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Durham Review (1897), 6 Oct 1927, p. 3

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- can" an in D bring e (on; rate nt lhu’o tting ma? nm of ten m, oeu NC rally ith th , " The Putnam expedition in» our north country is creating some inter- est in the Staten. George Pet-or hi- nam is keeping the America Prel- supplied with many cola-Is o! In- teresting details of his discoveries and experiences. Recently he dealt with the old ruins on Sculpin island as follows: Newfoundland was the "MINI" of tho, Denim sagas. Ind Non Booth was possibly "Kjalamu." 0n the other hand, "Wlnehnd the Good" In” have b ‘en Nova Scott. perhaps reaeh. in: far to the with end west. For sibly the students of these problems m-vur will, be entirely agreed. But for the main premise there " agree- ment and sound evidence. Leif Eric- 5:”! and Thor0n Karlsetnl came to Amorh-a tom Greenland 492 years be. furu' Crrlttmbun. Tho ruins themselves are on a small lucky peninsula a few hundred yards long with an avenge» width ot LU bet. The group contams eleven ma jor structures about my feet from the water. tent protet craft. with this] Meal m Ill ary nan: Morrissey Expedition Examine Relics that May Mark Noise I 'fig,,',',,',", Visits Nearly 500 Years Before Columbus {Conn ot that Tim Inca be c Greenland. relating to the l-Jaklmo. pronounces them rclirs of an old-time Eskimo hunting community, built there bo. cause " was a good base for hunting and tishintt. That native. of a later period also camped there. " pointed out above. comborates this theory. But. of course. the Norseman too, 11 they fired there, would select a good hunting alto. u p would early Mr. anthn the ( york "lat them op abou' thr The Ar ttropoiot Enklmc knead f sting to m talk 2tinst CC of P Hansel at Main. 0 tor th :es hull! d Strange Ruins on Labrador Coast kl " tbutt.tarttial Ru: maximum height Q43; ion a; um an period of Mel be ','trk by , th a! no , midway along th and not tar from Ruins "tctr Med landing place for small I some indication ot an artl. kwuter. " wn br t only account; of our opink sported to The New radio. the general al , ruins pronounces m very great antiquity a historic“ importance due to tho remains mo civilization. Bow, a student ot lit gy. attributes the mi 02.. Captain Bartlett for a generation in 1 I the Eskimo. prone rs of an old-time E ch to the east of hie trom it at td lies some n ay two-thirds t "I batw aap. th ya ‘ld Not " ruins us t hand In an excel Ancient. of our 0 aeration in things limo, pronounces l old-time Eskimo ', built there be- l base for hunting native. of a later J t' ravlan ml hat the FY. snap if n mi tent rin Scalp trllmp I ortinio' " judg My the Eskimo ruins to lett. ex- appei them ' and mun ot :alon- kinto Yor tof pear- m to Id ot than dent in th tho an i "lt seems.” says Babcock. "that so of "ttr as Investigation has gone there in e- Inot a single known record or relic of ,5. ‘ Wineland, Marxiand, Hettuland or any ?.y ‘Ntrse or Icelandic voyage of discov- n- 'ctw extant at this time. which may be d, Ex-eiiod on with any confidence." h, i And on the other side of the picture 1.. there are those who place consider- irla'ole reliance upon the "relics" and t in” evidence on record, and who pur- ples further possibilities, such as tho 'a, iruins on the Labrador coast. with of hurtful enthusiasm. But it would be. ailut'stursptircti.", fur one who Is not a v. F . rodent of the problem to enter into i'. glhe discussion. All that cam be said 3,. N that tho details have been sifted ..t land battled over tor some decades. l The Norsemen's Landing. il is Amertean residence was In Wineland " “on: illogical that the” only mrinere should hove helted on these hard there: long enough to require stone houses. or to hue completed and occupied 1 community ot them. " indicated by the relics" But again one any rejoin that perhaps Winter overtook them, compelling them to camp where they were. Only then, perhaps, they would have gone Just a. bit further. to the mainland, where a few hours' ball would have brought thorn to timber and abundant water. Al lot this, of course. is purely con. j.-r-tural. T8here are authorities like Babcocl: who take a pesslmistlc view as to the likelihood of finding any authentic Norse relics. They even doubt the ex- i..trmre of any. By and large. It may be well to give the "ruins" the benefit of a historic doubt. If not themselves of Norse origin, there is small doubt that Norseman made their first 1andtalla hercrtbout. And what an cxtraordln- ary story lies in those Y0yMe'.1---tt story that may never be adequately ruins hapatul prcsum The full of 1930 I. the latest eatr mate for the opening of the new Wol- hnd can}. At the present time the job I! " per cont. completed. Thou Ill-Imam- not out progno- ol the " gins in Ireland. tor Iceland was my largely peopled by the Irish. l Iceland. before the year 1000, Ldth, or Eric the Red. appears v lad a “tenuous lite. Not him- trouble maker. he seams tre. v to have been in trouble. As a ct his azmcumcu he was for a practically an outlaw. Later, by friends. he fitted out a ship [155m- M'. _ I g _ Ces " ""*';"';';":'.'t '; ':-,3isis,'s:cr, ' . . . . ( i ' _ l . 2 i . . . , - ' 1 "7rfs's?'" "y" , ' _ 121$. t i. A, _ il , , a: t _ .2 r' _ - V 11' ,"rlf. ... .; I? _-'u' s' . a; , . , "r-ei-ff/elite/cg,, . iibiitf '17 _. y Iraq lil, i", , 't 'aagriiXI © il tt Eg. ' , . .-: . _ . $22. "'_. .- ."' ' c, -, c', . 1: kk'. _ v . C! , ' 4 I .. a . - 'MB. o, - " . . 2:3 . r. i ' 3522...? iii». js95" a...“ . “Nancy. j:-2's'cr'ir'irfif1'ie J, .1 1tlif, .- “ cr _ _" Il'??' 1liliillrglltMilih' 'll 'ca L .. _ .. .. rr .... ..wg. (V1.11: y " " q MW" _ _ 'i:r'sfA1tyf:1 , " 2115.1" RTF, tE - I . t, .°"' 91:2 _ i? 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On the return voyage he encountered continental America. Though both training and circum- stances make It practically impossible for mwm'm-a of the royal family to earn their living. it will be different, mm .1:L!itl)!)’. wuh their chilthren.-- llerminc. wife of the ex-Kalscr. Found What is said to be the largest petro- glyph. or Indian rock carving. in Can- ada has just been reported to the archaeological Mlee of the National Museum at Ottawa. This petrcglyph is said to be over 50 feet long and to he carved on a vertical face of reddish rock rising from Fraser River Valley. The place is only about twelve miles trom Yale. 3.0.. on the railway line. and as It is t'ize most available petro- glyph to two transcontinental rail. ways. an chart will be made to hare it set aside as a national monument. Previously to this discovery the larg. est known pctr'ctrlyph in Canada was on the west side of a tseventy-tsos can- yon near Bella Coola. about one mile south of Mackenzie Highway. Women educators say that men feel abashed in the presence of the female intellectual giants turned out by Brit, ish colleges, and are picking the girls whose thoughts run to the intricacles ot the latest dance. Siatlstlcs covering seven years show that only the per cent. of the girls passing through Oxford Univer- sity have obtained husbands-ttouch they do not Show how many wanted them. London he the ch weir 'rtongids lock No. I, at Port'urrr In another - ot the harbor, Waller. the latter lock "treins lllul- l the land around which bu boon built and u the RIGHT. The tant hutch“. The oral depict- the louve- at wait" -'.-:=:' rjr.'._ cu _chytii,"jv'iri1siff? 'rr.' Jr, _r,),r'c' /C. v w" = - PMP. " r'a2.W=e.'jfim"'r_cf:s'i'Fra-lll, £235- l.“,r . aiiliik V "' “SW u'cau'. ' "a BM LOCK DEPTH NEARLY SAME " YHAT' OF HORSESHOC nus work. UPPER LEFT showi the slut Ithe lower steel mute can In 11.the' the lower at control sluice gate: leading to wute _background In in the harbor. LOWER Ethnaf“: Girls' Learning Love or training seems to ca ccnfronting tho modern Choice is Love or The New Welland Nears Completion k".t:t'i"g'i?ikf)c'iii'jk?ji:.t, Senator Raul Dandurand Canada's representative to the League ot Nations. Conference of Irish Lenders is Planned Cork, Irish Free statty.-jreBident Cosgrave, whose government came out victorious by a small margin in tho recent general elections. and Eamon do Valera, Republican leader, who heads the Opposition, have been invited to attend a conference here to consider the economic position ot the country and the question ot concilitv tion and unity. . Black Cats and the Tinker's Wife, by Margaret Baker; Boy who Knew What the Birds Said, by Padraie Colum; Dcnegal Wonder Book, by Seaumas MacManus: Down-A-Down-Derry, by Walter de la Mane; Elfin Pedlar and Tales Told by Pixy Pool, by Helen Douglas Adam; Moonshine and Clover, by Laurence Housman; Mystery Tales for Boys and Girls, by Elva S. Smith; North Cornwall Fairies and Legends, b Enys Tregarthen; Shea ot the Bea by Arthur n. Chairman; Tale of the Good Cat Junie, by Neely McCoy. ‘very child loves to hear stories of magic and whltchery. Here is a list, of the best books of this type, com-? piled by the. book editor ot "Child; Life," The Children's Own Magazine: .‘ The invitation emanates trom J. F. Daly, chairman ot the Cork Harbor Board, who at a meeting appealed for unity by the political parties in the national interest. Books of Witchery For Your RIO ARCHIVE TORONTO Great ingenuity basin-ea shown hr the printing industry in devising methods tor feeding single sheets ot ruper into the presses mee':eaiea11y. The system of feeding from rolls, such as is usad in the large newnpnper presses. is cemmcn knowledge to-dny, but in the job printing industry even that remarkable invention has been surpassed. Nothing is left tor the human hand ot do beyond putting a stack cf paper within reach and keep- ing the parts in working order. The distance rte industry he: come' can be seen when one recalls how In the fifteenth century the old German printer, Gutenberg. the flrst man in the Western world to use movable type. had to lay his parchment sheets on the type by hand and press a block ‘ on them laboriously to obtain the im- pression. The work of feeding the presses tor ordinary job work, in fact, ', seemed to hate arrived at a high state , of perfection a generation ago. Presses l, in use then opened and closed auto. matically, like the jaws of a frog, carrying the paper up to the typo and then away again, so um the printer could take out the printed sheet with one hand and siide a fresh page in with the other. By menus ot rubber grippers on the thumbs and tore- fingers, and after a good deal of prac- iice. the sheets could be shifted in and out with something approaching me- chanical regularity. The Smoke Nuisance Le Devoir (Ind.): Do people take seriously this smoke which pervades the atmosphere, covers everything with dirt and shuts out the sky? Do we Mop to think how poisonous it is? Since its supression restores health, is not this an additional reascn for ignoring it? Because mygleno as seen trom the scorntui treatment ac- cored those who hare the direction of lhe_Healt“.1 Services, is Just shelved. Today the new devices do that work tar more rapidly and with greater accuracy. One automatic feeder, for example, which wan shown at the recent exhibition of the graphic arts at the Grand Central Palace, ac- tually lifts single sheets up " a pile Grampian. Pa.-T'tur airplane City of Olympia No. 31, an entry in the air races at Spokane, Washington. crash- ed to earth in the Pennsylvania hills near here. Lieut. Valentine Getr. hart, of the Marine corp reserve, the pilot, jumped with a parachute when the motor went dead 2,000 feet in the air. He made a good landing and was uninjured. t the lower gates at Port Weller. limi- lar ut- ot at” being and on etch lock. Inch of the nu- weighs 464 tom um I: " foot high. It I: Inpu- Ilblo he" to minutely my...“ the auntie the " you and. Lawn PRINTING DEVICES OUT RIVAL Chiang Will Wed WORK OF SKILLFUL FINGERS MMe. Sun’s Sister Mechanical Task of Feeding Sheets of Paper to The Press He Divomec Wife Now in Has Been Perfected l, us. and Will Matty Great ingenuity has been ttttown by and ptM"etF-AttM) C00” about 817 I Wuhssr, . Gmtluate, 3e printing industry in 2'v'l'clill'l'lU-1"t'l"e"li Into the rollers that MISC MehngSoong Airplane_ Crashes Pilot I Conpllcsted devices do ell the work, In the two In ends ot the pile any 'trom the rollers are wheel-like Irma. l'l‘hese revolve Ilowly and u the pile of paper is lifted up. they bite in at {the corners and keep o small number (rt sheets raised slightly tn the alr. (Above these are other wheels tut Home down on the top of the pile at tintervals and revolve, butting their humpy surlacee onto the paper to Jlggle it and help separate the sheets. I Just at the crucial moment in that :procesa, blasts ot compressed air, blown thrcugh cracks In the tutteqted and: of pipes, are shot under the sheet trom several angles, setting it to ttut. tering freely. Suddenly another pair ot rubber-suction hands close: to the irons“, amps down and seizes the lsheot; the other “hands" let go. and 1while the " keeps the sheet Butter. lug, the second "buds" carry It for- {ward to the rollers and relcnse it. I Another automatic feeder uses the older method ot taking the sheets ott fthe pile by a. series of wheels. The :wheelu to-day are so finely adjusted jalong the way down the incline that ‘if an extrn sheet his got started, it li, mechanically held back to await its Near these is the firttt plir of magic lands, composed of rubber cum. like the one: on the toy arrow: that used to stick on walls. Operated by com- pressed air. they soup down on the pile of paper when their turn camel and in another moment snap back, holding the sheet aloft. and ptMbSB.-<ttt. could about car 1tandtr--ttgem into the roller: an: guide them down an Incline into the revolving press. The nun responsible tor the Ameri- can polo team defeating the British Army in India team. turn RIGHT shown " extended not oe loch 531140 71011 launcher mud. Inmmaom 1sutteet.a1moetthe-aathet" umummmum Nina-ulna. _ A stop in that Thomas Hitchcock ‘uvea a fitttt Rumors ot this msrrisxe which hsve been thick tor the past week or $ern dare, were eonttrmed recently by persons very close to the Soon: (smilyf But Chino: Kai-sheik what abouts remains s mystery. Tint he to in Blanche! seems fairly oertsin. his l tailor. on Englishman, ndmitting to no the: Chung hurl ordered seversi “its sod had ttttings s few days no. Then he disappeared. ordering the suits " livered to the house in the French Con- cession in whieY T. V. Boon; lives. Mr. Boong has gone to Japan to meet his wife. his mother and other mem. l hers of the famous ismily at Nusukl, and it is expected thst Chino; Roi. .shek will meet them there within the \next tew days. The date of the wel- ding is uncertain. " Is explslned that Chiang divorced ;his titat wife seversl months ago by l the old Chinese custom of merely pro- claiming that she wss no longer his wife. Chums has denied that the Mme. Chiang Ksi-sltel: who " now in America is his wife at all, and it seems that he has sent swsy two other “wives," as well as his original wife, and is now ready to marry Miss Boong. Their rrrmnmn Mann at (‘nuton two Bhattgui--The pro-cat whmhoutl of General Chin“ Kai-shot, who I.- nixnod recently an Commuter-III- Chiet ot the NIIIUII‘ animus: armies, in a queltion the is puzzling Shanghai these days hr more than the political manoeuvres at Nnnkinx as reports of his approaching marrinn are confirmed. , Their romance began at Canton two years ago, Miss Ewing's (”noun rin- ter. Mme. Sun Yattrn, who is now in Moscow. in also an American college graduate, while their brother, T. V. Scans. was a member ot the Hum! clan of 1915. Tee later incidentally. bitterly opposes the marriage. but dre spite family objections Miss Soon; h roanlutely breaking the vate-ld mm " dtnt and ChOGSIRK her own mate. This affair 0:917:11 qzlrnt visits to the Sr mm months. which " reruns! Important poll where as gummy th math drainmw 1 of the sort uni n sought by a v55: they who fituv.ly great mass tices; " one way or a: just as well; the without Free G; mun is more com dissension. Mo pleased. feet war work busilv in ll, renln can be an of the day rathe anger trom I. s: arise and tell me free to express l II to at. love am and point him l and (solo-sad an. deed! Lite 1: than ot us who 1 nine“, enjoymex Mel-lugs. and I signed to the de cry! doesn’t men enjoyment and {reunite not th Liberty have ell far rlfterent cltnracte A dircatee trom recently said that there that Chittng K tor America reeently Will Rogers Studies Effect of Man Losing a Million or Beverly ililis. (‘ai.-Juai been over mum; Charlie Chaplin at his studio, Ind watching him work. i wanted to 100 how u man acted that had Just but ”muted from a million. Thu 1 all be the supreme test ot a cqm; i'iii ,'tiL',",'e,',t" than evei. He o a”. ' new picture. . If the out Vito some. for '1 cent in: than iiGaiiii bait mum, she la n chum... You". WILL ROGERS. [not “a the climate!- uwnbh for ”it. We. show that will an». cub-cu, m - ”humid. and. inch-col- ”Wk-durum No may prevldort new out I a gamma” (In: Can“. hard I well; the country It Free Speech. ' more comfortable Mon. Mouths " d, feet wumed uni busily In the swim can be saved for any rather than I from I. soap box. md tell me chat it 1 was mg :3, and Liberty any be c to the devil tarevermora. I etm't mun either happiness eat and this (not In obvh Avintioain Ion. Mouths are tlllty0, em I feet warmed and the enzyme: 1sily in the stomach. while ad- In be saved tor the plenum: My rather than squandered II rom 1 soap box. Lot anyone ui tell me an it is hem-r to be express one'e opluions then It " love and play end I will erlee nt hlm out as In invincible use! In. Liberty or death. In- Lite In short enough. Glee I us who have cepecity for her enjoyment, contentment these gs. and Liberty my be con- m the devil Iorevermorc. xle- ' fact I have I living, (hut I either ezn't snot 1y he Soon ieh sage Plain op Is he: I: obrh most OKDOIIMI'I r Ind hard don Mn Talk. MI er Colombo ti in are 05E ry was ropertul tek had sailed 'tttl The " there tiMd group it. In! llrn an man I Better a work beer. over his studio. wanted to . Ind Just obvlou less can n of nth! t In run ty, he

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