25. carruP°i“""*' _ nosrnsal. "" '..'. fff du POW!! .rs na' rv. --' 101.4 on 2| fn/ ‘ 05 2;' 13,2 ‘0 iw. on 10% 3 ov. 11°'o`\ira'r` ' Ill ... ... .-s ... nowel-' as _ .. 24 121/, 15 30% 20 324 ,, ... ... ... ... Cnrporatioii ... . . ... Power ... ... ... ... ...f1¢.. ... ... ... . ... ... .r new vom: ... ... 22 0% 73”' '_,c';',_-;,'..1"r.f_' _'.1 1.111 1511. 35'/4 13”' ‘iv ' 2112 111% 12 1'~}»'é1i1`r` _`_`.` Electric ... Power ... ... 8|/¢ . ... ... .. 14% 20 . . ali ... ... ... ... J-i ... ... ... .... 42 of New Jersey ... 31% Securities A ... ... ... 1§ ... ... ... ... ... lla ... ... 75'/1 ...li/1%. l\E\'lE\V 'FDR SEPT. 24th, llidl is made that Nor- 3 shalt from 2.0011- nnd after this will to the same depth shafts. Now holst- heiag ordered call- to a depth of 4,200 metal production is rate of $5,000,000 per llilllil ` 3.1/ew York I 'clsllraii eunnmu 3' 1M0ming Stock Letter P. QPHSICS RESEARCH , first 0 mouths of this year, when both 12 Montreal, reference was made to the 1931 ' ' ESTERD ’ sToc1f“i Grand Mime” "id cannons position, despite the grove me ,th ,, ,,,,¢,,,,,,,,, G Crowe, Pastor 1045 s. m, ect What to do with Life‘s Bur q lilipocial to Johnst k Var rt s Muon nfmovsn ru imsrxrn 1.12 Brew ._ .. Beauharnols A . on \ di 0g.\en|lllgh|Lo\\ILa8! w.I B many friend-9 Ol Ml-SS DUNS nrmra Am 0 io io Q \-4 ,\ 0’/1. » n is w its nd Mrs. Higgins. Kent st., win pe '£3 §I_1'f.'i(..rm.";' rg 1s»/, rs isa 0 . ..- leased to know that she has re- Home 0,, __ _ r 11 Lai oy ‘M5 91'! » 4. pltah _ , sim-rat .. __ __ oo‘ " _Biscoe .. ... 40% nom: ron. aunm._Mr. A. A. \",.",{,‘,‘,,,f"‘§“’_'_ '_'_ “ ry A MacDonald, widow of the the Roman Catholic Cemetery FIRST POTATO SHIPMENT- BATHURST’ N_ B" sept" 24__F_ llih I‘€8H1'd to a press despatch Iii, T. B. Young of Caraquet, general to contest Gloucester County in the position party. death in December last of John P. HOTEL SY-VE PURCHASED-The Lordon of Bathurst, opposition mem property on which the Hotel Vic- be,-_ toria was located has been purchas- Mr, Youngs opponent in the bye- the Hotelhzul its garages. The main Govemment supporters. site on which the hotel stood has Gloucester has a representation been purchased by Mr. James cur- oi' four members in the Legislature S understood that the latter purchase|R|°h“’d» J- A- D°"°°¢ “"4 5- R' INTERVIEWED FEDERAL AU- In U' S‘ Benefits THORITIES - J-lon G Shelton I urchssin power in Maine severely Canadian dollars were being quot- of the training of a considerable number of students, and the im ‘ portence of research for the wel- fare of the nation is universally Tec", 2': -l Section of Lritish inent Place Given more in physics than is dreamt ol in our theories" Sir J. J. Thomson distinguished mathematician and physicist, stressed in his President' ial address today to the mathem- of the British Association for the Advancement of Science. “Nature gestive of ideas than the minds of the most im88inative of us- "The ideas which revolutionize Science are .ill-st those of which our theories give no indications. Theo- ries are the very life blood of PhYS~ tics, most of the researches in our laboratories originate in an attemPt to test a theory; theory, however, may be injurious ll it makes ur concentrate our attention exclusive- ly on the particular problem it su8~ gested. and to 'treat as an annoy- ance, to be avoided by a change in `method, any anomaly in the exper- iment which interferes with our progrers to the goal; the anomaly may be the outcrop of a vein rich in new phenomena. danger of the supply of new phys- ical phenomena being exhausted and of Physicists joining the ranks of the unemployed. Rather do I believe that as each successive Cen- tenary comes round the President of Section A will be able to say that the growth of Physics in the century which has just passed is comparable with that in any of its predecessors. The sectional president cohilned his addres sto a. review of the growth in opportunities for educat- ion snd research in physics, dur- ing the past nity years. It could be claimed now that some science is taught in all schools, and a good deal of science in a' great many of, them. "This is a great advance Joseph _l _imson , LONDON, Sept. 24.-(By the! Canadian Perss)-"There is far’ herself." he added. "IS m°\'° WPI "I do not think Lhat the1'€ is ally' Tells Mathematical Association of Prom- to Research iiow as Compared with iialf a Century Ago. veipprna coordinate those princip- les and to measure more and more accurately the value of known Phi" sicai constants. This view Seem-5 ludicrous when we know that with- in a few years Rontgen rays, l-hG I electron and radio activity were dis I ‘meal and physical sdence semoni covered. The existence of these Wa-S quite unexpected, and no hint 0! ‘the possibility of their existence was given by any of the physical theories then extant; this view was, however, to my knowledge. held by some eminent physic‘sis. The great Igeneralizations expressed by the first and second Laws of Thermod- ynamics loomed so large in those ` days that it was thought that noth- Istate of mind is api; to occur after ia. great discovery; it occurred after that of universal gravitation; there ,are signs that it exists now. Yet it has always been falsified by ex- perience, and I think always will be. There are no signs that physics is approaching an asymptotic state Iln which the progress gets slower and slower as time goes on. The additions to our knowledge of phy- sios made by our generations do not get smaller and smaller as one generation succeeds another, each great discovery is not a terminus but an avenue leading to new know- ledge. An improvement in technioue mov. as we have seen. lead to fun- damental changes in our views of the nature of matter and of physic- al processes." it N. S. Attorney Cen. For Bench HALIZFAX, li. S., Sept., 24-The Halifax Chronicle this morning states that Hon. W. L. Hall, Attor- and has practically all been made in the last nity years," he said, “It; cannot, however, be said that even now science occupies in our sys-f tems of education a place commen-_ sarate with its ever increasing ln~I fluence on human thought and with its importance in the pro- gress of civilization. t One defect of the present sys- Research is now an integral part I though this was quit a modern’ development. Yet he warned against efforts to get scientific results too quickly. "You cannot without dis-I aster apply metholh of mass pro- duction to education," he said. The demand in Cambridge at least for trained research workers' 'had exceeded the supllll' Until this year of acute and long continued G ‘ing txesses is prsttily told by PODB °’3°“u" °' L" 0' B' A' W” in world-wide economic depression. 3;; 3 mm:w:,., “Forma chug- e wmn 1° hi' W_°“'k°°W“ P°°m- “"4 9°"-° E"““d“‘° ‘°°°’“°““‘°° by Mm 1-Ion. Dr. Mapion, Minister or Rau- ,H as hm, t -_.0 ,nd 25 pe, mn, have ever raved on the sublect of Dime- Th” "““°‘* in 5‘”“’“"' ways, informed the Island delegates in lu in woodstoek this mer womans crowning slorv. but no ‘“*° °“ W°‘*“°°"“Y' ’°°“"‘“““ °° inn in me received 1. statement nite nouns smenem funds Lust 'bard has eve, ,un me no of th, Charlottetown on the afternoon H00 il depression, sir .nsepn added. wmii the gradual increase ln industryh ‘reliance on research wide fields; had been opened up for research PERSONALS with American purchasers here. ‘ I tion annulled. workers. There were now more than; 20 special industrial groups which maintained research departments' in cooperation with the govern-'_ ment, in addition to the many gov- ernment research boards dealing with such stters as forest products,l radio. chemicals, food, fuel-not. to mention the research departments of the Navy, Army, and Air Force. As for the advances in instru- ments snd appliances for laboratory ’ work, the progress was enonnous_‘ Some of the present day physical. research instruments were 10,000 times more efficient than the ln- strumenis used fifty years ago. of physical phenomena and to physical conception made in the last 80 years have not been excel- led, by those made in any period of the history of the science," he con- cluded. "and yet 1 remember that at the beginning of this period the view was prevalent that all the fundamental principles of physics "The additions to our knowledgef ney General of Nova. Scotia, will be appointed to the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia. Mr. Halls name has been meh- tioned prominently for elevation to the bench to fill the vacancy creat- ed by thedeath of the late Chief Justice Harris, whom Mr. Justice Chisholm succeeded. On October 6 here will be seven judicial circuits in the Provinces with only six 1.1 <1 t 1, tem in England er. least, raid me' U ges °" he hem" 5° that 'm president, was that entrance schol-'I ai-ships offered by most of the great, public schools had the effect of attracting the abler boys to classical The school examinations were now' too specialized, he thought. appointment cannot he delayed ang. Mr. Hall’s position in the pro- vincial cabinet is expected to be filled by Hon. John Doull, a mem- ber for Pictou county, a lawyer who Secretary. Mr. Hall is expected to arrive home tonight from Ottawa where he argued before Mr. Justice Aud- ette in the Exchequer Court on be- half of the owners of the schooner Mary E. Kennedy, which was in Inow occupies the post of Provincial `|collision with the S. S. Cavalier near the automatic buoy at the mouth of Halifax Harbour lest. No- vember. Suits for $30,000 were brought by the owners of both vessels, and in courts here the steamer was held one-third to blame for the mishap and the schooner was held two thirds at fault. Appeal look the action to the Fed eral Court. J. E. Rutledge, K. C., represented the owners of the steamer. The Attorney General also at- tended the meeting of the Can. adian Bar Association in Murray Bay, Quebec, and made a tour of the Gaspe Coast. KAYE DON SENDS GIFTS T0 MOTORCYCLE ESCORTS TORONTO, Sept. 24.-Escorts of Kaye Don during his visit to To- ronto, Motorcycle Ofllcers George Uytc, (108) and Fred Raymer (484), each received over the week end s sterling silver matchbox from the speed king. Each gift is engraved, “With grateful appreciation from Kaye Don. September 1931." ---_-___ TARNISIIED BRASS Curtain rods and rin!! of brass IN wt to become green and tar- nished, particularly in damp places. The tarnish is easily removed by rubbing the brass with e. reliable had been discovered and that the work of the future would he to de- ` aluminium cleaner. Oil the rods be- fore putting them back into place. ing was beyond their purview. This' 1 ~ 1 I _F l: but ,.1 gil. I cliii 11ndT 1/n li .I at I ind lrnatl :ly 4 _-play- l-roul rviv tlnat F Bt: I elil BU. i'ee Iirte givall 1 Bri iz fi! . M4 ; Mas yrjor »,efea 3 To 1. | S ,z fir ,urec c' Je: sco: ow urgl Toi mor 5 f 1 Mf- ltawi ‘elim r'Ml.i I3 Ui 1 . da .".11 c )'tl9.!I.' |'B.i’£l . nin1 ` ¢ par Mrs 5 onli Mrs .zplayi ` |_' the , the ‘rec‘ I )sh- f lecil | 19111-N l8i5h , 'tne’| 'ir 3' 5 '/lis|'I feel" 'ad' 'len 1;* _ ver 1 fied ' -_- ,rad 'als ‘ E1- -ao I E , i rst - 3' .` of 1 Iar I 'as 1 Ile, I .as 1 st §. i- . n. I __._v__._ -_ ., _ _ _ ._ ._ _ ' u l 1. i I 1