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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1934-07-26, Page 6ele 4: e Canada, The:Empire and •orld at Large ANAD CANADA • LEADS. - Figures Pleb released by the atatia: tteal branch et the. League • ot •Natiens. •plei,Ca Canada at the head ef the list • In programa toward Industrial recovery' with, .the 'United Staten eeceind, Can, 'ada'a' t1 Is 40, the U.S. .3.0„ When we, consider the. Meaarir adopted•In tho repehlte we are ,justified' In con- cluding that " Canada's recoveri is, . . • more likely to Ire..leating; because it is not the reaultot artificial allure:is- tion.a-ClinteniNewaltecord. • ' „..,•00. GOOD WORK,-" -• • ;-• On Sunda/ .illernieg• a '0170Vinclar police constable knocked at the door 0f a 'Vineland reeidenceand- calnily - infermea the occupant that his ,stolen ear had been recovered. . The man was not even'awitreahat."his: ear was inirialng,, and Yet .five yearig. Toronto. :men, were lbelard up at Welland for the •theft. -St. Catharines- 'Standard. .• Uinit -St. Thomas T1me Journal A p011 ot hooks „moat_ frequently reek_MInelfded by professors of Eng- 11611710iatirre in the -leading Ameri- can universities, hag been taken. The result Is rather astonishing.Here it W,rf,d9 and Prefacline,!' bY Jane Austen, ,•4 'Return •ot the Natiao,"14' Thomas Hardy. •" '• '•• "X'101ry Esmond,' by W. M. Thack: The Scarlet Letter,'" by. Nataahiel Hawthorne. '" . • ''.!The Ordeal of ~Richard Feverali" by George 'Meredith. "Vanity Fair," by W. M. Thackeray, •••-"Old Wives' Tales" by Arnold pen. nett,: "Adam Bede," by Geerge Eliot . "Vivid Cappeaiield," by Charles Dickens. : • , ' "The •Mill on the Floss," by Ofterg, Eliot. , ' • ' " -London Foe '-i•SAVING TNE•MUSKOK.aa• • ..„' PAGEANTS FIND •PROIBMS, „ . *hat; •PanadiVedid;.'aenio. *gat* ago-Wom. ;SO -• tier' beetIng4 • *KW- and- . , , heavier, a director ot pageants; has disCovered_br-Englaad-It-has---been found" impossible: to fit theminto' the stomachers, stayn, bodices • and • 'bus- tles their igranduiethera,Were. • ••• • : This may not matter miich,j. but if the- -Widening out process continues It may...constitute •:.••a new 'problem,• or :collection ot,ProbleMpa'aiareet car, rumble seet;,'elevator'Onct easy • 'Chair; And curves have Nat began , to chnie in.• . • .• :• , The riaiiie director has found thata men Can imitate their ancestors and! waken ',cant; .INVOmenare generally! 'Mora- hetiatifartheaThefele;Ireit their beauty : being .-staarderdized,,• is non - adaptable meir areTiatiFilia same ,old homely .cltizens and -. thelr heaatik being non,exiatent,•Maar- bnndapted, to any character' they Wish to portray. , • The'querition hero is: Do mea wish to • reniaiahomelyfor the ,purpose ' of , 'appearlag,.:ta! Pageants; or will they ,Adtbsta7a-eaatyTand 'let the pageants got:: -It is •a nlce question and not to 'be. •artawered-,'ci.ffbarca:--L-Torbrito , Tele-, • :10.•alie.",ihuffnle In •8aying":1t• freer: .ex.. muskox. The „ateiy, ot this. carieue`: • animal whose liome is. in What are -hnowif•as the Barren Lands of North- ern Canada and in the 'elands of the Arette*-4rAbologe; tool: by •Blanehet...,Carraaa.bak, 60 • apart.. a Comparatively Inaccessible region east • of Great Slave Lake; -!Irticiyinaae the . • Thelon Game Sanctuary, as ,a home ; for tha,•masItox. Iere.: it will be, safe from both Indiene•aria•,•Esklinee,„ and will halie• a .chencelif increase as the .buffalo did In Wainwright' Park. - Fredericton .Gleaner. . • : • ;., MAKE NO ,DISTINGTION47-, , • •.• • will agree' with W. 0. Sitiith;' Of Mani- toba, in hie hatred for the word "ille- gitimate", as apphea: to children torn ' out ot :wedlock. : The ehildrea, have, 'nothing to .do With it MI4. it. :itt • un- fair it stigma. '•In Ontario, as In Manitoba, " there 18 no'. distinction between child- ren aern:"Oatilde:.and in 'Wedlock' so 'far as the 'lather'sestate Is concern- ed, . 'sharing equally in any pro- ceeds. -Niagara Falis Review.- • , , • DIRTY ,LIGENSE-PLATES.a- Dirtyliemare.piates defeat •ope . Of the • liutpOSei of . motor' .,car Plates damaged:so that.the numbers are•;11.1e.gible• also,,heyelthe.,itaine bad effect License•Plates•iwe.,*.ditia • nierily.ler the information of " the general.pablie .and its taw,..enfOrai4~ Ment authorities. They are: the means of 'Identifying:a Car and protecting the public._Jclngston Whig -Standard, to0".,EDUcAT.I9Mt7, , A Miami . University ,student ate 15 There arestiff some peraatia ' who'arbitratilY.L.deClare that they can "see nothing: in •eollege, education.-• Ottawa. '• , • . ••• • .10.• • VALUE OF RAIN. - President Roosevelt, is, aSkiii for ' • $65,000.000 to give out to the people of the 'United Stater!. as Drought Aid: Thiswill give you some Idea of the vulue ot a good rean.-ChathamNewe PLAGUES AS A gnat plague Is kitting -Cattle by the hundreds, In Arkansas. asshop.: : pers. ara'expected to kill A large Part ' of the Wheat, crop in the:01;01e west, On both 'alder; • of the 'International' °line. Tie father's 'patinae Is to :light finch, enemies: but now that he is told • he Must eat down production is he to regard then'. as 'natural allieitaaLon- , don Advertiser.' .0 1 ',RE LE AROIN G WhYdries the. 'chieken . cross the road just ahead of an ante? Farmers • rel)Ort•thaf 'fowl are eultiaating a traf- lIc ,r• sense and i itOP look and listen • betere-entering_Ahe:____ihiglaway, One masays he sawa pheasant look out item a hedge' and *;deill3oratelY Wait for ears ,aparOachkrit:.from. both dir- ections to pass. and When the read was clear Walk across at t Montreal Herald; , ' 'PAROLE- IS OVERDONE IN NEW , • . • •. '•• :It is 'efo hard to getik Man gatvicied. •for riturder In New .torit.one 'Might think that When a Man la convicted and put away for a life"seritence, , or . Something 'aPProilitating' it. theMath- ' oritiee would .not seek to hirix out . tot',a great Many •years -15 .• or go at leaSt But . the beta:Work. Of the 06. Attlee, and in India.". Empire, as 'lice Isneutralized to regrgat extent by a *hole, • is 'out Of the depths, In the operations of *parole board *h1ch Canada every ' One Of the ordinary Is eXeralsitig nriaileged• In the most tests ot Shows the •Derein. eitraorditiaty fasliion.' • •• •lon Making rabid recovery. .Foreign Rite men ,convicted of :Murder in trade In the first 'teireariatithe of the New York' since -April, 1933, only a Vidaseat year . nearly 60 Pot cent, tittle More, thanbne Steer, ago, bove hetter7than, in the . terieaPoading been paroled, and oftliede, si; are period of 1983: The' datterha and et, ngitIn'Avaiting trial .fOr;ariather mar- else: revenues, fOi April 'Were' dittioat ,der Apieee, What jirstifteatient could 12,000,966 In ekeeee ot th&se. of April ' there have been for, adouthg•td Iran- dom Men of each , character? Two r&entlyvaroled Men; aol: areVitaleiSt murders, hate' been rearreated. for kIllIng'•it petreiniat aii4' :wounding '• three -children in the dolng et it. ,• :The rottenness ..that Olds in the , ..1.o.tk. .alistetoi 4000Ia • ta MOO r'ao „ , . TAKING CHANCES.- So niany,'of the accidents eccarring, in 'these days are unnecessary, 11 people would only ,exercise good rea- soning • and • common,' sense: The other day it was 'reported that two Toronto ',young -men 17 and. 111- years of age; 'losttheir: lives when the ',Can- to in which they *ere' seated ,upset. Particulars .of the accident iihriaa, that they *Were unfamiliarwith the man- agement of a canoe, and neither of them could swhn. When they were. -throWn-inte-thevraterthey clutched - madly nt'eadcatther -and •disapPeared. It- is added that: a number •of other young people were in a row -boat near- by, •bat -they Wete.Unabta-to' effect a. keacne as none ot them could swlm -Chatham,NeWs.' ' • ONTARIO LEADS DOMINION IN AUTO' FATALITIES. - Tho Province of Ontario last year established a record in the Dominion that should not be the envy 'ef other provinces. It led the: entire country in the number of .automobile fatali- ties. 'According to the Dominion Bur- eau of Statistics; 954 persous In ,all Were killed by meter cars in 1983, a' decrease bf 166 <from ' the previous year's figures. gill's Made the death rate from Cara per :10000 ‘popule- tioh -8.9 as compared with -10.7 .in 1932. Ontario had the heaviest death $011 in 1033=11.8 Per 1.00909 Popula,. tion, .13ritie 'Colunibia stood 'second with it rate.' Of, 11.0. Nova Scotia's rate Was 8.8, :Quebec's 8.6 And Albers.; ta's 8.5; In Prince' Edward,islind two persons were killed 'by automobiles during 1933. it, Alberta the increase In *milt over the previous -years Was: 1.6. -Further analyzing the steals - tins WO find' that Toronto decreased its_tolLfron038 in 1932 to65tn 1933;. Montreal from 121 to 104; Vaneratver froni-44 to 28:,71:Ittawithial-25-pat the same number as In 1932,. • While Remit* reported an increase of and London an increase of 8. -Toron- to Mail and ,Empire. , . THE..EMPI‘g C'Ai4AD'A THROUGH: anittaH EYES The Story "Cit the presenteconentle conditleas: in Canada isa heartening addition .tothe recent eviderice of improaeineat fn,.Anstrallit, ft tenth ,last Year, in the reports of the, greeter derporationis. the Prefite earned in the past,' ivkelye anotith0 have :heft :greater' by 75: per 'dett.., than In the Oreylons, Year, The irrairovement,dietWhich ,these - figures record the early', fruits; begat In Febt, ruarY;1938.-tied...haa.heen -steady ,In - the latervata-teraleg 1allt471elartre1t • • , CelobrateA yer. and Wife A recent' photograph of Sir Charles_and Lady Kingsforti-Srrath, 'taken at the Union Air Terminal; Burbank, Calif., 'where Sir Charles recently made iseveral test flights in the new plane in which he wila- Ity in, the race from, London- to •Melbourne, Australia,-next:O.Otaliela. Faom LUTHER'S stEcti '..The Prince ar Wales has sent' '• 500. beech tree seediiags '•:.frona Wlndsor under- stand they will .he planted by 'mem! 'bera-ef;:the_talea eLth..e:,Tree,a'„_nrcare ratint,, as an encouragement to CaIu- -dians eanCe'fb' the importance of . their for- est resources. It is••filteresting to note the ',Royal 'trees, were raised trona ,seeds gathered underneath • an 'off- spring bt tuthek'sbeech'at'Wertenr- .berg, and brought to Windsor Trn4re • than ilislo„'Yeara,:•age.. :-Empire Re - View. • ' • • • : ,WHY,OOMMUN'ISM Every .election 'demonstrates : 'the growing atrength:4 tae •Communists. One of then): 'polled • over 8,000 Votes In the mayoralelection in. Brisbane. Aithe: neetber: 'get an Orem bigger proportion of support. Yet Yet their.,Airstrallan,Pro, 'gramme Is 16 extreraeund.Viceent 'ea& 'eallit for: eid complete. -a :stitrailleato lion":discipline:that,:in a country With such easygoing. traditions, It is Cult:to: imagine anybody but a\road. 'Man or .crairk>suPpOrtirre it. ::Many. aft7these'Wlio .. du autairrit.akree airs. a ar----faiebi-iiremplOYMent -and cia bittereci by the ComPlafieney of • nn.\, COMpreneridiag3lalitielariaaaVelitleittria Who have becoMe the: idaves, of •prefes'i .wire And whose! minds have •developed ,inte. mere 'book-keeping • Machines; Have they, •fOr' instance, • aeen . the Condition* ,on' the N.S.W.:..coalfields? Ara they aware that on.„heth.the nor.," thern and 'fietithera fields there: are -literally thousands Whohave cynical- Iy, resigned- themselves to Make. the .best Of ,the dole and the.,. faMilY, en- dowment ter the rest of their lives? :Have .they ' heard,: that there are thousands mere. Yeangstersajirst-be- yond the school age, who ,haate ' readYcome to believed that it.' Com- uninhan cannot do for them. what the •preSent system has tailed to d6 it will et:least give there sympathy? - Sydney Bulletin, • , 'EARTHQUAKES ANO SIN - An urbane but trenchant ' contro- versy of more than ordinary,intetest has been taking place between Dr, :Rahltdratath Tagore and Mt, Gandhi.: 'Seim afterthe earthquake the' 'Mahal. "ina ,adrhinistered to the,.sorely tried populace of North post.:131h,tiir' one of thoiesirtataiary Shticks which, we are told • alvitaas. !Olio* An the Wake, Of the Major '..disturbance, .was .ifeet • bY God ta punish •the Hin- dus sin ot untotrehability, .This ialheiCientille and :aria:Orientate Vie*" ceased b!,;t. atibindranoh painful ear.: Prise.and urged him to "utter a truism In neserthig • that physlcal CateStro- plies have their hieaftehle and exclu- sive Origin In Certain coMbilliticins 01 :ehYsicalefriete. He went on to say that .unlea sive .fielitife: in the. inexoN trbletietla of ardaerati. .1aWs in, the arortelng, et which Gad Hinisele • never interferes -.7 -imperilling thereby _the Integrity of his own • creation -,,we find iCinipoSsiblo 46"..jinitity , (Welts on ,occasions !the. •;• one WhiOr '`his .sorely Stricken be In in overwhelm- ing Manner. and • Seale,- Cideatte btatetinan. •'' • • . • mediaeval,: quarters, eat toed ',cooked at Henry VIIIarykitehen, and sleep in an anwholesome•mess:•bf.: age-old • ivy. tool !.hia .09 ,.1)tetense,of.. puzzle- ment When he compared the ways : Of Oxford with 'those et thenniiteraities that he was ricatiaintelt with On this -rada.-6t-thei..Atlaritle.54sind-ainallyt,hia reluctant admiaaionthat eannehma, dead againat'every.eonceiVable posat, Oxford "gets there" "'arra his dark 'susplekon: that it . will Oeatinue •to get.thera•for-ManY generations to: • come. No one in America knows the value.,•of ,•useless knowledge ' .better than Mr. Leacock, and bis -fascinating sketch of '.Oatord, makes it clearthat •The'•Imaineas:::_ef.,n-aaliteraltY.:_ia-_,f6.do what: for centuries : Oxford has been doing ,and to •turn out the kind' •bf human. produce that for •centirriga, turning:, JAY 'No* T.he AtlanticMonthly"of Boston. Esca eS eat Four 6 ROCKING. Oil BABIES FOR HIRE IS ADDED TO ODD PROFESSI 'abY. Reekers,-LeCal No. of Ail- lem has riot yet received an approved NBA code but, Andrew IL Brown, the 'president, doesn't think it teed4 one 'We gita five cents a halfaroar -rockin,l'. Mr, BrOWn explains, 'less '1 tley is twins, when we its two -ceate extra. No cut rates." NOPPeri of .the -.10eat earn their nichela„roekiag, babies, . with or with- out .. carriages; for shopping mothers It IS,. a 'great convenience for the Mothers -who can fight their *ay um' encumbered jarte the bargain aisles and know.• that tbeir.effepring are in safe custody at the afore entrance,. The baby rocking :professionia a new additioe to the 'hit of odd weYs, for making ends m'eet. Some of thee unusual. businesses' Ow: of cansider- able size. A factory in the Metropel iten, area produces dells Voices, sell Ina- them to doll manufacturers. BU curio henters,Whe Might. 'fled ealue thing unique in the possessiot of s . , , voise without a doll could easily eh Win diPem).3041e41, f'lnira..r4" at i.)er slight 'expense. An Uptown estahlishment is ran* ' "Packaging' eaPerr whose deft drat " ping and be,ribboniag tilik plain- est 'of Packages will lend a Fifth:A- venue: air to a five -and ten' gift. At • exalted 'scissors grinder lending 'hiv „ , talent to the art's, putnothingte his griedstoae, but sculptor's tools. Several couples have turned professional brides and ,bridegrooms, having been ariarried over and over again* on dance floor to advertise dance marathoa contests. e, Public Learns Hoary Secrets • Of Old Titles English College of -A- Int Opens for Inspection of Some Ancient Family Re- cords, • " . , '-London,47.-7For the ffiat time In Ite nearly .500 aeara, or. existence the, Col. lege of Arnie Istn.Make an eXhibition OfitselL The staid old instltution se :oftenargioelated with the burst. of haraidrY .and,- the. pomp •of ,power, it to Show inner : aeereta• to all and sea - dry. .' '• . 7'. • • . Sections . of ....tire •cellege's' , pareamenta and, Other' histenh4 tread. - sakes, are to •he 'open Jer. public' in. .s ection: ''Ilierata.,:iallt_lan on view, for Instance, the foil. of the Westminster t9arnament4Iteldatn-•„--Februarjr; 1510, which.'10 60 feet ,i9pg, with 'beautiful 'script and. plOattres • also a parchM•ent depicting the descent of' the tartan *Urge, •Thia.:.pedigree goes back through to Adam 'Mid "Eve, , • . Many' Relies.' • • . •,' Among '•the ' tragi' contained' in therCollege: 'of Arms are .#1E') tar; :euolaering.'rata,tae"Sliordariken from tha••-•hedt•-,Of-lairMa-qv'or•-Shotlaaid- When:, ' lay . dela", on • Field .'et. plodden. ' • • '. The building :of the 'Colle'ge of Arms is • on the .,nottli • side:. of.' the City. It is large :' and sedate look- ing strnetare. Of • red. Mack. holt 'me .three-' squire. It almost giVen the ' IMPreeplon 'ri'• country 41. .„ residence 'of. the „Queen .0i:ie. period smes _ .Survives .Car Accident , -;--tightning-:.-13olt:1-4--h Storm and Rattle: Snake.' 'Atlanta -Death- bee, played four strange tricks on Julian Jones. ' The latest. adventure was when a holt of lightning fell in Jones' 'lap - and then relied ;off On to the gook- * his leer. Jones ' has, peen struck by a • car-and'hear landed • safely on - top Of its hood. has lived through a terrific . sicipn in bacon County,' Ge,.. and once he • almost 'tiateliecl a ,diamond -back. rattlesnake . before seeing he was in erter.. . .The lightning that chase...to light In Jones' lap tore .bark off a nearby tree to a height Of 30. feet, trent the root of the. tree the Hearing deg .ta :little' trench egress the road • to la rear' wheel oi, Jones' car, " leaned to the..hackiWindow, smashed the glass' and fell in his • seemed to hesitate. an instant, then hopped' down to, the barrel of a shotgun lying at My feet," he said. ."I never felt any shock from the have • sprung ,up In England in re - lightning 'nor .eay .heat." only cent years' Is raised to the rank Of injury WaS' gashed . cheek, hut by a borough, it must tarnish. itself with the ' glass ; of the cat window. , an. appropriate coat Of .arins. All While,: Walking across a downtewri work •cainaticted one or Street' one daY. Jones felt • a severe 'Other 'of the' quail:U:7' named o' Metals 101t and ,found hituself Sitting on top of the, red brick ' blinding queen of an-autontObile-lioedr--* -igterla-street. r right 'theref-but, was. bruised ' . ' • the driver ." stopped suddenly • at& U.810 to'Soothe,. .J6neS. felt tO the . street- '" ' • - The cyclone adventure came in , • • , • . 1898. , The 'house which Jones • .watched' the storm was neatly swept t heTired jtisr' e ma:di-hut it Withstood the, wind, y,,annonno ng iN tikAitt OF USELESS KNOWL- t. EDGE.- ;-4; ;. , • ,„ Wo ell'remember Mr -Stephen Lea-, ctehat account of his visit to Oxford, and his delightful portrayal Of Ox0 ford as., 0.0 coMPlete,aad periect eint Servs:ter pf ratelesa. ' 4 place Where arofeaSora nater lecture I but by request, and then WitetelledlY; Leacock Witri:,t6id,• toldthat Some 'had . not lectured ' for thirty' Years -.-where Ittitorw Seen} to do IMO, .ing • muck but 'attieire; Seem to de. little:but Hite th mouldy somehow dropped prinehalantii into the Melillo of the, banking. and fin- ancial centre of London. . An Englishman; proud Of his 'line- age and wishing to put a 'coat of arias- on, his -letter paper or upon• the panel •ortia •automobile, May ••'-'coMe• to the College of Arms and , Consult Rouge Dragon, thienianele, Portcul- lis or. Rouge 'Croix, or some other cif the august of the Hereditary officials . Eng and. • Heraldry. Probably he wiil be , directed to one of the. heralda:,Not-Unnaturatly he • May imagatie 'a' herald, 'to be A '110.3rsonitie' arra),•,eci scinterhinge" ,:lik,the Knave of 'Hearts; and carrying a long trumpet :But the. herald at the pres- ent , day is attired in -ceinirentional 'black coat and waistcoat .and strlpe trousere:, .. • . • a At the present ;de); the College" is -far from being concerned merely, With: tee.' records ot centuries baelc.',- New c:reatiotr uin the peerage, baronetage, (ma iraightage ire 'maae. every ;Year, which means the granting of so many coats ,oi When erre Of the Many new. centres, of population which rILMarsha 0 1 f I , , • . . • • . • • . Whinhwent on to dernolish ROVeral '• „ Turns Ai; From Mischief houses n and waotfrieto Living Purposeful ' , Washington, Tbe. right kind of :tfa:dninugnWlithurnalia:hit)tr:inNeheesthtiefn, IEWtihaesnoise . minbivant5: the wrong kind js liis health and tire hkcep a child out of is seeirrek • he notteed the .ground 'seemed to be . Jumping quickly, Yi mind. • „Jones fired a bullet the ea o the rattlesnakeleluc'h., as coiled , be- Music's newer to soothe the ,„jtia tween" him' and the squirrel. The onile • was vouched for flieflOre, the snake had 19 rattles. National Education Association by t: A. Wood, Superintendent of pub lc He had the speaking acquaintance with the lattleanake •• in Bacon County also. Jones . Shot a squirrel and had 'stoOped to pick ,it tip' when , . . Matra etitatin" Teittia„ - - • . ' ' ' ' ' .. MORE CANADIANHAROWOOD...• aMUsie ttirna •the individual froth . ' ' • '" • Mischief and -strife to a PUrristip, fUl • An; incieatte'bt leo per aant;la oiled co_oioriti.t.ti: ;wily .6f il.ving,, he :eeicre teatinetaentadthlaerttiltr:trd.tWhieeeed,nitooti?iriseaott,,,,Pthrriii.waTsltseicet3ttehere4si,bd,ye,onfutthheivia,ce,vse;rin entalevre. Steer lia8 hada reported The figures:ti,iet, •61 stilatigai/a illiricas.„ ., . 4Yelli)elttrie'Pd'al'tit'etd.1; iv"46h;96666470b°1:C.-i'fbe--61e-t ftheeill'heva8:klid4...tlitield• Ilet.it‘'•,1Afa' over- duringttilila.!'"aetibsyth:hviici. t1.16 81111.6 P81101 fix '1.0';" iCn,111.,' Merit teriCh:ea.ehildieta to noncentrate. 'than hardwood Is being used a ...„.„, ,o.e.h, tet.,,ae.t1:46,,,n ,.......„.e area' lng quantitiea irk • Greet - Britaliti Pupils :6"1.-flioor'In' k; furratar"a; 'mid the tattaa. • ttohel•Ateatewakeehre;teyxptloriittink;;I:uagtieictos.nitninti,iis°e. •faellare: etaiitetrieddle hadlet , Diathermy Use Told Doctor A Danger of Being Buri - --Alive Eliminated; Speaker • ,Says. Los. Angeles; Medical, Science has advanced to the peiht where no one to have a fear of being nia!311..f ied Dr. • Disrael W. Kobac , pro,. . fessor of physical therapy t. the Rush Medical College, Chicagosaid her •recently. • • the western tectian of the ,Ainerican Assoc- iation, Physical --Therapy yandthe:Pacific Physical -Therapy. Diathermy he said, a def- inite '.test for the determination of -death---a-rRr7.ellafilea"':"-a''fhyiiieian to; know when resuscitation is possible. If a living'Spark exists it 'cart be de- teeted by Means of electricity. One electrode . is placed 'Under the' patient's back,' be. said, • the. Other , against his or stomach; ' then ;after . the current has, been. on for about 39 minutes, , definite rise of -temperature will occur, if the pat- ieat,. is alive. If there'is stilt" life latiOn and raises theiteMperature, 11 there is no continuous fall of temperature results. When all , Other • m been feuiid ffaencdti'velirolliiri; rhcy;stislen1;:iinof has f 8 intreat- ment have Pr. ,I,Cobaelc Said, diathermy Or heat,7 .mall(re; tisref. erli;edjutbee last meeting of thte4.eA announcementercane Albert S. Hyman at the. • Med- ical 'Asseeiatirel;; that, by meansdiatheFfijv of methods, mete than 100liearfsThvhieh . topped henting.. were Started gobir-figcr. , Silence That Hurts Room of • Absolute Quiet. is Used TO Test 'ElectrieFans - : - If you believe that absolute quiet isjust what youlneed to soothe your , ruffled nerves sten 'into ,aroorii-tuilt A by the General Electric engineers at Bridgeport, Conn. and be disabused • Snap your firigrs. It is as if a rifle ' has been fired. Pat one hand With the other, make any slight noise, and the indicator on. the Inoise-,recordei • swings: violently. " The, absolutely quiet room. was ;• built in order to test eleetricfans, which have , a fay of ',whirring even 1 if they are . perfectly built. because: the blades Simplymust hit the .air, in •order to et up'. a .breeze. For the same, reason an 'airplane propeller ' can he heard on the gionrid although it may be churning up the atmosphere' a niile up. By careful designing • of blades: a, fen can be made Which is ae geed as silent. NOisea:',cansed by fau. lty bearings„;and_other,defects-are-in- exeusable in a new fan. in the silent ; .ar traced to their source and weeded out. ' The testing engineers do more than let thefans run in any way that hap- pens to be convenient: The worst possible condtithara are reproduced. False walls that Viberite like tight arumireattli„, and &unfair Ceilings that re alniost as resonant as a bell ex- aggerate the Sound. A Microphone picks up the hum or rattle; ailtr •air* otherinstruitent, an analyzer hiU1-. cates, the pitch I1d ,traces 4. to its • source..1(itChen mixers, razor strop- pers and ether dOntestin etecttical ap- pliances are tested ii the seine way.. But while all, this has its ' practi- Cal • engineering Value it • is a Mat- ter of, ao smnll scientific interest to learn that we ,inust have a. iLittle ,noise jest to be Comforteljle.Total: silence • Weald reduceOA sanestof U s to M'aeriess. It was • no easy Matter to Make room that would hi'absolutely quiet, ' The engineers laid to suspend it in sPriee, so 'that it would not be rigidly coitheeted with the, reit of the,build='„ ing; ceilind.waS hung„froin raf-, , tets and not attached tO the *ails. The :fleet,: and the walls were sus- '• iernietf on eushion. or springs. Thus a room •was'ateated to float tree of ') the huiidin k