HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-06-04, Page 4•
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tHE L10E. O•WSETZNEL•
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riunstAv, 3tIE 4th, 1931
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Put it on with LED-HEDNAILS
MustrationshowsPrestented-
Hed Nail. Note how lead on
•head of .Led:Hed Nail,seals
Imil-hole, snaking it completely
weatherproof. Note' generous
ov ap •
Presto Led-Hed Nail' de'
colored tc..h. the.roofing.
Vi',fre also "make.; •• •
regoited-Sheets • -
Preston Led-Hed Nails • "
• ;
Peenton Steel TrestecHterner-
•Gges,andStetrage•Buildingi
• Preston Galvanized Tanks • •
,
Majestic- Verti-Fold ,Garage •
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‘st.•••,
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THE"
LINCKNOW StEiNTOTEX.,
Ptiblished every Tburaday Morning
att-rtmeterrdwrOstarivests;--s-e.
A. D. MacICenzie, Proprietoi
. , and Editor. :
',1931
•' • '
:THE SILVER '•QUESTION AGAIN
• Therein:Aga-le much ,Otab •
the value .of sillrer as nisas-
aired in geld. It ia proposed to fix
the values at twenty to °Ate. That,
to ,••rnaketwenty •Ourices,ef,
,.• • . • . •• •
equin .value. to. one„ctetiee
The preserit 'Market, relation is Said
•••• to be 'efacty • ounces •• eilver to
...As • ke. ••• ; • ' t „t
1.
• 'Tn is nothing More or less thai
ncliner pieee , of Price:" fin, and
one • would think that the world ha.:
'had2iquite enough.. of that' recently.
• •.W-ith all-ite -wealth anii•-.4°Wer4he..-
Government of the Ueited. -States
to "fix" the price of w,heat
'above what market conditions deter,
• mined. • •. •
ThirtY years ago the eloquent bid
illogical William,: Jennings Bryan
fought for ,the ,fixing of the ratio Of
• - value „between gold and Oliver at
Build tor beauty ' With utility. Colored:Rib-Roll beatti- siiteeri to one; but the proposal' Was
fleet and - ' • t, • „ •Ireji3eted"tiree after time. The unrees-
•
• 1
•
• °nobleness of the proposal was then
To the durability Of galvanized iron Colored RiblRoll
a eauty an ppe o colora ap y o a new crop of "economiSts"" his
plainly set 'forth, but itapPears that
dds the b d a al •s p•lied our - , • •
• own Veda! process. It cannot warp, shrink Peel, crack, mown up since that time. There can
Curl or bulge. It is pernzanent. • • .be no better 'reason for the govern-•
•
Properly growiderl according.to the Ontario Lightning
Rod Act, Colored . Rib -Roll gives complete lightning
protection. It is positively fireproof. Flying fire -brands
burn thernselvea outharmlessly on this fire -Proof
roof. •Ca,n be laid „
• easily and,speedily
9v,er_old_shinglea,
• The saving Of tir ne .
•andlitblifrthaWit7,
' 'Tient fixing the value of Silver et•
• • oors
- Colored Ridge
Colored bleating "
• " Colored Gutter, , •
• Colored -Rave Trongh, ;
• • Conductor Pip ' :105 Gaelph St.,
•• !Minis Vo_ntila r Preston, Oat. '
less 'Cosily thitn:
other roOfinge. • '
• •
•IIMINIINIMI•••••11
nz
nett,• • Write today far sample or
Calared.Rib-Roll, •
--- :FitiefirS also at— • -. : color acitemee ° and useful _ • • • oneand why not so fitc•it?,-": "' • :
•
Toronto and ' roofing booklet. ' ' . : • ,
: . • - . . ' : '. .
.. .. . , •. • ,
three times it ' natural 'velee, than
for fixing'.the price of. wheat or beef
Cattle :that way, •and it is safe to
say that back' ".of the • inovenient •
• a •set of men Who are largely'inter-
' 'ested in Oliver' rnines. Let tbe gov-
ernment endeavor to: fix 'the relative'
valieLsof-gold-ariel-Oilver-sit-Stventy-
taene instead Of sixty to one and up
woUld go the-T•valu-e-7of, every _ _
mine in the country. •
I, •
But nothing' will .come of .:this
mOventent to • 'ei-establ4sh".
•'Thi-eib-iiirdity is tocl'eViirintgf 'the
ratio of values can; be,,Axqd -at twerr7
ty-to-one, it. can be fixed at orie-to.
• E •B,EA HARNGIS QUESTION
• RADIATOR FILL;ING CAFS
THE FARMER'q SUN
•
, The Farnteee SIM last 'week an-.
n:ounceci: that it -would publish only
one issue Monthly in the 'rnimiths-,i5f
Jorte 'arid - July. The buairiesi office
and,s*ttsnesessss*sthussite-atit..dffian-
experiSe• of : pelalicatton owing to the.
prevailing depression.
The Sun has a circulation of over
22 thouRuid and we • have _often
wondered Why 'it' is not inere'llbertillY.',
.patronized • by farmers. There are
many good farm papers, of course,'
but few o_f_theni give as' Much or as
intelligent aAsentiOn to public affairs
frein the farmers view -point,' es doe.,
the , editorial.; p,age . has ir•
recent years been Splendidly inferm•
•istise :mid; oerraible, Its pesition" of in
dependence:: Of party ties- enabled„i
to treat. public ..questions in a cony.
.•;:d b3
tuticiqngwen4eit;,irYn4otit9,*a,npre.ordicii,:e,
iigik.6r.Wrong. • :
• :IS 1ELD CYCLE,
• In a period of free' moral stand
aids like the present; the -busitieso-of
-ChristianitY is not to, attempcto• fit ,
the generation but to stand apart
and challenge that generation, Rev.
•Dr. Harry Emerson,Fosdick, ,of New
York,. says....
• 'The real explanation •of this" gen-
eration's excessive drinking- and sex
license, according VI' Dr.Fosdick is
that •mankind is . inLthe midst ef a
swing'Of the moral pendtilum„-si•mil-
ai to that, of the, eighteenth century,
• when inankin "went loose,
this swing- occurred while the saloo:,
• was epee- it.,Would hay been rime]
more serious: than it is, he assertea
•One .tteiniently • teeets': .persom,
whose 'religions. faith seems baffle'
ind• ineffective: largely because thel
•mild not'make their old. religion fi
he new weteld, h continued, declar'
ng that while there are many Way:'••
in ',which, religion.should adapt itseV
to its, generation by utilizing . nee
• knowledge and new instruments fo:
• service; there is anotbee_sense :ii
which Christianity :should he asham •
ed, to ' adapt itself:to the' world.'
.We face 'today, •'for leainifile,'
'said .Dr. • Fosdiek; "a renaissance „of
• drinking so insane that one gets. nasi
)brie it wlekeil
come So silly. There are , genie Wh(
his-retrudeseetice .ofTdrink
, • - • •
,toing fsue
prohibition. If we faeea• '
only 'crazydrinking, that eXpianatior
migh hid, but we ,face as well
.crazy sex obsession -and there iins.
• prohibitory law on ,which thot;:eer
•be hlanied. On the stage and off:
the movies and in real life, we face
an insanesex license oa, extreme that
an:one of our public. leaders' put it;
"Thi. will be known in .history ai
the •dirty decade.":, '
• •
• , The. ControVersey quer the Beauli.
•
. •
• WINGHAM ,
• Mrs. R. ,VOnstdne, who •spent the
• winter and sprints months in Florida
" returned -to Wingham Sliehas.-
• , sold the big •residence • which had
been the family home, to Mr; J. H.
• Crawford: • . •
4• Miss Jean Ramsay who is atteed-
• • ing the College of Educatien at Tor-
onto' has accepted a position as head
of department of English and His-
tory in the Paris High School.
Mr. J. R. M. Spittal, foe the- past
" • four Years acceuntant in the Domin-
ion Bank at Mount Forest, is the
new manager of the Wingham
• branch. '•
•
3ars- • 'Wingham is to have the Chautau-
•, • , qua entertanurrents-this-sun the
dates being:Julie 27th to truly 2nd
Tr
RETURN MORTGAGES
. • •
Scored of. mortgages most of them
on properties of doubtful value, are
being returned to their owners lay
• , the., Crown Attorney's office at the
...:„/Stratford Court house," says the
• Listowel Banner. "The ,documents
are those which-, were used as ex-
hibite .in the, actions against J,
' Hamilton of Listowel last year. The
'holders are residents 'cif .Listowel
and district and the land on which
the mortgagee are held is in the
Lakeview district_near Toronto."
The people who, bought thete
tgages had more money than they
could take care of; consequent-
,• last it.. They 'bought mortgages oh
property of which they kneut noth-
. , ing at' all. ' •
•
LANGSIDE--
Mr„ and 'Mrs. Tom, Ross of Tees-
, Water, 'visited on Sunday with Mr.
and „Mrs. B.' Tiffin.
Mr. Foster Moffat mored to Tor-
• onto on Sunday' having shipped a
car lo;s-d of cattle there on Satdrday.
Mit-s Martha Casemore of 13Offale
is visiting her, slater; Mrs. J. J.
Johnson.
• Messrs. Johridon and Wallace Conn
motored to Toronto On Saturday and
• Miss Maud Conn,' R.N.. who was
", • - there returned with them. •
• • - . Mt: and Mrs. Jathes Ross and
• Repaid of TeesWater, "spent SandeY
with Mr. and' Mrs. Foster Moffat. •
• Mrs. J. Richardson, Bob, Jim and'
•
Grace, visited with Mr. and 1VIts. W.
.•• Pinnel of Culross on Sunday.
. Miss 'Florence Pardon, R.. N.
Toronto, Spent Sunday with Mr. and
,•
•Mrs. George Tiffin...
James Orr, '6th Con. met •witit a
•
naiSty accident when the team he was
. • . operating a seed drill' ran
away. The iron oil the tongue gave
way allowing •the drill to corne up,
Wan -a ; the tta-it, Iretaffie
frightened-, Jinii Wes. riding on" the
drill and fell off in ffont of it wh•en 1
1 it carne,in coetact with a gate post.,
•
• •
Mentat Health
By,D...14-LeB_OLJADAI,
'Dinicter„ n.f EdneatiOn,,,•4kailian'
National Coniminelot Mental Hygiene .
Modern Science, However, is Finding
• That the Community Must Assume
Larger Share of Blame.
A correspondent writes about her
leather. He was bright .at school.
she says, but quit at 13 when!, he was
in the 8th, grade. . During the next
few years" he worked at a variety of
occupotiens, sticking to none very
long. Jim chief charateraistic _was
dislike for mixing With' others. • If
there were visitors he would • hide,
Then _be becarhe more peculiar still.
would go for long periods withs
out speaking to anyone; he shaved
off all his hair; ,would ,light paper
and throw, it about the house; drank
peroxide, ,hair oil, etc. Finally•
was taken :to a mental hospital: She
seenrin puzzled by the fact that, at
times, he could talk quite sensibly;
and minders if he, were not himself
largely responsible for -his own cop-
ditiop-if he. is not more to he blam-
then 'pitied, . •
• To determine the exact causes -of
human behaviour is extremely,. diffi
cult, and' even the most apparently
sirriple case requires, a thorough
study of all factors involYed. Never-
theless, in .this• case, it is probably
safe to say that the boy himself was
least to blame. In the first •place
there is heredity. His physical and
mental equipment were thrust on
hira,.....so to Speak_His_nature was th
result of a complicated set Of fac-
tors stretching back into the past,
As a child he was Open 'to impress,
skins on all sides, and naturally thell
firOt were stamped on him by father,
mother, sisters, brothers, 'and Itbers
in the community. He attended a
school and was subjected to S. sys-
tem of education Which was little
concerned in him..as an individual,
Later, while, still a child, he dtifted
into the industrial world to fit in as -
best he could-. And meanwhile he Was
passing through the limit critical
period, in life7--,the age of Pitberty.
when sex and itsimplications over-
shadow all else.
Most of us run /the gauntlet ot•ail
these more ce‘ less shedesoffilly, but
a great many.fail ' nee way or
another. In the past, when one has
failed, we have 'tried to hold .him
• po:nsible. We have blamed 'him
d Overlooked the environmental
tors which, are much more to
lame. Now it is doming to be realiz-
ed that we must -hold the community
responsible; and that the eo•ninsunity
oho respunsibIlity 'clnrf-by
previ el in es •"- nvi ron re ents,sh orn .
school,. oc.cepation,. an& other soeial
relationships -‘-which will produce the
east perceritage Of rhiettS. This is
a' big job, but nothing legit:kill do.
(InformstiOri on any Point •
Pot
Fevered :hese will be, given in later'
seats if -TM will address Your ques-
tions to "Mental •Ilealth,", 111 St/
geor t
CO-OpERATIyE PACKING. PLANT
The first co -Operative paekini-
arnois power development promiseci
to be a long one: Its the Old light
between private priiiiregE:elid
plant in Ontario Was•opened recently interest.
,at..Allandale in SiinCoe: County., b
Prernieorge. S. Henry: The build-
ing and machinery cost $165,000.
The" plant holds ,the hopes -of '1,500
farmers in the' counties of Si
Grey, Dufferin and Ontario far their
• ',A .deperture'is .finand on • the 'radi-
ator .filling caps: in the. '
1931: Wiflyr
.iine. On all • 'inedels • the•• radiator if -
-filled-frern-Tander-the--hoodat -th
left side, Special- care hae.been .taken
to •see that the filler can can be •re
No -private coneern-slithild-eyer moved withenat •• the. operators hand_
get •corningin• contact with the front of
--
control of "a 'great water power mace the.. radiator. • • •
. . . , • . ing Marchand April -chicks.
as that on the St. Lawrence, ' Water
mcoe, powers such as that at Niagara ar..d
future welfare'in the hog -raising in-
dustry; The farmers have each con-
tributed $100 , towards . the project
an'd are, under .contract to Supply the.
Plant with their hog output for the
/wart ten years. Modeled on the co,
operative plants •of- Denmark and
-built 'after two years of, .preparation;
the Allendale plant is claimed by ,its•
...'inanager, Themes 'Olsen, a, Dane
. • •
6, 1
He has many cuts on his baek, but
Apparently, there are no serious
hreises. He is doing, as well as ear
be 'expected, and 'his many friends '
bop pe a rapid recovery,
• , § Ott TorOato, .
•
4'4* 014.
•
who has been in Cana'dafor 35 years
to, be the•emral-• of any .plant of its,
kind on the continent. The new: ven-
ture will be entitled the First Co
operative Packers of Ontario, Ltd,„.
and Will employ 25 men perrnanee-
tly. • "
THERE IS NO
SUCCESS FOR. THE MAN
Who vacillates. , • •
Who is faint-hearted.
• Who shirks respOnsibility.
Who never dares to take risks.
Who 'thins fate is against him.
Wim,ie discouraged 'by reverses.
Who always anticipates trouble.
• Who does not believe in himself...
Who expects.nothing but failure.
Who 'is always belittling, himself.
Who waits for something to turn•up
Who complains that he never had
a chance.
• Who • ' is censtantly• 'complaining
about his work. I • '
Who never putshisheart,into; any-
thing he does.
Who blames circumstance's or other
people for his f,ailure.
Who assumes the attitude of a vie -
Urn whom everybody is bent cin doing.
• Who .expects to elithiesite from hit
Work everything that is disagreeable
or distasteful. t
• Who clings teriaciously to old ideas
and oM ways of clOing things and is
Slave' to precedent. '
Who' shuts himself Within his own
life so completely that he cannot talre
interest in anything outside of . it.
Who thinks the tithes are all alit of
joint and that he was not horn at
the right moment 'in the right
place.
Beaeharnois •belong to the , peeple
and on nal condition should be giver:
into private. hand..It would. make
:millionaires of a . kw, but it v.-ouid
keep others poorer than they might,
he:" It would put a few men in . a
position to, exact great wealth for
themaelvesfrom .the _imers_ et eleet•
sleet -current.' , •
'The 'Beanharnois eantroversey has:.
deVeloped into a struggle betwee:i
the two rival -cities, Montreal •and
Torentd. Toronto'wants the shallou ,
rapid sections -of. the St. LaWrence
River deepened so that ocean-going
ships Can mane. ,up into , the
Great Bakes -right to Toronto. Men-
treal „wants ocean-going ships' to
stop at Montreal, and doubtless cal-
culated that the private development
At Beauharnois will delay or stop al.
together the: river -deepening scheme.
Thesieterests 'of The:*•countrY is.- not
taken into account at 'all.
"TAKING THE CENSUS ,
This week the Men roughtut,
Canada who have beert appdinted 'to
take the census should be at work,'
and the great majority. no doubt are
It is the duty of these men to call on.
every family in their territory, and
to ask many questioes: Seine of these
questions .may seem rather impertin-
ent, blit they are not, so. Besides
they are on the paper which it is the
duty of the oenstis taker to fill•in so
Ear as he early • .
' The best plan' for everyone lap
proached is to give the enumerator
a Oheerf-ul welcorne, and to answer
hir questions in a business -like Way.
is 8 business niatter,•and the rem:
epgagedtin it Will he -kept busy time,
otit 'the month of .June to get their
allotted work 'done. Don't•think that
they have. a Soft jet) for which thby
get big ..pay, They are. expected ,tO
deal with a family in One' hour, and
they willsoot have -to any:, time-
.to dO that. 411 the information they
get • is: strictly eonfidential, and as
the -parties questioned may he pro
smelted for real:Aging ,orns wei-
Uuestions,, • so the ;Censtis-taker be-
chmeg liable for making. public the
information he geta.
, •
. ,
WINNING, StigGAN.
'
Out of 18,000 slogans •Stdatiitted,,
in the Slogein4Conteat conducted by
the World's Grain gxhitti94,04.
Coriference,_ the judges • diose • ' one •
• ,,,'
:ntr. OtblieN7t4e.ofP2ctre"'esvesail-Lth't :Vegit-4P-REPiCIPICIr POW:"
year will draw approximately 69 dif- •: ..
fererit countries into friendly coin- • ,
Petitiori and conferepbe at Regina. ' . •,;• - .
'.`ShoW What, -yonvirOTW -and' shaie • • •
what youltnow'? is the'prize-winning , - .
slogan, arid tbe.tater part of the eel, ' . .'
,ocerno;ielnowlatateptwrwtorxide• 4g , of. .: constantly ' ., •‘. . ....•‘
•
FIND ,CITRITS 'Fl411ITS' - ''...: •
. . ..•
•
• TAINT ,EGG SIIIPMEN‘S. ' :
• -•,.... •• . .
Several shipments of eggs consign '.
ed to, • Great 'Britain ,:fronit. • different
gourees dtiting. the ',past few-: weeks .
lieve'bbet'Yeand to ''be,tairitecr tts•''a ,:, , . " • ... •
,.... ,
result et:laying, been stored too near •., ••• „,„.....:::
Shipthentiva•trialt:.• i-:'!,, 1,, .5, ; ::'.; ',,' . ..
A ti,alabte 91, c' of the • "
tanning 'ofeggs from -being ;stored): -
near other commodities, • particularly
citrus fruits, have been •noted in- Can-
ada/ In some refrigerating
Elie result was 'nOted'-wliere 'the egga,
were in roome separate from thastel' • ,• • „.
of ;other coniniclities, but in which •
the same pis circulated:1%e odor of -
citrus fruits and apples has been
found to penetrate' the ehell and, is'
taken 'up' by the yolk ,of the egg,
• which iippatently has an affinity for'
such odors. Utmost' care should be •
ased-tin storing, eggs to avert the
• longer ot suchforeign. odors. 'Eggs
A/1th the unusual Odor are not actual-,
,y spoiled but create. suspicion in. the
ands of purchasers' -because • they ,
a smell and taste unlike fresh eggs. •
•
APPROVED mints IN DEMAND .
A heavy demand • ftr, approved •
.:hickg is reported this sPrieg,, with ••••
.he result th,at, many of the apnroved:
• hatcheries have orders 'b'ooked which •••'; are taxing their Capacity.. May'chicks, • •
neat' November .eheckg, and that •'' I
„slogan .• ' • "
kken_heldthe°, 501TV-a fancy. • • • • a.
A' review: of the egg market • '
rin eer eur-yearirsshows:
%that the higher' prices prevail-dirrnig •
the latefall and early winter months '
'before- the flush of ' general Prothic•-• •
•,tien ceale'S in. That is why the farms'
,who buys -ap.proved chicks earlY '
in the season •has , a Setter prosect-. • ,
,ive• cash crop for the end of the year
hari the farinerwho hatches- his own
chicks later in the 'season. The. uni- . • ••
fermity 'of -production and, the high ; • •",.
quality assured,' by goverrnnent in-
tpectioe 'and supervision which • con-
trols the.jhetelling of approved chicks
is one oi
t • the biggest tweets • n the
development of A' poultiv fleck.
- The cash returns from a millet
-fleaof from 120 .tO 100 approved
-chiclitHare,a-'welcozne and useful
asset -at a time of the year when
other . crops have ,'passed. May, chicks
become •pullet producer...a.
ber, and' raising chicks this' Month is
a much easier, proposition than rs,"
ere are a few
of the uses of
roe
•
YPROC fireproof wallboard is manu-
. factured from gypsum rock. 'It' comes
in sheets that are 4 to 10 feet long, 4 feet
•,.wide and % of ati inch thick. It costs little,
nails and cuts Iike. luMber, has structural
strength and insuiation value. It is Canada's
• premier Material for lining -all interiormalls,
ceilings and partitipni. Ask your dealer for
a Gyproc direction sheet, it gives full details. •
Store ceilings Hest rooms*, , Poultry houses •
•Basernents oficelf
Warehouses Partitions Farin offices
. ,
Harness roOma 1...... :-
IA3taLlsi,
rooms .
Fruit cellars Under coriiice waelaitsliiiig
, 'Garaged Sheathing
•
. Ma.krinoogniosldnew ' :'Dairfes,
Summer gSun porches Cottaes . • ••
Ceilingt
•
Store windows Factories , Covering old
' plaster
Dressing rooms Xitchens Picture theatres
. .
' N Approved by Fire Chiefs
•
Approved by Building Inspectors 372
GYPUM, LIME and ALABASTIN, CANADA, LIMITED
• Fans . Ontario
pR
Fireprdof wallboard
Per Sale !e:.
Hendetscbti 81. t'isher Lueknow,Ont.
Witt. Murdie& Son. .•‘a a, Luknovit, Oivto
One & Porteous ,a Ltieltnow, Chits
•
. • •
• °,, •
I•