OCR Text |
Show ' UK& PEACE W-M- 1ELIEED EAST IS M di dt TO B K Italy Is Planning a Unique Celebration of Victory in War in New Nationalist Army tone Organized in Turkey Is Tl Viewed as Big Menace Hope Is Expressed That She Entire Conditions in the Old Empire Are Declared" to Be of the Greatest Gravity and Magnitude; Consequences Are Difficult to Foresee. By WILLIAM T. ELLIS. developed lu the the war. Company him free from The armistice found (Copj right, Canada, by the New York the odiufh which attached to the politiHerald Company.) cal r.dventurera and generals such as EnJan. 1. Turkey ver. .Talaat and L'icmat. army GtASTANTINOriX. Called Strange Blunder. - It la not By a strange blunder, the Turkish army Constantinople. waa not made to surrender its arms by Moieo'er, It produced or was pro- the terms of the armistice. So Johnny duced by a new national leader, Musta-ph- a Turk went marching home with his gun Keinal Pasha. Recent report lias it and his cartridges, and with a habit of obedience to He hud orders. that Kemal lia been assassinated, but learned how tomilitary with little in his fight baseless as be rumor fesa may this Bnijrna stomach and on bis back. Hardshtp as t le many dispatches concerning En-v- could teach him no new lessons. The Turkish demobilised army remained a Pasha's whereabouts. asset for the right man in the Jietw een Keinal" and Enver there has right hour. good thing "long been nvsjry, which' is adoublv With the armistice the cry was raised serl-ou- s lor el taxation. It wou.d be that all of Turkey's misfortunes were due if. as at first announced, the new to cabal. The the Nationalist movement In the Interior of Turks were made the scapegoats Turkev was under the leadership of that Young Even the adherents of that joined apostle of recklessness and trouble, tile In the liue and cry. The real party Turkey had former dictator of Turkey, Enver Pasha, been betrayed All ad", these enturers. by who Is now a refugee with hia life in good Turks love the allies and hate the forfeit If caught. so And nauseum. Uermans. ad oh, There are no trad exploits that Enver There arose "the Turkish Wilsonian would not undertake with an army at his league, vindication of the prinfor the and audacious back. Personally fearless, A nationalist ciples ot nationalism. Imaginative, Knver Pasha, who rode Into movement took In a eminence on a white horse as "the hero conference at Blvasr AUculminating that was needwhich dethroned Ab- ed was the of the revolution to occasion make this proper dul llamld. Is the man roost to be feared Turkish nationalist a formidable by the allies and all friends of law and end active force in party the sorely dlstuibed order. land. Copvrght, 191?. by tl.e New York Herald be the beet soldier Turkish army during All Rights Reserved) er ...... al foi, ICing of Kurdistan? Furnished by Greeks. this latest of the reports conrentihg That occasion was furnished is that he has romantic i. illled the Kurd, who have made him their ruler In a new kingdom of Kurdistan. This story sounds probable chiefly to readers who do not know" the Kurds and who have only the haziest of notions as to where Kurdistan may be found ou the map. In truth, there is no such country, with often definite Travelers boundaries. Speak of certain parts of upper Mesopotamia and the eastern Caucasus as "Kura manner of distan," but this Is only speaking. The Kurds cannot point to anv particular region, aa can the Jews and Sjrlans and Egyptians, a yd say, The Kurd are "Thia is our fatherland. peoples of among the numerous - homeless the Near Eaet. In dwell Some Kurds villages and some are nomads. They are ae tribal aa the Bedouin and almost aa Incapable of ing welded Into one cohesive mass. They have few nationalist traditions, but intense tribal and personal loyalty. Quick to follow a strong leader. It ia quite con leivable that many of them wouldIbra-ld-go after Enver even as they did after soverPasha, who long defied the eignty of Abdul Hamid. m Could Da Much Harm. by the Greeks at Smyrna. The excesses of the Greek soldiers In the Smyrna vilayet were seized upon bv the Tut ks as theiP play before the high courts of civilisation. Even the Armenians never cried so vociferously ,aa did the "Atrocities! Turks, who bsd found the best reasons for diverting public attention from their ow n misdeeds. There were killings and robbings and raplngs and deportations by the Greeks. The Interallied commission of Investigation has certified to this, and the blunder that exceeds the crime was that the Turk was thus set before the world la the removing him temlight of a victim, so porarily, at least- - from ' the prisoner's bar, at which he had been arraigned. In the near east, where a few thousand or tens of thousands of killings seem to disturb nobody's digestion particularly, this stupidity of the Greek excesses, which lost all advantages of position to the allies, ia a sort of supercrime. Turks Rally, to KemaL .Stories of atroetttea Upon Turks by Greeks and Armenians aroused the population of Anatolia. Rivera of rhetoric began to flow.- - The- - old passions of thea were aroused. primitive tribesmen Kemal Pasha offered himself as leader and called the demobilised Turkish soldiers to arms. They answered. This was no European military maneuver, with a general staff and an elaborate service of supplies in the rear. It was rather the descent of an ancient Asiatic horde. Food and equipment were secured lu countless primitive ways. The army waa and la supported by g sympathetic country. The men feel that they are fighting for the ashes of destroyed homes and for the faith that has been outraged. It is in a "dare to die mood. Such Is the force that at this moment Is actually encamped over against the 70,0(0 Greeks Intrenched In the hinterland of Smyrna. Religious animosity and historical racial vengeance animate both armies. The condition ia of first gravity and of first magnitude. It complicates almost hopelessly any prospect of a peaceful settlement of the Turkish question. A year ago the Ottoman government would have had to accept any terms offered by the allies; today the nationalists have an army, an organization, a cause and a propaganda. .No man can foresee the consequences. Mui-taph- If Enver has become a leader of the Is assuredly only of a band or on of them. Ev en so he would possess considerable power to do harm, for the Kurds are famous marauders and and Individually brave fighters. hiteands,inaccessible Their position, rnldwav between the French 111 Sjrla. the British In Mesopotamia and Petsia, and the little new countries of the Caucasus, renders them difficult to suDpresa. Any warfare they wage would he of a guerilla character, But It would be serious, none the less. When Enver and his clique ruled at Constantinople there was little opportuto arise. nity for anv other personalities He Indulged, according to all reports. In g Oilental method of the of possible .rivals. Many a man who disagreed with him died at Enver's own hand, for the minister of war was ' crack shot. In command of the Sixth army corps, which successfully defended Gallipoli, waa General Musts pha Kemal Pasha, a quiet man who looked like a such la the range of types Scandinavian within this strange land of Turkey. Kemal was a modern and moderate man. efficient rnd thorough. He is reputed to Kuala It set dls-Isin- falr-halre- d. Bohemian Violinist Goats on a Strike Eat Plentifully but Feigns Insanity to Get His Food Free Produce No Milk Will Provrf Efficiency of Her Sex. -- - ....... Xeulnnd-Flanders- dia-brg- rr By Universal Seivte. Jan. 17. A herd of HAMBURG, Boats, 400 strong, owned.,by thomum-cipabt- y 'of Kasscl. has gone on strike, and has yielded bo milk whatever for rl ? Ju p -- Ceremonies Are Expected to Be Most Impressive Since n Days of Roman Empire. ri J '; ut wood. I EXERCISE FOR EYES URGED FOR AIRMEN physicians Discover That WeaHnesa of Mnacles and Nerves Contributes to Accidents. LONDON, Jan. 17. (By the Associated Press ) Air service doctors have discovered that airmen who have been experts will on occasion, and for a period, make all manner of mistake In landing. With a smooth lawn below them, they will do a "poached egg and rrash the machine on Its tall or will take the ground before they mean to. These accidents are attributed to a particular sort of weariness of eye muscles as well as eye nerves. The eye fails to convey to the brain a proper of the ground or other object. The eye fall very much as the muscles of an untrained athlete fail. Many exercises for the eye have been designed, which will remedy this defect. Deposits at Spitzbergen Ars to Be Worked on a Immense - - nt j 3 Cannon, 'Ammunition Carts, Motor Lorries to Replace 0 Old Chariots and Mortars. Ml - American Motion Pictures in Great Favor Overseas - t Antics of Charlie Chaplin Nightly Convulse Big Crowds in Cairo, Bagdad, Constantinople, and Many Other Foreign Cities. '(Copyright ,1(2(7 by fhe'Xew Turk Tie raid Reserved. ) Company All Right (Copyright, Canada, by the New Tork Herald Company.) ARIO, Egypt. Jan. 2. Next to Wood row Wilson, Charles Chaplin Is the most famous American in the Damascenes ROME, Jan. 17. (By the Associated Press.) Italy has not jet had its victory celebration. The ceremonies, which were tq have., taken place this month, had to be postponed because of the D'Annunx o Incident and the unsettled political conditions. But preparations continue and when the palms of victory are banded tq the heroes of the great war . early not next spring it wlU be excelled since the most glorious days of th Roman empire. Workmen are now engaged In making highways by which the troops may pass along exactly the route followed by the forces of Titus and Conatantlne a hen thev returned to.Komft along the Apptan Way and made their way through the Roman Forum to the capltoi. The victorious army wilt march tinder the famous arch of Constantine, througn tho arch of Titus, past the ruins of the Coliseum, which Titus hutlt after his conquest of Jerusalem, through th historic ruin of the Roman Forum, past what remains of the Temple of the Vestal Virgins, up the Capitolina hill to lio Altar of the Father and the menu mint erected to the illustrloua Victor Emmanuel II. Since the days of the emplrt the- - center of Rome has undergone many changes and it will require much temporary reconstruction to make it possible for tne troops to follow the ancient course of victor. Ktepa have replaced the ancient highway leading from the Roman Forum to the capltoi. Consequently it will be necessary to build Wooden roads over these to accommodate the cavalry and artillery. Part ct this road haa already been constructed and rise generally from the ruins ot the tribune where Mark Antonv delivered the funeral oration over Julius Caesar to tha level of the approaches leading to the capltoi steps. Cannon and ammunition carts and motor lorries will replace the charlotf and mortars dragged up the famous Capltoline hill centuries ago. There will be no elephants' and camels, no prisoners in chalna. But aircraft will hover over the ceremony and attest modem mans .con- -, even though he has nevquest of the air, er been able - to equal tba art acuteve-men- ta of pagan Rome when It waa capital of the entire known world and all discovered portions of Europe, Asia and Africa were ruled from the very spot where Italian soldiers will receive tueir pal ins. -- . ear-gat- e; eye-gat- 'I Am-;rfc- er Large Scale. Aso-elate- Fast Auto Ride Gains Home 'for. the President of France PAPERS WIN IMPORTANT POINT t'-- our t and tho Cairenes and the Jerusalemites. In many foreign cities, from Paris to Cairo. I have watched the crowds roar over Charley Chaplin's antics. One is surprised to find both the French and the inscrutable Orientals becoming really hilarioua over the stage follishnesa of A One touch of humor make Dog's Life. W Ot Id. the whole world kin. So polyglot are the spectators In such BRONZE HORSES ARE Peoples who do not know whether cities as Cairo that the text on this Mississippi is the wife of Massachusetts, RESTORED TO PLACES screen has to be written tn from three or whether they are both tribes of Indians to six languages French. English, Italor poetical pari Us, are quite familiar ian, Arabic. Greek and Armenian. This Again Adorn Facade ot St. Marks with the face and (cot and antlca of the need has created a new device a small Cathedral In Venice, Alter Two Bcreen for the legends, oper tar millionaire of fllmdom. Likewise, stereopticon of the large screen for the ated alongside Yean Absence. they know our "Wild West drama, and, motion picture. The text screens are of of local manufacture, and frequently they in lesser degree, all those phases American life which are the background lag far behind the progress of the story-witVENICE, Jan. 17. (By the Associated of current screen stories. occasional amusing appositeness. Press.) The four bronze horses which The fact may have escaped the attenAlso the translations ars sometimes adorned the facade of tit. Mark's catheIn one scene the dral hare again been put in place, after tion of the peace conference, where many rich and diverting. less Important matters were Considered, legend In French on the film itself quoted an absence of more than two years, dun that today the motion picture spoaks a the heroine as saying: 1 have abandoned to their transfer to Rome, where, they had The English translation been kept to avoid capture by the Ausuniversal language, which Is understood all reserve. by the Illiterate millions of Europe, Asia projected on the little screen was: "I trians or destruction by air bomb. and Africa and South America and" the have thrown a wav all my underwear! The horses are regarded as the finest In the Orient the American films ars specimens of ancient bronzes and, accordIslands of the sea. Bagdad goes nightly to the movies; so more populnr than those made on the ing to tradition, graced the triumphal and Cairo does Constantinople and continent, for several reasons. arch of Nero. In the reign of ConstanDamascus and Jerusalem and Aleppo tine thev were taken by that emperor and Salonlca, as well as Athens and Snappy Stuff Popular. to Constantinople. They they stood until 1204. when they were brought to Venice Petrograd and Vladivostok and ShangLove making In the east proceeds in a and RL hai and Toklo. en Mark's cathedral. There different fashion from the European. the placed horses remained lor almost six cenRapidly Expanding. Marriages ars commonly 'arranged for turies. Napoleon, after he bad conquered Every month the area of the conquests Asiatics; and often the bride scarcely Venice, to Paris to adorn the of the camera expands; the old world knows her husband by sight until the Arch of took them tn the PJace du Car- -' Triumph has taken to this new form of entertainwedding dev. rouseL After his defeat at Waterloo thev So the French and Italian films, which ments with avidity. Because the people's were to returned their original place hi are largely of Intrigue, with elaborate St. minds have not been diverted with a mulMark's, where they remained undistiplicity of interests and amusements, text, and which have for their principal turbed a for century. heaving of agithey are seizing upon the messages of action stand five feet in height and the movies with an eagerness that is as- tated bosoms and contortions of sgonlzed areThthehorses ones in existence representing only faces "sob stuff," Young America calls an tonishing. anaigpt chariot quadriga. may write learnedly about It are passed by In favor of the filmed Highbrow the relative educational importance of drama of action that oomes from across e and but the manifest the Atlantic. FLUCTUATIONS OF condition In the old world Is that seeing The lure of this "snafrpy stuff which is believing with the natives. Whereas America exports on celluloid rolls has MARK ARE VIOLENT tales of the wonders of the west had a drawn the lethargic oriental from his rather skeptical hearing, the pictured Interminable coffee drinking and gossipCOBLENZ, Jan. 17. Bv the Associated fact and play have scored instant tri- ing at' the sidewalk cajes to the cinema Press.) Fluctuations In the value of the theaters of the eastern caries. Cafe umph. Audiences enter Intq the enjoymark recently have been 0' Violent that aelio fflmwks though ment Of t far gdv suKjwtTve; it report that It ts accustomed to them from childhood. talk about self and politics and scandal, German business men of the motion picture is with the refreshment as a mere excuse. virtually impossible for them to carrv on The triumph to be written down as something new m On the contrary, the motion picture transactions with theIt outside work. Me1 is no longer a nnt-lcontend that the world. It Is a sudden,, general .and takes. Its devotees out of tbemseJvea and chant f busfnews. one ef pha.; educational factor of first mag- Into all thTwortd of feet shd fancy. It powerful on the exchange. Various suggesnitude nothing less than the advent of Is breaking down the old barriers of the bling have bv been made tions financiers and Before ever American east. cosmopolitanism. to remedy th situaother In travelers could get to the emancipated Chaplev Chaplin has joined force with tion, but aGermany nothing of practical imeast, th pictured life of America had President Wilson as sn emancipator of port has beenyetformulated. become known to the Bagdadls and the he world One suggestion being considered ev bankers la that goods be bought and su'd d CHRISTIANIA. Jan. 17. (By the Press 7 Coal fields are the most valuable aaset of Spltzbergen, for which the supreme council at Parle has given Norway sovereignty. It ia estimated here that if these fields arc developed they will provlde coal enough to supply northern Norway and th northern district of Russia. Spitsbergen coal i said to be the best grade of hard coal. Mining for or at present la not much beyond the expert, mental stage In Xpitzbergen. The fih-llj- g about the lland lx very poor. Norwegian expeditions lave done much exploration work, and the largest coal fields have been acquired by the Norwegian mining companies By Universal Service. PARIS. Jan. 17. President Poincare stated: GERMAN Replying to 1 esnnot explain the milk sterilitv 4aya of worry are over. friend who questioned tho reason for his AN of your goats. The animals have e unusual Joviality of late, the president good appetite and are quite friskr. I Many Book Donated. J BERLIN. can only form the eonelusion that thev said: "I have found a home." A otdtiitH th Ii.iBf ) bav UAVrpRXTKR, Fog , f IS. 17. tOr tbs .1 ,. Pr wvmpr Ww p( are inhabited by the touts of departed Mrlitnl Population Decreases. fug months ago. when Potncare defie I from th of r fhmusd WnX aw nitely decided not to run again for the b J.n 17. (Bjr the Aor!W Bolsneviks. Get rid of them; that is hT lr4v bmi ftkiioct'Kt hr nnlr th pi roosHl In ranotia prnpM4 rrrorlDf 'Ilivsrwi indent rln. - Hawbnrf mv advice. I presidency, he began looking for a house. In hUwra fc4 protoaimi PatoiiaMva 44 laanettratM la 1UU t bip tit I lmsr rant ria af He looked untT geptember. and then I is In Ita onrtaftl form. wbWfc of 1 rf tiJlc ViaTtng and The town of lvassel sold its goats, tsttvta. rfplii lr maaifirnt If th far Tli war and titw blocked hav r- - but for so small a anm that a morv. morbtal'mi th at tha ferary, whtl t lh Brpanmcnm tb rlfbt of rrp days of office growing shorter and shorterconsul . wrr. Premia ef feeip hav Keea reote4 to er, he gave up the chase and sought for rraootation in troMtaf of tho tiir fora rb4 4vr4 ! invibfrI IA&f tnhMtaa?e ,, . HOW tints UK th inaftlfl aacy peif OfM 14 loaveia It f th wer'A. i kto witk Th la tb tart Put these bs fourd sca-iorr tbha.anm htt of tv huainra an apartment. ThI rarr c Ur aer not. th agen nf'lr retmtiea than houses pal treasury? M Hl atni jeer many months During the war, ahe town expended n large sum of mo Hey on the purchase of goats, with the object of adding to the failing milk euppiy. Pastures were acquired and a number of persons were appointed to supervise snd develop goRt culture. From the first, however, the gosts proved obstinate. The milk they yielded was so insignificant in quantity as not to warrant the upkeep of the farms. Finally, aa expert waa summoned to inquire into the secret of the failure. In his report to the authorities he v W J flh railway is aflame uprising. Tne station of Sup and from nillett Batoum) (thlrts milt from BaLaiiHhkhetl (forty-fiv- e toum) are in the hand of the BoUhe vtk. TJsf JdegujnU Jute have .btifr4u!, government huiluings 1zd and the officials Imprisoned The government pent an with train artillery to supnr the revolutionary attempt, to keep the railway open and to prevent TifU from being cut from the Black art. Tne ;eorgian Bolnhevlnt activities center In Tskhinvali vallev north ot Corl, one of the largest stations on the Batoum railway. A dozen illRge in the diatrict in the outbreak joined tne movement lant week, wuen the government armored train saved the railway from being dam aged and recaptured Oort after hard fighting and considerable ioa, including Colonel jTiiic Zeretell. The Bolshevist retreated tip the valley. where they have been holding nightly meeting, threatening to bum all the tV movement, villages not joining and promising no taxation and free fire a re r.OML, .lin, 1, (By .. th. It Restated i The err for the tourist of America. Eng and and France Is heard throughout Italy. It is as strong In Venice and Genoa, aa ia Rut- Italian ritfes have- - increased Rome, at such an amazing rate tnelr durpopulationwar that there seem to be no ing the room for tourista. Hotels In a'l the larger citie ars crowded to overflowing at all times. Apartment' and house are not available at any price. Rent have been kept down bv law, and municipal authorities are hard pressed to find shelter for the population that has flocked to the cities. Rome had only 000 Inhabitant before the opening of the war. It now ha 900 000, and seems to be dVv There are few foreigners. growing One seldom hear anything but Italian spoken in hotels. rales aftd theater. The street are crowded day and night. In Its palmiest dav Rome had ,000 000 In the thirteenth century Inhabitant. when the papacy moved to Avignon, In France, the ont rrand capital of the world hginu a deserted ruin, with only 13,0(0 inhabitant. VX? Jn. Wit Pres . tv A EAGER FOR TOURISTS, BUT HAVE NO ROOM Now Playing in Orchestra Expert Sayt They Must Be Large Cities tf Italy Are Haring Diffiand Paying Money Back Inhabited by Soul of culty In Housing Their Own NORWAY TO DEVELOP People. GREAT COAL' FIELDS in Small Sums. Bolshevists. Departed Ei Universal Service. VIENNA, Jsn. 17. Karl Kraminex. a Bohemian violinist, has just been, from" the municipal lunatic asylum at Budapest, where for twelve months he successfully feigned Insanity ta procure free board and lodging. During his stay there Kraminex deceived the whole of the medical staff, uho were convinced that he was a dangerous maniac and placed him in a soil-to- r v cell. he recently succeeded Thence by scratching away part of the wainscoting in making hla wsy Into the general ward. There he read the news thst food and lodging were now to be ootatned in the loan at more reasonable prices. The supposed man Iso instantly became a normal being, and, when questioned by the bouse doctor and warders, he calmly confessed his ruse. Krsmlnex now plays at night In a restaurant orchestra, and at the conclusion of eath performance an aeylum official deducts from his pay a fixed amount toward repaving Ills expenses while being a "madman. FOOMI Country Along Railway The moemnt growing stronger daily, tne Bolehevirt are well armed and a number of'macnino gun. Sevposse eral former Kartaline nnd Jmcretlan prince are said to have Joined the rebels, a well a nuneou village. The movement also is extending southwhole community. ward from the Bolshevist concentration at Huram, on the Batoum rali- j po.nt Possesses Mother nay. toward Akhallailaki. Tsgavert, only Lady Astor possesses mother wit, six mile from Baukouran. where U loand she inis shown that if is possible cated one pf the most important AmerNear East relief to share democratic views with all ican orphanage inof the hands of the Bothe organization, sections of the people. To parliament, lshevist. therefore, she has been sent, because she is the best exponent of the view, CARDINAL DENOUNCES of those who have elected her. ( Lady Astor will remember that she ABBREVIATED DRESS is the first woman to take her seat in the mother of parliuments. Tlie solemn trout and high responsibilities will Father Bernard Vaughan of London Also Haa Something to Say ot not be betrayed in her hands. Naturally there are those Who can see no gooti Scant Garments. to her sex. Turn back the pages of we and shall read the ancient history LONDON, Jan. 17. (By the Associated prophet calling aloud when the test Press.) Cardinal Amette.a few day a so, was removed which excluded members In a pastoral letter, denounced the abof the Roman and Jewish aiths from breviated ferments for women popular, ized by Parisian fashions. Father Berparliament. Parliament within the last twenty nard Vaughn of London, who In the past has said hard of many the follies things years lias said it was an impossible and of the rich, has now, thought that women should be elected In anextravagance followed the Interview, cardinal' as aldermen, and if as mavors, how example. He said: were thev to be addressed! Similar coWhen I ask myself what Is Inspiring nundrums are being, discussed as to this tendency to nudity tn women modwhether the woman member is to wear ern costume my answer Is It canuo( be a hat or it she is to be addressed dif- a rightful desire to promote the health of our debutantos, because today's want ferently from any other honorable mem- of clothes Is savagely exposing them to ber. consumption and its kindred ailments, not Fo I am by hundreds, but thousands. May Make Mistakes. assured by competent authority. The Jew has been permitted to take old"Our girls, who ought to live to a ripe drop and die like flowers the oath, with his head Covered, ac- unfedage, droop, Imby warmth and sunshine. cording to the traditions of his faith, properly fed and Immodestly dressed, they and doubtless Lady Astor will follow defy all the laws of hygiene, and down the convention of her sex in wearing they go. her headgear. Parliament, when it settles down, will find the woman member differs little from the rest of the member. She will find her place and make her position. She will commit the tame mistakes and learn the same lessons. To women it is naturallv a greit moment in the storv of their recognition in the freest and greatest democracy of the world. Only those who have lived under disqualifications know what it is to feel that these barriers are forever removed. We believe - that Lady Astor will worthily represent . her constituency and that she will inform parliament at first hand that women are worthy the place which has been granted to them in the new age. - Her majesty Queen Wilbelmiua of llollaml arming at Hreskena, Hol. land, during her tour uf the proxmeea ef Limburg, Xealmni and iouuf misses of Iiresken are strewing flower in tha path of the popular queen, who received a ervat reception throughout the province. of The queen 'a tour, it ia thought, did much to strengthen the u birds and weld rinser the patriotiam and interests of her people. Thia i the latest photograph of the queen. By PAXTON HI8BEN. tUhlcaffO Trltnjn Cabt; t.'oFyTUht.) 7.) TITUS, pec. H- .- (VIa Paris, The whole countryside along the Ba tount-Tini- - Queen Wilhelmina Tours Provinces First Woman M. P. Said to Tdgaveri, Near Site of American Orphanage, in Realize Responsibilities Hands of Radicals. of Her Position. FRANCIS BALFOUR, President of the London Society for Womens Suffrage. LONDON, Jan. 17. Lady AMors election to parliament naturallv Ims excited many differing emotion. Hie has taken her seat, introduced by the two outsanding members of that house, of which- she is mow ft mehibcr. Mr. Balfour ha )mg held n pliilo soph ical and logical belief that women should have equal opportunities in the state. Mr. I.loyd George has had a sporadic belief in adult suffrage. Mr. Balfour has known I,adv Astor as a friend for man- - rears, and on that footing of a Krsnnal and proved friendship her constituents have elceted her their member with no uncertain or doubtful vote. It is another sign of the times that, in large democracies, it is the indivtd ual that counts. Many, no doubt, voted against Ladv Astor s candidacy merely on the ground that she was a woman; others voted for her because she was a woman who had proved bv many acts of the hand, guided bv the head, .that she had a living interest in all that pertained to the good of the -- Aflame. - By LADY in ait er - cies informed him, one single tons nor In the whole of Paris. The president then made tentative arrangements for a suit of three rooms at the Ritx Dne day in looking over the newspapers he saw that an al ld welfare organization was shout to vacate Us ... tahlishnent on the R". Marbe&u, near the Hols dti Boulogne. Without ksing a moment, he ordered hi chauffeur to take him the:, took one look at house, drove to the agent and bought the pla.v for (III oo. Paintand decorators ar row race in ing aev n apartment vacant te e h'. by barter, thereby change fluctuation. eliminating the Submarine Crew Rewarded. II.-h- Bi Jmb. LON'DO V. the Aenciit'4 Press. The crew of the fsmoos Rntuh fct,:. marine E 14, width in the war penetrated and sunk n Tnrklek transport UOOtl cart-vintroops, has received SB nward AXl.ftuO tor that eipV.it. readv for the president when he lest eg the Etysee. o'flcial home of the chief In Februarv. Th mansion ia an elahnra O'. ! ' vast marble rotunda, from which b. Hard, dining, and reception roon s oper ' 9u'Ou the first floor I t .( room ht . he point are a library arid study, he wl.l write articca for tne !a" Figaro. one of th moat nr 1 ne hnuae la aeet ona of Paris and the a - e totra'ir a has been ' made fane-tue Xiariteau 7a N g r in Hrn Boid-au-- x r . - i. . i -- |