HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-03-16, Page 3f'
• Reshape Pliable. Bones of An
Infants' Face if They Are
Malformed
Facial. malformations soon• may
• be `evef;lhome as a matter of. course,,
- Dr, Ray Edward Raymoker of Mis-
soulae Mont., told the convention
'of 'the -Philadelphia 'County Dental
Spciety last week. •
Dl. Raymaker said that any ex
perienced .dentist, using only hie
lingers and one small instrument;
could reshape.. the, pliable bones of
an infa:ot',s face within•30 minutes
after birth, In disclosing 't'he. re.
• -sults of..6 years of research, the..
`• NIontene;1entist jtated that be had.
reshaped'thefaces :ofhlindieds of
babies.
He declared .that.nipptes.'for nba
b'ies' Intik''bettleeshould 'be. prey,
eri•bed by couiPeten't dentists af-
ter careful examination; b.eeause.
poorly Shaped ,nipples cause upper
la* malformations. ,'
I 4 '
Noted Canadian Poet Dies
D'r. '1 h'otiias O 1•tagan, ••widely-
• known 'Canadian •poet,, author and•
.scholar died in Toronto after two •
• •years•' illness, in • his -84th year. A •
teacher by profession, Dr. ,.O11a
•' gar was :principal .of • some • of the
• leading:` Roman Catholic' separate
'"schoels, throughout.'the Dominion.
''Swedish Modern'
Leads' Furnitue
Has Grace, Style and 'Propor-
tion --Uncomfortable Angles
And Acres of Chromium •Are
Out
In current displays of modern
furnitu.re, •,Swedish Modern is
widely featured. The better Swe-
dish modern has a nice blend of
grace, style.and proportion so long
hoped for by those who have liked
'modernfurniture from the first,
Vett when "modern" meant un-
comfortable angles .and acre -Po
chromium -which it ne longer
' 'dem, Newest' tone in .Swedish
Moderri is 'harvest mahogany, mel -
law as autumn sirn'shine:
In one particularly. nice living
room the'I walls ate pale; cloud -
blue with lilies' of rust, green,.
straw' and deeper bluethat give a
subtle plaid effect. The rug. is
leaf-browif' and the draper%.e's cin-
namon -beige, both 'of which, -with
the walls, provide a ,perfect •.back-
ground • for 'the harvest mandg=
any breakfront' desk with hand-
' somely caned doors. • One chair is
in neutral_to,nes, striped in colors.
The other is coverefl .with nubby
cloth in two shades of green.
sire *epratltletio{is o <:evet�rop-
, � "atalst<i 4J&1r,,.Car r y, , 14414 Yt • iii
highlighted this year. Cornple•te
bedroom suites in Sherato'h and
Hepj,lewhite designs ought to ap-
• peal to tthe woman who needs new
' . bedroom furniture and "wants it
daintily feminine yet thoroughly
practical. •
Skyscraper City-
-A
ity-
-A Thing of hast•
..
ArehitecturtJ Expert Predlets
• Cities,ol Fi tare Will Be•Hot-
izontal Rather Than Vertical
r • George S. Mooney, .associate at -
rector of the Planning and Re-
search Department of, the Mont- -
yeal Metropolitan • Commission,
predicted the cities of the future
will be horizontal rather t1 tin ver-
tical.
" • "The skyscraper city already is.
a thing of the past," he: told deley.
gates to the second Canadian dolt-
ference on housing. • "By for the
larger number of communities re=.
•gard such,,pictures of architectural
•Aspiration only as warnings or
nightmares.
House of Tomorrow
"The houses of. tomorrow will'
turn • their baeks• on the street and
open their 'porch'es each on a lit-.
' tie park;" he said.
menace to the eorrimuni$ies • itt
Which they exist and "from • the
•standpoint of social ecoin:lily they
are ti luxury our' crvrlizatrnn 'cans,
not sffrird. '
a
•
.LESSON XII
Peter Exhorts To .Christian. Ovine
.1 Peter
golden Text.: Likb `mss he who' cal-
led you is holy, be ye yourselves•
also holy in• all manner :of living. •
1 Pet. -1:15.,
. 'The Lesson In 'Its Setting
' Time- We cannot • :determine•.
with 'absolute, Accuracy the year In
wdiiclh, the apoettie Peter wrote his
t'wo epistles, but it is generally be.
keyed that the .First Epi'stl'e Wag
wrliten' somewhere• near„A.D. 60.
•'Plage �-'•In the thirteenth verse '
of the ,lastechapt;"er of this 'epistle :
the, apostle, uses the phrase,
that. is 3n Bab'yJoir," .and Prom th'ia •
some have argued that Peter avrote •
th1s; epistle from',' the .greet ecity :on.
the 'uphs'ates•'Rivei'; others ItavQ"
advanced eke" theory that because
the ancient city of Cairo, Egypt,
'tdascalled'Baliylon, the epistle was.
written there-. It is more generally,
believed that here Peter used the .
• •word "Babylon" to. 'designate • the
city of Rome.
8: Finally,, be ye 'al'1 • lilfeni,inded.
'Christians'ouglit to be of.thesame
emend Ileum se„they ..ar=menehers-,-of
-thy saute body, •.fle'okid ;7es's
Christ. Compassionate., `'Loving ee
brethren.. In secular Greek the
word her mean the love of broth
'ers .for' brothel's, but in the: New
Testamen't it is. used 'in what .is
re'all'y a `•w 'sense,, "of love: for
those who 'are brethren by . virtue .
•of the, •fact ..that they are "begotten .
again":.ji'•Pet:'1:3•). Tenderaearted.:•.
Humblerninded.'Ilaving a modest' T
opiliion•, of ones self,• ` •
'' The manufacture':of '-cheese is
R•
eturn Good •For Evil' ' sp old that its origin •may be said
9 Not rendering evil *for, evil, •or to,be lost in the mists of 'antiqu
r•,eeele g• fee, feet -ling; b tt..e 44r41.1- 1 ;ley. meta e•s-wee etei,%":ae .{.o:
any country, or tribe in: the:worlds
history, .stated P. W. McLaga'n of '
. Montreal in an address^on the'de-
velopment of , cheesemaking
Canada to the meeting of' the Ca-
nadian'' Produce Association; • re-
cently held: at Montreal, 'which
• has not mn.de milk fat its susten-
'•ance'int& some form of cheese:,
' There seem, to be .hundred of va-
rieties. ,
Cheese is mentioned in. the Bi-
ble in the Book iof''Chronicles,
where it' is written that at a time
•when' the: Israelites were. at . war -
with'the Philistines; a farmer nam --
ed Jesse sent his young scn,, David,
to visit has three brothers• who
were • in. the arm, and to carry, to
them 'a quantity of parched. corn;
but, to the captain . of the coni
pony, he' was enjoinedto present
ten small ,cheeses.
' 'I'nthe, recent exeav tient of 'U•r
Of the Chaldees, the Mirth' place ,of
• Abrahaime a mosaic frieze- was dis-
covered representing dairying
scenes on 'a farm attached ' to a
temple, mote than 5,000 year ago
'• (3,100 'B.C.). There is.a•proces-
sion of cows, two, calves are seen;
' • issuing froth , the barn door, and
men sitting on lowtstools aremilk-
ing cows. Calves duly muzzled
are roped to the cows'' head -stalls,-
. sii as to encourage her: to give'.
milk. Another part of the frieze
shave two clean shaven men wear-
ing fleece petticoats„, the official •;
dress of priests, • pouring milk
through a strainer into a vessel set'
on the ground; while two others
are collecting the strained liquid
into great, stone 'jars; rperhaps pre-
paratory, to making cheese,,
°
ZSTAUXIL'i*R, Y ;OF , 4NAbl A
!PLTTRAIIING
:'S'kippers of the • Fishermeh's . Reserve, the latest.
auxielery of the •Royal Canadian Navy, were review-
ed 'b' Ho.n. E. W. Hamber., 'lieutenant -governor ofj
British Columbia; CENTRE, as they neared the close
-of 'their training'period atEsquimalt 'naval base. The
auxii-iar3�-co tprises-fry .boats and 200 -Mien -:and -the
w ,ram,iil.a'c.n n�.'i':ti5T7Yfl9c+ri ti'q�iiruati15»: si�n•aeiri ese.
sweeping and machine-gun .practice. •'The Reserve
:will beavailable in ease of need 'along, the British
Columbia coast • Pictured , at the extrerne. RIGHT, is ,
Jarvis . H. McLeod, collector of customs at Prince
Rupert, -who recruited snany of the skippers for the
Reserve. -
e
• Makfl Of . Cheese
An Ancient Art
Origin of Its. Manufacture. LOA.
In Mists Of Antiquity;
wie i blessing. We can hardly show,•
ourse,lye's 'Christiana •-more vividly"
ban in obedience Co just such lin •
-admonition' is this. Not • an easy
„thing to do, -Yet certainly•'possible,
. as tile• Holy Spirit'dwells within us.
For hereunto were ye called, that -
'ye should inherit .a blessing. , :God
Yblesses,`therefore:'we should .plese;
'he forgives us, and therefolre. we
should forgive others, We were cal
led .into such a highlife as ;this •
when we. accepted Christ. and re-
ceived from him a new life.
Men may give good words with.-
the lips,• while the heart iso full of
bitterness. .' •e .
10: For, He: that would. love life,,'•
and see good days, lee him. refrain .'
'his, tongue -one evil, and'his- lips
that speak no guile. The o'b.-
Jed wished tor is, not there life,: as
such; but a life that -a man can love
instead of 'hating with the -hatred
that is engendered, on the one hand:
by the satiety of• the .pleasure -seek- '
er, .and on the other, by bitterness
and wrath, • •
Turning Away From Evil
11. And let him turn eivoy firom
evil,.' anddo good, The objectives
which are here expressed will ne- -
ver he attained unless. there is de-
finite determination on the • part •
of „ the • man to: achieve these vie
tues: Letts remernber'that We can;
•not do good' until • we turn from.
evil, ,These things we do because
the life•of Christ in us impels us
to these effort's. Let him .seek his
• peace, and .pursue it. To live. toge-•
ther•In families, in nations, az •'a
race, to seek peace, to seek the
smooth working of this •homplicat-
ed fellowship, we are' to rid human
fellowship of its envy and jealousy
and • thoughtlessness and ill will.
12. For the eyes of the Lord'are
upon the righteous, and his ears
unto their'supplicatian; but the
face, of the •Lorad is upon 'thein that
do evil. The springs for all holy en- •
deavor are in -otr knowledge of God
srr,e lli :,S't,Tui ,duteue Christ. In outer
' words, the filture 'rifles the . Pres-
ent.; heaven .controls•oin• actions on
earth. ' • . ' '
13., And who is he that will•liartn
yott, If ,ye be zealous of that which
is geed? • . '
• Above Fehr of Man
14, 13ut even if ye should suffer•
for righteousness' sake, 'blessed' are.
ye:, and fear not their fear, neither'
• be tropttled. Compare, the words of •
our: Lord in the Sermbtt on the
Mount'. (Matt. 5:10.; 'Roth. 8:33.35).
The righteousness here spoken ' of
le, of course, not the,righteousness
'of Christ, which Is imputed to us,
.but the 'righteousness which' we
Ourselvespractioe,'aft r otir con-
version, in dol th "things• -that
are•right. -Fess, 't their fear -,-
the things which th • would dread,
and with which the will threaten
you, For what•are'they7
15, Bat sanefify' in your hearts' -
Christ as. Lord. Peter says' that the
holy fear of God „ ill lift us a'bp've
the fear of man, Being ready al-
ways :to give 'a(iteeeei', Tire ward
translated '!answer" means to de-"
fend one's 'self. To every' man that
asketh you a reason•• concerning the
hqpe that' is in you. Yet with meek- •
nese and fear. . ;
16, Having a good conscience;
that, wherein' ye are spoken 'ag-
ainst, they may be •pttt to shame
Who revile•.your good, manner Of,
life in Christ. A good topscienee la
e '_es reason, for the luau, that
, fe Wleliln its. An apology f lay be .
well learned, welt expressed, elo•o
qu\ent; butt it will not be convincing
ariless'it conies Prone the iieert, and
is Welted .up by life. ' '
17. For it is, better, if the will of
God should so will, tient ye, suffer
for well-deing than •for' evil -doing.
If, we know ourserves to' have cone
mated no evil worthy -of suffering.
•- ait4--nae leeangpunished only for _the .•
•sake-ef••ev'-Ler.•d.'f+se ,.,i •theee•r:.e-..�
sorrow, and no sense of defeat, and'
we can praise•God every•'hour of
the.day and night, no matter what
the punishment may be. • •To be •
right with God is everything. •
18. Because Christ also suffered
for sins once, the righteous for the
unrighteous, that he might bring us
to God; being put td death in• t
flesh, but 'made alive in the spirit..
The suffering we endure is never '
something that• the plan tor; the•
sufieing that • Christ endured he
purposed,•even in the long ages be -
fere he ,came down on, earth, for
•by Iris suffering; even ;Unto death;
he was able to make atonement for
• all tinrighteousness and• thus brings
us' to God. . •
BOOK SHELF
_ By ELIZABETH EEI Y
"THREE 'MARRIAGE'S
By E. M: ,Delafield
his. clever author who .writes
ec nt'ertai ' -ly has ion been'
• noted' for h atiiidal portraits of
women who get married for the
',sake_ of being ;parried; or of • Wo-.
men who j'u'st fall 'shrill of doing •
that.', Coixie •,to think o•f it, Mrs.
•• Delafield can be•'cruel as well as .
amusing. •
In "Three Marriages"" Mrs: De -e
•lafield treats. three 'women of. dif-
ferent •ty.pes, different .periods --
louse who lived in 'the ,1850's; 'Vie-
. let the little •pru'de who.' belonged y '
.oto- the Mauve • Decade;.,. Cathleen,
a lovelyesouled• creature • "who
meant 'to •'ire happy ., to 193'7, but
was defeated by circumstances.
Three stories, ' i}laminating „com-
nrentaries on ,woinerr and marriage
and' what, •the ,former think about
the • latter. '
"rhree'Marri es" . • . by • E.
ag
M. Delafield,... Toronto: Moonlit:
Ian Company of Canada
of rite p'Weather
i*
'®•�r Coming
ec astCC m
C.
Reports To . Be More Accufate'
Shortly As Soon As Extensive
Studies In 'Northern ' Canada
Are Completed
'Weather' .reports will • b'e more •
• definite shortly as a "result of me-
teonolbgical studies under way in
N,or'thern Canada and•a study' by
United States' weather 'men , in
1937 on Ellesmere •Island • off the
Nerthevest coast of •GGreen.land,
• Capt. C1ifi'erd J. MacCregor, Unit
• ed States weather expert said last
•
fie said that most weather con-
a.ditions in the ,Lower Lakes region
result. from Movements of polar
air masses 'and of air masses from '
the -r3'If of lint eeece, .;.. ; . . ,,
'he polar air •masses ' either,.
come down by way of the. ,Pacifie,;,
Ocean, or over a snow covered.or
dry Canada,", said MacGregor.
"The. warm -die mass from•,,,the
south come _,either' laden with
Moisture' :from rile gulf o.r •from '
the, desert:w' • . '
"At, present eve chart.the South=.
'ern ovements pretty completely..
We are .tui* beginning to .cheelc'
'more closely on the polar: masses.
- - ' "We :can tell where they'll.meet,
when they'll' meet and whether the
result will be snow '.or rain and
se forth.. 'When weather is chart-
edlike that, 'it .to longer''becomes
a; .4nestion • of, '`probably .rain or
snow tomorrow eir the next day!.
"inste'ad, we can. answer all the
questions definitely,."
Steel Wigwams •
The first •1.500 of ten million
"Steel wigwams"' Were distributed •
iri• Islington, Greater London work-'
gess ss 'district last week, to• the •
puzzlement. of .residents who asked
"What are we going to 'do - wi•th
thern?" •
• Government regulations require
the bases: of the air, raid slieltea•s
re buried three feet • undergroun�'in. .
the backyards••of homes. ,
Inaugurate Toronto -Montreal Air Mail Service
inaugurating the first air mail flight between Toronto and -Montreal, via
North BO anile Ottawa, under the new Trans -Canada Airways air snail
sereice, Capt. M. W. Fowler, °LEFT; and First .OTcer Humphries look
over their mail cargo shortly before taking off from Toronto.
•
•
REG'LAR. FELLERS --LA Heart Attack .
eroonerreemee
YOU HVEN'i' BEEN
ACTINO, .WELL/PINHEAD!
x TW1.1NiK' WE'LL TAKE: '
A'TRIP TO THE
DOCT :V ./
h►ey� P
40 Centuries Ago
Evidence that •trepanning .opera-
tions were performed by primitive
man in ,Britain.. nearly 4,0.00' 'years
ago• has been'discovered by &retie•
plogists. : ' •,
A•skeleton whose skull had been
operated uptra with ftin.t`'-surgical•
intetruneente"Was -dui up y asp+ ....:
cheologiet Stuart Piggot.' and hie • e
wife while .lnveatigating ancient
burial"wands near Long Crlehel
to Dorset. ,,-
This
This "la apt the first evidence 'of
a prehlatoric trepanning‘Qtperatlon•
found in England, Piggot deelared.
But 1t was the first .;yvith. evidence
that gave the date • of the s1cgil.
This, was determined by a pottery
vessel fouiad alongside the•skeleton,
•
7e:1f
-CuRI ous Irlr ORLD •
Tim WORDS
'tirivee'AIvD:
"A/EG4AT/te,E"
ELECTRICITY
• BANG TO .THE
''DAYS WHEN'•iT
WAS ,Real& rATS . ' .
A SOON' OVER. -
CHARGED
VER -CHARGE D,' WITH"i•HE
FLUID 'WAS' CA' r F('ti'
IROS/T/VE; ' •AN,
usDEHAR ED,
BODY : WAS
.,CA1L1_ECa •
A/EGA77VE.
----� ^ PROBABLY WOL.11-6 B,ECO v(E
• 41-1-1 E: AMER/CAN '/VAV O./VAL 0/02p
iGHOuLD THE EAGLE"EVER BE
:FORCED TO ABLDIG TE tTS THRONE.
NONI£,
ACASi
15 FA.RTHEtZ,
WEST ,
THAN.
• HOiNC)L GUS;'
e6pa. ,937 8r NEA •SER•V,CEt-
6-l9
NO• king hasthe full support of ,all his people;' and, .so there are
those who 'oppose the bald eagle as thenational bird of America. •
•" Because of the love and respect held.for 'the. cheerful meadowlark;
•his name often is mentioned as a true All -America successor to the
present ruler. • ' "
Feminine Athlete:.
HORIZONTAL
1 Pictured
American •;,
tennis' ace.
10 Soon.
•11 Golf device.
;_12 Bundle of..._' ..
official papers
.14 Musical note.
15 Before. • `
16' Conducted
19 Small trans-
port boat.
21 Wing:
- 22'Otherwise,, . -
23 I'nstigates.
25 Hair tool. •
28 -Like. '
29 Writing tools.
31 Starch., ,
33Morindin dye.
34ick.
35 ale children
37 Rectified. '
alb ' To 'punish,
42 Ladies.
• 43 English coin,
45 Ghastly.
46 Grazed.
47 To exchange.
2
19
3
4
Answer to Previous Punk
MAEC
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®I.REV.E.SS
S ICe7GIML.
49 Cover. '
50 Inlet. '
51 Toward.
52 Father.
54 Tiny vege-
. table. '
56 She was
chosen —,
woman tennis'
player in
e 1937, : •
57 She was
of the 'na
-tieing tennis
•
3
title• iri' 1936
- jrE•RTICAL'
2 Honors.
3 Dices.
4 Folding bed.
5 .
6 PreposFoeition.
7 To feast.
8•To exist.
9 •To ignore.
12 She was
the ' finals
in 1937 •
13 Sun god.
14 Myself.
• 17 Lock parts.
18 Guns.
20 Complained.
23 To 'put upin
ante.
24Girdle:
125 Government
official:
26 Mother.
27 She :is a tail
•r-- girl, e...
3Q Finishes.'
32 Race end.'
34'To behave:.
36 Line of 'color
'38 Hostility to
: law; • •
139 Drupe bee..
40 Vulgar' Xellew
41,Sea duck.
44 Tatter.
47 2000 'pounds. „
48 Roof point
covering.
50 Railroad.
51 Note in scale.
53 Form of "a!''
„55 Like.
•
,c.
I1
134.
9 -
By GENE'RYRNES
,.4G,riN.L:i
•
p'.
"
•