HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1936-03-26, Page 2on the ground that dolls were ■
I'
/1 •
. (From the St.-.Thomas
,e>-
an
Two Variations
. i 'people iii the hiub income tax' s<-aF
I1Cn : 1 ... .• • ..............., .........lx. »t,zx
92
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21
41
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f*/.-.n
I
i
A most • attractive
today’s simple to
has a new
put one ■
■pressed
There were then ."no.
and no service stations. It
[.tractive shirt blouse
L.) sew • pattern.'
v and charming neck
An-
nr+rr\ I
step. It’“is tremendously
ing."' Hugh Walpole.
was '■ t'lie GrTlfnTTT^WMmws-^^—
the. White Housip gives!' for news-
■' paperwpnien. ’ . " ,
is that
, should
ness at the back.
You’ll wear it to
your suit or
""for ,sports,
or tbek-irt.
Style No.
sizes 14, 1G,
10-incheis bust.
, 2 yards of 39-inch material- for
the short sleeved blouse.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your nanie and addreK-i
plainly, giving, number and iize
of pattern wanted. Enclose 15c in
stamps or coin (coin preferred);
wrap it -carefully, and address
your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide Street,
Toronto.
Newspaper Women Visiting tho
White House Give Imitation of
U.S. President’s Wife:—r To
Her Amusement
the ’ order,
last
Mitipe i(>r ins. nuiRUtv (irivu, ot nvtrE; H.- KELCp; Loring, Ont. nii]P3. “I looked at‘tlie car before
_______ . starting/’ ho.said, “studied it, craw!-.
'. ed indvr it; gob in and t^s’e-l to
| God "for <hn-ro«t ” «. •
0
)>’
Tommy Tou^-, Chicago gangster, shown' -in a : whee.lchair "as he
was taken to Federal court in Minneapolis, Minn., by U.S. .Marshals
to -be arraigned on. charges of • participating in mail .Volybery. at a
Minneapolis- railroad station in 1!>3;}. Tlie disease-weakened gangster
ivas-wheeled.to.the court room after be-i'ng -brought from' St. Paul mi!,,'
01-1 installe'/ electric' 'ligl.ts-, an ! he . had
,1 o take :
strange section of the ^country, ft. is ™'r”
of York an^l
2«»n.-4rS».i&«i»R
CANADA
EDITORIAL COMMENT
HERE,. THERE AND
.EVERYWHERE.
« Censored News
. Foreign newspaper correspondents
-‘. returning from Germany complain
jthat. it .is becoming increasingly dif-
iiculi; - to squeeze real nows- of tlie'
<■ day opt of Nazi'- Germany.
• One" American correspondent who
hail to ti’avel' to Copenhagen, Den
mark, to file his dispatch," remarks
that “newspapermen are feeling
more arid more the clutch <5f the
kid glove of terror.” I
He reveals that .12 members of
tie Association of Foreign Corre
spondents, an<T many others, who
wei-e not members, have: been exp.elL
ed. from Germany, on the ground that
their articles “were misleading and
poisoned the . international atmo
sphere.”
It is a stranglehold', strong-arm
system possible only; under a dictor--
ship,-—Victoria!" Times. ' ' '
; -..■.'..--j^u£xplaihed-''...
After seeing tfie Ottawa, Technical
school hockey, team perform -in Lon
don, one can understand how
' papital' is the- mother . of hockey-
-players. - It was the. smartest sec-,
ondary; school -team ever seen in this
district.—London ..Free Press.
/ . A Ton. of Haggis
"the Scottish Canadian will learn
.,.; w 1th, awe, hnd _the - Sassenach with
suyuirise perhaps., > that, en ope even-
ing last -year two thousand pbunds of
' haggis crosscdMh'e Tweed'"irf brder to“
appear at-,the StJ Andrew's festivities
• in London. :
. Hew; many Scotsmen were needed to
consume a 'full ton of this . ‘fgreat
chieftain o’ the puddin’ race’! one does
-—•-neWtlaiie, speculate,-hut the quantity
confirms certain rumors that are cur-,
rent' respecting the .number, of Scots
men, who have succeeded in making,
their' escape from Scotland. But a ton
——cUUifggi ’ ' ,..................
■ a . grace as langjs. ,'my arm/’ and it is
to i.'e hoped London Scots found it to
be ?. “glorious-, sight, warm-reeking
rick" ~
Clubs j^tn Women
From Knitting To
Economic Problems
Parliamentary Library Finds In
creasing Feminine Demand for
“Weighty” Tomes
OTTAWA. — Parliamentary
brarians are finding "that the weight-
j"~~i:est- tomes-are-Tiow—in-Meinandr-iiotr
!' ( only , by econdfiiists, Gavernm@nt
‘ bureaus,-and learned members, but
The , firm was ordered by an ad-. also by women for use as.reference
vei/tising board to stop these displays .for club' debates and speeches.-
on the ground that dolls vyere ■ npt ..• Recently an elderly woman asked
subjected *to immersion in water and | to see a treatise o.ri ‘‘Economic, Rela-s,
............ J .. '" lions Within the- British Empire.”
leading. ■ ”- ■'■■ ■. * . ' ■ I Anot-hep/woman asked for several
Surely, the board consists-of bache- [ lengthy’vblutnes, oiU Russian .culture
lots, else they might ' have known'and4 conditions,- ’ /-''.'I "'
That .one of. the .joys of-, having„■ .a*[ The- library, recognized, as contain-
... /» no ing one of the most complete sections
mere ca,t> _wash. br a wipe'with a' on the continent on economic and
lution.—Stratford Beacon-Herald.
thb advertising was, therefore, inis-
leading. ■
lor?, else they might ' have known I,conditions;-
_do.ll is to bath her every day,
i , ... . , w„ „..w x« --....-...... ......
dtmp towel, but a real soaking ab- financial affairs, is Restricted to",use
lution.-— Stratford Beacon-Herald, of Senators .and . members of the
, T~House of Commons,, but is open as 9
__T _ _ _ , _ a | 15 • UX x V L C7 Xl t V I* 5 V
of Senators .and’. ’members of the
7"__________________________. i
■reference library to those in search
sons io commemorate mis year, wuijTi^t librarians have commented
play host to more than the usual’found women becoming more
number of visitors. James Watt, I ke.e? matters of pabhc'import and
John L. Macadarh George Brunton,! s®,(^ ^he number of reading .clubs and
James Mill, author of ‘‘Analysis- of i ^ddy clubs has increased in such a
the Mind/* and John Grieve, the' wa>v that women readers are re
Dunfermline - poet, are among, those / Questing the most learned booxs;
whose achievembrits .will be honored. [ Though inquiries by mail are not
Of particular interest to all' coun- always welcomed, occasionally a de
tries where road^-building has reach-!- bating- society in -anotlier part of the
ed high development is the career of, country is hard-pressed for informa-.
‘Jlohn MaCadam, vvhose early expert tion--and turns to his library. , -
ments led to. modern system .of. mada-j- A letter was received frpm a wo-
daraizingj While Macadam “died a man' in the United States who wished
«£entury ago, the methods he evolved..to know the data, relating .the tran<i-1
are still considered”’sound. Watt Was/tion of the-House of Guelph”'into the | —
another Scot who built for. posterity;■ House of Windsor.-' ; ' '
He not only , developed the steam ! “They don’t seem to have as much
.engine but his nanie is. perpetuated tinie .for knitting as they use.q td,”"
in , the word ■ “watt"—the -unit of, one librarian remarked sadly, as lie
electrical poWer^ ,, ' -Took'- leather-bound volumes down
Aberdeen will honbr the 400th an-' from -a high- shelf,
niversary of 'the death ■ of' Hector.
■yBo'ece,™ .whose seventeen-volume-. —of"W
Scottish history, though
-d-paAv-h~f-ix?m-Ueg-ehdaxy^s.o.uxces^^
notably;, complete for Lhe times.
Boece, whose seventeen-volume part;
of his life in Aberdeen, where he
was the first principal of King’s Col
lege.
’ Oatmeal Saw Him Through
Letter to the' Toronto Globe:
—Sir:—On February 2: John Mar-
Sons of Scotland -reference library to those in search
Scotland, with a list e£ famous of information on abstruse lirobtos
soba to commemorate this year, wllll;,™® hbwnans. have commented
» - 'z. - ' *HAfr ivnnSan hix/t/ivMtn<# * TYlAltA
number of visitors. Janies
Whseled Tol Trial-N
.WASl-ilNGTONj' — Your cofres-r ,
pondent. has- been, joui am.dng ‘the
•ladieif and thus has picked up cer
tain item< which, cb.uld. hayd.iy have '
come*' to. him. and had he, been play-
ing -around poolrooms e and , other -,-
haii ills',of. tlie m:i le-| writes Rodney"
Dutcher. .. , ' , .,f ; ■ - - .
One of the niost exciting of thestf ..
bits"of news is the fact hat. Mrs.
Franklin I). -Roose; -It. can find her
way around her own kitchen.
- Some'o^ the girls Who attend Mrs.
Roosevelt’s press conferences .give
their' sworn word that she. showed
theht through the. new White House .
kitchen and demonstrated an aston
ishing familiarity."with all gadgets,
■fixtures, and' employees.
There-tire-no end of cupboards and ' -
Closets, in- the .nevv* presidential kit-'
chons and the First Lady ot" the ■ ■
United States.‘'could tell just what»
each Wa^ u.-eil for. without-peeking,
'in ..to-Sge. ■' ..- '
Nor did she mi’nd showing' .whole .»
shvivos of canned vegetables , to -a
group-.of yotiiig • women who . had, .
I automatically supposed all' such [Is'tuff ■
[in the White. House .would be bought:.
, fresh; ’ - ■' ,- ? ; '• ' ', : •
I .Incidentally, -Airs.- Roosevelt' spoke'
to all .the ker.va'nts. a,nd all -t^e s^-r-.
•rant's spoke., to Mrs. Roosevelt in a;
way which ..showed very plainly that
.;4Jh£^4Lidj.)MiL.ii>e another before. ■. .... . '.
" Another thing on which your.cpjr-i
respondent has' certain information,. ■
i gis-s-hou-l-d at :lyast- -be- “ wo-r-th-y-o’
5
hoped .London Scots found it to
\*', warm-reeking
as any -that Burns ever ate.
r.-in-eg Tribune, .
New York Corrected
.-.he New Yvrk, Times thei'e is
*i-l ;«£ m e nt of the. New Y’ork-Tele-
:e Company,, which' sounds like a
c.ylian. joke-.-- It commehces, “Alex-
. r Graham , Bell, inventor of the
............. '.X
■>re.’’ As Bell, went from Brantford
Boston; after his early experiments
re. and as he did not go to Nova
Svotia until-'h-e had acquired a Summer
res'd'enee there , in"* 1'ater life,, the
inhsiiiforniation in this particular- ad-
, tisemo'nt (jannnt be described - sis.,
'• Ifitticrwisi?' t'han^coiossal. -1- Brantford
■ F.xpcsitoi-.
■How: About It?
A farmer member ,o.f the Canadian
Parliament — one,.who isn’t convinced
' that we need many “isms” for. making,
a. go of life, rose in.his place, the
"'"N-' other day to infornl tire nation-.and the
woild that- he' has -gotten ajong w.ith-
cu.r a-batKlul. so far in life and isn’t
'. likily to lose any sleep if he never
'ha? one. ' . ■■■
. F is difficult to be dogma.ic abou^
■ lh‘-<> things. Many. a,, good, man has,
■ iVotshed his neck at the-rain' barrel.
Many a good man has 'wound up his'
■' tbi-'k o' nights and booted-' the cat
in'.,, the shed, before hieing hiffiself
riff ! o bed. Many a good man has
■ta’: -:t his wife’s scissors to. his own-
. -wvti.i.-.nei’s, snorting at -the -idea of a
V.iibcv doing it; « . .
it-i?' nice io have furnaces,
bs ,.aml. rjidios, • No’doubt the
gembrnjan from Bran.t county
.cii.jn'y them’-. -Rcgiria Leader-
Stiperiiiteiident, of- Penitenti
aries .. Recommends Segre7
■-. Ra tion -o f- Co n vi c t s 13 e tw e e n
■ P6 and 21. i - ■ •
,£Z\, ’ ‘ ’ ’’ ■ \
i. OTTAWA—-zCanada has only two
■girljj under-the age of 21 imprisoned
Times - Journal) ■ I
u 11 n -xx xx- -■■ -xu TT- ’ Joseph S. Cortelyou, of’ Haworth, -shall BennettutrAppmg with. Henry. N Jfj h<s ;drive.n autom6.biles. of vari-
...............t ---------------|
township of Brown,. ..left here for . which time he Alias never .been, in penitentiaries, a{,; qgainst 266
their camp alone. Instead of. taking charf?ec]AVith' excoding a speed' limit, < young men, under that, age; according'
their old trail, to camp, he to.k a new j int(J anybody or ,any-!to Brigadier Daniel • M. Ormond,
one by way of Long Lake, and dur"Mfiing' in short his -driving record is Superintendent '. of Penitentiaries,
ing a storm he became lost, and had perfect. On rcce|v.lhff.his 11131 license whose report on the Borstal system
been wandering in .he busl, for .11., pjates ..tke nlotor’ vibie'e .'oniiniss’bn-; recommends the definite- legregation
days before his. partne |>nd Howard i er o{ Ke^ jerSev feent him a letter of yoipig convicts between the ages
Thompson, with Gordon Brooks,^, comraond,of in and 21. - '
found hup. in a hunter s _camp on . Mr. Co1.,.q1v^ h w, motor!ns; “The great majority of young
Island Lake, about eight miles from Jn # tI,rc(,.wheeIefl affa;r _ .< -------------------------
■ eyy. .. . U Of O .V X in 1S98. ft had one cylinder of two/
When they found Mr. Bennett heh J arid was .air-cooled.- ,
had h>. toes, nose and fingers frozen. / f conilitions k. couW .
"" pairs.- When he began motoring i.i
.■-* the-'- States in 1901 he had ■ d ca
\ which had two- forward -speeds, but
if lie wanted to reverse he
foot, on Jhe ground«' and
days being a small package <5f oat
meal and a. small- quantity of con
densed milk. When you- take into
Consideration that Mr. Bennett is
past 70 years of age, and started on ( i
a 16-mile snowshoe tramp through a-
strange section of the ,country, ft . is /
a great wonder that he J.ved to te.l..of t00k Hm a wwk t„ puf l11e ;n
1 • '• , i shape for his. Sunday drive, of- five
- “Goofy”
\ yemng-iwife ,'h' 'California is
iPiihig,'..for' d’vofre ..because her-
and .spa'il:.'-! her with a’ clothes
she, • haying, been forgetful,
have' omitted to say..‘’Yes,
Preparedojy to (lie- spanking he
tho' dl-ma mu-red - creature re-
•,'Yes, .sir,” 699 times.- Had she
' lie ,'grace'tn .have said “-N-o* sir,”
in earlier stage.'in' the proceedings
might have-saved herself a lot
T'jri:
■ ■ 11 :> :
• at i
ah'*
of I'oul/e. Since- slbo didn't, why not
le-.-;, n a little piiti'cr.-cc n’ow'while her
■lord, and master endeavors to teach'
■ her iceor’im and respect? . '■
\Ve don’t-know exactly^ what the
wo* J “goofy’ means, but' wha-tever
It-,Joes mean,, it -fits 'the .pair.-!—Halffax
Chrori'i'cle: . ■ ' '
They Must Be Bachelors
.' An America^ firm of doll "manu
facturers staged a.‘display in store
.windows showing one -of their dolls
imrtrorsed .in. .water, perfectly firm
and fresh looking, and ano:theV doll|
■ made.,by another firm also immersed
in j,vator. but soggy and ''misshapen
an .1 the ?<'1or washed out.
_^THE EMPIRE A
Television On the Way ./exactly^
It, is remarkable how 'many people , a
express surprise that television is so ■ .Jll>n' 0
slow'in maturing. This frame of ,'on, ;’-
mind, where scientific miracles , are
concerned, is typical of the age. PeoJ h
pie are so used to everything happenv-
ing wj’th a rush iii thv-se day"., that
they, have no patience to., wait
painstaking pioneer research,
h The. television exports' are fairly
/certain, however,., that We shall see
^/practical Ijoom in television “next
'^arc and I am told that .manufac
turers are already making theii
plans accordingly. We cannot, have. \.y1jnv...(;
private tel'evis-iou in operation, how- \^r /
ever until next summer at earifest.
by which time-'the. $mt.hern broad-,
.casts on private set7 from the Alex
andra Palace.' •
Before next /Ih.ristmas, on-' the
other hand, -we shall probably have ,
[ television pictures "hr-adc-ast'to West. ■
End' cinema screens. 1't would he a
reasonably safe bet, I arn sure,, that
We .may see next, year’s Derby; if'
not the Grand National, that way.
Private sets .will' not he chea-p'/,(-at
first.—London Cor. Ottawa-. Journal., (
. .1 ■ ■ -----_■, • _ yatQs,
Loya! Toast [ . . ... . .
“My Lords, Ladles and Gentlemen: i-FacC Powder Now.Made ■■
The (oast is:.‘The. King.. Queen Mary I Froni Shark Brains
the Duke and Duches of York and j
..the ofher members of the. Roygl ■
Family,’’’ ' i - ' ■ i
Thus, in future, "toa-stmasters at,
official functions.' ■
His Majesty ' signed'
authorizing the new loyal toast,
weak. Britjsh News Review.
i , “Making a motion picture ‘”i's
exciting co-operation of all . the . arts
God for the ’rest.”
f—' This pioneer admits Hi t, ho had
his troubles with the police, but not
in connection with his dr.iv-.
He made the startling innova-,
equipping his', cars with •
and . so irritated4' thd police
that-they forbade him t.n take pas?-
i. engers w-i'.h .him. They - explained-
. that, the. doors prevented one from •
. getting out fast enough'in an emorg- .
ency. -Io also had trouble when he
........
a police captn-in. for a trial
spin, to■ demonstrate ' jus! why
did not have to get out al. dtjyk
light tho lamps.
,Thj only car-'th.-.f re-dly -troubled
hrfn. howoVfr, was one built in .a
It had a marine errgine
equipped -with -a rudder in
stead of a stooging whc^I. Being-, a
landlubhef-. Mr.-Cort pl you .will tell >
you that, his chief difficult-.- was that
■ when he worked the rudder the car
usually went' tho other way from'
what ho inten'ded.,
Mr, Cort.pl.you has only o.m
ge^tion to make and it. seems a per-'
fectlv sensible >ne. .-.Th^t-
driver., with clean .records
Have a. sticker or plaque affixed to
their 6ar;s -and that holders of such .
award?'sh'.uld get lower insurance
sag- ■
■ For some year- the shark has boon
! commercially exploited for it-L'skin,
which makes strong and,, decorative
handbags, and. shoes* for. its. fins
which make'a Chinese soup delicacy,
an-d for its oil which more more than
rivals cod liver oil.' .Now Australia
has evolver] an excellent face powder
an from dried shark brains.
’’The industry of-shark* catching <hr
and r rafts* with melodrama in evdry “meshing” is "being fostered by tWe
interest- New South Wales Government! along
•stretches of coast where the fish arc
...... ' found. An excellent market fob
>* ■ shark, leather and oil already exists.
'S
It nan a .........- ....-■ .and buttoned yoke effect
other chic detail, is the soft fu
' > town with
with a separate skirt
Wear is overblouse
2’692 is designed foi
ls years, 36, W and
Size 16 requires
1' y4 !voikvicCV .flint tb.i’ms,elves -.in- pe.nitenLl
•tia'ria.f (I'ue t'o a weakness, of inhibition-,
•arising - from .i,nappropriaete ■ earlyi
■training,' their greatest defect being!
luck. cf ■self control,” reports General
Ormond. “The majority ’ of.', these
y-ouths." have . been guilty, of, • crintes
_o~f a-equ 1 siTiv'oi'iess"."'"thoft,'Mj'urgl'aT'yT''
houtbreaking' an-d enibezzlenient. '.
been implicated in iines' iii,. which j
lethal weapons -played a part. 'Ap.-1
,u. pw?'Cnt. ot .th^ei v • , , K00d timc when ■ ■
.jolvHs fcul, ..$;,ny,el,o,n5 ■ reeor.lod l ; , impersonale<l Mrs.
against.-Them prior to being sentenc- ! * l ! ’ ■ , „n ■■■„7 If- ... - /a 7- i Roo“-e»e . ■ voice-' awl all. when a
/•' l >i ■ ■ .x■-- . ■ . . , *. , I adv - acting as st-ioge-. asked beg,cent, have served-, terms in industrial, 7,,;. ■ . ■ * \ , <'schools, re format or.ies or, jails., U W You r Majesty think of -.
Twenty-five per cent.- have cmnniit'ted : °l - rs.‘,
offences of. so heinous a' clfaractor I IRy.^lerj/y.'ia'i-ioi la- nucipp lope an
.that the public sense of decency de- ’ 1
-mandfid they be sentenced to- aiponi-] . “Whether the' Leref;; should be ,u:
tentiary to'ensure their control' for ■ worn ^m' formal-, occas-ioipj^at a- mat.-, ,
a long period.’’ ■ ■ ■ ter.-of tastet ■ I. hope .t'.iat duiitig the
■ m.* o. , ■:. n' , n 'coming sumthcr each- little family--
The ,St. Vin-ecnt .de ...Paul Pemten-; ... .. . .. .... „„■» .r,A/.+• x i m 'will get into .its,, motor and- inspect tiary has 7i. convicts under '21: m, -, t ,4 - . ,T-- 1 o- TV* I - vr 'the irrcat .ngdurar beaut-ie-s oi ourKingston, 3i; Dorchester; 3tr ■ ■ ■',Wa-
■itoba, 2’9; B.C., 14; Saskatchewan,.!
21; .Collin’s Bay, 7. ’, ’ ’ . 1
The cast corridor of -. tho ' south
•w.ing of Kingston Pbnitentiai'y is be-' p.
.ing remodelled -for- the ‘‘aeebnimod-
’ior-Tbe—yx)uhgN.;ebH£-+e^^
has 114 cells, .the largest ■ in any Ca-1
•nadian .penitentiary;, ‘the, colls on
three floors, With 19 cells to a range
and. a wide corridor, jn front'of■ the.
•cells. This ena-bl'es classification of
the youngs convicts into groups, c-ac..
group having its own corrhlor for
training purposes.
The seven young convicts in Col-' CV(.|-e.-<il»Wn
lin’s Bh.v-are, near the expiration- of'fast
their sente-ficles so’ the new '"•■"1 •
is. not .being applied to them.
The ypungsters confined under the' to Calais' for lunch.
Borstal system in„ England, .General
Ormond ■ reports, are 9’9 per-
British, stock, and 'foreign-l.min
an- not confined in Borstals.
■ ‘'The cons-
who have a
ditioii' in C-anuda wa
that ‘1 he’ 'Canadian
precocious and mor-
than the -lad of (he
England,’ ”. ‘ a,--, s : he
'■Tlie routin'' under
ami da has iioei,
.m., . open-lug' la
wori,;; 11.1-', r<-''irn
1 LUO dim;-er; lJ.f.",.' wo
to cell 'bloc!;-iipper
pcr'i'.d for-s-l
issi-mbly for
rea’ion; '9, n
doi in .'terries; !i... , .......
During tl.e fir.-: ..-ix 1.
in the institution all y
iiJ 'be c.'llb'd upon tn
nus . labor urjdi-'r. ■ kili'
From G to 9 lum.i h'-' •
('OllVlH S wi.ll ■ !iO p];|t'ri-
at. G;i’ded 'ahoi-., 11 i~ *
■cii.a-'ate ha>’i! s r>f j, h-;
and applica' in'll Li hard
pi ri'id I,f f;')t ! l.a;i
A drUpc'ivo dir., - </,’
for !he young i-n: "i--1
A ‘ the, ' i1 ■ <■ 1 ft,'
-■■‘andnrds wm i.o ,
i ho'.-e found i!/' \
rd to a’tqr.H •■: '■ o • O
<.ffi'’r-r‘is appo:: I for
r O-r; v - r I
jUI ' th°'e f.’.a .. d' .1
pure ron-v'e'-i, !>/; mm,
■'in ad'li'.ion to il-n f-,;.
were only, two y-r.irg'
e, the f r* m- .-,1. <,f
'-.of. f.
ng mon au-l
-,a‘fr-r L-
Ml';- fat ,-y
in p, a'" in .C-,"
and no change' j
•^'InnlHthe -i'caf .n,n'iur|
’ M i land. . " j
■- ,-T1h-:i when- t|7e iiiiH'.r cmiu-- you
■an sit "happily by A o.ur own fireside
md ro'mfmber the pleasapt times you
among-the birds and-the-flowers .
the Jutes'. And,'■ besides, the'
) n t.ho pi<- ii i' v.^lYad ' cbT<T“<'h'fcf<'bii''.'
I, pineapple, and cheese. B,ut
. the diildr-en had ha-rd-lmilded. eggs'-.' I
''some-lime.-' think there is better, char
acter arid mon-' kindliness, amonff
thaii (here i* 'hinong.. people ip the
low income tax scale.- ’ .
“Ob' Thursday J am riding a bi-,
to Windsor for break-
.And on Saturday morning 1
r'S>‘f-nihave an engagem' nt \yith the Lord
iMayoixof linyer m im^the-Channel-
I .‘'.The Wohd Cour^ must have the'
cleat. ( sup))orL. of its friends. In. a. few,
lads ..minut-f-y ' (ids interview will be . tef-...
J milpited, as I have an engagement.,
to f>pen.”a gold n’liih* on the air, I
shall proceed innpe.diatidy thereafter
♦ >. ».!!/.« 4 !■» ’ lx »it f>( * 1 i »*» rw» v* *f
.One its- assured, that Mrs. F. 1).
very heartily at 4hiS take-
h'er press conferences.
knowledge’of the .con- .<•_
effect to pilot the .China'Clipper.1
more.
<-ated. latri’hod
I Jesirov Supplement
- • .( j»nt .lining /*Hitler’s
Love-Life” ..
■v:cf ,U)P f h!. , (
is (r'ir'dy diffvenf. f. ,m
v'idr-d for y
mpre -i'nf i 9 a'/: rr,
.stated that very
mo nt is
wom«»n,
ed.
■ PARIS. The news ph per le'.Jour-
,.)r< . > ai <'barged- recently th:it-'police had
, ( .H',,' i aided' i'ts <.Hico-and seized il< id.
' .ff opir- the lianned Sunday si-T--
■j. -pl'-meiif <’;iri-yiii';- Wliiitwasi-oprescnt'-
ed f'> he ;m e.xpo-e «>f-(lie ‘’love-1 i fe”
. ( r '-f r'b 11 '-(djor Hitler, |
i.'-.. . ’ rh:>i:'of thc'r.-i'd, which follow-'
1] ’’d ' ojiIi -•;if ion of newsstand copies
]' ' 'i''I'‘..e edit ion1,- were made a.?' repres-
•mil ,-i I i-. eij
nppeaI
again I ..
the ;-i tick-.
' ' "I'he '
r • i IIv
de.-ilim
:’1]1.--. to
It" O'I ion pfthe Government In
■'’bpi'' ing the article and confis-
cat ji" • t |,e ismip of |,e Journal bns'
arou-ed n violent- sforni ..of prirte'sf
nr Iffi* «n!;r,e Frenchi prg'S. 1 ..
flic National Fedotation of French
No w- paper:; ■
of the paper prepared to
i'i. hoiirt Jo- answer a strut
’»y tie German Government
I." .!oiirii.)l f<n- publication Of„
acBi|..n ,. In-ought an a
1 oprt. piider (he lavy of ISS3
v-ith tie publication of J.n-
forcign *ch'cfs ofstate.
■'cnu
" th,-)*
f hr-rp
i;
VO
' p) 0 ■
much
fillip •
Gr-at- .\ow-.p;i|)/.)-:;. Issued n ' statement
■ for . •r-h'rn'i'iny Ih<. authorities with an un
is r^"0!niiivnd- warranted ehrroachment. on the free- "
' |(dom of (he press. ,