HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1945-07-27, Page 5•
Tiffs iboWlli
It'r,uli a toxitl�utiil
tnt °till 11t gd s" yo#s l ut. _. .
Tu, epite Af-,Its. llafllGttQnsl4..
�YgI1're nai^a tl�^ as ,a phtel ez04.0er+t
` au're ,Sbi�rt�» "YOU'xe
That's when you sedq! i ll°#romM91•e;...
Your sleip's ((. hhls..witb, Yell
'But when a twitcher comes your 'way,
'"Best player on the 'green'."-
udh,°, what a matt," your skip wplll, say,,
`Mae finest shot I've seen."
'Thin bowie a, trying game,
ll„lnt we peep on •playing , just the
same.
OF <Y+ *
Last week at the Lions Summer
'!Carnival there were three bowlers in
, the quiz contest that was broadcast
..over CKNX,, Wingham. On Wednes-
day evening George Hildebrand won
;out 'in a lovers' quarrel , contest and
' ;earned himself some money. On Fri-
day evening 'David 'Grieve fared well
do the quiz on general subjects.
!George Johnstoti was last •on the• pro-
gram. He followed behind two con-
testants who had been asked to tell
' dish stories. The announcer asked
trim 4f he knew anything about fish-
ing and when he answered in the af-
dirmative,.he was asked to tell a bear
story- But George ''Goldilocks' John-
' ston rose to the occasion. In the
-story he managed to jibe his good
:friend, Lorne .Dale. The story 'went
, 'somewhat like this: "One day I was
.out hunting bears near ,Goderich.
• Lorne Dale and Bill Hart were with
•we. We sate a big bear coming to-
wards us. Lorne ran, 'but Bill and I
, stayed and shot the bear." Accord-
bag to the newspapers there has been
ao alarming increase in° the number
of bares' along °the Lake Shore . .
so you, could hardly blame Lorne for
running away when he saw a bear
behind.
g gF
On Monday evening the popularity
of the bowling game was proven
' when Seaforth had a full entry in the
twilight doubles. Seventy-two bowl-
ers from Guelph, Exeter, Stratford,
Wingham, Goderich, St. Marys, Clin-
ton, Brussels, Blyth and Seaforth took
,. part. The weather. wag ideal and
"the greens were never in better
shape. You will find the winners in
another article covering the tourn•a-
' .silent.
The round-robin for the Soole tro=
phy got under way on Tuesday even-
gng of this week.
The Seaforth Club is sending en-
' -tries to the mixed tournament at St.
Marys tonight (Thursday).
The annual Hunt trophy was held
en. Goderich on Wednesday of this
week. There were four entries from
Seaforth, namely: Rufus Winter and
11 J. Sproat, Malcolm . McKelIar and
2rne Dale, . M, Smith and B. F.
Christie, Dr. F. J. Bechely and W. G.
Willis, the latter pair winning fourth
rrize.
Next week is holiday time for us,
so you will get a break by not hav-
ing to read our poor efforts at giving
' you the bowling news.
arra d
la
Iri,l"f0,1444(10
•V. are nat van
Ou10 Iieopin0 .moo' f+a
4.,•040o000 's,a• ck kt0lit.
be 'usaa •as Just t3�at"`
Bakes own Rraatl;
1klrs• •smith bakes her own broad
and,•,piakes nearly all the '+lethes . qr
tttd 4ybi1dxen, and only wishes tiiati"
i)al ] ters• had been alternated with
t ie..older boys, so that her "mothers
help" would be older. Hard-working
• J+eyce, • 8, and -Eileen, .10, are on the
young side.
"A large -family is tar better than:
one child," Mrs°. Smith eontends.
"They get into'quite a few arguments
among themselves, but they. all •pass
over — a fine training for getting
along with others when they.. step •out
for themselves."
None of the children are of military
age, although the family has a bril
liant military record. Seven cousins
of one family are in the armed ser-
vices. From oldest to youngest, the
children are: Lloyd 18, Russell 17,
Ralph 16, Leo 15, William 13, Gerald
12, George '11, Eileen 10, Raymond 9,
Joyce 8, Edward 6, Donald 6 (not
twins), Gordon 4, Margaret 3, Don-
na 2 years, and James 10 months old.
Their father is one of a family of
14, all but one living. There were
six in Mrs. Smith's family. Before
her marriage she was Laura Wilds.
Among the critical times in her
family experience, Mrs. Smith re:-
calls
e-calls the time she had 12 eases of
measles- in the house. -
Tireless and enthusiastic workers;
the Smith children, even before their
'teens, are in great demand as .help
on neighborhood farms.
o : 001,0hoppg1.40e,,
Walton Honors
(Continued from Page 1)
return to Walton, we can assure you
of a warm welcome awaiting you in
all our homes. To show our,apprecia-
tion to you who were such fine citi-
zens, we ask you to please accept
this gift and with it go our very best
wishes that happiness, prosperity
and good health may be with you in
your new home. (Signed) Your
Friends 'of Walton and Community."
beaforth Public
(Continued from Page 1)
Canada and in the States, and some
have passed away. including the well
remembered figure of Mr. L. L. Mc-
Faul, the' school principal, who head-
ed the group photo.
The Class of 1892
Mabel Edmunds, Lizzie Dorrance,
Hannah Oughton, 'Ada Beattie, Bea-
trice Punchard, Alice Campbell, Mag-
gie Daly, Rachael Langstroth, Maud
Abel, Hattie Murray, Nell McNab,
011ie Willson, Maud Kidd, May Broad -
foot, Laura Kehoe, Edith Neelin,
Mary Sutherland, Libbie Freeman,
Lilly Williams, Lizzie Lamb, Bell Pat-
terson, Millie Wright, Kate Spilling;
Nessie Crich. Billy Campbell, Charlie
Stewart, George Haxby,, Allie Bethune,
Frank Carroll, Keith McLean, George
Good. Bob Armstrong, ,Art Forbes,
1 Bob Winter, Herb. Johnston, Herb;
Brooks, Charlie Spading, Bert Jones,
Alfie Atkinson, George Duncan and
1 Billy Papst, ,
ONE
CENT a word
(minimum 25c) is
all that it costs you fox
a classified ad. in The
Huron Expositor. An
that each week will reach and be read by more
-than • 2,000 families,
If you wanLto buy or sell anything, there is no
dumper or more effective way than using an Exposi-
'•'r' classified ad. Phone 41, Seaforth.
J,
f•
Ni,
�e Huron Expositor
ti
(COMMIS grain l"agt 1)
D.O,L,; the deaeon, Rev, E. E. • Veit
enheimert I.ggan; sub -deacon, Rev. P.
. QWrowski, 'St, Columban. Inter-
Went
nterWent togli 'plaee in, St. Patrick's eem,e-
tory, Dublin, where Rev. Dr. Bfoulkes
officiated at the graveside services,
Among thane attending the funeral
from a distance were:,Mr. and Mrs.
Matthew McCarthy anddaughter, De-'
troll; Daniel McCarthy, , Windsor;
Michael,' Thomas ,and Miss Genevieve
McCarthy, Toronto; Mr., and Mrs. D.
Monaghan and two' ° sons, Mitchell;
William McCarthy and daughter, and
James Sullivan, Kilialoe.
Personals: Mr: and ,Mrs: Andy
O'Rourke, Detroit, with Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Burn's; Misses Eileen and Jean
Jordan, London, with Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Jordan; Louis J. Looby, Lon-
don, with Ilia mother, Mrs. A. M.
Looby; Miss Genevieve McCarthy,
Michael and Thomas McCarthy, To-
ronto; Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Mc-
Carty and daughter, Detroit; Daniel
McCarthy, Windsor; Mr. and Mrs. D.
Monaghan and sons, Mitchell; Wil-
liam McCarthy and daughter and
James Sullivan, : Killaloe, all , attend-
ing the funeral of Mrs. Michael Mc-
Carthy; Miss Margaret O'Connell,
Buffalo, N.Y., with her sisters here;
Mrs. Elizabeth Bruxer ;underwent an
operation for removal of tonsils in
Seaforth; LAC. Charles Benn and
Mrs. Benn, Toronto, with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Evans; Miss Rose
Feeney, Toronto, with her mother,
Mrs. Kathleen Feeney; Mr. and Mrs.
Blood and Miss Anne McAleer, De-
troit, with Mr, and • Mrs. Patrick Ry-
an; Robert J. Marshall, Toronto, with
Mrs. K. Feeney; Mr. and Mrs. H.
'Gordon, Mr. and Mrs. Ross' Gordon,
Seaforth, Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Cully,
Mitchell, with Mr. and Mrs. Dalton
Malcolm; Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Pep-
per and daughter at Clinton; Mr. and
Mrs, Charles Roney and Mrs. Albert
Roney in Stratford; Mr. and Mrs.
Geo. Robinson and daughter, Gladys,
and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Kleinfeldt in
Woodstock; Rev. John F. McConnell,
_M.M., in London; Mr. and Mrs. T. J.
Molyneaux in Kitchener; Miss Brid-
get Costello is vacationing inPontiac,
Mich,
Miss Marion O'Dwyer and Miss
Anne 'Bannon, Stratford, with Miss
Mary Stapleton. They are spending
this week at Grand Bend.
Charles Krauskopf, of the United
States Army, has returned from over-
seas after three years' service in
Africa, Sicily and Italy, and is on fur-
lough with his parents, Mr.,and Mrs.
James Krauskopf. He hag` vohinteer-
ed for service in the Pacific.
BAYFIELD
Public funeral services were held
Tuesday afternoon for the late -James
Dewar, from the family residence
near Bayfield, conducted by Rev.
Stotesbury, minister of Bayfield Unit-
ed Church: Burial was in .Bayfield
cemetery. Mr. pewee, who was in his
79th year, was stricken with a heart
attack while sitting in his chair Sun-
day, but had been enjoying the best
of health. Surviving are his widow,
the former Elizabeth• Johnstoi% two
brothers, George and David Dewar, of
Bayfield, and one sister, Miss Mary
Dewar, Kitchener.
WINTHROP
Miss Mabel Raines is visiting at
the home of Mrs. Ross Murdie for a
few days.
,Pte.. R. K. Davidson has returned
to Camp Ipperwash after spending
his leave With his family.
, Mr Andrew Montgomery spent the
week -end with his family,
Mr. John Bullard is visiting friends
in the village.
Mr. John McClure has been con-
fined to his bed for a few days. We
wish him a speedy recovery.
Mr.' and Mrs. Bert Lindsay,
Swift Current, Sask., called on
friends in the village last Week.
The regular meeting of the W.M.S.
and W.A. will be held on Wednesday,
August 1.st, at the home of Mrs. R.
Bolton. All ladies are welcome.
of
KIPPEN
Mr. William Sproat has passed his
year at Western 'Ontario Medical
School.
The congregations of Kippen and
Hillsgreen held joint services in St.
Andrew's United Church here on Sun-
day last. Rev, R. W. Beveridge, of
Thessalon, Ont., was the first of three
ministers to preach for a call. There
will also be joint' services of Kippen
and . Hillsgreen next Sunday, July 29,
and 'on Friday evening, August 3rd.
On Sunday, at 11 a.m., Rev. Ernest
Hayes, of Welland Port, Ont„ will
preach, and on Friday evening, Aug.
3rd,, at 8.30 p.m., Rev. Albert Hinton,
of Danville, Quebec, will preach. Fol-
lowing the service on Friday evening
there will be a joint congregational
meeting. -
Mrs. H. Jones is visiting her sis-
ter and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
William Parsons, of Cromarty.
Mr. and Mrs: Archie Parsons and
sons attended 'a family reunion. at
Ippervtash. recently., -
9A•h
111td3':.
a�ptller
31ti7)*r .arm, aid• :Ri< M' 1�r
D'9rrhrne:ibd at"Jewltt's
hove B&field, RA !�hus� Iasi
Nlr, >an( l - ' 'vie ted'
plu S;und.l .y With. Mr a d MRs. Herb.
.L-=}Ikren,. ,of xDuugan ,qu,,;4l#i et Port
Albex t. '
Mr: and Mrs,. Yehti L,',1,enderson.
visited with relatives -en Aurora and
Toronto on Sunday.
Psath of Mrs James Jarrott
A shadow of gloom was :past ever
t1Uis oorgmunity when, it weifi learned,
that Mary Jane'310411011, Wgo of Mr,
James Jarrett, passed peacefully
away at her home, Town Line, Hay
Township, on .Mond -ay, July '23rd. Mrs.
Jarrott had been in failing health for
some time, but ,had only been con -
;fined to her bed a week. She was
born in Stanley Township,..a daugh-
ter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Hudson, and was in her 79th year.
She was united in marriage to James
Jarrett fifty-nine years ago and spent
all her life in this district. She .was
a faithful member of Hillsgreen Unit-
ed Church. Besides her bereaved
husband, she is, survived by two
daughters, Mrs. Hugh Love (Annie),
of Hensall, and Mrs. Harry Norris
(Luella), of Kippen, and two sons,
John, of Kippen, and Eldon, of R. R.
2, Hensall. Two children .predeceas-
ed her some years ago. Also surviv-
ing are five sisters: Mrs. Agnes Con-
sitt, of Seaforth; Mrs. Wiliam Doug-
las, of Brucefield; Mrs. Martha Har-
vey, Mrs. Annie Logan and. Mrs. Eva
Carlisle, all of Hensall, and two bro-
thers, Isaac Hudson, of Seaforth, and
George Hudson, Hensall; also eight
grandchildren "and six great grand-
children. The funeral, which was
private, was held from her late, resi-
dence on Wednesday at 2 ,p.m., to
Bayfield cemetery, conducted by Rev.
R. A. Brook, of Hensall.
CROMARTY
At the time of writing Mr. Joseph
Speare is not so well, ,being laid aside
with a severe attack of Bronchial
trouble. He is at present in the
hospital at Seaforth, We hope for a
speedy recovery.
Mr. John Scott, formerly of Toron-
to, is holidaying with his sister, Mrs.
McKellar, in the village.
Mrs. Boa, of Detroit, is at present
visiting with the Walker family.
Mr. Frank Harburn received word
recently that his daughter, Sarah,
who has been in training for some
time, has gone overseas and. will be
a driver for the Red Cross. Sarah
has been in training for almost five
years, and we wish her success in
her new undertaking. She has been
in Nova Scotia for almost two years
of late.
Saturday night was another wet
night. There was a very he ' y rain
during the night, and sbmd "find-
ing it hard to save their hay.
VARNA
Mrs. Dodsworth, of London, in com-
pany with Mrs. ,Robinson, visited ,Last
week with the former's mother, Mrs.
Smith, and Mr. Dennison. , •
Miss Nola Kreger, of Zurich, spent
a couple of days with her uncle and
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Ings.
Miss Logan, of Hensall spent
Tuesday with Miss Mosso') and Mrs.
M. G. Beatty.
Mr. and Mrs.. Griffiths and Larry,
of Niagara, -and Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Reid, of Port Huron, visited - 1,ast
week with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Keyes,'
Mrs. Sears and Mr. Tiffin and fam-
ily, of London, are holidaying at the
home of the former's father, Mr. Cgul-
tice.•
Mr. and Ml`s. John Turner, of Clin-
ton, were guests' at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Keyes last week.
Mrs. Hord and family, of Stratford,
and Mrs. Ferguson and family, of
Sudbury, are 'holidaying at the par-
ental home. of Mr. and Mrs. M. El-
liott.
Mis°S Christena. Rutherford, of Osh-
awa, is the guest of her aunt, Mrs.
G. H. Beatty.
WALTON
The following letters have been re-
ceived by the Walton Overseas Box
Committee:
Dear Pat: Received the parcel from
Walton Overseas Committe yester-
day. It certainly was good, especial-
ly the home-made candy,, etc. We
have our own cooking stuff, so the
tinned food comes in very handy be-
tween meals. So thanks very much.
I remain, Yours sincerely, Frank Mar-
shall.
Dear Pat: You will think I am a
fine, one -'for not writing sooner to
'thank you for the lovely parcel re-
ceived months ago. It was really
super and such a variety. The' home-
made candy and maple sugar were
really a treat. I enjoyed reading the
notes from alb the ladies. I also..want
to thank you for the carton of cig-
arettes received a few weeks ago. I
had nine days' leave again last month
and went to Ireland, The Irish peo-
ple are very friendly and it was real-
ly a treat to get all the eggs we
wanted, juicy\ steaks and ice cream.
I have seen quite a bit of the British
Isles and •if I stay rattail longer I
hope to spend a leave in Freilee, I
haven't any idea when I will be go-
ing home, but surely In a few months.
Thanks again for the parcel and cig-
arettes. -They were really appreciat-
ed, even though I neglected thatki»g
�evex�'t
'n7 h1#
Anite ti
anath+�;�
U.
Prete
be 4,41e0g,
geed ee?ichle ul yr r i�alZ
summer hexa blit weplt ••>1q';o
se now' .ill spP,n b 'tryi1 i
°Ur own- ngttitilV you all a ,,p'fl
lion, I close. Tgur t iziy,. W.
Nichol.
Dear Mrs pilzl, lett: Just & feW
lines to Idt, ygji ,knew I haveareeeF
ed the '(tiga1ettof Y:!;111 ee»t Me, 1 offer
any ainoere t a*s and ap»reeletion
to one and all. Time hag flown since;
1 have 'lett and now at lest we
are thinking with good reagent 'of be-
ing'hot/10 once again. Seen I hope to
be 'able to pay a visit personally to
Walton. Since we have come to this
theatre we have had leaves to Eng -
rand in progress. Recently I was ov-
er there for ten full days, plus trav-
elling time. It was rean_semething
to appreoiate—getting back to places
where I hat been; spent two years
there and have come to lake it. The
best part was the people speak our
own language. Or we speak theirs!
Of course Canada and home are the
best. This will be all for now. Hop-
ing to see you all again—the sooner
the better. I must close now, all the
best. Sincerely yours, A. M. Nichol.
Dear Pat and All:' Just a line to
let you know I received the cigar-
ettes you • sent to me on behalf of the
Overseas Committee. I was very glad
to get them, and L want to .thank you
and the committee for the kindness.
Iappreciate it very much. Well, Pat,
I am afraid I am getting to be a poor
hand at -writing letters. I have lots
of time, but can't seem to settle
down to it any more. It has been
very warm and sultry today, and we
just had a thunderstorm and. it has
cooled the air a bit, so I hope it
stays cool for a few days, as I don't
like the hot weather. The crops look
good here (Holland), and the gardens
look nice. We have lots of vege-
tables to eat; also a few strawberries,
which are very nice. We have two
shows in town and in one of them
the picture changes each night,' so'
we are well off for shows. There are
two dance halls with a dance every
night; including Sundays, and are al-
ways crowded. The civilians claim
they wouldn't attend the German
dances, so I guess they are making
up for lost time, as they sure like to
dance. This is a very nice town, a
little larger than Seaforth and more
thickly populated. The stores are 'be-,
ginning to get stocked up .again, but'
I guess there, is a limited supply of
goods yet. The people will be very
glad when the tobacco stores are able•
to open up again; that seems to be
the most important need here at the
present time. . Well, Pat, I guess I
will close for this time, Again
thanking you for the parcel and wish-
ing you all the best, I remain. Sin-
cerely, Wm- Kelley.
Honor Newlyweds
Mr. and Mrs- Harold France re-
cent newlyweds, were honored on
Thursday night when a group of
young people numbering 40, mostly
employees of the Roe Farms,, Atwood,
met at their home in Walton to hon-
or the couple. They assembled on
the veranda and lawn and to the
music supplied by Harold Bartman
and. Clifford Coghlin • enjoyed a jolly
sing -song. During the evening an ad-
dress in poetry was read by George
Hume and the presentation of a hand-
some bedspread, tray .and six water
glasses was made by Lloyd Barton
and Robert Leslie. Mr. France re-
plied in a fitting manner. Lunch was,
served.
Personals: Miss June Hackwell
and David Hackwell with relatives in
Stratford; Master Johnny Wilson
with his grandmother, Mrs. R. Hoy;
S. Sgt. W. C. Bennett at his home
here; Miss Edith Hackwell is spend-
ing her vacation at her home here;
M'r. and Mrs. Crosby Sotheran and
family with Mr. and Mrs. B. Ander-
son; Mrs. Carson Allen, Guelph, with
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Somerville.
Mrs. John Kellar is visiting her rel-
atives and friends in Parkersburg,
West Virginia.
Eclipses
Don't Matter
(By Bruce Hutchison in Winnipeg
Free Press)
Until the public excitement subsid-
ed and people got back to normal,
with the black spots out of their eyes,
I have been waiting kindly to point
out that the eclipse of the sun didn't
amount to much—a poor show in ev-
ery way.
Here were two dead bodies, a flam-
ing star and a worn-out, pock -marked
moon, crossing each other's path at a
most inconvenient time in the morn-
ing, and moving in a routine fashion,
as they have moved for several mil-
lion years. A spectacle not half as
interesting as the stars spread across
the heavens every night, which no-
body bothers to observe. Yet most
of the population leaped from its bed
at dawn` as if the house were on fire,
which might have been worth leaping
for.
There was nothing important or in-
teresting in the movement of these
dead bodies in the heavens; nothing
half so remarkable, for examble, as
the fact that the angles inside A tri-
angle are always eq(bal to two right
fez.;i
The United Farmers Co -Operative Co. Ltd.
PREMIX DIVISION • • • r GUELPH, ONTARIO
angles, never more or less: It is
easy to see why there is an eclipse
when the moon gets in the way of
the sun, but it is beyond the wit of
man to understand why .the angles
of a triangle always equal two right
angles.
I have spent a good part of my life
trying to find out why this should be
so, without result. Only a triangle
can equal two right angles. The great-
est living man can never equal two
right angles no matter how hard he
tries, and the older and fatter he
gets the more impossible the enter-
prise becomes. Even the ladies who
are constantly dieting and wearing
girdles . can never quite make it They
achieve angles, but always wrong
angles, never right ones. Yet a tri-
angle does it every day, whereas an
eclipse only occurs every century or
so.
The movements of the sun and
moon are precisely of the same sort
as the properties of a triangle—life-
less, inevitable and routine. But the
other morning, when people were all
gazing at the sky until their heads
swam, much more important and in-
teresting things were happening all
'about them, under their feet and over
their heads, unmarked and unappreei-
ated. Only the young, who have not
lost their sanity and judgment, can
understand this, and while a great
journalist and I gazed at the eclipse
from the Lake of the Woods, a little
boy who was with us took one bored
look at the sun and then concentrat-
ed his observation on a mother duck
with her young, hiding beside the
shore.
The boy was right, of course, for
he was looking at life, and life is the
only interesting .and important thing
in the -universe. It must have been
a relatively simple job for nature to
construct the sun and the planets,
but the construction of a duck was a
masterpiece—wings to fly with, web-
bed feet to swim with, feathers to
thee the water, and the internal ma-
chinery more complex in a single cell
than all the gadgets of a B-29.
And all around that duck, as it
swaps unmoved by the eclipse,• were
a million other masterpieces—trees
that thrust out a new layer of wood
every year, grass that grows out ,of
the dead earth, a myriad of different
wild flowers bursting into bloom, and
the bees that fertilize them. There
was something to baffle all the sag-
es, but nobody paid any attention to
it except the little boy, who was not
yet able to think for himself. Every-
body else was watching two hunks of
lifeless stuff wheeling, without intel-
ligence, through empty space.
Man is always looking at nature
thus,- upside down. The other day,
flying over the Rocky Mountains, it
occurred to. Me how lifeless and un-
interesting they looked from above,
mere hunks of rock rolled together.
Yet the Rockies from the air are com-
monly esteemed a remarkable sight,
just because man can look down on
them:
If he would walk through them he
would find, instead of lifeless matter,
a teeming world of life with blossoms
popping up with 'a tiny shout at the
snow's edge, insects at work, moose
wallowing .in the lily pads, and a
trickle of water gradually becoming
the Columbia river, Man pefers to
fly over the top because it flatters
his ego to look down ou the earth
which he cannot understand when he
is on it. But it can only be under-
stood from the bottom u'p, not from
the top down, 'and there is more wis-
dom to be discovered in a duck or a
flower beside a Canadian lake than
in all the a.irpla•nes and mecha.nical
inventions of our time.
More mystery also. why, far Sao*
mysterious and interesting than : lisp
eclipse was the fate of . a house paib>
er in Winnipeg who fell off, a reit.::;,
and was killed on the saine daY.
at this particular moment did his lid
der slip? Why, among all the peep*E
of Winnipeg, was he selected, out et
the safety and quiet Of his ,life, . tia
quit it without warning? When s -
body can explain that, it will be talar
to examine the frozen moon.
Yet all through our society vim
look at' the moon instead -of tbee
things that matter. Men postulate
marvellous new politica] systems be-
fore
e -fore they know anything 'ef our ex-
isting system. They rear up new
economic systems before they know
even what money is. They promiae
a life of abundance in Canada and
get elected to Parliament before tbeg
know howthis nation makes ite )kr-
ing or how to make a living for them-
selves.
hemselves. Yes, men get up before
breakfast to see an eclipse and mar-
vel at it when the truly marvelgwze
thing is that they get up at all, and
are alive and can eat breakfast
Therefore, when the next eclipse- es -
curs, some 300 years from now, ignore
it. By that time you will have some-
thing more interesting to think about
and may know something of real im-
portance.
Fall Sown Cereals
In Ontario
Plans for the seeding of wince
wheat or winter rye should receive
attention soon. Success with thee
crone "depends on the use of good
seed of approved varieties, seed treat-
ment, adequate fertility, proper till-
age of the soil, seeding at the proper'
time and selection of fields with good
nattiral drainage, says A: G. O. White-
side, Cereal Division, 'Central Ex'peri-
men'tal Farm, Ottawa. Winter wheat
requires soil of good fertility to give
high yields while winter rye does rete
atively better than ether cereals on
light soils although it too' responder
to good soil. II these crops are to
follow sod, ploughing should com-
mence at least four to six weeks be-
fore seeding and the land thoroughly
worked to bring it into a good state
of tilth. Winter wheat or rye may
follow summer fallow or intertilled:
crops where these can be harvested
early enough for seeding at the pro-
per time.
Fertilizer recommendations ^ sug-
gested by the Advisory Fertiliser
Board' for Ontario for heavy sait,-
manured or which has grown clovers,.
are 250 to 300 pounds of 20 per cent
superphosphate per acre while witls
no ,manure or clovers, A0 to 300 The-
of 2-12-6 are recommended. On Iigkb
soil, manured-200 to 250 lbs. of 0-IZ--
20,and with no manure or (, clover:
250 to 300 Tbs. of 2-12-10 are suggest-
ed.
uggested.
Dawson's Golden Chaff is recom-
mended for the main wheat growing.
areas while Genessee Reliable, a
bearded red winter wheat, is com-
monly
ammonly grown in Southern Ontaxta
The more winter hardy variety'
Rideau is recommended for Eastens
Ontario. Imperial and Horton are:
the hest varieties of winter rye. Goed
seed of the above varieties is avail-
able and only the best should be
sown. •
To protect winter wheat from bunt.
or stinking smut and to lessen d
age from root rots that may at�
the young seedlings, the seed shoat
be treated• with one of the mercury
dusts.
Dead and Disabled Animals
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