Loot Explorers Sought in Vain Bone. of Many Heroes in Polar Region. Have Reveal- ed ngedieuâ€" Dyolt to .Seek Fawcett. Reported Alive in Jungle. I'll- lulu tho tnmou ol the Inhale mum of the Amazon ï¬ver m expedi- uon upset.- to panelnm wIlhlu mo nut low month- In nan-ch o! Colonel P. H. wcett. the Britilh explorer. who he ion. been mid-in; in that to taunt In." in union we on nine mch end an A port] at be- rellon. but who recently wee reported leuuered '3'“. to hove contentediy leitled down In the w'iltiorneu with hie mm. The no loott'e Party Perl-had. A teie ol huh heroism thin, yet the Milieu 1- to be headed by Commnd- um. cen he uld or almost every loot or floor. Miller Dyott, whole out! expedition In the hlltory of explore. met with thrillinl edventuree on It: trip eiona the River of Doth in Brnll not long one. the matter underswwth l tion. it In only Mteen yenre no thet the Antnrctic wu heinx combed "WI“ In“ (or trncee or Cent-In Robert I’llcon "131°?“ Scott, the Britleh explorer. who hld to he the ruins of e loet c villutlon, “tucked the (rent ice barrier behind and zenrch (or these. which Colonel ~hlch u" m. South Pole. l-‘nwcett was hooking when he loet touch with the world, will he ounued by my Dyoit party. Nenr the river. ll‘COI‘JXF-H to tradition. in n rich gold logic, Are we to hear In the courne 0t Roeid Amundlen who in he region It the some time and won the race. ieevin‘ A record thet with tour men he ma arrived It the South Pole on Dec. u. 19“. Scott end hie [our compenlone doubled on their trell back toward the limo vi u can ulmilnr to that o! “V'tmln (ood depot. Alrendy ton mem- ingstone. who vnnluhod for your: ‘niben of the 9.", ma returned to the Darkest Alricu and refused to mmolbuo. Are we to hour In the courle 01' than u! a cane Ilmllar to thnl. 0! [Av- lnzstono. who vnnlnhed for yenre Inx Darkest Atrlcn and retuued to come out when found by Stenloy? 0r w|l| nnmhur tragedy be wrlttcn down on the long llet of mlnln; explorer-f Numerous search parties have sought to ï¬nd adventurers who dluppenrud; expedition utter upedttlon hnu dared the Ice pack- at the Polar Sen or the hitter wnetes o! the Antarctic on the tnll of gallant wanderern. Into new ï¬eld and jungle explorere have pas-ed trom the range of clvlllzed contacts nnd many of them never have been heard (run: since. Molt nmnzlns. when the record In revlew- ed. la the [act that no may of the pioneers should hue nucceeded In' getting out o! the wllderneu In which they hunrded their live: In hen-ll o! trnde routes. extension of frontiers. treasure or In the service of Iclence and geography" In ma’m Schwun puny from tho Unlud Um»- unt out n the Int III. alumna. Th0 paper, duod â€111, ll“, mm the damn lo n;- n um ofloon and Mtun men. Ono “Mud Ind an mm won yet to dlo «mm; ,_ A . a camp all. Ind 600 empty meat llnl. Bonn Orlnnon, : New York mar. jaunt. mud out two expadulnns and In! than north to Join the search. My l‘nnllln equipped nvo sonar-u antler. A! Int, (on yen" alter the bum. bo- un. Capwn ‘Mconntock. In one o! my Innklln'l Ihlpl, cum. on n Mont of I "cord In a chum. I: fold of 010 death 0! Sir John F‘rlnk- Iln In June, "41. and of the denortion of th- Ihlpl In A In! “lamp: to reach A "1110 group ".004 on the shore- ol 1‘"- port 01 Virgo, Spluberun. years :50 and watched I 5-]- loon wuh mrce men drive northward on lb;- wlnd In one o! the moat darlnx “tempts made to discover the Polo. “For a moment botwean two hllls we pen-cur: a gray speck over the non. very. very [ar away. and then 1! null- ly disappears." wrote an oyowllneeu to the commencement of on Most]!- uon unique In history" Salomon Auguste Andree, the Swedlsh engln- eer. and Ill: companions, Strindberg and l‘racnkel. were at! by alr for the top or the world. very I! d to l Non Aum A singie carrier pigeon, shot down by the crew of a whaier, got through with :- messago from Andree dated two days later. The Arctic holds the been. or the fate o! the fliers just no it holds the bones of the men of the Zrebus and the Terror. the ships of Sir John Franklin's expedition of 1845. for which a search of more than wonky-fire years was made. By the time all hope for the missing man had been given up the polar regions had been ctfl‘ered and mapped. providing the groundwork of information fol- lowed by oil explorers since. Slowly lt became possible to plere together the terrible chronicle of the Arctic‘s victory over the adventurers. Eskimos told 01 seeing two ships locked in the Ice for years. One or them sank and the other was driven on the shore and broken up. Their stronghold was gone and the men at the Franklin expedition were left to light their way as best they could out of the frozen wilderness. 'Their bones were found in ship's boats, in uttered tents, on lonely peninsula. Tslen of the strange white men who vsndercd over the vast fields of ice passed iron: Eskimo to Eskimo. Dr. John Rae, pressing into the Arctic in 1863, was told of a camp of horror where thirty bodies were found and the contents of the kettles spoke of the last resort of the despernta. Clues to Frmkiln. Spoons. buttons, medals, watchesâ€" mute miles 0! the expeditionâ€"were In many on Eskimo hut. Sir John Ross, lending a rescue party in hls m yscht. fotmd thrsa graves on Mchsy' Islsnd snd the first res] duos to the fat. of anklln's menâ€" The Brltlsh Government spent £930,000 ln vnln eflorts to rescue Franklin; the Hudson's Bay Company ï¬nanced a year's expedltllon; a quar- ter of n mllllon dollars was expanded by private lndlvlduala In this coun- try. The whole world walled. year on your. for news of the expedltlon, no one of whose 134 members escaped from the zrlp o! the Arcllc. Here was the grlmmest tragedy In the hlatory of exploratlonâ€"a story 0! ahlps and men crushed by the forces of nature. Last Word 0' Andree "mm" to (no. tho m. at but lln. Schwinn lnvolul IJW Inllol lludoon’: I!†Into run Arctic. (on “oblon- on KN Wlllhm had. when m um;- um dutmr ad. And ro‘urnod with man yklmu Na 0! III". men who yam-i below land come our the Ice and dled. llr John mum: And In. tun won and. but In than annual 1h†umd the cum 0! â€lance. Tun Aro- llo town- now uv n lulu 0! dub» (or the Polo. un 01 whichâ€"tho (Jr-sly upodlllon 0: 1831â€"11th "Inlud In I: am! | cnmtmpho u mu 0! mum. one. mom rolcuo Iblul taunt molt vny lulu-t Ice uni nlu to ruch Ind uvo n vuly 0! ba- luluorod mou. 811mm. "up: down on Scott'- mon and the going In rough. 8w nun Kun- dmppod Ind d|od of I concuulon. The food nu ouL Cup- lnln Tllul on", do-peraloly trou- bmen Ind knowing um he was doom- od. refund to to! the party deny to help him dong. 11 any lulled. they would I“ port-h. "I‘m going ouuldo and my ho [one son. time." In aid «111111 and stepped out o! the tan! In- to n howUnl bun-rd. . It In: the In! over Icon 0! Mn. Eloven miles from tho depot m. nu! amp wu nude. Ann: I blur urd rose. unklnx I! hopelou to try to move on. For tour (by: the norm "‘8‘. and when I! blew Mel! on! tho bodie- ol Scott. “Nixon and Dover: lay under tho whlto mound 0! their lent. Eight months later the touch- on found them. They lound also the journal at Scott. the In! to dlo. ll. mid: "Alter Ill. wo hue than our live- for our country. ° ’ ' We have Actually undo the loans! journey on record and we have been the ï¬rst Enzllshmen It tho South Pole." Tho molt oxcmuz rescue of a but explorer II [but 0! David lelngumn. by Henry M. Stanley. . For years UV- lngnlouo Md not been heard (mm. He was somewhere In the hurt of Africa. ranging in dirk Interior and searching for the headwaters of tho Nlla. More than one expedition had gone after hlm and fnlled In It: quest when James Gordon Benett ol’ the New York Herald commlulonod Sun‘ loy to lend a search. étrlu was a mystery to the white mnn In 1870 3nd the ultnntlon seemed hopeless. . At the head 0! a small band of nrmed native: Stanley Venetrated the con- tlnent. The Finding oi Living-tong. Wild about: and cries greetod him at Tanganyika when ha marched in under the American nusâ€"the ï¬rst cnrnun to reach the village in yours. A black man in a white shirt. spoke to him in broken English. "Good mornlnz, alr. I um um aer- van! 0! Dr. Livingstone." "ll be here?" burst from Sunlay. The caravan swept on to the mar- ket place. There an an elderly man l as flannel blouse. . Stanley. the res‘ cuer, ralsed hls helmet. â€ï¬r. lelngatone, I presume?" “Yes," said Dr.. lelngstono. also bowlng. Drnwlng room manners had come to Darkest Afrlca and a classlo o! explorallon lmd' been achleved. lelngstons would not leave the land in whlch he had been rovlnz for ï¬ve years, last to the world; The fol- lowlng year he fell Ill and was outlet! to a nulve village. There he was found one morning at 4 o'clock, kneel- ing by his beside with the candle still burning. . Dlvld Livingstone. the de‘ voted explorer, who had traveled 29,000 miles In Africa alone and had opened a territory of A million square miles to the whim man. had held in the null to tho last. Byrd'leon 1n the airplane, he says, nn Instrument of peace. A flying olive-branch. In fact. â€l'va decided to put. I chuck on your allowance." "Thanks, old thing, Make it bunk. will you?" On Oct. 25 the world Joined Prince in oburvlnx the centenary o! in. birth 0! MIrcolin Dormeloi. chain. philosopher 3nd purlot. Ono oi tho pioneer: at modern memo-chomlllry. uricultunl chemistry and aromatic chemistry. hil discovarlol an the evolution of Iciouco I new purpou Ind direction. Berthelot‘l contribution were of extraordlnery min and inr-relchin; elect. More thin i,200 treetiul sand in bi- credit. en indicetion at Me enormoue induetry and of I enlrit encyclopedic in its ecope. Many of then no now cine-ice in the men- ture oi chemistry. Deepite the Irn~ theeee that hui been elected hetero Bertheiot‘e any. no ieu e chemiet then Berleiiue deepeind oi numb- llng moleculee into nrnnio com- pounae ninth: in those of nature. "Dannie" meant something intimate- iy enact-ted with liie. end between the living cranium end inert matter e chum nwned tint ecience new liir tie hope of bridging. Bertheiot'l brit- UAnt anthem of eiaohole. organic ecide. benzene. ethylene. eutyienoâ€" eyntheeee of the very atom at which organic neture wu composedâ€"em led chemietry with their new pout bllitiee. it the chemist now wield! I power over matter that seem little ehort ot miraculous. It in partly be- muee of Bertheioi’e work. (or the {rm More than a mere experimvnter, Bertheiot realised the vest potentile ties of his discoveries. "The domain In which chemical synthesis exercises its creative power is greater then thst of nsture herself.†he said. As he synthesized atoms. so he synthe- sized his conception of life and the universe into a whole-that saw in an amoeba and in a star two manifests- tions of the same matter. Interests Diversiï¬ed. To the true research scientist the clue to which Berthelot belongs, a discovery is but a key which will un~ lock a new door in the unexplored house of science. an inspiration as ‘well as an achievement. When he synthesised formic acid the inertia of *his atoms struck him. At once his ‘inquisitlvenees was aroused. Out of the studies then begun cams new dis- coverios and theories that gave that- mo-chemistry s surer foundation. While Crookes painted his gloomy picture of u too fecund world starving because of its inability to feed its ever-increasing oflspring. Barthelot saw the possibilities of fixing atmos- pheric nitrogen ~and establishing a huge fertilizer industry and making two blades grow where but one grew before. His quick imagination even conceived it possible to dispense with agriculture and with the slaughter- house. Hsd he not himself succeeded in building up organic compounds? Might not some chemist of the future produce food out of nothing but the gases of the atmosphere? Thus or- iginated the conception of "meal pel- lets." sin“ widely exploited. Marcelin Berthelot The German Invasion 0! 1810 re- vealed thi- extraordinary mn in a new light. Besieged Paris made him President of the Scientiï¬c Committee of National Detensa. in that capacity in tirelessly devoted himself to the mak oi defeating the enemy. to plac- ing Paris in communication with the at Inter TH! “OIA I'Ll‘h" A HVDIOâ€"ARIOPLANI (1'1:qu (mm France to End-ml In 10 mum Dru“ only (Moo tub. â€Hut Ind welsh- 2.000 poundn. II. b claim“ an I on". mum. I! built mo trip. crou mo lello with 100 DIWOI‘I in 40 hours. OLD FORT AT NORTH WEOT A Mun Built Wale! Spider Days That Are Gone Férever outer world. and to conducting r.- renrchu um mm the hub for the (II-cover, o! Imohleu powder all the now accept“ theory of the utIon o! epro-Ivee. Although he bed no am for polItIcnâ€"(he Mela-Inn o! the Chnmber Innkly bored nunâ€"m nevertheleu nerved hIl country In MInI-ler 0! Public InIIrucIJon “fl IInI-ler oI Forek'n Minn. When he celebnled hll eclonulo IanIno n med-l wu prouenled to hIln that burn on one Inca the Inscription: Pour In PllrIe «at In Vorfle" In thou Ilmple words From mum: um med up n greet Invenflcllor’l devo LIon to In. nnUve Inna “I to eel-nee. "Maybe you a" some curves and out was corn-n. but In not In slurp to now am I cap.†Australian Goes Ahead Although Canaan hu bun the lending cunomor oi the 0.8.. the Bub on of Foreign Ind Domestic Corn- merce of our neuhbor report- the! during the put month Aunt-ell: pur- chased the ingest amount of ndio receiving nets, with 48,613 worth. Cun- ndn being second with $38,390 and An gentinn third with 333,684. Australia was also responsible for $25,619. the large-t .amount of money expended by n alnglo country for radio tubal during the month. Argentina and New Zealnnd were second and third, with 16,124 and 812.241. respectively. Argentine bought receiving set components to the extent of 57,242, Canada 832.709 and Australia $30,270. Receiving lat accessories found a ready market in Canada. which pur- chuad $71,546 worth. Australia, with $27,484 worth. we: the next ï¬gure. The total value of the Milan: classiï¬cation: was as follows: Re- ceiving nets. 8135.079: tubes, $88,190; recolvlng set components. $167,768, and receiving not nccoasorlea. $159,- 966. Radio apparatus to the amount of $3,402 was shipped to Allah. Porto Rlco received 36,151 worth and Hnwnll 82.813. A Can-dim judge, In a suit over the recent Dempsey-Tunney nflnlr, has demanded pron! In court that tho bout actually took place. He evl- dently was there‘ ARM. HALIFAX Gabby Gar“. H" Boy who? I- a (bl-bu and h Alum . The onu- Mono-l Icon: 0 ur; mo think I“ â€In. balm their short um; the MINI and clamotuldrommnnhb am bloom; pink anal Ibo; DI! Ibo dart crunum rou- "fl-M M u» mourn and. I! In W In um. . Purplovn’lnl‘d vial-u. .- may no «Hodâ€"«hon rm do“ u manyâ€"and n In“. new orchid, u I.“ u "nth-tn. Mm -â€"whlch no Luau-nu: Minaâ€"dot m. plum. . . . Nut month. in. will mum Ihrubl on tho but to an ID!!!“ will bu coVorod with you" ll‘ crum flower]: than All the (â€doll will be a mum auto 0! nodflnq -â€"phlox. urban. nut .pouâ€"dl und- otunuu. 'l'hmwlllboen union of "on IMO: the buck l‘cnco wlu be - Ihoel o! mu thum- boulr. u panama. 1n bud now, wlll be hung!“ out DAâ€! 0! vivid rod; tho yellow Ammu- lulu will In" pom Unlu- hudl on! of (holy noon lholVIl, and than wlll bu ulowy bunch.- ol donut; ‘ I could mac u would". only um I In" bolun In the middle. But 11: November mo cool. no". nude- luvs um. All In. nonr- m ï¬ery red or yollowâ€"gonnlum. hlbl-cu. mal- ol-o. an: llllel, buonlu. All-moan Ind power-mm. Yet more In ll- lovhllonl. The nation (ml: la ripe, And lo In tho Capo mulberflu and hunched peachâ€. . . . Thou com" manner. when the momamelor unu- ono hundred do- rnu In the venndnh: when the [nu u brown ma notched, mo mob dry. . .. Hull-tonal make u clatter on Aha root. Ind lightning plan on me we! boards at tho Vlflndlh. There I: n Iuddon and dentin" chm ’ The blun- ke! bu um hotel: and than bunt. neutering (rut Juuod phoe- of ice. The old plum-mo. which novar born, flu pro-mu, Ind 010 nrden puma m tanned with vino sud mulberry luvel. When it is over. the whole oath, with ell upon it. um up its voice in rejoicing. Hail-tones Ire nthered in bucket: and wnppod in blanket: to ice butter and drinks tor the marrow. And oh, whet n pnndlse the yerendnh is on that evening after the storm! The slr is iilled with the voices of bent.- and insects which have drunk their on. The curlers Ire wailing in the scrub. end the swamp phoesent mnkes hls gurgling noise by the la- goon. There is a delicious sense or moistneu and reireshmont in the nt- mosphere. The verbenn throws oi! stronger perfume. and the datum et the end 0! the versndnh i.s oppres- sively odorous. l on lying in the hnmmock. Nosr my feet is I slab wall. where the sag-horn terns shoot out their Antlers. and from the top of which the tron flop hesvily upon the bonnie. . . . Close to my heed n ghostly-looking pill" oi rinknsyornrn rears itself. e mus oi white bloom. There is no moon. but the brilllnnce at the starlight senses every outline to sand forth clear Ania-t the hori- son. One In: seems pomd nponl Mount Msmon. It is s pointer ot‘ mp Bonthorn Gross. and tht Crosl iv. Isl! lies our the mounuin. while. nearer, in contnl heaven, there isl Orion's bolt turned upsids down. I Always used to wonder what it wouldl look like in Enflnnd. Someone is; singing within. s plaintive English! bsliad, in which there is In sllusion' to Chsrles‘s Wsin snd s winter even-l in; The words suggest the Un-’ knownâ€"the tax-away. Ice, snow. tho Great Bear, holly and mistletoe, sndl Chrlstmas waits. What hsvo these to do with this lung-uorous southern. night.â€"Mrs. Campbell Prned. in “My Australian Glrlhood." "My husband and I are going to be divorced. We own our house jointly. How shall we divide it?" “Divide it aqunliy. oi’ coursa. You hen the in- side and give him the outside." Pat was our in England working with bl: coat on. There Vere two Englishmen working on the uni: rub road, l0 they docided to have n joke on the Irishman. They nllntad n donkey‘s head on the buck o! Pat's coal and watched to see mm put It on. Fat. or course. luv the donkey's hand on the bnck or his coat. and. turning to the Englishmen. uld. "Which of yoz wlpad yer face on Ina coat?" Failure to Up 1! Mann gum From Unlvadty I One of tho upturn ï¬rst quule' its Whether the awwaw'ny has a friend in the crew. If no the ssamnn men- tioned ls brought to the bridge. I! I he admits knowing that the nownwny Intended boarding the nblp and mdo Eno mom to prevent N. he In nearly ialwnyn "logged" or ï¬ned. . It in not an especially dlmcuk task 'to board a ship. The Quartermaster lon duty at the gangway does not know the entire crew nnd nttor n stownway he: slipped nboard It l: be." for rum to ï¬nd I place In whlch a» Mom cum W (I. â€cum“! ol KI V “undue-don tron “Iv-:2 pol-1M0 to: conï¬rm an of mm M! mammal. Mu pm“ Imam In on public schools a! M urfllory tor tho two run. All Dr. Dan L. an prawn: «I an university, mama um ‘ Mu win: an 1:11 am. flu n19 unity will on.“ dlrocuan d mom and «man mun: to u! brunch“ at uudy, main; good [uh I "quit-nun! In All cluaeu VI A upmu mom-m report upo which wll b. buod each ltudenu'l' qudlnl wm: rupee! to use of mud lllh. m report. prepared by - apeclfl mm co-ordlutor, will b. used mull. tho ltudenu who Inow mull od deï¬ciency In Engluh to underut- Ipeclnl work without credit. In w lllh ntndlel. and upon continued do) fluency any result. In the student I»! in; droppeQ‘fmm the unlvexfllty. ' Stowaway: Are Not Dcterred By Prospect of Punish- ment A problem for mnny steamship cap-I talus In that of denim: with atom. swan. On one vessel on a recent_ trip from New York to San Francisco. Ind return thlrteen stowaways were unearthed. Eight wero lound on tho' wny to San Francisco and ï¬ve more on the return voyage. '\ The â€LION e univenity, which' ruul Itmndarclol of English to 1 higher loval thnn hver belora. buod on the theory thst A proper null denunding o! the English unsung. in u fundamental hull of Americni learning. and that higher bunches ot Itudy cannot be undertaken witnon a thorough commnd oi the language) according to Dr. antord. Formerly the 510‘37 '37 was thrash- ed and put in item. This custom has been done away with, although! the iron: are 81m used on occasions. In most cases the stowawlys lmo'w thla when discovered they wlll he put to work. All at wawayl. after dis- covery, receive th same treaLmenL They are taken to (he bridge. where, they are sour-chad. A record II nude 0: die discoveryâ€"Mme, dute.‘ pllco and by whom. These facts are entered In the ship's 105.8011» 0! the men are signed on as regular nearI men: other! work to ply their pub use; very rarely a stow-way Isl (ound who hu mine-lent money to pay for his trunnomuon. to hide. Leaving (he ship presents more or n pmbicm. The atownvay (presuming (but he has been discov- ered in tho course of the voyage). in now known. in any event he canno£ unceremoniously leave by the my wny. Sometimes he trien to slip through a porlhole; aomollmes ho hid†in one of the huge rope nel- uud to carry freight from ship lo pior. lake not. sud pay more “tendon Our Canal-n universities should Readml And walling than In 13 They Go Anyway? Called \o the Attenflon of (he Board 0! Health Mrs. Hopkins imparts her pnctim ability. psychology and knowledge of u! to her associates. Her ent‘lmliulmR and working pm“ are iniectiuna‘a From a reprint from the American Business Maurine. "What's Hm plans doln' slaerln' fer. us?" lnqulrod the mate of the Barend room as he sluhted Ml“ Ruth Eider'l machine. "Better change yer course A point." declnrad the skipper. "Y'never kln loll about than women drlven!" Modern Molnarâ€""Tell ms. Geno flan. two you known. â€mum: from mother!" Gunman -â€" "You, my mlmnt JII boy Mind." ‘ |' 1 a V 10;: 041m- Tlmu for Caution