HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-06-15, Page 31
40 Canada' Now
National Son
Siallditt Attention in
Ottawa, Glaring lit New
Status:
. Canada's Patriotic Song, "Cl
Was celebrated to the status
• 'of 'a national. anthem when,' follow-
ing the precedent established by ••
King' Edward VIII, on july 36, 1936,
King George stood at attention
• . when this was played. by the
bands:.
Alighting from. the royal cat in '
pant of the 'National War Memor-
ial, Their Majeities.were greeted
, . by .the playing of the National :An-
them. ••
• • • The Ring stood a attention,
. .. .
• • andiremained• in: this fixed postu•re,
when'the•hatid twin* inta.PO•Uame
..• ada.",:•1, , ,
. • • • Queen Joins In Stn.ging
This was.ri";ePeitted in reverse or -
'.der. at the clase of the Unveiling!,
. • ••' • " cereinoni, His Majesty .•stood at at •
, • tention throughout the 'singing. a
. the French and.English versions
Canada,",„: . , . ;•••
0,'"e' • • •• • "The Queen, it was noted, joined
In. singing.Her Majesty, also .sang
"GOd Save the king" at the. term -
!nation .of the service.
KEEPING FIT
• •;i:Y •
'1001
• Weight worriers and health fans
might take some tips from the Holly-
• wbod players Medicine ball practice' -•
• at the beach 'proves to be Dennis
• O'Keefe's favorite form of _exercise.
This permits hlm.to benefit from the
exercise as well as, the'sun. •
Cars Of Future -
Will Have Beds
to Be More Like Homes Thati-
Present Vehicles; Wash-
• stands Also Visioned by Mo-
tel. E*pert
• Automobiles of •the future, as
Visualized :by motor expert, •will
•appear more like lionihs than ve-
movable chairs, sun-
• '
• bath roofs,. air-ConditiOning, beds
and washstands. •
'In the ntit-too-ft;.idistant future,
• wewill, walk up to .ourcar,. PushLa
'batten. and the door will •open
• the seats will be light movable
• . • chairs and the floor, w141, be *Lde
end flat.- ' •, •, ••
' Sun -Bath Roof '••
"A •portion :of the :reef will be
made of a curved •tranaluceift Ma-
lerial Which will :admit, the health-
, ,giving rays Of the san,,at the seine
• time removing the glare. A series
• • of buttonswill regulate . the
peratiire and humiclity' toany Ale-
, • . •
sired condition of air. • • •
i'Predsing of 'anoth:er button will
•
• infold , a concealed, bed from out •
. et the partition ,heiween the Pass-
,enger and engine, compartments,.
Many little •passenger
c�hveuienc-
es will be installed; such' as toilet
and lavatory facilities."
• WIttioet increnSing Size;
• Allen said the driver also Would •
be able to carry on a two-way eon-
, versation with home or office. Mov-
able controls, be said, would. :Make
• it possIble' to' drive the e'er from
any 'seat.
"All of this will be done," he add-
sd, "without inCreasing the width.
or height 'of .the car at all and the
•Iength only slightly,"
•He •
didn't' say how muCh the cars
would cost—or hOW soon they'll be
on the assembly line. , •
• • ,
"Bees Smarter ,• ,•.
.0‘0flii,
Than People"
•
"Bees are smarter than' most
• people." H. G. Quirie of Bellevue•;
G., says. "They doust have any di-.
• vorces, any wars, or any Creprea-
lions'. The bnly thing I have not
4111114-,,i ben able to teach them is to Out
• exactly one. poen& -In each pomb.
• .tint. they' don't miss It Much at
that," ' , — •
• •• "Keep Busy and Save"
lie believes, the secret of success
• In any ilusineii can be learned
' Nem the tees, •
"Keep by" he says, "and save,"
•geirin, 'who shIPped ;queen bees all
over the World after. he Uinta' he •
' could hatch tiled' in an inettbatot,
• first became •interested an beea
Culthre"when his father becaine.ill
, an er e n i ey. , , t ion,
4 tiV d o ly !lei
•
• • • '
"0.
Where The 1111 -Fated &kis $021c
• 0
.1121111
. •
FORECAST; . There's that .election
again. ...We're talking about it a
little prematurely perhaps, but
now. that the King and Queen are
on their way haelt*Englarid,,the
prospect of an autumn trip to the
•polls. is. Net. 1•topie of • cenvers.a,:
• tion ip caned/an;pQJjj4c5• •
• Wo believe in getting our guess
In early, toe. . en what the
Bouse aConintens is going to -
look like afteritie,battle;. ,It!ts our
oripinion, that the Givernment ;Will •
;halve josta' number of ae.atsote the •I
Conservativesi'„ (iw'Ontai10
1y).; that the Left7Wing.'gronp. of.
' SoCrediFarnier-Labor etc., ;„
' will there iti• larger numbers—
the'..
' West may never ,•again•vote
_*-enthuaiaStically.• for Liberals .'or. •
..,Conservatives -,-to, hold a',verY, ,ef-
fectiVe ,balance.; of power between
the-two-oldAtine parties. We ,can
" see both Liberals. • and „Cimperya-
• tiVes toadying to the Left -Wingers
• in 'Order to_:gain their -voting 'slip -
pert • in the flotise; are we
• crazy? •• . . •\
TO1P5 TODAY: he French .Gen-
eral Staff have been heard in re-
- cent -Weeks-to -brag that-the-Araiy •
• of the Republic' is now at its:great-
est efficiency since Napoleon, could
• lick the Germany Arzny with one
hand tied behind itioback.
• Major George Fielding Piot,
•Americari military expert, agrees.
Says" he • "It is the French • many,
not the German which ie pre-em-
ihent in Europe :today. This re-
mains a towering feat. Bat,? he
warris,-"with every year that pass-
es, the 'conditions: are likely 'to
• ter in favor of Germany, as her
• military miehine improves, enlar-
ges, gains experience and train:- -
POST -CONFESSIONAL: • :When
• Colonel T. E.. Lawreriee'S "Seven
Pillars of Wisdom" weal published,
the world thought that • in it, the
• great British leader of the Arabs
• (doting the Great War) had. made
• his • last confessions. Nev. new
•light is being. thrown on the mys-
tery -hero's actions aftei :the War
with the publication of a c' hapter
,•
previously orriitted •frona the book.
'This chapter reveals that the Col-
••onel knew all along 'that the, Arabs
trctild be dou,ble-crossee by mrjt.-
am, 'The Colonel hadconsistently
refused money and . decorations
• 'from the British Government, re-
• putedly as a nrcitest ,againat Brit"-
ain's welching on territorlil pro--
• mises made to buy' up• the Arabs
• for the Allies: •• •-• ,
THE WEEK'S QUESTION 1 Why
• was Hitler mad when the story ,
"was recently circulated that three,
• new typewriters had been deliver- •
ed tb his Berlin °Mee? Answer:
• The Fuehrer's eyesight is giving
Y him such a deal of trouble his
secretaries have tO ty,pe- • his
speeches On machines •that have
• ;extra4arge • sized letters. Hitler
refuses to ,appear in public with
glasses and can't read ordinary
—printed -Matter without them. •
• National Forestry
Program's Started
-Enrolment. in •the National, FOr• •
••estry .PrograM Is now under,. way, •
according to the Deminitin 'Forest
' Service of the Department of Mines
and 'Resources,' Ottawa. Selection'
of y,oitlis is being made from 'an- .
plicants who are between,the.agea
ofeighteen and" twenty -11;7'e, resi-
dents of cities, towns or Villages,
ad wh� ire certified by a Muni-
• .ciPal or relief authority as (being
unemployed , end in ne2essittnis Cir-
cumstances."
Thousands Enrolled.
Between 800 and 1,000•yontlis.will
be given training in camps under
the control of the Dominion and ,
, another 3,000 will be -enrolled in
provincial projects,
.
Dominion operations wilL be car-
• tied .out in the following forest 'ex• - '
peritnent statiOns: Acadia, in New
Brunswick; -"Valeartier in Quebec;
Petawawa in Ontario, •and Kahan-
askis in. Alberta, •
.• Assist 'Ringers and Wardens
The projects WilLinelude censtruc-
Ube .of roads, trails; telephone hoes, •
lookout towers, fireguards, and
other • improvenients required for
forest prolection and development. '
A !Welber of the, young men will'
be detailed as Assistant to the rang-
ers and park Wardens. tither` leftist -
es of work will include the treat-
ment of timber stands to • inarease
growth, improve timber quality and
fanner: Species of high commercial
value by thinninge, releate 'cut-
tings, andSirailar oierations. Atten-
tion will be paid ,to forest secrea-
tional by, the provis-
• ion of facilities for *riot eastip, .
sites, fire -places and wells. Pro- '
' vidiatt is 141.20 being made ler the.
' totistreetien of dams and strewn
improvements to aid fishing con-
ditiens, and fee miscellateenti Prot
jectii "to aisist Wild life •conserva-
01040010,
......0000!..40400.010 400,00 0,010000401000 .00)0011,0,010,4,000000
a*s41:;•"ri‘,
With a buoy in the foregrilund marking the exact spot where die British
• submarine, Thetis, lies under 130 feet of water; the naval air compres-
sor ship, Camel, is shown lashed- to the -salvage tug fromNvI_Idg.I____ALI*._vers
went-;--down-to-determine-what-best nietlie-cluto use in a new atteinlit to
raise the ill-fated submarine. -Ali hope of saving any of 'the 99 persons:
trapped aboard the Thetis- was abandoned when experts declared that
chlorine and carben monoxide gases must long since have killed all on
',board. •• .
• SAKEP.
:N. 1:. A R I 0.
UTDOO RS
„A NEW FLY. DOPE
The •time is drawing near *flee
hlagit flies: mosquitoes • and :other
insects will again plague the quiet
and Peaob of elle angler while he
peacefully enjoys. his early summer
• fishing. • Bat it may be a consola-
tion to some to know that, at last,
a Powerful and effective letiea has
• been invented,' which Will forever'
protect •the fisherman from his,' an-
nual trials and tribulations.
• The eew lotion, which repels the
mosquitoes, black flies and other
• insects: and at tbe same time has a
plealant odour, is. tie: -latest dis-
covery of a group of scientists that
are working in .collaboratiOn. with
• an industrial 'company. The work
on the part of the research 'special::
.lets was not any too pleasant ac-
cording to reports,. The',spent a
great many hours in mosquito -in-
• tested swamps, trying manY varie-
tiesofexisting insect, repellents
and many new formillas. They fin-
ally -discovered that, in .every case,
it wasn't the smell.which kept the
mosquitoes and back flies from
• biting. They finaliY invented a new.
forniula and when they uSed it on
.their arms and,face, it kept the in-
• Sects away: • •
• To this formula, a• pleasant per-
funie was addect..thrther tests then.
proved the new lotion to be ,abso-
lutely harmless for 'even the most
tender. skin. So it'seems that this
• summer •Canadians, enjoying their
favourite sport on rivers, lakes and
streams cancsuccessfully fight off
• biting. insects' 'without having to
lIse,.a lotion with a strong 'unPleas.
•• ant odour and hwithout fear of even -
harming the ....most_sens itiye skin.
And THAT is good -news!• •
HERE'S MORE DOPE• : .
One of our druggist friends, a
contest dabbler in ehemicals .and
anxious to help fellow anglers, has
also elaimed the following to be the
"real stuff":
• Oil of citronella — 1 ounce - •
• Camphorated oil' •-•-• l'-3 oz.
• On of tar 1-3 ounce
• Oil pennyroyal— one clra.
• Castor oil — four ozs.
' This will make a package easy to
carry, can be obtained at -any drag -
store, stay', on longer and is easier
to wash off. And 'they" don't like
" •
It is said that 'all the Roose-
• veils, F. D. R is proudest of, is
•young John for the way he's kept
• phigging away in that Boston dere
and avoiding headlines. And the
family thinks john is more like
his mother than, any ,of the other
• children.
•
liverzracionsly
Wr!t!r Advises
.,• . . .
Ep..1...4A1.,inT.L.,:ea •eif
Don't Fall .Below Standard ..
• of Mother's Hospitality,
,Bride ,Broder.,. Asks •
•
Bride Broder (Il1ss Miu'y White),
Toroeto •wonianAouroalist, speak.'•
ing at Picton last -Month, asserted
that, it was in nines of peace that
it • was • essential that people _live• —
araciously. ygraeioas living, the
popular columnist explained, •she
meant simply, unhurriedly,
• calm, hospitable and •withoitt os-
tentatious .display." • • ,
• , '"That we have fallen far below
• the standard of hospitality of our,
Mothers and 'grandmothers," was
' the opinion Of Bride Broder,: She '
• altribUted,' the 'so-called depravity
•.
•
'among the younger generation to
• Mothers who' did not have tbe time
to make a proper bored for their
children'. • •,
Dephirea Hurried Atmosphere '
,'Waste is the opposite to gaaci-'
• ells living, as oppOsite as the p6les,,,,
There cannot be gracious living. in
a hurried atmosphere," shel•egaid,
and, quoted'. Earl Baldwin of Bawd-
.' ley who, whlle.111 Toronto, charg-
ed that, "adeeleration. today is talo.
en as the manifestation of 'civil-
•
ization." Bride Etoder frankly„ add- •
' ed that hurry was a manifestation
• of empty-headedness, and, showed a
• disordered mind and nature. •
gracious living. included the' ele-
ments Of living one's daily life ,as,
if visitors were always pretedt.
When-visiters-did-airive
• no need of rush and confasiOn.
• GraOlons•living is simple living and
. not trying "to live up tolthe Jones-
• Armies March
O Stomachs
•.,„ . •
Vitamins may decide the Out-
come of the next war, according `
'to Dr. Harold J. Jeghers, assistant
professor at ' Boston University
••schoel of medicine. .
Alid he believes that the demee-
, racies *hold the advantage in this
• respect. ,
Dr. Jeghers • said that night -
blindness,
caused by Vitamin, A. de- .1
• •ficiency; prevented • thousands of
*Gernianl soldiers .from fighting" in
' the trenches g night during the
• World War.
• Among many other -conditions
possible from vitamin deficiencies .
are skin disease's, ,exopthaImia, in-
• fections,. rickets, acurvy, pellagra,
beri-beri, ,excessive bleeding, oste-
• omalacia, Nervous disorders and
• war edema. •
THE MORNING AFTER
• What weare afraid of •now is
• that after the Icing and Queen
have gone. our. Canadian- problems
are going tel. look dingier than .
"ever..-----Torento Saturday Night.
. .
FROSTY •.OUTLOOK-..
focal political argument , end -
'ed 'abruptly- when elory asked a
• Liberal what Was going tk,halnien
' in September or NeVemhe4 ;"It's
...going -to snow," replied.:the Grit• .
—Kitchener 'Record. . a,• • •
'FICNIC „INDISPENSABLE
:'.• With'the plcnic season approach-
.in.g. rapidly, ;it' 'is .,:intere.sting • .te • '
"nete :that some natives in- Borneo •
use :red ants for seasoning pur-
poses. Over • here they're often •
used. unknowingly.—St.. 'Thomas
Times -Journal; • • ••
GIVE IT •F• .ATRONAGE • •"
.Residents of. a Western Ontario"'
district,.•are said .to have experi-
•enced • "tugging at' the • .heart -
'strings", when their laranCh
rail-
way Ihre-w"--a-s7cloTed;"77Tirarifn-411-7-
, have .been prevented if the people
questionjiadhad enough .fore-:,
sight to give. the line 'decent pat-.
renage.—,fireekviIle Recorder. and
Times. • - • •
. .
IN DOLLARS AND .CENTS•
Safety campaigns 'are usually
:thought of • in teres Of the human
lives and human suffering involved.
, That is nattral enougVand right
• enough, for they are the first con-
sider-at:ion; But there -is another •
side to it, and one not usually So
• easily` grasped. , That is the tre-
mendous economic lois . involved,•
More. than 100;00 ••• people 'are
killed, and- 375,000 crippled " for
life every year, arid the • •annual
• eConornic loss is not less.than three.
billion dollars, According to D. D. -
• Fennell, president of the National
• Safety Council of the United •
• StateS.-2-RegineLeader-Post.
'Immigration
, 1To Dominion
On'Upswing ,
Per • Cent Higher Last
L
Year, With Increase In
• Sight
•Canadian immigration is on the
upswing after striking 'its lowest
• known, a report released by the.
Department of Immigration re-
• veals. • ,
, Ah increase of eine per cent for
the fiscal year ended. last March
'" wasnoted in the report. Last year.
17,128 'innnigranta. arrived in the,
• Dominion conipared with 16,643 tor• . •
the 'year previoes. British immi-
grants totalloed 3,375, United States
_,....koweed from other countries,
•••72-6; ,stfid: ••
• Refugees Now Coming In '
The figures will be considerably
• bigher for 'the coming year it Was
understood, due to an • influx of
German refugee's • from ' CzeCho- '
Slovakia. The first of these arriv-
ed- recently and it is expected when
• , the migration' is complete nearly
1,500 families will have been;Set-
'tied on farms in Canada.,
•••••••••610m1.0001,00
WATCK
the Specials
You van depend •on the ape-
• .
cial sales tire merchants of
our town announce; in the '
columne'of this paper. They
' mean money saving to our
• readers. It always paysto'
patronise the merchants
who advertise.. They are
not afraid of. their mer-
• chandise .or.their prices. '
Don't Plead Too
Hard ForWork
Profes or Giving Advice To
Graduating Students Urges
Them Net To Be Too Do.
cile in Seeking Employment
"Don't take' rudeness from any •
one," Mrs: Alys Dwyer Vergara,
associate prefeseer ef "spaech, at
the College of New Rochelle, N. ir.,
advisedithe graduating claim OD job
/Mating.
• The most tliffieult thing to get
aceustorned to after yOu 'leave gel-
, lege," she; „said, "is •the • different
• attitude people have toward you.
On (Amelia every one 18 interest- •
ed,An your welfare; Ili business„nie
• body 'whet:lief:You make good,
or not.,
• YoUll Be 'Beaten' Down'
• • "With thlil in mind, I caution
you, 'don't plead for wOtirand..dou't
'.takeaudeness'frOin a•ny. One, If PM
are too docile you'll be beaten down:
• in salary, your talents will be ques-
tioned awl if you areAlred..tat-all,. -
it will be fbr pity- rather -than
-ability."'
How Cao I
•'BY AM NE ASHLEY
Q.—How .can I make a loose
nail Arm in a Plastered wall?
A.—Saturate a. small piece of•
-wadding with 'glue; wrap as much •
" as possible around the nail arid re-
• insert into the hole, pressing in
• firmly. Remove the excess glue
with. a wet cloth. When dry the
nail will be rigid. Any loose chunk
ofplaster can. be fastened in place
• With the glue, • • .
• . Q.—How can I freshen rancid
• 1::Utter? -
• - can, be freshened if brok-
en up and put into fresh milk. Al-'
• low it :to • absorb the nilk, drain •
thoroughly, then 'wash\ in cold salt- :
ed water ,and Wait 'it againinto
the desired form. .
. Q.—How:'can I bleach a faded
yeah dress entirely white?
A. -Boil the dress in two gal-
lons of water, in whiCh has been
nodiasolyed a half eup of eream of
taztar._Hom:
can I reinoye* tobacco
Stalin, from ash trays of brass;
nickel, Or, antimony?
A. -They can be cleaned byap-
• plYiag, denatured ''ileohol with an•
old toothbrush and then washing
in hot vinegar and salt.
HOw can I treat perspiring
A:—Shake some bora.cic acid in-
to the stockings each morning, and
this will not only act as a deodor-
ant butdrives the feet comfort.
Escaping from the zoo int Rid'
de Janeiro, Brazil, a leopard ate
a lamb,:a eat and a few chickens
before being shot. ••
A House Should
Look Like Home
•_Architect Says That Is The
Prime Requisite In, House
)3uilding—Have It "Closet()
Ground"
"WlLliarn C. Ltidlow, veteran archi-
tect and chairman .of the CC/Mira'
tee on ,publie. informatioa of the
American 'Institute • of, Architects;
explained:what, in his opinion, con-
• Iftifeted, a good-looking houep. Re
• said:
.. •
of -411, a home mut look
likp a home, and.I.mean,, of course,
it: "mast took like a home' to the . •
average -man. If it Is a rectangular• •
hoz, with a flat rootand plainwa,
2.harfaCes, ,it , remindicx:the, 'average
...'"ael:npnled'cot ;let ects4te:r- 3 7. t 11. e peupalats etay,
1:ttilO4Slincit"
tivathioell;
short time nOssible; and
gladly :1ea wbeii te whlStlebiows..
' •
Must Be A Good Neighbor ' •, • ,
•"Second.1r •4espertance--perlia.pe--4,--• ---L-:•••- •
to good iraliie,•a housemust be &tr.. '
prepriate in ' appearance to its en-
virohment; it must be a good neigh-
bor to the other houses of .its cora; •
munity, and zit)* suitable to the
• climate. A.modernistic or Mediter-
ranean house is .juSt as .much out
of the place on Cape Cod as a Cape
Cod or Colonial licaule:laimjatiami•
'or Los Angeles. ' • • •
"A ' third requirement: for the
good-looking. house is that it shall •;
site; a' tall•hpuse if a knoll
is just as. bad as a squatty house in. '
a hollow." For .henfelike feeling,
'most hoesea ahOuld be as :close? to. "
the ground' tis'posaible." •
• '•
l••
•
Click
: . and
• it's open!
Click •
'it's closed'
Bee Hive Offers
D ri p -C ut
SYRUP
At Big Saving
,A smooth aluminum
• band snaps over the
opening and cuts off •
the syrup -there is _no
drip. It is a grand lug
to, serve syrup from.
To get yours air a big 4 -
saving send 50c and
four 5-1b: Bee Hive
Syrup labels (or the
• equivalent in lbs, and
50c) for the 12 -oz. size
that retails at ovw $1.
For the 40't. size I
send ten 5 -lb Bee Hive
Syrup labels a nd.$1 (or a,
the equivalent in lbs.
• and $1) The 40 -oz. •
size sells retail it $3.
Mazi requests to the
•,reanufactuter-the
addressisoneverylabeL
eeeiliNe getup.
LIFE'S LIKE THAT
•By Fred Neter
lba by Wed ribber) I
, • -0 II I
BICYCLE
RACES
2/8 4, ;' c't
(, o "
� 4;) o
0
yQ
01‘
00 it) 0
0
0 •
• 0 •
q1/4410. • elb. • • • •
• •
:1
. • 0 .0. 0 0,-.
• •
2.1,00
"If you don't pay the i4nt by tonight I'm &mita have t� put
your wife and hide autll
•
II POP—The Answer
000 0, ro
.".
By: J:MILLAR. yVATT
• 4
BOUGHT THClv, A SILVER
BUTTER CUSH
, FOR twEtR WEDDING ,PR&SGtit
. WHAT SHALL PUT
ON THE CARD?
. . •
, • • - """:
•
" *".
6-4
• • ,
' .
(CosSytIgbi. ,10313, l'Ite,b011 SYnAltAte, inC
• -4'
•
•