The Wingham Advance Times, 1924-05-22, Page 3• '3 7!1,„ rtr, '••
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'991NO}IAM, AallANCE-TDVIES
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Tl'illr,41Y, May aand., 19,24
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• EAT
currrenkftwe
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For sale •b• y HYDRO SHOP
INebuchadnezzat; would be brought
back. To this Jeremiah -said: "Amen
the Lord do so; The Lord perform
PRAYER
''''''AlrhigittY 'God, we rejoice in'
knewledge we have from, Thy sleal-
ings with men of ancient times, as
well as with ourselves, that Thoit art
round about ail those who put their
trust in Thee, ,May this assurance
lead us ever to greater faith in, Thy
promiSe that the. kingdoms of this
world shall, become the kingdoms of
the Christ,' Help us to sec more
alearly •our privilege and duty in
obeying His command to disciple all
nations. • We ask it in 1 -Xis name.
Amen.
SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON FOR
MAY 25th,, 1924
Lesson l'itle—Jererniala and the
Babylonian
GLeo$1des°; 'In'Tasexstaler.jz
le—.er6;r23.8:8-16
Jeremiah was called to be a pro-
phet very early in life. He was one
of the priests who lived. in Anathoth,
•a city of priests some three miles
from Jerusalem. • At •the time God
called him tor be a prophet he, like
Moses, disclaimed any fitness. for the
office but the Lord said • unto him,
"Behold I have put my words in. thy
inouth. See I have •this day set thee
over the nations and over the king-
doms, to root out, and to pull down,
and to destroy and to throw down,
to build, and -to plant." •
It was in the •reign of Josiah that
• he began his work which he contin-
ued throughout the •two succeeding
reigns until the people were carried
away captive. In all he prophesied
for, over forty years; years spent in
warning the people that judg.ment
would follow sin, but that mercy
would follow penitence.
Early in the reign of Zedegiah king
of Judah Jeremiah and another pro-
phet by the name: of Hananiah, came
together in the house of the Lord and
each uttered a prophesy in the pre-
sence of the priest and the people.
•Hananiah • made promises in Jeho-
vah's name, promises that could not
be fulfilled unless the people would
turn from their evil ways. He made
no mention of this conditiOn but as-
sured them that the yoke.pf Babylon
• was ' broken, and that within two
years all the captives •would return,
and that all the vessels of the Lord's
house that had been carried away by
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
•
• safe stronghold our God is still,
A trusty shield and weapon;
He'll help us clear ' from all the ill
That hath us now o'ertaken,
The ancient Prince of hell
Hath risen with purboSe fell;
Strong mail of craft and power
He weareth in this, hour; 0,
On earth is not his fellow.
thy words which thou hasr,iprophe-
sled." Though' Jeremiah had time
ancl,, again prophesied against the
people he had also frequently prayed
for them -that the threatened punish-
ment might be averted, for he 'knew
• the gracious, loving -kindness of God,
ever ready to turn away His wrath
if the people 'Would turn away from
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Ho BROWN, Teetwater, LocalAgento
•D. E. MCDOINIAL1100 Sot.. Agent at Vititaghant
t heir sips'Xe was not „convinced,
howevef, that 'Han ard tih's prophesY
was r911-1. God„ for he added: "Nev-
ertheless hear now thou this • word,
that 1 speak in thine ears and in the
cars of all the people," He then pro-
ceeded to tell how other prophets be-
fore hint had fortold destruction,
and sometbneso as in the case of Jon-
ah when he prophesied the destrue-
tion of Ninever, it did not come .to
pass for the people repented of their
wickedness. That did not make
Jonah out to be a false prophet' aa
Hananiah was trying to convince
priest and people that Jeremiah was,
If, however, e prophet' 4prophesied
peace it could only be proven that he
was a true prophet by the actual
coming of peace. If peace did not
come then the prophet -was a false
prephet—an invostor.
Verses to-xx—Hananiah's Insolence
The Lord had toId Jeremiah before
this to make badges of servitude,
yokes with bonds to fasten them, and
to send them to neighboring princes,
allies of Judah, accompanied with the
message that the nation that would
not put its neck under the yolee of the
king of Babylon would be punished
with the sword, with famine and with
peslilence. Jererrdah was also' to
wear a yoke and thus identify himself
with the sins and • suffering of the
people. When he Met Hananiah on
this occasion he was wearing this
yoke as a memorial of what he had
prophesied. Hananiah tore, it from
his neck and • again uttered his pre-
diction that • the yoke of Babylon
would be broken. To this daring aS-
sertion Jeremiah made no reply and
in thiscwas seen the patience of the
true prophet. When he was • reviled
he reviled not again; but ,went his
Verses I2-4—Jererniah, Vindicated
God when he called Jeremiah prom-
ised to put words into his mouth. He
was sent back with a message to
Hananiah. • "Thus saith the Lord;
Thou hast broken the yokes of wood;
but thou (Jeremiah) shalt make for
them yokes of iron." These cotfld
not be broken and would lie heavier
upon them, signifying' the way in
which they would be oppressed by the
king of. Babylon, who would rule over
even the beasts of their fields. Fur-
ther Jeremiah was given a personal
message to Hananiah. He • had. not
only trie'd to make the people believe
a • lie, but had preached rebellion
• against, God. • Therefore thus ,saith
the Lord: "Behold, I will cast thee,
from off the face of the earth; this
year thou shalt die, because thou hast
taught rebellion against the Lord
(yerse 17). Hananiah was counted
unworthy to live, being a rebel. Thi
happened in the fifth month of the
reign of Zedekiah and two months
later, 1-lanania.h the false prophet,
died.
This conflict .reminds us to come
extent of,that between Ahab and Eli-
jah. Off one side were the priest the
people and Hananiah; on the other a
lone prophet. The outcome showed
that truth' must prevail and God be
honored. • Jeremiah knew from • ex-
perience that "The law of the Lord
is perfect; the testimony of the Lord
is sure."
• "Lord 'Thy word abideth,
And our footsteps guideth."
WORLD MISSIONS
When David Livingstone was twen-
ty years of age there came into his
heart a consciousness of his duty to
God which led him to say: "Feeling
• that the salvation of men ought to be
the chief desire and aim of every
Christian,I resolve that I will give to
the cause- of missions all that I earn
'beyond what it requires for my liv-
ing." But at twenty-one he read an
appeal by Mr. Gazlaff on behalf of
China, and from that time he sought
himself to enter the foreign mission
'field, influenced by "the claim -of so
many millions of his fellow creatures
and the want of qualified missionar-
ies." So he went out from his home
to follow the advice of old • David
Hogg,one of the patriarchs of his
home village: • "Now, lad make re-
ligion the every day business of your
life, and not a.,ithing of fits and starts;
for if you. do temptation and, other
things will get the 'better of you."
He went out fromhis simple home an
unknown lad and died 'as one of the
greatest and most honored of men.
Rude Rural Rhymes 1
I
j Will Assist Fernier's
markets are icring to discriminate
against buck lambs to the extent •of
$2.00 per cwt. the Departrnent of Ag-
riculture is willing to assist any far-
mers, wishing. to have their lambs
docked and castrated. We have help,
which will be available and will be
glad to assist in the next few weeks,
in woik of this kind.
BLUEVALE
The an.nual meeting of the Wo-
men's Institute was held Thursday, Hammond,
May 15th at the home of Mrs. C. H. Auditors—Mrs. Aitken., IvIrS. 5. W.,
Ga,rniss and was well attended -The King.
Ln. AND LIVE sTocK of •the fact that ll'ororito I
low to Bring •Relic; to Fara'
Anintais In Summer,
De•rbription of the Stable
Treatigient Usually Offered—Othby'
Remedies Suggested — Stack
Threshing Eras Advantages.
c(ntributed by On,tarto pepartinept of
s.griculture, `roranto.)
The fly is a destroyer of profits.
ihe annoyance that the various.types
)5 live stock suffer .from this cause
during the summer period. can be de-
termined with fair accuracy and ex -
Pressed as loss in pounds of milk,
..)ouuds of pork or work not done.
.nimals get no rest from morning
night. The worry is greatest
„luring the period of greatest light
_ad temperature.
.sceiption of the Fly. •
The common stable fiy, also known
as Stomoxys Calcitrans, resembles
die common house fly in size and
shape. The stable fly bites much
harder, giving quite a sharp sting. It
is also a blood sucker and a Very per-
sistent tease. The thin skin covering
the legs, flanks and abdomen of cattle
uU horses is the area they attack
nen bent on satisfying their thirst
and blinger. At other times they may•
yes, quietly on the animal's back or
on the stable wall. Any person who
nits to milk cows during the summer
is well acquainted with the
.,.tinuyanee that these little creatures
eau create. And when the stable fly
.s ably assisted by the house fiy and
file horn fiy, both the cow and the
Junkethave anything but a pleasant
time in their endeavors to be at least
• uz,o, emeient in milk production. The
state ily breed i principally in decay
mg refuse, horse manure, rotting
straw—materials that are too fre-
quently found quite to to the farm
buildings during the summer period
when it, is possible to keep them ata
aistance.
The Treatment 'Usually Offered.
• To prevent the stable fly from an-
noying animals, providing darkened'
stables, pens, sheds or other shelters
in which the animals can retreat is a
good practice.. Spraying or brushing
tile animals over with liquid fly re-
pellents is also advised. There is no
repellant of very enduring efficiency,
but: a number of such now in common
use are wox•th while' even if their
• eifect is so short as to require daily
or twice a day aPplication. This may
seem a lot of work, but a man with
an auto spray holding two gallons of
liquid can go over a line of twenty
cows in five minutes. A successful
• preparation that can be used- as •a
spray is made by mixing the follow-
ing:-
3 lbs. laundry soap. 1.32i ots. of of tar.
P. qts. coal tar dip. 3 qts. coal oil.
4% qts, fish oil. 3 qts. whale oil.
Dissolve the laundry soap in water
and then add the other ingredients
and more water to make SO gallons of
spray.
Additional Treatment Suggested.
• Pol,sons and trap S are sometirdes
used and can be xnade very ceffieient
agents in stable fly control' if used
with ordinary intelligence and thur-
oughness. Formaldehyde is one of
The best poisons to use in fly de-
struction. • Mix two ounces of for-
tnaldehyd.e with 3.3,h quarts of milk,
sweeten with brown sugar, and place
in a window where the flies coue-
• gate. In stables and pig pens pro-
perly darkened, one window may be
left uncovered to provide the neces-
• sary light to attract the flies to the
poison. dish. If the stable man will
at- the beginning of the season .pro -
Title shelves on . which to place poison
• ciishbs high enough up to be out of
the way and where there is light,
keep the same repleiaished from day
to day with formaldehyde, milk apd.
sugar, and see that all other mins-
tui.e is covered up, millions of files
can be destroyed with little effort.
A general _clean' hp (laxly to' prey ent
the pest increasing by breeding is
Verynecessary to fry control; in fact
there is litle use in trying thpoison
or trap flies if we are so shiftless and
neglectful of sanitary conditions as to
permit them to breed wholesale.
Clean ula is the first and last word
in stable fly control.—L. Stevenson,
Dept. • of Extension, O.A. College,
Guelph.
Stack Threshing Has Advantages.
Reebrde show that it costs the
farmer a little more to stack his.
grain and thresh it from the stack
than it does to thresh' directly from
the field. The cost of threshing alone
in threshing from the stack is less
than the cost of threshing in the
field, but when the cost of stacking,
• which must be taken into consider-
ation, added, the cost of *eking
and threshing' frOxii tiae stiekis a lit-
tle higher. To offset this., hpwever,
the straw and grain. are Usually of, a
better eitality. Considerable loss is
likely ito result from leaving grain
in the shock a long while waiting for
the thteshing machine. Especially is
this true if Wet weather prevails.
Furthermore, if grain is stacked. as
%Oenas it is fit in case of wet weather
the plow can be started. Shocks
standing any length of tbene on fields
seeded to grass kill out the grass.
Consequently in fields of this kind
the, grain shbuld be threshed or stack-
ed as early as possible.
• Dandelion Greens a.
We talked a while, my friend and
I, about the good old days goneiihy,
how grocers gave us packing cases
which we could carry to our places,
the hungry furnace mouth to fill and
thus reduce the kindling bill; how
meat men often loosened up and gave
us beef bones for the pup; how, sell-
ing pants, the clerk would grin and
throw some stout suspenders ,in.
Those good old days are gone forev-
er; we pay steak price for tripe and,
liver. That man would take an aw-
ful chance who sought braces gr
pants. But dandelions for you knd
me, are still as good and still free 'as
when sprouted 'round the shack some
ten or twenty seasons back. Some
folks are proud and are not keen by
watchful neighbors to be seen abroad
to dig this healthful green. But
•for me when I'm that ptottd, I hope
-
I quit this earthly crowd to wear a
sixteen -collar shroud. I'm glad I have
not got such shy ways, that near the
highways and the byways; 1 dare not
go iny knife to poke with foreigtters
and colored folk, until I have a mess
of greens to help along my pork and
beans. God gives them free as he
gave manna and so I take them home
to Hannah. And 1 an hereby warn-
ing you, in case you may be digging
tot, unless you Spryly, stir your
sttimps, I'll beat you to the biggest
cltunps.--I30B ADAMS
hold you up Pt hold you dotill".
Those who acquire the habit of wat-
ching The Advance "Want" Ads have
a distinct advantage in many ways.
'The habit of watching 'them leach to
gainful chances for buying, selling,
renting, hiring or xchangIng. t
books chased with r. good 'balance ou!
he
„Kind and tladies prroposg. “914
street lamps in the village, The <dee:,
tion of officers are as follows:
,President ---Mrs. C, H, tiarniss.
Vice -Pres. --Mrs, Jos. Breckenridge,.
Seey,-Treas,—Mrs. R. F. Garniss,
I)istrict Directors—Mrs. J.
King, Mrs, C. I-letheringion,
Branch Directors --Mrs. 1?„ Shaw.p.
Mrs. I -I, Boman, Mrs, M Smith
Prograth Committee --Mrs. A. Ait-
ken, Mrs. C. Hetherington, Mrs,
W. Leggatt
Organists—Mrs, E. Johnston, IVIrst.
The tomato is closely related to the
potato, and while the actual food
value of the tomato is not so great as
that of the potato, it has eertain qual-
arcs' that ,make it ,,one of the Most
desirable of our garden crops,
Farmers are not only profiting by
shipping their poultry co-oPeratiVely,
but they are getting into the field of
bosinesa, 'learning business methode
and how to care for their pbtlltry to
get the bet 'resulig.
A cOw that has to Use her enorgY
warining the ice cold Water she
drinks can't We that .energy to mole
tank,
- •
Make Your Trip More Enjoyable by a
Th. Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Co,
g Connections for Cedar Potrit, put -in -Bay, Toledo, Detroit and other points. Ask
w9senbiled'Rfoartree*siecUtitnal puzzle chart of the ..,..,.,,,,,ic,071:2:lici:T3eer;:atatSh11,91P8
. Cleveland, Ohio
T.,eave Buffalo - 9:00 P.M. 1, Sastern Leaye Cleveland 900 P.M.
Great Ship .Seeandbee" and 32 -page hooklet. -Sreandbee"-Length.
Steamers “SEEANDBEE" —"CITY OP ERIE" -. "CITY OF BUFFALO"'
Arrive Cleveland 7:30 A.M. Standen -LI Titno t Arrive Buffalo - 7;30 A.M.
Refreshing Night on,01,(1.1,ake Erie
comfortable night on one of our fine steamers. A good bed in a clean stateroom,
Thousands of west bound travelers say they wouldn't have missed that eool,
a long sound sleep and an appetizing breakfast In the morning.
your ticket agent or tourist vsener for ticket via C B Line. New 'Tourist Auto -
Daily, May ist to November 15th
(Your rail ticket is good on the boats)
ii -,are0.50
, 1111
I • tSh
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9
Just What You've Been Waiting For!
Annual STR. GREYHOUND Excursion
Goderiell.to.-117.)etrtyit,
and return: • .
,
Goderich
Leaving Tuesday, June 10
$2025 one way
$Thi3.7.5.0event round hatconiters
trip
put once a year —don't miss its Take this
restful, balmy lake ride to Detroit—visit the amusements, the great indus-
•. trial factories; and you can shop there, too. There'll be music, dancing
and appetizing meals aboard. B. e on deck wait,:Tyhealillesd the home folk.
ay, June 10, the Steamer
Greyhound will leave Goderich at
9;30 a. m., stopping at'Port Huron
1:30 p. Tn. and arriving Detroit at
5:30p. in. Remain in Detroit over
Wednesday and returning,leave for
Goderich Thursday, June 12th,
1 p. in,
4 ,z_37:1 1
jim.tampflis NI;
.f49,,, • wr,
and Babe Ruth
The New York Yankees and De-
troit Tigers will battle for base ball
honors at Navin Field, Detroit, on
Wednesday, June 11. This is your
opportunity to see the two greatest
stars of baseball in action— Ty
Cobb and Babe Ruth.
,Last trip to Detroit leaves Cogiericli
Friday, June 13, 9:30a.m.
MOONLIGHT
out of Goderich
Monday, June 9
8:30 p. m.
Adults 50c Children 25c
Enjoy this delightful three hout,
sail on beautiful Lake Huron.
Finzel's dance orchestra aboard.
WHITE STAR LINE
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