West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 28 Jul 1927, p. 6

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Pupil (after some co{iisi]on) â€" "Runving away from the policeman." Teacherâ€""What is meant by the phrase ‘a boit from the blue‘?" a ride for company.â€"-'T';!vx;â€"aF:lls (Idaho) paper. Watoro‘s story is that he set out to drive in his car to Twin Falls and picked up the dead man, giving him 4. Every person who contravenes any regulations made under the said Act shal; be guilty of an offence and shall incur the penalties provided for in Section 8 of the Act. (c) ime name and address or names and addresses of the person or I persons to whom each consignâ€" menl desigrnated by its respectiva mark of identification, is sold or disposed of; (d) the price at which each sale is made; and (e) such other information as may under the circumstances be necegâ€" sary to give a complete and clear record of the particulars of the lransaction. 3. The books and records required ander the said Act or under these reâ€" gulations shall be open to and availâ€" able for inspection by the shipper or his agent duly named in writing, at any time during regwlar bn.lnm} hours faramiodoltwomtrom: the date of the disposal of the consignâ€" | ment. The parp in t fr H it Must Have Been Tl uncii m ribing th 14 Latest from the Classroom TH th At int An A:t Respecting Dealings in Ervit and Vegetables on Commission ns h Aet sqall incur a penalty of not than $50 nor mcre than $100 for offence and the same shall be roâ€" able under the provisions of Ontario â€" Summary Convictions 1809296 * 19 n th natur m the >MM nto Regulations an Orderâ€"inâ€"Council, apâ€" His Honor the Lieutenantâ€" datel the 17th day of n a+ whom each consignâ€" ated by its respective ntification, is sold or fllE T8hp K each box, basket, ‘nlainer in such manâ€" the same to be identiâ€" inment or part of the he particular shipper, sion agent shall enter kept by him for that h b mI Lo Lc ccc ol CLTRG !~ _Fron that day I became a hunter >r under these reâ€" | of orchids and a haunter of faraway pen to and availâ€" | forests and lonely marshlands and unâ€" by the shipper or visited hillâ€"tops and moun:ain sides. ed in writing, at .& .. They are strange flowers, these regular business I orchids. When first they were made C TWY PARKE TromZ .c _ s . 20 tenantâ€"Governor ike regulations # in which boo nts shall be ke h fruit n lescription _ and consiznment ; ddress or names _ the person or Lonely addr shall mean any perâ€" gns fruit and vege on commission. h nd with th + cited as "The s Consienment «in of On guilty Agent" shall who receives books of kept by getables e better V th 1 by very the in Su °ggs like flecked pink pearis caught a sight which brourt Moyn, p, _ _WRUR in the tipâ€"top: of ; Liverpool express Mount Pocono, in Pennsylvania. I markable feat of had just found the jongâ€"sought nest | to Liverpool 25 of a chestnutâ€"sided warbler. Even time. The passe as I admired the male bird, with his ‘ in a body to than white cheeks and golden head andiemersod from the chestnutâ€"streaked sides, and the fourlmc.” it gasped, " eggs like flecked pink pearls, my eye found out how to REWOKE a aluks _lie & 1 hi f n nio . ___2 . )j C oSimn ffower in many |born of theolo; placesâ€"on the top of barren hills and ) William J. Mayo in the blackâ€"lands of northern Canâ€" levonanten, ada, where four feet under the peat,, During a rallrc the ice never melts even in midsumâ€"{a volunteer enri und 1 th Since that first found the moccas placesâ€"on the top out of sunshine, mist, and dew, every color was granted them save one. They may wear snowâ€"white, roseâ€"red, pearl and gold, ivory and rose, yelâ€" low, gold and brown, every shade of crimson and pink. Only the blues are denied them. in a F roodâ€"road f odl lilies of the valley end?‘;nowy dwar j The “-’.”““!" We k e . bees corne‘s swung three mossasin flower | through dim aistes of whispering pine in & Hine," The outer ones, like the trees. At a steep place, a bent green,guard»‘stars of great Altair, were ligh stem stretched half across the path.;m Color. Bétween them gleamed, like ul 1 o it swayed a rossred flowe; the Eagle Star itself, a flower of deep like a hollow seashel cgrved O o e est rose, an unearthly crystalline color, Jacinth. For the first time I looked“me a rainâ€"drenched jacinth down on the mossasin flower, or pink Then theto was the da)'v 'h.l .the ladyâ€"slipper, the largest of our native depths of the pineâ€"barrens The Lorchids, . . . For the first time my woods looked like a ah'immen:ng poot eyes were opened to see what a luve--lof changing‘greens tapping" over a j > iy thing a flower could be. Et .the,‘white sandâ€"land that had been thrust halfâ€"light I knelt on the soft plne-mp from the South into the very needles and studied long the h°"°“'inean of the North, I followed a‘ purpleâ€"pink shell, ~veined with crlmâ€",’wludi woodâ€"path .alonc the high son, set between two other taperln‘fbank': a stream stained brown and petals of greenishâ€"purple, like a sepal | d sweet "with millfon irâ€" of the same color curved overhead, | bteepe & ceda Th h «roots. . . . On and on the path led, e whole flower swayed between two hich large curved, grooved leaves. tmt Jadeâ€"green po@ls in w gleamâ€" e â€" like Leaving the path, I began to hunt 94 buds of the yellow pond4ily, t e lumps of floating gold. At last the or others under the great trees, and at last came upon a whole congregaâ€" path stretched straight toward the P . flatâ€"topped mound that showed dim tion nodding and swaying in long rows and fair through the low frees Negr around the vast trunks of white pines : att ;" gf h° hig the w which were old trees who this country ; the ?::fl?,‘t ,,O.AE_O _l:“f‘.md. the pa was born. | wa «e dvice ) Asgâ€" pre "f ancient stock from which Canadians have sprung is represented on the t quarterings by the leopards of Engâ€" | land, the liHes of France, the lion of { Scotland, and the Irish harp." The new , nationality made up of these elements *, is marked by the three maple leaves which have become the speciat emâ€" ‘ blem of Canada. The shteld is supâ€" é ported by those traditional heraldic _ beasts, the lion and the unicorn, which . can be said to stand for those British | institutions which all Canadians inâ€" . herit. Surmounting the whole is the | British crown, the mystic symbol of , | the sovereignity to which Canada owes ! allegiance as a free selfâ€"governing naâ€" | | tion within the British Empire, ’ | Canada has been blessed with vast | ’ natural treasure. The development of |her legacy in her forests and in her | fm!nes, in her fields and in her waterâ€" [ WHys, Bas | DOol_ rAkDuteatulle "ccr OM 1C FINDING THE MOCCASIN FLOWER t it of chosen on ancient foundations. The compoé*f; tion of the structure is revealed in the Coat of Arms which Canada has Th brilt on a On July 1 xtieth birth quarter cer n il sca to sea is the achievement of whose memory is still fresh. e Dominion of Canada is a newly edifice but it has been raised t moccasin flower h y the Hon her national symbol, Tbé _"0.0s and in her waterâ€" been resourcefully and great day I have brought me to minutes ago." mar "The world need-s religion. It needs religion s distinguished from creeds born of theologians‘ disputes."â€"Dr, vyrme _ 2 FF and fair through the low trees. . . Near the summit of the mound the path iwas lost in a foam of the blue, lilac, and white butterfly blossoms of tha lupine. Little clouds of fragrance drifted through the air, as the wind swayed rows and rows of the transâ€" parent bells of the leucothe. The inâ€" most circle of the mound was carpeted with dry gray reindeer moss, and beâ€" fore me, in the centre of the circle, drooped on slender stems seven roseâ€" red moccasin flowrs.â€"Samue1 Scoville Jr., in "Everyday Adventures." | my knees regardless for a moment | of nest, eggs, birds, and all. Among | reseâ€"hearted twinâ€"flowers and wild ll lilies of the valley and snowy dwarf y corne‘s swung three mossasin flowers in a line. The outer ones, like the | guardstars of great Altair, were light | in color. Between them gleamed, like the Eagle Star itself, a flower of deep-J est rose, an unearthly crystalline color, ‘like a rainâ€"drenched jacinth. . . . _ | On this great occasion in her hisâ€" tory, Canada salutes her neighbor to the south with renewed greotings and assurances of frendship, The relaâ€" tion between his Majesty‘s oldest Doâ€" minion and the great American repubâ€" Ite has been an example to the world. It is the wish of Canada that the conâ€" cord which has prevailed between these two democracies for so long: should bo strengthened and deepened‘ as the years go on. Just as Canadians are expressing their national life in many spheres of activity, so the Dominion as a whole is happy to take its place in the world at large, ;eflort in the great war is receding into the past will reveal an advance even swifter and no less sure. Canada is now a nation in the fullest sense. The union which was effected in 1867 and in the six succeeding years has been followed through the g‘enera-: tions by a sp{ritual unification and ai symimetrical development of the naâ€"| tional life of Carada â€" until on hert sixtieth birthday her citizens can look | with pride on their achievement in all | fields of human endeavor. | Minister to the United States courageously pursued. The record of economic progress in the three score years since Canada became a unlk‘(l nation reads like a fairy tale until ona encounters the solid figures which enâ€" dow it with fact. . The new â€" epoch which we have entered now that the aftermath of four and a half years ofl Minist« °d from the cab.. "Don‘t thank t gasped, "thank God. 1 only out how to stop t‘hh thing ten vung three mossasin flowers The outer ones, like the s of great Altair, were light Between them gleamed, like The Final Heat of Diamond Sculls When Captain W. D. Puleston‘s brochure, "The Dardanelles Expedition," _ pubâ€" lished by the United States Naval Inâ€" stitute, and now appearing in a reâ€" vised and enlarged second edition, apâ€" proaches this tragedy with cool poâ€" fessional reserveâ€"in the skeptical spirit of those who have maintained since 1916 that the Gallipoli advenâ€" ture was largely an amateur vagary inspired by Winston Churchill As a naval officer he believes that the traâ€" | From the Allted point of view Galâ€" ; lipoli was the bitterost tragedy of the war. It disappointed â€"the one roal |hope the original Aliies had of winâ€" \ning the war unaided. It was the one | strategical© conception _ of ambitious ’scope and genuine value on the Allied fsi(laâ€"the only counterâ€"thrust to the | oniginal German drive on the western ,tront, which pinned the bulk of the{ IAmed forces down to a longâ€"drawn |and agonizing western defensive. Un-; fortunately an castern offensive could ‘not greatly intorest France, with her [aofl occupled and the endmy within forty or fAifty miles of her capital. The | first Marne campaign had this be-l ‘numhlng effectâ€"that it prevented a broad and intelligent use in the first | year of the war of the or;>rtunity to take Constantinople, isoiate Turkey, draw Bulgaria, Greece and ~Rumania into the antiâ€"Teutonic allfance and esâ€" tablish easy and permanent communtâ€" cations with Russia. | The central picture of the upper row shows clearly how Joe Wright got entangled with the punt ropes on the side of the course when only a few yards from the flniuhâ€"lndlcated. ky arrowâ€"and Lee was able to win | THE GALLIPOLI TRAGEDY al picture of the upper clearly how Joe Wright 1 with the punt ropes on the course when only a ADAMSON‘S ADVENTURESâ€"By O. Jacobssor TORONTO of view Galâ€" dition â€" undoubtedly wollfoundedâ€" agedy of the | that ships are at an enormous disadâ€" he one real ) vantage in attacking forts or land had of winâ€"| batteries was rashly ignored by the was the one | Allied naval expedition. But at the f ambitious | Dardenelles there was a factor offset: n the Allied |ting the natural superiority of land rust to the | defenses. That was the possibilityâ€" the western| or to say probabilityâ€"of Turkish lack bulk of the |of preparedness. Had the Turks an longâ€"drawn‘ adequate supply of ammunition for fensive. Unâ€"| the forts at the Narrows? Had they a nsive could | sufficient stock of mines? Would the 2'_ with her| defense of the Narrows not have FIRS T PICTURES FROM HENLCEY REG ) upper | though Lee had been behind practicalâ€" Wright |ly from the start. The upper left-' opes on | hand picture shows Rt. Hon. Stanley | only a ) Baldwin in the stewards‘ enclosure;! dicated | on the right is R. T. Leo of Worcester to win, | College, Oxford, the winner. In tho The author‘s conclusion from his review of the naval"operations is not alone that they were ineffective and a 9 on o _pf Aaj nover the same again. There is nothâ€" j [Hed depression atter the fatlare ot the | :8 in the. Gaillpoll record "to show | naval operation of March 19, 1915, i"h“ a botter organized and ”M’M} was the mistaken beliet that the’"p’d"“’mn army, landed promptly | mines which caused such heavy losses |0" the poninsula and reinforced £mpâ€" | were set adrift by the Turks and float. !" instead of by driblets, could not j ‘ed down the channel, when, in mfl';have done what General Ian Ham!l-! ‘lhe Allied vessels had struck an unâ€"‘!°"% With @ll his difficulties, discourâ€" | suspected mine fleld freshly laid by agoments and lack of cupport, barely the Turks The second volume of Mr. MM#S¢4 doing. | Churchill‘s recent work contains tesâ€" * #* * t timony from German and Turkish Tho books‘s treatment of the navel sources to show that the straits deâ€" and land operations is succinet and <‘ fense was not oversupplied with graphic and is clarified by many maps. mines and munitions and that the | It is a eritical study which deserves ; chance of a break through was not | consideration for its professional . entirely desperate. I anslity. â€" *Tin tmA un 46) ns done ~comes , ditton â€" undoubtedly wollfoundegâ€" OMensivo was bungled from the start |that ships are at an enormous disad.| tB"0OU5! fatiure to coâ€"ordiats the naval vantage in attacking forts or land and the military effort. Asâ€"to tho |batteries was rashly ignored by the situation on the peninsule, Captain Allied naval expedition. But at the P4!@8ton is equally convinced that not | Dardenelles there was a factor oftset.; P"tUsh military blundering alonoâ€" [ting the natural superfority of land and it was acute and continuousâ€"left defenses. That was the possibtlityâ€" the Turks in possession of the peninâ€" or to say probabilityâ€"of Turkish lack| 844 _ HMe rates the Turkish army lof preparedness. Had the Turks an f vory high and thinks that it deserved adequate supply of ammunition for""’ win. . Turkey developed a great the forts at the Narrows? Had they a 1¢2d¢r in Mustapha Kemalâ€"the soul sufficient stock of mines? Would the of the resistance at Gallipoli, without defense of the Narrows not have | WYNOW the coveted crosts might havoe broken down through exhaustion ln:baen lost. The Turks fought well unâ€" the face of a much better conducted id" him. But after Gallipol the Turkâ€". and organized joint naval and mili.|1%" army rapidly deterlorated. It was ~â€" A LittleBig Man. ,~â€"~ _ _ â€"â€" Undoubtealy woilâ€"{oundedâ€" hips are at an enormous disadâ€" e in attacking forts or land es was rashly ignaored by the naval expedition. But at the relles there was a factor offset: Joe Wright Lost Out by a Fluke Tho books‘s treatment of the navel and land operations is succinet and graphic and is clarified by many maps, It is a critical study which deserves consideration for its professional quality. ~Galllipoli was a tragle millâ€" tary . failure, whatever the reasons. Judged realistically on its performâ€" ance it must be accepted as such. When the author, however, unconâ€" lower row the picture on the right shows Joo Wright after he had realâ€" ized that furthor effort could not reâ€" leaso his oar from the entangling rope an dthat Leo has passed him. On the left is Wright going to his quarters after the race. ATTA , uncon ably followed by Gur{> mel (Pa.) paper _ â€"Answors VUnlucky Peanuts, not to pamed something like Sir Henry of Navarre! y g) ; _ _z _1 â€"° CTV UOm great In size; others acheive magnificence through name. Peanuts was denied both these gifts. A son of Ambassador IV., ha }mltht very well have baen named Buckingham, Choate or George Har vYey. But he was so emall that he Incurred a namoe completely suggesâ€" tive of insignificance. Neither the littleness nor the name has hurt his carnings much. He has started four times this year and won on each occasion. He finished first in the Brooklyn Handicap, boating Crusader, Pompey, Chance Play and Black Marla, A week later, with 119 pounds up, he captured the Braokâ€" dale. More recently for the second time in his life, he was victor in the Empire City Handicap, shouldoring 124 pounds and running the mile end a quarter in 2;05, Bome horses are born great in others acheive marnificenea +. ture in the British Isles does not seo; to be regarded as n mensace to th future of the plantations under th British flag on this continent. | (» ada is doing everything in its powo to strengthen the tobaceo industry i all departments, and this groatly ce courages growers as well as th. ownrers of factores.â€"N. Y. Sun. Shouldn‘t y Weather â€"â€" Coldor 0St â€"if clear. Satu: _ The raflway authsritio ficlals of tobacco comp: that thig movomeni w#il an important migration. the field men of tho « panies that growing on conditions in Canada aye they are in the United xoil not having been c« pl British preferential tarift advantage of the Domin The effort to stimutato Arabian Nighte. > Musband (arriving home late) g'; you guess where I‘ve been ?" _ There is now in progress « tion from the Unitoq Hlates to ( which, according to the Ca Pacific Railway, marke a new opment in the transfor of c from this country to the Do: Farmers from tho tobaceoâ€"g1 States of the Union, particularl tucky, are movine in considerbl bers into the tobaceo disurl cts tario and othe provineos tm are being made of the ©Ca: authorities by raany more Kentucky Moges to patnians and the Damube. worth every possib‘s t liiay Unhappily, the ouly effort n that which Kitchener‘s feet agement wrecked. â€"â€" Wilian Phergon in N. Y. Heraldâ€"Trib b positions stantinop political : The A} They had Take the Britis munitions at N March, 1915. Th tions were sacrii "attrition." in C have enablad 13 ditionally condemns the strategical concept behind it be wanders far affeld He is a pronounced Westerner and holds that the Allies in 1915 and later should have used all their forces on the western front He believes the Allied vessels used at the Dardanctâ€" les would have have been bettor omâ€" ployed in the North Sea or the Baliic. The Baltic attack was a bhobby of Admiral Fisher‘s. The British c‘viâ€" sions sout to the Dardanelles in 1913 might have been thrown asainst the Germans in France But to what good purpose? ‘The British New Armica were used up there in 1916 and 1917 without appreciable results in a manâ€" ner of which Marshal Foch, ia his preface to Field Marshal Haig‘s Di patches, said sadly: "if a war is is end in victory, it must always havo a character different fram this " ry th t0 sUmutate tobaceo . Bfltlsh Isles does noi s« ; but tell youx: Peanuts d r‘y, it mu ifferent | British 1 meni will develo; Wonder. * r toâ€"night, heavy y.â€"Mount Car and mar the Dominion. tobaceoâ€"growing articularly Kenâ€" from to have been ir Walter or Ceonanly ienâ€" sidorble numâ€" stricts of Onâ€" es; ‘nquilies e â€"«Cansidian vre, 8 and the o° ibilea beliovs develop into It is hel} hy )Oi 14 E10 y $ pow e num l 123 ths th n Lh ata lian ~Â¥ elining 1 cabled : Ohriet? Boston ‘I #tory p! Â¥4 A FEA‘IHER IN CAN ‘When the in Canada e« encourage t] industry, th« first steps â€" BHdence anmo the quality «duce. The to regurd « O« )

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