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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1938-09-22, Page 2waimosirmagetrao*. ;.• Europe Interests Foreign Farmers istit Few Desire to Return Fer- - P'suanentlY to Native Lands LIFE'S 1-11C•E Fred Nelivi. 30,000,000 B Canadian Wheat Are Exportable ,P9WEBDRWEI.1., 1 • tobacco workers retain a, keep'.in- terest in ParoPeett'and intertletitnk •"ai, affeirs, even though gi Iarie.,eet- 4mntage then) are ;led and very iew of Meat have any, • Meath:MS • Of eretukniag to , their„ homeland,. Evidence .of this •intet- 'FS( was Shewirilr Uie Ives restau- rant and lee-cream:parlor here last • week when thres,,I,Pollah top:acco woOcers.came in and requested that e'tertain,radio. steamy)* tuned in.. on the radio. They wanted to • ten..tq anew etnententator discuss • the international qUestion::Thrimili 7 AIM entire news broadcast tb.0Y118-: ,•tenedk'attentively '"and••thea.",for . quarter of an 'honk afterwards dia.; , -cussed European affairs. *:• Would Rather Stay Here ..The three had been in Cailetle for levet* Years but apparently from ' • '•-ibeir• conversation they had .kept 7‘i In touch wlth friends ' in their holnelea4 ef 'Poland„ and Also Ger- . • many( through-. :-OSiTestrendellee- !That heliefebOnt foreigners retatti:,•. • ing to their native land is errone- ous, however, and it can be said in ' their 'defence anct.''.'ae a cow, ptinient •to the e9.1Mtii of Canada that :very , • few Oc'tbein have,any desite• of re-- • tnyning to tufoplit;after;.thei have.' anent a. OW years 'here. • " 1 etiew .Tiade' Pitt Neii.Zealand Ottawa Ends'itehange''Pump.", ing Duty. 40 'Butter corning: 'In FrOniAntipodexi;. ' '114,Yeaes. crptilbigiOt. Since 19321 Whaat'BOard EnPeet. 04; to !Randle Most Of kbar. Ventlde PriMehlit ifl 114',ve More • tnan. f240.00000 blitseels Oi thiP ,Yeer's Wheat tw1010 tO Sell tui world markets, Gaverlintent‘ shoved 140" week- ' .' !The Domialea Bureau, of .•Statis-,- tics in its 'firtzt estintato of this year'S Canada field/ 'crop yield set the: Wheat 'hares t at 158,43300: bushels nearly 'dOoble. the •thial es- timate ,or•ilast e ir eropWhich. was 182,419,990 'bashels 'and , the highest. prOductien•ioce..1932 W nen 443,061;000, bushels ere harVeated: A4brage yield, ,from 1928- to .193'7 , es 329,761,600 OttS711eK • • early Double Last •Year • Mime consamption f wheat likely Will be between 1..o,060,opo. and '120,000,000 'buthels, lenVing more than 230,090400 for export. :•.In Washington, the 'United States Agricultural ,Denertment estimated the II,S., wheat 'crop would be 939,- 912,000 bushels,. The• 17.S. has • flounced a 'subsidy program for eit7 pert of 100,009,000 bushels of wheat, „ and 5,000,009 barrels of 'Rear. It :is expecttd at Ottawa that praCticilly", the entire Chnadian eron will be handled by the Canath- an 'Wheat Board, Which will pay the • Western farmer 80 cents a bushel for No. 1 Norther,n at Fort William. The price also has been fixed, on othergrades and any lasses suffer- ed by the hoard in marketing he 'wheat at a lower price will be met by the Dominion Treasury. • • ADIILF HITLER . To citizens of ..our Western :World these last tense , weeks • Adolf Hitler of Gerinany has ap- peared to be •the most momentous • figure in all history; by whom our tivilizatign stands or falls; • This'. man has •ceught-the coun- tries of Europe napping. •fTliey did not. believe . that it, So: -called , mystic, 'visionary, 'fanatic .(what you will) could be e coldly prep; tient planner. Not until Austria- hed • been' aurteXe, did, we' Wake up to the fact that this dream'er-orator it -swiftly • turning, into reality and substance, the shadows of his own Mind; We, are finding, too: fate, that Hitler in his autobiography, '"Mein • Xarimf" • (written 15 years ego) ,rnearit.ex: • actly what he said. • 'A -.native of "Irish' 'IA, the one- time brieldayer's helper .eild paint- er • of picture Pdstca;rds, was em- bittered towards his lowly . let • early in youth: The •war expand-. 'ed'his horizon end.,,y.:ith'it, bit dis- content. :The shanie, of Germany's ' 'defeat acting on his overemotional 'nature became . a determining forge in Hitler's life. He ha's felt his divine niisSion to be to awaken •Geripany to:: revplt .against a the. Treaty Of Versailles. .By What means- he it: accomplishing , his ends, we all'know. . Hitler is a master of Staging, an artist at plaYing on other people's' emotions. Into his 'words as an orator he puts all the elementary force and stupendous vitality' that are his to cominand.:' Screaming • The Man is. still enignia. sobbing hysterically • The answer to his. persgriality: ',riddle will he revealed only by sub- sequent history. ••1 'Trade with New ,Zealand,. Which, - like that -With. Australia ,haS 'been Subject:. of frequent negotiations in, the peat -three Yeare'becatise • oftlie *1.140...:_ttilanckiingaviat Of •Canada,. will ..ecnitintle:=.aisibthei yea?: f under:' _ • , • the' pact agreed upon in 193wit1i some inodification.- ,,..* • In annougeing' extension Of the existing-agreeinent until September 30, ,1939,, the Tree and Commerce 'Department revealed the:. govern:'• ment't decision. to • caned, the ex- . 'change, dumping duty 'against New, Zealend,butter imports. • In return for this concession the New Zetiland.gevernment agreed to • co-operate as far as possible by • iting butter 'shipments' to such, pro- portions as not to unduly prejudice • the interestq of. canaditin . Trade is increasing, The present agreement was••nego- • tiated in 1932 for a ,period of one• . yeai. but has been successively 'ex- tended: Under - it trade, has • increas- ed steadily but, always with a, large • balance in tater of Canada. • •• In 1933 Canada bought -from New' Zealand • goods to the Value Of $969.- 900. and sold, goods to New Zealand , • to the value of $011,000., Ffq. the . 12months ended with, June last —•-,-•these figures respectively had in- creased to .$5.187.000: and $16.552,- 00(1: ' • ad ititerVork, In Spring ey h Already Complete The Luther Marsh Area Near Fergus --Sererz:',17.0..r.S.,men • have. ed employment oh. ,.4,he sarvei :work • ,Inew liebag z)ndacted in the '1..tith er • .1tarslt.nna•:in cOnne:ction witih the. • Gran d• *T -et. conservation . scheme. • :EL;G Aere.s•-:' et.'-e-neer-inchief for thr• Corvortc•tom.,.,.;15., ta9xing, ahpad rapidythenny of th,at..ated preper•etory to dpciding the definite. , •• site fdr,the 810;oo0, dam tO be.bunt • • in the marsi-titstritt. • Owing,le the fact that the Survey A work. wiltiO be z.compiete.:d.,.fOr .11bOlt and that a- • ter. that 'sufficient time would • , needed to 'drew plats and seek ten-* • ders if Will be too late to start ac -- •'MA work this,,fall. , • Large Storage Dams , The entire Grand. Rivet COns.er- • .vation scheme. With is series of -large storage dealt, strategiCally. lo- cated, is e'xpectect to ,coat, more than ,12,0011000, of which the Dominion. • Government : and, , the Provincial Goverument, have promised to Pay , ' 174 Pet; Cent each•;•leaving 25 Per . 1,Cent'; for' 'the municipalities to be , benefited ,by, the' ircirkS to centri-•• ,At a reeeut of the ra mistion.it tommittee,Was'appOirited „ , to interview the•Governnimits Again „with regard to paytng,' 'the entire' • Cosi of' the project and relieve the ,7,---A•linnicipalities6t an added;,•taxatibii -burden. ' When the firtt larke dant it con', strutted, it is "expecfeil that about • 14 SOS Men 'Will be `giten *Ork for It • leatt six niontht. •• eak Is Reached In Maple 'Syrup • op Production Figure. Again Touched' This Year ' In Canada • -Total Production of maple sugar- . . 7and syruP, expressed as Maple , Sy- •• .rup; •einOunted o 3,390;419 gallons In 1938,'the:DOniiititin:c ititireau ":ot 'StetistiCS i•eport.4. Tint was doable' in ;volume the short crop 'oi.-1,873.,:449 gallons in 1937 and •equal to, the 1929; tli%year of' peak ‘prodriCtien. The 1938 crep• Was veined at ;3,849,009,.. compered, With'42.245,,000 in 1937.. Althangit the quality of. the ,'erdp Was'.gener- ally good,. prices were ':Spinewhat:: ;lower than In 1937 ••owing t the hears- Only 10 per Cent of the 1938 crap Was' estimated to have been Made into` sugar ea tora • Pered• 'mai 25 per cent. •in :LOtp. 'Of Sugar, TOO Production of syrup in Ontario "t'atilo'ant-ett to 570,809 gallonsat cent: ,'„•Pared with 439,700, 'gallons ..)agt , %year.. Maple ',sugar prediction , ,•talled•79,009 tounds. • • The nolnbined• Value Of sugar And ' siren predated in .190, by Ontarip wag ' • .In the War against mosquitoes,' the ,tallee of malaria in Australia, authorities ef Brisbane ,)tikve placed" Medaka.„fith in all of • the city peat. The nietialte te.: kimi•tes s' stnitit goldfish and has a vOricioos appetite or TnOsfitntelarvae. - " • • r "He can't iorin our arm!, under the ,age Emit" •44 -e -e -e -o.-•-1•1••• e-e-oo-e I.THE :PRESS, VOICE 0 • CANADA • SIGNIFICANT TREND' • . A significant trend in all fairs, large and small, is the pririninerice .5. given to boys' and girls'Clula• -work,. 'It is one of .the best fea- tures the exhibitions have .evet IU- troduced:—Fatmer s Advocate. . • •wuAt NEXT FOR THE NORTH? , Jim Curran of the Sault.. his discovered that there used to be -white Indians nig:Mg :James Bay , and now some ,bird .at Timniins has discovered whiteblueberries. • Tall tiles from the North! .t-••,•:. St. Ceiharilibi: Standard. • " , . IN, PRAISE,OF' SOME DRIVERS , The total metor accidents -in - which . children are injured while Playing on the streets it appalling, but still more 'strikilig.is "the nuin- • bet of times in which accidents are. • avoided; either .by What • appears to be ai pure miracle,' or ,by re-• . rnarkable efforts on the part of the motorists.—Guelph Mercury.. ' ALL BRIUTES,TOGETHER , The • Philadelphia .prison horror' grows worse as the details are re- vealed. ' Twenty-six Men. were locked in the eight -by -ten cells,' and, steam- heat turned , on While the -,only ventilation was from a. small: grating in the roof of each cell. Twenty-two Men were taken out unconscious • after two days;':, . and feer men were dead, literally baked to death. This is civilization„ in Philadelphia.. No wonder :Ja- •pan, Russia, Germany, Italy and others want to know in What re- spect We think we excel them.— Hamilton Spectator, ' HORSE AND BUGGY DAYS •• We have no quarrel with those who refer to the. "horse and bug- .1 gy 'days" It is an apt term, very : descriptive. of . an earlier era: But. : there is a sound objection to those who use the phrase in a lone of ,• ,_The "horse And buggy ,days" . were important' in the develop. Men ,of Canada and Of Cenedian= • ism, They produced the Inen and women who made -the present era, withits conveniences and cont.' . forti. They made' these modern day's :possible: • Tints, when one refers to the "horse and buggydays'-"' it would be better to do so in a, spirit,. of respect, rather than a spirit of sarcasm.—Windsor Star. ' • The. EMPIRE ' •.. • "THINKING" UNDER THE • GUN : Even the, obdurate ,citizen who still refusesto aconite a ,(radio)' set Will not easily escape the yoke 7 of authority, for it is 1 nned to P spread a network of loud -speakers over all the towns ea.' that the • German going about his ordinary occasions shall not , miss the in- structidni of his leaders. Loud- • SPeaker columns in the streets and 'subterranean. loud -Speakers boom- ing. through .gratings: in the pave- ment will impress even on most; heedless Citizen the 'latest edicts of Nazi headquarters., When . the full bleat pf this, propaganda • it added to that of a press • com- pletely controlled, the canalization of pubhic thought Will, it is reck- oned,: be as 'complete as it can be Made.: The German, who may . still be independent enough to .-wish to hear what the 'tett of the world is aaYing does se at his .ppii1; for consignment to a' cant.Pw° may be the consequence of receiv- ing sentiments of which his; gov- ernment does not approve. The total effect is. 'a smothering of thought in an 'intelligent • People for which history Nelde,itio '-=Manchesterf`Guardian. 'Tight shoes are the 'greatest blessing on earth" --they Make you ° forget all your other troubles. -- F. Billings.. Piince'Mliiir Passes rrnaiw.: To Buy NO Extra Wheat The German ,DepartMent :„.of Food Supply stated this year's.par-. chases of wheat in Ceriede., prob- ably would not exceed .the -normal quantity. • • . • • A, spokesman said, that : in eq.- cordance with the Gerinan-Caoa- Olin trade agreement, anaverage, quantity of grain was. ptiichated • annually in Canada. • - . This mean about 2:00,000 bush-. elS. During the 'last fiscal year ' Gertnank bought 1,985,836 • bosh- . els from this country and the year before 1;678,896 ;bushels, accord- ing • t.00gmDopms.inion Bnteau of Statis• - tics Well known in Canada through his own visit's. and the' connections, of his relatives Prince Arthur of ' Connaught; -ABOVE, -died after -a hang illness- in London; England. In recent' years his health forced • 'hint out of public life, but twice ' • before the, war*and once in 1917 • , he visited. Canada in the coarse Of his official duties. He Was in his 56th The OK SHELF By ELIZABETO EED"IMPOy. R• BT7+ALNiCnEyu0t1:11.g140.4 Here is 'a 'book to enjoy by ad- :bits—to pick up and opt down at your leisure. •It is :a witty,. wise' and delightful summing up Of e distingpished Easternet.'s otitleek In= lin .:Yotang •,*yoti win find: a widely., traveled,, Widely . read man With the 'gentle wisdom of an ancient race arid the practical out= look ef a modern Man , . . a wit- ty, tolerant, delightful ,companion • . . . ; ready to discuss your , favorite topica With y:ou, ' ivheiever-they may ne . . . fall of stininlating' thoughts about every , phase of life Iforit ypur marriage to the tobacco you smoke, froma religion thet, fills a need' in our life to landscapes; from the pleas-, Ines of literature to those of eat- ing, ; froni• international affairs. to :arrangiog flowers . . .a philtis:O, pher with a deeply Satisfying phil- osophy. of liVing---.:riat in a:sechld ed tOwer but in the hectic World of today '.‘•— • I • "The Importance of Living," by Lin Yatang . . . . Tordnto: Me - Clelland &,8tewait, • 215 Victor Street. , • ajr Ubtb ek)iy sAye, amusing !An- gle pa -the OtttatiOtt. in the Mo4tio•-s vanenn::, TvnYelipro ntaking thO 'crosing to Vortb ,Africe ft'om the 'coutitfent' are patrootting Iutlian boats more. and Mere.t..I'reuih shipping. outpunieS 'port , $0 tt falling -off in tvatlle. Why givf,3 Preach, steamert the. go-by? Be - ;valise theY hnie keep,. targetS •.,,over „end • over. •agaia - for. 4.1:tirg0"" holuhing and. torpedoing, ltalien,• • ships' aren't bombed' torpedoed se • year travellers •figure they're ,safe aboard,' *on, • • ° TEN 6...10.P1'.!NtS•'-'--f)Ofi't-Yett' be, lieve 4 -dolt 'Oit101,1viteif h taYs in., his 'Nuremlnirg speectil Pat Ger.', many doesn't want to take A1sace7 Lorraine. ,•• • Upon the' wellof the Feldheirn. hallo ia Munich, *hick 'has been made into a Nazi shrine, is a.great„ scroll bearing the words, 4'Ood 111ake urFree". and ion:either side five. wreaths, with flowers .iienewed eery;da Each ,wreatil Carries: the color ofa loSt1 protince• and • not a day. passes ,without tens: of thousands Of Germans Coniiii.g there end MOinning -their. loss. Ten nantes are inscribed on the scroll, the !lames of •Ithe lest Provincer: Alsace-Lorraiee;' • the Palatinate; •• Schleswig.HOlstehq East Prtissia;. • • Memel and Dauzig; Stuletett 'Dea• t', • schland; South Tyrol aid. South Stytia, Posea, .Silesia; the Colon- kunk Is Cause Of Near -Death Waterloo Golf Club Stewardess Narrowly .Escapes.. Asphyxia- tion When Men Attempt to Fine h C Animal * , •`0,4147%,7,--A.S- 44? effernfath, of the% OW o a s4Ou1t tbe *F4tert4e.,": , golt and .004.4try. MO, Afttri)bYi ;04. gitOWOrdesa . of 1110' '• Was. put M 'hOseititl siifti Ing from ,Carboti:montutide p4sQnn' WAS first treated Willi PO-. Mater atid•then. pot in 'lin „oxygen. • 'tentit appears that employees of • • th,e club, Mit attempted to• get ,rid of thp milsance by' attaching a hose to • the, eXhaest og a 'motor car a'Sai placing it In the shed. •Ms Mur phy as Working lit•the•kitchenof'' the Adjacent clubliouser,aad lt Is sitd the, deadly fames, permeated, , . the k1tP1te4 nd Mt*" NOtithi 'Bod.4 dewy becathe ill,••; 'She Was taken • bente and bours later her [troable wits diacosd io pbon monoxide • .elr • poisoning; • , •• , • She, Was removed t� the hospital; ' and s•wit- ,sooa gut" of danger. but ' she had a close calh ays Final Trthute .•,. ON WITH THE NEW-'l'ite 'mptie.1.7 t.. Oat to .come frau], SomeWher, •So it • part of the, tax bUrden is - lifted ;• from. real estate .(.which Weald: be a " • good, thing, don't :.Y01.1 agree?) other nevi taxes win liaVe to :be inipoied,•, ' so the Ontario 'Goverinnott sayS; to , Make,np the difference... 0 ' : ;:: • , . Three. ,ne.tv .iourees'' of • taxation: are uncler,,tonsideratioir,:,:then,!•by. the Staff it pueen'S ratk and.wili come tip • for action at the next ses- .. .• shin of. ihe Legislature: an anoite- . men t •tax, to he, collected by • eaCh ' nitinicipalitY;. 'a sales tax imposed by .rattnieiptilitieS; Atierease • Of pro-..: viacial gasollue taxi; from : sii. ' ' to seven ;:centS' extra prcideed•s, to go .: teinuncipalities, ' • : ' .' • . •... • The :Ontario :".'inayoiS: Who get pretty nied ' soine OM es should: , be pleased Withi. these ptoppsals which: ,.Should,b.ring more revenue to their . _respective •tiliVias:and cities', and re- ' duce the atonber .06 Sales.' at .prot. ; perties"for fax 'arreatS;•• ....•. • -; • . , DECElTFUL, Flit.liT — Th•ks,e, . peaches ),,,OU bought' iooked on , derfol' in the stele ithder 'their .det - '• ceptive covering of rosy' genie" but • when ,on got ,,, then]: home, ,yon. feuna . °lent to hk". 'green as grass : and hard as bullets . But it isn't just peaches' . ..„ .:., ....eferY sett:of fruit grown in Ontario is shipped to : inarket. ...hi' an . immatitre, unpalat- able state in order to catch the hest . • prices' quick; before they drop: . Hoiv,long has this been•goinggir? 011;•for Yeats and yeere, but hohody. has said anything .tputh and the,. • growers have consistently got:awaY. - With it;: But no a stprin has been,: raised in the :prese', Of. . Ontario Yhll.ieeh.. may :. ,result :in. action being tan , 1, ; • I .. • ' THE WEEK'S QOESTION—wha:t. alignment,. of. Europeanpowers is ' . the Ningclem Of.: Greece likely to. -.swing in:Witte., : AaSwer,:, Greece is ' becoming •mote and • More:. closelY ' affiliated With13ritain and Preece ' •dud the other democratic poWers.: The ;silk ,spidning caterpillar (13enbyx niori) is cultivated exten- sively in the Fat' East and Europe for the production of Silk on 4, • commercial scale. japan produces about 89 per cent: of the raw silk • available to international trade.' . He has mattered all Points .Whe .has combined the useful with the ' :agreeable.—Herare, WONDERLAISTIfi..0F.'0Z. , . ••Att'e,1,eavieg the Whiinsiep, Otiolt :sontitinett Jouthei. He ., • ed to get to the Catintry' or`the, ttroWleywoge,• and In order to do• that he nnist trOVA the Ribaie Lattch 4 hard thing tcdo Poe the ttio.ple Lnnd Wa t.s1iecessioriof hills asta' •va11e-aq. veryttee0; fold roeltrv, whiph'clictstoc tbiceA, corittanti,v,hy fit)obtre. White u h WitA elimO4kg" a hill it tat* ittidertveatli .him and "fttlitY, and .While he *alit . Cloiceliolt*'into• a valley It rose tie . cud tattled him to the top,of a hilt. • • Th. wa. very OerpletOrtg to the ertiveler ntia a ttians'ex, might have •ethought if iraPokeibleto; cro.18,, the hiPple Lahti at ail, /milt Oural .knew that if he kept eteadity on he WOuld get to the•eod nt ta`st.' So he paid no attention to the- hili and val- leys .and kept • plodding' along lust , as though, he was walking en level toetiod. The result at this wiselver-. ststence was thet,the General n,o4.1hr • . rohetteo firmet•son and after pene- trating it 'dente foresst tame to the bontltitot4 of the GroWtey woo. '411C3'. • No ,sooner had he etoot,i4d, the bor- der et this ',earful borociri wto.,11 two kuneds.selted h,,i ;out earriid; • him helertt the 'Grand nantooet, of • the GroWleyWog,#, who *e,.O.Wied uP- . Mitt f„eroolouely 4n-4,0x:shed hitn why he. dared to introttp upon ,hi. ..lerototy, '1 ant the Oteat Ifigh fientral of . the Ar., nly of the Onetne KItur 0,4 .i.ny nanle Oaph," ,Watk the reply, the World trembles When that 146010, IA' tied" At thi 4 0,trit1.us • oneeeh the .0toWleY•Woge gaie ithotrt of Jeering ItiNgt1:0'.• 4 S'il1iattit.,/.6nr. 'thora erluttilt tIlie .grloteliy, ills 'St VOW:: Att).1:4:" 01, Will Itiah htto the, Mfr. Chttth'igit.§ . t(rfibty i,hilken'hen' he fe,11 tiOok the ht,rd t.tviottO but he .vphea.rid taiNt 110 brIf ir.r, IA( Ithr,..inthortith•Ilre' . Otr(i ortivrtstri t11:4 o If t pt+tikrz` . agtith t, ftic (4vioad 1 iOrtriiJ6t, "My Morpfet, the Xinothe Knt, 'hos••Fi.tnt , }i re tel 06'11(0' IVith :Y611. • oite .wtoire$ ytt,te cont(tnl, • tho-liana .tif Oz itt 1,6 Cho' nth( twa .1)11:11s4 d rend Aut. ••1;P1 • • .!er:trWts.d.‘tupoll T;VIn rtrd sl "(::o ' TAP • • • ' . His Eminence Rodrigues* Car-. dinal • Villeneuve, '•ArclibishOp: of Quebec, was one of the large num-, ber of princes of the . church %vile attended fhe funeral' rites in "St.-• Patrick's Cathedral, New York, -•of Patrick CArdinal Hayes, late ad- • minietrato'r Of the lArgest Roman Catholic diacese in Ainerica. Greater Music Interest Urged • Sir Erxtest MacMillan Advocates :- That Canada.,Learn to Stand • On Iler"Gn Fee! MUsiCally., Sir Ernest MacMillan, head of the Toronto Conervatory of Mus- • ic;• was the luncheon' speaker, on . • Women's • and Music Day at the G.N!.E., this. year. He •••urged..,Can- ada; to stand On hem • on feet in , the music world., No loni.,,er should. he depend on the United :States for iMisital nourishment any more than she Should for defenbe,, 'Sir , Ernest said:, • Unifying 'Power of Music: •4 , Support ,fot musn. financially arid :Otherwise was relatively - small, he -added. In laying foun- dations ,for future deVelopment of the nation and "unifying, civiliz- iog atoi peaCe-making"powell of musie should not be forgotten 'If the: varioUS' :Mad nations to- day wthilci• 'take Off a little • time from their feverish arrimment 'pre- parations and iearri stinie of each - other'sol1g8. they thetriselyes iitarer to peace -than - all the ditartnament co.nferences . and rioivaigressionPaCts are ever . likely to bring them,' Sir Ernest Treat 1-IOrsei TO ,Day In Country ' • Pegasus Club is '1:14st to ioq Horses Fro Gotham's . . Hos stieet..1, • • , bobbin had hia 4.0, at the Pege, . 'sate ChM, as IA: hortet frolic In the ' emititrY aWey, -• ..froin New York'S herd citO •streets, !,Ait tbe fon Mid , relaittitlon'ef • hentat.to-goodnese day .in the ppim. wilt'bei theirs," ,protnitektioni- las G. nolasetiruttSPortakrian, who ttett • ashost to .the uilnutlsAt a 40', Of • • Carrels aureate, ,ciottestt• and fresh , •, ' •• It%.011 eMiltiegiteat On. arrittal itt Wok. Woods ,wilt ;he ,etegeitt. .ed with tlt4t. sttaws hat hearing . • • ....'Cottest th deterriiitie'.. the ,axatt giatimmei the rifest.. faithful' and , ale Meat catelligetit ate Ontlietre, Oath 'aad. Plitt§ • Include tobbet shaps 'New • 'Yorks hntriendlY • etpetag,., • . ^ .•' . • ,