Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), July 26, 1939, p. 2

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fs pmte 2 the georgetown herald wednesday evening july 26th 1939 j the georgetown herald phone ho 8 gartem l megovray wwm eatta a weekly newspaper devoted to the beet interests of the town of ptanra and surrounding counter including the villages olchen wtl- nerval umehouse tbmxuowd baumaxad and terra cotfca issued tery wbdnesday evening at the offloe on main st georgetown subsoription rates 81u per year in advance united states 80s additional single copies 3c both old and new addresses should tan when change of address is woneated jkdvebfrmata rates legal notii ne for each subsequent u in blicfc f cc type 5c 13c per line for first insertion readers 8c per une for each r line additional notices qualifying as j entertainments society church or or- i meetings etc 8c per line minimum charge 25c reports of 1 held gladly inserted free in memonan nonces 50c and 10c per a for poetry birth marriage and death notices 50c small ad tertbements one inch or less boc for first insertion and 25c for each sub- sequent insertion display advertising rates on application although every precaution will be taken to avoid error the herald advertising in its columnson the understanding that it willnot be b gerald business offloe duly signed by the advertiser and with such error preotion plainly noted in writing thereon and in that case if any error ao noted to not corrected by the herald its liability shall not exceed such sv proportion of the entire cost of such advertisement as the space oocupl ed by the noted error bears to the whole space occupied by such adver the ffa docs jobpainttno of alfklnds remember me when i am gone away gone far away mto the silent land when you can no more hold me by the hand nor i half turn to go yet turning stay remember me when no more day by t day ion tell me of our future that you only remember me you understand it will be too late to council then or pray yet if you should forget me for a while and afterwards remember do not grieve for if the darkness and corruption leave a vestige of the thoughts that once had better by far you should forget and tfaan that you should remember and be sad christina oeorglna rossettl the difficult dat have you never met it that difficult day when nothing went right with your work with your play when try though you would both with hand and with brain your striving meant failing and fail ing again have you never heard it that hope in your soul that whispered today 1 11 get nearer my goal and then though you strained to the very last pinch the day came to night and you gained not an inch take heart and keep striving press on with a wld a morning will find you on top the bin aod then you will see looking down tfaejrough ways that the steps leading up were those difficult days life r one great heart the universe it stirred fcjby its strong pulse stars climb th g darkening blue gtt throbs in each fresh sunset s chaog ing hue and thrills through the low sweet song of every bird by it the plunging blood reds all men 1 veins joy feels that heart against his rap turous own and on it sorrow breathes her deep est groan it bounds through gladness and deep est pains basstonleas beating through all time and space ntlees calm majestic on alike though nature shake heavens endless arch j- or man 6 heart break because of some 1 dread facet i w tb felt in sunshine greening the soft sod ha children s smiling as in mothers tears and for strange comfort through the aching years me hungry souls have called that great heart oodi margaret deland making a report intelligible putting out its annual report for 193839 the dominion textile com pony has done a smart thing with the report is an explanation of whafcli it is about something to tell the oati dinary man what a lot of technical terms and financial jargon in the re port really mean there s the term accounts becelv able that of course is perfectly clear to a chartered accountant and even to a business man but it is by no means clear to the average man to the man who although he may not be in bo has an interest in a big national firm like dominion textiles accordingly the company explains tbat accounts receivable means money owed by customers it adds that a following line accounts r ceivable less reserve means that the company is holding part of its profits back it isn t optimistic enough to believe it explains that all its cus tomers will pay their bills so it is al lowing for losses that all a re serve means allowing for losses the company explains further that something must be held back for se curl ties and raw cotton and deprecia tlon all to provide against disaster should things go wrong to see that the mills are kept running fixed assets the company ex plains that these are simply the tools its employes make use of in manufac turing cotton yarn and cloth they have to be uptodate and first class tools or the company wouldnt be able to make yams and fabrics that the customers will buy hence fixed as sets repesent a lot of money it fc explained that no single person has enough money to pay for au these tools all this machinery that it takes thousands of people to put it up most of them living in canada they are the real owners of the company also s th put up money too but these donl own the company they only lent money and can t boss it unless they dont get the rent for their moneys use finally the management some times holds out part of the money or profits that it might otherwise pay the shareholders and uses it to buy more materials thats what is known as earned surplus merely sharehol ders money put back into the business to help it meet competition liabilities they simply mean debts what is owing for taxes always considerable in the case of a large concern what may be owing for plant and material recentyl purchased what would be owing for wages during the tune the balance sheet was being made up so all through the piece actuady annual reports and balance sheets are simple thlngsh- the people- who make them up would onlybo it in a simple way instead they confuse and devil them with a lot or technical terms and phrases that only a few understated with the result that the majority are confused and sometimes become suspicious they think and say that all these terms and technical words are used deliberately to confuse i hat the firms have something to con oeal to cover up in these days big industrial and financial organisations are of public concern they are a part of the whole of the national economy touch the public interest here there and every v here orten are in receipt of govern ment assistance in the circumstan ces it is their duty and they would be wise to tell the public about their business in an understandable way the example of the dominion tex tile com xmld be followed wide ly the 0 journal celia seems dumb by oloftm sncclaii the mischance- of a lifetime one afternoon mark twain who lost more tnan one hardearned fortune- by fltavesting it in nalrbralned schemes described to him in guttering tems observed a tall spare man with kindly a dark eyes and eager face coming up abe path with a strange contraption under his arm yes it was an inven i tjon and the man explained it to the ifxompxist who listened politely ui mu he had been burned too often bat im not asking you to invest a exclaimed the man you kite have as large a abate as you want t 800 mark twain shook his head invention dkint make sense the 1 stooped figure started away what did too say your name was r called after him bell replied the tnveotar a little alexander orataaa bell i coryell in the 1 monitor btkckwocdsnwa returning to bis j on your toes as we went out x baited awn grimly ton did aw kjbv tt we m fc tlrbjikoorplaoe air mail cements confedera tton says postmaster general mclakty the possibility for cementing con federation is provided by this type of communication said hon norman a mclarty kjc postmaster general speaking of the- telescoping of the provinces by air mall it is tune that accentuates our problems this service is to accelerate the speed with which our thoughts may be transmitted ao that we may realise we are all part of one country and that ours is a com mon heritage if the fishermen on the east coast can place his problem before the fish erman in british columbia if the grain gi of the west can quickly and easily communicate with the gram growe of ontario for instance does- nt that mean instead of canada being 3000 inues serosa with the vast and ttoejwest days apart our trou m s dayo be motuauy shared and we can more easily promote prosper sad the unity of our co tnrjndtng- the transcanada air peua drayton s coming to dashville was heralded by con- siderable excitement in what fondly believed itself the younger set dashville was fast emerging from vilragehood and was eminently city conscious celia came from new york all the girls were prepared for ultrasophistication a few came over to her aunt s farm to see her the very first eve ning they found a pretty healthy girl with a markedly simple straight forward manner dumb she seems to me said violet ray who was in normal school was too thin and had no steady boy friend tve come down here to play ten nis get some swimming in a really truly lake and run wild in the sun shine laughed celia to her aunt later i simply won t be inveigled mto bridge parties or indoor waste of time yes dearest aunt you may give one dance for me only i really want to live in the lake excepting when i m on the tennis courts evidently she cant play bridge 1 guess she s not much of a dancer either and gosh that dress had no style at all you might boy it anywhere i thought from what mrs webber said her niece was something marvelous darn good looker said the boys hoping their tennia would pass muster mrs webber laughed never mind celia she said i want them to see you dance that s why i m giving a dance for you they re all run silly with try ng to be what they believe new y k is they are just babies with new toys your uncle can t stay 1 the room when milly batt tries t am ke he says she looks jusl t k- gutndolyn the tame chimpanzee who smoked at the last circus 1 know you 11 for give them if they try to snub you if they knew who you were they d crawl at your feet but all i want is for them to be kind and friendly satd celia stretching her well molded arms i m simply spoiling for a swim did i tell you that wyatt fischer is coming tomorrow asked mrs webber well he is you know he is just through the beaux arts in pans he has been offered a posi tion in his father s office in phila delphia and we think he wiq go far i knew him a little m new york and celia blushed slightly well he won t tell these good young people a word until we say he may about anything she said vaguely there isn t anything to tell said celia exeeptingthat i-am- on the- stage the farmhouse made a lovely set ting for mrs webber s dance it was filled with fine old furniture and boasted wide rooms which had been recently floored with polished oak celia looked lovely in a simple pink dress that none but her aunt knew bore a paris label the rooms were filled some good jazz musicians gave their best and in the middle of the evening young wyatt walked in and smiled at celia so you re really back was all she said and with a real job he replied meaningly as they glided out on the floor gosh she can dance all right said violet powdering her uncome ly nose i 11 say she can but she has no une responded mildred batt who was short winded and clumsy line nothing she s got it de clared polly dawson a freshman al the state university good looking and a firstclass athlete after a delicious supper mrs web ber who loved young people and knew how to make an evening hap py rose and nodding to celia said we have tonight been celebrating my little niece s engagement to wyatt fisher whom you all know consternation registered on almost all the girls faces you will also like to hear that dear little celia is isolde the dancer whose picture i know you ve seen in the rotogra vure sections of your sunday pa prs she will be married from my home tuesday next now celia have you anything to say dear only that i do hope you will like me for i am going to live here in the summertime you see wyatt knows you all and i don l the sweet gentle voice went on i feel rather lost among you for i am the only stranger polly dawson jumped up and ran to celia and hugged her we 11 be friends for your service is fine and you can dance and you can swim every one laughed for all loved impulsive polly and we won t give a darn for the eats she whispered naughtily in celia s ear wild lot souvbnavxs fairs whether they are small carni vals with only a big top and a tow side show uumjiwlons or wnetber they assume the splendor of the giltedged exhibits of a world centennial show- mg myriads of atbaoqons are not fair sometimes to many forms of wild bfe which are sold as souvenirs at their sessions neither are many of the flveandtencent stores to towns and cities which ply a profitable souvenir trade with tourists fair to small wod life souvenirs one hot august day i wandered id ly through a tencent store in detroit the scene could easily have been duplicated in any number of dune- stores or carnival shows in any num ber of american cities hearing ex cited cprtfafr squeals of laughter i was attracted to a counter where two matl c and a man presumably th youngsters father were laughing neartoy at the amblings of a smab turtle trying to crawl through a mesh oh baddy cried the darkeyed boy aren t they pretty buy me one me too chimed hi his pig tailed sister what on earth would you kids do with a couple of turtles asked their father play with them promptly replied the boy now poking a speculative fin ger- at another small turtle in the shallow trough of water no firmly replied this inteuigem dad yotr can have some other toy but not a live turtle and anyway eyeing the halfdead tortoises specu latively they look almost gone to me and about gone they truly were these tiny little creatures with their delicate shells painted with pin roses and violets announced in yellow letters on their backs that they were souven ira of detroit to the stores customers but they told a sad tale hi their half dead manner to discerning eyes of any interested scientist or wild life lover meant for the cool woods and waters they were instead captive in a hot store handled by hundreds of cur lous people perhaps cruelest of all they had not been properly fed or car ed for talked later with a woman who is an authority on turtles she has trapped hundreds for scientific and research purposes but ha never i led one she said there is no law i know of which prevents stores from selling thes helpless turtles but there should be some educative measures which would at least compel store managers to properly house the wild life creatures in their care she told me that some turtles are at home on land and on water as well they need meat like fresh hambur egr or fish inthelr diet as well as sea vegetation the prepared food put up in boxes and sometimes sold at the same counter with the luckless turtle is not a completely balanced diet she said some die of starvation others of thirst thirst i asked surprised the poor things cant drink that water she exclaimed in disgust its yes we both agreed it win be a nappy day when stores and fairs who ply a trade in small painted turtles chameleons and other n forms of wild life souvenir can educate the general public in proptjcarmg for the pete they sell by setting them a htnfng e orace v sharrttt in our dumb animals once more merchants hi saskatch ewan ore filling their shelves with goods this summer they are selling more groceries more repairs for cars and fajsn machinery more hardware i and overalls in the fall they expect to turn over a lot of semi luxury and capital goods like radios automobiles new tractors houses and furniture the long tragic years cf drought are over and ao farms production t3 con owned the west is back to normal a few years ago pessimists croaked that the sofl of the southern and cen tral prairies was worn out that the days of even normal crops were over this summer these same prairies are a solid mass of heavy green thy pro- i mlse a bumper yield of well over 400 million bushels it was the lack wheat rather than the low price which prolonged the great depression hi the three prairie provinces if a farmer has no crop at all then the price oi what he might have had is ot only ac adennc interest this year then should be no lack of volume for the country at large and a reasonable re turn has bees guaranteed to the grow er along with the latter the railways elevators storekeepers and the loan companies stand to benefit directly and through them all canadian bus nesa financial post im all upset we had to till our dog this morning was he mad well he wasn t any too well plea sed profes or i am going to speak on liars today how many of you have read the twenty fifth chapter of the text nearlj every student raised his hand professor good you are the group to whom i wish to speak there is no twenty fifth chapter they saj meet me at the foun tain is being superceded by meet me at the qag pole at the canadian nat lonal exhlb tlon small wonder either because the flag pole is 1st feet high lncldently it is made from a single stick of douglas fir and simply coukln t be missed so meet your friends at the flag pole this year- well wo th an inspection che snapshot cuili bfc itrchlld picture onr itffe table standard time passenger and 1 1008 i i paavengere for toronto 40 1 passengers sundays only ml 34 1 x gem west passenger and mail passenger dally except saturdays and sundays 8jj0 pm saturday only 145 pjn passenger and mall 8 45 pan hjo pja going north mall and passenger going south mall and passenger oat canada bae 04 sir aifi aarvtces a tribute to books clarence day a tribute to books is s follows the world of books is e most remarkable creation of man nothing else that he builds ever lasts monuments fall nations perish civilizations grow old and die out and after ao era of darkness new races build others but in the world of books are volumes that have seen this happen again and again and yet live on stlu young unes servioss mr mclarty potoved j mill fresh as the day they wars your child pictures will be more interesting if thay toll a story show tho child busy at something such ae this repair job and dont stand too far back written uu telling mena hearts of the hearts of man centuries dead every parent takes snapshots of the children and would like to take better ones its not difficult to take a good child pic- lure and there s no subject more appealing bat most of these pic tures can be made still better if at tentlon is paid to a few common easilycorrected faults tne commonest faults are lack of story interest wrong choice of background or setting subject too tar from camera and movement which blurs the picture almost any child snapshot will be better if it tells a story simply give the child something to do dress a doll draw a picture fix a toy wagon wheel blow soap babbles such activity adds interest to the picture and also makes picture tak ing more interesting for the child give a small baby a rattle or bright- colored object to play with it will rouse ills interest sod rou will get livelier more expressive pictures be careful in choosing back grounds look beyond the subject- your camera lens will avoid a back ground that has a definite obtrusive pattern such ss the side of a clap- boarded house tad try for goodj trsst with thevsvfiiject for example if the child is wearing ughtoolorad clothes s dark hedge may make a good background a hilltop with the child against s sky background is also good examine the child snapshots you have taken if the subject appears too small in moat of them you re taking pictures at too great a dis tance see if you can t get closer it s easy with a focusing camera or an inexpensive box or folding type that has a two- point focus setting a portrait attachment is also useful for closeups at three and onehalf feet or even a bit nearer you need not fear cutting off part ot your sub ject provided you locate the subject accurately in the view finder and then do not move the camera when making the exposure h orem en t either of camera or subject blurs the picture take care to hold the camera still at the moment you snap the shutter and with a box camera pick a time when the subject u not moving rapidly if you have a finer camera use a shutter speed of 1100 second or faster with a correspondingly larger lent opening watch these points in taking child snapshots theyre all simple no troubleand theyll lasers you bet tar pictorea m john van gander summer time table effective sat june 24th leave geogetown to toronto a 614 ldl baa un u an m o 233 pjn 4j6 pun us pm a except sundays c sat only ol bm pja x ms ajmr 206 pm b 6100 pjn x 750 pm x connections for owen sound b sun and bol standard thne tickets and information at w h long phone 89 cray coach lines directory r r watson djs mjks georgetown office hours 8 to s except thtrradny afternoona dr j b jackson dentist xray office hours dally 9 to 5 evenings 7 to 0 mw lekot dale kx h- sybil bknnett mjl barrister and sotkttora kenneth m langdoff barrister solicitor notary pafthe first mortgage money to loan office gregory theatre bwg mw i phone 88 frank petch licensed auctioneer for the counties of peel and hattaa prompt s telephones cheltenham 26 r 23 georgetown 81 r 1 post office cheltenham monuments pollock irwgham successors to cater 8c worth gait ont designs on seqaest phase 8048 inspect our work in greenwood cemetery walter t evans co general insurance ocean steamship service real estate main st north georgetown o am nielsen 5th tear of practice chiropractor xra dnigleu therapist la7 andnt office over dominion store georgetown boors 35 790 bj0 fun dm two irishmen were m the moan- tslns mhng the one osrnirsx the gun saw a grouse and eoreruur took slm lake shouted fat dont ishootl the gun sint ksntod t got ttrsjmwkt ustwjd wiu nrter walw

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