The Seaforth News, 1929-08-01, Page 2� }ennearance,.lu leedling Govort{melhil
Ihvic - ad Iorgana prnetleel0Y assures their
w �h� truth, it Means that the Government
s We'Get In Tan
Spirit of Retaliation Growing
in Canada Against U.S.
Attitude in Trade
Treaties
SOLID CANADA
Ottawa•_rkel•e is a general -feel-
ing here, backed by important state-
oleststhat some definite made privately' in iretaliatoing lry
tariff measures will be promulgated
by the Federal Government it the Uni-
ted States puts into torce its pro,
posed increased rates against Ocue
adieu products,
The Goveranlent's inteutlori will
teat be huowa, probably, until the
House re -opens.
Action,' however, will he governed
to:'a great extort, by the trend of
'events betwe0n now And next Febru-
ary.
It is' practically certain that
Premier Khig's offensive will consist
of a very substantial Merriam in the
I3ritislt preference in an effort to
make the Motherland the beneficiary
for the. lost markets in the United
States.
In fact, so far will this British pre-
ference extend that it might be term-
ed a measure of free trade.
Direct increases in the general
this p
i
also accompany
Y
11 a
•
tariff F
t
a
n
and it is quite within the bounds of
probability that certain duties will
be heightened against the United
States, ditties which. will result to an
ears
immediate outcry from big 11n
aft.
interests in that country. these
The Cabinet is discuseing
plans in reseonse to demands from
all parts of the country for some
show of retaliatory action,
The (Government, furthermore, 1s
watching closely the action at Wash,
ory
Board
isggiving the wholee s issue its closest
scrutiny.
Canadian Sentiment Aroused
It these reports are true and their
la bowing before an overWllolmtl.g"
Cauadtats sentiment in laver of cone•
tern -action against the tacit aottvitio@.
of Washington.
The Prone Minister undoubtedly
geroeives that all over tee country
there le a feeling brat all is not well
in regard to the oountry'o fiscal Polley
and that, above . all, the new 11,S.
tariff measures cell for a Polley 10
national self-respect and self-interest.
Ghosts of 11'01, too, hover over Ilio
situatton• Then Laurier and I'leld-
ing were urged to accoutnauy their
reelproolty policy with e sustautial
increase in the British preterenee and
failure to do this undoubtedly added
to the Liberal (Master of that time,
There he no doubt that lack of de-
finite action by the Government"' will
mean a milieus setback to their
Prestige throughout the country.
There is no strong anti -commercial
fooling in the Aonziulou, but there is
and alwaYs fres . been, au extreme
sensitiveuese to any Policy of greed
and big -brother Pomposity on the part
of Canada's nearest neighbor.
Not a few political parties'; in 111e
past have been shipwrecked on simi-
lar lines and the situation calls for
all the adroit Political sagacity with
whioh Mr. Ktug .is endowed,
Canadians are not likely to en-
thuge over the Premier's visit to
WashingtonosyacDonald confer to witand Itt. Hon.
President
RarusaY
Hoover on navy disarmament,
They recall that the ooimtre which
manatee high sounding. phrases of
good -will makes Britain carry two•
thirds of the whole cost of the War,
slut takes millions out of the pockets
still fur-
ther
ore
e by
Canadian 1
had P
04 the Ca
raising a tariff wall already as
high as Haman's gallows.
We are told that eventually science
will give us a uew religion. Most of
the religions we have seem to be 00
little used they must be as good as
new.
Many more men slake money out of
the stock market than in it,
Looks Like An Oil Well Fire
JAPANESE VOLCANO, IN ERUPTION, KILLS THIRTY
Mount IComagatake, Island of Hokkaido, in a two-day eruption, obliter-
ated two villages and killed thirty inhabitants with its streams of molten
lava and earthquakes, ___•�.._
little while before takenen jectton
of camphor. that ought to have betrayal us. T1
It was about •1 a'clocic when we decisive moment was approaching.
came into collision with the first of I "A strong current against us did
the obstructions of the rola deteuceg, not leave a Possibility of getting be-
which were formed of countless crap-
aPart, heath the hull of the big battoahip
ter past four. She
THIS IS THE GREAT SOURCE OF EUROPE'S UNEASINESSfamiliar with 'Oa -
00,
One of rare photographs smuggled out of Rusdia, thawing factory` Maude bee
omiag us0, whioh 18 causing uneasiness in Europe.
her secret. But the enemy sub-
marine, although It passed, near,
gave no sign of having detected our
Presence.
huge
my
a stoppedug
ear waywasby
" cou r
s
dila -
11s P
Ince 1
blocks ot cement, I went forward It was 2ti minutes s
alone to investigate, and found I Aearan00..ships
could get well under the embank- "Meanwhile aboard the enemy Away
mast. So we steered the tiny sub- the morning call was sounding.
marine beneath it. on the "1100180n the first dawn was
"To ascertain our exact position I beginuiug to show in the sky and the
went forward, swimming alongside formidable lines of the ports de -
the face of the rock. When I got to fences began to take form and shape,
the edge of the embankment I beard It was Possible to make out aboard
above my head a sudden cough. I the Viribus 'Cattle the movements of
stopped. her brew.
'Not more than a few feet above 'Suddenly under the shadow of the
me was a man. He was almost battleship I made out a bottle that
bound to see me. I set my head was floating and swaying: That was
swaying imitating the oscillations of 011y partner Rosettt.
a iloatiug bottle, L Discovered
Of grief, Theu a slowly sank frotu � cDa it
Mir eight, �) �Sl
MAW/ Deliverance owly
"Otic Ut 1L bore us to wharf with-
in the port. Hatt naked and still,
dl'lppiug we Were, tekon to the boot -.Moderate Terms For Speech
tat spilt, I-lapsberg.My heeds were Fromm; Throne Are view
numbed. MY feet were frozen. My ed With Altitude of
river seamed Mfrs, not only front the Watchful Waiting
congestion of my blood but from a�w
WOW dealt . me shortly before by a " TIME WILL T1E1.,.L.
sailor ae 1 was getting ashore,
"There ensued gouge day$ of melan-
choly meditation for ;as, London That all parties aro toady
"There were 000aslons upon width.for a ranting poll inthearitish poli,
our execution seemed certain, Pre -it Ileal game is indicatedo both
by set.
he
paratlons were all completed for the 1 Labor government's pro ra Se on set
purpose by a squad of eight 'sollders forth in the ing'o ep
ay,
armed with guns and revolvers ,cud and ' its and reception
press, the otheretwo
lead by an o(iieer, ' - parties
"Five days later our own ,fleet ar• which his I,abon advisers prepared for
rived 'iu trimiihett. Pole. ` It was our this King, .was studiously moderate,
deliverance"! Newspapers of all shades of opinion
Ltonteuant Paolucci'e amazing story recognize it es such. At the salvo
ends at this poiat, Shortly after- time they de trot lose en opportunity '
werde'tile Armtstiee was signed and to point out that within many of Pre:
the elating allventurara returned to 'mier' MaeDonald's soothing Phrases:.
V i there lurk the possibilities of decided'
ask
aged to get control of her agate andlsplaslt of bodies as mon leaped from
g rho decks to the water.
ceeded in getting her dir• , to Eeossett's question, the Tientsin the famineeis their rchildrenettllines which already have been approve-
3lnahiy. sue In replyied by both the other parties. The
oted `towards Ilio yiribus Unitie. i aids `You may look out 100 Parents daretrnots tor fear they will , thous with reference to
e earl of Captain s ime iu run- out 011 the s , n, Party's intentions as no sign Co be s We lost not I 1 of actually este trades qts utes,aet
There v< I ourselves, stolen and sod a al of the p
partner, and I looked at my watch wing to the bridge and paining in the be rho . ps
I t dot• Failure of the sPs'!ng crop and rho to measure outlawing' generela strilcsa •
oft a0,
Call�raaballkna end
Famine lt: China.
action,
Although "The London Times"
thinks members of Parliament "are
humanly sure of 'a quiet life until
the House rises' at the, end of the
month," :`and "The Daily Telegraph"
declares "this surely is not a socialist
Icing's speech,' other journals, both
Conservative and Liberal, comment in.
effect that proof et Mr. alta0Donald's
gogd intentions will lie in the legisla-
tion in whioh,they are ultimately em^
bodied, -
LOOS]? PUIBASING EMPLOYED
Labor's preparatioOls' for tackling
the unemployment problem follow
Boston Reports of apalliag condi-
tions caused by- famines in the,
Sheus!, 'Suiguan, Kansu, Holten, Tele
sten and Tientsni districts of China
received
bytate Cofnmis-
havee
bee
sionere for Foreign Missions. Condi-
tions are. se terrible, the missionaries
report, that several cases of aanul-
baliam have been authenticated.
0n1y:a few hundred miles west of
n
th s
ms out
Or Pta
f•C10
man which. P.
confusion of hu extreme dryness wh c and restricting trade p g
ted the sea; to planting of crops for the tall la south- rives) remain vague union almost oga-
"With .sow strokes managed
et away from the big fillip. Not con Shansi means that there .will e might be done
g tattoo cif did no food grown to that area until the tstno "remedying theRsituatiothout n creat-
antii we were some qhs Were seized of 1930. I d by "res edyi
a ,launch' appear. We w The People are dying by Likewise "reorganization of the cos
and carried again aboard.
"Time passed until it occurred:, to
some ot the "crew that since nothing
had blown up they 'had been trick -
Moment of Fear
"I was daunted by the certainty
that a bullet from a gun breaking the
glass would leave its trace 02 red
along the surface of the sea—not thel
red of the wine, but the red out o4
my veins.
"Instead of that I heard the fall ot
reoeeding footsteps.
"At last I reached the other ob-
straction saving to shield the port.
It was mode of two files of long
beams, set parallel to the entrance
into the port and separated by ,other
transverse beams.
"Pointed steel rods, turned outward from the motor -boat. 'Italian 011100rs.
from the harbor, bristled at intervals! "Tile a:nstver had an astonishing
here and there. Upon some of them efEeet, Thor etv of the boat stared
were fixed great tin cans to give at us as !f `vee were madmen. That,
warning with • their noise in case an hof ever, did not prevent them from
attempt was made to force a pas• seizing us with. all speed,
sage. "Imagine our horror when we Were
Into the Harbor taken aboard the dreadnought under
"Satisfied with what I had seen, I which we had laid tpe timeufuse tor -
she
rds towards our little pato. In very
went backwards
craft and pushed forward into the would blow uta
harbor. Wo knew then that it would. "The marines crowded about
us
be impossible to return. asking countless questlone. Who
"There were enemy ships at auchor were we? Where . had we sprung
in the port of Pole. Among them from down below? What were we
was the great Dreadnought, Minibus doing there?
Unitis. We made for it ata speed crews' Terror
spring the bun-
dreds and thous5ntls. The situation
will grow worse until crops are har-
vested.
e 1
industry" gives ample scope for any-
thing that might be contemplated. Per-
haps earlier than had been generally
anticipated it, will _become evident
whether the Labor government intends
to consolidate its tent re of office by
confining itself to more or less non-
contentious legislation.
"No sooner had we greeted each.
other than a shout rang' out from the
deck of the battleship. Wo were dis-
covered. The next moment a motor-
boat Heade for us. .
"Faithful to our word of honor,
and certain sof t•ecsiving a volley at
any moment we sot to work to de-
stroy the submarine. Rosati open-
ed the immersion valve, I having
charged the second torpedo set it off.
"It dived and ended up in a small
inlet tvbene it exploded and sank the
big Transatlantic 'steamer Wien.
" 'Wer de?' the challenge came
A Splendid Feat
Of the Great War
f h Ad -
A Thrilling Yarn o t e
ventures of Two Italian
Naval- Officers at Pola
As Told in the Mont-
real Standard
We are able to reveal the details of
d as one of the
regards
what
must
ty metal ayliuders, five
and held in position by steal cable
Met a Submarine.
.We stopped the motor and be
to glide with the aid_ of our
movements along the' lines of
dere until we came to a break,
t did not strike us as
s until about a quer
was not many feet off from us now,
silent, vast, grim as a fortress.
grin "There had been an agreement be -
hand
cYlin-
but
fav
be
w
t
personal
b
greatest 1 "Wo
exploits of the
War, ora e• were about to get away when
It tells how two men, risking al- my comrade, without a word, grasp-'
most unbelievable pails, made thom-; ad my arm, Xie Pointed to the huge
selves into a human torpedo aid, mass et a submarine quita close and
sank a huge enemY warship in her'obviously leaking right tor us.
own of guarded
shadow ofy many devices ) ,1 intheClbe dlepthatutsetloffd to
e
th
grape
shore batteries. torpedo. This would have des re r
The tiny submarine with ire crew ed at once our little submarine and
featt was o which
the the invent on ttwo nava
oilcers.
In the craft there was just room
enough for the mechanism; a torpedo
and two men. It was known officially
as "Tice Leech."
Both men. were immersed save for
their heads, which Were disguised
witb coverings made to look like
empty bottles.
The Two Heroes
The two men who carried out this
daring enterprise were MaterRaf-
faele Rosetta and Lieut, Paoiucci, of
the Italian Navy, Their orders were
to penetrate the enemy's powerful
base at Pole at the Head of the Adri-
atic
driatic and do what damage they could,
They and their craft set out from
Venice, and at a given point at sea
the human torpedo, with its "crew,"
war The launched
of whatfioll wed istold
as 10110W0 by Lieutenant ream!:
All around us and above tie was
Cho darkness of night" absolutely
silent, says Paolncci, The engineer
had charge of the 0104tric motor
which' drove the craft. Ile acceler-
ated, and the first tech of waves
caught nee in tate Paco and etdowa
sensal
my neck and hreest, I g°ta
Lim of attire petit as if I had 'only a'
tweenus as to which one was to have
the glory of fixing the torpedo to the
hull of the battleship. I had been
tui nottmj moments
y,dr ve Alp wiper o ni
chosen but my comrade all at o ee
"Hoot Mon We're Wee Bootleggers"
THE ROYAL AND ANCIENT ORDER OF THE BOOT
Here are aim West Highland terriers, who
find the inside of a top boot
quite comfortab e w .- �- a
ed ,but I knew that the fatal on s� British Flotilla
ent'would. come at halt -Pant aix.
two minutes to got
LEFT WING STARTS TROUBLE.
Left Wing Laborites already have
begun to male. trouble for the Pre-
nier by tabling the amendment to the
King's speech which in effect, calls for
"Socialism in our time" and which
constitutes a virtual vote of censure
.on the government.
Of course; neither this amendment
nor life it is expected even by
their proposers to be adopted. But
from the numbers of his nominal fol-
lowers, who vote for similar motions,
Mr. MacDonald will be able to gauge
the extent to which he will have to
fail back on mieasures sure of Liberal
or Conservative support. 'Coincident-
ally, from his method of dealing' with
his "wild then," the Premier will to
some exten either. enlist or forfeit the
support of other parties.
TO GO. SLOW ON NAT! CUT.
References to foreign policy in the
King's speech were as vague as those
dealing with domestic affairs. Al-
though considerable optimism was
shown in the references to naval dis-
armament, it has been observed with
gratification by diplomats who have
this subject very much at heart that
Premier MacDonald evidently does not
intend to rush matters for the sake of
obtaining a problematic success of
"agreement in principle," but that he
is willing to fall in with President
Hoover's idea of snaking haste slowly.
Finally, that Mr. MacDonald in-
tends to continue the effort made :by
the Conservative government of hear-
t
11ile posing for a p _...-m ^- e ---e e, ... , weds
eze.
"By this time the commander or "Su.w� •,.
the Viribus Unitis had been aroused bridge of the great battleship trene
and .told of our mysterious arrival bled Objects on board began to
aboard his ,ship, We were talteu sway, A heavy bellow seemed to
Into his presence. issue from the boweleot the sea
4 om
"'Captain!' said Iiosetti. Your
a lofty column of water shot 1.11) trope
fai as
danger. hold and fell in thundering London—T110 admiralty has an-ingathe
in foreign empire
son relation sisbshown
c, is in great g the thedecks.
't f the sub,-�¢
mended.
The Blow Falls.
we watched the
Finds L'.'cation of
Lost Subm nine
Heavy Weather Hinders Re-
lief Crews Searching for
Trapped Sailors
rw
'Vtrizat danger" the captain do- areata anon ttie bridges anti .pounced that the Desi ton o
'Are ou Jesting?'
n't tell mita pail, could be
cabe
t
"1 fact at'
• t plates,
dreadnought
y e speech that the do-
minions will be consulted before any-
thing definite is done with regard to
the resumption of normal . relations
with Russia.
Prince of Wales
decided to make the trip himself as Each For Himself
his greater experience
i enabled 111m "The captain was at last broght to
forsee the technical difiicultis he truth. He daelied outside his
Co see t
Ger-
see
in G
roar
themselves.r tti
thi
•eseur
rhes d
i hty 4�e
m n
NhiCit g Cahill,
Lost His Comrade man, `The Italians have put a bomb
"Every
death rattle. The
din of riven and ren
shriek of hinges torn apart, the road
of inrushing waters—it vias a terrible to the abetter of Milford Haven,
speotaole.
"As the great vessel turned over Pembroke, Wales—An impreeeive
we saw the captain clamber over the
gigantic back—if such it .may �0 most elabof orate the British u�NM'
plate nI tete- marine H-17, which went down after 1 ed to the Kmg sasoareful y-announ -
y t . but in a heard in a a collision with
another underseas
boat, the L-12 had been buoyed, but
that bad weather had forced the sa-
e fiat to withdraw temporarilY
termed—of Ibe ship. He got tote could muster --was placed in position.
Little by little
owiards the bat he was un Gangsder roE salines, s, haft u¢keld shoed summit. There he stood upight mo- 1 in the treats to discover the where
swimming cautiously
stairways 'yelling. We heard the tionless as if he were a monument' abouts of the sunken 11-47.
tleship, the current swept me away I madly along the bridges or thronged Divers aboard a diving,. ship were
with my tiny craft. At -r'- I than i the s--'"" Y y ... ___.-. ready o descend and attempt to
-- -^ " -" "" fasten tackle to the boat, despite the
groat depth of 270 feet as soon as
her position was ascertained.
For mitts -sweepers, au anti-sub-
marine flotilla of five vessels, and
sgF destroyers searched the area,
A Peculiar New Type of Plane Makes Its American Debut
Vis'•.......- TIGI.... ,. .
STRANGE AIRCRAFT MAKES 8UOo>=SBUL F'L{GH`T
i 2 of ilia to Bolling Plaid, Washhlgt0h, by Harold V. Pitcairn, lands safely otter Its initial
The autogyro, built In l7ngland, anti flown from Plt lad A "
American flight.
Hears Plans
For War -Blinded
Delegates to Conference for.
• Sightless Guests at
York House
London, -The Prince of Wales re-
ceived five delegates from the Emilio
en es
1 while the lilting lighters made samba Conference f -or the Blin no
1 The Admiralty ha0 revised its list `held at nc 1York stan''sei this week. t hie
of casualties to 24. -i
London dispatches said that rho he
visitors included Captain Edwin
collision had been made the occasion Baker,: chief secretary of the Canadian
for a freshet appeal far abolition of National Institute for the Blind. In
the submarine by Commander J. M. his tulle with the delegates the Prince
Kenworthy. In an arttole in the showed the greatest interest in the
Daily Sketch, he contended that des -1 scheme for`tho well-being of those
CC 1
pile all the lessons of pass years, and
improvements in 'underwater naviga-
tion, the submersible remained a
highly dangerous vessel to the crew,
either in peaoeeor in war, . He Said
it was time to make an effort to
abolish the dengerous craft by inter-
national 'agreement.
—..,.-_-,se_.—...—
Sinai. Mary Was going to haveher dental parlors?" asks a writbl It.
picture. Laken for the firer, time, Her
.,iindecl pt' the 1050 and now scattered
in Canada and throughout the empire.
The delegates were introduced by
Lady Arthur Pearson aid were ac-
companied by Captain. Ian Fraser,
chairman of St. bunetal's,
The Empire Conference continuos
until July 12.
"Why do dentists call their places
might shock their patients undully
coma,
'
r
uiothol was gohtg on with some if they called them drawing r
10(011(14 while site was to 50100 later Isle—'Zloty aliout Yoti and me got
with Ilan father. As 5501 1110t1t00 ,Was I ting marriocl?'+ She—r 1 0, i thiulc l'll
g6tag• out the dear, Mary caliecpictuv -
n1f. plotters clot t. Piave 1117 picture `,make 10y Present hnObatld (o for' an,
taken till I got there." 1 (Alta year,"