any hour of to nearly er of local 2 an expert ping the iron inger is the vhile. cher. Frank is a wonder l matCh the tated a man game and '0de the l the score. le (doubles) tier. Donnie nd the boys ,I of the club llayers. The a young lads st.â€"-Dundalk s rarely seen listrict. were is south of st week. ac- brcury. The , crossed the n automobile pf Thorndale. tossed a field car go past. p in the least r drew level nd vanished .uest. who is [l sportsman. i he had ever rton. Even ‘ . Bruce Pen- n only occa- see occasion- h Wellington he saw pro- .er marsh. A once in Pro- st Confeder- .8853 se for market .5 cold in the if the Domin- ulture. They pasture and et should be closures. pro- and grit and be fed heavily edillm for the out two weeks’ fit. them for hours before starved. but are should be ry or steam ded. for the are particular- much as 60 dressed bird with a damp . The twelve- . able market .- . _« .-.».."w":i»- I ‘ 5‘ . g o 'l ,3: t Thursday. 0min- u. mo ' ,THE DURHAM barium lCLE " RUINS nu. STORY OF VIKING mm CluesM-gBaltieIiettea-allxamlned by Arehealagbta-Wanderlng of the Got: Shows Great Migration Southé war Archeological research in the Baltic States continues to add supporting evid- ence to the theory that a powerful “Viking Empire†was in process of forming in these regions more than a thousand years ago. It grows increas- ingly apparent that the whole Baltic littoral was more closely knit together by trade and cummunication than indi- cated by history, as written in the past. Important facts are also being supplied regarding the period of the great migra- tions and the southward wandering of the Goths in the ï¬fth and sixth centur- ies. In all the excavations, specialists are stressing the need for co-operation. This ideal was emphasised ,at Riga at the Baltic Archaeological Congress near the close of the summer, the first congress of the kind to assemble since before the world war. more speciï¬cally . since 1912. And the ideal will domin- . - .. 3355f; .ut . .‘ n’ '- ‘. ate in all accomplishment before the " . . ~ ' ° z~<~ z; .. .. -. ’1 ‘1‘ 3 c next congress, which is to' be held in - FOLLOWING a mdgï¬en .. which gumyhieh grows in' front of .thephouaepieee of hickory from the m along Kiel “1 1934- ‘ began more than-thirty 'y'ears‘, , . " _...Melanson’s father in France; a the Camdian. National lin In Sweden the two seemingly inex- . ll. H. Melanson, Assistant Vice; , pieced a pic tree from Acadia: a State of Micbisan. In addi haustible reserves of soil awaiting the sident of the Canadian National Rail- . ° '_ of wood) from the school'whcre V151. Mr. Mm received spade and measuring rod are the Island ways, was presented with a historic r. Melangonmadej his ï¬rst studies; a '_ of relics from all parts ' of " Gothland, nearly midway in the gaveloat the annual convention of the 'ece.oi the ï¬rstdesk he used when be world, â€Ch 8' 80m from Bonanza: Baltic Sea, and Oland, just off the American Association of Passenger Traf- Joined the railway; pieces 0‘ “681.me C ’ Yahoo. gathered in '93: 5‘69? Swedish mainland, on the southeast ï¬c Ofï¬cers, of which he is the 75th we the “Samson" and “Albion,†the, ï¬rst from ew Zealand: Conemara .Msrhle; o - coast. Not that the horizontal :area is sidcnt. Every piece of wood in thxdgavel locomotives Operated in {he Maritime from Ireland: granite from Scotland“ so wide-reaching. But on the Island of has “'8 own story to tell .of Mr. elan- Provinces; a less of lumber from Mr. Opal from Australia and a piece of metal: Gothland, for instance, the excavation son’s career- and of railway develOE- Melanson's ‘ ' ' private "car, No. 34 from the last sleeping ear built by the. of the foundation of some ancient meet. Them is in it willow from t e of the 'Intercolonial "Railway, .and a Pullman Company in the United Stand house or fort or cathedral may reveal traces of an earlier foundation beneath - _ . it and one still earlier beneath the when mortar was not yet in use in the devastation and some forceful evacu- i was a transit port established for the second, Such is the case as disclosed by North. The constructed wall is two ations of populations in the same period trade of Bira, or according to one spec- the summer’s work, on the southern kilometers long and it is estimated that, -â€"the centuries before and after 500 A. ulation, Birka was a far northern out- tip of the island. where Dr. John Nihlen with its height of 4 to 7 meters, and its D. The largest fortiï¬cation, Graborgen. post of Danish trade. with a corps of workers, excavated an width a maximum of 24 meters, more ’was probably constructed at this time. old “homesteadâ€. which legend attribu- than 2.000 men were required to com- Another, Ismanstorp, enclosed no less TO DEVELOP MARKETS ï¬ 3 assEr rm to a comparatively empty spot in the sky. the nearest bright star being Alpha Ursae whorls. We call'it our pole star. but it is really one and ale-sixth de- grees from the pole of our heavens. Ithasbeensaidthattwomoonslike ours could be “driven abreast'f. between the true pole and our pole star. This star, Polaris, is an interesting one. At a glance it appears to be one star, but a more careful scrutiny shows it to be a visual double, with apparent separa- [but up to the p t writing hulk chases of Canadian wheat . . . tion of eighteen. seconds of arc. The quota system of mm is the larger, a yellow star, measures 2.6 suggestion advanced to take the . magnitudes, and the smaller, a blue of the Bennett scheme. Star, 9.0. (Star W‘tum "it like a The suggest-Jon h†m e s , sol! some: the brlshtcr is the lesser that under such a scheme an .. number.) The parallax of Polaris is market for another 100300.000 ~ about 0.01 seconds of arc. its distance of Canadian wheat mlfllt be {i from us being 3201ight-years. The. two “‘9 total import W for the stars revolve about their common centre ' of gravity in a period thousands of years long. The earth’s motion causes bushels and under a quota system them ‘0 appear on 099051“ Sides daily .iting the Canadian wheat 00an policy of inter-Empire trade ences By the present Labor 0o - .. acceptance of Premier Bennett's and more-or-less united .. .. Thisweekmayseeotheral . plans presented for considers lflamywmtthe imeoonfenenoe itsexpertad nine months of this year. howe . not bear out such a belief for f . . sources they scarcely reach 100 H (just as all circumpolar stars seem to iBritish bread to not more than . shift about the pole), but actual meas- cent no such market would be .. .. ted to Stavar the Great. a heroic ï¬gure plete the work in three years. than 88 houses. An interesting fact FOR CANADIAN FLOUR ures show only about ï¬ve degrees of Neither the principals nor the e dating approximately from the second According to the Guta Saga, recorded disclosed by the recent aerial survey century of our era. in the 14th century, Torsburgen was an was that the houses were built fagopliéd The Federal Government Arranges for - - important refuge in earlier centuries. a rectangle or square, a type 0 u - Demonstrations in Europe of Its Uses. sugggnftï¬itga Eï¬rfigï¬fglea’gsbeiï¬i The island became overpopulated, runs ing heretofore identiï¬ed with the . ..____.__. foundations of the hugh hall, 60 meters the story, and lots were cast to see Middle Ages. . In an effort, to develop the markets in length are investigated. There are “mm" M the inhabitants WOUId .be This work is supplemented Wlth eq- for Canadian wheat, the Dominion remains 0f glassware from the Roman forced to leave their homes: The “1' ually important work on the °°ntiPent Government has appropriated a sum of Empire, ceremics with classical oma- fated ones sought Shelter Wlthin TOS' t0 the south and southeast. PI‘Of. Birger money to be USCG in practical demon- - . ilv ins. burgen, but the relentless saga also tells Nerman, Swedish archaeologists,_ has , , Sggteéleian b;r:?ie?ruirï¬fag:: (ff gajiciius. how many were driven to Dago, near concentrated on Grobln, in LatVla. He strations 0f the use Of Canadian flours ' ° - the Russian coast and some went has identiï¬ed Grobin as the Seeburg for baking purposes. ana. 9 , , . . $333;“ï¬bï¬fgcï¬egugflé‘gigsggspma, south as far as Greece. The period of of legend, where Klng Olaf came 1n the These demonstrations Will take place bian coins bear a later date and suggest the Great Migrations has been vague’middle of the ninth century, plundering first at different pomts in the United that the enormous house may have and shadowy in history, but bOth ï¬rst Seeburg and later Apulia. now Kingdom. Subsequently they Will be been desolate and deserted during a . Scandanavian and German scholars are , identiï¬ed with the section called 3 expanded to European countries. i I a a a ' istory in the light of new Apuole, - - to - t th 0 le of art of the age of migrations, 400-700 “OW reVismg h . , The idea is give 0 e pe p 50 be utilized again by the Vikings and ll facts derived from the work of the 8’" Hedeby. an old Vlkmg centre near the United Kingdom and Europe actual their associates. These ï¬nds. therefore, cavators. Schleswig, is about to be made the sub- , practical evidence of the value of Can- seem to substantiate certain hypothesis Views Taken from Air ject of special study and Will therewith 2 adian wheat and flour. . . - ~ the ï¬rst Viking town to be ex-‘ about other interesting sections of the! The Swedish Island of Oland, .with become . island. lits 16 known sites of ancient fortiï¬ca- cavated on a comprehenswe scale. ' CATTLE STRAYED l ‘ tions has recently been surveyed for The connections between Hedeby andi ,. . . .. or ur en. . , Along the eastern coast 15 T Sb g I archaeological purposes from the air . . . . Birka, a Viking town once flourishing | STRAYED FROM MY PREMISES. an irregular Circluar fortification on , by Dr. Marten Stenberger on this, his on the Island of Bjorkoâ€"the pictures-, Lot 30, Con. 2, S.D.R.. Glenelg. on or ' ' . ' . v u' ( i ’ e 'OId med htlgslzeilallï¬igfe‘: {1:23:31 IrtSCkncggth seventh year of intensive study of the que and idyllic Swedish island oflabout October 18. ï¬ve 5 two y ar an “e egion. somewhat barren but also pic- b t th lls to the south and r birchesâ€â€"â€"are being stressed, and var- : cattle three heifers and two steers). mation. u e wa ' -' Finder notify Angus Hooper. Phone with its sic es-like vegeta- 1 ions theories are offered as to the rela . fasltogertehguélgrgfdtalzenéinfilegrtnonae 53.13133 iiigreifquiiere again tggre are traces of tion between the two. Either Hedeby Durham 605 r 32, Priceville. RR. 1 n . I . Made from heairy blaclk rubber . in medium high ace sty e. Flue Over Rubbers Sizes 11 to 13, pair ................ $1.79 52°89 v Sizes 1 to 5, pair ...................... $1.98 Men’s plain overs, pair $ .90 2-49 Men’s rolled ed e red soled overs, 1r ........ 1.1 3-dome style, brown or black, per pair' ............................ $2.19 Boys’ plain ove ‘. pair .01... ‘p. r ........ s WOMEN’S RUBBER BOOTS Bright ï¬nish, fleece lined-revery Women’s ï¬ne ov farmer’s Wife needs a pair. As Misses’ ï¬ne over - « hers, sizes 11 to 2. Pr- 59 Children’s ï¬ne over rubbers, pain... ...... .59 announcemwtsâ€"We are preparing for some fast and furious Close-Out the gunâ€"We’ll shoot soon relative change in a hundred years. a lattending the conference are “bl * value that may be due to inaccuracy rejecting any proposals. This in the old measures. with others which may come. w , liully analysed and if it oflers The brighter star varies every 3.97 "practical degree of relief to the a days b0th in light (0-1 magnitude dif- dian grain grower efforts to see ference) and in velocity in the line of beneï¬ts until a broader and . sight. This variance marks it as a agreement can be arrived at me Cepheid variable, a pulsating star. A looked for. One of the immediate still further spectroscopic report shows ï¬culties lies in the manner in it again to be a double. With its in- Ithe Price 0‘ “he“ ““1“ be m†visible companion it revolves about 13:; Sagacitnzglgtspggmzflyg: ' their common centre of mass every . her wheat thirty years. It is fairly clear that no matter Besides all this wealth of interest in decision. or indecision. marks the the pole star itself, it has been said mlferencc. the ï¬nal judgment will be the most important star in the hea- i‘mh the 9190mm 0f Brition in the l vens because of its position and its resulting use to navigation and com- ard to the policy of inter-Empire merce. ferences. In so doing he has apo The pole star, being only of second i l.v succeeded in patching up ser . magnitudeâ€"just one of the seventy flBQtiODS within his party and 1 ° that are as bright or brighterâ€"is not Domt t0 the 86mm 8190th be simple to distinguish unless one follows 1 :‘é‘gaozd‘gï¬gsgnégnï¬rggnw ~ along with the eye from the two pointer Simultaneousl' the Labor . , stars, the two end stars of the Big eluding ministzrs of the . -. , Dipper. These pointers always single government are fanning the out the pole star for us, no matter on old prejudice against taxes on f« - which side the dipper may hang. The Britain. But the cheapest food pole star itself is in the handle of the I world is inaccessible unless one - Little Dipper. These two dippers looked money to purchase it. and it 18 ' ' . e a ’ . litt ar l certainty of a vastly increased . Ill: be rs a big bear and a le be ing power under Empire to the ancients and are still so called: I ' :that Mr. Baldwin is building his - Ursa Major and Ursa Minor. They are‘ The Canadian delegation to , such striking patterns that one can ' is not expected home for trace them easily at any position. ’month. When My, Bennett ml For us in Canada the circumpolar he will find all the machinery . . near future. Stanley Baldwin . ready nailed the Conservative ‘ space is quite an extent of sky, and we created to relieve unemployment in motion. The agreements have completed with all the provinus they. in turn. have their man can ï¬nd therein not only stars but also star clusters, doubles. comets, and neb- ulae. The planets cannot wander intol this region, for they, with us, circle the Efferrdycl’zï¬zihggt $2213†tit sun in such planes that they are always ‘ indicate that business generally is projected near the eliptic. the appar- ing a more optimistic outlook. ent path of the sun in the sky. ‘most critical situation. unhappil If we travel far south, the northern.that confronting the grain l. . . stars disappear, and the southern con- flt is to the solution of it that Mr. stellations, invisible here, shine. At the We“ and the Department of “rude equator. there are no circumpolar stars. iCommeroe "'9 bending "9"? 930“ At either pole the entire heavens arer PEDESTIIAN mg circumpolar. f __ _ â€"â€"â€".â€"â€"â€" l With the completion of a new Travel, they say, is broadening. This ’ road terminal in Phfl‘delphh. “I can be overcome if you walk a short hall section of that city will be : distance every day instead of sitting nected by underground D0601 on the soft cushion. lthoroughfares. It. . l . .. " ‘ Our business is to create printing that makes sales. Typography, choice of stock â€"every element that makes for more attractive mailing- pieces and handbills is pro- duced here with the care that spells success. Exact estimatesofcostsareofla- V \ '0