The Lucknow Sentinel, 1943-03-04, Page 2ere
or Briglit Ideas
et
Prices Board Welcomes Seta
gestions for •Saving Money
The Price Board, which has had'
to 'approvee many .•wartimerestrc-
*teas; said not long- ago"'that there
is no harrier ' ,ideas -70d ideas
save money: • , • '
Suggesting- that- anyone: , with
,Meas for the goad of Canada
aboultl send them along,. -the
board said .a simple °idea, for. to
, welding of twist drills *Plait ia:
estimated; 'save Canada $500,004
year.
The' board said it wants .:more
4f': the same ✓ .
Just as reminders of what kind •
of "oak trees the acorns:.ef ideas
'attn. •. develop, the•; board listed:'ythe
followan y
Someone suggested that the•.
piece of velvet cloth around . the •
top of a broom could be elan', •
matedand°the binding wire short-
ened ' changes in' the Manufactiar
ing°:nethods released machines• for
weavingartily cloth . and;steel for
yak ,weapons
, A; few, months, ago„..s,. 'Mother
eni gested• ways tg•-silnplifv ',in-
tants' and' children's -,garments.
,a result; sloth,'and la'bor'jtours
were.saved,
'Another`: 'Suggestion result 'n
.. gg ed t
the:.e-:xreduction of .the overlapping
of ` certain farmerst''-truckaroutes,- -
with, --cansequent;'-sa' ng --of .gas. t
aline, tires' and truck Meehan-.
"Suggest tot ,.'save ' materials,
iaaanufaeturers' time, and labor:--
snythang•which now is vital 'to.'
maintaining and • 'increasing the
production of civilian essentials
and •vital-' :war •supplies, said the • .
board.
:"State your ideas, ' one ;at" - a•
time, in•'a, .letter. Recordevery an-
gIe•-ofathe•idea, and,if..possible add
c rexample,,that has come to your
i The• clearing :house for • ideas,
• where they- should be .sent,, is
` "Consumer Branch, Prises Board,
Arcade 'Building,. Ottawa;"
'hy
0�
ai
Need for 'king-size tires like this
One : on a four -motored` , B-24
bomber at Willow Run.,: Mich.,
plant is one of the reasons why
'We average motorists are con-
serving rubber. .
'Germans Made
. Wrong Estimate
Twenty-five years ago the Ger-
mit made a very scientific cal-
eulation of Great Britain's food
ace uir is and decided h
qde that
they could starve'sher out, says
the New York Tintes....So„they let
' loose tile"U-boat war in face qf'
America's afire entry. But the ,
German . arithnietic set E•ngland's'
ininitnum nutrition': reqairemeaits
at so many urn* and the pnglish -
people ,amanaged to get along on.'
'perhaps 25 per sent fewer Antal.
tion units, and they didn't starve,
rind they: won: the war. It was it
narrow squeak:. At one time there
• was, only--a_..alie"' '"aitip it '. f
olid in the 'islands. If the Oer-
mani nutrition blueprints had been
correct, history *night have been
different, bet they erred on one.
seaiolis point. They carefully es-
tiniated t'h'e nutrition units. -They
didn't estimate the English people,
t
• SERIAL' STORY.
F' BRIGHTNESS GONE
SY' HOLLY WATi'ERSON
it FRAZIER-AND-BECH,
BHAPTER -RVPI
At `Good • Samaritan you • said„
:Fazierand-Beth as naturally, as at
*le' you; ' said salt -acid pepper,
;br:•eadaand-butter. 'Yost said, Fiat-
ier and -Beep are in. pediatrics, or
GYN; or,'',Surgeiy, as' they progress-
ed
rogress ed through ate Months of their
...rotating -services-
That • doctor nut se, 'combination
bad 'begun-thlree years before,
u :sty, ' in Iiterase probetion'er ' days,
r.�
.`moreao•less by *Meat .and''it
140 continued by .design—Dr.
-`Peter' TFrazier's- design atraigl'iaa
• en -Milo: la ergency - a .Dr:'-Frazier's• -
kat "service• before '•he would go • -
bad' private practice.
• For the first :time . in months
.Candace; found herself resenting
It. :Tn' the .beginning, .longing to
run away from .aatyrthang or •.any
baly that'even• i em'btelY suggest
ed Martin she had' fought bitterly
against. that :enforced contact; with
.Peter; ' but eireutestances and
Peter's'quiet Will. had been. 'too
much for bar. ' s
She would have said, t she
bad oompletaely ¢forgotten- :tin -:
mat,.'he was .to her snow stmply
a . doctor who had once • been an
Interne at She . hospital and was
now a . •consitatang staff' member
wiio appeared :•oecastonally 'on im-
portant cases, . That would be true
again . after tomorrow; batt today
he was more'. than that much
more. He was the man she had
On the next day another girl.
* *
- She 'bad come' on evening duty
s • few minute:,' before; to find
Emergency busy . hi the aftermath
of a 'street' flght in a nearby 'for-�.
- eign .neighborhood. asiggbborhood. Being shep-
herded ulp •-tti a ward tinder .the
' watchful eye of . a policeman was
•-.a sullen group, sporting assorted
banidaged knite wounds and"black-
ened eyes,. while on ,the table.
'w'libcing under Peter's .probing
ge�e, was still ',another -late "der
ligerent. • .. • - -
Jepperson, the n» ease she , was.
—r healing,-was..a,-.-good--one-as--far-•-•
as care. and kindness went, but
not partieular,.ly quick or efficient.
Omelet a thought, Jeppy'll be all
night at this mess if I. don't clear
and .she set •quickly -to work ,
to rid -the. earner _behind the screen
Get one of the fastest reliefs ever
found for headaches,•'neuritic
pain; neuralgia—at incredibly
low price
100 tablets fore 98$
Today, druggists
' all over Canada
arefeaturing Aspi-
rin, tecognized as,
one -of the fastest '
reliefs from pain''
ever irnowti, for
less tjban ,-ons
cent a able !
... fast -acting
Aspirin that goes
toworkaimost instantly, now priced
ea low, that hours of relief fnay •dost
but a few pennies. So anybody' can
afford it. Get the econo±ny;size bottle
at your druggist's today . . •,. 100
tablets only: 980. It's a bargain hi '
relief you can't miss.
WARNING! Be sere it's Aspirin
fi •18 *iadh-1irCatradd kid' is `ttte
--trade rt .A .the Bayes Company, Ltd:....
-If-every tablet is not
stamped "Bayer" in the•
form of a cross, it is
NOT Aspirin. And don't
'let anybody tell ya
it is.
A Member of the original 'Mea
rine • Contingent on Guadalcanal,
Major John P. Stafford, was
'wounded in the eheek. by' Alralinel
'that, severed an' artery: Blood
tllasmit saved his life:
Back. in Chicago, Major Staf-
t'oad and his- 'wife Stopped in at
e Iced Cross blood bank and
paid bade the blood.-.... each do-"
rioting a pint.
t %
ISSUE No. iO3'
A
0
of the .stained. swabs and gauze,
leaving . to •, Jeaperson the less
and loos task . of • passing instru-
ments' to Peter:
She was stili . cleaning .back
ut 0
there, 08 sight, . wile,, ...ahs .
s ,g
•
heard• two of the internes .on am-
lbulanee ' duty :riding the bus,, as •
it was called—come into . Enter
gency, arguing •.cheerfully. She
„recognized'• themfromtheir voices
as Henderson, the rather flip geed -
leaking one, acid fat . Quincy..
"It's three days. since that baby.
was' born in your: bus,"' Quincy
_ wa __saY.in :_."Three da a and you;
haven't . comae acmes with that •
barrel of beer forfevt yet. The
rest ot• as are 'dying of dry rot,
waitlatg." •• .
That prospect :.didn't seem to
dismay : Henderson. "Y"` know, I
kinda wish you . would," he said
cheerfully: "You'd force, me into
bankruptcy 'to .fer1 over $9. for
a barrel of beer when -you can•
get static) :tomorrow at the ' Harts-
horne -Corby nuptials at Papa
• •Hartshorne�expense. Papa Harts -
!t: ,,n»,-heYuY,`&uroviding even •.,
champagne."
Candace had stiffened. 'Shut up,
she 'thought wildly. Shut ulp! But
Quuncy's mind ' had already gone
on to other things.
"What are you doing here?"• he.
asked JepPerson. "Where's. Hnhat
Beeli? she supposed to be
on? Not that I don't .prefea you,"
he a• ded• : li'_ hthl . "Bech al a a
makes me feel viae years old,;wtana
ivas'hed,:..and late for school."
With the change of, siibjeet, . •
Candace could breathe again. • She
emerged front behind the salami;
rather pale but. apparently .other-
wise unruffled. - •
"Good evening;" she ,said with .
vinegary . sweetness. "l see out
dear, little. cheerful , cherubs • are •
with .us again." -
•Jepperson gig¢lad nrvously, and .
• the two boys • murmured" `confused
apologies and`-slu i abs 1i&f ,from
the room. • '
Peter .straightened a moment '
from-tine-wound--lie-was dressing.-- _L_
'`You're bushed, Jep," the said • '
casually. '°Go . on, Bech will , take
over." '
* •* *•
ing • tlae . ' personal equation. • It .I
snakes things very eae.,—for vie.
I'ma'aid Lt's bad.'for you, though. „
Keats every hamali, emotion talk
.Jcn in leash and one day they'll
turn on.you and read yau."
Candage . tainted, sharp and
hard. With a deliberate /effort to.
be insulting she said, "I never
thought you'd be' 80lty'• Of each,
cheep advice; Dcietor. That :enlo
tion reading busiaess---I' thought
only the• , cheaper internes •trying
to interest Some nurse In a con=
ver 'ant affrair ••used that otto."
c She had suocegded h -annoying
him • fleetly. "If you're, •insinuat.
jug that gall pdTIsing an affair for
you --I'm not: Even; to an affair
one must bring sonaething; .,anuli ' •
ypuu're fact getting to the -stage
w:iiere ";yon;re itis't an empty yes- ,
-.
set"' • .
• -as * *'
4." 'Ennptyvessels make most
.noise,' "she., quoted. "That's what
, I Was always .told as a child when
I, prattled too.. much. But fi 'seems
to ;•me that ;you're the one who's
doing the, prattling just now:
P•rabtling the sort ,of. advice that
gees over big with neurotic lady
pat1 n0. The. type of patients who
• really pay. You'll be', a success
at that rate, , Dirctor." . Abruptly
she stopped. • •
'Erractly. . that' ' was being
about' Martin, that he was build
ing up that kind of a. praotice—
'Phe thought of Martincame as
a; shock. 'Site realized, . with al -
moat :a `feeling. of . gratitude to-
- -ward : Peter -for ha ritfg"so dusts sf= T
end her, -twat athe -day 'sheham"'so
:long dreaded was almost over and
,she had • been'atargetting to think
• ,of Martin, that he had net once, •
since .coming omm duty,• imagined .
hire practicing 'for that scene in:
the church tomorrow.
4tnd now, slie, knew thankfully,.
she's hate no time to . think of it. •
Because she • was hearing the, eIr-
• en of a •policeman's ' motorcycle,
`the attend 'of a•apeeding•car coming
• to a grinding stop In the court-.
yard outside. : The e•nergency
war .ins gnrig_hegari ,.to_s.onnd:
There was , the familiar faint ..
'squeak of the stretcher-earriage's
wheels;. the 'muted footsteps of at-
tendants..:.on the cork floor of the
corridor: The carriage reaehed
the door of Emergency, paused an.
instant to negotiate the turn, then
a -Martin Corby was „Wheeled in.
(Continued Next Week) ' ' •
• LOVELY . 'EMBROIDERY
When She had gone and Can-
dace stood beside him be grinned
at • her companionably. "I'd hate
to see will:$ would. happen if one
of 'the yourjg squirts around here
gotnp . courage . enough to dare -
say 'boo' 'to you," be remarked.
Candace stared frostily,raised
warning eyebrows over. 'the pa-
tient's head. ,
"Oh, he doesn't speak Engllish,"'
--Peter..aexplained_ "flat _.. T:..m can
is," )re went.' en, ".you have every'
- man -Jack seared •of you when, if
only they had brains enough to
see it, you're the one who's really
seared. Scared stiff that life, will
find you , out, . force you out of that
hard shell you're so busily grow-
ing." ' • '
d' She 'had struggled hard to pint'
their relationship on a profes-
sional, stricely' impersonal :basis
and it had seemed that she had•
'finally won. It was a long, long
while since a • really personal re-
mark had passed between* •them.
Shewas angered, eta wounded,
tha't,. Peter, should presume 'today
of all days. She said • sharply,'
'You're • so. clever, • Doctor. You
read me jiist like an open hook,
don'•t you? . Bitt• then you should,
since you've resin all the pages."
"Save the sarcasm," Peter ad-
vised .mildly. "It's a• mighty effec-
tive weapon in most cases and
I've conte to admire the way you
use it,_ but Ism so thick I'd runt-"
it. Resent it or not, it's still sbfl d
„,„„adyage,„„terayeaalteaut that 'er: eet
maoki.ne you've become under
dust covers once in a While 'and
Come out for air. At least when .
you're off duty." •
"If ever 1 slioultl need or want
your- advice, Doctor," slie said •'
stiffly, "I'11 come to you as a pa
tient and ask for it." Her .face
was white and her voice shook,
but the well-trained hands that
furnished ilia,, with ' im-plenaents
v.
easiatall,
533
3,0e � o
voo �0 0 q. -•
o r 0,174. ° itfs
W aver'etly.
"You must knoW,a she,broke�
out ftiriou'Sly again after a ano-
m'ent, "that I resent• this spying
on me all the 'time.' That I hate
having to work with you. Hate at, v
hale ,it. Yet 'you've somehow Man-
aged at .on every . se:like.' t. !iy?"'
"Oh, it's fora very selfish tea:,
sen,"-: Peter said lazily. "I#ecayse
you're a perfect Machine) With
you, dole never has to be consideta
$, Qautat` Icier. '
Let your' best linens"b
;lossom
out" for Sprung—by adding this
spring-like flower embroidery.
The simple to-do motifs lend a
bright, decorative note to towels,
pillow 'eases, dresser''scarfs. Pat-
tern 5p3 contains' -a transfer pat-•
tern of 12 motifs averaging 3111
x . 8 .. inches; 3 motifs 3'% x 3%
inches; color schemes; stitches;
materials needed. '
Send twenty cents 'in coins
' (stamps cannot ' be accepted). for
this pattern to Wilson Needle-
craft bent., Room 421, 78 Ade-
laide St. West, Toronto. Write.
lslairriyr -`: `putter,, °-number, -your--
name and adtiress.a
The Place Where
Vater Runs Uphill
Phenomenon; In . New ,.Bruns•
wick Called '!The Magnetic
Hill" .
,A.beut six •miles from Moncton,
New Brunswick, there is a queer:
and intriguing phenomenon known
as "The • Magnetic I3i11;"' For,
years, it was referred to as "the
place where be -water ;runs up
• hill" and .otherwise thought of
7 very_ Tittle. '
Then, the more 'inquieative be-
gan •casting about for • a suitable'
'axpYana_ tion `Qf this unuspal: Occur=
rence and certain among., them'
allowed that the deposits of iron •
ore„ whish they claim they always -
knew 'existed under , this hill,
exerted force on an automobile.
and drew it up •' hill by magne-
tism! '. lienee the: •present name
."Magnetic Hill."l•
.But the procedure is this: Drive
to a point now Marked by a white -
post. •Stop here; shift gears to
• neutral -and ; turn. off- the -engine.
of your ,car. In no time at all,
you're 'off ! Up .the hill: you go—,'
gathering ,momentum as ' you
climb!. When., your car finally
comes to a • stop on the :crest of
the ' hill, look' down- on the -post
from whichyou started. Then
tryto coastdownpost.. toward the p
It cart be done.' Plenty of gaso
—line is- needed to-•get--you--•tlere�. -
Nor --is it -possirble- to---ga-'niu'cli=
faster than thirty-five miles an
hour up the hill .that lies just be-
yond the"Magnetic Hill.".: Many
may be the local explanations: of'
this phenomenon, -but no official
theory has yet been found. • '
.
The .
T o. s': ry
Land n Of
Japan
span.:
Where `Left Is . Right° And
Right '•SIde Wren° n
In Jattan, always'tl3e left is the -
right side, and the right side . is
'wrong. ',Keys 'must be turned, to•
opeii or doge, a .lock, in what^we
are . accustomed to think is the
wrong, direction. Books begin at
the back, or what' we call' the end,
the type being usually set in ver-
f��m__ �•,ghM l
to deft: In addressing an envel-
ope,. thename of the town comes
first and that of the' addressee
last.: Iii building a hoose, the roof
is • constructed,. theparts num-
bered; separated andstored away,
7-beiare, the superstructure ,is be-
gun. There are no flowers in a
landscape garden. . (Carpenters
plane towards the body. A match
is struck away from one. . 'The
Occidental wave , of good-bye; in
Japan, signifies "conte_ dere."_
* * *
Men take first place in. every-.
thing. They precede women, en-
'Cerhr lir leaving room and also
on the street: The roan is served
first at meals, and it is the woman
who pays the bills in restaurants
and -holds the purse strings at
home: she isalso the.p le to carry -
the parcels. Comparatively' few
embroiderers are women, most of
'the finest work being executed by
'inert' and boys. As a last example,
let us watch. a Japanese 'maiden -
thread her needle. Look! 'She is
slipping the eye of the needle over
the point of the thread.
Large -.-.Pulpwood—
Shipment For U. `S.
• Canada has agreed t" exert
, "every' possible • effort" to export
1,500,000 cords of pulpwood to the
United tates this year- from terra-
tory east of the Cascade Mountains
in British Columbia, it was an=
pounced jointly by the Canadian
timber controller and the pulp
and paper division of. the War
Production Board.
' The 'agt'eemept also provides
that • Canadian mills will • sbip to
the .tTnitect States ],170,000 tons of.
pulp in 1943. ' '
Tao statement 'said -there was no.
possibility at . this time that fir
logs could he exported Prom Brit-
. • ash Colnm,bia.. Bad weather cou-
ditions, in BritiWh Columbia and
the Pudget Sound areas have vir-
tually •exhausted log Inventories..'
To increase its ocean shipping,.'
Japan is reported to be sending
€reigns• err, -huge- rafts•- towed --'by-•
tugs. _
Plant a Victory
Garden with I;
Vegetable Seeds
Collection V9
• 01'.,.,_Deetti.:.Cr°ePitw.•-alenng,_
"Lettuer, Ontane, Pens,
Ra4ih. • -
"g Large Packets .,
50c Postpaid
FREE! 80 Paige Garden Bach Mauled Free on Request.
EBWARD W1.BB & SON$ (Canada) Ltd,
145 ICIt4G ST ti » TORONTO
6
WIN a mon,
hitter 6rakt�ast .
onMies/id. ,
be,/ter wart!® :_•
[
Our 'Nutrition Atlthorlties'
• advise eating, a whole
grain cereal every day.
Nabisco' Shredded Wheat
:is a whole grain eerie'
100% whole • wheat with
allthe bran and wheat
.It's' ready -cooked; ready,
to. eat, and equally della, • • ,
Ian with hot or cold' milk;•'
ter'breakfasts;
For' bet
serve Nabisco Shredded
Wheatregularly.
THE. CANADIAN SHREDDED
WHEAT•COMPANY;'LTD.' • .
Niagara. Frills, Canada
. .. • 1438.
MADE IN CANADA
OF CANADIAN WHEAT
TABLE_TALKS
S.ADIE B: CHAMBERS;
Merrtis • Based On
Low -Cost Weekly
Madre Order
FiRST DAY
Itetlled-•=-Oa is :Milk .
Toast .•.. r. --..--a-a:-
Cocoa—Children.
• . Tea—Adults '
Cheese • Sandwiches.
Apple Sauce
• Milk—Children
Tea—Adults
-a36"ea[
Roasted Potatoes, Carrots
Bread and Butter. ,
Rice and Raisin Pudding
SECOND DAY
St-mat:Raisins-- - - -
Farina -Milk
T,oa5t
Cocoa—Childa-en
Tea—Adults
Cream Potato .Soup_
-Cheese a reeleiy
Bread and Butter
Milk—Children '
Tea d-ults
Veal Hash on Toast
Potatoes
Cabbage
'Bread and Butter
Apple Pie• •
• THIRD DAY '
Rolled Oats—Milk
Toast
Cocoa—Childen
Fel--•Adults ..'
'Potato ,and Celery
Bread and Butter,
Salad
_._ Milk—Children
Tea—Adults
•
Macaroni and cheese
Bread . and ,Butter
Prunes '
FOURTH DAY
Prunes
Farina—Milk.
Toast
Cocoa—Children
Tea—Adults ' •
•
Scrambled Eggs ori Toast
Sliced Tomatoes •
Fried 'Potatoes
Bread and Butter
Milk—Children
Tea—Adults
Scalloped .Salrnorn'
Baked Potatoes; ' Carrots `
Bread and Butter •
• Orange Custard
• FIFTH .DAY •
Rolled Oats—Milk
Toast
Coe-oa-•hildren ' •
Tea—Adults ' •
'Scalloped Potatoes `
Sliced Tomatoes
Cheese
Bread and Butter
Milk.—Children '
Tea—Adults
Baked. Beans
Bread and Butter
Apple Sauce " .
SIXTH DAY
1toi1 { :6a£s--1GIiT1[`
Toast
Cocoa—Children
Tea—Adults
Left -over Baked Beans
• Breastun_d. Butte _'
'runes .
Milk-,-€:hildren•
Tea --"Adults
Y
Liver' and Miens .Potatoes •
•Beets with:Greens
• Bread and Butter •
Gingerbread
SEVENTH DAY '
Stewed Raisins
Rolled Oats.—Milk
Toast
Cocoa -Children •
Tea—Adults
Dried PeSoup
.- Sliced_,Beet.an.d._Lettuce-SaIad-s-. --
Bread .and .Butter
:Milk. -=-Children
Tea—Adults
Creamed Potatoes with _Cheese.'
Bread and Butter •
_•Left -over Gingerbread
° Miss Chambers welcomes personal
letters from .interested reader,,. She
pleased to receive sut5gestionn
. on' topics for. her 'eoininn, and 1s
always ready to listen to your “pet Requests for recipes or
speeiol menus are in order. Address
your letters to "Miss Sadie il,
Chambers,* 73 West Adelaide Sf.,
'roronin " send stamped melt -ad...
• dressed cn'elope 1f you wI,,h • a
rcnlY.
1140.1400. OSSSO
111100S IVO
SOS 1;400.1
r
•
Canada's `ficiusoldiers know that custards and _
blanc-
inariges, quickly'and`easily made with pure, •higli quality
Canada Corti Starch,are a delight tvi*'any luncheon
or dintier menu.
- bb tine whets Gatatlianeareurged toaEatRight.
' to Peel Right", these delicuwa.des`,zr , may, t ate.
orelcome addition to the nutrition foods featured by
the National food for Fitness Campaign. Follow
'Canada's Fool Ikules for Health and Fitness.
CORN °
STA..,, _
CII
rt A proderf of the CANAbA STARCH COMPANY; Witted