K I Q 2 . , _MASQ-1 rf... l -\.~»s.n» i ? i . 1 1 =i i.. i ZS 'i ,3 . . 1 . l 5 . 'I i 1 _i if -_ » 5-_ i r~'v° nv' =< .- E’ \' :/.¢ _N .J i T i .- i E t '.7 f ». i *. l 7 0 F. if canine in the world and this latest 'i 1. _l » ei. i J \ I \ .i` I i . .1 . ~~ .i- .i,' ti. !. ".1, ii: , i i i -_ l i » » I I rKGE’sni ._ _ ‘FiTE'EimuIo'rrETU_vvSi`cUxnoiAN JULY as. mo "‘S""- xl' “ - -f""’ """" _ _ """" rmuuasmmun inwrdg All~TAlliINO nomivric DRAMA/ Fascina¢A|ng-`|.;;|_' Y antlo drama of life at is Marino Post in Haiti! D I s h i n g a n I i' o r m, & pretty women! ' Mat. 3.00-lilc, Sic. Eve. 7.15 sg 900 - 42° - 52c. _.'_.Iau»___.__‘ All[[N, _ H2/\NT ~ VOTING HOURS - Electors in Charlottetown will note that the pol are open from B to 6 o'clock, Stand ard Time or 9 to 7, Daylight Saving Time. .___- _A fire in the planking of the proin- l enade of the!-lilsboro Bridge, on _' the side of the draw remoto from ‘the city was discovered about six o’- ciock last evening. The fire which was probably caused by s. lighted cigarette butt, and which was con- fined to a fow planks, was t ll estonia mor-nng in St. James - _ C5 Y mm “hed m "_, In emphatic terms at Winnilleu. Hon. R. B. Bennett, mum “cmd to th. fmhwmm “Nh D°" “ P" leader of the Conservative party, a native of the Maritime G mm CWM” of th. Umm §°’_§°;“:1“;‘“°‘_‘,‘;‘1;";“f_l“§n'th_t"m°°w;’; Pmvinm, nt forth the platform of no party. Isiefigfeiy I mjmh 0, Cm” Wm, mm hm , by nm md me mood." m the "_ pledging the following if returned to power n t e om on. on selmmber 17' hw, been “mmm FIRE IN BRIDGE PMNKING- *nm M- Th°'~ °- °’““‘°°- M” ‘U ““ ."-I-We pledge ourselves to a policy of protection for Cana- :;`rk'1;l;°t:p;2°t:r°; tantra" 112:: old resident of Charlottetown and visiting friends here delivered address on the passage in Luke 11-24. The prodill-L his departure is an XV edtozlonbytheministerwho tioncd that it was ni this oh m that Mr James preached his and return. Mr. James was wclccm- " -We pledge ourselves to foster and develop agriculture ell urcb Central Guardian chumh sewices A Pledge To Canadians u....i... ¢.....u " “““ ‘"" "°" °""“°““ From Coast To Coast ........., ..., ....... .... ` diana in the development ol our natural resources, our fagricultural and industrial life, and our consumers from ex- ,ploitatioru V _ 2 and the livestock and dairy industries now so sadly ne- glected. , _ : The thrilling gtg;-_v gg g woman who staked her life cn ihc game of love, -.1 -ibeti ; also soi'.\'o News Axu :iiL's1C.u. ni-:\1'c s.-<-n ~f. Mio v" .ie Y _ Valley after sight seeing at different °! -oiriroi I -~--~ nm. s.-11°, isa. *Today i f, A powerful and ,t bL‘€\ll\Ul.ll drama §` of Love - sweet- \ _cart love-niar. ._r, fied love -- mother love _ 1 u'ill'al\vsys remember wigh Belle Bennett it coinznv .mn iiooca room: i , And Mary Carr 1 .<4 l'AlllS )'i)L`R l‘L`l‘ \ UPON THE ROOF ' ’ , , __ iiorizi. rlwxrns LONDON, July 26.-A parking place for pups* has been built on the roof of one of Loridons West End hotels. The British dog is generally ance. All the large department stores of London have an attendant in the en- trance hall to stand guard over the dogs that are left while the owners shop. The dogs’ leashcs are hung on a series of hooks in front of which are placed little pans of wa- supposcd to be the best cared for ter. There are a. few restaurants, even in the smartest dining districts, comfort seems to confirm the sup- where dogs protrude from beneath position. A uniformed page is as- table cloths, and many hat check- ._ sgnecl to feed, water, and watch the rooms have coniplete dog checking dogs which are left while masters facilities. __ . _ and inistresses attend the perform- ,._ _ _ ._- _, ._A-' HON. JOHN A. MMDONALD, CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATE FOR KINGS In the last: two Parliaments the Hon. John A. MacDonald was known at Ottawa as "The member for Prince Edward Island." What this implied was that his was the only personality from the Province that impressed it- leif upon tho House. Ha is held in the highest esteem and greatly respected cn both 'sides of the House. It was no surprise in Ottawa when Mr. Meigh- en included Mr. MacDonald in his Government, as he was one of the out- standing men from the Maritime Provinces then at Ottawa. Mr. MacDon- ald, never-the-loss, is of s. retlrlnl disposition. He is not n self-advertiser, and prefers to pursue his even terms, working for his constituency, prov- ince and county, steadily, regularly and unostentatiously. He has been in biilticssince the days of his youth, and was one of the staiwarts that icpresented King‘s County in the Provincial arena alol‘~8 Wllh luth D01- ftical giants as the Hon. J. A. Tiothieson and the Hon. John MacLean. Ile has been in opposition r- 1 _.1 ine government in both the local legis- |g;u,,, and in mf r* ;...~ '..i business he is a mcrchaiit at Cardi- pf--»» i1-~-»~~, - - Y .ly and wherever farm produce is in de- i ~..iashis he K\‘WWiUl\1°¢,\lD0l1f4°l ‘~ ---QB- yicame in response to a still alarm. POLICE COURT-At the Police Court Saturday morning one drunk and disorderly was fined $20 and costs or 30 days, one case of un- lawful possession of liquor was ad- ' jouriied till August 2nd. one vagrant was given 30 days, a case of neglig- .cnt driving the offender was fined ‘$10 and costs or 20 days, two casw of breach of sanitary by-law adjourn- ed till 29th. ON MOTOR- TRIP-'Mh'. and Mrs. J. A. Thomas of Brighton, Mass, with their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Wiiber Banks of Leicington, Mass., and children are among the motorist.; visiting P. E. Island. They are the guests of Mr. Thomas' daughter, Mrs. Sydney Taylor of Winsloe, and will later visit another daughter, Mrs. James Todd of Bose lpoints of interest here they propose 'going to Nova Scotia where they will W1 visit relatives. The visitors are de- lighted with this Province their only too short. LEBLANC-LEBLANO-A pretty wedding was solemnized at Baloch- ois church on July 10th at 9 o'clock 'in the morning when Rev Edwl! LeBlanc united in marriage, Miss Elbodie LeBlanc of Dupuis Comer to Albenie LeBlanc of Lower Abouja- _gane. The bride looked charming in a gown of white crepe and s veil of white net. She carried a. bouquet of white roses. The bridesmaid wore I pink dress of silk flat crepe. The bridesmaid was Miss Melains Le- Blanc, school teacher and sister of inony a delicious luncheon was serv ed at the h gifts. -Moncton Times .____---- YERSONALS _ _.___ ' E. J ’Gallant. _ closed on Thursday of each week be- ginning July 31 until further notice, Saturday morning for Hamilton tion of Police Chiefs. He was accom- panied by Mrs. Birtv/histle and lan T. Foimd.-Amherst News 'lima cove. Y H. Btemon, 181 Dofrchestor Street thoroighly enjoying their holiday. Frank Quinn. Frank Mcdulgan, P “extinguished by the chemical which the groom. and best man was Mr. James Bolciyn. Following the cere- Politician Speaks Myrtl -Bemis N. s., returned home sstur- t/ensue in which hc is Qualified day after a pleasant visit to her an interpreter. Jircic now has eigh aunt Miss Myrtle Carrick and Mrs. of these brassards, and he is study- . nrat sermon. Announcement was made by Dr. Fulton that joint services by St. James and Zion Churches will con. tinue through August, and that at ‘James choir would have charge the praise service under the oapabl the organ. Mention was made by the mints ter of the loyal service rendered b ion Church choir during July. h WSG on his trip to Ontario wher t eir vacation. Dr. Fulton will re. main on duty during Aug-use 11; gg h°lW-`1 Rev M1' Mvfohead Legate will be inducted into St. Jam” septgm. ber 5th. at si. James in the moi-aiu; me men of Zion choir led in the sei-vig, sons. The chorus "stand up, St-and up for Jesus," by Adam gd. was rendered with fine effect, as *I mek chvrus. The quartet, "Warsl, *U14 Pray." was also rendered by 'V -‘ _ .i so , % Lum; j 25; 0 regret bein; our their my is ui zum mis quarmte. 'rm nsiugty congregational singing Wu Q” . fel-ture of the morning service, the lwell known and beautiful hymm, “Tha Ninety and N1m,,~- md no Love That ,Will not let me go," (Matheson) being \,_5ed_ At the evening' service held in 21°” °l“U°h» Mrs. Wm. wsiiace TcY1°r was guest soloist and render. Bd "Como Unto Me," by Coewen in 5 Very Plessing and at the mm, time, devotional manner-_ '11-1, ahah. “‘mb°T1n8 35 members sang the gn. them. ‘Ye Thai some in me Hours in 91° L°1'd-" by Splnney. ome of the bride's PU: Right Ifanguauges °“*°" *° ‘“"“°‘““"° m°“‘” 'md '°1` rams, France .iuiy m_iny The l f.~ ' auves' Then the h°'§p;a;°u§:n:°at Canadian Press)-The Frenchman is ;’;;dBt;mL;I:JT;f°;;:1 and soon “ter giving more attention than ever be- motored to Prince Edward Island' fore to the study of foreign lang- ua es , K - 31:9 T35; ssenriogptigz izihgg Many police officers in this cos- at the home of the groom when a mopolitan city are able to speak two large crowd oi’ friends and relatives °r tru” languages with °°"°' The ei ed n usefm champion of them all is Agent Jar- amndei They rec V ma y aslsw Jircic. If he learns any mo languages, the department will b forced to devise a new type of uni- form. For each police officer who learns ing to qualify for yet others. In or- during which he will study the lingu- as he is opening an office for that lst services of foreign police forces. day in Eldon over the store of Mrs. Tennis and other champions also A. D. Ross. 5849 need to be linguists in these days ` At a dinner given recently by the ohm of Ponca Bu..bwhm1,_ len French Tennis Federation on the oc V casion of the French championsh om when he Wm amend l °°m,m_ tournament. Jean Borotra, famous “The Bounding Masque," made most unusual speech in replying a toast He began in French . , and d““gh°"’ "'°‘°' continued, first in England. men in German, and last in Spanish, speak- MY- md MY* 5- L' M°L°°“ M' ing all three foreign tongues quite companied by Miss Margaret Clark fluently. The Japanese player. Har- - le" Y°5"°’d°Y °n 5 m°t“°’ mp t'° ate, spoke in French and English P E. Island. Wliile there they will and “muy in ms own 'mum' be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Har- which an mtnpnmr "WMM the latter headed the British War Mlm Nancy Almon, daughter of CANADA Colonel Alinon. Halifax, has been spending a week, the guest of Mrs. Land of the Mama Leu’ . Thomas and her daughters at Hol- Land of th, golden mmf’ Fair Canada! ' Home of our loyal sires; Mr. D. D. Mosher, Inspector of Hearth of their pilgrim fires; ` schools or Toronto, with in-s. Moen- mach naulct admires. sr. nav. arrives in ins city on a iwl- I0*/ea Camde- ids visit and are the guests of Mrs. _ Though on the fateful plain 'rms is their mens nip no ins ou- Thc I-“Y °°f°"° 1° "ln den Hovince and in their car are mf Cmma- A flower of union grows daily visiting the mlny accessive U ' beauty S9018. This week they pro- Th’ 17'“""d '°°°' Triumphing o‘er its foes. pose driving to Alberton and differ- ent points in Prince County end are Bn" cmmh" If wise her councils be, Undreamed. the destiny The funeral of the late Philip Mc- of “md” Quaid was held Saturday moming A thousand leagues of mam' from the residence of his brother, Lake' forest’ mountain Chun' |_,_ _ 267 Sydney Street ,to St. Dunstsn‘s Bound by ms umm mm. Basilica where Requiem High Mass omg Gund., _ _ __ 5 was celebrated. The pall bearers ~ »'-=9`~;1’-~i,-g_f!i?, were: Messrs. Alex. McPherson, The “Mom gram gf” W ‘ *_~"tl* . Behold my rising star, ig; . v` ' Minnagbsn, Louis Monahan, and oqsmssi ' ' ni minimis-| mm and nrigo., 1frrua_oa_ziaes ' llJl|hdlll_l\aLD@l" .i»~“(u. e “-5 NOIKTHCLIFFE VALUED der to make himself thoroughly pro- DR. AYERS’ OFFICE will be _ficient he has set out with a col- league on s. European motor tour, newspaper career the late Lord ment of a foreign market lemenmp °f Mm J' A' L““°” ‘md " -We pledge ourselves to the improvement of the whole W' Wwe’ Mmm' °m°’°"m5 °" 5 scheme of Caadian transportation northward by the com- lpletion of the Hudson Bay route, and the construction of ' ‘such branches as may be necessary to render it most readily Y available to every part of Canada; to the Pacific slope by Z ' ° a Peace River outlet, and east and west by the development ‘“°’° """h°d mf- Th°mP’°° I 5°” of the St. Lawrence Waterways, and we pledge ourselves to "° 0 aid existing traffic channels and to increase port facilities he “mi MW- Th°mPS°“ Will Mud on the Great Lakes, Hudson Bay and the Atlantic and Pacific Y* Oceans, and to the establishment of a national highway sys- ' tem. ‘ scheme. part of Canada." " We pledge ourselves to the stabilization of economic 3_conditions, and to continuity of trade and freedom from the manipulation of home and foreign tariffs. ,|“|-We pledge ourselves to the development of inter-Pro- of vincial trade, and of a Canadian fuel policy, and develop- e . "6--We pledge ourselves to foster and support a plan for greater empire trade based on mutual advantage. '"1-We pledge ourselves to a national old age pensions “ -We pledge ourselves to such compensation adjustment as will ensure the benefit of the above policies to every 1 Th P t °ot’s Volte Face D-.1-~*-°--`°-1-=°---~ ----1 e a rl' London, the Council is to meet, In a frantic endeavor to “gejt from under" its fvmcfli Wk” in I°°1l1 °°"1°°- own statement that the cost of Old Age Pensions to ;f‘o‘;_‘f'°; %;';:“m°‘1;';‘; the Government of this Province would be at least ppm to ,hs mmm wh,” umm, , $300,000 a year-a. statement which is being quoted mm 1°, ,_ ,,,,,,_ § by the Conservative candidates to show that Hon. 'nw cimii-mu of ui. nous oi ; R. B. Bennett’s policy thclls reapect alorite tvrvoiild Educatwc- RW- -Nusa 1-1t“°» D~ D- benefit Prince Edward san to t a ex en - e o- ' | cal Liberal organ swallows its ovi_/n figures and ;§f;“a”°g,“R:1,;f§u°hm‘”u“““u°nf'l;f comes out with a brand new calculation based on al- W_ R_ M,m,,,,h_ D, ~D__ ,,, Km Ieged “further investlgoltion." As the Saunders-Lea sum cnui-en nm us aus cem- Government never made any attempt to investigate :au-slows. the cost of old age pensions in this Province, the in-` Tig'-wJ°g“m§x°:n“:» 51?: 1*: “‘° sincerity of the'Patriot’s attitude must be ob_vio_us rm; or mmelhm md°.s;§‘; to all. When its purpose was to defend th_e provincial B,,v,°e_ Wm, mm _,_ L Nm, of administration for failing to carry out -its pre-elec- swam, ,md my _,_ W_ M,¢,,,,. tion promise to participate in the King Govern- neu o:suiiimc,N. s.,uesui>er1n- ment’s old age pensions scheme, it assured its read- *men*-H °f H°m° UMW- md H r that the cost to this Province would be “around ‘“°“ ‘¥° °’°“°" ‘“ *°“°*‘ ‘““‘ °°“' 8 8 ‘ ditions on the undeveloped fields $300,000 if n_ot_ more." Now that it is politically ex- mm m Mcconmn is Pmidm oi pedient to minimize as much as possible the advant- H., M,,,,,\., ¢,,,,,,,,,,,,,_ age of the Conservative policy by which the Federal smug other commiuwum. mv. Government wouldassume full cost of these pen- I-cvl Hucccr cf South Porcupine. and 'E sions, the $300,000 dwindles over night to $100,000. xv- gwf- €;k*“I;;;*th‘;nM11;*;°t':;>;fs» Such a. barefaced somersault is unprecedented even ma ML Ammon Wu mmmy 8 in Liberal election propaganda. The Patriot was_ in mmnm ,D th, mlm in Nomh as good a position to make an accurate calculation um minima . u mi-sign mano has '°° wc" °= hi-‘ last April as it ls today. M1” 6 Ros, U1 midway left arm a brassard, indicating th ii BIB CAMPBELL STUART LONDON, July 28.-(By Thomas T. Champion, Canadian Press Staff Correspondent)-In all his dazzling Northcliffe discovered onlytwo men whose advice he would usually accept without hesitation. says Hamilton . Fyfe, the well-known publicist, in his "intimate biography" of the celebrat- . ed newspaper owner. ip Others he would constantly check by interference or explosive criticism. as B And the two men who were almost to immune from his displeasure, accord- ing to Mr. Fyfe, were Kennedy Jones. Lord Northclitlds right-hand man when he entered the newspaper field, and Sir Campbell Stuart, for- merly of Montreal. Sit Campbell Stuart did not be- ' come allied to Lord Ncrthcliffe until Mission to the United States in l9l"l. ‘The Mission was set up to direct in the States the purchase of war sup- plies for Great Britain. Ncrthclide had been already struck by Sir Campbell Stusrt's success in raising in Canada s regiment of Irish-born, Protestant and Catholic, which he took on a. tour through Ireland. "He did." ssld Northcliffe, "what John Redmond could not do. Redmond gave him encouragement and assist- ance. But all the credit of the idea. and its execution is due to the young man himself." Stuart was forbidden by a medical board to take service et. the front himself, so on the sugges- tion of Sir Robert Borden, he was at- tached to the British Embassy at Washington. "It is hard," says Hamilton Fyfe, "for anyone who saw from inside (as I did) the activities of this ingenious and clplble young man to imagine what the Mission would have been like if he had not Joined it. North- clifie leaned on him as he had never _ leaned on any subordinate before. ` Hitherto he had always known far . .--1-'°¢----_-ul" ‘In denser, at her side, . -more than a.ny%y else about the ,lightened the burden of NorthclifTe's 'Times and The Daily Mail." It is also revealed in this book that work he was doing. Now he sailed seas strange to him. To find a sec- ond-in-oomrnand so unsssumingly self-confident, so ready with sugges- tions, so full of useful knowledge, was, he admitted, a piece of great luck. Stuart attracted him from the first. He had exactly the manner Northclifle liked. Soon there sprang up s real affection between them. ‘If I had a son .. . .’ Northcliffe mur- mured to is `friend one day as he watched Stuart strlding from the room." - When Northcliffe was later given the important office of Director of Propogsnda in Enemy Countries, it was Campbell Stuart who was res- ponsible for taking from Northclii7e's shoulders all the daily detail work. The war over, Northcliife put Stuart into very high position on The Times and The Daily Mail. "This associa- tion," says Hamilton Fyfe, "certainly last four years, the years between the ending of the war and his death. During those years he was scarcely ever free from troublesome ailments- Being forced to go into voluntary ex- ile, he was relieved to find that there was at last someone who could re- present him in his absences. I-le felt, he said, that he could leave the day- to-dsy steering to Stuart." Hamilton Fyfe also records that “Northoliffe looked on Canada. as the Interpreters House, which could help people in Great Britain to understand the United States. This was in his mind, in sua, when ns appointee cunpbsii Stuart to high positions both on The when Northclifte, whose mind had become permanently clouded, again left London soon after his return from his world tour, Sir Campbell Stuart was left in complete control, under power of attorney. mural. a srssnourrzs _i landlady-And what's wrong now? Lodge and Rev. J. H. Selkirk of Peace River. Miss Susan Smith of Hamilton, ont.. a well-known social service worker. familiar with home mission _work in the crowded districts of growing cit- \ ies. known to the general public as a sions and church extension work, in Women To Attend Canadian Press)-Lists of oommis-i ognised in the election of a number ot men and at leastone woman who have wide experience in newly-settled districts. _ Mrs. Burns, wife of the youiag missionary to Flin Flon, Rav. D. K. Burns." is the lay commissioner from Hudson Bay Presbyihfy. while Rev. J. G: Stevens of The Pas is the min- isterial representative from that ds- vsloping area. From the Northern interior of British Columbia comes George ogston of Vanderhoof. The equally remote Peace River country is sending V. C. Flint of Beaver Another woman commissioner is William Hanson of Montreal, while financier, is interested in city mis- adition to being Treasurer of the Wesleyan Theological College. Several of the boards which con- duct work of a special or general character are to be represented by their Chairmen, who are also prom- inent psstors..Rev. W. H. Sedgewick, D.D., elected by 'Iloronto Conference, is pastor of the rebuilt Metropolitan church in Toronto, and Acting Chairman of the Board of Home Missions Rev D C. MacGregor, D of Westminster Central Church. Doctors Study - Covers Growth J/4- NEW YORK, N. Y., July 27-(By The Canadian Press)-Growing can- cer artificially and the new hope it offers were described by Dr. Francis Carter Wood, Director of Crocker Cancer Research Institute of Colum- bia _`Univeralty, just before he sailed to attend at Amsterdam the Inter- national Congress of Experimental Cytology in August. These men work with live canoes- cells, one of the latest developments in cancer study. which began with learning how to graft cancer upon animals and raise it artificially. Now a start has been made at growing human cancer in glass tubes. "We are starting," said Dr. Wood, "to do what Pasteur did when he showed the way to cultivation of bac- teria artificially, a work upon which are based some of rnedlci.ne's greatest’ advances. We know no cancer bacter- ium or germ, but we have, and can see with a microscope, the cancer cell. It causes cancer, and does so plainly by ability to grow much fast- er than a normal body cell. But for 3,000 yelrs we have been compelled to work with dead cancer cells. Now for the first time we have them alive, and capable of producing cancer! We wish to know why they grow so fast, something we shall never know un- til we actually see them growing. "We can also study now how fast a. cancer cell breathes, that is. how rapidly it uses oxygen. whether this ismoreorlassrapidthanthera of a normal cell. Any difference the rats might become a point for a new attack on cancer. “Some bacteria cause disease the poisons they produce. We to learn whether cancer cells produce poisons. or. Nually important. to, know for certain that they do not. If we find auch. I poison. than vs wish to know whether it acts the ts in seek der artificial conditions ff it differs Youthful Ledger-I Just wanted to saythetfthinkyeugettocmuoh attaekonthecmoermystoly. .:eluW_l...milaaa» out of this xolisrdmll thisdiscrepencyagliniaspointfcr SMOKING 0UTFll` FUR LIVERPUUL Glad he smokes Rosebud and saves the poker hands. Oiieeithoiuo- mas as the big pol and paper mllfi- in Uvdpool eertal s booaterfcruioae bud smokin to- bacco. Hesaysit nlyasaa- ge ii-315-r'?"g_=;~ sydney. »i=i‘é€=§c=3‘é;: EE? Evite 'S' .»..§ hai ii 'li ig 5. G exdis hands-we wbsseo po °i°p?'iEi' wus nausea ° ll out Elgin certain wg.” a marked increase- dmndfcr vcsalar sibowbasssl espadally as the tobacco itself scans to bc, exactly what most rips Iaaokers y“¢_i Onepokerbaademnaslis elarseun r.'.';.”‘““‘°.....:.:.'a‘n°...'f.*°”»°°' ="=-» rite lor special minima diese _ Department B., Post 0800 Box 130,' Montreal. ~ _lu -_ Gyro Dance in-:ACH _oifovs INN TUESDAY ' From 9 to 12.30 D. S. Timo. Admission 50 Celia. “l'.l"l A GYBO DANCE" ¢Q§ cars are helped by X-rays. We hav( also some evidence that X-rays kill rapidly-growing normal cells about as fast as cancer cells. We suspect that the benefits of the X-fly are due to rapidgrowthofcanosroellaapro- duction rats that causes more of them to be killed by the X-rays. If is important to find out definitely the reasons for X-ray effects. "Cancer serum esn be made that will seemingly cure a cancer on s ra.t's leg, but the leg has to be lis- stured to retain the serum. So thus fnr then 8 no apparent method of making such a serum useful for hu- man beings. Raising the cells arti- ficially will assist in the study of this serum field." Dr. Wood plans to visit the Curia Instituto in Paris and various Cancer v Research Institutes in England. REAL SAND AND LOUD THUNDERSTORMS WON"l' < G0 IN FRENCH PLAYS PARIS, July 26.-Eating reel food and using wet rsinstorms on the stake make the Frenchman thinli United States audiences lack imag- ina.tion~ The French prefer what Americans consider artificslity and “play acting." France! finest the- atre, the Plgalle, called by experts the best-equipped playhouse in the world, is almoest ready to give up the ghost because, some antics think. it tried to give too much United States realism and forgot “thc plays the thing." Gaston Baty, one of the tour lead- ers of theatrical modernism, resigned from management of the Pigalle re- cently, revealing that his policy of real sand and loud thunderstorms had failed. Meanwhile giving em- phasis to the dlderenoe in the Amer- ican and French theatre, an address at the sorbouue by cu-oi ss. su. the Baltimore producer, explained somewhat. the Piga1le’s failure. not than generally known, by describins the psychology of French audiences. Sax. who established an American theatre here, giving a series of ai! plays for ten days or two weeks each. realized his company much cbeD8° its American methods slightly to sat- isfy his sudiences, which were 60 per cent French but learned the IBD couldn’t be entirely bridled. "A typical "American theatre-goes." said Sax, “prefers a naturalistic play but even when he goes to see ‘modenf drains he wishes to behave in U10 reality of, what he sees. I-le wants ii to be convincing and be would like to forget he is in a theatre watobiul actors perform. » c- , "Not so with the French. To t-hcl the theatre is the theatre. They 1/°V| may mum. insauicautv- '1'° W French scenery is scenery and t-h¢Y make not the slightest demand 014'- they de deceived into thinklnl it il anything else. And above all actin! is acting and they glory in ii ll such." i In discussing the differences in recimiqus oomumeia. me nruwivel theatrical NW. remarks of W 'rmarican players in "Tha Bam" that "in order to mass the audi¢D°1 W believe the tent was pitched OW* doors, they had to cover the 50884 withreaisoda.ndinordsrtobec°11‘ vinsoatmiswunimssibH“““ eocenadtoaeeandhsartherllnli well as see the actors cowl ll dsenahedtromtheahowarl’ moment mc* ansudienee bt* merelvlrytdlml 5? E5 if ““ir.~ mai mmaurm same after it has been produced un- »;!;l\e$M“'°* insauurroochausimnt i s |l\UU§”' l _ .. .. _’ ..§ f