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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 8
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The Guardian from London, Greater London, England • 8

Publication:
The Guardiani
Location:
London, Greater London, England
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE MANCHESTER GUARDIAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 9. 1930, 8 The Gardener's Foes The Scholarship THE HIRING FAIR Wages and Lodgings Crossword No. 189. System SOME SUCKING INSECTS South Manchester, must be persistent throughout most of I have been taken to task for including season is l- pray mem at least twice, at intervals of three or centipedes in the list of "honoured four days, with some liquid which will seal up the breathing pores ranged along The visitor from an industrial district receives something of a shock when attending a hiring fair for the first time. There seems something pathetic in the sight of young men and young women standing along the edge of the pavement in a country market town, waiting to catch the eye of some sauntering farmer or his wife.

I have, indeed, heard casual onlookers comment on the fair as being a lingering relic of slavery. But the country lad or lass who has been reared to tire idea would vastly prefer to find a situation by this primitive means than to undergo a catechism in a Labour Exchange. The privilege of baiter, so dear to the farming fraternity, can be me tMues ai uieir Domes. j.nere aiej CHILDREN AND COACHING Complaint has been made in Wales that wealthier parents are employing coaches to give evening tmtion.to their children, and that these children thereby have an advantage in scholarship examinations over those whose parents are poor. It is a difficult situation to deal with.

To complain of the conduct of these parents is only a short etep from asking whether people rather better off than some others ought to be allowed to enter their children for scholarships at all. That exeicised freelv between the limits set I ly the laws of supply and demand. At t1 I 3 I I I Ji 6 1 I "i mi "in 1 Is-1 pnpr a -At-- r-sr-fe-1 w-lH tt 5 I jj 55 -J 1 53 fenrith lntsunticle Hiring, though the demand for labour was not keen and business" was slow, there were few who preparations uu uie mantel for the purpose, but a nicotine wash is to be preferred because it is also effective with many of the biting as well as with other sucking insects and does not injur? foliage. An effective spray may le made by "dissolving 3oz. of soft soap in boiling water, adding cold water and loz.

of AO per cent nicotine, ami then more water to make ten gallons in all. The Black Aphis is closely related to the Gieen, but usually bestows its attentions in a more restricted field to peas and beans chiefly, poppies, nasturtiums, dahlias, andia few other flowering plants. With the vegetables one naturally hesitates over tisinrr a poison like nicotine, but there aie plenty of other lemedies quite effective, such as soft soap and quassia, soft soap and paraffin, or carbolic soft soap. Scale Insects took the hiring shilling who had not first bargained for and received a promise of would be cutting at the meaning of 1,000,000 a month is advanced by ihe Halifax Bulldlra Social BUY YOUR HOUSE HOW nd anleytha benefits now shaiad by ovar 120,000 Homebuyars through hli graaf Society. Loan Terms era generous and repayments light.

Ask for tha Fm "How to ba ow owl which partlculsn. I THE W0WJ3 LARGEST) BUILDING SOCIETY Haad Offlea. 5n-Mngra Hatifaa. Enoch MANCHESTER: ROCHDALE 1 10. Yorlohfaa Streal BURNLEY Zt.

MaochaiUr Road STOCKPORT 1 3. SMIiajtai Ki Sntfr OLDHAM S. Oa Sl.t BUXTON 4. l-h Streat more than the standard minimum watre. The young lads aro generally under the capable care of their mothers, who know the scholarships, which, unless they have been specially earmarked for the assistance of poor scholars, are surely intended to encourage scholai-shiD in tile rich bov or the poor.

It is guests among insects." As a matter of fact I did not. In the notes on the gardener's friends I was careful to write insect and other friends." However, definitions are troublesome things and it is sometimes perplexing to quarrel with them. There is an old story of a railway porter who was asked for the freightage for a tortoise. Well," he said, a dog's a dog, and a cat's a dog, but a tortis is a hmseck." I found out afterwards there was something to be stid for it. Reaumur, a gicat French naturalist of the eighteenth century, would have shaken hands with that porter if he had happened to be the owner of the tortoise.

In his monumental history of insects he said he would willingly include in the class of insects all animals whoso form would not allow them to be placed in the class of ordinary quadrupeds, in that of birds, or in that of fishes. The size of an animal," he went on, should not suffice to exclude it from the number of insects a crocodile would bo a terrible insect. I should have no difficulty, however, in giving it that name. All reptiles belong to the class ol insects, for the same reason that earthworms belong to it." But that reason, too. has vanished since then, and although, what to ask and how to ask it.

At Penrith female servants fex- peneneed) could ask with confidence for impossible to argue that because a parent employs a coach for his boy he is there tao to idu tor the half-year, and young beginners from 16 to 20. Lads from 14 to 15 were considered to be worth 15 to 16, 21s. 16 to 18, 24s. 18 to 20, 29s. 20 to 21, 21 and over, 38s.

Working hours are long in farm service, though improving in this respect, and a working week may be reckoned at 62 hours. There are commodity payments in place of cash. A cottage may be reckoned at three shillings per week, less rates paid Tho Scale Insects, too, are numerous family. Two of the most harmful to roses are the Scurvy Rose Scale and the Brown Scale. The former is the more interesting and has a curious life history.

The scale is formed by the casting of fore wealthy enough to continue his edu- cation, scholarship or no scholarship. may have been a matter of the nicely calculated less or more. The parent may have decided that the schooling must cease if the scholarship is not gained, that he can afford a tutor for a month ot two but not tha constant drain of school fees continued over years. In short, he well -may be, and probably is, the sort of parent who is not too much encouraged nowadays the sort who is prepared to do oy occupier. ew milk, 4d.

per quart, but not to be more than 2s. 4d. per week. Name potatoes Is. 4d.

per week, board about lis. to 12s. according to age. Bare lodging can be had at about 2s. 6L per week.

skin3 by the insects, combined with excretions, over the back. With the males the scale seems to serve as a kind of pupa case from which the insect eventually emerges with wings. The female, however, 15 wingless, and with Many North-country farmers send their Address -fyC TsT" i ff i 1 generally, the description is used almost children to agricultural colleges, like as loosely as two hundred years ago, scmething for his children out of his own pocket. At the same time, the question raised opens the whole matter of whether the those at Hutton. near Preston, to get their diploma in the various farming processes, and there is no doubt that they piofit thereby, if they can accommodate themselves afterwards to the fact that tM naturalists, at any rate, are agreed in restricting it to "the class of arthropods with three pairs of legs in the adult her the scale acts as a roof under which she degenerates into a mere footless and fleshy producer of eggs.

As soon as these are hatched the larvae leave the scale and go away in search of some choice spot on the rose bush to which they present method of conducting scholar CLUES. ship examinations is intelligent or not. More and more people are coming to the condition." This includes ants, bees, beetles, butterflies, flies, grasshoppers, and m'otlis, and excludes many to which the description is frequently applied, tarming demands hard and toilsome practice as well as scientific theory. There seems little encouragement for lads who have not the prospect of a farm of their own to stick to the laud A considerable number of lads ioin the nolice attach themselves and repeat the life cycle. The scales are very noticeable, and are sometimes found on plants fresh from force or emigrate after having got ome experience.

For girls, marriage In a nurseries and auction-rooms. In such THE PKINOE OF WALES'S APPEAL. I appeal to the men and women of our Empire to give gtnerously ia support of this great Service the Lifeboats. I appeal not only as President of the Institution, but as Master, of th Merchant Navy and Fishing Fleets." country district affords no relief from hard work, hut most of them chance it. T.

T. conclusion that it is not. Clearly, a coach in the evenings for children who piesumably have been at school all day rieans one thing and one thing only: cramming. Whether a child who has stuffed his head with facts for a special occasion is the best material for continued educational experiment is gravely open to doubt; and from the child's own point of view the examination-room is often nothing less than a chamber of horrible experiences. He has 6.

A pioneer of Indian Empire. 7. Dislike exceedingly. 8. Many of this may be seen in our public halls.

10. City of old observe the number. 12. A young game animal. 13.

A tally. 16. Moves about geographically. 18. Hogarth depicted his progress.

21. Summer delicacies. 2. Admire and almost, worship. 25.

A girl's name. 27. These are really ejector. 23. Squabble.

30. Solicits. 32. Cassius was this type of man. 35.

A Soman Emperor known to Britain. 38. Disclose. 39. They are not our countrymen.

40. By this direction can be maintained. 42. Not so this is not so bad. 44.

A Bede of literature. 45. The of the nursery rhvmes. 47. Withered.

ACROSS. Herb of cleansing. Tho Chamberlain flower. This craft has its- house in Yorkshire. There can only be one of aught that is this.

Entice is a less familiar meaning. The bulk of stage-name appears in this flower. A begging letter. Inertness. Sells.

Waits for no one. She came from Cleves. He also came here, saw, conquered, and returned. A pack of wolves. Passes away.

Here were many mysteries. This region ia almost the preliminary to a bottle of rum. These are on the credit side. Fifty more and one might stick it on. Really a great American.

such as centipedes and millipedes, crabs and lobsters, and spiders. In dealing now with the gardener's insect foes, it will be convenient to divide them into two groups those that do the mischief by sucking sap from the plants and those that do it by biting into them. It is necessary to know to which of these groups each belongs in order to combat it effectively. It would be hard to say which of the groups, if allowed their own way, would do the greater damage. It is enormous in each case, notwithstanding the unfavourable weather conditions, and scientists, ladybirds, acewing flies, hover flies, birds, and other natural enemies with which they have to contend.

Taking the sucking insects first, those common in gardens and greenhouses includr the Green Flies, Biack Aphis, Scale Insects, American Blight, Mealy Buff. Cuekoo-snit or Frozhormer. Rose 1. 8. 8.

9. 11. 14. 15. 17.

19. 20. 22. 23. 26.

28. 31. 33. 34. 37.

38. 41. 43. 48. 48.

49. SO. 61. 52. 53.

EACH TEAS WE NEED 1,000,000 HVE SHILLINGS to maintain the Service. Please send your 5s. to-day, and be ONE IN A MILLION." Will you also remember the Life-DoatB in your Will? The Earl of Hirrowby, George F. Shee, M. Honorary Treasurer.

Secretary. Royil National Life-Boat Institution, LIFE -BOAT HOUSE, 22, Charing Croat Road, London, W.C 2. known Iot weeks ahead that he is to sit." He knows what hangs on the result, what is expected of him," and all the rest of it. Not infrequently, he arrives at the examination with his health lowered by excessive preparation and with his spirits sapped by the sense of the occasion's gravity. What one needs to find out is whether a child's mind, in its normal and unapprehensive state, has the alertness and resilience which promise its healthy growth.

The examination-room is the SOLUTION TO CROSSWORD 188. I Leaf Hoppers, and Capsid Bugs Each of i these is provided witli a proboscis with cases, before being planted, the stems should be carefully washed with a paraffin insecticide. As this is a month when the young are likely to be reappearing it will be well to have handy some of the nicotine spray already referred to and to apply it twico at least, with an interval of a few davs, wherever they are seen. The Brown Scale is not as destructive here as in warmer countries, but it can be very troublesome indeed on plants under glass roses, various fruits, and other flowering varieties. It is best controlled there by spraying with a paraffin mixture while the plants are leafless.

Tho Mealy Bug, so called because it is covered with a mealy and woolly substance, is another scale insect, especially found on climbing roses on the interior walls of glasshouses. It is a tiny creature not more than a tenth of an inch in length, and easily disposed ol by an application of methylated spirits with the aid of a small brush. Sometime American Blight is confused with the Mealy Bug In a sense this does not matter much, as the lemedy is the same. But the Blight is an apliifa, and in our gardens is found chiefly on the trunks and branches of apple trees. They live there in colonies completely hidden by what appears to be a strip or patch of wool or fungal growth, sucking the sap in a manner which soon causes the bark to split and develop into cankerous-looking wounds.

Frequently the Blight also attacks the roots of the trees. Ihe remedy there is to remove the top six inches of soil and saturate the rest of the soil about the root3 with strong soapy water. It is hardly necessary to add that fresh soil from another part of the garden should take the place of the soil removed, which should be well sterilised heforo being used anywhere again. The Blight is ordinarily most active between now and Octcbei. B.

L. a lamous composer. Salutary principle, or poetical good news. Strove. An Oxford college The gentleman who has the lease.

Much branched. Take away nothing from this and drink if you're not an abstainer. This type is ust copy. His powors are now being much discussed. DOWN.

The village Shakespeare made famous. The wise owl is often miscalled this Think. Keats' urn was this. Often decorative on walla. 9AM winch it pierces into tue tissues ol plants and sticks away the sap.

Of the Green Flies alone there are nine distinct species found on roses alone, all of which increase rapidly and in great numbers. In their case not all of the damage is done by the draining of the sap. They also secrete and exude a feweet, sticky fluid called honey-dew. This is a nuisance to us, that is in two ways: it falls on the leaves, sealing up their breathing pores and giving rise to fungal growths, and it is also a great attraction to ants, which, because of it. nso the insects as im ed1way1 JEL A I Mtmi i ei vl I FURNITURE frSHELTi 9 jar SELURira IBtTUtVMWI HOOKS 1 jZm finest means yet devised for destroying all possibilitj of finding that out.

A Pleasant Week-end Visit My son is now at school with a scholarship. His only coaching was in French. He did not know that he was being "coached." A French girl lived in the house, and was never allowed to speak to him in English. When he began to understand things, she read little French tales with him, and so he acquired some French without tears. He did not know that he was taking an T.uwUz State, gheltn, ate.

Aniitic rod HarviewbU Ktutic Wood. 1U ItatfTilng, ud IfMlt Bird TftUc. intjinn a imsn, nudum. their "milch cows," and in older to get tiie more out or them carry them from shoot to shoot and even from plant to plant, just as our cows are taken from pasture to pasture. These species of Aphis are particularly fond of young rose shoots and buds, but are also found on examination.

The system at his school happens to be intelligent. He stayed for Two prizes of one guinea each are offered to the senders of the first two correct solutions opened of the crossword printed above. Answers should reach this office not later than by the first post on Thursday, August 14, and should be addressed Crossword No. 189, Tho Manchester Guardian," 3, Orott Street, Manchester. The solution and names of the priz-winners will be published on Saturday, August 18.

Solution to Crossword No. 183. numerous other flowering plants, par the week-end as the guest of the head ticularly where loses are absent or lew. The best means of setting rid of them- master and his wife. When he got home temporarily, of course, for tho warfare I asked him how he had enjoyed himself.

Famously, it appeared. There had been Removing Ink-spots Ink-spots are frequently a cans of oon sternation, a invariably when the accident occurs the remedy has slipped from tha mind, and unless they are treated immediately there is little hope of the stains ever becoming completely eliminated. The garment should be washed at once, first ia cold water and then 111 soap and water. Ubb lemon juice or vinegar applied sparingly. Oil of vitriol will remove ink from mahogany.

Apply with a feather, rubbing the utaiu out quickly, and then put linseed oil on tha spot to prevent it whitening. no dread or apprehension. I could 6ec at once that, for what he was worth, he had revealed his normal eelf. In tho flour sweepings, once obtained from 'he floors of the flour mills, are no longer to be obtained jillviminatmg as suggesting thai improved processes flour manufacture now eliminate waste and dust. Bui, as flour the motor manufacturer must have, he has to buy it now In the bax.

One bag a week to a foundry, which is the rate of consumption in the big works, spells a orettv big consumption of flour bv the industry in the course of a year. Groceries in a Car Of all the manv things that go to the making of a car, or required in the process of manufacture, uroceries would seem least likely to find a place on the list. Yet considerable quantities of common household requirements are consumed in the factories. Treacle is one, a commodity which one well-known firm uses at the rate of 100 gallons a week, and as manufacturing processes in the factories o-av are similar it follows that the motor industry consumes a considerable uautity of treacle. It is used in the foundry, mixed with linseed oil, another commodity which can claim to be a domestic one.

The mixture is used to bind the sand in the evening, it appeared, he had been invited to amuse himself with puzzles. TheBe, though he did not know it, were sound intelligence tests. He had been taken for a trot round the school farm, and, all in fun, the animals had been referred to by their French names. He was able to respond reasonably. He had been given a bit of writing work to do, and there were chats about this and that with the head master.

No worrv at all, all very jolly, and in the end it gives him 60 a year. So he entered school, with no gloomy memory of an examination, but with the examination none the less successfully carried out for all that. I wonder why more examinations are not conducted like that. Perhaps it's too much trouble. S.

The names of the senders of the first two correct solutions opened were: JOHN WtLLCOCK, 8t. Rlngan't Manse, Lerwick, Shetland. Mrs. B. d.

SLATER, 221, Lloyd Street, Moss Side, Manehester. One guinea will be sent to each of these readers. LI II I I I a 0" lu a. lf 1" Jl rj jo TI0 I Js r- FPMC P' "di o-t silP1- F-j I 1 I lksIc a 'j-5 Rubber Sandals for Chairs A recent novelty on the market consists of elastic pads iqr the feet of chairs, tablet, and other furniture Not only does this do away with the necessity for casters, but means that chairs and tables can be moyed entirely noiselessly. This is a less important consideration in the home than in tha concert hall and schoolroom, where such noise often interferes seriously with conditions suitable for artistic enjoyment or mental work.

A beach outfit of tussore trousers worn over a green and blue knitted swimming suit and under a coat of French cretonne in blue, green, and yellow, lined with tussore. The large hat is of natural coloured straw, and the necklace of brown speckled beadB and strands of green rubber is made to look as much like eeaweed as possible. 'A Woman in Manchester' This weekly feature is discontinued until the middle of September. moulds in which many parts are Floar is also used for this purpose in ihe foundries. It is illuminatine to learn that Competition No.

32. THE WEEK ON THE SCREEN. ridiculous to claim that television is yet "entertainment," it is even more foolish to deny the enormous effect it will have on entertainment in the future. In saluting Mr. Baird for having already brought it to such a pitch of practicability, my real object is to consider how it will influence films.

With the holiday season comes the problem of one's impedimenta. The Manchester Guardian offers two prizes one of two guineas and one of one guinea for the best verse ot four lines on Luggage." Entries, which should arrive not later than on Saturday August 16, should be addressed Competition No. 32, The "Manchester Guardian," 3, Cross Street, Manchester. The result of the competition will be published on Wednesday, August SO. It will not do away with films, because there must be something to televise.

At the is modern, and if it is not to have modem material there is no need for it. Kadio, records, music-hall, and kinema give us all that the Longacre studio offers, and we do not need another disseminating channel for things of which there are already too much. The scenery for the Pirandello play was painted by Mr. Nevinson. I wonder how long it will be before scenery is not painted but actually televised, so that actual scenes are cut in with the studio acting in the film manner.

At the Coliseum I noticed that a photograph was televised more successfully than living people; painted scenery may be better as yet. But this brings us to films, photographs themselves. It is because I think television is likely to be development of kinema more than a thing In itself that I consider it here; in America the moment they televise real people, such as the Loid Mayor, Mr. Lansbury, and Young Stribling. I myself saw Bombardier Wells (who gave a true tip for the fight) and Irene Vanbrugh.

Miss Vanbrugh came over very Television. On July 14 Pirandello's "The iTan With the Flower in His Mouth was televised, and on July 28 television by the Baird process was seen, for the first time any theatre, at the London Coliseum. I think these dates are so important to every film-goer that I propose to add a few more facts. January, 1926, Mr. Baird'a first transmission of true television took place, the object shown being a doll's head.

Two years later the image of a man was televised from London to Kew York, and on July 1 this year (according to the current number of Sir. Baird showed a screen two feet by five feet which made possible well, gaining by having something to say, SHREWSBURY FETE. This Year's Jubilee Event. The preliminary' announcements are now being made of the approaching floral and musical fete at Shrewsbury. Although commonly called the Shrewsbury Flower Show, it is and always has been much more than that.

It is almost 6afe to eay, in fact, that more people go to it regularly, year after year, for the horse-leaping and other eporte, the numerous open-air variety turns, the fireworks, and the excellent music in which three military bands participate, than for the flower displays, admirable as those always are. The fete, of course, is one of the oldest in the country, this year's being the fiftieth of the series; and, as a rule, the promoters manage to justify their claim that each one excels its predecessors. 'The fete, as on previous occasions, is to be a two days' affair on August 20 and the following will be held in the grounds of The Quarry, Shrewsbury's pretty park on the eloping bank of the Severn: The bands are to' be those of the Coldstream Guards, the Welsh Guards, and the Boyal Marines. INQUEST ON BOY SCOUT. Coroner and a Boyish Impulsive Act.

(From our Correspondent.) Fleetwood, A verdict of accidental death waa returned at the inquest at Fleetwood to-day on Patrol Leader Bernard" Georgp Cole, of the troop of Coventry Boy Scouts, who died in Fleetwood Hospital following injuries received in a stove explosion at their comp at I.arkholme Farm, Boesall. near Fleetwood on Tuesday. Patrol" Leader Herbert Leonard Arrowsmith was also injured, and had to be assisted into court. Giving evidence, ATrowsmith said that on -Tuesday morning he was carrying out his duties as chief cook, and Cole was one of his assistants. They had two stoves in the cookhouse.

One of the stoves went out and Cole brought a tin -of methylated spirits to fill 1 Cole held the tin between his legs and was lifting it up to pour some into the stove when there was an explosion and their clothes caught fire. He heard screams and saw Cole run up the camp with, his back on fire. Tha though it was rather too facetious. It would have been a truer test to have televised her sdently, as her voice is so easily PUBLIC SCHOOLBOY SHOT DEAD. Stumbled with Gun in Dark of a box of cartridges in the house had not been broken, and he thought that his son must have fitted cartridges he had kept from a trip to Norway two years ago.

recognised however, there were those in the audience who did not know who she was, film people are in panic about television, and their queries were rather tactlessly con which they regard as a menace only to be opposed by wide screen. But Mr. Baird veyed by telephone to the Baird studio, 1 veroict 01 accidental aeatn was returned. where she informed us of her profession. the displaying of television pictures before a large audience.

This screen is made of The announcer did not transmit the more intelligent request that she should show her hands; that she should be recognisable by himself has stated that in his opinion "television will be the final method of supplying films" a master film company transmitting pictures to subscribers. This, of course, need not affect kinemas any more than have home projectors. The public. ground glass, behind which are over two thousand small bulbs. I do not wish here her hands is a pretty compliment to any PILLIONrRIDER'S DEATH AFTER CRASH.

Shed. A verdict of accidental death was yesterday at an inquest on a Shrewsbury public schoolboy, George Francis Howard Guinness, who was round lying dead with a gunshot wound in a shed at his home in Cheyne Walk, Chelsea. Evidence was given by the mother that on Thursday she had been talking with to enter Into technicalities, but it is these bulbs which, lit in turn, reproduce each an actress, and the announcers omission showed a haphazard idea of the display, of lacking televisors, can see televised films on big screens in the theatres, some of which which I shall speak later. At present, I element of the visual image they together build up. Though it is true that television have seen television, and I am interested may be run for showing of concurrent events, just as the Avenue Pavilion is now devoted to news reels.

It is a prospect has already been seen in an American jiwwiw bib snort, wnicn were on theatre and that a film has been televised iiu nn alter vOie. tie tnaft WW her son about a shooting trip, and later in Berlin, it i3 only fair to Btate that Mr. uwp wer vnp toie np ana a master fell on to.p of him with a hi mwkM a A former Lord Mayor of Manehester, Alderman F. W. West, was alifhtlv The adjourned inquest on Richard Norman Goring, 20, apprentice joiner, Headingley Road, Fallowfield, was held al the Manchester City Coroner's Court yesterday.

Goring was a pillion-rider on a motor-cycle travelling along Kingsway Road on the night of June 3, when the machine crashed head-on into a motorcar which was being turned out of the high road. One witness said the motor Baird a year ago transmitted a short film featuring George Bobey. in where it will lead. They stress that we shall be able, by its means, to see events at the time they are occurring; wo shall have to be able to be near a televisor, of course, at that time, but an even graver objection is that it presupposes that television apparatus will be able to be on the spot. Bearing in mind the difficulties attendant on outdoor broadcasts, I think this will take some time to achieve.

There are the turns which are ordinarily umeB oil. O'r In returning the verdict tieCWer. attached no blame to anyone- and- iafij it.1 was simply a case of boyish imDUlsiTe- injured by broken glass vesterdny when a motor-car skidded in Oldbam Boad, Collyhurst, and collided with the car in My experience with the Pirandello play they went to the City, where her eon left her to buy some clothes. When she returned home she noticed a parcel of olothes as if son had also returned, but he could net be found. William Edward Head said he was was unfortunate, for not having a televisor wmcn ne was ruling.

ol my own I had to rely on the apparatus limited by only two things. One is that the television image is the orange of early films on a small screen, 'while the kinema now has advanced to colour and expanding screen it will be hard, even for television, to lure us from these. The other is the flippancy which marks both the magazine and the Coliseum programme. The public that accepts it as a sew toy is not the one that will help it, and those who see in it a machine of poetic 'potentiality' will ignore it so long as Mr. Baird' great skill, intellect, at a multiple store.

This could only be seen bv one person at tune as there ware over cycle was going between thirty and forty miles an hour when the impact occurred. a hundred waiting, and as the play lasted thirty minutes, our time before the machine. televised; pictures of artists appear in was limited, and who was there profession Television," and I confess that it is dis driven to take shelter from the garden by a storm, and he then saw Guinness lying in shed in a pool of blood. Dr. John Nigel Loring, whose evidence was that death was caused by a gunshot wound in the head, suggested that Guinness might have stumbled in the darkness of the "shed, which bad no appointing to find here much the same kind of turns which have made vaudeville on the ally, as it were, arrived before the screen at the instant of a fide-out.

At the Coliseum, however, I saw all there was to see. The screen was about the size of a door, and the CARPET SALE LAST FEW DAYS Fulfil Clearance of INDIAN, TURKEY, CHINESE CARPETS AND PERSIAN RUGS SPECIAL BARGAINS Iff AXMISSTER AND WILTON CARPETS Many HALF-PRICE offer SEE W1NPOWS. CALL AND INSPECT. C. BALL UWREWCE, -SLgC-ffiaBsfr It happened all of a eudden," he a4ded, and one man came right over the top of the car and dropped in the middle of the road." Mr.

Surridge (Coroner) said there was no necessity to delay the inquest any further. The driver of the motor-cycle was improving, but it would be two months before he would be able to leave the infirmary. The jury returned a verdict of accidental death. image was clear. That is not to say that window, and pulled the trigger of the there was not a great deal of "ram" and and patience "seem to them diverted- into giving muaio-hall turns another out! at.

Pictures to be seen in the ordinary manner daring August include Harold Lloyd's "Welcome Danger," Jennings talking In The Blue Angel at the Begal, and silent in "Fanst" at the Palais de Luxe. "The Phantom of the Opera" and "The Girl in the Moon" offer amusing comparisons in unsuccessful fantasy. ST. eon as he fell. radio so painful to many.

Ventrfloqnista; conjurers, singers of light songs may have their place, but that place ought not to be before one of the greatest modern inventions. We are growing too old to be content with television must not repeat the mistakes of the talkie.1. know that the Baird Company have to be commercial 1 in order to he experimental, hut television flicker, that focus was changeable, and that the image swayed rather unpleasantly. But Mr. Henry Samuel Guinness, the it Is absurd to be put eS by these facts.

father, said that, on Wednesday he examined the gun and replaced it without They will be overcome, as far greater difficul ties have been overcome. Whilst it 1b lea vine any cartridges in it Tha seal.

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