HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1938-09-22, Page 6NAMES
in the
NEWS
ADOLF HITLER
To citizens of our Western
World these last tense weeks
Adolf Hitler of Germany has ap-
peared to be the most momentous
figure in all history, by whom our
civilization stands or falls.
This man has caught the coun-
tries of Europe napping. They
did not believe that a so-called
mystic, visionary, fanatic (what
you will) could be a coldly prac-
tical planner. Not until Austria
had been annexed did we wake
up to the fact that this wild-eyed
dreamer -orator is swiftly turning
into reality and substancethe
shadows of his own mind. We are
finding, too late, that Hitler in
his autobiography, "Mein Kampf"
(written 15 years ago) meant ex-
actly what he said.
A native of Austria, the one-
time bricklayer's helper and paint-
er of picture postcards, was em-
bittered towards his lowly lot
early in youth. The war expand-
ed his horizon and with it, his dis-
content. The shame of Germany's
defeat acting on his overemotional
nature became a determining
force in Hitler's life. He has felt
his divine mission to be to awaken
Germany to revolt against the
Treaty of Versailles. By what
means he is accomplishing his
ends. we all know.
Hitler is a master of staging, an
artist at playing on other people's
emotions. Into his word§ as an
orator he puts all the elementary
force and stupendous vitality that
are his to command. Screaming,
sobbing hysterically ... .
The man is still an enigma.
The answer to his personality -
riddle will be revealed only by sub-
sequent history.
Peak Is Reached
In Maple Syrup
Top Production Figure Again
Touched This Year
In Canada
Total production of maple sugar
and syrup, expressed as maple sy-
rup, amounted to 3,300,700 gallons
in 1938, the. Dominion Bureau of
Statistics reports.
This was double in volume the
short crop of 1,673,440 gallons in.
1937 and equal to the 1929, the year
of peak production. The 1938 crop
was valued at $3,849,000, compared
with $2,245,000 in 1937. Although
the duality of the crop was gener-
ally good, prices were somewhat
lower than In 1937 owing to the
heavy supplies. Only 10 per cent.
of the 1938 crop was estimated to
have been made into sugar as com-
pared with 25 per cent. in 1937.
Lots Of Sugar, Too
Production of syrup in Ontario
amounted to 570,800 gallons as com-
pared with 439,700 gallons last
year. Maple sugar production to-
talled 79,000 pounds.
The combined value of sugar and
syrup produced in 1938 by Ontario
was $853,200,
LIFE'S LIKE THAT
By Fred Netter
"He can't join our army .... he's under the age limit!"
VOICE OF
THE PRESS
CANADA
SIGNIFICANT TREND
A significant trend in all fairs,
large and small, is the prominence
given to boys' ' and girls' club
work. It is one of the best fea-
tures the exhibitions have ever in-
troduced.—Farmer's Advocate.
WHAT NEXT FOR THE NORTH?
Jim Curran of the Sault has
discovered that there used to be
white Indians along James Bay
and now some bird at Timmins
has discovered white blueberries.
Tall tales from the North! — St.
Catharines Standard.
IN PRAISE OF SOME DRIVERS
The total motor accidents in
which children are injured while
playing on the streets is appalling,
but still more striking is the num-
ber of times in which accidents are
avoided, either by what appears
to be a pure miracle, or by re-
markable efforts on the part of
the motorists.—Guelph Mercury.
ALL BRUTES TOGETHER
The Philadelphia prison horror
grows worse as the details are re-
vealed. Twenty-six men were
locked in the eight -by -ten cells,
and steam heat turned on while
the only ventilation was from a
small grating in the roof of each
cell. Twenty-two men were taken
out unconscious after two days,
and four men were dead, literally
baked to death. This is civilization
in Philadelphia. No wonder Ja-
pan, Russia, Germany, Italy and
others want to know in what re-
spect we think we excel them.—
Hamilton Spectator.
HORSE AND BUGGY DAYS
We have no quarrel with those
who refer to the "horse and bug-
gy days." It is an apt term, very
descriptive of an earlier era. But
there is a sound objection to those
who use the phrase in a tone of
scorn.
The "horse and buggy days"
were important in the develop -
men of Canada and of Canadian-
ism. They produced the men and
women who made the present era,
with its conveniences and com-
forts. They made these modern
days possible.
Thus, when one refers to the
"horse and buggy days" it would
be better to do so in a spirit of
respect, rather than a spirit of
sarcasm.—Windsor Star.
The EMPIRE
"THINKING" UNDER THE GUN
Even the obdurate citizen who
still refuses to acquire a (radio)
set will not easily escape the voice
of authority, for it is planned to
spread a network of loud -speakers
over all the towns so that the
German going about his ordinary
occasions shall not miss the in-
structions of his leaders. Loud-
speaker columns in the streets and
subterranean loud -speakers boom-
ing through gratings in the pave-
ment will impress even on the
most heedless citizen the latest
edicts of Nazi headquarters. When
the full blast of this propaganda
is added to that of a press com-
pletely controlled, the canalization
of public thought will, it is reck-
oned, be as complete as it can
be made. The German who may
still be independent enough to
wish to hear what the rest of the
world is saying does so at his
peril, for consignment to a 'camp
may be the consequence of receiv-
ing sentiments of which his gov-
ernment does not approve. The
total effect is a smothering of
thought in an intelligent people
for which history holds no parallel.
—Manchester Guardian.
Tight shoes are the greatest
blessing on earth—they make you
forget all your other troubles.
F. Billings.
Prince Arthur Passes
Well known in Canada through
his own visits and the connections
of his relatives, Prince Arthur of
Connaught, ABOVE, died after a
long illness in London, England.
In recent years his health forced
him out of public life, but twice
before the war and once in 1917
he visited Canada in the course
of his official duties. He was in
his 56th year.
230,000,000 Bushels
Canadian Wheat ..
Are Exportable
This Year's Crop Biggest Since
1932; Wheat Board Expect-
. ed to Handle Most of Har-
vest
Canada probably will have more
than 230,000,000 bushels of this
year's wheat available to sell In
world markets, Government figures
Showed last week.
The Dominion Bureau of Statis-
tics in its first estimate of this
year's Canada field crop .yield set
the wheat harvest at 358,433,000
bushels, nearly. double the final es-
timate of last year's crop, which
was 182,410,000 bushels and the
highest production since 1932 when
443,061,000 bushels were harvested.
Average yield from 1928 to 1937
was 329,761,000 bushels.
Nearly Double Last Year
Horne consumption of wheat
likely will be between 110,000,000
and 120,000,000 bushels, leaving
more than 230,000,00 for export.
In Washington, the United States
Agricultural Department estimated
the U.S. wheat crop would be 939,-
972,000 bushels. The U.S. has an-
nounced a subsidy program for ex-
port of 110,000,000 bushels of wheat
and 5,000,000 barrels of flour.
It is expected at Ottawa that
practically the entire Canadian
crop will be handled by the Canadi-
an Wheat Board, which will pay the
Western farmer 80 cents a bushel
for No. 1 Northern at Fort William,
The price also has been fixed on
other grades and any losses suffer-
ed by the board in marketing the
wheat at a lower price will be met
by the Dominion Treasury.
Germany To Buy
No Extra Wheat
The German Department of
Food Supply stated this year's pur-
chases of wheat in Canada prob-
ably would not exceed the normal
quantity.
A spokesman said that in ac-
cordance with the German -Cana-
dian trade agreement, an average
quantity of grain was purchased
annually in Canada.
This mean about 2,000,000 bush-
els. During the last fiscal year
Germany bought 1,935,836 bush-
els from this country and the year
before 1,678,896 bushels, accord-
ing to Dominion Bureau of Statis-
tics figures.
The
By ELIZABETH EEDY
K SHELF
"IMPORTANCE OF LIVING"
By Lin Yutang
Here is a book to enjoy by tid-
bits—to pick up and put down at
your leisure. It is a witty, wise
and delightful summing-up of a
distinguished Easterner's outlook
on life.
In Lin Yutang you will find:
a widely traveled, widely read
man with the gentle wisdom of an
ancient race and the practical out-
look of a modern man ... a wit-
ty, intelligent, tolerant, delightful
companion . . . ready to discuss
your favorite topics with you,
whatever they may De ... full of
stimulating thoughts about every
phase of life from your marriage
to the tobacco you. smoke, from a
religion that fills a need in your
Life to landscapes, from the pleas-
ures of literature to those of eat-
ing, from international affairs to
arranging flowers . a philoso-
pher with a deeply satisfying phil-
osophy of living—not in a seclud-
ed tower but in the hectic world
of today.
"The Importance of Living," by
Lin Yutang . . . Toronto: Mc-
Clelland & Stewart, 215 Victoria
Street.
News
Parade
13y Elizabeth Ledy
SAFE TRANSIT -An amusing an-
gle on the situation in the Mediter-
ranean: Travellers " malting the
crossing to North Africa from the
Continent are patronizing Italian
boats more . and more, so that
French shipping companies report
a falling -off in traffic. Why give
French steamers the go-by? Be-
cause they have been targets
over and over again for. "pirate"
bombing and torpedoing. Italian
ships aren't bombed, torpedoed, so
your travellers figure they're safe
aboard 'em.
TEN OBJECTIVES—Don't you be-
lieve Adolf Hitler when he says in
his Nuremburg speech that Ger-
many doesn't want to take Alsace-
Lorraine.
Upon the wall of the Feldherrn-
halle in Munich, which has. been
made into a Nazi shrine, is a great
scroll bearing the words, "God
Make Us Free" and on either side
five wreaths, with flowers renewed
every day. Each wreath carries
the color of a lost province and
not a day passes without tens of
thousands of Germans coming there
and mourning their loss. Ten
names are inscribed on the scroll,
the names of "the lost provinces":
Alsace-Lorraine; the Palatinate;
Schleswig-Holstein; East Prussia;
Memel and Danzig; Sudeten Deut-
schland; South Tyrol and South
Styria, Posen, Silesia; the Colon-
ies.
ON WITH THE NEW—The money
has to come from somewhere. So
if part of the tax burden is lifted
from real estate (which would be a
good thing, don't you agree?) other
new taxes,,will have to be imposed,
so the. Ontario Government says, to
make up the difference.
Three new sources of taxation
are under consideration, then, by
the staff at Queen's Park and will
come up for action at the next ses-
sion of the Legislature: an amuse-
ment tax, to be collected by each
municipality; a sales tax imposed
by municipalities; increase of pro-
vincial gasoline tax from six to
seven cents extra proceeds to go
to muncipalities.
The Ontario mayors wlio get
pretty mad sometimes should be
pleased,with these proposals which
should bring more revenue to their
respective towns and cities, and re-
duce the number of sales of pro-
perties for tax arrears.
DECEITFUL FRUIT — Those
peaches you bought looked won-
derful in the store under their de-
•ceptive covering of rosy gauze but
when you got them home, you
found them' to be green as grass
and hard as bullets. But it isn't
just peaches . . . every sort of
fruit grown in Ontario is shipped to
market in an immature, unpalat-
able state in order to catch the best
prices, quick, before they drop.
Ilow long has this been going on?
Oh, for years and years, but nobody
has said anything much and the
growers have consistently got away
with it. But now a storm has been
raised iu the press of Ontario
which may result in action being
taken.
THE WEEK'S QUESTION—What'
alignment of European powers is
the Kingdom of Greece likely to
swing in with? Answer: Greece is
becoming more and more closely
affiliated with Britain and France
and the other democratic powers.
The silk spinning caterpillar
(Bonbyx mori) is cultivated exten-
sively in the Far East and Europe
for the production of silk on a
commercial scale. Japan produces
about 80 per cent. of the raw silk
available to international trade. •
He has mastered all points who
has combined the useful with the
agreeable.—Horace.
THE WONDERLAND OF OZ
.lifter leaving the Whimsies, Guph
continued on his journey. He want-
ed to get to the Country of the
Growleywogs, and in order to do
that he must cross the Hippie Land,
a hard thing' to do. For the Ripple
Land was a succession of hills and
valleys, all very steep and rocky,
which changed places constantly by
rippling. While Guph was climbing
a hill It sank underneath him and
beeame e valley, and while ho was
doseending into a valley It rose up
and carried him to the tot) of a hill.
This was Very perplexing to the
traveler and a stranger might have
thought it Impossible to cross the
Ripple Land at all, but Guph knew
that if he kept steadily on he would
get to the end at last. So he paid
no attention to the hills and val-
leys and kept plodding along Just
as though he was walking on level
ground. The result of this wise per-
sistence was that the General tinnily
reached firmer soil and after pene-
trating a dense forest carne to the
Dominions of the Growleywogs.
No sooner had he crossed the bor-
der of this tearful Domain when
two guards seized him and carried
him before the Grand Gallipoot of
the Growleywogs, who scowled up-
on him ferociously and asked him
why ho dared to intrude upon his,
territory. 1 am the Creat ,Lord
High General or the Invincible Ar-
my or the Gnome. Laing and my name
is (4' ph," was the reply. "Ail the
world trembles when that name is
meniionecL" At 11,18 pompous
speech the Growls C wu!rs gave a
shout of jeering laughter -
Suddenly one of them caught the
gnome. in his strong arms and toss-
ed him high into the air. Guph was
terribly shaken when he fell upon
the hard ground but he appeared to
take no notice of the impertinence
and composed himself to speak
again to the Grand (,allipoot "My
toaster, the Gnome Ming, has ri''t
me here to confer with you. 'lie
wishes your assistance to conal',,,
the Land of Oz." I4'ere the General,
paused and the 'Grand C,allipoot
scowled upon him and said. "Go
on,"
Skunk Is Cause
Of Near -Death
Waterloo Golf Club Stewardess
Narrowly Escapes Asphyxia -
Con When Men Attempt to
Finish Off Animal
GALT.—As an aftermath of the
visit of a skunk to the Waterloo.
Golf' and Country Club, Mrs. J.
Murphy, the stewardess of the
club, was put iu hospital suffering
from 'carbon -monoxide poisoning. .
She was first treated with a pul-
motor and then put in an oxygen
tent. It appears that employees of
the club first attempted to get rid
of the nuisance by attaching a hose
to the exhaust of a motor car and
placing it in the stied. Mrs. Mur-
phy was, working in the kitchen of
the adjacent clubhouse, and it is
said the deadly fumes permeated
the kitchen and Mrs. Murphy sud-
denly became ill. She was takes
home and hours later her trouble
was diagnosed as carbon -monoxide
poisoning.
She was removed to the hospital,
and was soon out of danger, but
she had a close call.
Pays Final Tribute
His Eminence Rodrigues Car-
dinal Villeneuve, Archbishop of
Quebec, was one of the large num-
ber of princes of the church who
attended the funeral rites in St.
Patrick's Cathedral, New York, of
Patrick Cardinal Hayes, late ad-
ministrator of the largest Roman
Catholic diocese in America.
Greater usic
Inteiiest Urged
Sir Ernest MacMillan Advocates
That Canada Hearn to Stand
On Her Own Feet Musically.
Sir Ernest MacMillan, head of
the Toronto Conservatory of Mus-
ic, was the luncheon speaker on
Women's and Music Day at the
C.N.E. this year. He urged Can-
ada to stand on her own feet in
the music world. No longer should
she depend on the United States
for musical nourishment any more
than she should for defence, Sir
Ernest said.
Unifying Power of Music
Support for music financially
and otherwise was relatively
small, he added. In laying foun-
dations for future development of
the nation and "unifying, civiliz-
ing and peace -making" power of
music should not be forgotten.
"If the various niad nations to-
day would take off a little time
from their feverish armament pre-
parations and learn some of each
other's songs they would find
themselves nearer to peace than
all the disarmament conferences
and non -aggression pacts are ever
likely to bring them," Sir Ernest
believed.
Treat Horses To
Day In Country
Pegasus Club Is Host to 100
Horses From Gotham's
Hot Streets
Dobbin had his day at the Pega-
susu Club, Rockleigh, N.J., as 100
horses frolic in the country away
from NeW York's hard city streets.
"All the fun and relaxation of an
honest -to -goodness day in the coun-
try will be theirs," promised Doug-
las G. Hertz, millionaire art con-
, noisseur and sportsman, who acts
as host to the animals at a day of
carrots and oats, contests and fresh
air,
Etch equine guest on arrival at
the picnic grounds will be present-
ed with a large straw hat bearing
the legend "Ye, hto, baby."
Contests to determine the most
glamorous, the most faithful and
the most intelligent are on the pro-
gram and prizes include rubber
shoes for New York's unfriendly
streets.