Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 25 Aug 1938, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

$ . . . . . All-Electric Farm Roosevelt, King Meet at Opening of New International Bridge Says Ontario's x . = "Eien fd ---- re ------ at a -- ----- . Is Now Possible News iid Climate Best # On Exhibition at Royal Agricul- Par ade NEWS Oibave, Diatric 4 the Hi y : ; tural Society--Labor Saving by Peter Randal Type of Person, Expert De- And Easy Control of Estab- lates) Helmet 11s sia Fra ANYBODY'S GUESS: The fixing Prof. A. R. M. Lower, of Wesley + A One of the most interesting fea- of X Tiduise dae yi the pes yar College, Winnipeg, during the : tures of the Royal Agricultural So- need not be ta eh too seriously. course of his address before the clety's annual show, held this year | !8 still anybody's guess. What conference of the Canadian Instit- at Cardiff, Wales, was an all-elec- should be taken seriously, some ute of Economics and Politics at tric farm, thing that cannot be over-empha- Geneva Park, Lake Couchiching, Labor-saving and easy control sized, is that the stolid British who last week, sald climatologists con. were the main aims of the lay-out, | 88 a general rule refused to be ruf- sidered Ontario, particularly the 8 Every section was fully equipped | fled believe that this August and Oshawa district, the "exact optim- electrically. : September are the critical months um of favorable environment," a 4 5s. Greenhouse and cold frames had | for peace. They say again and district which should produce the electrici'y installed to bring plants again: If We only can get past Aug- highest type of persons. to early maturity. Electrical ma- | ust and September, war may be The professor was discussing the chinery Tacilitated farm repairs in held off till next spring or summer. problem of national unity and said a small workshop. One room in the It might- be added: If only the Canada's three main climatic re. farmer's house was the central of- democratic nations of the world glons would tend to produce differ- ;, fice where all the electricity supply would get together, face up to the ent type of people, which in turn of the farm was controlled. The aggressors, and prevent a war from would complicate the unity prob- office was in direct communication happening, ever. Dare we indulge ler, with each section by "means of in such a dream? Britich Columbia's moderate cH- loud-speakers. [ De------ WOT mate would make for laziness while An aviary for keeping foreign GEORGE BRIGDEN extreme weather conditions on the birds was electrically heated and MOBILIZATION: Europe wor- i i } prairies would produce a moody lighted. ried last week when 1,000,000 Ger- This week we are Presoniing to and violent type. 2 * In the garage was an electrically. man soldiers, reservists as well as you the head of the world's largest ---- & driven truck to carry produce to regulars, began army manoeuvres annual exposition. ] Ai C diti : ely) market. on a tremendous scale. Mr. George Brigden, President of I=L onal oning ty / Should Canada be worrled, per- the Canadlan National Exhibition, . . A pr a He Doms ny nas Loa haps, to see the largest gathering is IN capitalist and Rous df it. He Aids Operations ALS adlan forces sin ; Se methods of butter and cheese mak. S Candia for Shy is Gest 6% Ag ST RR di hint hitb pete na pe RS Ia Is ova - pA N = te Clai limi P hats Ing, and in Intensive poultry hous. Camp Borden this August? President Franklin D. Roosevelt, of the United States, and Premier W. L. Mackenzie King, of Canada, a week the second year) to his aimed It Eliminates 59 er= fan * * €s chicks were hatched at the rate Not at all, you say. Nevertheless meet at Kingston, Ont., on August 17, when the new Thousand Island international bridge system was of- present position, as an example of cent of Post-Operative AR 2 _ of hundreds a day. Eggs were , * hind It ah Miote ficially opened. The president stayed in Kin ston over night, and on the follov ing day received an honorary what can be accomplished by in. Pneumonia BEAK washed, tested, graded, and packed there's more behin degree of Doctor of Laws from ueen's University. Above photo shows the designers' conception of the new dividual enterprise in this od A discovery that air-condition- ATTA with the aid of electricity. the public eye. = suspension span crossing the American channel from Collins Landing to Wellesley Island, one of fhe fos Yo ig 2 f ing apparently eliminates 99 per Food for cattle was prepared and Sopetsis spans and eight-and-a-half miles of approaches and connecting roadways comprising the Thousanc rid. i Vy selmi . ; r was prep Island international bridge system from Collins Landing and Ivy Lea, Ont. President Roosevelt is shown at The advantages of thrift, thor- cent. of post-operative pn umonia "Served the electric way and cows HOPES ARE HIGHER: Since right and Mr. King in the panel. oughness, were early taught to the was reported last week at Corey were milked by electric milkers. there has been only one case of Brigden boys by their father who Hill Hospital, Boston. In the kitchen garden artificial poliomyelitis (infantile paralysis) established the well-known Toronto Rigid control of humidity, keep- rain was produced by electricity, in tho Toronto area to date, this C L [ of Edmonton, the Yukon and the engraving firnt of Brigdens. Ltd. ing it low, at 30, compared with 7 year's attendance at the Canadian asa oma Bering strait.--Edmonton Journal. They learned their lessons well. A the 90 humidities which have been National Exhibition should climb | -- - VOICE OF - Co a ) remarkable memory has also aided "scorching" the Bastern United 'Makes - Mercy Flight - to normal: again after the disas-- The Million Dollar Castle on the The West's Position Mr. Brigden in his successful ca States this summer, appeared to ie : olen Makdahsd do nie Dengan aay with THE PRESS It is for people in other parts of reer. As a personality he is inter- be fully half the cause of improve 1937 epidemic. hundreds of visitors. Canada to recognize the nature of esting above all; kindly, humorous. ed vigor, . That is, unless war starts, or One of the big attractions for PO this western economy. The pour His advance to the Presidency of The lung trouble is one of the something. Because it's a good tourists is Casa Loma of Toronto, CANADA ing of the golden grain into the the Ex. climaxes a long career of risks of surgical operations, for » show! known as the Million' Dollar Castle 2 4 elevators by the hundreds of mil public service. Mr. Brigden was for which no satisfactory preventive _ built by Sir Henry Pellatt, and was Comparative Bliss lions of bushels in good years does 24 years actively interested in the heretofore has been found. 1 FORECAST FOR FALL: People | later taken over by the City for Our 1dea of a happy motorist 1s not mean affluence for the western | administration of Toronto schools. | happens after six to seven per aren't giving much thought to poli- taxes. a western farmer who, after nine farmers, The returns are divided For fifteen years he was a mem. cent. of operations, according to a tics these days on account of the The Castle is operated by Kiwanis years of drought, gets his car bog. among a vast army of them, and ber of the Advisory Industrial survey made by the Massachusetts heat, the harvest, or hay fever. But | Club of West Toronto as an attrac. | ged in a mud-hole.--Financial Post, lean years must be reckoned on, Board of the Toronto Board of Edu- General Hospital. things are brewing just the same. tion for tourists and nearly 60,000 Toronto. too. The average farmer, year in, cation. He is a charter member Prominent Liberals are reported to people have visited the castle this -- year out, cannot hope to live sump. of the Toronto Rotary Club, now its What is the primary pmpose of be quietly protesting Mr. Hepburn's summer, Wrong Way About tuously; he does well if he can sup- President. He has been Chairman the Ixhibition? According to My * attacks on Federal I"rime Minister The admission is 25 cents and this The flocking of people to the ply his real needs. A great num- of the Ontario Division and the Brigden, it serves to teach the peo 4 Mackenzie King. They object to Includes one hows tour with guide. |- towns from the country is about ber live very frugally. The western Toronto Branch of the Canadian ple of Canada just what the coun 'Mr. Hepburn's campaigning against | The tours commence every fifteen equal to withdrawing stones from farmers actually need all the con Manufacturers' Association. Thirty | try is doing; what Canada has. te the parent administration, the Lib- minutes from 10 a.m. until the last the foundation of the building to sideration that has been sought for tive years ago he became a mem- promote profit alonz all lines; what eral regime at Ottawa. tour at 9 p.m. This includes a tour place them at the top. -- Guelph them. They are under serious han- ber of the C.N.E., has since climb- it is actually producing both sori There is strong reason for the | through the large library built to Mereury: dicaps with regard to transporta- | ed to the op. culturally and industrially. ° ! . . \ . Flying Instead Ing a reality. Radio In Arctic | Canadian ig With or without tmon: departments to cities across Can i Of Bi li Webb Miller, veteran war and Sn see on: 50% enon ada would be of inestimable aid in : of ! ICyC ng diplomatic correspondent, looks Radio transmitting and receiv- Coli foreign millonairesses we combatting crime, Charles Barnes, : upon the Holy Land as one of the | ing equipment is to be installed at have been reading about lately ?-- assistant director of the Montreal ARAN 5 p Joined most dangerous, tragic and puzzl- the Government Reindeer station rs g ¥e Police Department, told the annual 4 ai 26,000 Britons Have Joine , . Ottawa Journal, ' os Flyi Clubs; Practice Ov ing spots in the world today. Why? east of the Mackenzie River Del- convention of the Province of Que- ie) » ying Clubs; Fractice er | 1a addition to the threat to inter- ta, N.W.T., Mines and Resources . bec Police and Fire Chiefs' Asso- PARAL Week-ends; Set of Lessons national peace presented by this Department announce. It will work Safest Air Route ciation at Sherbrooke, Que., last is Only $10 near civil war in Palestine, danger | With the National Defence station The loss of the giant trans-Paci- | week. LER : ; to Britain's own interests is involy- at Aklavik, N.W.T. fic Clipper air liner with 15 men Routine Information on wanted Ad. Britons in large numbers hope | ed. "The Holy Land, a bridgeway The reindeer herd has grown | aboard is regretted by aviation sup- criminals could be quickly trans Auth pe soon.to dismount from bicycles, mo- along the commercial route from to approximately 5,000 and the poticrs in Alberta as much as those mitted, the police official said, and HE torcycles, automobiles and take to Asia to Egypt is of great import. radio will enable the station to anywhere else. It is a blow to the correspondence among police de- Ye the alr in a drive that may raise | ance in Britain's scheme for pro- | keep in touch with the outside | realm of commercial aviation. But | partments speeded up, When major qr the largest aviation reserve force at of the Empire's sca and air world. A Sa ts stamina iy were Wg a general LRU in the world. 'life lines'. The Suez Canal and the T : ' alarm cou ¢ spread instantane- AIS er the first week after Afr | rich ofl lands in Iraq make Pales. Seventeen thousand Americans | the beliet held in Edmonton and by | ously, which would ald in rapid ap- We Winistes = Phageloy ya; fia tine of particular strategic value." ag ths i io hi any eli aon Wi Penson of the criminals. a RAY nounced formation of the Civ r ) ) e speaker also suggested a fn . . . , dir Guard more than 26,000 persons THE WEEK'S QUESTION Stratford-on-Avon, England, last | shortest and safest air route for an | cental training school for police |=, ERR T8 mes unr tua wbe ¥0L Wishing to join applied to officials | What European power gave notice | YCar alr line to the Orient is by way | ana firemen, "I'm gettin' sick an' tired of left-overs!" TH of the Air Ministry and civil flying' | 1agt week of intention to withdraw ; clubs. from the League of Nations Coun- k ¥ Men and women rushed to sign | of whose retirement deals a furth- SA tet emo | Ga ELS THE WONDERLAND OF OZ at) : will make them part of the reserve : ---- N PORE K Answer: Poland. " : 7 > AQ i defence force if war comes, and Copprighted 1092, Raily 8 Lec Ca , 7 13M & v4 SIR h i AGS will give them a chance to get into . if VE 8 i 4 ANTAL LR the afr cheaply whether war comes Cricket / E% 4/7 S287 \ LR We ®r not, ric A 2 + ¥ iY) i AN Theoretically applicants of either - AE ~~ Lh rfid D9 ) AX SINR sex between the ages of 18 and 60 The young and happy clover-hid- oN Te Ee, ? : 3) ' 1% EAH will be able to obtain flying tuition den cricket Wh : | < AVN in ultra-light planes for 60 cents an Fiddling first Summer by the Tou lo P LT hour compared with the present cellar-wall ' J AR AR rates for private instruction of $8.76 Conceals in his odd head no NRHA to $11.25. In addition, they may thought of Autumn. 1 buy a private pilot's license for Here's grass, and he has legs J) Ki 3 about $8 instead of $100.to $200. A and wings; that's all, ~ i) Rn : complete set of lessons costs $10, 1 DYE HR hes or The Air Ministry's scheme took That there will be three silences, o J; 0s at the breath away from Harry and " ihe nal b 2 Siding Shout; CL fo Harriet, who trundle through week- ush his doom beyond the thir 3 . end traffic aboard dual control bi- hard frost, The Chlet called a. meeting of But the rest of the Whimsics Dorothy, after showing Uncle Uncle Henry had nine suits of £4 - Carrying aid to a fellow priest, Rev. Paul Schulte, ABOVE, flying priest of the Arctic, left Ch rch- ill, Man., on a 1,600-mile mercy flight immediately after complet- ing another one of 700 miles. The word had reached Churchill that Father Chochard, Roman Catholic missionary, was stricken at Arctic Bay, and his mechanic, Brother Beaudoin, Baffin Island, and' Fa- ther 'Schulte started on their trip, picking up Dr. Robert Meine from the hospital at Chesterfiel Inlet on the way. . cycles, wearing matching costumes and manifesting one of Britain's courting rites. If they are poor they pedal; if they are not so poor they motorcycle. Clubs Buy Up Planes An hour's flying is all they could manage a week--or all the flying clubs could manage to give them. Now, at two-and-six (about 60 cents) apiece it would cost no more thay a cycling week-end, what with food, drinks and a%. * _-- belief that Premier Hepburn of Ontario and Duplessis of Queboc actually intend to support the fed- eral Conservative cause, when the times comes. DANGER ZONE: The big reason why the Arabs are kicking up such a fuss in Palestine is that the es- tablishment of a modern Jewish na- tion within the borders of the Holy Land (sponsored by Great Britain) would soon _see the dwarfing of their numbers into obscurity. They fear that the influx of Jews will dominate the whole region of the Near East and prevent their dream of an independent Arab state prom- ised to them by Lawrence) becom- He does not dream. The clover blooms, quick-blowing, Shake over him; here's sun -- and nothing's lost! ~--FRANCES FROST, in the New York Sun. Sweden has ordered a more rig- orous censorship of movies be- cause it believes many films por- tray too high a valuation of lux- ury and comfort and emphasize the erotic side of life, awa accommodate 100,000 volumes of books and is now used for dancing; the conservatory with its stained glass $12,000.00 dome and marble floors, A trip through Sir Henry Pellatt's private bedroom and Lady Pellatt's suite and the suite occu- pied by the former Prince of Wales. Souvenirs may be obtained and refreshments are available. It is a very unique exposition and something everyone in Ontario should see. Many American visit- ors have advised that the admis- sion price should be $1.00 instead of 25 cents. "Canada to Install Farmers' Gamble A few hours before the storm the wheat fleldg in this area gave pro- mise of a bumper crop, the heavi- est in years, yet a deluge of hail and high wind destroyed that pro- mise in a twinkling. In some scc- tions there was a fotal loss, in oth- ers partial. The raising of wheat on the prairfes is a gamble.--Cal- gary Herald. Such Things Make News Much is being made of a Canadi- an girl, daughter of a tugboat cap- tain on Manitoulin Island, who mar- ried a milllonaire from the United States. Why the fuss? Isn't a fine tion costs--both ways, on the things they buy. They are serious- ly affected by the various encmies of the crop. They should not be handicapped, also, for the benelit of other people. Whatever can be done to lower their production costs and their living cost should be done, for it is needed to ensure them and their families that degree of welfare to which they are entit- led.--Winnipeg Free Press. National Hook-up Teletype System A teletype system linking police LIFE"S LIKE THAT Fy Fired Neher the Whimsies and told them of the "offer made by General Guph. The creatures were delighted with the bargain and at once agreed to fight for the Gnome King and help him to conquer and enslave the Oz people. One Whimsie alone seemed to have a glimmer of sense having asked--"Suppose we fail to capture the 'magic belt, what will happen then and what good will all our fighting do?" threw him into the river for asking foolish questions and laughed {di- otically whon the water ruined his pasteboard head before he could swim out again. So tho compact wag made and General Guph was delighted at his success in gaining such powerful allies. But there were other people too just as im- portant ag the Whimsfes whom the clever old gnome had determined to win to his side, Henry and Aunt Em through their new rooms fn Osma's palace, open ed the closots and showed Aunt Em several exquisite costumes that had been provided for her by the royal dress makerd who had worked day and night to get them ready. Ev- erything that Aunt Em could pos- sibly need was in the drawers and closets and her dressing table was covered with engraved gold toilet articles, clothes, cut in the popular Munch- kin fashion with knee breeches, silk stockings and jewelled buck- les. His hats had wide brims with small gold bells around the edges, His shirts were of fine linen and his vests were richly embroidered with colored silks, Uncle Henry accepted his good fortune with composure but Aunt Em was "all a-flutter" and it took Dorothy, the housekeeper, the two malds to dress her and do up her hair.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy