Loading...
The Seaforth News, 1932-01-07, Page 7' l'HUirSDAY,, JANUAiRY 7, 1932. i!. Canada's Weekly Review tgliects the current thought 6,1 both hemispheres i u ossrts out and 'would bring. to you meek challenging articles from the ;ass td's great publications, malrine. for =annader horizons, truer perspectives. and ' ,,t.'syanpathles' Carrying-Inspiring_Entertaining will keep' you abreast, week by ''eoa^as'�•aitli the great facts .and startling. merom:ients.of they time. Printed every •'Aray-;dsy, World Wide brings to its xnt:s the bast thought on the very �iatmsct surprises of this most surprising iE'oihllabed. by Canadians primarily for •dfhanudians, with sympathies world wl e, tatnan).iity wide..... •nany who have been,. in the habit or lalling American reviews, have recently •;3tov.uexed that World Wide, at about ,nud4:tie, price, is twice. as :interesting. .6,: mental tonic—its every col- a/ma. is. a live -wire.: contact with bee: 'emu. subscription to it will help to- ward, the employment or more Can— :alma-5 .n various keyindustries, giving. ahem. an increased earning and.. spend stip power - May it not serve you? Sir months, 26 weeks, only $2. 'Twelve " 52 " 3.50 Yost paid to .any address In Canada,. Nfld., ''dr. W. Indies, Great Britain and Ireland. R,,sls n extra to U. 8., 50 cls„ to other for- '<gn .countries, $2.00 extra, May duty that may be imposed, by. any satade country will he assessed upon the sraaeriber therein. MEIN DOUGALL & SON L O. BOX 3070, MONTREAL mammas, 1931 3t ,se send- me WORLD WIDE for twelve months 93.69 Mc months 2.00 pent paid .@hmc 3s • ar town FARM FOR SALE 'lot 11, Concession 4, H.R:S , Tuck aersaaith, containing 100 acres of choice Tans;, situated on county ' road, 1A. imlles south of the prosperous Town. i Sraforth, on C.N.R.; convenient to thiels, churches and markets. This is all underdrained, well fenced; a 9 2 acres of choice fruit trees. he soil is excellent and in a good tate of cultivation and all suitable for growth of alfalfa, no waste land. tl..hr farm is we'll watered . with two rsor failing wells, also a flowing spiwg in the farm yard; about 40. alum plowed and reading forspring seeding, also 12; acres of fail wheat; arsmeinder is seeded with ,alfalfa. The ?buildings are first class, in excellent :repair; the house is brick and is mo - in every respect, heated with fur - nate, hard and soft water on tap, a 'throe -piece bathroom.; rural telephone, also rural mail. The outbuildings con- els/ of barn 50x80 feet with stone *fabling under; all floors in stable ent; the stabling has water sys- +sis's installed. A good frame drivin wed, 24x48 feet; a 2 -storey ', 'n use OYalt36 feet. A. brick,; "g pen with'ce mien ",root's-t'ttra' le of housing about igs. The house, stables and barn lana hydro installed. Anyone desir- a first class home and choice farm should see this. On account of i11 Ihr11th I will sell reasonable. Besides the above 1` am offering lot 27, con- pression 12, Hibbert, consisting of 100 acres choice land, 65 acres well under - drained; 10 acres maple bush, all seed ram to grass; no waste land. On the premises are a good bank barn 48x56 feet and frame house, an excellent well. The farm is situated about 5 vales from the prosperous village of Mensal! on the C.N.R., one-quarter of .a smile from school and mile from as'3cnrch. This farm , has never been to'opped much .and is in excellent' shape for cropping or pasture.: I will sell these farms together or separate IS lo, suit purchaser. • For further par- ticulars apply to the proprietor, Sea 2cfirth, R.R. 4, or p'hone 21 on 133, Senforth. THOS. G. SHELLING - LAW, Proprietor. D, H, McInnes chiropractor Of Wingham, will be at the Commercial" Hotel, Seaforth Monday, Wednesday and Friday; Afternoons Diseases of all kinds success- fully treated:. Electricity used. s Pers tan '!B'alm—the delight'Io dainty kerninfnitq. I npari's a •fragrant charm to the complexion. 'Pones up the skin and makes it velvety soft in texture: Ceoling;',refres.iinag, it is ',delightful ''fa •]ase, Never leaves a vestige of 'sticks ss: Inwalu<abie for'hands, face, and, hair fixative. Wonder'fully sootli-' d protective. rEspcciaUy recom- d)in cases of nouglness or clia'f- ised by weather conditions. t and For Sale Ad's, 1 tinie'25c. THE GOLDEN TREASURY .January 10. I have waited for thy 'salv'ation, 0 IIJord, Gen. xlix. 115. :Many heave received com'for't !from ithese•worlds, in dearth, and waited Ifaiith'for their salvation. The thoughlt less 'and impenitent 'wait only 'for 'tern- poral prosperity in their lives, and therefore icannot ex'pe'ct •e'terna'l bliss', but, on the contrary, a !drealtgl jud'g- meal after death. 0 that they ,w'oul'd examine themselves, this very day; that, at the '.eve ,of rife, they nitg'ht, like Jacob and Simeon, :depart in peace. •'VlTe will not, therefore, look Isar any earthly things, but ifor the (Saviour, Iwho is already come,' who 'will giant us his salvation, his aid .and de'l'iverance in life and d'e'ath, and will conduct us safely at last, though we sihoulld wait some time for his help. Yes, my IRedeemien, they who wait, depend upon, and hope in thee, shall not be ashamed; grant us- only faith' and patience, that 'Iwe may wait on th'eee 'frons one m'oraing watch to an- other; and enduring all things, make the whole course of our lives one per- petual ,expectation of thy aid; .and may we ever 'a'bunda'ntly experience thy. help and s'alv'ation, especially, at our latter en:d. His own soft hand shall wipe the tears [From ev'ry 'weeping eye; THE SEAFORTH NEWS. Anci 'pain's and groan's, and ,griefs andi !feats, • And death itself, shall die..' How' long, clear :Saviour, O' how long Shall this bright hour delay 1 Flay swiftly round, Ye wheels oIf time And bring the welcome day. On the Ps'alnis-JPsalni 6, Ye have shamed the counsel of the poor; because the 'Lord is his re- rug This is plainly addressed to the ad- versaries, and c'harges thein with i re- pros:citing and scoffing at that' confid- ence -in; the Lord, expressed by the af- flicted, righteous in the preceding verse: 7. 0 that the salv,aition•" nt 'Israel were come ,out of Zion. When the Lord bringeth bank the captivity ,of ,his' people, !Jacob shall rejoice, and Israel shall be glad. The consideration of the corrup- tion of ni'aislcind, . descri'be'd in this' 'Psalm, m'ake's the prop'het express to ranging desire 'tor ^ the salvation! o'f Israel, 'which was to go forth put df Zion, and to bring back the people of God from that naost dre'a'dful of all ca'ptivities, the cap'tidity• under sin and death; a! salvation at which Jacob Would indeed rejoice, and Is- rael ge glad. And how doth the whole church bole for that glorious day Of final redemption, when every 'believ- ing heart shall exult, .and all the sons of God shout 'aloud for joy! • CULBERTSON. iCro':wded into the 39 years .of the colorful caeeer of Ely Culbertson, sell styled' world's greatest bridge player, are fascinating "contrasts o!f joy --and sorrow drama tragedy and comedy, stark' poverty and riches such as are rarely observed in the life of one man. Master of seven languages, the son of wealthy parents, 'he'lbecame an ardent Bolshevik as a young man. He starv- ed on construction gangs in the .Rocky \4ounsinins df Canada, land organized a railway strike there. Tie lived in luxury in San 'Francisco and Ne'w York. 'Soviet Russia wiped out his family's fortune, .and she turned from the reddest of the reds to a monarch- ist and joined the «r+hire Russians in Paris in an attempt to overthrow the proletarian regime in' Russia, One ev- ening in ,Paris just a few years ago"10a francs separated him .from'starvation. He placed :a !20 -,franc bet in a .game of ecar:te, .and went to the United States with his winn'in'gs of 20,480 fr'aires. There be married, .and it was his wife who made of him a 'profession'al bridge player-, ,Culbertson, whose reputation, pride and $6,000 in wagers are at stake in his snatch .against Sidney '5. (Lenz, is a revolutionary in bridge. Revolution- ary ideas come to him quite tiaturaliy. He has long since 'buried his dreams as social and economic supporter of the ca'pitalis't system, so his revolu- tionary talents have been turned -i to upsetting the onbhodox bridge world. This is a self -assigned task .in which Waist and For Sale Ads., 3 times 50c • !� olf has assum- ed such im- portant propor- ttons•in the make- up of . modern everyday life that it'. constitutes a very real phase of the activities of those who serve the public. The Canadian Pacific Railway is such a one and its train services to golf courses and estab- lished arrange- ments for guests at its many hotels to enjoy the game are the practical interpretation of its desire tomain- tain the traditions of 50 years of meeting the re- quirements of the Canadian people Golf Is Golf From Coast To Coast • and their visitors. From coast to coast, excellent courses are available and where the corn - , pony does not operate its owls links, playing privileges at first-class clubs are granted. In the Maritimes, there are courses at St. Andrews -by - the -Sea, N.B.; Kentville,N.S.; Digby, N.S.; and Yarmouth, N.S. all in connection with the company's hotels. Quebec City has two fine courses, one club dating back to 1874. Montreal has the oldestclub in Canada; the Royal Montreal,' founded in 1875; which today boasts two championship 18 -hole courses. Other Clubs are numerous and good. Toronto, too has many excellent links, including the Royal York Golf Club, where guests at the Royal York Hotel have playing privileges. Ontario abounds in courses, all along the Canadian Pacific's lines. Bungalow camps at French River and Kenora '(Lake of the Woods) have sporty 9 -hole courses for their patrons. Throughout the Prairie Provinces, golf is available at all the larger centres, while the Banff Springs Hotel Golf course is among the best in the country, in settings of unrivalled mountain scenery. It is the Mecca for golfers from all over Canada and the United States, to say nothing of the numerous overseas visitors who play it each summer.' Vancouver and Victoria offer ready hospitality, the latter standing unique among,Canadian golf centres, in that the game is playett throughout the 12 months of the year, the annual mid -winter tournament for the E. W. Beatty ChalJ" Cup, run by the Canadian Pacific. Railway, being an outstanding feature of the, golf calendar. THE PICTURES (1) Looking, from the fair- way at the first tee, pavilion and Banff Springs Hotol, at Banff, Alta. The Spray River (left) forms a sporty water - hazard. This course is a mild above sea -level in the heart of the beautiful Rocky Mountains... (2) On the famous course at St. An- drews -by -the -Sea, N.B. (3) The 13th tee et the Oak Bay Golf Club, Victoria, B.G. Note the periscope to allow players a glimpse of what theyhave to cope with. Golf !splayed the year round ea tilts course. PRINCE USES .F° ►RD FLEET IN SAFARI Noth WHEN H.R.H. THE PRINCE OF WALES set out on his recent safari ° into ` East:Africa, his equipment and a portion of his party travelled in this fleet of Fords. The Ford units supplied to the ,prince by dealers at Nairobi, Kenya Colony,, included four trucks,. one light +delivery and, one phaeton.. The fleet performed without a bitch during the hunting trip. • he succeeded admirably, at the sant time amassing a comfortable fortun for himself. Tlie story of Cubber coin's remarkable career is perticularl interesting at this time when the eye of the international bridge 'world ar trained on -the 150 -rubber contest it New York, 'Not 'only is Culbertson 'a profoma situ:den't of cards and an innovate vv'ho popularized the ,forcing system df contract bidding, but he is also a organiser endowed .with'profound bus Mess acumen and a knowledge of hu man'nature-who hats miade bridge in etrection big business. The •enormous sale of his books has not ,been affected by the depression, because. he has had the perspicacity to snake pu'bl'ic his sincere belief that women are better bridge players than men. (This boost- ed to phenomenal heights the wares Cul'bertsou has'to sell .in connection with bridge, including lessons, books, s'ynd'icated articles, indorsements, lec- tures; tables, card's, lamps, pencils, etc: He has made ' life happier for nro woen'pl'ayers who are good and mis- erable for the "husbands of hundreds of thousands of women who think they can play bridge, but can't.. 'There was no good reason why Cul- bertson should have been a radical. His father, a son of the American Re- volution, was a ,geologist of Scotch Covenanter descent, •who left his home in Oil City, Pe., to help devel- op the oil fields in the Russian Cau- casus, His mother was the 'daughter of a Russian Cossack chieftain. His father-m'ade a great deal of money in oil, yet Ely become a revolutionist at the age of 1'3. At the school in V'ied- ikavkaz the was something of a prod- igy, the -forerunner of the Russian re- volution of 1005 captured his iniagin ation and he organized a secret revel-' istionary co'manittee among fellow stu- dents. He was an American citizen, but spoke n'o English. He had an American passport, which he used to smuggle incendiary literature, but once l'ackin'g this identification he was arrested during en uprising on the 'Blank Sea coastt. He languished in jail for two months and when he was released he was a Bols'h'evik of the. .first water. 'When still under 20 years di age he arrived in 1\re' York to enter Yale, but could not pass the English test. With the $300 a month allowance from his father., he retained a tutor and set out to master his seventh language. Bat the more he learned of 'English the more disgusted he became with Yale, so he set out for Mont- real. He got himself a job as time- keeper 'with a gang of Galician and 'Ukranian laborers on their way to the 'Canadian Rockies to complete the railway to Prince Rupert. They re- ceived 1 wage of $3 a day, but all this was sacked back by unreasonably high prices at the railway commissary' stores. Through his ability to speak the laborers' language, Culbertson or- ganized a successful strike, but as the price of peace he had to leave the camp, penniless and with no way of identifying himself by telegraph to San Francisco, bankers, who were holding his allowance. ;I -Is walked 200 miles to !Edmonton, where he was ar- rested by the Northwest :Mounted! Police and detained a day as a dan- gerous radical. !Completely "broke," -he 'rode the rods, sul+fering hunger, aching muscles and• other discomforts which attend this mode of travel. He was initiated into the international fraternity of hoboes 'and learned to "buns" meals. He improved. on the standard tech- nique by appearing at back doors with the cultured end charming manners of an .old world gentleman. In OJedford, Ore., the life exacted its toll and he came dawn with double pneumonia. Dis'changed, 'he got into a fight .with a hobo and lead a relapse. !Finally mak- ing San Francisco, and in funds again, he enjoyed five months' of gentleman- ly leisure,- studyinginternatioaiat law and p'hiloso'phy. Henow found that fighting for the rights of the underdog was losing its fascias tion, and the task appeared pointless and hopeless. iIle took a fling at insurrectionist poli- tics in Mexico before returning to Europe. He was living in Spain in 1912 when a Russian tossed a Ibamb at King Al- fonso. \4istalcen for a Russian (he still speaks English with a :Russian accent), ,Culbertson was escorted to he F'renlch frontier, with -an invitation' never to return. With all thoughts of ad•icalisin behind him, he entered L'-. %neoie Superieure des Science`, Ec nomi'gsre et IPoliti'�ue in Paris in 1913.AmericanWhen the first American troops 'ar- ived in Prance lie presented' Himself or an examination as'interpreter, He asset' .brilliantly in six languages, but lunked in English; H+e continued his nterests wtirh French Red, Cross in- ere5ts until the end Of the war, (Meanwhile -the rebolution, in which e had'so ardently taken a part a few tears back, engulfed Russia and wiped, ut his -family's `fortune„ iHe was left Nth en apartment in Paris •and a taim elf $3,000,000 again's't' the Bo'lshe its for confiscating his father's pro erty.. He joined the Russian',mon- rchists in their, abortive Plans tol e e t y d n n PAGESEVEN, raise an. army to clefeat the new Rus- sian regia -e. He turned to cards as a release from his financial worries: Yet it was not until in New York, after he 1i -tarried Josephine Dillon 'that he took bridgit seriously. 'His m'i're was always a prominent teacher of auction, ,and she convinced nisi. that bridge not only n^ould give matin an op- portunity to apply his knowledge of sociology ,and Philosophy, but would also make him .a comfortable living. He promptly made himself unpopular. in 'his ,sacrosanct New Yorle card clubs by 'his revolutionary methods. and his frank 'criticisms of established forms Of play. 'By diligent study -•he `: made himself into a•.bridge machine.'' Colored Walnut Creams,—Mould , piece of pink fondant into a hall about an inch in diameter. Lay on the paper and press an English wain t kernel on the top with' just enough force 'to make it stick. If pushed down too hard it flattens the .fondant out into an ugly shape. These are very nice made with white and maple fondant. White Creams with Candied Cher- ries.—Mould vanilla fondant in lballs a Tittle smaller than for !walnut creams, press into each a candied cherry. 'Pink Almond Creams.—Mould some pink fondant into a !ball; press into it an almond kernel turned edgeways, and draw the sides up to the kernel, cleaving the top edge of the kernel un- covered. !Creamed Dates. --Mould pink 'fond- ant into a ball, then roll between the palms of the 'hands until about the length of the date, Place inside the stoned date, and press the edges of the date together, allowing about a quarter of an inch of fondant to show the whole length of the date. Roll in granulated sugar. i Here and Tkere Annual value ot forests products in Canada is placed around $500,- 000,000 by the Canadian Govern- ment Forestry Service, and over 200,000 persons are employed in this work. Total value of crude bullion gold m Ontario for tho first two months of 1931 is placed at $6,517,254 as compared with $5,352,395 for the same period. of 1930, an increase of nearly 22%. If this continues, all prevfops records of gold output are likely to be exceeded this year. Position of president of the Boy Scouts Association of Canada has been offered to and accepted by 17. W. Beatty, chairman and president of the Canadian Pacific Railway, whose interest in boy welfare has long been recognized all over the Dominion. • John Minard, section hand with the Canadian Pacific Railway for many years and pensioned at the age of 73, celebrated his 105th birthday April 2. He does not use glasses, eats well, sleeps well and enjoys life. He has no prds'msi -, tions for exceeding the century mark. Sponsored by the Alberta Motor- cycle Association, the Western '�anada Motorcycle hill -climbing championships will be decided at Banff in the Canadian Rockies on May 24 and will be followed the same day by the Banff annual re- gatta. A shipment of 800,000 salmon eggs has recently been forwarded to the Dominion Fish Hatchery at Flat Lands, Restigouehe County to receive treatment prior to being deposited in the Nipisiguit River as a part of the 1931 programme for restocking New Brunswick fishing waters. Canadians, from coast to coast, heard the voices of His Excellency the Governor-l,leneral and 13.t. Hon. R. 13. Bennett, prime Minister of the Dominion, May 11, in endorsation of the work of the Canadian Red Cross through stations linked by the radio broadcast transmission system of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company's Telegraphs. In the last analysis the railroad safety movement's success is trace- able largely to teamwork: ' ' Each railroad worker is constantly re- minded that safety is paramount. Safety practices have become hall. tual, therefore they do net lessen efficiency. Railroad passenger ser- vice is now more efficient as well as safer than ever before, says a prominent United States news- paper. The new 614, hour service be- tween montreal and Toronto, both ways, which came into operation on Canadian Pacific 'lines end of April,' has pro ed highly. popular With travellers, and heavy traffic on these traits is reported. Otta- wa has also been brought halt an hour closer to Montreal and pas- sengers for Quebec have had 15 minutes clipped from the time of the journey. Popularity ofthe reduced week- end; fares which went into effect May 1 on all Canadian Pacific lines was assured from the start, acc'ord • - Ing to reports from traffic officials of the railway. They represent a savingof approximately 33% td the •'•travelling public with reduced' fares available from noon Friday to noon Sunday and return portions' up to midnight of the Monday following, '740) A