Grimsby Independent, 25 Jul 1934, p. 2

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i Ottawa-Announcement has been made by the Canadian Council of Child and Family Welfare, of the ap- pointment for a limited period of Eunice Dyke, registered nurse of To- tonto, as secretary of the division on }Inaternal and child hygiene, of the iouncil. Miss Dyke was for 21 years diree- r of public health nursing for To- nt6. She has just completed an ex- Inspector Albert Ward. spoken to last night, admiited that he and other officers on me case had plenty of data to work on, much of it con- fusing and contradictory: but he would not, as was more or less ex- pected, say Whu‘e anything definite might develop., within the next 48 hours. Appointed Secretary Maternal Division Another angle "f the investigation which is still more or less clouded is that bearing on the tire marks left in the dirt, rotiway running north from Blythwood Road beside the place where the body was found. Whether or not the woman was drugged or poisoned before she was brought to Hie “who: lonely spot oft Blythavood Road :nd bit with a stone has not been absolutely determined, and lhe poss'bil'/r is not being over.. looked. The analyst? is not expected to be in the bangs ot the police for perhaps another two days, and the tim. ttl result is expetted to give consid- erable impetus to the hunt for the 1riller. " tensive period of observation work in bublic health services in the United States and CNtadar, on a fellowship awarded by the, Rockefeller found- stiod, , _ ' Thompson is nixarecd with having taken out a. marriage license on July 18 and "to have committed perjury before W. E Dn slop. deputy issuer of marriage liCen,c1crc,' for Toronto. by swearing in his examination under oath 'hat he WAS a, bachelor when, in fact, he was a married man or a widower. such w‘eertions being false and being known by him to be false and being inter-Md by him to mir lend the said W E, Dunlop," accord- ing to the formal complaint Medica' Research Continues. Important is attached by investi- gators to the complete analysis of the viscera and stomach contents of the dead woman which is still being made by Dr. E ft Franlrish. medico- legal expert, _ one 'hree, the C,i'oet' six years old. The wed/ing was rancelled. The palm; were noti 7M1 Inspector Albert Ward. ot the pvcvincial police. and aLeteerive-Smgeocr' Grrorge Tuft. of Toronto 1oe:tdquoriers found Thomp- son at, the _hom. of relatives on On.. tario Street w'm'e he was staying, and placed "im-under arrest. Then th, brir'tuto-be. read of her intended hueband‘s appearance at the city morgue, weere he was quoted as saying he was "pretty-sure" the dead woman was hic wife She noted in the newspapers also that Alwynne Thompson was ihe father of tyo boys, one 'hree, the C,i'oet' six years old. The wed '.ing was rancelled. The chased a wedding ring a. _ Toronto.--rroeeeding warily buty persistently toward a solution ot the murder of Mrs. Arwynne E. (Viola) Thompson, whose body was found be, hind a lilac busa oft Blythwood Rd. last Thursday, tne provincial police over the weelrayssd extended their in- vestigation fo Guelph, Ontario. birth- place ot the murdered woman There, it is reported, they were checking onvthc mdvements of an old 1"rt)g, Mis. Thompson whom she had vie, (ed since her marriage. Probe Home'Town Clue _ ' In Lilac Bush Murder Sleuths C There, it is leaking on d friendzof we had viiiitt Met H: The nian i »nto less tN Iths Curious About Viola Thompson's Recent Visit to Guelph Man friend --. Exposed as Lothario, Al- wynne Thompson Faces Marriage License Perjury Charge, While West End Bride-to-be Finds Wedding Plans Blasted 'u. I's resident of the west (it). hat zllreav invited r: Jo tritwtit"ls, and her der1o-d with flowers. , ray-crud to have pur- Walking from Providence to Boston -every step of the way-in eleven hours and something, Miss Eleonora Sears, noted walker, walked into 122 Beacon Street after a 46-mile walk from Providence to Boston on foot. Seems Miss Sears had been walk- ing all night, one step at a time. Started out at 9.55 p.m. and pulled in at 8.20 a.m. Par for the course is nine hours and titty-three minutes, but that was 'way back in the Cool- idge Administration, 1926, You can walk a lot farther at night than in the daytime. Those who raised their heads in horror at the attitude of the modern generation did not understand what they were talking about, Mr. Knoelk said. "Instead of trying to run their lives by a 'code of ethics' they are de, veloping individual philosophies which change according to the situa- tion,' he added. "I have had a great deal to do with young people," Mr. Knoelk con- tinued, "and in my opinion they are meeting responsibilities and adapting themselves to changing conditions with much more ability than could ever have been shown by the people who say they are going to the dogs," F TORONTO-young people of today are more courageous, level-headed responsible than those of a generation or two back, William C. Knoelk, as- sistant superintendent of schools of Milwaukee and president of Round Table International in convention here, declared recently. George E. Wain, general manager of the street ramiav Was: at a loss to explain the Laws of the crash. There is a “helix of 200 feet of single rail just eam of 1 oulz’lle and " was the middle of alis :vlir"e *he cars collided. Jel‘ulm var;- nromeding east- ward, Burprsus ii' the opposito direc- tion. Vision war ole-.211 and it was a straight, drive. Mr. Waller said that both men were old employees and had driven over the route many years, Youth Much Wiser Than Own F orbears, Motormen J. L. Jerome and John Burrows were In charge of the one- man cars. The latter escaped but Burrows was st urged anu fell to the tioor. With the iront vestibule ablaze and the rear dear locked. occupants screamed for hair. Windows were shattered and bcfnre Jerome had re- gained his feet wan}! of the passen- gers had jumpei’ out, carrying their children with them or lowering them to the ground before they plunged. Waited Fr Other to Stop. "I guess one was waiting tory the other to stop." said Motorman Jer- ome when seen at the, General Hos- pital. Twenty-six permns were hurt but none seriously. Che impact which disconnected wiring leading to the control boxes, caused a short circuit and the fronts ot the jammed cars burned furiously. . Hamilton.-Pawie-slrieky1 passeng- ers, many with children in their arms, jumped though windows of two blazing street cars Sunday afternoon after a hea1Lon crash at Irondale crossing, Burlington Street East. 26 Are Injured In Car Crash Trapped Occupants In Ham- ilton Street Car Shatter Windows " WOMAN'S LONG WALK 'Twas Yale at Henley in rowing of four-man Wyfold Challenge Cup event during classic Henley Royal Regatta in England. colorful throng filling spectator boats and lining shore, Yale oarsmen sweep over finish line ten lengths in the lead of rival crew the Molesey Boat Club. Magistrate-And in this argument with your wife what passed between you? Witness-One vase, six plates and a frying pan. Lard--Pure, tierces, 8%e; tubs, 9%e; pails, 10c; prints, 9%c. Shortening-Tie-s, Sc; tubs, 9c; pails, 9%e; prints, 9%e. GRAIN QUOTATIONS Following are Saturday's closing quotations on Toronto grain tran- sactions for car lots, prices on basis c.i.f. bay ports:---- Manitoba barley - No. 3 ew., 52 1-8e; No. 4 C.W., 51 1-8c; No. 1 feed screenings, $19.50 per ton. Argentine corn, 78e. Ontario grain, approximate prices track shipping point:----)! 88 to We; oats, 35 to 38c; barley, 45 to 46c; corn, 74 to TN; rye, 48 to 50c; buckwheat, 58 to 60e.' Manitoba wheat-No. 1 Northern, 89%e; No. 2 Northern, 86%e; No. 3 Northern, 85 1-8e; No. 4 Northern, 82%e; No. 5 Northern, 80%c; No. 6 Northern, 79 1-8c. Pork-Hams, Me; shoulders, 15c; butts, 17%e; pork 10ins, 21c; picnics, 13c. _ Manitoba oats-No. 2 C.W., 4314c; No. 3 C.W., 4114c; No. 1 feed, 40%c; mixed feed oats, 320. Wholesale provision dealers are quoting the following prices to To- ronto retail dealers: Hens, over 5 lbs 4 to5 lbs. ...t. 3 to 4 lbs. .... Old roosters .. United Farmers' Co-Operative Co. Saturday were paying the following prices for produce: ' BUTTER-ontario, No. 1 cream ery, 18%c; No. 2, 18c. Wholesale pricer's:a poultry as supplied by the 'l1ri'iiFai,lr7ecJs,:',r Co... Operative Co Saturday we??? (Quotations in Cents.) Live Dressed Spring chickens Over 5 lbs. ..". 4% to 5 lbs. .... 4 to 4% lbs. ..... 3% to 4 lbs. ..... 2% to 3% lbs. ... Broilers: 1%to21dlbs.......10 .. WHOLESALE PROVISIONS EGGS-prices to farmers, eases re- returned: "A" large 18c; "A" medi- um, 17c; "B," 16c; "C", 15e. Lord Duncannon, son of the Governor-General of Canada, Lord Bessborough, getting off a long drive during a session on the links of the Seigniory Club, Lu- cerne, Quebec. POULTRY: The Markets PRODUCE PRICES A LONG ONE WINS BY TEN LENGTHS 11 10 18 16 14 12 10 6 13 12 11 Schiaparelli, of course, is the but, ton bandit of Paris. She has held up more ideas from this family and ex- torted trom it the entire family re- sources. This season her black and white "hands" have created the serv sation they deserve. She also has created a "leaf" fastener, These, it is suggested, will make excellent tall fastenings. Prince is already the Earl of Ulster. He recently paid his first official visit to Northern Ireland and was most cordially received there. The word "button" has changed its meaning. It is today, even according to the dictionary, a "knob, disk, or the like, to be sown on an article of dress, usually as a catch . . . a, small knob, piece of growth suggestive of a, but.. ton." Modern buttons are eyeless and range in size from a fly-speck to din- ner plate. In fact, a Paris button be. ing featured at the moment is the size of a silver dollar and grooved finely in exactly the same way as a flat record. BUTTONS OF ALL SIZES AND SHAPES FASHIONABLE The bestowal of this distinction on Prince Henry is of especial interest, in view of the fact that outside ‘of distinguished soldiers and Royalty it is limited to Irish knights, and the President Roosevelt has estimated nearly $5,000,000,000 would be added to the national debt by emergency expenses during the next 12 months. This was predicted on recovery that wold make itidcr::: t' producnm: average 98 per cent of the 1023-25 level. In July, 1935, the president hopes to start the pay-off for the recovery program. By that time, he has said, the budget should be balanced. The order is strictly limited to the Soverei l and 22 knights, nd at tjf.C,)li1vcr'ts.l')l,ec-i1i1-i-Af-i1if 12 il,n/1gca.st, the oldest member being the Duke of Connaught, uncle of the 'King and former Governor-General of Canada. The Prince of Wales was appointed in 1927. According to the Federal Reserve Board's htdex, the industrial produc- tion figure for the year just ended was slightly above, the 81 per cent, average on which the president based his hopes. In May it rose to 87. Last July it went to 101 for a while, boost- ed by speculative business activity. The last figures available for June 27, show the national debt was $27,- 008,336,065 as compared with $22,555 272,298 the corresponding day last year. Son of the King Gets High Honor London-The Duke of Gloucester, third son of the King, hashsen ap- pointed by His Majesty, a Knight of the Order of St. Patrick, founded by George III. in 1783. Ontario Waters Take Eight F our Young Boys "Victims Treasury officials scanned the in- dustrial picture for an indication of what the new year would mean to the coffers. That's geognting emergency ex- penses. Balancing reeerys against ordinary expenditures, the govern- ment wif declared to be $28,000,000 "in the black" for the year. u, S. Deficit ', Is Four Billions For' Fiscal Year -. Emer... gency Expenditures Add to Debt Washington,---) government, winding up its fiscal year today found it had spent about $4,000,000,- 000 more than it collected. St. Catharines Lad Lost -- Ottawa Fatalities - Sudbury _ Girl Drowned . Revenue of the London ard North- eartern system which serves a large part of the heavy industries district, increased almost $2,500,000 over the figure for the previous six-months' period, while the Midland and Scot- tish system showed only slightly less improvement. Increase in the revenue of the reat Western Railway amounted to $1,995,000, and that of the Southern Railway to $1,160,000. Jasper-Do you believe Ruth's tea- cher can make anything out ot her voice? Freddy-Well, she’s made over $100 out ot it already. It was impossible to tell on the bar. is of the published figures how far the revenue increases might have been offset by increased expenditures. London--Publication of railway traffie returns for the first six months of this year gave further in- dication of trade revival in the Unit.. ed Kingdom. Peterboro Tragedy Peterboro--Carried away by the swift current below the Peterboro lock, John MacKenzie, 18-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. James Mac- Kenzie of Columbus, near Oshawa. was drowned in the Otonabae River Saturday afternoon. Sudbury Girl Drowned Sudbury-The waters of the Ver, million River at Larchwood Falls claimed their first victim of the sea- son Sunday afternoon at one o'elock when Hazel Labrick of Sudbury, 20- year-old daughter of George Labrick of Little Current and the late Mrs. Labrick, was drowned while swim- ming Je'" Larehwood. b' Prospector Lost Sudliurv---Pr%neial police "receisr, ed word of the drowning about 50 miles from Gogama in Claw Lake Sunday morning of Sydney Thatcher, a prospector. His body has not yet been recovered. As he was a day's canoe trip away from Gogama, when the tragedy occurred, other details are lacking. Provincial police are in- vestigating. Kingston Search Maintained Kingston-Although almost a con- stant search has been kept up, the body of Raymond Metcalfe, 17-year- old Kingston boy drowned at the Ito- tary Kiwanis Y.M.C.A. camp at Eagle Lake, near Parham, had not been recovered. Metcalfe met death when a punt in which he and two companions. Bilt Commer and Ronald Arkley, was in capsized when they stoodup and attempted to sh‘ft the trail. ' Ottawa Child Drowned Ottawa-Falling from a pier on which he was playing Eric Dunn, six, was drowned in the Ottawa River less than two blocks from home, Satur- day afternoon. The body was recover- ed Sunday. Ottawa-The body of James R. McFadden, 42, well-known employe of the department of interior and pro- minent in municipal circles, was re- covered from the Ottawa River Sat- urday. St. Catharines-Stumbling into a hole while wading in Jordan Harbor Sunday afternoon, 13-year-old Don- ald Cameron disappeared from sight of nearby bathers and was drowned. The boy could not swim and was only about waist-high in water. Bathers dived repeatedly to get him and after 30 minutes of unremitting effort the body was recovered. Attempts to re- suscitate him were fruitless. 'rade Revival Noted In United Kingdom Body Recovered. With from THE NEED FOR CO-OPERAT- ION-wealth in the modern world depends upon eo-operation; ultim- ately upon international co-operation. Even national trade, national pros- perity, is not possible without, among other things, a stable money. But there can be no stable money without international eo-operation. We balk at that eo-operation in monetary mat- ters, as we do in matters of defense, and in other fields.-Sir Norman Angel]. TIME FOR THINKING-An ex- cellent result brought about by the times through which we are passing is, I find, a chastened and soberer point of View. It is turning more men to study and reflection than ever be- fore. The scope of the calamity through which we have gone is only now beginning to be grasped. Mil- lions of honest men and women feel this was a catastrophe that never should be allowed to occur again. Then, how prevent it? The answer is: Study and find out.-t. V. Jacks. WHAT PEOPLE CAN BE-"Not every person can be a personage, but every person can be a personality."-- William Lyon Phelps. SPORTS AND PEACE-fn my opinion, a game such as tennis, which is universally played with the same rules all over the world, can have a really great effect in making dif- ferent nations understand each other and each other's best qualities. - Jean Borotra. A story of a heroic three-mile chase on foot told during a proseeu- tion in County Armagh showed that the quarry only managed to outwit the pursuing patrol by tumbling ex- hausted over a fence into Free State territory where, of course, he was safe. DUBLIN-cattle smugglers on the Free State North-rn Ireland border are borrowing ideas from wild west cattle "rustling" tales, according to reports from the British Customs border patrols. Some of the more enterprising operators are now going to the length of gagging large herds of animals and placing pads on their hoofs. The cattle are then rushed across the border at dead of night while the attention of the patrol is diverted to crude and noisy attempts to smuggle a few worthless "decoy" beasts half a mile away. The real work begins when the patrols are leading the de- coy animals in triumph to the bar- racks. Mrs. Elizabeth Ford filed the suit, eharging the Teleeranh Company had alienated her husband's affec- tions bv delivering a telegram to him when it was addressed to her. Pad Cattle Hoofs To Outwit Patrols Newark, N.J.--The Western Union Telegraph Conwary was named de.. fendant in a $75.000 suit charging alienation of affections recently. when it was addressed to her. The teleearam, Mrs. Ford declares, was sent by Herbert Smith, of New York. described as a business ac- quaintarwe. and said: "Am staving at New Yorker Hotel . If possible, meet me Friday 7 pm.” Mrs, Ford said that at the Lime last April 19th - she was in the South and when. the telegram reach- ed her home, her husband opened it, read it, became suspicious ‘and jealous, and the "comfort and se- curity" of their home was disrupted. John Dillinger Shot toJheath He had been watching a picture titled "Maahatian Melodrama," not knowing that his pursvers were await- ing his exit wifa drawn guns. Fin- ally out he came. Probably he never knew what had struck him down -- 15 shotguns holi 1n expert hands. It had him shot dead by 15 crack marksmen among: its department ot Justice agents a1 he stepped jauntily out of the tiny Biograph Theatre on the north side of the city ending the greatest manhunt ot many years. Crimes almost without number-- robberies and murders-imputed to the Indiana {armboy who went wrong, were avenged. as the hunted man crashed to the sidewalk before a large audience ot trcprstant neighborhood folk. Western Union Took Her Love, Says Woman There was my a trace of uncer.. tainty about the way the Govern.. ment "rubbed out" the man for whose capture it offeroc $10 00() a few weeks ago. Chicago.---; United States Gov- .ernment got John Dillinger Sunday night. hast as it promised to do. Husband Opened Telegram by Mistake--- Became Sus- picious, f Motorious U. S. Desperado ' Dies As He Comes Out of Theatre Public Opinion Down on the south coast of Eng- land, near the mouth of the Thames, is a seaside resort called Margate. It is a place where London 'trippers' go by the thousands to spend an odd day, or their annual two weeks with pay. It is strictly the play- ground of the democracy, but Mar- gate is very proud of itself, but Mar- was just like Margate's impudenee to offer to sumylv the sand for Hm That is what makes him sanely balanced and his country an abode of level-headedness. - Vancouver Sun The new Cunarder now building on the Clyde will not have a mere bathing pool like other big liners, but a real bathing beach. Bathers will walk down into the beautiful green water on a stretch of sand, just as they would do at the seaside. Then they can lie on the sands and enjoy artificial sunlight. In every way the environment will be realis- tic. Derbys long past were re-examin- ed. The scene at Epsom on the Sun- day before the race was described by special writers. The horses were writ- ten up" as though they possessed personality. Jockeys were described. When thd great and historic der- by was run, the English press devot- ed pages to all angles of the race. It was because the Derby was a national play festival, a symbol of the Englishman's appreciation of the value of playtime he takes off from business with an air of almost indifference. be sand fra the. banks o' the Clyde or naething. --St. Thomas-Tunes Journal, HAVE WE LEARNED HOW TO PLAY? John Bull certainly knows how to revel in his playtime. This was not because the people of Great Britain are so deeply con- cerned with horse-racing or with the result of the Derby. Cunarder’s Lili; The Clydeside folks immediately waxed indignant. They would hae nane orthat English sand. It had tae ENGLAND'S "SAMS0N" Johnny Mann is the boy "Samson" Wokingham. He is aged fourteen years, and can lift 130 pounds with, his teeth, hold two ponies pulling in opposite directions or lift a pony from the ground. Johnny, a tall and bright-faced lad is anxious to become a professional strong man. He has ar.. ready received an offer of Lili) per week to perform in a circus," his fa- father, Mr. Ernest Mann, said, "but the education authorities require him to stay in school until the end of the term at Easter, and he has not been able to accept the offer." It was necessary to remove the chicks from the nests early, how- ever as their instinct did not teach them to take food the way the moth- er crows brought it to the nests. However, Mr. Goertzen said this presented no difficulty, and he says he is quite satisfied with his crow incubators. --Lethbridge Herald. Johnny Mann has been lifting weights since he was five years old. He and his four younger brothers have been trained since early child- hood by their father who won the Yorkshire wrestling championship in 1918. All the children have won prizes in baby competitions. Their mother, a tall, strongly-built woman has also achieved some reputation as aweieh ifter.--- ities Statue g t lift! . Barrier ,pliti-t1 A newspaper that is doing exeei, lent work in Canadian travel promo- tion is the Ottawa Journal, which publishes weekly an illustrated see- tion setting forth Canada's tourist attractions. The Journal is to be compliment. ed on this good work, and it is set, ting an example worthy of the at- tention of Canadian newspapers from coast to coast. ---Halifar: Her- aldr We have heard of hens hatching ducklings and wondering what it in about, and of cats mothering fox- es and young coons but J. F. Goert- zen, a visitor in the city from Stet- tier, Alta., rather startled us the o- ther day when he said he had had better luck in getting crows to do the hatching of his chickens than he got from the old Biddies themselves. He and some of his neighbors con- ceived the idea of making the much despised crow do something useful for a living. So they found some crows' nests put three or four hens eggs in each and in "due course ap- peared the baby chicks. A list has been published of " moving pictures to which exeeption has been taken by those who are cru- sading against unclean films in the United States. It is interesting to note that ten of the thirty-one were not submitted in Ontario at all, that the board of censors completely re- jected seven of the remainder and that the other 14 were, without ele ception, altered by the Ontario board --in some cases new scenes in trub- stitution for objectionable ones Wen furnished by the producers. But not one of the 31 pictures got through "as was." -.r._. Toronto Star. Voice of the Press SHE'LL BE ALL SCOTTISH CROWS HATCH CHICKS A COMPLIMENT 'upply the sand ‘for the

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