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Port Perry Star (1907-), 8 Aug 1935, p. 7

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Ww al -- streams, -. A song of love for Canada, -« man agreement was a "grave event" that had disturbed _ land adhered to. it under conditions | Piping A New Tune A long time has passed since pip- ings have been a haute couture style for dresses, but at this midseason, Lanvin does some charming things with silver pipings on black tulle or white crepe or even on pale flax blue linen. Lelong is another to endorse pipings; and Mainbocher shows a yed crepe afternoon dress with vel- vet piping in matching tone. Meet After Sisters Forty-One Years For 41 years Mrs! George Lucas, £ Chaplin, Sask., had not seen her ster. But the other day Mrs. Wil- am Kr , the sister, of Seattle, ash./dropped in to visit. "It was st Aike a dream come true," Mrs. Lucas said. A Song of Canada Lilian Leveridge in the New Outlook There is a song of Canada Which only they:can hear To whom the name of Canada, The name and fame of Canada, Are intimately dear. Tis whispered by the night g With tender, delicate delight; "Tis echoed in the mighty tone Of winds that race from zone to zone, : From height to lonely height. leaves at There is a song of Canada-- } A thousand years ago The Indian mother hushed her child With those melodious wood-notes wild, In morn and evening glow. She Jearned it from the lips of flow- 3 ers, x From warbling birds and twinkling showers, From stars, and snows, and foaming From mirth and music, love and dreams, In rosy, raptured hours. There is a song of Canada-- Our heroes knew it well-- Of loyal love for Canada, Too deep for words to tell. Jt breathes in evils overthrown, In burdens borne: and lives down. : honors won with hands unstain- ed, plenty, tained, glorious theme is known. laid By power and peace at- Its France to Speed - ~ Warship Building Necessary Through Anglo- German Navy Pact, Pietri | States. Brest--France must speed "the building of capital ships as a re sult of the Anglo-German naval agreement, Francois Pietri, Minister of the Navy, said here recently, characterizing Britain's negotiation of the agreement as imprudent. Speaking before members of . the Chamber of Deputies, who had at- tended his review of 'the French "fleet. M. Pietri said the Anglo-Ger- the status of European naval forces. "What surprized us in the Anglo- German agreemeat," he said, 'was not the faet of further German re- armament, for this was easy to fore- sce, but the haste with which Eng- that might make us doubt not only jts friendship but its traditional pru- dence. . "The sudden 'four-fold increase of the third Reich's tonnage should constrain France to follow up some forgotten arithmetic in naval mat- ters. We must accentuate our efforts in first-line ships." 10,000 Jobless to Attend School Los Angeles--Ten thousand stu dents began matriculating recently in perhaps the 'strangest school in the United States. The pupils will be paid to attend classes, and will be docked when they miss a' day. ; The unique educational ment, sponsored jointly by the Los Angeles County Relief Adminis- tration and the Department of Pub- lic Instruction calls for a total ex- penditure of $1,064,000. Students to be accepted are per- sons on the county relief rolls. The scheme was conceived to help them acquire instruction in a wide range experi- itis to begin with, and then it drop- SUFFICIENT UNTO THE DAY. Thank heaven the future is hidden! Thank heaven for short.seeing eyes! For bad luck cannot be forbidden, And good luck is such a surprise! An old colbred gentleman read with some interest the reports of the cross. country speed run by a stream-lined train, Man (seeing him reading the paper) --Pretty fast, wasn't it, Mose?- About the fastest thing ever to whizz along the ground. Mose (positively)--No, €uh, Ah re- call making much better speed some yeahs' ago when Ah passed by a cemetery at midnight. Love is never the same after a quarrel. Hard words leave a scar, and scar tissues doesn't function, The minister met one of the mem. bers of his church, lately reported to be 'on the sick list. Minister--Well, Mrs. Thompson, 1 am glad to see you out again. Are you quite better now? Mrs, Thompson--I'm a good deal bettter, thank you. 1 am not right, ag you may say, but I am better. Minister--That's right. What has been the matter? Mrs. Thompson--Well, 1 had tonsil- ped into my legs. Being left walting at the church doesn't scare a girl half as much as the prospect of being left waiting on the shell, . } The village choir was practising in preparation for a festival. There was uncertainty between the basses and tenors, and this aroused the ire of the cholrmaster, the village grocer. "I,00k here," he said, "if you're go- ing to sing bass, sing. bass; and it you're going to sing tenor, sing ten- or. But I can't stand this shandy- gaff. The fond maiden aunt was striv. ing wi' little success to amuse her ¢ma'l and very bored mephew. "Would you like me to tell you a fairy story, Tommy?" she" asked, making a last effort. °° : "All right, go ahead," replied. he nephew, indifferently. "Then I'll tell you one about Mae West. Customer--Do you sell hams, steam shovels, women's hats, icless refriger- ators, live chickens, setting hens, lumber, ready-cut houses, new auto tops, spinach, fish-bait and- that sort of thing? : Merchant--No, sir. All we do is to ge!l drug store merchandise and fill prescriptions. hi Customer--Then why the heck do you call this a drug store? It a fellow can put his life togeth- er properly, he ought to be good at jig saws. : "Little Girl--Daddy, when you see a cow ain't you afraid? Daddy--®©®f course, not, darling. Little Girl--When vou see a great big worm ain't you afraid? Daddy--No, of course not.- Little Girl--When you see a-hor- rible, monstrous bumblebee ain't you afraid? Daddy--No, certainly not, Little Girl--Ain't you afraid when it thunders _and lightnings? Daddy--No, no, you silly. child. Little Girl--addy, ain't you afraid of nothing in the whole word 'ceptin' mother? Don't blame the girls {if their volces aren't lady-like. They have to squall to be heard above the howling radio. Man (a3 he climbed into the bar- ber's chair)--I want a shave. No haircut, ng shampoo, no bayrum, no witch hazel, hair tonic, hot towels or face massages. | don't want the mani- curist to hold my hand or the\boot- black to handle my feét. 1 don't want to be brushed oft, and I'll put on my coat without help. I just want a plain shave, with no trimmings. Do you understand that perfectly? Barber (quietly)--Yes, sir, Lather, gir? . Some fellows inzist it is only_those who 'marry that are disappointed in love. | of the King's Stlver Morrisburg, PRIA PE $ "as 4 » aa am - . Ont, Returns To Navigation Circles RTT Steamship Lines. Photo shows: all on hand for the event. Like Leamington, "Wallaceburg, Picton, Oshawa and many other a ressive smaller Ontario communities where there has been a revival of ship ping during the past ve, Morrisburg, Ont., now becomes a port in every sense of the word. . Throngs of people from all parts of the world still crowd into the district attracted by the reputation of Dr. Locke and now regular daily passenger ser- vice on the ToonioRocheser- Thousand Islands-Montreal * route has been section of the celebration when S. S. Rapids Prince, in command of Capt. Cherry, entered the harbor for the first time. The Mayors of Morrhines and Waddington, N.Y, delegates from the Chambers of Commerce and other public bodies as well as throngs of citizens, were inaugurated, by Canada SCOUTING Here + There Everywhere ) A brother to every, other Scout, without regard to race or creed The Boy Scouts of India carried out a programme of loyal celebration Jubilee which included beacons in the hilly prov- inces, rallie:, parades, campfires and services for prayer and thanksgiving. Scouts of Assam contributed one "pice" each toward a eablegram _to His Majesty, and the Scouts of Bi- har and Orissa sent a message pt af- fection and loyalty through His Ex cellency, the Provincial Chief Scout by cycle relay 2,000 miles through the den:e forests of Orissa and Chota Nagpur. Timmins has organized its seventh Scout trocp in connection with the Central Public Schoo', through the co-operation of Principal E. J. Tran- som. "Scouting has done an immense amount of good all over the world, among races of every colour. When I was Governor of Ceylon I saw lit. tle brown boys, too pcor to buy any sort of uniform--they just had staves --organizing themselves into ~ Scout troop; and obeying the Scout Law. It had a wonderful effect on thom." -- Sir Herbert Stanley, G.C.M.G., Gov- ernor and Chief Scout for Southern Rhodesia. A report on the King's Cancer Fund Campaign from Chatham, Ont, re- corded the disposal by Boy Scouts, for "silver donations," of 7,000 lapel buttons bearing portraits of Their Their Majesties the King and Queen. Numbers of fraternal organizations in various parts of Canada are fos. tering or in various ways assisting Boy Scout troops, as a community gervice activity. The Scouts of Al- berton, Prince Edward Island, re- cently were provided with commodl- ous headquarters in the local Mas- onic IIall. A number of outstanding- ly successful Scout Groups in Alber. ta and British Columbia are sponsor- ed by B.P.O.E. lodgo:. Mr. W, J. Dick, President of the Boy Scouts As- sociation of Alberta, was asked to address the annual convention of Elks at Edmonton in June. The Sea Scouts are enjoying their usual summer cruises and camps. The blst Toronto Sea Scouts began the ceason with a cruise by 22 mem- bers in their two boats, dore" and "Captain," to Niagara-on- the-Lake. They made thelr week- end headquarters as guests of the Niagara-on-the-Lake Sea Scouts at historic Navy Hall A patrol of the Royal St. Lawrence Yacht Club Sea Scouts of Montreal made a triangular cruise up the Ot- tawa River to Ottawa, by the Rideau Canal -and Lakes to Kingston, and home by the St. Lawrence, aboard the whaler James Caird Il The Scout yacht "Jellicoe," visited Toronto and returned east to take part in the International Jamboree at St, Johns, Que. Lord Baden-Powell has made a posthumous award of the Bronze Cross, the highest award of the Scout Movement for gallantry at serious risk, to a ten-year-old Wolf Cub, Jack R. Green of the 1st Black- wood (Monmouthshire) Cub Pack. Cub Creen attempted to save his three-year-old sister, who had fallen into a pond, and lost his life with her, - CHAMPION RURAL ~ REPORTER FETED Missouri ~~ Grandmother in New York Says Crime is Not News. New York. -- A self-styled "ridge-runner" from the Ozark hills atrived in New York to be feted by editors and publishers, and wel- comed later by Mayor LaGuardia. She. is Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Mahn- key, winner of a magazine prize for the best rural newspaper correspon. dence. For 44 years she has written 504 we s which they otherwise ould nob receive. ] , A three-hour class five days a ""cek in a particular subject will be offered. The students will be paid' a weekly wage at regular werk re- lief rates, and as on work projects will lose a day's pay when they mis school. | : Courses in clericul and secretarial work, 'accounting, salesmanship, automctive, electrical, drafting, building trades, textile, foods, cos: metology, printing, horticulture, - landscape gardening and animal hus- bandry are on the gchedule, NERA NE , MONTHLY PRIZE CONTESTS i+ For Artists and Authors i HERE is one requisite that applies to every type of t contest entry, be it an advertising statement, limerick last line, descriptive letter, or a sketch, . . . .... That is SINCERITY. Send a 3c stamped return envelope for full information oy H regarding our Monthly Service for Artists and Authors, or send $2.00 for a yearly subscription, Sample sheet for 10c. ) GIFF BAKER, 39 LEE AVENUE, TORONTO, ONT. ¥ about the doings of Oasis, Mo., (population 27) or her former homes at Korbyville an¢ Miney, Mo., for the "Forsythe Republican," criculation 725. White-haired and a grandmother, Mr. Mahnkey found New York "tre- mendous, overwhelming almost," but said she wanted to "do 1t up right because I'll never be back any more." A week each in New York and Washingtn are part of the prize award, Only thé pleasant things that hap- pen in Oasis get into Mra. Mahn- key's column. : VIOLENT DEATHS It will perhaps come as-somewhat of a surprise to the majority of Can- adians to be told that the total num- ber of deaths in Canada during 1934 from violent causes was 6,448, That is an astounding statement, and one that should cause considerable thought, If a town with a population of between six and seven thousand persons were completely wiped. out by some sudden catastrophe it would shock the whole country. Because the deaths are widely scattered all ovet, the Dominion the realization of the calamity is less vivid, "We forgive those who bore us, but not those whom we bore. -- Dean Inge. : "Commo-- HIGHWAY SAFETY Additional Constables" Detail- ed to Traffic Patrol -- Car Inspection and Advertising Campaign. Toronto.--To cope with the rising tide of deaths from automobile ac- cidents in Ontario, Hon. T. B. Me- Questen, Minister" of Highways and acting Attorny-General, has an- nounced 12 constables had been ad- ded to the provincial force, most of them detailed to the highway traf- fic patrol. Provision for additional traffic police marked the latest step in Mr. McQuesten's campaign to promote highway safety. Possession of a driver's license has been made the basis for enforcing the traffic laws, said the minister, and he listed two other features of his safety cam- paign--police inspection of motor vehicles and equipment and an ad- vertising campaign. Departmental records showed 202 persons had been killed in automo- bile accidents during the first six months of this year," compared with 164 in the corresponding period of 1934. The June death toll was 44, an increase of 12 above the May total, "A small fine does not quite meet the situation," said Mr. McQuesten. "We will get more attention to the law if we exercise freely the can- cellation of the driver's license for a term." An act passed by the last session of the Legislature gave police power to order into a garage for inspection any motor vehicle they believed a menace to highway safety, the min- ister recalled. Necessity for such inspection was stressed in a circular Mr, McQuesten and Attorney-General Roebuck sent Ontario police heads several wecks ago. Tlis was followed by a circu- lar to magistrates and Crown at- torneys 'urging suspensin of drivers' icenses where such a course was be- lieved necessary, In the first six months of this year 1,763 drivers had their licenses sus- pended, compared with 1,271 sus- pensions in the same period in 1933. Of this year's total, reckless driving accounted for 783 cancellations. In- toxication brought 204 suspensions, and drivers were barred from - the roads without a license. Ocean Passenger Traffic From Canada Increasing Quebec.--From the opening of navigation in the St. Lawrence river April 20 until June 30 a total of 7,745 passengers left Montreal and Quebec for Europe, it was announc- ed recently. In the same time, 7, 627 passengers. arrived from Eur- opean points. Both figures showed a slight increase over last year. Navigation opened a week earlier this year. ; sip sninnbaiinn "What our better self is we can easily know if we will spare two minutes every night to ask ourselves what made us really happy, and not purely amused, in the course of the day."---Abbe Ernest Dimnet. , others, SOMETHING Just touch a light to "Dixie" " For Dixie is a mellow smoke The Best you ever tried! Then let your pipe decide-- DIXIE PLUG SMOKING TOBACCO TO WRITE HOME ABOUT \ 20° LARGE PLUG CANADA LEADS IN PLATINUM OUTPUT Over 200,000 Ounces Pro- duction For Last Year -- 55,755 Ounces in 1933 Toronto, Ont. -- Canada has emerged within the last few months as the world's leading producer in platinum, following a remarkable and steady increase in the Domin- ion's output of this precious metal till, in 1934, the world consumption and Canadian: production were al- most the same. I'igures on Canadian production were discussed last week by John C. Nicholls, assistant to the presi- dent, International Nickel Company of Canada. "We believe from a comparison of all the world production figures available, that Canada is now de- finitely in first place," Mr. Nicholls said, "Hitherlo, Russia, with mines in the Ural: mountains, has been the chief source of platinum. Re- liable figures on Russian production last year cannot be secured but a study of all data on production and consumption which is to be secured, indicates that Canada has definitely taken the lead." In 1934, Mr. Nicholls said, Cana- da produced - slightly over 200,000 ounces of the metals of the platin- um group. He thought that 1935 production would also be high. "Platinum is a by-product of nickel production," he explained. "There is approximately one ounce troy of platinum in cach 20 tons of copper-nickel ore from the Frood mine and the efficiency of modern milling and refining methods now makes practical the collection of the minute particles of platinum pres- ent in each ton of platinum-bearing ore." Though platinum has been fouad in the nine provinces and was ob- served as long ago as 1862, there are no official statistics on produc- tion before 1920 and during the next 12 years, the total for the platinum group was oniy 419,000 ounces or slightly more than double the production during the last 12 months. For 1933, it was 55,755 ounces but the remarkable increase in copper nickel ore mined in the Sudbury basin brought the total ov- er 200,000 ounces for last year, "Canada is now producing on a commercial scale, five of the six precious metals in the platinum group," Mr. Nicholls says, "These are platinum, palladium, iridium, rhodium and ruthenium. All are found in the nickel-copper ores of the Sudbury basin and Canada is also the world's chief source of palladium. Osmium is the remain- ing metal not produced in this country. "In addition to its use in jewelery and as a setting for gems and pre- cious stones, platinum is widely used in industry. It also acts as a variety of chemical ringmuster, causing other clements to react while being unaffected itself." "Education in the capacity for un- derstanding oneself and others, and for making oneself understood by is all-important." -- J. 8S. Haldene. "I have no formula for peace and must confess that 1 distrust tlie "Wars are never won, but they can be lost."--Bernard M. Baruch. judgment of those who say they possess one."-- Sir, Austen Chamber- Was First Canadian Soldier To Set Foot In France In 1914 The first Canadian soldier to land in France in the Great War was a visitor in Stratford recently. He is Capt, HH. II. Law, director of physic- al education in Verdun lich School. Cap'. Law ealisted in the medical corps at Kingston, anl vas a ser. ceant-major in No. 2 Canadian Sta- tionary Hospital Unit, which sailed from Southampton on November 8, 1914, while the mentbers of the First Canadian Con'ingent were still floundering in the mud of Salisbury Plains, and wondering who would have the distinction of being the first to land in France. The depature of the hospi al unit was carried out with great seereey, and the Canadians landed at Le Havre on the morning of November 9. About 11 o'clock that moraing Sergt.-Major Law of Kingston, Cn- tario, was marching down the gang- plank. He was the first Canadizn soldier exclusive of reservists who had been living in Canada und ve- called to their units, to land in France. He was closely followed by Staff Sergeant McDonald of Sarnia, who was the second man ashore. Although reluctant to discuss his war service, Capt. Law recalled the events of that morning when inter- viewed today. "1, recall the thing that impressed me most as we landed," he remin- isced. "The kits of British officers who had been killed were piled in heaps in the shed, to be sent back to Ingland. Most of them had blood- stains on them. That reminded us forcibly that we were going to war." The first order which he read in camp, he recalled, was that of a member . of a Wiltshire regiment had been court-martialed, and order- ed shot on a charge of attempted desertion. "The order was duly carried out at seven o'clock this morning," he recalled reading to the Canadian unit--further reminder of the grim business of war. } There was no welcome and no ceremony in connection with the landing of the first Canadian unit. The troops were met by a British RT.0. and escorted to camp. The Canadians were under the command of Col. A. T. Shillington of Ottawa, Classified Advertising AVIATION STARTED help you. join the De YOU WANT TO GET in aviation? We will Write for Information and Canadian Aviation Club, Ontarlo, BECOME A DETECTIVE SXPERIENCE UNNECESSARY. PAR- =~ ticulars FREE. Write Maurice Jullen, Drawer 26, Branch T. Montreal HORSES WORK BETTER when freed from Saddle Boils, Cuts, Sprains, Distemper, Colle, ete. by | Minard's Liniment, Keeping a bottle ' | of Minard's in the stable as well as in the house saves Vet's and Doctor's TEER LINiMENT Kitchener, Issue Neo. 31 -- '35 lain. ' 1 46

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