HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1937-07-29, Page 6•
'
•
•
grimCliandic P 111 thefr bobby.
. It fe-difficult, to- protect ` the animals
from Accidental; death .if theytry to
.4%,-.Dutiftti Son avail beillee1lee4Of • th13 freedom • tint .f
' George " Bedard,' a', ,Niagara , Falls they „naturally crave: 4 The motor car,
youth, was fatally'Injured In col. haa-mhde it 'virtually Impopsilile;" to.
4ision"between* trudk- 'and:, a. I street 'permit "doge. :any freedomon.: tile
' ‘At the inqueit, into his death It - qv:rte. :and the death' tell Is exaed''
was stated that the .last words the •• • 'ingly heavy. ' •
" boy poke: 'weret rivpat will mother
think?" •
•
'• Those four words convey a! world
of meaning• ° They show .that the
• fated. Vieth was devOted to. his.
• ., niether< and, that is , sufficient '1• proof
that •he • must have -beeni 'he •obedient
.004 one who .would chine his 'parents.
,no ,anxiety if 40nouid,.lielp. it. There
• . . •
'would 'be.'intich" less worry in the
• It.would be a grand situation if Alt•"..
dog owners had Placeain the. cOliotrY
where the petscould be offered a, life,
that is suitable .th their" natures. The
r„estrietions of the city are deadly for
dogs but It .is hn.expensils tecrehtita„
to have to buy h place fin the. country
to °itemise the dog. -The WOodstc.ick
entinehltiavie.w.. • "*" • .''."••• •
7
triunth-genoratly
,
ersatik-chil
Cre it to Parents
'--Xtilte 'the Child, *Oteatil.e.,.'•Y,Qi•C 091'
,this,, you are being -414117 VacitoothOr
!thfl.004.- • =
Most childrPti 'rum, en-e•trAeli--
,
go; 'te. SP,IMOIL tee*" hel?,to dry tlishotv.
• Pi 04.4. grase, dress .theIll0elYeS."
cOrreetl
ably well and. hold. a fork', y •
, , ,
when they eat... • . •
• Petlin00they. telozt iuusle'.0..if„..4A119-
04,-;on.tN.4,11.731;7.i;015-4-ftf4-fPf. 6r,
Ta-7:balT;-.7-."7,01.WOJI*4‘!"‘.tro,r,”(.5:4,
.periniseie,06.;to.,'.attemp.t,
theyare In 'genets:I entirely'' •.•green;
,.about Alpo, entiiiile,their" regider tr.7
It .13 §40411.COr o.mi• ; an ••".4.kisPleilM.0;•.
time to .sbow them ,
tliings. They yott., epoli a. lot,' mess:
,c.areeliti•a.. bit, and • try'your patience,.:
but in the end they will teineratier
; aocl profit by .what.. they do; •,.. '
There'e.J'Amea. And there are thre.0:•;::
taps .that.:.drfp and, Mimi "nelt
Let hie"father Show' hint. .how..to. -;fix
; • • .
one and then give him Psrinission.. to
• try his hand at the others -sone.
News In Review ,
' 1
•$.14..8,600 To4;Kco., Crop
; c1-1-4TKA.4,--Mealbers of the .Bur-,
ieyTeharcecco9iMv;d,a
r.et:,gtgaiA0Otii,oVaa3t1;.60o06f
Ontario ,
or price,
,f
3, 1;1.4: 0,014r,O pt3h0a,ac yot hp-eapwOrpasi,arOe1i,
.leared In a report' tabiel at the an-
nual meeting' here.: President C. N..
Desmond - -Moilteth Oecepied_. the
chain ` '.." 1 " , • .
Representing the tebacco, compan-
7 100'..fOr Mie. 'year *are; Ger Millet for
-the° 141PeriaP!Tohatch.GeniPaoY, Mont-
real;: W. MiI11gn of Elielimond, Ire4.
'-forrilte4 Canadian 1401. POinPa..f N.
' P:'Lock"NvOod; ler .the 'Hedge. Company_
of Kingsville; "Oltier •Drenini:tor the
Leitaingfon..ComptiltY1, •itoss
for tht,. :0nnselidated.• Cominity , at ,
:Kingsv1lI. and - fitirkow.its: ,of
.Montreal " 're.preesnting • all 'ether et*
. ;: •
' birectora who have :another year JO
Serve,are: R. V. O'Neill pr,',Failliette,,
Thomas nf North Malden,' M. A.
Drew of ..Merlin and • Preaident. Des..
mond, •
. •
r;' Trick
'
NORTH VORIC:,..;---•A • ne,w trick ef
'hitch -hikers< to, obtain- rides into . the
city Wasrevealed tidoweek to •A °To-.
• -
• td siinilar concern for their parents.
.41674 Illanv 8040 and daughters ten,.
•• their mother wheretheY, are going on
leaving the holice Of an evening? If •
they don't do it, a practice'theY
ahead : • • - -
Hew Many- sons and daughters ar-
rive lihme three or four o'clock the
nierning ;••'Iter:ettending show et' a
. ,
dance,.at a „distant. poiet, without as
niuch as kIngthemselves 'What
will ;,atotherr,ihinkr Perhaps poor
mother ;had been "worrYing ,halt the.
' .• night, 'wondering Whether het inni Or.
:clatighterr.hitt been aeOldsht be-
cause he. or she stayed .out So late'
,(or should We say early?). •
Young people woidd..get into: less
.tikinble:,:ed,,cinise- fewer', heart -breaks.
for 4t. they :get.,i '
IllabiV;at 44144tikemseives."4-,:otr.hat.
, , • ,
• Win :Mother. ,think?" -The Kitchener
Record. •
• The $20 Car
• ,
•
, Three Windsor boys bought a 1923
tatitoinobile, for whichthey paid $20; '
.. ;The lathe three Win -chair :Ways Were.
taken to the hospital, one -With, :con= .
...Cusaion,. the others with 'die -legated ••
shoulder hnd. brunes... ...; ' • .
Buying • an old, ear; for $20 does not •
• tome ....under the ,:hethi • news. "he-'•
Cause it has"• -been. done so often` he -
fore. • We- dare 'Bak young fellows have
had 5',/hat. they call !fa lot of fun"
with .sciniethose.'old ears., -•
. ,
No.onelvants„to 'interfere ,with that
• part of it, but there is an 'element of
thelie. old rattletraps. As
by are worn out, they, have
• a• good', many mechanical defects •and
they .have 'peer tires., Often. •enough
,
. the ,brake lining' hi. worn out The fact
• , • •
' that this one In Windsor was sold Or
20 Is plabi'enough eyidence. that it
wa8-A•eady'lor-the-ierapTheaPS-Peter!--.-
; borough...Eimmlner.:
, .
• .
Now To Be HaPPY.„.
Ten' New England couples who.
-- have; lived happily, Married from 60.
to 70- years, asked how theydid it,,
provided ten -reasons:.
•1. Learn to operate on ,a 50-50
. .
2. Be henest;"
I. Be tolerant;
- 4., Be comp hniOnabie ;, •
115, Work hard;6. Strivo for inutual 1-
understand-
• lag! • .
'• 7. Try to Weep' each other; ,
, 8; Keep your own „indllidUalitY;-
-.9.'116 loyal;
10. Be-thoughtfiii.---,-77.-.,
VolloWed • by • all : Married couples •
. that delealegtte we:aid soon Pitt the
„divoree, . out of business.- St
Catharines Standard.
Due To Speed
Police ;Chief Sinith ;''ef Winniing
•
gives It as his: conviction that the
• majority, of automobile'. accidents- are •
Caused by sPeedyf",,Many others in Eit
position te know, the facts agree with
The" higher the 'speedthe-
greater the ilabilitYlef Something' go-
ng the greater the liability of
. • . •
I
..The' On•tario .10epartment of Agr1-1,1
culture:will' sponsor 'a dille on poison 1 ' •
'ivy,' through. the District Agricultural
-repreinnifativeta,----.-Pelithn,'-ilrie $ ! a
-nit:dons- weed Roe ite .such : Meat. ,he.
fdestroyed.It Would he well. to have
all weed inspectors of the country fn.
• .
streeted as .0 • .the . Appearance and
It
:phar ter of thie week so' it may
be ••oi imirjeted .frnrethe list of nature
haze ds that than is Compelled .to 0117,
Phantom Rise*
ortAwA. - A Mysterious disease
10 has afflicted takinioa in recent
e rs took its toll again last winter,
or D. L. moseand,.'coMmaridor ot
the EtiSfern Arctic Patrol 'fella(' 'when .
his ship th P.Nascople arrived at Lake`
.114-fi-orm.paigo will be 0? interestAck
:a- number of "-Chathar,aites'
cer-
tain district of. the 'city'. where Several,.
children, • and .,Ofder. PeOPI0,..",heve*
. ,
al-
ready become affeated: But. the bit-
specterscannot do It •all. ! , .13.ersons.
who recognize poison i ivy' growing • in
Aixe:.O.ittal.Mit:8;4:0E-Anak.U&441
,C01111#; should immediately 'malty the,
.proper ;
Harbor, on the south coast. Of Baffin
hilhhd" ' • .,
•
He radioed to the • Department • O. '
Mines and' Resources. that SiX adulte:-
d seven children had 'died from It
near 'Lake Harbor :in• February.
• Almost every, year 'the" disease
sweeps down on ,some and with seri-
ous :reedits:, Dr. L. D. !Livingston,
Medical '• officer "..for the Patrol, and , •
-other', doctors stationed in the North ;
are 'seeking to., diagnose It withthe'r
pe••Aiiiiie provision •can • be made to
Doctors in the: .North are inclined
to the belief it is a form • of Ptomaine
pOlsonihg;.Poialbly .from •'eating. bad.
'meat. Further • information may be
gained 'frreii netters Who spent last
w titer in the North. •,Dr. • T. J. Orford
•
- Tel the Edam' "
A *certain Mr. Charles ,licoper, of '
Coeur D'Alene, Ida.,has. ,created "a
' peculiar record.:' ,Hs. is the world's":
champion writer of i"letters to the edi-
tor/' To date he' has written 78;000.
.such missives, .And these •have, been
net only to editors. in „the, IT.S4.
but also to France, Gerinhey, Italy'
and. Spain. • All lettere' are *written iii
,
the language 'of thecountry In which
. they are printed. . . •
.
.t is :easy to incur .the criticism of
busybody merely by writing
to editors, but Mr. Hooper doesn't
.tare. He lidows. why newspapers de-
vote columns :toletters-7-.111e reason
being :that people like an, open -forum
for •diatessiori-z---and he has decided to: .
make use of them. it is better than
one's views around -a stove. '
We take Off our hats to Mr.7„..f-inoper.---
jlamilion-Speetator.
-
Characteristic • '
"As • far: as ,women go," says
Dorethy.:Dii,..„"men wfll always be•-an-
fatithiphble:" That's chiefly .because
a Weinan thitke .it's h.:violation of the
law not te'•aneWer the telephone,
Im-
mediatoly. •• while; mere nta,n grunts,
wheezes, Stalls; ' oet--"„the win-
dow,
, • •
dOw; picks his teeth; • straightens his
• .
tie and • chews off a • cOuple. Of hang-
nalle.befere lifting .the receiver. They
arebuilt that way -both " of • 'em. .7-6• ;
Windsor Star: •
. •
. •
THE EMPIRE
Fplitiac .• '
Alhtgh, he: gait .much Money
aWaY,..the late Sit. lames Barrie llired
BO'frogally: that" •Ile • is „ejcpected' to
. • ,..,.
Ieage A large •fortooei. , For over 20
%yeas . his plays brought hini hand -
.sortie: royalties: .1 • ,:•• •
• og tits, COnteinteraries Hall Caine -
left over! £200,000, Rudyard
£155.000, Stanley Weyman, .21,00;000, •
Hardy.;'''R.91,000,,.,Galsworthy, .•$.18,-
000,.. George' Metre. 275,000, Chr.clea
•Garlic,e. -4711-;00:0; and •.f.lons,n Doyle, •
-2,60„000 . • •• •
; • ,Rider flagghrd left, ,f,01,1:100; Arnold .
„ ,Bennett : 040,000, »Chesterton 428,000,
loss, of ,contrelrand the more' disast-
• , roiia,-the ceinetleentee. of coflision.` • •2•24,000,' an 'Conrad .4 90W00,
Chief' 'de sWaY with.' The 'ia.r.geat . fortOrie : Was
high, cPeed Meilae6 by requiring the,,-Victnr i306`,600.,;'„D1ckAtis-•did
. , faanntactitrprs. tc put governors on 'all' worth ,q80.0'00. -News Of ,the",•iyorld,,
" :their "cars ,Which • Would prevent any-, - • we.t.tAndian4i.vo'sh, •
`$?!,ne elveeediug ,50 thilea an . hour;
whiehIs now the ,legal. Unlit,' in -On.
5.$ario. •Iti net exactly. a
at It hal' merit. • Rarely is aere;O&
Innen • for driving. faater : than
thiles and usually those rare ,ein'erg!
,Acied Are eatned by speed it'sdif.!
• ',Except:fel. the very few.ne. pleasuire
• is :added• to driving by stepping' the
rate up beyond'.50. • T.he neceafitty is
alin'est always 'Imaginary. , It 18 nn=
deairable that anyone' shonid
" danger dtlitirs.ny exceszive Speed'. It.
would be iniPossible ; under. Chief
Stnities
'Dogs ntheCity
"ni.toot. tt
becOniethe: falthked lints . :of'
'uman betngs,,ls shown ln the estaly.
islithent to . the "largo:r ot
rate .1161101tii18 for animals, and" even"
he' cokritructien: of
laces.lwr
ho deferefica us14•11y reserOttil ter th-lead �f -fi tht.i
e,
spe'. • !
Dog'. ta.otio4 te4iy
•
.11
: • °
ih-at--Pangnirtinig ,on Abe:east .
coast of, bailie. Island and may have
beine ,in actuni Contaet',:with-it;
Forced' Landing Without Mishap
•,•13.P4PEvxt,LE,, Robert
iii.14:''Chick Dixon ,""of Akron,.O.; made
. < forted landing'in the villhge. et.
"Shantionlille, fivd. miles: thiat
when their' plane ran out :of gaso-
line. After
filling their tanks froin.the,
punips• of Orage;•the," two fliers
continued •On. their way .eastward.". The',
. Mere' Wer, unburt and their • ;plane •
was
undamaged.
' ": •
, ,
, • .
• Round -World ;Flight ,Hiated.
• EDMONTON.::-=- Aviation officials:
.---herespecUlate4-:-MiLthe.:„.Posa•ility
airpithie
•flight-=:bein"gc.-inade in •the_netiLfutere
With a refueling .stop' at -Edtinintep;
-Where a. consignment of :more than..
600 gau�ns of:high-test gasellin. hi- •
riled' froth New York. and !Sin Fran. •
'Clete and forty4i•le,...gallona. of„sPeCiat.
Oil'. from Germany. , ..Identity of tho•
flier who 18 h Worl
. . . ,
;.girillingAlight with a scheduled tak
off about.: the •first. og next week, was
not learned: Persistent rumors In fly -
Ing .tircies. here have • Indicated such
. • ,
hi•pending...• ••
Now, iC , 6, licim Eidmiejlict tbe
general.' • gtigi-rgir -.1t:ino.1.en,-)3Y' • thq
masses .• 14 thege.:,111.1tish 'West, Indian:
' Islanda 13 unzatisfect,OrY; 'then •
heves those Or ;us 'with: any int,hience,
.:hoWeter.onscirm-' to, . assume some
responsibility to '•brink,,ahritit a way ot
• soeakhig., the English, larightigt. whieh .•
is undoubtedly, when Well seolteh, the
hest tothe vrerldi, it .should, h6,wevolt, •
be iteltrieViedgedthat it. seein8
in-
possihlo La. change'. : the • tangnage
spoken .13y a, people for' Mere; than.. a
.tentitry; leear experience with -the
lingual ,Prerfich,- Patios and Eng:Hall
amlly deilionsit'ates .prosent. ";Contit!,1
,....„,-The_inajekitz„,.. therefore,
onlY beeoine.„`'and do ion1aln, billngu-
al. bat f not „qttigitsti, grairitnatteal:;.."
tOglislf;" no of ouralmaanil - on
darn ." "
Weller' ( Toronto, and
DS. Weiler,. were driving Dufferin
Street when they spied a lad of about
18'1lieg on his back with 'both ;arms
outstretehed-and-his-legs7taliont-three
feet, on the .pavement. 'in. the path of
• •
tlie r c • • , • • •
As the' prostrate 4 -boy was.. motion-,
'lees, they presumed he had been the,
Victim of. s'• hit-and-run driver, And
was either unconscious or dead: Stop-
ping their ,car quickly, they hurried
to only to have hini,jerep to his
feet And ask for a ride into the acity.
•
"Apparently •had been Unsueceae;
ful in Atfiumbing! a ride and tried Dile
new .way of; getting some motoristto
'Btep,"-r-sommented ::P.C•.- Weller; who
added that, the incident .: had rather
frightened and 'upset Mrs. -Weller..
.S - Comment
porting
By KEN El5W- Mips' 7 •
• Speaking of fish,
we have our own
. .
' Canadian waters,',
And, journey.' to
Bermuda f r o
• whence comes ••
news that a new
:record. has ,ybeen
established.
,1,14rirlT
3. Tucker
Fit
mudh, hasAMst.
established line*"
Atlantic...„;0 c e a, n
record for
'hoe." It: weighed 91 pounds and was '
six : feet:, two itiehee 3itelter
fought it for 20 minutes before land-
ing it. He used a 12 -ounce tip and .a
--24-threadtine._:_An_86-peinder,,•CaUght
.ions."wahoo" record for 'those waters.
.• Whateplayer: on a baseball team.
'touches the...bail-mere than any other?
, pitcher. . • ,
• Did you know that 'way hack In
103.7 , or .thereabouts, the niggei.
pitcher, Geo. Storey of Newark, won
35 games, the most 'ever. retOrded:
• Lefty-,Orove-had, $30, strikeouts.:, or
- f -
'Baitiniere bit 1923. "1 ,
•
Well, 'follce, guess. ' run, along:
Drop us a ifne. any . old :time., •
i• •
tk •
Commentary on tke
HIGH14,010$,.:F0F:31* WEEKS MEWS
By Peter Randal
•
' ir;mmorim.
•• :The. world, thSe rives. Saw. the pPan-
iA0 war s1v.<0141113,10 a, climax while
Out: from Madrid'•:..General,
.Tose '.•ffilajh's re -organized .Loyalist
.:•artey• executed - lIrst great • often- "-
sive: in the . year-old civlI. war and: ••
etrack
gent ring whieh: almost surrounded
Madrid .and .threhteoed'Generhi: Frad-"•,,
glieerFrciieo's ••0P•':ePiti,MIIIIIaiiQ41' •
.° with the sea: ?ranee •-struek;back.
• with.a violent, counter -offensive In an
attempt to regain lost territory befere,
the, Leyaltsts: could strengthen their"
newly won • Positions..
•
Hundreds of planes; ions of high
:explosives' • and a• quarter of 'a millien
. men were herbed by. both Armies at,
the point of, the leyalists! newly -Won
salient In the' mountains.. -a1 'Brunets.
12 .miles west of Mhdrid..j. Thie. maY
'
• - I the Reliele are :driven '..back ' from
the position they hale, heldlior • near-
..IY a 'real' at •the gates ,of Madrid It is'
• 'likely, that new , hgreeinents' :will :be,
f-ormed•..Wthe.•'greatTEurepehn.• pow7
era with Germany -and • 'ItAly,.. with
drawing 'Much of the .supPort• wbtch
has so far bel8tered, the; Rebel attack
One Million men women and Chil-
dren have, lest their .livesi. it Is."esti-
mated.•sinCe,.„the. war :began On July
19. 1927: . • • " '
.°
. • •
•
. Japan's:- Militant imperialisti,govern•.
nient,'.'which`.114a 'held the nation•In
readiness 'fgt. war...fer several .ylhre. •
made rat. move in North., China
this . Week' when NippOnese. troops en
'terpd Mopei province Which
Japanese•territory te.iieWIY-COnqUered.
Aldan:eh-a .
japatiese_. sohtieriv, were repulsed
•ho:Werer tethiPetted and netetra-;:,
lned opposition by .Chinese, Com:Jinn-
ist and Bandit troopsunited ighinst• •
the Japanese threat under •the ,Nan-
• • • • ,• .
• Atli government 'Peace oveiture6 have
1,
„.4iirtpa,
at :great,..w heat.-.prodUclog,
•
5:TGiiiixrkitirrpor; ar„ctirt-'141'norod.: ttr4-0.;;:,0"SoaptToree4.4,
,Per .cept.; of the'pepUietten 'Wenid .need.
.government • ald,'of seine.kind beforo
the Winter* Was
hiak.armouncement„,,, the
"Federal gOverninent led by recently
...returned,- prem ,er Aing.-prembied
and better' ill;" heavy' ,raiiiifell°,16r,
several dhys. in most ..pette „ the
,p,soruotvhienorne: 7-katcheWitn -duet bosil. as
well ah in, the •northern .parts of 'the
.,..
• .
, Hardy, westerners.. :iminediatelY
• mashed off their penes,. of Minter .hed
preduced, drought •jekee ef which tlia'
fellowinen A painple. , The rains were
soheavy around duet,
bOWl centre,that. a Ihrge, drog.etrUch.
• a-lanerouLthe_forellead'Ann knocked
hint "ta.;•ther ground .,unconscious, . tied
:•tlie hired. man .had to throW. . three
.:lieekets ,of dust over him to. revive
'-•*••••.,".!*nwo
hten • COntrof
Over Adoption
1:;atva to. ii,iitect Children Not -
Sufficiently Stringent in; ,'
Great xlritain
.
,T4ONDON-iteennInIeridagti0lie -
ed, -at tightening': control bvek • the
adoption Of .cliPdreirM'Great Britain
were made SY the majority of a hOals
effice committee'appoiat,od SpInvesti-,
t,be.,.metheda ti91,i 80;P:O.
4
After several ealea: of
indiseriininate trafficking of c4tildien '
the, tenunittee aliggestea: " ' '.„. • ',.
Adoption orginiaatiOns 'should • be
Iice4sed,pts to.cAl .b.0,170.ighs, or," .0414Y, '
councils: • " , 4, ' •
Ther*,', should be forbidden fOrhi4din .fo ,
range Adoptions abroad,.py any Ter-,
eigner•or to let a'British.130.ieet take,
•a child abroad until a. magistrate has
granted, in Open court, a licenseper.;
pitting it; •• . < •
• 'They'.lhould "insist that' all adopt-
ers appy to court for confirmation of
the adoption after a probationary
Petied.• • '
Amor Girli Like
Dance Arranged
beenmadeby Tokio and
is eipeeted to relieve' the troubled ,
. • • , • • .
situation in. tht. Far ;East. •
With Soviet Russia disturbed hY,'es-
` Wonago. trials and the execution ot
army leaders it Is .not Unlikely . that .
'-..Japan will peak fOrwhrdin her, march
toward ,.the, richstores" of war ma- •
terials in ',the' heart ,of China;
•
Hove 'died this Week in. two widely
diet* parts of the world. In. the
Pacific. odehli,433: wide southern eirpiinse'
;where the Tilted States navy coni-
pleted . its two " weeks, $4,000,000
search for Amelia °Eakliart and . Geo.
.Noonan, and on the. wide stretehes, of •
Western Canada's ' wheat *Icounfry,
_•,:iihere thriller's fated the greatest crop
failure In' the history of the. west..
• The. United Statesn0y,,,after comb -
Ing 200,009: 'equate ninesor:kr:a-ewe-47
ocean for the lost fliers, gave up .hope
and pronounced them dead. . The only ,
galn' from ' their , attethPited'...,trane
'Pacific' flight' being the U. S govern-
ment's. 'Warning "Such flights., will. not...
be 'perinitted . In future:" ••:
. . • ,
, Federal' .; Minister ..ofAgricialture
james• 0:--Oardine-r-,. predicted 'this
ive,ek in Ottawa that.thisleir'e wheatr,'
'croP, would be not-Oyer..,--Ito`•milibon
bushels,. the smallest ince the wesL
.Three day sensations in Canadian
newspaper's, likre.;'inany "'this week,
featured by, the discovery and convic
lion on bigamy • Charges' et .GeOrie.
Roediger, a modern Bluebeard; if'
there; ever was. one; This , dark and
handeome. ,; 55 -year-old. Gertheir had
'niarided, robbed and: deserted at least
' tee 'woinen, in all parts of - Canada In
teat ten year's': He pleaded guilty:
• and ,.received nine „years . in Stony
Mountain peniferitiery''but alert pro-
vincial police Sergehnt• McKay, of•To-
ronto, , thinks that :the ',case is not .yet .
'closedfor *itoediger.:le,alleged to have
Christina MacKenzie where fie mar- ,
:.,ried in Barrie. . Ont., in 1015: Mrs.,'
MacKenzie ..has not been ,ieen. Since:
she left h 'twine on Vanhan • Rd.. To-
ronto, a feW days 'after her marriage,
Outside 'of a lioSteard., allegedly from .
her, but -thought to' be a tergeryi• that
*her, .relatives received in; December,.
1915, there isno trace Of the rnigairig
. Two of; lioedigni!s: • former:. wives,
died -yidient dea.thi,, one by .poisoning.
',the other: by • drowning in a well. .In
the letter ease Reediger was 'charged .
with murder and: acquitted Although
•
be served two 'years in .A .Nei "York
Prison for bigamy' in, the same tese.
'The, ;'finding of :there butcher knives
and cniaetitiesof arsenic In his lug-
g•ageliy. ppliceafter. his recent arrest
inereaSed.•:sespicien that this sienter
.and. handsame fortune hunter left
, •
many mysteries unsolved In his bli-
ecure past. Reediger's sonis being
Sought- by police in California,for
7.qtiestletiiitg.„<onitilY,,,fathern-hctivities-
and the 'fly-bY-night . German. Romeo.• . , ,
-may7yet-face--changes7.,-mere-ierious-
than'. bigamy .'
New Giant Eggs
;A:giant= egg, eight inches in eir-
cuthference one way , .and six • the;
.,dther, three and, ;:a :half incites ling
:`iind two .and a quitter in depth, was
.produced by a hen in the 'flack :of
Joe Cireti;:',Blakeburii; B.C.
The' aniount 61: t.) caned'
dian dlring the ,
‘‘t' 12,77400f) biiithett as
:et 2,6;042,0.60 'ibushot
;i:tier 1'015.85. seasOn • "
British Queen Meets Her "Ain Fo
State Training School At 'Teeth*.
seh, Okla:, . Inaugura es
,Social Activities
•
' TECUMSEH, Everybody
said the party 'w.asa great success -
So todaythe girls at . Tecioneeh
'State training sehobl who didn't quitaT7- -
make the • grade resolved to be just
as good as they can be in order that;
they, too,. may come"next time, Mrs. 1.
Creighton Burnham gives a dance for •
. the honor girls. • - •
Thirty-eight of the best-behavell'in,
, mates dines, :danced:, and enjoYed an •
improm tu:'•,floor show ..with L the:
young -men--,many o them college •
-boys-the super:ntendent, picked ,for
then); ' • - ' , '
, The Tarty, Mr. .'llunnliam said;
was fo'give the girls "social back-
ground against their ' rettirnto a nor-.
mai World.". Sheplans to 'hoh..1. the `
' dances every month, rotating- ilia --
-honer° girls, as 'ethers qualify .
Throws Light
Fashion Term
Sfifi4i.i.10f,g:entm,„airrea•igQeul.tore
NEW- YORK. -In order to fathili- 2 •
. arise oneself .,with • the terms used by ,
, -glib fashion reporters itmay be well
to take • a • look • at the r' -definitions
herew:tli., •Some Of *them: are quit.e.
familiar-
the:tH.u.:...layin.en, (or Should •
one say leyWorhan). whpe • Ot'he are
: For Instanee: • ' ,
LLAjonr-is-tlie-Erettch • ''teith for ,
"dra*o. work", . thatis,: drown. out
threads from the fabric, formerly
as-
soc'iated with, lingerie, but new
fa-
vorecl in lightweight woollens as welt.'
as crepes.• . •
Punch 'work', is an openwork Me-
' broide0, • the' holes .made • w:th
punch needle;
Both ,terins have bee* used re-
peatedly blousesandiin„a
describing.ccessori e'ssnnim summer frocks,
What is More generallYitnOwn as :
openwork embroidery is really bro-
. ,
.derie anglaise, with numerous pierc-
ed holes ' or eyelets- in rund, oval,
flower or leaf shapes, combined. with •
solid dots or 'other: motifs.' ' Or open-:
Work•-apaces; varying.,--iir'shane.tAndi
size cut or punched with it stiletto, • ,
then overcast at the edges- • .
• Another frequently. encountered
terrn:is.petit point, an- enibroidery in.
which only half 4fthe cross-stitch 18
Oted:c.thgs01dIified
Gtos;pohti;heaer
. . .
• .„.
• C eWel embroidery , is a- technique..
Which sowa.. Stitches placed next to
each other, to himitht,e the tIvistpef, 4'.
rope in a :*.lbeselY twisted; .fine tWo-..•
pjy woratecl yarn,. •• '
' • Betfuyai embroidery . takes • its
, th'e town ;in Franco •,
' where it was first an important type •,
of band work. ' It is usually a inaliz
'sive Of chain -stitches in ,fine threads,
usunlly in, delicate , leaf and sflower
mo 1 s, "wl pas e " co ors c erecter-
istic. nolt,'COpied by various
einbreidery Machines.' 'qt. is popular
$orrir: that is „ invariably produced`
'When, as this -year,' embroideries.' are •
. .. 11, ,
:44.The first • British Otieett., or ,Scottish " blood to v)Sit" &,,otiarid. sitioe . of Scotland. woo rovive"d. ' •}1e're., the Ring Queen. ai4 'semi! .11.1
-
I
NiarY. gilneh Of Seet8. 'Qtiedi tlizaboth at eenipanied the Xing Oh his 811111111g ineed 11:8sNiey Chat With '"Elcottiqft ioad"ors *While' tho Attila '
visit all. teat woa to ttoistfootthoti8o, where iotokeotiog. or otototoo.';. rtitoeggog.tocktetiv to be oioje'itImg. flibmtelve3;:'• • ' ' *
.. , ..
. . ,
•
6 • •
• •
•Abe' ck'ow Quett,c,In • .
• Despite the fact that •t U.S. be. ::,.:,
.:t'. ,-..,
il
.partniont , et, Agr!CtiltUit A studied
the habits of ciOWs for y are and has
found their*Oed.habit jus as bene4
. Ililial as tiloy”were injuriousv•and that' ...
;ether states have !Ong .dge given : iiP
the bounty pit croWs, „We. hale,!•the,„:
ipectatte. of 'Indiana • enhdUcti,.tig ita .
4;°tIlilrvi.0.0iLL_IL:kft1;:lan.bla:i:t2dt]=1;
..fored in b.*1114.d4 'to Chiba killing the
Most 'creWs in a 'Bve4Month ;period.
,,'Soinis 'day; Saga Our Dmob • A hlitop,,, ...
. • rod'ina, tiitiiileatIn JO. her sorrow that'
0,,,14.4iiellior.,44e,40-ilie...,L.:mieW.-.....4
' .il Otirtm. • '.,. -'• .
• •
,., .NntiyoN.,•a' Ra,,,f,.A.tvien, Chnin- snipk... •
... , . „
1t0 .btitteti,40,.. 'itae:- it "'.lia...a.,
1er:-. '-ioir Inir mid he:Wei eating; • ,
‘i
'";1•
tit
• 1
F