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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1937-11-04, Page 2pig...woRLa •T LARQE at of the ' CANADA lirr HE EMPIRE ! ;1 0 NO. ()liar Yet, When. it is found necessary to open a. special :prison camp in British- Co- :luinbia to house unernployeddisturb- ers it to talk about the depres- Pr4,"heiPg'aanittletelY' over. -Peter- borough 'Examiner. Tribute to Nurses . It is a tribute to Canadian nurses that their services constantly are be- ing 'sought in the,United States. :In fact, Canadians are numerous . And highly placed in, all the professions across,the border; This can have but One Meaning; lability and zeal. -To- ronto Globe -and Mail, . ' , Exemplary Punishment • Last week a man was convicted; of maislingliter"'-befOre-Mt. 4Ustice.iDert- is of Joliette, Quebec,in connection. with a "hit-and-run"' fatality,: and Judge Denis sent him to penitentiary for ,seven years. That, we should • . • , . .say, was an adequate penalty; and more of the kind would have an ex- tremely ,salutary - effect.H:4,_Ottaeiii, Journal. Shin 'initrters What motive inspired the Bank • of , Canada to abolish the:. tvienty-ftVe- • cent note, the , shin -plaster? Surely , no economy was involved. •Did any- body .find it a nuisance?. A': good many: found it a ConvenienCefor mita: remittances 'when .ft postal, note o money order seeinedliar* worth. while, oye ain John. Telegraph -Journal. , . • People Will Demand It . . The secretary of the Ontario Medi- cal Association is: onsafe ground : in, 'asserting' that state health ineurance. will.conie in this country. It will at, rive,.,with or without the assent, of the, mediealprofession, because the. . people at large Will;dernand,-aathey = are .already demanding, some relief from the heavy ,financial burdens ad- • conipanying sickness and hospitaliza- tion -Brockville Recorder and Times, .. Tjuill. of Plowing • • "What .was the attraction?" ably the, first question , many • persons as!rea:rori reading the''neWs :despatch repOrting...ari_.attendanci, Of ,:!:25,000 „people on second' day and 46.,000 on thethird day of the International : :,•,.PIOWing Match at Fergus. •-, Fergus being a tOw,nwith no great. population 'itwould - be readily as- sumed that a largepercentage of the ' people„ carne from outside : Pointe. It would be further assumed that only a ' percentage ' of those :45,000.Ae-, tually took part in the contest, • The. answer, :Of course, Would be obvious: to ,anybody :Who knows any- thing irbont..,ploiting.:',Thete is: •:thing like the thrill which accornpan- les_plovving a straight turret, and.,_ ,when you can't do the plowing your- self. the best: thing is to watch. - Windsor Stay.: ' Co-ordination Is Necessary. . • Sitice•uneinploynient•is .a MOst ur- gent Social and 'ecenonlic 'problem, It • • is; ektrernely •necessary that the and, the .preNtinese should .get together On this matter, with the leapt : Possible' delay. There phould:, be a tenttal. administration Under..a high- . ,ly. capable, executive .head, and the, different branches throughout the 'ininion,ehould be.under able directors:: 'The expenditure on relief conthities higher than necessary because of lack • • of -Ott efficientsystem for 'lacing the 'unemPleyed in jobs. Why .should this , retrain , so? great scarcity • 'of 'skilled Workers in some parts of the • country. Will Suggest bringing in • ins,. • reigraiits'i.of this class. • Why Wing. in Outsiderslf:thernnre-Canadietie whe _ are- qualified for -the, jObs,. or can 'he . • fitted for them? Unimpinyment in- srance will he adopted in some way.' before long. !-Then it Will be. expedi, , 'Ont36 keep .unemployment at a mini - mutat and ,this will require e fully or- ganized and. ,aggre,ssiiie: enifiloyment . serVice; There is, every reason, for al3andoili1)g the, Present policy of, drift.: For the sake •of the taxpayers and also •f the unemployed, the Dof'• Minion and the provinces:, should Rise , no thee in establishing an 'efficient', co-ordinatcd:ernriloynient service; Which can be modified, later if necei, sary.--;,-.W.innipeg Free Press. ' THE EMPIRE Who.,Will Guarantee? "The will .fot. peace,” President, ROdsevelt declares, Prousteicnressit- self to the 'end that nations attempt - frig: to violate agreknents . and the, rights of Other's, will desist, from such tOtifig." In, that, event '"the ,will or peace" takes a Curious shape, for • *hat is to be 'done 'abottt, the ne-. tions Which, in the tate President 'Wilson's, words, 'do not ',intend peace justice"? It Iseasy to '041! that - , • • 41...Looiro •::Vcihgri . • aneea" shuld be retno*ed,; but who is, to bethejudge of thein,, and. who is -,guarantee that the aggrieved wilt be satisfied ,With What' others decide to lii'' ' 1justice ?,--:711e7riartlMorning Post (Londg) ,cra.ay'iWorldt Crary Money 1,4, Henry Ford 'once. said: "The 'yard is always 36 inchee,, but when is' a .dollar:a dollar?" The Man in the street reads Of Wall Street slumps in share Prices,- �f • the reacting franc, :•of the jumpiness, of stock exchanges, and the failure Of brokers: And the • man in the, Street .can beexcused for thinking that finance has gone crazy. But the explanation is simple enough world nervOus and ill if ease, the Mediterranean full' of warships! 'sol- diers of four or five, nations fighting in Spain. And .on • top of it Japanle___ savage war on China. IXOW ean' trade flourish ,or :the . World. get on with. ite jobof: sharing the abundance that science has Made possible? pa 'Ong as the world is crazy fi*ance, will be 'crazY;.., too. -London Sunday Chron- oiiiantc rives in The 'vim* Trade Is Canied On In Africk chiefly - Used r For Billiard WO and Piano Keys. . a 'Conunerce in the days when sail- ing barques, laden with "strange car' ' e , seven. sea with s eertain, giarnof. Even today, . in this -More-prosaic. industrial age a few of the romantic trades of the pest 'atilt .flourish . in out;.•of-the-wity spots ,of the , earth, 91,-O, of, weso the 'ivory • racie,..writee Frank K. Linege,in: rron's Finanelut Week- ly. *". Africa Chief Source Africa is now the chief source til the ivory supply., From East Coasts1 Zanzibar and Mombasa, 'trading ' centres for British Kenya -Colony and Uganda, and Mozambique, port Of •Portuguese 'East AfrIcai, ,regular shipments are made, ,Supplles are ' also obtained in the Sudan and Cen- tral and West Coast regions, chiefly the :Congo; 'Cameroon and Nigeria. Russia ships annuallya small quan- tity: of mammoth tusks unearthed in Siberia, -of an- age estirnated at 1,000 to; 50,000 years. Siarn Provides a smell quota obtained :from tame ele- phants who have died of ad' age.. ' Shoot Their Ivory • -. At one nrie pract!callyi all the 'ivory brought on to. the 'market was --fOUnd-dead-in-the '_ jungle and: collect- oed by native expeditions from "ceme- teries"Teionwhere :.elePhants. in that g find ,theirway to dip:. It is estimated that now about 50 per cent' ere shot, ' although Slaughtering :of the .iminials is etrictly. Controlled. Hippos Produee It Too ' Besides the elephant, the , ivory, Produced: by seeing , is of commercial :Value and , Use. For -,:exampleHth&---IrippopoteMni7oi,v"---st horse,' has two immense canine teeth" or "tusks,. six ' others which are curved .in the upper jaw, andsix straight in :.the lower jaw... Various 'species :of Wild -boar-.. notably the Warthog of South. Africa -produce quantities of ivory. Among marine animals there is the -sperm-whale; which has im- mense jaws full of ininspalOoOking .teeth, ' and. :the; iv, alrus whose „long I Porting Comment 1 ny KEN gbwARps gang! .=--„, • 'Beek 'again from , •the, oldfishing grounds, and how • little ', ininnOws.. There are Plenty; . • of 'whitefish in. Lake Simeoe now. Way don't you try it 'sometime? ." , Well, did you get :around to an- swering last week's question? What, • wrestler has hadhis nese broken "2,3. times? The answer is Little Beaver, the 24-Yearold 'Cherokee 'lndian, iron 'War Admiral" is , following in the ,foot -Steps of nappy ,"Man .o' War:" It . seems', he had a hoof injury last sea- son ,but now in hia first .few. races ,he • is walkingaWay, well in the lead. " • •* * • , At the time when the bigOwlahonia oil wells were discovered on tfia In- dlan I•reserves. - (di was theLr gold, hence; one Oid. Indian ehjelc entire,- -PrlatelY named his:race horse 'Black , fight Harry Thereae-ot-Chicagor-in"-- 'Deeember in MeW' York. : Last, year .,Harry •Wen.,,18.fightis out of ;15,s :with 8 *.knockouts. • ; , ' ••• ' What famine :.bicycle :rider allowed his rbrother to ;chop. oft 'half' of , his Index -finger because ' ,of snake 'bite? ,-••1 s 111-41,, So long -Ken. ' War's Horrors Wilt Increase BentiaY' MacDonald.VVerni Asso- ciation.', For Advancement ' 4 'Of Scienie • • . . Poster 'Prime Minister . Ramsay -.11aCDOnald,' 'Association for. the... Advitricenient of , Scientei..dieetiseed the effects of 'med. . • ern 'scienee en.'wartare::• :He 'edit Cliina'arid Spain had shown: .the great ; advance:- attributable • I to • Science, in,..the: destructive forces of', tie -called civilkaticin., These would. be; renettiell with Increased horror ever. War ''broke Out. ' Cannot •Avpici.,;•Weytit we gannet 'avoid lar„. We, Cannot the'..iv:chtt that Can; ,hanpen hi Warfare," be said, delivering the first • Red terd 'Mather . lecture' to the aerinclation.: But let udnot be •misled .by." thinking!' ecientiats .„es :calf ; atop '• „ ;• The action the fernier in .grewing," „Wheat and feed 'for. Wei'," he iontinned, was ...akin tb: the .engineerturnink nut briproyed ipying enginee. But it was • 'taken Judgment and cowardly for one, to hianie there if peace' ' was net .; . -sectired,• ••. , • -Wants Prietical, .beniecracy , • . , , • plea I rnalte, for practleal democracy,btit democracy Is tn tet.. 'ninon in the Attack now being made) it ;Ring have method, and believe' the, retords .ot the scientific,. Worker And the: Way he ,sets tibtnit .work will steady' and 'Claritt the'popular - mind not onit to Coraplain , but • to cone). de 'wisely," the 'former Priree Minister'detlared. 'r . A retnrit hoWd. anti 'ArrOWS, he addedi.'Wetilit not ;remove the'. &16'07 ances Of nations; for 'WhiCli they . Will lighti.'Of the otilfghtenett macy *Mali; tin keep peadeWithOut laniry to a. nation's senie•Ot lnjustice. -. • - 2.2t tointltes; , ar orners tusks projecting downwards are in many instanges, fine quality ivory, and Were at one time. extensively London Central Maiket London is the central market of ,1;-0-0;ge,Ta —4444 suited in moderate quantities • being shiped to 'Antwerp where Sales are also, held, Buyers !limn the United States and the chntinent, as welt. as , , -pin...chasers .representing herrie trade, attend._ the quarterlyWhich,,haye been hell for many years in the -t conimercial 'sales, rooms in •Mincing, 'Lane, All '-the ivory to be offered is Stored and exhibited at the‘lvOry Warehouses at the London docks where it is inspected by buy- ers and valued according to quality. • on a y.sit to that county in the six- teenth century. The an who own- ed . m . 'the plece.at that time was Thom - 'as Wotton, Sheriff of Kentc.who en- larged and '.beantified the house : to 'make it suitable for his distinguished guest. - . -He-is said to-haVe -"praYed--to7hd- ,exeused" from knighthood -•and other honors which she offered hint Near' the house stands an old yew tree, en- closed by a' high .ragstone' • wall. Tradition has itthat the _ Queen planted this tree. • 1 The Wotton family held .this es, tate-fOr more than 400 years, and then,. it passed - by marriage to the "great" Earl of Cheeterfield. Later it becanie.t part of the Kent estates a the ,Cornwallis famfly.' ' • , 'Just as in Canada and United 'States the large -estates are ,difficult to,sell-becauSe of the limited 'number of „persona who can afford them ' so in ritain manyne pribei eg- ging" Many need modernization, ' taxes on them are high and :upkeep :is. costly. , An example of this is 'found in the recent sale of ROUsdon Mansion in East Devon, known as "one' of. the beauty spots of England." The'bnYer paid about $150,000, which was °111IT a, fraction of what the :late 'Sir: Henry Peek paid. t� erect it. id English Estates Oyster Produced ming On Market Hundred Pearls Man* of Them. Have .HisiOries ' 'Linking Back to EatlY., Days. of ,England; Some Sold by Auction As Various Fedora Enter ,Intoo Traniactions. , • " ' Ristoric British estates which date back several centuries, in some „Oases -feudal-dayshave-been-com- ing into the market in large traMhers recently. • , Changing family fortunes, new de-, signs ,for living and .death have been some of the factors, beltind;the 'many ;offerings at auction andprivate sales - of vast :holdings' ;meg. occupied by • English nobility. Many of the time -worn structures tflgUrlitein.,,the.realir news -there itt- ely have in days, gone' by sheltered: `niembere of the royal family or out - Standing figures in the, literary life , of the nat06ni, Their very walls.' 'whisper of the Colorful past: • Known to, PiCkenS and Scott: One of these interesting places 1s - the Rokeby Castle in Yorkshire, the home of the Morritt family since the early part' of the seventeenth cen- tury.. , More than 1,100 acres com- prising the eastern portion, of, this es- tate is to; be auctioned. , Another estate of -note , Which has come , into the niarket is Broughton Place, near Maidstone, in.; Kent, where Queen :Elizabeth' 'once stayed. BUt 14;it-N414.:1:04:0. Sigel" To, Be • Put . On Sale. •A test of more than 100 pearls. was found .in a Whitstabl& native • oyster Opened' ;at a fanmhe ',restaurant in Coventry .'efreet., tendon, .Engtand, Ye- *HY, • • -of-the-firm's-- eight, ,o'yliterinen,:;•opened •the. Oyster... Seoree .'Of • pearls rolled On •the floor: Mr. Butler has been an oysterman . for nie're than telenty years He ep!... ens an average of AOtt,a day., go 'that oysters have no secrets from Mr."But- ler . , Buthehas never ; met , sneir oyster. before. , . . ' • • 'Million a Veit • . . Tn Cast,.YOU_ATe Whitstable' and Starting ,the • oyster, rush Ot,193.7; it,:sliould be .stated,..tnat‘: the :pearls were exceedinglysmall and :not of: saleable • Value'. `." • But neverthelese the firm who eell • a 'million Oysters. a year, cannotre- cap anythinglike' it .•before and, Mr: . Butler says he has 'found bigger pearls': in'the,Past, but only 'one at a time.° The oyster In question Will go :down.= In Watery and not down doMeone's throat. it ie being 'exhibited la'a .Witv. • , dew, ' • , ' • • It is now a• t,rtiffic. menace:hi; Istan- but atoP,a 'person In the street and: salt for S./hatch:: CoinnientarY en the HIOlighb of the Weeles • ".. •. Finance Wizard it_esigns . Although Nazi officials andled that any -decision regarding 'Dr. II,jalmar Horace Greeley Schacht, German MiniSter ErtaxemlOri:114-.17,1re-q, -:',46-7.77.1fir.o4referiNnhwittoten-in self discharged fioria office;' The Min- ister, wbOie, astounding feats Of fin- ancial •jugglifi the Past few years have kept Germany's economic affairs an A workable basis, has long been at variance with ,eertal,11 of tile Nazi. leaders. ,I•rouble.:firet,canie to a -head: with the institution of the four-year plan Pol)so,red by General Goering, the No. '2 Nail. Asked about the Government's denial • that he: was leaving office, Dr. Schacht said: "The official announcement of my resigna- tion will be -Made yesterday, today or tornOrrow." The Minister desires al- so to withdraw from the PresiderfeY, .of the Reichebank,. the Government agency for the, control ' of German. banking. What: will GernianY, de without him? . One of the newer vocations open- ing up for the young peolple of On- tario, especially now that' the tourist trade is becoming a major industry, is the tourist catering ;profession. . Starting later this month. or early, in. Deceinber,.a course in wayside booth selling, advertising proper cabin ac - lews In i- Review, . :..onkreot. to Stand By.• • LONDON; Eng. -.--...411,7$rIti.eh' :war- ships ' witeleislyt-itinge,"4.ere: -asked tliis weekend,: 1.11OYd' , re ort • oTrtelet t British .s eamer Stanray after It was gred on and halted by , Spanish insurgent trawler in• the. liaY' Of .„Fliecay. • • •• . • . • :PKnOe Michael.Hanoreit .11TJd1,14%.R071'..-Itig. Oyes sparkling ;with: joy. and.Pride, • King Carol 11 this, meek placed on the..shoulderak,pf ;•hiti eon, Crown Prince -Michael; who ieach- ed his .16in.' birthday, the' stripe ..of tt• sectied-lientenant-in•-•-tho Ilinnanian arra*, A salute of 21gime marked • the • occasion,, Ceasitiered here‘" the .'most ,ImPartant, event in. .the • ,Rumanian Royal. Family ginere the enthronement of Carol ' • ' ' • . , , ThfilCinit :Opefls Parliament.: . LONDON.Iing-,:deerge,,addressing his paritament for the, first: time in Speech.; from .the.-I_T'hrone,.. 'pledged his • Coverninent. to 'work ,' Unceasingly, for ,peace Spain and the Far Keit, But he pledged the Government eise to •maintalif.i'ith_e_recing. pace • 'of its, re- -armament,: program -with • special at- tention to enti-itireraft IdefenCe.H, eo • that it War conies, the cetintry. will be .ready for. It; • 7.. ' . Robed In a Menge of red 'and'.biaCk: Collared.',with.,ertnine,,the 'King ad- • 'Areinied''MeMbera,'"of .• the.; licineei Of Lords and dommenfi,:the'Peer4; gorge- ously attired In their yobee. Of 'state;'• .trOm; his throne in the. • Lords Chard-; ther,. . . . , • News Skyway• . WASHINGTON. PenneYivinia-- • , Central -Airlines' formally sopened a new skyway this week for ;passenger, mali And express .,:traffic • between. 'Washington and; ituffale2a route that la...expected to link eVentiiallY':OttaWit 1 'I and Washington. ' : • • , •• Duce. Reidy .to Plunge. ROME.-Rreinier Mussolini prepar- od this 'Week -end, on the eye' of the fifteenth Anniversary of his. "March on ROM% establishing fasclom, •. to :pliinge into the 'Spanish civil war on a grand scale. it the 'London King Congratulates a u Prinie Minidter lqackenzie king in ,shov,o,n here Congrattilating Bliss Arilitt-"Neagle,:the British. screen Atari afterIlre-pteniata 'her-picture,-4Victoria the' Great," in Ottawa,' At right, Herbert Wilcox, prs?..., dueing ditsetor of the filet in , which' Miss Neagle his lorAling commodation mid tne .1 over- nightt01 I- 4)304prni sntg54w PiIl bl ee .11111:tdeer tveadi 1, a bbly6 the Women's Institutes, Department Air7igitiqstign .1S4eh A training bs'of SPecjAr use to young people in districts well trav- elled by touriSts Which are yet, pebr ar70:. Allco7;:n. g'ira 'me 'Means". I\ I Again the :voice from the seuth-, heard above the din,. Of 'European ,squabbling and preparing-, for writ: "We, as a nation, are at peace with all the world: and for that we 'are thankful. We have no plans for conqueat.1,,,TO, .keep the peace is a fundamental ,policy of . the 'United, States, War :Will be avoided by all 'honorable means." Ago in his Navy Day .Letter, • •Presient Rooseveltwarned that the United 'States Will maintaiti.a 'sea strength • sufficient to ensure a righteous peace. nicipal work projects„ Activities of the iner nLtpteetorep,i !.-figuresDominion eh ore fefi w:tuhaee:r: Canada. , 7I°nPtfSaee Septem- ber,196..'1?.eSponsible for the drop unemployed Are assisted in tiecoming established on farms; the, land settlement plan under which arebetteetimes, provincial* and ran, - National Employment 'Commissilm show that tinemPloymene and relief have decreased during the: prat year . , ‘PreniBeiell!n'Cabinet PiaatilVan.ZeCrisis Zeeland resigned last week...fret:1r the leadership of the yernirren*"ihr=order=te g the charges Of Boast (Fascist). oppo- nents' that he, was mixed :up .in a "national bank scandal." His cabinet resigned with MMas a confidence gesture. The resultingerisie in :Bel-,• gign forced thepostponement of the nine -power, conference which r was to have Met, in Brussels Saturday to find an -"amicable", solution to the Sino - Jap ..embroglio2 9 ' Neiv? Irrigation Projects . At a cost..ef ,more, than • $10.9.,000. two new projects fer irrigating areas:. in the Canadian west have beenan- nounced to be 'carried out Under the • Prairie Parra Rehabilitation Act. The Work will bedope in the. Brooks, Al- berta, irrigation district; and in the. Cypress •Thlis area of ::Southern Sas katchpwaii. The Gnverrinient scheme invOlventaking over thelandat about $10 an acre and resellin t the same .figure. Land •willbe used: Or -placing farmers frompoor lands. • Nan -Intervention Accord ,Rem.eie • • •.Hopeless of agremne t ' Eu- ropean powers delegates to .the Span- ish.' Non -Intervention • Comniittee, meeting in London 'Which convened ..oter• the ivepitend4sought only ;•te avoid, the 'definite break in relatione olcan • e Pimples Japane7e Scientists Deznonifrite It BY Measurements 4 iratcaa9 that Is getting ready to . go liito.,,ac.t.jcip acts , very mach, like 4. piinplo t4qt is. swelling: 444, rgetting! ready' to bdrat. TWAhas been demon- strated hy accurate measurements inade by two 17-4441140.-40-.1%.:*iarn W .:.,atian .86 Seleniiete•; R. - on canO-Apainn'in.:Tetuin and haverecent. ly rs to detectete pnblished their 01141117 in the,,bA.11.e.,?:, • tin of .the, Earthquake: 'ReSearelk. Inetti tut'. ;esell tiltenf tlie.groiind,:movements at several' points ,:011 1.h6 :flanks, of .the..volcnno, •'Tbea`e are..faStrtintellta'allnillT t� sel�. inngi-ajliitli1tt:,'recOrd' When the, ground ".renialnit Perfectly` tionc°il.redl luilligrinti7Pei:ai'•1111;nhliOani.rs41.8.ti.cYlYleus' .07411174.4'1't h:fetYS:' 'r"the ground6r; still, the seisinograph wifl record pai- ls tilted these lines have their spaeing, chenged. Tho distanse, and 'direction, by whichthey are disOtiee4' Makes it ' possible to .deterinine the .direetiou • aed amount of the ground tilting. Such. tilts. take ,place normally every day. . ..The Jeneneee:scientiets., :found • that tilting flie • times •the normal- amonit.••• • took place froin seven to thirty:dam . .bepre the .velcanyi erupted. The floor . Of • the crater' rose .before, outbursts. ..The, direction of. the'. iAtEi indicated. : the whole' Moantain was , swelling be- fore the eruption,' • • • Freak Fluman Sprout I, MuseuMs, Now Specimens That, Grew From Foreheads Of •:Abnormal re.00ks Pratieische'Trovillion spent Itis boy' - hood With'french 'charcoal -burners; hi Ta 'ye v ilage, Me- zieres,,At the age of eeireit a swelling appeared on ' his 'forehead and grew.',' iiitcra horn. • • : • ,1„. - • , ,,• By the time he Was:, seventeen this hern wee the length of 'a man's at: the age, of thirty-five It ltd 'taken the shape of a ram's horn. In year was exhibited as a freak, firet in liia Plaieraithtooks."tinlijhleanc•at. Orleans, wheri A...SomeWliet_sim:stillie„ -Occurred , In seetlerat;where in 1071, there. llted • Jai e*adQ" Wnlanr.1,4eY: b.iYeeoakreid 9.1if etng7...ea!"e9r8ael inebes: long. This horn was cut off In • the year • Mentioned, and is preserved In the Editibiirgh:Library,:fonnded .by Clement ' Thhhorned lady died at the agoof seventy without' naving4;, produced another. of these Curiens orn- • aMente:, • ; '• • • . , • ; • . 'NI:Pelts • ,• • In the British Museum there are two horns which ,Spiented.. from 'AIM • heed of.,a young Lancashire woman. . shed' their -7 -- et the age of thirty'-threebut the re- markable Point about her case is that another pair of horns. 'sprouted,and rernained . with her for five yeitie. .7,1 At the end et that time they also were shed.,Her death occurred in the ' ), year.168's at the riPe. age of seVenty- ,that hfight mean the opening of the four. Frenelr frontier . to the passage.. of -nlen-and ar a -Ant -0-8 i , pa On"Alie one dde were Great- Britain, France and Russia, dernanding the removal of fOreignere from the: Civil war; en '-the • other ' side; Germany, -ItalY, and Portugal .demanding recognition,.: of , the Spanish insurgents as belliger-; , ente;'..The meeting :Preferred e dead- lock to wide-open split: • • •terventiOn negotiation's collapse. it: :was learned on 'excellent authority: n Nyhtia 1.00,000 inaek: Shirts, poured -into Rome 111 .ninety.three coluiung that tritztinerj'. through the . streets tnrinighOut-; the,. night, . It 'Dues ,con- ferred 'Atli his subordinates On stern ftiOaseres to peno with.: any Situation , arising from a decision by Russia andFrance lo 1eStliIie 'llborty of action","' In Spaht.— ' .• Revises Margin ReqUireMents WASHINGTON Federal Reserve Board has announced ,•• a drastic revision in its stock market Margin leqiiiremezits. The mine was expected bY many Washington auth- orities to _holster sagging, sectiritv prices. , Deprived of Citizenship SESLIN.Theodor Wolff, ., Fortner 'editor eit the Berlin TageblntCle on a list of slittY-eeVen dermene.'delielied Of cithenship.,i published thifi 'week by the ollleiai• Gaztte WIlhelm Ditt- tnann,:leriner Socialist in the tleich.I. atag and, One Of theleadertr of the revolution, of 1918 •after the titalletlee, also is narned: Sabotage In Palestine . J,ERUSALE4--tizirest in. Palestine was kept, 'smouldering Ole week by new' sabotain atteMpte.figainmunicaUons st cots- rellWay„ Stations and. . police posts. - An: attank'• witi. Made on'the Lydda ritilWay Station and it Military Vohiele 08 tetie fron Naiilti3 to Talicarro watf. fired Upon.: TwelVe„ telephone sitting Cennecting Ptilestiii'd With 'Egypt were ent hear Itati. , The 4eriiielem4Ieb1.0n reed was bairielitiedI near Solonien's pools and the telephene, Wires stit. Separate tends firedon tlie itatiitAli and Lydda kdlien 'Matfett.. Some Apes Stilarter Than Certain Men. .'PaYehOlOgist:'WOUld Compare Two • to Find Out poiv ,mt,14.1 , A 'fairly bright" ape , could give somehumans a and still beat thernIto:the Wire In an: int1I1gence. derby, Dr;. bole, of .'the University of New Mexico 'PayoheiegY.',departmenti ,.said at .41. • -)Muueroue; last Week.;;'- "T,here are undoubtedly some , that Can learn -Mare than:sonie: ,he ,said in a P11 Beta Keene 'address 'hettne.s.e' eaatpaNictiltui,•al•. group. 7 eider to find this; oyer -lapping; It is7 necessary tnit take • for ' cc:61411On .„ fairly .bright;nties';andr.:very . Differences •Conly Of Quantity°Mans,". the detitor',eXPlitizied. ;The .differeticei between ,tann and aninials . are.. eilientiteti ye rather than • qualitative," 110 said. ,.'"11ien learn fast - 01' than white rits;:. they learn More , :4e a:011101i; h;,e; J.40:rcoloc, seests ;oar :that' .distinguishea". from the 'Sty to tho guinea plg." the-apee: in thie respect than theyipea Is eettainiY. net Ilearning ability Liquorless Ni lit Club , • • Three litiridred pans male' ristie! coss of the .forMal .:Opening. of the non-alcoholic night club 'at the 'Geo. Washington %University, Washington. otiiitig stronger than ginger': ale.. was served. „The club, planned nnd managed by students, is eh -Oiler to several established ,rodently, in the Middle West and on the Pacific Coast,' , A Gel:Mali.' Worknatin, served: With the Wrong type of -sausage in 'a WerhS ..eatitealiy: threw it out Of the W;nclo1W- r 'Ile elaiitea that he vas entitled to do , what. he liked with his° own saizatt4e,' • ISC,Inlitiary court held that hall been guilty of Unsocial .nriii tind",rnd . endely eotiditet, and suspended' - hien •frtnei Membership of the .Getiritin 'bent tient. for a year,