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Show EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES SPORTS MINES FINANCIAL REAL ESTATE America Aiding Starving Russians IS ON American Legion Officials TO FINISH X , Forest Fires Reach Great Dumps of Shells. Piled Up in Days of World Conflict N v ' Mustapha Kemal, Head of Army, Explains His Stand in Contest With Greeks. DIXHUDE,-- Belgium, Aug. r A e ot Turkey in Asm,, who Is fighting tha Greeks, Is a short, stocktly built man. who wears European cloths, speaks French and German fluently and looks one over with keen, gray eyes, the right one of which is marred by a cast. The Greek offensive was Just beginning when the oorrespoudent found him at his pretty villa on the hllla a mile distant st Cleanup Is Promised. Why destroy the fabric that holds the near east together? No political arrangement is perfect, .but this was the best to be found It is my honest belief that a pre-wTurkey is still the only solution, with the Turks even made responsible, as before, for the neutrality of the straits. We have given up tt the British and the French, Mesopotamia and Syria, and the peoples there must work out their national destinies as they see fit. But where the Turk population la in the majority we should, control, and we expect to. Peace? Of course we went it. It Is the antes and the Greeks who continue the war. It is ruining ell of us, but our ruin would be immediate if we accepted their terms. When we have gotten Hd of the Greeks, we .will continue our sincere effort to keep going an honest naFor one thing, we tional government. will dean up Constantinople, morally. war and since the ally the great During occupation It has become a disgrace to a that might well be civilisation, place burned to ashes as it stands. ar Prospecting for Gold Popular in Australia e ? , . MELBOURNE, Aug. 27. (By the Press ) Prospecting for gold Is one the most alluring charms of life in Australia. It may be enjoyed only a few miles bevond the boundaries of the larger cities and there are etfll many eager adventurers on the trail for surface gold. This is attested by their frequent success. Thirty miles from this city two prospectors in June smelted approximately 11204 worth of gold, obtained from the quarts, and during their sojourn on the one site realized 16000 worth of the precious metal. Precious stones are also available. During June large deposits of sapphires were discovered in the basalt country of New South Wales. Two syndicates are prospecting the field and have obtained some , exceptionally fine gems. On of the finest pearls in the world, found In Australian pearling waters, was a gem larger than a sparrow's egg recently exhibited by James Clark, a Queensland farmer and pearl magnate. Asso-clte- Gould Backing Theater for Dancing in Paris i u 1 r Service Cable.'" 27. A theater . imtimrlV" to , poetlo and rhythmic consecrsted Is to be built at Paris by the dancing dancer Stowthe, partner of Parlowa, with capital supplied by an American group headed bv Frank J. Gould. Gould is interested In several other, theatrical ventures. Including the and Apollo theaters A ttny theater" la. being built In Montmartre by Maurice Maeterlinck. -- Aug. ' or Member of Shipping Firm . Decribe Conditions Prevailing in Russ Capital. in- K :V Copyright, Underwood A Underwood, New York. ' LLOYD GEORGES GIRL SECRETARY IS ADEPT N GUARDING SECRETS Great Responsibility Rests Upon the Shoulders Young 'Woman, Who Js the Confidante of ins Busy Premier. of a BY MARY CONAN DOYLE. is fully appearance. Miss " Stevenson mentally for her post, being a equipped London Honors (Classics) B. A. She Is an example of the linesi typo-oEnglish college girl, for she combines brilliant intellectual qualities with personal charm and attractiveness, and thers Is nothing of the stiff and .angular academician i about her. I asked if the premier ewer seemed overwhelmed by tha atreaa of life ho lives under. Not in the least. she said; "he ie at his best In a crisis a man built to meet An even existdesperate emergencies. ence would pall on him as monotonoua She went on to teU me rather an amusing Incident In connection with tile old militant suffragette days., A certain mysterious looking packet arrived for Lloyd Miss Stevenson, of course, George. opened it. to find it contained black pepper packed so tightly that the effort to pull out the smaller, envelope friuo. tha larger shot the contentsof into thewasrecipiTelia- - of War Work. . ent s face. The irony it all that . . Routine? There's hardly Miss Stevenson, was herself au ardent Miss Stevenson said. It s suffragette. any . . a matter of getting used to people and k'"' 'j. things, and the ability to adapt oneself Living Tradition. to them. There is reslly very little I Needless to say. Lloyd George did not could tell a successor to prepare her In fail to supply witty comments on,' the One Just has to attend to advance. r subject of her party. .arrive. th'hgs aa they It is woqderful to be Inside That house Sue told me that Lloyd George himself so in historic associations lives very like that, and how the only Its and so fixed and regular occurrence at No. 10 curiously ordinary and unpretentious in It is In the heart of the emis cabinet meetings. She turned her head appearance pire and full of British characteristics. toward a heavy folding door. Theres one going oil there now." Nothing outside but all 'its beauty and I could hear tint vague sound of voices spaciousness within. Best of all, It standa and wondered what weighty matter of for a living tradition and not a dead state was being discussed at the moment one which is shown by Us ability to acis your work of a conlidential na- cept changes. After countless generations ture? I asked her, of great It could scarcely be more so," she re- men have done their Ufa's work and plied, as all the correspondence passes passed on, these wallg now ehelter a woman whose career is but just begun through my hands. to what may this not lead? perhaps tha Illusion Is Shattered. beginning of a new age! The old saying that no woman can keep REFUGEES ARE CHECKED. a secret occurred to me. and 1 thought: BUDAPEST. Aug. 27. (By the AssoThere goes another shattered illusion of the past! ciated Preen) Hungarians, expelled from She told me something of how the vast of old organization runs. In connection with the parts out Hungary, by the new states are carved of them, have been fleeing piemiers arduous duties. There two into the new, smaller Hungary in such three private secretaries the other numbers the government has isthat men. Then the is there parliamenbeing -- a decree forbidding further entary secretary amt other members of sued tries for three months. The refugees the secretariat, including Philip Kerr. All the peisonal side we attend to." had crowded border village! and cities and their his said Miss Stevenson, such as keeping beyond capacity housing faciliengagements, attending to business cor- ties have been exhausted. respondence, etc. All special appointBRITONS WED GERMAN WOMEN. ments ars made through ua." She told me, smiling, how she rememLONDON, Aug. 27. (By the Assoclat- faof bered arranging the meeting my S with ther with Lloyd George - whan the two had breakfasted together. the army on the Rhine have married GerWho originated the breakfast?" man women since the occupation, it was Mr. Gladstone, I think then it was In the house of commons today by dropped tiil Lloyd George revived it stated a government spokesman In reply to a again. To many of us. the Idea of breakfast question. Ha added that It was not the office to encourage policy of the as a social meal presents nothing but takes a oart.cuiar irjer of mind such unions, but the department has no to feel bright ana normal first thing; the power to prevent them. majority prefer to be left to drift into full consciousness about noon. I asked Miss Stevenson how she first got her unique Job. She told me she had been a friend of Llovd George's daughter, with whom . she was at school, and that through this friendship she had got td ITiave dona This Know (he lamlly well. work tor e'ght years. she said, and I would not give it up for anything, It Is not to .be overlooked that, with all her Joyous personality and girlish To be the prime private secretary, and LONDON, woman to hold the these days of strain, and gloom, and general uncertainty), would seem a Job fraught with care and . snxtety. But how often popular conceptions err! Passing down a wide, corridor at No. 10 Downing street. I was shown Into a Georgian room, with white wails, big windows and beautiful mahogany furniture. Sitting at the writing desk was a girl. The light fell on her fair hair and clear akin, and aa she rose to greet me 1 mss struck by the youth and happy efficiency ot her. Yet one of the most responsible jobs In the kingdom rests on her slim shoulders! Aug. paired dwellings sr.d In search of dugouts, as they used to do during the four terrible years," as they were called in West Flanders. The peasants around the forest have become expert in artillery and the barrage that night, they say, was something more terrific than they had ever heard during the war. First there came volleys of the familiar German seventy-seven- s, to which there Austrian elghty-eighstaccato of hunwould, reply the rapid dreds of batteries of French seventy-five- s. The forest of Houthulst was eblsxe and, owing to the protracted drought, fire was spreading with furious rapidity. Then cavalry arrived on the scene. They were Belgians from this battered town, come to fight the forest fire. Has It como again, the war, sir?" trembling old woman asked of the captain. suddenly the cry wee heard, "Gael "and there was a stampede. The soldiers began to distribute gas masks, and the throughout night peasants and soldiers, armed with spades, shovels and a trench that the firs might picks, dug be stopped before it reached the hugs ammunition dumps left by Oerman and allied troops in the center of the forest, millions ot shell of all kinds, almost enough, it was said, "to blow West Flanders into til North sea. had tha upper By morning the hand on the fire, fighters which was vanquished about 100 yards from one of the largest dumps, but meanwhile about 1,000.000 shells exploded. They were in four separate dumps, and of four square miles of the forest where they had been located nothing remains btit a few trees, like bars pars swaying In the wind. As the sun arose, old peasants could be seen going to their fields for the harvest as if nothing had happened. " f 7. r Unmarried Women ' - la - : nj i -- -- t a & i ww ' Jt Finds l Populace Ragged, Dirty and in Great Need of Necessities of Life. . ROTTERDAM, Active Campaign Against Liquor Germany Is Being Vigorously Prosecuted. In rxr;' 'W - war-tim- one-eigh- th one-thi- rd English Tailors Offer to Cut Vienna Prices Af. VIENNA fonrrrm to nett t t 27. Th offer of Brltlah Viean 400,000 read made 1 and 10 of men's cloth at hilUnM each baa been occupying mom apace in the than the disturbed political newapapera tuft TlfflT V tailors and ready made clothing am fighting it and thus far sue tba ministry of trad baa refused the Import licenno. The entire Vleoe pren, backed by tha poent-lecivil ervttta and workmens roupenttlre orietlen. Is demanding the deni bo permitted, pointing not that native tailor charge nt 10 000 crown for n wit of quality, wtrtfe the Brltlah offer eqnal aboutejnI 4000 crow on.' JJaater merchant rmfully in England, Said By HELENA NORMANTON, S. A., LONDON, Aug. 27. Two million moro women than men in this country! That ie tha most terrible and tragic aftermath of war. The remedies propounded are inadequate. T?io cold, emotion-profeminism of the feminist is ths mot comfortless. of all. ' That the matplotfs women will be capable of looking after themselves if they are "left alone and given equal opportunities Jh all the 'professions" may bs true aa far aa it goes. But what a Jittle Kay It goes! spinsterhood is an ley ideal. Only a very small proportion of careers can be of such value to the world and of such absorbing interest to the worker thst they compensate for the lark, of other outlets in life. The Florence Nightingales are the exceptions, not the rule, Aa to emigration, the war casualties of the dominions totaled nearly half a million of their tiny populations. Doubtless there are some bachelors there; but are there enough to go routid 7, of Men in Minority.' Desperate situations rail for desperate remedies. Ths lonely woman is a tragedy, a menace end a national responsiThs British girl (matchless bility. through war) has a preferential claim to matrimony with at British man. Yet authority allows marriages by the hundred of British soldiers to. Qermaa girls in -Well-know- n X - ' British Woman Wrltar ths area of occupation. It Is incredible! No man capable of a union should be sent contracting out to Germany,legal us let Furthermore, put a check on the growing tide of immorality by enacting that no woman who is the guilty party to a divorce can contract a second marriage until the balance of the sexes la shown to be restored by hensus. A wowho could not keen loyal to one marriage contract has no very sacred claims to pledge herself tef another. The late Tennessee Lady Cook would nave forbidden widow remarriage. Widows," she wrote, "are more skillful anglers for husbands than spinsters, and many marry several times. This is a socisi Injustice to the spinsters. Ons man one woman is surely aa fair a cry aa one man one vote. And yet our sapient male government has done, by Its pension gratuity system on remarriage. all it could, to encourage Widows to marrv man again." Would Tax Bachelors. A heavy tag also should be imposed on rschelors, and its proceeds devoted to grants to single women willing to adopt and rear orphan children, or those from unsuitable homeer Manv a woman would adopt a child if she could afford to. Finally. I believe it la only by the most terrific onslaught of competition the trad unions w tli ever be made to that equalise Industrial chances between men and women. The only decent alternative, therefore. la to taka women off the labor market by early marriage npt by enforced unemployment, whli h will drive women straight to prostitution. cj . fi; Copyright, 1921, Immediately after docking, four soviet soldiers and police Instituted a search of our twenty ship. They examined the ship thoroughly for weapons, taking away the few revolvers we possessed. The soldi ere were shabbily dressed, wearing t rayed, tattered garments, covered with patches. They were young, pleasant looking boys, one wearing a coat that had much too long for him, the frayed edge showing where it bad been to cut fit. Underwood ft by Underwood, New Tork. What moat struck Us in Pstrograd waa the absolutely famished appearance of the population walking about In rags, Uur own appearance, wnen w entered the street cars or appeared anywhere in public, aroused the envy and wonder, of the people, who regarded our everyday working clothes as marvelous luxuries, An Insight into the absolute famished condition of the people we had before we had left our ship. Hundreds of workers came down to the dock to unload our cargo and no sooner was ths hold thrown , open than they swarmed aboard, and Effi. they began unloading buried them-selvupon tha bsan bags and gorged Con- - - thenisuivea upon ths raw dry beans. ?$- Italy. Is Doing. Her U tmost ale of Cocaine to Crush Government Legislation Is Stern, and Most cient Detectives in Country Are Keeping stantly on the Trail of Dealers, in. Drug. j - BY FRANK es Canned Goods Attacked. ihr J. Switzerland was marched off to 8an OATES, on search being made waa tpsclal Correspondent Universal Service. found and laden with this poison, as with Italy, Aug. 27. The recent saccharine. Hia rooms were visited, and for the a young couple, slave do thi vice. Were , legislation MILAN, punishment rescued And in to the time taken in just of dealers has led to grave diecov infirmary. inexseems the Unfortunately, supply . erlf-at Bologna, Milan,-Bom- s haustible, One 4a never sat from It. The an and Turin. dav other Englishman, long resident Many arrests have been hotel, waa approached made and large quantities of cocaine In a first-clatha director introduced to gn by have been confiscated, but the amount Italian, who, welland dressed and elegant, old and used has caused he was an- acting manager, but had actual o.f said quantity of etn aine to sell of victims, an enormous living death of hundreds He waa not a Milanese, but felt mostly all young, and of very many cheaply. he could trust an Englishman. Would women, he join and make money quickly? A packet Of clgareta, please!" But the police who have tills job on At your service, air, yea! Twenty hand are thorough and will not slacken lire." until they have made a goodly sweep of The purchaser, cautiously glancing smugglers and large dealers round the bar, puts tha sum on the counnever.Ylourlehed here, and but ter and strolls out. The bar, though forMorphia war the cocaine would never have is well small, furnished, large mirror been fashion. reflecting the forme and features of Us Fe-del- e, ss tj - dressed youths, patrons; two elegantly with large silk neckties hiding large shirt IS IN front, are shaking dice out of a leather cup. A blonde girl in short skirt talks SUNKEN stridently with a rich merchant's son and heir who, perched on a high stool, is sipping cordial; a stout, oily, clean, Mias Knowles Poster of London Sails shaven man, bedecked with much JewIn Her Own Ttcbt to flirts with ths pretty money taker elry, is chewing at the desk. The bertender Salvage Wrecks. gum, and no one takea notice of the lean waiter, who quietly slips tha two ten-linotes into his worn purse' Lake Tribes Cable. Chicago Tribune-Bai- t LONDON, Aug. 27. Miss Knowles FosCocaine Is Secreted. ter, F. R. G. 8., in her motor In the street the ether opens the packet yacht, the Enchantress, has sailed from lieatly folded,- pouia the powder into the Hammersmith pier on a hunt for gold. palm- of his- hand, then, after gazing at Her Imagination has been fired by the Init lovingly slowly raises it to his face formation, learjied recently, that there and sniffs it with evident satisfaction. He sees another packet of powder nes- are several interesting, perhaps valuable, In wrecks the locality of Norfolk, two tling between the cigarettes and sighs of which are aaid to contain Australian contentedly. Tills happened yesterday. Today it gold. can Anybody does not happen. The conventional sign purchase a wreck from leads to a atony stare and shake of the the admiralty and salve It for themselves. The must be cleared or wreck head. Not after Bologna, thanks! I in a fixed time. If the puralso have remorse, I regret and shall blown up chaser is lurky .enough to find anything, trade no more. It goes to the admiralty, for which Certa'nly in the central part of Milan half of an official accompanies the hunter the drug was everywhere on sale. In reason to chck Whatever valuables may be rethe cafes, at night dances. In clubs of all covered. Jn music even tobacco sorts, halls, shops, whs Is studying' for' a by house porters wiio did great business with many resident clients. Morphia yacht masters 'ticket. will navigate the habitues took to its uss, then the curious.' Enchantress. She carries for crew a Miss Foster hs weak, the weary, the worried, the steward and two divers. a syndicate if she finds the abnormal, the fdle and the rich. It be- mav form came the fashion. It was smart to carry salvage too costly, Her agreement with admiralty is to carry out the salvage it about ths persoq. In dainty gold or the were ex- even if it costs her her last penny to Sniffs silver receptacles. do so. , , changed. They tell me It came from perfidious England during the late war, though others think the alder sister, France, exported It with the many women who attended on the soldiers and Mountain, officers. Before those 'days the poison was unknown. A famous Bologna alienist remarks that t its abuse can hardly be called a serious social evil, Inasmuch si it kills off the VIENNA Aug. 27. (By the AssoIts victims deunfit and ciated Pres.) The geological freak serve their fate. But- - this -- Is far from of a great mountain disintegrating so true. Although many cases are known, there-arfast that it is discernible day by day many more kept hidden. Families are ashamed of publicity and a thing that ordinarily takea thousand! hush up the scandals. of years la occurring In the Auasee Chemists, especially In ' Bologna, made region.. fortunes But their days ore over, and great will be their punishment, as many The Aussee Sandllng, rising more rich, wealthy and furious families are than 5000 feet, is aimp'y collapsing. prosecuting ruthlessly, would lynch some Its great cones and pinnacles of rock of them if possible. One broken-dow- n lad admitted having paid thousands of are crashing and tumbling as if unlire to a chemist, and the parents went dermined by gnomes, the forests that to plead with him, offering more payment clothed the slopes He flat or move 1 he would, promise to suppiv no more. But he bniy scoffed. Why should he not Slowly and steadily downward, piling he did not, others would, and sejl,? If into tha valleys, and tha turf carpet Che lad was doomed and could never moves wfth them. break away. Mors than , three , and ' Detectives Are Active; miles of territory is involved Iir Now Milan's detectives are busyf Tftey and hundreds of sightseers are about the Smartest in Italy, and for view the convulsions from opposite themyears have been distinguishing siopea selves. In one afternoon more than arrests wers made of dealers, large fifty Ths phenomenon has been In progand as and small, many victims have quite ress for neafly a year, with gradually been saved from misery, restored to their increasing acceleration. homes, or temorarily detained. At the central station a smart youth from WOMAN OP QUEST TREASURE ra 16-t- - . Miss-Foster; -- easv-goU- ig Majestic Rapidly Collapsing non-mor- e three-quart- er - ' "Then they discovered the canned goods, which they opened with the first means thst earns to hand nails, pieces of crow bars eating iron, hatchets, and greedily and then stowing sway as many cane as possible in their pocket. These latter they had to give up at tbs end of the. day to a huge Russian soldier, quit the largest individual that I hava ever seen, who guarded the dock When the workers had all entrance. streamed out more- than S00 canq lay before tbe guard. But this did not prevent the workers from repeating the perior inane each day following. "The goods ws unloaded were placed In .freight cars on sidings, destined tor Moscow, but eacn night w saw dark forms sneaking in and out among the cars and It Is a certain surmise that not ell of our cargo will reach Its destination. After several day a we received permission to go freely about tbe city, but we always retained the imprest ion that we were being caretully observed and spied upon. The claim that the storm are open is not true. We found hot a single shop, restaurant, or cafe, although ws wers told that thera ware a tew illegal restaurants which w did not attempt to visit. - 1 Flies Constitute Plague. I "There were a few peddiers hd I the streets, whose chief commodity consisted of cigarete, and several open markets, .eras overcrowded, where all business done upon a barter basts. Moat of the , trade here was in old clothes and bread, lhe street cars are free, but all ore so overcrowded that one Is fortunate If he can obtain a foothold. We ate and slept on shipboard and ot files that swarmed over ua Fetrograd is suftering from a plague of flies. Tbe haroor workers whom we met, ail told us that tbe soviet syetem could hot hist. Only tn chief officials were communist a all others disavowing any connection with the Bolshevista The communist leaders wars ths only ones decently clothed and fed. They had large special supplies at their disposal, ottering us meat which w did not accept. other Russians told us that they had seen no meat for years. - ' Two New Sciences Aid in Detection of Crimt . ry PARIS. Aug. 27. Poroscopy and are two new "sciences intended to make the way of the transgressor harder than it is. Poroscopy is the science of measuring the pores of the body. and Graphometry is tne science of form rlative proportion of letters In handwriting. Dr. Edmond Locard, head of the Lyons has police laboratory of indentification, elaborated these new methods of crime detection to a point where the results have been accepted in tha Lyons courts and are said lo have been proved effective. In poroscopy. Dr. Locard holds, the number, form and position of body pore remain the same throughout life. The Impression ot tha pores. In Dr. Locard 's system, la colored by chemical vapors or very fine powders so they may be photographed under a microscope. Dr. Locard tells of several successful prosecutions supported by his new sciences In one case a burglar, jyor ir'oves... but left aa impression of a small surface of forearm. That trace convicted him. Another burglar, perspiring freely, left the- Impression of pore surfaces through hla gloves and went to JaiL Grap home try. aa termed by Dr. Locard. consists primarily In the theory that handwriting showa always a certain relation tn size between letters and unmistakable characteristics in form, particularly of ioopa In addition to these principles. Dr. Locard, of course, utilises general'y ii -detecting forgeries, graph--oniet- eepteA-methods- ' .WILL REDUCE FARE Lake Tribune Cable. to Tribuae-Sal- t GENEVA. Aug. 27. Faros are to be reduced on Swiss railroads to the extent of 20' per cent, and passport restriction have been altered so that tourists an cross and recrosa the border with omc a permit and the payment of a smn.lt sum. Cilice SN "V of r Weapons Are Confiscated. BY GEORGE BELDEt. Lska Tribune Cable. Let boose help BERLIN, Aug. 27. - A member He eating account of hla experience!. saya: "Our ahlp, which la 1200 tons. carried a eargo of dry white beans from Holland and canned pork and beans from France, Contracts for these shipments had been made with Krassln in London and payment made in gold. "We found tha pstrograd harbor in good condition and our ship, drawing eighteen feet of water, waa able to draw up beside the quays to unload. We were I boarded by a Russian pilot at Kronstadt, but were required to pay no pilot or harbor fee of any kind; I was informed, however, that harbor charges would soon be introduced and that fee would bo approximately 20 per cent above prewar I charges. ft Chics so Tribuu-Bsi- t Gey-ma- 27 , - pay the reparations," hae become the slogan of the German prohibition organisations. Almost coincident with the announcement, advertised by all German breweries In large display type, that peace-tim- e beer containing I per cent aln cohol was again being brewed, the pusayfooters' began an active campaign, for a dry Germany, Bavaria foe-tor- s' Throughout Prussia and testimony is being collected to show the salutary effects upon German health of , the war-tim- e restrictions es to tha use of alcoholic liquors. Statistics have been presented showing the reduotlon in the number of cases of hervous disorders growing out of tbe use of alcohol, In the city of Munich alone the number of such cases having been reduced from 1U tn 1011 to forty-thre- e oases in the e year 1919 at the timg all the restrictions were still in force. In Bavaria before the war approxiof ell criminal cases mately were attributed to excessive drinking, whereas at present the police report practically no case arising from this cause. The most popular of the prohibitionists' arguments, however, rest upon the figures showing that more than fifteen billion marks Is spent every year in Germany for alcoholic drinks. This sum la almost of the annual payments that Germany must make to the allies, and tha German Society for the Fighting of Alcoholism has Just issued a proclamation to the German people appealing to them to refrain from the purchase of any alcoholic drinks, wine, beer, cognac, etc., and to divert the money that would have been so spent to purposes that will enable Germany to meet her reparations obligations. Aug. a Rotterdam shipping firm, a bo made the trip to Fetrograd recently. In one of nla companys freighters, gives an inter, DRY FORCES RENEW FIGHT bN OLD J. B. To Constitute Difficult Sociaf Pro&fem Chicago .Tribune Foreign News Service. PARIS, Aug. 27. Ambassador Myron T. Herrick was receiving a few friends who had motored down to Havre to met him on the arrival of La France. They were In the dining room of the ambassadors private suite, and he was having soft boiled eggs and cafe ad lalt as the French Serve It, Mr. Herrick- was talking about men who changed their minds quickly. . I knew a man once who changed his mind so rapidly and continually that he told me he occasionally found the seat of his trousers in front, said the ambassador. y'' He was a regular Rotarisn," reowner marked Colonel , Bunau-Varillof L Matin, who was greatly, interested In Botarians aa a result of their recent 1'tIbU to FtAnee following the convention in Edinburgh. 'Those present were unanimous in agreeing that Colonel Bunau-Varilhad pulled" ona of the fastest lines yet. v JU f - Apt Reply Is Made to Ambassadors Joke yd V u, I a, PARIS-- . I d of Universal t . "From an exterior point of view, we Nationalists are trying to prevent the Balkanizing of Turkey, prevent our house tha being divided against ttsylf, preventinfluHlliee from establishing runes of ents leading to future quarrels among themselves. yvhile out of politeness hs didn't say Ml. It is known he feels the Americans should understand and help diplomatl- news from mlly, at least. He asked for the outside world, for the trend of opincommercial to as stagnation. ion He objected to the French point of view questions that the Turkish and near-eawill be solved only when that of Russia ' is solved. "Ours is a question In Itself," he said, and a very important one. From the point of view of international law and order, I think It Is admitted that the destruction of, say, the Austrian empire, has entailed tnsolvable problems. Have every state In the United States warring with lU neighbors, and this will give you s conception of Europe today. The n, ANGORA, July 27. (By the Associated Press.) liustapha Kernel, pasha, head of the Nationalist army and virtual dictator Attitude Is Explained. 27. habitants of Langemarclc. Clerckem, 8ta-deWoumen and other villages bounding the forest of Hputhulst. were started out of their sleep one night recently by a furious cannonading which brought them scurrying out of tnelr more or less re- . as though it might affect some other country than his own. nameXJa known Muatapha Kemal'a throughout the east, where ne is far more than the sultan cooped up In powerful hie palace at Constantinople under the allied of the guns warships in the Bosphorus. Every child in the east knows his name. Both soldier and politician, those familiar with the American struggle for liberty frequently compare hint to the great leaders in American history. Resists Peace Terms. . .. In his moments of leisure, bit Turkish comrades aay he has a rare capacity for the telling of pleasant stories and something of the sense of humor and innocent fun characteristic of the Turks, but these are not often displayed in the presence of strangers. Hla eterner qualities were shown in his resistance to and 'contempt for the Germans duringin the his great war, and since the armistice, organisation of resistance to ally peace of Greek the and army. terms, At the moment the correspondent saw him he had Just refused to meet the British General Harrington to talk peace terms, as he is convinced that such conferences cannot now have any practical - result. They- - wont realise that we are in earnest, that we are speaking the plain truth when we say we will make peace only on our published terms," he com- To yield now means turning mented. over my country to the Greeks, to fora fate far more bitter than .to eigners, The only way that of the Hungarians. is to fight on for independence, movement- - SurWill the Nationalist vive T he said, slowly repeating the ques"That is a tion of the correspondent. question which Interests not only to ourthe selves, but is of vital importance peace of Europe and to the United states aml other countries wishing to lish a prosperlous world fit to live in. thtsf Haven't Why' dont the allies seesince the great they learned anything war ended? Uppor photo The officials of the American Legion with representatives of the French government, grouped beneath the Arch of Triumph, Faria, about the tomb of the "unknown soldier." In the center background ean be seen Commender-in-Chie- f Emery of the American Legion. Lower photo Commander-In-Chie- f Emery of the American Legion is shown lowering the American flag in salute over the tomb of the "unknown soldier" beneath the Arch of Triumph, Parte, during the recent visit of American Legion officials in France. O Nationalists, He Adds, Are Simply Trying to Prevent Balkanizing of Turkey. . Honor to Unknown French Soldier ' Soviet Russian women nod children waiting in line at one of tha food stationa in tha famine area for their dailv quota of potatoes. Tha American relief organization, through Walter Lyman Brown, ha completed arrange meats for feeding a million starving Bussian women and children. FIGHT IS Give f V JT |