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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1936-09-10, Page 3I! 304 Perfect White Does Not Exist • » » Totalled 127,459,990 Pounds For First Five Months Science Discloses Traces of Color Even in Snow and Chalk TOO SOON A 81 It I O E By MARJORIE B. PEREGRINE ’ ¥ ¥ ¥ * V ¥ ¥ vV ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥$ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ ¥ She thought she had escaped Jit forever;. She might have known bet­ ter — paight have known the shanty would never let her get away. It had caught Ma and Pa, had dragged them down from. self-respectmgfarm p£opietoastateofsoddenwretched? WRAPPED AIR-TIGHT Use Royal Yeast Cakes and Royal Sponge Recipes for these good breads ... • These famous dry yeast cakes assure perfect leavening. Fine quality is one reason ... careful packing is anotker. Every Royal Yeast Cake is separately wrapped. Air-tight—it keeps fresh. No other dry yeast has this protection- The standard for over 50 years—Royal *• Yeast Cakes are now preferred by 7 cut of 8 Canadian women who use dry yeast- Order1 a package. Send for Free Booklet “The Royal Yeast Bake Book", gives tested Royal Sponge Recipes for the breads shown above and m a ra jr more. FREE. MaU coupon. EVY MADE-FX- *' ’CANADA GOODS ness- Now it was going to drag her down, too. It couldn’t. She wouldn't let it, “I can’t go back to the stanty, Pa.” Joel Brewster bent the buggy whip between his hands, eyeing it thought-. Jully. ■■ ■■ —— “No? Well, why can’t you? Ye’re I let; /you get away with four years of this schoolin’ nonsense. Now-it’s time you come home and helped your Ma.” ' • “But Pa, i want to get a job. I’ll help with money.” Pa snapped the jwhlp. “You’ll do what I tell you/’ he rumbled, harshly. “.You’ll come home after your graduation or I’ll be here tq latiTPP out ye* 1 You’ yer Ma’s sick. You’ve got to come heme and take care of her!” Lola, White-faced and restrained, broke the news to Mrs. Piper. “You can’t go back to that place, Lolal You simply can’t!” Mrs. Piper protested. ' , “I’ve thought about it all,” Lola •spoke slowly, painfully. “I can’t see any way out. Legally, I suppose, Pa’s got a right to my services. J don’t know. I don’t care. If it wasn’t for Ma, I’d figbt him. But I can’t desert Ma.” Lola’s eyes filled* with tears. “She’s poor and* worn out, Mrs. Piper, but she’s the grandest mother in the world.” . / Graduation was like a' funeral ser­ vice to Lola—the burial of ail her hopes. She sat through the ceremony like a thing of stone, hearing no- tthing, seeing nothing but., the shadow of the shanty. Only /when Jerry Hughes claimed her after the last farewells had been said, did Lola revive. She looked into his r strong face and knew that, for her, the world lived in his smile. They walked down the high-school steps, out to his waiting roadster. In the car, Lola wrapped her hands about his arm and pressed her ” face close to the sleeve of his coat. ’ “It was dear of you to come,” she whispered. Jerry put one hand over hers and said tenderly: “I’d endure a dozen graduation orators just for a moment with yoo» dear.” They drove through the ’town out into the fragrant countryside. Under a giant birch, Jerry stopped the road­ ster and, in the sheltering shadows, put his arm around Lola and drew her dose. “Lola, sweettheart/’ he ■ whispered,. “Kiss me.” „ He had never before asked her to kiss him. At his words, Eola’s pulses, pounded and her heart sang. She lifted her eyes to his. No!. No? It couldn’t be. Lola wrenched herself from, his arms. . “You mustn’t kiss hie!” she cried. “You must not. If you djd, I could never bear to let you go!” Until, she reached the wretched- squalor of the Brewster neighborhood, Lola’s courage flamed high. Jerry loved; her. Nothing, not- even the shanty, could come between them. Jeriy had said so. • But when saw the shinty, hope died. - The ^tar-pape?\extertor was more forlorn and misei than she ’had remembered. The doo.kstood open. Lola set her teeth and s pped in­ side. ■ No paper graced the walls, |no. rug relieved, the 'bare, splintered floor boards, dingy with 'age. A few rick- Jefy, straight-back chairs stood helter- skelter in the ^oom, one holding up. one end of ari'ironing board. .'The other end rested- on a ramshackle table. Against the wall glowered. the big, coal range, with Ma’s irons push­ ed to tthe ffont. ■ The stove’s hot breath reached across the room and slaapped Lola’s face. She s ghed—a long, quivering Sigh. The shanty had got her. j. (To be continued) ; ' TORONTO — Canadian produc­ tion of zirje in the first five months of this "year totalled 127,45,990 pojxmU ...an. ificrease of three per cent., over the output in the same months of. last year. Production of lead in the same period showed an increase of 14 per cent, . totalling 152,267,991 pounds. Canadian producers of .Portland /Cemejat reported hipments. amount­ ing to 418,839 barrels 'in May as compared . with 293,538 barrels in April and 387, 3S4 barrels in May, 1935. Shipments during the *1ve months fending, May totalled.'*!, V70,- 620 barrels, an increase of 20.7 per eent. over the shipments in the cor­ responding period of 1935. Shipments of lime from Canadian kilns in the first five monts of 1936 totalled 166,803 ton: or more than -four rjer—feeht. higher than the—ton^. -itage -shinned^a-yearago. --------- ----- More Prosperity As Result of Drought United States Secretary of Agricul­ ture, Henry A; Wallace, said in an address, that “drought did not bring scarcity into the average American home in 1934, nor will it in 1936/’ “The record shows,” he continued, “that the real period of scarcit ywas in 1932. It was the nwhen trie (Sur­ pluses were greatest, that the bread­ lines were longest. It was then that the fariners were losing their farms, that industry was prostrate and fear and hunger were rampant. It was when farmery were burning corn in­ stead of coal that the city people were most hpngrv. . “The record, shows that: every year since 1932 farmers have been able to buy more things, city people have 'been better; and more people have gone back to. work. st andard brands rnirren Feaser Ave. and Liberty Sc., TcittattX. Oat. ■ i ETease nen<S tnc the fraa Royal Yeast I Bake Booft. ' " Name Street ... ' «* Cambridge, Mass, — The color pf perfect white does not exist on fearth. Closest to it are new-fallen show and purest chalk. Third comes the whites made by science and industry. The results of three years’ study to prove this, announced1 as the first made scientifically, were given to the .recent color conference at the Massa­ chusetts Institute of Technology. David L. MacAdam of the institute made the report. Previous to this study, he said, scientists recognized only one color Of materials as white, the nearly per-- feet White of a thiek layer of new- fallen ‘snow and purest chalk. Increasing widespread, use r of the words white and whiteness in indus- try,’ merchandise ancj advertising, he explained, led ^industrialists, to ask science to define whiteness. They gave the problem to the Technology, color laboratory. Their,, analysis showed that all colors ordinarily called white were slightly darker than peifect white or were-sligh tly,. colored. ... Im many, -cases- .they.were .both—v 1- Instruments revealed the shadings of-mravness^.Qrdarkness.-.invisib]eJiQ- the eye. The most frequent slight coloration, Mr. MacAdam said, was yellow. A bit of blue is usually added to “whiten” in such cases. -Blue is the second most prevalent discoloration in white. ' The color laboratory found a method of measuring whitenes swhich had been accepted as a standard, Mr. MacAdam said. By it the whiteness of any sample can be found. by simply measuring in an optical instrument the grayness and the amount of color on the surface of the material. “Even, at the height of the late prosperity nearly 99 per cent. Of the American population were, receiving less than $5,000 a .year/’—Harry Elmer Barnes. , “Man does not five by himself and for himself alone. We are coming to7 realize that law: is not an end but' a means to an end/'—Justice Harlan F. Stone. Toronto Exhibition Winners Tell Methods Mrs. F. W. Fordham of 44 f.amb- ton Avenue, Toronto, a veteran prize winner .at the Canadian National Ex­ hibition, has again this year become famous for the red and blue prize ! tickets on her jars of jellies and jams. Mrs. Fordham has won over a hun­ dred prizes with her cooking in the last twelve years.' There must be a thrill in realizing one has such excel­ lent recelpes and judgment that a prize Can be won every year! Mrs. ■Fordham gives a lot of credit to bot­ tled ffuit pectin which she uses, and so makes sure of Success. Hep Red Currant Jelly] is a joy to behold, as well as being a joy to taste. The color and the flavor have been kept so. per­ fect by. the short boil method that better , red currant jelly just isn't pos-. sible. ■ Mrs. Fordham is so enthusiastic about the short boil method that she has passed on to, her daughter the same enthusiasm and the daughter^ a •’/ery young housekeeper, has the bot­ tled fruit pectin habit too and is turn­ ing out rows of gorgeous jams almost as proudly as her mother. This short boil method, which takes less fruit find less time, gets to be a family trar dition. A cook who can 'win every year at the C-N.Es has reason indeed itfbe proud of her achievements. Con- gratulations, Mrs. .^Fordham! There is time now before many Tall fairs for other women to win prizes .with their grape, ''peach and; apple jams and jellies1 made by the short boil methodi Peachfes .are coming’ in at theirhest now and here is a prizer winning recipe for ripe peach jelly. Ripe Peach Jelly 6r_> cups (2^i lbs.) sugar, 3 cups. (I*? lbs.) juice, 1 bottle fruit pectin. To prepare juice, remove pits from about 3t2 pounds peaches. Do not ]peeL Crush peaches thoroughly. Add i-to cut water, briitfk to .a boil, cover. and simmer 5 minutes. Place fruit in jelly cloth or bag and squeeze out juice. Measure large saucepan _ boil over hottest fire and at once add pectin, stirring constantly. Then bring to a full rolling boil ^HiT'boiT'hard' % minute. Remove from fire, skim, pour ..quickly. Paraffin arid cover at. once. Makes about .9 glasses,. 6 fluid ounces each. hr and juice into I mix. Bring to a tbsp tbsp THIS WEEK’S WINNER Boiled Salad Dressing % tsp.- salt, 1 tsp m'ustard, 1 sugar, 1 tbsp flour, 1 egg, 1 butter, cup mine 'or xvater, % cup vinegar. Mix dry materials in upper part of double boiler. egg well beaten and milk. Add vinegar; slowly cook in a double boiler, stirring until thick. Remove from heat, add butter and coot Take onq large tomato cut in pieces to represent a tulip and decofate with dressing and parsley arid ’ lettuce' leaves.—Miss Louise Bunce, care of Mrs. P. Dike, R.R. 2. Markham, Ont? ATTENTION! Send in yotir fayorite recipe for pie, cake, main-course dish or preserves. We are offering $1.00 for each recipe ‘printed, •' Here's a gtfM crac^er^M that hitstK^B^ the spot! Everybody11 likes crackers fresh, fla^y and crisp. That’s why so many people prefer Christie’s Premium- Soda Crackgrs* They re wonderfid partners to a piece of cheese, soup or any of. the many good things with which crackers are enjoyed. Ask, your grocer for Christie’s Premium Soda Crackers, and enjoy a fresh delight - Ct Large Increase In Manages 1935 Figures for Weddings J Highest Since BeakJYear? A slight , decline was shown in live births ini Canada during 1935 at 221,- 226, a rate of 2(h2 per 1,000 popula­ tion, compared with 221,303 and a rate of 20.5 in 1934, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported. ,. Illegitimate births in 1935 num­ bered 8,327, a rate of 3.8 percent, of ail live births, against 8,070 and a proportion of 3.6 per cent, in 1934. Still births' totalled 6,444 or 2.8 per cent, of all births, compared, with 6,452 in 1934 with the same percent­ age. . ' '. Exclusive of still births, there were 105,511 deaths during 1935, a rate of 9.6 per 1,000 population, against101,-r 582 and a rate of 9.4 the previous year. Deaths under one year numbered 15,723, a rate of 71 per 1,000 births, against 15,870 and a rate of 72 in 1934. ' .- . .. .< Maternal deaths totalled 1,093, a reduction from the preceding year, when there were 1,167 deaths. The maternal death rate of 1935 was 4.9 per l,0OQ live births, compared with, 5.3 in 1934. - * The. na.tura’1 increase of the popula­ tion of Canada in 1935 amounted , to 115,715, against’ 119,721 in the pre­ ceding year. The rate of natural increase, 10.6 per 1,000, was the low­ est during the period commencing with 1926 for which statistics are available. * The marriages of ,1935, numbering 71,883, showed an increase of 3,791 from .the preceding year, in which 73,092 marriages took place. The 1935 figure closely approached the total of 77,288 for the year 1929, which was the peak year for mar­ riages in Canada:, but the marriage rate of 1935 was only seven . per thousand population as against 7.7 in 1929. Every Bone Broken / scoff at the idea that there is any sense or virtue in staying within reas­ onable distance of the speed limits of the. province. “The United States is. very fortun­ ate to be’ 3,000 miles away from' Eur- ope.”---Sir William ’Wiseman.’ ’-''—’ One Court — A Court of Law? ■ '.c -i/’ ijeM- A “We must not have two trials, on$ -jn court and ope outside,” is the em« phatic assertion in a report of a spe* rial committee bf The criminal lavr section of the American Bar Associa­ tion,” observe^ tljd Christian Science Monitor; . Presented to the agnual convention of the.association now meeting in Bos­ ton' by judge- Oscar Hallam of St, Paul, Minnesota, the report criticizes severely the. manner in which the . Hauptmann trial was conducted,r In­ ter alia, .as lawyers shy, it declares: ; The system ^he^pjiblic press . arguing the i case outside of the court is fundamentally wrong. In the second place, there is grave danger in’* the dramatization of crime arid exploitation of,the crim- It condemns the “indefensibfe de- ception’ir pradaepd^pn^ ^e ' those who took gic? Hires during '’tne^tndl. *ot<t 'in' no measured terms it "refers to Governor Hoffman’s activities as “repugnant to. our sense of propriety and in our opinion unwarranted.” ' Although the release of the com­ mittee’s report seems to have aroused -di ssension - in the , assorihtion,.. s,oihe ~ HOW TO ENTER CONTEST . Plainly write or print out the in­ gredients and! method and send .it to- gether^with name 'and address to Household Science, 73 .West Adelaide Street, Toronto.' Reports of automobile wrecks are so common that we may be accepting -them as something 'which must be, observes the Peterborough Examiner. ' For the most part we glance at the headings- if the wreck is not in our vicinity. There was one near Hamil­ ton, and from the report we take a few excerpts: “The car was travelling north and went out: of control ... he failed to ■ make a sharp bend in the road . . . travelled 80 feet against a bank on the right side . , . swerved to the wrong side for 75 feet,’ struck a four-” foot ■ hard-clay bank . . . plowed through the hard dry earth.1 continu­ ing crashed into a mapj'e tre.” Then continuing with the. story-as •it tells the results of such a. drive: “The speedometer stood at 60' when it struck the tree and by that time the speed must have been materialiy checked . . . the engine was driven into the driver’s seat; two front wheels.off: axle bent double.” . Sb' much for the machine. tipUe: . “Day and Mock. b -tiV young* men, suffered fractured skti'IIs. ■ They were still unconscious at a late hour/’ Then about the driver: • ‘/The driver's limp body was move|i from' the mass'of debris . one shoe was torn off’. . . almost every ■bone in his body was broken. -dficers said.. . . Was breathing, when lifted from the tmyhine but died oh the way to the hospital.” . - It is not pleasant reading^ not -a line of it; We have no -intention of seeking to drape comment about that : story or draw, morals from it apart from’ Suggesting you .might keep it in mind next time ym are inclined t; LIMP AS A RAG". UFROM RUBBING" VOU O SAVE L0K OFHARQWOgg JF VDU HSEP GIIXETT'S WASHES Son- t. HAPPY SMOKES Buckingham Fine Cut MILD* C®O O L • S M OOTH I WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— And You’D Jump Out of Bed ii»zthe Morning Rarin’.to Go . The Ever should iraur out two pounds, at Gtrufd bile tatjoycras bowels dafly. If this hila fs not flowina freely.’your food doesn’t digest. It decays In the bowels* Gas, biota trp yodr stomach. Youcet constipated. Harmful Dofsous go Into the body, and you feel rout sunk and the world looks punk. . A mere bortre! mmremen t ddesn'taiwaya set at the cause. You need somethm# that works bn the liver a3 welL It takes those, good, old Carter's Little Liver Pills to eet these two pounds of bile flawing: freely and make you feel ”np and up”. Harmless and gentle, they make the bde flow'freely. They do the work of calomel but have no calomel or mcrenry m them. Ask far Carter's Little Liver PiHsby • tHnxwIStuhbornlyr^useauythkizefea.25a ■ DIRT AWAY —no rubbing and scrubbing Cleaning jobs are quick and easy , with Gillett’s Pure Flake Lye. Use . a solution of 1- teaspoonful dissolved in a quart of cold* water. (M comes ,. ■ the dirt! And you-do no hard rub­ bing. Use it for toilet bowls, too— and to clear sluggish drains.- It kills germs, destroys odors. Never harms ~enamel or plumbing. Get a tin from your grocer—today! . ,4:Ncver dissolve lye ia 1.-C water. The action of the Ise itself heats the wr ier. 4 som, of New York, its president, fie*-.'. arding it as premature, the public .. will welcome if. In additi'dn Hallam, member^ the committed who sighed .the iTp<prt ij|ere. Charles' P. Taft 2nd of Cincfhhati, John Kiifc- . land Clark of New York and Dean Albert Harno of the,-College of Law in the University df Chicago. ; The report gives confirming weight to the proposal made previously to the c^n^ntBnfy >ilip Lutz Jr., > tomey General'of Indiana, for a stat­ ute to prevent “newspaper1 interfer- . ence with criminal justice.” . The trial yby newspapers,; Js; com­ mon.most Americans iadmit. .|Soij^b-' i times,'as in the Lindbergh ladnappipg case, it reaches a depth of indecency which makes them bludi. Recognizing I that some editorial 7?ooms exercise i commendable self-restraint, tlffey also ■ realize regretfully that a widely-cir­ culating, sensation-mongering yellqw press knows no’.ethics. There has been a general impression that something should, be done about*, it. That the radio, the motion pictures and fre­ quently the counsel on both sidfes share greatly in sensational publiciz­ ing during court trials makes the •fense of some newsp'apers no less. ’. Such a law as-*he; suggested, Mr. Lutz told the association, would pip- 1 ride a defrnrtion of what might prop- 4 erly be published, and, upon the cife- (tion of an editor, reporter, broadcast­ ed or newsreel man in contempt for a 1 specific publication, the case would-be, heard by a special judge, agreed upon by the interested parties^ He added-:, I Perhaps such a . statute might as- l sist the courts to maintain their | dignify, their popular respect and I their .deserved independence in the face of the rising power of the en­ terprising agencies of modern pub­ licity. This is a consummation many will devoutly wish. And, incidentally, they welcome the recognition in the... com­ mittee’s -report that rfotorfety-seekiiig ; counsel are not an edifying infiuence. I Newspapers are only human agen­ cies, and their errors? possibly do mot i transcend those of other human activ­ ities. No sensible person wishes to see a manacled press. The object les­ sons existing in some lands are too shocking. In- the .eighteenth century- “Junius” declared in his famous “Letters”: The liberty of the press is the : palladium- of all the civil, politi- . cal, find ieligipus rights of an Englishman. That affirmation rings just as true for the American of 1936. But as Newton D. Baker has said, those • rights are relative.. LESS AND MORE Worry less and work more. Ride loss and walk more. F rown less and laugh more. tiiTalk ‘less and think more. Drink less-and breathe more. Eat' less and chew more. • Watch less and sleep more. ■ / ‘ (Preach. less’ an.d practice more. Spend less and save more. Judge "less and help more. z' ■—W. J. JENKINS,. Ottawa. ’ GARDEN YIELDS STRANGE PRODUCE HEABHOISEft Nova Scotia Woman Finds Century-Old Coin in Soil, \lso Freak Flower DON'T OtjCf . Usst^CnftKuiarspissf Also excellent for Temporary Deafness and. Heart Noises due td) oonsrestroii caused by colds. Fin and swiraminx. A. O. LEONARD. Inc. ■■ 70 Fifth Avcy, N<S* York City SUB fW STICK OF EARS-INSECT CM Nf»TBlLSu>» i FREE BOOKLET —The handy Gillett’s Lye Booklet shows how this powerful cleatnset and disinfectant can save 'yetr hard work . . . contains complete instruc­ tions for rrtnkffWi soap'dt home . .. tells how to .keep farm equipment and btriMitijls clean and sanitary. Be sure to send for free copy. Just write: Standard Brands Ltd., •Fraser -Ave.- & Liberty St., Toronto, Ont. -Another of Nature's 1936. been presented h a local to a local newspaper. A alenJuia Dofekriu of this city. I Mrs. Walter Dockrill o.f this city. | n>>w hi ads the list of oddities from | field, ; .endow and garden such as ca-b- '; i bilge i-.uintuplets, triple daisies, sever.- | leafed 'do ver?, double-headed dahl.ias. ; jhese- fk ■'•viprs in all cases' being jmned back 11 .back. Mrs. DockriU’s garden also •ycdp< I cert<ild coin-dateda “A smaii moral n'incrjty b vyery nform in history.”—Sherwcca Eud v. * l£. 5 / ’i