Loading...
The Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-07-14, Page 67,46,'":41-Z-.1°,;:',git • „ ' :',t',-;;Q;'?,,...;.,•,••::•A.:;!‘,:ji,,,o;,.4 • AVI.r. ""V;••0.; ;•);,;;:, : • • • • :is' , !y: J. • . • - e • • 4: ;• • •,•c, Practice angi More Practice ie-• of the Press Canada, The•Einpire anti. The World at Large • - , .saprrt4 ,whicit may • become displaced tied prole- more of a menace 'Wm an These dangers have been dinned into the ears of taa, public. again and again. meghtless. disregard of them is cottly. And since tbouthtlessnesS is char-. anteristie• of. childree, parents would ao yell to impress. npon'thern•the necessity. for eau -tion when 'pleeffni about the water. •It does not do fo,P• 412FeParentr.tf.k.leantee. ber. thildrirnot4-goingetoegeteinto-•dartger- .WIttiont, some viateltful 'eye having It , • . in vie*, It is Well to' have every child • :taught to serint'at aa 'early an age as - , .• posstbie It is -elen Mere imptirtatit to. instil:into them the peril ot play- ing.aheut water Where there is no one to reScee;theor, if theyget- initeetta re, ger.4--Torontn Teiegraie. - • , • THE EMPIRE :Canada and the EmPire, ,it is, perhaps,, min -reel -late that thel. next great Imperial. Conference; upon which 'ninth depencle; should be, held at Ottawa for Canada since the War has given a lead tie the:Empire. It is. true that • she has net been able to absorbimmigrants ea did the :United States during last Century, but we must rementber that that capItal,large 71TeBritistii-whiehi-ettabled-the-linited States 'to • absorb those initigrants, • was wasted in the Great War. Canada. 0404P4 • Patronizing Peddler, People are: awaking to the fact that ' ^ not Only does the peddler emits.* fail to give eithergood (JIMMY or fair see. - viee, but his unfair-. competition in • • jeres the Lapel retrciant and eveatual- .y reacts (mills public.. The peddler I ' Wets nothing o .support the town he enters. He leeves'te others the mat- . ' ,• ter of paying for;.ilie,roads, the nide7 ie-4",.--eee-wellispetheewater-serviee,..4he-lights,„ ••; ' ,• • ,•• • ; • • , ....„ thefire Protectioti,_the,seWerege, the" police 'protection and. •the various other Services that' Mast he _maintain- ed in aeY toi. The,Peddlei. doesdot assist in tile. maintenanceof Weal churches, epli"nos ; comment orgatiV leAtlens, siorti,Jelief anythineelse' • essentially lOcal, So far as the local -concerned -the :peddler lle,041Y 6 parasite; a borrower who will • • • ' never even aphnoWledge the debt: ,,,,, • Seldom a week passes but The A& ,• . vance•receivee A compleintAhat a ped dler sold a Citizen a bath -tub or a ' PhOtograPh:er some printing or some Prunes, and while freed may net he • proven in a court of Jaw' the' patron oethe peddler is, 110 more pleased than • it it Were.' Thelocal merchant, ninety • times out of a hundred can: simply a: -better grade of goods thin t.Opeddier provides. Thi islways Thisthe-TieddleW • . trick -4o talk about the price, for a *epistler article carried locally, and. on • '• the mere question Of low Price; foist I is still the Land of 'Promise-tne • Mein -etlite. customer something that 1 country:, that should in a hundred ...•wlU prove .costly indeed. The more years be as rich: and as populousis important -phase; however, is the in, her friendly nelghbor south of that un jury Id the pttblic from this peddling .fortifted, border; which is in itself a System' with 'All it unfairnessit all beacon to the world and a ••foreshad- • ' business were done hy Peddlers sot a•owing of the;day when forts anderm- _ • local municipality -could exist ..When ies shall be needed no more -Hong thepeddler has a free swing, local 'Kong Press. business • must necessarily suffer. . It besinesi••ial, :handed- oven. -to the -ped • Empire Minerals • 'dler, the business men can not be ex- Dr. Charles Cainsell, Deptity-Minis- petted to provide credit, extend ser- ter of Mines ' in Canada, asks Why . vice, pay. taxee, and contribute to the there *tot be. Empire cooperation various causes that maintain a• town in mining?) •Our problem with nese In progress and Prosperity. ' minerals is largely one of world dVer- With all the talk •• about peddlers: Production and inability to get on the now going onin so many towns it may market ,at. competitive priees,: but en • , be asked Why is something not done Empire ,agreenient on the lines, sug- 0 remedy the 'situation?" Whyis gested by : Dr. •Cameell'a address ere no rattle -at therr-TiuratigN eL -sehouhi go-n-riottewayeto-improVeetite , • - seems to be that in manycases those position. It there is world over pro • . eeconcerned-seeeclearlyethe eell et -the peddler in. their on line, -but they ‘40.ie not ready to follow the general principle of• protection. Or all agairiat. • Miley. competittion. A Man formerly . in business in Tisamiew used almost to • weep while he recounted the 'elils of . the peddler to his own special lines, •- yet this,merehant bought -his printing from a peddler from out of town, 'Percupine Advance (Tinimins). .r '• Anatralla is, :out 'to---Will0eat' the olYmeics and. since her tdain ar- rived at Los' • Angeles strenumis practice has been enforced. Itiere. is Cyclist Eclgar,,,Cray limbering• 6 , Fast BOOther Plane Perforrosat fiend° Secret Fighting,Machines Also ' •in Royal 'Air Forc• e - Manoeuvres . • • Hendon, England. -Great Britain's fl est secret fighting aircraft,. Meted - Mg • a • day boniber capable of 2001 miles an hour at 20,000 feet, Were seen in action for the first time by a re- eord throng, at, the thirteenth' 'Royal Mr Pierce display here., • • . The great air spectacle •drew 25fif 00d 'paid spectators and nidre than 250,000 ciuteide the airdronie ,The day:s event, etraa.aa ea- , Here, day bomber and three Heerker4 Fury , These Mr are'. the aStest and lateet tYPea ."` Air Ferce. • Seereeyhai:eitsiirotided tneni sine tlieir. inception and the Air Ministry Sall. is Ain*Illing: te. divulge their official ,performaice.S.. '•The bomber was spotted hovering e air and immediately the Furies • roared and started shooting up reek- ta: -the battle began Withthe rat- .tat,tat of Machine -guns: The bomber '. 'felled and banked to, evade the speed- ier persueri hit thenruries• hung on its tail,'• Twe, Furies were sent delve. , in "flames"-rearistie re'' smoke' re- leased by the pilots -before the hoinh- e7 ;was "shot down." • The main. ,:program opened With a. Mass takeoff Of fifty-four bombers; _nemPri.sing ' three iquadtona.Lot.,.Air.. 'ore machines and three squadrons Of volueteers.' The civilian eirmea, Mostly -bank clerks and office workers, showed a skill' wiiinh' compared tailor - Ably with -that ot.the professienal air- . ••• • ;,4 ••• • C.- • , • OTHER OPINIONS Quality Outweighs Price • , A serious situation . has. arisen In American industry because of the' Widespread propaganda stressing :price rather than quality -las the basis of ,value. The buying public, which by Instinct- and practice:1s consumer Of good products, is, having ,its taste iteatily lowered and : its standards r4esQby the'avalanche of bargain • advertising which haelaweet the cone - Auction in a comma more; try. This price appeal has reason for the Empire to buy ;that comniodity wattle the Empire; ,while the position arising from cut 'coulee* '•tion in certain Minerals, from-whinir Southern. Rhodesia has suffered, . . . , been.far-reaehing in its bad effect not only. ,ia.deteriorating the .consumer's dtandards, hut. also in increasing the -difficulties -of-,--manufacturers .of__ able merchandise who must, compete shoutd be as Susceptible to preferen- with business' operated solely on a tial treatment as' in the case �t agri- price hisis.--Boston Christian Science cultural and Manufactured products. Monitor. The situation is described by the „ • st Canadian -Minister As one of a1 mo incalculable possibilities. In view of • An Einpire Park his belief, the Canadian delegates can Halifax, which has meant.so Much be expected to press the matter vig- in the history of the outposts Em- onrously, so that something' which is • Pire,,whose streets have echoed to the calculable may be., achieved. `It is a tread of scildiers, sailors and princes, questiOn -which warrants the -special has a suggestion for observ.anee of the interest of the Rhodesian _delegates, , • Imperial E'conomic Confereece.• The to anything that would stimulate the Halifax urges that the. Canadian revival of the base mineral industry ip Government set aside Citadel Hill as an Empire Park. • ' The idea is entirely worthy, Citadel Hill. rises esteeplY th centre of the city, and :from its top may be viewed the eurroundineciti andeharbor, With _ waters that have been pliived by Bri- tish ships ever since the. founding of . the city by Lord Cornwallis in 1749. �n itadel Hill were guns that roared out la defense of the Western outpost of Empire and. gave conlldence to in- . habitants of a tiny area on which rose the meteor flag ter England. -Tor- onto Mail and Empire. • Inflation Effects • • Minneapolis Journal tella of A. C. Townley's plan to eirint five, ten or flf- ,• teen billion dollars in five dollar bills and ,says if anyone is anxious to find out . what the States would do for change, coppers, five ,and :ten -cent Pieces. quarters,. half -dollars, -a:nd dol- lars, that there would ,be no need of a bill smaller than five dollars. "The live dollar hills would rapidly become of value so small that they would meet that problem and that alone. One dol- lar bills, fifty -tent pieces, quarters and difn'es would buy nothing at all by • themselves. Prices would be stated in thousands -a fortune in face valu • for a bushel of wheat,' a kings ran- • som.for a pair of overalls and nudism for 'everynne but the printer' ol• the bille." Probably also everY person - -would hasten to spend as quiekly as be got the bills for fear lest they be- • come of less and less value even in - twenty-four hours' tinie. That was 'what happened the mark when the -Germans were inflating it so that a million in eid,efilarks became not • worth a rent. • Wire profited? Not w those ho.bought or held mark -4 -On- tarioM 'elte; elver, -Rhodesia would have far-reaching 'ef- O fects for good. -Salisbury Rhodesia Iferald. , The Future in New South Wales Of course, world conditions are shockingly bad, and we cannot escape some of ttie consequences but there is a great deal on the other side of:the ledger. We have had two extra good seasons, and a third seems,' highly probable. We are not in the'position et those unfortunate countries which cannot find a market for their goods ' . . ' Summer Season Opens The' summer season has en)oild with a deplorable toll of drowning ac- cidents. Unless those who seek re- creation on or in the water are warn- ed, by the distre,ising reports which appear almost daily in the preeeh : te lose. of life from „this cause 15 likely. to equal that of last tear When 311 persons were drowned in' Ontario'. • Eeetyone, is familiar Witbethe dan- gers of veutpring Into unknownWaters, waters, of switurtilne itnevAietley at, • ...ter a Meal. or when overheated, otdiv- hie into water where' the eltaraet4r of the bottom is not knewit, and of • No Decadence in. Britain The fact is that the positiori of this singular 'dation> not merely during the last year or two. but during the last tw.elve years; has' -been very generaly inisundersthod in other•countries. Ob- servers, .like 'Andre Siegfried were disposed to •detect• signs 'of national decadence. • But thevery unrest:Which' .appeared in industry was. in "Part due to • the 'determinatien of ex -soldiers never to endure again the degrading poverty many o!. them had..knovvii be- fore the ticar:, And • they did ncitoen- dare .it. The most' remarkable, feet about British history sine the weria that in spite of loss of exports,.in spite of - unemployment • and strikes, the • standard of living of -the wholecbm- • munity, from' the •humblest - laborer to the middle classes. has. shoivn an amazing improvement.-eThe Christian • • .A :new • 'huge', night bomber,. flying 1E5 miles .an hour, aroused consider- able 'eterest, as did a•Vieterin troo'n. Carrier ,which .eani be converted , into a-botaber.-7,,. . ' Science Monitor. - - - Trailing Farms for Settlers Britain is said to haJiuzidreds thousands f 1atid-ht1iy people; and Canada has milli° s of eniPty acres of the finest land in the world. Britain is',over-populated, and Canada could welcome a pepuletion double the size of that • Which she now has, So the idea of some sort of fiftY-fifty trading a that is not byanymeans far-fetched at the present moment., Consequently, the back -to -the -land scheme on a fifty- fifty basis with the ad country in ex- ..ehatige_for tariff preferentes, is an- nounced by Senator A. D. McRae, has Provokedkeen, interest in business circles. The Set:later,' went West in order to get the view S of the Western interests on those lines before the Regina preliminary meeting. His idea of using the vast Peace River es a lo• catipn for' British immigrants to be brought over .first on a subsistence basis and then on a permanent farm establishment basis has met With ntuch favor. His idea of getting a strong preference for. Canadian grain, cattle arid fruit in exchange 'for divid- ing Peace River's millions of acres With Britain for the use of her land- herigry people promises, it is said here, to settle rapidly a section that can support fifteen million people; it is estimated. The fifty-fifty basis, it is tonceded, must, however, be (me of &ante as we1I at-' Selection of• those to gt, on farms, part Canadian ani part Old' Country. -The New Outlook. (Toronto). • • eran Swimmer ' ° Ottawa . • , . "'••• • •Attawa, eapittel ,Caleethi, • le \ .0. Years ago age,Duke Kahanainoku ot Hawaii set a • new raark for the 100 -yard :sWini. Physically tit at 42 tie hopes to win olympic how; ors, • Mosaic And Stre'ak Tomaio PertiCalarlY 'the lintelight of *Ohne • " attention this Year. .AlWaYa, 1#1celtife of its. b.eauty,and WM*. .on the routenutpe, of teuripte to Ottawa thin year has the. added attraction qt being the city of the Imperial •Eeonemlf Conference or the British Nations on the firat occa- sion upon which the imperial ,Coofer- 'ence has been held'outside of London. The city of Ottawa is located in the • , Province Ontario en the.ininIts of . the Ottawa, a malestic.river , which • Joins the St. Lawrenee near Meetreal.' • about /15 miles eastward ,••• The.Ottix-• wa rises ituedreds of miles \to • the , „-nostielarikdraint lig a .ceitetry...ee ine- ••:‘ menee forest-iIrc:08 **lei -has eeit- tribated materially Bite Prominence, or the Canadian !capitiLie : the 'Indus- . • 'Ottaiva is. enproximateli • 400mules northwest of ,,Neve York, `and aboitt 509 miles trOtiCW.tishingtoU, the • capital -4-if the '11ited ...States. The .haS a population Of aboitti.2,060; and • • „ B01.6114104 ..teuniciealitieS,, not in- ICe144-inlrete4eill eietrPoogrutien.. subetenthet.., DaveloPetent Ottawa.nates.froga -the arrival of -Colonel *1826 With. „ 'a ccimpen ot British Royal •Engineera.. who caine to build the Rideau Canal, .• 1t• military"trade route of traiisPorta- tiok linking the Ottawa and St..Law- • reitce Rivers. He,•pitched his camp cloSe to the spot where the beautiful • Chateau Laurier,. whielt will be the, home'ef the delegates to the confer - stands . Around ',this camp' grew the village of Bytown,• which by 1847 ba- . camp an incorporated toWn,_ The • name was changed to Ottawa in. 1854, •• O and three years. titter Qu'een Victoria... •_ csealneactdeda. the city .tia' th• e capital' of • • • The beauty 'of Ottawa is comtheeted . ., epee' by every. 'visitor.' The erchiten- tine of its public'. buildings is apprOP. Research vvorks just completed at the Doeniniort Laboratory of Plant Patholegy, St. Catharines; Ont., a Lriinch laboratury, of the Division. of Botany, Experimental Farms Braneh, of -the-Domition.Departirient culture, demonstrates that "mosaic' and "streak' ef ,, tomatdes are seed bottle.' This' liat-becii-accomplished in • two :ways by tie St. Cathariftes La-, beratory: (1) by growing under con, trolled conditions tomato plants that have Conte- from seed selected from streak Plante; and (2) by; inoculating: healthy tomato plants with the crush ed eettiryes from seed taken fret plants affected with streak and ;no, saic. . Love bought with gold is dear what- ever its cost. at any price; our .staples all have a .• Market of some sort, a id *eel is in a • ny other great • stroiiger position than world produce; while factures • we havethu wbichfor so many year tattle foreigner.- We ar get lacle to the old con were most iinhealthiboont conditions, based on vast toreig* borrowing and ,. Wasteful spell:King. and were bound to • - crash. But wise government and. con- fidenre and a -few fair years can bring' us back more real prosperity than we ever had. -Sydney Bulletin. Ere Ore Migration • The report British EconomiC Advis- ory Council directs attention to an inl- et fact which will ot serious erica. to Australia when. a re-. tar .prosperity makes it desirable. • to aiikment our "population by immi gration. "it is not seflielently real- ized,t' says the council, "that Great Britain already has', less than a . placement birth rate." That means ' that unless there is further severe shrinkage.in British trade. necessitat-. ine, the dispoSal•py inimigration of the number in excess of those 'who can be abwtbedO . in home,ledustrie5,;-an likc- ely e'entingeny,-there Will be no erweeng motive impellitig .people to - go to the Dbminion4.--Nfelleetine Ans. ,ttala•dan. India and theEmpire Preference ' There is a eomferting belief held in 'India .that as India's great staple dostries are 'exporters of •intlisoens: able. raw materials, theref is no need • foe t ' to wilt ry loin Prerprenep,••- as she is sure of het,markets.in.any 'event% _This prelbeoue• fallacy • for our mann- home market we presented' not going to itions they' Representing Australia 05 ..•••••.% • • • Ber-the-fi rsteeteehod--as4;igh-ae-eigi pee cent. of strcak and over, thirty per cent. of mosaic 1 Was obtained, while the 'second method gave as high as 6602-3 per cent. of streak and rnosaie. It should be pointed MIL 'however, that sometimes. astreit'seeW Mt is seed from plants affected -with streak, gave' rise to plants that were abso- itetely healthy ev. that all seed from a disease plant does 'Itot necessarily transmit the disease. The same is also true for mosaic seed, that is seed from mosaic plants. On the other hand, clear cut evidence of the virus being present in the embryo of the seed has been obtained, and thus the ,possibility of seed transmission is at once apparent. Up.till now, the efforts of the geA,- dr to control. streak have all too often ecet with very little success, largely because it was net known how the dis- ease originated. Now that our path- elegista have. demonstrited that the - disease .may be carried in the seed it immediately suggests the- use of seed that has mine from streak -free 4 is now hoped that by usirig clean seed and taking precautions to pre- vent 'infection -ef the plants through Soil, or insects, that the disease may be .satisfactorily controlled and thus thobtands of dollars saved to Canada yearly as a result of the successfel re- search work carried on at the Labor- atory of -Plant Pathology SL Cathar- ines, Ontario. • , • ' That there is good reason to believe that successful control of streak is now to be anticipated by• the. grower is shown by the results: which have • alre&ly been obtained at the St Cath-• ites Laboratory with seed specially -Selected from healthy plants. 'Using' this seed they have been able to grew, fiv successive crops of tomatoes with- out any mosaic or. streak whatever, vihereas•formerly, these diieases were generally present in all crops. Tge grower is 4.herefore urged t� make his own selection of seed from healthy llitte-tirthedignity -a. -greet The thirty mites of boulevards Which encitelethe, citv present an ,eler- •Changing 'panorama of ,beauty. Rich farming country lies* to the' smith and west ; immediately to tne - north rise the Laurentian Mountains, where fish- ing,, hunting and life- in •the open. in- , vite the sportsmai0 and adventurer. • At Qttwa thd river which 'gives the city its name is augmented by two other important, streams -'--the 'Rideati • and theGatineau,. These three rivera 4 ----afford almost inexhaustible supplies of electrical energy which is made available , to. the residents at a rate ' mincing the lowest ie the world. • ' • Althotigh Otte-a's iineortance"ia _world...affai6_js _due_ inaittly. to_ political eignificauce,lhe City has also sub. tautial othei. interests. A recent census. discloses 208; Manufacturing concerns in Ottawa with au Invest, ment of approximately $60,000,000, The 'Principal industriea, have to do with lumber and paper products and with ntanufActures of. 'wood, lion and • 'steel: 0 • ---e• • • Modern 'Apiarists Use Bee Escapes O "Hoarding" it a habit that has re- ceived considerable criticisni of late, btt there are instances where hoard- ing has proven ef great benefit to, mankind. Severelthousands of years ago some observant person noticed ti.at a certain little insect had de- veleped the tbit of hoarding •to • a remarkable d.p-ree and this person, like many Of today, considered the principle a had one, therefore set about to discover ways and Means whereby the thi fty one couldbe made t� disgorge at least a part of her saV ings. • Ho* toget it was the question*, for it was found that the little insect Was just as reedy to_fisht for what • she had gathered as She vias ready to work for itandtheresults were paia- ful to the plunderer. The period therefore decided that because the in- sect refused to give. hp tier stbres peacefully she must die # and die she did over the. sulphur pit. With the worker dead the • proceSs of robbing was eaiy but it was soon realized that • to kill the worker in order to get her stores woeld• soon reault in no more stores to rob, but human canning soon eveteme this difficulty by devising a plants and thus reduce these' diseases • to a minimuni.-Experimental Farm Method' evherel4. 'the' stores could. be obtained without the ownera' knewl-• Note. • >, • . • edge. Bees are encouraged to store their honey in boxes (supers) abcive Birth Rate Continues To Drop in France Paris. TIM fail ' itt the birth rate in France ig gravely pre-oecupyittg • .the nation, tt is feared. that the population will decreasp b, half in the next seventy-tive• yearseranees population' tnday is i-oaehly 40,400,- . 1 diti The eon thine/ decline in the With . . rate has become. so serious (-hat it. Is - • estimated- .that where as' In '1930 the notither of youths called to t he. -ctiors • was: 25S'.1104. in 1935 the • ' Runnier will. have fallen to 136.000 itt 1535 the average' French (am- ity raised form children; in 1594 this ti go re had • Innen to • th ren -Children per family, a nil enley the figure. it 1tarely. 1) i 1'0144 1'11 rraATCP I 11 13r3i wore 1.34111100 • la 191 thr,,, 9r.91/0, and, olte la annual ieovs evai le lel e ;Me ti b! for 0 hi dt One illy indie maY Pay • . , dary(' outte-i,;Ott ii im-ming We 'have pleeeire l5, preSenting Miss Fran Balt and crealdnelya 01 1144 belie (-Amite ar ferd o, neeteet a 541114''lmealine. 13 a tol 15 year old Neetralinu ()lymph. se. ith.tA itet. Cateette .wittie broke Lite lefiotetre backstroke rerord &hen fifteen , ,W ot h. 113 Centel I1l; i, ittaeothm". ;inst. • • the chamber in which they. rear their young, and when these boxes are filled thebeekeeper Slips a thinerard fitted with a bee escape befteath them. - The 1becte• on their way obt to gather ;tore 1.ney, pse threugh the bee escape but cannot return, therefore in' a' few 1 hours the box of honey may be re ' moved -without.' the bees knowing it and an:empty one put Wits place to be refilled. -Beg escapes are us'edin all of the Experimental Farm Apiar- ies asthe best endlenet painful Me.' duel of taking from the bets the fruits et` their labors. Bee esapes, threfore, tould be included in the equip -irk -at of ottLy apiar- F. xperiniNt al Farins' .1 ,Constromtion of Meat in Canada • The per yapita contfinption of meat 1 tanttla in 1931. was 148.46 pounds le doing.. this the Canadiao eats prae- ,. i illv bit wort 0 .tlit in meit yearly. 7 - • • . ,ive ell old:eWen CO 1 Wtli 11) 4 11101 is a lietipine,s. and tan be n4 Iisp trtt1t1 lit • Chat-v1n • 111 055055505 •