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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-08-03, Page 2,Parents Look Back! Jaid You Hate Having to Kiss. Certain 'Relatives'? rDid you tell a little lie occasion-' 'ally and then feet terribly •gu#Ity .and ' 'w.ish • that" '`your ; parents wouldn't be cross if you confessed and got it off your .mind? , Did . you feel that. no one in the •house was being °'sympathetic, en- ,ough about your homework, and ';''that •you'd be .deliriously happy if ' • only .One. Person .would • be . nice bout it ' and help In a• really prat tical manner? ' 'DUI-. you loathe eating ;certain .' • footle, such 'as.' greens, and ,yet •l .e. • readyto eat:.just a . little . witheut ' erotest if ,.only • that would ;satisfy • the powers -that -were? • Dii}n't you: hate- having fo wear. 'clothes'that: were, cut down for you and looked i't? Did you hate having to 'kiss eth- tain relatives anal wieh:that your .parents' and the relatives would be.. satisfied' with a polite. "Geed" after- noon'!" and a handshake?. Dld Y:ou Long. To Make Real Noise? Did • you. longe to' :,make a real T.ndise•..without fear of •being'told ,to behaiie, • every two. or . three''sec- ends? Didn't ',you sigh ,for .some' . place, be .it ever so • plain and • bumble, where you could make a :noise? Did you wait, .with' beating heart, Aa. for father to , come home and Wish that mother had .done the punish- tug? Didn't you long to. be able to tell your story' .first? . ' • . If these things happened . to, yen • ,when ' you ere: ,.w you bear them inmind, in alltheir lurid colors now that'you have •. children '...of your ,own? If you do remember these ;childish fears and so forth 'j Liu • `vein' -be 'a `"better. iat7ier • anti" mother! . KEEPING FIT t.wITL,.,THAR:s Ping .pong:'tennis,:'badminton, and :'swimming are the favorite sports of Judy Garland. She plays alt very well and uses these games for her con- ditioning exercises. The Place k Which You Live A. Happy Peaceful Interior lm- ei;'t>sia""� iia Your . Home • , Colors a are' eo important to the making of a happy home, since ,they. create that atmosphere of ser.:._, •enity which sends us Ont feeling at. peace with .ourselves and our world and welcomes vs back with PO same 'friendliness: But having found tbat glorious shade of red or •orange or vivid green, go easy with it. Use it as an effective touch here and there of colorful originality a wastepaper basket, a cushion, • candles,. a quaint jug or bowl. 'Over- • do the touch and the effect is' gaudy, restless, tiresome to live with. • Wallpaper is, all-important' and' therefore must ' not be 'chosen en- • tirely on its' own merit but -as the. background which is going to4sb.ow up' the furnishings of a room t'o the heat advantage, Cowslip and 'pale , sunshine. shades, for instance; shote - op the highlights of your color m ,schee' in the moat considi erate way. • These shades appear to'give' add- ed dimensions to a room. So do the light shades of blue hut, of course, like green, they ask •fora sonny reom. • Nowa Yew safe rules. Make sim- ' iUcity the keynote . . remember that the most. charming. etfeets' are •always simple: Be colorful, lay all Meana, but in a restful way. ' Avoid too violent contrasts especially between wallpaper and Woodwork: Where possible have these, toning. Beware of too ornate friezes, particularly in small ioomb, • if your abode is small, it' is' a goodplan to 'have walls the same tone throughout,, especially all on one' floor, so that when chore '•Are left • ajar, ,there • Is a pleasing leg€Oct of Contiinuityr intend of a lar ring chopped -Up 'Medley of color: Point thy tongue on the. an•Oil of truth. 4 ROYAL AIR FORCE: On the anal- . 'versary of Louis,,Bleriot's• history- making flight across the Engilsh Channel thirty years ago, Britain sent .249 of her most modern sbonab- • ing planes roaring.over France last week, ,It was the :biggestwar-test flight ever nnsdo in history and waa an` tmpreasivxe den onst'ration of too' Progress in aviation since •Bleriot made. the crossinga;thte decades. Although' the ,incl t „waft, Merely a ,demon;;tratien the Axis powers velli ''have h9 doubt ' now • =re- garding 'Britain's •power•. in the air and it is. abacist. • significant to • _ learn that ;Hitler mathe day of'tiiis "demo titration.- was suffering •froin nervous' shtick. ,• ' NEW FARMING ;UNIT: in• Dear- born, Michigan, Henry':Ford-exhib- ited. before 400 newspapermen and agricultural experts recently.a "new mechanized farming unit which he predicted would . revolutionize' Agri- • 'culture and • "snake draft animals economically :obsolete." ' Said`. he: "it "Will displace the horse on the farm just as the automobile displac-, : ed, him on the road.'): Mr. Ford's horse-ilisplacer con8ists. of a small. • lightweight'traetor with detachable implements"embodying• new :tricks 'of coupling : and operation develop-. ed"by an Irish°engineer named Har- ry' Ferguson' a The • •Ford -Ferguson. :tractorunit has . many .revolution—, ary virtues, and costs, about $585• BRITAIN'S CANNY MOVE: When - Britain . decided ato . extend credits alta iirng'$'30t,'69O,00u' -to tea- 'potepa tial alliesfor the purchase:.of Mum - Khans" s" and .other war materials she made a :canny ,mover,. More potent ' thanthreats of force, is the threat Of e.conomii resistance. ,.to fascist. plans . of 'conquest. While relative military strength has been ,riebat- able—England and France are un beatable' in .the field '•offinance= and Hitler knows it. Thus th : more important result qt. the . British . de= vision is: its moral effect -+-for •Brit-' ' ish .credits` are more convincing era dente •of '• futtlre intentions' than ' British :Promises. • 150TH •BASTILLE DAY: July 14th marked the 150th anniversary of, the fall of. the Bastille; The cele- brationatoo'krthe form of .a tremere does military pageant this year and not sincerecent war scares has :France' seenesueh a gay, self confi• dent and , joyous Bastille Day, "prompting dbservea's to note that in the war of nerves the Republic has won a -great victory..--- ..- Ta 'most of us Bastille Day 117s much more '.significance than, just " as National holiday. To Frenchmen. and to the rest of the :world it is a .memorial to the "principles of 1776 and 1789", to ideas common to Western .democracy. • When 'we think of the steaming of the Bast- ille we realize that it was an act of. defiance against vested authority, a dramatic and - concrete • assertion that men•can and will overthrow a government with which they are dissatisfied. The family Bible of the • late Czar Nicholas II of 'imperial Rus- sia has been found in a second= hand• b okstore in London.; The Bible, • bound in satin- smoothleather with ' solid. ' gold clasps,_ has ' been returned to the British and. Foreign : Bible Society, which gave it to the Czar for his Coi'onat1on in May, 18.96. • To prevent the formation of a black sulphur line between 'the • yolk and white, the egg should be shelled .while still'hot fend plunged immediately into'cold water. Detroit Red Wings' Star Is Golf Champ. et.te Kelly, •or`Charlottetown, star with the Detroit Red Wings in the National Hlockey League, 'success- fully defended his', golfing, crown during the New Brunswick -Prince Edward Island championships on the Algroneuin Cduntvy Club links at St. Andrews -by -the -Sea, N.B. Kelly had a•.gross of 309 ,and net ell 131 for 7 holes'ta' lead tthe.. field of Maritime golf experts. Swimming at Katy's Cove and par- ties at the Algonqurri Hotel added to the fun ,of the tournament at the famous °resort.. • TLI*T y Fred Neper • P;P'S PIARY• '•`h tossed a coin to see who .'should have the large cage, and the parrot lost" • ht. T A R I O' UTDOQR:S By 'VIC:BAKER -• SKEET AND TRAP SHOOTING The ten zone winners in the Do- minion Marksmenn '.19:39 national skeet and trap .shooting Champion- ships, whoe.merged victorious over some 400.ef,'the country's . leading clay -pigeon', marksmen competing on'"` 30 skeet teams ' and 24 trap squads, were announced recently from the headquarters -of the Dom- inion Marksmen headquarters in • Montreal. • The first renewal of ,the Domin- ion Marksmen • •national 'shooting championships, this' year's shooting • tournament will give some '3,000 skeet marksmen • .throughout Cah- ada, their second : championship team since the. sport was;introduc- ed to. thiscountry at St. Stephen, N.B:, In 1929. Fort trap shooters the competition marks only, the second time . that a national trap title' bas been at stake place Jack Trotter, old-time" Winnipeg marksman, • vented' the ,.clay -pigeon 'more than .60• years ag,i. . • Dominion Skeet'Championship Defending the. Canadian Skeet Championshipin the:Domninioirfim' els held at the, end of July is the York Skeet CIu+h team from •Toron- ':to. This -team posted the highest score• among the ,skeet zone -final- ists. The Toronto :-team scored 236 out of-a'possible .250 points to sue cessfuily defend t.ts Central 'Zone title against six. other. entries 're- presenting Hamilton, Copper Cliff, London, "Levaelf and Toronto. The -.other skeet Zone winners were: St. John'^Skeet Club, Montreal Skeet Club, Medicine flat„ Gun Club and Trail,. B.C., Trap and Skeet. Club. Dominion Trap Shooting Championships' - ' In the trap shooting champion- .• ships, 'the defending national title- holders itleholders from the. Saskatoon,.Gun Club successfully defended .their Mid -Western Zone'title after a very' thrilling shoot -off against a crack five -man ,squad from the Medicine Hat Gun' Club. The two teams tied in %the regular zone shoot ,,with a score of .243 out of a possible $50 • In the shoot -off the Saskatoon men • outshot .their rivals by ' a single point atter posting a score of .34.2 out of 260. The Medicine Hat team fell to second place among the other • three entries from Cal, • gary, ,Edmonton' and Saskatoon who represented the 25 registered gun clubs in the Mid -Western Zone. The other four trap zone win- ners were; Dartmouth, N.S., Rod and Gun Club, Grand Trunk 'River- side ,Gun Club of Montreal, Sun- ' ningdale Gun Club of London, Ont. and the Vancouver Gun Club. Many go through life as rivers go to the sea, taking the easiest course. ' - Man must love and be beloved. We must subdue self or '•ser-. , vice. • • - Don_ 't Get SSB In a Your. Eyes Protect Them With Dirk Claw ses or a Drop " of 'Wrinkles Will Result It's a common enough: impulse to fling ,protection . to the winds, ..or whatever winds blew before ..the sunshine camealong, but that . doesn't, do. away .with the.common ;'sense' fact that 'your eyes need•••1t;: your head needs it, .arid most eel, tainly your beauty needs. it. ' First, let's be sensible about your eyes, and, mix.. the sense with fun. Gone .ate the days when' dark glasses were `either a sign ,of'..de rr • fective sight or an attempt•, at dis- guise. ' .. Today, on 'a sunny day,' they are as'ind'sliensable as lipstick, and even More useful: An .afternoon's sunbath,, without glasses, can un- do all thegood that' a year's care . . ever: did. An hour's squinting into the 'sue ,can produce a finer crop of wrinklesthan adecad'e of time.. B s A ` ,•Yo c., • BY' ELIZABETPI EDY 'SUMM'ER' READING' When. the mercury rises and our brows bead with the heat of sum - seer we turn to the more amusing in the realms of literature. For summer. reading we find that the shorter stories and , human anec- dotes of, some ofthe popular essay- ists are delightful, . , Among the favorites we have se- lected three to recommend. One , is `. that little ,masterpiece from the, pen of, Cornelia Otis. Skinner., "Ex - Ouse It Please," in which the.•autk, or carries you along through a set- '. les of, her amusing experiences, such as -meeting old 'school friends and not having one .thing in com- mon with•.tsem,, ,and'' learning to ride a horse. One • of the . best collections 'which has not`receiv,ed the• attention it deserves id Harold); Nicholson's "Small 'Talk." Many ; are familiar with the Hon. Harold Nicholson, M.P-, in "Punch" magazine but they should' be more :amiliar'with these witty essays. "Small Talk" is a tonic! • The third to come td'mind at this season isone that is' listed among ,the new books: Dorothy Parker, to-• vorite of many has released a new collection'of her short;stbries entit- led, "Here .Lies.". Mrs. Parker in all her' works, shows . perfectly, certain situations common to the livea of millions • of human beings of all classes, races . and .nationalities.. • Her wit Is at times barbed • and again she writes with com- passion but; at all times she is pen- etrating,' We guarantee that one or ' all three of these will prove entertain- ing end will leave thexeader chuck- ling huckling and refreshed. ' REG'LAR FELLER„/, --The Expert. NOW THAT Y UNNA5TAty' ALL ABOUT JIU-JI75U 'Z LIr TRY IT OUT • �CNA LIrII= FELLER VOICE o! the PRESS .FOR HOME AND COUNTRY • We Bever 10-e eatoppbrtunity to say a good •word'about WomeQs's In atitutes tot of all the •organii'htioni rendering pubiio,and Unselfish ser- •vice'"in a community,. weplace these at the top,: Their.' activities' are sensible andpractical, mostly' of ;a ••humanitarian .character car ried en .without fuss or show. to .rte lievea and ;give comfort and happi=" ' ness to these less. fortunate Than' themselvs: — Bewmarivitie States - THINGS WE LEARN • a From 'John . Gunther's' "Inside • Asia,";you' learn that the Japanese Prime Minister's salary is $2,593 a year;' a belch following, a meal in Nippon is a compliment; an aver- age of 29,000 persons are picked off the streets of ,Shanghai each year, dead of starvation, yet in the same city one r iy dine at. restaurant where a dinner: costs $60O,;that Am=_ erican cigarettes sell at a lower price in' India.'than in the United States. -- New :Yorke Post.. T•.: ..-..,...,. . dfA.l • s WHAT HITi,ER HAS. DONE TO . GERMANY Wo hear'.much of ghat Hitler bee . "done for Germaa\y." We hear less of what he has done, to .Germany. to Lerman'buina'n beings. What he has done to German but man beings is disclosed in part by - an apalysis which the New York Times bas made of German vital '. statistics. Thus.: , Since Hitler came to power In ' 1933 eases ;of diphtheria and scarlet fever bave`-viqualiy, doubled; et,. epival . meugit.is actually trebled. Food poisoning cases increased, from 1,565 in 1933 to 3,764 in 1937. Death ra Sween the ages' of one a .five Went up 12.5 per cent. Ito, irla and,20.per 'cent. for lioys. tween 1932 and 1936:Dttawa . ott Jrna#. • rr. • HARK ,JUNE 13RIDE3 Average Julie 'bride, according to - statistics; reFjutrea 428 • for. her trousseau:,. Which, wouldn't be sR bad if she didn't •refuse to wear the. sante .clothes a month or' so. latex. • - Sherbrooke Record. "A VERY WICKED MAN" • ; A daughter of Charles Dickens is quoted as • saying that the famous „author was "a very wicked 'man" . ' and that his family led the. very' . Dickens of a'.life with him. -- The. Stratford Beacon 'Herald, ': A teachable spirit is beautiul whether in a child o' one: of ma- ture years. Times being ;what they are, Monte Carle's' casino' now gives 1,46 patrons • bargain -basement gambling. , For two hours on cer- tain days, the zero on the roulette- wheels oulettewheels • is suspended, 'thus giving the 'customers a better, break° against the house.. ° CONVENIENCE. iii/7/"/-./ i % i.�i 3/-' %'� �%•4', iii�i��ia,��,�a;..,���, . ;,moi/,�/...,, \ , ,.. ;:„ ,,,21., ‘,1,, TIDE LAST GREAT • MYSTERYSTORY . WRITTEN BY. S .V.AN El. • ..rt'v�illbe published in BOOKform . it will be made _ intoe . a' `MOVING,. PICTURE • - • • Hers: is' the last crime solution of PHILO VANCE, one of the greatest detec- tives that ever lived in the pages of fiction . . the last great story of;that foremost writer of .mysteries, S. S. VAN DINE. The Star Weekly has secured the rights to be first. in all the world -to publish this story --,a thrilling mystery that involves two murders and the theft pf a priceless collection. of emeralds. "WINTER •,MURDER CASE," by S. 8. VAN DINE, will appear serially in The Star Weekly starting August 5. If you like • nirstery, written by' a master storyteller, dont miss a• single instalment of this fascinating book to be run exclusively in The Star Weekly. RTING AUGUST Sr" ISSUE 1 C'MQN,••Klb f 1.1.1- SHOW YOU -IME OF 11.15, INE POINTS 311U•-Jl'rABOSUTU lG JUS TRIED an MY JIU-JIT5U 014.A FELLER/ Z GRABBED) IM 9`f THE•ARM AN TwI TED ITTHROUGH I -11S t,EQGS, SNAPPED HIS CHIN PACK AN' BEFot2E IHE KNEW Vick HAPPENED 2 FOUN' MYSELF IN THE. W2CWIwR 1 J� .lay 'ENE BYLINES' 1 , if. as )0., ,,,,,,, , " ..‘ es. ,.... ,... „,_...i. ,....0*.c.i , '"'• ?..t 4hib iF .Grin,. • ,I"' a , %1 s• a Aill,.. n1)'tt' re,h.,n '�' 1