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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1937-03-18, Page 7THURSDAY, MARCH •18, 1937 • THE SEAFORTH NEWS PAGE SEVEN. •��•art•��...�■.�..--.x�.er�■r—••—+.err—+ 1 Duplicate .1-. N[c�nth v Statements 1 We can save you money on Bill and Charge Forms, standard sizes to 8t ledgers. white or colors ft will pay you to see our earnplos. 0 Also best quality Metal Hinged Se, tional Post Binders and Index The Seaiforth News Phone a Pa 84 • • 1 s 1 ■ 1 1 1 1 (Continued from Page Six) is none living among men who hath nat tasted of that treachery, and none who does not regret that he had plat- ed his trust in princes," "'My lord," cried the King, in a fury, "you have spoken 'falsity and treason. Go," "1 go," said he. "yet I will break my sward before ye. Ye shall do what ye will, and he snapped the blade across his knee and threw the pieces to the floor, turning to go without a reverence, 7 THE WORLD'S GOOD NEWS will come to vour home every day through THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR fin latereeational Daily Newspaper It records for you the world's clean, constructive doings. The Monitor does not exploit crime or sensation; neither does It ignore them, but deals correctively with them. Features for busy men and all the faintly, including the Weekly Magazine Section,' The Chrlsttan Science Publishing Society One, Norway Street, Boston. Massachusetts Please enter my subscription to The Christian Science Monitor for a period of 1 year 50.00 6 months 54.50 3 months 12.25 t Month '76C Wednesday Issue, Including Magazine Section: 1 year 5:.60.6 issues 66a Name, Address SninPln CPpY 00 nne,raar There was one about the (Cour from whom I ;heard many years tater some account of these things. He it was that admitted my lord and re- mained in attendance ;within a closet near by. When my lord came forth, !10 loaked'nei'ther to right nor to left, but marched s,wFitly towards the out- er floors, and this other, astounded by wrist he had heard, stood watching. hint. The (King 'hims'elf came nexrtl as he told me, seeming to be deeply moved, against 'his 'custom. He leaned on the courtier's arm, and looked af- ter my lord, "Not'hin'g will tame that felicity," he said, musingly. "There is no chance to break ,hint. Yet 'it is needful that he have a lesson, iHe goes beyond all wildness,' and then he added, with a sigh, "Poor Tony!" But my lord strode from Whitehall —u4ttil he .was come to •Charing Cross where he entered in the "Boar," and asked for me, There T heard so much of this interview as he was able to render me in his agitation. "I will not:fly; I will stay," saki he aver and over- again, "Let them do their worst," So restless was Ire that - when he sale down to write an epistle to my lady lie stood up a dozen times: and when he threw down the paper, he had gut no further than a dozen sent- ences, He 'went nut of the door into the street, and I followed, endeavor- ing to bring hint to reason, and argu- ing upon what the 'Icing had said. I said that His Majesty wished hint well, as all this proved, and that it were more prudent to yield to , the storm for the tittle. But he repeated only that he was denied justice, and that the Duke was but one man like himself, whom he would spit upon his sword for a coward. And in this grievous state he had conte, ,w'it'hout perceiving it, into the lower parts of the town. 'The hour w'as very late, for he had been long with the 'King. Suddenly he caste to a pause, considering me. "What do you here, Hilary?" said he. '9Go ye to your 'bed. This is no place for you, Ye know not what 1 plot." T remonstrated with hint, urging him to come with me. and protesting against a madness that would drive him maybe into an act of wickedness.. But he flung me ori and strode away, and 1 watched him pass down a. nar- row alley, where the fight was faint. But in that instant of watching 1 'be- held some figure that drew, out of the blackness and come near him. Ere T was aware, this new shadow sprang forward, and there was an exclama- tion; and suddenly the scene dissolv- ed into one that fled down the ill - lighted street, and one that lay upon the stones. Yet in that moment T had wiottaSasillomlma FRIENDS I We are combining our newspaper with these two great magazine offers, so that you can realise a remarkable cash sav- ing on this year's reading. Either offer permits a choke of top- notch r.*ng'saines with our paper, and, regardless of your selection, you will say i't's a bargain. YOU GET THIS NEWSPAPER FOR 1 FULL YEA%? air' CHOOSE t iiIc%Eirktti EITHER r i EI°r f OFFER 3yO ER ❑ 0 0 ❑ ❑ Maclean's (24 issues) - National Houle Monthly Canadian Magazine - Chatelaine Pictorial Review - Silver Screen - - American Boy • - Parents' Magazine ° - 1 yr. - 1 yr. - 1yr, 1 yr. - 1 yr. • 1 yr -1yr. - limo' Opportunity Magazine - 1 yr, Can. Horticulture and Home Magazine - - - 1 yr. YOUR NEWSPAPER• AND 3 BIG MAGAZINES re O �kIIANGE FROM OME LIST TO ANOTHER PERMITTED 1 MAGAZINE FROM GROUP A 1 MAGAZINE FROM CROUP R El GROUP "A" Maclean's (24 issues) - - 1 yr. National Home Monthly - 1 yr. Canadian Magazine - - 1 yr. Chatelaine 1 yr. Pictorial Review - - - 1 yr. Silver Screen - - - - 1 yr. Can. Horticulture and Hame Magazine • - - - 1 yr, GROUP "8" - ❑ Liberty Mag. (52 issues) - 1 yr. ❑ Judge 1 yr. o Parents' Magazine - • - 1 yr. O True Story - - - • .1 yr, ❑ Screenland • • - - 1 yr, YOUR NEWSPAPER NMI AND 2 BIG MAGAZINES THE SEAFORTH NE VS. GENTLEMEN: 1 ENCLOSE $ PLEASE SEND ME 0 OFFER NO. t (Indicate which) DOFFER NO. 2.1 AM CHECK- ING THE MAGAZINES DESIRED WITH A YEAR'S SUBSCRIP- TION TO YOUR PAPER. ' NAME ST. OR R.F.O. TOWN ANO PROVINCE ....... ......... SEA1+Uta"..1-1. U.. recognized the shadow that -fled for 1 . AT OTTAWA that which 1 had seen in the court- The most evident characteristic of yard of the "'Bush" at !Farnham. Il'at-liantent this week is the drive to- T ran to my lord, and bent over wards prarogab!on 'w'hich is now not, hint. improbable by 'Mar'ch 215th. Monday "Who is this?" he asked. "Is ` it will 'bring the end of the debate on thou, Hilary? C had thought—" and.' the Conservative want-of-icon,fiidence then he murmured. "The third time," umeln'ployment amendment, and prob- and after 'that, 'What 1 have. done .f ably the end of the debate on the mo- have dole, and •w'ith a Tittle heaving .tion of tlhe Minister of Finance to :re - of his breast was ,quiet. solve the House into Committee of The letter which my lord had be- Ways and Means for the purpose of gun I. .took to my lady at Heriot considering in Committee the taxation Deane, but what it contained .1 never and tarriff mea'su'res which are to knew, for I sealed it without reading. keep the public servies going for the The villain ,Frangus was hanged an ,tlhe next fiscal year. All opposition groups succeeding twentieth of :filly, keep- will vote for the amendment. Couch- ing to tl>,e end a close silence as to ;ed in simple and direct language, what 'he 'knew. So died Anthony, the this amendment 11110 00 escape clause fourth Earl of Cherwell, in the thirty- such as the C.C.T. ,non -confidence first year of his age, o1 the ninl'h of amendment to the similar motion to June, 11154. Anthony, the fifth Earl, consider .defense estimates with its who was the last of that House, was socialistic feature as a second barrel born in Jlan'uary,'l'tiSS, at Heriot The, first important fact about 507 Deane, and ,1'1S cut .off untimely at employment is that the ambers of the age of thirteen, in the year of his those unemployed once the seasonal Mother's death. Alethea, Countess of curves are ironed out remail su'btan- Cherwell. tially where they were when the pre- THiE E!NiD %ion's Government lilt office. 'Phe satire is true of those in receipt of re- lief, if anything, the numbers are a ACCIDENT LEADS TO bit higher. When Mr. King appealed MAJOR INDUSTRY to the electors to restore his Govern- Tent to power that they might deal A cow licking over <a lamp they with 0.111% pas then ',considered Can - say. stiu•tcd the Chicago lire...\ spieler aria'. g010test problem, namely. that 01111bin ar a thread- IMMO'. Bruce of unemployment, he gave the figure of Srtrtland victory, But these and at that elate as 4110000 As a matter of nt:any' other like historical incidents fact that figure slightly understated pale bison the story of the boars- the situation, hitt it is now, accord - wife whose 'carelessness founded one in•,y to the January figure., 5,110.000— cif the 10.,1 im•portan1 phases of the just 215 p.c. in excess of what it was Canadian 'fish industry. according to the ,present Prime :Min - Away back in a Scottish village a ester's statement during the course of housewife left a haddock hanging the last 'campaign, In receipt of dir- frnnl the miters of her cottage as she est relief and other forms ref public went out for 1110 day. She had left it assistance there are now more than too near the peat fire, 'however, and 1,300,1)00. when she returned the 'fish was all :The second great important fart dried by the smoke from the fire, Site' that enlengcs from the discussion i$ decided to. cook it anyway and the re- that it will not be solved by an Urn - stilt was so a'p'petising that the news employment Commission. This House spread- like wildfire and smoked 'fish „1 Commons made the nearest ap- became a national delicacy, prna'ch of its lifetime to being shock - Today the popularity of snu,ked ed when orders in council which fish has spread everywhere 'and the were tabled by the Minister of La - appetite for this delicacy has founded hour, and whish provided for various 'Canadian organizations of interna- classes of appointments to this Com- tionet repute, some of w'h14111 have mission at substantial salaries, were been establi lte'd for a century and read into Hansard. 'The use of the more. Commission 'became apparent, 11 this The Canadian climate has 'beet] new Bureau does anything but pro- found ideal for the production of this vide political jobs. it sets h p :a new delicacy and other cured dish and to- statistical service, and it will go to the clay the Dominion holds a foremost regular B'urean o'i Statistics to gest its place in world trade in the export of information lust as sure as Rebecca dried, smoked. and pickled fish. with her ,pit'eher went to a well. The ------------ \1 mister of Labour, using the class - PROPAGATE 'HOUSE ical phrase insists that there must he PLANTS BY CUTTINGS ,1 breakdown", or what the ordinary man would call an analysis of those The plants, from '5111(117 cuttings of unemployed. house plants are taken, should he Another important element of the strong and vigorous. ilF sttmtad by in_ debate had to du with the wheat prab- 'cu1. \ir. 1011172 in opening' Itis Western sects or by uuaube1de surronndin'grs of Bran - heat, light, temperature, m tool, 01 campaign in the wheat City of Bran- don clammed sponsorship for the min- imum price provisions of the \\'heat Board :Act. In fact ,this 01111111 was aintly reiterated by 11r, hi1172 and' \tr. Dunning this weer: dnrin'g .the roar:- of \I r, Be nin it s spceeli, to I which Tato %lir latter gave the nit { k vions retort "Then why don't you put the measure int-, effet•t?" its purpose' was to provide through the lioard an , alternative maul:rting method to that arl>plied 011'011 4;11 111a• Ordinary -'batt- i n•1. of trade. fi:,1 the farmers riches - e -ed to lite 11„7r'1, iii aeco',',i m e w$h l ;11,,• 107, 0 ,i,a,.;,' :' '1t,• :\.•I, they world 11:1 ' rrrric an ittiti+tl pay - merit of 0i” , 0..111s. and bc'ansc ' their partieipati'm Certitieates a. hrr-1 thcr pay meat of ,ollitt 45 00110 by reason o. the ri., 111 "rices. \' it has turned d u=11. t n s wito sold, as farm- i must in I1.' hall season, weref ori no cents, anis the balance) n111I its to into the pockets of <enlat r. ,Tern'. whom, it istrue:: inners in a 'gnat! way are to lie! fo•.nnl. The linked K.ingdit trade 00;00e-' nler11 i, the Barnett Government trade,- agreement ' of !1932. The 1 (1r1711110111$1111111 held the provisions oil the olrl agreement eat ono 'tau' while; he wrote them into the new with the other, and 1t is. almost certain that every Conservative Member will vote for it when it is finally submitted to the House in the forst of a Pill. weakened by excessive production of dowers, the result will be unsatisfac- tory. and will be ectualiy so if soft watery growth, produced by a High temperature ami excess of nitrogen- ous food. is used. It is always hest to propagate from individual plants that. in their vigour, freedom from disease, prolificacy, 00 in size. shape or color of their flowers or fruit, show 111111.1111 Merit, Hoose plant; aro generally propa- aned by soft cuttings of the stent. l'hey are usually matte from terminal shoots batt cuttings from lower clown the 1%0711 can be used if in proper con- ;liticin. Cuttings should always -he taken from young vigorous growth that is first int not woody, \la'ke the cut almost at right angles with a .harp knife just below a node rule thickened part of the stent where Ibe ,nos grow), The cutting should be , >out three inches tong but may he shorter. The important poilu is the right condition of the base. Cuttings of this kind should have at least oar leaf and sometimes from No to four are left. Large ones can he cut in half and the lower ones must be removed. Do not allow cuttings to wilt. Clean river sand is the hest medium for rooting cuttings. Small pots are. most convenient to use in the home and the cuttings should be arranged around the edges .three or four in a pot. The sand must be .kept evenly moist at all times.:A paper should be placed aver the pot to prevent the leaves from wilting. iAfter,the cuttings have rooted plant singly in stnabl pots using a' compost of three pants loans, one part leaf mould and one part sand. Care must be used' to prevent damage to the delicate roots. Place the pots in shade until the ,plants become established. Water care'fu'l'l'y and do nat let the soil become either too wet or too dry. Some house plants such as Coleus and English ivy will root easily in jars of Water kept in the window, Af- ter rooting, they should be potted a; described above. The total area devoted to the principal field crops in •Canada in 119316 was 57,1662;5150 'acres, an. increase 11 00416;0190 acres over 119138, but 8710,900 •-res less than thearea sown ire 19313 TESTED RECIPES Moulded Cream Desserts In making moulded creast desserts, ,gelltatine is a necessary ingredient. used in the form al granulated gela- tine, jelly powders, or marshmallows. To ensure successful results, the fol- lowing rulers should be carefully ob- served; measure all ingredients accur- ately: if granu'la'ted gelatine is called for in the recipe, soak the gelatine in cold milk or water, using art least twice as much liquid as gelatine: add soaked gelatine to riot mill: or other liquid and stir tt9thil •,gelatine is thor- ou'gh'ly dissolved; 1f jelly powders or marshmallows are to be used. - dis- solve the powder or marshmallows in the lint milk or other liquid with atit previous soaking; alloy gelatine mixture to partially set betfore fold- ing into whipped cream, Beater- egg D, H, McInnes Chiropractor Electro Therapist — Massage Office — Commercial Hotel Hours—Mon. and Thu'rs, after noons and by appointment FOOT CORRECTION by manipulation—Sun-ray treat- ment Phone 227. whites, fruit, and such like; rinse mould with cold water before pour- ing in the dessert and loosen with 'a knife around the edges %viten ready to unntould. Grape Supreme 2 tablespoons granulated gelatine 14 cup cold water 1:f cups grape juice 4 table•'poons sugar ta'blrspoon lemon juice 1 cup whipping, cream Soak .gelatine in cold water. dieat g rape juice and add sugar-andgela- tine. Stir until dissolved. Add lemon: juice, and when mixture is partially. set, 0old in 'whipped cream. Peach Delight 1 package lemon or orange jelly powder I cup boiling water 1 cup peach juice 1 tablespoon lentinl juice 1 cup diced peaches tis eup "blanched" ainionds cup whipping• cream Dissolve jelly powder in boiling wat- er. Add peach and lemon juice. Chill. When slightly thickened, 'beat until frothy. .Fold in peaches, almonds, and w•hippec1 cream. Mould and child. Marshmallow Delight 3d lb. marshmallows 1 cup diced pineapple eup blanched almonds 0 cup whipping cream cup maraschino cherries Cut marshmallows into small 'pieces. Add diced .pineapple, chopped cher- ries, and shredded almonds. Allow to stand far several hours. Whip cream and fold into fruit .mixture. Turn into mould and chill 'until ,firm.. The above recipes are taken 'from "Cream Desserts" by Laura C, Pep- per, a copy of witch may the obtained' on request from the 'Publicity. and Extension Branch, Dominion Depart- ment of Agriculture, Ottawa. AID TO BEAUTIFYING THE HOME GROUNDS .Even the most modestly designed home can Ibe made to .look remarkably attraotive by planting shrubs and flowers ,its the adjoining land. It is al- so equally true that a home which may reflect the genius of its architect will appear incomplete unless the grounds around it are beautified by an appropriate or harmonious arrange- ment of trees,.shrubs and 'flowers. The Canadian Horticultural Council in co-operation with the Dominion Department of .Agriculture has a'lim- ited supply of a hook entitled "Beau- tifying B a" - t sing the Hoene. Grounds of i .e.,• dal" in which the subject is disc-Is.,..1 in the most lucid and 11011;•'1 w•1a3 : ,r 111,740 w' hose home. .tan' -i small lot or Ybose •,rho -c ' .' to rounds are .fairs has plans silo 'at., 17.1, i'lr , may he arranger' 114 71%e. a .f tree., shrubs, oerellttial and anneail, flowers suitable to efa0ll area o' tt. da. It is a 0,171')e' eesive ,r1 prove , e! Tia 1':yn r: 7011' 11117e a . ttl n,0ke. 1'101' 'i lit e •710-.,111.linzs 5l '•` of a t;l'ai I7.1 'or ' l..r ':err. .e ,a0)a'.l wit ' may .c0 eb 11i- book, of which , t:1 r is only a t1 sited supply, r ,e ,710711l.1, 'ar '215 ▪ is. the cost production, ,by writing' to the . -..cry. Canad'a,i Hortieul0'ural Cantu•: 1:14 Vitt • ria Street. Ottawa. Care in Fertilizers Every farmer hopes to abtain the `tea possible res1110s front the fertiliz- er which he will buy this eprim. The results depend r course on good drainage of the land, the quantity of , humus in the soil that will hold mois- ture, the suitability of the fertilizer for the crop 'On which% 10 1s to be used and the placement of the fertilizer when it is appllied. Experiments disclose that .the prop- er placement of fertilizer is about as important as the plant food content of the fertillizer itself and that when broadcast -much waste of plant food is bound to Decor. Realization of this fact is 'becoming more general every day- and farmers are advised to 'study the `iertilizer placement question with aview to obtaining better results. In- formation regard'in'g this may be ob- tained from Dominion Experimental Farms and the Atgt•iculturai Cobleges., • First Buoy: "b\'e"re picicing sides, England against India.'. Second Boy ::'.Are the Indians 'blacking their faces?" 'First Boy: "No. the :English col washing :theirs" 7 ll'rael'=i+i9