?Lia ninnttl SOm POINTERS ON , QUES TION AFTER M INVjEfTlC^: CATION .?r" ,\A Hoy English Cities Face Water F amine-Many Other Prob lem* m Britain , MISS YATE*' I London, May 15.-That the working class wife la a more efficient spend*? i of - thc household accounts than ber miedle clas? elster waa'the.contention of Miss Lucy Yates , nt a recent meet ing of the Women's Freedom League.' She declared that the 'principle of a woman having complete control of tits house waa recognized by the working classes, but higher In society there carno a sort of dual control. Through thia responsibility working ^ife baa learned administration, but hy leaning on some one else tho meddle class wita never learned. t ? > Th) wife, Miss Yatee said, should have complete control [of'the' "htoney set a side for .the household expenses, including housekeeping! dress and fMi ucatipn. There Shouldice no audit of her i .ccounts unless byi request She abou d bc provided wita a check nook aa nore-likely to prove sucqesefut than the provision of tepee coins,'tba' mlgb be 03.toled out oj her purse b> temp lng bargains. TSel speaker de clare! that spending wjaa a finer art and much more difficult than earning Women should also- choose the house and it was high .. time' according to Miss Yates, that u;e women took over the spending of thc money for the na t?on.r i Mctl?n?'.,oui-and other cities race o e?.ioue. water .famine. The water>^ppH the D?dwent Valley resevoirs from which supplies are drawn ?o speedily choking up all Iron pipes and boilers with .metallic deposita. ' A committee of the Nottingham city council has repoTicd thai the continued use of the Derwent water would in a short time completely choke all the iron pipes in th* city. Sheffield, which drawk ita. watej ot the same source, ts not af feclea.^be cauB? for thirty yeats the council has insisted on lead and cobper pipes be ing ihstalled. Lalcoste^atr-^roy; whlcq use galvanised .iron pipes, are in the same position .as -Nottingham! where the people are already revert ing ti the old system of pumping wa ter from sand stone wells. To r?-place ali or the iron pipes" and botlera would costth*uMnd0-??T?tmt?(?4 - T The .iJitpwaa^ Va^tey^Wai^'Systein Which supplies heal des the four cities, most pf the towns in Nottlnj&ajn shire i nd Derbyshire, nualretn?Rrof *35j00( ,000 and is lU^mlp^2fc?l^ The Cost of retatouintng a first class hattlosS?n hoc '. wIMgfcni--^?N* ??MUM somawfea't less than TIS ls.su iCv ??ci?y o million ??isiu ii * i>??U, Tho naval authorities, are trying to reduce] this baevy.eosf ' bat. lt 1* neVjfer likely lo reach th* 'former figures, al though thc 'nhe'or oil fuel makes "a large reduction possible in the anuB* er'a department Tho eight gurt'Queen Mary coat as most a million dollars mora to bulla than Ibo ten gun Ajax,' and is costing $250,00$) a year mora to maintain. A black tulip, which,has. been thc dream of avery horticulturist over since? Dumas wrote pf such a mytho logical! flower, hft? - at iaat been, very nearly realized. At the flower show in HoBtlcT^Kutwfc* Hall ?a. specimen nt tulip hna*rcw^owV \vnlch bas Such ' a darklplum coJdJVJth?t Jtmlghtattbe first alance ham?m^^?j^. be able ^Jffi^^J* 8Pecim?n-aliaoW Stores on putelr ci1?^,^Y^?*Jrt& menagtd hy ra??%*!#t3 what Potentate Forrest Adair sah?. ' It, was the univer 'sal spirit of good fellowship anti hos . pttnlity-~the Atlanta spirit-that has I mado thia con vent ion great. My heart .ia full of gratitude for all Atlanta, whlchbrHe-ts labor, its money, tn fact; its heard for the'suc cess' of thlscdnvention." Ti':' HOBEA OX THE UPGRADE Is Being Jledernfeed By the American Missionaries. Seoul, Korea, May IB.-Modernisa tion has began to' uiake Itself felt in Korea. . American visitors will find the white robeJi korean with hts sparse black beard, bia majestic waly, and his stov? pipe, bat sUU moving picturesquely through the wide streets of Seoul, ceaselessly puffing his long the city has lost much" of it? langer J and ease. A new energy has sprung j up since the arrival of the Japanese. The immediate problems of the Jep 'anese administration concern educa , tlon anti ?ha arfonftmartt ?9 ^?.t_^-_ ment for the people; The correspon dent for the Associated Prese was re cently informed??t&aUj.th? government I waar gr?aily in debt td $he Ataericaa ^mlssMIIBi^gfljiBr tho work they have done in esUbtlWiisg BfchoolB. The .Young B&n'a Christian t Association _b*aa ?aid to be doing, thai work In the 1 Ihd?Btrai " achoor'and " the Japanese government Ie pushing forward the . governmental Industries which r>/re ' founded by tho Prince Ito during the j protectorate over Korea) i The government wt&. a^MMWlt set of buildings for its offlceB on the j gio nod floor of the palace. Although tt?trprtne?pnr*?tHpe^ thens ' will be preserved, a number ot the angler historic, atr^ ^RtTongfeeiujs among tue rnncu?n%ti?a I of the Old r?gime who have benn now .thrown out -b% office and-among tbs JyonnS;Studeatjclass, w$ch ls porVai: ' ed with an interest In politics Uko that . fourni amos? att.dp.nia tn '.tup^n pren I er. NeJ$hqr~ of the opposing forces, j however, have as yet gfar?n ' their op position any concrete form.: rj f . ' Among the missionary workers, those of the Presbyterian, church ot the United States are et present con spicuous >by l?creasiui? ? I. A recent report amounted for I28 .Presbyterian mJsBio^rlos in tho Ko ] rean field and also chawed thai the I evangelical work ia carr'ti. on by ?S native ordained ininiat^j^aati b?j29 'ordained pnsachettHk^p have joined the?MHH^ffiBfi^fl I The denamlur V?LOK QUEST!' rmany HQ* T??ftt?ft^rWtl dod procei rItJe*of Ka "CANCER HOUSES" MARKED BY MEDICS Fae* Gathered By Experts ead 'fe the Pafcik ia North Eaglami Lond?n, May 15.-Medical mea ana sanitation experts ?re taking a great merest ia tue problem aa to whether a person; cap. f?ceme infected with < c^cer* taioagh' living id a house Ia which it cancer Mettra ha? died Ttfr ' years- the question has been a matter * ot debate and medical: literature now abounds ia- meieren ce? tn the "cancer ho?seg," ; Iptveatigation in England has follow, ed abe report ot Dr. Amande, who has found that .in a village of 400 Inhabi tants in France, eleven deaths from cadcor occured in seven yeera, ?ll be ing located In ' the same block of houses, and in other parts of France, including Parts, a similar condition waa found. In Great Britain there are numer ous cancer houses. There is a vicar age in the north of England where two successive incumbents have died of concer. In a large house In Somer. sat? where a mao died of cancer many yews ago, his wife, bia wife's second husband, a member of tlve family by Wa first wit? and a houaekoeper have since fiallen victims. In another house in Scotland, the cancer history extends badk three generations. An experi ment wad made there by confining - mice ia a trap. Severa J w Iii ein con tracted 'tho disease. Sir Thomas Oliver, tho distinguisher physician and writer on medical sub jects, in a, recent address, .declared thai- the gena, theory ot cancer was only- doubtfully adopted, still it was known ibat, cancer could be conveyed from maa to the lower animals.. More over, lt waa Regarded as probable that Just,as nome persons were particular ly siusceptable td infectious diseased or some persons might inherit a peculiar vulnerability of/the tissues, whereby at a particular age they become liable to cancer. Could this inheritance or vulnerability explain some of the facts about cancer houses? In his annual re port to tho Insurance Institute at isewcasxie-on-ryne. Sir Thomas baa said: "My attention has been drawn to a aeries of' ceses- In a street not one twelfth of a mile long In a ?mall tow n. The bouses. aro entirely rnaMonHai' In the fifteen years from 1893 to 1908 there died from cancer ia this street nineteen persons and ona ..dog. In Borne of the? housese there have oc cured two or three cases. As In all of the eases there, .was a hereditary history of th ? disease, the large ?um- r bert Of death: among successive occu pants of 'be houses has suggested thal more than a men. cohjciaencd.* . Cfc ?: 'Oreen,unether scientist, who has! StiudhtiVtbe subjeet of cancer, ba**! llevfca t?at it is largely .-due to coal Ases. Noirshirc feaa the largest cancer ? death j"a.tei>Jo, 3coUand,s ..Mr...Green re sorted in 1912 that ..the ? .GlatrtCto of Nalrnshlre which were free from can cer were those where peat ls burned, not coal flo frequently baa beofcaati^ ? i iS?tllis fact that he la disposed to at tribute tba prevalen??&-q??cer*tikK *M bpr?MtftUon^?^^ phar,{especially where the houses ot iOvi; people are sloping sitea in bel- , ] 1? ? r ; ... i :l?A?.L8 Ar?&EB ?D-i. LiAK: TO JAIL FOE SO DAYS W?lmt?gton, May 15.-Stewart Fe rel, aon of a well known and promt u?.-ui ?'i?^cn o? Br???\v?uk.'couui,y was" sentenced to thirty days In Jail by f>3Corder Furlong today for contempt of court. ' Fefel was on trial for va grancy. Plainclothesman Leon George waa testifying that Fetal had been > oren loafing boro several months with 1 no visible means of support. Fef^i. who .was seated i by his attorney, , Brooke Q. ?mpi?, who soon succeeds Mr. Furlong aa recorder arose and f ^randed the officer- aa a "d-^- liar." Ifc.y? pleadings of Fefel's father and fittfrney failed to shake the recorder MB Bia ?atoir?hiait??. * }&a| to pall for 30 days,and he began Jins! te tin immediately, for vagrancy, me|ca?e being continued. The affair J^rejited rauch attention. B; ? ' P*I^CJ? ?&itim?s& ' Jaaa An^torn Were Jent Like ihn Ki | . ? He? of Today, ?timore. Md., May l5.-7r?n the aa*- ' icnircn of Society or vinevnnatt are [some fact? about the early American jpairloats that would belter be left j unpublished, according to thf' state intents made today at the final -iesalon ]of tai triennial meeting r.f ihe society J When n resolution was offered to j nave a egMi?al commission appointed J or the pu'??cation of interesting farra ih the pu?soselon o? the society, it met with . opposition from Coi. Beaty, secretary of tho Pennsylvania branch of the oreanlsatlon. "I have v&fi all the papera." be said, "ana there ar? tales of poverty of some of our beat ancestors that would be'.bettet; left untold th ca in printed ??ircri. There aro stories ?x>, about jj mOaeV ?lfllCB.tte? Wita i r?jll*mjii- i P?ti ;SiM?':-.lN-??W ?; HOOSIER in y?p>IIJP.-finom? on tjfi'?-./'f?mo You may choose between the cele brated ''White beauty," whose pic ture is shown here, and one of the other Hpqisjej^ moak. The terms 6f : si?r Plan are these: U f%^ut?^?ihm^t you. choose ; . 2i^^'^?^|r^??cWy ptt&^m it. th? factory prevails strictly. . 4. No. interest. No extra fees. mSg^W^ direct wper l&jnof tite Hoosier Company. JifuVmoHey ?Mkif you are not ?TI-" delighted witl* your Hoosier. tho^? WQTBtn w\N3.ggasplhii>,opportonitv tomorrow cari be sure ol getting. one of these cabinets on this liberal Hoosier Plan. Yon realise of course that* these ?ciTii?i c???a not be offefvu except on a very limited number of cr.blnets, VWiW ?Ul? oajrp 1. The-v'HkXpiUr Pian" tenn? wlU be witiutowa, a. Our regular furniture tcrxoa -will then prcvail. THE IMMEDIATE CLOSING . i .i i i i in. ? .;// caused tomorrow by the number ot women who enroll onthis Hoosier Plan. Ii all the women'who need Hoosiers shouldcome'iomorrow, our allotment winild be taken be foi* night and the ?ale would cttrs?c^Whis has happened in many-simitar sales throughout the country; On the other hand, if women delay, thc sate may last all Urtek. This too has happened* Which now ts bett for you-io-delay ctn?fjfMj^Kti chances of missing ihis, opportunity or> te come d#wn tomorrow and find out about this ca&tstelso you taft decide-before ii is too hie? It cannot take you ten minutes to decide, once lor all, whether you intend to purchase now or later -And you ara deciding* remember. wlbst?^? orTon wi!! ssfvy? of unnecessary step* you now take. But unless you at once decide;* you may decido too late to own this greatest ot all Hoosier cabinets <>n this liberal Hoosier Plan. -700.000 women already have. Hoosiers.. Thousands are buying thia hew Hoosier every week: You should without tait graspyour opportunity and ?sub ?bia cabinet tomorrow. i Read About these conveniences that have made the HOOSIER necessary to over 700,000 Womeai i 1 ii^^^hrisliue'Frederick's famous V*y ''Housekfapers'F^ ' the .upper, left door-answers * very. wo?.... . man's, eternally, perplexing prpMisBjui^^ ^W^wKm^^ iot ??onpri'i Yo* * ?Ttil^Ppl^ yo? went and mi \i, complete outline of a perfectly balanced... meal ls before yog-Han excWelv* Hoosier f cat uro that is an invaluable help. .?? -,TA?'*^;'-!'i'"/?' *' ,Ur\tv'-?W' Tho Cook-book holder on the mid. * P V 9 die upper door holds your cook book securely when not in use. When yon are cooking, ?Imply open up the , book to ta? proper page behind tho holder. It la on a level with your eye, always clean, never in the way. There ?re 49 special convenu enees in the NEW HOOSIER - 17'are entirely NEW. (3V The Hoosier Metal FktorBin hold* > ?V*7/? cu? pounds. lt is i??w ood essy tb fill. Tiie sliding glass front c?atS?t?m *< lo clean H>e entire1 bm ^aslly..' T^tA^la Bide is entirely bf meia^wkJt'n^ to' hoHf flbnrT;; P?rst ? ouf first'.' " (A\ The NW Shaker Flour'.Sifter ?? " ' \ J the :nobt wonderful ot all the New Hoosier inventions, 1$ ia Ute only flour sifter ever made ona kitchen cabinet that : shakes flour through instead of grindingly it through, /(carino/ wear ont and can not grind throu?b any grit cr tofelga substance that might be In tho Sour. iTTciHj vt urcsv iTotUEe? noa described IN OUR WINDOW DISPLAY, which ts toe talk el ?hs iswn. Come, IB gs? find out about the others. /C\ A Big, Extra-Roomy Drawer fa \-r the base is made entirely of-met.-f for the proper storage bf all kitcha linen, towels, dish clolha, etc. The drawer ?s noiseless, dustless, end easy C&S todnrei in the1 Base Vv/ board is a narrow shelf eonve. curly located fer the storage of canned articles,,. Most women, will find; this a..., grvat convenience as,jan;.V|Omejrgc: JWM?- It will aavr many trios to th? , fully, pur stock of patterns is limited too late to get ont and SlrE this ron Hoosier Monday. Only Place in Town Where Hoosiers are Sold Asi Expert Demonstrator from the factory wi?! be with us during this s C?LDWELLh AMR MOWEBS have been continuously on the mi?f?l4TAi"? rv? W/v**!/! f/m /f?nA^oci' ?Ai'fv V?QVC "M/\fViiinnr /hi-sf fVi? Kocrf t? Sm materials'' and w?r^n?aMnr? Sftter* ?r???" %h?ir c?iikMetion. If you ant the beat, (et sell you a ?p?dwel?,