The Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-04-28, Page 611,111.1111,-,
. •
EDITORIAL, cOMMENT FROM IRE THER AND!'•
NVNP.Y:grliERE;. •
• 1
• NOW." THEY'RE 41.44.•
The• little ' • AllgAgao.: church at. Herb
• •
Lake, 89, tntieS northeast of The PAS.
-11,danitel?ej, was crowded last Sunday
* as evening se-vices•hegan. Sunday
fore,, you could have 'CO.:noted the eon,
,gregation on the •fingers of two hands.
• AqaPOO: the' hour of service was set
• back sixty-rainutes in-order:to. permit
;the 'Peebie of the.district. to listen to
• Charlie McCarthy at wen Weloalt and
•:1cc,4,Mtte• church at; eight:•' ' •
•Sa1d Rev. Percy, the .clergyinitn;
"Our, people jus t weren't .coniing t"
•''',Cliureh. MAY, ,.q44111e McCarthy'is -,a.
• .43.10ekhead, but he: dees' give whole.
.• SoMe entertainment...and" that itind,of
•• en:tertaininent is top, sadly ,lacking ' in.
many a settlement .of this, kind he
was worthy„ conaidering,"
'
„
- LONG, SESIQN.......fi,ecotiventar.ati'
er•the., Easter._recess,_,1110ase-rot
. •-gtoMinOna: at Ottawa is facing a huge '
, :amount of Work Which means a long,
• ,Apog session. SoMe of the things, to• .
cOrne. up:,' the Budgetj'.'Canada•Uz'S„.
• trade, agre.enlent, TreaSP.Ort. Bill, rO-
Pertez.,pfr...Geramiiialtine Including- 41107:
National, Employthent COnitnission re,
.•
withothers, are all matters of nioin-'
• ent.' ••
• .
• REASON FOR HASTE: Now that
Italy has concluded ,her. conversations
With'Britain and ".the new pact has
been signed. Mtuniolini" is turning very
'quickly to Franee in the hope
FraticoItglien.differenges.before
'Hitler oelees to Maize his visit in 'talk
,on . May 3rd..; Ile•lan't•eten asking that
France first- restore •ful' diplomatic re-
,lations• between the twO countries.(hy
nencling.an.Ambessacir .t6 Rothe).• .,
Because when Hitler' comes to • Rollie•'neXt :month ready to lord r_Mit
,s0, n • an orce •tra to fall in with his
.wishes, the .Pficewill have .two trutnp
xardEiIii his hand -the agreeinents
with Britain and FranCe,--Nice iverh
• ed. for from. ' the agreement, ' This.
;School of opinion, in other:words. jiist
d'oesn't trust Mussolini.'
'Jljen in quarters where faith h3
still placed' in the 'value of the.. Lea-
gu and Collective .security,
'PeXter sas the cry isthat- the ,a_groe-
merit is built oil a, ite,0041'.et
Ethio-
pii and •the • collapse or alt principle
•sac' that Of eibedieney,
,
•
••• DAl.SPZROPP' GR • D: NOPP of
tbe, Qn1r4UPlets • tbald' 'naive minded
.verY.'1040.4 whop'. theft.: .favorite' doctor.
Allatt,,RoyPafee, iaet:'week 'declared,
that,: Yvonne • , thebrightest of the,I.
ftve.•Intalletual ..compOtitien amenr;.,
feraales never is very fierce,. but 'When
opines :to the question of ' who's.. the
.heameoiriag'7,-- oh, boy!, We're afraid
Deg.pefoehas.eterted something., by
saying .that lie thinka•Annette'S the
"bretitige,t7
itEAtISTIC. FRIENDSHIP: . That
,•
.Canada and the 'United:States. should
enter, into a treaty' for rautnal 'defense.
_Agree men t that ne nationWould go to .the aid Of the other in
tally by •a proininent American news- ";
I paper, the,New' twit Isr.siMP.• "We know
that we're .already friends,' the • ar-
ticle, declares; "what is needed I that
our friendship Should take. on a More
realistic ,froin.", .
7,
elmova o ears
Aid 'to Tre4neiit
Medical Pat411t5 Sh0V14...Bg'Ad
Lifc.---WOrri!,S. and
Fears '$niC1 To Cause VigiAtive
Trotikle: • ..
Retnaval Of cayses of tear nud , wor-
ry, is an important faCtor hi the ;treat-
ment of 'many diseases, Pr.. Martin E.
Rehfuss.'PrP.e.eeer
'eine at Jefferson Medical Col -lege, as-
serted •at the Philadelphia County Me-
dical Clinic, • ••
•
' • . .
lan, deliberately?". he sad,
help year Patients adjust themSelVes
tolife.. if you ,Could, only write a few;
large ghentiesand Correct maritalfdis-
turbanges, Yon Wotill find: the sielt.tito-
-machs pf yonr.'nerrotS' patients aniaz.
hir,ly'iluick in taking tip their'erdric.:
people Are Worrying, ,
"With the stock market out of sight,.
politics a illlestion, mark. and future
• security ter of doubt, people are'
• worrying. And I know. from 30,000
fluOroecopic examinations that diges-
tive disturbances of the inost 'diverse
natUre`Can7:eceur fr:onl‘nerYotin:candl;
tiOns. '
' "Find out if your 'patient likes;his
• wife, likes his work, and It he spends
more than he earns.. Campaign .deltb
Iretely to adjust him to his environ-.
ment,"
'The, possibility 'of error in hasty
.,
diag.4.981..ir..a“idi Tit ed,:otit-by--Pr.I.:-Geo.
Pfal3.1er of Graduate Ilespital, when
be flashed one clinical -',X-ray photo-,
1%1'0.01, on the sefeen. "There's no one •
in this roonc,'", he declared, who would
not diagnose cancer, from this.picture.
'13ut it isn't. that at.ali, Itis a mess of •
peanut butter sandwich :that Che pat.6
lent Ate, contrary' to instructions."
- • •
•
Corning down to (he particid4r, It
adVoCatett that . :the 'United States'
•agree USW pome.of ;
ps
fOr. Canadian' defense.' by see, while,
Canada' Shotild tee td -it. that the Si.-
Lawreiice is.adequatelY:eciuipped with,
naval haste... . :• • • . •
' Ruch 'an, :agreement !Would 'itrtrie.
•. .
itt-
valuablc •to us Canada,' Should. thel
•
Great Britain' or Britain's 1:16cliterran-,
'ean or South African: sea 'ronies, and
Pot, be able to come to our aid incase '
• '
THEY .porr AGREE; grant Dex-
ter correspondent ,;in -Great Britain
for the P-191)e'rPld Mail andthe Winni-
peg Free Press, 'declares that the two
large 'political groups in _England are
. questioning prime 'Minister, Chamber-
lain's 0re1g-443,011°y, in Particular, the
i3.0W•agreeraent With italy.IThe centre
•
wing •Conservative sentiment;- as typi.;
fied. by the Yoricshire. Post; he.SELYS!
views the 'settlement coldly, •pointing
out,tJiaI while:the:Pact may .be*:gpod,..
girllie surface it 1s.,doubtful can
penetrate • the depths. The'. P;O:It'
that the. ter -me -of :thpAft*-1tre;.'
•-too' hroact'arid:tap. 'ague, leaving so
' niany loopholes that 'llttIS'ettn he hob -I -I
- The
SHEL
ELIZABETH . EEDY.';•
.• .
, S.TALEMATE: Japan, drawn further
and further into Chinese territory, and 7
spending lei:rifle; snins in an, Attempt
• to coneolidate, her gains, Is .coining •to
admit thatthe campaign China bus
.reacljed a stalemate, Reverses' that
,.Past: couple of week's. in Southern
Shantung. province, Southweetern
ICiangsahave been Unprecedented for
the :Japanese The realfaCti of the .
'shattering .defeats they have Suffered
are: Just now'beginning to 'leak Out.
:The-Itiriting-point:of the war appears
.to''be'itt.band, while at home the Milt -
lariats who threw 'IimaiL_into-the war
are:facing .hitter ,eritleisrnandTdettun-
•efition. Grave undest is. making i.tie4
, 'felt throughout the country, • •
eforestation, age of municipally -owned land, the
,
,frinn these SurVey,Swas the: percent -,:-
roup
Formed
COntervahch,
sociation'o*.lc e b
• Des c iton.
, L
The :Ontario :Conservation and, Re:.
forestation ,'ASsOciation,... it, province -
'Wide organikatiOn designed to proinote?
reforestation and conservation, 'was,
: formed. •at.:a tneeting Of :representv
fives from Several reforestation zones.
In ,varione parte' of Ontario held • in:
'torti county', last Weelrf:, .• .
Reeve ,James 'Rennie,. of Markham,
was named .preeident.of the new asso-
clation..0ther officers: Vice-president;
H. CnSselinan,..,:Ohesterville; ,,secre-
tary,'1,V. B. Potter, London; treasitrer,
W. W, Westen: '
.Will ,Survey Reforestation Zones •
Among resolutions adopted Wes ,One
reconithending• that the provincial toy-.
• :th:tutient he ••approached tO obtain leg
islation .preventing the .cientructiOn of ,
:tree growth:And: askhig, thit:;:t1-0
ting:.*:staell trees -.lie' controlled,-,--;-:::::•"--
govsrninent will be, redueeted
to !flake a ui4voy of Ali 1.eforeittation.
,zones In the prbvince. At present the
Province .1s, ,slIvided foto' fi'Ve Settee.
• Wallace Clallinger,..indver of the feSo,.
stated that Inferination desired
a •
perceatage of
submarginal land suit-,
able for reforestation, and the extent
and:cOnditien of waterheads
'This new organization .will co-op-
erate with the game' and 'fisheries de-
partmb-at-and-htnticulturalf.7iftiii-oilier
seeleties" interested Iri soll censerva-
tion.
Centre of London
,I3ogs.ti A Farm
A karin. Of 25 acres, charmingly
situated among old •-trees, beneath
which CremWeirs Men; are said to .
have sheltered, and wafered by' a
stream along Which. Queen Elizabeth
Sailed in her, State barge, is for Sale.
It all sounds beautifully rural-
' but actually the -farm is right in Lon -
den,, .England, less than five Miles '
from Charing breas. :-No farm is
cloSer to the centre of the city. -Con-.
. . •
thiental trains ,pass • its boundaries
within a- few minutes of leaving Vier
toria, In- the- spmmer-haymaking- can
be seen in progress almost before
passengers 'have had time to settle
down in their places. ,
.„ The farm is on the Belair estate, in
Dulwich, wleleh WAS , °Wiled by the
late Sir Evan Spicer.
Uncle of Kin 4 of Egypt Vits Laboratory
X-Ittaaein-Sahty,•Pasiia,-riglit,-41-tiele-pf the Kl'hg- of- tgypt, Vititts :the Irdiuse
ef Magis" at sclincetady;,.1NLY',', accorripaniedpy Wi Coolidge, dtrector
,ihe qaboratory, •
s
eUrcary Production Shims GAin
- kagt Year
• ..
Tbe production Of gold in Caltad*
1t1ring FebrOarY, arDOWitgCtto 0.40r
838 ne 'ounces compared with
0.80, ix th.e. PretitalS monti and 310,-
074 rn Enbruary, 191,ondott
prices ayeraged, 1P35,66 :Per 'Ounce du,
ring the latest month, n Canadian
fuucis, the value of the output being,
111,4.9.7,7*$if•41',the PreVietis Month
' prices' aVerage4.1:14;.?0, the total
being* 12,60491:47, •
PrpauDtion DY Ontario' Operators
in February totalled 410,448 ounce,
pf,:vvhieli 0'3,4,49 came from the 'Por-
; Ouphie. eanm, 73,704 from the Kirk-
land•take area Ard 43;495. front Oth-
, , •':
vsr. sources. • In January- the 'Perdu,
•pine camp, •preduCed 99948 oues)
KbAiand.L.ake ai:ee 82•,860 mid' other •
aautee,4 49,053. .Quebec 'produced
79*,879•;ounces against 76$65 inthe
previous • m'enth, - • 0...
jDwellerY and anl'aP:rq_eeTts'iat.,0e
Royal Canadiiti--Miiii in Febi.uaTy -
contained 1,286. Ounces Of gold; the
'1Q37' • was
1,711. ounces;
• •
ay Subsadme
Iron Industry
New. .Zealand .' Would GO Into
'1345ineeSr.5611:fl'aSS,t7.71
M .
;bpi ,Dio!viding, for 4tie :estsblish•-
.
rnent of an . iron and steel ind'ustry,As
a state monopoly in New Zealand,
has been introduced in the House of
RepresentatiYee,•at WeIIington,,
Jt is proposed to tina,neel'the
• indus-
try by nutliorizin..; the reserve bank to
hrreSt a stun :not exceeding tra10,-,
..The . control: Yof the indtistrY:
•,.;:yeuliL he' in ',the, .hands of three.com-
Siltiners7un-derTe*dition.
Minister of . industries, D. G. Sullivan.
.to :•TrainOwn Men'
'.'mr.:,•Stilliv,tt:a expected the '• initial
, .
fah production .wopid :be: :reached, in.
tWei years and ' this .Would. amount. to
•
about 85,006: tons of finiShe,t1 steel' an•;•
This would. ..necepeitate
. • .
•importing. about ..a.year froin
England and Australia. *. .
• J
.•TheProbosels are based ,on'a
.13y the,'firtn of Bras.s'eft ;and CompanY,.•
,
of Pondon,'"gonsulten :Sr who WOuld'•be
:silted toSupervise the technical'oper-
. . . , ,
• ations 'Until New, Zealand :had trained.
its , own.inen:' ." • •• •
,The ; propose.' la !...presnieablY.'' refer.
.prinelp.allY to the develoninent,of -iron
ore deposits at Onekaka.. and ,Nelson:.
"INTERMISSION IN EUROPE" BY
'VERNON BARTLETT/ ,
-..-"Intermissien in Europe" tellS,Yon
hitt hand of exciting events of .the
German Revolution; Of war in the Po-,
Bah Corridor: 'Of the nerve -shattering •
night when the votes were; counted In
the, Saar Pleblecite; , how Mussolini
snubhed..Hitler '•publicly citiring„.*he
historicmeeting in Venice; of the
March fitamcq of Haile Selassie in
Geneva; of Dolltues' assassination and,
funeral; of experiences in ,war-torn
Spain:. of tense, smoke-filled rooms be-
hind the scenes at Genoa, Stresi and
Bartlett has been present at a
great many history -making' ..scenes,;
and...remegibers-then*,•well: • "j '„.
•..From. personal knowledge - Vernon
Bartlett' can, in 'a:sentence provide'
the key to the personalities of Hitler,
:Goering, , Goebbels; Attaturk,_:
•Chnigg, Nitineolini;-Ed,en,"Lityinoff, tin
_Salazer4ind-others:
'
"IntermissionIn Europe". - by Ver-
non Bartlett, Oxford 7 University•Press,
Toronto, $2.75.
•
"KING GEORGE VI'''. BY 'i4io...roiFt
. • soLyin-lo •
No herd, feelings•Will...he *engendered.
y ector Bolitho's-account•of the life
of the .Present..occupant of I:lacking!
hara. Palace, "'England does 'not ask
)for a scholarly king or a witty.kingp
or one Who ilyee iaglamour," the par-
:ratlYe affirms "We .are a:Aoniestiel,t-
ed. •,pegia.le, ithd. When we pass ,Eficking-
haztt PalaCe; we, are happy ; and we feel •
safe when We knOW that within' there .
13 a ratirried'et'uple,joined together In
unanimity and peace." • ; . •
Mr liolitho'e dignifiect.chapters,.'Oo:
ver the ' childhood and 'educhtien7 of
King OpOrge VI, his war ,experiences
his marriage and his citron:Atkin,. The
-
conclusion; .,1 -fp IS king because he
satisfies the :tWerttletheentiiry cOneep,••
:mon of thonarehy" .• • .
'KingGeorge by,HOctor Bolitho
257 pp, -=--`I. B.•:141pbinebit•CompanY.
•Tctrorito; $2.00: ,
Survey js., Planned
Of Iron, -Discovery
Ontarib_Mker-Department-to-In-
vestigate ,the Potentialities of
FInds In Northern Ontario...
, ,
..TORONT0.1 --••.Thorongh!surtey of
' the petentialitites'cit'the.rePOrted..ne*•
hematite ;Oren: -cirei.•cliScoYeries, ten
.,,nalles_AorthivesLid.,Fort-IVilliant will
.be.niatle by.. ths•Departnient of Mine*,
Hon Pani Ledimatinennced•last'week.•
'• •
The new finds are being, developed
by piiVate :eaPital, and •in sciree..quar-
ters are viewed as a Continuation •0f,1
the famous Ntettabt rawge, Of.
Whtch in,. past Years COntribated so
nnith,". tothe development of Dultith
and other; United States -cities • on
Lake, Superior. .. • ' • • • •
• „
• ;. The Gov'ertratent'S survey, will proh•-
ably be made, ,hy.a meintier .91.:the .
•geolOgists'. branch. It Will:Pretty well
determine the extent of Iron or botin-
ty4.-ald Whichthe province Will 'con,
44:bute,'. if. asked, to the develOpMent. •
.The, Mines Department . has • been
••watching •• the situation clqsely, bar
. ,
tieularly• in • view of •repOrts,,ithdt..• the,
.•:ore : .eatt :be, produced for Marketing.'
•wittiotit, henegoiationt
. , .
ritis
.
Than Those at Present—Look to
,
.. SOO .Miles Per Hour—Exports
Grapple With New Problems
Created • In Aviation., • '
aentuts
reater
Statethents Made- lit*
;CoinniOns by oolonet ltifittrheed,' tinder.'
seeretary Of State fot'Air give pitothilit
of . even greater air speeds than those
at preeent,, Indeed,;R:Seerns ossible
' that these 4,1r-iipeeds '•WIlI shortly
Crosa the ratio at only • k few
.Years ago SC161'4416 b.elieVed the lit
-
men freine Would cellapee. tinder tfie:
. Strain'. •• •
„rEritisit s1entfsts, ciol Mbirbehil de:
clated,"Were :looking torwatil to SPeedn
of 500 .miles' per • hott :And-More-
a_cernpara;t1-velY•sliert tlnie'
• The II -Mister 4-eVeated one' of the
nietlibils, Which -Will assist In obtain-
ing,4411Ch seeds, eiPlatiting, that the
.1millediatelY" AdjaCent to ihe
• plane v/Ing. turfACe 'oseillatnS ,YielentlY
•Inittead flowing �i; Over.,
•COnstituflIng •• a thxbuitbo adart,
.•
.1a4rei'' retarding, the 'peed.
EXPerlinent8 are: 110W:tinder. . ii§"
,eurrdCt thle' inipedinient by art der iy
J•••
ee
drawing: ilitS tnyOulent'. %yet., away;
thus " .Striodthling out the flow Of air.
over the wing,iitirfaceS '
.Problems•
At and above 'Ole .500-tnile'Perlieur .
:speed, '4 new. range of problems has,
to bo facod, more , Partleularly the
,COminessibility 'of Alt; and, new exPort;
Monts with the.Wind• tunnel 'are TOC63...
sari.' to furnish.vitaidain on, thee°,
Otto - of the latesi 'hea.VY, bombers
nOW 111;•seinitce, ArtastreitgVhit,,*
.Worth. "WlittleY" thenOplane, named•
the, 'Whitley 1V; An shOWIO.9 Iinth1:9(
improvement over • its PredecesdOtt,•••
"the Whitley, r, 11, atidjui,Vio latter
baying a erseed.or 212 InpJt., whjla the :
WhitISY.
than the nr.• • ." •
dotalls al:6. net ,yet
able:the "perfOrthetica.:Of • the leteet
tYPe. can: beestiniatedthrough the In
fort,. '1On that' the Whitley I, weighed
attproxitrintely 2;(1.00 pounds and had
range .• of 1,500' mliett With: A 'heavy
hortile
4
it •
' •
'CANADA -
H.'
E EMPIRE
• •
a 'Button
o
$ee ':"Catiadi":'
•At .Empire
.-LARO,Ei
CANADA ,
:Pelatijcs°staitiatt
Crime Wave
et
ve'lmn IS On the
• InereaSe at "the present time. ,We
thbught skulduggery reached its peak ,
; in, the• country each, year about the •
time the harvest apples ripen.-Pciter,,
• . .
norough Examiner.
•,;
The Other Ektreme'
Ontario's atitemohile. inarkers are
to be yellow and black for 1939, Now
•listente thoee fellowaiyho have •been•
criticizing the ,1938 markers say' the
new ones.10ok pracards.
-St: Thoinal. Titnes,purnal. ,
40111,4 After Tourists ,
• Although it, lies a bit off the beaten
path', Prince Edward Island is:begin.
to.....Share.la.,the--proceeds from-
,I•the tourist -traffic and when the, Pro-
vincial Legislature inet recently, it
-rwat4--dOelared* lir The- -,8P-e-delCtioncIli-e-i
Throne that ,J4e tourist liuginess of
"The Island" had 'shown rapid, de-:
velopment,Broekville 'Recorder and
Times.
Living Without Working• '
Can anyone "doubt the point that it
would be better to ,spend eiten. Inore
nioney'aneget •something itt return •
rather than.spend what Is being spent
today without "anything; being :dono.
except . to procleini..te. the world' that'
thonsands.:0; people are living.,on. die -
:id. relief .and., moat -take. their • living
•.:iwIth•otiLWotkin do1.
lars.theiChave been .stent, toqiebi
poo-
ple In Idleness" iemain ronket the.,
.tregediesof; the non -production- period.
in Western Canada. It Is not toO•14te
to make a start. -,-Regina Leader -Post;
%Cannda In England
I A' 'straggling* English : settlement,
nestling along a' -Windtng, .Hampshire
lane, litts."bnt 200 -odd inhabitants, but
• ••• . ." • • „... •
•. • . '
they 'ere proud of ,heing. called Cana-,
• About 7,8. tailes • Ociin London, , the,
...village: has. houses, :Church,. publlc
hi:mite, one :store And,. a '.131acktiraith
shop' all cluttered . along a single
street. , • • • •
ywil4Iya.ge.4%;10g:reerstrange .
•
when thousands, were. ' Migrating to
. Canada; there. was a..miner*.blick-to
". the -land ,'n3oYeinent :in. Hemp:shire
•':Ahout. 29, families settled in pile, area..•.
Hutswere built -,bY,Itiik...piOneers, and
the lAndlipken for cultivatlon.
- •
WIten" the question of naming the
, settlement was debated, , SOMeon*
,pointed fait that those there, were set -
tiers Net as Much As the people who -
had' migrated to the Dominion.'"Can,
'Ada"B
was name chopen.--Mrnielpal• eview, of Canada.
. .
. •
THE EMPIRE'
• Fair. Share • 01: tke.:Load
The vastness .of the burden of gm;
Pip*: defence:. which Britain has thee
assumed 'must arouse. questionings
whether Australia„ prOportion, tor.
1..her wealth and population : is doing
• :e nOu
teetitin. We are ,reIntilding the de
fences which:Were alloweit.tO
te.;disrepair during , the, , deprenion,
.bnt.our.effort is small'Compared With
.•
, the---trementleo'ef feet- WhichBi itain
is putting forth-an...effort: Which ,i(die
can tiot; tinaidedil aintallx•indelinitely..,„
'Other:Considerations apart-, the claim
which Anstraiii-Cand the other , Pomba,
ions Make ,t,O coneultation on foreign
" policy tniplies that they Must be ready'
to take ,a'fair share ef the load .w.htch
is •noW. So,• heavily . In the
Motherlanch-Ychiei 'Herald.
China Can Win'
Ever . .
slace the, outbreak•of.-the'SinO•
,JAPanese War -the Japanese' have at:
least now ',attained, .the•-distinetion,
• , (410. 61 • being :the ,-initiators ..of the
:cnutieelared War",:erathe•Daily,press.
naval. Power though she be, japen,•-in'
,eni"barking,Oa,a• campaign of conquest
in `china, had set out on what is cer:
tan to culminate lit national...suicide,
• 'het.view has been'expressed,on many
eccasionentit as A•pleeekif,prepagari-.,
.da, but becanse'Sucti'hai:"elitays been,
.and still :is • out., lirrn.conyictIon, baked
OnSeyei•al irrefutable factol•s; .
0aPen 'evidehtlY Considers the China
• incident?'sufficiently .grave tO,.WArrant.
the fitehilizAtion Of • the •netion'e.entire
reseurees, althengh. slag ha e repeatedly'
•• denied '..tha*;" the •.measureVill be used ,
during. present -hOstilities. The ,Idob•,,•
illXatiOn Bill ig the existing eircunt:'
.statteee wIll probably proirethe pro4••
• •Terbial last.. straw • which breaks the
• ..caniel'e Itaek,, and Itmaybe confident...
ly expected' that -provided the Chin-
"eirie•-inaintain,'-:ilieir the
jepaneeemasses' will, hetet° a year:
from this date,. have •openly 'rebelled.
•, against the madness etifieir
rulers -Hong Kong: preati. • ••
, . . .
Game Of Baseball
Played On , Moon
4n Inaagmary--Game—Hitter-lias-
To Circle Bases Six Times To
, Get Home Bun; Put Fly 1,500
' Feet High. •
The Hayden Planetarium of the
qinerican. Museum of Nattirel•-.His-
tory, NeW., or , :this year beat:the
• gun on (vetting the 1938; baseball
-'seasen by "broadcasting" an iniagiri-
ary ball game,: an the
'The Setting Was realistic, 2;400
feet of, painted • close-ups of the
moon's surface which the planetari-
inn is showing, ' The announcer was
. Profeesor. Wiliiam H. Barton, Jr.,
Who is .kbaieball fait as Well •as aS•
trpnomer.,.. ' •
, • ,
Field Mils Long' .
"That's the • field,'?, ,he•said, point-
ing te'a shadowy arenbehind A moon
-.crater. i'It IS a_Mile
• it mile wide: • ' .
• mit is in the sha,de hecauie•In .the
Sun the teniperature is the boiling •
point of Water: • • ,
" "The first', batter, smacksA, long fly.
' Up and up goes the ball' 500H -I 000
, '
-1,500-feet. elder Catches. it a
quarter pf a mile away:
"The next batter ,StnackS: A ,homer
;He makes first base in three' strides.
He -gitei :30 feetwith ettah' step -7-12
,-..steptt-to-Cir-ele-the--bases. '
But he ,goes around again. On.
"
the moon the rule is six times Around
the -lases needed for:. . home. rtin.
Jilet 72: strides,
„ • 30 -Foot• Leaps
,The moon: is so small -its. gravity is
one-sixth ,-that • .of earth. A 150.
pound man there 'Weighs. 25;. But
With a , ball Player's 'rnoecleshe can
•run in 30 foot leaps. • Aplayer like
Cobb 'Would be./ expected to steal
'second: fp two jumps -45 feet each
Players 'would need :oxYgen res-
• • .
Atirators. • But there IS sPeculAtion.
whether creatures licing:on the 'moon
,for a million yeIrs might condition
'themselves to ;do:without respiritters.
lteeently astronomers have Suggested:
:that some Color changes they be ve-
getation,: and that maybe there Is ;fast
a little' rarefied atmosphere:
'I'he -rate of, disintegration: of -the(
element graniura; into helium And
lead, furnished •••,science swith one, of
the most accuretc historical clocks
'for• mcastniing-tIe age •of the cart
Dollfuss Children in Exile in Switzerland '
go:to Be Unique Feature
gLASCONit,-,-Canacla will play 'a
censpienons ro)e the• United King",
dom's greatest eihibitien since Weal.-
bley, .1924-45,, -whic440g.or ita
dinP10Y May Of baCIOd hY.4 Tlar,
antee: fund of. ;3;750,000,.*'. - •
The Canadian pavilion covers 24,-
000 'nqiitite feet. It -is 13014 of ,Cana-;
dian lumber on' a framework
.of Prit- •
ish steel. *, Flanking( the vntrance are
two 7eight,foot,.ligures Of ` 'Canadian.
you. ,SUrinounting. the .paYilion is
a 4.00490 tower.' '
••• Illuminated Mai,' •
A feature of' Canada5s display will
be the largest MaP, in
-the . .13y 'pressing On hti,t,7,
toni- visitors Wilj be able to -light up
such features of ,Canadian life: and
developments' as Mines, ,,Outposta at
the Royal Canadian Mounted,
airports and cities: .;.,••
panda:- iii antt
ithite,. forming a balcony round the
Anteript-attlyr bu-ilding;TWI UStrate
Canadian bnildings of ***bile and hie:- .
toric interest' and a dozen dioramas,, •'.
wiil tell',,the story of Canadian.indiiii,
tries, sport and edutittion.-
Ca-
nadian railways ,and manufacturers
throughout the Dominion will also
*-contrihute-to-the-exposition.,
rniany Issues
Jewish - Reader
"First Book" Starts Where Anti.' .
Senitic Prenner Stopped --In-
structs In. Jewish Question.
••••••••••••.•
Julius Streicher, Gerniany'S leading
,anti;Sernite; I:hie-Week issued 'his '"first ,
' reader,''. whiph.'ite..aald in •:143,•newsPiv• :•••
.per, per stileytrier,'.vas intend,ed••to. in- •••
• .
eNts: ,..cfnee dn'
by Pieturea and:stories...easy' to ander-
:The -6OOk;•;pleking up: Where. Strel• •
,elteee-anti-Sethitle-"Prinier"--1,eff off,. .
coIttttjn s se ven'teeti ' stories :with. Bach' ,
I•title s as !What Happened to Inge at .
the Jewish' Pecter'S'''and 41:loW a Jew '
Treats His .pentaleiSeriant's.". •
Outlining "the •150ok's. ,Pitip68e, per
.Sttfermer said; •.: ••,
' the. Gerinan peop1Stird to. retrain
protectediti .the • future
gets Into whith,:the Jew has tumbled
.,it hi the bait; every -dertnan mat be ,
jeliiregeeted' thoroughly
---edge aboat,the•Jew."i•,•,.., • '
' • ;. "Bad •People" Are the Jews
1.• The, stories in.', the. Streleher reader
'pentain. ohservatlonS.:such 'an; 'There •'
are good people .and•had•-peonle.--'/Phe-- •
,..had ,people•are.ihel'Jewer , '• ' • •
•
This •eccnrs,itt the:OP:01'11g ..chapter,
,Where'n'.'nicither teaching her soti
how to distinguish, netweenedible
niushroonis and poisonous,: .•• • ;
• .:Slie,gra•vely:exPlains4:0--the-tOphow
.`"just•as,otte polsonotis nuiphrOoni cankill a whole farnily, ,
'so,, can. one '.Jew:.
ruin.,n'WhOle cifY--;•eyen a whole:nor..
1,000 Musical Afrs
Detroit Boy Who h Mental Mar-
vel Has Encyclopedic
ledge
•
•
.• A Mental Marvel at four, GeOrge Po- :
"vett, son of Mr..*and.'Mrs,'" Lev-. •
f• ett of 'D.etroft?. Can hum the ,airs of 3,,
000 muslcai eothpositions,. fncludjng
...the 'themes Anti: 'overtures: airiaa .and
. Marches.' ' - • • • ,•••• •
His knoviledge,,ot,geographyl is com-
.:Ptnhensfire..:Geltrget Can tell the
popla-
tion of the World's' largest citles, nante
'State Capitals the boundaries 'of Iany
• state, And .7waters ,surroundthg any na-
tion.'
In the' W.g.;r1d.'. At any .14•Me,olte Can
tell the exacl. hour In any 0! a.'do2en •
• Cities Scattered around2the glebe. .•
With',10towledge .; A Spirts editormlght env-, ,
,he naines baseball ,stara,
their*teams. and ‚batting: hverageS„Off •
In an Offhand niainier','40" can
'recite" the, ,",Pecla.ration••, of '•Independ-
ence, the:,•preamble,. to :the.; -Constitu-
tion. Oe. the '1:tr;S:;.nanta ;planet's' titid• tell •• •
• tifelF.dlathifee from the; earth, andtell:- . •
What .hatttiii raises the lnost wheat.
firther minas' 4ys ybet
••• gantogas s agb, picOng'up things lie
• lieard.'ne',say.„ We,.have fiever alio*, •
ed itini to ltepoine• commerelalised'' .
•• George has. A Sister, and a brother,
both older, who betray .aolio of their
brot.her's ebnerl 1. Mental traits.
"-.
Cancer Toll
Canter Ileathe in' :•6(inada- arc ShOW,
Ing 'a steady inereenentid thOinaladk
.tti.now taking' a tcql of .1,6:4.40.e,the,
Per''annith., Dr;J s McEitelteM
eliairtilnil of tlid.
...4..S.1+A84nasits.n...anininfttes-,:,:i}t-- Oen--
-per Conti o, told' it :city health'opo6. •
tion Vanteniver; latit Week:. •
British Coltnnbta,. INICEabiterti
"Abovo is the first%pictuto to Pe &Lof 'Mutt ana EN'a"iiollfuss„chitd, °
slate 1509 DC.; ItS-eattse and
•of AtiStria'S ateasiiiiieted., Chancellor, .4:44 they grow hp irr Castle
..Middes) ZWitterlithd. :Their 'Mettler. Also et the baStle,
said; lutti the highest :death tell of aity
,brOsinbe In Canticle.
0141);. ki411,thM6,6fityniiei,v'epiTif.t7,001 Opfi, Petnotlintk
told to meeljag that although the
4.118basehnd been , knOwn and .recog-'
eliteWrestm virtually unthiowit,