Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 17 Jun 1931, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

4 WITH -THE " :-A LONESCOUTS With the Lone Scouts This week we have received another Tory interesting letter from Ixine Scout Walter Wraight, who li con- nected with the Hudson's Bay Com- pany and lives at ono of their isolated to improve some sort of shelter on arrival. I'age 177 of your "Handbook for Canada" tells you how temporary shelters can be made, and If you are ramping In very wooded country, and Die weather Is settled ami flue, It Is poslg in Northern Ontario. sometimes more advantageous to The winters are long and dreary In orect such shelters tlian to carry tent- that part of tho country, and there are! age on your backs. However, If you only two or throe malls delivered by dog team throughout the winter month-. Walter says that they were looking for (he commencement of the "break-up" of wintry conditions about the luth or 15th of May, and he will receive no more mall until then. W. i :'! says "one fllock of geese has have had no experience In erecting these shelters It Is as well to practice a little at home, before starting out. (Jood waterproof sheets can also be improvised as shelters, and provide very good rover. Ko having decided Just what shelter we shall depend up- on, we next come to the question of alp-ady passi d over h'-ad on their mm- what each boy shal Itako along. The stop flight to the Hay. There are a following Items are essential, what- few dj< -ks around, and of course ever kind ot camp you propose to plenty of crows. jhave: two warm blankets, a ground The wlndlgoes Kilio-ts) have al- sheet (In addition to any to be used for shelters), a sweater or Jersey, sleeping suit, spare shirt and shorts, In all kinds of weird tales of being at- towel, soap, toothbrush, comb, eating tacked by Ghosts. Last year one load ' utensils, needle and thread. Scout of fi'-iinn was lost. The Indians told a uniform to be worn, of course, story c f having been shot at by ghosts. I All this can be packed Into a pack ready start'-d thel rannual trips. Every Sprinp, without fall, the. Indians bring Missionaries From the Fast Tw i jni^dioiiar;' i w .1 > t >OK par: i.i rresbyleri-.i.i fxp i-.i::.m In nasement of Syria mosque, Plttsburg. Rev. Dr. James B. Ayres, Toronto, who spent 41 years In Japan and la noted for work In that neld, and Hev. Albert G. Edwards, Hillah, Iraq, modern town near ruins of ancient Babylon, who spent eleven years In Near East. The i ir.oo was found with bullet holes In It all right, and as the crew were not carrying rifles It must have been omeone else. Rather substantial that can use 3i-SO rifles, don't you think? The literal translation of the word Is, I think. WiM Indians." Wa!'f-r Is living quite a hard but Tery Interesting life up there In the north, ami he says that he is looking forward to the Hummer mouths, so that he can go our exploring In his canoe, as he wants to pass his Path- finder's Badge. He also says that he want i to KO and see a dentist, before he goes crazy, so you see there are dlya'lv;i:.'.'i:.'s too. lowing oi|'i.|'i.ieut should be carried: A good hand axe, large frying pan, throe or four large kettles or contain- ers for boiling purposes, and a lir^e tablespoon. Food should be thought of, and your dally menus planned before you go. Often It Is possible to obtain such Last week we discussed Camping . things as eggs, milk, butter and vego- and tho way to select a suitable camp tables from farms near your camping sack or Rucksack," to be carried on the back. The Stores Department at Headquarters, Ottawa, stock a very comfortable Ilucksack. ("are should be taken to have good wide shoulder straps, and to see that the sack fits snugly to your shoulders, otherwise you will soon be tired and have sore shoulders. Divided . ingst Hie Patrol tho fol- Survey System nients on a larger scale of a program of extension of triangulatlon opera- tions to the huge northern areas of Canada In which development Is pro- ceeding so quickly. Geodetic Engineers of Depart- ' Ic may he mentioned In passing ment of the Interior Make Amazing Record in Northern Ontario Quite an amazing record, when com- pared with the possibilities a few years ago, was made by .Messrs. J. L.. Rannie and F. P. Steers of the Geodetic Survey of Canada, Depart- ment of the Interior, during January | and February. 1931. In a period of f a eP'ane3 as four weeks they laid out by aero- port for lavln S slto. and this week we will go a little further and think about the necessary place, and then you can save yourself the troublo of carrying them. Tho equipment to be taken on these trips. I other food should be provided by the Let us plan a short week end camp j Patrol, each member bringing certain for a Patrol of Lone Scouts. We have articles, and care being taken that already derided upon tho place where items are not duplicated by several we Intend to make our ramp head- quarter?, and wo have decided whether the trip Is to be made on foot, or by wheel. If wr- are going on our wheels we hall be able to carry a little more .t than If It all has to be car- ',u our shoulders, but first of all let us think about the matter of shel- ter. -On this class of camp, of short duration, It Is better to either take Scouts. Next woek we will discus.* the food problem In more detail, and also con- sider tho activities of a Patrol when In camp. along small, light "pup-tents" or olse Otit. "Fxino K." who are not Scouts and cannot join a regular Troop can obtain par- ticulars as to how they can become Lone Scouts by writing to Tho Lono Scout Department, Hoy Scouts As- sociation, 330 Bay Street, Toronto, 2, His Majesty Grants Anniversary Honors '.< Ion- King George, In hU an- nual list of birthday honors, on June 3rd, announced, among other ill '. tious, the establishment of four baronetcies, 25 knighthoods and two privy councllorahlps. Sir Kdward Klgar, "Ma.stur of tho King's Muslck," Is one of the new barons. Me is the composer of "Pomp and Circumstance" and sev- eral oratorios. Ho was made a knight of the Hritlsh Kmplre In 1904 and decorated with the Order of Merit in 1911. The other barons ar Sir Thomas Jaffrey, consulting actuary of the Aberdeen Savings Dank; 1'hlllp Henry llovltt, founder of the Nauti- cal College at Pangborno, and Sir Herbert Gibson, an organizer of tha Empire Trade Exposition In Hunnos Aires. Miss Sybil Thonidike, known as England's leading tragedienne, wa-t made of Dame Commander of the British Kmplre. Sir William Henry Dragg, eminent . physicist, was th only Individual to receive the ()rdr ot Merit, regard- ed by many as the most coveted de- coration of all. Ken Turner, M.P . veteran trade unionist and former Secretary of Mines, Is among the new knights. Others are Prof. Horara I/ami), Cam- bridge mathematician; James lllack Baillle, vice-chancellor of Looda University, nnd Charles Reed Poors. preMdent of the Keyal Society of Antiquarians. The Karl of Athlon* 1 , former Gov- ernor-General of South Africa, and Sir William Jowltt, Attorney i;-n- eral, were mado privy councilors. Half a dozen women received minor distinctions. No new peerages were Mtabldhed. Favor English Language Berlin. The German language teachers, meeting at Hamburg, have demanded that only Kuglish shall rank as a dominant foreign language In tho graded schools, taking Issue with tho Prussian Minister of Education, who had made French tho chief non-classi- cal language In the upper .school curri- culum. Ho based his action on the belief that French was of groator cul- tural Hignlflcauce, repp-sauting the essential Greco-Roman culture upon which Kurop -an Intellectual develop- ment Is founded. The language toachers, howevor, as- sert that the citizens' choice should decide, and fifty per cent, of the Prus- sian schools affected alnsidy have gone ovor to English. Tho teachors agree with the view that unity Is "<-.<:ossary, but they say It is Imp,.*, siblo to make the study of French a universal major lanmiago requirement, even If It were desirable., in the face of popular opposition. Livestock Figures Calgary, Alberta. Values of live- stock in tho Western Provinces are (riven in tho latest estimates as fol- lows: Manitoba, $53,7-11,000; Sa.kat- Shamrock V. Wins British Yacht Race Southend-on-Sea, Kiig. Sir Thomas Llpton's America Cup challenger, Shamrock V, won tho Hi M race for big yachts In English waters thU year, defeating Astra and Candida In a 10- nille run oft Southern), Shamrock was away last, but quick- ly overhauled her competitors and was three minutes ahead at tho 20 mile marie. She Increased this advantage to almost six minutes at the finish, the other two yachts finishing almont to- gether. The Times: Shamrock V., 3 hours, 83 minutes, 48 seconds; Astra,, 3:S9.31| Candida, 3:39:34. Tht> course was to Nora Lightship and return, twice around. 355,000. r Columbia, $27,- Panama to Buy Planes Panama City.- Tho Uovernmmit of Panama announced recently that It plans to buy four airplanes which by plane a system of trlanstilatlon In northern Ontario, which would have taken several years to accomplish by older methods of transport l>y canoa and back-packing. In two Royal Canadian Air Force planes these Geodetic Survey of- , fleers selected the sites for triangula- tlon stations in a strip of country about 800 miles long (Including branches) and from 15 to 30 miles wide from Sudlwry to the north- west end of lake Niplgon. The branches extended towards Tlm- nilus anil Nakina on the north and towards Sault Ste. Marie and Port Arthur on the south. To divide up the area Into suit- ably sized sections three ba*e* were chosen from which to operate. In liat large areas of Canada abound In lakes and that this type of country la particularly suitable to geodetic opera- tions with present types of aeroplane, planes the of the method to other areas at present avoided because of tho absence of lakes will probably become possible. Apart from the economy, the use a means of trans- out a system of tra- ungulatlon over large areas of Can- ada years In advance of final opera- tions has other advantages. In parts of the country, such as north- ern Ontario where a program of building steel lookout towers for fire detection Is In progress, the triang- ulatlon stations offer the best choice British Author Finds Graduation Held at Ample Copy in Canada Kingston Hospital Many Ontario Com- munities Montreal Canada holds a wealth of raw material for the novelist.) So much so, in fact, that It makes rr___ \i n him "rather wistful". This was the rdH3r-f Nurses Represent opinion of J. B. Priestley, British author, on his return to England. Mr. Priestley had been in the south- material for an- already written "The Good Companions" and "Angel Pavement." The grandeur and wildness of Canadian scenery, particularly on the railway journey through the Rocky Mountains, Impressed Mr. Priestley very deeply. He found the people, too, likeable and more Interested in good reading than those south of the .boundary. Mr. Priestley names Willa Gather as the best American novelist, de- claring definitely that he believed her to be superior to Sinclair Lewis, recent winner of the Nobel Prize. He spoke highly of the works of Mazo de la Roche, Canadian writer, Kingston General Hospital School. The gold medal for the highest standing in the senior year waa won by Miss Priscilla Dodd, Orillla, who also won the Board of Governors' prize for the highest standing In the senior year. Miss Vonnle MacMartin, of Finch, was the winner of the silver medal for second highest standing In the senior year and Miss tedlth Bailey won the intermediate class prize. Tha junior class prize was won by Mlsi Ethel Rutledge. The graduating class for 1931 fol- lows: Doris Margaret Allen, Kingston; Florence Elizabeth Beatty, Thomas- and said that it appeared that a'^g: Margaret Christine Blair, Fall great deal of desultory writing was! 1 "*: Elizabeth Bolting. Westport; being done in Canada. The maga- 1 Lillian Maude Buck. Milton; Mosalene zlnes and other literary publications | Evelyn Burt. Westbrooke; Hazel Cain, he described as "creditable." i Perth; Laura Nancy Cuthbertson, Norwood; Dorothy Isobel Dawson, Britannia Bay; Mary Marjorie De- - ... ... Long, Zeeleya Bay; Mabel Geneviera Through Arrican Wastes | D i otz , Renfrew; Josephine Margaret Completing a trip of 12,427 miles Dobbin, Peterboro; Emma Jane Dodds, across Africa, through trackless Gananoque; Ellen Priscilla Dodd, wastes of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan Orillla; Anna Bessie Ewing, Westport; Complete 12,000-Mile Trip and the Belgian Congo, Prince de Llgme and Baron Terschuren, of Bel- Hilda Lillian Friendship, Kingston; Helen Jean Gordon, Kingston; Flor glum, have accomplished what is des- . ence Muriel Harkness, Kingston; cribed as one of the most arduous jour- 1 Miriam Edith Hatrick, Portsmouth; neys ever made in an automobile. Thej olive Kathleen Hartshorn. Peterboro; trip, they reported, took nine weeks, ' Audrey Annie Holbert, Thomasburg; averaging 210 miles a day. "We have broken all speed records Golda Helen Hughes, Cornwall; Ven Jane Humphrey, Laosdowne; Ne-ttl* and traveled 20,000 kilometers with- , Leona Lawrence, Harrowgmlth; Marj out the slightest mechanical trouble," they wrote. "On several occasions we were stuck in the sand and in or- der to get out we had to race the motor, throwing the clutch In with a jerk to make the car jump up vertical- ly. Much of our travel was through rock country, and in order to keep up with our schedule we had to go very fast. Sometimes, as the wheels hit the rocks, the whole car was thrown into the air to land at a different level, the difference being sometimes of hills as sites for these towers, [as nun-h The towers when built and trails and j telephone lines Installed are of great | r assistance when the triangulatlon Is! being completed. It is therefore ; mutually advantageous to forestry and geodetic officials to have the j trlansulatlon laid out well in ad- 1 vance of subsequent operations. When the preliminary work of the Irian*- ulatlon has been laid out well ahead .if R'.ilisequent operations, as Is pos- [ siblo when It Is done by aeroplane, , tr."f>T." homo In mind, viz., tho base must be on a lake large enough for aircraft to land and take off, It should he on the railway to facilitate transporta- tion of oil and Rasoleno for refuel- ling, and it must be possible to secure board and lodging for the personnel of the party, seven In number. The first two (iiialillcatlons were not dimciilt to find, hut the third was not so easy. there need be no delay In complet- important considerations had to be ^ |he (lna| work Jn any area , n which development takes place or where maps are required, and data can be mado available on an astron- omlcl dtum In plenty of time to be mdo use of. When the preliminary work has to be done by groun.I travel j In rough country It Is sometimes j two years or more before results; are available to those requiring the j information. With aeroplanes as a means of transport In laying out Madeline Lockhart, Almonte; Lenora Amelia Loyst, Napanee; Vonnie Mar- guerite MacMartin, Finch; Annla Myrtle MacMillan, Madoc; Mabel Ell mina Masou, Belleville; Helen Eliza- beth Miller, Consecon; Sarah. Mauda Mills, Egansville; Margaret Ruth Mun- ro, Apple Hill; Mildred Clarke Murphy, Kingston; Mary Isabel Murray, West Huntingdon; Annie Margaret Putten- ham, Kingston; Wilhelmloa Myrtle Raymond, Perth Road; Ella Grace Scott, Sharpes Corners; Inez Eliza/ beth Sly, Gananoque; Doris Gertrude Smith, Kingston; Margaret Chrlitena Stewart, Balderson; Helen Ruth Wal- lace, Kingston; Myra Belle Woodruff, Sydenham. Tho aircraft used on tin- operation tho tr !angulatlon a year or more Is were very speedy cabin monoplane*, , aml , ,i,,|| Ve rlng results. An- lilted with skla and carrying equip- ()lh ,, r a ,ivantaKn Is that, the trlani;- ment to enable thorn to operate u | atl ,, n iKivini; ]>een laid out with Its from bases remote from regular different grades of accuracy as need- aerodromes. Ily means of -,,,!_ operations which are required ('holly: Kr-Miss 1'e-ach. you have a pair of lips that were Just made for sweets. Miss Peach: All the other fel- lows feeni to think they are made of sweets. The Wolf Rayet Stars tho Dominion Astrophyslcal "Age of Youth" Says Lord Bessborough Montreal. "This is the ago of youth," the Earl of Bessborough, Gov- ernor-General of Canada, smilingly told graduating students of McGill University recently. "That is not merely a well-worn rhetorical generalization it is also a hard fact that can be supported by statistics complied, as they say in the world of insurance, on an actuarial Liisis," Lord Bessborough continued. "Ono of the most remarkable changes in my own lifetime and my genera- tion has seen a great many changes is the marked decrease in the aver- age age of those holding position) of trus- in every walk of life. In thj services, in law, in politics, science and industry, young men and young women can now be found in posts of responsibility that 30 years ago, .vere held exclusively by greybeards. shaped nose tents and collapsible |,, j s ,,; at ,.<l sections can ba completed j Observatory of the Department of | "Your father? have given you a wood-burning stoves tho engines witl , t !i.>fcrade of ac-n-icy which ! tne Interior at Victoria, B.C., an In- .finer heritage lhan was ever be- could be thoroughly warmed before wil | ma i< ( them fit In v !i the flnal | 'cresting discovery was made re- queathed by any individual emperor !ald out for the whole conn- starting, even when extremely low m , t temperatures such as forty degrees trv below zero were, experienced. Km- ersency equipment, consistim; of ra- ] lions, sleeping robes, tent, rifle, ' ~ . . , ala axea, etc., was continu- 1 he rrmce in .South America r rom cently concerning a very peculiar to his son; they have labored to build class of stars known as the Wolf | up for you, in the face of immense Rayet stars. Conditions on these difficulties, a country that excites the stars are such that streams of atoms ! admiration of the world, whose future are continually being thrown off i is so rid in possibilities that \t taxes all parts of their surface. ' the imagination of the world to esti- ously carri.'.l in e;nh aircraft. Tho Spectator (London) :The Prince of These atoms are shot off from the' mate them. But if the Canada of performance* of the planes through- w a j es showed himself far more aware star8 In enormous numbers and with ' today is the handiwork of your fath- out the wholn operation was most of {ho s jt ua tion of British industry Peeds often as great as 1,000 miles | s, the Canada of tomorrow must be satisfactory, thanks largely to tho than some of its leaders. We should P r second. They are continually j yours. Where they wrestled with the very efficient pilots and crews, who ]ike to two of the points streaming off into space so that the forces of nature, you will be face to kept thn engines and aeroplanes of |, is spcec h. () no j s tha importance stars are probably losing material at face with forces less obvious, but no functioning umlor somewhat unfav- of j^nding ou t f or the study of mar- lho rat ot millions of tons per day. 'ess formidable; your problems will orable conditions. j |< P t S( not underlings, but principals of j So niasslve are thesi stars, however. n t be those of time, space nnd cli- During tho past two years expert- firms. . . . The other is the- import- j tnat ll would take millions of v-nrs mate, but problems of citizenship, of incuts have been made by Geodetic ance of advertising, and a& an aid to; for anr very appreciable Survey olooers to test the economy j this the need for >a proper British '. thelr mass to los t by of aeroplane transport on this, class news service for South America. At of work and to perfe-ct the technical present all British news ffoes to South methods by which this faster means Ann-Hep via tho agencies of the Un- of transportation is best adapted to iK'd States, and tho natural result is ind"r-wiin' , ml _kt ',1 . fm .-*... Kooilotlc flurv* 1 Advertising The res p cctiva ,, , social adjustment to rapidly changing social conditions and of the sane ap- plication of scientific discoveries to daily life." -* Tho operation, that where Great Britain is mentioned med , meu sum- Ir .n , ,- up oy a contemporary as fo hows 1 in IMS \(t II IV LUUr BirUlltUVB ffUIUU .. ,, ,, . ;IC ** u|7 uy a uuuifmpui ilr Y H will constitute tho first national a* 1 ** rntIl y Ultcd , '> *"> "' " "^ Dually ne name of the United An .. a , r ln the eyo , 3 \. onh ton , and speed, marks the commence- States is shouted from the hou^-tops. ' ear.- Woodstock Sentinel Review. force. One of Canada's New Destroyers 'in" SaKtu'iiay, Hister ship of the Skcona, li'ith of which, are- the U\o new destroyers built In England tor the Canadian navy. The s!u, built after speclflcatloai ot Aoaat* claus of royal navy with speclul equipment for sub-Mr^ weather condition*. 1 ; Spain To Be Represented At Regina Exhibition Regir.a. Saskatchewan. Though Spain Is busy just now reorganizing its national administration, the import- ance of the World's Grain Exhibition and Conference to be held at Regina, July 25 to August 28, 1932, has not been lost sight of. A few days ago the headquarters' office of the Exhibition and Conference was advised by the General Director of Agriculture of the Spanish Ministry of National Economy that a special committee of cereal ag- riculture had been appointed to devote itself to the definite organization of participation by Spain In the World'i Grain Kxhibltlon and Conference. Canada's Historic Sitei During 1930 nineteen historic sites in Canada were suitably marked' either by cairns or tablets and a num- i ber of other sites acquired according i to n recert. statement of the Dept. of I the interior. The work of commemor- i ating national historic events and thy i services of important personage* it 1 carried out Ov the National Parka of Canada lirp.ncb of the Ucpt. of the Interii.-r 'n co-operation with the His- toric S:its ami Monument* Board. , . ,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy