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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-06-27, Page 2Kit t-1 'J.-., ' one in the Many Causes Five hundred families await their turns to draw lots for tracts in the Matanuska Valley, Alaska, U.S., rehabilitatidWpFojectT^MartlW W. McCormick, first to draw, announces, his luck to the crowd. ni n o n ?■ 'CANADA: ?;['’'-;’i;W[”?{* THE EMPIRE V 1 ■ \ **x THE WORLD . . » dr . AT LARGE J CANADA * . .———.— » FASHION-NOTE z . Talking, about epidemics,, have you noti'Ced-iiow-the Tadies are-coirijng out' fn spots ?—Hajnilfon Spectator; , . AND NDW-hQU INTULIPS W.R. Thompson, Main Street, .has a curiosity- in his flower garden this sprihg, .where .an old-fashioned yel­ low tulip has crashed to\ the front­ page by producing five blooms on one stem. Both mother-plant are. doing well—a fine . ‘‘quintulips.’’ — Petrolia Topic. and blooms family of Advertiser- ^do everything he ‘can to* detect the rays. He uses receiving circuits and valves of extreme sensitiveness'. But _if a- person does not want to re- his engine or himself I he does not ■ need sensitive, but insensitive, ap- .parat(us-Athat is, armor to protect ‘.him. '{.'• ' T ;. . ■ ■ ' It is. very much “easier to make insensitive than to make sensitive apparatus, and ir fact an enclosure of thin metal foil should be to protect an engine or delicate part of a machine from any known s.or.t of electrical ray coming from a source more than a few yards away.—Man­ chester Guardian. sensitive sufficient Drawing For Farms Stories of Intelligent Bogs As Related By a Divinity Dean ■ ■ /■ ■ ■ ■ - • “T-WHEN-“THE-LILACS-BLOOM ““ # . The world, may be going complete-' ly to the dogs, as • some people af­ firm,.but it is hard to belieye. it when lilacs are in. blobin and strawberry shortcake season is in the offing-— London . Advertiser. • “ 4 ” . GOOD DRIVERS., . 4 The majority of drivers go along year after year without mishap; they ar^ the conscientious people who re­ aliz'd their responsibilities and are not 'obsessed; with- the .'mania for ,,.LS,pbedKnor...,with^-th,at^dangerous-com-* ' ~ ~ iplh^wfilchT^ekpresses itself —Ttakirfg of chances. ." T, ■— They are • ever on the alert, guard-’ Ing' against - the possibilities of dan­ ger, avoiding risks, never plunging. :—Hheedtessly--nnto“sTO^ the unknown, or. unseen constitute a --—potentialmeriaee.Tn-otherrwordsrthey; proceed on their way> with their eyes .wide open and their minds centred bnjtlle responsible Work in hand; —- Hamilton Spectator. .' .. • ’ »’ • _____ . J ' Oyster‘YrtCTfQN;' - . r -Rredictiohs-ofditerary-pfophfetsHhat' the craze for-mystery fiction was on ’• ■'the Wane and would soon be’ ended _—..does not .^.eni_to~be* working-but that! .{I way; For thp 'last half dozen years si™^.iseacresMn—the—book“""World™have" ?’■persistently s.tajjed_Jiha.t-_th.A_mGflAr-n- fletective 'story was losing ground.- that its day was about done. The public, ' they said, had “sickened bn jthe diet of murder and horror which ■ was being served up to it, and that other forms - of - light, reading would take' its place. Perusal of circulation. cards in the public libraries, does nbt. '."{ ■ Wear out this~opinion. . - . Today the mystery story still re- —-nia-ins—one-.of sellers~oB~ ham JJew-s. i-j-nwoved—r % . STRIPPING the forests There 'is and always has been too much.0 ruthless stripping of . the for­ ests,..! particularly the. watersheds' of this country. And the results; are with us .today. What «ggith this ruth­ less cutting and the ravages of for­ est fires and incests, the Canadian wood, supply is; being depleted With all the attendant detrimental effects. There ls,t as one example, great­ concern about failing levels in the St. Lawrence waterways, and the greatest cause, we are convinced, is Thisrvery”strippirig“^ and the banks of streams tributaries to the St. Lawrence and Grriat Lakes, —Halifax Herald. CH ASING THE HITCH-HI KERS___ Hitch-hiking ■ still continues to, con­ stitute itself a major; nuisance .’along jffie ^hlghwaysy ‘alfEbugfi" those w4id engage, in this cheap but bothersome way of travelling report that drivers are becoming Increasingly hard-heart­ ed. and free rides- are correspondingly more, -difficult 'to obtain, j..„ “... After all, why should,.motorists,.be_ jexpected to pick up individuals along our-roads and nupply them with free- transportation?;..".,.. ' -. “Th^kitcteJfiker Ig' sometimes a danger,'arid Is always a nuisance, and iiF'iis"'not'surprising to ffind the auth- A restore them. The. small mixed farm has become definitely uneconomic in tries* and eyery year of progress, ev­ ery invention of seieriqe and machin­ ery * increases the efficiency of . The large farm compared with -the small. ; Further employment upon the land is.Jib bri. obtained, not. by a return- to earlier conditions of; sub-division,; "■but" byan ‘intensificfit'iQif^ ods of production, on larger units of cultivation. Under organisation even modern. production of certain select­ ed commodities-will adinit .of. the par­ticipation.of single-man 'units, the lack. of efficiency of which js offset by The ''social land . psychological ■ advan­ tages they confer.—A. D- .Hall in? The Nineteenth Century, and After .(Lon­ don). rides.—PeferboroEx. 4-inent—<] who beg _ free aminer.- ' AND A- BIRD, v From -the San Francisco Argonaut, . Sir Walter Scott once,said ho never heard a dog story he. had the slight­ est. difficulty in believing. And Sir Walter, like most old British Tories, had a .^knowledge of -Mogs -tlmt will be, denied to. every Bolshevik, ,fbr we are convinced that no dog ever liked, a rabid Bolshevik, or ever will- ■ ,-We shall hot, undertake to tell our readers ■> anything that we know- about dogs,, tlipu^fe we know a goodtj deal;, but we propose to 'relate two stories that the. Reverend, poctor; Charles?-’Carrpll Everett, the dean of Harvard Divinity. School .40 years ago, ...used to- tell Both of them may seem to * most4 of- ’■ our, rehder-s almdst unbelieveable, but those who, knew Dr. Everett are aware that he was not given to' gassing, and that he was not the sort of man who gave ready credence to “old wives' fables.” _ / j_ £>r.,* Everetti- related these stories o,f dogs and . persons whom he, knew well. One of- them was „in regard to ^Mog_„wffio_iir.0Jig.ht a physician to a houjse' that sorely -needed him. An old lady was taken suddenly ill, and her granddaughter said, inutile pre­ sence of the .'■(log that She Wished Dr. - ------ could, be reached- (This was before, the day • of telephones and there was nobody she.’could is.end tor • •him.) ; ■ . ’ . Suddenly the doctor walked in, to the surprise of the lady, and when she asked,-ho w- be knew -ha- wag. want- - __ {- ed; he told her that hpr dog had copie’ to. his place and' set up a tremendous .barking in-front of the, doory When he came the dog 4iulicatWhn various ways that.'Ire desired' the .doctor to ,fol|.ow - him and he had,, done so.- Re)> haps, the nio<t, remarkable fetlfcuxgt of the story is .that the dog ' ■ : _thAjiab.lt„ofLcMU.ng.M ■ffie.....feto^^^.., ho.ils.e!. i ■''' r The’ other- stoty is of a dog,Who- . was; exceedingly -fond of .-two young Cambridge men’who were almost. ’ inseparable. In course of time, both I of them went out into the world in search of fortune, and were both' gone for several .years., Finally one of them returned home on a visit, and the dog mani­ fested an almost unbounded delight; in- liis presence.. Later the went -to.0- - the. home of the alter ego, evidently having reasoned that where the one „■ was the other, would be also- But >he other had not returned, and the .. grief of the dog was alntfost incon­ solable. - ~7\ ■ ■ Shyness Has {n?.t?. But Most Children Are? Rendered Sensitive by an Oversoft Exist-? eiiGe-—-W-e-^UR-i-fi.tl?-^ .....Life..- .....’-?,.5 ■ Once there, was a boy who1 was ever so strange. He never flattened liis no.se against a^-plate, glass win­ dow to gaze at- catching gloves, or -flaasks, of nice smooth bats. He was.rilt. jealous.. of -his xousin--who ;had a new hockey stick. He didn’t get excited when two fellows-began t.o pummel each ■ other. and roll in the gutter. ■ _ ; . ■ ■■ ' ' „™_Naturally,..Xe™h.^d.T.o_e.nj,O.X-.his..,.o,w Swedish Use of Color Impresses Scotswoman MORE EVIDENCE. ^he-exteht^torVh'iiCh'WeffinesFMfiW - Ing is responsible for grade-croqsing accidents is shown by..data submitted by t<he Safety Section of . the Asso-. ■' ciation of American Railroads. Out of 3,322 accidents, of' this kind in 1934, it is stated That; one* but of . every five resulted from- motor veh-. '.Icles being driven into the side of. traijris. In many cases this happened s/when’trains .were standing still. In such . Collis ions 287 persons, were klli- , ed and 1,865 injured. ’ . The association includes lines in Canada as well as., the -United States. Canadian mQtorists (have certainly • done their fair share in piling up .the v accident total—Winnipeg Tribune; RADIO - PILLOWS. v There is no end to iriveritions to make the listening to radio \ pro- . grams\ comfortable to the very lazl- ---est of fans. There is one new idea that is also a comfort to, those wihri . ' do not wq-nt to listrin?' which some­ times is a Whole neighborhood.’ \ ■ -With ,a pillow of the, type no-fr in- iVWqnted it is said you will be able to 'go to bed and listen to theT-adlo all night if you choose without stern injunctions from others -to turn the 'thing off. A'sensitive'set is concealed' in the sponge- rubber, interior of the,, pillow and the reproduced sound can jb.e heard only when the ear ^s r,est- * . Ing on the* pillow- It was a -feature of this year.’>s ra­ dio and ele’etri’eal exhibition at Syd-„ mey, in Australia.-^-Braridori Suny ’’ ’ ------------‘Y UNCONGENIAL occupations ” ■ Tfiri most unhappy people bn earth lirn those who are in, uncongenial oc- eupdtions, who got the wpng kind of educations anjd, jobs. and had 'to be? ,,,., cotftrilit Tp" be forever squarin' peg's 'In,;, round holes. With, good advice from the vocational .guidance council, many such mistakes will be •eliminated.— Niagara Falls-Review. ... ^AIRPLANES AND RAYS. Rec,ent reports from Itrily of the mat hods of stopping . airplanes- by rays sbti'nd rather fantastic to the ears of professional physicists. T'-.ore is one important general con- bid'' r.tlon to be remembered when, claims, of this sort are feeing advanc­ ed- When1' rays have effects at great distances, as' with railio waves, it J a due io the efforts’ of the receiver to A CAT___ ... . ■f It is. possible to domesticate a cat and make of fIt a delightful indoor companion; but let it out for an hour land 'it reverts to the life of its an- ■tir^iyr^riJulIus Caesar. Toronto’ S{tar. . ^„:_LL_.^A.R.M-EAT-A.LIT4ESr- Litter Of Ten Silver Foxes Once‘Wo.rth:$65,OOj3 ‘ In Cash GHarlottetown. — P h otog-raphers have been out taking pictures of 10 little baby foxes all... of? .n.h.p-...,li±ka.Kr_ •4-he-r'a-ne-h--Of~^Go-h-^Fi'cx:l-“An'drewr““’~ Last year, on farms of the Domin­ ion, 37 persons were fatally injured by animals, ■ 11. by .‘falls froip. loads, 28v( through being struck by animal­ drawn vehicles and implements, 10 as, results of sunstroke, etc. The to­ tal of 150 fatalities give^ some slight indication of the number of non-fatal accid'ents that occhr. —’ Woodstock Sentinel-Review. ■ T ’ 'The EMPIRE the old boqks and songs. ’ An .anchor of - sanity in.a bewilder­ ing world. That is how we should regard the »old sopgs and the old books that Britain has befriended for many decades and still holds close in her'hep-rt. “Lorna Doone,” “David Copperfield; “Treasure Island,” still live.-.And “Home Sweet Holme” and' “Lome’s Old Sweet Song,” still live, too. There is a revealing glimpse of human loyalty in the publisher’s list of the i0O Best Selling hovels. We cling to those books because their sentiment Is true, universal and for all time—Manchester Sunday Chron­ icle. ■ ’'' - • \ tide. THE KING’S TUTOR. James Neale Dalton toured X •- the world, with the young Princes in the Britannia arid,the Ophir.. -His sturdy character-and hig mind, as human-ris .it'was scholarly, were a .strong i^u^. ence in building up the character of Klng'C^eorge; a character which has isiowly impressed itself upon a troub­ led ^Empire as the, ideal - of what • a- cohstitutional ruler should bo.' During the months {of Jubilee'celebration thp eyes bf all the world are'upon King .George. But we may allow oUrs[elves to “glance aside from the central fig-. _ute for a moment to the . wonderful old man who was his tutor, drily a few years have, passed since Canon Dalton stamped through the Cloisters of Windsor, a loud-voiced' Veteran, striking terror and: awe in all who beheld hirii.—Hector. JBolithoJ in The Fortnightly (London). *--------'---------’’ .FARM. PROBL EMC IN BRITAIN.'. The decline iri the number of men: employed upon t>he land has ‘ within the last sixty years been .very great’; at the game time the small, farins have-been dimihishin-g iri numbers, lu of the legislative, attempts fb quintuplets, wouldhave caused some­ what of a sensation .back in the boom yeafs when fabulous sums were paid .for—Prince-,.E d-ward.., ,I.slancl__pups,—a- promihent, rapcher; commented. “That litter in: 1913,’’ the rancher said, “would. have’‘'been. worth at least $615,000, or an- average of $6,- 500 apiece.” And then he went on to tell of the bull market on foxes and sales conditions irf the good old days. “As a matter of fact I sold options around May 15, 1913, for other ranchers'at $14,000 a pair and.a few weeks later sold six pairs for the Tuplin Fox Corpbration, acting through their Charlottetown agents, for $16,000 a pair.” ' ■ Fair Attractions The Directors of the Ontario I Societies, at a recent meeting, ■ {discussed at As­ sociation of Agricultural Societies, at a recent meeting, ■ {discussed at length attractions for fall fairs. It Ava's agreed judging should be arranged to afford educational op­ portunities [and be Ms' 'attractive, as possible. Suitable rings shouldl be provided for., all live stock and the names of 'winners should appear on hall exhibits. -Inter-community .competitions were recommended; such as special prizes for Women’s Institute Misplays. Jun'- ior classes have been found to arouse much interest and. this year’Agri Cui-' tural Societies ard, sponsoring over 180 clubs'for boys and girls.. . ' '' In addition to the- upual attractions, the following were suggested, having been tried by Societies 'arid requiring little cash ^outlay: v Antique displays. ‘ - ■ ‘ Oxen3 demonstrations. Hitching, driving and 4ridihg com­ petitions. ‘Milk, maid contests. Horse drawing competitions, v Clas,seS for "jumping horses^ Teams for horses, versus six{ ei^ht me-n. u. Horse back wrestling. ■ Sheaf binding competitions. . , Ldg{ sawing.’ > - Potato races. ,. Mrisic'al chairs—-mounted. Band competitions; old time fid­ dlers.’ contests, etc. » Demonstrations of various kind’s.’ X ’ • ’it - . v '* *4 ^ENTHUSIASM i VNotfiing great was' Without enthusiasm?* ■ ever or company more- p'r less’ because all *J>he others liked , the, same .things and n ■ couldn’t understand a boy" who wasn't -moee “Or less-a-roughneck. ■; .......... He liked books and fishing, or any­ thing one .could do alone or with an­ other, quiet fellow like himself. Oh yes, he- was very, very .strange. He had ju. t about a million bro­ thers — under 'the skin — but he didn’t know it- Neither did his par- . ‘.[.rinia.—did—tie-p-a-inH-ts-of- 4-“tlTOSO““0't'h'er*'~‘<’OTtd’u.'^mran’gX't7n'sTJ ' strange. any{.^mdYe? [ There are" Richard- Jones, head of the testing- laboratory «at"ihe- Institute, and Mark _ Smith, a .ipromising young lawyer, Fred, Art, Samuel and William often7 get their pictures .in the paper for something, o.r. other they’ve done . in their business or chosen profession. Every one of . them ig a courageous fighter in the world of wits and science arid law, - with the <courage, of .his convictions and “moral” cour­ age to persevere. And these are the strange, one who wouldn’t use their fists .or shinny up telephone poles to watch a baseball or football game. These -lonely ones that some people called “odq”. . . i_ Ves, in a way they were retreating from life during boyhood. Not from life exactly,, but from life as they' found it abound them.1 Why do yve think a boy isn’t a uia,ri unless he likes, to whoop -and punch and do cartwheels arid fsw£t a ball? Some boys-develop a sort, of .anti- 'social attitude (or just,let us call it. shyness), when babies,.- , They . seem to be b'orn with an inability to face, the sandpaper ofMlfe.. ■ . Others get it by criticism and ridi- .cule when little. Still others afo ren- 'dered' sensitive by. over-soft exist­ ence. They , are coddled, protected, treated like fine, chifla and never, learn what roughage means. And they ' ai'e kept apart, alqne t-oo long. ’ “They might-grit something,’.’ “T^hey might lehrn something they shouldn’t - know’.” “They might' grit hurt.” They must be’“good” boys.' : . Then Suddenly someone expects, everyone—ex-peCts, these boys to de­ velop biceps and calVes and pugna­ city 'over night, lliey expect -the .'•small hermit -to -go out and- -llck-ali the tough lads'in the neighborhood [First we unfit them and then we expect th&m tri right our, mistakes, . “Inherited” Shyness- .is’’no - one’s fault, but certainly not the boy’s-.- It is a mistake,, too, to 1(ry to force any small child triward courage he does not feel. “Roughage” is actually .•mo-'st successful, Unapplied, in very . sfrnall rind rabher gentle dose|8 by people he Tikes, at first,, it 1 ■ will gather itS...own momentum. . [ “ . nothing Is tnore attractive than to,'see a young man,. . Lbehding all his energies in. the direction of. truth aha riuty arid God> ... to be such a youhg ihanjs t.o. be like Christ; the highest type, the most Illustrious example-of enthusiasm- the world has ever serin?’ 1 McC. Holmes t eristic- feature, of Sweden,, and a visit' to the summer'homes on the, islands aro'-und Stockholm or in the beauti­ ful forest-' scenery-of Dalecarll'ia is an education in -its use, writes Honor 7Stuart, in the Glasgow Herald. The” Swede has the' good Taste " to insist upon simple furnishings for his sum­ mer house, but: the - plain painted wood furniture -i? so charming in hue —lime-green or blackbird’s egg blue, warm russet-, or a sunny yellow, -the,, natural grain of the wood .berng-iutii- i-zed-' for -deeoratiom— with : perhaps1 some simple “motif”.- in addition — that the eye is perfectly satisfied and’ oh e feels'1 Uispin ctjvel y [, that {-.anything ;mclh'elaborate would, jar.’ ■’’■ I.n a country- where the timber ln- ilustry is a -staple -one, itis, , of course, natural that this should -be the ' medium -employed,- but’ 'if domes- almost with a sense- of-- surprise- that its decorative u e should be of bo advanced, a. nature.’ ff the walls are but of pitch pine, the.-wood .is-painted or oiled into- a beautiful symphony of-gold’and brown; the floors are. wood too, and the carpets ^re-H^ane-ten-t— jnst’i'nct7'’jTshally' ’sTir'e" aifd souiicl7'"Ls? e; wpv.en eries, and the cushions' and’ -covers, for window seat or table are severe and richly colored, In one or two of the tourist'-centres' 1 where -the- big iToTels Tave been carefully furnished after old’ Swedish' traditions, I ha-Ve. 'been surprised;.by the beauty. which color and [the right uSe of material can give." * —- ■ - AMONG. THE PINES , There is. one Villa which is' a revel­ ation . of what can ’ be .done in. this way. It happens to> be the gift of a wealthy Swede to invalid- members of his own' profession, but the ex­ quisite taste displayed ...might be that of an- art connoisseur. .High up in the Wonderland, pine forests of jaffit-; land, backed • by the •mountain- of Areskii.tan — in winter a paradise for .ski-ruriners, in summer a delight for th'e city dweller and a surprise at all times for" the tourisjt' —; the brown­ walled house stand’s, the music, of a waterfall behind it, pine needles a barpet outside Mie garden., A skilful architect has modelled the houM from an ancient-Swedish coiin-; try residence; there are' loggias oped- ing from every storey, which' gives upon, the river or the, plnewodd'. And here, too,, a sure hand has blended the colors of furniture and hanging's into perfect harmony; reds and btowns that suggest the forest and ' the bright borribs .of autumn; blues that mirror tlye river dr the ■ sky; green of birch leaves and purple Of heather; gray of tlip plumage of .the' mountain birds. ’ ’ I Health 3. Do not run a tire constantly on the.same Wheel.-Shift your tires from. * wheel- t.o Wheel; which, will .produce even wear. ■ 4, Do -not rely on the generally ac- . cOptfed -theory that it is all right., to run old tires oh back wheels, because than one in front. A rear tire blow­ out is every bit as dangerous ^as one . in. front. ’ . .■ . ■ 5- Don’t go around qorners at high 4 speeds. It wears tires frister than ariy- -th'iTTgT’el'SXC'. ....;---r-f 6. Except {{to”' preventan accident,. J. • do not slam on the brakes.'The most gradual breaking possible is best for; tires. .. ' 1 ' 7. Have your wheel alignment checked .occasionally,, rear as well as front.”’ ’: / ’■ \ '■ . 8p 'Look'-o’ver your .tires occasionallyz‘ to s.ee how they are getting along.’ ■ , 9.. Do not drive too, fast on hpt, dry ■roads. -In extremely "hot weather on . dry roads, high speeds heat the tires, _sWL-ha^teri»-d.ate;rioxa:ti.on.>-.._. ■10, Start’ rm gently; doL_no.t_s.pln__ your , wheels, . 11. Do not bump- into, curbs or -run over; -them. .'^resv~have_^ot“-yetT ’ been so . perfected that«they Will per­ mit -tljis kind of' .abuse without in­ jury.. . ■- ■ . . , 12. -If your car ^begins to steer-qiieer- ly, slow'down, pull.off the road, and. inspect all four’tires carefully. Often' this action comes- when a tire j 'I nspectioCT" "nig'; “vent accident. ' { E a r 1 y Ceremonies Get Married Early In Day > .. Ahd; Leave Town Withoiit • Delay” Their Motto . ■ Tradition,. especially-in so far as it concerns marriage, dies very hard in England. ’ . - ; ■ This is the experience of registrars in the London -area ■ after a year's working of tihe Act which allows :Wed- dings to .take place up,»till six o’clock In the evening. '"r Hitherto the., ceremony could Only ■.take* place between the hours of 8 arm.” rand *3 -p.m:, except by special license issued by the Archbishop of Canterbury's Faculty Ofllce. - , LITTLE DEMAND During “the past year not. more than, - .20 couples have been married in Lon-' don and Greater LondCft-^fcr three in the afternoon, and In the whole- of England the figures available show that the number -of marriages after , that hour is fewer than 100. "IL was believed that the extension of three hours, granted by the Act would meet -a really widespread' dettria'iid’ on thp part, of- business people employed in' offices who, while wishing to marryf could not .afford . lo get. away before 3 p.m.,” a London registrar said. ' ■ - f> ■ , FACTS AND FIGURES “This;■ however, is not borne out’ by facts and figures. Rather has it been-, the - more emphasized’ .that,- . ,couples prefer to “have the wedding; ceremony early'.in the " May'. reeputiotr MjuTThen “IdKyiFTri’wn {" ' 1 for. the honeymoon, ' ' ' • ".Of the few marriages that- have taken place between 8 p-m. and 6 'p.m. an analysis’shows that most of them were soleraized in summer . months, and in sunshine. • .' rip not seenj to want jjo, •have -the ceremony carled..out in the hourg of darkness durlfag the. cold J’&uih’the Act of Partiamrint ig there it larioT, antT'wlu' not, I a-m Convinced,'be largely taken II advantage “of. ' - ‘ " * <fei'taln;ly$ caused no incion- ’ dot. married - early in the day and J leave town without delay seems to’, be the motto ffiotft bridal Ci’.-iiidof There are twelve simple rules for life health, which, if followed,.'would cut the average ' motorist’s tire- bill anywhere from”25 th 50 per' cent;, am nually, according to Technical Super­ intendent, foi;-a tire company. Those rules are: ' . - ’ 1. .Maintain recommended or rated air, pressure, at all .times. Th,e recom­ mended pressure is a minimum Ke- low which tiros should never be ab lp.wed to fall. Nor should pressure be kept mu,ch above this'figure. ' . -2. Whenever ypu p,uts.on a now tire, . —7 *,u whenever a life has been-off the .rim,'^n^n4e'td registrars 'or the clergy.' do not start on a long drive- with Im­ plicit faith that its air pi'esute is coirect/ A tire may, lose several pounds of pre.-sulfe immediately after H is put on the 'rim- Wave it cheeked throe or four miles d'own the road. •.’I