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Durham Review (1897), 14 Nov 1929, p. 6

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W * 4 .Wm:';ig' CC Om ytt m}.fi.u ce 4C tm &?_‘J * edugige g“t,,#fi;% La td 6 is dn n Pelierandey, 3} wied . Marteriey [b i aad" A\!Kifi.l":.: <4. .: np ym ; d '&'m% h4# 170®keL Tey 1 Jt‘ n 1 § ite>,~ * Oirlg i Fepell Soviet Gouncils) ) <.%, e -Iz?::quu “*W trminy thont hk t onl : us nllints Liffes Th Two aister alips, the DOK2 and the +DBOâ€"Xâ€"3 â€" are ngy . hait, completed on ftalign .orders.‘ , The Fench: govâ€" erament also has :fiow*‘;: »lln‘&u‘:;t tu the typé of ¢» usg., acro«« ‘the fl’?m?nw, ;-a..&fsfim and Mazi®s® a@ , .N. 0 __, T t aâ€"s" R to be reassured. . Conditions are thoroughly sountd, it was stated. â€" flm*fl is exceptionaily good, and , even 1 it om,y reverts to ‘normal, Revferything will be satisfactory. Bank able able speed of loi-,l'_‘m‘ hoir. The exadt‘s twelve motore=devejopeda ©,009 horsepower and . Mited t‘pvflft’pw' tons casily, An‘altitug4.Of 1,200 feot was reached. A ue . 5 â€"o, s tic fligh: " is planned for the DOX, gian‘ Dornier airplane, before next spring, backers of the huse ship have made known. * Distance tMals hows ever will be heid in~the near fature Thoso connectsd with the Dornies orgaulzation and rfisldebfp *‘ of .. the Lake Constancea alike were ,deâ€" lighted with the performance of the glant craft, (which; carried ©189 pasâ€" songers aurt crew alott fgr an hour‘s remapkable flight. â€"«~ «> & ( Those: who made :the. fight wore fnanicous"in praistng the comfort of their trip, and ease of the ship‘s tile ilg oitlite allebtie®, Anditine remare "Busiges is 6x ovenv’?.it ofix teverything will | -l,ifll*t:bg.' basks. at‘is a phaseâ€"this on mg . a . were never on a firmer basts. ufi&‘h‘ happening now is only a phaseâ€"this one restricting itsel! to the area of stock speculation on marâ€" gin.. With so many peopleâ€"in the marâ€" ket they Nave rud up umfi Tevels out of fus Â¥ith the" igt . geturas and when the Sfructure gets top hfii’ t is bound to come ‘down sooner or "Fite intrinsie_walue of Canadfin astooks todary t« jitst as High @Â¥ it was a woek or a fortnight agd. The whole future of Canada |‘{#â€"ang&d of these corporations the same as it always was. ‘The trothle, as eÂ¥eryoné knows, Roliers, operatim® on margin, aad h])i- in# to make sotftic casy money.. The real c@uditions do. not warraht any DOâ€"X‘Plans No Atlantic â€" Flight Before Spring hniaer is then unwavranted and ‘excéptiqnal mmpfio:mu"mo market "by. weak fi;fe,to. do with the banks.but not diretly with the stock market. In the 'I,blenn'o_tttfl" Minister ‘of Finance no offfcial sta ment is made, but, speakâ€" tog> whoMrially, other officials of his department said that the public ought according to Government officials who ty ‘f""“::z) anik.. Ot, kay . W oigi ("’l'; Unlicensed Transmitter Used y c / As â€"a director ol the Electrical partment of Commerce En Power Distribution Company, he has Uncover the Secret also heon associated , with. the deâ€" An unlfcensed radio station, operat velopment of powar l'e‘.~‘0!ir(‘f’1. ing on a shortâ€"wave lefigth, â€"contrlâ€" m iâ€"smre buted largely to the undoing of one of ® ‘;OOd the most extensive Uiquorâ€"running Bmlne“. " i "rings" which the U.$. government has Demte Crash enountered, it was disclosed foflowing 4 the making of raids along the New Of Stock values Jersoy and LongIsland coast, which x irnsulced in the arrest of thirtyâ€"two llas The:e-â€"n: nothifg> Hit" the | men and the seizure of large quantlâ€" * $Â¥Xy>â€" ""*| ties of liquor. * en er g t * yae. | :";‘;';:'y*';:i:‘co':n":h:‘;:m ::“V;(; | _ Operating in the band oft~ ware ul kcwaski i. 1.. 2 5 .0% . & ‘ As â€"a director ol ~the Electrical Power Distribution Company, he has also been associated with the deâ€" velopment of pawar resources, For‘ many y8ars Sir William has been intereated in the development of mineral resources . in Great Britain, and has been a direetor of. the Alâ€" bion Colliery and of the Welsh Colâ€" liery company. Sir William, on his ret@rn to Engâ€" land, intends to report the result of his onquiries to other British capitalâ€" ists . who are interested in the deâ€" velopment of Canadian oil fields. "From my observations there," he added, "I have no hesitation in saying that the Turner Valley shows the best indicattons of of! wealth." After mentioning that he had spent the past two weeks in studying the Alberta oil! situation, Sir Willtam deâ€" clared that he had also visited the off fAelds lying fust south of the border in Montana. + "Its potentialities have only been seratched as yet, aud I confidently look forward to its early development on a large scale." * "Southern Alberta offers the most wonderful possibilities I know of in the British Emptre as an oll field," deâ€" clared Sir Wiltiam. Sir William has been in the Calgary district for the past fortnight, and during that time made an extensive study of the Valloy, field and of other oll structures in the southern part of the province. Calgary, Alta., Nov, 2.â€"Oil fields in Southern Alberta offer themsolves possibilities, Sir William Cope, proâ€" minent British financier, stated here on his return from a visit to Tarner Valley. J Another Sphere Where Canâ€" ada‘s Natural Resources Will Help Build Up the Country Sir William Cope Says Turner Valley Offers Possibilities itenrhein, Switzerlanad â€" fich* " in nlannad ¢nm‘s whatever lengths used largely by amateurs, uf t‘-" possible that the station misht’ llon(er have escaped detection had 1t not been for tho factâ€"that it was Iul' operation over long periods, someâ€" , times as much as fifteen to eighteen | ‘hours at a time. Search of ‘license records © falled~to show any statlon' ' with the call letters which wore being ; | used, nor were its messages underâ€" ~staundable, being in code. Engineer Runs Down Station _ In an effort to run down the ‘bootâ€" leg station, Forest Redfern, formerly an engineer of the Signal Corps and now a radio engineer in the New York office of the radio division of the Deâ€" partment of Commerce, was given the â€" assignment of"locating the station and ‘deciphering â€" the ~code. | Virtually, it was Redfern‘s detecting which led to the routing* of one of the groatest liquor rings .ever encountered by the prohibition officers. When the strange signals were roported in central eastâ€" eru New Jersey, Redfern, with a staff of radio aexperts, set out to find the station . with a directional radio reâ€" cciver installed in an automobile. Atâ€"|â€" though deciphoring the code was more | diMcult thanslocating the station, Redâ€"| . forn s}o_n solved ‘the fairly simple |. ciphor used. by. the station:" Messages | were copied for several weeks prior | ; to the raid amd the trarisiations of | j messages turned. over.â€"to the Federal 1 authorities. * 4 Illegal Radio Station Leads h‘ U.S. Authorities to Liquor "Ri Where 800 Canadians, killed in tter Used by Bootleggers Traced by Deâ€" imerce Engineer; Decipher Code and the Secretsâ€"of Rum Violators Ne Ecoivres CEMETERY, NEAR ARRAs C the battla around this famous war centre are buried, together with a hundred French soldiers Glasgow Herald (Con#.): In other words, s0 faras the two great Engâ€" lishâ€"speaking ‘ Powers . are concérned, their naval problems aa virtually solâ€" ved. . They have agreed on parity in the proper sense of that mueh misâ€" understood wordthat is to say, they have recognized ‘that parity ‘ means not â€"hecessarily identical tonnage, but equality of strength when due regard is paid to the=essential tasks" which each Navy has to ‘perform. This is a vary‘ great ‘achievement, and the‘i Wghost credit is duo and will be sladâ€" Iy given to those on both sides of the1 Atlautlc who have made it possible, Ftom time . to ‘time . radio officials have been informed that "privaté staâ€" tions were in opgration and have run them down, ©Usually, however, .they were found ..to be experiments by amateur set builders, who had no inâ€" téntion â€"of. deliberately .evading â€"the license requiremsz_lts. but occasionally unlicensed stations.,have been found which were being used for malicious purposes; It is also believed that the Jersoy station was the control of the entire ring and receiving operators at all imâ€" portant headquarters and aboard all vessels of the ring. The station is reâ€" ported to have maintained an eighâ€" teen hourâ€"day schedule and is believed toâ€"have heen in coustant communicaâ€" tion with vessels at sea. Although authorities are inclined to withhold information relative to the radio apparatus both a the central New . Jersey . station and aboard the rumâ€"running: vessels, it is generally believed that it all was of amateur construcion and assembled by an exâ€" pert. The equipment discovered in New Jersey was composed of_various parts available to amateurs. ed in one of the liquor boats prbéégd- ing to a point where a Coast ,Guard vessel was waiting to take it over. sult in the immeciate closing down of the station, for Redfern took over the key, and using the rum runnors‘ own code sent out messages which resultâ€" Crowds Naval Parity K .EEL 1. STod : is o2. s1 hi lliné contempt ~for : M 1500 < * cmimeletienmmeceny -‘J,-:Lq-*--!iâ€"r'-“:\-'fiâ€"â€"â€"â€"ar ka h Sthaits of inn "Bame that have m st thesan +8 LarA"ask., c3 nisav. Â¥ 7+ s of § C m s ouicl c y k £o dodor qthe{}{ ti),_h‘c\ fiéet of tugs :@nvorl_u,g .get Eimnpress of Canada ofi zoc The Stone of Memory to Our War Comrades "We ask, therefore, this time, does France intend to continue to sponsor & movement.whose aims are directed against the Italian State? Today, no one canâ€"quibble any longer that it is not the friendship.of the two nations that is involved but a clearing up of the Francoâ€"Itatian .sitnation. One Italian newspaper asks bluntly it France wants war but the majority of attacks on France, while bitter in tone,â€"are more moderate in statement than this. The CHMornale d‘ftalia says, "For her own defence, Ialy has a duty to do0" by making ‘a categorical declaration that the protective tolerâ€" ance hitherto given to antiâ€"Fascist exiles on French territory has become one of the fundamental problems of Italian relations with France. 4# really seems asâ€"if France has no inténtion of regulating her debt of loyaity and. peace to Italy. â€" , TORONTO Hitherto, the French have retorted that if they take steps to deport the antiâ€"Fascists they will have to deport the entife Italian colony resident in France, which Mussolinf does not cerâ€" tainly desire. Italy has frequenily demanded that the shelter given by France to antiâ€" Fascists must ceasge. Previous to this incident, considerâ€" able friction had developed between Italy and France which had cropped up when attempts were made by the Italians resident in France ow the lives of prominent Fascists, including Premier Mussolint. France is accused in Italian newsâ€" papers of sheltering the man DeRose, when he crossed the frontier without a passport, and giving him a police card which enabled him to leave Paris for Brussels. malicg It is even suggested that naval conâ€" versations between Italy and France will be imperilled by resentment felt throughout Italy against Frahce. Italian Papers Incensed at France for Harboring _ Antiâ€"Facist Exiles London, Nov. 2.â€"The British authâ€" orities are . watching _ with some anxiety _ the attacks being made against France in‘ the Italian press, following the attempt on the life of tite Italian Crown Prince at Brussels. Italy‘s Big Boss Sore at France F ts +z man with a headache"â€"George Macâ€" lDonald. a . To despise money on some occaâ€" slons is a very great gain.â€"Terence. els was noted in the cointr;;u;r-;g-e in theâ€"last €4 hours. Present fAigures are 66,166,000 bushels. a Though balf of the storage space in nnlfte»elev;tors‘ still‘ remains unâ€" filled, an increase of only 9,000 bushâ€" Rise in lakehead figures came 1n, apite. of a substantial shipment ,gt‘ 1,360,000 bushels eastward by four boats recently; The increased storâ€" agse showed as its result, however, that cars awaiting unloading at head of the lakes elevaters were decrgy-‘ ed by .200 to.a total of 4,200 cars; and lakehead unloadings outnumbered. arâ€" rivals in 7,22% cars to 505. The number of cars waiting to be empti¢d, into the Port Arthur and Fort. William elevators are the Jowâ€" est.figures for two full weeks. Mean while, car loadings at prairie points showed a slight decrease to 707 cars; and marketin®s by couftry farmers} increased a little to 1,098,000 bushels,| still a comparatively low daily figure.| The new figurg established by risâ€" ing contents ~in elevators at Port Arthur and Fort William encroaches for the first timeâ€"on the soâ€"called working margin cf 10,000,000 bushels but the larger working margin . is stated to be necessary for «conven‘iâ€" ent handling of tbe grain. L val Working Margin of Ten Milâ€" lion Bushels Encroached on for‘First Time . Winnipeg.â€"Swelled by an added store of more than half a million bushels of grain, storage at lake head elevators~pushed onward to an unheardâ€"of mark for the seasoun. The record cf 76,06%,000 buskels in the highâ€"piled bins showed ar‘ advance of 655,000 bushels over recent figure which was itselt a new high » mark for the season. 1 High Piled Bins Contain 76,â€" 062,000 Bushels of . Grain Lakehead Storage What can .money do Sets New Record BIG GAIN 1N DAY to . console a r68» it en * for the pleasures, n x procure.â€"Sheustone. A f.., V ~y$) * No nttients u-:.' ‘\_;,"‘ s #" The persons who have tWe nfost sofP4 _ Itisn‘t every girl that bathing Buits,| . A Airt and still fewer that bathing» gpits ‘do.] ber mind C â€" wl F0 CC e d v--wt ““W a wollorganite 'm“‘!’lllfl . vomen can get up st@irs easily in fnr a h%eh‘l‘yfi,(nnmi:'m’hdl", but _!hch;"};l dvesses ‘they wear now." Cl;i not ayail them§elres of At" ¢ 4’ \HGétBprstares" L431 say.they can!!* ported us agdmifabiFâ€"with a display : of ‘posters "and theâ€" Trado Commisioners were eq defatigable in theit efiects; : coâ€"opetation _ of_ B‘M,vflg was lacking. They had m MAne Sem in Canada is emphasited by C. .. Rowley, English industriallst, in &b interview . with ,“Thc-‘flw Times." . "Empire. Shopping ‘Weék was cited‘,_u, an â€" example, o <a t ersand exporters fAre not taking adâ€" vantage of the mm& fiem in Canada l;_en;pl;alitfl by C. He asked for a mu»rking instrument and reached up gnd marked â€" a hm‘ side of beet with the stamp, ‘,‘Prlmo{ Home Killed," which &fso shows an outline map of Engtand. +9Â¥ _._"In the interests 0f British agrietlâ€" ture ‘and as a farmer myself, I hope Londona . butchers will takée" faly Â¥auntage, of this stheme," ‘the Prince then said, . Sk : T. e P k Ese .2 & Briti;h Industry Urged i .de ‘;Lfi?o?fm.@.._mu?; j m!,:;iiu:md Received by the Lord Mayor of Lon: don, Sir‘ William®* Waterlow; Noel Buxion, Minister of gkmku,n, and market offigials, the U made a tour of the smmnemm,:t% afd inâ€" spected the ‘systent BY which homeâ€" killed beetf is marked and graded unâ€" der the "national mark" stamp. ‘London â€"The Prince of Wales i$â€"a farmer himse$f and he ‘belietes in adâ€" vertising the roast beef of<Old .Engâ€" lind. *2 * t* :0'-;' "‘_« _ "During a visit io the Smithfcld Meat Market: in Londoh recently the Prince persogally marked® lfieflu of, British beef and advised London housewives to ask for national meats "arld ‘see that they get them." > ‘ Prince _ of . Wales Urge$® © _â€"‘__ Britain Buy Own Beef _ _ Prince Carol protested the order, and it was annougrced that he would appear in court on November 7 to appeal from the decision. + On theâ€"complaint of, hfs Jandlady, the jugtice ‘bf"the peate has iésued an~ order requiring Prince Carol to pay$500 to cover not only damages to the apartment in which he lived, but also unpaid coal bills. Carot in Trouble * Parisâ€"With rumors arriving via Berlin and Bucharest that his mother had been ejected from the Rumanian Royal Palage at Balchlki former Crown Prince Carol found h f inâ€" volved in~distressing troubles: of his own. * % 6 e . A "The, Raiplre ; {,;-Boll“:ll rted uf_fl‘mfim'ml a Spleni The incident is another in a series of discordant episodes which recently have forced the Rumanian Royal Houschold into the limelight, among them being the sensational street fight between. Marie‘s son, Prince Nicholag, andâ€" the chauffeur, John Damian. ie W 6. KT After the furniture episode, the Dowuger sought refuge in the wing, and the royal architect advised her that he was commanded to build her a separate entrance. Under the terms of the testament of the late King Ferdinand, the Palace belongs to young Michael. Marie reâ€" fused to leave. Sbe hid in a small wing of the Palace, but continued to use the main entrance. ‘ Furniture Thrown Out ‘ Several days ago, Queen Marie was astounded .to find several pioces ot{ her furniture had been moved into the‘ courtyard. The situation was Agâ€" gravated by numerous â€" intimations: which she then received that her reâ€" moval had become «imperative. ] _ Only recently Princess Heana, 20â€" yearâ€"old daughter of the Dowager Queen, setting out in her yacht, the Istrava, to visit her mother at Balâ€" chik, narrowly escaped disaster when the yacht struck a reef near Agrigas. The yacht was pulled off by a gunâ€" boat and towed ‘back to Constanza, its starting point. Was Ejected, is Report J Au unconfirmed report stated that Marie was actually ejected from Balâ€" chik after an intermediary, acting on behalf of the Princess Helena, mothâ€" er of the boy King, requested the Dowager Queen to leave the. Palace. Rumors of strife between the Dow»â€" ager Queen and others of the family have been current for some time. It was declared that several of the famâ€" Ily were opposed to her inclination to interfere with the regency which preâ€" sides over Rumania on behalf of her grandsou, the boy king, Michael L . Berlin â€"A report~ received here from authoritatite sources in Buchâ€" arest said that Dowager Queen Maric of Rumania had fied from the Royal Palace at Balchik because of dissenâ€" slon in the Royal Family. > Queen Marie, Interferes with Young I(ms Michael and is Evidently Asked to _ Rumanian Royalty | Silver Fox Farming A Distressing SCeMe, C.ouim of New British Inâ€" :3 is ‘a girl~who has made up "é id not t6 make up her mind. e +s Wt o 7 lt 304 i oners . were, dyingdally. While working in the forest they wrjgnoc_kpd down and ovéerpowered " three guards. . The beginning of their march to Finland, through the north pountry, was accompanied by gréat"Rardships from cgld and lack of Helsingfors, Finland. â€"Three groups of Russian refugees, including one woman among the 13 persons, were found by Finnish guards on the Lapâ€" land frontier in a state of almost comâ€" plete exhaustion: by the hardships of their ‘long, overland journey from (he Sovie® prison on Solovyetsk Isâ€" lawd in the White Sea. â€" % x desori conditions as . a fiq ter‘ro?,"dl said that prieâ€" KFurther reports told of wounded Nationalists flooding into Cheng Chow from the west. The majority were suffering. from sword and bayonet wounds, indicating that the Knominâ€" ghun were engaging in handâ€"toâ€"hand combat ‘to congerve ammunition. Ofâ€" ficlals of Laphokow were fieeing in contusion as the invaders neared the gity. :The Jmau dspatch, said: "The guomm 'cr-;ol tho* Natlonalist rces, the victory resulting in‘ great cbnfusion. ~ Eaochokow officials are Reeing."> ;~,â€" or "People‘s Army," had scored a decisive‘ victory over Nationalist troops along the northwest border of the Provinces of Hupeh and Honan. Near Laohokow, Hupek, Cheng Chow despatrhes said, 10,000 Nationalist forces=G@eserted and began ravaging the countryside, while an equal numâ€" ber refused to fight. ~¢2 Tonger Hankowâ€"The Japanese military inâ€" telllge_neo_mtod that the Kuofinchun, China is Ravaged At present the supply of good pelts cannot keep up with the demand. Even if the present number of silver fox farms is doubled or quadrupled within the next fow years it is anticlâ€" pated that the best quality pelts will always command a good price.â€"Lonâ€" don Times. 10,000 ‘Nationalists Desert, Others Reguse to Fight was not until 1920 that the possibiliâ€" ties of fox farming in Great Britain were realized. Since then, some 30 | farms, holding a total stock of over | 500 pairs of foxes have started on . what has proved in most cases a very profitable form of stock rearing. Comâ€" trary to expectation, most climates, such as that of Dartmoor and the Highlands, have proved satisfactory, ‘.‘ pelts better than the boest Ameriâ€" can pelts are now produced there. ‘ From a bumane standpoint, silyer ; fox farming bhas much to recommen$ | it as opposed to all forms of trapping. \ Instead of meeting a lingering and | painful death in the fron jaws of a trap, the fox can be mercifuily chloro formed. : Also, the breeder can pelt the fox when its pelt is at its best. As regards health, silver foxes are hardy and remain free from disease proâ€" vided that strict attention is paid to feeding and scrupulous cleanliness is adhered to. ‘The capital outlay is considerable, a pair of firstâ€"class cubs costing anything from £100 to £200, But when it is remembered that an average of four cubs per pair in a year, selling from £50 to £200 per pelt, may be looked for, the return on capital is se:n to be considerable. To~protect the interests of British gilver fox breeders the Silver Fox Breeders‘ Association was formed. This association holds an annual show, the next being from November 13 to 15, at Oxford, and also registers and inspects all stock. solyed until 1882, when the Prince Bdâ€" ward strain was established; but it By Fleeing Troops As Rebels Triumph .. Reignof Terror The problem of rearing silver fuxes Mistak t on By, Accid )1

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