The Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-06-25, Page 614,
ttitt 1,4kt
,
• .- •
''• ' • AnAddition I 'T'h ••
• : „
•-...higilreelecesitlyreleaseh fr�E Do
1iionHeadeparters ethOttawa indi.
' • , nate that Scouting is steed* growing
•Canada, end especially in this Pro,'
vince.
' " • According to' the cen.eue, there. wpre
52:072:Scouts in the Doinittion at the
eed cif ' 1930, :which is an increase Of
i2,404 'over 19.29. • ht., is , interesting to
nte that Ontario 'increased its
• ,•bershiP in_ 193Ohy 4158' Semite and
'course thiltie a • few of '4100-iTerh-
toileBonita who .enrolled during that
eis . •••• • •'•-• •
;, - • , • •';',4trtlie7tithe there -are' den
MAW.
hter,'*eia.
fen'• ally ;at Louie
ea:deearthrS- " •
. . , .
• -
bY..the report show that daring 1930
14,58 F'rehelency Badges were award,"
• ' • : • 7 -ed to" Co.na.4i..*O Soo, sh,owinetliit4
much keenness prevails amongst the.
'
boys to mahitalitaii efficient' Standard;
one, hrenie, eighteen silver.. and.
'Ed3c gilt neessee for bravery • were
awarded to Shouts .in this country', as
well as, nineietihals for ,nieettioui See,
vice in the Seohr, inovemeet: '
:
Thus it Will be seen that of the hohle
„Ude* of Canada about one pe,reon in
• eidrY';`,*.hunitlied is a Scout; and 'this
a very ,wonderful fact, for if, every-.
eekwai initined With the Scout Spirit,
.*hat'.a Wonderful. place .CitnadaWould.
.
be to live in; wouldn't It?
'191 4
"44,1 g
•
• We Publish slow two • measageg
ivhieli..are Of interest to eiriry Lone
• Eke 1-
Scent. The first is from His e
lency the tight Hon. the Earl of Bese-
' hon.:high; Chief.,Sconit of , Canada, and
'-'.• . s as fellows: . „
"On aisluiting thepositioli Chief'
,• Seeut.for delight-
-sch-.40-11avh the opPerienity-of ;sending.,
'• Any greetings to 'all the officers And
*labels of the Bo3e Scouts
Associa-
•
tion.Of Canada: , • •
. .
"I am ..eagerly loOking forward- M.
av ng odcailons, dirrhjgi
., h
.37
11 . 1
term ef office, of becoming aequainted
'hothiWith danadian Scouts and Cana•-•
hien Scenting and ef observing their
pregiess. •it is. most gratifying le. me,
as -Chief Scout, :to know that E. W.
Beatty hs consetted to undertake
duties UV -President of
'• :
•
• „ .
-"With' all my heart 1 wiSIChflieW
President.. and the Boy Scouts et Can -
Oa, every, possilhe 'succees.".
The se.cceld Message le froth Mr. J.
Beatty, KC., who N•,,Presidentof
theCtinadien Pacific Rellwey, and,alio
President of the Boy .hcehts Associa.,
•tion. He, saYS; • ' • .
• "It is gretifYiiii te think that so fine
a, ineveinent. as the-Car...010_0o $.cciabi
has paPtprOd of"; the
youth of the world:74h become -so
Only ihtereational.•; For. Canada. leY,
pecutaiIt..flttei. aa the • eitnihereft...
wbj1 it teitelieS*.ho well suited to
Ceneitions„; Nothieg
be better 000:pf se!
"nitselfisheeste'.:'
alith th,ci ...111,edhh te, h.f40110-hhah.Waehh,f
it may cost; moreover, it appeals Ate
boy, as begetsaletOf. finrouteof-
this process of:developing the spirit
Of ' tree sportenianshiri. • The qualities
inculcated are the eualities of 'the good
citizen and one is not. surprised that
anotliehna,trie_fer-a heed citizen Is
'`a good Scout'." • ' ' '
• •
Space will not pernilt, us thilhWeek
to continue our: "Camp Hints" very
feliy, but we Will content, ourselves
with•reMindingall Lone hout Camp,
ers •tlatit "A Scout's dutY. is • to. be use
:ful and to,lielp Othera."
Here are a few Of the things which
last year's. Bey Scout..canihers did as.
their hGooe Terms": Cit and burned
'elf weeds on camp Property; repaired
nearby r ad, cleaned refuge frem near
• .
c.G.11..,4p4tnActive
Summer Prograrn
• 4- • '
Titt.,:koehy'tiloCa siTpa. ' 7,_iliccilil •0744...,_rekriO....'.....,__,,_„,... .....;
... .
•
.. ,
. lights 'of •9tit•,c140r .. .• . .
Life ' . •. „
Tiii4 Alt Canielee 'direr in .-Trainieg •.. •
Who' read these weeds., I Ase .glad to
• he .ahle, to send ,greetings, -which aethis .'
time ofeyear ,rneah:eertainly include a.. •
wish An,. success at ekaminations. As , •
examinations seeni like a mountain: to . ' •
be 'clireh.edipereaps, a few N'yoydi about
*hat:limy ..be • felled on the Olher gill° . ., '.."... •
of the Mountain might beeneguraging, • h - ., . .
haor.Solhe.of. you there is a summer vs, • ' -,- • .. _ . .
cation, in. the nerteitled; far ethers,. ' .. ' • .
.., perhaps, a jethet home;,:and fortithere., .....• ...' , ,
• . getup... It. ,is of 'Oita, hist that. 1 would.
'..?,,,,......,,i,„' ,./4.1).P..a.h--.2e...1.. ,'..__,..1......'':,..1..., • ,, .. :" .'. • • - -
, .
,,,, ' - . ,:• "Whe...11461e•Stivie ykiod. siehlie at. twi • .!': . h, .••4'
.,.......„, ............ 1101ft:2; ..f. _,.:. ,,;.....:,.., ".:,."---.:`"7"---7- • --t,'Itit,,
. . , • • , . ,• . . , •
..... :‘ . '': •:'. ,•1k140'.'44011.1100,,ti,:t.;).a:aii,01 ledeintrnhe:. - ''''4.'
nice) shows Harolh Oshorne dangling from his , enitingled parachute • 2„000 feet, over Ch te
.Field, anteel, Ill. Per forttfive tninetee' Oshorn e. -was 'eaeglit iu midair tieforelhis 'rescue beones.n
91
etr
knife lowered by 411ee putatilt, ehip. Osborne gently glided :to earth; With- an extra chute he had
aimed on his baele • , • .
Calgary Exhibition
Calgary; Alberta,—Entry forms to,
• prOapective exhibitors; the poultry
classes at 'the Calgary Exhibition
and Sta.mpede;:to;.be held, July 6 tO it. By 1200 every educated man was .Biitish Scientist Declares' War.
The Three Languages 1 6- Warless World .
•Of- Old England : •I
Fr�ni 1160. Englieli more rahidly. ' impossime
took on the, forth in which' we know • `'• • • ,
•
Who is ew,ift td: read the Vilices Of the
„
Let, him follow 'with 'the other, •,. , .
For the youthful _feet are turning
"To camps of preyed desire
. • delight." ' .
There will be in this province alone
•
nearly thirty. canips for CanadianGirls. In Training and other gide in
the Sunday scheirla: There Willhbeetwce
leaders'. Caitlin at Bean Rivage, July
17-27; , and Beaeseleil, August.
There be six ." provincial. girls •
camps for 'senior 'girls, 1:54a (1.9th
birtliclayh 'Nermandele; ;Tiny 21-31, .
and August 11-21; Beau Rivage; July
17.:27; and July 20 - August 8; 13eanse •
leil, August 22... 'September 1; Vsill's
Point, July .tuerb- will be
nineteen lwentY cit' .end diatrict-
iceaterpms;ed'siep'tblese. 'tsrlifso:milirtib'ec)talibeoresfort
camps cart„; be obtained. by • writieg to: .2 •
Miss jesale Macpherson, Room '416.
299 Queen St. W., Tel -entre Out. " I • h
What camp .may Mean to the girls
who attend, to theegreups and Sue*,
school classes•freei which 'they go,.
and to their associates at bottle, ,only
campers or these who - have known
campers, can tell... They do cost • ,
-mtmeih ptitt-tlie.--retufas—in
health, in ttiendship; in new ideas, in
new-eelftlminahnina ,enereirarer--,.
such that the cost is relatively small. .
And even in this year of scarcity of
:money, .wonders can be yerkecL_witit.
a Httle sacrifice of other things , for • •
something ,greater. ' denip is more en- -
• • •
Aching 'than :almest any other :expert.- . •
ence; and therefore worth more sacri-
fice. It is my hope that Mani. of you
Will be able M. say with W. B. Yeats:
"I will. arise and ..go now, , , go M,
Innisfree, "
And a small cabin build there; of • •
clay and wattles made;
several other .craters in the Alaaha: Nine bean rows, Will I have there, a
peninsula. Visitors to western Ala-
-Itavvil_Witnse the riLetnrel • us_so..ehiez.L._ te a and peculiar beauty of, later 0" purposes. In us it creeps out And live alone in the .beehoucl glade. •
- for the honey- bee, .-
say ateemshito officials, whO expect •trahslations th,e :
WIrat wrdit-hilfi-lor--tihs-lahhwate—The Modein name for-t.hat-shilrit, of-
antegriniSin ire race prejudice."
I .
Earth Yields Building
Outlines, of .1)aesturn
11, are .being sent out by the exhibi, expected to know • three languages
tion board. Entries dose on :June —English, French and Latin Eng-. .
s Nat • g
20. A coVerhig letter from D. S. • was the &amnion epeechi. French- ure runin
by field, put up Ogna at dangerous poultry Associatien, urged that some thre; Latin the scholar tongue : -I -
the language of polite' life and Loheme—Man's erearn of a • world
Maceab, president of the Calgary
places on; toad, built protecting fence entries be made by all breeders,even the thirteenth centurY. Robert ,of without war ,can never - come true,'
Arthur Keith,,, the Ihritish sdien-
Hook • , ,
around t of young trees., built a though only one or two birds. Gloucester Wrote in English a RhYth'• tist, Said recently in ' an address at
Ple
stairway leading to, beach, built a lire- eShows and exhibitions are. neees- .ed, Chronicle. on Britain, professor Aberdeen Uniyersity, ; where he is
place for neigh"boring campers, helPed say If We are to centinee„ to breed Lounehury giyeshus same lines of it, the rector. '
newly arrived cettegerete get •shttieth. birds true 46 type," he sa„Ys. The In modern .E eglish: • • I • •••• • .' ."Natitre keeps e her IMMO -orchard
, . -...._ .
stook neighbors' mailto and from post %value, .of the,'oppertenity of. pNcing' 'fFor •unless a Man, knows; Trench, healthy by • ,pruning,h-ne said, "mid
ofIlee,_erected.sraell.briege for firther,;.. your hirds. alongside' theee. et) •other : . he 'Is ,little thought of ,
-glade heistio,aeats.lor a.,,fahmer,:hielped--breeders-oh,•,the,..varietTlil...Xiihilre But.--lew-niewhteep,:-th. English. and te.„.
•Wer is her -pruning hook. .We ' eain
not dispense with 'her services"'
farmer, dip sheep, , assisted : Short ine them far outweighs the value of • ';,... their own „speech.", . . '
banshee farinerwith chbres and crops any Money prizes You may be award-, Prom. 1272, ' when Edwarn.. I •wa.a. • That •"haesh and rehegnant" -aeser-,
tion was wrung from him, be aid,
lotted keit...cattle; .made Winter; -who'd; ed2=welcome as those i-nw.d to the Mese Of the fifteent ' evee Ireelle-the, melte ' of-111.1--chler
used :An .huhlth ! dream' is a .. time of eyerlasting
pile for fernier •who loaned camp site, are;n. : • • 'centurY,. French „was
e
cut weeds and tidied. up Around coati- .: i ' . . • r
. . In . the fourteenth century; •for a I
try .church ; ' made rustle: seats for Volcanoes Scatter Ashes ', , hchalar . to Write' in. English took a 1 ,.
in. die development of Mankind,: he
Even race :prejudice has its place
.1.--sithh-and-soriner-orlater: the nations.
cbuntry eliiirehYard,, made seetalnear de_ ge_o_:ociurage. Which may_ easily_
a bus stop, put out bush fires; guarded. ' •
.. [50 Miles • h:r i 4
be underrated now: • . But .this; eoute Will. have to: consider whether it is a
bailer' limits against iire, 'gathered , DutchHarboe,i•Alaska.—Newly ar- age on the. part of two great *rite good thing" hot OnlY to' overcome such
fireWood Per futute .dampers. • _rived fur „sealrnen on the Pribilof Is 2: ' ••
Lers did -much' -to shape the firet liter,
Lonlegwhen in camh. hetet forget •lande puzzled at the white ashes sil- •ety` English, • • • • " prejudices but ..to • eliminate . t•lieM
country-elfgelrgartledip
•
•
acts. .. , • , • "
Your good turns; . .•'• • --hT,one.,0,e iering theirgelderi brown aoirts„
Universe Expanding. .
•':DeelareS •-Einstein.
Berlin—Dr. Albert Einstein, in a'
e • • treatise ` submitted • to the Pres -
e• •
• there-proofe-of---the-theery-,...of-en-ex-
e.
pending_ snlyerse • whieli, hOlhs that
jiig • , • tosbne-lxiaesehra-re---noirstantly---Ato
ohtward.
. elan Acatienfiy,of Sciences, offera fur-
▪ '•
.. • .
The theory' received confirmation
Dr. Edwin ihubbell's observations
„
,Of the spiral! nebulae :and star cies-
' ters from Mt. Wilson OhservatorY
at Pasadena. •
Dr. Einstein's treatise works it out
• • .•
further • and elide to his 'earlier Writ-
, Inge' on the uniform field theory in
twhich--electriCal-4edgra,vitational-
phenomena are cOusidefed together
' front 'uniforni viewpoints • •
. The nevi .treatiEse occupies - itself
especially With the so-calleddlelemann
• .
spaces and teleparalleligni--the Aun-
, • Euclidean, conception that space is
not limited, to , three dimensions and
that the Eucliclean postulate , tljat
parallel lines never, .nfeet is etrOne;
• ous. • „ "
_ In..Dr_. Einstein's ceneeptiee, space
• is "the only theory representing
' reality." 'In his view; spice is truly•
nen-Euclidean., and Rietnain is right.
•, The treatise deal i also With corn-
patilile field, equations, as. Applied to
the Riernann spaces. On. a rigidly
• mathetrnatical basis which -requireg
most -concentrated. abstract thought,
• Ainstelii dittWe- certain' &bele-
. eions regarding the structure and
movement. Of the kosmoS consonant
, with Dr. Hubbell's ohservations,
whith indicate thetcosmic masses
are Meninx .away hroixt 'olitTsolar :She -
tem at' a rate of hundteds ,of mlleu
. per second. • s • '
•
mAif.• •
•
Prelinfinary 8teps Census
of Retail and .VVholesale
Trade Now Being Taken leaing statesman of •the Reich, in
The fifteen thousand enumeratora order to nita the coete oadeenate
rehresentation. The , -only assets
of the eetate are the proceeds of the
sole of his home in Rome and the'
royalties for his, memoirs which were
published recently and created a
sensation.
• The Ne of Sanity •
We. tend to • swing . too swiftly.
'from optimism to pessimism declared
Sir Arthur Salter, formerly director
of the League of Mittens'. Economic.
•
-and Finance Section, speaking at
-the luncneon . of ,Alirnntt
_We iwingloni
It .is just those whit,. in 1929, said
that we were. in a new eeenoniie era,
that there would be no more depres-
sions,' who are ae.h.w In the blackest
of pessimism.
. In 1929 there were. needed people
to say, "Steady!. Things are not al -
Treys' going te,be• so. geed." And now
noble are needed who will- say,
"Steady! Thesw_ill_ne_t_always h3e,
so 13ad as they are now." •
' Thie ,tendency,is also *true of ,the•
.
world political Situation. It is 'those
who in times of cam. go about' _say-
ing, "War Is unthinkatile,". that , say
Intimes ef_ dahger that War, is inevi-
table; support policies that ,bring It
nearer and, press their countries
.precipitate action.
Only.recently there has been, mueh
mischievous talk of the possibility
of -Immediate and imistinene
'l'his is not true,. but se& talk cre-
ates altuatherta and'. exaggerefee 'un-
impertant ones. There will tie no
War this year, or this decade.
ed, sulphur filled air.
al.together..
In spite 'of the adorn of scholars "I ant convinced ", he said, k'that
who Ilickeeinsight Intl) the vast ries-.
Volcanoes in the vicinity Of Chig- sibilities of Eeglish and still need
nik, are in violent eruption. Mlles French and Latin, :Wyatt and Chau -
have faller, a dietance,ef 150,.rniles in cer cane forward as, the fathers of
-every diredtion. Mitshreem-like clouds English literature. Wyclif finished
of dense srnoke bang ever Katmai, and his. English translation of the Scrip
tures in 1380; and it is to him that
We owe 111U -Ch- of- the, simplielty and
Estate of of Germany's Pre -War
Chancellor Shows Fe* Assets
: Berlin—Appraisal of the estate 61
Prince Bernhard von Buelow, pre-
war Chancellor of.': Get -Many, has
shown that he was practically Jen
, poverished at the time of his death.
After liquidation of all claims only
.‘„.few thousand .inarks will remain
for distributiOn among his heirs, it is
announced.
It is learned that the Prince, who
never had a large private fortune,
had to borrow money frequently
ht long careering diplomat and
these inborn dislikes must be given
an assigned, place. ' The humen7rane-
is like a British football league with
divisions of ,white and yellow, black
and brown, betWeen• which im trans..'
fors are :possible. , .
"Nature endowed her tribal teams
eeth a •-shirit- of anteeenisnizter,
• • •
, .
-this-ei:uptions-to-coutinue-for-seve-ral-
months. .• '
,
0,s national "xlvalrieft and .161rousre
Explorgbons Link Arabian
Period' to Christian. Past.!
Geiro.L-Seienre is poking an ex.
Ploratiye finger into the history* of
• the Upper Nile valley, and the hrit,
'season's- work --of- the hirclutetslogrcal
survey of. Ntibia has produced ninth .
new material.
in:6e large cemeteries also were
diecoVered with the tombi •shrroutid.ed
by small domes on pillars, This last
feature is very Important, from the
standpoirst, of hietory, as this type of
•'architecture show z the transition
from the first, centuries of the Chris-
tian dra to the Arab - period.
and , literature of -religion, Chander
Old for poetry and letters. Before
this, no one -dreamed of the power
end beauty' latent' in the „English
. Even in 16231-Wd een-
turies mid a quarter after . ; Lord,
Bacon turned his English works into
Latin, that they might be apreserie
id"! __He_thriught _of_•_hatiii the the
universal and permanent language of
learning, , while -English was • a hum-
ble speech for the less learned,. and
[might- die' out altegether!—From "A
New Study of F.ngllsh Words," by
jesSie Macmillian Aneerson.
• • . Ancient Greek 'City,
...Naples.÷The excavationsof the
Foruni at Paestum, the ancient city
6f. Preek origiei_arenearieg_templee.
time • The Forum,. which Was • added
to. the city in .Reman_, times, •measures'
about- sixty-five...yards by '160; and
. •
numerous reinaies " of. temples, law
eourts,.. steres and . hopaeehave ap-
peared. . • . .
'
Paestum- posesses, the two finest
"Moe need beatity in everything .mtd., ' Greek' ternples out Of Preece. and with
mil hare should' .b.3, a. thing of pructtee, the new •excavatioes the old city Is
• , •
'not aothetihig anarh"--41ehry Ford.- 'revealing • it's topography : clearly.
. . .. . .
„ . "People are taught ;to • be impudent
or greedy; they are not naturally so."
•—G.. E. Chesterton.
.. . .
.
"Aren't we Mole?" , -"Speak in the "Economic... prosperity . _rests _ulth.
singular.' "Certainly. Aren't 'you mately• on ability , to .defend it." --Ad-
„
a fool?” n ..• _miral Bradley Fiske.
.. —
'
•
Who haVe be'en ,engaged since June
ist in takiht the PoptilAtion Ceneue
have 'else beet making a record of
the, name and address of•Ievtk. retail
• . and wholesale .establishhetit In 'the'
DOminion; These names are to be
the _basis' for the Ostill Census of
• Merchandising and • Servide Estab-
lighniette.
4 • win .be some Weeks before alt
the .11AtS are hi the hantle ef the
of-
ficlals in the DOnainiett gateau of
Statistiee. When the • have been
cereally. • erlitittized atid eertahn
other Prelfthittary work done, aClike
&flee 4111 be Mailed to each retail
Or ' wholesale estAbliheient. It is
expected that eeilieWhere between
15,000, -and 200,000,nairieS Will be re-,
ceiVed and, thetigh, a Very great
men& 'of Dreeeratoth Walt 1s eedea-
• eery before Seliettiles tau he- mailed,
it N expected tit t tay wilt be sent
out n. Auglist.
• .4 ,
a 1
..t.
.Flight To Be. Made ,
By , Glider Over' Alpz •
Frankfurt Ara Main, Germanie—in
an effett to doncitter the Alpe by
gellplatie the Ithoen-Rospitteen
ing Plane -Society of nar-by WAS-
aerkilehell has orginied an , expeclt..
t1On. te the hiernese Obetland, head
bY Gtinter Giteellokre.eeril hold.
eI' for fights without motor.'
Herr Ciroehlieff. • will Use the , sail-
plane •hi which he flew 165- eithee
let* Czechoslovakia in hay. Be itlitt
take off from, .Terigtran Icicle 11,00
Loot la the • air. Swiss aviattoit
itOe1et1eroMlea oo-oheration. h •
• "Back to "Earth" ;
e'•
•
"''' •• '• tf . • • •
• • .“ .
:let/ ',f ' ••••'"
• •
•
ectItinen• dismantling huge balieun that earri ad Prof. Auguste Piceard and his assistant lea miiee
Shove earth te stratosphee, in ,an eihter- -hour e ploratioli of tipper readies of sky. F cells of digmantling is lfuee glacier ftear Ober Gergl Li the TY relean Aips; on 'which scientists landed. ' •
ft
•
"Auch-1 shall have-some-pettee-therer-for
• .
• •
Peace' comps drOpPing slow,
Dropping from the veils -of the Morn-.
Ing to where the cricket singe;
There midnight's all a glimmer; and
noon purple glew; _ • - • •
• Aild evening fell 01 the linnet's
•
•-L. wilL aris and go new, for always
nieht ana day
I hear lake water lapping with low
sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the roadway, or on
the pawereerits • gmy, •
1 hoar it in the deep heart's core.
—W. Y., Yeats.
Macpherson.
•
'Autogiro Foreseen
• Ai. Fighting Craft
Washington.--eAfter ,several flights
„in the uavy's new autogiro, Davi 5.
S.
Ingalls, Assistant eecretary of tee
Navy for Vierenautics, Is convinced
the. windmill plane., ultimately.. willbe
• endowd.. With houble" its present
speed and take its place lis i formi-
dable fighting. draft:
, By comparison with his Chatise
plane, with its ertilsieg speed Of 150
to 160 miles an heue the .75 to -85 -
mile gait .of the .autagiro, in which
he Opted,' Charles Francis Adams,
ecretary. of the Navy, emed
'hiretty slow:" Mr. Ingalls said.
"Bot"., he added. • "the i-1 are
hozein Ways in. which the speed of
the. autogiro can •be increaged by ap
plicatioe of stream lining and other,
well-known PritciPles.-of aircraft cote
struidtio"
:Ar.Ingalls
predieted eventual,
•
Provemehts in design would give- the
autogiro a speed .aiiilest ifnotAulte
equal to that of a • nave. ,plane
similar size and power. •
Even if some slight 'discrepancyin
speed might remain, he said,: this
would he •outweighed by the ndvan:
tagils of hen 4 able to take oft and
Ned in a small apace :ad te de -scold
vertically at less than . the speed of
a parachute, If disabled.
Hareworking Clock Does All
But Shave Ingenious Inventor
ltefafoYr4)111-feiCni•Yy.—F11111°renshoaltsi.niPHienlhaat
devised a robot which ,consists of a
dlockelork installed in A taking at,
chine. .! • '
,Wen the Ellarin sounds the•ta1144.,
inehne starts and the lights are
turned on..
At the tttid of 'the vecovd the radio
is earned On, the furnace connected,'
and tbeeciftee percolator started. .
a 1'? 1y1 •
, 4
•
•
' •
• ,
r'{; iiked2Sti tirA
-••••g4ok.lt4Aim•Vd...
1,14
A • '11-011170.1116C•1•111~/
' . • .
• 4.
It •
, •