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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1939-12-28, Page 3• ,a • • i . • , • e • • s . • • 3..919,!A9 19.:.91i99949l9,91.9.9.'• - , ' ' • • , • • • • • .. • . '170 &lila °Ad From New York To Buehos Aires • 12 '000 Miles. Long, It Will Be ' - • Opened on AnniVersary �f • • Over! rniles-higb rtionntein peaks, . across plateaus both arid and fer- tile and. titroagh see -lever swarnp and ',jungle, m'en, arrried With , spades, tikes, picks and bruah- ltniees, aided by oxen, horses, blares and rriaehines,, are building " • ' a roed in South America. " "Peut-Aniericen Highway" When completed, ;this road will . • be ,a .thin white, ribbon stretch- • ing from Buenee Aires 12,690 , Miles north • to •New York CitY, iays a carntrientatMe in The New. • • Columbus' ArriVat.in Arner- It isto be' Called the ParOknier lean Highway an& its Official op- , • ening, qa.set for ()ctoher 12; 1942, the 450th anniversary of the dis- covery of the Western world by Columbus. • . • The project is rapidly becoming • feasible reality irestead pf a wild ot the imagination. • The first northern link of this great international highway is al- teady familiar to thousaride . of American tourist e who' have trali- led over it from the United States to Mexico City. Equal. thousands of South Americans hive enotored over :tile southern portion, how 'complete, from Buen. os Aires to Linia,•Peru. The corn- , p e ion of the westerinost rn o this highWay connected with the • existing roals from Lima, Peru, •to' Quito, • EqUador, and thence nOrtheast to Bogota, •Colombia. " Colombian • highwaye carry the route to a point near the Pan- amanian •border. . . . _........... , •-. • . Pretty Canadian Girl 18 Instructing Future.of . , _ . _ •• . • ..... . • • 4blowin 'up in. order that the secrets, of her e'oastruction'ttligia' not •fall,' into. enemy hands? With regard to thee aetion taken at Ge/ifevaamany PeoPlie felt regret and an; • . nciyance that „thee League had aot seen ft. previously to doe something about the aggeessiPns of Hitler, the rape of Albania by Mussolini, (The Le,ague had never even dis- cussed the disappearance : of Aus, tria, Czechoslovakia or Poland from.themap), Looking plat; too, the world wondered whether, Rus-.. sia's eapulsioe would not throw the U.S.S.R. end G-erniany closer together. , . ' • _ • Italian Foreign • Minister Count • speech to the Fascist Cha er- embodied the first clear and comprehenstie , statement Of. Iraltan po-lity-eg nning oat, the war. He asserted, first of all, that the. Rome -Berlin Axis rek mains strong as ever despite.Italy's neatrality. Extenuating Hitler's pact with Stalin, he declated that Italy knew of the accord in ad- vence Fuether; hei 'Paid, Italie in- formed the Reich lest May, that Owing to the effects of the cam- paigns in Ethiopia and Spain, she would- not be prepared to engage in warfare • for three years. Such\ a statementappeared to end fOr • the moment any hope that Italy •could bp induced to come in on the Allies' El1de. (Same Week: Virginia Gayda, one of Mueselini's• Mouth-, . Piecee, • in a radio aderees declare, .ed that Italy mast have sea otitlets at Gibraltar, the Dardanelles, and E1. , The' Second Gre'at War broke a record in its fifteenth weok -- for extitement. Two events, ofie. of un - welled, dramatic iutereat, theotli- er world-ehaitiug'. ii importancp, held the spellbound attention of neWepaper readers, radio hounds,. of 'all. ccientries. We eefeir VP the "seicide" of• theGraf Sae, the ex• pulsion of Russia from the League of Nation.' What a .weelth• of speculation hinged, on these 21eappenings: Had Hitler himself Pedered the seettl! Jag of the.Spee? Wes it a gestete of g eat bravado, „ wee,: eke r • Chicago Show • , Sets Records • • Smiling Canadians Leave Live • • Stock Exposition.'With25 Titles and 507 Firsts. , Prize-winning aristocrats of the •• agricultural world paraded at the 1939 international livestock show at Chicago the last night of the • e:appsition, while exhibitors cram- med $1,000,000. in sales and prize • money into the Nvallets. • • • "It 'was the greatest show in • the. 40 -year history of the e4Posi- seid B. fl. Heide, general .itenager.' •. Thirty states, four Canadian provinces and Argentina werepree genteelamong the top winners. The Argentineans Won one first place,' Canadians took 25 champ • pionships and 507, firsts. Knighted For -Exploit • Admiral. Sir H. H. Harm:rod, former Commodore in. command of the British squadron 'which put Germany's peeltet battleship "Graf Spee" out of 'commission. Hg has :been. knighted by King 'George and promoted to •rank of. Admiral following the yietory. • . • • Does Hitler. Eat Too Much Fat ? Expert on Diet Declares Man With Torpid Liver It Bid - Tempered Suez). • , • . • . • . . .. ' During the week U.S:.Ambassae ,dor konnedi. returned to 'Washing,' top fromhie post at London. to• • give, a report on the war' by word- ofebOuthto his chief: He emphat- ically urged the States to stay rut'. of the conflict' 'at"all costs. "This e ' is not our fight," he 'said, ' • At Home in Canada, • the final ' draft of the nionfentous Empire • air training plan was 'completed-. Highlights: estimated eost' of, Olen for three" years, 000000,000, with, • Canada's -hare, $350,000,000; re- quired establishment in Canada of 67 schools of all types; nearly 40,- • 000 men .requiae.d to carry, out plan,. ' eirdpsive of students; • about .60 new air fields to be constructed and 20 ekisting fields enlarged; United ' Kingdom to supply:most., of alt - craft, fnciding engines and spares,' 'as her .sharein cost; Cattada, Atis- tattle and New Zealand to contri- buteeto total cost in proportion .to; use made Of plan by pupils from those countries; excluding cost of aircraft • supplied' by Britaiu, Can. ada to bear cost of initial and ele- Mentara 'training in Canada ' and about four-fifths of remaining costs of program; program to be admin... istered , by Dominion Government', with supaervisOry board composed .of repreatrYttatives from. four .coun- teles, lavoleed; great mit)ority of pupils will be : 'Ca.nadians; pilot training . to take about 26 weeks, many thousands .of pilots to be tterried out each year. , ••• • • The Wer at the end of 1939 . was not one war, but three! between the Allies and Germany; 'between Russia and Finland:, between Jan', an ad China Wester, Eastern, Far Eastern. • "If Hitler had fewer eggs and' less butter and the German people ,. had more, the world would be a more 'Peaceful place," said Mrs. Eileen Murphy, of the British , Commercial G Association, speaking at Stoke, Eng., on mod- ern laime-making. , • "Hitlerloes riot dririla'attfolet d eat Meat," the said. "BIM his diet `eontains too Many eggs and too much fat. ee "His chef hag t� cook .eggs in pairty different ways, and he is very fontleif vegetables done with fat. • •"Eggs 'and fat are toed.- when eaten ill Moderation, 13 ut too beech tecads to ist the - -1l • a I • , esee .. • , • . • Determined to - show the air 'force. that women instructors •Can turn :out'llre gird a•pilet as male...M.4rue- .. telt, pretty Helen Harrison is. busilyengaged in ,giving instruction, to pilots who ,have their eye e on the R.C. A.F. She is teaching flying at Kitehener-Waterloo Flying' Club after helpg turned clown when she applied for work 'ferrying military planes. Her record includes the instructing of militari pilots in ,South 'Africa . and test ,pilot for 'a Canadian aircraft company., Pigttired With her is Previsional Pilot , Officer Paul.Hender- . • • . • . . •• . . . . . • • , , • ,. Grand Titles Go. To 8 Canadians ' • William 'Rogers of Tappen, was aeiard'ed the. grand mpion- ship. for rye' at the twenty-first • international „train aed leaY Show' Rogers' victory . btought the to- tal number of : grand ehamplon- shipS won by' Caned 4 -his year at: Chic,ege .to eight. , • . The other grain grand awatds were wheat, field beans and Oats to' Alberta; _alfalfa to Saskatch- ewan; soy beans and field peas to Ontario and tirnotheY se'ed to British Columbia. ' • Ontario BOyi, 13e'st' Corn • Twci youthful Writers, members of the Canadian BoYs' and Girls' Farm ,Clubee GeraldeHemenatier:.of Rodheyrbrit.,' and Garnett linist- At International Hay and Giairt Shew, Chicago Winners in Live Stock Sectiun Also • • er, ofeRttecom , in 'corn.. Hessenauer trealt first in RegiOn 1 and Knister..first in •Re- gion 2. :These youngsters wona against a big field of entries from a wide area in the United States.• , In'. the • live etock. se.ctien, wards Brothers of • Watfaird,-Orit..„, .5618..at &aid prices eight of the s' thirteen head of eaberdeeneArigus :cattle brought to the exhibition.• Fs' G. TeddeLocknoW, Ont., veho 'showed at the international fct the first. time this year, scored twice in•the Aberdeen-Anens class. Lin- • • coin sheep. classechampionship ram • 'was exhibited•by H. yL tee, High- gate, Ont...• . • Eastern Canada Winners :•• • Other Eastern Canada winners • were: ' •.. • . •'. . Breeding ..sh'ortherris --- Two - tear -old • heifers, F.' H. Deacon ,and . Son, 'Unionville,Ont„, third; ,•sen- . ior yeareold hiker, T. A. Russell,, • Downview, ,Onte. second; junior aorta; .eeniere'l‘ifer „celteeDouglas yearling.. heifer, James, . Douglas •:. • and Sens, Caledonia, - Ont., 'sec - .• and •Sons, first. Film Hero Dies Suddenly • Will Get View• of Six Planets Astronomer Says Unique • Grouping In February D. play Is Seen Only Every Few Thousand Years The people ofeetodaY will be privileged to witness',• something which neither their childrennor their great-grandehildren Will see •e —a . trouping of six planet§ in the western sky next Pebruary, Dr. ' t - --S. Rogge -profeesee-ad.--- astronomy at the David Dunlop ObeervatorY, Toronto, told the Boyar Canadian Institute in an addrees last week.. , "It's only 'every few thousand years that you find as many as tiX planets in the same region of the eltiesr• he said ,"Along with eetth, there Will appear in the western' sky during th latter days ,.;-- •-- ,,,, ,:-gt._. 4.07, .• • - , Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, 1 ars 1 fraritia." 1 ` illad.tenipered, unreason. ablee and hard to live wait" Douglas Fairbenks, great Star at the silent screen and renowed for his. adrobatic 'ability' ' before the, camera, died suddenly, from a heart.. attack at his home in Santa Monica, Calif. He as 55. • Makes Tomatoes O. A. C. Lecturer Plans to De- velop New Types — Takes • Seven Generations to Fix the • • Variety • • C. E. Migittone of Guelph. is , young Plant wizard who has set himself to perform ..a real feat of' legerdemain two of theme in facealie.has determined to be he. Burbank•4. of the tomato. This •yOun&;., lecturer at the Ont- ario College of Aerieulture promises to Teach into his, scientific hat an • • pull out a bigger. redder, juicier tornato,than any now grown in Ce - nada, and present it to the catsup preservers and tomato juice‘ squeez- ers of Western. Ontario. • "Small,. Round, Firm," Wanted He promises to reach into ate .other hat aod..pull out a little, ,firm round tomato, more prolific than . any •grown in Canada, and to pre- sent it to eastern .Ontario eapeere • who. have been looking, for a torn- . 1ton., that won't go squashaT in the • . • "There'll be no thocus-p ells or 'abracadaara' about it," said recent address at Toeonta. • "We are working along strictly scientific lines, and I think we are me e! hig . success. • •• Strictly t Clentifle • "Once you haveefound the char• acteristies youwant,• it takes from six to ninegenerations to fix them," he said. "At we grow two generationa year, one • outside and one in a hothouse, so it will 'take fhree, to five years to fix our variety o eeye find it." • egut e. industry- , • Ottawa Acts to Prevent Scand- als 'Like ink Last War .• •• • . Blanket regulation -of. Caeada's hog industry --deigned to gneed against: any repetition of the bacon •..ecan•dais.of the laSt war is to be • ankinimediate 'result of the arrange- ment new: concluded with the Bate ish Government for large-scale •pur- •..2 hases • of Canadian baCen'a last week, 1d a story In the •WIndsor • . • 'Daily • Sta .•• . To Supervise Industry• . A :bacon. contol board 'is being Set'.up- by the federal governinent • to supervise all phaees' pf the na- , • tioe's hog.industry. It will regulate not only the price to be paid to the • priniary farodueer,. but also the Op- • eeations ofthe; packing Plants, The, spread that the packers will be al - .!owed ' to .er.ta will be rigidly. speci- ' fid by the federat bacon, author • . • • So fat . as the •farroms are cen-. cerned, it is likely. that. the Scheme will return thenabput an average • Price of .nine cents perpoUnd or a llttle better over the year fortb.eir bacop. hem • . 'Called Adequate .. The hog .population Of the, Dem- ' einion at the peesent tinie' is four and one-quarter .,million.•' animals. This is adequate to th0\produetive requirements of • the new • British • 'arran.gem.ent., • ' 999•999.9.9.99..491999999._93,99.9,99....., VOICE o1the • PRESS. • INTERESTED SPECTATORS Ethiopians will be interested in • Italian indignation :over Russian lerbarities in Finland, - Brandon 4 ' SUPPORTINg TI4 TOWN BAND • Interesting • is the ' :result, the passing of a by-lew, at Fort Erie to.spend a. quarter 'of aereill annum- bY for. the town ,bantleand- that IS ' iiPt,a. big price to pay for band -eon-. eerts. it,j8..possible Fort Erie -maYe• sset2a fashion erisewhere in . the • ProVineee-sHi,,Nlagara . . . ,;. OF mg:640c FiAcy 0. If there is .to be. deneocraey';after. the -War is 'Oever., deineeracy 'tfot be abandoned While the. war on. The, spirit of democracy mut • be respected, not seppreesed, witla• in the demberaeles themselees. :The thing for which 'the war is •fOlight abroad, nuist net be lost at • 'home.. Toronte Star: WARNINGS. UNHEEDED Another case of: poisoning by monoxide gas has been reported. • 'It is regrettable that,, in spite of all , the warnings Altaihave. been pub- lished for years regarding the clan- ' ger ' of this dead»' gas, fatalities •still occur to those who thought - 1y tinirer-With7elteir • in clos'ed garag,eiewhile the engine' is rUnninge---;'Brentforil ExPoittor. ' e777.7". •• • ..gOME SLASCOA3EqS OX • -„ri.tAT! NVE: ykiWeE, " 'SO WIN • AM` Joa woR14,...4g.c.o.kfc 'ONE db(.1,tcr our?, ARV $0, FOLKS! • MT. SO Urges.New. 5ystent, • Of: Ontario. Relief , Norfolk Children's Aid Society Superintendent Says Prob.- leni"Big Business" • A 'cap for a complete overhaul- ing of the 'previnee's • relief sys- tem as 'it affects the rural areas • was made in. Woodstock by Thern-' as Phillips, superintendent of the Norfolk Children's Aid Society ad- dressing a ineteing of the Wood - tock .Rotary Club. "This question has now enter- ed the realm of big business," said 'Mr. Phillips, 'and it is 'time to take its administration away froin • the munidipalities• that are ,ill-equipped to raise the necessary , taxation . or to appoint persons • skill enough to administer, such a problem. Federal and provincial p,articipation have made the lot of municipalities Osier but the .tnach- ' inery is .creaking hadly." • Mr. 'Phillips ,advocated that out- side of the large urban centres no unit for .relief should be less than country -wide and the admire • 1st -it -lion Placed in charge of speC- ially trained, persohs. . Nobteman Gave "Sandwiches" rki,arne • : • • The oip of sandwiches Is ins tereeting. In the reign of "King .•nGoebeliernanwilo geII,ItherweasNryf lived.,anient nof • gambling. He passed whole days at • the card table and would not leave. • his 'genie even for .a - meal., -Nate urally he found playing on an• empty stomach.. • uncomfortable • . work, and se devised . a Plane by • which he might .eat- .with as little trouble as possfielee ' • He ordered hie, servant to idt • .. two thin. slices ot bread and place meat between. The . meal proyed. satisfying. ''• . - The famous noblernan was the , Earl of •Sandwitheand po popular. dkFhis Ogee. of :breed, and meata . • become that they wereaealled 'her • „ isnarne.. ' • " • • • • „ ..atifta.10 Meat . . • ',A1.1...Acress Canada,. .. • . • .:•. , • • •. ,Jticy. SAealca and roasts tut- 'faloaneat. about 35 'cents 'a pound are available all over Canada now. • e As a -war measure there hes'be-en., a .slaughter of buffalo ,at the Do-• ' minion Government perk at Wain- wright, Alta:, and 3,000 buffalo ' • are •being dressed to provide 'ap- proxiMately, 1,00,0,000 pounds ,of meat,. ,which. will. be dittributed nationally.• • • Big trees of California are said te have no natural enemies and . none 'of, these trees has .tease•bsen known tO le or insect or. •attack, .4/ciht4,..iilEE:141111E1 • . . •-LIFE'S LIKE THAT 914 .,,.By Fred Neher...- ec., 3 •tiloote”, AO, by _ •'/•.:".•11,-cK "I -Want You To Tell Me How ,You Managed to Get Into • Without Waking My Wife." .e ' the .H0'.1S4 • REG'LAR FELLERS -Get the Broom POP' DROPPED HIS MEERSCHAUM PIPE •• ;- AN' IT SMASHED, IN SMITHEREENS! YOU COULDA HEARD -114....ALASKA BUT HE INVENTED A HOLDER FOR RM. NEV./ l:,113? Lo NOW •CAN'T FALL AN HE DOESST MAFIA 4?.. IX By GENE BY RNES ‘...,..2•••2241.•••••••...2.......••11111111110 • MY POP JNOKE •die Alf PI PES AN! WHEN THEY FALL HE DOESN'T MAFIA PICK 'THEM UP SITa4ZR y/re, 0, • , • : • 4 . • ' •••••99,..,: • . • .