ir". paper Apsgelatons. .. .â€". â€"2> 0 _c000 C â€"_ ‘|euts in salaries.: The teachers not only .CODâ€"| _ _ Poult y .0 munmm{fl'fl*u the Unitea | demned ‘the action, but jdeqhd-'twnmnc;f Rro rg + {m w%-m ‘\ false hopes among mu!,byed by callint:’g :.f’).';‘“;: o m 15 .u"‘\:nmnma RBATES> ; â€"_ . |applications whilst actually / infinding â€" toTéâ€"1to day.. Aite M eX / TISING RATES: > *. ... [ @ppMMMuHUs â€" NALRRE ; HMAUS £ > ‘On .,,xu.‘:;?nm copy must reach the | engage. the present .staffs. * office not later than Monday noon to insure insertion|= _ School teaching, if jt The Directors of the Fl“ Fairs in Elmira, for one: must have New Hamburg and Wellesley have arranged| parting knowledge. attractive programs which should prove Of | training of a high 0 much interest to the thousands of people who| real personal inters annually attend these events. The prize lists| the proper tempera have beén distributed and the number (’)5‘ exâ€" The teachers a â€" Cmy e s es e e d . T nie mivarinan af the Fall , n N nst Waw us . i + > Directors of the Fall Fairs in Elmira,| for one must have ‘the natural talént for imâ€" Newrrlixfn)ll):le:g and Wellesley have arranged| parting knowledge. Not only df;es it rautiht: attractive programs which should prove Of | training of ah.lg‘h orde?, but theu? must it m much interest to the thousands of p80ple vyho real personal interest in the.pupll, ast vlve t-“ annually attend these events. The prize lists | the proper temperament. It is a rare :& tla;;e 7 have been distributed and the number of exâ€" The teachers ask for legislation in on s; hibits of pure bred livestock, farm produce, but the matter _scl_lould rest with t,he\i a oo' women‘s handiwork and flowers promises to be| Tegchers‘ Association, backed by a minimum ‘of high order and more numerous than the ialary law. . previous year. | _ onE Ec rrs‘s ramTAYT NDIVINC ACCIDENTS | ated in Montreal and Toronto recently by a comâ€" paratively few people has extended to Kitchâ€" ener where a meeting was held on Monday night. The leaders are, for the most part, young men of German origin who hearing of the Nazi doings under Hitler in Germany and â€"of the Fascists in Italy under Mussolini, seek to emuâ€" late them. In Toronto the Swastika is used as an emblem signifying animosity towards the Jews but the movement cannot ‘go far in Canada because the people have too much common sense to be swayed by any such moveâ€" ~â€"ment. > a]v | ANTLSEMITE MOVEMENT FROWNED | i . % UPON | Any group of people who wear an emblem or shirt of a particular color and go about seekâ€" ing to enforce their will upon others plust learn ul â€" eA dli in tatidi i ht ns on T ( that our system of government will not tolerâ€" ate any selfâ€"appointed body to interfere with the lives or doings of others. The Dominion, provincial and municipal governments are quite capable of keeping law and order and do not want any interference from antiâ€"Semite groups or other selfâ€"appointed body. This movement should meet with the same treatment on the part of the authorities as the Ku Klux Klan, which sought to flourish on antiâ€" Catholic prejudice. There is no reason for any such organization in this country, and the government, through the courts, will certainly discipline any secret union or. group of men which seeks to persecute the Jews or any other law abiding citizen. A prominent official of the Roosevelt government, Mr. Morgenthau, states that the people of the world do not even faintly know how dangerously near another war we are. He spent a number of weeks behind the scenes in Europe and has come back to his own country declaring that war is on the immediate horizon. Miss M. Dingman, chairman of the Disâ€" armament Committee of Women‘s International Organizations, told an audience recently, that "The continuing activities of the private manuâ€" facturers of munitions are the greatest menace to peace, and that those manufacturers mainâ€" tain friendly relations with countries buying their diabolical wares in .order to kill the soldiersâ€"and the civiliansâ€"of the manufacâ€" turers‘ own nation." The best safeguard against war, she deâ€" clared, was an informed public opinion. To this end the findings of the subâ€"committee formed at Geneva to tabulate the profits made from the sale of arms is to be made public. INDUSTRIAL PLANTS USE MORE POWER According to Manager V. S. Mcâ€" Intyre of the Kitchener _ Public Utilities, manufacturers for some months past have been using an inâ€" creased amount of hydro power. There have been no cancellations of power services by smaller manufacâ€" turers. The Goodrich and Dominion Tire and other industries have conâ€" sumed more power, all of which inâ€" dicates a gradual return to more normal condition. Samuel Perone‘s left ear was torn off on Aug. 10th, taken to a hoapital in Hammonton, N.J., with Perone and esewed beck on. Because of the speed with which the entire= proceâ€" dure occurred doctors believed the cperation would prove euccessful. 908 Jb dn idahibrbnn ioh e NEWLY SEVERED MF en n Perone was fighting a fire in a barn adjoining his home and caught the side of his head against a wire which cut off the ear. Oarrying the ear, a policeman took him to the hoapital were Dr. A. L. Reposito stitched the organ back in place. > The antiâ€"semite movement which originâ€" Architect W. H. E. Schmalz of Kitchener has completed plans for the gr'o‘féné new Evangehieal Church at Bridgeport. It provides for A building 40 x 80 feet with seating capacity of 400. Tenders for the work are beln% called. Whether the building will be erected this year are not known. , PLAN NEW $20,000 CHURCH ADVERTISING RATES; > se w PR TCPc CY (WaeRpa . oe>. O cydR ) 50. â€" ApBreâ€"Â¥eky Hight The Rolkkiky: .*"The Jew pplication, ‘Advertising copy ust reach the | engage. the present staffs.©~ |_. .. _â€"~<»_~**‘lis, of course, a haudicap to nales of | . ï¬d !.:â€"’ later thas Monday noon to u:nu insertion. [ _ School teaching, if jt is to be maintainéd forh sgee and ponltge in the Targer 5...,â€"..â€1 j aiwengs s oz otj s ession in theâ€"life| ~.. ty Grop Repor il gities o nrkec_cc__._zâ€"__._â€"_â€"*â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" *!1t is the most important proféssion in theâ€"4 f Pa ® vVISIT THE COUNTY FAIRS â€"â€" t { of the citizen. The possession of a-’oe{tm:no’ hss gf‘"‘{mm?"w‘;;‘:& ?D“;“'i 'gï¬m}’}_ ooo ons e onz e n teach mayn.,t. alwa.y' <.be,‘f“_| ‘L_xxrfs .. ;m, lz]t\s n‘:'?la:fed'l?h‘e’,kt& blo:fll‘lfl on g:mh:! IS A WAR COMING? m ...3 "Wm.“ iry Thursday by D. Bean: EAR SEWED BACK the Roosevelt PRAISES ENTERPRISE Robert J. Cromie, in New York on Aug. 4th, en route home from & Huropean trip, said Russia‘s "great progrese, for a number of yeare, in poing to command world attention, world admiration and, along certain line«. world emulation. Cromie, editor and owner of the Vancouver, B.C., Sun, said the Rueâ€" «iane "are in the beginning of an economic honey moon." "If ghere is one country in the world today which has found a real job to do, and is wholeheartedly doâ€" Ing It, that country is Russia," he declared CHEQUE FOR $81,842 A cheque for the sum of §$81,â€" 842.68 has been forwarded to county treasurer Sam Cassel by the Ontario Government. It covers the county‘s share paid on roads during county‘s 1982. The city of Kitchener Poultry Asâ€" sociation are already planning for the 1933 show which will be held towards the end of the year. An adâ€" ded feature will be a canary exhfbit and 100 bntries in this class are ©xâ€" Even the grasshopper, bane of tha Western Canada farmer, has tte uses. The jumping insect which ra vages felde of wheat also destroys fotibv o Sn SE Winamak araAssHoPPERS WEED KIHLERS sow thistle, the Manitoba Depart ment of Agriculture reports The sow thistle is one of the worst weed pests in existence, POULTRY SHOW PLANS OoF sovIET RUSSIA occurred recently. In one case a man took a dive from the sixâ€"foot bank of the Humber Riyer at Toronto into four feet of water and died from the inâ€" juries he received. Another man dove from the top of a children‘s slide, twenty feet high, into‘ water only two and a half feet deep. At Grand Bend a young man employed in Seaforth, lost his life as a result of a broken neck, from a dive off the dock into shallow water. In all three cases the accidents could have been avoided if even ordinary precautions hag been taken before the' dives were made. & * 1t is the weeds that mature their seeds and spread them that will cause trouble next year. Neglect now will cost time, effort and lessened yields in 1984. There are in Canada thousands of unemâ€" ployed men who will find it difficult to underâ€" stand the C.P.R. President‘s advocacy of even "moderate" immigration to Canada. Excursions have shown the railroads that people are still eager to travel at rates in keepâ€" ing with precentâ€"day incomes. Cheaper freight rates might likewise stimulate business. Hundreds of thousands of workers in the United States who have had their wages inâ€" creased will be convinced that the depression is ended. The pocket is a fairly good indicator of conditions at any time. n Two antiâ€"Nazi candidates in municipal contests in Germany have been elected, but that does not bother the Hitlerites, who gimply will not permit them to take office. This looks like real dictatorship. That there is a field yet for the old time grist millâ€"the farmers‘ flour millsâ€"is proven in many instances in Canada. We read an adâ€" vertisement of the "Greenwood Mills, establishâ€" ed in 1838," and in our own field there is the "Hunting Mill," which is approaching the cenâ€" tury, and is stil operated from the same falls in the Salimon River, where it was first located. â€"Sherbrooke Record. In Waférloo we have the Snider Mill established in 1816 and still going strong. The Masonic Grand Lodge ol Canada In the Province of Ontario enters the field as a powerful influence in the promotion of safety on the highways. In his address to the deleâ€" gates at St. Catharines, Grand Master W. S. Herrington, K.C., of Napanee, dwelt especially on "the slaughter of little children," and ap pealed to the 115,000 Masons in this jurisdieâ€" tion, by rigid adherence to the rules of the road, to do all in their power to make automobile traffic safe. ' Three diving accidents, two of them fatal, FATAL DIVING ACCIDENTS Masonic Grand Lodge of Canada in EDITORIAL NOTES MILK PRICES ADVANCE AT TORONTO To avert a milk shortage which,‘ they state, threatens the cit and district, Toronto milk diatrigutors‘ and producers have announced a rew scale of prices, effective Aug. 6th, which will raise milk one cent per quart to consumers. Shortage of pasture, resulting from dry weather, will curtail the milk su‘;ply unless farmers are able to supplement pasturage with "conâ€" centrates" or winter feed, producers state. The increase in price is necessary to cover the cost of conâ€" centrates. â€" 2 . Hon. T. L. Kennedy, in a recent statement on drought conditions in the province, indicated the inevitâ€" ability of such a step on the part of the milk distributors. Farmers, he pointed out, were obliged to use nted out, weT ESBSH OM NC POLL TAXES ESTIMATE $4,000 The eatimated poll tax for the city of Kitchener for the year 1933 is $4,000, $2,400 of which has been paid to date. It compares practically the eams as last year at this time. * The new I)rice paid to the proâ€" ducers is $1.81 per ewt. for 3.4 milk. The former price was $1.45 per cwt. KILLED BY TRAIN Arthur Corey, aged 25, of Stoney Creek, was killed instantly one mile west of that point, August 4th, when a motor vehicle in whjch he and his brother, George, were riding. . was etruck by a C.N.R. fruit train. ’z‘r’;il;\‘{o ‘fle_e'('l their cattle due to the ack of pasture. George Oï¬rey _escaped the railroads that . .__ Weekly Grop Repo hi e C o ccialn _‘Pee] County: npomoll;;o yields :;u.ï¬u‘; ‘headed by . a e&tï¬; from 3 to.8 bushele per :on. Deak | Colonel. â€">â€", -nget\ of Hitlerite ens are Offering $6 to $1 a bushel|propaganda in the :Dominion. of at present. The late blossoms OR‘ c;nutf;,n have in the past few weeks alfaifa set seed but the yield D@"|been making.strenuous efforts to ucre will be Jow, owing to the fail oï¬iain a tociing in the publication ure of the frst blossome to proper}y |field in Toronto and launch a ;‘yl- pollinate and fertilise. Fall wheAt | tematic am : of.. antiâ€"Semitic has turned out in bushels per acre wder 4alnd»Ebo’l through thvrwen and in quality much better than Anâ€"| The Jewish Standard is also in reâ€" ticlpated a mouth ago, according t { caipt of information which points a report from Lambton COUBtY. | unmistakably to an attempt by the Northumberland has a whedt CroP | Hitleritee to . purchase a newly with a 25 and 30 bushel average OR | published rotogravure periodical the better jJand, Crops in Carleton|at Toronto for this purpose. This are, up to or above the average. The |»ttempt failed, however, when an oat‘ crop in Essgex will average about | offer of $82,000 was rejected. 20 buehels to the acre. onz Apple Export, Outlook Writing prior to depdérture for his fifth year of work in the British marâ€" ket on behalf 0 6 fruit growers of Qntario, ~ Andrew Fulton pays trib he loyal support he has received from the growers, thus enâ€" «bling him to greatly intensify ‘the demand for Ontario apples and building up a fln%reputation for ‘Onâ€" tarioâ€"grown brands in that ma,rke"._. Mn te on en es Commenting on prospects for the coming season, Mr. Fulton states that there is every? indication of liberal supplies of apples in North America. Nova Scotia promises to have a heavy crop of apples while Virginia, Ontario‘s principal comâ€"| vetitor in the United Kingdom, will | likely export fair quantities during ‘ the coming season, even though there is not a heavy crop there. In British Columbia the crop is statedl to be about 20 per cent. lighter, {which should help the barrel @ituaâ€" tion considerably. ‘ Following an inspection tour of Ontario, he declares that the outâ€". look is for a slightly larger crop of apples than last year. Rastern Onâ€" tario will be about 109 lighter and Western Ontario approximately 25% heavier than last year. He adds: "The quality is exceptionally good, ond e0 far, welleprayed orchards are ciean. I have never known more «praying to be done in Ontario than this year, and there is every indicaâ€" tion that the bulk of the crop will be ciigible for certification for the exâ€" HIGHER WAGE SCALE IS AIM port market Canadian Furniture Manufacâ€" turers at Meeting at Kitchâ€" : ener Plan Trade Betterment. Establishment . of a code under which prices would be stabilized, wages increased and price cutting halted was discussed at Kitchener cn Friday by members of the Canaâ€" dian Furniture Manufacturers‘ Asâ€" dian Fur sociation. ToX Matan wl , No definite a‘greement was reachâ€" d by the conference of represenâ€" tative Canadian manufacturers, but plans were Jaid under which bulk experience of the past four years would be utilized to terminate unâ€" bridled competition in the indusâ€" try, which has resulted in a colâ€" lapse of wages paid to employees, it was stated. . c a & 1P TVPM EMNUCCT The discussion followed earlier informal meetings of groups of manufacturers at whigh comfitions in the industry were d‘iscussed, and at which members expressed themâ€" selves as behind a plan to bring wbout national stability in the industry. It is understood, all the manufacturers present approved the tentative principle of coâ€"operative action to end price cutting, stabilize prices on a cost basis and elevate wages. W f _ â€" O 0 Avert Collapse. in addition to other aims, the plan seeks to avert collapse of ind‘lvldurl se Nee s en e es manufacturers, which, they frankly admit, stares them in the face as a result of four years of priceâ€"cutting competition. It would also tend to terminate the Qroduction of cheap furniture, _ which _ manufacturers have been forced to produce to keep plants running and employees workâ€" ing, under a price dictatorship which rests in the Rands of big retail and wholesale furniture distributors. Wages to skilled workmen of 75 cents a day and as low as ten, twelive and fourteen cents an hour be e e ns , for part weeks; production of furniâ€" ture at prices which do not cover amortization of indebtedness or deâ€" preciation of replacements of equipâ€" ment, have resulted from price deâ€" INCREASED DEMAND FOR QUALITY HOLSTEINS A marked upward trend in the| demand | for registered Holstein | bulls with creditable production backing has been quite noticeable all over Ontario lately, and more particulgrly since the new Premium policy of the Federal â€" Provincial Government went into effect early in June. As a result, prices have been stiffening up and even higher values are likely to prevail this fall, according to breeders, who point out that the present supply of real outstanding herd sires, ‘carrying the necessary R.O.P. reâ€" ?quirements to meet the terms of the ‘Policy, and apparently the only kind ‘wanted, is not by any means as large as it ought to be. In support |of this viewpoint which has been expressed by many in close touch ‘with the situation, the general conâ€" ‘set\sus of opinion seems to be, that |when the market flattened out a year ag}:) to such an extent that Iprices obtainable were not sufficientâ€" ty high enough to cover the cost of vraising, breeders became somewhat discouraged, and in many cases lsimply discontinued keeping bull |calves. L e P P Quite a few breeders will comâ€" mence testing in the Record of Perâ€" formance this fall, but at best it is not at all likely that there will be enough good bulls available to reâ€" lieve the situation for at least anâ€" other year. In the meantimé, those breedegs who have been testing and raising their best bull calves from ‘heav}v producing, high testing dams, iwill be able to sell profitably, WATERLOO READY FOR FIFTH FORM PUPILS Arrangements for taking care of the new pupils for the fifth form classes in Waterloo Public Schools have been completed by the Board of Education. Extra seating bas been provided in the Elizabeth Ziegler School. Téachers to take care of the new classes were upâ€" pointed some time ago. They are Misses Viola Cotton, Toronto, Esâ€" tella Haycock, Salford, and Elizaâ€" beth Staebler, Kitchener, and Mr. A. Nl'{‘e'c“t(;'r«lvlv(:;éâ€"l"ego!"; St. Marys FINED $20 FOR ASSAULT; MUST PAY BOARD BiLL Magistrate Weir fined Clayton Kurâ€" wchineki $20 and costs for assaulting his landlady, Miss Alvina Seip, and allowed to go on two years parole on charge of theft Of tobacco from the Miller refreshmenth booth. Eviâ€" dence given showed that accused was drunk when he committed the theft. He was also ordered to pay $200 hoard bill to landlady. The sum of $125,000 will be offered in prizes at the Canadian National Exhibition this year, clines, manufacturers declare, parâ€" ticularly in the past two years. The condition has become aggravated as merchandising organizations became able to take advantage of inactivity and to tender offers for factory turnduts at subnormal prices. _ _ Em im e Mmit en ce eap nds Throughout Ontario, it is st.ated.‘ which is the centre of the furniture industry _ of Canada, . numerous: towns and small cities depend for a substantial part of their industrial activity u‘)on the local furniture factory. in normal times these maintain large staffs of workmen and their families. In subâ€"normal times these workmen are still deâ€" penden( on the furniture factory, or relief. Relief means increasing taxaâ€" tion, of which the factory bears a substantial part. _ 2o 2 eTo on in t e ons Members of the Association at the conference declined to discuss in detail the steps which their plans will take, declaring that at present they are in the formative stage. ‘been let to the Hogton Jron, Works, Woronto. ï¬'%flfl e t capacity of about gallons, According to the report jesued by th%)lon. H.‘H. Stevaus, Minister of ‘ade ‘and Commerce, only .1.2 per cents of ‘Kitchener‘s population can neither read or write. Illiteracy was a liftle more evident in men than in women, 151 heing men and 146 women, *~~â€" uit SMALL PERCENTAGE & v-7rh'i;-,"r:;;ort j compares favorably with those of London and Ham!iton which:have .87 and .1.6 respectively. 24,000 RAILWAYMEN PROTEST WAGE CUTS _Immediate «teps will be taken to poll a strike vote of the running trades employed on Canadian railâ€" ways, it was announced by the Genâ€" eral Conference Committee of the engineers, firemen, conductors, trainâ€" men and railway telegraphers:; Some 24,000 men operating traings on the widely flung railway lines Of Canada will be called upon to decide whether they wish to take another 10 per cent. reduction in their wages or leave the trains idle in the yards and attempt to tie up the traneporâ€" tation system of the country. MINISTER IS DROWNED . PREPARING FOR BAPTISM A minister preparing for a bapâ€" tism ceremonial was drowned in the Arkansas River near Fort Smith, Ark., on Aug. Tth.. _ Wading ‘out to receive nine perâ€" sons waiting to be baptized,â€" the Rev. William Welson, 36â€"yearâ€"old Holiness minister of Van Buren, was caught in a whirlpoor. A large crowd attending the ceremony was unable to rescue him. "We‘ll @ . be there at 2 o‘clock" Bill Thompson, the threshing machine operator, finds the teleâ€" phone a great timeâ€"saver. He telephones ahead so he‘s never held up for a crew. ‘"We‘ll be at your place at two," he says to Nell MacDonald, givâ€" ing Mac plenty of time to get his neighl;om over for the job, where granary partitions have been put shipâ€"shape thanks to _ For 80 cents Bill‘s timely notice. * W“afl.bom ut As a work and time saver; as a 100 miles means of friendly contacts; as a~ D o jnmt-g_- dependable standâ€"by in emerâ€" _ tostation)after 830 â€" 0 p.m. See list of rates gct_xcy, you cannot do without your telephone. is surprisingly OF ILLNTERATES WB »‘ ». L w:{ I l ,'v.?' Bs , 6 3 &&.ï¬.t:flook in An;m‘i is : furth d-urle m . A1p Saskatchewan and Manitoba where crops are. matgring too ly, Fale to m ï¬ew-"-um m Northern ‘areas of Alberta . and Manitoba _and ‘in Nortbeastern Saskatehewan.: Other areas generaly ly are poor with total failure and tricts. â€"Ravage by Eushoppeu' conâ€" tinued over Southern: mreas, In Quebec rain which had been so badâ€" ly needed of late fell during, the past week with beneficial éffect in many parts of the Province. â€"In On» tario tm continued drought is takâ€" ling a serious toll of crops generally and is causing some CoOncern. CoTamce & Wheat crop on summerfallow is average © but stubble wheat and coarse grains are poor. Alberts Southeastern Areaâ€"Crops seneralâ€" ly are poor and in some districts will return seed only. Alberta Western Areaâ€"Crops in the Northâ€" ern districts are fair to good. With the exception of those on irrigated land they are poor in the South where feed shortage is imminent. Frost damage is heavy in a few districts. _ Sugar | beets continue districts. favourable In Ontario threshing of fall wheat is well advanced. The cutting of a short crop of Spring wheat has comâ€" menced and barley and oats cutting is general with threshing under way in some districts. Corn is generally satisfactory and an average crop is expected. Recent rains have helped root crops in some sections of Onâ€" tario but the growth in other disâ€" tricts is backward. Pasturage is badly burned in many districts and llack of proper feed is affecting the ‘milk flow adversely. Tree fruits are fairly satisfactory. ed shortage indicated in many disâ€" a Praifie Provinces. § Alberta _ Northeastern _ Area â€" inexpensive Province of Ontario EJ..â€"&'JM{ of rates front of directory. 2PA S3 (%