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The Wingham Advance Times, 1931-01-22, Page 2■ 11 ■ EGGS I POULTRY Iw TLS 'Fresh frees the gardens. Hints b h For Homebodies oIlietltlleS. Written for The Advance -Times By Jessie Allen Brown Mesa of Bruce Bruce, Comity, Ontario, has always been noted .for its stalwart men. Someone told mo,.the other day, that during the war, special uniforms had to be ordered for the men of Brace Peninsula, as the average uniforms were not ':large enough. 'They then went on to say, that the reason for this size, was the very large amount of calcium (lime) in the water. There may be something, in it, at that. It is an established fact, that children, who drink Tots of Milk, grow more, than' the children who do not drink realm- Calcium is one of th'e most im portant constituents of milk,,and i,£ a child gets a large: amount of calelur)a in the water, it should have somewhat thesame effect. The water that we drink is of value on account of .the minerals it a i a s contains. The waters dif- fer considerably in their contents,''and it is quite conveivable that the water should have an effect on the health experimented p a nd found that it likes spinach h raw or cooked but scorns let- tuce. . Just now, work it being done under difficulties. - The small son it at the other side of the table and the kitten climbed • up to visit. It does notknow what to make of the typewriter and jumps up on the bar and plays with the paper. It tries to climb .right in, to see ,where the noise is coming.' from. When I stop typing, it goes.' across to play with the little fellow, shoves his pencil` off the table, if he it lays do rvia aninstant and tries to run off with the paper, I amafraid there is more .,play than work going on just now. - •, Believe it or not, this . kitten 'likes: the zylaphone, The small son has a small one, and every time he has play- ed it, the cat has registered intense interest, Ordinarily, the cat pays no attention to the radio, but when thezylaphone is playedd in;,ap orchestra, it goes" ht over to the radio, tied sometimes tries to, climb inside of it. Just as soon as the zylaphone stops, it yawns in a yery bored.. manner and leaves 1 e io. ra the' firststzo stroke' e. of the tizylaphone At back it .goes; ,and, , listens to every note. taf ,the community. Apples Apples are Liked liy most people and are an easy way of adding .vita. mins to the' diet. They. do not: con- tain�'the 'vitanrins in large ,quantities but contain appreciable amounts, of. vitamins A, B and C. Children will finish a hearty, sneal, and then n turn right around and: eat an apple. Frequently' their parents will eltink''that they de not need, it. it is'a good plan froth" •i dietary standpoint; and it is, 'very,yaluable. Y help in' r_leamnt, the teeth after: a meal.. It would be fatal to let the child think that it is eating an, apple because it is good for it, ,but if the child wants it, let him have it:: A 'bowl of apples within easy Beach will help frequently to cut down . the. a.moutit •of smoking in 'young men.. They are restless and want "something to d or something s meth n toeat, n and g no- thing being handy,' they smoke. If. an apple was as easy to reach as a cigarette you would. find that: many times they would choose an apple. Apples contain the.valuable miner- als, as well as vitamins. They are" slightly laxative food, due largely to the amount of cellulose they contain. One large apple contains 100 calories, and altogether the apple is a valuable • a.+Cmana One great advantage of the, lemon,. is that we can get is, the year round, _ Very often, we use it merely because; of ifs pleasant flavour, but; it'should: he iricidded in 'the diet because of its food value. Lemons are specially Val- uable because of the vitamin's C which they contain. If we do• not have suf- ficie t vitamin e n n C w may have in- cipient a vein- cipient scurvy. That is we may riot break out in scurvy, but we still have it in a slight degree, and without vita- min C we cannot maintain health;' on e Includlemon juicei e • u . n, yo r cooking in ' as many ways as possible. ''Give the children occasional ° drinks of lem- onade, even in the winter. I should' Say, specielly•in the-rvinter,•as itis in. that 'season :that Vitamin C is more difficultto• obtain.. • ' r -- Feeding the kitten I have told you before about the. family kitten that tikes to eat'cod er oil and tomato juice. T wish it was as easy to feed people properly. It loves brown bread, in; fact it will growl over a piece of brown bread the same way it growls over meat. One day some raw cabbage fellon the floor and the kitten pounced on it and carried it off to a • corner to enjoy at leisure. So since then it has been getting raw cabbage in its teflon, We eimareowsoressaiimoommare Lemon; Pudding , 1 tablespoon butter. 4tbl tablespoons sugar yolk 2 eggs.:. juice lemon . , rind of 1 lemon 1 cup milk, 2 egg whites Mix sugar; butter . and the beaten egg yolks. Beat well and add the lem- on juice and the'grated lemon rind. Add. milk and fold in the stiffly beat- en egg whites. Bake in . a buttered dish for 30 minutes in a moderate oven about 350 degrees. The top will be a delicate crust with a lemoti",eattoe underneath. Serve hot or cold, Per- sonally, I prefer it thoroughly chilled, Egg Lemonade 1 egg, 2 heaping tablespoons sug- ar, 2 tablespoons ,lemon juice, a cup water. Beat the egg and sugar. Add lemon juice and. water and stir until sugar is dissolved. This is a good drink to add calories as it .contains 250 of 'them. r I Wash Day is Easy Now Particularly if you have a modern Connor Elec- tric Washer in your Koine. No tearing of clothes. no back -break- ing work.. just fill the tub with hot water, drop in the clothes, turn a i hthework .s tc andI switch s Mode. fife C n isskkh Phone , 56. lli i[Cxill 1VC1 7 fiR rat4S, r. .. Mosquitoes In Wiggler Singe Die Wilesa Fed Oxygen Dabblers.. A. weak link in the mosquito's lite cycle that offers man, a new method, of fglr ing the pest fuse been forma at Cornell University, says an Assuciat- ed Press despatch. In the wiggler stage., where all mosquttoee creed, they can be killed by oxygen--orui- uarily the indispensable need of all living things. Discovery of this unexpected weak-, ness came from obsesving a woodland pool near Cornell, in which year af- ter year no mosquitoes bred. The mosquito -tree pool contained a graceful, bottom -growing water plant named chara, and the pest -in- fested pools contained, no ellen..Studying this plant, Dr. B;abt. Mathe- son professcar of entomology, and . EF. Tiininan found itgave off con- tinuously - tinuously minute bubbles of oxygen. Female mosquitoes appeared averse to laying eggs in the chara pool, and when they did so no wigglers develops ed. But if the ehara died or was removed naosgtaitoes flocked there and multiplied. This convinced the scientists that : the. oxygen bubbles were is 501/20 unexplained manner the • lethal substanee. • ; :They' set up a row of glass jars tilled with water?,, half of theiq con- nected to an oxygen tank and the other' half minim the eeirmection: Tn all the jars they placed loons on which wigglers thrive. ', They put fifty freshly hatched wig-, glerei into each, jar: In a few days those in. the eXygenlegs,1are emerged as mosquitoes; but every wiggler, died in the water fried 'With tiny oxygen bubbles. . Time after time'. the death rate from oxygen.; as 100 per eent. The bubbles were about .the ` same sine as those producedby chem. 'and the deaths resulted` in the same ;length of time as. in chara pools. Dr Matheson says,that the larvae, being •'-oradious eaters, : swallow ve e r thin r ncludin t Y g g he:osygen barb - bins. He has not determined why the oxygen kills, .but offals' -the theory that the excessive amount .has a de- leterious e- 1 .te •io. i e us e � ECN 'iii e � 0 st10n or p 0 � g , • that it affects Lilts fool 'supply'so the wigglers starve ' PR ci1ii1 Y GI1 EB.3.' Fortunes. 3sed to Make Things ti's ter for the "B•ittotir Dog." "It's i fine idea, but a great ,re- sponsibility. A great deal of good can be:. -done with this, scheme." This is .how the Piigrlar Trust, the gift of Bdward S. ,Harkness, an American millionaire, of a large sum; of money to be spent for the •benefit, of Great Britain, was' recently de- scribed b Lord- Macmillan; acmillan' one of' the trustees. The gift is said to be in the neigh-, borhood of $10,004,000.. and the trustees appointed by Mr. 'Harkness have complete discretion, within wide limits, as to how,:it is to be used. Mr.. Baldwin; the ex -Premier, is one of them, and Mr, Tom ,Tones, late Dep- uty -Secretary of the Cabinet, is sec- retary to the trust. • Just as America's great fortunes are, on the average, far larger than those of the Old. World, so American ideaa of generous giving have been on a much bigger scale than anything previously' known in world history. Andrew Carnegie set ' the page, both by the scale of his benefactions andhthe fact that hisphilanthropy was not conned within, the limits of America, but was . international in' scope. The. Carnegie trusts cover a wide field—they 'have established great chains of Tree libraries, helped ambitious youth to a university ea- reer,'rewarded.heroisrii in a practical way, provided concerts and other'' en tertainments for village folk, • and helped to make life fuller and richer for millions, Another pioneer of international philanthropy is Sohn D. Rockefeller, yebo ;,has endowed medical research on a seats hewer before eontemplated. To -day there are about 200 trusts created to administer gifts made by rich men for public purposes in the United States alone. These' trusts control something: like one billion doslars, • The• Pilgrim Trust st is by no recons the first of Mr. Harkness' benefac- tions. He has contributed generous- ly to the : Shakespeare Memorial Theatre Fund, aid other gifts made in the Old Country include ane or $500,000 to St. Andrew's .University: FARMERS' ,MERS' CLUTCHING. HAND. Sevens,' Hundred Cabbages 'Planted By New • Invention: . • Young Babbage plants received the surprise of their tender lives at the Middlesex County Council settlement at Denham, England, recently. Seven hundred were placed in a box upon a machie whichbegan to moveover a " prepared bed of earth, In a few minutes the whole seven hundred were neatly planted out in rows. At the front of the machine Is a miniature plougiislxare which digs a little furrow as it moves forward. A' moving belt carries the plants ono by one to the rim of a wheel. As each arrives there it is seized by two metal fingers. Next instant a mechanical clutohing hand comes down. It Melte up the plant, turns it right side up. pernmost, and . places it softly in the furrow. At the rear of the machine are two wheals set cbliquely, .These close up the sides of the furrow, bed- ding the plant firmly into position. During the tests, not only cab- bages, but c aulifowers. savoys, voys, brus- seis sprouts, and sballots were dealt with by the clutching hand. The ma- p . • china costs about... 200...,....... Mites and Miles of llt, The 'United -States has 261,700 miles of railway, Canada 40,400, Ger- many 3$,750, .British India 38,750, the Aerialist continent 88,550, Prance 33,200, Russia, 30,160,"Anetrarasia 26,150, the British ;tried 24,000, Bel- ,gtuna has the largest mileage in pro- portion to ]copulation, China the smallest.. Society' bf Wanton ]lilnglnea*srs. 13rltatn Is the Drily reentry in the 'World with rt soelety of Women en 1- naerroi thl2 hair at membership of 200, JII yff MXfa'II�X'�'ih7,s' IVI N'AaVC,F:- ZMJ OLD DOCTOR'S IDE, iS BIG HELP TO ELDERLY PEOPLE In 1885, Dr. Caldwell made a lis c4 . (.r for v f t w icm elderly 1Y leo [e th c world over praise him toclay'l Years of practice convtnced bier that many people were endangering '.heir health by a careless choice r;. laxatives, So lie began a search for a Harmless prescription • which would tae thoroughly effective; yet would neither gripe nor form any habit. At Last he found it. • Over and over he wrote it: when he found people bilious, headachy, out of sorts, _ weak or feverish; wilt coated tongue, bad breath, no appethe or energy. It relieved. the anon+ obstinate cases, and yet . was gent]! with • womgt!, children and elder', people. Today, this sante famous, effective prescription, known as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, is the world's Test ,opular laxative. It may be obtained "ions any drugstore THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON LESSON IVs -January 25 Jesus Tempted Luke 3: 21-4;.30 Golden Text. -In that he himself bath suffered h of er ed beingm tempted, he,.is able to 'succor ' them that are tempt- ed.—Heb. 2:18. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING. Time. --January and. February, A.D. 27. . Place. --The wilderness. of Judaea;• traditi n allY at Mount Quarantn ia, near Jericho. . THE PHYSICAL TEMPTATION. • And Jesus, •full'•'of the Holy :Spirit. 'Our Lord use now full of the Holy Spirit, n t a in that S dl a fulls � s 3' pes I c is led up to combat .with the enemy. Re- turned from the Jordan.' He went to the scene of John's long years 'of.'•re- !igious meditation in ;preparation for his preaching.. Aird was led in the spirit in the Wilderness, No one is safe, iii seeking' Dirt temptation;; but when the Spirit leads hifn into temp- tation for s c r t}i =c blessedn d of the e s Spirit, on, c may advance with serene confidence that he will be guided, protected and' empowered: ' During forty days; • We' mustbe on the outlook for Satan when we ane alone, in solitude, like Christ in the wilderness. No monastic or convent life can save us from the fierce as: saults of the devil. Stand clad in your fullest armour when alone.". Being tempted of the devil. Unmistakably, in ail its parts, the Bible testifies to, the personality of the prince of evil. And he did eat nothing in ,those days; and when they were completed, he hungered, - Our .Lord fasted because His mind was so engrossed in His conflict with temptation as to have no thought for food. 'At last, when the desire of food carne, was ,well nigh overpowering. And the devil said unto Hite, We are not told whether the devil ap- peared to Christ in bodily forte, or merely spoke to; Chri5t's mind. He was equally real iii either, case, and. his suggestions were equally urgent. If thou art the Son of God, Forty days before, our Lord had 'heard : His. .hltavenly Father' say; "Thou art my < beloved Son,„ , If that is true, Satan craftily says, insinuating a doubt. Perhaps the voice from the sky Was only a dream. We must remember that this account is a niece of auto- biography. "As there are no witness- es of this experience,' the record must be ultimately derived front Jesus Himself. He must have told His dis- ciples what He had' passed through, with the intention' bf warning then against a similar' danger.” Command this stone that it become bread. At the end in this long, exhausting strug- gle, be hungered. henfcaine the rug ;gestion at once to gratify his appetite and to prove His Divine sonsliip by. calling 'forth His supernatural ,pow- ers. It was a temptation to sacrifice obedience to personal comfort er gratification, wheth"er by atrticipating" the close of an appointed period of abstinence, or by claiming for person at relief" powers that were hxtended only for the purpose of His ministry.", We may get strength to resist alt the fleshly temptations by remembering how Christ resisted them, and carne off itiore than .conqueror. And Yeses answered 'time hitt, It is written, Otir Lord stet each temp- tatko with the Bible. Mart shell not r, 1 Thursday, January 224 1y31 live by bread alone, Sticlt faith -filled waiting upon God is always justified, as it was in this instance, for after thero temptations were ended,wasted angels A l �� r 0 AL ER, bronglxt food to Christ's 9i��11/ body (Ivlatt. '4;1,1). latnularg THE TE'MPTATIQN TO AM- SALE �y Limited AM- BITION, S 1 ORES, Limited And he led hire up. Matthew adds ,.unto an exceeding high mountain," the world in a moment of tinxe. Tide I ...,�.�..... And showed h�vim all the kingdoms of E SY O EY SAVING VALUE temptation was constantly' repeated O Annual January SALE q. during Christ's ministry'. The temp- M -- DURING OUR JANUARY SALE --- ter whispers, "You are to be the O omillame� Grea,t'Delvcrer. Take a lesson from f . Shop and Save the Walter Way me. And the devil said unto. hien, T thee will wv I give all this authorit andthe1 glory y of them.. That is, o the kingdoms. The devil is the "fat! er of lies." He knew well enoug that the kingdoms were not his t give, to Christ or any one else., •Fo it hath been delivered unto ;me; . an to whomsoever I will give it. In sense the world has been .delivere to Satan, not by God, but by world lings. The devil is "the prince of thi world," as Christ Himself called him (John 12:31, 14:30); but his powe is only temporary and precarious,h is a usurper and he whose right i is 'to rule will reign some day. If thou .therefore wilt worship be fore me. Prostrate thyself before rn in token of lsubmission and allegiance It shall all be thine. "A little thin may tempt a little heart. But in Jesu the tempter knows the King• -end h therefore is 'tempted with kingdoms Do you see the power of that.tempta tion? It was these very kingdom Christ` had come to win. Through service, and suffering, and blood, and death, every knee was to bow to Him and every tongue confess. Then comeshe t ,devil with his swift sug gestion. He throws himself into:line with Jesus'' hope. He whispers, to him that there is an easier way than Cal- vary for • winning the dominion on of the world." ' And Jesus answered and.. said. unto hint;• It 'is written. Matthew inserts Christ's" emphatic and indignant com- mand, repeated in later days to Peter under quite similar circumstances, "Get the behind rne, Satan".. (Matt. 4:10. 16:23 Thoushalt salt r5 ' v w o .1 n the P li. Lord :thy God, and Hina only shalt thou se'r've. Christ might have told tiie devil about His own great and all- inclusive kingdom of love, the king- dom that was and' is to he supreme, but he would not cast pearls before' swine. THE, TEMPTATION TO. WRONG a. ,METHODS.• Arid • he led him to Jerusalem, and set liim on the pinnacle of the: tem- ple. The .precise spot . is of . course not escertainable,,but a probable sug- gestion, is that Jesus was placed on the lofty ft Y Pora a which overhung the valley of Kidron, where the steep side of the valley was added to the height of the temple wall, and made a depth down which it was terrific to gaze. And, said unto Him. If thou are the Son of God.' :Another Satanic "if,"' another challenge to put the word of his Father to the test, Cast thyself down from 'hence. They are ,expect- ing one who can show such wonder - provoking signs from heaven as will compel universal recognition and the following of all the Jews. • For it is written. Satan, who is quick to take up any.' weapon, ard. use it for his evil purposes, now. graips Christ's weapon of the Bible, 'quoting Ps. 91:11. Y, • 'Reg.. N:t6598cI en ft COATS h 0 Amommamosomok can never be sure just wheat VO' makes en infant restless, but the retnedy can always be the same. Good old Castoriat There's comfort, In every drip 'of this pure vegetal.ie preparation, and not the slightest harm in its frequent use. As often as 13abyhaa a fretful spell, Is feverish, er cries and can't sleep, let Caster :t south :and quiet cl t him. SOSnetimes •i toueh,of colic. Sometimes eonstipe- t ion Or diarrhea -La condition' that should always be elieelted without delay, Jppust kee : Castoria handy, and .. give �t , pra►ttptly I:,eiiei': will. foltory Very: yy peel 1ptl y; it rt doesn't, you l l a p hyswcran.'' Reg. 1.19 Flannel 98c . 1.19 Qp Ila,antvy 98c• Reg 0 $leg. to 35c 21c Chintz Reg. 2:25 .98 ® Wool Bats O 11 Reg. 75c 59c Eiderdown 0 0 0 0 PRICE Your Choice of Any Coat in the Store at 1 Price �2 To, 2.50 VESTS 1.59 sem, Reg. to 1.50 95c HOSE To 2,50 1 59 Bloomers • Reg. to 25c 17c FLETTE Reg. 3.95 QQ Blankets 2• V lank s Reg. 29c 23c Gingha is LADIES' HAT Reg.to . 4 4.5 o � 19 Children's COATS PRICE %21.95 Girls HATSS Reg, to Reg. 1.98 1 ` +t9 Shirts u• To 2.00 • Pyjamas A tr 9 0 O O n O a rs n nO it Reg. 75c GLOVES' 591"' ads !'' eg. 1.�4 DRESSES llua Reg. 45c Kirsch rods33 1 Reg. 35c • 'Floor Mats25c '" Reg. 1.00 g I,:.:c - O To 1251.49 .251«49 GLOVES To 1.50 Qi Q �. B.'s Shirts a✓T(] Reg. 50c g 39c B.'•s Gloves PRICE Come Early As Our Stock Is Fast Being Sold • Out. 1 Reg.'. e. .9$ g o B. Baths- . 149 11 Reg. 98c 7 /9c Bowl. Sets, Reg. 89c goLI Platters `+v O � 0 • ER RES, --- LIMITED --- • He shall give his angels charge concerning thee, to guard thee. Sa- tan does not choose to give the rest of the line, "in all thy ways," because the psalmist's ways were God's ways, and it is only for those ways that God's protection is promised, And, On their hands they shall bear thee. up, Lest haply thou dash thy foot against a stone. The follow- ing verse,_ Ps. 91;12. =It is said. Once snore, and for the third time, our Lord quotes from Deuteronomy, this time from 6:16. Thou shalt not make trial of the Lord thy God.. Jesus worked many mite odes, but never to enhance his own popularity, or to create amazement;; only because: His loving heart im- pelled Him to aid suffering, human- ity, making manifest the love of ;His Father. And when the devil had completed everytemptation. to p on He had used every sort of temptation that could possib y appeal to Jesus. He departed from him for a season. Satan never gives up, and he renewed his attacks from time to time; but "this was a decisive struggle; he was thoroughly beaten back, and his power broken at its heart. • Corning Events Ontario Field Crop and Seed Grow- ers' Association annual meeting, Feb, 3, King Edward Hotel, •Toronto. Ontario Plowmen's Association an- nual. meeting, Feb: 4, King Edward Hotel, Toronto. ',Ontario' •Association of Fairs and Exhibitions annual convention, Feb. 5 and 6, King . Edward Hotel, Tor- onto. Ontario 'Vegetable Growers' Assoc- iation annual meeting, Feb.. 10; an- nual convention, Feb. 11, King Ed- ward Hotel, Toronto, , Ontario ario I•TorticulturalAssociation annual convention, Feb. 12 and 13, King Edward Hotel To t min ®rXVID1 MINIM RV �' IF1NQ Maitland Creamery CREAM THE Wanted Phone Prices. A, UNITED FARMERS! ERS! CO.OPERATIVE COIVIPANY, WIngbamy ort itt. Phone 271, J