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Show EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES SPORTS MINES FINANCIAL REAL ESTATE V Sunday, November 20. Aircraft Will Replace Navy in-N- RUSSIAN PRINCES AS FARM HANDS Great War, Accordin to Viewpoint of British Expert ext REQUIRED TO GET s Comments Lieutenant Colonel C. R. Upon Destruction That May Be Wrought Forces. r With IQ21 Quite a difference. Two Russian prince are working at Hurit .farm, Headley, Surrey, England, along with thirty other refugees from aoviet Rus-siThe photograph shows Prince Nicholas Golitzin (right) and Prince Sergo Obliusky having a breather during their morning work. a. Finch-Noye- Well-equippe- Hot Tub Is Looked Upon as Special Dispensation by Foreigners in Moscow. City Is De-- " dared to Be Precarious; in Bathing in Provinces Advertture. By HELEN AUGUR. Chicago Tribune Foreign New Service. MOSCOW, Nov. 19. Pinner with private stock may be the beet en American V bogt can offer in America, but If he cornea Russia he cannot boreally popular un- Jess he offers dinner 9fith a private bath. Celling jl hot bath in Rusal U some thing that Is regarded as a special by; visiting foreigner who used to step into their morning tub at home with no thought of the miraculous. 3here is an extraordinary amount f cold water in the country but even the English, with characteristic .find .that their the appeal of a cold bath is taking it in or near a warm roam. At present there are no such refuges. Native Muscovites get their hot baths by going to Jdhe public institutionsbeg-of Visitors get theirs by cleanliness. ging, borrowing, stealing or outright are ever given away. baths No bribery. In the newly opened hotels the bathOccacold rooms look like sepulchers. will sionally a few drops of chilly water The trickle from an overhead shower. a take to is water hot onlv way to get to a kitchen, usually down sevis a where there eral flights of stairs, steaming tank, fchus the usual bath is a la samovar. tea-kett- le Some Are Ambitious. . desire Tlierejare ambitious souls who w bottom of enough not water to cover the illusion of - the tub and give them the a bath. This amounts to a feat, taking can bo done if the visitor is willing but it to resign the work he came to do and spend his entire time in Moscow on this The only foreigner who has been able his 'to get- - a- hot bath without cabling was position resignation from his regularwho American employed a clever young two secretaries and a valet. With the aid of these specialists In Russian language and customs he w'as able to land a hot bath on the traditional Saturday nlfn hotel which are under Bolshevik dictatorship guidance there Is a sternhotel inhabitover the bathtub. 'A large vis-- ed by Turks, Chinese, Germans and Hor bf Infinite nationalities and profuse ness of beard used to keep two bathrooms n the plan of an hour going constantly z beard. The water was heated by crackling wood fires under a tank. The Bolshevika test Vtem of getting a bath was simply n surviving bureaucracy. before The candidate presented himself several the hotel the political comjntskf aof bath corning on, weeks before- he felt the com and after a stern Inquisition bycandldsfc s nu gar, examination of the documents and questions tobyhieany other .P?"1 official in the room a soundness, he was made a novitiate and put on the waiting list. - - -- Finally Gets Ticket. to see lhat Dally thereafter he called and had not his name was still on the list e some of bee.r crossed off in favor mors Important if not more In need arwashed. Finally the day rived. he was presented with a red. card In and stamped, which he passed slimed theater to the ker-)- igV a ticket to the bath. of the chiefed guardians bath Vow due to the fuel shortage, thetwo a down to rations have been cut that the Commu-"u- u .Which proves world. In the arl the frankest party government would beItsashamed leading m Limit before the world that two dozen washed off only lights Inwere the year. limes number of Put blueprints showing the number unwashed In the house, the stick!- of wood In the cellar, and the sum the day, have been freely bir of hours soin that anybody who objects oislr.buted. and th ecowill be going against Marx nomic Interpretation of cleanliness. If bathing in Moscow. Isn precarious, adventure. provinces is bathing inofthecorrespondents who arrived A group cal ed In Samara during the dust storm an Inostensibly for governor tel v.ew" but really to .ascertain from the the and statistician of highest officer whether there was a bath to be the had After the usual formalities was asked through an Interpreter where they correspondents the to tell could get a bath. com-rad- - gov-rrn- I iGiven Speech Instead. yhe Interpreter, being a dignified and ocially minded young man, said instead: "Now, please tell the gentlemen about In the province." sanitary conditions ensued such a long and Thereupon before dingy disquisition that It was late Into the emerged the correspondents streets, routed" thepopula Horn and finally diove up to the public bathhouse In a battalion of Is-isvoschtka. - also told of two enterprisTho- story to ing correspondents who were sent ' - islt a factory In a remote province, and hotel, dediscovering a hthtub ln thelr cided to abandon- their work of inspecting the factory and take baths Instead. They and diploproceeded in the most delicate on pourparlers matic fashion, carrying with the political and industrial powers negotiations of the town and financial with the toothless little girl who, after work. do After a to the all. would have an entente was reached, midnight session out that early the next tne word went day the fires should be lit and the bath produced. Everything moved with n expedition The unusual in this leisurely country. noise of loud scrubbing and crackling household early. The wood aroused the summoned correspondents expected to be No Invitato a before breakfast bath. sauntered noon, they tion arriving by forth and heard loud splashes In the bathroom. Running water and splashes continued Explanation! were during the afternoon. It seemed that the engineer requested. of the plant was now bathing, and that only a few more of the inhabitants of the hotel remained unwashed. The correspondents climbed into their tubs at midnight, reflecting on tho ener-- g American temperament sing effect theRussia. Upon a factory upon Sroduces which had gone about happily unwashed for years had descended this sudden fever for hot water and soap. v ' d The coming aerial war and the need for broad developments of air weapons are discussed ln the following articles by s, Lieutenant Colonel .C. R. D. 8. O.. A. F. C. (late R. A. F., founarmader and organiser of the aircraft ment section of the air service, who was responsible for Initiating a great part of the armament of aircraft work in the late war. BY COLONEL C. R. LIEUTENANT and Inefcountry possessing Insufficient men with fective aircraft, an army of equipment and machine guns could be landed at strategy points. Flnch-N'oye- FINCH-NOYE- D. S. O. Universal Service Cable. LONDON, Nov. 19. Comments recently as to the nearness of the next war an air war make It not undesirable to lay before the public the necessity for pressing on . keenly with experiments toward aircraft development amt of providing against sudden demands for air personnel and material. For tills purpose I propose to give an Idea of the extent to which aircraft may ln th next have become predominant five years, provided that research and de' aeronautics In and aircraft velopment armament shall have been given th preIf eminence that, they merit. that preeminence is not given In this country it will assuredly be given in another. The air played a very large part in the triconclusion of the- late war. In umphant the- - next war It wlU play the predomi- nant part. Each week bring some new and ling development, and th limits difficulty, which was the one retarding factor in the sum. of Aircraft utilities, seems likely to be overcome In the near future. start- Says War Js Not Over. Those who think war is Over forever live ln the paradise of fools. War Is not over, and 1 venture to predict a submarine and aerial struggle, surpassing even the Imagination of H. G. Welle, In the not too distant future. The flying heavy gun and by heavy gun I mean a gun throwing a projectile of sixty pounds weight five miles is not a dream. It la a fact today. Further, this should have been used ln the late war. It was In existence. Such weapons, flying at 110 miles an hour and 16,000 feet ln the sir, could bombard a mark 10.000 yards horlsontally distant, and be invisible to the object attacked. The accuracy of such a gun puts bombing back Into the Dark Agee. Bombing from a safe height can never be accurate within a margin of errors which render! it practically useless except as a very effective method of terrorixatlon and devastation of an Indiscriminate and widespread nature. Varying currents of wing deflect the bomb on Its downward course, and the slightest Inaccuracy in the of the aircraft, relative to the ground, or in Its height from the ground, throws a bomb hundreds of yards from the mark. With a the precision of artillery can p attained. We have heard much of torpedo attack from th air and Its limitations r, Even with our present experience, a type aircrait could be construct"super, ed to carry at least forty men with machine guns 'and ammunition, and a second machine could carry ftve tons of provisions and equipment. Theretore 1900 Pisnea could land liu.990 men and 2690 ten of provisions, etc., in an enemy country with a suddenness which Would defy resistance, except from countering aircraft. Twenty thousand men. fully equipped, landing and consolidating their poaltlona, with lighting alreratt pnmevtin them: heavy gun aircraft attacking any field artillery being brought to the attack of the Invading armyr machine gun aircraft and attacking troops being brought up. lines heavy bombing aircraft destroying and bridges, would tend to stampede'' the invaded country into concentrating on attacking the first invaders, while the other landings could be made with the same trooper aircraft In different places to disorganise the defense. Finsl.y, having got the defensive forces on the jump, and scattered, a reinforcement could be tent in overwhelming numbers to one of the units already landed, and by pushing that unit home toward the objective gain the objective. Research, carried out with Imagination and an adequate expenditure of money, saved fiom other sources, could produce In a very short time aircraft that would outride on the water or In the air any weather in which an oceangoing destroyer can live at present, and that would be capable of destroying surface craft or land forts and forces, so that the air will automatically and naturally eventually take the place of the navy and an army, except possibly to land In a country not possessing aircraft, will be useful only for policing and holding territory already won by aircraft attack. ' -- Battleships of the Air. Exactly as at present we have battle, ships, light cruisers, destroy era, etc., on the aea, so, shall we have battleships, ciuisers and destroyer in the air. Atrcraft and submarines will make safety on the surface of theofsea and land commercial impossible. .The existence surface craft in the next war will be very short by reason of air attack. 1 can sea no counter for aircraft except atrcraft, and I can see no hope for those on the sea oi land when faced with the da'nger from above, in the cape of the ship there la tile added danger from under the sea. The Influence of aircraft on warfare Is uih that, urfTtl we get some form of which Is swifter and mort efficient than aircraft, aviation la the only effective method of distributing death and destruction. it Aviation, If given the merits as regards money, personnel and control, led by persons of imagination and energy, will mean triumph: if .neglected, disaster will follow In The next war as Inevitably as the night follows the day. death-deali- -- -- Torpedo 'Attack' Dangerous. - At New Type Proposed. the present time Torpedo' attack air Is a dangerous method of an enemy, because the aircraft assaying has to come within a few feet of the water and then fly into the teeth of the object attacked, but torpedoes have been dropped from seaplanes flying at a height of over 1000 feet, by a method eliminating all danger of damage to th torpedo and much reducing the risk to the sea. , plane. Experiments have been carried out very successfully with aerial torpedoes, and, by aerial torpedo, 1 mean an aeroplane confrom the eesawm V'1 Conditions in Russia Be come Acute Following Col- The blow wU fall with the suddenness a flash of lightning, and the ogily declaration of war will probably bs a bombing attack on the capital, in conjunction with the destruction of bridges and communication, the landing by air of thousands of fully equipped troops, the attack by torpedo and heavy on warships and commercial vessels, the mining of channels by aircraft, and the systematic and intensive dropping of enormous numbers of poison gas bombs to windward of areas In which it la desired to eliminate Ufa. In fact, the war In the air will embrace all the offensive metheda of the late war' carried out at ten times the speed that Is, gt a speed with which only other aircraft can cope effectively. When forces and weapons are transported at 200 milea an hour to the attack there will be no time to recover. The country caught napping and unprepared will be out of political and military existence In a matter of "hour, 1L not out of physical existence by poison gas and high explosive delivered by aircraft.-- Let it not be forgotten that till? use of poison gas .by aircraft is not influenced or restricted bv the direction of the wind. Aircraft can drop These bomb to utilixe the wind on the earths surface. In whatever direction It happens to he blowing, to drive the fume across the objective. i'ETRoGKAD, Nov. 19. (By a staff correspondent ot the Associated l'ress ) Kussia s school ejstcm naa sultered in the general breaadown ot the economic system. Limacnaisky, me commissar lor euuc.t-iriis endeavoring to correct and preserve the tiee schools by edicts, but it Is a cut. cuil task. A great majcrity of the schools ln the famine districts are not opening, and It Is, extremely doubtful whether they can be opened this year. Even In the great cities, itka Moscow and l'etrogiad H is qlpubtful whether they can continue unless reorganisation pioceeda with great ' rapidity and "energy ln an effort to Keep the schools going, to parents have made contributions teachers in the way of mousy and food, and the children have often carried wood daily to the ei hools to keep warm. Books, paper, pencils and other supplies have been lacking. Lunacnarsky says In a recent statement that the eheiu, or .commission, fur the insists prevention of that me schools must he kept tree of parental Influence. To accomplish this he announces that the government will name In earn committee toeshty to take charge of the schools, and will empower these committees to collect money from the parents who are able to pay. This step Its in line with the general decentrahxatjcTr'pottCjr'WhlcK the goverii-mela endeavoring to carry out since It altered ita economic policy and went back to domestic free trade. Fad which were Introduced In many of tne schools have very largely disappeared. Many of the teachers were extreme idealists ln the earlier days of the sov let government and endeavored to work many Innovations. The plan of having school children do all the Janitor work in the schools resulted in such insanitary conditions than It was abandoned In many places and charwomen came back. The schools are badly crowded. Is Moscow most of the small children go to school from 9 until 3, and the older children go ln the afternoon and remain until 9 p. ni. lu an effort- to piece-otheir- - inadework ln as many quate salaries, teachers schools poeartrte,- - with The result That there are often delays In classes. The meals which the government supplies to school children when food Is available are prepared in central kitchens and carried by children ln large vessels to the schools. the Frequently the meals are late school schedule Is Irregular. ' The fear which parents had at one time that the government would endeavor to take their children awav from them has apparently disappeared completely with the announcement of the new decentralisation policy, or even before that was announced. bomb-droppi- counter-revolutio- MANY AUSTRIAN GIRLS ARE SEEKING HUBBIES Dally heroto Many Columns Advertisement of a Matrimonial Nature.'-- . of to-- Tribune-Bel- Chicago Lake Tribune Csbl. t fv d ts Krench-Canadia- n, s. p. vint-tags- it Lake Tribune Cable. proud Invention of bolshevik, land had gone to smash. The captain said he did not see the train in time to stop, but, he added: "Anvwar. th brake does not work." The Rueslans have been applying this airplane propeller device to push trains, automobiles and boat. Nov. iProfesuor James PARIS, Rrown Scott secretarj of tne Caruexie Endowment for International Peace, has been elected member of the French Academy of Moral Sciences. .Professor Scott Is an authority on International law. His election Is considered a special honor to the United States. - and -- w-4 i TIFLIS, Georgia, Nov. 19. (By a ataff correspondent pi the Associated Press) Tifll la a city dreary by day, tsrribla by nighL Th last city of Importance to come under the Influence of th" Dblshe-vl- k emblem of the hammer and th sycthe, d replacing the eagle pf th empire, her are contrasted the happy old days of and prosperity with tne gaiety dull misery of th new regime. At the railway station, on entering th city, the difference Is seen and (elt. Instead of swaggering guards In black boots, black .laac.koak.aji4 Gashing 'liver belts" and swords, are seen a few Red soldiers, looking hungry and uncomfortable lu domes held together by a loose belt. Barefooted, dirty, white-raceragged boys clamor fur a chance to carry baggage. Peasant women and bourgeois women dt the old-tistagger along under load of baggage or packages of food and fruit brought from th country. Broken down hacks wait for fares, pulled by thin, under-fed . , horse. double-neade- d, Si-:- 1 tr All FUMED LIQUORS FRINGE IS GIVEN FIT INjCLDTHES Greeks in Constantinople Suit Worn Home by His Making Finest Brande Imperial Highness Causes From American Alcohol. in Japan. Near-Sensati- Chietro -- Tribune --knit Lake Tribe an Cable. CONSTANTINOPLE,. Sor... 19, Thirty Greek manufacturers ot strong drink operating ln Constantinople have . run afoul of the Interallied pollcs for fabricating from American alcohol, labeled "not -- foY' beverage - purposes," bverntgat the finest brands" of wn known Scotch whiskies, French cognacs and, Dutch liquors. A visit to Major Hobsons office, headquarters of the Interallied sanitary commission, will reveal Imitations of practically every famous English and French strong dripk, so cleverly bottled and labeled that careful analysis is required to determine the deception. A solution of 65 per cent alcohol, 40 per cent water and the remainder of whisky flavor and coloring matter Is a common drink sold "bottled ln bond" as veritable old brand whisky, snd although to the keener taste tills concoction is unbearable, one drink Is so potent that th customer will even forget what he ordered ln the overshadowing Importanca of hitting an old friend In the snout, turning a back handspring and deciding orchestras must not deviate from "Dowaa baa-- y Mill 8tree-am- . thee Only In Constantinople could these fabricators of overnight whiskies, brandies and liquors flourish, for hsr the Turkish pure food and drug act Isnt even tq the protorozoid stage. Major Hobson recently found several tons of British cheese, condemned . for the army and which was sold for grease, on the market as a high-graproduct. Condensed milk carrying labels Imitating the beat braids have been made out of a milk base (mixed with water and thickened by the mucous from musslea, which are put directly in the water. These are on y a few tf the horrible mixtures being thrust upon an unsuspecting public as bona fide goods. Thousands of Cases of spoiled milk sold as such by the fiear east relief to Armenians, who sakl they wanted It as a base for soap, werte ln turn sold by them on the market hers at a profit of 400 per cent. Major Hobson said the Turk himself Is seldom an offender, but ha dona little to prevent his countryman from being a victim to. adulterated products. Chicago on Lake Tribune Cabla. Tritmae-Sal- f I. Th crown prtnc of TOKIO, Nov. Japan, who will probably become regent within a vary short time, due to th very serious Illness of his Imperial father, has been a very busy young man since he re turned trom abroad snd received th welcome of his future subjects. From almost th moment he landed from th warship Kattori at Yokohama a montn ago until now he has daily been the center of some festivity in hi honor, and the effect of bis foreign tour It most noticeable In his ease of manner and In the way In which he enter Into whatever may be going on, Instead of, a has heretofore Invariably been th custom, standing off aloof in solemn dignity. One of the things about the young on hia prince that struck all observer return Wa the way Jie looked. "Isnt he to an on splendid, th Japanese said, other, and then they looked again to see Just what the change might be that mad the prince almost a different person from the stripling who went abroad In early summer, Finally some on,- - more observant than the rest, discovered what it was. "Why. hla clothes fit him!" h announced, and so they do. of sapan and not To any conversant with the etiquette of th Imwould not seem fSct house that perial at all strange. On the contrary. If he it would appear te wore misfit clothing be a matter of comment, but it is a fact the first of his that the crown prince llns to wear foreign clothes that look as If they were made for him. Gulliver ln hie travels found a land measured their cuswhere the tailor tomers for clothe bv standing off snd using surveying Implements, quadrants, and other scientific triangulation devices, with the to be expected results in the wray of a fit. in Japan the tailors for th Imnot even us these Inperial household douse nothing at all, but strument. They have to stand off and secure all their measurement by eye. No such a profane thing as a tape measure could possibly be used to circle any Imperial waist; no vulgar tailor's hand could possibly be put under an imperial armpit I to get a sleeve belength. The expected, what might consequence and the emperor, the crown prince, snd never have brothers the younger imperial clothe that even a city clerk would DESIGNS IN TAPESTRY had crown prince went the wear, that Is until to England. ARE EAGERLY At Gibraltar, when the Kattori dropped anchor amid the roar of the welcoming Lack of Them May Cause Beauvais, guns, a little dispatch boat was the f.rat to run alongside. From It stepped a LonFrance, to Lose Long-heldon tailor, who had rushed to the Rock to meet the Imperial visitor and take hi Population. order for all the clothes he would need.was That .tailor, not knowing what Chicago Tritiuup'Snlt Lake Tribune table. what, ran np and down' and over th PARIS. Nov. 19. Beauvais, a French crown prince with his tape. Jotting down He toM his Imperial town to tlw norm of Faria, which rank the measurements. with Uulelms, Arras and Brussels In the highness to stand up straight; he turned manufacture of tapestries. Is fearful of him around nTfien turning was neceexarv. d reputation becaus of and he otherwise commlttel all the forme losing its ths fact that painters cannot be Induced of lese majesty possible. But he did make to submit new designs which will depict him clothes thst fitted and that are today modern life th pride of all Japan. The tapestry manufacturers are lamenting this and they point out that Raphael, of the great Italian renaissance painter, aketches which composed admirable some Organize the for formed of the best design renalssame period tapestries. To obviate thia lack of interest among Chlrgfa Trlbuno-asl- t Lake Trlban Cable, painters in making deslgna, they have Bl ENOS AIRES, Nov. 19. An Argen-tin- e a prise fund of 3000 francs, Just offe-e- d Hhorthci n breeders' society has been will be given as rewards for the formed In Buenos Aires, to be known artists who submit the best "cartons. a Sociedad Argentina de Crladores the to b adjudged by a Jury of art authoride Shorthorn. Argentina is one of the ties. Shorthorn breeding countries In the great world snd the need of such an associafelt been for many years. hae Causes tion Stolen Although the statutes of the society been have not yet published. It la known Trouble, that they are slm'lar ln alma to those In other leading Shorthorn lands and that Odessa Tribune Salt Lake Tribune Cable. , the members of th new society have FARI3. Nov. 19. Mrs. William Hart of pledged themselves to pare no effort Ambier, Pa., while stopping at a leading toward giving breeders the multiple adParis hotel, missed a valuable barrette. vantages of Intelligent cooperation. She asked the police authorities tq help cattle breeders have Fifty hec-ftIt. They did so. to the great as founding members and elected Satisfaction of Mrs. Hart, but to ths signed Eduardo Drabble president, and Eqiillo of Georequally- - great disappointment Pelllgrlnl secretary. - -- chambermaid Meyer gette Gerard, a at Mrs. Hart's hotel, and ot the latter's NEW USE FOR SIRENS. -- t "joung man. found th - The police barrette In ths Universal Service Cable. PARIS. Nov. 19. Sirens attached to pcsnesslon of Georgette's lover. He explains that It bad been a testimony of th rear end of trains will In future warn affection from Georgette. Georgette ad- against railroad collisions ln France, acmitted this, and explained that she had cording to a decision of the state railfound the jewel In the courtyard of th way commission. Thus a us has been hotel.' Both she and the young man found for 6000 air raid sirens whjoh forare being held at police headquarters merly sent Parisians hurrying to shelter on a charge of theft. when German airplane approached. Ou-o- ous id de 1 de Down Shorthorns Breeders in' Argentina Barrette for Sweethearts well-kno- nd , ' snd over again until they art composed of patches only. Their skirts may bo of old pieces of ,sllk and their jackets of military cloth or even the black leather of aviator coat Shawls have replaced i hate. The men civilians wear rlothes that are a parody on snabbv gentility. Their top boot are all top, the soles and heels kmg since woru away. Ail suite ot military odds and end from all the armies of Europe, contribute to their drees, khaki puttet, yellow leather Jacket British canvas trousers, French blue caps. United States army coat The stores are boarded np, for th moat part and when open only have a few bottles of French or Italian perfumes and little else. . Shoe Prices Are High." pair of American ahcex, of poor quality, was seen ln on window, marked rublee, an Incredible sum ot money ln a city where a monthly salary of a ovlrt employ Is "3000 td hm ruble Mmali trading la don, on th market place, where starving families sell off and finery Jewelry, which escaped the wrecks of their home Thee homes, once so comfortable and bountiful In hospitality, are cold for lack ot fuel, dr eery for lack of food, often curtain! CM, with here and theta bullet marks on th outside wall The lavatories and baths are useless, because the city water supcut off fowlack of fuel ply Th Red army tn occupation has orders from Moscow to be "good" to and It la "good, yet its Georgian go ebout wun set s arn laces as if the world was watcnlng. Cholera in summer and starvation la witutr, is ths lot ot Georgia. A 169.-0- com-inan- Indication as to Age Angers Optra Singer , i ' Universal 8ervlca Cable. BARIS, Nov. 19. Mademoiselle Mistln-guet- t, tne famous Frsncn comedienne, has been entertaining FTench audienee for n considerable period but she's not overanxious that the world should know just how long. Returning from New York on th liner France, she wee asked to appear at a concert. Th captain of th ship called the organiser aside and warned him that Mlatinguett was "touchy and suggested he herald her appearance on the stag with an appropriate verbal bouquet. Accordingly, just before she entered, th organiser cam on th stag, bowed ands t announced: "And now w are to hav th extreme honor of hearing Mademoiselle Mistin-guet- b 1 hav no need to tell you about her, for, as w all know, she haa been the foremost European vedette for thirty years." Mlstlnguett angrily refused to appear, asserting that eh had been insulted. Much Bartering Seen in Russian Street Markets SOUGHT long-hel- at Heel The streets are dirty and full of holes. People wear clothes that seem to belong to another era. Here where a doicn tongues are spoken and where 10 tribes used to gather In th proud finery of their national costumes, all la down th heel. atWomen often go stock Ingles Their shmia show signs of patches don over ut - in - - Summer Starvation in Winter ft Lot of Little Country. nt Much-abuse- Tribune-Ba- Cholera -- fevers LONDON, Nov, 19. In' s bigamy case brought the announcement that the opera at Bow street a man told the court that In Rome will .not be opened this year the girl he first married had Previously unless th chorus and orchestra are pre-re- d married eight other men during a period Four day after the to discuss a reduction of salaries. of eight Mob seems unlikely. ceremony eh departed with another man. Misery of New. Regime Is Contrasted With Prosperity of Olden Days Dull n, - Chicago V ' -- OPERA MAY NOT OPEN. Chicago Trlbuee Salt Lake Tribune Cable. ROME. No v. 19. Excessive costs have Wfvvwte n, .VIENNA, Nov, 19. There is such a shortage of men in Central Europe there are said to be ten women to evtory man that womep are taking the most desperate measures to secure husbands'. The newspapers hero devote about trolled by a mechanism five columns daily to advertisements for stability, and by wireless waves from for husbands, among which are not the ground or from another aircraft for only appeals from the women themdirection and height the pilot and passelves, but from mothers and brothers senger being replaced by a quarter of a on behalf of daughters and sisters. The ton of explosive. Such an aerial torpedo would be capable of being directed at a following are examples:. mark miles away at th will of the perwq For my daughter, an educated, ind rpatchlng it. telligent girl, blonde, 26 years, of good In the air war of the future, as far as Modest, svmpathetic, with family. the land Is concerned. It may be eafely 1,000,060 . Austrian crowns; wanted, to predicted that: make the 1. hcnorableacqiiaintanceof and Intensive man " Of - good family with a view-- of will be able to destroy any ordnance or munition factory indicated to marriage. Applicants must be men of be ln existence. . worth. 2. Heavy . gunnery from the air wlH 1 wish for my sister, a cultured render rail transport an Impossibility by lady from one of the best Austrian famdemolishing rails and bridges completewith a ' considerable ilies, endowed ly. and will prevent movements of armies amount of this worlds goods, widowed, on the land. 3. On the other hand, in any enemy though without children, a man about 30 with own bouse, preferable of noble birth. The following is an example of an advertisement inserted by the women themselves: A brunette, of smalt stature, with large hazel eyes, possessing 40,000 AusUniversal Service Cable. trian crowns, wishes to marry a state LONDON, Nov. 19, "Girls should not a rope,' said Dr. Sanderson Clo.; "it official. Is easily acquired and, what la Just as play football, box or motorcycle. SYMPATHETIC. (Signed) AcAnother advertisement, signed This Is the opinion of Dr. Letltia Fair-fiel- Important, she should learn to come down Manv lives are lost In Tires and tress of again. asks for a High Ability, who during the war was medical at sea for want of this knowledge. to handsome actor tour the country. officer to the Royal Air Force girls, many The important part played by games With a veiw of helping the women, a In the character building of boys has of whom came under her inspection. has bureau been marriage organized to 1 do Dr. Fairfield contributed some bright been recommended for generations. women to Australia or Canada. remarks to a discussion on Games - for not1 think It would be disloyal to mv sex send maintain that we stand In md of It is meeting with considerable success. Girls' that followed a meeting by- the If these lessons in the playing field as Medical Office! s of Schools association. more popular much as the masculine sex. and we have Football la growing among women, especially in the north of the same need of games as aids to our GARLIC OIL IS USED England. said Dr. Fairfield, and 1 think health. Not only do J advocate games, IN F1GHT 0N that women should be warned against Us but they should be continued Whenetfr unsuitability, for it results In considera- possible In adult life. The fears of people ble strain not incurred In many other who about thirty years ago were starVegetable Is Found to Bs Motorcycling and boxing have tled by the revolution In the modern girl games. of Great Value as an were uhfounded. There. hss bqgn a dealso great disadvantages for women." Dr. Alice E. Sanderson Clow, medical crease ln the fatalities connected with Antiseptic. tnupector atthe Ladles' college, Chelten- childbirth. The birth rat has increased. the mothers of these fine babies and ham, spoke of the exercises that were and streneven have been the 8.11 grandmothers Chtcagn Tribune fob. Tribune Cable. good for girls. Every gtri should be taught to climb uous players of hockey and other games' LONDON. Nov. 19. Essential oil of garlic. rendered no Inoffensive ihat it no disagreeable odor and leaves no MUCH TACT IS SHOWN RUSSIAN INVENTION . . Irritantof effect, is the "key to the conto Alex quest CAUSE OF.SMASHUP Clement. tuberiulosls, according who served as IN SUBDUING MANIAC private secretary to three Canadian premiers and. In conjunction with P. A. ArCaptain of Eoyal Guard at 81. Peter' Railroad Car Operated by Airplane nold. a fellow of the British Chemical sodlucovered this antiseptic. ciety, Handles la Cathedral Deftly Responsible for Propeller It is claimed, savs the Dally Express, Serious Wreck. as the most effective antiseptic that Unusual Cue. can he administered to human beings, either or externally. Lake Tribune Cable. BAKU, AerbalJan, Nov. 19. (By the interrnlly t'bicasa Trlbune-8.l- t It la being ustd In the fight against ROME, Nov. 19. While a party of for- Associated Frees.) A new Russian lnven fevers and various diseases caused by The antiseptic nature eigners, Including several Americans, was tlon for propelling railroad car by th of garlic has. been known tor 3000 years, visiting St. Peters cathedral her re- use of airplane propellers has just resulted although the remedy Is new. in a smash-ucently, a madman rushed ln and attemptf RHINE WINE PRICES JU.MP. ed to wrench open the doors of the taber-nahl- e Captain Simolov of the soviet army holy euchartst. had- rigged up a flat car with a motor to Universal Service Cable. containing the Tie , cried, "'will you drive a big airplane propeller and built "Mr. 8t. Peter," BERLIN, Nov. 19, hTe continuous sunshow me the shortest way te reach th a little triangular house on the car. At shine of the past summer has had an Vatican? The pope Is awaiting me there a railroad junction outside of Baku he favorable effect on the vintage for a great dinner. I am thoroughly, fa- tried to Induce a conductor of train to extremely In Germany, and the wines of 1921 are XV's Benedict and miliar with cooking his hitch on behind. car The to airplane surpass the famous196a the wonderful dishes he turns out." conductor and the train went on expectedAlthough th harvest will be comA great crowd assembled around the for about refused, three miles and halted. small, never In living memory man. The captain of the royal guard As the passengers in th rear coach paratively the grapes been so well Ttpened, edged him Into a corner and whispered: were making tea. the airplane car came have Rhine wine, on account of the great de"I am Pope Benedict's private eecretary. around a curve going at the rate of sixty mand and small harvest. Will be very Com with me. Dinner Is ready." of the passengers dear, but South German and Tyrolean an miles hour. Moat madDiscreetly escorted by guards, th out of the rear car by way of the wines will ha cheaper than usual to buyman followed the captain to the nearest got windows snd the captain and a girt com- ers abroad, who benefit by the exchange Insane asylum, where he partook of a panion leaped from his flat car. which It la tplleved he will re- banged Into the rear coach, repast hearty doubled Itself AMERICAN IS HONORED. cover. t up and Jumped the track, a mass of Nobody was hurt, but the Universal Service Cable. wieckage. MUCH MARRIED. . 19. Long-distan- ' lapse of Economic Policy. Newspapers Simply Matter of Hours. 'Ky MOSCOW, Nov. It. (By th Associated Press ) In cities the else of Petr grad and Moscow , scores of street meukets have lately been opened. . Food 1 th drawing card- people who haven't money to buy white bread go to the markets to look at ths large tempting loaves, and they generally take something with them to sell or barter. They wander from market te market. It Is the best way to meet one t friends and hear the new . The wide streets snd boulevards of Russian cities, snd the great circles and squares afford ample space for markets, which,, however, cannot be eon fined to the market spaces of Imperial day because of the luck of eheps and th universal necessity for barter and sal. Unemployment Steadily Increasing in Denmark, COPENHAGEN, Nov. IS. (By th Associated Press.) Unemployment haa been In Denmark since steadily Increasing July. The. unemployed now. number 55.411. There ie not much hope among business men that matter will alter for th better during the coming winter. The high cost of living and the tremendous German imports compel Danish Industries to lie dormant and hop for better time , Book on Tuberculosis Issued by Scientist ' Universal Service Cable- PARIS- - Nov. 19. A complete history of the efforts of science to lessen th eftecta of tuberculosis and to discover a euro therefor has been published by Professor Leon Bernard, famous French savant. finely printed; oontaina ti0 pages ar.d Is said to be th moat minute ef the question ever printed. Th study French Academy of Medtctne has awarda ed th author special gold medal. u -- The-wor- k, 4 4 |