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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-05-02, Page 2i .x. ...,6‘.......i. ............... ' '■ ,'^ft V ‘ 'x * * -■ few ?•; ' .'.‘No pne has any business going to the theatre and sitting like » lump* of suet.”-—Dame Sybil Thorn­ dike. i . , ' I ; .... ’ ■ “We can -riecure all the advantages ' 22f000 Requests' For- of isolituide if, when beset by people f j. .. c ■ ;wd remember how wonderful • soli- O 8 n 1VI Service tude can be.”—Abbe Ernest Dlmriqt, THIRD CLASS New York praised the turning more arid By FAREMAN WELLS * » •• . ■J’ . ' ' ■ SX'HOB^IS i Adaipf Meiristan. .-.a- ;’-rgrmer-a - sori/ • articl^a a>.solicitor, makes.,a' "brave - but unsuccessful attempt to thwart ' 'three thieves in a pag-sin.atching j-alti Ar-*Fhe~bag—tvas--ter-n“-f-Fem-“t-he -harid,s of a girl wlio explains .that it* contains the day’s takings of her father's shop, lie •attempts |o urfick frtie thiexes qriq,; . reaches an “old warehouse. Adam, ‘enters the building 'while • the gfrl' watehes the door.' ‘.Suddenly -he hears' . iOQtS.t4piS. ' ’ .A.,.; ..'The- man turns--out '/to. be Adam* : 'ernt'ivyjei'—>ijprv-ille-- fcferkin, . . . - .Adam,' in ,h'is». private ' hours experi- merits wlthcsfftri'r-wai'e wireless. ''.. Walking -hmn'ewafd.' Adam' is- nearly “‘He. ball's- oh* Priscilla Norval. ' > ‘tier , father .recounts the history of five 'intitiue chairs he possesses..' _ Adam fs extremely puzzled ’over , the ."fco^iieefIo"n"W| oF" Corvifle '. Perkin and' Klphtada. who wants the antique chairs. Then Prfscifia* “is spirited awfiy; !.... The ex-criminal was fireg|Qe fistehed 'patiently" . ; , to' (he story of- thedisappearance, ■ •* shook*his-liead knowingly, and spat' at Eie’fireplace. • Neat bit of work/; ■ - he commented ; approvingly a full minute late.r / ■ ' “But is it MoutfidS, and where" wfe'uf.d they tak’e her?’'? asked/the dis- treu^ht Adam, j '• ".............'.. • - Ilfigili; .shook', his head and waited for his words. They came to him at* last. “/Tisn’t/MOntada . this time. 1 Mrintada’s bottled up/’ He said with an air of extreme certitude. : ‘“Bottled up, where?” ‘ ■ , Ahi! ’? ‘.said Mr,' Ha^ar cunningly^ . rtTlie, ensuing long silence was very hard, to bear. Hagar sat quiet, elow-- cuilousecL palms, his/yellowish eyes. 1 "'giaricing at his, visitor and shiftirig secretively back, / to the fireplace again^ His mouth worked softly as iif4 forming wotdsf frir which h^ pos-, ||{_Wy^Kesae,d4n6;-isourid.^.AtUa^L-he-.’Cle'ar-- gate. ■I ' 1 ______k. An Aspirin tablet starts disinte­ grating as soon as it touches moisture.. That means that Aspirin starts ^taking hold” . . eases even a bad Aeadache^neuritis-orTlieumaticpaihv ;. Be sure to look for thename Bayer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet. Aspirin is made ’ Canada and all druggists have it. Demand and Get ASPIRIN TRADEMARK REGISTERED- IN CANADA in Rusria and Rubber ; J1IIS PR01«RES^ °;F SQVIET UN^ON IN 1 -7. .its Search >dr |‘ ' SUBSTITUTES When/the Soviet UniW prpipui , ted ffs fiySt fi-ve-y'par ■ plan trie wm &eard much, of Russian attempts to solve thp problem of rubbrir. Latex1 had always beep imported. /, Hence­ forth, it was decided, the Union must either discover within its owii borr oy tne insect." m Jy34. This. Scarcity of •'"x" ------; r^„. «„•£ borers saved the corn growers <» fleye op /ts own precesses I.aga> can I. .,a,'or the -..ynthetic production ot tito • ^.r ........, T * 1 ■ •' —:~ 1. §> ■ ■ The/ good news hns comp jfrpni, the Provincial EntpntcirdgTst fhat /.in •m jA-ft almost ,every county/the borers <ver.o * much? scarcer lastAfail thiriri .$t any ; time since the Cbm Morer Act catne into force; in fact he ’3o.es 'ry>U know SUBSTITUTES -Montana might giveTbem away,- |“£ a s,in-’lc or I'!“t <*f «?r“. ™ Cross th^. river. Canlt be Montada’i own work this time. ; T'“— help you. - ul “MTsTi T could; grateful-” ^.e material. / A. Af er th is unusually 16pg speech wilJ ;b^a- ^eat^ty jf facers' The Umon/has done both. / & has .......... .......... have come to brieve,/ as many' pfob. acr<* M ,nT r - t^t the borer has seen its' rubber-like plantsy grow/ and **3 aM will, not trouble/’the ?fc 18 , e.pd. Adam listegsl.y j ./?hi.n trtn^r-^: fkriri ^ade. out- of nlcrihols and acetylene, * the Act. is now /hnnecessary. -5,u$h ‘a’ ■!Triri .plantations -are the* visible lev­ belief is based upon/lack of Xnpw- j- ^.ric® <>f a successful ..Search for ^;^idedge^o.f^thei|ns'ee-t“‘tandt-'of‘*'A!‘tlj^“*iairi'-s’rJR^®^s \ •■thnf--ri®ritt;'S^ectps.'Y—:)feaF---ar-- em' J fluerice of weather conditions, upon it. In Europe, .where the borer has been , fpr ages, there., are sometimes. /several: (years^wherf the weatrier. (chiefly- very dry weather) is so unfavourable to the insect that it does almost^ no ” ofteri '-followed by several successive, .moist, warm seasons. so favorable that -the borers soon become a verit­ able scourge and, the government is /obliged to . make it con^pulsory for the farmers to cihan up their stubble and other corn remanapts to Save the crop. This, for instance, had to be rab'rig' iifTtaly only two or three years ago. When this is true of Europe, ,‘whjere there are many" parasites , and . some, severe diseases attacking the borer, it is much more -likely to be true in Ontario where there are very ,few parasites and almost no diseases. In fact, Professor Caesar says that his experience has shown him that in a favorable/year for the borer the very best we can hope to db by a good. ,cleari-up- is to prevent it from -increasing more than two-fold instead -of four or five-fold, as it would if the stubble and refuse were left on the ground. He also States that with- k,gBit. afairclean^ only three such successive years /to practically destroy the sweet corn- and most of the husking corn in­ dustry. This is'alsd the ' opinion - of all those whb have careTblly studied the insect. Therefore,, to drop the Act at a time like, this when ttye xorn crop, is so essential to the welfare of the Province, would be to disregard the^true .interests~of“the'“f'arffier. ’ ' ■use good judgment this spring Tri ^deaiing^with-^Ks’-'corn^fieldy'-scrrthM"" he may comply yrith the Act’without any appreciable work. Hp can • do this if he is careful to plow the . Stubble-and other s corn remnapU mnder completely and" then to- u.sc^a? 'disc instead of a toothed cultivator in tilling-The, soil and a disc' diull in-5 stead bf the othei’ types, when sow-^ ing the. seed. If the stubble- bas heaved this spring it should be roll-* ed with.-a heavy roller before disc­ ing. This , will firm it so that very, .little will be dragged up by th£ disc or* the drill. . . * By. doing, their share^-voluntarily^' j Tar mrir s~^can --sfesc his lips jclosed^ slowly i arid heavily, I. like t^e- doors, of a safe. / Evidently | ,'as as he was concerned the; inter-! shook his- great hand and we^^.SSUfiBSefcand that theSjfore, hardly Responding' , all toi Mrst Hagar’s affectionate adieu. > ; : Although, his informant -had seem- j ed positive that MOntada was to; be ruled out,' his mind. clung to the sug­ gestion“that-“hfom^Bda'““m'ight.“.giver theT others, whoever they ^ere°, UwayL It was a line' on which to 'go,.tihe only way that Thad presented itself, >0 agfiin hez,once more turned towards, the narrow. Grail Street entrance. ■9 ■It. was a. chilly April night., A river mist hung about the ill-lit alley. Bar- .red doors" • and -bqxed-up windows seemed to frown resentfully thrpugh the sht6ud of light vapor at. him as . hri passed.',. - At thelb ottom - -the great- hlank: waff barred his way as'inex­ orably as' ever, The sight of its in­ adequate light recalled to him 'his last visit, and recalled it with the ' poignancy of /despair. It was under - that .light that .they h^d /first realiz­ ed that they were friends. He pushed hard against the big warehouse gat/e, This ‘time it was ^solidly ...fixed.Their—he-repalted- ■4h'a:t~ Hagar had said he was to cross-the river. He understood that to mean; that he/ must find some means of en­ try. from the back; So he carefully counted his steps back to the , turn­ ing and .then pushed on over Hayne ^^ge./p/Takffig-:the=fii:stfctuEn=ona3his* left he counted steps again until, at tihe same number he had counted' ;iri Grail Street’,; he found ...himself oppo­ site a big, well-lighted building. He strolled’ past if, not/, caring to enter since people were leaving it" in a bustling ^roup after their day’s busi­ ness. Instead lie strolled on until 'he reached the gate of a srnall yard.. This yvas not; yet- closed/ and^he was* . _TbJeto_j;yander..iii„_a'iid„reach.-a-lQ'w ---E.very_corn.....grow.er--is--.-.mrgecl--to- wrill that, bounded trie sullenly flbw- jf.UgJti.v.eri^.™ Aero ss™-tiie^bl aek—wat-ers■* he ’ could, just distinguish, above the wreathing "mists,, ■ 'the roof ‘of I the Grail Street, warehouse. , . •“ ; : There ,was mo - sign of’life about it, JxiUUie^d^not^xpeeb=thafe^Helmew ■ • lat hidden -lwithin its forbidding confines there . was a. small, room whose ’windows might be shrouded with blankets, a room that might hold a prisoner. As he'brooded there .Ge. recalled the. time he had stood on the opposite bank, not then al­ one, and he seemed opce riior.e in • memory to. hear the startled cluck- ing of a, hep,—He-^laneed7Treu-nd^-the- place* to keep hens in. Probably the ... cl.u.cking— -had—-beeh.-a.>—signal,— Perhaps this was -the side from , which the furtive users of the GrftiT Street premises made tiieir ap­ proach. But how ? ‘ There was rio‘ sign of any boat, no landing; ptlace.. The . puzzle was too inuch for his inihd . in its distress. Determined sbmehow to find a way' across that 20 feet of swirling Toulness he re- • ter „ year “ Epropeah Russia ‘ and Sib® eriaryere combed for /yoots, shrubs, trees and bushes _that? yielded what Imight be y tell-tale milk. At last tau-sagiz was discovered in Central Asia. That was in 19-29* Moscow lost ho/_time-Jn.-s,pre^^ discovery" received as much publicity as Edison’s effort , to produce a rub­ bey substitute from golden, rod. ’ Tau-sagiz is: a shrub. Its foots' contain a gum coagulated in fibers. From 15 to 30 per;. cent; of the! dried weight of the rpots consists of this gum.”: A sufvdy~made' in 19$3 re­ vealed that/ ' 15,000,000' tau-sagiz drirubs grow wild in Soviet territory. Twenty million more wCre.. cultivat­ ed on. plantations, a year ago. . 1 , Besides tfiu-sagiz there are ■ other gum-bearing plants. uQn6, kok- sfigiz, was found . in -Kazakistan, in 1931;. the second, crim-sagiz, in the Crimea a year later. Both are wpeds; -’nfu6h-tlike “ dandelion ;r^both—floprislr in the damp, salty earth of' moun­ tainous country. ' . , ber follows ..American lines. Like-J other chemists through the world, those of the Soviet". Union recognized ’ //' AW High Cost of Weddings Cut „/.The ~Chinese .. G^ernment- recent- in the 'damp; salty earth “,ot“ mou£ ly delivered a. telling blow _ at the “.............................. i high cost of weddings, » when 57 / The production o't synthetic ' rub-' ■“*** altar togeth- - ----- . ' » .. ..« jer and were married in a aimpie other chemists through world,',W“ those ot the Soviet-. Union recognized ^ben. Major of Shanghai, official- -rit^nee^the^^porfance^ff^chlorop^-—---- - land ivXS ’ “,?? Om/ 10 “Won^n aceoJdrace by Dr. Carrothpre of tie du Pont la. “ Moment rthe boratories. In America, the rubber-. sciett8 wew. t lite' .product derived from cWori.i e«»mony was devoid of all the frills nroti ic i and; extravagance characteristic ofspvprene 1 d d. p en ' In Ru’s8ia' ‘the7 traditional Chinese wedding, ' ■bLkum. . To the labored strains of Mendel- Wedding March, played by a utilized in- Russia than in any other , r A: ■country.' But IKd- ‘S5Vler^kri?eS/^?rr^^a^^1^^ar^ -and—ohomists—ar-e—not—pleased—with ' ca°d>da^ paraded doyqy thg—gi» m.tet of the tires made from their :’<>^“n>eted aisle, while. A crowd of -saTOrener^he7faiilMres7^,ot'-wltlrt--'J-~^'p®*8p^^a-resJy~^atu:e8"'lo<>k’’ the raw material) but with the me- 6 ’ thod of manufacture, •: ; — Marriagef Studies ' Said Not to Mix u -ipSEest, Boston—Get a college education firs|, then get married (if you want to), but don’t mix the two. | That is the advice .of former Justice Robert J. Peaslee of_ihe. New ~Hsmpslrife "Supreme Court_________ lecturer- -at - the'-'Boston ~ Tini versi tw ndw„„.a. Aimed- at setting, an example of . The couples ascended the platform iff groups of four, bowed three times' before the tstatue of Sun , .Yaj-Sen,. “Father of the RQnnblifi.,.‘ . bowed twice before each other and,qni6e to the Mayor. * , ' They then received brilliantly de­ corated certificates which' made them man find wife; Each marriag^ was completed in two' minutes. TnO government charged each couple the equivalent of $7 for jthe ceremony, tihe prifce including the certificate and a gift to the bride^L-. .—2 “The secret of being miserable it to have leisure to._bpth.er. about ■whether you are happy"1 or notj' George Bernard Shaw. Pipe Smokers! fill up ‘with ... . GOLDEN VIRGINIA- and enjoy a real ly .. good smoke! ~r AreYou Sluggish ? To Throw Off-Energy-Stealing Impurities, enjoy a. glass or two each week of . Energizing, Effervescent 1 Ml "hra'ke™t'he';cbst7^~ehTprcem^ntnof~tHe Act very light, less than. 25c each. 'ThiB'“incl'udes"-cos,t“to--the-I)epar-tment las well as the county cost. The Corns Borer Act is for ' the farmers, not against them/and is worthy pf everyone’s hearty cupport. The careful man who cuts his corn short and plows the stubble under thoroughly with, a wide furrow plow will have no complaints to make against the Act. '■■"‘'SEu'deri’t/vvho marry while they are in college are handicapping their1 chances for happiness,” Judge Peas­ lee said in an interview. 1 “Married life, in order to be suc­ cessful, should be centred about a home and fariiily, not around classes and study. Home life more than any­ thing'is important to a happy mar­ riage.” Judge Peaslee maintained that the good effects • of co-operation and mutual interest that come with mar­ riage are lessened by the fact that students /are. likely, to liye in a board/ ing house or a similarly unfavorable environment,” : , OTTAWA,—Last year there were 22,000 applications for positions in. the civil Service, according to theme­ port of the civil Commission- tabled in the House of Commons; recently. A total of/12,400 were examined. Of the appointments made 42 were permanent and 2,333 temporary. For­ ty males, of whom 23 were ex-service men, were.placea in permanent posi­ tions, while the 1,879 given temper- turned to the street, and this ,tiirie he entered the white-washed hallway of the building. The place v/as’evid­ ently let out ai|3 offices and store­ rooms;''and there wa& a big board on the wall displaying the names of tihe . tenant&r- He. stood before this for a while as if seeking an address, and aa he stood there ho heard some­ one pass behind him. Some, jnstfncU A£y_ .eriJ^loymeht,/ Veterans, warned him. not to look round- un- the report says. - til0the person had begun to go ujp | tile stone stairs and beyond. Then' he glanced that way and was rewar­ ded by a glimpse of the uninistak- able. straight back of Mr. fonville |. Perkin. 7..... . He watched hiin hurry up the ( stairs lik’e a man who has' urgent. 11 business, arid, then "’followed him 1 quietly. . ’ 'To bf Continued.I RELIEVE PERIODICPAIR TF you suffer peri- odic pain: arid discomfort, try Eydia E. Pinkham’s Tablets. In most cases they bring welcome relief. As Mrs.Caroline New­ man jsays,;“They case the pain”. Mrs. Raymond Chaput, Route 4, Tilbury,Ont. says,’’I suffered some* thing terrible.- Hud such backaches and headaches I was worn out. ” Your Tablets helped me”. Let them help you, too. Ask your druggist* -^Phls--was^-in—startlinK-conti,ast—~to :the-VcustQm^y--ehi-nese-----wed.<ling couple into' debt for. life. Ik ■ ~ y -* Wj IMSgL w British Writers Are Criticized — A Briton recently .... . „ “gusto” of American novelists and said British readers are turning more arid more. to. American hovels for qualities of ex? citing entertainment. » Norman Qollins, partner in a Lon­ don publishing firm, said: “When I read an American, novel I think of a good dogfight, with something hap­ pening all the Time.' . “In England they are mostly on leashes and are ;not likely to start a fight.. ' . .. •‘Or. you can think of it as a nice .. cgnt-Or,..with....the ~ author- menUlly pouring tea for himself en route, as against a steeplechase, with a lot of horses falling, but action, excitement arid gusto every minute. “That is why American books are being read in England, rather than the writings of our frightfully clever young men, who are ashamed of their emotions and have successfully di­ vested themselves intellectual curiosity. LIVE Indigestion • “I have been been taking Phil­ lips Pure LIVE Yeast regularly for the last three weeks, and I have at lust got rid bf a nasty form of Indigestion.” — Extract from original letter. If your stomach' “acts up” after eat-j jPt / . If your stomach “acts up” after eat-( ' ing you will find Phillipa Pure LIVEj j Yeast a^great boon. j ; . In its preparation arway has been ; ' found to preserve in a high state of j i activity the important B Vitamins,1 Enzymes and Nuclein which make yeast > so good for ypu. /These important in-j gredients Combine to: (1) Correct di-1 gestion and put rin end to pains, gas, , and nausea after seating. (2) Make your, food do you good by insfirin® complete * assimilation; thus building you up. (3) r Fortify your blood and enable it’ to drive oUt poisons which ajlfresponsible for boils, pimples, rheiimAtic' aches and similar troubles. . Thio 3-Fold riel ion of Phillips Yeast will make meals <>nce more enjoyable for ypp. And Jt /will give you ,'new strength and vitality.' You will like.' Phillips Yeast, .too, and it' is not expen­ sive. 15 days’ supply (in granules of pleasing taste) for 50c: 45 days’ supply, . $1.00 aft your druggist’s, i. return ^fare Apply to your local a£ent of to 217 Bay Street (ElAih .3471) Toronto UA5S Cosy public ro6ms and cabins f , excel lent food and plonty -of it.... go.od_.sur> docks ... happy dayfi of sport apd futi . fine steady ships. Ask about tife Reduced Excursion Rates, for sallings until April 30th, . allowing' IS' days In JEurope