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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-07-24, Page 6ftMV ndbtl --v The ,London- S Oety tole the Stud. of Inebrieti►' recently heard " >troni•• ,Dr .We K, �ilTilds, -its medical. auperditerndentt .ot . a new use for in •eulin� the subetaae develope d .--telt', ,diabetes • treatments by Pr. 'F. G. Ranting of Toronto, and .his 'c�oilabora- nelliipr'.;eald ,Dr. Wills, was 'highly • , valtiablY ' .in" the itreatment of deUri'- nm treenens and. ..was used lathe same `ay iie.the-ease -pt. diabetes. The' mealeal , superintendent found s in London • 41"eT;'•a"declining .owing largely to the. high cost, of spirits ,and .the, con eequent. • power coustimptien • by the. pniilc. .• • .• Insulin hes not ~been used', in treaty a x ing deiiriaim' :tremens.'in Canada, To- r -onto' doctors Meted: it was diff Cult •to imagine ' any scient-MRc. basis •for such treatment; they said; 'As a' means of • restoring .appetite .and getting the patient tee resume eat. '.clog, It -migl t:Ye•--at- •soMe-e eat h0- declared. elg111 Now, Joins he - Great Powers.. In Less • Than 12 ''Years Bel, gium Has', ;ladCome plate:`Comeback Belgiutn is .celebrating her one .hu Bushmen Rush. Johnso>r>, Plane $ritis'h Aitwoma';lt Describes Strange : Adventure Earn -6'11S Jelin Brisbane, •Queensland -Australians dred:'.y'.ears,+of 'independence by exhib:f- • • tions of industry, ' art ;and. science. Wiiat .king ',Albert At the. , Antwerp Exposition described: as •"the deter- mined' and ,iitt'elligent: labor of 'the :. Belgian, 'people" has wrought a , re- covery from wear, which is • manifested in 'the• rebuildide 'of towns.,' improved Highw'a'ys,. better $'tan"dark of ldving., • The fiscal. system .had to be recast: There werecrises in Belgian finance • in 1:919, 1920. and 1926.. , •But such' were',the 'energy •and•. tenacity' of the people that all obstructions': were ceared •away. A visitor to Belgium to -day ,is impressed • by,' the . scale o • "the great.,'nationai.festivities 'which In 'less than.: twelve' years, the 'Be: glans' have been able to organize." Thirty 'nations are represented a the 'Antwerp Colonial and Maritime • Exposition,tmainly ,industrial and OM mercial. 13ut it :finds space ter ,.a •reconstruc ion 'of ' old Flemisli and Walloon houses,�"shops.' 'and- cafes of one, hundred 'Years 'ago •'''with their occu ants' an kee ers the §tume p d p ... in he co of the.time:" . It is to Liege that one • Must gb to see the largest exhibit of arts -and •erafts in the Palace of Fine 'Arts and the` Palace of .'Glass and Ceramics.. There' also is an {.,electricity pavilion in which the uses of iighting••and power"on the •farths and in 'rural. districts as well as in 'Y "I began with the prayers. of my do not ceease to Marvel .at the rnemor- •ab'le feat ,ef Miss' Amy Johnson, the young, English ,airwoman, in forging leer way alone •from Croydon, Eng., to Australia: : Details of • the. he •i flstill form • h leading ht s fo m t e•. toPi •.Of P g conversation. Among the thrilling` adventres en-' countered :by :Miss Johnson is one 'that has received• fess attepition . than' it. deserves. .` It was at . Timor,.' a Iarge volcanic' island' of the Malaya>;. archipelago, „ where she decided .t0 • make a night landing. • No soone,.r' had she • corn3 •to earth, f as she .told .the. people of Brisbane, , than :she, saw a company of 'black" 1 men .come 'running out 'from little .,Buts •near 'by,• ; brand'ishing knives. lint?n , ,�... il�3d fl,� • .r-i--•� .iii!. VAT /lemma Covers Territory By' blanc -Flown 90,000 Miles • Hattiesburg, Miss. -Joseph`` John - sten, -a sky -riding 'commercial travel.' • ler, who is home when he drops down from the clouds at Hattiesburg" has. travelled more than 90,000 miles •by:j air on business :for a Cincinnati house and is. completely "sold" on the ideas Like a majority.' of travelling sales- men, "Sky -man" :Johnston pays his. .own .expenses i.nd with the price of airplaries being' reduced he ,deelares it •ese-yrngep'eepositionete-travel~by-ai e „ , much larger territory can be cov efed... he says =and the more territory a salesman covers., the more clients he Meets, and the more "john Hata cocks" he gets signed on the dotted dine• on; •his order' blank's: • • ana,,Lda 8 -Airways National: Asset? ue to Geographical Position Airways Are of Special 1 Importance New.lFrench liner '.S.8.' L'Atlantique a's it was' launched at St.. Nazaire,' • Canada's geographical position will Prelate, recently.' .I2 is of 40,000 tons and ,destined for service bets een make her one of the most', important France'and .South . America. ^ • units in Empire and world tralnsporta- • tion.• This fortunate ,position Is a • •' *. result of the -curvature. of, the world's Panama Hats Mades t tussis Cry#ic�zes surface. air rote as lop Long u s, g sea routes ,are outalong tea • • t laid 1 ''Great Of 'Pine Leaves. " ' " ". AmericanMethods Circles, Great Circle' is the nevi- .• • gator.'s. name for ,the shortest distance Weaving -is-- Done.• :Entirely Under Water and''Often r Tikes Six; Month's Time 'Contrary to a .popular belief "Pan- t sword's and. spears • ., ams" !lets are not made in Paeama, • As soon as they came up to the. - plane and oberverb its only'•oceupant,, they stopped undecided. At" last she. eard them say .one word+ -Pastor. heir attitude 'suddenly•changed She pine• •sometimes called the yipijeph;•a. essed' it was se mission plant common in the 'tropics After i ne o'f`ffiem 'she sa ii `to iii h-I , ok y special treatmen : to remove the soft a d 'and l'ed', me: over miles of Count part of the •i i'a a 'leaf the fibre is' s' try to: the church., The Pastor was; "s J e i p ,.soaked t4 r»ake'it•,pliable.. The weavel -the You-':may•i=magine':my..-relief .i•n of enu:ine .Panamas-is -done e - , � � g g n to ee him.". I tirely.under water' "some'times're uir- ' , q ' Miss Johnson •atributes her`' success• ing six months to coinplete ahat, mainly to her relieece'on 'divine pro- Fine quality Pandmac; ..cost, any - says "The Pathfinder." Genuine Pah- •ama hats are made of the young, un-` expanded leaves •of the stemless screw•.; wish toh,,, a Panama today you don't Moscow=The-CommPsaar ^of—Agi'--f between two', points-.'on;•-khe_earth,'s- culture; ' Y, Ah -Yakovleff, ad'dressi'ng suttface. the Cothmunis•t.'Party C:on';rress' paint An oexaitiination or a world globe' ell an optimistic picture oP •'the sue- 'will' $clow ..,.that the shortest .route cesses •aiid.•future• prospects .of collect : from: V tive farming..•' • 'Ile ,declared • that. col-, (a) ,• Vi estern ' Europe to., Japan leetive farms which 'now,.occupy 90; Chiiia 'and .''the "Far East' is across , 600,000 acres will provide hadf"ti a sur Canada, ' • pl•tis grain of the coun'tr'y.• this 'year.' lb) United States 'to Northern `and' ate, asserted '.'that the ,mere co -opera. We5)i) Il, Europe is over the Eastern tion of the former petty holdings part of Canada,• ' ' yielded an increase' of labor 'product•. ' (c): Ugited States. to:, Asia and the tivity of d3 per . cent•..apart frown ad.' , Far East is 'aver thea' e. tern part .of meati-taxas-•—w -i'c•b ;-conte, trent—the i• t --tea••- ' e •otuna. P r cr -' .ace nt of '.a'.nada's .. ea'eC.i ou C . n d use of tractor.';.. lie that 70,OQo tractors now iiln.etioning geographical position anti splendid in Russia are' used b '.flyin' , c1F.mate, our airways ;.are of ,more than'' th ., g same number wodid be in America tae=+ very' special i•mportanee'•and carr—he's • (apse flit v are 'comanally: net in- ..made •one of our greatest ,. nati.orial. ri'is idua,'y, oH:ned. a i • assets.' Mr. Y•akovleff gave a:•gloPiliy de- - ' ... set i tion of 'ip • the state of agricnl'are cities are shown. Many of the build-!Peaple;";said Miss'Johnseu,,"and eachha= a to t' in America/saying: ",lrnel:iea .is civ-. Pennies Regulate ' • v ,pay hat much for it. .This' is sings architecturally impressive, stand', days as I hopped off; I asked a bless- because there.•are so many imitations 'ing through •a sev c!iais. clot only; Famous Old Clock along the Meuse River and. close' to ing on. my trip.. now. In fact there are so man i' i u are m _' in industry. but' also in a-rrc a it= th• military' parader, ` ' "R'hep 1 Was crossing the,Jawa Seayr .11 y. The. situation of the Ainerican farmer Do yrou''know• how .131.1 lien keeps. e aground: i , tations and such good ones; tab itis tlme? • Iii Brussels and '.'also at 14Ions,. the i was in the midst of radns.torms•and truI hari:.'to•distip u'c-is sery.rtiffl ult.,• Taxes'on'farni nee; i q t_h a.,real. Pan APparelitly, this famous clock, like' city that figured so tragically in the, '.cauid find ne opening.' I could not ama from an imitation• arty have grown.' two and a ,hal•f es ma •-' - flyingtimes, the indebtedness of:. fanners the canes in our ow'n, hem Y inveSionma hats come from t 1'ttI f ' isf th c r ;et pictures; that at Brussels being•the,•close to. the water•and did not know finest collection of, Belgian paintings,' at what ''moment I mightstrike. ft. ' ever assembled.' At Mons are G iefly. WhenI felt it impossible to go in any ' direction, I guttered a prayer. I was seen ,e�Camples of th Walloon painters,' ' i. Other cities and towns :have their at=, flying round and round, when a. break ' tractions, illustrating ne hundred in the clouds occurred, and I' saw a years , of Belgian irides ry and art, double rainbow 'around me. .. It was ' The pageants are of .notable distinct I a happy • manifestation." • ',tion. 4 The festival goes' onhie; the I Autumn. Tourists may; se. whether :King Albert *as right when lie said that Belgium had raised herself. "in .the economic sphere to a place with the' great Powers Peer Gets No Bids , • • For Scottish Acres Glasgow, Scotland=Some' of the bonny_ banks of Loch' Lomond are go- - • ing 'a -begging. The Governinmet does not want them, p!eferring Il'o' have 'the cash and the private offers of 'prospective' customers•'have seemed to the owner, the. Duke of Montrose, much too low." He: did not receive a single bid' at' a recent 1iublic auction for 2,5,000' acres of sbme of the most .!emus'. land in Scotland, including ,;the- his -1 toric, isles: in Loch Lomond. • It was• his_ idea ,first to. give the' Government acreageof value' eoaiva-1 [Youth:. Conquers': • .• .. And Age Serves? 1 i A twenty-six-year-old girl flies alone to .Aust'ralia; bon Bradman, slightly l, younger; hits 'up record crickei: scores; Lindbergh ffew,the Atlantic at the age of 'twenty-five• T.hiz • i,s the age of youth, people .tell us. To which the • proper 'answer rte' "It always has. been." Here. isproof Nelson was in coalman ' -at twenty three; l'hpoleon won famous battle( at twenty-four-;• Stanley and Livin- stene 4ere exploring.Africa.at twenty- .five'.a id twenty, -seven respectively. ' When he was only • twenty-three, lames Watt was ' 'experimenting on steam as a motive force• and anotherscientist, Edison; was'-perfecting.coni munication systems at a year older.. In music,, Wagner had .composed. :hie first symphony.at ,nineteen. '. As a counterblast to,the latest'bioom in. youth, a company :Who run a chain of petrol stations' in A4lmsrica. employ only men over forty! ' Most of the men, who opera- tiie stations. are over sixty. They are more -careful; 'have more pride in their work, And are more reliable than • younger mete say their em,•liloyers.—Answers: a .y Britain Extends • • ' a • Widows' Pensions London. --The deririand, "Widow's ,pension, please," was , Beard recently in nearly every pest nffice'in Britain where -grants 'of 10 'shill'ings (•$2:50) week!y were paid out for the first time to 120,000• Women whose hu bands • passed on' prior to .Jan. 4• iitl2 '. ' Widows now for 'the first the re- ceiving this ;pensif n• are, 'all between - f,0 arid' 70 years. e'ir leg bands must have either' subscribed' to the. state ir=uran"e scheme, 4'r h'eiri•nge l to one. cif the •clnssttis .r'if workers eligible•. to ' >u1,'eribe if they pissed on h•'fore the sy.;tem was instituted. .Wid",ws be- tw•ee•n f)5 .and c,0 will 1.2iran .to; dr,'aw pen0ion er.,xt January. , • lent to the prospective' duties,' but the Government refused the offer. • ,Summer Precautions ' Begin the day right by eati'n'g' a sub- •stantial breakfast. At noon it will be '•too • warm , to eat heartily and at . night you may be too tired to eat. -Eat, .drink, work and sleepryin mad- ' i:'ratton if You- would keep •,well• dur- ing the heated 'term. • Avoid burdensome clothing, heavy • hat§ and tight sjroes. These retard the circulation and add considerably 40' the, 'genera: dischmfirt et . hat • weather.. • f Protect 'tfie baby's eyes from the 'direct sunlight and i card the • child from fliers—twa very necessiiry health end eemfort 'prerau.tir,ns, Do We eatlarge meals and get y2ur prat , ary p, o e ins largely in the milk • and chew;' e.1i-•c;•,1ly r•ottago chreeee, `f V ?iagc,rs', Secret • - Of Long.L ife Told }'',r'r,= •^' l: G a 'c•i;leee'who're the . r•.' 1 •f','k' i'1 f',01.(11:; ilrat iY their '1•2,.. 'rr r. t, .%tllr (' "1_'1111"1•,t114':. wrl,tlll n i . 1'/ ?t• i; , r •,a•h'':- .]'lam -"ell i• the. 1,i 3''r' tl it r•r'e: i,�,pi+'.' flvh$i.,i a: -Nd hug'. 1• 'taa r,nly' 499 , 1:;'if,'i{i'Lii'1,'<., b'1 stir .' cur•;.,,.Ic, sixty old. • eve i,r°4• Sr,Y{rtes. c:.', ,' a r utlr :v 11 .a rrr4) ? "r r r,tis 1. ens' a icy tg{e . i1 •.Tagr*rs riv". =:o io:i r. ''i"h-y. ail believe in "addling 'thr'ir own ori. Vii' as long as they can, anal .;,1"ny of V rkohlr* Deriding end li ,r 1 - nthf1 { , ovr;u keep them h0•91lhy ;"•,'ri .wi++' if 11,1'i•,,. ;cpvatthy. : . "I';arly to tier], aarigt to. rise,' -i t11 .'t•' ' Motto: • Frenchman' Undefeated Starts New Mile.long g Tube Havena.--Pref. : Georges Ciaud ,� French, natural scix:ntist' whose mile, gra' ;•feel lube for experimenting with (:,,:f:Str+•am ater for electrical Pro- duction was destroyed reeentlt;, said tha, a syndicate of 1,000 A.merican:s, French' and Cubans' will undefwritc 'grouser ,tub for 81,000,000.. Pr,fr, t f aude resumed his ''ex- .. i, i i.i,s t rr 1 although twice dill " r .:c' .1 ':11' n h'e seerned at the door• Sfakink first saccpssfirl i>ItrrrP yat tt rox�*r 1' 1 ire "Long Isl n'd, stne2' Elie deatdt-fall frf F3udd 'd3tits ,tti'. r r,t .,u^e . a Bomar ia.seen herewith his' ebuto parts) open. 1 '� ' h" eyE ' the hands' of native weavers' in South and ,Central America, •chiefly Ecuador. Peru and ''Colombia. They are .cwlled Panamas because when'they. were first exported • shine .300 .years ago ,.they passed over the 'sthmus of.Panama. ' .The first Panama hat is said..to have Negri .made in 1629 by''an Ecu.a= dorian, Francisco Delgado. • has feenio•Mly increased two'ift'i et 'gale imes ail farm •have ihslifficient. ,b'ld Intl :reef time, but is,: is never More than must rent'•more from big; owners, about a second out—a' truly remark - America le famous for the' tln:ndanee.' fable record' for a tower clock••which of its machines, hut in' whozo..hands is going all the time, The Astronomer Royal revealed the are 'those' machines? Friur•fi "tlis of . • .. , -tmerican .fares are' with(,:' •tract other day' lrow' this fine. record. is tors," maintained: - There is a tray, about half-v:ay down the pendulum, and It the clock is losing' slirahtly a half: Flier Soars penny or. penny •is placed on this tray. TO.Record- 1`IeiP'ht., The effect is that the pendulum vi - I Broad lhoulders orates a little more quickly, and so t1 a i brought gradually back Back flying 90 h 'San Diego, .Cal' -Ruin Aleycandei Barling cin St le a, 90 -horse -power ar ing mono- Yto the correct time. i clocks : plane •recentty soared to a 'height f feet, The former teemed made end narrow hips 'are to he the fallaaigdn'g. a halfpenny , or penny is re Miss Alexander about six Months moved from` the,,trayeand in :this way i na $$eels ton o of ing n.. the pen,tulum is slightly slowed' Designers; in' conventiott 'here recent "' down.—Answers. , ' ' Two-hookers,..ivo looker§,,two ile n - Baltimore Md.—Broad shoulders 20,000 ° on the osier hand, .if 131g Ben is contribution - to American 'men, 'the, syn was 1)•000 feet Internatin l A ti f Cl h g ly decid Pads and clever tailoring the delegates said, would -be used to' `hangers, foar meander • and one switch Lail•. A cow. • assist nature, to' prod-uce the figure • , • • 'desired by men:..'tart.--- Announcing theforecast of styles, Tliere • are baseail fans who, won't the designers said, "Breadth 'of chest• ire satisfi•eri that Babe:Ruth is earning and .blade and slenderness of .the that $80,000. salary until he hits' one necktie 'playing golf with lord Lon - waist and io,w'er part of thecoat will ,to the flew planet:, dondei•i•y, Lord Castlereagh and Cali:, be the 'silhouette 'desired." `` °fes Aird here'reccnlly.. While the Prin.e i Fur are, being dyedpraclicaily any ;laid' "It doesn't matter really;" • he High 'lights of the fore^ast include the information the mods:,Ii .trouser' color, so that fashi.on,able,}c;ot.�,en may 'hopes it'will'be sound. this' fall will he 20'dnciies around,'the; now have a special fur 'to 'sear with The, Prince.torik off .his hist and tib cuff and Will rise h•ighar at the Vise! i ever, `gowne s,T and handed ` them to his caddie, `A.n An - because vests are• to be shorter, with :draw's" but' near the end, of the round ]ower. openings, metbilirii' to rather', women who fall I victims 'to the :Andrews could not .find them. long ' points and five' buttons, • Sack ; cigarette habit are' stated to be.he'tvier, . • Scores of , persons.'joined in• an pre coat sleeves will be slender• and smokers' than men; :many of them •yucca-s£ul 'Search heGire the Prince rather tapering. consume up •ttr 200 cigarettes a weetk. ewas a}vaie of his loss, ' T• .Prince, Loses Eat and. Tie?' • West+•Itartlepool, Eng.—Th-' Prince 6f, Wales lost a panama hat and a 1 Daring. Feat Successful • •�/ter , • 4 +VE •h • Mr. Johnston travels the entire South, excepting Virgiflia, !nu' tincts the, airplane peculiarly adapted to'.hist field. Ile says: "In•the South, where une can''t. rush customers and', whene.l. they will keep you past train time ,to entertain you, the air'Ilane pays," ', The Hattiesburg "sky=drummer"" was attracted to flight'during his war • 'service, ' b corning aviation instructor te. heLP--ext•aaeolaenaveln-trAining—eta- tion. He" nnarke 1- how . government • offielal:s, particularly army mem al most neyer.go by rail and .two years' go procured a plane o£ his oval, hnd ata'rted to lase it regularly over' Ill?! ; circuit. Sir Thomas Llsiox z lsi Lauded by :Prince • • Thie luncheon' tendered' Sir Thomas - ' ' Li'p'ton by• the Master Mariners' 'Cont- party. Ip Fishmonger Hall, London; be fore he •salted :his. new' challenger, Sh'anirock' V. to ,Gosport • •to 'b'e. •out- fitted for her .trip across• the ,A:tlantic, was: a unique••eveiit. in British sport- ing• annals: .The. Prince of Wales Is president. •of: the Master Mariners, ..: and his tribute to Sir•Thomas, will be endorsed by sportsmen : • the•'' world over. It. is his• pluck we most 'ad- mire, said • the Prince;, and the great .• audience 'cheered•'h•im to The echo:; iTe• hadeprevions'ly-sald -that-_"in•-the•: _ : preselrce'• of 'the' ,American Arn'bassa- dor," he believed it. would be as pop- . • udar• a'victory' in'th United Sat As • in .England if, at°•t e• age of eighty b.. years, .Sir Thomas. • should 'bring back • to England the cup won' by 'America when he was one year old;. , Alphas, seder Dawes, not to' be• outdone 'in• sporting'geiierosity immediately arose, . asked permission; to make,a speech, and., gracefully 'end•orsed' , what the . . Prince had said, A ' chorus•:'af ale ,., pro. 1-has-..conie..fro:m tlineAmeriean press. • It. is the 'spirit of persistence; the' "never -say -die" spirit, the dogged c_our= age that 1c�rows no each word as "de- feat," .that 'spo''rt-loving .people ;eve0. where admire so' rituch, in` Sir .Thomas'. Whether he wine' the famous cup or. not on •his fifth• attempt,' he will have ' done -something ot, lnin•i•tely, greater •importan.ce,-he will have made one,' . more move' towards strengthening "t1 e mutual. faith. of Britain and Amerida in'a sport -praised by 'those bestq.uall•:' fled to judge on both • sides of the • Atlaiiitic, and' that :has, been main• twined unstained 'because 'it ,has never. been eoiiimercdaiized. • � , ' Red for -Danger. . :Sturphy.had abtalned a job as por- ter :to a little' country railway station. , "Com'e with me and .I'll show • you round," said the statiOnmaster. Murpliy . ollowed,'and after he had • been shown where everythi'n-g was kept the stationmaster told hlni' , to' fill' the lamps in the signals.. Five minutes. later the stationnias- ter again visited the oil -shed ,to see how his new :assistant .was getting on, and, was, surprisedto'find, the new hand• eniptying little drops of oil out of, a' can oil the floor: • • • "G od ' redoes.. inan," 'he cried, • '.what ever are you doing?" furptiy shook 'his. bead • sheepishly: I'm looking for the red oil for' the dangersighals," Iie'replied.—Answers. .. i '.HEROISM- •• ' , /"Heroism," '$alit a great preacher, i "is nothing; but a•'s ark'kindler. i'a -the 1 P i �. household, carried outside, and blown into '.flame. A thing that a mother does • 'every' .day of her .life nobody celebrates,'• hut, let her do 'it before• an iring c,rotsd, and she is dy'mole." The virtue is in the spark, if it be necessary to do a noble deed before the world so that its publicity blows ' it into flame, all honor to the spark that 'is living ready'. for. then public • deed., But, if it be necessary, to do the •noble deed in the secret corner of the hahie,'aoli hanor'to the spark that is living ready for the private .deed in which the world sees no Sterol:lin. TOO SLOW. • • The•kind'old gentleman was paC the gates of a'prison 'When a p Men who had ,obviously' just h teased. appeared through a small. Approaching one of the men the •old gentleman said kindly:. , "Atm • why• were you ih, prison, my man?„ "F'or driving.a eat. too slowly." • "Too 'slowly;' echoed the gnestianee1 ` in ama�s'ment, "surety you. mean too fast'''•' —Novi don't:' was the tardy. "I mean too slowly. The owner caught illi With me,°' , Some• men telie've in luck because' they never have any. • "Great books are •not ',Written by rule, theyre written by Men of e;.aniti9,"--J Tiies'1'iratir'h Gahan.- "1"ere is-ort'e' thing; better titan tl< gift fpr figures and that .M •svottiaridyl common sense." Tardy Astor. truth is irnper'rsli.a'ble. arid int-, Mortar and, needs no Milian Agency .to,' ,s'upport T''ieid Malone. 're+lt •refunds, may ire- on the square,, city' but • Why are the big fellows the only • one dumb enough to make such Mis,4 takes ill •their. tax ioturnart it