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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1929-04-18, Page 7nsjoraan des toF "Freedom Were h„OYeti4 'the HOP of alt"hlit the most 04.-treP4 ot explorers. • •In• ;TreafipOrtialk emerged TA •,91-0.0.7-Viteelt-et4h0-4;140.1941-PlliFlre. • as an 4Pflendign Or King Veleare Syrian KingtiOn1;„intt, in.1120. with the. o . . • • , Flepph ito,geip In sr*, .4t_...bee.s,-, t crgotteo Desert d,stpsinrtwoyere asort Of•Oo,i*orft: itui, withoUtcredentials and YrItlitint 401,Vidarieff.: 'The over • throw ofi the Daniainas Government displaced. net only King ,Feli41- but a large number of Syrian. Arahe'who •,hoirn. Dingttles Tur‘ '1kish..Misrule to' • H-4.9hiess.• " •• ; had' daring the war `aiiied,themeeives apitaI CluW•Que• • . •, • • , • ' e Arab cease. These PainflaPae, -• .140tel• IV 'GARY-OWEN •7:1',W refugees • withdrew the„.Ilojazp -as guests Of .7.Fisisara,‘..tatheO,, Aing. Haat, •• 40111•; na4,4a,'Aleece 'ander: t•lig 10'4d4.4t- •Dhriatian gclince MOniter ? 'Ship of Abdutla, the..eider brother: of .4.erue-atom----,/,Franajorilan is. a conii;', Klhg• Waal, hatched 'a forlorn. plan to try • whose name • tells. the World where 'restore heti#0... •Arah' Go'rerilroeet In it lies,for oVeryone eau .v14%; •tp4,1 Syria :by inVegjen.:•.' ••• .„ .. • Jordan -but •oilietikis.e • niest••••`'neoplel • :'HaY.a-PY:. for Abdullah.' ', • • 'know.Uttio or .notiling about •• was •lietter the 'British 'TraliajOrdan it revel:glair :;eve, niandate.,- The se:eelled arrn.y 01.14. • Intim:I,. In -10 Wort • Yekili'Itia.ti step 1va"si°n• was Ituaikeeti by yet another 1)4 • frOM. •the dinginess; Turkish Iwarallv o Ple-•yre,otho mak Bassein' JOY,entertaining' and or the KeisS.' Jt WO'outOt Cateer•401.;,'a:ii,..iladepeldentboa that ik'sheuld be allow#d•:bilhe . Eintrate; It i paying tis 'Way; . its ;British to Proceed- against the Preach.' ., population •is shyly appreciative :of Vas': a situation such as the British the new : regime, WherS, thiags• .now• :genius for .cotenronitae loves. • Trans - happen as they .are expected to hap.; Jordan was Oiertitte for organized•goi. . . Pen and iffe has 'ceased to be reund. arnint'llt• Why netintrust, ita dire& .unpleasant shocks • and extortion; tion .. to Abdullah? • Tfine ‘Abdullah d : from insignificance and Pea7. above •it ls ifiappY country' and emerge ; one With a •ebeergui future -not cast' ury,, as accredited Einiir• of Transjdr. dan and that with a .civil list, paid by on -grand lines; .lot It can never •be• rich -but onewhich life-can..be the, British deiernment. of' 4180,609, '-.in • ' • : ' • a -Year., • • • • Alt the panieseue refugees Were ti- eled•ed, in the, new government,, and .well paid out, Of the civil llst; and in I . • lived easily acccrding to the motto "Live and let live." Bowling Down Jericho Road • . As the . traveler; makes • his -way to .tirW delightful affluenee and ••agenrity, the newkingdom from Jerusalem ha their, sp•Ciit, tWO learn •and all' ' the vidi 0,10 .. a contort ,whi.6a....)at bO.,Inoney...and Credit,.of the new:State ; cause It Is net luxury ; is alt the more in .intriguing ,with .• the enemies of the . . _ ....__ . anti- •-.-Fren.Clithe-bordere-T-Viiiiirr t , . •"".• of 'Egypt ,.and "'Paleitine; ' But tbe Damascus • 'clique was removed from ,. traveler Must be "for..iwarned, else his Athatan, the capital' of the iieViEinir-. Southey. will, be expeasive..."; He does , ate, . andthe' control': of the filiaitoes not take :a , car , in Jerusalem to. bring PlacedIn the iltaada et.a.Britiah reai- . him• to ,Aininna:•20.• miles aWay. •: He deet. At the. same time the Emir takes a'single Spat forWhich he .: was. Invited to • negotiate a treaty' With • .:. , ' •shotild not pay. more 'than' $3-50; and Great 'Britain,. ; *bleb -;:Would give Ttiinajordan 'Independence in all Mat- , jihting ;done NO, ' he. will: And hiniseii en whateVet day the ear starts tete except finance' and, war,. the finat ., '. '.. '(*htett...depees, on tow ',iititotti,. the :deSiaion• in each • at. which • niettere •., „ . other.. seats :fill') early one 'Morning was • vested I'm the British•High cCe14. Pales•tifte•; ' • ., . bowling down the 'twists ot ;the Jeri- - misaioner ter. , •. s- ,,. ... .. - . oho road • . with; the three; Bedouin-. ' AffairBegin to merM• 1 1 -Otoin that aliment .1•1;.aagijogdgotian . •AtahFL his fellow travelers in the back - ffalr, began •to mend. And it was , ,seat, " who 'have .cettainlY. .paid. not ''° More than $t. each .. ,• , • ,.. . ,. /pine tont theY :should:, For the pollee ' Thea there and genda'smerle were over --a year id. . •• Is the ..10:mile span' Of- -.the Jordan Valley In a heat •Whieli 40T02'4 c't. baySo also tlie salaries makes ' et the .judges and tax calleetots, with 'Vakes. the Car hoii; _t.'ind . as likely Oa. the result that they .made. both ends not there will be a puncture. Pea; ' by .Wholesale acceptance Of .... titre -Mending In the torridity or the 'the° • •. • jordan 4s anything but pleasant • But' ' the East forgeta :and Smiles are rOdi-. . ant as be -end his Arab .friends -they • are friends .by, now-L-eongrattilate the •-•-•• sivil--Ilit--to;-#20;000-;-'-fl-7-bU-dget---was -7-"elfdiffrelif-bh hli . mending proWipTi produced,' and properly ;allocated; •• the 'And heap again hotly into ..the car. - judges and. the tax colleoters Were • The ascent from the volley intO the °Oiled and iniproyed, .afid;..above••all mountains of Moab. is -lovely. • . • •'leW., and ordtr, particularly . on thd -.-A back;•vie.or •gives glimpses Of :the French %Syrian .bordet, : WaEi imposed • Deed Spa, turquoise - bhie in its hol With Oriental severity. - „ ' low ••of purple hills;'an excellent road with -well:engineered ., .andwell-aurfaced, . _ sleepily and enttatvingly along a . • Country , • . theatre to the ! new regime -climbs• • A , • •• of Meadows.. 4 •:•.• , • for that Tiiture GifiLSCOM,MENCg- TRAiHIHG. 'fbt:LTHE.ii*Aithl SPH(Sitl'NE. 1.0113M. 011 II Peek) in *bei Flower Grower o stoat of us the 'teed Is familler,• but,:lear wenderiertintirnilieligarden- ere eal1y knOw,.atiOtit thls 110.n:tell' fele Men .herie: placed Mat In the :same group with, frogs and ealaniandere but .he differs frOna• the 49g in several #1'-e: ,i31)eCt3. '014 1s giQg *3•Eaaatig, as is the troKe,.• hat covered with wa..ts:'•or, enlarged areas Of •rough butt. - ten: been; kald that toad cease ',warts: that sAddealy. Open!! • On our hands. TTotilasdietl..aertrir ii,Spgs.:,91aahe;fri;nedolyndmvio. ekiftpa. lefiesctiVe'tfiaa the ,freg. • His Pe*Sra of . jumping are somewhat restricted. Third; lite; life hieteiy:ide soofivitiaat different, t4i6n that 'of the frog. • • -Although there ..ate- several kinds 9f toads found in the itnited States, only oie species (Bute:. aMerieanus) is: at all: comnitiii;•••• ••This,....speeies, Inhabits gardens in;partetilar. touting the day they, remain ;Cpllceiled . seme..clark • corner,, Or: beneath, a stone or other object *herd ,ineisture is plentiful, .and at night sally feta to feed upon snails, slags, and. insects, Whielf they. capterewith: the aid of- a sticky :tongue , as in the .case of the frog. Their tongue is fastened near the 04.: 'er,edgenpithetleiver-jaw and the ":free - end lies ;back in the month towards. the throat. When. an, .insect" 'delneo near the tongue is 'thrown out .and laps 'aiiinnd, the Meisel. , The -sticky fecretieirKeTdd -tre-ifilieerunti'ric Wit he 'returned 19 the •mouth. Thus he PintaLs... cakilncl?tear.eLdS•tbait4oth,h4alengfilla:°•rple:.:Yeirt- ,B0.1'.j.rfeclinio- girls start their training on the, l'addington recreation 'ground lnEngland. n PreParathin •for thei forthcoming 'events In track and ether physical conteste, ' ' ".• • .•"10--; , • The netv policy Stood for retrench- ment , The„ Emir, with public spirit, acquiesced in the reduction of his Ti ark Crciakings: eau: not e teve t a e e a es would be seriouslyy affected." • The • financial seisniogro ph of . The .StKeet 'Journal. has recarded. Such, as might be expeCted to preoetle a We -Id -wide crisis: ThiS tinanoial interprefatien of .•the Faish predictioli, in -feet, is that -.1 "Sir George happens to be 'an old - _fashioned, Liberal in:politicd, and" Eng. land is 'face tO face with! a general or more Men Gedrge Watched the world in. glOomy silence. on Januar 20, 1025, he lapsd into •. momentary cheer and told .a .Chicago audience •that there would never be another. war. ..But, hp wit; liaek to normalcy within a menith,. and on February 21 wa.rned BrooklYn that , 'Wing From 44 -to Gaz byDead $ Route in 64 '.17.1.44creilt Novice .on Ship of the • from Persia sda4ed in the waltlng fiusty moraing ..1-eadVfer• the great •04,,p(oe t� statteiteeight-;hone•trip to •Gezerefieeted. that the seine, trip took., 41' -odd dayg.,•• by, and . , • , , • . wonder,e.d •if, one: gr.i;t tonoh. ,ont ot.• the 119Vr as •thoig: •,.•• Iiggt,Att'•gtt. gentleman from say what ••!tio Inge& about fravein•g on, Centel backz•th ere 44, .opti• uetergetehli view:which yOU:can Otitis% ,only.'freM -' •• the • air after you niVe -left Bagdad: it is the view Ors the . ' Rephartea :at the time :the. "hind of. the. morning" . straggles :to. break through; • As the' sun" finally. 004 forth In.•alt its ,glary, the 'river below took on more and more the -appear- • 'ince' of . a'. snake, its skin a. dazzlin4) , Metal. '• • '••". • •- • • .,Two - and a bait hours. after 'yet left •Badged, you are reused by the ti.e0rea40,..tn sPeed.'.'PreParatorr .10 landing.' ••;: • ,• : • Butbah,the. well-known ••witterbil. • station -now a pest of the trah„.deSert: • pollee had, the :rest lonely for Painels': • gere •crmshg the desert lir 'road of a 'fortress .beetime a' fortiirW--. - .• --.Dier-the--Deatir'Seeite-maehlna • . ,-•-• • ' , bet,reen the bluest •sky and ge ;ono What .blotched discolored' green sheet , of .metal.`' But after four minutes the , sea IS behind us. • The valieleas•opera. tor -appears with: another disc an.„ nouneing Bethlehem , and Jerusalem. Froze a height of 4000feet one real? izes that to the ancients Jersuaiem 1: • was indeed the Most impregnable of • '• •cities. -Pavia • knew , Why he cliose, it • •and • Bethiehein, •;:ities 'entirely anaii,1" •Prroitecihr..acubiltecu14:;*th:rolovislanmitieaders getixetehlpi ii inetintainotie wilderness -4 'Judea. ' • For puraoses. of ,landing, and in Or der probably' ;to be more directly, •fitt the •Egyptian-paleatine railway .•16111% the Machine heads Southwest towed the douittttk; -Of the Philistines and :EiGiagzhatedSatit°aVdthOinie4.aadTilthee,w-Itepilotelhasi.-- operator has hung &new. shingle, Mit • .ancl. a • half hours after, We lett Bagdad . the- machine Made 'a .left -band .cirekr in the •inidiif: .tholigh-rainlets plain.' • • Therewe parted, these who hait come from the Lend , et the ',Tyre • 'Rivers .and proceeding tO the Land 'of. an- other twoileentering anil themachine w 'inacehivinehc!forwere ... ' going. to Jerusalem, : Chaffering. with a dr,fver over the Pride Of a par from. •Samson's CitY to the City ot: David. Civil iaviation, is a result of this Writer's: experience on his 'flight from Gaza to Basralt • and back: matte at. least one .convert who in the future will take the air whenever possible. "sight-fer-moving-elfi : d detibtful • Whether ther See till :objects of S:Georke V{): •• • „ . , • . 'early oferyane is, acquainted with • the tadpoles ot frogs; and toads- have The ProiAiet of 'Disatter',Uar- . a similar life. istory., Early in the water strings of a jelly•liksub e 9a lay eggs' in ••stagnant inatead of in 'clusters ae do the wOrld was hatching a new war. • .stane ng ries4.--ititle Weight" in the . , . • • , • , . . • US. or Cariada. And in April et that Year he predicte.d fro After.five to ten daye.the eggs PROSPERITY AHEAD: that France, Germany and Aussie ha itne wrialinr tad -poles • :which We are threatenedwith the graN<election onMa 20. Sir George is also would unite against Great Britain •Mid swim abaut'im.tne water. Their food • ", ,••• • • .an old,fashione d freetrader, liolding the :Gaited States uales.s they vended la mainly •mieroseepie Plants. - , that view with in nhifest ,:religious their °•Ways,. 4,He ceminended cancia- _ming is accomptriht by moo est financial:crisis that the world has • 7 e on y •eyen Such ,gloomy: pro - which• coul d be paralleled by 'ourl.tien of the • French .debts ,' credits for b' tail: .. Breathing •carri d PICT of • Sir . George. Nish, a' former ont - tashiened protectionists. Sir Russia:, and • free trade. m ; • . eans ••Of ouesideoand,in,side gils. As War that 'the cure for the war burdens Oat adviser to. the British Cliaaeellor • , . - editor of theLondon Rtatislo and'finan., George has -thbught. ever since the ' , is . an : international; cancelation. of Sir George" brake out .With another a deaf ear. On November 21; .1:927, "Again the ungrateful WOrid turned of the 'Exchequer. Sir George , now a ,,,,,,_ well-known European ' ' economist, `".':".-", . ` -'. ' ' ., • prediction ot, Iwerid-wide credit col well near future, the place to and dtiiibtiess. lie will conti%taet. .So.i.ne i •again4. -Mania the impending crisis on Patti- lapse? .Now*Sir George iS If any sharp crisis is to be antici; clans. who have pursued wrong po look for it is in the field of speculative Cies •since •the ;war. Speaking before ‘fi,,,,,,n. . thiaks the neighboring the National Free .Trade Conference -----''''' Journal of,Ceinmerce and the,Norfolk --at-ivfinchester4ngland,-en_iltarch_19, Virginiati-Pilot •reiniirds---iis--lher-the' Sit George Is quoted as 'sailigr:I•We British • economist wa•rainz must be are .threatened 'with:. this crisis- be • heavily •disceurtted.• as political 'am - cense the goVernmente of the ,. world munition. Sir George, says the New have followed a ,policy of trade re'stric: York Ilegnid Tribnne, "is one: of the Oen, thus "preventing debtors' from hardest -working prophets of • modern Paying their debts. We are face to •daYs," and. it goes on to recall that: - face With this crisis.. Nothing can be Cin '!lnly 21, 1919, Sir George de done now to, prevent a financial crash. c, lared that a. cellanse of world credit Those who have loaned money can was: not, only possible, bat imminent. . not recover it. . The qUeition we now ..'1 see only one way out,' he said,.'and hare to face is how to get out or the pcnnes,., , ,.. that is. by capital levies, both. national crisis When it ail internatienaV ' , . • ' ' Says Prof; Irving Fisher, of _Yale .. , • . •,, ' :"Goil January 14, 192J, he :declared University:: .. , Whitt Sir George is quoted as -say- ing about tariff interference 'With debt payments is true. Our own tariff is .pieventing the payment to us of EuroPean. debts. The French tariff ls. pre .venting the payment to her Of repara- tione. ,"Ultimately the debtsmustbe Paid in cow/iodides.' We would not want them toWaldin* geld-vre, have• too mullt• gold already. However, if *Sir George has been correctly 'quoted, It neems as if be, has hien betrayeed into exaggerating the suddenness of any injury. that is going. to -be telt. I, an net imagine any sharp cranking in the eiity. of a panic 'or world crisis, and',I • ,Wountain_torrent, ;pinkly banked with • . ; oleanders; and then it is the Trans - Jordanian highlands,. one rise atter 'another, sWeeping Oast, to the great ' This is country' of Meadows .of a Syrian Deserts, an miending vista of- ,noble amplitude, and oak thicket, and _Waving corn ' and closecropped pas - Paperof Pat.Raistris The chauffeur atom:. at Es Salt - his native •place -r- and buys a twisted aper full 'of the fat -raising for Which the districtiOamcitis; the tear travel - 'ere Pass- them round politely.. while •the car Charges :me hill, and skids • down the next, • avoiding, oireleas • '• Betio( of goats and .sheep Wending aindessly from the day's' pasture, back to their villages where -each animal knows and finds 'tn. own Way 'home. Amman lies in a cup Of the'hills, The • ' nun is lOwl half of the' cluatered town Is: itt"deeP •Purple shadoW.;..beyend. in: the nastern quarter, the traveler catches his 'first .gliinprie Of the „great ' Roman •amphitheater,' still •batited in •PIO.k. of AO :01.44ingiimi.—.. • Artintan. has one hoteli. the !Phila. 4delphia"; _for hi Graeco-Roman day's, :when the amphitheater was. built, the old Hebrew name of • Itabhah Ammon' was thanked to Philadelphia...It is • a ,g00(f.libtel-god fOodend.good btraig' init It is 'small. That Welt he .000t. In a four.bedded.ionth and his. tont. Pattions-were-in---Englithosan -veer nenting. a London ineuratte. coMpany, it :German kniv,eei razerfl and inisserS and a Greek food contractor ,to the British Air Pere° .depot four -miles tint in the :desert, ,As eet- tied himaelf Contentedly lietWeelf. the is goldfinch, perched on lodge • ihoeio be reealieeted !grin the, ale -Zed panel the .door, tap. Philadelphia means the W#76 of_ hroth.,. _ping the. glass .witit.his .erhooth • •-• . • Whirling Round Hairpin Turns ' HO'sPiiiit two days in. Aintnett.. Otte ..a heetie 'Marti expeditien te Getash,. and its rttins-a day which ..left , less. memory or antiquities than ot turns taken 'one wheel, • , The Other was due South pattlibunt Nebo whence Moses fierVeYed at!, -vivid Mose and bright-V*0036d. • Promised tend,: ,tridelt 00,1:kttlot oicattivo•to itivern the • ,..tiottir4 -to reach, ant. deli to' beAr.„. and site VerY still, and Preeent, --114-4-a-dOt"Ohgt6I't!'46:•46 • teitet-NOX0,---Aulth'w;-ittaritobitik sadden, rounded eminences. Southward breeds the long dim rampart' �? the Downs, taking the liege buffet Of the, westerly gales, keeping the Wide and wooded 'valley In peace. . ' • :As the sun falls to • the west, gar- den, and field .and Weed are bathed in a radiance of rose .and, gold, and the :cows wander •vilth •an air of slightly aggrievettlignity, Past the :shifting pond (across width' a moorhen .0Uttere! tO her nest in the sedge)' an 'dalong the grassy lane, and Into thedimfy whits reek ‘. and so Want°. ,Reyond •the - darkling .trees. the fires of sunset • bdrn, with •an orange glow. -.Alight shines in the cottage Windevri: Within, a great fire of logs flanies. and Crackles; in the wide Ingle, rudflytpuching the . oak beams) and casting blackAadows the oaf -lots.. Shut -dont -end -lattiti-fititrdreVrelbili about the' toMbortable blakev: There is no such tbingin London-. Withont, the' Wind has gone down; .tlie air is chill:. a great round moon hangs' itt the profound 'blue; and an in:intense -ellence enfolds the land - 500.. • ,Eatly the' next morning a. nets°, of tapping sound's the silent louse. What 1s in. There is no ono at 'the door. Looking from the Wil* door •one beholda. the sky "'bite and clear; the fields •glittering with frost and solitary, the'gliden al laptirkling whitei and eafility. Stilt the taPPItig. . . , • door is open, if be. Wished to enterhe could enter: but he 1 perrect little gentletitati Presently he filen. •tiOrtit and sits the tinple-tiee waiting for breakfast. • . • Another day of sun: The Weed, from Which they have cleared the titti dergrOWilt, is floored With lettveS the tadpele grcws these „gas- are ab- sorbed by the hody;:aud lungs deVelop, The tadpole Soon finds difficulty in in breathing so he conies to the sur - tamer the water to fill his lungs otith air:, Slowly fet• appear, the tail is lost day, doubtless,' there will be another •ant l a tin? toad ; seen •swimming fineneial crisis, 'When it COmen' if 'about - • Sir GeOlge-is matuier-affa Talten- Obtrerkssm°f;aitihetopadosndroer, astirreez. ..,,,,,, . and reniark,' deprecating137. 'I told, you 3tola4thye . 7In the ,opinion of . the as ng au . • i w fit 't there After -a certain number, usual. ,!•a-te Is sevetal dozen or more have, gOther, Pest, Sir •: George's 'predictions ed, a general mcivement or migration nothing , more than the croakings Of begins. Many farniers: have seen 'these an incurable freetrader.."• Continues , . this daily: , . 1, ... migrations. Often the tdads will fol. • ; law a rayine or cross a road, thus 'ex - "Sir George .is no -doubt • Making his wising., theinselves to great danger predictiOn at thi•s\time foi• the benefit 'from' birds and niaa Cr - of the extra session of 'Congress, which ' • ' ' "Ig a" "id 'to. be the chief enemy of the young will deaf:with tariff rates. As far as ': toad.' The few,that• de finally' reach a -the United States is concerned,' itis suitable environment; such is a gar - 1 are within& foundation. While den, soon busy themselves in catching the. Statement wan heing 'madetai their weight in' insects. -- i . • ,'It has been. estimated that one toal aliOne in a single eeason Is •Wortli MO to the. garden, because of the ent- worms it detours. These worms arei not the toad's only, article of diet, an slugs andlneeets figure largely. Xt is -indpid a poor gardener that'does not value' the toad. He is among the. ugliest of animalS, but one of the most benefibial. 'Let every gardener protect this friendly fellow,: he in worth„mucli: r•--141iles L. Peele in The Viewer 'Grow- er. ' . that a 'complete breakdown of the ex - returns were pouring in at Atte United changes ef commeree an dtrade is al - States Treasury, indicating even great-, ready in sight.. He feared Got Eur- States • prosperity,. than was antiCipated. .ope, 'deprived of American food and qommerce with other nations contin- material,' would . 'be destroyed by ties to grow in Spite of the tariff Wail starVation and anarchy? As a remedy he refers to, and the standard of liv- he proposed that the League of Na- ing is maintained at a higher levet tions float a v5,000,00,000 rehabilir than ever before." ' tation loan in the rnited States:. • . "Poor Sir George! No one took his So tar -Its Canada is concerned noth- advice. So on October 26, 1922, he am- In but prosperity is in -sight., Wheat neunced that `The policy of the states- crops in the West are increasing year men' of Europe is fast bringing the by year; ' our mines piling preilt MI strongest nations in Europe . to ruin;' profit; our manufacturers prosperous: and he feared that If the United our ,hanks outstanding In tlieir send, States did not Abandon 10 protective' ity; Our unemployment at a low figure. tariff it would fall into similar ruin. We cannot agree With Sir 'George, •d• Wh:Oie ' the deer .tif•t!..- tomembei.s •eogagstrietooilltag. • VlrlFitilen Paleatine-4110 .tott, , to keeo toratorat " oldest ill, the Watid And fie .11...• • .tid • . 111 .itetprete_ _ and ;with don1et3 deettritg, njeetlttg, *ii411011,tle CiuId t Rftserufat• • folgiEgrithiii -.0a6Ifigg tit fitif.tia*0 o Pofltttiltttt-R.0611 i4i11,givo gay 0145111 lethittitaigga--Whielrfor-trititsceadd• Wit n Tor,* _ • • Of ,Paihstinoc:olid •tfitoreat • manager,: • !tut tf0' On* 'taltc'thg, • and • Witieli tY)t WeSt0111. gthaginattaggi • tiongleiiii: Lhea, give high'ogg er is ABLE IV do ,b0-PA•ST ot tintWitty whgch, he lied Wit 'read lish," • primed *fat repertit. of Tratiajer;a:10b• egting out ttstog..,-vvattitthati„Ruge prepeifero' twf the Maii§ao lotith drt4t0 lier itt .q.02ttitii4eftti ,speed; as they ,AactvilikWigif had frakiined- tittoilgttet, . • hi the woIds gltydetwicat southaolotou ter . . ; • , • ' "The Whole Push" of the Majestic rtaa: ••• . . ‘.. Canada and the West Indies 'Saskatoon • Star-iquienix (Lib.): 'Considering that negotiations for -com- mercial relations between the West Indies. and Canada began In 1866; it is apparev; that Canadian companiee, liege taken a long time to realize the Possibliities in West Indian trade. Sugar to Run Motets .by Mill Owners''Plan . San Salvador -;-A Movenietft to, find a use .fer;surplits sugar got under waY here when proprietors e 21t, anger cane discuised organization tit aUbsidiary corporatiOns to refine fuel, alcohol as. a sithstitite for gasoline. ' Sttily The PhOeniCians were' (lie greatest • tiavigatore of their time their ships CarrYitig the •treasures to all the Mediterranean eetintriee and as far as taieiaerenbr.iotifsitlitlsrs. where, they cat.ne. A st,ontalt nionerte-hurn .lias- no trouble in finding a thatch. • , • • not the hapPlest Person in the • . world, lint rt0 titIt the happiest rurinured the slipreine 'egotist, ias he • ." took the sweet% young. thing -into blek at:Lb. • man suggests .0, bite somewhere tt, look.fed'un." "No' Wonde:," ea•n" itohat.e:.!,1171. 11"1:lieE';e1' c'dni:Itntij'ilfaleti:;li;11.6'dingtat:' 11./311 etY'11"1;ttnalideteeet7:Cit°47 tt: invitattott the infOrmatiott Of- anteisttItS '1 s it tea -t:::11:1(4 e mean' o mitt o7NN:ttetilti4r'et,311-litthkott:: . • ,_ TrIbttlttt 'Mat to Attattrairtv-pgiu gfe'de'tforsstng :tot le. tie-eter- i'vC•iter•lteve tke..410 '1‘6tt'Acer "s tesd14 the 1.00:761,-,:007Aftt4iiittloa-ttit0441.11o4ktr4‘f- i(* ti'"(1.4":g. °rad; de it to• seize 00 %OVUM ”ttre • • " ! -Off lot .16 itxtti....o.004. drag her to , Vie 'Parka/541M fruition hiettite Mgt. Yearsel . filitit needed it 'theme tong tor their rt tiatithey, hurl • her • into space She' . \ &Motion, qtettskin.,' • Among tun_ motet wthdolg-redge. :in her fall • • • ' delittibutietta reteiVed "Suppese•I drop het" asked • when the liner . .0tit gmg. writota ivio mid; the - . , • t. titddoltutv tea anfptgar.uil ';'0:g°1111°1$031rentl:Ittiluift•Tite., to •Pt4k • appeared