HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1934-05-31, Page 2•
,
he
Readers.
rot
rn14.
fifIrOrais
, Glynn Elliman, a pilot of Imperial
Airways is travelling as a special -Fly-
ing Courier' PY the JrA&fail to India
carrying two copies, a a talking film of
the Prince of Napalata, which it is most
'urgent shall reach there satelY.
The Prince is in 'London, too ill to
travel, and the talking film Is sent. to
foil the efforts of THE VHLTHRE. his
half-nretber. in India..
• On tire intrne Mair line travels Norah
he. said suddenly, Can bother you
Seaman, -a girl Glynn had met onlya
,week before.' Stefan, Max and Da for a bit of solder, or sealing wax,
agents a the „vulture are toiled in
,se..verai attempts, but at Galilee the at- al. anything 1can run into a pedlock
tache case in which.Glynn carries, one to. preventanykey opening it?'
films stolen. Next morning after the
,linea ha5 tett Galilee,. Stefan and Max, The 4nanager Pulled Open a drawer
who
worictihanished,' ve. staylearthat twOed behind. thinkingetheir of his desk. liHeyeta tube of, licrukit,
n, copis are . o
-carried. by thi-,Colirier.Stefan hires -a g1 he I'd • • Squeeze -goon-
Of
small 'plane andrikopes to catch„ the that in and after an hour .or two
-Pner..but engine` trouhis 011Yrc,Tes,,f!:!11 youli fld it easier smash;the
they leave without, ' , _
pad -
Is again attacked In linen'. lock than to make a key open. it.” 1-
01ynn Is, ordered by the - Prince, to ,
ward the Man asslatlui idui 'ait,Atbins. Girls, with • Some _contortions va-
ne ban a •aneatal,chain 'MO° Ond OlVe9 dressed enough, to. get] at the. chain
the key‘to Norah: At Shargah he stave r r_
aboard Alm Plane. The Passens- and out the ends of it held to-
er-nsibes--a-watter-...40 _10mt.s_where. _gether_by_the_padiook and then the
He Glynn keeps the film on his ;person.
manager squeezed a liberal dose.' of
plans•to assualt Glynn as he . the keyhole, and
ters his cabin for the night. • tne, sticky stuff into
a bit of bent steel would °lien.",
"Then -man assured me no, key but
it's own would fit it," said Glynn
doubtfully.
, "And wbat did you expect him to
say if you asked him7". retorted the
manager good-naturedly.
Glynn frowned. make sure,"
pushed , a ;little wad of paper in :On
'CHAPTER XIV top. "Hopa
- ,
it ;i0c-inT )04,'.- grinned
NEXT, STOP: INDIA the manager as Glynn **stored bis.
,
When a Man makes exact and Min-
,elothinetirorderi 4,becaUSelf 'it (lees,
ute,plans for action that is
you may need.a pair of seissers.to get
. to, begin
, " •
t a Certain instant and carry through undressedtonight.
' I'll, chance it," • said Glynn hep-
' .t.treadjniit' ideas -aTid-aiter',thlans
-in ;it split fraction of a aecond if 'the, haves to Worry, about it." .
ifirsC 'stip pf,,theoi .04 74'3,s -exist* Gwadar,an the bar.
indeed it ,is Only the ,rtian trained t9 Ten coast of Baluchistan, is no. more
Jive and act` on the emergency of the than a halting place for the air lines,
moment who can da-, this, su*ostully,.., and, except for the few servants .of
is a tribute to the ability of ,Dass, the Company, 'Glynn Itnew 'there
tine Indian,. to meet the 'unexpected wenid be nobody. but the passengers
that he le:as_nblete act ,as he did ow there- .And the; next r stage- would
,ttie instant of his .stepping out into carry thein -lo Kttracht:"'
,the, corridor: He •exPlained: this to Norah. as
He took his first stride forward theY,humnied.into the air the
after Glynn'S receding figure, check.: :liner ,beaded for Gwadar-, and she
ed, turned With the speed andin- Ak,„ and said almost sadly. "It his
istilictNe movement ofrao scared ' Wild been -:a wonderful , Week, and tirA
animal, . dived 'back Within the almost sorry, this is the last dairtif
cover of his -own door. As, he had ex- . • ' , • ;
peetedlynn ava•wallting( down the Snipe here, said ,Olynn promptlyeorridor and ..
was thateurthe est:I-mar; -"The-only-thitirtliat-conselee-me
number :of paces. l3iit here came pore
1;111thyou.
i
ngown'ohnYd-etir,it towentn
Hydra-
theoUneXPected: Glynn was not alone; e, ,
a step bebbid him moved the figure ,hesitantly, 'If it. would' be, ,Possible
.of ons: -Of the Goiallianies: POicemCri., in, for you to; wait Oir at 'ItYdraPere long
uniform 'hilt 'bare-footed-Whith • ac- enough for ine„ to deliver lily.- packet,'
Counted' for no itnnfd.Of his ;Steps be- and if your train has gone by then,
ing heard as he toek. them with Glynn. to take ,the next one on together."
" " •
r-q$inn had arranged' that a'sentry hardly 'he dmibt-
Shouldhe,liosted.in_:the;Corridor out -fully. "My people will be expecting
- Ofi' that. train,*.iiiid*my father
w
"should be inspected and relieved at
intervals tmtil. the m�rning. He took
another , precaution against being get
at- in ,,hik'rOom--7-remernbering hew he
had been , drugged • or doped Or , gassed
and no trusting,, a, -policeman to, be
any Jess liable to .be got at, He dis:2
.,.inissed the .gnatcl.,wlinhad , been post-
ed. in his room, Closed,:his, door and
it;ithoutliotlieling aboat, the Security
,
of :the ',leek, ..trriok from .his bag a bie,
• gimlet,' a -screw-driver and some long
and heavy screws.
It was 'the,work•of a• Minute or two
.to bore ,a" hide in the floor close ;to
to ,itisertend-Screw-dew
one of the screw's' Until it held beyond
. the -posnibility of being wrenched -or
.lorced mit under' pressure, but leering
length :enough, of it ,alifl
kye oor leVP1
.to engage the foot of: the 'door and
'prevent ;it, opening. He crossed to the
,-rivindetv and dealt With it methodical-
ly in a Shriner; fashion of screWIng it
-
down beyond the' possibility of !t.
be-
ing opened horn, outside
He 'undressed, -without remoV•
thef,ehiiiir;and ease round his,
. Waist, ,PuthiiLPYjantite.__onLover.:Lit,_
and with. his 'pistol: under his pillow,,
' • •\
- . .
Dass knPW,Whek'he was beaten and
. was too philosophic ,time in
regrets. He had failed here, bufthere,
.
was still a long way to go to Karachi
Hydraperelie .weritt-bed and
' asleep' before 'Glynn.was.
Next ,:morning, before . the start- • of
,. the liner, Glynn ' had a word With the
• 'AirWayi manager in his dike and
gave. Inv a;brief message to be
;!ed to ., the Prince's Secretary report.
....lug All Well and no further attempts.
Then be asked a ettabal Miestlen' but G`srightY;'1,11110-111f
got -an answer that made it 'nO longer abig Ont with the Wells ' 'raised On
the shadowed ,was fiercely:bet
a caShal matter. "
there 'and, everyone trig. end .when
"'Ye(' itnoii Basta; .you ;tell me," he
said. "D'you suppose • a lock and 'ky they ahnarq, and 'nft
I bought. there from natite- ign•ht!. . • '
would he, o„ ionohN one that nc,fiey, stop- said GlYnn,
but.ii,3;Q,01., would op.erir • . r"tfello; ,,we'te
Would be Stropg enougit I. daresay," ite '
at him. 'It negilY there!, . • .
The riienager latighed
"In dike,way; yes," Said lirnmy„ *ha
•tinS,Were'd, "but .f of chent;, Production had ati'aile4along for 4 'few words
.type that,' almost an y..Staiiilard key or with them.
• "But :it's odd 'how aceittionied one
'at gets to the nnaccustoined in a little
EASIER 9
Or .n time; 4nd: • "qUiCkly. one gets.
-‚_ y 1Tully with , people aboard an air
netv Instant:RR easier '.o uSe than. ;
iany-Other-tint or dye you ever used. 'ilner."
solves complete-
' ' , , , •
true,'": said Glynn. "Isn't it ,
'
Ity in 40 •seconds
. . ;seaks right
. m'akes, a
' eut e n
one4, 6n1S11'
end 'lasts and
fasts liid,,;sists;
Circulation'
*-Alarms- Ministry — Still
Far From Freedom
• .
' Berlin. -More freedom Is promised.
to. the GernISII Press by Di, Joseph
Goebbels, Reldes Minister ot Propa-
ganda, In new regulations announced
last week, '
Reports Of public •meetings hence-
forth will be /eft to newspapers
thelimelTes, ntilegg imPortt:o0Atild,,
°retinue cleIbend etbleMise• Puhlka,
thin ofspeeehes .111 4114Pial text Is "OOP
henceforth, a040.4.040,. or, when noes*
eery' • then Oletal texts 'mit be 4tit
Short as possible. Eiadnalt/n '01 edl
torials and fres lance 'contributions,
especiallyee:.eoneenne reporting pro,
,Thtelal ' end'innalgatenerings, ne
dleeenthinedt, :
In So far; is -State exigelleferth Per-
mit, the question- of -abolishing exiet--
,ing-prohibition-of-news-reporting*111
•be. investigated; ProbibitIon of .report.
ing of of *Pedal. . events will
.beneeferth he' the exception rather
than -"the rule. Plitorial-Writere are
In :futul.e to be as free as Rosanne
;within the fneje Of "theAireitilavi
. ,
iso that In all matteri•they ;can give,
'their Own itandpoint.,.
It pointed nowever, that
,v4W4*,dolzi=4
maluP the, ,Nstieits1 SPOI*11st
.e0604bt101t.'Pe 't,h4lici: The Preis-4*W.
:lars-devWits 'aiin to "Make the Gar-
man journalist as flee and 'as inde-
pendent as possible, upon his own
re-
epoasibility, his creative work for
National Socialist cOnstractive work"
. The offer, of greater freedom to the
German preski;'which: In reality, only
serves ;to -show 'how .bound the; Ger-
man Press, actualli, Is, undoubtedly
results frenv a serious crisis of the
Gerinan press during the Vast feW
objection to a uni-
form , and uninforming press nes
shown itself in the tremendous' drop
In the number of newspaper readers.
theChance11or himself recent.
- •
•
;Iir• declared "it is 110 inn,. to 'read 1.1
papers all of which have almost the
saine,wOrding."
' Lest the concessions be taken'. too
literally :their vete' accompanied by a
warning that, criticiam, for
sake Would not.. be tolerated. Criti-
cism 'Must be nuked, ,POsitive
petforitiance.,This' 'Confotine witn,.
recent remark Of .Herr *ler. that
ill not stand for a reed ;which ex -
would wonder -Why I'd delay -0,7. elusively ,exists: to destroy. wbat.we
that last message yeithad :at .are4."tirYinglci hand UP.1!
;
Basra' was that; he Was a good- deal; The •GerMan. presg. was recently -CX -
better," urged'ClYwp. "We eould.*ite 'hinted by Dr. Goebbels te,show More,
hini from Karachi Karaelii and Say 1 aril courage and enterprise, but .evitlencpS
bringing, you to -your. „henie but May
have to ' Miss one • rialit at' ,IIyilra-
She was still doubtful, ',tat's wait
at least •until we* get to Karachi to
decide:" she said At last. "I'Ve asked
for a wire to .be sent there to iy how
:my father is:" ,
.Of thenew attitude have not l'hatin
YerY:generally noticeable. Last week.0,
confiscation of 'Die Gruerie, Post, :. an
Ullatein weekly With ; Over .1,000,000
&ciliation, for :an article by one 'of
its editors with
press crltl-
clsm In Germany Is • unlikely to 'give
them intich practical enCouragement;
nd''t you can't risklosing
'1°Pe.' h°veYeri: is entertained that, In
train at .11ydiapore,",01 ativented Oe.. Words Qt. the Chaneeller, 'due
come, on bir,‘ the next ' train to -time -our 'edit* -W1i141glain
.YOnr 'Place 'Wharrl have delivered my 4/a- sa.' ra41.e'd 141:4'LtbiY' 'Can '1311ill°
packet And .ain free of thatiresPoniii-.tlieir own val14614' 'e6ntril*ti°1345 to.
.hi,itty, cair ket'a, do ,er leave natienal. recim. strnctiOn, • '
Suppose,. and I'll,. have something • , '
then went. tip' 'talk bier' With You.
And I want. to 'ineet Your 'fathet toe,
if he's Well enough."; '
. Before they reached Gwadar, an-
other wireless .frein the Prince's -
:Secretary, was' handed to "In
India will be. many erieMiet
you Closely Stop Redouble , your Number I," of "The' Idter-'i
-dantiOn Glynn.passe ,the -Tarr WoriiiitiOn ..init-de -Re-; Initial': aii:f
Literary Workshop
Prints Student Tale*
• ' • •
sin•Etn.:'VORK-.,,-Stionstirect by an ,'IM=1
posing ,array 0! American - educatora,
slip to " Norsk, ;, And she:titidvit
troubled frown: •
"I: confess'. I'm nervous abont,' it."
'she "said handing it hadk...,"I. do *hilt
,yriu were. handing what,ever it is to
.soine..xesprnisilde-persOn;,tit-Kaiaelii;t
"Don't you Werty,".„ said Glynn.
,a.Reiliernber, that Other cable 'Saying
the Ptince was, arranging for . his
pcople in India .to have a,;Safe guard
waiting 'Mei in Karachi. I expect
be well !Oohed. after .fr,Om there.";.. inibripts will Carry. critital. and con -
They Only made short ' halt. st• stinctiire coniment• beer to the kith-
-ritirieVr2ttraiding-botir ofetr=
Fier and 'student., in, the - tettehing
of Writing techniqiie.
The • first Jaime eontaine Atte
atOritic poems; . articles and; re.;yieWS
from 'writers repreeentatiVe of ',every..
. .
'nearanteretentlY 'its theHtittit
widl °intercollegiate., literary liege!!
eine hones JO establish 'a stab*
outlet tor' otite#t, eipreSsion
' Parte the'Tn1ted .Statet$,
eiieeitielSOIAS;t4iO14tOkinelnet,Ited,
by which "The 'Literary. Woittibon"
,expectn, .becoe ..constructiri
force.' Every ' story., printed will be
reviewed , "by, leading- authorities" , it
Was announced.. rejeCted. Man.
Int YE:
'WITH
isr6ra1•
eectlln of the United States. • . ,
• •ll.uy .at Home
• —
.Puhlic opinion should be so inenid-,.
. edthat liflitoilid" make the Buy t at
Horne Moreifient So big 'that all the
citizens Will teallze , that a dollar
,spent in the home town helps to build
the, town, and a dollar spent in some
other city, helps t� hand that guy,.
Help build. you,own home toWit:
"I• certainly never dreained 'I'd evet
FREE culy of '111
.'"4"41 it° frih' 104 t to linonr;anY-1: mean 'ne,01)1,a se
4 MT' Packnot " she Said gland'
111.44)::14414 him and then,,at,',Jiiiimy with
ciailddro ad otVe;:ii• Rd_ tittle:me, e,
rent,.
Ruston .0; 1.1(
, (TO Be Continue ,
ligWr „
lialoSivistespl
DIsstilvestnstantly,
. ,
pou,Nti. rgAIRORS
IIARNUSVILLE, 6.-Te..'eatiti' an
argunient, Over the. nahiber Of .feittli-
ers on the average chicken, 'Vernon
dairy einpleye, ,
Plucked ,a 'Plinnotith Rock Chicken: '
Itereported 9,328 teatitpre,. No One`
dit.niadthe lignte.; •
MATURITY -MATERNITY
,MIDRLE AGE
,At these three critical periods
' a *Oman needs a medicine
slid'can, depend &I, Theei
why so' many MkenLydia E.
.Pinicham's Vegetable' COM.
goad. 98 out of 100 say, "It ,
eips mei" Let it help ynu,
LYDIA PINKHAM't
4VEGETABLE 'COMPOUND
Exqpisite-
Also in
n t o
712
eads Carava
urch Mission
Mist Eva- age ()landed
Travelling Sunday' School
That Goes Through ,Wese-
ern Canada.
Aex.,"."0,thnellY,
object ot_the. Careiati..sun.qy a000i
Atimiton; los. to,. ..oproo 'the Goapel
through the reniote,eeatteted • Settle.
1000ts' Ofr.Manitohe, ,.Saskatchewan,
Alberta a0d. ..Prkti.Sh'''.001aMbia;i1t,-has
been „largely engaged Work
Within the past OW. 'yea** etate-
nient
ifeK:ittede by Miss
era:arriyed fii*gosielwreoenut:
worketmplY,7".4.00,04106
last --'year," Mise Hasell sald, IftesPe:
CiallY "those ...in thedrought leteare.',
Farmers and, their.ftimiltei ;Who.. had
been accustomed to good;i'cornfertible:
,honies,.VOrereducedte the most piti-
ful everywhere on Si*
.Pathetio.'exaMplen of. what the nrop.
In the- -prieti,of' wheat ' had done.
Little" children.',Were .Cletned. In flour
sacke; tiny babies wrappecitip in
whatever :their., Oar :motheri could
find . for them, and , exposure . to :the:
cold and .lack -,of 'proper' 'food had Im.
•paired•the health...of: many: '
.."I understand -it, was 75 dogrooif.
*new 'Zero In netts of Alberta .at
,winter ar-Lin during
thietiMe hundreds of ...families.; cloth-
ed in; 'Meagre .gernatints. were ',helloed
In the 'crudest kind Of shed,•fiegreelY,
heated; They dicl'not • dare venture
out.during the bitterly cold :'Weather.
,so yon can Imagine how their :health:
,must have suffered. . When ,X left
Al-
berta ;On October 21, 1933, there.,;was
12 laches of snow On the ground..,
"We hav!brought with us, how
ever, --thirty one enormousclotlilng given us by „peoPie. in ; the
Old denntiy: .Iii7fe'et, wewere esked:
to deliver, -: if possible, certain, pack-
ages to tamflies in the West from,
their relatives on on. the • otnerliside."',.
. . , „ „.
, . ,
' .; • •
, ,
The. -.first
:: founded In
.1929, in Solitnern'Seintatcliewan:::.MisS
:Itaself.haVing:h:antd a MisSiOnitrY iii
England:. telt' Of , the : gfeat..1diStancp
that had to be .covered iiring,,,the
'.Gospellri'.far4itinec,:treginna.... Of . the
Canadian West .sirddentir.'.74'...,ciniceiirett
tht. that of, trucks driven
by missionaries' would serve- a ':good'
purpOiw..:,ArchbiehOP:;.Mathewson., 'of:
Witutineg„...;t4en.... Finitude,. of Canada,
gave her permission to go ahend With
her scheme, and inn's' began, the \WOO'
whieh•WaerWoladly neded and which
hea'since grown so enormously. •
:32 Workers;
There, be 31 '!wOrltere, • in • tfie
party of the 'Caravan 'Slistliori, Sixteen
trucke,4WOlgirli to a truck -Will be
'need, and there will be -'coriiiiderabie;
of the '.pette,e. Rivet District,'.::;where
Mein, rends are lintiaitialileXCepting
'hY' Peek. horse or 011 "shank'sr-iinere:"
•
Naturally
, •
Catharines. Starlings; nnif.
the main topic of discussion for farm -
ere, have attracted, *the attention of
Mathematicians. It has been estimated
that: two. birds multiplying at , the
known_rate will, on a year plan
bn---;--parentsi---grandparentsf---tgreat-
grandparents etc., of 322;102 birds.
On a 'larger scale, starting with 100
birds, the family, increases, to 16,105,
FALSE TEETH:,
PONDER .
Would youlike false teeth to fit so
, firmly yet comfortably their feel natural
-eat, shout, laugh -au day long, nOU-
Califorga about them. Simply spnnkle
: • on Dr. Wernet'S Powder -prescribed by ,
foreinest denthittn--the one f
powder -that assurea.100 stieurts
eonifort, SPECIAL PEAcorai
fort-CushionliFo'reett sensitive guine-n,
: always ke,eps mouth clean and sanItarp
Inexpensive -70y dniggiat.
onus Offer
For -Better, Babies
Berlin(' Rewards Child Raising
By the.Healthier Parent, "
It is generally agreed ‘, by writers
on race iMprevement that it is :not
;enough to Prevent thor ,socially unfit
---the 'feeble-Mindedand, others, -
from reproducing their own kind. of
'microscoPe to form what is must also
he invoked, which ;tonns. that inea.
'sures must be enacted or policies a-
dopted tio:fayer the wellborn at the
expense of the Few eigenl;
".iitobelieve that ;democratic communi4
In tiraboiatosAgArgn*stit that ,
gujulgeg ttuci5 4esuqcrapy:„Will'.110t.mix;:
Bertrand Missal writes:
- Unless new incentives are diseov;
ered to include them .(the intelligent
dais) to breed, they will ,spon not be
sufficiently ,nnmerbun to. supply , the
intelligence needed for maintaining a
highly-'-technical-and -elaborate'sys
.tent• And new ineentives,,will have
to be .far. More powerful than any
that Seem ,politically feasible in. any!
fineasureable future. In America Mad
Gieat. Britain the fetish of demo-
craCY stands .in • the way; in Russia'
the Marxitin disbelief jn biology, . .
In France, the econonjc systtfln that
up:aronski.the goslealapol-4
eon linakee,any,...eugenid-refOrm- im-
possible. Probably the best chance is
in Germany, but efen there it. is,
Meanwhileoivp..must expect,
.at any rate'. for the nett hundred.
Years, that e,aCh -generation' will.;.be
congenitally stupider than its Prede-
cessor.
- That Germany is in a fair way ,of
carrying out aprogram of positive
eugenics, and thereby confirming_
Russell's half-hearted faith in'her, is
shown by the action' of "the city .of
Berlin. That community recently a-
dopted an ordinance, effective en.
Hitler's birthday„ -April 20, which
created 2,000 "honorary godparent -
ships" 'for "hereditarily healthy"
children selected by the Office. of
Race Culture.
Payments to Children
These :children "-Must, not be 'the
first or the second oldest in the fam-
ily. During the first year of life they
Will be paid 30 Marks monthly and
during the next ,thirteen years .20
Marks--monthlr--Inzaildition they will
ireceive special consideration in seek-
.,
ng careers.
, if Berlin's example ,i's generally
followed Germany will have reason'
to expect more from it than from
sterilization. At any rate, we have
here an 'offichd effort to induce' the
well-born to marry early and -have
healthy -children': Galion, founder of
.eugenics, went so. far as to advocate,
"granting of - diplomas ;to a select
chaff of "noting 'Men and *onlen,':.*-
warding of - prizes, for fine ..fandlies
and -offering heidthy -couples conven-
ient houses at low rentals, ' '
, The diploma idea seeMs a little In=
Docent Cheap heuses, in it.etigenie
colony Rating Ungemeeh) 'ere'
now Offered outside of Strasbourg In
accordance with the'wishes of the late
Alfred 'Dachert, a philanhtropist who
believed in Galton's theories. In
France bonuses- are paid by employ-
ersto skilled workers who,..have large
fainilies. In feet, since 1932 all
French einployers are compelled by
law to ,rnake (family allowances . for
children. 7
Similar systems 'are ,in vogue In' .
the birth rate has been noted,' partly'
es,
ecanie-the-lacts-are-not yet --avail-1
,
'able. The allowances are net 'enough'
to support a ,child. they ware, In;
dustly Would' stagger under a'.heavy,
burden,' The French SYSteln Seems til
be:the best thus far devised.
- , -
Weeds and Vines Used
'To Halt Wind Erosion
, .
.
DALHART,.. Texas-Mani.,farMers
atoned „Dalhlitt and .throughout : the
.14orth:Plaine:eenntrir,..baire'foinin an
.eiticient , preventative of wliid ero-
sion. in'..the , lowly' tumbleweed (Rus- • .
shin thielle) and the goat -head, some- .; • ,
'times 'called cow-head--;ann4anti-buir.1
a vine that .cloiely Cover's the' earth: -
When •unmolested, •
• „VisgetatiOn.ef:Ii-,„4 kind, fatin.lead-,,
era point. out, is necessary to Stop ;,,,
Wind: erosion. 'It crop atiibble,. 'Wheat '
;or. the -like 'cannot be left, late fall '•
Weeds"''Should. .iilletVed to remain
until after after the-kightylnds--nt the -
follOwb-rg spring, they Say.
fr4n10egtwiPitklit.:00:.,,gg;i.tert;iite:14t.
, .
'Wind-erefilOn..te tho'ittent ;,of (*VII*60 per cent. of the soil fei'tillty - that -
.
would have othei'wlse been lost. Old-
timets say the tunibieW,eed :was.,
In-
,tr�duced this section, about " 1960,
the burrslightly later,. the .seed dion-
pingalong the POII Worth and Dett7
V'er tracks mit of hay. Shinnients4roM
' • •
Dickens Fund
London. -A Wbrid.wi-cle„appearier
1,000,000 is to be launched.
to found a Charles ;Dickens Institute
Inbar his ,hnme,
1: This 'Dickens' memorial is to in-
clude e group of collegiate buildings
,with a central tower, hurroirrIded by
grounds with provision' games *of all
titinds. There will also be a literary I;
Centre, with residential quarters for,
, *titers and a'techplcar centre: •
ore-Rain—
a o
ews or e Prairie8
Winnipeg, r- Cueeting words 'for.
agriculturietv -of ....Wetitenr Canadaweirei7issned-weently-brA7-W7lifeit7
gett,,,past piesieent,of tne.'"iyinnipeg
.Astronomical Society; ,wliti7predieted
Mete' tale and ,:ewer ; .gratislicippete
are indicated for. tdertittiba: and . the:
-West between : neW'. arid. 1938. • •
The reason :for his .assertinn is
'Mg !heir period. Every 11
; Years 7the sun , goes through' a sun
'spot cycle, •• and records show (lie et.,
on tlie earth are .deflnite
Since 1928, Mr. Meggett explideed
the teat •titie at which iitin BOO, Were.
'At ;their maximum the sun 'has ,ben
,fairly- quiet.. There bas been a„ftilling
off in rain • and " Insects, Incitiding
gritesliopOers, have been multilnlying.
"Iteeords Manitoba since
i896," he sald, "Shaw that Where
there has, been o
mpeutinicidg:Ifises'iiteoiiiipteirs palisiociobeeti. mini.
. "As the dumber and Size 0! the
the
Isift!. SPotta indreaSe, Alit &inbuilt ,of
, ultra -violet .eas's also increaseti. 'play -
Preeminent Ho'idAdzioement
,
,!Mue No.
1
}lave • you a1'..14:9ey,
salbable?
Or periniri6 haN•e
about it. .`
Send a stp.mped (3a)
8014V te.
TfititTY.NINE
bringing :Increased ram because the
:
ing navoe. with inseCt ,world and ' •
,.0electrification of' the upper 'Mmes.-ft-
phere helps' te tor* eloud naiades •
,With more • abundant water Veber"' '
eggett stated. a group,of su
' it
eptiti . observing through bis,
.teleitetie at. present grow from 16,-
;006ffnilleSindiiiiineter ,84,01hi:Miles-'f,,,'
in fire
97'34
• ICSUSf
Slcdtch' ot.• -th: is
sbni;i otheri salable idea, 'tell, as
:
nv1�p fot informatfoi abait our..
,D;E A S.
,Unlimited
LEE AVENUE, TORONTO
Ir*,.11,(osft.
4
. •