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He Will Lead France to Victory te* Arlstldo ?riand has been a^kod lo form a now ministry In Fran? . tin. ministry of Vivian' having given up tho tasck of governing the country during tho war, after Working hard for fifteen months. Jules Combon, well known to American-., will bo tho general secretary of thc cabinet. The two. men working together ex pect to form ft atablo ministry which will carry tho country through tho wer. m i m Who Put the Price <: '? fut We ere still doing business at thc same old stand, where we ?ivq FULL , WEIGHT, "..opd r PROMPT DELIVERY, and we sure will ap preciate your business. rhone" Ne,. 1K3 ., ,/ The Five Dellar Gea! Man. 99 M. IL ourself*--* ? m We are going to build a n?at home on a nice farm five miles from town. The land is fine; wood and-water on ' it, about thirty acres' in Jt. See/ us ; Q?ICKand let us buUdJus\.tfie;.house you want. ' ?I B^?Otoft,Pren.-, ' ti ?. Hbrtoa,y^re?.'' Yf.^M^?n, Bm. BRITISH CENSORS NO LOVERS OF POETRY I?ndon, Oct. 29.- (Associated Presa Correspondance.)-The English press censor has a particular aver sion for poetry, and lils blue pencil longara suspiciously over every rhymed or metered phrase, apparent ly in fear that lt may conceal some information or misinformation of value to tho enemy. The first in stance of censorial manipulation of a poetical quotation-the deletion cf the words "and tho kings" from a phrase of Kipling's-has been follow ed by numerous similar Instances. One of tho most amusing of these is described by tho Times. "We published yesterday a first hand account of the fighting ut Hul luch on October ll). In the course of lt our correspondent, describing the storm of bombs, shells, gases, and other m l'an s of destruction which fell upon tho enemy, was rash enough to quote Browning's. 'Twenty-nine distinct damnations, Ono ?ure, if the other falls.' "lils message was duly submitted to tho "Censor, who passed lt without ma terial alteration-excopt for thc Browning quotation. "Now we cannot pretend to fathom the military reasons which rendered it Indiscreet to quote the toxt of a great poem as its author wrote lt. Whether tho suggestion that our methods of destruction numbered twcnty-nlno would give information to tho i?erinans, or whether strict accur acy refused to countenance tho Im plication that they were so numerous, or whether too precise a familiarity with Browning was calculated to de press tho pcoplo of this country, or to ?hako their confidence in thc govern ment-in short, whatever the motive of ibo censor may have been, 'wo'can only record tho fact. And the fact ls that , the words, twenty-nine dis tinct' wore neatly ruled out and the single word 'different' inserted in stead of them. Wo do not complain. Incidents far less trivial and far more damaging to our national reputation are dally features of the Censor ship." HARD FIGHTING IS REPORTED IN ALL THEATRES (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE.) the east continuo attacks. Tho de fense is gradually yielding, and the sltuatloa Is virtually unchanged. Tho size ot Germaa forces operating again?t Serbia is fixed at 150,000 ac cording to an authoritative statement. The number,of prisoners they have captured is sur pris ig ly small. The Austrians admit officially that they ure ablo to capture only 20 Serbian i-filcers and 6,000 men. The small number of ofllcers taken here suggest there munt bo many civilians among tho prisoners. Petrograd furnished the infromation that additional dorman troops huvo been sont fi oin tho Russian front to Serbia. . Military observers hero be llove tho opportunity soon . will come for the Russian armies to completely dtvelop tho offensive which has been under way.. . UNIVERSITY. IN STOKE Merchant Presents Hall and 15 Ciass Booms to Philadelphia Employes. ' (Philadelphia Dispatch.) A new and advanced step In higher educational, ivorit, which may extend UB.influence to-pla?as of employment throughout: the United States, was in iv \y u rated ' today, : at' ' the! Wanamaker ?tate when;John Wanamaker present ed his employes with a new hall and fifteen cfass rooms which will servo as the nucleus for a university. . For moro than eighteen years em ployes of tho Wanamaker -store have been able to advance (themselves along educational lino:;.through tho medium j;'bf cour?es provided by the John Wona I mu'.;er Commercial Instituto. Now it sis, preposad to. glv?.omploycs,\cour?;o:? in' higher' education, comparable with tho best universities in the United States! ' AU of the classes in advance edu cational work, in the ?j? store will be brought together/d?der. thc direction Of the proponed university and many new courses,.will ho added.' Tho aims of the new educational movement are set forth aa follows: First-Matters ot health, mental and physical; second j .development" or the.'receptive, - the reflection and the executive intellectual 'powers; third, educa'Jon for technical efficiency In iwpr^;;' fourth';'.character development and'.education. in" things spiritual ;. and ethical ; fifth, thrift and tho financing ot ' personal lives of employes ; sixth, development of taste,' ability to recog nise and appreciate beauty and finesse in alt forms; aoven th, the: wise use.of letters', I : The new 11*11 donated 'fp*. the ; . uni4" varsity,.project wlll.be fcuown as Uni-' ?erato-jSs>i. It'is located r ottgttte ~ 'l^tn^tlobV and the auditorium han a BgjjfjVi&pacity ot- i?ti& ?while'" the tts BOO persons. Tho hall witt rooms Mr, Wanamaker said that the real America, of tho futura is whht its ! boys and girls shall- become hy aca-{ demie and vbcational training; A|e,within your soul aa earnest "..-Ancoro desire, tb. doIt&o) ?ight ^then'-yoar .yftl\ notate do th? Wrong Thing, and: tho. - enthusiasm generated in fio doing wilt?naturally ?volve into * .?m daW?nirifctbVo 1 ?s^rij'W, Elliott. .'A:\tome>'ai with which moUdh' pic turo? ot the burora ho'reall* have bean I made waa built by a Swedish scien tist. . G ess is Dayton, Ohio* Merchants everywhere tell oar 800 salesmen that business is booming* _ Farmers have had tas? record crops, at big prices, with big demand at home and abroado Stocks of manufactured material are short, and labor is in great demand. Exports largely exceed imports* Factories are busy, many wei r ing overtime. More freight cars are needed, and steamers are taxed to capacity? People are living better, and' spending their money more freely. . This country has the best money in the world, and more of it than ever before. Such a combination of favorable, circumstances never has occurred before, and probably wilt never occur again. Billions of dollars - are passing over the merchants9 counters* The people who spend this money want the best service. They demand it in all ki?d? of stores, from the smallest to the largest. They get it m stores which tise^ our up-to-dateCash Registers} which quicken service, stop fnis* takes, satisfy customers, -and, increase: profitSs "A- I Over a million merchants kaVev proved our Cash Registers ta fae a~ V-:- ."-.iitt-v. .-?JJ? :< -'.'.Vi- '-. ES 5 v : Tfa i?atkwaljg?sh Register Co Artificial E^s ?iid ?It?bo^tory ?Uk * I-A Sow Offered. ,to Germ?n Pob?ic ? - (London iH?putoh.) By Germ?n ?. - government' order Sundays- and - Wednesday* or? the an ly day H ; exempt tr oat the new -re'*, ftrfclionG on tho us*Ktf incat. Ger man new?i, ipers publish''.-''seisedules prepared by th? . Cf?ramn : Federa* council controlling this consumption of meat. The announcement fa finada that meat rap??ela must be j con*, served. The Schedule, as ; ferv^M? by Rc u ter'3 Amsterdam . ' oorresp^s? dont, is as follows : Mondays and. Thursdays. -Restau rants : shall' offer no meat,', tish; fowl dripping. ' Tuesday? arti?, Fridays. ; ;- Butchers shall soil no raw or cooked meats. ', - - .:> Saturdays;* Fork; ahall not be .sold. : Thus far ho \\ *?stric?ton; on ? the cooking, of moot S? the -home baa been placed, hy-.-the"::federal council;*' So you father, now gets , #1.2-/6. w*ek?" said Judge TJhlov to tho daugh ter Of tho wife-bester he' had p?rol |fc;dtehes/e?okcd ia lard; becoh Or jed. "And ho^ much docs hq put away nf ery pay night?' "No leisa than three; quarts,*: said the grateful child.-nChf l?tlan: Harald; ' AU Wrong. ' ? '". Tho popular o^iorVhad become a eoUior says The ?ietf York Post, in s holly contested finnish he dis tinguished .himself '.'-"by hts* . codrogo and gallantry* \ *Well. w??l." said he fcfc-th* end cf th? aoUoi^.^wha*. -do yon thin* of that? Nqt a saul's applauding." ,? White lie 's Seldom As whit la painted, : -S?jT jS?SSBSBB?SSBKKB?ait