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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1940-02-01, Page 3• c • • Clflticizes Federal G(v't, • 'Premier Mitchell F. Elepburn of. 'Ontario who caused . a 'flurry in .. tanadian affairs"over his Goverrt- n' ••. ment's • condemnation ' „of "Prime Minister .Mackerizie King's war ef-. • forts. ` Impossible To.. Cure Balcdness. Science Offers No Hope — °It's 'In- herited, And •There's Nothing • You Can Do About It '. . The young man of 25 whose .hair oegies •to -recede 'at. the temples or ' • to disappear .from :around •spot • at •;,the back is'llkely to' give himself .a great 'deal of unnecessary. dis- nne-. cessarily'and- indulge. in' all sects • of. queer pe{•gormances••to ..save his hair,sineI •e' there is not•really very tench ,that •he can do. . The reason ,lies'• in the fact that his loss et. hair was•,ife'terni,ined by. heredity. • . . • WOMEN SELD0g2 LOSE 1T m Woen. seldom lose• hair as do the inen'and •complete baldness is >' practically never.. seen .ii}' women. • Most of the experts'•in the field•',o .. • 'heredity are'likeiy to say that hair • groxvth -i.s • determined 'by ,our con- • stitutiou• and That the factor in the con:otitution •which Is respensl,ble is . in the. glands. They sa•y that ordin- ary baldness can• .be inherited just through' a single gene in Men and tb.rough t vo genes in women.' • • `Tho genes are those little elem'• •ents in the cells .which (i:•termtne our charecteri;ties. The explana- . tion .seems to be that a Tuan with' two 'baldness .genes• will have sons all of thorn will be bald, and, if his wife happens tb have two baldness genes, some of their danghtctrs else will be bald. if the man has. only one baldness gene, 'One or ; two ' of. his sons. will. be bald.' If,'however, the genes "for baldness are absent, none of•fh.e children will be bard.; Form Original "D•eatu•re'-Club" •• Mont7real Workers ' •Needing • Co-• • False Teeth .Join in oper-ative Effort. to • Get Them • A. "rood club" :is the newest.._ twist to ' the papular co-operative ‘movement in Montreal, and if y'ou. ,ask any of..its 30 members they'll tell you it's a success -though 10 of them, have aching jaws and a• set of false teeth or the way. • A. year ago, (a group- of Iverley r'.� 4,.4iF..T„b9av rA.Tim+x�'.•.�i'�ta�'31t�i:C3'�'•?Vow.•Ga•L�e"����11L:4E:W���te�+LLU$!;i' • they sorely needed false teeth. They -laek.ed• sufficient money so .deoidea on a co-operative effort. Their discussion of ways and Means to obtain the teeth on mea- gre 'incomes led to • organization of the Denture Chit). ':1lenibers agreed to. deposit 50 cents weekly at a centre' office. When Dr., Jatiles Dance heard.. of 'the silienie he colunfeet;ed to' pro- vide sets of dentures for. the'niem- bers at basicb'cost. He. went fur- ther. and gave. centre clubs a ser-' , ies of lectures' on dental health ' .and -cart! of the teeth, • An Extraction Party It looked just like a Christmas party when the 10—nine Women and- a .man—.gathered at thine o'- clock one 'morning. • • But there was a lin of hospital -cots for the ,patients while they • carne out of the.•anaesthetic., The • venerating , r:ooni" was behind .a screen 'at ,one end "of the room. • The' first 'patient, a woman, came out of the, ether and asked through puckered lips: "Are my teeth, really • out?" • This Book's Alive A new type of book has been produced by Mr. George Olin, a collector of cacti, at Los Angeles., nig book is different, because it - lives! Gouged into the pages are pockets . and compartments con- twining lichen', cacti,,, and other small plants. Each pocket contains the right kind of ndurishfient so that the. la t can flourish, and . •.:S:.N.Iainti.P�ww..�....::Wn+.'.r.;..:tnke.....r .. you.eitt l riwc%her c . =ilt See the living 'organism on the same page. The tempest in our own Ontario Legislature . bade fair lastweek to rival the European war in sig, it ficanee as far as Canadians were concerned . ; . Damned: by soinet. praised by •others, the Premier Hetburn-sponsored resolution surfing Prime' Minister Mackenzie King's war .efforts' made the prime topic of conversation. here : Theaction threatened on the erie ,'hand, . to, split :,the ,Likleral paith" t .on the other, -to. get Mitchell.Hep- burn; arrested under the,War 11easures" Out, a wag suggestd . '(see section on''statements•4fpre--. • judicng 'recruiting") , , • During ttie twentieth 'week of the watt, . between Germany and the Allies, the Italian Gdvernment approved 'the largest military bud- . get, $532,000,000, . since Great War days. Italy's armed forceh would be made. ready, 'a Cabinet ,statement .said,; for any eventual- ity a 'tremendou's explosion, in a London, England, 'gunpowder. factory killed half a dozen, in- jured fifty ... the Western. Font -grevir.,active for a time' when. the Germans began bombardment' of the 'area west of the Saar . : Stockholm; Sweden, readied air - raids precautions • . the Italian liner Orazio caugklt fire and sank, e: Briti, I`•�destro.ycrs went down, and many neutral mer chant ships were mined or torped- oed, . . Great Britain acknowh• edged the loss of three submarines, the affair. of .Hor'.Belisha's res ignation .blew over , , First Lord of the Admiralty Winston Church- ill Made 'another of his vivacious, pugnac, ous radio siieeches ... 21 Germans escaping.from the aboard a Japanese ship were taken off its by the British . Swiss, living in areas bordering on the Reich were given, notice toexpect,,, evacuation at ,any time , .. . Ger- man treeps.-were'reported massed • along the frontiers of' Hungary , . • • • Sir William Mu1oek, grand old Iran of Ontario, and'one of the fore- most figure's, of the ,Dominion, celebrated his. 95th birthday, at his home.. in Toronto. by. receiving a stream of :friends and visitors_, who flocked to,,theMulock residence to offer their 'felicitations'. • SLEIGHING NOT''SLAYING Fortunate Canada! Sleighing par ties .instead of slaying parties.. .—Toronto Star. • —o -- ANY OTHER . SUGGESTION? . 1'-I. G. „Wells>, says this war is either the, end of things as -they care now or the beginning.. of, some- thing ,different.' Had. anyone else any •befter suggestion? . • -Lsi2llon Free•..I'ress:, • EASY,i. KUT TO LISTEN. Getting on';the an. and taking it -f granted that thousands t.ening is an; error. 'Thr "thousands May : ,e listening—but,' to ''sonic,, thing., else. 'Or they may not' be' listening at all. ' -Peterborough Exaixiiner.•• .IRON.^ORF•'IN CANADA • , The year 1939 was notable for, at :leant one thing -Canada began to mine. iron ore. There have been previous activities but the Heleti • Mine at Michipicoten looks like the • first permanent operation.. The ore is sintered and a train load of .this arrives at the Soo daily. • —Sault Daily, Star. —0- ,, "PUTTING OVER" A NEW ,FLAG' mune as• no Objection to a •Canadian flag;' as 'such; pro- • vided that the people want. it. But' such a flag would have' to' be duly. authorized by the people's. repre- sentatives in Parliament.. Thi; pa- per ' would .object to a :"national flat' being "put over",by hole -in= the -corner 'methods: ' • -Winn'ipeg, Tribune Grain of, salt .Needed Fifty -below zero temperatures 'caused. frightful suffering to both soldiers and civilians In, the Arctic' theatre of war . the Russians were drivpen, hack• on. the Saiia sec=' • tor, on `the Karelian' isthmus. and north of"Lake Ladoga. (.If a count were .made of ,all the Russians re-• ported at different times to h:£Ye been killed in this conflict, `the staggering total of tivo. million.k" would he reached news mag. azine "Time" warns: that figures are grossly exaggerated) . Bri- tish. officialdein lest. week advanc- ed the belief that given 39,000 - more men and 200 more airmen, plei.?;ty of armed equipment before .May, the_ Finns could hold the Rus- 'sians 'indefinitely' .: ' - • •.Prognostications ' . Outstanding., theories' . of • the week: Hanson W; ,Baldwin, military and naval correspondent of the New. York Times;, Said Germany • probably will adopt', a policy of a •"war of waiting" during 1940, sit - ,tight as long as she can. be assured of supplies front Russia; a .political writer. in 'the • 'Paris "Temps" advised that # the A1= lies would • undertake naval ai.'tion in the Black Sea:(wpicti_a.:lRussia.'s.:;Y, ' tender spot' gni' account of the oil • wells in that .region) Soiriet rein- forcements• could be kept • • from: going to the Finnish fronts; Karl von Wiegaild, one 'of the most ex- perienced• war correspondents in the world, staked his reputation .on the prediction that Italy' will get into the,war on t the side of Germany; a tustworthy •Polishob- server,declared that Russia is like- ly to cede the Galician oi]'fields . to Germany in return for a large sliceslice of Central Noland, 'including Warsaw., • MIGKIE SAYS= WHA1 lF I ERE ARE sizkiESSEgArrOON MAK? i'•MORE MOiJEY rn4AMUS' WE• air A ��.p�r o' GATISFAeTio,J OUT a', BEIM' Asi„E Tis HELP FOLKS, AM',1;N MAK%.fi' lime A: SETTER TO\VN ... kV> Puck Chasers TOPICS OF TIIE.GURRENT •: HOCKEY SEASON' 4011•0111•1,0111111..,...00.....1101110•1000, 114.111111.1110.11110s • ',Congratulations are .in order to • •Bob. Crosby and his •Mclltyre Mine: .team. They are the first "Canadian club to go into' New • York after a week's to'lir a:nd"com:e•out.u.ndefeat- ed. They held theRovers ,to a 3-a11 tie. Brothers .Lockhart, .Thornpeou and. Mise Mulany,Secretary of the ;Rovers' Booster Club, haven'•t got: over it 'yet. • , • LIMIT.STICK LENGTH The C:A.H.A. rule on veer—length. hockey sticks is now in effect. Anil that means strict enforcement' . of the rule limiting the length of hoc- key ..sticks oc-key'sticlis and width of, the blade. The rule "is, as .follows: • Hockey sticks shall ,not exce^d ;53 inclies from the heel, to the end Of the shaft and 1.4%.'inehes from the h'el to the .end'of the blade.., The blade of. the stick shall not exceed three inches .in height, except in the, case of. the goal -keeper's stick, whidh " Shall not exceed ai4 inches. • SENIOR -'.`A"! NOTES Hamilton''gare Goodyears a .real scare id the . oulosing ntain City, out by a 5-4 scare '. M. J. Redden, veteranofficial, made his first Sen- ior appearance' of, the season in the O.H.A. as referee at St. Cath-,. Brines .. tt . Galt signed` a new, cen- • tre.player, McCaffrey, from- Ottawa ....Jack •Astle returned to Niagara Fallis after a four-week .absence : . Geodyears, signed 'Joe Start, one, time• professional, as spare goalie, NTARIO MOORS _By VIC BAKER WAR' AND WILD LIFE. ' Daring a r'e'cent discussion on. 'Ontario's annual, fall classic, the .. ',pheasant shoot. at Pelee Island, wel. learned With. great interest Alin. the 'pheasant is playing a part in''Eng- laud's Air Raid Precaution system . by :means of '%-kith the heart of the Empire is protected during', these war times.• • A lett4r appears in a British' out- . •- •door' publication as •folows: . • "1u; these -day's of substitutes, ,why, not •a• fe'w pheasants instead •of the much -Maligned A. R. P. war- den?, AS one of the latter and a keeper .of' the former, 1 am relying 0n nl,y birds,' both by day and night, to warn ,me When it is time to stop netit:Oiling the Village and to take t.o' •cover. By way of wear work the pheasant farms, instead of closing' down, •could be turned on to pro-, d ting vast numbers of these •tat-' uilaf sirens. A cock, with, a lieu or two o for company,, penned' at •say, half -mile ,intervals . in the:gardens of our towns, i'buld cost the. rate- payer less.- money' than wardens, . and •Aossibly have; 1+es brick's,, • thrown at .them." HEAR SOUNDS- .INAUDIBLE TO • :During the World War '1,. we are told, parrots ;kept iii French fon- tresses and on the -Eiffel Tower, in Paris. -gave wut.aing,oftie approach: .of aeroplanes thet 'they, cotfld not possibly hare seen,' before 'they ,- were discovered .by itunian beiiles, At. night,: during • .that per.iodr when enemy planes Were wont to fly overhead and• drop bombs at random„ the pheasants' in the tor`- erta inland'tyere the first to discern. • the eiplosions of the bombs, orae. fendiirg anti-aircraft guns;` and• to hasten to issue- 'a' warning of ail 4tproaching evil;, In this way; .their behaviour • had. :helped to throw ' . light Upon. 'the..1pi;oblern. of.= • h' ."zones • of : silence ,arthuld great • .detonations', which, after. skipping these zaties,- became. audible, The' "inaudible" soundivayes were evi • ;d"ently "picked up" •by the pueas-• ants,• for they acted a:s if. 'great- ly. agitated. Al.', of which' adds to oua' store of knowledge concern- ing this intel•est'ing.game-bird. "Coal Butter" • is German.... I d e a Exile • Tells of Progress in' Mak- ing, Edible Syntietic . Fats Germany is prepared to inake'ed• ible fats from coal and shale. Quite literally, iu a • pinch .she -can mak'e- her batter from •coal. • , • • Details of this .discoveri• were given to the American A'ssociiation. for the Advancement of Science by a recently arrived German creat- riate,• Dr.. Willy Lange, , who was Fd'a rY1;652%1'.,S t firliar zletit'rtir' )Z,isttM.3: 4'i3rriz • the. University of Berlin,FHis fig- ures covered developments •up t'o Midsummer, shortly' .before start of the liar. ' • • Synthetic Chemistry Fats and copper are. the 'te'o ' Materials n leh informed' scien= .tists *here s � d Germany was tu•ost likely to run short of in Rat.:Tris inon;h there' have been news re- po'rt.s, that Ge:'tinrny was pi'ogres• •sing crit the fa't pt-ttble:n with• new synthetic. clientist.ry. Tho;coal fats, Dr. Lange. sstid,,are made by plowing • steam .throu, i' ,burning: coal to prodt:•ce carhO:1 monoxide and hydrogen. This pois` onous gas 'is the stat'ting•.snbstaac'' Which, with subsequent. chemical treatments:, iietOmes first Indust- .1'41 ndu.s,t-1•ia1 fat, •and :hen edible ,fat, • . . Shale Also Used Shale, of which Germany has a ' larger supply than of coal, is tui- other starting material for. butter substitutes.. Tho_ shale is first con- verted int oil. Wald Horses' Go When . War Comes B.C, intenei,fies Round -up". in Carl- • • boo Ranchlands-1-Range .is Needed arid Foxes 'Fie- qufre Meat:. - T'he,nor ipc•a'ns' deat;t "for -thous• • ands of wild horses t.;;lith roam the. Cariboo ranchlauds.'in British Columbia's interiol. • • . •.h.rovincfal government: officials have ordered an i;ttensification-of. •.the• 1940, roundup,:'af, the an'rtna:s whose forebears.', es.capel • from the ranches•tttid •begame•as wild as tae •moose or' deer.,I3unters. Were urge•l to. clear: the range roc every wild. •ito.se, if possible. • . • The roundup .is an annual', graz- ing control measure in the Cariboo' but officials =said It should be inter;• Sifted 'this year to preserve as much grazing land as passible •,for livestock that, will produce, food- stuffs. • Hunters taking part in the rauad. ..up Can receive $2.50 •• a `pead .from tho owners of branded horses, 'or, slaughter the animals for Afoa meat. Luxuries Now Coming 'Higher: • • Canadiansi-1Nho Like Their .Caviar • And Paris}Perfuniies Will tHave '"MS...C; �{��w Y.:1MKYL�'. N:iS•'.,WY•.'YiFi4Y`CS •... es.J'h•<'.1 •'Tle,..luxtiry-lot'lug ('.i'ia.didii has had to economize on his purchases since was was declared. . • ' Caviar will likely be scratched, Off swanky hienu,S since the cost of this luxury: 'imported from ?Russia • ^.nd FinlaitJ, ali•t'ady'ltas trebled in price. Sone itupotiteil cheeses harder :o get•!han before the t;tr,t• ' and. -special jam. ntarutalat!'s and .sugared fruit., aro higher. on the lnxt1!' :1it. . • CHINA, GLASS, SILVER Perfumes. art etit:ing the higher 'bract,' s: and inaify imported' French scents ere beco.mug scarce. Jewellers believo their businete will • not suffer materially, during , war, time. New sources in neiittraj countries' have beendiscovered t'o replace the • novelty and jewel ware's usually 'irnport.ed frond Euro- • pean countires now at n-ar. But •or- ders of china,,.glass and silver are filled mere:slewly because of trans- • •sortation difficulties. ro uce Better Cream, flutter ,Ontario' Dairymen Told of Govern- ment Plan to Improve Products J, L.. Baker,chief creamery'• in- 'structor for Ontario, ,told the re- cent' W estern,Ontario Daiirymen's convention that a..provincial gov- ernment program to improve' the quality of cre'am aid butter Jill be continued with g,'eater ' effort this year. "We plan to do more work with , the producers in 1940," he said, noting that in 1939 theinstruc- tionbranch con(ren:trated More on operations fn .creameries.. •.' 1'it.Q•PERr GRADING OF. CREAM • 'Among _suggestions be offered 4 ;r daifytneri- in a cezeperatfve scheme to . better quality of • cream and ••butter were proper gfading..ofall - ereanl with' payment to Abe.-ma.de • accordingly '_and ;the holding of'_ 'short eeui°ses . for cream. ,haulers to educate them as to proper meth- ods of caring'for cream on the. farm.. ' . In, connection. with licensing of . creameries; Mr. Baker said • the dairy branth "did not feel inclin= • ed to hurry creameries into mak- ing 'improvements, but necessary changes must • be completed before 1940 licenses are granted." ' During inspections for 1940 cher- tificates, . approximately 57 ' per cent of creameries. were approved. without having to makeimprove stents, he said. This compared with 'a figure of 11 per cent in —•t-'e�,-illus.:�-r. - ' . Liver Performs Sixty Functions It's An Important..Organ. in The Body.. . Every' -organ: .of. the body has one, or two joks.to•dp.Dr. Robert ',G. C.ontrell, Englev, obd,, :y.J., in Clinical Medicine a'tid . Sufgery, '• • says:, ' . 'Not so • with the liver. 'for there is hardly.a part ,of the body that•' not' directly •or indirectly affect-. ed .by the functioning or. working 'of this large ••"It is conservatively stated that the rliver _has •frena sixty, to ono"- hundred, nce hundreddistinct arti�itiesi • .and • that every oc'h'er iinporfantt system ,--circulation, digestive, . nervous ,and• others --is definitely •influbr.- ped 1Jj' the 'activities; ,of the liv- CLEAP,S• QF IMPURITIES All the blobd •from. the. digestiye pparatus—stofriach and 'intestine. 'carried. to •the liter to be •fit- tercd and cleared _Of .hariniful• sub=n.. stances before it .goes `back to the . heart to be' . sent to lungs and • thence to. the heart to be sent to all parts of• the .body: The blood must not only get rid •of' carbon' dioxide and' be enriched with oxy- gen •by means `of the lungs but • before it .can do all its work of . • The appointtrient of li.enry • S.. - Gage 'to ,the pdsiti,on of General . ' 'Sales ` Agent • sof, the ,: Delawar',e, .• Lackawanna, & WO"stern Coal Com- - • pany, has just..been .announced. Mr. Gage was. formerly • Sales • Agent for the company in Ontario and Western New York and is a. well' known figure in the. coal. bus= iness in. both taut}tries, having spent much' of his tithe ,in Canada before being appointed' to his pre sent executive" position with, the or• ganization. building ;and ma!ntaining, the var- ions tissues, it is made fit by the liver to destroy harmful products in' other fluids of the body. KEEP IT MORE ACTIVE • dependsupon 'the liver; it• might v<We11' be' said that "your every=day. . . health depends' onnimals' f•OrAJ ._ Bee Hive'S rrup •. y p LIFE'S LIKE THAT 14. • By Fred : Ne Piers ''Wanner' Buy' A Good Watch Dog, REG'LAR FELLERS—Bird of a Dog \O YOU WANT ` TO SW A DO SUMP,p a' `,W.HAbDYA MEAN. \\ s1RD b,'?L BET THAT MUTT COULON''SROT• A BIRAD WAY! A- FOOT. y GEBY'��1S � �.., 1. O4,YEAH ?WELL. COME', OH OVER"TO Mil HOU$E AI4" , L'.L SHOVI `i'A• SW'iPS 1'b MAKE , YA LOOKIT WHAT WE DID TO OUR CUCKOO CLOCK !THAT'S WHY L• GOTTA ET AID . OF HiM 1 ...a \ \\panne. y\r1 �3vwZt (IictlAI rFS� ns � N.:w•l� •Y tri