The Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-06-09, Page 7. • •
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A.
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, sareetee•-•-- '
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. *Am, ,
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7
Takes Three Prizes
• : •
• • A Unique Reunion
. .
Three yeers ago, during the week
Pod' of May 24th, a party ot gine boye.
casimed together at Ebor,Rark, qear
, Brantford, and liad lois or tun.
rerire-s-ent-dTora "woft
• — Pa
trol" of the old 1st 'Ontario Lcine,
41cOut Troop, _and this: Was the v
•first
is clean also. Prbbebly. yen have some-
times hear& ignorant peope Speaking
who •use a swear word with every.
breath. What sense is there in that?
Haven't • you notteed hoW StUDILL it
flieF,could Duly realize it,
fswearing is the biggest adVertiseinent
of a person's ignorance'
one •Scout Clianp...Ala-be-held-lo., • NO! .. "A Setintsis ior-a feol.,•2• leod,--:;s,,e.
......, .
-7---.-
, • . 'Rapt,. Furiniager 'onr:,(!ointeisidoner;.
Who was ivitli thein; F.says that '.its .1929
these boy; we :very inexeerie0pd .1h
.. , 00Outing,' • hot. t t at. 1 hey', were qui
;Pnck ' tb
a/. ' •
• Today dee of those lads litAsalstaut
• ....SsOutmastei.a.o the 1st Paris TreeP
• • • ind.inekher its'aseistatit)T•Cul.eatier
'lisisk"anci. all f then;lavegrown into big' good.lookilig:tel-..
, -
lows. • • •
• A.S.Msikeftnin.Prine" and Assistant
• Cub Leader Cljg. CasOady were -.again
aiiiiiingfon the same 's'pot this year
airing the 24t11' May week ,end; and
• ;Nth • them were some •ot their: boYa
trent the Paris TrooP,
'!These tfoys camped on the seine Site
• as, did the Lorries fa 1929, and also
used the same tent and provided the
fit the. first Lone Scout -Came.. -
During the weekend six other miens-
bers of the old "Wolf Petrel" capme out
• ' row Paris in a bunch to visit the
• • - Ocimp and to renew ecqoaintences, and
alkOver Old ifines with the Commie-
' stoner, who was so delighted to meet
them all again.
-
-Summer Camp •
' •
• • "On Lone Scent Trails" (May issima
,
. bas been aent out and With.it is a page
• • tin -the Lone Scout Came to be held
this summer at Ebor Park. There le
..
also a form` for You to fin in 'and return,
lo the Lone Scout Headquarters to se-
• Ore your reservation, at this cable.. '
•• • Donotput this on one Side until It
. Is, too late,:. bat'send it aim*, properly
filled in, as quickly as possible and re'
• member it must be in by Juke 20th at
the letest.
."Lone E" was at Ebor Par
• nd the:caniiisite is lookiag beautiful;k
ith the treesle full leaf and thegrass
nd wild tioiver,s.coming along nicely:
. the Swimming Pool is being put into
• '
nod shape. ,anti' the river lOoks'-goe,d
• Ito*. Tell Mother that she need not be
rvous,.as all. swiniMing at our camp
• closely supervis d•by etpelis d
Baden-Powell Ponce said, and therefore'
hehas no.; time fee 'swearing or fair
Passing on stories which can onlybe
classed "d4rtY." • •
.Thas yeas villf 'gee. theta/ a Scout
keeps • his. thoughts, 'aiid• his speech
clean,: it is only,nataral t expect that
iiewLi1bedean le bia.aalcns, and 'this.
is the iiirtatlinportatit part 'Of this.:Ia*
. keen Your hiedi healthy and, yo..,
mind. strong, . yon 1140.ii:„ he clean,
utsi-bOth,-outsidre-an-d-iCtei-td---a-11.
your actions must be lop%,goad: •You
stagy the Kidd and trees and other
•tufal-objets.- Havearem ever'seen any.,,.
thing ,uncleanli .thein?
And one further word, Lenies; Never
saydo-Or thitik n
•••-•'•
• - aotayaingthat
You 'Would telshe Med' !"dis Miss With
Your Moth r or Dad. If you do this
you vill be 0.k.; ead1 know that ,you
want -to -keep -the -10th-Scout-La"-vraiikf
as much as -any of the Other nine. -
Russian Exile Scouts ,
'
One of the world's interesting groups
of Scouts ecentirista "Russian Scouts in
• Foreign Countrie04---bOya orditissian
exiles: • ()nits areloCated in thirteen
Ceuntries, and et the last census num-
bered • 1,301. Their thief 'Scout is
Oleg Pantuckoff, whe'legides in the
United States. • '
For information regarding the Lone
Scoqts, write to- The Lone .Scout De-
partment,,BoY Scouts Association, 330
Bav Street, Toronto 2. -"Lone E."
n,.
Universities la Britain,.
• Improving
4.ttlytraitio...weS•7
thered,the fittakiat crisis last year to
satisfactbrY • eondition than in
• „aaccorcling-to a report justissued
kr •the University -Grant 'Committee.
Of the•fifty-UV° institutions ,cone
• cerned in.the report,three 'balanced
their revenue accourits,..ten showed.de--
licite and. forty shoWed.'surpluses in
1931, Jit•the preceding year -7wenty-
•e*ht• had surpluses:. Last year's de -
ficits aggregated only $57,000 (at par
•anyway, the River aud Swimming Pool rate. - of exehantej, and the condition
4re net deep enough to get you- into ef only twirinstit)tioesavaiceneilered
herious difficulties. at 'all serious.
Remerither vre want YOU at this • A Clecisieeof the. goyernmentnot
cainp front July 4th to 16th inclusive, -etirtail the grants to universities eras
so come. along just as you are.. Never received as a source of great, encout-
Mind a uniform, if you haven't got one, .agement and a, sign of faith in the
• and we will helparou to .ass your Ten- value of their work. Phe universities
• iderfoot and Other tests 'and give you •
tour badges right canip.
Don't forget the dates. and if you
liaven't a reservation form. write to
• Lone Scout Headquarters; and ask for
Gerhard of Dane End, looking very kingly here with his owner
Mise La Vis has every reason JO look thigh hat". He is the winner
of, several prizes at' the, a one -day dog
held at Loudon._ _un
__Craatal-Palatee-recentlzy- —
"OPF11,0.*
. • '
Cana.da's Position In'
— Empire Mini
An important chapter was added
the history of the mining industry
'the Dominion at the„, annual 'ineeti
of the Canadian Institute of Mini
and Metallurgy, held last. month
Montreal. This e•atheripg really
-solved itself into a convention af Ca
ada's mining expetts, the deliberatio_
and discussions being of particiil
significance in -View of the Econom
• 'Ai' -Tt.,-,0=',1,•41,
1 • /
ng
to
of'
ng
in
ng
re-.
115
ar
conference tie be.....held
41:fly7-Th-i-Wariers read and diseussed
had for their chief purpose theseon.
eiderg.tien Caetscla'a position -in
mining and...Latietalk_.:ray_in,a_e_lation...„
e mineral resources of the Erniiire:
as a whole. ' ' ,
'The Centel topic of this years gen:
eral meeting of the Institute mins, -per-
heps, the .paperteact 16r Dr% Chatles
DeputyCamsell, Minister Of Mines
• Ottawa, .entitlecl "Mieeral,Positiert
the BritiSh Empire."' in :41ia-P,Per
Dr; Caresell,cliselosed interett-
:big facts, based on a. comprehensive
study he has conducted dering the
-past-foiir years. TVs no secret that
the results from this Study; presented
• at the last kraperial: Conference. in
London, carried great weight with' the
,members. .
According to br. Camsell'S address
in the British Empire, view -
"ed as an economic unit or, group,
rather than as individual countries,
is in a position,.Potentially at least, of
imstrength.:-:..0t the -
NT,•.„ • '
ots•.44,siere., '""
."'
•
Unique Methods
• • •17.0 Get Jobs
Re tte rd011 ChenliktS. Adver- 01;
• • • •
.tis.e# by Plane-,:-Otber .
•.. Notes . •
,
Rotterdarn.-"If this is on hit;
-Oat else 'can he?".• vas
'
•
.• •
line. of a' handbill, which' z_eeeeatly
- -RoYal Dut-di'‘Alrlioes 'airplane s
tered over • 'Rottendani •ead Titer
,•
Hague in ten thousande, of Copies; ' •
behalf of .atr,,•
wro7tn letter' Of ,epplicee -
the" ..,a,ummarieed his qualificatione.
There Is evidently a in' the. ••,‘ '
• efforts for origipalitY Ari attracting ,
• •.
-the imployer's; pae. • 'This' . • '
, •
advettleing 'for job by airplane.woo• „: •
preeeded the '&1)p/teat/on of ithe•
• • ,
old and -.• •
oftke
SandWiOhyaan., '.S6pae tint° •ag.ti a. •
,Well-dressed: young men appeared .in' •
the, streets- of. R,otterdam 'messing
large- signs-55ii• his breast and back, . - •
.particulars of his., education •
an intellectual qualification's, re-..
• questing the who thought they had
•
portant metals arid minetals the Belt,
.. • : . •
• ish Empire posseeses 21 in•sach ab
7-•-1-0-•-•-e-•-......,.......... cleverly interprets," say Driver,
Sunday Schoird see
aspll's desire on the fosrmer vis
Benjamin as indicating a f
able:disposition towards him. To
esson• • one's eyes upci,n. a person" (v. 21
a nebtew eXpressicn, meaning
take, a person under one's protec
a.al show him favor " Will .fosep
_
not stand by his pronlise now and be
.luee 12, Lesson xi--sJudah the TrUe lenient with Benjainin?_ The flight of
• Brother --Genesis '44: 18-34. ,G11- the Years, together with the present
dee. Text-LBehold, how good and itouble§, have obviously purged the
• how pleasant it is for, brethren fa spirit of the brothers, Very different
dwell together 1, in units/S.-Psalm fromthe base deceit shown the -father•
when Joseph Verta sold (37 31, 32) is
un•••
$10_ dance as to have., large quantities
it to available 'ler export. Of the teniainl
avcir- ing seven the Erepire_poesesses: two
ii 4: in, quantities adeqUete for its own
set.
); ,,ii needs. For one the Empire is prac-
. iate tically dependent on outside sources;
tin and four it is almost entirely so
ANALYSIS.
' : the tender concern for hint y. 22.
1 -..THE ELOQUENCE OFLOVE,. Vs. 18 -?.3.
Judah now lifts the veil frOm
nitOTREIt's SELP-sacariece, srs, dilemina. On the brie hand he inus
rr, A TROUBLED OLD ACE, vs. 24-29.
TROUBLED OLD AGE,. VS„.:24-29. the
If A grief at borne. Jacob is, in an -acute
\ have food. Severe as the famine was
30-34. •
in Egypt, 'it Was worse stili in Can
INregoucrioN-The• years of fa -a- an _ye/Lin-good yearsetlie-harvee
-inre-pffdacted joSeph have came. of Canaan were not •coinparable wit
t'S"
d
n
rt
The :and of Canaan as well as EgYrit. those of Egypt. Further, there ha
feels the pinch of famine. Driven bY been no ski!, Pruclent_storirx_of grail
hunger, Joseph's brothers come down i--- Canaan—as there sad been, unde
from Canaan to Egypt in search of Joseph's • adminiatratioe, in Egypt
food. They are thus brought under Throughout ,hister: •when men felt the
Joseph's power, and Indeed . into per- pinch of famine in Canaan, they al
sonal touch'with him. , What a reverse ways looked .with longing. to Egypt
of 'fortunes! They had left him in a
. the land of.plenty. On the oth h
Pit (37: 24)-•.;, they. find- hint on a Jacob -s sons remind 'th ' •
throne..He had been• in their power:
they are' ow in his. They pay. two
visits to. Egypt; and although Joseph
:TicopyiZes-themi they do not recogiiite•
him.. On the occasion of their second
visit, he- plates his valuable •divining
cup. in Benjamin's. sack; and On its
tieing found he demands that ..Benja-
min. should be detained' E
• gyp as
have,none the less, taken steps to one guilty of theft. The scene has all
,effect every economy possible so as J the elements of tragedy-rjoseph, the
'to maintain their financial stability. 1 despised brother now clothed with ab-
•
. •
Our Weel:ly Scou. Law -No, 10 -dA
Scout Is Clean in Thought, Word
end Deed."
What a spleedid resolutiou this is!
To be Clean!
Ev_ery Imaltlas..boy •doess-hia hestst
eep himself clean, doesn't he? You
an usually pick out a Scout, too; by
is sniart apPearence, and clean cut
iook, even when he 'Is not in uniform.
Because a -good Scout takes care to
bave his Tace. and hands bright and
(shining. He is careful- to see that there
. ,
Is no ."tide Mark" around his neck,and
that those ears and fingernails are not
In mourning. -A'lso he takes care that
itte.lothes are _bruslietratideleamand-
urn correct y and not
rown on with a hay fork!
. So in appearance, on the o.utside, he
. Cioks dept.., • But. what about the in-
ide? What does he think about? Are'
is thought§ always clean? Is he obey-
. Lng ' the. 1st Scout L'aw and being
onorablef .
Ites, Ilike to think that Scouts have
• o time forillioughts that are not
1
leen. They 3Will net step to listen to
• tories and things that are dirty. -
. • AIM if a Scout's thOughts are clean,
lit will -naturally follow that his speech
•
4-
• bolute power; Benjamin, the fat cr's
1 *
CO oi _le Field& ° tim of others' ilt
• " -•
present favorite and che innocent
Golden dandelion discs -gold and
.orange --:of a hue niore beautiful, 1,
,think, than the higher and more visible
:birttercup. A blackbird, gleaming, so
'black is he, splashingin the runlet of L
gu ; the rotheri pros-
trate with fear and grief.; i.stid the
aged Jacob waiting anxiously at
home for the return of -die' beloved
Benjamin,
water across the gateway: raddy
--
- *kingfisher swiftirilia'nfiligliiiiiserf as
you might draw a stroke with a pen-
orer. the. surface of ,the! yellow
'buttercups, and away above the hedge.
• • Hart s tongue fern. thick with green,
'so green as to be thick with its color,
deep in the ditch tinder the shady hazel
bougXe. White meadsw-sweet Iifting
• its tiny' •florets and, black-flowared
sedges.-Itichard Jefferies' in "The
Life of the Fields."
•
•
A polieeman, op point drity had
held up a large touring car' for near-
ly five niintites when there seemed
to be no need. IThe driver; an eld-
erly woman; was indigpant. .
"Good gracious me, officer!'" she
said. "Do you realize. that you have
delayed me? Have you never been
on point , duty before? I want to
know why you held nitrup?"
"I beg your pardon, "Indite]," said
the young poiigeman, "but atiArst I
thought you were -'too young to be
driving a car."
MUTT AND JEFF—, BY BUD FISHER
AND AS A Butimss-
Bootkiic-g ± SAY WC! titsivr
.k.worrrria DOLE. we DO
4NOT .WANT The DOLE,-
7
a use for aq enterprising young man _ ', •:„
to cematunleate with him, He -re,
ceived a score- of letters offeling • , '
.
hini work.. , This example •Waa !4001i ' ' .
afollawed byrd M.
. Din
.s.rso ebile in Amste
ea Gulls •-_'•- --
-•
Sea gull'ar' : ' ' - the -same office .
...
•
in cenne s' -with the announce-•
. • 1.
: 0.: , • :7.7 ...: .
e.-
9.
!neat winter7in Amsterdani as the
swallows, according to tradition, •do
With respect. to spring -
northern. countriee. Earl3r in 'win
. .. .
ter the gulls coins, to Amsterdam' ,•• • " ''
because they are sure ta find there .: •
. •
much of their native. element, name-, .
1y, Water.. Purtherniore a great ' ' .
dependent. No .other single country, many •
people Amsterdexa in witt-
occupies a position comparable tothat
or group of countries so na'xiated ,t er Mike it 'a point daily to teed °
of the British Empire in respect of
depplies, of mineral raw materials.
. •
Aviator Traiels Faster .
, 'Than Speed of Bullet
Man. is able td•- travel -To-day with
the speed of bullet. When Flight
Lieutenant Stainforth, Of the British
winner -of the-103,-17:-Schtteider
rophy race, med.:. a eked for the
first lap of 415.5 miles an hour he
adually went faster than the. hour,-he
mum speed of a bullet from a British
service revolver. •
This bullet has a. muzzle Velocity of
650 feet a second, 'or 409.09 miles an
hour. Therefore, L a revolver were
s fired just as the flyer Passed in theory
iq the bullet might be expected !;.o travel
• along beside the ship and, the flyer
might feel safe •in reaching-'oet'and
itouChing it, or even putting it in his
pocket while it was still" proceeding
al,.full speed. •
The flyer's speed might also be said
to have been faster than the average
speed of a Springfield rifle bullet, says
"Popular Mechanics Illagazine." Such
a missile leaves the !nozzle at 2,653
--feet-a •second,- etatititIO 34149 m!les -
an hour, and its average speed overits
affective range of 1,000 'yards is 1,270
miles an hour. However, after the --
bullet has covered its effective range t
it floats on arid. on, until, slowed down
by. air resistance, it • drops to the
ground epent. At the end of its flight
Lt -has ----very- speed, --and if the e
11
•
useless to send them to Egypt for
more 'core "'Mina Benjamin fs 'snt
with them. : We Are made to feel
poignantly the anguish of the father,
Will he let Benjamin go? Bit what
if he is bereft of him as he- was Of
•Joseph? Jacsib's- cup of "sorrow is over-
flowing. Yet in all this it is the jus-
tice of God overtaking him. These
troubles of his .unhappy old age are
the aurc retribntion a the,wrongs ire
had long ago done his own brother,
Esau. Tortured with anguish -
spirit, he trembles at the -verge of
Sheol,- the shadowy abode of the dead.:
III: A BROTHER's ELF -SACRIFICE, Vs,
• 30-34.,
Judah's nobility' now rises to im-
pressive grandeur. , He has given his
THE ELOQUENCE OF LOVE, vs. 18-23. oiern, piedge to his._ather than Ben-
janiin svilbe-restored-to-lriniqat
Judah-,- wha tram "the fir -s1 see_ t
have been of. finer stuff than the
others (37: 26; 27)scomes forward as
their spokesman. His speech is re-
garded as the finest instanee of He-
brew oratory -tender, Moving, and
full of pathos and- beauty. Luther
-once wished that he could plead with
God as Judah pled with .yoseph. His
deeP love for Jacob andfor Benjamin.
has fired him with true eloquence. He
begins by showing JOSeph the utmost'
deference, v. 18. Surrounded with
such pompm
and cireustnce,.he
401 aware that he is speaking to one
almost as mighty as Pharaoh. Then
he skilfully reminds Joseph that it
was at his, Joseph's insistence, that
Benjamin was ever brought to Egypt.
Conseience has at last humbled the
brothers. • In a flesh the memory of
their early guilt confronts them, v. 16..
Consciene, now attiv, is busily at
wor-"Flis brother dead," v. 20.
Judah hasn't the reniotest notiOit -chat
it is Joseph who sta4cis betere
'a the grater, therefore, Y811 be the
surprise of the brothers whmi. Joseph
finally discloses himself to them. Ju-
tish is advaneing every. consideration
that would move Joseph to mercy. "He
the governor of Egypt is determined
to hold Benjain, his pledge will oe
broken and yet another'wrongdone to
the father. Once is' enough! He pleads
passionately that he :nay be permitted
_fa _remain as a slave in Benjamin's
stead. Better slavery than to face his
grif-stricken father! Joseph cannot
longhold out against such utter self-
abnegation; thehrothers are prepared
in the spirit for forgiveness.
. •- •
•
ONLY A TRIILE . •
1V.YOlng, newlmarried couple
were out for theirAist spia in a see-
ond-hand car they lied bought
They covered -several miles, then
hubby, who w.as driving, became col:t
uff:0m that sdniething was wrong,
anil brought the car to a halt by the
roadside:
"Have a. look at the badc tire on
your side; lte'said, "and
see if there id aethin-g- wrong with'
.ft."
'"Oh,' it's quite ail right," reported
the wife, after a careful scrutiny.
"Ire flat at the bottom, hut it'S !mind
enough at the top."
•
-Ttie bot.e. 'RUINED CleINAa VtIOT3 The'
it Cost C.-N6LAND MILLIONS toteLet
o POLINIaS • rtieut.om. ata
ING boar WANT'
DOLE
••••••••••••
them. The birds ate: very 'bright
and soon -get to knew 'the placed' ;
where at feeding time kind -heart,. '
ed woman or child appears at the • •
winow, with a plate heaped with ' . •
fragments of bread. The gulls fly
in large 'floks nag ihe• window,
catching in their.ftiglitthe pleces•oe..
bread that are thrown up in the air.
Fiadlo and Film Exeibit
2tnisterdwiti-peopie had a Volatile-
ate .opportunity to get/fr clearer , in- , . •
•.sight into the Working; methelat ot . ' , -
:Elie' -.-electro-aconatic industries
• through .en haternational exhviiti
or
radio, • television, gramophone;
sound alms, Sims and photography
held at Amsterdain from May- 6 to
May 1.1. This gave a complete and: ,•
lively, picture of the technical, edl,
tura' and ecOnomic phases -of- theta:
industries while lectures. were given
• on, allied -subjects- Rare and is
a- •
he
Dortapt 'exhibits troip Russia, t
United 'Sttes, Japan, Great Britain
and Germany gave instructive , im-
pressions of • the . achievements of
other nations.
. .
Taxi Men Cut Rates
• A rate ararpeteten_ the scs-called
stationed taxicabs, which are Isub'
ject to stringent niunicioal rues land
traffic police control, and the "free"
taxLewners, who have no fixed sta-
ion and, are net allowed to solicit
ustOmers by driving Very slowly,
as recently resulted in the estab.
ishment at Amsterdam of the low
et fail -11Tir-ea in the world, it is re-
orted, Amsterdam • taxi fares ere
aid to be even cheaper than tholem
n Paris or 'Berlin. A unitor
price of teu Dater! cents ($0.04) per
,kljaMeter, charged, which fig -area
out at about six Amerkaft cents a
mile, including the first •iiille. This •
explains the, signs which many taxi-
cabs carry on Ureic windshieldd.
Rides from 10 cella' upwardt
average is taken 1 is found to be less
-than for the plane at top speed: The
bullet would win, • howevr,: if the
p.ane's' speed . were averaged in the
same way.
•
ONE WAY
He , took his ticket lei'surely at the
booking office of a• suburban station
but, on- hearing the train approach'
an speed to the
platform7lie was going well until
• when nearly 81 the top of the steps •
leadirig to, the platform, .something
causedi his foot to slip. -
His- hat had wobbled on to his
brw, his .bag and ninbrella betook
themselves one to the right and one
to the left, 'bat, he regabied tliese
rossessionsin a graaPall • sort of
fashion while on his knees.
Then 1.10 1°4.0 up it the offiejal
at the .and inaulred7 fa;
the Vey to the the train?" .
"Yes, sir," Was, the unsympathetic
reply-; "yea ean come that way if
you vvsh, but it looksbad!"
•
•
Mothers
A mother is a mother still -the holt-
est thing alive.-Cilleridge:
Heaven Is at the feet of mothers.-
Roebuc.k.
All that I am, tuy inother_made me.
-J. Q. Adams.
'Nature's loving proky, the iwatehtitt
.mother-Bulwer. •
Men are what their mothers made
thena.---Emersoii. . •
• as) geed snutheq la worth a hundred
s rs.- eorge Herhert.
If there be aught surpasaing human,:
deed or word or thought it is a moth-
ers love -de Sparada.
crrs wedioN Write
lite .GoUdie.wne..63V
tStiM 'Etatt
410T . ii.toRioNG
Never Spoil A Speech By Explaining It.
ti
, • '
' • .44.q0
"AtatIftliesirC046.7,eaes.-,:tMLArittr'
—•41111. •
•