Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 15 Dec 1937, p. 6

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^V|t..MM mtt^mm i"t VOICE CANADA THE EMPIRE THE WORLD AT LARCJE of the PRESS CANADA Worthwhile Hobby Mis. AlljiMt Miillliewg, ni!w "first lady" of Oiilurlo. admils her most Im- portant lioliby is her husband. Hur- bands in K<.n<'r;il will ajjiirociatt^ such leadcrKliip. â€" Niagara Falls Uevlew. Sensible Decision Abli^hoiiiod sin;;le men who refuse to work in Northern Ontario timber and |)ulp\vo<Hi camps are refu.sed re- lief by the Government. It Is a sens- ible decision, â€" Ottawa Journal. Car.sda'* Ffutners Lead taiiad;i has rctaim d the world wheat <haiii|iioiishi;> at the Chicago Internal ional Kxhihition. In addition the crowns for barley and oats have comi! lo this country. Canadian far- mers are still second to none. â€" Lon- don I'lee I'ress. A Super-Toothache The Inic rna; iiiiial sitiialion Is like an uli rated jaw. And it starts up re- flex a<lfon.s in three teeth. Italy, fjer- many and Jaimn, either singly of all to!;<;lier. so that one doesn't know ex- actly where to lay the (ir ;er on the cause. It is a super toothache. â€" Ham- lltiui S'iiectalor. Hcme-Owners W^lnted Nut quite half of tlio householders of Stratford now own their homes. Moreover, the Ivi nd Is downward. Which l.s n< I a healthful Bllnation. A community of home-owners in tho ide.il lort III which civic adminii-tra- lion s!)i>iild dlieit lis effort-;.- Slrat- fon! II ••i''iivl(...:ild. Sports end Morals A siiorlin'.; cily is senerally a good 1 simrine.; <uy is Reiierany a Boou moral city. The promotion of sports Ig li'Uli a rivir? and S'lrial duty. You proinod- (iiic patriotism by keeping the lioys Interested in lionie sports. TJe .1 i;nod spo'l and supuoit the game;. A Rood bunch of ro"ters helps locii'.'i; a winnir.k' spirit. Cuelpli MercMi y. Government Ad Absurdum 'I'li.'t i;ie hi;':' r I'f ( '.iircdi.in >;<)V- ernin- hodi' â-  '.'^ "lei â€" c<iu!d be cut by twodiinls o;- :i; least by half must be ;ipp.ii'iil I'l every hc '"Uis citizen taklnt; the linii' look ov< r the .siiiia- tlon. Indeed, Ihi' more inu) thinks of it the Kf'aler the puz/.le beeoincs. Why have we heen ko cool and indif- ferent toward the building: up of such a vast nuinljer of organ iicatloiis to han- dle public money? No tnatter how good llio inteniiuii, you must have serloud overlaiipiUK and extra nance under such a sysl'tn.- -Windsor Star. Till the Next Depression 15ut It is all very discouraging to the man on the street. While the de- pn^SHion wag at its hei;;lit- or should It be depth? â€" we used to hear poli- ticians and miiney ma-^riales declare that a new system wniihl have to be devi8«'d so that such a disaster could never, never 0(cur again. Cheerful- ly, as the curve of husini's.s swung upward, they bej;an to present us each with his own i)lan for assiiriiiK future Inimuiiity from I he unhappier conse- quences of the i-conoinic cv<le. And no.v when we believe we liuve emerged from the woods what do we lind? The reformers are putting their plans back Into I'.Ueon h(dea and the linanciers are In a huddle lalkiru: of how to soft- en the blow wIkii I lie ne'.xt depression conn -i. Ciihiary Alherlan. "Lifer" Is Given Six More Months "Adclilional" Half Year Added to Life Term When Prisoner Assaults Guard KINGSTON.â€" Already .serving a lile Bt'iitenoe for alteinpted inuider, I'as- quella Ferraltl, 36 year-old Italian, was sentenced lo serve "six additional montiis" for gcttlMg <lrunk and a.isault- Ing a prison steward. 'Ho lild not knock nie do.vn, hut my head rang for a week,' Asaistaiit Steward Frank KIlis told .Mu.iislrat" Ambrose Shea. Kills, who Is In (â- har;je of the veg- clahle c(d!ar at the big prison, said he had f(.iin(l a pail of brew-mash hid- den among the polilos anil carrots. Ferratfl, considciu')!/ inloxicated, came alor.? Just ar; the discovery was made and swung at Kills with a pow- erful right fist. FerrattI told tho court he had oh talned the "home brew from someone cigi','' but that he had drunk "plenty." Some of the most delicious of the scv-.'.ty or so different varieties of de ♦ cannot be paclted for export - Thiy can only be eaten where they grow. ,â-º,â- â- ! "It Is the man who does not expect too much who is always happy.'' â€" Lin Tntanc. THE EMPIRE Anglo-U.S. Deal Hritaln will nuike a trarto pact with the United States. There are many reasons for welcoming It. Friendship follows trade, and liritaln and Amer- ica need to be friends. The talks on which the terms of this New Deal will be based have heen communicated to the Dominion Governments. At all stages they have been informed and, ."o far, no objections. Hritlah trade policy now rests (since the Ottawa Trade Trealios i;i3-') on three bases. First comes the liritish producer; next the Empire producer: third the for- eign producer. If thi new pact gives preference to the Americans above all other non-Rrilish traders, the Doily Express will welcome it. There are ways in which American Industry and agriculture are complementary to our own. But let's bo plain. Ottawa stands. â€" London Daily fJxpress. Sees Two Menaces An amusing commentary of the.ie claims to champion mankind against the Soviet menace is forthcoming In resolutions passed by a body calling Itself tho India Independence Ixjague of .Tapan, with headquarters at Tokio. This body, whose president Is Mr. Rash liibarl Hose â€" a character whose patriotism Is shown by the fact that he has become a naturalized Japan- ese citizen â€" has resolved as follows. "Whereao true happines.s and content- ment cannot rei'-n among tho i)eople8 of Asia till 13ritl.sU imperialistic and Ku.ssian C'liniuunistic Influeiici! and domination are (ompletdy put an end to . . . this LoaguQ hereby i^arnestiy re;|U(3t3 China lo cease hnstilities Im- mediately, inaUo up with Japan, and present a united front aj;ainst Uritlsh Imperialism and Uusslan ('ommuuism, both of which are a great menace to humanity.'"â€" Tlaies of India, Canada Lacking In Self -Reliance Net Thrown Elncitgh on Own Re- sources, Says Regina Editor \Vi.\N'iri-;0, â€" Canada has conio lhroui;h a series of great physical achievements "but one of our l|-()Ul)les is that wo have not been thrown enougli on our ovn miintal resources," 1). H. MacUae, of Ueglna, declared, who addresHi-d the Winnipeg St. An- drew's Society's fifilli annual celebr.i- tion of St. Andrew's Day at whicli the lion. Norman Ai-mour, United Slates .Minis! or to Canada, spoke of Scottish hl.story and related anecdotes of Scot- land to the audli-nee of nearly COO. "What Is it about that little country of ocotland lliat Insidres such devo- tion â€" what (lualily in lis air, what loloiir In its hills or sound In Its streams that keeps It so fragrant In the memory of Its sons and daugh- ters?" asked Mr. Armour. "It Is a sentiment all of its own." Mr. Armour said that lowering the (rado barriers was tho first step to- wards eliminating discord among the nations. Democracies Must Unite "It is nalurally focdish lo erect bar- riers belwe<'n nations and expect co- operation afid understanding to fol- l)w," he said on his arilval heio to address the '.M. Andicw's dinner. He Btress(!d the urgency of (Jreat liritaln, the United Stales, France and Canada coming as close together as possible. "I believe that never before^ in history ha.i it been so essential for I lie domocraeloH of the world to he as dearly united as possible," he said. A fossilized crab, probably more than .'^C OOO.mif) years old, has been unearthed durini? excavation work on the Highgate Tube ixlension, Lon- don Knglanil. Number One Trotter of the Current Year Greyhound, owned hy E. J. Baker, is the fa.stest trotter now alive. He tied the world trotting niarli for the mile, 1 :5G, recently. Scientist Urges Study Of Life's Prolongation Dr. Alexis Carrel Says That "In- ner Time" Regulates Our Length of Elxistence. Dr. Alexis Carrel, Rockefeller In- stitute scientist, wh) made small col- onies of colls virtually immortal, last week foreca.st a new step in longer human ILfe, by rc?:ulating "inner time," the human clock, whose hours are set by tlic blood and tissues. Dr. Carrel spoke lo the annual lonvcntton of tho As.^ociation of Lifi; Insurance Presidents. Ho proposed a new kind of scientific institute to :.lu'!y the pr.x-ess "f ascin;/. Body Must Have iVIorc Keslstancc "The prolilem of longevity," he .•;aid, "is entering a new period of its history. So far increase in dura- lion of life has resulted from hy- girne and medicine. But these have nearly completed their work." A few more discoveries, like pre- vtnting h( art disiase and cancer, ho said, will briuR further longevity, possil)ly to average into the TO's. "Thereafter," he continued, "fur- Uier lengthening of human existence will demand a new method. True prolongation will re(iuiro improve- ment of the quality of tissues and hloo<l; that is, more ri'sistance to the body wealing out." 10 As Old As 60 This will be done by discovering how to regulate what Dr. Carrel iuime<l "inner time", also called the "physiological clock," by which some persons of 10 are really as old as others of GO. The hands of Uiis clock are the blood, its works are the tissues, its mainspring perhaps the mind. Its lioiMs are ago, and these have dif- ferent lengths in different persons - This accoimts. Dr. Carrel said, for the fact that the days of childhood seem very long, those of maturity and senescence disconc I'tingly rapid, "Time Within Ourselves" "Our time," he declared, ''is not an outside event. It flows within our- selv(!s.'' That oiu- of these hours can last indefiniti'ly, perhaps forever, lias been demonstrated at the Rockefeller Institute. But in a complex human being, for reasons not yet known, the hours i]o not last, even though, the well known differences point to the possibility. As an example of the hour that never ends. Dr. Carrel said a colony of tissue cellsâ€" that is, a bit of liv- ing flesh separated from the body- will Jive in a drop of scrum- Left alone, the cells soon show signs of Kcowing old. But if the waste pro- uucts of the cells are not allowed to accumulate, "senescence and death are indefinitely postponed'' A bit of chicken embryo, taken from a heart in 1912, washed every few days ever .^lince, is still grow- ing a.;! actively as twenty-five years a(;o at tho institute. j News In Review [ Urged to Forget Russia BUCHAKK.ST, Uumania â€" King Carol II and Premier (U-orge Tata- rescu were reported to have warned French Foreign Minister Yvon Del- bos last week that France must choose between close collaboration with Soviet Russia and faithful mili- tary support from Rumania. Loyalist Victory MADRID â€" Loyalist .. ',i-tank gun crews were reported by the War Of- fice to have blown to bits a sriuadron of "whippet" tanks which led a sur- prise rebel attack on positions in the Sierra Nevada Mountains southeast of Granada, last week-end. The tank attack aga' st the Gov- ernment lines around Portugos and Pitres, 22 miles below Granada along the Trevelez River, was launched after rebel infantry suffered heavy losses in two attempts to storm the well-fortified loyalist positions. More Violence in Palestine JKRUSrALLM â€" New acts of vio- lence, including an attempt to bomb a freight train \vere reported in Palestine last week. A bomb was discovered on the railway line between Jerusalem and Lydda shortly before a freight train [lassed over the spot. During its .journey from Jerusalem to Lydda, the train was subjected to terrorist ride fire. Th.re were no casualties, however. Terrorists again cut the Iraq pipe- line, this time in the Jordan Valley. The agitators set lire to the oil which flowed from the breach. Commentary on the HighliKhto of the Week's Newt . . « by PeUr Randal BOOST FOR CANADA: "A fort- night's holiday on the east coast of Canada would give better value for the money spent, than a month in many overcrowded Continental re- sorts". Thus spoke the Duke of Glou- cester to a Canada Club dinner last week in London^ adding the hope that hc and the Duchess might be able to come here in the near future. If the Duke had no real intention of sojourning in Canada, and made the To Qualify As President DUBLIN, Ireland â€" A Czechoslo- vakian Count, whose ancestors left Ireland more than 200 years ago, prepared last week to become an Irish citizen so that he might be qualified to succeed Eamon de Val- era as President of the Free State. Count Edward Taafe, who recent- ly sold his vast estates near Prague, is one of a half dozen men proposed for the Free State's first President under the new Constitution which will become effective December 29. Amalgamation Wanted WINNIPEG â€" Premier Bracken asked the Dominion-Provincial Rela- tions Commis.sion at its last sitting in Winifipeg ths week to make a thorough study of tho proposal to unite the three Prairie Governments into one. He related the history of the abortive attempt of his Govern- ment in 1932 to get action on such a plan in order to have one L^i.s- lative meeting per year, instead of three; one university, instead of three; and one civil service staff, in- stead of. three, to head the west. May Join Fascist Axis RO.ME â€" Fascist circles hinted this week that Premier Milan Stoyalino- vich of Jugo.slavia may recommend, .ifter conferences with Premier Mus- s( iini, that .lugos' via withdraw from the Little Entente and join tho Rome- Berlin axis. Foreign diplomats said that the report, wliich would be a severe blow to the French security system in Central and .Southeastern Europe if true, probably was mere "wishful thinking" on Italy's part. They ad- mitted, howeve.*, that Stoyadino- vich's week-long visit in Italy indi- cated closer coi!a!)oration among Rome, Berlin and Bel.vrrade. Urges Corser-v'atives Reorganize TORONTOâ€" Hon. Dr. R. J, Man- ion. Conservative former Federal Railways Minister, addre.-;sing Con- servative bu.^inessnion here this week declared "nobody knows what is the policy of the Federal Conservative party." The party must be re- organized, he said. Disagree With Agreement CAI.G.^RYâ€" Protest to the Fed- eral Government against the propos- ed new Dominion-Provincial relief agreement has been made by the Al- berta Government, it is learned here. Now French Minister Here OTTAVVAâ€"Count Robert de Dam- pierre, new French Minister to Can- ada, arrived last week to take up his post, and paid a formal call on Jus- tice Minister I.apointc, acting head of the Government in the absence of Prime Minister Mackenzie Kin.g. The province, according to word received by Mayor .-Vndrew Davison from Hon. \V. W. Cross, Minister of Health, has endorsed the rccommen- dation.s of Alberta cities holding the agreement would be inei|uitable in comparison with the as.^istance given to other provinces. Japanese Apology LONDON â€" Japanese naval author- ities this week-end apologized for the bombing of two British ships, the Tiickwo and tho Tatung, at Wuhu, last week- One of the ships was .so (lama;;ed it had to be beached. The Briti.sli (Jovernment is considering an indemnity claim. Junior Fairrers Visit Internatiov.al Harvester Plants at Hamilton fi2 winners of li i ir own lespe live F.uin i ! .' :i liirou^lio-.;'. tl.c lioii.inirn of Can.",(!a journeyed to Hamilton from the Uoyal Winter Fair, to be guests of the International Harvester ('on'paiiy of Canadn Limited. Here they were shown how farm implements and binder twine are manufactured. This pictuie was taken immediately fol!ov.inic their tour through tho two large plants. At a luncheon in the Company cafeteria, A. E. Macl.aurin, General Secretary of the Cauudian Council on Boys' and Girls' Club work, spoke on the work of the Clubs, made possible by a fund to which the Harvester Company contributed generously, to teach better methods to the 35,000 young farmers who now belong to the Farm Clubs. Accompanying these 02 winner.! were J. C. Magnan, President of the organization, and other officials. F. M. Morton, Vice-President of the (!onipany and Honorary Pre-.ident of the Canadian Council on Boys' and Girls' CluD work, was the ofllcial host and invited the winncisln future year;* lO virit Hamiltoa a ;ain. The picture includes representatives from a number of Ontario Club*. / remark jnerely to seem pleasant aed agreeable, he will now be put rather on the spot, poor chap. At any rat* his statement is a good advertifs^- ment for Canada, as a holiday »•• sort. • * ♦ SHOWMANSHIP: A writer in th« Toronto Financial Post leads a time- ly di.-cussion of Canada's sad laSk of ".showmanship". The fifth largest trading nation of the world has fall- en dowm badly, he says, in national advertisement. The exposition is sug- gested as a good medium. At the Paris show this year, our exhibits lacked the punch and glamor of mod- ern showmanship â€" they "missed the boat", seemed dull and old-fashioned among more clever contemporaries. They overplayed the Indian, the trap- per and the things of yesteryciar when they should have told of our present development and tho promise of the future. Canada will have ofh- er chances, however, at the Glasgow Exhibition in 19;<8 and the New York World's Fair tho following year. VjX- hibits at these, the Post says, shauld be designed to represent present-day life in Canada, should assist export- ers in the sale of goods, induce tour- ists to visit our country. May the Government lend an attentive ear* to these constructive suggestions! „ « * • FLA SCO: Nobody really expected anything to come of the Brussels Nine-Power Conference convoked' to settle the Sino-Japanese questisn. How complete a fizzle it turned out to be. however, is realized only wJten one learns that its sole accomplish- ment was the production of "A Re- port" â€" not a report on anythihg, just "A Report". It's the old fable once again of the mountain giving birth to a mouse. Even "A Report" was the result of heated wrangling. the .American Ambassador fiiihtmg vainly to have it entitled, "A Report to the Governments Here Rciire- sented-" Not addressed to anyone, "A Re- port" covers twelve typewritten pag- es v.ith an historcal summary ,in which Japan and China are pictured as entan,';!ci 'u .liffi-ultics "such that solution tan be ach'eved olfly by the co-oreration of all co'intries interested in the Far Ea.=;t". "A Re- port" has iiwked toll us something, there. * • » QUESTION M.ARK: Claim 'ng .that , the whole future "is a gigar.tic nues- tion mark", Lammat du Pont, I'rcs- ident of E. I. du Pont d^ Nennurs & Co.. one of the wealthiest concerns in the United SUtcs, has proiosed to his fellow manufacturers 'n all fields that a huge $'.;.5.0n0.000.'?)00 program b" instituted to create 3,- 000.000 new jobs, lend new expansion to industry. Before such a scheme can be hunicheci, he said, the Govern- ment will have to dspcl the fog en- shrouding business and gu,irantee a reasonable amount of certainty ii!»on which it can count in planning cur- rent and future operations. Further, "New jobs, new wealth and agrical- tural nrospcr'.ty could be produced only through p'anned r.,'.search, plan- ned develonmcnt and planned exnan- s'on of plant, sales and administra- tion facilities. That meant, he sa'd, "planned expenditure of capital months and years in advance of any penny of return.'' Mr. du Pont is uaw offering of his own free will to endorse that which President Roosevelt has afl along been trying to induce bli; indus- try to do. The outcome may bo that If Mr. Roonevelt turns down his offorr Mr. du Pont will be able lo blame the- .\ew Deal for any further recession. in busiuess. • • ♦ GIVE HIM SIX YEARS: In spite ^. of h's continual talking and cam- paigning for colonies, Ucichskanzlcr Adolf Hitler last week admiltod that he didn't expect to have German tle- mands answered for another six years at least- Hitler is right in this, that for the present Brtain and Franco are not ready (intimidated though they be) to rush forward and offer to make a gift of certain sections of their territories to Ger«iany. Say Britain and France: "Germany's col- onial d-.mani's reqeire 'nnuh more extended stu !y'." * * • H.OVV MUCH TO EAT: A nalLn- wido nutrit'on survey is snyn to be made with the purpo.se of d .scuvering what the food reijurcmen's arc of the various stages of himan bvoloi - ment; what tho Caraciian Vv)v';ing- maii's requirements are and what re- sources are available to supply thsm. The data will bo ga'i-liercd by V.\s 25 (approximately') members of the new National Council on Nutiilion who will pick out fiO typical fatnlLes across th-.^ Dominion an.l make an intensive study of their d'et down to the last detail. Sr.methin:; very im- portant v/ill have been achi 'vcd when it is founj out exactly how much each person needs r.3 food. Then it will be our bur.inrrs at Canadians to see that every ndivitlual receives the proper amount. A -4

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