HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-11-16, Page 3Spies Employ
Ads, ;Purees
Coded Inforru ('tion_,
•Communitcatec Tiroxtsh
nocent Cennnejt Fusel
• can Newapa'pers'Take Pre-
nE"�fttnfK.V/z p'N• RG.Ygtd a +.M,7 .7 t,14,Sa .19=11.,SMM•M ,/,t3' ir. �! rtStT
r�.-;,_. •yt.:ma,ara,. e,,. ;xm„�gq.'r�PF�.y •.,.,r�,; WIG%r,. •,, •,_
• T
Many .elements df -a• newspaper
that ,are innocu.ous, in peace time• •'
become Wive with 'd°anger•.in•:f war.
leer instances` -Classified advertise- •
menus and' crossword puzzles.
European" puzzles •are banned -
: eomplerely after it, proved too dif-•
3icult'a task to censor. them.;daily,'
and. newspapers on, government .or -
,der now' require, tqz ty eight •hones.
:to Investigate. de little• notices• of
the want. ad, page. With no ;guar
agtg; they .will Uo puUlish.ed then:
The .danger in both cases is of •
enemy, .spies communicating boded.
information-through•theseinnocent''
.channels.
Suppress Weather Reports
'Most': important. of all for. war-
time,. however; are: the weather re,
ports. Thewar h'a's made them a,
-State secret,, No longer deo. you see :
them in the paper; hear them on
the radio. Now that the airtf'laue
has ' been' developed into one . of
Mats' chief aids, weather reports
are 4ncreasingly .vital.
"Tree Srr"ger
Arrests Decay.
All Rotten Wood Must First Be
Cleared Out . of ' Cavity ,
Radly deeayed . spots; `or„ holcxs.th
trees,may be • treated with "tree
surgery". so' that decay is arrested. '
Where a cavity exists in a living
tree, all• rotten weed' should ' be•
.herDngh y vire—awed .tett, 'and. the. e%
posed surface treated .with a sole
•tion: of corrosive', Sublimate, sol-
pitate .of copper to kill any fun'gt s
growth;thet may be present, and'.
with bisulphide of''car?bon to des- - l
troy the inseets.. The surface-
should
urface"should then' be tree'.' with 'tar to
prevent decay. After this 'the 'cav-'
It is carefully,;fi}lett with' coperete
of the'streggtlf commonly, used
constructioe work. 'It ,is essential'',
that the; joint between wood and
cementt, be 'atertigh,and the sur;,
face should sb.e• given` a -smooth
-, -hill that' follows the .growing :cititt-
line.of the tree. The finished sur-
face should coincide with the
edge of th'',dambi:um,,layer, sb:the''
growth of the'vee will proceed on
over the' cement. The Cavity' must •
he abselu•tply. clean; thorbughly d'is
infected, and auickiti'tEsiy watertight,"
nor decay wf l' .begin ' behind the fill-
ing. A longi lived "teee".like• the 'oak
is certainly :weeth'.careful...treat- .�
' ment orthis kind:
Comm• ands - Infantry
. Brigade '
•
•
Col'. Armand A. Smith Corm -
Mender of the first infantry bri-
gade, Canadian Active' • Service
Force.
Every Youngster
Needs' Affection
If He Is Not To Have A Warp-
ed Attitude Toward Other
People --
No one loves' a coddled spoiled -
child, but every child- under the
sun needs •love.
There aren't "many parents wlio'
neglect showing thei.r•affeetion to
t their children, , but unfortunately
thereare smite: •
A small perperitage •of • fathers
and mothers seem to have no very •
great'cap,acity fqr, love or the dem-
onstrations of love. • '
Call Be Etnotionatiy Starved
The question is, •,''D'oes it hurt a',
child to. be starved, in' his 'natural.
affections?" • •
Ties, it does. Affection:like, any '
other emotional ',impulse needs an
outlet, •It inust .be met half way
Otherwise we' are likely to have
on oar hands young• eeekers after'
artificial tlu•ills, nohcomforrnistie•to
society with a• warped attitude to •
other people ,in general. • f
,Tine DutcIi use more soap anzifi-
ally----twenty-four pbunda per head
aof the population—than any 'alt.,'
er nation. Tn.,Iritish Tndie and
China the annual co>i4sumption is
eight ounces per head.
illzinll ,
lilac. 'loll
,
•
Ciernllain
3oat Cxewlr• Enjoys Meal On Peck•
'--yVYI•,`xveV`1XYC;`j`le10TI`tii1L{'" l;te;e1.yv�q• '�•�=
of FuropeY5 Warring powers were
still. doing the Alphonse -Gaston
act in the ninth . week of conflict.'
Neithef side wanted, to drop the
first bornb .and inaugurate a` rain
of terror from the" air on civilian,'
. centres. ' .So the war, as pictured
in prophetic herror . stories. these
• many years past, had, not yet .6e.
gtiR; •
Neverthel'ess, everybody -knew
that 'Hitler' had t'o attack sometime
or .accept . slow etrangul'atien.
'fore the•Allfed blockade Would•
his grants offensive liegin with an .
.assault ;on the .Maginot Line.?%
With. a' .drive- thr"otigh • Belgium?
with mass ale attacks on British
.and French .cities? "or• ,a Smash,'i1
through the Netherlands? Develop-
• merits 'along the diplomatic 'front:
seemed to• indicate that if Ger-
many's bug: push were schedu:led:
'• for, this autumn, it would- come
through Holland -=the easiest Iand
operatio'„'and • perhaps the most
Profitable; yielding.'submarine
,.esand 'airplane' bases • for heavy
raids 'oz: England. . •
. The ,week brought news • of, the
first British soldier killed in, a&
tion' ori 'the-:•Wester•n Fren't ( Wil-
• Iiam Roper, 28, ' of Dewsbury,
Yorkshire).; of the massing of 18
German -divisions on the nether-:;
lands herder, from Enrde'n .down
to, M'un.ster; of the Allied• pursuit
oyer- sev;erai- seas. of the German
pocket •.. hattleship Deutschland
(winch captured the City, el Flint)
and Admiral ,Scheer; . of air en-
gagcments • between . French.' and
German planes:
Most; listened -to, speeches 'of the;
week °were made by Pretnier-For
eign Minister Molotev of the Sov-.
iet Union who told the world that •
` essia•vcould not fight o.n the side
of, Germany; neither on,'.the. side
O.,. :tlie 'Allies whom he accused of
•seek:ng ''new PxeUstis • for,- eor tine•-,,
ing • the war.• premier, Mussolini;
heed ,of another nout-al nation;
spoke more vaguely ' ,ct y,ng , that
rtaly ie. preparing. for the future:
and 'will ?''strezegthen her will and
forces. for to'morro'w." 'Were' there.
'threats behind those words'? •
in north-e'astei'n •.Europe Fin•:
rixsh:Russian negotiations'continu-
ed . to: hold the• -,dipl'omatie - spot-
light, . The possibility, was strong
'that differences would be •settl.edd
'by • Finland ;:agreeing to accept a
• strip; of. Ruseian territory in re-
turn for aiding Russia to improve
Leningrad's defensive 'positions.
In .southeastern Europe new com-
binations of •.Balkan -powers, with'
I{p'ssia,;,
Turkey, or• Italy';,as ' spon-
sor,' Were looked' for to . stop Ger
' man-''eatpanslon.:in. that direction. .
The Mediterranean; a quiet spot
'since the war Startedi; was expect-
ed .at Baty moment to become a No,
1 trouble zone
0.-
Things *ere 'happening on this
eartinent•-too......Rep.eaIeef. theLarms:.-.-
enibargls clause of the • U:. S': Neu-,
tralsty • •Act released, millions and
.millions of dollars in British cash.
or purchase of planes and muni -
ions in. the United States. Can-
da,.. sa,'ow_,`Grea , Brit in's,;,,;txiim}Cer
ver here, began at once tot play a
ig part in' the tran;lictionr, ,with
Arthur' B.' •Pie•*°is off ' Montreal as
ed of a British purchasing Com-
mission ,placing ..,ver orders ir. the
•United States,. •
Further steps were taken dur-
ing the -week to i%take Canada,the
,stir training centre of the Empire. •
Said an article in the Sunday •
Times, (London); "The establish
nient of Canada as the. air train-
ing centre for the Empire is, a
Iogical. consequence of a number,
of factors; First, • Canada's record
n the 'air; second, its industrial •
capacity; , third, its nearness to
American supplies of 'engines,
planes and technical experts;,
fourth, its ' comparative isolation
from hoot Jing raids."
0
b
He Registered
• 14,000 Lb: , Touch
Have you a light; or a heavy
touch at the piano? Scientists say
it does not matter how •you strike
a note; or tvheth'er with a finger
or an umbrella handle—jt will al-
ways sound. the same. Musiciaiis
differ, and maintain that such sci-
entists 'must be lone -deaf. Now
a Scientist -musician. in Chicago,'
Moissaye Boguslawski, has invent..'
,ed a delicate scale for measuring
the exact strength with. Which the
dotes are hit,' and he found that„
while playful& Riibenstein's; "Stac-
cato , Etude," lasting six Menutes,
his fingers registered a total strik-
ing force of 14,000 lbs. Bogus-
lawski has a light touch, and with
other ,p1a tern the strength of tough
varied, in 'sonic cases being alined'
double.
"Spare your, cat". is the latest
ednloiiition farom the British A.R."'P. aninials'committee. They fear
an epidemic of vermin should the
present eagerness to kill cats and
other pets continue,
•
•
J
This 'scene', passed by;the Gerrftan censor; is •unusuai'because it'gi%'es; for;
the' first•time since the beginning et the •war :a 'viewef a flotilla of .German .
U boats,•in an •,unnamed naval base.: In the foreground• the: crew of an -'
nnd'ersea,boat, just -returned-from a tour of., duty at. 'seal -are enjoying
• the luxury of a,meal oh the beck of'their•boat :In the baekground•are at
' least'seven of'the ;undersea. craft ri'ding,their moorings,
N TAR
u
TiooR
S
er vac ,BAKER
THEY 'DO CHANGE CAitrOUR
Observing that goldfish not' only.,
go• to College- these days but 'also'
- change; colour; a well-known •Spec,-
alist .in• this 'cotinfry' has.'studied;
recently' the rainbow 'eomtrlex of ..
the 'carp -that most abun fent of • •
all fish species:.
MICKIE • SA.Y'S
EXTRA! IXTR A 11
-y i4OMIr -row0.11A.PERi• •
?JO MURDERS!' NO CRIM'E1•
•No S Ai4DAI.'::ail;
AU.. •d' NE\VS,
'. • ale, ?F121ENi?.S,7.04'
G000.'QI,,e .I -IQ A
• 'rpwNFOLK$. ,
Ig.
•
Of a batch ofa dozen carp he
S ,
netted in ' sin abandoned cla pit
reports the fish expert, ail except
two ;:underwent. a charrteleonaike.
change in• two. seasons. .,Some, at,
the. start were the usual greenish -
.black• colour,. six were ;either -gold
or black , and :gold, 'while ,one 'was
• ;all . silver.. 'After: a :few months
two' pf the black and -gold ones be-
gat to 'change ..to' 'silver. !Others
took ori a straw, tint. But when
• the specialist bred from same of
these older,; fish, some of -,the•
youngsters -were golden -red, It
. ' all' .add's up to a pretty fishy nein-
bow;''don't you: think?, •
Here'a How For You Lucky Ones
'Scrub the plucked and drawn'
;.•,ducks Well, n salted water, Stuff
•"with slice. onions and apples :and '
"place strips of 'salt pork.er bacon
• o ler 'the top. Roast at .400 de-
grees Fahrenheit, , allowing twenty
•minutes' for each- pound and bast-
trig frequently, with ..fat • hi • pan: •
• Surplus 'fat may: be 'poured pff and '
orange juice: added for basting;
giving an .excellent' flavour. 'The
>stutring.1s•not•.served, being used
• only to. provide flavour and moss=
tore.... Place on. hot platter and
garnish, With .orange sections .arid'
parsley.:,Wild rice•is always a.de7 .
licsous accompaniment, Of course,.
this- recipe can be saved until next
, year when we 'hope you , get -your
shame. .
Jopuiation of - •
. •Ottawa 1454$3•'
Otto""-• wa's population increased :
by 94 in the past year according
to figures compiled, bY-Blyth Mac
.Donald, City ,Assessment• Cam-
. missioner .
T1lre-tote ..
: 145,183, compared with: 14'4,202
for 1938. •. '
•1 -'
CON TARIO Q JEBEc, d : ,_M
' We}1; erre tliingais certain; That
election in Quebec has pieced a
fearful strain On the ,Ontari'o-iQue-
• ' bet axis which, operated so merrily
for a 'number of months.. —Peter:.
borough Examiner.. -
NO MUNICIPAL,'ELECTIONS?
London, ;Ont.," will, hold 'a pie-
b;iselte on the holding of. munici-
pal elections in ,war -time. If all
munzeipalities. do tlr'r"s, it,'s, going
to peeve a bit embarrassing to the
provincial author ties.- -St. Tho-
mas Tithes -Journal.
, HAY, GRAIN, RESERVES
In districts ' .where feed
abundant fanners n.e;e�;
if they have to hold over a stack
of hay or a, few bushels of grain.
Reserves of this ' kind• are. often
needed the following 'year, ,Far -
i er's Advocate. ' •
—o—
BICYCLES„AND LIGHTS •
We again call attention to. sec-'
tion 9, sub -section 5. of the. High-
way Traffic Act; which. . requires
that whenever on the highway he -
:tweet.), dusk and dawn; 'a' bicycle'
must carry on the front a white
Or, amber light, and on the rear 'a
red lamp or. reflector approved by
the departinent' as well- as a white,
'surface at the rear not less than,
10 inches in length and' two. inches
in . width.: -Guelph ;Mercury. •
•• -o—
PROFITABLE,.TURNIPS' -
• Turnips' are not •always giveu.a.
very warm receptionwhen they ap-
pear, on Canadian tables but in
.parts 'of the United e States • the .'
`sane turnips are '• frequently priz-
. ed as a delicacy,. The Chicago
• market thinks so imich of them,,
indeed, that 'whereas in 1934 Can-
ada shipped there' only ten car-
loadsof turnips, .these grew 'to
477 carloads : sit 1938, and Cana-„
dian turnips also fill 87 per• cent.
:of Boston's requirements.=B rock-
ville Recorder, and Times.
'British dog owners .with. "war '
'nerves", are.. blamed for an • out-
break .of ' fighting along the canine
front. An. official of th'e :People's
'Dispensary for. Sick• Animals, L.on-
:•don, explained it this way: "4;6 '
are very sensitive' to Ithe state , of
Mind of-' their owners. Yen get .
angry through ,reading about air
••raids and your, dog :goes out and '
fights..the next dog." , '
Go erisy on '
yourself! Gently,
mildly, move intestinal
"left -otters" out of the
• way with acup orlwocif Gar,
field Tea. The fragrant (vice of
itslOherbs•mokeopleasant tee '
thatloosens clinging wastes,
hetes relieve constipat:t'n
- he-mild-wayr,.25c-10
• at drugstores.
nEL
Write for GEEROUS• FREI SAMPLE to
GorfleldTeuto,,'
Dept. 'f i.A .
1 Presse A ve., • Taranto a ; ;mod,
.Canadiiin Navy Keeps Vigilant Patrol of Coastal Waters
•
Imznediately,upon theee�.outbreak of war the small. but efficient Canadian navy commenced its vigilant patrol. of •
Cenadian coastal wafers. _H. M.C.S; Fundy, ABOVE, .is one'of.the niinesweepe•rs :patrolling Canada's ;Atlantic'
coast:.to .keep them clear of enemy mines. ' '
•
nig For . ' ..
Winter 'Eggs
It is common erectice with mast
c suoceeeful poultrymen • to feed
good commercial iayingt,mash in
conjunction with grains;. One nail-"'
notppm Wrong when feeding for
' laying mash • has in good piopor="
tions all. the elements' necessary”
for egg; production, then keeps it
in plenty, before the fow•is-in shat
low troughs so that they may feed
at will, • Plenty ofhornier, or ,trpugh
space should. be ,.provided, 'at all. '
!tunes '- -Shout' faur,inche; for each •
bird: ` . . .
Ctean.Grain Twice A.Day .
Clean grain, ,should be `.given.:
iw'ice a"dly a a fight feed' at the ,,
morning feectit: , and all the birds•'',
will• cleat. up. at '- venin~, just .he-,
'fore: they go., to roost. Green . reeds
in' some form are necessary. and
should be made a part of the daily
ration. They may be incorporated
in•the laying nia ' b;.tha:for'm•ef•
clover. -4r_
supplied by feetdine turnips or -leg-
ume hay, s•' -h as elf*, soybean,
or clover.
See that the fowls get plenty of
clean .drinking water . along with. -
their feeds. , - ' ' '
'rance's k'fench population b.;
38,500,000, compared . with .$70 ,
500,000 In 1844 a gain •"of only
1,000,000 in 78 yearn. '
t41144 ia4
BEE ^I91V
World's Largest Tire Carries 20 Tons ..
Costs More ThanAutomobile:
Jahn W. Thomas, President of the. Firestone Tire B:' Rubber Co. beside
elle largest fire ever produ•eed by,,. the rubber, industry:.Phese. are now being •
manufactured' by Firestone. ' iWeighing'more than 2600'pounds each and
• capable of carrying a load.of more than 36,000„pounds, apiece: these'tires
are in • regular•' an exclusive••pio'ductien by Firestone .for use, on the
latest types ,of earth, 'moving • equipment: They "stand. more than nine
feet in height. and, have a' cross section of .close'to three feet,: •
• Without• tires” of this :nee earth moving :trailers of the ,capacity 'in use
..today would not be posfiible • a'nd, consequently steam. shoi-els with 'such.
• large cap.acity.would•not be advantageous. Pneumatic tires are the only
equipment that would float these 'tremendous loads over rocky, rough
groti:nd and wet, soggy -terrain:'
Tbe.'tube in one 'of thele latest giant tires weighs 150 'pounds„ and the
"''protecting flap more than 50 Ipounds.. It: has thirty-four plies: of 'gum'
dipped fabric but 4urprieingly •enougtr•,only requires, 35. pounds of air,. •
The four tires ort each piece of earth; moving equipment have a load
capacity of '75' fons. a•
LIa~E'S LII�E.THAT
By Fred Nebel
"I know it's sleeping time,,bpt I can't disappoint a crowd like that.."
1 1c. � 'l •b 11Ra'i it � ,r,
t 1 1 �,� • i, 1 r,+ all
Hat 'REG'LARTELLERS=-The High
THAT'S Ai./5YELY
AUTOMOBILE,.
A NHEAD ! YOu .0U -1r
TO HAVE,, YOUR
COAT -OF -ARMs•
ON IT, :
By GENE :BYRNES
ON,YOU REMEMBER
'THE. COATS OF -ARMS
WE •SAW IN OUR
HISTORY BOOKS,
PINHEAD/ PKNIGHT:S
IN THE'MIDDI.E,
ACES HAD THEM
NOW TO. PAINT
' IT'AN' Mk BE
• RI4HT tN
STYLE f
111 u, lllgd. ' alto
,•tai
` Cpl , li. '1.1 tlht'1 II
1,� .,p t ,i 1 •t, 1 l
• .,t 'Lt ,s' wti • ,iii, t, r111111.l, 11 i 1101.`141it
1.
jt I;
Ill y�1 i+l� ,, �k
l tCP� ,, t .tl ' 1.1‘ .1�
1 .,\,%;1`,� ,, 1� ,1,x.1
11• '
C.A,P•t.ein ,:Ae disu mortal *n r•s
l‘• 11 al 1' • ,• lKe ii t , j'"
\si 1i i