a” <—e at be ali’ AND MATSQUI NEWS beac Bieet. is used but the “squeal.” Had Good Train'’ng Coach (to new ’ man)—You're great! The way you hammer the line, dodge, tackle your man and worm through your opponents is simply marvellous, New Player (modestly)—I guess it all comes from my early training, sir. | You see my mother used to take me shopping with her on bargain days. grown in Guatemala last Co! i on filled 567,000 sacks. won wy, is oo. ile - 95 : with % yard 35-inch contrasting. Price of pattern 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred), Wrap coin carefully. } . | How To Order Patterns | Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 175 McDermot Ave. Winnipeg | Pattern No....-..++-+ Name | Town « Perera nese eeeetereeeeesenen | Hitler's cabinet and Dictator of Prussia. Here is the first picture of Adolf Hitler (left), to arrive in Canada since his elevation to the Chancellorship | of Germany. With the Nazi leader is Colonel Franz von Papen, former Chancellor, who is now Vice-Chancellor in| no hope for me | fiv be district and from the air succeeded in exterminat- them. Smith wants me to lend him $5. you & You w | Do ivise me to do so uild be doing me a personal flerce,” ‘Sure there is; try dialect storica”™ U I WHERE THE NEW WAR IS FLAMIN | . Set p in perce? Train In The World, . w . Ontario Town For Extraction | Operated In Germany, Has di itchblend | The Speed Of AnA Of Radium From Pitc Dlende L VENEZUELA e€ Spee n eroplane ! ; Nad Py, prospector high above Great Holland’s Plans Going Ahead } Speedy as an airplane, cheaper than | of what 104 miles an hour is may be Bear Lake looked down. Strange BOGOTA 4 8 locomotive, cheaper too, perhaps, | gainéd from the fact we were hitting ¥ markings on the shore of the lake | Reclamation Of Land Involves Total i than automobile transportation, the} three railelicks a second. This was Jured him. The next year he returned Cost Of Four Hundred Million new German Diessel-rotored express|so fast it blurred the clicks into a < 4nd found pitchblende, mineral from! While public works in many parts train has stood all its test trips with | steady hum. which radium is derived. From that/ of the world are at a standstill ow- @ success that has attracted the at- Back in the passengers’ cormpart- casual glance came Canada’s first r@-| ing to the financial stringency it is tention of railroad men from all oyer| ment nobody noticed the speed, and refinery at Port Hope, Ont. interesting to note that work on the world, and now the “flying Ham-|the waiters from the buffet-bar It's a queer place, this refinery. A | Holland's great 20-mile barring dam burger” has been entered as the| served soup and coffee with no more long concrete building surrounded by| across the Zulder Zee and the re- “fastest train on earth’ for regular| difficulty than on the diner of the a high wire fence. A strange place. plans | Service on the Hamburg-Berlin route | North Express. We pulled into Ham- The front door is locked. The fence | go merrily ahead. In fact, work on| _ beginning in March, burg at 12:50. and a vast crowd peer- seems insurmountable. A watchman /the dam proper has been completed Personal experience of the “light-|ed over the embankment railings to at the gate scrutinizes people closely. | and it is now possible to drive across ning train," as the Germans call it,| watch the goggle-eyed snout of the A show of credentials and finally, ad- | the sea in a motor car or other con- is sufficient to bring conviction that| “lightning train” nose to rest just mittance. veyance. The dam {s a unique con- this may after all be the railroads’|two hours and twenty minutes aiter A long white table covered with nection between the two Dutch prov- answer to steadily growing competi-|it had left Berlin. We had cut nearly jars of minerals. A big safe. Bun-j|inces, North Holland and Friesland. tion of automobiles. It is sufficient,| an hour off the ordinary train time Sen burners, one burning steadily. | It is part of the Zuider Zee reclaim- | too, to justify the inclusion of the | from Berlin to Hamburg and had coy- A small retort filled with mineral,| ing plan, which involves a total cost | “fying Hamburger” in that remark-| ered the 187 miles at an average of “stewing” over the burner. of $400,000,000, of which 650,000 able series of post-war technical | eighty miles an hour. In the background the factory. | acres of new territory are to be won. Here is a map showing the location of the outbreak of h be- ts by German But the train had just warmed ~ Huge tanks on one side, On the| The first of four polders, covering an |*Ween Colombia and Peru, which ended a century of peace between the two the Zeppelin, the Europa, the Bremen | up. Without refueling, and without other, a maze of pipes, stairs,|area of 50,000 acres, is already in |&tions. For many weeks Colombia and Peru have been disputing the small| ang the “Do-X.” the necessity of stopping for any- (eScthenware crucibles, pots. On the | cultivation. The dam itself, huge bat-|AFe® about the frontier town of Leticia, which was ceded to Colombia bY| he jong iow, violet, and cream|thing, the “flying Hamburger” can left the tanks for uranium extraction, | teries of locks and bridges included, |‘Fe0tY some years ago. The dispute reached a climax with the bombing of | ogioreg, streamlined car, pulls out|Tun 1,300 miles, or from Berlin to * On the right, the machinery for the |has called for an expense of $600,-|% Colombia gunboat by Peruvian 'planes on the Putumayo River and the | or the Lehrter station in Berlin at| Paris and back non-stop. It could be Production of the world’s most vallu- | 000,000, is 300 feet Wide and carries |CaPture of the town of Tarapaca by Colombia forces. The disputed area is | 49.39 clock in the morning. The|™ade to develop an average speed ‘ ‘able “salt.” For it looks like salt,!a railway track, a highway for fast like a match in a powder magazine, as Brazil and Ecuador are likely to be 100 iy much higher than eljghty miles an this load-packed radium which is so| traffic, a cyclists’ path and a road |‘f4wn into the brawl before the business is settled. dated, are scarcely aware that even| hour, but not on the existing crowd- . greatly needed for cancer treatment. | for pedestrians.—St. Thomas Times- before the train has cleared the maze | ¢4 trackage. An extra track from But there is a vast difference. A | Journal. Program For Recovery { Issues Warning of local switches the speed has/| Berlin to Hamburg would make pos- 3 needle no larger than that used in a | aa | reached the average top of a through | Sible an average speed of 100 miles phonograph is worth $650 when filled | Hard Times Helps To Prosperity As Seen By|Says United States Is Inviting War | express in the open country, At sixty| 4M hour, so that the trip between - with radium, , Secretary Of U.S. Treasury By Its Weakness | miles an hour the vibration is hardly these two cities could be made in un- But with M. L. Pochon, scientist! Comparing the Present Era With the) Ogden L. Mills, United States eal A stern warning that the United perceptible. der two hours. - who learned’ his trade in Paris, let Difficult Times Of 1894 retary of the treasury, urges as a | States Is “inviting war” by its “weak-| Beyond the suburbs the speed in-| But the profitability of the “flying ; us climb to the roof, the “top of| Frequent comparison is heard of | Program for recovery: ness'’ in naval strength was made by | creases to seventy, eighty, and then| Hamburger” depends, of course, on the world,” as Mr. Pochon says. | the present era with the “hard times”| “First, a balanced budget; second, | Rear-Admiral William A. Moffett. on a straightaway it jumps to ninety | !ts cost. The first unit cost $90,000 Wooden stairways wind around the | of 194, but so far we have heard of |41 easy money policy consistently| The outspoken chief of naval aero-| miles an hour. Now there are very | to build, according to Dr. Fuchs. This machinery. At the top is @ narrow/no one going back to drinking “sin|Pursued by the principal central | nautics sald Americans “are too busy |few persons in the world who have| 1s more than it would cost in any- platform. There are bags of ore,| and misery” as a substitute for cof-| banks; third, a definite attack on the boasting that we are the greatest | travelled ninety miles an hour on a| thing like mass produetion. But the pitchblende. There are carboys Of/ fee. “Sin and misery” was made by | debt problem, not by wholesale treat- | nation on earth.” | railroad train, but any traveller who | OPerating cost, according to Dr. chemicals. Into two electrically-| burning bread until black, and then | ment but by setting up adequate ma-| “It never seems to occur to us, in| has ridden the fast transcontinental | Fuchs, is one-fourth the cost of run- < : stirred vats the ore and chemicals | steeping it as a tea, explains A. E.|chinery to deal with different cate-|our conceit,” he said, “that another trains of America knows how it feels; ning a steam locomotive train with 5 are poured. The ore is a black pow-| Hatch. It received its name through | gories of debt; fourth, a settlement of i nation may declare war against us.” | to be going at seventy or seventy- | the same carrying capacity. j _ der, already ground. a remark of a neighbor of the Hatch | the foreign debt question; fifth, a sta-'In that event, he added, the United five, We were sure the “flying Ham-| At the moment its speed is also ~*"~ The mixture is heated and stirred. | family at-that time that “It is a sin|bilization of world exchanges by a [States would find itself in a position | burger’ was not making more than | greater, from station to station, than a Strange things happen. It travels by|to burn the bread and misery to | return in the first instance to the gold ji of holding “a pair of deuces egainst seventy-five when our hosts asked us| the normal airplane speed. ‘Planes gravity and vacuum pump into other | drink it."—Wakonda, S.D., Monitor. | standard by the more important com-|a full hous Ito visit the motorman’s compartment. | now in use in Germany would re- vats, through rubber-lined pipes. | = mercial and industrial countries; Moffett addressed the Naval Acad- There, up in front, the speedometer | quire an hour and a half from field - Finally the uranium and residue is sixth, the lifting of arbitrary trade |emy Graduates’ Association of New| showed ninety, then ninety-five, then | to field, but another hour has to be drawn off. The white precipitate con- barriers.” York at its annual banquet. His lis-| 100 and finally hovered around the | added for transportation to and from taining the radium is removed to the This is partially a program for'teners heard a frank discussion of maximum, 104 miles an hour, the| the fields, making a total of two laboratory. The residue starts up to the United States and partially a pro- | events in the Far Kast and prospects | fastest speed ever reached by a mo-/ hours and thirty minutes against the 1 the top again and moves through a gram for the world. | tor continued world peace. The ad-| tor-driven, propellerless yehicle on| ‘flying Hamburger’s” two hours and a succession of wooden tanks until it , For Canada, there can be drawn up miral was bitter in his criticism of | rails. Controlling this speed, control-| twenty minutes. f emerges as a yellow powder, used 4 program to ald recovery that this nation for being a party to the | ling every adjustment of the combin- for ceramics and pigments. / would be this country's most useful Washington treaty of 1922. “Uncle ed Diessel-engine, dynamo-motor Public Misunderstandings - But that is of minor importance. contribution to its own and the Sam lost everything but his shirt tail unit, the motorman had but one ~ Let us follow the radium to the “lab World's prosperity. when he signed the Washington tre- movement to make. The entire con-| Sole Obstacle In the Way Of WaF—— for the final processing. It is as follows: t ty," he said. . | trol is centred in a single handle, sim. Debt Settlement There are) dozens of quartz bowls 1. Balance the federal budget. Moffett expressed veiled warnings | ple as the control of a street car, The need for an attitude by the lay- in the “lab.” The radium, in liquid 2. Balance the provincial budgets. | of what Japan might accomplish by | Our vibration was even less than|man in economics similar to that of solution, moves from one to the other. 3. Reduce local taxation. | building a navy for the puppet state | in an ordinary Pullman at half the | the layman in preventive science was The liquid crystalizes. It travels on All else is secondary and most of of Manchoukuo. “Such a nayy would speed. One good reason is the under- ‘urged by Sir Norman Angell at the and on, the bulk becoming less and the other aids to recovery would fol-| not be subject to treaty limitations, slung construction, and this jis|Oxford Luncheon Club, In that way less. From the big vats in which it low naturally.—Financial Post. including the treaty ratios," he said.| unique in the “flying Hamburger,” Dly, he said, could we be sure that started it moves gradually into smal- r | for here the inventor, Dr. Frederick | UF society would not relapse into erg elassca ano ucw is: Eventually pe Canadian Airways More Radio Licenses Fuchs, director of the Federal Rajl- | Utter chaos. Foe od eer mU ener NORATRES as —- |ways,, solved for the first time, the| Sit Norman, who has just returned than Milady’s thimble. It is pure ra- More Than a Million Miles Flown By | Increasing Number Of People Shown | proble=1 of compressing the whole| ftom the United States, said that : dium now, nearly ready to take a Machines In 1932 To Be Using Radios | motive power, consisting of two 410- Public misunderstanding there was the pla ceaug erm emennee es dree Nearly 9,000 passengers were car-| People are buying radios and tak- | horse-power Diesel engines and two | Sole obstacle in the way of a settle- COLNE DOF \CALCER: eee See ried by the Canadian Airways in ing out licenses for them in increas- electric generators, in two compact | Ment of the debt question. “We are . ae Saree erica imeniica 1932, according to operating statistics ing degree, says the monthly state- | units, slung just above the rails, so | 80ing to yacs in i mation ot debt. Pate RTARTA cI Sai ankgecois’ Ge: released recently, ment of the radio branch of the ma- that the centre of gravity is very| Settlement,” he said, “a period of . , Passengers carried on mail lines rine department. For the 10 months | near the roadbed and the train hugs |8Teat bitterness in attitude on the eration. For radium’s emanation and b 807, mera ft the!of th : Nf es) lonely hae take | part of the United States which will ratiatisntsreiigugecous! xiance’ Ala numbered 807, on other lines of the /of the fiscal year ending Januaty, | the ground so closely that it can take | company, 8,963. over 100,000 more licenses were is- curves at double the speed of an or-| Postpone the general financial and chemist, as he fills the needles, must i Phe | i | economic settlement. That postpone- be protected. He sits before a glass 4 The mail carried during the year | sued than in the whole of the previous dinary train. & ¢ post; P : amounted to 299,066 pounds. Freight | year. The 10 months’ total was 716,-| But up in front the sense of yelo-| ment owing to American policy and case. He places his hands in rubber andlexprens carriediby Ganadlan Airs {663 598,358 In the | city. becs inipreaalven Tay js | Attitude is not due to the fact that gloves, through holes in the end of =P Ss ry adian Air- | 553, as compared with 598,358 in the city became EoD ‘essive. ie rails benlericaia pie onGie's cations RRR I EN ERC i wat erg his | ways ‘planes totalled 1,870,136 pounds. | fiscal year ended in 1932. | stretched out in endless bands of sil- clans : | More than a million miles were| | ver and they poured down the maw | @nyone else. — -ehest rests runs a heavy lead pad. * e 2 ; | 7 I believe sincerely that their at- - bsorbed by lead, while flown by Canadian Airways machines ; The teacher was putting questions | of our hooded monster at a rate that) titude is just similar to that of ou ae.- pu in 1932, Of this total, 287,372 were to the class. | made one gasp. An express train, la- | 4 CLOUT _the sealed glass case retains the bulk ri pee A : . on reparations 15 years ago. Broadly, : pietienation; flown on mail lines and 1,006,833 were | What do we call a man," he ask- boring Slopg-on-s: parallel" tracie dn, the sltuaton ts Chak vol nave online : Ttitakes hours to flliench tiny nee- 465 | fown on the company’s other lines. Kee wag ae on talking and talk-| ae direction, seemed standing still as Hide in ile “Unie ‘Stato hihy ua die. Then the radium is weighed on| . | ——_—_— ing praes people are no longer Pee ahot past. ; : ccononilsts. all the ‘experts, and all . scales so delicate the markings of a, TINY GIRLS LOVE TO WEAR| Two hundred pounds of hay, corn, | ested? ‘We, Were SoLUe i Renee Sener bankers standing either for can- ~ Jead pencil on a sheet of paper would) FREE AND EASY CLOTHES | and roots make a day's meal for an| “Please, sir,” replied a boy, “a| five meters a second, The German rails ranttinn aa esis stalin as = . upset their balance. They will weigh | re ey eae | elephant. teacher. are fifteen meters long. Some ison tn dentaton, Wovothes ae cpethes S \ are nd won't sl love this cunnin, it Mee a yt aie = ea = a na ae a ence y ave eg @: 2 eee pees cee, |dress? ‘The Alcea Haneda trnasthe FASCIST CHANCELLOR AND HIS CONSERVATIVE AIDE heen eke at hae ae D |brief French yoke. The skirt may > Oe arene oo. ny pou uale cate work. | join the yoke With pin tucks or with standing for payment to the last dot. In the laboratory too is a large vat soit gathering as in the back view. |The terror of the politicians in the of water. After each operation the) It is very dainty—and yet very | presence of popular misunderstanding scientists wash their hands in thif | Practical in yellow batiste with tiny |is intense.""—Manchester Guardian. white dots and plain white trim. | x ii e vat. When the vat becomes filled it “pie ground dimity with wee white ee too is submitted to the final process- posies and white contrast is another The Pied Piper of Hamlin has tak- 4 ing given the radium itself. RAS Anca vctheun Eee ia jen to the alr, Swarms of rat Possible atom of the radium is ex- 2 i peery mice made a sudden appearance in 3 Patan Poe (E ialotivast valus, eee ae other sturdy smart sug- | the North Caucasus Bee in Rus And, as was often said of pigs at |” Style No. 465 is designed for sizes }and became so destructive, appe the Chicago stock-yards, ha de Rel ED 4 and 6 years. for help were made. A squadron of | Size 4 requires 1% yards 35-inch,