West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 2 May 1940, p. 7

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}National s Revenues ATCORNE:S ONBITIO N E.D RE CO. Toronto #Q SALL OME S eb N FOR sALE PV iT _ _1 . _ HavePoor Stance some flowers ha the brink of ext disregard of the ing them." C EERUTCIUZ U shrubs and trees. If you are Irish or Scottish, and have the germ of the Celtic magic in you, you will soon begin to wonder if it is not indeed true that the fairies are really here," CONDEMNS WHOLESALE PICKING <b There are fairies in the Canadian woods for those who have the germ of Celtic magic in them, Rev. F. E. Banin. of St, Patrick‘s College, Otâ€" tawa. last week told members of the Montreal garden clubs. "Just go into the woods and sit beside a trillium," he said, "admire Its form. Its color Watrh i n~=3 There Are Fairies J in Canada‘s Woods F 1 enoiihas |Mickey Rooney and his dad, Joé |Yule, give out with some close harâ€" |mony on the set of Mâ€"Gâ€"M‘s "Andy [|Hardy Meets Debutante." 1 appreciative audience of and trees. If you are Irish or ‘, and have the germ of the Relax knees. Lift high spot on chest. (Everyâ€" one has a high spot, she says, ar~ if yor try to put your finger on it you can‘t miss), Still Mak Felt For Germ â€" of Them "That‘s bad," Miss Duffey says, "the body should be balanced avound a straight line that would pass from the ear, through the shoulder, hip, knee and ankle bone â€" or a point slightly in front of it." RULES FOR IMPROVEMENT Miss Duffey suggests the followâ€" ing rules to improve posture: Expand ribs. Put ear over shoulder by pulling back your head. Elcuce @2 °o nuugte her â€"__ but {rom the waist down the beautiful clothes colt is askew." f f A STRAIGHT LINE In her work Miss Duffey analyzes about 2,000 female forms a year and she bas found that the average woâ€" man stancds like she thinks the modcls do â€" hips forward and the chest concave. Ninety out of 100 women and walk incorrectly â€" and el models are to blame â€" says Tuth Constance Duffey, Bosto1 iversity‘s director of physical vities for women. "A slinking manneqguin looks a million," Miss Duffey says, women iry to imitate her â€" {rom the waist down the beai clothes colt is askew." ~ Push shoulders down Ninety Per Cent, Make Their Presence Walk Correctly Only One Woman nose Who have Celtic Magic in manneqguin looks like rectiy â€" and clothes blamQ â€"â€" says Miss : Duffey. Boston Unâ€" towards the 10. For as the rain cometh down and the snow from heaven, and reâ€" turneth not thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it bring forth is an offense ag.inst him; in its freeness, fullness, his pardon melts away also that which it forgives. There is a backward look here to Israel‘s great and glorious king, David, with whom the Lord had made a deeply significant covenâ€" ant in the early days of his life.. unto thee, because of Jehovah thy God, and for the Holy One of Isâ€" rael; for he â€"hath glorified thee. No doubt this particular paragraph reâ€" fers more particularly to the naâ€" tion of Israel as a whole than to individuals, though of course, a nation is only made up of individâ€" uals, and cannot do anything good or evil except through the actions and words of the individuals in the nation. 5. Behold, thou shalt call a naâ€" tion that thou knowest not; and a nation that knew not thee shall run 3. Incline your ear, and come unto me; hear, and your souls shall live: and I will make an everlastâ€" ing covenant with you, even the sure mercies of David, 4. Behold, I have given him for a witness to the peoples a leader and commanâ€" der to the peoples. In almost every word of these two verses God‘s love for man, and God‘s desire that man should be saisfied, God‘s knowledge of man‘s restlessness and dissatisfactions appear; the whole of the second verse is a great plea on the part of God with man to no longer exâ€" pend his money on the things that never satisfy, but to receive freely by grace, from him, his bounteous gifts, that their souls should delight themselves in fatness. EXHORTATION TO ISRAEL â€" â€"__ 7 every man without God, are here set forth in strikingly picturâ€" esque and symbolic language: man is described as thirsting, as hunâ€" $ty, and as having exhausted his resources upon those things which failed to bring the satisfaction he expected from them, With this diâ€" vinely accurate analysis of man‘s innermost needs are also announcâ€" ed God‘s abrndant ability and graâ€" cious willingness to supply these needs freely; for the thirsty there is water; for the hungry wine, milk and bread; and for those who have spent their money for the things which failed to satisfy, joy and peace for their hearts. resources upon thos failed to bring the expected from them vinely accurate ana , .\ _\ 3 _ Price. 2. Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread? and your labor for that which satisfieth not? hearken dilfâ€" gently unto me, and eat ye that which is good, and let your soul deâ€" light itsolf in fatness. Three inesâ€" capable realities, existing in the soul of every man without God, are here set forth in strikingly picturâ€" esque and symbolic language: man is described as thirstimne asm 1._ ve h,, ___, °CC no money; come Ye, buy, and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without price. 2. Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread? and your labor for that which satisfieth not? hearken dilfâ€" gently unto me, and eat ye that which is good, and let your soul deâ€" light itsolf in famasge Thasll ooo se ho aieru enc ‘al} men in every ago most deeply long for, and strive for, â€" jJoy in their cwn hearts, prosperity in their lives and in their nation, and abiding peace. These are the things that CGod wantsiz. aiml. k 1 Golden Te, while he upon him Time â€" lace LESSOX in ITS SETTIN mva 2 w y D arnn T * ext _ useek ye. he may be found; him while he ie ... rly to the naâ€" halfâ€" whole than to opini of course, a is the up of individâ€" Hall anything good "| Toro: zh the actions 9.30. ividuals in the Bot wellâ€"k aird look here and s glorious king, The he Lord had show . ificant covenâ€" Sature of his life.. when .ORD Theat? while he may | ers in )n him while | try fol ? wicked forâ€" > unrighteous J 4 let him reâ€" ,| . WOI and he will | tion in ; and to our | ing up ndantly parâ€" | dio ga entar af anr ane th. iihond dA t 15 4UaL on the part | it w o Jonger exâ€" moe > things that Que eceive freely ol e is bounteous um rould delight ISRAEL _ and come r souls shall an everlastâ€" roons 1, even the . 4. Behold, E\ witness to mour id commanâ€" â€"an featt call a naâ€" and not; and a Town tsa. 55:1.11 Beek ye Jehoval ° found; call ye he is near." .1ga, which al se# C EeCCCMERIORe On each question Dr. Smith exâ€" plains just what in the statement his guest has made, led him to his or not, Dr. Smith, from your poâ€" nounciations, or dialect if you like, tells you where you came from and received your educaticn, NEW RADIO GAME WOR, the Mutual Network staâ€" tion in New York, is always comâ€" ing up with a new idea for a raâ€" dio game â€" and their latest is one that is both educational and entertaining. â€" Dr. Henry â€" Lee Smith, of the Faculty of Colum bia University, is Master of Cercâ€" monies on the program â€" Where Are You Fiom'.’ And believe it Then there‘s a good _ variety show direct from the Old Land on Saturday afternoon at three â€" when the BBC offer the Garrison Theatre. With all these, and othâ€" ers in a similar vein, Old Counâ€" try folk need never feel lonesome. , but this Both of these shows feature wellâ€"known British stars in songs and stories â€" that sparkle! FROM THE OLD LAND Everyone enjoys the robust huâ€" mour of the British Variety Halls â€"and lately the radio stations are featuring more of the peppy songs and broad gags from Lunnon Town. While several excellent proâ€" grams of this kind are featured during the week â€" three in parâ€" ticular stand out in our opinion. First, Revuedeville from CKOC on Sundays at 2.30 is worth a halfâ€"hour of anyone‘s time in our opinion â€" and a close runnerâ€"up is the Let‘s All Go To the Music Hall show on the CBC chain from ~ Toronto on Saturday nights at 9.30. meiis neeintnelifiedpeat s â€" s i against the forces which are deciâ€" mating Canada‘s natural resources, it was disclosed following a rocent meeting of Canadian scientists at Queen‘s University. Would Conserve Resources Here 1 200 2Cret desconds in vain. It makes the earth fertile, beautiâ€" ful, and lovely. So would it be with God‘s truth in the moral world. sower, and bread to the eater; 11. so shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereâ€" to I sent it. â€" The rain never desconds in vain. It makes the earth fertile, beautiâ€" Tul and Tovely &~ acantalre onnimeg e POPâ€"Flying Speed A Danish policeman, LEFT, can do nothing but %test Hitler:engineered "Blitziccm=n op. 2CCUD8, Put ® iPineeragq iop:s, ; °. C4i} GOo nothing but watch peacefully as â€"Srest Hitlerâ€"engineered " Blitzkrieg" that turned the theatre of war, to Denmark submitted meekly to the military might of Germany in the German soldiers, RIGHT, march into the city of Aalborg, Denmark. SOWEr. and hraad 22 ul n C â€" new onslaught i Canadian Scientists Organize To Save Our Birds, Animals, Fish, Forests, Water Supply From Depletion RADIO REPORTER to be made By DAVE ROBEINS L M M en t nsl cce o Aicnemncidieate ns se L the Town, 8.15 from CKOC . . , Shadow of the Swastika from CBL at nine . . . Florence Wyman, soprano, from NBCâ€"Blue at 10.30 + .« . Friday â€" Hill ~Top House from CBS at 4.30 + » . Poland‘s Constitutional «Day on CBC _ at T45 ... 13th Overgeas Battalion band on CKOC at 8.30 . .% Canâ€" adian Heritage, CBL at 10.30 . . Saturday â€" The Garrison Theatre from BBC via CBC at three . . . Percy LeSueur in the sports world Atyi.30 . .. Let‘s Go To The Muâ€" sic Hall from CRT .:; a aa MAPNSRE Ti Srmrfrninitecnnscance AC mt us 3 44# C day â€" Adventures . of Ellery Queen, detective, from the Columâ€" bia network at T.30 . . . Sweet and Low via CBC at 11.30 . .. Tuesday â€" Fred Waring in Pleasâ€" ure Time on NBCâ€"Red at seven . .« . Montreal orchestra from CBC at ten . . . England Dances via CKOC at 11.15 . . Hit Parade from Mutual on the dot of midâ€" night .. . . Thursday â€" Talk of Pn io y Lanalh T Classics by the masters are preâ€" sented Monday and Friday afterâ€" noons at 3.30 from CKOC, when Music You Want is featured. The finest in music makes this feaâ€" ture program a treat for radio listeners. in cce 0 2000 nB e w Wl Hall from CBL at 9.30 For the women, the ~Columbia Chain has a smart morning proâ€" gram each day at 9.30, when Adeâ€" laide Hawley takes the air with the Women‘s Page. A woman who knows the things women would like to do â€" tells you how to do them best. decision â€" of ten Dr. SPOTLI‘G_HT DIALING The association has a limited membership and includes sportsâ€" men, biologists, foresters, engineers and other experts, as well as memâ€" bers of the civil service. Its memâ€" bership is drawn from every proâ€" vince. The president is Dr. John D. Detwiler, of London, Ont, EXPERTS WORK ON IT One of the first objects of the association will be to obtain accur ate information on all the sporting and conservation groups of the Duâ€" minion. The association hopes to act as an advisory body for the whole of Canada on problems of conservation involving birds, aniâ€" mals, fish, forests, and, as well, the problems of soil and water conserâ€" vation, which are important in some parts of Canada. h The Canadian Conservation Asâ€" sociation was brought into being at this meeting, Among its founders was Prof. V. C. WynneEdwards, of the department of zoology at Mcâ€" Gill University, and B. W. Taylor, Quebec provincial biologist and diâ€" rector of fish culture. and seven times out mith is right. _ 1irst objects of the ill be to obtain accurâ€" n on all the sporting ion groups of the Duâ€" association hopes to â€" Sunâ€" «46) will count, not only the men, women and children in Canâ€" ada, but the horses, cows, pigs, sheep and poultry. They will note On June 2, 1941, some 16,000 enâ€" umerators will start ringing doorâ€" bells from ‘coast to coast, asking questions and filling in the answers on big sheets of paper. They will count, not only the war or peace, the decennial cenâ€" sus of Canada will be taken on the schedule in 1941, Officials of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics are busy preparing for the counting of headsâ€" and the compilation of hunâ€" dreds of volumes of figures which give a complete picture of the growth of Canada in wealth and in population. Plans Are Laid For 1941 Census new," In a remarkable address by Mr. C. H. Hodge, editer of the Farmâ€" er‘s Magazine, Toronto, on the ocâ€" casion of a recent meeting of the Quebec Horticultural Federation, in Montreal, the topic was the beautification of farm homes in Ontario. With the aid of coloured lantern slides the speaker describâ€" ed the transformation of the homes of those who entered comâ€" petitions sponsored by his paper. As Mr. Hodge expressed it, we owe to our children the enduring memory cf .an. attractive home, one that in after years they can recall with pleasure and pride. Mr. Hodge showed how marvelâ€" lously the appearance of a farm home can be improved by a little trimming and painting, by tidyâ€" ing up around it, giving some care to the lawn and especially by Planting flowers. The other ~day the writer heard of a man who of. fered a house for sale at $3000.09 and found no bidder. He then spent $40.00 on a paint job and sold the house easily for $4000.00. Surroundings of the Home The Ontario Crop Improvement Association has for its slogan: "Better rural conditions through crop improvement." It is a strange anomaly that many a farmer who takes great pleasure and pride in his thriving field crops, cultivated and fertilized with consumate care, is indifferent to the immedâ€" iate surroundings of the farmy; house. Thanks to Mr. Hodge, it may now be said that "the oid order changeth, yielding place :o mawr 99 Farm Notes . . . it seems, is : debt as living Rm Connntmniiihel 3 /0 ut ul there is detailed description of the task of making a living and of the trials and difficulties which face pioneers and their descendants in building up the fabric of communal life. The highlight of the "progress" it SCBME e Alvci en mesnddel in oS Th HARD TO MAKE LIVING Under the heading "Typical Comâ€" m«nities in Action," the volume states that "the favorite social gaâ€" thering is the dance," and "in the summerâ€"time the big event is the annual sports day." No mention is made of the colorful roundâ€"up, but there is detailed Aagnvinkias 2A us _ The "wild and woolly West" is deglamorized to the ‘nth degree in this latest sociological study, a product of several years research work in the Prairie Provinces. The volume humorously points out: "Scenes are still enacted and deeds are celobrated in song by cowboys and cowgirls, many of whom have never been west of Brooklyn or Toâ€" ronto." Devotees of wild west films and literature are due for a distinct shock when they read the latest volume from McGill University, enâ€" titled "Pioneering in the Prairie Provinces." It is the joint work of Dr. C.A. Dawson, head of the deâ€" partment of sociology at McGill and Miss Eva R. Younge, research asâ€" sistant in the department of social research. The book is one of a serâ€" ies of nine on the general topic "Caâ€" nadian Frontiers of Settlement." Beauty Culture For Farm Homes The Wild West _ Deglamorized : Sop en Camien. McGill Study Leaves Us Only the Wideâ€"Open Spaces to Conjure With â€" No Real Cowboys the mounting-l_;ad of standards go upward. Eiving some care d especially by The other ~day f a man who of. sale at $3000.09 1 wild west films and e due for a distinct they read the latest McGill University, enâ€" aral Federation, topic was the farm homes in aid of coloured speaker describâ€" 1$ 46 Rental conâ€" fuel. 39 Grew old 40 Boys. 42 Maltrcats, «+ ZiC€TON,. the wife. 31 Spherical. 53 Sea gull. 32 Falsehood. 54 An axil. 33 Trophical 55 Long oute: mammal, garment,. 34 Wayside hotel. 57 To hew. 35 To enliven, 59 He invente 38 Aeriform the 2O en ether, 24 Grain. 27 Heron. 31 Spherical. 32 Falsehood. 33 Trophical 15 Alleviates, 17 Life principle. 19 Preposition. 20 Compound spikeiet. , 14 Large ratite vessels, 13 Barley HOR!ZONTAL 1, 6 Pictured communics~ tion inventoy. 11 Always, 12 Tanning 12,000,000 Population of Canada at the last census, in* 1931, was 10,376,000. Sinte then it has been increasing at the rate of about 100,000 a year, according to estimates based on the ONTARIO ARCHIVES ' TORONTO "T.e! OMI8SID, religion, occupation, age, wages, employment or lack of employment, lvestock ard acreage in crop or farms. BETWEEN 11,000,000 AND EACH colony of bees has its own particular odor, bee is detected at once and driven out If a hi difference develops in the odors of the two colo one week‘s time the inmeante musyhiâ€"a ho the law? : Is robbing the IMPORTANT INYENTOR C 2 2A0T eLALL, measure, 55 Long outer 5 Slightost, garment. 7 Above. 57 To hew. 8 Incarnation 59 He invented Vishnu. the â€"â€" in 9 To stupety. last century. 10 Electric term 60 His signal 15 His native â€"â€" is still in _ Jand, use (pl.). 16 Use of a VYERTICAL cattle yard. 1 Southeast, 17 To go before 9 (ramna T time the insects are 50 To divorce By J. MILLAR WATT Answer to Previous Puzzle on ancees Wc parenta!, 3 To squal! 4 Liquid of a migratory bi total strangci's L M o ce ce e e ege e‘ Most notable changes will be shown in the increases in particuâ€" lar districts, cities and towne. The mining area of. Northwestern Queâ€" bec, for instance, will report many thousands of people where there were only nundreds in 1931. 10 PC CCCBICCACE ADT emigration. So the next.:ensue proâ€" bably will show a population of TX tween 11,000,000 and 12,000,000. ; © Arpinerdee p births and deaths, immigration and eoaal ie Ti es ir odor, and any strange If a hi\v'(f is divided, a mountains, 45 To slide. 47 Vended. Of 48 Troo yiclding oil. 51 Wing. h d se e y colonies and within bird 2 violation of 54 Position in time. 55 Portugal. 52 To burn into 37 Converses, 39 To question. 41 Membranous bag. 43 Liver fluid. 44 Russian [ 22 Large cask. 23 Half an em,. 24 Fetid. 25 Intention, 26 Wild duci. 28 Energy. 29 Tatter, 30 Greek letter 36 Animal that ||

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