The Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-06-11, Page 3Hk
"Keep ' (doge to duty. .'1Vever mind
° ile flt.tere if you only: have peace of
lulrut• Be what you ought 4:te be; the
rest is Cod's,affair"
Handicaps
It does us good to read biographies
of • Successful men. and women. and
learn 'there that they had` to contend,
ii it •
great ha dlieap.s but conquered
it m.' Vti'e ,lin very often tire. jiandi-
•il>was
the. ;c
a eof"thels
succes .:
..
Not the of its is free .from:handtCaps`
• Y 4 • ,
w Melt appear„to•anipede:progress, .`Vile
° '''stt.0 gi.e Wiih•_dis.ease, even: sontetirir'es•
• dde.ftligl ity , We'Wrestle•• with doubts'
and t#'ears, bve'i seusiti.Yeo'ess, •f'eelin'gs
of, inferiority and ail• sorts of, disabilr
ties. . •
• Furencopi'agernent read. about the
• tall c1i, woman-svlio-;.has..-achieved:
• tlthigs.' We find. in every case the life
was difl3'eult, not.always :keeping'the
wolf froth,the door,, but in material-.
izing 'his •'vision. Nothing is ;Worth
•4'1iaving that is easy of attainment. •
•'
Ta know .this gives one Courage 'to
keel? .dr. and teaches us to' overcome
our tfan•dic'a;pa. '
•;Some• years' •ago, a 'mall was a victim'
Of a; gasoline. explosion -which cost.
himhis eyesight. Like Men in. the'
. fall vigor •of life he' did pot anticipate
any suc'h' handicap: and flied- made no
provision for :the° future. Ibis' black-
r,
o5s of des
a w '
p it as..mote intense,tihan
. the blackness of hie sight.. The years
' stre'tched out, impossible.
Rut in this day and; gen`eratiun there
'Is a way' ,ou't. Twenty years ago 'it •
would ,heave been •,a real tragedy; but
°tha;ntra ';'o science, which has'i'thrown
.a helping hand, -aro handicap need
• floor. one .now, if be possesses'°the
• courage to . face the future with cont
fidence.
This patient overcame :ir'fa despohd
encywhen 'attention, was centred :on
tarts rn a n's sense -of torten. W1thft --a .
• few• week..sTlie.-lean ed_te_lusting
between, 'Aarious' degrees ' of:.smooth:
• nese of sailed when rolled •between.tlie
`"tirumti and fordfinger, He. began~to
practice w th flour._and_.became-'an ex
• pert.. flour .'grader•.•,by. ,sampling .it
through 'his sense of touch..
• He regained'' his feet• nauczally,
paid his.debts 'and earned (five times
what he had previously received.; He
.felt •proud of himself and 'happy • in
over'com'ing his handicap:
Why .could he, do, this? Because 'of
,the principle of• compensation. ' It,
carve to, hi§ rescue, Take away one
sense and •otliers flourish. '
We hav=e Robert Schumman, the
' musician who, while practising on the
piano, permanently injured ,hisright-
hand - o he could make 'no more ap-•
pearances.;-.tri 1Lubllc�Again: the --law
of compensation came -iii: It: 'stimu--
lated his creative''faculties and'he has
:composed .many of .our finest compo-,
sit!ou�'.
,As a lad, Theodore Roosevelt' was
lanniftc•rtttFed -:by-a` frail bo $' Adm[r•'
ing'physical strengah, he'Droceeded.to
` dev'elop it by living on ,a ranch. "•.He
rode. 'hexed, lived in the open, until/
—event tinny- he bearn e•strong in body.
He gained. through perseverance, ;not
only strength of body but strength of
miud,..will
and, c1 ratter and acconi-
', llished great tliii gs- 'in'his day.
So it is not by any •means• just•being
a genius that has 'sent ,people far
alread of us on the toad t� achieve-
ment, but'rather a. dogged persever-
ance that would never allow them to
give up. p
'rWI•LI•.GH:T tiOtJ-Rn STORY ' 1
Chicks and Other Little' Friends
- NO. 23,'
Well, we haven't found Fluffy yet;
Do you know, ev tove • wasbegin-
ning to feel lonely without Fluffy.,
Anyway, .he went, around poking his
:lose into eot°ners and looking around
everywhere for her. Perhaps you Can
., #tat"dty believe it, but really and truly,
.Rover rias growiiig to like Fluffy.
• • •"Anyw:sy, she often walked right under
his nese now: and all he would d
,t .
way to prick up his ebirs and- look at
beretan. mind you, -I've even seen them —Herbert Bayard Swope.
touch noses sometimes. That's some
thing like our kisses, 1 suppose. • '”
• Yeti see they began to have pretty
good times together. You remeiiber-,.
'don't Y.ou,.about the time'Rover chased
Fluffy up a, tree When -she was .a little
kitty? And Mamma Lady had to pun-
ish hover fol doing it. You remember:
about that;l'ip sure: Well, Fluffy soda:
found out: 'that site could - climb trees
almost as fast' as'a squirrel• and slie
a•iso- found•.out that Rover;,ceuidn't
climb at -;all, so Ishe had, lots Of Inn.
teesiing him.* she. was feeling funiay.,,
for 'she'd i un iu ;front of •him, real,
fasts right iiz.der.his Tepee,; tb•gat, .i.1
started•; .then dart; up.u'a tree:' 'Then
he'd stand' under the. tree and' look'
'.at her and: bark at Icer. But as soon
-as• he looked away at sothetlliug else
she -came -.down -jest -f-ar -enough -t&
.reach. him ,and .then she'd.stretch out
and catch the fur -on his: back .with
her paw,' He'd turn around quickly,
but she was,'. always. too quickler him.
and back she'd run ap the tree,;,again.
You see she . was laughing at him.
Yes, they bean do have•:p•retty. good
times together: Rover tlrought Fluffy
a :real nice' kitty, worth taking care
of. • .� - ,
• Of course, you know neither Rover or
Fieffy would have been'nearly:se nice
if Mamma Lady and"Billy-hadn't lov'e'd
th
eut ah
d given the su
ch good car•Q.,
You see if Manerpa' Lady didn't take
such, good care. of, Billy and laugh at
his .jokes and funny' ways he wouldn't
be nearly is nice a little boy as he.
is Love and .care made Billy `a fine,.
beautiful 'boy,- and it is', just he same
with.our Pets. 'If we iove'them :and
'
care for then they grow• so very. cute
and make 'great playmates, ,don't Aou
think•so?
But where tri the or; 1. d has Fluffy
ufey
-genre ? Topny, Acre, Is calling. around
fer•'h•er kitties. Wasn:'t it' top bad the
little .one left for her, should' get" run
••-=Taftsreve'r `rSirthe house'
to. Main'ma Lady, :hunting her baby.
She stood. up ,on her hind legs and.
..caught a hold of :her.dress, so Mamma
Laclrwatild loolf t lier,iTeh"auitioasiy
sgid; "Meow, meow, : where. is ., my
baby?" '
Then slue went'.to Billy and did the,'
same , thing; Oli, .wasn't it too bad?
Mamma Lady held her up, arid stroked.,
her and then even let:her sit in Fluf-
fy's `.chair, 'which madeher feel a
little better' and not so lonely.'
"I guess Billy. we'll have to ,rid .a
Tittle kitty for: Topsy." •
"But where will we get ohe, Mam-
ma " asked Billy anxfously,t
"I. don't know, dear.' We'll'- wait a
Tay .or 'so' and perhaps soinething 'will
turn up. We'll let Topsy stay :here:
She seem's more contented, •doesn't
sire? See site's curled 'herself tip and
plias .gone to sleep?"
•
New Measures To
• •Catch =Crimiiljal$
•London.•=:=Plain clothes mobile -pa -
lice .tra to be, a new terror for the
thi•fin the car
• This is to be the outcome of one of
several -" eoafereiiees Between Lord
Byng and. the "Big Five' at Scotland
Yard to deal' with the problemofthe
car thief: '
For a fortnight in -the near future
about one-third of the uniform .police
-on duty: at'night,•are• to be on petrel
in plain.clothes..
Their duty will he chiefly to keep a
close watch upon all the •shop.centres
in each division. .
Some will -also be detailed Ito watch
bridges and narrow portions .of the
hightbay in 'order to .p'ut a barricade
across the road• as• soon as a raid has
been signalled. -
Twenty-five per cent. of the mobile
police will be disguised as ordinary
motorists and, they; are not to deal -
with motoring offences, but with crim-
inals- -
If the scheme proves to be ,;urcess •
ful .during• its period of trial it 'w'ill.
be made a Permanent routine.
"I.11xer.11isrli is a_.state of mind—
progressivism is a state• of politics."
What . New ' York
a
Ia Wearing
B:Z•ANNABELLE' WORT`a'IWGTar
12.44644. Pressnaking Less'o'n Fur=
nis.(ted With Evert/ Pattern
•
•
Enhance 'your .charm by Wearing
flattering 'jacket costume '
It is a season of jackets., s.. ,
The, one. ,sketched is in the soft
green printed, ;crepe . in . combination
Sunday School
Lesson
:June' 21, Lesson All.The Sin of
Catmint Others .to. Stunib.Ie (Tem-
---
p. erairc: --Lesson')=R'exriarfis '1'4: `-i'3=
23. Golden Text elt,• is good
neither to .eat flesh; •nor • to drink"..
wine, nor to de anything whereby
they' • brothe.r stumbleth -Romans
14: 21..
:ANALYSTS
I. Pm:glumS..O,[•' THE EARLY CHURCH,
--- Romans 14:' 13-15.' : '
II. CHI;ISTIAN STANDARDS, • Romans 14:
-1623:
I. PROBLEr 1S• OP "PRE EARL• Y.' eRL' c ,.
.Romana 1p3-ltu.
NYuiiyi.difficu t: feat questions 'aruse`.••
:in the early Ch ii li in parties lar the' ';
following••two 1lih (jhristian. who lwad, .
t +
leen•:b"roughi.` up a Jet, ::had ' ee1a.
taught -from his c'hfldhood as the Lai-
of God that. he should only pat "kosh-
er"
er" meat, that is, meat. from an wn%
Trial which hadoeen killed •in a par-
tieuiar way: Gentile Christians us,l
turally had no such scruples. • What,
then, was to be done at Church meals'
and. at dinner parties t.o Which Gentile
Christiafis invited Jewish:
:Christians'?
Was the Jewish Christian to bet -bade
'to eat meat which he would' instinc-
'tively regard as unclean and.disgust-.
ing„o or, was. .the, Gentile Christian to
provide. -only '."kosher” • meat, ansa, if
so,' what became,'',f Paul's principle
that the Law w•ss ,riot binding: on
Christi;fns?
The second problem arose 'in this
way. In a heathen city, such as'Rome
'or Corinth, much or ,most of ,he meat
Offered in
ffthe market, 1'
e e:or i the
ac n
.. P.
butchers''shops was taken frombeasts
that had been sacrificed inheathen'
tehiples to: h'eat'hen ods • certain parts
a9' .gen etainein e temples• and
the rest was sent cut to be sold. Much -
of the' meat publicly; sold, then, had,
been, dedicated to' some heathen gad,
arid' ome. Christians felt that 5t' was,
therefore, 'contaminated . by heathen-
ism, and no Christian should touch it.
Were Christians, then,to reuse to
buy meat in the market and' to, refuse
°t1.''Jtis to Stage•
Lady Lindsay H4g, wife of Sir
Anthony "Lindsay lfogg, • • better
known as; \Liss' Franeee Dobie
Cana'd#an actress -who. ;sprang to
, fame "as leading ladyin "Young
Woodley 'returns 'to °stage . after
temporary retirement to play
-leading role.in "The Old MO.",
•
the serupulous.,;,weaker.brethren these
things- whichyouf'can do with a` good
conscience are really sin, for anything
is sin which We 'do' without having a•
happy conscience ' about it.
In this"'.pa'ssage, then, . Paul, • is not.
directly dealing with What is called,
tt k »
th Tem exance Problem. but
toda e
y P ,
he lays down principles •of Christian
conduct which have their application
to .problems altogether beyond, his her-
rzon. Three :important principles. seem.
't, • arise from the:present discussion:
• first, the Christian man is free to eat
• or' drink 'what he• likes. • Second, that
h is bound to respect the..consejences.•
of. any ••fellow Christians who differ
from him in.' this. mtter, and, third,
that our object in; -1 fe-niust-be, not--t-o
flaunt our freedom; but to'do•whatever
with-" plain green silk crepe that •'a'll-i•nvi±ntious-•to--)dinner-rmle they s "edifying"-tewur'bret`hren :or; .as -we
matches the -ground.... were given, satisfactory' assurance might say, socially serviceable.
that-•-•tire-Brent--scti--before•�them rad -
The •skirtshows slenderizing line in
poi uLed• lite- oite--tre'atnrent: Ttf
jacket is' in .popular hip length.
Style No. 3436 comes in sizes 14,
16, 18 years, $6, 38,and 40 inches bust.
-Size- 21i-regtrires•'4.- yards: of--39-inch-
figured ;with 1% yards of. 39 -inch
plain material:
' Navy .blue'flat crepe silk with white
eyelet embroidered •Batiste= is 'exceed
ingly youthful. ,
Brown flat crepe silk with white is
ever so smart and Wearable.'
Wool jersey, 'tweed and- shantung
also suitable for this • interesting
model.:_
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
Write your name and address Plain-
-1y, giving number And size_o_€ -sae
patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
stent s'or coin coin referred: wra
it carefully for each' number; and
address your order to Wiesen Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St.,,' oronto:
• never .:'had the 'faintest. connection �-
with a .l then rite? r, agars}, ifa mi'ti[1'afrj► ()pejil1,s, y` • . •
Cht istian was invited to. dinner .at the
Louse of a' non-Christian' friend, and
if the nbn-Christian host were to pour
out_.the_ first_•glass ,.uf_�vine .as_.a l'iba�
tion or' offering to his. god- (much as a
Christian host •might. `'''say grace"),
was the •Christian,.guest to refuse. to
touch it
TL"C#iRISTIAN STANDARDS, Romans.14:
• • 16-23. ' '
.Such practical sprohlems. as these
Paul ;often .;has •.iu •mind in his
these Paul often has in mitid in his
correspondence. With.. respect to all
these • scruples,'• Paul Chas been laying
down the fundamental principle of
Christian freedom. A Christian should
be free from petty scruples and super-
atitle- s-foxrs.> But there area"weak"-
brethren; very. ,tear to• .Christ, though
they -•seemed -rather •conterri'ptiblc to -
some. of their :ellaw-Christians, •,zvho
could not; ,with a goodconscience,,eat
meat: or drink wine, unless they were
assured .about. it. Paul. tells' the
sttonger brethren that they ,,are not
to despise the w,aker Igor teLleugh atr
-them. Their scruples may be foolish,
but still it is, after- all, a matter of
conscience with ..hem, and men must,
at all casts, be ley• 1 to conscience. '
• ,North Atlantic -500 'Timtes
•
Ithaca, N.Y.—The. logs of two inrag-'
iimry._Zeppelin_ which have _flown the
. north Atlantic "successfully" nearly
goo time's ina Day ton,: Ohio,• labora-
tory, •were. recently' described to the
Cornell ,University College of Engin-
eering. "�
• . The 'flights . have bee.'n made weeth'y
the five years and 'the charts show that
there has not 'been- a single week in
that, :period'. when, a lighter-th'an4air
ship Could not, have made the passage.
'The records were'presented by Col=
oriel Edward' A. Deeds, of Dayton,
chairman of the.board'of the National
Cash-Registety-Gon>•pan3;-who-poke as
anon -resident lecturer in engineering.
Hesaid the• -flights• wea-e-•plotted-in the -
:.laboratory of the International- Zeppe-
lin ;Transportation eon -Tarty.
Each week,- end a,_Zeppelin took off
theoretically from. Paris 'and New
York, their respective destinations the
other ift of thhe Lrndbe gbh trail-. Thieir
chances of ,getting through were pitted
against the gbvernment Weather re-
ports 'and. their courses shiftedto 'find
the loopholes through •atorin belts. Nti
ship ... ever -was delay ed__.- more_ than
twenty-four hours in• reaching either
Metropolis. ' .
- -"The • Studies- show," 'said' Colonel
Deeds, "that the fii.gl1ts•'are entirely
feasible • froman engineering stand-
point."•
A • -
Women Radio Announcers
• •R•ule the Air in 'Italy
:Although Premier • Mussolinie
n is
knoe to ' be • somewhat like) the ex-
Iaisers•in• holding women's sphere to
be bounded by the llmi!s of ,kitchen,.
nursery ,and church., bee. occirpstfon
connected with l>ub•1:c .life is complete-
ly> dominated by tete daughters of
sutra, Italy.,..„All of the eleven Pro'.
,fessional radio announcers in the king=
dom Ire. welkin. There are. three hi
Rouge, three ' in Turin, two, in Milan
aud 'one encu in Ntiples, Genoa and
Bologna.•
Dean of the diiinouticers- is Signorina
Maria. Lnisa Boncnmpagnl rife ]_.tome,
who has been at her post in. the -capital
for six and o'ife-half years. ,
"The '(i:`S}°iY>,•: , • must have suf-
fered, 'some heavy . financial re-•
verses.," - • • '
"Why do you think. so?" '
"Mrs. Greylocit has to my
knowledge worn the. sante gown .
to three • sepurhite anti distinct''
Afternoon fnnetions."'
The village of Crawley„ Ilampslrire,
which Thackeray described in
"Vanity Fair"''Calling it "Queen's
Crawley," h lately conte ,up for_
sale, ThackOray often stayed '.its •the
tillage. • . -
MUTT AND JEFF— • --By I3UI) FISHER.
J E PF, ,11' ERE''3 A gUY Vele �--
OVER- Lbo4ct to IN TMC CENSUS;
IT'S .tNIPwREctc KELLY ME
FLAG POt€
INHABITANT:
.On the principle of the Christian
man's freedom: in espect of food -and
drink, Paul is clear (v: '14), but we
are not to despise or laugh at those
who. differ .frorn lis, zt,13.. It is good'
to be freerbut tis much more inn
lortant not to make things harder for:
your brother, .: •ot•to make •him -sin
(t•. 15)•, for, feelih.elts he does, these'
things• would be sin to: him, v. 14; It
is good to be free (v. 1.6), but, after
all, matters of eating and drinking
are of very secondary importance. • It
k the • Christian' character and the
Christian fellowship • which really
matter. You' c»n surelye compromise
for the sake of the weaker brother in
tl eso •affairs of -the table, V. 117.. Yet,
unimportant as these mattersealty
are, you may be destroying the wore:
of God if you in..i.t on your freedom
without .respect for other men's con-
sciences, v. 20. Better never to eat
meat or drink. wine at,.11, than •iQ
hurt, your lifotiisr's conscience..` It is
riot likely that •the.e were actuate
any vegetarians or total. abstainers
the Roman 'Church, but Paul is taking.
an extreme instance, v. 21. Hippy is
.the reran wha_.is. able to follow the dic-_
tates of his reason with a good con-
science (v. 22),.but'repiember that for
T --moi',
The Fur Industry
�nVilesterirt Canada-
'A.1tlisugh iTtax:laPar��.iaaaalsea�:�,.,•-�
sed gn: iieiz. xlat a uitb tate.curtt' pre -;
re
to supply the greater part of milady's!
furs, there is a constantly increasing'
volurne coming : from fur -hearing ani-.
:lar in captivity, sags -a bulletin from
•the Dominion Bureau, of Statistica, • . .
"Canada, which for, generation' bas
• been , one of -the principal sources of
supply or furs of a wide variety,",
say's the bulletin; "and still continues .
Io be, has been one of the principals
.sotirees of supply -for furs of a wide
var,iety, and still contirfUes to be; has
'in recent years 'been augmenting the
Catches 'of., ,trappers and hunters" with
the products of fur far'ms. The. fur -
farming industry is. followed .on• a
comniere al scale; in.. each of the. nine,
,provinces and 1n'the Y'pkAn Territory. ;,
Ai the e. past few years °the industry i;t?i.
11(iestern CamadaNlias- groin unci -1 rt is
i�oW a .slilistant ah -one:' :Official. stn-_; '
strstics• recently issue4 show that the
total value of furfarm; in lylanito'Ba,
'Saskatchewan, Alberta, • British 'Col—
umbia and tl�e• Yukon Territory_am-
punts• to; $8,677;142,' an increase of $20• : ,
860,000 in 'ons' year.. The total.'num=
ber of fur farms ii 999, of which 572
are fox farms, 249 mink farms, 108•
muskrat farms and 70 raise raccoons,
,martens, ,fishers,..badgers; skunks;•
beavers, etc. ' Manitobais the print!:
pal centre of theindustry, in Western
Canada,; With British Col.uinbia'next,'
Alberta' third and Saskatchewan
fourth. The, value of anirnals on the
999 farms last'year was estimated at
$5,45Q,000 of which silver foxes ;alone
accounte for over $3,437;400. An
in
-
terestifeature of the repert is.
the '
• 'v u of the muskrat
'population
on 'the 108 f rms increased in one .
,11.17 fitaxti $ -,710-176-16-21,2X2, or
over 450 per cent.
Na- icon's 'Chess
Set . is.. On -View .•
Prag>re.--A remarkable set of
chess-
men which nearl y 'changed the course ,•-
Y
of history-••is•--to--be- shown -at- a• --Na
poleonic exhibition at Austerlitz, in
Gzeehosiovaki:.' '' • '
The Chessmen '.are ..hollow and 'con-
tain detailed
con-tain'detailed directions' for Napoleon's••
escape 'from "St. Helena.
Napoleon's friends' 'sentthem in .s,.
charge, of •a',Brititih' officer 'Who war
killed-bby': a fall lag- spar' during..a_atoxm ,.. _
.at sea on the way, so tleitt the ex -Ent- '
Peror never knew the sret contained
in the chess pieces 'with 'which'he was
playing. '
•After his death. the Empress Marie'
Louise attempted many .times to send-
these .chessmen as •a..sluvenir to
poleon's• son, the • Duke of. Reichstadt
(Restand's L'Aiglon); who bad been
b"rought'up at:the •Imperial Court in
Vienna in calculated ignorance of his
fatFer's place in history.
en at last a 'reliable 'messenger
was found he arrived in Vienna just
after ' L'Aiglon's death. The set -fin-;'
•
ally Passed intothe possession qt Priv
cess Paleologue who has .lent it to the
exhibition.:
•
1.
1 it .�.: t ,dti:. it }' ;o• s: •re, u;l•i
T'i'tle„u '
"Really? •1 asn't the ganie worth
the scandal?”,
Artificial eyes aro nowso �J)Lerfect "` "
that- the pupils yy_enact and..
dilate as the natural eye 'would.
"Oh, John," sobbed the young wife,
"I had baked a iovely, cake, "And I ,
-put. !t on the back pbrclr for the
frosting 'td (-obi, and the -d-d-dog
a=a-ate it." "Well, d'orff' cry about '
it, sweetheart," he consoled, patting
'the pretty flushed cheer:. "I know
•a teen, whoiwi•11 give us another deg." •
Po«erfax.'
The Cer,s.a..e Loser Ari tri �.triert?}foi'.
•e(
DO "(60 nue
HERE ALONE
HAVE YOU ,A
RADIO; WHAT
.1S YOUR LAUNDRY
MARK Do Yap
SAVE, S`11211.1G;
Now Do *MO
LIKE YouR
EGGS;
HY; Kitt; t MET YoU'
t�N ToP A TOTEM
PO-.: IN. SEATTLE;
Tttlts Alter BAD -
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SEAT oW ,A.
FLAGPOLE',)
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