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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-08-06, Page 21$4 • ft' • •3 • ,;,'?"1"r.:."'-- • teeerte:1•11lerneie...'Y ' ., .,1'..ielett,',7,73;c:e.,weenvoe:-Ssmevr.",,:ser"..PN-...."".....,......".. , ,/- • 1.,,m-yr...•••-.ig.e,oq".v.,*•;;.1"44•Isse.4.1 ...,.,- ' , .. 1"4,r-74...i.i..,,,.7...reit•sr..;,„ . , - -•.- , , ..........- . .-. -. 1.,.., ... -- -- , ,..0,".f..40.1.104404,44 t• 1,,,,,,,„ „.„. n$:,,,,,i. . • . ...v.,,,,,,,-,. ,,,,,10.....t.. 4,,..; J,.....„..i;v4. 1,, „..... • ..,1, , _114,t..",,,o...yy:, - .4; , • .. -. 4 + . , . •., , t$ . ,rkei......t.i, , ,rortit!!!#Me,,44.,'•:!,,,,it—tei, '..,,,A*V'ee.....,'. ,`„, 4 , t e......, ..., ''''''!" ,..i •ii ' 6..A, .,....,,„...„,,,,,• 64 • ,,..1.ei • • •'1. ,,,;;• 1 . , . i P , • • • 1 1 ' '.'. . o t .. ,• a $ 1 W! 4 1 # • • 7. 11 • We are pleesedthat as a _result .0 we think was exceedingly .good work, ,i•'” ,,. the publicity . givento4-1:164.e.:g.'674404$71'ali•Vie'.7diraVeSena4iiito 0;:few keaehea thretigh. ,ttiese..colunine mAny„ neer rtic utly that gotild vetry weft. benefit • ,,4 members, have ,.. joined t4e,..` nuiVOliiP,0 1)-i. '4101114r. "G°44 ihilrFt'" .' • ' di the past few weeint'' ,, Thie ?.-..,L. ne$ Scout: visttora to • Provincial 1' week ,.applicetioley .1.,for eLl'Oeherenin- ':*lea, euatters in.'Toronto recently have hare been iicelieti'?frol*:00hden'i-*-- 'bib* ed -'..11111-4.11bert,.',.ef. Pasex, ,a41.. •. • :1:.... dro,,Xipries Palls and .H.Wieton., add ,Tacitliaseett,-of-laiStowelt-and-Herild: ;1,-7" at Durham there is every presneCk of Niekle of iferrieten was In Toronto, 'A • a full Patrol beint-fOrmeck ' . ' .siiiirt time jijo, hut.'be 4,id net paras A rqee4•Flkdq of the records of a. visit. Loes Who. Ceple'0,TpViita.. i: tl*'910apic, tke49,,,:schu,...DiveytelEini, or any •••reanen • 0'0, 0479 -NY-.0d?'" • • . .. it. ehoWOk. it.'SinW ./e..4 ..dii4.0iititin two ikaitoratn:Scout.HeadUarters,so We' :.. - Three' chart -nine young 'ilades are eininitin& the la -est .types of . , . . Yeari-,agn t4hont.460 bo*s, haVe,. ,,heell. •`..• .”,:alasiF3.:: at .4..,E, rS 'cloy. of :OneattoalIndustries' exhibition „held .in," ••t admitted a. Meatiliership *-'016-be,,,, .eli471.74.t....7417.°, .'.,t:' iiiiget; .t•C'" .1*.t,-;.uik'lli Wentinfhater, ..Eiigit : d',. • • The :exhibition .di.,a Played! .ina.iir': of ,,,the • latest - ...! ,i......104t,., ,. of. , conk* 40t.o,. '.c.t, fe**..ii.i.900% ; This week .§4.4167-Titile' 13rUk6k: ' . '2marveis 4..t,sele.a9t.3..;., .• ...-,:."."-...:. :.:;;'•.!! ' .j• .. ' ..:. • .6. .' It :C.:: !'!.'I . ''' .•' ' . n• . :. ' 6 • .; %.. 4 4thme keen since t're„,i_sferred, •iii. 1, e- Out Backe f8''',the Angler.'s,Bange. The ' ''' •., . ...,'"•gullar. troopa, Which' haVp :heeilfeted: reg'uni9leilts are. "..:115116W4:t. ' ''. '''''. -' 'ere- einteg ',Up t'ro fliese77'7e, Of frCg: 8 '..a4"il; '...‘::: •': ....7.--'' rreresultgat L9ne•Seotit-activity: ' '1. -By. r•the usual: anglin'g Methods mice, ar are barrio!' feederA; er 'prey, Grasshoppers''':'§iiit'..'. ., Senior 4;,:44.0,/. 144,4a, . ocimg, • Warren..91e4 ..oT 44. '447,..P,3'3, ...480644a6'n'H c'?nouldrn'Y.•lartg',01-1:8-ts6tir-c°e74,ot,th.'13e, food.'uI_ 47i:fle-.1. ----1.1w... atim:-Nd.. br-44ta .. .„_ . .Tifi...±.6iims - .. - I 6 . . ' de catch and. name peVen different -spe••• "liiii/.61.bad..i7..VerybitslAIMI,jesrte'eeef'; must be taken by -flY-enting Or troll.: alt .birds,Ve should. 'flid. that insects. ,•• • ..., ....L... ----i• .•:. , . ' . :. : ' .. again meeting;:thdir !frlztAtik„ef !Viol:, .136.44,d must iaot •. .. • .. , . . Now insects .are m• • . great ma- ....Ountrk Lek -Barre in Wake - of. ly„ On July 4ththeykair,tbe pleasure, ing and tine by keit:caeting„ ..-1-.. .,-.,...,..,• " sing'le headed. the list. -- • ••: • •-: - '• • r the town ' • ' • ' ' . I 'tl.' • a. The Loniea helped+ the duble hande fly casing the •,7eItt41•,g..flie rod .:`,„.„ 1st Tortint0 Trecin. who camped near exceed. 'gegen...Mined In w Toronte•Seotita to Make :Camp; And en:. ,be one ounce Weight for .each ' teredito'their Activities With.zest: - length; in bait flaking the rod not exceed ten feet ,7) .m. length • • Later the Lone •ScOuts WereLlfritted.; th Visit titeteamn of-04790th.---Teronto-Pvg°U auil.cei 41. 7(eight• • . ' . 2:,-ShUiff.:tirkfielign-cylit- accurate- s Troop et .Bandy :Point; ' on' Sturgeon 14ake. TheY biked' over tu the . camp oeihanded casting Veith the-fiy for:di • , ' :• on JuiY 8th. and ita their ;surprise .Met tail:wee of 20;40 inct'56 feet, or in hait an old ttleod, who..0mked: oat to ,!),L, chit ng 'ler distan4- :Of '40, 60 ' and 70 none' other ..then ,"Ceoltie", ("Celenel". , •, . . who Alas so: popular At'. the iitine Scent Camp" at EhOr 'Park teat: . „..• ''. Suminer. l' The.. Loeferi :keyed' over itight-With the '90th,:and 'entered into • their programme •enthusiastically, hey - let:616a Seven Worneri to:03,il!PPte 1.11,0r-Itish . - , • London..7----r:Forty-two competitors, including seven, women, are ready to .stArk;in the 1,0.00 mile rapt: for•the 'British air. race Massie.' 'T"He'ficOdncludes :the first Canadian in the event, Jelin, C. Webster; of 1\11011, trgal, flying a Palladian maehille- . A daughter's Ohalleoge to her father :is one Of tba features of the: race. Capt. The Hon. Frederick '.G. Guest and his:daughter, Miss Diana :Gneet fly moth planes, leaving together 28 :minutes, arid" mine seepoda after -the first:Starters. No ane Would. be surprised if e •.trephY remained, -in fenileine hands 'for 'another year. Miss Wirinifred Brown, who .last year Was the first Woman to taptere the trophy, isileav- ily •hAndlcdpped, hoWever, leaVing 'gilt. in • I . .of Hordes Despite Des- ' joritY vegetable feeders.'. So .that in •• ) • ,p + 4„1 regard to' what we may Call,biolegical \,,,,,, • • Offensiveprate..° • , . red -mar '4)" m• trade—the Complicated circulation of Buffltio, Neb:-..--Wooden fence Posts. must ' h I' nor matter throng , lifeless fel/s An " wagon . tongues, even clothing bung lants, animal bodies, and microscopic the gray yellow , horde. Anything out ts> drY, were quickly devoored by .. ..,....... ...._ ' . earth,I water', 'and ri.r., throUgh green neaVengerriire-19,-?'1'41a :-and-• haC:te-vigi containing ,vegetable_fibre attracts the. and back bite lifeless forms, agairi- , hungry grasshoppers • • ' the net effect of birds is to be- a ehcok,i' , Although farmer8 said several mil- pOn inacteth ;in their consumption of lions of the grasshoppers had been 1 3: ake three :artificial flies (either this plants and, their products .1n killed,• additional iviarrias are expect-'• after ' three: staaard patterns or ih vm way they .are allies of Man. 1 ed when eggs id infesting ,,the .hikake a neat single gut leader at•least should we- are raeellaalOrig life. We bodies of the slain ihsects were being `ground have incubated Fires in Which, hnitation- of .different natural -flies). So birds ha a place in civilizatioa. - While four feet long, -or a twisted or braided. see that a place is kept f -"r. burned clotted -the plains tenight. In- ' a 'great time at the. evening coun- . leader t least three, feet icing. Splice them, for our delectation .and that of. , ...• ! tizooucdon,,of poison as a weapon re- -----•:.---.--:-- ' 'insect's. .• • • , . suited in the ,death of, thousand - �f the tlie"br' ken johitiof :a rod neatly. • our posterity. : • NOW . Lett ' ' F Ottawa.--7-New :stittiting_ the ,old. ere]. of Canada 'h King George V., tog steuctions for, the gdance of -the the dead gressiThe-Ypversetwa- donduet Of the ,Gaver ie last' tint° -letters 'Paten assic hoi 17 minutes and ve second after , the -first inadhine& Lady 'Bailey,. famous for her tong -distance flights, is inosk heavily handi- capped, of the women entrants, being Scheduled to start an - hour, 62 minutes and 27 °seconds „after the first ma - china which- take off frelll Heston . airdrome at 6 a.m. • Miss'F. 1 Cress, ley; daughter of a motor ear malla- facturer, in .a plane ,idloted by flying, officer IL S. Deaelt, a member of the Royal Air Force speed flight, takes of 6...with the first gro4p. c'r The scratch 'competitor is tight- • Lieut. C. B.. Winchott, :whose plane .is Capable of a Speed, of .:150 miles an .hour. iie • •.utes and 13 second behind, the firs& starts- two o n.:34:70 •r. ' • .4, dive the. :open seaSon for the. • ' tween the Lonies andtheir-city broth- game fishes in his vicinitY, and explain ,.: - ''• We like:teaee this fraternization b& howand why they are protected by ' • ere, and We are pleased to state that .." the law.. . . . . quite. a few -members . Of 'the' Lone ' APplications for membership in ‘.--$04te 447'.6' gone to teen' tili4 year.:teneVoTinti will lie•recei'V'ed-frOlhheye- . • yitation., • .. betWeen the ages' of 12 and 12. hada- ' with regular troops. at the iatter's in - • die Who cannot become ,melithers of , ._. a regu ar roo , . or :other-. rias,ndienia. . Applications should :be seat to the Lena 'Scout De- • King Ed pertinent; The Boye. Scents. 'Assogian?as h11•105•hY ! general', the recent docum the•Office4f-tli-e OliVerlier--G accord with the reconimeo the Imperial C onferenee of 192 Were adopted by the Parliain the "Ertipire' arvarfoue-datee-eiac , The enelon a. one con s, a so •report a rather 'unique 41Geo&-turn!.'„, *hien might be copied by other 1.1enies. who live along the lake. shore. They' , '77-'777 77-7- 7reaelltlY*assisted-1the local-town-alith---thinr-3-30,,--HayStr-eet,- "Toronto, pritlea to clean'up :the beech; which: "Lone E.'e. rs Paterit ' ' : At some points the bedies of the 1 r• 1 graashopPers were piled, high on the Governor:"..ser_iera!, . . lettere patent-,eon7.= rausrimperling-trains....:AlotberAtli_ey_ CA of, Governor- made the ground slippery :beneath the ve been issued "by , tires of automobiles. • 'Sonie: of the farmers, their crops • aestroyed, raised money 'by •pa.elting teriologist.e. flier with ne* in- . tm. Repiaces , Scientist . I. . ' . . „• •.. ' Neig`DiitOyety .." BritishingLi_ne - TTaditiOn of -3CiOYears-Upset._ %MO_ Aid. in -Devising Liqu' id 'Working chicag9.—A. •rnild-mannered little •S :/-77 inan described 'for fellow scientists y, Substance • London.• --A new kind -of engine that ery, expected 'to haVe a'far-reaching NEW Germ Isolation Pr-ocess • • by Invention • . Cures Using .• , • .• here4Vently his. diseitse,gerin &Coy- ueeL liquid water instead, of steam, effect on the:treatment of human ills ,dIschtds: boilers and condensers, de: as the processes evolved by• 'the fa- ' . . *elope -more power in less Apace than mous Louis Pasteur, ordina'ry steam and gas engines, vrith The man is Dr: Arnold L Kendall, freedom frem, exnlogion :a zards and prefesSor : of bacteriology at the . t heat Wastes, will shortly e offered for • Northwestern University Medical • • experiinental commercial 'use here. . , School for the' last 20 oddllears.' His , It is the invention of J. F. J. Malone, discovery consists of a process of ., en7lneer, of Ncwcasile-on-Tyne, who Malting visible under the microscope bacteria .so tiny that research work - has experimented - with the novel water engine for 'several years. .The ers, heretofore have been: unable to.. , -.• details' or its operat' 1. have just been identify it. revealed.% ., I "The •discovery is • as startling the Since steam and other enginesbave I the scientific weileas the discoveries • been worked always' by the txpansien of gases .og one kind or another for, some .309-y ears; this JalesK,.k.incl_et prime mover that is °iterated by „expansion of liquid, ingeed of exParision 9f gases has created +much interest in engineer, ' ' , • of Pasteur," said Dean Irving Cutter, of the Medical_ School.' • • Kendall's_ accomplishment means that we now stand on the lhresheld olf a great discovery," added .Dr: Edward ernrifelit-ba- • ; • ' , '• 0 • e tives and -Bel ing. ent.. o. s - t- ' lv ere* -issued . .. _ - for-beit "at 20 cents a Pound. , , l3Oth the new water engine and!' con- calla t e e in , ' a -s,,,ap, , . 'The. insect 'InvasiOn has devastated Ventional Steam -allfillles .use .water, tion. in Which .the • invisible bacteria ' tants bring gardens, Crops and . fruit trees, arid but i nthe case of the steam engine the now may be isolated. His experiments, eneralln•to - - •-:- - - Li utd ..•••••••!* I y Birds. Nece ry - it tbring,s the further disadvantage in ma .. , , : ,--;v: its trani that it prevents anaaniinal. , . To Hunianlildf are • from 'having a constant temperature .., • higher than it i surroundings; for;.its °bulk is so small in proportion, 'to its .. , JULIAN S. }HALEY : , surface that the heat 'generated by the- ' • Eminent Engliali. biologist and writer: chemical combustion in its . muscles , • To watch birds is delightful enciught all leaks eway in no time. • , , 1, in itself, but - -most people like a baclf-; So insects are not only small; but T' ' ground against which they., Can set ,the whole tempo of their lives goes --:--,:'• ", ' their 1)1:;iervadons. ,up and down with the temperature Of ' ' , • s. These leathered, creatures,. what the outer world:"-Thertannot achieve are:they in the-economY of Nature? ' the constancy o' living passible to a • . , coinpare . with other kinds of living disadvantage in. winter;,being put out things? There are no other animals built in'at all the same way as birds. How did _ they come tO evolve into • their present condition?, • -- - . The first thing that evolutionary study `teaches i--.; is that birds were -------;'.— : ----Aot---always-so--different, rim- cither ' creaturee as they are today,. The few" •-•-'7'-'-"---------fussil-birds- known froth the upper Cretaceous age, 70 or 80 Million years back, all had teeth, like any lizard. ..• When we reach the Jurassic period, near twieens long ago, the, only two IA:mein...end of birds so far found were • so/ unlike any ordinary bird in their Construction that, if it were not for the lucky hccident of their baying ' been embedded in such fine mud that the imprint' of their feathers :s still , preserved- to us, We should have been in doubt . as 'to whether they were" birds at all. They might have been What is theirhistory' • 'How ;do they bird or 'Mammal, .and.are' at 'a gre.at of .action •More.or less Coniplete1sr. by the cold. - ;However, though • birds , can' grew • ,big in comparison with insects, they are limited in size in coniparison 'kith other vertebratess This ,comes from - -We' fact or flight; the laws of aero- dyrianiies makec it very inconvenient fOr ,a flying bird to weigh over 59 pounds, and quite impossible for it to weigh as much as a horse or even a leopert. It is only birds Which' have given up flying, like _the ostrich or 'cassowary, which haVe even begun 'to grow big according. to mammalian standards. The 'Welt size for birds, in fact, tioxii an: mince to about 10' or 15 pounds. , Birth ,and mainmals •deVeloped frorn two quite distinet reptilian stocks. Birds have kept reptilian -looking Scales oil theFr. feet, and have stuck to ,behind •-theiradVance -gtretelies- a--gere- -water- meivbo'chae,ged . to. steam be- ations swath.. Damage already is in the, fore any work Can be '.done. In the nts of, milliont • of -dollars. • • Malone engine .the water stays liquid 6, which Entirmologiste. said the , &Bishop- eVen under pressures • of tons per -€'1411"at--- Pers Soon Wbeld sprout -Wings and- ir.r square,inch Created within Ihe engine. .'' Specifically, they remove froti. the - ' crease the area of their deMege. Un- Rapid heating e.-4 cooling ,of," the Governoient of.. the' . 'United .Kingdo leas -checked aocini,, they will be in Con- TWO . water are %necessary in Order the last vestiges nti eontrel exercised t• • tor a the entire tier. of Northern .14e4" that the ' water engine will oPerate: by that Government over .the :appoint ,.' .breska. coenties.' •• : , ...,, This, was accomplished by'. mi. Malone newt. of .11„.Oovernor-Oerie-ral . to' •Caa- .. Fields, • green today, may :Se' throtigh the 'cleyelopinent of a novel ode, • making. it • e ' 'direct and personal splotched tornorrove . with • , .barrett farm; of heat .transfer, -within one . of one by .!iiiitMajesty,,acting. on the:ad- .s retches. .. Another day, and the fer•- the cylinders of the 'water engine.. Vice. of' H.,M; Governnient. in. Canada.. tn. Platte .ValleY„may be barren. • . Other; advantages ''claitned• for . the, POrinerly it. defining the nowers. and, . . ,'..3_1y"And town dwellers also. are .epneAre:' • , ,, • . • . • ,, ' . , • . autliority" of the Obvern-ofrdeneral,the .,.hwItnessing. the march of the 'grass- Only a 'entail • amount of water Is from time t� time be .given.liini..under to. earry Out. soch initructions ..ais may leafless.' Hungry' grasshoppers sWarte engine and allows. it to baused:where solidly :onthe .houseey. gather in 'clue. one e Gardens and t_r_e...::. . are..` .1.e 7. . needed andthis. redlines the size of the letthes ;patent directed:His Excellency "c;-- -r our sign. Manual. and signet, or byor- 11-to..thegreund from; trees der -in -Privy Council, or by , us . through' ter antelephone -..,oles. • , . . one -of -our-- principal :Secretaries...et ' 'Burning• 0- '. the insects was .decided state-!' • in the ..nev. issue.. the last two upon when fa mert•feared their cattle references- are eliminated-• ..... • • ,. .• • Would .die aftereating the. bodies .of • The Same deletion. occurs in:, the grasthoppers:' . which •-had. ',been.. killed. dectiment • containing the' Kiiirt-T-inT--b,S7-.P°1°Q-n,-- -- - ' •' • . • An archaism is removed from'•these ' . ' ' tn, ": • . structions. , .. . .. . . . instructiOnirhaVing. reference to the Harvesting In West grant of .pardons; etc., by the Govern- . Early' This" Year -Or-Gneral. • Previoualy Big ExCellency , ... had the authority t� prescribe banish- .. ,Winnipeg. — Wheat cuttiug _coot- ment for: political offenders. • That menced in • 'the . St. Adolphe district • obsolete for* Of punishment .is done . of Manitoba on .July 25th, the earl- iest,orations ft Is believed,. such o have occurred in Manitoba. One fatImer, reSident jn Ma Itoba,.- self. , :1 earliest slate for wheat .cutting -in . . for 36 •years, deciared .it wei l'ilit•- NeW Cards. Invented ' ..• My experience." ',St.:' Adolphe. two Miles smith of Winnipeg. . , .. : , • . ' • • • 414.111M•r. ,4."" ,,•••• xl agile reptle„s, for they were to9thd, , the repti!e.s mahod of reproduction by large -yoked eggs. In 'sortie, way, however, the bird branch has evolimd beyond their rivals, the mammals, and in allege respeeth ust be regarded as. Vtsh nt the very tiptot of the tree .of lif. Birds have the hig est temerature, and , therefore the greatet..-1, speed of vital chemistry, .of any creaturs. The have the greatest activity, the peatest emotional Variety; they show the highest extremes of beitutA in color, and pattern, they have the nost had long jointed tail • bones, and big claws on their fore limbs. -• Birds, in fact, are an offshoot from one kind of Very active repile, prob. • ably related to sortie of the smaller • , dinosaurs. They beearne birds ;through the evolution df feathers out of, scales, which first, by acting as n heat -re. 11 • taining blanitht," allowed their teinper- '' Mute to he kept at a high level, and, secondy, 'Made flight possible.. Therehave been three othej. gtoupe of -animals to achiave trurffihi: one, the flying inseCtscarese from a whorly . different stock; tw„ from the same back-bned stock to which the birds • belong ---the flying mammals or bats, and the flying reptiles or pterodactyls, the latter all long extinct. The, gieat .advantage which the • birds had Over' their -:ertebrate dorn- etitors in the art •of flying was that they, possessing feathers,Cduld make awing of these;:. while the Sictility fliglitmenibrands ofbats and pter0- • dactyls had to be Stretched "taut and o demanded attachmentto hind as Well as fore limbs. Bath 'cannot rut or hop, nt Could pterodactyls; their legs are subordinated to their wing; -But birds kept their legs clear of this ' entanglement, as the ancestor s of nian kept thAr fore limbs Cleat 'by rtin- ningVand So bird a were free both of airay with by merely deleting the seas- tene which Conieled titOWer Peayer He who Prays' as he ought will en -1 cleaver to live as he prays.—Owen. • Striking •;and highly developed court- ship of any groupofanimals, and: their songs areby far the most heati- tifut and elaborate music that the world knew befcrethe corning of Man Theare the moat mobile of creatures, and so •ere at a great ad.vantage over every other kind,ef animal in -bili altittdes; for they can ibred there and take advantage of the riches of the Arctic lends 'and still More of the Aretie seas dering the. Sninfrer, and then migrate to temperate Mini. ate& What part do'-hira play 1-tif;t1e elaborate system' ,"f exchanges WhiCh constitutes the balhnce of Nature? • Thegreat majority of them are eaters of other animals, For this they have sttick to the aicestral predileetions of verebrates, Which Were all- in origin the air and of the earth, having op) flesh eatrs; pair of Hints for each element... • The birds as a whole stuck tri a' • Ifisect,are, the 'equals of birds in reat dit; hut their average .sire de- m `, 'LW' 1,iret; but they ate inferior i, tesed die aVerage SiZe of their anther; ., They cart never grow ai. piey. The gret• majority of them it would take tod long to coo lab tho . are se moderate in bulk that they can . • reason Why, but the ::act remais; an Orli eat Small creatures, thongh they "Bunny" Austn, England's. ranking. ta,,vis pup tehrila player, re- . , . . , • . feil career for himself, and is now tak ne't as big aa "i swan 'or eve a aa a-' Will iiielude worths and snails. and • Which initially come brther-in-la films a faet one during .ii, set which lie hon from Sydney Woed of , In his Studies, Spiders; will itei the mst. part are oVer despite his years of re- search-, 1,1e7salti-,-"a-rftl• 'practical- use -of -.1 . . his discevery iS yet to come. He now ' ig hard at work on a paper, describ- ' ing his "K Medium"; in detail, so that it may be manufactured in laborator- ies other than his own. A Small, intestine a rabbit, dog, swine -or man; chemically treated, is the essential ingredient Of the sobs- ton,. hesad. He- asserted that his iiiPerinients in Chicago hospitals ver .; ist perid of ti years iedicated that it could and would isolate thebacterla ;Si ! majoritir of the Malignant dis- erses, Isolation of theinfinitesimal germs means that such diSeases as sleeping water p scarce.," " .• It. rune arid changes speed- more sickness, paralysis, ,,influenza cancer • • noiselessly -Matt conventional engines, and rheumatisin Amy' be traced VI It loses less beat thau. other engines :their priniary causes and that'. phyai-, and its outsideshell is cool to the chins hereafter 'may be able to devise touh. specific cnree or them. , Its mechanism is shunter and the • . , ,, .:,, .. . working parte need, be opened for hi- pctin only. once in four years. SaskatchwanBritain . , There IS no incessant boiler clm ing, no, water gauges„. no rik of short- Cat-tiTrade Griming , . . Rgn.a.— askatchewan is shipping nesS or foulness of water. • • 150. hearof eilllPerWeek to Great The control system is simpler than Britain as a result of Contractsenter-• • in the -steam engine. ed intoi by. the Brit!sh Co-Operatiye It has no exhaust, as 'the water is Wholesale Society. , used over and over. •During the vVsit of officials of this. All bearings within the eagino are society to Regina during, the spring it was saggested approximately 10C cold and' lubricated by the water. it - hied be shipped weekly. Officials of the Government dnd the Saskatchew.,• an LiVe Stock Pool did not feel tlial the province was in a position , tt handle this order, and sugestecetot; • '8 • • ... To. Aid. Bridge Players Zurich.—A new kind 'of playing' cards, according to The N.Y. times, lag with a arnall shipment :find • in - ill soon be. agobted4 by bridge players' creSing it as the. , pool- becamay sup - 11 over Vitee..and America, aceord- cplied. , . . to Dr. Paid Herrmann of Zurich, I A8 li:reult it was learn from un- nthorityon the game. •• ... . official sources shipments had growl cards, made .in 'Austria, lessee to 150 head per week under the cn- .. , anees of a revoke at contract tract. British -Star /111 211 12 21 / 41/ ./÷ "A* ;dor' ;/'• 141, a tag alt Th the' ch, bridge, compliea mentds. pip dark green'', longer and present used present-dai dup . Dr. Jlerrmann by players 6em contract, w11 rapid the employMen1 of a eliminating all likelih Lion Meing ivrongly tra flexion of the voice wile Efforts are beteg Made more uniform systein, forms whiCh Contract big played and in the inethods of In order That inteinatidnal e tions nray be arranged betwee lag bridge. Cluba. • game rapidiy becoming more ea. Hearth are red, da - k, spades black and clubs idifie bards themselveS are larrofer- than those at and are made to fit. the licate contract boards. thinks that bidding elves, fa. duplicate y be superseded by n announcer, thus ood of laforma isinitted by in- n tailing. Religious Tract Society has translat- ed the famous classic. This edition has eight colored illus- • trations, and some thousands of Vol umes have already' been dispatehed. „On arrival, they are made ep iato. Former Cannibals Demand Classic:, Londen—Ciilization and education 'have wrought such . a changeNn head-lififtting and- one-time cannibal tribes of New Guinea that an urgent request earn' from that country for Buriyan's "Pilgrim's Proress" in the Tubetube languag. This is one of • the tongues of a Papuan tribe; and is the .k23rd language into .which the to adopt. a Oth in the ge' is now ,scoring, mpetl- 70-Yar-Old Man . • Enters Univeisity 1 Troeto,—A. frestna,n has. been ad- mitted tO. Queen's University, Kings- ton, for the summer classes,, who is F /0 years eld, is an evmayor and also • an ex-memlieri, of the Canadian Perna- nient. Mr. E. Pedlow Of Renfrew; Ont., la. Qanada's oldest "freshnied." xvr. Pectlow's college days will be ohowed With great interst, for he • lead` sutable-sized packages to go up comp: try On the heads of the native bearer. '1 Edison Forced To Cease Active Work 446' has Carved out an honorable and Ue- West -Ornhge, IsI.J.,.-Thomart &son, inventor, has beemfOrce 1 to vent° active work at•the age a .84 • . ' Overwork .duEng experiMerits11 -produting.r Libber irem. the ;Iolden rod plant, en • which the aged iriVenter worked steadily winter at Fort Alyeta; Fla., have Mde rrecegsay. , foi Edition to take a vaeation from the laboratory, aecording uohn V. Miler—a 'vie presage letirembilL thrush is, luckily for us, unthinkable. pinall size' is in, itself a disad•Onnn • 'I • . . . . , . "irAgbeitiee,t. ji",Q,' • • . first, . . cation that in seetS. Some ef the larger birds Cat. Nevi Yotk- '•• • 4251 attlittia0 • • • 1-/!21• `1',;"'ic • •