Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 28 Apr 1938, p. 4

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$} The United Farmers Coâ€"Oper. Co. Ltd. LIVE STOCK COMMISSION DEPT. UNION STOCK YARDS, wWEST TORONTO For mary years we have been doing the largest live stock comâ€" mission business in Canada, and have a staff of experienced salesâ€" men for any and all classes of Stock you may have to offer. Our cheques payable at par in any chartered bank in Ontario. For further particulars, write, wire or Telephone Lyndburst 11431144 Toronto has one of the best live stock markets in Canada: exâ€" cellent accommodation; free running water every day of the year. Market scales which are tested every market morning and inspectâ€" ed onee each month, Consign your stock to us and have it sold on the Open Market, where buyers assemble from outside cities, towns and villages, wholesale butchers and buyers from the numerous packing plants in this city, also buyers for the U.S.A. and Great Britain. CATTLE CALVES HOGS SHEEP This Pen hoid* 200% more ink ths any ordinary sack fountain pen on the market! You ean Write for Three Months on One Filling! No repair b:‘s! No Lever Filler! No re Bar! Inr;',fu teated and guaranteed to be unbreakable for life. Get yours NOW. THIS PEN GIVEN EE, if you cam one in the city for lese than THREE NOL!*"St This eeislfc=te good only while Mvenln‘m snle is on. NNE aaiarertveceecrry ie ALSO 31.00 AND $1.50 PENCILS \ MATCH, 396 ons SPECIAL Friday and Saturday SPECIAL 69 INIS LG@rtTIC@ATE WOrN a252.31 69; nhmun-dun-xmmmnmdovw c indastructible $3.00 YVACUUM BILLER SACKLESS FOUNTAIN PENS Visible inh seppiy. SE¢ the ink! ~ A LIPETIME @UVARANTEE WITH LACKH PEN Sizes for l!aZies mon, boys and girls. These pous on sale ce MARKET PRICES HAVE ADVANCED Add 6 Cte, EXPORT TRADE INCREASING days adveriises oniy!t This Cortificate Worth $2.31 CALDER‘S DRUG STORE OFFERâ€" THIS PEN WILL BE $3.00 AVTER SAik The Review appreciates greatly the splendid effort made from week to week by the correspondents, but we would like to state in all kindâ€" ness that we would be very grateful if our correspondents would endeayâ€" or to get their copy to us as soon as possible. Reports of meetings held on Friday, for instance, should be in the printer‘s hands by Saturday, or not later than Monday. The last day or two before press day the interâ€" type is busy setting last minute news so that it is usually difficult, and sometimes impossible to handle press secretaries‘ budgets which should have been in the printers‘ hands several days earlier and which cannot be given precedence over lnt-‘ er news. The "hot news" must be handled if possible. In the rush of press day, items that should have been in hand earlier in week are the ones that are left over. TO CORRESPONDENTS ONTARIO ARG TORONTO THE DURHAM REVIEW Daylightâ€"saving went into operaâ€" tion in Toronto Sunday morning April 24, at 2 o‘clock. Until Sept 25, itgetsyouupndmumtobed one hour earlier than you know acâ€" tually to be the case. For years tried and tested as it has been in the majority of cities under Lord Grey and assisted to carny the Reform Bill. In Melbourne‘s Government, Lord Gienelg was Secreâ€" tary of State for War and the Copâ€" onies. In that capacity he had much to do with Canadian affairs during the critical rebellion period. One writer says of him: "Lord Glenelg with the best intentions in the world, Br‘er McDonald is correct. The towrsh‘p was named after Charles Grant of Glenelg, in the County of Inverness, Scotland, who was raised to the peerage as Lord Glenelg in 1836. When the Duke of Wellington succeeded Lord Goderich as Premier in 1828, Mr. Grant was President of: the Board of Trade, but he left the Government, along with Lords Palmâ€" erston and Dudley, Mr. Huskisson and Mr. Lamb (afterwarg_s Lord Melbourne). In 1831 Grant took office _ Editor McDonald of Chesley comâ€" ments: _ "In â€" reading _ "Withrow‘s Mistory of Canada," we notice Lord Glienelg was a British Colonial secreâ€" tary at that time and we came to the conclusion that the township of Glenelg in Grey County was named after that important official, which portfolio® is now filled by the Hon. Malcolm MacDonald. If this is not correct the Durham papers are reâ€" quested to put this g. f. j. on the right track." f Most of his trouble, indeed, seems to be due to his enforced seclusion from mankind. He lives in an unâ€" natural detachment that makes his diâ€" gease of being a godhead batten on itself: the most balanced of human beings could not stand this kind of life without losing a sense of realâ€" ities, Nobody would call Hitlee emoâ€" tionally balanced at the best of times, and constant adulation makes him pathological. Nobody can teli him anything or speak frankly, still less criticize his policy or himseif. He lives in a mental world of his own, more aloof thar any Sun King, and he has only the narrow mental iequi:pmem, and experience of an aâ€" gitator to guide him. Unless one acâ€" cepts the prevalent German view that he gets his inspiration rrom‘ God, one must conclude that the future of Germany and the peace of. the world rest on the tangled working of the mind of one man whom not even his friends would call normal. sult. book which is engagingly written and unusua!ly colorful, presents a balâ€" anced picture of events that hither to have come to ts in fragments. I: has been critically claimed "the best general book yet written about "Naz! Germany." We quote from it in part: " Hitler is transparently honest â€" he carries the crowds with him beâ€" cause he believes so utterly, so apâ€" pallingly, in what he is saying. Nevertheless, he can say different things in successive moments and believe in each with the same ferâ€" vor. It is his terrific power of selfâ€" delusion that introduces such an element of uncertainty into every thing he does. His advisers never know what he is going to say next. The Dictator is never alone. His "suicide brigade" of special guards surround him everywhere. Yet he never has real personal contacts. The charming pictures one sees, in which he is taking bouquets from tiny tots or grasping the horny hands of picturesque old peasants, are all arranged. They are triumphs of the photographic skill of his old friena Hoffman: Hoffman blots out the surâ€" Che Burknm Amic 2 wh The May issue of "The Reader‘s Digest" has a highly interesting conâ€" densation of a book entitled ‘"The House â€"that Hitler Built," written "THE HOUSE THAT summErR Time in Toronto P. RAMAGE. Editer and Proprietor HOW GLENELG WAS NAMED a positive genius for doing thé HITLER BUILT" Africa in 1900,. 1896, Queen Victoria‘s jubilee proâ€" cession in 1897, and the departure of the Canadian contingent for South In 1896 John Griffin, popularly deâ€" scribed as "the father of motion picâ€" ture houses in Canada", opened the first regular Canadian motion picâ€" ture theatre on Yonge Street in Toronto. Shortly afterwards, L E. Ouimet opened a similar theatre in Montreal. Pictures were shown of the â€" Corbettâ€"Fritzsimmons fight in and neglected to watch wilere was driving. P car near the Hanover movie theatre inflicting damages to the amount of about $12.00 to the parked car. In his testimony Monk â€" declared that he was looking at the large posâ€" ters in front of the movie to see what show was on Saturday night, j , _ $18,489 $19,898 \ _ It will be seen that Bentinck has 4,489 pupils days, while Normanby, a larger township has 510 less at 3,979. This is possibly due to the fact that Bentinck has three high schools immediately adjoining the \township namely, Hanover, Durham and Chesley, while high schools are not zo convenient to the pupils of Normanby, about oneâ€"third of whom come to Hanover (1,239) while the other 2,700 pupilâ€"days are spread aâ€" ‘mong high and continuation schools in Mount Forest, Harriston, Dundalk, Durhare, Clifford and Holstein. Monk was charged with reckless driving on Hanover‘s main street on the evening of April 20th, when he crashed into the rear of a parked There is a fable that curiosity k:lâ€" led a cat but it was not a fable when Emmanuel Monk‘s curiosity cost him $15.00 plus 5.75 costs and the cancelâ€" lation of h‘s driver‘s permit for 60 days in Magistrate Spereman‘s police court in Hanover on Thursday afterâ€" In addition to the above, each municipality pays twoâ€"fifths of a mill for vocational classes, public schools and fifth classes. FINED FOR RECKLES$ DRIVING Egremont ...... 6,097 Holiand ........ 6,363 Osprey ........ 5472 Sullivan ....... 4,831 Sydenham ..... 4,771 Bentinek ...... 4,489 Euphrasia ..... 1,940 Glenelg ....... 3,942 Keppel ........ 6,949 Normanby ..... 3,979 Sarawak .... .. 1,228 St. Vincent .... 7,161 how they are to be carried what the results will be. Th Neustadt .... Shallow Lake wHAT EDUcaTION COSTS THE TOWNSHIPS Under the new system of county wrants. the villages and Townships of Grey not in a high school district will pay $18,489 for the education ot their pupils, based on a cost per day of .2211c and depending on number of munils from each municipality atâ€" tending high schools. The number of pupilâ€"days and totâ€" al amount charged is as follows: No. of Plus 1 Artemesia ..... Collingwood ... ment of Education with regard to lomeotthem.dounotknowlum mind. So far as we can make them out, some of them at least appear to us to be whimsical, revolutionary, uanecessary and inadvisable. CANADaA‘s FIRST moviEs A FACT A WEEK ABOUT CANADA as well as of the public â€" Mount Forest Confederate. 1 +1 ++ 6,058 t ...... 6097 ~x11++1+ 6908 rssr++« 6#T8 4+ 11++1+ AyBSL & ..... 6i a..... 4,489 & «... . L940 5472 1200 1076 4,831 1068 1,272 4771 1,054 1738 4,489 _ 992 1492 1,940 _ 428 1715 3942 871 _ 905 6,949 1536 1,190 3.979 1,355 1260 1228 0 2710 0 284 1161 1583 1710 406 _ 89 _ 155 s14t 4t > 4 1,797 12,201 $ 397 185 1,249 1685 1249 1112 1,349 1,330 1,406 T31 1i7%$ "OL . "OV 1,492 tendance 1'715 Mr. Ja« 905 ed work 1,190 Mr. and 1.260' 1“53 Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Iyan were re: l.lu,(ent visitors with Mr., and Mrs, W. 1,330 R. Jack. 731 ; The Zion Sunday School will open 1,076 Sunday, May 1st for the summer 1272 mwonths and the Supt., Cameron Robâ€" 1mae, son, would like to see a good atâ€" and Mr. and Mrs. L Livingston« and family of Townsend Lake were guests recently with Mr. and Lirs Mr. and Mrs, Oldfield of Corbetton, also Mrs. N Mrs. Stewart who has spent the winter months in Port Elgin, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs C Marn. rison, Oshawa, Dr. J. L. and Mr. Morrison Smith, Durham. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Macintosh and family of North Battleford were guests during Easter week witn their sisters, and brother‘ here. Miss Mary Mcintyre of ‘Toronto, was an Easter visitor with her parâ€" ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. Macintyre. Mrs. Edwards and niece, Marion Kennedy of Shelburne, spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. A. Livingâ€" stone. Morrison, Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. D. Morrison and family were Miss Mr. and Mrs. George Sharpe and daughter Miss Mabel and Mrs. Port: er of Durham attended the farewell gathering on Friday nignt. music and games were enjoyed to an early hour of the morning. Sorry to lcarn that Mr. John Kreager and Miss Bernice Koenig are under the doctor‘s care _ at Miss Ella Park of Toronto speni the week end at the Geddes home. A large farewell gathering was tendered Mr. Eben and Miss Margarâ€" et Geddes at their home Friday evening. And around midnight when all had assembled they were called to the living room where Mrs, James Byers read a very appropiate adâ€" dress and Mr. Fred Breatigam preâ€" sented them with a floor lamp and Mr. Albert Kraft an end table. Both replied very feelingly and thanked their fricnds inviting all to come and see them in their new home. A Mr. and Mrs. John Boddy and Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Boddy and daughter» of Dunkeld visited with the Byâ€" ers‘ at Bonnie View recently. A shingling bee was held at the school last Thursday when the soutn side of the building was renewed. Miss Evelyn Henderson who Las been recuperating at her home for the past few weeks left Saturday for Toronto, Mr. Jack Roun, St.Marys has startâ€" ed work for the summer months with Mr. and R. T. Edwards. his home in Toronto after spend‘ng the Easter bolidays with his grandâ€" parents, Mr. and Mrs, W. J. Cook. Visitors at homes of W. J Greenâ€" wood and J. H. Robson Sunday were: Mr. Cameron, R. Mcintosh M. P. oi North Battleford, and Mrs. Mcintosh, Peggy and Irvin; Mr. Angus Mcinâ€" tosh and sisters, Margaret and Susie Mr. J. Mor $0.2211. t 0s â€",,~ _ _ _Part of the following townships are The following amounts are payable for the maintenance of Grey County pupils attending collegiates, high and continuation schools in 1937. bein> high school districts, etc. It evokea some discussion when brought up in committee of the whole council, bu: there was nothing of a contentiou« The report was a long one, involyvâ€" ing cost per municipality on the county rate and dealing with rebates. Gery something in the neighborhood of $2,000 less than it did last year, Reeve W. 8. Hunter told Grey Council Council in presenting his re port at the special session. Mrs. Gillen Boyd, Glenroadin, is spending a few days at the home 0! Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bell. Mr. Bell, S is still quite ill and not making much progress toward recovery. â€"Bunday School reopens next Sunâ€" day, . It is the duty of parents to se that they make an effort to have their children present on the openâ€" ing day. Miss Doris McCartney, Meaford was a, visitor for a few days with he: cousin, Misa Maxine McCrae. Mr. and Mrs. Addie Symon and fam ly were visitors this weexk with relatives here, turned last week to her home here. * Mr, and % Mrs, Thos. Bell and Mrs Walter Dent, Toronto, were weekâ€" end guests with Mr. and Mrs. \‘m Mr and Mrs. Harold MecKechnie and Mr. and Mrs. Herb Atkinson and Mr and Mrs. James Crutchley were gussts Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. J. W. McKechnie who spen, the winter months with her daugnt Holy Land,. Mrs Snyder of Hanove: sang a beautiful solo. Other numbers were a chorus and pantomime. The meeting was closed with prayer by Rev. Mr. We are enjoying find spring weath er and the farmers are busy on th« CRAWFORD W. M. S. The W. M. 8. held their Thank offering in the church Sunday even ing with a large audience present ‘The Pres., Miss L. Fisher presided and read the scripture lesson.. Miss M. McGillivray led in prayer, Oth« readings were given by Mrs. Henry Weirmeir and Mrs. Geo. Hastie The guest speaker was Mr. G. Pentland and children moved to their home Remember that Sunday School re opens next Sunday, May lst at 1.30, busy practicing for their play " The Happy Vagabond" which will be preâ€" Mrs. Pete Hay and son Hubert of ROCKY SAUGEEN _ costs equals $18,428.29 and cent of cost per day equals were weekend visitors with will cost the county of Down in Grey Gondor * â€"____ _ » WNchets, Train Information to WINDSOR Oat. Notice was received by Cle Aulay from the Liquor Contro: of Ontario, stating that the d voting on the question o( in reoms in Southampton has t for Wednesday, May 1j new date was set following for of a petition bearing 310 na citizens, â€" requesting such ‘ which was presented to couns special . meeting . on _ We« n 0 é‘\'; % 6e L P x # AS. 8 4 1 l 1 % f S S id s Round Trip Fro May ThNR C A N A D 1 CHANCGE Copies of the new Unfl Apply these factos lem, then come in an qualifed to advise y ters of economical t modern merchandis these big, smartly =1 But there are othes popularity of Chew (1) There‘s the reo dependabilits, adapt consistent price lead and service faciliv factoryâ€"builtâ€"orâ€"in= To TORONTO a 846 a.m. b 2.06 p. m. 6.01 p. m. a â€"Gdaily except 8 DURHA Equally low fare Effective LEd TO HAVE ON BEER, 28 1938

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