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Durham Review (1897), 17 Jun 1937, p. 7

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arer paraâ€" n the pain. ive tly or e largest known , found only in land of Sumatry dies, and crown tmis country, is tne New York e Eronx, within Foot Bloom Thi rubi, but ig the Amor. : specimen i1 Cardens blossomed > the reported y exactly som. as it kee with \&r ding ind vi9, ul) leg ‘"out 1 to vrites Daily . and The which . will U" hu t very pt to ind a rree.q it a be 1y ture ra ue he 89 14 n= 19 ouskatoon. â€" Alfred Wells‘ Barred Kockâ€"White Leghorn hen here producâ€" rd doubleâ€"yolk egg every third day Â¥Yeszularly. One egg was seven inches in cireumference, two and three uarâ€" ter incher long and two inches wide. TREVORâ€"SOREN LIMITED 73 Adelaide Street W., Toronto MUâ€"@A:} is the trade name for & proâ€" duct found on the Beveriey properties In Ontario, as 70 moisture, is an ideal insulator, and acts as a natural scavenger. 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A real, honest opportunity to handle a fine profitable proâ€" duct, backed by national advertising and unsolicited testiâ€" monials. 5 : carried on at the Minneâ€" perimental Station showed da S!ver Band Entry for C. N. E. e baton of S. Clayton Pye wide reputation as a conâ€" | composer. Mr. Pye was x" two years ago in the ( guest conductor at the ctition. _ The Bermud.aans the brass section with an [ twentyâ€"seven men. Molasses For Pigs IrNa mM we has come to the Onâ€" ociation, which conâ€" nament at the Canaâ€" ‘xchibition, from the ‘and of Hamilton, ary A. L. Robertson m says that not in cars have there been ngton, mayor of inged transportaâ€" from Bermuda to is also concluded serics of concerts ! of the Hotel urpose of raising ith which to deâ€" f the trip to the crial Silver Band da t It is essential to prepare peace. You will find in every country in Europe and in America a War Ofâ€" fice, but no Government until now has had a Peace Office, a departâ€" ment studying the possibilities of fuâ€" ture conflicts, trying to neutralize them before they are born, studying the ways and means of friendly coâ€" operation among the nations that wil "When politicians in Geneva have been discussing peace, too often they meant by peace a vague word, the state of nonâ€"war. It is a state of inâ€" ternational mind; it is a plan of naâ€" tional living, not passive inaction, declared M. Hambro, President of the Norwegian Parliament and head of the Norwegian delegates to the League of Nations Assembly at Genâ€" Publicity succeeded with Senor Vinole, for which he has to thank his "sister". He chose the cow because it was illustrative of the Argentine peopleâ€"a cattleâ€"raising race. Outâ€" siders laughed, but for this poet the cow is a wonderful animal, the only one, according to an Indian parable, that does not let man starve. He feels that he will soon have to let his "sister" go, but he will alâ€" ways feel indebted to her. For the cow has brought him sufficient atâ€" tention to expound his gospel. "The rest is up to meâ€"and the masses," says Senor Vinole. 1 am trying to create a philosophic temperament. My object is to estabâ€" lish openâ€"air universities at which philosophical ideas will be taught, toâ€" gether with physical training." "L may, temporarily at least, have lost my dignity, but for twenty years I have been preaching the cause of culture, and society has ignored me. To attract public attention I had to adopt my ‘sister‘. I have had to cause a public commotion, aln.ost a revolution, to interest my countryâ€" men. "I stand for the reawakening of% an old ideaâ€"the perfection of man. ism. He threw convention to the winds and was dubbed "eccentric‘ because the Argentines, he said, with their increasing prosperity, were driftine from culture and forgetting the "things of the sp‘rit". Standing immacula-tely attired, by the side of the cow, the other day, in a city lecture hall, he declared: A Mean Advantage To Take Of A Cow Meaning of Peace Omar Vinole, an Argenine poet, adopted a "sister"â€"a cow â€" with which he made public appearances in Buenos Aires to arouse support for his campaign of antiâ€"mater‘alâ€" And only one of the physical meaâ€" sures, voice pitch, was found to have any significant relation to masculinâ€" ity as revealed by test or by ratâ€" ings of associates. Hair abundance and hipâ€"shoulder measurements do not correlate with the masculinity test or with vo‘ce pitch. Hip meaâ€" sures do correlate positively with shoulder measures showing, perhaps, that the man with the gorilla shoulâ€" ders might be expected to have "feminine" hips. 1 EP C tntiits 00. chest and "gorilla shoulders" will suffer a similar fate as criteria of masculinity? asks a Science Service Dr. Howard Gilkinson, University of Minnesota psychologist, raises the question and provides a surprising partial answer. If sex is a biological entity â€" a force which man or woman can be thought of as having in greater or less degreeâ€"and if th‘s force finds outward expression in such items as beards or pitch of voice, then you might expect the heavilyâ€"bearded man to have also a deep masculine voice and brcad shoulders, points out Dr. Gilkinson. Yet examination of more than 200 college men showâ€" ed these "secondary sex characterisâ€" tics" to exist quite independently of each other. Hairy Chest No More _ Proof of a Hc-Mm Gradually, as they are attacked by scientific study, many soâ€"called sex differences are melting away. It was a shock to many persons when the development of standardized intelâ€" I‘gence tests revealed that men are not superior mentally to their woâ€" menfolk. Is it possible that hairy ahuce "o . e 112 L E8 ' get a brand new 1937 streamline« stainless ANKERâ€"HOLTH separator FREE; send postai tor Entry Blank and "How to cut separating costs in ‘Half" ; nothing to pay ; simply express gow _opinion. â€" Address ANL OLTH, Room 1â€"3, Sarnia, Ont. Be one of the three tucky farmers to FREE CREAM SsEPARATORS you hear someone else trying to exâ€" plain how unavoidable some accident was, say to him: "Forget the alibi, acâ€" cident are preventable. es oo o ces e ooo mm etoaety and at the same time produce very few accidents, for after all, an acciâ€" dent is simply a mistake . . . . When tend to make you suffer througil a::: cidental injury . . . . Good habits of work will produce a good product, Do you get up late mornings and have to rush your dressing, bolt your breakfast and dash to work? If 80, that is a bad habit, and one that will Opinions vary as to which take us to greater heightsâ€" June‘s lovely days, with skies of blue, or its delightful nights. Some argus that refreshing â€" winds combined with midday sun, Inspire adventures and cause rare acâ€" tions to be done. While others say, when moonlight sheds its beams on listless souls, Their lives take on new meaning and they start toward higher goals. I don‘t know what your ideas are; but, friends, this is my plight: I‘m living in a blissful daze, inspired by one June knight! Salesman (a persistent goâ€"getter)â€" "Very well, dearie. Go back and tell Mr. Jones that I didn‘t come here to wrestle with him. I only want to talk to him." The purchasing agent didn‘t want to see this particular salesman and instructed his secretary to make some excuse: Secretary (to salesman)â€"‘"I‘m sorâ€" ry, but Mr. Jones can‘t see you toâ€" day. He has a sprained back." Bobby Hoga, nineâ€"yearâ€"old, miracuâ€" ously escaped death when he fell from a tractor in the path of a trailâ€" ing disc at Vulcan, Alta. His body becam so deeply imbedded in the soft earth that the sharp discs passâ€" ed over him harmlessly. He sustained a broken arm and hip in the fall. An explorer says that he will nevâ€" er marry. This rollingâ€"stone intends to gather no boss.â€"Montreal Star. ‘"‘They must be made as interestâ€" ing, as adventurous as the actions of war. They must be made so much more romantic than actions of war, as creation is more romantic tha» destruction. And this aim cannot be reached only by accepting gifts. It is necessary to pay the price in every country, the full price of peace." "Peace is not only absence of war. It is a willingness to join hands across the barriers of race, religion and language, of traditions and instiâ€" tutions. It is an active and fruitful state of goodw‘ill and of wellâ€"wishing. And the actions of peace must be prepared carefully. promote international sympath‘es. HJAVE Marjory Shear, bird physician and surgeon, preparing one of her feathered patients for an operation in her modern clin‘c in Houston, Texas. Knights and Daze neARD y 0 V â€"Lyla Myers. â€"_ A Healer of Birds "Proper carriage of the head and body can give an inexpensive frock: of good line the appearance of the smartest creation. _ Line of a garâ€" ment should be the first consideraâ€" tion, and then fabric. Fabric is imâ€" portant to line. Inferior fabric stretches and loses shape. It is poor economy to conserve in this way. "With just so much money to spend,‘ Adrian says, "most women will get the simple frock suitable to many occasions. A woman who can spend as much as she desires will often buy too much jewelry, too many furs, and spoil the simplicity of the costume. a matter of fact, he believes lack of money is a boon to those women wh6 seck true smartness. HOLLYWOOD, Cal.â€"An unlimited clothes budget has nothing to do with being smartly attired, according to Adrian, famous Mâ€"Gâ€"M designer. As Lack of Money Aid To True Smartness A lot of men wake up to appreciate great truthsâ€"after its about ten years too late. Wife â€"(sweetly)â€""Not at all, dear, because when you came home you didn‘t have that black eye." Husbandâ€""Well, I suppose you‘re plenty angry because I came home with a black eye last night." Wifeâ€""I don‘t know, but we have such a job getting him in and out of the bath?" Doctorâ€""Bath ?" Wifeâ€"*"Yes, sir. It says on the botâ€" tle of medicine you sent: ‘One teaâ€" spoonful to be taken three times a day in water‘." Doctorâ€"‘"Isn‘t it doing him any good, then?" If Extravagant Let It Be In Acâ€" Doctorâ€"*"Well, how is your husband getting on?" Wifeâ€""Oh, doctor, I do wish you‘d change his medicine!" Dr. Bottles met the wife of a paâ€" tient he had ordered to bed for a few days: Read It Or Not In the state of Alabama it is against the law to buy or sell a sack of peanuts after sundown or before sunrise of the next day. It is conâ€" trary to law to work for nothing in California. In Kansas no reptiles are permitted to be eaten in public. This includes centipedes, snakes, lizards, etc. The only thing that keeps a lot of men from marrying twice is the fact that their first wives are.so disgustâ€" ingly healthy. Jimâ€""Wouldn‘t you like a man who gave you $10?" Henâ€""I understand you were going to vote for him because he gave you $10." Jimâ€""Politics mean nothing to me. I‘m going to vote for that fellow because I like him." year in that town one Sunday." _ In a discussion on the type of milk which should be provided school chilâ€" dren, the chairman of the health comâ€" mittee in a small town, is reported to have said at a meeting held recently: "What this town needs is a supply of clean, fresh milk, and the council should tc‘.> the bull by the horns and demand it." Husband (absently)â€""Never mind, dear; just make some toast." Wife (preparing breakfast)â€""There isn‘t a slice of bread in the house." Don‘t make them say: "I spent a WINNIPEG. â€" Plea for greater masculine influence in public schools to guide growing boys was made here by J. J. .Wilkinson, Winnipeg school principal. He told a service club that women teachers outnumbered men 40 to 1 in junior high schools and 160 to 1 in elementary schools of Winnipeg. School Principal Pleads For More Men Teachers Recently "Motor Magazine" has made a careful survey of the chanâ€" nels through which this much covâ€" eted dollar passes. Here it is: Miscellaneous purchases at stores, 25 per cent. Transportation, 20 per cent. Hotels and other lodgings, 20 per cent. Restaurants and â€" other eating houses, 21 per cent. Amusements, 8 per cent. Confectionery, 6 per cent. ‘ The wideâ€"spread benefits bestowed by these imported spenaers, the tourists, are impressively significant, Scarcely any interest in the lucky tourist community that does not share the benefits brought by tourist expenditures. The fact that 66 cents of every dollar finds access to the tills of the local merchants, the hoâ€" tels and the restaurants, should imâ€" press the obligation these various classes of business owe in encouragâ€" ing and fostering the tourist trade. | After travelling through some of the Canadian tourist resort areas for the past three years, one is imâ€" pressed with the fact that thousands of visitors do come to our lakes and streams each year and they return year after year to enjoy the more favorable climate and scenery which Ontario offers. We have been reading reports of the amount of money that tourists spend in Canada, the approximate number of visitors who come to Canâ€" ada each holiday season, but who knows how, where and when the eluâ€" sive dollar rolls around the country and who benefits the most, writes the Oshawa Times. "In our newspaper campaign this year, as last year, we are urging drivâ€" ers to "try courtesy". The dictionary rays courtesy is "politeness of manâ€" ners combined with kindness" and we believe the sincere application of this simple idea by every driver in Onâ€" tario can eliminate death and destrucâ€" tion from our streets and highways and make them safe and useful serâ€" vants of mankind they should be. How Tourist Dollar Is Divided Up "But no scientific factor," Mr. Mcâ€" Questen insisted, "no matter how efâ€" ficient or foolâ€"proof, can ever have the slightest chance of success unless the simplest and most fundamental principal of human relations is apâ€" plied. This element can be expressâ€" ed in many different ways. It can be called ‘consideration for others‘ or ‘do as you would be done by." ‘‘The steady increase in motor traffic,‘ Mr. McQuesten â€" declared, «‘presents a vital challenge to every user of our streets and highways to aid in checking and reducing the horâ€" rible toll of lives which motor trafâ€" fic costs vs each year." Travel is Faster Modern motoring, he pointed out, is geared higher than ever before and this influence of speedy travel is steadily increasing. "Every resource of science has been applied to make this faster pace a safe one. Shatterâ€" proof _ glass, improved fourâ€"wheel brakes, wider and smoother highways, more effective day and night road markers, new designs and construcâ€" tion in tires, better lighting equipâ€" ment on automobiles rnd streets â€" all these factors have made their conâ€" tribution to safer motoring. TORONTO. â€" Sounding a strong warning that the heavy traffic inâ€" crease on Ontario highways expected this summer will inevitably result in more traffic accidents and deaths unâ€" less every motor vehicle operator exâ€" ercises constant care in driving, Hon. T. B. McQuesten, Ontario hishways minister, has announced that his deâ€" partment is lainching, for a second year, a newspaper campaign urging every one of Ontario‘s 700,000 drivers to "‘Try Courtesy". Science Cannot Prevent Accidents Without Help of Courtesy â€"â€" A Vita®‘ Chalienge Try Courtesy On Highways SERVICE LA FLECHE, Sask.â€"T. H. Bourâ€" assa has decided to handle his own drought problem. He planted 1,000 trees and arranged an ingenious pumping system to d‘stribute river water over his land. In Switzerland, melting glaciers form the chief means of water powâ€" er which furnishes the country with electricity, prints. 25 cents reprints, 3 cents each. Br ling, 20 RIWM East, ‘Toronto. ENLAROEH'NT FREE WITH EVERY 25 14 cent order. Rol! films developed and eight A 2 Pumps all kinds. Write for stock list. H. W. Petrie Co., Limited, Toronto. BOILEM. VERTICAL AND HORIZONTAL Pumns All Iinde Wita Paw spant gise oar en e io d oc ic sBc h ia ic d ed skin change to lovely, clear smoothness. Or der now. Money back guarantee. _ $1.00 pel bottle, Elinor ‘Tolletiers, 1068 Burnaby St. Vancouver, B.C. Forkckees must GO WHERE "FRECK leen"‘ is used. See that rough or freck} 0 NTARIO COLLECTION AGENCIES, EX perienced Collection Service. Bailiffs. â€" Stair Bldg., ‘Toronto. WE STILL HAVE A FEW vacANciES left. You can make good money . too, selling motor oils, tractor cils, machine oils, greases and roofing cement in your locality, Write Warco Grease and Oil Ltd., Toronto. Classified Advertising Steady Ships The Canadian Service Bteamanth thee trent :lln:r lndlv&unl uthntl.on" a complete personal service to all passengers. COMPLETE PERSONAL Man Fights Drought MACHINERY AND SUPPLIES COLLECTION SERVICE BANISH FRECKLES AGENTS WANTED travellers also Lloyd thought he would keep it as a souvenir. He later received an agitated letter from the United States‘ Treasury, asking why he hadâ€" n‘t cashed the checkâ€"that the books were out of balance to that extent. When he started a search for the checs, it was m‘ssing, and he had to sign an affidavit to get another check to straighten out the situation net gain over the figures of Profesâ€" sor Ernest George Ravenstcin, gooâ€" grapher and statistician for the Royal Geographic Society, of 399,â€" 100,000 since his estimate was made in 1890. Professor E. M. East of Harvard University says that 150,000 are born every day, and 100,000 die. At that rate the population of the earth will double itself in about sixtyâ€" six years, Medical science has just about perfected arrangements whereâ€" by man may live far beyond the age of sixtyâ€"six, though just why he should want to is becoming another problem. In view of our presentâ€"day labor troubles which continue to grow despite politicians‘ efforts to make the earth easier to live in and on, the patent increase in the globe‘s population does not seem to offer very many future Elysiums for the footsore and the weary.â€"Leighton Bonner Robinson, Mexico, D. F. In paying off a loan to the Home Owners Loan Corp., David M. Lloyd overpaid his bill 1 cent, according to H.O.L.C. accounts. To make the books of this corporation balance, a check for 1 cent was mailed to him. Letter in New York Times:â€" In May, 1927, the International Stat‘stiâ€" cal Institute of the League of Naâ€" tions estimated the world‘s popu‘aâ€" tion at 1,960,000,000, which shows a *There is no great teacher but that he or she is in love with somebody," he said. *‘The denial of love means auguish, bitterness and _ a frequent threat of nervous collapse." About 200 persons attended yesterâ€" day‘s session, most of them women of middle age. Dr. McKeever started the Lovers‘ Church to combine roâ€" mance and religion, ‘‘Love is the great law in teaching," asserted Dr. W, A. McKeever, peychoâ€" logist and founder of the church as he described a ban which he said existed in many cities against marriage of school teachers. OKLAHOMA CITY, â€" REnforced spinsterhood was described to Lovers® Church as the "burg‘ar peeking out from under the bed of tens of thousâ€" ands of women teachers in the counâ€" try." You Can‘t Be A Great Teacher If You‘re Not in Love Spinsterhood Is "T‘re Eurglar Peeking Out From Urder when she stepped from the train. teoâ€" land did not seem so far away aftor all, Grandma W. Paddock came from Brandon to Bicton Heath in 1901 wita 25 sheep, 12 horses, eight cows 2nd calves. Grandma Svsan MeAulay arâ€" rived in 1900 from Bouthampton, Ont. Mrs. W. B. Dempsey came from Otâ€" tawa 25 years ago, arriving in an opiâ€" demic of diphtheria "and ever since she‘s been talking and working for health." The grandmothers _ recalleod their "first impression of Manitoba." ‘‘One demure lass from Dorset, England, was embarrassed by the apparont friendliness of the passengers on the local train, The atmosphere was so different from that of the formal Kagâ€" lish coach, Finally she decided that the feather in her hat was probably too giddy, She removed it so as not to attract any more attention . . ." Grandmother Jean _ Marcroft came in 1897 from Guelph, Ont., furnicire and family all travelling togethor, Mrs. J. Grenon, a pioneer of *87, told of coming by team from An‘ A N.D. Grandma Frederickson «am» in ‘98, delighted to got a whiff of fish "One beloved little old lady with cheeks the color of a Canadian wild rose and the gallant spirt of a Viking, leaned on her cane and ‘spoke a pioce‘ to the delight of everyone." M. E. Ogrosky, said the oldest grandâ€" mother was Mrs. Susan McAuley; the oldest greatâ€"grandmother was Mrs. J. Careroft. "Magical alchemy proserved for one hair as black as a raven‘s wing; while another‘s of similar age, was now soft white," said che secreâ€" tary WINNIPEGOSIS, Man. â€" Grandâ€" mothers had a party; the Local Woâ€" men‘s Institute invited the 22 to tea and gave prizes for the oldest and youngest. Many hundreds of years were sumâ€" med up in the list of ages â€" if thore was -ufh a list. The secretary, Mrs. Fine ‘Getâ€"Together‘ Grandmothers Have Twentyâ€"Two Pioneers of West Recall Trials and Joys of How Population Grows Balancing the Books

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