West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 22 Oct 1925, p. 7

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«many. October 22, in. . nought he wuuld like I' HIP ro-pl'o‘so'ntativo d I nw. Paddy did ylou 1 aim): tho- \\:I\ m! l. .\l. RUBB. B. HS )ld'mHISON, 50.000 carloads t. ores of other riff policy we er tariff Doficv ~ .' H l \ lv' ‘(0 AMH l ll.» -' l ‘l ’ mum, '- “TU?“ mullly equip vo'.\ ”lg Courses: ifz'll‘lililllnn. ~. \wl'lllill School Stall is a Um- .le wxperienced hum prepare to ; ’lv‘l'nl. o l l;o9l;['_\'§$ mav h E'l’illl'HH‘l‘ L .,..,..m;.hle record “W” 90 main- ’7. Clergymen of. all denominntiona re urging their congresetnons to e “The Ten Conmiandments.” The Reverend Dr: Cheser G. Mir- hall wrote of it in “The Educ» ional Screen" as follows: “When it was rmorted many nths ago that a commercial com- pany was filming "Die Ten Com- mandments." many of us felt that this was apt to be something of a travesty on one of the sublimest and most epochal events of history. "\\‘hen the picture was first pro- .zuced in a New York theatre at top-- mulch prices. I attended with a :I'mlp Of clergymen as guests Of the :zulnagement expecting to see a 'r'unl uhunlat‘ln and nlan nmnnnnrl Tl dflSVVt'rE ard emxgrate to er via the The neces- re to do 13 ”ll e away from a foreign r ways. ;' East y the Itional :- mer- 1 con- to the would lrloads .vould Pat. 1" 0!! ana- at! .\.. Principn Chairman, tract ive .“ i accommom- (”any th: reasonabi. "If one message above another is needed by our pleasure loving, law tweaking age. this picture brings just. that. message. ""l’hanks in a motion picurecom- many. it. director. a scenario writer, actors and all others who are bring- ing lill‘ message to millions of pet)- pio'. livery American owes it to liiniso-ll' to see the world’s greatest and lwst motion picture. "'l‘ln-ro- is one question we can Tlnl :nuiol asking. Why, when such sillililw- and holy things can be pre- wnhul m such an entertaining and fascinating manner. must we have sin-h lillli, slush. trash and stupidity nnl'nlilo-ol lwl'ore our eyes as we have in iilt' :n'o-l'agP film?” FHI‘HH'I‘ comments on CBC“ B. DO \lillo-R' u'i'o-:it.o'st. screen production im'l'iolo- slutvmo'nts from the follow- ing: c-lim'vhns: Baptist _ «"The Ten Commandments as pi'o'so-ntml in the picture. is the leader of all the photos on the Si'l'm'll twill)”: and I regard it indis- |Io'll.~‘alilo' in HM" propagation of Chris- tian t'iilic's‘ and moral courage. All of Hlo' _\‘nlllll.' mom should see its ivl'millt'iinll at this particular time who-n tour of nlll' youths have re- ro-ntly two-n sentenced to the death Muir.”- »'l‘h.- Row. C. D. Patterson, iimninpnlitzin Baptist. church. Anglican. "'Tl'lll)’ marvellous and \I..m|.l lu- lil'millt'iin' of great gnod!" 'l'ho- "6W, Nathan .\. 803910. of St. \‘tuplmn's church. \lo-thmlist.â€"â€"-“'l'lio picture ‘The Ten l.lmmmmliiiunts.’ is aboslutely be- “Two hours and a half later, we vrnergmi from the theatre on to the hrvut White Way to be suddenly ,éfti‘t‘ed back into the world of real- .Ho-s. The evening rush hour was mm. the floods of humanity were surging by in two mighty currents, and there at tha- entrance, stood a wnman selling copies of The .\theist.‘ “Nu. lvt us ratiwr say we came from Mu- wnrloi 0f realities as spread be- I‘uru us an the screen. out into a world of unrealitivs. (ind has rare- 23' Down mun- ro-al tn us than he was fur the spare of one afternoon. "\V’hen the picture was first pro- duced in a New York theatre at top- hothh pfices. I attended with a :mup of clergymen as guests of the :zmnagement. expecting to see a great spectacle. and also prepared :{u-mod by which they law was giQéâ€"fi :.. man. Frankly. I may say, we mu?” 3 critical group. \lc-llimlisl.â€"~“'l‘lw pii‘lm‘n ‘The Ton 0L.unnmmlmvnls.’ is ahoslutely h0- wml i-i-itivism. It carries (mo 0! Min mus splnnsliul moissagos I haw ww-i- sown put. in a picture. ll. will if“ limill'fi“ ,‘Jnml. ll. has combined il! :l lllfll'VO'llHlls‘ way Hm i‘lm‘lm‘alinns nl' ll... HM ’l‘vsmmnnt, with modern lil'o'. ~‘u Hull. winplv must be con- \mi'ml that Hwy will reap what Hwy .~‘H\\’. l haw mwr soon any- llmu: m impi'nssiw ax the way “Th0 'l'wn i14mnnnmlmmns' appear on the win-vii." - â€"Tl|n Row. Christian F. Rf‘is- nm; illu-lsmi .\l. ll. i-lmrch l’rowlwlv.i'imi.â€"-~"[ wish that. nvm'y m we 'vinlence done to 'the' MI flux-j: pf t.he_ Dojcagogue and ofrtho lllo'lllln'I; M' m\ IhIII‘I'h and Sundav w ‘IIHHI IIIIIM sm‘ TIII- lf‘n Cummand- anIIh. \IIII .‘II‘I- IIIO‘mhing a most, \x-«IIIIII-I'I'III wrmom in thoir [)N‘San- tinII.” Thu Row. Edward I. Good- I.II IIIIIIIIII‘I‘IImIl SIPI‘M. Church, LIIIIIHHI. \Vllilo' sh" Plaza hntrl goods “'0‘1'0 WHI‘U] start stnlwn {rum “TN“.- lamps P. Donohtm. 0‘31!!!“th nt‘ HH- lzlh‘ Frank. “’3 \\onl\\m“h. Mm. with hPP two SiS~ tows. inhuritml his SWHMflfKX) 081,319, \VIIHO' sho- mu m new suite in the Plaza huh-l. It is unlikoly that the Quad; \\'o'l'o‘ lmuxht. in ”10 “’00!- The ToLcognuldnqnp,” mg n The erans' Stir from} October 29, 30 and 3!, Kudos-nod by £1”!in Chg-ch“ and amen Whore?"- Shown. MUN!” an \\ ON'T let the occasion he marred by sombre rooms --see that the walls are covered with bright. cheerful wallpaper â€"â€"the kind that makes each room beautiful and harmonious. There is a kind of wallEafier known as STAUNTON S [- TRIMMED that is easy to trim. may be quickly hung. and elim- inates half the disorder that usually accompanies the work of paperhanging. For perfect satisfaction this is the kind to use. Let us show you our samples of these exquisite wall- Forty samples of the new Spring Wall Papers are now .11 stock. John McKeclmie Thom”, 060M I. am. Not Likely n-I th'klzu'vs valuml at Ml nHH‘l' j!“\\'t‘lI‘_V Villllt‘d Curwn in $100,000 \vm'P It is unlikoly l lmllf-I'H. in Hm "JEN”:IIH Exm‘.‘ w‘. .5 Feeblemindedness is also a great cause of crime. “Half of the crime of the world, two-fifths of venereal disease, two-thirds of prostitution are due to neglect of the feeblemind- ed.” Recent psychiatric examina- tion of the inmates of Sing Sing prison shows that two-thirds are mentally defegtive. Another cause of crime is addic- tion to habit-forming drugs. “The great majority of drug-addicts are of the underworld type.” F. W. Gowan, of the Opium and Narcotic Drugs Division of the Federal De- partment of Health, says that al- though the evil is somewhat abating in Canada, one of the great needs is compulsory treatm‘ent of drug adidcts. In this way alone will the evil he finally eradicated. Thorn are five hundred mentally dofoctive children in Alberta. Miss Ixiuphino. Superintendent of Spe- cial Children’s (1133393 in Vancouver reports that there are ovar sixteen liumlrml mentally defective children in British Columbia, and the. mum- lwr isArapiclly increasing. Thisnis a problem in every province of the Dominion. ' A mental defective is one whose brain development has halted. He has the body of an adult but the mind of a child. Some are idiotsâ€"â€" mentally. these are infants. Others are imbeciles having a mental ca- paeity of from three to six years. The highest grade of feebleminded are morons. These can be taught ('Xpm't manual labor under proper direction if it involves no planning or reasoning. ada. If the sale of. hard liquor was revented. the police-courts would ose a great deal of their business. At a recent meeting at. police in- spectors in New York City, one eu- perienced officer said that “Drink is the greatest single cause of crime.” Lord Alverstone, .Chief Justice of Great Britain, said, “After forty years at the bar, and ten as a‘ judge, I have no hesitation in saying that ninety per cent of the crime in this country is due to indulgence in strong drink.” Addressing the Grand Jury in Winnipeg some time ago, the Judge said: “Most of the cases in these assizes are directly or indirectly due to liquor. Especially does this ap- ply to the foreign-speaking popula- tion who are industrious and hard- working when sober, but are like wild beasts when under the influ- ence of hard liquor.” Picariello and Mrs. Lasandra paid the extreme penalty for shooting a policeman in Blairemore, Alberta, because he in- terfered with their bootlegging traf- fic. And so we could multiply in- stances of strong drink being one of the great causes of crime. \ll montallv clofnctivn lack con- t..rol Thry naturally drift into im- moralitv and crimp. Their immoral tondrncirs make birthrate among thom wry high. and their defect. is terribly trapsmissiblr. In sddition to povgrty, which was mentioned in a prevnous article; an- other cause of crime is intemper- ance, says Rev. J. Phillip J HA, B._D., Social Servicsflouncil 0 Gun- At least th'I'ne persons in a thou- sand am fevhlominded. The un- trainml fwblomindml do not, work. and the PPSt of us are supporting them. Tim problem of the feeble- minded must he grappled with in narnust. By colonization, where they will nut b0 able to propagate. we must stnp browning criminals. How many fm-hlvminclml urn timm now in tho provinces of Canada? How many will tiwrv he in twonty years. Girls who used to have nothing to \war now have very little {it to take Off. TIE CAUSES OF cum: There can be no doubt that the Moscow Soviet which or more than seven ears has had i emissarms at wor seeking to overthrow existâ€" ing forms of government in ali the civilized nations, is the enthroned enemy Sir Robert Home was taik- ing of; and that the stable institu- tion which it. is most eager to de- stroy is the British Commonwealth of Nations. Though the traditions of the Inter-parliamentary Union are peaceful and academic, it is well that there should be plain speaking. The Union if it means anything, is an organization for the defence of parliamentary institutions, and these it has always been the Soviet's aim to destroy. Russia sends no repre. sentatives to the Inter-parliamen- tary Union, because it, has no par- limentary or representative institu- tions worthy of the name. It is governed by a system more reac- tionary than the Czarist, regime prior to the establishment of the Douma twenty years ago. And yet there are half-wits everywhere who think they discern in this reaction the dawn of a newer and wider freedom. Sir Robert Horne and his asso- ciates in the British parliamentary dele ation must in their hearts than Hon. Mr. Kellogg, the United States Secretary of State, for hav- ing refused Mr. Saklatvala, the Par- see Communist member for Batter- sea, admission to the United States. His presence at a conference de- signed for the promotion and de- velopment of parliamentarian insti- tutions which it is his avowed de- sire to destroy would have been an absurd anomaly. The fortunate cir- cumstance that Mr. Kellogg had ready-made regulations to meet his case has unquestionably saved the other British M.P.’s a great deal of embarrassment. The deliberations of the conference would have been upset by a flood of Moscow thm~ ries uttered under cover of Mr. Saklatvala’s prestige as a member of the mother 'of parliaments. “We are glad,” says one British journal- ist. “that a grand chance for self- advertisement and misrepresenta- tion of the Empire has been denied to Mr. Sakl-atvala.” ilt is hardly likely that, Mr.Ke110gg \\ as thinking of the prestige of the British Empire in inhibiting this flie-eating file -\\01shlppe1 He was probably convinced that estab- lished forms of government had enough enemies “ithin the borders of the U nited States at present with- out admitting anothei and exotic specimen of the breed.â€"â€"Jl‘oronto Saturday Night. In. his speech before the Inter- Earhamentary Umon, Sir Robert ome, Britann‘s former Chancellor of the Exchequer, did not name Russia. in his references to the in- fluences which mace the peace of the world, but anyone who read his speech must he dense indeed if he did not understand his allu- sions to the Soviet. “There are enthroned in the Gov- ernment of one of the nations of Europe.” he said, “the representa- tives of a political creed who 0 leniy avow that their first princip e is, by violence, and if necessary, by massacre, to force on other nations of the world, their system of gov- ernment by (error. Their activities are mamfested in many parts of the world, and most conspicuoule against the nations of Europe, w ich they regard as the most stable and therefore mest cap- able of resisting their subversive theories. If they should succeed 1n any country, farewell to that peace which we seek to preach as the only hope for mankind.” RUSSIA’S BATTLE THE DURHAM CHRONICLE SCHOOL HONOR ROLLS 3;;an FOR PAST MONTH mum 0.8.8. lo. I. W and Iran my wry] '13,an ' (September Report) nm on marl-Ion Jr. IV.â€"Harve. Scum“. “MB? â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"- David Infirman, Arthur Messrs. Darling and Kant R 0rd. . Mildma drovers. have on. freak cu Sr. [ILâ€"Norman Curbs. on exhn ition. The ammo! is {our Jr. Illâ€"Sylvan ansnermaq. 11.8w- months old. and its heart is placed Old Little, Annie Schnenert, Win“ in its neck, directly in front of its Redfgrd. {reddie Horst. Rachel Gur- shbuldor. Normal bovine: usutlly -O'J w'vv â€"--" “Not on your life,” replied the dealer. “No charge accounts. You can’t do business with the mail orâ€" der house that way. Fork over the cash.” The customer handed over the cash. “Now two cents for postage and live cents for the money__ordor.” tisl 0th 11an Sr. II.â€"Jeun Burgess, 'Lineoln Horst, Andrew Sch-rienert. Jr. II.â€"Dorothy Schrienert, Mary Lahn. Sr. I.â€"«Melvin Pfefl’er. Primer.â€"â€"Dordthy Disney, Mabel Hamel, Eileen Yandt. Gordon Sehmitt, Dora Horst. 'Earl Redford, Elmer Schrienert. A.â€"Reuben Lahn. (') Present every day. The customer}, inwardily mung, kept his agreement and paid the seven cents. “Now 35 cents expressage.” “Well, I’ll be â€"â€",” he said, but paid it, saying: “Now hand me it. and I’ll take it home for myself and be rid of this foplery.” __-._ “Hand it to you? Where do ynu think you are? You’re not in the city, and you’ll have to wait a week.” Down in a certain town, a man went into a store w buy an article and asked the price. It. was $320, the dealer said.p ' \Ivu- .. Whereupon he placed the article on the shelf and‘put the money in his cash drawer. “6566 ' radians," s.aid the man. ".1 can get t e same dung from a mail order house for 82.82.?» “That makes $3.26,” he said. ”It has cost. you six cents more and taken you a week longer to get it. than if you had paid my price in the first. place.” At the annual meeting of the Board 01‘ Owen Sound General and Marine Hospital, Mr. Joseph R. Mc- Linden was again elected President of the board for the ensuing year. Other officers elected were: Hegel‘- "1.1m Fight...” said the customer. j‘You can send it along and charge It to my accounL’j.‘ .. EXTENSION IS PROPOSED BY OWEN SOUND HOSPITAL “That’s less than it costs me,“ said the dealer “but I’ll sell it (on the same terms as the mall mder house just 111.16 W3 .. arv Presidénts. D. M. Butchard. Elias lémon. E.J.Hm1'1isu11; First Viceâ€" Pmsidont. D11.H0|m113:Semleice- President. R. I). Little; Socmmry- 'I‘masurer. J. l’. Telford; Auditors, A. F. Armstrong and B. G. McKay. The President’s address suggesmd that more. accommodation be pro- \‘ldf‘d at the hospital by converting tho nurses’ home into an isolation hospital and building a new nursos’ home, for which plans have already TIE HAIL ORDER WAY W. E. 8: TED CLARK, Agents, Durham, Ont. A Quality Coach - - handsome, powerful - - one-piece wind- shield - - double beading at waistline - - extra Wide dOOrs - - full Spassenger comfort. .V. M. Mervyn, Teacher. For the first time in history a full-sized. Sommnger coach with sliding gear transmission is to be sold at the amaz- ingly low price of 3850. Remember, this is a full-sized, five-pas- senger coach, roomy enough to hold five full grown adults in perfect comfort over any journey, regardless of its mile- age. its Triplex Springs give a riding ease found only in high-priced cars. cary big car quality feature at an unprecedented low price. By actual comparison you will find the Overland Coach more fully and better equipped from head light to tail lamp than any other car selling near ituprice. Step in and see this handsome all the year round car. All log", a light car wish _every 119cc:- Small down paymentâ€"easy terms. Effective Maud ‘Linooln {lid new huiding have not yet beefi STAN DARD BAN K OF CANADA DURHAMB NCHâ€"J ohn Kc! ly.l Manager Durham Branch - }. .. L Rowland, Manager Means for Create an Account With You Victuy bu Coupons V will mature on the first day of next month. Clip your coupons and use them to open 3 Savings Account with us. Then the money your Bonds earned will in turn be earning. ICTORY Loan Coupons will mature on the first HOSEwho have saved are able tobuy,and themanwith money in the bank is always ready for any opportunity or emergency. Determine to save a certain sum â€"say $100. That accomplished. save a second $100, and you will soon have $1 000 in the bank. joba.â€"-'Kingston shim carry their been: behind lb ‘ shoulder.“ This curs heart. it: nee): very notipenbly. an he may some distance away. 081! is m flue condition. and I. displacement of its vimprm.“ peg seem to seriously manned. It m mv vmv v"“ m mike work {with bin-d} to” D Y?“ 2!. better -th white coll-r Ask for our booklet, “The Measure of Your Income." It will help you. Men_are anginggag it i; m mumwm: I". I.

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