West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Aug 1929, p. 3

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oimen uF4 r he 18 Tb It toMs of theâ€"salÂ¥fng oi,the Ameri« can subtpWarine $54, which was rammâ€" ed by. the 8.S. City of Rome in Septâ€" omber,; 19986, and which Sank in 135 teet ot water inc one of the stormiest .sections of the North American coast. Tt was determined., that: n6. effort should .be spared u‘“:ln.fq'ek to the bereavk® rselatives the bodies of â€"their sense of the y whelming vote ttons. If resist "That opposition should now be met with a positive itsistence on the elimâ€" Ination of the submarine from the Aarmoury of war. . Such as insistence would be endorsed by the whole moral "It is time that this sinfster fact was faced and challenged. The case of the submarne is the acid test of the armaments problem and it must be applied with candour and directâ€" ness. It can be so applied with the utmost propriety and force. Both this country and the United States have repeatedly signified their wisk to ban the submarine, and they Iuvq' given abundant notise dn the subject. Hitherto they havo afted to ‘act out of consideration to the opposition of France. h Tt was utlored in vain, and toâ€"day, elght years after, the competition in submarines is proceeding as though no Loague of Nations existed and po Kollogss Pact had been signed» and France is in this respact as predominâ€" ant in Europe as she is in the air and on land. the dire by a "Why is this outrazgo permittcd to destroy the innocent and affront the conscience of the world? All the nations have solemnly outlawed war. Why cannot they give evidence of their good faith by outlawing this most infamous weapon of war? It is said that it is the only weapon of dofonce available to the amail gations themselves. Itâ€" is not the small naâ€" tions like Swedenâ€"and Norway that are butlding submarines, and. it is contmon knowledge that if the matâ€" ter rested with these Powers the sub-] mariue would be banned toâ€"morrow.. | "The â€"responsibility is not. with‘ the small Pewors, but with the groat‘ Powers, the Big Five of the Sea. And of these, two at least, a% three alâ€"| mase certainly, â€"dosire its elimipation. This country made a proposal to that‘ offect at the Versailles Conferetrce. It‘ made it still more formaily and urâ€"‘ gently . at the’ Washington Conteren(:ei in 1921 when it was supported by the Unlted States. Since then America‘ has independently, through its Preâ€"‘ gtdont, repeated the proposal. I think t w wl i am I full ac W "The fact that it is a sneak that strikes in the dark, a criminal that hits below the belt, And nowhere else, would rob war.of its last rag of deâ€" concy and honour, if such a rag reâ€" mained to it. Ind M@¥¥ile #urtive monâ€" ster, that sla Andiffesently . bo!h‘ friend and enem Rvagéry ot war touches its basest‘ . and ity exls-’ tence in an offense mxaingt the most* elementary ~conditionts of "a civilised society. * / * | Acrgplanes are a but thiy have aiso ; to the useful and ha of society. But the mitigated devilty. uses as a weaponâ€"of worthless, and if it 1 merrow there is not bhuman AInterest whi loss. The Right Hon. A. V. Alexander First Lord of the Admtraity . The sinking of the submarine H. 47 with its appaliing loss of life is re sponsible for.a passionate plea by Mr writes The Necessity For "A Positive Insistence on the Eliminaâ€" _ tion of the Submarine From the Armoury of Wal’" % “ What a great thing it would bo if we canld persuade the nations of the world to abandon the submarine as a weapon of warfare." 1 H.47â€"Why is This â€"| Outrage Permitted n the submarine, and they harg abundant notice 6n the subject:. rto they havo fafted to ‘act out nsideration to the opposition of K. Gardiner in the 7Ԥtur~."'~' â€"!'!e h P ht in es are a weapon of war, ave also added enormously ul and barmless equipment But the submarine is unâ€" devilry. Apart from its reaponâ€"of war it is entirely ind if it were ontlawed toâ€" re is not a single healtity erest which would suffer | to M. Briand one of give.. warnings . ever a nation in public that Japan is in sintster fact d. The case acid test of and it must y the world ? The that rd m Ottawa.â€"â€"A.. K. Porsild, botonist . , | and biological investigator, and F. H. C Ketto, DL.S8., of theâ€" department of id the interior, who have been investtâ€" U / gating wild life mlatters in the James C ) Ray region returned recontly, |~ _ The areas dealt with were Akimiski ©*/ island ‘on the wost coast of the bay ‘°\ and Charlton island onâ€"the east coast. * . These surveys aÂ¥e in comnection with * wild life propagation and other mat-‘ . ters. ‘The investigators went north ©, early in June to the end of steel on ® / the Temiskaming andâ€"Northorn Onâ€" 8/ tario railway and thence by canoo ) down u:%hAbltlbl river to Modse Facâ€" !fltory. ‘The : voyaging about "‘the bay C/ wasâ€"dowe with a small sailing Â¥essel t / with auxtHary gasoline engine; ‘The f roturn journey was over the same | route. They will immediately preâ€" t. pare their reports for presentation to â€"‘ Hon. (‘harles‘Stewart, minister of the 6 ~interlor. * & . io he dexeloped jointly at Chats Falls,| wark,. att Doslbip the mont, IiMDort: | . Prrovâ€"â€"mesmemmmmegs on the Ottawa, by the Ontario HNmAi :v;rl:).t :?ld llr;?;:sil:)l:otm;).;;ne:;r::;?ypoar;. *. e ahe F2E k | Electric Power Commission, ODOT@t:| nreciated. . And that 48 the saving|â€" [# °_ ~.. "uk ; . ingon "the: Ontario side of the river.| of infnts and sohoo! .children.. . This : i ge 2 e { ind by I. W. Killam of Montreal on | begins.> with ; <the . oxBbctant, mother. }.; ; oap. n $ | the Quebor side«‘s !She is being taught. the importance _ The despatch also stated that Mr.‘ of preâ€"natal care. . Shevis being. urge, â€" Killam‘s surplus power would be P4T | of to spe her doctor trequently" beâ€" chated by the Hydro, for distributio®} rore tng birth of hgrâ€"child, or‘ to reâ€"| ; (Messete +oge, o oor 7. n’nlEastcrn ?r;‘t{urfio, *provided a sultâ€"| gWiggiy .attond. clinics maiftained.. for ! i grd . * ~. _ able priceâ€"la own in (Ontarioâ€"|, i N £ o o 23 B conpenement could be ‘Secured, and provided the\ :;"m';:“';:l:“‘d flafe;v. ,Pu(;gug .ne:lxlm ‘M n AJ _ Quebec ‘Covernment‘s approval to the| Sttess the lfixmpo!am‘ito‘ | ‘setseme Is forthtoming."~‘"‘= .. . Two weeks, after the birth. of the}: d i Work of erecting the joint dam and child, the n“'rie ua'nvc‘u‘g the n’lot’h* $ power plant would start, the deâ€" ot &. dlrécteh m_;‘wdth'gb'y" ceh'!re's" C spatches statéd, early this fall., where her Child is oxXmined w‘elgh: 5 Commenting on the repprt. Promfie® pd, any detectgiue'd afd the mothor i s .. G. Howard Ferguson said! "The whole| referred) to her @doctor.to have these| [,~; d question â€" of« ~developifg .«PQWer &t) {omagjieq, No 1X OH > C dits m L rte it Chats Falls is @ matter of nogotiation. | The newes * devel: mw;;( ‘ian mis| y 92z Â¥= .. #: We have been discussing 1t fOf §0M€ > yi;onae of d:}hfl"m‘ is the, "proâ€"| EP 4’%*‘:. M”‘% time and hope to reach a satisfac 'uhool-pce" clinic, .for the . »h‘g‘slcal “n,??h h. ";»‘.‘,_f\ torg® corteluston ; before long." ' exa::lniflon ‘}( children ‘before they|" um 2sl L2 t ie | *: start to school. «, * ie zn f t ol yO RCB 7 | The Highest Art . ‘ oo au qurw_qq:o 1 tite ot the}\â€" *) )o &n>"" END| ,â€" The lover of natare has the highest ~chftd, regular PHysical ~examinations |~ â€"~Capt P"J. Crichtormt was * art in his â€"sod1.â€"R.fJefferies. * { aro provided for it, health educhtlond! ~enduranceâ€"plane,.Minnesota _ The despatch Afso stated that Mr. Killam‘s surplus power would be purâ€" chased by the Hydro, for distribution in. Eastern Ontatjo, *provided .a suitâ€" able priceâ€"lafd down in ‘Ontarioâ€" could be ‘secured, and provided the ,Quebec ‘Covernment‘s approval to the *stheme is forthtoming. â€" ~**> . Commenting on the repprt. Promier G. Howard Ferguson n'fl"%o whole question â€" of: ~developing «pewer at Chats Falls is @ â€"matter of nogotiation. We hare been discussing it fof some time and hope to reach a satisfac tory, conclusion â€" before long." 80,000 Horsepower Is to Be . Developed on Ottawa f River® From _ Montreat come news deâ€" spatches that 88,000â€" horsepower is to be developed jointly at Chats Salls, on the Ottawa, by the Ontario droâ€" Electric ‘Power Commission, operatâ€" ing on ‘the Ontario side of the river, and by I. W. Killam of Montreal on the Quebeg side» > 6e /s a i Donvinton |_ "Buch a guitâ€"unrlike a paper tissue , lowelâ€"will be unaffected â€"by. rain , and hotd its shape for at least two , weeks, after which_it can be thrown away. C tw 7 ‘"‘There is no question that préesent clothes are maddening. But we are slaves of .convention. Although. a thousand men â€" marching: down â€" to work in pajamas would liberate us from the present style tyranny, it is impossible to find a thousand such men. ‘The paper suit is our only hope." strips of «paper about his* formt and then <fasten them: with fish glue> . | _ Chicagoâ€"How men can obtain > _ more cemfortable form of summer atâ€" tire, a question that has brought forth advocates of everything from. pajamâ€" as to barrels, has another answer. It comes . from Waldemar Kaempfert, director of the Rosenwald Industrial Museum, Men‘s enslaventent to fashâ€" ion, says Mr. Kaempfert, will be, brok en by .paper suits, costing. .about §2 a pilece and thrown away after about two week‘s wear. * ~"The fibers,"~Mr. Kiémptert siys, "will be made of, paper, and w_lflfi spun like cotton or wool, then wov into attractive pattorns. Instead: of being _ sewn togotKer, the waven paper will be‘@glued. A man will step into a wlothes. shop, where an «expert tlilor will. in a few minutes drape Paper Suit Favored To ‘Liberate‘ Men The story of the terrific struggle with the clements which followed is told in a vivid narrative which is a great epic of â€"the sea. The reader will follow with breathless interest the details of the operations which make it easy to visualise every operaâ€" tion and to understand Ats purpose. Above all, it is a plea agatust the inâ€" iquity of the submarine. # xamined Wild Life Around James Bay The wreckâ€"master of a salvake company, when leaving the conferâ€" ence, declared: "I don‘t know who is going to do this job, but whoever he is, he‘ll wishk before "he gets through â€" that he« had .been bern a girlâ€"baby .‘ â€"dead, but the task of raising the subâ€" | marine under such conditions, was so difficult that no private salvage company couf undertake it. Evenâ€" tually Commander Elisberg conceived a plan, but the Navy Department was iscepticul, and it was only after ught-‘ Ing hard forâ€"it throughout"a conter-] ence lasting a whole night that he was allowed to carry it out. * f * The wreckâ€"master of a saivage comâ€" pany could undertake it. Eventual ly Commander Ellsberg conceived a plan, but the Navy Department was sceptical, and it was only after fightâ€" ing hard for it throughout a conferenâ€" ce lasting a whole night that he was allowed to carry it out. se e inton Bo]t%ist and Bioâ€" logist Will Report at Ottawa â€"tuberculosis of bone and s,l.andâ€"ls virtually _ eliminated " from " *Toronto, and septic"sore throat and all other communicable diseases are reduced. Everyone is fitniliar with the dÂ¥dinâ€" ary routing of a choalth department â€"the ~checkingup of© communicable diseases, quatantining,; otc: wR Thon smilk. A verffable 1Ake of milk is poured into‘ Toronto every day, and alt of 4t excepiing les& than oneâ€"half of oneâ€"percent. is pasteuriged. The result is that.bovine tuberculosis discases;. typhold, _ dysentary,". diat rhoea, etc. â€"Toâ€"day Toronto‘s deathâ€" rate from typhold is .9, while thit of sural Ontarto fs 6.43.° * P E97. dtGLE sad : (64,. 5 . yiutchcdtaih s 3 t dn id That figure is, basec upon tilne imâ€" provement in â€"the department since 1910â€"amot upon the differencg bet ween the deathâ€"rate.of 1928 and the deathâ€" rate as it would have been if Torontg had had no department at all. _ &. And what is responsible for tWis? Haow does the departmént operate to save all these lives? * > o in 9 , First of alt, the _‘.\\'vai-ey gupply is safeguarded 'ngg'imt al ‘wfiter-borgd_; discases:. typhold, â€" dysentary.". dat. In 1910,, when Toronto began» to apend a good deat of money to proâ€" tect itw health, there were 15.1 deaths every year, for each thousand people, In 1928, only 11.8 died, out of every thousand. Working . that . out in terms of Toronto‘s many thousand population, a dfétinct saving of 1933 lives is shown. . And even that figâ€" ure mark you, is not fair to th> deâ€" partment,. which is actually . saying many. more lives than that evéry, year. him well worthy of his hire. During <the year‘ 1928, 1933 lives were saved by the Médl(_:al Health Department of the City ‘of Torontp. 1 quoto‘ Toronto figures because thay are roadily â€" available.‘ Hafifiltbg‘, Ontarib, : furhishes Quite as ‘good an examplo.â€" ‘Néarly two thousand peoâ€" ple, at least; â€" ~People in all walks of life. _ Enough to populate a whole village. _ Here is how that ffeure is arrived at. f 1 The "Reasons Why ‘Taxes <«Bhould Be Spent For Mainâ€" . taining Efficient Public = Health Departments ' ; By PR GORDON BATESg~ <â€" .. (General: Secretary, Canadian Sociat _ ~a« Hygiens. Conncil)~ _. / .. "Why sheilldâ€"my taxes be.spent‘ in naintaining..an â€"expensive departatent of sbealth?" _ . +s One occasionalty hears. that comâ€" blatnt ~even nowadays. There: are sth few people wito point out that a department of health does net proâ€" duce â€" anything and . therefore, they sugfiut. does not justify iteâ€"existence. But d?e‘g anybody claim that we| eould get atong wllnum\a- police force â€"despite the fact that It doesn‘t proâ€" duce anything either? ,_And the lifeâ€" guard at a summer rgsort. _ He ign‘t a producer yet if ‘he saves half a dozen lives during a summer, we deem him well worthv of his hira Health Units and _ Tax Payments Lieut. R. M THE KlNg’S ‘ Blair, Canada, being chaired aft Canada Once ‘Afte? allP thekind world cue car" ries â€"about in oneself is the.(lnpor;@utz thingâ€"and the world outside takes all; its grage, color, and_value from that â€"â€"J, R. "Lowelt. * 4 Cpmfort the ppor, protect and she’l-;' ter the we:%ud with all thy nlent right that whith is;â€"wrong. "‘%: shall The Lord love thee, amt R himselt shall be, thy great rew@rd â€" Alfred the Great. > Â¥ 4* s3 *= I ! # u0 _ Experimets~ with such rural health «f .”‘”“"""“'â€":" t " m departnrents,â€". or _ "country he:fiflx,Bandlt and'l-h h w t units".:ag , they . are usually termeg.r L o > _} ," ‘have ‘Bucceeded. far beyond;expectaâ€" Cache‘mat& tionin Quebec, British (‘olumbin_and j ity: 8 .;':‘; * > vea Saskatchewan, and toâ€"day one of the Sm!.(hens, n --â€"â€"/-\qt:er suncdigg § Noredaftiskx fnglue Ihe public,hofIth, highway exitazam Auis districtefor worker in this democrtic country 184 nearly two weeks, since a bandit heta to educat@~pyblic opinion to.the‘_end‘_up the Bk ‘Balk staff heve and o4, that governments federal, provlnc_lab eap’gfl ‘”‘i’j@““'% C ho ¢ dolhfi.“ and . mitnicipal .may be. justified ln‘f‘pdlpe'.‘f'dlr'e' "-a'p;issumg‘.qrni-Md spending publi¢c"money on thé ,estz?\]?»;:£ Aiim asfeep P . whd .&,‘m&, hear. lishment . of adégifately financed m_xgt Wa!'éomtt'fe R, Ih a. 1P "f 1 staffed health cognty wnits; over the He gave,hlé'na;ue iÂ¥ J;ir'u;iWesle‘y! «ntire °D°‘;mnh% * ,A & renp ' Snvt * Frake (ratSuta‘ t i x 1 sey ‘v<vF?T _vre..sb“n â€" The ~repsonf; i¢, that" rural Canada ' anF?; n:i(:"i?‘ln :.(‘u.lé::e.lhtofi liscta, fias wiot the money ?°~spe"q h 9“""I and when the crop is garnered, these Cld h0 O OAeirUiEsuctrats ue transients" decide to, remain . for , the adahas. ~~In place of the nplend!d; Finter, , and: corfle to â€" the ‘ cifies ind krealth orginization serving 'l'orouto.g‘iowns in Jarge .niinberg.. where. no ‘ghe work of which I have just roughâ€"» | work is available. ‘ This has become P Lt e thelmverage crural C 0r | a serfous problem to the province and munity has toâ€".get along with one ol’-' munfclnallt(es. as the in¢n must be ficial, and:â€"a partâ€"timeâ€"official at that! provided for by the (asparers, who â€"a medical officer of health who is | fbet their taxes should be used for miscrably. unpaid, even. for Jhis part-’ the relief of their own citizons who fme work» atd who cannot toncelÂ¥a: | are in need and not of eutsiders. The bly do the work that should be done.; situation ‘is intensified b’ the tumber Previncial departments of health are 6f immigrants coming West. :ogtenâ€" doing a great and important. work to} sibly 8 Tarm lab"Oreré."and these add stem : the tide of rural discase. and?greatly to "the unempkf)’fieni prob. premature death, but until zural comâ€"| ént, as they,do‘ nofâ€"remain OKâ€"Farm munities are surveyed by smallâ€"fullâ€" Sut AdrHt c&'yward;to ‘16bk "Sbrwork time counterparts of the health dppart-t where~the ~introducton.. of" michinery ments that are succeeding.so well inl is "m, eliminatifig. the need ~Jof cities ,anything like complete success ; 1u@BNEEâ€" Inborers. qoX hi s + Bigs is impossible. | i T carefuily examined, and bygiene edtâ€" cation â€" thoroughly ‘ and systematically carried on by the teacher. W _, AW‘ofâ€"these thingg contribute to the saving of many .more than 1933 lives in Foronto last year, as.well as to the 1 preventing of untold sickness, misery, and.economic wasteâ€"and all of these things point clearly© to orffe inescapâ€" able fact. that the effectiveness of any Public health department, and the hl'lmber of lives and tire sickness and A¢ economic ‘wastage ‘that 4t will! save : any .commpunity depend entl;ely] wpon. the amount cf money spent upon it, and carefully. expended by it, un | der the «lirection. of competent public health _oficials. A * | " A "certain Injusti¢e is "indicated ; Here. In big ‘Cdnadian cities death | wates are â€"beigg steadily reduced through the efforts of public hoam:'l departments." But rural Canada is | anot sharing in this march , towards| socifal healff<to nearly the same deâ€"‘ grge,) * /*~ * PA â€" mhegriah is sent to PRIZE WINNER BEING ACCLAIMED or winning the King‘s< Prize At Bisloy, Engnd __"__ DE the.King‘s Comfort Again in the Lime Light * parents, teeth are i com, D: CC OCZ. 20 MTS SHempOyment prodâ€"; allâ€"tu11. | 14w as they,do not remain 6A farm Lor tepart.| but ‘drift ¢ftyward . to ‘look ‘$brwork|* vell in? u'llere" Athe «introduction â€"of machinety}%~s uccoss | # rapidly ~eliminatinig. the â€" need ~of |* , | mantal laborers. â€"_> * 3 m In health w * ow â€" *toat *L wo h heaqm;Ban w *4 mt { Scfl ormed. . dit a‘nd M Ag 4. +/ p@g 1 He gave his name as Jame§s Wesley «Rurt," frofi Ontario. «: Indian _ tratkers > located â€" eleven thousand dollats and a>revolvér bidâ€" \den m‘ brush near wh#re he Was cap: I-,‘UI'Q({.’ ts a es "' " # |. ; In $§lde tourf.h6 pléadert‘ guilty to charge of robbery with violence and ow an ts rhatiatthe aligespe t BlessAd mre they who have the gift Of making {rlends, for. it 4s,.one of God‘s gifts. ‘It inyolves man; things butfa@ve all the power of going out df oneself and seeing .and appreciatâ€" ing u;g,,;evex‘ is noble. and loving. in aother, hecthe. x 5 | â€" Edmonton, Alta. â€"As a"result of a conferénce between menibers *of the | Alberta â€" Cabinet and‘ RoBert: â€"Forke, | Feder#®, Minister ~of Ininigration, a i«urver 8 the unqwbn&;‘t'sm- tion inâ€" this "Provincé will be svdde. . This will ‘be undertWken in view of !â€"the serious condition likely to occur rthls winter with the incteasing numâ€" ‘ber of unemployedâ€"men in the provâ€" | ince. . ‘The suPvey Will â€"ascertain thetr: ~number, their former home, how lon“] they have been in Canada,‘ how â€" and. Iby whom‘they were brought out, and | what are; their occupations. ~& Both | rural and urban, districts, will he covâ€" ‘ered ln,tha.lnnfi;tatiqn.. y l Unemployment . _ â€" Stirs the West Infliix adtat oA x of Immigrants‘ Adds to Problem in Western hz § Towns > . â€" "C [ Mest to find who Rits at home, and dally 7. con&nw.lh&.mfllnn T. o wos CPPOUCC COPT L m at PA ‘_â€" _ ~Contentment © Contentment@ia not to be Caught.Wy long and foreign «Chases; he is Hikeâ€" Mest to find who Rits at home, and Truth .(Lcdog). Briand has not chosen his moment very well in reâ€" producing his scheme for the "Uniâ€" ‘ted States of â€"Europe". 1 say repro du‘cing, for the idea.is one which has "been moving in the back of bis‘¥nd (6r many years past. ‘Indeed, some ‘Tour years ago he frst voiced it in the lobbies of the Ledgue of Naâ€" tlons at Geneva. ~ The Taw that at the prcsent moment he: should ‘have. thought Ht to come out into the open with his plan is «perhkps an indion tion that he. at logast Js @ware of the fore&ifg isolation of his country.",â€" ~Kte ended hln.‘# by stating that fron his %@PA. his own country he fowt o wak able to at leagt familiarize British manufacâ€" turers ewith greatness of Canadian in dustries and to accentuate the imâ€" portance of establishing their trade in Canada, "ha â€" world~feet Abat his efâ€" forts had not_been in vgin. . 69. t}fi the: Louwdon TuBes,â€" strgssed the Tact tzt a greater attempt must be _ made On the ‘part o0f Both:â€"Ganada and the «British ‘EBmpire to ~develop an !nt’e‘finplrei Trade. . "Britain," he "‘ngfll. "has come back go the industrial position» she helq@ . bofoge war in spite of tire t‘emlll o{ffi.'fi has Kok to c(afld with... At the end of the "war, ~in the early days of 1921,1 nfimmm: the ‘condition>of ‘hef industries wére to sugh;a terrible state that mations throughout the enâ€"| tire world thought her attempts to| "recover herâ€"status would be in vain."| ‘recover hef‘ttg;gl. would be in yain." "Great Britain pays out per anpum one hundred and fifty million doHars on the sinking fund of her war debt. and another three billiontwo hundred thousand oh the a@mual budget of the navy. â€" Stfll, sh@".Hagâ€".pulled â€"right ahead and to«Jay‘ > classed as one of the n&:‘k’ nof The, groat., ost traf@ling nation u___fie world."> ! Srithin Greatest Before ieaving here on his expediâ€" tion Beebe said that as far. as he knows radiumâ€"lumnous fish> hooks newer before bhave been used. . He outfitted with glowâ€"hooks nearly» a «foot long, hoping to land some of the powerful creatures from â€" lightiess depths that in past expediticns have Aroken out of the néts that brought upssmaller scentific specimens,. . He _,,fl_a.id that occasional presence of huge scales in the nets indicated the posâ€" gpibiltty of great"fish. ( The radium was used by Wiliam RBecbe, New â€"York natpralist, as<g, Jumâ€" "Inous coating on books attached .t0 sounding wires abdout/AA mile long, in depths where no. daylight exists. The first catch was a squid, a member of the octophs Tamily/~ It was large onâ€" ough to fill.2 faingized fruit basket. New . York Naturalist Makes â€"Experiment at Bermuda gew York.â€"Sctence gave fishermen something mew to . pl&y . withâ€" w wfxd arrived from, Bcémdn of gucâ€" cessfiPâ€"use there recently.of ragium as a lure, for dp@p sea fishing. . . Radium Coated Hooks Lure Fish ondon Néwspaperman Says :;,.?Il.ter-Emplre â€"ATgzede,is .. lik#» 4. @sa_cntlal,.m * In an address: to ghe . Adverfisius yb at the u‘oޣ -m\; Hotel, catredl, | receat$ ‘Ohdriés‘m. Luke To date, according to the report, the treaty section has compiled and printed, ‘ in their original languages and in French and English, 1,850 treatiesâ€"80 volumes . of about 450 pages Teach. _ The" tétal (f treatios thus farâ€"deposited‘at the league surâ€" passes considerably the 2,000 mark. Furthermore, no treatios made beâ€" tween any of the members of the eague are validâ€"intil tlg.jud been omcially registered. â€" O they® are transmitted to the treaty section of the league they are public property. «During the past calendar year, ac cording to the report which the secreâ€" taryâ€"general, Sir Eric Drummond, will submit to the assembly in Beptember, there have been 382 treaties registorâ€" ed by members of the league and the | United States has voluntarily sent toi the secretariate. for publication 14] treaties negotiated ty . Washingtog @uring the year, l ‘ ‘"‘The United States of Genevaâ€"Open covenants, or interâ€" national treaties, characterized as ephemeral when, Woodrow Wilson first demanded them at the creatipn of the league, have become startiingâ€" ly close to reality. The secret con-‘ pacts of ‘preâ€"war days may indeed Still exist, but they have no binding value on the peoples of the governâ€" ments which made them. League of Nations Does Big. Business 396 Treaties Have This Ye Been Registered Making a Total of Over God has ‘placed . within _‘"Trader In World T #5 000 b8 x She (toylyyâ€""Ie, 4t 4 to M. a’% Inlaf” .'H#Mmuvâ€" "You bet. than one .man has | Bacers C 14 Eesnt . OV . SV CAn" ; ment "and (Justice. Chief Inapaquina y 1.recently vigited the,.capital of pay his "‘respecta. to Pr%t Arosemena. It ;‘J:s during thiis wisif that he received ! apopointment.©. ; s ve "' The appointment was in recognition | of: the chieftain‘s loyalty to the Panâ€" | ama ‘ governmeht." â€" Purifig the San | Blas uprising vnader ‘the . "Amenican 4 ard «O. MaraW‘a (fow, Years Ago, Inapaquina refgsed.to join the mbye ment and was ingtrumental in restorâ€" | ing peaceful relations between the ]lnd]tnl and the government |. _ Chief Inapaquine is a chicf in the | moftern manner, . Mis clothes are of tthe datest English eut, . Wherever 4e ;travelu,’c_ secretary and an intgrpreâ€" | ter accompany Mim * W.’w‘u make a â€"success of a on®, man, ‘whic~the phbit of halt> ;. doing thipge cwill rein‘‘Cho bigcost * brained man in the world. Efficiency E it the ouly path %o subcess. birth" is "the: most ridieglous of all vanition; it is likeâ€"the boasting of the root of a tre@ insterd Of the fruit it Jt has, been; well sajd ihu the thing moit likely to tiake the Migels wardor is to see a pfoud man,‘hot prite of » 6 Aoe eE # . The, habit of lnu“a"lu things, of doing things in‘ a , â€"» mMlovonly way ; the habit of aintless, purposeless worklug;”r ruined ;. more careers than . al anything else. System, order and" concentration, goupled with ear ‘Shn. Blas Chief Gets Rank Loyalty Recognized by Government s .. o’n Panama * Panai6,Chiéf Inapaguina, consid> ered ‘theâ€"thost powertul as woll as the most colorful of the San Blas Indian ChieMatna, now rules over his domain agt a~"Hrigadier general" by appointâ€" ment . of . the Department of Governâ€" Mr. Wooliven says in a dettor that marjtime friends have told im how sparrows on Cape Breton island, wishâ€" ing toâ€"got to Newfoundland, and unâ€" derpowered for the trip themselves, perch on the backs of migraling geese and, make the crossing over Gabot m, as blind bagzaze. â€" Oge of his frienmds claims to have Ween"as many _as ten sparrows alight from such a stolen trip, â€"â€" § § There arises the @festion of the geose‘s craction to the prospect of beâ€" @oming & free transport to the lowly "eparrowg.‘~. The chances are that the goose would . not care for it. Like Assolant,. Lotti and Lefobvre, he might find himsel{ forced down short of his desiination owing to the added weight ,yhkg?._hd not figured on prior t&*his Ainal fweal taken proparaâ€" soryâ€" to a hopoff on the long overâ€" water Arig.." z0+ . Ottawa~â€"Albort â€" Schraber, _ who stowed away on the Rrench moneâ€" plane "Yellow Bird," has othing on nature‘s uer“l og'aplnnxc&--. if the story Aold 40 Fred Wooliven of Ar» more, Pénn., and repeated to Clyde L. Patch of the National musoum 3 true. Â¥, Sparrows Play Joke on Geese 4 wâ€" m * wiew Desirous â€"of ~Reaching New: foundland from Cape ‘Breâ€" « ton, and Being Underpowâ€" '-:.Qrd. Ate Said to AVd Thenselves of Geese Backs As Me?aq'g of Transport. tree. None of the vocal competitors was accompanied on ‘the plano. The scale of Gaelieâ€"music is not adapted to the modern piano. ‘The barp is the inâ€" strument most suited. to the accomâ€" panying of Gaelic songs. & The classical "Cha tit MacCrima®* or â€""MacCrimmon‘s _ Lanrent" . was heard .in wnison singing by choirs from Uig, Strath, Dunvegan, and Porâ€" violin playing. The excellence of the piping competitionsâ€"was a notable féature of the tests, baing due Inrgely to the skilled instruction of William MacDonald during the winter *months. Of â€"last year‘s class, four are now pipers tin the Scots Guards, one in lamerons, o%~ in the Glasgow Police Force. $ The first day of the Mod was chil dren‘s day. _ One of the tests was an essay on the wandering of Prince Charles in Skye; another the translaâ€" tion of a Gaelic prose passage. â€" No fewer than 200 children enterâ€" od for these. competitions, and th*e standard was high. (The semior comâ€" petitors, were tested on the second day of the Mod in singing, piping and Portree, Isle of Skye, Scot.â€"The annual Mod, or Gaelic mustca! festiâ€" ‘¥val, which bas terminated at Portree, has once more revealed the masicat talent of the "misty isle." Hero there is found true Gaelic ginging in ~an island where the Gaelic tongue still provails. On both days the Mod was well attended, some of the counâ€" try fotk ?mhg from towns 50 miles away, and evidently much appreciatâ€" w& the masic Skirl of Pipe Isle of Skye tier General * f# Shis Â¥ / 4

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