Oshawa Daily Times, 27 May 1929, p. 5

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, MAY 27, 1929 PAGE FIVE A Page o Interesting News and Pictures of the British Isles Scottish Pastor Issues Challenge to the Churches Edinburgh.--The problem of the targe number of -mon-churchgoers in the community was commented upon by the Rev. Leslie Thompson at a meeting under the auspices ot the Council of the Congregational Churches of Edinburgh held in Au- gustine Church. He said it was no exaggeration to say that it was the missionary fervour and the gener- osity of the early congregational- ists which produced the evangelical: movement of the 19th century. What of today?' For one man who was interested in 'religion there were half a dozen who were in- different. Was that not a challenge to all the Churches? Today Con- gregationalists should be in the van as they were in the beginning, in- stead of being content to be in the rear. Every member of the Chris- tian Church ought to be a practic- ing Christian. They needed to in- sist as their.fathers insisted as to what a Church ought to be and au. They had services but forgot ser- vice. He had heard that 75, per cent of the people of Edinburgn never darkened a church door. Had they faced that? Profesosr Price, of the United College, Bradford, congratulated Edinburgh Congregationalists on the formation of a Council. It was something new in Scotland, but in SEARCHING FOR [GEBERGS 13 DANGEROUS JB Ships on High Seas Often Endangered by Float: ing Ice London.--Hunting for icebergs has been a regular business on the Atlan- tic ocean for three months in the year since the spasm of horror passed through the world in April, 1912, when the news came that the giant liner Titanic had crashed into an jceberg and was lost, with most of her pas- sengers and crew. It was this ter- rible catastrophe that gave birth to what is known as the International Ice Patrol, whese duty it is to pro- tect all who cross the Atlantic from a similar calamity as far as possible. The cost of this patrol is shared by several European nations, includ- ing England and France, with the United States; but the patrol itself is provided by the United States Coast Service, and its duty is to pat- rol the seas, from the Grand Banks to the Arctic, in scarch of floating iccbergs and fields. On the first day of April cach year this ice-hunt begins and continues night and day until the close of June --three months of strenuous, perilous and unceasing. labor, such as no other scamen on the face of the waters know. When with the coming spring, win- ter relaxes her grasp on the regions near the Pole, bergs and even fields of ice break away from their "moor- ings" with the rise of temperature and are swept southward'by currents from Labrador and Greenland, and in many cases crossing the routes of Transatlantic traffic. It was in latitude 41 degrees 46 minutes N. that the Titanic came to her tragic end; and enofmous ice- bergs have been seen two degrees farther. south -- considerably more than half the distance between Pole and the Equator. It requires little imagination to realize 'the menace of such colossal flotsam of 'the sea to vessels across whose path they are swept; for many of them weigh hundreds of thousands of tons though only onc-cighth of their bulk is visible above the sur- face of the sea. No lights or siren notes reveal their presence. In the darkness of night scarccly even a spectral glimmer can be seen before the doomed ship crashes into them to her destruction. Having encountered one of these floating ice-floes its exact position is ATG SLE t photegraph of King Ye tpp2 r-d just before nor for Windsor Castle. . ree. C shea kaving Bo. the (§ England such Councils were com- mon, and had done a great work in stimulating fellowship and in ex- tension. The: chairman, Rev. Roderick G. Davies, President of the Councit, mentioned that, partly through the work of the Council, a new church was to be formed in the city. The Congregational Union had taken up the matter heartily, and a fine haul had been purchased at Saughton- DEAN OF BRITISH BAR . Sir William Clark "grand old man of the British bar," who has at- tained his 89th birthday. Youthful Artists Have Exhibition Edinburgh, -- Known as the "Children's Royal Academy," the annual exhibition of the Royal Drawing Society opened at the Guildhall 'Art Gallery, London, re- cently, The youngest exhibitor is Jean Weir, aged four, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Weir, of Church Street, Old Town, Bexhill- on-Sea, whose drawings have at- tracted much attention in the Lon- don Press, and were submitted to the Duke of York for Princess Elizabeth's inspection. Her sister; Betty Weir, aged 12, who shared the first prize in the Junior Section of the Weekly Scotsman Christmas Number drawing competition last year, received the silver star of the Royal Drawing Society in the Girl Guides' section, the highest award in this section, and she is the youngest exhibitor to achieve tms distinetion. She also gained Win- sor and Newton's prize for figure painting, and three first ¢lasses for other work. Last year she won a silver star and a bronze star, and the year before, when only 10 years of age, with her first exhibits, she gained the Founder's prize, a gold star, for flower painting from na- ture. These exhibits were bougnt for the Queen Alexandra perman- ent collection, and some of them were photographed for use by wvu- tanical lecturers. OLDEST RESIDENGE ON EXHIBITION Was Built i in Thanet, Kent, in the Seventh Century Margate.----Minster Abbey, Isle ur Thanet, Kent, believed to be the oldest residence in England, was open to the public recently for the first time in its history. C. H. Senior, the owner, agreed to open the abbey for a fortnight, for the benefit of Margate Hosiptal fund. Minster Abbey, which is styled "Tanet Manor" in Doomsday Book, formed part of the Crown lands of Egbert, King of Kenf, in A.D. 670. Sixty years later Archbishop Cuth- bert consecrated a monastery on the site, It was sacked by the Danes twice, and in 1027 the Abbot of St. Augustine's, Canterbury, had the building fisted up as a court house. The abbey has been continuous- ly used as a residence since it was built. It was sold fo the present owner last year by the Dowager Marchioness Conyngham. PUTS BLAME ON PARENTS FOR CHILDREN'S ERRORS London, Eng--From now on we are justified in blaming our parents for all our personal falls from grace, that, we are justified, if the views of Prof. J. E. Marcault, as expressed in a conference on new, educatign at Mal- vern, England, are correct. The evidence is as follows: A cer- tain lady of blameless deportment harbored during most of her life a passion for a man not her husband-- giving no external sign of her heart's deep yearning. It went against her moral convictions and therefore sect up a conflict in her subconscious mind, © As @ result all three of her daughters "went wrong." Obviously because of mother, , says Prof. Mar- cault. marked. on the chart and a wireless message is sent out to shipping, to give waming of its locality. The pa- rol' ship then stands by the tower- mg peak of yee, observing its speed, | the direction of its travelling, its size, and so on--information which is also wirelessed as a warning to ships like- ly to cross its path. BALMY WEATHER DRAWS CROWDS T0 BATHING BEACHES Interesting Events Make Holiday Season Enjoyable : For Londoners London.--~The c First genuine spring weather in London was seen to coin- cide with the first bank holiday of the summer season, and the perfect weather drew out large crowds to the resorts and bathing beaches, while thousands journeyed to Paris. Their place was taken by provincials, who took the opportunity of the Monday holiday to visit London. Girls donned new spring clothes which had been hanging in closets waiting the cold, fogy wegather to end and turned out on the streets, but they were outdone, decoratiyely speaking, by the cart horses, which were dressed up for the thirty-ninth annual cart horse parade in Regent park. Sleep on Beach at Brighton There was one other fancy dress event. That was the swimming race in the serpentine at the famous wa- ter course in Hyde Park, where spec- tators today saw top hats, women's bonnets and other non-eagoing top- pieces born on the bobbing heads of the racers. An unusual number of cavaliers rode along Rotten Row today enjoy- ing the igh sunshine, The zoo was naturally crowded, while there were su many people at Brighton "London by the sea" that many slept on the beach last night. Hampstead Heath Popular But the day's most popular holiday spot was Hampstead Heath, or as pronounced by most people there to- day "amstead eath." The great open breathing place on the top of Lon- don was thronged with young couples and merrymakers riding merry-go- rounds while the costers were wear- ing famous costumes covered with pearls and buttons arranged in fan- tastic designis out of force, out of force. GREAT AIR SECRET HELD BY BRITAIN Television and Noctovision Play a Great Part (By British United Press) Eondon.~Britain will be practically impregnable from the air soon. The day is rapidly approaching when enemy machines bound for her coasts will be reflected on tiny illuminated screens in a score of outposts and the "hornets" of the R.AF. will be in their midst long before they are with- in striking distance, Quietly, and without ostentation, dramatic progress has™ been made within the past few months toward solving this most critical problem of national defence. Stimulated by the warnings of the Earl of Halsbury, ' Lord Sydenham and others, and frightened by the ap- palling weakness of air defence re- vealed by the sensational exercises over London and the home counties in August last, the research branches of the fighting services have been working feverishly on schemes for the protection of the country's vitals from the dangers of air attack. The experts are confident that in the new twin sciences, television and noctovision, a solution has been found. At the moment the position is that, though much of the plan has only now emerged from the experi- mental stage, a new phase of high efficiency in national defence has de- finitely begun. Noctovision is vision in darkness, by means -of the invisible infra-red ray which is transformed by means of -a modified television - apparatus into a visible ray, The infra-red ray picks up the object; the televisor transforms it into an image which can be seen as clearly as a cinemato- graph picture. Observation points can be estab- lished equipped with searchlights sweeping the night sky with beams of. infra-red rays. The noctovisor will pick up the objects revealed by its electric eye and transmit them back to the screen at defence head- quarters. Infra-red rays have six- teen times the fog penetrating power of the ordinary rays of the spec- trum, and their value for discovering the approach of hostile aircraft un- der cover of darkness or fog is obvi- ously inestimable. It will be possible to equip air- planes with noctovision apparatus and in darkness or fog a fighting machine so equipped would have am enemy machine, not So equipped, at its mercy. It would direct its invisible rays on an enemy machine flounder- ing in the dark quite unaware that it was under ohservation and harried by a foe which it could not sce. Similarly a naval battle between a fleet equipped with noctovision searchlights and one relying on or- dinary means of observation would in the dark be a one-sided affair, In the sweep. of an infra-red beam all difficulties of fog, poor visibility and smoke 'screens disappear. Within the past few weeks highly confidential demonstrations of tele- vision and noctovision have been given to statesmen, soldiers, sailors and airmen, "and among those who have expressed, surprisc and wonder at its possibilities for defensive pur poses in a future war are Lord Al- lenby, Lord Arnold, Admjral Sir Mark Kerr, Sir Thomas Inskip, Sir Herbert Samuel and Ramsay Mac- Donald. g V. J. O'Connell, C. E., Dundalk, has been appointed clerk of works for the constructional scheme at Dundalk harbor out of thirty-four applicants." Will He Be Britain's Next Préinier? LABOR LEADER AND HIS DAUGHTER Ramsay MacDonald, former premier of Brit- ain, showing him with his daughter, Ishbel, as they appeared at the priv. ate view of the Royal Academy at Burlington House recently. Latest photograph of J. Premier Peer of Great Britain Enters Into His Inheritance On Reaching His 21st Bir Duke of Norfolk Celebrates His Coming of Age By Taking on the Title and Dignity of Earl Marshal, and Taking Possession of Vast Estate of 50,000 Acres, As Well As Great Possessions in London And Sheffield Yield Him A Power of Wealth London.--Arundel Castle, in Sussex, admired far and wide as one of the gems among English ancestral homes, has become a new and absorbing source of interest through the pre- parations now afoot for the adequate celebration of the coming of age of its noble owner, the loth Duke of Norfolk. J The approaching festivities re creating a feeling of pleasurable an- ticipation throughout the country, alike among the people who may hope to participate in them, and that far greater body whose 'concern with the domestic affairs of high society is almost as intense though lacking the touch of intimacy. For even in our democratic age our appraisment of the market value of the first rank of the pecrage has yet far to go in depreciation before reaching the low level of prices in the fanciful kingdom of "The Gon- doliers." With us a Duke is still a Duke, and Bernard Marmaduke Fitz Alan Howard, who enters fully into his inheritance on May 30th is the chief of all his noble order. A Splendid Inheritance He is the premier peer of the realm, and the bearer of half-a-dozen titles subsidiary to. that of Duke. Fe is Hereditary Earl Marshal ofgEngland, as the crossed batons in Wis, coat of arms testify, and the inheritor of oth- er official distinctions. Morcover, he is "rich beyond the dreams of avar- ice," the owner of some 50,000 acres, and great possessions in: London and in Sheffield yicld him a 'power of wealth. He has a fine London resi- dence, Norfolk House, in St. James' Square, which as it stood nearly two centuries ago, was the birthplace of a king. George III and one of his brothers, who became: Duke of York, came into' the world there in the per- iod of the loan of the house by the Duke of the time to Frederick; Prince of Wales, the eldest son of George II. "What Will He Do With It?" Will the young heir prove equal to the responsibilities entailed by the command of such vast resources? If careful upbringing, and. wise mould- ing of character can emsure the fit- ness of the man for the job he will. In his case, training under a noble- minded mother, possessed of practi- cal good sensc and imbued with lofty ideals of duty and conduct, has mini- mised the deprivation during a long minority of a worthy father's prudent counsels. The Sportsman In one respect he may add to the hi list of subjects which have en- aged the attention of his 'forebears. There is no real sporting page in the history of: thé Dukedom, although there was apparently a Howard who coursed the hare according to the rules of the game in the 'days: of Queen Elizabeth, and a legend tells of another who beat Richard Il in the first racing match ever run. Now however, the Duke having bought a horse. fit for steeplechasing, and hav- ing registered racing colours under National Hunt Rules, we may sec his "Swing to those disabilities attaching hday Which gradual gntry into the sport over hurdles and fences. On his visit to the Grand Nationdl this year he showed himsclf keenly interested in it, ; Cheqiiered Family History The Duke is the only surviving son of the fifteenth Duké, who died in 1917. His mother, the present Duchess of Normolk, was his fathers' sccond wife. - Already. at her marriage she was' a kinswaman of her husband--a second cousin, in fret, She was the clder daughter of lord Herries, of Everingham Park, Yorkshire, and on his death in 1908 she succeeded to his Scottish barony, becoming a péeress in her own right. Far backward as their history ranges the Howards arc not the old- est of the families the, members of which have contributed to the pre- sent ciminence of the Dukedom of Norfolk. The first Duke was that 'Jockey of Norfolk," who fell with Richard lI1 on Bosworth field, but in "the blood of all the Howards" flows much from tributary ' streams supplied by alliances with other fami- lics. The greater part of the wealth and estate now enjoyed by the holder of the Dukedom was acquired in the same way, including Arundel itself, which is at least as old as Doomsday, and carries with its * possession an Earldom almost as ancient. Settled Prosperity Prosperity definitely descended upon the Norfolk fortunes in 1061 when by Act of Parliament all their privileges, titles and estates were re- stored, including the office of Earl Marshal. That office, however, the Dukes were barred from exercising to Roman Catholics, the centenary of the removal of which is being cele- brated this year. Since their re-establishment the Howards have not only kept their es- cutchcon untarnished; they have played a considerable and patriotic part in public affairs. And it is lucky for the new Duke that he is so fav- orably positioned to profit by the ex- ample left by the latest and one of the most faithful -and - enlightened heads of the family, his own father. To. a human, kindly and unostenta- tious personality the late Dukg unit- ed keen intellectual perceptions and acute business sense, and whether as a methber cof the House of Lotds, as Postmaster-General--an office which he resigned 'to serve his country in the South: African War--or as Lord Mayor of Sheffield his record was ir- reproachable. The Complete Earl Marshal The late Duke was, perhaps, the greatest Earl Marshal since the office as instituted. What he didn't know about the arrangement and the min- utiae of dressing of great State pro- cessions and ceremonial--an Earl Marshal's 'peculiar: bisiness, accord ing to ancient courtly practice has never been known. Many of our institutions which SEPARATE CLASSES ART ORGANIZED FOR BOTH SEXES Change i in Methods Adopted by the Senate of London University London.--Separate classes for men and women 'students are recommend- ed in the long-expected report of the London University's committee on the medical education of women students, The report was adopted by the senate of the university sitting in sec- ret session. Members of the senate were asked not to divulge the nature of the report in the meantime, but it is strongly in favor of admitting more women medical students in the hos- pitals. There are many reservations - and gualifications in the report ..of the committee, which was set up in March, 1928. Even so, there was a long and acrimonious discussion be- fore the Senate resolved to accept the recommendations. Strong opposition was advanced to the principle of admitting woman on equal terms with men, but it is un- derstood that it was generally con- ceded that the policy of the "closed door," which has been adopted by a number of hospitals during the past few vears, would have ' to be aban- doned. Details of the report are anxiously awaited by many hundreds of women who contemplate taking up medicine as a career. Since ihe: war St. Mary's, St. George's, -and the London, Charing Cross King's College, and Westmin- ster Hospital have all ceased to ad- mit women. The Royal Free, where there are now 280 women students, and the University College, which ac- cepts twelve women entrants a year, are the only hospitals which do not enforce the ban on women students. ABERDEEN RAISES FUND OF 52,000,000 Challenge By '\ Well-Known Sportsman Costs Him $25,000 Aberdeen, Scotland.---Lord Pro- vost Lewis, Aberdeen, has been successful in securing the $2000.- 000 he asked for from the people of Aberdeen and the Norht-East of Scotland two years ago for his Aberdeen Joint. Hospitals Fund. "At the beginning of March we appealed," he said, to a Press representative, 'for $150,000 to complete the fund in thirty days-- that is at the rate of $5000 a day ---and that appeal, too, has been successful. When I asked for the extra $150,000 a friend said he would like to bet $25,000 that 'I would not get it. I am not a bet- ting man, but I accepted the chal- lenge, knowing the people of Aberdeen and the North-East would rally to my assistance, and today I have won . the bet and have received the $25,000 addi- tional to the $150,000, the. money being handed over in true sports- manlike fashion. Of course my friend 4s a sportsman, and he was pleased to let me extra days to make up for the non-working Sundays. He is Mr.'C. W. Mackie, now re- tired and resident im the city. In his younger days he was a keen sportsman, and to many may be best known as. the dashing centre forward of the Aberdeen, football team which played at Chanonry, in Old Aberdeen. So that is how the joint hospitals fund now amounts to some. $35,000 more than the $2,000,000 asked for. SCOTTISH MINERS POSITION BETTER Union Executive Makes Pre- parations: For Big Con- ference In July Glasgow, Scotland.--The Execu- tive Committee of the Nationa! Union of Scottish Mineworkers met in 'Glasgow reeently, when a num- ber of resolutions were. passed which will be forwarded to the an- nual conference of the Miners' Fed- eration of Great Britain at Black- pool in July. The.subjects incluue the national wages agreement; the reduction of working hours, and the repeal of the Eight Hours Acc} policy and constitution, .with spe- cial reference to Communist activi- ties; the repeal of thé Trade Dis+ putes and Trade Union Act, 1927, and an amendment of the Wors- men's Compensation Act, 1925. It was stated that the reports from the districts indicated that the progress intimated at the last in the march of modernity. There was the Roval Champion, for exam- ple, who armed cap-a-pie, used to prance into Westminster Hall at Cor- onation banquets and challenge the King's enemies, (who were never there) to single combat. It was de- cided after the Coronation of Georgd IV that the Royal Champion had been tolerated long enough, and possibly by now his helmet "doth make a hive for bees." But as long as States and pageantry survivg there will be scope and necessity for the activities of a Marshal's. office, and the notices is< sued on occasion and signed "Ner- flourished in feudal times 'and were of feudal origin have been wiped out folk, E. M." must remain indispen- sable, | have the four: Edinburgh,--A "save ithe: coun- tryside" exhibition of.Zphptograph organized by the Asi ation for: the Preservation of Rural 'Scotlanu' was opened in the New Gallery, Shandwick, Edinburgh, recently. The photographs show generally both the beauties of the country- side which the Association are out to preserve and the "black spots" in the shape of unsightly advertise- ments and erections -against- which the Association are fighting. Mem- RIGHT HON. E. A. FITZROY Speaker of the British House of Commons, was returned by accla- mation from Daventry, Northhants. The acclamation was recorded in the nominations for the general el- ection. Scottish Tweed Mills Are Closed Galashiels, Scotland.--The Scot- tish tweed trade is passing through another period of anxiety, and it came as bad news to Galashiels on Saturday to learn that instrme- tions had been received by the lo- cal directors of the firm of Sime, Sanderson, & Co., woollen muunuw- facturers, Botany Mill, from Lord Barnby, to take steps for the clos- ing down of the works as soou ug orders at present in hand are car- ried through. Botany Mill is one of the oldest woollen mills in Galashiels, the or- iginal part. having been . built 1n 1797, and it has from time'to time been .extended, a 'large extension for spinning and weaving having been completed just before the slump in the woollen industry came at the close:of the war. The firm of Sime, Sanderson, & Co., which hag been well known in the trade for about seventy years, suffered se vere financial losses when the slump came, and the business was eventually taken over by the late Lord Barnby and carried on in his interests up till the death, when he was succeeded by his son, who has decided to close down the works. The process of closing down will, it is understood, be gradually carried through as or- ders are completed, and eventually about 150 workers will be affected. MAKING UP FOR ELECTION PHOTOS Addition of f, "Flapper Vot- ers" Causes Candidates to Be More Careful London--The large number of young women--all with an cye for a fine manly face--who will vote for the first time at the general clection, is 'responsible for the unusual care with which some candidates are hav- ing their photographs taken for pub- licity purposes, It 1s assumed that women would prefer to be represented by an at- tractive rather than an unattractive face. , -The bringing" out of a firm, well-¢hiselled chin, subtle insistence on'a wavy lock of hair, or a whimsi- cal eye may sway majoritics. Photo- graphers arc pointing out these things to candidates. Posing for the picture that will adorn clection addresses and local newspapers has become - part of a specialized business. The art of make- up is being employed. "My photographer," said a candi- date, "made up my face like a film actor's ,and insisted that it was the only sensible thing to do. 1 had a general coating of yellowish 'grease- paint some: subtle violet shadows un- der my chin, and blobs of red in the corners of my eyes. A mole on my cheek was obliterated. I was half smothered with powder, and, finally, posed so that niy. face was lit from behind as well as from the spectators' point of' view. The whole effect is distinctly dashing, but it gives mc a lot to live up to." Rowley Elliott, M. P., was, at Aughuacloy on Saturday, selected as Unionist candidate for South Tyrone by an overwhelming ma- jority over W. F. McCoy, barrister. The Keady (Co. Armagh) urban council have adopted a rate for the is'an increase of 2s. on last year's rates, executive meeting was being main- tained, and that the membership was 'gradually increasing and the financial ' position . improving. It was. believed that an effort in the affected areas for a further increase would be reported at an early date. time of his | ensuing year of 12s. in the £, which | "Save the Countryside" Is Slogan of Exhibition bers of the public are 'admitié free to. hig interesting display, & Earl' of addington, /presi- fan -oP«the Society,- occupied :the chair at the opening ceremony: He sald the best way to gain their object was by educating pubwie opinion - A mass of properly edu- cated public opinion would do more good than anything, for the coum~ tryside was spoiled largely through ignorance. . They were the trustees for posterity, , Let it not be said they did not do their best to pre serve the countryside. Lady Cassilis, in formally declar- ing the exhibition open, said it seemed to her that the whole .As~ sociation represented essentially the spirit of Scotland. She hoped it would go on increasing its mem- bership. Sir John Stirling Maxwell, mov- ing the adoption of the report at the annual business, meeting held prior to the opening ceremony, said their idea was not so much to ini- tiate a new moveemnt as to com- bine together all the forces that already exist for effecting the kind of reforms which they wanted to achieve. LARGEST BRITISH » FOREST OF 0AKS 15 DISAPPEARING Sherwood Forest Giants Be- ing Cut Down to Make Way For Collieries Londen. -- Great Britain's largest cak forest, the Royal Forest of Dean, which was planted to provide timber for the British Navy, is being cut down. Unlike Sherwood Forest which is gradually disappearing to make room for colliery developments, Dean is suffering from the ravages of dis ease. Hundreds of acres of trees are bee ing attacked by a mysterious aile ment, and are going prematurely to decay. Their branches are shrivell- ing up and dying, and their trunks are becoming over grown with moss and fungus. The forest, in some parts, is intact, but over a large area in the centre the decayed boughs and stunted trees make a piteous picture. The giant of the for- est isa giant no longer, Pitiless dis- ease has sapped. its vitality. The exact cause of the forest plague cannot be determined, al- though experts have made frequent investigations to discover it. The in- vestigation, however, has ascertained that the chief cause of the rot is an unknown fuwgi entering the lower dead or dying branches of the trees. One theory is that harm is done by the frequent tunnelling and earth disturbance occasioned by the work: {ing of mines under the forest. UNREST 1S FEARED ON INDIAN FRONTIER London--The Daily Mail's corres=« pondent at Calcutta, India, reports that stringent precautions had been taken to guard high British officials because of "serious developments" among the natives. The dispatch said reports filtering in from the hills showed that the Indian government was facing difficulties, the nature of which have not been explained. There were rumors current of sec= ret movements of troops and military personnel and material throughout northern India, the correspondent said. WiLL BE DUCHESS Mrs. I bell, wife of law Douglas vcs 4 heir presump+ tive to the dukedom of Argyle, whe before her marriage was. Hon, Jan. et Aitken, only daughter of Lord Beaverbrook,

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