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On the Home Page To-Day ; “INTIMATE TALKS ‘WITH YOUNG GIRLS’’ ——= A New EVENING WORLD Feature == “Ma” Sanday’s s BUTTER AND EGG GAMBLERS LAFAYETTE SCHOOL FOR FRENCH ORPHANS RUN BY AMERICANS CAUGHT IN THEIR OWN TRAP. FIND HOLD-UP PLANS UPSET Evening World’s Market Guide For the New York Housewives In order to further show that there is no just reason for retatlers exacting 60 cents a dozen for the society egg, politely dubbed “leghorn,” but which, in most cases, is nothing more than the highest grade of the every day domestic, lily-white egg, The Evening World begins its cur- rent wholesale price table to-day with the quotations on leghorns by Conron Bros, and closes with the regular market qyotations on this variety. CONRON BROS, Fancy white leghorn, Next to finest lefhorn.. seseceseeees 87 Cents @ dozen WHOLESALE MARKET QUOTATIONS. (New York Daily Market Report.) State, Pennsylvania and nearby white Western hennery seubeasas 35% to 36 cents a dozen Ordinary to good . 23 to 35 cents a,dozen ‘Any one who read Saturday's table will see that tho price jumped % and 1 cent a dozen on this grado since Friday afternoon. The news story tells you why. The purpose of specializing this leghorn grade is not to show the difference between the Conron quotations and the price for actual sales made on the two Exchanges (Conron Bros.’s rates are obviously fair, judged by Exchange sales), rather ts tt to emphasize this, that even at 89 cents the dozen wholesale there is no justification for a retail tax of 60 cents a dozen, because everybody knows that no busi- ness man will buy 50 or 100 cases of this or any other grade and pay as much as 89 cents a dozen. But nobody need buy leghorns. The best fresh eggs, fancy too and meaty, are costing the retailers who buy in farge quantities not a mill more than 31 and 32 cents a dozen wholesale, and they should be selling to consumers at 35 and 36 cents a dozen. + 39 cents a dozen Mra WILLIAM ASTOR CHANLER Mrs, William Astor Chanter, who has returned from a four months’ visit | P to France, to-day told of progress) in starting the Lafayette School for French Orphans. The plan Includes | the restoration of the Chateau de Chavaniac Layfayette—birthpiace of | | Latayette. | ‘The idea behind the school ts to| take the pick of the orphans, instruct j them in English, an then have them | | brought to America by big corpora- The highest grade of creamery butter sold on the Exchanges Saturday || tions and taught American organiza: at 88 cents the pound, and should be sold to the consumer at not more || tion and the theories of American | than 43 and 45 cents the pound. trade, The school also hopes to tmn- Current wholesale quotations on selected grades of butter and egg: (New York Dally Market Report.) BUTTER (Pound). EGGS (Dozen), Highest creamery . 38 Fresh gathered oxtras. Extra 7% | Fresh gath. extra, firsts, Firsts . % | Firsts State dairy Mixed color . Unsalted ... Checks ... prove farming in France. |" ‘These ideas have mado a strong ap- | peal to the French authorities, Mra, {Chanler sald. Tho Government is | supplying instructors, and every do- partment in France is ‘begging the school to take children. While there are a few students in the school now |the official opening will take place on Oct, 1. There ts enough money in the treasury to care for 100 children ) Showing to what extremes the “bluft’|'The number to be cared for depends element in the trade ts going, Level-| upon the generosity of the American headed business men in the trade| Public. have had no part in thls final splurge, | === The margin of increase js hardly worth noticing and certainly not to be | criminal prices for this and all other | encouraged by publicity, BN BOnSI HOR GE It6s 32% 31 40 30 =.30% -4 “The sooner the butter and egg trade gets out of the clouds and comes down ¢o earth the better Its bank accounts will look at the end of he fiscal year, There is nothing in the present condition of the market to ;; storage report and the com- warrant extreme prices. The produc-| Now for the proof, from trade] gent trade papers on it does not | tlon is gaining rapidly and promises a|®0Urces, this time from two welll warrant immediate passage by Con- |known (local) trade papers, including gress of a food regulation law that Uberal crop; pasturage Is fine, con- “the favorite.” wili give the American public a square Sumption is 26 per cont, below nor-| In the current issue of the “fa- Se aCe eae iareoele iret mal, money is tightening and the gress. The Evening World could pre: . s J “if lvorite,” page one, column five, appearg sent to-day a table, based on the ype of the surplus crop will not! the gollowing u jabove atateme showing pretty | easy. '—Extract from the current Trade Letter of the firm of Droste & Snyder, No, 177 Duane Street. er the heading: # HOLDINGS, eof a Year by a Trifle Over 150,000, accumulation In ail} arehouses, but these indis- figures should & ficlent any Seti ae tor ine man or woman, Tho egs Two weeks ago to-day The Eve- g conditions are extremely un- jois are looking for rellef to ning World made as a feature of {8 ! satisfactory because every storage teas Allies. hey mt ho Pe ae weekly review the statement that the | nant 4s full, with one or two excep-| Britain and France will take oft this immens “Every frozen poultry crowd was “stuck, that the British Government had stif- fened its back and politely refused to pay prices for poultry fixed by food gamblers. The poultry gamblers are still tearing their hair and wondering what they will do with the millions present prices. says the same | trade source, closing the article from which we have quoted, “has had an | inquiry for prices for fall shipments. tions, and these will give space only The sensational | drop to 29 and 30 cents for firsts (who could convince the New York house. | aulry for prices foe Cult ati p rnin wife that € had ever dropped to} jnterested European operators,” |such a level? She can't appreciate it} And this from the second of the es vy | Because she hasn't been given the op- rs referred to, under the| of pounds of broilers, turkey, Plain) portunity) has caused much uneas!- chicks and whatnots stuffed in ware ness by operatora who have stored houses throughout the country. The eggs as high as 38 and 39 cents, Not Government report showed the total! oniy are the coolers full of exgs, but #ecumulation to be 54,834,191 pounds DING DOWN FAST, Storage Space All Filled and Big Surplus in Market, ful attacks has ranged from fifty-one | less | about 250,000 tons less than the en- SOFT COAL BARONS | and sixty-six oMecers accused of con- BRITISH SEA LOSS INRUTHLESS WAR 1,745,000 TONS ane ne Only 250,000 Tons Less Than Entire World’s Output in 1916, ‘WASHINGTON, June 18.—The Ger- man submarine toll of British mer- chant ships since Feb. 17, as shown in official British figures complied here to-day, is $22 vessels of more than 1,600 tons and 135 of less than 1,600 tons. British steam fishing ves: sunk in that period numbered sev- enty-eight. Records for sailing ves- sels are incomplete, but @ three weeks’ total was seventy-elght. Submarines in the period given at- tacked 299 ships unsuccessfully and the weekly percentage of ungsuccess- to seventy-five. During the last week given—the seven days ending with June 9—it was fifty-eight. Arrivals and sailings in British ports since the intensive submarine campaign began have averaged about |2,500, but these include Channel | sailings. The British Mgures do not give the tonnage of vessels sunk, but officials here say 6,000 tons probably would be a fair average for vessels of more than 1,600 tons destroyed, Computing the total at that average and putting the average of the smaller ships at 1,000 tons, the total loss during slighly than four months’ submarine warfare would reach 1,745,000 tons, or tire world’s shipping output during 1916, ON TRIAL CHARGED WITH CONSPIRACY 108 Corporations and 66 Offi- cers Involved—Army of Lawyers Engaged. | The trial of the 108 corporations) spiracy to arbitrarily regulate the price! of soft coal began before Judge Grubb in the United States District Court to- day. The trial promises to be one of tho longest on record because of the| large number of defendants and the} fact that a ton of documentary exhibits will be introduced, The court room was filled to over- flowing with defendants, witnesses and | attorneys. Among the lawyers are | John B, Stanchfield, former Senator James A. O'Gorman, former United) States Attorney Henry A. Wise, ( ree EIGHTY AIRPLANES BATTLE AT ONCE ONBRITISH FRONT Germans Resume Mass For- mations but Fail—One Brit- ish Wings Four Rivals. BRITISH FRONT IN FRANCE, June 18 (Via London).—Having been virtually driven from the air during the battle of Messines, the German air forces have been attempting to re- assert themselves during the past week by adopting the familiar old Teutonic tactics of mass formation. The British pilots report that they seldom meot the Germans now in squadrons of less than fifteen ma- chines, whie occasionally they en- counter an enemy aerial “army” con- sisting of from forty to sixty air- planes. None of these great formations has yet been able to cross the British lines, for the new tactics have found the Royal Flying Corps prepared, and numbers have been met with num- bers. Some of the battles of the last few days have found as many as from seventy to elghty machines in- volved, All these engagements have occurred well inside German terri- tory and have been barely visible from the British Hne, ‘The pilots en- waged found the fighting s0 heavy aht they had no time to reckon the losses infilc upon the retreating Jermans, Later British machines flew low over the ground, counting the machines which had been burned or wrecked, After one of these encounters ten enemy airplanes were seen smashed, while only two British flyers had been compelled to quit the fight, one of these being able to land within his own lines, One young British pilot who bids fair soon to rival the record made by the late Capt. Ball emulated the Int- ter a few days ago by deliberately “sitting” over a German airdrome somo twenty miles within the enemy ines and smashing one by one four machines which came up to attack | him, When he began hovering above the place ho saw seven machines in| the airdrome with engines running. He engaged the first one that left the ground when it was only sixty feet up. and ft fell a complete wreck. Diving at the second machine which | rose, the British pilot drove {t square. | ly Into Two machines then | loft the ground together, so the Brit- | isher thought It best to get a little more helght before attacking the patr He climbed to 1,000 feet and then, after a brief thr rnered Nght, saw both his adversaries go down within 300 feet of each other. | a tree th a He is not a big man as weights and measures go—this man Lever, who is making history on the floor of the hut not without a formidable oppo- | sition, the motive for which 1# found in tho vested Inte! “wiry” culture and who for years held the | ton- )of affairs when American-made prod- title ot the “youngest man in Con After this exploit the khaki pilot ucts are sold cheaper abroad than at returned safely arn with his machine | #res®” in hand, |20me. For example, the price of ‘ Bid : a He has his subject well in |American cheeso in England is 16 |five'trom the Rround, xy machine GUN] Jy) Vows what he ie talking about. |cents a pound, and for the same studying his subject thoroughly, an | Lever Defends Food Bill. And Predicts Its Passage Before the End of Week Food at Reasonable Prices Provided For in Drastic Bill This is what the momentous Food Bill will do: Establish Government control of all necessaries, Authorize the President to enter into voluntary arrangements to Accept services without compensation, to co-operate with any agency or Person and to utilize and co-ordinate the activities of departments and agencies, Make {t unlawful to destroy, wilfully waste, permit preventable deterioration, hoard or monopolize any necessaries, Prohibit the making of unjust charges for handling or dealing with necessaries Authorize the President to license and regulate any business of im- portation, exportation, manufacture, storage or distribution of neces- sartes Provide that when the President shall find that regulation of food materials in the production of alcoholic beverages is easential in order to assure an adequate and continuo’s supply of food he Is authorized to prescribe the extent of the limitation, Authorize proceedings by the Govertment, tn any district court of the United States, to selze and condemn hoarded necessaries, the court being empowered to direct their salo in such manner as to provide the most equitable distribution thereof, the net proceeds of the sale to go to the party entitled thereto, Provide for the punishment of any person who wilfully deatroys any necessaries for the purpose of enhancing the price or restricting the supply. Authorize the President to purchase or provide for the production or manufacture of necessaries, to store and provide storage facilities for them, and to sell them; also to requisition necessaries and storage space therefor and to fix reasonable prices to be paid for the same by the Government, such prices to bo subject to review by the courts. He may requisition, take over and operate any factory, mine or other plant, or any part thereof, in which necessaries are or may be manufactured, produced, prepared or mined, Just compensation therefor is provided, subject to review by the courts. Authorize the President, when he finds that an emergency exists requiring stimulation of production, to fix, from time to time, a able, guaranteed price for any necessaries, in order to assure ducer @ reasonable profit, Appropriate $12,500,000 for carrying out the act. reagon- the pro- By Sophie Irene Loeb. (Special Staff Correspondent of The statute really provides is power to the President to carry out the act and NEW YORK FLYER DYN, SCHUM. Lincoln Chatkoff, Taking Ben | ny Woodworth for Spin, ’ | Loses Control. . PARIG, June 18.—The Paris Herald says that Benny Woodworth of Gam Francisco, chief of the first section of the American Ambulance Filia Service, has been killed and Linedim Chatkoff, of New York City, pilot im the Lafayette Escadrille, dangerowaly Wounded In an airplane accident. \ «4 Woodworth went to the headquer= | ters of the Lafayette Escadrille in Champagne on Friday evening, where he met his friend Chatkoff. They de- cided to fly over and visit some com= rades at the camp of “The Storkg,”* Capt. Guynemen's squadron, about six miles away. Chatkoff rose to) m height of about 150 feet and execute a series of evolutions, ning with several spirals and nose diving toward the earth. Witnesses say that when near the ground the pliot seemed to make effort to right the machine in ot to rise again. Chatkoff either miseal- culated the distance or something went wrong with the appartus, for the machine never altered its ‘cow but plunged headlong and buried # nose in the earth, Woodworth was killed Instantly, ome of his legs being severed and te other crushed, suffering in addition other terrible injuries. Chatkoft tained serious internal injuries, a tured his skull and suffered other wounds. He ts inw critical conditiap, SAN FRANCISCO, Juno 18—Ben- Jamin R, Woodworth, whose death tn appoint such administrator to carry tt Out as he sees fit, “As for Mr. Hoover in this connec- tion, I am confident that all who have been in close touch with his methods of handling such big problems will aot Evening World.) ‘ WASHINGTON, D, C,, June ie House to-day in storming through] hesitate to place the chief work of the most powerful | administering this measure in bis and important bill | hands. in tho history of Congress—the Food Bill. His battling av- erage being high, ho may carry out his prediction that the bill will be passed by Friday. “As to price fixing only a minimum price Is provided there to encourage and insure production, One of the strongest features in the bill, I believ is Sec. 6, which authorizes licensing and regulation of all foodstuffs in ordor to prevent uneconomical manu- facture and inequitable distribution. he section expressly exempts farmers, gardeners, and others with respect to products of farms, gardens and other lands owned, leased or cul- tvated by them; retailers with re- spect to the retall business actually conducted by them; and common ca riers, “It ds certainly Gorverenne ae rests that have held he ultimate consumer by the throat. But he is ready for them, ia this man, Asbury F. Lever, who 1s hairman of the Committee on Agri- a deplorable state much midnight oll | chee eae We are paying here 35 cents. baa Rurnes “When you consider that all at an aeroplane accident was reported curly to-day from Paris, was t yeara old, the gon of Mrs, Rath wow worth of San Francisco, and a grandson of Samuel Woodworm. author of “The Old Oaken Bucket.” He enlisted two years ago se American Ambulance Corps, When America declared war Woodworth pe- came an aviator and was made lieutenant. He Waa in San Francisco last fall and gave illustrated lectufes on the war, returning to the frontjn or, He ence lived in Boston, price boosting here as compared with the same produce in another county is due to the fact that the produc- tion and selling of food 1% not eon- trolled by the Government, as itt on the other aide. f “When the President is given power to purchase foodstuffs and sell them in times of stress it can be possible to keep @& check on ea [speculators by the Government bi ing and selliug enough to stabilize or standardize the price to be charged. Besides, it will be also within the power of the President to arrange such co-operative means of buyli and selling and distributing ag wil automatically adjust the price for the consumer, “That the statute also provides for 7 - a |goes into the making of that cheese|the President to exercise his discre- docks and stores are full, Trade has} “The warehouses in the metropoll- Gordon Battle, William A. Glasgon of | WEALTHY RUSSIAN WOMAN attribute not found in all fathers of 7, Cnty « pound in Hngland la the| thin en to peoduete chat ehall be Gane and that the holdings of 107 firms n the most unsatisfactory of uny|tan d re practically all full of | Pennsylvania, A. C. Burnham, former legintation, be they ever so old. sume as we pay iS cents for here, and|to the Allies must certainly meet the firms 487.3 heavier than last year. i during the entire season, Buyers | ess, with scarcely SO SOO, avall- | Judge J. N. Holt of West Virginia, Abel TAKES POST OF MINISTER rhey attack this bill as unsonatl- |that the transportation of thas chees«lapproval of our people. That is the To-day The Evening World an-| Will not take on stock, belleving that| ble, ‘The consumptive demand is the lan gitth and Carl E. Whitney tutional,” he told. me as I found him|across the sea must be added, you| safest Way of assuring our Own sups - there will be a further drop. The smallest in years and the quality of 4 if _—_ his h for to-day, in| readily realize that there is same-| ply ounces that the butter and exe men | Aimost as much hysteria over. the sis reported to be consider-| ‘Tho Government will try to show] Countess Sophie Panin Will Help| Preparing his spe Ce ocg {thing wrong in the process of sale!" "At such power must be centratty of the country are also “stuck.”| present conditions as there was when better than a Uttle while ago.|/that a conspiracy of coal interests ; mle peaking of the enemies o! from producer to consumer. controlied in order to insure There have been several big losses operators were putting stock into the only Tara es Pery aii®|was hatched at @ conference in a Administer Charitable and Bil, “L am confident that one of the| most beneficial results and coonsusiag already in the trade. Something out | coolers at an Hann FA Of Pricer . Ohenh esa enough consumptive|Neow York hotel last January, the| Sociable Institutions. “They would enter into a prolonged |principal reasons for the artificial e ordinary wi ave to happen D je me 9 long ago) fs ° ey | p D lc of o t Bees Oar Pe eee maint (saw these danger signals ahead, the|demand to use up the eggs as they purpose being the restricting of out, | PETROGRAD, June 18.—In a work-| debate on petty teohnloaiitien a : eee wii diavercsent Sica the weeatata Ae able cites te aeieel ‘And further on: Pir ote oat thre tout the East.|72an's blouse and a leather skirt, | time like this w ages have Tuesday’s Sale Pr housewife, | food conditions in this port by Th “It is too early to be altogether pes. | 0/tuminous coal throughou ‘-) Countess Sophte Panin has already} precious and every hi | a uesaay a ae old-fashioned American housew Evening World, these then ave un? |simistic or to throw up the sponge, |ern States. Many of the corporation®| ‘avon up the office of Aasist- in inestimable future hardship. ee sip bes stiffened nen Patriot lacrived as “bears.” ‘Then comes the| but tt 1s real a that the only Involved are interlocking. ‘The Gov-| Aster of Social Tutelage, a] “I am not speaking personally, but | eg? back and declined, to be bluffed any | Shoe, i! tion for the holders of storage egga| i ocg Snares fe Ministe! 4 . 8 Ks > an the ae ned the . tone ie fon tory demand for storage goods, |erAment’s case is being handled bY | department of state with the func-|no man can eet himself up a longer, that has forced the butter and| “rhe holdings of eggs to-day in the| 1% “n early GDASidl| “Hhsmasutite Taaag. Oaland t Judge of tho constitutionality gg men, gamblers and reputable|Bronx, Manhattan, Merchants and| This had been counted on by many | special prose # Isane KH. Ocland | tion of administering tho charitable| great judge risa ent q ara tine’ 4) who belleved that the production by|and John Lord O'Brian and Assistant| ang social institutions and also the|of this act, Prominent lawyers firms alike, to their fe It any|National (warehous 1,245 uch less than it is," ; | SAS comes JAA! ad hi nt can be . ; : ae ompared with the | Row would be much less than Attorneys General Frank M. Swacker| care of children, The Countess ts| passed upon tt, and that po! ° proof of this were needed, beyond a ime 1 ; And now for butter. Krom the| ; : 1 dispute r hid "time ast ye This makes an | hh the above was taken | 29d Rovert Stephensen the world’s first woman Minister, She | settled readily beyond dispute. unnin what hus been act forth in these increase in New York und Jersey City |aper from which the above was taken /O™! Tiever’ Stepimnuen. | the world’s firat woman Minister, Hhe| Hot When you think that in the con Iumng from time to time, the above | of 169,023 cases, not including the Kast- | We, cull this pails non, bromine is forty-five years old d we i ‘ : ron . bea ent of the reputable firm of em States (Reirigerating Company), Butter Is to storage very|are George Caperton, President of|sne resides in a palace which she| demnation of the Gettysburg property New York’s Premier masemen " which office could not furnish Its|rapldly, and with the exg space In| ing New River Coal Company; Justus | transformed Into @ poople's house, &| gor patriotic purposes we went so far “ 1 5 Droste & Snyder should be auffl-|feires It is understood that. this | local uses practioally exe em ve at of the Smokelwsa {combination of recreation place and| (°° P&NO 8 Pi a otg ne taken Collection cient. For weeks this firm has stood|heuse has no more rope hau tolise Foor taxed | Collins, President eevee at {Popular university, bsallgiat A ‘ te and inep out like a rock in the m: of the| The words in parentheses are the | bY p< good products, 1 Company; Osear M. Dyorle of)" Ag an active worker of the Conati-| for bullding 1 hooripricrd id, unorganized and contentious| reporter's, put in there to make plain- | butter « ng unusual | at Top Fuel Company; Thomas | tytional Democratic the Coun-}ing patriotism interes i nin the trad Bd called out] OFS AtRTemene intended only for the) care | ko . pace. Mer-| yarrell of the Pocahontas Fuel| tess last w & momber| ture wars, It seems that there must e e je trade, and called out) ,, ne Evening World could ¢ ‘0 were |? “ope of one of the new sub-dis on tn ov natitu again and again—“Halt!” Dosens of| published the above Neures aad the|con of but- | Company 04 mia y Cnn oe ee eeremmans to the Aasos| ne ample provision ja La Us other equally reputable firma have) story of to-day at least as early as|ter have revised thelr opinion tn the| Leckie Coal Compan. clated Presa she declared that her| tion for control o v je : tried ia van the recklessness of the | last Thursday, ‘Tho reason for delay- | of recent rep. from dairying | Staff of officials will consist for the | when the war ts at our doors, The breeziest, handsomest aomhie | the greedy, but all to|!9% it was to clinch facts with |sections, Instead of the confidence | most part of women. Sho hopes that| «qt ie@ time for control,” he flashed skirts you have seen—de- no purpose. cepted by the trade as responsible, | three weeks ago there 18 now a :| for the transfer of soctal institutional “a time to Krs Let $07) areas sig’ sae per petri: The docks, temporary platforms;| The figures do not tell all of the story, | eral feeling of uncertainty and weal REVOLUTION BY ARMY in other countries into the hands of|quick action, Of course it 1s un 4 with the demands of country w*olesale stores and coverings of all) °! ae Shey be inte ned to, be very | tanc yaa is usual on o eclintog ma mar- | mens auch @ bill, ; club members. ninute hey supply a. bi nl ket, Reta ave not b pee : x ho time ; : sorts in this and other port cities are) Viton to build further, and this build: | Nosed commensurate with the wholes ; Rut hes Ma and Wash Corduroys taxed to the Hilt with cases of eggs|ing shows that the actual holdings of |ente values | Gone essions to Troops,’ However, “WILSON ASSAILED in the history ‘ eee Gabardines—Repps packages of butte ome | eggs in thi , including pub- t dealin, ith 4 of affairs | ‘ bs oe TERS, OE DUEET An nome lished report. ‘of the: Hesters ‘ints |BUTTER SURPLUS 18 TREMEN- Inspire Dangerous Activity feted Soret Piques—Linenes jocks there is scarcely another fo t he Eastern States | that hay no precede ; | Refrigerating Company and the im- R 5 em BY GERMAN PRESS ne nt red wil! 8 - available for temporary holding of|Kerrigerating Company and the im: | BOUS AND AAOWING of Other Eleme “And yet, when you come righ Pailored with that smart these products. A tour of the market | in wholes: stores, are probably not, Th ort of warehouse Owners, LONDON, June 18.—A despatch to ee down to it, this mu 1 of power ness which relies upon sim Gistrict from Vesey to Twenty-third less than 225,000 cases more than ladt |on June 1 showe ine yin Ru the Times from Madrid say AMSTERDAM, June 18 (via Lon-| we are putting Into the hands of the plicity and richness of finish. Street shows all this and more, This / Yr. 1. shed figures are auM@-| that’ t eo iy. Incressing | "The crisis Is past, The crux be- |don),—Under the headings “Wilson! president is merely one of de eating | in itself would not be alarming were | went: 911,245 cases of eggs mean that | storage receipts it Is evident the aur-|tween the Government and the army | Without a Mask,” “Answer to Hypo-| digcretionary authority to #0 act as | Ss rt Silk Skirts {t not that it means the capacity of at the present time there are stored | plus of butter is going to be @ston-| hag been ved by the Premter {crite Wilson," Wilson tn Dellrlum, to conserve the most vital intereste of | mar the warehouses of the country is away n this port ished 1880 do ns of iain when tho final figures ere! sing infantry officers the right to Wis Be vila end ¢ erman provincial pa-| 11 o eopte in ita most vital history In the fashionable Summer Tat- a such a potnt a ORES se eo 0 el h mea a\p a . “- ” r ens » 1 b « 1 e exree this is done in also taxed, taxed to such a point that accumitiation, of 428,048,200 epes.| Here 49 the “favorite’s" comment | form committees of defen’ erev- | Wilson's Flag Day speech and the In lesser deg fone in eit) fetas and newest sport stripes: even in New York City the ware- ng the “favorite paper's he butter erisis olutionary movement which seemed | Norddeut6&e Allgemeine | UNK| departments of goverament where we M Hse ft house owners have served notice nt that this represents an in- | The butter deal since the ping imminent a week ago has thus been al ; ome President A Bs ff tO| authorize commissic to use thelr a big assortment of new arrivals, at they can hold space only for) crease of 189,023 cases more than last |of June has t \ OW bees ussia, In iuny cases the two pro y st jn conducting affedraat SustOMers SDALAP Rae e "i 610 dozen, or 60,558,180 eggs |down grade with such a momentum | AR SNUB OR. MOET SLs ot \Junetion critical periods, | gan or will be a 1 , Ae ea a He POND ere ne MN ealbia (0 BAY Where le wise b pleares, ane example set |" ‘The comments on the note to Rus “Here is a situation where things Fashion ore submitting the proof it re are ill stop, Most operators rega e | by the soldiers has given a dangero a clearly reflect the ardent desire In ee seagrass Mecaicenaciia: ‘ararras des make as good a gues ment and ire holding off until | atern foe while they repeat the fu.| be occasions where prompt and con- Four Shops conditions—the ¢ apne as to the total bold they feel r bly ured that the ~millar declarations it the position | certed action will save endless suffer houwes und the imimense and never |S 10H Gat Rutten marie e hed battom, | fronts being favorable and) ing ang preserve econ Cortainiv accurately accounted f les all Evenin Some are predicting that deciinos ‘ the rH aah y Ho. wit | this ts no time for quibbling on smail , ver the wntry was made amblers not stop until the &5-c mark | § for/a vietory if the proferred t is not| thi oO Ur ae 7 r - ree | ie ie here Ww n mwah oe Int marie ne eatccil Aine cookie gas clad Nineteen West 34th Street ast Saturd the age } ‘ - ored-up ¢gKS ¥ ka rages have been : f.ibinehe Zeitung, Wa “It is unfortunate alxo that the : boost the p att pagt ‘Tol excess of the actual mecds ahd ‘with | reluctan advances. freely | Ara onthe aNot only in tine working on OUF! i4en became broadcast ie Brooklyn: | | Downton: || Newarki wome extent the ef weeded utithe very evident intention of bluffing tll the assumes a m ia unde fetment Tor & 4 staide but also soun nan under a aiahak 7 the 460-462 Fulton St, | 14-16 West 1dth St) ‘ark Sts, 'America and its Allies into paying Sefinite aspect.” accounts with the Government standing, creating @ food dictator, What | {| Broad it - serves as another argument