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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1930-06-05, Page 5PAGE 5—THE BLYTA STANDARD—Juno 5, 1980 H, A. McINTYRE, L. D. S., p. D. S DENTIST Office hours -9 to 12 1 to 6 BLYTH—Tuesdays and Wednesdays Evenings by appointment. 'Phone 130. Dr. W. Jas. Milne, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. CORONER COUNTY OF HURON. Office—Queen Street Residence—Dinsley Street. BLYTH, ONTARIO J. H. R. ELLIOTT, NOTARY PUBLIC & CONVEYANCER Fire, Accident, Sickness, Employer's Liability, Plate Glass, Automo- bile and Live Stock Insurance. BLYTH, ('Phone 104) ONTARIO, LOFTI'US E. DANCEY, BARRiSTER,SOLICITOR,NOTARY PUBLIC, CONVEYANCER, MONEY 'f0 LOAN. Office— Queen Street I3LYTIl, ONT STUN LIFE ASSURANCE CO, OF GONADS, PROSPEROUS & PROGRESSIVF It leads the field among Canadian Companies, H. It, LONG, District Manager, Goderioh `fHo'11AS GUNUItY, AUCTIONEER, CODERICH, • ONTARIO Farm Stook Sales a specialty. Order left at the Blyth Standard Office will be dromptly attended to. Telephone me ates at my expense. Dr. J. C. Ross, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Office hours -10.30 to 12 2 to 4 7 to 8.30 Except Wednesday evening. Phone No.—Office 51; Residence 69 BLYTH, ONTr:R10 MY OPTICIAN Wftlte DIN Drug Store DR. W. J. MILNE, Fine Spectacle Ware and Accurate Lens Work a Specialty. QUEEN ST., BLYTH ? t 1111111111 MOMIINTAL !O 1{ has the largest and most complete stock, the moat beautiful designs to choose from in MARBLE, SCOTCH AND CANAD. IAN GRANITES. We make a specialty of Family Mon• umenta and invite your inspection. Inscriptions neatly, carefully and promptly done. Electric tonls for carving and letter. ing. Call and see us before placing your order, Robt. A. Spotton, iIINGHAM. • • ONTARI( Tho industrial Mortgage and Saving: Co, SARNIA, ONTARIO Money advanced on first mortgagee on lands. Parties desiring money on farm mortgages will please apply to the under- signed. J. H. R. ELLIOTT, Agent, BLYTH, • ONTARIO. C. E, TOLL, L.D.S. D.D.S DENTIST Hours 8.30-12 1.30-6 Wednesdays at Monkton, 'hones 124,-4212 James Taylor License A tioneer for the County of Huron, s attended to in all parts of the co Satisfaction guaranteed or no pay . . ,dere left at The Standard promptiY attended to. Belgrave Post Office. PHONES: Brussels, 15-13. North Huron, 15-623 The Standard Club bing List: Standard and Daily Globe $6.75 Standard and Mail and Empire635 Standard and London Advertiser 0.75 Standard and Free Pree 6.75 Standard and Toronto Daily Star 6.75 Standard and Family Herald 100 Standard and Farmer's Sun 3.50 Standard and Can. Countryman 3.40 Standard and Farmer's Advocate 3.00 Standard and W:ekly Witness 3.85 Standard and World Wide 3.90 Standard and Presbyterian 4.50 Standard and Poultry Journal 2.90 Standard and Yo'tth's Companion 4.50 Standard and Northern Messenger 2,55 Standard and Can. Pictoral 3.95 • Standard and Rural Canada 2.70 Standard and Farm & Dairy.....,3.00 Standard and Saturday Night 5.50 Standard and McLean's Magazine 4,75 BUILDING A NATION No. 1 :—Terminal Warehouse Units of tins Canadian Ileonistenystetn, Limited, operating a drain of diversified pt bh SO*. enterprises throughout Canada Canadian Rail and Aarhmrr Terminal. Limited, Toronto COMMERCE is recognized as being the very life blood of nations. On the efficient interchange of merchandise depends the prosperity, the comfort, even the existence of the people. The products of Canada cross the seven seas to supply world wide demand. Likewise the commodities of the whole earth flow into this Dominion to minister to our needs. To accomplish this, fleets of smart liners and rusty, salt -incrusted tramps ply the seas. Warehouses have always oeen an essential link in this vast chain of international trade. Modern warehousing, performing as it does functions impossible to the older type, assumes a place of greater importance than ever before. The great warehouses of the Canadian Terminal System, Limited, are the largest in Canada, and equipped and managed in the most modern manner. Here the com- modities of the earth are brought together; fruits from the torrid tropics and furs from the frozen north; spices and silks from China and raisins from. Smyrna are efficiently conveyed to our doors by water, rail and motor. A. E. WARREN Vice -Fret. Canedlan National Railways. JOIIN McMILLAN General Manager, Canadian Pacific Railway Company's Telegraphs. COLONEL ROBERT STARKE Pres. Dominion Transport Co, T. A. McGINNIS, Kingston, Ont, BOARD OF MAJOR P. A. CURRY General Manager, White Star Line, Montreal. HON, E. C. DRURY, LL.D. President, Collingwood Terminale, Limited. GRAIHAM CURTIS Former Industrial Commissioner, Canadian Pacific Railway. �"..._e— ......-- Al Here, too, quantities of domestic fruits, vegetables and meats are stored through the seasons of plenty until the storms of winter, when they are required. Strawberries and raspbeeries may be found months after they have disappeared from the fields. Even now eggs are being laid away against the time seven months hence when the incogitant hens neglect to supply our needs. So it is realized what a profound hearing the warehousing industry has on the very existence of a nation. Supplying its people with commodities from the most distant points of the globe and making available their own native products at a time when they would be normally out of season. Montreal Rail and Wafer Terminals Limited DIRECTOR S' 3. M. ROBERTSON Viae-Preeideat, Southern Canada Power Company, Montreal. T. W. FORAN President, Maple Leaf Inenranne Agencies, Limited. LOUIS COTE, K.C., LL.D., M.P.P. Thompson, Cote, Burgess and'. Thompson, Barristers, Ottawa. BARRY PIIICE Viee-Preefdent, Collingwood Ter- minals, Limited. OFFICERS: k • C. L,LAFFOLEY Sens dl Co Manger, Mark Fisher T. A. NEELT Director, Montreal Gan k Wake -?l Terminale, Limited. M. R. TWOMEY, Windsor, Ont. R. B. HUT,CHESON, N.P. 'Chairman, Exce,.J•o CrmisiM.., ' >t hiontreat Debenture Corporation. Chairman of the Board, COLONEL ROBERT STARK; President, 0. L. LAFFOLEY; Vice-Preeidente, HARRY PRICE and MA. TOR P, A. CURRY; Centras. Manager sabt Treasurer, nARRY PRICE; Comptroller and Secretary; E. 3. S. WALLWORK, C.P.A. The Canadian Terminal System Limited 4?� inn x� nI 11 e, 'deft Be Certain of SAFETY Build with Gyproc FIRE can hurl your home to destruction unless a fire-resistant ma- terial such as the new Ivory: coloured Gyproc Wallboard is used in its construction. Inexpensive, perma. nent, easy to apply, Gyp - roc Wallboard does not burn, It is exactly what you want for fire -safe walls, ceilings and par- titions when you build, remodel or repair. Ask your dealer today for full information on Gyproc Wallboard or send for interesting free book, "Building and Re- modelling with Gyproc." GYPSUM, LIME AND ALABASTINE, CANADA, LIMITED Paris Ontario ieNEW ['VOW S 264 GYPROC Fireproof Wallboard Nil For Sale by 5'710 lai'gc7t $6a lard, BLYTH PLANING MILLS, Blyth, Ont. ■ ■Irrrrrrrtl1Nrrrllr111111 Ni'allrrrlUUNr■rrrrllr■IRlUrrrrrtirt Canadian Terminal System Limited. 6% Gold Bonds ■ Information on request 111. ■ Willison -Neely Corp. Limited 1i 1 INVESTMENT BANKERS L C. P. R. Buildi■g ▪ A. N. Cameron, 314 Royal Bank Bd., London • ■ ✓ eessi rrrrrrrrrrrrrinrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr■ Toronto, Ontario rrt PI _r — — _ c._ nt — -•'e- - w SEE OUR FINE LINE OF GOODS FOR C21 day Gift8 CONSISTING OF UP-TO-DATE Footwear, Men's Furnishings, Garters, Arm Bands, Ties, Scarfs, Caps, Braces. A FINE DISPLAY OF Towels, Handkerchiefs Ladies' Scarfs. G. A.-MACHAN, Phone 88 BLYTH, ONT. i3IIDN:ZE A(n; CARVING . Found on the Face of a Rock on a 21111 in Denmark, On a hill near Ailing°, in Born- holm, Denmark, a large black Of stone sawlogs has been found on the /ace of the melt, which, it is thought, belongs to the Lr.,nze age. The an - Inge are made with tlltlt, and show a vessel about 43 inches, ht length, with a smaller one above it, Th.. date is supposed to be from 1000 to 500 $,Q This part of the island of Born- holm is beautiful and the rock faces the Gan on a sunny slope. There will be difficulty is removing the stone, as the ground fa at present a quarry, but It is proposed to divide It Into parts and 'remove it to the Bonne Mu- seum garden. Rocks of the Iron age have been •found in parts of Dan- mark, but this Is the largest one yet found of the bronze age, In that country. English coins have also been 'ploughed up in Denmark and Ger, many recently, The coins are o,j8ut 1,000 years old, and aro fro; the sigma of Sven Eatridaen of D nipatk 'Canute the Great, Hardi pg+ 111 Magnus the Geod. TiaesPf irif 'of pennies, with the .InmsJ 1 t tl2tic let- tere, of makers of cr/ttre limp and Alfrtk, and the arms u0 And, )>:xetel' and Roskilde c ,,,thedrals on 'ti1181 side, the other bast St$ the figurehead. Thirty of .fld coins are Anglo- Saxon, from the time of Ethelred, Canute, Hold Hereford. and Edward the Conf,,gor, while about fifty are firom t �a Hateof German kings, There are 294 whole coins and 33 hal, bolus, These were burled in a &r,ay vase, which Waa broken by a jplough, and are thought to be from a private collection of probably a tilt- ing who had been to England and .Germany, BA.I3"0Oit4. 'Osn Throw Missiles In Deliberate 'Fashion With Excellent Mint, It has been very positively stated 'that tone among the apes and mop- ' keys can accurately hurl a missile er 'wIIR attempt to use a weapon, Dr Ftaytumtd Ditmars, chief curator of the Zoo in New York, says that he hes never Been a savage monkey or baboon attempt to uric a stick or club is densive or offensive tactics, nor has he ever noted any except baboune accurately cast a missile, but he re- lates the following incident that oc- eurred at the Zoo; Raring noticed a disturbance among the visitors outside the Pri- mate House, wo investigated a row of cages where several large and savage baboons were quartered. Ono of these animals had loosened a panel of cement sheathing, which had fallen upon the stone flour dud brok- en Into sharp paces. These w,ero be- ing hurled at visitors through the bars, in leltberate fashion and with excellent aim, The crowd had re- treated to form a largo semi -circle, and the fragments flew straight and hart and with enough force to pro - dorm serious Injury. Steeper Palmer and the writer af- terward made a number of experi- ments with this big yellow baboon, Paplo eyanoecphalns. We fried him With a shovelful of coal and ran to different points to see If he deliber- ately aimed at us. This he did with a dangerous accuray, The method of casting the missile was curious, directly outward from the aide of the body, an overhand throw with the palm turned Inward and opposite to the direction of the toss. Vacuums In Coal Mines, Can you imagine a vacuum -cleaner being any use in a coal mine? House- wives may scoff at the Idea, but min- 4 ing experts don't, They have dle- covered that vacuum -cleaners aro a big aid In removing the coal dual which settles everywhere in a mine, and collecting it for use as fuel. Coal duet 1s frequently the cause of very serious explosions in mines, and it haw been proved that even in quan- titien so small as one-fifth of an ounce to each cubic foot of space, it may produea an explosion. And the effects of an explosion of this kind are far-reaching—they are often at their worst 600 to S00 feet from the place where the trouble started. Var- ious methods have been tried to pre- vent coal duet explosions, one of the most widely used being epreadiag stone dust and sand ou the flloora of workings, Cobras, The cobra to captivity usually feeds eagerly and thrives well, but occasionally one goes on hunger - strike, and forcible feeding is neces- sary. Snake -charmer, are well accus- •to this, and often carry about wt them the hollow shin -hone of a goat, which they use as a natural tunnel, pouring milk or the contents of eggs down It into the snake's gul- let. Snakes kept In laboratories for experimental work and for the pre- paration of anti-venenes are similar- ly fed through a funnel pushed into the gullet It may be added that the jaws and teeth of the cobra are not designed for chewing or crushing food, and leaving out of considera- tion the enlarged poison -fangs, the Ane teeth on the jaws can only help to some extent In grasping the pre,, Whaling by Airplane. A Norwegian whaling_ fleet not. at work off the ioebanirs of the Ant- arctic is accompanied by two ;v: - planes which are being used to scout. for schools of whales. It has tont Lound that in certain years the whales are much more difficult to find than in others; in fact, they seem practically to disappear, and it is hoped that the alrplane with Ito greater mobility and wide range of vision will be able to help to solving the problem, The machines can be equipped with three sets of tanning gar; wheels for landing on tire dock of the "mother" vessel, pantoens for the water, and skis for the ice. A wireless "there she blows" will sum- mon the legit *alien the airplanes sight their quarry.