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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-06-16, Page 2- Commentary on the ••• Highlighb of the ••Week's EPA! UNEXPLORED MARKET : .:the' Mines when there is so little •.• • lieVing Canada to he a•• land, rich '' employment aYailahl4"in.pertieu,.; viith; aessibilitiee beyond dreaming lar for; Aintramed workers. :Rbp as a Market'fer his wares,.,a gee- hundreds 91 unemployed Jining mask salesman has arrived berg the strcets of,Timmins and -Kirk- from _ th9. „PlitOb „IOO.* Delirious.' land Lake are testimony enough • With delight, we ...bnagirie. he is, to the futility of a young 'chap , • at the opportunity of working in going up .there without a definite •.a field sefertile, hitherto 'Unex- • job in view, • . AA • .1)1Orred, 11,000,000 potential ens,. • Under -the Dominion -Provincial toiners; oh r boy! , • youth training scheme, a number "There is -41 growing feeling yelnig.nien are'being specially ^•', aiming a lotof-people that they'd !fitted for work in the' Mines,. • like to Pwn•a, gond gas mask, and Who •doubtless will be • abgerbe.d that is WhY; we are selling them," ; by the/industry SS selsnna,r, flactu.; , • he 'declared" on disembarking at Sfion :in -enaploYment occurs. But . , • *entreat.' • . ." ' to other • young men thinking of •„ YOUdon't thinh-ja sales .am: : • gbirig: north:. We would :say' "better xiaign Will`go, over hie Wait 4 . staY. 941 • • . , • • While and see. ' Gas -Mask suirinu- .0 . . ' • ''" ' factnrers; you know; have ways of !JAPAN AND THE OLYMPICS: -,ereating a 'demand for their goods. The • official 'plans of the Japanese . , . . . • • '—,.-- ' Government concerning the„Olynif' • ., , HUNGARY'S. POSITION; Hun_ s pie Gaines (KIItii' , Olympiad). g,rY's new "strong :man" pron.' , Scheduled to, be led in' Tokyo in 'ler, Bela Imredi, has annciunced ,1940 are reYealed by the Minister' . . that Hungary Is drawing closer to of ;Welfare: , : the Itomel3erlin axis of. Adolf - "China has taken- the attitude Hitler and lienito.;Mtissolini.-"Our ' Of prolonging hostilities toward •:"relations With Ger' any," .he saYs-, - "•.-4PanT but we are .patting forth- ( ;Naitire. growing m e intimate." , . eVery- eff'ort to ' end this current • Bordered on e west et Ans- Conflict. There are still two years . , , - , , lila, on thenorth' by ezechoslo- . left before the . opening of the •. vakia,. Hungary A 'in a;strategic XlIth Olyinpic Games, and we be-. : position, intleed..,, if the country lieve :thatby that thine, the eon - were to fall in with Hitler's plane, flict,Will, be ended: With this fact ,go' toinpletelY Nazi and „become in mind we are preparing for the 'part of Greater gerinahYt, Czech°, • ;XIIth•OlyMpie Gaines in 'bider to ;.teloviikia- would' , he still. further.' assure. a .successful celebration in /shuttled in the Middle of Europe. 1940; WhiCli coincides with the . , Inside Hungaky's Fascist GOV*, 1 2000th anniversary .of the Japan- 'sizintient there is an active element. '.ese.nation. It is a wonderful op,' ;demanding returnof territory: Portunity toreveal' the ;true as- - , lost in :the, post-war treaties. Pect.01 Our nation.to the youth, of • ' "'Should. Germany agree: to 'satisfy • the World. and .it is altogether demand, Ilimgary would proper '-that sUPPOrt should • ••'• , r,--11e-arfor-e-fer-Winy leas .the- -154:7-grypii'la7t1.1.F.‘pretiairatio'h • �f,- IdernOCracies night ` advance. • ' ••• the XIIth -01yMpit Games Tokyo,. - I } .STAY AT HOME, vOuNG • MANT..y.Iii.tlie Old days When Can-. !LAME THE '01'HER FBI.1,1.0W • *Ws prairie 'country 'was'. a land • The Rome correspondent of the ofpromise; "Go West, young -man" New., 'VOik Times in a despatch. was the Cry:, And ..west he Went „•dated May, 18 said of ;Mussolini's ; in a covered•wagoir, or a "harvest-. Part in the Spanish' war: "En- ' cis' excursion" train. AnesueCeSs gaged. as he • is to the British, the 'as his; Inv the drought years , • Duce Cannot 'openly. begin sending Came. , '.• • •' feinfOrcements rind more;matei ials . • The mining boom' in Northern to Franco unless he can get syrn- .Ontario:- 'following, the War sent Pjithy on his "side by accusing the . hundreds of young Men north in krerich of sending ininte help to. • search of. gold;, Or work.' Many ,of • the I.lOyalists., than he: is to , them Lound, both. But :today,. nl-, Franco." . though the mines • are going ahead •, Two days later, MaSSOnni be - full blast, the number ()Linen they gan those very,' accusations pre- . can employ is 'necessarily, limited; dieted in the despateh: _Of; the their ehinice Of emploYees is gov-', -same color now are his. Claima that . • eyned, by a need for trained 'Tem- loyalist, not insurgent; • planet'', ,cient workers. ., made bombingexpeditlens. over It is a mistake then for. young ' France ,last week.. • • , men • from. Southern Ontario . to . The, machinery Of • propaganda flock north ,in search of jobs in. -appears to be 'Working effectively„ Says Canada Is • An: Envied Land In Position of -Danger*, Claims Yea", Archdeacon Scott.: Be-, ,cause.Other Countries Eye It Jealously, Canada.; the •"most envied coun- try in the world for countries • 'needing expansion,'', is in a posi- tion of "great danger. so liar as .tht' upset Of the world'is concern ed," Ven." Archdeacon F. G. Scott, ,senior. chaplain of the' danadian, ,Expeditionary Force in the Greet War, .said.:at 'Windsor last "A german hook .has been pub - Saying Canada is„a natural :place : for , ,Gerinan expansion," Canon Stott told a Rotary,•altib dinner., "If' has .been suggested Canada . needs irnmigtation ;and this imMigratio,0 be financed by Germany, ' that the immigrants ' would he • ,German at all times in- tensely Ioyril• to, Berlin, ••and that' it is not too ,soen, for those,to come to Canada."„ " Threat to tiominion's Peace "The :power that own' Anticosti, Island is the power that is going to govAin Canada,". ',Canon Scott sal41.. "It wpuld, 'make, a largo air- , plane base and 'other things could he:Carried on. 11 wimid 'ehabie• iountriesto catapult, plane 4 . out on Canada." • • On the' Pacific Coast ,the Jap- anese had bought Up ',slim]) islands, ' in the name of Canadian compan- ies, „ These constitUte , another • , threatqo• the peace and stability Of Canada, he saK Brair, Puts Man 'Above the Beast The Nearest Intelligence To •• 'That of Man is Possessed Sy Anthropoid Ape 'the chief 'distinguishing feature • hetWeen Than and the ,10,Ver gni- •' malt is, mari'li hrain, It is the nias.,. , ter .organ which' gives the human ; being power to think' arid to rea- , • eon, to speak arieto, create. ,The brains of all animals, 'however, are not, the same—as anyone Who has had Mach . experiencewith , , them knows. There is lots of dif- ference between the brain', of a fish worin and that of a dog or .a horse., .Indeed there are °differ- ences between the brains of _ cilia dogs and various horses ex- actly asthere are differences be- tween the brains of various. men. • "Hands That Grit's') . • •The "nearest. brain to that of ' 'man is the' Iirain of 'What are. called the anthropoid' apes — the monkeys that are like a man.. These monkeys,' • including the chimpanzee, 2 orang-utan, .Lemur and the gorilla, , havehands that grasp and a brain structure much like that of Man: There are some expertwilio insist that these Mort- lieya have even limited pOwera, of reasoning: . Intelligetice, testsmade, on the orang-utan 'ShOy that it, is slow • but that it, aitually tries to get in- sight into eveiy test' situation. In ' tact;,' -it has been' urged'• that the • brafn, of this monkey can attain the ..---(1-elormient. 'necessary for the prodtiork, of an idea. '• • - • ' The clurnpanzedS,•have 'attained great reputations as performers • and as cornedians: • " Gorillas, tee make remarkable clevelopiirent;. " The one 'which , is attracting attention in a circus this year was raised in a horne as ,have bten other' gorillas in the 'past. The gorilla's brain is larftet., and weighs' more thanthat of any 'ether; ape, arid in many other ' ; yifeyS is,nearest to .that of Man. Lack, of Mineals Is Disease Cause eirrnm,bri , Trouble- - With All, • I Clascei.of.Fittri-Anittale, , The lack of adeunate Mitteralii .,••• the soil Means .that, the ,Cl ops • grOwn. thertdii* %Oil Aliso be low iii theSeCS4entiala• ' consequently .aril; nialSyltest •teedcansists largely:et heniegroWa'prOtintlii are 'prone to Suffer frOin:(leilelenty tilsentes:$uell ;. a8 rielteta,' SI lif : joints, hone mall • fOrniations; n aentia, goitre t Cli!: 1(y and- bnlitelitinets getleral1k, Many An animal inay;nopear.titilto normal ead- yet' be below •Ikat, ,for • by the litne: SYMPtoniS et -Mineral.' "defieleney bedistrit :alainly. apparent ' The diseatit,lhig. reached an: advanc- ed. stage. • • 1 tO New. Power • , Xrr,. • Hghandas' K Ghandi, India's spokesman for the masses, is shown (X) leading a group of hs diseiples • Liking. a road of a .frontwr. province.. The little Hindu,' mystic is reported to have made peace with. the British and hurdled the laSt.barrier of internal -dissension thr-ough-an-agrpement between Hindu and Mohammedan i.. communitiea. 'Hei is Sad now to hold almost dii ctatoral powers in India and is in reinarkably good health. . . • . • THE W.01Z4D• AT LARGE ANADA o the: • Technique of Borrowing • A bank is a place, where 'you can borrow inoney •can prove you (lon't. need it.—Brandon :Sun.. • '• • Easy to Guess the Ending, „ When you see the heading, "Tied to .change in a ' boat," all that is -necessary is to look :it the hot,tont.of the paragraph to see if the bodies' have been Guelph Mercury. . • •-•Ft'" LeaVe Snakes Alone .. Oarter Snak,eS iire''iiroba:bli, the.. most coma:len. species -in 'Ontario, and. are 'even . found 'within' the city Thereis a disposition to kill them but 'theyserve some good PurposeY; and experienced garden- ers le'aVe them alone.—St. Cathar- ines' Standard) ' Lees Have British Tourists _Let's all boost for the British • • „tonrists: ThereareInindreda Of • thousands of : people in., 'Britain Who, like to get aft the tight little isle' to spend their holidays and, have the -necessary .money to do so..., They . go practically all oyer. anlie .world, and there is no reason, why more of them •should' , not come l to Canada. We would like :to have 'theni. System Archaic Electoral Sy . , - -nSaskatchewan, now inthe throes: of i'generaI.election 'cam- paign, is, ,perhaps -',•the World's "horrible example" of the ,results Of an ,archaic electoral system. At. the general electron, of 1934. the Liberals Polled 2,06,191; votes, the Conservatives 144,973,. and Far- mer -Labour 103,582., The Liberals • elected 50 '.rnembers, Farmer -Lab- , ou'f•thek.Lbalange of five in a House Of .55=and the •Conservatives no members at all. And if ever there ...was an, argument for SOMa sett of ' proportional 'representation; it is to be found in those amazing lop- side(l results. With considerably' le -i than half tht. popular Vote, the Liberal party elected 50 mem- bers in a,HouSe of -55, Halifax Herald. • ; Our Signature "Dishonored 'Canada's Signature stand's upon. , • r the Covenant Of the League of • Nations. Mi.. King' in effect de- ehiresthat that signattfro" is now dishOhored. If he replies that, in the present stetc of the World, no other, course is practicable, he ; CANADA -THE EMPIRE 'might with usefulness Study.; tbe presentposition of the Dotriinien.-' ,of New Zealand .which has had the '• courage to ; stick' to its' ',Pledged. Word and, has refused to Play the conscienceless . game alto.' which Mr. King and his 'Government have fallen. Mr. King' points • out that each Dominion 'stands' Upon its , own feet. True.. But let himr consider What might hate been the course of world affairs since. 1935 it least had Canada had courage -similar to that -isplayed by 'New Zealand., Had two Of the Doiain-. ions. together t..ken • the Stand ' , which one of them • did,: it is not 'fanciful to irriagine$1,a,rthe Course . of Britisle-fereige,'`PoliCY might have been verY.t..differeat.;;-7Winni- peg Free. Press. The. EMPIRE 'Much To Be. Thankful For,. There are ' other things Which make the British system of .life Worth any sierifice. This week the principle ofholidays' with pay has been -granted to every worker in the.country.r And the House of Commons has passed a• Bill for- bidding a manto leave his wife and family unsupported if, he has . • anything to leave them. When you. feel inclined to praise foreign systems of government, 'compare 'your own. We have much that, needs improving: •Even so, we Ai•,e • , a long , way ahead of any other countryin the world. London Sunday ,.Chronicle. • . Dangerous , Race- Prejudice The outcryagainstJews as Jews ,Prie of :those things Which 'flare •• up among the unthinking, and '4dd fresh filet to racial'.strife in a ' world already sadly torn by rac- ial :antagonisms. • 'Emotions . hatred, contempt,: .and suspicion 'poured out against any race, claSs, .or nation are a direct generating Cause of wars .and, in their local; manifestations, of civil commo- tions, Pogronis against' Jews and campaigns of extermination di- rected ; by a Powerful, nation ;against a Weaker "can be . traced to the same fundamentally wrong, attitudes. ,- World opinion is only conkfornerate ofthe thoughts • of the Plain citizens•in each coin: 'muititY; and Trinidad has :a cpn- • tribution to make, not onlyitia its own :self-respect, but to World or- . • der; 'by keeping away from _racial prejtidies in the' discussion Of the , pressing problem of immigi,•ation. • The Guardian :(Trinidad, 'I B. W. ' lion „Preyenta.Anaernia •,;; Calciumand, :phoSphortts .are :re= • ..atileed in notlibln'athounts ,fo'r bond. building, 'and •the itietabClistif • of :fa lik carbohYdrates. irr, the an • mql body depe,nds • on PliOsphortis, Chlorhie goes teOnake likdrciehlbric acid in ,the geStrie ,ItdeeS,".Sulphui is an lutpOrtant conStiftient,.eit the; Proteins •.rifflesh valid eggc,' • Itou ,preverita anAe)nla a diseaie so pre-' ,:Valent, in young pigs; itiid the 'per- ' Pose et the eoppee Jto aid the as • •Slinilittlen et iron' by tire bleed, lo- tiltie is..introdifted,tui a Preventive of goitre in daivea and eho,e0. of ' • ;Iititeleistrieas 111 In 4:441s -had to iMpreVe•the hair or coat e of kiteit the iitaithiigleai• so. Will on the ,pelts of ftif•bearing . Stock, sueh as foxes and 'tniak,.. trealtneSa .1k:hew-born •anirnals can. ' , be •aVtilded. by •giviiig" the:,•dain— •Sow, cew,"eWe, 'mare orvixeti;: mln oral contents:in.:bet feed„ 'from the: start of• ,the gestalten period,' : Residents4 of kess'ina; Saudi • Africa, were shaken in their' beds. when hundieds of tons Of rock from anexCa' VatiOn worked by thd andentii, fell intp a •,'rhine . three miles from the town, '10ang .a hole 200 feet long, 16o feet • Wide, and neaily 80 feet deip. • Too 'ji �w tationihg. gasoline. inototeyelist14 ••••• ,• ' • ,. 11" DelinquentBoys'. Own Salvation 'la Worked Out irk B.C.:1.34mA- ment—Try Honot-System•.in- ' Fight' Against. Crime :Waves 11 ' A 'few' months ago it was a sag; ging ofd mansion, but now It is a: ' •• 'Min place with a" tidy garden where. • ,youngstetsre trying to get t.:1ikt-witii-the-;16W-amerthenisetv,.;00:7:7 -'1' his is Biitish Cilumbia'W experi!f, nient in ithe• honor, iyhtent • young delinquents.. Behind. !tber' .:\scheme is the PrOvince''s, attorney - 'generals; Gordon Wisnier..: • The bOYs, come from the proiln- cial jail; also in the •municipality• Of Bureaby, adjoinhig tanCouver. At • the beginning Of 1933they were in.7. stalled under $iipervisor.Angus' MC- • •Leod in the building the • goebrii- .. nient bought forkhe put.Posff. ' .Four months later they had re paired .the. bUild:ing ,.expertly', and the gardens were neat and decorit-; ive. All that is lacking is a'fenCe around the grounds: Visitors are.' , welcomeand net one inmate has tried to esCape. • • ' • , Jn preParatien ter eight :hours • work a day the ,3-citingsters have :morning service conducted hi turn .by etteli member of iliel'''gang.'4,4t • Was suggested by themselves.: ' In the eienings 'there 'are' special' classes and sbrne afternoons are givenl..oVe.r• to Instruction in first - aid, placer mining and other .prie- tical coueSes. • • • • The object is to equip the Youth's to ,pielt hp life -,normal way when they leave the Institution. Vaneouver business men ho have contributed, money ' for genies, equipment aill be asked; to keep an eye on them later; 1 : Keeping' an eye.,on them now IS • :McLeod, • who began. ; his work atherig young • pris‘oners in the pro vinciau"jail. He finds that: 95 per ' Cent. of 'its .chargeti-,Were either ' "orphana: or came frtim.honies that racked the ,Proper parental rnflu ence. " a's, Oil , utp14 Rises 1 757,756-Barril 'Yield in Four Months Sets All -Time • Record CAT.gARY;'-"7•Alberta Prod4e, tion for the. Arst : tour 'montliS, of 1934, hit a new aiiint it Was7rPpgrt-• 94 in anOfileial government state, ment Issued here. For the four - mOnthP, PrPtilicf104 totalled 1,757,753'. ;barrels, almost three•times•as much as was irlidUc- ed'duriag the•correspolidinig period . of 1937 and. Six times as 'much as, the 'Yield $A:, the corresponding li)0104;o;-: 1936, APProximatebi'.99 ''per. cent, of the production came from; the. Turner ' Valley field, 45 Miles southWegt • of 'Calgary.: Most 'of it was from; the ;prude' oil wells la the south end of the field:- : . '''OnlY,42•Pter;en,t• of OaPaolty. Despitea proration schedule •10d7 Ing down production to 42 per cent. of capacity, the Yidid of Alberta • wells hae been maintained at niore-1. • than 400,000 barrelsa month since the first of 1933. InApril-production was 447241 , ` barrels compared with 172,130 bar- rels in April 1937, and 76,615 bar• reli• in April 1936: Of the .401; 'prOduetion., 443,183 barrelli came, from. Turner Valley:, • • Will Unveil.. Memorial To Australians , Who Died the Great War,,— • SinGeorge In Sombre. Ceremony at at' 'Valera- qtratanneitux July ' The ..gay Welcome whieli• Paris ---proMiser".-forltirtC-Ge" ‘.,..Queen Elizabeth, *heir, they pay their ' first State visit at :the end': of June will be in Contrast to the sombre ceremony at Villers -Bre - tonneaux When His Majesty:un- , veils the TAustrdian war memorial Itis just two years since fing Edward VIII took part in a simi- lar ceremony, unveiling the Cana- dian Membriat at Viiny Ridge. • 11,000 KiIled'There • The King, who will have „previ- ,. . ously witnessed' the unveiling of a, war memorial at Boulogne,, will . be visiting the place • where. more - than 11,000 Australians were • -killed during the Somme'campaign . 22 years ago, . tr.ie new village risen from. the ruins of the war, the King' Will - ',pass through, a, gtiard,'efr;honor... composed Of Australian war vet- erans to the simply designed nriern- 9)161- • Pressed back to Vitlers-Bretim-; heaux with the F'ifth Arrily,: the Australians Made a, fierte bayonet charge which some historians de- clare Saved Milieus. Later. they . ;attacked with tanks under -rover. of a' smoke screen and carried . im- portant hill positions sweepingi along ia swiftly they :fell on the • German artillery and reserves, in- flicting heavy casualties.: • :It was a crushing blow and'Gen- eral Ludendorff ' wrote years af- ter: "I gaye, tip the last vestige of The memorial • commemorates the "missing" among the Austral- ians ',in this and Other fighting in the 'neighborhood, '• ,44',•••:„,.,1•04404,61041,,:',14:11•14 • 4•:04,'•0,006:4,04,110•:••:•6:••:••:" tHE '• • :4•44t.,•:•.•:••:,••:•4:••:••,::••:•41•*•:••;:. •.• ..!" ..,.....,,,I,•,.0•1,...x.,.;.......... ,,, ...,,,..„,,......v."........1,...yi..,,,,,......,,,,yyvv- . ion and chief b the ainied foices' •.:•se.,.,ret. Service., 'Ile has' been head • . • of the; Imperial Kwantung.'-army'S ., .sMLcial‘serviee branc):1-a planning : ' litireau for JaPahese'econOMIL.. and : •,-Military -ventUre8 into the initr:br Of, Asia—and has again and air, ain: breaght pressurefrointhe mili•-: . • tarists tobear far ,settlenient of. ,tlit. Sino Jap i'asueS. ' .• .•• • ' :A Charmed Head .ffoWards the end Of May of this ‘, . year; qeneral.poihara's fenitcentli. diVision Wasl••Subjeeted . te.:', ftitious. ; • Chinese,tounter-attatks 'from' the direction. of... Lanfeng.• Ileporta ' ' were: frequently, herird'ttliat the ' division, had been Wiped Mit.. True; 'he suffertemany thouSands, of ,CasUalties;;beford reinfOicements Arrived front ,the • east ajOilg'..1.:lie ' 1.,iinghair•i•aili•ead'. But thetgeneral - hiosie4 .esddlied : titillarfodd id. tl-ough. Chinese ,rAi4ing partlea , . sallied forth into latmueserlield 7teeritoey in ea atteinpf te,CAlire• '. him, deedor alive (100,000 Cl.iiii- ; eSC dollars •wero; Offered 'PA' his ' :head), ' .. • ,' • ' . • • .., At • long , 'ago '4. ipgz..aoletii . nothhisi Was quoted. AS Saying that • 'he' •"attW to spco141. need /or slid, • Cial . elarei in istertit ellitte;" el, ,though ,he Conteded that ,flpOSi!ble "frilitiaderstanclinge" could 1 -ad te • ' .,.: ., ";diostis."' Arid .,so, it has tttrhedout, . "1 guess swing has abotit Svt'Unt . n.; GtMeral - floihara "'oil. bare ' itolf Out, Ipio't, a pod of mus - 1 , your, key' to''the Whole Siiiii-jap. ' ' 14. its it.' way' that 'MUSIC iS. 1)10,•• • GENERAL DOIHARA In command •of , the. Japanese ' forces .'•.' attempting. to brosie • theotigh to Chinea'.tiatikiii.V. this .Week .1...ieuteriant-Oeneral • ji DOiharr4'.itnoWn. iiefilaps:,•bettott Its the. ".(Aivrenee cof Drio . the innst Oine661 Of • 3atian's. role lir. Man, elthria and China, 'General. b,01; hatir has • been super -spy, agent priA•Opatettro 'Mint:Mt •Strate4iSt In ' • .111S it it •Inall •of .filifiiter• For , •tritity 'yeati worked.,. "under. grettind'f . as' *gent of the , most • •Militatit sector of. Japanese. Opin,` 'tato- 111, an. act s ac Agreement Covers F-40glOrs!lis 41111944, *Obit; and Travel, ProblOos clernlany and Italy • r4achefl an agreement last, month " . on econoMic, tinaneiel, shipping an.4.;:, travol Preblems 'arising from C•er? InairleabniseZpatti,orneeemfeAntalt.reru.'dd Au.s . tia oped between Germany and Italy. In • e*lethlg ngreeziyolte geyel• proqessiyely since 1931, It Inter- liaatellsgubrtehtewreettetel L°15. teWOe °eno°Umn cr I er .GFecirmreac7ts1;uprcaea4tibde9cEILPead4aleeMaci. . cord consecrates the ,Rome-Berlia ' erAtente In the economicfield and possessed 'an eVen 'greater iinport- • • mice by lorecristing Italo;derman politiCal find. commercial expansion' ; toward the Danube Basin and the 3aTil.chaellsn'eW:PaPer Ger.lnYalCia':11;ted4 inarketEC open for Italo-Gertnan de- velooinent as Danzig, Albania Hua gary, 1(ugoslavia, Bulgaria, preece, Spain, •:Spanish Morocco, the Belga- ric Iolanda and Italian possessions 111‘A‘OrnlyCa.a 'few /Wank. raw Mater- , ials are lacking, width cart be Oh•• • tained elsewhere by barter," it ad- • ded. account :of l'eaReetiYe linterests, it would be possible to ad- mit other Conntriep fa this! •bloo= firrit Japan., then Poland and Roil,- . •mania, .Bortugal with its Colonies and even..Tarkerr -^, • 1 Birds cOISUITIO Myriad InseCts:. Sonie .of,,the,hirds ..that nave ' Ilona of dollars In Crops. every year y are, still misjudged. • titrnit raiSers •often:leoli on robins. as enemies be- cattpe of the robin's „appetite for , '-•':•cherrie8....".Vet. tibias; 'consume., in-.... Sects that •are,harinful'to,frul,t, „throughout the year,. and only dur- ing• the,flocking pericida in lune and ! •t. July do they eat Cultivated fruit to any extent, : berries, 6.8 .soon • as they .arsi•,•riPe, form, the greatei. part of their food.. • Woodaeckers,are:often suspected •. .of•daineging•trees pieir drlumgs. Bach hole • drilled :means ;that the • bird'.has lOcatecr the larva Of t de :stritetlye Wood:horing insect. wood- . • peckers are Among ..the most valiv• able forest:. conseryationists.• With \ their, heavy bills . they capture in-', sects that other.. lairda• 'Cannot •get.:' • • Swallows. Are Oseful When :swallows' fiesta, are torn.. , . . •• from the:eaves of* harns, some of „ the best" friends,' of the farm have f been .titrned awaY..Swallows catch Ing their, food On the wing, consume vast .ntuitheri. harinfut eying In . sects, especially during the nesting and ,naeulting periods • they; ' like most other eat little:,b6: sifie' animal toad.; • • ' ' • In the trait, ,didtrietsi the oriole his'. been accused dainaging grapes -and garden' i.Deas, but the oriole'S food 'Consists Principally :et Caterpiliars., , also •eats quanti- ties •of plant and barlr•lice;. .waspii,. grasshoppers, sPiders, and .. eeils , r •• DenniakicHDrops..:, Her Policy Of Defense" $11,000,000. Is Voted for Re- armament. -.-Fear of Hitler 11ehindLatest•Move nma rle has urned away froM, • ,fts old 'belief . that. 'the beet ie feJise.is ,no defense.7. is going to iearm,The : reasitin is Nazi ger many,. • • The ,dornipant bemoorat, Party.,,desite . the unWiliin'grieSs of .-the • Radieals, whoiri forins • the', ' goverrinient,; has ',detide.d. to". •: vete,•50.,00,00)qo krOner ($1).„0.00;000),, for defense,: -The gaVerniiients. of beithat•I's slater Scandinavian na tiOns,'8Wodens and iiortVa..y, •recent-,' ly.,11aVe,•CoMe to Similar decisions., ..".'Poilews Sweden,' Norway • • Denniarle.'s $.50,000,00. keoneesslll 'go .fdr storing of Waftime :necessi-, • ties And ileceleratioa aueh'•niili tiiry preparaticin8 AS "already liaY0 been ..autliarrzed. by 'Parlianient„ .• • • BUJ this is oily:a-Start: There -is' ..dednitejalk of the!"oos*albliity•Otgt ..scondfuoyion defense alliance. ben-, mark and 8Wedentogetlier .tint for; iffy btttli: sides :,et the Oerainid, the, ' strait that 'aeoasttee therm There, are reports Of fari•reaebing..plant • ,for •seWing :Oorairod with • in eand of Mtat,' • Necessity for PreparatIon' , , • Such defenso.,.do;Operatien wOttlek4 gvo -a Meaning. to the bonds b'e•••• • tiveen geaildinaVitin:natiOns such as Andy have not hatt for it ...Through the ilea years Adolf Hit lee haelioled Getinany a belief hi , the ileceStity,of PreParatiOn' Or telt • detenie, hike' been. spreading front .the yotinger eldinentp tif' the •IienlOdedt: Pot.tt, lin to the eider. , ,. • •" puzzle. Heriiii, ` • . • ' • I"