West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 18 Apr 1940, p. 3

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

TT ASb uc ds ebetens. stt mcfi Canadians resident in Germary but not interned: Mr. and Mrs. G. Heimers and Miss Margaret Scotâ€" land, ali of Calgary; Mrs. E. B. Lincke, of Vancouver; Hans Weitâ€" man, of Regina; and Francis A. §chwin§hammer, and Mrs. Paula Huelsbach, and son, Karl, whose Canadian addresses were not given. Charles Grant, of Toronto, and Zygmunt Sedziak, of Winnipeg, aiso were listed as held in a civilian ©amp. Others with them whose Caâ€" nadian addresses were not availâ€" able were Thomas Reilly, Samuel Seliger and Joseph Erlips. was sunk by German naval fire; and Philip Templeman, RAF., held in a German hospital. Canadian addresses of Barr and Templeman were not contained in information received. Pilot Officer R. A. G. Wills, R.A. F., of St. Thomas, Ont., was listed as interned in Belgium, licer A. B. Thompson, R.A.F., Peneâ€" tanguishene, Ont.; Hugh Barr, stoâ€" ker on H.M.S. Rawalpindi, which W Ten Canadians Are Interned Many Historic Sites Marked At St. John, N.B., tabl placed in the Provincial to the memory of James Professor of English liter rhetoric at Dalbousie T and Georgo McCal Th OTTAWA â€" Many personalities and ever with Canada‘s early marked in 192% accor McCully Fathers berland Amhers port 3u MICKIE SAYs_ _ sOME MERELY RESIDEXNTS t not interned Prisoners of ot Officer Rot i Island, Edward Robort Barry Dic in Canada During 1939 . Tablets and Monuments Are Erected to Great Canadian Personalities kT KINGSTON. OX 1989 according to a reâ€". oric sites marked W the Resources Department. and preserving sites and W C ma n Henry I in n ithe H €r H istory we it auseum ndl * | Kir NO HURRY The average amateur starts operâ€" ations days or sometimes weeks too seon and stops long before satisâ€" factory gardening can continue. With the general run of vegetables and flowers there is no advantage in getting things in while there is still danger of serious frost. One setâ€"back from a cold day or two completely offsets the early start and may, indeed, meam replanting the whole garden. This caution of J. iugar Gom.ier, viceâ€"president and #enreral manag«;, Canadian Pacific Express Company, Toronâ€" to, who has been appointed presiâ€" dent and general manager to succeed the late Thomas E. Mcâ€" Donmnel!. Thirtyâ€"seven years ago, Mr. Coulter joined the Canadian Pacific Express Company as office boy at the age of 13 years, ana within seven years became chief clerk to the president. Gardening .... The longâ€"awaited spring offensâ€" ive by Germany came with a sudâ€" denness that threw the September 1 Blitzzrieg against Poland into the shade. Within twentyâ€"four nours, the capitals of two neutral ecountries had fallen into the hands of the Nazi conqueror. The entire situation in Europe changed overnight. Before the new state of affairs could be acâ€" curately assessed and events seen in their true perspeciive, a cerâ€" tain period of time would have to elapse. For the time being, of invasion of Denmark and Scandâ€" inavia: Was the German action merely a counterâ€"move against the Allies in order to secure bases to break the British blockade? Or was it also a political move, conâ€" sequent upon which the conquerâ€" ed territories would be reduced to the status of Austria, Czechoâ€" slovakia, Poland? Would the Alâ€" lies be able to drive the German army out of their new entrenched positions by air bombardments, by a naval war, or by land action? Would Holland and Belgium be the next countries to undergo W Our ve iAus was New General Manager . P. Express Company NEWS PARADE Ar he wa & the war ol But what did umber of inipc geographic, dip U Aall avia n War Closer Here up 10 were raise« Se ha PE ced ve h U W Cerma alkan W YC 11 a Wt omatlc, €Câ€" by Hitler‘s and Scandâ€" Imeny nerves w Mu Wha iture M us pe Ad. r Elt â€" i seu BV + uVC 22 ~Cmbagnies 3C There are really two convoys in this picture and the merchant ship below can feel that it is well protected. Partially visible in the UPPER LEFT isâ€"a British warship on the lookout for lurking German subâ€" marines, while overhcad fly some of the formidable Anson reconnaisâ€" sance planes of the Royal Air Force. They are looking for submarines and for enemy planes as well. stock W we With all the men of military age gone to the wars and with England needing more homeâ€"produced food than ever before, the women have stepped into the breach with the determination to raise a bumper crop for John Bull this year. Here is a scene on a big farm at Bury St. Edmunds, where women of the land army are digging and planting from sunup to sunset. Most of these women kave menfolk at the front or at military stations in England. eourse does not apply to dy vegetables or flowers grass seed. These should just as soon as ground work. nclination the: rual flowers th A little digging ate Spring is Pake such thi he Spacing i1 m any i and ligh 11 look af arl marl ifornia ; nselves R. A. F. Reconnaissance Planes Convoy A Convoy FOR THE OVERWCRKED acing is important as even ihe usiast does not care to spend h time knceling and thinning, GIVE THEM ROOM REG‘LAR FELLERSâ€"Pinhead‘s Very Tidy ny te PD wers almost wd out weeds on O the : that . _Spring Planting: Miss England Goes Back to the Land e on neguect. round in the is required. ilyssum, the laca and the Len r th0se peo e time not enty of an very nar or to the be sown is fit to tea AP 7 ORTRIR Nes cR S S . on en es tsamisn C02202â€"us 1t 1e Pupil Exchange Idea Valuable our Atlantic a hundred f Indies who a Maritimes. I There nover was a time when mutval unsderstanding among youns people living at a distance from one another was as sorely needed as in our day and age, says the Kitchen er Record. So it is of interest toâ€"noâ€" tice something of the way in which our schools help young Canadians to become aequainted in Other p virces and other countries. Each year brings over 2,000 f time students from the Uni States to our colleges and priv schools, in addition to those come for summer courses. A th or more of these come to . French language institutions, : probably most of thein are from milies who were at one time C adian. EXCHANGE AMONG Several hund Helpful to Students and To Countries. Promotes Underâ€" standing and Goodâ€"wili vfourdland provinces, 21 om the Briti rings over 2,000 fulâ€" < from the United colleges and private ldition to those who mer courses. A third hese come to our CC PROVINXCES ne each year especially to , and nearly British West consid 10 full United nrivate 11 ind in In its annual roport on farm valâ€" ues for the year 1939, the Dominâ€" ion Bureau of Statistics states that the average of occupied lands in Canada in that year was roported at $25 per acre, an increase of one dollar an acreâ€"over the 1938 value. This is the first increase since the year 1935 when the average value rose from $23 to $24. Average valâ€" ues aro still much below the 1926 average of $37 per acre. VALUES OF LIVESTOCK The average values per head of live stock in Canada in 1939 are estimated as follows, with the 1938 values within brackets: Horses $67 ($71); milk cows, $46 ($40); other cattle, $33 ($27); total cattle, $39 ($33); sheep, $6.69 ($5.79); hogs, $13.79 ($13.21). Farm Lands Value Shows Small Gain The author gives us a sympathâ€" etic picture of the people, the noâ€" mads, the villagers, the city dwelâ€" lers, as they adjust themselves to a new tempo of living â€" in a country as old as time, which stili looks to the future with hope and confidence. "A Doctor‘s Holiday In Iran" . . . by Rosalie Slaughter Morton, M. D. . . . Toronto: Oxford Uniâ€" versity Press . . . $3.50 By Rosalie Morton Dr. Morton, famous woman physician and surgeon, here preâ€" sents an informal and informative study of Persia, the anclent Eastâ€" ern land which has turned its face toward progress at a time when Europe shows signs of evolution in reverse. "The unveiling of wo men," writes Dr. Morton, "has caught the world‘s imagination, but this is only a minor phase of the awakening of Asia. Iran today is a iesson in modernism and an examiple of youth rebuilding a year by whe vers a ye ince oi ordinary rei tional Federation 0 vosity Students, wi tion of the univer years bas facilitate by providing an whereby students versities may exch A RBOCTOR‘S HOLIDAY IN IRAN T he Baok Shaif.. 7 t In Canada During 1939 â€" Inâ€" crease of $1 Per Acre tdonts in different uni y exchange places for a3 3e oys > CMPvies (esla>>g ns 78 ONTARIO LIFE‘S LIKE THAT lmprovement in the industrial situation is indicated by anâ€" nouncement that many plants are taking on apprentices. What they should have been doing years ago. â€"Owen Sound Sunâ€"Times. When hens laid in the spring, as nature intended, eggs were a good price all winter long. Now that hens have been tricked into laying all winter the best price for eggs is some other time. Pou!â€" try raisers must feel the same about it as a seasoned producel who exclaimed _ years ago that "The packers want the kind of cattle the farmer ain‘t got." Screams Scare Charging Beast This is the advice given last w by one of the most experienced men wild game hunters, Mrs. Johnson, widow of Martin John the explorer and writer. Mrs. Jobhnson iMlustrated her vice from her own experien "Martin and 1," she said, "disli Just one thing more. The elecâ€" tion campaign demonstrated that people who think 20 minutes is the limit for a good sermon sat and listened for 90 minutes to a political address. INTERFERING WITH NATURE CHMURCH ATTENDANCE If absence makes the heart grow fonder a lot of men must love the church. NO LONGER FORBIDDEN Hepburn said that after the elâ€" ection was over the people of Onâ€" tario,. might see March of Time‘s Canada at War. Now that the ban is off who‘ll want to see it? â€"Hamilton Spectator. as necessary to make the frighten ed animal turn and run, says a story from Washington, D.C., in the New Â¥York Sun. you do? (Nearsighted Officer) "Cut Out the Grandstand Stuff and Get in Line! ! !" LISTENING TO SPEECHES snoot any tures of. When an tas [nuditos‘s <. VOICE PRESS lephant shoud Cai know the best thin Just scream, scre as long as vou cal APPRENTICES AGAIN jaxtA qo us /f. 3 C â€"fhe s oJ s _outs tOla y 0 1 I fâ€";f*, Nes B4 css ’1{’ t â€"s® CCep jeaqsa ~20/ 1 Mrs. Osa Johnson, Wild Game Hunter, Finds Them Effectâ€" ive in Beating Off Foes â€"Peterborough Examine ©10O ARCHIVEsS TORONTO oP THE 1n0cero anima O 0 â€"Brandon Sun. s Advoc 10 lence if «** Osa By GENE BYRNES Germans Can Eat At Big Festivities me, I would scream terri most always my sereams eard ha For rolling . {>oae a cooler, ?’Y"‘: <glld> sweetfer, 6{‘;,; , r. more fraâ€" &3X ©./ 3A grant cigâ€" \TYVY (m~\NA arette the S‘ __ in N) pass word hai5, ~e N is always it *‘Ogden‘s‘". Recognized m *ar and wide as the best * *‘guard" to true smoking pleasure, Ogden‘s Fine Cut provides major satisfaction in rolling your own. A package of this better cigarette toâ€" bacco with ""Chantecier" or ‘‘Vogue** papersâ€"there‘s a combinati~ 1 that wili pass the testâ€"anyplace, as.ytime. mit THE PASSWORD 1sS OGDEN‘S:! W OLRC m 1001 Allowed Observe always my s« hem, I must ums. Only rar versaric n RIMP IN S( n By Fred Nehkor ASSWORD \ sben‘s: \ oA s §:>\ /fi j SA > : {5..) * ; *\ 4 y mss B s . Recognized le ss the hast * Special R in‘mat carrged in Iiow errifically. Al ams would 4i ive hurt theh

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy