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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-11-26, Page 6esesseesesseseeee•esteeeese"ee „'" 4 e •,., '§',11, ‘, . • ' , , , , „ .1 1., ,•.11 W .m.,,,. •,51, t• i'4, '"I'' '41:.!••!•:1:4', jill:Kirri•N''''•°';' '' ''.,: ' . 3,44-347,4 • e, esSeees•••e '', , . wag - ' Our bedroom consisted, of a small • . ' •ro. lith n ' . . 1 414:' ' - -- CIPPORIA, f* with e reteer dirty esterie,e , getneerttesed a one end into a, kind or • R. V-.. O., Boilart in The SelSeeef; dais two tePt-bigh on which were two •41.44,toriariate While yerlutpa!CoNieiing iln,tAS .0(9 4•4107 Its and twa„ icry . ..,:inwor actual. Mileage teen etetuttl hard.Pillnlira' etnifed with grain. • The e,.4„, . • rodeigee ewe: epee eel.", sepeelleeene . Waillf::::ef the room were Paltered With .' , tete "'' • and returns lime. with recalleetions Of old. 1 . - Modern Shansbal witi; itt eeeSerepeie 'PineAmeliceri journalsand in • ° Co! ilaelf the wied0Wii, had strips D, 1• • (Atte incorrect to sit -lever einee-.Meal ' Brother sii,d,,Sister. in British ,Parliament ' or expect ear flerkleineentektainnenAtt - • eed lingerie OOPS 9r. Qt ceeeeepolitan eteWilite PaOlting Peer.; A IOW table, Tientsin., Even •those, hav40,7 ,With two eteele watl-tlr only feraittire- fee as Peking have-tot:lifted Ten, watt 'PATO In bowie, made from the yell •AYer the h fre 4ea drie4nth. 4 ''.1tilianiank•or realized that the people! steeped la_ boiling water,. and was not whose Vier probably. seorefelly. refer as 0°4 ;a07•1k$9407. More damp -ko onativeV* consider-therneelYee tow,* f011eseedethe tea, an teem bed; • e could net help contrasting. this •••infinitely,eitinertor to. ttnys feeeigneie ;•..e,.. ,:. , • -whose crietoees, and especielly., maze :en: Wtit.h4 iglaringly EinteReallized . .. " •• ' • , neve. fill them with centempt. , , • : ..O. -O.1" 0 ,. ell li WafeineSted• in Tient • . ideteEVerythiek wessajci- and done la, Through the cOurtesy ' of • a 13'1404 .. „ firm In Tjeateln, i was able .te. make a :tge"Worstpossible taste. 'What a die- Johriley : into :' the northern parts :Sei rs3relce• in:IT•*°?n*entiniq. F,...‘:•-.'..• • e,,,,,,,., _ :: ••• . Sseleli and:rip to that inkr,f.,01th!'?-i64 , l'A*Ong..the".130.0flants • it was wall'13.f •China Which...fa:net kept rip for tonS to the p.toreigner-aheut, theloiftei ..the 'benefit:of Jeurista. ‘Abeoneettided W0.0,i•ediiice about by M.'Meitheei:Of the 'ilites'iteeeered :.04",biessOX• :an ,oceesion'al .91de•Chinese. •••:' "if eairlY ifre•itundred,..iiilefOnitttliC•llee a legend... .initen1Y. edacated:•triendlield rAt4 cax fld artIy.on foot, meeting .004. -.sometimes in English, sonOti.. most • lete;e4eite •tien ea Free eceaalenallye. in • Ger, , . „,. „ •:••• ..erotintlingEe .and. with the ala at ee ereed. ,mane. but , boasting • all the time of emindedthineseeintetiireter was ,able chine and the-alinesle :• to hear these rural ,neonle's point of: 'Turning' north, we left theeultivated 'flews •••• r . • ;..1:tak .a4d- climbed tbe mounta • ... . eiltemuttermeetha,te.franoteerolketoste.d_ 1egged_•rieclebarrenee-wher4slong-hatr-eit ••• •. eforeetten•villakes of .rtteet stein•Et.eeti)• Manchus drove their trains of 'wlebed- . „ • looking, shaggy ,citnielle • On the stim e. • • • •• :get any idea 'cif the ertentalit f the mita of the hills' were templet; •.• . .474,O00,000 inhaisitaetti • 'of :that vast dedicated' •to 'drakone purveyor Of cOunery. There is none of. thae.gr, dY rain; and other agricultural deities deuce ' grasping' etMoSpheree no outward eri-: : deuce of hatred for foreigner's, merely : We reached Teunwhe Hsieh -at sune • Set, and'had our ''hest•VieSst' Of. the a genuine. etriosity at the, eight.of anY- Capt. V. .a... Cazalet and his sister Miss Thelma Citialet, both ' .. • . , ' , • e •• . ,„At---oceettprifeats'el'rerme-BrItialieparliatrerit... Miss daialet • ' wetusealington Easeeciletrints-sw-hileeeeptain-Gazalet-retained the-sChin • penhane distriet.• _• • - _ , , . • •,., " ',7„;••- ' ' °.;."."•••.", 1•• "'••''''• • • • People who heve been eneorreca . • . infornsed. are sometimes , heard ete • •state that the Bay Scoutti Association Is a "Militareee movement, which we '741. know' to be untene.. • 4a. a maaer Of fact; the eenstitu- -• - Von. of the. Association states that It is "Nen-Military," eilid it is therefore with particular :intereet that we note teatethesBoys•Seents--Aestectatien has' ideistiffed itself wjth'l• the- League' of Nat:lets Society of ,Canadereler the. nurnose ; circulating "ite petition througeent thescatintry ort the subject of *World: Diguiniament .thterna-• tiOnal Agreelpenti7 •••,, ' . The. Petitien :reads ;its foilowie .- • e, . • nations haVe renounced Isar.. Let .us altio..yenonnee• this•hisisureents: se" ° • • 4I.The undersigned mei,' and w.othen,. irrespective:of- party, stand •for World • disbriseaMent byesiriteeteational- '-agreee More .Canadian Eggs,J Sold In Briti Isles -During ' 1 More families in the British Isles „ . . are . eating Cituadian eggs this., year • thingao•extraordinarY as a .whffe :man 'greet Wall of 'China, ;one. of- the real wttW ,thalr breakfast bacon than' ,Was • „ With -Pare :arm: and indecently -bared. eese • r , • -1Enees Wboetratelted-lhellireeellegitteell:' • ing Centrierinee which timeed; witlictut' vees ..:the aid of horses . • °• ThiEi oVerpOwering curiosity becanie rether-tryingerit-tlitese-tenetheestreet hundreds otjaPeering pebple 'followed' -.me, otethein evementeethe-shops. ' • , MY ineals et ' the •eesteurant were watched by throngs of , the curious • from the Acme Wiedows, At dawn hot of Celestials Peered in on Me to see how I teek My repose. •Yet there wa$ nettling Offensive about this •• ileeesei• • , staring, nothing discourteous. , The esseeeseeseregyeeneeee.iheeeleeeemeeefeeeeeeeee-eieeenneleseeeliereetheereartains___efstlie. wonders of the world. •It is 3000 Miles the Case in 1930„ .says ' Canada ;Week -long-,7-witil.;. a a•-eadevayeettearigeetleg-. tele litys-Weelc"eeetsersestimatetleth-ar20;000: broad' enougheto • admit two care •to cases,- each containing- thirty dozen 'tiriee 'abreast, with • fortse,whice can eggs, will be exported to Great Britain accommodate from 00 to 10.00 men: from Canada. • This marks a coneider- A most intereetingeplace, iseleaseLan sable • revieae_frorti_thesexpiortet ittel Yuebutelletle-knowneawing-toeitseen which totalede-appecfximately 437500 accessibility. w'e come up- cases. Already over '8,000 cases of on the city of the' deed,with its white eggs. have been shipped to GreateBri- marble bridgei and marble roadways, 'all leading to great goldentlled mans(); letims, eaeh a palace in itself. : Life, size statues of elephants :and tigers and horses, mandarins, and armed warriors guard the entrances. to the noble Manehu Emperors.. • Behind: a e of ill -manners were the soldiery,:wha : • • ••:- • sealed. -dragon doer lie the Emperor stopped- the car at every possible Op-. and the Empress, in their wettes feller- ' ' ' • pottutityeaskedeeenetilsersof needleeie eal •robes studded with 'jewels._ their eondition„ • ' • • ,sqtrestions, •and :finally issued passes - 71Ohteifhibirtee-WhWthe'"Wle- tiliereleckee TeiOett7dowtr-wittri-int reilefs''essetresedertneeti- eteeetrei- trett-CaSitelitilie jade, in gorgeous lacquered coffins Seel eggs:may be fully dependable it time reality .to furnish. the troops :with a ' -'. over their *retched teacks, but in pended by . golden chains: e I of export all shipments' are required Whatever the. future ma' 'bring to by, law to begraded•accordieg to Cana- little;eetla pocket money, though'Why soldier should need moneyeinsaecoune .rn_ftts--,...teetne-AureethatelEiteweiruled_ etisteeeetendaielesgrades7.ateettality..-and- . by the siinple. principles ot the men. inspected by Romeiton'goveresnent ee- e' .. • try where the people 'give them every - eking: for feat of reprisals is difildelt one meets in those remote cities • of speetere before shipinene • ;the ineeiler ite : future- would. he in egg, grading regulations :Caeada • • • to understand.. e . •• . . • • -brighter than under the revolutionary has gone further than many other tale from British Columbia via: the Panama -Canal. • The remainder of Cana:diari.exporters,.originatitg in the • Natives Weather •BUreau • _forecasts Long. Winter ,Okanogan, Wash. -The fer'ecast of an early and ;cold. winter for the • Northern states Canada and Alaska canes from nature's three •B's -the beeseebearseand-beavers.-- • • Indi us of the Colville resereration report; that bees have 'selected wild bleak high, wide ' and ample, for pro- tection against deep snow. Hunters :bring: news front the for- est: that blickbiais are fat and are still gorging in preparation for •Et, long hibereation period. ' From Alaska bbeervers have watch- ed beavers cut' and store unusually • jiwg_gro.:saninci4r1: ' "That .competition enearmitments is leading all countries to ruin 4ithout • bringing them to security, and that this policy of competition renders furs • ther wars inevitable; "That wars in future ;Vill .be wars of indistriiiiiiiate destruction oflitunan splendid opportunity for the tone Scouts' to uphold the principles ene pressed. by the Chief Scout :in 1929; ., 'end We hope that tiler will, as netlei; "deetheir: btest..". . • It is with interest that ecohee:, • from, Paris of, the ;proposal to tom Raver Crew.in that town, ehe•nucleus ne Which' will be the members of 'the,- 1, old Lone Scout Patrol whiCh et/nate- • graduated, Into. the let Parti • Troop.; " ,' This' briege two thoughts into aur exind -aro'. thet, firs* isisene Scenting •in Ontario-, is *fait eepoindlig aneoldrestablislied institntiOn,:ne eve • ;•,demeed,14.the fact that 'Auk erseeihile. young .14Onicse:are.egeowing 4ritetethe'•:•:. faere'neethre. age of • reecondly.:Ithat once :.itet'se•jObied • .theer.anke. of. the, Stouts.. it is. with ' _relnetaneeSthetsbet* Seeelqi. eflletlees_ -tioneevith-thab-orga.nization •In other ••- Words; "Once . a Scout; Always a• , Scout." • We hone the Paris..boye ' • . ence "Good Ravering.". --e-e , As 'announced in our issue ee last life •3rd Otterie Lone Scout roop, Mr.- Vic _resignation of the Scoutmaster of: the week, we eegretfully had to record the ,, . ; . , .•, . • Sheppard. . • • , . "That ,so long • ee: measures ofd s armament-sereeedelayedeethees • i ,e,,,,e,' we are, glad to' aandrinee, however, e :• peaeenil V'opse.elireLIe will.. be vrilu,elets." • .' . ' : „ , '.that we have been fortunate enough . mert"s assurances of to have been, able to persuade Mr.. .. • • 'The Cbiet.Scont 'of Ali the World, the GeEntery off Toronto to assume : ; ' • • -'' 'the eloest _theesee4e world- take :a let of perste:ding; as he ' has Lorclelegstee-Pfieree est_Gileveteeeneake-Emeee, leederehiP'.of, that Troop. Me.. • ..'. ' .must be admitted, .did: not • , • jemboreeot Scouts held in England in 1929, before' the Sccut delegates ' of alWays take& a very keen: interest in some fifty' nations sad : , the Lonies, and We know that he wine . "Here IS the hatchet of war,. of eel - 'ma" a ' very :fi(he has had - "Here ne leader , , ... , taffy, ot bad eeelings which I no* hury. previousexperience in thisvierk) and that he will' soon be v.ery Pt:Teter With ..: Prairie and Eastern Provincee will be . fings. Jerge heaps of birch and Willow sap- •• „ • ' Fromll the corners of the world yOu his boys. „ • came at the cell of Brotherhood. Now shipped from Montreal before the tiee .So', members Of the 3rd Troop, what of November. Whether shipments are emeds6...bye,the-Ohneeeveat•ere-Waree_Yele- leloatreal •:er by :the longer •eute seed you forth te your homelaeds, Akitishxasuabes„:„..... bearingeneeeeqe.g.of• Peaeneausieneedeebout letter f welcome te -e , , • , . . • 440ffleiei ,Will and Felloseship to lour fellow . • - :The. latest volume of the through the Panama 'Canal, the eggs . . • . History of the Wee- discloses that men- _ The Dominion, and Provitcial Ex- Here are seine' activities to rethern- . derive in Great Britain in first 'elate tee anoraxiniate• total cesualtiesi in iWtc5-iirimitees of tee. Boy Scouts .e. the British Expeditionary Forces weeee-Eibilr . .-.. ,--.......- Ee .0. Te-TO.Y.SHOlee-Have. you= - s•-•-•-ee„:,-, '117011-14- - 4"-stre-ranliiili:Ve gi4;eli---illeli' 1.-11411.I:11::7eLeett-itetirat 'I' fi• "0 ' tone Seout , . , fled end.orsation of the above genti- ror .evpty casualty Inflicted by the mente and petition, and have asked Trails? Get' busy, L•onies, time isfly in fast • ' visible enemy (in battle) the invisibee•• every Scout in Canada to get .behind . , enemy claimed two. Both :the percen. t_antleeueese v r3r--effo • ' THE SCOUT QUESTION. BOX. We ' etage of-deetbsefromeedieeasie and the add names to the petition ,er . 0-gisd---tr"ansiiibuifftituit. • • e• -e et---possible---to,---see.em neecentage of deaths from wounds are - - • • . e Send them to "Lone- E" at -headquar- • et L u,s . Copies have been. sent to the Lone lower than that recorded in the South African War. . •• • . Scouts and Lone 'Patrols of 'Ontario . , THE DISARMAMENT PETITION. •According to official records, 86.07 witha personal letter from their own • • Please- do your share. weigWand per-lieut. size-or.tiortat--ar-60-stfaltiesire---;Ceceniniessionere-yelso-itopes-that-each--.1 , taken into consideration in Cana- fighfing armstones) willdo his share to promote'were suffered by in Lowe Of the Foueth Scout Maybe you aren't a Scent? Well: if; diatt•grading bet equal importance is faetry, 7.% per cent.' by the Royal Law which reads: • i ' • , . you 'can't join .a regular Troop, why also laid on the Ulterior quality of the Artillery, 2..57 by theitoyal Engineers, not be, a Lone Scout? - ". : • • . egg: The Canadian•law requires that 2„46 by the Machine Gun corps, 108A SCOUT IS A FRIEND TO ALL" Write to The Lone Scout Depart alt all: eggs 'seed in Canada be candled', by the Cavalry, and 0..24' per cent, by If 'every person in the world would ment, Boy ' Scouts Association, , 330 the Tank Corps. According tOsla,rge, make the Feurth Scout:Law his or her Bay Street, Toronto, and ask fOr par - scale analysete 5S:.8 ----per Cent, • of life mottoe-whateneed-would-the--hteetieuterse -Thy - *in be gladly -sent. _ le to del • -the wounds were eansed by shells, 39 by ter aemamenti? Here, • then is a "LONEhes• Inillets. 2eleby bombs -and .;32--bysea-y-; L.: . •• .,....s....... , . • every un asquad ot a medpolicee men asked -questions. and examined abroad who ConSider themselves much lieories-af Chinese youTees--edueete ' " my baggage, stating „that tri• was 'a•• A superior to alr citbeis. • . - •' ' " . precautionary measure ow ng ta the • • •• : troable. in Canton, two thousand Miles ' aWay.. It, Wes Probablei because at the Record Sardine Catch . absurd Impatience given. in China tie • . ... .. • Reported by . Portugal tkyaded and sold accoeding to grades. • se- ' 's • . ' anYone with arms and. d tiniform. s • . BecauSe of the fact that Canadian. . . D 'Lisboa, Portugal -Since saIdines ele ,: • Our chauffeer,' Golden :Vbice by • Were .first canned • in Portugal. there consumers are able „ y upon :.„-..-......,,,.....,......• tamee_assureetemysecompanitinethat. et . ,e, ' • ' 'queIite--al eggs, they . .. rh6--iiiej.-e- --diesied. lb:: the ifie- , r .1-iiii never -ffee-ii -sibyl:: -a-ii- :iiiiiiaiiies ii. which.,.Till: ....kfifi. ry o a when t ey buy the dirrrent grades as this seaeon. •• In fact at tittles s; European 'chauffeur wee eheeldeptisS, -during- the-recent-sepackinge--seasott -7--''. ' -ane-whereettettoultled.--,--ife-waesserei;:iFie)* were sold by' the fishermen 55: : ' . ' • ably right, as a Chinaman invested lbw as 10' 'cents per 1,000 and the with ,power abiise it to the -utmost • ... .poorer quality were dried and used elralt, 'Mit he will not be' deliberately. al fertilieer. • , ill-mannered" and will • usually .carry onets. ,Allpy_ are _now using eggs _much_ wee. _ _Exclusive. of_the _DeminiareeFerceee_ • freely: There pee capiWyearly-con- uu fewer --facie2-,41-4;000eFfdividualeTer- .suiention of eggs in Canada is approxi- 40 per cent. -of those Who served se- nsately 372, or more than one egg per fered death or disablement for which, day ()Very day of the year. The figures it is stated, State ,compeneation was available :from other countries indi- cate that the consuiription of eggs in Canada is considerably higher that that of other 'countriet.' e'es his politeness to extremes.. Our Intel"- The owners of the trawlers threat- preter was a good exantple of the really 'well-bred Chinamate for his petiteness, whether asking his way of a peasant, dining in a local restaurant, --visitingeThe11 esen -theesinge-S°4 their product at high prices and ,4. ened on several occasions to with- draw the • boats from the sea and stop fishing if the packers refusedj to pay more for •their catehese but the pockets said.they -could not sell g -Trever-deserted-him.----These. Chinese damiels, While regarding me .• and My cempaniOn as creatures Un- believably funny, could, net •diaguise. • their horror at our physicalappear- • ance, comparing *meet unfavorably . 'with our Chauffeur and •our Interpreter. -- Though we saw nothing to indicate a- state of lawlessness, except the ehut- - ting of the bity gates at sunset and the fortifiedstate, of some: et the more 'Itsnely farms, we did learn of the re- cent apprehension of a batch of high- ,' traymen In Fenjung-Hsien, the centre of the bandit areaethrough their gen- erosity, 'to the above-mentioned ladies, , for who but a bandit fiad enough money to give double the usual price? • I was struck by the unmercenary attitude of the people of these lonely,. districts after the grasping dishonesty of their brethren in the towns, Often I stopped at a , pedlar's tea -stall and. • risked for a drink, he always made me sit dowtrwhifeelre- brewed -a fresh -pot, • and offered me -ciarettes., When. I Of- fered him pa, he always tried to re- fuse 'the mtey, net petal's° he did not need It because mostof these Peo- le are' desperately poor; but because • he consideredine his guest. Chinamen rarely entertain in their evvii omes. Trey usually invite their • guests to a restaurant, Which in 'China. ' Is divided offinto etthicles to teemed date any size ef party. In addition to the eistial flaked jelly Ash, omelettes, ,ancieet black eggs, pork fat and rice; We had specialties euch as prawns cooked in butter, fried brad, baked lobsters, bamboo shoots flavoured' with shrines' eggs, and various kinds of pikle4 sea -weds They also pro- • 'A pies- to Rivail-Otan fishernien Vent .on •fiehing as utual.. -A-n-teiventien 'recently -dis-playedeat given. • Paris Enjoys Rare Viands Oldest Store Uses . -Failt's-t-71-aisee-enea --fiiteeeste ing salons to be seen in Paris and Boston. -s• A •'135,yeareld Jamaica jiist now there are no less than three Plain grocery storee elieved by the :? ethe Autumn Salon ef! painting and United States `Department of ''Cons- -thesculptere, the Nautical Seloii• .with merce to be the oldest„in the United fell-tized' yachts and motorboats ex- States, is not depending on these laur- hibited in the grepiet hall of the Greed elf to gain busieess. It has added the' Palais and most interesting for most newest thing in food), merchandising- peoPle, the "Salon of Gastronomy," • quick frosted foods-havingreeently At the latter are to be seen and installed a zero refrigerator 'display asted-the most-deleetable viands- of case While the actual tonnage of sar- the Washington State Fair at Yeki.na dines •experted will run far ahead of and reported upon by "Tlie Packer" previous years; the money value of under date a 8eptember 2:6 sheuld be the exports will perhaps be *mailer [of,,interest to eanadien producers and than tinting the years when the consumers of apples. This machine, catch Was normal. Aside front cork wc.is designed for convenient use and win sardines the bi t of soft drink establishments Will con - item, of eportfront: Portugal. The- YOrt two Apples into a glass of cider season for packing begins In May in one Minute. It my result in ma it* fresh apple juice. as popular as orange juice is at present and,. if so, should Ina erially increase the market Hose IndustryFigures ' for apples .• : Show NO Deptesslon or June and ends in Deember. Rome. -Italy's artificial silk industry is one •-of the- • few •ifidustries up - affected by the world-wide depresion. Her exorts of artificial silk haVe in- creased in the past „six months all round, but chiefly t0 two countries inoet seriously affected by depression and disaster -namely, Qermany and China. Chinese merchants have bough1800000 pourtist---nromwtifi- Weather Damages Brazil 'Coffee Sao Paulo, Brazil.-Renrts reach in'g heiee from the interior .say that heavy losses due to retent high winds and drops le temperature have been suffered by coffee growers of the hin- terlands. Budding coffee is said to be eirrepar ably damages1.. • • etile -fruitful land of- France. , There - Altbotigh this- store es modernized, are assesebled the areists of theculi-: sorne01. tee Original bins may Still be • nary world andthere the wine -makers- seen . and smite of the; original..wall are exhibiting their fineet predticts for paper is intact. It was startedes a, the public to taste: general store and note 'elite() by Eben - It is 'possible to lunch there on ezer Seaver in 1796, and was cieerated samples, beginning with caviar .and• by the Seaver family "tor 134' years. continuing witli lark pie and sner- Last year the store •was sold to Mr. kraut with fifty kinds of sausage to ere -Daly andlVsejohnA:Craven-he choose fom, hams fr9m a dozen cures,' Mr. Fred Seaver • grand -son • of the and cakes withontnumber. For thse' [omelets • . . who look like potential custoiners. "In politics you MuSt begin, at: the bottom'of the ladder." • • champagne and cognac merchantswill open choice bottles. There is even =- fermented grape-j-uice to be: sampled. . Each day official and unofficial juriestryout new dishes and go h'oine at night declaring the world is almost too full of good things. The *Wheat Harvest • • • "In what'mannerr • "Well, as 0. rule, . the first thing you do is to shake the ladder in on • effort ot dislodge the fellow ahead of you." Regina, Saskatcheevaii:-It is now definitely decided .that the 'World's Grain Exhibition and. Conference will be herd in Regina from Jetty 24 to August 5, /933. • . • cial eilk So .far this year than last: Increalked exports to Austria, Japan an, also repoted. The Kings Reign Record. Xing George 1s the first king of .. England since the relge. of George ' who died in 1820; to have re1g112. ed continuoutsly fortwnty-one years. .The King ef Italy, however, has been on the threir• tor thirty-one years, the ting of Sweden fois tNeenty-four yers; and the, Xing of the. Belgians for twenty-two years. ,King Alfonso, • •'wecs was been king,•bccuped the- •• throne of Spain fort -four yers. • vided a ear of exeellent millet' wine, Lincolns Still' in Politics witiett we drenk verylot in little ceps. Reading, PeweeMr. liarriston T. The meal was termnated by the tri-,Liticole, e(D), Whose enceseere were •. Attie:nal bowls of Vice and any remaihs ' kinsinen of Abraeant Litoln, was re- . of dieter. which took the facy,, the' cently elected a member ofthe Beres • • main t•ule being to finish the. rice to prism hoard here. Mr e Harrisea Lin- - • - -the-d-regs--with---ae-muelt .sue.ting-atuiTteliga-g-reat--g-r-andfo.tiver-was--a-hrother.-- , mulling as possible, and ceiling fora ' of Ahrahate Lincoln's father. The tin, --- . _damp laivel to.wipe . the tiee eand-Lolits,..ltedlit Eeter, _nea_hre, and_ . __ hands, to leave the table' with eat the old /entente homestead there hi - ' '---7' -------tr-- Art zri ' - . '' ' A characteritic, mete of Pre i er e ti s in . . • " Ireets without Maher -delay, - ft being- relit stamillfg. - . ', ::: : . - , ' : , ' lefilfessing 300,000 el 1 -es ou . Paseistit's bittlidaY. • . f• . . . . , 11. Duce Speaks . • Three Rivers Bien Public: • It is curious to remark that wheat, right- ly considered as a most essentialQ Australisn "Youths • Farm Waste Land q. Aug.-Ilardly a vacant :, block of land eis to. be seen. in and around • Adelaide as result of the city's activities in providing employ- ment diming the trade slump, writes • a correspondent of the,. Christian Science Monitor. Cultivation Of waste laud -owners' such pionetty ifuvrag".plae-d• it at cominoditY, regularlf gives a har- vest each month distributed over the It:. tus purpose -has been part of the the disposal of the City Council for • .... . • . in Canada we •reap, our evheat in' wellorganized program- fltit helping . . differeet parts of the gldbe. Thee 'Unemployed youths. Other boys are •i '',1.'W 1:it'::' 'CV , ,. e. , ‘ , . I . Augest • In Western Eurbelng they . , , ng trained la carpentry, metal .• reap at •the sante etre°. lit Scandin- ' aide the taxi/est cotnes in September, molding and cabinetinalting: or else 'lee sent to "big farms to learn agriculture '. in November in Pere and in leedethel - . • bet in Australia. , In the A rgentine, - , , •Canda, wheat. is barvestell in Jan.' , . CanadianT"--Salmo e the -country which,comoetet with' n I • . . . Imre. ' In Pehrtiary it is India's turns' Usurping U. -S. Prod'uct. .ane In Marth the earvest eetnee In 0tetwa.-Cariait tlis replacing the. . Egypt, also a'' gait producer and eel., United States in the British market , . •veyor to 1.3ri ta in. In Mee wheat is for canoed salmon and for the fir61 , , reaped in Clt lila and Ja pan and . in ' nine months or the preeent calepdat-• June :in Italy and Spain. . . yearghe Dominion more than tibubled , . -e-see----s- 1 • eta exports over the corresponclingper- U.S. Flights 40 P.C. :at Night ed a yar rigo. . thieilgo - Approxivrteiy 40. eer ''' • Up to the old of September,accord- - cent. of the 150,000 eli•phthe miles ing to the .seirreetissue of the Cott, nowt; daily by etheduled lines in merciat intplligence Journal, the the United, States le now at night; 'Mai (4, kingdom imported from Cele • • '. it marked ineeaso over a .few years- tida 102.0(i) cwt'. 'of ' calmed salmon; 0 -go.- The Departmnt of commerce while importations frefeeteeeelenited____:______e_ -----haseeightentil-lliee00 rfira-nt- tar: .Stale-S-Toi a ficj -47d;ilon 'wt. Duriag the , • way most of V4q11111 is equipped with 'same peeked" lase Sleet Canada's .hare • - . z• ,radikk ..dirockize„fiacl_ cminateft-ion- 'was. waly 470-00" ('‘W-.;...ivfile effart-,'Of ••-• . rlie-11-.4116Wii ' l• • . . , faciltes, and voathar Inverting ser- the, Wilted States was considerably • . ; ice. , . /' . . 4,11,7441.•".4.4.4.4 %. V. .01*KP ;,04.f"A•g.*.i..**tolu1150.0,,,r. 44. ...?1,...4t.ty.iislifq064fettittvki4atktearWmetpoor04••4 ••• . . seeeseeessee'S see.. see'eseseeseeesseeeetesseesereseaeereeseeeseeeseses..... I over 100,000 cwt.