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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-11-08, Page 7/21 • , k • • : • 9.4`40 424-' 4 • -•4'44 • ' 4 • ' . • . Irrigating Dian.' mikes True ny. FRANCIS FLOOD . few years„ ago I was a home- steader Wyornieg trying to build an . irrigated; farm, out of a collection of ehalehills and bogging alkali hotteMS on which the governMentlied dered , • ellto make a living. Sometinons, after a herd day'e Work 'herding ditch, W.ater down the. steep Ode* Of my, 'little alpine fields, half ef weidted . 'end -the' otherhalhigh and dry; I 'Weald Chimp over to the „SitaCie Of a ..neighbor as • dejected ,an.d ers.,ra,gged • as .f,„ throw my sitevel and ruhher ,hoots. into:.n. 'Corner and discuss terra- ' lug Iz generel,..and'liiigatiOn in Par- . 'Opular, • - .. • . • . • ' We 'would pity Ourselves., that eitteh ...„ .wab sure,.. Then we. wiAtiii 'compare °• ....our rnegh,' Few little fieldalY).ag above .or :below tJe creaked canals. that weulut about aniong. the • •sagebush hills With our idea of 'what a real-. irrigation cliatTict shetild be. EVentnallY:.efere the evening was ' over,"me would ..e.ntlinSlasticaliY •pic-• tare in' our Imagination 'the perfect • project, thegum' hoet. fartner'e and describe it. in' detail 'id get: our' minde off • oui own. . , When..lirn and I. 'reached the Sete- • nar Dam: acrossthe 'Bete Nile in. the Angle7EgYtitian, or not -We saw it, just asT had specified. • , There is the irrigation engine.er'e. • COme-trtle:;. there '..**is the gum 'hoot farnier's.,intradise. .• • . • _First we 'visited the dainitself, that • • • "huge cOncrete barrage:that Stops the • Nile in ita tracks'. Nearly two Initea ioufrona: end: tO.' end, it .takee-, itn^ • • .hour to:walk. the. length and back 'Of .• 'Otis' great highway' acroas a conquered river. '! .the one side presses. . the. captivelakei 'fifty miles long, 'sufficient . • water to .supply the needs of the city ,Of 'New York . for a*. period Of.. two .•,,, yeas.; Bele*, on:the Other/Side is:the , '.torrent,:looseff, through. the "roaring Sluices and bolting away •so *far, far .down • that7eveti the tomie, enere•d�n keys, sheinbling.'albeg the Itighwey. on the :Creat are as frightened•ns the. • Sifeari squires .whoSebales of , 'freight 'they' bear, AS :nervetneas the oluckieg-Aronien 'and' the Wei black . • • thildrea' sciirrying likefate along the ,centre. Of .those concrete . . . , t a.• • -• ,kreuktaet,", O_rdered TerrY (124- Their' Majesties Open New Connecting Unk giiteer front Merrie,Etiglaad. and ne • shouted toWard the brick Illtchee in • the 'rear, "goy-, pass - brealOnst for three," . Then he..cenablered a, 1140111elat, look- ed us Over again,' 'nattered half to. himself, "fie • meet for five months," and 'shouted ageln. to the .;kitclien. "Boy, pass breakfast for five'. My 'Aitierlenit 'ttehent-andItla Eng- .jjsh ear had confused "nattil", for "meal." I Mit him, right. "But eever mind correcting your kltehen boy," nuggested. "Let hint 'carry,' on," "Yea purely ' think Wel had no.. Meal for Aire• months aid Yen?" etieistioned. . • • 'And I "deal believe "you've. creased Africa. en those motorcycles either," he adinitted; "The one lie earned 'your breakfast and I' ,thought: two such' .big ones • deserved a. double Oreer.".. . •• • . • • a. ; :•• We were .only ninety Miles.froin the, .pcistoffice in Khartoum; where we were sere, there was a*sidecar full of mail, our.,firSt since:.*e had left the .weift coast fringe of •ciyilizatiOn .nearly five menthe before and 'et • this English engineer wee' begging ns. to stop a day :with him So he could show us. his irri- gation projeet,. • He; succeeded, and it .Was wortli.,the delay. ' Censidering 'hew' badly. I: wanted my men that shows what think 'of .the females ,Gezira irrigation district.; • That afters:Monet* friend 'and a fel-, low -engineer took tia over as Mit& of the project s they•hould: We, eoaldn't. see it all.' The main Gezira area about 55 ratlea long With an average. width of Semi 15 1,itiles, 'running par- a. . with:the river,•the,wherre'iltWet as a football fIeld. Since if Was ak meet, a, desert before' the ' Water was applied it was entirely free front vege- tation ned little or atO „cleating had;to he done., This lite& ofS00,000 acres' "bleb Is .:•present Under .trrigation Is only ene-tenth. of' three. mililon level acres .in the',Gezirit between the, Blue and :White :Niles, which may easily be,brought tinder irrigation ru- •tiValicinslater. • - • • • „Briefly,' the: history • of,the tetire developnient re dile: Attntion,. was first .called.,t2e*the.Possinelitriitirri- gating. thi'.great •nfairt. 'between .the tWebranches••,ot, the ,Nile. ln,,1904. First it aves..clear that .exidting natite rights hould:,not be protected. 'unless a regiater '• ownership ot landrWas, availahle:::: This was difiletin ,becanae. • ' • • ' HAS SECURED 4,000 AUTOGRAPHS Collection Made by Antonio Hauptman, an Italiaivincindes :60,maharajap,, t51 cardinars,,:300 diplomats and 400 princes.and hinge, There are a:million:toes of Concrete • in the big, barrage designed tO pdse 15,000 cubic..yards of.Water' per second !through, the sluices;, os•tWeaty per • „ tent.: More than the • greatest known discharge oftheBftue Nile ib its flood. • . And Yet .otte'lnaa.Can.weigh the water. , out andcontrol the flow of that•eritire , Stream .as easily' as a housewife opens (.: the 'faucet iu. her, kitchen :sinit, . • • A main canal, 100. InileS , off from' the reservoir 'aboVe •the dani • and buircheS straight and • trne the length of the, great . projedr, with 221 • 'steady , ftl1, jest„as the ground " neon, about' four of .fiVe 11101.6.$, te • " th.e.inifo. Leading off froll the malit , canal are,•fiVe distributhig-Cimals anti! strictly. at, tight . angles io these, ,as straiglit' and ea. regular as a .eitY'S •fitreets run. the inejer• channels,' one • 300 yards, etteli • 'designed , to Water abut 90 gene', ob. land, :or. . • s , • enough Or three. 30 -art : For Miles and miles uti1es, Jim and .1 rode enuf‘ motereYeles ,ovor thiS •. flat and. level land; the 'whd, ole .cliecke off hlton perfect. chart' of even, regu- lar stinatek by the black b-anks of the • Canals: There arenofine homes. no fences, and no trees. . Thereire• no '• titti-ed highways,no school houses., and no:green grass.; It is' fill •a new coun- try. Its haute is all before it juet, as ycars. of 'a_ dry, dead . _ _ •'' Vast are behind' .• • , • We found' Min ,• neat' little frame ' bungtiloW beside a luge hemigete and . - stopped, early g, ' att-injute, cante°;A ,o vlained in the best Eliglitar that ne „„': American edlietitlettcould prodrice.T • that We had just 'driven those two I • battered Old motorbikes "ffbtrgli" and • TililibliM.alt the AvayIrotti -tho.'west. • • ' ••2 `.....'eoast• et -Africa_ and-. Witteln,.a: hurry- . :get .to gintr,tontr1 "bitatuse w� ..11:10•Ven?.t.had any 'trial' at. all .fat .ffite •.and We're. going .• to got' 8011k8 'there." • • 'rim% Coine tight In here 04406 no native reniry' owned ,any land but Yet he had a. historical right' to culti- vate 'Certain Mile patches becauSe.his :fathers had doneSo.before"hini, Fut- thermore the plain , had, 'fic,,er been .SurreYed add the. whole was ao level and :.0.(regular. there . were 'ho land-. .Marks or bonndary stones,' by : .which the .,natives could 'even identify their .claiins• It•was:snrVeyed'end at every ' 'minute Of latitude. and longitude iron PoleS; were" erected With preies• 'Vanes on whieh are stamped the degrees and . . . . • niintitea.,-or latitude 'and • longitude. Traveliag OVer: the fiat. Gezira is. like .sailiug ontheocean'and we navigated in* mihnteS and iziegrees in exactly the same manner. ; .• . ., • • :. • • .•• .... : The inanageraent of- th.e area was entrusted 'to. the Sudan Plantations _ . Syndicate.' The •Sifelan goretitaleet 1.vere•te be responsible for the:•fitianC- • log and buildiug. ef the 'darn' and the .• 'major'. tanalization; ' The 'iviidicate , becaule responsible • 'for the 'Miner . _ • .entialiatilien,•.' MaitageMent ' of the whole . enterMise .., and , for fiaaneing ,the. tenants. Th o• tenarita Were to ., sit pely ...the. 'labor., as *ctiltivators, •The .eetten crop Was to •be. divrded. into. , portions' of 35' per . cent. to the ,gov- ernntent.• 25 per tent. to the syndic- ate, and 40 per COOL fO :the tenant:. 'and all other crops.to the tenant. The • Alrlialtgo."maiment • 'guaranteed.. an '.erigitiai. term of V5,060;606 for freado- .',. bag,' The dam. W.:a.8 Started. IS 19t4 but - Was' stopped on the -otttbke.`ak of the. ) 'Wer.--, .Atter the'.:-Wer..•,-thesa ' Oan,,,Was. '.es.,:e.,.. "nbled .:_.,0.0_4___ _ coo.orgptio ktotted again; *The" 'fliiii '`. .` . .34.1x6"-kbont, • . 4•''z•"•••• X'•",, • • ' ellii Io Invite ;• Briti.;4errirn. eat ids on Lme Is Traced in Rook . c oss .EgYPt tO , . Karaelii Section, „Professor Ascoli, of Sorbonne, First Link PE Route, May' .' . Finds .Vintages of Franee '. .• -. Stdrt Ser.vice in ..,. ., „. _ caused ItIvaeipn .' . '• '. . ' APril, 1929 . '. ',' .1,1V.447 yeit.e'' study Of the'llieratnri . , • Simla, India:—An important etage of 41.0, day .igld aSeiclaclus ransacking of an air -mail route across Indio by has. been reached in the developmentl,ewfuiCcellintinhael74.g.itt;hisvoeledielryn locieccualiitipeed7 the aPproval of the AssereblY'e $tan4- ..144": iut Te66.40d In a, flgOnating .' .°. Ing. tilloaf nincediCaci'e*ITrtpteeeSet °Ito° cag9lrefrea;, '1)Pren,:e8n,bil,;'0Prr,,i:Pn,:s11.8:7..T74rT'oglAn:d9.9:15seprisaalAt'iy7.1.,7T,Poolvriiwes°104:-. *...:.' bids, scion, feir .the, Operation of three •P• meta Sections. A .weeklY Plene.serY-'..tse7t4h, 1,:ellibtovory,. dvierellohsgeee .ivollothftenori, .:.'... '•" *tiled :hi the British goverantent„. is:' lee betvieen, Egypt and Karachi, SO-, ale, .ngl1slipl4±anci. Engilshwo. ...,...„. ..- . ;,.. •. The. maSslie velunie wilieft• the PrO.. t ; ,• '''-''', '' An ' . ' 'ertiee,' In three'. iiee, ,fesso. r..11 as ..*Htten tills. 711 •.in.effeZt.O. • ". -• :• •;• , :" done; 'froth" IC. chi te'•Itanglion; is vacuum ha -historical. knOwledge;',•for ':' • , ^ ' •••••• . ., . , . that this shall form a:conaehtinelink the. next .Objedtive, it •Is'"iriterldecl. Winheisl:n• t,41.€.4.alys •I:eaasriys'.::t4hei;:iak'reorltati4ite.Wi3briatt.: . . . , . .. The three 'sections will be: ,, Kanachi• Brit - in the Elagiand-Atistralla • air reate., lissuh teturirgte—or ofwtiihoe •Ewrlast- to Delhi, Delhi' to Calcatta, arid ., Cal- anaious to find out what the , Freitch- rate to ,Ilallgoan. •,PreParatioite for •wlnhe,oneatlincioeugollvte.i..O3t.fitthh.eihl.r13iitaisdak.;e4iiideeier. • i. • ....the 'grnitini Organization between Kar- eoar ,twireaiot, tthh;11,grhrti?oefhLiloonbz,n, hitherto and it is understood, a start:*will be achl and Calcutta are well advanced .. expected to be established by , AprU an- • . BRIDGE OVER THE TYNE OPENED BY KING GEORGE ' •• • , „,•• ---One-of-the-finest-bridges-in--Erigland-has---been-erectectlit-Newceetle-on-Tyne-et-ncost of ,$6,250,000. The royal cortege is seen Passing ever. it. Inset Thelr majestles at the opening. • acre. .The land is then reellotted to The rows are , about 36 inches apar,t ,the 'actual on nerS who are !cultiVat: and ;the plants, at 20 loch intervals ing tenants onplots of .39 ,acres each,' Theneed Is sewn .Ori the: tees Of the aS. near their original„, holdings as ridges When picking Ia. pOssible. The theory is that no man Cotten:stalks are ,Ctit, dOwn'and.inirn, can handle ..•mOre. than One 30. Ore ed :as :a', Precaution against, pests.: unit; V, he Originally. held 90 acres .The, Veld is .about '300 .pounds of, he. ma Y nominate his ions or 'relations' Jong Staple lint cotton Per acre,..,Ville as .tenants on Abe, other two units, triakeS' an addition to the, world 'ecit- 'SO far, of the ,6,000-tenanciea, of 30 ton •'prodithieln of some'. SO -million, arres .eacha about. 5,000 have '. been pounds of Egyian cote* annul:41Y: takeit. laY 'ownei s. theniselek,and.: the and the • development . et iiie *attire. remaining 3.000 'by People already has. Only begitn. ; What effect this and 'resident • nrea, : .•similar and ,even jarger; irrigation genii 'prOPOsition for the ten- projects -.farther. xlowii-the Vile may . . . .entSotter.. He gets' 50. Cents tr•i• aere have on the IL, S.:.'hottoa Surplus ,pro - rent` end is entitled 'farnl. 30 'cies . •duction 'remains. ,to • e sen At .an,) • as near ••1:s 'pOsibie to his orihal rate it le Well . worth. *lathing. land Oii eaCh "30: acres ite 'May. :. ..•:- • ' • ' • 1 groww tel!'.•acte.s of ecitteu.•,ate1 ten acres if. acres., ueen., 'crap :for ' cattle or ' 'r0Y-k011r, reop gran for,' h is ' own eolisuniptien. " In- I' .• ' • • ' • •'' - Steed Of relying. the Precarious; good nature is net the end for .r.alias..he. gets. re,gular'„water• for Which I which, . the :World exists:, .,NerIs Jt, he PaVa .only .as 'much as if he lived the la* bv winch we -Should control- •aleing the, Nile.• bank and we V,..ere.-, our conduct., There is a 'good na getting it 'fron. an ox_dra.si.a. :water* tured" tolerance of In Other' 'Meek 'wheel,' He'', has. the best. cotton seed • distrihuted,:to m. he .iets' cash., ad- " • ; y which '"a -e help them to their sins,' Tn.-aces .at law interest ,and •he''gets'2.1?d plowing Machinery,to ploiy plic.e ,?Te There tieeirP 'good natured 4 aturedc"77, 46 gets,. expert supervision in Ilis eul mg Which.seems to'Sey.'What Is plea tivating •and. his'Imnrketing. rather than what Is tree, and It he gets se 'Mach *.that a he is buying 'undermines social truthfulness ; There fine nnientoisilevand living oil a Seale,. is • a good natured ' endurance' of en-, e,thousand times higher than hiS an croachment,:annini.!rightS,', :Which' we cesoiu hase ever,.hved before him siouId guard,' net for ger own sake so ,Thet soll Of the Gezira is a:stiff loam linich as for 'that.of. society.: A;zid: containing over firtY,per:Cent. Of 'clay. ,.there is 'a ."good-natured": avoidance It.. rapidly, • ; 'beternee,r,.iiimerviOns to of hOneit..;:teetiniony against. the •water se• that . no seepage occursi.world's evlls whlch reduces uS to thrOugh•the.caeal baulcs:... 'The land 13 mere 'ciiihira inthe. b4tle '•for ,tho Weiralleadi 'kingdom ot:Ved.‘.:- There -hi -need ' for af Sowing time This Is done' br the' 41 the ..really. "goodnatire," -the Syndicate ' with; cable plows -drawn courtesy, the Cheerftilnees, the•broth back and 'forth •between.tw&tractors,[`erlest,..1%-e.. can ,MuSter. But for this .one, -fit .either• end of ,the- field The I.VICieus good nature • whicia' .seeks geed is.... a long 'Staple •EgyptianCo&I only the pleasant " and the eesif‘ ton exclusitelY and Is . dibbled in at I neither earthnor heaven has root* .tii4.rate of: about p.'Pnundso per. acre ..1 or. heed:: • • ,' • '• • . .13eliefiti • Th ' a e refl. hes what is w -Mont. savour. .He avenges the 'injeri .• • receives sla-/y benefits. begi easy things When ' he 71ec.l0 itet.es 4 Cat things;.„; by, emu, 11110 meditates: .! . T/16 1.4113 of Fortnne ; ,Ben Fthnklln, said:' "To be •ravrn --- upOn'-one's- own ' teSetirces-7-is o. mad.e, on :the jCaleutte-Rangoon section ea.:soon as tinfficient: fitrids• are in " ' , • „ had n� data to hand.' • •••• It appears that even with .the. Sleek Prince at the doors•of Paris theg• ,En- •Nine700Ys Neater • , 144 admlred 1* As soon as the through .rotite' from Fr ane. .1• .as 17a1!: Karachi, to Rangoon is established, Captured French knights after their • the air mail from England will. be release .brought ,..back to Paris from, • delivered :at London glowing;repota her beauty:: . • Calucutta, Iry eight' days and at Rae- and poets *hp had never left France, , .goon 14 nine days, compared With six- In rare mannserilats. Which Profeinfor,. teen,. aereitteea and nineteen days by Ascoli's • researches have • now, the Preserit Sea Mute. . • brought to light for the first tithe Delhi Election ,will beready hy'tile fall beir,"„ her . It is ..enticipated that the, liarachl.- 8_4e by of .1929. Thaee-engined aircraft of the. her "slenderneck" approved BritiSh tYpe ot Construction herald sent 41 London owe, 1 1. • . • , ' • • . • " Enjoying Autumn Giory of Canada's New Park , 858;880.-,0(10,. WI %chides *Cantilizsi- ' Hon, • If son., one were to 'dig three • -,, - (satiate rrom New 'reek' 'le San ).....1,..• rsaectseo• the t a1.1.1.engtitwOrild be! ' S4.. '.',;'• " beta eqrtal tO the mileage of the Chtio,ies ,Mid ..ileld -channels on :the; Gotira Ilpliettto,- n't 1,386 miles. ' '1 , . ..4t, • ,. 1,.. ,.„ve.a......mosioss-1,. sour. :,,sc .... • .• ..... The, government took forti years 1 . • .; ,... .....-.,-.. .. ‘111111111M.— , .. ens° r1dWrsf BEALJTIES OF NATURE IN TNE‘ CANADIAN' 'Aire% . l. , all land Within the scheme at an an- ... .0n the portage froMNingsrnere.I.inke to Long Island, Lake In Lhe..Priliee ,,, , niter rental Of. itha4t. Aft/ ..e,11tO)),„er Albert Isl'aticinal Park, SasicalthtWan, , , • '1, . . , , ..... , .... ...., .„,.... ....... , ... . . I , .' / ' • . • • 1 -9•1•14.1,1:1•!•,i, 9.,,1 • 1; r , • • sang her "beautiful and greenling . • , , h'itit, into the Veri'lap .of fertun ',‘! • will be used, The goVernment. of In Sion to Edward 111 came back,* he . dia proposes, if "funds permit, even- ea:re, With a, • story that in, England, ttially to extend the London Karachi the faces Of the women were ,`.`rnors Service"te.bontbay. . • • angelical and . feroinine than any-. , The ,.Finance ',Cenintittee,, in egreel Where in the , ' , • • • Ing to the proposals;' suggested that; Professor. Ashen 'found in 'scene ot • following the English :practice, the Ihentamiscripts he consulted. stigges? Catiada is Native ClOWnS tions that the Englishwoman was not A Vt•-• "'"•%. •••• .!••• QiikBEd. BABY Be Iilid" Cub and "Bettling", a one -round .boat before ehee , , quite as 'good ae. She was 'good -leek • , •', ink. Hints• of her coipretry are 'con: t. tabled, It appears, in: some. of the • private reports which French embe.„ ' series to London serit home to the, , Freneb king ,The :chief "attribute With •which the' '. • , • • .fourteenthLeentury .Frenchman invest. - ed the Engiishmen,:. says' Professor 2. Aseoli, was . an ' enormous capacity for drinking, , - • . ' ••I It seems that all the Manuscripts which he • has disiaterred are nnani-, • . . mous on this point. ' • 1., • : . 'One. poet . wrote: "The. Bergundian sings; the Breton writes, .the English-. man -drinks." clerical chronicler' , records:. "The Norman. •sings; the • . • 'German eats; the Englishman drinks." • • '•A taunt,' frequently found in °musty..., , 2 : manuscripts, ; was • 'Oat 'the English, .`•'.. tinder Ed‘rard hivacled France" ' chiefly an aecount of, her ;vintages. • '. ' . ' The English Soldier. In France Is depicted as 'a great, oath -taker, and ; • French knights whom' the Black. ' "Prince tocik • away with him' noted • this habit in the Englishinan at home. • • 'Professor.Asoil's researches rel:' • ".• veer that it was • the -gaiety of'. the: • ' •• ,• people 'which. most impressed, French. *. visitors to England the. fourteenth " , century .' ."England., is full at'inetri-. ment,". one obrtver wrote., 'Another . . • • descrlbed.-it as a "country of free- , • dont. where joy overflows." ' • Pensive, Preach prisciners Were • - 'struck by, the sPeciacle Of young , „ . • _,• RS:BATTLED FOR A pl.1-TP0P.a... • Brui• n, two young bruisibears, who staged ing tourists in northe4n e a on ebee.. Rhigoldo don r playing b thefields seats were free The purse, a :ollypelp, les awarded te"Kid,',' Cub. round the capital Later thie gaiety , "The Brach Bear is just a sort of einnY, backwoods .clown, Wishiag for Was ,teihpered by 'gravity which., led ' nothing but a ;full _tummy. , complete freedom from Contact .with men FrOissert to analce,::-,the famous re- plied with rifles. In fifteen.y ars sp9t the Wilelerness'l have .had ino!..4 mark .that. the .English 'took' their, . • . pleasures sadiy. than my" share of ;opportenitie to get acquairitect With Bruin, and to my mind he is not a bad peighbor, xcept for his 'ingrained propensity for Investl- • • gating Camp stereeooms.., '•At his, he Is. altogether' too. adept. , and he goes Radio and. lane educe , . at his, work like a,group of Bol heviks looting the home of a wealthy Member • Alaskan ty Ratio- . of the bourgeoisie.' When a ber-camp storeraom; the easies a MatOIO',the works and sta '"Iiruin, is On his toes all' ever finning a bear •asleop. ex '.„ ear gets through ereashing around in/ a• J.itneati, -Alaska.—There a.re now, . n?etliod of cleaning Up the wreck. is to touch fewer insane' patients in 'Alaska than a Clear. • " ' , the Klondike gold rush'. insan. • . he ,time. There is no •record of „‘anY hunter ItY 'generally wee described as, caused' ent during they Veiled Of annual hibernation. by thelong•winters and iSolation hone human society.. Miners, trappers and . in. his 'formal state of health le is fully as alert as a nicidein burglar alarm,' ; reindeer herders were 'its rictitnA'' • • and' lie can ''et away .frote a staeding stirt in a manner: that would turn • d. . ' ' • this malady, physihiatis•here eclare. ".• • Nurmi greee 'with envy.''.--Ket tient Lee' in "Forest' end Stream," . p hale -riduced . • io and 'lir Ian s - ' ' • .. . 1 , -- - - ,. .-•---- 7----- - ----- •----.--7, i Practically 'all .thedistant camps have' • . 1 ' • — . I ' ' ' ' - ' ' ' t ' ' Panic-MMongers. , go% el ninent should .partic.pate•la •any radios to tell, of eN.en s arou,nd the ., . ,t.itrotits over,. lied atiove a Certain pe -r,, world. and diffuse entertainment. , BrynguYn 3,ames In the, Pi II Mall • • • . • cortege ,after maj•irli` g' (Inc provision . Aluuls.t daily airplanes May be sem (London): • It is tile commercial anti. . : .. , , . in every s.ectiOn of the territory. , industrial, panic-m)ngers wlu : have ' f°r. CI°Preciati°a• ' ''' ' Lbraiging letters', tiewsPapers' and • duoietiereSei onNmere!O. , 111recentrBercietnistilyetiltti•cs; et.,a..iliet..,ini. ; .c.,vionTeitiAdthci.e:Cnoeyalor7;ILitauticer, win ..b.e. mPleieftstes.:to7 the, . mest isolated settle- :••• sup. . -tri i dustrf•from the blows inflict d en. it linked 11P' with existing air -mail serve' • , . : 1 . • •• • .. -.-..:.-,-,-,- . ,PY the' war, and its .conse notices, Ace6, • accoraing , to Official -advicea, • . .• '. Their bletherings 'Cast.to"the ends of the ea•rth, :: lid thc•ir . first with Ametea and subsequently' "..,.... "1.tay iwe' ' br6ad•'' which "say a cennection.'will be made', Scant Attire in ,Swiss . . Advertisements Decried .. sour bread has been cast i Pen ,th..e' with. Australia. -In, tb.e former cag, e ', . 0 °A ev.. _ , , . Advertisetnents whic.h : • many daysf It' it a matter fo wont , to three da38, eh e, ith th , atter. . . . .. negligee have encountered the re of • In loon.Y. foreign c°uottit's there • is' th.He• daYs is% exliecteit ' ' ..• ''... . Six or mere •associallona have. tut.. ••• waters—and unfortunately ter int after it is hoped 1.4,,ffoet, savitig •of.otte trsv Aseinen in costumes extra,. that in Many parts of the lqineire,and gountry; a reduction. or approximately .sw.ip. fenareat Organizations., consequently a tendency • to believe The postai authorities .te pinilkare dresSe4 a public protest to the news. that tite..Old, Country is done tor?.. waiting, to avail themselyea Of the, papers the. ineteAnt,,,,4autt. '------t.'airo"tita*Cbi air Seriice, but lit Ines- r6piegenting WOOlen. irt newspapers 4 ' • ent the saving of tithe' will.. not, be dr in shop windows "In a state Of Semi - *National Extravaga.nce alTrociablc to CollitOilia: Pvfing to the.nudity. They, hold that it strikes' ' • • ishkodi and, karaehl.* • . One. Of. the itandirig • won ttra et the.• ae-ereliting. to Ore, youth 6e the ' • day; tlrat-t uxury %Era ' vtog,t. reuefey. , • , Britain tontifind 'to •fltatifish, while her ' "A natiori ,strong eels. 'in' proPer. basic industries flounder in the slOugh ' • :Two Hands, Free • (toe to its morality. '__says the nmtest„ et tlipiession. ThOse enterprises -on - 'tri"-.."".4°-t's.41:1`7-0tnthe _Prka.,... — -which...urges--ther,,itaxPeSing of--n-bevc.. . a which the real and ultimate Wealth Roy—."New„ lees pa::k in the drive." cott en store's, newapebera,and thigh- , cif the nation depend are Sunk creep in °46st. ', ' . ' - ' • - '21nes which' persist in showing lack distreeS. but the extras* the .frilleatid ' ' of resPeet for 3,,VottuitihoOtt, fancleii, Increse and muittply exceed - no bread cannot conftnuly e indettniteli: Ho , 'many peeple nee ties, the ii.e... Lost—Fox Terrier; retteh wail. • ' .. . it is utterly anrieconemic and • Must nutation of the teputatten tiiey ',Might Math iiin 'head. Side tail. -Ad la a ingly. 'This situation of all jam and. Reputation Now' Moclet HOoner Or later cOMO to catastrophe. i hav6 Ciaffebita. rittiet. • •