HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1934-06-07, Page 6PAGE SIX
THE WINGHAM ADVANCE -TIMES
Thursday, Jule 7th,. 1934,
Wellington Mutual Fir. e
InsulraOce Co.'
Established 1840.
Risks taken on all class of insur-
mace at reasonable rates.
Head Office, Guelph, Ont.
A.BNER COSENS, Agent, Wingham
J. W. BUSHFIELD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Money to Loan.
Office—Meyer Brock, Wingham
Successor to Dudley Holmes
R. S. HETHERINGTON
BARRISTER And SOLICITOR
Office: .Morton Block.
Telephone No, 66,
J. H. CRAWFORD
Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc.
Successor to R. Vanstone
Wingham : Ontario
DR. G. H. ROSS
DENTIST
Office Over Isard's Store.
DR. A. W. IRWIN
DENTIST -- X-RAY
Office, McDonald .Block, Wingham.
DR. G. W. HOWSON
DENTIST
Office over Bondi's Fruit Store.
H. W. COLBORNE, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Medical Representative D, S. C. R.
Successor to Dr. W. R. Hanibly
Phon 54 Wingham
DR. ROBT, C. REDMOND
M.R.C.S. (ENG.) L.R.C.P. (Load.)
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
F. A. PARKER
OSTEOPATH
All `Diseases Treated.
Office adjoining residence next to
Anglican Church on Centre Street.
Sunday by appointment.
Osteopathy Electricity
Phone 272. Hours, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
A. R. & F. E. DUVAL
CHIROPRACTORS
'CHIROPRACTIC and
ELECTRO THERAPY
North Street — Wingham
Telephone 300.
J. ALVIN FOX
Licensed Drugless Practitioner
CHIROIPRACTIC - DRUGLESS
THERAPY - . RADIONIC
EQUIPMENT
Hours by Appointment.
Phone 191.
Wingham.
THOMAS FELLS
AUCTIONEER
REAL ESTATE SOLD
A thorough knowledge of Farm Stock
Phone 231, Wingham.
It Will Pay You to Have An
EXPERT AUCTIONEER
to conduct your sale.
See
T. R. BENNETT
At The Royal Service Station.
Phone 174W.
R. C. ARMSTRONG
LIVE STOCK And GENERAL
AUCTIONEER
Ability with special training en-
able me to give you satisfaction. Ar-
rangements made with W. J. Brown,
Wingham; or direct to Teeawater.
Phone 45r2-2.
THOMAS E. SMALL
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
Fears' Experience in Farm Stock
and Implements. Moderate Prices,
Phone 331.E
A. J. Walker
FURNITURE and
FUNERAL SERVICE
Wingham, Ont.
Arnhule.li ce Service
"THE LIFE
OF OUR LORD"
by
Charles Dickens
CHAPTER THE NINTH
The feast of the Passover being
now almost come, Jesus said to two
of his disciples, Peter and John, "Go
into the city of Jerusalem, and you
will meet a man carrying a pitcher of
water, Follow him home, and say to
hini, 'the Master says where is the
guest -chamber, where he can eat the
Passover with bis Disciples? And he
will shew you a large upper room, fur-
nished. There, make ready the sup-
per."
The two disciples found that it hap-
pened as Jesus had said; and having
met the man with the pitcher of wat-
er, and having followed him home,
and having been shewn the room,
they prepared the supper, and Jesus
and the other ten apostles came at the
usual time, and they all sat down to
partake of it together.
It is always called The Last Sup-
per, and Jesus and the other ten apos-
tles at the usual time, and they all
sat down to partake of it together.
It is always called The Last Sup-
per, because this was the last time
that Our Saviour ate and drank with
his Disciples.
And he took bread from the table,
and blessed it, and broke it, and gave
it to them; and he took the cup of
Wine, and blessed it, and drank, and
gave it to them, saying "Do this in
remembrance of Me!" And when they
had finished supper, and had sung a
hymn, they went out into the Mount
of Olives. -
There, Jesus told them that he
would be seized that night and that
they would all leave him alone, and
would think only of their own safety.
Peter said, earnestly, he never would,
for one. "Before the cock crows," re-
turned Our Saviour, "you will deny
me thrice." But Peter answered "No
Lord. Though I should die with Thee,
I will never deny Thee." And all the
other disciples said the same.
Jesus then led the way over a
brook, called Cedron, into a garden
that was called Gethsemane; and
walked with three of the disciples in-
to a retired part of the garden. Then
he left them as he had left the others,
together; saying, "Wait here, and
watch!" --and went away and prayed
by Himself, while they, being weary,
fell asleep.
And Christ suffered great sorrow
and distress of mind, in his prayers
in that garden, because of the wick-
ednessof the men of Jerusalem, who
were going to kill Him; and He shed
tears before God, and was in deep and
strong affliction.
When His prayers were finished,
and He was comforted, He returned
to the Disciples, and said "Rise! Let
us be going! He is close at hand,
who will betray me!„
Now, Judas knew that garden well,
for our Saviour had often walked
there, with his Disciples; and, almost
at the moment when Our Saviour said
these words, he came there, accom-
panied by a strong guard of men and
officers, which had been sent by the
chief Priests and Pharisees. It being
dark, they carried lanterns and torch-
es. They were armed with swords and
staves too; for they did not know
but that the people would rise and de-
fend Jesus Christ; and this had made
them afraid to seize Him boldly in
the day, when he sat teaching the
people.
As the leaders of this guard had
never seen Jesus Christ and did not
know him from the apostles, Judas
had said to them, "The man whom I
kiss, will be he." As he advanced to
give this wicked kiss, Jesus said to
the soldiers "whom do you seek?" —
"Jesus of Nazareth," they answered,
"Then," said Our Saviour, 'I am He,
Let my disciples here go freely. I am
He." . Which Judas confirmed, by
saying "Hail, Master!" and kissing
Him. Whereupon Jesus said, "Judas,
Thou betrayed me with a kiss!"
The guard then ran forward to
protect Him. except Peter, who, hav-
ing a sword, drew it, and cut off the
right ear of the High Priest's serv-
ant, who was one of them, and whose
name was Maichus. But Jesus made
him sheath his sword, and gave him-
self up. Then all the disciples forsook
Him and fled; and there remained not
one—not one—to bear Him company.
(Continued Next Week)
(Copyright for North and South America, 1934, by United Feature Syndi-
cate. All rights reserved.)
HURONS SCALP
CARDS 10 - 7
Paisley Score Six Runs in Sixth But
Local Pull Through.
The Hurons gave the 150 or so fans
who attended the first Bruce League
game ever played in Wingham about
150 different kinds of jitters before
they finally walked off the field with
their first win of the league season.
The Paisley Cardinals furnished the
opposition and threw quite a scare in-
to the locals by scoring six runs in
the sixth to forge ahead 7-6, but the
Tribe pounced on Grant for four runs
in their half of the same inning and
won the game 10-7. It turned out to
be just a fair game that Mayor Hanna
started on its way with a speech and
a wildpitch, but it may teach the lo-
cal youngsters that five innings do
not make a ball game.
Neither starting pitcher stayed in
the box long, Atkinson, the 16 -year-
old Card rookie giving way to Grant
in the fourth, and Joe Tiffin being re-
placed by Peterson, with the bases
full and none out in the sixth. None
of the four could be said to be effect-
ive on Wednesday. The Hurons start-
ed right in on Atkinson, W. Tiffin and
Somers singling and Groves driving
one into deep centre for a triple. Bob
scored a little later when Grant took
Lediet's fly and threw to first for
some strange reason. A fast double -
play, Cottril to Grant to D. McAr-
thur ended the inning.
The Tribe added another three rims
in the second, Moore singled and
stole second, Mellor then drawing a
walk. Somers then singled scoring
Moore and taking second on the
throw-in. Mellor and Somers both
scored when Groves bounced a single
over third. base after W. Tiffin had
flied out, Lediet then rolled out to
first.
A. hit batsman, a two -base hit and
a fielder's choice broke the ice for
one run for the Cards in the fifth and
they went to work in earnest in the
sixth to score six runs, The Cards
collected five hits and two free trips
to first in this frame to say nothing
of a doubtful decision at third which
didn't help the Hurons any. After it
Was all over the Cards had driven
rob Tiffin from the hill and, forged.
ahead ahead 7-6.
Rae started the locals' half of the
sixth and got a life on Cottrill's er-
ror, taking second while Tanner was
throwing out Mellor at first. W. Tif-
fin struck out but Somers came
through with his third hit of the day
to score Rae and even up the score.
Groves bounced one off the short-
stop's chest, Somers scoring. Wild
Bill Lediet then busted one high over
the right field fence for a double and
Joe Tiffin scored both Groves and
Lediet with the last runs of the game
on a long single to centre.
* * *
While the game wasn't just exactly
a brilliant sample of baseball the fans
seemed to be getting plenty of fun
out of it.
* * *
The Hurons take on two tough ones
next, Lucknow and Southampton fol-
lowing in order. It's always quite a
job to win a game of anything in the
Sepoy town while the Fishermen are
said to have a pretty fair pitcher by
the name of Goldsmith, "Pretty fair
is right," sez you.
• *
The crops aren't the only things
that need rain around here, the ball
diamond also is badly in need of a
little aqua para,
• *
Paisley—
A.B. R. H. Po A E.
Cottrill, ss 4 1 1 0 1 3
G McArthur, ss 1 0 0 0 0 0
Craig, rf
Grant, 2b, p
Gregg, cf
5 1
5 0
5 0
H, McArthur, if 5 1
D, McArthur, lb .,4 0
Tanner, c 5 1
Seiler, 3b
Atkinson, p, 2b ..
4 2
5 1
1:0 0 1
2 3 1 1
2 3 0 0
2 0 0 0
210 0 0
1 6 1 0
0`0 0. 1
1 2 0 0
Totals 43 7 12 24 5 7
Wingham—
A.B. R. IL Po A E.
W. Tiffin, as 5 1 1. 1 1 1.
Somers, cf 6 3 3 2 0 0
Groves, c 4 2 2 11 0 0
Lediet, 2b 4 1 1. 2 2 0
J. Ti1iriii, p, rf ,.,.....-, 4 0 2 2 5 1
Peterson, rf, p 4 0 1 1 1 0
Gurney, lb .... ...... ,4 0 0 6 0 0
'Moore, if 2 1 1 1 1 0
E:ae,. If .... •-.,....,..-......-2 1 0 1 0. 0
Mellor, 2b ry .. 1 0 0 1 0
Totais..... .. . .. 37 10 11 27 11 2
1.H.>.
aisley ,.,.. 000 016 000 7 12 7
Wingham .,,...... 330 004 00x-10 U 2
Two -base hits, Atkinson, Lediet, la,
McArthur 2; three -base hit, Groves;
sacrifice, Mellor. Stolen bases, Gregg
2, Craig, Tanner, Moore, Left on
bases, Paisley 10, Wingham 4. Dou-
ble plays: Cottrill to Grant to D. 'Mc-
Arthur; Moore to J. Tiffin to Lediet
to J. Tiffin. Bases on balls, off Atkin-
son 1, off Tiffin 2, off Peterson 1.
Struck out, by J, Tiffin 5, by Peter-
son 4, by Atkinson 1, by Grant 4. Hit
batsman, by 3, Tiffin2 (Seiler 2). Hits
off 3. Tiffin,- 5 in 5 innings; off Pet-
erson, 7 in 4 innings; off Atkinson, 8
in 3 innings, off Grant 3 in 5 innings.
Winning pitcher, Peterson; losing pit-
cher, Grant. Umpires, McCartney and
Agnew, Lucknow. Time -2.05.
BASEBALL RECORD
BRUCE LEAGUE STANDING
Won Lost P. C.
Walkerton 3 0 1000
Port Elgin 2 0 1000
Southampton 1 0 1000
Chesley 1 1 :500
Lucknow 2 2 .500
Kincardine 1 2 .333
Wingham - 2 .333
Owen Sound 0 1 .000
Paisley ..... ................-.....-.... 0 3 .000
Last Week's Scores
Wingham 10 Paisley 7
Chesley 13 Kincardine 6
Walkerton 16 Owen Sound .... 5
Port Elgin 18 Lucknow 5
NENE
Southampton ...18 Paisley
Luckoow 7 Wingham
Port Elgin 16 Chesley
Softball League Standing
Class A
Won Lost Tied
Transport Oil .., 0 2 0
Class B
Cubs 1 0 0
Aces ,,. 1 0. 0
Mic-Macs 0 2 0
DRILLED' WELL
2 Limited, ,Tames Barbour, 43 -year-old
5 mill worker of Goderich, was arrested
1 at Goderich, Saturday 'afternoon by
police. from Kitchener, in which city
he is alleged to have committed the
offense.
Shortly after his arrest Barbour,
police say, disclosed the whereabouts
of 4,000 shares of fictitious Eldorado
Mines Limited certificates shares, and
2 these are now in possession of the
0 authorities.
Barbour was placed in Waterloo
County jail Saturday evening.
Pts.
0
AT MILDMAY
Reeve Fred L. Davidson completed
the drilling of a well for the village
of Mildmay on Friday. The •depth'
of the well is about 100 feet and at
that depth a flow of 338 gallons per
minute was secured. The village of
Mildmay has suffered: a shortage of
water for a year or so and this ad-
ditional flow of water will add great-
ly to the efficiency •of their Water-
works system.
The well was drilled in Town pro-
perty opposite the Hamel Factory.
GODERICH MAN
ARRESTED ON
FRAUD :CHARGE
Charged with attempting to pass
$36,000 worth of bogus stock certi-
ficates of Wright -Hargreaves Mines
THE PASSWORD
IS QUALITY
Canada Following up her Good Work
In Poultry Exports
"If Canada is going to get its share
of the British, trade in poultry, in
bacon, in live cattle, or in any other
of its agricultural products, the value
and necessity of doing things better,
not worse than competitors must be
regarded as all important„" said Mr.
W. A. Wilson, Canadian Government
Animal Products Trade Commission-
er in London, England, during his
present visit to the ';Dominion. "We
made a god reputation with our first
shipment of turkeys, because the qual-
ity was there and they were graded
and packed according to government.
standards. The British trade responds
to work well done, There is the near-
ket for. Canadian poultry and other
products and the password is Quality.
"The season for exportingpoultry
to Britain should be designed for the
12 months of the year. Buyers over
there do not want to change their
source of supply if they can be assur-
ed of the demand being met at all!
times."
"Canada should follow the same
policy in connection with the present
opportunity for the export of dressed
chickens as it has done with turkeys
exported to Britain for the 1932 and
1933 Christmas trade. The 1,000,00E
pounds of turkeys shipped in 1932
were 100 per cent, as to quality. In•
1933 they were not quite so good as
the previous year but this was due
to some unusual difficulties associated
with the shipping and are surmount-
able. Turkeys for the British Christ-
mas trade must reach the buyers at
least' one week before Christmas day:
Manager: ":Henry, you wear a very-
old-fashioned
eryold-fashioned coat in the office."
Clerk: "Yes, it is a bit out of date.
I bought it the last time you gave me
a raise."
"Papa, what was the Stone Age?"
"That was the glorious period, my -
son, when a man axed a woman to•
marry frim."
•
FACTS ABOUT HYDRO --No. 4 of a series of official announcements by the Ontario Municipal
Electric Association, representing the Municipalities who own the Hydro -Electric System of Ontario. •
et,
affi
O'NTAR.IA!
i'
MUNEC IPA L ELECTRIC
ASSIOcr•Ar!ON
How Hydro helps Rural Ontario
ELECTRICAL service in the rural municipalities of Ontario, as provided under the
administration of the Hydro -Electric Power Commission, is unsurpassed for any
comparable area and circumstances.
About 365 Township municipalities have contracted with the Commission to supply power
from, the extensive transmission networks serving the urban municipalities.
Rural power districts generally include parts of several townships to give the most econ-
omical distribution costs. They are operated by the Commission as agent for the Townships.
Rural consumers receive special. advantages not conferred upon urban consumers. The
Provincial Government helps in three ways: it pays half the capital costs of rural distri-
bution lines and equipment; it makes loans for the purchase of wiring and equipment;
and, by its guarantee, it has enabled the Commission to establish reduced maximum
service charges.
Rural hamlet service corresponds to urban domestic service. Farm Hydro service includes
both lighting and power and thus is a combination of urban domestic service and power
service. Here are some uses for Hydro service on farms:
In the House
LIGHTING COOKING
WASHING REFRIGERATION
IRONING VACUUM CLEANING
LIGHTING BARNS
PUMPING WATER
MILKING
COOLING MILK,
On the Farm
CREAM SEPARATING
CHURNING
FEED CHOPPING
ROOT PULPING
SAWING
WORKSHOP
SILO FILLING
HOT BEDS
On account of the fact that electric servicein the rural home is now so widely' used that it
can be considered a necessity, a five-year contract with the consumer is available in those
districts where the townships concerned so approve.
The service charge incorporated in rural rates is
designed to meet the capital and operating costs of
rural distribution lines and equipment required to
deliver the power to the rural consumer. To reach
each rural consumer there is required twenty to fifty
times greater length of distribution line than to serve
each urban consumer, with a corresponding increase
in expense. Nevertheless, Government aid and econ-
omical operation make it possible to supply farm
service in Ontario, combining household use and
three horsepower of agricultural power, at even less
monthly cost to the farmer than the low charges in
many Ontario towns for a comparable domestic
service plus a three -horsepower power service.
Co-operation pays. In districts where farmers make
full use of service, rates go down. More than 40 per
cent. of rural consumers pay less than the government -
guaranteed maximum service charges.
Energy charges are also low. More than 65 per cent.
of all rural consumers pay a first consumption charge
per kilowatt-hour of 3.6 cents net or less, and this
rate applies only on from 30 to 42 kilowatt-hours
(hamlet and ordinary 'farm services) . For addi-
tional energy consumed, the rate to any rural con-
sumer does not exceed 1.8 cents net per kilowatt-
hour, and thousands obtain it for 1.35 cents net per
kilowatt-hour.
A lots* follow-on energy rate of 0.67 cents net per
kilowatt-hour has recently been approved for rural
users making liberal use of the service. This is a
lower follow-on rate than is available in almost any
city, town or village fordomestic service.
Ten Years of Progress in Rural Hydro Service
YEAR,
1923
1928
1933
MILE$ or RURAL NUMBER or
PRIMARY LINE,- CONSUMERS
1,050 7,790
4,100 31,060
9,175 ` 61,850
PEAK LOAD
I71oRSEPOWER
1,700
16,980
32,370
CAPITAL GOVERNMEN'TGRANT
INVESTMENT ACTUALLY PAID
$1,328,000 $425,000
$7,298,000 $3,617,000
$17,694,000 $8,793,000
Hydro service brings to the citizens of the Township municipalities the comforts of urban
life. No other material agency can contribute so much to the maintenance of a standard
of living -which makes life in rural districts more attractive. A. service that has doubled
its business under the difficult conditions prevailing since 1925 has proved its worth.
ONTARIO
• NUNICIPAL ELCTRIC AsscclArioN
PUBLICITY COMMITTEE
it tri , Controller Jaynes Simpson, Toronto Prank L. Mason, Oshawa
'1', W. McFarland, London
Kee,) this in ormri:tit a statenseni and thatch for
rther statemenis by.. the Publicity C'r»nrnii
ea.