The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-07-17, Page 2is
•
.rt
f1Wuxi* SaysOG
yet
• By E. E..F,REE, P:lt,t]la .•
.A possible compromise between the
.demand; 01 •surgeons end scientists
that the. be permitted to experiment
• On living animals. for the sake= of, cur
ing human disease 'and the view of
Mani. animaliov ret, that . smell vdvi-
section must be prohibited at:'all costa
Is attempted in ,a.. newset, opt • official.
regulations promulgated sat ruasia,
• Germany for 'the cotitrot of such act
Mal experiments n' The .suggestiois
that necessary an:mai" experiments or
demonstrations be conducfett only
Once :arid recorded at that time• in etto
tion ,•pictures, 'so .shat 1f:s;imilar, oder
Men'strations are nece:;sary later :to'
new .lasses of medical' • tudents or,
others,' • the film cap 'bel .used ;instead,
.:
livianimal in ' an
of. a to pother n • a t
s .g
actual: test Tile Prne:Sian Tierschutz
••vereln, egwya.leiet ; to • the •Canadian
Society for the P,r,egention 9t Cruelty!
to Qrztirmals :admits! that the saying 'of
human Ilka,nd tite preyestlon PE:.ha=;
mag hufter'i t; may deme id :animal• ex-,
kerlmenCatlo: n,er of ' .
$at tide fielder
filming such anima, operations will ,
provide, they insist, 1:v: every possible•
instructional need, Under the new re
gu1ations official :permits' •rnuet .be, ob-
tained. for any expet•iment'on •anin'l tis,,
much as In now net.essary in 'many;
Other countries and in malty. states in
the ;United' States,, Such, peril -tile will
be , issued, It is pre posed., only to
trai•tied persons and to recognize ex-
perimental instttuttone. As an,addii=
t;;p'nal restrictiete'to per=mi,t:will he Ise
-sued for ' any dente stration or ex-
perireent alreadyeperfortne.d unless it
can be shown that':the nietlon -picture:
methgd :now suggested is•, not ap:plic
fan ships Statue
. And Recom s Hero
. Baltimore ' Md "Edmond FontaineThe: bold, idea of, a du•ect route' from
chipped a letter from apublic mono- I London to Winnipeg 'across Iceland
ment in' Wyman Park' Baltimore the and„over the' Greenland ice-cap'near.
*other';day7and not •ct=ly wept unpurtish, l the Arctic Circle, is being pursuedby'
ed,:but also became' sot ething • of a • H. G. • Watlta'ns; who holds first -plead
, popular:' hero.' heletter-eaii "s”— among the 'onnger' British explorers.
Terns has. been a', source of 'vexation' • His plants to examine the possibili-
to 'local literary folk, . It o.ceurred,"ties tor:an' airwaycrossing •the:inland
in the in.setiptfon on -the Edgar Allan' ice, which must clearly be the critical
Poe'Memoiial, in Wyman ,Palk+ Stage in any. projected servile,
f+lie• inQnuut-Zit ' .hf sire—bryuze; N'tean-w•hile-a-specia,•1- •corr'es'ponds
'shows . the poet• 'in a. pensive mood, of. the London Observer calls att'en-
.'describedi by the following' line frons tion to the fect that a;Gertnan expedi-
"The Riven";"Dreaming 'dreg .is no tion under. Ezplprer `Wegener i's' al=
nior•ta s ever , dared to dream before-" ready'G'reenland; so that one: Ger,
shortly after the unveiling of the• man' and 'one British party will be
neenuntent, several years. ago. C•.I spending next winteeten'the ice -cap.
Poder, a business man who heel 'his This informant continues; • '
'.Poen.• discoyeied•'•tiie`isuperiiuous ":8".
' in the word "m'o:nals. " -
An eatery • was raised at the tune by
'partisans of the poet whose life, was;
linked so closely , with Baltimore.
.Those in authority, said •that nothing ner's troop of, pack horses will 'ha Just
could 'be. done about ,it,; . Th'e offend, as amusing'a novelty for the natives
ing• teeter co theetiQLh ;e earxoared wit1 ,,,.ns: w-a;{k nst-•futtrre•-air-lime.
out defaeing the; surface, and •wquid "It is 'in-ali,probability the most pe.
Airline Planned
Through Arctic
"In .order to , follow' the 'progress of
these ;attractively original uadeetelt-
ingse it is desirable to have a n'iuch
clearer' eonception..thee ,most' people
Possess of Greenland, where Wege;
have •to, remain until, the bropze turn- ' cunar country on earth. Politically,:
..ed_:.into_.dnst- .. - --=--: , ;
--to begin., wrth, it is :as '`systemattealiy
Mr. Fontaine, -however, recently at- isolated as Tibet or ,Nepal: •
tacked the letter and with mallet and • "Denmark` controls it as a , crown
chisel chippe it away:' He also Monopoly . through', an organization
scrubbed, Off a .smudge !of 'black paint called Gronlands tyrelse, ' No busi
which the Park Board had allowed to nese men and no :to rists' are tolerated
remain on'the .pedestal for. some time, • d
norare' ships alio ed to call .at ;'the.
Mr. Seintaine was promptly, arrested ports, except in ca' a of ,'emergency,
and ''for want of bail . spet& a night'• in, or for brief and severely:.' restricted
jail. • Next : day 'he found' himself •visits, with a 'particular' object, satis-
e something Of a 'maitre '.Poe'Jeerers :factory to the Governtrient'. '
:from all, ranks of'.societyr, sprang. to
his defense. Edgar Allen Poe, Bald
more lawyer and collateral- descend-
: ant, of the poet, wrote :• letter defend-
' ing the chisler • Societies .passed' ,re -
solations of sympathy and •approval,
;i
The newspapers were all on; his: side,
.. 'and even the park 'officials appeared
e
Ears But a&1
Throu
mac '
es Invention
Ithaca, N.Y'--The teeth were stat) sites: and Alpe `very ;useful for keeping •
•stitu:ted ill hearing for the ears itven• water cool In. waim weather, 'hut the
invention exhibited at"the home of most interesting. Oleg about them is ,
Dr, Frederick Dekeil, professor of. their ceder, which is an earthy: real. '
pliy'si.es at Cornell University. • • S'ldiiliully paoked':In the donkey's 'great
.The prefessoes• gu.este appeeret .to, straw pa`ek, they are transported -from
sip their nttts:ic, through straws, as Place to, pike with a. m.ininuen of
•alley :list.ened to 'a pltonograph,. •the
sound •o.f; which was- -inaudible to .the-
eurs.. The seeming straws •were long'
pieces of wood witir'sharp ptnints on a•
tiny. Metal disc cit- a round! •cloth; cover laces' them on the curb •to. attract;-.
ell ball; the -size of;a big fist, that con,k
•cealed ti►e Lr►echariistn° o'f lire luven . and • to be exanifned by,: , 'Prospective
tion. ••••
Sig, diner Stops
To 'Rescue LIound
Lorlrlon—'lie liuinaltity• of Captain:.y: •.
A W Tutton, eomniendet of ':.tire
0,000; ton, litiet, `Clan • lelacNab,itr•' fur tee -
ills` ,has altil) •ibund in mid ocean fo
-save 'the- life of a foxhound `bitch
w•itich. • had-. failed Overboard, -was . re-
•ported.by.'a.friend of the captain.. • •
The liner was, carrying. a -number
of valuable -foxBounds Froin Liverpool
to Boad• ay..
" Oren. the vessel was e ossiug :the
Bay of .I3i cay.," • staes .Captain 'rur
(Mee • friend, "We.' par•ticuiar hound..
wee •.exer•cised as tietial round,. the'deek >
and then tied upon the.after-deck..
• "Aboltt 8 -a.in, she was missed.•
"A search• teas made;'• hut the heund • • -
.could not. be 'found, and it '*as kettle
lededi alta sire_ mest emyealinned. here,
V< ander ing wiry she held are apple. pan collas and 'been, lost overboard,
' w hen•,t' was •enly'"blossom time: " s'`'hell the,loss -was •reported.' -to' the- 4
But- half 'way. actress, 1 stumbled and , captain half ars hour later, .he turned,'
his ship round and steamed. back -tris •
estimated d;i's:'tarii;e travelled since the
Mishane plus an extra mile.
•
'The hound= was not eighted sightedand the
vessel re'snaned. her. cotu•se.. :The:
hound„ was' then -sighted 'a short. die- •
twice :away rigltt -,ahead. boat was
'lowered and site .was' hauled aboard,
exhaust'e4l.. She.receeered after a'few•
hours' at.teuteit. • ,
breakages audra. ma .. rim of display.
From tinio to time ,the vendor halts ' •
at a busy erasing end to ing' several
of -the note froni'thole Se of straw,
a :Thi Apple.Tree •
One mot rring;'.the moruttig shedled ,
'ty.looked. up'•.fioni my'plowing, in, the
• •' . •hot• lelds • :
Anal acioos to.the• Old otehard, bltirptrr
ing •early ' ' .
teAnd ' there I' saw'. ho, staitdingi ..be
Heath a tree, ' • .
With' her brown hernia• gnarled•'1ike
••the branches above -her, ,
And her hard eyes death -like in.het
face • •
-
c -
$he held a Rrtt pan In her: hands:. '
.('The kind we •use foe. apple•picking
• for-oursel'ves), +• ,• ,' • •
And she waited there, watching, '
I couldn't ••think. of aifything. to say,
' .except'."What is it, Ellen?"
And when she didn't answer, Ilstarted
• ' across the held to her, , -
fell, ' -
And when I got up she was' gone..
I r.ent'back'tie the plow.At noon . When
' 1 went its ?de-dinner;e
'1Tirere she was—dead-as a stone. The
00 its last , jeurney, the :III -fated. • United States' submarine a -a1, w•itich -
doctor said she had.died
carried 33 of its crew to death five years ago' it sank off Iliac'k lsland, •Eknew' ' ire
'Early that' morning, but I ne,M1vs
--- hadti'tt,
+' VO.l
ondon S ssion Is
Re t
Livesthere a ratan soul so dead'I've wondered .why she came out into
e with.o,
Who .Bever t.._._g . liihrse,ij ilea easel I the orchavd; • -
ICOSKI.B Press
"1 simply won't get • out of tied. She hadn't—left• tire, house for twenty
I, will not do a ood daY's work ., ` Yea f
London.—The imperial „Press 'Con-. g y i I'm sure I couldn't help it if she -'took•
Ivor w ill I. shun' 'tire stns that kirk
_I ,._. .,. .. _her-...iife._.so aid. r .•r.
In •rovereatru overdrin rn ', ,'' .. 44 ., _,_.. _.
g k g• � f ,, . , ,?
I loathe plaits living and high thinking..
Lonely:, terrible, grubbing;iu the soil,,.
A fig for duty'toward one's.'rreighbor • she called it., ,
And•for' the dignity of labor! • Ellen liad'book-learnrng, she had
• That was what was wrong with her.,
will not venerate my, betters
Nor:•pay my bills. nor answer letters. I've, been worrying lately:
To Hell with love, to. Hell with tact,' But I nicer be crazy: •
•geaher:representatives from the, chief ' 1 i She. eras' probably Ifapp'y* irt, het own
Confusion take• the Ice logg, Pact.
newspapers in 'Canada; Australia," And 'I will tolerate no more , tray,
South .Afriea; New Zealand, the Irish --Harriet MIndwell Voris.•
• Free. State and 'lndia; and the long and.That most .unmitigated. bore �I
Sir' Sanies but' when•:' he comes my'• ,�' :
varied •program , has , been carried ,- v
way ,
' • tole relieved at the elmination of the
The Park Board, in official session,
decided not to prosectte and the
l olic9 -rnagistrate disniissed the case,
warning Mr.• Fontaine not to continue.
his private i'editing 'of public . monu
menta. '
•
Paris 'Still' Picturesque
Those who .lament • the, passing of -
•• certain picturesque figures 'who used
tp frequent the streets of Paris, such
as the. goatherd and' his flock; ' flow •
banned from the busier segtions of .the
' metropolis- are takitg great deli'ght•.in
the arrival of a newcomer; or rather,
' • ' of several newcomers. They are the
, vendors of clay waterpots, and each
of them is accompanied in, his pare-•
grinations through. Paris, by a d'iminu-,
• .tive: donkey rendered almost invisible'
• by what appears to be a mountain of
straw heaped on its back. 'The pots
•'+ are of an. attractive 'design, in: many
Tho metal disc was a special receive
er for • the deaf, transmitting its in-'
audible vibrations to the• wood.. By
biting,; 'the other end of the stick light-.
I.ly the listeners could hear, and tri two
" : ,tof the auditors, 'at least, the • music
• . sounded art.perfect as when audible to
the earn '
• l'ro'fessor+•Debell. said he perfected
the device in hope that It will., be Use-
-ful fur the deaf in listening to talkies
and. radio. ; The receiver ivottld be
placed on the backs'of seats arid the
' straw -like sticks wciuld cost • but a
. trifle. They are,ordiriary wood.
The sound vibrations pass directly
, , to the' auditory nerves 11'throtigh the
'bones. NO ear drurns are 'needed. Pro-
feesor Bedell said that only destruo-
-.firrrr of the auditory nerves prevents
bearing hy'.the teeth method. I -Ie
arioltted it atter consultatirin with
m+•mbers ' of • the • medical ;faculty at
Johns Ilopkitr;, who ' sal 1 that •'about i '
tko•tl,irrt, of the deaf could hear
thr•ritelt the' teetlt,vihratf,n, a larger Hearing 'his son and daughter
i•.•t•r•ent;1L;,•t, than, r,ould hoar. by any Laugh, and talk ef dances, theatres,
other single nr"thrn+l. ' • ' of their 5r1nor)1, end 'friend% -
Tatztnsit all P•ar r,t rn a 1
"Scientists and.', genuine explorers
are welcomed, and are supported •with through without a hitch; • iHoer 'the And •start's his. yarns; I'll• simply say:
an.'astonishing generosity at every.'• 'auspices of the British Empir.e'Press. Well, that one is, upon my• word, Little King IDlrcliael has gone- for 'a,
point. T7nion; of which John 'J:.A-stor, Pm" The silliest tale I ever heard.'• trek . •
"The ;administration. sent' a '• erietor of. the Times; ice Chairman, • ' • In short, '11'gather from m' tone; To look at .It:s kin 'dons from Jass ` to
represent s o you'll y o g Y,
conception •of trusteeship. so .advanced ' T. W MacKenzie, .chairman of the. 1'ni going to. call my sours my own." . Szelc.
that a League of ,Nations mandate is South: African: delegation, on.June 23 -Martin Armstrong "fr;om. the Lon- He see- a boy with a spinning top
merely exploitation by cornparison, , said the great aim of all 'who halm at • don '1Ie'rcery, .. And wonderful 'things in a hii.ycle;
'Absolutely, no profit is allowed. The
interests' of the Elskimo take clear pre •
cedence of economic development, and
any- surplus en the monopoly, ',is ap-
plied .for the benefit. of the popula-
tion." u , :. . . ., .•
•erenee Which has betne' isle ssion. here.
since June2 concluded 'its ..Visit 'on
June 30.- The. final. social; gathering
'was a,dtnner on June 29, at which tire,
delegates sof previous ' similar assem-
blies.were tile hosts.
• 'The 'conference has' brought to=
A :Royal Inspection Trip •
•,
`ntt/r'
jr 1111
aNIMIN• "Why did Dobbs buy • a motor -boat?"
"Whenever .he left the lionise his
wife insisted on knowing exactly when
he would be':back. Now he can't pos-
sibly tell her." • '
Inventor, Used. Wireless : '
`'As Breakfast Announcer
Chicago—Credit 'for establishing
tended the conference had been for '
.closer Union . between- the countries , •
within the:.British Empire„ Freedom ranee `ane 'morocco.
•
in gn'ity was what the conference had- . • •
Linked by 'Wireless
set out to attain. V1'hi.le there must Paris—Wireless telephorre' comb
be closer trade understandings and re-
lations, they must seek a more. lasting
cement than even the most favorable
trade'agreement. Their aim should be
—h ai't
toward a ,political orison at party
�polltical 'union but a political union of
the. various Countries. He wished to
,see a ,council of empire established,
not a 'legislative or an• exectfti.ve body
but an advisory body ' which Would
deal with all the big questions fairly
and sgtdareiy, and advise the various
government$ upon then.
Some fathers still seem wonderful
'to their small sons, and some have
tried to help thein veith their home&
work.
Recent Bride: "f can't stand .it any
longer, Judge.. 111y husband actually iy.--D►, Nicholas Mornay Butler,
swore at me (.tearfully). • And I was '
learning to drive just to please him,
shoji. ,
, While.- strap hanging in a' crowded
tr'amca'r a lady accidentally trod oft
the toes of a man .sitt.Ing�,down. "Du+
municadio.ns between ,France' and
North' Africa have 'been inaugurated you know that ;you. are standing on
by a conversatiqn • between Andre my feet?" he 'said. ' t'Iyoir • were,
Mallarme,.:lfini ter'of•Posts and Tele- polite, you t!"wor arbestanding, on
§ diem yourself!" remarked: the lady.
graphs+,. and' Lucien' Saint;• Resident "America. 19 • the' only Country. left
General of Morocco, at Rabat. The where languages' are taught so that
service -.opened to' all subscribgrs' no - pupil can -speak thein." --John
,all dive lir,
Playing Fair
play• the' ganre•hard, but play it 'fair,'
Play the ganre, yes, to' win, •
:Play the genie: :hard, Intl play it fair,
• • If you,'are beaten, grin!,
Go and shake hands with the winner,: .
Tell him, the best: matt won.. '
'Remember, a game's •not :a death -grip;
But something you're doing for fun.
Play•,the game ilard,' but .play it fair,
If' you're tempted to; cheat a bit,:
Play the game ;hard, but .play it fair!,
. Foul play never • makes •hit,
We each mist •be beaten sontetitnes,
And nothing under the sun' • •
Is. eves worth. cheatin •tri win at,
It's, just playing' fair that's fan.
• -By Margaret'•'E. Sangster. ,
' Penguin Tricks •
Commauder'Worsley; in his teethes
at. the Inipetia:l Institute on the last
Shackleton Expedition, described the,.',
'way penguins find out if it' is safe -
to enter the water,' • '
The. birds; standing on the ice, sur-
reptitiously push one of their: -number
in and watch • the result: • If ,the vie-
tin remains tinder they' know he is,
eaten 'by a "sea leopard; if' he comes •
lip they infer. the coast is clear and
July 1.. • • • . Erskine •
M. Mallarnie, in his inaugural con.
versatime expressed the hope that
wireless ' telephone communications ``Plying" Spanish Prince Predicts
.with Morocco will shortly be followed n
by cOneections with Algeria and • 'Three -Hour- ' Rocket' Atlantic .Hop
Tunis. Receiving stations are being ,
constructed in .Algeria,
• Madrid.—Prince Alfonso of, Spain, tin's recent flight to South and North •
'•
="`'• —. cousin of. the Ktng and veteran aviator America—the"first of his , rank, io• cross
Peace —he has.flow�n longer and more than the Atlantic by air.
VV'e'need hot believe. in peace blind- any other member of a royal 'family—. "The dirigible Inas added mtich to
ly, but'tt a nitist'believe in it profound-; predicted to the • Associated Press in mart's conquest of the skies," he said,,
an exclusive interview ''that before "and for the next few years it would •
very many years passengers and mail seen- 'that lighter-thateair .daft have'
may. be rocketed across the :Atlantic an advantage over planes for long
'in three hours, • hops. ., -
wireless communication 50 years be- too," 'Judge; "What clic[ he say?". John' D,, Rhckefeltor, -senior, the
fore 1ss c ni'.was given to an Amer -American millionaire, has enrolled
• Recent Bride: He sat. there in the
Prince Alfonso, whose Srianish'title
lean physicist' by .Dr. kart T. Cotirp•� ditch and said llnly Cats. wr;man, himself ns a Bey Scout. He i ninety is 'infante of Orleans and ,llourbpe-
1 was a'passenger on the Graf-Zepne-
ton, , president. of Massachusetts to didn't •yott see'that truck?' "
atltuto•of'Technology,' in an'address '' - •
here. ,
The radio pioneer was Prof: Joseph
Henry of Princeton University. Ills
achievement received scant attention
at the time, 1$45, and his priority has
had no popuiaic~",recegnition since. Dr.1
Compton • said,
Professor Henry used Itis device in ,
a practical way, related Dr. Compton,'
He had hid wife . call him to break-
fast with iL When the porridge was -
hot; Mrs. Henry cranked a statis ma-
chino . and the .professor, although
several'hundrea yards from home, re-
sponded totJie' sound he 'heard: front
a maenett;<ed c'ompaas at his elbow,
The Father .
And books ' '
While Allele. i•r e much •ad) about ile sighs a bit.,,
"canned" music, it seems Only fair to Remembering wistfully
t•onsider the lrran.rl before co;nderrrn• 'A certain mill -town •
in.g the gr)'orl:r, 'Some forms of me -,1.4".'" 4 itis b°311.1°°4‘ there'.
'Chani -a1 mtede may be„cilmoitidins at I Aild puts his arm.
I' 1 Dtrmiily, as fathers de.
times, but other forms spread 'ate; ,e. cross 'his son's hr, ad shnuldlr,•
A's prrciatfon of, and Love frig, good mgts{c,
. far beyond the ,far'th'est reach of "rm.' --Jnhn 1'T61fii s, fi" Sch(Ye), "Souter
t trr'al" , Meek.
`.• .. , I *idle, .Meas.
•:''e. ,._ .. ..... • .1,PROGFIE•i3S- _ _- • _. •...
Tire piano; it ►s' nn'n•)nne.a~il, ii .now ' 1'r-rgir',s• i9 in its esser(ee Identical
fighting for its life in they Atnevlr•:rit ....eh turret, and stay be looked, open tt .
Hero is the }r' at'(I 'Canada uiidin v;iti'r�ln will hoes ' exhil it flair 'if
home. And rine We'h,ard the, ix ',pier. M••ide manif'eat.•=•-Auguste fur b g sn ) s1 lean) L ptr'ta" of the • lnnYi'tti'on itt.111`e toter-
-,,
.was., taking a til rrbie tieak'irtg. r'orn'te+• . . ' natic✓''nal Colonial, Maritime arid I`1 rrt'r,lt .Art lx:xbiidt.lryrl nt..; Antwerp, Belgium, irnttl October' of this year... .
year's of age.
Modern Architecture '
r'
re-
;' .• rf.. Y`I,,. ♦ - w/".'�'' py'r'e y.
•
•
surra.
•.
y '+;+�/% //fyy ` r / / ��yl //uH///i1•/Iliiii//////. / /l J!/%/ / i/ // "
0
"But. I believe .tjtat th.tr'`tinie will
come, and perhaps'-not'solar distant,'
when rocket flights •will be made be,'
tween Europe • and America in three' -
•hours." • • -
The Infante was the first Ettroitean
prince to fly. 1•1e began learning 20 •
years ago in France, and since''1310
has almost tinily been `in ha air. Ifo
was one of the organizers of the Span;
lab" Artily Aerial Service, in. 'whielt h
carries fire grade of 1)irettar of Trait)..
'big.
Dr. Hngo,l+lekener's skill in assem-
bling.weatlter reports while flying, and ,
charting Itis course accordingly, was
to him the' mast impressive aspect of
the Zeppelin's flight to the Americas.,
' i)r Nckenei• cats smell wind!" Ito
exslitheed .admiringly. "His 'weather,
hrteittnn is uncanny, but the flight
eottirl not have been'nn'arle without the
rr•tnat•kairiy efficient seeteint of weatii• -
er reports, received obis the' airship by
wiireiess., • the constant• plotting of
tc•r+ai(ter}-'tt'raps spy *Dr.. Eeketter 'front .
those report:s,• and the eitift.ing stud' '
changing of his course to dodge ;this '
or that unfavorable weather situation.
"it was atren)enrtous piece of wn'ric;
anrl it was to observe this mare than. '
anything eke that 1 made this Zeppo-`'
lit- trip" ' .
Tore notch ritd Belgian diamiton
trade dray • resumed ftrlt-limo •nperti •
-Hans; Thes Mfg ig Tndiait liras Teffe�t •'
tittles arejierc, or that tltey see' snit
Affirms of•brighter time's just ahead
if
certainly takes surplus' wort'ey t
t1i
boy ~IrrtlrirYls.