West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 21 Mar 1940, p. 7

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for better rolling CT TO O&DEA‘S! CO Canadian Horses Wanted Overseas FRICTION MAKES HEAT Winds, he said, do queer things in mountain ranges as high as the Rockies or the Alps. â€" Sometimes they get literally trapped. Winds blow into the entrance to valleys and ranges, find themsolves blocked and begin to fight thoir way back. This, said Engler, sets up & friction, "and if you know your physics you know that friction does he thought friction caused by the passage of winds through narrow, funnelâ€"like mountain valleys acâ€" counts for the warm breezes. Bruno, in town for the close of the Dominion ski championships, said Alberta‘s chinooks reminded him of similar winds in his native Switzorland. These winds, he said, wre called "foon" winds and, gonâ€" eraily speaking, they moderate the winters of Switzerland as do the ehinooks along the continental divâ€" t) MICKIE SAYSâ€" Tho theory that the Pacific‘s Japâ€" anese current sends chinook winds over the Rockies to warm Southâ€" ern Alberta received a setâ€"back at Banif this month when Bruno Engler, Swiss ski instructor, said Canadian Voters Increase 600,000 What Causes The Chinook? M EVEN if youve cot PLENTY OF Business, KEEP ON Apvertising / Ts GOOD INSurRANCE TER TH RAINY pay here O Animals 5 to 10 Years Wanted in Europe Correctness of Old Theory on Warm _ Wind Disputed by Swiss Enumerators‘ Returns Show Ten Per Cent. Rise in Numâ€"« ber of Electors Over Last Election contipues brisk, Fred Hoag 1ent horse buyer of Ingersol leclares. Rad road conditions er, have slowed shipment Western Ontario in recen eft that city fo. ex midâ€"December, with o contributin: haa H H TH xX1M a ontributin: heavily. D WORK HORSEs { the shipments o istonguay id return led >mp are REMAINING HER n lus mate M LC n colo num Dol n rs‘ lists have been constituencies to i office at Ottawa, 10 per cent. in umbers listed in ed last anadian rms show a total 200,000 voters on ed with 5,918,207 on. This increase §00,000 has been )pean to the : { youn: he U.S many â€" M M iY XDC n in T pas artim i animais xport trade A L W 192( ecen tha Old n Have you got one of those foldâ€" ing ironing tables? If so, set it up at the side of the bed so that the table part stretches over the invalid. If not get a wooden box about three feet long and a foot or so deep. Knock out both the long sides, leaving the short sides and the bottom intact. Sandpaper it and paint it with enamel and there‘s your table! You may have to strengthen the ends by screwâ€" ing an "elbow" joint (obtainable at any hardware store for very little) to the ends and the botâ€" tomâ€"inside box of course. something ‘ Europe befo MA ma Make Bedâ€"Table For An Invalid resigning" of Provincial Secretary Harry Nixon, and the peaceable conclusion of the inquiry into doâ€" ings at the R.C.A.F. training achool near St. Thomas. People of Canada last week inâ€" dulzed themselves with the thought that life would be simpler soon, with the election over . .. and only one war going on in Europe. Simpâ€" ler, that is, if Hitler didn‘t choose the last week of March to launch a big offensive on the Wostern Four Arizona Indian tribes, reâ€" sentful at Nazi acts of oppression have foresworn use of the swaâ€" stika. The Indians placed a blankâ€" et, a basket, and some handâ€"decâ€" erated clothing, all bearing swaâ€" stikas, in a pile, sprinkled them with colored sand and set them afire last weekâ€"end. A â€" handâ€"letter _ proclamation read: â€" "Because the ornament which has been a symbol of friendship among our forefathers for many centuries has been deâ€" secrated recently by another naâ€" tion of peoples: "Therefore, it is resolved that henceforth from this date and forâ€" ever more, our tribes renounce the use of the emblem commonly known as swastika." R no Indians Discard Swastika Emblem 1a@ come, was uphele when, in its 105th day Finnish war ceased a v€ HOME POT BOILS On the home front, all was by o means quiet. The country seothâ€" »d as 672 candidates brought elecâ€" ior issues to a boil. And in Ontario . . ructions! which fortunately were brought to an end by the "unâ€" cesi¢ning" of Provincial Secretary )0 Ini{ y NEWS PARADE th n . AND THE RESULTS? ... c immediate _ consequences > readily discernible: 1. Fin was brought within the Rus trade orbit; 2. Russia becams «puted master of the Gulf o ind; 3. Scandinavia was drawn ‘v to Russia and Germany: 3 1s8ions lishin ern Norway: i. Turkey would awn closer to Russia; 8. early entation of United States‘ forâ€" policy; 9. new complications e Balkans, and the possibility war front being created there, soon; 10. further loss of pres by the League of Nations. m Washington came the opinâ€" hat peace between Germany he Allies was brought closer 1e collapse of Finnish resistâ€" in al n war materia‘s were releas Germany‘s use; 4 .neutraliz of the entire Scandinavian possibility of a north Europ ar front in the conflict beâ€" Germany and the Allies was ed; 5. Britain and France lef: t foothold im north, couldn‘t DIDN‘T WANT HELP question that stood large minds of people both he conviction expressed by all f political observers that ing "big" would break in war ceased, abruptly, d ... with worldâ€"wide ment Germany; 6. the oppor opened to Germany . of ; air or naval bases in orway; 7. Turkey would re "the Ides of Ma was upheld last v ssla and materials tly Why d i from In ib the Russoâ€" in prete om the A London | es ponden reasonab om M High in the foothills of the C internment camps in Canada where PER LEFT, clearing underbrush : are kept occupied cutting wood for RIGHT. One prisoner is busy readi High in the foothills of the Canadian Rockies, west of Calgary, is located Kananaskis, one of the two internment camps in Canada where alien enemies are kept under guard. Some of these aliens are shown, UPâ€" PER LEFT, clearing underbrush and pruning trees in the forested area around the camp. The prisoners are kept occupied cutting wood for their own use, A scene inside one of the prisoners‘ huts is shown, UPPER RIGHT. One prisoner is busy reading and another is making a weather forecasting model. Permitted to ocâ€" cupy themselves in a variety of ways, a prisoner is shown making ash trays out of brass and copper, LOWENR RIGHT, parading before taking up posts within the double rows of barbed wire surrounding the compound. In the background are seen some of the buildings in which the administrative forces are housed. W While Fred Hall, Toronto President of the Canadian Amateur Ski Association looks on, "Queen Cay" of the Dominion Ski Championships (Miss Catherine Betts of Spokane) presents Art Coles of Vancouver with the Senior Men‘s Slalom ‘Trophy. Coles won the Slalom and the combined Downhill â€" Slaiom title at Banff. â€"C.P.R. Photo. Queen of Dominion Ski Championships Presents Trophy Promiment U. S. business men and society leaders are becoming frequent guests at Laurentian skiâ€"ing resorts as the fame of the Laurâ€" entian ski territory spreads far and wide. In the above picture taken at Mont. Tremblant Lodge recently are (left to right) Mrs. Wm. Ranâ€" doiph Hearst, Jr., Hon. James H. R. Cromwell, United States Minister to Canada, Wm. Paley, president of the Columbia Broadcasting System, and Mrs. Paley. â€"C.P.R. Photo. The Book Sheli U. S. Society Leaders Enjoy Skiâ€"ing in Laurentians By Kathrene Pinkerton) > author of _ "Wilderne ‘ scores again in "Three‘s THREE‘S A CREW REG‘LAR FELLERSâ€"A Wise Guy Enemy Aliens Under Guard At Kananaskis Camp in Canadian Rockie: Crew" with the story of an extraâ€" ordinary young couple who decide to invest in adventure instead of security. _ They buy a 36â€"foot motor wruiser on the Pacific Coast and for nearly seven years a small boat is their home, with only brief interludes ashore. Home is wherever they choose to drop anchor. The Pinkertons (Robert, Kathrene, and _ small Bobsy discover a world of beauty in remote Pacific inlets and rivâ€" ers penetrating the coast range, the forests. _ They visit Indian littleâ€"known glaciers, wild life in villages, still untouched by civilâ€" ization. This is an unique adâ€" venture in living told with great humor and charm. ‘"Three‘s A Crowd," by Kathâ€" rene Pinkerton . . . Toronto. Mcâ€" Clelland & Stewart . , . $3.00. "The moral of all this is that hunters who are unable to idenâ€" tify their game should refrain from shooting." The hunter who makes the exâ€" cuse of mistaken identity when he is arraigned in court on a charge of shooting a protected animal or bird, really has no excuse at all, according to an article in the Deâ€" partment of Game and Fisheries monthly bulletin for January and February. The article advises hunters to restrain their trigger fingers until they are sure of the identity of the game. "This business of mistaken idâ€" entity, however, has a much more extensive application than just the inability to distinguish game. It becomes tragic when a hunter disâ€" regards one of the most important rules associated with the use of a gun for hunting purposes, Several lives were needlessly sacrificed during the last year because huntâ€" ers failed to determine precisely, before shooting, just what they were firing at, At no time is there any similarity in appearance beâ€" tween a man and a groundhog. ‘"In Sudbury recently," the arâ€" ticle says, "two men pleaded guilâ€" ty of shooting three elk in the Burwash Crown game preserve. In the course of their defence both men maintained that the elk looked like deer." The article goes on to explain those »shose experience in hunting is very short, have no reason for stating that they thought an elk was a deer. The elk, both male and feâ€" male, is considerably larger than a deer. : IDENTIFY GAME FiRST Refrain From Shooting BY YIC BAKER NTARIO 61290043 e sn o We are constantly reminded that times change. In the old days women used to make quilts out of odd scraps of cloth. Now they make hats. MAKING THEM MEET Up to now farmers have strugâ€" gled to secure enough income to pay the price that others ask. The same or even a better standard of living could be maintained if we put a like effort into getting othâ€" er prices down to what we arc able to pay with the income w« have. Two men were killed at Courtâ€" land, Ont., the other day, the driv» er of the car being eighty years old and his companion, seventyâ€" five. It raises the question again as to whether very old people should be given licenses to drive. â€"Niagara Falls Review â€"â€"Qâ€" Every man has his own method of sighting spring. The romantics look for sunshine, singing birds, and babbling brooks, The gardenâ€" ers wait impatiently for frost to leave the ground. Others are wheered by the appearance of marbles on the sidewalk. The asâ€" tronomers point with glee to the lengthening hours of daylight, Not all these signs have yet become evident, but there is a growing agreement that spring is definiteâ€" ly on the way. No Trace Of March 24, 1939, he and his 65â€" foot craft and his 14 crew memâ€" bers vanished in a heavy storm 1,200 imiles northwest of Midway Island. Passenger vessels looked for him, and the U. 8. cruiser Astoria scanned 152,000 square miles of the Pacific. No trace of the junk was ever found. Anead ef tim were thousat of miles of c:ean and the exp tation of a great welcome at Golden Gate Internationat Exp« tion. LIFE‘S LIKE THAT "We‘ll take your old car and you pay the rest just like alimony!! VOICBE PRESS SPRING IS COMING AGED AUTOISTS TIMES CHANGE Toronto Saturday Nigh oF THE â€"Halifax Chror Farmer‘s Advoca moGeâ€" ONTARIO ARCHIVES Halliburton h old peop ‘s to driv alls Revie H By GENE BYRNES These Articles Are Contraband 1. â€"â€" All kinds of arms, anmuniâ€" tion, explosives, chemicals, or ap pliances suitable for use in «hem{â€" cal warfare, and machines for their manufacture or repair; component parts thereof,; articles necessary or convenicnt for their use; materals or ingredients used in their manuâ€" facture; articles necessary or conâ€" venient for the production or use of such materials or ingredients, 2 â€" Puel of all kinds; all contri vances for, or means Of, transporâ€" tation on land, in the water or air, and machines used in their manuâ€" facture or repair; component parts Tho Dominion Government has sued a contraband list, spocify articles to be treated as contrab; equipment, and other ar uments necd ence of 1,200,000 Sq. Miles In Arctic Parish m to be a good sailor, for flung See includes the is Ascansion and Tristan da â€"that Jlonely outpost of | tish Empireâ€"set in the of the South Atlantic. U the Bishop of Cai covers 620,000 sq1 id North Australia teen â€" bishopries very large; Japar Anglican. The Bishop of i to be a good sail flung See include Ascension and Tr 10,000 irrylng on les necess eir manut Schedulo one giv« lute contraband t} poops, FoopsTUrrs All means of communtcat implements, instrume nent, maps, pictures, pap her articles, machines, or « nacessary or convenient h in Aq t 00,000 By Fred Neher atrume: CossaTry LV h ude cart M hu h rpel t ials or man t conyer ho tist of ab icles which Hel« y en1€1 aliOd® of the J e wild s 00 tC on y island 1 nient uch n na N« ingrod reture: Cumha h io ng nd

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