HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1937-10-21, Page 7;.•
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1937
THIE SEAFORTH NEWS
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Stateents
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-VIEMNYNISIOS
ORANGEVILLE AREA MAPPED
'The Department of 'National De-
fence has issued a new map ,covering
portions of the counties of IDafferite
Peel ,aad Welling•tonin southwest-
ern .Ontario and the ,distribution of
this new sheet is being carried out
by the Surveys and 'Engineering
Branch tf the Department of Mines
and Resources. The map, which is
known as the Orangeville sheet,
takes in a rich agrioulteral are.1, we41
settled, and served by lines of the
Garnett= Pacific Railway aect by
Provincial Highways 6, 9 and .10. This
part of the province ,has an elevation
between 11)O and i1l050 'feet above
sea level, the rise being shown on the
niap ,hy contour lines at 25 -foot inter-
vals.
Grand delver crosses about the cen-
tre of the area and cam, streams
shown include Irving creek,, !Willow
brook, Speed river, Credit river, and
Nettawasaga river. ;Oraageville is the
principal town shown. on the mep.
including Belfountain, Cataract, Al-
ton, Betwood, !Grand Valley, Walde-
mar. Whittington, !Damasous and
Monticello.
lin ,additiou to the above Infortna-
tion the map shows townships and
concessioias, wooded land, orchards,
chttrohee, schools, ,anel farm buildings.
As the map was made with the aid
of air photographs, the information
is quite complete and may be de-
pended upon as +being accurately
shown.
This map and others of the same
series of adljoining areas may be ob-
tained front the Surveyor General,
Department of -Mines and !Resources,
at a. cost of 26 cents per ,copy. In or-
der to encourage the study of local
gengraphy, one ropy will be sent
free to the principal or board of trus-
tees of any school situated 'within. the
area. Information concerning other
maps -supplied fret to sehools will be
sent upou request.
PAGE SEVEN
Canadian Pacific President Tours Ontario
"Ontario on the whole is en-
joying an excellent year. Begin-
ning with agriculture anti coding
with industry progrees has been
greater than in the past seven
years," Sir Edward Beatty, G.B.E.,
LL.D„ Chairman and Presi-
dent. Canadian Neill(' Railway,
stated after a recent insnection of
the Company's properties and or
agriculture and Mi.;
ly throughout the province. Sir
Edward, and the members M his
'party, were everywhere welcomed
by reprementetive eitizene, and
are here ehown on the station
platform al' Sudbury after being
received by W. E. Mason, presi-
rlent of the Sudbury Board or
Trade; 3. Simpson. acting
mayor of Sudbury, and Mayor
19 A. Collins, -onnAr PIM% n the
• •
Courtney of the Sudbury Star.
G. B. Unwire vice-president of fin-
ance and treasurer; Aitken Walk-
er. general freight agent; Coecit;g0
Stephea, vlee-preisildent or traf-
fic; Mayor Collins; Sir Eldward
Beatty; 17..1. Hurnnhrey, vice-pre-
sident and ze.neral manager, east-
ern lines. Thomas Fla uthl ey, North
Bay general superintendent; Mr,
Simpson. Mr, and B.
71 sil ty, superintendent Sudbury
TESTED RECIPES
Peach Delicacies
In view of the abundant crop or
peaches this season; 'consequently
making the .fruit comparatively cheap
the following recipes may be 'build
to be of particular interest.
Peach Ginger Shortcake '
11. cep butter
te egg
14 'cup sour milk
1108 teaspoon ground ginger
deee cups .flour
14 .cup brown sugar
14 cup molasses
Ye teaspoon sodsa
1V8 teaspoon ground ,einnamon
1 teaspoon ebaking powder
Cream butter and sugar, add egg
and beat well. Add molesees, then
sour milk, to "which soda, .giteger and
cinnamon have ^been added. Mix well,
then add 'flour and .balcing powder
sifted tog•ether. Bake in a greased
pan 50 minutes in a stow oven (325
de,grees F.).
Split while lot and pile 'fresh sliced
sugared peaches -generously between
and on top. Whipped creatn may be
served if desired.
Fresh Peach Crumbly ,Crust
'1' cup flour
1 cup .sttgar
6 peaches
There are also a ,number of villages, Want and !For Sale ads, 3 wks. 150c 14 ttlp butter
eeeo`
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,eedtego'w
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What could be more complete than a combina-
tion offer that gives you a choke of your favourite
magazines—Sends you your local newspaper—
and gives yourself and family enjoyment and
entertainment throughout the what? year —Why
not take advantage of this remarkable offer that
means a real saving in money to you?
This Offer Fully Guaranteed—
All Renewals Will Be Extended
MAIL THIS C
UPON TODAY
SELECT ANY THREE OF
THESE MAGAZINES
El Maclean's (24 Issues) 1 yr,
jJ Chatelaine 1 yr.
Ei National Home Monthly 1 yr.
D Canadian Magazine 1 yr.
EliRodand Gun - - 1 yr.
Pictorial Review Combined
with Delineator - - 1 yr.
El American Boy - Bmo.
Can. Horticulture and
Home Magazine - - 1 yr.
Parents' Magazine - 6 mo.
El Silver Screen - - - - I yr,
ID Open Road for Boys - 16 mo.
El American Fruit Grower 1 yr.
Please clip list of Magazines after checking Publications
desired. Fitt out coupon careeutty.
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Gentlemen: I enclose $ Please end me the
three magazines checked with a year's subscription to emir
newspaper.
NAME
STREETOR RR, ,...... ....... ......... ........ ...
TOWN AND PROVINCE
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
Form 4510
SEAFORTH, ONTARIO,
Peel and slice .freeh peaches and
sprinkle 14 cup wear over them. Mix
remaining 14 cup sugar with llattr
and nub in butter until well blended
and of crumb oonsistertcy. Spread
over peaches ansi bake in a moder-
ate oven 1.4 hour. Serve hot or cold.
Fresh Peach Cobbler
6 large peaches
1 egg
2 tablespoons butter
cup granulated murex
tilria cups flour
14 cup milk
2 teaspoons baking powder
Peal and slice tfresh peaches.
Sprinkle each layer with sugar. Make
'batter of the other ingredients and
drop by spoonfuls over the peaches.
Bake 14 hour in a hot oven.
Peach Muffins
2 cups flour
Ve teaspoon salt
t egg
14 cup butter
1 cup milk
3i teaspoons baking powder
Tel cup sugar
1 cup sliced peaches
Mix and sift flour, baking powder,
sugar and salt. Beat egg and milk and
add to sifted dry ingredients. Add
peaohes. Stir as little as ,possible to
blend well. Bake isa a moderate oven
(350 to 3715 degrees IF.) 25 utinute,s—
serve hot.
Fresh Peach Spoage
1 cup fresh peach eu.lp
tablespoon gelatine
.rei cep cold water
Tt.; cup' sugar
11/3 cup boiling water
2 egg white,.
Soak gelatine in cold water. Add
oiling water, then eugate and stir
until dissolved. When partly set add
peach pulp and beat until foamy.
Add stiffly beaten eee whites. Turn
Mt a wet mould and chill.
If a richer pudding is desired. .i11.
jw.,1 cream may .1e.' substituted'
egg whites. using it*i) .112,0
cream.
LOVES STEEL
There are many collectors in the
ti•orld but perhaps none with a liob-
be more strange than that of Joseph
715-vear-old Bruce .Cpunty
resident. who lives in a quaint log
Inst outside of !Formosa, ,,n the
Elora roma, says the London Free
Press.
For torty years, :Joe Schmidt ha:
been c,,ilecting steel, all kinds of
steel. •leut with two c.enditione. Firet,
it muet be good steel. and ,second,
toast like the ring of it. To date he
has tans of steel, with a ,cash invest-
ment saisi to represent over 418,000
and the tide of "the Steel Ring oi
Western Ontario."
The story of his steel gathering
goes back to 'October 271, FM. On
that day the new church 111 the near-
by /German settlement had .been dedi-
cated. The mass was over, and the
bishop had ,blessed the whole Church.
IThen came a shuehed momene.....aud
ing steel, !Hie early collection was
made up mainly frern welt small ar-
ticles as axes and saver, his home has
his early collection of bars; bells,
axes, chisels, saws and in some .cases
solid blocks. Several times he has
had to add a reinforcing pillar in the
cellar of his home when it seemed as
if the load weuld go through the
floor.
Although be started with small
steel articles, as his collection grew
he secured larger pieces, Accordingly,
he took the matter up with W. S. Vo-
gan, .a hardware -dealer in Walkerton.
Vogan 'bought him a 'bar 'of steel fans
inches -square and about 30 inches
long. He 'collected a .number more 'of
these, all ,froin Sheffield in Engtand,
Then when he -had eight of these bars
he branched out once more and
hatight a block of steel eight inches
square. He bought seveia of these.
In 117100, he instructed Vegan to
buy a .larger block; The result was
that he received a solid steel block,
imported fretri eeermany. The latter
block is 30 inches square and weighs
almost dour tons, and cost a,botit $700
to land at Isis home.
Vogau in 111905 received -word from
Schmidt to obtain another blook, this
time .ftont the steel works of the
Krupps in Germans, this one being .3s1
inches square, and also costing about
$700.
W. 5, Vagan is now out of buein-
ese .but his son, Sam, who bas the
hardware 'business, imported another
solid block, 314 inches square, weigh-
ing eight tone, with cog of 44100.
The advanced cost is attributed 10
war scare in. 'Germany.
Mr. Schmidt hopes• to buy another
black of steel in NOS, the largest of
his collection, to be 36 inches square.
It s 111 serie u hitt/de purnose, be-
cause s hen lie dies he is going to
have it for a monument. with the en-
scriptioe carved in the steel
joe Schmidt 'believes his steel to be
400d investment. For example as
he points out, the nriee of steel for
the blocks is almost 512114) nore this
yea:- than it A:11. '11 1005. Mit the fin-
ancial end, iie ,4-1) •••• only secomlary
consideration. He ee,es the steel.
O H1 fivicms'
ehlropractor
t?) Therapist --- Massage
Office -- Commercial. Hotel
Hours—Mon. and Thurs, after
noons and by appeintment
FOOT CORRECTION
by ma nip ulati in—Sun-ray treat-
ment
Plyine. 227.
N1101111.861104.100$.4i.9
1;1.1 A,1s3k.:1 Atm. t'ar,)41:411
llie1,p1)”rturtiti provid,d, for Bp!)
1ars' 'taking tho'r
p▪ lyes itt the economic world side by
▪ vvisit 'their sighted associates.
The peen has by no means been
reaelted were it me be said with
truth that every blind person capable
4 working and willing' to make use
of that capability is equipped with a
job or husinees, but this latest report
of the institute does clearly indicate
that progress towards that desirable.
end i being surely made, •
illustrations in the annual re-
port are not startling, They eimply
show .11 man standing 'behind a conoe'r
ter ot a little 'stand, or a girl per-
forming some simple manual job in
a factory or a man in 'front of a ma-
chine, or a group of childrenin a
cless-room, but be -hind evefeorie of
these pictures is a story of intense
Inuriast interest. The subjects of these
photographs have triumphed, through
the help df the C,N.I,B., over a han-
dicap which, to the mind -o 'the aver-
age citizen, is overwhelming.
Naturally the spectacular achieve-
ments of the (Institute in finding 'po-
sitions and arranging Ibusinees op-
portunities 'for its 'blind friends are
what attract most ,public attention,
but there are other phases of the
work cd the Ittetitute which are of
equal value to blind people who are
unable, for reasons of health or age,
to share in the industrial or commer-
cial life of the community. There is
practically no tilled petteon, no mat-
ter. where he lives or what his eondi-
tioa, to whom the Institute is not
able to render some service. All ser-
vices, such as the loanin.g of Braille
books, home -teaching, the adminis-
tration of theatre passes, and street -
railway passes, special concessions in
regard to ,fare on railway, steamship
and bus lines. the handling of nadite
lieetrees, the sale of radios and radio
parts at very substantial discounts
and, the maintenance of a social ser-
vice department, 'are all provided
without any charge whatever to those
taking advantage Of them.
It requires -a booklet of 56 pages
to tell the year's story Of The Cana-
dian National !Institute for the Blind.
quapter of the book is devoted to
a list of Menibers of boards and coni-
mittees. They indicate that every-
where throughout the Dominion, the
"Institute is ,eupported 'anel encour-
aged by alt army of volunteer work -
ere trilt0 are contributieg -their share
toward making the C.N.I, 13. what it
evidently aspires to be, the most ef-
ficientlyefunctiening agency far the
blind in the English-speaking world.
ISSUE REPORT
The snmta: re.00rl of trim Cana-
dian ;National 'Inetitute fee the
Betel. reeetey received, is an 051 SyS-
i,1urivat ion concerning
the lil.ntli neople of Canaria ane their
tetirities. Although since its 10502-
'1-'inineteen weirs ago, The Cana-
dian N.:aimed Institute for the Blind
12,011115 :to atutost .every
C•tmtaliall able to re -ad, the Eves led
is the Mind people—who. they are,
what they 10, hot\ they make a liv-
ing and what is bring done to help
them—constitute an nninspeete1 my-
stery to most of those 'ito haye tvo
direct roman .with Mind ,people.
The two words, "blind man". still
convey to the mind of the average
person a picture of a pitiable figure
on some 'street corner, a supreme ex-
ample of the last :word in human mis-
ery. To .those who have the privilege
of looking over the annual report of
hells peeled for the +first time, The the an entirely different pie -
church is situated on a hill topand tore :is Presented. There istilt Men-
the note of 'the belle echoed and re- ty of misery and suffering connected
echoed over the eountryside, with the lives di many of those who
That was a moment Joseph must go through life without their
Schmidt was trot to ;fot-get. The bells si4,12 1, hut the long years of patient
had 'been; imported from. a Little town effort that have been expemi.ed in-eia-
Record Tobacco Crop
The tobacco crop, in Ontario int -
)rowed to a very marked degree rinnr-
g the month 'of August with ihe re-
sult that total productien s now
111^0.1 at -a much higher ti-tIre thatt
aopeare1 probable On the tie,; of Au-
gust. The flue -cured eree will amount
to at least 371,0710,094 !evinces. There
has also .been improvement it the
burley, crop eStimat.,,l at
slightly .more than 7,001,000 pounds.
The dark tobaece eros will possibly
a total of 2.500,001 pounds. To-
tal proluetioa .14 tobaece in Ontario
this year trill therefore reach the re-
eord tigue! of .60,1100,00et nomads, as.
compared ivith '315'1500„401i pounds in
19316 and 48,402453e pounds in 1936. '
All crops were harvested at an early
date this year. The flue -eared tobacco
crop has very good colour and is .
particularly good quality. The .burley
is also of .very 'good quality. There is
every likelihood; of a heavy demand
for Ontario's burley and flue -cured
tobacco.
in Certnany, iby .his mother, Mrs'a
Jo- .
devortng to alleviate the lot e.f
harm Sohtnidt.
"What makes that noise?" he asked tha'e is `Fre ha-"clqcaPPed 'h). The
lass ni the most precious of the
aneSutnecelle,'" was the answer. sense. is, apparently, hearing Inuit,
the six-year-old 'boy made a The 036.1317 report of the
promise to bitnsellf ehat some day he carries a score or more of would own plenty of the magical sub- tions ITIwy aro nut picture of men
stance that gave oil' the silvery 15 ne 1 i omen hi acute distress. hut
Mr. Schmidt has been a laborer all blind :net a" 'N'ork. bleei men obiect the eradication)f 11— tilber'nl-
ln dorin'ite areas.' At '''oetet e'vo•
le- life. ',He never ned a fartu, but , 115 111:11 at, 2,h„,,,,1
chose rither chopping 'logs. sawing, ,
rg c 14es or ,.vorleing foe farm_ 1"3.1 11 .,fjoe;
;1e tt,ithere1 fae--sieed fortune.. rro.i. \;""' -11,‘ 11 11 of smelt au areas an
trkulg,
n a iioatne of hard Work and
s1 ittitg• man he starred eoneet. 1-',.
The supervised herel plan is a single
herd policy applicable to grade herds
irrespective of the number of pure-
bred or 'grade animals' they contain,
No compensation is paid foe annuals
that react to the test, tbut the owner
receives whatever proceeds there
may 'he ,from the sallyage. Owners
placing their herds under this plan
must agree to slaughter reactors, to
Prenuptly cleanse and disinfect their
premises, and to -keep their cattle from
coining in contact with untested an-
imats, rf a betet is aot maintairted 00
the promisee, 'breeding operation,
115051 be restricted to a tested animal
The restricted area pian has for it,