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THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1916. Zuyder Zee project eventuates. As a BRITAIN LIKES OUR JAPAN FAGES NEw Japanese politicians. One was Eng- ffor;'ner jo}]frqal t and thrice minister matter of fact, the first Zuyder Zee Y Y i . The | for home affairs. 5 reclamation bill was intro«’i’uced as HWh Cost Of Wilson }:::lm::?"g::d ?,,l)e‘fsuffi;}'?:‘:m 3,}: The House of Peers remains the long ago as 1877, and others of sub- party cabinet, but impegfectly digested | enigma of the future. Many of its sequent date likewise failed to reach v political knowledge prevented the | members have tenure for life and pre- the statute books. But the whole of creation of a desirable party govern- | fer to remain independeht. It is doubt- national opinion now seems to be v—y ment. “These politicians,” he said, ful if any great number would openly stmns;{y |‘f°h:1"(:( the sclhel(r_lfc,l Morlc- Suggestion That English Adopt | Marquis Okuma, Long & Oham- | “do not hesitate to call a ‘party gg:luls*;e‘t‘\;;z :raf:]xcs,‘_a:?dal(h:mt:ccir: over, Holland has a plentiful supply inat! oy sess werful politic of money at the present time, the ggm Our Decimal Standard pion of Representative Gov- f:l::::::ly fi:e:(:;eg‘cffive:“;;:r::::;lfic their right to reject a budget. The stocks of its central bank being three Meets With Favor. ernment, Heads One Party. government, pure and simple, under | €ase of the peers will doubtless be and a half times as large as at the { “ p o snison | similar to the situation that existed in 8 e the name of a “stand aloof” or “unity’ outbreak of war, and the war’s effects, He said these men 'forgot England. both at home and abroad, have ac- ! POOR MAN MUST DECIDE HIS INFLUENCE }s GREAT tcl:atm!eh!e constitutional system of gov- customed people to contemplating the r—— v h —_— ernment in Japan was founded neither | Qi Y expenditure of vast sums of money. (Correspondence of The Assoclated Press.) | (Correspondence of The Assoclated Press) |on the English or German plan, He Six Men Rob Express Wagon The importance of such a reinforce- ment of the country’s agricultural London, Sept. 25~The suggestion | Tokio, Oct, 8. —A fmov(eimgm ;:fin(endcd (haé‘the power; vested in Of Money n Chlcago stl"eets land in peace and war is mot over- that Great Britain shall adopt after :(h'c‘hwg“ ::l:" go(ii.tlic‘a};e [?al:‘t‘ic:uoir; 'c,cu{:fa:;:;e lh::car;fmfie mg::‘::n Chicago, Nov. 2.—Six armed men looked, nor ‘the opening the project the war a decimal system of coinage | o iorfy taEing plg“ in Japan, and |Reichstag. “1i a government wishes | stepped from a motor car a few l‘;"‘;"l"°“‘a:‘d‘“|:g;:‘f YIV‘?; “s’cfi‘:':il‘ r::s patterned after that in use in the | leading Japanese believe it has a signi- | to carry out a well-balanced policy for | blocks from the center of the city there{ore better p'rosp“u of .renlizas Unltfd St,tu is receiving earnest ficant and historical bearing on the | the qdnnénslgmqlri of the countryf, he | tonight, held up the money wagon consideration. There is recurring dis- | future political development, of the | continued, "it wi be necessary for it) ¢ e Adams Express company as : 4 f : Japanese empire, The inspirer and |to enjoy the support of the majority ok e ) 4 ey cussion also of adopting a metric sys- |{eader of the movement is Marquis | of the people. In other words, a gov- | it was returning from the Union sta- tem of weights and measures. Okuma (recently succeeded as premier | ernment that enjoys the confidence of | tion and escaped. It is pointed out, however, that|by Count Te{auchil), who has fromh the :he th((l)lnelznd tt’he iu;pport of the na- i iffi 4 _ [ beginning of his long career cham-| tion will alone be able to carry out a theredarg m""f.”m d.'mcum" okl pioned the cause of representative policy calculated to promote the pros- nected with metric weights and meas- | government, The question is absorb- | perity and happiness of the people.” ures, which do not apply in any way |ing leaders of thought throughout the Hits at Oligarchy. “’.fl" proposed Americgn plan of "'I’:‘-bf‘"otlii‘:i °;'° ;’;‘:’"‘ ?:m':”::r:; One reason, he insisted, why the The Greaies‘ coinage: The latter change could be |Ment by political group existing political groups had been i ing . two great parties as in Great Britain made with a minimum of d}sturl)ance, or thg Uni?ed States is recognized as | brought into disrepute was that Ja= and probably with acquiescence of |a step of great moment and fraught | panese of wealth and good social ust those classes who in the past|with many difficulties. Y standing and influence had _ignored ave been the chief. objectors to va- [ For one thing the bureaucratic ele- | ypoy with the result that professional rious plans’ proposed. ments, represented 'in a measure by | poiicians had manipulated them un- Poor Man Judge. the House of Peers and by the power-| chocked for their own selfish pur- The in th ful clans of Choshu and Satsuma, will | S0 ™ 0o believed that his own poor man in the street gener- | ot eqgily favor the birth of a regime RIE. ally has the deciding voice in changes | whi Jonl cabinet, which contained more demo- s | R d SEthis kind: and. he St be Hlu“fed which threatens to revolutionize the | ‘oti " dJoments than the previous, had a e on ecor & i form of government. One of the iall 6 iy ence and logical argument. | groutest opponents of the idea is [ D i ;Zg"{;’d rl:‘:a:gx?;w;;lli‘t’ii?l An unusual amount of rent- He objected to abolishing the Gre- Co ) i i . R unt Terauchi, whose avowed poli- i : : ing and exchanging busipess, bt i“l‘"d“ on the ground that it | ical slogan is “a no-party form of ?}L’I’iif':flméafiiiufh"fi}’ tchoenwt'}l:-?cl combined with the lssuing of ofa c"r" i wb'y 0\; lolhea Tk h]'.{" government.” He represents directly | goyornmental groups into one party new. oatalogues. by neasly. all ain number of lost days. He |ihe power of Choshu, which is the |3 i e AEent atép: toward. prods the Enno-mkeu whose instru- | HOLLAND NOW WARS ON ANGIENT ENBAY ’,née-l.oviflg Dutch Going to Annex Twelfth Province From King Neptune. BIG ENGINEERING PROBLEM (Correspondence of The Associated Presa.) The Hague, Netherlands, Oct. 5.— Peaceable, unaggressive Holland has caught the annexation fever. It pro- ?Olcs to annex a twelfth province rom its old enemy the sea. It proposes to entrust its clever army of hydrographic engineers with the task of bridling the waters of the Zuyder Zee, snatching 529,575 acres of agricultural land from its embrace and converting the remaining 362,506 acres into a fresh water lake. For the present, the scheme just embodied in a government bill is restricted to the reclamation of some 133,050 acres, and is estimated to cost a total sum of $44,000,000, whereas the estimate for the complete reclamation scheme is X 0&) It is computed that even the restricted scheme will require fif- teen years. tion than ever before in its long history. British Want to Learn All About Mingy_aés, Metals | London, Oct. 6.—A suggestion is being made to establish a “Central De‘rarlmen( of Minerals and Metals” under government auspices to collect 4 Y 1 i and impart information bearing on In its main outlines the project,|the sources of minerals and the pro- . which has been evolving ever since | juction of metals, as being imper- the year 1849, is a simple one. The | atively necessary in the public inter- Zuyder Zee is a large, shallow arm of | egt, *This is advanced in a letter sent _the North Sea that breaks into the o the chairman of the Advisory northern part he Netherlands in | Council of Scientific and Industrial southeasterly direction and laps the | Research by the presidents of the In- ores of five provinces, widening out | gpivution of Mining Engineers, Insti- into a big circular basin. Across its | tyte of Mining and Metallurgy, and mouth lies a nnr}f of islands which, | [notiente of Metals, o before the great floods, once formed The letter points out that there is Religious Liberty The Plan. the coast line and the lim f th A ’ protested against turning up the clock of 1 ( f f f t present no connecting link between [’ A ancient clan from which the power of | ments we represent, makes it sea’s domain. Some little ance in- | & g A : [ an hour on the theory that it”was th. ess. i side this lilng a massive dike is t;a be ::;l.oi'é:r.‘m?"gx:f:;‘;i,:;“.n:ih'::uc',s‘ Tavlked 1n Chlna. ll scheme tlo r:lukc him work an hour :)l:;tga ::;sih:rrbpl);’zg;:nogr, ng’.’l inf “’ZI;I:‘Z;xnall‘l:::tx::u{gc;rzfle?‘:]etd‘;:: Ahsul"mly "acnssa” constructed in nine years' time, from . ——— 3 onger each day. fluence, is desirous of keeping its| i e ah shore to shore, right across the en- :r‘;:;iz.e':id ::;'isf‘f(i’:fentlly ’c:r:gg::fl (Cakranpodience. of Tha Assooired Pleaw) It is realized here that any pro-|friends together under the fl:)g gf the gpl]((jlc;l_ Iorc;s of Japan would be for us to dispose of ngarly one . trance to the bight. Starting a few | qisthirtel M [inerals’ and metals| Peking, Oct. 1.—Because of the late posed coinage change having the ap- | navy, When the naval cabinet of fal:;i;ulm:si:g; 5;3“"‘ 3"""”"“9“'“‘] hundred pianos falling under miles below the well-known naval |y 6% e ™ ‘e icience mueh valuable | Yuan Shi-kai's espousal of Confucian- | bgorance of even a nominal impover- | Count Yamamoto fell a few years ago | or § Bamenot ye the classes known as “Odd “‘h"';f"t of th; poor ‘f"lcl'“ld be doomed because of the.naval bribery scandal it ::}l‘eig;u}]{“ alggg :};?s(i‘fl:’su:m ox:;;fii ‘Sjtylg I;?"’ Pianoa,” ““Slighfly : !he s‘tartl'f'esplue df f‘arguu}euts' as | passively permitted the coming of | unit under the feadership of Kei Hara Hud Pyanoa " and “Second o the simplification of financial arith- | Okuma as one means of preventing L ro:?ns lrle"llioltd ‘3:;‘:‘:: li:‘::; metic, both as to mental process of | the advent of a military ministry. included in this sale, and each y C! making small change as well as in the larger field of commercial bookkeep- Legislita Opinions. .ndke‘:l“’t instrument has been marked at & ing. Internal complications and jealous- s Very Declded Reduction . ies tend to act against the formation Ony Dilficulsy, of two big parties which would wield It is well to remember that all these pianos are fully guar- The plan to adopt the American |g great influence, as against the in- standard fortunately has the appear- flugm:e of numerous smfll roups and ;lf‘?m:l'l :gfl"lyt“‘t};‘“e"c"‘!g :h'f Yal“fi clans who have no broad political plat- f H s oins to the extent of 1 cent | form and who struggle for the coming anteed, and that many of the " or drained basins, though Ul<:dthsd?;nhmd crown colognel in esll‘ch l'lullmg. This is how it would | jnto office of men, or representatives slightly used class would pass the two smaller ones, the north- [and other Dritish possessions. S¥s-| orese™ Kang Yu-wei, the distin-| ¥, out: 4 of clans, rather than of men as repre- for entirely new. Also note that and southwestern, located | tematic collection and co-ordination ited sakblat; who i a th One pound, or sovereign, would be- | senting ‘policies. the styles sold at clearing sale [ Amsterdam, are actually includ- | Of information bearing on the occur- | ERSHEC SEHOME WO 18 STONE 1€ | come §5. The 10-shilling note would | “Marquis Okuma_ frankly set forth prices because of being drop- the bill laid before Parliament,|Tence, uses and cconomical value of 2rldlc fion ek o aRiERosE, l’ be issued as $2.50; the 4 shilling picce | the situation at a‘recent meeting of ped from new catalogues are, ) heastern and southeast- | minerals and their products; special i h:d A ““t°:| f:'gr ':n" tede- or double florin would become $1; the | his personal supporters in the Hbuse without exception, modern and 8rap ra; government de- | 2-shilling or florin would become 50 |of Representatives. He declared that handsome, and, while not the i equal of the latest 1916 style casings shown by us, are equal and even superior to the usual ie later nort| g ' si attention being devoted to securing f ¢ H nfi&:‘gfl#:&fi:‘?:&xtbfi fdustrial ‘”lfa ions for newly dis-| claring that the Confucian religion is | centg; the shilling a quarter, and the il b e el . enny would equal 2 cents and the |tion has been considerably elevated in upright designs exhibjted else- ere. ! ®[covered | minerals’ or metallurgical | distinctly the religion of China and ; wgllti"".“l?d t't:lrn::g’:ll{. products and to finding mineral ma- ‘t,h" it ll" be rejected Chinese would | haif.penny would be called 1 cent. recent years, important questions re- ;ixt:d :n:’l i dide"' e ke terials required for new matallurgical | become like brutes. “What would be | 1¢%he ‘Dound sterling or sovereign e '}; e q‘e i ust sit down and write your | products or inventions. The investi- '}’:' “‘:9 of the }m " hehnked,h_lf should remain the| standard British e.colggmicu :,:3 ;i 10,:,“"), Have abec;‘. views. I you ask yourself why gation of all questions and problems | they be not employed for the worship | ypit rather than the dollar, it is pro- | comparatively neglected. He added: |} Yo do your trading at any cer- We quote herewith a few ex- posed that such notes and coins “Political groups in collusion with the tain store you will, no doubt, amples—but a visit of inspec- tion will alone give a prospec- tive }mrchnser an adequate idea of the saving he can make ; f Confuciiis?” of the other rivers and | relating to the utilization of the min- | ©! u Pt q d- coi Premier Tuan Chijui replied that |should have the double designation bureaucrats, have been busy contriv- |} find the answer in about these stamped thereon, the pound being |ing the advancement of selfish inter- by availing himself of this op- portunity. - at eral or metallurgical resources of the ! ion“ ,th.eu iu.y.;l‘:rw%ne.;.hfi empire, ’I‘hef soiordinnion and dis- (Ch:nfrx:ibt::c b'\’llt.lh':l“t'h i.re:ee:ee;-ec:“fci: ] mm o‘utor di thellllg.lmd of the developed and undeveloped |i# no longer necessary for them to| ™Ay to saving money for the it of the state, The result has been de- b Wne*="\1 1y, m a'ways mare can flow into it and without | mineral resources and of the position [ prostrate their body on the ground to |is pointed VN8 foney jor the poor, It | rangement of finance, dislocation of f§ to feel at home there. The i, ot i, 4 O 1T R ol T o thk et o i e (Pt AR 1 DO tomic v crptn o | smmen thre are oy ||| B S, Ornd m hit ‘u :.hot m'nl‘hi to ‘t:ult’ :l‘l‘l‘ n:l:;{::‘:/dn&nhol' d'\}:: :e .i:s “fi' Al AR oF oalldidiun for 1- hlof the standard gold coin | ca] 5e|f_uov";|men‘. The wvil’ “bas cour.teouu and painstaking wh_gn Chickering & Sonn.,'iJi{. mediately theongh,slalces | @ perial intereats, Generally o ads | to keer religion out of the political :‘,'i:::dw%‘“lésfit:'h"“ t;’u‘,’"f;‘e":‘c:lzg been carrieq so far that we have #vel waiting upon me, and I like s right, fair tone ; & c il i igi i- ' seen a question so important.as that |} these things.” ecker & Sons, Upright vise ‘the imperial government on all | turmoil in China various religious agi- | jown, Another argument in favor of |of national defense made an object of s i ot cnd it '8 Foster & Co., Upright, beautiful mahogany base of Den Helder, on the coast of | f 3 a A the province of North Holland, it will time, many lives and vast sums of | jsm and the important part that re- : ould b saved to the | .. . § § s the narrow strait of the Amstel- ;‘“.(::':'{ ;: rhe t:‘::lfiuciegf :}Z: pr?:unet l|fg|on, or phllos?phy, played in the effort to restore the monarchy, ultra- to the island of Wieringen, f ¢ ‘fige going straight through the sea :;":;c;':g tr:ugrlifihd;;dcu(:‘l:l::l%!::g:a- republican members of Parliament re- eastwards to a spot near. Piaam, |0 ely for their raw material on | cntly made an attempt to have Con- the Frisian coast. The éntire dike, mfnern roducts would have been |fucianism abolished by legislation on ing the intervening small island, saved, 'Fhe following are some of|the theory that such action would t gy grant greater freedom of conscience be twenty-five miles in length, : . ed with the 200 miles of | the duties suggested by the new de '"f,yi“‘“" the perpetuity of the re- public. compars . ast line that it supplants, parsmant: editi t of the lake thus formed it is rrangement for expediting the il stensariuiatiareat mdl ” gnation oded to construct fout separate completion of mineral surveys of the Ationg! the ‘modern sdmirers: af Cone fucius and called forth a shower of Raymond’s $100 Letter Contest Rests upon) a most engaging subject, one that you may have U i tators have been able to intensify the F H : ey ®) 2 ‘prob 3 bearing on the mining and ¢ |the dollar decimal system is that it | political strife.” On the other hand, if Jfi“ l:k ,T k metallurgica _i_tt_rlil_.__ y :::;"r:nl é’;fi:"‘fl..‘"nfi"fi.;c.l"?:'u'g i;;. x::el: ét:n:h]; ,'e‘ thedcgin,,d, be- political stri ’l"w s il 7 e ne ;o “e: e;:e flxe ni:“ ;;; e it 11 Gortakers Blame |Fe ot ikt s hewsre v Srah i s Chide 5| v conedd 1 hmon e e s e s Abatie fod ‘"K particular - religi were two distinctive schools among B e M ’ F Bl War for Advance in Confucian teac! Buddhist, T: Gem.fls Bufld NQW FO"S st e i ppraiashosoilion Prioflfl of coffins ligions participated in his funeral. (cirmnn‘-n- of The Assoetated Press.) ) markable value ..... Chickering & Sons, C cert Grand, a snap at $175 Steinway, Upr’pht, a real bargain, at’... $ Steger & Sons, Upright, tA’rt style, good A:onrli-3175 on, at .. ooy Chickering & Up- right, just like new..$325 suinw-x, Miniature Grand, fine tone....8$350 Hardman, Upright, ma- hogany case, same as new, at ..... adl Gerhardt yer Piano, ° 88-note, a rare bar- g:in, at 235 veral B: ianos, in handsome cases, at special figures. Many other planos:present. ing equally remarkable values. A modern stool and scarf in- cluded with every piano. and Lama prie: enjoyed his pal 10 Representatives of many re- On Banks of River Scheldt qu AN A some ¥mploye is answerable for Since the death of Yuan Shi-kai oosendaal, Netherlands, Oct " that result. Confucianism has continued to be in | According to reports received K om g "':'l" {:;dk' gr&;fi;ghgognl‘;?:'i:\,: great favor in Peking, but its adher- | Antwerp, the G:rmum have ere;?:g PHYSIG AL HEGK Ra mond’s I tho coll’t o burial sapblics ents deny firmly that the revival has |fresh heavy fortifications on the west y ::‘d“: Lol sl ol mng“ d anything to do with the monarchical |side of the River Scheldt. The forti- t0day by undertakers fo funeral serv- SObe rionaly (onantal ever sl SHEonE s tod in Following Letter Hoy “:::ehm % 0 lke to :::? ristian, recently delegate: by sdon! sel an 1 wi ou will like o !,“; R ""L"‘ ‘)‘l’ ':‘ war, it was I“tld' one of his undersecretaries to repre- | Rupelmonde o Niel and Boom. Thou- Tells in Follo g How will be ;'ust in proportion to an auery hargwar ameplates | gont him officially at a Confucian cer- |sands of troops were working on this| She Was Restored to Health earnest and sincere desire on ‘ul d coffin handles—has risen in price | (000 hatemnle where Yuan Shi- | line, which is intersected by concret . i 'gom 20 to 40 ';nr cent, The cheapest kfl'loilm:rly woufilped. ** | cement trenches and h."ic.yde. o‘f:r:h: f b] Lydm E. Pinkham’s the part of its salesmen and all ¢ 4 its employes to be of real use coffins cost §5 more than formerly. B T latest type. The old ring fort d American Nogroes | Weshington Suggests Aid . [Antwsro have now besh el e, Vegetable Compound. et wikin 9033 Bava SIS : 4 or Newspaper Owners n lic il to make or are for any purpose i e ordnance. The public are strictly for- 5 ' B i : Milwaukee, Wis. — ““Before tak i LM e d SR Invade lverpool (rwr..:fi:u:g: n(f) :(n- lAzm—llt.Sxde f1»,-....”(“?!1 bidden to approach or to view these ing visiting oug store. inion’ of the rne ' Letters may be dated as late L t ef from | fortification, \ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vq;hbh C‘:fl' N he critical newsprint paper situation pound I was a phy- advisers, it tan. *To set| Correspondence of the Assooiated Proms) | geems probable from studies made in | French Hotel Men Prepare !||||||[||l|||||| sical wreck. I had || as Nov. 15th. Cover the subject diture for the| Liverpool, Sept. 25.—Liverpool is|the forest res laboratories. s been s ; ¥ : : e P! fg l:).rl b ;l“ fe;::\d :h::lg g;:’eu'"d" Alreadthor Ame”cans | going to a doc in your own way. Write us your tor for several years a b.‘oo&,'ooo. in ‘the -boeom’:nf conlgtlgu; f a lramrk,rb':e 74 o y lace there enormous | growth in its cl %apu ation. e | of paper can be made from a number rrespondence of The Associated Press.) L views. 3 efits and saving of money which|negroes are coming from the west|of ':.,:n"n woods, which experts es- Paris, Oct. 12—The reawakened en- but he dld. o B0 mf.:‘{,.';“’fi':hg,ffim otipey .-fln to the entire coast of Africa and from America. A |timate can be cut into chips, dried, | 7Prise of French hotel men is be- 3 ] good. A friend told AT As the above prices apply on and drain ste stri feature of the invasion is that | paled fivered to fills 1 »|ing applied to the preparation of B |[||| me about Lydia E. | § g . age sy g and deliver s in Wis 2 only to this stock, we cannot rovinces. The coast|the blacks so numerous on the city | consin at a very small advance over |PFOPET accommodations for the Amer- Pinkham's Vegeta- , e /L 2 undertake to duplicate any of ¢ to be defended from the inroads|streets generally are arrayed in gar- [ the cost of chips made there from lo- | 118 they expect to see over here as ble Compound, so I the instruments at these un- the sea will be shortened by some [ ments of the latest cuts and hues. The | cal timber. soon as continental touring is again | (¢ L% decided to giveita usual prices. Prompt attention "miles, and in place of an arm of | color schemes usually ther Toud, | “"The only factor blocking the way |POsSible: ] 3 fair trial, and it gave Howard St is therefore necessary. orth Sea in the center of the |the negroes from Africa vicing with | seems to be freight rates and the | Jmericanbuilt hotels in portable B | me relief from bear- Pianos bought now will b . with its sharply changing rom the United States in a riot | Wisconsin mills are endeavoring to | PECtions will be ready to shelter tour- | | # held until Christmas Eeve with- out charge, when desired. Schmoller & Mueller Piano Co. 1311-13 Farnam St,, Omaha. Neb. Bt Sonditions, there will be & fres! ks, stripes, vivid neckties, lurid | negotiate with the railroads for ship- | 15t o1 the battlefield of the Marne as ing down pains water lake with & much more settled |hose and bri t yellow shoes. megm ofe :’xn‘;rimemll 0lrlinlo‘a’dssh‘gf soon as the war zone is opened to | which had been so bad that I would have O (EEMDERS AT TR o water level, low enough for & proper| At first this invasion puzzled the chips from the west. If a favorable [entrldl glrculatlon. They are to be | tolie down. I also used the Sanative |§ Cracker Factory Sweepings for ing of the surrounding region. [authorities here, but a little investiga- | freight rate can be obtained forest erectel hy ? group of French and | Wash and it has done me a great dea! of Sale by the Barrel. of this lake, too, the provinces |iion tended to solve at least a glfl of | service experts say the great quantity '“X'a‘ “{)f LTy good,and I'am not troubled with a weak- . riesland and North Holland can [the mystery. The bulk of the blacks, |of pulpwood on the national forests | ok #renOD € ROtel mat is already ne- | noss any more,” — Mrs. P, L. BriLL, || LOOSE-WILES BISCUIT CO, in a plentiful supply of fresh|it seems, have been recruited on the | should prove a considerable factor in | SGUAHNE for a site in Verdun on | 1o gogth Gtreet,, Milwaukee, Wis 12th and Davenport. long-felt need. west ¢ to work as firemen on |gupplying favorably located paper | %" to build a new hotel as soon L % & LA yond all this, there ig the|steamers whose white crews presum: milll: with the necessary raw material. | 3 German shells get through demol- Th.° most successful remedy for wo- ably have become reduced through the [ In Wisconsin alone, it is stated, ishing the old ones. A committee [ man’s ills is Lydla E. Pinkham’s Vege- war. They are not all seafarers, how- | there is an annual market for more of business men in Meaux is pushing | table Compound. It has stood the test | r lmilml meadows with brows- | ever, for many appear to have signed | than 300,000 cords of pulpwood. ;lon d;“';"“ projects for the bene- | for forty years, which would be impos- g cattle; and the financial field alone | for one trip only and have obtained e it of the battlefield tourists. sible if mfia not have genuine merit. will probably be sufficient to cover |employment here in the shorthanded | Britain Plans to Take . Signpogts giving distances between ¥ " ¢ entire cost of the scheme. Of the |factories at lucrative wages. This is H interesting points and the itinerary or special advice, free, write veclamation plans included in' the | particularly true of the American Over Coal Industry| tourists should follow will soon be | » Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine sresent bill, the northwestern, or|nerroes, many of whom have come | (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) erccted on all the fields of the seven | ‘0. (confidential) Lynn, Maas. <4 ingen polder, consists of very |over as muleteers or other workers on [ London, Oct. 11—The government dayé fighting in that region. Com-| y'our latter will be opened, read ad f‘ ground, and the southwest- | ships in the American trade. . is proposing to take over control of | memorative plates will be put up [and answered by & woman, and 3 goom polder, of the very best he West: Africans speak English, |the coal industry of Great Britain in wherever acts of heroism were ac- Rgld ju strict acwtdamce. i Moreover, these are the |of course, but not very fluently, The | the near future, the main purpose of complished, and an illustrated guide- RS DR R # t favorably situated for a speedy | American negroes being quite glib of | the scheme of nationalization being to book with maps of the battle of the | 373 Y v cultural development, where, too, | tongue are more interesting to the [ give a certain power of control over ed for visitors, while in- ASTHMA SUFFERER ] \ere are good markets, and from | Liverpool street crowds. The Ameri- | the neutral shlpgin which coals at the capital can be reached in |can blacks do not go to all the ex- [ British ports. Coal owners will be rt time by good rail and water- | tremes of dress aifected by the Afri- | allowed to take their present profits cans, who in their new found wealth | if the scheme goes through, but the About $2,900,000 Yearly. and European surroundings have | government will control the distribu- d over the fifteen years, the |proved profitable customers to the | tion of coal for home consumption, oat of the restricted scheme works|cheaper class of tailors. for export and ilo‘r shipping. ~ For n expenditure of about $2,900,- UYL some time past the' government has aiy ot eckoning the axra | War Can't Stop German used its wuthority over British ship- necessitated for special iEing} LAK IS Girsge 1ts touress Mmost Dege- in the interests of the coun- wm.s_g!sng‘?t"';anlu&gvlfir !,':Ln,g ticial for the nation, but neutral defence. For the reclamation| New York, Oct. 2—The German |3i¢m shipping, though dependent on eme, or at any rate that part of | electrical industry is scoring a tri- Britain for coal, has not recognized hich provides for the ultimate |umph in the midst of the distractions | &, F¢Sulting obligation to this coun- POLITICAL ADVERTISEM] Chas. W. Pool SECRETARY OF STATE 6,026 acres of fertile land; A here the waves now wash, will formation bureaus will be organized i F in each commune to facilitate visits | Write today, I will tell you, free of charge, to interesting place: of a simple home treatment for asthma which cured me after physicians and change Bee Want Ads Produce Results. of climate failed. 1 am so grateful for my present good ' health, after years of suffer- ing, that I want everyone to know rful treatment. Mrs. Nellie Eva s THE BEER YOU LIKE [ A glass with Peeling the Shin is Better Than Bleaching DRUGS wI CARRY A COMPLETE LINE of pure drugs. There ia no your dinner is good for you. ‘of the southeastern polder,|of the war by building t it 1 \ ; § ight across the lol:othern' generator an trullnsf'r‘)f-m::" llr:r':l:: The EI‘“ is that if the government b iy P ey 1:‘;;“;.: kISR RN ot B b y der Zee, must neces- | world, according to advices received | OW0$ the coal it will be in a position uarantee that you will be satls- o ia use by ladles Phone Donglas 1889 jed with anything y. 5 both aa o, guality, sad pitee. Cut way of dok { p 7ou and you whi ‘some beck Semire It is safe to uhohon.‘n order to rastic changes in the | here. h “ to stipulate the use the customer shall ida Seco "Sollani's chie Tortress|of Berlin are buiding a eperator and | MK OF it and 10 require him to call e MY apital, terdam. The govern- | transformer, each sixty thousand ‘K. for his return cargo at specified ports. here announces that noth-| W., the transformer having the power 1 in any case be done until a|to ‘transform the voltage to 110,000 Italy Saves Money by and have a case sent home. As & member of the State Board of| also been passed re- | volts. The order is being e rs pend ts, soon recoguise that mer- i euunup this law |the Rheienish Westpha! im:tlf:‘lm:‘ 'fml Making Ministers § " Vax outrinke them il 1 ba b v ents,, ¢ ish W ectrical | (cqrrespondence of The Assoctated Press.) o popular that it can be obtatned [l . H lepending on the re-| Works, Itis said the largest turbo-| Rome, Sept. 25.—Former deputies dryguists, who have it in original ved §1013,412.38 in uxus Gl’elnllle [ ing inq to be|generators in the United t i ; eno-ounce ges. The favorite 13 “the war 18 over and §5000 or 40,000 K.W. mialen are ll';d ministers may no longer enjoy B3 {8 ilke. Gold cresm. Bafore compared with the Tl et 1o . ¢ the privilege of free letter postage, pressiiag \we''weazs:. OF this, su Dogs. comp.ny R Don't Disregard Your Cold. atcording to a receut announcemgnt | Ias county payers profited to the ex- of President Marcora of the Chamber uf Deputies. He stated that the meass ure was taken merely in the interest of un econmical postal system. A . Few of us reslize the danger of coughs e and colds, Dow't take the risk. Take Dr. ‘Imlltrlhu:,; King's Now Discoyery. Guurabteed All W' * druggisis.~Advertisement, 16tk and Howard Sts. DISTRIBUTORS