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Durham Review (1897), 23 Jan 1936, p. 2

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#r*% 1 MAKITJ The point arises as to whether ©orâ€" not it is the proper thing to do. Is it a reasonable or natural thing ene hundred yards within Quebec, I was obliged to take off my heavy eoat, which I carried on my arm until I got back into Ontario, when I put it on again. â€" Paul Bunyon, Point For.â€" tune, Que., in a letter to The Globe. GoIng soutH? The rich go south in the winter. The hoboes without any money do it. Professional golfers do it. Geese do it. Raceâ€"horses do it. Cattle used to do it and would yet if they had a chance. t © tu e Queb D n Si n Ont n the W Tubder in t the United dom, France however. wi mizhest since 1930, when the outpu was worth $73,752,673. The product: of this industry find their way to the remotest parts of the world. Norway Uruguay, Dutch East Indies, Belgian Congo and China are but a few of the farâ€"fAung covuntries into which Can. adian exports find their way. During the year Canadian exports were valuâ€" ed at $11,990.151. In 1920, Canada was the filth largest importer _ of raw rubber in the world, ranking after the United States, the United King. dom, France and Germany. In 1934, however, with an import of raw rubâ€" ber wor‘h $7,654,544 Japan and Rusâ€" sia also headed Canada. â€" Burean of the other provinces ive in Ontario, only : from the Ontario. il boundary. Our pos ec. and as I go for th SPEAKING OF wEaTHER & TV ARCHIVES TORONTO velieve it or not ight again when it 0 issue that Ontari 17 lence is a fine of a hundred dollars or 3 days in jail. That penalty should be increased at the coming session of the legislature as an amendment to the Highway Traffic Act so that magâ€" istrates could use more discretion and impose more severe pena‘ties when the facts warrant such action. â€" Ni. igara Falls Review. Magistrate Hopkins pointed _ out something which is not generally enough known when he showed that the maximum fine for this class of of. foeuce is a line aF a Wuwics! mulil A GOOD ExXamPLE Magistrate J. B. Hopkins gave a good example to his fellowâ€"magis. t_ates throught the province when he sentenced a man, pleading guilty to *leaving the scene of an accident," to a fine of $75 and costs, six days in jJail, suspension of driving license for 30 days and an additional 24 days if the fine remains unpaid. 1 In in th n € by an event comparable to ent of Britain by the Prince are searching their con. o learn whether they are ‘t. â€" Ottawa Journal. Lindb then n p ‘vr. humiliation and exaspera. their own country. They a son through the vilest sort ‘, and there were constant iffecting the life and safety other son, Jon. They were ‘d with letters from cranks, . Crackâ€"pots, their privacy ded, their liberty ircumâ€" VOICE da K it RUBBER in when it said in the that Ontario was colder fr of rubber goods vas valued at $55 ince 1930, when York Times relates this sort of thine v. idberch t} forcing it t NO JAY.WALKING ibersh and his ‘wife out quiectly for Eng. to make their home in ind his fellow.country. out of their com. how runing at lai S. ISs GRIEVED b 1 down THE V‘ORLD AT LARGE i0, only a short dis. OntarlmQuebec proâ€" Our post office ie in m m Car NK3 CANADA or not, The Globe Cor "° world as a manu. ber goods. Production lued at $55,230.381, the 930, when the output 152,673. The products find their way to the of the world Noarwav n Tt of thing. Young ; being taken by his school to his ha had suffered vears them out m INDUSTRY fac n ntaining sever. alongside and aining the lad n jump mera top. acher acâ€" _ clutched in it , leaving ind little th een to or fowl _ impound and charge The place «d were click. into leading one WORLD OoPPosiTIOoN Take with a pinch of salt the opin. ion of those who say that the eco. nomic lineâ€"up of fifty nations against Italy will crack the Mussolini re. gime. _ When you hammer a nation you sometimes break it, you some. times make it. Britain, and a dozen allied nations, tried to hammer re. volutionary Russia in 1919. The Rus. sians of all creeds enlisted in sixteen Red Armies, though a year earlier the entire force were in mutiny. Thirty thousand old Czarist officers fought Think of the di culties, yes, but think of the reward! â€" Windsor Star. SOaAK RICH â€" once Great Britain is reported to be getting alarmed over the prospect of reduced inheritance taxes. Un. der recent levies the yield has been enormous, but it cannot keep up. For instance, the fact is cited that when Lord Cowdray died in 1927, leaving $20,000,000 the treasury took $7,500,. 000, and when his son and heir passed out in 1933 there was another huge helping, so that now only two and a half millions remain of the original , twenty. John Bull cannot eat hls“ cake and still have it any more than anyone else. â€" Brantford Expositor. l ine ‘â€"-!mnk of the reward. Mr. Churchill, we take it, did not have monetary considerations in mind when he gave this advice. What he had in mind was the> glory" of achievement, the deep satisfaction that comes with a realization that one has striven hard and long and finally reached a goal, the path to which was beset with many difficulties, To those who say, the difficulties!‘ I answ of the reward!‘ There‘s something | to â€"think of the reward. M we take it, did not hay considerations in mind w this advice. What he h one of Britain public men, is lowing : of the should be strict dis lations, plain food The convicts _ will They should be. T are there for. And : of the Canadian peo posed to the side o the officers of the la outcries in or abo ArIGS. â€"â€" Offtawa In n people among millions of decent ones.! _ New York. â€" The United States } There is a further moral which[Government is going to aid the some of our own people might take| housewife plagued by the maid who to heart. _ Imprisonment is punish. burns the meat, drops the dishes, ment. A penitentiary is not a place SWeeps the dirt under the davenport. where convicts should find feather | _ Mrs. Sar.ah S. Dennen, head of the beds and be encouraged to play ball, women‘s division of the New York §Ames. Cl is ao nlaes whouse snac« l Works Bonumnun bifectinrce. is That no one should be punished unjustly is a noble idea; and of course that idea is at the roots of the laxity of American courts. But also the idea is noble that multitudes of decent people shou‘d not be consider. ed easy prey by criminals who rob and kidnap and murder; it is probably more humane and better that one per. son in a thousand accused may be punished unjustly by process of lawl than that crime should seam to be a tolerable safe avenue of exploita. tion by a comparatively few viclous) people among millions of decent anes e oiicers of the law when there are itcries in or about the penitenti. ies. â€" Ottawa Journal, THRILL OF boing The Rt. Hon. Winston Churchiil, e of Britain‘s â€" most distinguished blic men, is credited with the fol. It is nearly a year since Hauptman was condemned to death (Feb. 13, 1935) after along trial; and he is still unhung. d | _ Look at the people who stay in the |north and attempt to carry on their |regular activities: Wolves, bankers, | moose, coal merchants, poolroom pro. prietors, politicians, preachers, musiâ€" cians, domestic fowl, p‘umbers, news. paper reporters, billiard players, conâ€" vention orators, house cats, bridge} players and college professors. Are‘ the members of this group wiser than the bees and bugs and senators ? Wouldn‘t the country get along more scientifically and naturally if they all went into hibernation ? Having thus proposed the subject for the debate, we dispense with the argument and announce the decision.! Making all due allowance for the inevitable exceptions, it would apâ€" | ; pear that obedience to natural law should induce all the people in Cana. da to either go south or go to bed | during the months of December, Januâ€" ary and February. â€" Western Proâ€" THE EMPIRE carry on their or they go to sleep. Is thing to do Are people wrong? Fish, mudâ€"turtles, bears, bees, squirrels, snakes, â€" flles, muskrats, hedgehogs and most of the other forms of life, which have no rapid means of transportation and are thereby compelled to stay in the northern half of the continent dur. ing the winter, do not attempt ~to carry on their ordinary activities ; | to stay in Canada during the winter or if, for economic reasons, one stays, is it reasonable and natural to attempt to carry on ordinary commercial and social activities. Plain food and hard work iviects _ will be dissatisfied. ould be. That is what they @ for. And the common sense inadian people should be dis. the side of the law and of SHOULDN‘T LIKE iT ble exceptions, it would ap. 1at obedience to natural law induce all the people in Cana. ither go south or go to bed be encouraged to play ball It is a place where there strict discipline, stiff regu. PRES $ CANADA, THE EMPIRE say, ‘Think of answer, ‘Think p. Is that the proper Are these intelligent remember volume than .1,..’_{ y'e:r _ Washington â€" Postmaster-Genera!’ James A. Farley announced last week that reports from the 55 largest post | offices in the U.S. indicated that Christmas mail this year was apâ€" proximately 10.21 per cent greater in mudkeccc / 9e & 1 Professional printing worked its way north from California and made its debut here with establishment of the Victorian Gazette. On December 11, 1858, appeared the first number of the first newspaper in the provâ€" ince now survivingâ€"the Victoria Coâ€" lonistâ€"then called the British Colonâ€" ist. U kc cice . don eee e nds The first news sheet in the coast province was printed on this French press with French type, but in the English language, in 1858. It was edited by an exiled French count, Paul de Garro. The machine was imâ€" ported by the first bishop of Vanâ€" couver Island, Bishop Demers. Victoria. â€" Just an ordinary hand press, a little ancient of lineage, can be seen in the museum of a convent here. It stands as a monument to the enterprise and industry of British Columbia pioneers in journalism. [ o SBR hn e 0 Old Hond Press First on , ANCHORAGE, Alasza.â€"An aviaâ€" tor learned there are more than one size of diapers, after buying the | wrong size ‘and flying hundreds of miles to deliver them. Another was somewhat baffled by a telegraphed order from a man in the interior, "bring wife shoes, she‘s kind of big on foot," Star Air Service officials pointed out some of the difficulties they meet doing "shopping by airâ€" plane" for Alaskans living in the farâ€"interior, One order for "long, women‘s unâ€" derwear, size 36," could not be fillâ€"" ed. No store had such a garment. | . S. Yuletide Mail Increased 10 P.C. Headaches For Pilots In Airplane Shopping i _ New York. â€" The United States | Government is going to aid the $V ) 12 J Cns rnffifinicatatitice ty shid ic Mrs. Sarah S. Dennen, head of the women‘s division of the New York Works FProgress Administration, anâ€" nounced recently a grant of $500 600 to school 7,600 domestic servants throughout the country in the propâ€" er way to wash clothes, make be;!s,‘ cook and to do other nousehold tasks, | Regina.â€"Proposal of the Natural History Society that a plant and an | animal emblematic of Saskatchewan | be adopted for the province brought ]a suggestion from an informant that | the choice fell on the grasshopper and the dandelion. _ Describing himself as "an anonyâ€" _ mous horticulturist," he said he was convinced no other plant than the dandelion and no other creature than the grasshopper had greater claims on Saskatchewan‘s coat of arms. | U. S. Government Comes to The Aid of The Housswife }for the Bolsheviks, repulsed all at. ‘tacks. If the Czarist.sympathizing fforeigners had kept their hands off Russia in 1919, possibly a Czar would be back there now. â€" London Ex. press. Grasshopper And Dandelion Backed s _said, "has indeed a great expe!:‘méfx; Rod Lorrain who turned profesâ€" $8:d, | s s a a sional with the Montreal Canadiens tal field in education. His wr:.rk is in the National Hockey League, ‘satxsfactory and commendable. 1 Happy is John Sark living at the ‘weepriehrmememenrenenmeiereerees ie eprrrreernrinrirmmmmmmagenome snn m . 4 4o T ©UHD Mel tar Air Service officials some of the difficulties doing "shopping by airâ€" Alaskans living in the AGb, Alassa.â€"An aviaâ€" there are more than one )ers, after buying the and flying hundreds of heet in the coast d on this French | type, but in the| ; | _ Dairy cattle in milk should be oast supplied with water not colder than !50 degrees F. Water at a low temâ€" d h“"dn perature must be raised to approxiâ€" e, can’ mately body temperature before it nvent | can be assimilated by the tissues. to the| Heat must be absorbed from the ritish | body to accomplish this, â€" Inasmuch m. ’&s part of the feed which an animal coast eats goes for the production of heat ‘rench | and energy, the consumption of large n the / amounts of cold water tends to inâ€" t was,crease the food supply used for this count, | purpose. I do not prophesy, I am the base for al And all that ever wi I am the changeles Plan Of a Zealous Master Working tovBards a ; "I hate war and the consequences of it" continued the keenâ€"eyed Indian teacher, "but I have to thank God for the world upheaval that brought me the English girl and the children that now surround us." Of winds that blow Constantly and forever; I am the testament of the world in stone, Untouched by tremor. In the eyes of his people his wife was a stranger and for a time unâ€" welcome. "But the beauty of her naâ€" !ture. the unselfishness of her life and the affection she showered upon me won their everlasting affection." The English woman has adapted herself to local customs and has beâ€" come a leading spirit in the comâ€" munity. They have five attractive children, three of whom are attendâ€" ing the little school. They speak both Micmac and English; their mother has never learned the Micâ€" mac tongue. _ The doctors had told the Indian he would be an invalid for the rest of his lifeé. "But," declared Sark, reâ€" suming the story in his own words, "within six months she brought back my strength and I was able to take over the Micmac school at the Lennox Island reserve." The Great Pyramid "Without help she found to Dalton and walked into sence unannounced. When I standing there, I knew t heart _ was the perfect ‘Where you are, I should said, ‘and I have come to m well.‘" weather the MMhalctt dn hP ons uit irePicicicioa T6: . ts 1 L123 : I‘Reserve of his forefathers with hisI â€" family and English wife, a war bride.| :) He met the former Elsie Houghton | E; at Dover Castle in England duz'ing'l 1/ the war. She was a volunteer nursc,' . he a Canadian artilleryman. War se-' parated them for a time. They were married in December, 1916. Onee | more Sark went to the front and the ward bride continued her duties | ministering to the sick maimed. ' In the Spring of 1917 a gun carâ€"| riage fell on Sark‘s chest. He was,‘ , ordered home to convalesce, In the| | Dalton Sanitorium, Wiltshire, P.E.I, he lay for weeks while his wife, still| | behind the front line, carr‘ed on her|| ; work. * ,' The Red Man had lost everything. Smashed in health the future was | 1 bitter. The strength that took him" "with the velocity of a hurricane" | through the lines of opposing teams | i when his 210 pounds fought with St. ! r Dunstan University‘s mighty footba!l' i squad, was sapped. n Finally a letter â€" came English girl saying she 1 to join him. Winter Water Supply _ "The teacher takes advantage of Carnegie Library facilities and is well versed in the principles of teaching. The Indian pupils are apâ€" parently slow to grasp the ideas when presented in English, but it is remarkable how well they remember what they receive and how thoroughâ€" ly their work is done." "Mr. Sark" the school inspector said, "has indeed a great experimenâ€" ; Returning to Summerside after an official visit to the little island colâ€" _ony off the north coast of Prince Edward Island, Miss Hilda W. Gillis, Inspector of Schools, reported: "The teacher is an outstanding athlete and musician. The pupils showed aptiâ€" tude in the mechanics of reading, writing and other school subjects. Singing is especially well taught in} both Micmac and English." Lennox â€"Island, P.E.I. â€"John Sark ’ "Life Begins a renounced his hereditary rights as er room than Chief of the Micmac Indian reserve stead of being here when he answered the call of | it may be on : the Empire and went overseas with old home town the 24th Battery as a non-commis-’ Able young I sioned officer. But today, as teacher Dr. Pitkin not of the Micmac school, he is 8till | tarian Magazin chieftain to Indian youth. ies 4 EeE Gives Credit For Success To His English Wife, A War Bride Work of Indian Teacher Praised e, I knew that h(:r the perfect â€" heartâ€" re, I should be,‘ she came from the she was coming found her way ‘mne luture was that took him f a hurricane" opposing teams make you my preâ€" saw her nbdh 648 240001001 ers almost universally practice of lively sophistry and exagg which deceives for the momen themselves and their auditors . â€" aulay, "We have heard much of the youth problem â€" and it is a big problem, one that reaches around the world. Gratifying, however, is the intelligent interest business and _ professional men are taking not only in counsellâ€" ing youth but in actively helping them make adjustments." | ’ All of which, he adds, |the patent fact, "Today room anywhere for milli able and willing to work tant, even though â€" not know that, in terms of m alone, every yorng work arrived at working â€" age would be superfluous in economic system if every} use the latest and best and improvements. understanding. 8. â€" Willingness to work for a long time at jobs requiring less than one‘s abilities. 10. â€" A knowledge of local affairs and. wide acquaintanceship with local people. Men with great ’ A 10â€"point list of qualifications ne. | cessary for highâ€"grade young men and «'women who wou‘d reach the roomâ€"at. |theâ€"top is offered by Dr. Pitkin;: 1. â€" Health 2. â€" High energy 3. â€" Persistence 4. â€" Thoroughness 5. â€" High teounical training 6. â€" Social sense â€""the ability to get along we‘ll , Able young man and women today, Dr. Pitkin notes in the current Roâ€" |tarian Magazine, should take a realâ€" 'lstic view of the change, and recogâ€" nize the fact that it may be necesâ€" sary for them to work longer than did able youth of another gencration at jobs requiring less than their full abilities. _ Progress up what he deâ€" scribes as "the battered old ladder of success," is apt to be slower than formerly, and wise youth will cultiâ€" vate local acquaintances and a know. ledge of local affairs. There‘s still "room at the top" for ambitious youth â€" but, declares Walter B. Pitkin, famed author of "Life Begins at Forty," it is a smaillâ€" er room than it used to be. And inâ€" stead of being in a city skyscraper, ‘Room At Top‘ For Ambitious Youth Is Smaller Says Pitkin For Many Occasions we‘ll with people o Selfâ€"knowledge, and selt conversational powâ€" the main street of the ‘y practice a sort and exaggeration the moment both ‘ auditors.â€"Macâ€" age since 1920 us in our existing everybody were to 1 best inventions idds, is based on oday there is no millions who are work. It‘s impor. not pleasant to of mere numbers worker who has "If scientific research is allowed to go on for eight or ten centuries, all diseases may be suppressed." _ Dr. Alexis Carrel, s uy o s c 2. Hane > PVE , Women flying the first tim | more quickly than men first ers; women take bad weathe: calmly than do men; women g ly obey instructions better; are more careful‘ where *th, their cigarette ashes; men ( more service and attention th: men; men ask more questions get more restless than wome; male epicures are more fussy the menu than women on a / Women, if airâ€"sick (company est records showed only 50 p gers out of 21.0(}0 got airsick) it less seriously than menâ€"and take something to settle their mies, even if it does "taste a with less squirming than men. & our 0. 0 VARCAUS, Some of the things the company learned about its clients, said New. ton Wilson, instructor, and Stewardâ€" esses Grace Hall of Milwaukee, Wis., who has flown nearly 500,000 miles, and Ruth Phelan of Iowa City, Ta., with 400,000 miles in the air, were; Women flying the first time relax more quickly than men first flightâ€" ers; women take bad weather more calmly than do men; women generalâ€" y obey instructions better; women l!'Q Mava asule s Y The change which the Prince ha:s now sponsored is a matter of cut The coat of the suit instead of being shaped at the side is cut with a straighter line. ‘The trousers hang perfectly straight, t.o, avoiding _ a broken line at the bottom by being jA trifle shorter than usual and thus doing away with the crease at the ankle produced in heelâ€"length trousâ€" ers. Savile Row, London, is said to be preparing to follow the lead set by the Prince. Eies mm omm There‘s No Argument; & Women Are Better Air Travellers Than Men Chicago.â€"Women apparently make better air travellers than do men, This information showed up in a ‘study of the needs and attitudes of air passengers made by a large airâ€" line in estabilishing a "ground school" where its 75 stewardesses are taugat applied psychology, some home ecoâ€" nomics and aviation rudiments, Some of the things the company learned about its clients, said New. ton Wilson, instructor, and Stawa2i _ _A new fashion in men‘s been started by the Prince Changes in men‘s fashions slowly and are often so sl pass unnoticed except to th cerning. The Prince of Wales Sponsors New Fashion yet completed when I chanced to see the Korda production in Dublin," Asked whether he wou!ld institute suit in England on the basis of the English copyright on his book, Mr. Hackett said that any further action depended on Miss Hoitzmann. The â€" motion picture, in which Charles Laughton played the part of Henry VIII, portraying the monarch, as an ordinary, kinély human being rather than a Bluebeard, as the popâ€" ular conception of the King, â€" was selected by many critics as the ou!-’ standing motion picture of 1922 "After my book became a best sellâ€" er," he said, "my agent went to Holâ€" lywood, where he discussed its posâ€" sibilities for screen purposes. Negoâ€" tiations were started but were not yet completed when I chanced to see uh0 v> 1 I 1 Mr. Hackett said he spent many years in England, France and Italy gathering material for the book. "To my astonishment," he said. "I saw paraded across the screen the living interpretations I had gleaned by laborious years of detailed â€" reâ€" search." and Alexander Korda, the producer; London Film Productions, Ltd., and the United Artists‘ Corporation, are named defendants. Mr. Hackett deâ€" mands a restraining order, directing the defendants to desist from exhibâ€" iting the picture, and also the surâ€" render of all prints maje of the film, an accounting for all profits in the United States, and payment of the costs of bringing the suit. CHARGES LISTED The complaint alleges that parts of LMr. Hackett‘s biography, copyâ€"| ' New York.â€"The English talking picture version of "The Private Life | of Henry VIII," which made a singuâ€" Mar success here and abroad and esâ€" ’tablished British motion pictures as a distinct threat to American producâ€" tions, was attacked as an "unwarâ€" ranted and blatant piracy" in a suit filed in United States District Court last week by Fanny E. Holtzman, inâ€" ternational lawyer, for Francis Hackâ€" ett, American author of "Henry VIIL" The suit, which promises to be the biggest plagarism sufit in recent years, is expected to involve more than $1,000,000, Francis Hacket Says "Henry VIII‘ Film Piracy Of His Work 2e which the Prince has | tuy red is a matter of cut.l 3 the suit instead of being | est the side is cut with -'"--- omen apparently make vellers than do men, ation showed up in a needs and attitudes of a attention than woâ€" more questions; men ss than women, and re more fussy about women on a diet, â€"sick (company‘s lat. Movie Producers The trouser; mhang ht, t.o, avoiding a the bottom by being stc8 2 8 n in men‘s wear has the Prince of Wales. ‘s fashions take place often so slight as to picture of 1933 menâ€"and they ttle their tum. "taste awful," an men. e \they put men demand to the most dis. W passenâ€" . )' take Lloydminster, Sask.â€"Jonathan Fox lifts an eyebrow â€" these days when city folk dilate upon life in the raw, Discovery of natural gas on his land, two miles from here, has transformâ€" ed his farm into one of the most modern in the Westâ€"the envy of his neighbors . N Gas has been piped to the house for cooking, heating and lighting . Cottages of farm employes also are equipped as well as the workshop and forge. Stock is watered by means of a tank heater and pumping engine which is run from the gas hookup, Without nwiw.i... without pfi;:'in; Gas M akes‘fl Premier Pierre not included. President Roosevelt‘s sketch menâ€" tions his "On Our Way" book and Herbert Hoover‘s his "Challenge to Liberty," Mb PR tzricnt n Secics: Bs 2. L 11 wl Mussolini‘s sketch is not ch: and still is untranslated from Italian. ’ The sketches of Douglas Fairhan)s and Mary Pickford both mention the fact of their divorce, . Mahatma Gandhi gains ten lines over last year, with a description of his fasts and his civil disobedience activities, % Adolf Hitler gets two lines, with the simple address, "Berlin " ate." o C OCRAT CR TeWw SNHCB, " "Who‘s Who" still dismisses Father Coughlin, Dr, Townsend, James J. Walker, Amelia Earhart and Mayor Fiorella LaGuardia, â€" of New York,. The only IUnited States Cabinet members mentioned are Secretarios Hull and Wallace. The only Senaâ€" for is Willam E. Borah Anurpthed o. Dr. Dafoe received only a mod est paragraph, however, while Corne lius Vandervilt, IJr., got threeâ€"fourth of a column. It is his debut in th famous publication. The Vanderbil+ hitherto were represented only ) Brig.â€"Gen. Cornelius and Frederic) W., both dismissed with a fow lines LONDONâ€"The 1936 edition of the British "Who‘s Who," to be issued recently, introduced to the world for the first time, Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, fosterâ€"parent ofâ€" the Dionne quinâ€" tuplets. e TERet 41 ,‘\.Ifz is the hardest to diagnose, "Frostâ€" ed barley" is determined by the cutâ€" ting of the berry. A frosted kernel will show a looseness of the hu‘l and also a discoloration, â€" and often a space, may be seen at the bottom of the crease. Frosted barley may often be detected by the presence of a transverse ridge or hump in the hull across the back of the kerne!. ly dried grain is barley that has c ,tained too high a moisture cont and is therefore artificially dried. the drying is usually done at ter inal elevators, the actual operat does not come within the purview the grower or shipper, Of all the v ual causes of unsoundness, frosti ‘fire, shows a brown discolorati« | the kernels. The heating may a‘ selfâ€"evident by the odour of m ness if caused by damp, or by s or cooking if from heat. In m: barley the musty odour is pronov and may be accomnanied by e: sive dust, evidence of being store an excessively moist state. Artifi |ly dried grain is barley that has _| Western may be said to be the ; ; cipal grade for feed barleys, , |higher grades of sixâ€"row and two. |barleys be‘ng used by the mal trade. In the feed grades, with | exception of the lowest grade, N. | it is absolute‘y necessary that ; barley must not be heated or m ed. Heated barley and musted | |ley, in fact like most of the var ‘causes of unsoundness, may be | tected by sight. The heating of | ley, whether caused by wet or fire, shows a brown discoloraticn the kernels. The heating may a‘so selfâ€"evident by the ainu» w# ... In view of the renewed interest Canadian barley as one cof the } feeds for many classes of live sto a definition of the terms uso4 w reference to grades mentioned in : Canada Grain Act, 1930, is not wi out point. Damp barley means » ley containing over 17 per cent moisture and according to the re lations cannot be graded hicher th No. 3 Canada Western barley, ar ficially dried or not. No. 8 Cana dean of the | "As all Canada goes to the polls" says the newspaper, "the attention ,ot‘ the political world naturally turns to Ottawa, the queenly little capital 'on the river whose Indian name it has borrowed. It needs ro ce« n, however, to arouse American interest in Ottawa, for the first sod of the Canadian capital was turned by an enterprising American cousin." The Star then tells the story of Phileman Wright, of Woburn, Mas. sachusetts, who led a small colonv of adventurous settlers into the Hullâ€" | WASHINGTON â€" Under double column headlines "From Hull t> Ottawa; It was an American Who Started Canada‘s Queenly Capital," the Washington Star, the American capital‘s widest circulated daily, used the Dominion general election as a peg to tell the nation of this coun. try‘s own peculiar interest in Ottawa and Canada. Definitely "Arrived" E'wy of $ kegion anadion Barley Feed ned are Secretarios e. â€" The only Senaâ€" . Borah, described as e United States Senâ€" Laval of France is ea bariey may oft the presence of or hump in the h not changed be issued e world for Roy Dafoe, mne â€" quinâ€" ly m modâ€" barleys, the ‘ and twoâ€"row the malting les, with the grade, No. 6, ary thar ‘ha line the OK Ago DON‘T RISK FAILUREs® t} H M 81 BISCUITS ARt LEAD 1 THOUG WAS FOOLâ€"PRi m W he Ra MoOTH T

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