has been made over, regenerated by BLAST UNDER RIVER LINKS trainmaster, two conductors and two the war, do not know of what they trainmen, In his circular appeal , President Underwood tells his men speak, France has always been, will Two NEW SUBWAY BORES always be, gallant and chival i that an employe buying a $60 bond has furnished a fund which will equip liven to-day she is a noble enemy t a member of the Marine Corps with a nation viling oll, her BONS W 4 all the necessary Ing for one refuses to retahne {Ou Tunnel of Broadway-Fourth| your; that is, with. winter uniforn, |She says, ‘I she even among murderers,’ | hot be a murderer Avenue System Opened pect betabadit cect oy neo aghated | ‘But remember thi de: hing; or it will buy a complete mand ene Through. supply of medicine, or @ rifle, bel long lace-clad arm shot forth from the tea gown of white bro and supply of cartridges: cade which draped the sibylline Jof ‘he bed rock of Coenties KR ing, connected the Brooklyn and | d registration, A blast of dynamite in the heart APER LOA Ah unee Suga hou teach hatred of them to our chil- | | of the Shuits Russians, | For us they will be forever the | nder the Hast Kiver which is to be I cannot see a big-| 1 have known Mme, Bernhardt] ighmael among the nations, the ny the Broadway-Mourth Avenue | at $4 Leet ein th’ | tor twelve years and [ have never| eternal outlaws of the human ly. ayatemn ta alia London Politicians Are Guessing jber barrel, ahis ts} acon her, either When weting her groat| race, ’ j ar Pay ! i Mi theit prices any, | Peles upon the stage or In Greatest! Thi of France, bleeding ana] “ill be bored through to a at Changes With Few Det- they have had to|@f all roles—berself—when she ap-| outr yoke In M It's | week inite Facts. peat Of courea we {peared £0 splendidly alive. Her face,| words, the most r-| ‘There was a partition of rock five made thinner by illness, had that look | rible words, 1 have ever heard fre nick between the bores, Cifforg| LONDON, June 2.—Polltical circtes no guarantee |0f @ leopard about to spring; the| human Iipg = Nand gargs of $26,.|#F® discussing supposed impending cee eee | leopard’s grow! was in her throat, and | man Bit |e lena tians froin; the. ‘ BEA salt her eyes, Jade green in moments of 0 Of ‘Under river tunnel. work |"O ROOM Ons FO SRS annisiry B06 A os ; | | 1@ Public Service ssion, |Fedistribution of posts. The only off! ] he ate 4 ure on bo ‘| Food Controller Devonport, but the — | Pio connection between the new| morning newspapers predict other i pane way subway in Manhattan and! changes, Involving Minister of Munt VLADIVOSTOK, June 8--Tho} yurth Av subway In Hrook- | tons Addison, Chairman Cowdray of United States Railroad Commission | voth of wh will be controlled ithe air Board, President Rhondda of to the Russian Government, headed eB. RT. Went he dual #¥#- | the ‘Local Government Boar ‘ost by John F, Stevens mer Chief] Ym Mill cross from Whiteball Street, | master General Illingworth and others neer of the Panama Canal has | irookiyne t Of the Gunpal: | Se HUBBE TAGE WH Ay especie te ja 1 he ne rs of AL AE... Sa | Churchill rejoining the Government te So amianion wore cordially received by! noe aiueg hy aly Bary Fall again to the fore, The Dally News a committee of sold and working a Jaswerts that he ts being seriously nm ' : A Becke even-year-old | considered as the new Chairman of men, The speeches 4 red ind rai ae aE s Ktrect, wax| the Air Board, cated eagerness on the part of th this morning b ing from the | The Times says Dr, Addison prob German| people to accept 4 4 tenement at No,}ably will Join the War Cabinet with- the spirit in whic 1 rt t, where wis ty-|out portfolto, The Com | ‘The Daily Chrontele alates Mr, Ul studying lingworth to succeed Lord Devonport, | Vladivostok, Th t i AA bir jin which case, it says, Dr, Addison 4 Sunday on their journe 10 tb ni ' “ » t t prot ograd m i Gene ee Fund Association, $350,000; Ward BACK YARD GARDENS The Only Safe Thing to Plant and Not Be « Century Plant—Add Tin Cans to Tin Cans, and tles to Bottles, and You Have the Entire Gate Rec for a Vegetable Arena That Cost You a Million Dol- lars’ Worth of Work and Made You So Round Shoul- dered You Can Lie Down on Your Back and Rock — Yourself to Sleep. h By Arthur (‘‘Bugs’’) Baer. Copyright, 1917, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World’ We don't know whether contrary Mary had a contrary garden or not. Old Mamma Goore didn't mention the harrowing details. But there is no doubt as to the muHsh instincts of the back yard garden. You inoculate {t with a boatload of seeds and pat it in the face with a valvet spade, You mantoure it with a hand painted rake and scratch its back when+ ever @ potato bug tickles it, You elect yourself a one-man chain gang and accept the nomination, which means that you wobble around that garden until your tongue hangs out @o far that it gets freckles on it. You crochet that gob of clay with an individual hoe made by the best hoe tatlor on Fifth Avenue and cut to fit that garden personally. No garden of yours is going to wear ready made utensils, You have the finest col+ lection of garden jewelry in the tournament. To the ignorant, every worm seems to have the same expression on his face, But you bend over that garden until you know every worm {u It, including yourself. You plant that garden with medicated seeds, jog its memory with an antiseptic trowel, bathe the blamed juvenile ranch with sterilized water and compel the weather man to furnish you germ proof clouds and filtered rain for it. And when harvest time comes, what do you harvest in addition to lumbago? You have a crop of vacant tomato garages, unoccupled bottles and deserted shoes. vs You have about as much influence with that young farm as Charles Evans Hughes had with the barber vote. So far as vegetation Is con- cerned it looks like a branch office of the Sahara Desert. Although you had the works chaperoned by one of the most stylish scarecrows that was ever clothed out of a mail ofder catalogue, the sparrows conscripted every anced as fast as you published them. The crows were your best customers, but nobody ever heard a cash registe er a cro orga h register ring after a crow Ashes to ashes, dust to dust, is a melancholy Prescription, but Just add tin cans to tin cans, and bottles to bottles, and you have the entire gate receipts for a vegetable arena that cost you a million dollars’ worth of work, and made you #o round shouldered that you can lle down on your back and rock yourself to sleep. Everybody in the neighborhood seems to think that the price of admission to your garden is a broken bottle or an uninhabited boot. Although you planted the best brand of «plit peas, no apllt pea soup awakens you in the morning with Its cheerful chirping. Raspherry number one, Although you vaccinated the ground with the finest edition of self raising flour, no flapjacks fill the air with thelr Joyful fluppine as they flap gleefully about. Raspberry number two. Although you planted ® whole flock of dried apples, you don’t wet any apple sauce. All you raise isa fine crop of raspberries. The only safe thing to plant and not be disappointed te a centur Plant. That takes ninety-nine years to bloom, which is ve compared to the ordinary garden seed. But after flivvering ar the average seed, you want to he carefal with the century plant, 7 sudden shock of It rushing into bloom may give you palpitation of the } The water cooled garden hone is the best type to use in bathing ts garden, The garden ladders should be very wall ventilated between tns rungs. A hot, stuffy ladder trritates the fragile cement and rocks which compone the back yard garden, Don't be afraid of brushing the nap off your garden, Although it may appear anemic at first, It will stand a lot of bruising before it unravels. If you like the Italian unken garden effect, you < acquire that by sinking money in {t. The more money you alnk sunkener it gets. You can have ono of the suckenest wardens tn eithe league If you persist. The floating garden can eaally be established t means of a hose, The hanging gardens aren't stylish @ince. lynchine went out of favor, but there are still a few hanging gardena in the aouth, » ‘Tho vegetable garden can bo insured against failure by plantine saur vegetables canned. The germs that blight vegetables don't carry cat openers. Armored plants are the only kind that can cruise umalont ons U-bitghts. If you want to be certain of a crop of vegetables, plant som, that have had some experience. Don't expect an amateur vegetable. te mattle against professional bugs and w " a vegan bleaipd ca $5 and weevils, Buy the vegetables w ack yard gardening would reduce the high price of living if wasn't tor the high price of back Yard gardening, tis pe walking to save a jitney carfure and wearing out five cents’ worth of When you lose you lose, and when you win you lose. y mur und w ers my Repudiated—Referendum On, Allan Benson, Socialist Presiden candidate at the last election, will re- ee iiiadin sign from the party if it does not as a rn whole repudiate anti-draft solutions ado rd at ite St, Louis m Ung. Mr. All Sales Mu { Be M ad f Benson made this statement in Yon- . Delivery on the Spot to kers to-day, He declared a re dum vote was now being taken on the Prevent Speculation Specula i St. Louls resolutions, The result will | be known early in Jul resolutions proposed draft by “mass action,’ Henson be- | tures on the Chic ago Butter and FE lieves this could be construed Beard has b a ° ou s been “dl by w re meaning the use of force against con- poorer i lution which was adopted u Mr. Henson said he was not su mously at a meeting of the bo: prised at the resignation from the] terday Under the CHICAGO, Juno 2.—Trading in ¢ new arrange | their relatives and friends in Cathe Ur | dral College, party of John Spargo, formor Soctal-| sales ure lint ist National Executive Committes. | et “re Hun! man, To date, he sald, the party us|” a whole had not spoken, but he indi he resulution adopted by the box cated that the utterances of individ- | says: ual members, some of them holding| “Owing to high positions, justified Spargo's| ing opinion charge that the Soc! seemed to be “pro-( American, J to spot transact mnly widesp: dand grow Mong the people at large lint organization | that sales of tutures in food products rman and un-| result in adv © prices of th products, a conclusion to which, how= << ny possible cause for complaint and ishop Patrick J. Hayes to-day| thereby prevent, as far us wo are con ordained twelve young men to the] cerned, unrest’ and watisfuct priesthood at St. Patrick's Cathedral. | our fellow countrymen t The Bishop celebrated the Pontifical Bive comfort to the nation's Mass and the newly ordained priests | enemies.” will celebrate their first Solemn High| , Twenty-five individuals and nine N rma dealing in eggs were indictec Masses at their respective churches] firms dealing in. exis were Indi to-morrow |by the Federal Grand Jur All of the newly ordained priests|ternoon for alleged violation of the are from St. Joseph's Seminary, Dun-| Sherman An ist law woodie, Bollowing the ordination | - they gave their first blessings to| Weaterm Union to in Oh No. 462 Madison Avenue,| CHICAGO, June 2 twenty-two students were also ad-| < en t (wenty*tWo \audente Union Telegraph Company, tt was an The new priests are Stephen Ry-|nounced to-day, t¥ to build what is backi, Graham Reynolds, Francis! planned to t tel McLaughlin, Joseph Mulligan, Tim-\graph. buil will othy Wheland, George — Murdock, |be located. In the downtown dist of William Duffy, ‘Daniel Sullivan, |Chi und t tructure al will Peter Buckley,” John McCormick, cost $1,000,0 All told the project i Michael Lucey and James Kan vol nditure of $3,000,000, The Economy -wa of buying “SALADA" OonYTLOW THA is in the fact that a single pound will yield at least 380 cups of delicious tea. none ‘ly wil! become Postmaster Oy Safe Everywhere—SALADA TEA C0., 100 Hudson St., New York

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