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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1937-05-20, Page 3TiHI%RSDAY, MAY 20, 1937 THE SEAFORTH NEWS PAGE THREE et a0c 11t45�r s:, A HOME IMPROVE ENT LOAN w1Bo transform your Biome or farm . Whether you live in town or on the farm, the Home Im- provement Plan can serve you. It paves the way to modernization: provides ready money to install im- provements that make the home more comfortable and the farm more productive and easier to work. The list at the right shows some of the improvements that qualify. Get in touch with your local Committee or with any re- putable contractor or ma- terials supply firm. Then, with an estimate of the cost of the improvement you con- template, arrange a loan with your bank. Or you can call on your banker first for guidance. National Employment Commission UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF Tilt' DOMINION GOVERNMENT SEAPORTH ADVISORY COM- MITTEE: H. Stewart, Chairman, Phone 32. D. H. Wilson, Secretary, Phone 100w ONTARIO ADVISORY COMMIT- TEE Metropolitan Bldg., Toronto Ryland H. New, Chairman I. Markus, Secretary Combine house 'and garage. Enlarge existing rooms. Add new rooms. Replace gutters, down- spouts and flashing. Scrape and refinish floors, Tile bathrooms. Linoleum in kitchen and other rooms. Repair brickwork and stone coping. Remove antiquated exierior woodwork. New storm doors or sash and screens. Weatherstrip doors and windows. Insulate inner face of roof. Provide new wall panelling. Provide special linen closet. Check wiring and add new outlets. New electric lighting fixtures. Conceal radio wires including antennae. Replace old refrigerator with built-in electric refrigerator. New built-in ,bath tubs. New lavatories. Automatic hot-water tank. New heating system,'or air conditioning system. Convert coal -burning boiler to oilor gas- burning equipment. Sec folder for complete Hit (The cost of ibis series of adrerli,rrments sponsored b) the National Employment Commission het been de. hyped emir,ly by poblie- prrrted concerns and in• tunt ridards as a daibetion owards )hal "Nslwn.trlde co • operative effort" en. visaged by the Parliament of Canada in rhe Nat/ono/ line. t teens Cammirrimr Art,) world the industrial revolution has at the level it knew 400 years before. meant a general rise in the standard And it has held down the living ,tan - of living which has meant in turn a dards of the rest of the cnnntry, ,general increase in wage scales since it Makes constantly available a which has meant higher costs. But. in vast reservoir of extremely cheap la- Pinan it has not. The agricultural hor eager to work in intlusir), at any bait of the population, too numerous wage above the hare subsistence )ec- to live fatly upon :Japan'5 limited el (f the farms, farmlands, and Ioflg habituated to ex- Again, there is japan's-efficiency rtremc frugality, has been held nearly in the use of Machinery. In prodnc- ung textiles her biggest export, she has ctev'e'1m'ped the 'I'oyocla 100111, one of the world's best, Japan's dirahle and economical formula' for mixing American cotton and cheaper Indian textiles is 11 secret which weaver, throughout the world ha ye been a t- xictns--and found it impossible—to -lettr1l. Bot it wotild .be entirely ia'lse to thunk that Japan's intitr)c's are all large -settle. la fact, 04 per cent of her mdnstrial w ()rku tire in tiny ' 1t tarn," employing. less than five :coil. --unknown hundreds of thousands of little wooden fae;o-ir.t-in-the-home where cash wage, as low as 211 cents a month :>1e paid, or ,yhere father, mother, sons, ilditiaitters labor mire - wittingly fir :, mea.ser return, at al! time,. hutch 1 •-, ,h;ut the t/ -t -rent, a - day' average of the inrlttstrial factory worker. Japan thus has an industrialization which must sell its goods abroad since her domestic . market is incap- able of buying her industrial product. And the question arises, then, how long the inalnstrial workers of japan will live on one economic level while their goods sold on another. hurther, boat long can "the Japanese peasant be held in an agricultural civilization which the Japanese industrial worker ,corks in the civilization of the Toy - oda ,loon)- -How lent; will farm wa- n" he willing tit ;qt, on weaving cot- turttp h npc I t (root) bitten ton by hand for their own clothing in into taw, sung• the tongue like red titer and thither about the fields, but a country in which machines weave hot 'becomes thoroughly the eotttge, stable and garden were it so abundantly that it is ,hipped ,hot 1')2/'11 drier! and wnok'ed, and uopc,lnnv,t in mind, abroad in quantities almost great ell- its starchy content was once a source Help w•as 11100ays at hand in the of bread to the Seneca Indians," ough to clothe the world? How long ln 51)< persons of a manservant and a•tnaid- can one century. be kept ,alive within •2/111. and other WO hl11t01 servant. another in the same country, so that the golden cups of the marsh marl -'Cresswell was aesthetic in taste a ratan looking sidewise from his car gold (Caitlta paulstris) will be gath- into the farmhouse w"here a ;woma11 sits at work :hodks not only into that house but backward' hundreds of years into history as well? The answer is simple. All this can 'he clone just so long as the peasant can be prevented from imagining a life in which women do not weave cotton by Hand and families do not live on a few dollars a year, Alt pre- sent they are very well prevented fr0111 imagining anything 50 fantasti- cally remote, bar centuries loyalty, Ont thought, has been the crown of the 'peasant's life. Freedom to think for himself had no place in such a world. The few w110 today do think have no chance, The familiar methods of propagan- da, of censorship, of "auoral educa- tion," of police terror, now in use and now effective, may remain effective for some time unloss a seri0u5 war occur,, \. ','rims war, lasting more than two 317.0, would almost certain- ly exhaust the country, producing ec- onomic collapse and the beginnings o, social revolution, But sooner or later, BOTANICAL NOTES FOR MAY strains :r. ,anar!1 trees will claim alae t y E. \\', ,Hart, I)niision. of loot.:o-- nli«,n eonr•cially those who 50- an1, Central Exp, 11arnn, Ottawa.) ctici.patr and ,appreciate ,the s,veet red- 1'11erc are many wild c�lant, in purple fruits, about the size of cur - bloom of more than ordinary , >1nti- rants, when they mature in July. clainterest, e ;'e•ialdv those ttlat rilnttld there be douitt 1(12/110 the im attention as being poisonous or identity of the foregoing or any .111,1 %01'111'. ;::.:111111(11a/1 plants; s" l nretti-. 511 Throughout •Neta n ti 1. 71 under 1 1,. 11113 o1' a ai,: tree. auk. (d,2/ 2/•r an? Chri.trl t.1 the I./on-Maw) Botanist, .7row ung in to.' r r'1( t al Experimental mental 1:1-,11. O1X2.0 1. 11'!•. m -the• -'w yit � •' ,1.,t, will he ,)]caked f identify 111,m. Fan, t )- ,r'n ir•a', + hit a attached 1,1 a n, t'ck, its thee, llin!ng ),•leder., \\';11(• is .0.„.)-„t W. N. CRESSWELL RESIDED the do,.er 1tli -1,ii' of licit r'- NEAR EGM'ONDVILLE s,•mhlc- that r' its rnitii-ated relation -;--a 1111 1. 211 , 1 „ben:'.. I. \l .:.1 a -!, in 2', til:; rr; protection (-'nit'.) 1!•,• 1'711'F , , fluters, a Welt are very n1L'' and 1(r- 1 '•f i 't.i•,•r. ranged around 1h, t_.Itapvt , • . "Iacl (opadix) 1ehicit 1 t 1d, era•ct in 1 •1 1 r:r Ai , n t,, ,tel 1 11 r' n and rite. I tl•tit" of Pathe; , 11. sp'i>1e i• „ow, t... ("toad in the fifth: - pale green and often striped o, ,pot- '1'be :ila,-o selected for ' Ii.,110' 1101 with reddisla'hrowu or purple. In ,1(1 a site in the ala:1(,t mt:t, the autumn this-0(1l'9it gird .ia.110 nil' 'lhnl1t mfr milt, from the 10111 ,. (( nave withered, Itut attacher) to the 1a.,0,milvil!e, nierbidk'ing the intik will he a cluster of most attrac- bell River. \\'lnle he )orated on a tics and cons picuon.: bright -scarlet, Farm, Ile \0110 110 farmer, Ile may shining berries which 100k t103' have been attracted to the spot ,ming tempting, but nliist 11,tt,. nn any 1(r- to the fact that a breather and si=ire count, 1e eaten: In spite of the fact of hi, were stvtilhrg 00 'land just that this plant is listed as being phis- across the road. "furthermore, the nnous C'. 10, ti allitrs says 111 hi,: place had aspects of beauty. \\'illiain', 0, o>I rl \\'i'Id Plants"; --"the familiar Persouyll interest in farm land 1\1(. lank -in -the• 1 111101 , , , , w hose small, limited to about 11,) acres, Some n cors), -root) 1i rn h<,rses,. rows and eherp wauder0)1 11- ered in large .quantities for garnishing the home, and •they really are worth the discomfort of wet feet. Mrs, 1'01(211 in her 'Studies of )Plant'Life in Canada,'" says that. the leaves were used as a pot herb .by the earl} set- tlers, before gardens were planted, Those ,people without gardens now— ant there are very, many --may like to sample these spring greens. •\11 who are Interested in edible wild fruits should .he familiar with .the poisonous kinds, in a'lt stages of growth. In the woods from New 11 runsw'ick to te'\llnftoblt is the blue soho:h (C'adlaphylltmt thalictroides), sometimes unwisely called blueberry,. as the whole plant, including the "-blueberries, is listed 210 being gtois- (nous. When y, ung, it is dak,green- ish-purple in colour, which gradually turns to green with maturity. The dowers are greenish -•purple too, and site place to large globular berry- like seed, or poisonous "blueberries." \ls, growing in rich woods front Oast to coast alt'. the Poisonous bane - berries t,\ctae,t .yp,), They are not easily distinguished from One another war 00 no war, the products of )ap- in the NEM eeine: stage, With the very 1111(01' inclustritrlisn must necessarily 'mall white flowers arranged, gener- he desired by the 1110911' who snake ally, in obinn.g clusters at the end 117 theta 1)011 by the 'people. who feed the the stalks, and clic 11idespt•ettding penp'10 who make theist, \\')ten that compound leaves; but hater on the red time mines, the standard of Hying fn 1t11ehcrries have red fruits, and the japan ,will rise, or the ruling class white banehcrries (white fruits. 11),11) which now prevents its rise will •hacc kinds are said to he very poisonous, to light still more strenuously to hold Tho edible -fruited jnuetn'rries it down. (:\ntelanchilr .p.) are in Bloom. Clusters of conspicuously 101110-pe:al- led white- flowers, out before the Want and For Sale ads, 3 w•Ics. 50r, leaves are tally expanded tut these r`'iis�7 «r•.11,1rP,"..,: '� ., •.I:;�.Yr��yt, We re Selling Quality Books a Books are Well Made, Carbon is Clean and Copies Readily. All styles, ", •• Carbon Leaf and Black Back. Prices as Low as You Can Get Anywhere. Get our Quotation on Your Next Order, � 1'i !�' l 4+ 5 � 4Y.h �.,. r '; '' fOrth / 1,4, wr✓ , SEAFORTH, ONTARIO, and devoted much time to what VCr will tall his principal hobby, panting, Lite was patterned by hint after his impressions of the English gentle.. 111A11. Certain kinds of sport had strong appeal for hint. Not infrequently he m,as seen strolling throng -1i the fields and into the woods with clog and gun and, i11 season, he was not averse to halt a hunk and east a line. :id -rolling about the gardens and among tilt' flowers WW2 dttu• to 111' heart, and a drive 'to 1 gnuutdoiile and to Seaforth In .15 'English -styled phae- ton left impressions that still linger, 1-1ospitality reigned in the hone, and at his 'board, presided over •hy 31 rs. Cresswell, as highly -educated Rio11.h lady, were matt and drink th1n1 would satisfy any discriminating pit 001'1(11, 0. i re',uell's gnists Cattle iron near and fat and went away with 11011'11 '•l'a,l111 for wanting to C1xn1, ✓:1111. The ,a•cenhrntsr ,,,uwnitl:iO t!it' cot- tagc 10 '. „n,' of itis ;t,•ond possession, and 111 it were plants both tropica' •111,1 unusna1. Surrounded, as alight seen) to a mien of his l'o'aner, by the ;tlut(s. ;tithe of a back A 011110 0,211I try, he neer lost interest in his y,etial bah - by, or profession, hot strove e.ontion- 011s1y u' keep abreast with the tines and in 10ne'h with the leading artist in ['attach at the time. 1 ate walls in has home were adorn- ed with numerous ,ketches and paint- ings done •in oil toad water color. many of which were obtained by ex- change with other artists, \y•ile at work in the studio he de- and progress, mantled absolute quiotue,5. The harm "The Queen and I trill altways keel,` a dy orthe buzz. of a he,' 10'nuld in our hearts the inspiration of 't#lis t )lint to out torn brush lmmo•d- 11113, May we ever 'he wor:hy,o? ,t'•tc sand not r,•,nun• work till the gond will which I ani pmol tri,think v,'o• ,Iv :.1 or ok-'1: d ;r surrotinds us .at the outset of my ''1' rlhnn• reign. - - - 112/2/10 ',> hits r I the l'rotipec "i thank you from my heart, awl M11)nrbec, also t,. the \\'l0e \loan1- may .God )bless yon 'all." tains i,1 1110- U.S., were not inirequent. Ile lovedthe scenery in hath place,, -The (King was presented to Itis old. usually had a0th hien k Ea large audience by 'Prime - Muster ,camera: Baldwin, The King spoke very dellib- On I.me occasion NI r. Cresswell waseratd}• and clearly. :iceompanicd to Que'hec by Henry jackon, of figntondyille, ltd his lit- $77,000 PROFIT 'ON ICE GUESSES 1111 01111. \Cltilt' tlterc, some .ketches 1 -ler - :very made by 'him 1(i certain rocks, I atrb mars "buster" Alaska, 'A fay .1,, \fere front which he produced in oil what `'in aE',Ater cenbreak-, double rt •tare) by him as being one of 'boot, of s, tura ice break -1(p of his het pictures. 'Perhaps 011 a in: contests, turned inrestutent of his Par $77,1100 profit over ,to a hanker -step with i1 were sheep, also diene in oil, father today 1(111 went hack to bus cAich wcrt' grazing in his brot'her's driving, THE KING'S MESSAGE King .t gorge \'1, crowned at \\'est- minster Abbey last week, thanked 'his Empire around the world from lluck- mOhairn 'Palace, London, in an 'ad- dress over 11 vast radio network on Coronation Day, ,lav 1111. Tits reply broad 1.1 greetings, was: 'It i- with a very full heart 1 speific 1., t 1) tonight Ae,e 102010 7 1 v •s 11 1 ,isle i 1 .1 , : n,' n r.: in tl ',511 11111-, "t hr 11:4,' 11 7'111..11.111, Ute 001110,0 iisrlf 11(0 .. -2:111!2 r. :•e, for 7110 - :0•:• '0. :1 '41'..ce '..,eand the •,10,10. _. -r i'1 il;.- ancieni 1 i taadedi. I 17 111,1 the ;,l, ,• Em- , ntt _tth red with- . tit, \: ,,-' •t\' t 1111Pt1.7 \hiley, I re is t o that 1 e , ,ow speak 00 e:c1 C r pet may 1' tXr'-r't 1,1 iriends in distant !an'Is ' and, hope, new- friends in those parts where it has not yet been my good fortune to p2/. "111 'this personal way the Queen and 1 wish health and happiness to 10.1 ,l' and we do not forget at this time of celelbra'lion those who are liv- ing under the shallow -of sickness, Their example of courage and good dozen.1tip is always before its. And to :diem 1 would Send a special mes- sage of :spittoo't•hy and good cheer. I cannot find words with which to thank you for your lire and loyalty to the Queen and myself, "Your good will in the streets to - doh your countless messages from overseas and from every ,quarter of these islands has ,filled sour 'hearts to ctweellowing. I' will only say .this. that if in the cooling years I can show 111y gratitude in service 'to you that is the way .above all others that I should choose, "To maty millions the crown is a symbol of unity .by 'the grace of (Ind and 'hy the will of '['110 free peoples of the British 'Comnlontvealth, I have assumed :that crown: In ale, as your Bing is vested for a time the duty of maintaining its honor and, integrity. This is indeed a grave and constant responsibility but it gave the oonfid- 011Ce to see your representatives in the abbey and to .know t'ha't you too were enabled to join in that infinitely 'beau- tiful ceremonial. "Its uwtw'd rd forms come down front distant tinges but its inner inean- ing, and message are always new. for the highest of .distinction is the ser- vice of wither; and .to the ministry of kingship 1 have, with your sharing, dedicated myself with the :Queen at my side in words of the deepest sol- emnity. \Ve will, 1!od helping tt:r faithfully discharge our 'trust. Those of you who are children 0010 will, I hope, retain the 'Memories of the dal' of carefree happiness such. as 1 :till have of the day,of my 'grandfather's coronation. In the years ye't' to c0nle some of putt will travel from one part of the commonwealth to another and moving thus within the family circle will nlcet many whose thoughts are colored by the same memories, whose hearts unite in devotion to 011r Cor - maw heritage. Von will learn, I hope, how ntrtch oiw free a,501ia.lion means to ifs, haw much our friendship with each other and all other nations ern the earth can help the cause .of peace Young aspiring artists who tame Anderson, il, a hos driver !l13years. to hint for assistance and advice al- told how 111 won the $715,)00 Tanana fofrl him not only approach- River contest Wednesday and split a 4,,1(101 prize with ,lliily Root, another !'' Int ,0.., untrsnally 1 inch (111 0( hese was Robert FordIrageh who hie operator, on the earlier Chena .22/,11.1() art in London Engl.n d. and bread<up, 1 t7o, in Canada,' a pupil. „f \\•illiati "i on the 'Tanana ice contest at :'0,swell. 111'. Cresswell was e'Iecterl Nenata by wild shots," Anderson ex - charter 010111 her of the O. S..-3. in plainer). "I hail 33 enesses registered. 1872 and of the. 10. C,' A. in 1980, But 1 W011 the Chen:) hirer prize by choosing the -minute rr presenthl In 1,005a ra'qucs't came to \ars, g my I 1(e., vc to sill t fat iii:lure 01 -by; ''lintel 3y her husband, the The Tanana 12ire•r broke at 10,04 '-1e:ti e buyer intending to )Jaye Pan, \\'eduesilay, two minutes later t 1 lac al 111 the \ 7tional 11t \I11srnm that 11,1 glint nearest ,11> 1. Ilse a)ta35a tang 1111)11 at a cost of $1,- ,1 11110 pont guessed the exact Minute, 140.1100, because •the painting was 1" 1 lt.m., 1'nt day`, nn the Chena considered to he worthy 0f a 7101115 in�Ht' b . nem) prate there. •1' 31' picture, how•- He left disposal or ,the money to et•cr, is now in Sealorth,-)11 the home his step -father, 1-1, 5, Stoecker, preci- of. the Misses Cee aycl1, nieces of aha :lent of the hirst National Rank of artist. It 1s said that in about the year I'airhaiks, ftv!vq this pastoral -scene received the highest award given :a painting in ''arena, Want and For Sale ads, 3 wks, SOc,