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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1928-06-07, Page 6'WE SUL WIL FEN I CO 1 STAN SU, At bat Ella :!l teat .JCS of Rev- Ja, a John Soling Of lVlr. 'W posed o: ;pylon L :iyiinchey 1session W Jul Clincheyry� any Spon h their' f • dotes Nova Scotia, Experimental Station, twenty-five plants of each of the two varieties Alacrity and Bonny Best, were planted in rows four feet apart. inches apart and tied to stakes, and six plants of each were planted four feet apart in a row and left unstaked. It was found that those grown in a single stem and tied to a stake gave earlier fruit and on September 20 had produced the highest yield of mature fruit. The bush grown plants on the other hand gave the highest total yield nf' ripe and green fruit, with fewer cracked fruit; The Patricia Grape The Canadian Horticultural Council has recorded and registered a promis- ing new grape named Patricia, This now variety was found as. a chance seedling on the farm of Mr. William Backus, of St. Catharines, Ont. It is described as a vigorous grower and very productive. The bunches are large, compact and often shouldered. This is a black variety that ripens in early 'midseasou and having a tough skin is a good shipper. This grape has been tested at the Vineland Ex - Silverwood, and his statement that perimental Station for eight or ten dirty eggs are one of the biggest prob- years, and pronounced an excellent lems of the egg industry is made not sort in the early season class. alone from the standpoint of the deal- er, but. also in the interest of the pro- ducer. A sheep shearing contest was he The production of clean eggs is a comparatively simple matter if the for the boys' and girls' clubs in Mid- prodttter is sufficiently interested to diesex County, Ont., about the middle give reasonable care to his flock. ; of May. These clubs, five in number, Glean, dry straw should be kept in the ! organized two years ago, have now nests and on the floor of the.•.houses.Ibecome well established and a number The clean straw on the floor of the of the little flocks that started with house is necessary to prevent dirt be.; three or four ewes have been fin- ing carried from the runs into the ?creased to ten, which is the maximum nests. Eggs should be gathered at i number that club members are sup - fairly frequent intervals, and on damp posed. to own. Some of the flocks days the birds should not be let out have been enlarged beyond this num- until 10 o'clock in the mottling, liens ber, the additional sheep being owned lay most of their eggs in the morn- by their parents. To increase the fin- ing, and by confining them until the terest in the industry and to teach balk of the lay is over much of the the young shepherds how to remove danger of dirty eggs is eliminated. the fleeces properly, a sheep shearing contest was orgauized by the local agricultural representative of the On- tario Department of Agriculture in co - DIRTY EGGS BRING LOW PRICES The damp, backward spring which has been generic throughout Canada this year has resulted in an abnorm- ally large number of dirty eggs com- ing to market, and this situation, ac- cording, to Mr. A, E. Silverwood, preri- dent of Silverwood,s Limited, London, Ont., is having a more effect ect on the Canadian egg trade than ny other single factor, "These dirty eggs," states Mr. Sil- verwood, "are the one great reason why so many farmers are being paid for their eggs on the basis of Seconds rather than on the basis of Extras. At current prices this means that pro- ducers are losing from 5e to Se per dozeu simply because they do not take care to prevent the production of dirty eggs." There are few men in the produce trade of Canada able to view the egg trade both from the standpoint of the producer and,the distributor as is Mr. Boys' and Girls' Sheep Clubs Tailing the Lambs It is not unusual to find amongst operation with the Western Ontario the members of Boys' and Girls' Sheep Sheep Promoter of the federal Depart - Clubs -an aversion towards the seem meet of Agriculture. Three classes Mg cruelty of removing the tails of were provided, the first, open to mem- the young lambs, with the result that bers of the clubs, the second open -to the tailing process is put off for perone anyone who wished to take part, and h this times the tells have grown haps a month after it should be rove, the third, also an open class, in which stout, and when the operation has machine clippers were used. The 1 finally to be undertaken the surgery prize money, donated by local organ - assumes a more troublesome aspect. izatfons and individuals, provided silrst At a shearing contest held jointly by prizes of $5, second of $3, and third the federal and provincial Department , of $2. The contest was well adver- of Agriculture for the Middlesex Couu- tized and brought together about one ty Boys' and Girls' Sheep Clubs, the hundred neighboring farmers to wit - lambs of the flock were used for a • ness the work being done. Besides tailing and wethering demonstration, ; Mr. James Telfer, the federal sheep The operations were three or four promoter for Western Ontario, there weeks overdue and provided an im- i were present such. well-known sheep pressive lesson on the importance of breeders as Lt. -Col. Robt. McEwen of removing these appendages at the'Byron, and Mr. Noel Gibson of Dela- proper age. The older Iambs had to � ware, who gave valuable advice and htl corded close assistance not only with respect to "MADONNA AND CHiLP', sr Painted by Raphael in 1503, which Sir Joseph Duveen purchased from Lady Desborough of London at a reported world's record price, of $375,000. Obsolete Bullets Condemn Slayers Browne and Kennedy Con- victed of Killing Constable in England on ;Their Mute Testimony Traced to Browne's Pistol CANADA INVITED Washington—Secretary of State Frank 11. Kellogg will Invite Can- ada and the rest of the Britieh self- governing Dominions, within ,the next few days to participate in a league to outlaw war which, the Secretary is seeking to form. Nir. Kellogg so informed the Canadian Press following receipt of the Brit- ish acceptance of his •peace pro- posals. Mr. Kellogg states that he will immediately send au invitation to all the British self-governing Do- minions and India to sign septi- rately the pact to outlaw was es an instrument of national policy. Asked is Canada might ask the icight to negotiate a separate treaty for the arbitration of dis- putes, Mr. Kellogg said that it was very likely the Dominion would do so. , Contributive evidence revealed Browne as the chief and Kennedy as the lieutenant of a gang of highway robbers and motor -car thiees which for years hadpreyed upon the Essex roads, always ready to shoat to se- cure their ends. A4 sentimental touch to the trial was given by the wives of the prisoners --the "wife of Browne, who tried in vain to establish an ,alibi,l and the wife of Kennedy, who tried to establish circumstances of mitigation. RESIGNED TO FATE When the jury had brought in its verdict of guilty the usual question was put to the prisoners: Had they anything to say,? Among other things Browne said: • "I ani not going to try to prove that I ani innocent, for the simple reason that there is something hang- ing over my head. If I got off this, I should get penal servitude for some- thing else, which is far worse than what is offered. I am content to leave it that I am not guilty, according to One above Who should know. But the Court says I am. I am quite content. found loaded with identical cartridges my consgience is clear." and some surgical instruments later "" Kennedy said in part: identified by Dr. Lovell as his proper- ty—instruments he had in his car when it was stolen. - Browne is reported to have exclaim- ed to the police, "Now you have found then, it is all up with zee," and again, "I am done for now!" The county con - "Nothing I can say now will alter the verdict. It is fate, and you, niy Lord, and the jury who have tried ni.e, are mere instruments of that fate. It is not in any zpirit of bravado that. I say that I •im not afraid of death, but have certain knowledge that • in the Do You Remember .WHEN LIZ WAS YOUNG? The Ford of 1902, and the costumes of its owners of that day, as they appeared at the exposition of auto- motive progress at Philadelphia. stables marveled that the prisoner hereafter I shall be united to the one should be so excited over a charge darling girl who has stuck by me of mere car theft. throughout this terrible ordeal." He A man from Scotland Yard came. had been married seven weeks when Sentencing to Death of These down, saw the material found by the arrested. Men Ends Crime Partner- ship Recalling Highway- men of Earlier Days A Touch of Lemons How many women are aware of the magic properties of lemon used in connection with meat or fish It has a characteristic not possessed by any other seasoning, for it submerges its own identity and acts as an intensifier of the best flavor in roasts, poultry and all forms of sea food. This is a fact well known by first- class butchers, especially in the case of roast beef. The good housekeeper orders her Sunday roast a week ahead, that it may be fully seasoned. Then when the meat man trims and shapes it he rubs it all over with the juice of a lemon. This takes away the season- ed taste and brings out as nothing else .can the flue taste of the beet. Nov that warmer weather is at hand the housewife should only very occa- sionally keep the oven going for roast- ing oasting purposes. Probably she will , if she is a wise woman, plan a series of menus where nourishing and appetiz- ing cold dishes give the cook stove and herself a much needed rest. But here again lemon proves a use- ful friend, for it gives the necessary tang to molded chicken, tunna fish, salmon and shrimps. Masked artisti- cally rtistically in lemon jelly, they are not only good to look at, but delicious to eat, and it the case of canned goods they recover most of theif original flavor. The following are a few warm wea- ther recipes which may, if necessary, be made by a busy woman the day before and kept on ice until nedd: Tuna Fish Mold e large can of tunny fish, coarse- lycut, 1 pint boiling water, % cup celery cut fine, 2 pimientos cut fine,. green pepper cut fine, 1 teaspoon onion juice, 2A,.teaspoon salt, 2 tea- spoons horseradish, drained. Dissolve jelly powder in boiling water. Pour thin layer in mold. Chill until firm. Mixcelery, pimientos, green pepper, onion juice, salt, cayenne pepper and horseradish. Add half the vegetables. Cover with jelly. When firm add flab and another layer of jelly. When firm add another layer of vegetables and cover with jelly. Chill until firm and turn out on bed of lettuce. Serve with a tart dressing or sauce. Serves eight persons. Salmon Loaf Three tablespoonfuls of vinegar plus 1 pint of water, 1 package pulverized lemon jelly, l4 teaspoon salt, horse- radish, drained, 1 cup of salmon, drained, 1 cup of green peas, 1 cup of cooked diced carrots. Pour small amountof jelly (made by dissolving powder in the water and vinegar) into bottom of mold and pack in ice. When beginning to set put in thin layer of horseradish, then layer of sal- mon, another layer of horseradish, then layer of jelly. When slightly thickened add peast. When firm add carrots and another layer of jelly. with a tart salad dressing, This will Chill for at least two hours and serve serve six Shrimp and Orange Salad One cup of shrimps,' drained and halved lengthwise; 1 cup boiling water, 1 cup shrimp liquor, 1 table- spoon vinegar, 1 package lemon jelly powder, 2 oranges free from mem- brane, cut and drained. Dissolve jelly powder in boiling water. Drain shrimps, measure liquor and add enough water to make one cup, Add with vinegar to saucepan. When cold and slightly thickened stir in shrimps and oranges. Turn . into individual molds rinsed with cold water. Chill until firm. Serve on lettuce with salad dressing. Serves six. Scottish • Church Union is Nearer London -•-Tho reunion of the Estab, lishe•d Church of Scotland and the United Free Church of Scotland has been brought nearer by an agreement announced in the re ?ort issue bow the Union Committee"°of the latter body. It states that tate declaration as drawn up has been approved by an i1114 portant minority section hitherto op• posed to union. The new form, it Is elaimod, gives o1'fect to the recom' znondation of the council consulted on the question of the United Free Church making an enactment dewier, Ing its constitutional position, on the Essex highway and began to repeatedly printed by the press show look around among Browne's friends. Browne with a sharply waxed mus - Browne, meanwhile, had assumed an tache and a clearly defined face, with indifferent air. He explained the pres- penetrating eyes, a Mephistophtlian The trial of Frederick Guy Browne ence of the cartridges and the revolver appearance— a strong face, "the face and Wiliam Henry Kennedy, which in various ways. The instruments, of a man who dominates. The face of ended at the Old Bailey in London'nd in the road in Oc- on April 27 with the defendants being a.d he s, he fou. tuber. KENNEDY DESPERATE It .was discovered that Browne the previous autumn had employed a man named Kennedy. When Browne was arrested this' man had disappeared. to the body to prevent bleeding, and the shearing, but they were able to sentenced to the gallows by Justice have their tails lig y when released after the r peration I answer many questions on points of Avory for the murder of Constable man; of them showed evidence of . sheep husbandry that came up for con- Gutteridge at Stapleford Abbots, Es - shock and illness. The cords were to' sideration. Occasion was taken to sex, Iast September, revealed a syndi- be removed the following morning 'give a practical demonstration in tail- cats of crime and < closed the careers when danger of bleeding would have'ing and wethering and in tying up d "gentlemen of the "`he work of these clubs passed, and the wound would have to , the fleeces, be treated for a few days to hasten I is doing much to popularize sheep the healing process, The lesson de -1 raisieig that is now regarded as one tided many of the young shepherds to of the most profitable branches of live do the necessary surgery at the age'stock husbandry. of eight or ten days, when the tail is slender, bleeds very little when re- moved, and gives the lamb very little shock. A Sheep Shearing Contest A sheep shearing contest provided for the Middlesex County Boys' and Girls' Sheep Clubs by the joint action of ,he federal and provincial Depart- ment., or Agriculture, provided an in- terestiug day for not only the youth- ful shepherds but for many of the other sheep raisers in Middlesex County: In the contest for club mem- bore, two brothers, Phil Matthews and Cherie -8 Matthews of the Deleware Club, won first and secoud prizes. The third was won by Earl Doan of the Komoka Club, the fourth and, fifth being won by Harold Lotan and Mor- ley Payne of the Appiu Club, The boys were given forty-five minutes to shear their sheep an, although they ha 1 very little experience in shearing, they finished well within the time and did a creditable job. There was also a contest provided for open competi- tor::, and the two Matthews boys won Beientl and third in this contest, re- versiuf their placing of the previous section. The sheep demonstrator, Mr. 'R m. Howard, operating under the di - Taction of Mr. James Telfer, the sheep promoter of the federal Live Stock Branch 'for Western Ontario, provided a special prize of a silver berry spoon for the best shorn sheep, Mr, D. J. i4icTaggart, of ApplinOntario, the winner of the first award in the open contest, won this trophy, finishing well within the prescribed time of thirty- five minutes and turning out a very excellent job. .A. third contest was provided for machine shearing with a time limit of fifteen minutes, Mr. Russell Orr, Lambeth, won first prize, Mr. Jack Kennedy, Ilderton, second, and Mr. Peter Johnson, Glencoe, third: Great interest was shown In the con test which was organized jointly by Mr. Pr, Parish, the Agricultural Repre- sentative at London, Ont., and Mr, !Wallies 'Niter, Western Ontario Sheep '»romoter at Paris. The contest Wait IhMe eld on the farm of ssrs, Chris, Maters and Softs, near the village of Delaware, 1:.4- Growing Gardel TOMatoes '' The growing of tomato plants to a single stein staked up is becoming more and .more popular for the small garden, iri a test at the Kentvilie, e-4*'*`w`" " Kennedy lacks all the features which are pronounced in the face of Browne. The mouth and chin are weak, the eyes uncertain—the face of a man who serves and is sorry. Browne was born in Bursiem, Staf- fordshire, and from the age of 16 had of two modern gen em He was traced to Liverpool and, was lived a life of crime. In London he road." arrested there on Jan. 25. He put up recruited his gang in Whitechapel, Early on Sept. 27, 1927, the con- a big fight and tried to use an auto- opened a garage at Clapham, which stable was found dead on an Essex photic. His desperation, like the fear became a market for stolen cars. road by the driver of a mail car. He at first betrayed by Browne, paused Kennedy, like Browne, was first con - had tour bullet wounds in his head. the detective to believe that there was victed in 1911. He is well known to The autopsy revealed that the wounds more to the case than appeared on the the police in Liverpool and Manches- had been made by obsolete bullets surface, ter, and already had a reputation as known as "Mark IV." Kennedy was taken to Scotland a clever burglar and motor -car theif, The same morning a stolen Morris- Yard and there is said to have made when a year ago he linked his fate Cowley car, belonging to a Dr. Lovell a statement which implicated Browne with Brov)1ne. One of their joint of Billericay, was found abandoned at as the actual murderer of the con- exploits concerns an early morning Bixton. There were stains on the car, stable and himself as an accomplice - raid raid on the railway station at Eris - and within was found the shell of a Meanwhile, Browne had also made hani, when they bound and gagged a "Mark IV" bullet statements implicating Kennedy. All porter and tried in vain to remove a safe which was bolted to the floor. In commdnting on the case The Daily Express of April 28 says: "Search the annals of crime for the STRANGE EFFEC'i- "I kissed her when she had her eyes shut,". "Well, what happened?" "I thought she was never going to open them again." Figures won't lie. And that is exact- ly what makes dressmaking such a difficult profession. King's Doctor Gets 2d Fee On Estate at Sandringham Sandringham, England --The ser- viee of. King George's residential doctor for 2d (four cents) a week per family le one of the many ad- vantages of the employes on the royal estate at Sandringham that are due to the benevolence of his Majeety, The penny Is a powerful coin at Sandringham, for this amount each Week entitles workers on the.estate tq• )pie a well-equipped club with billiard ronin, library and reading room, Boer may be obtained here at reduced prices, Ozt Saturdays popular concerts are arranged and . again a penny covers admission, children one- half -penny. The proceeds go to charity. In the next four months more than statements were repudiated when the thirty persons were detained, interro- i case carne to trial, and both men were gated and allowed to go. No further I ready with alibis. b evidence was forthcoming at the time, None of the statemerts could there were no finger prints—nothingadmitted as evidence. What was ad -last two or three hundred years, and but the four "Mark IV" bullets and } mitred was evidence te, show that on it will be impossible to find in assoeia- the cartridge case found 'in Dr. Lov-'the night of Sept. 26 Browne and Ken- tion two more cunning or more devil - ell's car. ' l nedy were together on the Essex road ish criminals than Browne and Ken- On enOn Jan. 20 Browne was arrested at in Dr. Lovell's stolen car, and the a garage he kept at Clapham. He ( testimony of the ars experts, who was charged with having stolen a car. ` arms established the fact that the "Mark His premises were searched. There IV" bullets found in the head of Con nedy." A Southern newspaper declares a monument never will be erected to among a number of revolver cart -1 stable Gutteridge could only have been the unknown politician.. And, most ridges were found some stamped fired from the We,bley revolver found certainly, not to the politician who "Mark IV." A Weblcy revolver was in the possession of Browne, really is known. Who Wouldn't Like, To Scratch Those' Ears He is $ star in many fixtures, ing picture patrons all over th /C7Oft ce,et:d#ugly popular with the profession coutineitt atllollywood a well as with tho mov- We- 'aro told that another crisis to the Crine'se 13iv11 war will probably' happen in the summer, Experts aro beginning to. feel that unless that War gets a now publicity man It will prob ably fizzle out, "Nell -meaning Friend—"They tell me, Patrick, that your brother is in the hospital" Pat—"Yes, he bet Ma- loney that he could lean farther oui+ of a window—tied ho won."