HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1937-04-08, Page 31 SurnrnaryoFtheNe.ws
Wheat Mixing Endorsed
VANCOUVER, --The practice of
blending lower grades of wheat, per-
milted by law, allowed the merchan-
dising and sale of lower grades at a
profit to producers, said John Whit-
tle of Vancouver, when he appeared
before the Turgeon Royal Grain Com-
mission Thursday.
Blending or nixing, said the Gen-
eral Manager of the Midland Paci-
fic Terminals, Limited, aided sale of
the wheat and should be continued.
Mr. Whittle termed the practice "a
service to the producer."
Provisions of the Canada Grain
Act prevented mixing of the four top
,grades of 'wheat—No. 1 hard and
Nos. 1, 2 and 3 Northern ---but in
other grades terminal companies
treated the grain and sought to pro-
duce a wheat that was merchantable
and of value to the buyer.
Loading of ships direct from
freight cars carrying grain in bulk
would be "commercially impossible,"
said Mr. Whittle, in explaining oper-
ation of terminal elevators. Direct
freight car to ship loading might be
done if the grain were sacked. All
Canadian grain is handled in bulk.
Farmers Open Road
SLI1VIAX, SASK.—A road -opening
"bee" is the latest thing in self-help
introduced by 13 farmers of Freelon
district, near here. Anxious about
getting their seed grain oter snow -
drifted roads, they armed themselves
with scoop shovels and cleared twelve
miles of roads into Climax. •
Protect Rail Crossing
GALT.—Present protection at the
Dundas Street crossing of the Cana,
dian Pacific Railway here, where 3
jives were snuffed out Good Friday is
"inadequate," a Coroner's Jury de -
(dared at an inquest Into the deaths
Of Mr. and Mrs. John Macey and Miss
live Moore, all Galt residents. The
jury found the deaths of the three,
passengers in an automobile driven
by Macey, was accidentaly and axon -
orated the train crew.
A rider to the verdict recommend-
ed establishment of a twenty -four-
hour protection immediately and sug-
gested steps be taken to provide more
permanent protection. Because there
are eight tracks at the crossing, on
a heavily travelled main highway,
the jury recommeiided standing
freight cars be placed so as not to
obstruct the view in either direction.
Heavy Fire Loss
EDMONTON.—Loss of stock and
damage to the warehouse of Western
Transfer and Storage, Limited, ina.
fire here this week may reach $25,-
000 it is estimated. Large quanti-
ties of wheat, some owned by Her-
man Trelle, world wheat king, were
stored in the building.
Should Pay Morrie: 1"enMore
LUBBOCK, TEXAS— Paul Po-.
penoe, Los Angeles soc:ologist criti-
eised the existing system of paying
bachelors and married men the same
wage scale as "economically unfair,
socially unjust and eugenically un-
sound."' Addressing Texas Technolo-
gical College students, he proposed a
basic wage for all jobs, with an ad-
ditional allowance "of, say, 20 per
Cent. fdr a wife and 15 per cent. for
each dependent child."
Anti -Lynching Bill
WASHINGTON.—The House Judi-
0ia1 Committee have voted 8 to 7 to
teport favorably an anti -lynching bill
sponsored by Rep. Arthur W. Mitch-
ell (D., Ill.), the only negro Con-
gressman.
The measure carries a maximum
$enalty of five years' in prison and a
5,000 fine for any tate, city of
($5,000 fine for any state, city ,or
permit" a prisoner to be taken from
lits custody and "injured or put to
death."
Girls Poor Dishwashers
WOODSTOCK. — Canadian girls
are not efficient in dishwashing, and
are nearly a total loss in darning
socks, Miss Maud 1Vlclntyre, general
secretary of the Woodstock Y.W.C.
A., told members of a service club
Imre.
Use Roller Skates
TORONTO,—Somewhat lost on
100,000 square feet of floor space in
new and larger quarters, 18 employ-
ees of the Canadian Tire Corporation
have solved the problem of providing
snappy customer -service by wearing
roller skates. Alfred Stevens, 200 -
pound manager, conceded that he and
a few others had provided customer -
laughs as well by falling. But the
experiment was such a success that
18 pairs of skates were ordered:
They are the type used in roller -
Skating rinks.
'Canada's Population
Placed at 11,100,000
OTTAWA.—The estimated popu-
tion of Canada in 1937 is 11,100,-
00 acording to a return tables in
e House of Commons from the De-
rtment of Trade and Commerce for
Pierre Gauthier (Lib., X'ortneuf). At
the last census, in 1931, the popula-
tion was 10,376,786. Natural increase
of births over deaths was then esti-
mated at 135,956 a year, In the de-
cade from 1921 to 1931 immigration
amounted to 1,166,290. Inthe same
period the natural increase of popula
tion was estimated at 1,362,000.
Would Prevent Drug
Stores Serving Meals
TORONTO.—Dr. Gordon P. Jack-
son, medical officer of health, said
his deparment Ilad received protests
from restaurants against the grant-
ing of victualling licenses to chain,
and neighborhood drug stores to
serve meals and lunches. Dr. Jackson
said it was a matter for jurisdiction
by the police commission or city
council.
"Fire -Bug"
SARNIA.—Police are patrolling the
St. Clair River front here following a
series of fires which investigators
term the work of a "fire -bug."
Discovery of some oily waste, ap-
parently taken from the journal boxes
of railway freight cars near the
scene of the outbreaks, prompted In-
spector E. L. Jordan and. Investigator
P. S. D. Hardingof the Ontario Fire
Marshal's Department to express on
opinion the fires were of incendiary
origin and th^ work of one person.
The fires broke out at intervals.
Three occurred in the yards of the
Laidlaw Belton Lumber Company and
caused damage estimated at $2,000.
Others were in the old Grand Trunk
freight shed, in a small frame build-
ing owned by Samuel Lampe] and a
sixth in the Sarnia Ice Company's
t rse barn. AB occurred within two
hours.
Last Winter Mail
CHURCHILL.—The iai1 man head-
ed for the Arctic this week.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Po-
lice dog team left here with a full load
of first-class mail for many northern
outposts, including the British Cana-
dian Arctic expedition now wintering
at -Repulse Ba;, on the Arctic Circle
at the top of Hudson Bay.
' This will be the last mail delivered
to the north from here until a boat
sails for northern ports about Aug. 1.
Farm Minister Acts Also As Pilot
QUEBEC. — Hon. Bona Dussault,
Quebec Minister of Agriculture, has
no intention of ccnfining his activities
t- the soil, he declares.
The Minister is a steamer pilot by
profession and plans to pilot the
steamship Manchester Port up the St.
Lawrence tt • Montreal when -•she ar-
rives frown overseas in a few days.
"It will give me a rest," the pilot -
legislator said.
Radio -Phone For Ships
OTTAWA.—To cope with perils of
navigation on the Great Lakes the
Government is seeking to have radio-
telephone stations installed between
the Head of the Lakes and Kingston,
Lieut. -Commander 0. P. Edwards,
Chief of Air Services, announced here.
Ships which do not feel they can
afford a wireless operator to carry on
wireless code transmission probably
would be willing to instal telephone
quipment if there were telephone sta-
tions easily reached on shore, Mr. Ed-
wards said. A regular operator would
not be necessary and any member •f
the ship's crew could call for help in
time of emergency.
Honors Vincent Massey
ABERDEEN.—Aberdeen University
has conferred an honorary degree of
Doctor of Laws and Literature (LL.
D.) upon Hon. Vincent Massey, Cana-
dian High Commissioner. Principal
of the university is Dr. W. Hamilton
Fyfe, former Principal of Queen's Uni-
versity, Kingston, Ont.
Canada's War Memorial
OTTAWA. — Tho National War
Monument will be erected in Ottawa
some time this summer, Works Minis -
t r Cardin told the House of Com-
mons this week.
The monument, the work of the
March brothers, has been completed
in England for many months. One
reason for not bringing it to Ottawa
has bee: the conflicting views on
where it should be erected here. The
Minister said the Government "will
h-.ve to make up its mind pretty •
quick because it will be erected some
time this summer."
The monument probably will be
placed in Connaught Square, in the
downtown section of the city, which
eventually will be a wide plaza.
Threaten Strike in May
LONDON.—Autobus conductors and
drivers theeraten to clog the Corona-
tion machinery by calling a strike for
early in May unless their present 8 -
hour working day is cut to 7% hours.
Ernest Devlin°General Secretary of
the Transport Workers' Union, con-
firmed his organization had givon the
bus company a month to make up its
mind. Employers indicated a willing-
ness to discuss the matter, and it was
believed a crisis would be averted.
Merits of Latin
TORONTO—Attacking the propos-
ed courses of study for secondary
schools on the grounds that Latin was
not included as a first-year su,'; ;et,
Prof, C, 33, Sissons of Victoria (701•
lege charged that the revised courses
were the greatest propaganda for pri-
vate schools that had been promoted
"in our day."
It woplci ho turning back the hands
of the clock" if the program went in-
t- operation in its present form, he
maintained, craving the right for a
school Principal to be allowed to
choose between Latin and French in
the first year, -
Dr, George F. Rogers, Chief Ins'pec-
tor of Secondary Schools, replied it
was likely permission would be grant-
ed to substitute Latin for French if a
teacher craved it, But he did not
think it would be a good thing to do.
"We are not trying to kill Latin but
to help it, We are trying to keep
away from it a lot of pupils who are
not congenitally disposed to Latin. A
classics man, a principal not far from
Toronto, tried out the experiment and
found that the pupils 'n the second
year made more progress in -Latin be-
cause they were a selected group,"
Dr. Rogers said.
Tho plan is to make French a,com-
pulsory subject in the first year; then
in the second year, if the pupil has a
taste for languages, he may take Ladt
in.
and To Get
Parley z";: eport
•
C.B.R.E. Officials Confer With
C.N.R. an Higher -Pay
Claims
MONTREAL. — Officers of thep
Canadian Brotherhood of . Raily�'
Employees announced Sunday raga's,
that a report on their Saturday wage
conference with Canadian National
Railways officials would be laid be-
fore the Smiley Conciliation Board,
45
otels, 1
Los
inquiring Into their .;Glainas for high-
er pay,' -
The C.73,R.E:, seeking full return
of 10 per cent, depression wage -outs
for its 15,000 C N.It, workers, was
not included in the Easter Monday
settlement by which the two major
roads will return -10 per cent, cuts
by next April 1. to 117,000 members
of eighteen international unions,
:They negotiated separately with the
National Railway.
On Saturday, Grand Chairman A.
R, Mosher and other C.B.R.E. o1fi-
Ors met with A, J. Hills, C.N,It.
personnel director, and other corn
pany officers. After that the union
rl men met together, and later announ-
'; oed the meeting would be reported
to the Smiley board, whose report is
due shortly.
There was no announcement on
what had transpia:d at the meetings.
Quit in Disg st
Goderich Music Society Tender
Resignations
GODERICH. Partly because of
a poor attendance at a concert in
aid of the Citizens' Band, and for
other reasons, all officers of the God-
,erich Music Society and Bandmaster
J. E. Huckins, have tendered their
resignations to the Town Council.
The officers are: E. R. Wigle, Presi-
dent;; . D, A. Campbell, Secretary,
'and J. M. Roberts, Treasurer.
"What's the use?" an official
rsked. "The public doesn't care, the
landsmen are indifferent, so why
hould we work our heads off and
get nowhere?"
The resignations have not yet
een accepted. Town Council is azak-
g an effort to keep the organize -
ion together, in view of the sum-
er's ,program of Coronation Day,
ominion Day, and Old Home Week.
Continued Violation of Rules De-
spite Warnings Given As the
Reason.
Forty-five hotels and twelve clubs
will not be allowed to renew their
beer and wine licences; it was an-
nounced April 1st by Chairman E,'
G. Qdette of, the Liquor Control
Board of Ontario.
Continued violation of.. rulings of
the board, despite numerous requests
and warnings that regulations be
strictly regarded, causes the cancel
lation of the authorities of most of
the hotels, Mr. Odette stated.
Decision of the.boardx;e.
fill 'study, that the clubs" were be
operated, "for purely pecuniary gain?'
caused cancellation of club authorit.
les, he said.
In the case of a "very few" .of
the hotels, applications` for renew -
cls will be considered, 'if structural
changes of the premises are made.
The hotels are scattered over -a
wide area, ranging from Timmins and
Sault Ste. Marie to Eastview `and
Thorold. The complete list, as re-
leased by Mr. Odette, follows, listed
alphabetically under their municipal-
ities.
iLicense
.teles Inn; Thorold, Ormond Hotel,
nmmit Hotel; Timmins, Floria Hotel,
Kingston Hotel; Toronto, Baltimore
1'tote!, •Commerce Hotel, Frontenac
}antra Hotel, Savoy Hotel, Shamrock
MIMotei, Tudor Hotel; Welland, Roma
otel; Windsor, Bodega Hotel, Col-
lgo Avenue Inn, Dixie Hotel, Grand
ote1, :highway Hotel, Hollywood Ho-
mperial' Hotel, Killarney Castle
el, Ontario Hotel, Shamrock . Ho -
Verdi Hotel.
CL'QBS:—
?.mherstburg, Young Rangers Club;
Awa, Preston Athletic and Social
: Sault Ste Marie, Old Stone
ocial Club, Troubadour Club;
o amazon• --prat; Erin - Grove
;tic's Club, Irish -Canadian Club,
. ,• fecal Club, Macedonian So -
Club, ',Recess Club, St. Andrew's
ridge Club; Welland, 'Hungarian
elf -Culture Society.
anta'a Will Enter
Shot") At Glasgow
HOTELS:—
Alfred, Tierney Hotel; Belleville,=
Crystal Hotel; Bridgeport, Lancaster
Hotel; Drayton, Royal Hotel; Past -
view, Beechwood Hotel; Hamilton,
Star Hotel; Markdale, Revere House
Niagara Falls, New Arlington Hotel,
Victoria Hotel; North Bay, Royal
Royal Flotel; Ottawa, Capital Flotel,
Gilmour Hotel, Ritz Hotel, York Ho-
tel; Sandwich West, Elmwood Hotel;
Sault Sty. Marie, American Hotel, In-
ternational Hotel, Lock City Hotel,
New Ontario Hotel, Victoria Hotel,
New Toronto Hotel; South Woodslee,
sOTTAWA—Canada will be repre-
sented in the British Empire Exhibi-
tion to be held in Glasgow in 1938,
the Department of Agriculture dis-
closed recently.
The Canadian pavilion was one of
the outstanding features to be seen
at the last great show held at Wem-
bley in 1924-25, it said. Huge
crowds are expected to witness the
Glasgow show, for, with better facili-
ties in transportation the 1901 rec-
ord at Glasgow of 11,000,000 visit-
ors will be greatly surpassed, said
the department.
Ninety per cent of the 1,750,000
insurable persons in. London County,
Eng., are at work.
feel Plants To Benefit
From ritish Boom
SAULT STE, MARIE. — Canadi-
an steel plants are 'bound to benefit
from. a boom that has swept over
the English steel industry, Lard
Riverdale, industralist of Sheffield,
England, said on his arrival in the
Sanit Sunday.
Conditions that have created .a
"terrible shortage" in the British in-
dustry, necessitating delays of as
much as two years in delivery of
steel machinery, should work to
Canada's good, the British peer de -
dared.
"We broke up our ships for scrap
and now we haven't enough ships"
he went on, declaring Britain faced
a deficiency of 2,000,000 tons of
scrap and 2,000,000 tons of pig
iron.
Lord Riverside estimated the cur-'
,
rent boom would last three or four
years. The mills operated at 95 per
cent. of capacity before the rearm-
ament program was instituted. Now
improving domestic conditions and
an upward trend in export business
have helped swell the demand.
But there will be no general
European war during the next few
years, Lord Riverdale believes. "May-
be not for fifty years," he declared.
Auto Crashes
Take Four Lives
Two Persons Killed Near Corn-
wall and One at Ingersoll
TORONTO. — Four people were
killed in Ontario motor accidents
over the week -end and many others
were injured. The worst crash took
place two miles east of Cornwall
when a sedan carrying six people
leaped from the highway and struck
a large tree, killing two.
One man was killed near Chat-
ham when his light roadster crash-
ed into theback end of a truck,
and another lost his life near In-
gersoll when he allowed his car to
get out of control while reaching
to receive an object from his small
son.
The dead are:
Alfred Grainger, 52, of Detroit,
Mich. '
Alfred M. Sawyer, 28 of Merlin.
Francis St. Louis, 23 of Cornwall.
Mrs. Lionel Massen, 21, of Corn-
wall.
SEVERAL INJURED
Among the injured, some of whom
are in a critical condition, are Mrs.
Francis St, Louis, Floyd Bodway,
`Masse—Pa, -N.Y.,; Mrs, Mai*- Terriah
and Leo Carriere, Cornwall; Jerry
Macdonald, Merlin; and Miss Mary
Marshall, Blenheim.
Floyd Bodway was at the wheel
of the car that crashed into the tree
at Cornwall Saturday night. Be-
cause of the serious condition of the
survivors, the police have not been
able to ascertain definitely what
caused the crash.
The wrecked car was so tightly
wrapped around the tree that a
powerful tow truck failed to budge
it until some of the part had been.
removed.
Winnipeg Ratepayers
Threaten Tax Strike
WINNIPEG. — A tax strike looms
in Winnipeg unless the city reduces
expenditures. At a meeting presid-
ed over by Joseph Stepnuk, Presi-
dent of the North Winnipeg Tax-
payers' Association, 400 citizens
agreed to refuse payment of taxes
unless the 014kg slashes its expendi-
ture.
When The. Sky Was The Limit of Enjoyment
,cf school children crowd beach at Long Beach, Cal., to participate in annual ite
i ; . - ^^t, kites of all sizos battled for supre macy. Some of the larger ones reached an altitude
e "01 r,;:
Oshawa Girl
Seriously Hurt
Hurled From Open Roadster
When Car Hits Bridge --
Drives Escapes.
OSHAWA. Helen Fontaine,
aged 18, of 63 Tamarac Avenue,
Oshawa, suffered a fractured spine
when an automobile in which she
was riding with I3ernard Higgins, 19,
of 306 Olive Avenue, 'Oshawa, crash-
ed into a bridge near Cream of Bar-
ley Park Sunday afternoon.
Higgins told Provincial Constable
Price Norris that a tire blow-out
had caused him to lose control of the
car as it approached the bridge.
The girl was thrown out of the
open roadster and over a bank. She
was taken to Bowmanville Hospital
and examined by Dr, V. H. Storey,
after which- she was removed to
hospital at Oshawa.
Higgins receivecl only minor in-
juries. No charges have been laid
by the police.
Australian Girl
Touring;. 'M to -3
St ° dv lts Pe®nle
Educationist in Sydney Agric-Itur-
al Bureau Interested in Winni-
peg's A"tivities.
WINNIPEG. — Miss Lorna Byrne,
Bachelor of Science in Agriculture
from the University of Sydney, Aus-
tralia, is very interested in this city
because she saw the Grain Exchange
at work, attended the Manitoba
Dairy Association's Convention, and
spoke to the Beekeepers' convention.
Miss Bryne does educational work
in the agricultural bureau, a divis-
ion of the department of agriculture
New South Wales.
Miss Byrne is on the last lap of
a round -the -world trip financed by
the Carnegie Corporation of New
York, who gave her a "visitor's
grant" to undertake her work of
observation and study. The grant
has taken her to Russia, Germany
Poland, Sweden, the British Isles,
the United States and now Canada.
She laughed about the handclasp.
"We have a frightful hand.gripning
in Australia I've found out by trav-
elling around the world. In England
some of the women I greeted heart .
Irr-Ii,rdffilt irildti '
Because her job in Australia is
to travel all over the state of New
South Wales to help farm men and
women organize to teach them what
facilities are available for their as-
sistance, Miss Byrne has studied
rural people particularly everywhere
she went. In Russia, for instance,
she asked about the large blue van
that stood in a field. "Oh, that's the
blue wagon," they told her proud-
ly. "Mothers who are working in the
fields come here at noon to look af-
ter their children." It was kind of
a travelling nursery.
There was work thriving every-
where in Germany, too, but with a
difference. Though the Hitler Youth
Movement trained children in camps,
you had to admit it had its advan-
tages when you saw "those sturdy
little bodies". She asked the children
if they liked wearing their uniforms;
there was no doubt in the exumber-
ance of their answer.
uakers Object T
Anti -Gas Drills
Think They Give Children Wrong
Ideas; Need Faith
PHILADELPHIA. — A memoran-
dum issued by the English Friends'
Guild of Teachers on the question of
anti -gas drills in schools, has been
received by the Emergency Peace
Campaign. Office here. The stand of
the British Quakers on the question
is warmly approved by officials of
the campaign and by Quaker groups
in Philadelphia.
"The Friends Guild of Teachers,"
says the memorandum, "views with
alarm the possible effect of such
drill.
"It is inevitable that the ideas set
up by such drill must cause great
harm to children ... by bringing
possible horrors forcibly before them
at a highly impressionable age ..
The danger of gas warfare in admit-
tedly real. Yet it is certain that anti -
gas drill must deepen our mutual
fear and distrust and so help to
destroy the faith that war can be .
avoided.
"Without committing ourselves as
to possible action in time of war,
we feel obliged as educators to pro-
test vigorously against any attempt
to enforce anti -gas dill in time of
peace on the child population, as be-
ing pschologically bad for the child-
ren and in every way opposed to
the growth of right relntienehins
between the nations,"