The Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-11-15, Page 3a
'MO
•••
Segra‘ie- to Seek Speed Records
in Motor. Boat and Auto Races
61141811 MatOr Hopes to Achieve 240 Miles; on Hour OR the
Daytona Track in February; Expects to 8kip. Over
the Water at Ninety Miles an Hour .
Londen..4.-TheGelden • Arrow; in. l'ires, ,he declared, m'ere the „great
joiph. major u. 0. sep.axe, holder probielnfor racing 'Moterists.
t the world speed reeord. for motor
' ears,hopes te reaeh; 240 i'nfleS ai
.•
hoar, le almet,i OoMpleted, Major
Segrave will take the car to America
In, Sanitary ler tests On, the sands .of
'Gaktoile Beach,' Fla. ,
SiMultaxieeusly, hiS new raptor boat,
christened .Miss • Englandis/receiving
tonehea- This. graft Will be a
coinrade or the Golden Arrow in Seek -
•,••Ing to10 e1 American recorils. Major
Segrave expects to hop skip and Jump;
• "Last tIrne» Segrave related ' the
company prcimieetilhat the tires, Would
stand "up at 200 miles an hoer for
three minutes --and they did,
time they promise. one minute at 240
milea, an hour, andthat should be.
Iongenough."
.•
Aeeoining to plans now announced.
Segrave's car will Present a unique'
aPPearance. It will be se low that the
toP of its tires will, be the highest part
of it, and it can •stand upside 'down.
on its own. wheels, , .1, •
over, the water; at .a rate or ninety • Segrave"S greatest prehleni eon -
Miles .an hour or more.' ' , • nection with hismotor boat is to pre
"I intend to go for the records ih yeat it from turning 'over. With .S
February," Segrave declared in an in single;prepeller the • twisting strain of
tertiew. "It ishard to say Which of the engine on the hiilL called "torque."
, the two recorda, will bekte more dn.- is So great that there is a tenderty
,lieult to beat; I am inclinedto think tor the propeller to turn the boat over
the motor boat record will be the instead of .propelling, it forward. One,
, harder, and it will certainly be at .,way out of the elifilcult* is to use two '-
least as dangerous as the other." . propellers; revolting in opposite direc-
.judging solely from the design of dons., But, there is twice as much re -
Ids Car; Segrate said he knew it Would sistance of the boat in the water —A..
,produce a speed of 240 miles an hoar. P.' dispatch.
Facts Ab�ut New
,
Warships Now on
• Fleet. Exercises
Cruisers With Oil Kitchen
Ranges and Electric
Bakeries /
'FIRST REHEARSAL.
Nelson and Rodney to' Fire
Broadsides From 16 -in.
-
. '• Morak rirtli during' the rie.xt
'few days seine Of the neweet aod riost
pOwerful Ships a the Atlantie Fleet
•,'„ „
91d7England Likes Noisy'CYcles
4PamtamI4WaaraaaImY41.041.1.1.
•
• • •
START or GREAT RAGE
It was a five -lair scratch event of the British Motor-cyling Racing Club!s Meeting at :BrOokl.
Silver Cup which was wen bk C. •W. C. Lacey: ' •
• • •
straction from the Archbishop of
. ,'Czar's Tr representing Raphael's "Scinsol of
Tuam,have segregated all ' the Shay- , • . '
Ian werks on special shelves not ac- . at. Auction Soon
cessible to the general 'public. --,
' "What the Galway libraries do to r., „ , . ,,
day doesn't. In the least matter; see- JOViet uovernment to Offer
lug that in at‘ few weeks no boolisi '• Priceless Objects for
. . .-
ted in Irelend,", .Sbaw replied, after
. -•
which' hg added the' ,iessimistle :pro-.phecy quoted , above.—N.Y.' Herald
-
Tribune. , '
pictures or sc ipture Win be 'Permit- ,•
VALUE .£300,000000
•-
--
Signed Masterpieces of Frericla
s01to Furniture From Gatchina
01
Athens" was presented With. three
others to the Russian Crown by the
French Government just before the
French revolution.
Empress' Furniture
; The Frenchfurniture consists Main-
ly of signed pie4es by the most cele-
brated cabinet-makers in the reign
of ',Louis XVI, special1y. executed for
the Empress "Catherine IL '
Eozne estiMiee• of the value of this,
sk• .11) n • of thq,s:ale can he formed by.
the .tetal• of 4i50,000 paid for a, few
P:eceq ••liv'the same master fureiture-
makers in tie Ciehelham sale two
• _lie gni' Police-- •Work London.—The Soviet Government es age. ' ••proportibn of these men are, serrins-'••• edge of farm work and lite steek. has nonaPirett Seven years ago a gTeat
-will-offer--t-o-r•gale in. -Berlin -ion -No-•Piller-, objects--ofti•-to-beL--offered----linre', •-otners-ha're-, refo-rnred-aud'-'-are. become •21 --years of age, Andliet---'s saved-11Prising-was=beinr-plannedr, but'wheett.
Boy Settlers' F'lan.
ManitOba and. Saskatchewan
Will Co-operate, States,
Foam
P1-IASE 'WHEN. 21
Scheme of Government Loans
to Aid Buyers to
• Finance
ORRI•T
Mohamtrieclan
Stir Rebellkm
in Chin
Uprising in West Is Directec
" Against Feng Yu-hsiang,
Whi Is 'Worried
by It.'
i.eicing7-osos. more the Chinese Mo -
••••I
o ments' are willing to co-operate/ with tawa, prov nc a evern,
liatint*dans, who, in, the far west of
the Dominion: Government in hring-Itka callatrY, are a compact body of
'tug ,RFItish. bora to Canada and make n'Wn' nunibering +3,1r,opoi, Are stlir,,
It possible or them to bUY farms kink Po 'rebellion, and'jn•snite• of ,
• themselves win? the assistance ' of ciel secrecy it is known4that in Kai=
0111
government loans, after they 4have and in Sinkiang Provniced donclitiens •
"reatlied the age of '•21 Years; :Hon* 12.*13 heroine serious. •
.
Robert Forke,, Meister, of enaniigraz This Rohe:Weeder' nnrising has a
f:tao nte and u statement
iezla t ii;n1 haiannreentaveruediin a ,-Ndiareetikt,inagikicoinviepernteenntt effectaitdail) op ann
• .
a three •iceeithe, visit to. Western, Can., ng, ecause . a .
king, b directed again.
. ada. '. The 'Purpose of his trip was to
Marshal Fong Yu,lioiang, the, general
..:work out plans for closer co-operation
who is feared.by all the Nanking lead -
with .the provinces. ,
inning kis trip Mr. porke.had eon. -
ferences with the Premier s and other
prominent members of the Govern -
meats of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Al-
ers and who, it is commonly believed, d
will grab Peking and Tienstin•at tbs•
first oPPortunity.
Marsluil Peng is obviously disturbed
harts and. ipBrro:ienhieiCo*luamsblain.., :le?Ifip fen: ,Ib'be:Y• ittbe ermau0P.3t,i:niesesgin,gtr.trtrapsosICahean,,Thatf9afranpotithttedit
. r Ld ter, the Butler iwvileiettthh, ettobhmeemreitrae . or paat4riotausineouft.hwelosee.it
, . .
. conducted' the hamIgration.;,•:entutry
.. - .
and v.•anted to sleep, until late in 'the last, sesaiqn. • ... : , , ..
1
.efterpoon. . . , . '. . '. : ....• 'The,Goverittnexits of both Manitoba
Fiore observation:•of his habits Seed- .and 'Saskatchewan halm announced
land tar& knew thia, sad:: inquirlea.1,their willingimai to co-operate with
atneng,hotel-keepers •Iii-tewas --nor-i-ths-Federsi-pePsirtment-ta its -scheme
covered the .afternoOn sleeper , •I Canada Bald Mr. FOrke. Under' this,
the scene 01 the robbery Soon. dis-i for the ''settleinent of ,/3ritisbe boys ' in sdoricosastty13:.atIt tilitebemgre.hamiettedx, the, Manchu
To.
To the . detectites . whose ' mind, scheme the Dnminlon, •Proviuchil ;and o finany put down only by the. foeptien ,
through . long etsociaticia ' With.' crlm-; British. •Governmentit. Join • tercets
of , n ferocious galley Cf. "killing ths
;ins's' has '..he6nle a vritable .11.i.et:u". gi'7"-4° boy an .°14143rtuniUr to iiec°107.11:. root and braileh"%ef every nisa iriipli
gallery, ,and wheSe'faeulty for mentor.' a • farmer in: ,Citiada. 4 British: '
fort to -establiahe clOser Co-oPeralln Peking area to send to the -
one of his „most able and most kiyid
generals, Sun Liang-chen, .the, man .
whom be had chosen to be Governor ot
Shantufig. '
,'Mobammedan uprisings in Chilli
/lire always been, events of frightful -
peps. The_ lastnnek abaft- 1870. --pre-
cipitated' a long campaign which was
' faces has bectirc.. so keenly de -.1 eapecially. -selected betWeen. the ages tilted:: ' •
•Weloped, such tasks pnient but little ' of .15 and 20, who', will Undertake, td . e 1‘1°s ems hz'lle never fergetten-.
'• ;
diffienity: .. . ' . ' •: - ' I engage in term work far a 000d a They ..ii° not 6°1'1'4i -themselves as 'Chi- .'
411etzsed at Scotland Yard.IS a crim-, three i.eaie. win he piahed in empitsp. nese, but rather as followers of ,*
i al ' Rec rd OffiCe co -ni g' early' m nt on C na' fan Wats Whoa a True.Prophet '
200 000 portraits of crinainais A good .bo has- atta4ned a practiCal" kne 1- They have hated and waited' nd
Th I •
• , ' I vember 9, picares • farniture tapns.. ax•e jewelled imiff botes candelabra • . .
nn W good citizens, while many others up about.,3500, the governinents con- tbe .leaders had gathered for a final r
tries and oth. t 0' in orinela and lustre ex i'dsite Frene'l
-Reorganitation of F.01..aa , er .are objectst -a oace . hate gone abroad. All theseportralts cerned. will niake.hint a loan Of P.500, cOnfereeee KanSU'exPerienced one .0f.
..B a „ , • • . belonged :to Czars Russian bronzes, , ,bas reliefs; French are, classified. with the-reCord, of the ter theImrchaseof a fainl'Or tile greatest. earillonakes vver knoWn.
, ...itarte.os • :ireltriediatel3r ' • miep.
•will engage in autunal, eterceSes, some / • • - • SO SO an . Pi ve.r eff I rticular type of crime and tall int ' th 1 t' 'b id over it Poled of irhe "molest& wzilked" 300,000 peo0
'factor missing- •vill be
or. volivh' will be so realiitic• that• ' e".
ati pril-ate Ott' - he kticSitin, royal palaces and ---------he inav 1,3e ..eyerat Persons wanted ::for ',"Another iebeine was. very1400 were 'the leadera in the plot far
by Its' ,New Com-,
The iloislievits •eoiri:ated; ar, 'LlraogeS• enamels. - different 'catalogins.: Althuogh there tu-enty ^years, : ' Ple.were. and among this 3pOr
.
x wander
, , . . •
'' • , .i, . • , - ,,. .., ,. • • tions in. Rinftaa, ai4. by Allis means, eo,eetIons of; the R4ssian PrlieCe.s..•; sindler e•flzoces, :the ., . _ . . .., g , p , .. . ,. . , . , ..
„
.a; real- 'enenke. target; . . , i Lendaa.„..viaccmat Byng, oe • Vimy has becnine pesiegied. or art. itreas archdukes, and noblemen were especi4 'trained mind of favor* blv ' re aided. roVides for the rebellion. ' ' •• .: ' ' •• . • "
.. ' elSon. and.!te4neY, the Nakk's latest 1! as gone to • Scotland. Yard' :tO begin urea mirth abent .0300,000,009. : ,' lok rich' in .'French eighteenth ' cen- s.tutly of the Portraits,. retains a cont-::dotnesties in,..Great: Itritaione
the, •detc.ctiVe. after. a few Minutes' , establishement of training centres for • WI of Central Asia is elated a great •
In whispering gallery,. Strange and d'in-:
battreshipei':will; fire: bron,ijides ';':•0711 his reorganization of' the metropolitan if the'result 01 the forthteming Ail. the finest, furniture,
sale tury. .ort... plete . picture •of , the. profile and full- ' England and One In: Seotiai* Where a torted tales :of events ,in 'Persia, in•
Turkey, in Egypt and in Afghanist-Tn.
have reached . the Mohammedans of
lansu and ,,,Sirticiang... •• . . • '
Last year they passed under. the
their immense ,154xich guns. Hood'. Be-
rown and Repulse, ships of battle
• niser squadr:in, will. fire 13.-ineli
..zbroadsides • while 'steaming .at.•• full
,
power..
•
has gone to Scotland...Yard to begin
through the ears Of a Royal, bommis
sion headed by :Lord Lee ef Farehiem,
has. been hearing what •is right and
wrong with Police methods as they
•-• NIGHT ATTACK. now exist.
. . . • . .
Lord Lee. like Lord' Byng was once
Cruisers," destroyers. and :aircraft
a 'soldier. He was the, British
.•carriers shoot at Centurion—an •
tary"Attache With„ the Ameriein forces
Milt
Old battleshiP which is the target ship during the Spaniell-AmeriCau War, and
Of the Atiantie ,fleet:--ancl..destroyers filled the 'same post later at Waah-.
• will ,ceirry out a :night attack en, the
ington. ,He married Atlas Reith Moore
Third 'Battle Squadron. • .
of ANevy.x9rk. •His present task is to
For the .first' time autumn exer:
find out what is wrong With London's
• . itses Nelson and. Rodney, the two great ptilice force, OhCe the City's 'pride; but
.
new battleship's, are taking part lately the recipient Of more brickbats
• To say that they odd is to be than encomiums •
:.Polite. "Ugly" would probably not be Evideliee .se far
ken. has been
too harsh. The effect to the eye is mainly' in defense Of the -pollee' force'
▪ lack Of balance, which contrasts
by its present heads, -many of whom
Strongly with' the fine lines of bat- . • .
will retire ' when Lerd _Wag ' takes
,
tle cruisers. . .., '
' . ' ' command. Sir 'William Harwood,
ONE TON, ()Ng sHOT. ' Chief Commissioner, and Sir "Wysiii
,
But these ships carry a bigger "de- ham' 'Childs,. Chief of the Criminal
Inveatig,atioa Denartment at Scotland
.structive power than the designers of
BritiSIX' fighting `ships have ever at-, Yard, who fall Within this category,
tempted. ' • emphatically denied that anything like
The .sixteen7ineh ' projectile weiglis "thirti-degree" methods has been pracz
' ilia Under one ton, so that a broad- tised• in this ,conntry. ' •• • . '
Side means nearly nine tens of metal The task of the police, thek, said,
and explosive
explosive. , • . • . • was to obtain teem witnesses by all
the artifices they' could employ, any
, The guns have a nittaimuin range Of
just under 22 mile's, and it has. been information they' required, but the
Moment those witnesses became :sus-
- estimated Unofficially that at ten
thousand yards the projectile ' can Pected Persona and started to make
statements that, might amount to
'pierce seventeen inches Of arnior. ',
To biiild the OAPs' costs nearly seven confessions, it as the duty "of', the
wiiiich police to Warne them not to say any -
'and a 'half inillion *ands: of
., about :three millions represent mins thing that might be . used against
` and turret armor. ,, ,• . them. 'This duty; wne always carried
They carrY, cOmplerneiits of aboOt out, -hey said.
Sir Windham, hoWever admitted
fourteen : linndrecl officers' and men,
that a belief In„'lltird-digree" meth -
who consume two and three7quanter
tons of food a dai. • (ids had become rooted In tile' public.
• mind, • '
1,00 LOAVES A DAY „ "Perhaps /engendered 'byathe preva-
• The vast store.i in the ships provide lenec of crook filmif," suggested Lord
for carrying naval Stqua and dry pro,,, Lee. / .
. visions for six months, While ;the re- A Certain amount Of indignation has
frigerating system makes it possible been mimed' in fenliiiist'circles bY the
to carry provisions for nine weeks . blunt asSertion of the Chief Commi-is
The ships' kitchens would make the stoner and his assistant chief that
average housewife' green with envy, women. police are still an experiment'
Coal unknown:. 0i1,•which Ares the 'wheat aucceps has not yet been deni-
boilors-k also 'heats the cooking ranges, Onstrated. They have been used to
,and an electric hakery' produces twelve watch the drug traffickers 'mid to con
hundred loaves a day. Act tortarte,teliers, hut, according to
Sir William Harwood, they; have been
found "unfit or responsible Werk."
Shaw Sees "Dark „
. .
The role •of the silk-stOcking sleuth
Ages" in'tedatid this country. ,. •
apparently, is cast on hard lined. in
. e only critic Of the police yet
.
Dramatist Cornments on; ee
State's Censorship of
BOOkS•
,
London--..`T4eland is going to relapse
into the dark ages," ,is George porn, t
:ard _,Shaw's _ warning on what will r
▪ appelf,Whetitke:,FAte.7.80.0471-%dtitiAbf:T:
Ship of • hooks will bicoitie
• "The Free' Slate has. apParently de-,
cided. not to be -a .cultured country.
It has. decided that .hooks, picturia
and Staines are dangerous4sd
, going to have any; li•eland will sink *
•,to the etiltUral.leVel Of the :Andaman 1
'Isianda—that'S *AIL"' 'vethran• h
.41ra t 1st . added.. ! ,
, .6. B. S.'S" einninent was tilted torth
. When an ifitettlewer dre* attest-
.
heard has been a magistrate ot long
experience, ao his crl le sm. is rather
ef the use which the three ia being
put He 'Pol ate& fait the,' geowitig ten,
000' te eiiiPlek the police to. Protect,
and' sport morals rather than simply;
,45 ell orce the law,. Which, in the long
un gate the hoist re -Snits:,
4,1 hie.: and utom
new: duties . for , the-Pcilite;.
briinicenness., „ he states, giVoS :then*
ess trouble than. of i•orei. bat the In
revise of • inoter.te? •OWnerS
loabld and itifiled their traffic duties.:
litio the :growth- of the . night club
labit keeps theta:608y in the '
Ottf$, •
An •Investigation is no* being made-.
k the 'Leaden, police ..thiefti to aseer-'
tain th genre of the
dal interrelation about the recent
• 'ton to the Viet that the pahlielihrals'
aids- Oil Stich' es ta.bliohnients.,
.itet ',GOtility ilatwot, following in,. t.
•
of a first selection of ef these treasures and' Iddturen, except the Pieces made faced appearance of the fugitive aix Weeks' course will be given tree to
fulfills expectitioos, It is likely to be' ler the Freneh Court,. *Were , ,
Result of Training • female denratica contemplating. hoes,
followed by other auctioni. . Wooe------------ ussian collectrirs ixt ikente observation can .only cona,R work in nada.' • • -
• • • • the time.' and the Russian palaces • • d 1 • '
. The. works to be autctioned in Ber- , , from a mind eveloped .and tra ned .in I ith regard t,. the miner harvester
lin,-;neXt:inuitith-litchule Pictu'
res aeop; and mansions 'all contained rooms en t4eLOonitaut_registering--0L-fael 'situation‘--theXinister Said: ''•‘R seems
• - • . • • tirelv decorated with the . tiwners' forms. ,, , .. ' : • '•••,...... , .. , . to. be settliag; down quietly: 'So. farj h•siaitg, when that General ' returned
.....
tare;'-tapesterles; bronzes. and Signed -. • , : , . • .
favorite artists .works. Nearly all.'the: , ,. ^
niaiterpieces Of French furniture from • . mbierVation has brought many trim- as , 1 ,taiildlearnthe great .majOrity.;overland from 111eScoW.. It is,said"that' ..
the .Gatchina• Palace, Which WAS a per- beat •pictures by I -Inhere' Robert; for inals to-juittee: The annals of erini- Of the harvesters'fitted intO positions ,Fen's abandonment Of his Widely l44-
sonal palace ot the Czar; and COntitin- e4132P.1%11.Nevaie
e'srueins now Russia.Russia.ed 301 piptities; fromthe Mikliailoff' ,i,h0offered : are
Palace, the' wOrld-famexis Hermitage
,
blusuein, .'ead other "nationalized"
'collections; , ' \ • ,
The Soviet GOVernMent, as is. Well "nationalized", ar
t '
known, ', "natiotialiZed" . all the. great -
private art cellectioas in Russia, add.,, ••• ,• ., . • • , . .
.
•
ing • thereby four thousand master- '
pieces by olCmitsterS to the Hermi- OW Scotland
. . .. • .
doireinatioa of Marshal Peng 'Ter- *
•inology teem with .. instances. • Not ' on Canadian farms without much:dirt
long ago Stewart, sentenced to death ficulty. • "
worth a', sensational ;total, but the for the BaysWater :murder, was 'ar- -`• ',There were' perhaps •a• few whose
.. , ,
. s.
,
collection even so is only •a samPle rested 'by a 'iletectite who.se powers onlY PlirPOSe was to make as much
of the Soviet Government's lyealth in Of observation enabled him to • piek,.• trouble as they could, but they Were
•
tsge Museum, which already contained
eleven: thousand pictures,' and incal„ Yard Observes
tillable Wealth in ecclesiastical and , •
iThe 'tentents ef the Hermitage
perts ezirlY • this year at £60,000,060,:
Museam alone were yalued • by ex.
Detectives , Trained in CO.a-
Stan. t' Registering 'of Fact
and FOrrn,,
.
•doineetic objects/of art' of• all kindS.,
, •
bis nian out Of thousands on • the front. 'gide* seeded out . •Illicijr:. of the
at 'SOuthead. - • ' ., ' : • ' .. • .:, ".•• . . harVesters -now. returningtO.Greit 174.1-
, .0iitaide. thepolice fore Sir Bernard' tain. will carry good reports+. ot Canada
Spilsbury, :the. 'eminent -pathologist.. is and 'Probably Many of them will dotnn
an outstanding ‘ eXample of the trail* back as Permanent settlers : .'. ..
, . .. .
ed,.ohiervant,,,inalytical.inind. He Is ; •, • , ', '' il, '. . '
co4011ered by the anthorities to be a . r •••• •
,lAt :all. times of • the ',day.and, night •'..,'.' 6!ifiseil
Prince of OliserVers.' ' ' 2 ` .. -' , \ Ontario''
may be Put to. the test, •A few months . . ••• : , .• -
N ' CI .ed
a. deteetive'S .poWerg' 'of .'observation i. Year, OW . Og
'ago a Scotland 'Yard; •deteetive ' *as •rr• 1- ' ' .
told that' a -Man Whoni he lindet-er• iPG:listraming •Itailw.a3”. Hands
• '..Over $1,300;000' Surplus .',...
Treasury
, ..
Toronto.Ontarfo's .fiSeal year 1927-
28 'closed at 3- o'clock. on Oct. 31st....
. One 'of the list sela of . the '1'i•eaS
tier-, was ' to • deliosit7rf•itheq,ue• for $1,.
300,0,0 ' from• George' W. Lee;. chair-.
'Man' Of 'the Temiskaniing &I Nerthern
Ontario : Railway .,' ‘This repreeenta
net •operating 'aurpilia. of the .ret:lWaY
.
for • lite' 37ear ; and Is the Swale . as the
surplus Of last .Year.:: It,was stated.,
hOWever;' that the 'amount ' indicated
andthe total 'value of the Sc•viet's. During the past few days a :noted seen was in the stalls Of 'a certain
art treaseres cannot be • less,: than burglar, was' Caught in the English theatre and that a Warrant had been
•R '
300,000,000. , ' midlands perei} from „observation of issuedfor his arrest,
The pictures to be 'offered in nib' his haliits,'writes a student of crime A few seconds ' studs of his photo
-
first sale include works !hy Boucher, in the Landon Daily , Far too graph:at the' lard sufficed. In the
Greuze, Canaletto,'.....T•rabert Robert and clever to leix-e a tell-tale 'fiager-Print half light of the auditoriumr the (it'll -
other favorite eighteenth century- roaS., behind: the man we's* caught on the• cer, Standing by an exit door. • was
tera. The seulnture •• includes .7. B. afternoon following the robbery. p,
Lemoyne's eelenrated marble bust of it has been his habit' afterl."crack-
Marle• Antoinette; the tapesteries are ing a crib to go to ns hotel in a
Gehenna of 'he finest period., • near -by tonn and 'ask for a rOorn, ex-
• One great piece of ,silk fiad plaining that he had travelled all night
,
able:to pick out his man and Make an
arrest. :There' was nothing distinctiVe
about the man's faceand to an un-
trained mind this task would have
been impossible. ' '
• .
TIM of Death Ito Launched
•;:f
"i•V,
::••,••••„
.vertised Christianity was/ largely
.political move intended to lessen the.
hostility toward him of the .millions of •
Moharaniedans Who :live in the prov-
inces which hercentrols.
It is not known •whether the new
rebellion. is merely a reaction:against. -
misgoternnient and crushing taxes or '
whether it is insPired •by Uarshee1
Feng?s political ezeinies, If it is '
either of ,these it will: pro•e of 'duly,.
transitory importance. '
But if the new rebellion is a revival
of the general anti -Chinese feeling
whichinspired' the rebellien of last
century, it may well ruin not only
Marshal Feng Yo-hsiang but rnay pro-
foundly affert the Whole course of de-
s ehipment of the Nationalist move..
Meni: in China.:N. Y. Times:
Discuss Problems
of Westrn Samoa
League Examines Report By
• Government of New
• ,;*:
Zealand
the best' Year. in, the history et the. Geneva --The ,League,.; Of Nationa.', •
•
, read when an 'expenditure of. $390,000 maadatess,Coniniisaion.' recently :con- '••
en track and right of ' Wiz repairs was 'eluded,' the examination of the NewY".•
taken into Consideration. , • . • • ;• Zealand Government's lireport Of the. ,
''Full. interest ..charges. had afte 'been • admints' traiion 'jot:Western •••
'Met On the 36.000,000 loan negotiated, ' sir James Part, high ;coinailesioner•
. • .
in the spring ,to carry out an etten- for 'New ,Zealand .in London, in rep', ;
alott program. • .to questions. said -there was Mi.differ- •
Neither Pi•emier. Ferguson nor PrO.-''.1-'enre made between the white,thhabt: '
•Vindial • Treasurer Monteith' would touts and thenatives, in regard to
comment in regard to the condition of •the repression of crtine. He Said that
• the'Protinefal parse. but Is under -1.' the...Police force was lame enough to •
•t•
stood that the GOVerninentiCxPeC 5; maintain order. Cote ti schoolselos-,
to be able to announce a 'surplus. Of ;ed owlng to. the recent : agitations
approximately $225,000,7... . were nolv.' reopened and an .attempt
,
,Was behig' made. to 'give instruCtioni •
on the alias and work of the .I.,eague
• of Nation's.' Tho New ,Zealand . Gov-
erninent niways hid in view; he Said,
"the .101.Proveineet Of the Social treti '
„fare of the people ef Samna; Meld&
14.; ni6asures 'tor their. education and
preservation Or • . their health. • 17n;
fortunately' .the 'Government had .to
"
reckon %with Certain eVents..
rendered ,It difficult te realize these,:
tntentions Llitherto, 11 had .attoWit,,,
patience,' and, had iii3L,,.:::resOrted.1..inY,
rigorous nieasures, but !the position
war not, yet, •satisfactory, althtnigh • •
,
the
-btat4011:4!ths,it,*. tre4-44-tiie polfcbge. .
d from the deck tubo of the new Ohliean destroyerworeila during hat trials in the rhansnel •
or in haSt wers
A torpedo
• ',etch). ,paii Bach • ;` working nertnalik.i.Werk on the Olanta-
."11elt-ex lovogn--lizardi-that's. whY." etiaar:-*-•,:ss-•0`;Dx-1.-,0egenreert!hge-oiksfidde-tfanta--:ocopra
muzt„no wiiwoy unto, do you imagine be shown.,he .sal the present -
0 4-= lie ;Ides& fat I lavokl., AtellV?I'rat4P11.' is _ha-, the-. Mandtt,..
had. to linagleie eh'S ItiseLd ox,n,at ale' I toltthnliesh.'ialvtashv tie:16:Ln! ,bit°
,
Stall Boy: 'Please. Muni. don't the spirit 'of initnenitY• and hattine&
'TERROR' OF THE 'SEAS', like these Wiles in the. bread.” • Tired, It "tolerant treatment failed ,
• Mother:, "NeVer. mind. You 4noedn't Ober Measures would have
seed atter It had been latmelied$
,epaiatiot.hoe helot. Leave them on the. taken le deal With. agitators; he/Celli'''.
,
,••••••A'.4
:
.0*"