lllili: iii“ IN WIII (ly Dominion News Service) LONDON. Oct. 12.—Normaa Cor- dukes Caru-th. a solicitor. of Bally- rnena Co., Antrim, who died recent- ly. said in his will, particulars of which have just been published that if any of his sons were abroad at the time of his death no tcle F1.'@I1o1.1i0 Test Abandonment oi Ruhr Resistance PARIS Oct’ 12.--’l‘he French Gov ernnlent has decided‘ to put to the test "Berlin's and of passive resist- an-ce. The minister of Reconstruc- tion will at once address to Ger- man firm orders undorthe Wies- baden agreement; as before the oc- flll-Dation of the Ruhr. when these orders were paid for by the Ger- man Govern-meat handing over marks to the Germans furnishing ' 11am 1 til-IARLOFDTETOWN GUARDIAN. Chapter =. _ “Talka/Pnlk, Talk- - lines and no action. . not even promising first act . said all Good tuna, inc. gram should be sent announcing his tlea-tlubut his wllfe should send a. let- ter to such son tgivlng details and any message he might leave. "i make this rather peculiar re» quest," he says." as ~l have experience in my ll-fe time of rs- ceiving telegrams of a like nature and am well acquainted with the unnecessary pain they cause to those who receive them," Other in-teresting clause-s in the xvii! werc:—' - “l direct that in e-very question oi finance or investment of money in connection with my estate J .l. Craig's opinion shall bc token and prevail, for 'l well know he can make more out of i-t by way of in- come than uny other person, and l further know that ho will do his beat for my wife and children. “it is my earner-t wiah ‘that all my children shall remain through- out their entire lives strict teotoi- alere." He desired that his coffin should have no na-mo or brass mountings, and i-i possible that the funeral should -take place at 2_.'l0 in the af- ternoon, and that his wlio and chil- d-ren should not wear nlournln-g for more than two nlonths after his (lentil. The Frontier WARSAW, Oct. 12.——Wnra and rumors of wars in the Eastern ha" of Central Europe which ‘glower so ominously from the front pagcn 0i metropolitan newapuilfif“ "T" "m half na serious when studied at first hand in tho plncc of their or- igin. Even the most sensitive paci- fist soul would agree wiih this con- clusion lf he had been with me dur- lug tho pant week whllo. l have been beating the bounds of Poland. Each and every frontier north south east and wcsl, has its frontier Paruunmnt reopens i“ Nmunnpm“. guards, rifle-armed, facing cncll Poincare will havonlargcnnalorlty other across the lulil""““lv° {m- htl foreign puppy up tn the tiuua strands of barbell wlro alul atone- dry! ditches which mark the inter- national boundaries of this coliti- l.ry, but whilc their Pflillfl liiinis- time m)“, mm, situation will still b!’ i"! ulontha from now. deputies fora may figuratively bo glaring at’ each other ticroaa vnlulninous notes and ultlmntunla, Lilo soldier folk and the people aouln to have reached a happy strum 0i‘ udillfli ment. lt is oven whispered tllut at- ies are in the habit of taking on_ tho duties-of one another for thel purpose of allowing tho opposing; sentry to make a trip to town or‘ to visit his family. All sorta of curious happenings take place on those frontiers. Rec- ently on tho southern Bofahevin lront east of Tnrnopol the ll-kraln- inn Soviet guards sent up a slsuul oi distress for their Polish Slnv brothers ncroas the brook whlcll luarlts the international boundary When the Poles responded. the sergeant of the Soviet soldlery anld he was in a terrible lllCSS. 'l‘w0 of his rifles were out of ord- or; something had B0! illmmfld. and a Soviet Commissary was coln- ing that afternoon for an inspec- tion. Woud they help him out? Lat- er it nppeurcd that lhreo of the four guns were impossible. Even tlhe conservative Polish soldlery appreciated the necessity in this in stance of out-wittlng constituted authority. nlld, without more ado. they invited their ilolshovlst colu- ratios to colno LlilPLL-W, and to‘: tho best part of two hours tho Poles worked ‘to put the guns of their en- emies lu shape. Thou, on the fur- ther confession from tlu- “Rcds" that they hnd nllslaitl port oi the ammunition. they supplied "if!" rv to see these new orders. nnd severe test. Ilflbly tened ollt move is ptlon of l (l-el-nlany. appeal that force . ~ C ‘n lmYi times lhoso deadly frontier tenleln-ltlgnznitfiy ‘jfjffff, {he country as a rgtgull of the alnr-m over Commlln- ism. III‘. III‘, III’ (Dominion News Service.) Belgian hotcl u eight hours, I bulo two wa a porter. and respondent. T. ed out a guard oi honor. l _ under the impression that | was u Duke. The guard saluted, and was dismissed with francs. For carrying a bu: thirty- l gave an Ostond porter three francs. Two would be cnouilh. i! Belgian friend advised mo. lllade it three for safety. said tho porter; “ He appealed to other than the crowd of poop erod. the supplies. Paris will tlben wait IBerlln pays for whether This, it must ~be said. will have listened to affairs. Tho consells lkilllt-‘FIWX French departments have now ‘(Ill Ifsiifll their sessions. M“! Ollly ""90 out of the 89 councils hnve failed ~to approve Polllcurcfis Doliry This means that ‘when of lilo clcctlons o"! next alYTIIII-i Those who hopc for n more mod- erate Chamber nitcr tho 1924 elec- illni. the reparations settled six when the new nnd that he Nationalities will win with "W is the. only way lust ad in will be chosen. LONDON. 00L. A boy took a franc for paper, and in three seconds was lost in a cloud of dust. I bought lny newspapers from a contenrlrian ni- The German Govern- ment s-topped the resistance pro- Bramme because it could -not any longer finance -it. ‘The payment oi reparations in kind will for-m a aim- llar financial burden, although ob- viously a smaller one. tion which arises is whether this payment forced on Berlin at this time will not bring forth very great dlfflcultlies for Streseinann. 0n tho other hand, i-t is u test the Ger- mans could have avoided if they bud ended passive resistance with a show of good-will. done ‘that. M. ‘Poincare would lpro- proposals to delay resumption oi deliveries until Berlin badsomewllat straigh- But the Ger mane did not accompany thc pro- clamntion to end resistance with to try to mcct French tlomands, any assurance that they ln-tendetl and today's decision la to force the issue. lt may be, however, that the llclv intended only to brill: home to Germany the necessity oi making proposals to A general reparations D it may be only that PUIIICHVBA lc- ply to the German GOVPFliIllPlil" assertion that. following tho end oi passive resistance, the French and Belgians to llnake proposals. M. Poincare has‘. not WI “Imwn his hand. All that is known is that he is going to demand the rcsum- iuylnollts ill kind. which deliveries lnu-slt be paid Gclnlon Government. The ques- Had t'h ey Purls arrangement. ii wit-l for 1m- hy plu; tuula" nnd “lnioiligt-nlizl" lio tllc Parlor Socialists) worn present; o; n“. authors, playwrights, editors and 12.——Lonvini§ l1 itcr a stay of lofty" found in the vesti- ltera, a chamber-lucid. a boy. writes a cor- he nlanugcr hnd turn- lt is iivc always." porters. nnd le that Kath- eighthfalluro and season more than ‘half over . . rather bo a playwright and fail than a critic compelled to listen to hus- bcons and would-bell irylnql" ill"- ovcr bud plays. . . . Oil. l0!‘ just. one more grea: first-night. . . if there's a aiirit world wily don't tho ghosts o! dcud urt- lsta get together nnd inhibit bad playwrights from tormenting first» nightcrwl. Astral board of lllliilflfillli-i sitting in ilnteonacloufi tweaking strings until KODIMEH and stelcl-oticn bw-omc. glbberilu: idiots evely tinlc they put pen to piper? , . lfmvcl- first-nights but more: joy . . till-lo joy of send- ing producers buck to cigar ntunda. dorm a . ’l‘ll:lnk (loll, no lollgl-r n critic . don't llcmltu come to first-nights unless-l l want . . call‘t kccp away . . habit. too strong . . poor dcvll of a colyunllst must forage . why did l licuoulc n. colulllnisl? More money. Money! And l once a ruboatuellt sticlnliut- . . . beat parlor tjlv . Lord! I wish aollln one would illi‘ uud ltlfLVi‘ nu: n. million!" (Tluvcring opcnctl Illa wcury eyes and glanced over tho (iilflitiilflil atulllorluln, visualizing u mass of lio-rod resentful disks; a iow hope- ful. perhaps, tlu- groitlur number too ctlucatctl ill the theatre not to have recognized tlul heavy note of incompetence that hnd boomed like u muffled fog-horn since the rise oi‘ lilo curtain. It was n typical flrstnlght audi- ence, assembled yo welcome u fav- orlte- actrcsl-l in u new play. All ihn Sophisticate-a (ml (‘layering hnd naluctl llltilll, abandoning "lntollctr- for u young editors. (‘Ifliillllll-iltl, llralnatic critics. young publishers, tho fash- ionable illustrators anti tlurtoonii-"ia, hostcastea oftllc clnincnt, and n sprinkling oi (lrcollwich Village to glvc u touch oi‘ old liohcnlia to wllm, Will-l oilu-rwlsc. tlllllost as bril- llnni and standurillzt-tl na o Monday night at lho. opera. 'l‘\vl~lvn years ago, Cluvcrlng, inlpUlcll irresist- ibly frolll ll tlllzlpillutlall colonial mansion ill Louisiana to tllc curl:- hruln oi‘ ilu-. Wuatcrn \Vorl.l, huu n-rrlvctl ill Now York; ulul run the» uauul gaunt ni‘ tho high-poworctl mall from roportcr to special writ- Pi‘. flllilfllli-lll youth rose l0 culin- ullcc ions rapidly thou than now. Dralllutlc critic of his nowl-lpupi-r Iior three years (two yours nt the wnr). i1" “Ilvlilll rllloier and omnla- cisnt columnist l-linco bin return from Franco. .lonrnnlintically be toward the frequent distinguished parties Elven by -thc Sophisticate» was complete without the long lounging body and llillllflllt.‘ couutcnancn of Ilir. Lou (Flavoring. As soon as he hnd act foot upon the ladder of pro- tnlncncc Mr. (flavoring hnd realised tlu; vnluc oi‘ llranlatlzlng hlllu-lclf, and although bu was as active of body as m‘ mind and of an amiable and genial (llsposltion, an hlg friends aomctilnea angrily protest- ed. his world, that. world of in- creasing inlportancc in Now York knew him an u cynical, nlorose, mysterious creature. who. at n par- ty. transferred hllnnolt’ from one wolllan’a side to another" by sheer effort of will spurred by boredom, Tile tlmnarricd women hnd given him up as o confirmed bachelor. but a few still followed his dark face with longing cyos. (Ho. sonlctinlos wondered whnt rolo ho would have adopted if he had been o. blond.) As a matter of fact he was intense- ly romantic. oven after ton yours of newspaper ‘work; nnd when his steel-blue half-closed cyoa raved ov- cr n gathering at the moment oi thought yards but l “Flvc." ll. DOW?- fronl their own atorc. tar that. entrance. it was with the evcrgrct-n Along the frontier whcrc tho Til! lllll-lwfillil I8 ll 1081 M‘! 0n 111i‘ hopc ofdiscovr-ring tho conaulnluaic Continent. Force has displaced woman ‘Zbrucz is the boundary iltfvttlil ll often happens that the frontier town is a divided settlement. hnif Soviet and half Polish. Generally the shops, stores and other luxur- ietl of civilization are on the Polish aide. thus in all thcao villages there is a steady procession of Soviet soldiers making tlullr wuy to Polish shops to buy what ihcy need. having left their rifles of course, for safe keeping in the hands oi thlr Polish brothers at the frontier post. ‘Most of the people speak as nlnny languages and dialects as filerc were blackblrds in the nursery rhyme pie. Thoro is a classic story of the Roumanian frontier that a Polish soldier. synlputhislng wltll n Roumanlan brother who wanted tojet married, crossed over, tion- nod his uniform, and did wntch for two days. while his comrade was going tihrou h the festivities. Yelthiilli . I came down from Donpil to‘ Warsaw by a new six- hoiii‘ train which tho Polca ului Germans have arranged. running “will! old West Prussia. A mix- ed Polish and German train crew - handles the express. At such stops as were malls l could not notice any ailna of friction between the tralnmen. They lléemed to be wall satisfied with each nt-herfil com- NM- in short the millonnirm. as the Governments desire it. may be gale distance removed, but among I ° Militia there some to be a fair- Y "llaitoble ambition to move ul- a‘: "Milli! anyquncalled-for fric- Loilrof I l "on n‘ fifliirgazlltlo keep up a Mr. and ‘I, I _y a quar- heroes can deal with the well. it la living. but it. minutes abroad. They failing precision, lncrcinl oifcnaivc on the you into their hotels, looks llkc uu anti-British strntion at first sight. it is boat. to walk about a franc. ho finds an much flln ill ml l did abroad. cvl-n the tip-hun- tcru will not spoil his holiday. -——<+>-—-— Two tramps followed street. At last ate-pa and was admitted. "What a sell." "illicit we wait for him finesse, and only millionaires and said that holiday staffs have only a few mouths to nlako n seems a matter of think travellers as ships that pass, but find time to trim their Bails. Britons are recognized with un- no matter they dress, or if they speak with a Russian accent or none at all. in Pal-ls and Brussels the com- lnakcr is kccn but it is on the coast that it is hottest. it. is a very one- aldcd nffall-"ut (lstcnd. There is a hint of it na noon us you land. Out- sidc tho station la a long avenue of hntol runners. The ldon ls to run though ii duy l'l\ili)l"li\ abroad as though you hnvo all you want. if you appear to need stunt-thing the chances are that you will be naked what it is. if you wish to scl- un entertainment walk straight ill, for if you stand outside you will surely be told that it in tbt- only nhnw worth seeing. or that tho ono next door is hotter. Thorn is a coluulerclnl aspect to all this, tlu- udvltu- usually costing How our nwn tip tactics strike tho forolgncr l don't know. Iiut if wealthy man thronllh "We" “m” lio stopped before h“; house of n lawyer. ran up the said one tramp, ," said the other. "'6'" There was no affectntlon in ills idealistic fastldlollanoss. Nor .of 18M. in his general boredom. Not that he did not still like his work, or possibly pontlilcniing every morning over ills famous name lo an admiring public, but hr- “lug tircd of "the crowd." the some old faces, tired of tho steady grind. of bail iiflya~—ho., who had such a passionate lovi- of the drnnla -- somewhat tired of himself. lie would have liked to tramp the world for a year. lint although he had money enough saved ho dared not drop out of New York. Ono was problem of how holiday- Lord Leigh to Wed American Bride demon oi holl- illy Dominion News Servlccl LONDON, Oct. 12.—-i~‘ol‘ llll‘ acc- olld tlmn Lord ,Loigllt. Lu-l Lieutenant to WflrWIP-lflilllrc. low chosen on Anlorican bride. ills engagement has been unnounurl to Mills Marie Onmpbnll of New York. Miss (‘alnpboll has llvml for lilo past ycnrs in London. and is Will known in English society. Snc was proscntcil at Court last year. The woddlng will take place, ni St. hiarlfs North Audlcy-strcct, on Oclobcr 1.‘ null will bn vcry quiet. Lord Leigh's first wlfc. who was tho daughter of the lion. N. M. ilockwlth. of Now York. died in 1909. lio is tho baron, and in tlSi years of age. Hln Warwlckshirt: residence. Etonelelgh Abbey, is one of tho most beautiful places in the Midlands. idnglaml II. VCIY beginning to foul c. four), bllt it wnn hard to ahul the olltrcncbcd. hypnotized. visions m’ lncllt was prcfrernbln. ‘By publicity l shall y.» know thcnl. lllcn with l‘llIllll("'l'|lii* hilloe-l could rise no higher. uml none of, eyears beslubobok Igyflmerlbas besi woman ‘Ln-inter ' LACK [x12 ‘l’ p, GEIZFRUDE “ATHERTON Published by arrangement wit especially since the war, changcdus ‘vanished p331, so quickly and yet so subtly that he c,‘ u, mu might be another year hilllaelf on his return. self younger than himself whose (‘.lll‘S-l;r,.n¢]\p_,t; hf lupin, but supplanted by ed audacity and tlramotizctl youth-q fulncrla would have nccuatollu-tl tin-huh,” fucllu public to some new brand of pap fluvorcd with rod pcppcr. world wan nlnrclllllg to tho tullc ufTulk, youth, dllmu i-t (Mr. (lluvcrlllg \\'il!i\y|||\h| lu- Illiirll!‘ i" H1511)" flock. 'l‘lu-n Ilit lclllclllllterctl u wo- w "Hi nmn who luul tlOlllu down tllc- ulalfl liu hnd his public l lie teoluiglé ul-ll extinct inn. Diapirrugc - Flynn public bud “Silo lznvcrctl tllo oponuglusr-l. boon acoll to shiver. (‘misc women couricll him. Prizc ilghil-ra on thc. dour morn after a triutllphnni night bud howled bctlvotlll fury ulul tours an Mu‘. Loo (‘flavoring (once crack reportcr of tho gcntlc urt) wrnto sadly of grotltcr warriors. Lenin hnd lut-viltlollctl him us zln vnclny of tile new rt-llgion. who lit-alt. not with tiu- truth. llntil lu- grnu" dull —llo grinning akt-lculn nu yul hlu public, nftcr ilusty or solculn diges- tion 0i’ the llcws. would turn over to his column with n sigh of relief’. But he must. llnng on, no doubt. of that. Futall to givn lilo publlccvcn a hint that it might. Ii‘lil'll to do without him. lio sighed ulul closctl llla oyea again. it was not unpleasant to fecl himself u. slave, a slave who had forged his own gildvti chains. But he sighed again for his lost allnplicitles. for hill llny-dronnla lln- dol" the lllugnolizls when lu» hat‘. be- lieved that it‘ wonlcn ui‘ his class were not obliged to do tllcir own housework thcy would ulll bc young and beautiful nnd tnlk only of‘ rom- nnce; when ho hall thou-tilt upon tho intellectual woman and tllc wo- man who “did things" us nn anom- ulyllnd u horror. Well, thl- roalliy was more companionship, ho would say that for thorn . . 'l‘llen ho grinned as ho recalled tllc days of his passionate socialism. when he hnd token pains, like ovcry social- ist he hnd ever lllct, to loll it lm tmtlcrrliootl that ho lllul boon born in tllc Incl-it society. Wall. so he bud, nnd ho was glad of it, r-ven ll’ forgotten over nignlt. nnd fashions, crn town had little tn livr- on but Lord Leigh succeeded to the u; coma peerage in 1905. >nn Often when conscience tries to the beat society of his alllnll aoutil- Watch for the screen vcralon produced by Frank Lloyd a with Corinne Griffith as Countess Zattlany. , rourliuSlllll-i now that he was eminent and com- t Tllvtht- iutl-rulinnbll» first. ilct. lcll :.lul phased his scat. sitting two souls nlu-zul of him nnd lluln to u aluall wl-ll-allapleil bond dnilnt-d by tilv- lnw coll oi‘ upturned faces scrutinizing tluznl casually." .r v v h Associated First National Plc- tho applause of the Q :30 never allud- dlstinguiahctl ancestry ~01‘ mill Ilhlkinrtablta, and llc looked back with t some lllillluupngy gulp-u upon his former he never uitc forgo-l it. No Soutllcrnolfcver Tina play drnnctl ml to tlu- r-nd of Tulk. 'l‘nllt. He'll go to slot-p, but rlllil.’ in gut a crlck in his nat us tlul. lights’ wuro. lowering lio had not copies of u book wllcr ' ruvil-wcr um her fact-l, bllt her izruifoflll "K- woman “vm. m,‘ mukhunesn, 101,9 could acll lllil‘. ills w on u play bud alttrutrlntl his uttcntloluulul mm, “h” h“ "W", mo ‘ongumufld was flunl~or ulnlost. l ‘r mill llu-li- ;lu- pi-culiul‘ slludo 0i‘ llPi‘ hair; the m rinmnnmr m“. c“,_,u,nm_.. tion oi‘ nuy oi lilo ' gluon-nus rulor of wllrlll lli-lllEri. 'l‘lu*r<- was m, gum“, M hm- ,.,ug,.,-|y_ nl\(lf(blt added at Ullbll. it) rcpuiinti ll. 'i'iil‘\'l‘ no wm ll oi‘ lllri lllfillliilllllllltit‘ with x, Hugh‘ “nnwmm m. annoyance . llwntiolu-l unidcf tlu-lli iilourlollt (I that. rarc allutlc of blondc bail". m,“ u“, NM“. ho,,_.,,, w“ “plowing words. Nt-glctet tfiillrli-itl llgfilllbllflill liw- opolu-ll ills cycu. Slu- wus m“ pxanmh,‘ Th” 0pm.“ ghmfll." in. lights ni‘ llll! stage gnvc u faint llulr. v..- nlul glanced nvcr tho rows of Show had a long throat uppn-ronily. blli zlltllougll ‘silo hnd tlroppctl her wrap ovt-r tllc back of the seat he had no lllore than aglllnpsc of u white ucck and a suggestion of sloping llllfilllill-ETS. Rather rnrc. those, nowadays. They reminded him, together with Lllc haughty poise of tho hood, oi‘ the family por- truita in the old gallery at home. living dark himself, ho. admired fair wolllcn. although slnco they lluti taken to bobbing their llalr they looked an much alikc as mog- azlnc (lovers. This woman wore her llnir Ill no particular‘ fashion. lt was: soft nlul liblllitlilllll, brushed back from llcr face, anti llrtlwn, nlcroly ovor thc iipsl of tho ears. Al: lcluli so he inferred. lio bud IIOt Boon uvcn ller ‘profile as silo post-lull. Proillcs Worn nut h! dfllg, but lll nu tlltl-falslliollcd corncr of his atull he lulllllrt-o tucnl, nnd he Willi idly convlnccd thut a woman with so porlhclly shaped n ltentl, long and nnrrlnv, but il0l too nur- row, nlust hnvo :1 proil-lc. Probably her full intro would not bc so attrac- tivc. Wonu-n with cclulro llnir gcn- crnlly hnd light brolvs and lashes. and Il(‘i‘ vycn might bc ii wnahcd. out blur. Or llfflllliiltilii. Or llcr mouth too slunll. llc would bet. on filo prnfllc. lmwovcr, ulld lusleull of rill-tiling olllt WIlPll that blesactl cllr- tuin wcnl down lio would wnit um] look for ll. 'l‘lu~ll lu- closr-d his cycs ngnlu llllil furlrol llcl" until lu- was roused tween a rising 08MB. audience heaved. the aisle and climbed over patient women. Ami ullcull of Cluvcrlllg did u singular thing. ed lu-r back to tllc atugc. raised llcr opera glasses ului leisurely survey- cd thc nlltiiciltale. clicked. "lilllfllptllzll. No American tollcl-ullell her cyca. but tllcv roared upon tho bridge of an indubltahly straight llosn. perhaps too high, bllt it was i‘ull, and buck from n sharp point. ibrnws, thank ilcuvell. “tare nlnny ailadca dnrkcr illnll hcr llnir. They were also narrow ulul glossy. i)c- cldcdly lin-rkcnctb-lifo. hnd nlud-v him skep- Iliug was no lover-oi‘ ltnulncluied na~ lure, holding nature, oxcep". in rare lcratic zlbscnco of "carriage." the in- ' oi‘ a few years ago. bored out loyal ad that of the enchanted and uickened in as the difference be~ breeze and a hurri- 1 - .§~.. . The actors bowed en masso. in hrcea, in twoa. singly. The cur- ain descended, the lights rot-sell"! Men hurried up People began to visit. then the wolnun two acute She rosc slowly lo llor fcct,turn- “i knew it!" (‘lavcrinpya tonguo ilcr iorlalltlutl wna brushed ller l-ye- tho. thick lluir nus utiontion. and they l-ccclvod Possibly they wcrc plucked ticul ot‘ "points." llowrevcr, (‘inver- lnolnenis of inspiration, u bungler of tllc first water. ill spite oi’ its smooth whlto akin and rounded contours above an un» damaged throat, it. was, subtly, not a young face. Thc month, rather large, although fresh nnd roll (pos- sibly they bad lip stick in Idol-op.- that approximated nature) had nnnc of tho girl's soft ilcxibillty. it wall»; t'llll in illc trcntrc and tho red of thc nndcrlip was more than n Vifllllil‘. lino, bllt it was straight at tlu- corncra, cndlng in on almost abrupt stcrnnss. Oncc llhc smiled. but it was little more than an amus- cd tlickl-r; tllc mouth did not relax. ‘Fhc. sllupc oi’ tho face bore out the promise of thc. hcnd, but deflected from iris ovnl nt the‘ chin, which war. tllllloat square, and indented. 'l‘llc figure wua vcry slight, but as subtly lnaturc an thc face, possibly bcczlusc. ahc. bcld it uncompromis- ingly tel-cut; apparently "hi! hi!“ nlnde no concession to the (lemo- ‘ that will aid "in the collecting of Scientists Start 0n Long Voyage (United Prnc) _ NEW LONDON,-Conn.. Oct. 12.— While Capt George I-‘inlay Sim- mona has been scouring the coun- try for a" itaff and crow to take the schooner "Blossom" into tho south Atlantic and Indian Oceans, the ship itself has been prepared for one of the longest cruises ever undertaken by a vessel her size. The expedition to the Antarctic islands which starts from New Lon- don this week for the Cleveland Museum of Natural History is said l0 be‘ one-of the largest ever un- dcrtallelrfor purely scientific pur- poses. Every one of'the 16 men aboard ship, except the three ship's officers. is trained in some line iliifnal and bird specimens alld in tlllclllggnutcsl on the goolgoy, plant life, admtimcs human ll-fc. and climatic. conditions; in tllc regions that will be visited. "Pile Blossom‘ will vielt tho least known portions of the world on her two your cruise. Explorers have gone over thr- Pacific islands and other tropic regions with fair thor- oughness, Even the polar regions have been visited in recent years by men who have taken accurate observations of the lands through which they ‘traveled. 'l‘ho South Atlantic islands, however have been visited only by scal nlulsoo elephant hunters, who brought back romantic stories, but lltlln :ic- trurate dnformation of scientific value. At the helm of the ship will bc John do. bombs, a Cape Verle Portuguese, who has sailed ho seven seas ‘for 32 years llndt=l' one blaster. Capt. John Cleveland of New Bed-ford, said to be the "last of the old sealing captains," '11s Lomba is reputed to know "every rock in the Atlantic," nnd has made several voyages to the 5.;- lands which he will now visit for the purpose‘ of aiding Ill asearl-h lior knowledge of the world we live n At the head of iho ship's staff is E. ll. (lray, sailing master. who carries a certificate as master of sail and second mate of steam in any ocean and for any tonnagefiaat Simmons will command both tllc navigating and scientific person- nel of the vessel. Me-mebm of the crew ore all trollego trained mcn, who will. in be-twcon their duties of hoisting sail and scrubbing Realm, carry out their additional duties of surveyor, chip's clerk or whatever additional capacity they were tlelccted to fill. ‘ "' to Antarctic Norse on m: ocsriiiosf The annual meeting of tho" Brit» ish Association for the Advance- ment of Science closes this weak before this latter can be road: but it: success from many points of view is clearly assured. and both the Association and the honorary local authorities in Liverpool do- ncrve our warmest congratulations and thanks. v Since Sir Joseph Lister presided ‘ . iu‘ 11196, the llnivcrsity College ha: ‘ broadened into a University. of which the latc Sir Alfrml Dale. son of tlu- well-known fir. Dale of Bir- mingham. whose book on "The Atonement" la well known to the olded generation, was Vice-Chan- cclulr. lio has been succeeded by ‘ l)l Adalnl, u tlisti 1r, llshcl man "f, ~- acllnce from the LMmlnlor. of Can- ada. Tlle University has grown rapidly in tho snport of the busi- nous community and their endow- fnenl of several profeasorahips. At tho some llmo, a noble cathedral In rising to completion. its great western tower will be a conspicu- ona obloci. ‘and symbol to all ' who conic from tho new world to the old on Atlantic linr-rs, either by sea or air. - ll was a happy coincidence that the outgoing and incoming Bishops, Dr. Cbavnssei and or. David, alr- ting together. supported thejrelli- dent at tho inaugural lnectiggffflevl _ >4 Q-r-iggg-F cral distinguished profes a who hnd made their reputatlo n car- llcr yt-nra at ‘fllrownlow "-a| the Mayor humorously were also present. The i Sir Charles Sheri-in ‘ sident of i922, Royal Society. and‘ Professor of Phyaio b5? at , Professor .l. L. Myers‘ of’. ford, one of the secretaries o’! tile British Association; and Sir Oliver Tndgc. who, when Lord Lister gave his address in 1896, was able toiex- llibit one of the earliest photo? gruphsof invisible bones as mani- ié-ntcd by-tho Rontgen rnytl. The _ glulldaon of tho President of the Liverpool meeting. of 1870, Profes- sor Huxley, who is following in his grandfather's footsteps as a brilli- ant biologist. was alno present to read a paper, and ls,a Fellow of New College, Oxford. his father be- illg a Classical l-‘cllov: of Dnlliol. Several improvements have been effected in the plans for the meet- ing. For Iinstancc, in place of one of tho two formal evening lecturer The Blossom is a three mast’ r. built originally for the cottstwlsc cargo.’ The expedition will spend thox-oming Antarctic summer ill different almost. npologr-‘io mien She worn a tlrcss of white jet unuln with the long lines of the pre- sent foahion——in tlrcsn she was evi- dently a stlcklcr. The neck was cut lll a low square, shelving the rise of the bur-l. Her own lines were long, the n-rma and hands very slcndt-r in the long white glovcim Probably she was tho only woman; in the house who wore gloves. Life was freer aincc tho war. She wore a triple string of pearls. lio walled cngorly until should drop llcr glasses. . . lie heard two girls gasping nnd muttering behlnrl him . There was a titllcr across the house. She lowered the opera glasses and glanced nvor the rows oi up- turned faces immediately before bur. scrutinizing them casually. as if they were fish in an aquarium. She had dropped her lips slightly before her eyes came to rest on Claverlng. lie was leaning forward, his eyes hard anti focal, doing his glance did linger on ills for n nlo- best to conlpel her notice. Her nlcnt before it moved ‘on indiffer- ently, but in that brief interval he experienced n curious ripple along his nerves. . almost a note of warning. They were vcry dark gray oycs, Greek in the curve of the lid, and inconceivably wise. cold, disillusioned. She did not look u day over twenty-eight. There were-no marks oi dissipation on her face. But for its cold regulari- ty silo would have looked younger ~—wlth bor eyes closed. The eyes seemed to gaze down out of an in- finitely remote past. Suddenly sho seemed ' to acnse the concentrated attention of the audience. She swap; l1 why, a hnsty glance, cvidnntly Rppraclglgd tho fact that shc alone was stand- ing and facing it, oolored slightly and sat down. But her repose was absolute. She made no little cm- barrnssctl gestures as another wo- s-lllc by tlu- clapping oi‘ lllnny llflnl'g_ Fllhl-"IKIIWPH filmy» nlllli-‘llltl. no iillllltil‘ how pcriunctorlly. Noblcsso M run: oulnluo us‘... m m... obllgc. lint llli‘ fllflt'l'i‘lli'i_i hetwm.“ ..~- 1- neem. aocordia to one Italian» newspaper which supports I »" I 1i ‘.l.... _ -. IFMV . an American authorcas, Mrs Mary man would have done. She did not oven nflect to rread her progrnnl, To bo Continued g‘ rum] Dean Inge Sticks to Gorilla Story (By Dominion News Service.) LONDON, Oct. l2.—'i‘lln dlaputc referred to in tho nrosa between Hastings Hrndloy, and Dean lugs has been concluded so far as the UPfill is concorncd. Mrs. Bradley, it. will be recalled took exception to-a statement by the Dean. that "l nm sure nothing would give me greater DIPIMIIG than to know that American lady had been killed by a gorilla. She therefore wrote to him. ask- ing why “my poor death. 1h such a tllshovollctl way. would afford peculiar satisfaction to a Dean of St. Paul's " ed ‘from a holiday near B.‘ when interviewed mo: ' “If. ififlliteffn! ti!!! I have hid a letter from "ill-a. ‘Bradley. Lbif l to it. I Dean lugs, who had lust return- u‘; Loflkd. rem-win. i aiiii not reply’ "Why?" oi doing . the South Atlantic. thcn rrnhe . . I l . ' ' . ' - that had succeeded the limp t.ur\csl?n‘gnfhé‘glm‘r;s' “gxrllfizg ‘fgglzwilfiliii in tliffcrlznt parts. by expel-ta and when ‘make for the indlan Ocean. She will restock twice at Cape Town, possibly a third time on illeI leturn voyage. and at each at-ipl will ship home the specimens til-i i‘€f1f'y-¢0ll(-!Ci€(1_ 4 . SURGEONS WIL'L HOLD . CONGRESS "IN OHICAQO CHICAGO, Oct ll —— Surgeon scientists ‘in- largs numbers from‘, all pario o-f the United States. Carl- ada and South America are expec- ted to attend the thirteenth an- nual clinical congress oi the Amtr- lcan College of Surgeons, which op- ens here Oct.'22 and will continue for four days. ‘ ' ' ~Chlei interest in the event will center about ‘a eerie-x of clinics dur- ln-g the congress. according to Dr_ Franklin H. Martin, tllrector-genrr- all of the organization. Visits will be made to various parts of the city to view clinical tie-menstru- tions embracing all phases of lmr- W m fy_ . An all day -conference on the cou- duct and management oi hospitals with discussions by our " nur- em and supervisors will occupy the opening day. Monday night, J_ ‘Ochsner of Chicago. incol ing president, will be inducted in ti- ice. He‘ succeeds Dr. -Harvl~y' Cashing of Boston. The succeeding tllrro cveninul will be given over to scientific meetings with addresses by num- erous American and Canadian eur- geona Papers presents-d at‘ H1610 sessions have become accepted us representing the highest authority on the topics (liscussed. according to Dr. Martin. Conferring of fellowships in lilo college on n group of several hun- dred candidates will take place at the cmlvoration ixosolnn "Friday night. Honorary fellowships will ul-zm he presented to foreign guests at this final meeting. {C} nor so scarce One of t-hc attaches at tho Vyllitc House was commenting on the coming of ‘Prcsltlcnt (‘oolidge and remarked that he didn't expect to find him as good natured and u: easy going as the late Resident Harding. "Don't you cvnr illlllk illc bnsi won slow and easy going," cried Mr. Harding's former chauffeur. adding: “Mr. ilsrdlngX-l illen of o comfortable pace was 50 miles an hour. > “One night we wore cooling bark from Columbus and u fellow was hogging the road In front of us. go any fflfilPl‘. me the wheol ' lone. incidentally and ally’ taking one of his fenders with "Are you ioolinfior ‘apex-man- ent investment‘ f" ' ‘ jwlvortoo permanent" ldcnt of Section M. claimed that kept. blowing the horn but the chap wouldn't get ovcr and he wnulnft - "Finally Mr. Harding said,‘ (iivc l did. and he gavo one big blast d on our horn, stopped on the gas and "went by that fellow like a cyc- intlcntlon- h before the Association, a popular scientific uoirce was arranged in the University buildings. and a number of short lecturettea in rela- tively simple language‘ were deliv- ered, with demonstrations or slides enthusiasts. biusic and “listening- lll" were also provided. . ‘Educating theFarnlcr. Dr. Crowther, the proaentfiPresi- though the atmosphere of crisis atlll persists, a more optimistic note may he sounded. He spoke of the value of the advisory work which is now available, and after his twenty years’ experience‘ he was convinced that the times were op- portune for a forward movement in agricultural education as well as the cooperation, co-partnerslpp. and other points advocatdlifljr‘ Lord Bledlaloe. As research prbceedl tluch advisory work will become in; orenaingly valuable. More hfioient propaganda» in needed, for, ‘lttgaridr ed. “one finds lii all parts of the country an astonishingly lar e num- hcr of farmers ‘who are to ly nn- nwnrc of their existence." More- over, there are the new opportuni- _ ties for training farmers‘ soils and , others, and the certainty in. the near future of preference being given-other considerations helm! oqual~—to those whifhave had both adequate instruction andpractlcal experience. Something-in the dir- ection of farming, is. he thinks, la- evltnble, and may be hastened if ever there is a nationalization of the land. _, And hero l would liike to coll lt- tention to the new Schola conc- mien Ruatlcae. its new build ng and splendid staff now established at Oxford. and not yet well known owing to the outbreak of the Great War in i914. it is possible for both men and womon——end hero is.a hint to aomo of the land girls of our war-limo (‘lYli‘.I‘KG!lClP5—~t0 have a three years‘ course and the B. A. degree at Oxford. it is a now de- partment of our most ancient Unl- verslty. associate-d both with the institute for Rcecarch in Agricul- tural Economics nnd the Ministry of Agriculture. Practical work ii available nn a farm limlr Oxford belonging to hiagdalon Cnllegpand quite roocnlly forest land has been acrluircd in Monigomeryshire which will bc of rnluo to the Forestry De- partmont of tho School. The yearly ’ cost of fros and maintenance need not - xoocd about £180. ‘Jnilsstudy of insect posts is also coming into Prominent-o, especially since it ha; . become known how Pasteur saved . the silk-worm industry in Frgngg, and how one species of insect, del- pite nil efforts. recently rndupgu thy c IAJplfl-lcnn cotton crop by (my w, One poraonnl suggestion 1. to make. ' ' ' will"! minister and lingual-arc little am. 8 III ,' llwrreutv. xiiaillii? neighbor, thong} |g h“ ‘_ urn - ‘fl. don't want to out my mono I lhouid not dream 99-99%?" ‘ be! litters oftiiit‘ ml >a:-_ 7,1?‘ in liplpli_lbere's a chance to m‘ _,_ _V .. ,. ..._