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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-07-21, Page 6vei•-•„••••: ••-• ••••••••• •
e.
*i'lint.14!)" PP tl4.
P014144 Of .16 We'Ciel • .News.
TimiEXT, ,.sgs,sxoW
#0•PSe.•7(4::•CenlAiOta,-:41f Ottawa
' gannet afford to °remain. u13•fer
long. There's a new Oenada4Thit-
Cd States trade agreeMent:in, the
Offing, the PreSSUte• of: 'world
• 'Vents, ie more tancentiated"than
CVer. before.. So Parliagnent: ,will
likely recefilene in Octeher., if
• it dOesn't,..ik, should'••
The next session cannot. help
but be interesting! ,In, :the mean -
time the Quebec and Ontario, pro,.
vgneial governments will have shot
off u few fireworks,. most em-
.lagarraSsing' to Ottawa: and rumors
of an early general election. will
have. beconah lacreaChiglY 1")°..r..sist-
ent•thronghtaut the land:
•
Who inaitia but ,:that it may be
jilatirtientous session, too, capable
of reshaping the'destiny' of Can-
ada? •
• •••
Maybe •so,, but we very much
doubt it.
. OUT TO BEAT NATURE:'
The West • ialacing the, beet....,:erop:
prospectsineight yeartb.hut while
looking forward With MUcli joy to
a bountiful harvest, " prairie far -
niers nevertheless are, mindful that
: there is no guarantee that the
• blight of. drought Will not strike
:ngain..next season. -, They .are
grateful, then, for the work ,that
is being • done: by the Dominion
Gadernment to produce -a grain
•
that will stand • Up against a'lack
'Of • moisture:, The :first Canadian
experiments in 'search of Such, a
wheatare being carried on at
Swift Current; Saskatchewan.
The 'scientists at. work on the •
Joh ,haven't 'progressed -YerY fth
yet,: but they believe, they are on
the right track. ;Should they suc-
ceed in '•finding a drought -resist
•Ant_wheat,--,,they.---Willz-.re,ceive*as-
tnuch recognition' ei ,came to .Sir
Charles Saunders .for discovering
Marquis Wheat: Thin'fampus grain
overcame the Menace -of ' early
frosts, but 'could net Withstand the
By lizabeth Eedy
thiAk of wliat_it-NoPl(1..he1i1 +n
adium. Mast
Coaxed From r
OTTAWA, The ffiethod'• by
• Which: P11141470 slth4retic• 'de-PO/Its'
.of life-saving radinin are ocoaxed".
Out _the. Pltehrb.leildp. ore Mined.
on the shore or Greht -Bear Lake
livein -the._nearvthe,.Arctic•%Girele- heve--114en-,
Arott& regions, where revealed for cif4 first tiete.' , •
'the sun WA@ 44 1249.u.rff y --,÷Marcel Ppchon; ehief chemist, of
night-time y blessed -.cool. tbe.,;41(lorado Litaited,
'' •141,4 W4114,,Pine 'eeffineer, flea%
-'%•thankhil, forsmall uterorea- ' . pribed•te• the AmerieakAlssoCiatien.
• . " • '0 ' • for the Advancement Of Scleoce at
onslaughts. of rust and -drought.
Now, rust-resistant:Wheit has sup-
erseded Marquis' on the prairies.,
Thus.',onliene.,of :the three',mtv.:
jet crop enemies ' remains' to be
I,
0VercOme. 'Once, thi.s obleetive is.
achiev-ed, . the Canadian .West,
shoUld.'be unconqUerable.
, • ESCAPING THE HEAT: Down
here in Ontario We -hitire plenty
Of reason t6 complain of the heat
these • summer days. We pant, '
puff; perspirefromdawn to dark.
• ;We would feel leas sorry for _our -
elves, ,however, if We pausedto
• • ' .4114E THREATENED: ItS summer Meeting the 14160104[3
• The . ,I:4*(1614 . England, News nsed in mining, transporting' Fula"
„ Chronicle this week. makes .- start-- refining radium. *. '
• ling disdlesure of a pian allegedly • It's Roasted First •
cooked up hy the. two Partners of - might ;be, calied,a qcor,
the Ro ,me -Berlin axis. which alms • element, the'Elddrado company spe-
cialists declared;,sfnee it is very
difficult ta'e tract 'froin the other
: valuable minel•ala Which Pectir ' in
combination with it, In early refin-,,
• lag OneratiOns, ailver. was conelik
titeff a .nuisance in offorti,topuhl
-14 the: 'closing of: tlic'.Mediterran-
ean to, Great Britain and a cutting, •
off:, of the Empire cape route to
the Far 'East; This double Objec-."1
••-tive would be 'achieved by the
seizure, of Gibraltar (alteady
rcleminitted by German long-range
mins); by having General Franco ,
(should he win the Spanish • WM) '
•turn. and ,seize •• Portugal, =(Gibral-
,, tar cannot be held without Portu- -
• gal). • •
,The purinase behind.the -Wan'is
.said to be the crippling of both.
cut 'oft front her important army
reserve., in North Ainerfea.
.
•••
HO!....% LAND'S UNHOLY ROW:
:The worst troubles. in recent 'Pales-
' tine history ..broke out there the
beginning of this rnentli With the
hanging of a l9year-old Jew who
:had ambushed. in Arab. bias: • Riots
• have been -Continuing, ever since
while .eaStialtk °lists mount daily.•'
Dozen's of people have been killed'
and hundreds wounded: • , ' ,
In the Midst Of thip." reign of
terror British .troops ,are attempt- I.
,ing to restore some kind of order:
Soldiers are Stationed in , every '
village in the zone of • violence, '
, but 'benibinge,-stahbings keep on
haripening, ' • - '"
1-itardretiS7-b#7-AITs-111777
' Arabs and ' the Jew s° have been ••
' lio.stile to one another. ' They each :
;.'want the Holy Land ' to thern-
-selves fOr:religions. as ; well '• as
'econeinic reasOns The Pa. iti
• Ang pf Palestine among Jews,
Arabs and'British its recommended
last suminer by -a 'British °corn-
.• Mission has therefore ? not' been
ucate Indian
Houselce!org
ISaskatchewan •Seeks to 'Aid
In-
dian Families in Raising:
• Standard of ,Liviag--rWomen
Taught:Housecraft:
/ •
• -'
Education.'of Indian .wonien in
•.hcitmehold arts, with a view to
•promoting a. higher standard, of ,
living among :the tribe's has been
., Undertaken, by .the SaSkatchewen,
Department :Of Indian Affairs
• with the co-ciperation of women's'
clubs, states .a 're„ceg_itKsiatch •
;froin, Winnipeg;
• "The Indian, woman has more•-
:influente .Over her .11116baod than
• the:.Whife• woman has over. hers,"
claimed Dr.". Thomas Robertson,'
• Inspector of "Indian. Agencies -in'
Saskatchewan. : "In the :pest net •
.dri
eneugh, attention has been -paid l" •
them. Money has been spent on ''•dou
•
men or farming.. equipment, And
improvements, ', but, the :depart- „
• nient'noiv airns at a higher stand- ,
'ard Of living through wornen',s
education. '
' ag r tarn
. 1 ,
"Requests :Of :Indian wonien"
;-that Meetings sponsored by the
' department be ;devoted to, work
:Shows' the interest they are tak-
, •ing in their Work". Dr: Robertson
. said.' "Indian viotnen, young and •
•' old, are eager • to learn."
.:the 'ffiteetings they are be-
ing instructed in knitting,
• canning, 'Cooking 'and other
household'arts. Dr. Rohertson be-
, heves craft work' his improVed
• sq per cent. in Many. Indian
homes, in the .past two • years:,
• 'Children are learning to spin in ,
,`Schoels and art' .teaching, others
.
homes. ,
the •
r4. the. RitetiblOdgt
.Today, howeveriAlieSe•al[ttl other• .
'diffienitiee, have ,been
new ehenfical!ntetiledeAnk,
"finer.Y'at Pert both
the. radinal. and 0,4n; 40.
ti -acted '
• •
The. ore • is first roasted
-fineeS,:and-WkeVed
tides. of acid reroilve. the ..silver
• ,and uraniutu. The ore .whieh, '
Is then treated with treme,nr,
dons. qudagt:IP§Le.f..1.4.arittin, and, ehe-.
micai phyf3iptans int'retiece
into steniaCh. inteStltes as
' POntrnPt' MP:tells). •in. Malting' Xr
ray • Photographs. • -
Bedlam Salt Is Left, •... .
• The ,haTium-iS the. i.4.eo.a*ine
..erial 'Which puils. radiuni, into af-
finity with itself, popkop
but 7:00(` grams of- barluin„muo, he
• used, te‘ :tine gram of raditint out
of hiding the pre,. .Ak „total, of six
, tons of 'chernicale. in -Get htased to
treat one ton of f.,ncentrated ore. r
• • ., .
WQR.CD.
of t
AT LARGE
' They Know the Sounds' .
• CANADA
•
.: somo .1konl'on wile hear 'fi, .man
nrArling arpUnd the iense at four
. a,m, are frightened; . others 'oare•
married to ,men who fish,. -'--Victoria,
Times, i.',...1 •
Doing. Double Duty
„ When the haying season ts on the
ed. Irt looks 'mere like one eight- ,
lour day before notin and then an-
other in the. afterphon.t-PeterbOr..
'ough .EXagniner.. • ' .
•
Summer Brings Its; Problems •
•
Europe Mai have Its worries over
bomb proof Shelters and gess masks,
but.'we've. our prObleins too.:9nee
found popular. In 'fact the pres; ' mpre '10,000,000 Canadians ' face•
.entatten of the report was ,u.sig--„
, . SuMmer and no one has invented a .
ilia for the outbreak :of neW Yio- true ,,iiips'quito-Probt pair pf..pyja-•.
' !mice.... • . , ' '
. ,
inas..--Ottawa Journal:
• . It is difficult to see Where it is
. ..
all going to:end.- ,„ •
, .
THE WEEK'S QUESTION:,.
Who is frequently: said to. be the
most.unpopular diploniat in Eur-
OPe? Answer: • Colonel Josef
Beek, Poland's. Foreign Minister.
•
campaign without.,..absistance from '
Canadians.' because , of the large
number of ducks hatched •lin this '
, „
. Ducks Unlimited ,
."We believe.' we Can ,Multiply
,duck a to annlinest unlimited extentand wItIz:
' your: co-operation we are •
• going:to pigt,farth Our hest efforts,"
Rfissenholt said. •He i'citett7thd-elv"r"
perience.'of the. state, 'of •Maine'.-;
,.Whieh,-throUgh_A0 years of -game:7
conservation, now has an anniial
relienue Of $25;009,0.00 from fish end
•game..
World-wide Soil Erosion• •
Great Britain is making in inves-
tigatien of: erOskin in all .parts`.
...of the world and *ill issue 'a; Janne-
The Japanese are getting. anisi- tin, being Prepared. by the iiimerial
pus about their :mar against Baleen of Soil Scienneind of Herb -
China.,. Theyiy just dcoido.d , to age Plants. In it Will be disclosed
ration their .Peticil SAPPly.. fu- how niueh-damage IS being caused •
motorists 'max •puz•chaSe OnlY the, world's food, supplies by soil ,
, ga on of petrol a day--Aaxi-: erosion; And, 'different ittnilits to
vers may have, seven. Taxi fares fight the xne.na0 will be discussed...
bled when this rationing w . Reports' .Se far, received in: Lendon,
announced. ,
Andkshow that the problem affeets„AV
as a result .of these new rice. China,: 'Atha. 'Australia, • Ras -
"!gas" :'1'PStristions, ali taxi-caga sia, all round the Mediterranean,
will be .fitted With irfefers,;to pre_ the Dinch•EasCIndieS and the Brit..
- Vent overcharging. ,•• iah: West ledieS as 'weil as the. mid=
1
western" states of Anierica and the
Argentina's •export •• gained' 'prairie provinces'of Canada. In 4.f- •
• nearly' 40 .per Ont.: in value ' last rice it has -been caused by over-
, year.•• •,,grazing, in .A.ustralialty. ever=grak-
Gas' Meters. In Taxis,
• :1EitelederS .ot Dictatorship
Where dictatorship .has come; it
'.has. come by reason of [he failure 4 --
of men to govern therimelies.1, It IS
likely to 'corne_7.-because :there is no •
' ether probable' alternative--wher7
. .ever nations' show theintielves :teo
tired, 'careless, or iinCourageinis for
the disciplines and exertions, of
freedom.'--Arancouver Province.
„ ,
Rural •VierepOint Wanted;
Modern transport, Press' and film
are creating in England 'what Earl
'Baldwin desCribes.as a "standardiz-
ed Suburban mechanized mind." We
'already have •too much of ;that here,
_ Bora people accept all ton Placidly
thenrhan viewpoint, and whole -'
...some• rural independence is becem;---
' In*, inerticulate.-7Pariner's*, Advo-
. tate. • •
• , .
•Nre to Save
The Wild Fowl
Canadians Are Asked to Cci-op-• •
erate VV.Ith Atntemail Slidrfs4
'
:NORTH BATTLEFORD,
*Canadians Were Urged to CoOpet
‘ate With American sperti3inen 111
their` .fo,*I conservation efforte y:
Ttingtierifielt.'of WinalPegk
blatant 'general Manager %Of Duelti
in'an address here. •
' said Xfhited, States' 'Workers ..
C�ukl not carry ont their ,eattensiVe•
,
• ing anCrahbite, and. In 'China and.
, .
Italy by•deforestation.—St,.The.Mas •
Times4OurnaL
•'• • • •
•
Bring It Into The.';Open.
' Ontario' and, Quebec are the .riCh.
est • of, theprovinces .'• They have
many natural .advantages.. •As• the,
'West sees therjtiiatlon, they are •
als he Chief' beneficiaries of the
ah.cir
• .perity as lt looks tathe rest:. or.
,C,andda; Srfedtly '.eXemplides.• the ,
aptiptninrsaying,tlint ,qte.,him• that
"hath shall be given' It Was to he
:expected that, of previnees,
•
they would be the Jeastotatereated '
:in a, study f the federalYsYsteM
which inigkt lead to changea. They!
. are :naturallyL for the ,status quo
',:•The .prairie .and Maritime • Proviu
Cep are just as naturally refornaist
• • gad) ,therefore; eager to present .4.1"--".,
„ ginnenti. and Statistical statements: •
tending to Show, a need .for Change.
'••
It .has been .suggested that „the in-
ffltiry••haS.,ProduCed or eneptirageu:.•
..
• sectionalfeeling. in. Canada:. That:
s clearly not ,•The eleavage .ex•-••
. isted 'before the•lioviell,Commission•
'
was thought •of.,,And 'the national
interest Is obviously „better 'served , •
by an open dekate.'on this .differ-..;
:ence of npinhinthan byefforts \ to•
hush it'up.by :Singing "0 Cana'
—WinnipegPree Press.'
•The :EMPIRE
-
If -Man enjoys his work, and he.
18 physically and mentally equal to
doing It :eirldiently!, 'there are yel'
"good i.e.aione why be should go on .'
. .working. ,And these reasons•arere
cliiforce:d In the •easoot menwho are,
•.so single-minded that their work is
also their hobby. But for the most
part, and,: particularly 'today. *hen k
the means of recreation and annise-,;
• .
'nient 'are se readily lavailable in so
. niany:.' different fermi,' the average':
, man, one iniagines, would be happy
to retire .at 60 if pe were ,ablerto--
COntinue Jiving in modest comfort:
The old coneeptien of the d1gnitY4ef,
labor has been iveakenecl by the .in-
trodUction into offices apd, factories
. of ,machines that can do as nnieh, '
work in aSday as a man Carr de in :
- three. • Work has become in Many. .
was Je,ss satisfyingae the:
• indivld-
ual than it used to be. Creagan:Ian-
'ship. had. decayed,- One Cannot
, • .
.'es)Pect:altsiorkinan to tn,Ite 'so much .„
pride. and.:,Pleaiure . Operating a "
machine -that inainifeetures a 'sin-
gleunit as his , grandfather did in '
' Making the • whole 1 job'.himeif". by
,hand-GlasgowHeralci.
19,,•900..
'14
0000p0000ocoo.ontooeo4***n0000eol,o4444,4
9 ' .
*14±4.0,140.4".
, NONitAP HENILEIN
• Xerth, America has its Edgar
'Bergen .and Charlie ',McCarthy; '
Europe at the presentnioinent is
being treated to a similar' exhibi-
tion of ventriloquism, by two no .
less prominent figures than 'Adolf
Hitler and konradsHenleiri.. Hitler
speaks but the ' word's: appear to:
name. from the MOutli of Henleiri,
...who asleaderof the Sudeten Ger-
. Man party in Czechoslovakia, is
' calling for union • with Germany.
Henlein is only, 46 year Old..
• Nevertheless he,fought in the AusT
trian army (like Hiticry during:.
the Great War, was WOundedon
the Ttentino front, captured
the .Italians •.and Sent to, a' little
,islaiid in. the Mediterranean .Where
, he e mastered the Czech language,
became an adept at • gymnastics. '
' After the beace 'treaties he found
his native toWn was new part of
-L.--khetnowlkicreated-'ze-c-Ithsfo-Ntaltia77-
:and he himself, born of German
stock,: Was one Pf the „minority:
•.'Corganiied9,tihletic I;.filions- •
. •
• Henlein wokked as a bank clerk
fOr 'a:while; became dissatisfied
1:and took up the teaching of gym-
nastics at Aseh, near the German
rise' from obscurity was
swift. Henlein 'went' from town'
to town in his chpacitY of gym-
nast_ics ,teacher, ergioi?h•Ig unions
of ,G_erman-speaking: athletel•,—
" (TurnVereina) in opposition to the"
Czech:speaking Prpm,
1925 On Ilelalein. incorp.Orated
,°:ffre4t many of Hitler's ideas in
• the new *citganizations and nieuld
' ed his men into Veritable oStOrre
• trpOpers." •. •
• • In October of 1033 Ilenle•id
formed the Sudeten Deutsche Par,
tel when the Czech Gov. dissolved
' theerrnatt Nazi::: and Nationalist
Parties;, Two, years his part;
met With tremendeus.:sucte.ssr*. in
! the. elections, iformed the. second .
;largest bloc in the Czech parlia;
The 'Maw Unmaske4
- At that tirne, }lenient still' pre-
tended to, support democracy but
, the maskbegan slipping. He made'
nuici.erable visit's to I3erlin,' con-
• :other Nazi. Officials. •Itt October,
1937,•he openly asked for euton-
oniy ;for the _German minority in .
Cechoslovakia. - •
Sedate in the knowledge that
he i backed by•Iiitler, the once
, •
unknown gyninastics teacher has-
Tgo14. on from threat,! to , threat:
The two demands' he now mekes,
'are: autonomy fel- the Gei•mart-
minoritY in CzeChesloVakia;
. a :change'.in- the foreign policy of
CZeclioslovakia. which Would in-
-elude abandonment of its alijances
with Irance.arid Soviet Russia,
:No, Martyr, He , •
In ,Inne; 1938, Henlein was
chai•ged with treason, but the ac-
cusation was almost, immediately
.withdrawn since the Czech govern-,
nrefit4-1Td-s-VailiWe" to make "Ta -7
• .,a1
anartyr of him.'
' The pictuIP-.,nt the head .of the
column shows lienlein, medinm-
sized, short-sishted,'
athletic, ]eav-
ing his hotel in t onami, England
in May when ' he called'nri certain
British diplomats seekingtheir
"sYmPatilY and sUPPert. • '
.Ren*rka.1•;e Dog
Goocl Policeman
Mongrel' Stops' .Other : Canines
•' :.Chasing Antes • •
Few glog.3hayethe' intelligence
.Of Major,.a Mongrel 'owned- by -Bob•:'
by lieConnell of Lanigan, Sask., 75 .
.miles east of :Saskatoon.
• Adept' at the usual begging, roll-.
Ing And. shaking paw:'tricks,•Major
has also learned to prevent other '
.diage• frOni. 'running -after autoino-.
biles. • '
- • Early in his life Major Was.ren-
rimanded by Master Bobby , for
obaSing Catsand he learned his ,
:lesson well. Now he acts as eon- '
, .
: Stehle AO the.other, dogs by should,
eringth§in frern.the read When aU. •'
tos pass., - . •
On one occasion the •dog spotted
a- Ike HJantics 4..ronsed .
Men and he building was SaVed. '
• :Every imorningi and., :noon Major
escorts the neighborhood children
• to.tachool,• eftext.' carrying', ',their
• year •"1938:' Of A -total nonnlation.
,abent...g4,00.0; 50,000 P,01..solls ,are On.
ablebOdied. „relief 'and .rnany • 'Others'
are very .tiear,;,it. More...than ..12i000.
_.• fishermen are. without Supplies :Or •
_zany,. other „means , Of:: support. •,,
. In some Cases discontent. at. (heir '
lot :-- .Thevertyhardship,: the dole—,
. . „
, 'has: driven •people ' to open protest
against conditions... .
• ....Bensons for Hard Times •
The 'tour kire't Suspension of. ,the
Cander devehapment 'because of
'changes,' in iftans Of ::,the'.AEngbih
!newsprint coiripoy,'EloWater-Lleyd;..:
•;Limited, 'fathers of .the proposals
deiay in '. Cenci us,i0,n of, general sea7
foods agreement,Witlithe.tomniis-•
sign of government:, setback in the,
herring-reductitin .cnieratiOns" .of
the Santa..C.ritz.,Oil, Company owing
•
to lack of hiring in, Placentia Bay:,
and !Curtailment of 7fOrestry .opera,,
• • • „ . •
Hons..•
:„.4. • *aimhai•learned,te earry wood
inte the hause..:biit insists on; a re-
ward for :his..efforti.• Once the ex,
pected reward was #ig fOrthcorning,
so ,Major calmly • picked hp, ", the
wood /raid took it • out ofthe; house
. •
:POverty
n Newfoundland
.ST. JOHNip, Nfld. N'eWfOund:
land's employment Proialein genet.- '
ally has failed to improve 'during -
the laat nix months despite high
,hopes held al the beginning of 'the'.
On lifistre0i Alice
Oliver
.11ere sleeps, past earth's al,,vakent
deg, • ' :,• ,•7 t -
A' woman, true as pretty;
'
Who was 'herself , in every thing;
And wise no less than Witty. '
Der lightest turn of. foothand--
head
Was 'way. of wind With ' water; ,
.So with her thoughts and all she
•
It -was -her' heart had taught her.
9 thou most dear and loving soul,
...,Think not I shall forget thee,
Nor take amiss what here i writ
,Porz, those who never met 'thee!
• —Walter d la Male,• in The
THE Vir,ONDERI:
Manufactureys of Britain ta-
treased' "prodnetion $64,000,000
• last *year.
What dO you man, alhies ••
tasked the Xing,:•ll'll'explain'? Said
Guph 'You'te going to: attack a
inlghty country, • :They .fhaVen',:t •
, madh of an ant).Iri asi' but Oinia
.
has if fairy i'ii-Anc) and, year tnigie :
belt,: and n .the South .oi .tlici
braid gay 11ve a,.Sei•tei•eas nanied
'Olinda: Also there I a Wizard who
Very geed And it•Wirtibe no. easy
, thing te Overtime all this ‘'1481t;,.'
• • "We have fifty' thousand ,'Soldt.•
era". tried the, "king', Proudly,
,
but • they,' are: gnome," remarked' •
Gtiph,:knocking the ailiet out of his.
leo.the chest, homes !( ‘. •
are immortale but they are -
••• VerY strong on nia.gfc. When. You
•,,lost yinir magic belt; ,thost
, Magic, power *Ai tkett Agallultb.
'Oita you and yOpt, gliOthed: iVeuld •
' • liaire, no ' Show at 'ell.°..Theltipg'a
eyes flashed hbolik,..
„ .
,
•
, e away ti go t� the Slit:nig,
Maciinel' he Cried. "Not yet," •
-Said. the genera II ling h pJe
•fronl;the toliaccti • peach. •
...:!What yoti do?" milted the •
•,Monareh, I propose to obtain the
powet e neeti,` a Weu$h, '
1iere Ore,many eVll Creatiires,
'Whet InVe .thiffielent nOWet to *COO -
quer and'Oetitray, tho ;And of Oz,
' We :Will." get. thein op otlrAide; and.'
'.then take.C.Snia, and her' people bY • •
• . • ,.
k.:: . ''.::;::.Zift•;.-. -,4-A
The king Was ticlightecrwith-thiti
idea for;he realiZed•frOW.'CleVer" ft
Was ,: Ti u y, Goph, you are the .
,greatest general *I have ever
•I'M eXcliiiined Ilia oYOS Shtfrkiit*
with jOy,4'qfrou go.txt pence
;makeari a,geinentti wit • ,116. V I.
" ' . li i e l' '
•peWera te.aSsistfuS.,airti Meantime .
'I'11 begin".0 dig the, tonuel.'i Ye. 'al '
thought'•yo-ted.'•agree., with -,MO,
• I -dolled' the •griciitic. ."Vil
'earl, this; Oiry lifeern4on . to Viiit
the thief 'ot'the'..Wilim-siiiii.". .' . ,
'
,
•
•°t•
.1
•
"
'e•T
elescope Fish
Aiding Science'
'
n :did' stoner study—Doctor
Sees' Possibility' Of Ending-
Ppeyntigut
OTTA W-A,,--Po§t.bIlity- of elim•-••
clPeratiolla:
the removal e•gallstonea Was fore-
cast in a report. to the Alnerican
• Association for the 4dvaneetnent.'
of Selene° by. Dr, ,Arne
ver Of the Philladelphia College of.
Pharmacy aiitt Science..
• ..The Chintso, •„ telescope- fish;
*Web has rio secrets because it
is "almost completely. transiiatentt '
niay make such -an advancement
in niedid81 'treatment 'possible, be'
• declaredbecause' :for the first,'
-One it is possible to study dlrect7 ... •
ly iui a living'organi,s,e1 the 'Aetiari
cheinleals 111 'cleaning (int the
•. gait bladder, ,
• Occurrenc,e , 'of gallstones .Ss.
most .'frequent during the. Middle
and later life, Dr. Viehoever said,
and the disturbance is -six tithes" •
• more prevalent' in 'North America
than in. such 'Oriental ,countries
aS laParf. At present surgical' re- .
movel* is • the only known method
-
By use of :the telescope fish it
.,.-
is :possible to study directly the.
. action .of wchemiCals on ° tlre gall
bladder, Which is visible without
the aid' of a Magnifying 'lens, he
said., Certain, chemicals, • known
as ..'"cholagogueS," stimulate the
removal of bile from • the ' bladder.
and ,in seine enses ' dissolve the
'Stones which Obstrnct. the, '.9utlet
of the"bladder: '
Gras 'a-ls Best
Aset To Farm
,
• It's ' the Most Neglected .Crop,However—Pastures Should'
Overgrazed..: ' •
. -with :the awakened aPPreciatf n
of the, y alto Of..giass, pasture .1
provemenf.Sindidaihave,becorne ma
' ai°nrd projectsstatiozin
is at "'l)yeC'ee:1;;IP1lielirbtaylifeefarms
,
the, :Boreinion. ; Exceedingly 'profit.,
able rektilts 'from the •aPplicatten
, ,
Chemical fertillierS have been, de-,,
•• monstrated'and. the econnany of the
practice confirmed on manku.,farin _
where the stock Cai•rying capacityq
,
of the, pesiUre, has peenAneretnetidoubled.
"Spine 'farmers With, lightsoils
• 'Jew in nitrogen; have .shown. a pi,O7.
felonee.for. the ;Spring aPP1ication •
of complete fertilizers of 242,6 or
.a,nalyals.:"but In the ' better"
pasture area, and ,espeCially',Where,.;
• eibyet Is present in tl herbage
• Pali appiications. of high.phosphatepot* ,fertiiiZer.,of• the type.:9:16-6
12 the more approved Praetice. The.,
addition of these Minerals. promotes
. vigorous rboting, thnsfortifying the ,
herbage against' drought and ;,Whi-
ter-killing.and 'definitely" encourag-,,
1ng the'grbw.th Of Wild. White clover. ,
"
Grazing pastures tothe point' of :
depletion Of plant•I load in the soil
k 12 an Unsound -practice, dating beek.::
to. the days ofunlimited areas of '• '
, virgin lapsi, and . has o Place in •
• I-11
'tap pioductionof our. modern • high. -j,
Quality farm products ' and maiii
tenance of, Oar ininioYed•
k.
Trouble ForSome
Coming in 1939,
British "Alinaneck' Says raider
' N'w
.and iMussolini Had Both
. Better Deware
Which Claims .ta be published' dnder ,
.an coPyriglit,dating hack
• to •1697,•.•.bropliesiesworld ..•eventa.
swedong Importancefor .'next.;:
year. .. • • . , • . •
of 13enit0,Miissolini's •
qietat9rship, is predict for NO- : •
ve,obe•r, 1930; the. hination Of Which' ..; •
''IS adverse for
SW,7.4yr:tpidly'1,itecliliipt •
throngh discern:tent fostered by eco
stress,.• partly thrtitigh the •
reignin.g..dyneetY. .noW •• exercising
inuth ‘rnor.e con 6,01 ttiab,filtborto
Italian *airs." :• '•••
• :Of July,. theAlmanaCk.' says:
,qttaly and 'Germany' appear to be.
beth faced' With financialand eco-
IrotIhten. of SO Stabborn'a,.lia,,,. ,'•
'hire aS:1 Oa, be, incanahie of relief,
Merely by reScrt, to the „ printing'
pIi'ss and:those. d,ifficultiee ane
to reader, the Position•ef;Mus-
solini setae What Precarioils,,!'
They Catch. tkabs •
with theft'. '•cottinion,
sight' to See. eoloniaS of !bent
SWarining: Over the beaches:: fook..•
Jog, for crab -holes. A` tail goes
into .eaCh, -holey and, AS Osherinel
.Play their, linea, sc thd inonkeyt
play their taiI4'eVading the crateit
pineerS' enil. rtpritig.it tnfac., tbe, .;
e.•
I.Orice, •the eralVis: aboite .rottifil '
' tho Instinkeyfpotinces On lifibil," ' •
,
• ' Lenden,nowg,0.0.0,066 OA* ..
• itati racei a ierintio tkOp 'abed: •
age. •
1,
,
tl •
4