HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1941-05-29, Page 7of
'.,
"lour Arsenal
For Kitchens
Ire Important • For ;Canadian •
Housewives to Know Differ.
ent Types of .Flour for Baking •
"PhD flour bin, is •one of the inn-
portant arsenals Of home nutri-
tional defence: It- is ,important. to
kmiow the 'differ:314 "types 'of •flour.
Wheat flow makes Indic, light
loaves of bread The wheat con-
tains -two special proteins. When
mixed.. with..: liquid they form : a
sticky, elastic mass :known'. as ' g'lu-
• '' • Good-gtrality ;gluten:As (Ivery .el'as-
' tic. •It 'eau easily " dou`b12 in• iullf"
without,, breaking. Figrir that ..con-
'. tains this high gttal t1y 'gluten is'
called •"strong" flour: It is nn'aae'
Trona the hard wheat types and 1s
'the baker's -first choice for Making-
yeast
akingyeast bread. • .
"WEAK" FLOUR-.
_ -"Wizen you—nneke`fine cakes aid
pastry, yore interested in a ten-
der texture—not in .strong• gluten.
• : In fact, too much. .gluten . mattes
the . cake. 'tough and rubbery. So,
for. cakes 'and .,,Pastry, the home
baker neat . a '"weak" flour that .
' comes from soft wheat.
"ALE-P_-HRP.OSE .FLOU$
Many homemakers' Melee to -'buy
just one kind of flour that<'will be
suitable. for "anything •they hake
—.bread, muffles, biscuits, or cake:.
they theiTe `is a'ii
,;-;,or. "family" .flour—a blendof hard
land telt whea't; that •has enough
• gluten •to make good yeast. :.'read..
' and will also, produce fairly •tender.
takers end. neick breads.
Rye flour, is also 'used for bread,
but it is usually combined with
wheat flour because the glutten
:formed is not, very elastic. Corn, •
pats,. rice, .potatoes, soybeans, lima
beans andbuckwheat. flours "con- .
tarn no: gluten. Mix thein with,
h'a l fluor .ta 'wake
of bread:
•
Mary Chu ra hill ; . arid
Fiance?
'LESSON IX '
BROADENING, CHRISTIAN
i•IORiZONS: THE ANTIOCH
MOVEMENT . • ., .
• Acts 111;•19'-30 ,
PRINTED TEXT, ,Act; ;11. 19-30
''GOLDEN• TEXT =For i ;am '
not ashamed of the gospel for it
} is thepower. of God unto Salva-
tion to 'ever, one that . believeth;
•to.'the Jew first, and. also to'_the.•
Greek.. Rom.' 1;16. A • • '
THE .LESSON; IN ,ITS. SETTING: ,
Time. -43 and 44 A.D. , .
Places '— Antioc)i was, • a great
city of Syria, on .the' left bank of
thew Orontes River; 15 , miles> in- •
laud • from -the Mediterranean
Coast, ' in'• thenorthern extremity
of . Syria., '
• In this i'ess-on we—fizrd`riek -mom"
terial . for the study of , Charcli
growth and' Christian fellowship.;
Churches spring up' and grow
wherefaithful' preaching is car •
-
ried on -where the word of God
is- opened, where . the ..Lord; Jesus
Christ is exalted, and where 'men
and ,woinen are 1'ed to believe' in
Hirai as their ;Saviour and where
those who know the Word really
labor in the Word 'to strengthen
young believers. • Most of those,
i`ti "wo ul tae'enn" wito ° yvi a yespo'ne —
sible for the foundiing'. of this' (to'_
be) great Church at Antioch were
e hat, we would; call laymen, stip-,
ported by' secular pursuits• of life,'
but dominated •' by a- passion Tar,
Proclaiming Christ.
J
Following; Persecution •
Acts 11:19. ' "They therefore
.that • were scattered .abroad •upon.
the tribulation that ,arose about,
Stephen.", The .persecutipn .that
followed, on. the' death of Stephen
(Wad a two••fo cr-t- act:—It tnda
• the dispersed , disciples -'.preach
Christ and found • churches 'Within
• Palestine' and beyond -Palestine.
In 'our: lesson '. the '•.Apostle; Paui
appears prea.chin'g, and: from now.
on he ' occupies an • increasingly
prominent• •and soon a dominant
part in the history of the Chris-,,Zian. -Church as 'recorded. in• 'th,.
.Acts. "Travelled as far as Phoen-
icia, • and Cyprus, and :Antioch;
speaking the .word to none •save
oniy:to Jews." .,
• (The population of ' Antioch in -
eluded many ' heterogeneous ale-
. ments. ..The upper classes were. •
mainly Greeks, •'The' imperial..of
_ ._finials were .Romans;: the masses•
were • • "Syrians. - • But Mingling
among these, yet -'preserving re-
ligiously their.. distinction from
• then, were many Jews who:Arid
been • drawn_,io._Antioch, bringing
along their sacred 'books);
A 'Gre'at -Number Believed •
' 20. t'But there ••. were some • of '•
them, men of Cyprus and Cyliene,
•who, when; they were coiine to °
Antioch, spake unto .the Greeks.
also, preaching the Lord Jesus.
"21. And the hand of , the -Lord
as it}r he7[n: and `grea-ntetm`-
beg that believed•turned unto the.
Lord." This preaching to' 'the
Greeks was not • a mistake, even
though , done , without official
sanction.' The evident blessing
. on their work justified these early
'evangelists. `
Barnabas • inl Antioch
22. "And the• report .'concern-
ing 'them• cafhe. to the ,:ears of the
I church which was in Jerusalem:
and, they sent fqrth Barnabas as
far as Antioch. 'The Twelve
'sent Barnabas who from- his
. earlier treatment 9f- Saul .had
•.'shown' himself a man Intl of Chris-
tian hopefulness, to tell the,Jews
about the admission of • Cornelius,
a Gentile, to• the', faith, and• to
declare. to the Gentiles that the •
Jerusalem Church welcon ed• all
believed that 'Jesus •was the
Christ. .28. "Who, when he was
come, and had 'seen the graee of
,God, was' glad;' and 'he exhorted
them' all; that • with purpose • of
heart 'they would cleave unto. the .
Lard. 24. For he was a 'good
man, and full of . the Holy Spirit
and of faith: and much • people
was added unto the ,Lord."' "These
cot verts were •added to the• Lord
Jestl's,bvf01'e they were added to
the Church: What ,a difference;
such a practice would ' make ..in
our•, ehuiclies today!
• `25. "And 'he went forth to
Tarsus to seek for Sari1;.26. And
when he • had found" him, he.
brought ,him unto Antioch," 'Raul
had been in Tarsus probably
about Six. years. It Seems prob-
able 'that 'Bartiabas was acquain-
ted with 'Paul's eon:mission to the: -
Gentiles; that he • sympathized
"With it, and that he saw in• Afi-
tioch the divinely preptared- , op-
porton:4y for itT It .is clear' that
neither ' of them' thought for •a
motnent that Gentile believers
could 'be bound by `Jewish
That demand had . not yet •beelt
raised 'within 'the Church: Thus
the first Gentileg Church,' knoWn
to history, was established in hat-
monic'is relations wiih the mother
church.
!`i'rstCalled Christians
••
"Aird 't came to'pasrs, that even
• for a Whole year they were• gath-
ered, together With,the church, •
And tat:el: n:ue.ir peole;'• and that
the =tdiscipies were tidied. Chris-, •
tient, first in Antioch." , The dis-
English society circles 1:ear
Mary 'Churchill, 18, youngest
daughter of 'Britain's prime mini-
ster, will. marry Lord Duncannon,
28, son of the 'Earl of ' Bessbor-
ough, former Governor-General of
'Canada:
.000,000 Suffer
Le r®� .
Dom p y
In the World -- Doctor Home
From Formosa .,Says it's Dis-
ease of Poverty .-- 'Not Very
Contagious
Lerrosy . is bort: of poverty.
alnutriticn and bad economic
h editions'generally. but it is the
• least conttigious of all contagious•
-diseases, Dr. G. Gushue-Taylor
told a recent meeting of the West
Toronto eBusiness Men's associa-
do .
' r. Gushue-Taylor is home On
•
fi 6 -ugh following 29 years' in
Forttiosa, 10 as director and fours-
' der of Happy Mount leprosy ;col-
otty. Ho went to Formosa in 1911
as a tneda"ical missionary and dur-
ing recent years he visited 31 lep-
rosy hospitals -and ; , colonies
tlorougltout the .world.
TWELVE CASES IN CANADA
"There are about 18•,000,0011
lepers it: the wo7rld,"• he said. "The
-diseaseis scattered' about chiefly,
• in, tropical and sub -tropical cotif-
. tries, but it is not confined to
these, There are lepers in Ice.
land and Mmiwa ", anti• there' are
12, cases liege in 'Canada.•" "
a
Canadian ''a
Gardening-. .
I ARTICLE NO: -13
In most parts of Canada' It 'i;s
'still quite possible to have a good
vegetable' garden even from seeds.
It is not 'e Ibit too 'early for mel-
ons, cucumbers,, squash and me- '
drum
and,*late ' corn,•. potatoes,
beans,, carrots. and 'beets.; .with well
• started , husky.. plants, purchased;
•
froth the nearest...seed • store or
•.greenhouse, one cart ;.set. out a.
whole• garden with tomatoes,, pep-
pers., ' cabbage . and celery. To
`catch ult •with this; late .gardening',..
it. 'is `advisable to`• cultivate free
quently,'.,.water during dry ,wen •
;ther,< and •to :hurmy::along with ra
,.few .applications'. of ,goo.d chemical
• ffertilizer, especially any newly ,
set net. plants;, °applied •close to, :
but not a'ctua`lly. ' touehing ; the,
punts or its roots,
Tie Theni 'Up , '
Dahlias,: totriatoes, large cosmos.
or nicotine, young shade trees,'
ne--ww •climbers, all bexefit o from'
some artificial support while they
• are getting started. .• • •
For ''tall individual. .flowers or •
tomatoes, 6 -foot •stakes are' advis-
able` and the plant is tied, to these
- loosely 'with soft twine or refit..
'Stouter •and, perhaps 'longer stakes
will be used. w, trees and •
•correspondingl,y shorter •one$ for.
the 'smaller ;Towers. . With tines
engettingreadylte,eling_enjence.,
• wall, string is used or ' perhaps
adhesive tape or staples where •it.
•
is impossible- to tie.• •
Sweetll'Peas, Tomatoes
With sweet peas and, ordinary
garden'.peas, one mar ase chicken:'
wire
from.'three feet 'to six. feet
•
,: depending, how tell, the'..pea,��!
grow. ,
With tomatoes, dahlias,' • etc.,`'
usually wide'shoots are nipped-.
'off, , and' the main sten ' only al=
,._10 vPd to :ACM,
eve, em ' oom
Thinning, as any, old gardener
will .'confirm, ;it inost necessary'
.with. • vegetables,' flowers ....and.
shrubs'. Nature When left alone
is ruthless, killing• or• crowding
out the weaklings.. :Of the. three
-to' 'five' thousand.. seedling ;pines.
that are• lavishly strewn by the
winds over an acre of land; .less _
than • a '. hundred. ' are permt
itted '
reach full' maturity three-quarters
• of a century later: •In.gardening:
this stern*; but necessary example
• .must be. followed.. If left to grow,'
crowded, flowers become 'spindly
and weak, easy preyfor • the' first
stiff • wind, heavy rain or. hungry
insect.'•: Vegetables, too, ,get
spindly or woody:. • '
Much' of the training time 'of .the Canadian tank man its spent in
the class ioom, where he learns. all the tricks of the intricate machines
with, which Modern war is fought••atbhigh speed. A driver is shown here
as he sits in one of the special instruction.. tanks. These' have sections
cut away to`revealthe action of the controls,and ,other.' equipment.
eiples previously had called them...
selves "believers" or simply'"dis-
chiles." • One , spebi&1' interett . •of"
the Word "Christian" is that . 'it
combines Jewish • thought with
Greek' and Latin language, and
hu°s,_likP the inscription on .she
cross, • cars witina t'0 '
versality 9f •Christianity' as a re
ligion .for the whole world.
The Church's Liberality
27. "Nowin these days there
came' down prophets 'froth Jerusa-
lem unto Antioch:.
.28. And there . stood up one of
them ,named Agebus, and signified.
by the Spirit that there should be
a'.great famine over all the world:
`which came to pass •in the days of
Claudius.
29. And the disciples, every
•
is
mars' according to, his .ability, de-
termined to: send relief :into, the
brethren,that dwelt 'in Judaea:
30. Which also they ' did, Send -
Ing ,it to'the elders by the hand
of • Barnabas' and Saul."
In a era ity rives in an a jos-
phere of evangelism.. The heart
'that is •warm with • the grace of
God is generous toward every hu
nian • need.
'Hitler .Saris Haggis
•
Hitler has , banned. Scotland's
national dish for the duration:
Reason: Lack of onions and other,
more mysterious, ingredients. •
"MARCHING IN • SWINGTIME"_
Exploring the. beauties �of Na-
ture or the effect' of a new word
on their..beloved public, it's all
the same to the .erudite uncon-
ventionals, ° Woodhottse'.an-d Haw
]tins.
Now they are exploring
a form of life new to them -life
in the East. The famous co•medy'•
team from Winnipeg -has arrival
'in Toronto and taken up residence.
in a large house which . already
assumes the air of breezy hos-
pitality known only in the great
open spaces. The- • boys have
made themselves indispensable in
the new sudnner show, "Marching
in Swingtime," and they will dash
through the ether.• proscenium
arch each :Monday, at 8.00 .p.m.
EDST. •
' ' It might be just as wellfor the•
listeners in Eastern Canada to get
used- to hearing Woodhouse and
Hawkins' •real. naives. In Win-
nipeg they are in the" directory as
Art E. McGregor and Frank 3:
Denville. '•Soon. they will •be listed
at their, new address in the same
way. But they will be using
Woodhouse and Hawkins most
when they are heard on the air
with. "Marching inS•wingtinte."
AROUND THE DIAL •
Note for the .ladies—a program
with a lot of interest and charm,
• re -Salute to-the--Bride..:heard_from_
CKOC .each weekday morning at
11.30. • News of weddings, en-
gagements„ and other items of in-
terest to the ladies are featured
on this half hour chat with Jean
Gillard, '
' Then, too, there's a well-filled
cedar chest that you, 'yon,• or you
may win just by sending in your
name; It's sothething nntf-lhbuld
get in on. -
Walter___C.ompton_s' Double ' or
Nothing show from the WOR.
Mutual network, is one of the
fastestpaced question and.ansv.;'er
shows• on the air, being heard
-rrrday night -at -8.00 o'clock=€Tome -
. the American. network. That
bushy -haired cigar -puffing vendee
vine -acrd . screen, :comic, Jay C.
Flippen . helps .pace the comedy in
this program.
—o—
Fhe irrepressible' Beetrie' Kay
and, 'jaunty . Joe E. Howard, co-
stars of '• the Gay Nineties Re-
view,
:join in taking the Colum-
bia netwbrk audience back to the
turn of the century with music,,
-song and ,comedy. This pleasing
review is heard ' over CBS Mon
days at 8.30.
—o— .
' Al Taylor • has a simple but'.
effective •method of cricking out
the .tunes he plays in WBEN's
early morning "Sun Greeters
• Club" heard . shortly after 6.00 ,
'o'clock. :.
"If it's a dull day, I pick out
peppy music," explains AI. `• rf
WS a bright, cheerful day, .I might
chose sentimental music: I fir
it up some way or another=and
the rest of the day takes. dare
of itself." -
-o^-
• Radio .Beams:—Songstress $on=
ni.e Baker is to have her appendix
. nut_ any _..daynow_:Blind-pian-
ist Alec Templeton: has settled
his lawsuit ' with his parents out
of court ... Orchy •leader Tommy.
Tucker never playsa tune (Mtn
his mother has okayed it . . Phil
Harris, (the lucky stiff), has got
hisself hitched to blonde Alice
Faye pf the movies; his divorce
from his former. wife came into .•
effect while he was' hblidaying,in,
Saskatchewan last year.
Pasture Helps
Milk Production
EVet'y Third
• Is, Found • I efective
One in, three, oars .tested on
Toronto streets in a recent three-
week check` -up has been •found 4n
defective. condition, Traffic In-
spector Dunn of that city de-
clares. Forty autos were ordered
',Olt the streets to be sorapped or
completely overhauled, he added.
•
"Il think there are more old
cars on the 'road. than ever before.
This may account for the fact
that testers are finding every •
third ear is defective," the in, '
spector explained.
• Pins are going- to be scarce in
Britain. Before the war_theyused
6,000,000,.000. •pins •a year;,.nova
they ' are rationed to • 250,000,.009.
THIS URIOUS WORLD
B
William'
• Ferguson
FIVOMY
`THE C7IrTANCE;
FROMt"BOW'
el
K'NUCk .
-r-f 1E
SLJ
f .Try- PEARS'
r • Llc -F1 .IS BmST
i \ 3LE '1 z> PENETRATE
MURK"? '
ATMOSPHE.R.
¢OPR 193® 0Y NEA ssevicE;1145.
•
-I's -Keystone In• Keeping : Up- -
Economical. ;,Milk yield 'in
gummier Months,' Says Ont.
Dept: of Agriculture__ _
Pasture , is the keystone Of econ-
. omical inilk• production and is the
most important single factor 'in •
•.keeping Up milk yield during the .
summer months, says the Ontario
Dept. of, :Agriculture. No labor is +
.required in harvesting- and little,
'loss of 'nutrients occurs through .
weathering, hea.ing or moulding.
Any summer production program...
must be built around ;pasture and
the problems arising"out of pasture
production.' Pasture has a ,special.
interest to cheese 'patrons, as the
best .quality cheese is made from
summer milk. It,should be meinem-
• beret' that, there •. is a, two cent
bonus , ort. cheese .,offered by the
Ontario government. •
NEAR THE
Pasture yields can be '.increased
by seeding higleyielding mixtures
of grasses . and legumes on goo
soil that has a, high fertility level.
Wherever possible pasture land
should, be located near the barn.
Walking' cows long distances to and '
from the pa"sture field rs not con-
_ `dhcive .to. lt.igla,.ntlllt. ,:ields.,n. bL ad-...
clition• to using much 'energy, it pre-
disposes the cows to ,udder 'injury '
and sore; and cracked feet.
Do jnox overgraze pasture : Over-
grazii g. reduces the yield, ' Teases
injury from drought' and eneourag-
• es the growth of weeds. Sema
grasses and 'legumes are ,actually
killed by, very close 'grazing. To
,..prevent 'this, adopt a .system of ro-
tational ,pasturing.
He? WAS PR.tSIDiEN
12E�Y1/ MFi i�Iy _.�
WAS -MEASURER OF, THE
uNITF� STATm'S?
ANSWER: Andrew Mellon was never treasurer of the United , -
States. He was secretary of the Treasury under Harding, Cool.
4Idge and Hoover.
NEXT: ' By what name was Cincinnati once known?
VENERABLE WRITE
iIORIiZONTAL
1 Pictured aged ha
P A
Writer . in P A 2
Englanclt EN
10 Artificial silk. E
„'11 Therefore.
12 Gaelic.
13 Demise.
16 Folding bed.
17 Preserves.
19 Credit (abbr.)
20 Aromatic.
21 -Yet.
22 Nominal
value, •
23: To warble.
28 Midday
30 Not as many,.
32 College •
official
33 Tow boat.
34 •Lresome
speeongchesti..
36 Humor.•
37 Right (abbr.).
38 Perched.
39 Opposed to . • .
bottom.' • '
41 Railroad . '
(abbr.). birth. n • personality:`
A
N.
A
D
D
5
Previous Puzzle.
ilT1 .QeUNa
0
A
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0
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M
A
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MAPLE 0
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QM
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42 Punctuation" VERTICAL
mar -k, 214l'under.:':
'3•Hdps kiln.
• 4 Cereal grass.
4413ill slopes:
46 Chilling.
48 To start. ,5 Pep.
50 Lacerated 6, Finished.
52 Form of "be." • 7 Scapegrace ..
53 Coaxes. 81?ertaining to'
55 Musical note. ' ashes.
56 He is a• 9 Grief.
World-famou$ 12 He has an
or
57'He by -singular
PVP-=Patp's Right
•
i'ON'T ANY OF YOU KNOW
WHAT 'MGG- OFF PI
APPARATUS ,Ws_N'T GO
UP A `
S'i'RtEer
i
2
I0
21
29
9'2
47[
52
4 5
17
20
34,
38
6
13
30
48
7,
■
14 _..
22
8 '9
14 One who' ruins
• away..
15 Arranged i11•
• layers. .
i' Black• brie raL
18;Rig pen.
20 Stocking tear.
21 Marsh.
24 Natural
power.
25 Moisture:
26 Den. ;
27 Freedom of
access,
29 Opposed"to 11L
30 Furnishing,
31 To go to sleep.
34 Beret.
35 Sward.
38 Sun. •
40 Hoube canary.
42 Insensibility.
,43 Person
opposed....
44 Faction. •
45 Fern seeds.
47 Routing tool:
.49 It isd
51 Thing.
53 Each (abbr.).
54 Tone • B.
15
23
31•
39
24 25 26 27
32'
35
36
�4C
41 :
4
94
50
54.
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51
By' J. MILLAI2 WATT
NO!
A '.
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„�( ;rin�rrA by 'Che fiC�`t S)'��d. . 1[• ir.N
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•
RADIO` REPOR`TE.R•
By DAVE ROB13IN5
"MARCHING IN • SWINGTIME"_
Exploring the. beauties �of Na-
ture or the effect' of a new word
on their..beloved public, it's all
the same to the .erudite uncon-
ventionals, ° Woodhottse'.an-d Haw
]tins.
Now they are exploring
a form of life new to them -life
in the East. The famous co•medy'•
team from Winnipeg -has arrival
'in Toronto and taken up residence.
in a large house which . already
assumes the air of breezy hos-
pitality known only in the great
open spaces. The- • boys have
made themselves indispensable in
the new sudnner show, "Marching
in Swingtime," and they will dash
through the ether.• proscenium
arch each :Monday, at 8.00 .p.m.
EDST. •
' ' It might be just as wellfor the•
listeners in Eastern Canada to get
used- to hearing Woodhouse and
Hawkins' •real. naives. In Win-
nipeg they are in the" directory as
Art E. McGregor and Frank 3:
Denville. '•Soon. they will •be listed
at their, new address in the same
way. But they will be using
Woodhouse and Hawkins most
when they are heard on the air
with. "Marching inS•wingtinte."
AROUND THE DIAL •
Note for the .ladies—a program
with a lot of interest and charm,
• re -Salute to-the--Bride..:heard_from_
CKOC .each weekday morning at
11.30. • News of weddings, en-
gagements„ and other items of in-
terest to the ladies are featured
on this half hour chat with Jean
Gillard, '
' Then, too, there's a well-filled
cedar chest that you, 'yon,• or you
may win just by sending in your
name; It's sothething nntf-lhbuld
get in on. -
Walter___C.ompton_s' Double ' or
Nothing show from the WOR.
Mutual network, is one of the
fastestpaced question and.ansv.;'er
shows• on the air, being heard
-rrrday night -at -8.00 o'clock=€Tome -
. the American. network. That
bushy -haired cigar -puffing vendee
vine -acrd . screen, :comic, Jay C.
Flippen . helps .pace the comedy in
this program.
—o—
Fhe irrepressible' Beetrie' Kay
and, 'jaunty . Joe E. Howard, co-
stars of '• the Gay Nineties Re-
view,
:join in taking the Colum-
bia netwbrk audience back to the
turn of the century with music,,
-song and ,comedy. This pleasing
review is heard ' over CBS Mon
days at 8.30.
—o— .
' Al Taylor • has a simple but'.
effective •method of cricking out
the .tunes he plays in WBEN's
early morning "Sun Greeters
• Club" heard . shortly after 6.00 ,
'o'clock. :.
"If it's a dull day, I pick out
peppy music," explains AI. `• rf
WS a bright, cheerful day, .I might
chose sentimental music: I fir
it up some way or another=and
the rest of the day takes. dare
of itself." -
-o^-
• Radio .Beams:—Songstress $on=
ni.e Baker is to have her appendix
. nut_ any _..daynow_:Blind-pian-
ist Alec Templeton: has settled
his lawsuit ' with his parents out
of court ... Orchy •leader Tommy.
Tucker never playsa tune (Mtn
his mother has okayed it . . Phil
Harris, (the lucky stiff), has got
hisself hitched to blonde Alice
Faye pf the movies; his divorce
from his former. wife came into .•
effect while he was' hblidaying,in,
Saskatchewan last year.
Pasture Helps
Milk Production
EVet'y Third
• Is, Found • I efective
One in, three, oars .tested on
Toronto streets in a recent three-
week check` -up has been •found 4n
defective. condition, Traffic In-
spector Dunn of that city de-
clares. Forty autos were ordered
',Olt the streets to be sorapped or
completely overhauled, he added.
•
"Il think there are more old
cars on the 'road. than ever before.
This may account for the fact
that testers are finding every •
third ear is defective," the in, '
spector explained.
• Pins are going- to be scarce in
Britain. Before the war_theyused
6,000,000,.000. •pins •a year;,.nova
they ' are rationed to • 250,000,.009.
THIS URIOUS WORLD
B
William'
• Ferguson
FIVOMY
`THE C7IrTANCE;
FROMt"BOW'
el
K'NUCk .
-r-f 1E
SLJ
f .Try- PEARS'
r • Llc -F1 .IS BmST
i \ 3LE '1 z> PENETRATE
MURK"? '
ATMOSPHE.R.
¢OPR 193® 0Y NEA ssevicE;1145.
•
-I's -Keystone In• Keeping : Up- -
Economical. ;,Milk yield 'in
gummier Months,' Says Ont.
Dept: of Agriculture__ _
Pasture , is the keystone Of econ-
. omical inilk• production and is the
most important single factor 'in •
•.keeping Up milk yield during the .
summer months, says the Ontario
Dept. of, :Agriculture. No labor is +
.required in harvesting- and little,
'loss of 'nutrients occurs through .
weathering, hea.ing or moulding.
Any summer production program...
must be built around ;pasture and
the problems arising"out of pasture
production.' Pasture has a ,special.
interest to cheese 'patrons, as the
best .quality cheese is made from
summer milk. It,should be meinem-
• beret' that, there •. is a, two cent
bonus , ort. cheese .,offered by the
Ontario government. •
NEAR THE
Pasture yields can be '.increased
by seeding higleyielding mixtures
of grasses . and legumes on goo
soil that has a, high fertility level.
Wherever possible pasture land
should, be located near the barn.
Walking' cows long distances to and '
from the pa"sture field rs not con-
_ `dhcive .to. lt.igla,.ntlllt. ,:ields.,n. bL ad-...
clition• to using much 'energy, it pre-
disposes the cows to ,udder 'injury '
and sore; and cracked feet.
Do jnox overgraze pasture : Over-
grazii g. reduces the yield, ' Teases
injury from drought' and eneourag-
• es the growth of weeds. Sema
grasses and 'legumes are ,actually
killed by, very close 'grazing. To
,..prevent 'this, adopt a .system of ro-
tational ,pasturing.
He? WAS PR.tSIDiEN
12E�Y1/ MFi i�Iy _.�
WAS -MEASURER OF, THE
uNITF� STATm'S?
ANSWER: Andrew Mellon was never treasurer of the United , -
States. He was secretary of the Treasury under Harding, Cool.
4Idge and Hoover.
NEXT: ' By what name was Cincinnati once known?
VENERABLE WRITE
iIORIiZONTAL
1 Pictured aged ha
P A
Writer . in P A 2
Englanclt EN
10 Artificial silk. E
„'11 Therefore.
12 Gaelic.
13 Demise.
16 Folding bed.
17 Preserves.
19 Credit (abbr.)
20 Aromatic.
21 -Yet.
22 Nominal
value, •
23: To warble.
28 Midday
30 Not as many,.
32 College •
official
33 Tow boat.
34 •Lresome
speeongchesti..
36 Humor.•
37 Right (abbr.).
38 Perched.
39 Opposed to . • .
bottom.' • '
41 Railroad . '
(abbr.). birth. n • personality:`
A
N.
A
D
D
5
Previous Puzzle.
ilT1 .QeUNa
0
A
M
T -E
R
0
E
M
A
L
E
A
Y
D
N
MAPLE 0
ANILE R
L
0
EY CANKER
DL
QM
R
42 Punctuation" VERTICAL
mar -k, 214l'under.:':
'3•Hdps kiln.
• 4 Cereal grass.
4413ill slopes:
46 Chilling.
48 To start. ,5 Pep.
50 Lacerated 6, Finished.
52 Form of "be." • 7 Scapegrace ..
53 Coaxes. 81?ertaining to'
55 Musical note. ' ashes.
56 He is a• 9 Grief.
World-famou$ 12 He has an
or
57'He by -singular
PVP-=Patp's Right
•
i'ON'T ANY OF YOU KNOW
WHAT 'MGG- OFF PI
APPARATUS ,Ws_N'T GO
UP A `
S'i'RtEer
i
2
I0
21
29
9'2
47[
52
4 5
17
20
34,
38
6
13
30
48
7,
■
14 _..
22
8 '9
14 One who' ruins
• away..
15 Arranged i11•
• layers. .
i' Black• brie raL
18;Rig pen.
20 Stocking tear.
21 Marsh.
24 Natural
power.
25 Moisture:
26 Den. ;
27 Freedom of
access,
29 Opposed"to 11L
30 Furnishing,
31 To go to sleep.
34 Beret.
35 Sward.
38 Sun. •
40 Hoube canary.
42 Insensibility.
,43 Person
opposed....
44 Faction. •
45 Fern seeds.
47 Routing tool:
.49 It isd
51 Thing.
53 Each (abbr.).
54 Tone • B.
15
23
31•
39
24 25 26 27
32'
35
36
�4C
41 :
4
94
50
54.
4S
GS
51
By' J. MILLAI2 WATT
NO!
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