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Summer School At Clemson Geaeral Plans Anounced For 1922 Indicate Best Summer % School Ever Held Giomson College; Jan. 3t?.?Wil liam: KS ?*urtis* the famous traveler and -writerJ was once asked by a lady to-. reolmmend to her the best all -thji* year round climate in the worldi: -Smf wrote: "I have jdenty of money. *no home ties, and wish to. move just once more. I wish my. new home to be located in a region, -where the climate is not extreme and at the same time not monotonous. You have traveled extensively, and when- would you recommend me to go?'' Curtis re plied;. .'-Go to the Piedmont sec tion: of the Carolinas. You will never regret it." , We are inviting you to spend a summer in one of the.most delight ful spots of a most delightful re gion. The days are sunny and the nigh'ts are cool. The air is like w:me. We ask you to come to Clem sor. to combine ail the pleasures of a vacation with an opportunity for study under the direction of a com petent faculty. You will meet men and women interested in the same kind of u-ork in which you are en gaged. You will learn to teach better, fafm better, and live bet ter." ' - CTcmson College will offer in her rummer "school for 1'j22 a more varied program than ever before, according to Dr. F. H. H. Cal houn. director or" resident teaching in the agricultural department, who wfll direct the summer school. The following courses will be given: r.:" Course for reachers: (1) primary teachers, (2) elementary teachers. <3> high school teachers, i.4)"\e?ohers for special subjects. H: ? Courses in cotton grading. III. Courses lor club beys. r\V' Courses In science: (1) physics- 12) chemistry, {Z) biology, '. 4) earih' science. V: Courses for making up back eollege work and removing en trance ' conditions. VI. ; Courses for Federal Board jLtudents. , Plans' are being made for recre ation. The baseball diamonds, the tennis courts, and the swimming ]?odr'will'"be ready for use. Excur sions and field trips will b'e arrang ed. The library will be open. Spe cial lecturers, famous in the educa tional 'World, have been secured. The cost for board, room and tuitJ?n will be most reasonable. If interested, write the Registrar. . Clejilson College, S. C, for detailed inform at ton. ? ^ ? Negro Workman Hurt Falls,. One Story While Aiding i^the Dismantling of Old j Hotel Building Mat hew Johnson, a negro work mah^who lives at Xo. 122 Dobson street, was slightly injured Monday morning when he lost his footing on The third floor5of the old Sum tor Hotel building, which is being dismantled, and fell through to the ! second flqor of the building where he managed to catch on the floor i Joists. Th?'* negro received bruises on | bofW?f his thighs* which will ab-j scihtP'him from work for several i days:'- 'The accident happened.' sh6?tly'2>efore the noon hour. ? ? o *K*r?ikers Sent to Petrograd, t Rfcval/'Esthonia, Jan. 1.?Two j huge ':?-iee-br?*a king cruisers the Alexander Nevsky and the Sviata- | goi, have just been sent to Petrb- ! gr?d by British naval authorities to j keep that Russian port open this j winter if possible. | Thj^r' were built for Russia in the j world war and were used by the al- ! lies ^t Archangel and in the White j Sea during the occupancy of the \ Archangel district by American and other allied troops. It is said that their names will be changed to Lenine and Trotzky. They are among the largest ice- ! breakers in the world and yre so | constructed as to^"Weak the i^e around them by rolling as well as by pushing through the ice ahead I of ^henr. Representatives Want, Bi-Ennial i Session. I ' i Columbia. Jan. 31.? Representa- i tive^j Bryson of Greenville; F. G. j ?Harris, of Spartanburg. and Me-i Tnnes, of Darlington, today intro- , du?ed in the house of representa- j tiv^s a resolution to provide for! bi-ennial sessions of the 'general I assembly. The* resolution would submit the} ouctgtion of changing the present] anitual provision of the constitu- ; tion to the people of the state in! th.et I f?22 election. -The resolution Would provide for a sixty-day s. s- j siott instead of forty days. A sec-1 ona?.ye*??h>tion by .the same an-; thors would provide for the levying of taxes'every other year instead of! every year, as at present. Senator Miller introduced a res-' olu&ion which was passed by thej senate and sent to the house, call ing* on law officers to "enforce! more strietiy the prohibition laws of ^he state and thus more elTec- ; Jively combat the lawlessness now. prevailing.*' Tjho senate today began a heat ed Beb?te on the gasoline tax bill. The point of greatest interest was' an ^amendment of the senate tin ance committee ro change the tax from one c^ni to two cents a gal-; Ion? on gasoline. T-he house, after long debate, killed the resolution by Represen-r ? tative Bvans. of Marlboro, to p*?r-i miiipl^as of guilty to be made in all Vases except capital offenses and? to empower circui; judges ro! imniuse sentence at ( hambers. with out) the necessity of grand jury presentmeni and indictment. New Litiaor Rules By Supreme Court Whiskey Can Not Be Drawn From Bonded Warehouses For Personal Use _ I Washington, Jan. SO.?Intoxi-j eaxhfg liquors, stored in govern ment bonded warehouses can not be withdrawn by the owners for their own personal use. the su- j preme court today held in a de cision delivered by Justice Mc-j Kenna, and dissented to by Justice! MeKeynolds. Such liquor ean only i be transported from the bonded warehouses. Justice McKenna stat- j ed. "to a wholesale druggist fori sale to him for purposes not pro-; hibited." The court in a previous decision , had held that owners could with draw from private warehouses, Honor for their own consumption j or for the use of their family or; their bona fide guests. Today's' ruling marks a wide distinction ' between private and bonded ware- , houses. Justice McKenna on this j point said that "mere ownership j was not the equivalent" to pos session and declared that under/ the Volstead law. "there must be ownership, arid possession in one's private dwelling, and that charac- | ?ter can not be assigned to the j bonded warehouses of the govern- j mont." The cases before the Court did not. he said, have the j effect of depriving those who held warehouse certificates of their prop- j erty without due process of law. j nor did it amount, he added, to j the taking of private property for: public purposes without just com pensation. Referring to the contention that j the prohibition amendment and the Volstead act if applied to liquor ? manufactured and lawfully ac quired before the amendment and | the law became effective would he j void, as taking from property its essential attributes of the right to | use it. possess it ana enjoy it. Jus- j tice McKenna stated that the court j was "not disposed to trace the! elements of the contentions mih- j utely." as they were all answered i by the former decision of the j -court in the national prohibition eases; Referring to that part of the ! law which permits one to use law- \ fully obtained liquor in his home, j Justice McKenna asserted this! right can not be construed to ex- j tend "to liquors not so situated, or I to put it more pointedly and in ten- j tion to make all bonded ware- j houses of the country outbuildings | of its dwellings." Declaring he had been in dis- ? agreement with the previous deci-i sion of the court in holding that j liquor in pivate warehouses could ! be lawfully moved by owners to j their residences for consumption, j Justice McReynolds asserted that) !f the doctrine laid down by the] court in that case was good. it would permit owners to withdraw; liquor from bonded warehouses, and he -urged that unless the court took that view it should "frankly" withdraw its former de oision. In the present cases liquor j was entrusted to government ware- j houses as permitted by the statute, he said, but the owner "is denied the privilege of taking it home be i ause that warehouse is not con tributory to his dwelling, nor an adjunct thereto, nor an outbuilding connected i herewith.?' The decision grew out of a con- , solidation of four cases, all brought against internal revenue collectors to compel them to permit the with- | drawal of the liquor. In each case : the decision was against the owner of the warehouse certificate. Marriage License Record. Marriage licenses have been is sued to the following colored I couples: Raeford Witherspoon of Tindal I and Alice Louise Osborne of Sum- j ter. Samuel Balden. Horatio and Sal- j line Collins. Hagood. David Butler. Sumter and Ellen ; Mae Deas of Dalzell. Jacob Williams and Sally Green of Mayesville. Willie Young and Nita Walker i of Rembert. James Grant and Ida Ellington of Dalzell. Marion Vaughan and Julia Sum- : ter of Sumter. j Frank Washington and Chistina j Bowman of Sumter. New Corporation Chartered Columbia. Jan. 31.?Charter has j been issued by the secretary of j state to the Weiher Construction Co., of Charleston. The capital ! %tock is $5.000. E. P. Weiner is president: Judah Weiner is vice president: Archibald Weiner is sec- 1 retary: and Ida Weiner is treas urer. The Carolina Piggly Wiggly j Stores, of Greenwood, is the name of a new corporation chartered by 1 th?- secretary of state. The capital Stock is $60,000. A. W. Allison is president: M. S. Allison is vi<-? presiderif, and R. F. Foxhall is secretary and treasure!. Money never wagged a dog's tail. -+ 4 ? Health hint:-*Stop knocking be fore your knees b*gin. A bird on the hat is worth two on the farm. A woman with a few children is never among the unemployed. Would ydu call th?- woman with five children who started practic ticing Inw "a mother-in-law?" Wouldn't it be great if worry made .'.our face instead of head bald'.' -?????? \'w fork doctor who operated tot the light girl but the wrong foot ought i<> make foot-notes. Stamp Slot Machines _._ 'Postoffice Department is i Making- Use of These i Face \alnc for your money ami i wait on yourself' is the principle j upon which the new coin con-trolled [stamp vending machines now he ling installed by the Postoffice Po [partment are operated and the i new machines hid fair to revolu , tionize the stamp selling business "of the country. The machine dc | livers, automatically, face value in [stamps for the amount of money I placed in the slot and the six al j ready installed in Washington by .the department have proven an un qualified success. They arc a's.? in I successful use in New Vor!;. Brcok i lyn. Chicago, Detroit Philadelphia and Minneapolis. j The silent twenty-four hour I salesman sells stamps in four dif i feren: quantities. The first slot (delivers five one-cent stamps for a nickel: the second returns a one cent stamp for a penny: the third deliv< rs five two-cent stamps for a dime and the fourth hands out a two-cent stamp for two pennies. The coin is dropped into the slot, a small lever pushed and the stamp is found in. a receptacle below. The machines are practically "crook-proff' isasrauch as the coin remains in sight for some time af ter the purchase and the Postoffice 'Department puts a sign over each I machine, warning against the use j of any hut good United States coins. This gives it the same pro tection that surrounds the mails and as inspectors are constantly on the job. there is little chance that the most hardened will take a chance of saving a few pennies by the use of had coins. The department through the I Postmaster General has installed the machines in the postoffices and ' in several public buildings in Washington, the idea being to ac commodate persons desiring stamps after regular hours or without 'walking to the postoffice. They 'are handsomely constructed, the case being of mahogany and the .trimmings ^f the finest nickel silver. The machine is expected to greatly facilitate the sale of stamps, nights Sunday, holidays and dur ing rush hours. Washington has taken very kindly to the "cafe teria" style of stamp purchasing. They will be ihstallecfin Charles ton in due course. PROPOSE FEDERAL LICENSE TO HUNT MIGRATORY BIRDS Passage of the New-Anthony bill to provide for Federal licenses to ihunt migratory birds and for the I establishment of game refuges and : public shooting ground:' for such birds would affec* about 5.000.000 American sportsmen, the Bureau of Biological survey. United States De partment of Agriculture estimat? s. The bill has been favorably report led by the sehate committee on [public lands and surveys. In the (house the bill is in the committee j on agriculture. j The bill provides that each hunt er of migratory birds shall obtain a (Federal license, at a cos; of $1 for the season, the licenses to be issued at any post office in the United States. Out of the proceeds n 't less than 4". per cent is to be spent j by the government, through a pro posed Migratory Bird Refuge Com ! mission, in buying or renting land, suitable for the establishment of migratory game hire1, refuges which 'would serve as breeding and feed : ing places for birds during the pe riod of their flight north, or the close season, and as public shoot ing grounds during the open sea son. An additional 4." per cent i will be used for the enforcement j of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act [and the Lacey Act and the remain ing 10 per cent for expenses in issuing licenses and other admin istrat ive expenses. .The bill provides that the secre tary of agriculture shall be chair man of the commission, and that other members shall be the attor nyc general., the postmaster general and two members of c;ieh house of congress. Rules and regulations"! governing the administration of the i proposed refuges would be placed | in the hands of, the secretary of j agriculture. The proposed measure do?s not in any way obviate the necessity of procuring a state hunt ing license. $2,000,000 Fire in Wisconsin Superior. Wis.. .Tan. '?'< i?Spec tacular tire at the ore docks was brought under control after a loss estimated at two million dollars. Vote to End Strike Omaha. Xeb.. Jan. 31?.More than a thousand striking members of the Amalgamated Union of Meat Cutters and Butchers workmen of North America have voted to call off tile strike. -??0~* Women Boot Icggor>. It has been estimated by prohibi tion enforcement offieais thai more .ban :>0.'?0?i women an engaged in some way m the business of eVad :o; the laws formulated in accord ng with the prohibition amend-1 nent to the Constitution of the H??-.1 States. They claim tba.t the 'est smugglers "i" Liquor over tin .orders of Mexico and ?'.in;!d.i ;t?:<i' hrough tin- various ports of entry i ato rpe United States are mem- j ers r.{" the fair sex. In smuggling] ron. another couuiry women pre er to bring in fancy liquors, vvtiicb ??."?cause they are not as bomin?n is gin. whisk?.-y and brandy are in nor,- demand and bring a greater ? lie.. AbjO ihey j > 111 up in mailer containers and are really nore pot. ni : hau t lie ordinary ia;v?- had .-.????i.-il garments made ?>r i to m. whieii contain iniiny o? k?'ts al points when- they ? ??i:M Divorce Cas$, Re-opened Mary Pickfordf?Wen Moore Con tr? v e rs v A i re d Carson. Xev.. Jan. 20.?The Xe vada Supreme Court, after hear ing dial arguments today on a mo tion of Attorney POwlor. to have lie- divorce obtained hy Miss Mary Pndciord a: Minden. March '1. annulled; took/the case under advisement. The court has three months in which to make a de cision unless tiie case is resubmit ted before that time. bowler contended that the di vorce of Miss Pick ford from Owen I). Moore, another .motion picture actor, was obtained by fraud, since, he said, she deliberately swore she had no other residence that Genoa, Nov., although both she and her husband were bona fide residents of Los Angeles. 'lavin MeXab. attorney for Miss Pick ford, asserted that the At torney (b-noral's act was "gratui t-Ious and fneddlcsome action and interference by a stranger, without warrant in law and against public policy." Ke declared the divorce decree was irrevocably final, since neither party had appealed. i'. A. McCarran, Cornier chief justice of tiie Xevada Supreme Court, followed McXab, saying that there was no aggravated party in the case and therefore no foundation '"or suit. FEBRUARY FARM CALENDAR Thing to Do This Month Agronomy Continue* tiie clean-up job until it is done. Make germination tests of seeds to !?c sure that good seeds are avail able for spring nlanting. Top-dress the small grain with soda this month. Home-mix fertilizers for spring USe. Plow heavy cotton soils not al ready plowed. Orchard and Garden Pr.une bunch grapes if not air ready pruned. The scuppemons will bleed badly if pruned at this season. Set out grape vines, fruit trees, and ornamental plants. Spray fruit trees with lime-sul phur before tile buds begin to swell. Plant asparagus roots and seed. Transplant cabbage plants to tin- garden and field. % riant celery, spring kale, let tuce, .mustard, bnions, ' parsley, garden peas, radishes, s;;' ich, and turnips. . , Plant in hotbeds, eggplant ' to mato, pepper. Animal Husbandry Get land ready to sow spring forage crops. Construct or repair farrowing houses for hogs. *: Make preparatfdn''Tor care and management of cows which ore to drop calves in February and Matfch. Add a little tankage (one part tankage to :? parts corn) to the ri lion of brood s? .vs j,vhich:will far row next month. ? Dairying PI m for a year's supply of home 33*o\vn focus each dairy cow .wiil need: ? four toris of silage, one ton legume hay 13 bushels corn.itvjiOO pounds velvet beans. 15 bushels >,als. and F.0D pounds cottonseed meal. If silage is not available, plan for two tons iegume hay. Clean up the pasture; cut out underbrush, stop washes, a a.', re pair fences. Stari keeping daiiy milk records. Cows iced this mvntb will calve dVring Xovember a^sd early Deiceni >)??;*. S: luve? I'r.cHiics Prune properly- and "Spray foi San .m.s. scale v.ith concentrated !:me sulphur when tree?! are leaf less and dormant. Spray for Oyster Shell scale on ap;?le and t ig trees with on ? of the heavy spray oils at. the rate of one part of oil to twenty parts of water. To destroy twig girdlers pick up and burn girdi'cd twigs under pecan and hiekory trees. Cut out dead canes of raspberry and blackberry to kill borers. Prune out shot-hole borer infest ed twigs and branches from peach, apple and other fruit trees and burn them. :M%n; Diseases. Secure certified Irish potato seed and material for treating them so as ;., be ready for planting time. Treat sweet potatoes with-cor rosive sublimate or formaldehyde seed-borne diseases before bed ding. Prepare a new place for the bed or clean up and disinfect the old one. Test seed corn for germination and for freedom from seed-borne diseases. Ask the county agent or the botany division how it can be done. Secure wilt-resistant seed now it you have v :!: of cotton or cow ji'-as <<!? Fusarium wilt of tomatoes in vour soil. Methodist Mission ary Conference .Memphis. Jan. *: 1 Informal conferences of the missionary lead of the Methouist episcopal . hur- h are in progress" preliminary ;.< the formal meeting tonight of bishops, presiding elders and other rep: -nta! i\es :<> take stock of the i-enteiiary mission' campaign. - Mine Explosion in Kentucky Field lb Keen Interest In Price Cut Whole Country Anxious to Learn Amount of Dodge Brothers Reduction What is the purchase price? This slight but important alter ation seems to have been made in the famous slogan spread broad cast by Dodge Brothers a few] months ago. The change was! brought about by the most persist- '? eat epidemic of public curiosity j since the lime when Dodge Broth ers first announced that they were] about to market a car and then refused to tell what kind of a car it was going to be. That was eight years ago. Dodge i h ot hers lat?-st bid for a complete and exclusive monopoly j on public attention, so far as it per- j tains to the automotive industry, came on .January la. when they announced that they were*about to make a substantial rerun-lion in the i pice of their cars and then declin- j ed to tell what the prices would ! I >e. The inert- fact thai they will not tell until February. 1 makes every one want to know immediately. J. M. McColfum", the Dodge j Brothers dealer here, was com menting on the subject today, some what on the order of the foregoing paragraphs, when a voice on the; telephone inquired, "if there! wasn't a chance to get a little ad vance information on those prices." There were good reasons, the voice said, why the "tip" should be given 1 out in this particular ease, "and it would be sure to turn out to your advantage." But the dealer ex pressed his regrets and the voice ' reluctantly w ithdrew. "That is the way it has been go-; ing ever since January 11," the' dealer said. "1 "ever appreciated) what an intense interest there was in Dodge Brothers .Motor Cars un-; til this happened. Thai fellow who just called probably wanted the in- j formation fur some business rea son, or maybe for sheer curiosity. Perhaps he had a bet with some one. Anyhow. "n<- refused to give j his nanu-. The great majority of j those who call, however, leave; their names and telephone numbers! and on February 1 we are going; to have a special staff busy calling' ail these people and giving them! Cue real news. "We prefer this method of mak ing the new prices known because it avoids the possible confusion re sulting from publication of 'F.O.B, j Detroit' prices. There is no dispo- | sition on our part to make a mys- I tery of it. once the price becomes] known to us. But we have learn-! ed that local people are interested j in local prices and that is what we j are going to give them as soon as we can figure the amounts after1 we receive the information from the i factory. In due time, of course, these local prices will be published : but in order to learn the amounts! on the day of the announcement! i; will be necessary for interested parties to call a: our salesrooms] Or leave their telephone numbers, so that we may call them. "It is not difficult to see that we j are going to have a big year, as a! great percentage of these peoplei who want to know about the price! are in the market for a car. It j became known at our annual meet ing in Xcw Fork that Dodge Broth er- themselves anticipated an ex ceptional year and made prepar ations for i;. They exhibited a morion picture in which some of these preparations were revealed. ' They have been working steadily all '.vinter, you know, and will be fully prepared when the big rush I comes?and the rush is only a few days distant now. This means that! Dodge Brothers will soon be ship-! ping more cars per day than ever before in their history. "It has taken millions of dollars to finance this tremendous program j of increased production, but every one will soon see that it was an ex- i cellent investment." While it was generally expected In the industry that Dodge Brothers, would make a substantial cut. the unusual form of the announcement' proved to be a veritable bomb-, shell. Ai first glance it appeared to be a somewhat mysterious pro cedure but as the full significance! of the announcement dawned on: other manufacturers it was con ceded that it was an exceptionally strategic move. ? ? ? Draws Dark Picture _ ! 'Too Late to Save People of Russia,'* is Claim _ i London. .Ian. :h>.? Dr. Fridtjof Xnnsen. who is closely identified with Russian relief. expressed himself in a pessimistic manner in a statement to press representa-j lives this afternoon regarding the famine in Russia. "h is too late to save the peo ple of Russia." he declared: "what ever is done they will die by the millions. Livestock is dying ev erywhere, and if nothing is done i there will presently he none re maining. Twenty American dollars ] v. iil keej? ;i horse ali\ e. but a litt- . man life ean be saved for fifteen shillings: that sum would keep a man alive until the new harvest. "Von ma;? talk about the hor rors Oj War. lUU these people sllf ti ; for v.e.ks and mouths lief ore ihr} die. Their bodies nr.- nothing be: skin ami bones, but the famine stricken ilu not come to that state until many days have passed." Asked if there was any iiuth in the r, ports on cannibalism. Dr. X'anscn i'eplied that there was. Put said it was not widespread as Vet. "In many places the people are eating <i> ad bodies." be added, "bul ci the Sahara regions they are be ginning to kill one another" Dr. Nans, ri will appeal !?? the !'.n:i h people lt/morrOw tiigb'j for Rw;ir salt ivhel. ; Lenine is Realizing His Big Mistake He Needs the Men of Ability. That Were Driven Out of j Russia Moscow. Jan. 1.?Russia's lack; of constructive leadership for its industrial and commercial recon-; struction becomes more apparent! .-very day. .and tin- necessity lor in- ? ducing refugees to return is clear- j er to the Bolshevists, perhaps, than : to non-Bolshevists who have less] knowledge of the inefficiency ofj government departments and the | difficulties the Communists have! behind 4he scenes. Premier Lenin?' has repeatedly I sir<ssed the desirability of attract-! ing back to Russia the 2.0^0,000 | Russians who have fled to other I countries and represent the cream j of Russian intelligence. The en- j gineers. scientists, bankers, teach-j ers and merchants are greatly! needed. Letts. Esthonians and Lithuan-j ?ans played a large pan in the business life of old Russia. They I have enjoyed the benefits of both ; Swedish and German culture. Many j of them are highly trained special-j ;<fs ami managers and directors of I various enterprises. But they have ncr.riy all bit disorganized Rus-J sia and taken up residence in the j rtf-v.' Baltic ftate.s Baltic merchants will not re-en-j ter trade in Russia for they lack! confidence in the Communist gov-1 ernment. Manufacturers are un-| willing to restrme their old work: under government concessions, j Even property-owners, or rather! fomer property-owners, arc unwil ling to take back their apartment j houses and hotels under the pro-; posed concession plan. Consequent- j ly the new economic policy is fall-1 ing far short of expectations. Free domestic trade is not en-] trrely free. The term is mislead-J ing. It is impossible for mer- I chants to ship goods at will on Rus- ! sian railways. Permits are requir- i ed for each shipment. It is diffi cult to get thes<\ The pilfering on rail lines is extensive. There is no insurance. It is largely through the goods carried by hand that markets in the great cities are supplied. Rail way men carry flour and sugar1 from the Vkraine to eke out an i existence. It brings a better price! in Moscow and Petrograd. Meat is also carried to the cities by rail way employes and regular dealers who employ carriers. Lenine's insistence that the gov ernment must win the confidence and support of the intelligent class es is generally regarded as a prep aration for further movements to the right in governmental policies | as/ soon as it is possible to make j them without disrupting the Com- 1 munist party utterly. The Qbmmunist party is rapidly becoming a party in the sense that the United States and England have parties. Its important lead ers show daily signs of making fur.ther concessions to the hostile majority which will have nothing to do with Communist principles, or half-Communist schemes, such as the concession plan of letting factories to old owners. The building up of the Far East ern Republic at Chita under Bol shevist domination, but with gen eral elections and right of private property, is looked upon in Rus sia as an indication of revised policies which will eventually be | adopted in European Russia. Prepares For Genoa Party Italian Government Laying Plans For Economic Meet Rome. .Ian. 30.?The Italian j government is continuing its pre))-] arations for the organization of the I Gehoa economic conference as if all the countries that have been invited, including the L'nited States and France, had unqualifiedly an nounced their intentions to be rep- j resented. Prefect Ricci, of Genoa, came to Rome today and conferred with Marquis Bella Torretta. the min ister of foreign affairs: Angelo Mauri, minister of agriculture, and Eugenic Bergamasco. minister of the navy, who have been commis sioned to arrange the preliminary discussion in connection with the conference. The prefect has ' requisitioned the Royal Palace of j the Ancient Logos for the sittings of t he con ference. !t is reported that the Russian delegation, headed by Nikolai Le nine. will be accompanied by thirty servants and five cooks. The As- j sociated Press correspondent, was j informed today by the minister of j foreign affairs that there probably would be no hotel available for the i journalists, and that an obsolete j transatlantic liner, moored at one! of the piers, would be the home of j the writers during the conference. i Signor Ricci has instructed the! telephone and telegraph adminis tration virtually to rewire the city! completely in order to give the vis- j iting delegations private telephones j in their quarters at the hotels so! thai they may be in direct com munication with their respective go\ ei n ments. Tin- man win- married his moth i-r-in-rlaw was certainly taking a ' round ai>eu; way to get even. British an- eating frogs and snails Wender hew they manage ; o eat< h tin- fn >gs V Id!" talk \\*oi t pni the men (.? work. Even the places where you pay in dance are free-for-all. -? ? ?? When she sets Cue clock ahead' it's you vyho are slow; There ar?* exceptions i.? .ill rules especially fin- British ruh-. Parris Island Marine in Case Charged With Selling Aero plane to Turner and Runser Washington. .Jan. ?Behind the arrest at Columbia, S. C. of Ralph Turner, a former army offi cer, charged with having a stolen aeroplane in his possession, is a 1 irl? - ?.f charges involving John L. McCoy, a gunner in the marine i orps. recently stationed at Parris Island, and a civilian named Harry Runser. The charges affecting Turner and Runser will l>e pre sented to the federal grand jury at .Savannah. where the civilian phase oi the case will be tried if an in dictment is returned. Such action as may be taken with regard to McCoy will presumably be by court-martial at Parris island. William J. Burns, chief of the United States Secret Service, is au thority for the statement that Mc Coy, the Parris Island marine, says he was given permission last Sep tember to take an aeroplane for a flight and that be landed near Savannah and sold the plane to Turner and Runser. although on returning to Parris Island he re ported the plane had been wrecked. The government authorities were suspicious of the wreck story and turned the matter over to the se cret service, who traced McCoy to the Marine Hospital at New York, where, according to Chief Burns, the man made a full confession. Turner was later arrested at Co lumbia and Runser at Fcrt Wayne. Ind. Attorney General Daugherty. on receiving the report of the secret service chief, ordered that the two civilian eases he handled by the Savanah jurisdiction of the De partment of Justice. The Football Scandals Eight Leading Athletes of Notre Dame Men Are Dis ^ qualified South Bend. Ind.. dan. 30 < By the Associated JTess).?Leading athletes of Xotre Dame university, among them two ail-American foot ball players, a championship track man and captains of basketball and track reams, today confessed to school authorities that they had played in the semi-professional football game at Taylorville. 111.: last November which produced the biggest collegiate athletic scandal in the annals in American colleges. Immediate disqualification of each man was announced by the university officials. The men dis qualified were: Eddie Anderson. all-American end. Chester Wynne, star hurdler and track team captain. Roger Kiley. varsity end. captain of basketball and star track man. Lawrence Shaw, varsity tackle and Western champion shot put ter. Harry Mehre, substitute center in football and last year's captain of basketball. Robert Phelan, substitute var sity fullback. Earl Walsh, substitute varsity back. Dick Seyfrit. substitute end. The players made their state ments voluntarily. They insisted that they received no pay and said they agreed to take part in the con tests simply as a Thanksgiving hol iday lark and without knowledge that the affair was the outgrowth of town rivalry which became so acute that about $10(>.000 was said to have been bet on. the game. In agreeing to play with the Carlin ville < III. > eleven against Taylor ville. the Xotre Dann- men were unaware that the nine University of Illinois stars, recently disquali fied for their part in tin.- matter, were to play with Taylorville, they said. Satisfied thai the men who confessed were tip- only Xotre Dame students to he implicated in the scandal, the school authori ties tonight had 1; unched an in tensive investigation to tind who was the "fixer" of the affair and what means were used to tempi the lads into professionalism. This man. if a student, will be expelled from school, it was said, the disqualification of the eight men. together with graduations and disqualification of three other men recently for playing in a professional game at Green Bay. Wis.. was looked upon as wreck ing Xotre Dame's chances in foot ball, baseball ami track during the coming season. Coach Knute Rockine will not have a single reg ular around whom to build his 15)22 eleven, while little hope was held for successfully replacing the track and basketball men. Wynne and Shaw were sure first place men in the hurdles and weights. re spectively. Springfield. 111.. Jan. So.- Wil fred Asa. coach of the Sot in field American Legion football team, who umpired the Carlinvillc-Tay Iorvilh- game, today substantiated statements of the eight Xotre Dame players, exonerating Cus Des? h and John "Moharxit from taking part in the game. He also expressed the bei.ef that the nine University of Illinois play ers, who were suspended for par tioi paring in the game, received lit tle compensation beyond the satis faction of heating Xotre Dame play* rs. London Worried Over India London. Jan. :*,!. London news papers discuss with considerable anxiety the beginning of "civ;! dis obedience" day in India under the plans laid down by M. K. Gandhi, the uon-eo-operationist leader. Von can't be polite these' days v.ith.aj; som?-hod\ wondering uhat VOU Want. j Women Disagree On Equal Rights _ - - * Measure Proposed by Nation al Woman's Party Opposed by Carolina League of Women Voters _? r Columbia, J.'in. Si.?Mrs. Mary Wright Johnson, of Washington, D. <'.. executive secretary' of the Democratic executive committee of i in District of Columbia, is in Columbia now. interested in the passage of a bill in the South Caro lin;', general assembly to give wo ;men equal rights before the law with men. in every way. The bill j in which Mrs. Johnson is interest led is to bo introduced this week, , sin- <ays. Mrs. Johnson is repre senting the National Woman's Parry in urging the passage of the proposed law. : The bill which Mrs. Johnson is ! advocating is opposed by the i South Carolina League of Women Voters. It is likely tiiat a wann ? iaht behind the scenes*, among the lobbyists for and against the new bill, will be waged. Mrs. Johnson's bill would give : women thr> same rights, privileges land immunities under the law as j men with respect, not only to the I vote, but to the holding of office: j eligibility to civil service examina j tions: jury duty; choice of domi j eile, residence and name; acquir ; ing. controlling, holding and con veying property; ownership and j control of labor and service within (and without the home and power to recover damages for loss 01 such labor or services: freedom or j contract: becoming parties liti Igant: acting as executors or ad j ministrators: custody and control of children: immunities or penal I ties for sex offenses\ quarantine, examination and treatment of dis ! ease, and in all other respects. Th< proposed bill would also I provide that no disabilities on ac ; count of marriage, shall exist, un j iess they apply to men as well as j women; and that the common law j disabilities of women shall be ab i rogated. j The bill would provide that ; there would be no changes in the S laws regulating the employment of j women in industry. ! Jewish Relief Work j I Statewide Drive For $100,000 To Be Held February i 5th to 9th Charleston. Jan. 30.?While in i the midst of final preparations for I j the statewide drive to raise South [Carolina's quota of $100.000 for the relief of Jewish war sufferers, which is to be conducted February 5 to 9 officers of the state cam paign organization arc receiving from national headquarters infor-? tnation showing that the needs'of j the destitute and famine-stricken j unfortunates of Central and East i cm Europe are becoming daily ! more desperate as winter hardens* j its grip on the cold lands where i they live. j "South Carolina's $100.000 quota j would be subscribed over and over j again." says Louis M. Shimel 'State J chairman of the campaign, in a statement today, "if all the people [of the State. non-Jews as well as j Jews, had an opportunity to hear [the terrible stories that investiga-* j tors and relict* workers are cabling .and bringing back to this country I from the ravaged lands. Each [day's mail adds to the awful mass* j of tales of famine, destitution, dis-, > ease, and every conceivable variety of physical suffering: tales of sev | euty people crowded into a single ! room sleeping on bare planks. | i.shelves and flooring, people bring 1 in trenches and dugouts left over from the war days ? oople going I through the bitterest winter weath [er wit'a no fuel, litt!-; shelter and * I rags for Clothing.- and people suf fering the agonies cf starvation aggravated by those of dread dis icases. Most pitiful of alb perhaps.* [arc the stories that c onto to us of the s?fferings of the little children niany of whom are-junxble at the age of six or seven to v.aik because khey hav. never had sufficient food ..dace they were born and. very few* \\ f whom can expect even with the (aid that America will send to them, to get more than one meal a day. consisting of a I owl ot soup> laud a piece of black tread. Amer ican f.'ithe s and mothers especially ! c ar.not fail to be moved by these ai counts of the awful sufferings of j innocent little ones." j Through >ut the Sta.?- work of preparing for the campaign is^ I g< ing forward rapidly and encour laging re ?->rts come to State head quarters from many of the coun jties. Despite adverse financial con fditions in many parts of the state, jthe campaign organizers state that they fine nnu h cause f.-i optimism land reports already made of early [promises subscrirt'or.s indicate ^ that Soutl Carolina will add its v ^ full quota to the $14.000,000 fund sought throughout America to keep hundreds* of tin?usands of people alive tell the coming' of the spring, f "We save them or they die." is the slogan of the campaign. Mr. Ceerge lb Levy, of Sumter, is chairman for Sumter county. Britain i :\porting More CoaL London. Dec. 30.?Britain is re gaining lu r foreign coal markets and her foreign trade generally is showing notable signs of recovery. . -ays the November bulletin of the American Chamber of Commerce in London. A striking feature is the reversal of die positions of the United States and Great Britain in coal e\por;>. in September. 1920. American exports were 4.336.658 tons and lhitish 1,475,623 tons. In September rhis year. American ex- - ports had dropped to 1.49S.S7S tons, while the British exports in creased to 3.4C0,579 tons. Some people are so rich they don't have to pa> their bills at alL