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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-07-07, Page 6xa • • • !C`ANADA f77kaneallrle Mai`lEa Tier g. itt •appears unlikely . that• ,Britaiu'a: s>lea for• complete cancellation jof war debts and reparations will be,aeeepted • at Lausanne -even with* the limits tb'e.,powers 'of that "conference The greatest obstacle in the way of final' and 'full agreement at ,Lausanne .ls•.the, uncertainty ver the attitude of - Abe United States,. The Government, "",of' the latter , countxy , has • already.I w^-••lserv`etl •notice~that•-Chet-Hpuvdr • ffiQra textual 'will'. net he extended, beyond July 3 of this'•year:. ' While there 'le • a general suspicion •,that that•"attitude ': l's •dictated`' nitre by.tke skigelicies of the political situation in the' iTnited States than :by determi'ned,. permanent „pokily, it effectively ;nreclacrea serious final .discussion. of the .whole: question untiLafter the Presidential••election, • • No one imagines that the Continent• al. Europe&n• nations: Will, .attempt, to resume payment' .to Washington un - '• less and uutal -Germany 'resumes pay - 'Meet to them. Britainbag already de- clar'ed •that she wifrr"eeu'nre-lsaymtents, regardless of receipts ffom her own debtors, if the United Staten 'so .de=' riands. But, there is a vast difference ' 'between willingness to pay .and ability to. pay in the 'face- of virtual temper ary world$ankruptcy.":. It is: noteworthy that, 'while the •• `Sooner Moratorium officially ends on Julie1st; no further .instalments on War -debt accounts are due. at ,iWash-: tngton until December.' Before then. !the Presidential- election'wll be. over. ,The chief 'Executive of.• the United :States will then be abla to act,°in' ac- pord with common sense, withodt fea .+of having his action• ma 4 e a campaign • f •oball—T'oront Io e. sniff , ai o b . One -Eyed• Car Tratiic police: are checking up close Iy on :Motorists Whose, cars lack pro- • •", `per lights. , A "one -eyed" caron the highway at night is a' menace. -Lon-; don Advertiser. • , Perils of 'a Tanker If man vean learn anything .from such. 'a catastrophe ,It •1 thenecessity of eternal vigilance. The .money' loss -ie very great, but, the • loss 4 precious' _lives- of .devoted and9hhocent worIo men, and the' implied peril -for the future, • are of . more, .importance; and ;this s ould not. more, lost on those •in kharge of such enterprises. • ' • The ,Montreal °' di aster, followl'ng' within a • few hays.. after'a •mysterious • explosion on a smaller tanker in Tore • onto ' Harbor, . adds • to-' the anxiety which must be felt by those engaged In handling such a dangerous sub - oil: -The- Toronto Globe. Planting Canadian Trees , 'During the last twelve • years more than°33;000,000 Canadian trees have been 'Planted in Great Britain, most of them coning from British Columbia,— .,Vancouver Province.`` . ' Canada 'Growing • 'The most encouraging feature about the Dominion's• population figures 'just • issued by the Bureau of Statistics at : ptta a is the rapid gro' th. -of • the • western provinces. The total popula- tion of the. Dominion showed an in-: crease of 1;586,427 during the ten-year period fro 1920 to 1931, and of. that. total the fop : western provinces—Bre: • fish Colainbla, Alberta, Saskatchewan clad Manitoba—were responsible for no less ,than 567,128, Quebec account- ing for the largest individual increase. with •513,590 =-Mintreal Star. ' fire :and The World: at Largo Pee increaa`ingly with the years. Lon don Daily Express: ' I• industry On •Trial, •The economics of today—as taught. by the orthodox --are out of date, be- causethey were Meant for a .world situation in which famine, and scarcity were the norr'al• conditions and in which mankind Was engaged in a fierce struggle • against "the • forces Of,` -nature •.Mem hail to save and 'hoard' and put by for a rainy day. But ;now • modetiCad encs. iid.ifulusirry, W'ifirlief- ter .means 'of transport and . conimuni dation,. have • •removed ;the spectre • of ;faminetand want. ,The need now' •is -,to ;spend,, consumpe; and thereby use up. the•:.,'overfi wing abundance which, every civilized courmunity can Pro7. duce.. The test ."tbf whether our'pve- sent civrlization .Will survive, depends .upon our :solving :tie •modern problem; of under -consumption in a world•,ma- terially •richer, than ever before.' . is manl;.ind,.realiy' to sit down' and starve. because : of lack of leadership and, courage :in 'the invisible governments of rIglrlinance, or will` the :cc%mmo sense of the common people demand that a way-out • of the• apparent passe be' found? .'— Comaiiander J. M. Kenworthy in `Current Hi's'tory. ' Inefficient_• -School's -- •The revelation of the number of in- efficient arid insanitary private schools, that remain in .this 'country made in the report of the departmental 'come mitteeset up by'. Sir Charles• Travel yan •wi11. surprise those who' imagined that the conditions of which Dickens wrotewere impossible''to-day. The. proportion of dusatisfactory'schools is not high. The committee puts' it at 10''per 'cent. • But the faults, Whgre they exist,,': - 'often grave'. Education that• is no more •thaw •a farce and 'school . zooms that are -a menace • to' health ` stili persist. •-=- Manchester Guardian: • Foreign Travel • If the: French people spoke English, and had the same coinage .as the Eng lash, .far. fewer English people would .wish to upend their' summer holidays on the north coast of. France: Even - "t'h'e names over., a shops the a source of pleasure to the. stranger, and the unaccustomed money tells him as he handles it that he ,is nd longer in the. dull, workaday world (Idle half-crown and the shilling,• Ile is not excited by the•'speech, of his: fellow -creatures if - he goes to Brighton, `since, he can un- derstand it; but let him go to Dieppe; and the speech of his fellow -creatures, being as a 'rule little known td him, delights hint like a • kind of .Pkaleido sco a of sound' at . once.meaningless less and beautiful: To • be . in a country where men . areactually called "Al-' •phone"=is not \that Something' for which, It is welt -:worth braving the ocean?—F: Y., in The Statesman and Nation (London). , Swat the Fly - - Flies are prolific, 'breeding a 'new generation every two weeks, while the offspring of a pair of flies will number ^'6;800-,00;000 descendants- in---al-singie- aummer. Thus it if readily seen that by swatting the first arrivals that bil- lions may be prevented from` invading your surroundings: • Every inch a King An incident at Royal Ascot, Eng- . land's famous racecourse, revealed. another reason why -King George is revered by all his subects. -One of the Fing's horses won an; important event, and afterward, amld the plaudits of a • great • multitude -70f his people, the Royal owner "ied'in" the 'Winner. Little won't Jr King George is popular. • He as in close touch with his people; interested in all their• activities, and• participating in many of them. He is the wise ruler, ••the' well-informed statesman, ' and the genuine sports- • man: a democratic King. While thrones in other lands have toppled and disappeared, the British Monarchy ' bias increased its toid on, the avec• tions of the people. Hence it is that wfien the' King's horse wins a race al1 • the Ki'ng's subjects are delighted.,— • To'roitto' Mail and Empire.• • EMPIRE Empire 'Markets Best The foreign markets of Great Bri- tain are declining steadily. To de- • ceive ourselves •• by arranging costly trade enhibitions abroad is as futile ', as the o'ld idea of giving the populace " a procession when they were hungry. VVe trust • sell to those iviio• have the • will and. the means to buy frons us. The Empire . markets ate growing Markets', and under an E'inpire Cus- tomb limon Great Britain and tier golonies and the Dominions Will pros, M , Art and the Home If it became usual for persons about to furnish, their houses or -to decorate one or two rooms to call ia•a design- er or a "consultant house decorator," the additional cost would be an insur- ance -against the feeling that the din- ing -room walls should not have been painted dark br•6wn or that something was • radically wrong 'Wath the decora- tive scheme.. The curtains• would not then be "a mistake," and •life would be worth living. — Edinburgh Soots, pian. Hitler's Success The peculiar- strength and virility Of the Nazi movement arise out of its connection with pre-war German na- It is a rebirth n.Lthat has tionhlism in terms of • po'at-var ideal- ism, or, in its degenerate form, senti- mentality.' It is like a miltiarist Youth Movement, or like a "hike" that sud- denly turns into army manoeuvres. Hitler • Wray be a fool. Much .that he says and writes suggests that he is a fool. At•the same time he has -hit on a kind of fooltdhness that happens to "come off," and he has able men round him • wh are determined to exploit '4t to the utmost.—Manchester Guardion. • Mr.,and Mrs. .1.11i Richter of Munich"have reached California, com- pleting another leg•, of their.. 20,00.0-Mile..fflight i'n competition for the Hindenburg prize of 10,000 marks:,: They plan to• stay for tIre olymplcs- ,4 T- • duly and the Animal ''Parasites On farms where :proper iirecailtions have, not been taken to .,control • the animal parasites, the infestations of such 'become 'very' serious . in Ju•1y, A .. warm and moist summer favors, the in- crease of animal parasites. Watch for the signs of lung worm (a. husky cough) in lambs, ' calves . and pigs. Infested animals should be notated, and . given 'extra care. See bulletins 337 and 340,' Ontario Depa'rtinent of Agriculture. , The . best; protection against worm infestation, is obtained _by --.the raining• o . the ;young stock. on clean ground, or -in clean buildings,' 'away from' older animals.) Good feed- ing is important, because high vitality is an aid in protecting.animals against Parasites. High vitality can onlycame from''the liberal use of ,feeds• contain- ing all the essential food substances - Have you noticed how young: animals` thrive when pasturing'on good grass? Change the young stock to new pas- tura. areas as frequently as possible as they like the fresh unsoiled gcrass and leave trouble behind there every time they are moved. Rome Leads Italian '.Cities • The Health of the Nation Greatest of all the meets of a nation is the health of the peopte.• Health is the basis both of happiness and of efficiency And to secure and safe- gu'ard the health of its, citizens should be the first care of every, Government. Most important of all is the health of the children. For physical well:being iii childhood is the essential, basis "of physical well-being in 'adult lite. It should, In hay civilized , community, be a matter of course, beyond doubt or discussion, that the physical con- ditions of school life are as perfect as possible. London Daily Herald. New Irish Port, is Punned The Irish Trans -Atlantic Corpora- tion, Ltd., has been registered as a public' cAfnppany' in Dublin, Ireland, -with the object of constructing at Galway Lay, or elsewhere on the west- ern coast' of Ireland, a port suitable for deep-sea shipping. The telephone oper ,tor-' hriswered'an agitated surnmone for a call -box. "Oh, miss" came a tearful plea,. "can I have rt► y twopence bad? Alfie' Wouldn't spaak to net" Rome.—Rothe, which for many' years ran a neck -and -neck race with, Milan and. Naples to decide which of 'the three would first ready 1,000,000 Inhabitants, is now firmly established as the greatest: Italian city. Milan is still close at Rome's4heels, but Naples has been considerably outdistanced; On April. A, the last date for which accurate statistics are available, the population of Rome was 1,021,388; Milan, 995,598, and Naples, 844,744. Italy Suffers Locust' Plague Rome.—Large sections of thecoun- try near Rome have been devastated by one of the worst invasions .of locusts within memory. The swarths fppeared simultaneously an . several mai municipalities, among .ivh' i .Anzio, Nettuno, "Cisterna and the re- gion of the recently reclaimed Pontine IV[arshes•-are' the -most-severely..:alfeet- ed. Despite immediate energetic de- fence measures, the crops in these, areas have been almost totally de- stroyed.. • Rubber ,Traffic Posts Please: • Auto 'Drivers of Paris. Paris.—Owing:to the frequency with which motorists crash lute iron traf- fie control posts and signals, the, ea - lice have ' devised,, a rubber traffic Struck by a •mis4guided ,car, the new post will bend without damaging the vehicle, and even • if run over it will snap back into place. "I "regard the fhventor of .this traf- fic` post as the equal • of Gutenberg„ Pupin,. Faraday or Newto!~i,"• says one writer,' "This--ki of_:_post-_should_ be used for marking frontiers, because it • gives satisfaction 'to everybody:, We implore. the..:League of 'Nations to investigate this post, which ought to'' be installed notably ' along the Danzig corridor and the' Manchurian border." Toronto Aviator Taking No Chances on Flight .;London.—On the Right J: • D. M.. . Gray, ,Totonto (aviator,plans frons here, to Toronto next .month,` via Greenland, he is determined not to freeze in his, passage over the cord northern chines. In• preparations,..Gray • sat in a re- frigeration, chamber for half an hour to testa specially made cold -resisting 'flying suit h'rom this ordealhe emerged "as warm 'as toast." , "I leave nothingto chance," 'said Gray, "I even have a fountainpen filled with ihk that won't freeze." Ship Set Record What is believed to be a record for~ discharging and loading cargo at Montreal, was set teeen'ti-Y--by the Canadian National steamship Corn- wallis, whch' discharged 6,700 tons- of cargo sad ' loaded 600 tons of outgoing cargo for 'the British West Iddies in forty-twe hours.. - ustraliasCamet Corps Holds First Reunion Since World War Sydney, Australa—Australia's mem- herd emherd •of the Cantel Corps, who took part .in the desert campaign egaal-hst the Turks during the World War, have held 'a .reunion, the -first since the force was disbanded in 1918. Famed Pt S R ? Australian Crit Cteers A'k Peet Picked Canadian ' Teas `A'f trd' Vi t 'To. Ontario" ---Don Brac ma i;' Hof tier •oaf WOW • Batting Record Big .Drawing Card ' Arriving : `n •,Toronto .June, 28, after. cussed ,oh Bradman' has, inevitably, "diverted a great deal of deserved at.; tention' .from the other membered of the visiting, team. They are a eglor- ful group of players, Victor.Richard- son, the captain, is. the only player to captain his 'State, iu both ICricket .and football. He represented hi; state ageing( Victoria.1n. baseball.' He is 'a • drst' class lacrosse and tennis player, a runner', of no mean }witty; ,in fact, one'•of • Australia's foremost, ,all round -ht'hl.etes:-Rlchardeo�was--Vico-captain-.--�•..--�,•-. during ,the .victorious,tour; o •"England • - in •1930;' And both as a sound bateman and .brIlliaut ilelder -(at •"n►id off" ,or "silly point")..Is incom,parablei ' To suninrarise the, special:.'aocompl'ish. menta, of the remaining -members,' of .•', the team,'Icippaic is the 'stylist• of,,the'' 'cricket ...World," •who.'bata magnificent-• ly and bowls ,quite, effectively; 'Mo- -Gabe, ;!only:• 21 :years -•old•, -au out •standing•"s1l-rounder" who can 'score quickly and: bowl in deadly fashion. Carter, the wicket-kepeer, le -the ' vet • eran of'the -group of'piayers` and still • • an uncanny artist.behind•the "snicks" .. - as"well- as -sit -•aitda,•ctous-batsman, Fleetr"auddd=St'aith° tend" i fancy are; re-. speetively, tett hand "•and right • hand t . bowlers: ` The former is making./ it • seethe, a name which the latter has already acli'ieved• for "googly.": bowl 'inn; • *e'sars. Tolh first, • Nutt, . Ives, Rote and Carney,. are the leader .iigh'te • on. the team but they have each .per- formed . pro`minentiy in' inter -state cricket: • • ' • After the `two' matches in Toronto, the Australian• ; team journeyed to • • Guelph for the centenary celebration''- of the Guelph CricketClub on July 4th:' • • and to:St. Catharines; where they play twodays, on July 5-6." The balance of ,the,tour takeLthem `to.Montreal, . July. , 7-9i • .Ottawa July. 1142; • and there- , after to New York, Detroit, Chicago,' . Wlnipeg;".Regina, Moose Jaw; Saska- • ' .° teen, Edmonton, Calgary, ' Vancouver. and Victoria. The• tour ' will 'be' concluded in Cali j `- fornia, . where Sahta ' Barbara, • San • 'Francisco,. and Hollywood • stage matches frm August 20, to -28. On' the R.M.S.. Monowai` the team embarks' at San Francisco. on the return trip. of 7000.,miles tQ Sydney, Australia. athriet stay in British Columbia Arthur 11tailey's Australian Cricket Team ,is scheduled' to play' five Matches . in -On- tarso, , On Wednesday and Thursday,, 'June 2940, a twelve a side two-day match found the visitors engaged by an "All Toronto" team, and* on the holiday a strong ''Eastern Canada" team opposed the.. 4S01313 in .another two -'day fixture .For both matches. the. _ ver_-�--,-,.line-.-., Toronto-=.G�fcket-•�C!•uN= „grounds at• A� moor . Heights furni'O.hed t'he "terra, ffrnaa." This is 'the': third visit Ontario'.has received from a tour king„ 4ustralian team;" but in::view of the-- 001pg of Doo Bradman,: holder .of the world's -;batting cre'corda; .never before. bas such tremendeus•.interest and enth'hsiasm been mapufesied; •KTo accommodate •the anticipated re-. cord:atte'ndance'for a cricket match in Toronto it. Was, necessary' to set up stands . which provided seating for, over 5000 people. Substantial par'k1ng• • area' adjacent to 'the. grounds, without extra charge, special .lies: service; con,. neetifig-vyith Xonge-Street ca-rf re- `'freshment InarilueeS and'' every" `'P0e.-: Bible provision, toward catering to the .large concourse on hand, if Drily to see the famed famed Bradman bat,` was included. ••in, the. preparations for the stellar event. • The most picturesque personality in the brilliant • group, of 'Australian cricketers' to be :Seen during the` On= tarso tour. is oil course; Don Bradman.' Regarded in American sports talk as the `Babe Ruth.• ot-Cricket, " his great- est aehievement Was: the :amassing of .452 .runs, not .out, in 450 minutes, two. years ago, when he ,was bu't4,1 years old. •Already . •he •has created six worlds batfing records, a dozen 'test. match records and in the realm of first class 'cricket he is .credited with a score more; The "crowded armament" of cricket" has never before 'displayed so' meteoric a rise in sheer brilliance„ of batsmanship•as this'youthful visit-. or from the Antipodee-Who' as a mem ber of :the "goodwill ,tour" •team, hail-' ed•as a happy bandof.afnbassadors, is. also' enjoying his honeymoon, on this coirtineiit.- • The. limelight.�•which'. has 'been fo- Cuba's • Earthquake, • Record Havana.—The Island of �pCub'a has suffered 229 earthquakes since 1551, only five of which ',were ' destructive in any appreciable degree:. All •of the. five occurred in : Santiago • de Cuba; capital of Orient .Province, •in 1578, 1678. 1776, 1852 and 1932., Eduardo J. Montelien, Chief . Engineer of the Bureau of -Mines, informed a meeting of the Academy of Science here, .Two tremor, zones exist in Cuba, acbord- ing. to Senor . Montelieu; one in the western' `nd of the island,' where tre- mors are slight, and, the other in Oriente Province, in the extreme east- ern end. • To Revise Mexican Laws. Mexico City.—President Ortiz Rubio has' advised the Chamber, off Commerce of Torreon that the governments of the. -states of 'Hidalgo , and . Vera Cruz have been notified they must revise their recently enacted expropriation laws. - • The- Smiths Still -L-*ead • The most .prominent family in the 'Grated States apparently maintains its numerical supremacy in about all departments of human activity. Not only does it use more telephones, .but it holds more public' ofiices, according. to recently published evidence. In the second edition of "Who's Who In Gov- • ernment," -whichhas just' appeared, with biographical- data on more than nineteen -thousand pubiin=o{fl a hold- ers "in the Visited 'States, the Smith. family IS the largest on the public pay- roll,—Providence Journal. • Giving Him the Dope . , A 3,00o;pou'nd ex teiispeya'ti' �'i,w�M of 'encourag.e'ttietit,to the tiny calf as the went e . r't w`' _ y n e at .r e t .k. � t•' .o'un 'sten semi' quite confident ,ha. ,. Making ...g _i. .S Lours stock shod*, but ire y • g r s q t that hes mal.rtaa a o,ery •mood showing, - thank 'your .. - • . 4 • • Guard Fish 'Streams - Against Pollution Dominion Fisheries Inspectors on Watch to Prevent In- jury to County's ; Fish Life . . Sawdust has its place, but not in streams' frequentedby fish, and • part the work of fisheries 'inspectors under, the Dominion Department of Fisheries is«• to see to it that such v : ters in their respective territories are not polluted wi'thrmill refuse or other substances injurious to fisli life. But how does sawdust, for nstance, do harm to fish lige? it has evil effect i in two ways: By covering spawning beds it prevents the hatching of „live fish from the eggs and, in the second, place, it kills live fish by getting into their gills or. breathing apparatus, Other kinds of waste—for instance, seepage from certainclasses of Indus- trial -plants--arealso--inj•uniousto-•fish life.' 'It is because c_ these injurious consequences upon natural resource's which ,it' is so important to••conser'lo that the Department of Fisheries, re- quire that, its officers in areas where ,tke fisheries are under federal admin- istration shall make careful inspection of mills, etc., along streams • frequented by fish: and check any operators who may 'thoughtlessly be allowing saw- slust ur; other_tefuse to fall into- the water:' Steps of this kind are of im- pot'S nee item the standpoint of fish- eries coiiservatibn,, and conservation is essential in the interests of conidier- cial fishermen and anglers alike. •-- In most cases where refuse froman industrial establishment -is reaching a fish stream the condition': is willingly and promptly remedied by the' oper- ator when the fisheries inspector 'draws it to his, attention. If this does not .happen; however, prosecutions may be instituted under the Fish'e'ies Act which provides that "no person shall cause or knowingly permit tc pass into, or put or knowingly, permit • to be put; lime, chemical substancna or 'drdgs, poisonous matter, dead or c'.ecaying fish, or 'renfiiants :thereof,, spill rubbish or sawdu. t•or any other) .d.leterious substance or thing, whe- ther the same is .)f a like character to the substances named in this -section or not, in any water frequented ' b3 fish." • • r �i Water -Power Sites in Canada The developed an'd- u•nd'eveloped water•' ower si es of'the Do"Airlift of Canada' are estimated, to have a. ca- pacity of 20,347,000 horse-powerr unde�• Conditions of ordinary ioIdiitiutn linW, •, or 33,iiI7,200 horse -power ordinarily ' dependab:e ateleast six Months of the year.' To•See "Hiawatha" Played The two. daughters of ,lhe poet • Longfeliow have been -Invited by till'".' city Collodi to be the • guests of theSault, during_ t'i'e prese P ntation of the Hiai� stir i Indian play during Wolf 'Week. --From' the S'oo Pally Stagy'.