Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE “it is more precious that this America should live than that we Americans should live.” Secretary of the Interior Franklin Lane. | “GREEDY POULTRY GAMBLERS, } OVER 64,000,000 POUNDS IN STORAGE, “STUCK” AT LAST ws ne _ With New Broilers and Other) Fowl Coming In They | Must Sell. a eS | cents a pound wholesale and by Sat-| urday dropped to 41% cents the pound | wholesale, The indications are that there will be another drop this week. The butter men are feeling the eco- | | nomic cuts of the housewife on her| daily and weekly purchases. All of the food men realize now that econ- omy in the household {9 worse than a| dozen strikes against any one com- modity. Last week there were 68,874 packages received. At the rate of 60| pounds to a age, this makes a! total of 8,282,440 pounds received in| days. total receipts since when the new season opened, | ro 243,548 packages, ‘There is now | storage 6,230,716 pounds, against | Thin te the day for The Evening | Lsie.186 at this time dest year, Tue) World's weekly review of the bigh!tned receipts cand. ; coat of living. To-day’s story has to| pounds less in storag do with poultry, with broilers and 30 cents, against 43 cents a pound at squabs andy sand what-nots of | {h2 beginning AM sanen the Povo vite of these es, the favorite the fowl line, The object of the story |jocal trade paper doce like to poke is to give the housewife another ex-| fun at the housewives. Here's one of | ample of what food gambling does to| its this week's consolation gems: | & country that permits it—and also| “Hutter will be the. hignest this | to wet forth another instance of how | War thnes”—and please, Mrs. toune one of our allies sat back on its calm| wife, accept this infa } dignity and declined to buy poultry|as the trade paper's reasoi @t prices fixed by speculators. price is on a level with all other fats throughout the FINE FOR HOUSEWIFE. She Knows Now Gamblers Must Come Down With Exorbitant Prices. te { ; 4 ser ountry.” This par- Well, the poor poultry men, gam-|tioylar journal is against food regu- blers and non-gamblers alike, are in| jation, | } @ bad way. They're stuck. They| “We do not believe America needs { have piled ayey in something like 164] 4 food dictator, Suppiy and demand tobeted er bis Halinda GE fee are far better regulators n any Werehouses 61,387,049 pounds of frozen |jegisiative body which may delexate poultry. Classified, the list includes] such power to one man," it says. 5 broflers and roasters, squabs \18 SUPPLY AND DEMAND JUST A ab chicks, guinea fowl bie t FALLACY? A les a miscellaneous collection of 8 sn ities Wand hae GOWN: Be turkeys led to slaughter early last biggest men th ‘winter. » rules of supply This is an increase, according to completely the Government re 318 per| ignored by rs. Her- cent. over lust year's storage hold-| bert Ward, buyer for England, ts on ings. The holdings in turkeys alone |record as stating that he would not} are treble those of last ye: This in-|buy butter for his country at the teresting collection of the dainties of | present ficial price the poultry yard was turned into] H eidler, an Eighth Avenue | storage at 26 ts a pound, In 1916] jobber, has this comment to make on just as interesting, though not hait |The ning World’a story of last numerous, a collection was ¢ week to the that the house- signed to stora t 18 cents wives are the gamblers a pound and brought out at what w ‘ accepted as a fairly reasonable price LITTLE TIME LEFT FOR’ GAM- BLERS TO “CLEAN UP.” , The speculators are terribly upset a time when butter They want somebody to t this vein: collection off their band y want it to be known that t have above ™ 64,000,000 pounds packed away. They week endin would like Mrs, Housewlfe to know these receipts {that frozen poultry 1s much more shed consumption of palatable than o bit of dear terder- the product had any effect on the loin or double-dear porterhouse. Last | wholesale market prices winter they did not want her to have sivealescil De any part oftheir fancy collecth Wholesale and retail prices NAMES OF SEIZED SHIPS kept up to the ‘top notch of » cost of living” consistently sessment ws) GHANGED BY GOVERNMENT storehouses were 1 ‘ | fident hope ut merry | —_— would “bite” at speculati bar Rachratened Gahure in Lonny When Lioyd George, jus Geier Rechristened Schurz in Honor how mean he can be, put chickens In of Famous German-Amei the luxury column.’ ‘The housewife ; can draw her own Soldier-Statesman whether England took t delicate SHINGTON, June 4 way of telling the food Secret here that she would announced shat tt down to excessive price e ie established, « “dt sh 4 Sealer iad “ tion must be content ® i ng of home-made bro! ws and roasters | Geter to Schurg, Breslau to Bridge The now season in at j port, Kiel to mden, Letbenfela to spring broiler and are coming Into tow against their long-fr The poultrymen have than a month to get rid of t lection, The value f has Increased bee age, insurance ment, and that help to away as a gamble BANKS WANT MONEY FROM THE SPECULATORS. The banks that advanced a the « Houston, t a to Ba Pen Saxon annah, Quin Nicarla to Odenwald to Newport News to Beach, FI Androw erg to Beaut Locksun gensen Lohente le Long Astoria, BI Kitte f the names of the towns ‘otion with the Kunbs renin’ famous new “ coast and whieh have son for German margin. The come down high perc lose a large amount of money list of the huldings of frozen pouttr includes LLors must now WY the Houston rleston Harbor when f relations y ‘ a sunk United Germany 2,000 HOBOKEN GERMANS JOIN IN RUSH FOR PERMITS s Before City Hall Leave When Supp! Out 1 s broke Be it Turks Mise Experts thrown on cents the p is all in Ane condition, eating.” “Consumers, tat ¢ ‘ every wetgh Any b pound @riminal noglige this frox to get it put on price. By July fresh poultry : every domest " \BUTTER 16 PLENTIFUL, HIGH PRICES STICK. Butter in down 21p ce of this w titled to opened last s Give M BUT Vw HEN you go on your vi tion ti Summer have | your favorite paper mailed to you every day, Evening Worid, 12¢ per week Dally Word, 12c per week Sunday World, bc pes Sunday i Fighting t ere. You cau sumtin it 6 Wee of aay toa a re oe pl »» Dumo ne Your aiidivee ss via has invented a ) * to 4 T dea- uA Petit dou Battleship Anchored Close to | Shows Recruits Routine of Reckurty Wie LEARY To SCRUB DECKS How To Ger THR New YoRK Boyd BTA lL Ust.S, RECRUIT ilors Do Regular Navy Work Aboard the Warship Erected in Heart of City, So No Man May Say His Enlistment Was Obtained by Falee | Pretenses—Everything There Except the Swell of the | Sea, and an Officer Explains Advantages Won by Recruit in Pay and Chances for Promotion. | C.F. PIERCE _ By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “the young men wanted for the United States Navy” want to know exactly what is wanted of them before enlisting they have only to get off the subway at Fourteenth Street and walk up the stairs to the right into a first class United States battleship, where thirty sailors from the Navy School at New- port, R. [., under the command of Acting Captain C, F. Pierce, will go through the routine of life on a United NY rc) States battleship for their benefit, every day beginning | that means by artillery «| LONDON, June 4—A Reuter des- & this week ‘2 Wealth of artillery that the w patch from Riga saysthe Russians ment, with one foot in the water, so to speak, will transports, trench mortars, grenades, 184 Saxon Regiment, who entered be able to see just exactly what is ahead of them in narrow-gauge railways, bridge mate- the Russian lines with proposals for Uncle Sam's service, both in the navy and the Marine GERMANS BELIEVE Subway Life in Navy NOT A PER Scope Ber Conw Gnowng at We Cry GARDEN CaTee (Nn THE SEASON) Ad AMERICANS FLY REVOLTINHUNGARY? OVER GERMAN LINE; IS FORECASTED BY ONEJUST ESCAPES, SOIALIST LEADER j Another Aids a French Officer|“‘Democratic Revolution’ Is in Winging an Enemy Talked Of There as a Vital — ) Machine. Step Toward Peace. | PARIS, June 4—Corporal Ed- STOCKHOLM, June 4—Hint that 7 | ward Hinkle of Cincinngti had an- Hungarian radicais are planning @ “democratic revolution” was «ven to~ day by tho Socialist deiogate, Dr. Huntin, “A democratic revolution In the mid~ European countries,” he sald, “ is Bot only an interior question, but # fs one of the greatest importance to European politics and a vital step toward peace and international sole idarity.” “Discussing the group deltherations of Soctalists already here, Dr. Hunfim sald: “I have the strongest that the conference later will jn uniting Socialist groups on @ odim= mon peace programme, ‘Then ell Socialists can work for adoption of that programme by belligerenta, | other narrow escape in an exploit of the American flyers of the Lafayette Escadrille, news of which reached Paris to-day. Hinkle disappeared into the heavens for a day—but he | finally got back safe and sound. Private J. A. Drexel of Philadeiphia, Corpl. Kenneth Marr of Alaska, Corpl. Hinkle and Corpl, Harold Willis of Boston were in a equadron of the | Lafayette flyers who penetrated fift- teen miles back of the enemy's lines jin a reconnoissance flight. Three of them camo back together, | but there was no sign of Hinkle, All remembered last acoing him diving | | through a cloud, | ‘The next day Hinkle crossed back | to his own side again, reporting bis) \arrival far to the north, over the “Wo have purposely 4 dis- [British front, near Solssons, Ho had] yuiey°qhentions hotween, belligeremts become lont in the cloudy sky and) jn the discussions to date because it | his machine began behaving badly.|!s not profitable to catalogue the In addition, it tae \ WN 7 GETTING user To THE MARINES . ' wrangles of war. AGAIN, WILE [He came down and lay hidden over | wrangles of war. tn eddie thet ENTERTAIN | night. disputes of any two bdellige WEDNESDAY Lieut. Maisonrouge of the French | would differ from those of any other army was to-day announced as sec-|two. All such questions as these nd in command of the Lafayette| should be considered by an interna- acadrille, under Lieut, Willlam| tional conference, where the preju- | Thaw of Pittsburgh, in place of | dices of any one nation cannot affect Lieut. de Laage, who recently was| the deliberations.” killed in action, ——_— Lieut, Maisonrouge, with Private] peatcal Newspepe Andrew C, Campbell of Chicago, suc- ceeded in downing a German plane | over the enemy's lines. It was Camp- bell’s first Might as a fighting aviator, | Sergt, Willis Haviland of Minneap- olls, left a front hospital to-day on leave of absence for convalescence, ence RUSSIANS INTERN GERMAN | BEARING PEACE PROPOSALS | Teutons Threaten Dire Reprisals of barbed wire, the whole bristling | Unless Lieut, Rabenek Is Freed chine guns. ‘Th | by His Slav Captors. blasted out m ht Ge COPENHAGEN, June 4 (via London). —Tho German military authorities have suppressed the anti-Semitic Stattabu Zeitung and the radical Weekly World, according to a Bertin despateh to-day. CONVENIENT To THE < SUGWAY When THEY Ger Shore Leave rial and all the other ‘manifold ma- separate peace. chinery of ‘wa ° Care a M1 Cantly, it menna men—and more ¢gaynan airplanes dropped demande starboard side of the great painted ship—the only battle must admit that the British pe ccherwie he would be Special Offerings ship on earth which overlooks a vegetable garden—files the flag of the o are vastly aned id what “The Russians replied that Rabenek | in Summer es navy, while from the port side floats the emblem of the “soldiers of _—_— Hoing and bd not Kn? was regarded as a deserter and that , . sre ind BO had been sent into the interior | the sea voeniaiens Captured Prussian Officer Ar ors tne of Russla for internment, | DRESSES DRESSES M used by the] ‘ : ; siti [RMR ARTRD Seeinaare itenae hae ~ | $4.75 to $30 : tical training, speedy promotion, pr rogar Say ar 1 inds of American a Bevis teoanid christened teal training, suweds, prometion, pre, FoRantly Says War Will \aznting inthe trenches and in the FIRES IN THREE N. Y. HOTELS, ILTON lant John Purroy nity for travel and educatio End Before We Get In " uit r Iked atte dak Miteh Recruit” this} is graded according to 4 y But every one with whom T talkec Te Set ENT, CO : ? compares favorably with that of high-| WITH THE BRITISH ARMIES or God's sake, teil the fotke, ba we ors of Unele Sam who begin swab ' Mil ite, dadesd, home not to lose time, We've simply! HORNELL, Y., June 4.—Deter bing up the decks at 6 A; M. and ¢ ed that a blue. |'N THE FIELD, June 4.—The war et te, hase thone da nnd, Prurenne mined attempts to burn the hotel Sher-! f 4 7 * of all 1 wha he m ican ‘punch’ ia. ft we food, th eat hotel or ve 1 Square, under the of is any class of mnity saddled on the United States | hele and die, hours. turday evening several upper * Q _> evening se PP York, the regular life of a man PALA MATAR the enlisted | nefore she knows sho is in, accord | © burned Karly this Ehrlich Glasses The crew does not dine on be hinak IT tan oo ite ee toc che 3 DEP AT burned Ite way through the roof. About re uaran! but: taken ite mesia: $0: -@: BROROHT Er ainemanta ot dita navesid eharace ih fwo hundred. guests “were driven out, | pee however, life on th bility. He must eara his advance: |For instance, a jeally ———_ ry, vat Harbor way de melas 6 W t 1 be on} me if he is without skill or ex | Prussian office at me co! Secretary f 5 ‘ troyed by fire last night, causing a : 1 te J ust Lik: eh i yu ae Me 4 ? reat} ee sf i i t jae it 2 ot se All bebe to Him lone of $6, 500 inthe fire Ia" belteved A than ordinary glasses. You fo rolling wave, on {ne4) should) be Wi art at the a ly. to us he stood in ay Citizens Are Not ip os une, 4 servi our vutch have not been duplicated by|tom and work Pde At orth lava tarensw aye tiaah PB se N june 4—Fire to-day ll also get the service of the Mayor's Committee are the enemy | 18 thousands ra like him hav am a batt 1 where Cana Molested. ” ar registered specialists for marines ry MAN-OF-WAR'S-MAN fans had mauled + vision into) BERLIN, June 2 (via London, June rg oer oe the examination of your eyes. ae nthe subway yester-| DS SOT NA ASN IE Se aps 4).—Arthur E, Dunning, Sec Correctly Fitted Glasses From $2.50 y afte nd tnding myself un-l 1 conders | ere Amertea awakes, we Willing American Association of ¢ esha vir ersie fy faualified te Italy into submission, and have made | Merce and Trade of Beritn, in a ata aay hee re ce with : iving you alone| meat to the Associated Press eatd Established 55 Years wa husth = the field.” he said |that while Americans desiring to| An air raid on) ||New York: 184 B'way, at John St. man hor ‘ 1 } RY To my enum of the evi-|feavo Germany are not receiving ape- | 8rukes ts reported in an official state- a23 Sixth Av., rth St. re inet ok tat | nees of America’s Immediate par. |elal privileges over other national. |e" the War Office this 350 Sixth Av., aad Th us i] recur : pepe os etna lie with “e nay |™™° tement follows: tor Nassau, at Ann St. ning over th al pation, chase tr 4 sent] 5 y meeting y t Dunkirk reports 17 West 4ad_ Street. : Grea r the submarine zone division ef} 4nd good will on the part of officials 't attack was carried out ||Brooklyn: Fulton 8t.,cor.Bo it, : at ‘ | | docks and al uaa Se meron oun Cat ath the quality \troomm soon to be at the tront, and| When applying for permission to leave, | 27. s docks and canals last &. Recruit rly tar who| preparing King and srving are|undreds of thousands of others be | “1 am unaware of any Americans | § , 4 rig arn ’ fe ¥ 6 ines bee being detained,” Mr, Dunning said. soles Naa ie kOe Bie y officers, wh equir y—"B-L-U-Per [Wh y exceptions are being ma : Med t uncom Rigcs om ec omarant J ee tt ad-|! have found that in many instances eee eaat ant hal the recruiting! clet 4 1 w f A ; Nanded me existing regulations have been + I tried to $ epithet pans are profitable When walved in thelr favor, There also ven C Blancs, Gil the a p ke of a hume alr fleet } ne | have been modifications in the rule} ’ nw rotate Rasa " » cee rachel Jom ea Sn eroaia te range toe EAL contentment don’t take ; » to apawai ths riven” Coaihale fal | Beliefs WBE: Ammtrions) Pualnass, mam up much room. Youcan find aiveceeer ati b Y st Meet of food car You'll he| MORenee Hare. Dave Apsormed ine 63 ie naeyi bua | rest niiitary aurvice In the| ovine un indemnity before tho ships | meeion that they are not beinu itin the smallest cottage or salen Gant pemndd ‘ | - in a pipe of Velvet. fot creormting «| GERMANY CORDIAL TO 4 e reneiaded, “ts! ASTOR NOW A VISCOUNT. Ve. after the] sna prepared to fiht a dateie| nents ERE is the con- t 1 Turns Over S persed \ : Preah le ponaie . tentment smokers lan to have| ] ing'e birthde find in Velvet. A cool, n every da ag egies ow DUPRE, mellow- ie sunt ness that can be only in ; ; Jscount ia a title of nol Eng: one kind of tobacco. Pie tie Titian | Teutiah becragn intervening “bet wae And that is the best nn the Navy Yard ana ourame the ere : Kentucky Burley age- on ' tan Committes . ie Jun ducaase mellowed two years in riven showin. TAiaineht CPOUERE Hoots Hee DRlte di OMe oa: cE aves ; jie Nature's way—Velvet! s life, and t " States to the tmilitary hosplta German “il? ¢ Dents ¢ . pneert ound eat {Me losses it vending or und Jackson mar It’s time that you Lieut, Ha rday of | tour stay in Grauder pensat ng ranks in| and soundin rebe tried Velvet, ma t 8 those} en eve urteay t axolbal, 42 suppited , « which shoutd | i nant, re(certalst e young ma nist In the to be beaten in’ the & tho country , ipo tj good, gra. 1g our depar protected by snarls! to-morrew, \ ‘]