The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-08-07, Page 6"aaafear
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Tiavels Through
African Bush on Motorcycle
...a.: ' . . ._,
,.. ..1.a ,, • /gape 'Wawa, 7.. ag.—To Louis Kraft,' "For three years I traveled detan the
Of delitineelinrg, goes the 'credit of he, ti.x.tvera The hippos Were an ever'Pre
peat Mellanei end I saw crocodiles in
fag the Arst Men ha cover equatorial
''''''' ' ' Airlaa • Itv matoreYcle. Mt. Kraft
• a''.• etarte4 alrOM Johannesburg on a :Seott
atietCla(ae 1 APtenther teat Year. the
nal to aisbt was simple compared
lalth his letetaadventares. , From Nal:
• Tobi to Lagoa. Itewever, is about -4000
, • Mlles: and there are.stetchesso lone-
-
that'a brealtdoWa Mean* a long end
• ' daugermis nteaeh throngh 4016 • bUSII.A
' aat Flirt Arcitambaulta on the 'fringe
.
pt Ie saaara' Mr:: Katt. had to
• • , • - fqya,atietc:t of,.400 iuiles
- without' tbe• :chance,' of. meeting, 'a.
a -single white•Man" Within it0 • with
Petrol,- Qn hia•carrier,he hed, a fouta
• gallop., tiliot petrel, and he transfer
,r • •' ••••';'' %tea has kit.Mahe tank in fahni.of him.,
• - :M.was leethis dangerous and
deso-
late coarttry,". he. aehtted, "that, a, leak.
• ' • developed . in zny 'Petit:II:teak. 1: saw
that R would be tideless to go on with
• ales petrol dripping away; so I lett the
.• ' mathine. beside .the road and set out
toaflforhe1p."..
"Inlet natives. and they pushed_my
machine.'to their *Wage. Then I
• f• • street ouattrt Met for the Erenek out-.
„ . post called ,'ort 14amy, so miles away..
Soon:1 reached' the Sharipaver, hired.
incredible panthers en the sankbatthe,
At night I slept in native villages with.
out blankets or mosquito nets. Meals
consisted . of half -roasted, elfteltense
bananas and 'eggs, ,.
glkiS•troubleti ended when I. reached
Fort Litany, 'for the Otivernor at the.
Proilite•lent •Me a %light ntotor-lorry,.
aad 241i:ours later I was baelt in. Fort
LIMY With the ieeter*le.. ••RePairia
,were mide'aild'1.;dreve on through the
,Aveak,Cluee,rootiC...., ' , • ,- • . ;
atelea, of the. Strangest, PlaCee 1 *lett-
.ed wee , Dikwa •-a.:: a mud city w. ere
• wend . dtgnitariel rode tiieughj the
streets on small Ponies With ti-,itics ere
•earryiag their stiorda.. ''Wheth .'iltt,
tives saw me IheYafelt on thetellices
on' tbe giettind.' , ' . ••• ... •
••e ."Petrorcosts $1.S7•.tagallen .at oat
Lefty, and $i.37 in Northern lilted .aia,
j: never lost any' way. once—tra ere,
• ,
pitsaiettariee, , and' Officiate. sketche the:
rOttte.71or me thiciagh it, colonies.. I
carried terafittle food, felyieg'On'sup-
plies- of milk, ' chiekense honey and
ground nuts at'native Villages! . .i.'
Mr..Kraft is a British subject of 'Elea
• gian,origin and a journelist by•prilifes-
skin.' He is planning .aatether long'
a small dug -out canoe and .two pad- journey -- this time .Europe via
dlers..
Wants Apples
Packed in
Cardboard Carton.s
.The results .o.f: investigations 'dttr-
• . ing •• the 'years 1921-1929 Into the
..• antountated types of wastage in Cana-
dian a fruit. 'shipped to theUidted
- Kingdom have just been, published by
• 'the ,Entpiri'Markleting Board. .Thle
ieport • issued byH. M. Stationery
LOnlitia, Price.one shilling,
•••• . Ters apples,•peart; :Pluttis and:Peaeltesa
1 • arnl should be ,in; the hands: Of every
•na .10----Cr--d--eagrothese fruits; Re-
• .garding applea,„"the atePort says,1 that,
„their condition on ,erriva1, is generally'
' • geed; lint' that • SC hi* -.Pereenticge-
, of wastage becomes a serious Matter.
• on :large shipments. The most ,seri,
• )cause of 'trouble wad. fungal rote
14.
, ee,
; • t.
•,
•ting.; pretaing do Wn andother pack!
ing processes likely tolnatee te fruit
• should -be reduced to a minimum. On-
tario, and. Neva Scotia apples 'suffer
, ;Tent scab and .British Collimate aP•
• . ,ples froth internal breakdown, , Ex-
. •• pert •of plums to _the. United Kingdom
• front *Ontario' is a comparatively re
cent develoantent,. but. althOugh they
•• -were attractive in appearance there
• Was extensive wastage trent 'brown rot
' , and a good deal of ,breakdOsen was
• noted. These and other technical
• details:are dealt with' 'at length in
• ,tbe report of sixty Pages. •
,
Market • competition In 'the Vetted
• .Einedotit is so.severs. that Canadian
growers, after perfecting the quality
ot fruit, might well consider .diffefeiit
:.methods of packing witach woeld be
mote attractive M the consumer.In
•• this connection, a Valuable Suggestion
come's trent Aid. Richard Tleorpe of
the pity of Mum, 'Yorks, and vice-
echeirman of the Yorkehire•Volantary
Migration, Committe.e.., • During • the
past two years he visfted• all the
fruit -growing districts of Canada and
• lobed a 'general complaint that ' the
•Prices the. grow, received' were •,too.
low, especially in view of the high re -
ail prices charged consumers in the.
• Old Country. 'Has it ever occurred
to the grower end exporter," he
• Writes, "that if the best grade of
• ap-
pies. both eaters and ceokers, were
• peeked in cardboard Cartoits in such
qualities that they could be :sold
•over the cOunteriaif retail shops here
at popular prices, the elimination of
some of the middle charges woeld bei
brought atieut. and both, grower and•,
cop nin et would benefit?" The sag -1
gestion .of packing in Cartons Would
•, ntsettle the problem ef. how to sup-,
ply'' the reeds of the artisan class.
pepulatian 'e -ho rarel, cat ,.af-
•- tbrieto•buy Empire 'fruits, but i' would
very ma terialTy ailialtaaea the 'nil -mbar
• -• of Mayers in ;he United Kingdom.
• • I
•
Mint for Remembrance
Tae srnell ointint e;:anes hack to me.
A kitchen with is homely <letter,
•• Tie Whitt tae cine coild see,
A ,(hoppinganife. eta woodet platter;
•.1kn1i ebody who 'agility laid° ' -
The herb in heaps and Stetted Ober, -
pine:
•
Air Competitors
• Another Air-Minde0 Prince
Prince Georg arrives with Squadron Leader Don at Raalett, England, to
Meet Berlin
• ofilciate, °Petting ceremony of aevir Hanley -Page Aerodroine there.
in
•
Beiliu7--Sixty competitors from six' Geittiatt' vA'alitli. •
4is
nations arrived in Berlin to Start on' -----.-0 ,„ ---- a ....
for Itght airplanes. • ' ' . • , ult.ort.a.
the 'second. kuropeati•cirCular flight -- ; Qa„,„fla.aa' '-
.'
,
Geemany leads. with 3a`competitore.
Poland 'follows with 12. England with
seven, France with six; Spain with
three and, Switzerland with two. •
Two ladies are participating; They.
are Miss Spooner and Lady. Bailey.
Yeah teen' Great Britain:. 1 ' •
' •
Regrets are voiced ' here that there tertaininent films which may ,be tin
-
are no American Campetitors. ,The ported into Germany durang 1930 was
• rout covers .7500 kilometers _andare-, fixed ' at 210 recently, following the
Ides -for 14-contlialenr-Y/4441diag.s'•'.--.--'-it-L-6"-errnatpAmerican, 11 Maisafee-enate- hi
' starts and ends at ' Berne,' • Soiree of Paris. • • ,•
•
the principal towns crossed are ErinkeO
'• f these, one-third may be talking;
fort; Rheims, .-Galais, :Leaden,. Parte; Pfdties. ' The • Gpvernment aiso may
Madrid, Barcelona, Lyons, . Berne, authorize an additional 24 films in the
Munich., Vienna,, Praatie,„ Warsaw,.' event s 'del circumstances merit in -
Koenigsberg . and Danzig. . creases. : The educational and cultural
:films :quota .was changed to two for
one instead ,of. an even (exchange,'
Which wee retained in the case of all
others. •
The regalations governing thIllni
iquota were revised in a more liberal
spirt as a result ef representations by
German AIM interests to the Geverne
• ment. The 1.1pPer Chamber approved
'the changes, which were executed by
• the Government department author-
,. nett by parliatiteiltary act to. handle,
,
the Matter.
The conference in Paris was pre-
sided over by Will Hays American
-1
film' arbiter, now in Berlin ii connec-
tion. *ha 'the' new accord, reachedin
•the film industries of both countries. •
• . American: Moiries
Number of Films to "be Ad-
• mitted Set at 210
Berlin.-LThe total of American en-
:The moat OffficUltaections are cross-
ing the Pyrenees and Swiss moult-.
tains. The eight not considered a'
• race, but a test of Tenability. Only
the time needed for covering each jep
will be decisive. • °
The German Aero Chia was jintruet-
ed avithaorganning 'this 'ears flight
',James, a German • pilot won last
Year's European flight. •• •
- _
_a
4 ,
"Occationatly a 'man gets a break
-whet .he leaet•eapeets 'it." • • •
"When a dittyconies to us, with it
comes a power .6 enable us to per-
form it."eaCaltrin Coolfila " •
• .
When your young lady says there
s something about you she likes, ask
her What elle ii going to do, when you
have spent it._ .
• •
• neat-AP-ea:al-a. :he Spey. Wale
tatealeh-,:he tient sheaf., eerily
, •
•• • 1 Juid j,-vorne.,t. far era see
r
• ,
•
•-aze,..e.lae ay. .ab
Tt re 'of tiara e ill et e: ae.
r•aan•-'ry of timt oat
.fra.17 the diStar.t. naye.
Tlay CA:: rne..,twack vagrant
Fr-im ripe jees end asurary Ways
*tt paatera treaff reost 59reP4 and
freers: •
h, • ‘..1 alerning.
•
vrairter.io truly beantifoi whet
asbe is half sleeted angular and,
bony —F).iren 2 Ziegfeld. - •
. ,,, ..........-..... .41.•. • .
•
• •
A fr.s.rt toed les at Pre'ston for im-
preperle nsing a limited trade :tcet.Se.
errota to the rnegifetrate flee ea-
• tOpett softie diectiininatioa b•CitvecZn in. •
1 .
-Washing Chiffon
. ,
•
' Many women are afraid to use cha-
fed for wearing, apparel, as they are
often disappointed after washing tt.'
To wash chiffon .extreme care is re-
quired. • Take. the Material, fold it
to or three times, accerding
length'. then:tack is together—long
stitchesand with a tine cetton.
solve our soap. and. ataing .warm wa-
ter. wash by constant Squeezing. free
on the wrong side With a thin cleth
between :the chiffon and the ironing
cloth. • If desire& stiffen with gum
water. .
•
•
Rural Club Foiiiided •
• •
By Canidian Women
. The women ,of Canada ' emit :have
had a more than.'ordittary, interest in
the International Conference of karat..
• Women held few weeks ago in
Vienna. 'Apstria. The firsterural wo-
men's; club to be formed anywhere in -
the .world cattle into being at Stoney,
Creek, Ontarica,oeer thirty, years ago.
It was organized for the purpose of
imprevipg•the statea �f home: fife in
rural' districts. The Movement qeick-
1Y-a•Praad tu-lItluseei*titrd--ttr
other, countries. • The first conven-
• tion of represe.ntatives of these in-
stitutes In Canada- Was • lipid at the
Agricultnral Cellegea-Gnelpla Ontario,
in 1906, 'Mae...small' hall the top
fiCor,of the Macdonald Institute Build -
Ina” at ,the :College. At tile aresent
• time. it requires a large hall ,to ac-
'Sine:Iodate a Convention Of any one
of the five districts in the province.
The movement was started in the'
British Isles by :a •Canadian woman:
Mrs. Alfred Watt, during the Greaf
•War, -and as now Well -organized there.
From Britain ,tt Wes carriedainto the
,countries of Europe, and the. first ,in,
ternatiorial convention • was held in:
Belgitun in 1929.' with delegates from
Canada. the. ,British Isles, the. :United
tea Australia, New Zeeland. Ger:
v Czecao-Slovakia and. India, and.
the chairman. was .Mrs. • Watt:. Wo -
Men an the rural •districts throughout
Canada are now organited .under
dif-
ferent tepees, but all are the result of
that first organization at Stoney.
• Creek over thirty Years ago.
• Prinie Flies' Solo
• LondonThe Prince .of Wales,' ac-
cording to an annopncemeat in a Lon-
don paper, has recently made flights
unaccompanied by aipilirt or any
other, person. , Tbe 'Prince's sole
flightit according to the Daily Tele-
graph. have •been made at Northolt
Aegodome in a "Tomtit" military
training plane. Ha did riot Itray far
from the 'lading field. but during" a
number of, shorts flights demonstrated
marked ability in taking off and
'flirstory, when we are young, Is tending. • . • •
. .
what came to an end, before We vrire •• _L....,....4.______:
beirri.7--Arthur Rausome..-. • ..
•--.-i,i:•:-.---- ', - : Segrave- Leaves
.A Willesden 'w6m'an. stated that ehe
was separated -from her husband but
diad takett him in alt a lotl-Fr.
rsity. Head Says INcrprodudion
rattled Men and .Women hnpossible°
•
•14 F ---
, Sarancisco."Taere eee s danger "I do not believe that many inetitu•
of overproduction et trained men and
weinenP : ' ' •
Thia .was tlie,Sta.tellient of Dr. ROO.
eta G. Sproule* a. declaration of pol-
icy on taking office as the new preak
data of the University Of California.
Ile emphatically declared agaight
limiting the enrollment of the•institta
thin,pew'ceasidered the largest in the
• far, as numbersconcerned,"
he• feel :that.,the most IMpert-
anCaheletiOn is that the qualiticatiOns.
of our entrants to de adequate untver,
.sita ayark• be maintatned,, and that the
quality 0? work in the university he
• net Wipe:teed' with ay idea et inaltiai
it. pOseible for an •:itterea,siag number
.fsttiOente to Meet the reeuirementsia
" "Subject. to these two Inaltationa,
believe that the uniVereite should ivel-
anate thcite Whedesire to come to us.
An increase ' in numbers1?• quality 'be
maintained; • cannot, but be desirable," .
Discussing the experiment •:now be.
• ing projected' at Leland 'Stanford' Jr.
University—that of eliminating the
freshmen andsophemotes and tending.
toward ;a . graduate universite-ee)r.
•Sproul
tion4 should adopt, a new. policy until
Its.aUecess has. been demonstrated in,
AtkleorasiinQstaaence sb•
ould„like tq eenone
institution de)neilstrate over a tented • . •
•.ot years. the deSirability. of eliminating'
the, fres/sawn and sophomore years of
the traditional AmericanattiverstY be- .••
fore .etialatitting the' Eniveitsity 'of •
California to •such, a pregrenta • That
seems likely, soon teabe tried in Ythiff• •.
'State and wk. slain watch the ,results
ta Our Ware poliey M. t •
with great interest and !,),„1„.§4\igdett, : •
.„
Dr. Sprouj favors both- sports and •'
selagoveinfitent,' •AdMittipg,', •
theettere-bete been a"uedoubtedly •••
grave abuses' In latereollegtate cona
petition, he stated Ineyerthelese each.
amepetifion hee, also:Inde.great :cone!) •
•tribtiticeis tb student lite,. There la no
taint" of - professionalism or eopmfer•
-
cialism in:sport§ at Califoreleandthey ".
will not be tolerated in the future," '
• He .closed his discussion 'with the .
statement: "The .youth Of toefity are
not worse', thin the iatitheof ,Yester- • •
• • •
day -if anything they Are better. We
• wilt try, to send them estit of tItis ins*
tution avith ideals," • ' • -•
.Mai;Olith-rirodUct ••
• of Chemical Magic
,siaizonui; 'a substance hard as stone
and stronger than niosakinds of wood,
18 one of the 'newest products of chemi-
cal Magic, Working on. cornfield
• wastes. Says Science Service's News
Bulletin (-Weshington); • •
Can be 'Made trent .any : part of
the corn plant, but most advantageous-
ly from Corn -660s: It is one •of the.
things • that bite been made by. the
chemists of Iowa State 011ege at Aines
• and has recettly been undergoing
tests�n a serncommercial scale it the
U.S.. Bureau of Standards. . •
'llt prepared by cliemicallydigest-
.Ing the, corn-cobes reducing. there to
uniform )ellylike pale:at:certain steed -
"era paper -mill machinery, and press-
Aagetheejelly-enea-tnel*---Thearesulting-
solid material is a dense, hardbone-
substance; ranging in coot. from
golden -tan t� a deep ebotta. :ft is"
sonteavhet stronger than the hard-
woods, and is a 'good electrical insul-
ator :, 'It can be machined and polished.
into non-metallic • :gears, washers,
panels, and other objects Such as are
now made frombard rubber•and bake -
lite.• . • . •
"It is estimated that a commercial
plant with a . production capacity, oe
five, tons per day could •thinufactare
it at a cost of about $240 a ten, 'The.
cost might be cut it it is manufactured
as a:by,:proOact inlether cornstalk
, •
"Its trade name. Maliolith, English -
ea into acorn -stone." , •• •'
. • 1
'And you really consider yourself an
expert swimmer, Reg?" • •
"I must ae! When I go to treatI a
girl how 1.6 ewim the invariably tells
ine in a few seconds that she 'lei
• •
, $82,000 Estate learned Perfectly and can get along
Londeti.--The estate of the• late with":- *a" . ••
' • •
Sir Henry Segrare, king of speed on
•land and. Water. ,whe lost his lilt. •
when his Misr Eneland II upset IP
Ever' base ociipa'ion makes one
Lake Windermere plasa bobtail amount-
sharpan its practice. et- chili:in every
ed to Sa2.000 a a. announced.
othee,--Sir, Philip Sidney,.
"The:young women of the preseat
eeneratton are • not what tbey used to
be," col:deletes a famous old acila.
No, they Used to be little girls.
/ —
Britain Takes Her Place in Dirigible Constniction
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`1'..49'.42F.afiaca •
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edverent mieeornprehezeten aral ae. • ••• • • .
liberate antraleat . • • • The - ( the large$1
rigibie an the 1#21ild, exeeedipg even. tie ref Zeppelit., sailed Iron( teglatkellor.cfattacla 54,..eNdzy LEtet week.,
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•••.4.4.,A.14 •.• •
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1.)104-411,„"r-
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•
A Drowning Person
iristra.zy - Be Firm .
Den't try :to rescue a drowning -man, •
—unless you are :a good swinimer.
yeurself. • • •'
Remember "a droWning. person' is
generally insane for the you •to your
death, unless you are eapahl f swim-
ming With.a heavy load."
• The edvice is that of Frank Dal
ten, a. swimming teacher, and sn 'of
famoas English (linnet Swimmer. •
He gives It in "Swimming Scienti-
• fically Taught". • • ' '
• Counsel on .rescue for drowning 13.
timely just now. .Among the many,
bits otadyiCe given by.Mr. Dalton are
the Tellowing• " '•.•
, •
••
5
Of the many different weirs of seta
ing ;life; the safest and best method
is to swimas near the peasonas-PP4-
eibleathan, dive ender and; come up •
behini him; otherwise he Is liable to
grab you around • the neck with.
death clutch from which it is ex-
tremely difficult to escape.
When swimming up behind, the -per-
'on, grab his biceps and force hint
on his back; the more he sttuggles,
the more he, helps himself to keep
afloat;
TO prevent -being clutched .hy .'a
arOwnidg person; the following rules
should he carefully etudietal Mr. Dal-
ton tells •us, adding that "every ac-
tion, however, must. be. prompt -and'
decisive, otherwise .this Method will
be of no avail." -Reading on
If grasped by the Wrista; turn- both
arms simultanemislY against the
dfowaing :person, • thumbs outward,
and- atteiiint to bring Your • arms • at
right-anglesio your owe. body: This
will dislocate -the iltum'ba of the'
4dirsowhnoilndg. Perien, and he must 1etgo
If clutched .around the neck; im-
mediately .take a deep breath, jean
well oVer yotir oationent, place the lett.
hand in the email part: of his:back
•
and draw your right arm in an up.
:vbaoruclidd;rafec.atitiotin 'iu)anstit it at
alitneolthoyltelts
tis ram. The' with the thitnib and
airefinger catch his nose and pnch;
the Pos;rils close; at the sanie time
Place the paltn of your hand on his
chit and push ffrmly outward. This
wilataese bite to open his mouth, for,
hreahag perpoeee, andhe, being. un -
Elea . you, !kill swallow % water. Choking
ensues,. and not only' is the. rescuer
fraed, but the other -is left so help:
:ess a.to be completely under Control.
Ifeclutehed aroUna, the body and
arms, take a deep breath, lean well
otter Your' opponent arid: throw • the
right arm In' an, upward direction at,
eight-angies to ihe bod, or draw it
ap betweee yoerbody and that of your •
oppen.ent. Then .With the thumb and a • •
forefinger catca the nose and...pinch
,he nastrile chse, :tad at the same
time race the paha of the hand en
the Chin and bring the right knee as
high es possible pp between theawo
bedles, plaeing it, if possible, against
the loe-r part of your opponerits
ches-..; then, by menus cif a strong and,
seateehat sudden nush, stretch yont
erns and leas out staight, at the -
sane? abiallirowine the, whole weight
of •hebdybaekwercl: •The sudden.
iraaon Will press the air mit of the
ethers lene' as well as push hint •
era matter•bow tightly he may be 't
at-aThig. ye may then . be seized • •. "
frem behirei and rescued. • ••
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•
49,
• Beware of Insect Bites
Iestat bites sometitn0 have serious
resaits. the chief danger being that
of liecoedary 'blood•poiSoning. Here
are arecantiobs you shotild take when• :
•b:Tel;ittle strong liquid ammonia will'',
atop 'the laritatinn. Then the bitta
saolibil be painted • with tincture citi
ledine, which vvill Mao lessen irritea
tion; lieshies deetroying any germ*:
lurking in the poret Of the skin,
' If thie does not prevent Invelling and
inflammatien, hath) the bittett part • -
plterriately with hot and cold water,'
er apply cold compresees at •Medea
leerily Intervale. le Matter latrine
ane :aorta.to diseharge Itself,
hot mr•noTirms and eon -snit a .doctori