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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1921-12-22, Page 3• T7. 4.- iggiujosaoR n t he worst The Prince as a hunorist ane -is a rally and sensitive boy," a welaknewn persopage 'once said of the Prince ot Wales, "but although he saYedittle he thinks arlot, and bits e keen brain and keen sense et humor." It is this latter trait in his'etaraeter whilch ba.' wen for thaPrince a repute; thin as a sfory-telier. .T.he Prince,. in- deed, sees the funny aide oil every- thing. • 0 . Oce, in Australia, while taking an eery moraine eeliee; ,the peineie suer good luck to be au d -t (th . some diflicultiee with his saddle. Au one does not ',lave t w •ar or e's Australian bouedary rider arrived and, noticing the English accent,: reeked, politely, if he *Breen- emigraett ••"Fin the Prime:of, Walesa°. H.R,H. ; • . , , -"Oh, are. you," replied the Aussie, marked: Tritese bridge disasters Are ="Well, t'm his tether." : • terrible."' Next day at a reception the Prince , phonic! MY Se," i::40 ri rf replied. Pate the Same man end,' pushing his "My wife lost all herarearet phi pieney , • way :through the, crowd, seized him by the hand and exclairaisd. "Halitne, , "Riche Perhaps," the Prinee later - ed: but hang it all, not. 41c" Even in his younger :days 'the Pm' to the :Throne enjoyeda .gnbd .8. 'rather inquisitive -map 'erica salted him it he eves not worried .over the, • responsibilities ixtvolved r. eing the' King's eldest son. Well, to tell e• he el .eh never looked at lee/eel, .tliit, he replied.- "Rot' I thiri, it,4;•4' beother's old clothes."' Perhaps the best of an tleepineWe jokes is that concerning the Iddy who had -been: reeding about some bridges , hieing been swept away by. a flood. r She turned. to a mate friend; and re. - Swat thePeashnist. • ° • The pesafaniet's pet theory is Vag Vet tr) ce)nra Tani Breging!'' Yeard Four Miles . I • optimist,. and •enthuziasts are ' Terrible disasters have been caused success of the ere:leaver. • These teste. it is les Imo -times, if be eon, to break by the irresistible eieirl of rushing were gondueted inethe Catskill Monne t_ mere ceught without warning. In one. operators. A tower, 30 ft. high, WOS philosephy prevail. He is the Med* , e toeir spirit by. making phis mOrchillt - floods, in which unaaspecting persons tains, by a specialler trained group of eel one; they are a • fattpus theprisfai. ' instance, years, ago, a gay party on erected to hold the gig-atitie•amplifi- He has the right,. eed the truth, awl ' a four -horse. tallyho vias enthusiaitie- ers -and the immense PrOielos 'which the world requires his acrid demand*. ties of tirkey Creek. Oapon, near feet in height. • explviiig the wonders and beau- measUred .15 feet in anfl• tion, net their "smiles of glee.' • 0 dad!" • • The Prince's stories are straightfor- ward in their appeal. Here is a characteristic one, a product of 'the • Highland , seeson : An old lady f;om the remote High- • lands of Scotland was taken to Edin- burgh, where she heard modern sing- ,.ing in a church tot the first-time. Ask- ed by her. lady companion what she thought of it, the old woman replied: "It's verra, vera bonnie: but oh, ma teddy,. an awfu' wayo' spending the SaWbetb." • The princie delights Iii, relating an incident which 'occurred in London, He had been "hung up" in his ear, while dashing, from one public meet- • ing to another. A nein, not recogniz- -ing. the occupant of the car, nudged his mate,' remarking,"One a the idle •rich."•, • • at It last night." ' The Prince sfpnd. of 'egg gteriege. Here is one ha once related to an emnen ju ge: A plaintiff told the Court that he . ,had found the .debtor eating roast chicken and yet, while' he owed, five pounds, he was offering only half a crown a week to pay it off. •There WSS a sensation in 'court. • "Your worship," the 'harassed debt- or broke out, "it is true. I could not afford to keep the bird." • Diring his visit to America,. the Prince was at the White House. The President took the Royal gueet Ryer to one of,, the windows. "It *as froan that window," the .PresIdent said, "that your grandfather, bored to tears by the unceasing round of public entertainments, escaped ,one night, down a rope ladder." "I wish I had a rope redder in my luggage," the Prince remarked as he - gazed. out of the window. • i t• d • The Teaching of Medicine in the .Provincial University.. ,Interviewed in regard to the effect emoit th-e-teaching-ef medicine df the generoug gifts. of Sir John and Lady. Eaton and of the.ttoekefellei Founda- tiOn, Sir Robert Falcener, President of ' the • University of Toronto, said, "These gifts •have • made possible the appoiritnient df lphyeicians and stir- . geone of established reputation who are to devote almost alt their time to • the orgardiatiep Of medical education and the adininistration of the medical department's in the ,General Hospital. • This reorganliation, so tong -dealred and previously ataimpOesible, has al- ready shown its-••superioritta over, the former system and, the change has , allo•anatie possible:: the: segregation, forhetter treatnient and more dare- , fel observation; Of 'patients s'uffering from siniilar-diseasee.---This tinifica tion .and co-erdifiatiorePt ail depart - 'mints, Medicine, Surgery,•gynaeeorogy; !etc..., has eettiralle resulted' in a more efficient organization both in the. orKedicine and in the Gen -. - • "Inetead_of clinical Apachingibeing -• supplanted by laboratory, experimen- . - tation, as;wae forecast by Renee who. - 'railed to See • the advantages • of the • . new systerrethe amount of time actu- ally •spent by the student's in plinical studar has been greatly liketeased and ' the clinical instruction, which for the jnost- part - is -dnethee hands • ef --Wen whose time.is largely devoted to ficie. - ed by by instruction given by men whose • primary 'interests are those of ' the general practitioner. -Indeed; there it tral supervising power- It is suggested now in the Faculty of Medicitie more. that .the name "Great City of 'London" • clinical teaching than there bits ever be used if the proposal is adeepted. -.before been in the history :of the The area wotild extend fort ' y s proviegiat univer,sitea The Same- lab- from Waiaz°r tO.°ravsewi grid '1;rLY oratories Which were in operation miles from _Reigate to Enfield. The . • under the old system are now pied -to -aim is forgreater efficiency and •eeona supplement-cliniea•l -teaching-and-to' whiehewill mean the-serapping of make it every reepect ranee effec- Alva ' " _ teechereoretheepreetitionerain:theehos- ,:, pitaLis better, as sitch than his pre- decessor of a generation agd, it is quite within the truth to say that the general co operation, the team Work, :is sifeli Under:the now system that bet- ' patient in the hospital and for the • student Under instritatione • "In.brief, the two magnificent gifts refereed to have •matle poseible the inauguration of a highly effective erganization in the,Vaculty of Meda: eine and the result of this is ,that those who are are receivieg better treatment, while at the same time n•ioro thorough instruction is being 'given to` the young men and 'Women duty it wilthe, as physicians and surgeons, to 'improve. the health and save the lives of the alck ..and injured in this province." ,c •lfrretIii • "eereerreereesee,,, ANIMALS HAVE KEEN SENSE OF DIRECTION DARWIN'S ^EXPERIMENT WITH BEES,' • "Great City of London." t?b • If the scheme for centralization of public Utilities urged by the London 'County Council is put into force and the new etheinistratiVe area is re- garded' as one city, tendon will be incomparably:the largest city in the world has ever known and:vaill greatly outdistance New York both in terri- tory and population.• • • • The proposals, which.: lieve been placed beftree th,e. Royal. Commission ,on bonder' Government, ',involve. the constitution of an entirety Lew author- ity to. carter on certain, p.pblic services •which will extend -*ever the. greater part of Middiesex .andlarge areas in Surrey. Essex,. Kent and -Hertford- ' • . ...AU_ large' -nuMber .0- decentralized authorities has led • to inereahieg ,con- fusicinin the control of tranaportitticin, roachr,--eleetrieitya--Water slip -PEW -Iroti,sivrafidiforfOrtly..7--.A.ii-dttemlit to Solve the difficultieswith veriees co- ceintitiffees been en. successful and a delegation from the Venititja•Ciktiffeil SSW the Printer -Ma: ister,'. which' resulted in. the. appoint- ment a a Royal Commission. Navy the local. goveinment has !tted plena f 1 4•I ora s ng e cen I a al. y. ' wan a city for the ricb ..es for the poof-: viewing' iipea'airare-aeela- lam of the cities and tow- ;ph' Itaye Sprung up around London want a cen- • many little urban councils in boroughs -which yet are- to-, be heard from, -and ethesionay_s_o_object as greatly _to_frto,d,... •ify_theesehemeebutin. generalritemeets- .with widespread approval, • • . Nominally the County, of tendon will become the City of London, With: possibilities of growth in every dir rection which in all respects should nd.4: -ae-long,as. En -p talic of New York's rivalry '•as the world' S greatest city.. ' • • Some Canadian cities .which have had experience hi , tree planting . in connection with waterworks- and sit/t- iler preleete are ..eantsidering the. re, ,forestatien of• pon-ageieulteral lands - in the district is a means of relieving u n-eznPloyment. 'Faculty of Perception is Low in Man, But it May be De- veloped and Trained. ' • •It .is well known that any • of our domestic taniinals can find their way home froxn e distance of mains miles, even after the lapse of some time. This facility is perhaps oftenest seen irithe dog, the horse, and the cat, but is known •to: be almost or quite: as fully deveoped in the ox. The facul- ty has been supposed by some batute alists to,depend upon a sixth sense, independent of sight or smell. Such •a theory involves an- organ ofesesisel by which the needed observations May be carried to the •brain; an organ virlica mast be district from .eye, ear and nostril. • Physiologists haveenet, ae yet, -found -anysuch organ -lathe Coanstitittien _ of any.. animal nor have they feted any netves different from thmse which laelelleg-to-thele "ft -e#:' •ous system. ,This is ahnest 'conclusive evidence that -1Tossess no sense different from mire. ' •• • ' If We Witt-dh -the eoriduet of a -dog when be is •t roevn upon his own re- -sour:see to And' his *ay home,- we shall see that he has made good use of. his five senses pp to this time, and that he purposes to make good use of them :in the immediate future. It is *I - ways assumed that the dog has net slept during the time that he has been carried ftom home. If he were to sleep, he would lobe all chie, wheth- er he 'had a sixth senne or 'not, for than would be' known to a men under I he same cimumstanees. Bathe case is made clearer by sup- posing that the dog's maser -has left bottle, gun in hand, while the dog has been detained for a thee., The man goes straight to the weeds,. but 'after getting out bf sight, Makes, a turn so as to bring him to the opposite aide of the helase. If now the dog is let have followed the rail b• y 'which he lwie he takes to- the -woods at the came, for this would ' take him a From there he trusts to his eyes and point where he saw his master enter. longer time; he must have street aeross country nose, keeping close wen his master's • • trail The question is, did he • take a, di- rect line for home, or did he shape If the dog ,had a special geese of direction he would not so easily be his generalegoqrse s_o_asitta come -out rown o the-pureuit-of a -deer era ram - Golden, • Colo. Gathering rainelouds. :To deterMine just how far the bu-IningThe;Y liasrgteGotoTduacyll. PesThscrinleisallrlet failed to mut a shadow Mimi their man .vtiiee could be heard with these many ready tc yeti) at these Who are 'high Spirits, and no serious thought aids, was edeornpaseee. in rather a trying te do things. "I find it hinpose was given to danger'from the rapidly weird manner, because the time 0367 sibte belong to a committee," say approaching storm, because the tour- ' lected was at 'night. Four men took a wenn..*.beeause see them doing tsts were not familiar with the char- up PreviouslY agreed -'upon station, at just what I know they oughtn't to do, ectOistics of the local tempests, nor distances of one, two, three, and lour but they werl, behave what 1 tell with the topography of the surequrpl-.I miles frern the tower. As the ,time. them." It doe's not occItudroet.sonloretraith4rt ing country. . . drew near for the experiments, the the-nee:4 be, wrong_ The storm. litiddeplY burst with 'four men applied matchee to Specially her min4 that the spirit of comprorn- great futes upon the 'unprepared prepared t,orches, Whiah gave large' ise, of reicrince, of willingnesiato Se* pleasure ;seekerit, and the deluge of , tiering flarnea . itha.t.q/ber mai,' he something in =- water ceuSed'thern quickly to abane • ere.ani!eleie, at the tower, Were . other's point v:, .is What Maine den the tallyho and lima for shelter ei gathered e party mene chosen to tains ' the peace ere earol and neteet: Closely huddled against the teetering i,obeeive the -tests, and who 'interested:. progress possible. ' . „ , . sides of ,the capon, they' SOOTCralized, ly Wafehed<the tiny ,flieltermg t.orches •• The. pessindst wants to stop you in With inixietY, that' they hid 'not reek- T in :the distence. .' When the "zero the mild.st of work and present his as- oned with the forces of nature The hour," or time set for the tests, ale' sorted reasons for believing tilit the terrific Fuel of water down' the canon. rived. the operator at the tower took downfall of civilization and the de - sides swept them from their feet and his .place .before the transmittelit of ear/letter. of enanitiee are buyouent down to the bed the canon, -where the apparatps, and in a natural tone He is aggrieved that , you do not .at a torrent of water now raged. De- of voieep °tiered the far-off erten to once assent to his preposterous pre- • • spite their. Struggles, many of the wave their torches,• mises and his , exaeperating condo - party lost their lives, and those sur- viving were seriously injuied• e Another instance was the great flood at Johnstown, Pa., and the more recent was the disastrous .flood at Pueblo, Colo., where the tall:qa Jives, and property damage,' reeehed enor- mous proportions. As .e proteotion• against ,such ter- rible events • as these, a system of huge telephone transmitters and amplifiers has been Produced, ivhich will throw the human voice a distance ,of four Miles. Extensive tests have been made with this apparatus, Which have. proved the practicaftellity and traces them a▪ t all. He has no: sente to in.form hinaef the•changecl positten of the family; nor of anything More .in -Sleep all .the -senses are ' equally dorment.• . Bee Line. for Octane. ; The case has been eubrifitted 'of a dog taken by -veil a 'distance of two hundred miles in .a circuitouri course 'and set down fifty miles from- home. disappears, and the .next, day is fotirel at his old haunts. He could not Breathlessly the watchers; at the done. He looks from the conning- • tower peered through the inky Mack- tower of his own defended 'ease, and nese at the flickering points of fire,' he .does not like what he beholds,- so and the nearest torch was seen to de -e he buttonholes the first he meets and scribe vigorous circles in the air. Ex-! denounces and says 'what "they" ought . clamations of satisfaction came from! to do. Firm in his conclusion that •the watchers, which rose to a shout, 4 whatever is in Wrong, he is impregn- as the second, then the third, and fin-1able to hunter, to reason, to new light., ally the fourth torch: was sect to dip' to the latices that 'venture to intimate and wave wildly in the darkness, thus that there might be hope after a. showing plainly that ell the Men had Swift to condemn, slow to commend, heard the comniand. • The °aerator those Who sit in judgment on those at the transmitter then spoke to the who stand or run in duty have their , men again, in reply to their ready i own responsibility, hough • they tlis- signals, and bade them wait for fur- I claim'it Theyeal optimists however, ' will not•give in to 'thern; they will be stiffieiently robust to .opposa a, stoet- hearted and militant resistance. Thd world, in fact, is becoming cold and I•turning a deaf ear to the tribe of melee, . destructivelault,finders. It is gettir*_. very weary to listening to their peev- ish, atrabilious jeremiads, It longs , ee• for voices of Comfort and hands of healing, and te thehe it turns:in thank. fulness, quite willing to be bid fare- well. to the other school • a cynics,. • .. Misanthropes, croakers and• propheti• of doom at hand. • . . The, teeth 'is, that in this world, where we depend eo much on 'ene an- • Other and all are limnari, there is Mee room to • damn with hard • word* ' or black looks these who are doing' the best they know.. , thee instructiopie • • The mind recoils !rem the • waste ot huge arntaments and seizes eagerly sech a trivial • Rein as the .news that an old • English' warship is being used as a floating laboratory for the investigation Of foot-and-mouth- . disease. • It the ordinary men a 'mild only visuelizea'Warehip in the 'daily proauction of some tangible good he would be bet- ter' content t� pay the cost of its upkeep. Infinity and Finitude. - 13 k d forth th • ar anwent e man with • the lame mower, leaving a wider space • of velvetlike grass with every cut. As •T. rrogress in Eastern Canada. h pp e e ' e yar e . . • . • -neon: some familiar it eoe'ey the-anenai takirig th tee water; neticed a 'slight-rdievenient- en the bar , may be, frail hoine-and from Experimerite • conducted with the • ' betweep the two wheel's .of the lawn nev 1 in h oP the Human Faculty: movirer. Getting ,eloWn on his knee a peat deposits of Prince Edward Island that' point fakeer reinembered paths? Thintere say- that the latter. is most frequently the cede; , • - Supposeeinethe• -dog's-absence-tilt elltav--e ay—rove-if that ft eiiike-e-it splendid The most ititeresting and perp•leil: ,he saw that the moving Object wtts in eases ere thos,e in which animals tiny measuring -wirin. . fuel- burna freely, gives intense" heat, th t-ha.ve been taken -some -distance ife -stetted, the .eitee - eetti tied .iserepresented to. have consider, Id. home has been enelmened-doeuveatidefrone homeeinaelosedetaigesehave-Yet 49ft--the-aittla-'fellotve-raeaenringealiiefih'k499me.rd" Th'-d99-9z1t"9""- aaaa his master's family h,ave• moved fivea. found theft Way, back without. way here and t.here over the machine. which cover a large area are entirely • neil„gefee- wati ce.eehoi 7nerfeete-andearethealatidttettetreceet theleinie ellitaneeijionl-:fetheePaintetretens• itittenessateeeeeryealiarige, of - When the raeh the Naduld be await -it -lir -anti ipated: that - - this feet Will-Tie".*taired to: a'lerge which he was set dOwn. He will go rection. . other end of the, lawn the worm s on the:Island: • e • ., extent bit'ek to the old spat, and from It:hare Tide facul.o.,erceptgia,„ia....16w in still bueffeat_its w.ork .of --„--ee,vitto -16/48:0--4-tainitys elereae., Wilt trade flier -family by szenttlif inf.r. iYut it may be developed mid Every few minutes the man looked - - were caught by the Grand Banks fish- ipplirstRhijotovek4'A, Waft'#r4410).0::_11 TWOSCOUTS • It: is. A dark and clisastay_daye the erindie. keen, the •skies_are ... - gray; an rain, of many' caeite3-jebn sorts, come§ down by gallone. ., by vistas, and people, !sislasbing thrteggh. the med, band out . retnarks that chill the blood. And Mr- Cheerup ;Vies, ,s-lloorayi - •, Unpleasant things will pass away; to morrow will be brig -ht -mid: . 'fair, With Sunshine ' glowing, everyWhere, and well enjoy our bliss •. '.'• --: the more-becanee toeley-oseem-s outtet-a-bere.---W-e -Inuit have rain . aitial :slush - in& Sleet:to :makeour lrietter days ,complete " And_ , lir. CheeruP'S*iong and dente are heartening, as. we advance up- on our errands ram or sane;. amid the slush and Mild and rain. • But Mr. Killjoy says, "My friend, tails doggone ram will never end; and it it does there'll he a freeze and we'll have'green. pains e ,--L•-•4n-6itririrees:'-xitre -ayerith&r-irolfrly grevereg,evotsa, eta lei •is -.wise' who hires a hearse...there'll he an outbreak 'of the, the and , that will put an end to 4e1,"- We hear _him spieling in the raM, . ' and feel that everything "is vain, and when 'at last w,e•reach our ,. homeS we're shooting'spadies in our dontes.and rhetutiatjanci here and zthere, and niumpe And falling of the ,hair., Thus these two • saute go up and d4wn; one tries to cheer the weary town, the ether journeys :to i' nd...fro, and seatters stove -length .chuiller-of . .• ' . woe. traieed There are persons who elee down to Make sure th t it had •n t • 4 . 9 Ing •fieet of .Lueenburg, Na, during best -with the head • toward the -north. Allen'. off,. Let such a person When travel'ing on When he had done h' . 'd the Past season, the third larrat in a sleeping -car meke it a point to elle cide upon the course the Aram is going soon•as hevyeakes from slee treatie_ie night, and he Via find liiiiiself • ly gaining new power to determine directions. • , • Darwin's expe,riment fit an interest- ing.one.' He p_tit4onte_i.xesrf. ..i..4 Taller -boxes--and-nearried -themeby a eireeitous rote a.• dietance from the, hiveWhen they were set Tree they all returned in i'straight line to their home. • - Again -he- 061c -theta -Peet route, but on the:Way. he -spun th • boxes rapidly argued. This•time only twoof the bees-feaelteetthe liive,_and perhaps these got lbakk-Olity by a.cci- dente • While dinning around in the boxes they lost perception of the ,di- rection hi whieh they Were being car, ried. ' • ••••1 or). •fiee cons s • 4 • mower, the measunng worm had. also reached its longjourney across. tlje mower. '11'i1Wit measuring- one qf had turned totvaied the Shed with the sehooners-andeette-steam travrleri-and-- the average eatel per ve•ssel was 2,840 quintalseetereeterdafeeealterigea,---The spring patch of 72;000 quintals was soldper quintail.,----aad the pee:- thewheels. , • • ' . _u„seftNear.wolvothrtiooh.itegn'lliHtaonwof.‘basthii:ini4tiazIngdyiniaian:otvrnee;staill4;e1 teee14):73-valtsleeltdshyruebrsa:ulngis4hlt:ro$172b5t,e1:4*. mbla-lihaft: , ,and mysterious it was to the little Alija-hi:the United -Prat CoMpanylit - measurer! And, the Worm .knew n'e its: •canning plant at :.Aylesford, N.S. • . more of the Man wile had pushed the This product Oan be eatieufactured at mower than it knew of the stars shin- eing in the -sky at •night.-.--Theeman atitireeas Oannadblweor le inretaa.°11111eind eaFesnagusan"uha. stitute fee maple sertep at. 75 centsea smiled when he -realized that the.worm had not known that the 'atwn intent- hed moved 'at all;. -to tliTeiariterh it was -a-greateflaredething on which he lived. 1-Te-it-the'yittedevaes-as tlie-upieerse and I the lawa mower- as the werld. • • the eyes of God do- we net ieeM. Medi es the tiny measuring worin seemed to the Man? Though OUT plan- et is one of the smallest, it is etleamee, w -*arid" le us.-7We circle the Sun 'once a year and never realize that we' have moved. Andas.for Him Whose hand Iiiithiss up the world and the -sun. and the.stars and whirls therfi round in their orbit* we have -never' seen Hint and would not know that Ile exists if it. Were not that in His -love and- mercy He beridsedewe elose to us, 'and:: speaksto-us-in words au we can understand, How humble Ilene; reiterant we should be' • China no doubt thinks that war isa stupid way to settle -interned-6nel dif- ficulties; nevertheless figures lately published show "that China has 'an active army_ of 1a70 000 Men. The army 'is, .indeed, diVicled betWeen the imperial North and the republican South, but that lessens neither the. Widen nor the Potential .destreetiv&. noes of it. • ' • stzeOr'71-Akr PPL(ce..mm-a ISief.T lie &Nee FELLER.5- by ksene Byrnes '4444644.414.41‘44441444.10401.4111•0711 . . The highway bridge, connecting An- •napplis and .Graraatille,„ has beenateL., - , fficially opened; thus.,realiiing the et!, _ --- fort:and work of ilaig a century. The new bridge, withain expanse- of 2;273. 'feet, is the longest' bridge in 'Nova Scotia, and cost the peovinciel govern, enteala7-466-.. • . 2 ' ' , -- - " Pulpwood is being .61iipped froni. varieus points along the Dominion At- la,niel l'sSiiway linato'Bearltiver, N.ie---A--- l; .following the re -opening of' Clarke , .. Eiros. pulp 'mills early in Nevember. •-• Promises that 'eerie-, orders for 35,e. .., 000 toils of steel rails will he placed e at Sydney, N.S., have been secured. . from railwey: Officials. at Ottawa, ' ac-, ecieding to a deSpatelrfrourthe Capt. tele' The mills arehesy• at preserit on the C.N.R, order for 20,000 railsa•see -cured some time age by the Dominion Steel Corporatioe aria bidications ineet . 7". ATithealreilieret Frain Show; bad ' te.- -• ' 1) -for namsy winte:t season. centlY In London, England, New teens, ' wick, in competition with the other previaced of Canada and the other, Dom 'alone of the Fent:Ire, Wrie.eutie :esse e - fel in carrying off tile firet Trite and . gold medals for Meeintose ane . Fe. Meuse, and also it third Prlie end' .bronee Medal for:Go/den niselL and. -Bailees& Lreuise. ' ....: , — ...,-..:. - -Attifieiallee was first made. in:178% Stretching the spine for a few nibt4..1 etes each day is the latest rettalpo 190' prolonged yeah. rrt-t tiTLI 014140. t tat.1/41e.p-- ' - 1044* tesa-v r. . , • • :eStftr-31.4, Planes leave Parisi for tandoe daily ' at .9.130, 11.30, 12,45 and 16.00, ars-ivied in London at 12.00, 1400, 15.00 and 18.30, respectieely. Itstetrning planes le'are. tondor foe Paris slafiy at 10.80; - 1:: 4e A 1,1 16.00, arriving. at 0P1 arei 13,80; , , - -