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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-12-26, Page 3SHOOT YOUR HORSES and the | Classified Advertising . ! .SEEINE. FANNING SXIX.x> TSSUMOHlAlS . . t/LlNE CQ., J$1 EMPRESS CRES„ ■ -------------- ----------■— --------------;-----------------— INVENTORS! !HJ,Mi'll? A brother to every other Scout,, without regard to race or creed -I When Potatoes. Breathe •I. Wooten, F I ft k 19 'V I I The behavior of mankind seems to prove that we never need doubt the patience of heaven. . * The chief draw, back to twin beds is' that yoti have no fellow sufferer to get for an extra blanket. To every wpnmn wi.ro has.been busy, around 'a. home 'until she has passedThe fellow who “does it now’’ has Time 'to do something else while the Other fellow is still thinking dbout it. ■ Hollywood contributed only They- were discussing American when , the teacher asked, if any pupil could tell called./ *. NEW YQjRK—The , sartorial' pace­ setters of TJnitd States' are its busi­ ness leaijres. -a' group of New York’s ger of freezing. On ■ warm days pa city.’ I .. There 'wafe- silence,-. . and then small boy waved his hands. ' . Teacher ~ Well; Junior? '■ ■ Junior (proudly) — Mischiefs. dresser out of pictuTes; He. ha$ yen for neckties, with hundreds them in hi's wardrobe. informed me on^Hhat. the''“kids” would be much more comfo.rta.ble if T would go opt some-' (Janet■ Jameson, in the Toronto Mail -and. Empire) (Scouting develops a reliable and it profitably- against the. enoTmous Oriental production. . ' ' :■ Canvasser — .is the master of the house in? . : ' : Young Father (wearily) He!s up­ stairs in his cradle. FARMS FOR SALE •v IN ONTARIO R<>m% good properties at fair prices, part cash and extended .terms on the balance at 4% interest. State your .find. . write. J,Or details. to-: COMMISSIONER or AGBICUETURAtn EOANS Parliament , Bldga. , - Toronto pride' over the repeated success of Canadian sheeprais'ers. Ontario once again seht sheep that co.tjld not be •matched. With the ■ blue) ribbon for sheep--edmi-ng—so— often :to Canada U 111 ’ J v U 1 t U 1 tl 11.1 C^L UL ,<Ui 111 v j _ ______ _ ____. _ . rest of th.e. world — has. been hav-j her fortieth birthday there comes a ing a hard time, of it, but it is. not for | day when her.duties gilow less and lack of trying -or 'of keeping the , for the first time in her-life she has standard up-.- : Eih'ly^V. a stamped dressed envelope for - the LIVE STOCK MARKETING Shipping on t-he .'co-.operati.ve plan liaS been productive' of splendid results. Selling on, the open market means real- value for the owners. Get in 'kouch with its,'Writ—Wii-er— or Telephone XYndhuiat 1143 THE UNITED FARMERS , CO-OfitRATIVE COMPANY. IT? Zt-TED I.TVE STOCK'COMMISSION DEI'T. union Stock YnrdH, webt Toronto • Farmers vs. Farmers Those Leisure Hours Why Not Employ Them " Pro­ fitably? Specialised training leads to Increased efficiency.1 Increased Efficiency ' means Increased ' Earning Capacity. Overcome Inferiority Complex,' ? develop mental power, and .better tilings. Study leisurely in the (lUi'et of your own htome. Write for particulars of fascinating correspondence 'courses-.— Institute of Practical and Applied Psychology 910, Confederation - Building MONTREAL, QUEBEC agafhst. the’best exhibits, of .the huge'potatoes from .being frozen, . Chicagq.-show^we_)are. .-clearly, in-^ ...posit-W -tn., take . . care „ of our own needs, should a revival -oh,-the long- Correct this sentence — ‘‘When we start sometihing to help the .communi-' ty) those who have -the most, - give- most”; < The. amount of ventilation- required is that which will keep the potatoes dry. From .early December onwards’" all ventilators and doorg should be” closed and protected to prevent the- Some Grounds For Crowing ’ • . 1 / . ) ). » ■ - Latest census figures for the Dis­ trict' of Toronto show a. total of 9,- 700 Wolf Cubs, ®oy Sc-outs, Rover Scouts, Sea Scouts and Scouters. A new permanent Scout camp site ■ has been presented to the Trinity Church Scout Group of. Saint John, •N.B.,.the..gift of Mr. and Mrs. Isaac . H. Northrup, in memory of th'eir'sbn; a former member of the troop. v An old iEnglish village, including caktle, lych-gate and maypole, was/ the setting;of the Ulster Boy Scouts’ j.Bazaar, at .King’s Hall, Belfast. Her l Grace the Duchess of Abercorn was Chairman.♦ ♦ - Nearly 400 .Cub’s,-Brownies,.-Scouts, s Guides, Rovers, Rangers and Scout- i ers and Guiders attended a special I. Sunday afternoon ' service .in St. I. John’s Church,- Kitchener, to. witness' B the presentation and dedication of the colours of the /6th Kitchener Troop S and to participate in a service- of worship.led'by Rev. J, N. IL. Willis,. ■ -‘Next year's district Scout Jambor­ ees -planned in England include a Northern, Counties Jamboree, to be held at Raby Castle, the seat-of Lord Barnard, County Scbu.t Commissioner for Durham'.'.. efficient citizen. ‘ In these panicky days Scouts will be needed — men who are prepared and can rheet. un- of mind and resourcefulness/’ -fcqird-Soprers—foi*nrer~Goveriior and" Chief .Scout for Victoria, Australia, The Scout Bronze Cross,( given .for' gallantry at , serious personal- risk/ wds awarded a jiamaican Scout, Mar­ tin Watkis, aged 13, of the 15th St. Ann /Mount..Zionf Group. Scout Wat­ kis esntpred a burning house and res­ cued a crippled woman 90 years of age, whose presence in the building had been overlooked until, the house was. aflame from floor to’roof. . ...'-. . * * * , A. further tribute by the Chief Medical Officer to the work being voluntarily done in the quake-de­ stroyed, city of Quetta by Indian Ro­ ver Scouts: “Yesterday I went in the morning to watch a group of Rovers take a dead sweeper’s body from a house. The.sweeper' had been an out­ cast, yet the Rovers, high caste Hin­ dus and Mohammedans, did the work which-- .(he authorities • did not desire, to ask the soldiers to do. It was' a . magnificent effort'on the part of the Scouts.'/ Photographs of 'the Rovers •at work show them, in gas. -masks, carrying bodies from the' wreckage, diggingr grave's for hundreds of vic­ tims and giving a last salute to the, unknown dead, ' _ . and -Harold G. Hesler 1 " made Assistant Gen- e.raL-■ Managers! /•■ Appointment of Mr. Burr/iam L. Mitchell, Mr, James.'Muir and 'Mr. Harold G. Hesler/US Assistant Gen-, . era! Managers, of . The Royal Bank of Canada has been announced.. Mr. Witch-ell, a native of Merjgo- .. mislr, N.S., and 'since 1934 Supervis­ or of Ontario Branches, becomes As- ■ " --'sistant General. Manager following a' long-, and extensive career with the bank in many parts of Canada and Newfoundland. He joined the Union . , Bank of Halifax in 1903, serving as a ■ Junior . at the NeW*-Glasgow Branch. When The Union Bank was absorbed by the Royal Bank of Canada in 1910, - ’ Mr. Mitchell was moved to Halifax, and two years later became? Accon-- ■ tant. ’of.that,branch. Th 1915,"he’was appointed Manager of the St. John’s 1 ■ * ■ Newfoundland Brain-h, fpl-lowing two //--:■’-’ -years’ ■ service-Assistant Manager „—■Hrerer-Rv - - fax ahd at Vancouver;1 in 1919 lie was appointed Manager at Toronto; and- five years later Supervisor of,Ontario Branches- As Assistant General Man­ ager, Mr. Mitchell “will, continue to su­ pervise Ontario Branches from head­ quarters at Toronto. Mr. James Muir, for the prist four- years General Inspector of The Royal l^ank of Canada, is a native of Scot­ land. Like Mr.- Mitchell, he has bebn engaged in the ‘profession of banking since boyhood, and’has served. the Bank, ip the Dominion and-New York. Mr. Muir joined the Royal Bank of Canada at Moose Jaw in 1912, after serving three years with the Com­ mercial Bank of Scotland. Ltd., and one year with the chartered bank bf- . ■ India in London, England. In 1916 lie was transferred to. -the Inspector’s Department at Winnipeg, and later in the same year became Accountant in the Winnipeg Grain Exchange Bra’nch.. In 1917 he was -transferred fo the Credit Department, I-Iead Office, and ^appointments as Inspector,. Supervis- Or’s Department, Winnipeg, and as Assistant Supervisor, at New York, followed in quick succession. His lo­ cation ’in- New. York as Assistant Su­ pervisor of the bank’s business in Central ;and South America extended over three years. In,192S lie returned to Winnipeg as Manager. ...His ap- pointment, as General Inspector, ,-wit’h headquarters hi Montreal, followed in December 1931. .- r‘ ' | . Mr .1-jarold G; Hosier, Secretary of The Royal Bank -of Canada, was born in Humberstone, Ont., and "joined the Welland Branch -viF - fhg,’ bank as a' junior in',1916. He sef.ved' in various capacities in several branches throughout Ontario until 1915,. when he was transferred to Winnipeg. Af­ ter enlistment in 1916 and service overseas-, he rejoined, the- bank' a.t the Havana Branch "in . '.July 1919, and ZsKorlly~af.t er ~was "h’.plpnln'f (^/~A"c cb'finT tant; at. Cienfuegos, Cuba. The follow­ ing year he was transferred (o the, Su-' per visor’s IJepartin-en*, Havana, and in 192S became Joint-Manager of .'Ha­ vana Branch. In 1930, Mr. Hesler. was mov.ed Jo Head Office, Montreal, w-herfe he has since been ‘closely in-’ touch, with ;4-lie. bank’s foreign busi­ ness, having visited personally many'' of-the bank’s foreign branches- well as the nior-e. important offices across the Dominion. He was appointed Gen- ! eral Inspector in 1931. The appqin-lments of Mr. Mitchell,, Mr. Muir and Mr..Hesler become ef­ fective immediately. J ' "7“ (By “Irish Cobbler” in F6rt Arthur News-Chronicle) We farmers often cuss and swear abou-t—t-he prices we are charged'- 'for goods we buy, but seldom do you .©yer hear .a farmer’ berating another'. farmer for services rendered. I often" xvbndei\ wTly no >T<7c'k|'Ts '“made/J/ong^ ■■■D^TO“mTrtw-~'0lTunr^^ sale of a horse, or a hog- or a bCast, as to price,’and it' ends' in a take -it or leave it, or a compromise’, both sides giving way op a. fifty-fifty basis. But7 When it comes to threshing, or buz-, zing wood q'r grinding grain, jobs that- some good farmers take oil as sidelines, often wonder there is .not more 'grumbling.. Take threshing, for instance. It is. a thing that has to be dope; but whether I get . fifty cents a. bushel for grain or a. dollar, it makes no difference to the price.I.pay for threshing, and • threshing is a costly affair. Threshing clover seed is a slow business, but the clock ticks al'opg j inexorably, 1 am paying, five cents a minute for4threshing, and the seed may bring three cents a pound or. thirty (cents.. J suppps.e the only truth about1 it is that the "law of’ayerages works out' in th© long run, and that what I lose this year f gain the next. The siime. naturally holds good of grinding that grain' for feeding on the farm. T musf have chop for the sMek, 'and whether (lj.e barley is worth forty cents or ninety cents a- bushel I must pa.y two bits for each two sacks I take down to the grinder. Here, how-x ever, I can get a bit of my own back; I know I have 1o pay twenty-five cents for eacli-couple of bags, so why fill wheat sacks or flour sacks when britn and cidishecl oat sacks Hold so .much more. T guess T am riot better | than the other fellow. Wc all want as j much for a nickel as H philosopher would want for a dime. Now let me wind up this crack at .the farmer by relating a story — it happened dtiring the war. The farm­ er in question..,came info the black­ smith’s shop w,i*h- a ^hare to sharpen. Whilst/ the smith was doing it, thej farmer regaled him with his latest ex­ ploit. He had,sold half a. dozen hags. He had expected at the best ten dol­ lars a piece for them, but, he'added, "I-knew he—the Ijutche'r—--had'to have Jliem so I. charged him thirty dollars a piece, and he had to take them or leave them.” The share shai'penecl. the sfinitlf handed it. to the farmer. .The lai ter said: “Hoyv. mych?” “A dollar and a. half,” said the forgemati. “What.!” roared tile farmed /‘Yon, thieving rascal, it is only .fifty cents usually/’ '‘Yes/’, said the blacksmith, “but 'J have to buy some of that high, priced1 pork you have jus! sold to the bufcjier.” >.Observes the Montreal Star; “We have grown so accustoune'd to a Can-, adian winning the trophy for the. best wheat grown on thi? Continent at the annual International Grain and Live­ stock Exposition at Chicago that the repitltlon of the feat this yea.r may be accepted more or less — and per­ haps too much ■— as a niattei’ of course. Both .the Grand Champion- ship/'and^tlre Reserve ' Grantr cham- , pionship.have once again’-come'to this 11 -Country. It is interesting *to note that ■ the latter Juvard went to. a sample of durum "wheat, .from British 'Columbia instead of • from’ one of the Prairie', Provinces, the usual breeding ground for, “ex'tra-spbcjar* specim:eiLS--_Xefir. j wheat areas are pushed westward and' I northward as the patient‘experiment­ ing of breeders and students develops sti'on^r and quicker ripening vari­ eties. Should the high hopes ot tho.se who have been working on11 wheat dis­ eases be fulfilled and a type which will bb immune to rust be . put into farmers’.'hands — something that is reported to be on the eve of accom- "pl'fehment ’"ah. ■ enormous, increase/ in .the potential wealth of the country will result. ■ . ./ ' “ ■ It'is when.'we turn from the wheat avva'rds, however, that ive have es­ pecial reason to cheer foi‘ the Can­ adian ffirmei\ Our wheat-grower - may have certain natural advantages .of clknate and soil which aid him . ma­ terially in winning' championships but in barley -anjd oats, in . which growing . conditions "here, and in the United Stales are more nearly equal­ ized, our grain-growers did equally well. Perhaps the, mo'st’interesting of, all the awards for field crops is that for soya beans. Tn'this, comparatively new venture an Ontario grower , took first in the grain and hay show. It will be, interesting- to she whether, with this encouragement, there is any. increase Th the acreage of this crop in the: future. The, soya bean has been-doscri-bed ' as the most .valuable 'product, of the soil‘yet discovered ip the sense that' it -may be used for knorp and more widely varied pur­ poses than any other ., food’plant grown by man. Research into th© re­ markably ..diverse- uses -to/ which., the soya, bean and its very numerous'pro- , ducts and by-products can be put is toeing carried on in more than one laboratory/n this country at the pre- senvA£m%f and the. decision of .the Chic/ago judge's that the Canadian beans exhibited there were of the highest quality is assurance that we,- have the best possible raw- ' THE.WAY OF A MAN He picked, the pegch.erinos/ the blendes, the gay brpnettes, “ wagered he could make them all/arid,won a lot Qf bets; ' ■ ” The ma.idens with.', the pajntej lips were prone' for sweet roipance, ■He liked a slender, platinum for rhirmibas at a dance; . But when i.t c.gme to marriage that was a -different i.ung> . And he' who", favored peaches fellJ; . ( for a Tittle prune. ' ’ ' ' by year the - frontiers' ; of • Canada’^' • IAt a fashionable restaurant during the Christmas^ holidays a girl had just finished luncheon band wa s pre­ paring to light, a cigarette, when the waiter showed, an elderly lady to the table, ' ” Newqome.r (acidly) — I do hope you won’t mind me eating whilst yoii are smoking? ■ « . . ‘ - G-ir-1 (readily) — -Not- a-t- ally so long as .1 am able to bear the orchestra. ... •It is very difftcu’t f-or- a woman to keep a secret, especially in a modern. baChing suit:.' . . " the North Indian in a. rural school what the tribe leaders were .’ Bright Lad— Chiefs.' Teacher ■— Cbrrect. Nt>w-can you tell' me what the .women were called? There wag' silende, . and then a Some.of these city sl.ickers visiting on the farm soon learn there is more to milking a- cow than, simply drain). ing her crankcase. <ir Physician-,— Aire you ill? Let me see your tongue, please^ , Patient —r It’s no ii.se, dpctor. Ko tongue caii tell, how bad I feel. THE STEIN SONG ■. There’s a notable family named Stein, There’s Gert and there’s. Ep and ” there’s. -Ein. 1 ,Gert’s verses’are punk<^\ Ep’s statues were jhiik. And no one could understand Ein. , M-o'se— Once Ah had'a -circus.lion.- “dat had.; broke "out' oh' his * cage take -n-dd-ei’~THie--’-a--nd—ru-CH-m-e; T-or-L-h-lo cks,; een ma life. When wuz yo’ de wust scared een yo’ life, Sambo? Sambo — Lamme see. Oh yea. De wust scared Ah ebber wuz een ma life was Avh'en ma wife lost her job. The" Spectator — I can’t understand anyone missing a putt' as. .short-as as that. . The Golfer — Let me remind you that the hole is only 4P4 inches across and there is Hie whole world outside it. ’ ' ' ' . Helen — What’s 'Franklin’s busi­ ness’? George -- I think he's a bookkeep­ er. At. .least.’ he never returned the book he borrowed' from me last winter, j . „ . O ' Tn the storage of potatoes;, it has always to be remembered that the potato is a living organisio and that there are two periods when respira­ tion may become of practical im­ portance. »One- of these is immedi- Ately- after digging, and the other-a sudden rise in storage temperature. To prevent sweating, special atten­ tion should be given to the ventiN ation of potatoes handled in bulk immediately after digging, and also after sudden rise in temperature following a period, of . steady cool storage. The lower the storage temr porature,"the higher will be. the in­ itial rate of respiration at a sudden higher temperature. Sudden rises and' falls in storage 'temperatures are to. be avoided always: - The, early, fall is the time to provide all possible t___ _ ...y material j air cirulation by keeping ventilators to work with, provided we can grow' and dbors open until there is dan- "___‘ On - Warm days r....... ......... doors should be closed’ and opened As usual also, we have grounds for. only .at night’when the air is cooler. ■the conductor did’look cross. I asked her if! I could help, but she .shook her head. .Then evidently-feeling the need of a confident, she told me the trouble. She lived, with her son and his wife; the girl was thp acme of modern efficiency; “she doesn’t want me muddling about her kitchen.’’ What a tragedy And yet the story . -h-ad-its-u«e^I~had--a~I-i-t-t4-eTex-t--Fa^money77~v; My new friend Is a gobdvk’nittei’ . ' (which I am not).. Result Four pairs of mittens for little hands that other­ wise might be cold this winter, two forty-and-overs taken off shelf.' „ .. Japan Purchases Foxes From P.E.L CHARLOTTETOWN. — Eight Pi’inee Edward Inland foxes purchafe*'; ed by the Japanese Government fbr'. " an experimental station have left Charlottetown on thdir long journey. Th© special pedigreed male animlalfi, shipped in two crates, will'cross Can-' ada by rail a.nd be put aboard a liner for Japan. ‘ ' depressed wool market -call for -an in­ crease flocks.^ With the 87 'show, ; by' Canadian farmers is- excusable. Our agriculture — like that o’f .all the in the depleted .Canadian i tliis country taking -50 out of prizes at the international- a certain amount of, crowing AN OFFER TO EVERY • INVE.X’TOft, List of wanted ’ inventions and full information sent free. THE EAM3AY Company, World Patent Attorney Bank Sttreet, Ottawa, Canada. spar© hours.. She has never been a ■member, of any clubs; there was a'l-. ways top much to do, and if a kind friend takes", her to one, she, feels rather a misfit. She isn’t,, up on. cur­ rent ©vents, and she doesn't ' know who’s who’.in musical, circles. Miser- > ably sh.e wishes .she had stayed a.t home. Big- Busings Leaders Set The Pace For Sartorial Perfec­ tion— -Only’One Actor in The. List . [ Then there* is the great soul x^o lias spent, years nursing an invalid. ! Release comes, but‘it does not. bring happinf-ss'-to the gweet.-faced, middle- aged xvpriian.- Her hands are empty, her days dreary. In. a darkened room .she sits and. weeps for tl\e yoke sh'e b'ore so long. ' . • ’ My-fortieth birthday came and went without .causing me a pang, ,1-was busy with m.y family, and content with A BUR-SHOT ■ HOT . AND WORM Remover. Expels all Internal Faf- asites. Saves feed, cost^ a trifle. Ask your dealer pr write- Fairview Chemical Co.,. 49. Abell St.. Toronto. • LIVE YEAST Clears Up Pimp Pimples and many other ^kin troubles yield-to Phillips Live Yeast. .Phillips- Live Yeast, the new English discovery, , is different to other forms of yeast. First- of all it. is pleasant in flavour, and - <;asv to take. You will-enjoy it.■Second it is very rich in tlic vitamins ■ Bl and B2 so necessary for health and ’energy; I’hillips Live Yeast helps natural diges­ tion, improves.the appetite and makes ’ the sluggish system active in,a healthy ■ normal w.ay. Constipation is overcome,' the bipod is purified and enriched, The-: acids and impurities'which clog the skin, are carried away and the com­ plexion-clears up in no time, Pihlples and boils disappear. A s'allow, “muddy’-- . skin,takes on (lie.fresh, rosy colour of health and beauty.' " ” And furthermore, Phillips J.ive Yeast -' is more economicaj. It doesn’t spoil. I t 'keeps indefinitely. Y’ou can purchase ' Hevcrfrl weeks’ supply at one-'tira’e-- > and.save money. Twenty-five days’ , treatments cost only one dollar. 'Two sizes—a bottle of. 150-tablets for S1.00 or 50 for 50 cents. Your druggist, has it. Try Phillips Live Yeast -“-it's nicer, . ' , it’s bettor and more economical. leading tailors agreed last wepk' in - ]jfe Qpe day. th©'youngest, with the picking a .ist of ten best-dressed men. callousness of youth. Hollywood contributed only f ’ -It should b© actor-—nimble-footed Fred .Vstaire, j I The ten-leaders; drawn from a. The biggest- composite selection' by - recognized' ’ ’. .sty-le 'authorities'^ Edsel^ Ford, Detroit autp manu- AV i 1J i a'n.i Rhinelander Stewart, New Yotk real estate oper­ ator; Anthony j. Drexel Biddle, New i York and Philadelphia society ^gurc; William Goa'dby. Loew? New York ,, broker; .Adolphus Bitsch' II, qf the-St. i Louis Brewing family; -Marshall J ■ JDJUJMHELLER, Atta.,—L .................... .................... a , Merry Christmas in, this coal min-1 The ten.-leaders; '-drawn fconi , ‘‘a, on. tiAe nights he had them in. ihg'district this yeaf. r"’_* 1 - -• - - * - - payroll in five years was distributed. last week^ $137,000. Some of the 30 mines have been -working at full cn-\ facturq)';' naoitv.’ ' ’ S4------u With a feeling that my family had outgrown, their urgent need of me., l|wds being shelved with the other i'orty-and-overs. It happened on the street ear. 1 sat. dpwn beside an elderly Woman, whose chjn was quivbring omiiiou'sly. I fear­ ed she m-ight not’have, a -ticket, and 1 Field,Chicago merchant; Isaac New-1 I ton Perry, Chicago financier; Richard; | K. Mellon of Pittsburgh, nephew of | .Andrew Mellon; Walter D. Teague. .] New York industrial designer^ amt Fr&d Astire, the .dancer-actor. . • 1 Astaire’s high rating is at'tributj able to his recent pictured,• especially . --‘.4 <<TT- 1.«- (lone 'njore ■ “Top Hat” one tailor said, “He has done 'njore this year to encourage' the wearing of tailcoats than Any­ body else.’’ , ' 1 Astaire, however, also -is a carefpl a Pf. HAVE YOU A FLAIR FOR DESIGNING ? Make a copy of this design 4^ inches •wide. "The choice of a Water Colour Land­ scape Course, ot\ an'’Original Magazine Illus­ tration, a Political o„r .Sporting -Cartoon, or-a Comic .Drawing made by a professional ar, tist Will bh presented, for the bestdesign submitted in this contest which closes on December 23r<l. 1935. Other prizes for flic next five best designs. '. • The -Entry Fee i?' Twentj'*Fiv'e Cents, • NO STAMPS Gitf Baker, 39 Lee Avenue, Toronto, Can. •rvrnm^e-f'' your driving. ■ HM.nii.iteulUni.ilWuiUeMmiWi...