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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1941-09-25, Page 3• ys Germans Plant Acoustic Mires Churchill Reveals' New Mine Menace Overcome bygScience and Hard Work • The British Government kept secret for more than a year '.its knowledge that • G•erman planes were playing acoustic mines in the waters around'Britain, to prevent the Nazis from knowing -the Royal ,Navy had found an effective ans- wer. . Prime •Minister 'Churchill broke the secret :when he told' the House ,of Commons the mine problem had been "largely mastered." . He 'said that mines, "with oil . tli.eir, ingen- ious• variations," ,wase- being ..laid nightly in . British :waters b,y: 3Q t9 40. . Nazi planes. ° The. acoustic : mikes are saki to be touched •off by sound • waves from the :propellers ;.of passing.. ships, ,but ,exactly how they • have been. toaster is a. secret: ..A.hint-of how-ef-feetiwe•-the-ne .mines• were at first was given in an article by .the naval corres- pondent of 'the Daily Herald, He_ deo-bared- thre guetic mine • had.• been mastered but' said that ' "every day 'of •.the week ships were blowing up from , no apparent cause around our coasts." Stating that scientists had de- cided the 'explosions must have been caused by an acoustic mime;, the col respondent wrote: "Ordinary.• .'sweeping methods were useless apd hopeless, 'so dare- :dovil5" of" th'e"N'aitT' VoTunteei ed'"tia combat it. They ,well knew 'they : Might die in the. process, ` • , . 'rhe..y vier the pioneers -There wasno shortage of :volunteers:ail the days we it by. Later, by fur-. ther• tests, • scientists discovered . then.titl-ste:'o- Hirohito Takes Over Jap, Army Y FIF WEFA au G In a drastic move to surmount the crisis facing. Japan, Emperor Hirohito, ' above, took' '•command of the army, his direct rule super- seding previous General Staff control ' . Scotch Thrift - Scores Again Factory , Dust, Helps Solve Serious Shortage in Nickel Fifty thousand pounds of factory dust saved by a Scotchinan has helped solve a serious shortage in. nicker,,!' vital 'essential of ,the de- fence program, Enough Bickel has beets recover- ed from the 'dust to supply 20 -per- ...emit of...tile need s'at.the .Gee .eral Electric plant in West Lynn, Masd., .for the manufacture of tiny" mag- nets in -electrical meters in air-. planes and other instruments. . • These .inagnet.s are the smallest and most itowei'ful in the world. When°the Magnets are• ground, the grindings form a black, sboty- looking dust,, partly grinditig. ma- terial, partly nickel and other met-. abs. It is swept out and • pdifred into barrels. It has been going to the scrap ,pile; in charge...of Charley Stevens. Believing the metal In this dust ought to firing a price from. some sprap• dealer, Stevens hoarded the • soot, until he had 50,000 pounds • piled aft, but. no customers, ' A few months ago, Jack Sinver, a metallurgist of the General Elec. ti'ic Company, decided he' could recover the nickel in the dust. Ills chef, 'Jimmy .Goss, obtained itn a.ppropiiation of stoop to com- plete the experiments. They work- ed, and the dust was 'used as a snooty for an important `fraction. of the precious nickel. Now, in- stead.of going to the scrap, all the 'picket. dust goes„ to the foundry. THE DECLINE OF WALKING In Exigland, as in .Ireland and Scotland; walking is a tradition, has not been, checked by the motor car. People think nothing of walking twenty or thirty miles a day The 'late Lord Tweedsmuir - once" told us that he had walked 75 miles in a single .day; a feat which., almost incredible to. Cana- .. diens, was by no .means extraor- dinary for the Old Country. in his "Prophets, Priests and Kings," • Mr. A. G. Gardiner -told how the late Lord .Greyhad once walked'. 25 miles in a driving rain_. across the moor to cover a bird's nest ,fr fl- the, 'Acorn., ' Andthen, of course, .there are thesetales of ' -thedelights of Walking by writ- ers like Hilaire Peiloc. All 'of 'us might be better ifthe habit of walking- should •• come back `to us; better in healfh and strength, and better in our 'souls because of more love and know- 1.edge._of _ the.beai ties_ of -the- coup=_ tryside, True, many of. 'us '.sub stitute golf for walking—but who ever. heard .of a golfer stopping on the fairways to admire..a tree'' Or a bird; or seeing_ anything of the good earth but his bad lies,? Ottawa Journal. _o, --- a NOT, PUSHOVERS ' The secretary of state for Scot- Aa'iid . ,h ..:.�tl��—that,,-.� r. • as- l3 tam s.-,.: g l school' bool4s be purged' of refer- ences which belittle .Britain's al- lies. We might also " stop belitt- ling the -enemy.. The, enemy, is tough, shrewd, unscrupulous, well , equipped, determined and capable. The -sooner 'we ' Tea:liz this --and- set . to . work to beat just that type of enemy' the soonerwill. we be within sight of victory. . All too much is heard of the stupidity of: Nazi soldiers, of the "inevitable" collapse of German morale; .of-G-errnnny's iae'k of pptl, food, rubber and clothing. It has " been . indisputably- proven. • that just before the Nazi 'blitzkrieg into France" Nazi fifth columnists: spread word among French peas- ants that the German army was . dying of undernourishment. And then, carne the German army. This enemy is no fool • Ottawa Journal.: PLEASANT ADVICE : A lessen ,that .•small." boys have been trying; to--itiipress; uipen their-. ni e i ttikf 'a is • eu fi 2ctlisn .-";ondon msdiea- ' i thi rity. He tiniarns-agailist theht'aFsrt f getting out of ';bed suddenly. in the morn- ings. ' 'He ,advises: "Lie awake at least five minutes before arising. Stretch' every Blob, and a few minutes; spent in reading is ex-'. cellent. . ' . Occasionally . a health speeial- ist prescribes ' something that can be performed with pleas Guelph . Mercury DRINK "HOME" STUFF Apple and tomato juices wi11 be available in quantity: for ' Can adians this Winter. This should lessen the need for imported cit- rus fruits and thus conserve ex- change, while putting the money into the pockets of Canadian' pro ducers who have lost 'their over- seas markets. ' Brantford' Expositor • CARELESS SMOKERS So a tossed -away cigarette end hardly ever starts a fire, eh? That's what you think!. A state- ment released by the Canadian Underwriters' Association de-, Oakes that , the, carelessness 'of smokerswas responsible for by far the" gest percentage of the 46,62 fires which destroyed pro- perty worth $22,735,264 in 1940. —Brantford Expositor —0 - QUEEN GIVES TONE Nice comment from a para- grapher in The New York Sun, to the effect that Queen Eliza - '.beth, at 41, is equalled by few women for charm with less fix- ing up, and every time Her Majes- ty' appears -lin a nevus reel,' it lifts the whole program —St: Catharines Standard LI1ICHPlN DEFINED Prime Minister Churchill, with his usual. gift of expression, has called Canada "the linchpin of . the English-speaking world." A linchpin is the in passed through the axle -end to keep the wheel on,' aa-Vrahtford Expossiter —o` VOLUNTARY GIVING 0 only 'the Germahs had a sense of humor. • They gravely annoounce that the Winter relief •drife will open earlier this year; • with : "voluntary" contributions being withheld front salaries' and wages. —Windsor Star TROUBLE TALKERS' Ii` seine people didn't have trouble,, they'd.. have a'• hard time •carrying on 'a conversation. Average cost of the i' iron and steerin.an 'autei iobile te the man- ufacturer is 'three cents a pound. Y+. Seine from Newest German "Horror" Fihn Release. by British • ,Nazi_ movie.:camelramen.. who_..taok .this•.picture '91. German.:infantrymen racing past blazing- ruins -of- a. Soviet• town intended that the finished film,, called "War in the East'''. would be shown in the Reich • to boost home morale. 'Instead, the film, which previews •.a Nazi "victory,."' over Russians; fell into''Brit- ' ish hands, is now being shown in' Britain as "a masterpiece. of the Nazis' glorification of brutality." THE ,W A R WE EK—commentary on Current Events . Roosevelt Answers Hitler's Threat S�.tz r her en I� de � �usag d �,H1 o s- � d "Whoever believes. he will be abbe to help,.England must. defin� itely- know; one. thing:. Every.ship, whether with or without a convoy, that comes before our torpedo ''tu. a wflr .e orpe.oe "No act of violence will keep us the. occasion of the 8th .anniversary of the: Nazi accession to power last. January,. •- No act •of violence will keep us from "maintaining intapt two but. *arks brirefense:- First ,our line of supply, to,•the enemies'of Hitler, and, second, 'the freedom of our '• shipping 'on the high' seas. From now on, if German or Italian ves- sels of war"eater the waters the protection of which' is necessary for American defense, they .do so at, their own peril." ' . So said President° Roosevelt on the occasion o8 hie' last radio ad - dress; an occasion. which had arisen from attacks on American -ships at . sea. • Mier. -Roos yeltroy in h3rerapreeem. ii kt . :,L .gzi ,4i0za tit said - • "Thede actsai;internatlenal lain- lertsness are a manifestation of 'F * * the Nazi design' to -abolish the free- dom of the seas and to acquire ab- solute control * *' * Ofthose seas. * • * For with control of the' seas * * * the way can become obviously. clear for their next step, domina- tion of. the United States, domina- tion of the Western. Hemisphere by • force' of arms: To be ultimately successful, In world. mastery, Hitler knows that he * * * must first destroy the bridge of •ships which we are build- ing across the Atlantic, and over which we shall continue to roll the implements of war to help destroy him. Generation after .generation, Am-: erica has battled' for the general policy' of the freedom of ,the seas. * * *.No nation has the right to make the broad oceans of the world, at great distances from the actual theatre of land war, unsafe far the eomrherce. of others. • • 'There has now come a' time when you and -I, must see ;the cold inex- orable necessity of saying to these • * *• * seekers 'of world Conquest • • • 'tYou shall go no furthtir:" - * * This is the time for• preven- '` tion pf attack, * * * Upon our naval andr;air--patrol * * ,*falls the duty ofmaintaining therAinerican policy • of freedom of the -seas—now. * * * Ourpatrolling '• vessels and planes w1n protect aTl 'merchant ships not only, .American ships but ship of any flag—engaged in commerce. *- * * It is noact of 'war on our part when. we decide to protect the seas that are vital to American de- fense. 'I he ggression is not ours. Ours is: soley defense."` The essential element of the, new situation cieatetl:hy.the_,B;in_eri- • can challenge to the axis is in the North Atlantic: :It is through those waters that iIritish vital life lines to Canada 'and the United States run. And the effect of the, President's stere order to the navy is to place ,those life lines.. under Aiiierican armed protection.. Spitzbergen' Offensive A British -'Canadian - Norweg- Ian expedition' crept 'secretely. araesos'nigarti eszswiese sate i+�'✓' fiti1xt, wpro _«.',ate ittnr r Yriv&-n1T'n -in4fmrar--th r Naas _knew_.sxlir�i _was__A#oot.. aJrr-.,;. tarp's' immediate objective was to deprive the Nazis of, any value -the islands might have in strengthen- ing Hitler's war effort. • About 1,000 Norwegians were' re- moved to new homes in England, Three tinea as many Russians were taken to•undisclosed destine- . tions: . Hugestocks of oil and ;coal. were fired. Damage done by efficient Canadian• sappers renders the' 1st "ands - "ands'useless for years. They lie depopulated in- the Arctic Ocean, 400 Mlles above Norway and 75.0 miles for the North Pole. • Spitzbergpn meant far more to Britons than 'a regrettable bit .of wartime destruction. Those Who have been 'clamoring for a British land offensive somewhere against Nazi -occupied Europe, :saw in Spitz- bergen a sample of what might be coming. As a Norwegian possession, the Arctic islands brought, dangers of British, invasion -home to Nazi sen- sibilities. ',,Berlin has been most apprehensive"about Norway.' And witn. reason, judging by recent out- breaks in that country. Russia Still Holding Russia is still the great enigma. AND THE BAND PLAYED Obi 1'•iow can the. Red armies be power- ful enough to hold, the Germans. at bay? fart of the answer may ' be in the treinendau;"s losses. suffered; by the .Germans. In men alone the casualties must be• well. over. a mil- ' ..]ion.,: -.in. equipment Yan-authorata... live estimate ,of•.forty per' cent is given. German servicing of 'ad- • :vanced .knits has daily become •more dtfflcult and the meebanizeu forces have found the Russian ter- rain very costly in fuel' and upkeep. the rest of the answer --may •be'that the "encircled" Russians have •re fused to retreat even though they have suffered terribly -but so have: the Ge'rman's- Their air' force, ,ad- •.mirably handled,' has bad .telling . striking. power. Russian .railway's -have •done -an- amazing job,- mainly due to the high morale of the workers who Ignore ordinary work- ing hours- The Germans: h"aveinade . ' two serious miscalculations;-- the volume of R.ussia's war material reserves and the fighting power .of her civilian population: • Thus far Napoleon's 'ro'ad to Mos- cow has proved ..tae. tough' for Hitler. ' The distance that the French grand 'army ndgofiated in ' 80 -Odd days, afoot and with horse, 'Mule andoxen transport, is twice aa-•• vera tejaaai adds, 9-eaverredsabya - ]F,i'tYlaraa� 'otasiizedi lagra l ,--rola-r Starts With. Gas Goes On Kerosene. Jimmy . Engler, .a • service sta-, "tion •°operator in New York, has. solved the gasoline problem so, far as his personal consumption of fuel is concerned. He has ,equipped his car with a tank for kerosene and a small auxiliary tank for •gasoline: ' The gasoline, he • says, 'is used only for, starting the motor. Once started, the gasoline line is turned off and the •car operates on kero- sene. He says he uses three 'gallons of kerosene, at 7s cents a gal- lon,' -to one gallon of'gasoline at about 20 cents a gallon: e .Book Shelf MARRIAGE • iS A PRIVATE . AFFAIR ' By Judith Kelly It 'is interesting to read a book about.' people who • are not too beautiful, too good, too . clever, . too abnormal, but who• are just the average persons, well brought up, well educated 'and well enough - endowed with this world's' goods • for normal arid gracious• living. ,Such ag;e Theo Schofield, and Tom West in "Marriage Is a Pri- vate Affair." This 1941 Harper prize novel' was written by Judith I{elly, a native of Ontario: The story deals With the first four- years _-of. their- married life •__.I Deeply in love, there .is every prospect that their lives :will be • happp, thqugh more 'b'r less con- ventional. Toni is endowed with. much common . sense and, • besides his love, has- a great respect for ' his wife. Theq tries bravely to live 'up to his ideal of marriage ' but, emotional and youth -loving, . . finds distraction away from home. Failing as a wife; she realizes that , marriage. is a system of rights and obligations . and that more than love is'needed to cope • with its problems. Eventually they reach their ftill maturity and' understanding of each other. This story is a fine example, •skillfully. handled, 'at essentially decent' people, adjusting them- selves to sane .living. e Marriage 1s a Private Affair .. • .by Judith ,Kelly . . . Harper & Brothers.' , , . Price $2.75.. Relieved to have thrived in 'the . days of:Shakespeare, Shakespeare, a• guni tree recently felled in looba Forest, Australia, yieded 1132 railway ties 'eight feet long. ALL THE LATEST ,PICTURES Mail only two Durham .Gore "Hurricane!' or "Catalina" Starch labels for eachic- . the list of 20 other pie. tura desired—or one tures will be 'sent with your Hive Syrup label: fust request. Specify your name, address, picture or To 'start, select from the pictures requested•-enc1oee' "Flying Torpedo"Shy ' , necessary labels and mail to Rocket'— 'Lightning"— the St: Lawrence Starch Co., "Defiant"—"Spitfire"— Limited., Port Credit,' Ont. Firemen's Tests Toughest Devised Would -Be Members in New York. City's Fire Department Must Pass Severe Physical ':Test Appointments :to the New York Fire Department is the,. .a:mbition of 5,400 young men who have ,un dertakea topass qualifying exam- inations, notes The Toronto Tele -- gram,. The physical• test -stated by the head •of the Civil Service Commission, to be "the toughest ever.: vi esed, da er- far --=are ,govei:n:ment--. jolt, civil or. military"—wllI dispose of at ..least' half of the aspirants. The.- first ;test -ds- for- co-ordin- ation;' each man 'sits' in a seat equipped .with a steering gear and foot ,hand brakes and iudg- ed on. his response to signals. flashed, an a board ahead. Then be sifts weightswhile lying on his. back with somedne holding his feet. To score perfection he "must rise .to a sitting position, bringing a sixty-poundweight over lits head. Perfection .in lifting dunibbel.ls. 18 with those who lift eighty -pound weights hi .each hand. .Then the aspirant has to: carry a dummy weighing i70 • pounds up eight steps. After which ' 'he is required 'to take a ten -foot broad jump, hurdle a th.ree:and-a-half-foot trail, dodge through. •barriers, climb a' ladder ten feet high.-'alnd swing across a ladder for•fifteen feet, ',jump or drop trona an-�,iglit-foot wall, vault a box four and a half feet high' and �,.dishalfa- oiiagATdriaatirne tlkaataafosd, , fifteen -minute 'les com l�evii York Men - `Train For Raids Managers of skyscrapers, apart- ment houses and ]oft buildings in New York• City have, trained 50,- 000 0,000 men in dile Tast'tliree months to con?•b'at incendiary air ,attacks . and bombing• raids• on. the city if they should come. This army of private fire , fighters and salvage will total 200;000 men with- in a few months, according to B. , H. Belknap, head 'of the manage- • ment division •of the Real .Estate . Hoard of New York, The. work is being 'done, under the supervision . --�'of-•••MayaryF`: H::L-aGua'rdia; ;C1•vlian'- Defenee.' Director, Mr. Belknap's statenie'nt•'was- the first .inkling . that- New -York - or any- other -At-, !antic• 1Seaboard city, , ' ae, prepar- ing 'for eventualities that might come out • of strained ,relations •with . • ' the Axis powers. • • After 50,000 key men 'ire , fully trained •they will instruct others so • that the 'private • fire brigade will total .200,&00 highly efficient ' men who -will not only knpvw •.how to:.pnt' out 'fires,: -salvage sections, • . -but' 'al'so' handle sabotageaiid :all' • forms of. subversive . activity. ' • The 'fire brigade. is -being taught the significance 'of different colors 'of smoke and how'•to• fight the fire. ' behind the smoke:, The incendiary bomb,,' he explained, heats to • 3,4.00 degrees When the ,boinb explodes, . throwing spark's in. every 'direction • and 'getting ,fire •to ,.eve•i•y'thing' • within` many yards of the: missile„, I• • Sound. Ethic, a mile_ Educational requirements . In- clude matriculation standing . in, high, School, . " • The 'young fireman,.. after six months' probation service, starts at $2,000 a' year. The department, , with more than 10,000 'men, is on , the three -platoon system. Sell Gas In Can To, Domestic User Gasoline -May be sold in cans or' other containers . providing it is • . •.for use in lamps, stoves, -washing _machines,, or • for domestic pur- . poses, 'Oil Controller G. R. Cot- trelle stated recently in a wire to a Midland washing niachine agency. - The agency asked for a ruling and reported 'to the oil controller . that gasoline station: operators had • refused to sell gasoline in containers under any condition, -and that domestic consuiriers were srwffering, • • ' "Prohibitions only apply to, gasoline :for . use in private pas- senger. vehicles," stated the wire. it _ _-°, : --s,, 'iii;,. 'Q� • Labor Minister McLarty Says � in war industries, r McLarty° said re- , "It is toped that • parents and • teachers will discourage 'boys and • girls who are makipg progress &t school. from taking jobs,'' 'said Mr. MeLarty. ' "Our most pressing concern is, of course, to further war produc' - tion but we must not lose sight of the 'problems that are bound • to • arise after the war and among these will be some measure of un' ' employment, due to an inevitable' dislocation in industry, Workers with the: least education -and the least training are sure to be anis, ong the first to be let out. and the' last to be taken on." The Minister said' that sound education and training gave the best foundation for permanent era- ' ployment. 'Youths Under Sixteen Not Needed in industry Children under 16 years of ago are not needed Labor.' Ministe .ceintly. in a statement em,phasiz- ing the importance of youngpeople • .. continuing at school as long as . 'possible and "as long as they cau .profit from • such attendance." LIFE'S LIKE THAT By Fred Neher (Bemused 6, C.nMI(dnted No..* ,•.voce, "I -low many 'times must 1 tell ,ybp never to bother me when workin'! 1 i"