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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 64

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 64

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4 THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK, SUNDAY. AUGUST 6. 1922. THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE.

NEW YORK, SUNDAY, AUGUST 1022. 5 NEWS AND VIEWS FROM EUROPE BY EAGLE SPECIAL WRITERS At 2 Used Typewriter; At 4 Went to School; At 13 Enters College Only Two Candidates Running on Wet Issue In Indiana Campaign OH, MR. RIEGELMANN, ARE YOU GOING TO HEAD THAT BIG BABY PARADE? "I am sure that at no moment, not only did I not think of smiling, but at no moment could an involuntary smile have crossed my lips." Raymond Poincare. (By the Associated Press.) Not laughing? There is no doubt about it in this photo. Same day; same hour; same sunlight; same cemetery not the same expression.

(By the Awe AXOUM, Ok! alSS Press. Aug. 5 Eleven Mrs. Willmoore NDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 5 While the I By CARIj WILHIXM.

ORO PRESIDENT EDWARD RIEGELMANN expects that the 1 923 National Baby Parade will years ago Kendall ga Prohibition question is not expected to enter into the fall cam ALL FRANCE ASKING POINCARE: "WHEN'S A SMILE NOT A he L'-year-old play with while i looks to her blind In the Northwest- i But to Get the "Kiddies" in Line Here Coney Island Must Have a Boardwalk, and One, Mind You, That Will Beat Anything This Side of Mars. Thirty Minutes from Boardwalk to 42nd St. and Broadway. fcon a typr khe read from text husband, a student held at Coney Island. rhis expectation he predicates on in The boy 1 sat by the aafo arrival of the 2,000,000 feet of Georgia lumber for the great boardwalk, said lumber being now In tran with liis had, that Is, before prohibilon went "Mr.

Rlegelmann "The old shacks, of sit to this port via the Atlantic, Ocean 3. Willmoore ihc ii. has got nothing on us in so as the weather is concerned." "But the mercury," we pessimistically persisted, "not infrequently does dance around the zero mark in this section of the country, and blizzards are not unknown. How would your Boardwalk look after a healthy blizzard "You forget the neutralizing effect of the Gulf Stream," Mr. Riegelmann replied without hesitation.

"Maybe the Gulf Stream will accommodate you by running a branch through the upper bay?" "Of course," the Boro President responded, "We intend to advertise the t'oney Island Boardwalk by every means in our power. But we don't have to advertise the Gulf Stream, for the reason that any accurate map of the United States will show how close into ertect. Eagle Bureau, rn University. Evanitc discarded his other to fcn hour picking at thl au; flngei i Today, at the age of jKendall Jr. i prep fcollege.

His mot her dei experience with hia Vrlter gnw him his a Jng his education him into school at he he had read such book J.amc Prinze" slid "Litl leroy." are flooded with mnll orders from outside of Paris. to enter the early r's type-D acquir-hat swept of 4 after The Uttlo i Faunt- 53 Rue Cambon. By GI'Y HICKOK. (Staff Correspondent of The Eagle.) Paris, July 25 "When is a smile not a smile?" is the great French parliamentary riddle which has kept a teapot tempest blowing up and down the country ever since pested the Boro President's interlocutor. "I can't digest the Idea," he responded.

How'll Von Get Lords and Mappers? "How will, you get the ailing millionaires, the weary statesmen, the English lords, the confabulating politicians and the high-toned flappers to perambulate on the Coney Island boardwalk in preference to the one at Atlantic City? What will be the lodestar "Ah, now you have it the lodestar. existence, Atlantic City, according to Mr. Rlegelmann, will decline and fall quicker than tho Unman Empire. If all goes well, including the Carpenters' Union, Coney Island, before the flowers bloom again, will be prepared to step Into the shoes of the famous Jersey seaside resort and go it one better according to the same authority, Mi. Rlegelmann (this fact should Let me tell you," he went on.

"the Great White Way today is as compelling a magnet as ever it was to people who want to be amused and don't mind the cost." Do you mean- "I don't mean anything," the Boro President interrupted with an inscrutable look In his eye. "I am vacationing and not making any official statements." "That is all very well, but how are you going to make a dry White Way look Inviting to the thirsty?" will disappear of their own accord, as a matter of self-interest on the part of the owners of the land. The Boardwalk will indrease land values In Its neighborhood enormously. On trhe sites of the existing cheap structures you will see great modern hotels going up. Atlantic City? Atlantic City won't be in it.

Just wait and see." "Instead of the carnival, then, tne baby parade will be the greatest of all Coney Island attractions during the year?" Mr. Riegelmann, who is a bachelor, one another for an hour, a row so heated that the President of (he Chamber had to adjourn the sitting to give the deputies time to go out In the halls, the restaurant, the bar and the smoking room to cool their rage. Communists Make a Postcard. The cause of all the furious fuss began in the fact that the Communists made a postcard of the photograph showing Premier Poincare "apparently" smiling among the crosses at Verdun. They have long June from rt i Pom Explanation, ograph in question: thai of rent do," "'en' Ambassador HerriS that of the Communists and that man who took the picture.

he 1. Premier Poincare: "I remember well the moment when the photograph was in ken. We both bad the sun In our eyes and ottr features were In consequence contracted, I am sure that at no moment not rtntv it runs to the shore of Coney Island. The influence of the Gulf Stream upon the climate of New York is a well known phenomenon. We have balmy paign in Indiana, two candidates for Congress Charles A.

Bidaman in the 5th and Joseph J. Turk in the 7th (Indianapolis), both Democrats are known to be avowed wets and they made their campaign for nomination on that issue. Twelve of the incumbents are considered dry. In addition to the two avowed wet Democrats, Charles W. Branstrator in the 12th District received the support of the wets in his pre-primary campaign; but Prohibition was not an issue In the fight.

Harry C. Canfleld in the 4th was an avowed wet two years ago but since has become an advocate of Prohibition enforcement. James A. Clifton in the tith is neutral while William F. Spooner is the lOtli has never indicated his stand in public The.

other Democratic candidates, Miss Esther O'Keefe in the 13th, William E. Wilson in the 1st, Arthur Greenwood, 2d; John W. Tyn-dall, Sth; George L. Moffett, 9th, and Samuel E. Cook in.

the 11th, are dry. The Democrats at present are without a candidate in the '3d owing to the death of John Ewing, who was nominated in the nrimary last May. The Republican candidates for Congress, all of whom are dry, are: First, Oscar R. Luhring; 2d, Oscar E. Bland; 3d, Samuel A.

Lambdin; 4th, John S. Benham; 6th, Everett Sanders; 6th, Richard N. Elliott; 7th, Merrill Moores; gth, A. H. Vestal; 9th, Fred S.

Purnell; 10th, Will R. Wood; 11th, Milton Kraus; 12th, Louis Fairfield; 13th, Andrew J. Hickey. Ambassador Her-rick and Premier Poincaire walked through the military cemetery at Verdun on June 4. The answer is.

"When it mighl be. a political ol. His father idist Church end to enter ihms.n if the can he bus- Otherwise he ne other Insti- training. cetslty, I sup-ithoitt design contended mat premier poincare while president of the republic and previously when Foreign Minlstei took steps that make him partly responsible for the war. They nick-named Willmoore gradual the Mangunt High' 8 Is pastor of Kirs this city.

Thi- 1 Jv'orthwestern as a rules of the Unlven pended to admit hln will matriculate with lution. Regarding th lrs Kendall said: "It was a mattei ol pose, which made place him In a posltl early knowledge ol I away at the keys of (1 moore gradually le alphabet and almost to acquire an rp. Pecking nachme. Will-ed the entire I bi under." It may be difficult for American readers to stand how and under what cir-cumstances a simple phenomenon like a smile could be a political blunder. Jt he was putting did I not think of smiling, but at no moment could an involuntary smile have crossed either my lips or Mr.

Merrick's." 2. Ambassador Herrick: "If Is quite possible that something I raid to Premier Poincare may have caused him to 3. The Communists: "Poincare la Guerre regains the dead rerion where sleep the victims of his criminal ambition. He focls Joy mount suddenly from his heart to his mouth and the man who never laughs begins to laugh." I. The photographer: "A motion picture operator was running with his tripod and camera to get ahead of M.

Poincare. He tripped over one, of (he legs of his apparatus and stumbled along for several yards. M. Poincare and the American Amha.au. mre we knew ters together words into ere was never iresome men-alning, It was the hoy and Into words and joining sentences.

1 ane sure I any consciousness or al effort in his early tr all a matter of play foi him "Pomoare-ia-auerre am! on tinr postcard they credited the smile to a feeling of satisfaction on the part ol the Premier. They credited him with being lover of war for its own sake and with a feeling of joy at its results an accusation against which he has since most successfully defended himself. For a long time the Premier remained silent though furious at. the accusation; but, the storm broke when a young Communist deputy said in answer to a question: "Yes, I smile often: but I never smile before the dead." Everybody understood the reference and the row was on. The Premier insisted that, matter bo thrashed out at once, and ohal-lenged the Communists to prove wherein he had been In any' way responsible for the.

war. It, is to be said that in the opinion of the majority the Communists It kept him so amused thai his father and I were left free to go on with ur reading, stopping only at first to tell him a new letter and later the fcDelling of words." Only by remembering the extraordinary bitterness that arises in the'mldst of a presidential campaign when a good Old-fashioned mud-Minging party Is on can an American comprehend the bitter furore that has arisen over the question as to whether Premier Poincare did or did not smile. Fre-ftoh Politics Always Bitter, In French politics, as in that of most European nations, the spirit is hitter all the time. The tension which we in Grey Silver, Boss of Farm Bloc Willmoore" DR. BOYNTON OF BROOKLYN TO PRESIDE AT THE WORLD ALLIANCE OF CHURCHES HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF MEN WITHOUT COUNTRIES WANDERING OVER EUROPE ntry into tne punnc of 4 came as a recall of 'he city school it Hartshorne, Mr.

Kendall was sta-d was reading aloud irne's "Tanglewood teacher entered the was attracted by his chools at the Suit of a ch.an Superintendent where the Re tloned. The from Hawtl "Tales" when jroom. The visit days here even In midwinter. Why go to Palm Beach? That's what I want to know." "Then it is possible that Mayor Hylan will spend his vacation at Coney Island after the Boardwalk has been installed?" "There Is nothing to prevent him from doing so." "Would not local patriotism dictate such a course on the part of the chief magistrate of the city?" "You are asking a Question that America teel only once every four years, and then for a brief -Interval, is permanent here. Conditions make it, so.

The atmosphere is perpetually that of tho middle of a presidential campaign. nationality is equally am- (By the Associated Press.) A ug. 5 One of gees wnoso the biguous. Continued From Page 2. the tuberculosis deficiency appropriation have been scored up to the credit of the Farm Bureau and its insistence upon continued action on the part of Congress.

The Farm Credits Bill is still pending In committee, as are the Truth in (By the Associated Press.) COPENHAGEN, Aug. 5 Clergy At IJ nsen i if eseni ailed A men and religious workers from all parts of the world will gather Is stion a con-s of 17 gov-he League of uss the best problem. It i League of ugg I live bv I disi the thi ernmei Nation way of recently to lealins with here early this month to attend the meeting of the International Commit tee of the World Alliance for Interna suggested thai Hons he empower people and list -d to 'gister all frapld and expressive pronunciation. "What grade will you he in this he asked the child. Mrs.

Kendall explained that her son Was but 4 years old and had not entered achool. Upon the Insistence of Ithe superintendent the boy started his-achool work the following fall. Willmoore has not sacrificed his physical welfare for his studies. Five feet. 3 inches tall, he weiirhs 110 and takes keen deisrht In all the open air sports enjoyed by a boy Of 13.

He is an expert swimmer and I Indulges regularly In boxing, and other athletic competition. replied emphatically in the affirmative. At this point it is easy to visualize Mayor Hylan patting the babies on the head and giving the glad hand to their parents. Also Mr. Riegelmann as umpire.

Having no kiddies of his own. he would be an Impartial Judge in the selection of the finest baby in the land. "Conceding the magnetism of the Coney Island Boardwalk, with New York as a background, to visitors from other States and foreign countries, even to convalescent millionaires, Washington diplomats 'and lesser politicians, in the summer time, how can Coney Island be made an all-the-year- tional Friendship Through the dor saw him and laughed; It was at that moment that they were photographed." There Is the Photograph. Of the four explanations, that given by the Communists has less than any other the appearance of truth. There Is something in it.

against all common sense. No human being could feel hilarious simply because the ground about was sown with the bodies of slain soldiers. That. Is a sentiment of which not even the most, blameworthy of the Germans has been accused. Even the Kaiser, on whom many lay the greatest responsibility for, the war, is said to have exclaimed when confronted with a great field of slain: "I did not will this." The Communists' explanation must, it seems, he rejected, leaving the, other three.

Among the other three the choice Is a difficult one. To an ordinary unpolitical American mind either Ambassador Ilerrlck's or the. photographer's explanation sounds reasonable, and without M. Poincare's denial would probably have been accepted. But M.

Poincare is a man of exceptional intelligence and exceptional clarity of Ideas. He is quite intelligent and alert enough to know when he was laughing and when he was not. ini ernational Churches, which will open Aug. 7 and le to port ich I thi of und continue through August 11. One of them a sort which would to that they I League of any country its protec- hpwever, It iiic i hing to the main topics will be limitation of armaments, and it is expected that failed miserably.

Their evidence was thin. Their oratory was weak. And their whole conduct, during the debate was that of men who had bitten off enough for a whole herd of elephants to masticate. Poincare Defends Himself Well. Premier Poincare defended himself ably against the charges of complicity in bringing about the war.

And Rene Vivlanl, probably the greatest living orator, defended Poincare better than Poincare had defended himself. The poor Reds were simply inundated, whisked off the map, with no legs to stand on and no place to put their legs if they had had them. Only the smile remained. It is the smile that won't come off. It.

is of no importance in itself. If M. Poincare had admitted that something had happened, or something had been to make him smile for second the incident would have evaporated into thin air. It was Premier Poincare's denial of the, smile in the photograph that raised the matter to the height of a flrst-class dog fight in the Chamber of Deputies. In the meantime the Communists are continuing to print the post card in huge quantities.

With no organization selling It they have disposed of 200.000 and at the present moment. lie recognized as si would be citizens Nations rather I bin and lie, so to (pea It, tlon. At the confei was pointed out thai grant such people another thlna to in ditions in the United States, Great Britain, France, Germany, Denmark, Hungary, Austria, Holland and Serbia will be reported by nine, committees appointed last January for this purpose, and the conditions thus analyzed will be brought to the attention of the national governments concerned. On the basis of these recommendations the ohurches of the world will be asked to do their part in reconstructing the industrial order. One session will be devoted to a.

discussion of racial and religious minorities, and how the churches may help in preserving the rights and liberties of such minorities. The American delegates will present a resolution, adopted at the Cleveland meeting, which urges the Government of the United Slates to co-operate with Great Britain, or any other nation or nations, in Investigating atrocities practiced on Christians in the Near East. The discussions will be carried on in English, French, German and Danish, and the proceedings of the conference will be published in these four languages. the conference will adopt resolutions Poincare was Premier on Tuesday. But on Tuesday night or Wednesday morning he may have said or done something earning the displeasure of a majority of his parliament, and by Wednesday night another man may hrve his place.

Many want it. Many are watching him minute by minute, second by second for an incautious move. Failing a real blunder his enemies must try to create one by exaggerating some small and unimportant incident and making it appear huge and disastrous. It is because of this situation that an accidental twitching of facial muscles may lead toward a political crisis of the first water. In France it led to a furious row in the.

Chamber Of Deputies, a. row in which the lie was passed, in which Premier Poincare left bis sent on the front bench and literally screamed with rage at a young deputy who had brought the question of the smile into the discussion, a row in which several hundred other deputies hooted, cheered, banged the fops of their deslis and shouted recriminations at countless post-war 1 in which the League of Nations has been attempting to solve is what to do with the world's waifs and strays, more particularly those of Russia. There are hundreds of thousands of human brings at the present time on the Continent of Europe who cannot claim citizenship of any country. The -are scattered all over the Continent and are registered by the police as on the tolerance list; but in reality they are to certain extent prisoners. They cannot go about, from one country to another with the freedom of an ordinary person whose passport Altogether in order.

Another, and not the least trying, consequence, of their lack of citizenship is that these unfortunates cannot, claim the protection of any consul, minister or ambassador. In Berlin alone there are about Russians who have no passports and who refuse either to be registered a i the Bolshevist Consulate (here as Russian citizens or to return to Russia. Similarly in Tur-key, Jugoslavia. Bulgaria and Rumania there are thousands of Russian refu. ssports luce tie passpi untrylee nd quite rlous rts.

people only the Mayor himself can answer." "And Mr. Hearst might Join him there." "Come, now, you are getting Into politics, and I won't go Into that on my vacation. Moreover, the Coney Island Boardwalk has nothing to do with politics. Cut it out." It was impossible to cool Mr. Rie-gelmann's enthusiasm for the Coney Island Boardwalk.

It was impossible to discourage him in his project to take, so to speak, the shine off Atlantic City. Not that Atlantic City has ever done him any harm. Far from it. He admits that he has always been well treated there. But Atlantic City is not Coney Island.

Discourage him? He had an answer to every objection, and many more objections to building a boardwalk at Coney Island were put forward than have been mentioned here. So finally we gave it up and allowed him to keep on dreaming his dream of a transformed Coney Island with the frankfurter gone, the barker gone, the fattest woman and the tallest man in the world gone, and the museum of thrilling monstrosities moved to maybe Atlantic City. President Riegelmann is away from the city at this writing. How far we do not know, nor does anybody at the Boro Hall know, his secretary declared. But we were able to get Into Jaorlcs measure, the Standard Container Bill and the bill to remove the $10,000 limit on land bank loans.

The Farm Bureau was turned down recently by the Senate committee in regard to the Muscle Shoals plant. But Grey Silver does not list this as a defeat. "There will be no settlement of the Muscle Shoals proposition until we get what we want," he said with quiet earnestness. "That one committee has rejected the plan by no means closes the incident. It is not a defeat.

In fact we have no defeats In the Farm Bureau. Delays, perhaps but never defeats." He's Satisfied. Silver is well satisfied by the progress made by the Farm Bureau with its legislative program. When the Farm Bureau Federation holds its annual meeting this winter he. is prepared to make, a favorable report, on the year's affairs.

He believes in taking the most pressing matters first and the three victories scored by the Bureau were in his opinion the three which were most vital to the welfare of the farmer. Other organizations of a similar nature here are viewing with envy the manner in which Grey Silver opened up the Federal Reserve Board for a farmer. When this was first proposed by his federation the cry of class leg countries to visa hesi Not all of these "cm are in the position decline to recognize Government. Main I heir citizenship oWlni technical and legal America cltlsens win before I In- a r. in rjayi were required foi- Ru only, found during Hi Mussians who the Bolshevist I In in ha ve lost to a.

variety of aaons, Certain lived in Elurope when passports and Turkey 1 Wllr flint they "Stop right there," Mr. Rlegelmann exclaimed. "That is no argument at all. I have visited Atlantic City more than once since the advent of prohibition and have found no decrease in the boardwalk crowds there. On the contrary, they are larger than ever." "Hooch ship anchored outside of the three-mile limit?" "I don't know anything- about that," said the Boro President, again with that inscrutable look in his eyo, "but "You are going to have one outside of the three-mile limit at Coney?" we interpolated.

"Nothing of the sort! All the same Atlantic City will be a silent waste when we get our Boardwalk In operation." "Then you rely solely on the combination of a boardwalk and a dry white way to make Coney Island the premier seaside resort of the country?" "There are other factors. All I can say now is that, after we get old Coney cleaned up, and the Boardwalk going, there will be no other place like It In the whole, wide world." "How about the cleaning up process? Do you mean to burn it down and let a brand new, immaculate Coney Island arise from the. ashes?" "Oh, that is a mere detail," said appealing to the nations of the world and recommending to the Churches methods of co-operative work toward this end. Among the more than 100 delegates representing the, 21) National Councils of the World Alliance, who are coming, will be a large number of prominent American ministers, including Dr. Nehemiah Boynton, formerly moderator of the Congregational Council and pastor the Clinton Avenue Congregational Church of Brooklyn; Dr.

Charles E. Jefferson, pastor of the Broadway Tabernacle, New York; Dr. William P. Merrill, pastor of the. Brick Presbyterian Church, New York, and chairman of the World Alliance and the Church PeacS Union; Dr.

Henry A. Atkinson, general secretary of two last-named organizations; Dr, Charles S. Macfarlahd, general secretary of the Federal Council of Churches of ne says aenmteiy that he was not. But still there remains the photograph. The photograph says well, what does it say? mid lost i heir an rica ii citir n-ihin be He Is a member of the local Bov troop and i greatly interested In all activities of the local troop.

East summer, while encamped with the "troop in the mountains near here, he I readied a boy of 12 who had been Belzed with cramps while swimming, Young Kendall Is sM'l find of reading, Dickens. Scott and Stevenson being among hi favorite authors. He also reads much current literature and history. Science and mathematics he finds eattremely difficult He is enthusiastic about music and although he fcaa neve had regular instruction plays the flute well, taking par! In his father's church orchestra each Sunday. Willmoore admits thai he Is too light to try for the freshman football team when he enters eoPeo.

hut declares he will go In for del ating. Wbv They're So Bu y. "What makes giris ran about the Way they do?" snarls a petulant clubwoman, and a timid exchange suggests they may be trying to find their Mothers. Kansas City Journal. cause of having too long abroad.

around resort like Atlantic City?" Mr. Riegelmann was asked. Sun Parlon and Everything. "Oh, yes, you mean the atmospheric conditions problem has already been sieved. Nothing is simpler.

The great hotels at Coney Island Will have spacious sun parlors where the guests can enjoy themselves during spells of inclement weather. When the cold winds blow too hard for comfort the boardwalkers will be able to get under cover without sacrificing the view of the ocean or the music of the surf. Indeed, those sun parlors will be a very attractive feature of life at Coney Island In the years to come. No doubt the more robust among the guests will elect to stay out in the open, let the wind blow as cold as it will, and get up a tremendous appetite for dinner. Besides, we have many fine mild days throughout the winter when It doesn't rain or snow, so that Atlantic City i What else than the Great White Way within 30 minutes drive of our boardwalk.

The great metropolis as a background! Do you get the idea?" Mr. Riegelmann lighted a fresh cigarette and threw away the match with an eloquent gesture. "Thirty minutes from the boardwalk to 42d st. and Broadway, New York City. Do you catch on?" We did catch on, but still had some doubts to be dispelled as to the future glory of Coney Island born of the boardwalk.

think know what Is on vour not he lost sight of) is the "father" of the Coney Island boardwalk, that is, he will be when it is In esse. "Our boardwalk," said he, modestly, "will beat anything this side of Mars." "Do you think they have Coney Islands, boardwalks and such things on that planet?" he was asked. "I have never been there. But they may have. If the Martians are really of cyciopcan stature, ay some astronomers assert, their boardwalks must be tremendous affairs.

I want to be AN EAGLE MAN SEES THE OCEAN of every sort. Including saxophones Meel also a c.i rl pianist, And the triendly sailor explains the difference uciween tne poop ana the fiddle ak, j-iio nrsi nay, also, the third it I 1 telepathic communication with him, the source of the above interview. Commissioner of Accounts Hirsh- Christ; Dr. Arthur .1. Brown.

Bgora mind," said Mr. Riegelmann, reassur- tary of the Presbyterian Missionary conservative 111 making comparison field is not the only medium In this 'Imagine a baby parade on a Mar- nigly. ion feel that the Great White town for thought transference. tiau Coney Island boardwalk," sug- Way hasn't the attraction it formerly unit on lasi trip the ship carried several opera lingers, group ol actors and a number of trick dogs ll used to watch ibc clever dog being fed, bill the actors jusl ate regular, He further lhal American boyi don't make good stewards; they aren't servile enough. And they don't slick long as sailors, for they want either to rise quickly nr try something else A little shriveled old German, miner from Colorado, has .100 fiou teresting things and asks you to be sure to send her anything you may write about the voyage.

Only Two Kinds of Wines. By the fourth day out you have learned that the. ocean has only Iwo kinds of waves, little and big, and that ocean liners have 36! varieties of bores. We have been told to beware of the people who speak to you the first day out, tor they are the ones who become tiresome before the end of the voyage. It was good advice.

But there are people, on shipboard so extremely proficient that they can make your acquaintance on the morning of the sixth day and make you regret it the same evening. Even the agnostics pray for the sight of land after five, days out. But they ire the optimistic agnostics. The pessimistic agnostics start, sooner and pray only for weather rough enough to keep the majority of the passengers In their cabins. The first night out, after the band had played below, one of the masters at arms gets out.

his concertina on the after dock and plays and sings a half-dozen English songs while in the moonlight the German, the American, the French, the Spanish, the Hungarian and the Czechoslovakian passengers dance picturesquely the dances of their various home lands. It is fascinating. The second night the master at arms plays his half-dozen tunes in the moonlight and the passengers dance and it is fascinating. TALES FROM SHAKESPEARE The third night he plays his half-dozen tunes and the passengers dance and the moon shines and it isn't so fascinating. The fourth night you can stand it.

When flue same half-dozen tunes start on tho fitlh night you look frantically about for a brick and curse the sea that is so unproductive of projectiles. Then one of the crew gets out his mandolin-banjo and plays jazz, and you praise God from whom all blessings flow. Two evenings of that and you don't know a. blessing from a blight. Hoop! The Bar Opens.

Out in the open Atlantic the very first, evening we concluded that the sea had its uses. It chastens you, said we to ourself wisely. Surrounded on A LOVER IN CHAINS By ELIZABETH YORK MILLER I ma mi Germ wiih him and i look up relativ ird from in lei ny I ir hr mnd hasn't ars. A Hilda By CHARLES AND MARY LAMB an professor head" Hung; pesj tr tl last i us n.iu' in inr Society; President W. H.

P. Faunce of Brown University; Prof. William I. Hull of Swarthmore College, Hamilton Holt of New York, Dr. Frederick Lynch, George, A.

Plimpton, the Rev. A. Z. Conrad, the Rev. Lauritz Larsen, Dr.

Samuel A. Eliot, Dr. Anson P. At-terbury and John Harvey. Dr.

Boynton, who is chairman of the International Committee, will preside. A report on tho Washington Conference for Limitation of Armaments will be presented by Professor Hull and the meeting will consider resolutions adopted at the Seventh Annual Meeting of tho. World Alliance, held last May in Cleveland, Ohio, which urged the United States Government to participate in the Court of International Justice; favored the progressive reduction of armaments, and called upon the American people to "cultivate and practice the art of thinking in terms of peace and international goodwill" na ii ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL mil an 1 Or Mltsl Hajos, his tar of "Pom Pom," and other m'uelci ft, how to pronoun lif mi Heels" ii We forge A nun Jim." the Is reading Con wireless operatoi Lord is Her-other "Salt." IT WAS EXCELLENT BEER Cyl heree are "Erit Movies, Horn Gem ill the morning she sent Bertram away, and he immediately set out on his journey toward his mother's house. Helena prevailed on the widow and Diana to accompany her to Paris. When they arrived there they found tho king was gone upon a visit to the Countess of Rossilion, and Helena followed the king with all the speed she could make.

When Bertram presented himself before the king the first thing his eye happened to light upon was the ring Bertram wore upon his finger. He well remembered that Helena had said she would never part with that ring unless she sent, it to the king himself upon some great disaster befalling her; and Bertram, on the king's questioning him how he came by the ring, told an improbable story of a lady throwing it to him out of a window and denied ever having seen Helena since the. day of their marriage. The king, knowing Bertram's dislike to his wife, feared he had destroyed her, and he ordered his guards to seize him. At this moment Diana and her mother entered and presented a petition to the king, wherein they begged his majesty to compel Bertram to marry Diana, he having made her a solemn promise, of marriage.

Bertram, fearing the king's anger, denied he had made any such prom gesheimer's book's aboard "Merton of tht "BI Secrete di Hija del Ases read by a. 111 Cuba, bound f. like lo talk In acquainted), and she boldly engaged to forfeit her life if it failed to restore his majesty to perfect health in the space of two days. The king at length consented to try it, and in two days' time Helena was to lose her life if the king did not recover; but if she succeeded, he promised to give her the choice of any man throughout all France (the princes only excepted) whom she could like for a husband; the choice of a husband being the fee Helena demanded. Before two days were at an end, the king was restored to perfect health, islation was loudly raised.

Silver was shrewd. He went after his objective in a roundabout way. His Farm Bloc put through a bill which removed the recfuirement that to be a member of the Federal Reserve Board you must first be a banker. He declared that he was fighting against class legislation and yet it was an amazing coup which gave him and his farmers the whip hand in their fight for better financial representation. Silver believes that with the coming election the blocs in the House and the Senate will be greatly augmented both in size and in strength.

With all signs pointing to the arrival in the Senate of such men as Beveridge of Indiana and Brookhart of Iowa, he sees his legislative machine working more and more effectively and expeditiously. Numbers the Bloc at Twenty. Today he numbers the bloc in the Senate at about twenty. "Twenty odd" he calls it, because It is a fluctuating quantity with certain measures rallying more support than others. In the House the bloc is a hundred strong, though there he admits that it Is less visible, less picturesque and a bit less workable, because of its size.

"But it is there in the House, all right, when it's wanted," he said. "So far we've not missed a single vote when it was needed." But Silver is out of politics and he prefers the background of power rather than the spotlight. He is something of a man of mystery about the capital. Grey Silver says such and so and then things begin to happen. He knows his men and then it is not so hard to he a ruler when you have some three million odd votes at your back ready to swing to right or to left.

Recently Senator Calder tried to call up a bill authorizing the construction of a bridge over the Niagara River. Senator Norris of the Farm Bloc for some unknown reason objected to the consideration of the bill which was le Julia," and "La two being girl from We would an't speak i la. Solterani no," tho last Hide Spanish ir Germany, her. hut she CHAPTER XXI. Here they found a state of great confusion.

The caterers were busy clearing away the feast they had prepared. Gay's luggage blocked the small room off the main entrance corridor and the servants were flying about with white, rather scared faces. Before the door stood the doctor's brougham. The butler said there was some lunch waiting. No, Mr.

Traill could not go up just now. The doctor was with Mrs. Desmond and would speak with him presently. Pressed as to the state of Mrs. Desmond's health, the butler became evasive.

He really could not say. She had seemed quite all right when she went out a bit nervous and "edgy," perhaps, but that was natural. "I'd like to see Phelps a moment," Donald said when the others had gone in to lunch. The butler coughed and glanced word of English. and to "find and apply the peaceful methods of settling international differences with honor and credit to the nations." The results of a study of labor con which sank deep into the mind of Helena; for the story she now told was of Bertram's love for her daughter.

Since he had been stationed with the army at Florence he had fallen In love with Diana, the daughter of this widow, and all his suit to her was that she would permit him to visit her by stealth after the family were retired to rest, ibut Diana would by no means be persuaded to grant this improper request, nor give any encouragement to his suit, knowing him to be a married man. She said that he had been particularly importunate with Diana to admit him that night, because he was going to leave Florence early next morning. From tltls story the ardent mind of Helena conceived a project to recover her truant lord. She disclosed to the widow that she was the deserted wife of Bertram, and requested so rarely accepted. He was also supreme In a particular department of his profession.

Donald found him In the corridor brushing up the ancient silk hat which a condescending footman had handed him. "I shall have to buy a new one," he fumed to himself. Then he. looked up and the bright eyes behind the huge spectacles softened as they rested upon Donald. "Well?" Donald asked.

The doctor gave him glance for glance. "Young-man, you've had a lucky escape," he said. "The woman's daft. She's headed for perdition. There's just one thing to cure her a strait-Jacket.

For her sake it's a pity you aren't married yet. For yours, it's a blessed thing you aren't. I don't know which I wish. Are you very fond of her?" Dr. Middleton always adhered closely to his gospel of truth.

Mincing matters was not in his line. It was impossible to get away from that keen searching glance. Donald would have given a great deal to meet truth with truth. He should have liked to say. "I am not in the least fond of her.

She fills me with supreme disgust." "I am afraid I cannot discuss my feelings for Mrs. Desmond," is what and he assembled all the young noble-; Helena was not slow to make htiv Mn-iipe Inr nmnrip- these Vlinnsr An American ex-soldier tells a returning French war-bride a story of Mont Carlo. Many men who lose all their money gambling there go out Into the gardens of the Casino and shoot themselves. The heads of the establishments don't like this. 11 gives the place a bad name.

whenever a shot is heard from the garden, an attendant, runs out and puts some money in I he pockets of the suicide. That makes it look as if the dead mifn hadn't killed himself because he lost his last cint. Some time ago an American visited tho resort. He lost everything. But he knew tho custom.

ii went into tho garden, look out his revolver and fired. Attendants ran out quickly and tilled his pockets with money. Then they went, back and un After the band has played below one of the masters-at-arms gets out his concertina and plays and sings. He says Hamburg is a great UIUL Lliey WOIIIU SUIlCr LUIS Visit. IlUIll; Bertram to take place, and allow her sidewise at the man who but for a mere slip would now have been his master.

little town, and he wishes he knew some one he could borrow $10 from. ise, and then Diana produced the ring (which Helena had put into her hands) to confirm the truth of her words; and she said that she had given Bertram the ring he then wore in exchange for that, at the time, he vowed to marry her. On hearing this the king ordered the guards to seize her "I'm sorry, sir, but Miss Phelps has gone. Madam dismissed her this morning. They had words, as you might say, and madam packed Miss By ARTHUR POIiLOCK.

Phelps off at once." Dramatic Critic of The Eagle. (he st work of nature, i. The he actually did say. nounced our views of lift Ban Low Flyng Washington, Aug. (By the Associated Press) Low flying over crowds or trick flying over any populous area will be prohibited in all parts of the United States by an aeronautic code of safety being drafted by experts of the Bureau of Standards, the National' Aeronautic Association and the Society of Automotive Engineers.

Pending passage of the redrafted Wadsworth-Hiclcs bill providing for a Bureau of Commercial Aviation in the Department of Commerce, and which now provides for unified air control, the draft of the safety code is tentative, but its original provisions will include: Inspection of aviators and aircraft in connection with the granting of licenses to pilots and air transportation companies; prohibition of dangerous proximity of aircraft in flight; rules governing personnel and equipment, of airdromes, including medical and signal equipment; aircraft radio regulation rules for landing fields; lighthouses for night flying; and landing. UIBURG, July 9 The ocean has BERTRAM. Count of Rossilion, had newly coin to his title and estate by the death of his father. The king of France loved the father of Bertram, and whin he heard of the count's death he sent for his son to come immediately to his royal court In Paris, intending to grace him with his special favor and protection. Bertram was iiving with his mother When Lafeu came to conduct him to the king.

Ejfeu told the countess that the king had fallen into a sad malady, which was pronounced incurable. The lad- wished the father of Helena (a young woman who was present in attendance upon her) were living, for that she doubted not he could have cured his majesty of his disease. And she told Lafeu something of the history of Helena, saying she was the only daughter of the famous physician Gerard dc Narbon. and that he had recommended his daughter to her care when he was dying, so she had taken Helena under her protection. Bertram now bade his mother farewell, His last words were spoken to Helena, but they were words of mere civility, wishing her happiness; She had long loved Bertram, yet she always remembered tiiat he was the Count of Rossilion, descended from the most ancient family in Paris.

She of humble hirth. Gerard de Narbon. when he died, left her no other portion than some prescriptions of rare and well proved virtue. There was one infallible remedy set down as an improved medicine for the disease under which Lafeu said the king at that time languished; and when Helena heard of the king's complaint she, who till now had been so and so hopeless, formed an ambitious project in her mind to go herself to Paris and undertake the cure of the king. She hoped this legacy should advance her foftune, even "to the high dignity of being Count Rossilion's wife.

Bertram had not been long gone when the countess was informed by her steward that he had overheard Helena talking to herself, and that he understood, from some words she uttered, she was in love with Bertram, and had thought of following him to Paris. The countess dismissed the steward with thanks and. desired him to tell Helena she wished to speak With her. til head of been greatly over-praised. It's a bore.

all sides by you revise petty tilings seem not to matter the rushes, win wages? At niflcance of suicide. VV lien the establishment arrived on suicide had walked away, tp in the morning to tind irm raging. We ask the ir if this is a hurricane or and he says: "A stiff of man-made civilization count in the least. theaters, the subway women, song, work, last one sees the Insig-human beings compared I the scene I hf We wake a terrible st friendly sail just a gale Truefcit is mighty. But if in their rhythniTo, inarticulate way the wild waves say anything lords she saw the Count Rossilion, and turning to Bertram she said, "This is the man.

I dare not say, my lord, I take you, but I give me and my service ever whilst I live into your guiding power." "Why, then," said the king, "young Bertram take her; she is your wife." Bertram did not hesitate to declare his dislike to this present of the king's of the self-offered Helena, who, he said, was a poor physician's daughter, bred at his father's charge, and now living a dependent on his mother's bounty. Helena heard him speak these words cf rejection and of scorn, and she said to the king: "That you are well, my lord, I am glad. Let the rest go." But tho king would not suffer his royal command to be so slighted; and that same day Bertram was married to Helena, a forced and uneasy marriage to Bertram, and of no promising hope to the poor lady. Bertram told her that, as he was not prepared for this sudden marriage, she must not wonder at the course he should pursue. He ordered her to go home to his mother, and he "parted from her without the common civility of a kind farewell.

She returned, a dejected lady, to her mother-in-law, and as soon as she entered the house she received a letter from Bertram which almost broke her heart. He wrote: "When you can get the ting from my finger whih never shall come off, then call me husband, but in such a Then I write a Never. Till I have, no wife, I have nothing In France." The next morning Helena was missing. She left a letter informing the with the other works of nature. The.

breeze! I bis is very discouraging. At last land is sighted and at. 7 a.m. the ship glides into tho Harbor of Plymouth. The sailboats here have blood-red sails and the hills of England are divided into lovely red.

green at all, they merely repeat themselves. Wherein, unfortunately, they are like the passengers on the ships that tra worries and wants of everyday life in a large and artificial city are trivial. A big Idea! We looked about for a ship acquaintance, upon whom we could retaliate by imparting the newly passed over. The next day Calder went to Norris and said: "Look here, George, are you going to object to my Niagara bridge bill again today?" Norris looked at him, winked his eye and replied: "Well, I don't think so, Bill. Grey Silver came to see me last night and he said that bill of yours was a pretty good bill after all.

No, I won't object to it this time." All of which was spoken in jest. But beneath the jest there was a solid foundation of truth for the report, that Grey Silver Is one of the half-dozen really Influential men in the nation's capital today. to pass herself upon Bertram for Diana, telling them she wished to get a ring from him which he had said, if ever she was in possession of, he would acknowledge her as -his wife. The widow and her daughter promised to assist her. Helena caused Information to be sent to Bertram that she was dead, hoping that when he thought himself free to make a second choice he would offer marriage to her in her feigned character of Diana.

After it was dark, Bertram was admitted into Diana's chamber and Helena was there ready to receive him. The flattering compliments and love discourse he addressed to Helena were precious sounds to her, though sh" knew they were, meant for Diana, and Bertram was so well pleased with her that he made her a solemn promise to be her husband and to love her forever. She exerted all her wit to please him, and tne simple graces of her lively conversation and the endearing sweetness of her manner so charmed Bertram that he vowed she should be his wife. Helena begged the ring from off his finger as a token of his regard, and he gave it to her, and in return for this ring she gave him the ring which the king had made her a present of. Before it was light in and gray squares.

It. is a nt' place. hats also, and he. said if they did not confess how they came by this ring of Helena's they should both be put to death. Diana requested her mother might he permitted to fetch the jeweler of whom she bought the ring, and presently she returned leading in Helena herself.

"Oh, my lord," said Helena, "when I personated this fair maid I found you wondrous kind, and look, here Is your letter!" reading to him in a joyful tone those words which she had once repeated so sorrowfully, "When from my finger you can get this ring "This is done, it was to mo you gave the ring. Will you be mine, now you are doubly won?" Bertram replied, "If you can make It plain that you were the lady I talked with that night. I will love you dearly." This was no difficult task, for the widow and Diana came with Helena purposely to prove this fact. Thus Helena became the beloved wife of her dear Bertram, the daughter-in-law of her noble mistress and herself the Countess of Rossilion. Customs officials come aboard that started nut to be tall like derbies and flattened a ii.

I I ben Stopped short making them themselves out as if xne wauswori n-jiicKs Dill in practically its original form passed the had said, "Thus far the manufacture shall the braliu of customs Officials verse them. days on the ocean Is a 1 thing. You see the flying fishes play in the Atlantic exactly as' in Kipling's poem. The porpoises perforin for you. The water is full of phosphores-c flashes at night.

A whale spouts so that you may brag about it senate. It has M-n redrafted by the Y. ign and interstate commerce committee of the. House to include unified control of civil army and navy aviation. Its passage by the House is declared to be assured, together with acceptance by the.

Senate of its re discovered met. 1 tie, deck was deserted. i Even prohibition, said wo, as we went below, is of Infinitely less importance than a shooting star. Whereupon we discovered a mass of trivial human beings almost, as vast, as the sea itself. The mass centered about a counter witli a brass rail.

It was 7 o'clock and the bar had opened. It was excellent beer. The next morning we complained about the eggs. And most of those who had crowded about the bar wore faces the color of the seaweed in the Gulf Stream. That first night passengers couldn't wait for the waiters.

They went to the bar and ordered and came back on deck not only with their hands full of foaming glasses but with their arms full, five, six, seven beers in one arm and as many in, the other. A woman took a glass of lager to her dog. On the dog was a blanket bearing the embroidered inscription. "Every rose has its thorn: ever dog its day." The fob lowing day was the lady's. She made the rail her friend.

The dog barked merrily. i "Humph!" the doctor ejaculated. "Well, good day to you, young man. I'm sending a nurse. The woman will likely be better tomorrow and then you can get on with the wedding if you're as daft as she is." He threw Donald a glance of piercing contempt as he trotted off.

Like everybody else he imagined that the wretched young man was after Mrs. Desmond's money. Donald stood for a moment in great indecision. He wanted verv much to see Gay, but. from Dr.

Middleton's manner he judged that she was a wreck and not capable of giving a coherent account of herself. As he debated1 what to do next, one of the footmen went to open the front door in answer to the bell and Jack Stanhope sauntered in. CHAPTER XXII. "I'll Kill "Please accept my congratulations, Traill. I hope the wedding went off like a house a-flre and that I'm not too late for a glimpse of the happy bride and a bite of lunch." Whatever the man's purpose was in coming here, Donald was taken in completely.

Evidently Gay had invited him to that ill-omened wedding. Certainly he had dressed for such an occasion and boro himself with the air of a welcome if somewhat tardy guest. However, he. had sufficient wit not to offer Donald his hand. "Mrs.

Desmond is ill and our wedding has been postponed," Donald said shoriiy. He turned abruptly and went upstairs, leaving Stanhope in the wide corridor watching him. Stanhope continued to smile, drawing off his gloves in an absent-minded way, and handing them over to the footman together with his hat and stick. Then as Donald disappeared he strolled into the ballroom and Joined the small party who were still discussing luncheon and the unpleasant contretemps Which had taken place. "Hello, people!" he exclaimed genially.

"What's this about Mrs. Des go and no farther." At Cherbourg little French newspaper girl comes aboard and a French doctor, the most self-satisfied man in the world. The friendly sailor gto mad because the doctor wears severaJ decorations on his breast; "beefsteaks" the sailor calls them. The sailor is German. And at 2 a.m.

the next morning we get up and see the lights of the Elbe, leading to Hamburg. The Kiel Canal is just ahead and lighted it looks like a dignified Coney Island. German efficiency is In evidenpe at once. The buoys marking the channel are equipped with electric lights that flash intermittently. The beautiful flat fields along each side, are as well cared for as lawns.

Each road is lined with fresh green shade trees. countess that she was so much grimed at having driven Bertram from his native country and his home that she had undertaken a pilgrimage to the when you get back home again. The rainbows are as lucid as in any possible dream. Yes, for three days, possibly four, it's fine. "Extraordinary! Donald muttered.

He went into the ballroom where tables had been laid for 100 and joined the lonesome-looking group who inquired of him sympathetically but at the same, time curiously. "I haven't seen the doctor, yet," Donald replied. "I don't know a thing." Mrs. Walters, a flashily dressed woman whose features advertised the fact that she drank too much, proffered an explanation. "I'm always telling poor old Gay that one of these day she'll do herself in with those powders she's forever snuffing up.

She says it's to cure a cold, but I tell her that a bottle of 'the boy' or a stiff whisky is much better." "Quite right quite right," agreed Mr. Carlisle filling up Mrs. Walters' glass. "I think they're bad for her nerves. Don't you agree with me, Mr.

Donald sat stunned, but his features were quite noncommittal. as well as his answer. "I'm sure I don't know," he said, quietly. "Gay's doctor understands these things better than I do." "Undoubtedly," said the old dandy, who agreed with everybody. "Of course Mrs.

Desmond is only my by marriage and my dear wife and I have not been on speaking terms for many years but. nevertheless, I am fond of Mrs. Desmond. I drink, sir, to the happy ending." He glanced at Donald, who perforce raised his glass. "The happy ending!" shrilled Mrs.

Walters. "Good luck, old chap." said Ritchie, who was a decent little sort. "But we don't want 'many happv returns' of this dav, do we? I can feel the sweat trickling down my backbone yet." At that point the butler glided across the parquet, and whispered a few words in Donald's ear. "The doctor," the, latter said briefly, as he pushed back his chair and went out. Dr.

Middleton was a little wizened man whose fame as specialist enabled him to brave the amusement of the world with a shaven upper Hp and what are known as chin whlske-s. Strangers took him for an old-fashioned Methodist preacher, favoring "revival meetings." In reality he was a cynic, inclining to no special brand of gospel but the truth, since It was drafted form. Its approval by the President is also expected as he has repeatedly declared in favor of the legislation embodied in the bill. In this connection the coming convention of the National Aeronautic Association is of interest, when unified and expanded air power for the federal government will be the primary object. The meeting will have in mind largely the development of civil aviation throughout the country, and will have the practical co-operation of and then shrine of St.

Jaques de Grand, and I requested the countess to inform her son that the wife he so hated had left his house forever. Swedes Will Again Sail The Ocean to Delaware And then the sea begins to make a nuisance of itself. It is unnecessarily spacious. The wild waves repeat themselves like the patients at a watering: place talking of their dis- When Helena entered she asked her, "Helena, do you love my son?" "Good madam, pardon me." said the affrighted Helena. The countess replied.

"Give me not this evasive answer. Come, come, disclose the AMER. BUSINESS IN Berlin, Aug. 5 A membership mark of 2,000 is rapidly being approached by the American Chamber of Commerce in Germany, as compared with a maximum enrollment of 350 before the war. The chamber was established in 1903 for the purpose of promoting trade relations between the United States and Germany, and especially the promotion of American foreign trade.

For the past four or five months, It is officially stated, more than 10d explications for membership have been laid before the board of directors at each of its monthly meetings. The constitution of the chamber provides for two classes of mcmbersnlp, active and associate. The former includes the right to vote and hold office and ii limited to American citizens; the latter is open to all non-American nationalities. The status of membership on June 12 showed 509 active and 1,041 associate members, the latter comprising exclusive life and honorary members. Bertram, when he left, Paris, went to Florence, and there became an officer I in the Duke's army.

He received letters from his mother containing the tate of ycr affections, for your love 1 Hdine-s that Helena would eisea. ne nylng fish have played themselves out. The man from Mc-Keesport, with two proud gold teeth In front and. after i a. ul t- i ,1 TJT1 I OTHENBURG, Sweden, Aug.

5 VJ One of the most romantic adventures of the Swedes during Hamburg is just green boats with 1 yellow boats, blue with leeboards in canoe instead of I beautiful summe Hamburg That's (Tic Place! The first day a friendly sailor im ahead and we pass (lack sails, red bonis, boats, huge sailboat3 ie those of a sailing And there are homes along the all colors, most of tiled roofs. Early clad only in towels at us. in Army and Navy authorities. Among the leaders expected to attend the convention are: Howard E. Coffin, former chairman of the Air-Craft Production Board: Benedict fjrowell, former Secretary of War-Gen.

Mason M. Patrick, Chief of the Army Air Service; and Rear Admiral W- F. Fullnm, former Superintendent of the Naval Academy, and commander of the Pacific fleet during the war. Delegates will fly to the October convention from all parts of the country. Speed and efficiency contests, national and international in character will be among the events.

shore, houses i them with re I morning bathe wave their tow a six-cylinder car in McKocsport, has told you a dozen times how he shoots past the traffic cops at home at 40 miles an hour and thev merely shout amiably, "Hello, John!" He knows them personally. The highly intelligent lady who invented color music before Wilfred contrived his color organ has learned that you work on a newspaper and has flattered you quite mad by asking your sage advice as to how free a hand to give her son in Paris, by commending pointedly on the worldly wisdom of newspaper men and by desiring three times a day, and each time significantly, your counsel anent the proper way no nior" disturb mm: ana ne was 111 paring to return home when Helena herself, clad in pilgrim's weeds, arrived at Florence. She heard that a hospitable widow received into her house female pilgrims, so to this good lady Helena went, and the widow gave her a courteous welcome, and invited her to see whatever was curious in that famous city, and told her that if she would like to see the duke's army she would take her where she might have a full view of it. "And you will see a countryman of said the widow; "his name Is Count Rossilion." Helena wanted no second Invitation. The widow told Helena the story of Bertram's marriage, and how he had deserted the poor lady his wife.

To this account of her own misfortunes Hele There are sheep and goats and horses grazing in the fields along the shore. And any number of cows. A of the descendants of later immigrants. Even the vessel itself is to be built by Swedish-Americans, and the crew and passengers will be in early 17th century Swedish costumes. The new Kalmare Nyckel is to be sailed over the same course as taken by the original immigrant vessel which landed on the shores of the Delaware River more than a century and a quarter before the American Revolution.

It is thus purposed suitably to com-meraorHf the coming of the Swedish immigrants to what is now the State of Delaware, and to call attention to the advancement and good fortune of Swedish immigrant and their descendants in America. The project was suggested to the management of the Gothenburg National Exposition, which will be held next May to celebrate the 300th anniversary of Gothenburg by King Gustavus Adolphus. the early 17th century the foundation of the first Swedish colony in America will be enacted next summer, if plans now under way in Gothenburg materialize. It is proposed to reproduce an exact, full-sized model of the Kalmare Nyckel the "Key of Kalmar," the vessel in which the first Swedish immigrants to the New World crossed the Atlantic to Delaware in 163S, and to sail it to America. In order to add further interest to this event it is planned that the crew AUXO me lull cil.

i'ij Jeer knees owned her love and with shame and terror Implored the pardon of her noble mistress. She owned the design she had formed in her mind, when she heard Lafeu speak of ttie Icing's illness. Helena said this was the most prized medicine Gerard de Karbon possessed, and that he had riven it to his daughter on his deathbed. The countess gave Helena free leave to pursue her own way and generously furnished her with ample Seans and suitable attendants, and eiena set out for Paris. Lord Lafeu obtained an audience of the king for her, but she still had many difficulties to encounter, for the king was not easily prevailed on to try the medicine offered hirn by this fair ycuag doctor.

But she told him she WSJ. Gerard: de Narbon's daughter Jtotffcjtfepa 7 am 9- the king -was well srman woman discovers parted the information that Hamburg was onlv 3.600 miles away; that it win a real live city compared with dead New York; that In Germany beer cost a cent a glass. "The very best brews may be a cent and a half." It's a glorious universe! In spots. That first day presages a musical i trip. We meet the bass viol player from a New England symphony orchestra name Pfeifer, which is Get'- man for lifer.

We meet also the man who repairs all the musical irtstru-mentl for the Philadelphia Symphony. He is bound for Markneuklrchen in i Saxony, the greatest musical town in the world, says he. where all the in- hafAnts make musical instruments returning the cows "Ach," German. all tour 1 The fr th Covered. A policeman recently told an interviewer that visitors frequently asked him where the Strand was when he was actually 'standing on it.

There should be a law against tourists baiting our bobbies as to their size in foot- dl says, humorously in nice cows. They have sailor is even more He says: Hamburg town. And he wishes one he could borrow The Saving Grace. Good footwork is essential in box-ng, we are informed. That would ba pur only chance with Mr.

Dempsey. to go anout getting publicity for her mond's being ill? The bridegroom seems positively vicious. Nearly snapped my head off just now. This looks more like a funeral than a wedding to me." (To Be Continued.) friendly than ev is a great little he knew some $10 from. and passengers be made up of American descendants of the early Swedish unch.

fcUmdori). mean on coior music, men sne says she is positive you write terribly in. na patiently listened. Then the widow I wear. London Opinion.

began another fsverji teord fit (Bettlere along the P.alaSM River and.

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Pages Available:
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