In an exhibition game «¢aged at Chatsworth Monday night _ between Chatsworth and some of Durham‘s Centre Grey League team, Chatsworth handed out an $%â€"4 thrashing to the locals. The game was fast and there was plenty of action,. The proceeds Chesley of the game go towards the purchase uf new equipment for the Chatswortb boys . Durham : Goal, Brown; Defence., Vollett, Black; wings, Lloyd, Kearns; centre, Murdock;, alternates, Collinâ€" son, Falkingham, Braithwaite. GOOD FARM FOR SALE 200 acre, in Holland township, 2 miles northâ€"east of Dornoch. Good brick house and tarn, also good. orâ€" chard . Soft and hard water conâ€" venient. Apply at Review Office. Chatsworth: Goal, C. Rowe; de fence, E. McFarland, C. Dudgeon; wings, E. Woods, C. Be‘l; centre, M. McFarland; altervates, J. Maher, Mcâ€" Donald, Walker and J. Wood:. Referee, W. Snell. CA NA DIA N NATIO N AL W.O.H.A. JUNIOR STANDING Goals Won Lost For Against ATTRACTION â€" DETROIT â€" JANUARY 24 TH National Hockey Leagueâ€"Detroit Red Wings vs, Montr Equally low fares from all adjacent C.N.R. Station The spectacular skiing depicted in the ahava Arawine af Maunt 4 in the above drawing of Mount Norquay near Banff in the Canâ€" adian Rockies will become an acâ€" complished fact at the Dominion Champions@aips of the Canadian Amateur Ski Association to be beld there from March 5 to 8. Ouly four miles by good motor road from Banff, which is situated 4,â€" 500 feet above sea level on the main line of the Canadian Pacific Railway, Mount Norquay is but one of the many fine skiing disâ€" tricts which is earning a worldâ€" wide reputation for the Canadian Competitor3 and visitors to Banff for the men‘s Dominion championships and the women‘s Western Canadian championships bave some pleasant surprises in HOCKEY :: _ ROUND TRIP RAIL TRAVEL RAR@GAINS _ _ From DVRHANM JAN. 22 and 23 to CHICAGO $8.‘ * xt Lob ts d ‘g" pfeb" e + .n 3 f 10.3 ts 98 s o ol e tinye, * * 0 h. Wil "L 4240 ‘ -S‘“ ,5:1'3‘ * P&. '.:‘.",‘ ' Sb ‘; vite ‘,; * k# * iz * ..."n"_ ‘J: / zx8 TX / * 4 a 84A & 4# i ; & .44 * * u .55)4‘&4 s w * % 4«‘ ‘A 4+A : TK & & ‘&4 “": *}-'_’! * ""‘"‘3?%'5?: "ras:* _ «28 «c é:‘ 1;: 2 5t '/’.‘â€"’t‘; “‘m ‘;'- ;M C on * 5 + 1:‘ “}“E‘v'\} . f ‘, ‘ ‘siï¬.v%*!' CÂ¥ @4 ‘ .‘J * g4. :‘."\1 Banff Prepares for Ski Championships ( JANUARY 22 TO Return Limits from Azcats. ASK FOR HANDBILL~ L ) th [s$ C#A 24, / *99h _a® . p~ i .:;:“.‘\n. 5* 9w C » * + °* ;:‘f, 2 6A« â€" * &** NB "â€â€™â€œï¬ i. x \ e * # y o P y 7 whty sn jX «3 4 en i "A W N u* Vhinlz e C \;. ")«. U ho M Sn hy * . 0 Cmy 182 o l a k CR *T, 4* P // . ‘ of *51 //i ‘:P?iflj x 74 ?GIp B 1e ie wron SCHOOL NURSE A COMmING MUNICIPAL NECESSITY Whatever was done in the schools of fifty years ago will not do now. The present does not owe the past anything inâ€"the line of _ advanced thought . Fifty years ago, a child might have let a bad tooth fester, neglect‘ng medica!l attention and thus injuring his general health, but, such iâ€" deemed to be gross carelessness at the present time. Selfâ€"prevention is the modern idea and any normalâ€" minded being will concede it is the proper view to take. That is where the virtue of a school nurse is conâ€" ceded by all parents of school age cliiGren. In her weekly or monthly rounds, she detects little weaknesses in eye, ear, nose or throat troubles that would be overlooked otherwise. A weakness mot urdoubtedly has an effect on school studies. The local educationists of Walkerâ€" ton are endeavoring to have such a public utility in their midst as _ a school nur e. The Department of Edâ€" ucation gives a grant of $10 per anâ€" num per class room for town schools and a similar sum for each rural school under the jurisdiction of _ a nurse. It is thus considered that the financial obligation incurred by the hiring of such a young woman could be met with but a small extra burdâ€" en on the local tax payers. Frequentâ€" P. RAMACE. Editor and Proprietor WINDSOR DETROIT store for them. The best Canâ€" adian and American skiers will compete on trails and jumps difâ€" ficult cnough to try the nerve of the best of them. Pleasure skiing is particularly attractive throughâ€" out ths beautiful mountain disâ€" trict. All the local and many imâ€" ported amusements will fill in the spare hours. With the assistance of the Doâ€" minion Government, the slopes of 8,275 Mount Norquay have had jumps, downhill runs, and slalom courses built on them equalling the best in the world. The downâ€" hill run, starting 7,500 feet up the mountain, drops 3,000 feet in a mile and a half. Jumps of 250 feet or more are expected from the new jump built on the style of the ones at Garmisch, Gerâ€" many, and Lake Placid. Th: L w ngs vs, Montreal Maroons .N.R. Stations. TI8F $4.10 Plans are also being made to detain some of the competitors as guests of Banff to show them other less acc s ible but possibiy better skiing grounds, notably Skoki, which is 14 miles from Lake Louise by ski trail; Sunâ€" shine, which is eight miles by motor and eight miles by ski from Banff; and Assiniboine, which is 25 miles by ski trail from Banii slalom course is at angle of 30 to 40 degrees. Entertainment for visitors, after the day‘s skiing programme has been completed, will include skating, hockey matches, curling, moonlight sleighing and tobogzaning, snowâ€" shoeing, dancing, and â€"â€" of all things for a winter resort â€" outâ€" door swimming in a naturally warm sulphur pool. 1y a local nurse can be secured if cation blank conta‘ning a series of ly a local nurse, properly qua ified, questions which applicants are expecâ€" can be secured at a moderate figure. ted to an wer. The questions are: ! Engaging a school nurse is a modâ€". â€" Does your mind â€" concentrate _ or ern public utility asâ€"et. \skip around? | o mmA ltz m | Can you plan well and carry out DRIVING PERMITS \ywir plans, weighing the consequentâ€" Too EAsy TO GET es ahead of time? Do yoi act impulsive‘y? Sir Robert Borden, J. A. Stoneman Are you inclined to think yourself nf the Railway Commission, and Othe" misundersto(4? speakers at the frst day‘s session s Are you persevereing? of the Nationalâ€" Safety Conference, what habits or vices do you have accorling to the Oitawa Journal €¥ ;, fight down in yourself? Sir Robert Borden, J. A. Stoneman nf the Railway Comumission, and other speakers at the frst day‘s sessions of the Nationalâ€" Safety Conference, accorling to the Oitawa Journal exâ€" pres ed the opinion it is too easy for Canadians to secure permits to drive automobiles, that there â€" should be uniformity of tests as among the provinces. Certainly the examination of new drvers in Ontario does not err on the sile of severity, and if permits _ are refused such cases must be rare. A permit represents little more than the ability to stop and start a car, to back up on a clear road, to turn corâ€" ners. Its possession does not prove that the driver bas had care, caution and conrtey drilled into himâ€" or herâ€"has some «nowledge of traffic laws and rules, has common sense and good judgment, a decent regard for his own safety and the safety of others, will not insist to the point of danger upon his legal rights. Whether good drivers are born or made is open to argument, perhaps. Temperament undoubtedly has someâ€" thing to do with driving skill or the lack of it, but adequate training, we should think, is equally important, It is quite p‘ain that there are many drivers who would not hold licenses if the standards were fairly high, and the elimination of bad drivers unâ€" questionably would have its effect on the accident list. Some time we shall get around to taking this matter seriously. The test of drivers then will be‘ mors than perfunctory, and holders of licâ€" enses will have to pass this test at regular intervals. The superintendent of the Public Employment Bureau of New York has devised a vocational guidance appliâ€" ¢ P Y iY alts:,"* SELFâ€"STUDY | The first certificate, he said, would come at the second year end of high school to boys who have reached the school age linut and were not conâ€" tinuing their education; the second two years later at the stage now repâ€" \resented by pass matriculation, and , the third at the end of the fifth _ or | sixth year. | _ _Edwards was born Sept. 13, 1907, ‘ at Georgetown, Gritih Guiana, to Fitz B. EAwards and*Julia M. Edâ€" wards. He was the twelfth child of | thirteen children in that family. _ His education begun in Georgetown , British Guiana, where he attended :school and college, wa= continued at New York University, and has been Do you consider yourself absolutely honest * Government Considering Eliminating Matriculation "Today there is a certain conflict of interet between technical educaâ€" tion and the itraditional _ academic form of education". _ Dr. McArthur slated. Now that technical education is established, however, the time has come when we ought to break down the fall between the two types and we should merge them as intimately as possible into one system. The type of edueation provided by technical and vocational wchools is much better for meeting the demands of a large body of students than the academic course, Dr. McArthur statâ€" Are you wilfing to pay the price in hard work to attain success? Are you conscientious? Dr. McArthur deplored what he referred to as a certain type of feelâ€" ing of inferiority connected with the technical schools and the soâ€"called "Aub courses" they provided, designed to meet the requirements of boys not able to keep pace with academic work. "That feeling should be completely eradicated," he continued. "We in this province cannot afford to build an educational program which admits validity of these utterly faulty social standards." The Ontario Department of Educaâ€" tion is considering the wisdom of elâ€" iminating entirely matriculation . exâ€" aminations and is considering . the possibility of creating a system . of three secondary school graduation class certificates, Dr. Duncan McArthâ€" ur, deputy minister of education told a luncheon meeting of the Canadian Manufacturers association at the Royâ€" al York hotel yvesterday. "Let me tell you that every emâ€" ployer who has insisted on a matricâ€" ulation has done a gross injustice to our technical sy:tem," said Dr. Mcâ€" Arthur. ‘"‘The deputy minister also criticized employers of labor in many cases reâ€" quiring matriculation standing from boys who applied for a job. in a boy sent to you a relatively high standard of ability of practical skill and of moral integrity, but these qualities which are of supreme imâ€" portance to you are not those which we can test by any type of written examination . "You as cmployers of labor," _ he declared, "have the right to expect "You are in much safer hands with a judgment of the school principal in these matters than with a departâ€" mental certificate." Canada‘s AlkRound Athlete There would he said be three coursâ€" es leading to these certificates: First a general course; second, a course leading to some type of graduation certificate _ taken at any technical school, with core of cultural subjects but emphasizing shop department work, Arafting and appliance science and commercial. Possibly oneâ€"third more than are now registered in technical schools would receive a better training there than they do at present in academic schools, Dr. McArthur estimated. Dr. Phil Edwards, interne at Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Captain of Canada‘s 1936 Olympic track and. field team, has the great honor of beâ€" ing judged Canada‘s outstanling athâ€" lete in 1936, by five eminent wportsâ€" man of Canada. Dr. Edwards wlll‘ thus be the first name engraved on‘ Lou Marsh‘s memorial column _ of. marble, donated by Chas. Ring, Torâ€" onto, as a memorial to his â€" late friend‘s outstanding sportsmanship. What limitations or defects have DURHAM REVIEW It‘s never the job or its wages i That determines the worth of Or a paltry ard mean forty bob, : There‘s a job for the man who C make it, It‘s always the manâ€"not the io completed at McGill University, Monâ€" treal. Today Dr. Edwards is an inâ€" terne at Royal Victor‘a hospital there. In 1928, Edwards first competed for Canada, at Amsterdam, Holland, at the Olympic games. He made his mark there as an outstanding haltâ€" miler and a good fellow. In 1930 and 1934 he competed for Britith Guiana at British Empire gamesâ€"the first at Hamilton, Ontario, the second at Lonâ€" don, England. His wonderful efforts at Amsterdam eand Los Angeles Olymâ€" piads are hi:story. H‘s racing the past year at the Berlin games, and his record for the year was sufficientâ€" ly outstanding for him to win â€" what flo other Canadian athlete has won to date.... three recognitions from sport juries in Canada in one year. SIMPLE METHODS Where ice is readily ava‘lable, the storage of a few blocks of it is a very simpie matter. Any unoccupied cornâ€" er of a shed will serve the purpose. A rough board enclosure, ten feet square and cight feet high, states the Dominion Department of Agriculture pamphlet, "Simple Methods for the Storage of Ice," will hold enough ice to provide 5y pounds per day for 130 days, after allowing for a reasonable amount of wastage. The smaller the quantity stored, the larger is the proâ€" portion of waste. The space of one foot, to be filled with sawdust, should be left between the ice and the boards, and the ice should be covered with about _ the same thickne=s of sawdust. It is the sawdust which keeps the ice from melting. The bottom of the enclosure should be covered with about one foot _ of sawdust. If the soil underneath . isâ€" impervious clay. it will be all the betâ€" ter if there i> a few inches of gravel under the sawdust. In putting the ice in the enclosure, the boards can be taken away from one side _ and replaced after the ice is in position. The drier the sawdust, the better the ice will keep, and it is a good plan to throw _ out the Ariest of the sawdust from t‘me to time as the ice is being removed during the sumâ€" mer. Under cover this sawdust will continue to dry out and thus be in a better condition to be used again in the following year. Several plans anc specifications for icehouses, including an icewell, are given in the pamphlet which may be obtained on _ request from the _ Publicity and _ Extension Branch, Dominion Department of Agâ€" riculture, Ottawa. It‘s the faith and the courage he uses In doing the best that he can. It‘s the vision that carries him onâ€" ward To success with a heart all athrob. For the man who is winning the honâ€" Is the man who is making the job. For no one will carry him upward; He must climb to the top by himâ€" self. If he falters or strays from a purpose He is apt to be left on the shelf. Though the job may be humble or menial, Irksome, distasteful, or lone, There‘s always some chap who can use it, For an upward stepping stone. And though the toil may be weary And rewards seem uncertain â€" and slow, Dame Fortune is ready and waiting, For the chap full of hustle and go. He who bends to the task in dead earnest With a courage that no one can rob, For the job doesn‘t count in _ the struggle As much as the man on the job. So whether we toil for a living At a desk or a lathe or a loom, In the fields that are ripe for a harâ€" vest, Or deep in a mine‘s leaden gloom. And whether we draw out ten thousâ€" GOT INnDiGEsTION? maÂ¥yBE ITS A GUILTY conscience An article in the American Weekly, with next Sunday‘s Detroit Times, reports that science has discovered your stomachâ€"ache can come from remorce or worry and the chronic dysâ€" pepsia of many reformers is caused by their knowledge that they themâ€" selves have done wrong. If you tell it wellâ€"your ad. will sell. â€" Advertise in the Durham Reâ€" view for results. THE MAN ON THE JOB FOR ICE STORAGE 0t the job. â€"B.LL .L. |_ Mrs. dGeorge Reay gave a reading ‘Home‘: reading by Mrs George Turrâ€" !bnu ‘Wuich are you‘; solo by Mrs F. Torry ‘Beckoning Hands‘; A spelling match was had with Misses Jean and Ada Reay as captains, AMa‘s slde |\ winning. _ Grace was sung and a deâ€" liciows lunch _ served by the hostess ‘and assistants. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs Alfred Bailey on Feb. Lth, those to brinx Mr and Mrs Ceorge Bell visited with their cousin Mr Alex Cranston the fir.t of the week. Mrs Dowsling and two children reâ€" turned to Toronto after â€" spending some time here. Mr and Mrs Malcolm McKechnie and Joan were visitors the first . of the week with Mr and Mrs E. Wise, Allan Park. + Old neighbors were sorry to Jlearn of the death of Mr. Wm. Hill, which took place at the home of his sister Mrs. Turnbull of South Bentinck. Although â€" in poor health for some years his sudden passing came as a sbock. Mr. Hill was always honest in his dealings and when in bealth was very industrious and a good neighbor. _ We exterd sympathy to the bereaved sisters and brothers. Mr. James Watson and son D. L. of Toronto were callers with friends here on Monday. Recent visitors with Mr and Mrs J. Crutchley. are Mr. John Crutchley and Mr and Mrs Chas. Moore of Durâ€" ham, also Mr and Mrs Lorne McNalâ€" Construction of the Ragged Rapids power development on the Muskoka River as the first step in the plans of the Ontario Hydroâ€"Electric Power Commission to make the Georgian Bay system independent of Niagara power for a gsneration at least, will be under way some t‘me in 1937, Mydro Chairman T. Stewart _ Lyon said last Monday. ly. _Mr. David Watson left this . week to #pend a couple of months with his brother in Toronto. Mr. Francis Meloshe has gone to Owen Sound to attend Busine s Colâ€" lege. Mr. George Scheuerman and «ons cut up a large pile of wood for Mr. James Heslip inst week. Mr. Lincoln HMorst spent Sunday with friends at the Rocky. GZORGIAN HYDRO Mr and Mrs Colin McArthur and family of Owen Sound spent Sunday with Mr Nicholos Meloshe and famâ€" ily. Mrs J. Hcft spent a few Aays with Mrs M. Kenny. The cost of the projected Ragged Rapids plant will, in Mr. Lyons‘ opinion, approximate $1,000,000. _ Deâ€" velopment of the several other availâ€" able sites on the Muskoka will bring the ultimate expenditure on this riv~ er close t o the $3,000,000 mark, he The Muskoka has an est‘mated caâ€" pacity of 40,000 horsepower, which, when completely harnessed, will make available more than double the enerâ€" gy required to serve the Georgian Bay system at the present time. Unâ€" «i1 the system can _ use all power which the proposed new developments will provide, the surplus power will be taken over to Hanover, Mr Lyâ€" on stated, and fed down into the Niaâ€" gara system. The Allan Park U.F.W.O. club met at the home of Mrs George Turnâ€" bull with 23 members and visitors present. Roll call, _ "Something to laugh at" was well responded to Minutes were tnon read and adopted. Letters of thanks were read from Mrs. Grat Wise for the lovely boxes received at Christmas. _ Correspondâ€" ence from head office was reai by sec‘y. The sec‘y was authorized to write to sec‘y of head office and inâ€" vite him to attend our next meeting if possible. We would like a full atâ€" tendance of members and visitors. New Year visitors with Miss Ada‘ Barks were Mrs Laverne MacCallum and family, Mrs Jerry Pitson, all of: Detroit; Mr and Mrs John Boyd and| family of Durham; Misses Marion| and Heather Boyd, Mr Cowlie and Mr Abbot, all of Toronto. | Mrs Mike Kenny spent a day re cently with Mrs. Keiffer. Dr. and Mrs Wolfe of town spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs Mal Macâ€" Innes. cake ‘being _ Mrs George H. Torry, Mra George Turnbull and Mrs Grat Order your job printing from the ALLAN PARK U. F. W. O. GLENROADEN MAY STAND FREE late Mr and Mrs Thomas | Fulton, She had reached her 80th birthday on Christmas. _ Mrs Derby was q much respected woman and an . dent worker both in the home ang the church of which she belonged ard attended when health permitts4 She was associated with the _ Re) Cross Society, later with the W .Ms of the United church. The past few weeks she has been tenderly careq for by her caughters Mary, Mrs,. g. Vickers of Lamlash and Jessie, Mra Andrew Green of Paisley and _ sop ;M with whom she resided . Ap. other son Austin of Peace River 4s ‘u‘d is also bereaved of a mother, |\ The funeral on Saturday afternoon was largely attended . Friends and !mm ecame to pay their last reâ€" speots and filled the church to ove» fiowing. Services were conducted by the pastor Rev. W. H. Smith of Purham and interment was made in glh-dea cemetery . . The pallbearers were grandsons of deceased: Mossrs Wilfred, Fred, Clareace and Gordon lVicIlen, Cameron Green and Gordon \ Hopkins. Last Wednesday evening saw passing of one of the pioneer dents of this locality by name June Derby, eldest daughter of late Mr and Mrs Thomas P Mrs H. McCracken and Cliffor ited recently with Mr and Mrs don MeCracken, Darkies® Corner Mr and Mrs Howard Smith were Bunday visitors with Misses Pletcher Aberdeen . Mrs Art Macintosh and Maslyn were weekend visitors with Mr=and Mrs 1. MacLean. Nearly one hundred relatives a=~ friends extended _ felicitation A birthday cake and ~dalnty reires> merts were served. The old home i" Bentinck still stamis. Mrs Sharp ba* four sisters, Mrs Poliock, _ Toronto Miss Colena R. Campbell and Mre ® Nicholl, Rockvood; Mrs T. P. Jon® of Bovil, Idsho; _ and two hm'h‘j William Campbell of Duluth, M and James of Bovil, Idaho . A sat event of the past year was the doat‘ of a beloved brother, John in M~°C 1936 at Cloguet, Sask. Thre 0t‘ Peter, Thomas, and Duncan p>«** away some years ago. . The "@=! circle numbered 11 boys and gi~}s The funeral of the late John Sulliâ€" van was held on Tuesday, Jan. 5th from the home of his brotherindaw, Mr. John Crimmions, Bentinck, to Bt. Pau‘ls R.C. cemetery, Dornoch Mr. Sullivan was 76 years of age He was born and raised about 1 mile from Dornoch. He spent part of his life in the west and in California Me is survived by one sister, Mrs Crimmions and and one brother Je ry of this place, Rev. Father Leavey officiated at the church and grave The palibearers were Messrs Dan 0 Mara, Richard Moran, Edward Mul doon, Joseph Coffey, Wm. MceCurdy, John McCartaey . â€" At her home, 80 Douglas Ave Toronto, Mrs. James Sharp received friends and relatives on her 80th birthday on Jan. 4. Mrs Sharp was born on the farm homestead of he parents Mr ard Mrs Duncan Camp bell, who seitled on lot 7, con. 2 Bentinck, in the early fAftiee of the last century. She attended the _ log pioneer schocl house on con 3, Benâ€" tinck, built on the _ Stewart farm Nearly all the _ neighbors _ were staunch Presbyterians and her grand father, John Melniosh, donated the lot on which _ Dornoch Presbyterian church stands, having been | erected over thraequarters of a century owo In 1878 Margaret Campbell married to James Sharp and |« girthood home to live at 1ime E<quesing township, Halton . ©« Mr. Sharp passed away several before the World War and i: Mrs Sharp sold her old home » tired to reside at Toronto. ber dauzhters, Mrs Arthur Wes Miss Mary E. Sharp and Miss Colens Sharp ail of Toronto; her sons, Wilâ€" liam J. and Duncan C., ber grand children, Mrs Russell, . Thos. F Wens of Toronto and _ Mre Jerowm?" lowden of Wind or, her sisters, Mr# John Pollock and Mrs Thos. Caup bell and Mr. E. E. Russell and M J. Pollock, all of Toronto. Though she has reached fow years Mrs. Sharp is still ha} hearty, doing all her own sh and home managing. She abreast of the times, is keen!» ested in the daily press _ ano with old associates in the cit> ing the summer she frequent!s her childhood home and D friends. BENTINCK® NATIVE in ToRonto CELEBRATES 80th BIARTHOAY Assisting Mrs Soarp receiv guests over her soth birthday JAN. 14, 1s37? DORNOCH Mrs , the [OUH Go nter Du the in good .# er for being Lots of Glenelg, on Mighwa res more « ham. all # For lnfomlj Priceville and bot tests b by no 1 retentic Give bake . variety Scie ple