West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 6 Dec 1923, p. 5

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Jr. Illâ€"Arden Whittaker. Clen Rowe. Dorothy Pickpring, Gordon McCrao- and Caroline Mitchell (qu), M'tmrv McFadden. â€"â€"Annie (1. MacKonziv. Teacher. Jl'. Ill. A.â€"-\Villin Erwin. Mary 'l‘obin, Viulvt Mchan. George Hay, Wllulu I V “U. - Jr. IV.â€"Martina Simpson. lrvine Slorrey, Eunice Moon, Maud Kelsey, Clifford Moon. -â€"John A. Graham. Principal. Sr. Ill.â€"â€"-Elsie Willis. Raymond Mctlirr, Norman Mcllraith, Jean McKay, Dave Marshall ancl Orville Saunders (equal) . ‘ ‘ - n|_,__ Durham Public School Sr. IV.â€"Christine Goodchild. Vera Mountain, Lizzie Hind, Iva Milne, Donald Young. Wilma Smith. Jr. Ill. B.-â€"â€"Lawrenco- \Vhitmm'e, ansnn LUWP. Norman BN‘kPI‘. Ruby Hulmo. Sam Glaser. -'~‘a¢liv F. Machnald. 'l‘vaclwr. Sr. ll.â€"- Krâ€"«A'orman Dean. Wil- fro-ol )liolcllvtun. Dorothy Slwx'k, MN'MJ Hawns, Alvck llaltl‘Q'vll. Sr, ll. Bra-Jami, Walsnn. lilill'ord Mrllirr. lluhy Willis. Frank ilulnw and .lavk Lalulm' qual'~ 'l‘mldy lil- lioll. .lr. ll. .\.â€"â€"«,-\nni» Campbell. (jaw- vim-v Smmolm's. Alice Nicholson and [Imam Knight. (vqual . Helm Young. Lulu Mills. H. II. [#:4215in Fallkingham. K0150 Mollawlo-y, Clarke Llnyql. Donald limit. Annin Walker. Sr. l.-â€"-Tnm Caldwell. Pt‘~i'(‘y Green- wnocl. Holcliv (Blasm'. Agnes \Valkm‘. Wailtm' Ni'aws. .lr. l. Margin-wt Sibliald. {marge \shlvv Bo ssiv Atkinson, Elsie Pink- m-tnn. Farinu-s Hm. «Edna \. Bumning, 'l‘nat'ln-r. Primary Classesâ€"«Sr. Pr. Glass .\.v-Flnl'on('9 HavonskLillian ()lllilisnn. Mona McDonald, Catharine McCawloy, Margarvl \V‘atson. ’ mass iaâ€"Ammr Knch, Violet. Hind. Gladys Ritvhio'. Uliwnv Yiil‘s. Clara Jack. llluss (L-â€"â€"Bl¢l0n Whilmorv. Kath- lmm Ml'lhfllflld, Percy Murdock and Charliv Caldwell (aqual, Joan Mcâ€" Lean, lmw is \V'hitmm'o. 'wlkmalda .VlcEaclwrn. 'I‘Pavlnm‘. Junior Primer : lilass A.--â€"â€"Harnld T rafl‘orcl. Marian Mmu'v. .lnlm Hrmnwoocl, Mary l'ick- (wing. Russ Wilson. Class Bwshirley M1" uhl'v Clara Thompson. Jack hagnon, .lcaa Rowe, Elsiv Hunto'r. Class (1.--;\|urris Simpsnn, "'iul'chm (Nahum. Hort Lzuvreuce‘, Joan Mur- dock. 'l'hcju'nton Snell. No. 1!, Bontinck. Sr. Himâ€"13001110 Hupkins. Norman Ritchiv. lilifl'ord Rosvlml'ough. Jr. [Yrâ€"Allan Picknn.(1urman Rmobm'ough. Sr. [ILâ€"Lawrmu'v Hawkins. Maplv Armstmng. . Sr.llrâ€"Poarllhnufiunwuufln \thfl Armstrong. Tommy Milligan, Maudie Pickvn. Elvin Vollc‘tt and “Ma Vol- Iett ifivqual? . .ll'. IL-Sicily ankins. MIN} “up- kins. J r. l.-~ Arnetta Manta. . Pr. Asâ€"Clarence Rik-hit“. Irvine Wuhtwr. Jim Armstrong. Pr. B.â€"â€"â€"Raym0nd Hopkins. Dawson Voile“. Pr. C.»Frod Rosebornngh, Irvine Mountain. lo. 3, Glenda. Jr. W.â€"Christene Anderson', Dorâ€" othy Ritchie', Armonell Gloncross', Archie Greenwood. Sr. Illâ€"Lena Bell'. Blanche Mc- Kechnie‘, Dan Ritchie'. Mae Bell, Dorothy Robinson'. Dan Firth', Myrtle Glencross', Grace Paylor, Ralph Staples, Jack Anderson'. J}. "IQ-Irene McKechnie, Mary Scheuerman, Tour McNally'. Jr. ll.-â€"-Adeline McNally. Allen'. Jr. l.â€"Jsabelle Firth, Mary Ander- son', Ruby Staples, Jim Bell'. 81'. Pr.--'DIvey Allen, Viola Neely', Jr.‘ Pr.â€"-Margaret Firth', Millie Gloncross', Aggie Anderson', Gordon Greenwood. Pr. A.-â€"â€"Whlter Street. Willie Soheuerman, George Scheuerman. Those present every day marked '. No. on Roll 34, average attendance for November, 31.47. lo. 9, Glenda. IV.-â€"M». Hargrarve, R. McFadden, J. Dunsmoor, A. Amen. ' ‘ Sr. [ILâ€"D. Amen, B. Hargrave, 0. Hopkins, K. Dunsmoor, M. Hopkins, L. Jacques. Jr. Illa-‘B. McNally,‘ G. Hopkins. _ Thursday, Docent“ 0. ”33 filIHâ€"L Robins, B. Dunsmoorhu. 8r. ll.â€"-V. Robins; E. Lawrence, E. Himsmny ankins \m» w. Anniv Mamlcmalcl. 'l‘nachvr. Armetta McKechnie, Teacher. Mary E. ."lUl'tOIl. 'I‘Pachv «Lizzie Se'mm‘mx Tea-chm. . Acheson. Toucher. Greenwood', Olive Dunsmoor, C. Hargrave. Sr. Pr.‘-â€"-C. Jacques, F. Arnett, Greenwood, D. Lawrence. Jr. Pr.â€"-O. Dunsmoor, G. Green- wood, D. Aljoe, C. McNally, 0. Ball, E. Dunsmoor. Pr. A.â€"R. Lawrence, M. Harrison, A. McGirr, M. Brown. Jr. lV.â€"-â€"Irwin Matthews, Jessie Hooper, Edith Hunter, Harold Ec- cles, Norman Watson, Pearl Watson. Sr. Illâ€"John Hooper. Jr. III.-~Mae Andrews, Wallace Adams, Ethel Lawrence, Martha Lawrence, Lolita Daily, Florence Patterson. lo. 12, Baromont. Sr. [VF-Amanda Matthews, Wlil- fwd Daily. ILâ€"John Matthews. Barman Wil- son, Douglas Nelson. SP. I.â€"â€"l\llbl‘l"iS Matthrws, Curmsm Hargrave. Jr. I. B.-â€"-Lawson Andrews. JP. 1. A.-â€"-\Villio Patterson, Clam Watson. Mary Daily, Dave Daily, Clarencv Nelson, George Wilson. Anni» Hoopor. Sr. Punâ€"anis Wells, Fanny [Imu- m‘aw. .lr. PP. .-\.â€"â€"â€"Llnyd Brown. Jr. Pr, B.â€"~.\nnie \Vatsnn. â€"-Mae Davis. 'l‘omzhvr. No. 2 ,Bentmck and Glenelg. l\'.â€"â€"«Beutriov Grasby. Alintm' Lawrmwn. Sr. III.~-4lathari1w Mova‘m. .ll'. Illsâ€"Joan Clark, Corinne Law- rmwv. Murgal'vt. McLean. [Ir-«3131110 Mclman, \Villw lmgah‘. Jr. l.â€"â€"4‘.lan~uw Ritchie). Humiv Miller. Sr. Pinwflhnna Clark. Muriel. Brown. {thostm' Mmm‘. .II'. Pawâ€"Archiv McLean. ~43]. E. Lamb, 'I‘vas-l'm'. SHALL THE MAN BB RANGE!) OR JUST BIS BARS CUT OFF? Just because the only sentence provided under existing legislation for pound breach so far as they can find. is hanging or cutting off the ears of the accused and deporting him to the penal colony of Australia. court ofl'icials at Winnipeg, accord- ing to a dispatch last week, are in a quandary .115 to what to do in the also of Angus McDonald, 3 dairy- Only Law Governing Taking Out of Pound. One of his best cuws became sep- aratml from thv herd, wandered {may and was garnered in by the puundkeeper. Angus proceeded to the bmine limlm and despite objec- tions of the poundkeeper, led his Imssy home, t'nllnwing a warm ex- change 0! verbal fireworks and per- sonal opinions. «A charge 01‘ pound breach was subsequently laid against McDonald, but when all the ewidence had been taken and a \'erdict‘reached, court Oll'ieials muld nut find in the Cana- dian Criminal (Lode any penalty for [munil hrearli. Accordingly, refer- enee was made to the English com-.- mon law. where they discovered an enactment of more than 150 years Iago, pimiding: that a person fmmd guilty of this nlfenee shall be either executed or, his ears liming been removed, deported to the penal enlâ€" uny 0f Austmliu It is, of coursv, out of the question in thesv onlightcned days» to hang :1. man for such an ()tpénce, and Austra- lia may uhjoct. in still being consid- ered a penal colony. Hence thn quandary. WHY YOUTHS ARE PIRBD The average boy. jauntily starting on his first job, little realizes that the odds are nine to one against his holding it. Yet such is the fact, ac- cording to Mr. A. D. White, statisti- cian for Swift 00., who presents analysis of the reasons for the fact, not only the fact itself, but his an- SWEEPS. The reasons are fiveâ€"and every boy who has a job or expects to have one should check of! these five and see which of them apply to himself. 1. Lack of sense of responsibility. He neglects work and lets somebody else do all the worrying. 2. Unwillingness to work hard. He arrives late and leaves early, takes extra time at the lunch hour and wastes his employer’s time in social and telephone conversations. He shirks hard or unpleasant tasks. ‘ 3. Lack of thoroughness. He is unwilling to master one thing well before going on to another. 4. Faise notions of salary and pro- motion. He doesn’t realtize the tmth that the key to promotion is to do more‘than tie is paid todo. Instead, he expects to be paid for more than he doesâ€"which would ruin any worker. 5. Lack of principle. This is evi- denced by concealment of mistakes, untruthmlness and constant making of excuses. The youth who will avoid the er- rors here indicated will keep his first job until he is asked to take a better one. â€"-F. Kerr, Teacher. All Canada was shocked at the bungled and twice attempted execu- tion of a young man who had been convicted of a brutal murder in an Eastern Province in the recent past. The bungled execution by a drunken hangman was shocking enough. But the more shocking thing was the murder, because So- ciety itself was really more to blame than the poor mentally defect- ive murderer. He should have been from his early years a. ward of socie- ty, protected from the terrible perils of liberty amiong normal people, whose competition, temptations, and taunts led him to fall into illicit srxunl association, fits of temper, and linally a frenzy of jealousy, which drove him to his awful (iced and to end his life on the gallows. His is by no means an, exceptional vase. A great. many of the most, bru- tal murdi-rs arid othnr shocking dovds of Violence are C(ll’lmlittléd by irresponsible), fofé-hlo-mindvd men 01' women. who instead of being exposâ€" ml to unfair competition and over- pmx'm'ing li-nmhation at. the hands of lli‘rl’lllfll and unscrupulous follow- ritizrns. ought. to have been discov- (.‘l‘l'd in rhildlwod as sulmormal and to haw boon ‘arod for in tho pl'O- toclvd nlnwsphvro of a rural and in- dustrial training; school :ulaplml to their [.wculiar hoods suvh as \w haw- now in some Provinros of Canada. and in many Amoriran Stains and in the United Kingdom, Dr, H. H. Goddard nf V'inolzmd. .\'.J. gives threw selected frnble-mindnd murderers in his book on "The Grim- inal Imbecilr.” ”no of thoso, Joan (iianini, a yuuth of sixteen. a fairly high-grade moron lwcauso he hall been placed in a (lunco's corner by his tcachm' for some“ breach of discipline or failure in his lesson, in a spirit. of rmwngv enticed his tlpacl'wr outside the Vil- lage and with an old m‘onkoy- \\'l‘(‘ll(’h with which he had armed himself brutally beat her to (loath and gloriod in the publicity his tor- rible deed hail given him. Another, Rolaml Pennington,‘ a farm hand, of imbecile mental slat- us, led on by the. farm manager who was jealous of the farm owner, bru- tally attacked the latter and with the help of the manager (lid the vic- tim to deah in horrible fashion. Both manager and boy were convicted and executedwwhieh was gravely unjust. to this poor boy. The third. Fred Thompson. an ele- vator man, was attracted to a stem- grapher whom his elevator carried up and down daily, proposed .mar- i'iage, was refused, bought two re- volvers, followed the young lady on the street car to her home. again proposed and being again refused opened fire and finished his brutal deed inside the girl’s home into which she fled. He, too, was an im- heeile. Being convicted he was giv- en a life sentence in the peniten- tiary. His life should have been from early years spent in training seluml or colony for .the feeble- minded where he would have been happy, contented and safe in this THE DURHAM CHRONICLE protected atmosphere and the. com.- munity safe from the crimes he was liable to commit. Dr. C. K. Clark, the great alienist, is quoted as saying that probably one half of all crime in general is due to the nonâ€"care of these well-intention- -â€"'" ed weak- minded but dangerous p0- tantial criminals. ‘1’"Iltlul \p- .m-â€"â€"._ When will governments learn the wisdom of discovering and properly caring for these unfortunate crea- tures and so protecting them and the public from the very serious dangers to which they are constantly exposed? Probably not until the public gets to know the alarming facts and insistently presses for ac- tion. Even in money it costs less to care for these potential criminals before they become actual assault: ers. murderers, prostitutes, incendâ€" iaries and the like. HOUSEHOLD TIPS Kwp butter tightly covered in a dark. mm] place), away from all posâ€" sibility nf taints. l'so a clean brick for an iron stand wlwn ironing“. It will retain heat much longer than U10 usual stand. Wrap your ['DI‘PSUI‘\’("S and jullivs that an! cmmod in glasses with pa.- pm' 11011] in place by a rubiwr hand. 'l‘iw)’ will retain their color best um.- «tt-r such ti'vatnwnt. ll um \\ill \\ ash wry lino' ilannvls in (old \Vutvv \xith naplitlia soup suds. and (h) them quickly. “my will smn'cviy shrink at. all. NPH'I' nw ilw may directly an the wool. If ynu usu yvllow snaps. in your laundry. relnmniwr they haw much I'vsin in thvm alld’CIUUH‘S must 1w \wll rinsed. £23: 9:: ES .2: .35; 2:23; 5.; :95 3.5:; £37. 63.5 :_ :25, is E 1.52:. “SEE? .33, 3:52.51. .3 .816; 8?: $27.. Egaez When you are baking pastry it is :1. wisp m'm'uutiun to put salt under Hw tins t0 prvwnt tlw cuntvnts from scnrcl‘ling. If you use a wooden spoon instead of a mom] one when beating your cuko dough. you will find it. loss tir- ing and it will loaw no black marks on your hand. ‘ Language To Fit. An urnithologist states that birds have accents according to the part of tho country they are found in. The remarks of a Billingsgate parrot which recently got tangled in a wireless aerial sccm to bear this nut. -â€"(London Opiniun. â€"â€"â€"â€" GOOD CROPS II WEST. BUT POOR PRICES REPORTED Ir. J, A. Sim of Unity, But, In Something to 3:: at Conditions in Thu Part Of the West. ' . We received a remittance recently from Mr. John A. Sirrs of Unity, Sask., for which we. tender thanks. He reports a good crop but poor prices. Though a number of years in the West his thoughts are often directed in kindly remembrance of the peOple in Durham. He wishes to be remembered to his former ac- quaintances and particularly to the Oddfellows, in whose IOdge he held the chief executive office at one time and is now in a similar position in the lodge at I'nity. Reading be- tween the lines. we think he would enjoy a Visit East. BORN. . Derby.â€"â€"-ln Bngltinck .011 December 5.1923,mMr. and Mrs. William Derby, .112, a datlghh-r (Margarot, Jean}. Livingstonâ€"In Guelph Gmwral Hospital on Monday, Nm'embm‘ :26, In Mr. .and Mrs. Stank-y Livingstun. 0f Elmira, a sun (\Villinm Ilohwt. Ml". Livingston is a sun of Mr. and Mrs. \V. A. Liyinushm. Bunlinck. WOlf.--IH Washing" «m l’alk Hm- mm mm. ago In M1. and Mls. t1:h ls H. \\()H a daughl‘nr .Mntlvllcn. Buth doing “Ml. HOW IS YOUR LABEL? Though we have endeavored to explain it, there are still some who are unable to interpret the meaning of the label on The. Chronicle. Let us try to make it clear. “Dec. 2i”! Collowing the name indicates that. the paper is paid up to the end of the year 1924. “Aug. 25‘" shows the subscriber paid up to the end of Au- gust, 19%. According to our method of marking, the paper eXpires at the end of the month named in the year indicated. “Dec. 09” means that the subscription is paid to the end of the year 1909. The labels are usually changed about the beginning of each month and the changed label is to be taken as a receipt for moneys re- Tceived. It‘ money be sent at any ltime during the month and the label is not changed shortly after the be- ginning ef the next month, it would be well for the subscriber to make inquiry. About the end of the year when renewals come in more rapidly . than at any other season it means a ‘ lot of work to acknowledge each re- mittance separately. We hope we have made the matter sufliciently plain. Look at your label now and .see what it says. tl' THE ' BAPTIST ANNIVERSARY will be held on Sunday. Decemhbr 16, when the services. morning and evening, will be taken by Rev/J. G. Brown, BA... D.D., of McMnster Uni. ,versity, Toronto. ALL PARTIES O‘R’ING THE BUN- Essan U. . are [eh quested to c l 9 at the Royal are the will at 1' that date the ac- )lacod in other hand: for collectio .»By Order of Execu- tive. 1262 Essan U. F. 0. Club or an quested to c 1 Royal Deco mun r that date . mum in am NOTICE 1'0 TmAYflS A” 1923 {3‘08 f0! HN‘ Town Of Dmham must hfl paid 0 vilhvr Bank on or b: in up- cemlwt 1:2. 1 ’ at datv 3 {wr rum. “0 ‘ addvd on an unpaid t (he an (or Median.) PAGE m

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