West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 20 Oct 1938, p. 3

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Day a bole SaAr\ iet Farmers of Russia are to hold a chess tournament in Moscow. "Respect for law," he continued, "depends largely on your actions, and the way you administer it. You will gain the . respect and confiâ€" dence of the public if you treat them courteously." of starting an argument and makâ€" ing an enemy." ders. If you must give a man a ticâ€" ket for some parking or speeding offence, do it with courtesy. â€" You will win yourself a friend, instead ders. "A judge has no right to lecture a man whom he is sentencing," Professor Rogers said. "The adminâ€" istration of justice and not the givâ€" ing of moral advice is his function. Winning Respect "So, it is with police. They have no right to speak roughly to offenâ€" "Be courteous" was the advice given members of the Police Assoâ€" ciation of Ontario by Professor L. Joslyn Rogers, Provincial Analyst and professor of practical chemisâ€" try at the University of Toronto, at the association‘s convention in Tor. onto early in October. Urges Police Be Courteous Prof. Rogers: P:ovincial Anaâ€" lyst, Scores Rough Talk To Offenders i Emphkasis Is Being Placed On Peculiar National Art Forms And Folk Instruments Russian Children Learning Music " °"+ ~NMCre ie largest acreage in the couniy is harvested, shows the usual good run. The largest con. tract is at the Hale farm near Thedford, where there are approxiâ€" mately 100 acres of sugar beets, The c well, wh the coun )p th m d >a the first week in Ocâ€" rick Groombridge, of representative for the Dominion Sugar Comâ€" ham ard Wallaceburg, In all there are 21 staâ€" jority of them situatâ€" ‘thern sections of the weigh stations are at . Blackwell. Porceh Al. scceiving zar beets d ir around Blackâ€" Kin stations for in Lambton week in Ocâ€" Porch, Alâ€" court and Makes and burns own gas from "coal oil." Fuel cost less than 2¢ an hour. Radiates a flood of clean, bealthful heat. Ideal for chilly autumn and spring days or as an auxiliary heater all winter long. See dealer or write . . . THE COLEMAN LAMP & sTOVE Co., LTD. Dept. WOâ€"108, Toronto, Ont. The most favorable conditions, of course, are when the leaves are off the trees, the ground is wet or covâ€" ered with a good tracking snow, and there is no wind blowing. But we can‘t always pick the best times for our hunts, so must rely upon skill and a knowledge of the habits of the deer to secuse our trophies. The hunter must proceed against the wind to get within firing range, if stillâ€"hunting, and he must learn how to walk through the woods as noiselessly as possible, and without making quick motions, if he is to bag a prize buck. He must not cough, talk to his companions, or smoke while stalking the wary whitetails. In a region where they are hunted extensively, the deer exerâ€" cise uncanny intelligence in eluding their enemies. While they are able to see at some distance, particularâ€" ly strange movements, they depend mostly upon their sense of smell and hearing to warn them of apâ€" proaching danger. There hardly is a more popular big game animal with hunters than the whitetailed deer, Where there is adequate forage of the right kind, these animals are to be found in good numbers, and over a. wideâ€" spread area. They are keen witted, crafty, and call for real skill on the part of the hunter in pursuing them successfully. Hunting Deer _ Requires Ski "Puddin‘" reached the quarter fiâ€" nals of the tourney before bowing to Mrs. A. B. Walker, a member of the British Curtis Cup team. Her long drives and putting were senâ€" sational, but she scemed unnerved on the first nine holes of her match with Mrs. Walker and went down to a four and two defeat. "Oh, I just started fooling around with a club when I was 12. I only had one club then, an old number two iron, and one day I told my brother Bill, who‘s a good golfer, that I had gone around our nineâ€"hole course at home in 53. MarcarET (PUDDIN®Y) Esson Margaret (Puddin‘) Esson, golfâ€" ing sensation of the Canadian woâ€" men‘s open championship who hails from Rosetown, Sask., and who cclebrated her 17th birthday _ in May, never had a golf lesson in her life. Asked how she came to take up the game she told the Ottawa Journat: @ (Puddin‘) Esson, golfâ€" n of the Canadian woâ€" championship who hails Over in Dover, New Jersey, the town‘s poplation of 11,000 "will cease all activity on Friday in a oneâ€"minute prayer for world peace." The bulk of the town‘s industry is centred in "huge munitions plants." Contradictions like that are the things that keep the public mind in a constant state of bewilderment in these times. People making muniâ€" tions of war â€" and praying for peace! And beyond any doubt, their prayers are sincere. It is all so biâ€" zarre, so fantastic, so utterly inâ€" comprehensible. The unreality of it is "real" only to megalomaniacs and wouldâ€"be "Napoleons" who rule by fear and force. Junior Farmer Moement Since assuming office as Provinâ€" cial Minister of Agriculture, Hon. P. M. Dewan has taken a lively inâ€" terest in the junior farmer move. ment. Educating of rural boys and girls of today in upâ€"toâ€"date methâ€" ods of farm practice, he recognizes as of the utmost importance to agâ€" riculture of tomorrow. â€" Guelph Mercury. Funny to hear some of the old Canadian crocks to the Great War picking out the right kind of jobs for themselves in any war to come, The underground bakeshop of the Army Service Corps seems to be a strong choice â€" St, Catharines Standard. \ dtaintcs AdiAis a io d Canada has everything to offer the tourist but upâ€"toâ€"date highways in a general way. It is the Prairie Provinces that make the poorest showing in allâ€"weather highways, â€" Regina Leaderâ€"Post M e RDCwnt A Peterborough motorist chased a rabbit for over two miles at first, 25 miles an hour and then 32 or 33, and finally passed it. The automoâ€" bile thus won the race by a hare.â€" Toronto Star. said to be moving away from Eurâ€" ope at the rate of about fifty feet per _ year, "Nobody _ can blame Greenland very much,"â€" St. Thom. ies esc oS 7 as Timesâ€"Journal Keeping Its Distance At the present time, Greenland is sald to be movine away Erau. 1e Attraction Is Gone Shortage of teachers keeps schools closed in Alberta, was when the western prc were a great attraction to C teachers, â€" Kingston Whig ard. Left Hard, Right Hand To live long and keep healthy, one should take exercise in moderâ€" ation, avoid rich foods and _ too much food, and keep the blood stream healthy, by living largely on a diet of milk, eggs, cheese, and whole grains, also fruits and vegeâ€" tables. train, gets violently angry or does anything else to make the heart beat faster, the extra strain on the blood vessels is likely to break them and one has a "stroke," or apoplexy, One of Chief Causes of High Blood Pressureâ€"Leads to The Grave Almost everybody eats too much, and the path of overâ€"cating "leads but to the grave." Overâ€"eating is one of the chief causes of high blood pressure. As one grows older the blood vessels lose their resiliâ€" ency and become less elastic and more brittle. If one then runs for a Better Highways Needed Overâ€" Safe Jobs Next 7 Where enlarging is out of the question or deemed inadvisable, the existing garden often may be made more !ntex-estlng by "partitioning off" certain nooks, or enclosing a neglected corner, just as we make the attic into a room. Such nooks or compartments, divided by small hedges, and used as special places for special things, will increase the element of wonder and surprise, which even familiarity will not wholly destroy. An artist said of a certain house: "I like it because the outside appearance does not beâ€" tray what is inside," and the same thought expresses a garden quality, Simplicity in design need not be obâ€" viousness. One of the changes most fre. quently wanted is to enlarge the garden. Such a move, however, is best not made without careful conâ€" sideration. It is not wise to add a ‘"new room" until the existing one is so well furnished and arranged that maintenance time saved will be sufficient to build and furnish the additional one. Partition Off Neglected Bits And Make Each One a Thing Of Beauty Brightening Up 48e ol teachers keeps thirty closed in Alberta. Time en the western provinces great attraction to Ontario . â€" Kingston Whisâ€"Standâ€" Garden Corners Is Dangerous Next Time some of the old o the Great War ies snaienent Fbel w Sir Edward stayed at the farm home of Dr. F. F. Tisdall near Langâ€" staif, about 10 miles north of Torâ€" onto. Chief reason for bad teeth in England is probably because not enough milk is drunk, he said. Milk is pasteurized in London and except for there the milk supply is not very good in England. «"Poverty" is another reason for the ~low conâ€" sumption of milk he said. Beliet Canadians "are the bestâ€" fed people in the world," was exâ€" pressed at Langstaff, Ontario, last week by Sir Edward Mellanby, the secretaryâ€"general of England‘s medâ€" ical research council. "If you are not, you are at least very near it," he said. British Nutrition Expert Says So â€"â€"Plenty of Milk Consumed We‘re the World‘s Best Fed People in the Windsorâ€"Chatham area to 30.8 per cent. in the Sudburyâ€"North Bay zone. The report presents findings gleaned from supervised farm acâ€" counting on 780 dairy farms which was conducted during the year July 1, 1936, to June 30, 1937. The project covers all dairying sections of Ontario extending as far north as Sault Ste. Marie, from Essex county in the southwest to the Queâ€" bec border in the east. Compare Returns For Labor The report indicates that the crop season is an important factor in successful dairying and that those milk producers residing in areas which suffered from the drought for the crop year in question securâ€" ed on the average discouraging net incomes. The operators‘ labor earnings which represent the farm operator‘s return for his labor and management plus the value of the family living secured from the farm for the several areas were as folâ€" lows: Toronto $333, Windsorâ€"Chatâ€" ham $881, Londonâ€"Brantford $660, Hamiltonâ€"Niagara $378, Owen Soundâ€"Peterboroughâ€"Oshawa â€" $355. St. Lawrence Towns $560, Ottawa $1,205, Sudburyâ€"North Bay $768, Western Condensery $329, Eastern Condensery $691, Western Cheese $696, St. Lawrence Cheese $265, Ottawa Valley Cheese $472, and the Cream Shippers $572. The value of the family living ranged from $309 per farm in the Eastern Conâ€" densery zone to $430 in the Lonâ€" donâ€"Brantford zone. Milk Cost The feed cost is the largest single item ‘of milk cost amounting from 48 to 58 per cent. of the gross cost. Labor also is important accounting , for 20.6 per cent. of the gross cost An enlightening summary relaâ€" tive to the organization and finan. cial success of dairy farming in Ontario has been prepared by the Economics division, Marketing Serâ€" vice, Dominion Department of Agriâ€" culture, Ottawa. Survey of 780 Ontario Dairy Farms Has Been Made â€" Crop Season Found Importâ€" ant Factor Dairiy F. arming Costs Figured NEXT: What would happen if the than it does? t be Anyaiis_, j "1° EVDiCNded that the African elephant could mot be domesticated, but the Belgian government is offering very tangible proof to the contrary It costs between 750 and 1000 tollars to train one of the beasts, but he pays good dividends when put to work on the Congo plantations. FOR centuries it THMCEE BILLION Ssemamsayz HDEAS, was contended that the During September revenue amâ€" ounted to $30,657,432 as against $32,695,437 collected in September, 1937, a net decrease of $2,038,005. Collections in detail were: Income tax $5,890,328, increase $1,131,774; customs duties $6,896,432, decrease $1,339,129; excise taxes $13,291,482, decrease $1,657,156; excise duties $4,521,025, decrease $168,615; sun. dry collections $58,165, decrease» $4,879. " y Receipts from income tax amâ€" ounted to $117,441,212, a gain of $21,978,891; customs duties $40, 573,436, decrease of $6,922,409; exâ€" cise taxes $77,667,145, decrease of $6,804,816; excise duties $27,089,â€" 491, decrease of $424,127. Revenue collected from customs, excise and income tax for the sixâ€" month period, April 1 to September 30, 1938, was $263,132,899, Revenue Minister Iisley announced at Ottaâ€" wa last week. This was an increase of $7,798,100 over the correspondâ€" ing period last year when revenue totalied $255,334,799. Customs, Excise, Income Taxes Yield More Than Last Year Revenue Rise In Dominion Mr. Curran asserted the newlyâ€" gathered evidence might possibly prove that Norse sailors came to Ontario by James Bay before the year 1100, or 400 years before Coâ€" lumbus crossed the Atlantic and reached Lake Nipigon by way of the Albany and Kenogami rivers. 400 Years Before Columbus The Sault publisher said: "I accept Mr. Dodd as a truthful man, and so accept his story as true and exact. There is no question in my mind but that â€"he found the Norse relics where he says he did." The relics sold by Dodd, a railâ€" way conductor and amateur prosâ€" pector, were proven of the 11th Century but their discovery in Onâ€" tario was disputed. Dodd said he dug them up while prospecting for gold. He and two other investigators are prepared to report that three Norse relics were actually found in 1931 near Beardmore, in north westâ€" ern Ontario. They were produced in 1935 by James E. Dodd of Port Arthur, who sold them to the Royal Ontario Museum. Prove Weapons Fourd Here Mr. Curran said he investigated with little hope at first that the weapons could be proven to have been found in Ontario. He was asâ€" sisted by Judge Alexander McComâ€" ber, senior judge of the Thunder Bay District, and Dr. George E. Eaâ€" kins, of Port Arthur. New and important evidence that Norse adventurers were the first white men to set foot on North America will be made public soon, J. W. Curran, publisher of the Sault Daily Star, said in an article in the Star. Edi‘t'or of Sault Daily Star Finds Sure Norsemen First Settlers New Support for his Belief That They were Eavliest Whites to Set Foot on North America earth rclate fasts THE WEEK‘S QUESTION â€" How does the price paid this fall for Mr. de Vailera must have had his tongue in his cheek when he said that "Ireland cannot be left out of any general settlement of the miâ€" nority problem in Europe." At home the British Government is confronted by th> Welsh Nation alists who want their minority problem taken up; by Prime Minisâ€" ter de Valera of Eire who wants a plebiscite in certain areas of Norâ€" thern Ireland. It such were held, Mr. de Valera believes, four of the six counties of Ulsterâ€"Armagh, Down, Fermanagh, Tyrone, Antrim, Londonderryâ€"would wish to join Eire (formerly the Irish Free State). of the Sudeten minority problem in Czechoslovakia, Poland got her ultimatum in at Prague, demandâ€" ing the cession of the areas where the Polish minority â€" lives. Now Hungary has set up a how!l on beâ€" half of the Magyars in Czechosloâ€" vakia. ME, TOOâ€"As soon as Germany had been granted the settlement That says nothing about the Britâ€" ish African colonies which he wants. LAST IN EUVROPEâ€"In Adolf Hit ler‘s speech to the world Beptemâ€" ber 26, he declared that the Sudeâ€" ten areas were the last territorial demand he woild make in Europe, "In Europe," mind. Nothing seems to b France to do, but to Britain‘s satellite. This autumn of 1938, France inâ€" stead of Germany is encircled. At her back door she has insurgont Spain with its hostile airdromes only a few miles from the border, In the Mediterrancan she faces the threat of the Italian fleet cutting her off from her reserves in North Africa. In the east her "impregâ€" nable" Maginot line of defense against Germany is built on the same enginecring principles as the Czech fortifications whose secrets the Germans now possess. vise could you interpret her presâ€" cat position? Just four years ago France count. ed her European alliecs and friends on both hands: Belgium, Czechosloâ€" vakia, Poland, Rumania, Yugoslaâ€" via, Soviet Russia, Greece, Turkey, British friendship was â€" assured, Germany was well encircled, Today French statesmen admit privately that â€" their country is dependent solely on Britain‘s goodwill for hor future. Nevertheless the 1nd kict was worth it. The loudspeaker was damaged to the extent of $3.75. Something went wrong with the powoer lines outside of her house and the town will be presenting her with the bil1, as a result. V/:lITHER FRANCE? â€" It looks ow as if France, once the strongâ€" st democracy on the Continent of urope, is to be relegated to the Jle of a secondâ€"rate power. How News Parade By Elizabeth Eedy ONTARIO respec be left â€" for o revolve as s the Ontario wheat compare with a year ago? Answerâ€"The same whoeat which last year brought in $1.02 to $1.04 is now selling at 56 to 58 cents. All popular present day music is derived from coloured rhythm, said Sir Ernest last week,. He did not believe "swing music‘ would be permanent. "‘Jittery‘ music is probably the result of the "jittery‘ nervous life people lead today," he said. Bir Ernest was guest co;ndu(-l(nr for the Vancouver Symphony Orâ€" chestra concert here. Millan, of Toronto, Canadian comâ€" poser and symphony conductor, claims "jitterbugs," "jam sessions" and swing music are nothing new, Derived From Colored Rhythm Canadian Symphony Conâ€" ductor Avers Swing Not New Says Sir Ernest Economic consequences, thus, of the European situation, coupled with the geographical position of Canada and the United States would bring the two countries closâ€" er together in a new cra that must come if the whole economic strucâ€" ture were not to tumble. to Jecome sellâ€"sustaining was enâ€" visioned by Premier HMepburn. Mr. Hepburn told the American Transit Association that Japan, Italy and Gormany revealed in the recent world crisis they had soriâ€" ous designs upon the rest of the world, seeking to make themselves solfâ€"sustaining at the expense of other countries, Becoming Selfâ€"Contained Canada and the United States never had feared invasion, but they should give serious thought to beâ€" coming selfâ€"contained. Both "won. derful countries", they woere peoâ€" pled by the same people who had provided the necessary material to maintain free democracies. VANCOUVER.â€"8Sir En A closer union and the United S the struggle of B to become self.â€"e Premier Hepburn Predicts That !.II E_r_l to Come Canada and Sees Closer Union With the States David A. Croll, K.CG., formep® mem‘«r of the Hepburn Cabinct, who, according to reports, may reâ€" tire from provincial politics and run for Dominion House in the next general election. the U. S. Will be Drawn Closer Togetker Interested In Election n between Cansda States arising from European countries sustaining was onâ€" st â€" Mcâ€" a0

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