West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 14 Oct 1937, p. 6

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plat out Ing ted .’\‘I! UNG my of rePr on he }riv i¢ * pr W th al th it W or t] s 1@ Sound Philosophy Haven‘t Got The Cash Mr. Anthony Ede: m for years many States have co potential enemy in the British E Japan as an ac crisis arrives, t! the British stay fact British pre in the Orient ( Japanese alike) ed States. ~Han with d Lost "Face" In Nanking Life The West Has Faith Women VOICE woman her go Stop hunting would ities â€" could have been prevented. In every case human carelessness is the prime cause of a hunter being killed, maimed or injured to some degree or other. The prevention is simple. It reâ€" quires only that those carrying lethal weapons should always remember to STOP. LOOK and MAKE SURE. Don‘t walk behind a companion with a cocked gun pointing toward him: don‘t grab a gun by the muzzle and pull it toward you when gotting out of a car, boat, or when crawling under a fence; don‘t guess, be sure it is not a human being at which you are shooting, and don‘t forget to unâ€" load your gun.â€"Kamloops Sentinel. W, THE WORLD *" &T LARGE lit bl If n Exj f CANADA 1 poi h : considered Japan as A emy, while most persons h Empire have considered i active friend, when the s, the Americans go, and stay. As a result of this prestige will be greater nt (among Chinese and ke) than that of the Unitâ€" H.amilton Spectator. none of these h disgrace t _ Columbia cason comes e of these e been preve i Times Mak sople in the T idered Japan while most pe h Albe sure! â€" there e hunting fatalâ€" the newspapers every time the m it its movies. d with ft. The iz with n of the nite runting under their Brant Th h AT but TD British Subjects Training the Unemployed t Xâ€"Ray Martyr Again Sacrifices the â€" went Prof. Charles Vaillant, of Paris, Undergoes 14th Doeration NIS aurin work Rays Attack His Body Now the rays have attacked his body for the first time. But Prof. Vaillant, who has been lodged at the nation‘s expense among the war mutilated heroes and invalids, is unâ€" dismayed. h He declared after last week‘s suc cessful operation that he thought his was no remarkable sacrifice to illy meds later Cost of Living Still Climbing Weokly Budget of Average Canaâ€" dian Family For Food, Shelter Professor Charles Vaillant, called e XNâ€"ray martyr, last week underâ€" mt his fourteenth operation, a omach incision, made necessary by The cost of living mounts. Figures issued from Ottawa by the Labor Department show the weekly budget of the average Canadian family for food and shelter rose to $17.48 in August from $17.24 in July and $16 72 in August, 1936. The index has been rising steadily from 1934. In August of tkat year it was $15.92. In the boom year of 1929 it was up to $21.90 which was still below the postâ€"war peak of $26.â€" The food budget has climbed to $8.80 from $8.17 in the past year and the weekly rent average for a modern city house of six rooms has increased to $5.87 from $5.71. Fuel and light costs receded, however, to $2.77 from $2.80. PRESS The ray 0 Rises to $17.48. THE EMPIRE constitutional ref Conference, publi reseat rays continue corroding the i. and during the last 25 years Vaillant, whose name incidentâ€" h incision, made luntary â€" exposur h‘s lifeâ€"long ra CANADA THE EMPIRE vite another point, the sug* hat legislation was necessary re has found no support, and »r is left for future consultaâ€" : us hope the whole thing ropped. Meanwhile, the main at all South Africans remain ubjects, not in the sense of to Britain but as subjects to .â€"Capetown Argus. the e French oth arms & operations 0 rnegie dal of lant, ns of t worl > re nfeet ( a who has received he Legion of Honâ€" Hero Medal and the City of Paris 5 vears old. The T} LV ure to Aâ€"rays radium research or courageous, mputated bit by 11 h th At rm art of the Im L recently the ind f D pro _ Carnegie w months craused by ropose As for h Do erwent, rressive k place { th\‘S(" it the Infroit sh ray \B.B.C. Broadcast â€" | â€" Daily For Canada Twoâ€"Hour Program to be Trarsâ€" mitted by Shortâ€"Wave The British Broadcasting Corporaâ€" tion and the Canadian Broadeasting Corporation have announced an atrâ€" rangement _ effective October _ 4th, whereby a BBC direct short â€"wave beam to Canada will be transm tted for two hours daily, from 7 pm.. 10 8# wm. GMT. (2 pm. io 4 pm Governor Alan Plaunt of CBC conâ€" cluded the negotiations here and ex: pressed gratification at the generosâ€" ity of Sir John Reith, BBC directorâ€" general, and BBC empire officers who have extonded the service without a charge and intend to provide the most interesting programs for Canadian consumption. Canada May Reciprocate It is held possible Canada eventu ally will construct a 50 â€" kilowatt shortâ€"wave station and perhaps reâ€" turn the courtesy of BBC with Car adiar programs. Many Famous People Victims of Hobby Bug The hobby bug is no respecter of persons. It bites with equal viciousâ€" ness the rich and the poor, the great and the lowly, and one might almost say the sane and the others. Kings, Presidents, Movie Stars Are All Bitten â€" True Disciples Search Globe For Prizes. President Roosevelt‘s stamp collecâ€" tion is known to be one of the best in the United States. He‘s been at it since he was 17 years old, and many a oneâ€"sentence dispatch from Washingâ€" ton has been to this effect: "The President spent last evening with his stamp collection." King George VI is continuing the stamp collection begun by his father, which is one of the greatest in the world, and worth literally millions of dollars. He has a philatelic secretary who does nothing but take care of the collectionâ€" which has grown ‘way beâ€" yond a mere hobby and become a fullâ€" time job. Artists Succumb Eeasily But those are orthodox hobbies hobâ€" bies. Many people of promience have been drawn to lessâ€"traversed bypaths. People in the arts seem to be parâ€" ticularly addicted to hobbies, and many carry them to what would seem to an outsider considerable extremes. Lucrezia â€" Bori _ collected _ historic Lucrezia _ Bori collected _ historic fans, Roland Youns has a houseful of canes of all kinds. David Belasco had a Napoleonic complex, paying any amount for old boots or hats of the former dictator. Fanny Hurst collects altars and religious furnfture from all over the world, and associated with all kinds of religions. Rudy Vallee has Famed Church, Harbor and Highâ€" way of Upper Canada Scene of Litks Battle. By MR. HECTOR CHARLESWORTH Hard by the site of this year‘s battle for the Seagram Gold Cup, emblem of the Canadian Open golf title, stands the churchyard and rectory of St. John‘s, York Mills, one of the oldest Anglican Churches in Canada. In the churchyard are graves which date back to the first decade of the 19th Century. GOLF MASTERS MEET Some idea of the a edifice, which stands . looking a large stretch be gleaned from the Some idea of the antiquity of the edifice,. which stands on a hill overâ€" looking a large stretch of country, may be gleaned from the fact that the largest Anglican church in Toronto today, St. Paul‘s, Bloor Street, was orâ€" iginally established as a mission of St. John‘s, which Hes about five miles north of it as the crow flies. What is now the City of Toronto did not exâ€" tond more than a mile back from the Bay, and at the time mentioned, only ooking a large e gleaned fro argest Anglica oday,. St. Paul‘ ginally establi St. John‘s, whic north of it as t OQJNTARIO t Ottawa intend a national hoo\ on TORONTO ON HISTORIC GROUND o sup f the "Literary Edition" Of Bible Issued The jeatous‘y guarded privilege of the King‘s Printers and the Univerâ€" sity Prosses ef Oxford and Cam bridge to print the authorizod verâ€" s‘on of the B ble has beon relaxed for h« nvaduetlon of a "literary odi Corintures Prosented In Lussinous Forimâ€"Spelling Modera‘zea tion th D torm A few port.ons have OCCH MARMIOROTE including the Book of Chronicles, and parts of the Apochrypha as well as genealogies. Spelling and punctuaâ€" tion have been modernized, In an introductory essay, Laurence Binyon declares that, "though the Bible reprosents one of the greatest litcratures of the world, it has for centuries been studied apart from its literary form and value; the way in which it is printed testified to this difference." Lionel Barrymore‘s work as an etcher and painter might have won him considerable fame if he had never acted at all. and there is a rumor that Rupert Hughes, the novelist, is A string saver. Albert Payson Terhune bred and kept dogs as a hobby for years before they became his mealâ€" ticket, filtered through his typewriter, Collector Aids Science Otherwise practical and materialisâ€" tic business men have shown no imâ€" munity, even those who have been able to collect $500,000 Old Masters and give them to the government. a bad case of amateur movie itch Toscha Seidel, the violinist, is a s time bacteriologist. The late Nathaniel Rothschild, head of the European banking family, colâ€" lected fleas. though on a . severely scientific basis. He ransacked the world for all types, and even sent an expedition into the Arctic to get speciâ€" mens of a flea that annoys certain kinds of Arctic seals. When he preâ€" sented the whole collection to the British Museum, that august instituâ€" tion was delighted. Of courst fleas are notorious disease carriers, and the more known about them the betâ€" ter, so Rothschild‘s hobby was not as silly as it sounds. Henry Ford‘s weakness for antiques got the better of him to such an exâ€" tent that he had to build a separate village to hold them, adjoining his home and plant at Dearborn. Many hobbies have become so abâ€" sorbing as to lead their riders to beâ€" come actual authorities in their fields, and sometimes they have led directly into a good living. The new edit farm lands with a few crossâ€"road setâ€" tlements lay between the parent church and its offspring. The ground where St. Andrew‘s course is situated is historic for anâ€" other reason. The old road on which it faces, now merely a byâ€"way, was once part of the oldest highway north of Toronto, laid out under orders of Governor Simcoe. The original Yonge Street, planned to connect Lake Onâ€" tario with Lake Simcoe, and the hinâ€" terland to the north, detoured along the hills to avoid the deeper valleys, and this byâ€"way is one of the original detours. rim Another fact of unique interest is that the old church once overlooked what was an inland harbor. The Don River, which used to cross Yonge St. at this point, was so deep as to be navigable from Toronto Bay to this point. Flatâ€"bottomed boats carried carâ€" goes for the north which were transâ€" ferred to wagons and sledges at York Mills. product ion Part of Oldest Highway Associated Screen Nows > itch, and is a spareâ€" loze of Declaring â€" that Canaria imck® M Gonal aim and ia drifting along w kt )n ut leadership, the former wditer of the London Evening Standard before loaving on the retwrn trip to Vinglomd last woek eriticized the Dominion for having a wondorful future which It is not trying to use. "It is a marvelous country," he said, "hbut populated hy 11,000,000 _ people â€" content . to drift along betwoeen Britain and the United States as markets and _ protectors, without any national plans of its own, no policy to follow. You could be a great peop Presidert Roosevelt‘s Speech Believed to be the most important speech he had ever delivered on world affairs, President Roosevelt‘s address at Chicago last week has created a great deal of comment in countries other than his own. He spoke in acâ€" tuality to the world, appealing . for the "concerted effort" of peaceâ€"Joving nations ""to uphold laws and principles on which alone peace can rest secure." He raised his voice against an "epiâ€" demic of world lawlessness," against the troubleâ€"making powers, declaring that epidemics always call for quaranâ€" tine. The President‘s suggestion for a quarantine against international lawâ€" lessness is looked upon as the strongâ€" est and most concise offer of United States coâ€"operation given to European nations seeking to curb the aggression of Italy, Germany, Japan. The bills before the Alberta Legisâ€" lature on taxation of banks, the Credit Act and the bill "to ensure the publiâ€" cation of accurate news and informaâ€" tion" were reserved by the Licutenantâ€" Governor to await the pleasure of the Governorâ€"General of Canada, when they came before the House this week. The Lieutenantâ€"Governor gave his assent to eight other bills which bore no relation to the one disallowed by the Federal Government in August. Premier Aberhart‘s proposal to conâ€" Russia Buys Arms In U.S. WASHINGTON.â€"Soviet Russia was disclosed this weekâ€"end to have bought more than $10,000,000 in arms, muniâ€" tions and implements of war in the United States during September, more than half of which was for war vesâ€" sels. This expenditure was believed to have beon for the first matorials and equipment for two battleships which the Moscow Government sought some timé ago to buy from the United States. COLUMBUS, Ohic winners of the Int« pennant by a 2514 feated Columbus R for their fourth st capture the 1937 Li four games to thre« Sertenced to be Hanged MONTREAL, â€" Pleading innocence, Exelphat Benoit, 31â€"yearâ€"old exâ€"conâ€" vict, was convicted by a King‘s Bench Court jury this week of murdering Hyacinthe Cote, wealthy Montreal landlord, whose battered body was found July 24 last in a suburban ,eld. Mr. Justice Wilfrid Lazure sentenced Benoit to be hanged January 14. Commentary on the Highlights of the Week‘s News . . . Ministry has announced "similar in type to those Italian submarines" was the spot where the Briti was reported attacked aff Mediterranean coast last Famous Papers Amalgamated LONXDON. â€" Amailgamation Morning Post, London‘s oldest ing daily newspaper and the Telegraph has been announced The Morning Post published its last edition as a separate newspaper this week. The combined paper is pubâ€" lished under the name of Daily Teleâ€" graph and Morning Post. PRINCE ALBERT, Sask.â€"Confirmaâ€" tion three prospectors had drowned in May Lake, 272 miles north of Prince Albert, was recoived in a wireless message from Lac la Ronge, 160 miles northwest of here, this weekâ€"end. Three Prospectors Drown MOSCOW.â€"Four big planes with 36 more searchers under the command of Ivan Chuknoffsky left Moscow this week to look for Sigismund Levaneffâ€" sky, lost "Lindbergh of the U.S.S.R." Further Search For Fliers U. S. Brands Japan WASHINGTON.â€"The United States Government this weekâ€"end formally branded Japan as the aggressor naâ€" tion in the undeclared Sinoâ€"Japanese war, They will go to Rudolf Island via Archangel. News In Review Pressâ€"Gag Bill Stopped Little World Series Canzda Criticized MBUS, Ohio.â€"Newark Bears, of the International League by a 25!4game margin, deâ€" ‘olumbus Red Birds 10 to 4 r fourth straight victory to the 1937 Little World Series 10 that â€" Canarla â€" Jacks n# id da drifting adlong with p, the former editor of {vening Standard before o roturn trip to England ticized the Dominion for dorful future which 4t is ~< 90040 # 4000 t of the existâ€" Daily Ikrade trol the proess hy the hoard €eepreet ECC A conforence of tho nine powers who signed the Leagne of â€" Nations treaty euarantoning the territorial inâ€" logrity of China (China, Japan, Great Britain, â€" the United States, France, Ialy, Bolginm, the Notherlands and Portugal) is proposed for this week to doal with the Japanese invasion, This followed close on the declaration of the Loaguo‘s Sinoâ€"Japanese subâ€"comâ€" mitteo that Japan is gullty of violatâ€" in@ the treaty. MBR EPP EY C EOS Claiming that medical services not being provided the public ¢ sound economic basis, Dr. T. H. gett, of Ottawa, President of the Canaâ€" dian Medical Association, calls for a thorovugh overhauling of the system in Canada. At present, he said, the scheme is right for the wealthy but not satisfactory for the middle class, working men and those on relief. o eneoee e en n n t War is already here according to the Hon. Mrs. Freemantle, British author, journalist, who last week adâ€" dressed the Toronto Branch of the Englishspeaking Union. "But we can prevent spread of war by immunizaâ€" tion," she declared, ‘as we would deal with an infectious disease. The imâ€" portant thing for us to do is to avoid infection by taking preventive mediâ€" cine." Harry Richman, night club singer, screen star, Atlantic flyer, has anâ€" nounced that in February next he proâ€" poses to beat the world nonâ€"stop flight PCmm e iesns record by hopping from Toronto to Rio de Janeiro, a distance of 1,500 miles. United States authorities would not allow him to make the flight from thereâ€" and now he is hoping that the Dominion Government will not express similar disapproval. The Government accused Japan of violating the nineâ€"power pact and also the Briandâ€"Kellogg antiâ€"war treaty, The ucflon was announced in a forâ€" mal statement issued by the State Department. It came after the League of Nations Assembly had adopted a report of its Far Eastern Advisory Committee, in which Japan was declared the aggressâ€" or nation. ta the the me! five LONDON.â€"The Admiralty has anâ€" nounced that eight more of the navy‘s newest destrovers are due to assemble More Ships For Mediterrancean at Portsmouth, preparatory to leaving for the Mediterranean. All are 1,375â€" ton craft belonging to the fifth desâ€" troyer flotilla of the home fleet, They are mounted with 4.7 inch guns and have a top speed of 38 knots, Shelve Yukon Annexation OTTAWA. â€"â€" Premier Pattullo, of British Columbia, announced this week end the Dominion Government had concurred in his suggestion that acâ€" tion to include the Yukon Territory within British Columbia‘s boundaries be held in abeyance until consideraâ€" tion can be given the report of the Roval Commission on Dominionâ€"Proâ€" Rokertson Remanded LONDON, Ont.â€"Lavchlin John Robâ€" ertson, middleâ€"aged factory worker, accused with 70â€"yearâ€"old Dr, Charles Cline of murder in connection with Mary Wilkinson‘s death, made a brief court appearance this week, but the Crown was not ready to proceed with the case. He was remanded till a later date. Demonstration Against Japan LONDON. â€" The Government was urged this weekâ€"ond by resolution of 10,000 people to seek means for interâ€" national coâ€"operation in preventing a continuance of bombing of Chinese civilians by Japanese airmen. A crowded mecting #n Albert Hall adopted the resolution that expressed "horror and condemnation of indisâ€" criminate attacks on nonâ€"combatants by Japanese forces in China." Giant Goes to Law CHICAGO.â€"Robert Rmerson Wadâ€" low, youthful Alton, NL+ giant, whose case excited medical curiosity so much that the dignified Amecrican Medical Journal published an article discussâ€" ing it, estimated that this scientific contribution had embarrassed him to the tune of $150,000, The world‘s reputediy taltest human â€"he stands eight foot six inches in his stocking feet, and weighs 425 pounds Medical Plan Attacked Present Spread of War Torontoâ€"toâ€"Rio Flight Chinese surged from their enâ€" ments all along the front from wined Chapel native qvarter on ige of the International Settle porth almost the whole twentyâ€" Japan lndk‘“'d by Peter Randal of Alberta has thus gone n on A Believe Love (EaT e Crige Begin at Seventy â€" Love, a pair of 1877 s have decided, can begin Sixty years ago pista Woods and hbarefooted \ studied together in _ Pu room schoolhouse near 8 Â¥, Ten years later, W went away. Until las couple had never again William Woods Jones, fornia newspaper reporter ed railroad engineer, retu laski to study the genca family. A greatâ€"great p Coffield Woods, he found, er descendant living in h home town. She was Woods DeMott. So Jones called on her ed genealogy and of the The friendship, reborn ai grew into courtship, ca letters after Jones retur fornia. Today, William Wood turned again. This time | DeMott, took her to Syr: they were to be marricd Germany Eliminates "Servant Problem" Nazi Girls Rigorously Trained â€"Get Eight Cents a Day Pocket Money Twenty thousand Germ itween the ages of 17 a lend willing hands to {w and country mothers. the labor service. According to Reichsle tin Mierl, leader of the service â€" compulsory fo but not yet for gir‘ls service is to bulld cha loyalty to the nationalâ€" and to the Fuchrer and team spirit. One hundred thousand passed through this ser are 500 camps in the taking care of 490 gin‘s. SIX MONTHS S] The service lasts 2 each girl must prove sl and must be passed by fore she can enroll. © board and lodging, a parade uniform, two 1 shoes. bed linen, hand eight cents a day pock eight cents a Gay p The day begins a the camp leader « a gong and giving : "good morning." C enjoined to avoid : militarism. Fifteen cise is supposed to out of the eyes of th Breakfast follows hoisting the flag tika with the additi double ear of grain ing of job by First Newspapne: To Fly At! Amelia Earhart‘s Paper From Abroad to P: with 1! Americ roundâ€"t opinion Derry . the T within is a t efooted Willie Jones Co, Back After 60 Years to letter wh newspap« marve‘!i( on the should 1 on the f more, v us here in English pr pioneer f1 a series « posed commerci Foynes, Ireland, which occurred same time as t hart. At "It n aIn hart he? t} 24 Hours After P t} thir Claim His Bride ear Ol the naz 7 a.m. ni it of t d A Tangible Link th char nalâ€"s and SERVI with th of t} daily wives Mrg Pus his B¢ PQs in lit= | Classi#: «* acsiy!C M e ara0 204000 0" «Te Te Te 1928 28 .8 ... we"erererene oo ce merererenepetececenel Cole" w;qzeze pCbe >e002% AGEN1S the Cn hood. ‘ necessi Real, Repoa No m mble, LO(‘AI, R BE PR wanted, for 8 newal list suppli« Write Canadian laide St. West, I BARN N 2N, wWONt money 8PA c mnecessi pPI m $1 , $85 w OM $47 $£49.00 $29.5 $35.00 W\ RC ty Save 40%. C 47B YONGE $1 T (O] LYONS‘ P UPHOL® y( }

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