West Grey Digital Newspapers

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

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C man ~. t _ _â€", u0 enterpriemg« young man one of the clerks had ap. propriated that particular bag with which to carry home his Christmas cdinner. It was one instance where the thieg literally obtaincd the goose but lost the golden egg. However, the incident impressed CHicizls of the bank with the need for mor» adequate protection. Result â€" ©iges and bars â€" Brockville Re. €order, been very good jud up the largest bag getaway in one of goupers." Unfortunately for young man one of t] propriated that par Wiich IG AGBFYG ho. id a L is 1i id Mr. Perry =j. Griffen, | for years a member of The Star vertising staff, and more recent business manager of the Edn Journal, has been _ made & manager of the Peterboroug! aminer which has recently bee quired by Messrs, Harry _ Mui Rupert Davies. With Mr. Grig general manager and Mr. &. R. nedy of the Stratford Beaconâ€"H as editor, the Examiner wil be ably administered, Already its toral page has put on a more e tive typographical garment, and ¢ improvaments may be looked under the new management, â€" ronto Star, wHY THEy STARTED The familiar metal grilles and | so common in most banks origing back in the gay nineties, accord to an article appearing in the jowr of the Canadan Bankers® Associat And therein lies a story. It seems t It was Christmas eve, and that e in those days clerks had to w overtime, A thief managed to . inside the premises and burled brick at the 2:@ass partition behi wheh were stacked bags of sovereig Showing what would normally &a been very good judgment he scoon w k s o ivuWien y _ . oC Om Neâ€"ar was an ardent golfer and amateur boxer, hit it too, and he never misses. He tees his own ball and drives by in. stinet. His caddie tell him where his ball lies and where he should hit it to, and re never misses. . He also learned osteopathy and has built up one of the most lucrative prac. tices in London. â€" The St. Thomas Timesâ€"Journal. BY NO MEaNS ALONE Apparently it is not only Canadian and United States railways which re. quire assistance Just now, for the British government | has agreed to ‘ guarantee principal and interest of a ,|j £30,000,000 loan with _ which the| i railways of that country will carry | 1 out a variety of largeâ€"scale improve. | ; ments and purchase new equipment. | 4 Canada‘s railways are by no means | c alone in experiencing difficuites in | r regard to profitable operation. â€"| t] Brockville Recorder and Timac t A BLIND sRiDpor PLA Y Captain Gerald Lowry, g veteran of the World War, r was one of the champion pair British Bridge League Congi Harrogate. His partner was a | Not only did they win but the a‘ways the first pair to finist hands. Blindness has its comnens Nature to some extent redress balance by developing other fac Captain Lowry is a remarkab ample of overcoming the ha, and lives a more active and n life than most people, He h veloped his memory to such an that when a friend _ whisper designations of his cards to hi remembers _ them throughout game and where he has arr; them. When he has to play du the cards named to him and h members them, too, The rest is During the Harrogate tournamer Pplayed 32 calls and never forg card. Captain Lowry Caps e Cuee. e . Ee not mean that such a vast amoun of money was paid out in cash, bu there were 70 deaths and 3,129 in juries. Trafic experts and insur ance men have their own way of computing such matters and their estimate is that a death means an economic loss of $1,000 and an in. jury is reckoned at $2,500. We pre. sume that the $10,000 figure for a death would include the loss of the individual‘s earning power, That would be a family loss. â€" Peterboro Examiner. our whear ABROAD There are two things Canada re. quires to do to promote wheat sales abroad: First, to familiarize the people with the quality of bread made largely from Canadian flour, and secondly, to remove _ mental prejudices based on the repeated assertions that Canada has been en. deavoring to gouge the consumer. These are important tasks. What the grain trade can do in these di. rections should be done, and the Government should support their ef. foris to the limit. â€" Winnipeg Tri. ] bune. ‘"C° principal and interest of 10,000 loan _ with which ~t] Â¥s of that country will car variety of largeâ€"scale improv. Traffic accidents Eo'l? $8,500,000 in the year 1934 Traffic A GOOD TEam V OICE FIGURING iT in may be looked V}or management, â€" To ° ©00 MT. &. K. Ken. atford Beaconâ€"Herald xaminer will be cap. ed. Already its edi. put on a more effec. | 1 garment, and other | ay be looked for 1 management. â€" To. t I °Y STARTED C etal grilles and bars | ¢ ost banks originated | j nineties, according | }] aring in the journal | ¢; ankers‘ Association. | w story. It seems that | a, eve, and that even G rks Ahad to work ef managed to get es and burled a an $ partition behind trg bags of sovereign. | 76 ild normally have ex] Iigment he scooped | be, 3 and made his and f London‘s "PDe&â€" | at cial * the enterprising tun the clerks had &Dâ€" | an rticular bag with ton: me his Christmas tion istance where the last ced the goose but port the cident impressed Com with the need for free ction. Result â€" cons Brockville Re. price the . "S sUC2 matters and their is that a death means an c loss of $1,000 and an in. reckoned at $2,500. We pre. * of The Star‘s ad. nd more recently the r of the Edmonton een made â€" general e Peterborough Ex. s recently been ac. . Hatry Muir and With Mr. Griften as and Mr. A. R. Ken. tford Beaconâ€"Herald iminer will be cap. . Already its edi. t THE WORLD AT LARGE ropatby and has built most lucrative prac. â€"â€" The St. Thomas ‘"‘a‘! such a vast amount was paid out in cash, but 70 deaths and 3,129 in. Trafic experts and insur. have their own way of such matters and their CANADA wWHEAT aBrRoap two things Canada re. to promote wheat sales t. to familiarize the the quality of bread ory to such an extent friend whispers the his cards to him he m _ throughout _ the ) he has arranged has to play dummy, before the and Times «~@°8°C Congress at rtner was a woman,. ‘ win but they were pair to finish their him and be re. The rest is easy. e tournament he never forgot a DGE PLAYERr Lowry, q blinded orld War, recently impion pair at the ague Congress at ! which the TY will carry cale improve. w equipment. by no means 1 comnensations. nt redresses the other faculties. remarkable ex. DOLLARS some is AUSTRALIAN . n. Z. TRADE ‘t The citizens of the Dominion are & lanxious that every facilty for mutua 4 | trade between Australia and New « Zealand should be established, The *‘ | experience of the past, however, has ! ) been most discouraging. Mr. Coates ‘Jand Mr. Masters were in Australia |at the ned of last year on a commer. cial mission, and numbers of oppor. tunities have been made for Australi. an Ministers to discuss trade ques-‘ tons on the spot. Yet the major ques. tions remain unsolved. New Zealand last season strictly regulated the im.‘ port of oranges from South Australia the only source of supply in the Commonwealith because that State is free from Mediterrancean fy, and consumers had to pay â€" excessive ‘ prices. As to the embargo placed by the Commonweaith on New Zealand â€" "C BRITISH wWHEAT 1. Homeâ€"wheat prices are influenced @ ) more by competitive imports from n / the Continent of Europe than by im. 4 ; ports from Canada, Argentine, â€" or I-!Australla. because â€" this European â€"! wheat is more strictly comparable 1 in quality. The fact that France‘s $ crop this season is but at 18 per cent â€"| less than last year‘s reduces the posâ€" | | sible competition that home wheat [ has to face. This scheme in aid of | homeâ€"grown wheat, as we pointed Jout recently, is the most popular among farmers of al! the plans so far tried to relieve â€" the economi> troubles of British agriculture,. On paper the scheme looked so compliâ€" j cated that many M.P.‘3 confessed that they could not understand its c intricacies, and not a few believed | * that it would prove unworkable. Far |° from these fears being realised, the :} wheat quota is the simplest of all h devices in its actual operation,. â€" Glasgow Herald. CC Toronto It does amount _ MaARcHING FORWARD Britain still marches forward. Say. ings per head of the population in England and Wales have gone up from £3 Ts 114 in 1934 to £3 15s Ta it 1935. Retail sales have increased by 8 per cent since 1934 and by 12 per cent since 1933. And look at the 40,000 drop in unemployment announ. ced by Mr. Chamberlain, We are reaping the reward of the confidence that four years of stable government have created. â€" London Sunday Ex. press. of the , Ffat we need in t however, is not so much bee as a stingless mosqt bee only uses its sting fence, whereas the mosq one without the least J â€"Stratford Beaconâ€"Herald "~ Siumate and produce sufficient honey to make it worth while keep-t' ing them. In Africa the children seek out the Manpasi nests and gather the | honey," for ‘Whica Ihars is . _...~1 These Manpasi be only about the size . fly, and it remains to they can live in othe tive climate and pJ honey to make it w. tne 200.0gical has arranged to shipped for exp BIRTH OF TtHgE movies In Paris the other day was ob. i served with appropriate ceremonies ‘s the 40th anniversary of the first moâ€" t tion pictures made in Europe. Louis t Lumiere made them, with his brother August, since deceased, and Louis for ~ | the anniversary celebration ran off ; these ancient films. They showed the p arrival of a train at a French rail. 4 road station,, two men in a rowboat and a comedy on the exploits of a \|gardener with a water hose. _ Rach |film was about three feet in length,. They were made in 1894, but they were not shown until March 22, 1895, when they astounded an audi ence of French scientists gathered in the basement of a Paris hotel. But the Lumieres, it appears, were second to Thomas A. Edison. Edison, according to the Encyclopaedia, Bri. tannica, began his experiments as early as 1887, and on October 6, 1889, damonstrated his kinetoscope in his laboratory at Orange, New Jersey. He obtained a United States patent ian ‘01, but it was not until April 14, 1894, that his machine had its first puble showing â€" at 1153 Broad. way, New York. That was 11 months before the Paris shnwin» Be THE EMPIRE â€"‘AN . N. Z. TRADE s of the Dominion are every facilty for mutual n Australia and New id be established. The the past, however, has "SCes, dnd wao would like to eir own honey, to know that of stingless â€" hees has been d in South Africa. and that logical Socie‘y of England ‘szed to have a stock of them or experimental purposes, Manpasi bees, however, areJ it the size of a large house remains to be seen whethér live in other than their na. PRESS whica _ there i; N0se â€" who ers, and w10 " own honey, â€"stingless _ } in South Af ;ical Society , As we nc mosquito. The _ sting in self.de. ‘ mosquito "bites" least provocation. â€"Herald. CANADA, THE EMPIRE this country, h a stingless a ready TRlpPeRes ib remiafitendi® 1A ... ent be hoped is that prohibition may be replaced by equative regulation. The situation is a smallâ€"scale exem. plification of the narrow economic nationalism t.at is obstructing trade throughout the world, _ â€" Aucklandl News. C dmnile COnF SuCEe SCce | to be a fairly even rise and fall over Iperiods of about ten years. Over the \last 15 years, however, there has I‘been a steady fall, |_ ims variation in lake levels is | something no one, so far as we know, | has tried to explain, but there seems "to be a fairly even rise and fall over Wautc3s * ~a 54 W potatoes, the best that the lakes cominé b_acvl;" This variation in la) something no one, so far (From the Owen Sound Sunâ€" October report of the Hydro Service shows that the water of the St. Lawrence and Great while lower than in Septemb this year, are from 2 to 5%4 higher than in October, 1934 comparative levels, month by : for this year, have been highe last, and a slight average in over 1933 was reported last yea the lakes comin» haal * it was ing by of in. aid of his supposed] THE ASIATICS by Frederic Proâ€" holiday at th kosch (Musson‘s, Toronto) is a travel novel everyone will want to read Bo who enjoys a tale wellâ€"told _ in THE â€"UN( exquisite prose. Here we meet Antoine Baroness Orc: ‘Samazeuith, a tall powerful fellow, let Pimpernel ‘handsome, strong as an ox, free of THE WEDI all conscience, incapable of unhapâ€" THE SHIN piness, "born lucky. . 1 garet Pedler. Zara, a Turkish girl, travelling toâ€" SUNSHINE ward an unknown destination. Unâ€"| Ruck. couth, yet possessing great affectionâ€"| THE SUN F ate eyes and hair that shone like| Ruby M Av«. j one time or another we all have atâ€" tended our first Gilbert and Sullivan opera and enjoyed ourselves immenseâ€" ly. It is only seemly that this famous partnership should be presented â€" in such a way that we meet Gilbert and Sullivan as human beings so that we find an explanation of their famous partnership and their equally famous quarrel, in their strangely dissimilar natures. There are many amusing anecdotes throughout the book and it is with regret that one finishes this recounter of two truly extraordinary characters. t ul on raeine BY MAIR M. Morcax g ’ ilmlmnl.‘imlmsVI:m;llm:l;imlm::l!z!:‘l;i:‘::l:;x.Igu..‘lzm;llh:‘:l!m!lnu;ln.'lilmnllmilmeilvn:lu.e,l emle | _ The season of "reading" is with us. water under moonlight, ; Cold winds, flurries of snow drive us Ahmed, an ingratiating young P | indoors where a comfortable armâ€" sian, who longed for the West, t chair beckons. Now is the time â€" to | was incurably under the spell of } \catch up on your reading. And what Eastern shiftiness, ’an array of good books. Look over Ursule, lovely _ but disquietin the following list â€" either for yourâ€"| faithful in her fashion, but capable . selfâ€"or as a present this Christmas: | SUPDPIGn® mautmeso _ ; 4 FPeve weeus _ TT GILBERT and SULLIVAN by Hesâ€" keth Pesgson (Musson‘s, Toronto). At LEVELS RISING? report of the Il&drogr;i;ii}é ows that the water levels Lawrence and Great Lakes, Valerie Traxler, 19, cous pentcr, 27, got along so well ners in a Hollywood musical married and become nartnare levels, month by month, , have been higher than slight average increase _ reported last year. Are Owen Sounq_ Sunâ€"Times) in'"Sâ€"e;)t-evmber of n 2 to 5% inches TORONTO can at pres Siiywood musical film that tl;c; become partners for life. 43 y n m Books Received ,“’ old _ in THE UNCROWNED KING by" m Antoine Baroness Orezy (author of the Scarâ€" c fellow, | jog Pimpernel), ll‘ tes, 05| THE WEDDING by Denis Mackail. };’ urharâ€"| THr sHiNING CLOUD by Mar.| 5 . | garet Pedler. To ing toâ€"| _ SUNSHINE STEALER by Berta|" _ Unâ€"]| Ruck, L ectionâ€"| THE SUN AND THE sEA by | £5, @ like] Ruby M. Ayres. 19 â€"\_-\__ tot The reason for this last is not hard | Y to find, when we consider that there ’ i has been a constant campaign of| P qG 7 channel-deepening. Dredging has been *‘] done and canals enlarged, with the| 4 natural result that more water has imes) | been brought from the head of the| T aphic| lakes, and as Lake Superior â€" the | M. evels| Only one, by the way, to show â€" no | Wit akes, | material drop since 1860, when the, 1. _ of | first records were madeâ€"is virtually | take iches | dammed by the Sault rapids, more | Why The| Wwacer has been going into the sea | fore nth, | than came into the rivers and llkes., 2. than| The falling levels are easy to ex. ON° ease | plain â€" deeper channels, the Chica-’mm" Are| go drainage scheme, deforestation ; £904 but the rising levels are a different | WhY is| matter, for they do not seem to | mas depend on rain nowfall, but go | N°w ow, | dep or s $ g ems| on as we said, in cycles. Tear, ver| _ If the levels are really on the up. | Start the| grade it will be good news for| 3 ! has | shipping, as an inch of depth makes 404 & a difference of thousands of dol-(“"‘ lars in cargo capacity. Good news "°t P: _~~| too, for lakeside summer resorts, l‘edr ':2 *S=I SGME Of WRHIch ‘hava ~ aha..,. "L""" ‘ So high as a tree as so high will it find â€" suited to it.â€"Thoreau, sophin Aroufac dsis o d If the levels are really on the upâ€" grade it will be good news for shipping, as an inch of depth makes a difference of thousands of dol-t lars in cargo capacity. Good news too, for lakeside summer reso'rts,,' some of which have almost been put out of business by recession of ; the water. All interested will be hopâ€" ing the periodic rise is under way. l' well when they cousin of The reason for this last is not hard to find, when we consider that there has been a constant campaign of channel-deepening. Dredging has been done and canals enlarged, with the natural result that more water has‘ been brought from the head of the: lakes, and as Lake Superior â€" the only one, by the way, to show no material drop since 1860, when the . first records were madeâ€"is virtually | dammed by the Sault rapids, more‘ wacer has been going into the sea | than came into the rivers and lakes | EL s ee e c oo 12 0 o Pn his supposedly convential holiday at the seashore, C e C m e J n m m o laliap,g 3 j .0 (408580n 8) is another delightful, bizarre adventure from this author‘s pen. Those who have read "Polycarp‘s Progress" will need no introduction to this author’s,‘ characters. â€" For those who have not enjoyed the amazing antics of, Mr. Canning‘s heroes, they â€" should not miss a moment, but hop out, grab a copy and accompany â€" Edgar Finchley, eminently respectable, on hig. anttemini s 3nc. lt lVictor Canning (Musson‘s) delightful, bizarre adven this author‘s pen. Those â€" read "Polycarp‘s Progress‘ no introduction to this characters. â€" For those : not enjoyed the amazin» Victor nlblin® d c lt c is W 75 All these and many more into an amazing tale, wh grosses the reader that it to arrive back in everyday ing, when the book is Ani Books Received THE UNCRQWNED KING Ursurlfie,v lovely but _ faithful in her fashion, but surpris_ing gestures and en T he MR. FINCHLEYE HOLIDAY M mes pr en n w o Lini t oretta Young, GROWTH re Book g Shelf G Orezy (au}h;; of the + Kok . were paired as dance ar _ I ' STEALER aspires to grow,, "No an atmosphere if he : I _ "o *z z__", 7c ho yOeds are as fol. * many more are woven lows: Manitoba, wheat, 18,800,000 ing tale, which so enâ€"| (37,100,000) ; ocats, 82,937,000 (26,752,. ader that it is difficult | 000; barley, 23,533,000 (17,298,000) ; in everyday surroundâ€"| rye, 1,885,000 (1,134,000) ; flaxseed, book is finished. 157,000 (180,000). Saskatchewan, Siiinimmmensey ’wheat. 132,000,000 (114,200,000); cats, LEY‘3 HOLIDAY by;136,399,000 C6A PRA WMs sele s o dn mnlg e Anga L sAE L 7 rivers and lakes, 8!‘_9 easy to exâ€" , s mu en snn P have decided to deforestation; re a different , and I?uddy Car. lating young Per-i‘ or the West, but r the spell of his| but disquieting,! on but capable of and emotions. l y more are woven le, which so enâ€"|. hat it is difficult eryday surroundâ€"| : is finished. 1 is v C UMY rwihke o. '- threeâ€"week by Berta SEA by Chicaâ€" Mackail, y Marâ€" i \by Scarâ€" to call ‘the _ _I thing when one is favored with a gift of this kind it behooves one to remember the Creator by remem. bering those who are needy, especi. ally the children and the elder folk. J. A. D.â€"Toronto. not pay at present, or lél;ti &A ed bm for Christmas. fami;,,. _ ___ *E And see that some ,lamllies in our neighborhood got a good square meal for New Year‘s, Why New Year‘s? Because at Christ. mas they generally get a lot, and on New Year‘s Day, starting off another year, very little. Give them a good start for 1936. 3. Pay some of my obligations and score out some of the indebted. ness owing me from those who can. not pay at bresent nr aanH m ciellgln partâ€" get "« * would take $4,500 of it and ‘take out a Government annuity, | Why? Help my Government; there. fore help the people. ,‘ 2. Take some of it to help some one less fortunate, and see that some familfes "In Our Ral#hhearhans oo To the Editor of T M. I. Williams‘s letter With $5,000» 1. I would take $4 period last year 120 2 CE 1| "The second estimate of 1935 wheat , production in the Prairie Provinces is +| 16,000,000 bushels below _ the first |estimate of 272,000,000 bushels made on September 11. Most of the reductâ€" ion is due to frost damage in northâ€" ern districts of Alberta â€"and Saskâ€" atchewan that was not apparent two | months ago." | _ The report said movement of the 1935 crop to market was considerably later than last year Lit about the first week in September marketings 'increased perceptibly and by â€" the ninth week of the crop year, starting on August 1, the cumulative total exâ€" ceeded that of 1934, The cumulative total was still greater than that of 1934 at November 1. At that time total deliveries and platform loadings were 146,899,210 bushels compared with $14,427,423 in the corresponding Dériod last wan. How l 2 2C e e yO / 136,8399,000 (64,288,000 ); rye | 000 (1,320,000); â€" flaxseed, 1 !(542,000). Alberta, wheat, 1 | 000 (112,500,000); * oats, 94 '(81,000,000); barley, 18,860,00 | 041,000) ; rye, 2,244,000 (1,93 fflaxseed, 118,000 (105.0001 singer ever lacks that a Prairie Provinces "For the three Prairie Provine the second estimate of the yields the five principal | grain crops bushels follow with the 1934 figur in brackets: Wheat, 256,000,000 (26: 800,000) ; cats, 263,947,000 (172,04( 000) ; barley, 66,115,000 (44,742,000 rye, 9,8347,000 (4.38inom. * anll.._ cwas a2, 00000 20 UFACR@LS \=â€" Barley 87,512,000 (63,742,000) ; rye 10,610,000 (5,423,000) ; peas 1,581,000 (1.588,000); beans 1,117,000 (813,. €00); buckwheat 7,972,000 (8,635,â€" 000); mixed grains 39,567,000 (37,â€" 92(‘:.000); flaxseed 1,433,000 (910,â€" 400); corn for husking 7,765,000 18 Tag nan\ (6,798,000) T ever can reach the top that quality which I like necessity to sing‘." _ Oats at 416,369,000 were 000,000 bushels less than ; tember 11 estimate but above 1934 production of bushels, Estimates of other cerea bushels With 1924 Rane.. : than those of last year, The report said the was similar to that of threshing returns did n stantiate first estimates duction. The crop report containing the sec ond estimate of the wheat â€" yield brought production down from a Sepâ€" tember 11 estimate of 290,541,000 bushels to place it slightly below the 1934 yield while estimate yields â€"of most other cereal crops were higher than those AF Inct wan.. 220,000); _ flaxseed, 1,055,000 0), Alberta, wheat, 105,200,â€" 12,500,000); oats, 94,611,000 ,000) ; barley, 18,860,000 (15,â€" ); rye, 2,244,000 (1,927,000);\ , 118,000 (105,000). | Frost is Blamed , second estimate of 1925 whaas OTTAWAâ€"The Dominio of Statistics estimates Can wheat crop at 273,971,000 about 2,000,000 bushels less of 1934. lfi occ is UAE in September marketings perceptibly and by â€" the : of the crop year, starting 1, the cumulative total exâ€" o Spend $5,000 Bureau Now Places It At 2,000,000 Bushels Under 1934. â€" 273,971,000 ’l‘o-J tal. 1935 WHEAT "°,°nC »ariey estimate by 0 bushe‘s while flaxseed and _came down as threshing reâ€" iled to support previous comâ€" s. The fa‘l wheat crop of is estimated at 12,601,000 compared with the earlier ©13,267,000, ‘ ates of other cereal crops in wth 1934 figures in brackets: 87,512,000 (63,742,000) ; rye 0 (5,423,000) ; peas 1,581.000 imal 6 Yields Per The Globe: Re r, ‘‘What to do [ ut ic sds is 4 UAISICRMSY 0,000 bushels less than that l Second Estimate report containing the seeâ€"| ite of the wheat yield oduction down from a Sepâ€"| estimate of 290,541,000 1 plice it slightly below the [3 2 _7 ) Cats 29,5| confidence of their children, 5 (17.6); rye 13~8’ "Children can be doomed to fail. (16.7); beans 17.3, Ure by parents mollycoddling, and 21.0 (21.2); mixed]others may suffer from nervousness ; flaxseed 6.7 (4.0);| for the rest of their lives as a result 6.3 (42.2), ,of too strict parents. 1 reduction in this‘ _A few of the symptoms of nervous. was caused majnly!neu which should be looked out for in Saskatchewan in the young child was explained by I’\ureau was forced | Dr. Miller, There was the case of rley â€" estimate by , the excessively boisterous child who while flaxseed and'needs careful strdy. | in mc qk2 4s w Year‘s,| TeG at Christ. tZfl 0t, and on {he ff another Y m a good | bla, whi bligations C indebted.| It‘s who can. & 8 & l‘ecelpt- | B‘lfe.l of 1935 wheat MiceL _ _ . . |Ihands are Miost . : {Rerearch Being Mude CROP DowN [mpomnt Asset Into Bacteriology j PR Te db | Of Common (al mates Canada‘s 1935 273,971,000 â€" bushels, the 1935 season t of 1934 in that did not fully subâ€" \120,745,000 ) $ rye ); peas 1,581,000 1.1;177.000 (813,â€" than in the Acre Dominion â€" Bureau s made reductâ€" northâ€" Saskâ€" 0); cats, , 5,218,â€" of grain proâ€" still well 8°1,120,000 almost 33,â€" | It‘s made of black ‘ a much favored mater _ son, It is relieved by EP CPO & Fervraelzbstisetihs.2> in stamps Sht. manccl_1°¢ * YEeLRe 9 red jersey, accented by metal but tons. _ The tied coliar is ver young and flattering and repeat:s the red jersey. Another effective scheme is black novelty crepe silk with white slipper cover, Copy it exactly at small cost. It‘s so simple to sew, Style No. 2533 is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18 years, 36, 38 and 40â€"inches bust, Size 16 requires 4% yards of 89â€"inch material with % yard of 39â€"inch contrast. ing. HOW To ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address Plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted.. ®y.1°" 8)2° Dr. Emanuel Miller ’chologist. said in a ushels | ‘‘There is a very larg buck_'parents today who 29,; confidence of their c 13.8’ "Children can be « Sepâ€" come, your worry is either case it is we and a distrust of Gor Tryon Edwards. DPs or coin (coin rap it carefullyy . ‘our order to Wils MCQ, 78 w”t 4 Toronto, child is anothe; type not be overlooked. _As a ruie this kind of child is suffering from a feeling of anxiety and fear," he sad. "The restless child is another type which should inbure 2s e e utd Molly principal advice to younger pl‘ye“l tion, the common cold or nasa â€"|essaying screen fame. catarrh, tiks 1| "Eyes may mirror the soul," she| One of the difficulties has bee; ~|says, "and are very important, esâ€" that of cultivating the virus unde )lpecially in pictures, but with the ll'tlflflfl conditions, but indeed #i ‘ |hands one can express any emotion| ©xpression the virus is hardly appli. |and any instinct. _ For instance, to| Cable seeing that from any one per. | depict fear, nothing can be so ex.| son 'lufl‘ering from a cold one may pressive as one‘s hands, â€" properly obtain as many as a dozen different used. There is a psychological reaâ€" types of bacteria. A cold is a "mixâ€" son. In the presence of sudden terâ€" ed infection"; in one person one ror, the first instinct of a human‘kind of a germ predominates, in anâ€" being is to protect one‘s face.| Other, another. _ Vaccines prepared Hence the hands involuntarily travel from one‘s own microâ€"organisms upward, 'have‘been found in some cases use "This does not mean the use of, 4 in others uscless, But to supâ€" any conventional gestures, which of| pose that no research has been or is course should be avoided. The idea| D¢ing done on the prevention . of is simply to let one‘s hands do what| "2821 catarrh is quite a mistake. one‘s subconscious thoughts direct;."‘_“y day we may hear of a preparaâ€" Instinct is one of the most valuable | tion the injection of which may ward assets.to actor or actress, yet many| o.ft this familiar but none the less try to avoid usine it" pemnaading sc > M samre C LI buctad id Iâ€"A.Pl C009 AlMY LinduoOii Of| To ,ud‘e by some of the dolefu : Instinct, Declares Conâ€" _ |reports in the daily papers, no re | stance Collier search is being made into the ba¢. ‘ teriology of the "common cold," and Hands are more important to the | no preventative, .fnr l_ess cure, is in actress than perhaps anything el.e""‘htv '“y' & Wfitel‘ in New Health she has to depict emotions with. So MaRazine. This is by no means a believes Constance Collier, famous f2ir statement of the stage of our English stage star, who makes her|knOWledge at the present time, American _ talking picture debut| A g00d deal is known about the shortly. "Watch your handsâ€"study| types of bacteria found in the disâ€" what you can do with them," is her!.:greelble and, at first, local infecâ€" principal advice to younger players tion, the common cold or nasal essaying screen fame. fcatarr h, accented by metal but. _ tied coliar is very flnttering and repeats of black wool jemy| nadl nunglctos o $ NEmls CC e t o subconscious thoughts direct;.’A."y day we may hear 9' ® pr t is one of the most valuable | tion the injection of which may to actor or actress, yet mny'°," this familiar bu? none th avoid using it." tiresome form of infection. plain fact is that some of our x competent bacteriologists are » -Coddllng M‘y s moment engaged in an intensi DOWn Tl'ne Clnl&en vestigation into the problem ¢ w ]“common cold." IMARIEE WMTLer mmifininins: ecus. THE FUTURE material this ght; ar'xd if they do ncrt"'Aut' worry is useless; and in | A it is weak and in vain, n st of God‘s providence.â€" s¢ rds, m mmms Mrs, Young Frock I gatherin Wilson Pat. st Adelaide and address er and size El!close 15¢ a vestee of Miller, â€" eminent psyâ€" in a recent lecture : y large percentage of 1 gestures, which ",f’Vpo'se that no resenrc]lu : avoided. ‘The idea| P¢ing done on the pr one‘s hands do wh.t: r‘nasal _catarrh is quite preferâ€" o porcmtase 0| The "Fine Art‘ never gain the | Lo he man r youn anyw thing ‘lA ned } : her, . ing a catch simul: walke, his th ‘sey, sea. | three . sent except a booth, a make. robe _ people thread handy ; reflectors, nine couple of pregs on the Crusad(rsi,' \:'as that no anachronisn; c were foup men with , two, out of sight, with see that everybody else : "Pnctically nobodv . Nabatitediion,..... Th . ned by foup other m her. A soundâ€"recordip ing a microphone ove catch her sights, m limultaneou-ly. Mr. j walked b:clunrds, AC his thoughts, two ster three assistants, [ *"Thepe were thrce ; ’to freshen the trodden Young rehearsed her . enade. Also a script g she walked according t ions in the book, and a to see that she wore the as in the preceding 5 to be takep weeks later "Harold Lamb, avth, on the Cruudcs, was â€" ADBBE B0 MKHRAIracacls. c‘ LONDON‘(:,,,,,l atic critic of The cribes the amoun went into a single ing â€" Berengaria ,‘"“‘i"g pensively a lawn, "To portray a s man on the stage young woman, On anyway in a De n thing mare stome Aik. . not| Author Must Have ,:,l,n' Th â€" K 4. _ 10 CC Coue Toun "The pioneer stories are ground of Canadian literatu Mrs, McClung who also stre wealth of romance and mat books that could be found work of the Canadian missi , Outlining the requisites ; cessful writing, Mrs, MceClup [tlnt in addition to having sense" the wouldâ€"be authy avoid being too near to a sy realize the possibilities of int it. _ "You must have an awa she said. The I Mrs. Nellie McClung, addre sing a gathering in Edmonton, stressed roâ€" mance in the early days of the deâ€" velopment of this country. _ "There are stories that are told and retold," she said. She lauded the work that the Women‘s Canadian clubs in both Winnipeg and Victoria are doing in collecting true stories about the pioncer MORMMEN Jn Phiin Guniskc... a makeâ€"up e, people _ with Te were th!'(,e A hen the trodden rehearsed her Also A goring _ "The seerct of lies" in not cating said, "but in letti before you ubegin, cream in your mo; buds rain the fnl! _ "7 080. Un the picturcs y in a De Mille picture â€" are done dilerently. Camtern HABH 2M a sgoud. _ _ d Soue 10 e ce public really have a di taste," he declared. Judkins, official taster York concern, is here fo, tion of southern ice crear turers. Miami, Fla. â€"Prof. H. who makes his living cream, says "people are ed to the fine art" of food. y in case of â€" to juggle with in “Awareh;ss” Says Nellie McClung "Perhaps Nâ€"Campbell Dixon, dramâ€" of The Teleguph, desâ€" _amount of labep which A single film scene show. mnuce " 3f ~ording to the instruet. k, and a continuity gip] wore the same costume ceding sceneâ€"possibly ‘eks later, ®b, author of a book €s, was there to see onisnm crept in. There n with whistles, â€" and ht, with red flags, to ody else kept away, nobody else was preâ€" ‘sound mixer in ‘# Right C000 CCCR manâ€" other men, went before 1-reeordin¢ gang, dang!. hone over her head to hts, moved backward . Mr. De Mille also nul.â€" ' _Phb‘" With silvered stage hands and â€" a o Vn stage takes " just _4Aime Art" Of Eating Ice Cream t eating it too hastily," » t in letting it melt a litt] u_ ubegin, then holdinz th your mouth until the tast the full flavor." ~~"adian missions, e requisites for syuc. » Mrs, McClung stated n to h.ving a u“ews ouldâ€"be author must ) _near to a subject t c8g aga s ° accompanied by stenographers and solitary only 10 per on a truck man (Loretta Tt, two ward. needles and of aceidents. men with Frass as Miss ”litf‘?’ promâ€" stories about "I" /n some cases use s useless, But to supâ€" research has been or js n the prevention â€" of literature," also stressed wary promâ€" to see that in an intensive inâ€" the problem of the eating ice Common 'C'old A Young) lone across young wo aster for a New e for a convenâ€" cream manufac. [ interest in Awareness * materia] some of the doleful daily papers, no reâ€" made into the bacâ€" "common cold," and r cent. of the dhcriminatlng but indeed ie is hardly appliâ€" om any one perâ€" a cold one may dozen different the bact; F. Judkins, tasting ice not educat. eating that in one a mistake, a preparaâ€" may ward e the less ion. _ ‘The ‘ our most are at this $a.d the for the cream ," he ; the taste pared been under tories in Dominion ther, in t year the s close to a Of Canada year of 1: exten tish « Ths spc $10( Cha Nia; bury bam ply an var cer ar m« tha are part othc mats othe: to V to ida O of ( D Cr the 18 Ar of nice Ik W had m lan hat nick M cafet classi other say : pup" Mary the be: with winr Bunset Bong o Life is Raindr Childis} All su V sor? Bun will What is Smiling . BSummer lane Roses th What th Life is s Flowers Willows H« M tur w} blow

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