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Durham Review (1897), 9 Feb 1939, p. 7

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Perf IT FOR A it] Ji c" ke. Huge lake trout can be seen “Numb the ice. Frightened be the skating forms over them, the trout swim frantically around. l'hase-d exhausted into shallow water near shore. the iUh an then Putrht by chopping a bola in the so! testing has made rapid Milli-s in Canada during the pres- 'n,' t' "utters'. The tirtrt need labora- 'r'y' in the Dominion was opened in urrmm in 1902. and since that 'im, laboratories have been estab- limo " at Sackvllle. N.B.t Montreal. PA?: Toronto. Ont.: Winnlpex. 1ivr; Saskatoon. Sula; Calgary. Ali, and Vancouver. B.C. In ad. dition to these. 1 laborutory for “"11 rrsoarch has been started in ”if max. and already considerable r mgr: t ”In of crops are dependent to p. rrnic;'t'rsrable extent on soil and irnntir conditions. but, no matter mv rainurnble are the growing ' wririirinns. the crop cannot be good ..' the seed is lacking in essential qualities. Seed must be vital. cap- ,EilIP of producing strong vigorous hints. and should belong to a var- 'v-_'.v suitable to the conditions un- -i~r which it is grown. Vitality, vu'/irty, purity. and freedom from distance are among the qualities in s-rls studied and tested by labora- Wz')‘ methods. Testing Remove. More Heard! The tinal purpose of making a his: is to determine the value of "r"ul for planting. and the system has been developed to aid the tar- trv; in avoiding some of the hag. ards of crop production by furnish- hut ull possible tttformation. Smut testing has made rapid No Need Seed Tests For Good Crops gross has been made. on Tim craze for ameteur photo- gummy which has swept the coun- my in recent years has aided in making the nation more art con. mime. Hagen Side, architect. told m: students in Montreal last Week, during an illustrated lecture on art. My. She was speaking on behalf of :he National Committee for Art Apprsuiation, which in cooperation m i'?) rm‘tain newspapers. is launch. ing it continent-wide campaign to Awaken interest in art by the dis. ruuuxion of inexpensive reprints of C. " w s mister-pieces. m ph Photography Aid; A rt Appreciation 2 Matter How Favourable Growing Conditions Are, Seed Must Be Vital, Capable Of Producing Strong Plants. mm}: a visit to Liverpool, Eng. ml. this July, the Duke and whims of Kent will unveil giant mun'ials to the late King George and Queen Mary, and the pic- rv "hows Sir William Goscombe hn. sculptor of the statues, at " on the one of the king in his ‘lluOIl studio. Photography develops a feeling 'm. r'm-m “slob is the first essen- m: tor all artists. Mr. Sine said. le urged the students to take up durum-spiny as an aid in develop. 1-1: their talents. Form, color and the ability to mnmnize both in such a manner a m ylease the eye while retaining At' Crue sense and feelings of what. u-.- is reproduced were held the min essentials in a masterpiece. 1w speaker believed. t' (.11rtSPtt YoungAFolh to King George Memorial Take Up'um’xs; i77 i,", Develop Artistic Talenu. 119 of iiinGil hi house such growths before me Ice nus formed. Filling the lee-House A cubic foot of ice weighs about " pounds, so in storing ice it is customary to allow from 40 to 50 cubic feet per ton for the mass of ice. At least 12 inches must be left between the ice and the wall of the building for insulation, un- less the ice house has permanently insulated wells and an unusually Inge space for insnlatnon beneath end shove the ice. From these figures it is possihle to calculete reedily the tieltlty .t,1 tu"' The ice harvesting season for- tonately comes at a time when there is the least work on the farm for men and teams, and con- sequently the actual money cost is usually not very great. Water for the ice supply should be entirely free from contamina- tion or pollution. Ponds and slug- gish streams usually have grass and weeks growing in them, so that the ice harvested is likely to contain vegetable matter, which is always objectionable. They should therefore be thoroughly. cleared‘of Farmer May Reap It From His Own Ponds And Step- is Germany's financial situation desperate? Answer: Germany has no foreign exchange for the pur- eUse of raw materials abroad. Up to now, subsidized exports have provided enough foreign cur- rency to buy vital imports. But this year the Reich's exports have sunk away down, incurring an un- favorable balance of trade. In ad. dition, the annexation of Austria and the Sudetenland make for- eign-exchange needs even more desperate. THE WEEK'S QUESTION: Why of a C: ?')' growl! last week before ti» i:“l'"(‘ " Commons, Georges V.cirrs., (unsurvative MP. for Ar- p:ic:uil, demanded the calling of a general election to decide whether Canada should automatic- ally an to Great Britain's aid in any “or. Said Mr. Heon: "Sir Wilfrid Laurier propound- ed the policy that when Britain is at war Canada is at war, and Prime Minister Mackenzie King has reaffirmed this . . . I do not infer that we should never take part in any war. What I say is that any war in which we do take part must be a war in which something better than sentiment, actuated by propaganda, is at stake. It must be a war that threatens our very liberty, inde- pendence and existence, and the issue of which would be of imme- diate vital concern to all of us." Commonsense'? I tajk? _ Take your, pitk. AT WAR CP. NOT: In the course Imps the Government (-an."Ai- tention Department of Mines and Ilcsources. ed down by the Federation of On- tario Naturalists. The members would have had to finance the en- terprise out of their own personal pockets. It is urged by Dr. Pox that an 1.800-acrc area be set aside in the Bruce Peninsula for the preserva- tion of a number of rare plants-- v,ild orchids, pitcher plants and other botanical species now threatened with oxtm-min 't'on. If the naturalists ean't afford i'., per. WILD LIFE.. A scheme to pur- chase and maintain a wild life sanctuary in the Bruce Peninsula as advocated by Dr. W. Sherwood Fox. president of the University cf Western Ontario has been turn- it, or leave it-thills' going to be "another Munich," this spring be- fore the ice goes out. SURE THING: Take Hitler: "And here's how you do it: you mass GOO planes behind the Pyrenees, 500 seaplane: and M submarines in the Balearics, 500 seaplanes in Spanish Morocco. At.. ter that you tell Daladier you want Djibouti--" Mussolini: "And Tunisia l'" Hitler (irritated): "No, I've told you a hundred times that you must go slowly at the beginning. It's the principle that counts." “a .5 an 'urout, and where the next one is coming from . . . The French newspaper "L'Epo.. que" went Phophetie (?) last week in a whimsical way. It published an imaginary dialogue between the Nazi and Fania numb”. the Nazi and Fascist dictators: Hitler: "As soon as Franco wins in Spain we'll pull a 'second Mu- nich'." Mussolini: "Without mipyte, Adolf." "'--M run-a "cvn, we mean. You’ll forgive this time, no doubt . . . it'aimpos. sible to avoid concentrating on these two foci of the world's at- tention, if we are to understand what the present international cri- sis is all about, and where the next one is comimr Mm- PRINCIPLE OF THE THINK tried hard to, but we just cou make it. Leave Hitler and M lini out of our column rr,,'.. .. "iiiiitid Teioiis 'the ice has Ice Harvest From Contamination. _ vr nu; THINK: We I to, but we just eouldn't Leave Hitler and Musso- f our column this week, . You‘ll forgive this Auk; - " hold. our word for Isolationist wasting Sir Cedric said Garrick. one ot the most famous actors in stage history, would not bother with the theatre it he were alive today. In- stead of swaying hundreds In the theatre. he would be a dictator ex. erting his spell over thousands and hundreds of thousands. First rate actors today are not on the Mage nor in Hollywood, but are in politics or business. Sir Ced. ric Hardwlcke. British Mar ot "Shadow and Substance," said in an interview last week. Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Eminent Britisher, Says They're In Politics or Business, Witness The Dictators. Best Actors Not Found On Stage Deer are still being seen in Brant County and in that section ot Ox. ford County where the wolves were alghted. Partridge have become numerous, Mr. Porter said, in the South Dumfries preserve. In the vicinity of Scotland. where beaver are numerous, an area two miles square has recently been posted as a game preserve. Thought To Be Police Dogs Having no gun available, Mr. Hutchinson borrowed one from a. neighbor, but darkness had set in by that time and nothing could be accomplished. Peter Parlor. district game over- seer. told ot the incident. F'red F'oarheller, working on the farm, told his employer that he had seen the tour wolves in a field. Mr. Hutchinson believed his employee had seen poliee dogs and had mis. taken them for wolves. Lator Mr. Hutchinson was driving a team when he also saw the wolves and was convinced they were not dogs. They approached so close he feared they might attack his horses. He raced the team to the barn for safety. Four wolves. three large and one small, repel-ml seen a few days ago on the farm of William Hutch. inson in Blenheim Township near Princeton, om. owe their freedom to assistance from the weatherman. Deer, Partridge, Beaver, Are Also In Evidence In South- ern Ontario. Wolves Are Seen In Brant County Captain George C. Pirie, air attache of the British Embassv, is shown in a New York hotel questioning Captain M. L Alderson, RIGHT, who was in charge of the flying boat Cavalier when it plunged into the At.. lantie ocean between New York and Bermuda. Pirie is in charge of the investigation into the disaster which claimed three lives. WONDERLAND OF oz They Are Investipting the “Curd; Suddenly there appeared from the opening another hairy man with . hour's head. In his hand he bore a brass hoop. He glued at the stronger in evident surprise. "Why have you captured this foolish on. and brought him here?" he demand. " addressing the owl-mun. " did not couture hill." was the InlI‘CI‘. "" pund the some: alligator and come here of MI own free will and word." Tho um um! Foremost looked It GM Mayor Thomas E. Henry, ot Strat. ford, said the highway must qualify this year as one ot the main roads bringing United States' visitors, in to the province on their way to New York. Mayor A. T. Clinton. Lindsay, Reeve George West, Madoe, and J. T. Stephenson, Ailsa Craig, were elected directors of the association. More than 19,000 runners par- ticipated in Russia's recent cross- country contests. Executive ot the No. 7 Highway Association at a meeting in To. ronto last week decided to ask ev. ery municipality between Point Ed. ward, Sarnia, Ottawa, Pembroke and Montreal to consider a co-op- erative proposal tor advertising the highway as a tourist route tor United States' travellers on their way to the New York World's Fair. As Tourist Route For Visiting States' Travellers On Way To Winter Fair “These dictators, don't forget, are primarily actors," he maid, "They get their effects by the art of the actor." And So Are Salesman "Today in our public schools, and by means of special courses, young men are taught how to com. mand audiences-but not for the purpose of becoming actors. Far from it-tor more important pur- poses. putting over the big deal, selling the customers. It they have a flrst.t'ate talent they have an un- limited field before them. It they have only second-rate talent they go on the stage." Will Advertise No. 7 Highway gfi i Clialllfj"iiiiiiiliiiiiiiii r5)itifiiit-r5,llrdit?,, iil,ilrlfJiiL0[']iFrfi "Have you become tired ot living, then?" he asked. "No, Indeedy!" answered Guph, "allowing nerv- ously. "I ma tt snome and the Chief General ot King Rutledo'l fret: any of gnomes. I come of I on;- "no no. of peoplo and, u 1 any It! so. I up.“ to live I Ion: “In. Le: Aideht_.1ropiitititiAEn In! " .55 fr,t,i'tpi' yi7irtiiiCiFgribG'r, ad will all you of the bl: (“or an about to do for you}! 'r_Mlrt"??) c, . _ "__"- c ' illli ".' f:irc.e;qs'p't"'itts;itittl" ' /,'?Jy' we. '--, e r. 5,/2r)is ANlleli. §<§¢ . ""’“ g _ - i tit,i,ir "i': _ ' ilaiRliliti r ”ti/cw“ \ ' tit,, a" “Nb; f s" ctit'i'ij"il/'- e tif, ls, Mllli, 1 ”URL; t 'd ' N Ah) ' ' ' ' r . 'd - ' y M LT.i I = yit _ 5 '1 _ , 'd F. / 3. tr f "rep/tit, f-j'?, . e _ 5’25, T t f ' F r If I. t I oe ’ ' “K I‘ y., f, I; P." . V r " ' MI L ' f, -it ft 'ldlil lt i'f-?N ’y r? I/ _ * f _ P,rialt, "e,n J l (i"il!(ie, -.' " " ty, p) ) e ' 1ftf, I IIE id, _ Pt', N" "srt ' Its"; 5. C) C, ' a; r 35: F/ V , Ai "L: ("a 'r. :3,- AY - 1 . A T.' ".'o r.------" 3 "tr" LR . fr‘ ' _ ' , Q 'Jfif P,,d tw 5 ' ' 'f,' ' I', I . I, .. ,’ . l .j l l -- l - ‘----.__. l \ h ’ , ,_,‘ _ . _ What is an ibex? An ibex is the back of the book where you look for things you can't ttnd. As the law stands, a car owner is under no obligation to take out insurance until after he has had an aeeident; then he cannot get a license um'l he has. This is like locking the stable after the horse has been stolen. If an) we should be compelled to take out insur- ance at the same time that he 10 quires a car it is the owner of the used-ami sometimes very much used-car. And the cheaper the air the greater the need for in. raranect.---h't, Thomas 'i ttttcs-Jour- nal. COMPULSORY INSURANCE It is a poor reflection both on cur education and our patriotism that not very often do we hear "God Save the king" done cor. rectly. In that familiar piece we are not, perhaps, blessed with any- thing approaching a great piece of music, but at least we could learn to sing "THE" King, where writ- u n, intend of "OUR" all the way through. ---Brantford Expositor. One of the doctors, a director of the district health insurance bureau, said the children all fell asleep in the rarehee atmos- phere. Twelve children with whoop- ing cough were flown for two hours at a height of more than two miles above Berlin, Ger- many, last week, and, nccording to attending physicians, came back to earth relieved. GOD SAVE "THE" KING A good example of obsolete mu- nicipal practice is the re-appoint- ment of a pound-keeper to serve Ridgetown, Ont., although the ap- pointee has never been called up- on to place an animal in pound for 20 years. Almost in the same category must be the individual who is sltin, we understand, Broeil. ville's ofheial fence-viewer. - Brockville Recorder and Times Airplane Ride Cures Cough A thought for the moment when you just ean't bear to hear an- other word about the state of Eu. rope: Snowdrops and primroses and first crocuses in the black earth-and then, in a little while, buttereups and daisies in the grass-Vancouver Province. OBSOLETE APPOINTMENTS THINK, AND BE HAPPY Is it not time that Ottawa in- augurated a new policy of bring- ing selected immigrants into Can- ada? We can never solve a lot of our problems without more peo- ple.--London Free Press. THE MORE, THE MERRIER IT'S THE FARMER WHO PAYS Many farmers are feeding the pheasants in order that the hunt- ters may have a good day's shoot next autumn. And their farms must be invaded too.-St. Cathar. ines Standard. I VOICE OF , THE PRESS _ o one-“om. -i_-- - . OMWWOOM‘ rock heaps wero titeFerrUiiWtiGii to nu own ayes. nor could In "no 1N?N"tfPdelit,2it2,5i 'sa' ."attu out but: bum " .33 With all hi- knowledge And brav- err, General Guph did not know that the “clay clue from tho hour'- eyel wu rendln‘ his month" In surely u If they had been gut Into won-an. 1!. did not know that the '.YtrPttte Perf Jetelr. glee-won- LIFE'S LIKE THAT Increasing attention paid to die. tary habits by medical and public health authorities may foreshadow important new trend: in farming. Such at least is the View ot lame agricultural economists who are following with interest the dietary and nuiriiion studies undertaken Dietary Changes Affect F arming Trends In Diet of Containers Have Direct Bearing on Ate rieuiture--Ott- Keeps Tab to Give Tips to Growers. In selecting u breed, considera- tion must be given to the space available. If space is limited, then a light breed will be the most suitable and they will be kept for egg production alone. More space is desirable for heavy breeds, which may be kept for the supply of table birds at the same time. It stands to reason that no mat- ter how good the management is. results cannot be got if the birds are inferior. either in strain or stamina. Healthy birds are " solutely essential at all times and most diMeult to secure. Healthy Bird. Essential In purchasing the nucleus of a flock, a visit should be paid to the farm where the stock is being bought and every observation giv- en to the health of the main stock. A subscriber who Intends to start keeping poultry wants to know what is the best breed. The fact is there is no beat breed. Ev- erything depends on the strain and the mungement. Choosing Best Trre--Depeu, On Strain And Management J-iii');')""; Poultry Breed "An' I never thought she looked a ", over tlnfrly © n-uzht Gupta around an luck with hi. inn hoop. The nut Can-M the General was - lulu the rock but. a." that. In only A at. "(In by ‘75ch (banal. m 'KP, o! the In!“ of mm... " I. m I fooling that may Wd we“ listened upon Mn. . . rat and Pore-lost MW .17. "It u Ian M: I. it! than I. h- ,mgng.:’__l_o__ ----- flout out In- t5R'riiiii6""""iii"iEGi'i'; Rcmves ,.iisEtTt%Uti' III. TUS he 531909;, .rtrrrtrqt 5nd Fort-on i’imm" 1.1- By L. Frank Brvor: Lac " 'Uehe is now frozen solid, but snow has ruined the usual glassy surface necessary in sport. intt Inventions, Pttterttrd und mum ented. qittee 1924. " .vrtu h..w sound. practical Inwnlim fur HI wrlte In Immediately. (“new IIII‘IIII' a! Arm-riva- Into-Iota. "ere. "= IVA-Islam!"- H, c. The economics division ot the marketing oervice ot the Dominion Dewiment of Agriculture has giv- en some study to the eating habit. ot Cunning. not particularly with I View to correcting deticienriea in diet but in order to obtain su- tiltictl data which would assist pro- ducts and distributors in planning their bulimia. The European population of Southwest Africa, n former colony of Germany, in now estimated at 30,000. including 21,000 South Africans, 6,000 Germans who we naturalized British subjects. and 3,000 unnatuttlized Germans. INVENTIONS WANTED _)i,',rc", I',,', "t Ion PM“. PM. This would probably mean I grener revenue for {armors gener- ally n such foodl brine higher prices. It might also involve chance- in arming Ind marketing methods and in the ulna of dit. ferent type: of farm lands. by the League ot Nations Ind 1b ("calen- of several nations, lu- cludlng Canaan. (can. I!“ of Canadian In (hm uudleo emphul- l- pluced on the desirability ot a greater consumption of protectlve food- Iucln u men. can. milk, fresh mm and resembles. Should communion at the” foods In- crease In any marked degree farm- er. would be called upon to two. duce more of them and loss of cer. eals itt order to meet consumm- de. minds. 7" :54}sz ' - Br Fred Ncher V a:

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