The evening world. Newspaper, November 18, 1922, Page 14

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i a a f a ET 2 Se WHO'S WHO AND WHAT HAS HAPPENED: MARTIN BLAKE, law clerk with a longing for adventure, gets & faste of it when his employer, JOSIAH SMATT, who handles to carry # sealed envelope to CAPT. WILD BOB CAREW, Cruiser saloon at Green Street and While Blake is getting his instructions as to delivering the envelope DR. ICHI, a dandified Japanese, sits at Smatt’s table. While Ichi reviously has been closeted with Smatt, a supposed book agent who jartin later learns is LITTLE BILLY, a hunchback, rently tries to sell a “Compendium of Knowledge.” The book agent, wer, lets his eyes rove all over the place as he talks, His attempt at a sale is interrupted by Smatt’s envelope in his pocket, re-enters the a sense of some one’s having just left. That night, on his errand, Blake encounters THE BOSUN OF THE COHASSET, alcoholically mournful over the disappearance of Little Billy, with whom he had started out to buy a birthday rene for the brig’s “blessed little mate.” When Blake refers to Ichi and Carew, the Bosun, comes suddenly belligerent. As he nears the “Black Cruiser’ Martin runs into Little Billy, whom he tells of the bosun’s anxiet of liquor on the hunchback, Little Billy appears unsteady and, in seeking to maintain his balance, seizes the law clerk’s overcoat, in which he carries the envelope Smatt saloon Mart‘n passes a figure in a gray overcoat. He enters the “Black Cruiser” and is put in an empty room of the lodging house upstairs } tx while Carew is to be told of his arrival. he hears a noise that makes him look out in time to see a grou; Japanese dragging a beautiful white girl, clad in a gray coat, along the passage. As he opens the door, the pit of his stomach and knocks him back into the room. Martin is unable to understand to rescue the captive girl, RUTH LE MOYNE, rescues Martin as well. discovered as they leave the premises’ of the “Black Cruiser” and in a gun battle that follows Blake who had been given a pistol by Little Billy, shoots Spulvedo and throws his weapon, emptied, full in the tace of Carew as the latter shoots. hasset. Little Billy explains that from Carew's shot. hunchback explained, “The police you. You were not cut out for a law clerk, anyway The Jap messenger who comes declines to answer the law clerk’s Blake’s excited story, Carew himself—an extraordinarily handsome man—turns a deaf ear, demanding Realizing now that through the police would come the best chance io rescue the girl, whose gray overcoat was lying on the floor in the lelivers the envelope. Captain’s room, Martin Carew discovers that the envelope roars out a command that results in Martin's being assaulted by several Japanese servants and SPULVEDO, keeper of the “ out in the battle, comes to in a small, dark room. the door bring a bullet crashing t Spulvedo to keep quiet. Miss Le Moyne, Martin learns, sees her now, he is convinced he was right in judging her beautiful when he first saw her a captive in th SQUARE JIM DABNEY, blind captain of the brig. Through Little Billy, Dabney hears the first tain.” The hunchback begins by pr BI A Tale figures which was in the envelope Martin was carrying to Carew. Little Billy had substituted the envelope containing the blank paper, he explains, when he acted as though intoxicated on meeting Blake en route to the dive. Ichi, he said, had stolen the parchment originally from him. Dabney, violating a rule of the Russian Government in trading with natives for sealskins in Bering Sea, was pursued by a re) some mysterious cases, directs him “We shanghaied Presently Martin hears an irregular tap- ping on the wall of the room in which he is a prisoner. who is to be found in the Black rf Russian gunboat and escaped, wind) the Embarcadero, San Francisco. Bark Good Luck, 1889,” ITTLE Billy explained that he a had discovered the log while re- steward of the brig Cohasset, ap- covering from a “pertodical spree in @ Chinese resort in Honolulu. The first entry, which he read to Martin, told of the capture of somo whales by the crew of the Good Luck and In the last paragraph read: Costa picked up a limp of am- bergrease near his kill, The am- bergrease weighs twenty - five pounds. A fine day's work. “Tell me, Blake, do you know any- thing about ambergris?"’ asked Billy. “No, never heard of the stuff,"’ answered Martin. “Then wo will have to digress a moment," said Little Billy. ‘Because, from to-night, you will think of am- bergris by day, and dream of it by night—ambergris in kegs, oodles of it! Ambergris, my frjend, fa the stuff John Winters calls ‘ambergrease.’ It & wary substance, very light weight, that forms inside of a sperm whale, and which friend whale belchos forth when he gets the collo from feasting too heartily upon squid. Squid, otherwise cuttle-fish, is a hor- rid monster, all arms and beak, which the cachalot considers a, most dainty tidbit. “Ambergris is the best perfume base obtainable—it has tho virtue of mak- ing the odor superfine and enduring. "The demand for it 1s inststent, and unsatisfied. ‘To-day there ts an al- most unlimited market for ambergris. Wo looked up prices in ‘Frisco and found that $40 an ounce will be paid without haggling. “Meanwhile, let us to John Winter's Journal again. Here comes the smash- ing denouement, the very next day, April 1, 1890: ‘This day there did happen to us the like of which no whaleman aboard can remember. I will write it down like it happened, This morning, at dawn, wo came trough the channel Into the lagoon of the north island. As he turned to go} 1 was given the task of wood- i and Costa was told off to Contained only: blank: paper water, We towed the casks ashore, and landed on a fine, white beach, that was littered with driftage. While the men were rolling the casks up to the spring, Costa and I took @ walk along the beach. We came upon a great squid lying dead. He had been bitten in two by a cachalot, and had only three arms left, but they were of tremendous length. ‘Then we saw pieces of othér squid all along the beach. Suddenly Costa ran forward, and gave a great shout, and bent over what I had taken to be a big jelly-fish. “By Gar summons. When Blake, with the main part of Smatt’s office he has a gigantic, h-less Englishman, be- . Though Martin detects no odor was sending to Carew. Near the 8 As he waits in the dark room of a fist shoots through, hits him in the tapping. Little Billy, coming Their escape is Jartin awakens on board the Co- lake had suffered a scalp wound oS for your own good,” the rew's gang would have ‘got’ or to convey Martin to Capt. Carew’ questions about the girl, and to that Martin deliver the message, le} ing. Black Cruiser.” Blake, knocked His kicks against hrough it and a command from , is mate of the Cohasset! As he e dive, Her grandfather is part of the “Secret of Fire Moun- ‘oducing a parchment covered with a vibe al HOTEL MEN'S WEEK FORA CONVENTION _ AND ExPOSTION It Will Be Week Replete With Fun and Gustatory Instruction. The leading hotel men of this coun- tery and Canada are already arriving » New York for the Seventh National Hotel Exposition, which begins Mon- tay at the Grand Central Palace, and will continue throughout ek The thirty-sixth annual convention wilt also be held, and the New York State Hotel Association and the Hotel York City will be eral hundred bont- the Association of the hosts of the s faces. The exposition this year Is expected © be of unusual interest, for numer yus labor-saving and ystems of hotel management will be semonstrated for the first t * BE. M. Statler, of the Pennsylyantia, will entertain all visiting hotel men at luncheon Monday noon, and the Hxposttion will open in the evening following addresses by prominent New York officials. ‘The Long Island Hotel and Restaurant Association will have @ dinner at the Commodore Tuesday night, and on Wednesday aight come the theatre party to all visiting ladies and a supper dance, at Plaza. Shef's Afternoon,’ on Thursday, will be followed by the big banquet of the New York State Hotel Association at the Commodore, Friday will be Restaurateurs’ Day,'’ and will in- elude a golf tournament at the West- chester-Biltmore, and John McB. Bowman's famous ‘Open House’ at the Commodore. House devices novel when special demonstrations and _ pecking competitions wil) take place keepers will be catered to at the Exposition Saturday, Housewives’ Guide of Market Prices October in the past few years with the average price of creamery extras 45.89 cents as compared with 46.90 ‘The first ¢all shipment of asparagus came from Buenos Ayres and sold Fri- day at $15 per box, of about twenty-|oonis for tle samo month a year two. tunes In the same consign- lio The receipts of fresh and ment were tomatoes which were 1D) iiorage holdings will have a storage poor shape and could not bring a good figure in competition with the better class California and nearby products. A quantity of fino tomatoes from effect upon the winter market, Re- ports are that present production throughout the country is from 6 to z 10 per cont. lower than 1921 and bbe SRRRON TT re patie in | this shortage is likely to Iast until sl sj after the turn of the r. Fall pas- basket, conselning from 144 to 180} i rage has not been as good as usual, : eclally’ neat belt whe Long Island hothouse toratoes eansctely Slorachiiia een bring 20 to 26 cents per pound whole [or eens atiod and there Is a sale, about three tomatoes welghing|®004 ‘supply of xrain and. present a pound. Much poor stock was among the first Florida lettuce and romaine, and dealers were trying to move It at 2 and 3 centa per head. ate from gradus ext weiner dairy tubs and finest putter prices ought to stimu duction, Dut the inci nresent low point wi perts think, Creamery around 60 cents and Sta! 48 to 49 cents w! Wholesale figures show that veal, | tayie mitter ret wtween 58 and beef and mutton are not tn demand} ¢<° cents per pound; dairy tub, 53 by the retail dealers, which may in-] ants dicate that the housewife ts either buying lamb and pork or fresh Killed] eceipts of fresh vegetables con chicken and fowl, Choico cuts of £004 |yinue to arrive in increasing amounts grade veal retail between 30 and 45] ¢rom the South while nearby stock 1# cents per pound and elther chops or a good roast would bo tasty for Sun- day’s dinner. Beef vartes froth marketed in less Island cauliflower quantitios is \n heavy heing Tong 25] uppiy at $1 to $4 per crate; State cents per pound for chopped or stew-|4nq Long Island Brussels Sprouts ing portions to 40 cents per pound for |arg dragging at 19 to 20 cents per prime roasting ribs; and a leg of mutton costs but 28 cents per pound, Fresh hams retail at 88 cents par pound; pork tenderloins, 3 cents; roasting cuts, 30 to 45 cents, and chops, 35 to 40 cents; lamb ranges from 80 to 45 cents per pound for the cholcer cuts. Wholesale, beef ts 14 to 18 cents per pound; veal, 13 to 15 cents; lamb, 25 to 27 cents; mut- ton, 18 to 16 cents; pork loins, 18 to nuart under quiet trade About four ears of Baltimore spinach augmentet the eupplies already on the market Wriday and fixed the wholesale price at 75 to 90 cents per hamper, The housewife can buy Brussels Sproute ‘n quart boxes for 25 cents; cauli- fower, 20 cents and up per head: apinach, 2 pounds for 25 cents; green peppers, 3 for 10 cents; Canadian rutabagas, 5 pounds for 10 cents; red 21 cents. Fresh killed chicken retail}and yellow onions, 3 pounds for 10 between 36 to 48 cents per pound and | cents; lettuce, small heads, 10 cents wholesal to 40 cents; fowls are} radishes, 6 cents per bunch; green 34 to 46 cents rotail, and 30 to 88 -10 cents per Jeru- cents wholesale. onions bunch; salem artichokes, 20 cents per pound: French 5 endive, 40 to 50 cents ner tomatoes, 15 cents and up per potatoes are 5 pounds for 9 sents in the chain stores, Comparison of wholesale quotations for # few staple foods, this date and The expected advance in the butter market came Wednesday for the finer gradew with a scarcity noticeable and a strong demand October saw the eatost reducti of New York stor- 3 yockages—ot any was found wreckage of the ship Good point of the story the hunchback produces “The Log of John Winters, ing im the time-honored pastime of and of vowing the usual saflor vow to leave the sea and buy a farm. lar entries in the book. ing UP at a volcanic island where uck of New Bedford. At this says he. It was @ big lump of ambergrease, the biggest any man aboard has ever seen. It weighs 198 pounds, But this was not all, Costa and I looked along the beach, and we found It was dotted with the precious stuff. I sent Costa straightaway aboard to tell the captain, and he brought everybody ashore, and ° we combed the beach all the way around the lagoon. By nightfall we had a big boatload, and we went aboard. The old man is dancing with joy. When I get home,, I will buy a farm, and settle Gown ashore. I think Alice will take me, and if she don't there are plenty of other girls tn the world. “You see, friend Winters ta indulg- pending his payday before he has It, “Now we will skip to the last regu- till in the fog. We have been three weeks without a sight, fos- bound, and plundering God knows whore. It is ao thick we cannot see a ship's length in amy direo- tion. I know the Old Man ts worried, because the Kamchatka coast is close a-lee, I am thinking a lot about Alice. © * © May God have mercy! I sit in the window of the dry cave, on the Fire Mountain, and write by the ight of the midnight sun! Manuel Silva and I are the sole survivors of the wreck of the Good Luck. Thirty-five were lost. ‘We are cast away on ae barren Isl- and, It is a volcanic mountain, filled with black caves, There ts a bottmless ‘hole that belches steam, and the eartn shakes. It happened a week ago. It was very thick and impossible to keep a good lookout. We jammed be- tween two monster rocks and the masts went by the board and the ship broke In two and all hands forward, except Silva, who was at the wheel, went too, * © * Silva and I salvaged all the wreck- age we could reach. We got a cask of beet and one of bdiscutt and a “handy Dilly The quar- terboat came ashore only a little damaged. We pulled off to the wreck and succeeded {n boarding her. Then the devil entered Into us and we were possessed by greed, We had planned to get clothes and stores from the lazaret; but when we got Into the lazaret we had no thought but fer the treasure of THE EVENING’ WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER is, 1929. ambergrease, We spent all the day getting the ambergrease to shore. During the day the wreck broke up and swept to sea. We sal- vaged but one box of candles not @ particle of the clothes and food we so sorely need. So doth Providence justly punish us for our greed! Bilva was greatly disheartened, but I braced him up. We set about to explore the caves with the candles, for we wanted a dry cave to sleep in and to stow the ambergrease in, The ground-level caves are all wet from steam, though they are warm. So we went into the mountain through the Elephant Head, to- ward the Great Noise. We came to a windy cave, where these was a great bottomless hole that the noise came out of, Silva went half mad with ter- ror, for he Is very superstitious, this cave. So 1 rigged the handy billy and wo hoisted ail the grease in through the window and stowed it. : “There—that was written a week after the wreck,” sald Little Billy. “The next one, three days later: We have been kere ten days, now, and I think things look mighty black. Bilva’s nerve is gone, and I have to fight to keep mine. The mountain shakes con- tinuously, and we fear {t will erupt, And always there {s the noise, tho moaning in the hole, and the great rumble. It has got Bliva. . Silva has gone down to the beach to get shellfish. We are sav- ing the beef, a8 much as we can. 1 am glad Silva 1s out of my sight. He is mad—and, God help me! I fear Iam going mad, too. Ho sits and looks at me by the hour, just looks, looks, and says not a word, and his eyes burn. but I saw it was steam. But tt is I am feared of him. He ts a an evil place. And afterward we murderer, He told me so, when found the hole in the roof that his conscience mastered him. He led to this dry ca’ told me why he feared the hole. This window I write by ts the He drank of the hot spring, and only daylight opening in the dry when he got a bellyache, he cave, and it ts full forty feet though he was dying above the beach, Then he told me that he was But we had no nerve to look deeper into the black guts of this awful place and we decided to use one of the hands on the Argonaut, a dozen years ago, and that there was a mutiny, and that he stran- MOUNTAIN a BY NORMAN SPRIN GER. hie 2 ILLUSTRATED BY ROBT E. JOHNSTON | Mystery, Treasure, Love and the Jea gled the captain with his hands. And he says the moaning down in the hole ts the captain calling him, Now, ho goes down to the edge of the hole and howls at the captain. “‘Now—the next entry. Day or two later, I judge," said Billy. He is gone! He was sitting op- posite me, and suddenly he sings out something in his own lingo, and sprang to his feet, and rushed down toward the hole leading to the windy cave, He was laughing awfully, I followed— but could not catch him. He famped into the hole and tho noise stopped. And I stayed through the shake, and saw the lights from the pit. : God help me, I wanted to jump, too! f I am golng to leave this place to-morrow, I have repaired the quarterboat, and hopeless or not, I will try to reach Kamchatka, It ts better than to stay here, and go mad, and follow Silva! I have written the secret of the cave on a ptece of the lining of my parka, though God knows 1f I shall over need it “Tho next entry is just a scrawl sald Little Bully. ible."" I am in the fog—the terrible gray fox! No water! ‘I seo Alice in the fog! . “It is barely leg- 4 “And then—the end.” I see Silva sitting opposite me, He looks, looks! Lord God, bast Thou deserted me? Billy, who had been with Capt Dabney when the Cohasset reached the volcanio island, realized the iden- tity of the place with Winter's Island. ~ From the Chinese owner of the resort the hunchback learned that Winters had been picked up demented tn his open boat, brought to Honolulu and had there died. He left his log with the Chinaman, who sold it to Little Billy for ‘*filve dollah.’* “At breakfast next morning I ae- quainted Ruth with the passages I read to you," Little Billy cxpiainea, CQ “We were waited on by Ichi, the Iite tle Jap, whom we shipped as cook Hakodate. As he apparently hardly anything of English, we no pains to guard our speech him. Indeed, we never gave him @ thought. We verified the Good loss and congrRtulated our- on the finding of Fire Moun- tain—all within the hearing of Iéht. “We were daunted only by the prospect of searching blindly t that cave-ridden mountain! Ruth found the code. A rip om the Uning of the log book revealed it—the Piece of skin you see on the table, ee writing, you see, is all numer s."" + Martin inspected the faded of figures; — 4384454423616381461: 1828624896168115852311884462816111 6434411921288411421465224381454618216 | 11562685844244611913421446844244628618 94499815498144164818118118, “How do you know it's a code?" hi asked, “Three exegjient reasons,” ah- swered the hunchback. ‘First, Win- ters mentions writing down the eecret of the cave's location and we find the skin; second, Smatt himself deciph- ered the figures for Ichty third, Ruth and I proved correctness of the de- ciphering this morning. We talked to each other through the wall in the “Black Crulser’’ by means of it, Con- sultation with Poe's ‘Goldbug’’ ane me the key. It is what is called a checkerboard code. I will draw it Learn more of the meaning of the cipher In Monday's instalment, * CONNECTICUT TOWN WOULD REGULATE ALL FEES OF PHYSICIANS Charter Prescription Would Kix Maximum Dose for Their Charges. (Special to The Evening World.) W BRITAIN, Conn., Nov. 18.—The city of Bristol plans to bring before the new Legislature a proposed charter amendment that establishes a médical bureau, the object of which will be to fix a maximum rate which physl- cians and surgeons of the elty may charge If it passes this will be the only place in New England where the fees of the medical practitioner re regulated by city ordinance, The Medical Association has 1 violent protest. one year ago, shows butter some higher, eges about the same and apples cheaper to 18, 1921 Nov. 18, 1991 18, 1991; Nov. 18, nt), 00 to O40, Nov. 18, 3 to 48%, io, Nov. 38, A chotco of three meats is offered for Sunday's dinner, all priced be- tween 25 and 35 cents per pound; the salad will cost next to nothing, there- by giving the housewife a little leeway to purchase @ fancy vegetable, Brussels sprouts Chicken ple with (chicken 36c per pound; mushrooms 16c), or Beef pot roast with carrots (roast, 26 to 85¢ per pound), er of mutton and mint sauce (mut © per pound; fresh mint, 10¢) (5 pounds for 9¢) routs with French dress per quart), oF (ie per pound) Mashed turnip Cold slaw and green pepper (cabbage fe per head) Cluster raisins a 16c per half poun: half pound) walnuts, 19¢ like mushrooms % pound rings i walnuts (raisins per of No. 689. After the processional, In which: the Scouts followed the chur, the Stars'and Stripes and the church colors were presented, The Key. El- lis Pairy, assistant pastor of the church, officiated, ¢ oN The second class examinaions werg passed by eleven Scouts on Monday The Evening World conducts a column of general and local inter- est to Boy Scouts each Saturday. Bronx and Manhattan iteme should be sent to Headquarters, while Scout leaders pf Westchester, New Jersey and Staten Island are in- vited to mail their note: Scout Editor, The Eve No. 63 Park Row, New York Cit, evening, and after the examinations a ¥ Fi the new investiture ceremony of in- itlation was carried out SECOND DIVISION PREPARES) ‘rhe Scout Officials’ dinner for all FOR RALLY. Troop Committeemen, “Seoutmasters, The big Second Division rally takes| Assistant Scoutmasters and fleld me place a week from to-day tleketg | Will be held at the Carroll Club. No. $f admission have already bean matted] 120 2mciwon Avenue, 6 6:80 ot IO Store’ Hoout mad’ Booue ieagax| tneevenian of the -a6th) in the district. The Hebrew Orphan Wine NEW Asylum Band will be one of the star SCOUT YELLIN WINS attractions of tho interesting evoning RANK. cout Max Yeilin of No, 236 Henry Street, a member of the Second Di- vision, has been raised to the rank of Life and Star Scout, Ho is Senior Those who require additional t may obtain them from Headquarters, No, 73 Madison Avenue. 2.90 to 4.30 distance lines direct from Princeton, 6.16 to 7.00 P, by the Colonial Dance Orchestra, WGI—MEDFORD HILLSIDE \ 360 METRES. jie Ups," Arthur B, Baird, 9.30 A, M.—Mustcal program. 10.30 A. M forecasts, 11.30 A, M,—Musical program. 145 P. M.—Harvard-Brown game description, p SCOUT OFFICIALS AT CONFER- ENCE. The Boy Scouts of America is rep. resented at the National Conference for the TrafMing of Youth for Citizen hip by James E. West, Chief Scout Executive; Dr. George J, Fisher, Dep uty Chief Executive, and Lorne W. Barclay, National Director of Educa- tton, Patrol Leader of Troop No. has been @ Scout for three years. . oe DEAF STUDENTS STUDY SCOUTCRAFT. ‘The Indian& State School for the Deaf has an enthustastic group of twenty-four boys who are preparing to become Boy Scouts. All of them are deaf, and a number are dumb. They have been learning the Scout path and law, and as soon as they have learned the necessary facts they will take a written examination. They are looking forward to hiking and many other features of scouting. oe “A BOY SCOUT LIVES HERE.” A “service flag’ innovation has been adopted in Philadelnpia, where a poster bearing the Inscription, ‘A Boy Scout Lives Here,’ is placed in the front window of each Scout home eee LIONESS HAS TWIN CUBS FIFTH DIVISION NOTES. ° BORN IN BRONX ZOO Scouts of Troops Nos. 539 and 543 were invited to as the Guard of] pywo ton cubs were born in the Bronx at the presentation of colors] zoological Park yesterday, This ts the the Armistice Day services at} ast gyent of its kind in many years. the Holy Trinity Church, and thirty The s aro Gus and Nancy and tour Scouts from these troops were} 2 ig 1 ear, The ons are mn 3 were bought last ¥ present under Troop Committeeman] guarding the cuba in an inner cage and Roth, Scoutmaster Pennell and As-|appoar to be Jealous of any one seeing sistant Scoutmaster Edwin Roth, all ~~» sic and talks, SUNDAY. 4 P.M. clety of West Newton. 6.80 P. M.—Boston police reports 7.80 P. M.—Church service, conduct- ore tary of Province of New England for Music of service by All ed by the Rev. Malcolm Taylor, Bplscopaltans, Sainte’ Church Choir of Brookline. 8 .—Evening musicale. WIZ—NE WARK L 300 METRES, 2 P. M.—Play by play resulta of the Columbia’ University ve. Dartmouth] of which Mrs, Diana Belais is Preal- football game direct from the Polo} dent, Grounds. 4s, grain, coffee and sugar, 5 P, M.—Resume of Musical 7P.% Uncle Wiggily Stortes,”” Howard R. Garis, author. 8.30 P. M. fashions 8.45 PF. M.—Program will nounced by radiotelephone. 9.55 to 10 P. M.—Ariington prograim, be By Capt. Robert Scofield Wood. . WOR-NEWARK 400 METRES, SD Pp. M Princeton-Yale football game broadcasted over the long M.—Popular numbers —~ 7.00 A. M.—"Before Breakfast Set- —New England and ocean football diers’ eld, Cambridge, Masa, 4 a ecompaniments by Miss Kay Seal 6.00 P, M.—Weekly crop report by Mr, | *ccompan Bit et V._A. Sanders 203 P. M.—"The Work of a Motion Pleture Director Allan Dawn. 8,00 P, M.—Eyening program of mu Twilight program, including concert by cholr of First Unitarian So- P. M.—Cloring prices on stocks, sporting by an- time Mgnals. OMctal weather forecast. 10.01 P, M.—Program will be a@n- nounced by radiophone. SUNDAY. 11.0 A, M.—Morning prayer and holy communion services of St. Thomas Chureh, Fifth Avenue and 63d Street, New York City. 12.00 M.—Musteal_ program. 3.00 PP. M.—Radio Chapel services, sermon by the Rev. Willlam Wilkinson of the Trinity Paris! 340 P.M. — "B Franklin K. Mathiews 6.30 P. M.—Readings and records from ‘The Bubble Books That Bing,'* Ww, - Adventure stories fon ris. yersonationa,” by Mrs. NK ‘g) am arranged by Reading,” by, t arranged by Leonard Snyder, 8.15 P, M.—Re by Mme, Nouvart Dzeron Koskarian, mezzo soprano, with flute obligatos by William Schade, plano ter 9.30 P.M Mona Morga: ‘— >--- ANTI-VIVISECTIONISTS ISSUE OPEN CHALLENGE Romeo and Juilet,” by a Winglisb Debater Will Meet AIL Comers at a Town Hall Meet= ing To-Nigi At the Town Hall, No. Street, at 815 this evenin) Hadwen, M. D. L, RG, Pi, Ta 8. Ay Je of England, will de- liver an address under the auspices of the New York Anti-Vivisection Soctety, 113 West 484 Watter R. The society has issued a challenge to Dr. Simon Flexner of the Rockefeller Institute, to reply to Dr, Hadwen, Dr, Hadwen has expressed his willingness to meet all comers oratortcally at the conclusion of his lecture and to answer any questions put to him, | Admission ts free and there will Pw no collection. &

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