HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1939-02-17, Page 3r
9:
�j +,.�• ',^�`Qp!�(q�, .µa1. i r, , �1 r' '� .
Seen on the +
(Continued from nogg 0)'
en to'build build a umidit '(t work about; a
* topic in ,the' Soolal Stuidde0 r(;pxF,e�a -
„ ® Q and the class de in the throes of 4ulak- Ot
i %%
OLinty Papers )ng Cartes re-ldvie. They have d Wen �,,(/
as their medium of exputessda11 a flrat 046 own
puppet 'show In ane cosher a group
(Continued from Page 2)
Jp 'doing 'arithmebic�-�buildog %0D ,pup•
ped show silage-••'ha'vdn;g. -made their
Thursday, Feb: 9
ployee of a butcher shop in- Dash,-
drawings, measuredand worked the
Haan. Ian Ma.ckeugAe rose in the
House of Commons last night in his
+wood, head injuries and suspected
'lumber salvaged from (packing cases,
'they' are now putting it together sove
on du -emetic dePenco. He did not
fraoture of the skull, condition crib-
cal; Andrew Musser, 74, retired, Iiv-
.,speak
,(flet ilt.will fart On top -of the teacher's-
very long but he created a de-
�ded 'stir while be did speak, There ;
ung in Dashwood, but formerly of
table. Two -of them are having a, ra-
werr times when the speaker could ,
when
London, head ,injury, fractured: hip,
tiher strenuous argument about a col•-
new joint which threatens to comeJo
rot get ores
the file debate Mr.
severe ,lacerations and extreme shack,
critical; Melvin Restemeyei.
loose each time the stage is moved.
Mackenzie was paying a tribute
condition
24, farmer on the 1141, concession of
They appeal to the teacher wiho sends
w -
that ga}laa2t soldier and, }�rdlldemt law-
yar, Col. Rarlst[on, and one of the Can` ,
Hay Twp., cousin of Hubert Reste-
thein to the cupboard to ,observe how
servative members e1houted be Is an-
m Byer, head indury void fractured) an-
k1e; Edwin- Midler, 29, employee of a
tihe joints there are fitted. 1n am-
other corner several are mixing corn
other grafter. This raised the blood
'hie threw into his
garage at Dashwood, head injuries.
starch ands ealt according to,a recipe,
of the Minister and
'effort all the vigor 'of , his highland: e
Latest reports state that the men. are
and monlili ng puppet heads from the
'ancestry and if the member makingeopeyer,
all showing slight improvement. Mr.
11184,0Mal. We :see two who haven't
'� statement Add not feel ashamed,,
Musser and Hu'Rest both
been; very exact in their measure-
he surely should have. COL Ralston
• with skull Injury,ry, ase the most ser-
mantle-,onetwith •a dough too �stdcicy,
was one of the mosit straight -forward
tously hurt: Exeter Times -Advocate.
another with -one too crumbly. Some
and one of ' the cleanest living
mem-heads
others are well on thdnr way, shaving
bars of this House during his mem-
of Cortes, Montezuma, hiddans,
berslhirp. He gave his best as many
CKNX, WINGHAM
Spaniards, 'horsies,,etc., using picture
(boobs as their guides rto the features(.
others did in active service during the
'War,
In Uhe book -shelf corner others ane
Great He is so brilliant in his
100 •Kcs. , 250 Metres
,looking thtrou)gh, books, old geogra-
'profession that Its ',services are in de -
WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
phies, encyclopaedias, etc., for 41tor-
miand to -such an extent that -hie bus! -
ness is worth between fifty and Bev-
Frid'ay, Feb. 17-10.30 a.m., Salva-
matron about, the costumier tlhey are
making. They have buts of lace,
e'n't•y-five thousand -dollars per year.
tion Army; 11.15, Beauty That En-
plumes, velvet, and leather, which
He served as council on the Brian
gun investigation, and accepted no
duxes; 12.45 pm., Poultry Talk; 15.15,
they have rescued from some rag hag.
Dees for ieervof and in view of
"`Oldppings"; 6.45, CKNX 11111 -1311 -lies.
Still others ere composing -dialogue,
dividing' the Conbee story into• episodes
flee and inn view of the high standing
Saturday, 'Feb. 1&--10.30 a.m., Shut-
suitable for the show, searching for
that Gal. Ralston bas, it surely is un -
Ins; 12.45 p.m., CKNX Ell-Biildes; 7,
direct quotations they can use, even
fortunate that any person would' stoop
Wes McKnd.ght; 7.45, Barn Dance
asking for a Spanish, dictionary at.
to 'calling him a ,grafter. Notaii.ug that
'ins
the public library'. Another group has-
I have heard the House7 was more .
Sunday, Feb. 19-10.30 a.m., Th -L,
several giognaP'hies. spread out and
bittemlry msenled.
Music Box; 11, Winigham United
are painting Mexican and' Spanish,
Mr: Mackenziebad not been on his
,Cbaureh; 12.30 p.m., Kern Sioble's Amar
scienes.Dor back drops for, the stage,'
feet three minutes before 'he had: op-
teunse; 5.30, Gracie Fields; 7, St. An-
fashioning carts, temples and other
position members who had denounced
drew's ChnrnclL
properties, from cardboard.
him on- their feet in indignant pro -
Mondaty, Feb. 2i0-10.30 a.m., Church,
A da y Or later we would seg the
test --the new member for South Wa-
teloo whom he charged had a Prus-
'of the Ai'r; 1.30, "Cleopatra"; 5.45,
group, efforts being adjusted to fit to
get'her+- tb worrisome timeof gived
elan ,mentality; Mr. Woodsworth, ;
Souvenirs; 8, Kenneth RRentoul,
take. Perhaps some 'of the puppets,
whom he referred to as semi -Commun.
Tuesday, Feb. 21}11.15 p.m., Beau-
are boo big for the stager -or that
ist, and Mr. Douglas of Weyburn,
whom hie described las a quibbler. He '
sty That Endures; 3 p.m:, Royal Chefs;
bothersome joint is -still giving way,
fsmlt for five
declared lhie had nothing to retract,
1.30, Glad -Tidings; 8, Terra. Redd Pre-
or there room enough(
puppets at once and dialogue must
nothing to regret and nothing to hide,
gents.
Wednesday, Feb. 22r-11.30 a.m.,
Wednesd
he 'reor that treasure of tree-
His course -had been honest acrd up -
n
Tight tJhrrowg�hbut the administration
"`Dowse of MraeGrtegor"; 1.30 P.
sures, the big pluvised,
plume for`Cortes' hat,.
must be discarded, because the audi-
of his department. He d'id not go, in -
<. Cleopatra"; 7.30, Cocoanut Grove.
eases see Montezuma cr Uhe hors-
to the details of the contract, but had
Thursday, Feb. 23-1 p.m., Royal
es or even the temples, posit it. Still
eye
invited the Public Accounts Commit -
Chefs; 8, Gladys P ekiell•
a few days later, and everything—or
tee if they desired to do so, to ex-
—
almnost everythdn&1---is adjusted. There
Fine the contraot least year. How,
_
are still plenty of crudities, but the
thent, could anyone charge him .with:
CHEESE IN EXPORT TRADE
show is ready to go on. The teacher's
been
trying to hdde anything?
Perhaps the most effective speech
object hes already aclhdeved--
they have taken enormous dioses of
media today was the one made by
Exports of cheese from ,the chief ex-
,ardbhmuetic, geography, history, read-
Jerry McGeer (Liberal. Vancouver).
porting countries of tfie world, reek-
ingcomposition, voice training, art,
Hds analysds of the contract and the
,oned by value, account for only a
er.a6 and tackled 'their real pro'b-
endeavor of tine Opposition to have
very small proportion of total exports
lems with persistence, honesty of ef-
the oontrocit cancelled, was, I believe,
from these countries; in New Zealand
fart, coapera•tion,, reliance -'•and their
the most effieative of any of the
where the proportion is highest, it
goal of satisfaction is at hand.
speeches we have heard in this de-
ramounted to little more than 8 per
cent in 1937. The proportion hats d1--
The ohdefl crit dem. of this trend is
basad upon the fact that life as not
based
bate'•
Mr. Howe, who is an'enginteer
dlined in resent ,sears in New Zen,
merely a roundof pleasure; sharia are
and large cocontractor, also made a
worth while contribution. Others who
land, Swdtzerl'a5nd, the Netherlands
and ]stab,, but has remained (fairly can-
moan, and 'm disagreeable situations , k be
raved, and marry abaniolese tasks to
spoke were - Dr. Young', Saskatoon; Dr.
p
stant in C^nada, where however it
do Do m(ot ,such problems -occur, in
Fleming, Humbolt; Hugh Plaxton,
amounts to only one per ceilt of the,
the play situation outlined above? In,
who assured the House that be would
total Canadian exports
deed,, yes, Dor these, as everywhere
be reafly to appear before the Com -
else, somebody has to do the dirty
mittee at all timre,, and who did not
"
work; someone ;has to olean out the
want to go into the matter at all'un-
EC8LAR
PA#NS
p� per; someoneLas to relinquish
brand-
tial the Committee made their report.
Mr. C'aha,n, Dr. Hyndwan and Hien.
a desire Uo use the
l plume;
fwl plums; sameane (bras to ilabMonte-
Hugh( Stewart spoke on •the Conserve -
No longer need the calendar
diictate to you. There is freedom
ly .eradicate the Monte- from Monte
live sdd(e.
The Hoarse was all ready vote
rfrom pains and aches and a fevered
zuma's conversation; someone has to
Oil Ghia question' and it would•have
condition for girls and women who use
keep on straling with that ineffec-
gg
ended -the debate, but Grant MacNeil
tive joint. The wise teacher seizes
DR. CHASE'S
upon these enviable opportund-des for
:PARAD OL
pCHILDREN of all age's
thrive on "CROWN
BRAND" CORN SYRUP.
They ever tire of its delici-
eue Savor and it really Is so
good for them -so give the
chadre-i 11>t90WN BRAND"
every day.
Leadinf physicians pro
fclounce `CROWN BRAND'
4 CORN SYRUP a most satis-
1factory carbohydrate to use
;se a milk modifier in the
;feeding of tiny infants and
-as an etuergy producing food
for growing children.
-TNE FAMOUS
ENERGY
FOOD
�r I Y Ue. •.
• ' �. ''� . 'slie•
CANADA SiARCII
c COMPANY Limited
level, ping -in the Pupils -the sense of
abldgadon which must fail capon one
amd all it tbings are to run smoothly
in the school world_
�Jothdng is more expressive of this
C'la'nged attitude then thle atmosphere
of,thta modier n school. Have you been
In one lately? Go, if you have not,
and seaxcb in, vain for that rigid, im-
posed discipline under viihich the chil-
dren became automatons, fixed in
rows • of fixed seats, all, 'bonds bebind
the backs, awaiting a list of facts en
uncoated by the teacher, repeated in
unison, copied in "notes," comnrdrttted
to memory, regurgitated ou examina-
tion papers, marked to barlf-point va-
lues, noted on report cards, .ranked
in order Of stamddIng regardless of ef-
fort or ability', and promoted oD(ly if
they fitted the P,roercustean requme-
ments, laid down alike foe' every oom-
munity in the •p(rovdnce. Dict we real-
ly expel the thoughtful, self-control
of demuolaracy to be thus produced?
The modern school seeks not to have
its citizens' do as -they are told,
thoughtlessly, but rather to do as
they ougiht, after weighting the cir-
camstances. tf delrOon ,cy is to sur -
vivo, therein lies .its hope.
Of course, them are always rebels,
the selfish, the petulant, the showoff.
What happens to there? it would do
YOU goad: to see the weight of youth-
ful oondemnattinin fall upon tine child
who interferes with the smooth com-
pletion, of a unit of work upon which
the eWIdrew have concentrated. For
no longer its such an interruption, a
diversion from a ,tiresiiodie piece of
drudged',, but a theft of time and ef-
fort from something in which the ma-
jority has put a, tremendous effort. It
hug become ami vn.forgivable crime,
like deliberately breaking the only -bat
when the -score is tied and the bases
a
full. Despite this force of group dis-
cipldne, there are, as there are in
adult life, times when tine tesoher, as
representative cif law and orxler, must
step in to weigh and adjudge differ-
enoesi.
A more difficult problem is that
presented by the shy, the uncertain
and tribe handicapped. Can they be
brought to -the fullness of the joy of
something well done? Of course they
can- The teacher who is a man" or
a woman flrst„ and a teacher by pro-
fession, can now, is ,the freer atm,os-
phar•e, so dispose the problems and
the groups of pupils that everyone
can be given the opportunity and the
necessaty of accomplishment, a magic
cure for lack of self-reliance. With:
the first small success comes the re-
alization, "I can excel;' lighting the
hardi Toad ahead with the knowledge
that the will to do is -the chief factor
in :progress.
How this will to do has developed:!
instead of memorizing facts- from one
text book, the children, individuallyor
collectively, gather materials from ev-
ery source tbear imagination suggests,
binding it together in an understamtd-
ang to be found in no book. It. mast
be confessed that this tendency has
put a tremendous strain upon teach-
ers, parents, librarians, tradesanen,
and agencies of all sorts, whish have
been overwhelmed by demands far
material. It .really is the business of
the schools to meet this demand, with
.the aid of the public libraries. But
school and 'library budgets are not
easily ,expanded to supply the ,need
Immediately; amid wisely .so, for the
sources must be built up gradually
and with considerable reflection upon
the value obtained; for the money.
The great danger of the aleflcienC3
is not the deficieucy itself, for chid'
dren can and, do make 'silk 'purses
from seaws' ears, but that 131 -advisee
teachers and parents may attempt t(
do the cibildPs work for him. Of courm
it fs but natural that in, their anxiiet}
for '.Nis success, teachers and pameeb
do not allw the child to face his ow•r
problem, .readh his own .4DIlition, ant
stand (and, fall) by; them. Let us no
Fail to apipr a.tre ,that success come.,
only; through repeated failures; f'
takes thoroughly tough going to pro
duce stamina of wi(11, steadiness o
purpose, and true 'pride of achieve
ment. How often, when you look a
those too -perfect exbidritions of work
stupposedd'y the sole effort of schoo
(ihilldTertn, (116 you wonder how mncl
real education was denied those c'hil
drew by some webl'+meanring busybody
llhie school of to -dray Is a child-oen
trod school of life, not, as .some Sul
Pose, a place wbere children do a
they Please, but a place where th
%kne4trfed principles of phtlosophX ar
.presented .in the child's worlid,
world of vivid reality, with atll th
equalities and inequalities, the joy
and the sor ,*s, ,the successes an,
t'he ,flailures-iyes, even the justice an
Vie injustice of that grownup worl
toward( which they; comb,
1i
m r�.�t r r�, , i , ! •,� mt ts
}?,
.�k="ti vFi 40�.,e:w
5� ot
y �
t- r�•
R
Armes an-: Feet,gwoRen
with Rheumatism
T%ig woman suffered 'Dor many
Mars. Pain sapped 'leer strimgth, un-
di she lost hope of recovery. 'Many
vinedles were, ;tried, but nothing
broke the 'gm4P of ' ller crippling rhieu-
dmaidemt. At :last her husband pensuat
A 'her .tto try Kruischenn Salte.:
41mMy ang4q and feet wtelne swollen
with rheumatdisen, she writes. "I
3ould not walk nor got regular sleep,
and nothing did me airy lasting good.
[ was so hopeless of ever getting bet- `
ler, I ib®t My good mature entirely.
rb,ma mty� husband persuaded me to
tr7y Krtiechen Babas. After two weeks
[ began to ,feel batter. I•perserv�,
rnid in .six weeks, I- was dibiing e,
work. Later, I was able to go for a
walk. Now I am free from pain and
[ fee ,grand."-�-(Mr+s.) F. W.
Rheumatism is commonly caused
by deposIa of uric acid crystals,
vohich lofte in the muscles and joints.
Kruschen helps to •break cap theme de-
3osdts of troubling crystals sand :to
3omvert them •into a b'aivmlesrs solo
hon, which is removed through the
natural channels-�tlhei kidney's,
(C.C.F.) stalked. until 11 o'clock. --al "
ubh)er itldnrsitration of what Dr. Manion
last (fall 'termed, thy. nuisance value of
his group in the House. The debate
will now be ciouUnued on Monday.
• . •
Friday, Feb. 10
It was refnesthin* (fro have the House
retitle down after the storm of last.
Aght and ,Dor i1he first 'Gime this see-
-ion get some practical work done, ,
This 13 -,nen gun debate does no one
my good and it is damaging the omm-
ay's chance of getting further orders
'nom the British Government.. All
agree that no Member of the House
)r• the Departme�wiere gua,k.y of - any
;arrt.ruti,an, and yet -the whole trend
A the. debate is based on that very
tlnng. It is, of course, a debatable
[�(?lnt as to whether tenders should
brave been called for to produce these
The fact is that this was not an
3rdinary contract The British Gov-
ermm�ent itself was not in production
3f these guns to ,the extent to know
their iactuali-ooet. Therefore, it was
m extremely difficuilt thing for any-
one to submit a tender- Major Hahn
visited the British plant, made a sur-
vey of the madhdnes needed, and with
the British Government arrived, at a
tentative price. It is a question even
now as to whietrher be, will make much
un ,the contract. However, it is an a
cost plus 'basis with limitations to not
over seven, and: a fraction per cent.
7Thds 'd'ebate, will probably erA on Mon,
dray.
Today the House gave its attention
to a Bill. presented by the Minister of
H(ealttf L It deals with license of
mrammlactureeirs sof cosmetics, and ev-
ery prandbits ithe 811-0 ofsome• barmful
things often, sold in the Category . of
cosmetics. Deaths shave otfeurred in
some (instances and in others s'kan bia-
sues have been disfigured for life.
Mrs. Black, M.P., gave the Members
of the Hbuse a practical demonstra-
tion of pulling out a compact and
powdering 'her nose- She was all ,for
gcmrding against the use of imjwrrous
preparations.•
A Bill by the Minister of Finance
-was (before thhie, House to give enabl-
ing legislation to deal wi*h matuiring
obligations and naso issues that Way
be naiads in the future. Mr, Stevel-
bad something to say about the banks
—not that he was condemning them,
as 'be thought we ha+d! PenhaW the
best banking' system in the world, but
,be Wats disturbed( to find commercial
loans down tr•omr 1930 to 'tbe present
,time compared wvitb 1926. I•t was our -
prizing to hear his remaa'li an 'Matt,'.
is just as natural as it is to have
snow in winter and sunshine and renin
in the summ(ar. W4renever business
is expanding, commercial loans are
up; when 'business is shrinking and
con,tmeting, commercial loans are
drawn. Lt always was and always will
be. He commplaiined . tbatt our circula-
tion of currency is not much more
then 'half 'of Britain's' or the United
States.
One isf mmindi-A of a speech made
in the spring of 1938 in which the
speaker claimed that the United
St6beis limed a circulation of currency
amounting to $49 per capita: Ausbu-
dia had $40 per capita and Ce.n Wa
bad $23 per capnita, so the suggestion
was made that Canada should buy
gold and issue more currency- Well,
,the Unified States bad bought gold,
had over double the circulation of cur-
r+ency, ead their pomti�ou'was •so bad
that the Government hladl to prime
the pump by putting some billions of
dollars into public works, etc., to get
people working.
It is not ,the a'rniount of currency in
oircutation that Counts ria much as
the velocity at which .it turns over.
If' ,thorn is a gxxrd market for basic
products the currency will move the
-products to ,tine consuaner. If there
is no markers, currency does nothing
to -help. If Canadh had, alt wheat crop
of 500,000,000 bushels of torp grade
/ e
Klee s
t �f
STOVE
Lookin
3
3 o Nice
' 89
a
a i
i' 0 if
a{,
ten.. �,it.r�um•%.�rtr,., "swan,..} i`14eC4�+7�K'�`?A'�J
1A/:44';!iP.>��'jf, a �iC%e • � .. x •' t,
• r r a rti}
Willatover mor •'be 'me
througliouit 'title douluta+y' mom• f1�e / 3`F",
Been,�u' ,ogmtrac • there, is
of eaue� thiwg, �tw!d tkiat 38 'cites' all Cob,
tracts in Me, future will be dealt w.ltb t , yam' `. < , `�� •s ` hF�� •'
:
im a most, oaw0u�) andl scruUnizi:ug
way. This debate while largely cal'-
stied; on: for political •purposes, will unK
doubtedlly have the effeet of keeping.
those . who ,enter into future contracts. f •. •:�, � kN
right up on thew �
In this case, the Judge found that ia''' ,A"
there no ckuarge 'has been made that
ap no Craft or suspicion of it, q
11,
shiers was. No charge of tam(lr kind
has been nude, so that it Is unit from
that standpoint that we haws spent ,,;;i + �
hours in reviewing' the whole' case. , � f „�;Mot m V,q. v ��
The set-up of the company is 'being •/,'j>�:•' �,
attacked. TIhB plana of the Inglis a dH;
a
d,
Company is •being referred to as a
vvm bood� factory. People
le ding
broken broken do is
f/••r:: ���:. �;,' ,;v.
making these charges probably were
making
never inside -the 'pWam+t and probably
do not know that some $5,00.0,000 �� A little money in the bank°. Oftel, spells the
worth of munitions were made ,there between worry_ and ease of mind. Any house''Wife Cclat J, .
w
during; the war. However, the phint a "nest egg" to fall back on by opening a Savings AacA-, s
had been closed for some time, buta
when :dad it became a crime to try to t this Bank and making small regular deposits. Alsct�. ,
Accounts may be opened for your children. Theme lis !CL a�
reestablish any industry? I imagine;
filet many towns and cities would be Branch near you, where you will receive courteous att 6
mighty •+glad to see some of their now tion at all tithes.
idde (plants put into operation again
HTHE
owever, it is perfectly proper that
this contract should he carefully serut-
Mazed and filets is surely beinrg ,done. N - DOMINIOBANAIU
There is 0328 ,point that not
been particularly brought out and that ESTABLISHED 1871
its that the British War Office also
carefully considered the contract and SBAFORTH BRANCH �
jointly entered into it and in this
way, saving about $1,000,000 in cost- E. C. Boswell - Manager 1
they Kaye also sent one of their most
reliable men to assist in getting this
plant to (get into production.. Rest r
assured then that the contract is not `
so terrible as it is now reported to
be. One of the Conservatives, Mr. Feld for, Poultry
Walsh, demanded the resignation of RE
of
Mr. Mackenzie. The nutrients iu eggs are present E T F
Mr. ,Bradette (Liberal) opened the in entirely different proportions from '
debate yesterday and shad a slurp those in grain; and unless the hens 11 e 1 1 ' ROOFING
:.
olasb with Dr. Manion. The- doctor are given additional feeds to level up
said that when he was defending his the differences, prodluction is disap- - '
country, Mr. Bradette was at home. pointing.
Mr. Bradette. retorted that he had Feeding poultry entirely on grain; WRITE 9 fi
been eighteen months in uniform and ,anr1 only one grain at the , is the least NOW
that when he got to Halifax .he --as profitable ' prractice followed on most 8=1,1ge
sent 'back on account of his eyes and farms. To keep the ben in good con- sad ratter
said: that some people were trying to dita•an and supply 'egg ingredients in m� or
parade their loyalty like peacocks. the correct proportions, so that.. each area to be s
Mr, Walsh (Conservative) certainly egg represents the least possible feed roofed. patched or re -
came out rung in his condemnation paired Council meStaal
$'t intake, it 'is necessary to supply and "Tete -Lan•, metal
of the whole contract. Mr. Mulock -mixture of .ground grains, Proteins roofing isasound,per- '
(Lib., North York) thought that ill and cod liver oil, besides a. scratch Abaoelut lay �thei'-
these troublous times nothing should miatur,e of two or more grains. Oyster tigrit Greatly release = �• F
be done to hold; up the progress of shell is also required ,for shell forma- SO v
SOLD ON A 2S YEAR
the company now the contrast has tion, and a snippily of good dlrinking GUARANTEE
been let. water is essential, prices now are lower because of Sales Talc
Mr. McAvity (Lib., St. Jahn) gave vemneE���of�usPB
the most sensible speech during the -- Truss Batas and Jamesway poultry equip•- _
afternoon, He wag with the Mund- ment, Address: 308
Board during the last war and It was a reunion of old' frlendss and.
was the only one who dealt with th.e as a bit of ftn, the guests, were e=h Easterft Sjeel ' a t
problem in a practical way. Indeed asked to bring g'ometihinrg to the feast.
one who (had° experience in the work The Englishman -brought a bottle of .
at that timecannot help emili'ng at whiskey; the Irishman a tin Of his -
some -of the speeches now being made. cuits, and the Scotsimaw'his brother!