HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1934-05-31, Page 2AGU TWO
TI-WINGIA�M ADVANM-TIMS
The
Wingham Advance -Times
Published at
WINGHAM - ONTARIO
Every Thursday Morning by
The Advance -Times. Publishing Co,
Subscription Rate One Year $2.00
Six months, $1.00 in adyance
TO U. S. A., $2.50 per year.
Foreign rate, $3.00 per year.
Advertising ratee on application.
TUBERCULOSIS FROM MILK
In a recent issue of Health, a mag-
azine published by the Ontario De-
partment of Health, is an article on
"Tuberculosis Frotri Milk. To over-
come this infection from milk pasteur-
ization is recommended as effective.
We quote the following:
"Among the diseases • of animals
that are transmissible to man, none
bas received more attention than tub-
erculosis, As early as 1898 it was con-
clusively established by Theobald
Smith that there were varieties of the
tubercle baccilus, namely, the bovine
(cow) and the human variety. It has
been shown that animals suffering
front tuberculosis infection serve as
reservoirs of this infection in trans
Misting the disease to other animals
and secreting the organism in the
milk. Man may become infected by
drinking milk from these diseased an-
imals. The appearance of the cow's
udder is not a reliable index as to
whether or not the animal's milk eon -
tains the germ of tuberculosis. It has
been demonstrated that tuberculous
cows may have .a normal` udder, yet
secrete the germ .in. the null.. Effec-
tive pasteurization of this milk rend-
ers these germs inert."
�c *
REFORESTATION
We have heard so often that we are
depleting our forests so when we read
an article on how Mono Township
had a systematic plan of reforestation
we decided to pass the information
along,
This township, near Orangeville,
planted this year 30,000 small pine
trees on a reforestation plot that it
has on the fifth' line of the Township.
A systematic system of planting has
been carried on over a period of ten
years, and they now have 150,000
1
•1
1�
■
s
Maitland Cre
ool for
ery
■
NOW OPEN
■
Call us f r articalars
■
■
THE UNITED FARMERS' CO-OPERATIVE
COMPANY, LIMITED.
■
■
1
MEM
WI h
Phone 27i
laEmil MEM
MEE
trees in the plot, Trees that were
planted ten years ago are now 10 to.
15 feet in height,
if this reforestation plan is carried
on as planned it will be continued un-
til 1,000,000 trees are planted,
The Governmenteach year supplies
farmers trees free for planting on land
that is unsuitable for cultivation, or
for wind -breaks. Many have availed
themselves of this yearlyoffer, but
the above example showswhat can be
accomplished by systematic planning„
>f * *
The United States is trying to clahn
authorship of the song "When You
and I Were Young, Maggie." It is
just a corker what they think is theirs
since they won the War.
* * * *
The fish season is well on the way.
Now comes a story out of the North
about a man who .had to use fish tongs
to land a trout. And that is the coun-
try where we thought all men were
men and afraid of nothing.
:2:
On June 15th war debt payments
are again due to the United States, It
is said that Great Britain will make
some sort of payment to "keep her
slate clean." There is no •country in
this world that has as clean hands and
skirts as Great Britain.
* * * *
The Loch Ness 'monster is at least
dead, and Colonel Hainberton of the
London Zoo, who examinedit, said
it was a "regalecus" or a "Ming of
Lenings" and that it could not sur-
vive on land; but many Scots say they
saw it out of the water. It is truly
wo.nderfiu what Scotch liquor will do.
* * .*
The grasshoppers of the 'West are
to get a•$ 700,000 dose of poison. Hon,
Robt. Weir says that it will save 14
ONTARIO ELECTION
Women of foreign birth who have
become British subjects by marriage
or by the naturalization of their par-
ents while they were minors, require
a certificate of the judge to enable
them to vote, and they shall not be
entitled to be entered on the Voters'
List or' to vote without such certifi-
cate. Apply for such certificate at any
Court of Revision where Judge is Re-
vising Officer.
T. M. COSTELLO, •
Chairman of Election Board.
ONTARIO ELECTION ACT 1927, R.S.O. CHAP 8
AND ONTARIO VOTERS' LISTS ACT, 1927, CHAP. 7
The Ontario Election, June' 19th, 1934
TAIKE NOTICE that the sittings of the Revising Officers Officers for the purpose of hearing complaints or appeals
with regard to the Voters' Lists to be used at the pending election of a member of the Legislative Assembly for
each of the Electoral Districts of Huron -Bruce, and Huron, will be held for the respective municipalities in said
Districts, at the following times and places, mentioned its the schedule below, with the names of the Clerk of the
Revising Officer for each Municipality, and the last date for snaking complaints or appeals to the said Clerk.
HURON BRUCE
By His Honour Judge Costello
municipality Date of Sitting Places of Sitting Time of Sitting
'Grey Township May 28th Township Hall, Ethel .. ...10.00 a.m.
Howick Township " 29th Township Hall, Gorrie 10.00 a,rn.
Wingham Town June 4th Town Hall, Wingham 10.00 a,m.
Brussels Village May 3lst Town Hall, Brussels 2,00 p m
Mildmay Village " J 30th ' J. A. Johnston's Jo stop' s Off:, Mildmay 10. a.m.
Carrick Township June 2nd J. A. Johnston's Off., Mildmay 10. a.m.
Huron Township lst Township Hall, Ripley 2.00 p.m.
Ripley Village " 6th Council Chambers, Ripley .2.00 p.m.
{Cuirass Township " 7th Town Hall, Teeswater 2,00 p.m.
Teeswater Village " 5th Town Hali, Teeswater , 2,00 p.in.
By D. E. Holmes, Esq.
Ashfield Township June
Colborne Township May
Morris Township "
Turnberry Township June
East Wawanosh Twp.
West Wawanosh Twp... ........ May
Blyth Village June
Lucknow Village "
Kinloss Township e
oranweloreemnageffameetem
2nd Township Hall, Ashfield 2.00 p.m,
29th Township Hall, Carlow ,2,00 p.sn.
30th Township, Hall, Morris 2,00 pen
6th TownshilHall, Bluevale 2.00 p.m.
1st Foresters' Hall,. Belgrave ,.,,2,00 p.m.
31st Twp. Hall, West Wawanosh 2,00 p.nt.
7th Community Hall, Blyth 2.00 p.m;
4th Town Hall, Lucknow 2.00 p.m,
5th Township Hall, Holyrood 2.00 p,ni,
19Mnicipatrty
Date
HURON
By His Honour Judge Costello
of Sitting Places of Sitting Tinie of Sitting
Hay Township May 21st
Htillett Township .. May ,30th
McKillop Township ....- Tune 2nd
Stanley Township ,May 28th
Stephen Township ,... ....,.June 4th.
Tuckersmith Township May 29th
1.7sborne Township June 1st
'Seaforth Town June 5th
'Exeter Village June 6th
Hensel' Village Jiirie '7th
Clinton Town
Goderich Township
Goderich 'i'own
-Goderich Town
Goderich Town
Goderich Town.
Township Hall, Zutich 10.00 a,m.
Community Hall, Londesboro ...2 pen.
Carnegie Library Hall, Seaforth 2 pan.
Township Hall, Varna 2,00 p,m
Township Hall, Crediton ..... ..,2.00 p.nt.
Walker's Hall, P'rucefield 2.00 pan.
Township Hall, Elimvillc 10.00 a.tn.
Town Hall, Seaforth 10.00 aan.
Village Hall, Exeter 10,00 axe
Town Hall, Heneall 10,00 "a,r,
By D. E. Holmes, Esq.
May 31st Town Hall, Clinton 10.30 a,m., 8 part. 28th T-Tohnrs Hall, Holmesville 2,00 p,nt,
Jute lst Court."E1 Huse, Goderich ..,........,10:20 a.na.
H
June 2nd Court ouse, Goderich 8 pen,
House,
Tune 4th Court House, Goderich :.....,....10.30 tem,
June 5th Court Goderich ..,, ........:........8 p.m.
All persons are called upon to examine the Voters' Lists to asc
entered therein.
Clerk of Revising Last Day for
Officer Complaints
J. H. Fear, Ethel May 24th
Isaac Gamble, Fordwich May 25th
W. A. Galbraith, Wingham May 31st
A H Macdonald, Brussels May 28th
J. A, Johnston, Mildmay May 26th
J. A. Johnston, Mildmay May 30th
Donald McKay, R.R. 3, Ripley May 29
E. F, Martin, Ripley June 2nd
J. S. McDonald, Teeswater June 4th
W. H. Logan, Teeswater June 1st
C. E. McDonagh, Lucknow R3 May 30
Wm, Sailows, Goderich No, 6 May 25
Alex, MacEwan, Bluevale May 26th
W. R. Cruikshank, Wingham June 2nd
A. Porterfield, Relgrave No. 1 May 29
Durnin Phillips, Lucknow ....,,May 28th
J. H. R: Elliott, Blyth June 4th
E. Agnew, Lucknow May 31st
J. R. Lane, R,2
Hol Yrood
June lst
Avirmibelonsalw *MN
Clerk of Revising Last Day for
Officer Complaints
A F. Hess, Zurich May 28th
James W. McCool, Londesboro " 26
John McNay, Seaforth No. 2 May 30
C. C. Pilgrim, Varna May 24th
H. K. Eilber, Crediton May 31st.
D. F. McGregor, Seaforth No. 4 " 25
Henry Strang, Hensall No. 1 May. 29
J. A. Wilson, Seaforth June 1st
Joseph Senior, Exeter' June, 2nd
Jas. A. Patterson, Henseli June 4th
R, E. Manning, Clinton May 28th.
R. G, Thompson. Clinton May 24th
L. T„ Knox, Goderich May .29th
l„ L. Knox, Goderich' I:. Ma $0th
L,Knx o May
.20th
, G dericlt May 31st
L. L. IKeox, Goderich June lst
in that their names are correctly
AND FUfTHER TAKE NOTICE that any voter in any of the: said mttneipalitie5 .who desires
ctttnplaiit that his tame or the name of anperson entitled to be entered on ites to
y • the said list;for that municipality
'tris been omitted from the same, or that the names of any poisons who are not entitled to be voters have been
'entered thereon, may as above set out apply, complain or appeal to have ,his state or the name of any other sueh
tie
tson entered on or removed from the list.
AND FURTHER TAKE T that such appeals
, NOTICE pp s mast be bynotice lit writing W ng in the prescribed
form (in duplicate); signed by the com lainant andgiven to the Clerk of •1 p d
Itis address as stated above.' p. ' the Revising Officer, or left far trim at
The lists of v to
o rs may be seen at the office of the Clerics of the
• Revising Officer is ach nun" "
pal-
ity afi above,
Por further infis r
tr l r rn tit
a tri. write to Mrs,B. Reynolds, 'S • .
nog d, of_ the County of Huron, 5,Y opt 444, l�rtiderrcl,, ClC1ci1r for the Med
dated Goderich the 17th Day of May, A,15, 1934, '.1U1" 'COSTELLO
Chairman for the Election i card of the Cotiinty of Huron,
out of 15 bushels, On that basis it is
surely a good investment,
,h
W. W, Cooper, Independent candi-
date in ;Huron, thumbed a ride in a
Government car and thought it a good
joke, Both Liberals and Conserva-
tives expect to take him for a long
ride on June .19th.
* * *
It was announced by Premier Hen-
ry that the Government proposes to.
assume' 90% instead of 80% of the
;cost of construction and maintenance
of highways, This will be good. news
to many county councils.
* * *
A young <Elmira lad of six years
who has had no schooling can read
the Bible, the works of Sir Walter
Scott, daily newspaper or magazines.
Thatis surely a record and the intel-
lectual growth of this young wonder
will be interesting to note.
*
In the death of His Grace Rev. Neil
McNeil, Roman Catholic Archbishop
of Toronto, whose priestly life extends
over a period of more than 50 years,
the Roman Catholic Church have suf-
fered a real loss and one that will be
hard to replace.
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
JESUS IN THE SHADOW OF THE
CROSS.
Sunday, June 3—Matt. 26: 1-75.
Golden Text:
He went a little farther, and fell on
his face, and prayed, saying, 0 my.
Father, if it be possible, let this cup
pass from me: nevertheless not as I
will, but as thou wilt.—(Matt. 26:39.)
It is no accident or coincidence
that the record in the twenty-sixth
chapter of Matthew follows that in
the twenty-fifth. The earlier chapter
tells, in inspired and infallible predic-
tion, of Christ's future return to this
earth in glory as King of kings and
Lord of Lords, to "sit upon the throne
of His glory" and judge the world,.
The next chapter, our present lesson,
records His prediction that He is now
to be "betrayed to be crucified"; Jud-
as Iscariot's infamous bargain with
the priests for this betrayal; the in-
stitution of the Lord's Supper; • the
prediction of Simon Peter's tragic
denial of his Lord; Christ's solitary
agony in the garden of Gethsemane;
His betrayal, arrest, and illegal trial
before the jewish Sanhedrin.
• The bringing together of these two
chapters throws into sharp relief the
contrast between the glory of the Son
of God and His voluntary humiliation;
His going down. into death that He
might become the Saviour of all lost
sinners who are willing to believe on
Him and have life through. His death.
Fifteen centuries before, God had
told the Israelites in .Egypt to kill the
passover lamb, put its shed blood on
their door posts, and partake of the
flesh of the lamb as the passover sup-
per. "And when I see the blood," said
God to Moses, "I will pass over you
to destroy you, when 1 smite the land
of Egypt" (Exod. 12:13).
For fifteen centuries God's people
srael had observed this passover sac-
ifice and supper, a divinely ordained
ign that they were saved from death
y the shed blood and death of the
I
r
s
b
substitute lamb.
And: now tite Lamb of God Himself
typified by the Old Testament sacri-
fice, told His disciples to prepare for
the passover supper with Him, know -
'ng that .the next day His own blood
was to be shed for the redemption of
all who would be saved. It was an
amazing moment its the history of the
world and in God's' eternal plan and
purpose; when a symbol or type, set
forth for fifteen centuries, was to be
fulfilled in the antitype, Christ the'
Son of God..
As Chi-ist and His disciples were
eating the passover stepper He insti-
tuted what we now call the Lord's
Supper, observed in all Christian
,churches at the Conunuition Table,
Taking the bread, He "blessed it, and
brake it, and gave it to the disciples,
and said, Take, eat; this is My body."
He did the saute with the cup, pass-
ing it to them to drink, and saying:.
"rear this is My blood of the new.
.testament, which is shed 'for the re-
mission of sins,"
From the supper, after "they had
sung an hymn," they went together
to .the .Mount of Olives. There the
Lord Jesus, leaving the others and
taking with Him the inner- circle of
His .three most intimate disciples,
Peter, James and John, went to a gar-
den called Gethsemane.
Let tts never talk about "our Geth-
semates." We have none. We could
have none. No sinful man has ever
had a Gethesmane. There has been
but one Gethsemane in time and et-
ernity, and there could be but one,
Gethsemane is as unique, as 'eternally
solitary and isolated; as the Soli of
God Himself, the God -avian who is
the only Saviour of sinners.
Christ's heart hungered for huttlan
cotnpattionship, yet He must be alone,
Thursday, May 3lst, 1034
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"Knee -Action". Chevrolet offers you safety
glass in the windshield and ventilators of all models,
at no extra cost. Chevrolet has a strong and solid
Body by Fisher. Chevrolet's braking system is bigger
and more powerful than ever. Chevrolet pioneered
the Starterator — the controlled automatic start-
ing system that eliminates dangerous "stalling".
Chevrolet is pioneer, too, of the ICK frame—the
strongest, most rigid in its class. And Chevrolet's
headlights are the famous twin -beam, foot con-
trolled type—with new, pre -focussed bulbs -pro-
viding more light and a safe passing beam.
No other low-priced car has all these outstanding
safety features. No other gives you the additional
health -protection of built-in Fisher. Ventilation.
And only Chevrolet gives you dependability—tested
and proved by thousands of Canadians -that insures
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it. Beautifully stream -lined. Designed
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BIGGER, POSITIVE BRAKES... Greater
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.;Air-cooled drums for free-
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EXCLUSIVE YK FRAME: . . A new
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and government license extra. Easy GMAC terms.
CRAWFORD'S GARAGE
WINOHAM
ONTARIO
He asked the three disciples to "tarry
ye here, and watch with Me," for, He
said, "My soul is exceeding sorrowful,
even unto death." They failed Him
utterly, as they were to do later that
night when "all the disciples forsook
Him, and fled" (Verse 56). Instead
of watching with their Lord in the
garden they fell asleep,
Alone in His agony our Lord pray-
ed: "0 My Father, if it be possible,
let this cup pass from Me: neverthe-
less not as I will, but as Thou wilt."
Then He turned back to His dis-
ciples for fellowship and sympathy,
and found th•ezn asleep.
"He went away again the second
time, and prayed, saying, 0 My Fath-
er, ifthis cup may not pass away
from. Me, except I drink it, Thy will
be done,
Again He turned to His disciples for
or
sympathy; again He found thein
asleep; and tile third time He with-
drew by himself and poured out His
heart in the same prayer,
What was the "cup"' from which
our Lord shrank in such suffering and
agony as not other has ever . known?
Luke, the beloved physician, adds the
startling detail that "His sweat was as
it were great drops of blood falling
clown to the ground."'
There are various interpretations.
One is that our Lord, under the ter-
rific pressure that was upon Him,
feared prematttre death; that he fear-
ed He might break down and die be-
fore reaching the cross, amid thus fail
to carry out God's plan for "the lamb
slain from the foundation of the
world,"
Another interpretation is that our
Lord, holy, sinless, righteous, was re-
coiling from bearing the sins .of the
world in 1 -lis own body on the tree
(I Peter 2:24), He knew that Ile,
who
knew no sin, must be made to be silt
faros
r , "that we might be treacle the
righteousness of God in Him," (II
Cor. 5:21.)
Perhaps there is a mystery' in the
Gethsemane agony that we Can never
understand or comprehend in this life.
Whatever it was, it marked our Lord's
renewed, unconditional surrender to
.the will of His Father, and He came
through in triumph; Satan defeated,
Christ triumphant, lost mankind re-
deemed.
HOLSTEIN BREEDERS'
HOLD FIELD DAY
Will Be Held at Stratford r June 12th
The major Holstein Breeders' field
day for the Counties of. Perth, Water-
loo, Wellington, North Oxford,' Mid-
dlesex, Lambton, Bruce and. Huron,
according to an official announcement
just made, will be held at Stratford,
Tuesday, June 12th, and .already ar-
rangements are under way for a pro-
gramme that will be found both pleas-
ing and 'entertaining, This bigannual
g
event which in past years has always
attracted tremendous crowds of peo-
ple, will be held in the City Park, one
of the beauty spots of Stratford, and
ideally suited for the sports and oth-
ier events scheduled to take place dur-
ing the day.
This field day is being sponsored, by
the Perth County Holstein Breeders'
Club and the Extension Department
of the Holstein-Freisian Association,
of Canada, and both organizations are'
working with a view to making it the
most outstanding event in live stock
circles this. year, During the morn-
ing there will be an exhibit for edu
cational purposes, and a judging com-
petition, with a strong line-up of Hol-
stein cattle selected from the well-
known herds ofPerthCounty breed-
ers. These will furnish animals for
four different classes which will be
judged by both men and women in
attendance. The official awards will
be placed by .expert judges, and to the
winners valuable prizes will be given.
The lunch at noon will take the
form of a basket picnic, followed by
a couple of short addresses, and then
the remainder of the afternoon will
be devoted to sports.
a
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