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Show Editorial Mines tv, Financial RUST GATHERING UPON ZEPPELINS AT FRIEDRICHSHAFEN Queen Mary of Rumania Shows Unusual Business Tact Dramatic Confession Made Financial Chaos Threatened Marrying for Former Naval.Ofhcer House Is Latest a by Great Britains Huge Budget, by on Other Side to the Murder of His Wife Paish Declares Sir George her June PUTST . Service Cable.) 19. He married is the new way have of explaining unexpected matings. No progress is being made toward solving the great housing problem here, tnd any spinster, no matter how by nature, can find a suitor nowadays if she lyra a ready-mad- e home. Beautiful flappers" living with their parents will remain Isa drug on me - maruntil predicted riage market. It voung couples find It easier to obtain houses. (Universal LONDON. for her house, British Economist Says Credit System Is Falling to Pieces Under the Policy Pursued by Chancellor of Exchequer. Well-know- n She Convinces Hard-heade- d Business Man That Bonds of Her Country Are Good Every Little Nook and Corner of Her Kingdom and Is Loved by All. Knows BUCHAREST, June 13. (By the Associated Press.) Queen Mary of Rumania dleplayed her business ability and her faith In her country by putting through an Important deal in locomotives not long ago. The Rumanian railways were There In sad need of the new engines. and English French were American. agents here to sell locomotives, but for money only. None of them had enough faith In Rumania to sell them for except for cold, hard cash Then the president of an American concern who had been selling locomotives An Interto Poland, came to Rumania. view was arranged between him and the queen, who presented such a strong argument on the future of lier country and busid its resources that the ness American agreed to furnish locomotives and rolling stock and to take in payment Rumanias national bonds. The queen believes In Rumania and she knows how to convince others, because she has been over every foet of its ground. During the days that she was princess she traveled by train and by automobile and on horseback until she has come to know all of the resources of her country and a great many of Its any-mh- g hard-heade- people. Talks of Her Work. Here is what she said to the Associated Press correspondent about lier country The queen of a small country! Those are accustomed to see rulers of a great land can little understand what It means. It means work and anxiety and hope, and a great tolling for smallIf rethe sults. But the field Is large and heart Is willing, great Is the work. a as Queen Mary has a reputation writer and now that the war Is over she has resumed the literary work she abandoned when the war began. Whatever may be the value of what 1 write, I am happy to say that I have1 she explained. facility tn writing, WTita in the morning before I begin my day's work, but interruptions do not disturb me. I have to see someone. I go back to my desk and am able to take UP thg unfinished sentence where I left it Part of my writing Is In the nature-o- f a Journal which I have kept throughout the war, but it Is of such an Intimate nature that much of it cannot be published until long after I am dead. who Writes Fairy Stories. The most admired work of the queen, aside from her fairy stories, la a little book entitled "My Country, wherein, In a casual Impressionistic manner, the of her travels tells through the queen country, describing the life of the peasants, their desire to own the soil, thtlr willingness to work hard, the quatnt costumes of the women, the curious architecture of the churches and houses, the beautiful women of the country and the charm of the winding, dusty roads. For all her beauty and fine clothes, the queen is not afraid of dirt. This fact is shown In her boundless admiration for the dusty plains and dustier roads of her country. One day during the German occupation of Rumania, she was riding along one of the dusty roads of Bessarad bia, when she saw and picked up an little orphan girl, that was part of a group of refugees, but seemed to belong to nobody In particular. Illy-cla- By SIR GEORGE PAISH. British Economist.) June 19. A British budget for an expenditure LONDON. provides $6,000,000,000, with the of Indefinite continuance, is likely to contribute powerfully to the financial and economic disaster which la now threatening Europe, Including Great Britain, and which, unless step are taken to avert It without further delay, will Imperil the welfare of all the nations. Great Britain has a duty to the world which no other nation possesses, for It has been main'y. Indeed almost entirely, responsible for the growth of the credit system and the close dependence of nations upon each other for the prime necNow that the whole essaries of life. credit system Is falling to pieces, not only does the British chancellor "of the exchequer do nothing to strengthen It, but he is actually contributing to Its collapse by tacitly assenting to a permanent expenditure beyond England's capacity to (Well-know- n meet. Cripples Helping Power. In introducing a budget which provides for so great an expenditure In a year of peace he Is crippling the power of Great Britain to render effective help to the nations in their need. In future, approximately 30 per cent of the Income of tlis British people will be required to provide for their government's expenditure, ugalnet a prewar proportion of a little over S per cent. The continual absorption of labor and of income by these vast expenditures cannot fail most seriously to handicap and4 diminish the power of Great Britain to pay for the food and material which; she and the other natlone of Europe need to buy from abroad in order to maintain life and to restore their productive power. The fact that the league of nations has already Issued invitations for a worltf financial conference, and in Us invita tion has definitely stated that the world Is at this moment In a condition of financial and economic disorder, with results that are at present so serious and may in future becomo so dangerous that the league of nutions catinot ignore them without falling In its most essential duties, has done more to raise hopes of the difficulties being overcome than any action that has yet been taken or any statement that has yet been made. Indeed, no small part of the recovery in British exchange In recent weeks and of tlie relative steadiness of the franc and of the lira has come from the knowledge that the league of nations, with the approval of the various powers, was to call a world financial conference at which the world crisis would be fully discussed and the facts of the situation frankly faced. One of the main reasons for the very small productions of Europe is the Immense government expenditures, not only of England, but of France, Italy, Germany, and. Indeed, of practically all the great nations expenditures not for production, but for consumption, which, indeed, diminish production . and Increase consumption. Huge Government Expenses. The world's aggregate government expenditures at the present time are in thousands of millions of pounds, whereas previously they were in hundreds of millions. In the current crop sea non most of the continental nations are suffering seriously from famine, as their own productions are small anti they have not the means of buying from other nations With the present outlook for the world's cnoDs, the continued extravagance of governments and of peoples upon and with still greater shortage of International credit tn prospect, their sufferings wit) greatly Increase, and consequently the forces making for changes In the organisation of society are likely to be more powerful than most people desire to .contemplate. Meantime, the new British taxes fall upon almost everyone, directly or Indirectly, and the effect of the budget must be a further appreciable percentage advance In the cost of thing. Cooperative Homes Are Urged as Aid to Worlds Progress L Germans Are Much Excited Over Fact That Country May Be Added to Poland. OPPELN, Upper Silesia, June 19. (By Preus. ) German workmen in the plebiscite zone are tremendously excited over the election. Zealous patriots and firm In the belief that Germany soon will be on its feet again, of they are dlsmajed at the possibility to Poland. Upper Silesia being added Irremediable an and Ruin of Industry setback to German labor In the district ts the dark picture they paint of Polish victory. Seeking the views of Upper Silesian workmen on the plebiscite, the correOppeln spondent asked the editor of an with .lanewspaper to arrange a meeting bor leaders. The editor got together a are the prinHere all German. dozen, cipal points of their arguments: be a ca"Alliance with Poland would Silesian workmen, tastrophe for Upper as they would be deprived of the benefit of German social and labor legislation, such as workmen's Insurance and comreprepensation acts and the employees' sentation in the operation of Industrial and commercial concerns. Poland Is an agricultural country and and economically. backward socially hsd Lacking lnduatrlea, the Poles have manlittle experience in the scientific In Bveu and factories mines of agement the Poles still use the most agriculturemethods In and implements. primitive their unskilled hands the highly complicated industrial mechanism of Upper Silesia would be ruined. Polish labor Is underpaid. Upper compared to Poland, Is a labor paradise. If It becomes part of Poland, Poles would flock Jn and overrun the country, reducing wage and working standards and, forcing the Germans out of employment, "If Upper Silesia becomes Polish It goes with the east. If It sta,s Germau ft goes with the west, and Its people will follow in the path of the democracies ot England and the United Statea" Much was said about democracy. No bolshevlst sentiment was expressed at all. These Germans professed great of Poland's foreign policy, which they declare to be Imperialistic, but they asserted that the Poles were suoh an unstable people that their policy was likely to change over night. "German Upper Silesians want to remain with democratic Germany, they said. German workmen want to settle down to work and restore German Industries. They want to show the world that Germany can fulfill the obligations of the But the war indemnity peace treaty. cannot be paid if Germany Is deprived of the raw materials Upper Silesia can sup- the Associated June 13. When every house one kitchen, run on PARIS, lines by an expert cook, and chamberwork is done by competent malde; when. In short, the low priced apartment hoUbe or flat is run on the com monsense .basis at present applied, only to expensive apartment hotels, then the world will be really able ' to progress. . . All civilization Is based on a certain have real progTo amount of slavery. ress, there must be leisure leisure for thought, for the appreciation of beauty, leisure to live. Modern industrial conditions, as well as the trouoles arising subsequent to the war when so many men were taken away from their work and given time so-to tnink and to grow dissatisfied with cial conditions as they are, have, through their repercussion on the servant prob- lem and the housing problem, unbal- Once Commander of Yankees and Danes CROUZET-BENATO- Writer Lniversal and Sociologist. Service Cable. -- dls-tru- st 'Tv Makes Friends Easily. The queen makes it a point to be in touch with all sorts of opinion and has made friends with a great many of the radical politicians of Rumania. Not long since, she invited all the writers and newspaper folk of Rumania to her home, serving them tea and had a talk with them. She ex plained that she was working Just as were for the good of Rumania, told they them that perhaps In the past she had not worked as ehe might, confessed that she had been ignorant, if not misguided, but promised to do better In the future and asked to be permitted to work with them to the common end o,f making their greater. -country The queen Is keenly alive to the social changes brought by, the war, to the posne ssibility that thrones are unstable, butmuon Is said to believe that there is still that kings and queens can do If they stick to their Jobs and smile. hesrt-to-hea- rt ... Great Craft Resting Idly in Their Hangars and Are Forced to Remain There. sorry. 1 took the body and threw ll down In the river. 'I don't care what happens to me. 1 am speaking the truth. That pendant, tf you get hold of it, must be full ol knew 1 was guilty: I am guilty. bloo4. I look that pendant from my wife's neck, This pin also the chain and earrings. was ljtng on the bedroom floor. I took that simply to prove that tf Daisy Holt gave me away 1 would give her away. I told Ialsy I had done the Job. I told her the best thing was to poison ourselves She said, did I care more for my wife than I did for her? I said, 'Yes.' I felt that I ought to go to the police. She said, There will be no clew. Everyand 1 will stick thing will be all right, to you through thick and thin.' She kissed never be able to would I I told her mi love her. She asked why. I said beme cause she had led astray. Says Girl Insisted. Goslett and his wife lived In the fashionable London suburb, Holders Green. Miss Holt was given . accommodations as a lodger and Goslett became infatuated with her. The triangle lasted for more than six months, and, according to his statement to the police. Miss Holt insisted from the very first day that Mrs Goslett must be killed. This, however, the police entirely disbelieve, and art taking no action against the girl. "I am going to have the rope and am going down under. I am speaking tht truth. I have been putting it off from day to day for the last six months, i meant doing it a couple of nights before, but my heart failed me. Daisy called m a coward when I saw her afterward, ths same as she has often, done. I killed the best woman. "I see my mistake. Daisy Is the coward. When I returned home on Saturday night I intended to poison myself, and I asked her to take poison with me. She was too frightened. Spends Wretched Night. We spent a wretched night. Believe me. I never Intended escaping. I never even troubled to get out of bed and drees. I was In bed when the police came to the door. Goslett and his wife were savin te purchase a home near Brent Bridge. Hendon. He was waiting to receive $1600 from the government for hi gratuity war services and the day of the murder a letter came notifying him thatlt bad been placed to IiIb credit. This would have enabled him to buy ttjetr home. Goslett tn blaming Miss Holt for the deed declared that she chose the ttme and place. "Tide murder Is entirely my owm fault, I was forced to do It. On tlie first occasion when I did not do It I was called a coward and threatened by' this girt. This was not the first occasion. Hlie has been running on and on. On April 30 she wanted bie to do It then. My wife was down there, but I could npt ha,ve the evefl my wife. I thought the world of her and this girl tantalized me to kill her.. Da lav said there were plenty of places doAn by the river. Same Old Excuse. "She suggested that I take my wife to see the house we Intended buying, stun her and throw her- In the river, which 1 did. 1 don't know whether I struck her three or four times, as I had too much whisk v down my neck. I did not feel myself drunk, but I felt very, very funny. My limbs gave way. I felt sorry, awfullv - Palace 1 Devonshire Honse , Workmen, Not Permitted to Fashion Them, Put Time In on Kitchen Utensils. Chicago 19. a. m I told "On Saturday, May my wife to meet 'me at the Prince Albert at 9:15 that night to look at a house. When I left home at 4 oclock to go to Richmond I put the tire lever in my pocket. I took it with me for the . pur. . of killing my wife that nlghL returned by bus to Golders Green. 1 drank the whisky I had previously taken from heme. 1 spotted my wife waiting for me and said to her, Gome along. She took my right arm. We then turned into one of the roads to 4 he place where she was found- 1 said to her. I don't exactly know where It is, referring to the house I was pretending to purchase. As we were walking along she said, It Is rather a long way.'1 the river As we were approaching dropped the parcel of beads on1Lths new I did not notice road, but she did not know there was a river there unlit I came up to it. It was Daisy Holt who suggested I should take my wife down to that place and stuu her and throw her Into the river. . . , "I turned to my wife. I thought it was the time to do iL 1, at 7 - ' -- Describes, New Kiss Follows Killing.' f struck her on the back of the head with the tire lever. 1 struck her three or four blows. She was clean gone when he fell. When she fell I took the Jewelry from her neck, the pendant and1 chain and the earrings from her ears. looked for a diamond brooch, but could not find It. . . .'I kissed her hand with the wedding ring on and said I was sorry and then flung her overboard. I picked up her bag and also the parcel and ran home. I met no one until I got back to I returned home by the high rood. I knew all about the back entrance. It and so did Daisy. "This is king's . The statement ended, evidence I am giving here. A handbag belonging to the dead woman and a shirt and collar belonging to Goslett were delivered to the police by the The trinkets, which murderer. he removed from his wife's body after slaying her, lie Intended for Miss HolL ...... blood-stain- By ELEANOR JEWETT. Tribe a Balt Lake Trilraaa Cable. FRIEDRICHSHAFEN, Germany, June Undopbtedly whatever the fame of Friedrtchehafen formerly rested upon, U rests now upon the fact that there was conceived and brought to fulfillment a man's dream the Zeppelin. Under the present wording of the treaty ef Vers allies the dirigibles which now lie ready for flight In their huge hangars may not fly. Nor may the workmen, skilled In the fashioning of each delicate part, now wont upon their creation.' Instead, the ahipa lie Idle and the men are put to the making of pote and pans and other kitchen utenslla to BerComing up from Switzerland lin. I went through Constance and several villages along the Bodensee. half buried In huge masses of blossoms, for the apple orchards all through that part of the country were In full bloom, and day to stopped at Frjedrichahafen forha a accomsee exactly what Germany plished In her passenger aircraft. Lured Her to Death. ed blood-stain- Sends for Police. Before his confession Goslett detailed a long statement accounting for his absence on the night of the murder. This he later refuted. and returned I went to Richmond hotne at 10 minutes past 10. be said. He accounted for damp clothes by saying that lie had cut across fields to get home. The police accepted hi story, But realization of what he had done and the groat love he bore for his wife, down his despite his Infatuation, broke called the calmness,' and he voluntarily take confession. to hi police The statement came out at the InquesL Testimony given by detectives who InMiss vestigated the crime and questionedhouseHolt and other members cf the hold ws to the effect that they had been unable to find any corroboration whatever of the suggestion made by Goslett In ills statement with regard to Daisy Holt. High Golfing to Be Made of 03d Child Is Adopted. The queen gathered up the child In her arms and took it home, thinking later to find its mother. To (Jate the mother as not been found, so the queen has dopted the little girl as a member of her own family. Another girl that the queen has almost adopted is Miss Anne Shaw of Philadelphia, who has been in Rumania with tlie American Red Cross for more than a jear. Mias Shaw came to know the queen through her Red Cross work, and then, especially Prlnoess Elisabeth, with whom she has struck up a fast friendship. The queen heartily approves of the friendship and when Miss bhaw is about the house, the queen treats her as a younger sister. Queen Marv is a good Judge of human nature. When she receives a stranger, she puts him through a sort of third degree. She places him a chair facing a lighted window whereas she sits with her back to the light and if the stranger meets with her approval, as a person td be trusted, she then Is apt to remark: 1 think that light is too strong for and asks him or her to your eyes, change the seat, Then she is ready for conversation. By FORBES W, FAIRBAIRN, Universal Service Staff Correspondent. ONDON, June 19. For love of a beautiful girl, Arthur Andrew Goslett, a retired naval officer, lured his wife to a lonoty spot on the hanks of the River Trent, crushed her skull with s steel rod and threw her body into the river. In a dramatic and sensational confession made to Scotland Yard, Goslett, remorseful and repentant, accused the young woman, Daisy Holt, of being the instigator of the crime. "She alienated my affeetton from my wife and has been the Instigator of this I killed the best woman. murder I kissed her hand with the wedding I was sorry and then on said and ring beautiflung her body overboard. This ful fTend, Daisy Holt, lured me on and on I her!" to kill had until The murder and the extraordinary confession that followed filled columns of The callousness ot British newspapers. the crime and the care displayed by Goslett In carrying It out and preparing an ailbl recalls the masterpieces of Frenob detective stories. Sherlock Holmes would have enjoyed unraveling the clews of the case. Saper-Mor- ie Are Best Judges of Half Million Troops Music, Says Heifetz Plays With Pebbles 10 FIT Declares, However, That He Was Driven to Crime by Urgings of Yourfg Woman With Whom He Was Deeply Infatuated. ... anced the lives of the people of the middle classes. It Is alwajs possible for the very rich to get servants, secretaries or whatever help is required. But under present conditions, this is rendered almost impossible for the middle classes. Now the Intellectual efforts of ths middle classes are of paramount Importance to the eonvnunity. cannot bo They stunted without stunting the whole level of a country. Therefore, in order to make it Possible for tlie middle classes to survive In the struggle for existence and. to maintain intellectual interest, the material Dominions of modern life should be reorganized so as to enable each man to get the maximum comfort at a minimum cost. At present it would seem as If the orhouses were ganisation of cooperative one of the best solutions of the problem. houses should be constructed Cooperative In all parts of the city, to suit all purses. cases In most it would be a relatively simple matter to adopt the average apartment house. "When living conditlonj, are satisfactory' man ts able to devote his entire time and energy to the things ply. that make human life worth living. By T. Lon-Jone- rs ALLOWED Cost Craft. Tho first Zeppelin was built tn a huge hall which later proved too small, as the became possibilities of size in these ahipenext two evident to thetr builders. The 0 meters 180 measure long. halls built meters wide and 40 rooters high. They are vast, airy spaces In which on feels completely lost. The first hall, en the day of ray violt, sras empty "except for a motorboat lying In perched on wooden horsee In a corner. the second hall, however, wss the Nord-atenever the new Zeppelin which has yet been flown. It Is a perfectly beautiful thing. Graceful, slim, light strong, fail proportioned words marvelously miserably to describe the absolute grace and power of its lines. Facts may convey eomethlng. The Nordstem measures 180 meters long. It carries thirty passengers, a crow of thirteen and a captain. The motive power Is from three Maybach engines of 260 horsepower, making 560 revolutions a minute. The normal speed of the boat is It is the sister ISO kilometers an hour. ship of the Bodensee, the Zeppelin which before the times flown many had been peace treaty closed down its activities. Fittings Are Luxurious. Both ships are equipped with wireless telegraphy, kitchens possessing fireless cookers, and mail boxes. An excellent steward is taken. The passenger cabins, seating thirty, have unbelievably comfortable chairs made of hollow wood ami upholstered In apricot plush. The walls of the cabin of the Nordstern are done In old rose. A carpet ts on the floor. One could, were the ship allowed to fly, play cards, write letters, telegraph,. eaL drink and be merry, and at the same time, for the sum of 450 marks about $9 be carried in a little less than four hours to Berlin. A trip which by train takes a good twenty-fou- r. The record trip of the Bodensee wss from Frledrichshafen to Berlin 3 hours 45 minutes. Another record trip was made early in September, when the Zeppelin left Berlin early in the morning, arrived at Stockholm at noon, changed passengers, and got back to Berlin the same evening. By train, one way, it takes 26 hours to make this trip. Heated by Engines. in London Does Not Tlie English dirigible which creased the ocean was copied from the German model, and a great many of the construction ; parts have been put .into English ships. By the way. the passenger cabins on th Zeppelins are heated by hot sir supplied by the engines. Another feature is that they are equipped to carry heavy luggage Cad- and, above the passenger cabin, a little to the back, is arranged a second room where the engineers can sit and smoko Run during their hours off duty. The ships Up are made of aluminum and wood. Going from the hangars to th factory it seemed to me a bit too bad that the Figures. men who hsd mad these ships and could make others are doomed to turn out piles I watched upon piles of kitchen stuff. I them for a while in the different stages Cairene Berries Cable. of a Lonbut In 19. Golf the perfecting strong and cheap, LONDON, June aluminum kettle or a pot or a pan. don district Is floating well up on the light, The men as well ss their employers !L C. L. wavs, for It costs no less than seemed to feel keenly the almost ond $30 a week to play the game here. might call It degradation of their new In Scotland players can still have a Job. round for $ cents on some of the finest courses of the world. WOMEN But In the metropolis It is mainly a matter of automobiles, expensive club LEAD luncheons and retinues of caddies, with entrance fees running to $120 and anTheir Treatment Is Darkest Blot on nual subscriptions to $75. Even So, the demand for membership the Country, Says Member ts so great that In the biggest clubs only scratch players of good social standing of Parliament. are accepted. LONDON, June 19. (By th Associated IDEAS Press) Th treatment of women in Egypt is th darkest phase of Egyptian BEING life, says a. N. Barnes, member of parliament, who has recently returned from a tour of that country. By MINOTT BAUNDERS. The men. tn Egypt, said Mr. Barnes, so Lake Trtbuae Cabla Chirac Tr1ban.-B.l- t far ss marital relations were concerned, COBLENZ, June 19. Slowly, but sur' thought themselves the lords of creation. out the old ly, is Germany a tangling They could divorce their wive at will Ideas. Hi-rand there signs without whim or reason, and it was not of the times are seen almost daily. uncommon for a man to have three wire. Over tha main door of th postofflc continued Mr. In many houses, in Ooblens the familiar words Kaiser- - Barnes, "I never a woman and you no longer appear. In can take it from me that th poeitlon of lichee Poetamt thetr place are Inscribed the simple In- th women tn Fgvpt i aosoiniely mm of scription, "German Postoffice." serfdom and dependence. They spend A recent order from th ministry of their lives tn miserable hovels; in working posts tn Berlin directed the removal of In the adjoining fieki. or in getting waall Imperial liras from the poetofflee ter. buildings and the substitution of InscripThey are the eerfs of the men and a tions conforming with the new repub- much easts of burden as the donkey and lican status of Germany. the camel. A people which usee women So th weather-wor- n and civilization-wor- n folk tn that way are destined to be a letters, two feet high have been subject race and do not deserve to chiseled oft Feaze the Devotees General Vassili Denikin Is World's Youngest Promi- Correspondent Tells of His Historic Ducal Residence in Autos, Luncheons and to dies Prices nent Violinist Discusses Living in Seclusion at in Ancient Piccadilly Is to Undergo Experiences Transformation. Unusual Sussex, England. Appreciation of Work. Institution in Anatolia. . CoiTtml Service Cable. LONDON. June 19. General VaaaUl hope of the RusDenikin, the sian reactionaries, is now working out tactical problems with pebbles on the beach of Pevenaey bay, Sussex. From a respectful distance. smll crowds of villagers gather andhe watefi marhim as, seated on the seashore, shals the pebbles Into companies, batin then them deploys talions, armies and battle order. solitary stranger, The solwho was known to his diers of southern Russia as "FatIn Papa, a la living in complete seclusion cottage. While he Is deriving with pebbles, new moves to defeat the red, bis faithful sit at a window srtfe and daughter Catverael Berrtce Cable. Rejuvenation Proposed u Old Lad -- for London's y SHANGHAI, June 19, (By the Associated Press.) Under a systematized plan of licensing by which the number of permits issued will be decreased yearly. It It Intended within five years to banish disreputable houses from tha International settlemant of Shanghai. Thle- recommendation was suggested by s vice commission which conducted an Investigation through last year and has been adopted by the taxpayers. gray-bearde- half-milli- ed dressmaking. i Universal Service Cable. The rebuilding of LONDON, June the business sections of Ixmdon on modern plans approximating to the New York system ts to be advanced considerably by the tearing down of the historic Bank of England, famous as the Old Lady of Threadneedle street, ' and the erection In strucIts stead of a palatial seven-flo19. or ture. The site, described nfuie finest tn the world, has an area of four acres. The present low, rambling building, dwarfed by the fine new structures round the Royal Exchange, was built between 1733 and 1718. PARIS, June 19. Jascha Heifetx, the world's youngest prominent violinist, says American and Danish audiences are the most appreciative of good music. "I try to make ail my audiences understand what my music is trying to tell Heifetz told Universal Service, them, but these two nations seem to understand the beat. "America is my home, although I wasn't born there. tt I am longing to return to my cottage, but my engagements will keep me away for more than a year. Narra-ganse- Shanghai Is Making War on Disreputable Houses INNOVATION INTRODUCED. BERLIN, June 19. (By tha Associated Press.) The first divine service with moving pictures tn a German church has Just taken place at the Zwlngtl church here. Pictures of the Passion were thrown on the screen, and music by Bach was rendered by the church choir By PAUL WILLIAMS. New Turk Times Balt Lake Tribune Cable. ANGORA. Anatolia. June 19. Unmistakable signs of foreign and unwelcome life upon my person led to my introduc- tion today to a real Turkish bath, which is at least one good thing which the world has borrowed from the Ottoman. Europe and America have improved upon the Turkish bath and1 made it sanitary, but they have not deviated much from the system. Abdul Accompanied by Lieutenant Rahmen, an Afghan on the general staff who speaks the king's English, and equipped with some of his clean duds, I went to the city's principal bathhouse. one large room for disrobing, There furnished with divans and tapestries, and without chairs. An attendant presented me with two large Turkish towels and a square of fancy lavender cloth. There were no hangers for clothing; that was to be bundled In the lavender cloth. The hot room was circular, about forty feet in Vilameter. had a circular stone bench In the center, and a dome room remindful of a brick kiln. Lying about were several pieces of human clay being baked. Heat came from the stone floor heated underneath by fires which hsd not been permitted to die out even onoe In ISO years. rooms opened from d Small ths hot rooms In each were two square stone basins into which the hot water flowed. This water was not to he used directly. In front of each basin was a hammered brass dipper on a stone stool. Almost everything was stone. An exception were the wrooden sandals upon a stone-wille- s Universe! Berries Cable. LONDON, June 19. Devonshire House, the historic ducal residence in Picatiilly, theis to become England's super-movater. Two bu.ltiess men Shurmer Sibtborp and Laurence Harrison have bought the mansion and site for l5.iW.WI), outbidding John MacE. Bowman, who wanted to build a London Blltmoru there. They announce their intention to tear down the mansion and ereot In Its place a movie theater accommodating 600 people, a palatial reetaurant and a huge dancing ami assembly hall. to retain the "I have the legal right name of Devonshire House," says Mr. It will he the finest equipped Slbthorp. and most lavish picture house, on New York line, in this country. The famous crystal staircase, along which stately dames and lords tn bygone days were accustomed to pass on will be retained great socialns occasions, the ascent to the dancing and used hail; but wthe duke is removing the hisindowa, doors and paneling. toric old ie , OF EGYPT UNHAPPY LIFE MONARCHISTS STAMPED OUT lc e which patrons walked to keep their feet from the floor. It wss clean, but not any more sanitary than could be expected of a floor whlcn had not been Bushed for 180 years. An attendant brought more Turkish towels No one rubs himself with towels jn a Turkish bath. They are thrown about the body to abeorb moisture and Back in changed as often ss necessary. the dressing rooms patrons lounged about tor half an hour, drinking tea of coffee, smoking cigar eta and conversing quietly. I . i |