Northern Advance, 16 Jul 1903, p. 3

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you-. the item` UgVVV,vvv cu Ihlpl: E10110 00!! 9; of economy in all th_ names, and vmorchunt-. mu-inc: 0! tin `wot-14 ituwgt `cod rpauy don` pug. v)`Mr !!i1!.h'.0nIk1r&blo. _ _% _ gb snu-: av nu. riR's1* g.;.as`s DEALERS .......:....- ... .1... H... nm -mle tnnden Tubs and Pails whs-1 FIRST" uuass uLau,.r.n= byle wooden Tubs whom you can , agwell as being light, strong and handsome. .Ga.bri_cl Dusot, who was Louis Riel s right-hand man in the rebel-` lion in Northwegt Canada 18 years u.-__ _..............l "l'\ +h fnrrittyrv IIUII Ill 1-` UK In: vvugv vwu...._... .. V . __ . ago, has returned to the territory from the United. States, where he has been living since his chief was ` executed, atter the suppression of trip.-,`,;{e itrouble. Dumont in his 3'oungc_'i=:`7,';': `.1 ! days bore a great reputation as 34:} i_.`;.a [sout and hunter, and many roman-' .- Atic' stories are told of his feats` and ' `adventures in the backwoods. He the `K. `A ` outlawed for a long time after the Riel rebellion. He proved himself, be- yond his expcrienced knowledge of the woods and streams, a military `strategist of great talent, and he gavev_ the Dominion forces mug]: trouble in 1885. l ' ` `VV -r ;Vj'v" will `mu . not can fot lravln mulionu gpug bu, ecc.. sud cl {onus of Iuanqnooo. It can; sot cues annually. {Such endorsements as the outollowinz are _I 2|W|||3 cum tn `Bone splns at Ten Yum Inning. Eulvma. N.Y.. Int. n. max. - CIINC WI DDIII Upuuuo an n cu - u- u v.........._ Eatlvma. N.Y.. Mar. 1:. xgux. 15.3.]. K&Id:l!Co.. Gntkmea:-SoIu an ago! % used your Kendalrs S via Cmoou 3 bone 3 hndtwo h'oi>obkf;1e. annual _ "I." KSIDALL co_..I,ocburrag,-vg, _ once Rllfs fight Inn! Man. gm`? '7` `mcunll `I A 1 a. - D or 11, . any of the adv . 0 cumst ;_..,. , 1y heralds a . _ r_ _ 1 national gatherin D9n8~ `in '.London" t,o-day-_(M, ' .8) one ` `of all intern1(fit<)11ar1ld lngst pr ~ he World has sou` c'9nfrence:cu9&1"( `agree upon. a.r;_been _abl-btha,_1-, ;1, Itrlis` a` C0nferc1icO. .i:1.1 vb M Q to ': F -1193 y.and d . .. 8. my V 1 bread-and.bua1'lV -the qauecti? 1110131 1330916 6f._,1;he rw intrestsy` He.-lid 3' Hague peace com ("'13 than `:1 : .the =4 lineal gafhex-in.gS $c1`0nces"of 0th The` 1 of the world ha h high pOu`?1"po. , The Internative dreamed tu.ina "E4 `ference will be 1?ne._1 _TelQgra , 9 | 1 :tion Hall of thee!-d in the E1331 Qqh; 7:1 Physicians and qR0ya,1,cua_'milna._`_ ` '1`hames Embankk llrgaeons 83E`.-.-`gfj;: opened this mm. I.nnt. aim n_ the` .CH&mber1ain thzmg by'Mg- "X1-be 1 ` 7 ostmast. Ste 5 . er-(;,ener_`_ a1 1 At this cdnfcrenco every na.tio1i"ii1;.' the world civilized enough to be I a -, user of the telegraph-which, of I course, means the whole of the civil-` ized wor1d--is represented, with one 1 Th 114- 13-9.. ,..A. .\ .\+ nfhln curt-nnfinn "technical explanation, \VUl i`-4 -m an nylon wwunnvvu ost notable exception. That ex- '4 cc tion is the United States of Am-` ".1 er a. But though, for rcasons pure- : I 1y technical and , capable .only cot ,1 the United !. States is not directly represented in the conference, it yet fully shares` in the effects of all its deliberations. T...4-.-uonnl-'nnn1 `Tnlnnnnh nnn_ I111. - GLIUUDD VA BULL Aunt uv-nuvocthlvllu The Internati ona.l`Te1egr6,phV Con- ference discuss and amicably arrange \: (xvcry point of every sort relating to_ the exchange 01-: tele`g'ra.phic- communi-_ ,; cations between all the ends -and parts of the earth. - Tc -unn nhnnld wish to travel frnrvnux pal LEI UI busy \/can van! It you should wish to travel frotn the interior of Argentina or of Per-' `London to, say, Manchuria; or to! sin, you would need to spend quite a little time and anxiety in tfortifying yourself with the `,\'ery_necesa_a1fy"per-.' mits to insure your reaching your destination unmolested by trouble-3 some customs and mill-tary authoryi-` ties, and toAre`ach it in reasonable_ time. 1 V 1 (I,_l_Il___ _ Ql_.-Il_IL_. I ~ ' -I l If you wanted to telegraph to these places you would simply goto the nearest. telegraph Anfco-it might be in a. grocer s `shop -at the next ' corner--and hand in your message in ,the simple and_ nu~b1in_1o,aasVurgnco `hat it would bodclivered to `your ~correspondent in- Manchuria or Per- sia or Argentina within a. few hours` and without the slightest trouble to `you or to him. . { n'\L.:.. l..uu...L nvnsliv vnnnasnann 'vnnp|u ` J WU `I-I L`, IIILILO . This though your rnessage might] convey immensely more ' 1mpo`rt'ant4' news to him than` you could carry it you took the long journo yourself. And you would mot"..l_kely com- -plain strongly it your tolgram were `delayed an hour or two, though you in person might. be deiayed for days : at some frontier by _ some stupid frontier oicer. ` ' { 4.1: . . 4 _ _ -_.LA-__ -1 LI... 1| klllvllil Uuauiiln ' All these delicate matters. of the 4,! free passage of the telegraphiecor-Tl `rcspondence of the world all over the world the Intern'at_i'onal_ Telegraph I Conference arranges. .Its.wox1k' and! the result of its work are worthy the ' pen 01' the world's tgrealtest nqyelist. I . rm..- .......PA-.A...nn svutunl-11 nhllf &II`II. }-`U11 UL bill: VVUI au alwilulvv-Iv nnvqjvv----vv ~ The conference meets about `every- Eve years. The present meeting i_s<,;_ lit-. two years belated. It should have; been held in 1901, which was . the golden jubilee year of the establih-" ment of international submarine tel- cgraphy. It is held in turn in `the; .world s great capitals"; There W616 other things of moment to the world. `occupying'thee British Empire's 0&Pi' tul two years ago. So phe 'c0,nf01ff- . ence was postponed. h..4. 4.L.......l. an- 1-6.-usnnl-1nnn'1 nhn-Q "pa woirk in London`: .3! 7v gf Detnil-'rho`mo for 3 Kovuat. . 5` run: was pusbpuucu. -. . 4 _ V - But though the International Con-, ference meets only~oi1ce_ invo` y6a1`9.j- .thereAexistsV all the timcaan.Intern_a- tionul J`o1egrI1ph }3u~!fcau,A Which the` ('0r1fr-roncus direct, thif. `d0.89 1'07 th,91; telegraphic c-omznunications. of the World what The Hag-ue bureau 11195 ` _do for the peace ofAtl.`16~w6r1d---whe`n' the millcnniuln is ..a little nearer, v_ = `rue World`: Nerve Contrpo . This bureau is loca.te(1"Aat;13er11_-"` Switzerland. It is the ,nerve '8'nt". of the world's telegraphs- It 18 _th0 Ihe court of arbitration and medium of amicable arrangement of all the dimculties that arisein the away 9 the free interchange of tel81'Phi 1 t'orx`nspon(1once between; all. the 61159 ofihe ('i1I`Lh. It is a prosaic business` otce full or? innite poetry- ' ,_ -._ ..... .. {.5 Iz.ntu!lr ivn" I JULY V8.7-1`90$" outce mm or lnnnlte p0vw`.Y- . Borne, as the bureau is?k'_11_-Wn 1!` every telegraph o1c6_ in the Wr.m' is in closer touch with all the worm- 1.hnn+1n- all the W0r1d'.8 rulers 3d poiiticiuns. [T ? ' ' 1 1: ,, , . - , ,, '.__1.'`_- .-.z_ ` 4.1.... `lin1hnnn- 111 E.'Y W3 .'.A"".E*`-.E"'.?~."!`~.`.F `s - ~ ,. K. V 1 :2 or IN7e`aNATub g;;;. j. GRAPI-.1'.CON._GRESS., :=`?< Sublime Simplicity. I its way by the ad ahead` 6! every V the`. Internat-idhalv Lasso, e A!_rom_'Be4rnlo`:_ .. ll Qnw 'y qther.m9ssmge;fto;: mu! =.';_in. this v_vidq._. .1 t , = .. 3` Tqu` Wcfst. coast t:....S11_u,|"A1"'1.31.'1,`?3v3-A3:75.. H ".41; L , ._`;`CQ_`,' D11:-ans {?_]T`n11 Stations, - and .-.a. Tx`nessagve`IroniT`Ll}erne,' telling. perhaps, ' V> of ` interru1itiqgi_`__`.1to . :NY;o_s.t-~"~t1 Indian cables `{Vbeca.i1:s-i:3f~`<)'f jthe" I`tioz_1 at _lfartitique,; or; of `the stqp-' fa . page of,`,`ciph`er- telegraxns `(co South g_.i! ',Africa. beca.use- o1 ;13_o_erw "war. "` would be; passed.fro1p`one station. b 1` and `Government, and:'c'g`.ble"compa`ny +711 I to anothf, un3;i1` it `rjeachediavery,-." telegraph office in the;worId.j_: ; 2 11 This {ti ll\vn`Iv - -4---~ J ` " ` &'-.-.7- V - ' . . . . . _ '_ Everything relating to the internal T -telegraph service 7 of the various % `countries is communicated to Berne, iand so to one a.__no'ther; every ` Wim- . provement .any country may intro; ,.T~`duce, all alterations of tari, open- `! 3` ing of new lines and closing of old` ._ ; ones, :1}! about new" experiments, ev- L ' en the times during which oices are Vlopen. ' . - r_. v V you-a g clence. H11 , , vv `Jo Anna 4 For Berne is very much.more than a more information bureau." It is an internationalclcaring house -and ar- bitration tribunal. It was created in 1868, as a, central office to col- lect, arrange, an-d-_ publish informa- iition of all kinds relating to interna- ! tional telegraphy;- to circulate re- j quests." for modications of taris and `service regulations, to give no- tice of `changes adopted,` and gener- ally to study ; all subjects and exe- 'cute all workintrusted`, to it in the interest of international telegra- I 'I'B-.....--J.L:..._ ,__I_41.. ; :1 a 3' VI vlavnbe 7 "As showing the minuteness of de- tail with which Berne deals, it is in- teresting ? to note. that Berne says ` that `.`between'all offices of different {States the signal for closing is giv- uen by. the olce belonging to the ' State whose` capital is" situated fur- E thest West.'_' This` triing rule. illusr-. | -trates vividly 'how Berna `settles a ,very possible international quarrel _` between a Persian operator who may want to hurry home to see -his sweet- _. heart and a. Russian telegraphist gwho, at the usual houro! closing. . has stillon hand a. message from 8- lprosaie Cannon Street merchant or- daring a bale of something, by next steamer, from his Parsee agent in " Bombay. IR.--__- .I'<$n--14-we AC ntvnlocv CAD` r Duusuay. V ; Every dimculty of every sort `that. might arise between nations in the transmission of telegre.ma is dealt with by Borne. ' * ' - l - Gasman; our nnvnn mhnt Illlvhiif: wun uy umuc. . 1 Somp day some great novelist will 1 take Borne as his theme and write a. ptory of mgt. that 'will,Ihame _ all ,:t_D.le8 of the` purely imaginative story tellers; ` ' " " 4 . Inn. _ .._...___x_. `E ;LI.- 114:`. Tuurnnll WUIICFE. The `expense! offthel 1?-lgrne bureau. H are borne by -the yespective _Govcrn-,` ments in_ the orde1i= of -their telegra.-' phic import-ance._ (is denoted `by class- OS. - , j It. is interesting that in tho` rst. , \ class` come Great Byitain, Germany, it-he Argentine V. Republic, Brazil, Fra.nce, Britisvhhlpdiug, Itqly, Russia, E and Turkey. .. Then comq Austria.-': ; Spain, `and Hungary.., In the thiljd class are Belgium, No'rwy, Swedeng. ' Holland. and Roumania. " I -\-.._._._1- .._.A` Tannci` nnrnn in an 110118110. arm Jtluuxuuuna. Denmark and} J apan come in th, Jourth cl_a88. with omue Brit.- ish colonies. Portugal, Greece, and ` Servia. are in_ the fifth class, whilq ` in the last Pcrsia,_ Mqhtgnggro, and" Home smaller colonies of Europegm , -_ ~- .....a.... 13`.-rnrnm: uv--.' _-, - - Sin-T Frederick Lugurd. V _ b For_...a. man of only. forty-ve, say 'I`he_ Chronicle, Sir` Frederick Lugard . has` had -a. diversied .mi_lite.ry ex~peri- ` once in many lands. `He had hardly_ attained his majority" when he an-'-i_ companied. the expedition for , the punishment of the murderers of Sir Louis -'Cave.gna ri. In. `Afghanistanh _ Egypt, `the .Souda.n, end. Burma. he ; has participated in considerable tight- ` ing, while his work in Uganda. ash` representative of-- the British .. East 1 Africa. Company, and.` his present post in Nigeria under the. Coloniiil` 0fflce,' have given him .a, _up.ining in civil administration and 4:`-'pra.ctica.1 1 colonization. He is the author of The Rise of our East `African Em- pire;- orearly Eorts in,Uga.nda. and. Nyassaland. ' e . - '~r.'..Iu T1n'o'11!'d was once known t_o. Nyassaland. " ' Lady Lugard to. fame as Miss Flora. Shaw, the lady who toured Australia. for The Times, trumped toethe Klondike gold eld, also for the benet of Printing A House Square, and was one of the sociation with this `latter ill-starred-= ' enterprise is `one of,_the_ many m-at-. ters that the `committee preferred to leave. in the realms of the _mistily mysterious. Lady Lugard is _one o_! the three ladies who havereadpapers before the Royal Colonial Institute during the last` three A decade She- other evening in looking. very rueful :` " `- A frhrbtfu A $180 A `A sorter `employed at A` tne 1$ostof- c"e_ was discovered by a. fricvnd the other _evenin'g in his dIggings" ful indeed. . looking rue _ I'm in a frightful hole," he said. "I went` to` see two doctors yesterg day and. `got. up nzmiical-.certico.to. from' each. c 0no..was ac certicate of , health for a. V lite insprance company c; and the: other was a. Vcerticath-.of ill- 7 nesa` ' tq sand to ` t ,chie1.with my-I and the other was u ..........w., d to the chief, with ngy. leave of ab. 'A school` b-0a.l'd4.JAil;apg;:V1',op key & small pupil `of whet `the surface of .`.,V, H . . ' V d" the earth consists and mm . .e....':.':.::,t= ='*2,z; 5}!-IIUIIILTII Uuavusya V. 1.--ILondon Express. ' .5322 1`Ha;:rIut-:8 coanaawounerrr. 1 g . ' T ' ~-. I_.. ,V.`' ':;' -'- ' : ` ' ' .- > J-"Lu 5` I . A. "x V ' - the Catalan Voo3nbu!ary'fg'V-13A;_I`*6r,'l'haIII5 ` Gonuynlly Suppoi .'1`}is': fol` In .7; 3 " .Tanlor |-Uzix "' idfnjg; . `V " ; Aciording to .3 :7it"'1iot't1ic'. entire ;h1'1fy1a1_; ircabulary fat any rate many_1z_;ore_words than n ' . ..-............|-- 4....-.....-4.)! .~ in `....a.H ' 'i` :aog;[ ' canine race` . 1.8 -' ,erst.o`.n'dA-g ;IC any F836 ma.ny_ ISIIIII ;_`ledge; L- 1&Pr vocabulary `St an`;-Tany} . 0thi`::- " king:l.".', 1` says the ', ,'cbmmonly fsuppoeL_ _:;f-; ' jj3eg `. - "t.rust',A" '.f_etch_. it " ._ a1_id~`-`:fci:.ts'f >.are A by no eans the .1in;it"-Gt -wjjgs know- '3, `~" v`, 7 :_ . - . {Tet dogs, -as a; ruI_.e", .;,\. . . "r": QT-"I`I."*.i~i'3"=`." d6g"s,]the- kind we :AIi?_1;7iwitl11jcircu_ses A ayd` oh the `stage, ..probab`1$'r?g:qmc Sec- ` qnd, and. the pthers age ra._nge_d_- ac- 1 cording to the lives thgay_-1e.ad.I I 'I"lnn Hna Iniarnn.-urnrdn rnnch mom . The "dog 1perns,.:. words` much more `I uuruuxg L0 Lue_,1ivea bugy,-mg.x_.:.a. - rapidly than we _s,up'p_ose._ In" the rst place; this animal i's;"a._ `remairkably, close` obser.v_er.` Hearin"gi~ a.` sound re- peatedly; it soon learns to associate 4 {it with a. certain object. Take the `soon~lea.rns what is meant by gun, ; well trained hoi1nd,1)for instance. He shoot, huntfdeer, fox", chase and so I on. `(Experienced hunters can furnish ; many evidences of the understanding of dogs when it comjs--to the words and phrases most frequently used in connection with the sport. - -A axu1n,s1, 2; _-......'A. 1..-, n`n~:V!`\nl" for cDnneut.1un.\vun urns Bpul. u. "While it canno hunting dogs. that they have a. very extensive vocabulary; .they under- stand enough words__to-'go about t-Ibo. `blaimed A for {N their work intelligently` and at times j withpreoision that-islittle less than marvelous. `Pet dogs--poodles, fox terriers and` animals . of this` 1_ ha.ve.a. more extensive vocabulary. . ..._ .-n`._..L.-...:..... .-.0 Maia in frandg h&Ve,a. more UXVBIIHIVB Vquuuulau An illVu.sti'ation of_thispis. tima " in 9.1 fox'Vte rrier belonging -to. the; ~ma.`nager 3'~_`o1_`-at.-well known theatre, a. tex_'ri;zg of. _r`oya_l;1ineage,; having come from -. the ro$r'a.l l at .Budape_~.st. Few wordsin. comnion use aronnd the house a.re beyond _ the under- standing of . this intelligent animal. .It` knows the name of every article of `furniture; an clothing 4 in the % house. - - MA L-..;. ._-.. ......-I.. Inc: +1: nnvnnsln 1101153- A test va.s made `for tlie purpose , of determining `the accuracy .of`thc Tterrier s understanding of words. `I wa.nt.youto walk on your hind-feet to. the front room and bite .Mr. B. --_. 9 ..-:.I .. um\n'rv\"\n1` `n! fhn 0. tne lront. ruuxu. auu LJIUI7-415:. _... on the car. said a member `of the household to the pet. Forthwith the terrier was o, and before Mr. B. knew anything about the plan the pet dog was playfully pulling at his` Anu- _ perfectly. ear. , "Here was a rather intricate com- mand. It was not simply a `com- mand to. go; it saidhow to go, where to go, . what to do and to whom. But the terrier understood . y _ g . ` "Now, here is a dog having an ex-" traordinary vocabulary, understand-' ing, no doubt, A. no fewer than 250 `words. This one case will show that the pet dog has a wider understand- ing of words than`; dogs belonging to any other class, arid there is a rea- son for it otcourse. They are talked _to constantly and naturally learn to _ associate certain sounds withgccrtain objects,"--London Express.` _ :: _ Q19g Q` In-1_7l'|.;_\ V`l`:"e Wes Recently Cap- " . tired `by Io:-eecov Iobbou. !~ Waiter B`. Harris, The Times = _correspondent in -Morocco. who has been made prisoner _by a. robber cated in arrew and Cambridge Uni- A tribe ther . is a Fellow-ot. the Royal . Gmgrup Society and was edu- versity. E `years ago. he was mar- ri`edt'o Lady Mary Seville, the beau- `tifiil' daughter "of the ' Earl `of- Mex- Borough." He Visene of the most ven- turesome trpvelers, and has won fame inrcent years by his exploits among the Moham.meda.'ns. One bf his latest adventures, before his f>resent exploration of the country surround- ing _Ze'enatj,'~was the journey in Ye- man in Hm nnnthwnstprnt Dart, of Zenat`, `was the J0}1!'n0Y 111 1` `man, in % the southwegterp` p_a.rt . of Arabia, - -where he` 't1'a.veled dnsguxsed -_ _- -u-.-......1........ An's~:na- +1`: 1-nhnllinn Arabia, 'WIlBl'B IIU l/YGVUIOIS uawaunuvu as e". Mussulman during the rebellion _against the Turks. He - stgrted, from Aden, `acconfpanied only` by one ser- vant and a. `guide. `When-he reached the frontier he succeeded, by "means of his"disg(1ise, in obtaining _a permit i to passinto o`:{I`urkishj_ territory. ' He `was compelled to do " most ` of his traveling by.night.- During the day the little party hid in- the jungle. . 9 The explorer was nineteen days in !reaching Sena, the capital of the = 3 country. On "his" arrivalthere his dis- 'guise1` was `penetrated by the Tunkish ` atitho,rities,- who threw him into `pri- son. They compelled him to live . for two weeks in an underground cell. After` a week `he fell ill with fever, -l and while the fever was raging the Turks sent him through the moun- . tains westward` of .-Hodeida, on the Red Sea coast, under; an escort of soldiers. gThe journey, covering a. , little less than two hundred miles, occupied ve days. Then he was sent over ,the_ border,` with the "warning that if he returned he would be hung c by the thumbs. ; the extreme_. penalty` for trespassersi " Tn Others besides Irishman blunder when unexpected. demands." are made ;upon them. A welt-l_v known public ! man was lately assured by the chair-- l man that the assembly welcomed him `.'with no` unieignetl pleasure." at which the visitor was so embar- re.sse'd as to shy, _"I-I'm always N ,'gle,d to "be here-or anywhere else." It wa_.s.u.nwEng1ish Mayor who order- ed an interrupter to sit down and go out- . ' V A suburban apeulier uuggested that" '- the pending proposition be post- ,poned to the tuturerfoif some other. .`~L:o..'- "- 'lhA smnnintmant In ~DbGs} AN 3 VIC`! POHGG T40 Tallp 1|.lIaIu $"'\.u uvauv `time." . The appointment by 6 mid."- land authority of a. lady 95 L medical` protest" against oc brought a. mndicai men," ___..a`n hnunmlno - brought I pruucny ` CI-`Guano woulr becoming medical men," whic '.~.`!`qn1inds one of. tho convening "of 9 .-'mee'ting,o "women So! every class, regarglless of ' so: or condi- lrt1on'..'. --London Tu.tler.; - ., ruin Are Not'Ir|_fh Bum. `%jrt;11_%ij `rho Qgnfoi-co. . "At a meeting-.of A and C,hiru\rgi Society, held - -at . 2;; Hanover" Square, .`Lon`tlon.$?r'ecientA-, . -Prof.` Schafer; read the report othe committee (of_ yhich he man) appointli-`to consider. the blphy- 3 siologlcal phenomenaattlgftling jneph-o yxia produced by. the V n__-t V ' of Va, into the lungs, ; and the_se' which ac- % company r'ecove"ry2,in '.ap'pa.rent"deathe I by drowning.`.- 3The"rep'o1t\de'scri:bed . ? at some length the `principles of `the _ { methods which might be psea in arti. cial respiration in man.` These are of three kinds: (1) Trac_tion--enlarg- la ing the chest by raising`, the ribs. that is .Silvester s` ` traction, method of dragging the arms fox'w,a,1:_(l_, and- upward:_ (2) com1`;ession..by;1;i;lessuIo- on the walls of the thoxjax. .t'hus__ squeezing air out of itsand xallpwing i fresh air to pass in, and (3) the me- Echanical driving of air through the ' air `passages into the lungs, Th__isf f third method was neglected in the ex- ` perimcnts as not being generally ap- / plicable in most instances of lappa.r- ~ ent death from. `drowning. Experi- 1 ments had been carried out on ve _. medical men and physiologists to de- termine the quantity of air passed `into and out of the lungs. There- sults had been carefully tabulated,- V_.... `L-.. 4.... .....+lnnA-_ nf inrlnr-inn I 9 '3U1LS uuu UCCLI. IG`_lUA\4ll-_yv I'I~|l\-I-U-v\r\-y no l ess than ten_ methods of -injducing articial respiration _being3used, tall modificatio_ns"or combinations of tho `traction "and compression "processes. 1; It was apparent -' that all the meth- ods employed were competent to ef-. fact the oxygenation of the" blood by `,an exchange of air. The committee" drew attentionto the a'mount of- air inoveinent obtained when the `subject- was placed face downward or `on his side,Vand-both traction and pressure eemp1opye'd,e and advised that the roll- r' ingv method, and the `(still psimpler 2 .plan' of `placing the 'su'bject `"fa1:o downward`-and using regular inter-' .-_ mittcnt pressure ypon the back, 3 ` should occupy a prominentplace in I ` all recommendations made with the 3 ; view of theresnscitation ofthe ap- parently drowned. _ From experi- 3 ments on dogs it was clear that the 3 presence of water in the lung after - death was not to be expected, the 3` uid exu-ding from a cut lung being 3 blood serum. Another striking fact i was thelength of time immersion -` mighti last- in one case eight min- ` mes-and yet be followed by com- '- plete recovery. There. was little dif- " ference in the results obtained from 3 the experiments carried on in. fresh \,l and salt water. As one of the most 3`, marked physiological symptoms _, "of 1` death. from any form of asphyxia was the extreme. lowering of blood pressure owing to paralysis. of the vasomotor system, it had been hoped that `injections of adrenalin would be of service. The experiments . estab- - lishcd the fact that such injections could only `be benecial in`ca"ses,._ where the mood was afclently aer- ated, otherwise the ooctwvas only. ; temporary, deferring the inevitable _ : result for a `brief period.-London" p_ Standard`. A . - Tho` Moon and tho Professor George Darwin, "son" `of "Charles Darwin), who has mcde 1;` special study of the moon : eebt on-' the rotation of the earth-, has prov-, ed by mathemat.ic_8 that the moon once was a ' partoftho earth and still` is slowly moving.a way`from it;-- However, by the agency of the tides --due in the main to lunar inuence` _,4, ,LS-,, -1 LL`- -..u6I- In `uA`~nni ` --Que 111 L110-llluln bu Auxxua Luuuvuvv --the rotation of the earth is being made slower-, for the tides act as 9. huge brake upon the earth, which ev- er spins a little less rapidly; hence it is that the length of the day -- the period, that is, `of the earth's rota- tion-4-increases by about twenty-two seconds. in each century. Obviously this, unchecked, would make a`tre-' mendous difference in the habits of the people,` "say `a';~ million years hence, when the d,ayf_wo_ul'cl be about `eighty hours long. ffrroiessor Dar-' , win says that ultimatelyv the day and the month.,will be equal in length, amounting to about titty-ve days of the present length. This will be by no means the end, for if there still are .oceans on the earth the sun , will-cause-a tidal friction. even when the moon has ceased to doso, and will eventually bring the inoon` back to the arms of the earth neverfmbre to"'i_be parted. Such indeed-- will be the `history of the solar system, for the earth` and all the other planets. and their satellites will one day re- `join the sun which gave their: birth. ( .. Color Schemes in Farms. A man -who goes in for a color I scheme in- farming may fairly` be said to have a hobby. Lord Arlington has such ea. hobby, which he calls his white farm. Everything :a_bou't thgr b pia.ce__ that can be white__is 'yv_hiteLj He has `white horses, coiv8;5~dnd.=. donkeys, v 7a. white bull and white hares `from Siberia. The hens a.re_a'.1_l White, and so are the geese, `ducks and hogs. The `fences and term buildings V are painted white, and so are the farm wagons. White owers grow in the gardens, and the farm` laborers wear suits of coarse white ..cloth. Lord Ar- lington dresses in white when at the- iarm, but in spite of his example the ~ vegetables insist upon coming up green and the trees still shave green ! leaves in_ summer. Even a` British peer `cannot change that.` ' ` `I . A!!! .Q.nnII| `Un`nn f_hf1f `to DEB!` Canuub Uuuugu buuu. In New South Wales there ixsed to be a. black farm, which_was an ob- ject` 0: interest to ptrangars. The t settler `who owned it had everything painted black a.:;_:;'f'wou1d allow` `no animal on the p1`b;_cewhich' was not black. He even went so far as to hajro all the term. 1ab,orere negmes. In . vui ;;'I;2,Jr"'<>3iT'a ms policeman -in charge of tin. vstrlct ,pmht& mg infqnt son for mm. ~ " ` ' "Rpm this child, aid tins-learn-% .od ,9'xfond divine. g 1 _ ggaptimug, _ota,viuI_, air." utum-w 7!d??lfh`e.P1,F`.`,- % A ] . A J" --33$ .ei- 91.! rich-sit; `H! -V the .."`! 1m?` ```:'?j; ' L%L JI'A.`T"~ V ~ ~ A ;_1~ "~i'A "' `I I . '0 [,3] V. vlugu Ann. . 2 .' . '"` v"?"A% A t,.h:o4_?l.1i'iatoning vat ,co.!!r-_ q -_.n' "74'_.'_`4I.n`.- Q4-nIunI|. Ti`-is `snowman. ' Sovdntl and iightll. '"F'OR_SALI-2 BY ALL. ru-tar ugua WHY continue In use the old style buy thigwaroio much more durable, unwell lie iv; junpearanca./` 3 ~ Ooopn Patrol. ` Onn Engltsh ahipbui1der is Afurth.e!'- mg 3, ,;;_`;_x-oject which if _ carried \ through will. be. the means _of much [saving of life CHI P1`0Del'.tY`il1 ' mid` -......... 1.1.. mm. `it. the: International 8aV1ng'.0I Ill I` I- l'U[JC1_h__V All an ocean. He calls `it the Internatxonal Blue Cross.V0cean Life angi _ Sglvage ` Service. It is meant to take the place of the Red `Cross in the army. .14. min nnnsxint nf a et Of ten \Jl'UA1ll VIII.) U8-A-mugs . -It will consist of a eet lifeboats and one store boat to _ patrol the north Atlantic along `the 1 line of travel of the great ocean \ steamers. The aim is that ot.sa.ving l vessels and crews in distress. ` They l will have a regular schedule time, which will be sent to all captains of vessels , so that in case of wreck or fire or disablcment the ofcers will- know at whatcxact date and point a Blue Cross boat may be expected, and much may. be. done` to save both life and money. I L V . rnL- .._l......... 8:: `II an fn` . I118 unu 1.u.,uuu,y. The salvage is? to go to the . re`- ; spective Governments which tted the eet out fir]; proportion to their ship- -=-~- 4-------n 7.1.. -vmu-1-a the various .ln p1'U'[JUl uxvu uv guy . .....I. ping tonnage. I-Io expects the various nations that have` much tramc on the ; high seas to appropriate `sums neces- 1 aary to the complete outtting of the boats` and crews. The project sooms A A I..-.. ....a. unik onnrnvnl in hit]! .1703 can Burn: nut. \ In accide_nt- has revealed to om- cialn of the British navy that coal which has been immersed in water ` `has .higher vaporatlve qualities and 1 ----n- --ulna-1: run: than C011 I188 8V8.p01`u.b1vv Iilll-Ivllvnvu cu-so longer ~ endurance than coal tree from the pit : mouth. Experts bo- -liovo-thqt "experiments now going on will produce 9. complte rgvolution in CO:-ling stations. If the coal` can ho kept .unde'r_ wn_tor'_ it will last longer ilid `to guard and store. ~--- In. -..-I 1..."-and In: British war. boats and crews. 1110: pl.v,|c\au _.w...... to have met with approval in high places, and ere long we may expect ` the Blue as well as the Red Cross to the rescue of human lives in danger. "5.`.t1.2c`.,.x 1533:; :1u;g".;:,. . V cm 81o..00o.000 I -;:`.o?o.`..?' a! mommy in tho

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