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THE FARMER: JUNE 27, 1911 i NO MASCOTS IN PARADE OF ELKS Grand Exalted Ruler Garry Herr- mann Issues Orders to This Effect . Governor Woodrow Wilson to Welcome Visiting Antlers : Plans Completed For Handling 100,000 "Hello Bills" At r lantic City Taking Pains to See There is no Overcharge - For Hotel Accomodations t Atlantic City.-' June 26. No mas c cots tf any. kind will be tolerated in the greatest parade the order of .Elkdom has ever ljeld. r An order to this effect emanating -from Grand Exalted Ruler Herrmann " ri a han nrnmn eaten n prfi hv Vv II- Uam J. Storek, chief of staff to Grand - Esquire James H. Nicholson, of Bos yton, who will be in command of the . mivAtilniy Strata -i tha o n 1 1 or-or? fntar. ,nity. The effect of this decree, of great .Interest to 300,000 Elks throughout the country, will be to exclude from l the spectacular procession on the fourth day of the twenty-fifth Grand : Lodr Reunion in Atlantic City dur j Injr the week of July 10th, freaks of every description. . Giants, dwarfs, wllliam goats, pet--ted canines and mascots of any and '. whatever kind are to be relegated to the tall timbers: Grand Exalted Ruler Herrmann has indicated the "belief that the Benevolent and Pro "tectlve Order has reached a stage , where it Is Justified in Insisting that ,rthe annual parade of the order, ai rways a spectacular demonstration, demonstration, shall be exempt from sideshow specialties. Members, may wear what ever unfcjue garb they see 'Et and there will be no end of strik nt novelties, but the mascot will be a thing of the past; 'J,' - - All Plans Complete. Atlantic City has worked" out its -plans for reception and entertainment - of upwards of 100.000 of the "Best - x vrsjf 10, V I r iu liiv iaov a luge -perfection. - Accommodations have - been reserved for practically 35,000 and word has gone forth from the Ho- ' lei Bureau through acting Secretary i Eaton. that ho Elk should remain away ' through fear that there may not be -room for him for Atlantic City has a "tested housing capacity for half a 'million people. Hotel proprietors "have deferred closingreservations for f regular rummer patrons until after the .Elks' meeting In order that there will ..virtually be unlimited accommodations , for the great army of Elk;; and, the "promise made at Detroit a year ago ' that there would be no- advance of rates if Atlantic City were narrfed for Tthis year's" convention;- will be kept gto the letter. . - Governor Wilson, of New Jersey, will do the honors for the State in ex tending the glad hand of welcome to the hosts of Elkdom when the Grand Lodge convenes in session on the Steel .ner on me morning or juiy iut.ii. h,iks will virtually own - this great centre of amusement, for th,e local commit tee of arrangements ' has leased the BUUClUtB 01 DlCCl VU liVilLICtC ivi oil entire week. Here the registration headquarters will be located and in the largest of the three halls on that pier the 2,700 representatives of the Grand Lodge will be in session for three days. j Prizes aggregating $3,400 in cash will be awarded, it was announced to da v. : for -drill competition, band con certs and to the lodges making the finest appearance, turning 'out the greatest number of women and trav elling the longest distance to take part in the procession. - 25,000 To March., -" There will be sixty bands and it is estimated that the number of paraders will not fall short of 25.000. Texas will send the largest number of Elks that has ever attended a Grand Lodge Reunion outside of Pallas. Col. John P. Sullivan," of New Orleans, who is waging a strong fight for Grand Ex alted Ruler, will come up from the . Crescent City with his own corps of boosters in a palatial special train. Texans will come to the shore in two special trains running through from Fort Worth with the Grand Exalted Ruler Boom of Charles P.- Rasbury. Californians will come from Frisco and Pasadena in palatial specials run ning through with all the comforts advanced railroading science can pro vide. Oregonlans will come in a spe cial from Portland which ' wants the next Reunion. . There will be specials from North Carolina and specials from Boston more specials in faet.the records show, than any previous Grand Lodge gathering has ever produced. Three thousand bulletins posted in railroad stations throughout the coun. try have helped materially to stir in terest in the great meeting. Railway traffic managers have "featured" the Reunion to a greater extent, it is said than any fraternity, convention that has yet been held. Atlantic City is already beginning to don its habiliments of purple and to bedeck Itself in miles upon miles of bunting and thousands of flags to af ford a proper stage-setting for the mo mentous occasion. By the time the vanguard arrives the always gay and attractive city will be as pretty as the proverbial picture. , Grand Exalted Ruler Herrmann and the Grand Lodge officers will open their headquarters on July 6th at the Hotel Strand, where ninety rooms have been reserved for them and their fam ilies. Peculiar interest is attached to the Atlantic City meeting because it was here in 1895 that the factional differences that threatened the very ex istence of the order were peacefully adjusted, the hatchet buried and the future of Elkdom as a great Ameri can institution assured. DISTRIBUTION OF EAGLE'S PLUMAGE There will be a special meeting this evening in Eagles' hall of the general committee in charge of the arrange ments for the Eagles trip, to Dan bury next Saturday to attend the state field day of the order and all of those members who have decided to go. . The uniforms to be worn by the Bridgeport delegation will be distri buted next Thursday evening at which time any of the members who desire to make the trip can obtain them. Over two hundred members of the aerie have already signified their intentions to Vo and President Callan la anxious for as many more who can do so to Join the delegation in order that the chances for Bridge port to capture first prize for having the largest number of men in line may be increased. The full Wheeler & Wilson Band has been engaged and the delegation will march from Eagles' hall next Saturday morning to the depot where a special train will leave for Danbury at 8:45 a. m. The return trip will be made from Danbury at 8:45 in the evening of the special train. On Thursday night the officers and mem bers of the Bridgeport degree team will go to Danbury to take in a tate competition for a hundred dollar cash prize, which will be awarded to the team making the best appearance on the floor. MAYOR'S COURSE IS LEGALLY AND LOGICALLY SOUND The New York Herald last Sunday had the following on Mayor Buckingham's attitude toward Sunday baseball: - ' Bridgeport for several weeks has been the State's storm centre of blue law agitation and, in some respects, of blue law enforcement. Since Judge Foster of its Porice Court, proclaim ed that club licenses to sell liquor on Sundays wouldn't go with him the summer breezes have been sighing their song or aridity through the de serted club rooms. One does not have to be a tem perance man or the holder of very high views on morality to concede that in the guise of clubs there are in Bridgeport too many "speakeasies," with their constant temptations to wage earners. There are dives there which, because of the debasing influ ences contact with them engenders, have no redeeming features and are entitled to no leniency. But when the edict goes forth that reputable clubs and hotels are to be classed with these dangerous agencies ft iauaaox ality which ought to be sternly sup pressed, the effect is an added at tempt to make criminals of those who are offenders against ex parte opin ions rather than violators of law. Today, in Bridgeport a club or a hotel that would not incur the dis pleasure of a member or of a board er or visitor ' who calls for liquid re freshment has to play a game of hide and seek. The hotels would have ehaken off these shackles had the bill to legalize Sunday selling passed the Legislature. It went through the Senate easily, but the House shied at it and left it by the wayside. Now the hotel men of the State are trying to resurrect it and obtain reconsidera tion by the House. Although the ho tel men have large vested interests closely related to the welfare of the State which deserve more considera tion than the House gave them, it nevertheless cannot be gainsaid that the poor showing there is to be at tributed in large measure to misman agement of the bill and a deplorable lack of team work. Mayor Buckingham's Stand. But, aside from the liquor question Bridgeport is not entirely in the grip of the blue laws. The application of the eighteenth century statutes has been modified to the extent of per mitting professional baseball playing on Sunday. . Because Mayor Bucking ham has stood firm in his refusal to use his official position and prestige to suppress this healthful sport and relaxation for thousands who have do other day to taste its Joys, he has en countered the maundering rage of those who would make their own form of Sunday observance compul sory with ail. Nearly two score of , clergymen have organized themselves into an association of protest and have poured a delicious dose of pul- J pit hot Bhot.upon the Mayor's de voted head. , , On the other hand, so wide is the potential range of carrying criticism that there are those who find fault j with the Mayor because he does not explicitly rather than impliedly stamp Sunday ball playing for an admit tance fee with his official sanction. Thus he is getting it from both sides, or, rather, from the two extremes and in this respect he is placed in a position somewhat similar to. that in which Mayor Hooker, of Hartford, found himself because of his attitude toward Sunday amusements. But Mayor' Buckingham .has taken a course which is legally and logi cally sound. - He could not officially sanction the breaking of even an ab surd law. He is too sensible to use his official power to Insist upon the enforcement of an absurd law. The manly attitude he has assumed is en tirely in accord with the enlightened and preponderant public sentiment of his city. He may hear more of de traction than of praise, but that is because most of the tents of the ap proving multitude are pitched in the shadow of the eternal hills of God j and His years. It is for the numeri cally prominent but relatively ob-1 scure part of a great community that Sunday baseball is a boon. There are those of us who do not care for the games, but . we don't have to go to them. There is less coercion prao tised to drive people to ball games than there is to get them into church. Few. will be worse Christians because they heard the rattle of the base hit on Sunday, but many will be better. ' A Possible Extreme. Meanwhile the soda fountains gush in Bridgeport on Sunday and the wooded Indians glare defiance at the gleaming stars and uniforms of the Park City's "coppered" force. Cleri cal hissing would swell into popular howling if the ban were put on-the sale of the fumaceous Sunday cigar and the sweetly seductive lollypop. Yet Mayor Buckingham has as much right legally; morally and logically, to proceed against such traffic as he has to call a halt on Sunday base ball. If he can be forced to do or if he can be forced to do the other. The clerical thesis, carried to its logi cal conclusion, would put practically all the Inhabitants of Bridgeport n limbs Judges and ministers of the Gospel included. But Mayor Buckingham is not at all likely to retaliate in this fashion. His hide isnot pachydermous, but he can better afford to bear the shafts and taunts of hi9 assailants, serene in the confidence that he has the sup port of the great silent majority of his constituents, than he can to be goaded by his turbulent tormentors in a crusade that would put Bridgeport into the category of flag stations. In cidentally Mayor Buckingham is poli tically stronger than he has been at any time since his election, nearly two years ago. He has become a public figure of state importance. EASTERN LEAGUE. Team Standing. Rochester, Baltimore, Toronto, Buffalo, Montreal, Jersey City, Newark. Providence, Won Lost P. C. 40 19 .678 34 25 .576 35 -rlM .574 27 28 .491 26 29 .473 26 30 .464 24 37 .393 19 37 .339 Yesterday's Results. At Newark Montreal-Newark, both games postponed, rain. At Jersey City Jersey City 7, Buf- X&lO 3 At Baltimore Rochester 4, Balti more 1 (called end eighth to allow Rochester to catch train). At Providence Toronto 8, Provi dence 3. NEW ENGLAND Team Standing. ' Lowell, . Lawrence, Worcester, Brockton, Lynn, Fall River, New Bedford, Haverhill, Yesterday's Results. At Lynn Lowell 4, Lynn 1. At Worcester New Bedford 2, Wor cester O. At Brockton Lawrence 2. Brock ton 1. At Haverhill Fall River 7, Haver hill 3 (first game); Haverhill 6, Fall River 2 (second game, seven innings by agreement). Won Lost P. C. 32 18 .640 30 22 .577 28 22 .560 27 24 .529 25 24 .510 23 28 .451 17 30 .362 17 31 .354 Welcome To Our Fair City; Come See Our John Good Chance This Week, For He's Doing "The Virginian" in Play That Thrills With the Wild, Free West Have you seen the great plains where the cattle range? Io you know the foot hills and the 'red mountains that rear giant bulks to the clouds? Have you waited an hour or two among the pine shanties in the bus iness center of a "city" at a railroad Junction on a western line? Do you know the ranches and the great terri tories In which women are scarce as hen's teeth, and men settle their dis putes at the pistol's end, where the process of Judge Lynch still runs in the land, and a cattle thief is the worst criminal that encumbers the earth? . If you know these things and have felt their . thrill you are in proper shape to see "The Virginian" which was presented, last night, for the first time at Poll's, and whicli is to run for the week. John Ince has the title role, a part of the type in which he excels, for the Virginian is an untutored chap, strong, tender, brave and true, a cow boy who is a leader of daring men, a lover who greets his lady In the spirit of knights of old. Pretty hot stuff, eh, as the gallery gods put it. when they like a thing. But then Ince is an institution. He is a part of Bridgeport, like Seaside Park and the City Hall. He has been here so long, that they tell strangers about him, saying,. "Welcome to our fair city. Won't you come to the matinee and see our John." The play, is adapted from the book by Owen Wister. It covers the whole gamut of thrills. There's the pretty school raarm, the only single woman in the neighborhood, whom all the cowboys adore. There's the mixing of the babies, there's the lynching so real that you feel sorry for the vic tims, and there's a shoot-you-on-slght duel, in the last act, in which ouhero pots the villain, and the curtain goes down with our heroine clinging to our hero's neck like the vine of the sturdy oak. Some heroine, you'd better be lieve, as Miss Annie Hollinger does it. As for Joseph Eggenton, seeing him as Trampas one could never believe him anything but a villain born to be wicked and predestined to be damned. He's a thrill ajj right. Then there's Tom Moore, wlrose Spanish Ed, could scarcely be improved upon. Want to know how a coward acts, when , he sees the rope? Poll's last night was the place to see. More th.an a score of people are used In the production. That's too many to catalogue here, but they made' the team work and the verisi militude as the real critics say. The scenery is elaborate. There are four settings, something to stir the pride of a local public. There-was Just one flaw in the production, or hardly that. The mocking bird really must be toned down. It is ferociously unkind to run in a mocking bird 'with a voice like a steam caliope onne of the most tender passages in the show. But so it was. Just as our John got a good grip on our heroine and was looking unutterable things Into her eyes, the mocking bird began to sing. Heaven's how it sang. Pianissimo for the mocking bird, hereafter, please, Mr. Stage Manager. Cop Shot To Death By Gang Early Today (Special from United Press.) Boston, June 27 Patrolman Walter G. McQuarry is dead and his friend, Charles Follette, i3 dying as the result of an encounter with four thieves at Appanaug, early today. The shooting occurred near the Appanaug. The guests of the hotel, aroused by the fusllade, ran to the scene Just in time to see the outlaws disappearing down the road. A posse was quickly form ed and a thorough search of the sur rounding country was made. Under cover of darkness the gang escaped. Just before ,he lapsed into unconsci ousness, Follette, who was shot in the head, said that he and McQuarry had Just finished' repairing an automobile As the four men appoached them on he road McQuarry noticed one of them carried a big white bag and he called out, . "What have you been doing, robbing a clothes line?" Without a word in reply, the quar tet opened fire. Both the policeman and his friend fell at the first volley McQuarry shot through the heart. Sewer Inspector Reports Attempt To Bribe Him (Special from United Press.) - Stamford, June 27 Alleging that an attempt had been made .to ,bribe him from the performance of. his duties as sewer inspector of this city, Geo. Conron, at a meeting of. the Com mon Council, last evening, asked that the plumbing license of Felluer & Sovulkin, of 156 Pacific street, be re voked.! Mr. Ccmron alleges that the firm had taken a contract on which they were losing money and wanted to complete it in a manner which would cost much less than the origi nal plans. He said that Sovulkin had called at his office and presented him with a five dollar gold piece wrapped in a newspaper. He kicked Sovul kin out of the office and threw the money after him, it is claimed. Trying To Let Taft Down Easy In Coal Land Case (Special from United Press. Washington, June 27. That Presi dent Taft never personally passed on the Cunningham-Guggenheim coal land claims in Alaska, was the ex planation offered, today, by his friends to the contention that he was reversed by the decision of his new secretary of the interior, yesterday, cancelling the entries. The administration officials said that Taft in his excoriation of L. R. Glavis, field agent who first brought charges against the Cunningham claimants and against. Former Secre tary Ballinger, considered only the questions of "insubordination, mali cious charges against superiors and disregard of executive orders." in the dismissal of Gifford Plnchot as chief forester, the Taft men said, the President considered only the same auestion. Banker Tells Of Wife's' Coldness In Divorce Suit When He Kissed Her Evenings on Retiring She Would Hug Him Like a Bear (Special from United Press.) New York, June 27 When Edward V. Gambier, cashier and director of the Merchants . Exchange National Bank, resumed the witness stand to day. In the trial of the suit of his wife for a separation and his cross bill for an annulment of the marriaue. he com pleted his story of the happenings fol lowing his wedding. He was then turned over to Mrs. Gambler's counsel, Augustus Van Wyck, for cross-examination. Gambier insisted that at no time following their wedding did his wife show any affection for him. When he complained to her father the latter told him that Mrs. Gambier was suf fering from ' nervous prostration. Gambier said that when they reached Philadelphia on their honeymoon, his wife complained to him that she "felt like hell." The bringing into the case of the name of Harvey C. Sickler, president of the Atlantic Fertilizer & OH Com pany, and one of the millionaire or ganizers of the Fertilizer Trust, add ed interest to the case today. He is the man whom Gambler alleges his wife lavished kisses on in New Jersey in auto drives about Central Park. Gambier testified that on the trip abroad after the wedding his wife spent most of each day in their state room. At night she mingled with the younger passengers and participated in the dancing. , "But she was always cold to me," he said. "Evenings when we retired to our cabin she would have nothing to ' say. I always kissed her good night before going to my own bed. One night I asked her to embrace me and she put her arms around my neck, bear hop fashion. Her attitude al ways indicated to me that I was re pellant to her." BIG MOOSE TO VISIT BRIDGEPORT James,. J. Davis, international Su preme organizer, notified National Organizer Kennedy todayv by tele graph that he would be present to take part in the mammoth street parade of the local order of Moose on Saturday of this week. This news will be heralded with delight by ev ery member of the local lodge. - " - ' JAMES J. DAVIS, International Supreme ' Organizer of v . Moose. On account of the large number of applications on hand Organizer Kennedy has decided to hold a special class initiation on Friday night of this week. The growth of this order has been phenomenal. From a neu cleus of a little over 200 members the membership now totals closely onto 1,500. Aged Banker Drowns .Himself (Special from United Press.) Rutland, Vt., June 27 James Clarke, 72 years old, cashier of the Baxter Na tional Bank, this city, and one of the best known men in this part of Ver mont, today committed suicide by drowning himself. He was prominent in military circles as a captain in the 7th Vermont infantry. HI health is said to have been the cause of his act. Earle Ovington Says Boston Has , Aviation Surfeit (Special from United Press.) Boston, June 27.- Boston may add to its distinctions that of being the first city in history to become sur feited with aviation, according to Earle E. Ovington. the Newton boy who has lately made some remark able flights hereabouts in his high powered Bleriot monoplane. In a statement, today, Ovington intimated th.at this is the reason he is about to depart for New York where the ex ploits of airmen receive greater re cognition. There has been so much flying here of late, he said, aviation has become an "old story" and to this he blames the fact that no prizes for unusual flights have been offered here. He believes some one in Boston should have, before now offered substantial money prize for a Boston-New York flight. Weather Indications. (Special from United Press.) New Haven, June 27 Forecast: Un settled weather with showers tonight and Wednesday; cooler Wednesday; moderate southeast to south winds, shifting to southwest Wednesday. The disturbance that was central over Iowa yesterday morning has moved northeastward and is now cen tral over New England. It produced general rain during the last 24 hours from Iowa eastward to the coast. Pleasant weather has prevailed in other sections east of the Rocky Moun tains. The weather continues dry and hot in the southwest. Conditions favor for this vicinity generally cloudy weather with show ers, followed by cleaxing on Wednesday. EVERYBODY THINKS THAT SATISFACTION COAL IS THE BEST IN THE CITY IT IS BRIDGEPORT LODGE, NO. 289. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSB Round-np Initiation Sunday, July 2 tt Charter Closes Saturday, July 1 , WITH MAGNIFICENT STREET PARADE AT 8 P. M. Those who pay $2 with application before the Charter closes have thirty days or until August 1, to male foil fiayment and get obligated. Candidates paying $5 have sixty days in which ' to take their degree. Applicants obj ecting to pay at least $2 become ineli gible at the special rate. There Is no ttene to lose, and the time Is gmwmc shorter. HUSTLE ! 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