,"'1916. :' : :' ' """ 1 ' 11 . -.--- fl it!juUane ENGLAND'S NAVY ETERNALLY i PREPARED COMMERCE VEI " . 3 -. s '- GERMAN PRISONERS DIE BY THOUSANDS ENGLAND'SIBIGINAVYl BRUNlPtANSlTOI STRANGLE GERMAN JRAD1EVE Great Corrimercial Weridetta For More Than Year, Has Pa HGermanr BeeftKeptUpSV When War. tnds,' MEN - ARE- ; ENTERTAINED - - ' . ' 9 ' ' ' ' : ' " - i ' ' " - - ' " ' ' " ....... . . .-. i - . i . t i - . i j ' . i . ' .i ''??7er ;"rlaiesaaer;'Svry 'Bight Some of Taos Aboard Xsen ' l V'-'Vasssl In JtOTie' Show. 4 United Press -Staff' Correspondent. - "With tbe vBHMsh Battle Cruiser 8quadrdn Somewhere in the North' Sea. : March By MaiU Standing pia- cidly at anchor.but: In formldabU bat tle array the Brltlah navy's ighttng : veUrana of ; (he battles ot Helgo land, Bight and Doggerbank. were still . waiting for the Germans to come out. - Great,' Jong gray warships, their r engines ready' to turn propellers; lithe Igreyhoundish scout, cruisers and swarms of diminutive black destroyers v and -torpedo-boats, all -fully manned and ready for action, . appeared anx jous hd ; willing today . to be off In chase or battle, v , -;--' By courtesy of the British admiral ty X was ' able to see at close range the real . reason why there has been no nval warfareA In. the North sea since January. 24, 1915, when the Ger man Blueher was sunk and the. Derr f linger, Molt&e And Beldlita were' forced Ito rua to over; fn the German mine fields.' Since - that .time, the - German fleeU has remained at home. -y '-s;i.Z irw-Criffr"7,,?Si Prepared, n ..V ; .Preparedness , personified Jn ships and men the British squadron la ready to remain thus for years, If necessary, according to the off icers and men with whom I-talked, i 'N. r't-:? Welt: ahead ia the battle line is- th Tiger. 7fi0 fet.ff the same fighting cat that showed her teeth to the Blu eher In the Doggerbank action, A dent ed armor plate just -Above the water line, mark of a final shot- from the Blueher, is a listing , memento still carried by the Tiger. . The shell was from' one Of the Teuton's 11 inch guns, the Tiger's officers tleclare. s It failed to penetrate : the v. nine Inch belt - of Krupp armor wttile the Tiger's .13 ft Inch guns wre .perforating the equal ly . Kxupp ' armored rOermanV battle ' cruiser."-,,,;;.'- j'-'V.-s ? r Berlin still believes : the- Tiger- was sunk In this action.? A possible fore- -east' of future German naval -.war fare in the Worth- ea-nd an..- expla nation of "Why the German1 belief Is firm that .the - Tiger went down was given by one of the Tiger's officers. When- the Blueher turned her- massive hull to ,view, a. Zeppelin appeared 10.- 08 feet above and dropped bombs jn i the vicinity of the boats of the Brit ish fleet busy picking up the Bluchers I "survivors, .-. i: - Bams Old Tiger. 'Observers on the air. ship"-:-saw the Blueher' death struggle and assumed that It was theJTiger. The word ,was carried back to Berlin and officially announced to the world before Ger many saw .fit to announce that the Blu eher. was sunk. It was the same oia Tiser. however. Which the writer Jn- Speeted from stem to stern today, and seeing Is believing. . : s. Not far astern the Tiger stoodihe other member of the battle squadron's cat family. It was the Lion, bristling I with guns, big and small, primed and ready for any emergency ; Hear oy la the New-Zealand, a gift to the navy from New Zealand in 19i0 and which made a record trip around the worm Just before the war. The Princess Reyal. 700 trim feet of fighting ship, also was nearby, keeping silent com- Ipany with the other Ileet units, xne identities of which must j remain ad miralty secrets. - - The battle cruiser squadron is wait- Iing for something out of the air which will set dosens of engines racing to ward the open sea and cause hundreds of officers, gunners and stokers : and thousands of seamen to Jump to their batUe stations. Lees than 10 minutes after th prepare- for action" - comes from the flagship the leading scoot cruisers ,will be tearing out to sea. Close behind, a-few moments later, will come the speedy battle cruisers, primed for the long awaited but ever welcome tction. i . Xuntlng Submarines. Is Diversion. Every four days some of these light- sr craft- scout, cruisers and torpedo. i. Of My Ltttle Girl. They Were Yery Orefigurmg and Caused Itching. - Child Very Cross and Fretful. HEALED BY CUTICURAr SOAP AND OINTMENT " rThenT ny little girl was three and one- tialf months old, ah had eruptions break xit on her head, face and arms that were a dad of mattery scales which were very dis Igurlng and caused Itching so that nttto a she was I had aaawfuDy hard time keep ng her from scratching, and at night when : wasn't watching aha would Cry and scratch ill the plood. would run. -. The slda was nfiamed and red. and the srapOona mads isr very cross and fretful. ' She got to dis- iwea i oia noi gnow aas co ao. . TM had nq. relief unta I used a free iDle of CaOcura Soap and Ointaneot. :: X Minor sad after nsmg almost a faO- flxed bos of the CuUcura Ointment together Vita. the. CuUcura Soap she was healed.? ;signedrMra.S. Blatter, S33 Market 8fci J)aklandVXaL,;No K 1915. : ' arapio Lacar ree ay Aiau jTIth 33-p. Ekia Book on request. Ad dress postcard "CdttiM. Dvyt. T, Sold throughoot the world. - 'ill .v I I 4L. - .-u . r-- - V Nil - -; - I f ' - HI I , ' V ' i vj6- - " s' SB Su . v A'NVi PSSP5v 'y N -v. : Vi v . : I J 1 .. r- ' - l ' " Jap3iiTsLast Bob Jrigersoll Laid to Rest -v ; Sans Anyeligious Ceremony Whatevir, m " : " v : : mmX " ' Baron 1 Katd . Was Not Back3lif!ef From Any Belief-BatiWas Unbeliever in erv SenkeEMt ahii WestCbntikertJ" i Toklo. March 25. (L K-vB.) "Ths, last" or "the infidels", was' buried in Toklo with - the fJrst absolutely non religions funeral service ever held in Japaa ,. Baron ; Dr. " Hiroyukl Kato, privy councilor, former president of Tokio Imperial university, and tutor to his present majesty's father, the fa mous, emperor who led Japan into -modern-ways, was 4he last of a group ot 1 earned - Japanese who professed the disbelief Associated wi t h. "Colonel-Is -geVsoll and Charles Bradlaugh. ' H was not a backslider from Chris tianity, but from " BuddhJam. r and - his atheism exlended te-aAl religious,-, be liefs Christian or paran. Thls jitti tude had no effect - whatever on his career In Japan nor did it Interfere with ' his influence and standing. It - did not prevent . 2000 of "the most ' distinguished living, , Japanese, including the representative ; of .the emperor, from attending - the "patt ing meeting" held at the grave.'' Von-Bellglona Parting Ceremony. ; When 'the Oaron died, his sons,'' in achordance With his- .Instructions, in serted an advertisement in the news papers, inviting friends to attend a "non-religious parting- ceremony" at Aoyama cemetery. " What took place was very much what would have, oc curred in France if a dUtinguisbed agnostic, was buried.' The impressive pageantry of Buddhist ritual .- the priests in gorgeous robes with their heads snd intoned prayers, the cages of birds to he liberated at the graveside as a good deed on behalf of the departed, the ., incense to be burned by each mourner as an offer ing was all cut out. ; ' :- In the funeral pavilion at the cem etery the coffin was placed on a table and the uniform and orders of the dead peer -were laid on it The grand stew ard of the crown prince read a vale dictory address, the . principal tribute in .j which was paid to Baron Kato' s work as a pioneer of -western learning and a student of western religions. . boats, ;. amble -aeaward t take ; their patrol sUtion where the; wireless ears can be nearer'the German coast. It is these Craft that will give the signal. Their diversion in, the- meantime is hunting' the elusive submarine, many of which, it . was learned today, have cruised their last in quest of the battle cruiser squadron's haven Heavy nets, set fartheri Inland, act as the squad ron's second line of defense against the submarine, v Whether these' nets have been effective for catching purposes is answered. iThls must remain a secret! until after the ;war t?; ' Despite the long ;wait for' the Ger mans to emerge from Kiel or-Hellgo land thers Is no lack of morale, due to inactivity, among the personnel of the British fleet. v-Th hundreds of seamen aboard the various units can tarn their hand to-munition making; at any hour of the day.. -OSteel lathes in the hold of every cruiser are busy making small shells and parts of shells for the array, i On the second deck of every ship is a battery or sewing machines and a supply of j heavy . c&nvas. -1- Tens of thousands f -articles, useful ' to sol dier or sailor, are . turned out weekly In this part of the North Bea, .The work is voluntary. 'Each- week.' small patrol boats slip; up to the cruisers and take aboard the munitions which are shipped by rail . to.. -various army depots. - - i - . ' ? ' i ' ' throws See Xovls hows.y. $ ::r A portion of the crew, off icars first. see ''the movies on board every night. Charlie Chaplin perform his antics for every member, of the battle cruiser squadron from Admiral Blank down to the-smallest mess boy." ; : ;'. - Periodically the great rafts, inciden tally of American manufacture which hang on the supers tructure. of all the squadron's units are launched for com petitive raft racVs by picked men ef the crews.', .There are .many other smaller diversions' that keep the Brit ish Jack-tar ' from worry about his watchful waiting. U . k ; 1 ' Among the ships -visited todayT not ones ,was the question asked TVVhen are the Germans going to come outT' Officers and men. alike, apparentljtjkre content to wait. -There are no melan choly faces anywhere In this part of the'North bea. t The extension of a branch of the Si berian ; railway - for BOO l miles ha opened bus of the world's greatest coal fields, , , - , - - The, vice' minister, of education, a former president of .Toklo imperial un iversity, and Baron Bahatanl,' former minister of finance, also made short-addresses.-; The widow and 'sons and sons-in-law thenstepped forward and be wed low before the coffin.- Without further: ceremony, the burial was com pleted. Imperial sympatfty ' was- tesh fied in the customary form by the dis patch Of a court' chamberlain - with a gift of silk and J1600 from the. Em peror. ' : The late baron is said to be the last of the group of secularists who tn the last-reigrv as the result of their stud ies In the (to them) virgin fields of western religion, fcecam uncompro mising atheists. His .compeers are some' of them 'dead, som of them back unobtrusively in the Buddhist and Shinto folds, j- ; , , - East and West Contrasted. ...... Th fact does not mean much,for the - two "heathen religions of Japan have'1 fallen into decay, and Bhiilto es pecially, is ; now-., practically nothing more thin -a cult of loyalty to the em peror and remembrance of one's father. There is no reason why an "agnostic" of the Indifferent modern type should cause' trouble by breaking with it. -A. curious illustration of Japanese complacency ig seen in the manner in which the Japan Times, a,n organ owned by Japanese and printed in Eng lish for the enlightenment of the for eigner, contrasts' the honor - paid" tor earon isaio wun what is assumed would have, been -th- case if a dis tinguished wiesterner ' hsd ordered an agnostic funeral. ? If a man of Baron Kato's standing1 had died in the west, says the Jajaan Times, 7 stories of a deathbed conversion or anecdotes showing ; that, at ; heart he .really . be lieved in a Ood would have been forth coming, and a secular funeral of the kind described would have been attend' fed by none but persona of a special set and a few curious others. , - Jttussia;ls Mavine Usual Army Scandal Offieers ; High in 8aak Xlzed TTp ta aSegad raad 1 in . Commissary, : Amonatlaff te XfUloms of monbles. V Stockholm, March 25. (' Jf.. s.) The Rustlan minister of war. has start ed an Investigation Cof 'a , huge army scandal In which many" high officers are said: to.be. mixed up. - -Although the matter fs surrounded with a great deal of- mystery, enough has leaked through to create "a sensation. The Petrograd-"Retch" says that already "nine. high 'offieers. among them agen- erai- ne.v Deen- -arrested,- and many mors arrests are to follow shortly. The arrested men. are charged with defrauding.- the $ government out--of many millions of roubles by ordering payment for war materials which nev er were delivered. One army contract, or, according to the "JEUtch." received 1,600,000 roubles for muni tlonsr 1 thouehv he umif furhliMni .n.i. shelL be was 'only allowed to keep tenij per j. cent or. , ine - large sum. paid to him,-ho wever. Tfae rest went to three high officers and several well known leaaere ot the bureaucracy. y . , - Aerial JBombardiiient Oss crash After Another Occurs While Ooloaai Beading; XT Oood Is Boded v Home, March 18. (TI. P.) There Ts one new regiment in Italy that took Its oath -of allegiance under circumstances that teem to bode nd good for any Aus trlans that ever happen to get in its way. The regiment was assembled in One of the huge barracks at Milan, The men - stood at attention, their right hands raised to heaven. The colonel was reading tbe oath. - Just as the lsst word fell f rem his lips, there cam the terrible crash of a bursting bomb, fol lowed by another.- and another, and sn- other. Perceptibly, nbta single soldier moved, but. the i eyes ef every man turned just enough to sight the enemy aeroplane flying overhead; and,-as the last word fell from the lips of tbe colonel,-and the moment came for tbe.men l-:.v.-V - i f I r..:'i r;r, f , , v " V t ' ' i. v' , -Pbotogrsp'ii Cepyrisbf." 1918,' by . U Intn-setiootl mm Service.' . " -Above, left to right r-Prince H,enry of Prnssj,' commander of the German fleet whose recently reported dash from Kiel kept the world expectant of a -naval engagement with Great Britain; German torpedo Below? Interloriew of 'a torpedo . - - I T T BY- Night and Day Butrowing v Goes on in Effort to Ad ; vance Lines Few Yards London, March 25. (I. N. S.) H. Warner Allen, the official Britishpress observer, with the French army, givet the following interesting account of underground fighting as practised; in the. present war: , . jr - "Night and day the enemy is burrow ing and pushing forward bis saps,- try ing to gain a few yards of ground lb the . heavy clay soli, while the' French on their side try to bar his progress with .counter mines and camoui lets (or mines used - to ' destroy an - enemy's galleries without breaking the sur- j face), and In their turn tunnel further and further towards the German lines. .-"The soil ls-eodden, and to prevent It from collapsing -on the sapper con stant shoring up is necessary. Every ear must be vigilant for the slightest sound of tlie enemy's approacUl" his purpose must be divined end everything done so" silently as to give warning. ' Greatest Trecautioa 'Used.- : A time comes when the French' and the German ! burrows . are almost in contact. The look-out men listen for the smallest soundof .tapping 5 on the enemy s side. - Calculations . are made as to the position of the enemy's sap. Then,- with tbe utmost precaution, a hols is mads with, a crow bar in ; the wall of earth between the two excava tions. . '- ! -.'-y,..vH-"'V'-S'-i ' "On one occasion three sappers were working on ailehtly, when suddenly one of them, stopped with a warninr word. The earth sounded hollow under his pickax. Very cautiously a number of j little 1 blows : drove ' his ;jichax downwards until tbe,' point .passed into; -Aj nothingness. There vt could be i--?no '-. doubt that? there i was a German 'sap immediately underneath. With every precaution they widened the hole until It was large enough for one of them to pass through, and 4 man, with revolver la his hand, slipped down Into the darkness below. -Worst rights ronad Craters.'"' - -. . -:is inspection i was . brief. The German--: mine was 'empty ' , and an guarded. - The French soldier returned and reported to his captain, who at one called up all the .men he could spare to fill the German tunnel, with explosives. .The end of the tunnel lay GIN OBSERVER certainly- in the German trenches. andi"PlM was sentenced te six months lm- ii ws iuan vuc wi uicci v. wu9 ex plosion would be felt. .-.? Sic" :- The i word of ' command" waa "fol lowed by a vast explosion. The enemy's trench was torn 'to piece a A few mln- utes 1st er the hugs crater produced was in French hands. ."fris xeund those craters that some of the fiercest fighting takes place. The knit, the, bayonet, and the gren ade, play -the chief part.. Sometimes, rrlth th aid of sandbags, on of these enormous holes will be converted Into what is really an. advanced ' fortress i lab t outside the main- lines." to respond, there rose up one -roar of I swear? ' with a vehemence that mo mentarily drowned out the crash of the bombs. , . . A, storage -tnagsirine p tho German naval -base. ' ' " . t '' ,"' ; French Prisoners . AreWell Treated 'T , : Wp - Swedish Xaperer, Who Kas Bepcated ly Tislted Germany; Bays" Hlthy aad Abmadaat rood Ptowlded. -. ' .Stockholm, March 25 a,M.M.W The famous Swedish explorer, Dr. Sven Hedin, who has repeatedly visited the different- fronts -of the German army, traveled through all patts of Germany since the beginning of the war,;wrltgi-W jt , jf-(.' . " ii"! haVe.eeeni.bow. tbe prisoners. are treated in Germany, and I talked with hundreds of them. ' The French sol diers.. without - exception, ' praised the kind and humane treatment . tney re ceive fronttbeir-eaptors, They get the same : healthy, abundant food as the German soldiers. In most . of : ths camps the French prisoners cook, their own food Sometimes they: ask that they be given more vegetables -and less meat; - and this request ' is -' always granted; ? " - :V: ' '-':-' 'rWith dismay I have read In foreign I newspapers that the prisoners of war are badly treated by the Germans. This is a 11. and I can state- so upon my word of honor. The life ef a captured enemy soldier is as safe in Germany as human power can make It safe. 4- Switzerland Unable ; To Stotp Espionage Two. Crtiseas Vaalshed Oaiy Beoeatly for Acting m XeM of Communica tion Between Cplss aad rrsach. v ; Bsrnei March 25. L N. 8.) In spite of all efforts .of Swiss authorities 'to stamp out the activities of foreign se cret agents, espionage still flourishes In Switzerland. Proof of this fact : was furnished at the trial ftwo Swiss citl sens before tliejterritorlal court at Zu rich.' 'v-.r i ;.;'' S':j . .The defendants some time ago opened alleged news agencies at Zurich and Basle. Tbey' had pretentious offices, but their business was eeaf lned to for warding letters .they received from French spies in Germany to a secret service bureau at Lyon a, ' '- and to the military authorities In Parts. For this work -they received a fee of I860 a month.;: The letters handled by them appeared f to be entirely harmless, but they-contained much highly, important military information, which was' writ ten between the lines, with .invisible ink..v;-,--v-.:?-.' Jir-f:::J Both ' defendants were - convicted. Their only defense was that' they did not know the contents of the letters they forwarded to France. One of the prtsonment and the other to three days' imprisonment and a, fine of 1 4 00. v - Hindenbtirg Gives 4 . Estate to -Widows Berlin, -March 25.-(L K. a) Field Marshal, von Hlndenburg has fallen heir to V Small fortune. The famous army leader recently -received n6tlce that a West Prussian farmer.- whose two sens were killed in battle, has left him aa estate of about IlliOOO. tTh victor of Tannenberg announced at once that he would turn the money over to th rVief fund for widows and children of slain soldiers, - - . .- v Aft '' mAiuK UKA TjitNuH:: VILLAGE C0MIiS: A GE L Teuton Soldiers Considerate and Partiriilatlyrehey '. Charitable to Poorr ' - Berlin, March: 25. (t N..S.)The following letter was written to Major Lohmann, commander of a battalion of- the nineteenth Wurtemberg infan try regiment, by the mayor of a small French village in the-r' Vdsges; moun tains:-."-; t- J:; "Slrr Wirh considerable regret I learn that your battalion has received orders to leave our village and to pro ceed to some .other pert of the. front. The occupation of our town-by force of the enemy will, of course, always remain a sad memory - for us, but we Vnrvw that vnn and mif mn rannot be held responsible for -tha misf or- tupe that has befallen us. ' "As far as ? you and your officers and : soldiers, are concerned J I gladly testify .that you have always scted humanely and : honorably. You Shave protected the weak and innocent and I know - that 'your personal; f forts have dons much to relieve our suffer ings. Tour soldiers were - always- con? slderate and chariUrole.: During the year which they spent here they shared their rations daily .with the poorest of our citizens and they- took especial cars to feed ths hungry children. "More than by anything else we have been touched by your chivalrous con duct .- toward our owj soldiers. .Ton treated our, wounded defenders as un fortunate comrades and . brothers in arms and buried our dead with greater oimtary honors than -would have been giyea to itnem by their own country men, Thja will never be forgotten by us. -Sou have honored yourselves by giving "many proofs of T sympathy for us and we will remember-your chival rous conduct-long after' peace ia re stored.' ' ' - - ' - la ths hope that this cruel war soon may come to an end I bid you farewell in itb name of the population or our village.- - -. -; , Telephone in Trench ;rlays runny Trick London, March 16-Even the tele phones - in i the trenches -play .' tricks mpA in a while, aecordina to an of ficer just hack from the front. Th's officer waa - in charge or a telephone at - an, advanced post. Us waa - talk ing to another -officer at another post when -the - lih -went wrong.,,-Af ter mgny, moments of silence the Instru ment buzzed loudly and ,hs heard a sweet' femal voice demand: "Num ber, please." Exasperated at" wbat appeared to be a bad Joke, ne, asked for his home number in London. An other short pause and another-female voice was heard. It. was his wife tn London -- Joyous - greetings were" soon interrupted fby other voices which ex plained - that the trench line has - be come . crossed - with -, the - .main ... head quarters , line connectedwlth JLondotu. RMAN OFFICIA rSlBERIA HELL 1H0LE, HPDR, MEYBERG German1, publisher Saysf His Countrymen Dyih'g.'by; the - Thousand at'Shiganska. - J . Vienna. March 25. (I..K. S.H "Less than to. per Cent of the hundreds of thousands or German ana Auetro-Hun garian soldiers and civilian wno have been carried to ' Siberia ' will return alive after the war 4s over, - This positive --statement whs mads by Dr. Friedrich Mayberg, a publisher of Lemberg, who-recently returned to his native town after. 16 months Of terrible suffejlngln a prison camp at BnigansKa, on tn iena, m northern Siberia "With many ether prominent citizens of Xemberg, Dr, Meyberg was carried off by the RuseJans when they took possession of; 4h Qallcian capital In the first stages at the war. Karry in February of , Jast year he reached Jakuttk, with several thou sand other .prisoners. . From there he and hiawfellewauffererewere senjt north over the fiosen Iena to Shigan- ska, a distance of about 800 miles, in temperature often SO': degrees t below sero. Many of the poorly clad, prison ers died from exposure on the way, and hundreds of them were sick when they reached" their destination-. '; Prisoners' Xbt Xs Awfut, '- "There were about tOOO prisoners in ths camp- on the Lena," the- publisher says. "Their lot..-wag --awful. They received only scant supplies, and there was no .medical eara for the sick snd wounded. T-s! .'-. - "About 20 of th unfortunates died daily during the' months of April' and May, and matters became still .Worse When the terrible Siberian summer be gan. An epidemic of typhoid and swamp fever '. broke out and-the death rate more than doubled.-.';',; ' "In August, conditions became a llt tle better; buttup- to October. 1. when I at last received notice that my ex change had been agreed' upon and I "was 'started on -my; way to Yakutsk and Europe, ever 3000 of the prisoners had died. .---I . - . 1 . ICaay Xasdred Selfless, j ... """Fifteen- hundred others were In a of them ar alive" today." . , "And i.Shiganska is not the worst hell in. Siberia," Dr, Meyberg say g In conclusion. "From prisoners whom I met on my Journey to the; Roumanian frontier. I learned -that conditions are still worse in some of the, other prison camps, I repeat fhat when the war rfdf i ad i ths exchange of prisoners begins, it will be found that not 30 per "cent of ths soldiers and civilians sent to Siberia ar. alive..- Dies iii Connecticut -i New' ;Terk,?, March - ts-Nathan Co- hen. "the man without a country,", who, .because 'he was Insane and bis, na- tlonalityeould not be established, was shipped ' back and forth many ' times - ' . ' , 4sSSSBBBBBSMasaSBSfeSSsnRBSBBBMBBBSSBBSsWsW t , ' . The Moment It Reaches Your Stomach all Pain. - - , . . , , Gases, Sourness, Acidity and Heartburn "Goes .: Don't suffer! In a few, moments 1' stomach distress' will go. Ko indiges tlon, ' heartburn, -- sourness . or belching of gasvacid, - or eructations of undi gested .food, no dizzineis, . bloating, foul breath -or headache. Papa's Dlapepsln m noted for' its speed in regulating upset stomachs. It Is the surest, Quickest and most cer tain indigestion remedy In the whole world,' andbesldes it Is harmless, Millions of men and women now eat their favorite foods without fear they know Pape'a tlapepsin will save then from any stomach misery. - - - Please, for your sake, get a large j ; J - - Oreat Central VrgaalsaUon Wit t . On Idas, That of Privlng feu-i - f to rrem-Tleld, Being yorttoC ' London, Ttfarcn 25. (U. ' P. Pre liminaries to the greatest commercial ' vendetta In history are on in England today; If ngland - was unprrpared ; for war in ' August, 1914. there is. no indication she wut be unprepared ror the- great K trad war against German y : which rls to, follow sterner hostilities. - British?oommreial, ; inanuf acturlng and" financial Institutions ar rapidly welding themselves Into - a ' central organisation which wilt hava for n sole purpess , the atrangllng- ef ; Gr- mant trade a everywhere.- Thlg (central organization,-as already outlined. dur- A th a great meeting Juet held at ,th GulldhsU.j London, has for Its pur pose also an affiliation with British labor- which '.win .'-givs the- British 5 .. worker Joe- most powerful voice in htstofyf Vti "unionism , for. the- promo. tlon.bf JOs welfs re.? y Resolutions adopted' agree that i tsber shall have a'plsc' 4n Itheiergantsationantl-iad - minittratloft'n ths shti-Gerrasa cam paign etj'an : equal ; f ootlnr "ith i em ployers. ' ' ; ' ;'V! v . M ? "- hfd tbator vAeked to Join. ? f. ; '. LkboVrhas betf ; asked' te Join In - 7reat demand ;tnr the' government s lor a non-POiiin-Bl . miniirjsDi tjMiii-. mefce. A remedeling ef British tech nioal and commercial education is to bsJ demanded ,of the, proposed minis- try; . That the- British consular serv- h irehroughout51 the werld- Sbsll cori-: siaf of ' the fbeM guested and smost V prafc'ticai' buslness-'men that Knglan.l ran produce, . is soother deman.i. : British -consuls, it was sgreed oy i ns hundreds of leading commercial and financial heads attending the meet ing, ' shall be paid high salaries with substantial cash bonuses for any con siderable increase in British trade n their respective localities. Allied with : more thsn 180 cham bers of commerce representing prsc- 1 tlcally every commercial center in the British empite, the Jondon Clianl ber of Commerce presented the fol-' lowing 'recommendations '- which - were unanlmouslyeiadoptedjv;i-W' v,. -, hamberg of. OOnuatre JSsst " , For reclprocalv trade relations ' be -tween all parts-of the British em, pire; - preferential trade with Eng land's sHll: penalising -.enemy coun- ' tries by :tarlffs And, otherwise." ' A i, committee of the , government board or - trade commission to inves tigate and recommend changes io ths - ; advantage ef British commtrce ' also is on record with a lengthy list - of ; vital reforms designed to protect-ths -British producer against foreign com petition., Th . recommendations '.bar German mechanical toys from import snd place heavy; duties on '"enemy" glass and Esther wear. The govern ment is asked for a vigorous enforce ment of foreign patent laws anl among of her things, for laws making : it obligatory that foreign goods be plainly stamped as such. - - - "Representatives from more than 100 . British' chambers of commerce mt 'n v Ixndon recently to . frame further . "stumps";; for German '.''trade;..- This . meeting combined theyolcs of 80,- 000 manufacturers and merchants. ; , British bankers are ' - planning . a v meeting to discuss financial aid tor new eommerclar enterprises to fill ' the gaps left vacant by missing Ger man Imports. Tbe great munition,' factories, now making shells for the. army.' are to be refitted wlth proper machinery' for the ? manufacture of divers things ' the t ' formerly came from Austria and 'Germany. - Xnflaoaee Will Be Telt, - ' When England's, great commercial, financial and manufacturing ring is finally-. welded, it-will not alone en deavor' to crowd opt German trade 10 the British Isles and England's colo- nles, ; according to best . information todaavi Its influencs will be felt more strongly" at first in the coiin-' tries : allied with England, but will eventually spread to the four Quar ters of ths glebes 1 - between the. United States and South -America, is dead. '. ; . Thirty-five years ago Cohen -wts born !a , Russia. As a ,boy hs 'left heme and three years ago landed in Baltimore with severaK thousand dol lars which he had earned in BrarIL He started in business and married. His . business failed and his wife ran away. Cohen then lost his memory and speech and was taken to an insane asylum. , , fifty-cent case "of - Pape's Dlapepeln from any drug store - and put . your stomach right. Don't keep on being . miserable life is too shortyou are ; not here long, so make your stay agree able. Eat what you like and digest It; enjoy it, without dread of rebellion .Jo -' the stomach, - . - Pape's - Dlapepsln belongs 1n your -horn anyway. V Should one.ef the fam ily est something which doesn't gre with them, or!a case of an stuck of indigestion; - dyspepsia. " gastritis or stomach derangement at daytime er , during tb night. It is handy to give the Quickest, surest relief known,. v ' -