HUGH DOUGHERTY, NOTED MINISTREL, BIDS CITY GOOD-BY Man Endeared to Milliona Goes to Home With Adopted 'Daughter ALMOST 73 YEARS OLD , Health Poor, but He Still Can Make Song Tribute to Town Ho Loves Hitghejs Farewell Word Tribute to Philadelphia trurrlmv nnuehcrty leaves this 1 city probably forever on the-4:31 train tms aiwrnoom , Ho will pass his remaining days with his stepdaughter. Mrs. Evalina Butland, in Los Angeles. He was a minstrel for more than fifty years. -, Ho will have a royal send-off from loyal friends. His last word is a tribute to the city of his birth. He won a big following by orig inality and clean fun. Exit Hughey Dougherty. Tho famous minstrel who has made us all laugh for years Is going to quit tho town this afternoon. And everybody who has any Philadelphia blood In him will be there to wish him Godspeed when ho makes his final bow from the train which Is to tako him from ur- sight undoub'tedly forever. Ho ero'es to spend his remaining days with his daughter, Mrs. Evallnn Dutlnnd, of Los Angeles. Ho adopted her many years ngo, before ha was In his prlmo ns a mlnstrol. When Hughoy became desperately III and was taken to St. Agnes' Hospital more than two months ago she heard of It through the newspapers. ''Come home," was the message the old minstrel received one day. It was signed Imply "Evalina." When his llttlo adopted daughter was christened at the Church of the Assumption, Hth and Spring Gardon Rtreets, Huphey was singing tho song "Evalina," so tho baby wns called Evalina. And so, like bread cast upon the waterB, she will bo at Los Angeles to greet Hughey when he arrives there on Saturday. The aged minstrel ho Is nearlng 73 doesn't want nny fuss about his leaving this afternoon. He heard that somo ono had planned to kidnap him for fun, nnd It worries him. "I got to got my hair cut and get my laundry and n. lot of things, and there won't be any time for nny skylarking stuff. I'm a kind of afraid of that laundry fellow; he hasn't been on time with It yet." Hughey's face Is ratner full, despite his tlness, and that twlnklo In his eye, the .twinkle which used to bring many a laugh nt tho 11th Street Opera House, Is sttn there. He finds Is somewhat difficult to walk, but he feels that the air on tho coast will brace him. In fact, Jhe old min strel behoves that there's one more show left In him yet "What message have you for Philadel phia ?" h was asked. "I'm not leaving. Phllly," ho said. "It'll always be with mo In memory. The thoughts don't como as quick as they used to," ho said, as his hand ran through his IIHijHPTsSBk "3 HHiialliBBI EVENING LEDaERr-PrilLADELPHIA', TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1916. "HUGHEY" DOUGHERTY scant white hair, "but how Is this on tho Impulse?" Dear old rtillly. You're n whlto ns n Illy, And you've won a Just renown. I'll be for jou until I'm through. And let nobody run you down. Hughey said ho'd try to reel off n few tines about Kvallna at Broad Street Station. He finds It hnrd to remember things sud denly. Asked to sing It today ns he was looking after his effects, Hughey offered the' following In a fairly clear voice: Wy down In tho Green Vnlle? Whro tho lilies thy do grow And the winds from tho mountain (Forgotten) cuonus, 8wot Kvallna, dear niallrm. My love for theo will ntur, never die. Siot Kvnllna, dear Uvallnn, My love for theo will never, neer die. Among those who will greet Hughoy at the station this afternoon will bo Joe Fox and William Waid, tho oldest blackface team on tho utngo nnd still nt It. They will soon celebrate their golden Jubilee. Both sat with Hughey In the famous clrr cle at Carncross & Dlxcy's nnd Dumont's. Then thero will be Frank Dumont, Vic Illcharda, John Breslln, nsslstant treasurer of Dumont's Minstrels, who will accompany Hughey to Los Angeles; John J. Kc lrnn.1, Norman Jcffciles, Frank Donnelly, Ed B. Itohn, of tho Bingham Hotel, and numerous managers nnd hotel proprietors who have known the old minstrel for years. Hughoy will not have anything to worry about en routo. He Is scheduled to reach Chicago at 4:30 tomorrow afternoon, when he will bo met by Francis Leon, nn old minstrel, nnd a number of actor folk and well-known Phlladelphlans who aro In Chi cago for tho convention. Ho Is scheduled to nrrhe at Los Angoles oij Saturday. Hughey was born In this city near 4 th nnd Gasklll streets. After doing llttlo turns nt concerts he camo to the attention of Sam Sanford arid mndo his professional debut, It Is said, with Sam Sanford's min strels at the Eleventh Street Opera House. When Carncross and DIxey succeeded the Sanford combination Hughey remained for many years. Ho left hero for awhile and toured all over tho country with tho leading minstrel troupes of those times. Later he returned to this city nnd was with Frank Dumont's minstrels, which suc ceeded Carncross and Dlxoy. An Insight Into his character Is shown by tho devotion ho paid his wife. While he was playing hore she was for a long time III in Now York. Hughey boarded a train every night after tho show and went to comfort her. He returned every night early In time for tho performance. For many years ho mado his home at tho Hotel Bingham. A benefit given by Dumont's minstrels April 17 nnd 18 netfed moBt of tho money with which his expenses to tho coast were paid. GLIITALIANICOSTREm ADEVACUARELACIMA DEL MONTE DI CENGIO Disperatl AUncchi ResplntI nella Zona del Torrente Posina I RitBsi Iniziano Una Poderosa Offensiva LOTTA VIOLENTISSIMA ;WAR HAS WROUGHT GREAT CHANGES IN ANGLO-SAXON CHARACTERISTICS Placid, Pretentious, Pompous Dwellers in Suburbia Lose Dross of Caste and Pride in the Purifying Flame of the f Fire of High Aspiration and Achievement TPHffeit Especially for Evening Ledger. ' By ELLEN ADAIR LONDON, May 20. "KTUMEROUS strarige prognostications JLN are being mado on the changes, eco nomical and social, which will 'occur when the war Is over. But few people stop to' investigate the personal problem in other words, the resultant transformation In the Individual character. For no man can pass through the mad ness and come forth unchanged. No man can be pitchforked from the quiet, hum drum, sedentary Ufa of pre-war days Into the seething maelstrom of the Great Ad venture nnd come back esentially the same. That would be a psychological Impossibil ity. Take the case of Mr. Jones, typical resi dent of Suburbia, placid, peace-loving and paternal, blameless of Imagination as of mile, eminently respectable and "bon clto yen. ' The suburbs of London town swnrm !d with Its Mr. Joneses before the war, One watched thenj of an evening watering their trim little lawns with miniature hoses, pruning their rose trees while they smoked the pipe of peace nnd finally dozing off over the evening paper. Morning saw them trotting placidly In pursuit of the 8:35 to town, back to the same old routine, back to Me- same old office and tho same old grind. A curiously dull and uneventful life had far, Jones, of Suburbia I His range of vision was so limited that he seldom saw the wood for the obstructing trees. The trees wert. Rood enough for him, he said and forests nynow wero wearisome, perplexing things, it was hard to find one's way out, some tunes. And always they Involved calcula tion. Ho hated undue calculation the evening paper offered sufficient mental ex ercise and as for physical relaxation, there were always the rose-trees and the farden hose, Such was Friend JonesIn pre-flfar days, nave in mind one particular member of his class, a little .nervous, fussy sentleraan whose horizon was limited by his 12 by 6 psckyard fence and whose spirits were materially dampened by ouch trivialities s a leaking kitchen tap or a few drops of ln on his new spring toilet. He was a snobbish little man, too, wo this particular Mr. Jones. He never would associate with any one "In trade" for trade was "bourgeois'1 and hs prided him self on "claaV "One really cannot know the Soand bos,' ho would pompously observe to his tong-sufferlng wife, "they're not quite 'It,' you know" We never did quite know lust what "It" II. 'Siq'silifsouoiu emit in m ssumioA uai want, cut it certainly implied a Jot There ne wasn't ''it." then one just didn't exist sathln the range if Mr. Jones vision. when war broke out, a change came o'er the spirit ol the Joneslan dream, Pater, raiaa patriotically squeezed his rotund wrm within the limits of the khaki tunla and the Sam Brown bandolier, and set forth Oft the Great, Adventure. Since that great day, many strange things Jave befallen Mr. Jones and. his particular prototypes. How great the changes ars 1725 1ow when ,ne end ot war ot in t, hav Tcently learned. ' For an e ve sta spent at the abode pfethe Jones faro m out In. Suburbia, has taught me many fes, yet Mt me treatly wondering. 23 .tTmctw Paterfamilias. I hardly "I never knew what living meant before," he observed with truly surprising meekness. "The thought of the old dull days nnd that cursed office makes me tlerd ! To think that I wns content to sit. day nfter day, at' tho same old grind, never leallzing what life meantl Gad, what a blind fool I'vo been! Never again for me that sepulchre!" "You're getting a commission Boon?" soma one Inquired. Paterfamilias frowned. "I believe the Colonel has recommended me for one," he said airily, "but, 'matter of fact, I'd Just as soon-remain In the ranks. You see as much fighting either way, and I'vo a spe cial pal In my section that I hato to leave. He's one of the best and liveliest, a castor monger from Whltechapel way deWllsh good chap used to run nn all-night fried fish stand before the war." We listened thunderstruck. Impossible to believe that such rank heresy Issued from the once snobbish lips ot the haughty Mr. Jones! A costermonger from a fried fish standi But more was yet to follow, "That chap tells a story better than any raconteur I've ever known. Oh, no, he's not refined he calls a spade a spade his stories aren't for the drawing room but brave? Why, listen to what my coster friend accomplished!" "It was the other day up In the trenches, the Huns had been quite nasty, firing shrap nel from their field guns and having a long and glorious 'hate.' We lost a few men and got a bit peevish. Then the howitzers began. God, 'twas awful) You know the stuff? It explodes on impact. There was a nasty droning holse, then a smashing concussion, and tho earth flew up In a blackish yellow cloud. The air was singing with bits of shell. 'Then came a roar like nothing I'd ever heard before. Friend Coster Bill was hurled high Info the air, and thud I he landed on top of me, and down, down, down under the earth we went, suffocating, chok ing, burled deep In debris, 'Qorbllmey !' screams Bill, lighting for breath nnd doing the Australian crawl swimming stroke, 'I'll glya the blasted 'Una 'ell for this, so 'elp mo bob!'" "And sure enough he did. For -when night came "Ever bayoneted a Tin, old thing?' " be Inquired and I saw he meant business. "I believe I have, I said, 'But I'm willing to do t again,' " "So we crept out cautiously Into No- Mane-Land. A soaring star-shell showed us the figures of four Qertmins. out on patrol We followed them, We got them too. Gad, till that moment I'd never known what life meantl Bill cracked the skulls of three of them, and I accounted for the fourth the thrill of It ' Tho face of quiet Mr- Jones, of Surburbla, was ablaze. His breath was catching, bis hands were shaking when sud denly a plaintive little voice was heard out side the doors ' "Daddy, please come and kiss me good night," and a baby's curly head came Into View. There was a sudden silence. The queer, strange light died from the eyes of the speaker, and the hot flush faded- He Java an awkward laugh, and when he rose to leave the room the wild look on his face was replaced by a very tender one Yet we -who had witnessed the little scene were, j the French say. "given furiously ROMA, 8 Qlugno. ( La scconda fnae delt'offcnslvn austrlaca sulta fronte ltallann o' ormal Inlzlatn. SI trnttn. dl un poderoBo sforza dt superaro la rtBlstcnza del centro Itallano dove nppnnto gll nustrtacl esercltnno ora In masslma prcBslonc. Oblettlvo nustrlaco o secondo I crltlcl mllltarl sulln rlva quello di guadn gnnro posiztonl sulln rlva merUlonnlo del torrenlo I'03lnn da dovo pol II nemlco nt tncchcrcbbo Ic posl2lonl Itallane dominant! dl Fornl Alii, Colle Xomo, Monte Alba, Collo Poslnn, Monto Spin, Monte Cogolo, Monte Illono o Monte Bovegno, tutte ben forttflcnta o' ad un'nltezzn vknrlanto dl 4000 n C00O pled!. Net medcslmo tempo gll nustrlacl tcntano dl avanzara sull'altoplnno dl Araloro, dove cssl sono fiadront dt Monto Cimorie. a .ISOu pledi, o dcllo faldo scttcntrlonnil dt Monto I'rhffora. Ivl, I crltlcl mllltarl rltengono, non e' csclusa la posslblllta' dl resplngcro gll itnllanl plu' lndiotro, ma loro seconds, llnca si rltleno sufllclcntemonto forto per la protezlono dl schlo che pcrclo' non si constdera como serlnmentn mlnacclata. SI fa notaro nncha che gll Itnllanl sono orn fornlll dl un buon numero dl cannonl dl Krosso callbro o pcrclo' possono Impedlre II conccntramcuto dl grand! forzo dl attacco che hanno dovuto cssero fatto avanzaro flno n breve dlstanza prima ill essero contrat taccate. Net suo tnslcme, sebbene la sltuazlone xla certnmento serin, el rltlene fermamente che gli Itnllanl potranno arreBtaro le marcla austrlaca verso la planum. IL COMUNICATO UFFICIALE. Per ora e' tmpegnnta Bulla fronte Hal lana una furlosa lotta. Gli attacchl che gll austrlacl hanno pronunclato nella glornata dl lerl su moltl puntl sono statl lesplntl, ma It rapporto del genernle Cn- dorna nmmctte che r.ll Italian! hanno dovuto rltlrarsl dal monte Cenglo davantl a forze nss.tl superior! del nemlco. Ucco 11 testo del rapporto del generate Cndorna, pubbllcato lerl sera dal Mlnlstero delta Guerrn: Nella Vat Daone 11 3 glugno repartl nemlcl oorprcsero un nojtro posto avanzato ncllo vlclnnnze dl Malga Staboletto. Dopo nvor rlcevuto rln forzl, 1 nostrl contrnttaccarono II nemlco o lo pilsero In fuga. N'clla Vallo dl Ledro si ebbe una In tensa ma Incdlcnco azlono dcli'artl Ellerla nemlco. Nella Vnl Lagnrlna, dopo II sollto bombardamonto con cannonl dl grosso callbro, II nemlco tento' lerl un attneco dlvcrslvo contro In nostra fronte tra Monte Olovo e Tlerno, mentro pro ntinclavn II vero attacco contro lo nos tre poslzlonl di Conl Zugna. Fu re splnto con grnvl perdlto. Nel settoro del Pasublo si sono avutt duolll dl artlglleria o combattimenti dl pocn Importanza. Lungo la fronte tra 11 torrento Postna o l'Astlco it nemlco, dopo una lgorosa preparazlono dt artlglleria, rlpotette I suol vlolcntl sforzl contro Monto Alba o Col Poslnn. Ne venne una lotta dls pcrata ed 11 nemlco, dectmato dal nostro fuo&, si rltiro' In dlsordlne. Nella zona del Monte Cenglo sabato sera 11 nemlco, nttaccando con forze declsamcnto superior!, obbllgo' to nostro truppe ad cvacuarc lo loro poslzlonl e rltlrarsl sulla llnca dl Vallo Canaglia, dovo sono state rlnforzate. Not conscrvlarao It possesso delle fnlde occidental! del Monto Cenglo flno a Schlrl. Duo vlotentl attacchl del nemlco operatt nella stessa notte con tro quoste poslzlonl si spezzarono con tro la reslstenza del nostrl. Sul rlma nente delta fronto lino nl Brenta si sono avute soltanto azlonl dl artlglleria. SuIl'Isonzo I nostrl repartl con audacl incurslont si nsslcurarqno un buon bot tlno dl prlglonlcrl o dl arml. L'OFFBNSIVA RUSSA. Intanto glungnnn dalla Russia ottlme no tlzte. Lo forze delto czar, approflttando del vuotl lasclato dal comando austrluco nelle lineodella Bessarabia e delta Vollnla, hanno Inlzlato una vlgoroslsslma offensiva contro le llnee austrlacho. Dopo un vlo lento bombaardamento nella reglone del flume Pruth, lo funterle russe sono state Mnclato all'attaceo dollo llnee austrlache, hanno rlcacclato lndletro II nemlco e ,gll hanno preso ben 13,000 prlglonlerl. Un comunlcato uftlclale nustrlaco ammette che una grando battaglla e' lmpcgnata nella reglone del Pruth. L'offenslva si svlluppa su dl una fronte dl 260 mlglla. lsaa e' fatta prlnclpalmente con lo ncopo dl al leggerlro la presslone che I'Austrla, ln debolendo lo suo llnee della Gallzla, delta Bucovina e delta Polonta, ha portato contro la fronto Itallana, perfettamento come l'offenslva Itallana dl un anno fa fece ar restare' la marcla degll austrlacl In ter rltorlo russo. I crltlcl mllltarl londlnesl rltengono che se anche l'offenslva russa rlusclra' soltanto a far arrestaro l'offenslva austrlaca con tro I'ltatla, le forze delto czar nvranno reso un Incstlmabllo- servlglo agll alleatl. V del resto le conseguenze d! una tale offensiva russa, se avra' II successo con cul e stata Inlztata, avra' conseguenze enorml per gll Imperl centrall anche perche' po trebbe decldero la Rumania ad lntervenire. Ad ognl modo cl trovlamo davantl alia plu' poderosa offensiva che t russ) abblano lan ciato da un anno a questa parte. KITCHENER ANNEGAT0 SULLA COSTA DISC0ZIA L'Incrociatore Hnmpahire Af- fonda e Porta Seco il Coman- dah,te dell'Eaercito Inglese L'ammlragliato inglese ha annunclato che l'lncroclatore Hampshire, a bordo del quale s trovava 11 maresciallo dl campo lord Kitchener dl Khartum, comandante In capo delle forse Ingles! dl terra, e' affonda to al logo della coeta settentrlonale della Kcoita per avere urtato contro una mlna o per essero atato sllurato. II maresciallo Kitchener ed 11 suo stato magglore sono annegatl, corne Bono annegatl tuttl coloro che componovano 1'equlpagglo. Questa e' una grave perdlta per I'lnghltterra, glac che' lord Kitchener era ritenuto come II sua soldato mlgliore, ma o' da notare anche che egll era ora uempllcemente 1'organlz zatore detl'eserclto Inglese e non II sua comandante dlretto. Le forze russe hanno Inlzlato una grande vlgorosa offensiva sulla fronte austrlaca dal confine della Rumania alia paludl del Frlpet, o nel prlml attacchl hanno fatto prlglonlerl 13,000 soldatl austrlacl Questa offensiva era stata prcparata nel lunghi meal dl (nverno ed Inlzlata n glorn! scorsl con vlolentltslml bombardamenU della poslzlonl austrlache. S.T J..vo recpamized bto Gone was the I to think." In. the last analysis, what will 3ivJ.fi,'-w iJ" l0,iuo'awer, the I the result of war he on the Individual? -- Bsu-cojHDiacfiney or rormer No one knows. The futura xlontt holds Iha Mcret It t Mts on the Up of the gods, Booze $3 a Glass aa Drunkards' Cure HARTFORD, Conn., June 6 Governor It Holcomb received a letter yesterday from a woman In Des Moines, suggesting that as a means of decreasing the con sumption of whisky, the price be made 13 a glass by Government regulation. If that method failed to do away with In tempeance, she advocated "making liquor so cheap that no one would care either to matuif a.ctu e or drink it" The writer said ttlie was sending similar letters to tba Presi dent of the United States and to the Gov ernor of all States. CBJiiikr K. mm II IBB m JM mr&r jB sisisisisisisisl sisisisisisisisB isisisisisB k IbbbbbbbB ibbbbbbbbbbbbbbbV bbbbbbbbbbbbbsH iibbbbbbbbbbbV I great iB liH ls.H J.V SBBbIbV iSBBBBHBaL .SBBBBBBBbL-. SPSBBbW sale HA hBbbbHI ifliB JK I .f IPSBBBBBBBBBbK BBBBHssBBElk tSL HP JbBBBBBBBBBBbHbT inlfiir'octn) bbHb M sbbbbbF & AAA ,, V HH. .PSBBBBBbP i7 mmr . j p. 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