The Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-05-09, Page 19(K H.
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oultural
Tidbits
This libmindtIA*4"11001 ifftVissonsi se*
tiara and filrinOre views from
report en clmfficatioa
prorated to the Ontario .govern-
rant
overnrI t that I think w !As of .inter-
est <to °enam,
411* production of :plat and
animals ratul to num must be of
paraMount concern . every con
for with, chronic fr
linherelart4esale �iut
y , vete andear
coat,, but eventual hunger for
Many.
"CIrn wasrtedlyr ex*
presiled at the (public) meed
that .qna 1pa .and -or regional
plans tend to , ve- elopment
priority over agriculture, Areal
have been defined for :industrial,
commercial ' and residential
zones for parks, golf cam,
raceways, hikingtrails and other
recreational uses, With . the
leftovers being considered farm-
land.
" Farinland has been continu-
ally .. treated as an ,.endless re-
source. It is obvious that fan))-
, land , is not unlimited in total
quantity and is particularly
limited in productive quality.".
Fanners urged: "To prohibit
or control the entry of non: family
corporate owners whose . prime
activity is not the production of
Agricultural products;` but which
may _ be a method of marketing
their principal products through
a system of conversion into 'agri-
cultural products." In other
words, feed companies raising
livestock in order to market their
feed. I presume it could include
canning companies who raise
their own chickens and vege-
tables in order to supply their
manufacturing facilities, The
growing of agricultural products
then becomes secondary.
The report also attacks rural
residential oWnership: Having a
residence among farmers in.
Elates prices and thus assessment
for the real farmer, and it re -
'duces food producing land as well
as creating problems with fences
and noxious weeds. It creates de-
mand for services not needed by
the farmer- thus increasing his
cost of taxation and the odour
problems from close proximity to
livestock buildings. Ml of which
end up in higher prices for all of
us as consumers.
4-0--0
PhilvDttrantv .the chairman of
•crthetn ii` arcl has he'en hilt in
the news lately. Heopposes a new
power station in bean -growing
areas because, the inherent pol-
lution causes diseases, like
bronzing, in the beans, resulting
in greatly reduced yields and
hence* reduced income for the
producer.
When some consumer group
wanted the consumer to have
representation on . marketing
,boards, Phil Said: "When the big
corporations, like GM, let their
customers sit on the board of di-
, rectors, we will do the 1 same.
Until then, nothing doing."
When Mrs. 'Plumptre, of the
food.prices review board, singled
out the bean producers and asked
for a two price system for beans,
Mr. Durant asked why the
farmer would have to subsidize
the rest of society when no other
industry is asked to do this.
I have to agree with the bean
board chairman on all counts and
since it's so reasonable, one
wonders why some people even
dare suggest some of it, and I'm
sure my urban readers will agree
also.
"NOTICE"
C.A.S.H.B.A.
CANADIAN AMERICAN SADDLE HORSE
a
BREEDERS ASSOCIATION
Horse Sale
Regd American Saddiebreds
Reg'd Saddlebred Palominos
SAT., MAY 11, 1974
HORSES 1 p.m. sharp
Tack and Equipment NEXT
HUMBER EQUINE CENTRE
of Hwy. 27 and Humber
College Bld.
(Near New Woodbine Raceway)
For Catalogues contact Sam Horn
Phone 519.291-331 B Gowanstown
Place
. GORDON
GREEN"•
Going trough an antique store
the other day I picked up an old
book on Hell, and since I hadn't
heard much on the subject for
some time and several of my lis-
teners have been insistinglately
that I really ought to go : there, I
brought the book home with rne.
Thought that it might help me
look forward to the journey.
Now this .book was . published
back in 1886. It's called "Future
Punishment" and it was written
by the Rev. Dr. Wm. Cochrane of
Brantford, a former moderator of
the Presbyterian Church. Just In
case a sinner like me might have
some doubt about the authenti-
city of Dr. Cochrane's findings
about Hell,.I see that he quotes no
fewer than 86 authorities' on the
subject, most of them Doctors of
Divinity like himself.
The author.r seems to have going to Sunday School? Are you
supposed that his book would be a . old enough to remember the days
popular. number:, ,to, present.. to £ when tolisten to, a hellfire evan-
"., icertaiii categorteswof readers t,-'to-4-4telistioriguri3vieningavaalenough
those Miters ' who were: getting to keep you awake for the rest of
ready to cross over, perhaps; or the night? Well I'm that old, and I
to the young and impressionable - don't :recall that part of my reli-
and there is a very handsome gious training with any fondness
dedication page opposite the
author's picture.
Well I read in this scholarly
work such quotes as these: "Only
conceive the poor wretch in the
flames of hell! See how his tongue
hangs from: between his blistered
lips! How it burns,theroof of his
mouth as' if it were a firebrand!
Behold him crying for a drop of
water, I will not picture the
scene, suffice it for me to say that
the hell of hells will be to thee,
poor sinner, the thought that it is
to be forever. Thou wilt look up
there to the throne Of God - and on
it .shall be written "Forever".
When the damned jingle the
burning irons of their torments
they shall say "Forever"!
"Forever" is written on their
racks,
"Forever" on their chains;
"Forever!' burneth in the fire,
"Forever" ever reigns."
Are you old enough to re-
member the good old days when
the fear of hell was the chief rea-
son for your beinga good boy and
at all, and [had no regrets, when
our bigger theological colleges
quietly began to ,phase hell out of
their pulpits. But for some of the
evangelically -minded, hell still
burns as fearsomely as it ever
AND MALL P00120 MPv `P
WHEN yoti YR
Ontario S;fO"' League'
courtesy filA0 INSURAI$CE
did, Seems to me that the reasori
that the people who believe in.hell
believe in hell is. because . they
just Can't stand the thought of
anybody getting away with any-
thing. As some wit once ob-
served, "Misery not Only loves
company: it demands it.." '
And incredible as it 'may seem,
there .• are
;still people who
actually:get a thrill -of some kind
by terrifying kids entrusted to
their cage with their lurid des-
criptions of the geography and
climate of hell. In my oWn com-
munity every spring sees a cer-
tain hardshelled preacher sign-
ing up youngsters folr what he
calls his "Gospel Camp". Chil-
dren
from homes; where no reli-
gion of any kind is taught are of
special intererst . to him. The
camp generally sounds like a
wonderful deal to the youngsters,
and if the parents are willing a
bus starts calling at their door
just, as soon as school is over to
take them out.to the camp every
morning free of : charge. And
"there the all important mission of
that preacher and his staff is to
tell these youngsters how to avoid
hell. ,
Now I am well aware of the fact
that some* these Daily Vacation
Bible Schools: ,:are an excellent
..idea.illA&ill,huirtpo.youngsters to
snake the acquaintance- of -the
Bible, if the obscene parts are left
out. But any man who will delib-
erately set out . to .scare a de-
fenceless child into the kingdom
of heaven is, to my mind, an ig-
norant and a despicable charac-
ter. There ought to be a law
against him.
He ought to burn in hell.
PREHISTORIC MONUMENTS a continent apart ... In Europe these simple forms off,
megalithic tombs can usually be guaranteed to intrigue Canadians visiting the old
continent for the first time. Called dolmens, they consist of large capstones and three or
more supporting uprights. The two examples pictured here in photos by Jack N. Oldham
were taken a continent apart. Top, a tourist examines one in a farm field in southern Ire-
land where they are often called Giants' Tables or Druids' Altars. Below is the Strandza
dolmen in the garden of the museum at Bourgas oh Bulgaria's Black Sea coast. It was
moved to the site from a small Bulgarian village to preserve it. Dolmens such as this were
used by the Thracians for tOillbS around the 8th and 7th cer%turies B.C. Dolmen capstones
are often of enormous size, glvtng rise to wonder about how they were ever placed in
position. A dolmen at Kilternian, Co. Dublin, Ireland, for example, has a capstone mea-
suring 23 feet long by 17 feet wide by six feet thick.
.EXPORT remits Uit
Taiwan ezpokted more than
2.79 milks) black and ►Mite
'IVsets to the United Stntesin
1073, au 18.7 per cent Mcrease
over the previous ' Year.
no
your printing to us
in the kpoglinninwg`
pond is opt mile.
BOWEN
psirito
Seie our units t
SPORTS AND, GARDEN SHQW
Listowel Agricultural Hall
Maim Street, Listowel,. Friday.
and Saturday, May 10and '11
1.1
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Coach"74
rkshmt
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