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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-01-09, Page 6TIIEIMKNOW MAMMA 4 TH, $imit 91theet93,0, EXPORTS Wel?h, Mayor •adeethe stateineet that , *ere utir,atriotic be-. ee,ka.sed, muCh ibread, nfi.eg at heine. He ale° .;,AilemPloYment in Oarigla ase if imports Were cur- , ".WHAT MAKES CANADIAN'S, CANAIOAN" $V9Ti: #41.4 ali.,..A144{041.1 ;genies tit' 'Onleada to. live, his Secret' determina- tion aeeins`to be to try And make 'this country Yaekee. •Every time t.14- -ltabraark .ccanda. to Canada to live, he Wants AO maise.thia'Country.Eogliah. The resistingof ,these two Opposing inipulees good thing for thie • • . • country, because it is:what ' makes #0,--9$10sIte. is .• -r" CaSeeeete Canada Canadian, Canadian: person - in imports Would, reduce ' ailty is. welded mit a the clash be- • ,. Ont., • There IS aiw4,Ya; - less; !AiWeen English inilnenees. and 1114 iniPort$ 'Aare cein eencee ' -eff • • • - „ . „ ,.. • - . : irapoOs Canadians are able to realize that *OettOi 00 the temporary the Ateorigei. fs 'orrig- fast.' His u?na!'''terire ,only. to :Prev.e • the *tit:Mile, scientific action, his business ••• ; 147,. • 141119etiihY: 01:1n,:E..ike; or h:raa',k; and his - isin is shown tnaia.farats". restlessbusineSseanthitibn •tend to ays where we can •Seente' ./nake. business machine which has allies. NO other rule of con-. le etibject is very interent- . e ,Written, a little booldet ipi and will, be 'glad to is of this paper 8::copy There is of entiese no ,tetached. to this, Simply 'nerd addressedto R. J. $44, kOttawa and •I to send yen e Owe'. IL4ATIOX created tounding prosperity, in Un- ited States. • But have these things made Amer- icans happier? • Have they added . to the richness and fullness of American life? Are the American standards of • sieccess haeed on true and lasting premises? / ° The Englishman, oh the other hand is going too slow. His, industrial phil- GETTE,16 04. , '.`c01.0MIHA AiiRRICA • (Prom:The Walkerton Telescope) We , have ,an interesting • versation with Mr. Frank li, danieft, • B. Be. (Queen'a), who ie, in Walkerton after...spending two years at Barran-. cabermeja, ColornlYee South Amerlea, employed as an engineerwith the Trepicel Oil Compiey. MreJaines who is the, second son ol Major and , Mrs. F. B.• James, is Spending • some.. time with; them • here.' , • After gracinetion. 162.7. he was with the 'Canadian •Prifta' coinPanY• it Walkerville for six:months before accentinia eiisition With the MI' in- terests •4t Colombia, 4Which have a coneeesjon peer equite. an extensive teteltory• for:a • period of '-.60 years.' .0n, the Steff and *Monk the thelisj' •ands of einplOyees are 350 "Whites,"; referred to by the natives as foreign-. ers., The -oil is pumped frpm, 300 to .350 miles to the coast whereit. is loaded into tankers and delivered 'io the Stites. , . • ' The company Opelates 20 Miles of railroad and constricts ; and maintains its ewn higleyety,s-Mueleof Mr. James'e thee was spent in supervising the letter. Considering, the nature of the Country, , living :conditions .are quite geed, he says. The; beet, during the: dry seasons, ofcotirse, is. intense, es- pecially in the middle ..ef. • the day, where it is often:135; degrees in the sim and 1:06 i the „shade,' lent the av- erage ie abotit4,00_inethe shade'. Pe' the other "-hand, that country,. exper- iences heavY e,ains; as much as 'eight inches falling lin 24 hours; M. :lames 4ith, ogrrusT,9 THJG.S DoNE *,-...Fr..*••••••• • Elbert 'Hubbard, thq. gt•eat• writer and philosoPliere mice said that, if we ettentect anything' dette, We must go to "the busy men, Alet. theother :kind: had no time. It is a faet that sckla tinieS the 'Persen• who 'SOMAS •te bwe the, most to de is tbe Very person *nee can: and wili gat some . extra woe* done ,and•dene ProMPtlY" and the .right wey: The person. ,without •Much of anything in 'particular to do ,hardly more than iakes a living, and • . , .aentetinies .not that, is apparentrye0. eteleages just now ovine... the „ . busy Otat'aziYAITi:g•:044ing 4.1°Pg.'41 Werld an ex Whitten of 1.7.,114t bOd Way of extra, work,'.espeetally':ik eintriene w1l lead to. The ;government It ',(Ef ji peblie'dn't'y of some cud, wifl of the city .- (not the -city , itself); is eliy• at the...tele and •refuse it :chtS ha.Ve • anYthing to ;do .evitrf:it.- It is' ..°1::1:11"t". the' ...whole, osophy is archaic. Maintaing a, vast armyeo-femiddlemenelielets-the-work- man do what the machine should he doing, He. devotes histime to polititel something Worth consider- philosOPhy. and economic theories .ra- ,, " ther than to practical actionele • is ought that a road is .a• •eiVilieatiah. Seto "Tate,. fliihay hard ,•of it form. It is the sav- urks in the 'Jungle,* re- neyereehon ....ventures 'tint 1.1 and. joins With his fel' buildingea highway, however the saurce of big vverld talk and big; political talk. " • But the Englishreati,.has cultural .EtItterng And an aesthetic 'haticground; that the AMeriCan, as a class, lacks. :.Canada cannot afford ,to EeilOpt eith- er English or Anierimn methods in theirLentirety. 'Sim' must pia the hest ittehighwey may ate; We Seeh' h eacand apply them ze her own eneculiar,tirefilems.. • . nnmghof. eenlizatten. we accept this "thin** as *being xpresilen of ,eetahlishedlact, •e,heeessiteilyefollows- that lijgh- ewe,knowe them to -day are •a '..eiviiiiationeand association . ,. -cl' inter -dependence. And ,. , ghethe...old Roirans. Showed ing w 'roads might be hat to last for ea tinder .the traffic .Of re noylebuildiniroads Which ' 4 , • • other' distinctiVe' 'Canadian •personehty. h te,peesoeatityjeente_ei en.gag- °1°°m'wera-to. come after us ing and hopeful one. Johnny Canuck a wonder td. them, ; good is sitting here With 3,729,665 squire. 111., 1(19a though °jay' were ' It Miles, 'including Sortie of the mint ig too, be remembered' that RoMe., productive eoli in the Fetid f- Sitting n e best days .of the great. empire,, here with vast resources; with min- eMiliOri the highest, Civilization !rats.. induaing 96 per, cent of the world had known it: thatPer Pre-Cantbrain shield, containing: the great ore deposits of the world; sit,. ting here with a variety of clirnate nnequallea in any other country on And the sooner Americans and Erteli-teeen in Canada realize- thie fad, the sitoner they, realize that this is CANADA, the Sooner will they be- come' good Canadians and make the going easier for themielves. s„, Meantime the ptessure from both aides. is forming and building .up • :fr14, 1400 K N CeW E N.T • .. Published overy Thorsdev Morning • • at Lucknow,.• Ontaria, .0. Meatenale. Proprietor '• and. THURSDAY, elANUA.ItY 1,03a, • Ap. CITY GOVERNMENT ts iksoinething worth renteether- ng , at times we ere rather stag- ereclat the vast gums which 'are. ' being Spent build the roads His *vigorovs 'Nordic. temperament tche lhtodern traffic demands and gives him a pride and a etermina- a e Vast Sums which must be spent tion; tte he its here on n;4 fortune, er.manY rs to complete and to not to he led by the nose this way or mai t Civilization IS that, but to make a 'distinct and pow - AS its ad- :erfut persormlitte for himself and for ntagee over life t e jimgje. " his country, CANADA. - . - scnoolteagicing etag bad to '.go' with- . man Whii can .be Airkni °ut tu Pay thcil r • because cheques,issued •by othe Stitool Beard inat the differenee betteeen ,the tlungs d9Pe- and the one3Nlio cannot would not he honored at the Fiertige In eveey 'community:there are men • (and 'women) who Put their shoulders t�. the Wbeel and get things:done Mich :people come in for free criticism end' very little thanks for the work they do, because wheneVei'we do any- thing we cerne .in for „criticism. The only way. to, avoid. criticism is to do 7nothii‘-and beenothing-Butee-riticisme does not .faie the person who is really busy •and engneed. in doing useful work. Such a person --really has no time to note the quibbling of the. Critics, and criticism fells' off such a person es- does Water off. , the haat .of a' duek,„ . The fellow who gets things chine in' pensive, ,imit after ,all good, enjoyed the experience, but he, may Teinain in Canada rather Milt return' to South Ameriea for another - extended period. • CANADA'S VICTORIES. -;Canada's victories at the Internat.,' „ ional Live Steck 'Exposition ood, Grain Show In lanve. ;been - the subject :of many eulogistic re - Meeks., Among the covethChonors woh be the Hominione,Were the charrtE pionship for wheat, grand, ch5rrij3rO3- Shorthorn Male and female; grand, cbanipi�n Clydesdale 7 Stallion and mare, champion caelot Of 'market iambi,' ;numerous championships 'in sheep- classes, and ,many prizes in grin ind; seeds. secured by exhibi- tors from Ontario west :to. Alberta. Prolrbly the outstanding individual victory vete the capture ee irst prize for the best buehel: of wheat by • a hitherto unknown farmer from the foothills of Alberta. This impressive showing one afrain demonstrates that Cahada's soil and •climate are the meet feyorable.in the world for pro - chiding the highest quality farm pref. • products. s Neither could council .pay for remov- ing. snow from the, etreete; so ,much , of it remained where it fell -a serious detriment to traffic of all kinds. It is the word situation which ev- er. has developed on this continent, ur in any c ntry• pretennuto ir civiliz- ation. It i not be-04,Se the .eity is torrnerebeeatete-the-peo i•ee;heeett • taxel. It is due 'entirely to "graft." Millions of dollars of taxes lutVe re- mained uncollected. clue to the fail-. `ure * the tex colleliese machinery; and the money,collectedwas one way and another et) i sa p li ro pr ia tbd by MaY- Or. Thompsep and his asseciates. When they took office they began by THZ.NE* MNISTER " P r" QV FINANC • These who. IrstenefI to: }Ton. Charles: !punning speaking over the radio 're- cently ,could not .failito be struck by the 'clarity"of,hia thought and expres- sion. imPreises ono at once .s.a man of Prot' 1,.:ote ability. Indeed he . must be such,otherwise. he could not have enjoyed the rapid rise ',which has been his to the prcient high pos- ition whiliClle, occupies: - „Nit.. :Dunning came.'to thi:s colintry. ftoni 'England, 1m1 of seventeen, with , but little means. At least we infer that lye had: little money for he Worked as hired, men e)v"ith farmersduring. his Mit few TFa ears in 'alcaf; • . chewed.. petting :a farrie Of his Own and taking. part in the farthere',.mevee. Merit he quickly' • attracted. notiee, \ He Wetsalegted to the Provincial legise hiture, he.came premier of the prov- ince and was soon drafted into the Dominion Parliameet . and presentlY 'Put in charge of the Departinent, of Railways, one' Of the' big departinent- Of the Goeernmeet. Havine melee gooci there 'he .7..s the best melt available for.the Vinance Department when the post.tien *at rendered \Taint by the :untideath of Robb. ,There is hut one more step for Mr: Dunnin'e to t^kl` Until he reaches the tep..qf the Taddr in Canadian poll - tics -he prete'erehin. But he may remEtin lope• e here he is. 'Premier -King ei.elro -Young marWand is do- ing well -capable as a; stateemari and TTe dicl; Wellin picking,urf • POWER • PROM NIAGARA , FOR EUGENIA' SYSTEM ; (Owen .Sound . Bering the past week, when Owen Sound and surrounding district wn‘s • yisited i)57 two severe storms which. paralizod traffic on the 'highways and. in the coneessions thee il4er- • ruption in, the power serv.-9 by the Hydro -Electric Posis-er .Conimittion .from the plant At. Eugenia: In sme places in Ontarko.;diore sev,otal rpterruptions, but the -fact, that there were none this.section speaks eveli for the -manna! in which. tpe traiu- rniSsiofl 141,0 'and ether equipmeht is booked ..after., ; 7 tioweVdr,' the, plant at Eugenia was -taxed to its utmost 'Cepecity .during the sterile:Pt fact running at toll d0:17Sati ond• the 'ste,4.0 plant. Seek. lies „been : niecl • as, an auzcili0y,,, the ,geeatef part of ,the wintere and while , einit do-vn at the present tiree will anY-cor-51-m,PottVii Onne- ,of -making. -Ete substantial addition: te. the. our civilization and' eltistance as. pay :of all city ethploeees who sup- , nation. - WithOut 'ageietY, Woul& .poited4isem nthe -election./ 00ers- drift back to chaos snd -*num 'revert -44 'barbarism. • • Who was it drove the money-ehan- gers from the Temple 't' -Jerusalem? It.i'as -the man who could get things', • The are'millions of excuses fpr inaction, but the man who gets things done needs no excuse, end if helails in any undertaking h 1 the last one to make excuses for his failure. Ile jest 'a good sportsman and tilges it all as a ,matter of course nd as, a part of his life experiences. -Madison Cooper „in Flower Grower. WHAT THEY ASIcED HIM ' • Bishop Flipper i in an address at- tacked .bigetey., "But, dear friends," he encled,, "the best .settrack the bigot ever -get wee- at "the hends of old t'ar Clay. Cal was asked one day by a • missionary What denominatien he be- longed to, And, -the old fellows reply Was this: 'Brass ye,' Sah, „dales 'fo! roads .leadin' from ,hyalt ter town - de long road, de hill road, de sho' road and .de swamp road -but when Alt goes ter town wid er load er grain dey don't say ter me, "'Uncle Calhoun which road did yo' conie in by ?". but "Cell, is ye' wheaf good?" • 'AT INDIJSTRY, :•?;;;,' '-'7"••• i. I t,..7.4:::•;•::::. • -"iiii.:.:: ea,..c•eceei. „<> ".;.•••`::::.;•,•:::::::::%:•::::::::::::::,.7., • • *:•:::::•:... ....::::::74a,F.:::•:::::::::::::,aa::a:•:::;::KS::::::::::::::::::::: f:,..:::f.:::::i:i:•.;',.:::!::i:::'::::":::"::;i:";:ia,::,::.,:i:afi*K:ia•::' • viseouatand Viseiontest Williss•den aid Vieit4teisi 'Pity • flgtitled Attonssbilsittstietiirhis flint et -the British- 'Entpire thst �t the Peri litstst Togiatislitr o Candn Lisilted, "WEBB Viiiiiillf.-01Ohric" • • , • • • • Duties Of Modern Executives Made Upon Kings Of Yore.• . TIME was when rulers, gath- ering their, intimates about thetit,-tenk to the -fields and woods in search Of 'Wild boar or slipped, incognito into sequeat- eyedinns, when they wished, niir; • teithe from the duties of state or OpPorttimity to Sit vis-a-vis with their Subjects, , ' Today, the executive obligations' of the head of a nation entail an in- ' timate knowledge of the industries that lOOM so prominently in the, , genera,' conditions of his country.. 'Recent trips of this nature by the titular hear of the govern- ments of Cella a, .Spain and, the Milted States of America giverise 'to the conjecture AS .tp, hiAV their respective prototypes would have reacted to the spectate: les of • natedge0 mags4produettoli , that tiferW- Wed liffilf'fitteltike these modern leaders. Any guess ,as to wht""erriwy Isabella -or Washington might have 'thought or Said must rest:litonly in the conclusion that the job of knowing how to conduct a government these days is much more of a teak than in the periode so often referred to as "the good old days." Improved transportation have 'enlarged the importance of industry it all countries in its relatiOpto agriculture and com- merce since the dart when govern- ing Was more leisurely: Governing today, if it Is- to safeguard the in- terests both of laborer and menu - *tauter, and if it to recognize all the essential elements of pros - parity and. wellobeing ,for the Imo sotd Beaty Verdi as. his Cornpsnion, durflr Breont Visit at - • ' Duirborhi. Michissn-,AND Biotite* ituler , Spah. Kink . -Aif�fle., 4sige4 Man Qtztone bkriaji Trio Thitittirie gorti • -Plant st, Bitreehigia: . . ttott's peoples must include knowl- edge of the industries upon Which a healthy state depends. Visits made reeentrf by ViScolifit ' • WillinicIon,-Vide-regal head Of the. ,Canadian government; King Alfon- :go; ruler of Spain and President HdoVero"hecid of 'the American State, to plants . whete Ford cars and trucksare manufactured, are indieative of the importance c,..that leaders of nations attach to first- hand labilliatien about the index industries of their .reepectiVe tem:- a tries. Viscount Willingdon was at. Contimiled by Viscountess ' eon on his inspection trip 'through the largest automobile ntatinfae-! • Wring plant in the British Enetire, that ef the"Fitre MOttlif COTOPitilY Of< .- Vfailitda Limited, at East,Windsor(ki Ontario. King Alfonso evinced keen interest in the Many opera-' *Cenci in the plant of the ``,:ird,` Motor Company, SA.E.,, at tarce- ' long, and President Hoover spent teueh Of his limited ,titte white in Dearborn, to honor Thomas' A. Edison, dihduShirei' the related subjects of production and,g6neral busineas prospects With Henry Fordo, his ihOet. • •were unseriteoneoesly hickd out rienvey-enntrix4i4e,r-notkbAg....,pis.' looked gooilTto the • great:I-teary" em-.' Ployed by the 'city; and 'Poing 'there- •selees tort...net, , they thought there, was ho nine like Thompson. Some of them May vew think 4iffereptlY, see- ing that the master grafter cannot Pallolihenwc:Y: . - out ofthe s.tre,' nge sittue: tion has yet peared, but tome'Way nat mnit:. be found. Not. however. with the niesent gang within reach of the city treasnry. Seme oreanize Oen. of respecteble reqes eonfitlet •1' enlui-Ttreeine talons will have to take over the. business et managing the :city. TheiieMble with Chime.° , and many other hig cities on thiS centin ent; is that the reajetity, of the ,people are cerrupt: They do nol-, exnect men' r•elected to- offiee to sot squarely. They expect them te the.eselves to the highest bidder and to- intle!e'e in eraft of every soft. They would:do"it them- selves if \they he'd the opportunity. : • VICTIMS OF HARD LUCK Mr Eunnine, and he has now made another Freya selectioe in; the appeint7 / -merit of -Me....Crerst to :the heed -of the Depattfr,en,t; -ot Aaitways.. be used a little later.: ,, • , • The Hydre-Vectric Power Commis- sion, ',however, ie..' not taking Lief chances en there being any shortage of 'Power in the.. teiritbre now served by" t1. -c Eaqen'a. pint, ' and is neking preparations to take Cere..Pf future • demands. for • power,, which eireeen , stifitly.. being made. 'SPEite time ago• ' the anneen"'ernent Was .tnede .that there Wouldbe an extensien of the main -pewee line running direct "trotne._,ek. the sYstern at 'Niap.,ara Fells' to FOri4 . • nect with ilie Eugenia 'system , at .Senover. The .first ' thought in cop - 'Election, with this extension Was One of ,prOtection to, the district in' tate Ytiting went ' ewrong , at Eugenie 'there -should he eeeehortege .of• power, and while to ,some.,Oitent• tiiih idea still prevails,"-theHeeohirniss• ien fully . realizes the necessity, , of providing • further 'facilitiee to ,supply this, ()Us-. •triet-tecanee-vf-theeconstantli-increa-'-7-.--7,---, sing demands for power, 'and thie will be takencare of, from Hanover. .• Jest at".the Present,:time the trans- misSioe line is in course of ceeeteue-• Oen between ' and Hanover,, with gangs of men working : at each end of the' lipe, and while it Will )36; some 'little time yet befinle the werle, is. comPleted it is expecteu diet pOW- er will be available -over the new lin"e in the .spring. The line is • beffirrirarit. on a straight line :through the coun- try from the, village et Arthur; 25 miles north of Guelph, the right. of ; way having been ;seepredespine little time ago.The sub -station which will he: necessary at. Hanover i& also und- er construction, and will, he .finisheu inside of a few weeks. The necessary • teenstorniers:which will be installed at Hanover bave been secured and thesewillbel ready by the time the building is read. When this .station is ready an additional 10;000 horse power . will be available . for use' in the Eugenia districtthus taking Care of ally shortage .wha might develop at • Eugenia. . —0 0. 0— DRIVERS ARE BLAMED FOR' MOST ACCIDENTS- , . • • At the 15th annual cenientien of the Insurance Federation' of America he statement was made by Albert* 'Lavery, State Senator of Bridgeport Conn., that, approxiinately 80/e of, th automobile ocidents in his State are due to the motor vehicle operator. Ile gave at the authority for his remark , a rec.ent study of Motor 'vehicle iterP' cidents in the State, made by Prof. Kirby of Yale UnivertitY. These, figures, eaid. Mr.; Lavery, sus- tain the judeentent of the Legislature of Connecticut in *passing an Act' which plaees the imilden where it be- longs -on the' men wild drives 'a . car; The Suctess of the Connetticut low :hat been dai.* in ' a greet part to the . fil'et that the motor Vehicle departe m.ent of the State is orgapized and eqiiipped to furnish .the neceeeeke in- • formation upon to littgealV rating system. ' their records all accidebts and convictions in. •tbe..• • State sloe 1911. .• The Cr nneetient law of 1925 which , Comp.elled persons having accidents to furnish firaecial responsibility, did meeh to secure a greater coverage; but because it was net" universal it centintied to ftirhigi an argument for . .coinntilaery insurantee The expertenee • in Maseachutetts With cornettliory instmaitea bet been hAteli that it. WEis".• not eitrective to tonneCtiepte. leneneekeepperee.-,aee ekew the three, entsteeding rhen of the Goveinnier,1 and • .it motif& be difficult to 'show that :any epreviees-eCattadiaheeabieet bed three more -capable Men • Some men get through life having encountered little or 'rei misfortune Others bec"orrc the victims of a suc- cession of misfortunes which reduces them to poverty. or at anY, rate Makes lefe rather hard going. Up in Brant Township last week a faernet by the name of Thaler lead •his fine brick re-idenee totally de. stroyed by fire, thie being the isecond good house he lied lost in that way. The fast fire :wee sail to be due to defective stovepipee; •Ithe ..secobc1 or- iginated in the'attic and was -likely due to a crecked ehimihe,y. "Careless- ness," eornenne will eav.In it sense it was, but all fires, With the excep tine of those due to lightnieg, e_nd in- cendiarism May be ascribed tO care- lessness. But the vast majority of these who go through life wiihort s berme* arei,jtist is careless as 'Mr. Thaler 'and esCape through good for. tune rather than good management • Accidents and fires are inearinhly due to 'a comparatively rare combination of circumstances against which the great majority of folk are net ,pre- • pared. • o -o COMPETING FOR DRUNKS McKENZIEKING TPIFTYFIVE. ' YEARS,:00 .AGE* • ""beel• 'gently with the drrfnk" ap- pears to,,hrive been the . order peesed outto the nnlice in the egorder Cities for the reeent liediday season. day ceinbrants • ie the 'Border Cities vvito imbibe too freely of intoxicatine liontore 'may , So • Without fear arrest enteeS they beernee ,ithrttly;" ib itkifte it "newspaper 'report. It mehnt that. Oro:Aimee' es on. the street was to be re-oerrieed ne d tee titivate: tvey' dee:lel:raft* 0,hrist-rno.. and giving it. it stiteding of respeete. The tittle"' ,r n a the oetionte et, eope petition Bit theletierie' .Ittid Weirr try de. It we.; ini't late/ nt Walkereilb where the ...chief constable announced that 'well behaved Art:mice. would itot -be' disterhed. 'their celebreti on. of the birth ef CAMiet. TO the atithOrities in .tatt Windsor, Sandwich and erside this looked like a. geed 'stroke .bifsitieAs so in Order to get, their ihere of fil. drmyks and .keep the trade at 0(3,1, they had, FiliTlilar or- ders iSSiled. i,erhatis "it was MI done With on eye oti the good businesS ex. pected from Detroit. • '-(Hamiltee etlerahl). Rt. Hoe. • William Lyon' McKenzie King was; fifty-five .recently and: 0.ce cOrding to the reeieed standards of eeeend---useftelneeseis'..stiil-a-yoeng. Man. ,To young teen at college, 55 ntay seem a .patriarchal age, bite .as a matter of fact a man has hardly begun to feel his social and academic feet tinder hint until he .is fifty 4, -or more, 'and the idea OfrfOrmer centur- .ies:that a men, deri yeti dignity from a stiff and Steetthed ;Appearance and an. embarrassing reserve that kept .all intrudersat a respectful distance has liaised into limbo. Aedessibility is the mark of the modern man et ebility. He ' is not a- fraid .of Meeting anybody, feelrng - quite able to engage any and all com- ers. If he is ,ignorant on any subject be is not afraid to admit it, knowing well that the world of keowledge .is inexhaustible and not th.e Ian -fiber territery of any. 1Vodern leaders are not' encyclopedias of knowledge, but. they knew where „knowledge is to be 'found and do not hesitate to hiake doe ca it through the agency of others So it has come to be that public men who are. sucessful owe, their suc- cess to cleverco-ordination, much as to their own labor. The nian who can surround himself t:iith good execu- itives will go, further' than the man Who expects. or attempts to do•eve.,. • thing himself. lVite King has a eacu;ty for getting good men ' and setting them to work. This is his success and ast.in his Own lines he is equal to any' he hit sUfficient distinction to 'enable. him to 'holti bib 'own and invite the best men to assist him. He is not a- fraid to get cleVerei men than him- self if they are to he gal Modest but confideet, Mr. tine IF imperturbably settled as prime mini - der, secure in his- abil4y to get good advice and follow. it. • A CAR Ttiltir OBEYS ORDERS A West,:nghouse engineer down at Pittsburgh, Pa, has invented a means tf driving an automobile-by:the spo- ken word. The car, without a driver. can be made 'tilt start, stop, go for ward or beckweed according to in. etiuctions edietated through a tele- phone. It emmde-'•raltrTnie"sticroke et "fishy" if you like, 1101...a lot of queer things are beitig•elene 'eli'ose days. The -fete i-s-nerchlipitd lrq-retie neeting th telephone vire to a heht eteirceeltictderteettmai:riatetele- tacit wbrd, .11:1see titt,eetight to flash end the combination kvetie Pr 'mere deifies operating thgh a eell son- ative to light neerates 'through relays Odell tontrel, the eete:.Theitethe exe elenettom; hit wellen't quite unclem. ;land it. On 'ycin • • ..1 • • • – d'ANADA IS LARGEST • RAI)16 CUSTOMER Electrical ;Apparatus from • the Eh, •;ted. Stated, tiertietlerlir radio equip - Merit and. electrical .• rsfrigprators :Shows catitiotted gain. in foreign ma *44.4*.**• lietii-fateYetteatey-in tariachreatid ober shipment retched the ihighest , ICCOrdirtrtntatstateta-1,- ment issued rieently by the •tiepart, ment of Corrinteree. • Foreign shipments of eleetrical. piitattie !tont the 'United Statee.' for , Oettibt4 1999, ant (Meted to .$14,914,994o. a gairi compared with the same month - year, aceordieg to prelimitArY.fig lust leaned by the dectefeal divi Canada *at the largest purch of reediting seta. with' IVIekido to • Canada wa alse the. most hid:PO*04ft Olirellaget of radio redsifing ectrePOtte • CIAO tte value otanch purchases' .4010)4te4 to $O5,285