HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-04-13, Page 7Nits*
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We }J ve fi�uc
To Give World
Netlie Mel.ung, +Well - Known-
Canaadian ' Authoress, • De=
„ *ores Canada's 'Standing So.
• Much On The Sidelines:
'Canadians : ha e -'been "pretty
much spectators 'while a great,
tragedy has been going ,on in Eur-
ope," Nellie McClung- of Victoria; ,
pro'mfnent writer and lecturer, said
to an4tddress at Toronto last week.
.` She asserted Canadiansepuid not .
;it* th.eit• hands in their .poekets
- 'and,etand on the siiie•lines. '
Unmoved 'By •Eu,rope's Tragedy
''what has Caliada".ta give ' to
9th r parts of the. world?" Mrs.
itis 1 ng, ..asked "She has; room.. •
Canada can. hate.: her IiieI<` of a •
great.iziany people. Outwest there
are.two people•, to the 'siieare
wide in some` •:a „!tie < E6-rope'ad .
aetintries there a:ce as many as --600
to the:,squarey mile,
• •"There is 'not a country.; witb a,
betteropportunity•.(than~..Canada)
to give •the answer • to the pr.ob-
., terms withinit;" , she said, "We
haven't a .problem' in Couada that .
can't' he solved 'if we have' the n111..
to create the Atmosphere : in which.•
it can be .owed-'. We're a young
..country and we have no P'urple' -
:patches in our history.. We're : a
constitutional country;•;. we have
never been taken by an act of ag-'
gression. • But we haven't .yet tap-
ped Our human resources;"
• Must Be:. Securer
To
Live: Ideall.
13.'- Blitz, Fortner Educational
Consultant For The Qutup=
iett's "lbeanes'The Ideal' Per.
,.son. •
:i?ormer educational` consultant.
•
for the Dionne Quintuplets, •profes-
sor' of child 'phycholo.gy, and •direc-
for of the .Institute ..of Child 'Study
at Toronto• 'Universi•ty.' Dr. W. E.
"Blatz; last. week discussed the, at-
• •. tr4butes of .the ideal person.. That
person,' he said, • was', one who had..
' it 'sound, phIlosophy,• a constittifion •
• which did notrworry .him, a job in
which' he was confident of .'success,
• no spare.. time in •which to •get
• , bored, • master of his own fate' 'as
tar as .his :•family associations were
concerned and a'friend •tvho would..
stick closer• than a• brother.
9 Bataed Ort, :Security
Upsets in any one,, -of these•th;ngs,•.
could change the.;whole character.
Dr. Blatt-explained;it all o'n,a basis:..
of • a
conception of• Security; and
traced the idea from' the dependent, ,
security of childhood...through -to
the more or less •independent se-
• curity of, maturity... • .
All types of mental, disorders and
• extremist 'movements r, could be,
traced te'a variation of this sense
• of security or insecurity, and re
adjnstinents . could be ' .nada. • ac••
eordingiy: •
Young Teachers
Make • Mi takes:
"Boners" Are Pulled., By Nor
mat. School Students In '
. Music Examis.
Schoolboys for years have been
'accused of ".bone'r's" in, 'answering
examination .papers, but .prospec
tive Leathers make. just -as . funny
ones, Roy Fenwick, -direct-ot• oY
• .4 minearc.dos. f'ttdine ;taattg . ,43,,
Among answers, •on• singing to
structions given by, students at.
Normal schools where • teachers
are 'trained were the .following; .
Fenwick said:.
"'k'he range%of a child voice is
about' 50' feet:" • ,
".Childitlen shonld•sing as high as
possible without ease."
"The children who oiinnot sing
shouldbetaken apart." •
"When children have forgotten
a bine ,ask, them to limn it," •
"It a child has a defective vocal
Organ, .take, him to ;a" doctor and
have It'out" • ' '
"Monotones should have heir
eyes and . ears', examined."'
•
"Jazz" Sounds
w. ' Like Goslings
Jazz music•,sotlnds like a flock
of goslings masking to Neil Mc-
Coranack, of 'Orangeville, who holds
the • title of "Canada's. best,' old-
tim6' fiddler".
Vr. • McCormack, khowri locally
as the "king of•the 1•iddlers,"lived
in the Village o1'' 1;3iilsburg, five
Miles south of Orangeville. In the
six tires that he has competed
"in the event at the C. NE. for
fiddlers' over '75; he has emerged'
the winner 'four ' times.
• "King , Of Fiddlers"
Mr., McCormack has been a fid-
dler for, 72. years, starting to Play'
,. ill•--
.q•� e•
W
{1~ �
-d31
4�'u2 next1Ja breis, Since the first
'a"`..'IIY``�,•;`1'.1*�' flv'i��.th�d�41S;°'•� �llEa�•,�
• end, at thousands. Of, barn dances,
learned hundreds• • of tunes, won
Many prizes. And 'yet ho can't read.
a•.note of basic -41e has tampered
With graduates ,ilf 'conscrvxf,or!Fs of
•
•
•. f •
e •
Riverdale Kiwar l
of Toronto,
presents a
'R.CJR R.
.an
•
• l
PRIZE
LIST
Don't miss a single game!.
START 1
lobi` '
'TODAY.f
Shack Method -
°
Helps Insane.
Aids In Restoration .OE. 'Mind's
Balance.'= Complete Relax-
atiori Healing To'°Schi;oph-
renics..
Terrific insulin ,I3hock$ , which
plunge ,the' mental patient ., into
deep coma are giving new promise
of life to hundreds of schizophren-
ics at Arkansan' new state hos-
•gital . for 'nervocs diseases: Dr. N.
T. 'Hollis; staff psychiatrist at the
' institution, said at least 50 -per
cent. of the schizoids treated. with
insure"' were showing' improvement.
Sc ixzophrenies—the 'name means
"split -personality" -make.. up .more
than 75 per cent. of the population
of nervous .institutions ,In the Unit- • '
• ed States, Dr: Hollis said: The •
disease ,' briefly. totally' ineap'act-
' tates the patient, by making him in-
.• capable of 'connected thought..
"Insulin shock treatments :aye''
only a few' years' old, and operate
on the theory that eon'iplete re-
laxation is healing to • shatt'ered
minds." •
isoilight Drop Back
To Pent
Western Farmers Must Have
Help, Premier Bracken Of
, Manitoba Declares
•
Wostnrn ;agriculture would drop
to the level of peasantry if Canada
did •not•regain her lost markets for
.wheat, Premier John Bracken, of
Manitoba last' week told members
or the •Brandon Board of 'Trade.
Speaking on . "Agricultural. and
Ebenontic Readjustment," Mr. '
Brackten urged the Wien stand by
the farming,industry in its present
'economic troublres.
"Under the present setup in Can-
ada," he• said, "certain sections of
our •economy have been askured of
a• definite }'ate of return while oth-
er section§, in this case. agricul=
tura, ,reteive what is left."'
The premier declared agriculture'
must not be denied the right to
adeuate adiustmeints to meet thee`-
emergencies . it le, palled upon to
face. '
Need Compensation ••
"If .secondary industries are to
be bonused in Canada by tariff laws•
to' the detriment of primary indus-
tries, the latter are entitled 'tot
equal eomptensation if equity is to
be maintained," he said. •
He added there must be, intel1t-
gent planning for agriculture Un-
suitable lands must go'. out of Citi-
tivation• and effieIeuoy in•,:produc-
tion tti:itst''• replace' Inefficiency; a
.il...wasti _.,.pQ11Cyw,bf.._.proluct�on.�
const give pace t� tl po.lio'y OfMi..,.� ea ,nd "stYusrd- detrel mend.
Sheep. that ares feed al lot `the
g 9 p
"dod • uality legume hay they will
up )
=lean will need fess grain than
t,
sheep 'that ` r'ecOi re. pooy'er-r,uaiiity
rougbages. '
Parliamentary
w
Doings
ith . (Ihla I[ 'r f:eginti,tur•
ygring, 10811 •
itY IaEDl'
No mistaking "]t Premier
Mitchell F. Hepburn usually . gets
what he wants.. Despite all the,,
controversy, vituperation.; and
threatened .strike of• motorists, and
a Conservative' ' *filibuster (lovely
Word!) •'against the proposed
amendnient to the Gasoline' Tag
Act, Ontario now finds itself pay-.
ing eight cents tax on every imper-
",,ial n galloof''gas,- two cents, more..
•?'es,. he got what. he wanted last
Week ' in the Legislature. including •.
,a vote of confidence (60-22) . ,
and. then the Budget was brought
down . and all. the M.P:P.'s ^
went home and had ;an Easter 'te-
'cess.
„ --e , P
..The Budget: Onfar'io 'finish'e'd:"
the 'fiscal year With.. a .surplus. of
$236,038. Surplus in, the previous'
year was $4,609,718 ,fibs" Prov
'Inst''ant` klE,0`O040,Q0
construction. and this item.of capi-
tal. expenditure .helped raise the
. gross debt by$37,600,000—(revenue .
from gasoline tax: and other sources
during•',the bast year amounted , to•
aboti.t ' $27,000,000, $8,000,000 of
which was spent on 'highway main-
tenance,, the rest absorbed through
other channels; . so that the $35,-
000,000 used for new highways had
Co be freshly 'borrowed) . • . Suc-
cession duty collections for 1938-39 •.
reached an . estinrated $15,000,000
"Or $3,.000,000, below• what the. Prem. -
ler hadbudgeted for. (Maybe.. the,.
Government ceuldn'•t get settle-
ment soon enough on Sir Joseph
• FIavelle's estate.)
Refeta!te Conqueror, Welcomed.
0
Field, Marshal •Hermann Goering;• baton :c1•utched in' one hand., is .shown -
Shaking hinds with •Reichfuehrer':Adolf Hitler on the:latter's triumphal
return tp,• Berlin after his our of the .former' Czecho-Slovak provinces.
• 'now under •a Reich "protectorate." Chiefs of the German army are shown.
in the background. Note. the expressions on, their faces •
i�'or• the_ coming year: More wil'l'
:be spent en highway maintenance
(but not on new. highways); esti-•'
• mates for the ''Debartments' of
Mines,:Agriculture, Game arid Fish-
eries,Health; Municipal Affairs .
are up• hca'nsiderab•ly . . The
Premier announces that not less.
than $2,000,000 will be used next.
.year In ..treating tuberculosis • ,pa- .
tients throughout Ontario with the '
object• 'of. "complet'ely'' eradicating
this'scourge from our. province";
. ; It ;has' recently •been 'sai'd •
that if •.the. proper ,measures were
taken, there would be no trace of ,
the "white plague" left in :Ontario
inside.' a dozen years. • •
A-new,chirdren's unit, at dlie"On=
_tario Hospital, Woodstock; • will be
.. built; a tie ' 'fireproof building at
the School for. 'the Blind., •Brant-
ford'; ` a community hall 'at R•ondeau •
Park: ,
• •A cut of $25,000 ,in th�'e 'grant to;
• Elie University of i'''estetn ,Ontario''
,has .loused the ire of the students
there wh:Qhave been deiaionstrat-:'•
ing .valiantly against lhs reduction -
which ntay ,mean a: cruel .• curtails •
na.ent, of `educatiioual activities
there.. . . : the Citivei•°sity -of To,
ronto suffers similarly,its special:
grant,. nicked a cool,'$1A0,u00• •
In, lighter vein: Sneaker Clark
has ruled that, M:P.P.'s may - no =;
longer •spend. .' their king's Printer
sessional allowance of $25 on any--
thing
any=thing lrut stationery and leather
goods .(in. which, the King's Print-
er's office deals) .... Certain mem- •
berg, of the House have been screen-,
dering their 25 bucks' on women's
lingerie, jewelry, • perfumes, .medi-
cines, boots and shoes', 'golf clubs,
picnic kits and what:have-you
Tut! tut!: gentlemen... .
Filibuster (verb) : 'to delay leg-'
b islation by the use of extreme dila=
tol'Y tactics.
ms.
Radio Licence
Fee Uncanged
Continuation• of the present
licenco fee of •`$2:50'on radio• re-
isze3;Vs zwaiseerate sed-:sby :.4he
Parliamentary , radio 'broadcasting-
Colnitiittee last' week on a motion
by J. G. Rosa (Lib., Moose Jaw).
He said evidence of the Canadian
• 'Broadcasting Corporation officers
as to the curtailment of CBC ser-
' vice'' "that must result 'foom 'any
• reduction • in' revenue," -had been
'heard and should, be adopted by the
committee as a warning what
would happen to CI3C I•f the' fees
were reduced. '
The motion was carried by a
vote of 9 -'3, and a second motion
by Mr. Ross, that the main motion
be sent to the House as an Interim
report, tt:as carried witheut'record-
ed vote.
ENNTARIO'
U.TDOORS
By.: VIC, •AER,
ONTARIO'S 'GA 1E.,BIRD, •
RESTORA i-itJi TOL CY
• PAYS -A DIVIDEND:, •
Has. Ontario found 'the ans
war to •.its -game bird problem?
.While other provinces,'°with.the
"exception, of British Columbia; ,.•
are 'forced to .,,cut 'game' 'bird ,
shooting' down to short `open •
seasons on • indigenous• birds,
• •popu]ous Ontario, where'indus- ''
trial 'and municipal' develop=
•melt have probablyreduced.na-
tiv'e wildlife.' more than 'else-
where, has started ° to enjoy;
open seasons on . exotic
ties ,of bird life 7,raiied in cap-
tivity-
Last year no, fewer• than, 50 ,
Ontario, Townships, in addition •
•toe• the''counties of Essex,; Kent..
. • nn�,'d :Pelee' Island, permitted
•short seasons• of •p.ieasvnt stoat-':
For this extra huntin
extra, .farg.—
• Ontario enjoys ap-
• proximately the • same seasons : '
on ind'igenou's birds as••other
'provinces—sportsmen Spent be-
tween $75,0'00 and $10'0,000, of ,.
•which' $20,000 went into Iicen.-•
ces. ' :Approximately • 35,000'
birds 'were bagged during the'
season. •
Shooting a 'Paying Basis
. •Oistario''s si}ecess •in putting
shooting ofi a paying basis may '
be put down to, simple factors;•
first, recognition,of the need. of, •
re -aeration -rather than coiiserv-
ation;. second,. the' .encourage
ment of''private and commercial
breeding. . Unliite British ••'Co=
lanibia,. where 'pheasant eggs
are °distributed free 'of charge
to farmers •and sportsmen's or-
ganizations who ,hatch the'birds
and release them when. • ready;
receiving a sum from the • Gov
ernment for each matured. bird,
'• 'Ontario now' does most of the
. game •. propagating on its own
game farms, leaving the .tial: '
-nine ,t -o _licealsed 'game' breeders.
• Until qti to„recently, .though,
the Department of • 'Game and
Fisheries su'ppletnented its• own •
breeding ,effort's •and those. of. •
romm'ercial 'farms' by distribut-
ing' pheasant eggs•'among fann-
ers and sportsmen, who,` 'al-
' `though under no• obiil;ation`to'
release the birds, when matured,. • .
'usually did so. The Departmcut
now operates tingpheasantries,
one et Normandie'and the oth-
er at, :Codringte ,
a•• In• 'addition the two• Gov -
eminent .operated g''arne„farms,
there are 62 licensed ' breeding
establishments .in Ontario; four”
of them being of considerable •
WO'NEERLAN1.OF OZ
I iRk
TO 'GET THEIR MAN
Americans seems to think that
all a Mountie needs is a -good bari-
tone yoice and a bOrse.—Quebec'
Chronicle-TeNgraph,,
NUDISTS LOSE. NUMBERS '
Canada's `Doukhobors are being.*
urged: to forsake their ',ancient
Ways—in 'Other words they are .be- •:
• ing • a,dvised' to keep their shirts
en. -,-Stratford Beaton -Herald.
• MAKI<NiG.HISToirr '•
It's going•a historic May, •
The King'and Queen -are 'going tci
see ,the New World for the first
tinie and. so .are the gllitituplets. -
':f oronto Saturday, Night.. '
TWO FARIkI. NEEDS
• Two -.'things •should be restored
•
to .Ontario farmrHthe maple su
,gar• laugh as, a •revenue producer•,..
and' the woodlot as a. source of•.;,
fuel. wood: -Farmer's Advocate.
•
SOMETHING' FOR NOTHING
Twenty .Canadian• cities and
towns are' reported to••have spent;
a total of 0,000#600, to remove.,
size. One of . the largest, the
Watson Chick Hatchery at.:Or-
angeville, produced 2,000 birds
during 1938 'and has plans for .
10,000' in 1939: Mr. A. H. C.
Proctor, another large Ontario
breeder with an, establishment
at Unionvxlle, also plans to
'raise,10,000. pheasants in 1939.
snow' from the streets during the
winter months, • Nov~ Spring .suet '
and rains come along and do it
for • nothing..-- Peterborough Ex-
aininer.
eterboroughEx-
an.iner.
An - old : truism says that every`
farm can afford at least one pig;l.
and •no farm can afford not to
have 'ole.
fneverypoundand
half, pound pack-
ege ofLipton e,Tea
there are valuable .k
coup'ona. Savo'
these carefully.
theyare exchange.
' ,able for beautiful
Wm. Rogers ,and
Sozi. Silyerp)a'te. .
Write,now for pze-
mium booklet.: to.:
Thos.' J, Lipton."
Limited, Lipton
•IQnildiva, Toronto:
a ao
LIPTUN5
AMILD
CIGARETTE'. TOBACCO
TIN ' :r
Also ire 10c Packages
and 2.5c Tins
L.IFE'•S 'LIKE THAT
Fred' Ne ser •
NOPSy
X6OSBA -- ,
VLMJKL ' ;.,
AGTOZ
(Coryrigr+ 1631V. to Fyr4 Nehc)
GL44S.E.S
PUTTED:
49. M: O KewFE,
-•l5
"Well{ I'll be darnecl if it ain't a 'Z' -=no wonder. I've been' rell:ng
'enInan} glasses .la.tely l; could have sworn that was an 'NV!'
' Copyrighted 1142. !Sett? k 2i4Ca
'By L.' Fran; Baum,
•
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�'Yt, lis i111`Y'fffht"Fifi y�"etre"°'iti'si�rrr'•,•R.�.*�'l"vY'°�Yo�"11'�riiet+3't'tT•->z^trr-. t •it•errn-••-CF+crtt-ctrl .,-u•H1V- -t.t't td to ,t-hC ,3 +t•i,,.re�e -to -that,. bl�id t•M.F-Er'rns, "�'•C�,t
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..�rnm.-nr� , .� WP�,.^,rr�"�T.�,�.i4��.� . G+°c9,.�1•� ia•^�^'�lt�"�"�,�='"�''"a'�ti�,F�z�,'":-'.�"r't��".'�`�kF$ia*�c1t r1�'• fir- Tit e''''c`'C+trcnc,
tvrt�. �• wC�•s ,,.:�rsL��•s �a"�,•.""sri�tr"%'�i"i's'��,"--�e�'";� e``ud`tlFes` ltd: '�o't�V�"o"'I-8'i�"`° ... i�•sa'°• . .• _
kens:or Winkiee' or Muneiiktns come here' 'wagon .and continu d thekr •journey.' Whimsies Jotd,us?" ""They will;".anstve9•ed of Oz:'• tut 1,1ta•ve other' hews•lor you,'"
to 'ahttise themselves by matching us to+, "Those are Certainly strange peopie," re.' • the,CIenerttt. "They .will tight ror,tis with •, announbed the uenernl.. "ti,ot,d or h;Sd''"'"
gather.. So' there will •no hariri in leaving tnark.ed .,,Aunt Ent,.' as they drove aWsy. all their strentl'th And cunning."' `"(:god!" asked the. King. "klood, , ltut• MIS Je.ty.-
• these' 'pieces. where the' ate, tot iii, time. •, '")lut 1 really can't see what use they are.". • exclaimed the Xing. "W hat reward dad, "Then•[• will hart it,"' raid the l; i•t?i„ "The
b ya
' But I,'hope you will visit" us again and it '"I thinlE , they're more 'fun than playing ,you promis'i: thent?' '"5' our Malesty is to nt'ow.leyWQogs' mu join us." ••N.+:" criod
• o don au will always be weleofne 1 • selitalre,." declared Uncle 1-lenry,• soberly,: . use the mattes belt to give, each Whimale, the, Beteg "I have their-rrom,ise," ast: t
• you.
you." ''Don't 'ou &et rnittc•h eneh • "rot 'my leart•1 ttai glad 'we visited the a large,'tlne •bend in pia&& of the stnalip,shS�e ieneral. '.'I3ut what reward d"1 the;
. other'?" asked Dorothy. t'atddlex," w one he fs not' 'ob'ligsd to wear':'' ,dentttid.' asked the If iiia, sugpir?cr,ts'
- • - , ✓ ,
13,
•
•