West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Aug 1932, p. 6

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& } CANADA ‘ | _ More Confidence in the West Descriptions of conditions in the West a year ago were so gloomy that we greet with joy the return of that part of the country to less pessimistic sentiments. On his way to Sault Ste. Maric, Mr, J. T. M. Anderson, the Prime Minister of â€" Saskatchewan, said: "The crop is magnificent; our population is getting on its feet once more; they are doing more with their own efforts than with the aid of the Government ; the West will be the first to recover, This depression, in my opinion, has been a real blessing." We very much prefer this language to the depressing despatches we used to reâ€" ceive last year on Western conditions. "The Wost will be the first to reâ€" cover." What courageous optimism! Three cheers for the Prairies!â€"Le Great Britain‘s master stroke to bring about national financial readâ€" justment by a monster loan conversion scheme has been greeted with acclaim throughout the world. The Old Counâ€" try has thus staged a remarkable deâ€" monstration of her financial genius and of the character and faith of a people who will not be downed. In this matter as in war reparations, I ritain has given the world leadeship and inspiration at a time when they are most greatly nesded.â€"(Calgary Herald.) Doit Ottawa.) It would really seem that a better day is dawning for the pedestrian.‘ First an Ontario magistrate rules that a person on foot is entitled to as much room on the highway as a motor ¢i ; then the Podestrian Rights‘ Asâ€" sociation springs into being and now zlong comes a Vancouver judge with a decision that pedestrians do not Lave to scurry out of the way at the sound of an automobile horn to avoid responsibility for being run down. This last judgment may be sound law, and the judge gave it point by awardâ€" ing $1,200 damages, but it might be a«â€" woll, The Examiner believes, to y 1y safe and .atch your step when motor horas are sounding.â€"(Poterâ€" borough Examiner.) Benefit of Spending What puzzles everyon» about this depression is the timidity of shoppers in the midst of irresistible bargains. It is contrary to normal psychclogical processes and can be explained only on the ground of that sheeplike attriâ€" bute of human nature by which, for go»d or ill, mass conduct is governed ty common impulses, A year or two ago, when prices were much higher than they are today, the tendeny was to indulge in a buying orgy. Today though prices have never beer so atâ€" tractive, the purseâ€"strings are tightly drawn, with resulting injury to comâ€" merce and industry. It is felt that the solution of our ecconomic difficulties lies largely in the action of citizens thomselvesâ€"that is to say, those of them who have money to spend, but who will not spend it.â€"(Hamilton Spectator.) To overcâ€"me any difficulty in read-l Ing signatur=s, it is the :ustom of many offices to have the name typeâ€" written directly below so that the reader will haye no difficulty in knowâ€" ing what is meant. This permits of the writer indulging his fancy «hat h. is fooling the forger by writing his signature in a way that is very duficult to read, while it enables the reader to see at a glance what the name is. If this practice were followâ€" ec more generally, it would remove a great source of trouble in business both to the party who is answering th» letter from a stranger unplainly s gnod, and to the writer of the letâ€" ter himself who frequently is quite armoyed if the an wor to his letter doos not bear his name correctly spell»d.â€"(Monetary Times.) Those huge froight trucks that come rooming through the heavy traffic of the highways and through the main streets of provincial highway towns look strangely out of place. They are like wandering warehouses or like: straying freight trains. They aro a menace to pedestrian. in the crowded streets, and their booming noise is an offence to the cars: These mammoth juggernauts should be made to pay dearly for the use of the highways or else be banished from the traffic.â€" THE EMPIRE ; Empire Settiement Sir Robert Horne is not alons in thinking that British industries might now begin to establish branches of their organizations in the Dominions and transfer not merely plant but perâ€" monnel to thoir new sphero of action. ‘The Dominions can be persuaded that (St. Mary‘s Journalâ€"Argus.) the influx of an organized community will not tend to increase but help raâ€" ther to solve their local difficulties, tince it will make a new centro of tradeâ€"of consumption as well as proâ€" duction. Such migr:tions, however, Britain‘s Loan Conversion Pedestrians Get a Break Unreadable Signatures Highway Danger attempted, without a revival:of the old pioneering enthusiasm.â€"(London Morning Post.) Like the Bourbons, the cotton magâ€" r<tes learn nothing and forget noâ€" thing. Yet for years science and comâ€" mon sense have been knocking at their closed doors. Witkhout exception, everyone who has investigated the cotton trade has reported that wholeâ€" sale reorganization and centralization is its only salvation. How much ‘ongâ€" er is Lancashire going to be content to allow its very machinery of existâ€" ence to be destroyed by the stubborn obstruction of men living in the past? â€" (London Daily Herald.) The Colonial Empire ‘ The Colonial Empire, in the past Las been overshadowed by the Dominâ€" ions. The dawn is now bright before us and the day is ours to make of it what we will. We are an Empire and slices of an Empire. We have each our own history, our own peoples and m ny of us our own languages, We are divided up into fiftyâ€"two separate administrations. We have 54,000,000 people and a trade worth together £400,000,000. Our importance almost takes the breath away. We have only to find a means of welding ourselves together in spirit as well as on paper. â€"(Trinidad Guardiar.) The world‘s monetary policy proâ€" cuces tremendous irregularities in‘ price levels. But this does not necesâ€" sarily call for the abandonment of the g.ld standard; and the opposition to anything of that sort would be so enormous as to make it practically in:possible. What is possible is that the value of gold may be fixed by inâ€" ternational agreement the value being determined by .e general price level of commodities. This might mean that price levels would be lifted say 49 per cent. by the simple process of valuing gold at 40 pe: cent. less than the present fixed price. The level at which the change should be effected would be one of the toughest problems to solve. Here vested interests would speak very loudly..â€"â€"(Sydney Bulleâ€" tin.) World Economic Coâ€"operation ‘ World conditions have outgrown the stage when the normal friction of: markets could with fair rapidity bring prices to a serviceable level aftor any sudden rise or fall. Under such conâ€" citions, there was justification for allowing the process of adjustment to take its own course. Conditions are ow vastly different. There has arâ€" rived an ora of general artificial intorâ€" ference with economic tendencies, and the logical step is to come to a worldâ€" wide agreement to transform that interference into guidance for univerâ€" sal benefit. Every economic or finanâ€" cial question for any nation tends now to be a concern to every other nation,. â€"(Auckland Weekly News.) For our own part, we think that, apart from restrictions of output, which is immediately necessary, the salvation of the British tea industry may be found at Ottawa. If, as is hoped, arrangements can be made whereby Britishâ€"grown teas will rsâ€" ceive preferential treatment throughâ€" out the British Empire, thereby enablâ€" ing Ceylon to recapture the Austraâ€" lian market, our worries should be at an end. The situation is frankly deâ€" pressing, but it will not be improved by becoming downhearted to the point of being panicâ€"stricken. â€" (Colombo Times of Ceylon.) OTHER OPINIONS New Leaders for the U.S.A. The American people are looking for new leaders, for men who are truthâ€" ful and resolute and eloquent in the conviction that the American destiny is to be free and magnanimous, rather than complacent and acquisitive; they are looking for leaders who will talk to the people not about twoâ€"car garâ€" ages and a bonus, but about their duty, and about the sacrifices they must make, and about the discipline they must impose upon themselves, and about their responsibility to the world and to posterity, but all those things which make a people selfâ€" respecting, serene and confident. May they not look in vain.â€"Walter Lippâ€" l mann in Time and Tide (London). Sir William Bragg, distinguished British scientist, spoke at a recent meeting of the English Association in London of the great importance of a thorough knowledge of English in reâ€" lation to scientific discoveries. Teachâ€" ers of English, he added, had so diâ€" vorced themselves from science that it was hard to get any bip}rom them. Rising to rebut, a teacher of Englisn might have said thet scientists had so divorced themselves from clear and simple English that it was hard to get any understanding of science from them.â€"(New York Sun.) Britain Leads Whatever tentative conclusion may be reached in an examination â€"of the The Lancashire Cotton Trade The Currency Problem Empire Tea Preference Mutual Complaint prosent situation, the fundamental good sense of the British people may be counted on in the long run. They may be apathctic, stolid and »hlegmâ€" atic; they may glory in being thought stupid; but in this baffling and probâ€" «bly forever insoluble problem of the organization of human society they are not unlikely to assume the leaderâ€" skip in the future as they have in the past, deriving from experience and from the experimeats of others the metlods best adaytd to their own particular charactr and temperaâ€" n ent.â€"Lord Ponsonby in Current Hisâ€" tory (New York). The _ chronological _ sequence _ of canal construction on the St. Lawâ€" rence River follows: Lachineâ€"First canal built in the year 1700 at Riviere St. Pierre. Dopth 1%4 feet. Enlargement by _ side channels, 1780 to 1804, and deepenâ€" ed to two to three feet. Early St. Lawrence Projects First Lachine Canal built between 1821 and 1824. . Enlarged _ between 1843 and 1848, with 9â€"foot _ depth Second and last enlargement, 1873 and 1884, with 14â€"foot depth. Length;» 18 miles; lift, 46 feet. Soulanges sectionâ€"First <construcâ€" tion _ of fourâ€"side channels, 6 feet wide and 2% feet deep, 1779 to 1783. In 1817, locks doubled and canals deepened by one more foot. First Beauharnois Canal in that area built 1842 to 1845, depth of 9 feet. â€" Displaced by present _ Soulâ€" anges Canal in 1899, with 14â€"f00t depth, length of 14.67 miles and 83% foot lift. Cornwall Canal built 1834 to 1842 with 9â€"foot depth. Enlarged to 14â€" foot depth between 1876 and 1904. Eleven miles long wih a 48â€"foot lift. Farran‘s Point Canal built 1844 1847 with 9â€"foot depth, enlarged to 14 feet between 1897 and 1901. One and a quarter miles long with 4%â€" foot lift. , Rapide Plat â€" Canal, Morrisburg, built with 9â€"foot depth between 1844 and 1847. Enlarged 1884 to 1904, with 14â€"fo0ot _ depth,. Length, 3.89 miles; lift, 11.6 feet. Galops Canal built in two sections (Galops and Iroquois) between 1844 and 1846. Sections joined by Juncâ€" tion Canal, 1851â€"1856. Original 9â€" foot depth enlarged to 14 feet beâ€" tween 1888 ang 1904. Length, 7.36 miles; lift, 15% feet. Why .. Two friends were having an indigâ€" nation meeting of their own. Both had suffered doniestic strife and now they were comparing notes. f "Aren‘t women the limit?" growled the first. "Wo husbands don‘t know anything at all and our wives know everything." "Well," said his companion in misâ€" ery, reluctantly, "there‘s one thing my wife admits she doesn‘t know." "What on earth is that?" "Why she married me." King George, attended by officers, as he reviewed the marines on the flagship of the British fleet, H.M.S, Nelson. _ The review took place at Weymouth, England, recently. Three perfect diving poses of Katherine Rawls, 15â€"yearâ€"old Miami marvel, who astounded officiais by defeating Georgia Coleman for.national divingâ€"bonors at Long Island. The petite miss will represâ€" ent America in the olympics. + h AOECEELURT Wealte 27 ce By Lord Snowden, Former Chancellor of the Exchequer, in a House of Lords Speech. Some of my Socialist friends have never realized the tremendous reâ€" cuperative power of capitalism. We shall see ourselves through the crisis, though I do not ignore important changes in our plan for national reorâ€" ganization and reconstruction. I shall never live to see the estabâ€" lishment of a Socialist State. I believe the economic revolution is working in that direction, but may God save Engâ€" land from such a socialism as they have in Russia toâ€"day. Russia is under a system of indusâ€" trial _ conscription, has confiscated capital, repudiated public debt and started without capital liabilities. And ever since Russia has beon coming to the capitalist countries of the world, cap in hand, begging them for export credits and loans. Emotion Slows Up Workers Under the above heading, the Science Newsâ€"Letter _ called attenâ€" tion to the work which has been done at the Western Elécric Comâ€" pany by G. A. Pennock, in an effort to fing out the effects of various conditions on the efliciency of workâ€" ers. It was discovered ‘that the emotional state of the employee was much more important than fatigue, A harsh foreman who frightens the workers under him will decrease the output of his department by such tactics. The man who precedes his working day with a quarrel at the breakfast table with his wife is a most _ unsatisfactory . worker, both from the standpoint of accident and health hazards and from the viewâ€" point of working efficiency. Fountain Flow Started By Bending of Drinker Schenectady, N.Y. â€" A drinking fountain that operates the instant a person bends over it, is one of the latest contrivances embodying the "electric eye" perfected by the Genâ€" eral Electric Company. Such a founâ€" tain stands in the main office of the General Electric Building. A tiny beam of infraâ€"red light, almost inâ€" visible to the eye, issues from an "electric _ eye", _ or _ photoâ€"electric tube attached to the fountain. Whenâ€" ever the head of a drinker intercepts the beam a stream of water is turnâ€" ed on automatically. Her car had broken down on the roag opposite.a field where a farmâ€" er was plowing with a fourâ€"horse team. The farmer came over and offereq to pull the car to the nearest garage with his team. _ "I appreciate your kind offer more than I can tell you," the lady in distress told the farmer, "but, unfortunately, you would need twelve more horses. You see, my car has a sixteenâ€"horsepower motor."â€"Capper‘s. TORONTO The Socialist State Areloniiger ce teee. New Swimming Light 6 Trade Volumes Used At Conference Statistics on World Trade Facilitate Proceedings Ottawa. â€" Six companion yolumes dealing with world and Empire trade are placed at the disposal of the Imâ€" perial Economic Conference. ‘These were arranged for by Hon. H. H. Steâ€" vens, Minister of Trade and Comâ€" merce, and compiled by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. » The risk of confusion in the minds of the delegates to the conference, when comparisons between the trade of the various countries is sought, is disposed of by converting all values into Canadian currency, at the par rate of exchsige in each country, for the more important tables in the genâ€" eral abstract of Empire trade. These volumes constitute a most comprehensive â€"readyâ€"reference guide to the trade of the British Empire with its owir and foreign countries. Thoy were designed to eliminate much of the labor that has fallen to the lot of committees of previous conferences and to facilitate discussion upon isâ€" sues of trade and commerce as they arise. The work, which entailed an imâ€" mense amount of detail, has been in progress since before the beginning of the year and the printing of the documents was completed just before the opening of the conference. The first volumo giver the statistiâ€" cal abstract of the Empire and foreign trade of all British countries. There are 36 British countries or groups of countries whose trade is recorded, as well as the trade of 64 foreign counâ€" tries. The second volume deals in detail with the trade of Canada, with British Empire countries ~~d the United States. The third sets out the trade of Canâ€" ada with Australia, the Fiji Islands and New Zealand, and the trade of these countries of Oceania. The fifth gives details of the trade of Canada with British India, Ceylon and the Straits Settlements, as well as the trade of British India, Ceylon and British Malaya. The fourth comprises the trade of Canada with British East, West and South Africa, also the trade of British East and West Africa, Northern and Southern Rhodesia and the Union of South Africa. The last volume comprises the trade of Canada with the British West India Islands and Newfoundland, and also the trade of theso countries. Let no guilty man escape, If it Can be avoided. No personal conâ€" siderations shoulg stand in the way of _ performing _ a publio duty.â€" Ulysses 8. Grant. Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested Hamilton, Ont. â€"An important do-' velopment in the recovery Of sulphur ; dioxide from gases of low concentraâ€" tion has been made by chemists o(| Canadian Industries Limited, which will open ‘a possible ‘new source ‘from which Canadian consumers may s¢â€" cure the sulphut dioxide required in manufacturing processes. © In order to‘ study the recovery of sulphur dioxide, an experimental plant was erected at Hamilton â€" to â€" duplicato conditions . found at plants ©producing nulphur' dioxide goses of low concentration AsS a waste product. Sulphur was burned . and the fumes diluted to varying perâ€" centages of concentration, to ltllnu-l late the waste gases of industry. Thus developed a new method whereby lul-: l Regina, Saskatchewan. â€" The value of Manitoba‘s dairy products last year |wu $13,715,000, while that of Sasâ€" 'kltchewnn was $18,893,000 and Alberâ€" ‘ta $15,914,000, making a total of $48,â€" 522,000. Regina, Saskatchewan.â€"Taking the figures for the first four months of 1932 as an indicator there will be a record production of lignite coal in Ilhe Province of Saskatchewan . this year. The output from January 1 to | April 30, 1932, was 329,209 tons, comâ€" tlm.red with 228,060 tons for the corâ€" [ responding period of 1931, an increase |t,hhi\ year in the poriod under review ‘of 101,149 tons. Last year the total ‘ production of lignite coal was 658.902 =lons, the highest on record for the province. phur dioxide may be separated from the waste gases and liquefied. It proved so successful that it is now supplying a portion of Canada‘s reâ€" quirements for liquid sulphur dioxide. The process can be adapted to & much larger output, and as many times the total annual consumption of sulphur in Canada goes to waste each year in the form of gases of low conâ€" centration, the development promises to be of substantial value to the Doâ€" minion. Canadian Industries Limited is considering the erection of a plant for the manufactzre of liquir sulphur dioxide on a large scale. Winnipeg, Man.â€"Two new products from Manitoba‘s northland may find a market in Canada if plans of the naâ€" tural resources committee of the Inâ€" dustrial Development Board of Maniâ€" toba are carried out successfully. Samples of birch oil, used for waterâ€" proofing leather, and syrup from the Manitoba maple, are now being studâ€" ied by the committee. Saskatoon, Saszatchewan.â€"A herd of 11 Ayrshire dairy cows at the Doâ€" minion Experimental Station at Inâ€" diin Head, Saskatchewan, showed an average profit per head for a twelve month period of $27.60 over the cost of feed. ‘The best individual performâ€" ance was a profit over cost of feed of $42.80 for the lactation period of 174 days, while another good performance was a profit of $40.94 over a lactation period of 233 days. Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.â€"Moose Jaw‘s most recent industry, the Sterâ€" ling Oil Refineries Limited, is workâ€" ing at high capacity, turning out 800 barrels, or 25,000 gallons of refined gasoline and oil per day. These proâ€" ducts are sold in practically all parts of the province. Edmonton, Alberta.â€"Boys‘ and girls‘ clubs in connection with agricultural development work in Alberta now , number 125, it is reported by the Deâ€"‘| partment of Agriculture. Of these 70! are grain and fodder clubs and the balance is made up of cattle, swine and sheep clubs. The combined memâ€" bership is about 2,000. Last year there were 94 clubs. New Westminster, British Calumbia.! â€"During the 11 years ended‘ Septemâ€"| ber 30, 1930, the Forestry (‘ommls-l sioners of Great Britain planted a total of 32,3330,000 Douglas fir trees‘ on various sites in England, Wales and Scotland. All these trees were' raised from seed furnished by the; Canadian Government Forest Bervice, | through its seed extraction plant at New Westminster, British Columbia. A considerable quantity of seed of | other Western species was hu'nllhedl to the British Commissioners troni the same source. The New Zolltnd; Government has also taken a large ‘ quantity of tree seed from Canada in ! recent years. i Vancouver, British Columbll.â€"'l‘he{ immediate construction of a mllllon, dollar refinery and distribution plant on an 80â€"acre tract of land by the Sheil Oil Company of British Colum:â€" ; bia, Ltd., is announced 1»y Mr, Charles | Anslic, manager. ‘The plant, ,whlch" will have approximately 1,800 free of frontage on the south shore of Bur-’ rard Inlet, is to be supplied with a 400 foot dock forty feet wide, Mr.! Anslie states. It will refine from’ 2,500 to 3.000 barrels of crude oil per day. Eventually, it will be able to‘ handle 10,000 barrels daily. | Victoria, British Columbia â€"A well known packing company proposes to erect a large dehydrating plant in Vicâ€" toria to handle loganberries Women were first permitted to act on the English stage, as early as 1565. Flaminia set the fashion for women actresses in Italy, but Engâ€" land‘s attitude was conservative. It was not until 1656 that Mrs, Coleâ€" man took the part of Ianthe in "The Biege of Rhodes" at Rutland House, thus paving the way for others. In women‘s parts to be scâ€"t:d";‘y ;;- men"; aftep that the stage was floodâ€" eq with actrosses. . Canadian Notes _|Ancient Moscow * Mitumiaes . * > .( ..J. TO Have m’ as early as fashion for iy, but Engâ€"‘ servative. It t Mrsa,. Coleâ€"‘ nthe in "The _| pass through a section which was elmblbly the ancient center of Mosâ€" . cow, containing relics of the strange and almost unknown life of the times. J One of the current suppositions is r _ that the prison where the rebel Pugaâ€" ,.| chev and other famous prisoners of .. | the old days were kept is under the _| present Liubianka Square. If excaâ€" ‘ | vations verify this supposition it will je! have a cerlain political piquancy, g since the headquarters of the G.P.4, a| (secret police) is located on the site » . at present. The subway construction ;,,: also has revived hopes for the di» , _covery of the fabulous library of Ivan ,. the Terrible, whcih was kept in a ..\ dungeon under the Kremlin walls Moscaw. â€"Historians, archeologists and the public are excited here over the discoveries expected in connecâ€" tion with the excavations undertaken for the Moscow subway. For the first time in centuries certain central parts of the Russian capital will be coxâ€" plored to a considerable depth. Fasâ€" cinating reliecs of the city‘s wonderâ€" ful past are expected to be unearthod. Clews will be found, it is hoped, to a number of historica! secrets covered up by time. 1 OSR w * ant w ds Rhiommat A sitxeenth . century cemotery . alâ€" ready has been uncovered. ‘The existâ€" ence of this cemetery was known, since it was the famous burial ground for victims of a great epidemic. But its location, in the heart of the city, was not known until the subway digâ€" gers discovered traces. Digging in Moscow always has boen a process full of surprises. In 1910, it is recalled, a full skeleton of a preâ€" historic mammoth was unearthed in the city when excavations were made for a wator main. Digging on Rod Square some years later, workers disâ€" Square some years later, workers dia closed a secret passage into St. Basil‘s Church, In the passage were several skeletons, fully dressed in eighteonth century armor. The first part of the subway will When the subway diggers reach the Kremlin wallsâ€"the underground railâ€" way will run parallel with one of the walls for a considerable strotchâ€"it is hopod that many secret chambers and passages will be uncarthed. Re ports of such passages each with its tragic history, have survived for cen turies. In an article in The Morning Post of London which reveals that remâ€" nants of the strange sect of Assasâ€" sins is still to boe found, the writer gives the crigin of the word. ‘t will come as a surprise to most persons Traces are still to be found, he says, in various parts of Asfi, of the mysâ€" terious sect of Assassins, one of whose last strongholds has just been discovered in Northern Persia. Smal branches of the sect are believed to exist in the mountain districts of Syria, and doctrines similar to theirs are still to be met with in parts of Asia and India. In the opinion of many, the dissemâ€" ination of these doctrines has done much to prepare the ground for the revolutionary propaganda which in recent years h ; made such headway in India. The name "Assassin," which did not come to be applied to secret murâ€" derers in general <until a comparaâ€" tively late date, was derived from the Arabian "hashish," on account of the fact that the members of the sect used to dose themselves with this drug before committing their crimes. The Order of Assassins was founded in Persia, in 1090, by Hassan ben Sab bah, and quickly spread into Syria and Asia Minor. lts absolute head was the Old Man of the Mountain and its fanatical practice of secret murder made it a widespread terror for itwo centuries. While. most modern langâ€" usages the word "assassination" means Origin of Word "Assassin‘ a secret murder in French it merely means homicide unless the context inâ€" dicates otherwise. . . Heâ€""Darling, 1 lay my fortune ‘ and name at your feet." Tilburyâ€"A sweet _ young thing from New York state went into a bank here and asked to exchange some U.S. currency for Canadian bills.. ‘Then she looked at the Doâ€" minion bills in evident confusion "I don‘t think," she said, "I‘ll know how to use your money. I‘ve nover had anything to do with these pounds and shillings before." The teller walkeq over to the waâ€" terâ€"cooler and took a long drink Pm «a€. # Meâ€""Darling, 1 lay my fortune re Currency is Here Pretty Tourist Believes , doesn‘t it ?" t Bill liy Btill flo Still bik Blants . To load *â€"Sherry No one . 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