West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Mar 1940, p. 7

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10 TTE PAPERS port elps Figure onger L p IWNER MADFE â€"Ep by Takin *n A +A x/ * § a 308 EV @C gh Bird banding in Canada sot a new record in 1939, when a total of 41,062 native wild birds, represâ€" enting many species, were marked with official bands. This brings the total number of birds banded in Ca rnada since 1923, when the compilaâ€" tion of bird banding records be came a government activity, up to $41.958. Total of 41,062 Native Wild Birds Were Marked With Official Bands by Canadian CAPTURED ELSEWRLERE Thousands of these birds have been rotaken at the place where they were first banded, or killed, found dead, or captured elsewhers. Kach report of the recovery of a banded bird adds to the information being compiled relating to the miâ€" The British Empire suppluied more than 9,000,000 men to the armed forces during the last Great gration, flyâ€"ways, range, breeding, and wintoring grounds, mortality rate, longevity, and cycles of abunâ€" dance of wild birds. These records are invaluable in assisting in the conservation of wild life, and the important task of collecting them is carried on by the National Parks Burcau of the Department of Mines and Resources, Ottawa, in coâ€"operâ€" ation with the United States Burâ€" eau of Biological Survey at Washâ€" ington, D.C. Most of the hbird banding in Canâ€" ada is carried on by about two hundred voluntary workers, 10 hold birdâ€"banding permits under che authority of the Migratory Birds Convention Act. Official bands ars of aluminum and are inscribed with a sorial number and with a lettor designation. The animals, three times the size of cottcntail rabbits, have done serious damage to Meaford district orchards and James C. Pillgrem, Meaford sportsman, ofâ€" fered $1 a head for 100 of them which were shipped to the Huntsâ€" ville district and turned loose there for the amusement of huntâ€" ers. War. Trappers in the district used wood traps to catch their victims and the animals were not harmed. Premiums paid by the Dominion Governmert on high gradoe cheese under the Cheeso and Cheese Fac tory linprovement Act totalled $586â€" 385 for choese made since June 1, when the promium went into effect, J. F. Singletom, associate director of marketing services for the Dominâ€" lon Agriculture Dopartment, reportâ€" ed to the anuual convention of the Ontario Cheese Producers‘ Assoâ€" clation. Jack rabbits, some weighing as much as 22 pounds and able to leap move than 12 feet, were worth $i a head alive in Meaford district the middle of February. Cheese Premium; $586,365 Paid 8y Ottawa Since June 1 Ontario Gets Biggest Share AIM FOR IMPROYEMENT Some premiums on 1939 cheese have yet to be paid, so final figures will bo somewhat higher, Mr. Singleton said. Ontario cheese producers receiyâ€" ed most of the premium money, the total for that province being $499,â€" 198. Quebec was noxt with $79,564, then Manitoba with $3,491, Prince Edward Island $1,607. British Colâ€" umbia $1,483, Now Brunswick $560, and Saskatchewan $461. Nova Scoâ€" tia has no cheese factories. Flightâ€"Licutenant L. W. Skey, of Toronto, has been awarded the Distinguished Flying Crocs it has been announced by the British air ministry. Flightâ€"Licutenant Skey joined the R.A.F. in 1986. â€"â€"Photo by Ashicy and Crippen, Huge Rabbits Cets Distinguished Flying Cross During 1939 Caught Alive GETHSEMANE: T RIUV M P H THROUGH â€" SURRENDER.â€"Matâ€" thew 26: 30â€"56. Place.â€"On the way to Gethâ€" semane and in the garden of Gethâ€" semane. Matt. 26: 36. Then cometh Jesâ€" us with them unto a place called Gethsemane. (This garden was loâ€" cated on the Mount of Olives, beâ€" yond the river of the Kidron; the name itself means "oilâ€"press"). And saith unto his disciples, Sit ye here, while I go yonder and pray. 37. And he took with him Peter and the two sons of Zebâ€" edee. All the disciples, except Juâ€" ilarch 9th, 2:00 p.m., i i inâ€"engi in R.C.A.F. pilots have The first of a shipment of Avro Anson twinâ€"engined bombers to be used to train C pilo e arrived at the DeHavilland Aircraft plant in Toronto. A continuous stream of Anstl)tx;ls vlv;lltr:;:;(; l;:-h(g:::'. ada until there are more than 1,600 of these fast bombers for use in the wn}morgwe; P .to S hets they nid Nine flat cars were required to bring the crated planes to siding for unloading in Toronto, be assembled. GOLDEN TEXT.â€"Not as 1 will but as thou wilt. Matt. 26: 39. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING. KNOW CANADA FIRST The Canadian Broadcasting Corâ€" poration during the past few months has, through the facilities of its Features Department, develâ€" oped a form of broadcast that conâ€" cerns itsell with the life of the inâ€" dividual Canadian and at the same time emphasizes the importance of the life of this individual in the life of the whole Dominion. With this in mind CBC has planned and broadcast a number of series of programs which brings listeners from coast to coast word pictures of national life in different parts of the Dominion. "Carry On" broadâ€" cast on Sundays from 9:00 to 9:30 p.m. is the latest of the series to join such programs as "This Canâ€" ada" a series of talks about the customs and economic and social life of various parts of the country and heard on Monday evenings at 10:30 p.m., the Farm Broadcasts heard in each individual Province with news and market tronds perâ€" taining to each, every day at 12:39 p.m., the presont Dominion Elec tion Broadcasts, "Canada‘s Mercâ€" antmen" heard on Fridays at 8:90 p.m., and most interesting of them all to those whose sons and fathers and husbands bave gone to Engâ€" land with Canada‘s First Expediâ€" tionary Force, a regular series of broadcasts "With the Troops in England" which often brings to some lonely person the sound of the voice of one of their loved ones. NOTES AND NEWs A message by President Roose velt to the farmers of the U. S. will be heard over all networks on Friday, March 8th, from 10:00 to 10:30 p.m. ... The King‘s Men quartet will be the featured vocalâ€" ists on the new Rudy Vallee proâ€" gram which will be heard over the NBC network beginning March ith, at 9:30 pm. ... H. V. Kaltenborg 2 Seuie ue w e ic p i ns PRINTED TEXT, Mat. 26: 36â€"46. Time.â€"Thursday, April 6, A.D. 30. Sunday School Lesson 1 /)Â¥ RADIO B notes LESSON X By MADGE ARCHER CBL, Metroâ€" poliian Opera . . . 9:00 p.m.. CBL, Toronto Maple Leafs vs. Chicago Blackhawks . . . 10:00 p.m., CBY, and 10:35 CBL, NBC Symphony Orchestra . .. March 10th, 2:00 p.m., CBL, Hart House String Quarâ€" tet .. .‘$:00 paui,. CFRB, N. Y. Phil. Orch. .. 4:30 pm,, CFRB Pursuit of Happiness .. 5:00 p.m., CBL, The World Today Reviewed by Edgar Mcinnis . . . 8:00 p.m., CBL, Chase and Sanborn Hour . .. 9:30 p.m., CBL, Appointment With Agostini . . . March 11, 4:15 p.~., Dominion Election Cast . . . 8:30 p.m., CBL, With the Troops in Engâ€" land . . . . 10:4§ p.m., CBL, CBY, Dominion Election Cast . .. March 12, $:00 p.m., CFRB, Tig Town ... $:30 p.m., CBL, Information Please . .. 9:00 p.m., CBL, Top Flight Tunes .. . 10:00 p.m., Los Concerts Symphoniques . . . 10:30 p.m., CBL, Dom. Election Cast . .. March 13, 4:15 p.m., CBL, Dominion Election Cast . .. $:30 p.m., CBL, Serenade for Strings . . . 9:00 p.m., CBL, Dom, Election Cast . . . 10:30 p.m., CBL, "France This Spring" discusâ€" sed by Professor Felix Walter . . . 10:45 p.m., CBL, Dominion Election Broadcast . . . March 14, 8:30 p.m., CBL, On Parade ... 9:00 p.m., CBL "The Shadow of the Swastika" (new series) . . . 10:00 p.m., CBL, Bing Crosby and Bob Burns. das, went with the Lord as far as the outer part of the garden. Here Jesus requested eight of them to sit down and wait, but James, Peâ€" ter, and John, his three most inâ€" timate disciples, the only ones who were with him on the mount of transfiguration, he took with him deep into the garden, that these three sympathetic souls might be with him during the time of exâ€" treme sorrow and agony that he knew he was at this time enterâ€" ing upon. And began to be sorrowâ€" ful and sore troubled. 38. Then saith he unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death. Christ here was experiencing the limits of human endurance. Abide ye here, and watch with me. 39. And he went forward a little, and fell orf his face, and prayed, saying, My Fathâ€" er, if it be possible, let this cup pass away from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as thou wilt. The Lord separated himself from his three close companions who had thus far accompanied him, and he goes deep into the garden to pour out his soul to the Father alone. The "cup" is not merely the physâ€" ical suffering Jesus has to endure; but the whole experience, the beâ€" trayal, the trial, the mocking, the scourging, the cross, the grave . . Jesus was not asking that the cup should pass from him regardless of consequences or God‘s own The Agony â€"Adjustment Necessary In this lesson we realize that the only absolutely holy person that ever walked this earth, who never did anything wrong, was forsaken by friends, betrayed by one whom he had continually beâ€" friended, all without the slightest justification, and all of this was allowed by God to happen. Just why God allows sorrow, distress, tragedy, to come into our lives we do not always know; but if Jesus endured such experiences as these and never lost faith in God, we, who are sinners, can surely endure any experience he sends, and still trust him through them all. will; he was asking that God‘s will be absolutely carried out, and, if possible, in this carrying out of God‘s will that the cup should pass from him. Screeches and howls in Andrew Ross‘ radio set at Rochester, N.Y., last week, sounded too realistic for sound effects, too piercing for static. Ross investigated. A grey cat was sitting on the tubes. He tried to move her, but couldn‘t, Police were called and they put the cat out. a Live Static Watch and Pray Canada‘s Sugar = Output Speeded Judging from a report from the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Caâ€" nadian sugar refineries have been pouring out sugar this year at more than double the pace of early 1939 Official report said Canada‘s ten suâ€" gar refineries manufactured 50,728,â€" 000 pounds of sugar during the first four weeks of 1940. Of this, 47,790,â€" 000 pounds were granulated and 6,938,000 pounds were yellow and brown. Both grades have been produced at more than double the early 1939 pace, Granulated during the first forr weoks of 1939 amounted to 15,432,000, and yellow and brown amounted to 3,142,000, or a total of 18,575,000 pounds. "Medicine has been an in‘ternaâ€" tional subject, but the contribution of Canada to it has been such as we need not be ashamed of," Dr. Fraser B. Gurd, associate professor of surgery at McGill University, told a Montreal audience last week. The achievements of Osler, Bantâ€" ing and Best, Collip, Archivald, Sheppard, Henri Lafieur and others were detailed as outstanding among the contributions of Canada to the science. OUTSTANDING CONTMABUTION More Than Double What it Was in Early 1939 Dr. James B. Collip. who came to McGill in 1928, had boen referâ€" red to by an ominent American surâ€" geon as the man who had done more for humanity than any other man during the past 20 years. _‘ his collaboration with Dr. Banting and Dr. Best he had purified the pancreas extract so that it might be used with safety in the iroatâ€" ment of diabetos. The firâ€"t four weeks of 1949 turnâ€" ¢d out more than for the first »ight weeks of 1939, as the sacond fourâ€" week period last year produced 23, 004,000 pounds. Dr. Gurd cited the famous case of the Frenchâ€"Canadian, Alexis St. Martin, and Dr. William Beaumont. the young American doctor, and told how the gunshot wound in the stomach of St. Martin had enabled Beaumont to watch digestive proâ€" cesges and through a series of exâ€" The supply of registered seed in Canada is rapidly growing less by feeding and by saje through the grain trade. This is particular‘y trve of the rust risistant varieties of wheat and oats, says the Agriâ€" cultural Supplies Board and urges that it is important that ordgrs be placed without delay for any rogisâ€" tered seed â€"roquvired for spring planting. The Ontario Cattle Breeders‘ As sociation have reâ€"elected H. A. Dol son, Brampton, president; B. B Warrnica, Barrie, viceâ€"president; and L. E. O‘Neill, Toronto, secre tary. Experimental areas with a view to obtaining a clearer conceptio» of the livestock disease problem in this province was suggested in & report adopted by the agriculturai committee of the Ontario Logisiaiâ€" ure. Serious aspects of spread of dis ease among livestock were cited »y the cominittee, particularly in view of the increased production of baâ€" con necessary to meet the woekly supply exported from Canada . to Creat Britain. The report came from a spocial committee yested with the rosponâ€" sibility of studying recommenda: tions brought to Toronto by Harry Wilson, Charing Cross farmer, on behalf of the Southwestern Oniario Swine Broeders‘ Association. Canada‘s Famed Scientific Men Dr. F. B. Gurd, of McGill University Reviews Work of Eminent Mediâ€" cos of Dominion â€" Osler, Bantâ€" ing and Best, Collip, Etc. FiIGHT HOG PLAGUE CATTLE BREEDERS BUY SEED NOW F A R M NOTES periments greatly develop the knowledge of these processes. OSLER‘S BOOK IMPORTANT Sir William Osler, the "bad Lboy" of the school, who at the age of 21 came to McGill to study medicine, wrote "The Practice of Medicine," which became the bible of the mediâ€" cal profession throughout thre conâ€" 29 Force, 49 garden tool. 30 Type standard 50 Grudge. 31 Portrait 51 Drunkard. statue. 52 He was an 33 Chinese sedge, __ =â€"â€"â€" patriot. 34 Uncle. 53 He was a »ezam 35 Edible fungus, â€" PY profession. 36 Musical note. VERTICAL 37 Nay, 2 Competed in 38 Cunning. 21 Gypsy. ‘ 22 Eye. 24 Paid publicity 25 Sable. 26 Pronoun. 27 To tolerate. 28 Twentyâ€"four apparatus. 14 Humor. 15 Chamber. 16 To slash. 17 Soft food. 18 Raven‘s cry 19 Born. 20 Barking of Spangled Banner." 13 Dyeing HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle the U "The Starâ€" s‘ 17 =4 â€"feet‘ }~ 4 dar es 90 To an Oy Willian 1 THis Curious WorLp "ik® |___ 2WE â€"PWMALLE <= THE ENTRE \*. ~3HT OF A TERMITE ‘_._~. BE mapEe uP oFr THE new 200â€"inch telescope will, it is hoped, be able to pene» trate space for a distance ot 7,200,000,000,000,000,000,000 miles. It will have a secing range of nearly four times as far as the 100â€" weh teloscope of the Mt. Wilson Observatory. PATRIOTIC SONG WRITER 39 Upon. 40 Quickly. 41 Blue. 44 No good 45 Dangles, 47 Wiser. 48 Twice. 49 Garden tool By J. MILLAR WATT the vel 4 slowly. 8 Court. 9 Street car. 10 To pull. 11 Chinese measure. 12 To become manifest, 17 Nominal value. 18 Company. 19 His song is 6 To swing 7 To drink 3 Chill. 4 Fishing bag 5 Crodit. tire world, Canada could also take some credit for the founding cf the Rockefeller Institute and the Rockeâ€" feller Foundation, he suggestad, "or it was by the reading of Osler‘s book and his remarks on the aced for greater knowledge of disease that Rockefeller was inspired to es tablish them, CONSTRuUCTION AT MT PALOMAR, CALIE, 16 EXPECTED TO HAVE A VISION RANGE Oor 1 200,000,000 COPR. 1937 BY NCA SERViCE, tC. ols field. 41 Ache, 42 Roll of film. 43 Senior. 46 Electrical unit 47 Health spring. 48 Youth, 51 Southwest, feathers, 35 To fail to hit, 36 Blasting substance, 38 Cavalry horse, 40 Floating ice 20 To purchase, 21 Elastic. 23 He wrote his song during (pl.). 25 Ventilating machine, 26 Minute object, 28 Monastic title, 29 To diversity 32 Dove‘s cry, 33 To shed Fort McHenry

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