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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-06-04, Page 24110. • c. • #. • „ • styledcamp", but which is reall • • . a oolledicip,:tif huts or 'buildings, Per reatiently rected, 41:14Inure resein resort or 'side ,inotorists ArVernight "calnP","'W anything that' the Chief .Scout eve • had in mind when he • originated th WY. Scout Novenient."•in that' Origina - Scout -Caine at Brownsea Island ' in England. • •'' • , The perManent camp ':blishiesa seems to have had itS with our •• • '' •• • • •• friends" ont,' the 'south of tional Line, and .from the point of view of: ,sairing work:and.,.handling • • •:,•:r1.•• - . 'the langeit nuinher, of boys with the ••••••'''leaSt•Vessible'adillt 'a•Seistance; it pen. ' •-• haps laei• •Ite adventates; but it Is " • been oet perienel of late as t • : think Of.,tlili•anhteet,..or; , • at least :lt should be fascinating every tone Seciut-Oomn • ,• , " The tendency' of recent --ears. ha's been? liPtcr..41nately„;...As far as. hew_ • camp are concerned, to;•get *Way y deavor to link up with their ileareat - tone Sc011t Neigither, 'enti 0 her uce o:11) ber tra-. out has 'leen, decided not to ' A t. tenint -to: 4 age the', Pioneering In the. Len with _ JAM. _and_ MY-will- Tamply repoid by the fun and exp „We Which they will gale., • ✓ . For the past to Years. .the L Ccont Department in Ontario has 1 ganized spegialLone Scout Gamp • • • - from the original pioneering Spirit of •i. ,...."'pl: .. , . • camp and to Mass boys in. a large' , '' .' ' ,... ,• , ready-matle•habitation which.haS been 'Very Peer sahstitiite for the joYs, of Camping as known by those who have . : rotighed It out•in the open with only a .• . ,... . , small teht, and' who have had to carry. , their own . water and ',Cook their own breakfast!. ... • I don't : think' that. .an real. scout • could 'delude &Innen into thinking that ....le was really. "Caliping" if he stayed. • :. ... ,, : . it one of these mase icamps:'Which • , • • . are in reality a "Heine from Berae.". , • We who- are Lone Scents have Prob- . ' ably already -• experienced the jey f,t • • . ' going •off Ante -the Wilds -to -make-dur. • ' • .:, • • 'oWp:, camp with the materials Which i'sP • • , • • . • .• •• • . • • . .sen,ftnd,lets..Of lun.catioing,together,'. '',.;•••'''•••',4"P'. • ' ' akingtheir Own ,sleeping ••'''.' • ' 177:11 • • ' • •• , • L • ters„Or takieg .along thoee., Jolly • have been to hand; and if you have , • '' not tried you Should' not Pisa up the opportunities 'which thls'¶suinnier Will bring to you. ' Lone Patrols .will ,no doubt .this sea - a place near /13rantford :and a num of LonIes frein all over the provi have each -trear attended this ca and happy times were spent toget over • a period of ahOut two Weeks. Owing, ,howeVer, tothe very ex ordinary ...growth ' of the , time ''Sc MoVeMent..during •the Piet year.' it • ,A large cainti thia year,I•sa-S it WO • old Rudi (i.3 t,•inix,en• . . • ,,,,, ..r.beltinitiriWieldiirbyrrather f,!;i:-;enco O.,. ' ;.tresses, ,won...goltt, inedat at _recent exhibition -4.p ,BadaPSet-ifittigary:;:- 47- • 40.,,, • .. ,,, .., .------.7--4-7.------'--- lte;" • . • - .,. • . . ,= . .. •• • •• , • • , , , :•• • . - •• .... . .t. •••••• ' .......,........-4.„......_ • byv "CensorshiplitrATli ittalia „ ..1 • :; r • CattieW)riier-T"ta-7,' . • . • • .,,, . Anstralia - has a , film cenerstlin• . ' •Ottawa.-e14"'ollowieg the , •revival last • his board. 'Which ' • derivei is. anthority. .6miner, . after an` ahsenee of' some eri- i from. a section .mf the, caStOine 'act years,,of, Canadian, live cattle .410.. •nd-.-vekich gives-atithdrity to praliibit the- inents'• to the BritishMarket,' • 3,591. rat, importation of' riod..s. Under this cattle reached the, port • of Manches- o.0 section jareciamationg, hive' been Is ter from the Eorninion. between -the aued.banning the impOrtatiOn• of filers • initial shipment ,made in Aug and ee. and related• advertising matter ex. the end ofH 1930, Writes. Harry A. ut 9ept under . certain conditions and :Stott, 'Canadian' Trade. gommisaion- p, with the. consent of the Minfiter. er, at Liverpool, in , the leominercial n • The conditions_ pro:ride; Among other f.• Intelligenee Journal. " , ; ' • .,: .. fin .thitigs; that no film shall be 'register- • ' .' • .' , . : • d••-',-,---- , - . , . . • • ed • Whieli in the Opinion Of the cen- eor Is •blasphemous„ indecent or.. ob,,: - , • • . T . . . . ' NO. Place for Gangsters .Toronto Telegram ' .(Ind. •Geris.);-,-• scene, is 'likely to be injarlons to'thar- ,: ality or to •encourage .4' or : incite: to , (bangsters• are palug American Meth- crimeli. isIikely to be offepsive , , . to the ,. ode iii•Etigland). But gapga.and gang th • • pehpie of 'any, • friendly .., nation,: ,,15„. methods can only have a 'temporary' ce •.to .be.. Offensh,e to ..the :people-, ieixettnesio:7L41 n England., ogocicoLopg,. .. , of the 13ritieh• Enipire, or depicts any ..- po'•Poiliictleasyllsyiecnois trao171i:edne•cleews. . . to .matter of which the "exhibition courts and . "Ic: 'undesirable in the • public interest, ., iS • sary• to . etiebesSfid, gauge, - And While in Importers have the right 'oi. appe 1 politicians even in England are not al- and-LitOhnin 4.04rga.440;nanips-- Oatkois; or as individual Scouts- training Point, Of 'yiew'•1 Will be iiivaluable,*as only by min enccan-misaY-thingebe learned; a the mistakes you make at your .camp Will,„net be repeated:When y go Okahky • So, LOniee, do • not. wait. for LQ Scott -Department Camp, thi'e year, b ,go. ahead and organize your own cam and Write' tO, your Scoutmaster for a inforthation' you maY.wanti.'and refli know jnit. what. you' are • Several :Lena .SCut.Ptrols have.. already received .invitations to camp With, .other e0gtilar troptis;.• ,for Stance, .the. Silver Foxes cat Pickering have ,been invited •toi.go the,. .0ehaWa. Troop and this s a very ,nt •arrangement indeed. . ••' • , •: - ••• 40,:j40,e Scent who weald like. -mp-With-Sonte Regular •Trpoifts'eis ed to let us. know; and we will furor him just 'Where the, inoet. • convent camp will -be. held this saniMer.' have had •,quite , a . number offe froze trOops •to take Jaime •Scoita aloe , . •:•If.:you are nota tone:Scout .yet an woold •like ; to •Share•in. all the' fu WWII- we, 'Joules. have, . Write •tor 'pa ticulars4e • Th p 11,one4c.oitttiDepa,r "LONE E." V than of• Australian-niade Wins are . Ways .above reploacti it. has yet :to be shown that, in the old Laucl, any ' of tit • Regale:flans governing the , exporta: rs. similar, with the , . addition .that ill; , them are in league with crimihals,, ,. .,-±!:-'---77.---- •• . 7.. g film may be exported if. in the opinion' . • of 'the 'censor; it is likely • to • trQYe71,n.--x W detrlitientaI. or in'ejiidicial .'''te.411-QH, T4nng-,-,10:14- 1"tPss4- ---With-----sPr g7 n ..pominonwealth •of Australla,i'.',.... : ...comes the canineign. season .iii , China,: s., ,, ,,, • , • ,• • , , • 't, • : , . • . and the. embers' Of the'old wars show t ..„,...4.---.. mewl°, kelativi. s ...-:.i. . 1 -.-otbarsting Into flames. iNoone; n, • . - ex.c.e." pt-the-seothsayer,---prediete.--the7 Oxfort1T-Eng:Er. • Albert ."EttiStein 'taupe. inChina, but' it is good. toknow eipreased .his sOrrow at., the • recent ' • .. ' a . • 'Pup -tent," which,nre soeakili. -ear' • nient, The Boy Seouts' Assaciatio 33O -Bay StFeee, Toronto, 2. P.' • , are to be ebteine'd•so.elieriply. • 'Illiiise-'-indiviclual"-trans--Somittfrwlib- •• not -care to go alone should en . • •• • . • , • ro • • Insect Troubles -dana,da. not the only country wor- • ried 'with fruit pests, The• British Minister of; Agricultere has recentiy. • madejan order with the object of pre- venting the ititrodnetion.. into that Country of the Cherry'Ptriii.t flY, This -*der • regniiites. the importation of 1.1 •'. 'cherries into,England and Wales dur • , Ing the 1931 season. P Cherries grown -in France -Will be admitted without restriCtiOn until June gild, _after which date importation Will • , be prohibited, except Of cherries groin within a, small. district around •" Honfieur;•'.,Slintlar regulations are an- . plicable to other European countries. • • • , TheTourist TA•Ade. . ;-! • , Saint •Johu.' Tilnet-Olobe• • ' ' Tourist trade- Canada's. great invis- • ible' exliort. It largely -imPonder- • . able. Its Magnitude and importance I are: admitted but little understood. , It • is almost impossible to gaugOtheefull • value of the tourist trade in all its •411,Profit by the coming Of • 'tourists; hoW much and how directly - itis hard to 'assess: But While all are partiCipanta in what is brought tik• tourists, hotel-keeners and retail- Mee. . • chants, are unquestionably thoile :who • reap the most direct and Visible bene- fit. Ancient -Psalter "..., ,... , - . .. Brings $1O,000 Vienna -The Polish dovertinfeht has acquired the Saint Florian Psalter roni.the monastery of that name in. Upper Austria for 500;000 schillings, pproximately $70,000, It fa 'authenti- ally-reported'here. - The . psalter is -a nrchnaent:manuscript from the four- . e meie ants of Peiping are act - passing of ErAlbert Ilicheleon, Whom • .1gg on the .assumption that there will, • he once •characterized as the man Who inspired In, hire tlie -concept of the be no. War this spininer, ;iElsewhore Many ruMop of strife 'are current, and theory of relativity. . ., ,, , 1.thie is in.evitable 'in a country which "Dr. Miehelson was one of the has noli, experienced. some fourteen greatest artists in the world Of scien-' years of MO war, • If most of the • big tille exPerinientation," ,be said "His • military adventurers have'been ertish- investigatiens were of, decided. signifl- ; ed, their followers are. by no Means canoe' to the theory of i relativity.' 1 extirpated. China, swarths, with' wt- .._ Br; Einstein' is here. to deliver ,p; diers,dfdertune of 4j1 ,r9Aks,•ready for serieS of Rhedes memorial leetures. , . any w,arlike.. enterprise, ;from a raid _ _.. /linen a- Hwaegtung-- village to- a- ne .g... ....... movement for the overthrow of the' "Nanking tyranny" and the "true in- terprethig" of the2v4three principles,,•': or any other Political slogan adopted by On 'adventurer who, can guarantee pay, food and loot. This is the after.... math og war. : . • 'Snow • Mid -West • • .• Pacific Swelters • • ChicagaL-SnoSy rain, 'Wind and sand ... storms. iwrere reported in Various see- An • dons of North America during the. past • week at the same time that a, e blistering heat wave was drilling tem- ' • petatures along the Nellie coast to, the bighest"...-iring marks in 20 years, .Examples of. the contrasting ex- fretnes were: • ' California - Temperatures as high as ,92. • • Chicago -42.08 inches of rainfall. • Missouri -Floods. " southern (atifornia-7-SaiidThrofins. Win•nieee-Snow. Trinidad, _teenth, centurY; -congststlin$-'ne-4.? pages, In excellent condition, and writ- ten in Latin, Polish And German. Polish scholars maintain this pal ter,le; -oldest monument. in* Polish literature. it came tq Saint Florian during' one Of the many visits -of Ake PlIsh Queen Catherine in the elk teenth' century. , , , • •-, ' ' ' • &Me .2'. - Will you remember that when next you write me, • ' • It Is of little things 1 long to hear. All the small happenings that Ymu hold so tightly, , • . I 'held se...dear. • I " • - Are' You still busy . in your :-Igarden daily? , • Printers Ink • . dtiawa.—Tnel'at were .22 establish- ments in .Canada 1929 engaged in the manufacture of ink, according to • the 'Dominion Bureau. of Statistics.' Sixteen of the plants were chiefly _. engaged in making printing inks or rollers; the other six niaking writing inks as their main product. • The .year saw . a new high, leyel' at.,, tallied by the whole indnetry, the out - Put .being valued' at $3,033,049. An did .Maxim• . • There is an old maxim which says, that one hero makes a thousand, and It is an undeniable fact -that the vast - What are you reading, now? What do you sew? . And do you hum your little songs as • gaily As lung Age? Are the larks singing now, at da-Wn's awaking, • In the ,green meadows where wild• . pansies grow 'Clusters, free Por any traVeller'S taking? " 11 me such things as these, ply heart is breaking • •• Dear, gust to know. . . -Maud Stewart,, in The, Canadian Bookman. eblares Western Farmers • Optimistic as to Future tratford.-"Wheat growing is a 'nd-Irlipertent-birsiness--iir"the- minion of Canada will 'con- ue 'so," declared the Hon. 1?ansan• rshall, _fernier Minister et, ture for ,Alhere, In a rr atl- ss 'before the Stratio ,1 • b,. "Wheat was the !an means' of whlell this provn e wa nsformed from a Wilderness into present fertile state. • The farm - like al riles t. everyone e, ...m eke mistake and that is buying- everY g in, sight when things are geed. trying to pay tor them. when gs are bad. The 'Wstern farm, 13 not, discouraged he is eot go - out, of the wheat -growing 1)051- • pecaite 1riCeS are low, end 1 iU have to hesitancy prA)hesy.- that 0 Irears from now •Canada, be producing .and exporting more Do tin Ma cul dre ,Clu by tra its er,• '•otie thin • and thin ing nes • on ing will est number ever counted begins at the Veil beginning With ONE: HAPPINESS A . cemnionwealth: onglit to be but Faehion cleanings. Paris -The feather boa is scheduled 1 to become popular Again. It is ape- G daily attractive With evening clothe of sheer materials.. „The . boa .is worn 'h in the. shape Of a• leis, and is very: p fiatteriug.. To !is cOrect, it should e blend in enter • with the accessories: b • • Vanities These be three vanities'. To which the mind of, man is pey-- Church steeples pointing mutely sky- -word • , At nothingness - tombstones •crum:- a • bling to dust away-. Hone that some vague, unseen to -moi -- a • , The Love, of Cornrnon „,Things • * •.; • The love for Common things grew • ••14 the whiter, the anatomy of the. daily; things that cost nothing, and ;trees., their. 'flaked limbs throWil, life was ?fall of them. That Is what the silhouette against the '07; ..atuslof art wil do. • . . had no tracery of last year'i weeds, goideg, titn040.4 actual study, hours were lei-rand--itater_whose seeds Were long ' 'toe. broken tedr-ar ince sow=1,...inTreildrY WinsWthelottgf... • • pres,sious at every' 'tui linpreseions • sweeping lines of drifted .snow, Poems. • . are like 'capital' to th • bank, .hearing in themselves; and across the wintry • • houriy interest. On the. train twice landscape bow full of meaning as e-ery .between, Alexapdria • and daritnees.• and the train fined On; .• Washington, an hour to leek .out of -was. the yellow lamplight shining trent . the wiadowa, lot • of lontISCap.p can the window ot. sone poor matee - home be nhetographed.. upon the mental taking the.lo:n.eliness•out of the .whale retina. in an hour every .d(Y, Eyes world and the eolduess-out,ef the • tired u4ith"the 'blaat4ndzWlifte of Char: ternight..•' faces and coal drawings' could rett.on. eXPalises hands portraits all painted by ,Masters. . • ef blue and green'.of- swamp or SneWy Militigode Andrews, 1011, an endless panerania. •••.••,•algetnois .017( Poor 4itelatio,n." • . • . Wilkins Confident Submarine 'NautiIus" .Nt 'An Ordinary Siibmarjne - Has 38 New Devices -New4.,:yok4Calt.-- Thiboh wii_ kin.s,„ recently •xpreased . confidence • . that' his enbma ine expedition un- der the. ice cap at'the north pole, Would ,Sticeessfill : and declared that it Might lead to. impOrtant dis- Coveries concerning the Gulf •Streami and' other • marineConditiens... `. fur.' sure the .expeditioil 'Weald be miceess-r, reaeltes:;SPitsbergen. safely, lie ,Was Sir Hilbert said that aa. "I think We cen 'twilit • referenee to danger," he said, "Every tine. of 'tie •experiences at• One time: or aiiother. In exploration '.e •stk__•_ mate the haSards and prepare An. vanee to emeetl thein;._ • 'In' preparing, this expedition • we went' to men who had had Years of experience and the greatest fund of knowledge to: sup- port lie An the situation We shall face. ' If we are 50 per cent.' successfiil, the' expedition , will ha: ,e heeit lirdrth while. If you ask what., geed th.Le -trip can acoitiPligli, -can 'on'ty point -tirthe variote—geTeiffilie- reoelefier. .that :have lent ,their names and their' active Ossistottee-to,--US." • '•1 The Nautilus' is -erMinped..: new devices which Will make it pes-,!• sible for it te travel under -the polar • ice CaiN• while ordinary submar- ineweule be inadequate. he Said. The • Feirer Germs. Sleep beconteS'ef •flie.'gefnts ef. the, in Insect Bodies dIseas,e" called 1Nlecliterran.paii.. fever itc.111.e kater,,s0.' that theyn • • • to Start . 'A neWr. eliffailof, • le-, ,• . : was:described •reeentlir_t_10,the French' Academy' . of Scieli in POO, by MM. Ch. Joyeux:and .4 Pfeil. This, fever usually , breaks • „oat in -the the-in-vesti•gatore • reno r t alt hough occasional are • - 'met with In'winter ale°, The.geurae. of . the: disease, is belleVed to be Spread ...hy;.the hites hloodancking ':‘• • ticks and. • perhaps Of other Insects. During the-Warin weather of summer these tacks are' plentiful and „many • people are bittett',..thus .causing -unisk ' • fever. • As '`Vold weather ,conletr the digging into „cracks in • the wells :or honses, underneath Wall paper. and inaimilar 'places...M. • JOYeux and M. ,Pleri .w,ere able, to find'over :two .aun- •dred ticks; even in February. These inseets--were-kiberna•ting,' • Much ' • bear i and a feW. other animals do. Th.& fever :germs, it • Was found, were, hibernating toe.. The Inset s rotted, • , were 'killed by fumigation. and then grothid hi water, but in such. Yeah- ionthat:. germs• inside the sects' bodies Would • not perish. •Small. aniolints of this germ mixture their:. were injeeted .liato human , , catiaingL'eages Of. . fever . Is . the iiiveitigators believei.' that ;the : germs , of the :fever' , hive. learned the . Secret- of hibernation: , liotirerliaeS frofirtlreir 111173-erM , and that. they manage to stay ,:alive all winter in the' ,bodies of • the in; secrs. aitliongli the germs Can. get. but hale fod or oxygen: while the hfl. seets..ore in'. their winter. It, s probable, MM. Joyeux and • Pieri• believe, that this. long winter aleep weakens the germs seinewhit. so that hey are • less virulent when they'. rat emerge in the Spring than thy Oor,:pnoVksitin.., tilotemsumM.e7, 4 .., Be eager to me: ()pia -widow lace - o face. Invite It to combat. . Give allure to understand that • You . are .‘ ot afraid of Give it to under- t'and that you are master of • the ••'• , • • • party 'expects to travel furtlierf than '50 miles at a time under the - Ice he said, With stops intervals te renew the ai- supply; recharge.' batteries, and condfict scientific Work,.I•t Magnetic and gyroscopic compasses, I fi a theodolite, and other apparatus. will b make • it .possible to navigate ,with. out • any insurmountable obstacles,. he added.. , " . , A special diving cempartmerit will . make. it possible t� record the tem -1 peratiire Of the water along thou- n sands of nines of the yoyage and ! s -eilay,:-serve-to-elea,A up of Where the Gulf Stream ends, con, firming or effploding theories that id sank -or rose out of great holes in the ocean bed; he Said. ...Sir Hubert, said his ambition to tittiflY the weather in order _to • be able to 'prediat it as muCh as two months in advance had , made it neceasariy for him: to become an ex- plorer, so. that he could study regions where Meteorological ' conditions originated •' ease the bitter sorrow of today. oPrt Turper Ford, in Opportunity as one huge ChrIbtiaapersonage, Ono o.14 mighty growth ;and stature' of an !. honest man, as .big compact In virtue as in body; for look, what- the,' grounds ' and .causes are of single happiness • to one man, the same 'ye Shall . find them to a Whole State. . 1 john Milton. • • . • • -;Weld best to seeing•theOccan or he hills or the woods is enjoying -a. painting. of them.":.-Maxfleld Parrish. Though ambit:16n itself be a tice, t Is often .the (auSe of great yrtne: ive the that with whompraise exCitc ,, lOry puts o, or disgrace grieves; e is to. be:nourishd With anillition. '. ricked* forward with honour. check- d With reprehension, and -never to'. O sukpecied of SntIts---Beft • Jenson. 1.• "The English are not in 'inventive eople; they dont eat enough pie." Thomas • A. .Edison.. "Iiring.,your glasses, Tem?"- • "Nene, just ase ihe bottle."' King Geore's' Ascension Commemorated • • ;;.:CA'j wheat than nhe ,is today," • • 'Gt. OCKS tikKEO. AND F•i101.FNS lips' Nol& intended for nse in tropics are baked i., PiPtric" e, While .fiffne, Whin re lc regions arefrozen, to ensure n standing extreme weather • SI , • Rgg, Ic(!i m • 1;. iMit : , - like -m.; \ Z.1.1, half the blyi ' • •• Arct • Pggy: S:,tt half. Witted, 1.4 thet ;•• • • • 114; • .• cnditiOns, • • •0. 0 • 5 4 0.1 "11 .'0,4:,1,443410 . ' ''4.• ‘ t. ,:•••.• i ';''i ' .0.1ullog • , . . . • ' • - 4 • - ' : , taalityL.J.S.:ti'.. 'aiiikitti,7;titirkkowni..msfi4.-ili4tdit LfkileP,U4ti•ka444.4.,ISM) ',.▪ ...-, , ,• ' A • . ; lit 1 /ItVr BtiLij t;u• 'ho, -May 0110. • - • • .1 • • thet‘‘ c114-1ir51 • annive,•ssev I 4 i31 0.•1<illg; • 4. . 41' • ".!4.4443444;".4, 1/4 • ; „ • •,. , • ••• • • 't1;