I BATTLESHIP CONNECTICUT LAUNCHED I
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Washington Evening Times. (Washington, DC) 1904-09-29 [p 7].I
looL 7 I
BATTLESHIP CONNECTICUT LAUNCHEDI
THE MEW BATTLESHIP COHNECTICUT One rf the Most Powerful Fighti in
the United States Navy A Sitter SW of tile Louisianalc En nee
BATTLESHIP CONNECTICUT- IS PRIDE OF THE OCEAN
Contined from First Page battleship in the navy that has been built
at a Government yard The Texas a secondclass battleship was built
at the Norfolk navy yard but was never- a complete success the ship
generally starting a plate or breaking down In some one her
component parts when- ever most needed tar duty
j 1ws th jfjwr- Is the pride of the
dfpartraent of the navy The constructor declare she will excel any
ship ever built
A sister ship of the Connecticut the Louisiana is now pain
completed by the Newport News Shipbuilding sad Dry Dock
Company
The two battleships Identical in ev- ery particular were py an act
of Congress approved July 1 1MB It was by this act that one of the
ships should be built at a Govern- ment yard and the future
Connecti- cut was selected be constructed at the Mew York yard The
contract tor the LouisianaNewport News
A 4MK understanding was reached that every endeavor would be made
by both the private concern and the
to finish tie ship first The Louisiana was launched about a month
ago and is consequently several per- cent ahead of the Connecticut
la the race for
The officers at the navy yard say however that the Connecticut will
be completed and turned over to the
before the Tx uisiaDa pleted
Milt ssi LoatfaiaJHU
On the first of the year the Louisiana was 10 per cent theaxTin
work but on
st 1 the report of the chief con the Connecticut
While the Louisiana ws 52 per cent completed the Con necticut was
47 per
With the a work is as only completed On the remainder of the
t le officers at the yardpar the private company The Connecticut a
load
water line pf 480 feet and an extreme bread h of W feet inches the
will have a displacement of MOOQ tons and a trial sea four hours of
IS knots The hull of the ship is of steelthroughout
Formidable Batteries It is not only In Chelr speed and dis-
placement that the Connecticut and Louisiana will be powerful it la
their
The main battery of jbe Con cut will consist of four 12Inch
ihloadlng rifles eight breech
loading rifles and twelve 7inch breech loading rifles Her secondary
battery will consist of twenty 3inch
twelve semiautomatic
SInch field guns and ix automatic buns
Tht finch guns of the main battery wall be mounted in pairs in elec
tricallycontrolled turrets on the center- line one forward and one
aft each withan arc of tire of ahout 270 The
h guns will also be mounted in eta two on each beam
ihsst Farwarl and a stem The 7inch guns will be mounted in
broadside on pedestal mounts on the gun deck behind 7ineh armor The
for ward and after guns are arranged to lire right ahead or right
astern The
of the secondary battery will be mounted commanding positions
The Connecticut amply nro vided with defensive armor as well as
with offensive engine of war The hull is to be protected t the
water by a complete belt of armor 9 feet 3 Inches
having a maximum thickness of lit The decks and
by the best of armor It Is be- lieved the Connecticut will
withstand the attack of any warship ever con- structed
In addition to her she will have four submerged torpedo tubes
These
been added to the armament since the were made partly because of
successful torpedo the nuaao war
Water or Wine The Navy Department had Its troubles
when the Womans Christian Temper- ance Union learned that the new
ship wms ta be christened with The Metjr sent a petition to Acting
Seerre tarS Darting atoned fry almost all its
ham in which they decried the use of wine and begged that the
malts use in the ceremony of none but pure crystal spring water
against which for nearly three hundred
no indictment had been found and which has played a vital part in
build- Ing the sons of into sinews of the nation
Secretary Deurttaw s
wards4 to the Va IIId Com-
pany J
lau ed
two machine
Un
o
JII8ID
ears
Gov- ernment
have
Time
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KICHARD H ROBINSON C awinietar im the Kavy Only Twentynine Yrs of
Af Ke leas
Oum of Building of Bit Battleahin
Yt4tt tat
f what it cufs-ons The petition however came to Chief Naval
Constructor Richard Hhas had complete charge ofhe construction of
the Connecticut KJthe youngest constructor in theme born In Kavenna
Ohio in
CONNECTICUT- IN NAVAL HISTORY
and doubtful elections afgurs
high back highly polished carved Dining Chair Worth1
a Dd
Thil plece iramParr Suite elaborately carvedpoll swelled front and
fullbacks with Iat ntspring construction and upholstering inells
Verona or amask Wortk
f
The very best
iThis ui cuturs u4buttonedholstered with patent con- struction 10
Spe
wen tor the tutus of thisf KOOonmass of steel complicated machinery
and fearful engines of death which has
and It Is one that has had an unblemished recordin the annals of
our navy
It wis a Connecticut that took part in the first fleet action in
which theUnited States was engaged and thoughthat momentous
resulted defeat to our arms yet like that of Bunker Kill it was so
stubbornly contestedthat it prevented enemy fromrying out their of
invading New York from the North strug gle might well be called the
BunkerHill of the Sea
was on the 11th of October 1776 that the American and British
naval
i
car
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forces on Lake met In their first clash Of arms The hastily assem-
bled American fleet under the command of MaJ Gen Benedict Arnold
consist- ing of fifteen vessels mounting eighty eight guns and by
700 men took a position old
Among those vessels the Connecticut technically called a gondola
mounting three guns and eight swivels and manned by The op posing
net under the command of Cap tain Pringle of the royal navy con
sisted of vesselseightynine guns and manned by 1 men
early in the morning the battle opened and was with fury until 5
oclock in the afternoon when theBritish retired just beyond gunshot
In- tending to renew the struggle In themorning that he was lessly
outclassed and having severe damage on the enemy Arnoldunder cover
of night through theBritish lines and stood the lake
Started in Pursuit The enemy did not discover the move
until the following morning when hey started out m pursuit All that
day October 12 the chase was kept up and It was not until noon of
the 13th just after the Americans had paved Split Rock fleets were
again In gun snW
in vessels were destroyed or dispersed
Although not regularly connected with the navy there was another
Connecticut- in our sea forces of the Revolution She was an
eightgun sloop i privateer manned by men under the
command of Capt C Tucker She was commissioned from the State of her
name Evidently he career was short and inconspicuous for there is
little- r ecord of her
The Second Cojupectiewt
The second Connecticut of the regular navy was a sloop of war built
In 17M
at Middtetown Conn She was ship rigged f 418 tons mounting 30 guns
and wee manned by 280 men The coat of her opnetruction was IS7M and
at the tf rhfjaatlon of hostilities wfth
ee for pt300 is like many other of Our
warships of that period was built to nrotect our merchant
marine
from the depredations of French cruisers and Under the
of Move Tryon she cruisedtwo years In the West Indies escorting
homewardbound andprotecting American in those
waters At the outbreak of the civil war the
problem of national warships at on the was one of the to confront
theat Two aidewheel steamers rechristened Connecticut and Rhode
Island were purchased and fitted with coldstorage plants for the
preserr
Champlain
DIed
mount
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lowertie 8pe
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carved Solid Golden Oak large shapedplate mirror shapeddresser
washstand 25 50
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575
finely S Worth Now
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vatlon of jrrth meat for IB those dayscanned provisions were almost
noknown These steamers also were ordered totransport the the sick
andwounded and Inoners to and from thescene of hoatillttes Why they
were
two ot th smallest Statesof the Union Is difficult to
understand
of orncers and men who satdown to wellprovisionedcheerfully More
Warlike Service
Aside from this stewardship these ves- sels frequently were called
apes per fornj more warHk service In the way of chasing Confederate
cruisers and
and bombarding torts The Connecticut was purchased July IS ISO
under the name Mississippi froMesas S L Mitchell Son for She was a
wooden vessel of 17K tons At the close of the war she was sold
September 23 1MB for 1 W to D BAllen
The name Connecticut having suchcreditable association In the
matter ofgood and good sating In theit for thebattleship just
launched
JUDGE SITS
Presides Over the Police crt After Yaemtia JHx Weeks
months In the wilds of Maine Judgeivory o Ktmball senior Justine
ofPolice court returned to the bench thismorning
He presided In the United Statebranch of the court told had
heavydocket to dispose of Judge Mills whohas been sitting in the u
per courtthe District Branch where there another full
Judge ONeal was conspicuous becauseabsence ferencc In the nenalti
M
m branches of the court Between
11 b IMl few
I
named after for the pert they took In the warby no means
unimportantas hundredssumvi
will
t
bllut4orun
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were
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half months leave eachJudge Kimball left Washington in August to go
o Boston attendedthe annual encampment of the O
From Boston Judge Kimball went to Maine wherefor live weeks His
health was Improved and he looks stronger
He he spent time hunting andbut ones gotaway Judge Charles F Scott
who has beenpresiding in the District Branch of thecourt will not
return until about themiddle of October did sotleave until the lIt
of September Justice has been appointed asa substitute Pollee C jrt
It is
then again
LEAVE FOR PRINCETON TOMORROW AFTERNOON-
The Georgetown football team will leave over the Baltimore and
Ohio
at 1 p m in a special car or Princeton where the team will play
Princeton Saturday The arrangements- for the trip were made by
Percy Bald- win traveling passenger agent There will be twentyone
men In the squad besides Coach Assistant CoachDr Owens and Ma
ately after the game Ort
the Baltimore surd Ohio at 7 a mnjt At Princeton in goodtime for
the game
MAY TRY OUR METHODS TO IRRIGATE IN EGYPT
American irrigation methods are the most modern and wonderful in
the world We will probably adopt many of the methods In rescuing
the deserts around the Blue and White Niles for agriculture
The foregoing utatement was madethis morning by Col M H K Bakhati
chief engineer of cant projects for thegovernment of Egypt who
calkd at theDepartment Interior and had along talk with Secretary
Hitchcock
Police Court have one and tt
Ay of the anda time
H alt Strider
Theteam will return on Saturday 8atw ardMite will be train
ha
ed and Blucher Boots
13 Oak Sole Hand welted Extension Sole newest style Velvet
tt60 fine Kid Blucher and regular cut Laced
tall soles 1OD
Handy BathroomSlippers in pretty colon
Call and Kid Boots Three sorts at 24
s
c
I meHJHteJatelS T
Mrs Campbell in The Sce i The Sorceress which Charles Froh
man will produce at the Columbia The- ater on Monday evening for
the first time ID English on any stage will be the AVst appearance
of Mrs Patrick Camp- bell In a play which has made a sensation in
Paris and in London
Sarah Bertfnardt who first appeared In It fn brlnctag both Paris
and London audiences to leer list Mrs Campbell who wilt appear la
the part of Zoraya in this city which Charles man lids chosen for
the perfor- mance will afterward present the
and extensive production for a- long run hi New York Mrs Campbell
Jtt all the emotional parts of the present day is perhaps the very
best and thestrongest that this drama could possi- bly have great
skill and versatility and Is espe- cially adapted to the
psychological u eMatton o a character According to Partslevnes her
new role will give her unusual acting opportunities
the sixteenth century in Toledo after the expulsion of the Moors
tram Spain IB their retreat the Moors did not carry the
superstition away with and at the beginning of the play a fairoung
widow name
i accused of witchcraft She Is thedaughter of a wise and learned
wisdom and learning shehas innerited She Is ot nature which she
accredits to her
blood though the charm she exer esjKH upon men is attributed by
thetts of the Inquisition to sorcery
Enrique the newly married hus band Joana of the gov- ernor become
infatuated with her She Is brought before the Inquisition con
to the stake to be burnedgut Joana has lanes Into a sort of cat
from which Zoraya with
her powers can awaken her On this condition she is libei uea but
the pardon she has received isnaught the raging multitude and
cede by arms of DonEnrique
FriiM Scheff in TIle Twe
Fro fish
has power
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ttonal Theater Monday night to a new y opera The Two Rases
under
the management of C B DUltngha- Mtos SehetTs new ofeerUtg is a
musical rendering of the story of Dr Gold- smiths comedy She Stoops
to Con quer
Stanislaus Stange is said to have known cleverness in adapting the
story for opera purposes and of
ta chief incidents of eve actsInto two He has also furnished a num
ber of excellent lyrics upon themes sug gested by the comedy it is
claimedthat there is not one musical number
in any sense be regarded asinterpolated music by Knglander isto be
in harmony the E
rural life tong the of th opera
Mum Scheff is seen first as Rose Decoureelles a French girl In
English surroundings and then as a Hence the two Roses Later she
appears in a gor- geous costume as lady of fashion Miss SchefTs
obviously pat- terned after Kate andreported that Miss Scheff has
won new laurels es a comedy actress Hereto fore she has been famous
chiefly as a
but now she has achieved new distinction by giving a piquant
perform-ance of this comedy
In Miss SchefTs supporting compan are Roland an tenor never before
heard in this country Louis Harrison the wellknown eomedian who
will have ample
for funmaking in a mrt much Clarence Handsside fi7 Whitney Jr
IdaJosephine Bartlett Louise La
and a singing chorus of There will be a matinee on Saturday
Oar New At the Lafayette esmmsneing Mon-
day night win be given Our New- Man front the pen of Charles T Vin-
cent with Harry Beresford that sole fellow as the star of the
performance This young actor Is regarded as a comedian of quiet
methods of a grace- fully awkward personality sad thepossessor of a
ofnte lines as comprehen- sively as if he spoke them Vin- cent play
Is a comedyfirce and is de- scribed as full of clean pure fun
com
JwWJIfItfl will appear tile
Boys V Hand welt Waterproofed Sterling Calf Laced with
monkeyskin
Newest tyle girls and
Calf Shore sixes 11 to i
Three tt36 kinds ofBoys Viet Kid and Box Calf low Shoes sixes 9 to
A AC
a Asst I kid low
7
Two new fall styles heavy sole swell style
CalfBluchers O1U Hand welt LSO
Kid and Velour
Newest style Biuch er Laced Shoes in Ve lour Calf and guaran- teed
Patent
Splendid UM
and Gaiters oJ
made Laced Shoes
¬
plicated situations with a a coun and again a third plot all
ofwhich develop however In the most natural manner the climaxes
being ludicrous in the extremeManager Coleman has selected
thecompany surrounding the star with theutmost care s
ent to theirwith quickened wits and iuietel
The Child Slavs of Maw The Child of Mew Tusk
melodrama In a prologue sad tour acts by Charles B maser and Howard
Hallwill receive jts second presentation inthis city
The play is said to be replete withscenic features among which are
an Alaskan scene with snow clad talus and glittering peaks of ice
the river front of the great metropolis by moonlight showing an
grate elevator its destruction by the har
end fist Street station of the Underground Railway shawl the street
above
The company numbers thirty members and among the are William Vedder
George Mack last season withFoxy Grandpa Ida Vernon
Van Dyke Brooks Fannie Ulllan Mae Crawford M M Murrey Harry Hsmmil
Robert A WeusetU-
iOustave Knoll William Morgan Samuel OafTanr Fred Slater the Chfid
Slaves Octet and the Child Slavs Roy Band
Tha Pay Pester Casapggyi- t Tb Fay Foster Company seen
th ffcyeufn n t Cap doav are
AWS Lk uhi Dafcre Zoe
Yule Bert 1 no and Walters andFva Wheeler are also features
The Orphstua Show The Orpheum Show will make its
usual annual visit to Chases Theater next week Mclntyre and Heath
vet eran black face comedians whose sketch The Minstrels is uf
the
vaudeville seen in On Ik ssanfs eao brought
diecUy from frame fur Shorn and the act as said
to be one of the greatest novelties im ported to these shores They
ride a merrygoround participate in a ludi- crous banquet ride a
bicycle play clown and do other feats unexpected from bears France
and Yen Latona will
a comedy act entitled The Musical Slavey which garnishes their
wonder- ful Instrumental work The Knight Brothers and Miss Sawtelle
will offer tuneful songs and fascinating d mces Harry Swirl and
Rose Keener will pre- vent The Belboy and the Waiting Maid Clarice
Southern singer Jack Gardner monologue comedian and the Boston
Brothers startling European gymnasts complete the bilL
White Ribbon Remedy Ne Taste Ne Odor Any woman can give It
M waisr cisim er feud without t t JOsrwtBSg i White Mbfaoo one r
destroy the
i eSan sr coeSrwei taebciito a tip pier social drinker or
dnoUuML
UI
for anyone to have an appetite for alcoholic liquor after uosic
Remedy It has tBooaandi of permanent ewes aad in addition restores
the victim to normal health the nerve increasing the will power sad
determination to resist iecnpUtio-
nlnser Mf sy flaailnri mt a WMMMes CfcrtstiaM TeMfMrance
Unfea
Write Dr W 8 Brown 218 Tremqot St Boston for trial psrfcage and
letter of advic free in sealed envelope oUt con fcfaotiil and
destroyed lOGe u minaret
White Bibboa oW also seat by soul in plats package price
J
trplot
is to begood the and up I r tile x
n eveh ritertawin
thur
< L
Re
Sold and by Ipecial In washlsgtaa Pharmacy Ps AWe NlIt St
said costuming someto p lamid of r
which kbansnerves
Twit Slaves
recoreadsd agent Stwsas soles
AT HAHNS
Street Store only vt mere fractions of their rWt9J4 sftitil offer
at all our 3 Storks a number of bmndn w ran Shoe
line at irresistible Bargain Prices These Reduced Prioe are made
for tomorrow only to induce you to call and inspect the greatest
and Fall Shoes youve ever seen
r
morrow s
I
p4C Strs Only
24 Noiseless Kid 12 1250 Boots and Oxfords sizes 2 to 4
30 pairs Kid and Patent Leather HM and 12 Boots broken sleet
40 HM Kid Strap Slippers for house or evening wear broken
sizes
Womens 2 50 tS 350 SlKrCS la4D
12 pairs 1860 Cushion Boots sizes 3 to 4
100 pairs 1260 and IS Fine Kid and Velvet Calf Walking and Dress
Boots broken sizes ranging from 1 to C
Childrens 1
sad SI 25 Shoes- A tableful of broken sizes of boys
and girls black and tan Boots rang lag in sixes from 3 up to
5
Mans 250 to 3SO Shoe lOU
The broken sixes of many USD to S3SO lines of Cult and Patent Colt
Fallweight Shoes
70C
fossil
i ¬
9 IGener SevMtle Strts
a l K