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Port Perry Star (1907-), 26 Mar 1936, p. 6

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4) » 3 N oy CANADA, Ne: THE EMPIRE A & ' : . " tA : - - REP of the ---------- VLE or : i} " » - ; x Ay . : Fe : \ . Gl THE WORLD P R E S S he AT LARGE ol J 3 i he A " 0 : : CANADA The firm was "ordered by an ad- & ig poli vertising board to stop these displays BRIE : «lon the ground that dolls were not A Censored News subjected -to immersion in water and Torcign newspaper correspondents | the advertising was, therefore, mis- S «returning from Germany complain | leading. J y that it is hecoming increasingly dif- Surely the board consists of bache- : { : - ficult 16 squeeze real news of the|lgrs, else they might have known AE day out .of Nazi Germany. ~_| that one of the joys of having a BN One American correspondent "avho |-doll is to bath her every day, no AS had to travel to Copenhagen, Den-| mere cat's wash or a wipe with AS | mark, to file his dispatch, remarks | dtmp towel, but a real soaking ab- 5) < "that "newspapermen are feeling | lution. --Stratford Beavon-Herald. we # more and more the chitch of the : - Rae kid glove of terror." jn) Ie veveals that 12 members of . Sons of Scotland ! aa the Association of Foreign Corre: Scotlund, with a list of famous YI spondents, and many others. who [501s to commemorate this year, will RAR wire not members, have been expeil-| PRY" host to more than the usual 2) AR ed from Germany, on the ground that number of visitors. . James Watt, a ; their articles "were misleading and [John L. Macadam, George Brunton, EIS poisoned the international atmo- James Mil, author of "Analysis of 5 sphere." ' the Mind," and John Grieve, the be It is a stranglehold, strong-arm Dunfermline poct, wre among those Be system possible only under a dictors vince achievements will be honored. FANN ship.- Victoria Times. Of particular interest to all coun- agra tries where voud-building has reach- Explained cd high development is the carcer of After seeing thie Ottawa Technical school hockey team perform in Lon- ity don, one can understand how the Po Capital is the mother of hockey RLY players. It was the smaytest see- CHP ondary school team ever seen in this % ; diztvict:® London Free Press, ' ie h 34 a | - HAVE A Ton of Haggis 7% The Scottish Canadian will. learn | £3 # na with awe, and the Sassenach with Le surprise perhaps, that on one even- NBA ing Bust ver two thousand pounds of Rody hares crossed the Tweed in order to Fe appear at the Sto Andrew's festivities red in London. Ud Ae How many Scotsmen were needed to 3 4 consume a full ton of this "great PERERA chieftain of the puddih' race" one does ATE TS 31 not dare speculate, but the quantity Wabgts i: confirms certain rumors that are cur- 3 rent respecting the number of Scots- HTE i fe men who have succeeded in making N their escape from Scotland. But a ton PLS ' of Hire should at least be "worthy o' { 7 { a grace as lang's my arm," and it is Oat! to be hoped Lendon Scots found it to £5 i] ee bea "elorious gicht, warm-reeking J i reo as anv that Burns ever ate. -- GET = Winn'per Tribune Yo 7 # a hs Zi Nzw York Corrected AND In the New York Times there 1s an 84 % | alvertisement of the New York Tele- YA 0 phone Company, which sounds like a AY Gibertian joke. It commences, "Alex- £3 ALE ander" Graham Bell, inventor of the ONG telephone, went to Boston from Nova jt ul Scotia to found a- school to help the PIA deaf. His experiments led to the tele- Yi He A, phone." As Bell went from Brantford Ry Ti to Boston, after his early experiments fie 5) . herve, and as he did not go to Nova ZA GIES Scotia until he had acquired a Summer ra residence there in later life, the Srl A misinformatior™tin this particular ad- Yip vertisement cannot be deseribed as 5 4 otherwise than eolosszal. ---- Brantford SAH k- Expositor. he ' SE Ti 5 How About It? \fradt Oi 7 A farmer member of 'the Canadian RN : Parliament -- one who isn't convinced He OE that we need many "isms" for making LEN "t a go of life, rose in his place the iy Ie : othér day to inform the nation and the Sy t - world that he has gotten along with- ¢ Fo out a bathtul so far in-life and isn't ¢ bd likely to fose any sleep if he never Ky | Ha has one. . . . Ed 0) 3 It is difficult to be dogmatic abaut BAY Fa . these things. Many a good man has ATR washed his neck at the rain barrel. 3 ak Many a good man has wound up his pt - clock 0' nights and booted the cat op 7 : into the shed before hicing himself od ALA off to bed. Many a good man has a "taken his wife's scissors to his own fy whiskers, snorting at the idea of a 5 barber doing it. oh 3 But it is nice. to have furnaces, Vir E rl bathtubs and radios. No doubt the Sth oH sturdy gentleman from Brant cowity Gy at would enjoy them.--- "Regina Looers i. Es it : Post. . AH "Goofy" i) Pvis A young wife "in California is : a petitioning for divorce because her g iy ; \ husband spanked her with a clothes J Sa 70 brush, she haying been: forgetful A i; of enough to have omittedgto say "Yes, A ft sir." Preparatory to the spanking he i 4 ¥ had the ill-mannered creature re- Zi HA peat "Yes, giv," 600 times, Had she 2 i 7 had the grace to have said "No, sir," Sr, 07 i at an earlier stage in the proceedings A ? * she might have saved herself a lot ga > "of trouble. Since she didn't, why not ihe 2 3 Jearn a little patience now while her Ti « Jord and master endeavors to teach i re % : her decorum and respect? Ad pis. We don't know exactly what the 2 145 word "goofy' _means, but whatever A; ge. 4 it does mean it fits the pair.--Halifax 7 Chronicle. i) i Led LG TT e------ 7 They Must Be Bachelors. An American, firm of doll manu- Zit facturers staged a display in store windows showing one of their dolls immersed in water, perfectly firm and fresh looking, and another doll, made by another firm also immersed in water but soggy and misshapen "and the color washed out, it, John Macadam, whose carly experi- ments led to modern system of maca- damizing. While Macadam dica a century ago, the methods he evolved are still considered sound. Watt was another Scot who built for posterity. He not only developed the steam engine but his name is perpetuated in the word "watt" --the unit of clectrical power. . Aberdeen will honor the 100th an- niversary of the death of - Hector Boece, whose seventeen-volume of Scottish history, though partly drawn, ffom legendary sources, was notably complete for 'he times: Boece, whose -seventeen-volume part of his life in Aberdeen, wheres he was the first principal of King's Col- lege, . 5 Oatmeal Saw Him Through Letter to the Toronto Globe. *---Sir:--On February 2 John Mar- shall Bennett, trapping with Henry Graham on the Still river, in the township of Brown, left here for their camp .Jone. Instead of taking their old trail to camp, he to.k a new one by way of Long Lake, and dur- ing a storm he became lost, and had '| been wandering in che busl for 11 and Howard Brooks days before his partne Thompson, with Gordon found him in a hunter's. camp [sland Lake, about eight miles from here. 3 When they found Mr. Bennett he l.ad his toes, nose and fingers frozen, «nd was just about exhapsted, the only food he had with him for 11 days being a small package -of eat- mea] and ,a small quantity of con- densed milk, When you take into consideration that Mr. Bennett is past 70 years of age, and started on a 1G-mile snowshoe tramp through a strange section of the country, it is a great wonder that he lived to tell of ' E. H. KELCEY, Loring, Ont. THE \EMPIRE Television On the Way It is remarkable how many people express surprise that television is so slow in maturing. This frame of mind, where scientific miracles are concerned, is typical of the age. Peo- ple are so used to everything happen- ing with a_rush in these days that they have no patience to wait on painstaking pioneer research. The television experts .are fairly certain, however, that we shall see a practical boom in television next vear, and I am told that manufac- turers are already making their plans accordingly. We--cannot have private television in operation, how- ever until next summer at earliest, by which time the Southern broad- casts on private sete from-the Alex- andra Palace. ' Before next Christmas, on the other hand, we shall probably have television pictures broadcast to West End cinema screens. It would be a reasonably safe bet, I{am sure, that we may see next year's Derby, if not. the Grand National, that way. Private sets will not be cheap at first.---T.ondon Cor. Ottawa Journal. Loyal Toast "My Lords, Ladies and Gentlemen: The toast. is: 'The Kirg. Queen Mary, the Duke and Duchess of York and the other members of the Royal Family,"" . Thus; --in_futurey toastmasters official functions. . His Majesty signed the order, authorizing the new loyal toast, last week British News Review. at "Making 'a' motion. picture is an and drafts, with malodrama in every step, It is tremendously interest- ing.-- Hugh Walpole. i : 43 :! Clubs 'Turn Women a! on; From Knitting To Economic Problems Parliamentary Library Finds In- creasiig Feminine Demand. for Weighty" Tomes . - OTBAWA, Pavliamentary Ii. brarians are finding that the weight- iest tomes aré now in-demand, not only by economists, Government bureaus, and learnéd members, -but{- also by women for use as reference for 'club debates apd speeches, Recently, an elderly woman asked to see a treatise on "Economic Rela- tions Within 'the British Empire." Another woman. asked for several lengthy volumes oA Russian culture and conditions. The library, recognized as contain- ing one of the. most complete sections on the continent on economic and financial affairs, is restricted to use of Senators and members of the House of Commons, bug is open as a reference library to. those in search lof information on abstruse problems. The * librarians have commented they found women becoming mote | keen on matters of publie import and said the number of reading clubs and study clubs has increased in such a way that women readers are ve- questing the most learned books. Though inquiries by mail are not always welcomed, occasionally. a de- | bating society in another part of the {country is hard-pressed for informa- j tion and turns to his library. A letter was received fom a wo- man in the United States who wished to know the data relating the transi- tion of the House of Guelph into the House of Windsor, . "They don't seem to have as much , time for knitting as they usea to," {one librarian remarked sadly, as he took leather-bound volumes down from a high shelf. r The Perfect Driver Surveys His Record (From the St. Thomas Times - Journal) i Josepli S. Cortelyou, of Haworth, . N.J., has driven automobiles of vari- ous forms and sizes for 38 years, dur: [ing which time he hac never heen "charged with excedirg a speed limit, never bumped into anybody or any- thing; in short his driving record is | | perfect. On receiving his 193% license "Tommy Touhy, Chicago gangster, shown in a wheelchair as he was taken to Federal court in Minneapolis, Minn., by U.S. Marshals to be arraigned on charges .of participating in mail robbery at a Minneapolis railroad station in 1933. _The disease weakened gangster was wheeled to the court room after being brought™rom St. Paul jul. Canadian Youth : More Precocious Than English Lad Superintendent of -Penitenti- aries Recommends Segre- , gation of Convicts Between 16 and 21. Canada has only 'two OTTAWA | girls under the age of 21 imprisoned in penitentiaries, young men under that age, according to Brigadier Superintendent whose report on the Borstal system as against. 266 Daniel . M. of -Ormond, Penitentiaries, | plates the motor vehicle commission-| recommends the. definite segregation er of New Jersey sent him a letter of young convicls between the ages; | of 16 and 21. i of commend: tion. i Mr. Cortelyou beg)n his motoring in. italy with a three-wheeled affair "The great majority of young iin 1898. It had one cylinder of two] | horse-power, and was air-cooled. { Undar good rowud conditions it could do 12 miles an hour and could run for 15 minutes before requiring re- pairs, When he began motoring in! the States in 1901 'he had a car which had two forward speeds, but if he wanted tp reverse he put oe} foot on the ground and pressed | backwards. There were then no| garages and no service stations. took him a week to ppt the car in shape for his Sunday drive of five miles. "I looked at the car before starting," he said, "studied it, crawl- ed ander it, get in and trusted to God for the rest." : _ This pioneer admits th. .t he had his troubles with the police, but not exactly in connection with his driv- ing. He made the startling 'innova- tion of equipping his cars. with doors, and so irritated the police that they forbade him to take pass- engers with him. They explained that the doors prevented one from getting out fast enough in an emerg- ency. ie. also had trouble when he installed electric lights, and he had to take a police captain for a trial spin to demonstrate just why he did not have to get out at dusk and light the lamps. : Tha only car that. really troubled Foi however, was one built "in ta | shipyard It had a wmarine echgine {and was equipped with a rudder in-| «stead of a steering wheel. Being a landlubber, Mr. Cortelyou will tell you that his chief difficult: was that when he worked the rudder the car usually went. the other way from what he intended. } Mr. Cortelyou has only one sug- gestion to make and it seems a per- fectly sensible one. Phat is that drivers with cl®an records should have a sticker or plaque affixed to their cars and that holders of such awards should get lower insurance rates, Face Powder Now Made ; From Shark Brains For some, years the shark has heen commercially exploited for its skin, ~ handbags and shoes, for its fins which make a Chinese soup delicacy, and for its oil which more more than rivals cod liver oil, Now Australia has evolved an excellent face powder from dried shark brains. The industry of shark catching or, "meshing" is being fostered by the New South Wales Government along stretches of coast where the fish are found. An excellent market for ; Shark leather and oil already exists. It! .. Two_ Variations A most attractive shirt blouse is today's simple to sew pattern. It has a new and charming neck and buttoned yoke effect: An- other chic detail is the soft ful- ness at the back. } : You'll wear it to town. with your suit or with a separate skirt for sports. Wear is overblouse or tuck-in En Style No. 2692 is' designed for sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 36, 38 and 40-inches bust, Size 16 requires 2 yards of 89-inch material for the short sleeved blouse, HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number: and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15¢ in stamps or coin. (coin preferred); wrap it carefully, and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto, convicts find sthemselves in. peniten- tiaries due to a weakness of inhibition arising - from--inappropriacte early training, their greatest defect being lack of self control," reports General Ormond. "The majority of these vouths have been guilty of crimes of acquisitiveness, theft, burglary, housebfeaking and embezzlement. "A relatively large number have been implicated in ~~ imes in which lethal weapons played a part. Ap- proximately 75 per cent... of these youths had = 'convictions recorded against them prior to being sentenc- ed to a penitentiary. Over 50 'per cent. have served terms in industrial schools, reformatories or jails. Twenty-five per cent, have committed offences of so heinous a . character that the public sense of dectney~de- manded they be sentenced to a peni- tentiary to ensure their control for a long period." ' The St. Vincent de Paul Peniten- tiary has 77 convicts under 21; Kingston, 37; Dorchester, 36; Man- itoba, 20; B.C. 14; Saskatchewan, +21; Collin's Bay, 7. : The cast corridor of the south wing of Kingston Penitentiary is be- ing remodelled for the accommod- ation of Class D convicts and - the east cell block then made available for the young convicts. The building has 114 cells, the largest in any Ca- nadian penitentiary; the cells three floors, with 19 cells to a range the cells. THis enables classification of the young convicts into groups, each group having its own corridor for training purposes. The "seven young convicts in Col- lin's Bay are near the' expiration -of their sentences so the new system is not being applied to them. - The youngsters confined under the Borstal system.in England, General Ormond reports, are 99 per cent. British stock, and foreign-born lads are not confined in Borstals, "The consensus of Borstal officers _|{ who have a knowledge of the con- dition in Canada was to the effect that 'the Canadian youth is precocious and more sophisticated than the lad of the same years in England,' " says the report, The routine under the new system in Canada has been set as follows: G6 am; opening bell. Exercises; 815, work; 11.15, return to cell block; 11.30 dinner; 12.45, work; b; 'return to cell block; 5.30, supper; 6, silence period. for study -and meditation; 7, assembly for sollective study and rec- reation; '9, retire to cells, rooms or dormitories; 9.30, retiring bell. During the first six to nine months in the institution all young con¥iets will be 'ealled upon to perform ardu- ous labor' under skilled instructors: convicts will be placed in shops or at skilled labor. It is intended to in- culcate habits. of industry, regularity and application to hdrd work over a period of not less-than 8 hours a day. A distinctive dress will be "Hevised for the young convicts, t the outset. the . educational standards will be ascertained and those found. illiterate will be requir- ed to attend schols. One supervising officer is appointed for each 30 young convicts, . x All these plans deal with young male convicts, the report stating that in addition to the fact that there were only two young female con- victs, the treatment of young women is entirely different from that pro- vidéd for young men and is a much more intricate matter. It is also stated that very satisfactory tréat- ment is in practice in the prison for Nomen and no change is recommend- ed, Mrs Ruel | Kon Hekyy on- more |. From 6 to 9 months selected young | hen Newspaper Women Visiting the White House Give Imitation of "U.S. President's Wife-- To © + Her Amusement WASHINGTON, ~ Your corres pondent -has been out among the. ladies and thus has picked up cer- tain items which could hardly have come to him and had he been play- ing around poolrooms and other haunts of the, male, writes Rodney.' Dutcher. i One of the most exciting of these bits of news_is the fact hat Mus.! | Franklin D. Roosevelt can find her way around her own kitchen. Some of the-girls who attend Mrs. Roosevelt's press conferences give their sworn word that she showed, them through the new White House- kitchen and demonstrated an aston- ishing familiarity with all gadgets, fixtures, and employees. : There are no end of cupboards and closets in the new presidential kit- chens and, the First Lady of the United States could tell-"just - what | cach tas used for, without peeking 'lin to see. Nor. did 'she mind showing' whole shelves of canned vegetables to a in the White fresh, : Incidentally, Mrs, Roosevelt spoke to all the servants and all the ser- vants spoke to Mrs. Roosevelt in a way which showed very plainly that they had met one another before. Another thing on which your cor- respondent has certain information, was the Gridiron Widows. party' at the: White House, given for news. paperwomgn. Dr A They all had a good time when Mrs, Jay Hayden impersonated Mrs, Roodevelt, -voice -and all. When a lady acting as stooge asked her, | "What does Your Majesty think of' 'the latest fashions for women?' Mrs. Hayden grabbed a microphone and said:" 13: 5 : "Whether the beret should be worn on formal occasions is a mat-| ter of taste." I hope that during-the coming summer each little family | will: get inte--is motor and inspect the great 'natural beauties of -our land, "Then when the winter comes you | can sit happily 'by your own fireside and remember the pleasant times you had among the birds and the flowers' and the hees. And, besides, the peace of the world lies in- women's hands. ) . "On the picnic we had cold chicken' salad, . pineapple, and cheese. But! the children had hard-boilded eggs. I sometimes think there is better char-| acter and more kindliness among people in the high income tax "scale | than there is among people in the low ipcome tax scale. "On Thursday IT am ..ding a bi-! cycle down to Windsor for break-| fast. And on Saturday morning I have an engagement with the Lord? Mayor of Dover to swim the Channel! to Calais for lunch. "The World Court must have the support of its friends. In a few; minutes this interview will be ter- minated, as+I have an engagement "to open a gold mine on the air, I "shall proceed immediately thereafter "to pilot the China Clipper." One is assured that Mrs. F._D. laughed very heartily at this take- off of her press conferences. . \ : D.! Confiscate Copies Police RATE -Conlaining "Hitler's Love-Life" {roy Supplement, v "O'Ffira fn group of young women' who had 'Liberal or Conservative--is that they automatically supposed all such stuff fwill make the decision when the act- House would be id crisis comes. The ominion has | propriations of $161,836,147--slash- i » ------ ficates. "THat 1677p = 't Follow' Leadwof ~~ f° Britain ; Won : hE J : NO ALARM IS rEg a He OTTAWA, -- Canada has no plana for national defense comparable to the great defense system of the Units "ed Kingdom for the strengthening of .the navy and the air force, if was learned recently in official quarters. Although Canada ranks fifth among'& the trading nations-ef the world, her army is smaller than that of little Siam, while her navy would be infer- jor to that of Switzerland, if Switzer- Jund had a navy. : ' Canadian governments refuse in peace-time to" accumulate war machin- ery and munitions, and there are. public men ahd others who argue . that Canada 4s having a sufiiciently difficult time to- finance the peace without undertaking to finance an. . ther war, Ry i Proposed expenditures on natjonal defense this year total $11,252,001, or, roughly, $1 for each persdn in Canada. This compares with Britain's Billion- and-a-half-dollar appropriation for in- crease in armaments alone, or, rough- ly, $30 for each person in the United Kingdom, over a three-year period. Attitude of Canadian governments -- no warlike intentions, 'is the last coun- try in the world to rattle the sabre, "People Oppose - War Political leaders are convinced the majority --of- the. people are opposed to war, if they are not actually op-. : posed to_ preparedness for war. One o ledder would not send troops out of' the country withapt summoning Par- likment; the other would hold a re- ferendum; a third no longer says,' "Ready, aye, ready"; but, in the hist-. oric words of Hon, William R. Mo- therwell, he is "only semi-ready." Canadian experts state that > in. -& j grease in the number of British cruis- > > ers to 10 invoives the addition of 20 cruisers. According to the naval agreement which is in force until the end of this year, Britain was dllowed 650 cruisers, subject {o certain escala- tor clauses which provides that, should other powers build more ships, Britain could build nfore. Civil Aviation Stressed Provision' for 1,750 British aircraft for home defense involves an increase of approximately 1,150 heavy bombers and fighting. planes. Canada plang no ambitious program of this kind. The total Canadian appropriation for aviation this year is $3,000,000, and much of that is for civil aviation. Nor is there in Canada any definite plan for the correlation of industry to defense; though commercial pro- duction could be rapidly changed to war production should the need arise, as it did 20 years ago. Starting from scratch in 1914, Canada made her- self a fighting power to be reckoned with. Were war to come again, and she took part, she would have to scrap much of her obsolete equipment and train her manpower, according to military experts. - GN U.S. Agriculture Budget Slashed WASHINGTON--An Agricultural Department supply bill carrying ap- - Ey J ing budget estimates by $28,625,857 -- was reported to'the Hotise by the ap- pr~-riations committee. * The measure ignored a request by Chief Forestes F. A. Silcox for $1,- 000,000 to carry on the Administra- tion's. ast "she.ter belt," project in the Western drought area. "Instead the measuce carried anly $99,152 "for continueu study of the project." "It was indicated that ury ~ funds 3» ent-- the. 3 _ PARIS.--The newspaper Le Jour- ral charged recently thot police had 1aided its office and saized its 13 fi'e-copies of the banned Sunday sup- ed to be an expose of the "love-life" of ~Chancellor Hitler. " Charges of the raid, which follow- ed confiscation of 'newsstana copies of the edition, were made as repres- appear in court to answer a suit brought by the German Government against Le Journal for publication of the article. : 2h] : The action' was brought French court under the law of 18 dealing with the. publication of in- sults to foreign chiefs of state, The action of the Government in suppressing the article and: confis- cating the issue of Le Journal has aroused a violent storm of protest in the entire French press. ; The National Federation of French Newspapers issued a ' statement charging the authorities with an un- warranted encroachment on the free- "dom of the press. plement carrying what was represent-|- entatives of the paper prepaved to; to carry on the shelte.. belt plan -- ultimate cost of which wa. estimated at-$250,000,000--would hav: to come out of emergency or Yelief appropri- ations, } : e ol Australia Plans Economic Survey - , CANBERRA, 'Australia--Witi. ex view to removin misconception » 3 abroau the Australian Government is considering = carrying out special in a Scientific and economic Surveys re- gq lating to- immigration. Th. Common- wealth government has recently been considering the idea of reopening its ports t¢ immigrants so as to increase its population, both on the land and in the cities. Fy : But the pian is proceeding cau- tiously, - The surveys are to, deter- mine Australia's capacity for absorb- ing immigrants and also to investi- gate the feasibility of encouraging new industries tobe. established in the Commonwealth. gay " ~

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