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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-05-29, Page 2• 10000.000.0.01100•0•11•01. 10. 010000110 re Cole moo;? Sixteen -Hours WQirling Week and Family Planes For AB Rave you ever tried to visualize What the world will be like in A.D. 2030? Lord Birkenhead -has 'been do- ing this, and some of his forecasts of the World Of the' future, are" described below • i . Imagine, a world in which it: is pos, sbie .,by tapping the atomic energy •• ' of 50,000tons of water—the amount displaced by a large ' iinel to uaain? tare,#the 1 olar� regions. at the temper a ' •tare ttf the Sahare fol•' a thotisawT ears? ,• 'A et•orld in;wilich television tt'11l,•en- • .able poli•:tical.leaders .to add_ ess' evet`y . W•Picture energy not • .alt- effects rel bike undo.: tlie, fecundity of our lnQ,t,.r, ,. able: criminals. Our :descendants Will adopt .the mo'i'e•'effective' preeautio,u, :of pr`eventilig 'th' birth' pf those . who' Must inevitably grow up with anti social ,proclirvities. prevention is bet- ter than Broadmoor. ' • • .. •• Dirt and smoke will disappear...but. horse -racing will'be, as popular' as' ever in 2030.; Week -ends in berth'_ ern .. Arica for 'the workers—•carried thither' With' their famili'es in fancily plashes travelling at 400' mt'les an' hour. • Aa :inspiring and •:thought-prgvokiug picture. of what oar world May be. like in a hundred' Years hence. And' with. mien -and - womenyliviug• . iti a world which changes from year-" to rob,, �flor *ill: tie The•csteial•-'ll -_ A. able that when the .man of A•D 2030 rob - nor. farms• • The • factories will no reads this'liook, he may wonder a_ ,t'he longer need to crowd: near, coal or rait knowledge revealed by Lord Bft'ken ways—they will be " dotted over . the head lie' 1030, '.' .But somehow, I .can country and, served by electric trails •lot •help'thinkingthat .the future is ',transplanting their gods at govt: cost.. going to be even more :greatly cliang-, The Wetter r�i these factories will ed than any, mind .can risualiie .to -day. have 'mastered the • machines which _ t now• threaten- to enslave him. • 'He ler, Stamina.fbr Britain wild ''wort: a ; sixteen -hour week.: ,The Brigh isur., for use A new, idea in stamps has recently • rest ofwill an will bele been• put forward .for' the Postmaster-: as he evt pf eal' ed�ication; travel, General's consideration. It is •.that 'a' health, the .pursuhtt of 'lies new series of postage stamps should ldlhoie-�,t<dustaiesMto D,sappeai It all Mounds Iike a world'whicl leas ,never existed. ' And it; •hasn't• --yet. • • But ;that is what, W.'are coming to, if we are to bleieve: Lord,' Birkenhead's., " brilliant new "melt, "The' World • .in 203r. And ' if . We" remember wireless or' 'those. • first aergplaties ' of pre- ar days the • excitement when ,the Chan- net was flown by 'Bleriot; and remem- ber' the Mighty • air -mall liners of the .skies to -day, 'Who can doeb�• that even r more -alnazing discoveries"may,=nay, Must—came? ' • 1 othitig is sure ,but change, And the changes , Lord Birkenhead' fore- sees will' mean the disappearance' of Whole ind istries w itlhin the :nest'. cen- prepared; st3'eciai2y "'for: tlr die' pose of bringing home to us the r side. ' beauties of the count � 'These stamps,; , it is' , "suggested, should bear Pictures "" o:f ,flowers and animals and landscape,,• ma C,N.R,. Head Say's Good og 'This Year Will Retrieve Most, of Losses PROGRESS IS NOTE' 'kat! etno '1'.etaoi .etaoi etaoitt, " ' Oita Henry `l'hort.on said, re: eerily the outstanding facts of the year's operation were so well knocvu . "as, uot. to requiae•uluch further explatt: anon: h'e first six utoitelis''bee( nes. WAS. •spletidld, 'Phren carne a crois 'silortr1gt t1d the• failure of 'the 'ctotr.'to•be ino�ed This ' resi:ilted ill ,'t4er;. mater ut,l• reduct'•lot lir the res elates, of • the compepy. very • ertnsaclerable ;expense "h td bees incurred • in preparint for a move 'nett. that ' .failed 'to;:auarerialtZe • Ib.t egmliart,t,. itowevei,• had taken steps`. to4sue'",t11a4.;iao hardship• leas utfltcic>c! " • on t;l}:e employees hy'teiit,o:tt Of 1ke•1e's,- setetl; tratile, • Much May Se Retrieved •The chop was eonri•tenci.tlg to IIIOV€ And, it.would.be expedited,;With a good ' crop.' this year Sir hieing• ex` peeled to • "retrieve a ' good .part, of • what. lias,.been lost" : • The comMittee afterwards, 'took up thetivaucial •statement .The deerease in revenuefroim grain ship111et is alone was 1151,000,000: a • .. ' , 1'10 IStOckl market crash' also had beett. an .adverse influence. Various , 'other details were given of •itetis wii`icin figure in the lessened passenger•, �and, :frei,glt.t. revenues .0f. the past year.. k H • w'i'th •aireadv. bare 'beep 1 v. r . n.. ...a f a •„a,.,.aol; ' 4; v tt •-� , • he 1 i d: e i - A. r.....ars •- '� ' ,°a, etit•'X,amo.u•nt of the'..deciitt ,, ' i s Ftande',, retu a-, passenger raft c. is due to highway i f ales tanned b . A,fric to t;tt.kl, •boarding • plane" at 1Vlarse lie , i Sir Henry. • addin^g. . ,Sta'kin'g photoaraplt of Pr nee o WY contpetitid'n,, said ng. 'to London ; frorn big game .hun't on the dark, continent." ` �--- the tourist oomutg , .. than if " , i • in by . motor prole- ably leaves more 4ehit;d:biip ' es' throw h tiiehi?tieficenee of,b1 he 'conies bY .train, • It all amount plac , K Blackie, • that pullet' down •nearly 300 3300,000,000 it year, • Policy .to Fill .Trains "?he object of the railway iti to fill its trams and. the better the, service:, the better, the' patronage," was • Sitr Glasgow, Gets Mercat Cross B ,After 300-, Israelites, They would rememier • liow the aged` prophet Eli,. met his end. acwhile.' 'administering justice in the k gate;: a nnessenger'brought erii nesse of .disasters, both. national and. d - •Years fell back- • me5t'ic•, and the old man , ward•sfrom his sea`. , 11 . terl� "i w'aS`•''pTLtt-S'e"Yi ttrid�"`i. "t�T The .Centre of Justice he hear of roar. project eo►•tile re -erection •' "And they could recollect hov when Of the Mercat cross'of Glasgow: hy could i had. Safely serve. only the' match -Making, These pica evo§see a of } landed a rich suitor for the hand of as reminders' of the, past, 'bat also as. to the gate the. Boaz Ruth; .it way i.emblems ofthe continuity of our civic bargain It, is true that we haven't mantle the and national 'li'fe. n e shall always,, "Por \aotni's parcel ofland which legal- same use, of our ;opp0rtanities ' in the 1 bogie, : be a fo,rw=ard-looking people,. "'zed his declaration:='] ore-' 'natter• of. postage stamps , as, sone .ready to face in an adventurous, spirit over, Ruth further :'ioabitess, the wife e- 1 confronts us'• but new series woad et•ery "near task shat h r nations. The' ne tel. of o certainly .make for brighiter...Br'.i:tiiSb vee must peter allots to wither' those. sections in our stamp :albums, espec- ially 'roots, embedded in our past,' , front 'ally if new issues,. with .fresh sub- which we derive strengtli4frd,stability,' jects, :were made front :time •to. time. "We have•a great history, and the , From the publicity viewpoint, too,,. the ids. is a':good one. ' Stamps, bearing 'pictures of, some' 'of our love- liest 'landcapes, Would prove .a po?,v- erful aid tu. the' ``Come too Britain" went to arrange that strange g tory, 1' iaovement• . In addition to, agriculture, the rub : berm and cotton' industries will go. , ' • EVERY DAY HEROISM I We should "R is already possible' to synthesise all be heroic it our trials rubber.' from isoprene in any ordfnwere on a• grand scaleav ! Should e? arily '.equipped chemical laboratory,"Heroism in, the least is the'only we' writes Lord Birkenhead "The pre pledge or heroism ,fn the greatest. Un - cess is as yet uneconomic, for sytl- thetic rubber costs anything •up to fifty times the price of the natural more we treasure its memories; the forefathers: Justice, bargaining and stronger. will be oars • determination Failed to keep life's compass true?, - legal evidence of ' bargains' — these that the chapter in it 'for, which we three things constituted a large' part Ourselves are responsible shall he a When war's stone • broke ' o'er your one. P�a1n5a MacDoh• of the life of an early mercantile coni• . head years ago: • Twenty, Years a King (•I:M. the ' fling' celebrated the t tfet*t-il,, r °f�,-eiatiefh dii'trlver'�a`rj�rsi' h•iss-accessloti�ji-eiin•v's,•`repl} o--•a� to the 1I•iilsen as to why trains .were being- 'I"h}'one-t, Nilsen, speeded' up.,whett•.t'h•e passenger. traf• 'falling. King,, of hearts as :well .as halide,, • ''fix 'rfi 'fah >; •`.at lupe n a throne, "Improved facilities; he sa tl; "eh __-:-.--- But• on 'sea this Empire stands, cloub'tedly intre i ensu 'C,risiness; 'r Swine i services,• unprofitable, at first, • •T'ou, its corner -stone; 'for •eKatitple• : ears hasSe.pro-ved••yo'ut= worth now .very' p'o tables Twenty y e farthest bounds of•eartli. ' those .front ca da to \eH 'York, To the • • Washington stili the south.^ .. Mahlon,. have I put'chared to be ;my IIalpfulness Itas,been your aim wife, to'.raise up'the :name. et the. dead Each ,and every dad'., upon his inheritance: And youve` always played the gathe '`-Shat the. gate. was to,,ancient. in a kingly .*.ay; y Israel. the Market Cross .was••te• our Who can ever say. ,that you worthy o y muni:ty, and in days when the art of aid.• writing was a rare accomplishment 'Not for .centuries have -thecitizes' human memory wa4A helper' by the Mr- historical iv historsgovv witnessed a scen .of' more cttmstante••tjtat such things C ere done historical and romantic import' than ata fired and recri things e "ted under -the that which was, presented - '•So the Cross became th t scene of shadow of the old Tnlli>oth steeple., almost e'c•erything that affected ,the v., tic has sfood the islet of 'i'l'ls as secular lite of the community, •Goodsr less we take. the smallest 'trials As i• the symbol of t?te'•rornmatiir,}'s corp°r for sale werd.ezprr3pd ar,'at near' thlie real trials of us.and trifling, tests as ate existence," say's the Glasgow Her-; CO Loyal p> °clamariorls were read s. ertain.. However„ real tests. of us, we give promise of go- aid, from 1t and 'Aga": nnt:r r. l were priq!<d product. „ It i c The Mercat Cross, the. token of the :. d that ing:-down under great • ones: Dignity• el .d!°nit, Ix ill •not• long cobtinue,. wit In very few years synt a tc ru bea will be producer onan industrial' divine purpose in them and great trou- 'froltf•'homble beginnings, was be;rYg r`' r,P4rSy.ihS par, played by t'r.?• Market ive the na- . bles will' have dignified treatment:. Let stored on almoFt exactly tn.: same,=rte, ,rims' _n. , Pa hplayed 1i'e than, the scale w bbe will soon d4 tural rubber• off the •market:' • .each small annovaYlce or disappoint,- as its prwleee- o^.' • v'1rJcb• in: th', fit ,rya .:�` Town r ;�rt•i -viii, 5 had r the cotton industry, meat be •one.degree of heat in the fur- ,p?trasee.egy of ibrr •pArioo' we= :'mar;. a a :, the t whirl' ran'. The . deprk fo . r mad': i•:al w.: , already. depressed. fe equally black. nave for the steel's sake,' one gah, equa'i with the .gr:n.ri, :n 15a5 • vin i`, ea tY K are!. a-,...11- ;f it w• -n f the knife's profo' s er l� S '*ale-''<'.:� •z cre ' The Dq'on of Cotton f h m 'ia rh rr•• 'tr ^ a •1 • "Artificial silk is already an iti ipor- tance menace to the existence of cot- ton spinning and weaving- It''seems every function of cotton, and' stdnce are more s�'tit°Se shrine •asr,)•J ,stir Yr17 7 *� n .r , ,} , h 11 .rar p•e 'red -to the eye. —G -?r1'','". • ;3* , t d a.'-.,',e-f.....•,,»g:• ,A .r,-'� : , 6 r ,x• -•. 'r i✓• i'g'la n . .1p A' lr!rf - f{tl: or' 1,npc ear and. touch, more desired by ,wr,mar1 a no • rte• u, .-r, y -o . �� ,r fir.. � .1.. • • e• .In 5 the cotton :t:. 'errs•. a r Y • , 6*/ •Ell Tri leg at Bt't�it tla:rif>f 'ln;:n=i»r� Er•'yr.::�r, rrja3�?'�, net, that t an h £' b little troubles by the thought f the r , tr x ammprr'F v ht, r 1 • ant r - nIr Pai'iapj nothing j io u ,d more grain in the grindstone or " _ 5, • . sake' and the making 9 erois a o..a4 J . a ;kyr, yq 'ars. Pi :Ir here. • :7^;,r'l+Y a'.tt r, 74>}.:1.c may. A -, — 7•a' a. n:�-"dam. V, �'. 7 s, . r. �f -' ,• .: Z .., �u3iw'r rfi FLATTERY that' ('r* s •✓ whit rr• r ekyr •e s' a ,- c•c:a- r.s ,.."✓:I7 ;:•.••••>v i; :tyre its had Courage never slept;. When the empire"mourned' its' dea With the. •Sad y'ou'wept, . Ever hopttig•for that time When the hells of Peace should chi Sailor King` indeed you 'are, ' Cheerful, • hopeful, strong, • Kind in peace and ealm in war, Hating strife and .wrong, Clinging r;1o:,e CO home and wife, ,:Pattern of domestic life. • ' d,. me. we vet llnc:e the world began -Hai there ever been Sweeter woman, kinder, mat, Than our King and Queen, : nia seem simple praise; . who can rarer: nehler traitit.• • . -=•.t, tf: Co'oper in Anew • von l far mora- f to fulfil eve . e y r• L r,a: y a..•b . w Ct:n ban from wl'hout,-. J. Beware of Platt'iry, 'tis a Weed c.w ,r, a'ts h , r :17 , to fulfitt• as satisfactorily. '?aisle a,9,,,f•_ ,�� '^r: nano -v1.1 .,,.,t sod n r7'ti Which oft.uflends the,very sd4: yi, ,u.a, r z.,.. `�-•`"•` "a' _ta 4 -vg a;i,f ro't..}r nia t'•�r;sN , rials ivanufacturbd from this tufa` 4" r•ar't!,rii�. a` �r 'r'd r', : ;i.? 3'. k s..,...,• , • r m` ale aj o� F era. ,..- 1,,' ,,, ind tm. , :fine 'sire hag hoops for himself. and yet a durable as .roller. goods In Ie 1107a... aayna •'tore. rtJ ase -i; x r t ua', r=. Y 3i h : a, . ' silk, Which• can'be orodsred • �, r -,u o AstifiC $i -a..,j d };�z'";A, , ...y- y$,' rSi- *�.•.,a ..+ •..a '.. _.. as .t'beap'. ''as c°"on, viii Cer'ain;y d. _ �- -- d already tJeen F+ira: ed. trr.'h :a Lan'' cashre at .,e C .'a: S';a:ag, x:ra. the' vial; ,• ' , a- •ver it a Meati' .-ant 1•'. -tu: •?s: .'•->•a. .' •r, _ • .,. l •. •r• s , . . +•- • . k' :a, a .. - -. • .-:. - r r 0 tee u:t.i L'mxr•• event.uh' '-Y• ture a g.0 e'• ' ettpecta ti.=, r• ' conrenteti: f :::; S 2 • - check and '.. :',: • • of motor-rar pt,„! ; s ' • • • „Sy 203rr• tai.,-. •r'.r •-; , ,, Pya?se'd t1i' i '7.• 3r 1Kmti".a: , • ity• • ,q century %%•• "' 1 • be n3e.d far 1 tji,pl>ine• r +. tv.,1 tre'amrtsern'rnr of yn,ttlt. i t!t•1' k1':,', in fact, sant; 'rn 'the t,.;,,' ••;'.,•r' ,n eittltod. by the bit-yr'le." }Vitlt till tial nat'nrst r,la' ental+' 3't"'tirpt tr'r!ti•i • ire•made tri int prove rhe irurnan rar 'tsett. This will b -r•' ar:htri ed by eugenics 's-trturifIe brrled•ir,g: "During the next century." prop- , „Lord 13irken.head. "biology promises definite and sweeping, ad- vances. The. secrets of Itutnan here- . •. ,•tri'Ity will rl'ttainty receive, ebleidation; the vague nonsense which 'tifw' mr•••- querades.as `engeutc.,' will h'e'.ropia r• ed by .an exact seietrc'p, t'ts e ap "r'• trill claire, for example to iii''' i • With accurai'y the idiy,ic.ml and iit,•r' • Mo f real Port Growing ' Sir. Henry • The St. •Lavience route, Si stated,, is :becomin.g mere ai11 masa Popular. and Mhntreal a very growing' port. Fine tiain Services tndoubted- • ly bring to, Canadian. ports much' Huai)- • pean traffic org'inatin•g ib the United - ` States, ' `'Because '$10,t)00s000 was .lost on passenger services, it dist not! mean . that it was all lost. ''All the large rail; ways had the tame, experience: Pas- senger "services could not be dispensed with :and, ','if, . they are not good, • we should not belie them.' ,. The' nitost' ' • profitable services. really' were the suburban. -Tt cost no niore to have a full, train than an empty one," Col. ;Cantl+ey wanted to know when the company would be needing more freight- cart 'and Sir, Henry, said the system 'had Inherited 8,000 old wood= vin cars,' which were being got- rid of ' ;as quickly'as possible. "Do you ever anticipate coining to the end'. of your betterment program?", asked. Maicoltn McLean, M.P. ';tie, no railway or no individual, ever does,''' Sir Henry answered• r ENGLISH M.ANUFACTli.RERS' CQNTiNUE T1 Ei(PERIMENT WITH SPEECe GARS r•,',+ !ii. ,.,'i, t':• -v-Pd drive -r. at• a;rr•eu: of H•iv l)' :'Ji' , 1'aeen'. a ' a ,. r . :. ,:p ::: v ! 'e 4 1'r,. e11'4 ,tf 134 33 utile'' ,, •1• • rf n li!,nr, allyl alai+t Kay,:p'ilnn'+" Man Sought For 18 Years . Arrested When He Begs chira;fol"--:nig "Ciigrley, wanted for 1S Years in iionttectiatt with_a $272.-000 sate -cracking in Canada, was held at the I)etecttve Bureau receutiy for the. authorities at New Westminster. B.C. ' ".(;barley," alias :,.olio W. Harris, alias ,j• P. gontiagtle, alias William St., ('lair, hokl•up Mian, burflar'and yt'gg• is Alleged ,to have been a ntentbei• of the bandit gang _whlelt raided the Bank' of Mnntrea.t branr'lI al, New Westntiu- titer In rho•stirntner of 102. Despite a 'convincing. pollee 'record,' 'Charley denied emphatir;aiIy• that ' he waS 'a 's'nar'ls rrlminal, Ifr. said: - n l+h + "r.hnrges a're rliiieulous, I 'Why, 'ar,n, i'vrt ski enothglt tn, be your grand - fit har •fro i .look -like a 'fete 'Matt?? T:,ri•, clad l want mo in Canada, either, Ti•i-rr of errr'st.hd tae Just because we nor an srrt;rmmt7lt, 1')o l took tough? , rrf ,nlJrse- not, ,and you have to be' try i10 all the things they. Say 1 11.14 " , . • Al Sergeant : 'Thomas.- ('onnoliy was k•avfr g his home., a shabby Juan asked • him fur a dime to bus coffee. Connol- ly leek Ili'in to the Detective littreau, where lir gave h' t name as Joseph Ttor1;:Xsrs, lett t%,:,+ identified as "'lig Charley."' ,- • • Mont reai,-�•'i`hc Bank of' Montreal 1'ra s 110 intortnittion, 11pr hatye- city cte• tr"rtfvea. nn 'ilig ('ltttrley: Many Motorists— •fnn'I' gii•c" ,a h.t(it far perit*stt•iati:+ --Are t^ont,lrrt. lb'. lakelife ' as it --1:1'00,• all ahr,ti1 1:10 r•raw1 of- the ewe; 4014(1 • -:--;teem t,s 4'11ov r+•'o1'»s (1oltvn thdiit >;eiltxS •meta.• Like • pe ell Trrieelee, ''rut are licca on sak•ittr, Ihr•f9' nt41i bat'on. -; Go (•ritzy''ore r a new Carr and iittislt ;IP 'by.doing the same -thing udder tt t-i'a"ovr'r t'tat tit at.ldjtion try the r•"••i of the •ear, 'there ,is.' rite' upkeep mid stay oflr:ti tall:arnnvet. • , •- • 4