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N?nM esj??jx Bnm/Jvray. S4th ft? Ml* ? We Sell Dependable Merchandise at Prices Lower Than Any Other . Store, but tor Caab Only Store open? 9:00 A. M. and dotes 5:30 P How It Shines! The cut glass sparkles and the pressed and blown glass gleams? and all of it outshines every other event of its kind in economy. For this is the June Sale of Glassware, a great dis? posal of glass articles ?I for all purposes, timed to a nicety that brides of this June and Junes gone by may benefit by its savings. As for Magnitude There arc 24,000 water tumblers?surely enough to supply a few Summer homes and cottages. These are usually 84c doz. For the sale they ave 4c each. Such savings are charac? teristic. Think of 1,200 pieces of handsome cut glass, including pieces of beauty and utility worthy of a place in the^most pre? tentious home. These are marked at HALF OUR USUAL PRICES. . Summer Significance is attached to such pieces of cut glass as those which may be u->e.d for serving things to keep one cool and well tempered, even in the warm? est weather. We're listing a few of them for your con? venience : Usually. Sale. S - inch Berry Bowl with com? bination floral cutting .$3.89 $2.74 9 - inch Berry ? Bowl with com? bination floral cutting . 3.89 2.89 11-inch oblong Orange Bowl.. 3.69 2.74 5-inch Bon Bon Dish with han? dles . 1.29 97c The Blown Glassware Group also has some hot-day con? tributions. They* are finished in a prettily decorated de? sign, and include champagne goblets, cocktail glasses, wine glasses, saucer champagne glasses. These would usual? ly be 3.48 doz. For the sale they are pried 19c each. At 12c each you can buy tall ale glasses, iced tea glasses or grape juice glasses in two t>izes. Not To Be Overlooked is the pressed glassware group, which abounds in use? ful articles at rare savings. There are 200 cereal sets consisting of three glass jars at 49c per set. There are water pitchers, wine glasses and root beer mugs, plain or with gold decoration. There are sauce or mayonnaise jars of opal glass with covers, Candlestick?, sandwich trays and flower holders, nappies, sugar 1h>w1s and creamers, berry bowls and bon bon dishes in light cut designs. There Is Nothing Left to Do but come an/1 see this vast and comprehensive collec? tion. The fact tnat it has been assembled from our own stock is an index to its quality. /JJKSQfa?fl?Mm??ntf Front. U. S. Decried -, 9 -; And Trotzky Called Great Young People's Socialist League Told Money of All Nations Is Being Counterfeited in Russia Fraud to Beat Capital Lenine's Book Bought, but Discord Stops Playing of the American Anthem An innocent looking newspaper bound bundle was carried surrepti? tiously into the gaily festooned hall at 122 Second Avenue, where Circle No. 8 of the Young People's Socialist League was arguing itself into a stato of ex? citement last night on whether or not it Bhould indorse the left wing of the Socialist party. The bundle, made up of books, was borne by H. Friedmann and its con? tents were selling at 25 cents each. He sat down and furtively began to explain to his neighbors just what his business was: "See this book, he said, " 'It's the soviets at work' by Lonine. I'll be put in jail if they catch me selling it. The State Department has sup? pressed it. There were 360,000 copies printed by the Rand School of Social Science, but they only wanted to make money on it. They didn't care for spreading the propaganda. Now they can't sell it and the only way to get it around is to distribute it on the quiet like this. Already we've got rid o.f 5,000 copies. "And see this!" Here he produced a copy of "Revolu? tionary Letters," by Lonine. "The only copy in America," he proudly, asserted. "It was brought to me by a Russian. He carried it into this country under his shirt next to his chest. We're going to have thou? sands of copies printed. Do you know what they do with it in Russia? They distribute it among the American and other Allied soldiers who are there. Oh yes, we're getting the soldiers on our side over there. Longs for Russia and Trotzky "Ah, but I wish I could get out of this terrible country into Russia where there are men with brains. I tell you Trotzky has more brains than President Wilson,' or any of the so called great men here. I know Trotzky. I work for Trotzky. He and I were im? prisoned in Siberia together for two and a half years. His cell was next to mine, and I saw a lot of him. Then when he came to America I had long talks with him. He is a great man? Trotzky. But they will not let me out of this country. I work at the Russian headquarters on Fifteenth Street, and a few months ago I was arrested and then released. Says Police Hire Girl Spies "The Police Department put a girl spy in our office. Oh, yes, that's what they do-?send girls around to all the meetings to take repoits. Well, this one was an innocent looking thing, but ;'.ll the time she wa3 informing the Police Department of what we were doing at the Russian headquarters. We discovered it and fired her out. But first we took her photograph and sent copies of it around to all our meeting places so that she would not be ad? mitted anywhere. In Russia a girl like that would be shot. "I tell you Russia alone is going to fight the capitalists in every country in the world. Do you know that in Petrograd British, American, French. Italian and every kind of money is being made. Yes, and it is beginning to flood these countries. It will so cheapen native money without peo-* pie understanding why that the capi italists will be checkmated at their own game." Decries American Socialists From this he proceeded to decry the moderation of American Socialists. They were afraid of their own skins. They did not have the nerve to do any thing. Bomb plots? They were "framed up" by the capitalists them? selves. When it came to revolution the Russians in America weren't go- i ?ng to bother petty individual cases ? of bomb throwing. No, indeed, it would ] be war of the deadliest type. All this in undertones to his imme- ? diate neighbors. Meanwhile, the Yip- I sels were getting tuned up for busi? ness. They had their preliminary mon? keying around the piano, and when one girl, with a derisive laugh, played the opening bars of "The Star Spangled Banner" three or four youths jumped toward her and rippled the keys from treble to bass to drown her incipient effort to play the American anthem. Sympathy for the "Lefts" The debate on left versus right wing was conducted in animated fashion by Jack Haikin and Higo Pollack, sympa? thy appearing to be with the "lefts." The advocate of the extremists out? lined a programme of organized work men's councils to control the govern ? ment first and then abolish it. It would mean industrial revolution and linking . up with the I. W. W.'s. It would be an I exact duplication in America of the I Bolshevik programme in Russia. The ; youthful pleader impressed upon the , I Yipsels the importance of getting in ' on mass action?speedy, clear-cut, rev? olutionary. ? ' -? ? Burglar Makes $13,000 Haul in Littauer Home __^_ Police Believe He Hid While ex-CongresHman, Awakened, Made Inspection NEW ROCHELLE, N. Y., June 8.?A '. burglar climbed the front porch of ex 1 Congressman Luc?ub N. Littauer's j home at Premium Point last night, '? entered the room where Mr. Littauer | was asleep and went through the house i at hi? leisure, departing with jewelry, ! ?ilverware, Liberty bonds and cash j valued at $13,000. Mr. Littauer was awakened soon af i ter midnight by the rattling of a win j dow shade. *Ho found the window, i which he had raised only to a point \ whore* the shade did not overhang it, wide open. He msde a cursory inspec? tion of th* house, but, finding no sign of disordcaw went back to bad. This morning ths burglar w* *k covered at once by the manifest evi? dences of the thorough ransacking the intruder had given the house. The po ("?ee believe Mr. Littauer could not have failed to notice them had the burglar finished when he was awakened by the window shade. They think, therefore, that the burglar was hidden in the house while Mr. Littauer was making his rounds. An attempt is being made to trace a motor boat which dropped anchor in Echo Bay, near Premium Point, laat Herbert Fisher Slated For Ambassador to U. S. New York Tribune . ,.* ,-,? ?. European Bureau (Copyright, 1919. ?*ew Tork Tribune Inc.) LONDON, June 8.?The announce? ment that Herbert Albert Laurens Fisher, president of the Board of Edu? cation, has gone to Paris 1b taken to indicate his early appointment as Brit? ish Ambassador to the United States. Mr. Fisher's main educational work in England was accomplished with the passing of the education act of 1918, which may now be left to the adminis? tration of local bodies. It is thought tho American interest in educational matters may make his appointment popular on the other side of the water. Commenting on the prospective ap? pointment, "The Times" says: "He (Mr. Fisher.) has been engaged at home in the great democratic task of opennig the gates of opportunity to every citizen. In America he would stand for British ideals at the moment when their essential identity with the ideals of the United States of America has been established by the searching test of war." Tho Irish movement in America is likely to hasten the departure of the new ambassador. The passing of Sen? ator Borah's resolution to secure a hearing for De Valera at the peace conference has impressed Great Britain with the necessity of counteracting Irish agitation in the United States. Former Greenwich Judge Is Sued for Divorce GREENWICH, Conn., June 8.? Charles D. Burnes, formerly of Green? wich, but now of Springfield, Mass., a former judge and one-time Secretary of State, is the defendant in an action for divorce brought by Elizabeth R. Burnes in the Superior Court, Bridge? port. Mrs. Burnes, who was Miss Eliza? beth M. Raymond, is residing in Stam? ford, Conn. An unnamed woman is co? respondent. The Burneses were married Febru? ary G, 1885. They have two sons, Dud? ley Burnes, a student in Princeton, and Raymond Elmere Burnes. Judge Burnes attended Wesleyan University and later was graduated from the Yale law school. Mrs. Burnes was active in Greenwich society circles, and Judge Burnes, a practising lawyer, was for some time judge of the Borough Court and a mem? ber of the Town School Board. British Soldiers Mutiny PLYMOUTH, June X.?Fifteen hun? dred British troops of General Allen by's force in Egypt and Palestine, who returned here to-night after having served at Gallipoli and in Mesopotamia, Palestine and the Balkans, refused to entrain for an isolation camp. The order was given because six cases of suspected smallpox had been discov? ered during the voyage to England. The soldiers who had entrained left the cars and the others refused to enter. The authorities finally gave way and the mon went to demobilization centres instead of the isolation camp. Interested spectators of the scene were officers and mn of the U. S. S, Aroostook, which shortly will return to New York. Trolley Crash Injures 14 A southbound Avenue B car, crowded to the vestibules, was turning west into Second Street last night when it was struck by a northbound Four? teenth Street car. Tho impact broke many windows of the Avenue B car and flung most of the passengers to the floor. Fourteen of them required attention by an ambulance surgeon before they could continue their journey. No one in the Fourteenth Street car was hurt Winnipeg Near Full Triumph Over Radicals Law and Order Emerging Victorious After Four Weeks of Turmoil; Aid of Soldiers Turns Tide Staff Correepondence WINNIPEG, Man., June 8.?Winni? peg to-night seems on the point of emerging victorious from its four week's general Btrike, which has put it through the most remarkable experi? ence ever endured by a city in North America and has also given a convinc? ing demonstration that there is a pow? erful?in this case, a dominant?element By proclamation of the President of the United States this is Boy Scout Week. The purpose is to strengthen and Bus tain the Boy Scout Organization. Our interest in Boy Scouts of America is far and above the official out? fits sold at our four conven? ient corners. What's good for the boy is good for the Nation, and we're only too glad, by this further publicity, to help give a flying start to the nation-wide campaign, for associate members. Surely there are 300,000 grown-up New Yorkers who are willing to con? tribute $1 for associate membership as their share in a movement which, an? nually,-is turning out thou? sands of better boys and creating the finest types of future American patriots. For the sake of America's best boyhood, how can America's best manhood and womanhood refuse? Your neighborhood will be canvassed. Join! Rogers Peet Company Broadway Broadway a{ 13th St. "Four at 34th St. Convenient Broadway Corners" Fifth Ave. at Warren at 41st St. T-liJMBy?s-Wiiri^^ Your favorite smoKe TT may be a clear Havana, a cigarette or a Jimmy pipe?but whatever it is?it's here. We don't say we carry every brand on the market?to do so would be to convert the entire store into one great tobacco section? BUT, in the event of your favorite brand being among the missing, we know we can furnish a new favorite with the same desirable qualities as the other, at a lower price. We can confidently say "Try us for your favorite smoke!" B?ajptr-Mmta Ml Vteth Flom. MO? sti*?*. HERALD SQUARE # NEW YORK i r i Tt mu? i is.m i mn in i m s insi ? i ~i. in the community which will fight to a finish, if it cannot defeat, any attempt to put a "proletarian dictatorship" into effect. The battle with the soviet is won, though the radicals are not yet en? tirely convinced that they have been beaten and are still hanging on in the hope of outside support. But their forces are disintegrating, and the next few days are expected to bring a re? sumption of the streetcar service, tho last public utility to be put back into running order. The organization in the last few days of a special constabulary, including 100 mounted men, who can be counted on to maintain order and give the pro? tection that the police have refused, has been the final factor in the vic? tory. Behind this ha.% been the change in attitude of some 75 per cent of the re? turned soldiers from neutrality to an active support of the city. The or? ganization of thousands of older clti ?zens into a reserve army has also been completed, and it is now felt the strik? ers will not dare make trouble. The fight against the Soviet idea, which lay behind the attempt to tie up the whole city, though probably not half of the strikers knew this, has been long and bitter, and skillfully handled. Perhaps its most remarkable feature has been the successful efforts of both sides to avoid violence. Apart from a few fist fights and some mild disorder, there has been no trouble. The strikers have asserted that they wanted to demonstrate the "peaceful force" of labor, and have also been im? pressed by the show of force made by the citizens, a show that was largely a bluff in the early days of the strike, but that is now overwhelming. The citizens have been even more anxious to give no provocation, since they felt an appeal to arms would not settle the question, though it would win the strike. It was duo to the efforts of a citizens' committee?with more than 6,000 mem? bers in active service and as many more affiliated?that the government has been maintained. The strike tied up absolutely every part of the public service except the police, and they were admittedly taking orders from the strikers. The citizens organized what was practically a counter revolution, and placed at the disposal of the gov? ernment such forc?s as enabled it to put back into commission every one of its functions. To-day the city is functioning al? most as usual, except for streetcars and the delays due to the inexperience of the citizens who filled the strikers' places. Winnipeg has shown that it can live without labor. It has lost millions of dollars, it has suffered great discom? fort and it has been badly scared, but it is still going, and going better and better, without any help from practi? cally its entire labor element. The newspapers are being printed again, the regular men having come back after reporters and editors had learned to stereotype plates run presses and man delivery carts. For Men. ? Women. Est. 1853 STYLE COMFORT | QUALlTYl Pumps & Oxfords The highest class of selected material shaped into form by skilled mechanics makes the superior standard of footwear universally recog. nized as Kahler quality. Dr. P. KAHLER & SONS 15-17 West 44th St Xear 5th At*., >>w \-'otll High Sign No. 20 Behold-the "Sign of the Urgent U"?a signal spe-? cially created by the Order of Orlando for use in thej great membership drive now in progress. It means "U Join ?/s"? an invitation to the wandering smoker to join the Order of Orlando?to enter the mystic Arena of Aroma and to learn the secret of a good cigar. Heed this sage counsel, Friend?and waste no time. Go (how, and t/nite with C/nited, the stores where Orlando presides. Let Orlando teach you a new degree of cigar satisfaction. A cHSeSign of a Good Cigare Thousands of men are en? rolled in theOrder every day? men who have seen the wis? dom of smoking Orlando? the cigar that combines quality with economy. There's a character about this rich, mild cigar that makes friends the minute you've experienced its sooth? ing charm. Everything about Orlando is just what you've always hoped to find in a cigar?and most always hoped in vain. Join the Order to-day, Friend, and %learn what thousands of men have learned air Invincible Size, 2 for 27c Box of 25, $3.25?50, $6.50 Orlando comes in ten sizes*?10c to 15c. Little Orlando 6c. Ten sizes enable us to use a fine grade of tobacco without waste?the secret of high quality at low prices. Orlando is sold only in United Cigar Stores?"Thank you!'9 UNITED CIGAR STORES