West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 17 Dec 1936, p. 3

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Bern. ." Mr. an: of un- a I uh um“ " pu- um! new]: anczuo, 000.000 ded , Barn- 'Inlml- Hid. t play better to so. an. et ren- the oo (rt-u ugene ur Apple Pie Fist Apple pie ranks first in desserts, it is revealed by a tabulation and. of meals served on the dining can Character That Comte Nobody ever takes seriously the old saying to the Mteet you can never trust a woman with . secret. Neither sex has a monopoly on wagging tongues. It is the character end the individual that counts, not the Bex.-- Windsor Star. Imus are voming tn all the time. The reason for replacing the native trees with species from this contin- one. Europe and Australia, is that the native trees of New Zealand are too slow of growth. although some of them produce excellent timber. Fortunately for the country. the im- ported trees thrive well everywhere. When will the Ontario Government show any symptom of being more alive than their predecessors were to the importance of starting reforesta- tion on an extensive scale? Every now and .hen we hear of new con- cession of pulpwood areas being made. apparently without any condi- tion of reforestation. If the oreaent system of granting such concessions needs to be alter- ed, then by all means change it, but get a beginning of reforestation made as soon as possible: and what is true of spruce is equally true of white pine.-Guelph Mercury. In New Zealand an intensive re- forestation has been carried on for more than a decade. Millions of larehes, oaks, sprucee. Douglas firs and ecualyptus have already been planted. and vast numbers of seed- linzs are coming in all the time. The reason for replacing the native trees with species from this contin- ent, Europe and Australia. is that the native trees of New Zealand are too slow of growth. although some of them produce excellent t_imher. There is no greater need in New Zealan ' than there is in Ontario for reforestation. probably there is not so much; but in New Zealand they are doing this work extensively, while in Ontario all that is now doing is little more than a mere pretence. Watch for Apoplexy Viewed from the stratosphere, ac- cording to ftiers. this terrestrial sphere 'N a deep purple. You can scarcely blame Mother Larth these days if she develops symptoms of apoplexy.--Windsor Star. . Another group was housed in the pressroom of I daily newspaper and one of che same size in a sound-proof room. I'he results were the same as in the first experiment. So, wording to this scientist’s findings. the neighbor's radio actu- ally lengthens your (by: when it is going full blast.-kitehener Record. A series of experiments on rats subjected one group to normal sounds and another equal litter to the roar of trains under on electric road. And strange to relate, the latte: lived 53 days longer than those kept in peace and quiet. The Hon. Dr. Simpson. Ontario's Minister of Education. has the right idea in his decision to overhaul the curriculum in the primary schools of the province so that emphasis will be placed on the "education of pupils for life rather than for the universi- ties." When this is accomplished we may expect to see fewer mUfiU in life and {ever failures in the higher seats of learning. - Brockville " corder and Times. Does Noise Praia. Ute? Along comes a Nipponese scientist in an attempt to knock the props from underneath anti-noise organiza- tions by furnishing a proof that noise prolongs life. Everyone have why this la felt more in the East and in British Columbia than in the pairie country. There is some improvement here, but with the normal production that can he reasonably expected next year. thew provinees should go forward to a much greater extent. There ts plenty of ground for hope and eonh- uerwe.--Winnipee Free Press. Anyone who think! that this is idle optimism need only took " the vari- ous indicee of the economic condition of the eountrr-- in addition to the trade figure. - the increase in the physical volume of Mailing. in the total of bank debits, in the retail aalea throughout the country. and in the thrures Ihowing the general economic index a reported by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The evidence all points in the same direc- tion. Canada is on the up grade and m'aking good progress. Reaso- Fa Chttimism Canndu has marched far bark on the row) to recovery. to a point which is perhaps safer nnd more wholesome than 1929. in the opinion of The Ottawa Journal . . . VOICE THE WORLD AT LARGE Time To Get Busy Education For Life CANADA t system of granting 3 needs to be alter- means change it, but of reforestation made ble: and what is true ually true of white of the Proved If there is any lingering doubt concerning the advisability or value of toxoid treatments, Brockville's record or not one case of diphtheria, during the year ought to dispel] tt beyond qusetion.-Brockville Recor- der and Times. Look to the Empire The Americans carry a million passengers a year through the air. We carry a quarter of a million. The American airplanes have a longer haul than ours For, though they carry only four times as many pas- sengers, they fly nine times as many miles. And, of course, the ativan. tages of the air as a medium of transport are displayed in the long tlight. Does that mean that the Am. ericans enjoy an advantage over us which we cannot overcome? Not I bit. We have greater opportunities for lone-distance than any country on earth. In the Empire! In the Apropos this subject it is interest- ing to note from a report in the Glasgow Herald that the demand for Canadian apples is such that whole. sale prices are from 60 to 75 cents per case higher than a year ago, and that at the particular week-end at which the paper was published. not a single Canadian apple was left in the wholesalers' hands, and the whole of Possibly for the first time in its history, North Bay will this year en- joy , balanced budget. Advertising DOES pay. - Strat- ford Beacon-Herald. was pleasing situation in due to city council's close adherence to the program outlined at the commence- ment of the term, and to supervision by the Department of Municipal Af- tairs-North Bay Nugget. must wash 1,000 dishes " each wool in a sink lea than two feet square. Dining car stewards. waiters sud chefs go through a training school before going on the road. One large eastern railroad had three such schools where there ere reproduc- tions of the epace equipment limite- tions encountered in ectuel service. --Toronto Telegram. a cargo due there on the Monday was sold in advance. The timing car stew-rd knows that out of every 100 diners. 85 will order coffee Ind 15 tea; that " will ask for roast beef end the rest will order chicken. fUh. chops end steak. in the order named. Amerie" railway dining can serve 25,000,000 mull each your. yhich are prepared in a kitchen lea than even feet wide and 16 feet long. One In: none aometknu of railroads and announced by tht Association of American Railroads. Here are othe: "eta on the food likes ot the travelling public. Science Service reports: {BOW TIE ,.__. Our Applet in Glasgow PRESS Ms on var! Nivl Toma. mas no, or COURSE as Dossm NEED It) we mom-R Tn: as m: 1'0sz mum 551 mm w. / . A. 5:15 comsmv 515% up soiiiaiis HE can, 115 100%an Q6814 Rama WHEN MIR mm AS wen tff Hi2 Norms 10 A am CALLS To HURRY ot', HAVE HER WAY, AND was mo new: on 411’ ties some fo IE mt mm as am: If tthh am mm i/ citl/, THE EMPIRE M5 on m! w ets am Manama sfovs meES Yo trijtii, mums mayo. cans NO. or bMrt as ARMS AND new: OM oost new MANAbEs It; TE A Bow IOURSE HE DOESN'T HANDS tf E: HE ‘(IES A BOW To H15 6trfmrgeftytl GED m awe MOWER KNOT WITH SHOE was [IE H15 TIE M '1) a" t t f, t? '"'I _y,f" t) "V . '\ U3 l v."," td ' , THE EMPIRE (Miriam 1m. tt as arm my LONDON. - King Edward VIII abdieates and the Duke of York as- cends the throne. This was the ef- fect of formal announcements mum. tn the assembled houses of Cords and Commons. The Duchess of York becomes Queen. The announcement to this mist momentous meeting of parliament in all the history of British royalty, came in the form of a direct message from Edward as King, which was read to the Commons by the Speak- The King is saying fanewell to the England he loves, to go to the woman he loves more. er, being repeated simultaneously in the House of Lords. development of - route: over its vast expat-Undo,, Sunday Ex- An experiment in the housing of the populations of big cities in a new war is to be carried out by the Liverpool municipelity on its housing estnte It Speke. where the corpora- tion is planning to erect 5,000 houses " 1 cost of £2,100,000. The scheme altar " providing not merely a. dormr tory for the lower-paid workers, with the resultant anti-social segregation of one clues, but n complete self- contained unit accommodating all classes. A new idea for the safeguarding of pedestrians is incorporated in that through trathe and buses will not be allowed within the estate. Planned in the form of an oval, the estate will be completely encircled by a ring road, which will carry all through traffle Ind buses, but the layout is Duke of York Becomes The Empire’s Sovereign Following Announcement of King Edward Vlll's Abdication Duchess of York Becomes Queen. HIS MAJESTY THE KING lb, GLUYAS WILLIAMS He has signed away his great throne and his heritage as King-em- peror and the Duke of York will be crowned in his stead as George w. Neceuury Legal Steps The following legal steps are ne- cessary in the event of abdication: 3. Parliament taproves the abdi- cation and passes an act establish. ing the line of succession, or, actual- ly names the new monarch. 2. The cabinet through the prime minister, communicates the King's notice to parliament. _ - _ L The King signs and presents to his ministers a notice of his desire to abdicate. such tint no resident will have more thanaqunrterofamilctowalkto I bug stop. -_ _ - No buses will front on to the ring traffie road, but only to the sub. sidiary roads of the estate, and be- tween these ad the min road will eiretini the whole nun. In one direction the oval will be dissected by a central boulevard, running from end to end, but not open to through tmftie or bus trat- fic. On this will be situated shops. clinics, doctors' and dentiata' surger- ies, 1 library, cinema and all the necessary social amenities. Work will be provided for 2,000 building operatives for two and I half years and for about 350 men for three years on road and sewer eonstruetion.-Industriat Britain. Sites have been reserved for seven schools, several churches, ehildrerN playgrounds, rest gardens and I large recreation ground. 4. The privy council meets and Ll-al AM, belt 150 feet wide en- ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Thus dispelling a common concept among parents that it is the healthy thing to do to let their child run abort in the snow with bare knees, Dr. Smelling goes on to say that in clothing children and infants during the winter, the common error in to "It in Just " ridiculous for a child to go out in cold weather with I sleeveless cont " to go with bare knees," writes Dr. C. E. Snelling in the current issue of "Health." bility of another reigning "queen Bess", so took the spotlight that even the Duke said his awn chief claim to fame seemed to be that he was her father. One of the most prominent phases of the Duke's public lite is his desire to promote a closer relationship among various classes of England, and no other member of the royal family, it has often been said, can lay claim to a more strikingly suc- cessful achievement than his in this Children Are Individuals and They Should Be Clothod Accordingly Advises Tomato Medico. Doctor Bans Other official missions took him to Norway. Italy, France and Belgium. But in their "vacation" times he and his family have preferred to remain in the British Isles. It was not the Duke’s position as possible King, but the birth of Prin- cess Elizabeth that captured public interest in his family - and again the Duke remained in the back. ground. The lively, golden-haired princess, in whom the nation saw the possi- bility of mother reigning "queen Bess", so took the spotlight that even the Duke said his own chief claim to fame seemed to be that he He went on his firet official mis- sion to a foreign court in the sum. mer of 1022 when he acted as "koom", or sponsor, at the wedding of King Alexander of Serbia to the second daughter of the King of Rou- mania. Later that year he represented his parents at the coronation of the King and Queen of Roumania and was so popular that many a Rou- manian child was given the name of York. In 1924 he and his wife went to East Africa and in 1927 they visited Australia and New Zealnnd and re- turned to England by way of the West Indies. Not by any means the globe trot- ter that Edward vm has been, the Duke nevertheless has seen a fair share of the world. When he was 18, in the midst of his naval career, he visited the West Indies, Canada and Newfoundland on his training cruise. And he has counted those times happiest when they could turn from the press of official life--partitnr larly to the country. "it is to my country house in Windsor Great Park," he once said. "that I gladly turn when I want to find a little pence after the bustle and labors of public life." During his father's lifetime, the Duke had already established, in his London "palaee without a name", 145 Piccadilly, and' his country home, White Lodge, Windsor, a reputation as a homebody. The quiet and simplicity of his do- mestic life then was overshadowed only by the family life which formed so much of King Geortte's appeal to his subjects. Proud of Wife Of his wife, whom King Edward often chamtsgly called "Queen Eliza. beth", he has said simply: "1 am a very lucky man to have a Scottish woman to share my life." 5. Parliament's action is commum cated to the dominion Parliaments, which ratify or reject it. King George VI The new King, while he has led an active public life, is more of a home. body than Edward VIII. waits on the new sovereign to notify him of his uscent to the throne. new I? lltmrrtE NEW CARS CRMRIEN em me new}: Bare Knees Writes the Oshawa Timrtr-.-B. K. Sandwell. editor of Saturday Night, who recently spoke before the ah. nwa branch of the university alumni. stated during the couran of a Hart Fluse debate that newspaper edit- on; were "uauuily" intelligent; tash. ion (society and cooking page wanton vole "moderately" intelligent; re- po'ters were “nlweys” intelligent Those who continually critiriu newepepere night rend mark, learn and inwardly digest these statements of Mr. Sendwell who should be on authority on the matter. l "In dressing the bub) the mother should use a minimum of regular clothes and make up for the changes from outdoor to indoor atmosphere. The regular clothes of the child should be devised to meet the re. quirements when the child is indulg- ing in moderate activity at the usunl temperature of the house, or in other words, so that the child will not perspire under those conditions. When the child is going out of doors or resting indoors the requirements can be met by the use of cute! gur- ments, such as sweaters. ‘egglngs. and coat, or the combination gar- ment. The child should Wear rub- hers or overshoes when playing out in the wet. udvisalle though not nevessaryd There are certain conditions in whichl wool is not advisable-the (-hild’sl 'ihysician will advise the mother re-l starding this. The gertrudes may be of flauelette or cotton; the dress! should be of cotton These should, not be so long as to restrict the! normal and necesary moVements of‘ the extremities of the baby. The stockings for the baby. uades threcl months, should be the knitted knee- length bootee. After three months.’ the full-length stocking of wool. un-i less contra-indicated. should bei used. The mitts for outside or night! wear should be knitted woollen.l roomy and long enough to fasten; with pins to the sleeves of the outer, garments. A silk-lined bonnet is) preferable. Sleepers with the teeel enclosed and plenty of room may be used for the olden infant and child; a sleeping bag with zipper fastening are useful in keeping the baby GOV-1 ered while sleeping out of doors. "In general. the articles of an in- fant’s winter wardrobe are diapers, shirts, eertrudes, dresses, stadium. mitts, nitthtgowns, bonnets, uweaters, sleepers and sleeping bags. Binders are never used after two weeks of age. The diapers should absorb the moisture freely so that one recom- mends bird's eye, the knitted cotton fabrics and a recently developed ty " which is composed of numerous lay- ers of cheese cloth sewn together. The disct.ru'able. tissue napkin . hich may be inserted inside the regular diaper is very useful. The shirts should " of wool mixture with cut- ton rayon, o: silk and the. sleeve is "No mother in extremely tstraight- ened circumstances would be guilty of underclothing a child," Dr. Snell- ing writes. “Overrlothing fatigue: 1 child, causes excessive perspirution and lowers the resistance. Damp clothing i not healthy in anyone. let alone the infant or growing child." use too rruck clothing, rather than too little. He's An Authority jam» Another member of the Round! hmily, Elliot, is vice-president of Hunt Radio, ine.. in chuge of the Southwestern division " Fort Worth. Texas. Recently the enmemem or Frnnklin D. Roosevelt Jr. and Etna. du Pont, memben of I family that gave the President romidenble on- position during the campaign, was announced. Mr. BoetNeer is a veteran news- puper man, having been assistant chief of the Chicago Tribune’e Washington bureau, in post he left in 1934 to become Assistum lo Will Hays, motion-picture “cur". Hie wife. the former Anna Roosevelt Dell, may join the staff of the Poet Intelligencer. Me. Hearst indicated that he would not interfere in the future policies of the paper. "You can't concentrate and work in D mehopo1is"-al- O’Neill. Observes the New York Ttmes:-- Politicians have an adage that goes: "if you cttat't lick your enemy, join him." Last week William [Randolph Hearst, who we. a bitter pre-election foe of the New Deal. engaged l'reni- dent Rooeevelt'e eon-imluv. John Boettiger. to publish his Seattle Post Intelligence: The appointment followed the settlement of e throe- months-old strike celled by member- of the American Newspaper Guild against the paper. " We must plan for u p ogreuive- ly rising ruse level that will even- tually create production for n com- fort living standard. That industry an eventually pay the comfort wage in unquestioned. for, provided distribution of income in equitable. conceit] operation of our industril. will in incl! create the wealth Incen- ury to my it. “Step. tow-rd thin gull must come progressively. We an begin with an effort to bring every temily up to the minimum health standard. end today between 10,000,000 and Iii.. 000,000 American families are liv.. ing below the standard." groups, tum part ut would have an attract bring motor tourism f miles as wvll as plc eating and a (cation: Alberta people. The story pa1avontologists toll of the live: of the stance and mighty dinosauri which roamed tluuugh cer- tain the” of southern and central Alberta in the dawn nee n- {asexua- ting ml in part of Alberta's hiss tory Ibout which little In men to the people Ot the orovinco Such I Imitation would be oven-om by the development of the proposed dino. saur park. (on! not by the America Immu- ot [chol- In its monthly our", d bushels. Only by such um Increases. all One i to 10 per cent. increne thin your in not enough for workers, aid the federation, asserting that “in the months the“ we must plan for general and recurring we increase. throughout all industry." The fed- erntion added: Observes the Calgary Herald Alberta has a unique naturui source in its dinosaur "eemeteri on the Red Deer river, mud n ".0 ment has been startod in the Fla ville urea to intent-sf the l'unm. 1nd Peder-l Cowman-mp m tet" tuHishmcnt of a dinosuu, (an l no! where in the region Kn. \‘.u aw "bcd lands" locaud Hit-Iv _ turd. of trade Hf “vuu'.~ lo south. and Hanna. to 'he “mm interesting themsoes " the m... ai. tt appears to he one MM!” gone'ul support. the fedeiation, "GU we add market mt enough for and prtduction and full employment." The geology of the "bad In the Stovovllle Itatrm proves the valley of the Red Deer there in older than the Roda; “in. Million, of years 11,50 ttion was the habitat of mink ouurl of various spades I remains of these extinct r were found there a gamut: and a number of tyxpcditiour out by large museums In Canada and the Unitcd 5mm cred a large numlwr of cxcvll rare specimens. Pl'ufvsaru I Browr of New Yor, C.o.r an splendid syn-lmcn dian musuems In the u: hem: bereft of " cariouds c York Mu: The Stern If a amour thc Steven] "HIV ultion. It is argued, and so: if 3 amount park w Lita: t tr our WASHINGTON. - "Dinosaur Park" Mr. Hearst Hires w l ' re prof Wan Rind Urged att cu m New Yor. M tind n ma it cationnl exhibit othe men to it mturut " ce tttetorivs tttirc " I tv0ve Mouth the ttr 'erti "I I'm] trut 'F m um 08 l?- of h tt " .',Wti% v: I f . " $2

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