The Seaforth News, 1939-05-25, Page 7THURSDAY, MAY 25, 1939
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
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A DAILY SCHEDULE FOR
BUSY WOMEN
Far readers with too little spare
time for extended seilf'beau'tifying,
this article 'outlines a daily routine
that even. 'tlie Ib.us•iest woman can fit
into her schedule.
First must come a few, setting -up
exercises, carried out ib.riskly. Then
your hair needs vigorous .brushing,
'from the roots right to the ends.
Cleanliness: is essential, so wash
your 'face, neck, bust and lsands with
gentle •palmolive'soap. It's made with
soothing olive oil and really helps
cleanse, smooth and youfhi•fy your
'skin. And if you adopt the six min-
ute, mance-gup, ;u'sing three - purpose
•cream, it will salve your make -un
problems. ,
You 'simp'ly cannot afford t, neg-
lect your hands. Rab them at odd
moments with Italian thetas to keep
them 'smooth and white. Here is a
•point you should not overlook, either:
pat •cream or lotion into your elbows,
It takes the roughness away. and
you'll appreciate this when you are
wearing a sleeveless dress.
A few other little duties that arid'
so anuch to feminine charms. Clean
your teeth morning and night, and
after meals; look to your nails; and
to aroid offending; dab a little odor -
ono deodorant cream under your
armpits.
This schedule naturally won't cover
cases which require special treatment.
Write for my confidential advice in
your personal beauty problems, and
leaflets on the following subjects are
available for 3c stamp each: Face,
Eyes, I•I•air, Hands, Feet, Bust, Slim-
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SEAFORTH, ONTARIO.
CHIEF JUSTICE DUFF
(From 'he Ottawa t7,ounnel)
To the House sof ,Commons last
Tuesday Minister of justice Lapointe
brought a(bill extending the terns of
Sir Lyman P. Duff as Chief justice
nt 'Canada for three years "after his
75Sth birthday. It will the one Govern-
nient measure over which Parliament
and the ,country will achieve happy
unanimity. Tor Sir Lyman P. Duff is
more than a great chief J'u'stice ,of
Canada; ate is a Canadian legend, a
national institution.
In his thirty-third year on the
Supreme Court bench, Duff today is
recognized as one -of the rare masters
int law; balanced, penetrating; scholar-
ly—one of the Empire's great jurists,
His record has been 'a procession of
triumphs. There has not been a great
legal decision within a quarter of a -
'century with Which his name 'has not
been associated. During the war Sir
Robert Borden recruited his abilities
as Central Appeal 'judge under the
IvL'ilitary Service Act; he was, with the
late Mr, justice ,Meredith, a member
of the Royal Commission which
investigated the shell changes; •he has
heard, and given judgment on, prac-
tically all She great constitutional
•cases of the past three decades; and
time and again he has sat with the
Lords of the Privy Council upon vital
Imperial cases.
INior has Duff been a narrow
interpreter of 'the letter of the law,
inclined to .make the constitution and
statutes the people's master, rather
than their servant. A liberal by
instinct and temperament, he has been
the nearest Canadian coutaterpartof.
that great 'humanitarian and philoso-
pher of the law, the date justice Oliver
Wendell Holmes, Like that famous
upholder of American civil rights,
Justice Duff has not always found
himself in harmony with the conclu-
sions of his colleagues, Profoundly
learned in the law, unbending for
justice and right, his attitude and his
judgments are yet apt to' be influenced
by an understanding sympathy which
Maces the spirit of a statute or an act
above its letter. Illustrative of dais
was his dissent from the verdict of
his colleagues that, under a strict
interpretation of the B,N.A. Act, Can-
adian women were debarred 'front the
Senate. Duff took the liberal view
that a country's :political development
could not and should not be retarded
by the dear) hand of stere legalism; a
view upheld by the Lord High Chan-
cellor of England.
Duff, in short, has given to the
Supreme Court not only a progress-
ive and -humanitarian interpretatiolu
of the constitution, but also what
Burke once called "the cold neutral-
ity ' of an impartial judge." Hearin
courteously. answering wisely, consid-
ering patiently, deciding impartially,
he has been learned, just, reverent,
confident; oblivious to plaintiff. de-
fendant and pleader, seeing but jtrtice
itself.
His interests in life have been wider
than law. A member of His \lajesty's
-Privy Council, active it? the •delilbera-
tious of the judicial committee, an
honorary Bencher of Gray's 1010, one
sometimes thinks that his greatest
interest in life centres in literature,
in philosophy- and mathematics. It is
told of .him at the Parliamentary Lib.
rary that there are few vnlumes oh
sciencesor philosophy that he has nett
read.
A Canadian to the tore of hits, one
of the characteristics of Chief justice
Duff is his love for England. It is
teat a love' for the England of battle,
nor the England of Mr. Kipling's
barrack -room ballads; it is a passion
rather far the England that has walk-
ed justly and loved mercy; for the
England that has given to the world
a Milton and a Shakespeare and to
humanity more of justice and free-
dom. Each year, or as often as duty
calla or permits, he slakes s nilrrim-
age to the 0111 Land, ate1 teen the
historic spots of the Island, halL,we 1
ground and places. know him es
much as the courts of the hilt 's
justice.
Personally, Chief Justice Duff is
simple, cultured, charming, a great
gentleman, a great comrade. In his
75th year, he has the outlook, spirit
and 'buoyancy of youth, refuses to
grow old. His •canrpa•nions, like his
ideas, are young, and he is never
happier• than when in the company of
young men, debating things and
books an•d abstract ideas far removed
from late, •
Thus -••the joy of those who know
and reverence his .intellect over. this
decision to keep him as Chief justice.
II. Ht McIrnios
CHIROPRACTOR
Office — Commercial Hotel
Electro Therapist — Massage.
Hours—Mon. and Thurs. after-
noons anw by appointment
FOOT CORRECTION
by manipulation—Sun-ray treat-
ment.
Phone. 227.
They know what he nteanis to the
Court; know that he retains for it na-
tional trust in a great intelligence;
and that he retains for it as. well . a
rich 'humanity, a civilized mind, a
comprehension. of .life's need for tol-
erarsce and .charity.
PRUNING APPLE TREES.
'(Experimental Farms News)
Apple trees benefit front a certain
amousit ,of corrective pouning to re-
move dead or diseased braatche,s, ex-
cess sucker growth, crossing and
overlying limbs and to generally
shape a tree to permit •of efficient
spraying and picking operations,
states R. G. White, Dominion Ex-
perimental Station, Fredericton, N.B.'
The .ultimate aim of the pruner is to
produce large, strongly built trees
that have a large bearing surface and
will be able to withstand the weight
of heavy crops of fruit, or the strain
of severe storms. Roomy trees with a
thirty foot spread or nature and 'having
a maximum height for efficient spray-
ing. and picking operations'Should be
the idea in mind when 'pruning. At the
Fredericton Experimental Station,
this work is done in late March and
early April, allowing sufficient time to
cover all the orchards betore the sap
begins to flow in the spring. The only
tools necessary are a pair of pruning
shears and .an adjustable pruning sate.
Pruning begins with the young tree
at planting time. The latest practice
is not to head' back the young tree, To
offset the loss of roots cut off at dig-
ging time, remove crowding limbs so
as to provide a modified central leader
type of tree with four or five spirally
arranged scaffold branches spaced ap-
proximately eight inches apart. The
first limb is situated about thirty inch-
es from the.ground .and the leader is
headed back after •the fifth branch has
been established. When possible,
branches with sharp angled crotches
should be cut out, as these sharp
angles may have hark intrusions
which render then weak and liable to
break when a yectes bj d to
a severe
strain. The nearer a right angle a
limb is to the trunk, the stronger it is
usually. Very little pruning is given
for the next few year, as the trees
grow faster a•nd conte into bearing
earlier if given only light pruning dur-
ing this period, Only those branches
having a detrimental effect on the fut-
ure shape of the tree should be cut
out, leaving all the leaf surface pos-
sible to stimulate rapid development. -
Older trees and mature ones are
gone user each spring to ,remove
tread or excess wood. Sucker growth
is usually the greatest Arcade'. as it
generally starts from some again limb
and grows perpendicularly through
the tree, irrespective of tree shape.
"this type of gleet ill i also structur-
ally weak, breaking rosily, it is ad-
ti•ahle ni remove the majority of
them ucker acept where a hold
.01.17. be tilled to afvantl;e.
.\t oar time., sotnr thinning of the
oaten ryfus
wee '•, n c ererl goon, 1
pruning. The feeling t lay is that the
majority of the high grade fruit is
borne at the sides and top tet the tree
and that the younger wood Is not
likely to grow too densely. If tete
thin, unproductive wood is taken Ottt
of the lower Centre to open it lip for
fraying and to eliminate the pour
fruit it produces, that should be sufii-;
(tient. keeping in mind the idea that
where possible the scaffold limbs
should have side branches arising
within two or three feet of the main
trunk.
Varietic: differ in their habit of
growth, ,onto like the McIntosh be-
ing of a spreading nature, others Slid]
as the Canada Baldwin ;mil Sandow
aentg erect. in general, hoeeter, the
;trinciltlec to apply are the saute for'
each rase, namely, a modified central
leader kith four or tie scaffold
rancho. within two or three ;Oct
:hr tr:udc, the remove' .,f .lead or di,-
-ed wno,l: croes!tt.i and crowding
'inchs and of suckers Little if any
::itlin:g is done where the beat fruit is
produced, with the totter centre open-
ed up slightly- to remove thin unpro-
ductive wood and allotting spay, for
inside. spraying. Snipping of sisall
twigs is to he avoided,
All cuts should he neatly made at
the juncture of the limb to be remov-
ed and another branch: If stubs are
left they rot 'hack and cause break-
ages. Large limbs should be cut half
way through from the underside and
at a short distance from where the
final cut is to he magic. Another cat
CM the upper side, hitt nearer the
trunk, will .ever the branch from the
tree, after which the stub may he cut
off flush with the other limb Thi;
avoids the nasty jagged splinteriva
which often occurs if only caw
wont the top 1s made: When pruning
operations are complete, paint all cuts
over two inchee in diameter with a
white leads paint to which may be
added a little lampblack to give it a
grey color. When mixing the paint,
use raw linseed oil as a spreader- not
the boiled forte. Any forst of drier,
such as turpentine, is bestleft out
as it injtires the wood. The paint
keeps the wood covered and ,preserves
the cut surface until heading ooccurs.
BUSINESS I33 'GERM'ANY
• (The announcement'is now - Made
that the Germen 'government and its
subsidiaries will hereafter pay private
enterprises only 110 per .cent oash'far
goods std services, and will` force
diem to accept "tax certificates" for
the remainder. This °lends ,urnasua'1 in-
terest to the following article .which
tells of the difficulties :private -•cone
kerns have already experienced itt do-
ing ,business under 'the dictatorship,)
One of the fallacies about fascism
is that it is the shield of 'private pro-
perty. How .has this worked out in
National Socialist Germany?
The •owner of a business there—if
he be fw1I=blooded "Aryan"—is sti'14
nominally the master •of his shop or
factory. But no longer may he run
his business the way he wants to. No
day passes in which he does not' have
to petition. ttumerous state commis-
sars or. control commissions to find
out how much raw material he may
have, how he must operate itis •faet-
ory, at iwiiat price he may sell his
product and to whom; A great .part
of every day is eaten up in official
conference and correspondence about
the myriad decrees and regulations
covering—and, interfering with — a'tl
his busitte :i activities, Sixty per tent
of his entire c.arrespondenee is devot-
ed to this nueaucratic red tape:
Large firms boas had to add hund-
reds of elsrks who do nothing but 111'1 -
out questionnaires, prepare monthly
report:, aL o ay for certificates, and
study the ncvrr-ending flood Of new
decrees, What is really happening to
German beetle:5s is a gradual and de-
liberate fusion 'tetween private enter-
prise and. state bureaucracy, The
whole farm of business, its accent,
its risks. n -ova .hanged. Today the
main tftitt.; is not so much to 'buy
cheaply,- .o taw the right production,
and sell v i' -h- most important
thin s is t) win the favor of local par-
ty chieftains ani state bureaucrats
who can • 1 xt government orders,
or re r n:t for sw Material or for-
eign currenzy, or authorize a selling
price whidit .v.II allow you to make
a profit.
Ail -imp ra.ttt to •every German
business:, it.: i= a curious new bus-
ine• _ eats. "a eg-between," whose job
is to maintain good personal re)ations
with officials ,f the economy• min-
istry in Berlin: : he knows how to in-
terpret. af' the new decrees in his
firms case, and can guess how far
one can g> without being caught.
Any titer..._-.gin:3 toreniaitt in dtusi-
nese must legie each a contact man.
The Mg -lige. train from Ha'n'a/erg
to Berlin fell every day
port and oziget agents and tlwir
tart melt i tg ait•'r pertaitegg
ons kirk:.t known
"Penna Yon !la.. -
take a • trait: tz,
story
the N42!,,
e , t, ,
obiat:t...4 "•.--
miseertrol C•tnt'•1 :::: "i i tilt. 00111111: •,:.r
foreign - ',for 'longla.
tity egi ir Loudon. l" ,:
arrived in if araerg, but the
hank fail .. _ ,.tsr the .: rear;
reticy actually, ,•, . _
tenable . .r • it. The
therefore es storage, wears
_
piled tg :'1:1'{.c_
Now Reiensaand has t ...
the :o't•' :rite 111,.
Charge, - teiehati an.ttnn - ..
eno1:_'.7. Te tig ad,iition.t .,_
of for:,.4r;
h• Ve :- e ipproa5lf
governing . eereaes. Hie a •.-. ..
notrlal 'ht
ately, • ttlratltint,.
age ,.
than _• i ,,i„1i
sti'1 .e • el. ,ic't. i' • i
prove,- _ r.i1 Aav
pl''t: _. a 11:4, 0!,1,
agouti ...ions. say t,eget/Ike`
ar. N ar.- -,in; to mak .t s,t:-
renie ' 1 c'r through the ,en-
tallgiitry -i nee: he is goittc :: Ber-
lin toate
r:,- f,ehrer of his busia.t.ss
group. to eat a letter of inttoductio,,
to :u1 inriu i : a official of the- Reiclta-
hank, ,0111.* i.;_ close relation: with
the eon111, ar fnr foreign currency.
who might gear aside the ohetacles
and give hint las goal! -
Su h ishiife of that once most
mde.t -1d,, german bei sines amen,
the Herniate.... bio' tart and export ag-
ent, o,i.:i ylittle more than a 1:51;.
elm,i :_e.1. ..
R t le :niers, too, find that
Profits seihie only tilrou,git
good r,da.:Hr,.4ot!!: the state
tie # to Nazi theory, tea hie eeeieeittetive and to :he e'•Ilt1n-
ate.t ae f r t eitiesible. Yet- there are •
wader, ., _.. intake .a hatodi
Date
-profile L.. t aid even flagrant vio-
la t t ,i gee .tw haze become -the
etut:n rule of business in Germ-
any They era dangerous • for those
lacking :strong support in the. right'
quarter: This is the new business risk
which has replaced the former .one. of
rising and. 'falling prices,'