West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 5 Sep 1935, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

I: a; , I; " l) I F. “in. . In thr rea'm of fend- for which the soy Man is use-ml are " am". em product; There-la even soy tteatt its no... t _ , .7 _ Cfaetrt'trts rave tound it metal ttt many sp' t't "r'. From it are now Bade. in addiiinn to valuable cattle teed. paint oil. varnish. enamel, ollcloth. linoleum. buttons. handles, box can era. window tn- sucks. electrical parts, printer's Ink. glycerin. cum. lord. glue. my all "I." when.‘ tttteg. I THE SOY BEAN The my bean which Mart McDonald Is endearorcttt to Introduce Into Thundm' Bay district is becoming more and mare In article ot com- merce and iatdu try. MUTUALLV ADVANTAGEOUS Cuban imports of American pro, duets, it is panned mt. have risen greatly. Purchases ot s't‘el products are up 61 per cent; of agricultural machinery. '.141 per cent: ot food. atuls. trcm 100 to 300 per cent; ot cigarettes. from 800 to 1.000 per cent. On the outer hand. Cuban sales to the United States have tripled, and Cuban economic condition; are said to be better than at any time aznce the world depression started. "tt trade agreements can do things like that. don't we need more of them?" Inquires an American contemporary by way at comment. And it this In so, where cou‘d another such treaty In concluded to better advantage than in Canada. the best natural cute-er of the United sates? - Quebec t'hroalete-Te'.egtuptt. had to ttilnto, services haw than down. ot the digit) " seems that it needed t; fact that the plate whn l ceremonies. Herald. "The Rebel." a "trttt'trtreatntined train running out at Chicago, is op. erating at a fuel cost ot 2.2 cents per mile. Ono passenger tare pays the fuel bill for the trip. Twenty lures will pay the complete operating cost ot the train, maintenance, wages, nuppllen and servicing. The new streamlined train trom Chicago to Portland cuts the running time by 3 day. it makes the trip in 39 hours now and will make it in 21 when the curves are. banked and widened and) the problem of a clear track is over. come. These new trains are Diesel- powered. air conditioned. quiet run- ning. clean. The steam train world is not idle either. "The Royal Blue" ot the Baltimore and Ohio has rounded roots. >kirted sides, tapered observa. tion roach. folding steps. and weighs only 55 per cent. of a normal train. "The Royal Blue" did 11!! mun. an hour in SI tit, Ji, . WARNING Ethiopians Bttoulrl be warned that tito Fascist salute ot the ltalialn so]. diers in Africa doesn't mean halt surrender. - Winmpeg Tribune. NEWSPAPER QUOTATIONS Four times a year the Dominion Press Clipping Bureau of Toronto, is. sue. a quarterly statement of the number of times in which the vari- ous daily newspapers ot Canada have been quoted in other publications throughout the Dominion. The Ot- tawa Journal. whose editorial page is beyond compare in this country, has had a "rattgltshold upon the first] place in this competition tor several quarters and for the three months ended on June 30th it retains that po- ttitiott well in advance or its nearest Hmpetilor. - Brockvliie Recorder and Timoa. Then there to the story ot the woman In North Carolina who. lee. In: her thermometer register 140 on one side at her house, “curled it to the other side, where It promptly ex- Plotted." In another district, frogs driven from drled-up "ramps. sought relief by the hundred under urban lawn sprinklers. - Winnipeg Trl. bune. Here ere other side-lights. “Tele. phone linemen say the heat he: so expanded wire: that they as (an. serenely low, and may paved streets are exploding. while oiled roadways are running into the ditches." IPIAKING OF THE HEAT Take Katuas, for enmple. The New York Bun gives " oyemnneu' pleura of what oneutttudredauMt. club: in the shade for seven] days means. "Potatoes bake right In the ground." we read, "and wheat putt: on the Btalk." kirted sides, tapered observa- LICh. folding steps. and weighs per cent. of a normal train. oyal Blue" did 118 miles an a lest and averaged " on a -- Vancouver Bun. CANADA THE EMPIRE soiti:,.t,. BETTER TRAINS CANADA Natyon, ri'",iut,t,., so Car " their purchases trom the Mother Country were concerned. " is with satisfaction, therefore. that nutty we tind ourselves in the pleas, ant position ot being able to hand tlt bouquet to Canada. OtBeiat returns hm- that imports Into the Donia. Ira trout the United Kinzdn- In- We have had occasion in the to complain ot the poornets ol rvsponse ot certain Dominion. tt provisions of the Ottawa Agreen so tar " their purchues from Mother (‘onnlrv in" mum-vu- Late reports Show the suggested course starting and t1niahintr at Syd- nay. by way of Fiji, Hawaii, Vancou. var. Montreal, St. John's. London, and thence along the Imperial Air- ways rou:e back to Australia. Meanwhile. Adelaide. the capital of South Australia, is organizing a Miami testlval on a mammoth Beale, an Empire exhibition, literary and musical competitions and a ',niiii-) cal pageant in Yrtor of its centen. my. next Fear. The Empire exhibi. tion. which will open on March M, next year, will be housed in a spe. eiall.vurttnt Centennial Halreovert" two-ated-a-halt acres. - Australian Press Bureau. WORLD AERIAL RACE Sydney; the birthplace of modern. (iviifzed Australia, Is planning to celebrate its 150th anniversary by organizing an air race round the globe. . BUYING MORE FROM THEY COME AND LEARN The tourist habit is one ot the best, corrective elements which has made its appearance. When people come) and find heat here in Summer theyt know how limited has been their con. ception of this country. They will) ’probably go home and tell other people. We can enjoy a good laugh! at the expense or those who come in Summer armed and prepared for Winter. but the truth is the people 1 trom the United States never knew _ any hetter. It is well they are finding I out. -- Btrattord BeaeorcHeraut. L' ALL FRIENDLY FUN Remarkable how infectious ls an example of courtesy among noble minds. Montreal, with pretty wit, has only to start calling smaller Canadian centres "Little Podunks.” Straightway the Mayor of Toronto yells "'roonervil'ar" in the direction of Hamilton. and the Mayor or Ham- ilton returns the highbrezl salute with "Tank Town." - Toronto! Globe. l Other Canadians. accustomed to good Canadian bread, have also complained of the doughy. lndigestible Brut! served up at even the most proton. itious places in England. The reason ‘is that the people of the United Kingdom are not buying enough Can. adian hard wheat and Canadian ttour. These products, it too strong tor their palates, can be mixed satis- taetorily with their own soft wheat, and Bour or the similar products ot other countries. - Toronto Mail and] Empire. CANADIAN BREAD EXCELS Sir Edward Really. on his return from a recent visit to the Old Coun- try, complained of the poor quality of bread to be found there. The editor of this paper noticed the same thing during the King's Jubilee. Other Canadians, accustomed to good WAR FEVER It is the lack of intelligence ot the common people that makes war pos. sible. They prefer to gather.in mobs and permit the ottieial war promo- ters to excite them into a fine frenzy in which all their senses are para.. lyzed except time that function tor disorder and violence. They tall to give themeslves a chance to think. it they did they would realize that the thing into which they are being pleasingly caJoled is one ot the most terrible catastrophies in human ex- porience. a senseless shambles in which thousands of human bodies will be tortured, exposed to the most hor- 'r'.ble hardships, subjected to an. guishing wounds or blown to pieces, all to satisfy the bombastic ambltl- ons of an individual who has become unreasonable through his own vanity and craze for power. - Welland 'i‘rf." bune. SELECTING A TEACHER ’ A Waterloo County school board, deluged with applicants tor the po- sition of teacher, decided the mat. ter in a novel way. They put the names in a box, shook them up, and the chairman pulled out the winner. It may be as good a way as any to decide the matter, and yet tttere, should have been some process or selection as to what names were put in the box. -- Hanover Post. The soy bean has been a farm crop in the Orient tor centuries. Chinese make milk, butter end cheese from it. it was ttrat grown on this continent in 190i. - Port Arthur News-Chron. icie. THE EMPIRE I'uited Kingdom in- t was THE WORLD AT LARGE ion-eased trom a total value ot EI,. 3928,000 in June, 1934, to £1,990,880 last month. We look tor this to con. tinue on a still bigger scale. The new Order-in-Council which imposes a surtax ot 33 1.3 per cent. on all goods imported into Canada from Japan should help. Statesman in the Dom.. lnion may now be realizing that a boy's best friend is his mother. - London Daily Despatch. _ { Petroleum first appeared as a imedieine. In 1849 a Pittsburgh .druggist found some oil in a near-by Ibrine well. Deciding it was a fine 'remedy for a variety of ills, he bot, (tled it and offered it for sale. Ten, ‘years later, the first oil well was) "eonstrueted and the great boom be-l Jgan. 1 The Dominion election campaign P, has really not got going as yet but , will in the first week in September. “Then, the Prime Minister is to con- "tinue his broadcasts . What line, " precisely, he will take, has not yet l,been indicated. He is expected. how- ‘lever, to go on from where he left it,',," to seek approval for what has been done already and a mandate to, do more. The economic situation. the railway problem, questions of trade and revenue, the revision of lithe British North America Act -- lat least all of these, it is anticipat. led, will be dealt with. After his broadcast. Mr. Bennett will start out on his tour, beginning probably lin the West. The new cabinet ministers have been kept quite bu y since their up- pointments. Perhaps one ot the busi- est departments right now is works. where omciuis are working on con. tracts in connection with the govern. ment’s gigantic scheme ot public " Ult:tcu Senate vacancies all ha. " ing been tilled and or/y a few in.» partmentul appointments pending the Prime Minister just about I138 the decks cleared for the coming 'ciectien campaign. The last Senat- orial appointment went to Charms (iie"iiyir'ir, who formerly represent ed the riding of Three Rivers-St. [Maurice in the Federal House. In the Department of Interior James IM. Wariiie. who was chief engineer of the National Parks Branch, wax !appointed Deputy Minister. Mr. Wardle is a westerner and before entering the government service, was (engaged in civil engineering with railroad companies. Ott Mr. and Mrs. Clive Gault Benson, Judith Pace Dawson, whose marriage bride is the youngest daughter of Mr. a monton, Alta., while Mr. Benson is a '. Benson, of Sheafhayne Manor, Honiton, Mrs. Benson sailed recently to spend tl and Scotland. The, Clive. Gault Bgnson. the latter formerly Mrs eek In Ottawa ro' hat. Modern babies don't wear bonneta, and on very hot days go nudist. wearing only I "rtappie" ttnd . sun ‘ Three one-yard squares ot fiaitrtel, which also can serve " a shawl. Woollen booties for winter wear only. and a llttle knitted coat or sweater for extra warmth when re- quired. Three nightgown- made ot tine wool or fitutuelette, opening at the bark, with kimono sleeves. Three cotton dream; opening tn the same way. Three little shirts or vests, these to be made ot a mixture or cotton and wool, or silk and wool. Need not be worn In the summer. Three pettfcoata ot tiatmet which open down the back. Three woollen bands, only worn tor bapy's tirgt ten days. Here are the clothes any baby needs: ask the modern war ot dressing tt baby, and what '15 the minimum one can do with when preparing a lay. ette. What Every Infant Needs In The Way Of Clothes The Farmers' Creditors Arrange. ment Act also is producing good re- sults. The government ottices are re. ceiving reports weekly of settlements effected between the farmer and his creditor. many ot them being in the province of Ontario. Numerous pro. posals ot settlement also are under advisement. _ Evidence ot the popularity ot the Natural Products Marketing Act Con.. tinues to make itself known at the offices ot the Dominion Marketing Board. Twenty marketing schemes have been set in motion within a per- Iod of a year and under them more, than $4,000,000 worth of products are already being successfully; market- ed. Ot the twenty schemes, seven areI in operation in the eastern portion'! ot the Dominion, affecting producers} ot tobacco. potatoes, berries, dairy’ products. apples, etc. There Is noI doubt that producers have come to accept the opportunities offered by these schemes, which are set up un- der the provisions of the Marketing! Act, and supervised by officia‘s of the] Marketing Board. . Several 1"”,de have triage took place recently. The if Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Pace, of Ed- n is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Honiton, Devon, England. Mr. and spend their honeymoon in England with». shine hi the jobs already started. prizlcipaliy [he Irrsstal term. inal buildlng and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police building in Ottawa. An addition to the Royal Canadian Mint has been undpr C0tttrtttttytlo1t for some time. It i, anUcipated that in the very near future further de, tars ol' the housing scheme will be announced. In the Employment and Social Service Commission Hon. George S. Harrington and his aides are rapidly putting things in shape so that the commission may function at the earliest possible time. i Baby's Layette written A to Mr. Komonen is the holder of e many titles. He has hundreds of a medals and trinkets awarded him a for his many spectacular victories. He won the London marathon in 1 1933 and the Boston marathon in 1934, the Boston marathon being a t distance of 26 miles, 385 yards,‘ which he covered in 2 hours, 33 2 minutes and 53 and 4-5 seconds. He 2 is the United States National A. A. A. 15-mile champion. This title he l won in Washington against a fierld of 128 of the best long distance run- ners on the North American con- tinent. Dave is one of those really modest lmen who shuns the limelight, always Ipraising the other fellow. m believ- .es that he will be able to capture many more races in the future, if [only his old stomach will behave. TORONTO , ...u aunrnu 1'tAA I Dave Komonen, the "iisine Finn" 'as many call him, is one of North America's fastest long distance run- ning champions. Dave came to Canada 6 years ago from Kaki, Salmi, Finland. He en- tered his first race 15 years ago. at‘ that time being in the Finnish army. From 1926-31 he had to retire from the running game due to a weak stomach. Dave is 37 years of age and before taking up running in a serious way he played soccer and won a ski championship. Mrs. Routhier and six children, including Adolphe Routhier, k.C., of Montreal, and Rev. Henri Hou- thier, of Edmonton, survive. Lethbridge, Alta. "_-- Jean Charles Routhier, Vo, pioneer Alberta ranch- er, a son ot the late Sir Adolph Routhier, who was a chief justice in Quebec, died recently " Pincher Creek. Sir Adolph wrote the words of "O Canada" l Author Of "O Canada" Recalled In Son's Death A staff of 200 cooks, waiters and dish-washers are ready to serve be- tween 10,000 and 13,000 meals in the big dining tent, which measures 60 feet by 90 feet. Traffle will be handled by a staff of GO men. Between 50 and i?, {en}; will be put up on the grounds, some already erected. The conference has not been held here for 20 years. Fourteen acres have been secured for parking pur- poses alone, and these will he flood- lighted. The Mennonite brethren in Christ Tabernacle, a mile from this city on the Galt Road, scene of the meetings, seats 2,000 people, but an addition to accommodate another 2.000 was put up free of cost by the} Mennonites of the district. It will bel torn down immediately the confer- ence is over. Loud speakers have bren installed to carry the messages to all parts of the grounds. I Kitchener-Mennonite, in Water- loo County Sunday were preparing for an invasion of their brethren. The advance guard: for the biennial gathering of the General Conference of the Mennonite Church have " ready arrived. By Wednesday, when the influx is expected to reach its: peak, 3,000 delegates and visitors ‘will be in attendance. Three-quarters of the United States will have representatives here, while Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta will send many delegat- es. Missionaries from the Mennonite fields are expected to come from In- dia, South America and Africa. The conference will conclude Thursday. Biennial Conference Will Bring 3,000 Delegates and Visitors To Kitchener MENNONITFS READY FOR MI INVASION ml: rum.- HM PV KEN. EDWARDS' lad to retire ane due to a is 37 years of up running in Strait: -iirTato.' ,, -- """"ac" contrasti . HOW Tug ORDER PATTERNS Write your name Inc. address plainly, giving number end line of pattern wanted. Enclose 16e in stamp. or coin (coin prefer- red; wrap it carefully). Ind ad. dress your order to Wilson Pet- tern Service, " West Add-M- - -t- --- gnaw: so new looking and mun plain navy for its collar, und tie. Style No. 2915 is design size. 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. 8 require: 2% yards of I lantern! with 96 yard of t cgpkuting. now shall you carry it Well, if you follow the im model, you'll choose printed able rayon .erepe in Potters Yon'can‘t go wrong choos sailor dress like this for I use daughter. As to cut, it the best of style End taste. dilute to pew. make and Mrs, Loni Maverick Lloyd,! members of the national board. Miss Mabel Vernon is world cam- paign director, with headquarters in Washington. Miss Louise Wier is. r'ampaign secretary for the United States, with headquarters in Chi. cage, and Miss Mary Hos: Weiiborn, campaign secretary for Europe.] with headquarters It Geneva. , Active: . pain are ’of the le: paign are the international officers 10f the league and the national of- fieers in the 25 countries with na- tional sections. Prominent in the mandate campaign in the U.S. He Mrs. Hannah Clothier Hull, national president.. Miss Katherine Devereuxl Blake and Mrs. Loni Maverick Lloyd,! members of the national I‘M-A ' na The circulation of the “People's ’Mandate" for signatures will be Icarried through prinmrily by League members in the forty countries where the Women's International League is rprmtented. League, organizers will travel to other coun- tries to aid in the work, The co- operation of mass organizations and local groups will be sought in each country. l l The simultaneous meetings open- ing the campaign will be followed " Geneva by an international mem- orial meeting to Jane Addams, at which world-famous speakers will“ broadcast on an-international hook-i up. I Simultaneous meetings throughout the world Ire projected for that date with a view to organizing n concerted demand for the peoples to their governments to end war.“ The "mandate" which the meetings are to present will call on the gov- ornments of the world to use peace agencies for settlement of present; conflicts and to bring about world: disarmament and international larce- ments ending economic unnrchy’ which breeds war. I Washington-Plans contemplat- ing the mobilization of n large "army" of men and women through- out the world for an intensive cun- paign against war to be inaugurat- ed on September 6th, the birth en- niversary of the late Jane Addams, its founder, were announced refent/ ly by the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. I The Women's International League For Peace And Freedom Announce Intens- ive Campaign For Disarma-l ment. _ WAR AGAINST WAR RADIUM AND in preparation of the cum I 1. Was! R PA'rTERNtt 2. Plan ne we address best cloth umber and line a, L.“ . Enclose 16c .!the baby (coin prefer- I 4 P t fully). ma ad. t . " to Wilson Pat.. “a the Ct West Adelaide I lr. Farm ‘and leave the inspiring Printed ww. Pottery nut, man, and collar, cuff. designed f or 'eu's'. true of 89-ineh of 89-ineh seGdi i u in out? Doniphan, Neh.--There have been numerous landed rain-making at- tempts, but the Doniphan Herald. "uandiag jam-nu of this Nebraska communit1.'. “from, the necessity from I different Angle. In prod-im- inc "rain week" in Doniphnn. the Herald listed the following rules: 1. gut your ear. Rules For for u The Soviet scientists make no tti- tempt to explain their sstonishmg results. Either vitamins or com- pounds very similar to them are formed by the action of radium (aiiiGiif. Chemical tests lend color to this hypothesis. I The Soviet scientists make no at- tempt to explain their astonishing results. Either vitamins or com- pounds very similar to them ere formed by the action of radium emenetion. CLelnical tests lend color to this hypothesis. Sutherev holds out high hopes. Powdered dried blood, yeast, liver, ell duly exposed to radium omens- tion, will be used in the treatment of enemie end stomach troubles, he pr diets. Arctic eprrers. who ere often laid low by scurvy for leek of the proper vitamins, will csll foe their raditmoetivited breakfast end dinners end keep themselves in perfect physlcel condition. chm the cost of irrndintiont Dirt esp, eceordmg’ to Sukhsm. er." " cents in Americen money _ All this is not no original IS it rmoy seem. In 1988 Nndson and Bochlin experimented on the effect of radon in forming :onstant types of yeast; in 1982 Falkenhein tested the tuttirnehitie action of radon on milk, and in 1980 Raisin. Mund Pourbaix and Cutille studied the transformation of ergosterol into vitamin D through radon irradil- tion. baby outdoors at night. Put the Wag. the curtain: the carpets Out for an airing. Fax-men, cut your hay, stack it leave uncovered. "01’ m: ucuvuea mod is moro easily and thoroughly assimilated for some report still to be discovered. clothes: [an the e , Next the Soviet experimenters . team ehiekens. Activated meat F and bone meal had an etteet like cod-liver oil. Riekets-preventine, in a word. Moreover, the chickens increased in weight by an amount that could not be attributed to nor- mat growth alone. Control chickens fed in the regular way were puny in comparison. Even birds that were utttmtrttiittttt runtr twenty days after they had been hatched began to thrive on activated food. In forty days they were bigger than the average for their Me. l Two groups of rats were tested-.. one with food lacking rickets-pre- venting ‘vitamins, the other with the lame food to which Indium-ac- tivated yeast, meat and bone meal had been added. After three weeks only one rickety rat of the first or control group was feebly crawling around. All the at: in the second group were alive and active. pound of food Indium gives o8 alpine rays (helium nuclei), beta my: (elec- tron or eteetritUd bits of mutter) and (emu rays (super X-nys). Water has exposed to rudium. whereupon it in turn became adio- luctive. so that it could irradiate ttrod-yeast, dried meat. liver and ia men]. It is evident that the 'tadionetivity come from radon -- a (as which is given " by radium u it disintegrate: and which is one of the first products of rudmm'u decay. In hospitals radon is used in the form of thin tubes ("needl.. es"), which are inserted in cancer- ous tumors. ( Let ultra-violet rays play on foods And viumin'D in Produced-the one that prevents rickets. [In Indium . similnr effect.' The Soviet Institute for Animal Breeding thinks it In.“ wavered the question. v. Suklurev tell: the story in Front Nicki i Teehniki 1Scieutitie nnd Technical front). Finally Soviet Institute Reports Tests Made On Rats And Chickens “min and the washing and VITAMINS wen your tl, in to Tin Its Park the R: Brotlu It the .0me ne l . We“ tide til tr a: per Poison tum H R0 Gimp! ter ht but tl It! Hi Numerous Bites Fin Rent ,h, your gethe movil {on h Th " fl Ho the the in H, Exerci noor are with arr mater. Straight. Then vrc Hght too left hip noor. Ti Reverse. right. I: When leg lea; and New " " levc mm le ft, orirtin with h bend i n touch 1 course lure Rap 1 no: n inches do hm and t in: e: am t Ma, step cise, pounds you ww )our do Wdrertit Ntvtt ft, “III Furthe pounds "u'll ‘ and tr and Ir Cum-1 the "" Diets weight. lbdomin waistline At tilts a l her and “lady l “in sle enercise the spor If ll You Sports Good, “Dailv 10 ar ‘l\ I

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy