Miss Elsie Kearney left Monday to attend Westervelt School, Loxndon. Mr. Peter Nichol and son Peter of Detroit, Mr. E. Nichol, and daughter Marelyn, of London are visiting their unc‘e, Mr. Walter Nichol and other friends. Mrs Smith of Elriwood is *pending a few days with her sister, Mrs J. Turnbull Mrs. L. Mllai ais daug‘iter He‘en of London are visiting ber father, Mr 8. McComb. Misses Dorothy Pickering, Norma Gagnon and Mae McEachern and Mr Gordon Rennie of the Public School staff were successtil in their Sumâ€" mer School courses. Mr and Mris Thos. Henderson and daughter, Betty went to London on Snuday, where Miss Betty remained to commence a year of study in Wesâ€" tervelt School, London. Mrs Henderâ€" son remained for a few days visit. Mr. and Mra. George Heard of Toâ€" ronto, attended the funeral of the late Mrs. Jas. Gun in Durham on Tuesday. They also vis ted with Mr. Heard‘s sister, Mrs T. Weir of Egreâ€" mont. Mrs R. Cook, Mr. and Mrs H. Warâ€" rington and Mr. H. Mills, also Lucas Perdue of Toronto, spent the week end at the home of Mr J. N. Perdue. Back to School! . . . Mrs. Wm. Smythe and son Billy of Toronto, are visiting the former‘s aunt, Mrs M. Kearns. Miss 1. C. McGirr is â€"spending . a week with her sister, Mrs J. C. Mcâ€" Lean of Shelburne. Mi s Ethel Hargrave spent last week visiting ateNcrth Bay and Timâ€" Mr and Mrs J. S. Mellraith son Norman were Exlybition vi over the weekend and were ue Tho cowcatcher of old Ex these costumes of the â€" part in the pageant at Port anniversary of the first C. P The old engine, driven by t Moody a string of six oldâ€"sty conductor of the first train i More than 6000 visitors, incl in ‘86, flocked to Port Moody W . Sll!flhal"d son Billy of Welcome First Train CEmee °* CVVHIOMY two children are spetr s Red Bay. ‘s J. S$. Mellraith and Miss Jean Allan of were Exivbition visitors iting her cousin Mis Have you a telephone in your home? Nothing yields more for what it costs than the homs telephone. touch with his world. School days are here again! In thousands of households, life gets back to afterâ€" holiday regularity and routine. The home telephone helps the childven to keep in touch with their newâ€"found k . ce ce o en es CGOK t at Port Moody, July 3, celebrating the fiftieth first C. P. R. train from Montreal to the Pacific. en BV the arlmimaroscc2,0 ns B irnedicacthas. db ic is s n by the original engineer oldfstyle wooden cars hand Moody lorvtfn;';:;l'e;ratlon‘ were guests Of Zion, the 80‘s a_fii);u;i;;-‘i;elles Miss Alice Renwick of Ottawa is spending a few days with her grandâ€" parents, Mr and Mrs Robt. Renwick, Sr, and other frienud> in town. Miss Renwick was one chosen from _ Otâ€" ftawa to go to the C.G.LT. Camp at Normandale, Lake Erie, and is visâ€" ‘ iting friends on her way home. Mr and Mrs H. Noble, their daughâ€" ter>, Doris ard Lorna, and son Budâ€" die of Toronto, visited with his parâ€" ents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Noble and! oiher fwends in the vicinity. ' Mics# Annie Turrbull is visiting for a week with friends in ITuntsville. Mr. John McDonald of St. Cathâ€" arines spent a week with his brothâ€" er, Mr. Dougal McDonald and other friends in and around Durham. - Sir Wm. and Lacdy Hearst onto spent the weekend with Vavid and Mrs. Jamieson. Misses Susie Bell and Shirley Mcâ€" Intyre went to London, Sunday, where they will attend Westervelt Business Mr. Roy Lawrence and fam‘ly and Mr. V. MacDonald spent a day this week at the Ex. Mrs. J. McKechnie of town spent the weekend with her sister, Mrs. Dowkes of Oliphant, going on to Toâ€" ronto and spending a week with her vister, Mrs. J. Ball Master Curtis and Ross Ryan, after spending a few wreeks with their grandpa.ents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Ryâ€" an, returned with their father, Mr. Melville Ryan to their home in Torâ€" onto. | this week with To.onto friends and took in the Ex. ence and Kenneth spent _ _engineer, hauled into Port cars handled by the original i1 reâ€"enactment of the event. s of rail veterans in service ow cOe â€" keeps Father in Mr and Mrs W. B. an Allan of Toronto is visâ€" cousin Mis J. C. Cook of of 1886 who took are spending a week at Lacdy Hearst of Torâ€" with thclr; Mrs. W. Ryâ€" father, Mr. rome in Tor-|' a few days TORONTO And thee These are Shouldn‘t â€" Hon . Eor a madcap stunt or a The King‘s a gentleman And keep: to his side should, For he knows that t the place For A Madron senca ~ But he ked highway. He trims 1 He‘s gentlemen The Kins‘s The King‘s a gentleman through through, And these are his Highways 1 a These are his Highways 9 and And they OUERE L( NB\ masars Brampton Fall Feir is to have ’something new in the way of beauty _contests, The judges will stroll thro‘ the grounds and pick out the pretâ€". tiest girl. The Wiarton Echo says that to date they have been lnckyf enough to have escaped . two things:,‘ first, judging at a baby show and second, selecting the prettiest gal at the fair. "York has commenced on post office at Mildmay, the ( Construction Company of To: curing the contract neftent n rume onl ie oi ds 114. B0 1 fence, it not at his brother man‘s expense ‘s keen and daring young and gay, it he keeps the rules of the king‘s high waw Dr. John Russell of Arthur â€" who has been lying for some two months in the Toronto General hospital, has recovered sufficiently that it is exâ€" pected that he will be brought _ to Feraus Iodlay IFS) wAF o all 7 ANNE SUTHERLAND M Work â€" has The "F" standing for "Failure" ’does not now appea ‘ and in the printâ€" ed list and outside of the pupil themâ€" ‘selves their friends are none the 'wiser, how they fared in this letter. We think the old system of being succesiful in all of the subjects or none, is still the effective method|1 of testing a student‘s fitness or otherâ€"| wise. It certainly tends to a higher | <tandard of success, than that of winâ€"| ning a subject or ‘wo one summer,! and then dropping it out of the cur-; riculum, We may be oldâ€"fashioned. but at least we knew when a pupil‘ was successful and when they weref not. I MISS$ MACPHAIL, m Durham school did not have outâ€" standing re:ults but the average was well sustained. Norman Greenâ€" wood of Durham presented the best standing, i.e., four first~, five seconds and one third. _ Douglas Scott of Mount Forest, wrote sixteen Upper School papers land got first class honors in them all. 'Mary Firth, North Bay, daughter of , Mr and Mrs Tom Firth (nee Amy Edge) got first class honors in each lol the fourteen subjects that llmi wrote. Marion E. Jacklyn, Chesley, ’wrmn; on ten subjects in Upper: School, took nine fir:t class honors' and one second class. She has also: won a scholarship from Western Unl-i’ versity which gives her free tuition | for twoâ€"years and is valued at $250.| Lawrence Ruttle, Kincardine, secured | first class honors in twelve subjects,‘ and will likely land the high Carter: scholarship for Bruce County. | THE C;l;_c Burpum Arviw his speed to the . The Wiarton Echo _ says date they have been lucky o have escaped . two things : Mote _ ts wid are his Highways 1 ; h‘l Hi‘h'.y. 9 and e use them like ¢, RAMAGE & SON. Editors and are hisg Highways 1 and his Highways 9 and 10 ought to be peonled i a sportsman and takes a KING‘s HIGHway BRILLIANT _ PUPILS Company of Toronto, seâ€" SAILING FOR HomeE a chancy race. n through and road is BROOKS. Campbell 10 and by the line, where | Russians. The t; | arch which is | the hammer and the inscrspuon «4 | unite." It takes :j At the border between Finland and: | Ruszia, each nation had tried to outâ€" | do the other in the way of statlons,’ ‘customs equipment, restaurants, etc. | _ Both buildings were beautiful and| | were way beyond the needs of traffic| ‘at that particular boint. Everyone on ; |the train was quite excited when we' were passing on to Russian soil. The | Finnish officials escort the train to| the line, where it is received by tbe‘ 1 Toh onn Pss cce 5. en volution was fought, city great importance Leningrad, Peter the ,| ‘f‘end, who would easily top the ,| sonles at 250, showed definite signs “i of exhaustion, pleaded with us not to euffer as he had. He told us that ‘when he felt he conld not stand the ‘| heat in the steam room any longer, | even with liberal quant‘ties of cold _ water to drink, he rang the bell and | told the Firnish woman attendant in | _ English to lessen the heat. Instead | she turned on more until in despera ‘ tion he was forced out of the room. | The pressure of the needle showers | ‘he was just able with his great weight | ! to withstand, but he feared for ne | > Miss Macphail Tours e capital of Russia. It was in Leningrad Finland offers three attractions to the vicitor; excellent and ridiculously lowâ€"priced accommodation, a variety of fine handicrafts and the famed Finnish bath. Our syacious room, realâ€" ly a sitting room and bedroom comâ€" bined, entered through two sets of double doors, with hot and cold waâ€" | For ten days we have been cut off & from the world with which we are "'!t.millzr. It is not only that things ‘â€"‘ look different, that the language is "{ unintelligible whether written or spoâ€" Y|ken, but one feels the difference in 5/ values. The ingredients which go to °/ make up happine s are different and *\ the Russian idea of comfort is cerâ€" "/ tainly not ours. ! 'I! On our way here we passed through ‘ / Finland, stopp‘ng at the capital, Helâ€" * singfors. The Finns and their counâ€" litry were a great surprise. We did : not expect to find a capital city withâ€" liout slums, with wide streets, modern: +â€" buildings and fine park:, topped by , really magnificent parliament hulld-l \ ings. The new republic of Flnllnd# | was set up in 1917, with a president, ‘‘ an elected assembly of two hundred| members and an esecutive who are“ |not members of the governing body . | Since that time great effort has been‘ | made to build up the republic but| |strife exists between the Swedes who || | are the minority and Fins. Both lan . "gua.ges are used, with the Finnl.h]' clearly in the ascendancy as was|. \ shown by the recent passing of a bill. j | which provides that only those who’ survive a very severe test in the Fin-,( nish language may enter the national ?] university. â€" There are separate sch-!la ools for all grades below university % for the two peoples. Street names,; £ posters, stamps and signs are all w written in both languages. The Finâ€" i nish name which is uced for Helsing-‘s fors is Helsinki. | THE DURHAM REVIEW MIOn "workers of the world takes only three quarters ‘ to go from the border to which from the days o Great until 1917 had been husld y iescs sw y Fialand and Russia is painted and sickle 7 adâ€"in its streets the successful re. t. which gives the ce in the eyes of passes under . showing Leningrad, U.g.s August 14th, 1936 Canadians, the now of Calgary tawa and Dick Y.M.C.A.. Tor: _ ~ »nerwood Eddy Party, some whom had been travelling and st ing in Europe since the end of J This is the seventeenth organ group Sherwood EdAdv has i11._ It was a tired group of people who filled the train from Moscow back to Leningrad, Fifty of these were of the Sherwood Eddy party, some â€" of whom had been tre telling ang studyâ€" 0& H EUroba as. .. _ .. _ °C AHHE: |__,_____ 6C*CrHmMenDt, where Stalin‘s | offices are, and outside the Wall, | which enclose; it, the famed Red | Square, where the famed demonstraâ€" l'tions take place in front of Lenin‘s tomb, It is a great city of Approximâ€" ‘ately four million people, not bemu-l | ful like Leningrad, but busy. In our 'nvo days we crowded in as much u, we could; we saw cliniecs and hospitâ€" 'ul:. parks of rest and culture, markâ€" ets, Stakhanovite rast homes, factorâ€" ies, collective farms and a prison, u! well as art galleries and museums, | but of these we have not now time | to tell. _ Writers on Russia have acquainted us with the casualness with which ll'Russians mix the sexes in allotting _ compartments on trains, It is one 'thlng to read of it, but quite another |to come face to face with the realkty. It is just a little better than an â€" all ‘night run from Leningrad to Moscow and it was on this journey we enâ€" ’countered Russian pullman methods. | In sorting ourselves out we found ‘next to us, on one side a friendly ‘New York woman who had as her 1 compartment companions, threei Frenchmen, who, contrary to the tra~, ditional gallantry of the French, were vehemently protesting against the arâ€" | rangement, with â€" exclamations of "Oo la la‘" On the other _ side af wellâ€"Grassed Frenchwoman wept and‘ stormed because she and bher husâ€"| band had to share their t.leeplng! compartinent with two Russian men. The lady‘s husband sat before the door of the compartment and would not ‘fOr & Iifie AMrur 4100 L. ""~"° Of the compartment and not for a time allow them to Later the matter was adjust the New York woman movin# i °* "O5 crevices. It was lifted upon brass sledges and dragged to the shores of the Gulf, wh‘ch effort took the work of 400 men for a whole year. They made only about 650 feet daily. It is now shown as an exâ€" ample of the capriciousness of the Tsarina Catherine II. of Calgary but gra _ In Leningrad we visited the Winâ€" _ter Palace, now a museum; the Herâ€" mitage, which in the old days was a picture gallery attached to the Palâ€" ace; the Peter and Paul Fortress, , where political prisoners were imâ€" prisoned before the revolution, and where the Tsars and Tsarinas are [burled. We also saw students‘ set-‘ |tlementu, workers‘ apartments, a mo-I ther and child welfare institute and an agricultural scienti¢c institute. We‘ | walked in parks, went in shops, atâ€". .‘tended motion pictures. _ We were enabled to cover a great deal of | lground~ since Intourist provides Linâ€"] coln cars to drive tourists around.|l The working time in each day, how-[ ever, was shortened by the difficulty in getting meals served. | Lenirgrad is distinctive because of the coloring ol the buildings. Many of the fine old structures have a stucco finish and this is washed with color, sunny yellow being _ a favor‘te shade, with the pillars, figâ€" ures and trim picked out in white. It: case stayed with us until we entrainâ€" ed again for Moscow, where we were met by another guide. It is a very good system and one that could be followed w‘th advantage by the Scandinavian countries. There we had difficulty getting interpreters and folten wasted wvaluable time. i must come through Intourist and this eervice provides a guide who is thorâ€" oughly familiar with Russian affairs. The guide meets the train and in our the communists. Besides it is &A city of great architectural beauty and is still the centre of culture and aoiâ€" ence. Everyone who enters Russia d Dick Davis of A., Toronto. Among them we AGNEs C, , U.8.8.R. itry of the French, were rotesting against the arâ€" with â€" exclamations of On the other side a Rev. Mr people, not beuutl-, CR] but busy, In 097 | _ Mp and Mrs led in as much "/Hugh of Desbo cliniecs and hospitâ€" relatives aroun, ind culture, markâ€"| Mrs. pP, Hay nst homes, fl-ctor-: ham, spent par * and a prison, &8 ) MrS, Hav‘e ... ment and would low them to enter, ® was adjusted by ran moving in with » her husband and ‘ were fortunate in en and one man. formerly of the end of J;ne. has taken to MACPHAIL °"ly of Of. the Centraj EEI«\ I}Ly S d found two | Kelloway, | possibly Russia . made, of the venre to !hank‘ and nelghb,.. to Pathy shown, anq al tributes sent a and death of the Mills, Mr. and desire to + family visiteq fOrmer‘s _ nay, W """~~000, A ‘"reke number from this vicinity atâ€" tended the C:N.E. IAHF ul i P °* "CCC Of mrhï¬ was the guest Of her friend Miss p Anderson over last weekend, Miss Alma Anderson BDeDt n fey days recently with Miss M Lunney Mr. and Mrs. win m.._ l T kirk and family are vi, Mrs Jack Corlett, Mr. and Mrs H Russe}] were Sun Mr. and Mrs w land Centre, Bornâ€"On Tuesd Mr. ang Mrs, Gen ' Miss Mary Morrison of ited cver the holiday at } home. Mr. and Mrs. Art Mel Marilyn were recert visitc and Mrs Joe Crutchley, p Mr and Mrs Jas. Crute} panied Mr ang Mrs Garry visit with Mr, and Mrs, . and family of Ogdensburg, HMine / We ocu l .2 Miss Georgina Mr. and Mrs Bilj Schildroth, Mr, Bob White, Toronto, Mr and Mrs B. Macintosh and Delyon, Owen Sound were holiday visitors with Mrs _ R. Macintosh. Miss Bessie Campbell has reiurned to ‘Toronts â€"»Whee! / euedggt t tm o Congratulations to Miss Katherine O‘Neil and Mr. Waiter Schaeter, who were bappily married on Monâ€" day. Mr. James Heslip sold ten head o fine cattle last week. Mr Sims of the Rocky spent a few days last week with his daughter Mrs. Hughie Vaughan Jr. Miss May Scheuerman is visiting with her cousin Mrs Bert Barber at Varney. 0 Teronto after sp ‘ith her niece Mss Messrs Bernard and Gerald Meagh er of Hanover and Mr Joe Westfali Detroit, spent the holiday with Mr and Mrs. Mike Kenny and family. Mr, Ernest Martin of Owen Sound is assisting Mr Malco:m Macinnes of Hayward‘s Falls. Mr. Paul Yake and sister Miss Bernice Yake of Detroit, spent â€" the weekend with Mr. N. Meloshe and family. Mrs, Eddie and daughter Lillian ot Toronto spent the boliday with the former‘s sister Miss Ada Banks. Ves rround Crrwford rs. P. Hay and son } . spent part of last : «_ Hay‘s aunt, Misg a Mrs. Laverne McCallum of Detroit visited with her parents, Mr and Mrs Allen Boyd. Threshing has begun again on our I‘ne since the few sunny days dried off the late harvest. All has not been gathered in yet. Mrs. Leith of Durham visited with friends in this locality Saturday. Mr. Wilfred Anderson and sisters, Mrs. James Byers and Miss Nellie Anderson v‘sited with friends at Ferâ€" gus the beginning of the week . . Mr and Mrs Burrows Smith _ an© family of Moorefield were recent vis itors at the Byers home, w Miss Aunie George of Toronto and her aunt, Mrs W. George of Walkâ€" erton were visitors at Bonnie View recently, School bhas begun with Mr Pauli of Stratford as instructor with the ay erage attendance. Misses Nellie, Beth and Marion Byers have taken up H. School work in Hanover. Some of our local sports have takâ€" en in a day or.so at Toronto, during the Ex. Mr. and Mrs Summerbeo O UEFB!!! and Miss Vera Abell of Dunkeld who were guests at the Morrisonâ€"McVean wedding of a week ago visited at the Byers home on their return trip. Hanover, spent an CVOMUB 7"""""" with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Fulton Mr. H. Whiteford of Detroit visâ€" Ited in this locality last week. Now is the time for corn roasts. Mr and Mrs John Laidiaw . who have been visiting with friends and relatives in this part left on Tuesday morning on the first lap of the return fourney for their bome in Pittsburg, Penn. Mr and Mrs Botteger and family of ‘ Mrs. John Penner Desboro snent a.... parents in CRAWFORD GLENROADEN Corlett and Mrs Summerbee of Cargill DORNOCH Tuegd. y Morrison of Barrie holiday at her Dar 8 H. McCracken Sunday | visitare visiting â€" Art Mcintosh White or spent Sunday Cay visitors with Buchanan of Holâ€" y, Sept_ l‘t. * sm‘th & son spending six woeks ‘ss Florence Robert. thley, Durham, . Crutchley accomâ€" t visitors with Mr Annie Hubert Jones on a Feo. _ Hay and son Pructo;: Mr and rie visâ€" parental with with and CENTRAL _ _ [0CCCC»tes and M 1co. Consult Local Agent . O. Hahn, Hahn House, Agent Telephones 24 and 173. to be up and oy the tormer‘s two sisters, the es Dunlop, their father being a mer pastor here. Pleased to report, Mrs Honli Mr and Mrs John Penner and son Hugh, of Desboro, Mr and Mrs w Ritchie, Mr John Picken and dauchâ€" ter, Mrs Bower and Miss Jean Picken of Durham were guests at the hom« of Mr. Donald McKechnie, Sunday Mr and Mrs Reid Hastie and dauâ€" ghter Isabel anid_Miss Alice Campbeli of Chesley were Aunday visitors a: the home of Mr and Mrs. Dougald Hastie, A goodly number from this section aitended the Ex, Saturday in Toron to and report a good time. Others ar» lalking of going, Saturday, Sept. 12 We were pleased to have at â€" our church services Sunday, Mr an4 M« Denlop of Chatsworth, accompanied b’ '-he tomor’- Bmow Annkusc o ous > LEAVE souTHBounp 8.10 a. m., 6.10 p. m. Itineraries planneg to all points _Canada, United States and Mex. 0 BUS w SCHEDULE offered prayer. The scripture readin? was given by Miss E. Scheuerman from Romans 12 (110). The sec‘yâ€" Treasurer‘s report was adopted. Prayâ€" er was given by Mrs. Vessie. After the bu iness discussion, topics on ‘"The ministry of the printed | page" by Miss E. Scheverman and _ "Why foreign missionaries," by Miss 1 MacQuarrie, were given,. . aA lovely poem entitled "The Harvest" wa s given by Miss €mith. The annua} Tlunkolerlnc meeting will be beld in the chuich on Oct. Tth at 2 p.m., Visitors with Mr=and Mrs. cKechnie this week were, 1 Mrs Herman Steumfle and son neth, Mr Fred Steumfe Mr a»~ &A Quiet, WELL conoucrtep, OOIVIOIIHY. mooern 100 room nOoTeLlâ€"ss witH satn WRITE ror FoLDER TAKE a oe LUXE Ttaxs rrom DEPOT or WNHAREFE â€"25¢ wm. McChesney all of Elmwood. Miss Myrtle McLean returned ; Toronto after holidaying at her home here for a couple of weeks. Burns W.M.S., met in the church on Sept. 2. The president opened themeeunzvflhmlm“andmo Effective May 3, 193 LEAVE NoRTHBounp 1250 p. m. 7.20 p. m. son; Mr end Mrs Stanley Reay Jack McKechnie, Mr. Howard and Mrs. Gordon McCracken. Those from this community . w), took in the Teronto Ex. on Saturda; were Mr and Mrs. Clarence Thomp Miss Annie McArthur of Torons spent a week holidaying at her homâ€" Mr and Xrs Wm. Logan, New Jersey, spent a couple of weeks wit) their parents Mr and Mrs Robt. Law son. Mr and Mrs Lance Rumble o( Toronto spent the holiday at sam» tives here. _ Mrs. J. W. McKechnie _ grrivei ;uâ€"m.u--m-mz with her daughter in Toronto. Mr. and Mrs Art Mcintosh of Dorâ€" noch and Marilyn, were visitors the first of the week w*th Mr. and Mrs Joe Crutchley and family. Miss Georgie Miller was a visitor a few days with ber aunt Mrs. Alfrei Orchard in Preston. Mr, and Mrs, James Crutchley are enjoying a few holidays with Mr and Mrs. George Hay in Ogdensburg, N Mr. and Mrs Alf. Hincks and Mari SEPT. 10, 1#36 ONTAR1O BUSs LineEs Lto "Por Your Commnioncs" CPOrt, Mrs Hopkins S n seriously ill, is ap)» around again, father beul‘ a for Im, topics on printed | page" in and | "Why by Miss 1 8. Mai Mr. and on â€" Kenâ€" and Mrs Miss Mr . Reav Give your bake. Bat i care of you variety of f OURSTOM CHOP Bcientists . and bones. 1 tests brough: by no means retention . To find out ho« need to stop sate} an hour, Oldfield‘s the ‘reaction dist; 50 miles an hour, 65 by three and i: ®of 165 feet wouls «top the car. Get our prices feet; if 30, think on. Experts call : Barney Oldfeld race drivers, pre for safe driving: meter goes to 50. that is bhow far t after you decide : foot can touch the the speedometer ; MULTIPLYING Gunn‘s Royal Hous *O Oanad: Pilot Will tu nfl leave thei JOH HEND RrEevurN ie dgestin “"".m Sep! T HE FLO sEPTâ€" sEPT. Going in St until 8E IN