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I & W I# I •••Q9:-S ^AnTTTrTfiMT PAGE TWO. Washington, Nov. 15.—American ..(•legates to the great peace confer snch are understood to have been se lected'by President Wilson, although there probably will be no announce ment until the place and date of meet ing has been decided upon formally by the inter-Allied council which re assembled today in Prance. Discussion in well informed quar ters of the probable personnel of the delegation centered upon four men. They are: Robert Lansing, secretary of state, to head the mission: Colonel E. M. House, now in France attending the Inter-Allied council as the personal representative of the president Elihu Root, Louis P. Brandeis, associate Justice of the supreme court. The belief is growing hero that President Wilson himself will attend the opening session of the congress, though not to sit as a delegate around the peace table. Former Crown Prince y... Goes Round About Way To Maastricht Amsterdam, Nov. 14, (Thursday.) Polymer Crown Prince Frederick Wil liam of Germany arrived at Maast richt on Tuesday from Spa, having taken a circuitous route to avoid mutinous troops. When it became known that one of the party was the crown prince all were disarmed and detained until the arrival of the Dutch commander. !Tho former crown prince, accom panied the commander to the lattec's home under guard pending instruc tions from The Hague. AMENDMENT PROPOSED. Washington, Nov. 15.—An amend ment to the war revenue bill designed as a substitute for the child labor act recently declared unconstitutional by the supreme court, was introduced to day by Senator Pomerene of Ohio. Under the' law nullified, interstate The Extreme Value In Glasses Is not in the price you pay, but in the satisfaction they give. "SEE T7S AND SEE BETTER" 6 N. 4th St., Grand Forks, N V, yw&$. !S6?® "-. 14 W i„ CONFERENCE ARE SELECTED vjy.v Mrs. James Dills, Schenly, Pa.) A combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin, free from opiates and narcotic drugs, pleasant to the taste, and gentle, yet positive, in its action, Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is the recognized remedy for constipa tion in countless homes. DR. CALDWELL'S Syrup Pepsin READ ALL THE ADS ViK How The Perfect Laxative Sold by Druggists Everywhere 50 as. (E.) $1.00 A TRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OBTAINED. FREE OF CHARGE, BY WRITING TO DR. W. B. CALDWELL, 459 WASHINGTON STREET. M0NT1CELL0, ILLINOIS r?vSt|b?iqt :&frvin?^rv. Bringing Up Father shipments of products of child labor were prohibited. The Pomerene pro posal would levy a special excise tax of ten per cent on the net profits de rived from the sale of such products. It was prepared after numerous con ferences between Senators Pqmerene, Lenroot and Kenyon, who believe It will overcome the objections which caused the former law to be declared invalid. THIRTEEN SURVIVORS OF YENRUT LANDED Miami, Fla,, Nov. 15.—Captain Fesser and twelve other survivors of the small American steamer Tenrut of Philadelphia which went down last Sunday off the Bahama islands, have arrived here after sixty-two hours in an open boat. The steward and four others of the crew are miss ing and are believed to have been lost. THEATER TO CONTINUE. Paris, Nov. 15.—The Royal Theater at Berlin, according to a dispatch from the German capital, will con* tinue as a co-operative company un der the management of an art com mittee. "I have been taking Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin foi constipation and find it a splen did remedy. I recommend it to my friends and will never be without it in my home." (From a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by T" WHY DON'T TOO VANT TO I iO TQ FLORID* TO* THE V/INTEI5 "tOO DONT ADVERTISEMENT. IS YOUR FAMILY FREE FROM COLDS? Coughs and Colds don't linger when Dr. King's New Discovery is Used.# Tou owe it to your family—to your self—to keep this standard remedy in your medicine cabinet. For almost three generations it has been the first-choice cold and cough relief of millions of people, young and old. Helps to bring quick relief—loosen chest-stuffiness, reduce fever, soothe irritated throats, check coughing. Sold by druggists everywhere. 60c and $1.20. Dizzy? Bihoas? Constipated? Don't permit yourself to become constipated, as your system im mediately begins to absorb poison from the backed-up waste matter. Use Dr. King's New Life Pills and keep well. Try them. All druggists. 26c. NEW UNIVERSITIES DICTIONARY IS O O N Presented by the Grand Forks Herald One Coopon. and 08c Secures the Plrttowy. iiiiiyiiTiiiiiiii'imii"iiiiiiiiiif aeo iiuHnmimiiminniiiitiHiiHii to Get It IT 98c secwe this NEV? authen tic Dictionary, bound in real flexible leather, illu»^ trated with full pafes in color ami duotone 1300 pafe*. 'ffei Present ,or niail to this paper one coupon like the above with ninety-eight ccpts to cover cost of handling, packing, clerk hire, etc. Vm to 1M TTp to M« atllM. .1« .......IS TJp to Up to ON For CKM PMtnitar rats for J]m. Att DiettBSSariM' published previ- HHft in fftlc ummt Mil a# Awio EVEM KNOWWHERE. «T K TW5 ONt TOO Neve* bo wi THIH4 TO OF THE RE*bOH° DOKT WANT TO iO- Versailles Regarded As Place Where Peace Meeting Will Be Held Paris, Nov. IB.—(By the Associat ed Press)—'Versailles, although not formally chosen as the meeting place of the peace negotiations, ia regard ed as almost certain to be the place selected for the peace conference when the inter-Allied council reas sembles today. The real work of the negotiations will be carried on in Paris, where it is probable that' dele gations from all the countries will re side temporarily. There also Is little doubt that the supreme act of signing the peace agreement will take place at Ver sailles in the same historical hall where the German empire was pro claimed in 1871. Many Children Are Working In Factories Washington, Nov. 15.—Great In crease in the employment of children between 7 and 16 years of age in vegetable canperies since the federal child labor law was declared uncon stitutional was reported today by the children's bureau of the department of labor. The conditions under whien the children worked were found to be generally bad, their hours of employ ment irregular and the camps in which they lived insanitary and crowded. BAKER PROMISES T0i BRING BACK MEN AS SOON AS POSSIBLE Washington, Nov. 15.—Congratula tions and expressions of the nation's proud esteem were cabled to General Pershing for the American army in France today by Secretary Baker, with a promise that now a respite has come, the war department will do all in its power to expedite the early re- turn of the expeditionary forces eoin European waters October 9, as an- that the country m^y welcome its sol diers home. NAVAL TERMS OF ARMISTICE ARE BEING CARRIED OUT Paris, Nov. 15.—(By the Associated Press.)—The naval terms of the Ger man and Austrian armistices are be-} ing carried out rapidly.^ Admiral Hugh Rodman will be the American representative at a meet ing tomorrow with German naval del egates at a British port. PIiANS TO SAVE MONET. Washington, Nov. 15.—During de bate in the senate today on the need of greater economy in government ex penditures, Senator Underwood, Democrat of Alabama, former chair man of the house ways and means committee, declared that only by delegating to one committee power to pass on all appropriations could ex travagance be prevented. I POCH MAY COME TO U. 8. Cleveland, Ohio, Nov. 15.—Antici pating a visit to the United States shortly of Marshal Foch, generalissi mo of the Allied armies, Myron T. Herrick, president of the Cleveland Chamber of Commerce and former ambassador to France, today forward ed an invitation to General Foch' through the state and war depart ments at Washington to'visit Cleve land if he comes to America. CANADIAN CASUAMTES. Ottawa, Ont.. Nov. 15".—The .follow ing names of Americans appear in to day's overseas casualty list: Wounded—W. J. Abernethy, Mil waukee L. Strem, Green Bay, Wis. W. Decon, Flint, Mich. T. Johnstone, Clilef, Mich. A. H. Johnson, Eagle Bend, Minn. 100 KU&EDJIN BERLIN. London, Nov. lg.—About 100 per sons were killed in the fighting in Ber lin which marked the overthrow of the imperial government, according'to a report frbm Berlin received in Co penhagen and forwarded by the Ex change Telegraph company. The dead were buried in the Frledrichstrasse church yard. TO FORM BALTIC STATE. London, Nov. 15.—The state coun cils of Esthonia, Livonia. Courland' and Oesel Island have decided to form a Joint Baltic state according to a Riga dispatch to Copenhagen for warded by the Exchange Telegraph company. LEGAL NOTICES CZTATXOV. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA.) County of Graad Forks. J' IN COUNTY COURT la the Matter of the Estate of Paul HOT. Deceased. Car! s. Hov, Petitioner, Against Johanna Hov. Slver Hov, John Brldsten, Treasnrer of Grand Forks Couaty, and all other persons Interested in said estate. Respondents. The State of Nerth Dakota and tbe Baid County Court to the Above Named Respondents, Greeting: TOU AND EACH OF TOU. are hereby eltes and required to be and sppear be fore the county court of the oftunty of Grand Forks In said state, at the office of the eounty Judge of said ceuatjr, at the court hooae in the city of Grand Forks, in said county, on the 7th day of, December. A. D. l»tl, at 10 o'clock a. m., of that day, tbea and there to wend the hearing on the petition of Carl 8. Hov for the appointment of Nertliweet ern Trust Company as administrator of the estate of Paul Hov, deceased, sad to shew cause, if any there be. why the prayer contained in said petition should not be granted. Personal service of the above citation at least ten (10). days prior to such ^hearing on John Brtdsten, treasurer of 'wand Forks eounty, W. D. a 4 tor J^rvioe br publication Grand Forks Herald onoe three sucosssivo weeks, the last an bit. A,Vtl GRAND FORKS HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER, 15, 1918. THTSE tWTAKx .TH»N« TH*TG0U|4 R£. done, TH/VT^ WOOLO PLEArte \0*r Handley-Page Plane Is Inspected By President Wilson Washington,' Nov. 15.—President Wilson personally Inspected today the first American built Hatridley-Page night bombing airplane which, with thousands of others like it itoutd have played an Important role! In the- war had Germany not capitulated. Accom panied by Mrs. Wllspn and with Sec-. Setary Baker, Director Ryan of the epartment of military aeronautics and General March, chief of staff, in attendance the president looked over the big machine as it stood on the Polo grounds of the Mall 'and later watched it take the air. He did not go aboard the plane. Mrs. WUsoir climbed up the ladder to the under hatchway to look through into the quarters of the aviator, bombers and gunners. .. To illustrate the great size of the giant bi-plane, a single seater was parked beneath each of its., broad wings, completely slffltered under their spread. They looked like'tenders to a battleship. When the Handley-Page took the air it rushed down the long stretch of open ground with its wheels barely lifting oft the earth. It looked as though it would crash against the trees at the far end. The crowd held Its breath. At the critical moment the pilot dropped the landing trucks sharply against .the ground and rising on the rebound, the plane sailed over the trees and away in a slow curve up ward. To prove it was all in the game, the pilot came back, several times, dipped over the treos to touch the earth and jumped immediately into the air again to circle and dip a few hundred feet above the heads of the crowd. NAVAL VESSELS Cl)T SQUARELY IN TWO IN A COLLISION New York, Nov. 15.—In a collision between the United States destroyer Shaw and the British Liner Aquitania nounced by the navy department two days later the naval vessel was cut squarely in two and the forward sec tion sank immediately, the other sec tion catching fire, it was learned here today, with the arrival of the Melita carrying 25 survivor* of the Shaw. The navy department's announce ment said 15 lives were lost. CANDIDATES CAN RESIGN. Washington, Nov. 15.—Candidates for commissions in' officers' training schools, the war department announc ed today, may be discharged from the army immediately If they desire. If they elect to complete tl?e course they will be commissioned upon gradua tion in the officers' reserve corps and placed upon the inactive list. A Combination Good Qualities invrbes your attention to No sweetening required. No cooking. Needs but fattfe milk or cream. Fine with evapo rated milk. Keeps indefiratetye Not a particle of waste. A wonderfully attractive flaMK 'ThereseRtoson ^i-Nuts. WELL-VE WON'T TALK ACftOOT !TA*Vf WORE -IF "POO JJQNT VOttt GERMAN SUBMARINE CREWS DECIDE TO STOP REVOLUTION London, Not. 15.—IHE crews of German U-boats at a mass meeting at Brunsbuttal, accord ing to a Copenhagen dispatch to tbo Dally Express, resolved to oppose the revolution and rein state the officers. They decided to fly the national flag instead of the red liar. CONSIDER IiAFOLUETTE SPEECH. Washington, Nov. 15.—With the hope of Anally disposing of long pend ing charges growing out of Senator LaFollette's alleged disloyal speech at St Paul more than a year ago, the senate elections committee decided to day to meet Thursday to consider this matter and nothing else. 9 CONTINUE COTTON PRICES Washington, Nov. 15.—The prim fixing' committee of the war indus tries board hgs recommended to Pres ident Wilson that the present cotton fabric prices be continued until Jan uary 1, and that after that date no further action regarding such prices be-taken by the committee, CENSORSHIP* OANCEMjED. Washington, Nov. 15.—Discontinu ance of press censorship in connec tion with cable, postal and land tele graph lines, effective at once, was an nounced today by the government censorship board. ifcAGOOD PROMOTED. Paris, Nov. 15.—General Johnson Hagood, chief of staff of the Ameri can department of supply, has been iromoted to a command at the front. He has been succeeded.-by Brigadier General W. D. Connor. EPIDEMIC IS CHECKED. Washington, Nov. 16.—For the first time since Spanish influenza became an epidemic In army camps at home the surgeon general's weekly report shows the disease effectually checked with indications, of further improve ment •A/4 GOTO um RE LABOR DEMANDS REPRESENTATION AT PEACE MEET London, Nov. 14, (Thursday.)—The labor conference today unanimously adopted a resolution submitted by James Ramsay MacDonald, demand ing that labor be represented at the official peace conference and that an international labor congress sit .con currently. There were cheers for in ternational socialism and the Bolshe vists. ADVERTISEMENT genuine Bayer-Tablets Bqyer-Ti Tha Drar Cross WMGLEY5 there! I I IT evening EDITION By George McManus WELL-MA«1E WANT Demands For Higher Wages Made By 5,000 Army Depdt Workmen New York, Nov., 15.—Demands fw (. Increased pay to compensate them for •the loss of overtime wages, eliminated by government order, 'were made by 5,000 striking workmen on the netur, army supply depot in Brooklyn.- The strikers drew up demands for *1 an hour for journeymen and 62 1-ac for helpers In virtually all the trades af fected. ADVERTISEMENT, THE BAYER CROSS "DOTH tablets are white. They ire of precisely the same ah* I One contains genuine Aspirin. Can you be sure about the other? Hundreds of medicinal products are sold in the form of plain white tablets, and plain white tablets are sometimes ofiered when Aspism is called lor. Bayer-Tablets and Capsules of Aspirin contain tfeaatee Aspirin. For your additional protection—every package and mrary tabJmt oi of Aspirin is marked with "Tbfe Bayer Cross. ttn-U. S. M. OS.) wIMili Bum