HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1934-08-16, Page 2PAG; TWO
THE 'WINcI-IAM ADVANCE -TIMES
The
Wingham, Advance -Times
Published at
WINGHAM ONTARIO
Every Thursday Morning by
The Advance -Times Publishing Co.
Stehscription Rate One Year $2.00
Six months, $1.00 in advance
To U. S. A. $2.50 per year.
foreign rate, $3.00 per year.
Advertising rates on application.
THE MAPLE LEAF TOUR
Between one hundred and fifty and
two hundred members of the British
food distributive trades of Great Bri-
tain will visit Canada in August, They
willbe the guests of the Toronto Ex-
hibition authorities at the end of the
month and their visit will be, it is
stated, of great importance to
Can
ad-
isn producers. In the party willbe
'or re resentatives of the
principals P
biggest buying organizations in the
British Isles. Their visit to the Ex-
hibition will enable them to meet lead-
ing growers and packers of food pro-
ducts in Canada,
The ,purpose of the tour is to give
to representatives of the distributive
food trades of Great Britain an in-
sight into the methods by which pri-
mary- and secondary foodstuffs des-
tined for the British market are pre-
pared, .packed and transported. Thus,
it is said, the visit will prove an im-
portant practical application of the
principle that the expansion of Em-
pire trade can best be assured by the
promotion of first-hand knowledge of
commodities and markets by those
concerned; that Empire markets can
only be retained by the exporters of
goods which are of superlative qual-
ity and produced under the finest con-
ditions which science and administra-
tion can devise.
Not only, however, will the British
distributor be able to learn at first
hand a great deal of the actual and
• potential productivity of Canada, he
will be able also to give the Canad-
ianr ce
p odu r personally the benefit of
his criticism, specialized knowledge
and advice. This will be of incal-
culable value, authorities state, to
Canadians who are anxious to adapt
their products to the special needs of
the British market,
This project is known as "The Ma-
ple Leaf Tour"..
"WAS TAKING EVERY
KIND OF DRUG FOR
CONSTIPATION"
Then ALL -BRAN Brought
Relief
-e
Read this very enthusiastic.
letter:
"I am 34 years old and as far
back in my life I have been •consti-
pated. I was so bad that I had one
bowel, movement every five or six
days. I was taking every kind of
drug known forcon constipation.
ation.
"Now for the last two months I
have been eating a little ALL -BRAN
night and morning and I have at
least two to three bowel movements
each day."— Mr. Frank Piratzky
(address furnished upon request).
Laboratory tests show Kellogg's
ALL -BRAN provides "bulk" and
Vitamin' B to aid elimination. Au -
BRAN is also a fine source of iron
for the blood.
The "bulk" in Ar BRAN is nitwit
litre that in leafy vegetables. In-
side the body, it forms a soft mass.
Gently, this clears out the intes-
tinal. wastes.
Isn't this safer than taking harni-
ful patent medicines? Two table-
spoonfuls daily are usually . suffi-
cient. Severe cases with each meal.
If not relieved this way, see your
doctor.
You'll enjoy eating Kellogg's
ALL-1#iaa rt as a cereal with milk or
cream -sugar or honey or fresh
fruits added. Or, to use in cooking.
In the red -and -green package.
At all grocers. Made by Kellogg
In London, Ontario.
DO NOT, CRY WOLF! WOLF!
We all remember the story of the
shepherd lad of old who cried "Wolf!
Wolff" when it was not necessary and
then when he cried out in earnest his
friends failed to respond to his call
as they thought it was not necessar
Last week a young Toronto lad.
thirteen, while swimming at Strat
roy, played at fake drowning. It w
a great joke and :he and his chun
were enjoy=ing, the fun. Sad to rela
the young fellow got into difficulti
and his friends on the bank thougl
he was still playing. Their u discover
,to the contrary came too late and th
boy was a victim of drowning,
Every child and grown-up shoul
remember that bathing, one of th tramhealthiest of pastimes, can be uc
less dangesous if the silly habit o
feigning drowning is •not a part o
the sport.
* se * *
During t
t g 1 e hot spell last week coa
was being dumped into the cellars om
sense of the merchants here. A re
minder that the summer is quickl
slipping away.
,;a* * *
Dollar or near dollar wheat and
good price for hay is a great thin_
But, as a farmer stated the other da
in the office here, the prices are big
when they have little of these coin
modifies to sell.
:l;* *
Sir Malcolm Campbell will try and
drive his Bluebird, the fastest car on
earth, to a new record at Daytona
Beach this winter. It is to be hoped
he does not go to the well too often
* :r- * *
Babe Ruth, Sultan of Swat, is in his
last year as a regular player. No
doubt, he will be a great attraction
for some club as their manager.
* * *
Kincardine has unpaid taxes total-
ling $66,802. That surely is a load for
those who pay their taxes to carry.
:i * *
Of all the places bet e Z'L'
Thursday, August 16t1�, 1934
l
in e o ty o eronto. Such case
as have come in have originated out
side of Toronto. .Similarly gland tub
erculosis, of bovine origin has, all of
it, come from, outside Toronto, It is
well known that pastettrization of mill:
y. will definitely= prevent this terpe'ef dis-
of ease. It will also prevent the spread
h- of typhoid and paratyphoid_ fever,
as scarlet fever and,septic sore throat
es and diptheria. The most notorious
to typhvidepidemic in the history of this
es country, that of Montreal with 5,000
it cases and 500 deaths, resulted from
y failure to institute proper pasteurize -
e tion.
Yet in the face of these known facts
d .a recent very creditable move on the
e part of the government to institute
h pasteurization throughout Ontario is
f met by the opposition of organized
f groups actuated entirely by pure self-
ishness. For some years Rotary and
Iw r
� anis Clubs in Ontario have taken
an interest in the rehabilitation of the
Crippled Child. There are 26,000 crip-
pled children in Canada. One of the
causes of crippling in children is bone
tuberculosis by' a type of tubercle
bacillus conveyed by non -pasteurized
a Dr. Bates suggested that it is neither
a" sensible nor charitable to care for
y crippling or any of the illnesses vehicle
h may be transmitted by non-pasteuri
- zed milk and at the same time neglect
to make every endeavour to see that.
all milk is pasteurized. Point is added
to this comment by the fact that only
the other day, in Ontario, he found a
large Kiwanis Club Boys' Camp sup-
plied with raw milk by well-meaning
Kiwanians.
Most of Ontario's milk is still un- ,
pasteurized, much of it is dirty and
much that masquerades as pasteurized
milk, is not. This is a situation which
uncorrected means unnecessary dis-
ease and death. It can be corrected.
Dr. Bates urges that Kiwanis Clubs in
common, with other service clubs,
should take an interest in the matter."
s cause and effect with inexorabl
- truthfulness, These things that God'
- ratan Amos has been condemning ar
the cause, And what is the effect t
be, the consequence from this cause
"Therefore now shall they go captiv
with the first that go captive." Tit
nation was going down into ruin an
captivity before a foreign and heatliei
nation'. Suffering should replace self
ish pleasure. Humiliation shouldfol
low crime. God's people should be de
feated by godless people.
It seemed impossible when Arno
uttered these words, but it carne t
pass with dreadful literalness and
reality.
And was this to be merely a human
sequence of cause and effect? Some
would tell us that the consequences
of sin are merely natural, the laws
of nature working themselves out.
The Bible makes it very plain that
this
h s zs not all, but that God Himself,
because He is a God of righteousness
and justice, must deal and does deal
.with those who persistently and in-
corrigibly. reject and defy Him. "The
Lord God hath sworn by 'Himself,
saith the Lord, the God of hosts, I
abhor the excellency of Jacob, and
hate his palaces (because they are
filled with `corruption); therefore will
I deliver up the,,. -city with all that is
therein." `God'does not take His hands
off and merely let events work them-
selves out. When God's infinite love
and mercy and redeeming •power are
rejected, then God's infinite justice
and righteousenss assert themselves.
In an earlier chapter Antos spoke
the solemn words to his fellowmen,
God speaking through him: "There-
fore thus will<I do unto •thee, 0 Is-
rael: and because I will do this unto
thee, prepare to meet thy God, 0, Is-
rael." The same word is being spoken
to Canada today, to the United States,
to Great Britain, to every nation.
Whether we will or not, we mist meet
God. It makes a vast difference whe-
ther we meet Him in humility, repen-
tance, faith and obedience, or in sin
anddefiance.
e ance.
One of the penalties of sin is that
the man who sins and persists ,in sin
loses the ability to distinguish.. be-
tween sin and righteousness. He atro-
phies his moral sense, He calls white
black, and black white. "Ye have
turned judgment into gall, and the
fruit of righteousness into hemlock,"
declared God. Moral color -blindness
is a dangerous condition.
And at the heart of all this eat -
anal and individual failure is the wor-
ship of man. Israel was congratulat-
ng herself on having risen to great
heights by her own strength. If ever
here was an age in which the exal-
ation of man became a devastating
and ruinous snare, that age is today,
en prefer to talk a great deal more.
bout the greatness of man than about
he greatness of God. And man in
ontrast with God is very, very small.
God uses nations to punish nations.
od may use heathen, unbelieving na-
ions to punish nations that had been
elieveing and God-fearing, but have
turned away from Him. "But, behold,
will raise e
r upagainst g tnst you a nation,
house of Israel, saith the Lord the
od of hosts, and they shall afflict
o u."
It came unerringly to pass, as Bab -
Ionia and Assyria swept down up -
n helpless Israel and Judah. Shall
of the Christian nations of today
ke this lesson to heart?
f
y
is en asaga
Beach and Bagdad for a plane to be
forced down we can think of none bet-
ter than England. The daring young
aviators, James Ayling and Leonard
Reid were surely fortunate.
* * * *
The only place in Canada that has
increased production of apples this
year is British Columbia. We will
surely miss our syrup and Baldwins
this year.
* * * • *
With silver at a price of about fifty
cents the dull shine on that metal
�xvill soon be a thing 'of the past,
* * * *
If the water in Lake Ontario contin-
ues to recede as it has this last few
ears the C.N.E. swim can be an ac -
ass -the -lake affair.
* * * *
The beverage rooms gots under way
before any inspectors were appointed.
According to reports some of them
took advantage of this fact.
* * * *
URGES FIGHT FOR
PASTEURIZED MILK
The following
editorial
appeared in
the Mail and Empire on Friday last.
It contains some very useful and
practical information re pasteurized
milk.
"In an address to the Toronto Ki-
wanis Club, Dr. Gordon Bates, gener-
al director, Canadian Social Hygiene
Council, pointed out the enormous
cost to Canada of diseases in a large
measure preventable. The facts are
that two per cent. of our people are
constantly ill and that notwithstand-
ing an investment of $250,000,000 in
hospitals countless thousands are ill.
in their own homes. It is estimated
that the direct cost of illness in Can-
ada is $311,000,000 year after year.
Of particular interest to both Rotary
and Kiwanis Clubs is disease among
children through the use of unpas-
teurized milk.
Toronto has pasteurized its milk :$
y
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON
AMOS DENOUNCES SELF-IN-
DULGENCE.
(Temperance Lesson)
Sunday, August 19: Arnos 6:1-7, 11-14.
Golden Text.
Seek good, and not evil, that ye
may live. (Amos 5:14.)
Sin and righteousness do not
change. We like to talk of the very
"modern" day in which we live, and
try to persuade ourselves that every-
thing is different now from what it
was in centuries past. The reading of
the Bible is a good anitdote to this
!mistake, It is filled with descriptions
of men's sins of long ago, that seem
like photographic records of today.
And the standards of righteousness
i'eld up long ago are exactly the same
as the best standards of righteousness
that the best of men know today. For
real righteousness comes from God—
and d H
e does not
change. And g
sin
comes from Satan and the human
heart—and they do not change.
The prophet Amos sounds a warn-
ing to two great cities, capitals of
their respective nations. "Woe to
them that are at ease in Zion, and
trust in the mountain of Samaria."
Zion was Jerusalem, glorious capital
of David and Solomon, and them of
the southern tribes of Judah. Samar-
ia was a beautiful city on the heights,
capital of the northern ten tribes, or
Israel. Both were really superb cities,
and when Amos prophesied' it must
have seemed that they would last for-
ever. But "woe" was pronounced
against them, and pronounced by
God. Amos was merely the human.
mouthpiece of God. And when God
says woe is coming, we may be sure
it will come—unless we avert it by
since 1914. During the last twelve
years there has not been a single case
of bone tuberculosis of bovine origin
ressumummussiumourasimmommummaion
Sr
1aITI
Maitland � reg r
y ia
1
I
uyers Of •
r•404. Egg's.
Call `or Pl�ri cp
wift and complete repentance, turn-
ing to Him as our Saviour and.Lord.
But the people of God were closing
their eyes to the truth, They "put
far away the evil day," warned Amos.
Something had come between them-
selves and God—it is a common ex-
perience. Riches, prosperity, luxury:
the people cared more for these things
than for God. Do we ever ::see any-
thing of the sort today? They "lie up-
on beds; of ivory, and stretch them -
elves upon their couches, and eat the
ambs out of the flock, and the calves
ut of the midst of the stall;' that
chant to the sound of the viol, and in-
vent tothemselves e IWn5C
Ives 'n5trn n t
t tens of
musick."
This is a temperance lesson, and
those who are intemperate in food and
amusements are sure to be intemper-
ate in drink, So we read that they
drink wine in bowls,"
But they are not grieved for the
ffliction .01 Joseph." The name of
oseph was used, here for the whole
ation. Many a nation has gone to
Lein while its leading men and wo-
men were revelling in luxury, selfish-
ness, extravagance, self-seeking of ev-
ery sort. Exactly the same facts are
wrecking nations today.
Then. conies the pregnant word,
"therefore."" When God says "there-
fore" we know that He is describing
o
tf
Is a
CSE (IN'1TE» FARMERS' CO.OPERATIVE w n
a Er
(COMPANY, LIMITED. 1'
Ontario.
N
Wlilt IMAM,
Phoao 71
e 3 doz. fine strawberries
s Put into a large punch bowl, the
e sugar, water, the juice of the lemons
o and of the pineapples, and the car-
? benated water, Mix all well, Add the.
e strawberries and decorate with slices
o of pineapple and lemon sliced very
d thin. Put a. large piece of ice in the.
I bowl and add sugar to taste. When
- ready to serve, fill glasses one-quar-
- ter full of crushed ice, and fill' up
- with the lemonade (being careful to
have Several strawberries and a slice
$ or two of lemon and pineapple in each
o glass),
Tea Punch
3 cups orange juice
1 cup lemon juice
1 cup crushed pineapple or pine-
apple juice
1 oup raspberry syrup
1% cups tea infusion
1% cups sugar
1 cup
hot water
1 quart charged water
Mix fruit juices with pineapple,
raspberry syrup, tea. Boil sugar and
water five minutes and add. Turn in-
to punch bowl over a large piece of
ice. Chill thoroughly. Add charged
water just before serving.
Mint Julep
1 cup lemon juice
ria cup water
1 bunch fresh mint
3 pints ginger ale
1% cups sugar
Ice
Add mint leaves, sugar, and water
to lemon juice. Let stand half an
hour. Pour over a large piece of ice
and add ginger ale. Serve in small
glasses,
Grape Juice
2% cups grape juice
% cup evaporated milk - -
cup cold water or chopped ice
% tspn.. lemon juice
All ingredients 'should be cold. Mix
milk and water. Add the grape juice
and shake vigorously. Then add le-
mon juice. If sour grape juice is used
add a little sugar. This make 6 serv-
II
Cgs.
Pineapple Lemonade
1 pint water
1 cup sugar
1 quart ice water
1 can crushed pineapple
Juice of 3 lemons
Boil water and sugar five minutes,
add pineapple and lemon juice; cool,
strain and add ice water.
Lemon Frost -
1. lemon juice
1 to 3 tbspns. sugar
1. cup cold' water
crushed ice
1 egg white
Add lemon juice to water and.
sweeten to taste. Beat egg white un-
til stiff, sweeten and flavor with a
dash of lemon juice. Add a spoonful
of this egg white on top of lemon-
ade.
Chocolate Milk Shake
2 tablespoons finely -crushed ice
eta cup milk
2% tablespoons chocolate syrup
Beat ingredients with egg beater or
ut in shaker and shake thoroughly.
train into glass for serving.
Ad 'a
gd
ew gratings of nutmeg or a few
rains of cinnamon on top.
Iced Mocha
Mix 2 cups hot chocolate and.2 cups
trong coffee together. Cool and put
nto the ice box to become very cold.
erve in glasses filled with crushed
ce, and garnish with whipped cream
n top.
Orange Ginger Ale Freeze
Combine 3 glass orange juice with
% glass ginger ale. Add a scoop of
anilla ice cream or lemon sherbet.
hill with ice to taste, and serve at
nce.
Cider Punch
1 quart neer or bottled cider
"4 cup lemon juice
Sugar
1 quart charged water
Ice
Mix cider and, lemon juice. Sweet-
, to taste. Strain into punch bowl
ver a large piece of ice. Just before
ruing add charged water.
Eggnog
1 egg
1 cup milk
1 tspn, powdered sugar
A. pinch of salt
2 tablespoons sherry or any' fruit
juice
Beat the egg. Add milk, sugar, salt
nd flavoring, Pu,t into' a cocktail-
laker filled with cracked ice, and
ake hard until there is a frost on
e shaker. Pour into tall glasses, �and
tinkle the t withli •
e. op a little nutmeg.
oat may use cream instead of milk.
Oriental Punch
1 cup sugar
1, cup water
6 cloves
1' inch stick cinnamon
y/s tablespoon chopped ginger
i4 cup lemon juice
1 cup orange juice
1 drop oil peppermint
Green coloring
Mnit leaves
Boil sugar and water five minutes,.
dd cloves, cinnamon and ginger:
over and let stand until cold. Then
d fruit juices, sttain, color green,
cl add peppermint. Let stand :due
ur end pour fate pupeh bowl over
i
t
t
Ivi
a
t
c
G
t
b
I
0
G
y
y
0
n
to
USEFUL RECIPES
FOR, HOT WEATHER
Many housewives set luncheon or
dinner off to a. good start with a re-
freshing chilled beverage served with
a light appetizer. A frosty tinkling
glass of something tasty in the after-
noon, evening, or any time these days
is received with delight. A cool drink
assuages that weariness we are all
prone to in warm weather. For sim-
ple and light appetizers try various
spreads on crisp crackers, such as an-
chovies and hard-boiled eggs; Roque-
fort cheese' and chopped bacon; sar-
dines and tomatoes; salmon, olives
and mayonnaise; crabmeat and lemon
juice, horse 'oeuvres, or stuffed cel-
ery.
A very popular drink is iced tea,
the flavor of which can he varrietl in
a number of ways. You can prepare
it with orange as well as lemon juice,
and garnish with lemon and orange
slices, or use a cherry or mint syrup:
Fresh mint leaves are a popular ad-
dition. .
M n
,a y warren use decorated
ice cubes, These are prepared by put-
ting into each compartment of your
refrigerator pan a maraschino cherry,
a candied cherry, 1 or 2 mint leaves
or a small slice of iemon, then fill the
pan with water and freeze; if's easy to
fix up, and very effective.
Ice coffee, cocoa or chocolate are
always good, as well as fruit drieles.
As: a quick aid to beverage -making
keep a few bottles of fruit syrup on
hand,
Fruit Lemonade
oven lemons
1 Ib. sugar
`L quarts ewater
1 pineapple
2 bottles carbonated water •
rn
Exquisite Quality � and Flavour
r�rur
"Fresh From the Gardens"
619
a cake of ice. Garnish with fresh
leaves.
Strawberry Sherbet
One qreit fresh strawberries. er-les.Mash
through t collancer Add 1 tablespoon
lemon juice. Boil tgethe.r for 10 min-
utes 1% cups sugar and 1 cup boiling
water., Add this to fruit juices. Mix
well. Coll and freeze in freezer. Put
about a tablespoon of whipped cream
on top of each serving, Delicious ser-
ved with chocolate wafers.
C.N.E. Aug. 24th to 'Sept. 8th
Dates of the Canadian National Ex-
hibition this year are Friday, August
24th to Saturday, September 8th.
Fourteen days and nights of educe -
tion and recreation. It "is clean,
wholesome and captivating.
GOLDEN WED P 'NG
CELEBRATED
of 50 years ago took their places be-
fore the assembled guests and were
joined by their family. Rev. A. A.
Holmes, of Clinton, l nton presided over vera
short I t program of speeches by Mr.
James Spence, an uncle of the bride,
Dr. Armstrong, of Gorrie, and Mr.
Wm. McEwen and musical numbers
by Mrs. John Innes, Mrs, Warren,
Miss Freda :Fowler, Miss Aileen War-
ren, Miss Betty Warren and Mr. Adana
Stewart.
The bride's 50 -year-old wedding
gown of wine taffeta, her ostrich -
trimmed close -fitting white hat, shoes
and gloves were worn by her grand-
daughter for the occasion. Happily
both bridesmaids, Mrs. Fred Taylor
of Gorrie, the bride's twin sister, and
Mrs, T. Wallace, of Fordwich, a cou-
sin of the bride, were in attendance
as well as ten other guests of the 50 -
year -ago wedding,
The rooms were beautifully decor -
Recently Mr. and Mrs. James Jack- ated with roses and gladiolii. A buf-
son celebrated their Golden Wedding. fet luncheon was served, the table be-
A reception was held at their home ing centred with the bride's cake bear -
near Clinton from 1 to 3 p.m. attended
by over a hundred friends and rela-
tives. Particularly unique is; the fact
that no break has occurred in this
family, all eight children being pres-
ent as well as their seven grandchild-
ren.
Mr. andMrs. M s Jackson were married
in Morris Township in 1884 at the
home of John Roe, the bride's father.
After their marriage they resided in
the Township of Grey, then in Cul-
ross, later removing to Stanley where
they now reside.
While the Wedding March was be-
ing played by Miss Aileen Warren, a
granddaughter, the bride and groom Cleveland, Ohio.
ing its fifty candles, flanked on either
side with silver vases of American
Beauty roses.
Many beautiful gifts, messages of
congratulations and telegrams from
distant friends, unable to attend, were
received.
The members of the family are;
Mrs. T. J. Warren, Earl Grey, Sask.;
John L. Jackson, Winnipeg:; Dr. Wes-
ley L. Jackson, Philadelphia, Pa.;
Miss Hazel F. Jackson, Washington,
Pa.; Stanley G. Jackson, Canfield,
Ont.; Dr. W. J. Spence Jackson, Win-
nipeg; Miss Zetta A. Jackson, Phila-
delphia; Dr. Clarence Roe Jackson,
Here, Every Day is
Farmers* Day I
BECAUSE the farmer is of sufficient importance to the people of Ontario to
warrant k, the major exhibitions in the Dominion feature Agriculture.
The Western Fair, Canada's Oldest Annual Exhibition, believes in the
Agricultural industry and in its future. The daily program and the interesting
exhibits are planned to satisfy you—the Ontario Farmer.
A visit to the sixty-sevenyear old fair will be entertaining and educational.
Plan at least for a day or more at Western Fair.
J. H. Saunders, President W. D. Jackson, Secretary
SEPT. 10 -15, 1934
ESTER!' FAIR• LONDON • ONTARIO
is elft
WHEN
you're on a holiday ... and
you're having a good time
. . and your only worry
is the children at home . .
Telephone home . . . a Long
Distance call every night will
relieve your mind.
o At home or away, Long Distance takes
you places quickly, easily, economicallly,
You can tails with someone 100 miles or eO
distant for as little as 30 cents. See the lid.
of rates in the 'front of your directe y