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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-11-24, Page 7• • ; -[''. a Erna live and Th oil at 'L • CANADA „13•ritish .h' kis Going' Str.ong.l• , • Most.Gana i ''' • re pleased to.i[now.5 li- - . films rm rove in itis e that, r m t t. � ,. n„ gttalfty, and that itlie Bi !rise :tdtisry »resperseabun ettly, We base. this • ' slrateinelit upo ''reports, &ought.ii4k' from Englandiv. returning' Canadians and i ci fra eednilesiotrls •putYlislted.. -41,11446d. States trade journals., Mr. "..viee-prestdent of the Columbia Pictures C.grporation, inter- ' viewed bee thei,,Tilrn I{1a 4y, an intruen- „ tial 'United /trade organ, is, tfuoted . s. yi , g • "It might Me' well •to noteethat •.al- though the apericart,, industry has made little , progress•.'• through. this. ' 'Period • of ` wobll, ;depressiort .enormous • profits .have been! made''ln Eng'l'and by t•,pi'oduoers, dieetribu•ta1 see:U aahlbators. Sliolild,•fios sftua0on -Pia eV US'tIiikk2 , Those in Control Qf production do not - seto realize that •there•is `au en'tire- -_.yInm ese world,point of_ ie ' Which -lams fco,he met in picture ,product,• This ""film! sed v%sevtealeit 'radically affects'' the .type° er entertainment • that. must ' be:furnished' as well as ,the attitude. • of the 'audience. Arti'etically,: the bUsi- ness 'must improve:" The qualityof restraint..and whole-' sameness, • observable in Many Old • Country films; is one that.recommends' • -them to. 'Canad'i'an 'patrons.—Toronto Mail and 'Empire. d,- • -Something. Lacking Here• The, end, of the limit seems to 'have been reached when 'a •man in Montreal Was serif to jail for 15 'day:.s %,because'he 6egge 1 a CIgarotte •'from ' a mare for: ' tunate individual. Sonehorr that rubs heavily against the grain of ee normal person, .., ••• This man •certainly was more .sinned ▪ .against than sinning and tire. citizen' who ."turned him' in" apparently had ompleteIy4orgatten.-Lit .e: 3itilica4 quo- tation, "It is .more blessed to give than, ' to 'receive". while his accoster ,appar- ently„went on the Biblical assumption , of "Ask and •it. shall .be given unto von." 'If •thisthing-is carried" too far we know a: .great 'nu;ruber of office. • "friends' who will shortly he'on• the Inside looking snit:^Kitchener Daily Reegrd:, The Bacon Qubta .', . The Ottawa agreear]ents -provide for f_r.'ee entr�r ntq Br tajn ,of 2,8'0,90,990 • • pounds of 'Canadian bacon "o'f good, quality." ' '•`Good. quality" means -'the. grad'e'knewn in Canada 'as "select." ast year Canada -only produced 'one- . fifth of the number of hogs ;re(1uired' to supply this quota: of "gbod.qualit3"' . bacon), These figure may give those 'not acquainted with theindueary some idea ' -of the huge tesk.facin'g depart- . merits of ,agriculture,. paelcers, breed- • ers aiud -farmers 'if' Canada`is-to take Pull act vantage of i`his impo`r'tant eon - cession. Already an intensive cam. ' palgn .'towards' hog, irpprevenient has been undertaken by the r1epartments. 'here ,.and in Toronto.. 'A evolution within the industry will be required. Breeders are:faced with le* prices for b'aco'n in Britain,. the exchange 'and other major considerations but leaders • in the' indfstry claim -the Bacot! quota .- can be worked out to the advantttge:of the Canadian -farrier if only sufficient —tee ope,aYi�ru acrd guud sr-ili are -Ali -own all concorned.-----Ottawa Journal. , Radio. Licenses A total of•544,129 radio.:receiving• licenses have been iss•ited by the Cana- ' Nati Government. Radio Branch 'from • April 1 to September' '3O, 1932; or ap proximately oue to every'eighteetx per- __ _ =. nurrtnnot—Acton I rcoa Press. of ,. tlt9_D_o-s s. • • Comeback, For -the Horse The horse will reappear, in great force as the motive power for, urban find suburban street and road trans= portation, If a certain British organi- nation has its way.' That organization, foundedto further the interest' of the breeder and user of the horse and Y;'is- knotvir ah tilio; National `Horse Association of Great Britain At the , ,. !request of various bodiescommercial- ly interested In the maintenance of Morse trate, it is conducting an active ropagandi for the enc'ouragemnent of he use of horses for transport purl oses, and is meeting with support and; o -operation from firms with large de•, iverios tomake.--Welland-Port Col-. orrie Tribune, • e f -earth raised Is .a *ort of deposit,.in • the hank which can}apt fail, and .on . � h kind; ;the, gone coat Idn�w'. c egnes in ii 1, for tiid'i'u.aint enance of life for a . con sideiaahie Period: • Naturailye'one luta, to -work hard, but the earth is an em- !!layer, which does not stint 'bread to.. its •workers.—La Liberte,, Winnipeg. •. The—Plowman 'rhe, plowman' is the symbol of the countl•esa then' and 'women who liave gone before us•wrestling from the Soil. the means ' of. sustained life and higher 'aspiration. "He'.is the ernbodimer}°t-:of all .tliat Th noble •in Ituniau',}abor. �aome how; the •hands ,that have guided a •plow through the fresh snielli'ng earth- a?•e'.bet'ter°Por•hat.Ihg.$T.ciise so.—Otieera Citizen =� -Supported;.by'the Law ,' ,,Thee Ilritisli ildlfeer tan is ebackeOE ftp by •thilaw • far more effectively. thau.l' .ofi'icers in •same countries. heti 11 -maltes..anarresE"there are no -thous- n _�-.. -and-lo.opliti-ass-an tlie:cirmi,ial iayw-1,�'. tthich an unscrupulous lawyer', eau • • 'm free, i i5.ari,,• . There are not a lot; of criminals -who, go,untouched because, they have influence.' The .British :liceman very truly •represents "the ina- jesty .of the law; .He does not, as 'a usual thing, ''need . to carrye a weapon with 1iine Victoria•. Times, THE EMPIR ' idle Mone Y If !Millions of pounds of move« star t to' drift out of circulation=as they have been drifting out-an'd begin to pile" up inehe beaks, clearly the con- sequences are 'going' to '•bye' serious. Fewer goods will be bought °'becari:_ the money to buy them is les;' by the, amount • lying unused on deposit, and unempioy,ment milk rise. There is no other way of stimulating 'output and ernployrment at the present tithe than by getting thls money back ,into • circu- latian.=London Daily Herald. • , • Dangerous• Po'licy'. Tliee.lapnese see--Chai,a rajidieedie; in:tegrating.before their eyes,.and`they, a-sk ._'tjletnselves .whether their .'beet. course is •not to strive to .save some- thing from the ruins.dand to •natk'.out an •.eeur ., i , eat.jeb they .can immunize from tie surround-' ing contagion,? It is a desperate, policy,. but it .is intelligib'leto anyilody who wiil-.:adm.i.t_.that Japan's. i-nte-a-ests - an China are more vital'to her than the interests' Which. the Shanghai .defence force . 'was established ' tp protect so short a time ago, were to England: It is :a dangerous policy, , . Dangerous •to Japan, ..because it• tends to revive -the prestige ' of .-the military caste; to -strengthen' the waning•fe'udal ideology. Dangerous to civilization;'•lteca.use• it creates yen more septic focus in a dis- ordered world.—Round Table,' London. • e„, Russian Jewels Part of 'Legahy , b • The principal part of the• $1,032,348 in personal property•left by :.Edith . Rockefeller McCormick. consists.. of jev elry.. Over 1,700 dia- . • mo•nds, .many.. pearls•' and emeralds are • shoWn ,in these,. two -pieces. : Plant Surveys Proposed • ' • • In Fight on lay fever Manhattan, Kan.—Plaut '.surveys of eonithunities as: an loll to'.i,ay-feyer control are. urged by Mise Elia:Horn; Kansas , State : College botanist, 'wird has"completed'•such a. project in. Man- hattan, .a city. of -12,000 population. • • "Only; ten of these vitally deeded su'rr'eys have been made in; the • Uni- ted St'at.ee,'t Miss Hon, *aid, 'but. botanists Must' take, up :this work .if, hay -fever sufferers are ever to' get much relief." • :• 'Three varieties of ,ragweed, hemp 'and ,pigweed Were identified in ;MissHorn' •research " as Manhsattan's ',Worst offenders arri•ong. • the 250 pos. sfbl.e,. varieties. of 'trees, grasses ,and tweeds'which; may cause hay fever. . She found^ that, 571..8 acres, or. 22. leer .cent 'of. the. city, was in weeds, A single, acre of ragweed, which grows in .profusion in Manhattan, had been found to , give off sixty pounds of .pollen., the ,botanist said. In arguing the importance .of .weed surveys;' Miss' Horn pointed out that 60,•per cent of all asthma is bay fever in •it's advanced stages. .` . • Peace With' Honour . The time for rallproclieinent ' be. tween the Government and the . Con- gi;ess will come only wheu civil dis- obedience is . definitely' called off; and When there are guarantee which fully satisfythe Government that thane will be -no attempt to• 'revive it invany' shape or, form'. .Even _then; past ex- peri.ence cannot, but make the. Govern- -meet-•cautio:ne- in recepting any over- tures' for. peace that may cone •from the .other side..` India cannot, afford to risk a repetition of the disastrous ex- perietnce tbat.followed the Irwin -Gan- dhi 1'acf—Calcutta Englishman. UNLOVED One sorrow only in God's world has ,birth— . T irfh— To live unloving and• unloved on • earth; One .joy • alone makes life a Part of enforce this latest 'western reform. p` heaven—' , Any names•may ire chosen as long • The joy 'of happy love received and as they are consistent •with Turkish . •giv.en. customs. e ' • , ' • Heretofore family names( baVe. been Give rice the heart that spreads its ripe -existent. in Turkey,,:' thousands of wings, women being simply "Fatimas' an4 Like the freed 'bird, that soars and thousands of men. "`Mu.�taphas" or sings. • "I-lus'seins." • Sometimes •men have And sees the bright side of all things, added names indicating 'they are the From om Iietiri dg's Straits 'to Dbver. • sons' of a six -fingered man or a fish - It • sh-It• is a bank that never breaks;, - •mogner•—just for'distinct#on. - It is 'a store thief never takes, •Names 'must be chosen• within six It is a !lock that he • ' shakes, moi lis after promulgation 0' e n All. the wide world o er. law. • • •Motors Replace . Horses ' Of Royal : Mounted Police Winnipeg. -For forty :years farmed throughout the - ,English-speaking ,world as. • the Scarlet Coated • Riders of . the. plains, the. , .Royal • C'anadian Northwest Mounted Police at last have. discarded, 'their horses :and 'taken . to the, motor car. • Before there were dirt roads' across the prairies, before the era of • the ,railwajs, •the old Northwest' Mounted carried law .enfo:rcemeut, the Crown's. justice, into' every'nook and cranny of -tie Western prairies.. ,They did" so With the aid pf horses' and their prow- ess as horsemen.' Their ability to travel weeks and months.living.off.the country, • Cut .off ..completely, . ,from supply depots, 'earned for -them the .reputation, of• the 'greatest, mounted police° fens i.n ithc.• world: meth- bds': of crime,• new • problems of . law enforcement have :changed all this. ,The photographs and'.pairitings of the old scarlet -coated riders,,-astride—their horses, is now only'a relic of a Neel- west- which is gone. . New Regime in Turkey . Introduces Family Names Istanbul, Turkey.—Millions of Turks are racking theirbrains tochoose family names for themselves while the Minister ot Interior prepares. a law to OTHER OPINIONS Home Town Advertising ' 'Mr -Mere-hail t, the-trevespapera- front the larger eines near your community are coming into the homes of your own customers these days With adver- tising columns •bursting with an-• - nouncentents of real values: - If you will go toyour dome town newspaper advertising man he will kelp yeu with your. advertising prob- lems and make your advertising just as appealing to your customers as the "big city' advertising is. You, Mr, Merchant, have to• keels that lead. -Local advertising has thejump on advertising that comes in from the out$Ide; by properly utilizing the. home ; town newspaper columns con rsistently And, with careful attention to Lite' preparing of copy.—Kenton, Ohio, • News Reinibl:ican, ' Helpful. Reading ' A fondness • for good.'hooks doesn't • just hapyieii, It Must bo Cultivated In • the child, as well as in the adult who -` ''did not acqutre it in its youth' or lost it in the transition from you s' to ina- vtur icy. ' Hoines with good libraries ries - • --,ii. ell -read ,byr adult members of the - ekainily seldom are the scene ot'jnve- '-.:+--• - Pilo revolt against helpful, reading.— ' • 'Sarnia Gtini,fiiai-Observer. , • . The World's 1#'a]ker • . " l;ven in prnvielont jieop'le are'ecenr- Polled to bo Cirifty en. tholand. Tho;. icanriot in ac',titl fact get +r the, e .d lot their resdnrce , tot a !rand-.in-niotlth - iT! is itnpt+* i`, -fu for thein. Tiic pro-'. eeess of•farn]io; .rnai;i..s 1111 faimfea'• tlace his • inveslrn�•nts..iu the .soli. hie len,t, r e i rove , . -1,i.hie' I r iii r n .] t t,, y o `rain of seed,, every ft; froW, 470;1 d No Change The many Americans Who are con-• e.tant.eeeadere acrd admirers of Punch had naturally a moment of dismay when it was announced the other •day that Sir Gwen Seaman, who has heed the; editor. for the last 26 years, was about to retire 'But the 'fears that a new editor might givens a new, twen- tretli-century, wise -cracking Punch, a Prtnch of studied irreverence and veil- garity--••in the spirit of some Of ita contemptlraries, notably in Genially and the United States -'are happily set at rest.' Sir Owen's successor: is 1ikely,to be B. G. V. Knox, the "Evoe" that has long been signed to some of Punch's most deft htfu1. Its of satire and parody in pros anci vers`O.—Bos- fc5t"itlii�l`iit, _ _ - . ,�� • _ .. T'(t• 111n first trine prior to file']?• nrbd war, .a German, ]va'r'sltipvfsit- t „e tn, ,caste i1iscan�ent Try` care- r' t t'it,lurirtphiit. Seaman Herbert Brrtsl�aff of the .L"'rutser •I arlsa`uhe• i,,;;g .0014141,- , •1 cti•1,;nt1y, enjoys the change of scene, < < v • q • . Ger arship at Philadelphia 4 Development of the Ontario-,, Agricultural College News. despatches recently told of the visit of His ' Exeellency the Gov- ernor-General to Guelph to. =dedicate and open formally' the 'magnificent, new. administration' and residence. building of •the Ontar-ie Agricultural- College. These reports were exceed- ingly interesting: It may ba . ques- tioned, however, if the public • are thoroughly' conversant with the splen- did work for agriculture being date at that institution, now presided over .by Dr. G. L'•Christie. The year•1873 saw its incep:ion and on May 1, 1874, ;the Ontario School of Agriculture was declared open, thirty-one students be-_ ing a.drnitted. Under:but four presi- dents the C.allege has ilevelqed, until in all .35,855. students have onral'led, there •'being an enrollment of 568' eta-, dents in the agricultural courses for the- season` of 1931-32 Since the' in- ,eeption .of :the O.A.:C., degree tour ses' have been established;` arid. the study of I;•oine.ecohoniies•;ard short,courses have been added. - Rr• The. Maidun'ald Institute, the. gift of`. Srr+ 9R plain° Macdonfait wars opened: in 1003, as a part of, the 'C'ollage' for 'training in home "gconomics. The Col- •abl aid' .gig tom. e to farmers in the selection -of test seeds,, iri fact, a new 'frets xaf barley;, named "nobarb", originated there. The O.A.C: looks :also after.. the registra- tion ;of beekeepers in the province, about 669 apiaries, with approximate• ly .162,;000 colonies, being registered.. Much help was given by the Celine in. the .corn -borer•, battle, while in the` Canadian School of Baking the Trent Institute conducts commercial baking coursee'and does'research and''demon-: tration a� orae.• ,.,Poultry research, 'soil • survey; animal'husbandr , fruit grow- ing; coldstorage, •gradg of omilk;' killing f `weeds- •and . oUlher . features, -ofthe work' of the school,. show the iiiiportance• of O,A.C,' 'to„ agriculture in.this country; 'To the •Guelph Mer- cury; which' ,Published an attractive special ...edition'• teeentark- 3is Excel- Iency's•.visit; we are indebted for many facts concerti: g this admir'abie tution:--Toronto Mail '8a •Empires • �I Low,=Cost 'Rations f okows • • Economical cow .rations that, New, Jersay.dairymen can feed as one step toward'making. readjustments to meet. reductic_ns in' milk p.rieet are listed'in a recent •.statement by • E. J:Perry, extension -service '•dairy,i]ar:' , at the New, Jersey. Agricultural experiment e. rag ar-d grain constitutes from 50 to PO• per cent:>of the entire annual exPense, of keeping' dairy cows, feed is 'the nidi exp9nse 'irhrch-the -owner-can probably reduce .with. the least diffi- culty,. Mr. Perry points. -out. ' For the dairy , farmer who has such hoine- • grown grains• as corn, oats, barley ,er wheat, and plenty of, choice alfalfa; .soybean or' clover hay, Mr. Perry re= coniniends the following ration as one that • is economical and capable of stimulating 'high ,production: 1,000 pounds of a 20' per cent. ready,_mixed 'feed and 1,000 "pound's of, corn meal, corn and ebb meal, ground barley, ground , wheat or a combination' of some or all' of• thee. This mixture contains 14 to 16 per cent. total pro- tein, and, fed vrith good legumes, is a balanced ration. • Is Letter -Writing Out-,-cif-Date? • Publication i -n England, of a new and complete. edition . of Sir Walcei • Scott's letters, which reveal him a: elite 4f tl e -most 'prolific missive •writ- ers in the annals of literature, leads' The Commentator in F,andon Moijn- ing Poet to reflect upon the "positive- ly appalling number of old littera which. have been preserved in print. "I have heard' a 'famous historian,: •after his 'third glass of mellow old • port in; a- college 'Common=room, : utter ' ,fervent, wish that the celebrities of the past had made 'it a'paint of honor to burn all one another's letters;".he 'says. "Seeing that 'tris domain was modern history,.. even a• literary -critic could''excuse the outburst. • •Dr. wJohn- sort rote 300 letters to 1%irs a Thrale,� 'and. 'Disraeli' 800, to.. Lad r, Bradfo;d, :: ret .ile thereare in ,existence more thea.'.'. 1,OAtf.df Edward'Fitzgeraid's'' _ff.& prod gious niass of. c'orre`spon den;ce has to'.be eirainiiled ley ;expert or •this or.' that phase of .eighteenth: .., century histork: orte of 'when hare as- • cured• me . that "he• had radinoreaa.n •a ton :of handwriting; mach of 'which crab bad as c �.hbpfl nd '•.rroCsed ,, anal..'ve>ry difficu, t to decipher. And a` whole marinig s work, Ire added,, spent in thus spoiling his eyesight' sometimes failett tp provide him with.. ' a signifi cant sentence." - However, the author of the -article _ has 'his doubts as to whether . the young swains ef today are keeping up the old, gracious custom of writing love 'letters, , "They:, seem 'to prefer' the tele- phone," he observes, "because, atone young and adequately ardent devotee tells: me, `I'd' sooner hear her voice than,have to chaff her about mistakes in spelling" There.1s_,.somethin.gin that;• and when, television is perfectedy andthe lover can.hee'him beloved•as' well as hear her, the walls of •space :and time will be down between the: two neighbors.' - "Another. swain 'insists that the writing of the old-fashioned love ter!'. is really a:. dangerous_,,practiee, 'Two people, don't see orifi' another for • a long time,' he explained, 'and write. • scores ot. letters cracking one another up in the most absurd way. And when they meet again' neither crimes, up to • thegageotherrkient'sis-caspecifilledcatioff'''. ons; and the en - Matches .100= Years •.Old. •�-igizted-at�entenatr�-i--°-• Dogliani, Italy.—•14latches 1.00 years - old -were used to light candles' and'cis-. arettes at a celebration here in honor of Dytnreixictrt higltano,"their•-manses 'facturer. • ' • Dogliani credits Ghigliano, a native sort, with being the inventor of the sulphur, match. Similar clain]s have been made by' others, but" Degliani is so convinced that it -has, erected a monuinenit to its townsman: '• The. mayor ,produced the, ancient . box at a ceremony, !narking the• hun- dredth anrriversary,4of the invention. . The first thatch •broke. into . flame at the second stroke: Other honor guests were allowed to,.,strike the .remaining., ones, all. of which were good: , ' Ghigliano was a poor chemist when he produced. his first mateh.. There-' after he manufactured them in boxes. South Favors Soy Beans Mexican National Railways Rale! h-' N.C.-1191•Carolina's g , q Ban Foreign Employees. greatest agricultural 'dee Inplishmeht . ' - - Mexico City —Indications that the ' in the last 25. •rears has been. to in- atf, - crease the -acreage 'planted to soy �rn�I�-in.ca of i-sli;ct�-wi,3--'••-- hold to the letter of theaw relluirin beans, in the, opinion of Mr. Gt it., theft only Mexican nationals be el-- • Hudson, who has just rounded out his ployed 'except ,in. technical and direc- twenty-fifth year • in farm demonstra- tive posts, were seen in the decision tion work in this State. Mr. Hudson on the appeal of a foreign worker.. believes that the introduction of the William Barl:r,c•,- who was employed . soy bean into eastern North Carolina in the Jalapa,..Vera Cru; shops; ape , and its use over the entire State has pealed his dieccrarge after an accident been of tremendous importance to agrieuitual.'devlopsireirt ... ..._ __ _and. ash ed, for ii den]n-_4v, _-The Fed etal Councl.of Arbitratioe end - When Mr. Hudson' came to'.North 'ciliation ruled agninet'him,' cit:ng in Carolina in 1907 his first work was the: tleeisioe. the argument that tender - 1'au:nched in • a few counties around the labor law -1 his post should have been given to a Mexiea_n c•itizc:;. A _.- _ .� •Statesville, in the piedmont. From that limited 'beginning; the county agent system- has grown' to the point where there are now SO counties hav- Airplane Device ls,Tested ing farm agents, - .Milan, Itel - S^ccc•: sful test >:• -- flights have beet' made hct. i•,iiai an. Leads in • Farm Tree. Planting airplane malt dye prim il,tc. :,i.e •••those of the wind taime•i. ;lir i•s- Harrisburg,.Pa.-Pennsylvania led forced by'.a tractor Iirctp•:11.•r ;:tri,.te•h the nation in 1931 in' farm forest a hollow compartment in• t;: , flee, !ilio planting, according to the State De - narrowing toward the ccnttt•.an,i v. iw• partment of Forests.. Of the 35,500,-, ening'again at the. rear. Ti ;• r :i',F: 000 trees planted oa faint • forests is '.te add to ilii driving :', during 1921 in the -United. States, propeller. e • Pennsylvania planted,,; 6,000,000 trees, New or was second with 4,&00,-000, 'Pa ulation of Ching .• Ohio third with 1,743,000. l'eiping•:--'I he ;Ministry ui the le-• terror has announced C hifia's tete! Population, as 474,787,:356, of whop] .in '25,000,000 are under Japance control in 'Manchuria. Kiangsu, will! ' 34,- 120,000, is. the:most denee'y i]oruh ted p-revi-neeee in heirre-«=itiv -fi l g +' .is the email, et - .Fine Imposed For Posters", • London.—T` i nes were imposed two 'cases recently • in courtier in Ox- fordshire and • Montgoniel•yshire against indivi�als who .had'disfigur- ed• the 'couefry, side by the use :of posters along the highways, In both cases court action was taken in this. field of lawbreaking.forethe first iii" • May Sell Cigarettes Singly 'Ronne-J-Slot'machines to sell single cigarettes to .persons Who do not wish to or cannot buy ,it whole package are ' being considered by the .government tobacco monopoly. , t" "I bear° your wi rnst ttmn yoi •to Monte Carlo; "Yes, she's ii]ad •• it. But I put my foot down absolute', iy " "So she's not going' after all't" ' "Well. not with niv, concent." (i .T "What is meant b a. •sgtrar•�e gambler?" . , One who itioVer trees toeheat t2 '' po'lioe otic pf their 1°ake-eft,p cir