HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-05-02, Page 6. ’ ; A?/ ;;-v \ ■ ’ "? . \...../ ■' ..<Z
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GOOD SHOTS,
slingshot was’ given a
-.“I am not yet a candidate for that
cla^s of dotard to whom only the
old dayis appear good,”—Harold Bell
Wright.
~BTipi§rflti0UB one in order that it may
be; returned to store at once?' —•
.Manchester,. Guardian.. /
uiv wv,,.„v _____ —*—
——Lake—-Onega-.
chief, | a . rigid . economist,
i'ishman^wiiMeadsucl
" — July~1
..__has commit- "■ted.the crime. All lnuividuals except
those belonging to group “B” type
“M,” can be eliminated immediately.
CANADA
'WtMRHte.-
Ssek Erpsior? Relief Collector orOld
Cars Finds The
Hobby Profitable
THE WORLD
AT LARGE
CANADA
PASSENGER HAZAR'p
/That a ;motori&t may lose v -every-
thing /fie, owns as a result oh a /kind-
jy-s••gesitSi^n"1givfffgrtrfi?^ to^_a”frieHd
Is not an. imaginative situation. Such
cases have been ■ through the courts.
.And while toe motorist, whety' he
has been at fault, cannot complain
,lf he has to b®a/‘ the cost of injur-
’ ies to pedestrians or the' occupants
n-f otopR. cars 'on.. .the . highway^ ha...
. has, it seems, valid ground, tor com
plaint if too guest in his own car in^
.accepting a ride accepts no risk, the
liability, .if any, falling on the ino-
torist as' a result of his generous
impulse.—Toronto Telegram. .
/ . . --------i
FIRST ELECTRIC LIGHT.
The remark by a Toronto proces
sor that Edison was not the inven
tor of electric light may- surprise a
number „of people, but that is quite
—true. " The" first electric lamp was
produced by ;.Sir Joseph Swan, who
was born’ at Sunderland, England, in
.1828/ He was a chemical engineer
who first achieved, success in ' im
provement^ in. photography. He
inad^ tamp as
early as 1862, and in 1880 exhibited
‘ the/ first ^filament vacuum lamp —
St. Thomas/ Times-Journal.
Nearly every adult carries
watch of sOtt^e sortj find it would Ap
pear that the watchmaker could be
assured of 'Continuity’ of employ-,
ment. But, according to. a fitate-
ment- by^-a-^dfilegatlon--3o.f-^tlie—Gayia-"
.dian Jewelers’' \ Association, boys
are not learning toe - watchmakers’’
apt as wapprentices.
The delegation stated" that /there
was not an/apprentice in watch-
inaking'dn any of the Toronto jew
elry. stores/, and that /the associa-
schools for toe watchmakers
future.
The dearth ofz apprentices in the
watchmaking trade is not an isolated example^of the change, that has
tazken place in methods- in handi
crafts although' the situation in the
jewelry trade may be more surpris/
ing; in that there does not appear to
be any serioiis fallim
work
nal.
of'the
.off in
to be done.—-Edmonton
the
Jour-
/when a movief producer ;of. an au
tomobile maker wants a car of anc
ient vintage the chances aye that H.
E. Twohy, of Los Angeles dan supply-
it. HeWollects oid automobiles and
owns one of the worlds largest fleet
of antique cars in running .or.d,er, A
suprisingly profitable business has
XfefeiopedM‘froW" tlie. “"collection' that
lie siarted-“as a hobby, wito the pur
chase, of a 19027Pierce/Arrpw....
Wherever. TwohjL drove .this acquf?
sition crowds gathered; A’ merchant,
seeing the display value relic; -~
/paid Twohy to „ plfic®,
ton it Then a movie"company^Eired
if. . .1 •
Twohy began buying obsolete carp
-jiApHinting and reconditioning Jhem,__
and sending them forth to advertise
hjs enterprise. When-fils -machines-;
■found increasing demands Jor .auto
shows/ parades, motion pictures,-and .
FASCISM, NO 1— COMMUNISM, NOT
“-^In^thiese^-st”res's£ul~.-uncer-ta-in“"t-iimes-“
every quack, charlatan and unscru-
"~pulous-"merpenary rubs his hdndis in
y ghoulish pglee/ realizing that a world
in travail, suffering countless: agon-
* des, is looking in every direction for
quick relief.
Prolific in promises and adept at
painting word pictures of milleni-
- uims on/ ear-tthy - these >» vultures -often-
.succeed in stampeding great num-
^.bers. lot, unthinking—morons into the
belief that by, .sacrificing the hard-
-wonlibertiesthelrancestorsf ought
and died to achieve, they will ease
their .sufferings and quickly dissolve
toe grave problems which have baf-
fled the ablest of our statesmen ‘and
the sfirewdest of our Business meh
and economists for many years on
- «nd." •....... '
, In Soviet Russia^ Lenin, Trotskyj
Stalin, ,et al, have slaughtered mil
lions ’~of intelligent people from all
walks oif life, simply to impose upon
A.the remainder, a ruthless dictator
ship, in which' no man, woman nor
child can call his soui his owjn. An
entire, nation has been reducedL to .a
-^i»tev^f=^j[eei^reri or find- hopeless
ccnintlless ’ millions of. suffering hu-
• tQa'nity. J? The firing. squad working
night and. dayn to obliterate th®-Inst'
I, vestiges of ind®P®ndent thought so
’‘toat the power lust af a fewj/domln-
ant individuals may be w gratified
without, let or hindrance; ’ ’' . '
We find 'the. same forces • at
work in Germany, Italy anil some of
the smaller nations of . Europe,
where under the name of fascism,
moronic forces, are stampeded into
fettering themselves With shackles
from which they will not escape for
generations to come. Entire races
are. being regimented tto furnish '
gun-fodder, for affibitiouis militarists.,
’the working ’ classes in all these
countries are being mercilessly re-
prossed,, a^e forced . Iq work ■ -long'
.* hours for little or no .remuneration,
jjlli for the so-called glorification of
• the State. In'reality, simply to gra-
Wfy thfi vanities of a small, coterje
' W. .power-loving" men.. ' ' .
Dictatorship in any guise means
' #he negation of freedom. . To those
riposte liberties have/been, torn away-
?!' matters little ■ "if the slave-driver
The slingshot was’ given a great deal ofz undeserved popularity by toe/
success which David. achieved
"against '^liatlr^tfi^ftSTWstetaircer
At least that is toe view of the Sault-
Public, Ufliittes Commission.
And tlie reason is—that in three
• days -last—week- there -were- 74 -street • lights broken by boys in the Moffly
subdivision section who have man-
aged-to"acqUirea-certain'£acility'in"
the use of these slingshots. •
These street lights will cost $111
to/ replace find naturally th® com
mission is prepared to take drastic
action against the culprits.
These be circumscribing apd re
stricting* times for the ' small boy,
“but. perhaps it would not take many
$1-11 items -for-street-lights- -to- make
the commission feel that it had to
-bbost-the-rates. - - ----■. -
And vlhat then?—Sault Ste. Ma-
~rie"Star/
THE PUBLIC HAS A PART.
The public baa a direct an/i active
part in the -success of a newspaper.
The newspaper is a public servant
giving an efficient anid accurate run
ning ’record of what the public
thinks, does and wants to. do.' It
has, if it is adequately performing”
its duty, scores; and in some caae3
hundreds/' of collaborate!*^ , who in
their own wish to build up the com
munity are anxious to see that, in
formation reaches, the editor find re-
portdrs. News-gatherlhg is no mag-
71c process -.“by which material / is^
-“sno^ched—ouho?--4-h-&~air”--as~-a---'con---
i- Alva- B.. Adalis, Col.; Senator- Morris Sheppard, Tex.; Carl Hinton. Sander Edwm-d
Costi.eah, Ceil.; Congressman Jack Nichols,,Okla.,- and H. B. Roosevelt in regard
AgridfiEure Department, pictured (left to'right) confen*ing with Presid n
to $100,000;000 appropriation of soil erosion-relief work in thb.mid-west and south-west. z
be naiftod Hitler, Stalju,. .Mussolini,
or.. Huey_^ong^rhe.„Tomnto._ Lahor...
Leader; :■!■■■'■ •
DEARTH of watchmakers. 7
you, with 'a face like tljat, eh?”
■ask’ed..th® sergeantonfijbF.7 "7 ~
"He? just said, ‘Good, morning, se^i?
' geant-major,’ ” replfejd. the recruit,-—
' Calgary z Heuald. ' ’■ '.
. ■ . ,1 ■ .
A IS/NIBS.
The new Office of Works/ order
restricting; the issue of .toilet soap to
civil servants to-tone tablet per per
son every two. months /recalls -a .
story - of -Sii-—W^-Si—Gilbert’s <youtor-
ful experience in a Government of-
-ficerr**”—:
His chief, | a
strictly regulated the issue of sta-
tionery. He allowed each clerk 12
SEEKING MORE TRAINING
___The tragedy - of tito-iack of em-
ployment for boys of school-leaving
! age reflected in the eagerness
with which technical, education / is
sought, and in the inability of .toe
"existing- -schools— to—meet-Authe—„desi
mands made upon them..Boys find,
parents recogniz.e that in the com-
’petil^n'~'i^ ‘
the only bne who. has a chance of
recognition -among the multitude of^
applicants. On the reopening of toe
schools. after toe Christmas holidays
it was found impossible ;to m®et all
the demands for ' enrolment.-- The
Australasian. • , ,
pen, nibs a month, but on one occa
sion accidentally gave. Gilbert’ f13<
Gilbert went to, him at once,-deter
mined to. make the best, of his op-
portiinity, “|If you please, sir,” h^
began. “In regard to my allowance
of nibs—.” “1 cannot discuss the
matter,”/ snapped the chief, rising to
the bait; “I consider twelve nibs an
ample allowance for any clerk.”
“ ’’Certainly, sir,” replied . Gilbert.
“I have no wish to question your
Wisdom/ :rTnerely’ Wish to report :
uthatzTZKayeZi^^
It is a/‘ process..built up on «,experi-.
ence, tact* and skill on the part of
the newspaperman z and . . good-will
, and co-operation on the part of the .
public. — Kirkland Lake Newte.
NATURAL ERROR. ’
The latest recruit had celebrated
his Saturday leave by returning to.
barracks with two lovely black
eyep and a face like an over-ripe to- '
mato. . -
w The sergeant-major let off steam
> in the 'old<-fashioned style,, -
“Report to the guardroom - at
<onoe, you blithering? numskull!” he
.rbared; “And while’ ‘’you’re about it,
hang your face out of the window as
a warning to yodr pals as they come ,
in;’’ ■■ ■ ' • v - • ' 4
Passing^ the guard-room,, About fin
hour later the ^rgeant-major7 espied
thie recruit yHth his face at the win
dow. . ■ '
^'Anybody seen you /yet?” he bawl
ed out. '
“Yes, sir,” said the recruit, “the
colonel .has just passed.” <■
“And'what did he have to say to
---r----' 1 1 &--------------------------------------
ADVICE TO FARMERS
Dr. Viljoen strongly urges upon'
fapmers the recognition and addp-
t4on oif two fimdamental points of
agricultural practice that have been
consistently preached by the Sunday
Times for years; namely,, that the
supply1 of stockfeed ?an never be too
large for o country “like Sbuth Afri
ca; and that experience gained as fi.
peeult- of. drought and .depression
ffiust be applied in practice. ? Eyen in
times . oif'/comparative prospbrity; -he
says, (farmers snottltf accept the pro
position that depressions, . lil«j
droughts, are natural phenomena,
and should, al ways bear in mind that
“the uheconomic'tourdens'with "wbich "
they saddle themselves will be so
much more/unbearable -when the in-?
evitable stringency occurs.” He is
convinced that. if farmers proceed
/along (these lines they will have
nothlhg to fear for the future
anuesburg 'flmes. ‘
NAUGHTY MARIETTA
zy ■ q
fer,
Princess-Marie, still disguised as her own maid, slips
away joins a marionette show for she is deter
mined not to marry any of the French colonists in
... NAW-Qxl.eAnjj-, even though, she„hastoailed-witb~the •-
■ other girls to escape her qging suitor Don ‘Carlos.
A11 day Mane finds happiness, in her/work-and while
the puppeteers manipulate the dolls she sings for
them.- • -* •
. But that evening while she is at suppar with War-.
■ rington the trapper, who toss rescued het1 from
pirates, the town crierTides by, announcing a reward
... (or-in-formation about—Marietta- Franinl which .is
Marie’^assurhed namd. Her cruel uncle, the Prince^
has teamed of her flight. Although Marie and War.
rington haVs just had a lovers’ quarrel he protects
her, hiding her,behind some burlap bags."
never to receive women whose mar
riages had been divorced or annul-
’ led/"tpd ”at~oire^time“*her-T>.arties--at--
Kensington Palace were the only
ones in royal society where artists
could be seen. , ' .
SovietPrisons
Groups From The United
States To Study Penal
Conditions '
advertising purposes, he offered
cash rewards for information as to .
wHere cars 20 years or more - old '
could be found. Today his collection
numbers 25 such 'car? including an /..
1898 Hayes-Apperson, fi 1908 Ford ,
and a 1911 White Steamer.
A modern motorist would be at fi
loss to handle these old-timers . and
TWohy and Ill's two sq^fi are’ toe only
ones who drive. th@A. Witb the pas
sing of time the cars will become in
creasingly valuable-1-^, veritable mu
seum on wheels, ,and “a profitable one '
One large, collection of automotive
antiquities has-been -made by anoth
er Californian, DaVid Gray, Jr., of;
Montecito, whose 36 cars, all in per-
‘“fectu'-running"- ord®r^™4nclude~-a----.-one----:----
cylinder Cadillac/ a one-cylinder '
Oldsmobile, and a revolutionary two-
cylinder Peerless. al(l''of 1902. -• .
....Mr. Gray, whose father was^one of
-the’- -f-i-rst“pa^tneto-^and_.ba.ck.ersjL.\-„_of..
Henry"" Ford, Insists that each Car
jid.(l.ed_To,jHS^^
to come up to the gates, under, its) own power and |hat every Part off
the car must be the maker’s original
part/ - ; ' ;
Princess Louise.
PatronofArt
Queen Victoria’s Daughter
Studied Sculpture , ;
Th,e problem of crime and pun-
. ishment Jn. Russia.. this year is at
tracting the ,attention., of, studenU, of
penology and social science. The va
rying accounts of. the Soviet penal
~sy®tem-~toat^hayeu^me=to_toejtlftli^
ed States, have , prompted organized)
groups to see wliat Russia does with
her wrong-doers. Joseph Fulling
-4h4s-
Queen Victoria’s daughter. Pr!n-’“
cess Louise, who was 87 years old
March 19, tot/ill lives in the part of
Kensington Palace wlhere. her moth
er was born and where 98 years ago
her mother learned that she was a
Queen. Princess Louise’s statue of
Queen Victoria as. a . young, woman
Board Walk in Kensington T ’
summer, sailing- July TO;
■This;, group will arrive in dLenin-
grad bn’ July’ 2 2 and; remain in Rus
sia until Aug. 21, making trips to
reformatories, jails and. juvenile in
stitutions1 in the, iugerior. The form
er summier palacj^^f the Czars at
Tsafskoe Selo, which is now a chil
dren’s institution, will provide • the
first view^ of the Russian system.
Then come Petrozavodsk, capital of
.- ? . ~—r-
Blood Groupings To Aid In
Children V
Brooklyn -— The application of •
blood “ grouping tests developed at
the Jewish Hospital of Brooklyn, and
embodied in legislation just enacted
in New York state, is explained by
Dr. A. S. Wiener; associate in toe di- .
. [vision of genetics and bimetrics, at
the Jewish hospital. . . ■„■ "
through associations with the Queen
in the Victoria pennies.’’. »
Princess Louise, who is tile King’s
aunt,/had the reputation of being
the best-dressed daughter of. Queen
Victoria, and it is safd-by her friends
at court that fij the years go on she
is better and better dressed and a
model to all elderly women. Her
husband, toe Duke of Argyll', died in
1914. She still ’ has her estate Of
Roseheath and goes-to Scotland for
some months every>yqar.
Princess Louise had several artist
- friends., -toe- chief of- them-Sir—Edgar
Boehm,. who taught her sculpture,
and Sir John Millalis.
• She took her ar,t as toe took life, •
"very seriously. She never went.to
’Asciot or Epsom anid probably never
attended a rficemeeting, and al
though she went to Marlborough
House to dinner she never attended .
a dance there /and never danced at
a court ball.
It Was through her intercession
that Queen' Victoria waived her nile
Baltic-White Sea canal project, one
pf Russia’®’’new waterways. ,
The .city prison of Leningrad, the
People's Commfcsariat, of Justice at
Mosco^r, toe Norvitskl prison, for wo
men, the Institute (for Judicial Psy
chiatry-, the Kharkov institute for
the protection of workers’ health,
and various communes and model
cities which have been built for .toe
children, of workers are ..on the; Itin
erary of the group;
. This is only one of many groups
that will head for Russia .during the
summer; many will. Observe opera
tions and others will remain in one
or another of toe Russian universit
ies to study more intensely the phil
osophy of th® new Russia.,
- /‘‘Letr us..train,.our. young „people _to„
be heroes and not bookworms.” .—
Andre Maurois. .
said Dr. Wiener, by scientific prooif
that the. husband could not be
father of the child.
Thus, „if the mother belongs
group “A”' toe child to ' group?<
and the.husband to group “A,
husband could not be the father of
the child, since the cihild possesses a
mibstance “B” which neither of.-too-
supposed parents has. ,
“The . tests,” the added,. “can only
be used to prqve hon-paternity> and
not to prove paternity.
....In criminal cases, Dr. Wiener said,
the blood grouping tests are valuable
for purposes of ldehtlflchtlori.
He cited as an example the case of .
a criminal whd escaped after being
pursued find wounded by police.
Some of the criminal’s blood left at
.'.th.e.....P.ce,.^e„..o.f.... the.. crime_|s...hgr3up®fli.__„
and foundb to.belong to Group ”B”
and type “M”. Later, several individ
uals are apprehended, find It i»
known that one of 4*1
Bfiftdos Musical Adventure Romance fey
VICTOR HERBERT >
White the crowds scurry excitedly about the town/
Wfirrington quickly takes her th his boat to help
her escape. But on the opposite.shore they fun into
trouble. ’ The police are there-to meet them. War-
...jShgton' a6®HM^-T'S^’|;lftnhemr off "but 'Marie; fear
ing for his safety, quietly submits to her captors. It
• is then Warrington is stunned (to learn she. is a
French Princes^,
' ? ‘ ’ '........ ' ’ ' ' '
Marie is brought to the Governor’s palace. He
shows her the King's mandate directing that she be
placed under custody, of her uncle who has now
arrived with Don Carlos. She istosailto Franceto_
be~ married; immediately after the grand ball that
night. And if Warrington attends he wiT/be shot.
Wi’ll he be there?"IJon’t miss next week’s con
cluding'installment of “Naughty