HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1936-07-30, Page 7Their VacationWhere?
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** water. After six minute* strain liquid into two-quart container. While hot,
11A cups of granulated sugar, end the juice of 2 lemons. Stif well until sugar
dissolved / fill container with cold water. Dd not a//pw ted to cool before addi
the co/d water/ otherwise liquid will become cloudy. Serve with chipped ice
Laura Wheeler Crocheted . Lace
Has Beauty That Endures
COOL MILO
TOBACCO
: t"1
3. '
President Roosevelt’s speech at
Baltimore has again put in high re
lief the arguments pro and con con
cerning shorter working hours, db-
. serves the Christian Science Monitor,
to the adverse commentators on Mr.
Roosevelt’s speech the result of a
^^■«hdrt:ehfirg df^drk^Suld-”be:;::^oss=:pf:
productivity. Thes reasoning seem
crystal clear in its simplicity. If peo
ple are not working as much as they
did, obviously,' rijns the .argument,
they will not turn out aS many goods
or perform as many services. Thus the
total pool of goods and services out
of which all obtain their living stan
dard would be diminished.
- - The': fesuTV however, cannot be so
easily explained, For the . proof no
rival theories need be set up,
actual experiments. In our financial
pages recently these
have been recorded in some detail.
In Britain the Boots company, a well-
known firm of manufacturing drug
gists, inaugurated an experimental
flve-day week. The, weekly hours' were
to 42% hours—a loss of 10.5 per cen.t
lit work. And yet the drop in total
output was only 1.6 per cent.
An even better example comes from
the Kellogg Cdhapany in Battle Creek,
Michigan. Here the company decided
to switch from, an eight-hour to a
. Bix.-hour day, or. thirty-six hours a
week. Apparently the previous work
week was forty-four hours. Thus the
hours were reduced 1'8 per cent. T.e
results are differently computed by
the Kellogg Company than by the Bri
tish, concern. While Boots reckoned
the effect on total output. Kellogg cal
culated the effect on individual work
er otfiput. It found that the workers
were able to turn out 10 per cent
more work per hour.
These results were achieved because
' *. shorter work, time eliminated fatigue
and supplied an incentive to better
performance. Thus reduced working
time does not make inevitably for
lower output. It depends both upon
the industry and the plan. Wherq. the
work is highly ' mechanized, where
production an distribution are v£st-
ed in the same .concern, where the
wage cost does not constitute a very
high proportion of the selling . price
“ ojf <;the commodity—in these cases
shorter working hours may quite con
ceivably maintain output. It is equal-
lytrue, however, that this would not
be achieved, by an all-in proposal. The
proposal of a universal thirty-four
hour week, for instance; is too crude
to have' any such result. ~
The universality of the President’s
proposal to shorten the , working lire
.'-at both ends is also infeasible. At
the ope end of the scale t|he prohi-
hi:ion of work to youngsters under
,j eighteen might work, a rank injustice
: upon dependent parents. Moreover,
Academic education isn’t the best
training for $11 youtlf.. Some young-
, .sters may be better employed at work
. than in college. At the other end of
, the scale society might be distinctly
the loser if some person over sixty-
' five were jcompulsorv retired firom
work. Man"is a' creature of ‘‘infifute-
variety," and neither usefulness <nor
capacity knows any age limit. Elihu
Root lived two careers after he had
passed sixty five, while Mr. Chief;Jus
tice Hughes, is at the top of bis pow-
but
experiments
Author Unknown
Where can a man buy a cap for his
knee,
_ Oy a key to the lock of his,; hair?
Can his eyes be called an academy
" Because ther are pupils there? ;
In the crown of Ms head what gems
.■ . are found? •
Who travels the bridge of his
nose?
Can he use, when shingling the roof,
of his house.
The nails on the end of- his toes?
Can the crook of his elbow he sent
If sp, what did he do? .
How does he sharpen his shoulder
blades?
I’ll be hanged if I know, do you?
Can he sit in the shade of the palm
of his hand ? •
Does the calf of his leg eat the corn
Or beat the drum of his ear ?
on his toes? : ■ ■
If so, why not grow corn on
ear?I . ____________ • 1
. Who^d ever guess this handsome tea cloth was once a, pile of
beautifully simple, Squares?. You’ll crochet yours the same easy way,
a square at a time, using white or colored string. The sample square
is quickly memorized, its repetition doubly easy. When you're a
number laid by, join them for a bedspread, cloth or scarf. Pattern
1049 contains complete directions for making the square shown;
illustrations of it and of stitches used; material requirements.
Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pat
tern to Wilson Publishing Co., Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide
St., Toronto. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and
ADDRESS. • ------- ------------ -----■-- .....................................; ..
b-.'
the
Jilted 99-Year-Old
Man Gets Thirty
Letters of Sympathy
OLD FORGE, N.Y.—Charles Jean
nette, 99-year-old, French Canadian
veteran of the American Civil War,
pilted on. the eve of his wedding to.
Mrs. Ella Blanche Manning, of
Albany, recently, says he has received
30 letters from women expressing,
sympathy and^ proposing marriage.
He said the . letters came from
.throughout the United States and
Canada. .
Still, expressing the belief he would
hear from Mrs, Manning, Jeannette
said he would “look over and consider”
the new offers. .
■ Mrs. Manning left Old Forge , hur
riedly and went to the home. of. rela-
- lives in Saranac Lake where she later
refused to discuss the niaiter.
Labrador Indians Are
Cheerful and Happy
ST. JOHN’S, Nfld. — Declaring In
dians of Labrador, although hard-
pressed by privatibn and of a nomadic
nature, were nevertheless cheerful,
Rev. Edward O’Brien of Northern Bay
left^St. John’s to return to his mis
sion for the 17th year.
The missionary said that not Once
during his 16'years in the north had
hi seen anything like' prosperity
among his parishioners, and attribut
ed this mainly' to the fact that the In
dian were tijo busy supplying the
need of their wandering families for
food tq, be able to devote sufficient
time tp the fur industry.
era at the age of seventy-tour. In
short, there tan no more a hard
and fast rule in • this matter v than
there can be on the argument as to
the Effect of stortening hours on pro
ductivity. . v'.. X-
STUDY BUSINESS COURSES AT HOME ■ „
and save IH Ing expensed. All Rusiaessi ^ind Secretarial
successfully through oour Home Study Department. Hundreds of successful
graduates during past thirty one years. Reduced fees.
HO EXTBA CHABGE it yon enter college to finish In Bay or Wight
School. Writ* for free particulars.
CANADA BUSINESS COLLEGE
Imperial Bank Building, Bloor and Bathurst
. Properly staked plants ensure an
orderly garden. Lack of proper stak
ing means that yon are reasonably
sure to have some wrecked and messy
beds later in the season. A heavy
rain or wind storm' is likely to knock
over tall and heavy foliage plants
which naturally have stems not suf
ficient to stand up under such cir
cumstances. ' ;
Delphiniums are first plants in the
'garden to show the need for staking
The heavy spikes of bloom on these
stately perennials make them singu
larly susceptible to destruction by
winds or heavy rains. Stake them be*
'fore the buds start to open and save
the beauty of the delphiniums. Gladi
olus with heavy spikes of bloom are
likely to need stakes. Lillies and iris
of the taller types also need this as
sistance. Tall African and French
margiolds are tipped over by the
win'd or rain and become a jungle.
Staking would have saved them.. .
The first requisite of gool staking
is that the stakes should be strong
and capable of holding up the plant,
but as unobtrusively as possible.
Green painted stakes are least con
spicuous The • cheapest and most, ef
ficient stakes are the bamboo cades
sold in- varying lengths by dealers.
They may be bought already painted
or in their natural color and you can
paint them yourself. They are strong
and durable. Recently heavy, wire
stakes have been offer'd and they
are least obtrusive of all especially
when, painted green- Plants can be
tied to them easily and hung upright
so that the tying cannot be disting
uished until viewed at close range.
Set the stakes and tie the plants
before they come into bloom A good
job of staking that will not make the
plant look stiff and obviously tied, «P
can be done after it has come into
bloom. For plants of lighter growth
that are apt to sprawl and be Of un
tidy -habit, twiggy branches carefully
applied make the best supports! The
tall snapdra: is need staking. If
pinched back and tied the tall types
ttyrow out branches and become py
ramids of bloom. Th’ long terminal
spike is sacrificed but a much* greater
quantity Of bloom and finer garden
display is obtained. Get in a supply
i
to need staking attention, early in
tljeir career. The sooner staking is
attended to. the less obtrusive will it
I be when the plant reaches the ma-
| titrity of its bloom.
' '"of stakes and give the. plants known
Many People Have
Felt Like Murder
At the Bridge Table
The august members of the court
of appeals at Warsaw, capital of
Poland, must be bridge players. If
they aren’t, bridge players every
where will agree'that they at least
have a rare understanding of the
emotional side of the game .
It seems thiii a Polish gentleman
named Josef Iljas, having bid three
no trump, played the hand and was
set four tfkks. His partner, instead
of keeping quiet as a dummy
should, criticized his play throughout
the hand; so Mr. Iljas, overtaxed by
a strain no bridge. player can bear,
finally drew a revolver and shot his
.talkative partner through the shoul
der.
In due course he was sentenced
to three years in prison;* and . now
the appellate court has reduced this
sentence to two years, remarking
that the trial court should have tak
en into account, the excessive ner
vous strain under which the prisoner
had been laboring.
Can any bridge player fail to sal
ute these judicial gentlemen for the
setting of a useful precedent ? •
Playtime Must Be Planned as
?Their„ Working llQurs
Vacation must be faced. It is a cam
paign against time and idleness and
if mothers don’t marshall their co
horts—the children—for a little work,
then Old Nick as usual, will. (
. Drifting from day to day and hop
ing for, the best won’t get us very
far. The more idle the offspring, the
busier and more nervous the parent,
because life without any duties' at all
makes' children cross and contrary.
So up in the cool of the morning
they should be. And then, instead of
answering Charlie’s whistle or Polly’s
call, leaving the house to bedlam and
to you, mother, have it understood
that each one tackle his task at once.
Ollie’s job is with the sweeper (va
cuum on Fridays), the mop and the
scrub-bucket. The floors are his, in
side the house and out.
HOUSEWORK FOjj| BOYS
Peg must' make her bed and the
boys’, straigh^n the rooms, dust and
dhrken them. She can lay the table
.for lunch, early as it. is, because by
this time you have the kitchen and
dining-room cleared up. Teach her to
move quickly. She won’t rush, don’t
worry; but a certain alacrity may be
achieved.
• Eustace gets on his bike and does
the errands. Once a week he cuts the
grass. But there isn’t anything; vtrong
with Qlivef and his brother exchang
ing jobs once in a while, if they like,
or even “swapping” with Peg, as long
as they don’t bother you: about it.
What? Boys make beds and sweep
floors aiid scrub steps? Why not?
Yes, and even learn to cook and wash
dishes. In fact, unless something im-- I ’ r —
I portant is pending.' all three should
... •_ . .
Black Flies
Writes The. Fort William Times-
Journal—-“Black flies are bad in the
bush,” said a man who Spends a good
deal of his holiday hours fishing. But
what thei average angler knows about
black, Hies is nothing to what the en
tomologists of the department of
agriculture have found out.
To the man in the woods a black
fly is just a black fly, just as the yel
low primrose was nothing but a yel
low primrose to Wordsworth’s , idiot
boy. or a rose is a rose to Gertrude
Stein. He might think more about
them if her were*aware that, the en-
ioino’ogis'ts have counted no less than
38 species of black flies, and each one
is more bloodthirsty than the other, no
matter which yod begfin with. ?
Mosquitoes do. not deserve front
place among the blood-sucking in
sects of the bush, for the little mus^
quite has the decency to' give some
warning of its approach by humming
at the victim, while the black fly
makes a silent and mean attack; and
does a good deal more damage than
the mosquito, In fact, it, is quite
possible to become J nr.oculated with
mosquito bites, so that^he victim is
immune, to the poison, and the bite
.leaves never a trace behind.
France Still Owns'
Statue of Liberty
help you with the after-meal clean-up
pretty regularly. Mapy hands make
light work.
Thus is the ‘‘work-time” budgeted.
It can be changed, of course, to suit
your fancy, and to fit the age3 and
capabilities of the children. The above
is only a suggestion* of course, that
may lead to ideas of your-pwn.
By this time it is, let us say, about
ten or ten-thirty o’clock. And in gen
eral the rest of the day is theirs, un
less there is some practicing to do. .
DON’ T INTERFERE WITH PLAY
And just as work-time is planned,
play-time musF have some attention
also. Children, need suggestions. It
is not necessary to be an entertaih-
mer. ■ committee of one (and beside^
the youngsters don’t want you. “but-
ng in.” as they say I, but it is easily
possible to provide background, ideas,
materials and well-hidden sugges
tions; at the same time leave them
free to act independently as though
they thought it all out themselves.
Boards, boxes, stones or old bricks
willuprcve a vertitable mine for ex
perimental hands. Or some paint, a
brush or two and very old clothes.
There will be noise and clutter and
movf of the neighbors in, but this
has to be accepted as another thing
to be faced if the children are to be
contented and happy.
It doesn’t matter what-idea ypu
plant; it may have nothing to do with
yards, or boards or paint. But fer
tile suggestion. leads-to busy, happy
days, and the wise mother will- turn
inventor. Resource :s a great asset
in vacation time.
At the last session of the Domin
ion Parliament section 7 of Part J
of the Dairy Industry Act was
amended by adding the following
subsection:—
....“Z2) On and..afterthe .first. ■■■■._
January, 1937, no person shall man
ufacture, import into Canada, sell,
offer or have jn JpOssession for sale
any package cheese unless - such
package contains chee-;e nf the f’*’!
net-weight of|, one-quarter pound,
one half-pound,' one pound or mul
tiples thereof, but nothing in this
subsection shall be held to apply to
cheese of indiscriminate weight man
ufactured by individual farmers and -
sold by them.”
As explained in ‘ the House of
Commons by Hon. J. C. Gardiner,
Dominion Minister of Agriculture,
the reason for the amendment had
to do with the* recommendations
made by the Price Spreads Commis
sion in 1935. One -of these sugges
tions which had been discussed at
some length Was that prints of
cheese offered for sale to the publie
should be made in multiples ol a
pound rather than in sizes, say, of
five ounces, six and a half ounces
or seven and a half ounces, The..
amendment provides that the prints .
must be put up in eiihejr multiples
of a pound or in divisions of", a.
pound, such as a quarter of h pound
or half a pound. The phrase - “but
nothing in, this subsection shaU be
held to apply to cheese of indiserim-
inate. weight manufactured, by in
dividual tyrmers and sold by them**
means that home-made cheese is not
subject to this legislation. It can bo
any weight; it is not confined to mul
tiples or divisions of a pound. The
cheese, however, must be made by
a fanner as well as sold by him.
‘‘When we went in for 'machinery
on' a largo scale wo went tn for - a
world, which said to us, *plan orper-
jsh’.l* — Norman Thdmas/jr
F R EE
Whs' suffer any longer from the
dull, depressed feeling caused by
faulty digestion and poor eUmlna-
atlon. If roti feel "fagged-out" and
your vitality is low., avoid habit
forming drugs. Instead call. Write
or phone to Dept W for
sample Af
TMUNAS
Test it at our Expense
Thoro-Kleen is nature's remedy
for young and old. You make it
ilke ordinary tea. Harmless and
non-habit forming. Sold at your
local druggist of by maii.
THE
THUNA HERB Co
' ■ TOBOWTO
IRON
-CJH fka
EoauUUcui
it
,v X
i
&
Books
Office of
Issue No'- 30
EC0NOM/CAI - EFFECTIVE
SPRINGHtTBST BEACH' OH THE
GBORGIAHBAY
'3 miles . weet of wasaga (Hata
Sand Beach) Ogata., You—
A h.»iely tboMed lot £(•«' at’.d fi
new’ smart' (-room cottage wlttl
lafjSe screened verandah for S3J5
'*tdo.Wn ivhd balance Quarterly
Write W. A. Wheeler,1 CoJlincw
■ SOLE AREN'T __. .
J. E.M. GENEST
SHERBROOKE. QUE.
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• Improved Quality Throughout, j
Manufactured by. the Originators of Sales
For Price* and Complete ,Particular* Phone the
This Newspaper or Write
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73 Addoide St. W.. Tcrciitb
N'EJV' YORK *— Through aii the
storms of half a eentdry the Statue of
Liberty, has stood' staunchly in New
York harbor—but it was learned, re
cently’ ;the original tk-ed of gift which
the French .intended to send alohg
with the greht shaft never reached
the United States.
The fact the deed still is retained
in French archives was disclosed by
the ladies’ auxiliary,, to the Veterans
of Foreign Wars, which is making
plans^tocelebrate on October 28, the
•50th anniversary of the id.edication of
the statue. ,
‘ A photograph of the deed was used
in the 1886 dedicatory ceretnohies.
—- -...............—
ExtortionCheck
‘ *
CANBERRA — To check usury in
Canberra the Australian Government
has gazetted a special ordinance pro
viding heavy penalties for moneyieP.G-
ers who offend against regulations.
Penalties .range up to $2,500 or im
prisonment for five rears.
Increased Mental Efficiency
Means Increased Earning
■ “ • Capacity
V»’u c.tr: 'fearn t • • ih.r.k y •••sm.h ely a ad
constructively. You car. to cor»-
C^ntrate and cultivate a powerful
memory. ’ You can me inferi
ority Complex ■ add «ea,*:> :o live suc
cessfully. Let «s ,sh- «• . j‘,u bow.
The Institute of Practical and
Applied Psychology . (
910 COSFBDBBATIOS BUILDING
Montreal Qnehee