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The Wingham Advance Times, 1932-04-07, Page 7Thursda, April 7th, 193 • se # e g 1,4,4 ka e'gura, .4rov TEA "Fresh From the Gardens" llllllll 11111 lllllll lllll 111111t111111111111111.111 llll NEWS of the DISTRICT Kutz, aged 22, of Mild- may, had both feet severed when he fell under a fast Canadian National freight train at the Barrie station last Thursday afternoon, when he attended to climb onto a Car, loaded with stone. His brother, Edward, aged 21, and Henry Weber, aged 24, also of Mildmay, etnable to catch the train, saw their companion fall under its wheels. other returning the he had not Cashed, now confronts the outcome will create checieeS which A new problem council and the further interest. Mildmay Youth Has Feet Cut Off .Dungannon Boy .Awarded Parchment • In the announcement of awarded for bravery, by the Board of Gov- •-ernors of the Royal Canadian Flu - Inane Society, Benson Park, Dun- gannon, was awarded a parchment certificate. Wallace Farmer Drowned When the left front wheel of a 'tuggy came off causing the horse to 'bolt and jump over an eight -foot embankment, Orlando Pike, 43 • years old, Wallace Township farm- er, and a man named Small, were -thrown in the swollen waters of .the Ifaitland river. Small was catapult- ed from the buggy into the river, .and succeeded in scrambling to the shorei The horse dragged the bul- gy downstream about 50 yeards and -then got on shore and went back to its stable. Small called to his com- panion but received no answer, and it is believed he was carried down- ' stream by the fast waters and was -,drowned, Dear Little Deer! There are three nice deer on the farm of Mr. Carl Pennington, feed- ing off his wheat fields. Nice, dear little deer are too dear to keep at • that job, and Mr. Pennington will be obliged to the trio if they will just kindly 'move on. — Teeswater • News. Suit Against Hospital According to last Thursday's Dun's Bulletin, Mrs., Mary C. Hop- kins of Glenelg has issued a writ aga.inst the Durham Red Cross Memorial Hospital, claiming: the sum of $20,000 damagefor injuries received by her husband, the late Mr. George Hopkins, the' result of :which he passed away. It is a su- preme court action. — Durham Chronicle. Council Cannot Force P. U. C. To Return Salary A. startling turn of events has taken place with regard to the pay- 'ment of salaries to the members of the Kincardine Public Utilities, -which is, according to legal advice emanating from the Ontario Hy- clro-Electric Commission's Office at Toronto, that the Kincardine Corm - has no power to either suspend payment of salaries or enforce sal- aries already paid to be returned to the local fp: U. C. Two men have already refunded what they receiv- ed, one with 6% interest, and the Fire Destroys Dwelling In Bruce Township Kincardine\ — The residence of John Bentley, concession 8, Bruce Township, was totally destroyed by fire last week. After starting' a fire. in his stove, Mr, Bentley went out to the barn to do his chores. On his return he found the kitchen a Mass of flames and there was no opportunity of extinguishing the blaze, which spread rapidly, des- tioying house and , contents, The exact loss is not known. Fishing Time During the past week the fish. tugs ,at the harbor have been break- ing the ice . in an .endeavor to reach their nets forty-five miles out; in the lake, With favorable weather a haul of fish should be due this week.—Kincardine News. • New .Industry for Listowel Mayor Creighton, of Listowel, announced this week that a weaving industry, manufacturing • cloth for men and women's clothing will oc- cupy the plant formerly used by the Clark Metals. dpera.tions are ex- pected to start within a week or two and will 'employ' to start about 15 or 20 hands. Eats 42 Eggs to Win Wager Kincardine A recent wager between Earl Avery and Watson Moulton was hard on the egg sup-. ply. These men had a bet as' to which could do away with the greater number of eggs in one day. In the ensuing battle Mr. Avery did away with three dozen, while Mr. Moulton consumed six more. Tug Sinks in Harbor Goderich — Battered by . chunks of ice, the tug H. B. Phillips of the C. S. Boone Construction Company of Toronto, sank last week at her berth in the harbor here. The Phil- lips was built in 1880 and, is a wooden boati, Public School Overcrowded At Brussels .Owing to the overcrowding of Public School, it had been decided •91.••=41111k • NIUNINIIIIIIImmitunimusunmaistammuNnainwollommunfflus11111111111ININ = 1 COUNTER CHECK KS GUMMED SEALING TAPE • 'A representative of this!office will .be glad to call on you with Samples and Price List. • THE ADVA.NcE7TIMES TELEP34 ithoilamingimiumiontillillIIIIIIIIIN1111111111111011101111011111111N11111111111111111111111111ocomoota ,101, 00 • The Advance - Times has recently pi been appointed agent in this •district@ for anexceptionally fine line of COUNTER CHECK BOOKS —and - 1, 1 THE WINGHAM ADVANCE -TIMES not to admit any pubils after Eas- ter this year. Howeverthe Board reconsidered this decision and will admit any child from:Six andone- hall to, seven years .of age. , • 2000 Chicks Lost in Fire at Harriston • An overheated , brooder at Zeig- ler's poultry farm, HArrisfpn,. CUUS- ed -one ofhis brood houses .to burn destroying the building and 2000 chicks, Nearby building § were sav- ed with difficulty; The dainage is estimated at $350, ITHE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON tni11.1100.11.13111M0114111:11.0.11111t114111.1.11@•1141163,1.0141.11.111:41.1.1.11.14.0.4. LESSON 11—April 10 Flow Sin Begins.—Gen, 2: 15-17; 3: 1-8. GOLDEN TEXT.—Watch and pray, that ye enter not into tempta- tion.—Matt. 26:41. THE LESSON IN .ITS SETTING. Time.—The Bible does not say when man was created, and the geologists are greatly at variance in regard to the time when the hu- man race appeared. on the earth, ex- cept that they all agree with the Bible that it was long alter 'the intro- duction of the other forms of life. • Place.—Somewhere in Asia, and probably in the Babylonian Plain. FORBIDDEN FRUIT. And put man into the .garden of Eden, to dress it and to keep it. To dress it,1 that is to culvate the soi tend and prune the trees; to keep it that is to defend it from depredation by animals, or from the evils aris- ing from unchecked luxuriance. ' And Jehovah God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely: 'eat. Too often we foolishly and wickedly fix our desire on the one thing forbid- den. But the tree of knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not of it'A God wished man to trust and obey Him, and live in fullest union with Him; and there can be no obedience without a law, and no trust without peril. For in the day that thou eat - est thereof ,thou shalt surely die. The death which will come upon man if he disobeys the command of God is physical death, of course, but also and essentially it is spirit- ual death. THE TEMPTATION. Now the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field which Jchpvah God had made. The flowers in the garden May "keep on bloom- ing. The fruit may ripen and the river sing its song. But if sin' is in the heart, happiness is dead. And He said unto the woman, Yea hath God said, Ye shall not eat of any tree ' of the garden? The devil being 'always a deceiver, misrepre- sents God. And the woman, said unto the ser- pent, Of the .fnuit of the trees of the garden. we may eat. Yet the tenor of the reptile's interrogation was fitted to excite alarm; and if, as some conjecture, site understood that satan was the speaker; . she should. at once have taken flight; while, .if she know nothing of hirn or his disposition, she should not have opened hereelf so freely to a person unknown. But of the fruit of the. tree which is in the midst of the garden. In the tree of life also is described as being in the midst of the garden. erhaps they 'were side by side, od hath said, Ye shall not eat of , neither shall ye touchit; lest ye ie. The woman had corrected the erpent's misrepresentation, but mild not refrain from a slight ex7' ggeration on her own accaunt. And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die. After he had aroused the suspicion in :Eve"S mind as to whether 'God had spoken at all, then he goes a Step further, and says, "Ye shall not surely art • this is the first lie in the Bible • ' For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye :shall be as God, knowing good and evil. The microbe of our Misery will be found Within the four . eotners • :of this Scripture: God said, "Bat net," The serpent said, ''Eat." And man ate!— and the tipward progress of the race was arrested at that point. SIN AND ITS RESULTS And when the ,woman saw that the tree was , good for food, and that it was ": a delight to, the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise. Out great security against sip, says J. H. 'Newman, lies in; being shocked at it, But when we allow our mind to hover about Jhe forbidden thing and our .imagination to picture it until we gm* accust- omed to the thought of it, we, are breaking down first and Strongest safe -guard against evil.. Resist the eneiny, at the very gate, on his first G it d SHE RADIATES PEP The peppiest co -cd at the Univer- sity of Iowa is the title on the crown won by Miss Ruth Rodaniar at •the pep jamboree of the school. She is shown here flashing the smile that won her the .honor, knocking (a Kempis). Afterwards it may be too late. She took of the fruit thereof, .and did eat, Her sin did not begin with the deed, but With the desire back of the deed— when 'she began to choose her own way in preference to God's:, And she gave also unto her husband with her and. he did eat. Like all sinners, who seek to involve as many as possible with them in their sin, Eve's uneasy conscience impelled her to involve Adam with her in her guilt. And the eyes of 'them both were opened. Their eyes were opened be- fore—opened to loveliness, opened to wisdom, opened to all the joys of life, opened to God. Now their eyes were opened, to' shame, to misery to sin, to satan! And they knew that they were naked and they sewed fig - leaves together, and made them- selves .aprons. The form in which the knowledge of good and evil comes to us is the knowing we are naked, the consciousness that we are stiipped of all that made us walk unabashed before God and men, The promise of the serpent while broken in the sense is fulfilled to the ear. And they heard the voice (Margin, sound) of Jehovah. God walking in the garden in the cool of the day. Though our first parents when they sinned lost so ,much, they did not lose this— the voice of God was in their ears, haunting the garden and haunting their lives, All the old in- timacy was over. Man was a child no loger; and God was changed and far away and fearful. Still, far as he had .fallen from his place in the div- ine friendship, man was not beyond the sound of the divine voice. And the man and his wife hid themselve:,; from'. the presence of Jehovah God amongst the trees of the garden. We have done wrong. But it is impos- sible to hide from God anyway, be- cause He sees us everywhere. FARM NEWS AND VIEWS There are son -1C points in the handling of hatching eggs which may appro- priately be referred to at this time, Too much care can not be exercised in culling- eggs which are intended for hatching use. A inetal bucket should not be used becaused the slightest contact with a hard surface may cause a check' or crack in the Straw or burlap gives protect- ion There shonld be plenty of nests available to the hens, froni 12 to 15 nests per 100 birds, When culled, hatching eggsshould be kept in a cool room, they should not be kept too warm, germ groth starts at a temperature of 69 degrees( and the room in which the eggs are kept un- til delivered to the hatchery should not be more than -50 to 60 degrees. Eggs should be delivered to the hat- chery as soon after they are collected as possible. Getting More Milk The current issue of the dairy News Letter issued by the Dominion Dairy and Cold Storage Branch con- tains an interesting reference to the growth which has taken place in dairy herds and milk production throtighout Canada since 1900. In that year Canadian dairy cattle num- bered 2,292,120 head and showed a total milk production of 6,864,909,400 lbs., an average of 2,996 lbs. perl5 clobw s. with a butter -fat content of o In 1929 the total number of cows was 8,684,766, giving a total produc- tion in milk of 14,349, 023, 000 lbs, an average of, 3,894 lbs. per cow, with a butter -fat content average of 136 lbs. Live Stock Registrations The annual. report of the federal Minister of Agriculture contains an interesting reference to the number of certificates of registration issued fcr pure-bred live stock duriag the period covered by the report. It shows that registration certificates issued for 951 horses, of which 249 were thoroughbred, 293 Clydesdales, 164 Percherons, and 135 standard bred. A total of 19,222 registrations wer certified for cattle,the Shorthorn breed leading with 6;087, Ayrshires totalled 4,780, Jerseys 3,440, and Herefords 2,673. A total of 10,617 certificates' were issued for sheep, and 6,781 for swine. The other four groups under national live stock re- gistration include poultry, with a total of 1,608; foxes 88,390; dogs to the number of 4,158; and 39 goats. A Problem With Chicks One of the big poblems in con- nection with raising chicks is canni- balism, when chicks pick at the feathers and flesh of their mates. Recent studies indicate that this is more likely to occure where the chicks in brooders are exposed to direct sunlight( Direct rays of the sun should not be allowed to come into the room in which the chicks are carried in brooders. Artifical lighting is proving satisfactory and it should be so arranged as to cast no shadows. Ventilation is import- ant, and provision should be made for the cold air to come in at the Published by direction of Hon. top through an opening near the Robt. Weir, Minister of Agri- ceiling, but care must be taken to culture, Ottawa, 1931 deflect this cold air so that it will be properly heated before coming in contact with the chicks. Care of Hatching Eggs This is the time of the year when the farmer with a good poultry flock finds hatching eggs in big demand. The cost of transportation is an important factor determining the profitable source through which special crops can be distributed according to the report just received by the Department of Agriculture at Ottawa. Taking the early carrot as an instance, Eastern Canada irn- Ports its supply very largely from Texas and the British West Indies, The situation . is reversed with res- pect to the Pacific Coast area where British Columbia growers export considerable quantities of this vege- table to the Pacific sections of the United States, It Works Both Ways COMFORT for COLICKY BABIES ... THROUGH CASTORIA'4 GENTLE REGULATION The best way to prevent colic, doctors say, is to avoidgas in stomach and bowels by keeping the entire intestinal tract open, free from waste. But remember this; a tiny baby's tender little organs cannot stand harsh treatment. They must be gently. urged. This is just the time Castoria can help most. Castoria, you know, is Made specially for babies and children, It is a pure vegetable preparation, perfectly harmless. It Contains no harsh drugs, no narcotics. £'or years it has helped mothers through trying times with colicky. babies And childan suffering with digestive upsets, colds and fever. Keep genuine Castoria on band, with the name.: eZ)401.; CASTORIA t 1-111.DR StNa CRY fOR IT • Travelling Farm Schools Since their inception in 1928 spec- ially equipped agriculture trains, wh- ich are virtually travelling agricult- ural schools, have had a recorded at- tendance of 134,000 farmers. In the operation of these trains, the Ca.nad- inn National Railways, the various provincial governments, and the Ex- perimental Farms Branch of the fed- eral Department of Agriculttire have .co -Operated. They have proven to be of considerable assistance to farmers in respect to increasing the product- ivity of the soil, better breeding, and greater efficiency in the feeding and mangement of the stoek, in extend-. ing appreciation of .the use of clean eed, and deficiency' in the mange- ment of field crops and other farm activities. Dirty Seed A Menace "Dirty seed" is 'defined by the Do- minion Seed Branch as meaning seed that contains noxious weed seeds hi Isuch (inanity as to pollute the land 4,v1th weeds that, are difficult and cos- PAGE SEVEN t ,maiitianclCreamerX 1 r 3 IS N tt 4 E (Iva ce rice 10c 4 4 Call For Particulars THE UNITED Wingh FARMERS' CO-OPERATIVE C I MPANY, LIMITEDPh . g 9 i271 61114111°° '1:01 AMMMOMMIIMMINEM ti • 1 tly to eradicate. One of the principle tion to the facilities available through mediums for the distribution of we- the Seed Inspection Service in this ed seeds in Canada is dirty seed, be- respect. In every district where clo- cause of the fact that most of the ver and grass speds are grown is lo - noxious weeds have seeds of about cated a Seed Branch inspector, who inspects seed offered for sale for seed purposes, and who furnishes in.- founation relating to the cleaning and grading of the seed. Seed that is submitted for inspection should be properly cleaned to remove weed seeds and dirt before it is submitted for grading. This may be done eith- er through the local power cleaning plant or, where such facility is not available, by the use of the hand mill or the farm, which, when it is equipped with suitable screens, will do the work reasonably well. the setae size and shape as the seeds of clovers and grasses, and hence are difficult to remove. This reason alone should be sufficiently import- ant with the intelligent farmer to en- sure the preference which is due it for inspected seed. Room For Expansion A statement just issued by the Do- minion Live Stock Branch with 'res- pect to testing and production of da- iry cows is of special interest at this time. It shows that there is in the whole of Canada a total of 63,336, cows out of an agpegate of 3,683, or only 1.72 per cent, now under officail First -Run Sap Is Best One of the peculiarities of maple test. Cow testing in Ontario,. Sask- products is the fact that syrup, su- atchewan, and British Columbia is gar, or maple cream made from the now carried out under the supervis- first -run sap is always the best. ion of the provincial Departments of Some of the reasons advanced for Agriculture, while in the other six for this are that the first -run of sap Provinces the federal Department is is practically pure water and suc- earring out the worko. There are at rose, while each succeeding run' the present tune a ' total of 447 g5- finds a larger percentage of carbon- sociations in the several provinces ic acid gas absorbed through the of growing bud and leaf surface, with a direct effect on sap elaboration. It is also claimed, that utensils for, ga- rieemfand Is Growing for branded thering the sap and for "boiling Be down" are in much batter condition It is a well recognized principle of at the start of the season than they retail merchandising that the cliscrim- are later on when sugar 'sediment inating housewife prefers quality in gathers at the bottom of the ;boiler everything she buys. This fact is ag- or evaporator and when ace:amnia- ain borne out by the increased de- tions of sugar begin to carbonize nand for branded beef, which is qu- from the heat of evaporation there- ite general throughout the Dominion. by giving a darker colour and a A report just issued by the Cattle stronger flavour. Each succeeding Division of the Dominion Live Stock run of sap does give a stronger fla- Branch shows that in February to- vour to the product and also a dark - tailed 1,549,558 lbs. of beef graded er colour. This is the reason for the engaged in earring out this form activity. in accordance with gm-el-in:fent stan- 1 grades in maple products as provid- dards and bearing the official brand l'ed under the Maple Products "Indus - marks in red and blue. itry Act. The fotir grades are "Can - It is, also interesting to note that ada Fancy," "Canada Light," "Can - practically all the better class butch- lade Medium," and "Canada Dark." beef in their ineat dep- er shops and retail stores are featur- ing branded - Parent: "My son has so many artments as a quality feature in at- 1 original ideas, tracting trade to the store. niTeacher: "Yea, especially in arith-. Buy Inspected Seed On account of the importance •of Grace: "Meer you and your wife the control and eradication of weeds had some words." on Canadian farms the Dominion . Jack: "I still have mine; Ididn't Seed Branch calls particular atten- I have a chance to- use them." sallIII•111=11[11IMNIBIA1111110 BULLET-PROOF VESTS FOR JAPANESE • • kr XEEPING THE IVIANUBACTURER BUSY N TOXIO Photographs of 'workers making1Miystitaro Honda, claims the vests bullct-preof vests or cuirrasscs in can turn a pistol bullet fired. at close Tokio, Japan, where the prevalence range. A number of these vests were af assassinations has created a big used by Japanese soldiers in the to - demand for them, The inventor, Dr, tent Sino-Japanese conflict,