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Durham Review (1897), 8 Aug 1929, p. 3

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Living I). ”Ila. mo. 1 A “a... narrow and a. most a. " re no". u use. Prion ot 'mt. his ." “vile-c It V." 1h A In! t he at "no the to " "Id had I to buy I (I " " my no I the menu work. t In All h ial after mu The 'I'ml 1M- "M "I. , of an. so". " "I. tho '0'. It to pf " Jan has "eotlt he» described Mi lowly bad nohq..h . km. _ H btete 2:22: not “hm the competp "on of 3mm. fatt6tttr. . . W'mmer‘ torm an enlarged 'utter-imperial tndol may tale. it must be based upon "-3 cognition ot the fact that one portion at the Empire in not to nourish " 00‘ expense of another. The bulletin an that, ulna. the passing of Chang Tnolln in June, 1929, "the new Nationalist Govern. ment in Nanklng has unnamed the dominant nohtknl position in Maw clnrla" and that "in expelling the Russian general manager ot the mu. war and " Russian heads ot va- rious department. the Natlo'nallnt Government In again asserting the 'rtSuertee of China, not only over the way itself, but in the Three Province- " welt." Saint John Telegraph-Journal (but): Lord Beaverbrooh’s eampaign for free trade withht tho Empire and 3 mm: around it will certainly not "petal to Canadian manufacturer. Id marttttttetttrers in other parts ot the Empire. They no diligently en. gaged In building up inimtriel, and American Policy Stated Both of the countries had the right to maintain their own railway guard! on their respective lines. During these negotiations. and tollowing them, tho bulletin recalls, the policy of the United States was vigorously express- ed in notes from the pecrotary ot State, upholding the principle. of the open door and the territorial integrity of China Ind questioning Russia's in- terpretation ot the Chinese Banter!) Railway contract. "As, a consequence of the World War and the Russian Revolution," the bulletin continues, "the Chine" Eastern railway was bully dinorm‘ taut and the operation of the rout was placed under the supervision of on inter-allied technical board, headed by John P. Stevens, an Amer. Kan railway engineer. Equally .variml an the Icebery through which the road passes ere the people that live along its sides. At one end are the Hannah, a mole dwelling in large community houses that hold as my a 200 ht. habitants. Then there ere the Bad- hwaneee in the centre and the ter- ritory of the Rata of Sikh in the agttgtertt part ot the inland. ll the vent and tn the south or the island on tound the famous giant Hard. species that some times reultee 13 feet In length. To prevent its el- termlnatlon, this lizard is now epecially protected by the Govern. Dent This string of three non-toll lakes] that lie at the bottom " old vol’ noon far below their only approach. the oncient crater rim, tor-a one ot the most hizarie spectacle: on the island. Not because of the bleak. lunged 'mrroundingts, or the sleep» for the tact that there is only a thln wan ot rock between two of the lakes, rising precipitously trom their waters, but because of tho-mutati- oue phenomenon that one of the three lakes retleetg a deep red color, the other a light green and the third “o rlrh blue. One ot these places ls "or", In bland of the Lesser Bends map, out at Java. notes has not as yet nttracted many tourists. As a rule. .09! mum. to the nrchtpelnso you It by. Yet there ls on Flores s road -h wonderful road, when the engi- neering dillcultles surrounding lts construction are taken into consid- "ation-that crosses the island three times sud traverses it from one end to the other. At one point this road! ls high up In the monotone. a Isl tle lsrther on " drops to sea level“ lot seversl Jules it Is hewn out or, the solid rock. in nnother It mee- through treacherous swamps. lt Cl) tinuen through fertile upland valley“ and it shirts the barren foothills ot the netlve volcano Goenoeng Keo. It! clings prea-urtounly to a ledge high: above the roaring breakers ot thol open Reit and it approaches to within A low miles the serene calmness at the Bell Woetoe crater In“. not be acmsthle to the tourist tor n longtimetoeotneonseemtelthe - irssmranountaMe ”an!” thoy present to laden tttttmgtt. Isml there In In, - In the archipelago. it ls stnted In Anthems- ntlve quarters, out of the neat beaten Inch, but nevertheless eastly stumble. when those who no will- in; to forego sole ot the pleasures and romtorts of the tutu-modern hotel will tind more than componen- tlon in the charm of exploring little known beauty spots and In the oppor- tunity ot contth 'lth natives that have not yet exchaued the products or their age-old art for those of the modern factory. Arnsrtere---rtsayr. an with]. the Dutch East Indies may union- the beauty or which ha- beon described a. glowing word- by the Home" of western osmium- in the noun» heat or of mum] "tenet. on“. I number of those am". however, will Lying Deep at the Bottom of Worn-Out Volcanos, Their Vivid Colors Add to the Charms of Picturecue Me of Flores in Dutch East In- Not Free Trade Attract Visitors " London Delly Mail (ind Cont); :'rhtt fact that the construction of e trunnel should supply e great deel " ot work or s useful kind tor the un- iemployed ought to recommend the (trtterpri" “to.” " the Socialist ‘Government. and Mr. J, H. Thomas ‘has publicly epproved the protect. " :is calculated that quite 24,000 men ’ would be directly cussed; and in ado i tlittort there would be a large amount of indirect employment in the manu- Ilacture ot the steel and the horing' iappliances required. The stimulus. igiven to British industry-tor we as-. f-mme that British labor and British! imaterial would be exclusively speci- lned for the British section ot theI Worh--oFoutd therefore be of great, A value in e period ot trade depression’ gsuch as the present 'the old objec-! ’tlons to the undertaking need not be: treated too Jeriouely in our day. in‘ a few years everybody will be wonder. ing that there ever was any opposl-l mos to it. SELF-ESTEEM The higher a In is in (race the lower he will be in his own esteem. London Evening Standard (Ind. Cons.): The nation or reparations cannot be dissociated from that ot inter-Allied indebtedness. and In this latter Great Britain hes gone as tar " lenient generality can go. hence in paying in eight millions s year. on both capital Ind interest accounts combined, against an outstanding debt ot "5t),tn0,006-ortiutt settlement has not yet even been ratified. Italy, whose debt is not much less. is pay- ing us only tour end a hall millions a year. Memwhile we are paying to America a colonel mm annually in respect ot money: which we borrow. ed trom her to lend to France and Italy. Mr. CtntrtNil'tt last statement on the subject runs that we bad paid since the war $241,000,000 to our cred- itors. while receiving only 134,000,000 from our debtors. Ask Your Barber-Re Knows FOR THE HAIR Carefully Njfritiuunued to promote probu growth, Fail and shining. Iver! (arm And I." cartot My" should have our price“, Write ow. A.ttentpt Wanna. Minimum cu " tons. No - to eommun of high mice- It you buy from " Write today. FERTILIZER! AND FEEDS LIMITED ’ I . - 9:00.. .980 but. lt. Went. mm 0. an. " M: tinny-m . *MI'. . . "I LUXO Reparations and Debts The safest, moo: economical and when w it to keep you: amen loaded with Genet: film. Mode to work {Incl-than ordinary min, Genera and: the "rifiest movement. amnpukling nep- tives. No med time or material. Better Pictur-un or no Inn. pm Bre Pm], anxious to "get" mm; out My beause the Inn “dubbing. Don't In an; happen to you. lamb" ninety Per cent “While kiluree is due '0 t"tderexise-e--Gd' Grunt fa itfaster. WANTED I How olienqt ytretr-. ' picture The Channel Tunnel PBRTILIZE RS FOR FALL WHEAT Man with good reliable travelling equip- ment for Watkins District in a nearby locality. Must be reliable and in a posi- tion to devote full time. Write at once gal“ age, (must be between 21 and to THE J. R. WATKINS co. Dul 27 John at. 0., Hamilton, on. CONSIDER THE END Better It is. toward the right con- duct ot lite, to consider what will be the end ot a thing than what In the beginning ot it; tor what promises Mr at Brtrt may prove m, and what seems at tirgt a disadvantage may bring the greatest and truest gain. -uuttton. “How’s your wife coming along with her driving?" "She took a turn for the worse In! week, Mr."--). it is s tribute to these two books that one can read them both without a weaving sense of repetition. The ground they cover is, tor a good deal ot the time, common to both; but the avenues of stomach are widely dit. ferent, and whilst .. comfortable arm- chair is desirable tor the complete enjoyment ot "Ath1eties," Butler's book calls for close attention to die- gram-tusd a notebook and pencil. When the authors come to their pet specialties they have much of interest to say. as. tor example, when Lowe proponnds his theory of the “constant factor" in halt-mile run- ning. Broadly and brietir put, his argument is that however slowly. within reason, the firgt quarter-mile may have been run. the time for the second is practically a constant fac- tor for each runner. and that, there. tore, the time for the that quarter is ell-important. in other words, it 51; seconds is sppoximately a 'ruunerk "constant" tor the second quarter- mile, after a 55s. first quarter, no ad- vantsge will accrue it the pace tails below Mg. in the opening "MO." On the other hand. he points out, the pace in the first lap may be so hot as to be economically unsound, in which case the 57s. taken " the "eonstant" for an exceptional athlete would increase perhaps to 69s. or 60s. a Butler’s book is not, by compari- son. such leisurely reading. He plunges without preamble into a dis- course on (not technique sud organ- isation. Illuminated by a profusion of photographs. many from the “slow- motion" comers. These strips repay careinl analysis. The work is writ- ten by one with personal experience of the ”his ot a games master at a big British public school. and its value would seem greatest to those chm-zed with the instruction ot boy athletes. His chaptei on the organ- ization ot school athletics excels any- thi..; the reviewer has previously read on this subject ' T Lowe and Porrltt. nided by C. T. Van Geyzel. the renowned Cambridge higtrtumper, end M. C. Notes, at ox. tord, Britain’s best "strong man" tor many yenrs. have teamed up to pro- duce the most com orehenslve survey or toot reclng and its concomitant: since Sir Montague Shearinhn wrote his classic on the when in 1887. They start on near the toy/left-i ment ot hnmnn activities as research on - them ', they revive the ear-J liest extent records, appertaining to the Tellten Games founded in Ire lend about 3000 B.C. by Lnguid of the Stroll. Arm; they pass through the history of the Olympic Games at Anci- ient Greece to their letter-day counter-l part, touching. he they go, upon the development of the sport in Britain.‘ in the United States. the British 00-] minions, Europe, Asia, and South Americn. The reader is led gently.l to e scholnrly exposition ot how iil should ell he done, or perhaps one' should rather write. how the best Jip pie do it, since the authors have strip‘ en, successfully. from start to Bnish, to instruct without dogmatism. l An already ample bibliography.“ track and leld attresties-oorti with their roots set deep in ttntittMty--has been enriched by the production or these two authoritative works which, white contrasting strongly in theirI presentation; supplement each other'l values to the student ot a very wide,. as well u Intricate subject. By their own experience. the authors are "e ticniariy fitted for the task 0' trans- lating the practical application of em. pirical knowledge into the written theory or the subject. D. G. A. have, Gaai; of Cambridge University. Athletic Club, 1924-25, has twice been the Olympic champion over 800, meters; his fellow-author, A, E. Por-, mt. Oxford president 1925-26. had a. meteoric career as a sprinted or thq top class. and Butler, president ot the C.U.A.C. 1920-21, is the possessor ot, one gold, one silver and one bronzeI Olympic medal. l Athletics Pvthtt Have no "can'ta" in your mind. 1 can't in 5 total thought. Have only ideas and reverie: ot I can'. You shall accomplish ~anything you per- sistently set Four forces upon. You have within you the “why for ad- vance in any tttrqutiott. Just com- ggnge -Desire in the proof of ability to achieve. Doubt neither your-elf, " Ci, A,4|.I__ - J. L. Garvin in the London Observ- er (lnd.): President Hoover " law is prevented from coming to Europe. The more reason why Mr. Ramsay MacDonald should go to America. Both the President and the Prime Minister.know how to lay_all the cards on the table. Each of them would find the other: amongst the most Interesting min that either can ever encounter. Each ot them can explain a good deal from differ- ent standpoints. It would be a re- markable ad happy episode in the careers of both. The thing wanted is “drastic reduction" of navies, with a human demonstration to the whole world that the two Beett will never be used against each other. It is true. But covert mischief will work right and left until openly we clinch the truth. Let us break down Chinese etifuette .hy the tlrgt visit of a British Prime Minister to Wash- ington. After that, all ordinary decent people in our two countries‘ would go about their business feel- ing better. Grurrutt, etge.--Ha Bathing Pent.- cost. Minn-tn Liniment for Summer Con. Mothers who keep a box ot Baby's Own Tablets in the house may teel that the lives of their little ones are reasonably safe during the hot wea- ther. Stomach troubles. cholera in- isntum and diarrhoea carry ott thou- sands ot little ones every summer. in most cases because the mother does not have a sate medicine at hand to give promptly. Baby's Own stlets relieve these troubles. or it given oe. casionally to the well child they will prevent their coming on. The Tab. lets are guaranteed to be absolutely harmless even to the new-born babe. They are especially good in summer because they regulate the bowels and keep the stomach sweet and pure. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. I We creep under the broad Moorish wall. cross s sun-dried, parched mountain top and sre again on the southern slope ot the range. The steep declivlty is covered with Indian fig-cactus, which grips the cliitt, with ,its broad, lint roots. Below as. the paths meander down' like ribbons along the mountain-slope. and over them irregular rows ot smoking chimneys seem to stick at right angles to the red mountain soil. We can see the entrances to the caves from here. . . . At certain points the steep, rocky wall changes to terraces there peach-trees and almonds blos- som; at other points the walls are pitted by soft shots. sites of caves that have eoltoImed.---Marttn Ander- son Nexo, in “Days in the Sun." SAVE THE CHILDREN In Summer When Childhood Ail- ments Are Most Dangerous. In some places the slope becomes too sharp to be negotiated by stair- cases and the path is then obliged to assume a long zigzag rise. it has been impossible to build houses ex- cept on the inside of the zigzag. where they must use the mountain tor a back. The outer edge ot the path' is a white railing and a file ot slender cypresses topped by an ocean of blue. As you mount the path into an end- less labyrinth ot cabins and weather- beaten walls. as trees peer forth trom the ruins. . . . Steep staircase streets lead through the city, with traces of Moorish time: meeting your eyes everywhere. Here a great "ttltttAreitrteht pmsred' Nth glazed tiling; there the ruins of a little mosque or an arched gage built to break the force ot a hostile on- slaught. in the city walls are frag. meme ot stucco arches resting upon. marble columm. and now and Main your eye wanders into a still perfect; Moorish courtyard. _ So have they stood tor may Jeaee. rm centuries. at!“ spying out the enemy in a sort of petrified Mlle. c'ang tor trrot9trt.h.t to the stun mountain Hues. Then they um stand. a densely packed mu, like a tiirtetx ot trighteaei mountaln goats. ,Grnnuh in heidJo be qta."et the iovliest places in the whole world. The city lies at the mint where the Sierra Nevada put: forth its foothills, a bundle ot my: extending toward the Vega like gigantic toot. that have come up out of the ground. The new section ot the city has spread‘ piacidly over the plain with it. some“ ous horizontal streets and lines of elm: (niamedns). or in wedged in " tween the hills. foilowin. the "lien and rivertrt8U.. and terminating in thin lines extending far into the Sierra. The older part of the city has not been able to make itself so comfortable. These ancient quarters ntili trear mnrh. of having been but) in 1nsecnre times. when the houses MacDonald and Hoover Mountain City CAN'TS i Many people. two hours after eat- ling. tuner Indigestion " they call it. In In nanny anon acid. Correct It with In nun. The boat wny, the lqulck. lumen and and“: way. In (piiiifipi; um: ot Magnolia. It in irttmaitaed for 50 your: the lunch" lwith physicians. Ono spoonful In ", want neutralize. many times tta 1 ‘volm'ln In Roman was. “a " once. tThe symptom disappear In an min- Phlladelphig Ledger: In the United States there has been no disposition to question the importance or the propriety of the meeting between President and Prime Minister, though a few years ago a furore of suspicion would have been aroused by any pro- posal 'of the head of a British Govern- ment to establish direct personal con- tact with President Harding or Presi- dent Coolidge. The gentlemen who like to ask rhetorieallr, "What have we to do with abroad?" will doubtless shortly be heard from. But they are likely to find that their rhetoric is much less powerful than it was be. tore the present fortunate conjunc- tion of men and circumstances. President and Prime Minister Norman Ansell in the Spectator (London): Alike in Europe and America, we have slipped into the habit ot assuming not merely that America is now "the great noise." in. dubitably the most powerful single national unit in the world, having captured " economic predominance which yesterday was Britain's. but that this predominance is bound to be permanent because inherent in the nature at things, in American super- iority of natural resources. more fortunate situation in physical advan- tages denied to Europe. . . The on- doubted superiority of America and its economic preponderance ttMay is not to be explained " superiority ot natural resources. but by a political fact (which gives rise, be it noted, to an economic one) The States have political unity; Europe has not. it the course ot historical development in North America has been more like that or South America, so that Eng- lish-speaking America had been " much divided as is 'lLllt1d'i'l'a"rd'; America: it, in what is now the Uni- ted States. there existed, not one na- tion but a dozen rival natiotgtr--t" south of the Mexican border there are more than a dozen ditterent nations --we should not now be talking about American power and its predomin- ance in the world.. North America would Mure tor very little more in such terms than does South America.] The Predominance of America ”rmultnns‘ plNK PI lbs Watch your Wm Ca., Dachau}; Buy I box of Dr. Willis-W Pink Pills It all drunken and dulcn in redieia, oe, pct- Pink Pitts foe her and in gained in weight and seremrth. She is new the pie. tttre of health." 'relietr indium min. Dr. William? Pink PM "tra'eh the blood. mt qua-i- nd build healthy bone and titans. nouns-b of mothers have proved this. no sae, sis ill “a mm that we Ind to take hee out of 3cth I tried Dr. William' "Mr twelve-yaw!” girl." when Mrs. Robert Devin of Mun, Chg-do, "been" ticuIJ-ly git-TH rid: "ai, of rod blood 5 caudal. Languor,,qgrvm do. " uouuuonm mutt m u counts-n " T00. AC1 D You will never llrir- nude methods when you know this better method. And you will never suffer from excess acid when you prove at this any relief. Plan do that-Ar your own trake-now. Be aura to get the genuine Phllllps' mm: ot Magnesia prescribed " plant- cianl for 50 years in cumin; ,0!- oou acids. Each bottle contains full dimettpprr--a" Canton. "Our baby kept waking us several times a night, until we stated giving him s little Castori. stter " last nursing." uys sn Iowa mother. "He slept soundly from the firtrt night and it made him look and feel worlds better." Baby speciinsts endorse Fletcher's Cumin; and millions ot mothers know how this purely-vege- table, harmless preparation helps‘ babies sud children, with colic. eonr stipation. colds, diarrhea, etc. The: Fletcher signature is tlwnys on the‘ wrapper ot genuine Castoria. Avoid imitations. I all!” witch were then being pushed to I conclusion, Alcock and Brown were quickly forgotten. I Detroit News: (Bruce Gould, in his (book “Sky Lurking," predicts that 100 years hence Captain John Alcock and Arthur E. Brownuvill be honoured above ell other "wanders of the air.) The acclaim that should have been theirs was denied them. It my be, on Mr. Gould im-ta, that ell coun- tries were too near the dangerous darts of the var period in 1919 to properly Appreciate Brown and Al. cock. The world was tired ot heroes; in not there were more ot them than; there were John, and in the news ot the monumental proceeding! " ver.l The inferiority complex would be I Me thing It the right people had it. New York World: Mr Charles G. Dawes. our Ambassador to Great Bri. tain, has let it be known that no liquor will be served " the Embassy so long as he occupies it. “I never made it a practice to serve liquor in my home in the States," he said. "and nee no reason to change now." And while it may be doubted whether his motive in quite so simple an that, he certainly deserve: no criticism. He raises no tedioul point ot law, yet places hlmaelf in an excellent poli- tion with regard to a question that be. comes. trom a international point ot View. continually more dimcuit. Common ”use. potience and sym- pathy are the qualities needed tor the may of anionic. Equipped with these and I desire in do honest work, one moot. help leaning Ioniethlng ot value to Add to our knowledge ot dumb Creatures.--Prom "J. T., Jr.: The Biography of an Arrival) Monkey" by Delia Akeiey. Minard'n Liniment for Neuralgia. One at her Christmas present: we: 1tlrtaetutritt_ndettewouur, about cumming ohiectl end people. Iain-ting the the: to unit her vision in o surpriuingly hum WM........ T J. TN ehiiity to see mil objects as well as her delicate some at tuoeh wu Ihown in the can with which [he would rip tine stitche- trom cloth. Sometimes when l we: sewing or tending and did not want to be ditw turhed. 1 would (in her In old no meat. She would then Mt quietly on lay up by the hour and indugtriout: tr rip out the Mitchel without tearing the fabric........She used a needle and thread exactly like u child who " tempts to new tor the first time, often when l we: celled away to attend to some hounehold duty I would return to tind my sewing drawn into puckere by her ettorta to imitate me.' in her desire to assist me she would sit on my hp when l was sewing and with her dainty thumb pull the needle through the cloth, dropping it immed- htely to draw the thread tight........ LONG SLEEP MAKES BABY HAPPY AGAIN and mains. on. 'tern" the men hem]! without my taming. the leaves - beam-n hub and loud-cor. Aha- olo he“ iii-[liar with logo one recognised their picture- and It. would no. her iitrrrotr.r-r mow-mo sound over When: and turn bathed eoitttietr1r 'ttqtttt side tn side In it expecting than to respond. tthe thaw-d tar mor. inr telligenco in recognizing picture. and keetrine I mains right side up' than the majority ot Airim native“ TORONTO Much Alcock gird Brown ': Dave. Stays Dry ‘HIVES " In“ It I. C A nu ma mun mot-mtg "rm, human or ruldemw. no map 'a. unnuloum tgrslPlg,'t'tt1t't n Roll" .. 'e u l '4'8Mt'/. ont. . Br “than: (Inflow in of ml- mlu In New York my tt In he“ qstttnated an an ”ecu-Inn will be In t position to be "need by three taltutharsaasetrttaeseuxrtuetu low dueos only two. Ottawa Journal (Con-J: Stock- ‘on tho New York - Itch-u In" declined by $6,000,000,000. What " 'rrtuMliVtoktsoxrh,rttemi.t" 00.000.000.000 t All! GBICKI: JUL} CuttD AUGUII‘ p Roch Ite, Brown Lantern- " ncom In. White Leghorn- we. .5- I run we“ " inure“ and on 200 or our: a. QtrtntNtui C a awn-or. can”; thttprio. " . You'll Meets In t‘omfort it you apply mount ISSUE No. 3 I---'" CUasihed Adv; ti nun-Inca to: clinic NEWTON A. HILL So Would We Toronto

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