West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 15 Aug 1940, p. 3

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YR ? ~EAT weather induces _ mold, so keep boxes spotless, ose of any cake ows the slightest seald and wash t, seapy, water, nd air thoroughâ€" thorougrh cleansâ€" should be suf. summer â€" months fashing may be \ s o aiC "C“Es ERBUCILT moâ€" ACIFIC SEAL style: black ‘C kuaranteed > 42: 110 coats Kt only $39.50. \ for relatives ['icc men: wilt ‘ on receipt of "gain=s. Munto ICAPNXS SEHENC mp AHits ibox In t Weather W.-\TCH, NO roken. _ One h Repalr Co., ronto. are notbeds of K FPARTS ANT EIASE RYVOUSâ€"who spelisâ€"to take ALE Carburctors, K¢ _ Service, reprinte 25¢, free emiarge T free silver. it in quality ir (llms to Jul siiver~ hout cost, ranteed by Company. mplete set ‘ding your °_ an order *#** particâ€" devetoped _ BLOOD cks. finâ€" Females Lindsay, ation J W. Hodâ€" ancb, Toâ€" CorTe ous for ho farm Tying <t. The Street, «prayed 170,000 MEN uecâ€" «t is stored in bottles, wash the outâ€" side of the bottle, being especialâ€" ty careful to cleanse the mouth and cap. T ake Care of ber, the number of gallons used, and the cost. A page may be used for each day if desired, with the names of each town. At the back @ntanues made along the way. Truly no journey is complete without one. the date and time of each trip, from and to, the number of miles between each stop, the route numâ€" Motor Log Makes Trip More Fun As everyone has found, haif the fun of a motor trip is talkâ€" ing about it afterward, reviewâ€" ing all the details. Far into the winter, it goes: "We left Uphill a little before six, and got to Downâ€" da‘e at noon. Two hundred miles, and only seven gallons of gas . . . .>*"* There‘s a delightful little cences, and makes them entirely authentic. There are spaces for Restriction on consumption of oil and gasoline in embattled Briâ€" tain have immobilized almost all private automobiles. The Duchess of Atholl, who is president of the County Red Cross association and other enterprises, manages to get about to her duties on a bicycle. Her Grace is shown here cycling from het‘ home in Eastwood, to her headquarters. > _What a travesty this is", Richâ€" ard Uhimann, Chicago grain authâ€" ority, pointed out, "with the world‘s wheat carryover the largest in history. Unfavcrable weather and mobilization cf persant iabor (in Naziâ€"controlled countrics) have had their effect." Reliable information last week, said the Associated Press, confirmâ€" ed grain trade reports that Eurâ€" ope‘s wartime wheat crop was subâ€" stantially below the 1,640,000,000â€" bushel average of recent seasons. On the basis of data coming very largely through Broomhall, British trade authority, and Canadian and United States government sources, traders estimated losses range up to more than 33 por cent. compared with last year‘s big harvest in some localities. The average loss was esâ€" timated at 25 per cent. This would place the crop about 10 per cent. below average of recent years. Whether this deficiency is to be satisfied by increased importations or whether Europe is to tighten its belt even more in the face of posâ€" sible famine in some regions will depend upon the course of the war which has shut off most of the norâ€" mal traffic in grain imported by Europe, trader experts said recentâ€" Europe‘s Wheat â€" Crop Said Far Below Normal Duchess Uzes Legpower Keep Track of the Details of Your Journey in a Notebook Especially for the Purpose of comments, and for and needs, and‘ the overflowing cupâ€"the abundant satisfaction of these needs and desires, so that the man who has the Lord for his shepherd, and has all the blessing of which the psalmist has just been speaking, knows a life filled with contentment, peace and satisfaction. 6. Surely goodness and lovingâ€" kindness shall follow me all the in which the welcome of the host to his guests is expressed by the precious unguents with which he anoints them on their entrance into his home. Our anointing is ours in the mind and intention of God; it is for us to seek it, to appropriate it, and to allow it to be the one blessed consciousness of our life. My cup runneth over. The cup is a symbol expressing man‘s capacity for any particular experiences, as a cup filled with suffering, or a cup of joy. Here it seems to speak of contentment. The cup symbolizes man‘s desires ening fears of the morrow. Our enemies are stayed at the door. We are the Lord‘s guests, and our sancturary is inviolable. Thou hast anointed my head"v-vith_-;_)'il_. This similitude is borrowed from the usage of an Eastgm_ feast, Guide and Restorer 3. He restoreth my soul. Christ uses may restorative ministries. Sometimes it is the word of a friend or minister. Or it may be some lovely mcod of nature. Ia guideth me in the paths of rightâ€" eousness, for his name‘s sake. In the spiritual life, of which the psalmist is here speaking, the word "path" is a very simple, easily understood symbol of one‘s conduct, the manner of one‘s life, determined by the things he does and the things he does not do. 4. Yea, though I wa‘k through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; for thou art with me; Thy rod and thy staff, they comfort me. Was the Lord able to recover the soul from life‘s wayside weariness and hunger? He will equally defend and keep it amid life‘s deadlicst dangers. "Thy rod and thy staff" are not synonymous, for ever the shepherd of today, though often armed with a gun, carries two inâ€" struments of wood, his great oak club, thick enough to brain a wild beast, and his staff to lean upon or to touch his sheep. Spiritual Joy and Blessing 5. Thou preparest a table beâ€" fore me in the presence of mine enemies. In the Lord our God we are secured against the destructâ€" iveness of our yesterdays, the menaces of today, and the darkâ€" f beginning to end, and that thought it sweet. The infinite God is mine, and cares for me, provides for me, is with me. Evâ€" ery blessing named appears as a personal gift. It is this intense personality which so greatly enâ€" dears he psalm. And then there is a satisfying conclusion: it is THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Timeâ€"David â€"lived through most of the efeventh century B.C. This psalim has no date; some place it early in his life, and some late in his life;y tentatively we might say that it could have been written about 1040 B.C. The beauty of this little psaim consists first in its calm â€"assurâ€" ance of Jehovah‘s allâ€"sufficiency; and second in the simplicity, varâ€" iety and fullness with which this assurance is set forth. The essenâ€" tial thought is felt to be one from â€"Psaim 23. GOLDEN TEXTâ€"Jehovah is my zslhpbord: I shall not want. Ps. < K. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Timeâ€"David â€" lived through most of the efeventh century B.C. This psalim has no date; some place it early in his life, and some late in his life> tentatively LESSON VII GOD‘S CARE OF HIS PEOPLE. SUNDA Y SCHOOL LE SS O N of ce of Hope Not A MODEST BEGINNING Playing stooge to a star is not always an ignominious role. Nicolâ€" as Massue is an example. He is the wellâ€"known Montreal tenor who is frequently heard as guest soloist with the "Sevillana" proâ€" gramme, presented over the CBC network Saturdays at 8.30 p.mi. He tells this story of his modest beginning in the world of oper2: He was sitting patiently awaitâ€" ing an audition in an agent‘s ofâ€" fice in Milan. In the sanctum sanctorum a wellâ€"known prima donna was singing for the agent. When she came to her favourite aria from "Butterfly", she refusâ€" ed to sing without the aid of a _ So you can look forward to a real season of topâ€"notch enterâ€" tainment this fall and winter! hear many newcomers to radio taking star parts in the new proâ€" The public is clamouring for new radio shows â€" not someâ€" thing just done over from the old pattern, as the Charlie McCarthy show was. This season will see Eddie Cantor back on the air lanes, Fred Allen in a new show on a new networkâ€"and you will AUTUMN FORECAST Although this hot weather keeps us well aware that it is summer it will not be long until the cooler fall days, and all the new programs of the 1941 seaâ€" son will be making their bows. This fall will see great changes in faces and casts, as well as types of shows, on all the netâ€" works and major stations. A commercial treaty was signâ€" ed between Norway and Great Britain as long ago as 1217. alone, for we are sinners needing forgiveness. Not mercy alone, for we need many things besides forâ€" giveness. But each with the other linkedâ€"goodness to supply every want; mercy to forgive every sin. God will not break off his kindâ€" ness, nor suffer his faithfulness to fail, nor forsake the works of his hands, for "his mercy endurâ€" eth forever." And I shall dwell in the house of Jehovah forever. I shall be a member of his houseâ€" hold, a member of his family, enjoying his protection, holding communion with him, and subsistâ€" ing on his bounty. David surely must be thinking of life beyond the grave, of fellowship with God in a heavenly home. Sure, it‘s Mickey himself busy casting for trout in the besutiful Bow River below tumbling Bow Falls. He hasn‘t got one yet, but there‘s lots of trout in that river and he‘ll have one before long or thai look of concentration means nothing. Picture was taken round the end ¢f July when young Mr. Rooney, on holiday between pictures, was a guest for several days at the Banff Springs Hotel. â€"C.P.R. Photo. POPâ€"If It‘s a Matter of Age "Andy Hardy" Goes Fishing Below Bow Falls, You.~ 0k ~TEN YEARS OLD * T. O. Wickland and Roy Dilâ€" worth will handle the broadcasts, which will be made available through the use of a double short wave setâ€"up. Fick transmitters and Mobile Unit No. 1 will conâ€" tribute to the technical efficiency of the broadcasts, so that golf enthusiasts hundred of miles from the scene will be able to hear the topâ€"notch club wielders in their great moments. GOLF CHAMPIONSHIPS CBC listeners will have an opâ€" portunity of following the proâ€" gress of the 1940 Canadian Open Golf Championship tournaments which are to be played on the course of the Scarborough Golf and Country Club. The special events department has arranged to cover the story in a number of specially scheduled periods on three days of the play. Thursday, August 15, and Friday, August 16, at 1.00 to 1.30 and 7.00 to 7.15 p.m., EDST; Saturday, Augâ€" ust 17, at 1.30 to 200, 6.15 to 6.30 and 6.45 to 7.00 p.m. EDST are the times announced for the commentaries, running reports of the play, and, finally, the descripâ€" tion of the Seagram Gold Cup. tenor. The agent knew better than to cross her, and in desperâ€" ation he faced the line of "aspirâ€" ants in the waiting room. "A tenor," he criedâ€""any tenor". Massue answered, sang with the soprano and when the audition ended, he, and nct the lady, was handed the contract. The followâ€" ing week he made his debut as the Duke in "Rigoletto." octaves. When angry a person invariabâ€" ly raises his voice in pitch as well as in volume. Hundreds of exâ€" periments with the human voice have been conducted by two emâ€" inent professors, Dr. Grant Fairâ€" banks and Dr. Wilbert Pronâ€" ovos, of the State University of Iowa, in which film and stage actors as well as business men and women in all walks of life have figured. They have discoverâ€" ed that when rage or fear grips one, the voice goes up a full ocâ€" tave above the pitch level for indifference, contempt, or grief. These three range in the neighâ€" bourhood of low C. When actors portray emotion their voices covâ€" er a pitch range of fully three Temperâ€"Your Voice You‘re NOT AS TALL. AS MY UMBRELLA! _ a P â€" e £Copyright. 1929, by "Tha Bell Syadiec@". fnc.) eb ccopriieitains (oinect in on henBP s 9 Patglne ABee ce in human body are "nearlyr il;viS:; bigger than those on the left. Fertilizedâ€"48.9 bus. per A. weighing 59.0 lbs. per bus.; Unâ€" fertilizedâ€"33.1 bus per A. weighâ€" ing 58.0 lbs. per bus.; Gain from fertilizerâ€"10.8 bus. per A. and 1.0 lbs. increase in Wt. Per Bus. One outstanding survival ocâ€" curred on the farm of Mr. Morâ€" rison Comfort, St. Anns. Last fall as winter set in, Mr. Comfort reâ€" ported the unfertilized Wheat about 80% normal, and the unâ€" fertilized about 40%. His soil test showed the field to be acid in reaction (5. Op H) medium well supplied with nitrate nitroâ€" gen and potash, but very low in available phosphoric acid. Fertilâ€" izer was applied at 250 lbs. per acre .to half of the area. This spring the Agricultural Repreâ€" sentative of Lincoln County graiâ€" ed the fertilized area 90% normâ€" al, and the unfertilized 30%. ‘The average yields and weights per bus. for fertilized and unferâ€" tilized Wheat in the 1989 tests were as follows:â€" Ten Fall Wheat growers in the Niagara Peninsula reported little difference in appearance between fertilized and unfertilized Wheat last fall. In spring they reported an average winterâ€"kill of unâ€" fertilized* Wheat amounting to 24%, but only 8% winterâ€"kill of adjoining fertilized Wheat. AN OUTSTANDING SURVIVAL CAME THROUGH Winterâ€"killing of Fall Wheat is one of the commonest arguâ€" ments against seeding this imâ€" portant crop, writes Prof. Hen:y G. Bell, fo the Ontario Agriculâ€" tural College, Guelph. Winterâ€" killing may be occasioned by poor drainage, continued drought in fall, dessication or drying out due to cold blistering winds in late winter and early spring, or starâ€" vation due to deficiency in plantâ€" food. A wellâ€"nourished Wheat crop will usually survive low temâ€" peratures and drying winds of winter and early spring. RECORD OF DESTRUCTION White pine makes the best lumber of any of our native soft woods. Formerly it grew in a great belt across Ontario from Lake Huron to the Ottawa. Lumâ€" bering for this pine started early in the 19th century. The trecs were made into square timbers that were floated down our rivers and shipped around the world. The only virgin, stands of white pine that remains are in Algonâ€" quin Park for it took only 60 years to despoil the growth cof centuries. (No. 8) Much has been written about the passenger pigeon and its disâ€" appearance. The best account we have for the species in Ontario is by Margaret H. Mitchell in Contribution No. 7 of the Royal Ontario Museum of Zoology and 1 do not intend to repeat a too familiar story. But every bit of evidence we have shows that man was sclely responsible for the exâ€" tinction of these birds. In one year, 1878, at Petoskey, in Michâ€" igan, market hunters shipped ovâ€" er a million pigeons from one colony. No bird, no matter how abundant, could stand such deâ€" struction. WE CAN REPLENISH The record of the destruction and waste of many of our natural rescurces can be duplicated everyâ€" where on the continent. Looking back we can see the mistakes but our forbears believed that the wild life, the forests and the fishâ€" es would last forever. This was quite understandable but we should endeavor to avoid similiar optimism. We can replenish many of our depleted resources but it will take a long time. Farm Notes . . . Limbs_ on the right side of the THE SPRING WHEAT THAT Oneâ€"Sided Beings Nh o+ C e nemem, eehetcrte a n d o The Americans claim to turn out the finest machine tools and is George G. Webber, of Cleveâ€" land, Ohio, whose steel blocks are finished so perfecily that when though welded, and must be slid pleasure. 50 Tennis point. 4Stain of 33 Bulk. 51 Italian river. disgrace. 34 Uncommon. _ $2 River 5 Land 36 Eternally. obstruction. measure. 37 Fashion. 54 To card wool. 6 Grain (abbr.) 39 To careen. 56 Mcasure of 7 Road (abbr.) 40 Scolding area. $ Stair post. person. 58 She is â€"â€" 9 Aroma. 42 Height of a by birth. 11 Eatable grass person. 59 She is a â€"â€" growths. nobles. 23 Wrath. 24 To perturb. 26 Membranous bag. 29 Transposed. 30 Going before. 32 Sound of organism. 19 Nut covering. 20 Argot. 21 Mohammedan 12 Father. 14 Star. 15 Behold. 16 Minute HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzrztle 13 She has a 1, 6 Pictured ; r , mnviine # 611 EJE 12 JLUIL_MONUMENT s it tar. f meti i l disposition 10 Device for _ . JDUVORRET NElRWoger ,, dispositio | THis Curious Worip ONTARIO SEA PRESSURE increases at the rate of a ton to the square inch with each mile of depth Off the island .of Mindanao, in the Philipâ€" pines group, soundings of 35,400 feet have been reported. BREATHE THROLGH ; ~"PORTHOLES" ALONG THEIR SIDES NEXT: Are red squirrels good swimmers? GLAMOROUS STAR center. 50 Tennis point. 51 Italian river. 52 River 45 Distinctive theory. 47 Stream. 49 Ampitheater By J. MILLAR WATT or skillful actress. VERTICAL 2 Right (abbr.) 3 White fur. 4Stain of disgrace. in a job where he had to work to eight millionths of an inch, a ficult to imagine. It is like splitâ€" ting a hair, and then subdividing it eight or ten times. When workâ€" ing to such limits, Mr. Webber takes into consideration the heat of his body and the light thrown off by the electric buibs in his 14â€" Th CENnTury!/ ement so fine that it is difâ€" 51 Postscript. 53 Sloth. 55 Above. wax, 48 Queer. 50 Eucharist 43 Berets, 44 Chestnut. 46 To close with 17 Pool. 18 Amidic. 19 Small nail. 22 Repeated, 24 Accented syllables. 29 Growing out. 27 Lava. 28 To captivate. 30 Wages. 31 Three. 33 Wise mon. 35 Poem, 37 Distant, 38 Payment demand. 41 In a row.

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