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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-02-14, Page 7Enjoy areally fine hand-made cigarette by rolling ycur oum u>ith “ GULDEN VIRGINIA ALSO MADE UP IN PIPE TOBACCO . I—-- 4, ' ■ ; \ ’v' Farmer Fill. Well ’ ' ■ 4'/»'■Hi» Cow Sydwi^'N^w-Bouth; Wales.—A- far*, (iieft. in New South Wales ^was,d!»- . fling a. large ..well ‘ pn his . property when /his. cow fell into the Kola. The. well wap down to a depth of 15 feet. The animal was' uninjured'* but the problem was Wow to get It out. The farmer shoveled the, dirt which he itatf dug out back into the well. The COW, treading about, rpse littfe by ' Tattle~aa ' the Well '"was'^fied fn, W finally it was able to walk out un- '. karmed. " ' / . ' ‘t .., • '■-/- ■ ■ ■-...... - Classified Advertising - ----------- -------------!--------------------i---------/ WHXTZ WYAKDQTTEB FAMOUS Superior .Eischel Strain. Closely teathayragfor severe weath- BhIn ’W* broiler: Brown egg: NeuhaUBers,, enhatham, Ontario. er. Yellow skin e! PATENTS ■. J V ' A Al OFFER TO EV ER Y INVENTOR OlLwante0^ tn-vfeiitl ens land- full/ rinatlon sent free. The Ttn.Tn.ny Company, world Patent Attorneys' 273 Bank Street, Ottawa? Canada . S fl 8 FOB YOUR OLD GODD /OBTAIN the highest prices/ ■ for ,yo?,r o,d gold, silver or platinum. Deal direct w/ith „th^<dargest refiners ----mete] scrap.; in Canada.The Williams Gold Refining Co.. Ltd.. Assayers; Smelters . and Refiners, Box 219A. Fort Erie. North. Ont., 76 Pimply-Sick Skin - That inferiority complex that a pimply-sick * — skin brings to jrott. M Well as-the discomfort- of r ‘ —the.rash, the imnpleeand.the bump* all yield to _ . the softening influence of Mer Soap and the healing influence ot Mer Cream. These two ', '. have long yean of splendid service behind ■ them, and look forwaltd tobecomingydur friend' aa well. Scientifically- made by Caulk of , Canada, Limited, you can get them gt Drug ■. and Department Stores. , . . T"' ■ ; ’ Artists9 and .........- I Send a three cent stamped Jen-’ velope for information on our -MONTHLY to..Artists„,,.ahd^.A-utho-te^ listing up-to-date iriformatipn . on , ■ “WHERE AND WHAT TO SELL Canadian and International Art ^. .:And„Xitera^~Contest-s-- Yearly subscription, One Dollar —Sample .SheetfT-en-,-Cents “ GIFF BAKER 39 LEE AVENUE /TORONTO, ONT . i _____' I • J 5 ■ Heard? '■i : __T A RHEUMATIC PAIN FOR 4 Y^ARS Man Pra^ST") ' ■" Kriu&ben -. • - . -J. - - ; ) i ’ A man who once suffered severely Jrom rheumatism writes:— ; “For a long) time I soffe^ with rheumatism, and at one time was laid up for about nitie weeks. ABout ;fiv< years ago I was aidvised to W Kruschen. I did so, and have CQn- tinued using them ever since. KrUs- chendid-thetriick.asIhavenothad a rheumatic pain for over four years. I 'am nearly 70 . years of age, and feeling fihe, and always able for my day’s work—thanks to Kruschen,”,— a. s. ? Kruschen dissolves - away thoss needle^pomtfyi/crystals- of ^uric-acid .* which sire thell cause of all rheumatic troubles. It will also flush ,;theM dissolved crystals clean out of. the system/. Then if you keep ,sup “the little daily .dose/*”,, ekcess uric aqid ■ will never/form again. ' ' . : LoseSj/Tteda /■"' Germany’s Balance Drops 380 Millions In J. '._Qne/ Jear.; /'.../ ■_ Berlin. Germany’s" foreign trade balance dropped by ^380,700;- 000 within the past year, it was disclosed recently. 1 " While the 1933 foreign trajde balance wa§ favorable by- $267,200> 000, the balance for 1934 was un­ favorable by , $113,500,000. JLn- ‘ creased imports of raw materials arid cattle sent the total of '1934, imports to $1,78.0,000,000, an in-, crease'of. $98,700,000 over the pre- ? ^vious yea?; ■■ / - - ■ / 7' Germany sent out goods .valued ? at $1,666/000,000, a decline of ; $282,060,000' from -1933,/ attributed /; partly to decteased prices. Fqod ex- ports declined; one-third while the / ■^quantity-? bf-~4oods-/-brought-7--inf-4n-r-^ Creased, although ' its total value was smaller.. RELIGION SHOULD BOYCOTT WAR COMMITTEE IS TOLD . . '*'St ■ • . , __________' ________. '. ' " . / . ‘ . .. ■'/,..■ ; I J..L-..; ■...J.!'-'J.’..■■^'7'..-■....' ....... Biologically, Sociologically,1 /-‘TateMpetualiy war perverts sci- ' “ * ..... . pnc,e tq1 sytematized murder,” he .. said,. M/ "Most wars can be traced -to econ­ omic causes, though these ate ca­mouflaged: aiid Idealized, since ..no mother would cheerfully 4 sehd 1 son tp »hls premature death for com- mb,rcigl aggrandizement and ppmmer- . clal suptemheyr’ Dr? Mann said.' - His address brought applause from thdrT,000 women delegates, repre­ senting 11 national organizations; here to press on every possible, peace front. The ; women were already well '<ong*^ Senator personally to urge® passage- this week of the measure for '’world court adfierence/ CoalMinerShouldn’t Mend Clothes And Do “Sissy Work” The State of Ohio agreed/recent­ ly that mayhe. lt would be/all right for Ida We /Stull -tp work : In her So Ida Mae; 34 years old and .buxmn, donned overalls; boots and carbide lamp and went back into the pits from which she was barred/when state yminp inspectors > /said loading coal was not for women. “I’ve got to start making a living again,” said Miss Stull. «K-ve been doing sissy work long enough. C I’ve got no business baking cookies and mendiiig clothes. , ’m/a; coal piinpd. "I’ve worked in the mines for. 22 years. I’ve, shot it d3wu and I’ve hauled it out. I’ve cut props, dug 7entrigs'r and' loaded cbalT T can load five tons a day with pick and shovel, and /that’s, ds- much as any , man in /the mines can do.” / Miss Stull is parjt owner of a mine near here.’ She also keeps house for ^haP-Px/J-^Wolfe^fiffi—who—owns^-the" other half .of her mine and who Was , a former partner of her late father. ' Ida Mae was barred from / the mines las.t summer when a state mineinspector recalled a state law prohibiting women from performing ‘‘manual labor-.” She stormed and ranted? .but^toe^sjate. mine department /wa.8. /adamant—-the. law was 4he.-law. „4 however,/ Attorney-General. „ .John.Bricker w^-s asked for' a ruling. He- handed down an1 opinion that as’ ilohg as Ida Mae owned the ipine she could work in it. . ‘ /< " . . ‘ % ' ‘ Natural Question „ An American . woman 4 who was presented at Court this year had among her /staff a Chinese ! amah, or nurs”ernaia, *for hfer children. The.’ amahwaS; extremely“'4iomesick,and to‘cheer her, spirits a little,, her mistress would -relate...'’small—^i'iF cidents of the day in as amusing, a The evening of’ the Court 4--__- tatibn, still in her Court dress, com­ plete with train and feathers, the American returned to her hotel and related to the .amah, with complete gestures, flow she had- advanced to. /the. throne, ..curtsied^ -withdrawn^ -She- went through the \yhole ceremony. . The amah watched with fascina­ tion,..and broke’ into a broad- smile. -‘K-inglaugh?”“"sheinquired?—Our Empire. • ‘ Immunity?from the law is granted to members of the Diplomatic Corps, their secretaries and servants, ’resi- <ieht in London. A pedestrian run­ down by rin ijlmbassy care is power-' Jess to lake" action unless the dip­ lomat waives his privilege. • 7" |' Bconomically And Intellect­ ually The. Resort To Arms Is* A Tragedy. Washington. Religion never again .bless war but- should fprm bo strpng a boycott, against war as to make |t impossible. DjL.JLQjjis.: L. Mann, Chicago, told a‘ banquet of the U.S. National Committee on the _C&UBes and Cure of War, ' x-- /“Commerce, education and science have "all failed to; abolish war,’’ Dr. Maim sa|d. ■, ‘'They have been: utilized to further the purposes of war J It seems to me that religion, which Override^ the boundaries of nations and transcends the barriers of race should take, its ‘stand of opposition to all wr at all 4toes.-L .. \ “If religion'not one religion and not in onb- country but if feligion. everywhere would boycott war therq, could .be.- no war. There' should " be no chaplain in any army. A chaplain is not there to comfort the dying, and bury the dead. That is mere camou- flage. He js .there to gjye., .a divlne, Wnclioh to the hellish business of hum|m slaughter. Religion must never again bless Waft The religion that, Jn th© future will, bver: bless war will, thereby damn itself.” War, Dr. Mann said, is founded on falsehoods and, propaganda. He said .the -stron win, not . those .who *are -right/- ' . ' - ■ ’/ ' ‘ “The \61d idea that God is on the side of the right" is a silperstitioh,” he continued. “God has nothing to do with war.'’ - ■ Biologically war kills the potenti­ ally best /fathers. - - - “The flower of every "land marches' •forth,to be mowed dciwn like so many • blades of grass,, and the weaklings temain behind to become. the fathers of the next generations „. 7?^£tologdcaIly__jKar„_dj¥er-ts-~-nioney- for slum clearance', health improve­ ment, and recreational centres, to pur­ poses of destruction;" economically‘ war expenditures grab 80 per cent.: of all .the revenues. ■ of the' United States, "it cost,$30,000/to kill each man who; wds sent to his . premature should T rRingworm Infection! r Skin Troubles YIELD QUICKLY TOl F |^^^Dr._D.-D.—Deniiia"”Li<juidPre- scrip tion, made ahd guaranteed W hy the makers of Campan*?a Ttali«n___„ y Balm. Trial bottle 35c st your it 1 —J ' . -V" If Your Ehts Ring I With Head Noises If you hAve catarrhal, deafness or head-noises/ go- t-o- your druggistTandl of(double strength), ’and add to it' pint of hot water-and a Jittle- '’sugar.. .■ Take a ■tablespoonful'./four‘' times, a clay. ■: ■«" —T-his’-wiHroftefi“"brin^^-®iclrrelief'' from- the distressing.,--head noises; Clogged-nostrils should open, breath­ ing become easy, and the ,mucoiis. stop dropping into the throat? It is easy to prepare, costs little, and is pleasant /to • .take; .. Anyon6 Who has catarrhallr deafness or head noises should^ give this prescription .a trial. /' ■ R. Handwriting^Reveals Character !y Thi» Fascinating New .Chart Shows How! Everyone should have a copy of THE GRAPHO CHART \ , 100 Illustrations- ‘ SIMPLE! —'ACCURATE!!— INFALLIBLE!!! . By Geoffrey St Clair . (^well-known Graphologist) • it /shows you bow to analyse J our own. chaijBCter, and that ot your friends from handwriting ; . .{..It is—not only a very fascinating game, but it . is extremely practical. • • • . ' 'i ' • Copies sent Post Free for 12c. each THE GRAPHOCHART, Room 42l;l 73 AdelaidezW«i Toron^aOnt* • if n l. '' . ■ . . ■ . • -.. . ■ ■ ' ...' . ... ■ ----2-—--------' .........* High School Boards & Boards of Education r Are authorized by law to establish" ■ ■ ■■Indixstrial, Technical and Art Schopls With-thp: dfipropal Ulf'iitiUpr pf Ddiicdiwn.' a' “yi Theoretical and. Practical . Instruction • (s given in various trades’. The . schools and-classes are undir .Conimittee^-———— .... Day anJNEvening Classes May be conducted In accord­ ance with the regulations issu- id by the Department of Ed- &e direction of an Advisory ucation. ■ Commercial Subject*/Manual Training, Household Science . " , ' : and Agriculture, and Horticulture * . Are provided for-in.the Courses of Study in Public,^Separate, Con­ tinuation and High Schools,: Collegiate Institutes, Vocational Schools and-Departments. jr‘7/ Rpation mag/ be obtained froni the Deputy. Mmisierr - — i W’’7 Parliament Buildings, Tmwito. . ,J Application for attendance should be made to the Prinyi^al of IchiOol V . 1 I / 'ftp .A & ' WITH SAFETY OF PHIHOTPAI. ■' . / • ‘ Code of a Eamily Rides the Mitiuis " 7 ■ - ’ ■ . / (Winnipeg^ Tribune)l|i • Ip the Occident the name of Roths- : ijehild.. is one that: by. over a century ;df common consent, represents econ­ omic power land influence. ' ■ ' < / Today, along with the .sharper ^projection of Japan’s progressive in- fairs,/the (name pf Mitsui, figures ■ 4argeiy/as- the* dominating influence jn the economic set-up of the leading ; power of the Orient. . Long before entering into financial enterprises in 1673, over’three hun­ dred years "ago, the Miteuis - of the :. seventh- century. -were//established among the warrior aristocracy of , Japan., - ■ Hkcherobei Mitsui came to the irdnt as the fbunder of the business:. house at, the latter? date^ The great ■sigti of his- business ^establishment still exists, reading, CASH PAY­ MENT AND A SINGLE* PRICE. .Each .of ,the eleven Mitsui fami? hies of today are under an identical code, bound to it by formal written pledges, unchanged . in the past'. 35 years. Then the older’rules of 1876 weredrawnupanew-butpracti- cally the same in^ principle. These, eleven separate Mitsui fami­ lies of today occupy fields of bank­ ing, trade, mining, shipping, ship­ building/., insurance, trusts, ware­ housing, mining, "manufacturing and brewing; They all trace their an­ cestry back to that'seventh-century warrior; 10 the seventeenth-century tradesman and to a good many Other celebrities. They constitute by war .the-largest /organization of its sort m the world and -their world - operations are Spreading with the expansion of , Japan-’s aggressive, methods ih^worjd-- wide trade and rommerce.Examination of/the|cdde, as pub-, lished in a recently issued book at ,Tokio, written bygone ol the family? Mitsuia Gomei Kaisha, gives an indi- cation how seriously the -House of Mitsui takes its obligations. , He^re are outstanding pledges: ' ' Ndt, to qiiarrel with relatives. Not'to over expand. - - To; observe thrift and avoid-, all ' luXiiryTT''• . , /Not to, retire froiih active fiusi- '■ness'foo‘early'''(the-Jrecent-head'~of- the house quite active work in 1933 at the age of 77). To marry only on adyice of, the family council. To employ able subordinates, and listen to them. . __ ^^£k>--make^executivesF0hly«oC7those- who know how to do subordinates’ work. . ' ‘~- To sacrifice today, in order to avert a larger loss tomorroyZ"* ~~ To'' wofsEip the gods, revere^ tbe^ ^-piperor, lo^e one’s country and do 7~” ..j ..Jn the/, daygL..' _ when/^Jap’an^ ,.^whs • ehahgmg4?-the- more modern system not as other' money lenders , were the .Mitsuis. They did not hitch their wagon to the local daimyos, . (feudal -ldrds)-T making a lof of money when- the daimyos prospered but losing it all _whem-4he -~daimyos-'“repudiated^thei-r? ? debts.' ■ The' businesslike■ Mitsuis confined, their, efforts to .'commercial / 'loans,' forfeiting some of/the 'easy money- an'dml'somscapjffg~th'e~l<5ss'esr.’ In 1876.- And again ih I960, when . "the institution was reorganized on thoroughly up-to-date models, there was little need of change. - Long before western, merchant princes were inventing advertising ideas these Japanese' business men were practising them. Paper ; Um- , brellas, neatly marked with the" ~BtoKe£&J' advertising .. slogans, were given axvay tcr~ customers caught -therb . in a sudden rain. Handbills werfe passed about the streets’ an­ nouncing the current bargains, ’ Double entry bookkeeping was used by this ingenious family long before the. West heard of it./.Rest periods, -were set for employes, jamd » profit- sharing program arranged; for the responsible workers., r I A/frieiid qf this . Cplyum says projection oi J apan s ’'progressive ui« nm ( believes in prayer but cannot , ask . £reg|.s Western and world, af- om' for further blessings after having - ' wasted what’s already . been given. O-O’-d ' ’ WHERE is THE JUSTICE? . Happiness is very’dear, sadness very -■ ?cl/eap; ' ■■■ • ....... Cara.' and ^atles. .bring ua .. cheer, onions make us weep .. .Travel costs a .pile of Jack, mumps; _,arie thrust; right;, at us; Snows And sfiWrbets; S0t7 -us’ back; chilblains w© get ’gratis! Halls of fame are gained by grit, , jails are/'tfoft of entry. y • i' f Birth brings lots of ^please remit,” death is complimentary/ J ,r O-0-O ‘ •___/______ ? Woman (at bridge party) Doses your ..husband, always lie. to. yoi?,?.7 Other Woman.-4- No, some nights T am -just tootired-to ask/questions.- . o-O-o ’ The high-pressure salesmap at ’ ways brings to our memory^ that con­ versation on between the" little girl and. her grandfather: After having heard of* his B oft repeated i wax, stories, she said:. “Grandpa, didn’t anybody at all help you win the war?” .'■ y — O-0rO I ‘ .Friend — You say after the last banquet you attended" you gained five pounds. It must—have~~ ~been mighty good food they served. ■ / Youth —No, it was, the silver-; 'ware;■ •'■■' : o-’O-q . ** ■' •■'/*. A sneak has to be able bo fool himself, or else lie^couldn’t - stand living, with himself. - . o-O-o. Nell — Why did you jbrqak oft your engagement with Dr. Cutter? .... Gladys — Oh, it was his awful writing. Every tim4 I. had a letter from.'him/I had to take it to a drugr gist 'to .find out what was -in it, . , ' o-O-o ,, . . ' •' ‘ The depression has< revealed a surprising number of things we can get' along”just as well .without, /in­ cluding depressions, ■ * ' 1 O-Qrb ■: / , .Londoner — I* went bald, so I Spent' ■’3r"Si^r’T5ft^ storier. ' ■ '/"'•.- -. / . '•/ : Aberdonian — When I went bald T-sold-my^b^shmnd^eomb;---^^--;-— ^4./- - /-■■ ■■ . '■■ ■■•--'-■■-/7- The ideal climate is the kind -where-whiteimported* some /other race to do their work. , ..-.................... ......... Y ou Think You’re / Wowing Old” nesen- FIVE OUTSTANDING ??•■ REASONS WHY INVESTORS CHOSE C.D.L. 6% INVEST­ MENT— 1,7 An' attractive return of . f &% per annum. . • ,*7 2. Safety . ..... . The ^Company’s I assets consist of cash and guaranteed contracts only; 8> Immediate Interest. ' At 6%, from date of Investment. 4. * No Trouble or Expense, in . cashing Dividend cheques. Payable without exchange. 5. Amounts of $100 and Upwards Accepted. . Partial Payment. Investments from $3 per ' month and upi 7 ■ Contract Discounts Limited Con/mercial Bankers 45 RICHMOND ST. WEST, ^d-O-o--— Lady Lena' (looking out into the yard) —-What' wasj" that terrible clatter, Hawkins? , . Hawkins t— /’Twas7 Sir Oscar’s pants felboff the line, mum.' /' - o-O-o*1 ""■.'■^■NbT .once '"3n~’ten ,-times' is a fa^m- worth much ,,to an .owner wio does hot.Iiv.C on/it arid cultivate it. "The; high’pricebf.Jandrestedpurely-up- on speculation. . :___■ ■ '. ' < •...<* o^-O~ Pa tand Mike wept for a walk. Pat, who was the shorter of the two, could nojt keep up with Mike’s long strides/and-after a while began to be very tired and short of i breath, ' Pat — Surd, MikeJ do ye always .walk as fast as this? Mike Yes, and1 faster... than.-this. when I’m by myself. Pat — Indade. Sure, ahd I* would not like to be walking with ye Mrhen ye’re by yourself,, Mike. . o-O-o Machinery „ is Essential in this age$ but intelligent management is even more necessary if our pace is td be quickened. I o-O-o " - Goldberg — Please shut up! ; , Stemberger ■— I can’t. There’s iol'.room in my pockets. " i. o-O-o : One well-known ’ man' says.; , -‘*1 call^may, wife’s hash “enthusiasm harir’*" because she'" puts everything: she has, in it. ! . 7' ’ - - - o-O-o- Dorothy — So your neW boy friend is a furniture ijnisher? Clarice ■— Yes; Dorothy Does he polish. or move? 1 / ■' ■ -,i o-O-o ■ ' ' , Father says he bought the chimp clock-to ’keep daughters, company informed, but it doesn’t do any ,goo<k „ - '/f’s Frequently Just!an ‘‘Idea. Not '“‘Old. Age.” And According ■ to Scientists, May be Something' No Mor<e Alarming Than A Touch Of Acid Stomach ‘ ' ■i- , . — Tear out this coupon and " send for information. Ip-. Address. Di Ju A Body Builder Mr. James HoWarth ’df • 8 E. 25th St., Hamilton, . Ont., says: "My appe- ‘ 'txr-faitalT'T , lost weigEt and- strength, and caught cojd easilyl This state' of health also affected my digestion. I, took Dr., Piefee’S Golden Medical Discovery and fully rp- ,. gained my lost health. I picked up in appetite, and weight.” New site; taolSts- 50 cehts, liquid $i:pO. Large.aize,,tablet3 or liquid, $1.35... ... T T’.i " v . I • / I / At . about. 40it jnauy,J)eo];ie think __ T^tE^’fe'‘■'growing olcL’ They rertirud . . " a lot. Have hfeddachca. Stomach up- . -■ibets. Dizziness." Nausea- . ' ■ '/ Wel-r; scientists say the caxise/riW':,—: --greaVmany/casesT-is^metel^aqrfleia condition of the stohiach. I he-tiling - to do'fe simply to neu/ruZize/the-excess “ ■ ^tomacli acidity. ■ • When you-have one. of these acid stomach Upsets, air you do; is take - , Phillips* Milk , of Magnesia after / nieals-and'before going to bed. Try this. You’ll feci like another nersonl Take- - either the familiar liquid “PHILLIPS’ ”, or the. con- ; yenient new PhillipsyMilk of Mag- ,/ nesia Tablels. Made in Csjnada^^ Wito-Tablet Forms. Phillip's .Milk of Magnesia Tab- . lets are now on sale at air drug “ stores everywhere." Each tiny tab-' , ■ let is.the equivalent of ’ a teaspoonful of Gen- 'Jr “"xypyti- uine Phillips’ Milk ot . Magnwia. : Ph i Lt ips’ r . , - 7- ' 4 .7.', ■ Abundant Vitality of Cod Liver Oil hwtoAdd I ‘pNtTlMndN The I FIGHT GERMS? I'M VITAMIN A. , PEOPLE AkMEBOME , >< EVERY. L !■ / h For over fifty years doctors, have specified ’‘Scott’s. Emulsion**, wherever the bone- building, {strengthening qualities of pure cod liver oil were indicated. For Scott’s Emulsion . . is more than Just cod Hvef oil. /'Scott’s 7 Emulsioh is purfe cod liver Oil, emulsified for easier digestion; greater efficiency and pleasant taste. fI 6UILO BONES' I’M VITAMIN O. HEALTH ^STRENGTH DEPEND ON zM.E/ w - /» .7. /.. •r J______ V ■ ■