x » r ~ ' the southern. : lition Sails Map 200-Mile abrador Coast Scientists to Chart ic Using Aircraft Photography for Mapping 'Neponset, Mass.--Setting forth on a three months' cruise to the northern- most section of Labrador for the pur- Pose of making accurate maps and charts of the whole northern 200 miles the Labrador coastline, the Gren- fell northern Labrador charting ex- pedition left Lawley's shipyard re- cently aboard the 100 foot schooner Ramah. Dr. Alexander Forbes, of the Harvard Medical School, is in charge of the expedition, which was first con- ceived and suggested by Sir Wilfred Grenfell, In addition to correcting charts of | the region which at present are en- tirely inaccurate, particular attention | will be paid to exploring the Torngat | Mountains, a rugged, snow-capped and as yet unexplored range. The map- ping is being done by aerial photo- graphy, for which purpose two air- planes are scheduled to fly from Bos- ton on July 1, arriving at the scene of operations at abcut the same time as the schooner. Radio equipment, supplied particu- larly for communication between the ship and the mapping planes, and with friends and sponsors in the United States through schedules with ama- teur radio stations, has bee: installed by Edwin D. Brooks, Jr., radio amateur and Harvard student, who is accom- panying the expedition as radio oper- ator. The short-wave equipment will operate on the accustomed ship fre- quencies by special grant of the Fed- eral Radio Commission, and amateur contact arranged through the Ameri- can Radio Relay League will be relied | upon principally for outside communi- cation. 2 On the departure of the schooner it ' was stated that the party was pro- ceeding first to St. Anthony's, New- foundland, where several members of the crew will be taken aboard. There also Sir Wilfred will join the gchooner | in his steam yacht, the Strathcona. | With only a brief pause, the two ves- sels will continue north to the region where mapping will be begun. ee To | endl Islands Off Alaska Have Rocky Surface The thousands of islands of Alaska's southeastern "panhandle" are rugged and offer few places suitable for land planes to alight. But for the plane equipped with pontoons thére are in-| numerable resting places in bays and covers. Harbors with gasoline sup- plies are available at a number of ports in this section of Alaska, includ- ing Ketchikan, Sitka and Juneau, Eastward across the Gulf of Alaska, Kodiak Village on Kodiak Island fur- nishes the last possible base before the beginning of the long crescent sweep of the Aleutian Islands, which extend for 1,600 miles almost to the peninsula of Kamchatka, eastern out- post of the Soviet Union. After the survivors of Bering's dis- covery voyage to Alaska in 1745 re- turned to Kamchatka, Russian adven* turers poured junto the islands in search of furs, exploiting, enslaving and killing the natives. Few survived and since that day the islands have been sparsely settled, many of them uninhabited. It was because they were opened up from the east that the islands are known as the Aleutians. The name is derived from that of a Kamchatkan cape, the National Geo- graphic Society says, Although the Aleutians are as far north as Central Canada their climate 18 not severely cold. Rather they may be said to be always "chilly," damp and foggy. Fog is anything but an asset to the flyer; but the Aleutian fog has the good point, at least, of be- ing less dense than the fog of more southern lands, Dutch Harbor, Unalaska, is the first harbor of importance in the islands. This deep, landlocked harbor Is one of the finest in the North and has played an important part as a way 8 to the Yukon and to Nome. It Is station for ships during the gold rush- by a radio station. Dutch Harbor is connected with the rest of the world on the shortest route from Seattle to Tokyo, and with the establishment of coaling stations may conceivably be- come such a Pacific way station for the northern route as Honolulu is for etl mins { The Causes of War Boston Christian Science Monitor: War is, in a large sense, a social econ- omic problem. It is out of distress, upheaval and despair ; wars are made, Millions of men and women out of work, countries plunged into the deepest difficulties, J id tradesmen and impoverished armers are the raw materials of con- , The profound discontent of pov- by, with all its harmful potential- ds not onl a result but/a cause strife. 5 Souls The souls of the sons of God are London Skyline is Undergoing Change Chimney-Pots and = Other Stacks Rapidly Disap- pearing London.--The new London is to he a London without chimney-pots. All over central and west end London new buildings are going up with flat roofs. Gas fires and electric radiators are displacing coal fires. The traditional open grate is passing and is taking away with it those infinitely varied flue-problems which still give the old London a skyline all chimney-pots and stacks and cowls, No other metropolitan skyline {8 quite like it. Its rows upon rows of red pots, clustering two or four or eight to a chimney, astonish and puz- zle every newcomer to London--par- ticularly newcomers who land at Southampton or down the Thames, be- cause the boat trains from these ports enter London on elevated structures whence the newcomer's first view of London consists almost exclusively of chimney-pots. Except in parts of the east end, where the streets consist of rows of cottages exactly alike, there is usual ly an astonishing variety of pots and cowls to be observed. This is because chimneys have diseases and chimney doctors do their prescribing with lengths of stack and bends of cowl. A chimney may do its work regularly and complacently until the east wind comes along and then perhaps it falls into an acute depression and refuses to work at all. For an ailment of this prescribe a taller stack with a cowl sort the chimney-doctor is likely to added, This variety of pots and cowls, each designed to meet its own particular variety of flue complaint, gives the old skyline of London {ts fantastic shapes. Sometimes a chimney behaves itself for years until the erection of a taller building next door. Miles upon miles of old London streets still retain their old chimney- pots, but in the heart of London no new ones are being erected. And same who believe that coal fires and makers of fogs are not sorry to see their chimney-pot vents are the the old skyline disappear. fp re New Type Plane May Explore Stratosphere Roswell, N.M.,, July 4--New experi- ments in rockets and airplane motors to enable the study of the stratosphere are being made here by Dr. Robert H. Goddard, professor of physics at Clark University, Worcester, Mass. He selected Roswell because of at- mospheric conditions and the absence of storm areas. A new type of airplane motor that will enable airplanes to travel in rare atmospheres and at higher speed than ever hag been attained has been de- veloped by Dr. Goddard and patented. "It has been estimated that above 600 miles an hour, rocket propulsion for airplanes will be more effective than any other type and it is on this theory that I have built and patented this motor," he said. "Although the rocket jets them- selves have more efficiency than either the Diesel engine or the steam tur- bine, this efficiency can not be utilized at lower, or present airplane speeds, because a large part of the energy passes off in the jet and comparative- ly little is given to the plane. The pre- sent invention, involving the use of a turbine and propeller, in addition to rocket jets, overcomes the disadvant- age which exists under 600 miles an hour." Dr. Goddard's rockets will carry thermometers, barometers, electrical measuring apparatus, air traps to col- lect samples of upper air strata and other specially designed apparatus to gather information from the strato- sphere. Propelled by a newly developed liquid fuel, Dr, Goddard hopes to send the rockets 250 miles into the air. --r---- arm Finland to Preserve Folklore of Country Helsingfors, Finland.--Finland pos- sesses one of the largest collections of folklore in the world. '"Brage," the society which fosters and guides these efforts, celebrated the twenty-fifth an- niversary of its foundation in March. Its members are drawn from all parts of the country where Swedish 1s spoken, and from all classes of soclety, and at least one-fourth of those attend- ing the festivities were in national costume, Traditional part songs and solos were rendered, old-time dances performed with so much verve and expression that all could interpret their meaning, and a performance of excellent presentation of country life in bygone days. ee em. Five-and-Twenty Five-and-twenty is the very haryest- time of life, to gather precious corn and fruit of our labors against the cold storms and cloudy days of aged win- ter, when the body 18 weak, the eye- sight decayed, and the hands tremble. --Bulleyn. ----e ime Law of History than their business; and arg thrown out, not to do a cer- thing; to have some sacred ents, to show some divine tint Parent Mind from which they Martineall., The fundamental laws of history is, | that it should neither dare to say any- thing that is false, nor fear to say any 2 thing that is true, nor give any just} suspicion of favor or disaffection--i C.cero. The Rose Garden at the Farm (From an old diary.) Life on the farm, in this year of 1880, is satisfactory and at no time more 80 than in midsummer with the rose garden at its best. Nearly every- ore in the near-by villages and on neighboring farms possesses roses; but no roses, it is generally conceded, on neighboring farms possesses roses; which grow in the old garden, on Texas John Smith's farm. Ther» are many things besides roses that are accepted as a matter of course, in these days. Among the many, rank names. The writing of Texas John, without quotation marks, is considered eminently proper and no one thinks it necessary to explain the reason for it. Not only is he a man of parts in the community, but his farm is one of the finest in a sec- tion of Michigan which is renowned for its iertile farming lands. And the farm garden! It is at the rear ofe the spacious, comfortable house, at the left of the driveway, in- closed by yhite pickets Which. fn sea- son, never succeed in doing their duty.' Ramblers, climbers and long-stemmed "Jacks" refuse to stay within the in- closure, but lean over, creep under ar twine around the outer sides of the would-be stern, yet really friendly: pickets. Each morning during June anl July the daughters of the house pre-! pare for the daily visitors, who seldom | ji to come, Into the garden early,! yefore the sun gets high, come these | two yoling women, with garden shracs and baskets, - Deep pails, filled with! cold water, receive the cuttings, and during the day the roses draw their refreshment, waiting for what may be called their presentation hour, j Sometimes the visitors arrive sing- ly, but not infrequently as many as five or six vehicles may be seen drawn up along the driveway, between the farmhouse and the great barns 'which lie well to the east. Phaetons and surreys are the usual conveyances, with an occasional carryall, and upon iere times a high-seated trap, biack in its body and yellow as to wheels. - | Into the shaded parlor the visitors cone. Their hostesses, Miss Agn:s| and Miss Florence, have not long to wait Hefore the conversation turns to roses; and, even while remonstrances are being uttered, the daughters of the house insist that their gu:sts iT | liquid fuel from coal. | when synthetic steaks must shara in the beauty of the old garden. The share--a sort of unwritten law, in vogue summer after summer--com- prises a dozen roses to each caller. And the bestowal carries with it some- thing of a ceremonial. It means much more than a neighborly exchange. There is an exquisite graciousness of manner in these daughters of the house. There is an affection for the flowers and for the old garden, full of memories of other summer days, an affection which both giver and re- cipient feel. For months these friends look forward to these yearly visits. Roses from the farm garden are both a reminder and a fulfillment. --_---- Food From Coal May Be Possible Dortmund, Germanuy.--A scientific. discovery is announced here which, by use of a little imagination, seems a siep in the general direction of event- ual manufacture of food from coal. Prof, Wilhelm Cludd, director of the Coal Research Society, told membera of the organization today that Ger- man natural scientists have solved the problem of producing synthetic albu- men from coal. Natural science has already vro- duced dyestuffs, flavoring extracts and It was made plain that the day has not yet come and chops could be made from the surpluses glutting world coal markets, but the synthetic albumen: invention apparently was a move 'in that direction, my iis TRC "Waal, how's everything up tew the city?" ' "Everything up tew the city is country just the same as fit is here. Of course, after you get inter the city that's different," "Babes in the Wood" One reason why children gat a big kick out of the 'great out-of-doors, have a fascination %or $:year-old Shirley Russell, who has given it a spot of lunch. o 'men and phosphorus Tooth Cavities Fill Themselves' Mental Torture at Dentist's May Cease Through New Discoveries by Dr. S. L. Davis Washington. -- Carfully regulated eating was envisioned here last week as promising mankind freedom from the misery of decaying teeth, and even the healing of those in which decay had made considerable progress. The successful healirg of decayed teeth so.ely through treatment with special diets was reported at a dinner given in" honor of Dr. Sherman L. Davis, wh, was credited with recent nutritional discoveries which may bring about profound changes in the practice of den'istry, A case of the filling of a cavity in a tooth without mechanical assistance in Washington was described. At least a dozen similar cases were said to | have been reported by dentists in various parts of the country, and it was held to have been demonstrated that decay of the teeth almost al- ways can be preveated and in many cases arrested after it has made pro- gress through dietary treatment. Dr. D. C. Robinson, chief surgeon of the Youngstown and Ifland Steel Corporation, described Dr. Davis' ac- complishment #3 "one that bids fair to range with tha. of Louis'Pasteur," and Dr. M. A. Englih, a Washington physician, said he was "so impressed from a medical standpoint" that he would insist on every new case of his taking an examination to determine whether there was aeed for the nutri- tional treatment. The Washington case of self-res- toration of a tooth was described as that of a man forty-eight years old, who presented himself for an exam- ination Februury 1, 1930, and was found to have eighteen cavities, of which six were new and the others had appeared around gool fillings. One, a cervical erosion cavity in tha lower right first bicuspid, was left open for observation purposes and a special diet worked out by Dr. Davis was prescribed. This cavity was re- ported smaller when examined Octo- ber 4, and had entirely recalcified, or filled up naturally, on Juhe 2, when the patient was last examined. Dr. Davis told »f 675 cases over which he had maintained personal su- pervision. After checking them for a perial of six months, during wkich time an average of four cavities ap- peared in the teeth of each patient, each patient was exainrined and placed on a diet deemed best suited to indi- vidual needs. Upon examination after another six months period, he said that instead of finding the 2,700 new cavities which might have been ex- pected on the basis of the first six months of observation, only five were disclosed in the group. He added that he had made numerous tests of treat- ing hypersensitive teeth with the same method and had not experienced a failure. Dr. Leo W. Solbach, a director cf the Clinic Club, described the method of procedure in diagnosis. Assuming | that nutrition is of primary import. ' ance, he said, the first step should be the taking of X-ray pictures of the mouth. A history of the physical con- dition of the patient in the past, and various analyses should be obtained, he went on, to determine sugar, albu- requirements and disclose such condition as anemia, infection and diabetes. With the pa- tienl's needs thus determined, he :aid, a proper diet and treatment can be prescribed. ref ren o¥ It was his first day as a caddie and he had shown so much interest in the play that at the end of it his em- ployer asked him how he liked It. "Oh! I'm just crazy about it," replied the youngster. "The only part I don't like is carrying this bag." This tiny fawn seems to The Useful Yak Again in Demand British Expedition: To Use Yak in Himalayan Mountain Crescent The yak, which 1s being used for transport purposes by the British Ex- pedition to Mount Kamet, is consider- ed the most useful animal of the na. tives of Tibet. He flourishes at high altitudes, and is a strong beast, often furnishing the power by which their i grain is threshed. His long black halr is woven into tent cloth or ropes; his tail serves as a "fly whisk." The milk which is not drunk is turned into but. ter and cheese. When old, the yak is meat for a long time, His hide sup- plies leather of every kind. The wild yak is large, standing six feet high at the shoulder. This spe- cies is confined to the arid central plateau of Tibet. The domesticated type is smaller. Evidently, however, the line between the wild and do- mesticated yak is difficult to draw, judging from the experience of moun- tain climbers. The Kamet Expedition Teeny reported a small stampede of yaks. The Mount Everest Recon- noissance of 1921 made the following comments: "The yaks supplied to us were very wild. In a few minutes af- ter starting we saw the plain strewn with our kits and stores, and the yaks careering off in every direction." Again their historian reports that the wild yaks "rapidly got rid of their loads," but also that they are the most "satisfactory beast of burden; although their pace {is slow--about two miles an hour--they seldom halt until daylight fails." Because of the sound of the yak's name, and of its convenient size, the animal is also useful in this country, his place of residence being found in cross-word puzzles, and in limericks and in nonsense verses and other light rhymes. tee fem Rochester, England, Marks Ancient Historic Episodes Rochester, that ancient Kentish city, with its Norman castle, its ca- thedral, is many fine old Tudor houses and its Dickensian associations, drew attention to its beauties by a pageant in which eight of the most stirring evens in its history were represented. The pageant, beginning June 22, last- ed a week, and opened with the Ro- man Emperor Claudius establishing his camp on the present site of the city in A.D. 43. The next episode showed King Ethelbert of Kent visit- ing the city with Justus, the first Bish- op of the Diocese, and St, Augustine, to decree the building of a church on the site now occupied by the cathedral, Then followed the dedication of the cathedral by Henry I; the Garrison of the castle successfully resisting the final attack of Simon De Montfort's army in 1264; Chaucer's arrival in Strood soon after the commencement of work upon the new bridge project- ed by Sir John De Cobham and Sir Robert Knolles in 1388; Queen Eliza- beth's visit in 15673; and Charles II's departure from Rochester on his jour- ney to London in 1660. Finally Dick- ens recalled in a reverie incidents in hig life characters from his novels. In this episode people who, as children, actually knew Dickens when he lived at Gad's Hill Place, took part, Dame Sybil Thorndyke, who is a native of the city, impersonated the spirit of Rochester at the pageant. ----h Porcupines Record Trip United States Ranger Croghan of Glacier National Park recently re- ported what appears to be a record movement of the slow, snail-like trav- eler, the porcupine. 'As slow-moving as he is dull-wil- ted, a porcupine wll often cover a surprising distance by his persist- ence," says Ranger Croghan's report. "The morning of March 5 I encounter- ed the tracks of a porcupine on the North Fork Road in back of Fish Creék ranger station. Following them, I discovered that the animal had made a round trip from the top of McGee Hill some time between the snowstorm of the early evening be- fore and my arrival at 9 in the morn- ing. "He had diligently followed the road for a distance of ten miles though his footpriits were rarely aced at more thun six inches apart. t no place was thero any evidence that he had eaten, nor had he met any others of his kind. Had he, like 80 many summer visi the park's glories, made the trip for the sheer joy of it?" ree. : A Village Treat A certain young man of Sparsholt, in Berkshire,--who shall be name- less--has thought for his neighbors. He is about to be married to a girl from a neighboring centre, but the wedding will not take place at the bride's home becauso, as he naively puts it, he "wants the folk from his own village to have the rare oppor- tunity of witnessing a wedding cere- mony." It will be a "rare opportun- ity," for it will be the first wedding at Sparsholt in over three years, be- cause of which the centre 'has been named the "village without brides." According to the vicar there are no "aligible girls" in the village, and all the men have to seek elsewhere for their brides. killed and his flesh is dried, providing | x : y ES : So They Say Br "The national heart must never mas- ter the national head." -- Sir Artur Keith, SS "Certain fundamentals must be cor rected before we are put on a sound and substantial basis economically.-- W. W. Atterbury. 22 "Laws are to the reformer instru- ments for making other men behave according to his ideas."--Lincoln Stef- fens, "A man may be young at sevently, and we should aim at living to be a 'hundred."--Sir Oliver Lodge. . "There is a very small minority of human beings who continue to grow intellectually after 23 or 24."--Nich. olas Murray Butler. "The whole world is like a powder magazine on which an intemperate idea or remark may fall and cause a world conflict."--Newton D. Baker. "The trouble with economists Is that they read more than they think --Henry Ford. "The high development of women is a social luxury."--WIill Durant. "Modern invention and ways of liv- ing have taken all the fun out\of housework." --A. B, See, "The caste systém has not tended toward the improvement of human breeds."--Sir Arthur Keith. "I think we have got to the point when we are ready for national plan- ning."--Franklin D. Roosevelt. "My formula is clear: Everything within the State, nothing outside the State, nothing against the State."-- Benito Mussolini. "We are trying in the age of the electric light to teach national econo- mic progress with a candle."--Nichol- as Murray Butler, "Character depends upon thinking for yourself, not of yourself." -- Lady Astor. "Be discontented: it is another name for ambition."--Deems Taylor. "Jerusalem has its Walling Wall, America its. Wall Street."--B. GC, Forbes. "The chief ideal of the American people is idealism.""--Calvin Coolidge. "My way of joking is to tell the truth. That is the funniest joke in the world."--George Bernard Shaw. "Women are inherently more care- ful than men."--Ruth Nicholis. "Merely having something on your mind is not thinking."--Henry Ford, "Nobody is ever too old to take & fresh start."--Thomas A. Edison. "It is difficult to lead men at all It is still more difficult to lead them away from self-indulgence."--Richard Washburn Child. en iaimeiipemestinm A Good Deed Lives on A New York man made an invest ment of $300. He has nothing to show He knows he will never see the $300 for it. He will receive no interest. agair)--and yet he considers it an ex- ceptionally satisfactory investment! This is the story: Some years ago a talented student of sculpiure wads down to her last cent ard was about to give up her studies. The New York man offerad to advance her $300 with the under- standing that when she got "on her feet" she was to pass that amount on to someone in need. That woman, now well known in her field, handed $300 to an art stu- dent who finished school and became established. She, in turn, hearing of a business woman who had been offer- ed a good position on the Pacific coast, Hut did not have the money to: go to it, handed her the $300. The business woman made good and in a short time handed the $300 to another woman whose need was great. Three women well established in business and a fourth given a start! It looks as if the $300 would continue through the years as an investment in the gold bonds of friendship. ------------ Vancouver Increases Shipment of Wheat Vancouver, B.C. -- Wheat exports from the port of Vancouver for the current crop year to June 25th total 69,462,800 bushels, according to the weekly report of the Vancouver Mer- chants' exchange. For the same per- fod last year, 45,233,376 bushels were exported. Shipments to the end of July, when the new crop season commences, are now estimated to reach 74,000,000 bushels. Recently 1,764,045 bushels moved out, while ships in port loaded 903,333 bushels. Slightly more than 500,000 bushels were booked. Eleyator stocks were 10,115,050 bushels with 751,800 bushels en route, - met wg oie Broker--"I put a friend of mine on his feet three times in the last five years." I put a friend of mine on his feet fours teen times last night." "Why is Swift do anxious to 30 into business?" FT "He hasn't been able to develop | any class in golf and it worries him. He's got to do something te get his mind off the game.- Jones--*"Oh, that's nothing! "