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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-10-16, Page 6et; .14 4.•... - • , 'PI othent eetente 1t1 11. ' , • • • . tO.fteserre..•: ouses; Remo by Amicans 14ut. tjaee ati 'tempt wilt be Made by the ffovernMent 1 *0 TentrIet by Jew ,the retneral: from • Britain. a buildings oi historic and •national interest. 1 A Measure for 'this purpose is -now in tbe hands of Partin.. MenterY draftsmen anis expected to beettarodeced, in the coming Session. • The bill is designed to be an effec- tive check upon the grewing tendency On the part .of wealthy foreigners, ' • especially Aineticani. Since the World War, to buy histOrtc heeses and other : lenildingS and remove them piece ItY. Piece for reerection abroad.' Net long'ago apiece of a. four entle •Century England: Deitswolii cott ge• a ..Chedworth was Mimn down and • into boiei. The dismembered•Cetta*a•i Weighing 475 tons; was plabed aboard d a treinhof 'Sixty-seven •care and then ahipped trizAmeriee. The Earl of Pow, is's oldhalf-timbered house et by/more near Montgomery, built about 1675. without any alterations was sched- uled as an ancient monument by the • Office of Works, but the Earl's offer to the nation had to 'be refused be - cane of lack Of funds for adequate maintainance: The *Ouse was auc- tioned and was purchased by an an- tique dealer, who said much of the valiable oak' paneling, and the fine staircase Would go to America. Meanwhile., despite. the proposed •legislaften, "en:Englishwoman. Mrs. Amy Adams.' has announced she is going to America for the sole pur- ,pose of selling old English cottages to Americansi She said she already had bought a Hertfordshire cottage • for shipment to America next Year, "Since the desire for old cottages has 'grown. in America,” she added. - "I am gong •to gnu And sell them." When a building , of historicai.. or eational interest conies under the provisions of the piroposed.tiill, it will bei illegal for the structure t� be're- mOved., not only out of Englanud„ but from its existing site. It is also ei- pected that a check will be placed on 'stripping such buildings • of their fit- tings. • . Meat aind Drink land. surverer. Thmason looked to the Italian grimInacia, and Ofrom the Spanish gimio. monkey. in ble. • then it may come nce S•old b» Yard " this be 'rellia Latin simia, but it should not be for- FJogliji Forebears Referred to gotten that grimaciers were. formerly a company of artists whose duty was to carve the fantastic heads used in Lite as 1614 • - architectire. such as are frequent -1Y "Meat and drink were sold by the to be, seen in • our gargoyles, and • yard mice upona time in Merrie Eng -1 Randle Cotgrave draws attention 'to land,“remarked t,hat. delirer into an -1 thie fact. But, in Old Saxon we eient eustoms. Dr. Frank Vizetelly. have grima, a war mask, including the "I• n those days yard, meant something visor of a helmet that concealed the • prepared, and it was as common to i warrior's face. Both the 'comic and speak of a yard of beet at it was to, tragic !flasks of the ancients were so ask ter a yard of cloth, Wine, ale and distorted and, ludicrous as to repro - beer were served by the yard in a duce a facial enpression.• glass that stood thir-ty-eight inches "Our Phis comes from the French high and contained two, plate. The annual feast of the Corporation •• ot 'Hanley' in Staffordshire the inita. Prussia as Sprucia as • vis, the..faee, from the -Leda .Yieus.,• from oils°, the ydsage or countenance. The thainfrom ' the ph tothe v is tion rif each member consisted ot his confirmed by the word tilisenny used iLlealty_4_0_135____S elt1SeriOgIlOntl ,aTS and drintting a yard of.wine---that, f:siewiten scholar did pretty much as pint of 'port or sherry -out of a they pleased with the language ;that ' glass one 'yard in length.. •. they used. From the Old English. vis “A word that has a very interest- love, rhave vis-a-visface to face• _ Ing history is spruce with its double!. Brewing Created the Stoker - Blaming (1)smartly or finely. dress -.i "One etymologist says 'that the .eir and (2) 'the fir tree' known as word striker is from the Irish stoca, ,spruce fir. Cin its face, this word a servant boy; a helper; adding that doee not bear any resemblaece to nee final a of otbkr languages often • Prussia,. yet on special occasions it becomes er in English: as in Spanish, " was the custom amorig our •forbears 1 dagge English • dagger. . Bet the to deck ones self out the dress! original • stoker • came from the of other countrieee Men who adripted I Dutch. in which iangeaes it was • the particular dress of Prussia were' a term used in brewing. and it an- . arrayed in a style to which the epi- thet spruce might have been applied • with Perfect propriety. They, were • appareled after the style of Prussia. 4: 4. • pears in dictionaries of Bailey, and Phillips -one looks after fire. and: some other concerns in a birewhouse. It is allied to the Middle Dutch stock. as it was cemmonly, known and; propony from the use by the stoker spoken of in those days, Spruce. The of a stock, or thick Stick in stirring • reason that Prussia should have been ' a fire and arranging the logs. and this • called Spruce instead • of r Fruce is tol is the samel 'word as the Old French • be attributed. to -Alm English fond- estequer. Middle English stokes, to • mess of inital 5, which may hare stab.- A•stock rapier was 'a. stabbing • been drawn; in this case, -from the rapier and so we see that from stab - German rias Preussen. bing to stoking. is but a step'. • Where Puss Came From ";The story of pier is also an in - "The domestic pet . that competes teresting one. and Skeet traces it • nightly with radio songsters is com-, from be Anglo-French pere, a stone. monly known by the popular name It is defined as a mass of stone -work, of puss; In Friar Bacon's "Froprecie' forming a pier or pile of a bridge. it figures as "prisca ' Minsheo spelled Objections have been offered to this it pusee ad the term was used for 4 etymology or Dr. 'Skeet's on the ground • both a enfi and a hare. Werfeweod,1 that in the first place, the piers of • . an English theorizer in etomology. bridges' were, very generally made of support of his pobrit of view -heart's - suggested that the name. was given i wood and not of stone. it wonid not ease, that is. a cure for all woes- . • probably as ate IraitatiOn of the ioned I have to be called simply a pier. . , ——. made by a cat in spitting. , Another,: The Piers eif, a bridge are one thing 28 Nations Sign " ; ere anetThe phraee • .world, recently its Eight shaft 10 Vintiberah's.Ligar • • 1' • - ".• kt. t' 43 - .11• 4 tone .51 lb* 211 ne 222;0 It . a e 41' • - -Jen • hethe t'l:ttee.",htente" "—'4".""d4::::.'1.77... 411.. Lindb.ergh Beacon. most powerful searchlight in upon top of Pahnolive building in Chicago, from where r many miles, eh' Fascist Italy Bans the Illouse And OrderiNew Rules Enforced The house fly, which .is, along with- the Mosquito,. one ot the chief .peets in France and Italy where win- dows ate unscreened, will no tenger find toleraticni in Fascist' Italy. Mus- eolinps government, began its cetn- paign against the fly a year ago, directing attention toward the breed - be attacked in tbe Spring. :being sprayed with a solation molasseth arsenic and . water, The ft:es are readily attracted by the mixture and feeding eagerly upon it die, within an hour. It is essential however, that the ePraning should be kept up re- gularly throughout the Summer. . • ing places and stating tbat'extermina- which is the breediiig season. Hon indoors was by no means au ef- The 3erlese method has beet! sue- fective method of preyentiOn. cessfully used at the. Summer resort of Montecantini, by the, hotels -on this • ' • But thapUblie has not responded to the Fascist order with the whole Lido, and a large tuberculosis sant- hearted enthusiasm expected of it: A tarivan near. Milan - as, well , as the - new order- has now been *Ivo to itoy.al, Palace of San Doe:sore; near. the prefects , of the kingdom •remind- Pisa. Prpfessor 13erlese -haa guar- hag them that the campaign of *re- paiteed keep' a town as large 4as. •vention is to' be ',strictly enforced "Florence completely, free from filea alting the lines outlined Previonely-by. withinea threemiles radius if'his- PAifeseor .Antetilo .Berlese, 'head' of method, bi treatment is rigoronsly the EntoracilogiCal Institute of 'Eton aPpliedt Un.der.the new Fasciat orde, ence, .1er-blesser Beriesesn directions de- mand attention eci the fact that flies deposit their eggs on decaying matter and, if their larvae are batch out, this matter must remain iingsturbed for a period of two weeks. All he- te the- prefecte of Italy the Belles° metbodtis to he pit' into force. e All ;heaps of refuse. alt town, ,e-iltage Or city.. damps, all manure heaps'' farina, as Well as butcher shot's, slaughter beesea and other places ; which flies are likele toeinfest are to fuse that cannot be destroyed should be protected against fly incubation, Ontario entre Mennonite Exodus ,L Of Flour Industry Stopped by Soviet •, The chief centre"of the fleas milling Weary in the Dominion is Ontario. This province with a production value Of A$106,486,000 in 1928, accounts for • more than One-half of the total Pro- duction Of the DOnaiii. ' Quebec, Al- berta, Manitoba and askatchewan are responsible for al ost the entire balance. Among the • four; „Quebec story. of the Mennonite exodus. comes first, with a production of $99; Seale months ago 30,000 Mennonites were colleted in a forest on the out - 338,000; Alberta second, with $91,-. 005;000; Manitoba third,. with $18; skirtsof maskaw• awaiting Perlaissea• . priated.. Their' ; rights granted bj eincea; in which the milliege industry- F - h ' eter t, e Grnat and _Catherine had • figures among the leading Industries, been repudiated. and their geode had are British Calumbia and Prince Ed been dispersed...In spite of difficulties, ward Island, in each of which the piroj and qt rbarmt_inkrtMe_d on fliittio vffitretnsennderlffi900—e- industry during the. wet. was due te nonites reacied the German frontier, Mos_tly on foot. They found shelter the deport . trade, and Canada has sine then :held her own among; the flour exporting countries of the world. • To -day, Canada is exceeded as an ex- porter of flour only by the I; niter: States,. Since the opening of the cen- .where the advance.. guard of their had landed in 1925 and ' tufty, eiport of flour by the Dominion nwv?Tent has multiplied more than tenfold_ In I92S. Separated; they felt they would the fiscal year 1900, exports of wheat flour from Canada amounted to only 768.000 barrels. Ten years later they totalled 3,064,000 barrels. In 1920, they amounted to :8,86000. harrejs, while for the fiscal year 1929 they were '11,406,000 bartels. In the fiscal year which closed inMarcle last there enee dancing the grist j -ear is lost if it was a decline, owing to the general is forgotten that their determination' slackness of the grain trade, to 7.892t- was to repaid united in migrating however. to Canada, • a country rtleich has al, ways-nrored hot-tone:tile to their peeple" 000 hisses.. It as clear. In the meantime the centralized economic system of the .Soviels spread inexorably from the eldest to the coun- One Soviet commissioners. issued the decrees: ' • (li) Enrolmeat of the Mennonite youths in the Red army_ iti inventory an 1-eizere of the seta:teen's crop and stocks of ceeis. 1:1,t Order to sp.2ak Beselen ?eel each in the eettolls (41 Prohibit:On of old aericifeara: me:heteet arid °bile:zed-en to f )llow So- viet ore:d'elzation of agrieaitere. •Soviet Demands Return of • 30,000 MernmOnites Who • Await Chance to''Emi- grate to Canada PariSe-Soyiet Iniesia is writinga* I; other tragic chapter in the pitiable • • 18000; and Saskatchewan fourth,. to.are the terrifory of the Soviet with 515,781,000. The other two pro: 'ePt11("'"et Theirland bad been exprie •, • The epansion 4 Canada's milling 150 for PassP9rtt abelit 6,000 in an abandoned military catup. The. Red Cross kept° them' from starvation. Stubbornit- the set aside ether pro- jects. determined th teach Canada, • be.log: Ther had settled in Thessia 1'1-.1701. • Their numbers had grown to 3,000.- 000, chiefly:.on the Ukraine..and they, had helped zo.makelt one of the rich- est wheat belts in Russia. The tragic , sequence of events In their! eXperi. from comparatiye figeree, that over. placed PI period of years Canada has been ad- vancing as a 'flour exporting country, carries, held her own. 'As evidence of this, it while the United States has scarcely for the panacea of, the Gteeks was the most celebrated herb_panakein, signifying 'all -bean' hence. a remedy for ail diseases, and the author of tiuis bright tho bt advises us to con- sider the 'other name of the plant iil schol1rhowever, pointed out thatand stonee her. the hare. when spoken of by those: a bridge with wooden piers is quite New Peace Pact who used Latin. was . called • lepus. I commeon. ••, • - rr Others intrOdueedthe name careleselel. "The real origin of 'pier 'ie said to. ' ' t . • • into the Norman .Prench, and later* be altogether differeht from this. it Project Assores i-inancial Aid, • epoke a jumble of langoagee. of Which „meant. eriiiroey a landing 'place on Latin formed ' no small part. intro-' the 4ea-zhore or the banks of a river duced the' term Which became a fam- 1 and as seamen Often landed froth their .. Mar word,. .arad Was not long before 'j.thipe-- at night. it' was necessary . to . the first eyllable of the noun le l'iyas I Keep a liteht beraing to guide them 1 .116115 indicated as , the seeed-01.1 Meal-- e 11ed as the French definite aro tto the. Incline; spot. ..mt.., light was .ed a.. close on OC•tober 2ted that tat. tie'e le. and ieens became le vase, .. 1, the per or pyre or ..11;lr. ".• a7pi"er or i, 'League ' was fihntly coned/iced 'that like penalties constitute. the best • to Invaded Nation Geneve -Action taken 'during the present meeting of the .League ,of•Na, Froin thel war- -Only, the theotetiCal student of; lantern by the shoreside ' eurity and ,peace. • w I‘C,111d iaell:ify. the gooseberryl pier or, light at , the end of ar v..tty,1 guarantee of se Two developments painted to tins It'll St Iotia's'' berm yet according;the sense wae extended. to Inelude the, coactusion. The 'first .was the adop- 1.113nribr Victim -41 hit. the which month [has tweirtzy-eikht, days."' May be stated' that. while in 1928 the . , lnlite.i. States for•financiall assistance to inraeed tines in time or war and the seeped ' wrter- 4e3x-070Ortsbacirrf ells' elees titan,. in 191. -hie the rejection by tab assembi, of 843,00 taiircu these eaperts' from 'Ciatteela were 5.- 1 project to. modify- tile Le.ague coven- ant and harmonize.it with the KellOgg year before the war,. greater then in. tire Pact outlawing ear. - . • . .. Twenty-eight nations signed the . ' Wash• the. Sozio. first coneention. offehing fih*ncial assis- when .frai.,4‘inz in plie,:i, .,..nia".,.... 40. tance to invaded countriee., Of these ..:er, cererefiteEuarbospteaennsioconsa.ntriescre.. rniThaemirey. ybriroivereurfinliginAit7or :ieritm.Eisaint'lgott the tesr.et:ent neer. I/lineal-F. Switzerland and Lax. - treilhelept,e.rshoanvensing it . . You wondered whether before yon was. in enaburg. Under the ciconvention the League i a goon state otr health or weetton that will be *hie t utilize immediately' the Person was suffering train tome ekin weapon of economic itselation ovine:el natainon.iyaraded nation; The Leatestao fore, by, washing the soap first, and disease.' Be an the safe side, there- aZanY Sitlar74tnhgen guiardi the health of others hr teeth.' with loans and renewed economic as-liftag the soap after you har,e nosed it. eistance. .• • Many experts exPrseel the cores -len . . nine: Old Gentleman -L -1/e* del you ti Celt this would be sufficient to lose your eye, my paw ;haat" Tramn. stifle wan. -"Letokiin fee week, sir." •• e. — F-ievell-▪ tonthat's the Matter with} Tft.ther.-"Note. PeelOes. :de • to Fox Talbot Geralanee nlents1 landing race. arid ultimatel:r was ap- don and signature of the tonventaan 'err:1meg nail. p------------ as Johanni'de: plied to, all tetructures built over water!, thee are rete ati bout the 'me of he piers_ beereo. that is John's berries, because ; or raieed from in which were called: Storm Wrecks Fury on Trees f :to of So t1,- in,. midsummer. In ! • . L a Getman and in Holland the fruit 1. Tlate Iterte-waale• of old -is the te-11-1 ;1!': 1;Th ittlI;-beere.11.4 and " • of ells .toeiav. h. etometimes saehten • th • as been carelessly. andie.o.- -I, • + 's the F.?ab.,re . In 'Iceland as erre* «el G an- -beere nof a , • ee-berry: rendered krott.hvair The'. name is, ef ur Enelh.4h et-te teed to "eare been given to it front the — ' • ' -* '; Can- 'a Ger- . e- ft.:, • noise that die small animal' Mahe s. whim is enid to resemble the *eight! C.; •,:. es ti:St.Ory of Dupe I in of a horse. , • ; ; et. • has n curilaS "The. tern atietraeus is enot of t"7. It 'r tneaiit a dove or- doubtfuloorigin. •11; ha; been :ratted: „ and ; guile. to the Latin from the GFeek aspareel :• • - . • • • . leter and Littre gos. In 'Mei:Nebel .1.etitri it occurred; ..'• . ' ete ete em as. spare:gee% arei . was friend in Eng f.4!- 1;•:..7.):,,e, ;it the fori. eparegi as early as -• z-t.f - 4 • . the Feat, 101e:te. \ Gee sefellar traces. it lee-reer, •1.e. atpaearete'at the ". eindpipit. Cot- Warlus Once, Horse -Whale 1. 1: 1.. - 2 1.. "r • ; o" ..-,..' , rn .,...p. 1114I a eetee. erttain Ed:tins irate French eeperee. ' o• : f.-- et.• tt. erei eve...les es -the teet. netin„ee en.' spairteite" 1... '. , . . . .. • e -..hi,' a Skede paeoneneeten mere nor- . .• . ' ete te , :.: d -r. toieehil terenene c.T '4110... .1,...Itin, werde the a: ' • .• • - 3. 1 .- :;; . f:. -':- 7:117- ..Ft, -71.; it, neenreete is a Iiilltc (..;:... A ', ...-...• -7...,. The Fretith rase sprineler. a :eau tie.rred .fr tea the , . eel' he 1 -,.... en, •li eel 1.11 1,e ne Latin eetengete, ea ek3::.- et. ( ,.., 1...1... b,17,1,, a " note ere. a ..the espiteent .ed tnete-n tenet 54."':•;:•'..7": " . sir:the nnetanth enteeperieneed ash; ir sent -Mt soiled ter- 'ha icitOt“ c ' • • ,'tt rod. , unfotitioteta. tiornebred, hoe-...prinkling. ineeli:• -= • ee,......1. -1.,4 ee - , . ,. 1,; -'"-.1:. ninle: dolt: needle.; elle ' ie•bune lees'. . . tno . '..lanket and bath neateit te•sah.' - The eftne.elese of ear eel wheel be. hath meet need to r' t: .S,.14 is :traced be Sheet to tbe an.-tteli pen- . Crazy:ire wrote it intot the eeeinei. . C. ' a weed fr-&ni White: we get the' . "I'1.-'.711a(...e. , ie 14 fl... 'weed , ac:••il benet.ftil ides Ot. 'the'. flowec• ef tliotinitt which car simple ;crave.' hare /hoe Cr rem erebrenee. yet emir friendethe. • to elan ttne ot thni erlielerS. tglti not allow Steel in Germanton. grim, Menage, eimte,,,d tot it • ear. that peeee la lee :tented on penacea4 laterise eeloritai. 14 Pa: after tete - ty a elestrica: Aorta that :a )1.44.4. tiV, 41 • 'r • Tragic Experience The Mennonites resolved to quit ate iehospitabie • country en mase. The Soviet. zovernment beg n I* ea sueel of repression , All authorization to leave the t :em- ery has ttow been dennitely reit: -ed. • The Soviet is deneandiliag that the Gen In' an. Government ,depart the E.:vaned •Mennonites, who are encamped at ettiontge There, under the most :heart-. rendieg coedit:ions.' these unfornidate 'people. have for enonthe been wining - for a chnece tO get to Canada Bat tae Soviets are inexorable. ThIey - , • the Me no hes fngitires at Ras:tiara citizens who melee 'answer for insehord e a !ion For 'the Men non it es peurn te) Ilts04:a means the &tendon-. mem of ail 11,q).*:.., • PeaccickFeathers Arrives Taotena. IVaeint-t !avec „shipment of peaceek feathers rell. Chtl.s at, . . hOrs eettntly 00 the lit,, 31arn Thee.caite co"hoei tnnes are nsed iri makiee eta'. nt. ,haperr and other do:oreileat. it fie entsielered nee:tette " fer (hlitese tee handle peat eks .the atthert, ett Man -fan lahorees ate emplot-eden1.tle peri f677111-21:10tet% • . The' testiters e ern coneiented to Nee. • 4. , . G:fe-e-teeh1e ntts, ia y, te' -• r:","0-:" laidely-' Sorr, alt-. these ya t• nfr them an hour FA r." r ittI 'tette:en ina. "do yon etey tictehh"-Vt-ell," wes let tee. - itn,nt. bat 111 re* ter tee' teng in a nay. It make; • het r; y orher troubles! la an *tr. zeitta ex.latittation Paper a elate ef steal! girl- Was asked for the • eppeofte of certain wi-de. In one never, the opeeite. to "pemanent* ea; ii-eas 'Marci'bC." This is male tottintentard of a notice seen In a reeftitle. which de- ' 01.ired:e-4, :the undersigned, do bere- t.• enarantee that any oeroratieut. "7'1' “lehtated by en will last for at Sie to ten ritioniths."7 • o44 =2„ It .,,C4L4, • ,}4 tit