HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1940-05-23, Page 7THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1940
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The Secrets
O
Good Looks
by
190:4lottsaL)+0e, daL _'W Vee
BE A RADIANT BRIDE
It is the natural desire of every
bride to look her most charming self
of her wedding day. To help those of
you who are planning your Exciting
Day, I am outlining a short-range
course of beautifying.
You want yourhair to look soft and
glossy, so getyour permanent three
weeks beforehand. If your hair should
turn too crisp, give it a few sham-
poos. Halo shampoo will make 11 soft
and natural -looking.
For two weeks before the bridal
day, do this: (1) every night, before
retiring, wash your face with warm
water and gentle palmolive soap.
Rinse with cold water, then pat in
some Three -Purpose cream; (2) using
this same cream, spend five minutes
daily in kneading, stroking and pat-
ting your face and neck; (3) Twice
each week apply a good face mask.
During the last week, use a hand
lotion generously and often to make
your hands soft and smooth.
Two days before: Shampoo your
hair to leave it shining. Manicure
your nails. Be conservative! no ex-
treme tints, please! A subdued nat-
ural or fragile rose shade Is the key-
note.
One day before, apply a face mask,
afterwards smoothing nourishing
cream. On THE day, you're bound to
be excited, so don't forget to use a
deodorant cream to banish perspira-
tion odour. And now—Good Luck!
Write for confidential advice, en-
closing four one -cent stamps for my
booklet on Beauty Care. Address;
Miss Barbara Lynn, Box 75, Station
B., Montreal, Que.
He was field officer of the week
and had to go round the new and
hastily erected camp "somewhere in
France." He came upon a compel))
stores and kitchen.
"Disgraceful!" he said. "Never saw
such a mess! Doesn't_ your platoon
commander supervise you': 'What
must your company commander be
thinking of? Doesn't he ever come
near you. Hasn't he seen this awful
mess? What company do you belong
to?"
"Yours, sir." said the cook.
Beautiful Columbia I'cefield Highway
New Thrill for Visitors to Rockies
:W
Oteitsei
The newly completed Columbia
Icetield highway, leading north-
ward from Banff and Lake rLouise
in the Canadian Rockies, will
provide unique motoring thrills
When it ,is officially. opened for
traffic In July. The new road,
'w'hich cuts through one of the
moat beautiful sections at the
mountain playground, furnishes.
direct access to the great Colum-
bia Icefield, 150 square miles in.
extent, whose melting ice is the
source of rivers which eventually
find their way to three 00e0.115,
the Pacific, the Arctic and the
Atlantic via Hudson Bay.
The highway runs through the
very heart of the great mountain
chain, It follows the valleys of a
succession of wild,ltossing rivers;
skirts impressive, age-old gla-
ciers; rune along the shores of
tumbling streams and jade -green
lakes; passes roaring cataracts
and rapids.
This mountain region is not
barren or colorless. Instead, be-
neath great snow-capped peaks
are great spruce and pine for-
ests, glittering glaciers, translu-
cent bodies of water, peaks look-
ing for all ate world as though
huge paint pots had been spilled
down their cliffs and terraces.
Bears, elk, moose and otber big
game can be seen along the road-
side and 'there is good fishing in
the waters of the district.
This new highway promises to
be au important factor in attract
-
lug greatly increased numbers of
visitors to Banff Springs Hotel,
Chateau Lake Louise and Cana-
dian Pacific mountain lodges this
silmmer. An interesting pro-
gramme of special events has
been planned in view of the re-
cord numbers of visitors expect-
ed from all pants of this contin-
ent and includes the Indian Days
celebration at Banff, July 18-21;
Trail Riders of the Canadian
Rockies, July . 26-301 Sky -Line
Trail Hikers, August 2-5; Banff
Golf 'Week, August 18-24; Alpine
Club of Canada outing to Glacier
Lake, July 14-30; and Banff
School of Fine Arts, August 1-31.
The annual Stampede at Calgary,
Canada's greatest Wild West show,
Will be held from July e to 13.
Norway and the War
By Marne Braatoy
Norwegian 'theory is one long
story of struggle against furelgn dom-
ination until she finally secured her
iudepeledence in 1905.
When, on April 8, the Nazi Gov-
ernment offered Norway "protection"
in return for surrender, there • was
only one answer possible says Warne
Braatoy, Norwegian newspaper cot' -
respondent and author.
Norway is not a very large country..
Its population is small even in
relation to its size. It Is as if Great
Britain were peopled by under three
millions instead of by forty -orad
millions. A hundred years ago there
was not even one million, and they
were spread all over 0 mountainous
territory stretched out from north of
the Arctic circle dowu to the level of
Scotland.
The Norwegians were alwnye of
one stock. They were united in one
kingdom eleven hundred year's •ego.
But independence was not assured.
Through the centuries the Norweg-
ians have fought against one foreign
domination after the other until. in
1905, they finally emerged as a free
and independent nation.
The majority of the Norwegians of
to -day, therefore, still have tho spirit.
of struggle for national independence
in their blood from living experience.
If they have been neutral in one
Great War and asserted their neutral-
ity when the present war began, it
was not because they had no opinion
on the rights and wrongs of the con-
flict between Hitler's Germany on one
hand and France and the British
Commonwealth on the other.
It was because their independence
seamed to be best served by central-
ity. If challenged, they would fight
for their iudependenc'e 310W as they
fought, one way or another, for their
independence throughout the oen-
t Ui'ies.
It is a fact that they have never
found that independence threatened
fi'otn the West. But there is no doubt
that from which ever side they night
be threatened, they would fight.
Their country lends itself to that
spirit.
Norway is not a country of wide-
open plains where modern barbarians
eat disport themselves from the air
at the expense of peaceful popula-
tions. Nor is it a country of large
cities, The Norwegians can disperse
into the mountains and forests in-
land. and bide in the maze of fjords
and Innumerable islands which break
top the long coast of Norway.
This wpirit of independence has not
been weakened by the rise of a mod.
ern Labour Movement in Norway. On
the contrary, tate .Labour Govern-
ment., which has now been in office
for five years. longer than any Nor-
wegian Government since the World
War, bas intensified the spirit. of na-
tional independence in Noway, while
developing the contributions of Nor-
way to international co-operation, 111
the first place in relation to the other
Northern States, Denmark, Finland
and Sweden, and, in the sec'olnd place.
in the League of Nations,
When a German envoy appeared in
the office of the Norwegian. Foreign
Minister on April S, end domancled
he surrender of Norwegian independ-
ence to Nazi "protection" it was a
eiregone conclusion that the Nol•weg-
ian Government would reply "No."
No foreign power was consulted in
the matter. No advice was sought.
True Norwegians could not act other-
wise.
In this case the reply was even
more certain that Nazi Germany is
the very opposite of everything that
Norwegian citizenship stands for. The
attitude of Norwegian public opinion
throughout the first seven months of
this war proves 1t.
The Norwegian press has faithfully
published reports from both sides,
but the response of the public and
the comment of the Norwegian press
could leave no one in doubt where
the Norwegians found the vindication
of those principles along which they
themselves had developed internation-
al co-operation.
They would react fiercely at any at-
tempt to impose opinions or policies
upon then from outside. They would
be as outspoken, if not more out-
spoken, where friends appeared to
transgress, than where dictation was
implied. But that did not mean that
they were not as firm, if not consid-
erably firmer, in their actual dealings
with the Power that has now proved
to be their enemy in the complete
sense of the term.
Future historians will have to un-
ravel all the threads of the immediate
circumstances of the outbreak of war
on Norwegian territory. It may' be
that they will see events in a differ,'
ent perspective, and assign responsi-
bilities in a way different from the
one that appears obvious to; day, That
is a privilege of the academic mind.
But to the human beings of flesh
and blood who people Norway to -day
there is only one opinion on the
genedis and perspective of the suffer -
hags that have come over our old
kingdom.
.A. spirit of aggression is running
amok in the world today. Nobody
knows who is going to be the next
victim. No ono 0ets out deliberately to
be a victim. But if the trial conies as
it leas cone to the Norwegian people,
no one there will begrudge the mis-
ery which it involves. if it. is finally
possible to demonstrate, without fur -
the' caution and reticences, that
totalitarian frightfulness must be put
to an end.
A great French writer, Romaln Rol-
land, once spoke of the cleansing
nature of action -- l'ltygiene de
1'actlon. That is what the Norwegian
people are feeling today. They have
risen against. Nazidoni.
WORTH WHILE SHRUBS
(Experimental Farms News)
Everywhere in Eastern Canada lilac.
honeysuckle, mockorange and hyd-
rangea are planted, but really there
is a great variety of shrubs which
grow well but which are not used be-
cause so few people kuow them. in
the colder districts most people have
stopped trying to grow forsythias be-
cause the common ones rarely bloom
above tate snow line, writes R. W.
Oliver, division of horticulture, Cent-
ral Experimental Farm, Ottawa. Re-
cently a species of golden bell called
Forsythia ovate which appears to be
hardy at Ottawa has been introduced,
its pale yellow sunshine warming the
days late in April, a few clays earlier
than F. intermedia,
Another early bloomer which needs
more attention is Vituruum Curtest'.
It is sot so robust as the more com-
mon Snowball but its early clusters
of pale pink blooms amply repay the
trouble for giving it a shellerod soca
thou in •hr -um. It ha- :t lel o1 rural
eou:in vileirrnuute fleet deeerve a :place
the elu-uh horsier o lite larger gar -
len, and all of them nicely Di part •
hal .bade.
tinewletll, Rigel Seelo cranberry,
etacfaring tree, tcitliv•rorl.are, •w ace'
are all useful large -lruhs in their
'10,0'. The lir-i 0a, -lucre fallen itoo
1i -favour because rh- leaf r'lliog in-
:eris aft. ask titan . 'retro -1.11y but
three at;,c.:, rant ',1• ,eaten off ante a
-Prosy 'eau fall of ni,otine sulphate
r1+u•in.0 the -tiring-before the leave- are
Lolly out.
Another lard" groin, of -rather in -
tonna] shrubs :1hu need ni,rre irentuent
planting, in the shrub., border is made
up of rhe various rose spt to 11 ar-
e et, yell"a has , ut a fat,nrite for
year., :out the ritgosit are used unite
frequently tout there sire a tit./.01 pce-
ie. and h', held,. whit floral display
is lot ely and Altos.. foliage adds to-.
terrst to the •ilitufliberyi ail season.
Stta'ral of these hybrids have J: en
produced iv the Central Expertnitiellt-
tl i•trul, f)1t•ny a. Ihtt met 1 n, mare
rrtentien than ,pit t t :ni'.I a l l ,;rh aNy
:„ the tarsen t't thegarden:
For spots. it the Farm
larger Siberian peas lar,' leen :i.e.!
fora lore. :1000' hitt there are hco fin
ittareti-shrubs of this uuoilt srhlont
seen Lot touch nt'ore r.rnanier:.e1. r 1u.•
mann l.uerbergii, a variete of the tali
rt•owittq Siberian pea tree, Ire- i ine;y
cut green feliaee reed a gracefully
arching hai,i: r hat Wake- it rerp in-
teresting thr,t_itott the eea-en.l'h,•
dwarf pet tree, ter 2an1 1 c m:u•a.
With little attention. frons .lite -.hears.
form. :r neat. lore, It di u' fine green
mist) foliage all veru' and 'r Acchit
'hitt!, yellow- flow er. in early Ione.
Another :Juin!) with 1e14-atr• foliage
l':un:eri.k. Meet 'teriette- have kill
e t in hinter but 1'. i'entandra i•
pretty hardy and vert atirat•tit.-.
;r^.'1.. 'ter`: sort are particularly
elms itis ..t'.l areas tech• fide t,.'-
1uy
are ue.nt:hv leen-io1�r.f. 411,1.010C..
\\?lite „n the su',i,et or finch rni
is1 r:u'4'te of the
red F.ldereeere .hoole b0'• much more
• 'nnn'nly t:ea. 1\'i n 114010ei in a
, t'tat it -till fruit -.0''d, this
bruit 91ae everything, araeefully arch- t
in.• 'i ranoltes, purple ',-0ihery foli'egc
`.n eprfn„ ,vhiclt rrltrtins attractive all
0as,nt, large .panicle: of creamy flo;v-
t'rs in early summer and uorgenu:s
cluster.ci of red fruit in .fall. It need. To
1100 kept in vigorous condition by feed -
ng and an occasional stiff 1pruning.
Other good :Meths for ,tall fruit e'- i
feet are the various members •nf .the'
Cntenea.ter and Etionyus .families.
Neither have attractive flowers. and
',,usequently they haws sheen little
erowu in Canada. Honeser, they 'trace
• 'e'rs'ut foliage and are varied in
1 ',it zrawth.'When properly pru01-
edo;by keeping the old 'w•ond thinned
ut SO that young, .vh Grub. growth is
-•dared, a wealth of fall color ri
sults.
PAGE SEVEN
CUTS COSTS
YOU PAY LESS
YOU USE LESS
SURER RESULTS
OPENING
TIN-
' C4UNOT
�• SPILL,
hit, if his .317 average in the Eastern
League Met summer is any criterion,
Heath supplies the experience.
Erie Tipton in left field is a line
hitter who is belting the hall at a .310
clip. Buddy Bates, centrefleld flask,
has yet to stripe his true stride. He
finished the 11189 season with a .321
at Memphis. Ferri Bell, who hit .268
with Pittsburg last year, has just
been purolaee'd to patrol right field.
Bell has never failed to hit above .300
in Double -A company
z,e. e
John Tyler. re-
serve
e-
.tt outfielder; is a long ball hitter
who drove in close to 90 runs for
Buffalo last summer.
The Leafs have steady pitching tr
go with that power. Starting pitcher,ure Carl Fischer, Jim Walkup, PhilMa'childon. Jim Rentnger, Lester Mo
Crabb. Pat McLaughlin and John
Pezzullo. This is one of the beat bat-
untied pitching stal'l's in the entire
league.
Fisc her, a brilliant left • hander-.
proved his worth beyond doubt i.
1:110! and Jim Walkup, smooth eurvc'-
bailee after recovering from shoaldee
trouble has recently come t rntlgit
with two beautiful pitching efforts
Phil Murchildon, 1939's promising
young rookie from Penetang, has been
learning things from Coach Sad Saar;
Jones and looks a muck improved
Ihurler.I3ig Jim Bellinger has already
won :1 games and is a decided ac'quisi
tion. Lester McCrabb, on option froze
the Philadelphia Athletics, has shown
plenty- in Itis two appearances ane!
loops as if he might might wits 17
games without straining himself. Par
:McLaughlin had a great year in lob'
with the trailing Toledo Club in the
American ,association. He )las brit,
purchasers outright from Connie Mack.
dolor Jezzullo, the other lefty on the
-1 ,12. is a \tarn weather pitcher ane
will become increasingly useful a,
he summer wears on, This ccomplete,the roster which Manager Lazzer!
thinks will be good enough over the
season to land the chub in a playoff
spot.
The .Leafs are at home practically
the whole last week in May. Return
ng on May 21 front a three-day stay
n Rochester, they take on Buffalo in
Maple Leaf Stadium on May 21, 22
and 23. A holiday double-header is
scheduled with Rochester for May 24
the concluding game of the three
game series to be played the follow
i
e ng day. Montreal comes to Toronto
for games on May 81 and June 1. The
Leafs then go on the road, not to re-
turn until June 10, when they open
at home with Syracuse. Afternoon
games in May commence at 3.30 p.m.:
BASEBALL AT TORONTO
Wink Carroll)
(double-headers at 2 pini. Night games
Will start early in June, when the
weather Warms up.
Want and For Sale Ads, '1' week 25¢:
Practically everyone who has seen
the 1940 Leafs in action rates them
100% stronger than last year. The
1939 team failed because it lacked
power. but there is no dearth of that
essential in the present lineup. Harley
Boss, secured from San Francisco to
play first base, has a mean batting
average of .302 over a 10 -year span in
Double -A baseball, At second is Dario
Lodigiani, who is leading the Toronto
hitters at the momeut with a mark
of .325. Fred Chapman, sprightly
shortstop, is hitting the ball well but
right at the fielders. His hitting cau't
help but improve and, along with
Lodigiani, he gives the Leafs one of
the best double play combinations in
the league around second base. Flea
Clifton, a flawless fielder but light
hitter, and Mickey De Jonglse, who
packs plenty of power but is an un-
certain fielder, have been alternating
at third. Carl Fairly, a smart all•
around ball player, is the sixth he
fielder.
Milt Gray, a contig great, is split-
ting the work behind the plate with
the veteran Tommy Heath. Grayhas
youth, speed, a great arm and he will
BUS TIME TABLE
Summer Time Table
Leaves Senforth for Stratford:
Daily 8.25 a m. and 0.25 p.m.
Leaves Senforth far Budcrieb:
Daily except Sunday and hol,, 1.115 p.m.
and 7.40 p.m.
Sun. and hal., 1.05 p.m. and 1,20 p.m_
donnection at Stratford - for Toronto,
Hamilton. Buffalo. London, Detroit,
Tavistock. Woodstock, Brantford
Agents: Queen's, Commercial, Dick house
D. H. McINNES
CHIROPRACTOR
Office — Commercial Hotel
Electro Therapist — Massage
Hours -Mon. and Thurs. after-
noons and by appointindnt.
FOOT CORRECTION
by manipulation—Sun-ray
treatment.
Phone 227.