Ontario Community Newspapers

Grimsby Independent, 22 Jul 1936, p. 2

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The renovations will take three morthe. Several m,,, 'W‘l‘-fl-fln. a walting» Â¥oom and chambers for the clerical staff, will be added to the interlor, Work will begin in carly August, Immediately after Mr. Baldwin leaves London. A large brick wall which covers part of the sidewalk and exâ€" somds to the door of the residence will be torn down. A small lawn will be put in its place. LONDONâ€"No, 10 Street, hhm«._‘-mcu m'ninl.:."."'.,..-, nisters, enjoy a "faceâ€" ml.-'c" while Parliament and Preâ€" wier Baldwin are on a vacation, it was learned recently. The gas masks are to be stored in cou.vemient centres throughout the country and will not be issued to the public unless their use becomes neâ€" cessary. Methods of distribution in the event of an emergency are to be worked out with arrangements made to allow the public to try on the masks and become sccustomed to them, No 10" Te Enjoy A Facelifting The supplementary estimate ling $20,001,250 of which $14,554,500 was for a cat ‘ grant, pushed the total of 1936 supplementary estiâ€" mates to $41461,060 beyond the amâ€" P uns up Neville Chamberlain. An additional $25,0000 was allotted for the civilian antiâ€"gas school. LONDONâ€"Great Britain bolstered her air.raid precautions last week. A supplementary Civil Service estiâ€" mate filed in the House of Commons maked an additional $4,250,000 with which to purchase gas masks. Of this ::-ull. $125,000 n.ou:u\: for purchase and adaptat two factories producing masks in the Manâ€" chester area. Britain Pelsters Its Ait â€" Raid Defence C m T mm To Drownings "in 1935, exclusive lll those ceeurring in land or niur trans portntion, numbering 877. or 15 per cent of the total of fatal aceldents. Land | tranportation arcounted for 16147 deaths, or 28 per cent. of the total. Of these, deaths in autamobile nccklents numbered 1.224, or 21 per ceont of all nreideatal deat‘s. Excluding those care« where an o!ln:-om. was I-v":i’wd there were 215 deaths in rall neeklents and 87 in street car nccilents. Accidents in mines and quarries accounted for 141 deaths, although one of the drownlugt is dupHeated here. There were 12 pervons Lilled during fl-l y“: in accidents of air trarsporta« Montrea! had 109 deaths from motor veblele accidents in 1935 as ¢ompared with 101 in the procediag year. Toronte had 74 as compared with £8, Vancouver 43 azunst #5, Winniper 24 against 19, Hamilto 16 ngminst 27, Ottawa 25 nguinst 19. and Quebec City 17 szminst 15 toc deaths as compared with five. Now Rronswiek 40 spsinst 3?, and Alberta 45 ngainst 61. Prince Edward Island had the lowest rate, 2.2 per 100,000, and .l‘-hlm-n stood next with a ""J 4.1. of Prince Edward Istand, Alberta mk’nmw-m nomber of motor vehicl« fatalities in 1935 than in the rreeed‘nz year. Prince Edward Hland, however, had _ Euirides secounted for 202 deaths, compared to 927 in 1934, and homlâ€" ::; for 153 compared with 142 in In all, 6,885 persons or 62.9 per 100,000 met death from external vilence in 1635. This, too, was the hichest total since 1931 and comâ€" pared with 6469 in 1934 1 Automobile mishaps took 1,224 lives or 11.2 per 100,000 of populsâ€" tion compared with 1,155 in 1934 This was the largest toll since 1931, when 1.316 fatalities occurred. brought death to 6,885 people in Canada last year, the Dominion Burâ€" eau of Statistics reports. Almost all forms of violent death excent sulâ€" cide showed Increases over 19%4 and crept up towards record high levels vegistered around 1950 and 1921 6885 In Canada During Past Year Violent Deaths Automobile Accidents Claim 1,224 Lives; Largest Toâ€" tal in Five Years. Al provinces with the exeeption OTTAWAâ€"Automobile and other groom‘s 18â€"acre farm near here read the wedding ceremony. Temaiiey the smy ho e i Clerks refused to issue it until the bride‘s father appeared and consented. He nodded approval while the county COLUMBUS, Tex. â€" Oscar Crawâ€" ’Mfl.wh:.,m:.‘...u pension cheque for soon l.:.nlllthmmu. wmulnmd&fl" and noked for his first marringe 1iâ€" 66 Weds 16 When First Old Age Pension Begins Infbector of Foutar Horten: Amidtent oster Superintendent, Provincial Superinâ€" tendent until juvenile courts were first established and she was the logiâ€" cal cholse to cccupy the beneh. territers." Judas Mackaebisn bas tes * run up enough mileage on her automobils lo-lhhthlkbnhin':‘ times, registering 20,000 a year. :;]:‘mflu,domuml _ The only travel woman judge io Coumts loft Entnbury wa, y work in west, beginning n:m?‘uxmuw- Regina at time w suporinâ€" tendent and she formed the entire HALIFAX â€" Judge Ethel Macâ€" Lachlan of the Juvenile Court of Sasâ€" katchewan is beck visiting her native province after an absence of a quarâ€" w century. Woman Judge Spends Holi Jday in N.S., After 25 Years‘ Absence |leave the John Brown | rer the Hner. «hi "I‘c-n-l-unmuuum m tender although we bave not reâ€" M'N_u‘rluflllr-tlndm says ‘The company has expected to reâ€" nl: an order for a battleship, but io Feq n dad o+ SE T “'.L‘;“‘;:J::Imn&- pany, . w Queen Mary for the Conardâ€"White Star Lines, ENo POV USI it is understood the Admiralty work would be spread instead to other, ”Efl:_ll _North England to posits. M the rosl e is ul ebristened the King George V. An official order for the construeâ€" tion still is awaited. 1t was suggested the projected liner would have a tonâ€" nage of about 85000 as compared to x tairaiyâ€" co In shipping circles it is said the liner, if constructed will probably be christened the King Georve V panlon t Preparations Under Way . Craft May Be Christened King George V. Plan Bigger Ship k. Back Home As Tashionable crowds line the in Lailex Chalionge Cup Plate aver mive of 80 1 As fashionable crowds line the boom, of the Queen Mary, Company free quotations on Toronto grain transâ€" actions for car lots, prices on basis eAf, bay ports: Manitoba _ whest â€"No. 1 Nor., #6%e; No. 2 Nor., 95%e; No. 3 Nor., 90%e; No. 4 Nor., 86%e; No. 5 Nor., 81lke; No. 6 wheat, 80%4¢; No. 3 amber durum, 90%e, Western Ostsâ€"No. 2 CW., 49%e; No. 8 C.W., 44%e; extra No. 1 feed onts, 44%e¢; No. 1 feed, 48%e. Manitoba barley â€" No. 3 C.W , 56Te; No. 5 C.W., 61%e. Ontaric grain, approximate prices track shipping pointâ€"Wheat, 73e to T5e; oats, 35¢ to 3%¢; barley, 46¢ to BO¢c; corn, 70e to T3¢; rye, 62e t> BTe; buckwhent, 50e to bic; maltinz barley, 55¢ to 58¢; milling oats, 34 to 36e. \ HAY AND STRAW _ May quotations in Toronte Saturâ€" S o naine k were: , $9.00 to $10.00 a ton; No. 3 Timothy ha,, bayed, $7.0( to $8.00 a ton. Ort and wheat straw baled, $6.00 to $7.00 li'; s |.'";.‘ '-:i:-‘:‘l:.fih Lo Lo 18, €. h.n“g-:m.'uu to all m‘ prices. WHOLESALE PROVISIONX PRICES m_“‘;_“_... .-.-.E quoting prices to Toronto retail tradeâ€" Pork â€" Hams, 21%¢; shoulders, I-::. :-:‘m. 17%e; loins, 211%¢ pleâ€" Lardâ€"Pure, t 11%e; t 12%¢; pails, Il\ic::.gm 18:60. hk 1%â€"24 Th 24â€"3 Ths. 43% Ibs. 34 The. Over 4 Ihe O d roosters 3 to Spring aegoe SUANA T ENA r e cessn 4+ + 16¢ BUTTERâ€"No. 1 Ontario solids 24!e; No. 2, 23%e, POULTRYâ€" Hensâ€" Over ..Ulllod Farn turday were prices for prod GRAIN quotaTio®s Following ate Saturday‘s . closing “‘“"'"'*lmor--ul. lc'll-&kbyn.nthbmnul. And he‘ll never answer you back, Y-.mm friend, and . your t fight, A“wfilhwm lhrnrr,-hlhrm'..m. And yetâ€"he‘s only a dog! The child‘s first school i« the family, You may talk of frieniships you‘ve “hi-ttm.. ov your pals and your lovers, too;. “T:dm.- who‘ve _ often the following :‘l'{"m r-:ln ollowing GGSâ€"Prices to producers, cases â€"ned basis, delivered Toronts:~ (Quotations in cents.) 5 Th«. .. lt.. 4 «+ broilersâ€" Th BUYING PRICES Only a Dog Farmers‘ Coâ€"operative Co. Live Dreassed Milkfed 14 13 11 0. P ollege, Dublin (nearest Il:a':dlllll.mlu‘.. FROEBEL 16 Dressed Tornity, and a group of C cluding Agnes MePhail, by Prof. L C. Marsh of McGill Uniâ€" versity, and a | Canadians Will SouM Developments Berlin blend in perfect taste with the furnishings of the finest room. Many well deserved compliments have been received on the beautiful appearance of this portrait. y makers of Bee Hive Golden C and Durham Corn Starch are happy: their friends throughout Canada a hmk tone reproduction of His Majesty, Kin Wire VIIL The portrait, (by Bassano) is one of the most recent and has been specifically designed for framing, measuring approximately 9" by 11", It is restrained and dignified and when framed will Regaita, @ Send in one Ber Mive Go‘den Corn Syrup labe} and one Durkam Corn Starch label with your name and address written clearly on the back of cither label, along with the wordsâ€""King‘s Picture." Mail to the St. Lawrende Starch Co. Limited, Dept. 1.MM°!h_bnln-lmpov- trait will be forwarded promptly, Member of officials anâ€" Fecure Free Portrait It may be time, as this concern thinks, to turn from eontinual erlâ€" tielsm of the careless to encourageâ€" ment of the careful. Certainly #t is behavior is more effectively attained by emphasis on excellence in achioveâ€" one driver in each state is to be selected as the state‘s safety chamâ€" MMHMJ:'MOI& the A.A.A. and affiliated motoring chhh&::::x:c.lrnw penseâ€"palid own car to New York city, where, together with the other state champions, he will be awarded a medal, prizes to drivers who have driven not less than 50,000 miles in the last ten years without a blemish on their records, either of nccident or law violation. \ priated $50,000 to be. awardad in Comments the Chicago Newsâ€" the -:-:'.‘hl:..l pn-d: lor ulny-th'l‘hb-m «.n eastern concern engaged in the financing the Medals For Safe ST. LAWRENCE STARCH CO. LTD, Motor Drivers MELBOURNE â€"â€" Mrs. Robert Bull, 89, arrived here on her 67th voyage from England, Now she plans to fiy over a large part of Australia before feturning to Enpltand, | _ The word should be elimiinated from the marriage service is "irritating a d needless," the relegates decided. BOSTON â€"â€" A bride may "love and honor" her husband, but it is no longer necessary that she should promise to "obey" him. This was the opinion of 1000 deleâ€" gates of 6,350 churches at the General Council of Congregaiional and Chris« t‘an Churches of the United States, held at South Hadiey, Massachusetts. Women Have Always Known ‘Twas Futile to vote," they chorused. "We together on the Senate race." _ Dressed identically in navy blue sports dresses, the sister, Mary, Roâ€" berta, Mona, ard Leota, stepped into the huge drill room of Durast‘s arâ€" mory to cast their ballots in Okla« homa‘s primary. -lruuuuluguu_-u-l DURANT, Okis, â€"â€" Nervously unâ€" wertain just how to go about it, the famous Keys sisters became the United States‘ first . voting quadâ€" vaplets recently.. _ > _ =â€" Four Minds With The Same Ideas Flighty at 89 impriagns.,..¢ 300. or six -fi prizonment, with or without labor. ‘The same penalty applies to Anyone acting as trainer or second to any persons intending to engage in a prizeâ€"fight. The explanation of the who‘e thing in easy. in Canada most boxing matches are classed as 1 "oxhibltione." Wretiios n benat NE resiiprePToantaregm ism carialihcics sihsd backer, assistant or reporter, or who advises, encourages or promotes such fight." A fight is not a prizeâ€"fight when Jt fany be shown that the fight was . the e maault °"'-flfl-m-uun-u. principals engaged and that it was not n‘:t:m for a .h....‘l:: even then the princivals may able to get away vith it; if not disâ€" charged he may be fined $50. ""A"'hrhulnnwhg. challenge to a prizeâ€"fight is a fine of from $100 to $1.000, or six months‘ Imprisonment, with or without hard !rllâ€" the Charlottetown Guardâ€" "hmeling and Louis could have n jailed for a year at hard Iabor had their ring eptsode of a few weeks axo taken place in Canads. Not only ‘-: the C:hhul Cade nl-k!ht participants n a prizefight are U ""-"hlbfâ€".ht.h-:; one, "who is present at a prizeâ€"fight &s an ald, second, surgeon umpire, the American Medica} Association, ’lhwmnlku!nth‘-u homeâ€"live, grow, move, kill germs and produce blood cells. a Preliminary experiments wit artle fielal bloodâ€"making were described in Journal in May by Dr O:zsod p--am-n..-. Alfred N. Mus, NIRENSeAGrrevirmmam mm ces .. 1 composition of the medium." Vorld‘s Greatest Cities atter of population, Greater London stili ahead of Greater New York. e dwellers in the former number 742,212 and in the latter 7,363,624, th Brooklyn as the most populous rt with 2,739,585 inhabitants, New wk‘s population has been estLuated er than London‘s, and it is possible it the latter city is now farther the lead. Next in order to these o cities in the matter of nopulation mes Tokio, with 5,003,250 in its reater" area, and then comes enter Berlin with 4.288,214 inhabiâ€" its. Then follows: Paris, 3,787,000 habitrants; Mascow, 3,572,000; anghal, 2,400,780; Chicago, 3.376,â€" At that time the machinery was imvolved, with two dozen assortâ€" glass compartments and tok««. It neluded a mechanical "kidney" and With it. Crt. Orgood «nd Musceâ€" itz decared they had "material . . uitable for any" studies of the blood nd the physical and chemieal proâ€" esse« involved in tissueâ€"building. Old Way Too Costly But such a complex apparatus was xnensive. This month Dr. Morris Fishbein, ditor of the Journa!, made a speakâ€" 1¢ tour on the Western coast. He topped off to talk to Dr. Oxgood. He ft so impressed with the simplified oparatur he sent the new report 1k to the Journal in Chicago mark» is . . . technique is has been pos« bie to make rapld strides in the udy of the effects of variation in Inside the "factory," the two sclentists reported in the Journal of Persad B S ied ustt Sm use Acca d .. Ropunee reve . ant b¢ _ t k Although devised as a substitote mm-flrmw human bones, machinery | in rmw construe» plants ‘are extremely simple: A jellyâ€"like substance in a plain glass tube with a rubber cap. To start the "factory" going, the two doctors would obtain some marâ€" rnh-nnnfidl.h.q,m it Into the tube with a syringe, force a mixture of gas through the jelly -ltb-um.-llhnplu.u. tube in a warm water bath. "rush." "The method descrited," said the port, "while not duplicating body nditions so exactly (as the more mplex apparatus, permits satisfac», ry growth and is convenient for cowing a large number of cultures : the same time. . . Ry the use of ); Leningrad, 2,859,000; Buenos wen, 2,236946; Philadelphia, 1,050,â€" ), and Greater Boston, 1,527,709. ;nm r =I“Ilo- u.m.t“t over a ding Glasgow, Montreal, Caleutta, mbay, Budapest and Barcelona. The Law in Canzda Notes the Victoria Colonistâ€"In the this category They were designed by two Unive sity of Oregion medical men, Dr. K4. which manufacture human blood cclls artificlally are in operation on the Pacific Coast. Simple Glass Tube with Marâ€" row Builds Up Cells at CHICAGOâ€"Tiny glass "factories* Live, Grow, Kill Germs "Cves are classed as Wrestling is included §M in anci n ons

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