West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 28 Dec 1939, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ers greem cella 9e T _Lgsgs and fat are good when ¢alen in moderation. But too m‘eb of them tends to upset the liver. "A man with a torpid liver is isually badâ€"tempered, unreasorâ€" avlee ard hard to live with." . Does Hitler Eat Too Much Fat ? "His chef has to cook eggs in hirty different ways, and he is ery fond of vegetables done with SDed e pert on Diet Declares Man With Torpid Liver Is Badâ€" Chicago Snow Sets Records mer â€" the B "many T pl maling Canadians Leave Live Stock Exposition With 25 Titles and 507 Firsts housand fat Knighted For Exploit AD+ spade knive AC) tiike 12,000 Miles Long, It Will Be Cpened on Anniversary of Columbus‘ Arrival in Amerâ€" To Build Road From New York miral Sir H. H. Harwoed, *_Commodore in command British squadron which put ny‘s pocket battleship "Graf out of commission. He has knighted by King George omoted to rank of Admiral ng the vietory. 6) on 0s and machines, are bui ad in South America. "Panâ€"American Highway‘ hen completed, this road ural world iternationa 000,000 er nulesâ€"high mountain peaks, s plateaus both arid and ferâ€" and through seaâ€"level swamp jungle, men, armed with 6 now ( ernauonat hignway is al. miliar to thousands of tourists who have trav. it from the United » Mexieo City. Equal _ _of _ South Americans ored over the southern ow complete, from RBuen. 0o Lima, Peru. The comâ€" o Buenos Aires axes, rided n he e westermost link of _ connected with the is from Lima, Peru, gquador, and thenece Aj nol 07 H AS 1¢ H d itest VOn ok ale natior ir â€" Canadian ua were preâ€" op winners. stead n ocrats of the raded at the Db ma, Teru, d _ thence Colombia. arry â€" the have trav» e â€" United y. Equal Americans ‘s cramâ€" nd prize the COMID t NAn P 1er snow the 12.000 al 0 194 reten» this T of JY "It‘s only every few thousand years that you find as many as six planets in the same region of the skies," he said. "Along with excth, there will appear in the western sky during the latter days of February the planets Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, Saturn, Mars and Uranus." De The people of today will be privileged to witness something which neither their childven nor their greatâ€"grandchildren will see =â€"â€"a grouping of six planets in the western sky next February, Dr. Frank S. Hogg, professor of astronomy at the David Dunlop Observatory, Toronto, told the Royal Canadian Institute in an address last week. Will Get View Of Six Planets The War at the end of 1939 was rot one war, but three: betweer the Alliss and Germany; between Russia and Finland; betwoen Japâ€" an and China â€" Western, Rastern, Far Rastorp. At home in Canada, the final drait of the momentous . Kmpire air training plan was completed. Mighlights: ostimated cost of plan for three years, $600,000,000, with Canada‘s ~hare, $350,000,000; reâ€" quired establishment in Canada of 67 schools of all types; pearly 40,« 000 men required to carry out plan, exclusive of students; about 60 rew air fields to be constructed and 20 existing flelds enlarged; United Kingdom to supply most of airâ€" €craft, including engines and spares, as her share in cost; Canada, Ausâ€" tralia and New Zealand to contriâ€" bute to total cost in proportion to use made of plan by pupils from those countries: excluding cost of aircraft supplied by Britain, Canâ€" ada to bear cost of initial and eteâ€" mentary training in Canada and about fourâ€"filths of remaining costs of program; program to be adminâ€" istered by Dominion Govornment, with supervisory board composed of represertatives from four counâ€" trles involved; great majority of pupils will be Canadians; pllot training to take about 26 weeks, many thousands of pilots to be turned out each year. During the week U.S. Ambassaâ€" dor Kennedy returned to Washingâ€" ton from his post at London to give a report on the war by wordâ€" olâ€"mouth to his chief. He emphatâ€" lcally urged the States to stay rut of the eonflict at all costs. "This is not our fight," be said. tronomer _ Says Unique Grouping In February Disâ€" play Is Seen Only Every Few Thousand Years neutrality, _ Extenuating â€" Hitler‘s pact with Stalin, he declared that Italy kuew of the accord in adâ€" vance. Further, he said, Italy inâ€" formed the Reich last May, that owing to the effects of the camâ€" paigns in Ethiopia and Spain, she would not be prepared to engage in warfare for throe years. Such a siatement appeared to end for the moment an, {.ye that Italy eould be induced to come in on the Allies‘ side. (Same week: Virginia Gayda, one of Mussolini‘s mouthâ€" pieces, in a radio address declarâ€" ed that Italy ravst have sea outlets at Gibraitir. the Dardanelles and Italian Foreign Minister Count Ciano‘s speech to the Fascist Chamber embodied the first clear and compre} Asive statement of Italian policy since the beginning of the war. He asserted, first of all, that the Romeâ€"Berlin Axis re mains strong as ever despite Italy‘s What a weatth of speculation hinged on these2 happenings! Had Hitlo: himselft ordered the scutt}â€" ing of the Spee? Was it a gesture of great bravado, or was she blown up in order that the secrets of her construction might not fall into enemy hands? With regard to the action taken at Geneva, many thinking people felt regret and anâ€" noyance that the League had not seen fit previously to do something about the aggressions of Hitler, the rape of Albania by Mussolini, (The League had never even disâ€" cussed the disappearance of Ausâ€" tria, Czechoslovakia or Poland from the map). Looking abead, tou, the world wondered whether Rusâ€" sia‘s expulsion would not throw the U.S.S.R. anda Germany closer togothar, thinking noyance seen fit about t] The Second Great War broke a record in its fifteenth week â€" for excitement. Two events, one of unâ€" excelled dramatic interest, the othâ€" er worldâ€"shaking in importance, beld the spelibound attention of newspaper readers, radio hounds, of all countriés, We refer to the "suicide" of the Graf Spee; the ex pulsion of Russia from the League of Nations. 2) NEWS PARADE he Dardanelles and Douglas Fairbanks, great star at the silent screen and renowed for his acrobatic ability before the camera, died suddenly from a heart attack at his home in Santa Monica, Calif. He was 55. The other grain grand awards were wheat, field beans and oats to Alberta; alfalfa to Saskatch» ewan; soy beans and field peas to Ontario and timothy seed to British Columbia. Ontario Boys, Best Corn Two youthful farmers, members of the Canadian Boys‘ and Girls‘ Farm Clubs, Gerald Hesserauer of Rodney, Ont., and Garnett Knistâ€" William Rogers of Tappen, B.C., was awarded the grand championâ€" ship for rye at the twentyâ€"first international grain and hay show Rogers‘ victory brought the toâ€" tal number of grand championâ€" ships won by Canada this year at Chicago to eight. Film Hero Dies Suddenty At International Hay and Grain Show, Chicago â€" Winners In Live Stock Section Also Grand Titles Go To 8 Canadians 1° " . ,_ cu to PNOW We air force that women instruciors can turn out as good a pilot as male instrucâ€" tors, pretty Helen Harrison is busily engaged in giving instruction to pilots who have their eyes on the R.C. A.F. She is teaching flying at Kitchenerâ€"Waterloo Flying Club after being turned down when she applied for work ferrying military planes. Her record includes the instructing of military pilots in South Africa and test pilot for a Canadian aircraft company. Pictured with her is Provisional Pilot Officer Paul Henderâ€" son. REG‘LAR FELLERSâ€"Get the Broom Determined to show the air force that Pretty Canadian Girl Is Instructing Future Pilots of The R.C.A.F Strictly Scientific is‘ ‘"Once you have found the charâ€" acterisiits you want, it takes. from six to nine generations to fix them," he said.. "At: O.A.C., we grow two generations a year, one outside dnd one in & hothouse, so it will thike three to Tive yearsâ€"to fix our variety 0 *e weo find it.". . ‘"‘There‘ll be no hocusâ€"pocus or ‘abracadabra‘ about "it," said Mighâ€" ton, in a recent address at Toronis. "We are working. along , strictly scientific lines, and. I think wo are meoting success, BX ‘This young lecturer at the Ontâ€" grio College of Agriâ€"ulture promises to reach into his scientific hat and pull out a bigger, redder, juicier tomato than any now grown in Caâ€" nada, and present it to the catsup preservers and tomato juice squeozâ€" ers of Western Ontario. "Smail, Round, Firm," Wanted He promises to reach into anâ€" other hat and pull out a little, firm round tomato, more prolific than any grown in Canada, and to preâ€" sent it to eastern Ontario canners who have been looking for a tomâ€" ato that won‘t go squashy in the can. C. E. Migbton, of Gueiph. is a youug plant wizard who has set himself to perform a real feat of legerdemain â€" two of them, in fact, He has determined to be the Burbank of the tomato. Downview, Ont., second; junior ond; senior heifer ecalf, Douglas yearling heifer, James Douglas and Sons,â€" Caledonia, Ont., sec. and Sons, first, er of Ruscomb, Ont., won awards in corn. Hessenauer took first in Region 1 and Knister first in Reâ€" gion 2. These youngsters won against a big field of entrics from a wide area in the United States. Inthe live stock, section Edâ€" wards Brothers of Watford, Ont., sold at good prices eight of the thirteen head of Aberdeenâ€"Angus cattle brought to the exhibition. P. G. Todd, Lucknow, Ont., who showed at the international for the first time this year, scored twice in the Aberdeenâ€"Angus class. Linâ€" coln sheep class championship ram was exhibited by H. V Tee, Highâ€" gate, Ont. @t, Eastern Canada Winners Other Eastern Canada winners were: Breeding shorthorns â€" Twoâ€" vearâ€"old heifers, F. H. Deacon and Son, Unionville, Ont., third; senâ€" ior year.old heifer, T. A. Russeil, . A, C. Lecturer Plans to Deâ€" velop New Types â€" Takes Seven Generations to Fix he Varietv Makes Tomatoes ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO ‘Mr. Phillips advocated that ou:â€" side of the large urban centres no unit for relief should be less than countryâ€"wide and the admirâ€" istration placed in charge of apecâ€" ially trained persons. ‘"This question has now enterâ€" ed the realm of big business," said Mr. Phillips, "and it is time to take its administration away from the municipalities that are illâ€"equipped to raise the necessary taxation or to appoint persons skilled enough to administer such a problem. Federal and provincial participation have made the lot of municipalities éasier but the machâ€" inery is creaking badly." A call for a complete overhaulâ€" ing of the province‘s relief sysâ€" tem as it affects the rural areas was made in Woodstock by Thomâ€" as Phillips, superintendent of the Norfolk Children‘s Aid Society ad. dressing a meteing of the Woodâ€" stock Rotary Club. Norfolk Children‘s Aid Society Superintendent Says Probâ€" Of Ontario Relief Urges New System Called Adequate Tho hog population of the Domâ€" inion at the prosont time is four and oneâ€"quarter amillion animais. This is adequate to the productive requirements of the now British arrangement. So far as the farmers are con cerned, it is likely that the scheme will return thom about an avorage price of nine cents per pound or a littla beiter over the year for their bacon hogs. To Supervise Industry A bacon conirol board is being set up by the federal gurerament to supervise all phases of the naâ€" tion‘s hog industry. It will reguiate not only the price to be paid to the primary producer, but also the opâ€" erations of the packing plants. The spread that tha packers will be alâ€" lowed to eara will be rigidly speciâ€" fied by tho federal bacon author ity. Bianket regulation of Canala‘s hog industry â€" dosigned to guard against any repotition of the bacon scandals of the last war â€" is to be an immediate result of the arrangeâ€" ment now concluded with the Brit ish Government for largeâ€"scale purâ€" chases of Canadian bacon last weok, . id a story in the Windsor Daily Stav. Ottawa Acts to Prevent Scandâ€" als Like in Last War Will Regulate Hog Industry lem "Big Business" ©"I Want You To Tell Me How You Managed to Get Inio: the Without Waking My Wife." + LIFE‘S LIKE THAT MICKIE SAYSâ€"â€" Another case of poisoning by monoxide gas has been reported. It is regrettable that, in spite of all the warnings that bave been pubâ€" lished for years regarding the danâ€" ger of this deadly gas, fatalities still occur to those who thoughtâ€" lessly tinker with their motor cars in closed garages while the engine is rimning, â€"â€" Brantford Expositor. PRESERVE SPIRT oF DEMOCRACY If there is to be democracy afic: the war is over, democracy must not be abandoned while the war is on. The spirit of democracy must be respected, not suppressod, withâ€" in tho democracies themselyes. The thing for which the war is fought abroad must not be lost at home. â€"â€" Toronto Star, Interesting is the result, the passing of a byâ€"law at Fort Krie to spend a quarter of a mill annua» ly for the town band and that is not a big price to pay for hand conâ€" certs. It is posstble Fort Erie may set a fashion eisewhere in the province. â€" Niagara Falis Roviosw SUPPORTING THE TOWN BAND INTERESTED sPECTATORS Ethiopians will be interested in Italian indignation over Russian barbaritics in Finland, â€"â€" Brandon Sun. (CopprMight, 167. by Fied borRR. SOME Sucscricers cor "TH‘ 1PEA THAT \VE MaAxe S0 MuUCH MONEY ON ADs AN‘ JOR wORK , wE powt HAVE T‘ coLLECT ourg Ssugserirprion mone! Ir AINT S0, FoLkKS! IT AINT SO+ WARNINGS UNKHEEDED VOICE PRESS of the d sagt? . Alcoei By GENE BYRNES Big trees of California are said to have no natural enemies and none of these trees has been known to die or insect or discase attack. Ask {or BEE HIVE As a war measure there has been a slaughier of buffalo at the Doâ€" minion Government park at Wainâ€" wright, Alta., and 3,000 buffaio are being dressed to provide apâ€" proximately 1,000,000 pounds 0f meat, which will be distributed nationally. Juicy steaks and roasts of butâ€" falo meat about 385 cents a pound are available all over Canada now. Sell B â€"ffalo Meat All Across Canada The 1: Earl of i did his s become ; his name Me ordered his servant to cur two thin slices of bread and piace meat between, The meal proves satisfy ing. The origin of sandwiches is inâ€" teresting. In the reign of King George 14 there lived a famous nobleman who was very fond of gambling. He passed whole days at the card table and would not leave his game even for a imeal. Naiâ€" urally he found playing on an empty _ stomach _ uncomforitable work, and so devised a plan by which he imight eat with as little trouble as possible, Nobleman Gave 446 Â¥ .22z *A .'..-/4.‘“ efi n C By Fred Neher amous nobleman was the Fandwich, and so popular slices of broad and meat that they were called d ) 350 »J is n-“‘ AT

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy