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TIeRENES i NG TERIRTIRING TR EEERSEIRR T RN PO S RN RN EN L A TR SRR I IR A TR L S T IR SRR R TR R drRa R e AR T NN T T T o EREETRRa GOALITION CABINET FORMED IN FRANCE Briand Organizes New Ministry in Which All Parties and Factions Are Represented. WOTED MEN IN ITS MEMBERSHIP PARIS, Oct, 29.—A mnew French eabinet, headed by Aristide Briand as premier and minister of foreign affairs, came into existence tonight. This is the first time in the his- tory of the French republic that there has been a coalition ministry of all the opposing parties and factions. It follows closely on the recent 1n-| novation of forming a British coall- tion cabinet of comservative and liberals. The action taken today informing the | cabinet was the culmination of a deep | popular sentiment that at the suprome crisia of the war party divisions should give way to united action by all the parties in common support of the govern-| ment. As the result of the cabinet of Rene Viviani being representative of only a few political groups, the ministers presented their collective resignations and President Poincare immediately charged Aristide Briand with the for- mation of a new organization combining | who was one of Gambetta's aides in the upheaval of 1870, Jules Meline, former premier who Instituted the protective sys. | tem of France, and Leon Bourgeols, who | 15 known as “the grand old man of the| radical party,” which has the largest membership in Parliament. 01a and Young Statesmen. The modern element is represented by consplouous leaders of all the political groups of the country. Thus the new coalition brings together France’s elder and younger statesmen and in personnel represents all lans. The extent of the coalition is shown by the following representations from the warious parties: Bourgeols, a former premier; M. Combes, & former premier, and Rene Renoult, one of the foremost parliamentary leaders of the party. ¢ The republican socialists have as mem- bers M, Briand, M. Viviani snd Prof. Painleve. The soclalist group is represented by Jules Guesde, who has been the socialist head since the death of Jean Leon Juares, and by Marcell Sembat and Aibert Thomas, prominent socialist leaders. The democratic left has as members Its representative. The royalist and clerical elerent is represented by Denys Cochin, This embraces all'the parties and grouprs in Parliament which for years have been arrayed against each other. '. GET TOGETHER IS WATCHWOR. OF ESTABROOK , - (Continued from wage One.) to forget ab a convaloscent is o forgot that proeperity had vanshed wth seemngly It means that between the clecton of a democratic ad- ministration and the outbreak of the European war the richest nution in'“the our Nis ‘recent wsufferings. ' 1L seems no prospect of return. world had virtually gone bankruyt. phychological—a state of mind. But this dia not appease the hunger j Z them. to whom EH 1 zfi | | E i kidneys, i i ¢ il : Meeps Tourists Home, “In other Mr. Speare: contracts negotiated here. ‘prosperity? They for the| Jacobs ON" at any drug store, and in just a moment you'll be free from rheu- stiffness and Rellef awalts you. “St. Jacobs Ofl" has cured mil- llons of rheumatism sufferers in the last half century, and Is just as good for sclatica, ueuralgia, lumbago, back- disclaim the history of modern/ France since the fall o Napoleon IIL Tho| ..\, of production, the cost price to new cabinet also 18 notable in having the | |them and their solling price to ua. popular military leader, eGneral Gallien! H |1t 1a found aifficult to engage a consular as the head of the war office and Rear agent who is willing to have his nose Admiral La Case as head of the ministry vy fhomghn : S | tweaked or his vertebrae telescoped as & arine, Bath O Quen replading o regular concommitant of his activitios, then Mr. Redfield will make it a statu- tory crime for any American to pur-| Science tells us that this motion is rotary chase an imported commodity at a lower | and that rotary products on the United States and our high-blown bubble will be pricked. 8o much is conceded even by Mr. Redfield, who says that this inevitable predicament will be met from an ethical standpoint and not from an economic standpoint at all’ “To increase the tariff,’ he says, ‘might seem to be the simplest and easiest way.' But who ever heard of & demoorat taking the easy and simple way f & protective tariff, demonstrated by history to be the sure and effective way when there was & theory to be exploited? We have, he thinks, all the machinery and a goodly number of laws to handle the situation on an ethical basis entirely. He says Could Check Shipmen For instance, if after the war is over it 18 seen that a movement is under way to ship forelgn goods to this country in reat quantities and sell them at a price low which we can produce them that movement can be checked. At the present time no goods ean be shipped to this country from any for- elgn country without a manifest signed by our consular agent in that eountry ing the cargo. 1f foreign countries attempted to -hl‘r Koods into this country at a greatly reduced price our consular agents could demand the right to investi- gate the means of produoing the com- modity to see if the manufacturer was selling at a _lower price than he should. If the agents were refused the right to make such an Investigation the Amer- fcan consuls could then rofuse to algn the manifests and the vets _could never leave the ports States There would be a chanocs, of course, that some goods might get by the Ameriean agents. To meet this situation congress could pass a law making it illegal for any any one in the United States to buy or sell goods shipped into this country In an effort to undersell American manufacturers. “The Washington correspondent who have | all clements. The resulting coalition I8 yr.;ycribed Mr. Redfields exact words, | remarkable in personnel, including such | oo BRSSO "0 lear the wecretary | venerable figures as Charles De Freycinet, p,q heen misquoted. Gase at the propo- | sent this dispatch purports to sition, ponder the beauty of it, note and inwardly digest the logic of it! To Melp Forelgners. “The sole object of Yowering tariffs is to enable foreign manufacturers to sell | their goods in America in competition with our own manufacturers, fsn't it? | What other possible object could there But Mr. Redfield says he will not poermit this object to be u:camnlllhofl.‘ He will add to the dutles of our consular agents the function of a Paul Pry, who will investigate the private business af- thelr be? fairs of forelgn manufacturers, price than ought to be charged for it! ridiculous as Mr. Ppossibly accord to It. Democrats Spell Faflure, our imbroglio. United States. In that bright murmured— being the unhappy plight of our ', the firet growl of tho dogs of dog's honest an emergency tax and call it a war tax. It was an arrant eubterfuge which fooled nobody. Bo far from causing our distress, the European war i all that saved us from going to protest. The given by Mr, Bpeare prove this salnsay: the de- “It s Mfl to place llv.fl:‘. -nn!uo-': transports, cloth- 3 the w#uwm. At 3400, words, the war has kept r tourists at home at a saving to us $450,00000, and Europe has handed hard cash. But this | ©a8e In fifty requires internal treatment. ::a“:ru:nn; Rub soothing, penetrat- =hi) nts it. Jucobs O11" right int, r.,‘,‘ o ‘5'.;..‘2"’.’,; one- ! 0 your sore, the | stiff, aching jolnts and muscles, and re- | + « there fs only one word—fallure, policy! Has not his masterful statesman- ahip kept us out of war? “No! The most that can be claimed on this score is that he has not, by some | superhuman blunder plunged us into war | ~a distinction with a difference. “In the Mexican affalr, he, who would now . pose as a stickler for the nice ob- servance of international law, disregarded onr;:l I—netlon of international law, and ! actually en BT sl whloh wa 610 4D | We sorabes: freen Mesiar e e rare, loss of life to be sure, and throughout the trying ordeal our president was perfoctly cool—particularly his extremities. But we #hould never have invaded Mexico in the Having done #0 as the out- perflucus threat made by our president, we should have made good the threat and stopped the fight. In his al- lonescme president, sct like a solitaire |leged policy of watchful waiting Mr, Wil- in a circle of ingompotents,~an island of | theory entirely surrourded by theorists— was dazed and bhewlldered at the de vastation wrought ‘by governmental poli- cles which seeiied to his didactic mind first pl come of shame upon us! falls to rogord it. Duty to Ourselves, with its own great creative faculties? recede from its cloistral, Ouch! Pain, Pain. trial bottle of old ‘'8t. Jacobs OiL" ‘Paln only.” Rheumatism is harmonfously unite. thing. for the United | it | the George, jr., Republic should promul- “But enough of the domestic side of | 1 challenge anyone to Gabriel Guisthau and Jos Thierry, while Dame a single positive, affirmative, oris- the radical left has Etienne Clementel as| Inal act or proposal of this administra- tion that has been, or could be, of any possible benefit to the people of the lexicon “Ah! but there is Mr. Wilson's loni(nj. son -has been lke an hour glass—the longer he waits the less gand he seems to have. What have we to show for our Mexican flasco but the bodies of a score of murdered boys, whose blood cries If in the whole of our national life there has been a more fatu- ous, chapfallen, humiliating episode than Mr, Wilson's dealings with Mexico, Mr. of thousands out of em- | Wilson's ‘History of the American People’ re standing in the trom hand-to-mouth They the ““War or no war, I belleve that the pres- ent administration, having gained some little knowledge of the world, must either rtant as the party back of him, pro- & man upon whom re- it they still exist, can Rub Rheumatic, Aching Joints Rub pain right out with small That is the essential Republicans Mast Rule. ‘Republicans must never again permit the democratic party to prance dry shod into power through any Red sea cleavage in the republican ranks. The republican convention of 1912 had a braln-storm—an eplleptic fit, and fell into it. There was really little difference among the dele es as to fundamental policies, so far as these were national in scope; but there were dominating personaities in that con. vention whose motto scemed to be ‘rule or ruln.’ The issus was not party prin ciple but personal power, from which conflict there emerged a new party, with & party platform radical in many respects. Radicalism, sald Larmartine, Is but the desperation of logic. has shown that the republican party is not radical. neither is it reactionary-—it is national and big, as opposed to sec- tional and small gressive party If progress means the ac- complishment of permanent good, for it 5 the only party that has ever done anything that ultimately did not have to be undone. Once Republiean, Always One. “But I am one of those who belleve in lettng by-gones be by-gomes; of letting the dead past bury its dead. I do not be- lieve that a man who ever called himself | a republican would be happy to be ealied by any other name. Wherefore we must got together, not as hyphenated republi- cant, bul as rejuvenated republicans The republican party is big enough and tolerant enough to Include men differing as widely in opinlon as Mr, Root and Mr. La Follette, include Mr. Koosevelt unless he Insists upon fiocking by himself; for our party | 1s comcerned not at all with sections or | individuals, but only with the nation and | the people as a whole. ““There can be but two great parties in any nation. All others are spordaic, ephemeral, tangenital—or any other hi fallutin word you are pleased to thom-—-comets, zigzagging through space, bound for God knows where—all tall and no head—all gas and no substance, Just as In chemistry, antagonistic sub- stances fall apart at the first shock to their enforced union, so in politics the alllance of opposing Interests can never last, Btephen A. Douglas sald as much in his debate with Lincoln, and Lincoln did not deny the statement. No thinking ' And the reason nature of man has ever denled it. of it inheres In the very things. Sclence tells u sthat every mole cule of the universe Is in motion, in- cluding perhaps the very atomles that make up the substance of our thoughts. motion evoives proud of his antecedents, was, neverthe THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30 through a democracy; Hamilton, without pride of family or codents, type of the anonymous that was | brothers fall out they do mot come to- destined to give name to the anonymous | gether in sackeloth and ashes nor through Hamilton, 1 say, was in his theories of |Tecriminations or aapersions of motive government centripetal, fearful of the im- neutralization of divided [ hands, with a smile in the eyes and with power, belleving that for the good of all s exercise should have the energy that from centralized aufhority our government to tend beyond the ten- dencies of Hamilton would tend to im Yet Jofferson was not an an- archist, nor was Hamilton an Imperialist No, these towering figures are our pillars of Hercules, marking the dangerous chan- nel which our ship of state must navigate if it would escape the rocks of Gibraltar on the one hand or those of Abyla on the And so we have, which 1a all discussion and no action, nor yet anything approaching an autocracy, but this wonderful republic For Its history | a pure it is the only pro-| It is really big enough to | * Fine Healthy Child Convincing Evidence For | of ours—and this wondeful republican party of ours—guardian of the republic— the party that made it and saved it and is yet to bring it forth the most glorious product of man's effor and God's provi- | dence—the only party that comprehends the insuperable distinetion between or- dered liberty and utter anarchy—the hope of America, as America 18 the hope and beacon of the world! “Can any man who ever called himself a republican, who ever cherished the prin- ciples of the republican party or fought willingly seo that party perish for aught of ‘him? WIIl he let the spleen of personal hatred, under its conquering banner, the wounds of personal vanity or the dis- appointments of personal ambition stand | between him and his fealty to a party whose principles are ag eternal as truth and as tmpersonal s justice itself? Mr. in his recent speeches, says that the progressive republicans, so-called, will eame back like the prodigal son, meaning, 1 take it, that they will came back in Taft is mis- Taft, sackcloth and ashes. Mr. | and 1s resolv 191 It is not a question of ‘coming back,’ but of getting together. When They come together with a clasp of the the sheepish grin of mutual and affec | tionate condonation—and say nothing | Just so must we republicans forgive and !frr:rt It is the only right way. Are we | mot willing to sacrifice a little pride of opinion for the sake of auld lang syne | Bigger and better men than we have made bigger and better sacrifices for the party. Lincoln was murdered because he was a republican. Garfield was murdered becauss he was a republican. McKinley was murdered because he was & republi- we mot, in the memory of what they must always mean to us, forget our petty differences and fight shoulder to shouider as of yore? Listen to this 1 read to you from one of Lincoin's speecehs, so instant in its application that it is hard to be-, ' 4 g lieve it was spoken so long ago: Buchanan taken together, are a maj divided between Fremon Can_we not come toget ture? Let every one who really believe that every o past_differences as nothing sieady eyc on the real the republic. We can do It. us, even from the grave.'” P ———-— Clgarette Sellers Pay Fines. FALLS CITY, Neb.,, Oct. 28.—(Special.)— | The sellers of tobacco and cigarettes who | twenty-five | school children who were arrested and confessed last week to the use of tobacco have been supplying the Simple Inexpensive Remedy Checks Larly Tendency to Constipation. About the first thing impressed on the young Mother is the necessity for regu- larity in her baby, which brings up the question of the most desirable laxative for children's use. Mrs, Jesse Richardson, Philpot, two It forces: centrifugal, away from the cen- |} ter; centrifugal, towards a center, and |18 no medicine in the world lke it. Sus #ate a governmental policy as naively | that each force acts as a check and bal- Redfield’s we would ance upon the other. call them children, indeed. But here this| consclous of these opposing tendencles | take, and everybody taikg about his be- twaddle emanates from & so-oalled states- Everyone of us la|loved it writes, “My little son, William, Jr., jus: because in his own mentality, and is attracted to [Ing such a fine healthy hoy. man, an exponent of the administration, | the school of Hamilton or the school of | and is therefore supposed to merit a re-' Jefferson, according to his dominant pro- [ pound of simple spectful consideration which no adult can | ciivity. For Hamllton and Jefferson were | from any oplate or narcotle drug, and | and continue to be mymbols of opposing |is the standard remedy for constipation tendencles. Jefferson, born an aristocrat, Dr. Caldwell's €yrup Pepsin 18 a com- laxative herbs, land, | this excellent Ky., |ravs she has used Dr. Caldwell's Syrup *epsin for the past year and that thero it is 8o pleasant to free | in thousands of homes throushout the | Drug Stores everywhere mell it less, in his theories of government cen- |for fifty cents a bottle, trifugal, jealous of centralized power, be- leving that its exercise should be diffused remedy, and have It in lme house. A trial bottle, free of charge, WM. J. RICKARDSON, JR. Get a bottle of | can be obtained by writin, Caldwell, cello; TIL 464 Washington St | 60 “It s true that all Murope s In & con- flagration, but that fact only emphasizes our own duty to ourselves. Kurope to- fried | day, with the madness of insanity, is de- ' inter- | stroying what it has taken it centuries to “What I want is |[create. Was there ever a time when America could less afford to experiment $15.00 $17. 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Mayi All of us who did not vote for Mr. 2% 2 of 400,000, but in the late contest we were and Filimore. r for the fu- feves that free society is mot and shall not be a fallure, and who can conscientiously declare that in the last! contest he has done only what he thought best—let every such one have charity to, ther g:lhun Lod ':: uch, Thus let bygones yEOnes; > 2 be; and with issua ‘let us_ re- | inaugurate the good old “central idea” of | “Here speaks our patron saint, our| monitor, our friend. Lincoln pleads with | \ and supplied the names of the merchant to the committee from the Welfare ass clation are taking their medicine by marching up to the police court and pleading gullty to one count of the com- plaint and taking the minimum fine of $20 and costs. 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