West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 12 Mar 1936, p. 2

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| 1 UNIAKIOUO ARCHIVES food . But the f2 A artitian would say this was not a ba‘anced diet; it leans toward starches and its carbohydrates conâ€" tent wou‘!d be high. A person workâ€" ing at something where physical exâ€" ertion was . needed _ could probably burn up all the . fuel provided, but on* staging in jail wou‘ld be apt to put on a coating of soft fat. On.:{ with a _ tondency _ toward . d‘abet weu‘d go down quick‘y under such T!CC, sugar, poiatoes, onions, rice, sugar, potatoes onions, raisins and jam Bread appear: to be on larze items, and 266 pounds was purchased. Other artic were wheat products, beans rice. sugar, bolatoes â€" ania live yo. se should be ; from Perth jail did we C m0 s ognmoaomy . ie jJail of Perth County reports that during the last quarter of 1935 it cost 9.80 cents per day to feed a prisâ€" oner. That would be about 69 cents a week. So if you have a family of five yo. see the weekly bill for food should be abou. $3.44. . The ranavt Major Trethewy who jail of Perth Cauntv King "dward is certai slave to tradition, but he : the tradition of service tha bears have handed down. * wishes him well. â€"Sault 8t means to fulfil them the will to apply those don Sunday Dispatch. increasing in favor possesses an air a» finest of its kind t air force under con thoroughly airâ€"mind the world. Like her in the Far East, Ja expansionist aspirat means to fulfil the he Â¥pRpempipeines Aibouge id olrrr i. +is in z) 5 varies according to the job on the trains, but the average is $90 a month.â€"St. Thomas Times Journal. ment to 11,000 porters, wa‘ters, but at the pre there are only about 7,000 varies according to the i How the railroads begun to emâ€" ploy colored gentlemen â€" as porters scems "wrapt in mystery." There is no foundation for â€"the bel‘ef that President Lincoln suggested it to George Pullman, mention of whose name may be the reason why port. ers are called "George." At any rate colored porters were first employed in the late seventies or early eight. i¢s. _ Six or seven years ago when the railroads were really prosperous the Pullman Company gave employâ€" monkt ty KK OME * sumulacsl ul & h eve it was It has at been 714 d ny The cost of motoring in Australia is very much higher than in many other parts of the world. A car costâ€" ing approximately £170 in Canada, would be sold in Australia at about $400. The difference in cost is acâ€" counted for by customs dutg, primâ€" ago, freight, exchange, and other charges. In «ddition, the price of petrol is much higher, being 1s 1d per imperial gallon. In 1914 the duty was one hulfmanum iess oc cap sls M 22M o t C C EXrce t the German military strength now three times that of France self. That proportion is rap‘dly reasing in favor of Germany. She sesses an air army not only the ‘st of its kind technical‘ly, but an force under control of men more roughly airâ€"minded than any in wwoa.l d _ * I 200 eR wet EVUHC tical Science Association recently, that this philosophy â€" was passing and the editorial page was coming back into its own, "Today‘s ediâ€" torials," he said, "explain, rather coerce. The editor undertakes t reâ€" late 2n item to its general frame of reference. He introduces an explanâ€" ation and background, so that the reader, having informed himself, can make up his own mind as to what it is all about."â€"Halifax Chronicle. tical m‘es‘ al such argument is that the prisoners lived and For a time, in some quarters, there rose a feeling that what the people desired most in their newsyapers was news, and the editorial page was a thing of minor importance. George Fort Newton, distinguished historian and ed‘tor, told the American Poli-‘ §E mc se 5.: & 1 Iniuits ltb i ainiascaais i s one halfpenny per gallon for tish and threeâ€"quarters of a penâ€" for foreign. Gradually this has n increased until now the duty is d per gallon.â€"Brandon Sun. or a reunion of monton Journal. 9.85 Cents Per Day Despatches told of a Toronto mag. istrate letting a man off because the prisoner always read the magistrate‘s art‘cles on trees and wild flowers, Another Toronto magistrate, the late Col. George T. Dennison, could alâ€" ways be moved by any old soldier who, excusing too exuberant a celeâ€" bration, pleaded a battle anniversary or a reunion of old comrad*s.â€"Edâ€" radition of Service been openly stated cerlnany A"n‘ the weekly bill for food bou. $3.44. â€" The report says the inmates of the on the diet; in fact we s stated ther thrived on Motoring in Australia V OICE The Editorial Page her opposite number , Japan, Germany has irations; she has the service that his fore ches told of a Toronto magâ€" tting a man off because the always read the magistrate‘s on trees and wild flowers, Toronto magistrate, the late THE WORLD AT LARGE them, and she has those means.â€"Lonâ€" s certainly not CANADA be one of the pounds .! meat r articles used orters, chefs and the _ present time Porters governs the The world adheres to ar barley, in t rance gallon for 21 Many people have been asking themselves during these recent days, when so much purple has been minâ€" gled with the black, why purple, a color in itself so bright is a mournâ€" ing color. One has failed to find the origin of a custom so wideâ€"spread. c ee o on oc en ogiey at McGill by its octogenarian goverâ€" nors because he has reached the age of 65, we think that, in the national interest, he might do much worse than become the head of a Dominâ€" ionâ€"wide antiâ€"mosquito organization or, speaking more locally, the head of an Upper St. Lawrence Valley Antiâ€"Shad Fly Association. | We understand that the mosquito control efforts undertaken in the viâ€" cinity of Orillia, a community imâ€" mortalized by Leacock, have been uniformly successful. He would conâ€" fer benefit upon many another Sumâ€" mer resort region, not excluding the Rideau lakes, if he would undertake | a nationâ€"wide tour in the interest of mosquito contr#!.â€"Brockv{! Recordâ€" ‘ er. If Stephen Leacock is serious (and we scarcely think he is)â€"about deâ€" voting his remaining years to the presidency of the Antiâ€"Mosquito Asâ€" sociation of East Simcoe, now that he has been chucked out of his job ak MLAHL _ i & . Chronic Wisease Injured MicWigan couple wants to sue reckless driver whose mind, his lawyer claims, has been a blank since the accident. Only since the acci« dent "â€"Guelph Mercury. I Canada‘s Smoke With women taking to the weed in more recent years, cigarette conâ€" sumption has gone up materially. Last year nearly four and oneâ€"half billion cigarettes were smoked _ in Canada. This works out to an averâ€" age of 1,250 for every man and woâ€" man of smoking age. Since there are. still many of either sex who cannot‘ bear the taste of tobacco or haven‘t formed the habit of puffing away at a "fag," some cigarette smokers must have greatly exceeded the 1,250 avâ€" erage.â€"Kitchener Record. l of the The speed of communications beâ€" tween all parts of the world is one of the proud boasts of the present era. But there are some regions without direct contact with the rest of the world. For instance, the news“ of the earthquake in China r8ported to have brought death to thousands' in Szechuan province, did not reach | the world until a week after it oc«! curred .â€"Kingston Whigâ€"Standard. Reason for Royal Purple And without that romance there probably wouldn‘t be any use for the cattle and the potatoes before long. Perhaps even the farmers vill agree to that. By all means save both surfaces! â€"Sault Ste. Marie Star. 1 Barns may be importa horses and cattle and m: potatoes. But just think romance there is wrappe pair of girl‘s lips. And without that raw BiUs Eoward VIil, it is stated l Save The Surface pointed out to the authorities that "Save the surface and you save| @ll draping should be carried out in all," they tell us. So when we read / purple rather than black at Queen that the coâ€"eds of the University of[ Victoria‘s funeral, Wisconsin use enough lipstick each| All shades of purple are being year to »a‘nt four barns, all we can[Widely worn at the moment, and will say is that perhaps it is the more continue to be much seen. Amethyst, important surface that is receiving| plum, and egg plant are three tones attention . 1 anmennekady Lis S otne ane a 0 s P ce THE EMPIRE There is good sense in the ruling of a Prince Edward Island county judge that a minor of nineteen is bound by a contract he signed to buy a foxâ€"a contract he aÂ¥tempted â€" to evade. by pleading his legal infancy. "I am asked," said Judge Duffy, "to assist the defendant on the techn‘cal plea .of infancy. If I did so I would consider that I was helBing him to steal the fox from the plaintiff. This I refuse to do." This is sensible. On| the precedent set by Judge Duffy]| perhaps the custom will be establish-f ed of deciding every such case cn its merits. â€"Ottawa Ianrnal | A Port Colborne man h back t« his municipal.ty all h. ed in relief. Having "got feet" again, he shows his a tion in this way. It is suc which makes it easier to pa for Telief ‘purnnosae _(Mhaik. _ have something stronger of argument than we no must conclude that it is keep body and soul hite} at a very modest antia» did well on A Job for Leacock " , _\ _ _AUIng stronger in the way irgument than we now posses we t conclude that it is possible to body and soul hitched together _ very modest outlayâ€"9.85 cents day.â€"Peterborough Examiner, ~| PRES $ Delayed News Ottawa Journal Colborn@e man has paid s municipal:ty all ho receivâ€" ief. â€" Having "got on his in, he shows his appreciaâ€" is way. It is such cases kes it easier to pay taxes purposes.â€"Chatham N#ws. Exemplary Act Sensible! CANADA, THE EMPIRE the diet, so until important to house and _machinery ami _ think of afl the wrapped up in a to 00 CE 09 Comnett HHe §« Extraordinary changes have taken t | place in domestic lifeâ€"companionate b marriage, alimony for men; children ~| taken on visits to see what â€" the‘r ¢| mothers and fathers are like; threeâ€" 1 quarters of the people being supportâ€" ¢| ed, submitting, and thinking the 25 ‘~| per cent. should be ashamed to have ‘ | enough money to do the supporting,. 1| _ "We maks it easy for young couâ€" ‘ | ples to marry and have a family, on relief, but very hard for the ‘ | young people on small salaries; we ’ build large sewers and large hospiâ€" "| tals, but have no money to bu‘ld ‘! homes; we live in a world where "| everyone sings, that, too, making it | more operatic," said the speaker, ‘ She suggested scenes and lyries â€" for an cpera dealing with tendencies | of today, and finished by explaining that a writer of pure nonsense and satric comedy would have a more difficult task now than in the time of Gilbert and Sullivan. Those writ. ers made sober realities appear fanâ€" tastic and absurd; a modern satirist | must make fantastic and absurd | realities appear serious and matter of fact in order to show â€" what they really are worth. "When a man wants to murd tiger he calls it sport; when the er wants to murder him he cal ferocity,"â€"George Bernard Shaw RECO ns oany TTE equally pungent and democratic outlined some phases of modern After dealing with the fact that Gilbert and Sullivan opera _ was modelled on the pure Greek comedy written five centuries ago, and was uitc l 1 ’ J »peaking on "This (Gilbert and Sullivan World of Ours," she stated, "We sadly need a reincarnation of Gilbert and Sullivanâ€"a genius who would make this somewhat criminal world a source of innocent merriâ€" ment." WINNIPEGâ€"A | modern life as fantastic as a comic opera and nearly as hilarious was pictured by Mrs. Valance Patriarche in an address Lere. Woman‘s Speaker in Winhiâ€" peg Asks for Modern Gilbert In 1929 hi fortune was estimated by those who should be in a posiâ€" |tion to know at about £750,000. His | "Jungle Book" alone brought him in over £10,000 a year. | . Nothing can be more erroneousJ [ than the idea that his poetry is no ’longer read. In the United States‘ lalone the sale of his various volumes of verse has averaged from 100,000 fto 150,000 _ copies annually during1 the last quarter of a century.â€"Lonâ€" don Evening Standard. Pictures Life Speaking on "This his books. They sold steadily all over the world for 45 years, dnd he never allowed his work to appear in cheap editions. More than any man he had what Arnold Ben_ngtt called an estate in I predict that Kipling‘s fortune will prove the greatest ever left by an author, One can only learn that purple has always been a "Royal" color. King Edward VII, it is stated, pointed out to the authorities that all draping should be carried out in purple rather than black at Queen World‘s Best Seller 1 Bit Fantastic nda democratic, she es of modern life. ranges have taken lifeâ€"companionate for men; children see what the‘r en the tigâ€" he calls it murder Answer:â€"If fertilizers are stored in a dry place, they should not sufâ€" fer any loss of plantfood if stored for a year. There may be some tendency for the fertilizers to get hard or set. Before attempting to sow fertilizers that have been stored over winter, they should be thoroughly sifted before they are taken to the field, so that they may drill evenly. (4) Question:â€"Which do you think would pay best on oats and barâ€" ley m‘xed, one bag per acre of fertilizer or two bags per acre? ANSWErâ€"â€"_BDatsep ap o loilet ACVeE _ Canadian Olympic Members Pass in Revi quantity and if the soils are not acid. Sand will not correct acidity. (3) Question:â€"Does fertilizer kept over from one year to another lose any of its strength? ANSWwer :â€"â€"_If "Aurbilio ame i mhan i mb sc $314.0 2| (1) Question:â€"We hear a good deal about Fertil‘zer containing extra plant food materials such as magâ€" * nesia, lime, sulphur, etc., besides the usual nitrogen, phosphorus, and potash and I would like to know just how important these other plant food elements are in a * Commercial Fertilizer. Y Answer:â€"On certain soils, the extra o or rarer plant nutrients may be § of very great service, e.g., where | sandâ€"brown or premature yellowâ€" ing of tobacco occurs, magnesium a salts have been found to effect a ‘ cure. Magnesium is supplied in calâ€" ' ciumâ€"magnesium limestone (doloâ€" mite or in the form of sulphate of magnesium. Sandâ€"brown occurs on very sandy soils. Sulphur has been found to be of great service in addition to suitable fertilizers, on onions grown on muck soils. It has also enabled celery crops to withstand disease and make good growtHK. Borax on turnipsâ€"in adâ€" dit‘on to manure or fertilizers has produced crops free of water core under certain conditions, while its use has not been effective in all cases. (2) Question:â€"Some fertilizer salesâ€" men tell us they have a lime filler in their fertil‘zer instead of a sand filler and for this reason their fertilizer is worth more monâ€" ey. Please let me know what you think about this. Answer:â€"Dolomite limestone used as a filler in fertilizers will correct| â€" acidity of soil if used in sufficient| â€" 6) weré -t-l:l';d on If answer is des‘red by letter enâ€" close stamped and addressed envelope for reply. Address all inquiries to Professor Henry G. Bell, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, Ontarto. J. H., Chatham, | _ Through this column farmers may secure the latest information pertainâ€" ing to their difficulties. To introâ€" duce this service Professor Bell has prepared the following typical probâ€" lems to indicate the information which should be given in order that a satisfactory answer can be made. â€" and many other phases of agriculâ€" ture, engage the attention of Ontario farmers from day to day. During the winter months there is a little more time for study of the most acute problems. The business of farming is yearly becoming more and more dependent upon facts that have been gathered regarding â€" livestock and livestock management, crop production, soil management, d‘sease and insect conâ€" trol and business organization of the farming industry. Individual prob-‘ lems involving one or more of these, er Olympic team return a Nazi salute as thefir pass t Winter Olympic Games at Garmisch Partenkirschen ne bag per l;r; â€";f two bags per acre? _ of fertilizers (2â€"12â€" Conducted by Professor Henry G. Bell with the coâ€"operation of the various departments of Ontario Agricultural College. ""t8.% 56 a g.~ VCV 8 three farms in arm Problems & WPs . n LK o+ ;} y <a & x * * S P ~ Lt A " fi‘ f i +.4 **3%, 5 i. ".Â¥ l ce a 4 e A R ’A-\': NB 4A P o o." d order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adcla‘de Street, Toronto. HOW TO ORDER PATTERXNS Write your name and address Plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 15¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred) ; wrap it carefally and address your noulenm 4s enc EOm â€" Style No. 2552 is designed for sizes 14, 17, 18 years, 36, 38 and 40â€"inches bust, ‘Size 16 requires 1% yards of 35â€"inch material, Silk or satin: linen, etc., are mediums, Could you possibly choose a smarter or a prettiee blouse? Slip it over your head in a jiffy. Its soft collarless draped neck so completely comfortable un der your suit, lends itself to inspiraâ€" tions with handkerchief scarfs or modern clips, Easy to make! Inexpensive! One glance at illustrated diagram reveals the secret, EC : ty 3 09 Aoicbets ‘5 ag 8 o y o Mess 12 Hahs 4 ; $ ae. N y PA iss * e C agolet .&% § x ‘*<@%C‘fA_.t 2y /s _ Mme. Stavisky, or Mme. Simone as she prefers to be called, is a Cinâ€" derella in reverse. At one time the most â€"envied woman in Paris she turns today to the chorusâ€"appearâ€" ing in the Frenc# C:isno‘s revue in New York. Mme. Stavisky speaks English haltingly despite the fact that her early years were spent in an English school. 1985 by the Ontario Agricultural College with the following results: Treatment Yield per acre No fertilizer ......, 82.1 bus. 125 lbs. per acre ... 39.4 bus, 250 lbs. per acre ... 55.6 bus, . 1 Easy To Henry G. B;", Dept. of Chemistry, O.A.C the‘y_ pass the reviewing crepe, cottons, suitable smart is designed for r Mme. Simone, called, is a Cinâ€" t one time the in Paris she chorusâ€"appearâ€" "To dren in pair his "Poor comprehension i the seventh and eighth been traced to the fact were baby talkers in i said. D 66 » Bee. _ As a matter . ’pretty good at it myse feat of spelling "hg and ‘Lembarrass" at S No. 3, Township of 1878) put a laure] head which 1 am stil defend, I congratulate reviving this good old B T200 S L7 Leacock, Professop of Ec MceGil University in a lef Montreal Stap: "I am glad to have the Old Spelling with us. It used to play a in the lives of the plain Canada and the United $ fore radio was and bef; pictures were, in the d; ‘Little Old Schoolhousn.' th Bee had its honored place sented that combination o ment and inte“ectunlity ' progressive people. â€" The this continent could always were proud of it! They car tattered Spelling Books to tier cabins, The book m first, and the teacher a: ‘True progress‘, asg my ep friend, Sir Andrew Macphg say, ‘is best achieved by pu cart before the horse‘ Commenting Old Fashioned Oo‘s Ickie Mousie Mousie Are Y ou" Injures Infants Welcomes Re;urn Of Spelling Bee it siatcltss Wcc ic s 2 ' Disputes over educatio; ‘tnry service led to 5,000 | selling their Canadian h 'Mnnitoba and Saskatchew | ing to the Durango Valley and another 1,500 going tc in South America, They quit Canada to e obstacles to their religion from El Paso, Tex., said want to leave Mexico and the Dominion because they posed to the socialist‘c e program of the Mexican iC WINNIPEG _ Western Canad ans ’ sought a clue last week as to where, 7,000 Mennonites from Mexico would, seek new homes if they return to the‘l Canadian west they _ abandoned in | 1922, | So far as could be learned, no conâ€"| tact has been made with Mennonite colonies in M a n i t o b a and Sask-" atchewan although some communicâ€"| ation may have been made with the‘ Canadian M e n n o n i te colonization |: board at Rosthern, Sask. | a cncourage it, or in« it, will retard and general learning," Mennonites Wish to Come Back to C anada "Dr Currelly sounds as if he was suffering from a bad attack of inâ€" digestion himself," Miss Macpha‘l responded. "Out our way most women cook two, three and even four variâ€" eties of vegetables for the midday meal in the summertime. A large salad is almost regulation menu for: supper. In the winter vegetables are | not so numerous and come from the vegetable pit. As for women being | lazy cooks! Well, I think perhaps what | we had better do is to invite Dr. Currellyâ€"who, I believe, is an archaâ€" | eologist â€" out to our part of the| country for a meal." | (Dr. Currelly made his accusation |. of laziness at a meeting last week of the Ontario Vegetable Growers‘ Asâ€"| sociation in Toronto. However, he,' corrected the statement by saying | women worked just as hard now as': they did in bygone days because they | had less help in modern t‘mes). $ Miss Agnes Macpha‘l, the woman member of Parliament from â€" Gréyâ€" Bruce, is irate at the statement of Dr. C. T. Currelly that "women are growing so lazy they won‘t make the effort to cook the family meal." ; The statement of the distinguishâ€" ed Toronto arehacologist was sweepâ€" ing. "There is a tendency to neglect the cooking of vegetables because of sheer laziness, Dr. Currelly said, addâ€"‘ ing women go to the corner store to buy prepared food and that the eatâ€"‘ ing of the "lazy" forms of foods inâ€" creased the danger of universal dyspepsia. | bes Miss Agnes Macphail Takes’wc':':'; o e hK yotix Exception to Remarks Of _ |pes, Corhing BVEL ‘ the Dr. Currelly the activities of Chnada‘s Women Not Lazy Preparing Food 1 at it myself, my éu;_)reme spelling "harass," "arras" _ p, > wPeUmg Bee, Stephen Professop of Economics at Iniversity in a letter to The Star: "I am glad that we are the Old Spelling Bee back It used to play a great part ves of the â€"niay, " .7 3 P D PCCY «B7 laure! wreath on my im still prepared to «y u4 2. eighth grades i,t' or indu‘gp on the revival of Spelling Bee, Ste, to pay a great part the plain people of United States, Be. and | before moving _ the days of the late The Star on old institution." r education and miljâ€" d to 5,000 Mennonites ‘anadian holdings in Saskatchewan and goâ€" School (Section Georgia, A.D, t that they inf.n('y'" he 0 Valiey in Mexico going to Paraguay ch‘ldren of to escape the ligion. Reports said they now ) and return to : they were opâ€" t‘e educational ‘an government.! ‘‘re chil. may imâ€" the he Spelling e. It repreâ€" of _ amuseâ€" dear to a people on has contracts, they cann | to leave their posit porarily, by reason maternity, "There is no reason wh women should be employed ers anyway, with so many unmarried women serious| of positions," My. Aberhar delegates, the where | s where | Dramatic C l EDMONTON.â€"Alberta‘s Promic Aberhart is opposed to married woâ€" men as school teachers, and his Social Credit Government is seeking ways ‘lnd means of dismissing expectan: mothers from teaching positions. A delegation from the Alberta Cabinet recently discussed means of dismissing teachers expecting a child, Or â€" sumptniiny | shant L in calc‘ or suspending them motherhood. ‘The tru: Women Teachers Wants Expectant Mothers To Be Dismissed from Their Positions Alberta Premier Opposed to Married |_ _ "For instance, every girl at the party may have her hair fixed exaci. ‘ly like yours. A dozen girls may be wearing white gowns very much like your own. There may be a marked similarity in cosmetic makeup. Howâ€" ever, one thing no other women ai ‘the party possibly can have is a voice just like yours. ~Our voices and our speech are our very own. We should guard, improve and treasure them." ’ There is a correct way and a wrong way to pronounce each word in the English language, Every woâ€" man who cares about the appearance she makes should learn the right way, [ "On the other hand, good speec is entivrely up to the individual, Even l’education is no guarantee of correci and pleasant diction, It is the perâ€" \sonal duty of every person to learn how to pronounce words correctly and to realize that success often is more dependent upon the personality as revealed through pleasant voic. quality and unaffected speech than on many things often considered paramount. + _"A good many girls think that the jrule about speaking softly means to ‘, speak in low throaty tones. It does ‘.,not. A high soprano voice may be as soft and well modulated as a norâ€" mally low one, ! _ ""No woman should try to force her voice below its natural pitch. | She may think this produces an inâ€" teresting result, but; her listeners think only that she is hoarse and that her vocal chords give out raspâ€" ing, grating tones whenever â€" she _opens her mouth, paratus diustrouély and ently. under the "You may 'injur'er)jour speaking "Soprano, mezzo or contralto â€" you were born with your individu voice and to attempt to change i quality and natural timbre is a mi take indeed," says a dramatic coacl Dramatic Coach T hinks V oice Most Distinctive Asset Pleasant Quality and Unaffected Speech Helps You Through Life 1 Finally there was the ratho *) pleasant picture of â€" the spokes ‘|for Canadaâ€"he seems to be A '|ticularly talkative fellow â€" ; ‘jlike a cornerâ€"lot urchin that 1 'lhnd had no business defea ‘|Canada, the Canadian team bx f]much better, It was all due, he s _ to England‘s goalkeeper, _ Wo)\ ; have always understood that a p ,keeper was a pretty important ; of a hockey team; that he was ]fellow who, for the most part, k the goals out. Moreover, if this E. lish team was so inferior, how di; come to score two goals? What the whole business : | gests, we think, in that in the fu: when sending teams to Olym; games â€" providing we go on se, ing them â€" we should @xercise so caution about those we send to ma age them. It might be a good ide for example, to send sportsmen â€"a, gentlemen." P PC ETTE PR _ weary of the sort of thing that |n. been coming over the cables abo,, the activities of Canada‘s hockeyist . lat the Olympies, remarks the Ottawa Journal. In the first place there wo, a lot that smacked of child‘shness ;; _not hypocrisy, in the roar set up b, our representatives because Englang was using two players recruito | from Canada. That, apparently â€";1,, , practice of importing "amate;»_" from other countries â€" is a Practic reserved for our "amateur" {0o,=, teams. Then there was the wholly )j diculous spectacle of th» Mankser of the Canadain team taking part ; an international contes! wiy!» not troubling to find out wha: the »,; of the contest were, subseque, wailing loudly because they Yoep; victims of their own iznorance " 4 whole business, to say the least, is a bit humiliating, , with so many men and women seriously in need . The trustees expla?fié& At The Olympics : present system of cannot force teachers positions, even temâ€" reason why married Aberhart told the of approaching until after as teachâ€" ing ap perman must NC W H W P Ethiopifl No W Th To 6 M W A §

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