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WOMANNOVELIST IN WIRELESS 'PHONE fi ROLE OF II]EALIST’PRI]VES NEWS VALUE - Heart in America But Soul I i With Turkey Angcra, Turkey, Aug. 18.—Dressed :In a black riding suit and astride an i Arab mare, Halido Hanum, tho Turk- ish woman novelist and Nationalist . leader, greeted The Associated Press ; correspondent by the roadsida outside of \Angora, waving her hand in rec- © ognition as the automobile approach- after crossing innumerable moun- tains and rivera from Ineboli, tha ' contraband port on tha Black Sea. Halide invited the correspondent to her home, an Anatolian farmhouse in ' & nearby gorge. She said she had rid- flen horseback frequently since she escaped from Constantinople in March, 1920, riding the entire dis- tance to Angora on her horse. “My mind and soul are hére but my heart is in America with my boys, Ala and Hassan, in college at Urbana, fiL,” said the woman who has made berself famous, not only ai a novel- st but by espousing the cause headed by Kemal Pasha who is fighting the Greeks. She spoke of the war with the * Greeks and of the difficulty in mak- ing peace with the allfes. “Time is our great and best ally,” “she said. “We want peace, and wa " we willing to fight forever for it. It “ s costly for us but it is the only way. We must havo our independence; pol- % | ltical, geographic and ccomomic.” % Tha correspendent reminded her i * that these were vague terms used by &!ho Nationalists since the Turkish . armistice. © “It may seem monotonous but wo _ keep right on saying and tHinking the ‘jame things,” she replied. “When we first said them, wo were ridiculed by some o! our own people, while the ~ ' Allles went on violating thc armistice ierms. We have made progress dur- mg the past two vears, and finally wa will win. Haven't the Allien got snough out of us by taking Mesopota- mia and Syria? Ai for the Greeks, | Mter they have spent all their money 2 and indebted their nation to keep up s large army, they will be obliged to , | teturn home. 5o “After wa have disposed of the | Sreeks, then the Allies will have to E ' trop the Capitulations, which origin- ‘lally were privileges extended to for- |} sgn subjects centuries ago by us so . 'we wouldn't need to interfere in their .’ affairs. Gradually, the foreign na- _ | dons have made oif these capitula- . dony an encroachment on out sover- . dignty. “1 understand the Allies have about * tbandoned their pretensions to zones st influentie. Anvway, we won't have 4 ifgem. as such zomes mean infring- L.ment on our political liberty. In such sones the Allies would exploit us, not oring us economic help. The Allies we ruined and need to spend their money at home. It is better businesa . 'or us to have freo trade competition I 'giving the Americans the Swiss, or | ¢ wnybody, 3 fair chanca to trade with *“We can’t give up Constantinople. " | That city is the culmination of our stvilization. It represents our art, ‘sir beauty, our culture. It is at onco pur Venice and our New York. “There’s a peasant fairy tala that the Devil, once upon a time, finding lhe peoples of the earth at peace, salled a counci! ot tha under Devils, when it was decided to reform tha jarth so as to make the straits (ot Dardeneclles) and there pitch, in . olace of rare beauty, the fair city to- | Say called Constantinople, and that sver since nations have fought to possesa the straiti.and the city. Per- aaps, with all the new mischief thera ® in the world, the nations may leave s to make peaco with the Devil. ‘The British want the contrcl of tha straits and tho city, but the worst they can do is to blockade us, and wa 2an live on our own food, maka our swn clothes until they are tired. Why should the British bave such control? 3urely no one wanta the Greeks or the French therae either.” Regarding Bolshevik relations., sha mid: “Wae do not want any military help nor Bolsheviki among us, or any strangers for political reasons. “The sum total of our nationalism & to tell the truth, and accept no middle measures. The truth i1 the pnly thing that counts. Wo are sither right or wrong and if right we will win, and Turkey will be a frea and useful nation. We want to live sur own way, educate our people, promote commerce and the arts, build rsoads and railways, and cultivate our Selds. Any nation whose prosperity ‘s based on agriculture may survive. Will the world let us? If not we will Aght to. the last man and the last woman.” PIMPLES ON FACE FOR 3 YEARS AlsoOn Arms. Very Sore. Cuticura Healed. “For three years my daughter wa troubled with pimples on her face and arms. They were hard, large, _and red, and some of them festered and were very sore. Her face was for a while, and she stayed . g three cakes of Cuti- and two boxes of Cuticura was healed.” (Signed) F. McDuffy, 20 Franklin St., Exeter, N. H., Dec. 31, 1920. Give Cuticura Sosp, Qintment and Talcum the daily care of youx skin. Associated Press Uses Equipment to Report Regatta Chicago, Aug. 18.—The wireless tel- ephone, used by the Associated Press te cover the Great Lakes speed boat regatta Aug. 4, 5, 6, 7, furnished a so- iution for one of the most dffiicult problenis of news men that of getting the results ashore and into the office speedily. The ingenuity required to report vacht races has furnished many a rp- mantic incident in news repoyeng, but the wireless telephone in this instance swept away every prevous:Krpwn bar- rier.to speed. Sitting in comfort on the deck of a ship at the finish.line, the Associated I'ress reporter, without getting out ol his chair, called the names of speed boats as fast as they flashed past him, direct into the office of the Associated P.es in a loop skyscraper. His voite carried as clearly as if he had been in 2n adjoining room. s The new experiment in reporting was made possible by the co-operation Japtain Edward A. Evers, command- ing the Illinois Naval Reserves, was ‘nstallel aboard the slbmarine chaser 119, placed at the disposal of the As- sociated Press by Captain Daniel W. ‘Wurtzbaugh, gpmmandant of the ninth Naval District and Great Lakes Naval Training Station, Lieut, A. C. Forbes, wireless officer of the Illinois Reserves was in charge of the installation. At the Associated Press offices on e seventh floor of an office buildinz, \ small receiving set was placed on 'ne corner of a desk, and for aerial « single strand of wire was stretched rom a window to a roof acrose an ireaway. Lieut. Jack Henning, commanding he; SC-419, anchored alongside the indge’'s barge, where the Associated Press correspondent was able to talk ¥ith judges, timekeepers and scorers, follow the two and a half mile race "ourse with glasses, and dictate his nlletins through the air to the office. During the regatta the wireless :«chool at Great Lakes Naval Training Station maintained a telephone set on the Municipal Pier, where thousands of visitors to the Pageant of Progress “leard the Associated Pre:s bulletins. The naval wireless exhibit was one oi the stellar attractions at the pag- rant. Visitors heard wireless telegraph stations in many parts of the country sities. BESSE-LELAND :WINS Ringrose Leads 'Teammates in Nlnt.h ! Inning Rally. In a slugging- match played yester- day afternoén. at Walnut Hill' park, Besse-Lelands came . through winners over the'Adkins Printing company team score 15 to 14. The winning nine had an exceptionally ‘poor day in'the fiela, but more than made up for that 5hort- coming at the bat: In the first inning Adkins checked up five runs and in the second added two more to their score. ‘ Elevén runs were scored in that inning by .the Besse-Le land outfit. The score was tied in the fourth and for the next four, innings both clubs fought neck-to-neck. last frame the printers sent - three runs but the clothiers went ;hern one’ better, ending the. game. with a 15-14 score. ‘‘Vinny’’ Ringrose, the Besse-Leland slugger who has - been pounding out triples with monotonous regularity for the past several weeks, came through with one'of his special- ties in the last inning breaking the ice for a win by the store team. Ringrose scored on Gibney’s double, Whippie walked, Gallup sacrificed and -Tucker knocked -a triple. Larson scored Tucker by a long drive, ending the game. For the winners Ringrose pitchéd ana for the losers Crean and Smlth worked on the slab, . In the CRUISE AROUND WORLD Chicago Man To Start Tomorrow on 18 Months’ Trip New York Aug. 18. —Albert Y. Goe-| wen of Chicago, was making final pre- parations today for a cruise around the world in a 98 foot power yacht built here especially for the trip. Accompanied by Mrs Goewen, Ber- nard Rogers Jr and F. Trever Hogg, captain of the 1916 Princeton football team Mr. Goewen plans to sail tomor- row for the 18 months’ cruise that will take them to the south sea islands; China, the Philippines and Africa. The prime purpose of the trip is to explore the rivers of the south sea islands and the yacht, Speejacks, was designed with this in view. The Speejacks has [ two 500 horsepower engines, and tanks for 3,500 gallons of gasoline, sufficient to take her 4,000 miles. of the United. States navy, department(make the W. C. ] and the naval reserves.of. Hlinois. The| t8 warfare against alcohol transmitting equipment, furnished by complished and that law enforcement «nd “listened in“ at band and phono- :raph concerts 'in Chicago‘and other “BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY AUGUST HELP ENFORCE LAW IS PLEA TO WOMEN Apathy and Indlfierence Are Not Wanted Toward Prohibition San Francisco, Aug. 18.—Women of the country were called on to give their vigorous support to law enforce- ment by Miss Anna A. Gordon, presi- dent of the National Woman’s Chris- tian Temperance Union, at the open- g, of its 48th annual convention here was the keynote struck by Miss Gordon in her address on “The Expanding Program of Our New Cru- sade.” ‘We are not dicharged from our beaceful anti-alcohol warfare of the past four decades,” Miss Gordon told delegates representing 500,000 W. C. T. U. members. “We cannot lay down our arms.: “Much territory remains to be pos- 3essed for our foundation principles of total abstinence and prohibition. “We thank God for the eightheenth imendment that legally breaks down he bulwarks of our enemy. But today 1¢ fights in the open. He is very mych- alive as a law breaker and a Jeer bolshevist. He would .like to W. C. T. U. believe that is ac- need not be our great objective. “Our chief danger lies in the apathy ind indifference of many good people who aided in securing the law. . An unescapable obligation, Gordon declared, rests upon every law abiding citizen bravely to co-operate with federal and ' state enforcement officials and go to work for the elec- ‘ion regardless of party affiliations of candidates who believe in prohibition wnd its enforcement. Today she added, the United States ‘s a vast unified laboratory where the indings and declarations of eminent European and American scientists, >conomists and sociologists concerning ‘he dangers of alcoholic drink and the bénefits of prohibition are being suc- sesstully tested. “All the world is looking on,” Miss Gordon said, “and’ will judge prohibi- tion by the brand that it labeled ‘Made in America.’ To enlighten the tamily of nations we must help hold aloft the brightly burning torch of a well enforced, successful prohibitory law. We must still crusade, we must still dare. Comrades, we must ‘carry THEREm plain fu ‘The body is warmed, sustained—kept ymmc—in & very practical and scientific ‘way. Some Simple Facts Food is heat and power and renewal for the body. After all, there’s nothing mysterious or magical about what food does in serving buman need. Nothing mysterious, but interesting—and much that is important. Some foods are particularly good for the body. GRAPE-NUTS is such a food. Grape-Nuts is made from whole wheat and malted bar- ley flour — product of the two grains which are richest in food elements for human need. Under the outer, or bran' coating of the grain, DOINGS OF THE DUFFS TOM, You'D BETTER HURRY!E WE'VE ALL HAD OUR DINNER! THE DINING ROOM. WL BE CLOSED! Miss/| mll underotood. about pieceof machinery: npdr and running smoothly. Ilthebod‘yfl:shnpomm a8 an sutomo! engine or a + Is it as reasonable to talk about the best ways of sus- taining the body as it is to talk of proper care for the engine furnace? “7 Ask Far B % “Zeat Horlick's The ORIGINAL ‘Maited Milk b i NO COOKING The “Food - Drink” for All Ages. Quick Lunch at Home, Office, and Fountains. Ask for HORLICK'S. #Avoid Imitations & Substitutes Reporting on her recent trip to South America, Miss Gordon said that prohibition was a live issue in Chille, Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Ura- suay and that the president of Chile and Uraguay were enlisted in the prohibition movement. Sentiment for world discrmament the W. C. T. U. leader declared, must “‘unceasingly be created and constant- ly kept at white heat.” “AMERICAN PLAN” GONE. Hotel Men Say That Public Has Wear- ied of This Restaurant Menu. Pittsburgh, Aug. 18.—The American plan in hotels in large cities is a thing of the past, according to delegates at- t_ending the convention of the interna- tional stewards association here. Neith- er the traveling publi: nor the hotels want it and ‘‘that covers the whole ground,”” F. J. Smith, hotel manager of Newark, N_ J., said. ‘‘Besides the American plan is bad for the digestion,”” Mr. Smith contin- ued. “‘It's human nature to eat every- thing in sight after one has paid for it. Club breakfasts, table d’hote luncheons and regular dinners in greater num- bers will be offered hereafter through- out the country.’ COURT OF JUSTICE Creation of International Tribunal at Geneva is Assured. Geneva, Aug. 18.—Creation of the permanent court of international jus- tice is assured, ‘it is announced here. The secretariat of the league of na- tions has been informed that Spain and Haiti will soon deposit their ratifications of the agreement to establish the court and when they are received the number of nations which have deposited ratifi- cations will have reached 24, the requis- ite number. If they are received in time, the assembly of the leagus of na- tions which will meet next month will be able to elect the judges and con- stitute the court. How Old Age Comes | To Those Who Invite It 18, 192, TAKE GREATER CARE IN DENTAL TROUBLE National Dental Association Hcars U. ot P. Doctor—Fifty Per Cent. Of Tosses Not Necessary. Milwaukee, Wis.,, Aug. 18.— More than 50 per cent. of the teeth now being extracted could be saved by proper ireatment, Dr. J. F. Biddle of the University of Pitsburgh told the National Dental association here to- day. . aUnt-A7TE—UWknne E T ET TTN “Teeth are in many cases the source of bod:ly ailments and their extrac- tions has in some instances resulted in cures which seem almost miracu- lous,” Dr. Biddle said. “However we must not lose sight of the fact that many times teeth are sacrificed with the hope of curing almost every disease known to science. “Undoubtedly abscessed of pulp- less tecth should not be permitted to remain in the mouth if they cannot be put in a healthy condition. On the other hand all teeth in which pulps have been removed should not be condemned.’ Proper treatment which Dr. Bid- dle said would save half the teeth be- ing pulled consisted of “infinite care on the part of the operator, strict ob- servance of approved methods of by the X-Ray, and follow-up exam- sterilization, the verifying of results ination and X-ray at regular inter- vals.” ELECT DERBY MAN. Sullivan Is Suprcme Grand Ranger of Foresters of America. Baltimore, Aug. 18.—Delegates to the biennial convention of the su- preme court, Foresters of America, in session here elected George P. Sul- livan, Derby, Conn., supreme chief ranger. Other officers chosen were: Supreme sub-chief ranger, P. J. Ken- nedy, Exeter, N. H.; supreme treas- urer, George Sinnamon, Philadelphia; supreme secretary, Thomas M. Don- nelly, Jersey City, N. J.; supreme re- cording secretary, Joseph M. Grise, Chicopee, Mass.; supreme lecturer, John H. Baehr, Cleveland, Ohio; su preme medical examiner, Dr. John J. Franlinger, Philadelphia. Supreme trustees, iWlliam C. Ro: enkranz (chairman) Brooklyn, N. Y. Frank Spesia, Joliet, Ill; Fred S. Pulver, New York city; Charles A. Mitchell, Baltimore. —“Thm’s a Reason’’ nature has placed phosphates and lime which go to the making of bone, and the red blood corpuscles. This may sound like physi- alogy, but it works like health. Hunger Not Cheated All the richness of the ker- nel, together with essential mineral elements, are retained in the making of Grape-Nuts. Often, in the manufacture of foods, some of the most vital of nature’s provisions are thrown away. The long baking process (Grape-Nuts is the result of 20 hours continucus baking) partially pre-digests the food substances, develops the sterches into dextrin and mal- tose—giving to Grape-Nuts its own natural sweetness— and produces a food which, when served with milk or cream, has been found by chemists to be almost per- fectly balanced in qualities of nutnition. The Enemies Within Now, old age begins in the larger intestine. This is what the scientists have found who know the humean body as the mechan- ical expert knows his auto- mobile engine. Noneedtogointothe partic- ulars—it’s enough to say that Certain effects produced by food which is slow in digest- | WAS JUST CLOSING THE DOORS ECT 1LL LET YoL ! ly and ing develorp fermentation and other conditions Grape-Nuts digests quick- ‘wholesomely. Much of this is due to the fact that the long baking has partly pre-digested the nutri- ment; partly to the fact that there is contained in Grape- Nuts the essential “rough- nesg” to stimulate the action of the intestines. Health's Splendid Champion Gmpe-Nuts is a delightful food, for it and sweet in flavor, and al- ways crisp. It is unusually nutritious, for it has all the body-building elemems of the most perfect food grains. It is a convenient and econom- ical food, for it is ready to eat from the package, keeps in any climate, and is appetiz- ing to the last bit. is uniquely rich It builds strengthnndvigor without taxing the digestion or leaving, within the body, elements whose familiar harm is really the beginning of “ald a¢e. Grape-Nuts has been a favorite food, around the world, for nearly & quarter of a century— And there is a reason! | {enEss vm A LTTLE s | LATE - WHAT CAN | GET NOW? Root, Sacramento, California; John J. Mack, Hartford, Conn.; James Du- ross, Philade'rhia; and Bert Monsigneur Ceretti upon his ar- rival at Paris as Papal Nuncio. He is the first ambassador from the vati- can to France since the break be- ‘ween that government and the Church of Rome 15 years ago. He is regarded as one of the ablcst diplomats of the vatican. TO TAX PRIZE WINNERS. Mexico City, Aug. 18.—The govern- ment intends to exact a tax from all persons winning prizes in tho scores of lotteries held in the republic. A recent official decree orders a ten per cent. tax on all winnings abova $5,000, a five per cent. tax on prizes from $500 up to $5,000 and a two and omne-half per cent. tax on pre- miums under $500. The decrea be- cama effective August 1. $75,000 HORSE DEAD. Lexington, Ky., Aug. 18.—Ultimus, sire of Last Coin, Harry Kelly, Step Lightly, Second Thoughts, My Rev- erie, and other noted thoroughbreds, died at the Beaumont stud near Lex- ington Tuesday. An attack of colic caused the death of the famous sire. He was valued at $75,000 and was in- sured for $25,000. CADSULES u ‘The world’s standard remedy liver, bladder and urk. acid mhlu—dn National Remedy of Holland since 1696. Guaranteed. Three sizes, all druggists. . | A big box for 35 cents. Mail orders Princess Pat The secret is in the poise of the heel and in the straight inside line. For walking or housework or business. BIG P. 0. BUSINESS Shanghia Postal Receipts For April, 1921 Were 179 Per Cent. Greater Than in 1920; Gratify:ng Reports. Shanghai, Aug. 18.—An indication of how swiftly American influence is growing in Shanghai, which is China's greatest commercial center, is to be seen’ in a comparison of the amount of business done at the American Pos- tal agency in Shanghai with that of post offices in the United States. A report issued recently by the post office cepartment which shows post reccipts of fifty leading post offices in the United States records that only 16 of these made increases in the month of May, 1920, over the same month the preceding year and the largest increase was 15.32 per cent. The increase in postal receipts in Shanghai in April, 1921 over tha same month the preceding year wai 179 per cent. ond the May increase was 123 per cent. TO AUCTION OFF CARS. 41 Rum Running Machines Will Be Sold Tuesday. New Haven, Aug. 18.—Forty-one motor cars, seized by the federal au- thorities while used for transporting liquor in violation of the prohibi- tion law, will be sold to the highest bidder at auction hére on Tuesday, August 30. The sale will be con- ducted at 10:30 o'clock at the store- ' house of the Smedley Co., No. 465 Chapel street, this city. The auction is of more than usual Interest, as it will be the first public sale of auto- mobiles seized because they were be- ing used for rum running purposes. (1) endnd health- “‘\._ DBordens EAGLE BRAND Condensed Milk For Itching Eczema, Old Sores and Piles “1 guarantee my ointment,” says Peterson of Buffalo, “‘to cure eczema. to stop the itching at once and any reliable- druggist will cheerfully- re- fund your money if PETERSONS OINTMENT doesn't do everything I ! gay it will do.” William A. Carley of Franklin, N. Y., is surely a wise man. He writes: “I used PETERSON'S OINTMENT on a little boy suffering terrible with ! eczema. It did the work.” Then there is Alex. Louttel, a brave fireman of Buffalo, who is glad to write as follows: “I had an old sore on my leg for many years. The best doctors failed. PETERSON’'S OINT- MENT entirely healed the sore quick- ly”* And from over in Canada comes a letter from A. Blockeby, stating: “The best thing I ever hit for itching piles is PETERSON'S OINTMENT.” filled by Peterson Ointment,Co., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. @z/er ' 1 Shoe Store, 211 Main St ! DON"T WANT ANN HASH! WELL, THEN BOTH You AND | | ARE THROUGH' £,