HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1940-05-02, Page 3•
• .•
_ Ninety Per Cent.
Have Poor Stance
Only One Woman In Ten
Knows How to Stand and.
Walk Correctly ,-.- Tips on
Good Posture
•
• ., Ninety out 'of 100 women stand
, .,and walk incorrectly --- and clothes
Models are to blame - says IVIlah
Ruth,Constance Duffey, Boston Un,
Iversity's director or. physical acti• -
vitiee for women. , •
"A slinking mannequin looks like
a million,". Miss Dtiffey says,."and
women try to Itnitate her -- but
frotti the 'Waist' down the beautiful
•
'"•,kt.4,1 e1Othes colt is askew."• •
• • A ,STR.AIGHT 'LINE
" • In her. work Miss, Duffey analyzes
about 2,090female farms 'a Year and
•:sh,pthas found 'that the average We;
mak.stapds 111 she ...thinks the •
• ,;:•-• • models 'do hipsWard and the
•
.chestsoncar.
."That's :bad," Miss Duffey. says;
"the.' body ' ahold • be • balanced
• '' ground a straight line that would
pass froin the' eat, through the
shoulder, hip, knee and ankle. hone_
or a paint slightly,in front of it."
RULES' FOR IMPROVEMENT.,
Miss Duffey suggests- the 'follow-
ing rules to, improve posture:.
Expand ribs. . g • '
'Put ear over' shoulder by puliing
'back your : head,
• Piish sho.uldera down towards the
floor.
• Relax knees. .
Lift high 'spot on 'chest. Overy,
one has'a high spot, she says, a-.1
If you try to put Yeur. finger 'Oil
you can't mies), •
1, FATHER AND _SON
• TEAM
Mickey Rooney and his dad, 'Tod
Yule, give out with some close har-
mony on the set of M -GM's "Andy
rdy Meets Debutante?* • , •
There Are Fairies
In. Canada's WOOds
Still Make Their Presence
• Felt For Those • Who. 'have
Germ of .0eltir • Magic ' in
• • Them • •
•
' • There are fairies in"the Canadian:
• "• woods for -thos&who have the germ
of Celtic magic in them, Rev, F. E.
Benin, of St. Patrick's, College, •
• tawa, last 'Week told members of
• tile Mentrest garden clubs.•, . •
' "Just go 'into the woods and. sit
. beside a trillium," be arild,'"adreire
•its form, its color. Watch It nod,
• try to hear the music it makes. Lis -
•ten to the birds. look around and
• See the appreciative .audienco. of
shrubs and trees. If you are Irish Or
Scottish, and have the germ of.itbe
Celtic magic In you., you I1l sbon.
• . begin to wonder If is is not indeed
true that \the -feiries are really
here." • ••
CONDEMNS WHOLESALE• '
PICKING •
Dr. Banin -condemned the pluck-
ing of wild flowers to take home fel'
• decorative purposes. "It we are to
. • remain in secure posaes.sion of this
priceless heritage," he continued,
,
"we must become active copserva
• .onists." There was no doubt that
some flowers had been brought to •
• the brink of extinctiqn by wanton
disregard of the neectfor conServ- •
•• Ing thern..''
Bivale't
The men's club of the First
Parish • Church of SuitUate,
Mass,, have discovered, a new
• formula for increasing chiirch
a t ten dance, Announcement •
that • members, personally,
;would serve breakfast before
ervices increased attendance
nesmcent and brought
ge,ra'ai=RAL.Faaa
;founded., The menu t 16 dozen
scrambled eggs, bacon, corn
Muffins, doughnuts and eoffetl. '
suivpAy
.SCH�OL
E S SOW.,
LESSON V ••
• ISAIAH GIVES GOD'S •
INVITATION
Isaiah 55
•
Printed Text, Isa.:55;1-11
Golden Text • "Seek ye Jehovah
• while he may be_found; celIye
•'• upon him while. he near." isa.
55:6.. •. • '
• LESSON IN ITS SETTING •
Tinge - Not definitely.given, bit
• probably about701 B.C.
Place JernWialein, ' •
..thjngs talked about in this
saon are. the,'things whIch. all
•
•rnbuI11etery age„intist deeply' long
'fer,,, and strive for, -e• Joy in their
cwn hearts, Prosperitria theiriives
• arid •in,,titeli. nation, and abiding
peace: These are the things that
•'god wants. men to have, but they
can be, permanently ,possessed only
if the way of' the Lord here unfold-
ed is followed.. .
•• INVITATION TO •
DISILLUSIONED
. Ise.' 55: 1. Ho, every one that
thirsteth, •come • ye to the waters,
and he that bath: no money; came
ye, buy, and: eat; •yea, come,. buy
wine and milk without money and
without.. price. 2. Wherefore do Ye
•spend money forlthat which is not
*breed? . and your labor for '-that
which satiefigth not?. -hearken dili
gently unto. tile, and eat ye, that
WhiCh is good. and let your soul de-
, light itself in fatnees: Three Ines-
capable realities, existing. lit the
• soul Of every man ,without God, are
• here,set forth. In strikingly pictur-
esque end symbolic language: man
is described as • thirsting,, as hun-
gry, and 'as having 'exhausted .,hia'
• resource. upon those things which,
filled to bring the satisfaction be
expected from.them. With this, di-
vinely accurate analysis of man's
• innermost needs are also annottpc-
• ed God's abundant ,ability and gra-
• cious willingness to' supply these
needs freely; for the thirsty there
, is water; for the 'hungry wine, milk
and.bread; and for those. Who have
• spent ',their money for the' things
which failed to satisfy, joy and
peace for their hearts: ••
• In almost' every word' of these
two verses God's love far man, and
God's desire that man should -be
• saisfied, God's knowledge of man's'
restlessness and' dissatisfaCtiont
aPnear; the whole of the second
-verse is a great plea on the part
• of Gad withman to no longer ex-
•' 'Pend his • money -en the things that
never satisfy, but to receive freely .
• .by grace, from him,. his bounteous
•gifts, that their souls should .delight
themselves in fatness. • •
EXHORTATION TO ISRAEL
•'3, Incline your ear, and .come
• unto'me; hear, and Your souls shall
• live; and I will make an Overlast- ,
ing 'covenaht, With you, even Vie
sure mercies Of. David. 4. Behold,
1 have given him for a witness to
the peoples ,a. le'ader and comman-
der to tOie 'peoples.
5. Behold, thou shalt, call a na-
tion that thau knowest not; and a '
nation that knew not 'thee shall run
unto thee, becauge of Jehovah ,thy
God, and for . the Holy One of. Is-
rael; for he hath glorified thee. No
doubt this particular paragraph re-
fers more particularly to the •na-
tion, of Israel as a whole than ' to
individuals, though of course,
nation is .only made bp of individ-
uals, and cannot do anything good •
of•evil except through the actions
and words of. the individuals in the
There is a backward look here, •
to Israel's great and glorious king,
David,: with whom the Lord had
made a deeply significant' coven-
ant in the early 'days Of his
'• SEEK THE LORD
• 6,'Seek yee.lehavah while he may
be found; call ye upon him while
he is near: 7: lit the wicked for-
sake his Way, and ,the unrighteous
Man ails thoughts; and let him re-
turn unto Jehovah; and he will
-have inercy..upon him; and t� our
God, for he will abundattly par-
don. Here is the Very center of our
wonderful chapter - the climax,
as it were, Of the gracious invite.,.
tions here extended by an infinite- .
ly loving God. Four things God
asks 'man to do: to seek the Loyd,
• to call upon the Lord, to fordake
the way S of wickedness, to return '
to the Lord. Four things God pro-
mises if man will do. what God.
asks: if he seeks' the Lord, he Will
find him; if he,calls upon the Lord,
he will be heard:, if he forsakes
• his way and returns unto the Lord,
. God will have mercy noon him ;' and
God will abundantly pardon, hint
8. For my thoughts are not your
thoughts,. neither are your ways
rny waYs,.Saith Jehovah., 9. For as
the heaven a are' higbee,than_the
earth, so are my ways higher than
your ways, and 'my thoughts than .
your thoughts.God's way of dealing
'with sin is lifted ,boVe all human
example. It.surpasses all our own
thoUghts. God's pardon- is undis-
turbed and unhindered by any sense
of personal •resentment, though sin
IS an offense aginst him,; hi its
freeness, fullness, his pardon melts
away also that which it forgives
-.4juv
"77-6:11424,1M-3,,gONVAVOritniitVileir-rqf .
turneth not thither, but watereth
the earth; and maketh it bring forth
atyl bud. end giveth sseecl to the
•
Atha. voe if,'
•
Wheit the Nazi. Marched Into Daunt&
rt,
• • ADaithh. •policenian, LEFT, can
latest Hitler -engineered "Blitzkrieg"
,Denmark submitted meekly .to the
German .sOldiera,.RIGHT, march in
do nothing but watch peacefully
that turned the theatre ofwar, to
military might of Germany in the
to the city of Aalborg, Denmark.
Sower, and bread to the eater; 11.
so shall niy word be that goeth
forth outiof my mouth: it shall, not
return unto me void, but it • shall
accomplish that which I please, and
• it shall prosper In the thing where-
to I sent it. •
The rain never descends in vain.
It makes the earth fertileb uti-
ea
ful, and lovely. So would it be with• ••
God's truth in the moral •worhi„
• (9,4•• •
• •The .Cana.dian •Conservation AS -
sedation. was brought into being at
,•thiS meeting. Among, itsfounders
was Prof. V.-c.•Nqnne-EdwArcis, of
the , department of. zoology .at; *Me: -
Gill university, and -B.. W; Taylor,
Quebec.. provincial ;biologist' and di-
rector of ,fish. culture. • , •• •••"
. ,
EXPERTS WORK. ON IT
One. ;of the first objects'. of the'
association will be •to obtain aecnr-
ate ieformation on all the sporting
and conservation groups af the' Due
Would •Conserve minion, The association hopes to
• act as an advisory 1,90 for the
• whole of Canada on 'problems of
• conservation involving pirds, ani-
• mals, fish, forests, and, as well, the
' problems of soil and, water censer -
'Ireton; which are , important. • in
• some parts of Canada. '
The association • has a Iiiiiited• '
membership and ineltIdes '.sports-
men, biologists, fOresters, engineers.
and other experts, as Well as mem-
• bers of the civil service. 14 mem-
bership IS drawn frotri every pro-
vince. The president is Dr. John
D. Detwiler, oflondeli, Ont. •
Resourres Here •
Canadian Scientists Organize ,
•• To Save Our Birds; Animals,
Fish, Forests, Water Supply
From Depletion '
• A new onslaught is • to be, made
against, the forces which are de61-
Anating Canada's natural resources,
It was disclosed following. a recent
• meeting of Canadian scientists at
• Queen's University. • '
RADIOII REPORTER
•By
111
FROM THE OLD. LAND •
• • Everyoneenjoys the robust hu..
moor of 'the British Variety;Halle
• -and lately the radio stations are
'featuring more of the peppy songs •
' and • broad gags • from Lunnon..
,Tovvn. While several excellent pro-
grams of this kind r are featured •
' during the 'week three in. par-
ticular stand out' in our opinion.
First, Revitedeville from CKOC
.on. Sundays at 2:80 is Worth 'a' •
half-hour of anyone's time in our
• opinion anda close runner-up
is the Let's •All• Go To . the Music
Hall.shosi on the CBC chain from
• Torohto on Saturday nights at,
9.30.
Both of these show e feature
*ell-knovyn British stars in songs
and stories - that Sparkle!
Then there's •a good • variety
show direct from the Old Land on
Saturday afternoon • at • three
' when the BBC offer the Garrison
• Theatre. With all' these, Aid oth-
ers in a similar \vein, Old Conn- .
try folk need nevei feel lonesome.
5 * •
-• NEW RADIO GAME
WOR, the Mutual Network sta-
tion in New York, is 'always com-
ing up with a new idea, for a ra-
dio game - and ` theii latest le,
• onethat is ..hoth educational and •
entertainilig. Dr. Henry Lee
Sthith, of the Faculty of , Colum-
bia .University, is ,Master of Cere- •
monies•on the program - Where.
Are You' From? And believe it •
•or not, Dr. Smith, from your po-
• nounciations, or dialect if you
:like, tell§ you where you came
Qom and received your sedneatien.
• On. each question Dr. •Smith 'ex-
plains just what in the statement
his guest has made, led him to his
l
. decision and seve,n timesout
of• ten Dr. Smith is right. ' •
.5
For the • women, the Columbia
Chain hs a smart miming •Pro-• •
•grain each day at 9.3a, WhenVide-• '
!aide .Hawley takes the air with •
the Women's Page. A woman who
knows the things women would
like. to do. tells you how to do ,
:them best. • •
*
Classics by the 'Masters are •pre-
sented. Monday and FridaY after-
noons at 3.30 from CKOC, when
MusieYOu Want is featured. The
• finest 'in music makes this fea-
ture
.program a treat 'for radio
listeners..
5 5: 5,•
• 'SPOTLIGHT ' DIALING • - Sun-
4ay , ;Adventures Of Ellery
Queen, detective, fronijhe Colum-
bia network at 7.30 . Sweet
.and Low via CBC at 11.30 . . .
'Tuesday Fred Waring in Pleas-
ure Time on NBC -Red at .seven
Montreal 'orchestra -froin CBC
• at ten - England Dances' via
• CKOC at '11.15 . - Hit •Parade
• from Mutual on the d:ot of mid-
night . . . Thursday Talk .of
the, Town, :845 'froin CKOC .
Shadow, of the Swastika from
CBL at nine
soprano, from NBC -Blue :at 10.3o
riday - Hill Top House
front CBS at 4.30 . . Polatid's
' 'Constitutional Day, en CBC at
7,45 . . . 13th Overseas Battalion
band, on CKOC at 8.30 . . ."Can-
adian Ileritage, •CBL at 10.30 .
Saturday - The Garrison Theatre
• from BBC via CBC at three . .
Percy LeSueur 'in the sports ,world
at 7.30 ..; . Let's Go To The Mu-
sic Hall,. froM• CBL at 9.30. ,
.POP -Flying Speed
• ••• ';TZ.t:icr;•SM.r.,7at,.....
• The Wild West
Deglarnoriied
McGill Study. Leaves Us Only
the •Wide Open Spaces to
Cbnjure With No • Real
• COwboys
• Devotees of wild west films and
literature are due for a distinct
shock when 'they read the latest
*Aurae from McGill University, en-
titled "Pione:ering in the Prairie
Previnpes.", It is the joint work .o
Dr. C. A. Dawson, ;head of the •de-
partmentiof sociology at McGill and
Miss Eva R, Yetinge; .researcli as-
siStant •in the department of social
research. The book it„one 9f &ser-
ies of nine on'the general, table "b„.;
nadian Frontiers of' Settlement,"
• The "wild and' woolly West'', is.
'deglaraerizeci to tire 'nth degree ,in
this latest sociological tittidy„ a
product of several . years research
work in tite;•Prairie provinces:..The
volUme..-,humoronely • 'Minis out':
aScenea are still 'enacted and deeds
are celebrate,d in song by cowboys
and cowgirls:; many of whom have
never been west of Brooklyn or To-
ronto."
' HARD. TO MAKE LIVING
.Under the heading "Typical Com-
munities in Action," • the volume
states that "the favorite social ga-
theriag is the dance," and "in the
slimmer -tithe the • big • event is the
annual aports day,".No mention is
made of the colorful round -up, but,
there is detailed description of the,
task of making a living and of the
trialsand, difficulties • which face
pioneers and their descendants in
building up the fahrie of communal
life. The highlight of -the "progress"
it seems, is the ,mounting load of
debt as litingestandards7go ,upwaid.
Farm Notes . . .
• Beauty Culture•
For, Farm Hornes • In a remarkable address. by Mr....
• C. H. Hbdge, editor o,f the ,Farm-
, er's Magazine', Toronto,. an the ee,
• caSion of ,a,recent meeting of We
• Quebec Horticultural Federation,
• in Montreal;'' ,the tonic was the
• beantification„ofqairrii•komei ii
Ontario. With the aid 'of coloured.
lantern slides' the. 'speaker describ-
ed the transformation ..:of the •
homes .of those ,Who 'entered com-;
pet•itions sponsored by his paper.
'As ,Mr. 'Hodge • expressed • it,' we
..Owe to our children the endoring.
•.memory cf an attractive horne„
• Ow that in after years they•can..,
recall with, pleasure and pride.
. Mr. tHodge showed how •marVel-
lously 'the appearance of a farm
home can • be trnproved by a little
trimming and. painting, by tidy-
•' ing up around it, giving SQMg 'cafe
• to • the.• lawn and • especially . by
planting flowers.. The other day
the writer heard of a man Who of-
fered .a house for sale at $3000.00
. and found no bidder.He then
spent $40.60 on a paint job and
sold.the house easily for $4000.00:
Surroundings' of the Home •
the, Ontario Crop Improvement
Asseciatien has for • its slogan:
"Better rural , conditions through'
crop improvement." It is a strange
anoinaly that 'many .a farmer who
takes great pleasure and pride in
his thriving field crops, cultivated
• and fertilized • with... consuinate
care, is indifferent to the 'Minted -
late 'surroundings of the ,• farm
house. Thank e to .Mr. Hodge, it
may now be said that ."the 4)14.1•
order clutrigeth; yielding place to •
hew."
• Plans Are Laid
For 194,1 Census
War or peace, the decennial cen-
sus of Canada .will be takeeon the
schedule in .1911. Officials of the
Dominion Bureau of Statietics are
busy preparing for the counting•of •
heads and the compilation of hun- •
dreds of volumes of figure's which
give a complete picture' of the
growth of Canada in wealth and in
population.
On June 2_1941. some 16,000 -en-
umerators .Will start ringing door-
bells from coast to coast; asking
questiOns,and filling in the answers
on big sheets of paper..
They will, count, not.. only thg •
pen, women and children in Can,
•ada, • but the horses, taws; pigs,
sheep and poultry. They *All note'
31
racial origin, religion, occupation,,
age, wages, employment or lack of
employment, livestock and acreage '
in crop dn farms.
BETWEEN 11,000,000 AND
12.000,090 •
Population of Canada .at the laid
census, in 1931, was 10,376,000.
Since then it has been increasing
at the rate of about 100,009 a year
according to estimates, based on(the
bir,ths and deetha, immigration and '
-ettligratIon- $o the nerd census pro-
• bably will show a population of be-
tween 11,000,000 and J.2,000,000. •
Most notable. changes will be
shown in the inereases4n partica,
lar districts, cities and towns. The
mining area of Northwestern Que-
bec, for instanee,fwill report Many
thousands of people where there
were only hundreds in- 1931.
I THIS LUR1OCIS .WORLD
84,:sur
•
• • WHEN •TOO.'QLD TO HUNT BIG GAME...
• >-W
HEN
NC7T7DO PROUD TO SUBSIST ON •
• • •• 43E,E7Z.E5 AND. GRUBS.
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•
017-'7'..7.. MEMBER.. OF •
. rrE...'1,11V, . AL±HOuGki
ari-ic:-..-.t. MAY BE FROM
• 10 TO E- /GA 1 7 3/ •••
• 77-/q.u.S..41/V42. MEMBERS. a
. .
. . . . .. . .
' • , • . .' .' . .:
. . . . . . .
. .
qg FPO crfg„
FR.F_LJEN•tly ARE \/11E5L,.E
• WITH THE./VAKE:0 E'VE",
• BUT THE EVES SHOLILD
• BE PROTECTED, *BY dA
• DARK GLAS
7_16 COPR 193.7 RV NE.4 SER'!ICE,. (NC
, • EACH colony of bees has its own particular odor, and ,any strange
be is detected at once and driven out • If a hive is divided, a
difference develops in the odors of the two colonies andwithin
• one week's time the inserts are total strangers
NEXT s robbing the nest of a migratory bird •a iriolation of
• the law? •••
• IMPORTANT INVENTOR f
• HORIZONTAL
1, 6 Pictured
communiceL
• lion inventor.
11 Always.
12 Tanning
vessel's,. •'-
13 Barley
• spileelet.
14 Large ratite
bird.
15'Alleviates.
17 Life principle.
19 Preposition.
20 Compound.
ether.
24 Grain.
27 Heron: - • ,
31 Spherical.
32 Falsehood.
33 Trophical
mammal.
34 Wayside hotel.
35 To enliven.
,38 Aeriform
• fuel.
39 Grew old.
40 Boys.
42 Maltreats.
46 Rental con-
• tracts.
49 To annoy.
,
Answer to PreviousPuizle 18 He was alsei
-(p1.).
• 21 Male child.
22 Large cask.
23 Half an On!
24 Fetid. •
25 Intention.
• 26 Wild duck,
28 Energy.
•.29 Tatter. •
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50To divorce • parental.
the wife. 3 To squall.
53 Sea gun. 4 Liquid
54 An axil. measure.
55 Long outer • :5 Slightest.,
garment. , 7 Above.
57 To hew. • 8.In6arnation of
59 He invented . Vishnu. '
the in 9 To stupefy.
last' century: 10 Electric teat.
60 His signal 15 His native
is still in land. '
30 Greek letter. •
36 Animal that
• nests. •
37 Converses.
39 To question.
•41 Mernbranous
bag.
43 Liver fluid.
44 Russian •"
mountains,
45 To slide.
47 Vended.
48 Tree yielding
51 Wing. '
52 To burn into
• ashes.
54 Position in
use (pl.): 16 Use of a ' time.
VERTICAL •cattle yard. 55 Portugal.
'1 Southeast. ' 17 To go before 56 For example.
• 2 Grand- ' rank. 58 Postscript. -
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