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Durham Review (1897), 20 Jun 1935, p. 7

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dvised Of Health ed We meet to part and part to meet All cadenced to a cosmic tune, And if a flower fades in the Fall It buds again in fragrant June." 1 shed my grief within the wood, A haggard and a haunted thing, Then, hand in hand with Peace and Faith, Went forth to meet approaching Spring. run, While others lead a floral dance â€" We live to die and die to live By some celestial cireumstanse. We meet to part and part to meet All cadenced to a cosmic tune, Not of the sweet approach of May. As hot, unwanted tears arose 1 heard the villege church bells chime : "And what is Life and what is Death But orchestrated songs of Time? And some may walk and some may Within The Wood 1 took my grief into a wood And sat beneath the April trees Barren, as yet, of foliage, To listen to the errant breeze. Within my soul a haggard fear Haunted the beauty of the day, Epeaking of cold Deember death, Not of the sweet approach of May. As hot, unwanted tears srose Although Mr. Morgan generally reâ€" tained most of his crew of sixty men from one season to the next, he has not followed this custom for the past three years. During the latter period there have been only Captain William Porter and & skeleton crew of five or &)x men. The Naivette, the only other yacht onned by Mr. Morgan, was sold durâ€" ing the winter. The Shuttle, a comâ€" muting express boat owned by Junâ€" lus S. Morgan, also will be laid up his season, according to reports. It is in drydock at Fyfe‘s Shipyard at Glenwood Landing. Unce before, in 1933, Mr. Morgan did not commission his boat. It was last used in September at the regatta at Newport and shortly afterward was brought to the moorings here, where it remained for a few weeks before being taken to the shipyard for the was disclosed recently. The 343â€"foot clipperbow type craft will remain in dry dock at Tebo Basin, Brooklyn. of year signalizing unofficially the ©pening of the yachting season, will not be at her moorig this season, it Glen Cove, L.I.â€"J. P. Morgan‘s black and gold yacht Corsair, which generally rides at anchor at Morgan Memorial Park here about this time of year signalizing unofficially the Morgan Won‘t Use Yachts This Season John Anaquod, 35, author of the play, and Pat Cappo, 49, the producâ€" er, have been at work on the script for five years. Harry Carriere, who painted tepees with clay, and ground rock 30 years ago, turned out the scenery . Fifteen players and a boys‘ 25â€"plece orchestra, recruited from Muscoupeâ€" tung, Plapot and Pasqua reserves, took part in the performance, The play was a complete history of the Indian tribes of southern Saskatcheâ€" wan since 1874 when the Qu‘Appelle treaty was signed. nt Regina.â€"Indian war drums rumbâ€" led as painted Crees and Sauiteaux whirled in ageâ€"old dances during inâ€" termissions here of the Indian play and pageant, "The Last Great Indian Council." It is believed to be theJ fArst all.Indian play presented in the Daminion. ‘ have not." History of Tribes Theme of First Allâ€"Native Performance "I go to find some very thin stockâ€" ings," |hg concluded. _ "These we ‘"New York women, they look very nice. But we are not used to seeing pain‘ed women. With me, I use powder and some people boycott me because I use a little powder and lipstick, but some like it. _ But the ladies look here as if they â€"were without any . . ." Here she used a German word and her interpreter, after solicitously asking her to reâ€" peat it, cleared his throat and said: *"Well, er, weltâ€"say that she thinks they look too artificial." ‘"‘The people here," she woent on, "have no idea of decorating the windows of their stores. Ja, I have been to Fifth Avenue. They . are very ugly. We are all so beautiful. Our small shopsâ€"how do you call itâ€"â€"on the outside of town are betâ€" er than Fifth Avenue. But the chauffeursâ€"they are the artists here. They go by right side and by left side of autos when they lindl3 the space." f Five days in New York were spent by German tourists recently. _ One of the women in the party, a Breâ€" men housewife, who knew some Engâ€" lish and had visited every European nation, was asked for her impresâ€" sions of New York. "We find it very funny," she said, "you have little buildings and' then 50â€"storey buildings next. _ In Germany the churches are outstandâ€" ing and here they are between snops and Oâ€"oâ€"h! And the cemeteries, too, squeezed in here. They look very unholy. German House Frau Not Used To Seeing "Painted Women" Indian Theatre ‘ind it very funny," she u have little buildings and ‘storey_ bui]dings next. _ In _ *"There is no such thing as chance or accident; it being evident that these words do not signify anything really existing, anything that is truly an agent or the cause of any event; but they signify merely man‘s ignorâ€" ance of the real and immediate cause," â€"Adam Clarke "Looking back over recent years I feel that both the British and Ameriâ€" countries and I forsee that there will bee in time to come many opporâ€" tunities for similar helpful and conâ€" structive collaboration." "My attention has been called," he said, "to two very friendly references to the United States in recent speeâ€" ches made by Stanley Baldwin _ and Captain Anthony Eden. It is heartâ€" ening to note such expressions which I am happy to reciprocate in full. â€" Send 3 cent stamped envelope for other information. Hull was commenting upon a stateâ€" ment made by Sanley Baldwin, Conâ€" servative leader of the British House of Commons, and Anthony Eden, Lord Privy Seal, that the United States and Great Britain eventually should coâ€"operate to maintain world peace. $50.00. A Commercial Art Course An advanced waterâ€"colour landscape course .. $35.00 _ "While we were not in every inâ€" stance viewed problems eye to eye," he said, "yet our common outlook and the many traditions which we share have enabled us to work toâ€" gether in appreciation of the importâ€" ance of a constructive policy favorâ€" ‘ng the promotion and preservation of peace." A preliminary waterâ€"colour art course ....... $10.00 w low 30x3 ‘ NEC practs 90 IR c AND UP 1/)1:5:%":??::??« 4.40/21 â€" $6.35 Washington. â€" The United States is ready to coâ€"operate with Great Britain in an attempt to maintain world peace, Secretary of State Corâ€" dell Hull said recently. One Sample Lesson in W aterâ€"Colour Paintingâ€"25¢ Personal Art Lessons by Special Appointment Hull‘s Replies to Statements of Baldwin and Anthony Eden â€" To Act With Britain U.S. TO CO â€" OPERATE FOR WORLD PEACE afford Firestone quality. The six salts in Kruschen stimuâ€" late the liver and kidneys to healthy, regular action: assist them to get rid of the excess uric acid which is the cause of rheumatic pains. When poisonous uric acid goesâ€"with its deposits of needleâ€"pointed crystalsâ€" there‘s no doubt about those aches and pains going too! f Never before could you buy Firestoneâ€" made tires for so little as these Sentinels at new, y s e ie e en ie eny I1 have no trace of rheumatism. 1 would not be without my daily dose of Kruschen, which I take every morningâ€"half a teaspoonful in warm water."â€"Mrs. P. B. > came out soméone advised me to try Kruschen‘ Salts. T did so, and now "Two years ago," writes a woman, "I was suffering with rheumatism in my legs, and when walking upâ€" stairs one day just kicked my right foot agains: the sta‘rs, and broke my leg just below the knee. I was in t\ospital for four months, and when BROKE HER LEG AGAINST A STAIR Whilst ;“â€"l’fi"d By 39 LEE AVENUE TORONTO, ONT. SENTINEL It appeared that the area had been discovered to be an excellent desert, and a passable Pacific island, a wild corner of Asia or Africa, or where not; and we may presently find the prickly pearâ€"that unlovely pest â€" planted in an English scene with the | object of lending | "artistic verisiâ€" militude" to the otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative of the film. Some owners, indeed many ownâ€" ers of property along the shore, are wise and careful enough. Over one very lovely stretch of coast in North Devon a proclamation is set up in bold capitals on a board, containing three prohibitions, You may not put up & tent dwelling, dig sand, or preach a sermon inland from . the point reached by a moderately high tide, _ King Canute did not offend for his sermon was acted below high water mark, Such care of the sea‘s edge is not, however, universal and generally speaking, landowners are poor and ready to sell land that annroaches Some curious uses are made of the edge of the sea, I visited on area of rough dunes that has been famous, and indeed still is, for the number and rarity of the birds, inâ€" sects and plants that have a natural home there, An essential part of it was being used for the stabling of camels and such plaguy wild fowJ.J _ Access to the sea is a national demand; and no national park is so much desired as the very edge of the silver girdle. There are many gross offences against this privilege in existence; but it is said and felt by many seaside dwellers in a numâ€" ber of counties that the desire to buy and sell patches of land borâ€" dering on the sea is vary rapidly on the increase. Even rough dunes be-l come "building land," that Is, a popular site for shacks. J London Spectator Wherever you may be along the coast of Brtain you ind among the dwellers there an ardent desire for protection, It is like a personal inâ€" sult to see barbed wire or warnings against trespassers and much more to see dwellings set across the edge of the sea, whether close down to water, as in the Isle of Wight, or up on the cliffs as near Looe in Cornâ€" wall. If any land in the island should be nationalized it is the land that has one foot on sea and one on shore. SAVING THE COAST OF THE BRITISH ISLES One of the notable King‘s Silver Jubtllee functions was a dinner gathâ€" ering at Toronto of some 60 memâ€" _ Walkerton, Ont., Scouts will soon be the fortunate possessors of a speâ€" clally built Scout hall, the generous gift of Mr. George D. Martyn. The headquarters will include a library, reading oom, small gymnasium â€" and shower baths. Surrounding grounds and shrubbery will help make it one of the town‘s attractive institutions. J _ An arrangement has been IRade by which the Boy Scouts‘ Association of New Brunswick and the New Brunsâ€" wick Forest Service of the Provincial Department of Lands and Mires will take over the Canadian Forestry Asâ€" sociation direction of the Junior Forâ€" est Wardens of that province. They are said to number approximately 1,000 . ‘ Nanaimo, B.C., Scouts assisted the local police in controlling traffic in thattown during the arrival of cyeâ€" lists participating in a Vic‘oriaâ€"Nanâ€" aimo bicycle race. Five Rover Scouts of the 39th Toâ€" ronto Crew hiked to the Caledon Mountains, as a step toward qualifiâ€" cation for the hundredâ€"mile requireâ€" ments of the Rambler‘s Badge. 4.50/21 4.15/19 5.00/19 5.25/18 5.25/21 land that afiflr&cflgg ) A3 ) A# A brother to ever & Here + There 7 Everywhere A brother to every other Scout, without regard to race or creed e area had been excellent desert, c island, a wild frica, or where $6.35 6.95 7.15 SCOUTING a pen or pencil. But legibility is necessary only for the author and his typist. He asks neither his pubâ€" lisher nor his public to read his script. l It is true some au hors are still scriveners. _ They find that imagiâ€" nation works more readily and words flow more freely when fingers grasp When the printing press super-I seded the skilied makers of manuâ€"‘ script it was commerce that saved| handwriting. The clerk on the high stool in the merchant‘s office was required to make out invoices and bills of lading in round, flowing, easily legible script. Models were deâ€" veloped on the business desk that went into the schools and shaped the style of those long and delightâ€"| . ful letters which once were written 4 for the sole sake of communication between friends and kindred minds. Alas, commerce now gives us no aid, and the speed of modern living affords few of us time for cultivating the graces of correspondence in either mental or manual expression. There are business men who seldom use their fountain pens except for autopraphing letters and checks, or scrawling memoranda on a pad. the pen for nobler and more leisure: ly exercise. . | _ Undoubtedly, despite the tremenâ€" dous multiplication â€"of typewriters, more persons than ever before are using their pens or pencils to inâ€" scribe words. Unless for some reason the attendance at schools and collegâ€" es declines, handwriting of a kind probably will continue to be increasâ€" ingly practised. Only the general use of silent typewriters or stenotype machines for classroom work could drive out of use the modern succesâ€" sors of the stylus. But the handwriting of the classâ€" room is intended primarily for the reading of the writer. It tends to become hieroglyphical, as many an instructor has discovered in the weary task of decoding his students‘ papers. He tolerates it, perhaps beâ€" cause his own is worse. Some penâ€" manship experts hold that the noteâ€" taking use of writing is the chief foe of their art. They even argue| . that substitution of machines for| that purpose would be a godsend to| calligraphy, because it would liberate| 1 _ _ Chicago Daily News observes â€" "The National Association of Penâ€" manship Teachers bas been holding a revival convention in New York. The problem of restoring handwritâ€" ing to a status of importance â€" in American education deeply concerns its members. But the ancient and lovely art of calligraphy has fallen, we fear, upon evil days. the artificial value set on the buildâ€" ing site. The threat against access to the sea is general; and more than rights of access are in jeopardy. Someof the villas and shacks re cently ~erected are a grievous eyeâ€" sore. The shacks are often half hidâ€" den in dunes, as at Saunton sands, but some of the cliffside villas of Cornwall and of South Wales beaâ€" con their repellent colors and shapes from afar, and there is no chance of such disappearances as have been both welcomed and lamented on the "slipper‘" clay of the east coast, for they are founded on granite or the hardest of igeneous rocks. it was decided to lease 7a ;em camp site of some 55 acres on Chippawa River near Fraser Sta A permanent camp ground is assurâ€" ed to the Scout of the Niagara fruit belt. At a meeting of the Niagara Falls and District Scout Association TENDING 10 BECOME FORMLESS A Scout troop vegetable garden will, the boys hope, provide camping funds for the Scouts of Tilbury this summer. ’ The latest report of a Boy Scout collection of used clothing comes from Timmins. The Scouts of the big mining town put on the campaign to help settlers in that district whom they learned were badly in need of clothing. 1 bers of the Canadian Boy Scout conâ€" tingent which attended the King‘s coronation ceremonies 25 years, ago. Later the former Scouts, now includâ€" ing men of all the professions, attenâ€" ded the great rally to welcome Lord Badenâ€"Powell. The reunion was arâ€" ranged by W. Irvine Heart, N.C., son of Sir William Heart. l Some 30,000 "Cancer Fund" envelâ€" opes were distributed by uniformed Scouts of Edmonton and Calgary, preâ€" liminary to the opening of the local fund campaign. ) acres on the Fraser Station. a permanent 10 Juneau, Alaskaâ€"Travel from the United States to Alaska â€" increased approximately 50 per cent. in 1984, over the preceding \year, Visitors who arrived in the territory by steamer and airplane totaled 24,009, comparâ€" ed to 16,117 in 1933. We have no wish to return to the flourished capitals and shaded strok es which Mr. Spencer introduced to the American public through â€" his business colleges more than 70 years ago. That ornate style, now practisâ€" ed mainly by those peripatetic artâ€" ists who write visiting cards for vain patrons, may well be left to them, but if the professors of penmanship can promote a renaissance of writing that has legibility and simple beauty of form they will add something to the grace of life, and save a lot of time for the decipherers of corâ€". respondence and a!l penned docu-‘ ments." _ So our handwriting tends to beâ€" come without form, and that is to be deplored. _ For there is a certain discipline of thought and feeling in setting the hand to shape clearly, and with some measure of beauty, the words and sentences which exâ€" press them. And the reader can feel the personality behind the phrase more intimately in the script than ini the type. M omt-utumby-unru- ainteâ€"280, 490 415. 2014 D7 all, $1.00. Don‘t Let ‘ Mosquitoes Spol:!!gu_r Holidays a, ii°~ _ CCO the museum has had no flles of this type, They visited three of the extinet volcanoes in the Buringa Range on the border of Uganda, â€" anq here, though they saw no wild elephants, they were glad to USe the elephant tracks through the forests. In the thick bamboo growth on the lower slopes they discovered â€" two new species of mosquito, which deposit their larvae in the stem just abovt & joint where water collects, Thesel mosquitoes look and bite like the common type, but they _ are not‘ fever-carrying. _ _ ,| _ _ _ ""6 DCecliés in the leaves of the groundse!, ang he captured many of the wingless flies. He exâ€" plained that frequently in the mounâ€" tain regions subject to strong winds, where wings are not of much use, the flies, especially those that walk about on the ground, lose their wings. Hitherto the museum has bhad no flles of this type, . mc t PE he itching and reduces swelling. parts with "Mecca" as a prevents. Take "Mecca" along in !'eldineu- ;;ndthi: you do get stung, simply sls u.:.:_?"t .w“h. Mm- Sbm [ The expedition visited the Ru. wenzori Range twice staying there for six weeks on the second visit and getting a magnificent view from the summit of the dullyâ€"named Obâ€" servation Peak, and they pitched their camp 13,000 feet above sea level, Dr. Edwards captured some â€"rare insects on the snowâ€"covered rocks at a height too great for plant life. He found big beetles in the leaves _ They found Jlobelia trees 20 feet high and tree ferns 15 feet high, and quantities of mosses and ferns, Among their specimens are sections of very tall trees. Discussing the reâ€" sults of their explorations at the Natural Science Museum recently, they said that on the three ranges they explored they found the same types on all of them, but dlflerenti species, Issue No. 24 â€" ‘35 From the Manchester Guardian The two young scientists who have been on a British Museum expedition . to study plant life and insects at 'Ovarious altitudes on mountain ranges in East Africa have just returned to | England after a more successful six | months than they had ventured to {Iexpect. They will not know the value _ of their finds until the fifty cases of specimens now on their way have been examined, but they know they have secured specimens of many species not yet represented in the national collections. This was not their first adventure, Dr. F. E. Rdwards, the entomologist, had collected specimens in South America, and so had the botanist, Dr. George Taylor, in South Africa. They wanted to compare the plants and insects on different moutain ’nnges, so they went first to the Aberdare Range for a > fortnight, where they found one of their plant specimens at a height of 12,500 feet. On these mountains, and on all the others they explored, _ were â€" giant groundsels, close relations of our small weed and with a fower not unlike. These, however, were trees reaching a height of 15 feet to 20 feet, with trunks two or three feet indiameter. Alaska Travel Gains STRANGE PLANTS, AND INSECTS wITHOUT Wincs the Buringa Range on of Uganda, and here, saw no wild elephants, ad to use the elephant i the forests. In the 0 return to the d shaded strokâ€" ‘r introduced to ‘ through his e than 70 years e, now practisâ€" peripatetic artâ€" on the subject of his own luck, that he thinks he bas & real shot as a winner. is frequently so egoistical Applicant:â€"Yes, sirâ€"but it takes me longer. When a man has one chance out of a million. he Business Man . sition as stenog write shorthand? me where Soâ€"andâ€"So lives?" (Never a please.) The thought came to me: ‘If you would just keep on blowing your horn at each house along the road eventually you would find the home you want,‘ but the words were not spoken. Instead I directed him and without even ‘Thank you,‘ he drove on. Did you ever think how an automobile can save a lazy perâ€" son a few steps, while someone else is called upon to take a few more ?" 1 giPoitdniinl wi it Jnsittat?®. Porrsbsmstaes Th css it was a warm day, was open. The driver of the car stuck his head out of the car and said, "Could you tell me where Soâ€"andâ€"So lives"" ° (Novar "One evening recently a car stopâ€" ped at our nearest neighbour‘s home; the horn blew two or three times, but no one appeared. The car moved slowly down the road, turned in slightly at our door, and blew again. Not knowing what might be wantâ€" ed, I stepped to the door, which, as Captaining the Japanese team who are competing for the Seagram Gold Cup in the General Brock Open Golf Tournament at Fonthill, July 11, 12 and 13, is the thirtyâ€"threeâ€"year old "veteran", Tommy Migamota, wko has been Japan open champion three times and now holds the national professional title. Others on the lineâ€" up are: Kanekichi Nakamura, reign. ing open champion; Bob Asami, twice national open and twice national proâ€" fessional title holder, heaviest of the lot at 150 pounds; Jack Yasuda, four times open runnerâ€"up; whose 110 pounds makes him the midget of the: team; and Seisui Chin, Eastern Japan professional champion, the tal] man‘ of the squad at five feet, ten inches, vUIMOST m «3+ alue 'kq,,q Tan M iggmf: hapg! days of sport and fun . . fine 2 Cosy public rooms and cabins . . excelient se _1 TT Y Discourteous Motorists Man (to applicant for stenographer) :â€"Can i ute uie * PME * SA BIG size ,‘@? >> / £ BIG l/alue ‘ { f/ f BIGO satisfaction BIG BEN a million, he THE PERFECT _ _ Chewing Tobacco "Veteran" . . good sun decks . . m~,""° *7°° ‘Ak the envy of all â€" 500 newest slang expressions â€" 25¢. Dryden‘s Directory, B4 Lister Bik. Hamilton, Ont. MAKE your talk the envy of T‘» oyment services; also tools â€"Box 10, ‘Wilson Pnblllhlrg Co. ILAd., 73 AQdâ€" elaide W., Toronto, Ont. *_ elined, have a fai alize the future in Wwill train you in sp includes instruction employment services MmeN â€" " â€"â€" portation _ paid Toronto Tire, 195 | ronto. §$2 V Classified Advertising "The boss isn‘t here, he‘s at work ,* & telephone operator reported, and for a moment we thought we were listening to Amos ‘n Andy â€" broadâ€" casting, sity IP e ul m 9999 AAaANAEAA Ks Other officers are: Viceâ€"president, H. Laureys, school of higher commerâ€" cial studies, Montreal; C. J. Mera meon, McGil] University; W,. C. Keir. stead, University of New Brunswick; w. L Mackintosh, Queen‘s Univerâ€" "TIE®UON. â€"â€" K. H. Coats, Dominâ€" ion statistician, Ottawa, was elected president of the Canadian Political Srienle _ Association recently, _ Ho succeeds D. A,. MacGibbon, board of grain commissioner, Winnipeg, iuik _ C s 8 Kingston E AND BICYCLE pa mm mm P; BICYCLES $g10 uj PERSONAL you are mechanically jnâ€" A fair educuxou“nn:i pe» 0 in Diesel industry, we in spare time; small fee HELP WANTED . _ Free _ catalogue. Dundas West, ‘Toâ€" consulation and TRANSâ€"

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