. EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1918 HOLLAND PREPARED TO WITHSTAND KULTUR DIKES READY FOR FLOODING DUTCH DEFENSM HOLLANtfSAKMY 500,000 STRONG HOLLAND'S EFFICIENT LITTLE ARMY PREPARED TO DEFEND NEUTRALITY INUNDATION IS CHIEF uemummxiijwummnmiegnaBi!Kr. mmsmMiVflrmi'tmru-Mimujsa DEFENSE OF HOLLAND 8 mmmmmmMmmmmmmmmmmmmB Formidable Body, 'Well Prepared to. Defend the National Honor GROWTH OF FEW YEARS Best Trained Fighting Force) in History of the Netherlands Only some two day1 mari.li north or the battle arena In inlanders stands a formidable arms', Intact, fresh and vigor ous, that has not yet fired a phot In the Kreat war. It la tha' army of ttio Neth erlands. That army has been growing ever alnce the work of ttalnlng began fever ishly back In August, 1914, and has been carried on without a break. A special law was passed In 1913 greatly widening the clrclo of those liable lo sorlce. with the result that all tho men under , arms on August 1. 1914. were relieved . N tj -.y-j, R , j by newly trained men and sent home. jiNcttlUU YV 111 IU. 5s Hal ULS perate "Mailed Fist," Capital View B L visliiiiiiiiiliiiiB)BhlfP laiiiiiiM ' I if" BliH?V jtrfTy v. '3m s r ' a. jk7iaPisll9IIIIIIIIIIIIIHiiislll.llllllllllllBislllllB IB illllllBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHRnDHiIIBiS!jsWpsBM & nx ?-"-.v j - , , ' ' Wiex, tt'A ' aani I&'bBbhIIIIIH i? .Jr Ail JbKJpSV kaTliaalllBIE. i ' pKMrlH aliiiillllllllH wiJ 9kw BEf M i?'smgMs"'a!fm"wim' o ri sUBlliiiiiiiHi "K jJmWi' IKS' ' :! jMBbT Mlf ! jf '- '- in nmimrsiiasthsrim Nation Enabled to Resist Trespass Withi Flooded Tracts and Submerged Fortifica- ' tions Oceans a.iid Rivers Faithful Allies ; I "VTO COUNTr.V, peihans had greater Holland would be protected, not i 1 jl l ucaire, oi- nieuier rrasuii, id rciuuiu "" fcci- uuc, out bv thi y,ij ' aloof from the Kuropean war than Hoi- ' the north and In the south I ' land As with all neutral Jiatlon. the estuaries of the JIaas and ScJi.M,71.' unceaalnK aim of the Dutch was to I protectees area would Include bv f. present a Kindly. Impartial face to eery ' most attractive and desirable i.iu "" uruiBurriu. it ivai n urFLUli uuiuu-. wmmij iiif opulent nnirit i i. : . . .----.- -- ,., . -:. - vuLiernam ,.. 'enets of Mi let neutrality but" upon In- -niieraam iiolland'a two . B ,,. ; : " a laled policy, which Included checks not ' provinces of north and south n.i,' a'one upon deliberate departute from and Zeeland, The Haue RotleMim M f enets of Mi let neutrjlitv but'tinon In- Amsterdam Uollatid'H -' .m'4 advertent acts which might Irritate one merclal centersthe ports of mu,m" ' or more of the Covertiments embroiled and Tlia Hook, not to wentlnn ' '1 . the conlllrt. Yet Holland's position i cities as Uoidiechf, T.eyden and u iiea I '' th? , .. J.'"!-," " P"!"o 'hat alter ,u xu ami "-in iino miicni ue roiced bv lmn7. WASHINGTON SEES HOLLAND IN WAR though they can be recalled to the color Immediately should occasion arise. That the country's military lcidei had no Intention to rest on their oais after the achievement uas shown by a bill promptly passed by Parliament pro vldlne for a re-examlnatlon of all men of the Landstrum born since 18S5 whr had been rejected for one reason or another. The measure, of course, yielded very substantial Increase to Holland's Available military forces. How large a mass of trained men Holland could now place In the field Is easily discernible. There Is first the army that was mobilized In the days of the war's outbreak, probablv not far TENSION IS NOW GREAT IVxtiincton, Apill 2 ' tlirinan Is holding the mailed list over Holland to enforce sanction of supply shipments through that countr Into belglum. In her desperate fffort to ilrUe throuuh u decision in th (treat went i front blood zoiiu, the Teuton diplomacy ! is onrn mum nhnuhn, tfa ,,,V,1iit, .lto . n.iori. vi a. iiuaiiur i ii iiuiuuii luvu. i repgrrt ror the rlifhts of neutrals, und later sent homo on indefinite leave. ' fho Situation appeared fraught ilth Then there .3 the new army of a like nl. possibilities, but then, was n strange slze I dearth of olllclal newn hem nnent the Moreover, there Is a ery considerable doelopnients. while American officials body of men, who, prior to 1914. had suggested that the press refrain from finished their period of fifteen years In too much romment In the absence of rntlltU, Landwehr and I-andsturm, but facts hire. who are subject to call should occasion I If war roivis. (Jermanv would tin- ' rOulre douMuIly seek to Plow through Holland, This should hi Ing the number of opening n ii.ith to Itelglum which she trained men aai!able to half a million i wants for tmops and supplies. Hol men and possibly well o-er that num. land's border Is well protected by highly- , tor, constituting a far more formidable trained troop-. but It Is doubtful if and probably better-trained fighting the Imtch could withstand lonu ary force than tho Netherlands has ever be- berious attempt at Invasion. " fore possessed In her history. ' Germany's feveilsh ha.i now in In equipment, too, tho Netherlands pressing Holland led rome authorities army has made great strides during tho here to believe the Teuton war lords are last four years. The ammunition In- J anxious at the result of tho Itrltl.sli naval dustry has been reorganized and enor- i offensive on Zeebrugge and Ostcnd. If' inously extended. The artillery arm. In the Allies could demolish thtre bases It which the country was notoriously weak. would necessitate Uermany looking else has been re-enforced In so far as ma- j where for a base on tho i hannel and terlal was obtainable. Thn delivery of j Holland offers th only possible point nntl-alrcraft guns Is also in courts of It Is held certain here that Holland execution. wil not agree to Herman) 's demands un- Serlous efforts have been exerted to lc!.s slw is willing to Ktcrlfliu her, Improve Holland's aerial service. A re- neutrality. organization Is estimated to cost be. ' Uermatt designs on The Netherlands tween J7.200.000 and n,800,000. The are if long bUndlng. Somn ye.irs be-' new scheme provided for fifteen airplane fore the war, Herman Influence sought' "iiuatyiio, uuiitpwsiiiH niij -eiKui. uHiuu irj urivo a measure tnrough tli" Dutch "as delicate to a degree not appreciated i 'em v those who have not studied politics of thn situation . farters "Oi.dlt'ons which, perhaps, did not exist .nosui' Dutch enalneeru t..j ."'" 1 m the case of any other Kuropean touu- While the possibility exists u i, ..m" ti v. might combine a I any time to over-i more than a possibllit) If thl, y throw the plans of those who are steer- pened the Hollanders' would IiVY" .nr the Dutch ship through the deWous utterly at loss. They would fill in t il.anncls of Continental diplomacy. once more. and sacr.nce a stilt ,. How well. In tills eetif. Holland could area of countrj, would saciiflce t ik protect herself against Infringement of Inflowing flood. Indetd. all of Hllt I her neutrality was a matter of opinion, i except the territory wh.eh Inclojei ji Some believed she rould defend It no sterdam In a clicle, on ths circumfrf.'1'' I more successfully than her neighbor of which Is Haatlem The irut.r5. i Kclglum did. while, on the other hand, Water Mne, It Is believed, rinderi tktl there are assettlons of those familiar ' flty virtually impregnable It i iw.lh their subject that Holland could , guarded by a line of strons- ,... -i.. CTADfTETi 1I7ITU Uf AD i I"ovlde ,no'6 tioublo for an armed tn-(the iear is protected b the iimi ! OlAIllLU Willi VVAlihanaer 1,,an ou,d be accpetable either Zee. Tho flooding of the Xnif.rjJ. i to Germany or the allied nations at this Water I.lno would nuan the brlnru. . time . inlo being of the old Haarlem.. .! ! This lako existed a.s late as 1!0, C HOLLAND'S TROUBLES Disputes Constantly Arising, First With Germany, Then Great Britain irWu'lmina the Only (Jui'cu Against Kaiser The piosppct of Holland's en trnncf Into the war on tho side of tho Hntcnto brings shnrply Into view tho possibility of the Kaiser having1 arrayed agalnsi him In Ills nKgresslve plan of world conquest the first woman yoverelgn to take up the eauntlet thrown Into the face of humanity. Sho in Queen WilhPlmlua Helena I'aullna Maria of tho Netherlands, tlilrt) -eltrlit years old. who succeeded to tho throne on tho death of her father, Klnis William III, In 1S90. Her liuMHiiu! Ik n, Cierman piinco who has novel- been popular with the Uutrh people. The heir to thr throne 1m their dauhtir, tlie 1'ilti cess .luli.m. Has No lllr Fori l"" ""nl " 't ai 1S10, bd Thete is no thought that frontier fort- c'l It thlXi'f "V"d " fosses could hold an enemy at bay or . f,J Hf ihlvlnd P st n- , ExpSM4 more than a few days at most. Holland ' ?u?"tov the Utle vessel tyJ?1"1 has no forts of the strength of I.lege, i 'fla" i01t hl',e., .i"V?f ifnh. at'rM,r,,d Namur. Huy. or Dlnant. The Dutch. I"; V ?4 nV'SrHS facing superior numbers, must Inevitably j th h,m hi,i, .... '' retreat from the frontier and railway iwir ne.N of wpUta cat "',1 centers, and fall back upon Amsterdam ""WB ". ' wasnltI "aft and territory beyond Ihe famous water- iormer J.vperlfncM line, wheieupon Hollands chief ally I The confidence of the Dutch in their would be Invoked inundation. Water , water lines Is strengthened bj the fut not connon. rifles, men Is the real de- that upon two occasions they hive let .cnuu ui nun iiiiio iiiiiiiuuiii. 41 in iiuiiT i i,i'- uviwui uuu uiuiikiil UlafomnlUre te The story of Belgium' valiant defense will lie lepeatetl shoulil the Germans decide to disregard Holland's neutrality. The upper light-hand photograph shows Queen Wilhelmina inspecting some of her troops. To the left in part of Holland's canine army in action, llclow is a Dutch sentry on guard at the Westphalian frontier and one of Holland's battleships. possible that It would be absolutely potent : rertalnlv If seems Improbable that a large portion of the country should fall Into alien possession If the Dutch were drien to the desperate expe dient of letting1 In the tea, strong Invaders. When the hirMrej thousand' Inadeis of Louis XIV wire turned back th haste v lth which Inun dation operations were carried resulted In the flooding of a neater ares Uitc was necessary ! no Krench were ibi. HOLLANDERS FEAR MENACE OF HUNGRY HOHENZOLLERNS Dipluni.itir history which covets tho period from iic-lober, 1(115, to tho pres ent time, nitistles -hldly the dim- tittles with which Holland has had to deal owing to her geographical situa tion between the belllgeients. The lecord shows that disputes hae .itien now with (iennany and now with i treat ltrltaln, tho progress of which was followed by deepeM. interest, not lin inKed with anxiety, by tho entire Dutch nation. The oiango Hook was delayed for month-, in tho hoie that some f-ettle-iiunts of tho questions at lbsue would be reached, but several matters were still in suspense, It sas, und home appaiently In hopeless deadlock. The principal of these, niattetf is the hlnU ing of tho Dutch liner Tubantla. which Is at the same stage that had been leacncu ,iune ?. uiu, wnei, io ; i,,,, R )s belletd, would render a bea and uir warfate as applied in thti. i ciound of elaborate technical evidence, Ia,eo se(ton or t1le count,y as laccessi -.modern days. He does not, hosewr, ' Hermany declared tho incident closed, b, to fo v as )n fiT:, when doubt the ability of the Hollanders to I i 'iiai no neiiiiuii naiui ""',""" ""rilnu William of Orange Induced ills put up a much stirrer defenee than Tubantla and Insisted it was likely that countlymen to let In Ihe flood and thus Belgium maintained. The frontier ef n toipedo which nau ueen prcMousi . sct tt. naught the plans of the army of the Netherlands are guarded by i well fired at a Htitlsh warship had lemalned i Louis MV ' trained, resolute army, prepired to re sist Herman invasion, wime tne seieoiit , Draw a line through Hronlngen, lutely set at naught, but fieezln. weath. Vtrecht and Antwerp;' all of Holland I er ga.e them new hope thaw citu, lying west- of that line, or 38 per cent of however, before the cnem could mil the country, would be submerged If prop- themselves of the Ice er openings weio made In the seaward, The Field's corrcxpondent is of epinlM barrier of dlKrs and dunes. Thus Hoi- that In the end thi, Dutch would be land largely depends upon Its depression . obliged to give wa- despite Inilndi- below tho sea for defense. An Invasion tlon, to the attack of a strong pontr i would surely be met by Inundation, i backed by all tlie lesourcts of und. planes and slxty-slx scouting planes. Despite Hermany s own big needs, the arrival of a dozen machines from that country was reportod not a great while Sl gO. T WIRE FENCES 'TWIXT Kaiser Masses Troops on Holland Frontier Continued from I'tise One ij'erman ministers, owing lo llio near- protested "j strongly as to constitute a ncss of their respectho lapltaN, go urtuai uillmatum a.id the bill was de-li,0me for Instructions of linnortntit Military experts heie believe that Al- elial-l';t" rMhrr llu" ""' on "" " ' lied forces t-ould be sent to Holland's aid ' certain rharailci- of lelegtaplin. com , it would require scarrcly more than a. rnunioation Parliament to fortify the mouths of the Hcheldt thus affording protection against attack from the, wea. This was aimed at Great Britain, and Kngland , Ka'iM'r Holds on lo Historic Title of Prince of Orange House of iSetherlamls Has Only One Heir in Dynastic Line afloat ami onu in contact with the liner. To this portion of the uraneo Book a footnote by the Dutch (toernnu.nt . added that Holland maintained its pte- linyal vlotis uttitmle that a Herman torpedo ' hank tho Tubanltia and said the Dutch iioertiment was determined to Jeae 1 gallon Ilelrtw .ea i. . ,n(. e j,, ti, ni.. ,i Is guarded against any attempt that of Holland would not exist were It not j might bo made by Ilia -VI Uei, eltiir for the constant exertions of her people. 1 attack of their own Initiative, or Xeatlj the entire country Is on a level1 '. ,V1,aml ""LfLw with, or even below the sea. In the charge of tho defense against Cew.iv ; vlclnltj of ltottcidam there are districts ! roon", manv d tUT""v ' "- m.iituVud "b oVS ?h"1 iU' fc ! ON NEW PLAN PROPOSED; formation from Germany. i., .., ,..., ..?,.,.. i.. . rillTrH AMn IJIVkMAN ,ialf mmin Germans to overrun the lit s-UJlVll XTllllf uuilliinii tie country and force their will. This would depend on Holland's Ce- ' " termination, however, to literally "sink Divisional T,inos Arhitrarv. ' or ?w,m-" The scheme of defense of the . v. littiA , At One Place Frontier Bi V. S. READY TO CALL EVllltV loval Dutchman, and espe- eldest sou as Kiadthulder, Vlmui a ally even- loval Dutchman, hates " nnir.v and a half later the office was and fears the rullUK house of Prussia. m"au Hereditary in ti.o orange fainllj If this hatted Is unjustifiable as unchrls-1 Origin f llermun Llnlin tian. tho fear is thoroughly well ground-1 Meanwhile tlio J-'ianvuiil.in Iloberi ed because Kaiser Wllhelm wears as his zollern. connected by several marriages own tli proudest and best beloved title with tlm Dutch ruling house, had grown contraband and all ships bound for Kur il tho Dutt'li ruling house, that ot l 'rince i irorn ainiiuiiius cierman princelings into liinu would lc sent to mo ooiiom, Another caso dealt with Is that of tlie destruction In April. 1!H6, by a. Ger man submarine of tho Dutch steamship Herkelstrom. Holland sharply demand ed full reparation for this act. and espe cially protested against tho Ueiman sub marine commander's alleged utterance that all goods bound for England were flooded almost jegulaily every winter for some da)s. In all the country there Lor(J ,yce's Committee AppaMntlT. in nut, u,ir ,(,w, iinug nwwto vvv iii, and only two provinces are considered I to be wholly safeguarded by nalme from Inundation. Ylslrois venturing outside tlie beaten tiark of Baedeker travel will no doubt recall the curious experience of walking In some byvva) arid seeing the shipping tranlc proceeding at a level Would Drop Hereditary Prin ciple Altogether sects Railway Ticket Office There Is a barb-wit e boundar) be tween Holland and her neighbors Ger many and Belgium that presents a re- tll?!? I Wm? 1IfT T I V1 ' of Orange. mo powenui rojai nouo or I'russla. ilermanv on JUiy v, ltfib, jusimeci "' "" .,............, ..w.t ,.. .. ur r .11 u I lyi, ii.1j1j.'Ii JJ , .. . 1 su,,,. n..,t tit..- uin,.i n... n.,i. i, t i.u ini.ii,ir -,r i, irLlit,nn ime m-I heads ."Lit. '.?.:'. "I' :,.":. "L..:. .. 'L ." , thro. eeme.l HUelv t lack .a ,ll,e..c ' vlted tlm owners of the cargo on bond That the Dutch have faced the pes H a-lilngton, April '.'3 If the comment of Dutch nevvtpapers, accusing the Vnltcd Slates of duplicity In the propos al that equal tonnage thould leave Dutch liondon, April 25 I-oid Brjce'ij committee on the leform of the HouhJ of Lords recommends in Its leportU I that the houso consist ot two tecfloru.'i ' ....a rxt 'iJir nannd KtcMer 111' nflneltt vu w, mv I'vtauii-i ..vu. r j. little neutral embodies concentration of her forces In a restricted area the Holland fortress ' comprising the provinces of Xorth and South Holland, with parts of Zeeland and Utrecht. Tivo tnirds of thlfa nrcn Is KiirrounrlnH 1,v tlm fea. On the land side arc "tronclv es- i harbors for America Is to be taken as throne as prince of Orange. Tiue. the tablished mllltaiy works, rendered ex-, Indicative nf the feeling of the Nether- 'Dutch Parliament has the right to ilioose ceedlngly diHlcult of attack by ir.un- j ian(j3 oOVernment and people, the rnlled , '' '!nf W,I?" "it, 'alJ'm'S?, tM", "1 w" datlons. The German land approaches ' .fNij . ,..,. . ,.,.. .. l"1"' the" T ?.T. " tl1" CJ1 7s ' " only as his by inheritance from the a me "r"n 1'eeme.i nixciv to jacu a uireci viteu tno owners or me c into OII ..uaiu - -- "-.--, " " , ": , " 1 '", of members o the IIoum of C'ommoM i region and the same ancestor bv whl.1i he" the llolicnzollcitis have been eager the steamship to make their claims to sibll l or Invasion and have made, prep- .,,..,, . .nraDi,lcal erours ind . he l?uS:l to III hous :"nh its the title! to what pro.lt th. might make out , ,1... Hamburg prize court ilermanv de- . aratlons o resort to InundaUon In tha; 'VVsf.S'rfeS : :- "r -.. ' . .'.! ."M ,,f ,,!.,i-..".'u.i:""E . ' :r Jr,": r,'",""; z y,r. zrio'TZ0? , &a jiint .tandiw committ.. of 'Timi snouiii mo uuicii rojai now tan oi , -. .- - - . - - - , , terent Issue of the I oudon houses of Parliament. an lieir he woulil have n i-laim I., the - - - - ,".. "I "'"nl issue ot tne 1-01 uon tn,. -..-.lu,, th,,, mrxuii li t land. Officials exprersed hereditary claims. Only Two I, Ives llrtween matkable picture at some points, where Trr '3"'1 " " ; hV'for th, cor S oni lg t It bisects farmhouses, towns, or even dam Is well fortified and there also are I of three ships to oxpedlte grain to Hoi- J llamenta when they conflict witl cuts straight across the platform of Inundation protections which might pre- frontler railway stations. ' lude uc.essful attack by the Ger- ., , mans At one place a street Is divided up control of the Inundations has not the middle, so that Dutch and German been entirely in military hands, how-! shops face each other across barriers ever, and the fear Is ptessed here of barb wire. On the further side of i'!1" "JlKl l?s.Ztm J 'ntI.,u "W" Hair an riviicu iu uir iiuiiit uei P l no r par- ins the street runs a street railway, which fa In Germany. Separated from the tracks by a high wire fence there runs down the middle of the street a strip twelve feet wide, which Is neutral ground. Then comes another fence, and the narrow bit of road and pavement beyond It are In Holland. At each street corner are narrow openings to allow passage from one country to the other. sentries of each country standing care ful guard on either side It is the main street of a busy town, and the ordinary town life flows back and forth, while rune uutcn street boys talk to the. flooding of the countrv to prevent in vasion may be jeopard.zed by Ger man agents. CHEVRON FOR OVERSEAS , SERVICE PLEASES MEN disappointment and surprise at the reception accorded , Between any claim that vv imam ... ., . w. , ,u t- ,. . ... . ,, , 'lis eldest son might t.et up to the throne the offer of the Lnited htates. which, of ,,ollan(1 ther, now stand orrlv two was based on a proposal of the Dutch lives, that of Queen Wilhelmina and Government to alleviate suffeilng from i that of her young daughter, and the a shortage of breadstuff. The offer , Uml omhwet of the Cms has long I looked good to the ever-hungry Holien- was ciiplenientary to President Wilson s , gollerus. statement of March CO. when the Dutch It Is no mere fatrv tale thl about ships wero requisitioned, that lOO.uOO ! tho Hohenzollern dit-plav of the title r loin lip. HKrepH wtrn nrnvr a.irnnri. 4 i ,.w ... . v- ... , - , WHERE GERMANS THREATEN HOLLAND ; J--",lf SUPX i "oLd tr:35 not offer natural advantages to the de- I lnucla lA V ""-."' m.nj. .i,,t r i.... , . . ... .. . T. lenoit also tccommenaj uim icnr. i ma u.uu mean mac an or i , ,-"" , . t, , ,-,..,. nf l).l rr.i.,,i o . t,. , ,- tha terms of office for members or IM I .;: on the" south' coaf. "of he econd chamber-shall be tw elve , un. Zuvdev Zee. tlnoueh TJtrerht nn,r r.nr ' one-tUlrd or tne memoe t . ,.. r,..,..i.i. -V. . .... , fw rniii-th vear and their piscei ...tin iu yriiiuuciuc c, in ,cru lira- "--.- .. - . v . ,, .i. ..t..f.a. bar. could be abandoned. This mark, fllled by election J he wlarlMl the water line referred to above, a ' $ the members shall bo I he sa me tia.t of country selected to be given up f01- those holding seats in the Houw to tho floods in event o necesslj J f Emmons, if It Is decided they shan Koughlv speak'ng this line Is seventy ' " ld- Tho second chamber will not n,u. i., j ' .r.", I have the nower to amend or reject , iniies S ,v.known "tiwns sucTa Hnancla. Mil passed bv the Houje c i Orotiinseii ami Amii-m r. in ,. n... Commons. When u disagreement. ot water and would h ahnnHr,n.,i , th. arises over a bill between the) lr . iw.rfs oiumher.s. the measure may be ri Men Who See Six Months in France Peimitted to Wear Gold Insignia tons of grain would be provided for Holland if ships weio i-ont tx) carry it If Holland docs not deslro to take ad antage of the offer to expedite the grain, the. original offer to furnish grain still hold, but tho time consumed In ending ships from Holland to America will delay the relief tlie frilled Stater; is tes-dy to grunt. Tlie three ship provided for c.tne. dititigthe grain were taken oft important irilfi the nifrlran Arnt.r in 1 rnnce, April -5 Jov- was hi i end thiough thn ! Atitlra Atnofi, n .vntilitinnatv nrr'A Vlv the official announcement that all officers '"ns and will have to be returned un .,.! E.l.a,a,t -a, tn t.- inrd rd.lrJI.,, t va n,4A ll.n li tnnrln ..? .1.. . .... German street boys through the meshes of whether they are engaged In combat . Down this street at the beginning of . or doing noncombatant work, ate en- ...... ,mv,, uTr,,,,,.,.,,, the war the Dutch population watched titled to the gold chevron for six Ghi.MA.Nh HO.NOJt KICIIl HOIE.N r fn.. o.... j ,. .. L months overseas service. irmv marehimr .,,h; , . t, , . " A majority already were .porting the Tn 71 mi e south,v'ard illt0 neelum. I gold V-shaped stripes on their sleeves All tne villages on the frontier lead a I under the original plan of Issue, whereby confusedly bisected existence, a belt of only men at the front received the In-barb-wlre as It were, separating their ' slgnia The American boys not at the fceads from their feet At n. fw nnini- ' front felt this to be a hardship, as It I theatrrMnMZhlrl?ZP12 through no fault of thelis that, is further nenT!-?.aV.e, !b"wlr f?ce they had been assigned to duty In 11 f.uVner Protected by wires carrying- France away from the front, were sta- ' Hectrlc current, and searchlights play tloned at French or British ports or I up and down the llne during the night, were doing clerical work Instead of i ' Part of the town of Tia.-irie.ir.i-,,,- i . fighting. Belgian, but it was .avert em f...,, i The decision, was reached, follovving of Prince of orangVi as evldencu of their , claim to the Dutch thtone. Berlin L waited with Interest and The Haguo i with uneasiness duilng the eight ears that passed between tlm matriage of Wilhelmina and the birth of h. 1 first und only child. The Dutch rosal house has been a small family for some generations, ami ' tho uncertainty of an heir to tlie thtone is no new thing In the historj of Hol land. Look up tho Dutch royal house in the buoks that treat of Kuropean royal families and you find no long l'st of unules, brothers, sisters, cousins to tho envcrelgn. When Wilhelmina inbeiiied the tin on.' SCALE .1 , , . ' " ' "l l "mi I tn i ' : " su x tw -j1 ' 'i ti'.MCa. c'ni.4 Xr AMSTrcAfiai-V .ifJV'i WHine I vV rl sT crAqCOLOON C I ' . ..a A nAnfucATiP rt thirty mem Wilt llestrltt Joodlo ' "... ", m wi, l,n.e, and this COS- The flooding, while ast In lis infill-: fercncB shall teport unanimously to, ence. would be carefully jestrlcted a to DOii, houses. area, a lact wnicn tenders this means of I defense far from the simple e.pedlenl ,,. , . rdl(i, . that one might think. The Inundation Factory Waste Poisons tame ; would be regulated by a syslem of spe-' H.rrlibarr. April .5 - -As a result : daily built sluices and dikes. reports of cattle bemg klU'd V,h'"i'' i ue ouject, sajs the writer in ths i waste prouuets or "" ,.,T;. ifi Field. "Is to obtain a uniform depth of through excess of salt f;'WBg.V eighteen Inches. But tho country be- ensilage arid other ea (. , tn BU. twe the Zuvder Ze and the estuary 'pf'men0 J.ftf'omi " " which the Msltor to Holland, vra Flush- ri.Vtodt0i""ote.oX aUim J Ine ullt enml... ,pABtnH ,.... ..t tlla!r . . . .... -.t. t-a.'a ahAwfi ;" .......-. .v..mh jut... ueiuic reeds wiucir Kiueu came nt" ue came to uorarecnt (or Dort), by a 'hitherto unknown conditions. occupation early In, the war by the fact that It la entirely surrounded by Dutch territory a little Belgian Island In tho middle of Holland, From here to the real frontier one travels over a well Jiaved roadway, which Is Dutch, while ir.o aucn at tne side Is Belgian. At negotiations with officials of the War Department at Washington, and Is ex tremely popular Those who have, served less than six months are to be. awarded a blue chevron DEFENSE OF HOLLAND AGAINST INVASION th1?!,?!".'"". the hero of the German neon! ' the great Htadtholdtr. At his assass! railway station, which Is IJaarle In Hoi-' and with a half wreath beneath """" for whom he fought and died " Hon the Hutch States-General chose iaim turn ictus in- ueigium, tne frontier . - runs straight through the ticket office .. rsy-v.T and out: across the platform on either INUNDATION Hide, A line of colored tiling In the "V1"'"- -,1" floor marks the boundary, and tho words "XederlandS and "Belglcjue" are set Into th concrete on either side. On both platforms the sentries of the two. coun tries fsuje each other at a distance': ,ttf ah yard or so apart. Dead Airman Called National Hero ln 1SH0' ns " Klrl of te" ,mlei ,he ,c" t. tt;. or,. ' gency of her mother, the enuinerat on oj ills Uliet nf the royrt f,unj included onlv the , ,. , . . little Queen and tho maternal regent To- llerlln, April .5 vla London). ja. you fld mentioned only Queen Wll- A tribute to Harorr on Ilichthofen, helmlna, her husband and their daugh- famous German airman, killed recently. lr Juliana Wilhelmina. heir to the ... . , . . throne. Just under nine years old tvas paid by Lieutenant General von The great houso of Nassau which lit si Hoeppner, commander of tlie Imperial attained eminence in Holland married air forces. it.to tin. ancient Orango family of." " ' ,.,"".'",, " " " -- - ,- "Itlttmelster Ilaron von Illlchthofen France, a princely house going back to e , , ,i , "6i .becauf ".'f5' ere -entirely contraiT to the Instrue- Iim not returned from his pursuit of Charlemagne. -lOO ears ago. The "on uau " "rf' ' It " " . tlon t the German Admiralty." Hol- the enemy." sayo an otllcial order, of this marriage inherited the principal- ' Henl " n . face ( an i ,,. ', lie has fallen. The army has lost Its ity and title of Orange, but died without """"" JV V ,,,,r1,,,,",,,.,V V,, .,. 7. i. , . "-"" Ulc (9... n i.i.o IIHU 11UC UCCI1 intalned clstrom The appearance of German cavalry units on the Westphalian border constitutes a German threat in support of the Kaiser's demands on the little kingdom. and title of Orange, but died without adverse- Kuropean opinion. When, how- 'am' It Is also announced that men in the generally admired hero, tho scouts their Iwue, the succession in 1B44 going to "J. ,' , "u,ru lJ",B miam in or trial tank corps win wear a special collar In- rreg,tble and beloved leader. He re-! his cousin, famous as AVilllam tlie Kll lemlu a vtilmatiir tunic lTinuntnn oivi i . ... i .. .. ... .. t, i lent, 'Kiislaiid. who vvas Prince of Orange and I BUfricietitly examined and mal Ina-1 htadtholder of Holland, died In l.2 ' that the destruction of the Belli i,l8 without an hear, the King of I'russla. as . (as jiteKal. BRISTOL DOCKS EXTENDED r V, S. and State i'gree to Push Work Beyond Legal Limits Ilarrl.burg, April 25. Federal and DtaUe authorities hive reached an agree ment whereby two shipbuilding com panies at Bristol, the American and1 Mer tibantw, mar proceed with construction K docks and othef works beyond what j V.v been stD!!iwa aa tn legal limits. It was found that the work has been i. uUndul to lowvater mark, which &T ..., 41i MfatM t4 inl-.a Mi !( W?W, MW V-... M- " M.'ICT k,,' Ml 19 a,iTnif vry tn i unimuaaionrrs ' avlSon. yta AmorneK Qeneral'a. V avfMwisMBoMHlalon;l auitnoritles i i r i -- i r; i ' ' (Ww Jtn&Z&Ai' NOR J J) vVt. J&30K J&. k 'A, ex t'SP ' '""' '' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ""V' L-r, 1 claimant to thn title and principality of Orange, mado a dicker to his own advantage with Louis XIV, and tded the tettltory of Uiauge to France. The Dutch, however, held on to the title Prince of Orange, and It Is borne by every heir to the ruling house. The Ho heniollerns also kept the empty title as something that might como In handy some time. On several occasions Prussian Kaiser- vladUCl about a mile Wide, lies at ail sorts of levels. So tlie flooding must be done In well-p'anned sections. What makes the inundation effective Is that It 1,1s not" at all a Vase of opposing a big flooded meadow to the advance of an . army. All the land In Holland at any rate, In the part with which we are concerned at present Is full of ditches, little canals, bigger cana's and large , , canals. Obviously, then, It Is impossible to wade through a foot and a half ofi water covering such a country, for at I any moment the wader may drop dow n ' up to the neck or over head. And' eighteen Inches is also an Impossible! depth for navigation of the sort which Is of service to troops which desire to move in large masses, with aitillery and other equipment. Finally, there Is that potent last resort of letting In the sea. "Tho only way In which the Inunda- i tlons can be coped with Is by turning off I the water before the flooding Is com The Orange Book said answers were still expected from Germany as to whether the explosions on the Holland. America Line freighter Kmedllk. while I Plete, or by force of arms latsr on. when bound from Baltimore for Rotterdam. I It Is complete. Formerly, the flooding and on the Dutch steamship Itllndllk. while bound from Portland, Me., for ructerdara, were caused by German torpedoes'. The Orange Boole dispute with dam hns attempted to possess Itself of Great Britain and France concerning bravo llttlo Holland Of course the Hohenzollern claim to ' the Uiitch throne Is shadowy enough, but J thtfri'jWe I the unpleasant fact that the ruler'Of.' Priissi, persists In wearing the tltl,of the heir to'tho Putch thtone, If jthcKalmr is not In the business, think I tlie Dutch, why ddesn't he take down his sign? ' ' I If Ills' claim, is shadowy, shadows ara real things to tne mystical utrman em peror, ana if ue remains trie master or fleet 'hpd army nfter t"'s w-ar ho can make good almost any sort of claim he i chooses tfl. wut forth. He thus flaunts In the face-of Holland t.nat oeiovea name and- tltlo of 'Orange vvhlfUi the Dutch have carried w.(h them wherever they go. If you find, Orange as a geographical Tho fjoodipg of ,1072. The modern water line around Amater dm(D"Std tracts represent th flaettod The modern water line from the Zulder Zee to the Mas? Eturjtv oiders In council of October 20 and March 80.,and the French equivalent of tho decrees on the question of ths in terruption of the nationality of mei chant, men, which Holland maintains Is estab llshed by her flar a case In point being the Dutch steamship Hambom, which was seized by a British warship and taken to Halifax while proceeding from New XoH to Cuba In 19 IE. The steam. Ilp at tho tlmo waa under charter to an American company. Holland main tained her protests against the solxure and subsequent requisition of the steam, ship by the British Admiralty as con trary to the law of nations, "which hid already been disregarded In prevloui In stances oy ureal uritatri and France," Holland also protested, according tn oama In any parr ot tne eann, r-yrope, . trip urapcp oouk. against British sell Asia. Africa Korth America or South, lures of postal parcels on neutral ships, and Jn the islands of, the tropic Indian i Jtegardliur the detention pf letters. Hole Ocean, you ma; ; Auswect, PtUi !tuence, land atwtl Ww UnolBt of ihtf V?alt4 nr ot r. -y - ' took a fortnight. It can be done now In two days. The water Is drawn from j the Rhine, but In an emergency recourse would also be had to the Zuyder Zee, 'It ! is undesirable to use Zuyder Ze water If it can be avoided, for It Is salt, and Would inflict damsga on the flooded land, from which it must take years to recover. 'The result ot the flooding Is to make Utrecht a place of great strength, All the railways, roads (on the top of atykes, as the Dutch manner Is), and rivers which cross tho waterline, are Protected by forts. None of these routes through the waterline li of such a char acter that an invader. In attempting to mako use of It, would find superior num bers of much advantage. Th routes can eaoli ba defended by a smalt fores. Owlnr to the careful restriction of the Inundation, th Injury don to th land la limited. Much of th flooded terri tory, Indeed, U of relatively small value. But tt U a mistake, to assume) that th inundation a a whol would not be a costly business for Holland," Study of acc6mpnylnT maps will allow that, if InuiMUtlen BCaHtlakl what to esp-!! vt it, aaeut kali tt f " WITH FINGERS! CORNS LIFT OUT Costs few cents! Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little Fre one on that touchy corn.jn- ctsntlv that rorn stODS hUftlllJi then you lift it right out, with the fineers. Yes, magici f o A tfr.,, ThsKI. nt Freefone. COlNI v.... . .. .i. nv lirur itoffil but is sufficient to remove evf ,itA -nfn nft rirni. or C0m "" .1 tween the toes, and the callusef.'l oitkn.tf mnrrnff nr irfltltlOn. II Freezone is th seniilionsl . covery of a Clitclnniti geniui, Thi rl . '!""i' WttUf C,( Cluf r