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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1930-08-14, Page 6ii• • oreig ers ew Citizenship • Wt est Americawbora soon Berchaeil, of New York,, to Prince 'Henry ..1CXT1I. of Reuss; the former Mrs., Gifford A. Cochran, of New York, •. to Frinee•• • Chlodwig 'H,ohenxiohe-SChi1- liugfurst of Austria, and Princess Upt- ake', daughter of the late J. Emery. of New .'3i'orlt, to Crand Attics, 'Dmitri of Russia. '•, A. •subcommittee, of .the Parts ,Vassar alumnae group,• with headquarters at,. the Women's 'Unfyersity, Club here., has',a ,long secret list : of. Amexioan: botwomen' Married to foreigners who' are anxious to regain- the 'nation-" elity of • their birth brut' who do not•; wish to return • to : the • Vatted States Woni9111 paarrfed: to toreigne s . and 1iu- ing a1 odd ave joyfully hailed views .frost ' .Sht gton • that• the Cable act hatpeen.' so •atnendeti' that they will pie able wtihout much diiiicnity to re: gatp,..their Amer lean. c, itizenship Mrs. -O H •$. Beiinont president • of tree l .ational "Womett'S paTtk, whose daughter, Mrs... Jacques Balsaxi; ,horn,. eConsuelo Vanderbilt, fernier. Duchess, of Mariborough, is one of the outstarid- ir�g Aineriean ,heiresses 'married to .a Frenchman, said am meetly gratified This bill was , •iutrgd'itced in Cetng`iess by theNatiott.v 'every few years to re-establish their, al "Women's' party and; we have 'de- 'passports, assc� as necessary under the voted ,nearly .aayear to working for its • 1922' Gable paesage„ • , There are several titled naflies on;' .M0; .iacgties Bateau ; whose :mar the. list, according to its"vice-chair- riage to the Duke or Marlborough. Was man, the Countess of Lauzanne de Vou- annulled'by tb.e Roman Rota in 1925,, roussel,', orniei^ly;Ethel;•Maceenber, a is only one of the many Americantwo Vassar alumna. The eoitimit,ee chain- men of wealth :with, foreign husbands• Mauls Mrs. Maurice, Guinet Among international .marriages with- "To give out the names of women . n the last few` years are those of Vir- Whp have. manifested their interest in` ' i h ginfa• Willys, daughter ,of .John North.. re-establishing their American citizen- , 'Wdlys, Toledo automobile mannufac-1 ship would • bar ed,a shiof fai-uath; th tuner, to .Louis de ,Aguirre, scion of a countess ex,P Buenos .Ayres family; Countess Guy 1 ly many women communicated' With de Bourg de Boxas;'daughter of Joseph the committee for women's nationality Fuller • Feder,. ' of'. New York, , to, their rigi}ts without'the knowledge of their French inventor; the forinex Mrs. An- i .husbands:" Spain Overcoming Depression n Period Secretary of Trades Congress • , Guest` of. Torcintci Toronto.,-It—in, .not the first time 'Great Britain hae\beeiz forced to over - ,dome a•depression,sand,,as rn the pass the 1Viother Country will overcome • the usri:. Rumania Pensions Aged Journalists. Bucharest—The .newspaper rtten of Rumania• are to 'receive, old -age- pea lions,: .and when they retire from ac- tive w'ar`d are to live in. nicely furnish ed and, attractive . `:journalists'. ue- treats,`' according to a law 'whieh'has, just been -passed by: •the National As semb.ly here.. • given ' ".no tto b e re Il this rs .g, ,. all _.. u e O Ec 0 to them . as'. a gift;' pure and, sitnple.. They', are to help. build up a lun has 4 R Goad Crat4'~ Im orta ice cif Good Scoutmasters Emphasized b Lord 13aden-P well •-m s.1,ondon•---"Although I think that the the eonght s ofr matt fey these s right sort of man at the :heed el $ Asked about the i f04tliese , posts. ]Boy Scout movement is an afvantage,. 1 can. certainly say that it i.left,it to- •tweenlRove ,altldte Chief Scout kindred d morrow it woulci.•cai'ry on without organ 1 tier this was hie Scout air pause or, hitch,'; • Lord Baden-Powell that a t • yvt1 concerned. wa4,b Ce opera= told a newspaper correspn"nd'ent when as •Tot 1l. asked whether he foresaw a successor tiOn ~Guides weeneBo Ser ed, and Giri .' to himself in, the futtire or whether was es 18 a wayyenfe terently, at a. big matters .would be left -in the hands of t•alty of: smite .7000. Currey • Guides. at a commit • Guilford, On r"mpiie Day, when 12o(e1r • ',"We've got our- conned,• . •he 'added, "and every department is fitted oat were ans1Bskegf where maiith next• Jaiirb • «he with understucties..• so .that 'work is be itever.lteld.up if anyone happetts'to .be weir 19,33e 9srriid hed.wouldl muchd Otteto awahe , is said ithat"the have it tit Australia, bet he thought ,The ° lty o Stout. a the • of there would' he 'too many' diff laic eIties di;tiifficp1 Y •of getting eight' type 'id tire' wee:at present. .The matter Man as•:Scoutmaster was graddally be in$ ',solved now •that. the big, schools would be settled at.au international weie.;coming into the niovet:emit'. Lord ;3neting wlilch is ID 'be field' at scan= well .was very insirstent on.. deiSteg, iii• Switzerland this summer, • • Srcry�eatre• Handkerchief* •' New .'.Style English • Decree of Royalty` Stir Universal..Use Do you know why itandkerchtefs are usually'square? No? . itis because this. shape was :flied. by' royal deciee,•nand usage, .has per- petuated the forth. At one, time hand- kerchiefs. were of any shape that in- dividual' fancy dictated --round, ob• long, oval, or what not, One'da9 at Trianon, ' Marne .Antoinette bitppened to mention to Louis XVi,"'that she was tired of .these vardous' 'shapes.'' The king at Once decreed that `The length `of handkerchiefs .shall ' • equal - their. width throughout the kingdnn," thereby settling the matter for tire- years to come... • • •tiol.din . 24 -pound And did you know that lead 'it not !�Rrs. 'P. • 11'Vlorgan,, Sturgeon Point, 'Ont., 'is seen here g and been for the camel in A,rabta:tlte tar eon Lake, .recently. The tislt rs 47 inches:long a ani ht be. without. butter? The origin ge caught it{, S g g of butter has.' been , ••traced to • 't lk a gtrtli of nineteen inches, Marriage g . 1Canada's Planned t0 . �an i to eP a r N •• � Statistics Satisfying present era oE'ind . t at attd labor de ld' Pension Ct PeStS The Dominion Bureau ,of Statistics 1 �1LPIUL ]Ince pression, said Walter Cftritie; genera As the workers, school .teachc rades Union. fun$. r , � makes an announcement which should s t f the British T t Euro ” d b those countries deploy. h s' tendered a civic ors and � Th f' parasites to destroy in tl • marriage statts- Cetre dry o titate officials to most be envie 3l Congress, w o wa tries contribute from - err a use o Wing a decrease tn• to and rdigiier on his arrival .,peso conn .a sect life injurious to, t e ,forest or do _ ne weddings 'e atoll toward u 1-- iiarriage stet - p • monthly salaries :.or wanestics. cr J here• . '. .•-w,h;ch°they-•�dr• -agri-isis-' '7foplt'lar"'Sit rovnces of • Catia'da showed an u ,. in- ,' n fun ;—f-roze . P. ed a fni pensttt d minders ornrthofo hit •three per • Great $� erld,. trade. r'etaiu of need or after retirement, ject ' Acetas i+. S crease Of more than erg of wort ,trade thr�rugted, the; in cases re going gist for the Roosevelt over the month 'share �` he 'Rumanian •journalists a g g cent ,'period of depression, 'he -stated, and sot r ..ti red to -1'a3' mone3' ae because of. labors resiliency has-actlial- • to be eq ,, es cent r 'better than marry other na- a rainy day'. • .. • .w� ti fared or • tions. He. warned Canadian Labor 'Every real newspaper`�manhie4 acs l tion . of"" man,; in the country, whose . c leaders; however., that a sola the' problem facing Labor at the pre-, cupation is journalism • and who re- Must be found by Labor'in each ' delves .for: such work at least • 400 let, :bentand. who. is a member 'ion. or $25 county,- to..mee# its own condtt Past policies, he said,' could not be. ex: 1 o4 one of, the ,•authorizedr..Ruman a P to peeled to solire present probl'em's: • journalists ay-towtr4 then retirement . a bute regularly tows :1, fund, which will be .admrnisteredi con- Canadian on Canadian Supplies trolled. and supplemented by the'state. Leave. for Arctic •�'' , Ottawa.—Canada has.'again blazed: - the trail in the Arctic, by providing. a fully equipped miniature hospital ship for .use•: in -the Canadian Northland. ' The . ship, called- the Medico, is a 38• • foot cabin cruiser.type. At present it is on its way to• Aklavikk; Northwest • Territories, which will be its base of : operatto .s. Its operating base . will make the ltledico the Most ,northerly situated 'hospital ship in the world.• The ship will be. used to convey Pa- tients from .any` place that can • he lst the ho s rta a E to P boa b reachedy • Aklavik. Dr.J. A. `Urquhart, Govern- meat PbYsictan at Aklavilt, will be. in Wouldn't they give it to you`.'" charge of 'the ship's' operations. "That's what's the .matter. 'They The• :craft,• which was built in, Ede were so much more enthuslastic about mouton for the Northwest Territories it than •I was that I grew a little She, Ini 'for „ ' branch of the Department. of e3' ,. prvious. left Fort.Simpson, on the Mackenzie ' ;.—: River, bound for Alclavi,'receutty. Rig 'increase :Shown , ' ' In Plane' Freight World Needs alder. Men Paris --Records of Le Bourget air - ''Older men should never quit. The port just published for 1923 show )>sahetct oy vu world. needs their_ experience. , I pre- inearly a 1? -Enid increase n value of, , 'The water ' ler to have a good part of my eiriploy- goods imported, la France by plane. ceded and the caused the River strange. tra ge.phe 1 ms its volt Wild 'Life Sia of .bray:, _ the Oa•r• .tion New—York States College of Fors wince of Quebec' led with a gain ide , esti Syracuse University, discuss i Province e hundred and forty per Y. of rn this interesting problem in 'arecently The ..Maritime Provinces had a' gain published . bt`lilfetin '. on the 'summer (of shit --eight per ' cent.; ` Ontario birds • , of the Northern Adirondack : eighty-three per cent.; -the • Prairie Mountains ' I• Pr vi • Nal ... ni tv-lair nay • , .� t_ • Arabian' habit ,of, carrying sour ant f" w and in s en•�. O 'the a The or order , io in' skin bags across the desert. it n Most. m a d M ore than se ccs u en ' the c am els ca t '. ion oY t� h. 'tredmowith- . iswaYt g � • . ,the contents of the bags ,to turn to , English niay. be mispronounced out becoming unintelligible; as els ' bpt hat; r • ,<, reading wfhiessed by the large .number of :mu Tertne'een's. habit of ;c mu - from his is works for the entertainment' 'trial]- intelligible dialects' which' cul ted al - fro h l a s, r adv exist, The onl felsee.t of intends •a�..gue�ts ,was not. saw;, Y ^-'--^"""`"-"""`"•Zachrisson fully appreciated we well ktlgy'r. Car— .with English, Professor, t on him once,.for the urges, are incidental matters like ir- Tyle wof Ch ou the complexities of ' f Chelsea' could not endure to regular spelling _—•, ,_at.. .. listen e,o ne aloud, not the irregular verks, the shades even histo anyone }'earring son, meaningof such words as shall and even ; .friend ..• Alfred TeunY . Mary Gladstone (Mrs, Drew) notes fru will, and others 'of similar English hr. cter M y her dairy) an occasion when .she In 3t IesoinerPoi�itsil ave been remov, visiting the Tennysons during. whichiron & so that t noet read "Maud" to an assembled, 'ed, the`Sewlslrearexpert belie ee the new company. 1 anyone -can,' 1 heed ; kind. of English quickly_ and still be intelligible to persons' speaking Ode : - nary English.• A similar proposal to regularize English for use in ,Japan •instead of'Japanese was. considered many years ago by'the Japanese Gov-, ernmeut, but fell through )Because no expert was found .to' undertake the reg gularization. ' A new' kind. of English ,.intended' to re tle,ce• all other languages and to be7 come the universal speech :of the. 'civilir.ed world •hhs been invented, by Professor R. J. Zachrisson; well 'known philologist of the University oe_U'ps-' ale; in Sweden,; -who; is urging s. ad- vaufage's' iii • a series of ,, radio talks, broad'cast'from, Stockholm. English al- ready Possesses, Dr. Zachrisson, be; Heves., many of the necessary eharact - eristics„of an 'international' language. 'It has: adopted'. thousands - of word roots from other tongues; so that ,it, possesses ' words .for almost • every eossible shade of •meaning. Tl a grams • matical Structure of English is simple and •these are • no i'nsuperable diificul- •ties about such'm'atters as pronunela-', " ' ' a ' Brifsh Columbia sixty-two .poi cent. Insect - `. . t• ui most commonly in 'uncontrolled Even ,after allowing for •the��naturreasi, • numbers," says Dr. Saunders, not, la augmentation of "June brides, figu natural, forests, but on city shade trees t such as these should' go far to •.:conn and in agricultural areas where na teract the' dismal croakings' of the tura] conditions have .been destroyed , pessimist .who argue: that social stands that birds .cannot live there in nor-�,arde 'ire degenerating: as a •result. of so mal numbers. Destruction ,of natural• a growing disregard for the marriage•. (cover • decreases bird life but has .no state 'appreciable efect.On. the•abuudanee' of i ; . parasites, yet in such cases parasit•es A eritinos `Wall 'Study • seem unable'to hold their insect hosts in check.' I. believe 'that' birds are at least of etlual importance with . para- sites as 'destroyers of harmful inse4cts. and should be given equally. thought- ful and serious consideration; both by fanners and forresters . Alt kinds , oaf woodland insect forest, hav their bird 'enemies in a natural aa�c•cording to Dr, SauuderS, Nature in- t'ended'to :maintain a belance'between them, m It is only Where natural forest of - din that we c red 1 ' lie • a �• � are couditioits rely wholly on birds to keep,harmful fdsects in check. Iii Ner3splapers Only • t .rain -handling methods int .s i'heatres Cor. River i g York.—Th Fox , .Austrian New Yor . c't_-.,.. Backwards try. eastwards. through r...._� ___.__-- ...,..,.,,,n ri,;in. Henceforth ft , ."Aren''t you .taking a ;vacation this summer?" , • "Nee, , i �" nee for o ask o rdn t you D "yes Canada's Grain .Handling:' _Montreal—Two. hundred .members of the 'Agrarian Producers' Union of the. Argentine 'wiiLarrive at Victoria, B.C., on .September, 14 to eommehce 'a• tour . of, Canada, during' which the ''party will .study Canadian methods Of 'handling grain. The tour is -under the direction, of Luis J. Skinitzero, of- ficial representative of the Argentine cfa in G dna , •Chamber of Commerce 'who resides in Montreal. Mr.Skinitzero organized . the trip, and has received *groin the govern- ment the assurance' that Canada will. "We were forced' to take no ee of . such earthly," things as luncheon" She„la'men ts- . sem_ Missionary: "Are the natives .becom- ing civihzeda ”' ' Chief: '•C:t'iciirallY. Eighteen of, the chiefs playell a' game of baseball last ices were �r m tour P only •nd o r t a week we killed." FOX to Advertise - offer every --`facility for surveying . - tri court - Linz, Austriee-eThe, amazieg spec- 'Traveling 'They will come as., far ea$t as Mont- - teal whenee they will depert on. Octoe •Scientists Explode•• . .. Silky -Hair Myth. ' . •. The idea that wotuen's hair is soft- er and silkier. than Men's. will'.tiot stand the cold,- unromantic light 'of scientific investigation.. To discover rust What limits of hair size, -color •and other characters are shown by American white people, Miss Mildred Trotter, of Washington, University. 1n St. Louis,, measured 10 hairs from hairs cls Single 4 ind ivrdu 'each of 340 were found .to vary in thickness from one end tQ, the other arid. different • lieirs from the same head also vary. But when such variations are aver- aged ,and compared, Miss Trotter re- porta to the Wistar Institute Biblio- gra'phic 'Service' of Philadelphia, no difference at all is found between • the male and' female: groups. In- dividual men or individual.' women • ' May have; silky hair • or 'coarse, but Of :any rule .that women's haat usually is fine there_' is no trace. Itis true, however, that young girls tend .to lnai•e slightly thinner and finer hairs -then boys -of the sane age; probably because a Roy's hair'hegins to take on its +adult charactefistie, at a 11141e earlier age than happens with girlie, An incidental cliscbvery is that grey hairs tend to he larger than ether " , hairs from the same head which 'have • root yet turned' grey, perhaps because . larger hairs need more nutriment and thtis tend to, torn. grey first when the blood supply of the scalp begins to fail. will advertise nly in newspapers. Money. heretofore, used •on other terms of advertising will be used' for in - The reaSonie assigned, are superior werel • flexibility, ability tolnake last minute ees not young men. Men thirty- ve o• imports at , le . . sixty—and in Some. jobs eve!' older— valued at $140,000,000, compare are-, more desirable. Not- only :ere the 1923- figure of $8,430.009. Exports they' more dependable -thaw tha aver-. 'by air increased froth $11,960,000 to age .young fellow. but they.are able eo-, $13,500,000ein. value, . • set the younger ones aneeettinie and,' Inducted in. the linoorte wereheaVy, pass offstheir experienee to them.• gold. shipments, dogs, and •eloth from 'ell •the men over tittle got' out ,of the. 8nglapd, laces.and furs from BeigiuM, world, there would not :be enough ex- fresh cut' flower& paintings, and perience, left to run it."—Mr. Deur): strings for Musical instruments front Denmark 'to Discard Last Two Cruisers • "The only yeligion...known. new' chaeges• and digostien of it source in, tile_ lake, to statt flow g , MAPS' heats,. on the lehe and et tee, mouth of the river were- stranded. • ' the reader. 'Police Quiet Rioters' Moscow. nds Shoe. Graft .i. Ceseenhegene—Denmark, which owns 1 instituted a system, deeigned to cheek,: Niels Juel has decided 'to'. dispose ofl Shoes- in the .private market at pro- 1 , ahd the NielseNel, jeet returned ftom- .Children' will be provided with shoes. - a royal yisie to the, Iceland Jubilee, linen preeentation of their lereatil• prebeley will he soM to a foreign ' cards. Adults may •aurchase shoes at 1 pewee—Allem neve! officers believe.. I normal 'wises. in . government gimps i I anon presentation of special coupons.' sen. has cqinfirnicd recent reportS Of . lesued by the, house committee of the • ewspaper- Workers Struggle To 'Quench Blaze at Refuiio, Gas Welt Ft( • TeX: }Inman ingenuity was re ntly, against aeoweeing pillar of item, es wearv workmen struggled to. ri tench a efts Well, fire The safety of t 'e .business see - thin, was at stake and e-Six•inch pipe line was Under hurried tionetruction form the riVer ten miles away. ' The flarnes 'shooting 300 feet in The .air end Only, three bleekS. front. the 'centre of the •city, repeatedly threat- ened be fire letilldiags as shifting winds B'eattefed ..the blaze end beate",Re. tut& bas no city Water sure*, A wee Of earth, was huilt areend the .well and Water 'potened through the newlY, laid pipe into'the reservoir' to* release the stored• water •suddenly upon the well, hoping. the rush of A reqaest was sent to 'Teems. Then? I ten, Amarillo nitroliverlive *OW, Who has put out oil' !tree oVer Om • soutimegt,,, to untie and "shoot" the Turkish Village " Belgrade—In- Ingoslavia the 'haying toy Man who smokee muck is "he • orte Moslem 'eillage in south Serbia'. Which gives the seeing the lie. • l• priest) of the 'village of Male ilocha. in eolith. Serbiti preached in Ihe mos - flue and $Poke Of the harm done by tobaeee. aekertg the Peasants ,to give • t. up smoking. The latter obeyed him, Ovule theie "twee" •or word- of honer . ; that' they would not smoke atm more. Vnfther. they decided to boyeott any ' flue or their Uninher who elierild break 16 -talon in the casing; ' ' ' ' ,sizt 'Were killed and several ittlitred. mere than a month and was ignited , • Old Aitierican Plate • Brings High, Prices AuctiOn Boom reeentl•y. plain , saucepan, made in 1720, weighing , about 10 ounto, brought '240 guinea4 a bottle in My hed toalght, MEOW', Nary:. "Yes, sfr, Irish or 8cotele