HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-07-28, Page 2,
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'
OMMentarY on the -•
IOW* of the WeehNiNeW1 Y Peter Rohdal
4)9411.EST;c-TR9081•ES: As, now issues a bulletin saying ' that
artificial • respiration .:Should be
continued for isrlOng ;as • four
hours. At: the end Of ;that time
natural breathing may be restor-
Dr, Frederick 13ahting,:einittent -
Scientist; who. discovered
is adding further tq:oll!I knowledge
of heiv to treat victims of near-
drOwnlag; He says that soinetinles
when the heart -heat . is no longer'
audible to to' the human ear and the
patient is .pronounced dead; an
electrocardiograph can pick up
up
the sounds of the organ, still heat-
',
It is believed, also, that .Sii
Frederick has found a Serum,
• which, when injected, into
drowned anneal,' will reStere- it to:
, life. Whether or not the same
sertnn will work in the . case of
Iceman beings is a problem *for
farther research, • ' '
. •
itor:from: Ireland who 'Set fqot on,
our shores last Week for the first
• thne received a series of shocks
on,;anCing 'tFlOt people here after
NS 'arrival- All his life be . had
• heard.. about the land of peace and
•
plenty which is 0110, never had
• imagined that We have troubles of
our elWa over here He knew about
the, '4`SOrrOtva of Ireland" but net
• abbot our railways Problem, ear
•-'wheat-*oblenv.our unemployment
situatioot the isolationist leamaga.
of ,Quebec, Ontario; 'Alberta- SO.
it was that his eyes.were
•3, But with midsummer ,here,' we
f-"-- have forgotten: for the time -being
the.:rallwalts problellii' the section-
• alism or Quebec, etc: • (It* w.94.14,
be Well .to Watch these.):' -"We are
:, More concerned with fighting • the
gccussednesi" of natuk.e7-7.graSsh°P'
pers' on the prairie, cutworms in
Ontario, black flies' in the north,
fruit -flies in the orchard,,, house-
flies.: in the parlor,hats, in the
• belfry
Can't a fellow have •little '
Peace and comfort senietime t
. TIGHTENING THE SCREWS::
Over in Europe the beat doesn't
„ ,
seem to be stepping Germany and
-., Italy any-----7-orlie second anniver-
sary : of the Spanish ' war • rolls
'around, Mussolini throws Mere
., men and munitions into .Spain..--=.
Facing a 'wheat shortage at 'borne
II •Duce wishes the Anglo4talian
• - -;agreement would-cothe into force
so he could' borrow.- a sizeable
^ amOunti from.' Great • Britain
, Hitler puts the screws On:Czeebo-
"slovalcia, , sereaming, pronaganda,
about!, Czech "aggression'? from••
.every publicity organ at his Aii- .
, poSal-i---fit '.home -the.,_,GerrnaziFL,
AtIree',In-arket suffers the " worst
collapse :of the Nazi era, securities' go into irtailspint.......
. • , . .
. . The Siao-Jap,conflict in the Far
• East ,(wer is still undeelared), 'en-
- "iers its second ..year.. . Japan is :
drama.' further and further into the .,
•. :interior, of Asia whileChi 'eses're- :
• ' siitance`gains strength d ily ; •"'
• '..Tenanese unemployment soars and
' the doznestie,eeeninny of the na-
tion finds itself in a bad Way
;.' But in spite of their troubles at -
home, the -Rome,Berlit, - Tokio.
,. gOVernmenth... work well.- together •
„ tewards,„their ceminan objective7----
, a Plea for each in the ann. If
Hitler . is 'planning...a • COup. on '
'CaechOslovakia,-MuiSollei ' stages
on extra -big ruckus in Spain, jaP.::,
.., 'ztiicreates a tense situation in -tEe• ;
-eriat.by 'aecuPifig Russia of hived.:
•' ing Japanese -held Manchukuo• • „
By setting ,Up .conater-attractions
.they seek to draw public attention'
,away,froni the main event., The
machinery tightens, tightens: , •
AID FOR THE 'DROWNED:
Since the method of artificial res-
piration.Was first introduiced, it•
,-'has been thecustom for those •••
prectisiag it. in • eases of near-.
___...-'40:/ining......tair-give--upt.-after--the-
' first". hour or. shortly thereafter.
--Th*-,rIealtlr'''Leigue of Canada'
bino Colts „
All Succumb
Still & IWYstery to Breeders
As Sixth Pink -Skinned Ani-
. •
mai Dies on Prairie Farm
•--WAk- ON RELIGION: Thee •
' are nulnY in this country; not
• seriously 'Worried by, the ',Nazi
menace, who Who believe that the Hit- :
, ler' regithe in Germany will be
'Wrecked • on the, rock of the
.Chtirch, that the Reichsfuelirer'ss.„,
war 'against,-1.the Vatican will, re,
suit'in the turning against him. of:
-. a vastnum of the Gerrnan peo-
ple. There's soinahing in that.
How long are the pooPle of .0er-:.
many likely to sit down under an
Autocracy which Pesseeutes Priest's:
and nuns, .attacks',young-,:ehildreh'
Coming from miss, consign s a
Protestant minister to i coneen-
'2tr6tioa caniP ? A Systematic.' war
on all aspects' Of religious life is
being• 'carried ' on; .which „cannot'
help but Strike at roots of all
7.";,--that--the--Peeplelfold-dea"F.- .
CHANGE OF LOCATION: ---
.1riefding to the. pressure of the ,
. war, herons who are behind the
Government's every move, Japah,
.hai sadly. 'relinquished her invita-
tion' for the 1940 Olympic Games
• to 1?ei held in the Land of the Ris-
ingSan. She, needs the cash had-.
ly: to carry on the War in China and can't afford to usematerials,
particularly Steel and concrete, in
0IymPic plant Construction which s,
are necessary to the war reach e:
The Japanese 'public . is bitter
disappointed, .observers pay, ns
. they feel that Japan has net '! only
lost lace abroad, but even 'very'
much •znore within Japan. - When
the Olympiad., was: awarded, to
Tokyo in 1936, there .was the .
greatest rejoicing through the na-
tion,because it I was considered a
•• foreiga.admiSpion-of Japan's ath-
. letie :equality: with Other nations.
Helsingierd, Finland; will be the,
.scene of. the 1940 Olympiad, in-
stead.
THE iiVEEK'S:QUESTION:. -
',-What other leaders of a Canadian
• political'Party, ',besides Dr. J.
ManiOn_..(Coaservative.),;..,were-Ito
-trizazi:Catholics? Answer: Sir •Wil-
fred Lanrjer (Liberal), Sir John
r -Thompson s
(Cqnseriative). •
$ Head Was. . . .
- adio Set ,i PlOnWeLdth ant a. :realllt af. tke 44-.
A RoSchool of Public Health
.'
vice of Dr. IlttrYoy autton, dirge-. '
tor f the
. , . , ,
. • .. • - - • - ' ancr Tropical Medicine-
, ' • The boomerang has 'the advant,
' lk..!ry, Night .Ho Tried To ,Ock ; age .iwe.r the ,Iavelit. and the dis
. To Sleep He Heard ,Music—. OPP, as well as"s011IOP retrieving
Found i Bed -Frame Acted As sP9rtso in tharit comes back to ,
- Aetiaj. .0,- .1i..-tbo..tiii9Wei instead Of the, throw-
. ,
. ,- en being °Wiped to go after it.
Are yen crazy -or am I?" the
chief radio: engineer Of Statical
WOR New York asked, his'
rieclAtioking visitor. -
, ..fIll'enest, it's just as I tell you,"'
said 'the visitnr iniserably. "I don't
hare • a radio, My neighbera don't
,havert radio, yet every night when
' I:::ge to sleep l.bear radio l'aPsie-
It'S getting Inc down:, ...4 can't
. sleep," ' ' , f', : • -,.. .-
:Hii Teeth Partly Re po :able.
The chief engineer was a ., pa-
tient, Man and curious. And his
• visitor 'didn't: leak :Crave- 'pi he'.
started ' asking -questions.; ..1 -le
' learned that the worried • one . was.:
employed grinding ., grinding , paper knives, '
that he lived. 'hcai WOWS trans,
Mitter, that he, read ,in. bed; and '
_that he , had 'gold fillings in. his
• teeth. And a great light dawaell.:
, The . facto, apparently so unrelat-
ed,' fitted together perfectly. :
kitite grinding wheel's had settled, .
ca!,'6PrIntdont..-44.0: . ;trent"... the.
in the .Man's 'gold filiiiigs. • "When .
he went to bedand switched off.,
his reading-lanip, attached to the
;top of the bpd, the bed -frame be,
- came an aerial. As his jaw. re -
Jazzed when he fell asleep the car,
borundiun in his gold teeth -acted
as ;a crystal. detector and inter- .,
tented programmes from the near-
by- station. When theunisic wak-
ened him, he switched on his bed
lamp; partially short-eircuiting the
:bed:.frazhe aerial and .cutting off
the progranute. He could switch '
liiinself on and off! • , • '
• , 'The chief -engineer .exPlained.
He ;did -in'ore." He presented the
. Worried one with, a toothbrush.
New everything is O.K.
.. ,.
ees IrObactO:,
Ls,
•
Mixture,.Moist,"
Method"of Regulating Moisture
In Box Is Discovered
Dr. Ralph H. McKee, of the
ehemizal":engineerizig_department
' of Columbia University, made pub- .
lic last:week patented fermidas-of
salt compounds to regulate .auto-
matically. the Moieture' in a •box of '
tobacco, , preventing; spoilage and
retainingthe flavor of '
the leaf: • '
,• Dr. McKee said that the.formu-
las- made possible the 'preservation
Of motion Pichire films and also
• Cotripohndl.of Two Snits ,
He found two salts; ordin-
ary, borax and Glauber salt; Would
absorb Moisture in exactly • the
correct amounts. : .
: He said that the compound-
Made possible a constant figure of '
. 70. per cent. saturated atmosphere
for the tobacco. In ' the case ' of
"r.foods, ,Dr. McKee illustrated with
: a • box of crackers which • he. had
;keptell Ilie.„Sfielf..Of_hia.Oifice2tor.i,
-• fie Menthe, ' witli the torepOund
at the the .bOttoth of .1tile.•_bok..-:.,-The-:'-
'moisture' Was 'Maintained :at the
• level ,of :,40 • per cent. Saturated -
.care,• ' - ' 'atmosphere '• and • the crackers,
%best veterinary
' . when removed, 'tasted freah, and
; Pink -Eyed,' Pink -Skinned Crisp. He said that the formulas ,
Why these pink eyed, . pink would make possible the preserVa- .'
skinned little hoisasdie is a inyx.... thin, of Motion Picture' films . with,
, tery to breeders and , 'scientists. •. out their gelatinous surfaces.' dry-
Indliths ' recall that in the pait, , . frig and cracking,, bykeeping thern. '
some were raided to - maturity oi":. :. sufficieatlydampin tin boxea...'
rare occasions.
." The albinos are barn of .Pinto• .,
,• The death of an ' albino .' colt . .Parents, .4.0 interesting and sue-.
,. ,
three days after its birth: On the , cepsful exrierimeht- in breeding of
,.,.- ranch :Of 'Don Gidarnean, near Piatohorses has been -under' way
Mottlich, 25 'Miles west of Moose for -several. 'years on the . ranch. •
Jaw, has once more proved hoW•'.. With a nucieUs of four mares ano
- . . , .
,
difficult it is to rear "thesestrang§ ': i' stad "Galarneao: started a pinto
little animals. . ' ' .' s '
•.....
hei.d that,..no*.riumbers 26' head.
., No fewer ' than six • albino 4x1Its, '
known to the Indians as "now . - , Bicycles are keing,..'sold in Tok-
----,- horses," have 'been' born on 'the yo, Japan, at $3 each. '
,•
A Perfect Game
• -
'Far Lazy Sports
-
.Throwing the javelin and .the •
discus , are sperts, of the ancients :
-.WhiCh still, enjoy great popularity
with '
with hacidern athletes., Now Axis.:
• traljal has gone one better. •BoOn't-
, erahg throwing is ; becoming one
of the leading sports in the Coin-
• • ,
• • .*Iit •
'1)11°5 :131'1143:1)er
otgarette- t Oacco pro.
doted ,Cooadit'S
toilateO, nianutsaiiirev.:
It's 'geed ---try
Roadside ,"Courts".
Satisfy Tourists
-
Attorney -General Celdauut. SaYa
§YstemIs Wedging Out Well
• fillONTO.1-7.- United States,
tourists are saving Wad. and (rou-
ble . thee days with • Ontario's
roadside' traffic "Ceprts"...
they do the wrong ' thing
on the highway-,-apd. are 'Ought
at it -the, proviacial.traffie:effieer
becomes • both prosecutor • and,
judge. Ile deterannes the fine and .
colleets jt on ::the spot. :If the ••
tourist disagrees, he Can go into
court in the usual way and get a..1,
refund if he proves himself right.
• Attorney -General, G. 1). .Conant
Said the Scheme :was, again*94,s7•„.
int" ant this
..NO complaints have been received'
.• by, the department. On the eon:
trary,-any move to abolish: the .
plea would be a, direct move
against the 'tourist business. ' :in
Mr. Conant's view,'
The amounts assessed by traffic
Officers are usually accepted as
reasonable by the offending tour-
ists, for few appear in • courts
throughout the province to con-
test the charges read against
them -On which :the • Officer is
`Waiting to. pay in the fine,...already
collected.'• ' ,
Sawdust Heats
Wes_tern.,1-rom,
New Type of Domestic Ric
Used by 20,000 Homes In
And Arourd. ihalcouver
:1I14,\YORLD:'
• ,,,cANADN„..,,
"trifg,thlow.4.
'Mt •
CANADA
SLING A ,r,t.liAN.,pArsor,01ER
P.erhaPo Modern wives don't
make . bread, like.' their . grand-
mothers did; but they • certainly
can 'make.‘gocul sandwiches.--70ue-
Pee :chroeicle-'1'elegraph. •
WHEN youk gouALEs• ...
' BEGIN• .
,If the Pionnes all live .leget,her
• in pile house they'll have. to .instal
telephone switchboard' with day
-and 'night operators later on: --
. Brandon Sun.
414GENUlTY TEST. .
to bite& -
'Lai! is now,,undergoing :two su-
preme. tetts;'how to creat a- peace-',
fill world seeieti and how to de "
vise 'an original' radio program
Toronto Saturday Night. ,
„ ,ON.E WHO COUNTS
Mrs. , Black should not be Al,
lowed.; to. resign her seat in the '•
'Yukon., not. even to make Way for
the new deader., She utters . mere .
'. good con -in -ion sense than meat of.
.•the' ether memhero
We Could naine a couple of dezen-.
,inehlbers • whq,'EoUld.' he .drePPed
out without making any differenee
to.,Parliathent; but Mrs:" Black is
-not One, of there. •-•-•,- St. 'Thomas ,
1 Times -Journal. •,
, IDEAL PARLIAMENT •
• • Parliament should ..be an assein-
,
Ic• bly ' of •• patriotic ..representatiVes
, whose: supream is the well-.
,
fare of the country; and not par-
tisan •advantage. • Useless debate
. and strife undoubtedly serve to
'keep many Men out of Parliament
who would be willing to give their
• time. and abilitY to the service of.
the cetiatrY, but Who cannot Pas,:
•siblY tolerate months of idle talk
and ?artisan .recriannationsi, The
pity of it. is. that too frequently •
the outstanding leader's of the"
Party set .the example, whereas
they'shotild endeavor to raise 'de,..,
. bate to a higher level.-Brarztfoid
Expositor.
• •
budgetandin, dentinelatiens
the financial orgies of .-their'ep-
entS.' It wasa good game 'at
, other effeetivo
brom des of,the4 hustingi lint •
hat 1160ed ,I10,W is More et the
searchli, It in,artalysis,41-Iamilton
Spectator ' • •
•. - WE IITRIAVEI.. TOO, PAST_ .
' ..It ' is being Said ...inereasingly-',:z
Often' Of; lb te .that we- hare.. pe•rmit-
ted the.'W.Ontier:s Of seienee"te 'mit, '
, a'
' strip. the. Impulses of • our hearts;
In other words- we have developed
the mechanics of civillzation fast-
er than we equir..1. real
'
knowledge of how to use, them'
..1?,!.9P.01Y..._ .."..,..._::.....,:,,,,_.."..:
-"The Mederp tempo is too fast;
and WQ,Sh611,10 Cillti,r4te the art of .
1;QiSbog al'1:11AI'QisetS° Dr°t•l.a:l..g.C. C. /zeutley,,,
General. Secretary 9f the Canadian
Medical Associationi. And it is ,a
7 thought worthy of consideratian.
.5:.4f13:1, t:zi..iiitutilhayc.s,;obel.;t!::.rauceill...et.liet.Orhepc;!;.O0..„
sheuld., pause and get a...AV* sense:
give our souls 'a-ehahee' .to catch '
We have:traveled far in a tria
terial 'way in the last hhlf-refittirY.11
• E'1,1,u'et, .iiialiNa-e..t:,..rziangt,re' fsasrhiluizeocluta.eniemalficiy.
e.
spiritually? - .. - • • •
• The doctor idt: right -71,-w°' travel
'(ned.
toofast. --. St. CatharinCS' Starr -
i .
' Nearly 20,000, .hozaes. Hr.,' and.
around Vancouver are heated.: by
sawilu"dt whieli a few years ago was
seat to refuse:burners, says T. A. ,
.illicElltiaaey;.„superintendent of the
. •
forest prodacta laboratories, Deihl-,
nfon'li`oisst .SerVlce, Ottatcra: ; • .
; "Research„.ii. constantly unfalkl;.
Ing neW,•,uses for,' weed And new,(,
methods Of .chrtailing. Wage."' ME::
MeElhanneY snd c'ShWdlist is nOw...•
being used; for 'doineatic fuel on the
.Pacific coast'. In.Europe many automobiles ,
trnehe atid buses at op,
.erated Oh. producer gas ; freni"char:
teal. 'Ethyl' alcohol': frem. 'weed Is
'.:Izeing,:naiXed ;with 'gasoline for hici-
tor fuel.„'Sinee 35;. to .60. Per CeaL
...of the foreststandCanada, ,new „
Is Wasted in -logging or milling;the ..•
possibilities of, Corresponding d.
veleaments'in Canada offer attrac-
tive neioi" forthe research"engi,
.neer:"`:
By ELIZABETH EED
"MADAME CURIE"
By Eve Curie •
.mme: Curie's daughter Prefaces ,
to. her biography a brief passage
On the almost anYthicar life of her
mother.. The little Polish girl had
to 'surmount poverty and Preju-
dice..She did so 'by dint of almost
incredible effort and with no ran-
cor. She rearranged her life to
:admit a great leve and a comrade -
Ship which vrOpld ;seem . almost
unique in its breadth and depth of
understanding. 'Then, devastated ,
by the sudden. death ,of, her be-
loved husband, ' she ,elosed - that
deer to life, and took pp alone ,
the work they had started and..
carried.forward together. She was .
honored . by .hingi ' and queens.
...scientists and„, common people.
She rejected wealth and tried in
vain to turn ..aside ;fixate. She out-
witted: blindness, and more than
once she ' seethed to caltvvit death'
itself, to carry on her work until,
: nearing the ,Cad Of her sixtieS.-
The - glowing element, radium, ,
•
the glowing' element,', radium,
. 'which she herself, had discovered' ,
was a factor in her • own ...... end. .
,,,,, • to,iie ind Work Blended'
.i. In another age the tehipera-
nient Of Marie Celle woOld, have ,
made, her a Saint. • .
f - Eve .Curie's biography ,of her ,
mother is fascinating as a;redord
'of scientific research. Though'.
written by one who lived • from
• liabyliood,'Irt the atmosphere of a
• laboratory; itmakes clear ' alld
vivid and concrete to hon-teehni-
, cal readers' the Story of, the diS-
covery of radium and the de.vel-
..opment of that knowledge Which
.. Aline. " Curie... carried' ',on:---sii---.isiii-''
liantly until, the end. Of. Iter 'life.
i- XIS' real. itnporti:',•hoWeverv is the
story ;At the:.:,.women"..whese• life
Was All but synonytruius with that
history. ' •,
.• Madame, Curie ' hy Eve_ Orle•
Translated by Vincent •,Sheetin.
I• 8ant-tettetaid-,e6inpany; t15, Vitoria
893 pp. ttlroqt11.: D.E410010Y, b"4-
. -
1
4.1,••
!'
' GET iiQwN TO EARTH
The public :is so used. by now
to the dire warnings abut
iona and 'IiiiliOns""ia 'Canada, for
example, that theylose'aignificahce '
-the national debt is almost • an
.abstraction' to the Majority Nor
have some of the revelations 12,..-ade
of outragecias extravagance caused
.znare than a ternporar3 political
stir, 'Goveraments naturally like
. to Maintain this They
like to use
— ions" ili loose talk about 'what
they are going thAo,,to-balance-:
• John Schafft, 'Of West, Ammer-
; ties, N.Y.,. decided that hls,radio
.needed a new aerial,
- ;Mrs. Ella 'Simon. said that she
•
would help him. , • .
Eleven year old Jacqueline Kia-
. ble witched. • ' ' • '
Sehafft coiled the wire end-
.
• The ._,EMPIRE,
THE I.M0011T.—"--ANCE OF ,eANAPA
• Great Dritain,. as Mr. MacDon-
ald out at -the Imperiaf
pres's. conference recently, .is the
ene indisputably .•first-class !power ••,;
• within the British. Commonwealth
of Natie0...' Other '; Dominions,
however, I are ontheir way to • be-
: coining firs: -class :Pewers:. Can-
ada. for, instance, ;eoeld.suPport a
population larger than the present .
population of the • Isles; '
where' sOnat: of the . experts -predict
A Sharp 'declinein number's.: The
emergence of -a 'firstelasS British' •
Power in the New World is bound'
• ttr•haye far-reachi.ngeffects' upon
;the deatinies of the: world. Can-. ,
ada's large •frontier -Marches With
thefrohtier Of the .1laited. States,
. whose -capital in More 'prosperous ,
days flows readily into Canada:'
Geographically, Canada looks
sopthwards. Stiitedmanship for .her
consists in a wise 'adjustment be-
tween the pull Of geography from ,
' the United States land the' pull of
sentiment ,from:the Nether Coun-
try.. So long is Canada is strong;
. there :can be: no fundamental•
, , .
•
cleayage". betwe'en Great 'Britain
panodst:_„the• United. .States.---Yerkshire
•
' tossed it over the roof of a aurn-
mer cottage,
Mrs. Simon:caught' it -and fell
:dead. : : •
Schafft • rushed to her • side,
stooped to lift: her -jerked con-
vulsively, and died.
(000,:40e..0,:••:••:•04o,x••:•(%0I-,:•ik•00000000c.o..:,400,i0000tt••:••
404.0e.
0
•
1000e-0000.40000+0000000*000000*0004.440.00*000000004400.0 •
'
DOUGAS CtirtniCAN -
. The biggest ; newS, story of. the
.niarith broke in Dublin, Ireland,:
• :when down out of the 'clouds ,ahov•
the Balilonnel Airport.- chihe an
. aritiotiat;ed; plano7,4t • nine-yeareld
"crate", ;iii.....factH-floWn. :from • no
'.,,,ane-linew where. 'Landing,, it was
imznediatcjy surreurided;by
suii-
• hod.; airport officials and, a, crowd. •
•;of'.asteilislied••Irishihen• whO'
warit-
ed to ICitow the.; Whenet and„the
wherefore. • • '' • •
. • . • •
' OdeCorrigat,'!'
, .
-
ared a sinilitig as • ..4 step-
ped' itoWn; from tho.'eockpit...: "Just
• got . in. ,front 'New ' York: 'Where
an I?'intendfly to
, • Calj-
fornia ed:to
; . •
but 1 ,gueSs., my.: compass
. went wrong...!' •• .••• '
•No Ita'thO ,Abca'rii• •
Chnie',Ont in ifhe oonese• or, the
next .feW anntites . that, pilot
Cor -
ligan ill; of Santa 'Monica; Cal) .
•had .'floWn, his battered sin-
:gro,engitted slrplane across the.
Atlantic hours, initrates
„without benefit of ;Iloilo,' mans or
2ttioty iadtrumehts'. "Ile flew' by •
the seat. of his trotisersa;
.,„beek :in the 'States...remarked.- •
.1 ft ' t '
. te .e.hirpor in .\ev
WO; ^320 ,
gallons, 'et gasoIin., halt a .g.aliOn'
'tvat'er Ata .eitoeninte .hi. •
'gallons of 'gasoline,:
remained' when, 116 landed,Ily • "
his unique 14light, Cortigabhas joincd ,the long lIst 01 note(I'
rtiet'S*
chided COL,' Mit:lea A. tinhorsch„
the late Antelia'‘Igiribart :and the .
kii* • Wilcio:
•
ritish Papers k
• Ignore C nada'
is the CoOtentioo
i President—Says Little
:ciiven and gvOnti. 'ffinfr
„
oompanieS are r,7
'hUSit4e84. C:O.P.'s,tillitlY 14 ',Oreirt 43,11..tz:
'n.itt'heettnS0 of' oltielanii! ot
condl-
bus lu Palltnla bafieit on 'laek ot
kheAviedge„" ne,Olared A. B.- Wood, •
president of the SOH ttifn• ASSAF.'
Ohre CO', Of.,Vallncln, W1i7e• ferttrnpci
.to• our ahem's last Week,: o"rter.
• six weeks ViSiV'to the Old '
:42 -it is really- •surprising fo find •
.4lob little sae& glvtn In. ;the Eng-
lish- newspapers to Canadian
":•fairs; and it is threngh.
it).010i011 the • wrong thpreS;._
Siqn,"id ereated"'ite Added:- al'heA17.! •'
llerta :Situa:tion was magnified.In.; • .1
pubrie inind•as,lf it Were -a
• Cnn-
adian ottio.r titan a local:Sitthili,oa,
fitet,that the Social 'Credit
legisidu 1011 had''beea disallowed by • •
the Dominion. Government And the
. „
;snprOue coart••*aS diamiSsed in
feW lines the 'Millie' cOuld only
.• • ., . • •
--bett:n6;."•itiferinct17:anCtirouglit 1977
1ei1lise what Canadn'ts. the 'rast:
ness of, OM country and its financ- -
MI abilhy gip would. help .Canadian
business •cOnAiderably." "
Egyptian Temple
• Is Reconstructed
A'g,igitittie jigsaw pez-"'
;le, of hits of Stone has been pht
••,togetlier 1.)y two Preneh..Egyptolog,
Ins -TO. recreate: a -tWelfth. dYnastY, '
,..tetitple at ,Ariton, 'retie,. of the art 1
witiek'flottrished,-,by the:1111e. 3i600 :
.yeai•j ago.:Dperts.say, it, is the fin.,
est Monument: of. aneient..Egypt Iniiguig •
the. duat;, at
4001 nfl&s s'ou'ih.' Of
tists-dottinl: broken blocks and fig
monts.„-• •some. no bigger:than
hitur's hand .--- which' they used to '
lebuild the ancient einple.• The
Work•ci.s 'iVere.Pierre 'Lacaa:.forni.er
aire&:01; general:. of the:, Egyptian
St -it r.)
te Ahnuities 'eparthient, .
• • _
,.1.feary.Clievrier, Director of Works.
• at Karnak. • • 1
-
They..stunibled liven the'jigsaw•
baz.zie.:witen .they'..were welt ing.oh.;:„
the.'0.'yloa Of Ainenophis, ill in 1924:
aini.:ifeuint its 'fonlidation's largely ,
Were detoraterrblocka:,:flom
oldei
• .inohumehta,.whjcii :later rules pul
led doWn'antl.:.used. again.Blocks
'COtild be collected oily few
months each year,'When infiltration •
of the. Niie' Was low. By ltiart...,Willter., •
941. blocks ,,fropi.- elei;ea different
• .moonnienta'had , 'been aSsehibled,. •
• and: bloelia..for to ludituntents vk
tuallY were'cohipiete.:
OFiginally built to ,mark the .firs •
jtibilee. Of Icing Senusiet 1 t,heyre.-
cotiStrtiOed month:pent IS mounted
, on ,a.• raiped base :approached "from
,-opposite.s, by. :stairWas-al Which. are
flanked 1» low beltistrades.•ln
the .centre of each StairhA .Is a
sloping . passage •., for carrying ,tho
• teat: and .,statue 'Of Aptatt:'-•
headed •ged.of Thebea:
Practices:$ee
,. •
A.'%tissell; TO-
ronto Industtlallst:visitihg 'South
Aprica;o1i a littsine.as (OP, told Cape
Town heWspaPertheit he. 401ov-ea ..•
, . „
niechinical farntini'yt:ould increase
rapidly, in the lUnien. ' .•
hi t 40 Onillel.p.Orovitites'he,had
.
been sulplised to dee',the eit,tent..to
which. farm Week is done :by' oxett,',
doitkeys: and' Andesitistead by
tisited one fairly large
.fiiritt 'Where -'4000 111ttles;:•-te.”i11o0. •
• a...large' pasturage area,- were used.
Rassell--belieVed cheap labor
. was largely resPottsihle for:Alla fact:
• that less. Machinery :13 wed .In
South Africa than 111 other farthin;,'• .
' Contitries. „la.Canada; fer ektuidde:'
• ,labor is exoensive and Most anted:. r
; farihei.s ''.de • their'eWit ..Work itI
the 'help. Of ;their • finallies. ' They
.11aturally use :n1pc1iinexy.in Or(ter to,
„ get 'through it • : • • . •
lie•fotind ftiriplug in South Africa.
less iziteasiVe- than it is 10 Catiatlai.
NeW .lealai4 and Attatralia-Thet;
Mr.,Bussekthotight;a-As•due to the
fA"et, ,gontlingrieuitUrat soil had'hati:
-are:16101d eloser tOgether. WhereaS
, in. Canada :there are, large ;stsietolten, :
of.good land And large stretohoo.ok
bad, .1.4Otttli •Afriea' geed Mid bad- .
Soil are usually toned on thelartie..•
farm. •
Alaskan Peak
to coiiluaiod
VAI.DR•74 4mt"4,..
• tii4(16Wit 'umiak & twolttsill orl • •
'daYhattle• against stiii anir
frigid Weigher' disclosed •that ."lo.itt,
Young .e,plittrers had', ,Ceirquered; •
. , . .
l3,250f,,t 51.
.A,knes,mitecti
or 'the.. Itithertli ititclinthed:pcaks
of 'the Cliugaeb Alciuntaitis, •
The: noted.:tivete 'Madk. by tratl. .
letler of the, "
party,' ‘vhicli reathed. the, Surtnnit
Juno. "Alt1tougl the ,riti4,te isnaly ,
50•Miles: distant, ,it took. ser*•"':,,;:„.„_
*ettf•-tittytItyr:. Ihe-nolOa• to readli
•
'Valdet, The Was opon.•
Aoroti hy the iturvarit Inatituto of
tkograplitota flkploration,. t
'
t