Dryden Observer, 17 Aug 1923, p. 3

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-- AE Et EL Ea a Si EEE IE DRE a TB ag tar i me MM A eH EE a I i iar a Ep RL SN Ae on 1 shine ate Harvesters Orderly These Farm Workers from Old Land Make no Noise Passing Through The first contingent of the Cana- dian Pacific Railways' "fifty-six dol- lar" harvest hands from the Old} SEPARATORS Country to the Western Provinces OIL PULLS passed through in two special trains. TRACTORS The contingent numbered upwards of six hundred. The men were a fine type of the the English farm hands and were quiet and orderly differing fro the harvesters passing through from the Eastern section of Canada. A third train is expected to pass trough. this evening. UNITED STATES STANDS READY TO HELP IN EUROPE WITHOUT INVOLVING THE NATION \UNDULY--COOLIDGE WASHINGTON, Aug. 14--Presi- dent Coolidge's administrtion was said by 2 white house spokesman today to ntand on the position laid down by Secretary Hughes in his speech at New Haven last December in the mat- ter of German reparations. The gov- ernment, it was declared, is ready to help in any way it can without involv- ing itself unduly. COMMUNISTS TAKE TOWN DIS- ARMING GERMAN MILITIA DVANC Qil-Cooled = gp aw Engine Dr. The only Perfect En gine on the market CLOVER HULLERS all to t 1} or BURNS KEROSENE Lowest Operating Cost on Tesi See us before you decide on your tracter Eagle River, Ont. LONDON, Aug. 14--Hamburg was the scene of further rioting today with many killed or wounded, according to a Central News despatch from Berlin. Communists have gained the upper 121 AGRE FARM FOR SALE Aug. 13--The through this column. Spadina House, Spadina Crescent, Where and from whom are children The question is an important one, for investigation has proven that ninety per cent of children receive this in- formation at a oughy impr ghould be repeatedly impressed with the fact that the source of information on such matters should be the father Sound training in chivalry and ideal- iem, a proper reverent attitude tor- wards sex and the great purposes of nature, thorough training for marriag and its responsi tute a foundation upo nwhich parents can build the future happiness of their ' children. been proven that the great majority of children obtain' their education on sex matters often of the right type. this state of affairs lead to? [to a biased and improper viewpoint of .the whole question of sex. ; rthe high purposes of nature; it devel-: ! FERGUSON TAKES LID OFF BLUE ops cynicism, carelessness and some- SKY LAW NOT PUTTING DRURY , times is' the starting point for careers PROCLAMATION IN FORCE TORONTO, Ont, Health Talks By Dr. 3. I. MIDDLETON Middleton will be glad to answer guestions on Public Health matt: Address him at Io) Texonte, Ont. receive education on sex matters? tender age from thor- sources. The child Tr mother, not friends or companions. i bilities--these cons Yet in spite of this it has companons, not What does It lea from whole cout was out all Saturday night and most of Sunday morning engaged in a man- hunt for the tardly outrages committed in the his- tory of Carleton pretty Hazel daughter of Mr and Mrs A. M. Mock- ett, well-to-do Bridge, lies at her parents' home al-. most at death's door. It blinds 'of ill-health and crime. Red cheeks, sturdy limbs, clear vi- hand at Wilhelmsburg, near Hamburg, Xx kk h i | Toronto Star says today that the Fer- sion, happiness alike in work and play,' § long and useful lives, these should be the despatch adds, disarming the mil- itia and taking control of the town. 2 paid ! Si 5 the Here and There Uver a tnousand milion fish eggs of various species were collected by the hatcheries branch of the De- partment of Marine and Fisheries during 1921. 3 Inbound ships from the United Kingdom are averaging 4,600 tons of freight for dischar~~ at Vancou- ver. Outbound they take about 4,000 tons per vessel. Last year the average outward tonnage was practically »he same while the in- bound was only about one tenth of what it now is. Announcement has been made that a Government wireless station tor. is to be erected on St. Paul's Island, which stands in the entrance to the Gulf of St. Lawrence, off the most notth-easterly point of Nova Scotia. Two Government wireless engineers have arrived there and are making Here's the chance equipment, ready to go to work and make some Only 1% miles from Dryden by road, or 2 miles by water. dary is . Lake Wabigoon. standing pulpwood and fire wood, good barn 20 x 28, with attached hen-house 14 x 36. especially crops and small fruits. About % acre START TRADING new red raspberry plantation, also 3 CREATED PAPER EXCHANGE { other small fruits. L sides stock and equipment mediate possession at $3,200.00. Will you're looking To get a good Farm including money from the start. Southern boun- | Plenty of Soil is mostly sandy loam, guson provincial government has given consideration to the proclamation of the "blue sky law" passed by the Ont-¥ ario legislature and has decided not to 'put the act into force. was for the regulation of the sale o securities and provided for a commis-} ; 'sioner who would have power to for- vasting plague bid the issue of any swtock or securi- ties which he considered questionable. } : } This measure adapted to early ' garden | Quick buyer gets all crops be- | with im- | i cents will the lot of your children. But for many thousands, the picture 'is and will be, sadly different. Blind- ness, ¢ ataxia, heart disease--these are only la few of the serious results of the de- deafness, insanity, locomotor of vulernal diseases { which overwhelm so many. Surely the heritage of our children should be the right to be well-born-- : ithe right to a sound body and mind ON NEWLY | piherited from healthy parents New York and children, four out of five of whom die San Francisco will open branches. 4 My Mauff declared the new ex-} ; change would eliminate waste in the'ance and cowardly silence. Ignorance sacrifice farm without equipment at 'paper industries and permt of great-ican be dispelled if citizens and par $20 per acre--apply Dryden Observer, ey public service. {in infancy. Both these diseasese thrive on ignoi- who have married in full knowledge of the YCHICAGO, Aug. 14--Trading on the'fact that they are free from all dis- For quick sale owners will include, floor of the mewly-established paper eases. 2 horses and harness, Jersey cow and industries exchange will begin here | blindness in the new born is due to heifer calf, plow, 2 sets harrows, tomorrow, according to an announce- | gonorrhoea; and syphilis is responsible wagon and other tools including com-!ment today by John R. Mauff, execu- for the birth of thousands of diseased bined planet Junior drill and cultiva- tive vice-president. And yet, eighty per cent of Seeking Brute Who Assaulted Young Girl wre Lass of Sixteen is attacked and left for dead--discription of assailant EX EE Ottawa, Aug. 11--- Practically the vside at Billings Bridge author of the most das- county, whereby Mockett, 16 year old farmers of Billings The e 1 wag attacked by an un- tnowa man ¢f whom the police have a fairly accurate description, within a quarter of a mile from her home in broad daylight, was terribly battered about the face and throat by her ass- ailent, who, after dragging her into a shed and outragging her, again beat her and then apparently left her for dead. - ; Miss Mockett's plight was not dis- {covered until some time later when, as she failed to return home for sup- per, an older sister, Bessie, who was sent to search for her, found her with er features almost unrecognizable, and hardly able to stagger along the road to her home. fi Surely when they understand, parents and indeed all citizens, will do their part for the sake of the children of ° the land. No parent can sit back and' say "This is none of my affair." Pre- ventive social measures are important. Careful supervision of and attention to the needs of normal children will revent much of the trouble. Normal recreation, good books and proper. companions are all preventive mea- sures. ; The cost of venereal diseases takes 'ank with the tremendous costs of war Early death and widespread disability as a result, are matters of every-day comment among those who have stud- ied the question. The fat is we pay unnecessarly for hospitals, insane asy- lums, homes for incurablees, jails, only study the situation. institutions for the blind and reform- atories implies a wastage of public funds that should make every taxpayer thinks. arrangements for the erection of the station. : One hundred and forty thousand Canadian school boys have been banded into an army of guards to banded into an army of guards to watch for and prevent forest fires in the Dominion this year, according to an announcement made by the Canadian Forestry Association. The new organization, which is known as the Young Canadians' Forest League, will, it is expected, save several million dollars' worth of timber from fire ravages. | That "prospects for increased im- migration into Canada are excel-. lent" was one of the most important statements made by. -E. W. Beatty, 'K.C., upon his return from an ex- tended tour of England and Euro- pean capitals. The president of the Canadian Pacific Railway believes Canada is progressing in the matter of immigration, but intensified ef- forts are essential, he considers, to offset erroneous impressions abroad that Canada does not require new settlers. A record run between Winnipeg and Quebec was recently made by a special Canadisn Pacific train when. passengers from the Orient were, through delay caused by land- slide, in danger of missing their connection with the C.P.S.S. "Em- press of Scotland" at the eastern port. The train covered the 1,579 miles in a little over 36 hours, whereas the schedule time for trains between these two cities is 53 hours. The passengers had crossed the Pa- cific on the C.P.S.S. "Empress of Russia" and were taking advantage of the 21 day Orient-to-Europe ser= vice of the Company. : The United States has invested in Canada $2,500,000,000, accordin to the Bankers' Trust Company of New York, which has just com- pleted a survey of Canadian indus- try and the amount of United States capital invested. Of the total sum invested, $1,200,000,000 is in bonds, and the remainder in farms, mort- gages, small businesses, industrial enterprises, banking and private loans. It is computed that more. than 200 branch factories were opened in Carada by United States concerns in 1919, and a great num- ber in 1920 and 1921, and that late in 1922 the number of these came to, 700. J A collie dog is reported to have saved the life of a London West girl, while accompanying the child to a nearby store. On the way she stopped on the C. P. R. railroad tracks in the path of a westbound flier. Realizing the child's peril, the dog threw himself against her with sufficient impact to knock her clear of danger, and was cut to pieces by the train before he could regain safety. ' ) The girl's mother fricq to discour- 4 "vo dog Irom going when the davghter started for the store, but he went, and was the means of sav- ing the child's life, and died heroice ally. a0 8 ampules © Bed The Slatue of Mar de Laval |} in front of Office T QO the many artistic monuments } to be seen in the city of Que~ 'bec, out of which those of Cham- 'plain on the Terrace and Mgr. de aval in front of the Post Office, mare not the least, another will soon be added which will be of no or- dinary interest, as it. will be erected te the memory of one of the greatest personalities in the contemporary history of French Canada. = Car- inal Elzéar Alexandre Taschereau, - the first Canadian to become mem- ber of the Holy College of Rome, will shortly . have his statue in his 'good old Quebec, the city he loved and cared for during 'his lifetime, and upon which was reflected so much of the glory he gathered by his rapid ascent inthe hierarchy of the 'Catholic Church... Cardinal Tasch- ereau was appointed to that high state in 1886 and he died in 1897. He was succeeded by Mgr. Begin, who was later awarded the scarlet robes of office. It had long been the earnest de- sire of the citizens of Quebec to have the memory of their beloved cardinal recalled in a more material fashion, and for that purpose a public sub- scription had been organized some time ago to defray the cost of such a memorial. When sufficient funds had been collected, a contest in which many noted sculptors from America and the old world partici- pated, was held, and from the models submitted by. these artists, a com- mittee selected the design of the Statue 'which will later be unveiled on the Place de la Basilique, in front of the famous old temple of Quebec. i : Its author is a French sculptor of renown, Mr. André Vermare of Paris, who has been engaged in making many of France's best known monuments erected in recent years. One of them recalling the fame of the "Blue Devils," the celebrated Alpine regiment of Franee, grands on QUEBEC'S NEWEST MONUMENT ! "Wr MRois in Architect. {lf the summit of Guetwiller and is much admired. Shortly after the decision of the committee - was made known, Mr André Vermare landed in Quebec with Mr. Maxime Roisin, the archi- tect who is going to design the pedestal of the Taschereau memorial. Mr. Roisin, also, has attained a great reputation in his country as a master of his art. His last work of import- ance is probably the triumphal arch which will soon be built on the road from Bar-le-Duc to Verdun, to im- mortalize the glorious stand of the "Poilu" on what was then known as the "Hell of Verdun." The two French artists, who left Quebec for their own country a short time ago to proceed with their work on the Taschereau memorial, took the opportunity of their stay in the old city of Champlain to "collect some valuable information regarding the life, ways and character of the late cardinal, such information being airs Monu Cia 2 oi a But orn Terrace : indispensable to give a tras' integs pretation of his personality. The location of the monument was alse discussed, and it was agreed that it would stand in the little park stretching in front of the Basilica, at the end of the Rue de la Fabrique. While in Quebec, Mr. Vermare and Mr. Roison were thé guests at a great banquet given in their honour at the Garrison Club, at which most of the prominent people of the ancient capi- tal attended, In answer to various speeches of welcome by Hon. L. A. Taschereau, Mgr. Marois, Mr. Henfri Gagnon, and others, Mr. Vermare said how he and his companion were pleased to be in Quebec and how they had been impressed by the wel- come extended to them. He alse had eloquent words to express his admiration for the picturesqueness of the city and for the congenial hose pitality of its citizens. He:said he hoped to come back for the unveil ing of the statue," which willg taka place on Jume 17th, 1923." ° a

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