Grimsby Independent, 21 Aug 1935, p. 2

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Sos: fmaginmg that ext * cumulated â€"over %~ P . _ y@â€"pâ€""A#hens wâ€"or even‘ yearsâ€"#ean Be. taken off within a few w°®$s, In other words, good judgment‘fi;u]d be the â€" keyâ€" note of any lietâ€"minded â€" woman‘s routine. Af‘t’él‘fl{have received your docâ€" tor‘s permission to omit certain foods from your diet, decide at once what type of exercises you will have to do to reduce specific spots orrt your body. If your measurements suit you, except about the waistline, concentrate on waistline exercises. However, do not try bending and stretching varieties which are so difficult. that you can‘t. learn to do them correctly. The woman who wants to reduce never should map out a rigid diet without first consulting her doctor. She must not go in for strenuous, intricate exercises, intended originâ€" ally for acrobatz, unless she . doses Jhem under the careful supervision sf£â€" an_ * ced teacher. â€" ;g~@ "‘ This doesn‘t mean that only simâ€" ple exercises are â€" recommended. Fracliée intricate ones,; of â€"â€"course, but ~don‘t expect to do them perfectâ€" 1y the first few days. It‘s much betâ€" ter to ramain overweight than to Tisk injuring ligaments or bones. "There was a sailor namei Colâ€" umbus," the little girl began, "and m queemnâ€"sent him out on a voyage @f discovery, and his «<hips â€" were Wnamed the Nina, the Pinta #nd the.â€" and. theâ€"." ; "The Santa Maria?" suggested Professor Morrison. C Back bends, for instance,~ never should bze tried unless you have someone standing close by to supâ€" port your back. Standing with feet wide apart, s‘swly forcee your body backward until hands touch the floor rather close to your heels. This is simple for a dancer or an exâ€" ercise teacher, but the average woâ€" man ought to have support across the middle of her back until she learns how to balancesher weight perfectly. ; Splits of vartous kinds are other types of exereise that should not be attempted un‘less you have someone to guide â€"you and holdâ€"you â€"up in cage, you start to . {ail. <«Once. â€"you have mastered the technique, they are especially good for legs,. hips and waistline. Safe And Simple _â€"â€" Should Be Slogan + For Reducinsg disease, Professor 8. F. â€" Morrison, who holds the chair of American history at Oxford University, was . calling at a friend‘s home when his friend‘s little .daughter began to tell him the story of the discovery of Ameriâ€" The estimated short apple crop |° ‘ & nslsns _1 in the U.nited Kingdom for 1935, Clergyman Holds S should stimulate a larger _ demand +Â¥ s * for Canadian apples which have the In â€" Parishioners further advantage under Canadian T C tfaee> export regulations of carrying with A young vicar in Nen them a certificate of freedom from| TY"?%@ EDg., has found a ca. This had been her lesson for the day. "Yes, the Santa Maria,""‘ said the | little girl, "and the queen‘s name,! it _ was=â€"" 1 "Isabella?" the professor asked. | i "Professor," said the little gifiâ€" suspiciously, "have you heard this story before 2?">.y "~>~ w2 ypauly.," ~@l Butter, cream, eggs, flour, fruits, | ~441 ~A4GidIng â€"LDC milk, cooking oils of corn, peanut, Done Abo and soya bean are a few of the e ies agricultural products used by the WINNIPEG,â€"Three Ka: biscuit and confectionery cocoa and | tourists who registered her chocolate industries. w.of â€" Canada| were prepared for Winnipe which employed Io.g,oi?persons in | cold weather. â€" They carr 1934. Since 1924, the statistics reâ€" | Overcoats and a supply of lating to the Canadian chewing gum | derwear, and asked, as the industry were incorporated with the | tered in a heat wave, "how biscuit and confectionery industry. have to go before we n Â¥o 0 s 0 > cogxts *" The Ayrshire cow, Onslow â€" Lass, bread and owned by Miss Mary Hoopéer, Pictou, _N.S8.; hasâ€" recently completed a second record of over 20,000 pounds of milk, 20,541 pounds to be exact. The previous year â€"at seven years of age she gave 20,685 pounds of milk. J The Ontario Approved Turkey | body to know when I le: Breseders‘ Association inspection | I‘m going to lose myself." work has been greatly increased with Mrs. Waley will be el 2,000 turkeys eligible for approval | parole in seven years. inspection in 1985 against 682 _ in _z _ 1934, * t . > . ~â€"<%_â€"C _ % Canada continues to be the chief 19'0(1){1215122?0{1161\{{1;211;\/1[)21;‘ source of supply of tomato ketchup .Woeyerhaeuser, heir to a and sauces to the United Kingdom, lumber fortune, is "thr increasing her shipments in thelmen,” she observed Here 1935 period to 96,857 cases from changed traings en route t 89,700â€" in 1934. The tomato _ soup | ergj Women‘s Prison at M trade .also is‘ almost . entirely . in to serve a 20â€"year term. Canadian hands. § Without any bitterness, I o said: "I deserve what ‘~ The figures of imports of wheat | thought I was going to get into the Scottish ports of Glasgow | Harmon Waley didn‘t get and Leith for the first six months of | what he deserved." 1935, show that Scotland has taken Waley, her dAusband, plea more Canadian wheat than in the | to the Weyerhaeucer kidna eorresponding period of â€" the two |s serving a 45â€"year term 0o: previous years. The, shipments of | Island. Canadian flour also were greater ‘"When _1 come out. I‘m than for several years previous. alone" Mrs. Waley _ s: 33. r s P throug? with men. I don‘t The Ontario Approved Turkey | body to know when I lea Breeders‘ Association inspection | I‘m going to lose myself." Canada continues to be the chief source of supply of tomato ketchup and sauces to the United Kingdom, increasing. her shipments in the 19835 period to 96,857 cases from 89,700 in 1934.) The â€"tomatoâ€" soup trade ‘also is‘ almost entirely in Canadian hands. l A â€" Smile FARM FLASHES ext r:raancer or_ â€" 8 but the avera have support : Most of trie parishioners Jude‘s cannot afford Sund: to attend service, so the BR Rumney decided to hold s: ‘their. homes. I With ‘a band of willing | Mr. Rumney initiated: his ; {this week in a twoâ€"roomed â€"the bhome of an 87â€"yearâ€"o MOSCOW, â€" Ths Soviet preparations to establish the first meteorological station North Pole is progressing wi nation of iceâ€"breakers to ; expedition and its. airplane top of the world. The expedition will study atmospheric conditions at t Poleâ€"a virgin field for re: but will furnish weather r transpolar commercial airp vices projected between Mo San Francisco. 2 Officials hope the station in operation next summer. tial expedition will sail fro angel to a point as far nort]l breakers â€"can batter thei throug the polar seas. TI planes will take off with the crew, â€" supliecs and â€" meteor equipment. 3 Plans provided that if =~ai; cennot land at the pole me equipment will be dropped in chutes. During recent years Russians have experimented constantly with mass parachute jumps. At a recent air show 50 men, cattle, crates of groâ€" ceries »and otrier equipment were dropped simultaneouzsly and suc. cessfully. of keeping his flock in toucl Gospelâ€"he takes the churcel Johannesburg Star Successful efforts are being made to make South Africans "travel con. scious" and especially to encourago them to make the fullest possible use of the railways. The catering and service are generally excellent and train travel is in every way quicker, cleaner and more comfortable than formerly, but there is still room for improvement in at least one direc. tion. There are, of course, exceptions to the rule, but the majority. of our waiting rooms are dark, stuffy and depressing. Their furniture is primâ€" itive and forbidding, and the pic. torial incitements to travel which adorn the walls. sometimes emphaâ€" size their aridity. olar Weather Post Planned By Observes the Toronto Star, "Unitâ€" ed States citizens are no doubt duly grateful to the prophmetic statisticians who cheer them with the promise that this year only $4,600 of them are to ‘be killed by automobiles: three motor killings a day fewer than last ta‘ be »kilted> by "â€"aut motor killings a day year‘s record score." Can Nothing Be Done Abo Brighter Waitingâ€"Rooms ~ ~WEYBURN, Sask..â€"J. row‘s wife is in hospital, b as though she‘ll be out befo domestic he‘p. He has tray miles throug/i â€" southern | wan, and found no takers fer of a domestic job. Lady Kidnapper "Through \ Here‘s A Jo! wWORLD‘S FASTEST \ Warrant Officer Francesco Agello has travelled faster than any man in the world. This Italian flyes darts through the ozone at the terrific speed of, 440.67 miles an hour., This undisputed speed king of the air, who travals faster than a bullet, has taken his life in his hands many times before wearing this crown. He is the only survivor of the Italianâ€" Schneider Cup team of 1929., _ Agello‘s recordâ€"breaking seaplane was a Macchi 72, powered with 2 Fiat engines, developing 2,500 horseâ€" power. The machine weighed 3 tons and had a wing spread of 161 square feet, which necessitated a speed of 130 miles per hour to keep in the air. Thus, Agello‘s landing speed must be terrific and anyâ€" miscaleulâ€" ation on our friend‘s part, in resting his pontoons on the water, â€" would have the same effect as plowing through a brick wall at many miles an hour. "Deven and minute." & Formerly, Lieutenant Stainforth held the title of the fastest human, until Agello flew 428.7 M.P.H.,.,° 15 miles an. hour faster> than the Briâ€" tish pilot. # 2 Later, Agello flew the same plane at the bloodâ€"freezing speed of 440.67 M.P.H., breaking his . own world‘s record. * raraet * 66@ oneâ€"third miles a Bâ€"DWARD KE In Ottawa Hon. Edgar N. Rhodes will continue to be Minister of Finance until the campaign ends, or perhaps until a little before that time. However, his decision .to hold on has taken con. siderable weight off the Prime Min.â€" ister‘s shoulders. _ Fort Erieâ€"The height of economy was displayed here recently by * a United States tourist, who was stopâ€" ped at the American end of the Peace Bridge by a customs officer and informed that regulations preâ€" vented his taking two â€" dozen ears of corn into o the United States. There was no ‘argument. The motorâ€" ist turned andâ€"drove back eight milâ€" es to Nie Road in Bertic Township to get. a refund. ROCKFELLER GIVES 25 MILLION IN STOCK EB,. F. Smith, cxâ€"M.P. for Victoria. W@arleton, Col. H. A. Mullins, exâ€"M.P. for Marquette, John T. Haig, Winniâ€" peg, and Dr. Eugene Paquet, former M.P. for Bonaventure. Ontario men appointed to the bench William T. Henderson, â€" Brantford, ©ntariq Court of Appeals; ®.>~=1D. HMHogs, Ottawa, and Col. J. Keiller MacKay, Toronto, trial division, Ont.â€" ario\ Supreme Court. Of interest to Chatitable Organizations Get Oil Holdings Following. Wealth Tax Plan Washington â€" John D. Rockefelâ€" ler, Jr., was reported last week as making a gift of more than $25,000,â€" 000 in oil securities less than a fortnight after President Roosevelt‘s "wealth tax" message. The securities commission was told unnamed "individuals and charitable organizations" _ received 2,100,000 shares of Socony Vacuum Corporaâ€" tion common stock. This gift, made June 28, reduced Rockefeller‘s holdings in three major oil companiesâ€"Socony, Standard of New Jersey and Standard of Caliâ€" forniaâ€"to $180,000,000. The commission report gave no inâ€" dication whether the famous financier made his gift at this time in expecâ€" tations that Congress would â€"vote higher taxes on wealth. Contributions of this character usually takeâ€" some time to plan and the program may The ‘market value of the stock June 28 was about $27,300,000. have bben arranged I;rio; to the preside t’s,__ message., . .:. orn From Canada + Camrned At Border Shorteningâ€"Tierces, 10%4c¢; tubs, 10%¢; pails, 11%4c; prints, 11%4c. HAY AND STRAW No. 2 timothy hay baled, ton, $12.50 to $18.50; No. 3 timothy hay, ton, $11 to $12; straw, wheat, balâ€" ed, ton, $8; oat straw. $7. Hens: s © Over 5. Ibs: .. 12 o+ by: 4 i0 ~5~1bs? ; 11 sfs * . 3 to 4"Abs. .. _ 10 is 1x old roosters .. 7 /s 3+ Spring chickensâ€" Overâ€"5..l1b8. ... 16~_ s + i s & AVa=to> 5 1bs.~ 15 * 4 3%4 to 4%4 lbs. 14 z: e 3t to 3%% Ibs. 12 ais as Spring broilersâ€" 1% to 2% Ibs. 12 Â¥ / s WHOLESALE PROVISIONS Wholesale provision dealers are quoting the following prices to the Toronto retail trade: Lard â€" Pure tierces, 15%c¢; tubs, 16¢; pails, 16%c¢; prints, 16c. i "Pre i o Aniohe" "~fal United Farmg. wq\‘JOâ€"Operative Co. Saturday were paying the following prices for produce: ; EGGSâ€"With cases returned, "A" large, 28¢p "A" medium, 2%c; "A" pullets,â€"18¢; "B", 17¢; "C". A6c. BUTTERâ€"Ontario No. 1/ solids. 20/%¢;. No: 2, 20¢. POULTRY: Porkâ€"Ham, 22¢; shoulders, 17¥¢; butts, 19%c¢; pork loins, 21V¥¢; picâ€" nics,; 17¢. s Londonâ€"Lloyd‘s, famed â€" throughâ€" out the world for willingness to take insurance risks on almost anyâ€" thing, believe an Italoâ€"Ethiopian war is inevitable. Italy The Un er, 109 Invasicon er, 500 to. 1 Latest odds of the underwriters against war within a year were: Italy and Ethiopia, no rate; war inevitable. Japanâ€"and Russia, 20 to 1. France and a major power, 20 to this same stock to an unidentified "educational and scientific corporâ€" ation‘"‘ in March. Hhis holdings as of June 30 were 2,852,570 shares, worth about $34,200,000. In addition, other commission reports show â€" he held 2,142,422 shares of Ctandard Oil of New Jersey common, valued at nearly $100,000,000, and 1,306,828 common shares of Standard Oil of California, valued at $45,700,000. Heinrich Himmler, Chief of the Nazi Secret.,Police and dominant figure in 1934 "blood purge," who, it is rumored, is slated to replace Wilhelm Frick as Minister of the Interior, â€"â€"Himmler. is also leader of the ‘Schutz Staffel ({picked guardgsys _ =*> > en Lloyd‘s War Risks oi eniee o ealigs +. fi;‘.{;,;;:;fl{.(;-'};f?;::::;::‘._:‘::i_:‘;:;:;:;': ;'»:‘/f'z,;'f.‘a};@’/l:f:‘;:}éi:'-:'-:?.‘-_:';'.':'-‘ m o _ VA . 7 on > AWWA . e ies > ’3" 3 Pereler en o. > . Gains Hitler‘s Favor and a major power, 15 tsd Statss and a major to 3. sn ‘of the U:S8. by any (Quotations in cents.} THE yaiz 64 16 15 14 12 â€"_â€"Dregsed ive Dressod Milkfed 66 to 1. pow=â€" powâ€" 66 *) k sxâ€"â€" ©FAITH IN HUMANITY "How do you like me in my new‘ Chinese laundryman in Bronxville, gown? I got it for a ridiculous N.Y., went for a holiday and left & price." [ note in the window telling people to "You mean you got it for an abâ€" | get their laundry as the door was not surd figure." | locked. We doubt whether this gen., 2222222222222 tloman has been thoroughly civilize® and Christianized since coming ta Pure ’Bred Cattle this country. â€"â€"â€" Stratford. Beacons fes s T Herald. A The. total . number of pedigree certificates registered with the Canâ€" adian National Live Stock Records, approved by the Domwnion Minister Agriculture, during the month of July, 1935, was 5,642. Of these, 8255 were horses, including 138 Clydesâ€" dales; 76 Percheron; 54 Thoroughâ€" bred:; 87 Belgian Draft; 15 Standâ€" ard Bred; 14 French Canadian;, 7 Hackney, and 4 Suffolk. Cattle numâ€" bered 2,787, comprising 821 Ayrâ€" shire; 708 Shorthorn; 518 â€" Jersey; 256 H e r e f o rd; 231 Canadian (French); 128 Guernsey; 88 Aberâ€" deen Angus; 21 Red Poll, and 16 Brown Swiss. Sheep totalled 591, of which 164 were Southdown; 97 Oxford â€" Down; 90 Suffolk; 89 Shropshire; 50 Leiâ€" cester; 35 Hampshire; 26 Cotswold; 22 Dorset Horn; 14 Lincoln, and 4 Cheviot. Thieves recently broke into the Detroit zoo and stole $200.00 from the "officeâ€"safe. The safe is now deâ€" posited. at night in the den where fifteen . lionsâ€"sleep. ic s 5# * *# ) .# A Birmingham horse attached to a railway van, having ~remembered the exact spot where it was knockâ€" ed into a motorâ€"car by an omnibus six months previously, bolted down a steep hill and struck another van. Swine numbered 640, including 469 Yorkshire; 85 Tamworth; 58 Berkshire; 15 Durse Jersey; 10 Chester White, and 3 Hampshire. There were 36 foxes; 610 dogs; 3 poultry, and 20 goats, of which twelve were of the Toggenburg breed and 8 of the Saanen. _ ® Tickets to Heaven are a regular business line in certain Chinese temples. A man can read a newspaper by the light produced by a Costa Rican lantern fly. It is not good taste to pass reâ€" marks about people so that they cannot quite hear what is being said. It is not good taste ho have too many flowers about the house, to correct children in the presence of strangers, to talk disrespectfully of a couple of decades ago when elderâ€" ly people are present, nor, if one is a woman, to smoke in the street. Better Cooking Will Make For Better Musbands * * * Persuading pears to grow â€" on apple trees was only one of the feats accomplished by Ivan Mitchâ€" urin, Russia‘s "plant wizard," who died recently. In his private orchard the scientist grew black currants as large as grapes, and plums as big as ducks‘ eggs. Chicagoâ€"Simplified meat cooking to produce a roast or a steak â€" with real palate appeal means better husbands, less work for the houseâ€" wife and a happier home, Dean W. C. Coffey of the University of Minâ€" nesota animal husbandry school, deâ€" clared recently. The rule is helpful, too, when apâ€" plied to the choice of clothes. A. hat, dress, pair of shoes, ornament, or coat may be quite pretty, very cheap and of an attractive color, but unless it is in good taste it is waste of money to buy it. If only ~mors people would remember this when making purchases fewer unsightly figures would be seen. Dean Cogey heads a group of reâ€" search workers in coâ€"operative inâ€" vestigations. The workers, holding their annual conference, are ready to give the housewives some lessons in neat cosokery. * & The research workers upset some cooking theories of, longâ€" standing when they ruled: ts : "Don‘t baste your roasts. Searizng roasts is unnecessary. When broilâ€" ing a steak turn it only once. Don‘t turn O# ~the heat full blast when This seems a sensible idea, and one whith might well be adopted generally, says a writer in the Weekly Irish Times. We would not be so likely to "drop bricks" if we asked ourselves the question before making a remark. In nine cases out of ten a "brick" is a remark in bad taste. Then again, some letters that lead to trouble would never be posted if the writer murmured: "Now, is this in good taste?" A@mtter of Taste bacs A popular woman once said that she always asked herself if a thing was in good taste before she did it. "Applying that rule", ~she said;. "I have been able to avoid lots of misâ€" takes. g»6ting meat. Don‘t cover your meats when roasting." Figuratively â€"Speaking QUEER WORLD 32 _â€"_PAINTING BARNS After a lapse. of five full years, Canadian farmers are beginning to paint their barns again. There is no general rush, but bere and there through most of the mixed farming areas, examples are readily noted. While important enough in itself in view of the immense area to be cov. ered in familiar red, green or white, the significance of the return of barn paint is that it means the first real indication of a return of permanent. ly better times to Canadian agricul. ture. â€" Financial Post. GOOD SALESMAN If the large number of people who have visited the Canada Shop in London since its opening last week is maintained until the date of clog. ing, the promoters should be moré than pleased with the publicity given to Canadian food products through this practical advertising medium. .On Saturday last the number of visiâ€" tors was checked. No fewer than 2,« 300 passed along the counters and inspected the food stuffs. The maâ€" jority of them purchased samples, as a result of which it is reasonablé’: to anticipate enhanced sales by reâ€" tailers in the locality and in such other localities as were represented by the visitors. â€" Canada‘s Weekly, London. 3 May there not be an outside chanco that business and fashions are reâ€" lated in some way or another? Cl« tainly, business is looking up. . AnNG now skirts are apparently followIin§ suit. Chanel has chopped off three inches at one stroke, an upswing as convincing as anything provided by; economists‘ charts. KNEE PLUS ULTRA % Paris reports that the season‘s first Winter style showing at Chanel‘s this week revealed the femining knee. You may remember that joint. it was much in evidence before the depression. Then, along with stocks and things in general, skirt hems came crashing down. For the past five years it has been discreetly conâ€" cealed almost everywhere except in the nudist camps. : is being properly quoted, goes much further. The idea that a healthy person can get leprosy by touchin a leper is "mere nonsense," he Said ‘‘No doctor or nurse treating 1lepers has ever been known to fall prey to the disease." Then he adds the more astonishing statement: "A native Canadian never has been known to contract the _ disease." â€" Moncto®r Times. FARM PRICES RISING _ Tho mostâ€" satisfactory year 1O livestock production since 1980, iS the report made by a packing com pany. es There are many other evidencte of this condition. Prices in all line of livestock have advanced a 100 way from the low point registere about four years ago. The sam thing applies to most of the OtRE minor products of the farm â€" GdaiH produce, poultry and eg8S, and ,, the many products from which t wellâ€"amaged farm derives much L2 o nawanua O__ ‘Winnines: TriDpunsa LEPROSY IN CANADA _ Leprosy is waning in this country and as Dr. Murray MacLaren said when Minister of Health, the danger of contagion is very much exaggera. ted. But Dr. C. P.; Brown, chief of division of quarantine and medical immigration for the Dominion, if he Far from bemoaning what he findg in modern youth, the former Prime Minister evidently considers that if is quite all right, at least the fe. minine part of it He said so the ther day when he (a product of the Victorian era) denounced it as "prim and grim" and remarked that he preferred the modern girl and th'% education which makes her what she is. ‘The old academies for young ladiesâ€"they were not girls in those days," he went on to say, "at beéc‘:'é were an expensive joke, and at the"_f worst they were an atrocity." == Brockville Recorder and Times. _ it3 revenue. â€" No hankerer after a pel‘io‘d times referred to as "the good ; times" is, apparently , Mr. | Lig George who, in â€" spite of yearg are occasionally â€" considereq rath advanced, is sufficiently youthful _ spirit and outlook to refrain from t faultâ€"finding in regard to the rigi generation of which, older people a so often guilty. 8 PITY PooRr MOoTORIST _ Hard is indeed is the lot ofâ€" drunken | motorist who. gets Ca8 Most courts will fine him $10 to . occagionally give him ten day jail, and sometimes actually deP erately placed a ‘large DW W low citizens in danger Of | death or of the loss of limb§ horrible and painful laceratiO Toronto Telegram. *to Dircoas" such _'é.é'.'\‘ f.eW A DEFENDER CANADA Winnipe8 MobpEern

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