May, August 30, 1933 Rive Funeral Service rt Moderate Cost R 01181:» for the use bf 01:? I‘ax'lnl's. kl -l3lé Au‘mw 12.] Toronto try day. )0 “WM \\’p“7].1 PUL IUIUIIlu . Bates R. Maddocks Hr immigratiun laws mvn zltry Feeds. rultry Feeds. Durham. Ont. E W asn’t Severed .re You : l ( HIS tassvs. 3-70 [)6 the barrel“ mge, 100 ms Tho' WHI'M wants and awn! wnrkmpn aoh'un f OFF Y i 0U W'AIT 0“ and, “31)0‘1‘5‘ I'HHH 'l'h prices. .Y OF FLESHBRTON MILLS 5“ '1' 15 R DAYS Feed H “H BURIAL Co. 0 V ...-A W? gal. .~: '33.. formc-r. .‘iw imsy man ' if'nglow’SiHHal mu, :u-ju1'}., un‘iff‘ and mvi: and phase 0f :n‘éom uf Hm good iivuivlv .‘n all classes Rn nnly one w of HM" situa- nlk think there < 1101'“ DOW'.â€"- ma- 8 '50 "HRH‘ tar! flu- N (P I? vxamlo-r Gigs m't'sicient 0 iio'miral En aim and E. R 01' HI“ .xmer' mit'zll Engin. an O M to more Tlu'ough his [N'f‘tl'y runs a not.- iceable win of cnntinual sadness. Hf th» downs of [moms in the volume. a 1w~markablv fact is that A Canadian Twilight M‘ Bowman! Fi'o'vman Troltm' .\ ynung llanzuliun PUl‘i nl‘ gi-vat pi‘nmisu was killwl on tln- bat-liv- news «if Franc-v em May 7th. 1917. film i-vlatiu-s 01' ilvi'nm-ol Finn-man "'l'i'nttvy haw (-nllm-ml many or his [mi-ms. and iilf'St' \\'o.- haw- in a Siln] Simon Volume. "A llanaclian Twi- light. and â€lilt‘l‘ l’ownis.‘ i’l'llililiiiy nnv ut‘ tlu' must. Willi-1y known 01' his pm'ms is tlu- bran- til'ul "Tim Poplul's": “Ami sn I sing tlu- poplars. and when [ mm» in Iiit‘. : I will not look for jasper walls. hull cast about my t‘yu For it I'll\\' of winil-hlmvn fmplars against. an English sky." Hun nf Hu- mnst intoi‘nsling poo-ms in this book is “Tim Clan of Hip “knows". which tnlls the story of an old Celtic it‘gt‘lll'i. But I, what. care I how sad she looks? I lnvn this Child Of the SP3: I’m- tlw day that my Falsv Low: nm t‘orsnok Shh camp. and she! \Wpt with me. Evening RN lï¬wwuuwlfkmvnnul'frnflvr 'Hw Silt'l‘nit'O'S m' â€w day aw damn Hu'tToHI (if husy tunnlh sinks in s“1w% oh'sil‘t'. \ml Night. high hc-awn’s privstvss, Spl'o'uds Iwr altar rlnfh H{ spunghul Vvhww. hingnd Vth :J-nfluwï¬ng (hm. Aml sump thvrr hr of a gladsomo mom! “ \Vho hate- this maid forlorn \Vith lwr chilly rohos ï¬nd her dusky snood: . For slw puts their mirth t0 scorn. Iluunmy and mm is how pallid hand: Its Mlu'h is â€w tmu'h of «Math. Shv \vavvs it thrivv. and the fair swowt lam! Fallow nut. in a mistv hwath; Likv tl|¢e.~'\\'Pat Of tlw toiling )‘ti'ars. thiH uguvs tremhlv hm' body Hnough. \nd lwr malt isoh'vm'hmlwith lo‘aI'L'. HI-x- hmw is" damp with a headed claw Like: 9. vision of things to beâ€" A shadow. a brvath. and :1 s:ience-- comvs 'l'lw «hwyâ€"Roby! Child 01' Um Sea. The Grey Robed Child of the Sea by Bernard Frwman Trotter ’ Lil-u- an mm,» arising from fragrant It. is pleasing to hear from you again and know you have managed in have a few holidays in the. midst of your activities. Hnlidays we†spent do give us such pleasant memories. and the reading of a gum! bank does the same fur US. This time I have for you a re- \ ivw by Clara Beinnardt of Preston of Bernard Freeman Trotter-’5‘ imok "A Canadian Twilight,†and also a comple of his poems. I haven‘t read the book and reading .the review or it certainly gives me the desire to do so. Do'ar Come in Chat Awhile -â€"Rnth Raehurn. ' Thursday, ABM 30, 1928 ’ Prudence: misty hl'vat h Sincerely yours, RL'TH RAEBURN Bernard Freeman Trotter has left us a legacy that all verse- loving Canadians deeply appreciate. These. poems have such promise. that, had lie lived. we believe. hd would have attained a prominent plain» in the ranks of Canadian POMS. 'l'rotlm' vlung tu no particular mvtw nr \‘m-sv t‘m'ms. but through- out. his work is characterized by an intensity of Liver! feeling. Om: wonders if there was not. a great tragedy in his ynuth that pmduced this; 93.111055 â€1' vxprossion. only one "To )‘lal'garei" is in a lighter,- inne. That Trotter ailnred his mnther is evidenced by several puems written to her. "lei Repose" is a well written wai- poem, said hy many in be his best work. The n‘iunusei'ipt of this poem reached his parents the day after his sud- oh‘n death. Little came? to Papa: den 1'." First Period "Little Ella: “Oh, papa! Do you knnw mamma had a firm punctuated tmlay?" Rich with joys my life has been, Always by true friendx attended. Much l‘vp treasured. much I‘ve seen. Think nf these things when its t‘ndod. I have hoard the» wild bird's son". Loved my childrpu's merry laugh- fer, Playm with them thp whole day long. [)0 not, sigh for me hereafter. startin", - " Felt the ocean's salty spume. Sheri no tears at. my dopartinv. I've seen rosvs bud and bloom, Watched day’s ending and its I. have lovml the Oan sky. Sun and mum and stars adoring, Wlwn it (-Omvs mv day to die 8mm! no time for mv in momn- in". There are pictures I hav treasured I haw heard a I'ip[,)ling brook, Wail mo. not when I have per- ishod. I haw treasured many a book, l “So it becomes a matter of. com~ putation to find out .how long the world has been in existence,†he declared. “This naturally stret- ches the. age of man. It could not have been before the time of the mammals and man could be traced back to the tertiary age. Man’s time period on the earth is some- thing about 15,000,000 0;- 20,000,- 000 years.†“One of. the most outstanding results of modern research,†said Prot’. Hill-Tout, "is the remarkable extension of time that has begun to be recognized in connection with the. origin 01' man. In the 17th century the calculations of Ussher, which are. adoptaed in ,the Bible, placed the creation about 4,000 years ago. Modern research has placed the time at nearer 15,000,000 years. ' Man is at least 15,000,000 years Old, according to Prof. Charles Hill- Tout, British Culumbia anthropolo- gist, who has spent years in studying the origin of coast In- dians. SAYS ORIGIN OF MAN 15,000, 000 YEARS BACK Ella: “Well anyhow. we a full stOp." "You moan punctured, my CLARA BERNHARDT. AFTERWABD â€"Edga 1° A. Guest. Without food for a week, Hon. Laurence Bloomï¬eld Palk, 32, of London. Eng. son and heir of Baron Haldone. was remanded in Birmingham todax on a charge of being in possession of stolen jewlry. He “as said to have a gold and dia- mond broach which had been stol-. en from a London man. Four safe robbers overpowered two watchmen of a Sears-Roebuck Six persons were known to have been killed and several more were injured when three buildings in the business section of Shelby, N. U. collapsed on Tuesday. Several others. known to have been in the buildings are missing. The bodies or three men, two of them unidentiï¬ed. were found in widely separated parts of Sacra- mento. (331.. Monday night. Thpy wen-P believd to be victims of Percy Bains, who ran amuck, shot and killed Charles Curtin, his. brother- in-law. and shot. and probably fatally wounded Clarnnce Muncey. Although 85 years old and hav- ing spent. 53 years in public 01'- tice. E. U. Aldrich, of Cuttingsville, \‘t.. will not be allowed to retire. having recently been re-elected for the sixty-third consecutive time. During this period of ser- vice he has been lister, clerk. treasurer and collector. Mistaking some grease scum on the toy of a vat of boiling waterfor the concrete floor. William Clarke, :31. a Toronto machinist. employed at the qulliam Davies plant, stepped into the water on Monday and was so badly scalded he died in hospital Tuesday afternoon. Two girls of Stoutfville, ()nt., on Monday walkvd 34 miles to Toron- to. after taking a dare by friends. They made the trip in 11 hours, \\ on a :31 hot and slum ed the \\ orld the modem gixl has all the stxength and gxit nf hm f--01bozus. Louis 1). \Vilko. f01me1' \\ ell- L110“ 11 [unlessional 11881118†plav1 91 11191! to death at his home in Hax1isbu1g,Pa.. on Tuesday Death 11151111011 aitm a knife he was usin" tn trim bushes slipped and sexcmd an illiPl} in his 101:. More than a score of persons were injured, some of them ser- iously, when a Laneasterian Ex- press train from Manchester crashed through the bumpers in the Huston terminal, London, Eng., Monday afternoon. The ï¬rst two coaches were partially destroyed. Robert Massey, lS-month-old son of Herbert Massey, Toronto, while playing in an alley between his home and the next house was at~ tacked b} a large collie and a por~ tion of the nose bitten otl‘. The dog is being kept. under observation for rabies. Three men were. sentenced to 10 years. 6 years and 3 years impris- onment at. Baku. Azerbajan. re- centlv for keeping a voung girl chained fin a subterranean passage for four wars. in ordei to seize her iortune. The principal in the outrage was the girl‘s uncle, wha got 10 years. When the. Persian gm ernment issued a decree banning the vs ear- ing of the turban German hat manufacturers beneï¬tted to the exent of an order for two million tweed caps. When the society' women of Rome planned a dance to raise funds for a new cathedral at Ostia Cardinal Vannutelle of Rome put his foot down and vetoed the function. The ladies are highly indignant but the Pope has signi- fied his approval of the Cardinal's action. a few minutes. If was foundâ€"{ha} the tine of the fork had pierced his lung and the aorta or main artery of the body. , When the. tine Of a pitchfork. thrown in a playful scufl‘le entered his shoulder, Ernest Salmon, 19, of Mqunt Hope, collapsed and died in When a cloud burst caused the waters of the Roundout Creek to rise about. 35 feet, 'the Napanoch County Club, Ellenville, N. Y., was engulfed, and three persons drowned and between 400 and 500 had to be rescued by .boats. and liné. It turned oili tho Bey; seven-foot sburgeon; weighing about 200 lbs. ‘ ' Sault Ste. Marie man has ï¬nally laid to rest the sea-serpent stories that have been agitating the Al- goma district for some time when he ï¬nally landed it with a hook I A contributor to a conscience fund that carried memories back a long way has been received by the Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit Co. The contribution consisted of 20 cents in stamps'and it paid, with interest, a debt of 5 cents con- tracted in the days of 1883 when horse cars were in vogue. Dail 60 y Events as Told by Cal) ndensed for Busy Chronicle Reader; 5 1w} . WW THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Lives of 11w pOOpIo hung by a fow strands of barbed wire hero (mgr the wookemi, when the auto- mobile containing Wilfrid Mathieu The Canadian Paciï¬c Railwax “ill in the near future stait \xork upon the building of a modem hotel in L01111011,E11gland. A state- m1111t to this effect was made Mon- day 11\ F. W. Beattv. chairman and [11esi1lont of the compan). V CO. retail store, Chicago. early Monday and escaped with between $25,000 and $30,000 in cash after blasting open a safe. A Teeswater school ma’am has resigned aftm: fifty-ï¬ve years in tho onv school. That’s too bad. Had the school board known that slm (lid not. want a steady job they would no doubt, not have had her In the ï¬rst Instance. by To win’s the thing. One of our local exchanges last week took quite a lot of space to tell of a rink of bowlers from that place that had done a lot of winning in some of the surrounding tourna- ments. Is it possible that bowl- ing is going the way of other sports and that a rink must win to be. considered successful? It bowling is as it should be, it is no crime to win; neither is it a crime to lose. Good fellowship and soci- ability are the main objects of these tournaments. Any old body can be a gracious winner, and it has often been said that you can tell the real person by the manner in which he accepts defeat. We sincerely hOpe that lawn bowling and tennis never sink to the “got to win" class. They are about the only two sports left that are still run on the strictly amateur basis and played for sociability and ex- . ercise. W‘ 5353‘.- d It may be all right to do things y halws but you should be sure > select the right half. Claude Pearce, Toronto Alder-v man, was beguiled into stopping his car to pick up a tire lying on the roadway and had to run for it to escape being the. victim of highwaymen. We thought every- body knew that old trick by this time. After this, Torono Aldermen, will know nearly as much asdï¬he‘l rest of us.‘ '\ t A news diSpatCh from Germany says that that country is. to have churches on wheels, to 'follow young couples aroupd ' on week- ends. That might work out all right in Germany, but in Canada the chauffeur of that gospel car could make up his mind that he was in for a mighty busy week--i end. NOTES AN D COMMENTS Servant. (to portrait of master): “You said that I drank your wine behind your back; now I will do It. to ynm- t’acn.â€"-â€"Huon Humor. Mad- rid. Woeful Want In Pamela’s wardrobe a moth once appeared; iExooodingly hungry was he; He (lownod some show stockings and sneorlily cleared , A bundle of choice lingerie; Ate four evening dresses and than passed away With a sigh of profound resigna- tion. An inquest was hold on‘llm follow- ing day And the verdict. was: "Doatlr from starvation. vâ€"'d _"v-â€"- The time for YOU to fix lzed business or estate ad- such matters is z‘ODAYâ€"lt ministration not already attended to. However, if business rea- You will be under no obll- Ions dictate that a near gation in consulting us nt friend or relative, or your any time. The Grey and Bruce Trust And Savings Co. Pymcvgs Ingrit‘i of. ' Are N at Business Qualifications W, H. Talon! The Logical ï¬ecutor is a Trust Company which is or- ganized and equipped to transact this highly special- ized business or estate ad- ministration. tention. ENTIMENTAL or fam- S ily reasons alone should never determine the naming of an individual as your Sole Executor. Such appointments are strictly business propositions invol- ving experienced daily at- Swvdml is personal Solicitor should serve in this capacity, it is a very simple matte" to name the individual as Co-execut- or with the Trust Company. Thus, the intimate know- ledge 01 your business or family affairs which the Co. executor possesses. may be of assistance on certain de- tails in the settlement of the estate. Mavio Magnah-z "Ah that's the stuff we want. Anything goes that‘s got sex in it." Call the Censor Callc': “I have horn Hm see! for a distinctlx nnwl ï¬lm. a simplv stmv \wwon round lite 01 a svxtcm." I the “wity princvss who is 3! half E 1glish, is being mm-o. more frequently linkml with 01° â€10 Prim-v. 01° “"3108, “PINKHAM’S OOMPOONO l8 WONDERFUL Owen Sound, Ont. is already scenario I. It is und the PAGE 3. and that ‘t. l .- ’M-r.’