HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1934-05-03, Page 64
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AVIATION IN CANADA •
CoMmercia1 aviation touches the
leconPirde interests of the country in
„a vital spot; It enters inte„Canade's
conviction that 'this country had rich
• resources as yet undeveloped,: and
• that 'development can. be speeded, up
by organized:nee, of Or facIlitie It
enters into Canada's ,well-founded be-
lief that this ceuntiT!has a Position
„
of tare strategic value in tne plannIn
, of world aerial highways. • /3roadl
ePeahing-no ee.u4trY in the„ 'WOO
atands tct.gain more from well Organ
Ised :and strongly supported ;cornme
end aviation than this Dominion o
Canada. -Winnipeg - Tribune, .
• TOURIST STATISTICS
, Travelbetween the, United State
4-aaideCeneda-i&-''greaterthitirever',Wn
other.• international boundary inthe
world,' according to return just is-
sued by the Cantidian Government
dealing with the tourist traffic of
'Cenada; During 1933. the number
of antomohiles from the , United
'States which entered Canada., for
touring ' purposes. wee 8,996,887., 'Of,
• these, ;233,418' were admitted- for a
piwiodpot.eieeeding-.A.bee urs
136fora .Perbad" mat •"exceedieg,: go
days; and: -333 for a Period_ not ex-
ceeding six, Mentha. From Informa-
tion received from various sources
teuding co-operation, with United
States officials, it is estimated ,that the
average expenditure per car in the
24-hour class was $7.68;• in !the '60-
• day, class; $59.80; in ,the six-montha
$234107. Total expenditures
by,visitors hr;autemobile from the
',United States dueing. the year .are
placed. at $77,250,000 in Canadian
funds. -Canada Week by Weeh-
14'-Wilen, 1404 fe'ef „einda*
:is P4Perietierf,
it 'WM learn .the.'veiSdeni 'Of blinking
and when it'learns -that ;,it. Will have
ceasted to be ,ii.yonger generatiom,
4indsaY ' • ' '
, FORTY YgAiRs AGO
'
There wee few" traffic jams,, no
redio croOners,.. zlebedy • thqpg10 Of
eesetricting prndictien of , any Sett
Whetever;'•and" if a dollar 'a daywas
a good Wage .fer a wername, at, least
fe • hevias allowed to runhis own' affairs
T wale:nett ,s0 Much-Offieiatinte1leFenee
d as gavernMeate irneose .todaie
, 'Nobody- dreillned• of 'talking aeross
r!" ,the eentinent by telephone. nnechleSs
,With 4uroPe; avietion was in the vie"
ioaary Otago, health regulations Were
comParatiyeli.eketchy and we dispos--
ed of our,owriogarl?age. In .bort, it
s was a simelerage, and containediess_
r 0 -W -bray '
• We can't getlatten fo and, if we
&Add we ahouht probably ;think twice
about it. •But at at thil distance it has a
sert'ef heleyon look.. It is misty with
enchantment, ' betatale'it was a •tune
;When- the prelaleme'whicir beset -i -us
now were Atilt -below„the hetizon.--;
Woodstock Sentinel -Review.
FilNelY:t0T, sAYs.
, '
Farmers, eite.peeple;,yoting people,
old people, . .busypeoplc and people
- who have little to de; they all :huddled
into the Office where, one eieeres car
JilArkera and they: all wanted to get
attended s te;-'at.enee- •
.We de"; the 'same .thing in u' number
• of ways. e find 'our when. we.
go to light ther:eitmace,in the Felt
' WelineW„.abbiat'it Moefhs, ago,.
„that ,the grA:efi'are..,.WiirPed. And Wok -
but' not . is heed for 'fire
do w'e attend to it."."IPOPPle--AnOV4
.right,;,.neee„that,:the fly. .door of last
-..Yeaiii;siio,440',0:07.7ifte,...aiii:aia-- a
,41telitene:MeWeiewettld„nbe cue butter
*Pd I t.h0.'"knowthe lawn hose leaks
like. e sieye, but will they. attend
.0teke': Net reticle ',.Nof ,UP'e
til stern necessity takep the& by: the
ateek'and:ferela. action; ..and -then -they
will "deitire."sereiee ;. "lei& and geed,
Aetually we are a,.:fimni ,lot of
eieopleStratford:Beticon-Heralti,
-
','--,Consider this:ad. a fine type of
Britisli CdItmbi& citizenship: A ‚resi-
• dent Of. Burnaby inquired of the re-
lief depertment of .that -district the
.amount lie 'and his family had drawn
sine e *he had •hecome unemployed.
The , information Was duly given to
'him and he Moiled; '"Thenk 'Yetai
-wish to refued-to--the-niiiiiielpality
the relief efforded my 'fereilYe as we
have cerae into. A little money and are
nowin e p,osatieziyerepay.' ft was a
bitaf. a Sheen foe the elief officer;
but •we'irelidd that' he •promptly
lied,.and gave the 'Man a reeeipt:,for
,the kulkanaimat which he feterned to
the public. fued..Viettaila Tirnes. •
7111
•
PAYING BILLS
• y, . ,
In: litany teems tradespeople' are
ruined because people, perfectly well -
to do, donet pay then- bills for a
year or ttvti.., That is 'alibi a form Of
theft'. . The, man'whe can par and
does. not is on precisely the saritelevel
iee a rneze-who-, puts. his hande into a
till and takes Mit,What he finds there:
Seth People:fate commoe. robbers. -
Dr i Heywood, Biehon of Hull,: quoted
'
' HOCKEY 7TEAMS AB19:0410,
The trips aloe& ..'oeloer ;hockey
*nia notiill unprofitable. Other
atenateies are seeing the start of skates
we use. The archaic and traditional
aketes ofreally European : countries
• are apparently giving way before the,
Canadian': brand,. for in the lest two
Yetire there has been alarge increase'
• in the 41/pet from Canada. in 1031
Canada sea only 0,001 pairs of
skates to Europe, but in 1933,the
expert was 24,418 pairs. '
• . . •
GOATS. AND tattiriAllS
There are two old, stories about
• &ate.; The ,one, where two Igeets ,met.
on a nariow, bridge, but being jest
,geets,4ef_useil-te. 'giver:each =other -the-
." right ofway and there they Stuck; tifi
each sileceedeti in betting its oepom.
• ..enelitenthe sireana below: The other
sterr tells -of twit ,SgeetS, which had
attained some degtee of ,civzhzed
amenitie&_fonLone_laY down, the -
other passed' carefully and safely
over it, whereupon the first rose and
• proceeded on its way, • Thus both
crossed the-narrovv bridge in safety
and without a, ruffling of feelings.
, Was there not soteething valuable fee
Mortals' ie the old -Scheel -hook story.?
-7-11eliftte Chronicle.
'
r'er,
DEAD AND, BURIED .
,
•
Now tent we are reading again
about records in industry and coin-
. merce, we think of :old man DepresS-
. , ion as gene, dead and buried. Among
•others, ,a new high report' fot power
• output was established in February
. when/ the preyious high, in January,
• was -exceeded by 3.6 per cent. Indus-
• 'try in the second month of this year
was screed by over 1,600 million kilo-
watt hours -Canadian Bitsiness
'
B4TTER. THAN DITCHES
• Welcotne tinnounetilenti made be
SMitte, Deputy Minister of High -
Way& ; that ten -foot shoitiderfi will be
'provided aim* provineed highWays,
• providing safe space for pedestrians
and 'also e track for sleighin theWintrtirne .
eerteihly the sleauldeis
Will, be better, than the present .dan-
geroualY deep ditches in Which ,,so
man e people have becn.,killed.-Nia-,
gara Falls Review Jeurnel,
LEARNING TO LIVE
We have to live in oi;t1r to khoW
:what: living is about, 1V,faybe it really
•' deesti't make any difference, bet. it
sen S we have pet :too much empha,
sis'on the ability 'Of youth to hav6
fresh answers lot, prceont troubles;
It Makes hiceieading in, Sunday sup-
plerneuts but it .really isn't :86. Ile'
, yehriger generatiee elealeeeeeoPer•
rIr
HIGH 'HAT
The most"„..rneelutitetary things
wlnch haveliaPPened to 'meactilirie
.dress in thepexiod haVe, been the dig-,
appearance .Oeethe ftock 'coat, and.the
decline in .pbeselarlii .of thO tit') ,hat.
top hat .sitining n, the June sun• :le
a very beautiful spectacle, suggesting
a world of peace, pregresa,and' pree-'
perity in full full awifigIt is-, the crown
ot ,theaucceseful man. -Y, Y., in the.
New. Stetestnee, and Nation (Lon -
VICTORIA'S GOLDEN ACE'
.'The: Victorian period was the
Chi:side ,age of, British Impekialisin.
Itrimeitie new territories were then 'at-
enaleed;„ others, .were settled.. Tiede
vastly' nicreasede Govern'mentbeetarte
• effeetive, and the- CioWn succeeded'
the chartered icenpaniee:.::.Tlie, Brit-
i,lh Were in that age ineomPatably
the mint snecesSfitr Itt.perialists. • I'
suggest that this Was dee IC. !the in-
herent :eualities. of " thei;English and
•Scote than to the more ceniplete ac-
ceptance laylliem./...Akeleireeteeeth_Cene
turyeulwraeTt11e-fikeite
Relieblicenisin 'and Monarchisin, Ite-
ligioa and Irreitgioh, was Iessaure of
-herself, lesa eulterelly gnostic; .: and
so, 'less suecessfuL-'-'. -. Tete Eitel:of ' Id-
desleigh; in 'Ph& English: Review (Lon-
don) z: • -•4
NEW TRAFFIC LAWS
The amendments to the dilating
,
law of the road which are embodied,
in the new Road,' Traffic Bill cover
rnost Of the needs' revealed in the re-
cent official analysis of ine cattses, of;
reed accidents. The Bill „rightly' re-
cognizes that ell' blame for accidents
does not fell upon one elass Of toad
users, and it proposes a number of
changes calculated to make metering,
eyeling,. and 'walking all 'safer. The
first 'main 'provision affecting Motor-
ists is the tleimPoeition of a speed
limit of thirty:miles an hour in built -
tip areas, which are ingeniously defin-
ed. as'areas provided • with street
lighting. This peovision lies 'few, of
the disadvantages cotthe old general
speed limit of ;twenty miles an, hour.
The old litnas abolished becauee
it could net beenforced. It gave, the
Motorist too much occpsietf •.te' think
the law' was an its's' elle AO act aecord-
ingly en stretches of open read in
-
the country. The new litnit will ap-
peal to the reasonable motorist as it-
self reasonableLondon Times.
I
INDIAN AGRICULTURAL
sTAND.AkDs
' Except for eotton, for which Ilthere
exist the East Indian Cotton Associa-'
tion statidards and the corresponding
Karachi and Liverpool standard,
most Indian agelealturel ptodece is
sold Without any systematic and or-
ganised gradieg. Enlarging the agre
cultural, wealth of India depends ona
...
All the way from Vancouver; with their husbands, to jobs in -Newark.
New Jersey,came these two ladies, Mrs. Frank' Connors, left, and
Mrs. Alex. Sin -mane right.., The -two ,couples were arrested recently
in Sudbury, charged with stealing rides on "trains and given 10 deye.
'The ladies are seen just after their release from jell.
by concentrating npon •InipreYe-.
nients in productionand: in market-,
ing-must go hand in heel -Times Of
•Indite
, •
BLESSED COMMON SENSE
Perhaps, we should be thankful for
what foreigners meet criticise in us.
The Britorijs accused of being too
rationel,,,X(enaitnagihative, tenaliirei"
sponsive.' 'Foreigners find hiin, rathei
a dull fellow. .But if Volatility, tem-
perament, and imagination find ex-
pression, in 'the hour of crisis, in des -1
triction and disorder, the Briton mai
thank his stars for his -dullness. , To • Pie. reSoldion' said "wise ;cracks
Plat it diffeeently, he may thank his .and 'sex. ankieS4 were resulting in
common •sense. Surely the greatest decreased box office receipts '
triuniph of coninion sense. is -.to be will be acted 'ape!' soon, With another
found in theimlicee of Greet Beitainresolution. assailing' "block booking,"
Here issell i
tione countrytohetotwhicpeie:ioliu
tkerevra'ttae. )?theiPraetiee-bY(*
-which theatre intern
ti '
sight unieenthe stueliosseition
of
World4e-aeeettaid-Ito-e'whieW-Bieferiat -+-suPPiT'a-lexture9net4re9i. ' ' •
may stilllook as.a rallying ground of The owners. took under -consi.d"
civil libeitie It is not too •nnich,to
:„ he the continuance . et this elation a plan to appoint a cbmnut-
eepethat tee to, meet here with the makers of
p040, 4es tie brighte# hopeof the Ifitne in an effort-to-Plinlinate
ftureAustralasian ;; • uniliebreacherstandltgs
The
between.,,
tore' and producers widened, when
speakers- said they were '"being, fed
apple "sauce:In 'the lend , of '.'Citrus
fruit" They referred to a defense
of :the producers, made by Leuis B.
'Mayer; in Which. the ", eithibiters'
charges that • 'present-day, *turns
were in •ce „LainLinamexal were de-_.
:• •
Mcle. up by
Loyioh :putoshAw.,
.04:ANottAr; 14Vesetil14;
titnanf socier ISageti le 'Shanghai rte
vegla. the fact .theteven • wealthy
• "Glenetio!deletes. pair, petventis
ouly one-third- ereven nae.-teurth of
the wages e414 by the average feraisa
famIle. A, 'PhitteSe, • family; ,tor 14
,1344,nee,: Win Pay: enly $e 4 Month for
a • geed coele but 0,-ftireige family
71;141,:acYf:0:2,30 ,to $45. •
4te
hehlt Of.,t1,PPIngltish
Jy .aeceente for the dlffrenee In the
-.wage -gest ie a Chinese
•
;der°, aPe;:e3".e: -11'9t:!hrui na4k1o1Poi.
handing put ".Cuineeaw"- or. tiro -
d, luc1t,
.
,At 14Veth feast s the guests are Pep -
Posed to tip' 'from, to. , $20, the
money being • banded either to the
-anastereor-aniseress-rof-tirce-Thoescrfor
distributiOrt atnongst the - staff .:ef
servants.Chieese hosts make a'
habit Of sending their rickshaw&
carriages or automobiles for their
guests, and the guest k are supposed
riceahew' pulter,, the coachman or the
"'chauffeur. • ' '
. At. most'. Malt Jotigh Parties a ape-
'741a:41'746to whiertl"rhe:Wriirtiaer? treh ta-Yidgeme;
Is ,supposed to put 10 per cent:. of his
;whit -tine& • The host 7cir :hostess , will
!lite take eeoueh 'money from , the
ash tray 'to ,pae•fer the elgaiettee
and sweet -meant: consumed, , and. will
then hand 'the' rest ,to the • "No: /
Boy" or 'distribution •entteigst, ,the
servant.-
• , ,
It: is a gala day. when the niaster
of the house :seeds. Out e wedding
gift. Tee recipient mese . pay the
bearer 10 per cent. of ;the 'estimated
value of, what he receives, if the tie
.is etude. the servant reports to :his
master, and the:Master will be deeply
hettre Cheats -Drell -int
'Offended at et, he ,implicetion that he
"Indecencies",...:
•
Condemned
American : Theatre Owners
•Angles" Cut ,
Box tReceipts •
Hollywood. "Indecencies" • in
motion pictures were condemned in
a resolutiOn Introduced before the
American Theatre Owners' Associa-.
Eitencl:Derittil •
Relief :Service
Larger14:k7r-ea InCiuded
eriunent Plan, Dr:. Robb,
States;- :- ,
litate.-heee
made by Hen. De .e.; M. RObb, Min-
ister of Health arid .eathee, that the
scheme for emergent dental service,
by which.the citizens .of Ontario on
'relief have '':their. ' immediate .aind
urgent:.dentel,..needh atteaded' to;:- is
being eetended to ,include the cities of
Toronto; Itiniilton, Ottawa and''Lon-
don. '
"'Originally," stated Dr. Robb," it
was felt' that the urgent dental- re-
quiremeneenf the people in the 'rueal
and semi -urban sections -�f, the prov.
'nee shittritHee-hdtenreare u and thai
this should: be done through the,
Praeticini.„-clental Profes.siOn. The
dentists in the areas concerned co-.
o,peiated- rertierkably . well With the
department in this effort; and so well
was the Wain handled through •the
adeisery coinniitee of dentists that
we apPOinted for the purpose, that it,
was not king before: the scheine could
be extended to include, all the smaller
cities, of the province.
"The 'extension we.annOunee Makes
•it Possible for every. person in, Ont-
eriClehotitteartelief to ,finite dental
-Stirvic-e-telc-r-extraetiente;:fe-a the'reliek
•of-Taire and forrepair of .dentures.".
'The cost,' stated Dr., Robb; was in
-the neigliboiliod of $4,000 per meet)).
"That," said . -"ie slight eonantated
w"Dead Sea!
Has .Been Found
own in Otear.i
is From 51)-to---1-00-
low the Surface Between
• Arabia and India.
Cambridge, Eng. -Another "dead
sea" has been discovered -one which,
unlike that in Palestine, is not open
to the ski and in Whose muslce and
mysterious depths -Moves no living
It is far down in the ocean between
Arahia. and, India. To depths 01 from
50 to 100 feet below the surface the
waters .teem with marine life.: Below
-theeerz.levetelike_doeS,,not-Teadst____. _
- The dieceetery is due -t� ,the
search of the 'expedition financed by
•the late Sit Jahn Murray. iThe &air
manderae'nt 'a ftesle report' to Prof:'•
Stanky: Gardiner, exPedition 'sec-
retari ' • '
Prof. Gardiner/expressed the opin-
ion that the leen of life in the ,depths
may be laid t�: the, petreleum:•Whieh
has been seeping into the ocean from
the 'lend thieugh the ages---preducing
in effect eimilar,to the familiar. Pale-
stinian Dead-Sea_b,y bituminous de-
Poslts..
Pioneers Best Liars,'
Deelares. Professor
• ' ' .
. Toronto.. Thhabitants of this
continent . are bigger liars Wail peo-
ple from older cointties, in the op-
inion of Prof: Peter Sandiford, edu-
cational psychology expert at the
Ontario College of Education, who
thinks Ananias, the •Iying :. Greek
must surrender' hia„.. Mendacity title
t� sone of the sturdy pioneers
set round camp free and told; tales
witee they ' weren't busy carving. Out
an empire or two. ‘'
Commenting on the • recent Sault
Ste. Marie Hackle Club's Ananias
competition, Which was *on; lying
up, by Alex. Delve, PeofesSok San:
(Ilford stated such competitions were
frequent eourees of en,tertaininent
among pioheers. •
4‘litmorpttft exaggeration is typle
cal cid thiti contirlent," declared the
•-
professor, instancing the yarns of
the norse-swapper, •David f Harm.
'Prok..'Sandikord thought the,oldplo-
neers dide't have timeh In the way
of''entertairiatent .ito thee just told
fanteStie •Sterleeo
number Of factors qf Which ireeroVed
marketteg is on one.. 1111 eh is ee.• beliern e ru1 bt t else
ing &me' by scieetifie research, but '1;elievee. in :good goyeettittehes,"'e,-Satn.
progress will not he •achieved...Zotely Uel Setabureee '
nied.
World Police
Force Talked
Punishment o f Warlike
Nations' DisoiiSsed
HOt* of
LONDON, Eng.An inteentational'
pence :force for the penislitnenL-i-nt
belligifeet nation Waer diseutteeti
recently in the House of ekenniOnse
•Propeped'•by Lord bevies as one
Wee'lat apptotteliing the , disarmament'
.edestion,-,thecieggestion--wee taken tip-
1....a.v.Viseneatt CeelLaf-Oheeteciod, -Who
sal4 the only Moiat“ use Ok Iotee in ;
.intereational{effeireeWould be through
internailiantiediellie three. •
• Objections were posed on of :t
the government by by Earl Stanhope, t
:with the atnoent_of_Work that_is he-
hhhi edilaponyjv:ecatryhl n.e.? rn,p srep ionfete.ns nads Etch' e eiSoasni nsel le etxatmetnic;edndi
ng done. 'and h
in
rith
is
. . .
Who pointed' out tkelime Wasnow
Under-Seetetare of the Foreign Office,
opportune for the teialleation of seeh
te plan, a number :or the Clarger : na-
tioes. beitig unrepresented In :the
League of, :Nations. .tre termed the
League the only .bo4y, that meld con -
tree such a poliee-ferce Army.
• Earl Stanhope: concluded: • 'The
League et leattenie Was "eenceiareil• to
prevent 'war tattier than to pike
Warr
"
• Sunimer '.School
ox to • HOuSe, Empire
u0ents July .21-26
• This Year.,
, 'LONDON,: .semmer
pehoele, under ..the .ritaitett of the.
MVO'. Empire Soclet whieh last year '
'attracted many from ovetteette 'will' lie
held at Oxford this year, July 21-28.
SPeititera tilhI ltichele. three 'British
cithinet.mititsters-Sie PhhiIp CenlIffie
Lister„'Walter'Elllot and Me. eltmsby-
Gote;' 1Vittleolin MacDonald, . 'Unger -
e Cretaty for Detention Arta! rs Bari
Peel, the High Comnaistiloneiefor Aue.
tralla; JohnBuchan, M. Andro"8leg•
fried, well-lotetve Preneh "'Welter 'on
British aditittistratiete/ thd Alt 'Com-
modore IFellewes, ,who flew over,
Mount 'Everest, • 4
' Melnleere 'of the tichOol•Will bead.„'
COMmoilated in .Wittlhatti and Oriel
Colleges and elftewitete..'
;
Popular Music •
Taste Changes
...•••••••am.m.
Vallee, Whiteman, Olsen and
• Harris See New 'Trend
4
•
. • '
Nevv Yorn-.Mote like muSic, less
like noise -that is the future of jezZ
as • eriviSaged thday by feet' Widely
IthoWneorchestr.„ leaders.
"Repeal is having a *erne:Mous ef-
fect' on our 'popular music" comment-
ed George Olsen ; "PeOple;.'1 think,. are
returning to Waltzes In Viennese tern -
Po. Something like. old gYpsy songs,
with light and derk shades. '
Explaining he is just .a fiddle"' and
nein prophet, Peel VIthitentah placed
the future ef..jazz nit the deterstep of
Aeieripee, compoSer,s. '
"They Must •write something irn
portent," said .the genial Whiteman;
'before we Can play it." ,
"Every move' effect has been tried,"
said Rudy Vallee, Individuality in in-
steurnentation, .in his opinion? will be
the keenote 'of populardarice °relies,
tras in the next few years, '
'Popular music front now On MUM`
be played properly" said, Phil Hattie,
'Bands Will be Composed: et ualified
.;
musicians, inert Whol could' P-fAY.),hat
We call 'hong halree'muSie if nes-
Bary." ' • • A
apical' 3 Wife.
a es at Curtain)
Late Mr:1i' Howard Thnifitcon
Was a: Native of Kentville,
Nova Scotia
curtain
has tung down for Nina Hawes Thur.
store . wife of ,HOward •Thureten. In.
tereatiOniely amoue inagician,
A native of this town, elle was.
• one tithe a choir sewer in St. Jame
Anglican piquteh., At the age of ,16
• she left. to begin:a 'stage career in
the Vetted States. •.
TiPhOlding, one 'ef the fittest tied!.
,
060of the. stage --"The remit
go �n"--hee, husband'and "daughter
Jane ,carried Mit» their performence
44 .New York theatre although. they
knew, the.,•third metaher ot.'"Thut-e--
the. Med: /cOMPany"; lied. left, there tor -
A -sorrowing" tether, George Hawes,
well known, ' 'retired rallivay Man,
"Mourns her passing:40e. She atte
•-ed-&-finiehinee-seltooleiti-Ne*:-England
and Was a . etage, director in .New,
York before•• she married the magi;
clan at the age. of 23. -
• Accompanying her husband on .
hist natienal and international tours, -
.Mrs. Thurston -has -been-three,tlniea
around the world and bas -.seen ' him • •
• petform befOre Monarchs and chief
admItaistrators- of seeeral nations.
• tor and 'handled a 'large:portion of' the
business' affairs of the "great Thurs.)
In recent Issue eta leading Am-
ericanmagazine, the Man. of Mystety
attributed the Maier share of his' see.-
Oess to his Wife. einritig a visit to her
:fathet here, -last November, het. 23rd
•Wedding- -anniVerserr-was4celebritted,
,RadiantlihaPey on that day after,telk-
ing by teleehene to husband mad:
„
de:444r 'then in. TOrolatte she said'
that in all their Married fife thee had
never exchanged a cross word: •,
Struck by an automobile In Ne*_,
York' several year/rage. Mrs, Thurs.
;the never completely. recovered. '
Thurston-and-Compaity...h&d-juit-be-
gun the drat' of two: night show& •when •
the megiCian received word that his
wife had died'.
• Thurston spoke With. hid, daughter
for
foiea moment and ;then informed the
theatre manager that they' would not
cancel the,show. They 'carried
through: to te finish.' •
Besides- r -.father, , hUsband an. • ,
daughter Jane sbUs eurVieed,„ by One .1,::•'„
tee4itotheie'•O8:- -11:--PeieeteTeljetee-T--
,Kennetneok,. N.S, and. three ,sfee;slie '
tWeell---r., chase,. gitffirIthn
Mrs. *deer, ,1',111.;'MrS. W.
Van Blanco,.Weehawken, New Jersey.,
-
•
Trade Agreements
401.inoN, tag.7-.1stegetiationa ehert-';.
between the British: and Australian! -
governments regarding expiring. por-;"
ticinte of the, trade agreement 'signed' ,
at Ottawa., may conceit -101y :have an'
,importanChettring•on future discefe%
aloes with- other p9mlt:11one.
Stanley entice, Australian lege cone.:
miesioner, it wait thouget,,would.like-
ly 'Play an ' Important - role In thi
coining discussions in laying the
foundation for :the wider, negritieteins
thetwili be,necessary When Die main •'
„Ottawa pa.cts.• run out. "
yhe Ottawa agreeinente generally,
as 'With Canade, ere for a' Period of
five years, expiring in 1937, but So far,
as meat is ,coneerned the agreement
With Australia expires at the end of
nett Jeep, while the dairy . predicts
agreeeient runs out next year.
0
• We shall not travel, -,.by the road -
- --Ere ,- day by day "the smine2of •
• many_feet
Is heard weurrnea' i,the stones that 1190
• • Ye shall. be 6:nee to where the
cress roads meet. ,
,
For us the heat l';3r day, the *old
- "by night, 1
The inch -slow "progress and the
heavy load,•
And,death at last so close the tong,
• - grim fight ,
With Man and beast end stone;
for. them the road. •'
Il*or ithem the shade of trees that
new We pipet,
The safe, smooth journey and
. the certain goal-• '
lea, birthright in the‘land of cov-
,• client; • .•;
;For -us-dayriabour, traeail o
' the. soul., "
, „ • .
,
And yeti the roadi is mare as fiever
. theirs;
• It is one gift on us', alone be-
' _stowed! . • .
' For us the joy,of joys, ,0 pioneersg,
We shall not tined, :but we make
• the road! ' •
Friedlander
Cow Adopts Pig
BeahtfOrd.---Willarcl Lefler's cote
apparently has read about' the .cat'
'that:adopted the tat.: The cow
Leffee'S farm in Waterford"had
calf. But bossy wasn't satisfied with
Seth jt Small family,. so Adopted a
tw�-weeks.o1c pig and ' 16 feedipg
both ot therie Witheet any fuss.
•
•Monkey ftiraa to be uSed ekteeelvely
for tailored" and , °veilingeineetbles;
'het triallaings andAecessories... "