HE OSE A DAILY ~[FALSEHO0) ' used through Bumanity's growins¥ SIX HOURS IS ALL etuioncd to Bu sleep, the writes" { argues, it would have a profound Di Chi- China, and has as her sisters, M :Chiang Kai-Shek, and H. a FOOD OF LOYE, A fic minds Ap toprnB TRUTH IS HARSH The best general line of defense agawnst -men of Hickman's type! 'wrote letters describing themselves either as the "lox or as one of hie 70 REFRESH ONE of Preparation "During the first 20 years of lifd man ean accomplish relatively lite SLEEP NEEDED, fries = 5 |8oong, who for a brief period was lies in speedy and certain appre-| accomplices. The high suggesti- tle, for this is the period of prepa. | Bi i, anne LSE nt Ba Bld] oer, iin = ii | ie f Boron of hi rte 2 rr Boe fe rt ' Sweethearts a person plans a crime, |torious, the newspapers play | Professor : A a a ' Test a DI a pam | M Truth if They Want |?2¢ kaovs that it is almost iner- 'apon that suggestibility. Sleep T: Says 8-Hour are relatively wnirodusiive. . OF "York in Craft Setied, itaole that shortly after its com-| A plan that is aimed specitically eep Theory Is Erron- oni y Pron py og: Wo. +20:8um Wilk: probe to Stay in Love mission he will be behind the pris- [at men of the Hickman type is that| @0uS and Is Bad Habit [yy most men in steep and a ably enjoy the respite which will -- on bars, he ig inclined to abandon advanced a few weeks ago by Gov- ---- tive recreation, leaving not quite 14 time somes apetn, wat 'roytted BELIEVE IN THE BEST [the project. This has been proved eruor Alfred E. Smith, of New|rq a7 ppEDTAN MYTH Sor of life for productive activity, .t % again, q Shey Io -- by the experience of England, in York. By limiting' the power of a If by building up new habits, or by. : @ : yA els eniang aa Party | Between Lovers the Sim which country criminal procedure. trial judge to the single decision -- the discovery of some new means - Promoters Vessel, on Cabinet. 1a the methine (hare "|operates swiftly and surely, and [Of Whether an accused person is|Qphowter P iod Increases Whereby amount of alesp yi Principle of Catamaran- will presumably be a new effort to plest Question May which has one of the lowest crime Innocent or gullty under the law, oT B Ok honk Joruus fan bo Sut do consolidate the unist wing Mean an Evasion rates in the world. It has been and by placing the power of deter- Man's Productiveness a night, a Ye u su ours teh will be able to travel in al! weather as an airplane eannot, "Hometime in April, it is hoped, || this new adventure In quick trane- portation wilt be undertaken The craft will leave at dawn one day from Cherbourg and will ente; New York Harbor two and a half days later, according to the plans. 'Storms will not affect it, its de- piri a 1g ou pd Rey x po gs iho nu Cue ination ais of "honest lovers" Because there |if they would cease picturing crim-|this state that brought about pass- | H. L. Hollingworth, Columbia, Uni- | drawn from his experiments. any knots, In a calm ft ia ex- [ried the great leaders of modern {same thing. is no such thing. Lovers are crude- [inals as heroes and supermen. It|age of our Indeterminate sentence | versity psychologist, as well as oth-| He concludes that deep alesp, pected to make seventy, ly, fundamentally, transparenti¥|iy worthy of note that Hickman at|law, under which the maximum |ers, are expressed by Walter Ra-|Which he considers the best and There will be aix men aboard. They will have a sending and re- oelving wireless installation, They will carry enough food for ten days, and as they will follnw the steam- ohip lanes, they will be in no dane ger of being lost. Their ship will not sink whatever happens, it is declared, © Jf the first trip fis successful, those who are backing the project plan to bulld at once a larger ship of the same pattern which will car. 7200 people and can he ured regu~ larly for the quick transport of mail, Passengers may demand more comfort and more space; but it Is believed these ships will become the forerunners of a new Atlautie fleet of mail carriers and will be es pecially useful as dispatch hoats ie test step-mother, which has been active in Community circles ment with the successors of Mess: ra, Wu and Sun. By now his un. trustworthiness is so well recog- nized that he is not so welcome old adage can be readily adapted, that the Nationalists fear Feng though he come bearing gifts, The less operator, also experienced in transatiantic sailing. In some ways, this experiment can be considered the French ship builders' reply to Charles A. Lind. berg's exploit, He crossed the At- lautic In thirty-three hours above the waters, On the surface, the ad: venturers In the new craft expect to take sixty hours, but they claim that they will be able to travel in weather that would wreck an air plane and will not be at the mercy of engine trouble, FIERCE LIGHT THAT BEATS UPON THRONE BELIEVES FIRMLY IN THE OLD IDRAL OF MARRIED STATE Miss Royden Discusses Com- panionate Scheme; Disil- illusioned Women BOSTON, Jan, 17.~Woman's discovery that mau does not take marriage seriousiy 1s responaible for the compauionate marriage idea, in th. oninlon of Miss A Maude Roydcen, English teacher i*nd authoress, LONDON, Jan, 17--Helen Rose a the author of this unique article must be entirely false to them:elves. For what you say as a lover must be entirely different from what you say to the word at large. The lle to shield a lady is nothing to the lie to please a lady, either in mag- nitude or in frequency. People talk of "faithful lovers," "false lovers," 'true lovers' and "great lovers," but they never speak dishonest, All codes are topsy-turvev, al rules are up-side-down, If a man's sister happens to wear a hideous frock he can easily tell ner exastly what she looks like without endan- gering his life's happiness; hat it his fiancee wears the same frock he will have to tell a thousand fibs before she is satisfied. A brother may be told that his feet are large, but a lover never, Between lovers the simpliest quee- ton may need an evasion. Better that he perjure himeelf a hundred times than confess that he propnsec to Mo'ly six months before he pro- posed to her, Better that she should tell a hundred fibs ti an tell him that Jack still squeezes her hand, The s'mplest question that Is met demonstrated by an obverse logic in the United States, which is mo- torious for the slowness and inef- thefts he might have been deterred from committing the Parker mur- der, or his psychopathic nature might have been detected, with the probable result that he would have been permanently incarcerated. Newspapers could do their part toward discouraging crime, partie- ularly on the part of psychopaths, tirst tried to live up to the wholly fictitious character that the daily 'press: had given him, It Is also to be observed that a score of psycho paths, inflamed by lurid newspap- er accounts of Hickman's activities mining the length of sentence In the hands of a board composed of psychiatrists, penologists, lawyers, As matters now stand in New York State, according to Lewis B Lawes, the warden of Sing Sing prison, who heartily approves Mr Smith's proposal, there is no uni- formity in the sentencing of erim- inals, Some judges are invariably lenient, and others iuvariably sev- ere. It was a similar condition in and m'nimum sentences for various crimes are f'xed by the Legislature, and under which the decision as to what part of the sentence 'a prison- er must serve rests with the State Board of Prison Control, they participate in the benefits but they endeavor to fill it ia as cun nighly and meagrely as they can. Now, a'l this deceit is got really 80 bad as it seems. It is all done quite honestly for the other's sake. Many a confession which it would have been the greatest relief to share is withheld for fear of giving pain, Very often the past !s a mat- ter of deep regret and is hidden from a sense of shame and unworth- iness, 'RADIO VISION POSSIBILITIES BEING SOUGHT Certain Technical Difficulties Holding Un Labora- tory Work by Full Quarter NEW YORK, Jan. 17.--The the- | crease this period of possible \ ductiveness one-fourth." . Some people sleep "fast," ne eral physician-scientists. Not only is the theory erroneous, but it is merely a bad habit, cutting down productive activity and casting away "latent powers" that could effect the entire future of the world, ac. cording to Dr. F. A, Moss, Profes-\ sor of Applied Psychology at George Washington University, Dr. Moss' Ideas, with those of Dr, leigh in the current issue of The Outlook, If six hours' sleep at night were taken as a maximum in+ stead of eight, Dr. Moss declares, the period of man's possible produc tiveness would be increased hy a full quarter, This is reckoned by taking the year's between twenty and sixty as a man's "productive period." "Alfredian Myth" The real beginning of the Alfre- dian "myth," that one-third of a man's life should be devoted to sleep, probably was far earlier than Alfred's time in human history, Mr. Raleigh says. [It begun, he hellev- es, in primitive areas, when man's only light was that of the sun and perhaps a rush-light, or tallow tip somewhat later, There was noth- ing to sit up for. PARIS, Jan. 17. There ls naw the Nationalist cause when this |in the Sunday Pictorial: ficlency of its criminal procedure, Peychologists and representatives o..'y.oi oignt hours' slee "slow," it 1s pointed out. A meu 3 iinghiod Cherbour hich seemer to be useful to him, is| Obviously lovers tannot speak the |and Which has the highest crime Of the lay public, the Governor ai 0 a wight asthenie may sleep for 13 hon : York, it is asserted, in pA Again Jeparted to be active, Should | truth, otherwise there would be no rate of any civilized land. Had Would Institute' a system under (grown Anglo-Saxon myth coming |2"3 Wake just as exhausted as wh oe snrtacs of the water. and he achieve military successes he lovers. . Hickman been apprehended in one |Which the punishment fitted the down from the dim times of Alfred | Io, "ent to bed. Many persons of} , * su : may enter into a working agree- | Lovers, to be true to each other, [of his robberies or motor car |eriminal as well as the crime, the Great, in the opinion of sev- | the Napoleon and Edison type. oa] ' the other hand, have sleep ment within a very few huura. The! * way to cut down man's sleepin time, Dr, Moss believes, 1s {0 spee'. up his "sleeping apparatus." ' Sleep Becomes Lighter | In this branch of the subject Dr, H. M. Johnson, of Pittsburgh, cone tributes some Interesting facts most restorative, comes almost {m= mediately upon going to bed, an that sleep tends to become lighter up until the hours of waking, "Our state of minds has a greas deal to do with the habit of sleep," the author .continues, "If we dao, not get our full eight hours at night! we are all too ready to blame every ill on lack of sleep. Much of the tired feeling subsequent to going a night without our full quot: o sleep exists only in the mind, We think we ought to feel fatiguedy Consequently we do feel fatigued." 1 SEA PUNISHES SLAYER, BELIER, he yd 55.00 ola, with an hon And the both t 5 ol est answer fs often y are both so eager to { The ship, which is now being Wiarton Paper Comments on » Hin Boyds, whose lectur«s enoush to explode the mine nia) live up to the standard that has i a SPagitions Raving eledyed to- : | pul at yy Just outeige Some Unenviable Things BR Dees lite od in solo Siti ers simply dare mot afford to be|been set them, How can anyine a ASHINGION, Jan, 11-4 Has i HY ry. ay Risin Did Captain, Once Sentenced to during ' i " expect them to shine In their true ed progress has been - ny 4 Seine during March, resembles In Agnes Has to Bear comjanionate mariage in en in. [Jonest They mav pretend that they pis fill colqrs are often cont manths toward a radio vision | long sleep becomes "only 1 had hab- Hang, May Be Lost in shape two long cigars with a bridge ---- {teview after delivering an address > 80 ugly? recelver acceptable to the public, |it." So the author quotes Thomas chooner The Wiarton Canadian Echo here yesterday, of telling each other al! ahnnt them- A. Edison in substantiatinu of Dr. anisms that pring them refresh , between them, in which are placed Could anyone expeet 8 man wh -n and with the many hands and minds 2 , writes thusly on the disadvantages, +] myself, am distinctly old- selves, But do they? Bless me, 4 ' : sued th b'am.[ con- | Hollingworth's thesis, Like many . J the engine room. issleds Soom and of being famous: 'tashioned," "she sald, : no! 'They are not humaa beings. | he knows his lady thinks him brave, Rew en&nxct oa Lie FIORE TONE Go hag habits, it is called *'use- PORTLAND. Malue, Jan. 19.= crew's accommodation space Each cigar-shaped floater is slightly more than sixty feet long and nine feet wide, Agnes Macphail was in town last week. I don't know whether I'd care to be in her shoes (literaily "Perhaps 'oecause I um not married, I believe that marriage should be permanent and monogamous, They are lovers. If a lover once started making what is called "a clean breast," he would soon find that bosom empty. clever and chivalrous, to say "I am a perfect mug at bus'ness. I jam afraid of mad bulls, and 've a rotten temper?" fidently helieve its eomnletion 's the work of but a few months more." Th's prediction by C. Francis less," too, since the mere switching of a light drives away the dark nf which we need no longer he afraid, After three decades of wait'ng, the sea has claimed its own, In paye ment for what has been termed one of the most brutal murders 'n hise ing of course. or not, For n+; « ; d : In the middle are placed guso- °POak 1 do not think this discussion |g, uld 3 ot Could any girl who is considered | Jenkins. Inventor of the mot'on- (8s Our ancestors were. tory, veteran mariners said today line storage tanks, which will cay. ARSE, 44 she pascen, our WATS: vn companionate marriage is a She could ot Ply Sulntond most exquisite creature whe was | pletire projection machina and| A remarkable series of experi: | when they learned that the third ¥y about five toms of fuel, 'The two ends of the floaters will be fil'ed office that "there's Agnes Macphail" Instantly, every man and woman phase, but it is more widespread 'than just a passing phase, loved anyone better or before her- self, It would be too monstrous ever made confess that she is luzy iva'n and extravagant? means for serd'ng photograp is and motion pictures by radio, is prob. ments by Dr, Moss, Dr, H. M, John- son, head of the Simmona Founda- day had passed with nn word from Captain Thomas M, Bram and the 1 with kapok, such as is used for "You see, women have become | No. Lovers must he 'overs, |ebly the most far-reaching of the tion for the Study of Sievp at the | gonnoner Alvena, ; atufting 1ifebuoys, so that tha float: p-, gh iy By I disillusioned on man's attitude to- It he nite Rulon ie 8 18W RIED 10 | ere will be plenty of time for|many prophecies whieh radin.is ex-| Mellon Institution, Pittsburg. and | "mpat Captain Bram, master of the ' ers will not sink even if perforated. | s1o" wers Rudolph Valentino, the. Ward marriage. They are realising, = °° end. of it. As for the fair! them to find out all about each | Pected to fulfill in 1928, by others, is reported to bear out | gonr.masted schooner which sent - The tank space will be furnished with an electric pump and ordinary hand pumps, 'The cabin slung between the two floaters will be about ten feet wide and twenty-seven feet long, It will be entirely enclosed, so that the | Barnum's circus, Prince of Wales, or the whole of elephants, wild animals, clowns and brass band, all rolled up in one, I don't know whether they were disapponited or not, any way, all they saw was A well dressed, fine looking, modest for the Tirst time that man does not take it a bit seriously, It never thas been a monogamous program for him, "And 80 now the women are say- ing: "Well, hang it all, why should 1 take .it seriously? Men don't, | ship can drive on its way without' personage, whose claim to distine-|cam be just as inconsistant in this danger through big waves if it en- counters them, A 650 horsepower, eighteen eylin- | tion is that of being Canada's only woman M, P, A little later, I was in an office matter as a man, Why should it be #0 biniing for me? Do I not 'give up so much more for it than der l.orraine-Dietrich engine will across the road when she passed 'a man?" supl'y the motive power, gine will be placed just behind tne captain's bridge In the front part of the cabin, with the propeller This en- again, and I called Jim's attention to the fact. He jumped to the front window as quick as lightning to see the sights, with the remark, BRITAIN WILL NOT one, if she told him a quarter of what has been told her he would either throw himself in fron: «f a train or throw her, It is incredible how much lov- ers can swal"ow. There is i.0 praise, no flattery, mo ahsurd halle? that they cannot believe. They wart to believe in the hest for their owa sakes, which they do, and it Is this that makes lovers for the time so ridiculously happy, They ask each other all corts of honest guestions, but they would hate an honest answer. It's like other later on, Only It will nave been a gradual! and ecomurrativery painless process." The gilt wil. on- ly have come off the gingerbrsad in flakes. Only one petal vil' fall from the rose at a time. Also by that time, they will have ceased 'o he lovers, Honesty may be the best policy in life, but not in love. The hon. est lover is a cruel, and heartless brute, and lovers' dishonesty is beautiful, pathetic and ahsolately necessary. : [Ake the much-needed state elim- inator, the radin-nictnre machine Is easl'v a $1 000 N00 invention, "The reward for a simn'e, prac. tical. inexpensive receiver will be ample, and there .are no basic pa- tents to Interfere." says Jenk'ns, "However, certain technieal prob- lems remain to be solved," he adds "The general scheme is to anal- vze the object of scene by a rotating ~eanning dice, This permite the I'ght reflected from the subject to fall on, a light-sensitive cell, which, just as in still pletures, changes these light values into enr- the theory that man not only does not need long sleep, but would ac- tually benefit without it. Prolonged Wakefulness Lung capacity, physical strength and weight are little affected by pro- longed wakefulness, Dr. Moss's ex- aminations showed. Mire .mpor- tant still, the psychologizt discov- ered that the menta! alertn=ss of the subject was not injured to any marked degree. Nor did any of the subjects lose "much, If dny" in mental efficiency, it is reported. "After completing the experiment out a call of distress from Cape Hatteras on Sunday, is the same Thomas M, Bram who was sen+ tenced to hang by a Roston court for the murder, in 1876, of two men and a woman on the high seas, was the confident expression of lo= * ca' sea-faring men, " And, equally as confidently did these men shake thelr heads with doubt, when the possibility of the Alvena reaching this port with hee cargo of lumber from Jacksonville, Fla., was suggested, " They believed that the man, who ; was convicted, hut who escaped the shaft running through the lower "Gosh, I've never geen Aggie be- Taig ol pr Vahey i . 280,000, R.I, has population), + values, At the receiver there the subjects ero oy » 2 oe gallows through the Intervention of ; bin. fore, Darp, she's a fine looking ¥ Simply B B hetorer's hdd are converted again to 'igh' and RC SeeD 2h Mary Roberts Rinehart, novelist,| | part of the ca girl Isn't she?" And there you are, - hours and report to the Jahoratory } art, id At first the ship was planned to have an air propeller, but the pres. ent plans are for a water propeller, Ftv ay orvard sone ae sum [ibe Rlgiborbood ot Eoulh Gre ing Complete Se- That Spell Progress [|b vo sits tn BI 1 neato iw: | ruler on a mong n 1990 came | face of the water, for in essence . Plan p inch across, arranged in a spiral Ly A the opening chapter of the tragedy, the new model is 8 glider, as fte| "8% 80 high. Wherever she goes. g The holes were an inch apart fn the | 3 thet they were approximately 2 Shap Fogel. | patented name, "'Oceanogliss-Eur," denotes. Government Is Interested After the inevitable initial delays, the bullding of the ship is now wel I suppose that's the kind of stuff that's going on around her all the time except down in Ceylon and In she Is the cynosure of all eyes gasz- ing, staring and with all kinds of comments, nice, nasty and other- wise, Women being women, maybe 999 out of every thousand envy her, and: would like to be in her shoes. SUBHIT SCHEME Has No Intention of Present- LONDON, Jan, 17.--I am anth- oritatively informed that the report that the British Government - has notified the Lesgne of Nations' secretariat of its intention to sub- mit a complete scheme on security Recommenda National Advisory Committees Report is an Endorsation of St. Lawrence Waterways Scheme (Editorial In the Border Cities Star) tions Opponents of the St. Lawrence waterways proposals have probably and then to make recommendations. This is the purpose of the sessions seen directly or by reflectinn from a screen, 'Such a seannine dise was patent spiral, and the ends of tha spiral had an inch off-set; therefore, the contemplated pleture was an inch sonare made up of 50 lines The light intens'ty, a= In a pin-hole cam- era, is limited to the amount which for final tests, It was fonnd that the average time of sleep of the subjects after sixty hours of wake- back to normal. "The fact that nine hours' sleep is sufficient to restore one to nor- mal after 60 hours of insomnia," Mr, Raleigh writes, "is of tremen- dous importance, and leaves litt'e and was paroled by President Taft and pardoned by President Wilsor,| ° has pa'd the toll of the sea, with the discovery of the badly beaten bodies of Captain Nash, mas ter of the Fu'ler, his wife, and the second mate. The murdernus ceed. had been committed mith an axe, en tay 'two Gosters, the catin | PUL personally, being 8 he-men, I doubt that there lie within each of EVERYTHING BUT month the two floaters, tha cabin , , *v | 88 seen from the British viewpoint | noon given something of a surprise | Deld ip Ottawa last week, The|.an pages through this minute aper- eae and engine will be resdy for as- belleve I'd be inclined to tire of It, | io' gp yirely tneorreet. 8 p government, of course, does nOt|iure that fs, one-fiftleth of nme. |VS l12tent powers which we do not (Judge) sembly on the water of Lhe Seine The French Government is taking s paternal interest in the prepara. tions, In earnest of their faith in the ship the engineer who has designed it, the foreman of the works which is building it and two directors of the company which is financing it. |and will travel to New York in the crew when it is finished. The other two members will be a captain whe has spent his life in the transatiantie service and who declares his com- plete faith in the invention as the fast ship of the future, ani a wire after a while and some day turn on the rabble and with fierce coun- tenance and pugilistic gestures, exclaim In my most terrible staccato, "Go to the blazes," only I wonldn't pronounce blsses that way. That's what I would do 1£ I were in Agnes' shoes but then that's impossible, for I wear nines Agnes takes four and s hsif or thereabouts, I presume, THEY OVERDO I? (Petrolia Advertiser) Some people seem to think the dominent quality of lsughter|mored should be noise, of Is like The British Government merely proposes, in common with other governments, to earry out the sug- gestion made by Dr, Benes at the December meeting, to send to the League, prior to the next meeting, the. British views on the program of work to be proposed for the Leagus 'committee. 'One or two explans tory memorands embodyinz the British views on the committee program are now under, prepars- tion, but they make no pretence at being a complete scheme as ru- This undoubtedly gives the quis tus to current rumors that Britain Exterminates All Rats (From the Detroit Saturday Night) Detroit once produced a genile- who always got himself into , who seems to have experienced extraordinary pleasure in butcher ing and mutilating a tittle girl of Something of the same Leg»old and Loeb. » end mutilated a helpless little boy in Mhicago. F ow lorg should we keep an pro- due ~ and preserving this kind of wld an'mal? Safety calls for their repre-sion and extermination They are all physical cowards. for the!r own hides is the one thiag thy cherish. If sll of them who are now at large were informed by Hh | : i i ih; il | 4 i i i i ; g : FEEESE . Ny 1} ot : to offer to adhers to an ¢lause of the Worid Court or to agree to assume new military commitments beyond Locarro and | Rhineland, It fs 8 cortainty that the British Government's views re- garding compulsory arbitration and war commitments have not changed CANADA'S BUFFALO HERD a (Moncton Times) More then 1,600 buffalo calves 50 yak, 30 moose and a few ante- To this out the . herd at The P. Burns Company, Calgary, bas the contract for The Wainwright too rapidly for the modation available in the 4 by the published recommendations of the pational advisory commmiltes appointed to consider the lakes-to- sea plan in its entirety. While all the details of the committee's re- port are not ready, the general terms of its recommendations have been agreed upon, The three main features are: 1. Endorsation of the principle of buflding the waterways, 2. The retention under Cana- dian control of what is known ss the national section--wholly jn Ca- nadian territory, 3. Recommendation for negitia- tion with the United States Gov- ernment concerning the interna- tional section. These recommendations mean that the committee has turned its face squarely against the fantastic ali-Canadian scheme put forward by interests that were opposed to carrying out the jdea and saw in Another interesting phase is that concerning the initiation of mego- tiations, As the United States Is the more anxjous of the two par- ties, the committee is said to take the view that Washington Is the ope to submit proposals for the consideration of the Canadian Gov- ernment. 'These would involve terms of cost, arrangements for carrying out plan, division of power that wi be generated, con- trol of the waterways and so on. The advisory committee has, of course, no power. It membership is mot drawn from the government. It is representative of various sec- tions and the purpose of its ap- pointment was to provide the ad- ministration with certain edvice. The engineering reports on the St. Lawrence updertaking have been in the bands of the committee for some 'The members were ask- 3 | time. ed to make ~. ecaref: have to accept the advice of the committee or any part of it if it does not see fit to do so. But it is hardly conceivable that the reec- ommendations of an organization of prominent men-----friends of the ad- ministration--will be pigeon-holed or ignored. Indeed, it may be that the committee has made jnst about the kind of a report that the gov- ernment desired it to make Ac- ceptance: of the recommendations, or at any rate of that recommenda- tion which suggests that the United States be invited to submit its pro- posals to Canada, does not, of course, involve the Canadian Gov- ernment in any serious commitment, Parliament will eventually have to settle the matter and the best time for this to be done is when a con- crete offer is 'aid before it by ibe authorities at Washington, In any event the recommends tions of the advisory committee are drawn out story of St. Lawrence development. They mean that the project is pot dead, as its opponents would like it to be, but very much alive. They assure the continua- tion of keen public interes: in the scheme, and an interesting depate in Parliament. Best of all, they mean, or should mean, that Canada and the United States will shortly get together to work oui the de- tails of one of the largest and most important projects ever at- tempted, jointly, by two nat.ons.' This significance of the idea, from the broader standpoint of Interna- tional re'ations, should mot be over looked. If this deal goes through ~and it should go through- it will be an object lesson for ths whole world. It will be one more demon- stration of how two semsible, cool- headed, North American nations can work together for their mutval zd- vantage. fiftieth, or only 1-2500 part of the whole light. "We, in my laboratory, 'hink that limiting the light by passine it through these apertures is not the best vlan; the avallab'e }ight 's too weak, So, to get 2 greater light value, we make the openings in the seanning disc 1% inches in diameter, and get the required riny light-spot by focusing . the 'ight source as a tiny flying epot on the receiving screen, to build up the moving picture. "Television woud have doubtless have been attained as early as the telephone if a suitable light-sensi- tive cell had been available for the transmitter, and an adequate light- source for the receiver, "In the transmitter we need more sensitive licht-cells, or per- haps I should say, light-eells ziy- ing greater current output. With light reflected from outdoor objects, a light-source more fintenss than the neon lamp, but having its high- speed light-change. The other pns- sibility is a steady light sour:e and a light-valve between ths lizot to build up the picture," APPLES~~APPLES (Brantford Expositor) The people of Ontario must have been surprised at the contents of a news item which anpounced thet no fewer than 175.000 boxes of British Columbia apples were shipped to this Provirce in one week. [It is impo=sible pot to ad- mire the eoterprise of the British Columbia fruit growers rnd export- ers, but it does seem too bad that Ontario, which bas had the repm- tation of the finest apples 10 the world, capnot supply piferguson, of course, wasn't hurt, use at all." In other experiments men' have gone without sleep for more than a hundred hours and re- quired less than 20 hours to "cateh vp," If those "latent powers" were Junior: I feel sorry for that poor freshman; he failed in every sub- ject but French, that? "He didn't take it." 0 8 "Tely Falls on Evil Days (From the Ottawa Journal) That strange, sometimes inered-! ible newspaper, the Toronze Tele- gram, seems to have fallen on evil days. Time was, during the proprietorship of John Ross Robert- son, when it was a power Jn its field John Ross Robertson had many ee- centricities, but allied with them and submerging them, were 4ignity and fairness and a fine passion for in the presence of red execu of Hickman | 5,00 the declarations of Sir Austen | this impossible alternative a chance | of genuine importance, They spel! | the "|! Ottawa they might . slto- { h potassium cell gives but a very | public service, His successors, un > : ith a aa sehaid for bls | that they must pay 10 kind for thelr | Chamberlain and Lord Cushendun Lo block it for a long tims to come. | progress. They constitute another |smail current. [fortunately retained all tho eccon | Fp the "raw fort fos. npstarics affliction with a sentence. perverted would be | yore made at Geneva This is important. torward-looking chapter in the iong| "Our problem in the receiver is|tricities without the fairaess and | were sting thought thunder, Wow, the dignity. For years tle paper went on, living on John Ross Rob- ertson's prestige. When it jecame particularly silly, or m~r2 of an abusive bully than usual, which was a lot, people remembered some of the things that its founder had done, and said, "It is only the Tely," But that, of eourse, couldn't jest. In the role of a buy. as in everything else, there i= a law of diminishing returns; and the ""Tely's" returns, during the past few years, have diminished rapidly Mr. Ferguson was among the first to discover that its mud-guns dida't matter. The "Tels" tried to bully him, just as it had tried to pu'ly other Premiers, and just as it kept on bullying sma"ler fry at the City Hall, but Ferguson just ig~ored it. because the "Tely" had become really negligible; and now others this market. are following his example. Even i Toronto. . Dr. Edwards of Frontenac had scof- fed at its preténsions as a cham pion of Orangeism, called fit a ngly Anglo-Saxon ngme, and Hall. 'n at Oween's Park : might just laugh at it, and dowr' even thet is zone, For nn Monday, dear old benign *Tom" Waster. the, Telv's candidate for the Mayoral ty, wae all but snowed under, whi' Sam McBride, against whem it he. fumed and frothed for weeks, trivmohantly into office. More tha that, the "Telv" lost one of its pet controller candidates to hoot. y It is perhans too much ¢o hope that the lesson will be salutery-- the Telegram. we fear, is pas' pray- ing for. Yet there's a profitab'c moral to the story. Tt fs thet Put when that pretension merely takes the form of indiscriminat: end vulgar abuse of everybody, then' the meanest intelligence in time iz bound to see throrgh it. That, ap- | * parently, is what has happened i=4" 2 Senior: Why didn't he fail 5 f