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The Seaforth News, 1930-10-30, Page 7
Empire Trade Co-operation Will Lead to ''rosperity Tr. B. Macauley Would Banish Existing Internal Tariff Walls —Cited United States As Striking Example. The immediate need forlinkingthe "Bat they mole advantages also. Tlteycreate diversity in products. The United States has given us "a fine example of trade co-operatiou with the tropics. 'There is absolutely no tariff in either direction between the United States and Porto Rico, but in Porto Rico a tariff similar to that 'of the United States is levied on imports tram any other part of the world. "We must advance step by step. We have made a few short steps in the form of'Imperial preference and I ee- joice at there. Tho time has, .however, new Como when we can take a further. step In Imperial preference," ho said. British Market Valuable "Looking at the advantages to Can- ada do we realize what the British market could mean, not merely to our nlanufacturees,: our miners and our lumber nen, but ileo to our rood pro- ducers?' Britain speeds $5,000 for im- ported foodstuffs every minute 52 the 24 hours of every day of the year. What would a substantial preference merely the rest of the world, but in such a market mean to us? . agaidat the other parts of the Empire. "Above all, however, our aim should 'The people of the United States think be not the transferof any of our Cana - nationally, while we, unfortunately, as diaa manufacturing to Britain or of a rule think only sectionally, any of British manufacturing to Can "It is easy and natural, of course, for ada, but, by co-operation, to transfer the people of the United States to to Britain, Canada and other parts of think as a unit because their land is the Empire, the production of the vast centinuouo from the Atlantic to the quautities of articles of all kinds, la - Pacific. It is separation by the sea chiding foods, which are at present Im- that encourages sectional thinking. ported into the Empire from other Distances create difficulties," he said. countries." Empire by stronger ties of trade form- ed the subject of T, B. Macauley's ad- dress to the Empire Club in Toronto recently, He compared the prosperity of the United States without internal, tariffs and conserving its own markets with the state' of affairs in the'British F1mPire, divided by over 30 tariff walls. Mre Macaulay said; "I propose to say a few words on Euipire trade co-operation: Unless' this great question can be_satisfac- torily solved the :coentriescomposing the Empire'can never attain the maxi- mum prosperity possible to them, .awl I' shall at present speak only from the dollar standpoint. "Let us contrast our position with that of the•Uaited States, U.S. Conserves Own Markets "The United- States conserves the markets of that country for its own ,people, while as a contrast, we of the Empire are divided into over 30 sec- tions each with a tariff against not Britain to Develop ;Eggs of Dinosaur Her Flying Boats ' Now Found in U.S. New' Flying Boats to Havel Pullman Accommodation for Forty Located in Montana -Mam- mal Which May Account • for Disappearance. Princeton, N.J.—The first discovery R-100 TO GO TO TROPICS in America of eggs of the dinosaur, London—Out of the airship discs- prehistoric animals ranging from the slze of tabby cats to 80 -foot length, ter which darkened England two con-• was announced recently at Princeton elusions are ah'eady becoming clear. University, The first is that until America's The eggs were found last Summer two new dirigibles rove their ca a- hear Red Lodge, Southern Montana,) P P along with discovery of another fos- bilities the Air Ministry intend to all which saggests an answer to one i concentrate increasingly on "flying of the great riddles of evolution, why dinosaurs became extinct after pop- ulating possibly the chole earth and seemingly dominating it. The other discovery indicates that they collided with a higher forst of The second conclusion Is that Bel- Intelligence. taro will continue to use her last big Announcement of finding the eggs airship, the R-100, but will fly her was made by Dr, Glenn L. Jepsen, cautiously and run no risk of an- director of the Scott fund Expedition other R-101 tragedy. of Princeton University, who unearth- ed them. This is the second authenticated find of dinosaur eggs. The first were found in Mongolia by Roy Chapman Andrews of the American Museum of Natural History, The Mongolian eggs, nearly a foot long, at first were pronounced 10 million years old, an estimate which was raised to 95 mil- lion years last winter after scientists had checked the radio activity'- of tate minerals which turned thetu to stone. Describing the Montana, work, Dr. Jensen. said: "A number of broken retuains of eggs were found, ia fragments not more than an inch In diameter. Their age is estimated at millions of years. "The fragments resemble those found in Mongolia inseveral particu- late, both occurring in closely similar geologic formations. The American ones were found in the upper lance formation which was deposited itt up- per cretaceous times." The suggestion of the Dinosaurs' fate came from finding near the eggs a small tootle of au apparently con- temporary animal, a mammal possibly of the Possum family. The early mammals, though small, had better strips," bigger but of the same gen- eral type as the flying boats now oper- ating on the Mediterranean` section of the,England-India air route. May Use Helium in R-100 Helium may be substituted for hydrogen and heavy oil fuel for gaso- line in R-100 engines. In any event It -100 is now in her shed to receive a new fabric coveting and site will re - pain there until early ltext year. England is keenly interested in Re- gir'esentative Brlttett's proposal to al -I dew helium to be exported. Airship authorities here are counting on a 'drasticfall in the price of helium in .Coming years and also on new m- attes reported to have been tomtit in Alberta. They believe it will be pas- isible to inflate tire R-100 with helium dor $175,000, and with the expenses lof maintalning the R-101 wiped out they feel that the government will be 'willing- to purchase the non -inflate - enable gas so necessary for the R-100. Ship to Go to the Tropics It has been decided to take the ship Ito the tropics. She may, as has al- ready been said, have heavy oil fuel substituted for gasoline. It is pas= tsible also that R -100's passenger (quarters will be made safer and pleas- anter .without impairing the ship's hero -dynamic efficiency. Already ,there is talk of ..slinging a gondola brains than the Dinosaurs, which were lbeneatlt the envelope similar to that I reptiles despite 'their legs, various pan theGraf Zeppelin, where pas- horns, armor plate, claws and teeth, bengers may have windows open and ' The little mammals had the intern, an exit in the event of disaster, In ,pi -100, as in the tragic 11-101, the pas- .teeugers' quarters were inside the ett- eerelope, offering no possibility of .es- Qape, Whatever is done with. the R- 0100, however, will be carefully tenta- tive. ' Nieenwhlle the British Ilylug boats etre passing one triumphant test after lanotlter and may Pro -ye to he ample 'idonsolation for the sorrow of the 11.- 01, Although not as big as the oruler DO -X, England's ."raying dpi" are believed to be safer on the lie -off and eeawortity in almost any torsi, The type now building will tovide Pullman accommodation. for orty passengers, On these and not Diminutive arm tables with Medium ,jiu' airships the attention of the Brit- sized lamps will increase the comfort 91t aviation world will be focused in of your living -room it used with your tthe corning years, largest arm chairs. i gence presumably to eat Dinosaur eggs, a prolific source of food, This competition front some higher form of intelligence has been a fay- mite theory to account for exttua then of Dtaosaurs, but mammals Have been largely loft out of the picture because evidence of their beginnings% Is found mostly in a later age, Special Containers It .is wise to place calmed rood in a special container, rarther than leave it in the opened cum, before putting It in the refrigerator, lExpedition FPisc©vers F. ssils elieved 30,000,000 Y • Peiping, China. --Discovery of 20 Eos- ' ifs of animals tmkuown to science, ud believed to be some 30,000,000 ears o1d was reported by Prof, Wat- er Granger, 01)101 Paleontologist of lie Roy Chapman Andrews expedi ;ton, who receutly returned here trout1 ongolia, The expedition had irrefutably de tleanstrated'the theory that life had Ito 'Arleta in Central Asia, Prof, Granger ars Old said. The expedition was vary sec..; cesseul la obtaining fossils of a Ilen- Bred extinct species, inoludiug rhin •oceroses, elephants and deer. I • Huge fossil deposits were Ieft un- touched when blizzards forced the ex- peditiott to discsntiuue its work foe the I What to do with a six -yeas' -old boy, who has a moustache, shaves regular - the winter, it is hoped to resunte t 1 , sitteltes cigar , t Its in deep voice tend does "strong man" stunts -e -this ;work next spring, � � ;�. ,9�,.a itesfion is azzliu Toledo school oi'ticials, as well as parents 67 Clarence Prof, Granger is attached t0 the. 1 1? g I Americau Museum of' Natural istory. Kahle who is 'three feet five Inches tall, weighs 84 pounds, Russia's Fi t Woman Air Mechanic Young Myrra Zeldeuberg briskly. at worse on an aeroplane at Leniu;rad in her capacity as first woman aeroplane mechanic to be recognized in Soviet Russia. She was trained at military aviation school C .: nadiar Revenue r® ps $37,098,574 Ordinary < Expenditure Rises $7,639,043 in Same Half -Year Period Ottawa.—The half -way mark in Canada's fiscal year was reached on �".eptember 30 last, and figures cover- ing the ordinary revenue and expen- diture of the Dominion during the past: six months were issued today' by the Department of Finance. These show a reduction in the total ordinary revenue of Canadaduring the past six months, as compared with' the corresponding period, in the pre- vious fiscal year, of $37,098,574. Ordi- nary expenditure, on the other hand, shows an increase of $7,639,043. The net debt of Canada on September 30 last was 02,146,728,558, or $3,612,522 less than on September 30, 1029. The statement issued today repre- sents only the receipts and expendi- tures which actually passed through the books of the Finance Department up to tite last day of September, The major part of the decrease in Canada's ordinary revenue, according to the statement, results from a fall- ing -off in' customs revenue collected during the past six months, as cmn- par'ed with the corresponding period last year. Customs duties collected during the past six months totalled $73,585,050 as against 597,751,892 in the same period in 1929. This is a decrease of $24,166,842. The total amount derived from ex- cise taxes (sales and stamp taxed during the past six months was $17,- 897,923. This was a reduction of $10,- 547,523 from the 1929 six-month total, which was $27,945,446. Income tax collections were higher during the past six months than in the same period of 1929. They amounted to $65,478,299 in the six months just concluded as against $63,036,700 in the 1929 period. Glycerine. Helps IC rata water is not available for washing woollens, flannels and dello- ate lingerie, add- a little glycerine to the water. This not only renders the water delightfully soft, but helps to eradicate dirt, A teaspoonful to each gallon of water will be 'sufficient. When it is inconvenient to use the usual remedies for removing status front materials, a little glycerine may often be used with advantage. Apply to the affected parts with a pad of soft cloth, allow to remain on the material for a few minutes, then wash in the usual way. If a little glycerine is added to fruit while boiling, considerably less sugar will be required. It also helps to prevent the formatlou of scum. A tablespoonful of glycerine to every three • pounds ot fruit is the right pro- portion. Try a little glycerine for freshening the cover of a black umbrella that has become slightly faded. Extend the cover and apply to the outside of the material with "a pad of soft cloth. ELBOW FLOUNCES Otte of the new: coats for winter leas an elbow flounce of shaved car- acui, about six inches deep. The :collar is of the same fur. It is often a hard job to hold down a soft lob. Smokes Cigars! Vivid Clorrs of Railways Give Motorists Warning Red and Yellow Fronts, Visible from Afar,:' Are Designed to Prevent Level -Crossing Tragedies Montreal.—Iced and yellow are col- tins take the place of steam. iocomo- ors that the human eye cats detect at great distances. That explains the festive -looking cars that are begin- ning to appear on the lines of the Canadian National Railways. 'They. were not painted to put gaiety into railroading, But they were intended to relieve the hinds of the men con- cerned in operating, who are continu- ally exerting themselves to find new devices to make railway crossing.; proof against the reckless motorist. Self-propelling cars which in some see - lives are 'equipped with bells and horns„ but to add caution to caution the railway has adopted a scheme to Blake them even more conspicuous, Sic Henry Thornton has approveda plan to have the fronts of all self-propell- ing cars on the system painted a bright red and yellow, and the work is now being carried out. Oil -electric, gas -electric, gas and battery cars are alr affected, and when they conic swinging along the track they will make their presence known for utiles, to the eye as well as to the ear. Mick Mine.''; last Injures Fi rty Fifteen Suffer Serious Hurts, 25 Others Receive Minor Wounds, When Two Tons of Explosives are Exploded at Flag- staff, Arizona Flagstaff, Ariz, — Fifteen Persons were injured seriously, two perhaps fatally, and 25 others received minor hurts, on Oct, 12111, in a miscalculated explosion of black powder and dyna- mite on a motion -picture location in Dinosaur Canyon, 70 miles northwest of here. Of the 25 receiving minor injuries, 15 required medical attention at the scene. Physicians went to the loca- tion from Flagstaff, the nearest settle- ment of any size. The mishap occurred during the filming of one of the last scenes of a desert picture by Pathe Studios, Inc. The more seriously hurt: William F. Wallace, Flagstaff, chauf- feur; Gailand, powdermau and electri- cian, Hollywood; Howard Riggin, film director, Hollywood; - Bert Gilroy, studio business manager, Hollywood; Walter Hoffman, powderntau, ' Holly- wood; Hubert Morgan, helper, Flag- staff; William Garrett, Hollywood; .lint Cunningham, Hollywood; Marvin Peterson, Hollywood. Film officials said two tons of ex- plosives had been placed in the face of a 400 -foot cliff and in an old mine tun- nel, the explosion being expected to crumble the cliff. . Unexpected presence of hard rock lent the blast violence that had not been anticipated, and showered rock and stone over an area or nearly half a mile. Riggin, the director, was in the lead of several men near the mouth of the tunnel. lie and his companion were struck down by hurtling ruck. William Boyd, leading man in the picture, and Clark Gable, the film vil- lain, were 200 feet from the point of the blast, but escaped injury A sec- tion ection of rock fell between. them, strik- ing neither. Helen Twelvetrees, leading lardy, had left the location and was en route to Los Angeles. Cameramen had been spotted on platforms near the face of the cliffs to photograph the expected landslide, which was to wipe out a mining set - GENERAL Traviss tlement. Four were knocked to the ground. Three of five cameras in use were shattered. "How far down the Rhine did you -go?" "Tweuty post cards." VOLCANO CAUSE Loudon—Volcanic a eruptions may be caused by radio -active substances in the earth which create an intense heat to melt up rocks and cause the explosions, That's the belief or Prof. Jolly, eminent English geophysi- cist. This substance is unevenly dis- tributed throughout the earth, he says, and at the site or a volcano it is in greater quautiiiee than else- where. Province Solves Medical Problem Saskatchewan Grants to Doc- tors Provide Care for Sparsely Settled Areas Itegitta, Sask.—The problem of medical service for sparsely settled areas is being solved in Saslratcite- wan by a system wltich provides for municipal doctors. Distinct progress has been made under a law which is slightly more than a year old. Of Saskatchewan's 865,700 people, scattered over 251,700 square utiles, 14.4 per cent. live in the eight cities. 7.7 per cent, in the eighty towns, 8.4 in the 377 villages, 65.3 in the 301 organized rural municipalities and 2.9 per cent. in unorganized territory, the remaining 1.3 per cent. being Indians on their reservations. Thus there is an extensive area needing medical service, but which makes little appeal to the young doctor seeking to earn an immediate livelihood and to estab- lish himself professionally. The new Rural Municipal act gives to every municipality the right tai mate a grant up to $1.500 annually to a legally qualified medical practi- tHoner who is a resident or is easily accessible on call, or it may guaran- itee his income to that figure. Tite' municipal doctor must give free meda- 1 cal service to iligents, and if neces- sary perform the duties of health of- ficer. In the demand of twenty-five taxpayers, the council must submit a by-law to the electors empowering the council to engage a physician for full-time services at a salary not ex. needing 65,000 a year. Already, under this ro-operative health measure, there are thirteen rural municipalities paying medleai grants of from $900 t. $1,500 annally. Nineteen other municipalities have engaged municipal doctors at salaries varying front $3,500 to $5.030 per year. The system he giving much satisfaction, for it guarantees to the physician a -reasonable lntottte. and gives the ,enters ne'ded medicaltim•t-ice. Artificial Luno -s Save Girl's Life Paralyzed Breathing Muscles Restored to Normal Condition Again Chicago,—Three weeks of being buried in a clanking steel coffin, which automatically forcel :lir in and out of her paralyzed lungs, ended on Oct. 12th for Miss Frances McGann, 25 - year -old student nurse.. She remained in the whirring, vi- brating machine, but physicians said her lung muscles had returned so near to normal that they expected to release her as cured within a few days. "It is simply marvelous," comment- ed Mist McGann, whose head pro- trudd from the machine, which sub- jected her body alternately to air pressure and then to vacuum. "Three weeks ago I was dead, or just as good as dead, and now, well, I'm almost well. again." Three weeks ago Miss McGann was stricken suddenly wigs a mysterious and complete paralysis of the lungs. She was rushed to the hospital, ap- parently dead. Attendant;.• quickly damped hes in the respirator, turned on the motors, and immediately she be - Igen to breathe, unconsciously. When she was revived, the machine became for her an instrument of ex gnisite torture: To prevent flies from breedlitg•Ip manure, add one pound et borax to each 12 bushels of manure. Induction of Artificial Fever Effectively Cures Pneumonia Doctor Also Sta. -s " Feverization is Successful in Combat - in,; Diphtheria and Rheumatism Chicago: Indur s' by electricity of an artificial few,' ' 116 degrees .is the latest and one oft ke most effective cures for pneumonia, lh. C. C. Vinton of New York, secretary, recently told delegates at the opening of the 40th annual convention of the American Physical Therapy Association. "Fever, which kills disease germs, is Nature's method of combating sick - nese," Dr. Vinton explained, "We simply have found means of aiding Nature. Also, we have learned that a temperature of 106 degrees leaves no ill effect on a patient. Dr. Vinton said the use of "fever- izatioa" also has proven a valuable form of treatment for scarlet fever, diphtheria, arthritis, rheumatism, asthma and lung afflictions. In a Memphis, Tenn; hospital, he said, two physicians are usingit to cure insan- ity by killing germs of the spinal cord and nervous, system. The treatment is accomplished, Dr. Vinton said, by applying heat -radiat- ing electrodes to the body and wrap- ping the patient in blankets. The electrical system stakes it possible to keep the temperature under control. Comet Has Missy:! Old Mother Earth Schwassmann - Wachmann Meteor Veers Away After Menacing Globe Paris—French astronomers at the Meudou observatory have announced that all danger of a collision of the 'Schwassmann-Waclunailtt cornet has the earth is past. `Phe comet stag swung as close to the earth as it will ever conte and is now disappearing, having missed this globe by'the coat- paratively small' celestial space of five million roues: French scientists inalet' that the earth had a narrower escape than most laymen ever imagined, Had 'the little comet come on at the speed and angle it did when it was 'discov- ered by the Germau astronomers, Schwasemann and Wachmann, . oa May 1, 1930, it would have put a dent in tate globe and perhaps knocked the earth out of its smooth-runuing etr- e"' If It Hit Us Scientists are lost in weird conjec- tures or what might have happened had the collision actaally occurred. Some argue that the earth would nave broken into bite at the impact, others believe that like a Derby hat, the earth would have been dented but no- thing more serious would occur. The comet was travelling at a pate which would have left the world far behind. Through. the telescope. watchers could see the comet streak- ing through the field ot stars, lis progress being such that movement was visible to the eye. The Schwassmann-Wachmauu .will be back in live years, but its circuit will be even farther away from the earth. Instead of being 22 times a, far away as the Moon, it will be 30 times, se that from now on there will be lessened danger of a collision. The Third Escape French astroaomera point out that thele have been but three comets come dangerously close to the globe iu the past few centuries, Lexell'e comet caste nearest, missing the world by 1,440,000 miles on July 1, 1770, while the Pons-Winnccke pan- ed by just 3,480,000 miles off on June 27, 1927. The Meudon scientists succeedei in photographing the new comet awl have been able t0 figure its size as 400 yards in diameter instead of tette, hundreds or thousands of miles as astronomers first believe!- The re.tt of the visible mass is ultra -rarified carbon gas which makes the comet appear much larger that it really is. Scientists point out that Were have been meteors of that size strike the earth, but proved of little damage because they came at much less speed. stead of coming directly down and because the carne at much less speed. In North-Eastern Arizona Is a meteor crater 1.200 yards in diameter and felt yards deep. Ground Crew Foil Fog of Victim Novel Method of Burning Gasoline Creates Hole in Dense Fog 1 snt•cessfai small-scale experiment in the artificial dissipation of fog is described in the Bulletin of the Ameri- can Meteorological Soolety on the authority of R. C. Sauey, Here is tile story as quoted in Charles Fitz- hugh Talman's Science Service fea- ture \\'hy the Weather? (Washing, teal:. _� pilot taking off from Cleveland for New York was informed that while the air was clear both at Belle- fonte, Pennsylvania, and 1-ladley Field. New York, the visibility was decreasing, and clouds showed a ten- dency to close in. "The pilot, however, decided to risk the flight, thinking that he could land at Bellefonte in case Hadley Field were foggy. Reaching Bellefonte, the pilot found the field foggy and tate landing impracticable. Hadley Feld was still clear." When half -way from Bellefont to Hadley there came the report by radio that fog had closed in on Had- ley, which put the flyer itt a bad pre- dicament: "Without sufficient gas to return to Cleveland, and with no landing pra- cticable at Bellefont, the pilot con finned toward Hadley. The ground organization at Hadley, of which Mr. Soucy was then a member, could soon hear the airplane circling overhead, and now and then throttling down and almost making a lauding, but zooming up again just before it could Itave touched the ground. "The fog was too douse. "Realizing that the pilot would icon be out of gas and would have to land somewhere. the ground organi- zatton undertook to burn a hols through the fog by pouring aid igniting two fifty -gallon hogsheads of gasoline in the centre of elle field. The pilot, ivlto was apprised by reale of the plan, circled around I.he fire, watching for a hole. As the tiro died down a holo appeared, thro telt which the pilot c',ai.'eit ro a -tar, Tan.' ing on the field." Presumably, Air. Tatman adds, the' fog, in this particular instance at least, seas shallow, and the air was very probably • calm.• "Gettera.ily sitoalting, the dissipation of a fog by heating it is, according to circum- stances, either physicallyintpassible or prohibitively expensive."