West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 8 Oct 1936, p. 6

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

Men who have be Mvestock for vears h: on a number of sccasi can be trusted or re N9 no warning it turned on him. gored him badly and trampled on him. His cries brought two daughters who attacked the bull with pitchferks and rescued their father. The animal apâ€" peared to hare become so enraged that a man was caled from Seaforth end he shot it. Frank torey, a farmer near Seaâ€" forth is Huron County, was badly inâ€" Jured when a bull turned on him. We read that Mr. Storey went into the pen where the animal is kept, and with no warning it turned on him, gored him badly and trampled on him. in@ for it is neglected in a large meaâ€" sure. The desire to hive in the backâ€" ground the idea of economic indepen dence and to be prepared to achieve It, if necessary, is all very weli, but there is something even more imporâ€" tant, and that is the making of good wives. Victor‘a Colonist " C ET NOCE for mar.iage is about the last thing thought of in school :; there are no courses in homeâ€"making and motherhood. It is true that domesâ€" tic economy is taught but where is the teaching relating :o household economy. to home decoration, dress, hygione. nursing and music, all matâ€" ters which have a bearing on homeâ€" making? Marriag is the most po Jlar career of womanhood, and the trainâ€" in@ for it is neglected in a large meaâ€" sure. The desire to hive in the hack. mercurial Welshman returns atr adâ€" mirer of Hitler, declares that Gerâ€" many is air ‘ng only for defence in her extensive arm unt plans, deâ€" fends the way she bas broken the Pact of Versailles and supports Hitâ€" ler‘s demands for & return to the German T ‘nire of Mismar 2e 1 ae Lloyd George was : ‘e responsible probably than any other man outside of the French statesm n for the harsh and impossible terms of the Versaflles Treaty. He would hang the Kaiser and drive Germany into the dust. And much of the trov‘~les of Europe to day are due to the a, mpts that were made to humble Germany and reduce her to th, status of a secondâ€"rate power. Lloyd George must acc pt a great _ al of the responsibilities for # blunders of 1" ‘9, Lloyd George has been visiting Germar. 5 ~ tha Edncation Preparation fo The British Government has collectâ€" ed inheritance taxes amounting to the equivalent of $4,843,770 from the estate of the lateo /‘ Honry Well come. The total estate amounted _ to $10,694,795. This is a ‘lzeable sum, even for the British Treasury â€" and indicates the determination of govâ€" ernments in these times to make a great estate bear an adequate share of the burden of public financing. â€" Ha lifax Terald. Nothing is gain :y passing them through the public schools too quick: ly. The training a child receives in the primary grades is the foundation upon which it builds future education. The grounding cannot be too thorâ€" ough. It is far better to slow down the brilltant wapil than to rush the aver age child, or, as the Journal expressâ€" es it "education in s*ower, broader doses mixed with play is likely to be better in the end than when taken in indigestible gulps." â€" Chatham News. Speed In Education All parents wish their children to be smart at school. Some parents push their children ahead as fast as is pos sible, and even urge te teacher to give them special att ution, «â€" that they will keep up with â€" or excel their playmates of the same age. The Ottawa Journal thir‘s this is a mis take, and goes on to make out a sonâ€" sible case against efforts to equal the records of the exceptionalHy brilliant students. Cannot Trust A Buli cars were sold in August of ‘36 than in August of ‘35. Thus Manitoba has showed :. gain of 36 percent, Saskatâ€" chewan of 29, British Columbia of 17. Quebec of 23, Ontario of seven, the Maritime Provinces of 11. Alberta sales declined by 13%.6 percent. â€" Otâ€" tawa Farm Journal. It is interesting at least, and possib ly significant, to ncte that in every province except Alberta more new In the eight months to the end of August in this year Canadians have bought $8,975 new motor vehicies. In the same period of 1935 the‘ number was $0,895, so the gain is ten percent. In August the number of vehicles purâ€" chased advanced by 9.9 percent, and the value 12.3 perceat, seeming to show that Canadians are buying more‘ expensive cars. VOICE * Soaking" Inem saiues and supports Hitâ€" ds for a return to the pire of Memel and Danâ€" More Cars Are Bought ars have in THE WORLD AT LARGE ‘al estate amounted _ to his is a ~izeable sum, British Treasury â€" and determination of govâ€" irses in h It is true taught h: ‘latimg (¢ CANADA en breeders of ive informed us ons that no buli gsarced ar safe oloni ‘en more. imporâ€" making of good ©ry strange comâ€" ge, the champion Lib alism. It is _ Brit‘sh people _ _but refuse ~to T in these trving /> .age i of in s home riage : is about 1 school:; neâ€"making iat domesâ€" where is household m, dress, or the harsh e Versailles the Kaiser e dust. And trying Press. the ot the No co. ntry can regard itselft now as being adequately defended If its manufacturing industries be not firmâ€" ly established. When Great Britain The world struggle seems to be narâ€" rowing down to two races. the human race and the armarment race. â€" The Toronto Saturday Night, citchen is twenty feet ong. To walk nine miles a day, or about fifty thou sand feet, means walking two thousâ€" and five hundred times the length of the kitchen, or its equivalent in up stairs, dow .stairs and in my lady‘s chamber, cellar, rarn and attic. It the business man who alks ten miles a day presidos over an establishment with a fourâ€"hundredâ€"foot frontage, he would have to traverse that floor space one hundred and wentyâ€"five times a day. If he really does it he is 10t a very good business man. But if the experts had calculated th t a busâ€" indss man in the course of a year de velops six inches of skin callosity in pressing buttons. It would sound more ce it." â€" The I "~ ‘*â€"3k, to twelve miles a day in office hours A farmer at the r‘ow walks twenty five miles a day. A woman shopper walks ~ight miles. The ploughman is a little hard to accept. The bargain counter s!:ve s:ems about right. But the housewife and the siness man simply cannot be © valized Sav n __ We get tired recording statistics of globeâ€"girdling ships in sea and in the air, of longâ€"distance stunts all varâ€" ieties of athletic speedsters. Here are some facts and figures about walking in the ordinary course of your day and mine. We do not vouc‘i for their absoâ€" lute accuracy, but they were given as. follows in a paper read b fore the tional Association of Chiropodists and quoted in the New York Times: "It is said that a housewife walks something like nine mi‘ a day about her work. A business man walks nine Manufactures As Defence Drivers Do It The papers report the case of an lllinois woman who has lived five years with only half a brain. Nothing remarkable about that. Some car driâ€" "ers get by with none at all. â€" Strat ford Beaconâ€"Herald. This case near Seaforth is typical of others. We have no doubt Mr. Storey entered the stall or pen where the bull was kept in order to attend to it. He would do nothin: to provoke an attack and probably he had entered that same pen a good many times beâ€" fore and nothing ever happened. But on this occasion the attack came, and one can never tell just when that will take place. It is chat uncertainty which makes the bull such a danger ous animal. And it is the long perioa when a man may work in the pen with a bull and receive no injury which puts him off guard and causes him to forget that the attack ..ay come any time, and with no warning. â€" Peter borough Examiner. Ga wihenss FUMBLES FOR CELLAP_ HOHT Switcy tC l-\ ) (\\\ R m ‘ MJ 7/ w_‘o % 7 U ‘ : ¢â€" \L Cl â€"â€" J 4 FUMBLES FOR CELLAP \ ll-'\ $ 17â€" Wibbbext T ET AK.* â€" GOFS DOWIK CELTBD BWE _ BWE umm s sks .o e 1 THE EMPIRE : «* AGemens, 100 °90 BOOK WHEN FAfarp cmia _ P42 LE\ 2ECONDS LATER, STARTS oUt tuRroven EASES HIMSELF THROUGH B00K WHEN FATHER Chus FRHER REPERTINE REâ€" DINING ROOM, RICKING _ SWING pOOR OF PanTRV FROM UPSThIRS To PLFAse QUEST, CALIS ME3 oN _ pooR WIDE with Foor FETCH HIM THE HAMMER _ e way FROM THE CEilAR | J x ‘43 # ‘U ‘*Wâ€" a ~ 5 REEMINEETY HE Kuaadin in > > S esies s o s oo 00. Oe * PRESS Two Races Day‘s Walk CANADA THE EMPIRE j siness man talized. Say a ong. To walk °* m NB 0 éâ€"’& 60€S DowWn CELLAR STA)RS, PULLS DRAWER or WORKâ€" _ RETURNS Ssromy uPâ€" STE? _ BY STEP, BOOK GEfNG BENCH OPEN With ONE _ stair wune. FINiSHING "XRE MD MORE FXCMING HAND, AND TUMGLES CHAPTER. AND HANDS tit u2 S o8 TORONTO Co "Informing the patient that this grant has now been exhausted invar iably terminates any unnecessary absenteeism." "A valuable asset in deaiing with any undue absence is provided when the firm pays its employes the dif ference between panel sick benefits or accident pay and full wages, sub ject io medical officers‘ reports being satisfactory. "Among industrial workers true malingering | is exceedingly uncomâ€" mon. When it exists to any great extent, the reason will be found in faulty handling of the individual either by the works medical officer the panel practitioner, or the hospital This is the tribute paid to Britain‘s workers as a whole by Dr. N. Howâ€" ard Mummery, chairman of the Asâ€" soclation of Industrial Medical Offiâ€" cers in the current issue of The Practitioner. Concerning illiness, he declares: "The average man or girl on sick leave wants to get back to work as soon as possibleâ€"very often before it is wise to allow it." commanded t!~ seas and the Domin ’ ions were merely part of a great Em pire there was no necessity for â€" and if there had been necessity there was no possibility of â€" thinly populated portions of the Empire providing exâ€" clusively for their defence. Present cireumstances resuire that each Doâ€" minion shall play its part, and the manufacturers of Australia may be relied upon to contribute to national solidity.â€"Melbourne Argus. | t 1934, by The Bell Syndicate, Int.} WHY THE U.S. WENT To Arrangemen‘s have been completed for a homecoming reunion ot graduates of the University of Toronto, it was announced by the Alumni Federation of the University of ‘Toronto. Tribute to Workers Honor For Varsity Chancellor, Sir William Mulock N If Why, then did America join the Allies? One thing alone was responâ€" sibleâ€"according to Mr. Bakerâ€" Germany‘s submarine campaign, and all that it implied in the way of ruthless disregard of the lives of nonâ€"combatants. _ He reminds us how the policy of neutrality was genâ€" erally accepted at the outbreak of the war. No one other than Mr. Bryan questioned the right of Amâ€" ericans to travel on belligerent vesâ€" sels not carrying munitions of war. Every one resented the British inâ€" terference with American trade and the disregard of property rights. But this resentment was never as keen as the hatred of Germany when the submarine campaign led to the sinking of merchantment and the killing of neutrals. â€" Mr. Wilson‘s forbearance seemed to many persons so extreme as to be a weakness. But it served at least to unite ail but a handful of pacifists behind the doe By GLUYAS WILLIams ca into the war. _ He even minimizes the effect of British propaganda, pointing out, quite correctly, that American sympathies from the very first 1lay of the war were proâ€"Allyâ€" long before the Allted propaganda machine began to function Mr. Newton D. Baker, in his artiâ€" cle in the October "Foreign Affairs," has poured a refreshing wave of sanity over the discussion of why America went to war in 1917 observes the New York Heraldâ€"Tribune. Speakâ€" irg from intimate knowledge as Mr. Wilson‘s Secretary of War, and viewing events in retrospect after{ much mature reflection, he rejects unequivocally the suggestion that either the munitions makers or the "international bankers" forced Ameriâ€" FATHER ThE ScRQEew DRWVER &â€"25 Marry in haste, and where will you get the leisure to repent in? TORONTO,. â€" Wallace was a to writing compared United Church mi G. D. Kilpatrick, Church, Hamilton, Mystery 1s One last word â€" get ou the water and cast from water to shallow. Lure your where he feels safer and at I in the cool depths. Making your own plugs is a great hobby. But here is another thing. You can lguy_fihe best plug The use of plugs is bécoâ€"mn:; yearly one of the finest and most sportsmanlike ways of stalking fish. So try to ease up on the musâ€" cle and put the plug where you want it, if only twenty feet away, This is wrong because the acâ€" tual throwing power is done by a quick forward snap of the wrist. Then again it seems to be the popular idea to throw the plug out of sight. (If possible). I‘ll grant you that sometimes it is necessary to reach a spot that is impossible to approach except by a very long cast. Here is a startling fact. Ninety per cent. of the fish caught while casting have been hooked (on casts between thirty and sixty feet. In casting, a great many people make the mistake of trying to throw the plug (baseball fash ion) with the whole body. Some of these facts apply to all game fish. But now that we‘re in the season of Muskic, Pike and Lake Trout, we can try them out this season. mt abstccinint ic B e lt hetuacdaci d in‘ 1915 and 1916 a navy as strong as she now has, Germany wouls have _ refrained from ‘provocative acts? It was not so muct our neuâ€" ltmlity as our unreadiness to detend that neutrality effectively that got us into war, _ This is the great les son of the ‘epoch â€" and this is the lesson which modern critics of neuâ€" trality refuse to heed. They talk _of embargoes, prohibitions, abstenâ€" tions. But these are for the most part selfâ€"denying ordinances. So long as we continue to build up our navy no nation, in the event of a neéw world war, will risk involving us as an enemy. Now that the cooler days are here and we can expect the first frosts, According to the Indians and our more modern guides. you will find they nearly all agree that September is the month when the big Muskies are caught. (That is the greater number), Here are a few tacts you might pag!( along in the old tackleâ€"box. Who can doubt, for exnr.'lplc, that if the Unit_edAStates nad possessed fo he By KEN EDWA W riter Put In cast from deep The _late Edgar «et out on C Shade our fish at hame | _ Severai times he reter'reu to "return ing prosperity" and on that thesis ne | built an argument that private relief | organizations should expect a larger measure of private ai¢ and that every individual has a greater obligation "to [ aid in the relief of distress in his or in her own community," | Turning to general â€" economc c. n ditions, Mr. Rooseveit asserted : "Nearly 6,000,00 more men and wo men are now at work in private inâ€" dustry. Three million others are en« gaged in useful work provided or asâ€" sisted by government. Pactory pay. rolls the first quarter of this year were more than $70,000,000 greater each week than they were in the first quarter of 1933." WASHI.\'GTONâ€"President Rooseâ€" velt told an annua meeting of the Moâ€" bilization for HMumap Needs income of the United States soon would e double what it was at the ow point of the depression and "confidence has re turned to the great mass of our peoâ€" ple." 4 graduate nbhhimiuziees | Manitoba, 4 64 â€", successful po, Roosevelt St.resges Return by ts on sig ing Prosperity" and Conâ€" |by has | taug fidence of People Web we Double Income Predicted Soon CHTOSSODE: scrrenereerncbicteate HOGH, AAGA: . asereirriarvesen Do., off trucks ....... Do, Off "ATS .......«c.. Good ewe and wether NADLIDS ©..â€"... s inrvveasieaties MDO.: : »OUINEN srsscrsaces BUHCHKS _ .....,.0â€"siecrelateendtanes 1DO.; KUMB . sssererrstrecss> > Sheep, good lig) ........ Do., ReRYIGS .....m.su0 1No., «OUff$ .0. 5... 000. Milkers and springers 3506 Calves, good and choice VBRULS 2s csectals. ols .. sB cce e Do., common ... | Stocker and feeder teers, Ontario grain, approximate prices. track shipping point â€" Wheat, $1.04 to $1.05; oats 40¢ to 41¢; barley 60¢ to 62¢; corn, 80c to 82¢; rye, 65 to 66¢ malting barley, ©8¢ to $1.01; milling oats, 42 to 44c. Do., medium .......... Do., common ......... Steers, over 1.050 lbs CBOROG ~>.,â€".192â€"000stsesese LIVESTOCK PRICEs Steers, up to 1,050 1bs. Manitoba burlei â€" No. 3 CW, 65%¢c; No. 1 feed screenings, $26.50 per ton. Do. co:amor Western Oats â€" No. 2 C.W., 49%¢; No. 3, C.W., 46%c; No. 1 feed oats, 47%¢; No. 1 feed, 44%e. Manitoba Wheat â€" No. 1 Northe® . $1.11 3â€"8; No. 2 Northern, $1.09 7â€"8; No. 3 Northern, $1.06 7â€"8; No. 4 Norâ€" thern, $1.03 7â€"8; No. 5 Northern, $1.01 7â€"8; Feed Wheai, 88 7â€"8c. Shortoning â€" Tierces, 10%¢; tubs, 10%¢; pails, 11%¢; prints, 11%¢. Tax to be added to ~11 shortening prices. , _ GRAI QUO . ai10Ns Foliowing are quotations on grain transactions for car lots, prices on basis cif. bay =~â€"ts: Lard â€" Pure tierces, 13¢, tuts, i13%&¢; pails, 14¢c; prints, 13%c. * Pork â€" Hams, 21¢; shoulders, 14%¢ butts, 17¢; loin. 21¢; picnies, 14¢. Wholesal: provision dealer: _ are quoting the following prices to the Toront. retail trede. » HENS Over 5 Ibs. ..... 4 to 5 IDS, smm 3% to 4 lbs. ... 3 to 3% lbs. ... Spring Broilers 1% â€" 214 lbs. .... Spring Chickens Under 4% lbs 44 to 5 lbs. ... 5 to 6 1DS, ... Over 6 lbs. ...... Old roosters ... WHOLESALE PROVISION PRICES BUTTER â€" No. 1 Ontario solids 24¢; No. 2, 23¢. PoULTRY â€" (Quotations in cents.) , common to med.... 5.00 EGGS â€" Prices to producers. cases returned basis, delivered Toronto: " B HBTEE |.colloinmnsioess . srrmeatiinnsensie .AE M WR@OHLTH _ cecyeccsiessvantcentigncrensnnten â€"| BWB Pullet$, "A" .......,.mcommitummemsmise / HORC United Fa mers‘ Coâ€"oper.tive Co. are paying the following price, for produce: ('C" government. Factory pay. first quarter of this year e than $70,000,000 greater than they were in the first 4haa l MARKETS PRODUCE r... _8 Dressed ; Live Dressed Milkfed| 10 11 13 14 11 12 11 10 $.25 8.50 2.50 1.50 1.15 1.15 8.00 3.15 4.25 8.590 60.00 $ 5.% 4.16 4.25 6.15 4.00 3.50 1.50 8.3 2.15 rom | /) @ "_ _6 ®merging op from one road to anothe» due care, losing control, s inattention, and excessive 3 77 per cent, of the cases the died as the result of a collis, a mechunically‘propefled veh the cyclist victimg 8938 wen 18 years of age. it Must be born, tve:, that cyclists q C@ss of road u““, vedestriang, Prop «‘" of motor cyclist The principal cau: «yclists include eme; from one road to due care, losing c imttention, and exe 77 per cent, of the c di“ HS th@ rhoule + The] Edinburgh the report on road â€" reveals th‘ .pm“‘m ('yc“l:. were klued ing the year.) The 6,32 accidents, anq rseponsible for no of them. years Due to crop _ fai lacked a barber. Th the schoolboard came of the communit; and out charge "as q pub Botn in Ontarin at. to make up books Mr. S ber of handâ€" Handicaps in accommodation the public school here were mei turning a poolâ€"room, lacking equpiment, into a schoolâ€"room advanced students. . The tea. t desk and bench were "home ma. Student‘s desks were borrowed f surrounding schools. An automo hubcap sufficed for a schoal han 21¢ 22¢ #21¢ 18¢ 71°° Mg" school teacher ana author of "Dance in the Buffaro Skull" and "The Northern Light" is busily engaged on a novel of "West ern life in the early days" und two long poems. He expressed a desire to tell of the plight of students and teachers in the crought areas and hoped some day to devote his entire time to writing. â€" z0 002. E°0°0, VICTA Sangerâ€" cock, Canadian poet, passed a year teaching in a oneroom schoolhouse here. From his experience may come verse of this dried out area 100 miles south of â€"Re-g‘m; The ’ The fight for possession of the household, however, continued in the courts, As late as 1900 Samuel Greer was endeavouring to prove ownership to the property. He died in 1925 no nearer‘a settlement than when the dispute first arose forty years before. Book of Verse May From Experience In West Western Drought Inspires Writer ; Fight For Aiter the chores were accomplish ed Mrs. Greer changed her mind and refused to budge from the family property. The battle ended for the time being with transfer of Mrs. Greer and her children to town. A parley was held. Mrs. Greer agreed to surrender providing the invaders caught and crated her chickens, and milked her cow. This was agreed to and for the next hour officers of the law were busily scouring the woods for errant chickâ€" to the car only to find the staunch defender hadâ€"+repossessed the nomeâ€" stead. With the defence relegated to Mrs, Greer officers of the law moveg in, seized the family furniture and loaded it on a box car. When they started to raze the house Mrs. Greer countered by removing her furniture from the car. Officers rushed back GLADMAR, Sask.â€" The Greer homestead was visited by Sheriff W. J. Armstrong and a large party of police officers samâ€" uel Greer met them with a barrage of buckshot. After the smoke of bat tle had cleared away several casual ties were taken to the hospital ana :he young homesteader removed to jail. Samuel Greer, redoubtable Irishâ€" man, was a squatter on property near Kitsilano Beach granted to railway interests. From 1895 onward ownership of the land was disputed in the courts and on the land. The most exciting episode occurred in 1897 when eviction papers were served on the Creer family riang _ p_l* aPaArt from the rians, Proporu’onluly. the _ motor cyclists is far greater, principal causes attributed to s include emerging op turning one road to another without are, losing SORIBOL ssdmmastsc. 1,376 Cyclists Killed VANCOUVER â€" An exciting batâ€" tle, verbal, legal and otherwise that rageJ 25 years around ownership of Greer‘s Beach, now Kitsilano Beach, was recalled by the death oi Mrs. Louis Greer, 89, a protagonist in the longâ€"drawn out struggle . Death of Woman. Recalis Long Drawnâ€"out Court Battle. ) Ontario, Mr, Sande: aite of the Universi â€"_ A number of big 1 poems bave been p ) the Western prairies taught schoo} for cyclists EOI:I.I'I the iburgh Scotsmu.l! writes, n road accidents in 1985 appalling fact that 1,376 e killed in Britair dur. h § s C 2 # schools. Ap automoblie Biced for a school bel! and p for a shortage of text. Sandercock wrote a numâ€" PWE borne i; no fewe» Calbattnt tsAE ceamcsss. Sink .. 1 a schoolâ€"room for its. The â€" teacber‘s were "home made." were borrowed from accommodation at taliures the town The chairman of ime to the reseue and cut hair with public service." report eyclists siDg or turning inother without atrol, gw.ninu' ssive speed. In ises the cyclists a collision wit» led vehicle, 0f 98 were unae:; _Sanderco Universit y mind for several thain Prsily _ of hig most ) inspired ies where analyses are hela , how 1.0%3% Btate death and studic Maharaj ; lived to t He has RADIO | outs in the Belgrade w entered th whort cireui The 4 ionshi; fen, o lowing Raym« We ants, Briga. increa eonsid found per. | €gg â€" €s SPEI ter a . bairdro: months. 22â€"CA} chain wa Jed up b; chai £c. TNFA N Mickey smokes a the dai than t« price « necess. He wa three stand: If + Stanc govern: weight tent, M milk wi BEER TALT! grair Effe on gra sulted TOI retary Produ: increa weight essary get m« ter. MIN Droug! Higher Spe« essenti of rai the sa when killed a par ficient ment, swiftn tacular traditi 40 [( eight averag hwev- of mor than a and th speed : Diesel the or: City, : Deservin some indics reaching is are offering to regain 1 lated list o mileaâ€"minu which is pr eof Railroad miles an 1 United St: world recor Lowell div Maine, an< over long < far to trav the last : there are 4: hh lhil’(f. ean trains ; andâ€" in ma five miles surprise to mequaintan c An the Lonoâ€"Lj In to I1 Quee aid re

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy