Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 6 Aug 1914, p. 5

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`IIIIII "K3111 vanwyvo-vs: ac. 3..- E V See'programme's, etc.,.;'1'1-{eh will ihe out in a few days. _MOND;AY S _C}ELEBRATION GUA-RDING swLfr CANAL . to Burn` %%VVN5oRTH%ERN} ADVWANCE iedd s.99?16'? '!40#iIrh0mv.`ths`_very";'1hehtion`iiofith ` is distasteful`, go withihixn the" farm.` Such men are nsnally ?'.f9Zi1nres'jas farm helpers, and after a_ few weeks or months sliake `the 'oont_ry. clay, from 01! their hob-nailed . boots andfhurry back to city rooming houses. _V1t the. man" loves" the, city `and despises the country leave him there. . But this is not the main ques- tion. Are we getting ;the right class `of immigrants? .We know that some of them are what this country most needs, but are the majority . of tha: class? There is room and to spare (in Canada, but at the present stage of_ her development she needs men her broad acres. Our great industria`; enterprises have taken all the avail able men, and marry` a community has been stripped of its native. born as well. Canada needs farmers and farn: -laborers far more than she requires H city loafers. - . short period at r from 9. row days tc` i willing and ready to get out and till 1 rms Road? when completed wm be i ~ 7,074 Mme; Long A % 4 The announcemenethat the Belgiar Government has ceded Gyeat Britaiz wuv - V.-....`,..- ---.. -__-V I a strip of land in the Congo `mark: an important step towards the com i pletion `of the Cape-to-Cairo _R.ai1way `This strip will make it possible to: the railway to traverse British terri tory over the whole of its length o:} 6.944. miles, that being the distance! from _Cape. Town to Cairo, or 7,074 _miles, it we include the journey t( { the sea at Alexandria. The astonish ' in; progress which is being made wit! this scheme for` opening up darkest Africa" to civilization and commerce I ny be gauged from the fact that rails `have already been laid to Bukama l right in the heart of the Congo, thong! lat present passengers can only trave` ` . ,_; _;u__.:u- .....-.- 0 90! GI: ylvnvl-It ya-a-v---- V-...~ _, _ gs tar as Elizabethville, some 2,32z| imllgs xiorth at Cape Town. *0 Dan. 5 8):: Own: a I-|ouse-Earn7e'd by Acting! B_ABY" EVA ESMOND Eu mnmona cl_a.imI the distinction of being the youngest girl actress to own `a housebought with her own Little mu Emona lsbonla years old, but she polseeses 1 yottage with groom tor every yea: n'n__ 1, -__ .1 AL`. _Ifvvu-- " -g- .- `pho has lived. "ie ":5 one 'ot'uu Highest salaried child actresses it the country, 1nd hermother has mad: It 3 rule to invest her little gm . _,_ LC. . JV 5:-v -v --_.._V earnings that she receive tin` jrectest beam from them. ` cnvujy Olock A11-uvity clock which winds -itse1- _u it moves by its own weight down shluuiln II 3 Igovelty, :11 the men which lf`rumlru being.~to nu :2 ?ttTothoto1:revet!.5tV||l.d1!._ f `F1: Topxumqtc njsrlchlture in tr;-anc; u stLat1ons%nVprofeszoz j;ot_nr_lcultInu ln inch dgyu-uncut to_v_t_lAIeA cm TOWN T0 emu `tut uIn:`wE seen` Kcroplanc without `full new type of tnmeu sen I-`aiming In France overthrew . ~ s ii.,0_f.?t.he Ejreers`-`A yftouii 1 fo_New .;Y6rf'A\\'h< _ _15tr6cuted`i?1or emurdr.` ` He j.yi?ishd?.~{tb" {and but it} they game` 01 degenerate or7it ther`~'wa.s any tmirgiabnorma-1 in theirchildhood ma: toreshadowed their terrlbleeacrimve and its penalty, 43. far as the parents oi the four are concerned, there is nc `record. otlaw-hreaking. Nor` in their early youth was there any indication, ac` abnormality. iwhile none of "them was a typica1-Sunday schoollad, none ot_ themvappeared to be` worse that the average boy. What was common to them" all was an education upon the streets of New York, and in th( poolrooms when they '_ became old enough. There was a distaste" for " steady toil, a desire for luxuries, to: fine` clothing, and for spending money and consequently a. necessity to gem this money somehow. Common to at was the absolute failure of theix parents, their teachers'and everyone else who had any` authority over then to really civilize these men. It is said that the average -boy is a savage a` heart. These boy savages were never { civilized, thcugh living in the very} _I heart of what is called civilization. t smrs ins scum 1:1 A * cam mg azscngg rlley Cross a Dep Ravririe on a si'ngl_ | . Log The surefootedness of the mule is proverbial,` but the feats of this anima are rivalled by' those of the pack heges used in the wild timbered re `[1 s of" northern f Canada and the [Bocky_ Mountains. Laden thougl [they are with grub, as the surveyo: terms. provisions, these horses can Iwimwide rivers, ford shallow ones or follow the men of the `party ovei a single log, often no more than a foo in diameter, which bridges a deey narrow mountain gorge where a ial would mean instant death `or `worse They can `even follow the forester: `through the sloughs, muskegs an: `wind-thrown hral characteristic 0' {this northern forest, which is saying In gooddeal for a mere horse, for a: 3 fans of the forest ` surveyors write: {mm the primeval forest near Lesse; Zlisve lake, A forester needs to be here, besides an other professional tles. a. real hnshman, an axe-man an: 1 up `:1 --- ` There were eight forest surveg ' fpartles engaged in demarking totes` and agricultural lands in the tar wes last summer, and their reports contain zeeeounts of actual adventures whicl 11731 the most fictitious. The tota not examined was about 11,000,00( `dares, some on the rough slopes of the Rockies, some in the rocky areas 0: I Ianitoba and Saskatchewan and some _1n the low-lying and muskeg region 0 northern Alberta. Very little lam` I `was found` t for agriculture in these 1 regions, and most 0! it is recommend} 0111.. _.......u.- cv-----,7 .--_ _> , 1 ed as forest reserves. The presen area of the Dominion Forestkeserves ; 51- 23,017,504 acres, or nearly 36,001 I square omiles. In comparison, the ` Notional Forests of the United State: cover an area of 257,855 square miles yet Canada is larger than the Unite' 1 State "and contain larger lnnd area: 1 it only for tree growth. . I Oodoailuto In Ceylon The native: of Ceylon eat `one am gs 11:11 million coconnntu a day. Then -___._A 1...--- -- are sixty eocoanntvtrees ox} ' Iabnd, and tile` surplus producj `tlonotnntnuchleyusod mmak.` An A 4.1.- _..L` gfeopn, the dried meat of the nut! Vhlieh is a. valuable source of vegf tame oils, It is estimated that then; `me produced you-1y.ooo,ooo to-700,001 . toutof copra, valued st sixty-ve mil 2 lion dollars. One-quarter of thai ivorldh production comes from thai Philippine Islands. ! sun. 8n nlI_t , Bomnchgreoterinthedemandfoz thst the uni; .`"......"'" ......n...'"" .2, .... ynnhnmg-.wmcncopq:ator_meu unlhy cult year: old. 3 HORSES WALK PLANK No` OI-jinn Anyimnc ___I_-- *$<!`k;ocatin"g technical` education ; `:i!f?". W-.; _: Merchint. - London, saidrj lspecialization I in manufacture has luade it almost impossible for a youth to acquire the elements of a trade in =5 `shop or factory. There are at the present time no adequately or ganized agencies to give the youth a training in trade or in the elements of technology. Labor and ,capltal are agreed upon the need of such a train- ins. Modern life has not yet accomv niodatedv itself to the great revolu- tion of our industrial system, he said We believe that the "education of workers is ..a public necessity, and that it should not be a private but a ubllc functiornlconducted by `the public, and the expense involved at public cost. With regard to plana for such a training the speaker was of the opinion that` every public school should be a pre-vocational school in theisense thatpupils will nd'in ii opportunities for discovering their ap-V titudes and will receive through it such a grounding in the elements oi `a general education that they will be in a position to take fuller advantage of a latercourse in more direct preo paration for their vocations. He then described. the technical system as it `works in European countries, where in a.` good many iostaoncesl thre was compulsory training. This he do clared to be necessary to introduce info the country. Mme. Oohstantine Dumba. wife of the Austrian Ambassador to the `United States, is." one of the most I enthusiastib tangoists in Washington. %'l he Remarkable career of :1 Notable E _ Baptist Minister 'l11e Rev. Walter Hobbs, who i died at the Middlesec Hospital, aged 70, had worked as an auxiliary post- man, hecame `a Band` of Hope lecturer. ; and, eventually. a Baptist minister. ; He ran away from his home in ihondon A street. , Isiington, when he was 14, and for three weeks slept nnder railway: arches, in drain pipes, ' in bakers barrows, or in one of the recesses on Londen Bridge. One morningh hevwas vfound asleep `in an empty cab by a poceman, who `took him home` to his mother. His career, Briey, was as follows: Worked tofu monthg in duper : DEVELOPMENT OF A PARSON Anlillafi D08tman in Hollovfay. Postman at St. Martin :-le-Grand. Student at Baptist Pastors College. Baptint pastor at Norwood. Ilember of Lambeth Board . oi Guirdians for 26 years. `lit. Hobbs had an exciting ex- ipe@ce 1887, when a man, once I an inmate of the workhonse, called at 'hIsre'sideneeat Iorwoodnndrano vith..t1vo.overeont.I -`hanging In the Ir. Hobbs gave chose and the '_ nan turner]. seriously ausulting him, gun watch and ms colleagues on the Itolenvywafoh arm: a recnmcu Enuimlou "U.- Antonutiercw1ninsreelIr!=0 441 __ Diplomat : Wife Likes Tango PP9 ize, so leather [111 OX" I :1.'!`1._`Y from ; Vpow- L leave -brush . disap- ShoArt%l ~u ;a!b1:a: [Table Mi(11m;.1 A1-g-us-The Grand Trunk Railway special SSS8'__ ment with the town of .'Mid1311id - .1 .'.. T.)n1h11`\' mu` .panv for the preceding ten -years, Adouibth-.1vo tn be settled beforthe \--woos:-o 1119111 \\'1I'1l llll: Luuu nu. .o-9 _ expired in J-.m1u1ry, and this yea: the a.~:ses>:u1' 11-.1: mc-teased their a.;sess111c-11t by 21b0Ut -$1?00,000s.` 3' re-.19o1m*b1e im-ren:~:e in View of"Tthef low as. enj0_\'e;1 by -the and the gexlcral ad.va11ce-ii1 as-_ se5.sme)1t Hf t0\\`ll.' propei-'t-,v. company does not view it in [that way. 11owe\'(-r. and they `have a"p_-'1 pealed agz-ain.~'t their assessment; this year. and the matter County J t1 and failing- agreelnent there, before a court. . j . . A ' The e1ect1`i<:--.1ll)`-lighted '1'": train is no 110v-elty on 8113- Tc-lass road. but there are few sengers who can tell how `the doc? 4 tric cu1'1'ent is produced jwhich keeps the "]L`- lamps regard1o.~;- nf whether the jtrain1i83 in Inotinn or not. Firsteclam` se11ge1' trains are not only iligh V` by elec-tri<`-it,\'. but the curnentt has- been adapted to drive dnrimr the hot summer Indlltha V and. in me or two instances, it i3 also used in the kitchen of -the din-JV ing oar. where the food is tjver the invisible xes` of mu tuv m\1>1uu: um: 11; ity. In Iightixlg a p@nger Provision 11111:-:t be made. ? for. plying` the c-nrrenTt` whether .or. the train i~' in motion. To pli.-`h thi; :1 star-age battery is 1 erally imtallul in conncti0n- 3- the elc.-(-tric--.. generator. "There three :~;\'.~tmn.: in use fdr train lig-hting.-.' `rm tam -is the St01'a5_'r~ ~y.-tv:11 \\'hi consists st(ra;.rr- 1:z1ttz.:-x',\' large en6ugh 5 YO store sm -ic-nt current `for 4 .. . _ 1 1- I I ' , _ ,_.L.' `v <`-ver T110 i11\'i.~iMe ves` of elect1'1c- - " `_V - `H. 1 In passenger ttiili 'Th9'G1At zen5",B`-gmd gm 11m`-t made for 310 ;o %'1 -nrr(ent or. not d13u"t~ "real .-h,1`-4" A agiixe-8-.|` motion. To accour at . is gen- ce1ebrat309`.n %3lndV~?.** -. in c-onnection with .'1'ie S.0`Y1,`H"3`d3y_7_`G`9'f ! C11"-('I1`i1':1]. gr-no-ratrrr. There are :t11eF}'*1.t133 d i I .<,v~mn..- for train .19 -3 ..mT _ `J Iig.-'htin:_".V T`:':~ tir~t is tbz straight I` I`: -I consists of 8 - Ft<'n'a1;:(- entiugh 10 Of d1 '. s1x`iir`::1t for the _' ` 110(.`d.< of {ht} train En route L V 1 ` 1 U hm -11 tcsrxninula Of course. . thl __ A V . -`T vl`a1', (* lumr-:'_\' has to be charged ;' hlforo em-`n trip. The 181099 3'9 1i%1.1tv;-I 1-3' 1m~rz;-1)` xruing _ _ f'\\`itr,`h whi-`n 1I`2`.WS on . , _A ~`t01`erl in the battery. In` the 599'. ' `md -*.\'#tr-:n a mall genel 8t0.1' ,1 9(`a1`(.`(1 HI I,'5`]If:1] to the % % a..`I,il'lf*"' one of :1.-. (,-ar=. -This 5D`}"1if`= ("V-t"tritit`. diArec1;l,vL to 5 ]3`m}I5~` am} ;I]~`0 to at! 81131503! T` 2+ 3 O\"l`.\DIn `[JL'[.` znnnrn Ago A Full ay s Sport for 25c. % 7 %% % 'ISin_g le %Fare oi; l.{ailro"ac ls%and Boats .I.11en>ers 1 reported from -of Ontario, showing -W lbs. per colony. V AS? .m 101-) ...-- __-_._1_.v 0.\"l`ARI() BI-ZEILEEBERS % SOCIATION Th? (7 r01) Report the Ontario Beekeeped .4`: 11011 met on Frilay,vJtl_1yL 4 ` utteig ad the u 0. Balloon % Parac % Ate? M0T0!i'C.Y`?':'53'_`ae*` -l;rofessiInal and usjon smell tins about equalizes the price.` In selling to the Wholesale -mer-` chants the lowest wholesale 1 price; should asked; while the _retail' grocer should Pay the highest wholesale price. The reail price to the consumer might vary accord- ing to the quantity he takes in any one purchase and whether sup- pl-ies his own package. UA...... 1.4`...-..-`.J .-.`vwu\u1_~' B "onv\` :1: till`:/5 Illa `SW LI . _ 1 Honey should alwaysf be kept. in Lsealed'package,s in a dry room pne- nferably warm- Where storage con- `ditions have not been perfect the kbest -of honey will often have a sour odor on opening can after. aev~l eral nonths storing. This and thel `slightly acid ' taste which `often ac-' companies V it may be removed ` by` placing the can in,da_v_esse1.,of water which is `kept hot `but not allowed to boil, . for _ a3boutJtwe1ve.hours. Old honey. which has been 1!l'l0l`- oughly heated and liquied in this way should be practically as good gas new, provided it is` -nes_rer allow- jed to a temperature too hot `to bear in the hand. n - l Signed by the Comn1ittee--eWm. +Couse, W. J. Craig, H. G. Sibbald, l1r,,,1-~_ 11.1.1.2; (Qnn_"`1-`a` 1. 0 Cl, 550 xlo `b01136, W . u _ gllorley Pettit (Sec.-Twas.) 5 aom. . 1 events, in and ten niil e`oontAsts. A artists. the IN by There will _aho `fv "amt vi-rw ifor run 10 .171 ' 155$ lfletit VIII! one of the but-ever Barrio 81111 thetexisn big crowd; v._,__ 3 " "i b cold v1 of \J4IJ.Ll 5.1 I A-av-V 8 HERE on HOLIDAY Leaves ` rrie MILITARY TATTOO Crand A Display ,. Fireworks AMATEUR BAND Free Vaudeville CONTEST [borough township, York V County, |until~ her rgarage, when she moved_ uwith her ' husband -to -El.m\_ra1e,l `Where they ran `a general store for several years, afterwards V farming near Eilmvaie and on the 6th Con- cession of Vjwpra. YIVL- ___....-I __- L_1,`I __- .'I"_--..J..-.| Vvwusvu `lab I \.A71I& 560 I l The funeral was held on `Tuesday. aiternoon 10 Elmvale cemetery. the Rev. Mr. -Lockhart" of h,Hi`1lsdale| `Presbyterian Church, of which body Mrs. Lambiel was a member, [ta 'ng the services. 7|"... _-__ ,..._1 ..... .L..-...LA....._-. ,.....-| , BIIXI %"I\g'%\7. 1' Two sons and two daughters sur- _vive--Mrs. Alex; `Stra'th, Saurin; 3.9.. Joh1+1rLant;1l`)ie 3; age Barrie` #1! [Polioe; Mrs. -Chas. Hurst of Me- |Dona1d St.', and James Lambie of 'Camrose, Alta. `Mr. John Percy, a `retired G.-T.R. conductor who lives at Sutton, is a brother. _ -' Monday 'p1-omisvegftio ibe `a; _big dziy in toIwn--1e Mayor having pro- claimed it Civic H0liday-and. the Citizens Baxid arranged a` ;,.'J ~ _A..L_-- JJGIJVI JJCIID ' IlLl|QAAa\I\n - - uwwcxw I progrjamme of spa and attrac- tions-'whic_h is` sure to draw an im-V W111 [E 116111. Posters have been sent all over fthei country and `to every town [within a radius of 60 miles. Ham- lilton and Collingwood` both have V ac.-ivic holiday the some day, and` there is sure to be a big crowd from; these places" as well as from Braeebridge, Orillia, Midland, Mea- -ford", =Ivy, Thornton, Oookstown, and ,all places in this. district. f Tire day` will wind up vith thei ever-popular Tattoo `an-I -. Torch-, ` light .Paade and a magnicent ~-Display of Fireworks such as has not been excelled in Barrie. ` in 1 :11 In the morning the Citizens ! Band will give a programme at the} `PD. ; Square, and after dinner here will be a." big parade to the` |Agriouil;u1_-al Park, where` the sports ;wi1l`be hel`d. - 1---- --..A. -11 A...`- a.mf.- % emble-

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