The Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-09-07, Page 7°
•P
Fuels: For
ie'l Oman Body•.
whether Weather lint or Cold
' A Little of Seven Fotsd
, Varieties ,Necessary ,
anadian Trobps.Are V n ward Agaaiu ps•i
Sabotage 4 Dotaimi>a
There are .Bevel). 'varieties of
Mod which we' all need to keep us'
' in health, says a doctor. Whether
the 'Weather is hot 0 or cold and
n
eeee- _ef ._ ;-�y1 li h _ lana
"a�,`'Lsisi�r�2p�!" ��_ wy�'?l3q yg;�3r.�"p=t11��j�•}E�130#y�,��tusr�
'• e m t 11 O ifi/WiV L ,•^M'(itl4�"e hj °�' -
tbese kinds eof food, No one variety
• can, replace another, • while • if, we
• eat too much 'of ,one,. and too little •
. of another; the ilalanee of; diges •'
tion and•nutr.tion is upset and'we
• may become ill.. Herd are the sev-
• en •plliars .of a healthy diet;
(1) '•Peeteine, 'These have been.
ebMpered to a building atones,' be-
•caues: ane the. process, o•1 digestion
and assimilation they;, are Con'vert-
ed into . actual _body tissue: 'Animgl
proteins ...(milkmeat; . Irish" an4
' eggs) are more- easily bniit•
• otlr "bodies' than `'Vegetable proteins
(such as peas•'and beans),.••,'
(2)•, Fats'.' From cream, 'butter,
eggs,. suet,, fat of'rneat., and• oils
(especially fish ells),.
(3). Carlitihydrates, ,•whicte give
energy olid are derived from, sugar
and' starch, ineiud.ing cereals,
bread root vegetables, .anti •.many
fraits,.• , '
.Mineral salts, from• m_
meat, ,the°`gerni .and thin inner cov
. ering, et , whole • cereals and from .•
'vegetables — particularly" -green
vegetables — and fruits- ••
-(5). Vitartiins, f and •with miner-
al salts. :in .the above• classes o3
food' and in 'fish oils, they .are ne-
ceseary for health, growth, . and
Protection Prom 'disease: ;
(6). Extractives. Flavoring es=
senses which .make foods gold to,'
smell and to'•taste and which help
us to digest out food. They• are'
found in al] natural••feeds and in •
'stock, settee, gravies and the wet -
REPERCUSSION,: One of "the first
••things the new German-Russlan
non -a ession c' ! was to
gt a t did
P
give Japan the jitters, turning the i
mer 'triangle -partner, Germany. Iro
mediately Japan . began • to look
with, :. favor again . upon Britain: •
Within three trays of• the .signing
of the new pact, .Japanese army
. men left off stripping .British hub-
jects in China,• .began to make ,the
German, 'nationals 'suffer the var
Taus' indignities instead.
'TIS, AN•• I•L.I- WIND: 'Wars- anti;
rumors AA wars ' end ' successive
. crises . in ,Europe dont, •help, bust,,
. nese Mach,' They.' bring .'trade•'e- b :.
tween ' countries to <a "standstill
play',havoc with the s.tock'market,
chase' customers away from, every
Mercantile door, 'throw, the, youth
of the land into •a' frame of •rhino'
where .they tb4'nk a. hand-to-mouth.
existence ie.. the only possible one.
But ....'it's an 1'11 wind that
blows nobody „good. Europe hang-•
ing on the brink of catastrophe has
accomplished one wonder. It .has
succeeded; in bringing bn'tario's
• Mr. Hepburn' to Ottawa, to confer
with federal ;officials . , '
ELSE FORGOTTEN: Have
not, heard much Valk of an •elec-
tion this Fall, eh, since . e• Danzig
crisis started? Ears straining. 'to
Hockey Star • Drowns . .
r
ARI'.
`U"DOOR_S
By VIC BAKER.
ONTARIO"hS4C ` T TEAM WINS
DOMINIONTITLE 3
Posting the highest individual•
Score among the finalists in the na-
tional. skeet championships, which
trap competition, Friel Lister• fed
Toronto'•s York Skeet •Club'to the
successful defence of its Dominion
•' q,
, •title..'.
+i
The five man .teeth representin-'t
Canada's second oldest skeet club
• .broke 'hed8+ x '500 •targets . to out •
-
Shoot•tthe four other entries 'in the
final' _Match b3' a wide margin, ;Sec-
And place was taken •by, the 34ont- ,
real':Sheet Club's No,. 2• • Team •.
Whose score .of .440'1eft,therh. 28
points: behind the' victorious..Tor
' data ;squad The other ent ies• and..,
, aepeesNwere•: Saint 'Bohn, N.$i,•:.,
Skeet Club .48g, Trail, ,B.C.,'Trap •'
and Skeet Club 424, and the Medi-
cine Hat, Alta.,. Gun Club 424.:
With a brilliant 'display of, •
'marksmanship, Lister missed, only '
three ttlaydiigebn"targets) out of •
.the hundred•.'thrown as • hie. score
of 97 led' t)i .Toronto; marksmen .,
ll "' to victory in the nation-wide' tour -
1 :nament.,
•
In face• of European events, the Dominion .government has taken steps to:.rev'ent. • sabotage of 'lm-
portantpublic• buildings, transport and communicat ion' • lines. At the RIGHT,'"a, sergeant . of the Lincoln
'and We1E,and Regiment is shown standing guard on a •bridge" over • the•. Welland.' canal, while • a Lewis', gun
crew •is.see'n, LOWER LEFT, keeping a watchful ey'e' on.' the .canal it'sel'f, In campat •Thorold 'Ont, these• so'l-
di.ers, UPPER LEFT, gather • •around ' as one. of...the.ir " kr de receive s . sh v r n
tom, a s e , s a , a, e f om': the .company barber,
prior • to taking 'up, sentry duty $
, .•
1
down the' sink! (i•n steaming, or in,
• 'casserolo 'cookery, they, Are con- •
•served ate'', utilised),. ••
• ('V), \'.Vater in ample Quantity.
• Besides. building the -betty and
gi.viug, energy., the digestion of the
:'rood .produces heat and so maint
ains the warmth of .the body, In •
summer, therefore, we.have to lith ;
it the body's protection of heat 'by
eating:less of the heat -producing
foods. such as sugar, fat and the
.starch, ,replacing them,•with •more
fruit and vegetablet.
Airplanes. Aid
Survey :Parties.
. Air Transportation In North-.
land Expedites Work; of
gineers=Camps .Moved �y
.Planet.
Aie•transpartationepla3'ed •.an—ipl-
• portarit part in the survey of _the ' •
Saskatchewan•Alberta '' boundaip"
last sumi)t'er, 'according to the, De -
...Apartment. of Mines .and Resources,
• Ottawa:. Airplanes ' equiplied'. with
floats were successfully used as •a
means of transport for' the survey
• party. The 'air service: was supplied
by private eo.nipanies.'operating in:
•the neighborhood of the . s,urvey •
a��'d, •by arrangement,' an airplane
came to .the survey party's camp
on• selected days 'and moved• it ,to
the site chosen.for the next camp.
••• There were eight camp moves ne-
,eesse.ry, •averaging ' 'about seven
miles per,meye,. °
..Moving a survey camp by air-
plano •has many advantages• aver
moving it- by pack .horse. canoe,
man -packing or dog train With
the plane, the cook add, his 'helper,.
with perhaps ono extra man,, can.
manage the .whole2 move and. the
survey work can proceed es Usnal.
'on proving 9aj Mioving days occur`
about' once' eeheek and as the air-
plane conies in it brings fresh' sup-
plies; doing way with the old eou-
dit'ions of rancid •b.tcou, dumpy sug-
ar'or wet' flour. \t.til was received.
regularly, and, a!t.iiouch' the work
a as .Tieing .cari ped ori i in a' remote'
•dietriet, it was mesh like tntiking a
survey hear centres of population.
- Export Trade's ' x
Huge Increase
Ottawa Records Large • Gain
.In Past Six 'Months-•-Canad-
' ian Trade Expands Gener-
ally.
Ciin:tda's export trade during the
month of July was valued' at $90,-
797,050,an increase of '$23,881,333
over duly; 1938. 'according to , a
statement issued by Hon. W D..
Euler. • •
' This increaso Is in keeping. with
• •a general expanision of trade in
recent months,'' For the three
Menthe ended with July total ex-
ports were valued at $278,049,915,
,�i ,compared *lth $201347,165 for
trio same three mouths in 108,
teitstanding features of •the Tuly
t ode were tare contliu ed large in-
• . creases In (lie ,o'po 'ra to rill trite—
• ed State4 and the lln'ted• ICingdlom.
To the teenier, tato aini utit' was
$41,996,027, compared with $21,645,-.
5lk3 s .p�rrttr� •of 12045h,5 -22 -,or'' 93•
:cent ane _ to the IJnited:.
riO1L X31,*vYia,,u z3<a il) t•t:. :,
' $25',1h5,516, a gain of $5,570,016 or
eilmeet 32 per cent A ,
Albert "Babe" Siebert, star of
the:; Montreal Canadiens' hockey •
team 'for many years; and recent-
Iv. appointed coach of the Flying,
Frenchmen, was drowned in Lake
Hurion while. •atteimptipg to re-
trieve an" inflated . autombbile •
'.tube which • had , got away from
•his little'daughter,
•
catch the dropping of a pin in the
Polish . Corridor, have .been mis-
sing bangs and' crashes on .our own
political floor.
POLAND'S HISTORY: 'In 965 un=
'der the reign ofeMieszko, whose
great -great-grandfather had,wreat-
ed its beginnings'— a province ex -
:tending from the Carpathian moun-
tains to the Bug River— from th'e
• . falling', Moravian- Empire; the hist-
or'ya of Poland as a kingdom'began.
She graduually,grew, atone time
•'extfetadertf ever part 'of what is
now Western Rustle and the Rus-
sian Ukralne,'as far -south as what.
formerly was Czeche-Slovakia,. and.
as far noetll.: as what is noee Lat-
viaon th:e Baltic, 'anti, with ,a west -
" 'ern frontier. approximately The'
same as her present border.
• Poland has been partitioned
four times.' She appeared as an
independent ibiate under treaties
concluded, in .1795, partitioned her
between Russia, 'Prussia, and Aus-.
tria. Not until •1919 did she again
appear as a nation, carved into.the
world neaps by the Treaty •of Ver-
. smiles. •
THE WEEK'S QUESTION: How
does the new Nazi-Commitnist pact
aid China? Answer: Japan's sung
of energy is already half -spent af-
ter two years of expensive untie
spared war in China. But Japan has
all along been Counting heavily
on Germany remaining an enemy
of Misfile. Now , Russia • is in a po-
si'tion-.to condentra•te new strength '
on the' Siberian-Maudhoukuo hoed- .
er,'foeal poinf•of Russian -Japanese,
hostilities, and give all her, atten-
.tion.to defeatingethe Japanese.
•
•
•
Meatless Months
The Shake Park at Port Eliz '
abeth, Natal', has a python 21 ft;
long, Which did plot touch food
for 19 months. It remained' per-
fectly healthy.
Hyl K
Niagara Moving
During the last 100 years Nia-
^. guru -Falls have 'moved back' near-
ly••460 it.,• and •are still •inoving.
wears away the rockabout 3 ft,
each. year. • , '
atl
EXCAVATION.
Out in ,Alberta they dig up dino-
sauis b.ut in.Ontario, 'merely Old
estates.. _'Toronto. Star. '
•
FORGOTTEN' MENII'
Rural mail carriers are to have.
special • markers to pnt o'h their,
•cars. Brit they have .not had their
pay raised. — Oshawa Times. "
LAND. OF ABUNDANCE
A'ndre'w. • Murray,••; . of Wilton.
Grove, Ont., .'planted one bushel of
Erhart oats `and harvested "93 :Bush
els:' Thera are many.•things.wrong
in. ,theworld but • there .appears• to
be nothing wrong with, an • earth•
which can yield, ,sucii an abund-''
ante.' -. Peterboreugh Examiner.
NOT TO .BE COUNTED ON '
An English: industrialist visiting
• Tprehto predicted a boom for Can-
adian industry in the event of war,
this.. country. beinglooked upon as"
a fist .line •reserve for the : Old
Land: That may be true enough,
but all . war "booms leave a head-
ache' and a demoralized economy.
The truth is, the world has' not yet
_recovered from the. Great War. i—
St. Catharines Standard.
ABOLISH• ROADSIDE •WEEDS'
One argument 'used' by the advo-•
cates' of reforestation: is that a
beautiful landecape will attract the
tourists; yet we cannot recall hear:
lig it said that sow, thistle, wild
-carrot, oxeye daisy,., orange hawk-
, weed, teazel and bine devil along
the roadside'and in' the fields will
- give any special delight to those
who travel the King's Highway. A
large•pereentage of 'the people of
Ontario apparently 'see, beauty :ra-
ther than decreased tiroductiorj
and loss in •this fauna of weeds for
many' roadsides are dirty and
fields are over -run.
The\ provincial highways 'should
be models of .cleanliness regardless
- •of .the standards of farmpractice
in 'the • com'ttrunities through which
they pass. — The Farmer's Advo-
°ate,
Twice Champ
Beard 'Grower.
The arena at Vernon, B.
was packed to its brim again this
year • for tl•+e grand finale carni -
veli .19$9, when . Bert Lamarche,•
for the seeond,year;in a roW,
awarded the palm' for haoing
grown' the gushiest beard.
OId Fallacy
Is` Expkded
salt cies Not Cense Harden.-
ing of the Arteries
A Irl
here •is •proof that• should, dis-•
• prove conclusively' . the ,popular.
misconception .th t ,salt. is harmful
to the human system, that it cats
,;es hardening of the arteries di
lutea Ate natural lubricants in the
holy joints,. end results in depose
Its of salt in the system, paving'
the way, 'to rb•eumatic•diseases.'
'Wand 'Off Fatigue. '
An. article 'in the current. isshe,
,of ,the Oval, magazine. of Canadian'
Industries, 'Limited,. reports 'that
..scientific studies by physiologists
hi leading laboratories have.prove 7
ed'' conclusively that ''salt lost
through' 'perspiration: must be re-
.placed.to. 'restore . the necessary,
'balance,. and the .ined'iae],. Pi•:ofes-.
sign is in agreement that the use
of sodium chloride, or common salt
ei•ther" in looseorm .or as small'
compressed tablets). Is a safe 'and,
successful method of counteracting.
or. wardink_off the• effects of exces-
sive heat fatigue:
Endorsement
• Prompted' by .the generale belief,
that salt was .harmful to the lium
•an 'sys.tem, Safety\ ,Engineering, an.
authoritative ,Americate 'magazine;
recently ' conducted• a sur'. ey a. l
among the leading American need- ,
teal' authorities, and the• following
sentence sums up 'their combined
opinions. "Inasmuch; However, as
.the good that;is done by salt tab=
lets outweighs` ; the .Conjectural
harm. 'that might occur • to a very.
emelt 'number oi'..people, the use of.
n'
salt hetet ind'useries, or hot wea-'
thee should :be. encouraged. •
Pasture For The .call
Here is a suggestion front th'e '
Forage Division, D.ominien Experi-
mental Farms, about providing•
good pasture in the fall. Fallrye,
,sown at the rate of two bushels
to 'the, acre from August 10 „to
September 10, depending on dis'- •
trict and' season, will usually sup-
ply good feeding for .cattle until
well ' on towards :Winter. Early
plowing helps in preparing tire
seed bed,' and once rye lia.8 made •
a firm start, cattle may be turned
into the 'fields, but not sheep be.
cause, they • nibble too closely. 1f
not pastured too, closely, therye
will Winter well and there will be
early pasture next spring lasting
till theend of June: TJien it may
be ploughed under and the plants
, make exc'el'lent green manure.
Established, • in • 129 Town
Bowling Club, Sontthamptot,
England, has greens which are
six centuries old.
Books, A rid ' You
+ ELIZABETH.. EERY
"UNCLE LAWRENCE"
Iiy Oliver Warner'
This email, book is'the fine :story,
of a • •yo'ung.' Englishman's ' short
Summer t:isit •to an uncle •.kn,ewn
only through letters .who. lived oh
the island of Pelee- hi Lake Erie,
the southern -mast point'pf'Ca'nada.
Uncle' Lawrence was the only
one. of, a large 'Victorian family
who did ,net turn oekt. to be a 'rep '
resentative son of a Lincolnshire
clergyman. ' His •letters. ,and ', they:
chance comments of the •family,.
caugi t the comments
.of a young nep-.
hew (the, author). .When Uncle
Lawrenee iiiyited•• Oliver to come
out.- to Pelee duriti , the •stimrner:. '
thyoung. man .acceptedwith eag-
er *and affectionate curiosity... He
• found his uncle living alone in • a •
strange'sort of , crabbed content-
ment.
• a . •
- The cbarin'•of the • book •lies • in',
the revelation' of_eLavv ence's char-
atter and in the young nephew's
.,delj'cate . tindeestand•ing of him.
• le has special interest' for South-•
• ern Ontario folk whb know the. is=
land . and L.eamingtoter and kings- •
villee The names of the people• In
the story are (real-life'on.es. •
"Uncle• Lawrence" by' Oliver
WarneY, Toronto The MacMillan
Co., of Canada; $1.65. •,
Popularity Of
Wool Increases
New Textures and Color Range
Are Partly Responsible ,
It May, seem early.. to'talk about,
wool; but now that wool ,is 5o de- • •
finitely •a year-round fabric, we
•can discuss it reasonably.
New textures. sand ' fascinating.
color ranges have a lot to do with
wool's pottulari'ty. Also, wools are
now sheer ..and even tweeds are
lighter in weight • Wonderful', im-
ported knitted fabrics are combin-
ed with hand knits. ••Circulal' or
slim skirts in the better h'ou'ses .•
are not .too short and the sheer
wool fabrics, some of them' combin-
ed with pure silk, • are very thin
and' flattering. .
•• New "old" fabrics like melton,
duvetttn, broadcloth, flannel, serge
wool bengaline Old ottoman„ vie,
with really new'' weaves in sheer
woolens. Some of these have ani -
'mai hairs woven in, and in the dye-
ing, the difference in color values
gives added surface life. ';
'Angoras' are•also very popular' in.
sweaters andl a new hand knitted
angora evening wrap is not only
news'but good•news,'
Inthe Etat round of th:e nation
al shooting taurnanent, sponsored
each year by the Dominion Marks-'
men ,organization; the 'crack Tor-
onto team' successively : defended
its Central•Zone'title by outsheot-'•
ing the six teams entered• in the
zone from London; Copper Cliff, .
Hamilton and Levack. In this
semi=final shoot champion Dr. G.
D. Beierl was in top form as he
set 'the' pace for his team-mates
with a Peyrfnet 'score' of • 50.
The 'Dominion titlists ,h 'd stiff•
opposition to overcome' in .this
y e• rr : n t a 'f`reer 16'TfF
zone .champiopshipteams . fought'
hard to ;take possession ;bf the per-
petual trophy, emtee'niatie of skeet
supreinai'y'in Canada. . . x . ...
When Twilight, Comes
'When twilight •comes .and .nature
Stills • - ' • '
•
The hum that haunts the dales and
hill ,•
Dina, shadows deepen.and combine
And Iteaven with it's erystal'i wine
The cups of l thirsty roses fills:
Blithe birds with music -burdened
bills ..
Hush for a space their tender trille
And , seek theirhomes in shelter-
ing :pine
When twilight comes.
.Soft melody the silence thrills •
Played..bys;the
..nymphs along the ,;'
rill •
And `where the dew -kissed grasses
- tveine, - -
The frogs and crickets. tattoo fine
Drums to, tate fife of the whip -poor- e,
' wills.. •
Fran C Dempster .Sherman.
acre Of Wea't
Beings In $8.35 ; •,
How the Saskatchewan Wheat
Pool Yigures
' Saskatchewan . Wheat Pool, ;Eley,.
ators,. Ltd., has its own way ,of
watching the'''ppssible .outcoiiie _ed.
h
the wheat crop at •maturity. Re:
present prospects .are, 93 points,
and it is'•elyplained ,that a full 100
points indicetesAn average of:i.6%
bushels per ,seeded acre On that
basis the ,pr-eisent outlook Is, for an'
•average of 151-3 bushels.' . ,'
For. that .grain the fixed .price .ot,
70 cents pe' 'bushel• will apply. but
the 7A cent figure -is based. ;on del '
ivery2 at Fort William. ,. Freight' •
crates. from' Regina :to Fort William • , t •
are 20 ,cents per 180 pounds, or 12'•
';cents per bushel. There are other
- charge* for 'elevator. storage, in-
su?ance, .inspection.. and weighing,
,• and these .average 3.5 ; cents per ,
bush'el,• making the average Bost
of piatti•ng a bushel'.of grain in Ft.
,William 15.6 .cents.
Farmer To Get But $8.35 Per Acre '
IP. a• farmer .delivers No. '1 hard
he will actuallyhave 54.5 cents pf
the 70 -cent price. Taking. 15 '1-3 '
bushels' as , the ' average yield it
means that one acre will give a're: •':.
turn of $$,35 And 'if his wheat'
grades lower than No: 1 his finan- •
sial 'return will be -less than :that.
Out •of that the farmer •*ill have to •
pay rfor his threshingno matter i;' '
Ile ' does it by : separator or com-
bine.. A cash return of $8.35 per
acre is small indeed, and particu
larly so for a lamer who .is
'• pending chiefly on- grain- for hisin-
come.
n , .
LIFE'S LIKE THAT
'By Fred Neher
.,"There --now I hope you're convinced 'that those fingerpi•:nts ;en, the
g'ujeat towel are not mine!!"
REG'LAR FEILLERS -practical Farmer
lanamemol
THERE'S MORE
'IMPORTANT 'moo
ON THE, AIR BESIDES
A HOLE COWSPY
PRO? RAM.
By GENE 13YRNES
WASHIKGYoa
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