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The Wingham Advance Times, 1935-04-11, Page 2AG The Wingham Advance -Tines Published at WINGHAIt'I - ONTARIO Every Thursday Morning by 'Me 'Advance -Times Publishing Co. Subscription Rate One Year $2,00 Slit months, $L00 in advance To U. S. A., $2,50 per year. Foreign rate, $3.00 per year. i,dvertisin g rates on application. 'Fergus will have daylight saving this year, It is easily seen that Fer- f,us-is a Scotch comnitinity when they try to save even the daylight; or may- be they need more light there, Hon. Mr, 'Croll made a significant remark as to the hunger marchers when ht said: "But here is a strange thing about these outbreaks, They :have been occurting. in the municipal- ities yhere the relief allowances are the most gonerous in the. Province ----'---- and in the Municipalities where the province ispaying the greatest per- centage of the cost." ter has pass- * And, now there is, tall: of a Peace 1. • : .ul insure the peace o.f Iactthatlso d Europe for ten years. At the rate the European countries are nyw preparing for war.there Would be a terrific clash' at the end of this .period. If peace pmts canbe made for ten 'years, why not for a inucll longer term Of years? :SPRING TIME IS CLEAN-UP TIME Now that old man Zvi td along and Spring is beginning to assert itself one of the main objec- tives of the citizens should be a clean- up campaign. During the winter the snow coves ed not only the ; round but the rub- bish that accumulated during the Fall and Winter. This rubbish now stands out like a sore tlntnlb and the placing .of this refuse in the dump wi*uld acid much to the appearance Of our town .and make our town a nu're healthy place in which to live. It may be a little early yet for a general clean-up, but the picking up of refuse about the hone would 'add much to the appearance of our town. * * * * SHOWING INTEREST At the last meeting of the Council a notice of motion was given that a by-law would be introduced at the next meeting of the Council which will provide that .all milk sold in Winghain inust conte from tubercular and b suffer - in the right directiontblood-tested cows, This is a step < While st Toronto i ; at present . and the public ling from a measles epidemic (previ- - should be quick to appreciate that the i ous to 1935 there had been no deaths Council to ancicius to safeguard the . from • that disease for two years in WINGRAM ADVANCB -TIMES, HER ARMS AND LEGS IMMOVABLE Ten Years With Rheumatism To this woman it must have been like „commencing to live a new life, when she began to use her arms and legs again, after they had been help- less for elp-lessfor ten years. "I suffered with .rheumatism," she writes, azul had been bedridden since 1920. I could not move arms or legs, and had to be fed like a child, Every- body thought „1 should be an invalid * * * So far our April showers will not produce many May flowers. �- * a„ Sidney Smith, , Ashfield young man, was last week presented with a medal for heroism in saving the life of Miss Dorothy McQuillin from drowning. Despite,much that is said to the con- trary this is another of the many ex atiiples that the youth of to=day can rise to the occasion whenever the oP- portunity is present. * * WHAT T•OXOIDING HAS MEANT TO TORONTO r. (Toronto Star Weekly) l J ) all my life. I forced mysolrto fight against it and tried a' nutnbe • of different things. It was Kruschen that eventually saved me, and to -day I consider it is saving my life, My condition has greatly improved, and my limbs are gradually becoming more supple. 'Already I can eat with- out assistance, and, dress_ myself -which 1 had not done for ten years. —M. H. Two of the ingredients of Krtischen Salts are the most effectual solvents of uric acid known to medical science., They swiftly dull the sharp edges of the painful crystals, then convert thetas into a harmless solution. Other ingredients of these Salts have a stim- ulating effect upon the kidneys, and, assist them- to expel the dissolved uratic needles through the natural channel. 1>ea lt11 of the pealile. jsuccession) the general health of the + There are other.health measures ;city is good. Last year's e.ar's general that the Council could well take into ; death rate of 10.1 was the lowest.on :consideration but the fact that they !record in Toronto, as was the infant have made a start in the right direc- ' death rate of 54.7 (by 13 per -cent.), tion is proof that they are thinking i and there was a 7 per cent. reduction ,along the right lines. iri the previous low rate for tuberou- x .g * * losis. There has not been a case of AN INTERESTING CAMPAIGN smallpox for two years. Mr., George S otton, M,P., has long. It is. in diphtheria, however,., that P been known for the excellent cam- !the most remarkable record has been paign he carrys on during an election. }glade --a record due in some degree, He knows practically every person in 1 to pasteurization of the milk supply this riding and is an excellent plat- ;but chiefly to immunization of the form speaker. !children who would otherwise have J Mr. R. J. Deachman, of Ottawa, a, been afflicted. What toxoid can do in former Howick product, . who was ? the control of this disease is shown nominated at the Liberal convention !by the following table of diphtheria himself a fear- t n deaths among Toronto res- •nn Friday, has proved huff , t cases and less speaker and proinised this con-iidents during the past few years: •vention that he would stage a whirl- Deaths per wind campaign, ,1 ear Cases Deaths 100,000 Pop, It appears to us that the electors 1929 .....1,022 64 10.6 of North Huron will have a most in- {1930 , 1,018 8.7 teresting campaign during the coming 1931 532 election. 11932 168 =1- * 11933 56 5 .8 '1' .l. .0 The town council of Clinton raised 1984 22. 0 tax rate 4 mills this year. This is The reduction in diphtheria rates the -not such good news for the people of may he even more strikingly stated Clinton, but a pay-as-you-go policy is i by taking into account the fact that Cl , . t sound idea. 195 per cent. of the death that former - =i= 1c * ly occurred in Toronto were among * 1 'Eddie Cantor is being stied for ; children under 15 years of age, of "$250,000 by a gentleman who says he jwhoni the last census disclosed about has written jokes for Eddie for many 145,000 in the city. Sixty deaths ears. After listening to Eddie's jokes among these 145,000 children meant y we wonder how such an amount could a rate of over 40 per 100,000—a rate be involved. !which entirely disappeared in 1934. 1 Approximately 56 per cent. of the ' cl'ai"arteria deaths which used to oc- cur were among children under six years of age, so that perhaps the 64 who died in 1929 were in that There is only one good shepherd of !category. There were 56,000 children men, said Christ, and that shepherd Himself. "1 am come that Y ions. The man out of work or the Woman Who had lost.'her job Was told won "You don't need to worry about a job,. we'll see that you are kept." J Neednless to say the exhortation was heeded With the results. that we have ed'a whole generation of folk cultivated who look upon it as, their right to live on the results of other people's toil and self-denial. We sowed the Wind of soft -headedness. We're about due to reap the whirlwind of municipal bankruptcy, both financial and moral. love of God—that love which was -Iseter "Times -Advocate. willing to go to any length at infinite cost to Himself, that souls might be C A.NA:DIAN SCREEN STAR y Nova n 1 1 1 Ouccn of the Annapolis Vall.y. Blossom Festival last summer, Gladys Wade (ABOVE;) of Kentvilie, i stitu,tionary atonetnent, when God judged the sins of -the world in the person of His sinless Son, and visited. the death penalty upon Hint, that sin- ners trusting in Christ" need not die eternally, but have everlasting .life. Paul makes this very plain in his Epistles, especially • in the chapter in Romans chosen for this lesson,Where he tells us: "God coa inendeth His, love toward us; in that; while we were yet sinners, Christ 'died for 'tis." God cannot ignore sin; He cannot: condone 'sin, Because He is a right- eous God He must deal with sin. But if He- dealt directly with the sin of the human race, apart` from any Sav- iour, all the raec would. necessarily be lost. Christ took the place of the sinner and consented to the Father's dealing with Him, sinless, as though He were a sinner, Dying thus for our sins, He was'.saisecl ' again from the dead on the third day; and, now God asps' all then to accept the sacrifice of His. Son in their behalf, that they may be saved. Scotia, has just made her debut n the movies: In 'Acadian Spring So g'. an Associated. Screen Studio picture filmed In the Annapolis Valley, she co-stars with Philip •Donat, brother of Robert Donal, young star of "Tie Count of Monte Cristo.," ity as a babe, born of a hmuan moth- er,' but of 'no human father. Anci 'he came to ,this earth and becarie man; not primarily in order to live here, but in order to die here. He could be- cci e the Saviour of -sinners only by bearing their sins and paying the death penalty of their sins, "For all have sinners,, and conte short of the glory: death, of God.' 111e wages of siti is dca , but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord:" People sometimes talk, ignorantly' and angrily, about the cruelty and in- Ijustice of a God. who would condeinn. human souls to hell. Those who talk in that way are blind to the infinite oras, hell—from the inevitable Ca31SECit 1 d own and His ,,,�°,,,�®,,,��°�.��. s for salvation �„,�,®�°�°®°�°�®°�'°.�". saved fr LESSON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL CHRIST THE SAVIOUR. Sunday, April 14. Loire 2:11, 30-32; 15:3-7. John 3: 14-17' 10.9-11 14-16, 27, 28; Acts 3: of their own stn. ,fences Christ showed His Father's eagerness thei of souls by telling the parable of a man who, having a hudred"sheel; left the ninety and nine to go out into the' wilderness after a single sheep Romans 5:1-11; Philippians 2: 1 that -was lost. 1-18; 5-11; 2 Tiniothy 1:9, 10. Talking with Nicodemus, a theolog- ical leader of the Jews who came to Christ by night, the Lord plainly de - Golden Text: God so loved the world, that clared the Gospel :in these • words: For n that "And as Moses lifted up the serpent He -;ave His only begotten Son, t whosoever believetli in Him should in the wilderness, even 50 that ,the not perish, but have' everlasting life, Son of Man be liftecd up: shouldthathot soever believe 34 (John 3:16;)• 36 5.7 __ perish, but have eternal life." ,000 000 He was referring to a miracle God 15 2.4• There are_ more than 1,700, long before in the his - people in the world today. And there had wrought is only one door into heaven; every tory of the Israelites. They -bad re-. 1,700,000,000 must either belled against God in the wilderness one ofthesegafter He had brought them .out of pass through that door or never enter in the land. of Egypt• He Heaven. This seems a startling stat- bondage ment, and of course it is challenged sent fiery or poisonous serpents. but it was made repeatedly being a type or the sin that destroys by many; by the Lord Jesus Christ 'Himself and men's lives. Then God• told Moes on is the lain and reiterated declaration make' a serpent of brass, lift it upalln n of the whole Bible. In last - week's a pole, and tell the Israelites that, n the Heavenly Father Christ who would life up their eyes and look lesson, o said: "I am the way, the truth and upon that brazen serpent should live, no man cometh unto the Fa- i even though they had been bitten and the life; ther, but by Me." This. week's lesson the death -poison was in their veins. shows us Jesus Christ, the only be- Many Iraelites did this, and their liv- gotten Son of God, as the only but es ,were saved. Brass is a symbol of judgment in the Old. Testament, and -the brazen serpent, lifted up, was a symbol of sin judged. So Christ told Nicodemus Thursday, April llth, 1935 rig:tat:a 49.1 '�4Ur ..rhh� r..^:x{.a t,iir'i ��_ - .atir , , « : •;;—yrs. +� Fish for Balanced Budgets and Better. Meals By Barbara B. Brooks. Have you- ever walked along'a beach `just after a heavy storm at sea? The very bottom seems .to have been turned` up on the wet sand. It is al- ways surprising to see what variety of life'there is in water in lakes and rivers, as well as the ocean. Tlie =er bountifulness of what we 1 y call "sea foods" perhaps accounts for. the fact that we pick and choose so few to eat. '/re seem to be more nar- rowed by custom in g and OW ABEL - 33 ANGEt 59 parsley and serve with lem- the of oil over chopped sheet, sprinkle a;few dropsin a on slices, top of 'each piece and bake very 1 15 .modern refrigeration eration and transpor- hot oven (500° Iy.)� for 10to.Mo g seasons for in n on thickness of tation ' has eliminated si minutes, depending up. on many varieties of seafood, but oyst electro fish. s i has 1 when the month as 1 out flavored fish, such ers are still cooking fish than any other food. It A dry;: mild improved if served is interesting to note, too, that :fish haddock, will be 1 first "R" which is prized' in' one community despised in another—and all apparent- ly`for no good reason. Tlie result is. that the fisherman throws back a third or more of Inc catch and the price re- mains high for. the few favored fish that we will buy. • In the business of balancing both budget and menu, a study of your lo- calle. .1i�v�i hi Will rote worthwhile. 1 fish market w p you to tr some it iS with a sauce. Mustard Sauce 2 tbsps. butter 1 tbsp. flour 1 cup boiling water 1 tbsp. lemon juice 1 tbsli,, prepared mustard Salt and pepper Melt butter, add flour;ancl niix un- til water grad- ually Add boiling r of h. g smooth. ually and cook until flour thickens. Insure and Make Sure. All the best old established Companies. 'FIRE! AUTOMOBILE! ACCIDENT Thirty -Five Years in the Bi1- Abner Cosens Insurance and Real Estate. will encourage y y If at Zvi of the less expensive varieties, just Add lemon juice and mustard and sea - remind: yourself that in' some other son to :taste. with salt and pepper. community that kind of fish is C00- Cookuntil•smootli and hot. Pour ov- n.c. , Ask your merchant.) er baked fish just before serving. sidercd a delicacy, about all 'the varieties he sells. Us -1 You may vary the baked fish re- you whether each ei a by adding to the salted milk, wally he can tell P 1 36 of all sufficient ,Saviour, tie under six living in the city, of whom is Ithat a cross 36 died from diphtheria, a rate of ov- irnfght have havelife,' it more abundantly. undeiHthe judgment of tip CYndnin order. er 60 per 100,000 children of that age. they might And in 1984 not a single death at any I ant: the good shepherd: the good that sinners, looking to Him in faith, } should not p > age! kind is dry or oily, free of small bon- es, where it is caught and how it is brought to market and can give you suggestions for cooking it. You *will find recipes for cooling fish- in general cook books. Supple- ment these by clipping fish recipes from current newspapers and maga- zines. Many women hesitate to buy fish because they know of no way to cook it except by' deep fat frying. It seems to us that trout, fillets and fish steaks, crisp and golden as to crust and white and,flaky within, are worth all the work it takes to fry then. However, we are not averse to saving time 'and trouble if the results are just as good. The following recipe for baked fish does for' fillets. and steaks all that can be desired. Baked Fish Spencer Almost any fresh fish large enough to cut into quarter pound pieces, fil- lets or steaks is suitable. Clean, scale and wash with piece of cheese cloth wrung out of cold, salted water. Bone and cut into serving pieces. Dip each piece in milk (evaporated milk tray be used) which has been heavily salt- ed, hi the Proportion of one table- spoon of salt to each cup of milk. Then dip the fish into rolled corn flakes. Place on a well-oiled baking " erish but have eternal 11fe," This is the mystery of the sub- * * ,ie* PASSING THE BUCK The problem of relief in Ontario has got out of hand and the fault for this calamity lies at the door of the 'Province. When distress first mani- fested itself, churches and other or- ganizations raised no end of cry in behalf of any who were on short rat- `il1111111111111fll 11111MMEiillMIMISSENIMliIM/1118 Maitland Creamery 11 IN NI 1 lin 11� 119 141 i� �y,�y��ea..II��i� yyy��ii��y��yyy�i���yy �y �yi�i,,yyyy ��yyp��q��yyg� �,yyy����i, r�jy�� 10111001$1111111111101111.110101111010111”000101100011011111111 i 1111111 1111 1101 111101 r ilararrl�l llr6l01100lll1101111A11111 Buyers Of Crea.rn, Eggs and Poultry THE shetiherd giveth His life for the sheep." meO a ie rti os Again He said: "There shall be one fold, and one shepherd.. The only. way of entering that "fold," the only way to be saved, is by the one shep- herd, Jesus Christ. Yet it cost this good shepherd His. life to become the Saviour of sinners. He continued: "Therefore doth my Father love Me, because I lay down my life,'' that I might take it again." Men do not like to be told that be- cause they are sinners they are lost souls. Nor do they like to be told that there is only one Saviour,- and that they need this Saviour, and are lost unless they commit themselves. to Him. When the Lord spoke these words about Himseif- as the only shepherd and'way of life, some of His own people, the Jews, said: "He hath a levii, and is triad. Why hear ye Hint?„ But it was a great day in Heaven, and a great day on earth, when God sent His only Son to earth to become the Saviour of then. "Tare angel of the Lord" appeared to shepherds keeping watch over their sheep by night in a field near Bethlehem, and announced the 'Gospel of salvation, "Behold I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all peo- ple. Por unto you is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which. is Christ. the Lord." This Saviour, as John tells tis, was in the beginning with God, and was Himself God. Yet He condescended to become man, and to enter hutttan- UNITED FARMERS' CO-OPERATIVE COMPANY) LEVIITE14. WIUO1Urn, - . Ontario. Phone 271 IN a ME no "R"Tliis is to remind you that after' April, ,September is the irs month. Oysters dipped in corn flake crumbs may be 'baked on an .oiled sheet just like the fish. lie sure to sprinkle a -few drops of oil over each, oyster and to bake quickly in a very hot oven „(500° F.). AS HF iE LD Mr. and Mrs, Erving Jinn and two sons, .spent Sunday with Mrs. Jinns mother at Clinton, Mrs, Sam Sherwood and son Earl, spent Friday afternoon with Mrs. Andrew Gaunt whom •we are very pleased to hear came home from Wingham Hospital on Wednesday. Pleased to hear that Mr. John John- ston 12th Con. has been able to get out a little, Mr. Johnston has been confined to the house the avast of the winter. Miss Olive Kilpatrick near Mafe- ling spent the week -enol .with her cousin, Miss Jessie Andrew, and Miss Hazel Webster near• Lucknow. Pleased to hear the little Jimmie Bradley, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Bradley, Lake Shore load, who was taken to Kincardine Hospital last Sunday and operated on, for appendi- citis, is improving very fast._ seasonings, such as a teaspoon of dry mustard, a dash of ground•ginger, a teaspoon of Worcestershire sauce or a few drops of onion juice. Baked fish -with anchovy is a variation, worth special mention. Baked Fish With Anchovy A dry fish,' such as fresh cod, flounder, haddock or whiting is es- pecially siutable. Clean, bone and cut fish ino serving pieces and place on a well-oiled baking sheet. Mix two parts anchovy paste• with one part cooking oil and spread paste on fish. Cover with finely rolled corn flake crumbs. Bake in a hot oven. (500° F:) until fish is done—about 10 to 15.minutes,: Sprinkle lightly with THERE IS STILL TIME to treat your cattle with COOPER'S WARBLE FLY POWDER 100% kill - no guess work. ' - Ask your local Cooper Dealer, of write Canadian Co-oerative Wool Growers Limited 217 Bay Street p - Toronto, Ontario EMONSTRAT1ON April 11, 12, 13 A representative of the Martin-Senour Company will be in our store on the above dates, to demon- strate • the use and' application of a few prominent Martin-,Senour Products. Come and' see how Multi -use Enarrnel can be used to brighten up things about the home. Bring in" your ppaint problems --advice of any nature will be gladly given. 44cl Coupon Redeemable on Demonstration Dates only. ae & Thompson: Wingham Phone 27 Name Address This coupon and 10 cents en- titles bearer to a 35 cent tin of Multi -use Enamel