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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-09-17, Page 7finer flavour for all your salads ,JCRAFTOId-Fashioned floiledSalad Dress-: • lug has a piquant, freshly-bleudcd flavour that adds new pleasure ,to every salad dish. It•offers delightfully -rich smoothness yet beano oily. taste ... Hest of all, it costs lustone-half the price you're used to paying Y .• A large,. generous sive 12 0.jar costs only 25 Cents. Gat some:to.-da�,, 16,14:A Boiled Soled D o ''x,51 1 t 9' 9 • • (fid • Boiled'.- Salad Dressing •.MADE IN CANADA: 6.11 the Makers' of Kraft Cheese and- Veiveea k.t � oaud: . .S y j a�th ,_._- astly.�Extends--T Er s Age. • . . Geok ist Turns Back' Clock Seen Hundred Million Years ,W•ashington:=A vast aeon'• -:.known. it -, i •. - geolog s s as L palian •time=1,5;0, 000,000 years -appears to have drop- p_ed.• completely out of history, Accor i ing to Profes'sor•Charles. Schucbert'of Yate University in a report issued ►ty. tie National Research Connell: Sea.ch-the world over Tlias iai'leil to rev al the slightest Clue to e er- rant e g .1 ethe rant millenniunis,.during ,which some of the most momentous •events in the • history' of 'life" on earth occurred.' The : pages of rock on which the long story • of life was written before nran'began • to record events •seems • to have been torn Cut- end. 'thrown, away for this • The •reczrd of time, Prof: Schuchert explains, runs back in fairly good order . through the period known. es -=� = eedambrisn -- timee about== • 5004)00,00- years 00." 00;00years ago. Theift{ere was abundant'000 Q00 T b fh f d s a to fhenited life: hiethe-gr-eat-oceans.- -Many-ef +he- ---- regarded as - undignified': to: have no t had h Shells. Th" died, in our'talile we: have allowed onlyhnaf straflge to a Japanese: - .furniture -in a room. .tn' Japan it is - to the bottotii and were buried to creatural a her/ .lnunal �had"'used nnie':thy certainly' would have been recovered by this. time This 'absence of skeletons is. all -the more t astonishitrg sinceit-would seem that there must have been an abundance-of-gunnelsfeeding-on'-other- animals and .on plants." Now, he points • out, it must have. taken. • a' very long time for'.animals. to have learned to• make Skeletons-- either. keletons- either.' shell or bones. Consequent iy, the .Cambrian creatures nod � the crae'i- :ing" worrns of the'next- oldest rocks cannot. have touched' each other in, time • says,t"Ltpa`lian�ihie-s�a'tt�c's �'— _- qtr for the' unrecovered interval ;during •"The; which the marine . animals • evolved mostly- :from. very sma1L floating, .and. swimming forms without. ,exterior. skeletons into he much ' larger and, highly diversified life of th'e Cambrian. How long Lipaiian time. lasted can only be guesses, since we •:have' no' guidance at all from radio -active min- erals Or .from rates;' �f organic •evol.u- tion. "There was no; ,more •fundarnental; evplution during the whole of -the :I3 P ( of h • a Normandy `Till ie • "For a' good apple•yeer the year has "oit Will ,be well advanced." ' not .been too'good, but for a 'bad apple 4 Wordsworth covin not induce. the year the year has not been too bad." 'clitl'd to alter titer simple ieckoi ing: , �"We are seven "' I could not induce ;That is the classical phrase attribute 1' the e. ntrepreneur to abandon his to Norman. apple -growers, It is heard phrase', "It will be well advanced." • ie. a thousand variants. you can never j "Well,' said the Mayor of the ,'tiny' get nearer • the facts. 'Things might, commune, "my advice Would' be -stay have been better, but then they, .night ' on the . soot if you would have -the have.••been worse. On the positive side house' , made ready, They have so° the Norman philosophy is, ' lacking.. much wont to do that they rush from There are no enthusiasms, 'Superla-' one place to another. They . do the tives are , eschewed: Everything •is •moat .urgent jobs.. They will never be- .comparative: .i lieve-that your job is urgent. i;f you do In 'my Norman • villagQ..I..eonstat tly a not take up your.,abode. ' Then when, heard. the non -committal reply, The they see • you camping ''in confusion workmen were putting up an elaborate, they, will take pity on.you." kitchen; with - incredible •. complication l I ,.''thanked ;bile for his counsel. of pipes,•to carry hot water from room i."Yours. iri'ust be, a happy village if n work for or' thane o h : s u e Wilt 'Fit and ear-. there.iug to room;., and were pa g t., pentering and generally making my everybody! ''' old mill' : nhabitabl:e In .ord'er, to matte „-„ e H ahopk' his head: "For' avillage it . habitable:- l wher.,e. there is plenty of. work there a . ''W'ou'ld they11-a— finis} ed in' a' week•? i is not too much cause for•.co nillaint, Surely . they' were approaching, the.' he said: end? :Theylted already' been a, month :. Th�e''sun shone on the red • roofs, ir- m �••re' •lar 'old, ,rain -soaked•, and sunburnt and a haiR longer, than AO hid •led a gu . , ..,,,, e.hilis..on�the o: hersid' .of th_ river_ • ould, `I 'rel. on them to , °Th , t ., � ..;� __.. ko believe. C.. Y. , co'mplets• their task .by Wednesday? ''were• green enamell..ed: Their. mead "Why, as' to that;"; said the enrepre- ows 'were .rich•,and shining. Here and. neur•;,blowing up his forge, "as_to-_that, there. a cloud, whI e in -t cast. it'will certainly!.be well advanced." deep shadows on the grass. ,The trees - , ._ -7 _.-, - -well -a that -crowned the sl'op'es showed every What '•3o you • •mean. -by d vanced? Do you ;mean" it will be fin 'Shed or' not?" : "I•cannot•say iir`will be finished;. and: h'ue from pale. gold to' black•. .;The :or- chards oa the right were heavy with fruit.'' For a village where'nature was Leland say .it won't 'be finished. It.1 both generous' ad 'charming, 'where 'will be•well advanced' f i there •wee, employment for all,• there "But Yon have told me that for -was-Tittle •r•oom for-gruambling:-Fro' But you ., d „ theHills," b� more' than a "•month: What dam 1 to Between the River and H y think?"... . " .w Sisley Huddleston: , have little. use for it; . • You - open a gift' est :'Fhro . h.': • in "the resence .of . the person 'Who o h P gives. it to you., In Japan: this: is never .done.. Our _ "after ..dinner"' -.speeches are made before., dinner., • In Japan people will ,wait hours, drinking tea• before commencing" to eat but. wi'.1' Sheba, city editor,of the Japan."Tinles. leave as soon as the meal:is'over.' In b t Eas'tern...ryes ,: Here we lave an, interesting and informative article. written by'Kimpei' l," h we, view :customs western Countries --.people ,o jec. 'to and lviat w erem and' habits of the Occident as seen by waiting for their meals but' will' stay the 'Orient. : • ust as our Japanese days appear u' ccountable to you, so your Ocee aleozotc pbriod ..the:;_time _t a be- _-Yea_ i ; �of--res eat .bnt,in- _..._ .� ....,-._..., _--- - --• dente • - �_,-r u_.__.-... ,.-.�. . You.. stand gas s s gn P ,- nnin of life)than is indicated. byways are equally unaccountab.e, - n gJapan it is disrespectful' to stand -one this interval, and we have guessed its to us Suppose. I set''down a" few of -_. it- ._...._ _ - -.: r • _-41ust_a1v'4xs,�sit�n the floor in_greete' d t to 6 f-tfi d fr30� Elie ed's�oms'`'fikts�rved-=during=a -brief A •. t for •hours after their meals, drinking coffee.: In the Occident people are 'supposed to 'eat, all that is'on','their plates This is. bad taste', in': Nippon: urs. i.on e o e orde c ,- , a 'nest. _ain in America i :is years. o: a on' a sae side .- y n S'tateri-whivh"eeetn r s e ey' re , ats much time and the future :alone taxi It is early` morning in 'a typica, undignified' to' have- furniture in.' a sanktell how ?near our . guess is to the American home.. You. are . resting 011 room: e ' the mud • Throggh the millenniums truth.", "1 ' d r' ' beds VVe *ire - soft , u owe an s , to the -sear -disappeared, the bolivar ,n ' e-differ-not=anl3+ in -our ar e eve ution, o g , differ le we sleep, • since : t but 'tn theway in •. f zein crea ares ant even vuhi • •w:t.),:ik,„Assxst c11640. • 14441. • GOOD T zoo g moltE Bt.ENDS -AeAlo rel1 Oira e; +oe 'ft 'was ;difficult for foreigners among tau hin . c •r k from the °ape tato f} to g,ep g g and naturally so. ,., The driver was in pajamas f ' • But -there are things ' in ,,;AmeFr'ca which;seem:•just as ridiculous to.Japi anese eyes: For • instance, in, New York •recently, ;when I happened to be; walkin on. Fifth' Avenue, ,,I beltetd a g ., sight-which=almost-caused-;ne-to-hold my. sides'lest I burst from laughter. For: what should I behold in Ynidday and 'irlrtlre- very` heart' of the -'greatest - city_, n the word_ but' an American martian pridefully walking aloe g, wearing' a dark blue Japanese coat,. or "beppi"'on the bus a which in flay - b g reJapanese Classified- Advertising fil.TO13: Y Ti . N OFFER' anted Inv , 1: , 1e.. Lister wanted inventions and full inforrnation tient: free. The'Raraaay Coat ' • pang,,;World Patent Attorneys, 273 Manic • Street, Ottawa•. Canada`' WA7Q'SED: ,�'O. ruscolL%E �y OLD SCRA1a' } Oi7G'H•'I FOR` CA$Ff �Jlr 'Sethi golsj,teet�h'and bridges.,Crawn .Special •Coni any, P.O. ox. 354, .tet:lge, x 1 DEEDS This -as the law of agood deed b' tween two;the one ,ought at once to forget,tl4 E it was conferred; the °thee never, to forget that' it Was received. t ' d 'eharaeters six inches' �. , t Ex-- ' oris . re : r'hwLACKHEADS.i t.,eat ahe h wg, Don't'. auger any longer from these . tinguisher." •It' was a coat patterned - those -Issued. by the Tokyo' fire after those'iss cepartment. • So, hereafter. to'the�'American visi- tor -...in Japan- who exclaims; "_Gush, you're a tran e. eo 'e.s disre•• became rock and was raised up Into Prof: Schuchert points ont in ••his re- in Japan people lie on hard beds and which we.aook at mountains. • port bn -the possibility of determining rest their heads on firm pillow",: ,those Creatures r - t : hic knees of 'eek§ laid''lown , y .. Presently tl. yoused in. You MOLLUSC DAYS. the age of the earth from fossils and teed b the'women.enca . The fossils of the sea were- f om. Yet k x sheaths. I'r n y . aw''ake. • You embedded in the rock, so That geolo-• by sedimentation, appears to have gists today know what they looked like `gone on at Such a 'variable'. rate. and What families .iheY belongd to. throughout ~history, that, it is a very. Some of them were relatively enor- unreliable guide to elapsed time. Mous creatures, measuring from six to Thuscertain sea shells` now living eight inches. They represent practi- can .be traced -back practically _With - calk all the divisions of the animal out change for. 400,000,000years, and kiitlgdom now found in the seas except the race shows no,.signs of degenerat- e those with IWckbones such as fish, ing through old age. On the other mammals anddre tiles.'i:a'nd snail shells .in an artificial lime Seen in'a museum ''-exhi•bit' today created in -Wisconsin evolvedinfo a these lords of creation .a half billion recognizably different .species in sixty years ago • look like very primitive .years. ' creatures. ' But they are probanly On . the basis of deposits of sedi- closer to .the highest developed forms, mentary. rock, Prof.' Schuchert ,riade of life today, than' to' the most.comp:ex up a calendar of the earth's age back forms which -preceded them and of to thebeginning of the Archeozoic which there is record. Just behind area -about- 700,000,000' years. them lie the lost millenniums during . which animal life was beginning to Snow Scenes ' , take on the evolutionary processes e which resulted in the mammals of Stepping into the wonderland of white;' Many millions of years later. Our lanes in ,snow, I• am so heaped In the next oldest known rocks, with blis's ' ' • Prof. Sehuchert says„ there have been I wonder Which bewildering wealth. found traces of , some primitive to miss , sponges, some tiny protozoa -like crea- That I may hold just bearable delight: tures-known as foraminifera.-trails of Tree -corals or lamp -shadows, moon cut „worm -like creatures and of some un- 'a bright, Roofs deep„r.t,ermrine, tarry barns ' gone Boar As fabulous rocs that slumber ever- more In a valley of diamonds and forget,' a billion years. There also are traces • tenflight. known invertebrate animal. There are also limestone deposits of peculiar formation laid down , by tiny plants, the blue-green algae, who are still busy in American rivers' after almost • of bacteria. Even some ofdthese were No, there's a port -hole opening on ro- already•high in the scale of life, espe- •eaily the worm -Pike creatures known as' annelids - mance Wider than any Sinbad knew; the hold - • SKELETON GROWZR. MYSTERY.' Bairns richer than most ancient Span-, But, prof. Schuchert says, "not one of the known animals had yet learned to use lime for skeleton structures; -. either external or internal, and this stead.,- i when theremst have been present a, The window •of a child just gone to ish gold; My breath, my .thought hang in a `frozen trance • Before a ship un -anchoring, from the highly diversified mass of lnverte- brates. hire know that -the 7pre-Cam- brian•seas must have been reilete„urian lime salts in solution. If any of the bed: Geoffrey Johnson.. Spe for This FREE BOK math. "Imbed ed conp- and we will lead you a copy , of , one new took boos. 'The Goat Provider,” with over a handfed delightful recipes for p iddings, cakes. pastnes.,•Rc , things - d wide, innety of other tan oiake better'witb S ILC UNSWErtoma i EvApOkarED. horde$ C0,4 Limittd 115 Wait' St.; Toronto ___�ftead�me sr f nee cum' Ybur neiw Goole book. Nam.. • .,.0.' 64,641/1.e Ks re Ado!• ..Y:e . . st.c.hl ing Up the Trees The English Lake District 'is now under'goin'g a Process of transfprna- tion,' large areas, formerly are, hav- ing been planted with trees, which are gradually changing the appearance of the mountainsides. This is part of the systematic plant - of trees for timber which is now in process in Great Britain. Side by sit up and stretch 'yourselves, facing the foot of the bed. • As we in Japan rise,. we make •a turn so that when we st etch-' ourselves, we have our faces wa�rned in the , ppo'site..directien, to- rd the, pillow. In brushing' your teeth you devote as little time as pa; sible to the undertaking.' Our ...ouii-' tryrnen' take as long as possible: In fact •Yt i enet-uncommon fon.a. Japan-. ese of the lower classes tolbe seen flat cn seenorning's work in the neighbor- hood eighborhood of his home., brushing his teeth. After washing your , faces, you use a dry towel. ' Ws wipe our .faces with a moist towel;' •. As the typical Anier1"can fa nily is, about. to sit down Ns breakfast, the mistress of the house may call to her husband, "Harry, won't you run up- stairs and bring me something to put. over niy shouldrrs?° And Harry runs ur In a Japanese family, Mr. Sato would be sitting at the breakfast table while his wife was still busy in 'he. kitchen . As she came into the dining room. Mr. Sato might' call out: "Run• up, will you, and fetch my. glasses." Mrs: Sato - would obediently 'sasten upstairs. • things. For instance, a .Europeen visitor to Nippon finds a• litter of •in- ' It ends in an apocalypse•. of gold. "wanted:-pu•ppies left a:n the bushes.. : He .,. _._,:. , ,.Alexander Louis Fraser.!: cannot help .protesting against such ' cruelty.. On the other hand;. When es •t�� Japanese, ' hears that in western eosin Lone to a Tuan tries unwanted pups are killed, he WTI A new system of memory training' ask, `.`Flow does any oneaknow that tie was being taught in a village school; helpless puppies prefer to die?" Told • and '• the teacher ' .was becoming en- that it is better for the puppies to be "thusiastic. • • a ' •' It •is an honest critic of. the :soul,'' It. is a cheque-book we ,too ;seldom use, It kindles' hopes beyond .our 'fondest, ' dreams, • ' -It-hes=a-belni-for_evety;.Wean.deil heart,,i It •speaks; a langgage that- all •under - Stand, . • } f. , painlessly 'put to,death than to be left," p'or..instance,' he said, "supposing in the 'bu;<hi'•.= where their chalice of You want to remember the name of a keeing alive .is very small indeed,' he poet --Bobby 'Burn's. Fix • in your in certain to'ask. -"Why-their_are•nn'--mind's-.e•ye--aa--pictu`ce of-ja-policeman..._ famine -stricken people itt,.China killed in flames.. See -Bobby Burns?" painlessl ;�:?i'" "Yes, I see," said a bright pupil.. Take the case of aged people. Elder- "but how is •ane to know it does not ly folk in America' generally do not represent Robert Browning? ;live with their grown-up children. In , ATI A: Wash the painful part *jell' with ;waier--tben-rub in - plenty warm .. . plenty of Mhtisrd's' and ,you'll feel better! i'Japan the children. out of. considers- - • p.LE'ASUR.E tion for their parents, prefer -suffering To give pleasure to a single heart s a little discomfort -often it is a great by 'a single kind act is better than a deal 'ofdiscomfore-to having their 't3iotisand headbowings in prayer -- parents live apart from .them. II Saadi. Another matter in which the Jap- anese differ is in smiling when they are reprimanded.,. This has causedsi'' great deal of misunderstanding -be- tween -foreign employers' and Japan- ese employes -almost ns much mis• understanding as the Japanese custom of actually saying no when yes is meant, and vice versa. , ' -Visitors to Japan frequently fin.l it Yes, it seems we do things in exact- 'dt�fieult to keen from laughing out ly the opposite' way -even to ••raying right on observing some of the ridicu grace. In . American homes, if. grace g i3said,, it is before food that is eaten by the living. In Japan prayers are recited only before. food that Is Prof- fered to. the dead. And, when we. say' grace, we have our faces turned' up, while you pray with your faces turned down. American and Euopean wo- men in mourning Wear black dresses, whereas in Japan - women wear •Only white during this sad period. On the other• hand. black it the conventional costume worn at weddings in Japan, Your people ; •develop love before marriage, and it very frequently hap- pens -.that this love- grows- less- intense= as the months '_lass after the ear:). rnony. ro- mony.t Or people frequently develop love onlyliafter the marriage ceremony is over; for ,in, the majority'of caves the man and woman: re not sufficient- ly well acquainted evert to hold hands, during the period of their engagement. A Japanese.carpenter pulls his saw, while an American lushes his. In ajesty rode in his new carriage, and using a' pair of scissors your wome: all seemed l'1'to Jara::eseeyes. But, tolk operate the han.ile end, while we : push together the tips. You stand lous tr'sngs we do in :an effort to affect western ways, This is especially true in the case of English signboards. "Ladies have fits .inside," you may read over .a ort ssmaker's" shop; or ''I:.Iave y.;be head Cut here," o+,er a barber shop. ! . • When the first • train Was run be-- •tween Tokyo and Yokohama, the•late Meiji Emperor attended the mem,r- able ceremony. Te be in, keeping with the wave of watt rnizgtion that than swept the county, the Emperor•p-'an- ned toride to the station in -a horse- drawn carriage rather than in the court pa ao•lum. he ontrdifficci using a carriage was to find a suitabh: 'livery 'for the. driver: After' a search in the official wardrobe, a foreign gar - merit WaS ar-meritwas discovered which seemed to . answer very well. It was dignified, 'had buttons and deeovative stripes'and was*#said to have been bought at 'a foreign' auction in Yokohama. So' His • .Such lather! Such refreshing fragrance, sack skin ".softening and cleansipg!- daolads 0 inaividuol Cartons •9.31 • IZ 71uHN I was Z,welve years VY old my mother waisted me to take Lydia E Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound, but I wouldn't: If 1'ha'd I might have been awell girl now. I have suffered terribly every month.,; " Thegirls where I work used the Vegetable Compound and 'urged me to try it. It helped my nerves: ;-1 intend to keep on. ' until I•am well and strong:" Miss. Rose Lama, 6 Brighton Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. . VEGETABLE COMPOU'NlU .. ' ' E FAINTED AFTER FOOD Over -acidity and Flatulence side with this,. 'experiments are going your umbrellas with the, handle ero on with a view to Producing• the per- up; we stand •ours with the handle Beet tree for,timber purposes. . down. In carrying a closed umbrella The object ,of these experiments Js you hold 5116 "handle, bat we dan'le•' to produce trees which will come more curs from a string attached to the op-, . ;I -n'fekly to .maturity, and yet which pos'ite end. In entering a house you ' q will yield sound tinibera Some of the firist of all take oft your heetlgesr trees which brow fastest are, unto{- The first thing, wedo is to retrieve our ctor'.. in other ways, lodge -ate if yogi have brought ht a ...0 innately, unsatfsfa y y g � g But it 'is hoped that, as: a result of a home with you, and he has a gift, he e.+3 p KEEP YOURSELF Y • H E A L 1`�1 The lot of moso.people is much indoor. work and little real ex- ercise. That's why it's `sensible, every to often,te give the syetesn a gentle, thorough cleansing with Dr. Carter's Little Liver Pills, AU vegetlab'iie. 60 years lectlt if and cross -breeding, for iri resents it irnntediately. Our cus't�ni In use. , In which will be. ready thegift n artin . stance, poplars is to leave h p P g 25c 6e. 7.5clred packages for felling after twenty years •1' presenting. , the gift you inferm suit • 1, Yost thatit is sotretls-n very' ourtituggist-f® • • r fr'IaLR ' TERSPIUS True lrnowlcdge' is to know bow . assure i --- little KNOWLEDGE you hope he will like it. In Japan ,7ie eu • friend that anything we e can be know1s may- choose to present as a gift is (ieo..e-.:Sand res 1 sof no value and»''tve know'he will• IbbLJ-& No 7 . '31 - •'�kY.P.:•+rpt t to. s} -.y r ) e ',� Nurse's Acute Suffering - Corrected by Kruschen- " A nurse's life does not leave much. r ime-to spare; but.havin'g derived much benefit from taking, Krusch'en, it's only fair to you and others to pass the facts on. " I was suffering from over -acidity and flatule ice to such an extent that I was completely ill. I couldn't take food. The' very thought of, it nauseated•me. When I actually forced myself to take something, I would be wretchedly ill, and faint afteiivards. I 'really began to' feel life was not worth while: " I have now taken Krnschen for' 12 , months, and I have o "Mibi that it hes righted my digestii'e system: I am now quite fit and able to Work with vigor again,- I recommend the same treatment. tothose of my patients who ore likely to benefit by it." ,Nurse E. S. Indigestion . is ceased, by a failure in the 'flow of the gastric or digestive juices. As a result, your fond, ins -teed of being assimilated by your system, simply eollccts and•ferments inside you, producing li rrmftil-need-poison s --Start the' digestive juices fh-rwinl normally, and you'll not have to suffer r.iip more. And that is jfist. how 1'r•u .• len halis bnswi ogs ft and lastinfl relief' ,ftoln• iedi g estion. The immediate effect of the six mineral salts. in I rusehcn is to promote the healthy flow' of the vital juices of the body. And that means a blessed end to Iiidigestien and a re- •newed • and whole -hearted enjoyment of your food without the slightest fear of having' to ,pay , the old painful penalty. And More lion Will soon •cxperienee , the tonic binflnence of >C rusehcn upon ' our bloodstream: Vint•--Wi-H-begin-t'o-feel--lr•itevr heing happier, heartier, and, hungrier than , eon e1,tr felt in, your life. 1'�i'usedien Snits is obtainable at all Drug Stores at mac. and 75e, per bottle, , •