HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1940-06-06, Page 3•
p •
• Jekyll-liyde Type
Not Uncommon
Many Persons Live in Two •
',World* of Personality. •Psy-
:hiatrist Declares . ,
.•
• Disetivery•that many persons live
'
ii .two worlds of personality, each '
Independent . of the other, was re-
ported before the American Pry-
chiatric Association. , • • .•
1 This Jekyll -Hyde relationship :ex-
' late without 'the personknowing .it •
and resemblesethe functioning .of
two brains instead of One Dr. Mil- .•
toe, Erickson, of, Eloise. Mich., de,
• clarea. The, condition- is not'cont-
•. • Mena he added,. butsfrom 'the num-
ber' • • 1 • of eases •discOeered 'without
.• •
starching for theta it appears that
• '° • • •' it, is not enceinte* . • • .
iNDEP.ENDENT OF. EACH' OTHER
•. • e, example...he reportedthe •
,ease or a.gfra working A. univer; .•
• • sity. office *hoe wat ,aulfernitteiy.
"Mary" *ilea "EUen."- Ellen, desig-
nate& as he a"primary personality"
by Dr. Erickson,9san e.xeeeding-
ly attractive, unusually ea.pable and
intelligent. 2,4 -yeas -Old giraa while
bee 'mental, sister" is ."displeasing•
ly meek, unreasonably insecure, nee,.
ver.'dares to show any ematihn,and
is forgetful and absentminded • as
.well as being awkward .aood very.
clumsy:" •
Beth' personalities aie entirely
In-
dependent of each other; he dealer- .
eta and yet 'seem.. to be' acquainted
in an aieseract.way.
•
ea.
New StiLff Chief
• Sir John; Dill, ABOVE, has
been named Chief of the Impel-;
ial General Staff to replace Sir.
• Edmund Ironside, who has been
• a alien the task of looking after!.
Britairae home defences,
Blames Santa.
For Ttonbles
Prominent- Mentat .Hygienist
Says He Is Responsible, for
Many People -Refusing to
Face Reality
O •
•
Many of thee troubles of the hu-,
man
.race and the .refusaa of many .
people to face reality, . has been
caused, by Santa Claus. in the opin-
ion of Dr. G. Brock•Chisholm, prom- '
Lfient psychiatrist and mental hy.
gienist in an address at Toronto
before the, joint meeting of. the
Canadian Conference an • Social
Work . and the Canadian .National
•Conunittpe. for Mental Hygiene. He
declared that if the democracies
were .to survive as independent une
'its' it. -might well be that --they
would have te.come much .more '
closely in torch With reality and
maintain that touch. "so'. that this
cannot happen again."
IF DEMOCRACY'S TO. SURVIVE
Colonel Chisholm was discussing
educationfrom the viewpointof
mental hygiene for family life. 'We
cannot take for granted because the 4
family for a long time has been the
unit oi civilization. that it willcOna.
tines, to be. nor that iu it is to be
fotin.i the highest type of develop-
inen'. We must approach the .suh- •
loci: in a speculative'way not know- .
ing for ehat we are preparing our
children. It nia'y be nhcessery for
them to •thernielves to a dis-
ciplinteof form extraction 4hat may
eneeeivetay by force of arms be ince
pesee1 upon theni. in order that they
• r1.1.14i 411L7're.” he said. •
Pacific. Islanci
Seal Sanctuary.
_epee good .to know that in
- this world ef strife at least one
section of enema' life enjoys
slam' Seals hive a sanctuary
on the Pribilofs a rack*
• archipelago ef four tiny islands
rieteed after • Gerasium . Pribilof,
a Ressian explorer. The"lelands
new belong • .to • the ' United
Statea.• Who hare extended a
60 -mile z� n e of protection
• around them; this being re-
opected he international • treaty.
No tourist is sheared on the
Pribilof's, the only houses being
• those of Government officials
scientists who' study the
hitee_ealfe thee, Sea,L...
_
Which was in danger of beon
tetinct in these waters, hal
o re• incra:sed in mitabers to
tstere than twe
S N I) AY
scUQoi
•LESS.ON
LESSON X
EZEKIEL. TEACHES PERSONAL.
• RESPONSIBILITY '
•• Ezekiel 33:1-20
Printed Text, Elek. 33746
•Golden Text: "So then each one of
us shall give account of himself to
God" Rom. 14:12.
THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING
Time - 586- B.C. ••
• Place - AtTeaabita at the river
Chebar, on a canal , op the ahe.
'• phrates Riaer, -near agioper, in Bab-
yion. a•-> •
' THE PROPHET .EZERIEL
Of the man Ezekiel himehlf
name ''ineatss aGod strengthens")
We know very little. In Babylon he •
as plantedwith ethers el hisaewn
nationby the beaks of .ona of the
irrigating canals which was called
Chebar. He was a married man, and'
the loss of his Wife, 'Jae sudden.and
terrible way, was made bydivine
• instruetioa. a ;lesson to the people
(24:15-27).- He" spent 22 years in
,the discharge a. his prophetic ea
fice. In grandeur and variety Of
thought in his conception of God,
only Isaiah and Mises can be 'cam-
-
• pared with Ezekiel.
WATCHMAN OVER ISRAEL
Eiekiel is personally eommission-
• ed by God to be a watchman for
Israel, the Lord, remindjng the
prophet that a 'true watchman it
one who wilt blow the trumpet to
warn tile people 'when danger.
imminent.
• Ezekiel 33;7. So thou, son of mani.
set thee a watchman unto the
•.house of Israel, therefore hear' the
ieword at my mouth, and ,give them' .
Warning from me. ' •
' 8, When I say unto' the wkked,
, 0 Wicked 'map, thou shalt surely
die, and thou dost not speaktel
warn the wichectafrons his way;
that wicked man shalt die in his. ,
iniquity; but his, ',blood will I' re-
quire at thyhand. • •
p. Nevertheless, if thou .warn the
. wicked of his way tai turn them it;
and he turn not from his way; he
shah die in. hie iniquitea tett thou •
hast delivered the soul. •
7; Sc thou, son of Man. I have set
' thee e*etehman Maio thethouse of.
Israeltherefere hear the word at
,my mouth, and give them warning •
from me. • •• , • :
8. When. I say unto the Wicked. 0,
wicked man, thou shalt surely die,
ana thou dost ' not speak to warn
• the 'wicked from his way; that
wicked man shall die in•his iniquity
, but his blood Will 1' require at thy
9. Neierthelessif thou warn the
' wicked/of, his way to turn from'ft,
and he turn eart from his way: he• '
.shall die in his iniquity, but thou
'base delivered thy soul. 'Office aa
ways inealves res•pansibility, and
no responsibility couldbe greater'
than that of a 'watchman in. time of
• invasion. The prophet who is ,elio-
sen to play the part of Watchman
must have his eye intent simply on
• the spirituel issues, seeing • the •
coining moral calamity, ie order to
be able to warn the people. There e
• is nothing in Ezekiel's ministry
that appeals more directly to the
Christian conscience than the ser-
ious and profound senseof pastoral
responsibility -to which this pas-
sage bears witnees.
•' MESSAGE TO DlaSPAIRING ••
ISRAEL
• 10. And thou., son of man. say
unto the house of Israel:"Thea ,Ye
speak-, sayings. Our transgressions
• and our gins are upon us, and we ,
• pine away in then; how then can
we live? The people had stow conte
to regard their calamities as due to
their sins and as ealdenc'e octhent.
11. Si' unto them, As I live, saith
the Lord Jdhovab 1 have no pleas-
ure in the death of the wicked,•lant
that tae wicked teen from his way
and live: turn ye, turn ye ,,from
your evil ways: for why will
0 house of Israel?' Gad would have
Israel knowthat he look no pleas-
ure in seeing, tfie• wicked die. and
that his will was ever, for men to
turn to him and live..
THE VAST /40T IRREVOCABLE
12. And thou, son 'of man. say,
unto the children of thy people,
The arighteousness of the righteous
shall not deliver him in 'the day of
his traesexession; and as for the
wickedness of tae wicked, he shail
not fall thereby. in the day that he
tnrneth from •his wickedness; nei-• •
theceshall he that is righteous be •
able to Live thereby in the day that
• he Menotti.. 1-3. When I sayto the
righteous, that he, shall surely live.
if hetrust to his righ-teousness, and
commit fniuity. none of his rigbh
• roux deeds shall be remembered; ,
• but in his. Iniquity 'that. ha hatb
committed, 'therein . shall he die.
The prophet's purpose here is to
teach the- general truth 014 the
past of one's life does not of rietes-
• site detetteine the future either in
iMelfe a le the judgnient of God.
Thla, next to the assurance Of Gea's
gracious will regarding liten (v. 11)
was the truth most needed to a -pra-
ted the. people and awaken them
out of the stupor Which lay on diem
into a moral life and anlivityeaeain.
irrevacehle, a .fuh. •
FT 0 13k • '
14. Again, when 1 say unto the
wiekeda `Thou shalt surely die; ft
be turn' from his sin, and do that
Control Room of Britian's Air Defence System
es
-
41, : w- .4., 1'7.
Here, is the control room, somewhere in England, of Britain's
intricate air defence system. Around a large-scale map of, the British
Isles are telephonists •in communication with ltey defence points. Re-
ports, of enemy planes aring quick action 14,the men around the table
who ,take appropriate ateps to counter •the attack in their areas.,
which is lawful and right; 15. if the
-wicked restore the pledge, give
again that which he had taken by
rohbery, walk in the statutes of life,
.committing no iniquity; Ai.
eureka live. he: shall not Mee 16.
Nonrnh his sins that he hath com-
mitted shall be reinernhered ag-
• ainst him; he hath done that which
is lawful -and right; he shall surely.
"Life!" here Is used in the rich.
sense of enjoyment of the favour
of God. With regard to -"righteous-
:. The bent of •the character
hiwards or away from goodness is
no doubt spoken of as subject to
• sudden fluctuatiees, but • for the ,
tittle being each man is conceived
• as dominated by the one tendency
or the other; and it is the bent 6e. •
the whole nature towards the good.
that constitutes the righteousness
• by which a man shall live,:
•ScOUTIPM 1•
An eighteen -year-old Bay Scout
who wants to be a reisaioaary, ;end
a bookkeeper turned ,
havestarted out on a canoeing and,
• preaching mission down the lower:
Mississippi River, among • shanty-,
• boat dwellers. They are cooking all
their meals andcamping out Boy'
••Scout style. •
There are Boy Scoots •in mach -
sting -about Mandalay, in Upper Bur- '
,ma. One of their public service act-
ivities is the regular cleaning and
retillitig of animal drinking troughs
and they also help in traffic control
and in locating after 'orphan boys,
aScouthig has been a good thing
'.in our community, and the fruits
of the efforts of those who aregiv-
ing time and thought to the work
are to be seen Melte lives and con-
duct of the young people Who have
growe up here. We hope we can
continue the work" Annual Ite• -
port of Great, Village; N.S. Scout
Group. •- •
Oysters Carry
• ' Worthless Pearls
Don't expect to eeet rili ron/
• the pearl you find • in .aa .oys-
-ter, ' even •if it hasn't already
beeh ruined by cooking
The reason: you won't . get
-rich, according to Clifford I.
Josephson, president of the
• American Gem Society, is
cause no peed •of any real
worth is ever found in• the
North American variety of ed-
ible °aster. They lack the lustre
of the true gem."
• "The earniti.f s- -pitn• -
wily• an • escape mec Insta-
PP
•l" ; -Julian Bexley.
III . .11. A 0 .
• •
•
:0 ' ' .8....E. .F0 Hart 111
• ,By DAVE ROBBINS , . •• '
SUMMER .SHOWS'
' With the season sleekening' oft
for the Summer,. radio' listeners
Will hear newcomers and
under-
studies get their chance on the air. .
Every year as Summer rolls around
the topnotch stars and headlinehs •
take a few months' vacation - so
that when they return in- the Fall
they will be taking over neva spots
on the schedules and as thee de-
part tite neophytes step into their
places., • .
• Many big-timers:on the air today
got their startle just this Way -
• so if you hear a new rice you like.
or someone with a new idea for a
programme that you like, let the
-
station.youheard them from know
ebout it. •.
In that way you ,encourage the.
kind Of shows you like on the• air'
lanes. ••
• NOTES. ANOE NEWS aolah'"aaha .•
Well, it's alt set Fred4Allen
text season. Fred will be beard on
the Columbia network on Weaties-
day nights at tine litt a similar .
show to that which thousands have
enjoyed for the past few seasons..
For .whioh hip, hip, hurray!
Itt these days of stress and war
we should not' overlook the fake
thatetruch of the Red Cross money
pouring into Europe from the Unit-
ed States is being raised by the ,
radio headliners,' who put on better
showa for thkenoble purpose se- and
do It for teething -s than they man-
age to perform for their sponsors. ,
And foe- the, ladies - Meriel
King, ace dress 'designer, 'has an
interesting program on the CBS
chain Wednesday afternoons at .
four. Stie chri give yon tips for new,.
dresset.
. • -• -• • •
JOTTINGS ON THE, CUFF , •
• Larry Owens, long with Guy
Lombardo's• band. has stepped ,out
to form his own unit last
Week fOrmally aecased the' Motion
picture' Industry of 'deliberately
holding back television,. . and the ,
week's best radio crack' -came from .
Walter Winchetas Sunday night's
newscast. - said Walter: s. "Hit-
ler will go down inhistory as the
man %Nato:made necessary the in-
vention of beIleearoof. baby car-
riagee."
KfLoCYCI-161G . SPOTLIGHT
Moeilay Breakfast atub .vis
CBC' et nine each morning : • .
Music Von • Want from ('KOC at
. 3301a . . 'Alec' Templeton ,Tiate on
NB(' -red at 9:30 Leo Reisman'a
orchestra from WOR at 11:30 .
Wednesday - Backitage With Ra-
dio .from CKOC at 8:30 pen: . . .
The. Green Hornet on NBC -blue at
nine . . . Kay Ryser and the gang
at ten NBC -red., . Mart !Kenney.
CBC from Vancouver at '10.:45
... Friday - Modern Trends from
CPC at 5:15 Fifth. Row Centre
with WOR -Mutual at eight . . •
Showboat from NBC' -blue at nine
Make Mine 111101C from ('KOC
at 11:30. • • 7 •
•
Obeyed Orders
Farm Notes .
Calf Requires
Special Care
The care given to' the dairy
calf. frcm birth to six ,rnonthi
of age ,hes• a very definite efe
• feet on is ultimate usefulness
in the dairy herd. Calves worth
rising are worth speeial care.
The practice at the Central Ex-
perimental Farm, Ottawa, states
' Y. S. •/Logan, Divisiori of Atli-
Haebehtliy, isto separate
the calf them its• mother -im-
mediately and teeth , it to drink
•from a pail.; •
.1Yleans Later Usefulness
' It ia •essential that the near-•,
Vorief calf raetiv,e• mether's
• fleet' cr colostruin for, "a
perrd of six to nine days. This
. provides a•Ilaxativel andalso
contains substances •whicis
hibit :the develop/tient 'of ' dis-
ease 'gerrns present in the digese
tiv tract. •
Whole Milk feeding should be
continued fOr the . first four
• weeks at the rate of about one
po,und ,of mijk per 10 pounds
Weight ' of calf. Beginning . at
four weeks, skim milk should
be gradually substituted for
whole milk • at the rate of
pound each day. At this change,
meal rich in• fat may beintro-
• duced„to take the piece of the
fat that • is removed from the
niilk. • .
Skim' Milk, Good
• Scalded • flaxseed meal With
water added *make it .the con-
sistenoy 'of gruel Makes an ex-
• cellent fat substitute. The gruel
should be .. added to 'the milk
when the calf .is four weeks Of
age, allowing 'one-qiiirter 'cup
per. feed And increasing the am-
oant gradually be a 7 cupful :per
feed at two months of age: If •
available, skini milk may be us-
ed until the calf is at leastsix
• months ' old: . Where skirn' milk
is not available„ whole milk,
' sheuld be •given for a longer
• period • and gradually replaced
with .warrn water. .•
Cleanliaeais ,Essential • •
At, two b�l three weeks of age.
the .calves should be provided
• with): all the geed • quality ' le-
• gume hay they will eat, and at
three .weeks, re meal mixture
such .as one part ground oats,
two parts bran, one part corn .
diatillers' grains, one, part oil
• cake meal in small quantities.;
This mixture should beincreas-
• ed gradually to a rate of two
pounds per day at three months
of age. Clean stalls and clean
feeding utensils -'are positively
essential in order to avoid dis-
ease in young calves.- !
Gardening
• cAlsvSTART VET •
I..!veir'f in the Wai'meroections of
Canada' it is still. possible ,to• have
a•s•plendid garden::There.are plen-
ty of things to.plent which will all
(eine on, quickly. Experienced, gals
deners in recent ,Years have. been..
purposely holding' back a portion
.• of lettuce. spinach, 'carrot eed otle
• er vegetable seeds so.that the har-
vesting season may 'be extended
just that Much' lodger. •
Early June is the ideal time in
:most of .Canada toaplant seed of
those hot weather things like mel-
on, •ctieumber. mediuM or late torn
and beans. It: is not safe in matt,:
districts to set out; celery. tntnato.
cabbage and :Pepper plants much
sooner. There is still plenty of One
'to plant dahlia. gladiolus and canna
bulbs or corms among the 'flowers
• NEED SUPPORT
• ' Dalilias. tomatoes. large cosmos
Or nicotine. young ahaile. trees. new
cianhere:, all benefit from some art,
ificial support while they are get.
ting started. .
For tall individeal flowers or to
matoes, 6 -foot stakes Of 'wood Or ,
steel are advisable and the plant is
tied to thee loosely. with soft
tine or raffia. Stouter and peahape"
longer stakes will be !teed a -up the
thecae trees , and correstiondittgly,
shorter ones 'for the smaller flaw.'
ers.
:Building permits igsued hi 20a.
municipalities in Canada during
the first 'quarter of 1940 hedes
total 'value of $12,442,014.. •
Contract diamond --(trilling on
-Canadian mineral deposits in
1989 totalled 2,064;292 •feet, or
more than 390 miles. These op- ,
eratiOns cost $3,013,249, and'e
were conducted • in Ontario,
Quebec, British Columbia, Nova
••
Scotia, New •• BrAnswiek
Wog, Saskatchewan, and. the
Northwest Territories.
•"The .student igtould net be
stinaulat.ed •to. werkt • by lintel?. •
compettive nnethOds."
-Albert Einstein.
•
4IS CURIOUS WORLD Bierwguaslioamn
•f40f?...SES
MGHT N/atAyE
•ME,50taSEFI-j1-
TO MAN. HAD r -!-
NOT' BEEN .
SPACE
iieWVP
• isrrwtE.KI.
•Nic rsarzs
ThE ENT is EDLAcE.c. • IN THIS
SPACE., AND THE, ANIMAL-GANNOT
TAKE. IV !NI HIS TEETH./
THEREBY, IS ABLE TO Cth.flRO.L
AN' " 'GUIDE ailtsAe
s •- 1531 Se NEA SERVICE. INC.
. 0.
0
Oe
, o :
TROPICAL. RDIZESTS. '
WI-4ERE •Humforry
is HEAVY,. AND W4arM-
• SL1PPL-Y FROM r -A
•17.0cirs IS PLENT1FUL.„
'CERTAIN LEAVES AREhe,
• CONSTR1JCTEC> 70
VVATEI,
THUS
THEN FROM BECaaeMiN• I
144tITER- 4.0GGEZ):
WEREit not for the fact that tropical treee ran get rid of their
surplus moisture, the leaves would become so coated 'with water a
that transpiration would be retarded. Some leaves have special
drip tips which conduct the water from the rest of the surface
NEXT: Of all the species of parrots, what one is a native of the
United atatesa • • •'
•
1 POPUI:-ARIACTRESS 1
HORIZONTAL• Answer te Previoas,Pnzzle role of bete,
1 Actress pie- •,,, . Queen ---.
tured here. r ''''h TA P L Y N 18 Chard'
. 9 She is a dignitaries.
•
• • famous ea---- 20Searlet.
• of todasa 22 Coffieer's •
12 To declaim • assistant '
wildly: 23 Twilled
13 Field. FAUST cotton cloth.
14 Crucifix: '• • 24 Helmet
15 Meral failings. ' , wreath.
16 Being. . . Pa KL p 26 Related by
17 To impede by 1 RA. U Ni DIEIVI I L . blood.
.'T
R
tis
E
T
E
0
0
B WAR S
A
• estoppel. Li ON O'P E 2 Frees.
• 19 Braced rail OIL28 Merriment. •
tracks over a 34 'F rove. •
- gully. 48 Owns. •worm. 1' 35 Six plus fie.
21 To coax, •49 Living. '3 Varni-h 36 Sick
25 Big. 51 Neither.
29 Placecl in 52 Ventila tes.
laa'ara. 53 Genus of.
• 30Sbe haS g reit evergreen
in craft shrubs.
of. acting. 54.To use tongs.
31 Land right. • 56 She has acted
32 Fantasy. on stage
33 To revoke..
36 To insert. . 57 She -s---Ls the
37 Indian , stage.
mtaberry.
38 Acquiescee. VERT" L
43 Sponge spicUles,2 Silk from a
• •
inaredient. . 39 Styl
'4 Oceupent of 40 Po .
• Eden; •' • ' 41. Ac al • being.
5 To. take, f a . 4aaTi e of .• '
shelter. co
? 6 On the lee. •43 Meribrantrus
7 Carp type . bag.
fish. • 44 To applaud. '
8 Orient. , 45 Grafted.
9 Cry for help. 46 House top. ' • ,
10 Child. • 47 Eagle., • '
11 Stir. • 50•To tilt.
14 Rolls of film. 52 Late. '
15,A favorite • 55 Grin (abbr.)
-
12.
3
1 5
13
7
a ,
14
10'
21,
29
31
33-
16
22
38
39
7
25.
30
26
40
,
27
28
18
44
45
46
9
51.
3
54
55
56
7 '
' ByJ. MILLAR WATT
• t*VGN't \OU ez4isf
.SCI -100C -
• TODAY,
7 9
14)1.1 TLD ME TI -85
MORNING TO MIND
THE STGAM
'ROLL ER !
•.
; • 3
* • '
5-6
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