HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-02-20, Page 7•
ere
1,4 JAI
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11.
• ...*,/ le 4. Garvin, • •
The 4elegat04 of tlia nre Powers
STe. bi..timileAi 40.4Yerealeo hart
OadY.beitui Frame -Wan retatteeo
ore the hOrdeet atm -TO ` fortUllek
ef the whole Conference i elf, though
,hot necessary to evente afterwarde,
., "range beyond doubt holds the key;
ond it is well ineeed that, ,she is ,..re".
"resented by the inOst brillimit Of heh
younger statesteen -e- Monsteur Tar
di", whose atheseinal keowledge of thej. .
EnaltelesPeeliing world is remarkable.
The. three mein bless teelmically
are those•of battleships, large cruisers
' and submarines, ,
leloating Fortresses -MuSeetle
It is absolutely certain that unless'
' there is drastic dealtng with ,the fleet:
big fortresses .'there, will be no
reicl economy worth speaking abeuth
anue no real change tothearh as re -
heeds naval • armaineets, e They. bave'
• InVeleed. Britain ane'Ameelca,:eseleciel-'
ly In vast *Ole of Mangy and. they
V.i:14 be the tiOck.of satirein aiietbete
generation. 'They aye the world's worse
e symbols' Of war -mentality. They are
not', suitable.engines for any .future
eitare They areeinether Unimaginative
'eatanaple (history 'heti 'furnished many)
of exaggerated preparation, fore -the
Daft ,war. The -monstraue battleethee
monstrous fallacy, Hostile air -
'cage • if there is tenother grapple to
the death between fiaiimis, will attack
nit the supplies and; the life of an
Dorttak.,pepple, not the fieets. An
O'aft will bomb, burn, and ilifle the
ports and. shieping aid the, derise key-
)towus In 'spite of the eNelsont." eltod-
ney,". eitood,". :andso' forth. Rather
'than 'depend on thoee-if. We, ai•e. lne
deed to think be realistic war -,terms -
It would he better to halve the fleet
:and treble tleeair-torce. • •
Germany's Famous Pocket 'Battleship. , .
' Germany setting. anexample.
which inay be epoch-making., Trade:
. the:tally, pize is the they 'of -brains.
More Mains...mad science have gone
into tile.fatnotf:s Geetnau "pocket bat-
tleship" thai. were evee Packed befere,
1110.011e hull Centrived 'With tnihinal
f Ores' of research, •thought, and Shill,
the,"Ersati Preueseer theugh only of
loAgo . tons displacement, will' be • a
.match for any, warship •up to twice
her. site now, afloat. She will been -
.Comparables a blockede-bieakee and
cometereedeshoyer. . As a• hunting
,
and fighting ehip she reduce'? to insig-
'.nifleance' the eruieers of equal die':
placement, 10,000 tons, when have
caused the.prodigious ,fuss , between
- America' and Britain. The german
'pocket -battleship' is .wonderfully de,
signed be sink nearly all the wershies
that could catch her, and to escape the
few that could sink her.
No Battleship °yell 17,00a Tons. .
It is enderetood that at the Confer-
ence some 'propOsale will be made -
with ehery prespect of easy but inade-
quate aereement-fortlengthening the
life of existing battleships and reduc-
ingmore orless the maximum siteof
their stiecessorse Remelt,' for .what
„it Is worth, pets .that maximum too
high. The present "Washington!'
standard ,should be cut down by fifty
Per cent. ' Allowing anything bigger,
merely gives More fildae to cemmene
place es well as, to cost. . Nothing but
limitation of sizes will coined the
. ' sailors of Other nations to equal Ger-
Man efficiency as Stimulated be the
Versailles restrictions; and to break
sway. from "preparation for the Pest
War." We shall be disappointed if
' anY battleship laid .down after • this"
*ear of grace is allowed to exceed 17.-
000 tens at the Most., ' • • •
• Cruisers and Common Sense
.Cruisers are a simplier matter in
'Pito of . all the preposterous bother
ee-that has, been made 'about them since
. the Britesh-,Ameritan muddle at Gem
eve. Fier the necessary adjustment' to
. any agreed parity with the tithed
• States, British requirements in this
branch have been.cut down to aeitini-
,
Munn. •
• It is tettled that :we 'shall not go to
. • War with the ttnited States in any eite
eumstrinees. It. does bet matter a
brass farthing to, this colietry .wheth-
er America in the name cdparity gets
three or tour 10,000 -ton eight -inch gun
pettisere over apct above -what our .hd-
Weals' think justified by a Peden*
a parity. Let theta -reMember
et *Igf thsir professional counter,
•
arts ,across the Atlatitie have want:
eti in their hearts, is two to Wm. The
htatesmen on both sides„ not the sail-
ors; have Saved ea from that.
• • • The Position ot japan
.• But it is said that afteateVill jeopar-
Ozo the eontiegent H�ovei-MacDoii-
id
tinderstaeding. by iiisisting on a
Slightly.. higher ratio for 19,000 'ton
kruisers; giving her an" aditionai two
er three of these hesSels. We do not
belie -rte for a single Instant that the
tOnfeVence• 'tin be iMPerilled on this
of an isstiel.•Cytir Mote anti -Wit im-
litfeal ad teeing:eel. • The Japenese•
lire a Wise.'people. They know that
31rd here admire and litte• them; that
he whole English-sPealang- wetlif de'
Atiros amity and cooperation with'
01'0'1 en l'alheakethali ef Hee iteid
let 'live; Mid that_ furtlit:r .goddwill,
thottgat aui iinflOnderable Oen-WU or
ie6lritY, is a real equivalent tea co'.
atrannte.of- tonnont. 'Againt; they-'
Ore Weij.ltlydrelliat the''"Ersatz ttrens.
ten" will Make Obsolete the destgus of
•all the eight.inch ,cruiseri which • weed
Ittelik Me -newest . beast._ .
' Coto th:e Plesh
' Prunes for the pi' tit is wedded to
_thte theary of artned Secwrity by Istd,
air,and sea alike an the only titre
e
.. ,e1
...t -
1
0111tiilhaetheintee.eteulIhert.;139u MU3el)eittienee• Mt 1040•44 the COVeltan
dad the Ifeleilef .Pitat give her 'no gen'
prohlundly disagree' With, the hbeele.
but he. be 111.4fttleht With It Is 10°110.
It may be megibe et iesuperehle im
pediment. to thi,,,g nerat proseelie ec
disarmenient: it ma ,.beeee we think
both a imenologlei inietelre and SI',
technical ft:Olecy he regards ultiMote,
security Welt. But it Is an abeclutel
French coniectien not only fixed in''.
thamind, but burnt Into the flesh. by
;the' terrible memory Of.two:teampliag,,
ravaging, wrecking envisions. .. The
new Oreneh national System Of Oman
meets ante, fortification provides te-
lativele to tharest of Eutopeettritehe
included, ailoniiiiastedipleMacy ilithedt
hP with; Poland andTthe ittle.Ententeh
a. doinheafie'ermii a dominent , 'atre
force; .and"a. Specialized natty Which
wheel:dais are ctiffipleted teetcata=1:,
"elude Maeketr streekth, in cruisers and
deetrby•ere as well as tee Magt feareith
elite eueniarine-foe exieting.
, .
No Abolition Of Submarines
.
. , .
•
How •cee the Five -Power ,Conferetece
Mitigate the situation „on the naval
sideh itis uselessly suggested lib*
France, in her 'presentstate of mind,
.shell abolieh hubmarinee altogether.
She will de nothing et .the kind. 'No
French Governnient could clo it. The
Republic cormenes the mosfettherent
and unified of colonial enfDires. Our.
neighbors regard as indispensable to
their CoMplete projectef SecurIty an
assured ' conneetten _with ' the man-
power ,ane material reseurces of their
greateeiniselidated.Noith Afetean do -
Minion. Tee MarseilleseAlgiers pass.;
'age forward.. and ,backgrounds is held
to be a chief line of life; requiring to
be eroteet.e ith' a definite submarine'
ot!,
• MAY p(JCCED 'LATh• HON: PETER LARKIt4 9
HoU. yincenli 'Massey, Canadian minister.;too,Washington. „Who is likelY
to be the net Cane:than:high. commissioner in Londoe, in.successian td the
late Hon. Peter .C."Latkin, believed, at Ottawa. e George Waseington
.
Stephens, fOrther head of 't'he 'Saar governing commission In 1923-26, may be
eccredited :to the .'W,laite 1-louse•to replace Mr. 'eeiseey. '
arid cruieer supeeinece- in the. Mediter- ' • . . . •
. •
teneen.Sealers Draniai
'Preparin for Past War • • •
'Thee,: nothing to be done? Are
ive„ te. throW up. our hamlet' Not at
elt Thotigh.euhmarinhe eeeenot . be
abolished altogether a most. valuable
tetermediete. gain is peSsible. 'As we
said let the 'etateenten: of americah
B ritain, and • Japan etep..•"preatiring
terial.' het °there: 'agree accordingly to
abolieh he 'gigantic .battleship, even,
4 tbe preseut. moneters mtiet be
per-
mitted to die eta .vitinin a hpecifled
-period • instead' Of being 'summarily.
scrapped. Let them.. seduce, by at
least one half .the maximum now
al-
lowed for repia,cement ships. Noth-
ing sniailer than .proposals like this
would he worthy qf the 'decisive .spirit
Of Charles Hughes. at 'Washington in
lop.. Let ehiseheedene, and •Franee,
though still unable tie abandon her en-
ilerwatee :boat, cold not refuse 'to.
diminish the gravity of the ssubmariee
question by. consenting to some de-
finite limitation of sizes and numbers.
She is now oompietiag at. Cherbourg
the, sinister 'Sureouit" a giant: 'sub-
marine of Over 3,000 'thine. That Way
the old ' madness liee-threat• and
counter -action, ,polson and ,antidete.
Limitation otters' the likeliest means.
of accommodation with Italy. ' -
But are we eirually bound to say,
that the: German pocket battle-cienser,
however natural and masterly as
triumph over Versailles restrictions,
Is crammed with challenae,to competh.
thin: More of ,these vessels are .to
be built (though,only feta are as yet
mentioned)' by the great maritime na-
tion e•h•lela won -again the blue rebbon
of the Atlantic foe passenger 'steam-
ers...Aiayone 'who reads: "Neatens"
and the. "Marime Rundscheu," eh()
ablest natal annual and monthly in
the worlffelees at on.ee that german
seaspirit iitinteese thougherepgsed.
The Fiee-Power Cenference would be
foolish if it three', the tailed' eye to
that. fact. At least let them get .4
plain, aeswer to e plain question. How
many of the, 10,000 -ten eight -Inch gun
cruisers would be required to be a
'match for one "Ersatz Preussen 7"
Greateet Sacrifice Mahe. by Britain,
No eacrifice can be askeeefrota any.
nation ..apprOaohieg that made' by 1:tri-
tely, which held the sovereignty of
the seae for long generations and now
on the linver-elacDonald basis ac-
cepts equality all it e implicatione
-7-the greatest change of. its kind dur-
ing a few short that history has
known.-lidntreal Standard.
for the pest War" at, ,ehoenteue wiete
ot .menet- and gross mituse of nea-.
R-100 Will Not Be
•
Taken' to TrOpicy
„
Gas4lineEngines Would If e
Dangerous. in Extreme
• Hat. .
London. -The new ilkitieh airship,
R-160 es • not considered suitable, for
use' itt teopleal 'cliniatee end. cOnsfe-
queenly • her operating . will be .con7"
fined., for sonte thao at tent, to riortii.4
• Ititildes, said *Holt P,. Moittaghe,
linder-Serietety for Air, itt reply to'
questions ft Parliament. • ' • .
Mr. Illontatue expidined the R-100
wai fitted with gasoline engines,
•Whicb *bid&he highly dandirois, in
the „eictrenle 'heat of. the .troPiee.
WAS not' proPased e
the .epeet with CoMpreesiOn Ignitiett
eAgiireo Veleta *retie lei:Wits used:1110e
sister ship, R•101. Since these engitiet
were Strir.io the experiltental Stake..
•
the 11.10.0is to analteler trial flight
-freer 13 titei n to, Coa nada,- In tile sPri4.03•••-••
ad.
'eThe most seeceeeful •religiet is a
superetition Which'
an enslaved
plillotophe."-eDean tsgs, 0. F. Vapier, .. .0 ,
4 .
Religious Batile
Will Be Filmed Upsets England
n Ice Floes
Varick Frissell, Amateur Dir-
ettor, Heads Company
Now in Newfound-
' land
41 sound -screen romance 'with its
• •. ,
theme centering about the adtentufes
of Labrador seal fisheries and the
perilous lives of the old-time fisher-
men out of Newfoundland ports ie the
project `undertaken recently by Ver.:
telt Felseell, amateur 'cinema director,
whose.expeditien, aboard Captain Bob
Bartlethe iehooner Moerisey; Will sail
farm St. Johns, Newfoundland, early
in Feberiary for the: sealing grounds -
In et -elaboration with technical ex-
perts fathiliar With the 'requiremente,
of sound- fitin peoduction, Mr. Frissell
will utilize as the stage for Mi. drama
the lee floes -and north Atlantic
wastee which eonstii:ute the seal hunt-
ing grounds of the fleet of sail ane
Steam vessels ,which annually • puts
out" from gt. Johns; in quest of the
Pelts of these denizets of the neer-
Arctic regions.
During one et his trips to the north-
land Mr. Friesell became •acqueinted
:with Captain Bob Bartlett; vhteral
seal hunter, lisheeman, sailor and
deep water adventurer, whose tales
oh his tripe -abroad the hforrisey have
been Materiel contributions to the
sage of sailing men. :Captain Bartlett
will not only supervise the selection
of. locations on 'which scenes Will be
"shot," but will play the part of a
sealing captain in the Min, a char-
acter role not far removed from that
which. he. Wive in .actutte life. •
Thome ha ehhite of the prodection
have selected Charles Starrett and
Miss Louise 'Huntington. for the Pro-
tagonists of the play.. Although Mr.
Starrett has flgered in leadieg toles
In screen stories before, Mies. Hunt-
ington has never before appeared in
(hie capacity.
. Situation. ,Serious Rari/.c. f
Anglican Church
.Circles
London-L"The biggest crisis', Since
•
'the:. 46formation.7, ThiS, is. the des-
scription being. applied �- the. re-
latioeshetween the Church and State;
.whien'are again agitating the entire
country,' folloWing recent action bY.
.the 'Church.Assembly in adoptieg the
.Archbieboe. of York's recommendation
that . a:commission. be appointed to
• prelate Britain's .refigiouS ills.
.A statement issued recently by the
Archbishop of danterberyedescribeng
the .siteation as :preceriee's• 45 regard-
ag Moderate 'in • the elehunrstanohs,
because it ii.realiz'eti•that if tbe ex -
tea -legal' actions of the 'Bishops should
be ' brought into 'open conflict with
miblic la*,:the geeetion. of 'disestab-
lislement will be .rateed in an -amite
.ficulte,
rchhishop of Canterbury says
nobody wents disestablishment,
but the Archbisbop. of' York says that
'perpetual anomalies are arishig in
the divergence between the marriaee
law of the, Church and thet of the.
state. , • .
• ' Islet Too 'Great
"The prihe ef diseetabllehment,"
contieues the 'latter, "would not .be
too great to pay for spirituel • inde-
pendence." '
And the Bishop. of Durham: "The
only solution, et spiritual • indeeend-
ence is disestablishment."
•The Biehop; :of Wineheeter: "We
are face to face With the gravest cbal-,
lenge between the spiritual and secu-
ler. since the Reformation."
Other Church leaders are stressing
the fact thatlawlessness is beginnteg
to spread in the Church . of .England,
but they' admit thee these in favor of
aiseastablishment•are in the minority.
Now, however,, the number .will greae.
ly Increase If an open' conflict. through
the late courts begins ; as It Is expect-
ed to shortly.. • •
• ' We weaken' wheil we: exaggerate.. •
. light -et day."e-Lerd •Salisbury.:
British Youilis
J or Dominion
London. 'Under an •agre'ement
between the ,British aad Alberta
Governments, 100 youth.; from 17 to.
20 yeara of age are ,being 'selected
by Herbert Oreentield.„ agent -gen,
oral fel` Alberta, :for agricidtural
training and. settlement in Alberta
by early sumer. The. Arst group
will sail 011,1March 1S.
Canada -Colombia
Track 'Expanding
Next Fifty Years Aerial Surveying
I Belong to Canada Durk'
Esme Howard is, Full of Great Areas in Cealada 'Photo*.
Admiration for Dominion- • graphed for Mapping and -
Jorge G5nzaJs, Consul -Gen-
eral,„, 'Predicts.. Futur6-
, '.Stady Groixtli ••: • ,
• • •
. • rilie 4-te•In,' trade betweTen'.Canada
'and',Z.:•010,mbia',In,the past seven : years
has 'been .reinarlfe.botOc; Said , Jorge don-
consill-ge4eraP,or the •RePtiblic.
of ColombiatoCapada recently. Singe
he began his 'dutie ,in 123 tie ex -
pinta from the republic to the Demi-
Ilion bed' increased, 20. tithes and, the
exports from the Dethinion'to the Ite-
,plbli6 hadincreased 12 tiMes,' he ad-
,•detd' illustration.. .
SenorGonzales said that the, posse
bilities :of a' still greater Volume' of
trade betw-,een the trp, countries Would
beunuct enhanced hy,a direct line of
1,11pS between, them. Canada was lit-
tle • kneten, in South emerice and a1
most mikn3wn'', in Calbeibie. • This
• •
was, targely due to the fact that' there.
was 'n.o .direct • oo.nirnun ca tion by. sea:
•At present goods 'from Canada reich-
ed Colornbla Only through' the :134ed
S•tateti, ,end When tee geode' i•eachaed
the south - tbey, were.' hieoWn, no t as
catiadian • Produpe, :hut as Ameeiege.
'Oily -when the pi:educe: reaehee CO/.
'rimbia as Canaalan would ibeeteade
reach its full poseibilitiee. •
. Demand. is Great”'
:E'er thele greet denaane for. the
things that Cenaele preelucede Though
Coloirmia ie. tech • -and can produce
:flora and fauna Of eteeri.known. de-
. eceiptioe because of the vest variety
of bee:. cliniate, yet elle needed elle
'reported great quantities' of. iaanufac-
tured article, • of thaeleineey ,o itself,
and particulaelyi of flour. •,,!' .
'But"said Seller Gonzales, elf
.Canada is unknown in COlembia, ;the
reverse is also true. rt is not under-
stood. that the inhabitante' of our • re-
publicare •60 Per eerie white and that
they carry in their Wood all the coeie
ege ane energy of their. Spanish; fore-
fathers, the Conquistaderes. We have'
Many. of their fine. ipielitieg and We
have Cast off many of their, bad .ones.
We are not conglomeration of p,ete
pies. We have an. cirganizeit state.
We hate a life and mind Of our own."
The •geegraphical situatlon of Col -
theta was such that it had no sea-
sons -and all climates, said Senor Gam-
zates. Feom the torrid, hutnid
mosphere of the coastal re,gions,
where• trial:heat Products grew, to the
.higb, dry.hold atmosphere cif ,the 'Cote
(beeves, where the prodecte peculiar•
to tempekate dounteles grew, the •Col-
ombienti !could draw all sorts' and
kinds of produce.' While •coffee was
the largest eeport of the country at
present, 'there Nees a great field for
°tiler exports, particularly of fruit.
Gm/eminent Stable ' ..•
The government of the country, too;
he added,•was stable. :This wa's :wit-
nessed be the fact thaethe Colombian
pee° .was, .prgetically at Dar .on, the
Canadian exchange anti; fluctuated
very little, kat all. Therehras every-
thing, therefore, which, was likely to
give. great 'promise of expansion of
•trade 'between the tee) co:untries.
' Colombia 'Was, moreovere • peed/s-
eamed to traddhotith the Britis-h peca•
pies,. tor. they still reenembeved the
day whee Briteln.,,had . Sent .out anti
and money inh Men• to aid there ID
threw:fig off' the Shanisleyoke.
"Half t world would
evils .the,
stop le they had to be done in. the
,
• elteeN,
Lopking-Ater Canada's Interests
•
,
• • ,
01401-0GRAf314 HERE' thOWe .helearilaef'oteeokrts 'Fbn NAVAL: COetheAtfeet liN LOtertartN. winko. ) hl. face -took sloi
Left to right-CoMlioclore •Wa;ter Hese; erf nae- at :mor; c.as t. mimei c L ir
. ,,e:nce; ar'l .1•St31es-altar's etrgnee. It made Ma
1 poste:met fi-e look long." e • '
NATIONAL SPIRIT
Other, Furposes--Exi.
tend Aeroplane's
. .
UsefUlnesa '
BrRitshA
eturn.rahe
fnr"aLoci°ngrevope
Visitt
tto of N. 1.-; t2y9, ta.h:a etlittde
Washington. -,-"I think the.next frfty to'tteir winter quarters It is now pas+
years belong to Canada," said ir sible ta suntmarize the 'aP'rlal -Work
Esme Howard.' • aP „ Performed :14.Y the ',Royal Canadian Air
The British Ambassacler, soa"to re- Force for the various service&o.of the ,
tire, returned fforn his fareivel/"Visit Department -"of. tl‘ Interior. :Dtier
to the Pbminien ebviongly, refreshed sincethe war there has-7:been' the
nd invigorr;ted 'and full a adult:Fa, •elosest :co-operation "b4Ween the AO'.
" • Forceand the,D:epartment of., the
"It, was delightful ta. Visit Canada interior and While originalli thin:De.
again' and, :renew atquaintance- pertm,ent's aerial'activities were le'rgek;:
stip," he'Said: . „ lk Confined to fOrest,Patrot and aerial
Discusging the economic future of photographs', (*.late years 14as•heen: •'
Cariada;• Sir Eshie yeMarked that titi- • found that the aeroplane 'pawhe used,
less 'fortunate- cottritrfeS;. the bY Kakny. other.sefvfces: in,their aciepm ,
minion's -eggs 'Were not all in one. bats- and in. the iiiministratioii
let.. He feresaw the industrialization of' c anada's natural resources. •
•ca: the. cOuntry with •-the development results obtained during tfie,Sea-
a bhdro electric :power sOnrees. ..inop. of 1929 were more than usually '
which ;it is wealthier:than anyeatheit successful ie. aerial 'phoMgrephee -
land..". together ;with the advance, in 'files. aerial, photographs are 'need...
not only for. mapping but for water.;
'Powee investigations hiniber cruising' •
teed estimating, geological ,investigas
done, and various , engineering pur-
posee. , In feet the aeldallthotegraPbs •
provide. the means for aesistingeht •St
material. way the ultheate enaiegis of •
the resource s: of. a. dietriet. As: an.
example thie year ' an area ief over, .
4,000 eqttere :Miles was hluitographedh
northern pritigb • Columbia .eor the
• purpose Of ,taking,'stodk of its natural
resources.;Thai preliminary repeats
'fitdicate that' this work vattil 'So 'satis-
factory that aewlee field of• ifsekeitiess
ha p• been opened up for aerial icon
naIssance
. • .
In 'eh eight detachments of two ,ma-
chines eacli were .used' last season.
and the aggregate ;flying time totalled
more than 3,409 hem's. Activities
extended from Neve Scotia on the s•'
east to tritigh .Coliumbia nettle west
chid ineracied WOrk every provincee
To ail Aimee 70,060 eguare 'miles were
covered by aerial ithetographe of'. ..;
which '24,000 Square .milee'Were verti.
,ekte pleetegrapay and 46,000- square -
miles Ohligee. Vertical Platitogi•helia
is used by the, Topograplaical 'Survey
•;HvoauliifdaxbeteaVa:er-711;era,,thepziuxe217ian,t map rough country Or *here .great
. .
industry ehd the use to. which vast
ahd varied resources might he put,
and proportionate and neeiseary ine
crease agriculturah'preeuctioh..
Expressing ;a particular intereet in
the opening of Hudson Bay, Str Egme
said he wished hp had: been able to
visit that Part of the country as well
ez the Cobalt district.
CANADA' NATIONHOOD
'With eiwioue ,ride the'Ambassador
theO'Spoke of the Domiaion's nation-,
hoed and seid he had' noted with a
thrill of interest national spirit of
the Canadtaes which, inherently'Brit;
leh, ever .grew and strengthened.
olesereed also the breadth of the Can-
adian outlook reflected in the press
where prominence, was giVen to weald
and imperial affairs...,
This. was Sir Esme's first visit to
Canada in the wirecet time, ''The air
is eoelearehhe said. ""The braeing air
in Ottawa I shoed think is not unlike
that its, the Swiss. Alps". •
ThehArabassador liotte.d. that some
thee he eveuld be :able • to returh
Canada for a longer .eisit. When it
was : suggested • he sl:duld take. ,sik
months or so for e leisurely trip :front
,
deed."
•
"I arrilghewingt e .. n g •)1cli", he
said„ lies, eyes .were merry.. He roSe
•
Saskatchewan to
Have - No New
Court Buildings
Anderson Government Re-
quiregiall Funds for Edu-
' cational and Highway
Developments
Regina, SaSk.-i7,...e, will bene 'new
court .house 'tor -..katchewanthis
year. . ”,
That's •••• ree of the Anderson
Coverer •;ehich has been urged to
•bulldeeveral new • law 'court' stette-
1,11T..6.1as.e...aesw.er is 'thati the Gereerrment
must look atter educational end ,high-
ways expeaditeies first.
Sir Predeeick Hauitain, 'Chief Jus-
tice of the.Couit.of Appeal, other emi-
nent twists bereisters, and Re -
ghee. civic leaders; pressed the Govern-
ment to -build a million -dollar law
courts building le the Capital City,
but they were turned] dowe.
Saeltatoon asked for a nett- court
house and there was remota af a plan
to melte . the Coat of Appeal to the
Nerthern city. •
:The Government ha S called a halt to,
Sis'katooe's ambittens. •• While the
Goeernment tailed down regueets ter
•a new court house, fittentions. are te
spend eome m,illions on beech:lee et
other kinds this year. , •
A 'million -dollar school for the 'deaf
at Saeeatoon, it new Arts bitilding.at ,
the lenireesity of Saskatehewen;an
institetien for mentally deficient child-
ren, additionat accommodation it the
Provincial -Home for Aeed. People Mill
more acCoinmodation provincial .•
sangtoria are aMong the things plan-
ned by the Anderson administration.
On top of -that Dr, AndersOnis keen
about putting in new eehools In. re-
mote parts of the peovieee. including
northern. areae where hatebeeed and
white childrert a,re 110t new served.
The highways Progfa'm is. a .particu.
larle afebitious on.e.•
detail is required, while' the 'oblique
photegraPhy has afield of Its oven'ilt •
mapping and exploring .our great hin-
„teiland. '
• . Canada has for .yeerseled the world.•
:in aerial surveying and during: the .
past season has consolidated that Ieed-e.
eiship by 'applying. ter the'llest.,time
,in any•cohetry, aeriel'inethods to gee- •
.detic recennaissanhe and. transporta-
tion:7 .This ha 's been done With a very
marked ' savieg 'both •In. time .and
money; perticularly as ,theetearle
been •laegely •done .by aeroplanee. en
Photographed operations en Weather.
whin was eneuitable. foe, photogra•phy
,and; When otherwise the .Olanes wpuld
have been idle. a In .all more than
.300 hours were flown for the G'eodetee
Serveel Of .Canada giving an'. incnease
of about ten,.per cent. in the utilization..
'of the. photographic machines'•at • to
.eipense for equipment et personnel.
This 'increase,. .however, .
part . of the. stere as 'two-thirds •.of
the geodetic .Work was dons by one
iletachment,"cnly in its spare time..
It ts reasonalee 'av.,nnfrs that 'w;111 ,
the benefit of a. season's. exh-erienee
, in aerial work the Geodetic Suevey
will .be glee to Make use .of the aero-
plane even more; exteasivelk in the
future.
. .
Tete. operations • this year have ,
shown that the geotietic reconnais-
sance, both gees:jai and deteilee, can
-be ma -e by aeroplane, an Rem being,:
cover I in, a few hours 'that ,wouhl
talte,a-ceks c:r months of ardeous
trevel afoot 'The stations havieg •
been "F•6;:',,e(1, be tower-byalding irate!
eee ie trentported bY air. and 'land-
ed •-:.rt sort..e :ake oneal. the station.
The wo4t, completed the PartY :nog -
ed "ot che'netystation Ix.' plane which -
brings in, on .its, freih •stippliest
and pia'erials, The observing attrty
et et .its lights b aereplane atig
n-.0ved from statioe te etation in
the ,eitne way. In addition to all this
the cotief of the 1)arty and ,he Head'
4)friie in Oteawa are thus able to keep
in eer.ost daily; ttieeh with the vale -
ems', weleie scattered: trees' of the
organization%
During, the season the aeroplane .
3arge:y used by the aupervis-
ory agineer and mentbers a
.hic staff 40 keep In touch with dt
•veiopments and •prospedting 'through -
reit
the Prairie Provinces and . the
..Y.crt';west , Territories,: Those ene
Efigek in mining activity in many parts'
r•f .Canada are pledge -more and mere
...lian.ce in aerial Prosp.ecting' and
• re nenortat n.-Nhtur'al hesoureeee.
.Arrieritan'."ralkies
NVe‘oterri":.S.riiii:.-rbe American
!-• repleie with neeetit en& Solent,' .
ofter,.6 1.0 the' tongue that
answ; and
« • .' the' American'
r- iSO .ac-
, ht.
: :- affecting the t.e.
•:.. c•f the yoUng
' dn't h
;•,,ehe . Ti'oe irtlei have conne
•Ivat I 1711 .reason why' ..•
b#. pettnit%-d to American,
-Vetr.4- Ofigh-eliespetkiree.
, • •
•
It Is learned to spend el9,ee0ee0
within the heht three :feels en im-
prot-e.d, Tor s
:
•
• Vevotees of Sport
Clkotttbni Progreet: ;PeePlie et all
ages and both sexes 1%sste Pre,":otts-
haute, ti:scuso,-.4'ng the Coq/we ot t1,11‘. rr
thet thee ani of this or -41.v: boxer or
wre.tiel arh 2!s opponcn", 1
-trt fro,
tholsaras of 11,..,t14, n.1.0.•h i
eaeia. year. ctirplor.a ic.st...itror:74.•:'.
Matters 4.11`e o\tr yo:'.
peole: .1 'shoed like •. • •••;...e sciitc r
t1om:Al4 In wort
artist iee ecnmic er other ,t.'4.174-1} :••
acter. In all sirc:•ity, e '•••'‘,:
hthe,••;',eira aleve
: _ _ .
• Mrs. Blebfae ntw', hr.'
•6
•
•
11:04,:Liog up yrIr eenrsge. helIT'hea
deetrey.
it.
•