HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1927-07-28, Page 6An it Respecting Dealings
jn Print and Vegetables
on Commission
His Majesty, by and with the advice
and consent of the Legislative As
sembly of the Province of Ontario, en
acts es follnwk:—■1. This Act may be cited as The
Fruit nnl Vegetables Ccnsigninent
Act, 1927.”
2. In this Act.--
(a) • Commission
mems. any rerson
find brndl.-i fruit
on commis-icn;
(b) "Slriinier” shall mean any pct-
» ton who cim igns fruit and vege-
' tables for sale on ccmmim|on.
3. It shall be the duty of every com
mission agent to keep Looks in such
form an for such time as may be pre
scribed by the regulations mad? under
th? authority of this Act. provided that
such becks shall include a record of
fruit and vegetables received by such
comimlssicn agent and the persons to
whom and the prices at which such
fruit and Vegetables are disposed of.
4. — (1) It any fruit er vegetable® ar
rive in a damaged or deteriorated con
dition it shall be the duty ef the com
mission fgent to immediately notify
the shipper of such condition, giving
particulars as to the effect on prices
and the. apparent cause wherever pos
sible.
(2) If no such notice is given by the
commission agent the fruit and vege
tables shall be deemed to have been
received in normal condition.
5. —(1) Every commission agent
ft^all immediately notify the shipper
of the sale in detail of any fruit or
vegetables and disposition and prices
received for same.
(2) After commission and other legi
timate charges have been deducted,
payment shall be made by the com
mission agent to the shipper as sale is
made or within ten days thereafter,
until the entire consignment
for.
Consignment
Agent" shall
who receives
and vegetables
The Final Heat of Diamond Sculls When Joe Wright Lost Out by a Fluke
X
'T***-V
’•VSSXWwwaan
A Nation Now in Fullest Sense
FIRST PICTURES FROM HENLEY REG ATTA
though Lee had been behind practical- lower row the picture on the
”?*7 Tzxr» TJUVIerli f o ft At* lin hflfcentral picture o£ the upperof ly from the start. The upper left- s!’°- J°° Wrl«ht aIter hs
ditionally condemns the strategical,
concept behind it he wanders far
afield I-Ie is a pronounced Westerner*
and holds that the Allies in 1915 and
later should have used all thoir forces’
on the western front lie believes the
Allied vessels used at the Dardanel-'
les would have have been better em
ployed in tho North Sea or the Baltic.
The Baltic attack was a hobby of
•Admiral Fisher’s. The British divi
sions sent to the Dardanelles in 1915
might have been thrown against the*
Germans in Franco But to what good
•purpose? The British New Armies
were used up there in 1916 and 191^
without appreciable Results in a man- '
ner of which Marshal Foch, in his
preface to Field Marshal Haig’s. Dis
patches, said sadly: "If q. war is to
end in victory, it musf always havo a
character different from this,”
Take the British waste of men and
munitions at Nueve Chapello .in
March, 1915. Those man and rn-:r.I-
tions were sacrificed to mere local
"attrition." In Gallipoli they might
have enabled Hamilton to-capture
come of the commanding Turkish
positions and open the road to Con
stantinople—a pri'io cf enormous
political and military
The Allied armies
beaten Germany on tl:
except for the Amerlc
They had a chance at
, off Turkey, neutrali-5
carry their front tn the
jpathians and the Dnnu
worth every ‘ possible m-li
Unhappily, the only effort
, that which, Kitchener’s feeble man
agement wrecked. — Wiliam L. Mc
Pherson in N. Y. I-Ierald-Tribuno.
Minister to the United States
courageously pursued. The record
economic progress in the three score
years since Canada became a united
nation reads like a fairy tale until one
encounters the solid figures' which en
dow it with fact. The new epoch
Mr. Massey’s Views on the Diamond Jubilee of
Confederation
By the Hon. Vincent Massey,
July 1 Canada celebrated her
sixtieth'birthday. Although three and
a quarter centuries have passed since
tho first European settlements were;
established by Champlain on what is ’
now Canadian territory, the creation*
of Canada as a Dominion stretching. which we have entered now that tho
from sea to sea is the achievement of j aftermath of four and a half years of men whose memory is still fresh. j effort in the great war is receding
The Dominion, of Canada is a newly ’ into the past will reveal an advance
built edifice but it has been raised ' even swifter and no less sure,
on ancient foundations. Th$ composi-1, Canada is now a nation in the fullest
j tion of the structure is revealed in ‘ sense'. The union which was effected
1 | the Coat of Arms which Canada has in 1867 and in the six succeeding years
- - „ ,, , . •! ciucxein, bcuuk. nu-m. wuiuu. v
vwlatwn of any ot tlw provisions «t|tew 3pTOlg u rei,resentea
is paid
6. No ocmiM sston agent slia’l r.ur-
cl a so any fruit or vegetab!es ccrsipn-
t d to Mm on rc mmisslon un lyis be hos
ITevlcuv’y pm n clear not ic> to the
Y.i,ij.p„:r of his <leslre io do so and has
obtained the e<;.Rsmt cf the shipper to
The
row shows clearly how Joe Wright
got entangled with the punt ropes on*
the side of the course when only a
few yards from the finish—indicated
by arrow—and Lee was able to win,
■' s right
had real
ized that further efforjz could not re-hand picture shows Rt. Hon. Stanley jeass ms oar frOm the entangling rope
Baldwin in the stewards’ enclosure; ' an $that Lee has passed him. On the
on the right is R. T. Lee«o£ Worcester left is Wright going to his quarters
College, Oxford, the winner. In tho after the race.___________________
such i-urch a.
7. Ev«ry
permit any
books and reccrds- in so so far as they (
relate to the consignment cf such ship-.
H | w-«-.WV V*. ---•— T- ■ VVJUUM. -AX* VAAV KZ K*-'VM V W'U *
P<T mvorv r whn is ^uiltv of a I cho&en as her national symbol. The has been followed througlixfhe genera-
b. LVv-rj person o g y ancient stock from which Canadians lions by a spiritual unification and a
violation of any o h- i . have sprung is represented on the symmetric^ development of the na-
this Act Penalty of not, rteri the q£ Bllg. fckmal lif0 of Cana<Ja
less than ijjuO nor more than $100 tor,. . ...................... .. .. -■ . . .- . . .
each offence and the same shall be re*}
ccverable under the provisions of,
"The Ontario Summary Convictions'
Act, 1926.”
9. Tho Lieutenant-Governor
Council may i .. „ ' ''
scribing the forms in which books of
record and accounts shall be kept by
persons receiving fruit or vegetables
on consignment and for the better
carrying cut cf this Act.
Regulations
Copy of an Order-in-Council, ap
proved by His Honor the Lieutenant-
Governor, dated the 17th day of
Juno, 1927.
Upon the recommendation of the
Honorable the Minister of Agricul
ture, the Committea cf Council advise
that, pursuant to Section 9 of the Fruit
and Vegetables Consignment Act,
1927. th® following regulations be
adopted for the better carrying of the I
said Act:
1. Upon receipt of a consignment of
fruit er vegetables the commission
agent shall mark each box, basket,
crate cr other erntainer in such man-!
r..er as io enable the same to be identi-1
fled as the consignment^or part of theJ
consignment of tho particular shipper, j
2. The commission agent shall enter ’
in a book to be kept by him for that
purpese:—
(a) the name and address, of the
shipper;
(h) the nature, description and
quantity of each consignment;
(c) The name and address or names
and addresses of the person or
persons to whom each consign
ment designated by its respective
mark of identification, is sold or
disposed of;
(d) the price at which each sale is
made; and
(e) such other information a® may
under the circumstances be neces
sary to give a complete and clear
record of the particulars of the
transaction.
3. The books and records required
nntler the said Act or under these re
gulations shall he open to and avail-,
able for inspection by the shipper or
his agent duly named in writing, at
any time during regular business
hours vfor a period of two years from
the date of the disposal of the consign
ment.
4. Every person who contravenes
any regulations made under the said
Act shall be guilty of an offence and
shall incur the. penalties provided for
in Section 8*of the Act.
Must Hhva Bean Lonely,
Natero’s story is that he set out to
drive in his car to Twin Falls and
picked up the dead man, givihg him
a tide
(Idaho)
. T* . I
commission agent shall;
shipper to examine his
THE GALLIPOLI TRAGEDY
until on her
sixtieth birthday hex* citizens can look
with pride on‘'their achievement in all
fields of. human endeavor.
Just ‘as Canadians are expressing
their national life in many spheres of
activity, so the Dominion as a whole
is happy to take its place in the -world
at large.
( On this great occasion in her hls-
insytutions which all Canadians in-pory, Canada salutes her neighbor to
herit. Surmounting the whole is the * the south with renewed greetings and
British crown, the mystic symbol of! assurances of frendship. The rela
tion between his Majesty's oldest Do
minion and the great American repub
lic has been an example to the world.
It is the wish of Canada (hat the"con-
cord which has prevailed between
these two democracies for so long
should be strengthened and deepened
as the years go on.
j land, the lilies of France, the lion of
1 Scotland, and the Irish harp. The new
' nationality made up of these elements
I is marked by the three maple leaves' which have become the special em-
, , 71 blern of Canada, The shield is sup-
' P°rted by those traditional heraldic
beasts, the lion and the unicorn, which
can be said to stand for those British i
From the Allied point of view Gal-, dition — undoubtedly well-founded-
lipoli was the bitterest tragedy of the ■ that ships are at an enormous disad-;
war. It disappointed the one real vantage in attacking forts or land;
hope the original Allies had of win- batteries was rashly ignored by the
ning the war unaided. It was the one
strategical conception of ambitious
scope and genuine value on the Allied
side—the only counter-thrust to the
original German drive on the western
front, which pinned the bulk of the
Allied forces dowp to a long-drawn
and agonizing western defensive. Un
fortunately an eastern offensive could;-sufficient stock of mines? Would.the *171 Lam rlft/zx-KnA tin n *\Tzn Uvn-drO . vi/vt Tl ct TfrS
unlucky, but also-that the Dardanel
les could net have been forced. That
is very different from holding that the
ofllensive was bungled from the start >
through failure to co-crdiato the naval
And the military effort. As to tho
- situation on the peninsula, Captain -
Puleston is equally convinced that not ,
; British military blundering . alone—
• and it was acute and continuous—left
j.the Turks in possession of the penin-
< sula. He rates the Turkish army'*
'O’
value.
could not ha*to
lie westtorn L-mt
ran ij.it:arvontioa.
i Gnll’p di -to cut
;o. Buis; r’-i ;j,u l
■'"I
a;i
for company,--Twin Falls
paper.
Latent from the Classroom.
What is meant by tiio
The
Teacher
phrase 'a bolt from tho blue'?”
Pupil (after some cogitation) ■
"Kunii’ng aiw from the policeman.
the sovereignity to which Canada owes
allegiance as a free self-governing na
tion within the British Empire.
Canada has been blessed with vast
natural treasure. The development of
her legacy in her forests and in her
mines, in her fields and in her water
ways, has been resourcefully and
FINDING TOE MOCCASIN my knees regardless for a'- moment
’ of nest, eggd; birds, and all. Among
rcse-hearted twin-flowers and wild
lilies of the valley and snowy dwarf
cornels swung three mossasih flowers
i in a line. The outer one®, like the
I guard-stars of great Altair, were light
I in color. Between them gleamed, like
the Eagle Star itself, a flower of deep
est rose, an unearth!^crystalline color,
like a rain-drenched jacinth. . . .
Then there was 'he day in the
depths of the pine-barrens, The
woods looked like a shimmering pool
of changing greens lapping over a
white sand-land that had been thrust
up from the South -info the very
heart of the North, I followed a
winding wood-path along the high
bank of a stream stained brown and
steeped sweet with a million cedar
roots. , . . #On and on the path led,
FLOWER
The winding wood-road passed;
through dim aisles cf whispering pine !
trees. At a steep place, a bent green j
j stem stretched half across the path,
I and from it swayed a rose-red flower
’r-like a hollow seashell carved out of j jacinth. For the first time I looked
■ down on the mossasin flower, or pink
i lady-slipper, the largest of our native,
I orchids. . . . For the first time my
. eyes wefto opened to see what a love*
’ ly thing a flower could be. In the
■ half-light I knelt on the soft pine
needles and studied long the hollpw
‘purple-pink shell, veined “with crlm-
json, set between two other tapering
petals of greenish-purple, like a sepal
of the same color curved overhead.
The whole flower swayed between two
large curved, grooved leaves.
Leaving the path; I began to hunt
far others under the great trees, and
at last came upon a whole congrega
tion nodding and swaying in. long rows
around the vast trunk® of white pines
which were Old trees, who this country
y/as bom.
not greatly interest France, with her
soil occupied and the enemy within
forty dr fifty miles of her capital.’ The
first Marne campaign had this be
numbing effect—that it prevented a
broad and intelligent use in the first
year of the war of the opportunity to
take Constantinople, isolate Turkey,
draw Bulgaria, Greece and Rumania
into the anti-Teutonic alliance and es
tablish easy and permanent communi
cations with Russia.* + ♦ «*
Captain W. D. Puleston’s brochure,
/‘The Dardanelles Expedition,” pub
lished by the United States Naval In
stitute, and now appearing in a re
vised and enlarged second edition, ap
proaches this tragedy with cool po-
fessional reserve—in the skeptical
spirit of those who have maintained
‘since 1916 that the Gallipoli adven
ture was largely an amateur vagary
inspired by Winston Churchill, As a
naval Officer he believes/that the tra-
Allied naval expedition. But at the ,
Dardanelles there was a factor offset- j
ting the natural superiority of land
defenses. That was the possibility—
or to w probaMllty-ot Turkish'IMk. flnd, ftat n
of preparedness. Had the Turks on s developed a srent
adeoua e supply oj^amm^Uon tor I ln Mu8tapha KemaI_th0 aOul
the torts at the Narrows. Had they a pj, raB)atalC8 at Gallipoli, without
whom the coyeted crests might havo
been lost. The Turks fought* well un
der him. But after Gallipoli the Turk
ish army rapidly deteriorated. It was
I never the same again. There is .noth
ing in tho Gallipoli record to show
that a better organized and equipped
expeditionary army, landed promptly
on the peninsula and reinforced amp
ly instead of by driblets, could not
defense of the Narrows, not have
broken down through exhaustion in
the face of a much hotter conducted
and organized joint naval and 'mili
tary attack? The chief cause of Al
lied depression after the failure of the
naval operation of March 19, 1915,
was the mistaken belief that the
mines which caused such heavy losses
were set adrift by the Turks and float-
!ia a?m“/ue w“7’. ton, with all Ms difficulties, discour-the Allied vessels had struck an un-1 • .... . .
were set aorux oy me iufks uhu d(mQ whaJ. Oeaeral Ian Hamll.
ed down the channel, when. In fact. aU Mj> alfflculUee disoour-
me Aiuoa vossce ™Mll lack ot £OTport> ter01y
suspected mine field freshly Laid b> *nn.„ Tvr„ missed doing.the Turks The second volume of Mr,
Churchill’s recent work contains tes
timony from German and Turkish
sources to show that the straits de
fense was not oversupplied with i
mines and munitions and that the
chance' of a break through was- not
entirely desperate.
Tho author’s conclusion from his
review^ of the naval operations'is- not
alone that they were ineffective and
« «
treatment of the naval
thorn
That \va
.ary offer
made was
...■-1'1 -J
Kentucky Moves to Canada
| There Is now in progress emigra
tion from the United States to Canada
which, according to the Canadian
Pacific Railway, marks a new devel
opment ' in the transfer of cit'zins
from this country to tho Dominion.
Farmers from the tobacco-growing
States of the Union, particularly Ken
tucky, are moving in considcrblo num
bers into the tobacco districts of On
tario and othe provinces; inquiries
are being made of the Canadian
I authorities by many more.| The railway authorities and the of-
| ficials of tobacco companies believe
that this movement will develop into
an important migration. It is held by
J tho field men of tho tobacco com-.
• . *
The books’s
and . land operations is succinct and
graphic and is clarified by rn^ny maps.
It is a critical study which deserves ! panles that growing and marketing
consideration ffor its professional conditions in Canada are better Sian
quality. ' Gatllipoli • was a tragic mill-1 they are in the United States, the
taryfailure, -whatever the reasons; ■ “-n „...i
Judged realistically on
ance it must be accepted as such.
When the author, however, uncon- ’ The effort to stimutato tobacco cul-
j spil no.t having been depleted and the
its perform- j British preferential tariff being to the
advantage of tho Dominion growers.
past jade-green pools- in which gleam- 1 ed buds of the yellow pond-lily, like
lumps^pf floating gold. At last the
’path stretched ''straight toward the
flat-fopped mound that showed ,dim-
and fair through the low trees. . . Near
- the summit of the mound the path | was lost in a foam of the blue, lilac,
Fro^Tthat day I became a hiintor'^ butterfly blossoms of the
- — - t lupine. Little clouds of fragrance
j drifted through the air, as the wind
' swayed rows and rows of the trans-
' parent bells Of the leucothe. The in
most circle Of the mound was carpeted
with dry gray reindeer moss, and. be
fore me, in the centre of the circle
dfooped on slender stems seven rose-
red moccasin flowrs.—Samuel Scoville
Jr., in "Everyday Adventures.”
of orchids’ and a haunter of far-away
forests and lonely marshlands and un
visited hill-tops and mountain sides.
. » . They are strange flowers, these
orchids. When first they were made
out of sunshine, mist, and dew, every
color was granted them save one.
They may wear snow-white, rose-red,
pea.nl and gold, ivory and rose, yeb
lbw, gold and brown, every shade of
crimson and pink. Only the blues are
denied them.
Since that first great day I have
found the moccasin flower, in many
places—bn the tbp of barren hills and
in the black-land® of northern Can
ada, where four feet under- the peat,
the ice never melt® eveii hi midsum
mer. . , , Again in "the. tip-top of
Mount Poctmo, in Pennsylvania. I
had just found tho long-sought host
of a chestnut-sided warbler. Eveni
as I admired the male bird, With his ’ in a body to thank him. A pale face
white chocks and'golden head ahd emerged from the cab. “Don't thank
elmstnut-istrcaked sides, and the four
.eggs like flecked pink pearls, my eye pound out how to stop this thing ten
caught a sight which brought me u’a^rmtes ago.”
"The world needs religion. It needs
religion s distinguished from creeds
born of theologians' disputes.
William J.. Mayo.
f. I ..... i .. L., j r,-.
Durirfg a railroad strike in England
a volunteer engineer on tho London-
Liverpool express performed the re
markable feat of bringig the train in
to Liverpool 25 .minutes ahead of
time. The passengers went forward
'Homt thank
mo,” it gasped, "thank God. I only
t ADAMSON’S ADVENTURES—By O. Jacobsson.
fwfarn ji m !■ ww w,<—
A Uttjc-Big Man.
/AW* YA LITTLE1
/ Runt ! $
■ I the IDEA . PARKING
\ tflGHT IN MY PAIR?
ture in the British Isles does not seem
to be regarded as a menace to the
future of tho plantations under the
British flag on this continent. Can
ada is doing everything in its power
to strengthen the tobacco industry in
all departments, and this greatly en
courages growers as well as the
owners of factores.—N. Y. Sun.
,______ . ,, tK- . .
Peanuts
Some horses are born great in size;
others aclieive magnificence through
name,
gifts,
might very Well have been namq/1
Buckingham, Choate or Georgo Har
vey. But he was so small that he
incurred a name completely sugges
tive of insignificance. a
Neither tho littleness nor the name
'has hurt his earnings much,’ He lias
started four times this year and won
on each occasion. He finished first
in the Brooklyn Handicap, boating
Crusader, *Pompey, Chance Play and
Black Maria. A week later, with 119
pounds up/ lie captured tho Brook
dale. Mere reC'&ntliy tor the second
time hi his life, he was victor in the
Empire City Handicap, shouldering 124
pounds and running the mile and a
quarter itu2:06.
Unlucky Peanuts, not to have bceil
named something like Sir Walter or
Henry of Navarre 1 x j
Arabian Nl&htc. i j
Jliisband (arriving home late)
^Can’t you guess where Pvo been?”
Wife-—”1 can; but tell your story.”
-Answers.
Shouldn’t Wbnjer.
Weather — Ip-hTglit, heavy /
frb^t if clear, Saturday frair, prob*
ably followed by Lui^Sy.-“Mount Car-
Peanuts was denied both these
A son of Ambassador IV., he
tool (Pa.) papas?