Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 4 Jan 1934, p. 6

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aa Ary we © day afternoon. glay t es "eee er -------- A #3 : Voice Seer Anxiety Felt For John D, : Guelph, Ont. -- The Ontario. Agri- 1 'Dé cultural College at fhe Ontaria. 45th 4 Cut 32 highest honor# in the eight hannual Loz nada, - [Empire and 2. World at Large | intercollegiate .meat-judging con-, °/ ; ga b , CANADA the League. Pretty soon people will test, feature college event a the l038 in First 10 Months of 1933 | 's Forde He He ; : : Hd | International Live Stock Exposition! Ottaws.--Immigration into Canada went i ybaT = Hotey, 1933 Style. be calling it the League of Resigna- held at Chicago. 'It was the first which swelled into a mighty flood a : Ehrman i EE ble a : . "National Hockey League directors might well take a leat from the book of Nero and, at the start of every game, have the players line up and say: "We who are about to die salute you--Hamilton Spectator, The Editor Came Clean, ~--3cott M. Thomas is editor of the Richmond County Journal, published at Rockingham, N.C. In this week's edition under a two-column heading on tha front page he published the news that he had been drunk, was arrested and paid a fine, He glves the details as follows: Scott Thomas, editor of the Jour nal, mixed South Carolina corn liquor and Pennsylvania beer, drank too much and landed in jail. He re- mained incarcerated two hours, being bailed out by a friend at 2 a.m. Sun- day. In Mayor's court yesterday he was taxed with the costs," $5.85." Of equal interest is the editor's par- ting statement affixed to the bottom of the story: "An editor who won't tions, --~Edmonton Journal, J ---- . ; Better Pictures, } It was not the least achievemen of the talking picture that it lessened this moronic adoration of "stars" who couldn't hold a part in & second-rate stock company, One by one they digappeared, with Hollywood gradual ly introduced to actors and actresses who could act, and millions of "fans" made aware that histrionic ability consists of more than some female rolling her eyes and tearing out her hair, the while showing three-fourths of her legs.--Ottawa Journal, Curfew In Montreal. In their establishment of a 2 am. curfew law for cabarets, night clubs and such estitblishments, the Montreal police are actuated by special consid- eration for boys and girls of 'teen ages. ence of such children--for wht they are--has that is feature of life in the night haunts. In the last few years the pres-| been a striking| institution, * of "Gormley, Saunders, of time that Ontario had ever won. As champions of 1933 the Canadian trickle in the team was awarded the National Live 1933. Stock and Meat Board trophy which . According to figures releaced by 'it will keep for the troplty must be won t become the permanent property next' year, Ontario scored 2,368 points out of | a possible 2,700 to win first place. | They were closely pressed team from lowa was only six points behind. Alfred D. Hales of the Ontario team '| won the highest the contest with 821 out of a pos- sible 900, - Hales' home is in Guelph, Ontario's strong points were in the judging of beef' and lamb, finishing first in both of these meats. Members of the winning team.from 'Canada were: Charlie N. Heath, of Campbell, Ontario; .of Guelph, Ontario; by t State College which individual score of Alfred D. Hales, and C. M. Brodie, Ontario; with E. H, Chralottetown, Prince (dew years Bago, The the hree times to 505 men, of an senting 41 races, {tween January and October, This was dwindled to a mere first ten months of Department of Immigration, 12, entered Canada be- 32 per cent. from 1932 into Canada a decrease of Immigration | reached a peak of 402.432 in 1913. In the 10-month period, 7.549 Am- ericans 'entered Canada. 2,024 British subjects and 571 Northern Europeans. oe | 'Ban on Warlike Toys Urged in All Nations | New York. -- Mrs. Franklin D.| Roosevelt urges toy manufacturers to! make "armies of foresters and farni- ers, and mills with modern workmen," | and abandon tin soldiers, cannon. taks, battleships and other «warlike toys, which have a tendency to teach children to be little soldiers, she women and chi'dren, repre: a. niavailed. Prince George ran onto a jagged reet in Observatory Inlet 'on the ne. thern 'British Columbia ecoact, the same steamship shivered. onto thes beach outside 'Vancouver harbor, A newspaper ~ report appca-ing in Vancouver, December zl, 1913, read: 'The 8.5, Prinee George, bound in from Prince Rupert, was nosing into the entrance of the Narmws al 7 p.m, yesterday and the lookout thought he saw the light under Prospect Point. The steamer. came slowly on this mark and then came @ thudder and she wags ashore on Siv/ash Rock. X "The lights turned out to be those of the * motor craft Marine Express No. 1, which had rus ashore 'just ahead of the Prince George" ~ 'The Prince George ran agi ound on the - Observatory Inlet reef at 11.27 p.m. Dec. 21, was refloatsd and moved into Anyox Harbor the next day. Her iis crew of 60 and 17. passengers were. saved. put his own misfortune in print has As their parents, apparently, will not © ed avers, : 2 = MLA ' , ward Island ,as alternate. E. GC. in 2 no Wight to punish ous 8. iis > cannot make the yous people Stillwell, of the. animal husbandry Her, appeal, made, public in her "Poll 'Baby' iis Dead ; h d with the u eep reasonable hours the duty de- t Ontario Agricultural monthly department in the Womans H 'On i department, E Home Companion, says in part: "Very Lived ly Five Days of Mr. Thomas, not the least. can the readers of his paper that he used his position to save his own hide. When he sobered up he struck off on the right trail.--Strat- ford Beacon-Herald. " Prosperous British Industry. In days before the war no British child could pick up a toy, game Or a dol] without invariably finding that it was "Made in Germany." Today, Nor urge volves upon the police. It will be well if their efforts meet with success, -- Montreal Gazette. Forgiveness, It is, says G. K. Chesterton, "a fine thing to be swift to forgive our en- emles, but it is a finer thing not to be too swift to forgive ourselves." "G. K. C." might have amplified the thought. Some people have difficulty wholesale cuts placings. College, was their coach, In this contest the teams are re: quired to judge both carcasses and lamb, place them according to and give written reasons for Successful Year pork and grade, their of beef, We Wheat Pool For often we sow the seeds in youth for an interest which will later engross the man or woman. 'I believe that we not only can encourage ingenuity and build up imagination in children by the types of toys, games andy books that we provide them with, but I believe that we can also give them tastes and interests which will he helpful to them later on. I should like to see the nations of the world| Findlay; Obio.--The 'Dol Baby" is dead. a J ; Born on a Saturday, four months before she was expacted, the . pound and a quarter child of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Carmen died recently. "Doll baby" had gained a quarter of a pound and the child's mother expressed tha hope she would: live. She ald she wouldn't give her little girl a name until she lived a month, She had been kept alive with mi'k in forgiving their enemies, and equal, 1 ' -- is that is all changed. During the last| difficulty in refraining from forgiving | Regina, Saskatchewan.--A satisfac- : - : ' ; radually do away with weapons of dos few vears the British toys industry | themselves; but there is another class tory 'year's operations of the country gras : ho A at tia hil 1 fod thrush Ee or 5 mu 3 il has made enormous strides, and many are thousands of men and women now engaged in it. In one London factor alone there are more than 1,000 people working 'night and day to make games and to more than 30 foreign . countries, be- sides heing distributed for home sales. where toys, which are being exported Even to the United States, there is a 70 per cent. duty on such! tending they meant some other win- : hi ts igned to Pool terminal i ; 1 ; i he best shipments consign : A imports, daily shipments are being | ter.--Border Cities Star. bi vg OT Mette ade Th il] a desiensg of, sles Sight oe elevators during the year under re- farmers, and model mines, and mills building and hits a man on tre hewd } : dispatched for the Christmas trade, -- = A \L., as ag ' 8: view amounted to 3 988.000 bushels of with model workmen, and : model That's what a 40-pound &stter name % - sciences. § month last year, says a report issued Py houses and model machinery? Such | "Tell" did, and as a result Albert E. St. Thomas Times-Journal. ind Justice At Its Speediest. Canadians pride themselves, criminal cases, Nevertheless, would we hard for our courts to bet ter the record to which a letter to the London Times draws! at tention. particular case may he exceptional but, even so, it is an object lesson interested. And he might well do so in the light of his testimony, which was as follows: "The goods were stolen on Satur- day morning. The burglar was caugh and the goods recovered on Satur- On Monday: the bur- was committed by a magistrate stand his trial at the Old Bailey. _~ On Tuesday he was duly tried, eon- victed and. sentenced." With police and courts capable of working so fast as this, it is no won der that England. does not have much not without reason, upon the promptness with which justice is meted out in it discords and jealousies, and it will-not Todant Probably the speed in this who, with the greatest of ease and facility, forgive other people's enem- jes--and this class crtainly deserves a place in the Chestertonian epigram.-- The Halifax Herald. Some Other Winter. When last seen the prophets of a short, mild winter were stamping their feet, rubbing their ears and pre- Ninety Years of Empire. This Empire of free peoples is wot vet a hundred years old. It has grown up Slowly, it has been retarded by pursue its course by its own momen- tum; it demands eternal vigilance and prudence. It has enemies all over the world know knows it to be the main barrier against Communism and cruel tyrannies. Their agents are forms of human - stupidity, Courage and sympathy, as Lord Curzon said, have brought us through our troubles and these qualities will guide through t | future centuries the Empire of liberty and order.--W. A. Hirst, in The Em- pire Review - (London). Indo-British Trade. - Great improvements ~ have been made in recent years in the market- ing of British goods in India and of Indian goods abroad, but there is still much that requires to be done in the THE EMPIRE. | The' venerable oil king and dime donor, John D, Rockefeller, is recovering from a severe cold. concern is felt for him, Due to his advanced age. grave ---- plaining father. an assistant x "s" | Girl Wins Scholarship In School of Medicine New Haven, Conn.--Miss Lena Hal pern, of New York City, is the win- ner of the Perkins scholarship in the Judge Sympathizes With Mother Accused attorney She led the third-year class and had the highest average grade in a group of 593 students, mostly men, who took part in one of the national board examinations. Miss Halpern was for a time an fnstructor in bio-chemistry at Post Graduate Hospital, New York City. band and castigated instead the com- "Do you think I am going to wrest a child from a mother's breast?" manded Judge Alfred C. Erickson of stage's presented a fugitive warrant for 26- year-old Mrs, Ilo Blumenthal, yourlg woman is wanted at South Bend; Ind., for child stealing. * The court called for more facts. So far, he said, there was mo evidence that Mrs. Bluementhal was an unfit de- who The More Marriages During November Ottawa. -- Births registered in 70 cities and towns of more than 10,000 population last month' numbered 6,- by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. Deaths numbered 8,774, as compared with 8,765 in November, 1932, and 2,641 marriages, a 4 1-2 per cent, in- crease over the corresponding month of last year, During the 11 months, January-No- vember, of this year, births registered in the same cities and towns totalled 73,896, deaths 42,171 and marriages 27,210, as against 79,298 births, 48,- 376 deaths and 27,181 marriages dur- Economy Record; ' Home Built for $25 Hutchinson, Kas.--Lon Briles, farm- ef living near Hooker, claims a record for economy in house building. Using the plentitul gypsum of his vicinit, Briles manuactured his own brick and constructed a farm home complete in all details including doer and window frames and roofing for $25. i Bo om em Further Aerial Surveys a ended July 31, led through its of 87,382,000 b the province. all grains, wan. on mortgages. at $13,507,000. As a result nal. having fallen ness. bers' prolific and terminal' grain elevator system during the crop Saskatchewan 'Wheat | co-operative organization. chewan Pool Elevators Limited hand- 43,02 per cent. of all handlings in or 68 per cent. of ths class of business transacted in Saskatche- Net earnings of the system amount- ed to $1,434,000 after ) 363,000 for depreciation and interest Pool since it came into existence 1925, to the end of July, 1933, ations in 1982-33 the Saskatchewan Wheat Pooltorganization was able to might be called the second class of novelists in the United States, died recently, observes the Ottawa Jour- Louis Joseph Vance was burn- ed to déath in his chair, apparently cigarette in his hands, and Robert w. Chambers succumbed to a long ill "Vance saw the color of far places, wrote of mystery and crime, publish- ed many novels and short stories, made a place for himself. year 1932-33, which 1988, is reported by the Pool, a farmers' Saskat~ country houses a total ushels of all grains, or In addition, platform allowing $1,- the in stand Net earnings of of the successful oper- as:eep with a lighted Cham- pen touched historical taneously, and therefore 1 should like to begin with the children of to-day and teach them to do without toys which tend to make them think of war as a game. ; "Why should we not suggest to toy- makers the world over that they have a responsibility to future civilization; and that they might just = as well fake armies of young foresters and miniatures of real life would surely find equal favor in children's eyes. "Let us not forget that everything which we do for the children now may make an impression and count as an influence years later in their lives; and let 'us try to give them a chance to develop the qualities which will make it easy for them to live without greed and therefore without var, and to appreciate the joy. of giving." * land and Wales during 1938 is shown in the preliminary. statement of agri- cultural returns just issued, " Wheat acreage is shown at 1,660, 000, an increase of 29 per cent., com- pared with 1932, Wheat production was estimated at 31,476,000 hundred- weight, an increase of 9,386,000 hun- dredweight or 42 per. cent. On the other hand, barley acreage decreased by 209,000 acres, and the estimated production 'of 12,624,000 is 2,718,000 hundredweights below 1982, 3 Her mother's wedding ring, small * as it 18, could have terved as a brace. let for" the child., . Dog Falls Off a Roof 'New York--It may not be news when a dog bites & man, but how about when a dog falls off a 10-storey Barrett, 46, of Morristown, N.J., is in | hospital with' a possible fracture of the skull. EXd 5 Barrett was knocked unconscious and the dog was taken to an animal hospital, where he was found 80 geri ously lurt he was' put out of his misery, The dog apparently fell off 'the roof while chasing a bird. Farmers' Co-operative izations AY of its kind. | everywhere tricked out in 'fair dis- . uw 4! ing the corresponding jod last : ver Tv A The object of the correspondent in guise, masked as pacifists, cosmopoli- -.Of Stealing Child year, This comparison P ehows " de-' meot commitments aggregating or --r ; : Oitdws, Conan: io nd RL writing to the Times was to commend | tans and the like. We must look back | uA unicipal judge lent | creases of seven per cent. in births, | 824,000. England's Wheat Crop A $e Rey TF ANNE the London police and courts for upon our history and see that we aid and comfort to a weeping young three per cent. in deaths and one- : x SEEPS Sh Big Increase|a cooperati "dairy i Prince E. He their promptness in disposing of a have triumphed over racial antipath- mother accused of stealing: Pr YOURS half per cent. in marriages. T Writers Die ! ows Dig cre a F ve ¢al1y. in + i ; oY case of burglary in which he was les, official "apathy, and countless A ¢ of ste) ng her: NIX : Er wo 'vyriter London, Eng. -- A big increase in Island, the Stanley Bridge . year-old son from her divorced hus- Two writers, foremost in what wheat weroage and tuction in Eng- Company, which has been in a. business since 1885. For the I. forty-eight years this company he been manufacturing cheese: an bu ter, and conducting a business on t co-operative plan, In'the same prc ince five years later, the" Hamil 'Cheeso Factory, "~wheh cis affiliate with the Kensington Dairying Ass ciation, commenced business, and | 1000 there were eleven . co-operatiy their farmer patrons, Coincident with. operative dairies were established in trouble with "crime waves," such as|way of developing efficient 'widespread mother, Pla d for N Y law-abiding citizens suffer from in | publicity, sales and service systems. a 3 nned for Next Year| nce society, adventure, roamed| - Somer fm other provinces, and are now per the United States.--Quebec Chronicle We believe the Trade Commissioner h New York. -- The New York|gq tar afield as plays and children's Wo an Driver Not forming a useful service for farmers Telgraph. is justified in the view that the Ot- Gets 30 Days for 30 Eggs Times says it is considered probable that next year when the northern fly- shories. their spheres, Botjh were competent in ~ Always to Blame throughout the Dominion. There werd A dense © "Knocks Man Unconscious deey factities on tho Teland servini this' development, or shortly after, co- . 113 éo-operative dairy 'organizations - 448 in Canada in 1982, the largest being the Saskatchewan Co-operative Cream. eries with a p of 89,000. and while neither will have a place in the American Val- halla of literature, it can be said of them that they gave. pleasure and tawa agreement has prepared the way for a great advance -in Indo-British trading relations, but he does well to remind individual Indian and British Boise, Idaho.--An egg a day sent James Waller to jail for 80 days. He allegedly stole 30 eggs from a farmer, ing season is good Col, Charles A. Lindbergh may make another trip into the arctic for. further aerial sur- Waukesha, Wis.--The woman driv- er is not always to blame when in- 'volved in an automobile accident, in Perfect Police. Sixty members of the: Metropolitan: _ Police, London, have been ordered to 5 - ott ; : . : taking one at a time. i 1 0 D provide temncivos with dive face exporlrs, that It soln ik [hel LM "7 toms etre of apples i mi pion of Gist Judge Charles) Monto Crapative Bangs i ; ] ; ) | M. Davison, PA are large organi. Tornial tritamrings. And, wo suppose, apperiiaiiies offered for the mutual Gangsters Go Modern after all, fs a tremendous thing, Katherine Fitzpatrick of Madison,| ations in this field, each With a me: ; they will bow from the walst before | benefit of the two countries, --Calcut- - To laymen, and perhaps to many | Wis, was sued for $2,000 damages by | bership over 6,000," ~ ° Xe I writers, there is ong thing worth |'s Chicago railway after a car she was ------------ allel i, » The Turn of the Economic Tide, There Is a quite definite, it still slight, turn of the economic tide. The tremendous slump of world prices that followed world deflation has appar- using their billies,--Hamilton Spec- [va Stauesiiiute tator. noting about the "giiccess of "Vance and. Chambers in their profession, It was that they became proficient, he- came competent craftsmen, by sus- tained toil and practice. Vance wrote scores of stories before he had ome driving crashed into a locomotive at a crossing. : : After hearing the plaintiff's allega- tions that she was driving recklesely and didn't have control of the car, Judge Davison granted a motion for aka . = . Peace in the Balkans. One of the curious features of pre- "1% sent-day politics in Europe is the ex- > ample which is being set by the Bal- Radio Telegraph Links . New York and Madr. "Washi: , -- A new radio tex graph service from New York to Ma- drid was instituted | recently, when Mr, Wiliam Phillips, Acting Secre- kan States in the peaceful settlement ently been completed. Prices have | accepted. Later on he spent years res of difficulties. A few years ago the] been bronght._down to the level de- ag a hack writer for the magazines, non-suit, tary of State, sent a MeSSAZe eXPress- stock phrase was that there was manded by. a crazy currency policy, getting not more than $25. a.story. EA TET ing American friendship for Spain. have even begun to recover a little, Yet he 'had patience and industry, Market Available In his message to Premier Alejan- trouble in the Balkans, and these countries were regarded as the dan- ger spot of Europe, Today the Bal- kan States, including even Turkey, have agreed upon conventions that will maintain peaceful relations be- tween them, while the major powers, who used to regard 'the Balkans as the home of fire-brands, are finding it dificult to arrive at any under standing that will assure pedace.--For¢ William Times-Journal. dro Lerroux, president. of the Span- ish Council, Acting Secretary Phil- lips said: "I take this opportunity to express in the name of the American nation its friendship to the Spanish people and bo send at the same time and by dint of hard work, by sub- , For 50,000 Airplanes jecting himself, as it were, to an ap |* washington. -- A possible potential prenticeship, he finally reached the | yarket for about 50,000 airplanes to point where he could turn out & 200. | geil at about $700 each has been found 000-word book in two months, 5668/1! | py the teronautics branch of the become a best seller, He dled com: | United States Department of Com: a paratively wealthy. merce. most earnest wishes for the prosper The 'moral i that competent oni thousand: pilots 'and mech. | ity and continued progress of - yout There is now a possibility of a long, glow 4mprovement in trade and inj employment.--Yondon Daily Herald, Public Health Precautions. According to the Director of Medical Serelces In India, the sickness rate for the Indian troops is at the pres: ent time actually lower than that for British troops. Compared with the figures of 36 years ago, the pres- ent-day statistics are go remarkable that those who take figures as final are apt to conclude that India' is now |. a health resort, Major-General Nick: erson warns these light-hearted optim ists that nothing could be further from the truth, Disease still stalks abroad fn India, but rigid precautions ward era are not born, but made. anics, answering a questionnaire sent | great nation." caglonally, the world may throw out by the department several weeks wy CHE a genius, somebody whose sensitive. Demand Is Increasing ness to the music of words and : whose insight into things are 60 For Guernsey. Cai Montreal--As a result of adve great that he can writs without ap- J prenticeship, and write greatly, Such. ising, a growing demand for Guern- cases, however, are terribly rare, and : ? soy milk and cream has been created in 099 cases out of a thousand pro- Pilot License Saved ~|in Ontarlo. Guernsey cattle are now B Lindbergh's Cable P°°¢ largely bred fn that. province. 7 y % and many herds are being purchased flolency in writing, as proficiency in| most other things, la the product of | ! Washington, -- Col, Charles A. trom Nova Scotla, where the Guern: '| hard work, ago, definitely sald that they would buy such a plane; They collectively knew of 38,000 other persons who ,would be in the market, The Industrial Development of Canada, { 'Canada {8 today the second in im- portance, from the point of view of . industry, of all the countries of the British Empire, and her exports to ofer British countries' consist prin: clpally of manufactured products, Her,L.o vo of it oft f "4 " he °F d can: 'Genfus," sald a great : i Ge Md A : exports to the United States of manu- |, rom. camp an "(ra L Lindgergh came within a cable length sey cow has long been established. tactured or semimanufactured prod- the old. contin Bagi) hy Fake: Gomi Is Sin nly. (log Paina" | op joing his Department of Com in 5 ~ uots exceed her Imports of raw ma | ¢homgelves. The price of continued | Air Company Reports Gains Herte Geangor ee fe H = 3 4:3 ~ 1 a 4 x The continuation and prog: a trend depend largely on ~dorelopment of the coun- natpral rsources in all its mani: aspects~--Le Nouvelliste, Three 7 : Ye id) terials. ont SG EO § # ? i ross ~ London--For the first half of the] Officials here disclosed that just Ee , current financial year Imperial Air- before his license expired he cabled! ~Tondon, -- { ways have registered receipts of more from The Hagve fo an extension of Peics, her, | than £60,000 more than for tho same time, Active Tiscarus must bo renew thie 8 the toast | period last year. The distance flown éd every six wor "in REV : in' September, showed an increase of ~~ on 24,197 miles and the ton-miles an in. Dumb waiters can usually = carry crease of 44,561, © everything but gossip. fmmunity is continued vigilance, == Calcutta Statesman, = a a ! Judge Marries 7,000 | af ; Poplar Bluff, Mo, -- Jud . i or a PATTI 1 ------ ? ori ge D- } Chivago gangsters used a radio to intercept police alarms, while Ce Deem has married 7,000 couples dur-~ : | ie New Name for League, ing his 86 years in office and granted they spent three hours, gmashing safety deposit boxes in a Chicago bank, Here's thd: result, Shed : 5 Sh And no¥ italy 1s talking of leaving | between 300 and 400 divorces. oh f.

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