Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 18 Jul 1940, p. 7

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- . » BE | '. a nT : «SE At) 3 her? LTA Cet, Cy fo abil SOTA iis A yy A A HR Ne A LTA EES old nit WV Ae dy CR PAR ER re os OL El a ASS A A ES : v nda EE -- sah - Aa PESVRER RISE TEV SNR ARS FLO EARS ASAT 5 WIS 0 RSG SREY Apres fe foment Ae me nd arid adnan sl =u] Technical Schools Start Operating \ . This Month In Canada 8&5 | Technical or Vocational | Schools are Opening -- To Traln Youth for Skilled Wa - Contract Jobs . Hon. Norman: A. McLarty, Peder al Minister of Labor, announced in the House of Commons that &5 technical or vocational schools will bo In operation In eight of' the nine provinces this month, They will be open to give technical train- ing to youth and" a minimum 'of 5,000 will have training facilities, the minister sald. In some instanc- es, double shifts will be working, "These shops," sald Mr, McLarty, * "will be used to provide instruction Refugee Children Need Adjustment Montreal Mental Hygiene In stitute Official Warns of The Heavy Strain Child Evacuees Are Under Chango of environment under emotional stress subjects refugee childrén to an unusually heavy strain, in the opinion of Mra. W, T. B. Mitchell, director of the educa- tional program of the Montreal Hy- gieno Institute and 'a member of the executive of the newly-formed Quebee Provincial Conneil of Home and School. "The satisfactory -adjustment of refugee children to their new en- vironment in Canada demands a careful correlation of home and CONTACT WITH THE EARTH It is small wonder then that In such times of stress men and wo- men have always found a healing and stabilizing solace In garden- ven so thoroughly Into our national ccopomwy that it {8s not reasonable i to believe that they will or can be reduced below the level of their necessary confribution to national in occupations connected with in- school with the various institutions lng -- a sense of security that may efijciency under any conditions, vis dustries engaged in war contract in the community which are Inter- be unreasoned but Is nono the less 'l would even hazard the belief 4 fy - work and will be devoted chiefly to ested actively in child welfare," effective, Such a solace Is not "es- that the war economy will increase _ ne machine shop, sheet metal work, she declared. cape," {t is tho fundamental reas- rather than reduce the necessity Ls moulding, welding, production wor- "However well intentioned the surance that comes fram lntimato for motor vehicles, although the & kers for aircraft manufacturing parents are, good Intentions alone contact with fundamental things, It kinds of motor vehicles: req. 'red bY and, where there is a demand, mo- cannot take the place of intelligent goes back farther and roots deeper may be changcd. or mietianies and wood working, knowledge and understanding. This Daj she upheavals Woo hi by iy ) I 4! "The minimum age of admission is particularly the case with strange of history's men on horseback, of - a is 16 and at the outset a large pro- g ehfldren ny enter homes under These have come, but they have A Tug of War . p vortion of the trainers will be also notional stress such as will be oc. | Bone; aud the grass roots that a To Bring Rain A drawn from the students in the- casioned by their removal from surging tank crushes beneath its A 5 ~ senfor years of the technical Great Britain to this Dominfon. tracks remain, and will bo growing Burmese girls held a tugof. pi echools, Older men will also be ad- By PROVIDE SUITABLE green again when the steel plates war at Mandalay for 6 days--to ga . mitted to these courses, provided 8 ENVIRONMENT rust and the driver has long lain bring about a storm. They be- 4 Dts i Soe ais § a i A z ash : "445 som v3 gue duty of parents Porsklen: is have- gardens, who lieve that ill-luck befalls any year h n the trade for which the . x i Li Saka ar 2 oster parents, to ¥ IRVE-- £1 » 3 i ; i edia LF: _training'is desired. Lady Astor, American-born member of the British parliament, hands a mouth-organ to a Canadian il ey sh ine Bus have had personal experienco of en gi TiS jabs mmeditely i WITHOUT CHARGE soldier as he sails for France--one of the first contingent fom the new world to join the B.E.F.---he didn't In the community whose programs this Soul and nerve mending con: sh Al oe : ae { "The technical schools factlitieg +} Jay 7a France long These Canadians had barely rcachedefrance when news of the armistice forced evacu- are directed towards providing suit- tact with earth and growing plants, water-thre wing festival ' . 8ro being placed at the disposal of ais fe -- : able environmental conditions and |* need not be told these things.-And vi he goreinniens without charge for ge proper child guidance. With intelll- others, seeking samelbing to taen, Lock Your Car 1 rental or depreciation as the mun- : ent guidance, a developing child._|_ to for a measure of rellet and of | & 5 icipalities' contribution," Mr. Mec- Vv (9) | C E So propedal du 3 Rokon Bs S C 0 U T I N G . only can but will earn con- reorfentation in these dark ind, A joy ride in a stolen Montreal pf Larty continued. School. S NE) a ee 4 ess sider the rights and privileges of will discover them, In over-Increas- automobile ended in death for { The schools are distributed as OF T H E a a b Uperintenden) rt IP 1 -- others as of equal importance with ing numbers, as timo goes by. And one of the occupants. This is an £ follows: Ontario, 24; British Col. o ¢ instructed to issue an One hundred Scouts and lead- '| "his own; he will learn to be social- working, with nature, to create unpleasant reminder, says the 1 > : umbia, 5; Alberta, 2; Saskatchewan P R E S S order advising the teachers and ers representing six different | 1y co-operative and contributive; he something of beauty, something of Canadian Police Bulletin, that. tho 1. 3; Manitoba, 2; Quebec, 12; New - pupils that split infinitives are all troops of the Parkdale Area of | will develop self-expressive, creat- usefulness, is the oldest and still joy-riding season is -at-hand and Ro right. Toronto paid their annual weeck- {ve Interests and activities; ho will--| tho surest anodyne in an atmos. that there are quite a-few youths 2 y Al bd National Park and 7.at Prince Al- Pioneer life in Western Ontario surfaced highways where there are injuries were detailed in the mess: Association was told at its conven: quired, bert National Park. 120 years ago was a continual Do dwellings or buildings, as the | 'age, and finally built a fire and ton. d His statement follows: MEAT, HIDES SOLD blitzkrieg against wolves, bears, result of an amendment to the | - boiled a pint of water. The after- Agreeing with popular opinion, "It is too soon to say with assur : -- A sum of $60,509 was realized famine, sickness, or cold. When Motor Vehicle Act passed by the noon's activiteis ended with a Dr. Lowell 8. Selling, of Detroit, anco what the full effect of the new "after rolling 20, you from the sale of meat and hides at we have become as hardy as they Legislative Assembly but "an un- Mich,, reported that mental examin- budget will be on the operations are not satisfied that Brunswick 6; Nova Scotia, 1. 2,943 Buffalo : the level crossings, the car in | veving thought." after which the Canadian boys | and perseverance, their cars when they leave them Newly Killed front and the car behind. After The committee, however, de- joined the American Scouts in I. Car Industry on the streets" The precaution \. Beir that they can enjoy the scenery. clined to immediately act on his decorating he graves of Buffalo's |. Will Ch may prevent theft and perhaps Recent Slaughter in Three --Ottawa Journal. motion. war heroes. "Nut" Drivers 1 1ange save life. \ Reserves In Western Canada Disposes of Surplus Animals NOT MUCH FUN Hints for motorists: Watch the red lights, the intersecting streets, --0-- MAY STILL SNORE "Too often," he charged, "lan- guage is taught by a set of rules, rather than as a neans of con- end visit to the 16th Troop of Buffalo, N.Y. Part of the pro- gramme was a sight-seeing tour, A field day programme for learn to tackle the daily problenrs and difficulties he meots with In. telligent planfulness, efficient skill Found Menace phere of welknigh universal des truction & Chrysler President Says New who are not abcve seizing any Ed parked auto for the purpose. One 5 remedy is for motorists to lock ol { a At Pontiac, Mich., a court has Scouts of the Ist Brant (School Tax Will Alter Type of Out. he At the recent slaughter of sur granted a petition of a minister Quebec Speed -. for the Blind) Troop of Brant- I put In Canada i plus buffalo and other animals in forbidding members of "his con: La Ch d ford) was surprisingly like that Ousting Urged; 15,000 Lives RR HL Western national parks, 4,104 ani. |" 8Tegation from rattling papers, ws ange of Scouts with all their faculties; A Year Could Be Saved in The John D. Mansfield, president of ST mals were killed, according to a whispering or making faces at the ------reie Each patron ran a mile, using United States, Is Claim the Chrysler Corporation of Can- 0 return tabled In the House of Com- preacher. Apparently it will stiil Motorists Must Now Use Own "Scout's pace" (alternately walk- ste ada, Limited, said in Windsor last 23 mons, "be in order to sleep, snore or Discretion on Open Roads ing and ruening so many paces). Lives of the 15,000 persons killed week he believed the automobile > At Buffalo 'National Park 2,918 | cough. : ---- They erected a flagpole using | in traffic accidents in the United | jygustry™ would bo able to adjust 3 buffalo, 113 moose, 1,806 elk and ----St. Thomas Times-Journal?' Quebec motorists are allowed to five Scout staves and only four States cach year might be saved if: | jieelt to conditions arising out of 4% 242 deer were killed, while 18 buf- | - --0-- use their discretion In the matter< | ropes, deciphered a message in "nut drivers" were eliminated with the new taxes on motor cars and falo were killed at Riding Mountain Buffalo National Park. The meat was sold by tender to Canada Pac- kers at $5.75 a hundredwelght for choico quality, $4.75 for other good and top and boner quality suitable only for processing. z Meat sold at Riding Mountain Na--. tional Park brought 6 cents a pound and 3 cents and 1% cents suitable only for processing, Meat sold at Riding Mountain _ National Park brought & cents -a pound, 3 cents and 1% cents, res- pectively, for the same grades. SOME GIVEN TO INDIANS All other meat was made avail able for Indian relief. At Buffalo National Park 500 spe- clally selected buffalo hides were reserved for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The contractor took the balance at $1.50 each, re- Kardless of size or condition. Picks Wrong Lot But He's Lucky THE HARDY PIONEERS were, we shall fear no invader. ~--Lohdon Free Press, ENE WORKING FOR EVERYBODY Next time the income tax folks ask us who we are working for we shall tell them for the instal- ment men, ceal dealer, two banks, an insurance company, an auto mobile dealer and the rest of the time for the groceryman.. --Brandon Sun. Says It's Permissible To Split. Infinitives School Committeeman Joseph Lee of Boston, Mass.,, thinks school children and teachers in Boston should be permitted to split infinitives "any damn way they wish." 5 Seek Travel Permits of speed when travelllng on hard- reasonable speed," is forbidden. IN BUILT UP AREAS The bill which is now operative, also forbids a speed in excess of 50 miles an- hour on hard-surfaced roads to which dwellings or build- ings have access. ' Motorists may travel at 40 miles per hour on mountain roads or on gravel roads affording good visibll- - ity-in-a-straight line, but must also slow down to 20 miles per hour on winding: mountain roads; on curves, In commercial districts, In front of schools, at Intersections and at the level rallway crossings, It Is forhid- den to pass on a curve or when climbing a steep hill. SIGNALLING REQUIRED Bpecific rulings will also be en- forced "In connection with signals. The bill states: "Every driver of 2 vehicle desir ing to stop, slow down or turn on the road must make the following signals: Left turn: gontally; right turn: place the fore- place the arm horl- Morse and treated a patient whose campfire and singsong. - * * . In formally thanking Ottawa Boy Scouts for services rendered during the recent big Tri-District Conference of International Ro- tary held in the Capital, Confer- _ ence Secretary Norman G. Foster declared, "we would feel incap- abl: of handling such a large crowd without the assistance of the Boy Scouts." * . RA A composite troop of Kingston, Ont., Scouts joined some 200 Am- erican Scouts of the Jefferson Lewis district for a week-end "Camporee" at Grass Point State Park, N.Y. The Camporee was one of a series of international Scout get-togethers of the adjac- - ent border districts which began last year on the oecasion of the visit of Their Majesties. . » . Timmins, Ont., Rover Scouts, under the direction of the police, proved so efficient in handling traffic during the recent North- mental tests, the American Medical ations of traffic offenders in the re- corder's court of that city showed that many of them had just about enough sense to turn a sfeering wheel and step on the accelerator. Tho tests made on persons haled into court include a physical exam- ination and tests of reaction time, judgment of speed and distance, and color blindness. In addition, the of- "fenders aro submitted to menlal tests, he said, and required to give their entire history in order to ob- tain their intelligence rating. "When intelligence is rated be- low normal a driver Is obviously not competent to drive, no matter how well he may react mechanical ly," Dr. Selling declared, because his judgment in an emergency Is sure to bo faulty. As a result many licenses of drivers are cancelled. Solace Found In Gadening maintain the volume of isiness re. of the automobile Industry, 1 have every confidence, however, that the industry will be able to adjust it- maintain the volume of business necessary to efficient oporation. "Industrial and commercial mo- tor transportation have been wo- self to the new conditions and to . they are smoother and beter cigarettes, we will cheerfully refund the purchase price. The FASTESTway lo Smoking Pleasure. |i LIFE'S LIKE THAT By Fred Neher 7 Y arm upwards; stop or 1®sening of ern Ontario Scholastic Track and Working With Mature 0 ' ly Hamilton Home.Owner Er- speed place the arm downwards. Field Meet at. Timmins that Chief Create Something of Beauty ABEL : ected Bungalow On Wrong YE driver must stop at every of Police Gagnon is formulating - " that try men's , A LY ¢ : place where there is a stop sign. lan. ese are times r 11h . Li : Property; Swap Arvanged 1 : pans for zefulay See of the odes souls --- and falths, Ideas and Ideals 3 Ww hn, GARY A! : : i Scouts in handling the town's rin I Swi so og bons Tom a Wy utd y J? aly 7 N 4 J ~- i . i wae HN LARA William Hannaford _ purchased : ol Wg solld as stono dissolve and disap- A 2 o from the city of Hamilton alot No More Coffee the city's main intersections on pear almost overnight. The mind fs : 31) et and on it he erected a brick bung- : Fy y left groping for any realities that 5 {Bit "In alow. He appeared before the board of control last week and confess- ed: "I have now discovered that I' built on the wrong lot." / Board of control, however, tolved the difficulty quickly. Since both lots belonged to 'the city the controllers authorized a trade, the owner surrendering the Jot he bought and getting the one on which he built, A Formula For Finding A Job Mrs, Roosevelt Gives Three Very Sound Rules Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, last week ig ts east-side (New York boys and girls her formula for find- ing employment was: "1, Draw a fine line between be- too aggressive and knowing your own ability. : "2, Never 'feel you can't do a b. "3, Don't give the impression you know more than the person: hiring you." id. A scene outside the passport office in Westminster, London, as - Britishers 'awaited "permits for chlidren and relatives seekingsto travel to Canada. The government is arranging to evacuate hundreds of children to the dominions For Italian People Coffee is no longer available to Italian civilians, it was report- ed in a broadcpst picked up in New York, - . Only the armed forces and hos- pitals continue to receive supplies of coffee, which are imported. Next to wine, coffee is the basic beverage of the Italian people, Saturday evenings. World Population . Increases Yearly According to the figures of the League of Nations, the average annual increase in population in the world is.'80,000,000. Other estimates are 20,000,000 a year, wlll endure; for any fundamentals that remain unshaken, says the Néw York Times. In such an omergency contact with the earth, with the cycles ot growing things which follow pat. terns that remaln unshaken even when capitals are stormed and clv- {lizations are ovor-turned, assumes a new importance, offers an anchor to sanity, , . . AEC ocd B= er "Just think, dear, mo work for two weeks!!" REG'LAR FELLERS--The Art Critic "By GENE BYRNES ~~ NOW WHATTAM Lt OFFERED FOR JHB, BEEYOOTIFUL WORK L WORTH ONE' THOUSAND DOLLARS P 1 4 s Ber TH GOING / CONE. TO THE LITTLE FRONT (8

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