The Lucknow Sentinel, 1936-02-27, Page 2of the
...Leolliaej^^ elephant-, was shot by. Dr. Crile.
I
I**
il
t
n
ton
ton
11.4
1'3.2
, He and his party
The prize of the
with
them-
17.'0
14.5
hy.v in
:its. as
pirns-
A Friendly Act
While the Peace Garden on the
boundary is a permanent and visible
indication of friendship between the
United Stales and Canada, there have
Elt*. ftt
It
i: .1 prief ?:
tid ■
a f t *
■ 'may
•t ai'n -•
;educe
ei’are'd
to fn-
•;1J be
them-^-until. he tol.d of them ,in bis- ations.
even;.. .Tlje^e
’• came
the servant^ to V
‘.‘vol-
;>•■)• contV.
on .the farm of'Mr. A
Krifflcy,
dairyman; . .
following r'-suits;
or 16
w/s con-
Mc. •
Brampton. ■ prominent .
in. your county with the
' *
Manure
Mam:'. ■
one- .
te ...ton
- 10 ton
. \’:'»n Ib
. 25o' ill.
16 not have a
f>>r •the corn,
. cnrrnnc; •■pno5t>,
as.9,12-10 or
crioes tne ancient language or tn-e
Celts. And they stirred, up a inir.cr
controversy over the point. «
It. was .not until years later '' th
Kipling heard- of it "ip London.! 1
The fact that the council was in ses- ■
s’on, is surely an unnecessary detail.!
Winnipeg alderman should t Ake warn,
ing. — Winnipeg Tribune. . j
been
I'elloW
heavily
dds as
preL-.
Oat*
Bari,
time.
variety
given the
rposes of"
rich we’ve
•Mtern On.
\ l)r. Qeorge W. Crile, riyted Cleveland, 0., scientist, and.Mrs>
Crile as they arrived in New York Cftyh on the. S.S. Majestic after
completling a brief research trip ih Central Africa,
bpgged 2010 .animals for experimental purposes.
per-
along.
cibminon
iiMii; u.ii.i i.c; but
still stavss/with
roll of 'tiie where they tbo.k up •.farming'. ^ ”
.Tlje^e ,ear’y Cape . Breton. , negroes-
came 'to Nov^i Scotia originally as
.-...■.ntri tri Vnited “Empire. Loyalists';
fleeing from the United States."-Later,
Male Student Says\ Women
Often Prone To Rudeness
With Escorti "7 , 7
MONTREAL.—Learning what it
costs to finah.ee an “evening out”
I should be part of the education of
They are,.different .now. Anxious to all women students, is the view ex-,
be understood; certainly considering Passed' in the McGill Daily by a
It’ desirable, they have, become go,od ra.en undergraduates.
_ ~ ‘ To-dav too nianv women take be-
“The 'indulgence,' in grief is .a
blunder.”—Beaconsfield.
I
§peak the Gaelic.
A
0 uie L,vi
IMqre power to hhn. So many -Peo^ as];intr
' '."0 • ■ . v
CANADA.
THE EMPIRE
Home Frpm . Africa Britain's Youngest M.P.
THE WORLD
A r LARGE
CANADA
The Speed Demon
The j raff le accident statist les for
r^ivitlHh Columbia dast jtear, as just
X announced by Inspector: Hpdd, of the
Fro/^fpcial Police^ show jfliat 90 per
sons were killed mid S34 ilnjured by
motor vehicles iu our streets and our
highways, and that , this was’ "the
highest total for any year hln.ee the
beginning of the' depression.” The
prlucifnil. reason for this toll of death
op our roads, says Inspector Hood,
was fast dri-vl-hg.. Vancouver Pro-
viuce.
been An tiny other evidences, of good
will Among them have beei| the beu-
efnot Ions of wealthy people\.o( the
United States which have been offer
ed to Canad.a as well as to Their own
country■—such as the assistance tor
.higher education from the Rockefel
ler-.Foundation. . , '■.. „•.-.. u
The latest-instance is a bequest bv
the American painter. Cliilde H^ssam
who died recently. He was an admir
er of C^wiada and liad many Canadian
friends. The will.disposing of his es-z
tale provides that all oil' and water
color paintings in.his possession are.
to be ‘given ,to ftie Afftertcsn Academy
dikposed of1
at prlj'ate?Xaro.' . . " ~
. Proceeds'of the sale are . to go. to
establish tiie Hussain Fund for the
encouragement of painting in the Un
ited. States .and Canada, the'income
. Atoning used to buy works by. artists of
’ both countries. The pictures thus ob
tained are to be presented to public
art jgalleries in the 1'nited States and
. Canada, — ••Winnipeg.'.Free Tress.'
Rabbit’s Fatal. Rest
Aja ok rabbit was frerieh solid while
Sitting upright, its ears back and. eyes
open. . 1
.The rabbit, perched or.-its hind legs'
was found in a ground depression in
, ReginA cemetery,-stiff as.a poker, and
nearly covered with snow. a lictim'qf
the cold spell.
: Apparently the •
ixjg across' the cen:
' rest aud.froze sit:
•"gin* Tx^ad’er.ivs'
Contentment
. A ■ n 1
. than s» mile
v c/ ridden
boat who 1
ding, a bs*!!
’ fight h.
■ he was
rabbit had bs or. fac-J
:ue:ery. it stoppfcd to'
■tilv.g upr• ght — Re_
-cr-n tnofe.
o’b.kd ne-''
. <>r a
s wed-.
> prise
5 And
TO THANK YOU
,,awE
talks t.ve
says the
repeat :
Tnaybe;-s
can tesc
., get t Ag ;
. k X . h .
• vr .1
W <? 0*&n L^&rn
7/
hesu^s
0 Star
• S
Weil
w t'v e« ’
. Those Empty Front Seats
Good Reporters
' .** «
■ri-rif :■>
reporters, haybeen turning their
once dry-irs-dust financial rigmarole,
dhto readable human interest stories,
i We have before us, for example; the
addresses at the. annual meeting- of
the Canadian . Bank of Commerce. Its
genera! manager',' Sidney H. dLogan,
Shunning the usual statistics about
ti^ide and industry gave.an intensely
'interesting expositton^f a bank's role
in|the field of credit swid money., It
wajj not an easy task he set himself,
1 did.. it/efficiently, made the
’ tiling clear,- we should say for . the
ayerage intelligent business man.
. !Mo,te ___ ____
pljo confuse money with wealth, and
sd many more talk the idle nousCnse
about banks creating ^.wealth, which
they don’t and can't. Had they been
’told.fi little more often in the past,
with a ’greater effort at simplification
and less propensity for Jargon. ft
would have beenybetter. for the banks
—•and for-aiTthe/re^t/of us.. --Ottawa
journal.
---------- . ............ ■ ■ •■ ■ ?.
They/Still Croon
1... -Ther.e,_-igj_tal,k_ across the, border 6f:
a bol i s h in g. t h e wo rd ‘ e roo u ’' bu t VhaV
is wanted is an effective muzzle on
crooners.. — Calgary Herald.
• “To-day too many women take be
ing asked otft for granted,” one
student' commented. .“They often
look bored and are apt to be rude , in
this respect, even to the point of
not thanking their escorts for the
thoughtfulness and trojuble involved
in giving them an evening's pleasure.
If these same girls were forced to
ask the men out for a few months
and pay . the bills they would realize
their privileged position.”
The comment was aroused, by the
fact that the. .coteds ,.h$ve not been
iii any-.hurry to avail themselves ofi
the Leap Year privilege’ of doing then
I toted- Cleveland, 0., scientist, and Mrs.
l-'Ar.___,1. r’ii-.L C* Q» Vaifiuiln n-ftAV
. ------—— ----------------— ■ — - ' -------
1 0
Scotch,” and’ where the negroes
like the farmers — ...all huffy-<
The Kipling character stretched
the truth a pointy though, when he
told the gaping Harvey that Cape
Breton was. “f^U” . of those negroes.
Only a handful of Cape Breton bracks
§peak the Gaelic.- \ ,
But they havte, conquered the diffi
cult language; -a!s completely as they
might be expected, to in small farm
ing .communities -such as Why.co-;
Few. even in comagh. And they come by it hon-
“Coal-Black Celts”
Down Cape Breton
- HALIFAX, Canada—Rudyard Kip-1
ling’s keen eye fo^-h.e bizarre sei-. I
dom spotted a more striking bit of I
literary material ^h.an- they did in ’
his •'•discovery of \N o v<a Scotia's !
Gaelic-speaking negroes. .’ ’. . I
For discovery it wa . .................................. ........ .............
"Xova---Sexvtria-r^kLHeAw-t-.h<^--pxaxin'te„ held estly., for th ejr f o robe a r $ h ay e. been
“cpal-black Celts”—as Kipling- called . handing it iic.xviF^ ~fTreni'~f^r:"g'e"iY
T ..; ' ” ’ ’ •
“Captains Courageous”. • And
then, the sedffers .were many.'
They wouldn’t believe that
j negro tongue could' master the.
echuffyX|King George Was
A War Casualty
■ ■ ■ > '. ■ ■■ ■ ■'
Timely Warning
Not long ago; w^iile.the city council
of PeirdleCon, Indiana was in .sess/on..! leying syllables, the sighing cadenc-: thev drifted" down-to. Cape Breton
-an exp.-osTon-of-gas ^ok*plaee-a-yd th;e ‘ es. the -.loug7 wash and " ‘ : ' I.?", .........I.1. „
3-Qdf—of_thjLXLty._hall. was blown . off-j Gaelic,“ as one Scottish writer des- Gaelic was '^n'ess’e'nri'ah in ■rhe-Sco-t-.
TTsiWcoin ■inuhTt|ies~of"TC ape~Bret; on iir
those days;
force. had‘.to
at Today. 1
.It Is Their Trust
So far as the press js wncerued
is Itself .in business and profit § most
when business ip general is flourish
ing. Its own business, however,’ in
volves giving the people the news. In
that it s£eks to. be fair. Otherwise ' it
would certainly have a very limited
circulation'. The riewst-saperih^ie-jregard
for the reader, the community;' soc
iety and journalism, and most news
papers regard this as a trusf.-
;John Te'.^graph-Jourhali
Man to Fit the Suit
From a smslbtown in New
state comes an interesting and though
provoking story of lo-c-al ecopomy
The community was faeo'd with the
necessity of naming s new chi
police. The complete uniform
previous incumbent, purchasssd
vast a rai l a ble
•use of-the 'next... There were
dbsen applicshts :?r
What was the n:ur.
merit to dof Its membe
to ■ •'
n f0 rvv-nt. T
police the man
"fitting the uni
price of a new
Hriforcemerit ■ 4131-cis
on WF.:g’-i
THE EMPIRE
Where Humans Fail
^Toronto" Maiden
Prefers Rancher
mid the negroes.
ad’.te pick it up to:, get
E 'n g hi s h is . . the'
He" language of- tAese comn:unities
tk;, ■the Gaeli.4-heritage i............. -
er- the few negi’oe's who. remain.
; f’.'o:4' for- -nauticaf c ‘Ibr.- when A-few years after “Captains^Cour-
heard of the black “Scots”.. ageous” came olu't, a Nova.iSco-tia ed-
Ile brought them- into hjs ''?bok ueatio'r.isf yisitep Whyeoeomaghand!
i ih- young Harvey Cheyne's . meeting- met some1' of the negro 'Celt's. He
; with the negro cook of ., th£ salt'found they spoke the. language like'
‘ banker We’re Here, fishing out pt natives, even' then.
I Gloucester. Dan-Troop, son of ’the;. Meeting Kipling in London later,
j skipper, tells Harvey the cook comes he told of the discussion oyer - his
1 from ’“the in’ards of -Cape Breton, negrioes. The authors reply'-' was
I where the farmers speak homemade.•-characteristic of Kipling’s certainty
’ of the factual material that .. went
r.to his works.
“Fools.!” he-exclaimed., “Didn't-they
.now I w'ou’Af. nori put. Such a''..thing
f -I were nor sure of .y'he^acts ?”
Ak Neat Model
Candas, Wheat Kings
. V ■z
Ak-;.J'o±d-..of .-Siavely, AI-
•-^amp.idxjx.
?ld for an exhibit
the 1935. Interna-
d Hay Show in Chi-
ory marks- the' 21st
that the title ”Wheat
■•bestowed on- a Car.a-
firn’.er., Following is’ 3-list of
“wheat' k: e 1911:
Seager Wh kat^hewan
it is somewhat noteworthy.0 that
Kiug George V. was a war casualty.
When-he was in France reviewing
the troops in 1915 hl.s horse becaipe
startled by .the explosion of a shell,
• reared aiid fell upon him crushing
hiru severely so that he had-to be ta-.
--b;ej£,Aa._ihe hospital. It is' said , that
even afterwards lie had*1?l>as"nf“of'palin
in his steniaoh; jrhe.ii, -again, af*jkej
Armistice services at the. Cenotaph
in* Pieeadiljv Square, in' 1928. . lfe
■ s.ro'od with bared heaihramong his
people on an inclement, dhy, paying
tribute to the:, fallen heroes of < the
: -Empire. Tie-contracted an illness .that
••-cvm-frrie^—l-^i----t-Q.--h-i-s-~l^l-Jfun_
months, during which his life ;'i.t times’
•hung in the balance. It. was nearly a
year .before lie-recovered sufficiently
to return., from• Windsor to London.-
The significance of this Is that on
such occasions the dangerous prac
tice .prevails of men standing
bare heads, thereby exposing
selves, to the menace of severe .ill
nesses Which' frequently prove fatal.
It is a useless and Senseless custom,
and one which should be discarded;'
.Many' thoughtful ministers ui .'con
ducting funerals ’during' the winter
season'set the_example of keeping
their hats on while the cortege is be
ing, borne from, the house to the hearse
arid again during the services .at. ihefi
grave.. This is ’preeminently' sensible,
and becoming. Tbe notion that people
must expose themselves to dahgi»r in'
obedience to an antiquated observance
is ridiculous., and the sooner it is
abandoned the better it will be for
those’ who ..attend such gatherings.
The-jjKing’s .sickness should be a. warn
ing to. the entire world. —• Brantford
....... ,. . ■.
Payment of $8,262,415
To Wheat Pools Asked
r.e^an
-u Com.Judged
.I1EG1.NA. Payment' of S8.2G2,-
415 to the Ca’iadiatr Wheat Pools
by the Canadian .Wheat Board is
asked in a resolution to be .placed
before the Saskatchewan Legislature
Clarence Stork (C"C'.F.T.
' ’Malcolnr MacMillan; tbe -youngest
M.P—he is hnxi 5(!^ars young
er than the j?a^her of the House,
Mr. Lloyd George--has taken, a good
look'at the Houk^ since the g>iera!
election. “I thinks I shall like it* all
right,” he said cautiously. '
lie is going to- be very busy, fpr,
in addition to parliamentary^ duties,
he is.studying’ law, and has yet to
take. hi’s\ arts degrep. But Mr. Mac
Millan is not'a bit dismayed. He ii
going to take the arts degree at
Edi,nbur.ghv' and, unless Parliament
makes it impossible, continue his law
studies..-. ,•
Mi-. MacMillan . was “oji. th« .
stump” before he was 20, and hail
probably done more public talking .
in two years .tjian, some- member^
Parliament have done in twenty. Ha
is a singularly quiet, self-possessed
.young miftn, of medium height> fair v
hair and - fresh complexion,' with
brown eyes. He' wears luh n-rimrried
spectacles-
He won for Labor the Western
Isles of Scotland — a constituency
which lie had to cover by motorboat
as .well as car.-fOverseas Daily Mail,
That Weasel Word /
Some way after the Toronto Globe,
The Ottawa Journal and -the (|Vic
toria Colonist—“after” in point of
time, and not at all- in the quality
of its detestation—his respectably
family newspaper desires tp support
them in their protest against thl . ^'.
use of the word “contacted.” ...
It is to be noted that Webster,
the lexicographer, admits the verb.“to
contact” to its pretty-nearly-all-em- .
bracing pages. ’ Contact: verb tranal-
T^U^ays-AVebste^-uiveans-
into contact”—“too touch.? Liter
ally it means pretty much what Is
intended t° mean in nipsf of the re
cent newspaper usage which eybkei
.the protests here cited. - ,
You "contact” some party, or
other of the second, part; you .'meet
dT’m'7'airfl--you have some _o.theit. deal-......
ing witK him. You" Tfuestioir ■ him,-----
you lind out wh.at he .is up to., you
pu.t your “cards on the table and ask
to see- his^-you meet him or' “meet
up” with Ti’im, and “proposi
tion”-him. If you are-going to con
tact a' mail, why shouldn’t you pro- a
positjon liini while you are about it?
—why should vqu strain at your ^nat
of elocution when you have so com-,
fortably'.swallowed- your camel?
But ’ mostly^, -as the word afflicts
the sensitive ear in this l^Tceiit us- <• .
age, it means little more thSflkri ex
pressed in the good old Anglo-Saxon
'“meet.?—Vancouver Province.
Police Answering Calls
Within Two Minutes
TORONTO. -- The average elapse
of time between a call for, police ,
and their arrival at a given spot was -
two minutes .under the new police
radio '.system, , Sergeant Richard-
Pouht-ncy, officer,in charge of police
communications, told a gathering of
of— Radio Engineers -at
the -University last' weik. _
•ing listened .in on police calls .dur
ing . the ' evening while the guest ;
speaker, Professor B. de F. Ba\l<r de-
jiPribed their benefits-.
' Conducted by Professor' Henry C , /
' ' . t Z
with the co-operation of the various departments of
Ontario Agricultural College. ’
muly<
;■ violent/
e l re-
aange-
ement,
islness
lus’.rs /
• . br
p.'.ases
M’ncn of-
L>ur-
i little
acute'
ir-tps ripen at the sane tune as
O.A.C'. No. 21 barley am! nr.- ’he
■ v:ir,i<'ti»’.s ('.onimotily.'grown 'in On
tario, where barlo'j? ’jand» oat • are
■ grown in; mixtures for grain ’■pro-
"Tuciibn. ,z ’ • •
l.’r^f. W. J. Squirrel!,’ ]><•;•'. of
P'i»-’.<1 Husbandry, O.A.C.
. Your soil inay.be runnitir
of the plantfood nutf:*
plios]')hPi j,c acid; or possible
’’Inhic ac’nl arid p'ltash; I:' y<m have
.1 u<i-i<l supply ,..f manure'<m hand.
.'I a mild ad\is'|. yiuj.to s,vp’pl‘',mont
with .--lipi'r phosphate
In' 1!»a tes
Rate ;,Yield ' G’n Ac/
1 S. tori'.
on 5.6 ton
:on 3'1 ton
supply of
’■'^ition of ’O pA.^-pot-
emnplet*
'!l;zer,'sudi as' 2-12.-6 or 2-12-10
':sed. at the fate* .Of 250 Ths: per "
. - •i'-','r;T'should .give you more and
- bv^t^r : Ebslfilagc. according to et-
porimfiTts that Irav’e been ( enduct-
•'■I.in i'e» 1 County.
Prof. Jb'pry G."Bell.’ I>p* of
■•"'•■misfry. O.A.C. *: