The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-03-06, Page 3,t
,
eee
_•-
•
e World-Wicte Broacicasi
•
• 'riteBJ3.C.aleneueleee that•nn Strat17-
.
et reports received :atom abroad
. Makes it cleer, that the 'world broad -
east whioh was proposed and Wanted
• her the Bridal:1 Broadcasting- Corpora:
:alien, preyed a triempla •
La . Ot ear pritala recaptien was uxd-
Iorm1y good. In atr•aace ,eleven Gear
- ernrnental 'statical% including the
• Eiffel Tower, were In 'actien,ated .by
et: the stesecaaints, Loacion-Paris; Reeler-
. Paris also rebroadcast. Belsigni and,
•, Holland beta satisfacterily relayed the•
cerealeay Which.they received'by line
or by avirdleseepack-np.erom Daventry
•.6XX .according ace diecunaitinces. • In
, •
Germany, Coletne. alai; Berlin • were
. I ,th,e main Vial efetthes for.theponthis
• 'eret. :•-.Cologne 4 SuPplied Hamburg in,
the one eirectlea ana FrankfartaStutte.
gat, • Menica, "Siitzeilana •. and itaJet
in 'the • otherFibm Billn, Smith
,Eriettera,-EuropePaland and Seandira
aeria Weeee'reuepliede sin Oeimany. it-
aelf nearly all, the ..regioaaa geoips,. of
'stationsirearoadcaat ;the, proceedings,
• Information from -Switzeglend,
Aastria, Czeclaosloyakie, latingary,
•'soeitteria,, Poland, Latvia, Finland, Den,-
. mark, Norway, 'Sweden and. Iceland
• •stow.'s that he many Of .theeeseeinitriei
tbe•quality of recepteop was excellent.
. Canade, the Caaaaien National
Railways' . elsein. of • twenty-four ste-
tione relsroaacallt With exoeteet re -
:suite from coast. to coast; • Similar
success was obtained the United
States, whOe the Iwo 'great clusees of
the National Broadcasting Company
:and the'Columbia, broadcasting -eastern
•distriboted Ale relay, the termer. with
„eityeate atations and the latter :with
•thirti.eight. ••Resnits in South 'Africa
'aad..Auseralia •wee not tie geed, .but
'Neer Zealand reports excellent iteeep-
tioneend.rebroadeasting, While in 4an-
aa„e0AtTarito the first, report„it now
appears that the eebroadcest was: Sue,
ceSsfully Carried out by the earneee
;aticatcicariting.,Corperritien.. ,Inetedia
there 'as -a tebreadeastefrom Calcutta,
as •welaitseir,goodldeatelif direct 'Were
lag to the BBC n;at It le esti
Mated that between 00 'and 280. eta.:
•tienii• Were inehoticate
The organization and execntion of
-this relay .of the ,Kiit's speech to AII
Parts Of the•ivOrld were significant of
the greeepotential :value tit 'broadcast-
ing • as .an ad thacivelliation .in ite
struggle against..both war .and lgnpr
ince. • . •
Chinese Fan -line
Toll May keac4
4 Million in 10
2,000,000 Natives of Shensi
Province Died Last Year;
•• No Harvest Since 1927
• Tailyuan, She.nei.—The main, cen-
Louis Coatelen
With.lcaye Don
Famous French -Born
• Eng -
.neer ' and Expert Builder
•• of Rating Car• s
SEGRAVE'8 TEACHER,
Louis Coatelen, one Of the outstand-
section of Shensi Frovincekhe ing automotive :engineers of -the vierld
and designer.of the car in which aszyc
Den. Will seek to establish .a na*
world's *speed record a paseona
•Beach, Flea Will adcaroperry else Ba.
tish race driver to the. United': States,
-
it is Announced. .by the ,Aroeratee
Autoevaile. Assoeiatiori. '•
eThe gieverising,body of aacilige Which
'will supervise aid time be attack On
the existing record, . sees that Mr.
Coatelen, with Kaye Den and mem-
• Wei., River Valley, cdatering' around
, Sian—is in the midst of the most ap-
.
palliegly disesttbus faniipe wilica has
• affected' any part of, Chiraesince the
• critastropbe of 1876-77. '1Estinsates
made from the 'best •posible sources
Indicate' tbat those'aead haat .staiera-
• tioa during 1929 numb-ea:at least 2,-
•000,009-a-wita another .2,000;000 prac-
• tically certain to (lie kora the same
canee-before'the neet harvest; • The bers of theiroarty, will sail for Amer'-
total poPulaciOn of this region before eas the steamship Berenea.ria,
• lheetamineeevas about 6;000;000. .
• I just completed k trip cif Investiga-
tion .through a part of the Shensi area
•. and what I saw made the Week or so
• In Shensiaa coatis:Moat: ghastly night -
'mare of past; present and, prospective
human, Misery. Pyactically every one•
man, woman and child -eon the Weeds
, and on the readalooked as though he
was just about ready to drop • from
tetervation. They were not cowed ea
much as dazed to the point of utter
apathy by long .continuee lack of tob'd.
Record of Harvests
'Wtat has caused this condition? a
• For one• thing, this 19 the. record of
Isarvests: "
' Spring, 1927--Exeeacet- • . • ,
Autumn, 1927a-practiaalle nothing. •
Spring, e928-aPractically nothing.
. Autumn; 1928—Practically nothing..
•Spring, 1929--aPractically nothing.
Autumn, 1929—A millet crop about
a per 'cent. of normal...
. And the' prospects? . SPring, 1930—
under the best' possible conditions,
net more than 1.0 per •ceett. Drought
last 'aettimn nte.dett possible to pla.nt
• only. about 20 per cent. of the normal
amount of wheat. 'Of that only about
• half germinated.. There- have been
good Snows, and the prospects are ex-
cellent for what wheat did get a start
before the• cold weather. But wily 10
Tier cent. can neural crop got -a start.
Human cease:et, unquestionably con-
' tributed to an important degree tie
• making the famineeae serious as it is.
• But natural causes were the primery.
• cense of 'the famine, as is demon-.
Sleeted by 'the fact that famine rases,
came in southwesterxi .whefe
the drought conditions were .eubsta-n-
tally the, same and where the human
elements all contributed . to relieve
rather .than intensify the effects of 'tbe
enecessivre crop' failures,
In any ease, the appalling famine
conditions are there.
beurtin_26.th,•aarialsig.aaNeW Yok
on Match alth. . • ' • ,
. Interest •of the ,engipeee ' in' Mr.
:Don't 'aetempteto-sliatter, tae.aecord of
231 miles per heat ,made last. y'ear 'by,
Sir H. 0: DeSegrave willbe intensed
by:reason' of the•faet that he alai) de-
• 'signed the "Mystery a,a la which, Sir
Henry. established the first Worlds
re-
cerd . in . ex-cees 'ot 200' nsiles -per hour.
• Britisher t bice •1901.
Coatelen Frenehman, 51 'years
of age, though be ba e 'spent half' of
his life in England. obtained his
first automotive experience in the
drafting rooms .of the DeDion-Boutoa
works in„France, going from there to
Clement and the Paehard. • He mi-
grated to England in 1901, aecanse
the greatei opportunities," there ;or
young men. His fleet employment was
With the Humber Company. in 1907
he entered into partneeship.with
Minelnethe production of the Hillman-
Coatalen ear; In 1908 he accepted the
invitation Of the Sunbeam Motor Car
Company, Ltd., of Wolv,erhamptoriato
join it, and the ,first products •of
designing figured in .competition en
'the race eourses in 1909. His con-
cern's — Sunbeam.Talbot-Deracq, have
been :the leading figeres in compete
tien ever sines. • „ • s
Aided Royal Air Force
Lon before the war he beCerne in-
terested in aviation, and bought a
Farman airplane. , He then; et -wiled
aircraft so' assalboesly that wbep the
war broke out, the Stinbeam %Coate:len
engines were said to be the enly ches
of British manefactente, in big proclea•
tion, Which had suffietiept power • to
fly British seaplanerra .Seubeam. Coat-
elen aircraft' engines- were in •the
planes
planes that gaye• the news at the cri-
er:nye§ desperation in the battle of aut.
land; that dropped food in Kut when
General Toeinehend's foie.° was he
-
gigged, and played a' tonsietentey
portara lien eviation thiougbout
the war.
'
7,
•
RUSSIAN ESEAUTy •
,Cia the 13,000 Mennoultee'whe tried to leave 'Russia, one thousand only
sueceeded and will eventually.reach Canada,. Her is shoWn yolinger mem-
ber et the religiouti sect.' •
•
Canadian Girls
hi Visitor's Eyes
Attitude Towards Men Criti-
cised by English Woman.
Who Stayed Two• ,
Months
•1.4ondon:774s a result of a Visit to
'Canada Which lasted two montare
Mary Locke aiscusses' co-education of
boys and .gires in ,dontriOutien to
the Dille '
„ "One labelieved tat egeeciaeatica
s'neutit'prodace a Saner attitude towarde
sex th:an'our present eystene of segrer
gatione. The twit ba the of -my yung
sreqiielpealices who' n te,been so edn-
.cated have a frank and friendly ;INA-.
next:: towatde membes eaf the ,oeposito
• sex,that seenis, to. ale wine delightful,
and Whea letteete:d Canada, witere.
.nieet of the epee and girla go to Schierl
together, I eapeetea to fine the sante
'aa'Not'. at all, • aite.edahadien girls
'when& 1 met, either la ,theilown
homes or in hotels, .See.med to Me to
baye' the -same attitude 'toward's Men
asethe Magazine heroines ef the esine
ties. • , , ' • •
-They talked about.their.
and were not only most artlessly anxi-
'ens to get laarried• but apparently
regardedinetriage af3 the only sat's=
A:Tribute to Currie. tanada.'s POOls• factory eareer. They lapped up the
,• Mott increaibly-seatimental films and
. " Id' .Greatest songs
With frank aelight.aad-
• Canadians : of -eve& -tie:a will read
wiale !teen saes:n(1.ton • the , remark-
able tribete paid to Sir statatir Carrie
by 1VIajor-General J. E. B. Seely, Come
• mender of the •Canedlan • Ca,valry
, Brigade daring' the War, In his 'auto -
!biography jut issaed from tae pees.
Ne Man' was en a better poSition than
t•P'e tMajorGelieial to know 'what was,
ateleg on at headquarters: He wee, in
tar Arthur's coafidencee, and :lie,
'Peaks with the auth'ority of a mart
whoie word must' carry weight, with
• all Impartial People. . •'
laajonGeneraa Seely' ;testifies that
,Sir :Arthur bad elmetet a • fanatical
hatred of• eaneeeseary casualties, and
his further • statement. that agate and
again the. General 'nearly brought his
• military career to ah end by Phluntly
..eefusisig i� do things he was certain
would result hi great loss of life with-
' tepeateating—aderantages" •
conie as. a welcome catroboretion
those Who know Sir Arthur best They
vein• realize that thiseis quite in keep-
• ing with the charactor Of the: men.
His men's lives were to 'him a 'seem&
tenet, and. he Would not wantonly Sing
them aWay.. It is , a good. thing,' and
a pleasant thing, to •finct a brother -
officer etao. linows waatehe as talking'
about pea' this spontaneous and un-
sought tribute to the bunianity of the
„Man who, guided- the Canadian Army
to victory :and' upon Whose shoulders
fell the brant of a sbatelers few could
have bdrue Unaided as he d1d.—MOlit-
real Star.
'
The "Empire Crusade"
• Nation ,and Athenaeum (London.
The "Empire Crusaders" have not ye.
thought out their policy, and -they are
putting Protection before the country
In a cruder teem' than any which has
been produced since the cleys of Adam
@mita. There is, therefore, no.danger
.its adoption, in its present .form.
The danger • is that the Tories, who
never -cease from hankerhag after Pro-
tection, will seek :to take edvattake
of the tauch of real euthesiaern in,
Lord BeatArbrook's, propaganda to
tolit an ordinary piatectiee tariff upon
the eleetoratet From a party 'point of
view we could wish for nothing bet-
ter: .lint there are bigger 9senee at
etake.•" •
Ontario Drink Bill
Set at $56486,5i4
, .
• Increase of $8,534,396 is
• • Shown Over Figures
- for 1928 •
Toronto.—Ontario's total drink bill
for 1929 was set at '$56,486,514.al; by
• Hole W. It Price, attorney-gelleval, In
• apswering question in the Letisla-
We. This represented an increase of
1,8,534,396 °Ter 1928 figures. In ad-
dition, wine valued at, $1.,168,258 wee
produced in Ontario and sold to reel-
-, -dente e other vette-laces, and 09,721
*near enrehasers outside of Cern.-
sula.
The amotait bt cpirittioue limos? told
by the Litenor Contra Commiesion
• during' 1929 Wes $32.368,503.91, wine
• $3.23satat.50 a -ad beer $2;120,43a.80.
'Wine sold by nine:let direct On-
farlO eoreenieste west $1,126-',94areelleee
void • inset • ( oireniesioh warehouses'
wee
sot at 11.1.157.865.45 and hold de
rect. tteap hreweriest, $3,57;e0a4.1,6.
"Thereaterve enfoemation wasaaletight.
• by T P. aladt, Prog., laulferih, hi re-
ply to es question put by W. G. Medd,
Frog, Stutli Huron, the :Attain -ea -Gen-
• eral eald that 1146 persons, including
the P member's of the board, were tint
ploy'ed. the Liquor Control Coramis-
•e'en. The total payroll *es 1f3,721,.
• ' 92.2.10.
or s , , .
does afeten't it darting?' . • •
•• • ' " _ "If by any 'Caance they weee gen-
.
Western Farmers Have 'Or- versing. intelligently ' (as they ' were
• ganized the Biggest Thing
• of its, Kind Ever• :
Attempted
critta.Ws.---There' • are foul. 'Wheat
Pools in West era Canada, the Mani -
titan • Siskatcaakena and • 'Alberta
'leanadien ,Waeat Pool."
• The three peels af.Manitoba, Sas-
katchewan and' Alberta are now oper-
ating . on their second fiveyeer con-
tract period. ,,
' These' have a- total 'memberphip ef
approximately '146,090 earraers in tbe
world'e, greatest nonprofit producers'
co-operative marketing' association.
In, less than six -years tae Canadian
Wheat Roo) has became the leading
1'
' • ('en aie.n wheat
h,arldlate More thaa balt of all the
newel sold by Canadian .farmers. '
The Canadian Whet Pool organiza-
tion is an evolueion Father than a, re-
volution in the• grain marketipg syre
tem of Canada. The Pioneer farm-
ers of out Canadian West, after they
had :foune out by a long series of ex-
pearmenes on-thelr, larms and at the,
Dominion eeperimental farms, the irar-
leties of Wheat *lath • wotild give a
eattafactory yield .of high quality
wheat, were faced' with 'the neees7
eity �f impreving marketing metheds
.if the grain grower was to have any
margin above the barecost of produc-
• tam for ,his crop.
For more than thirty years 'the
what farmers of the ',West were en-
• gaged in a' continuous struggle for
some Measure of tcontrol over the,mar-
keting Of their grain.' In the report
cif the Royal Grain Inquiry, 1925, it is
stated tliat: "Between the year 1897
arid the outbreak of the Great War
in 1914, tisirteen investigations into
various departments of the, grain
trade were held by Royal cOmmis-
• sions, In some easeS appointed by
',Federal, and other caees, by' Proi-
incial• authority.
. Al of these Investigattons were
15110Matted by complaints. emanatitig
fram the proeucers of grain and they
fl resulted in the bringing about of
at least some' beneficial changes In
• tee eonditions, about wbich there were
temp:rents-a"
• ;
The two huge teeters e,sel in DoliF
ratan) challenger are the preclude of
Coatelen'a engineering genius. •sehte
are :desigaed, ft is understood, for.
work on super-airplanese winds ea
counts for their great power.
May Outdo .Pupils
, .
Least :Said, Soonest Mended
Winnipeg 'Tribune (Ind. 'Cons.): By
typographieal error.in .printing the
King's opening speech •et the nayai
parley, an Well 'newspaper .has His
Malaga 'calling tor "early reductian
of arguniente througheut the world."
If that could he accomplished, it would
not merely reduce armaments but
Would bring tae Milleniurri.
•
Anyway, that royal, /wedding has
served to remind the world that Itnly
still hats a role &ulna.
e .
God eb Arrow, pfeeent record
bolder, 'was designed by Captain Irv;
• Ing, it ceinjuection with Sir Beery Se -
grave, %Ole drov 'the car to its re-
markable record Of 931 Miles per bout
oti March.I1, 1929.
• Incidentalle, beta SettraNe and ira-
ing at One, time, ix hen the "Mystery
S" wasbuilt, were nttc.chEs a the
Satibeelia Comprory. • • ••
VI the gi-ent Coe.feieri• ae .h•tat
• otatle his former jarpils? Thie is the
wrestler; to the forefront in the racne
frateerity tanstirarett else werlet.
• Fog at ,W,estrninster
•• Truth tLoielon): 'rue 'facts enures
frein the fog. One, if ftelr• tO
such taleg as -a Free Teacle Ferly rove
;Tile Sotiallet Party 14 to hch*Tebn11)- •
:en wIth Prollivrttordtt.th-acTrftz 11 r1
eleit the siert] and sardebe: leir. Sea*,
den' avows signs o.real:tizingand
tenciebnig the trickslitlete ot:tias beta
Istria:res. 'a That last trade
tintet teine toonpr er Meet- to protte
tleti Of tkeir labor obvious, and it
an- ff 11 Would be teener Trailer
flans
-sat
11
Who Eatsthe Butter • 7
Halifax Chronicle (Lib.): • Two ves-
sels within a start time have be.
tween them landed 15,000,000 potteds
of New Zealand butter at Halifax. It;
Of coarse, does not stay here, but
oomes to Halifax for distribution all
over Canada, Thisele a Very large
anmunt of 'butter, but side by Side
With it place tbis fact, that into Can-
ada carte last year 16,000,100 people
as tOurists. ,That huge amount would
Make a pound ertch for theaottrists.
tvery well able to do to one; or their
own sex) and a mail entered the room
they instaistly beereine arch and allur-
ing, and seemed quite incapable of
talking to him, Without aoraehow intro-
ducing a sort •of :tete-a-ester atmos,-
phere.
.- "This 'sort of thirige I' gather, starts
quite early in life. .1 am 'told they
have 'petting' (otherwise. 'necking')
parties !oat before they leave school
fevour throe tout their 'caliege aife.
and continuca them with 'unabated
One • exceptionally euatere young
science' atadent Whom tidr. broth er' and
I invited to a Picnic' flatly refused to
:come Until we pledged him our word
that iawas not giong to be b, necking
play. ' •
."I do rtara tale is not all quite
natural in the young. Perhaps, it 'is
even , as well to get the sentimental
••
4
4,20,4
•$E,triet .Trade United'for
With Great Britain in;erZthotatiet
When we look back
nd
ne'wlatlIsofalgh6eoddli;laovmg;triaoti°TellIaotflotni7. .bree: • tealeavtentbeYr7ass'eitthteTallar Oa, oneCW:
tween Great Britain and the Soviet would be reedy to answer the call
.trnion that Soyiet purchases in this recruits if , a new war broke .04
country have shown a considerable in- morrow, •'
crepe ,during the #st three months of find such men in oyer*: •
'the fina,nolal year 1.928-29,a says the cotintry. But for every iriaan wiAing
Bank for Reisetan Trade Review. "Oa .fight again;there are half -a dozen Naq,.
dersi placed by the 'Soviet trading or, waist) reuse to bear arms theinstdireis
ganizations during October December, and Who would throw their *horn.'
1925, amounted td R4,770;22.8, as come weight pito the scales against any'
'pared with al,e93;96e in ilectobee.Dea •move in the (*peelers of war, la other
cember, 1928., • '' , weeds, while there may be, a nwibeY••
t
The • follOwing Jai* snows the of people whO either want war, or Who',
amount of Soviet orders :each Month Would accept it, 1110 are in the min -
in. poundt'. stetting prity,„ Tho great Majorfty of ,people, •
1929 to day are of another miad. Net 041* •
; Ito bbr ee.; 56i77 1928704 1,693;5er
2,994,622 thatatet they (have the power' to ena
. • • •498,9
' Means ofettaballot-aOrt. Titer&Wafl a,
foree their ,aoisit of •view.. •
They .can do So, . not of all, ',by
. • 'Tistal'
. _
-i,093962 . 4770,223 ',time When ajneetiens of.foreItn taltayse.
' "The .ardere',:reachee the highest
level in OptOber, lint...declined •some-
what (luring Notrepelser,and„Decerisben
hIeli Is due' roaaili: to seasonal flue;
thations. -•
'The work *th4 , tractor service
stations is of great irepOrtance in 'atelv,
of the attempt thatis:belag nsade irt
• the Soviet 'Onion to ,impreveeagricul-
tern. These stations Were organized
in'aonn•ection 'the existing eolleace
• tive fated§ hi bider to utilize the avail.'
aisle .tractors agriehlt3.tral
ehinery for the CeltiVatlea of estivate
Peasant. arms in exchangefor cer-
tain Oration of the drop. The firi,at sta.-
flea, v;as eStalaished .aear , Odessa, in
the tetraine, less •thandwo years ago,
• and • by the eta' of September .last
there •Were, more • thane hundred,
while the eitimatess.of the Ouargla fila
medal year. provide for 'the. establish -
Meat of another bundeed stetioria dur-
ing the period. • '
"In addition to SUpplying. tractors
and agricultural inieliineay'aad teach
higi the peaSants te, work them, the
tractor stations giv.e the.peasantS couldn't be much. wase off in war
lected seede', in exchange far their time, time,•apd Might be 'a bit better. But
own:. For all,. tae sees -ices renaerea, (hey mould net be in a position to al -
the station taceivee. teem 25 to 30 itter feet the Comae , of events'. .
cent of the crops; : • ' • that Id 'It
'Those who eeirld dO. at WOU e
1 -Tba number traetor sere -ice seta , ae-e Men. employed in key industries.:
tions is to be inereased by Octo'hn.' 1
uh as transport a Suppose they rialtle
(il-auac3ti,Qtxko. 567f5.0 hfearemstsimlyaotercilredgraii31:., 'p;hce;•. This 'Wee:is being' forced on, theenae;
;ion against its will We refuse. to bo
'st-ationsfk7'41) 93'3, is 22,-11.4144e,n-44:4)% a parry to it. . will 'not-enevO
aalt of et teh atareity,Is to be.esaiaet- teoope., •or supPliee, :Or menitioers. Of
able grete." wale". Suppose that 'other groups 01
of: .'
• workers, Baia: '!We Shall not Mike
stage over earla. Neither .do I imag- '
ine that can Judge of the effect of "" s guns, •or shells; be bombe,,. or etect-
to-education in a twcamorithe" eieitet
;zinc the Leader planes." '
' ac • : Action -of thia kind wonlil, of p0UrSe,
rere .left -to, professional 411,4040o -
Ind 'were hardly ,mentioned at all at ,• '
elections, Tais is no longer.the win
:now better unt.;.
detstheil by the electors; than ever be s
foie, and a Gov.ernment *hese toiler
seemed. likely to lead to wetea Would
have ASO 'thence of •mientivel aCteta • ,
polls.. Tete .;woisieWs vote hat; made..
that doubly sure: . '
. •
Stelkeii to Stop War ,•
Tais, safegua.rd; however,.. May not
be sufficient:. A GO/ern:meat which
slecitles to go to *4 Athiesnq Wet a
general erection to .see, whether: the
' majority of the nation agrees- with it; .
'•SOPPose that, '' between .;ttiro. , general
'alectiensa a Government Is faced with '.
Some anforeseen contingency And • can
see noway out but War,: theife..cir-
' Cuinstances Would 'it matter that the
majority of. the people didn't, Want'.
„.
War?. • ;. • . '
„
I• feel peetty., sdre . that it Would.
There might be •a millioa .or so :menu...
unemployed or, in internsittenserapicia-
Mena. ,who'wottld. thiek. that the
In Peach District,be treeeen. But .ccitila ana GoVerns
Prison Sentence , raent, In face" of .sucli a temper
Niagara PeninSula Agog Over home, take the risk, of: going to sfar
•• For• Ahuiint • Boy• •
Reports Of Ore Dis- w '
1th another nation
The question, then, belle down th
In -migrant. YoUth •,' • ReceiVes,. • • • ' • . • .. • .. ' '
• coveries • , , this: INnuitt thee organized. working--
Beamsville-e,ell the' farmeri in the cleat, in the event of -a threet of wet,' '
• . . rown AgainSt..Revoi- ' .. theet planing .kilives for miners' Pit In 'my opinion they woulk Uniets in• ..
. • • • . • , diamond drills. if -the increasingly on, ... .. .
Terrible •Injuries When•
'Niagara peninsula will be dropping •
be. likely to take action of this kind?
Th
the very improbable contintenceattraea-
ving Wood -saw • and replacing their 'Pitchforks wi.
direct and unprovoked attack on this
Regina, Sask.—A prison, term t as timistic reports a nang out of Lincoln cc/until'. or the Dominions,
just lren meted out .ta'a Satkateb- Connty persist. s
Such strikes 111 essential Services •
ewan farmer .who was found guilty' Already pthet• eel of unearthing
' might be ceuetered, as Jo 1926; by a
of crippling a young immigrant lade 'lead; ziec ar :liver in paying auanti- volunteers ••frara the 'middle classes
'
Alex South was .sentenced by Mr. ties in . i. 10» Totanshipa betWetaking the places of -theee who had
Justice
-
' woe
Justice BigeloW' an the Kint's 'Bench Smite . and ' .,Beamsville, bave downed tools. But there uld bat. / • . .
least a day or twof on,
eourt at ,Prince Albert for a one year proved rosy enough to. interest the
skeleton serviceso' • 'oconfusiof
n the relieve
team. H.' A. South, .his father, was Treadwelialrukon• Mining Compaey.
while the inanniacture. 'of m—iiniti5'ori;
fined 'the Court. . • Engineer's of , this and other • concerns
mtght be held up for weeks.
'have looked over the property and . • •
William Pealling, a British immi- • • The Power of Purse.;
grant boy, received terrible injuries insuernfatcoefals,aamesonadndaaridnviinsgad commence- •
And would the middle classes
when he was thrown 'against a .re- .
'calving. wood saw allegedly' by South Two drills will be brought doet-n spond to the call as they did in 11269.
„Mid his son.. • , • , • ffora Treadwell'e property in .Sudbury In many ways: they ard the people wbo
Peening had a deep grub: -belt way within two weeks, according to -pre have lest reoet as a result of the last
'around his head. Other injuries pee. sent plans.,• Those connected with the War. They are paying for it year by
•map,entiy, disabled hie.right haral; He investigation are visualizing a rush of Year ill income tax—they know 'that
was in tee hospital for months and he • prospectors, promoters and develop- another w1' would mean still heavier
was lucky to live. ' • . • menteoperators into tbe dieerict • Aa tasation. • Of all people,- they beve
Nearly a•ecar :leo, the: lad .was ern• ready they can see areperty valeee perltaps most to lose alai least co •
plciyed on- the South farm Another isoaring and, eager feet tramnling down an :p the event of. were e
Immigrant boy and the Smiths Were the sturdy peach trees .and lissome " It inay " beinged that, as a new
gateretiotgnaws up whieli -knows
notheig 'of the.horrors'of war, the like,:
nitoed of a seroneantiewar. pttit,nde
nprt'otany large eolop
population wnl iesge.n. ant edoecitioll
le -day as a -powerful latigense . tor' •
pen. 111
no
Onttel%rsatie•1;
for
11;It.to re'
child-
reiegirtl
wers•and battles as leiif .the only
things of impertanee-eas they were
taiight Rome tw'en!y .y.t.+ars ago. Tha
smphriels ie Ae..i.al. and political de -
State Purchases of Wheat . • velem-tient—op tete grown df freedom
• SpEetator 1,Lentionl: calm balk pus.. an.dodinm
eorct12g
raitn3."', oefnienrda7tcr2•4"ne•dii.W.de..
chase of raw: coTnnfoxliti4s by the State a.fo
At the same time, travel. wireless,
.hae • been proposed le the British
the cinema are all broadening out •
minds, giving us wider sympathies and
a fuller .understanditig of other nit.
done. Atel the Mote we. tedeealacted s
the her fellow's' pant of view, the' • •
lees likeliheod there le of war. The
great. wars of the past were Only .poi-
aible because each of the nations in-
volvedthought that it was abseluteiy•
In the right and its enemy cerapletela
in ..4,hrt,e_the wt•istni
g•ailother - •
ette for permanent Poh'cret.„: -This is_
. . . vin,es 'welch .cover the receerty iat pre -
According t� • George "Beale, who. sent being testcd. .
- •
' A. J. Bales, of Toronto, a Pseeeteeree
who tr.t.utleArtItOcl traect of lead,
now COsti Oil a,000 ecreain the section
W.111(13 tne aequirea at prices 'eanglitg
sewing wood. •
was brought beck from the State of
Mahal to testify 'in. the case,. South
and his son' bit Peening and knock
ed him ,agaast the saw after they
had grovvn angry .at , the way the from $40 to $100'an acre.
youth was handling. saw -logs. Engineers are 'confident they can de -
The accused pair denied that there vslcip the property be scooping lip ere
had be.en a fight or an aseault. The -s -
said that Pealliag had statnbled over
.4 log an dhad•fallen against the saw.
The
Snow Shoers Still Hold.Huge "Meets"
tun steam shotal.—Mall and Empire.
leeese of Common. The dent -els ;n-
herov. it State taading ought not -to
be overlooked. Easry tithe there ea
a rise in the price of bread e toinatio
of abuse would break ceeerehe bead of
the Government of the day. Aed if a
deal -were put tinesegb by the Careen
Board with, kr e:xample. the Areets-
,tine, for an eicbane of wheat and.
ManufactUred articled. it Would csa
thinly be represents(' as it
-Brow to Canadian and saa,
oopa44 c 1aae:(4---1.4
Detio. eeeeoelle „nee, e ...iv: sae- Inereasing peWer ef laternettenet •
(leeta ct Imre eeee „ freanee. Money known no frontiers,
`sphr.,:te. t r, e :ad to iay. the iiiVes.ttirente Of A single"
ings. f rr, saatintry ettaer the ',thole world,
eeee oe :ee jay, , /Mlle great induetries fa one land will
aa eeeetess else „0.1.te to Milted inr-with--seVetal others.
merits 44 bes s .• • r s
poltecel p:c-tcr
ei Pest's d *bar rears heel *es a • d
to b.eve the folIcCp.g •..
ed to .his rc!olt, 'Atte „
geig.5613P. knife. ribs. 5,•r, y., •
"all tail* beetle that, Vote. the Polo!r:
of view - of the banke,r, the finalielera
be
tgreat wfir N had
bditiatieS. ••So t 14 gn fti beValry
stiffiew:flinfele fatetee 'Watt* the tele
itgerents to get the. MCCOY theY
quire o mery 0». Its .ntkongent ,
fart -04n
bort. YAzer•bic,(1„.. . re. 1'. a lea' A)] ta•tiobee-firlande, the mlitdie
clase-
AN ANCIENT CUSTOM Wi1H-P0LLOwt0t5 OP 1"1-1E tRAIL .11(1
and' a!” ^l1a-.1af: • T!'Y/N 't% ae ea the Vierking elase—get tans '
Th'is snowshoe .eult a s iletv.tilettb.ers wi h a 'banht1nga e(iirernony. Here:ale' elloaeaa nit:taller alatT: enclet. eate. ,•"; Seace test ; finitely grisly -ad again8t*it1'. datt tut-
daribg 'ie rites ateentlext tapon h jairieg the fratertitty,„,
• . , • Oils 'An. '.cf1Pc.:., oovertmerit afford to tett th9101
•