Halton Hills Newspapers

Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), June 16, 1932, p. 7

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jrfv i w v ej to j- t- rl -a-t- rjtofre ifta ti nw kyy i ot noli jlv w life apart x woulft not seek a favored start ilnwtfo exacting raof jfeit ftlar common lot would share a wi my brethren do anadare v ot ttwwudnotstandupon a peak injoveleeseolitude r ho eminence would ever seek i wheruiosernay not intrude waojshare the attributes which be tm wrthrightoihumanity the acton free press faob sbvkn lot is all iask in irnaspukajak g sb the common fare vtle fconurujn task f2 t thecormifh prfcieiand goal- jjjhawtawlthfnwit and main gjlipapisii ejffcejlence atmhv 7ret7t4vwhiir years ago v ir- j v vfljhje iisto of the ijree frew of vr jnne 0 1918 v there- halve been light frosts again rthissreefc v- thjj entrance examinations began 1 yesterday with- principal stewart pre- atohiv strawberries were pick ei vvjeit to town oh tuesday si has been cleanec prepaeft tory besprinkling with oil messrs eorge agnew w g cvken- r ffirt j ftwm j camp niagara on friday- evening they v were playing in the 20th regiment band smr ralston brown ba left yester day morning for alberta where he was stationed at the tecent methodist con- ference at edmonton the epworth league held an outdoor we uid nature study on monday evening the members and their friends left the church at 630 and proceeded to v liynds bush miss minnie r holmes led in a study of the plants found in the woods and made it very interesting a seizes of outdoor games tbllowedand picnte refrebhments concluded the fen joy- able proceedings ij r makbied i abthwrblitmrjsaylat st andrews r manse rquleau on june 14 1012 by t- rev pm buchanan b a mr john r arthurs formerly of acton to miss agnea a- liindsay of avonlea sask- hmostontcoleiman at the resid- ence of the brfdes mother on june 18 1912 by rev ohaai d praper thomas the sunday school lesson for sunday june 19 i sophia daughter of the late joseph coleman acton mfil fireveni tnceritea kroat at the first symptomsof sore throat which i p ulceration a i take a spoonful of drthobias eolectrlc jjjiljacuuajittle sugar tptt to sate jt palatable ft will allay the irritation and prevent the ulceration and swelling that are so painful those who were periodically subject to quinsy have thus r inade themselves immune to attack jacob the aged father r iboiden texti bonor thy fathier and thy mother bjtodus 20 12 leoson text gen 417 2830 4v 7 atudyvoisb 1 tton 5 18 eph ft 19 xuke 2 4152 timelos fi c- placeuen route for- egypt and phataohs court ejrpcitionjt goes to egypt i7 v here we have the account of jacob going down intofegypt to enjojr the hos- puautirof ls long l9st son tbjstwas a- tremendous journey- for an old man to undertake but once again jacob receiv ed direct inftirnation that jehovah- was directing his affairs and sh his destiny as it seemed good fa his sight josephs father and brethren had come to egypt by pharaohs personal invita tion oh- 45 1619 but in spite of this joseph might have been tempted to have been ashamed of his father who was a plain countryman and his brethren who were not jan altogether reputable crowd in the niidstof the splendor of pharaohs court the greatness jf fala charapter jacob went out from tils presence but he did not wout from a greater pre sence that of the king of kings here again we see joseph as a feeding his biettrren and sustaining them lhltte in the midst of all dangers john 10 10 28 his heart was now satisfied he- had them with him and the great longing of our josephs heart is to havp usl with him in the place which he hasgone before to prepare for tiose inky fingers tioov he jacob was really the greater heb 7 4 one whom god has chosen not matter how bumble is greater than are you one of those unfortunate an earthly kind having blessedjeharaoti people who can never write with pen douglas egyptian liniment- relieves toothache and neuralgia invaluable in cases of croup sore throat and quinsy keep a bottle handy comes put in that he was not at all ashamed of them but brought them not only to egypt but into the very presence of ihe king ct ch 46 1 the story is told of the great archbishop tihotson that one-day- after he had attained his ecclesiastical honors an old man from tire country with uncouth manners called at lamyeth palace and asked tosee john tihotson the footman proceeded to turn the old man from the door with scorn when the archblshop caught sight of his visitor rushing to the door he brushed the jtoptman aside and folding the old man in his arms in fond em brace cried in delighted tones it is my beloved fatker au of us admire such exhibitions of filial love which over comes the cold conventionalities of the world for all that a man should- not look if or applause or credit merely for showing love to and for his father joseph was not ashamed of his father and pur joseph is not ashamed of us us john 14 2 3 17- 24 even -dur- and trees and on insects for the pig inghis absence we may have him with ui in a very real sense john 14 23 he ked his brethren on the fat of the land v 11 and so does our joseph us in nourishing his jtather he was law which was especially emphasized by jesus christ ex 20s j2 cf matt 15 46 1 tim 5 8 v the accompaniment everyone knows how much easier it is to keep moving to a lively tune than to trudgealong without any musio to keep e to- aideec lt has bee i w a iplginem fiom the uuttle and ink without getting the ink on angers jnquires a writer in the cape argus th6 industrious wrters of pastages carefully recprding for posterity mans acomnulatbg knowledge stained their fingers with ail manner of ourious inks the foluerblack stain on cinfingert nqjy- adayi isdue to an aniline dye made from coaltar but in the past man has called upon the fish in theiseawdh plants mehts to use in bis inks tha egyptian scrftie of 2000 b c writing with laborious care on this papyruj iwith a reedpeh used an inlf preipared fromvegetabie animal charcoal mlx- ahticlpatjngljthati portion qfuieimpklc eri withguin ahtj water these early sabkto- jthougnbmlghtabellbehebr10rli hqljir tfll capture and hive a swarm of bees a swarm of bees in may is worth a iq hay rr a swarm of bees in june is worth a silver spoon a swarm of bees in july is hot worth the a swarm of bees represents thework- ing force of a colony and therefore is a valuable thing to capture and hive esi pecuuy if it is a prime or first swarm and emerges early in the season when v a swaiin leaves its juve tn6 queen of the colony goes with it othepwise the wartrl soonreturns to itsfonner home and because of that- fact many bee- keepers follow the practice of clipping their queens wings before the swarming season starts in order to prevent the escape of swarms later in the season the same practice is followed in the experhnental apiary on the central ex perimental farm at ottawa and the fol lowing methods are used hi hiving any swarms when a queens wings are clip ped the hiving of a swarm is ah easy matter while the swarm is still in thefumathey were to be put dn positions they had stopped in the land of goshen because it was near joseph oh 45 10 andr becausethey woulfrthus be- separat ed ifrom unnecessary contact with the egyptians v 34andbecause of the superiority of the soil v 6 what a wonderful day for these shepherds when they were presehtetolhegreat pharaoh v 2 but a greater day is coming when our joseph shallpresent us fault less before the king of kings jude 24 joseph had anticipated pharaohs ques tion what is your occupation cf 46 33 34 joseph seems always to have planned things out before hand theirs was an occupa which god has greatly honored taking it as a figure o his own relation to his peop isa 40 10 11 ez 34 10 11 they went a little beyond josephs in- structions ch 46 34 even going so far as to definitely request that they might dwell in the land of goshehl their going to dwell dn egypt was a fulfument of prophecy ch 15 13 they came at a time of great heed v cf deut 26 5 j joseph not ashamed of his father 2830 7 pharaoh does not seem to have been much impressed with josephs breth ren there was nothing in them except for the fact that they were his to commend them to him except that fact and there is nothing in us to com mend us to god except the fact that we are qhrlsts brethren for josephs sake pharaph was ready to do the best he could for them not onry were they to dwell in the best of the land but if there were capable men among strated that soldiers will keep marking while the band continues to play who if the music should cease would fall by the wayside anything in- life is more easily done to the accompaniment of cheerful thoughts the grouch works hard and accomplishes little the achievements pf almost any person is in an inverse ratio to his long face the gloomier he looks the less he does itris not always possible to work to the music of a band though with the radiq andf talking machines that is hot so wild a fancy as it once would have seemed sffeu can always have cheerful hopeful thoughts to inspire your actions and your cheery face will serve as a sort of gauge by which the merest ontobker can estimate what you are likely- to ac complish much depends on the accom paniment x furnishings inks have proved to be temaricably per manent in cbaracter for there are manuscripts in the british museum which were written about the year 2500 b c and are still clearjy decipherable today these chinese whose writings date ifrom a very early period ah ink composed of- lampblack and glue with the curious addition of dried ox tongue wiiich they declared gave the ink a violet tint the omarr scholar inscribing his- parchment of goatskin wrote with an ink in which the main cploring con- if6w do you regard your mi3 takes most of us regard our mistakes as pits some of them are shallow although deep enough to trip us others are so deep that when we tumble in the chances notice to creditors in the matter of the estate of john heailek late of the township of nassagaweya in the county of halton farmer deceased time tables ataoxam are against our evqr getting out a xrrvmyptjtmi riren that 11 recent magazine quoted somebody as saying that bis mistakes have been schoolbbokfl and that he has learned from them helirly all he knows the consequences of a mistake are seldom pleasant it makes a lot pf differ ence however whether we regard the mistake as an unrelieved cata or as a hard lesson set down for pur mastery j v bam bog i go real kick out of kissing jane last night 7- r gog any more than usual- bbgjfltea the old man caught me creditors and others having claims against the estate of the said john heatley who died on or about the 13thday of may a d 1932 are requir ed on or before the 24th day of jurie a d 1932 to send by post prepaid or deliver td william stalkerjr r no 4 acton executor full particulars of their clalms and take notice that after such last mentioned bate the executor will not be liable for the assets of the said estate or any part thereof to any person of whose claim notice shall not then have been received by him v dated at gtjkkph this 2nd day of juneajcx1932 dunbar dunbart 32 douglas street guelph 503 solicitors for the said executor fish or squid the pigment is secreted by the cuttlefish in a sac or gland and is discharged whenever the fish isr- at tacked discoloring the surrounding water and providing a perfect cover for its retreat motor run by moonlight air search for the queen- in front of the hive entrance and when found place her majsniiar hor israger suiiedialely move the- old hive from its stand and in its place put a hew hive fitted with drawn combs or foundation the swarm will soon return and as the first bees enter the hew hive release the queen amongst them now put a queen excluder over the new hive and above it place the supers rom the old hiye the swarm will 1 then go to work as though nothing had happened all beekeepers do not clrp their queens wings and where this is not done the queen leaves with ttrfr swafm when the qiieen is with a swarm it usually clusters on some nearby objest for i ew hours and thus is easily cap tured first prepare a hive with drawn tomb- or foundation and then if the oblect oh which the swarm has clustered is moirablevlt can be carried to the hive and the bees shaken down in front of it hen they will quickly enter the hive if however the cluster cannot be car ded to the lilye carry- the hive to it and place it on the ground so that the entrance is beneath the swarm now sharply shake orhrush the bees down- in front of the moving the hive up eioaeto the fallen bees where they will won find the entrance and signal the otherjto follow them home of influence the if seems to have loomed rather large in pharaoljsmrnd and probawy- with- good- occasiort it- of egypt js before thee but god for christs sake says more than that to us 1 cor 3 22 ro8 28 phil 4 19 2 cor 98 the aged shepherd patriarch jacob must have seemed insignificant in comparison with the great pharaoh but in reality jacob was the greater of the two v 7 cf heb 77 jacob oon- iferred more upon pharaoh by his bless mg than pharaoh conferred upon him by opening the whole land to him for all his faults arid failures jacob was now a man who knew godj pharaoh asked jacob how many ate the days of thy life r v but jacob answered the days of the years of my pilgrim age- he had caught the truth that our earthly life is but a pilgrimage the bible men of god always walked in the consciousness of this truth 1 chroii 29 15 psl 39 12 11919 54 this truth permeates the new testament as well as the old 2 cor 5 tf heb 11 9 16 as tl4 1 peter 2 11 modem christians seem to have largely lost bight of this truth if christians more fully realized the pilgrim character of our present life they would not be so disturbed by rumors of war and fears of its havoc of pw1 3 20 21 r v we try to strike our roots very deeply nto this present itm and present age one hundred and thirty years seems to be a long life to us hut it is short indeed when it is done long only toy comparison with the average modern- life and short to jacob even by comparison with the lives of his ancestors cf ch 5 27 11 11 of eternity a vapor that soon yamsheth 24 25 25 7 8 35 2tf te longest life la but hahdbreadth on- the scale- away jas 4 14 p 90 312 ttiere are si few lessons that we today need look papa thore thahthat pftfeing tsughrtosbj wt yet ft half- box of cough number our days so that we may get jltiibjfc 1 us heart of wisdom ps 90 12 r sk 4 fiod yot extravagance i tell herman jvjt jacob blessed pharaoh thus show vto go out and get his feet wet correct m deacon perkins interrupting sermon pahson ah wishes yo would give us de dejbnitron of perseverence ptfytm joneshsrudders and teter deacott perkins done axed me to define p- persewrence it means fustly to take i- r holid secondly to hold- on ffiudly and- lastly tpneber leave go v i-lii- try it again ju was a generous thing to 6ay the land ly be seeded to grass for hay or pas it is worth while expending a little care when arranging a joom for its appearance can be so easily marred by nonattention to quite small points hyon possiblycan sefr fur niture is neither- too large nor too small for the room in proportion to its size also if you can arrange for the furnt- ture to be of one kind and period so much the better so often the effect is spoiled by the addition of one solitary chair or otherodd piece of furniture else in the room says an authority other mixtures can easily be avoided by distributing ones belongings to other partsof the house whensuch removal would mean im so many possessions look well when in their ap propriate setting while their appear ance and value are belittled otherwise a room can be ruined by the injudicious mixture of china with copper ornaments rich hangings with those of a much cheaper quality or pictures with both plain wood and heavy gilt frames- pictures look much better when they are uniform as regards type and fram ing water colors and etchings when hung side by side lose- their effect the beauty of each being entirely spoiled by the proximity of the other pictures containing a wealth of detail or rich coloring should be placed in a good light among the most curious motors ever invented is one devised by a r ben nett and intended for delicate experi ments in heat measurement it is so sensitive that it begins to revolve the moment it is exposed to daylight even when the suri is hidden and in clear weather it will work at night aven throughout the night being affected by the radiant heat of moonlight the motive power is due to convection cur rents set up inside- the glass shade with which the instrument is covered while the glass is not warmed by the radiant heat of7dallght or moohllghtpasjslng through it the metal surfaces of- tho motor are and the minute differences of temperature thus produced suffice to start convection currents grass helps kill weeds weeds are an iever present problem on the farm and they are one to which the dominion seed branch gives very special attention here is a suggestion which will help in their control lands foul with some kinds of weeds particularly annuals may advantageous- lng that for all pharaohs exalted posl- ture the cultivation of hoed crops be comes too expensive for labor wheri the soil is polluted with weed seeds grain crops may also be unprofitable because of weeds and they afford an opportunity for the weeds to increase seeding to grass 1 and cutting the hay crops early will prevent most kinds of weeds from number of seeds and the number of ripening more than a relatively small vital weed seeds in the subsurface soil will rapidly decrease froiji year to year if perennial weeds are also prevalent it would be well to pasture with sheep and mow the roughage closely each year before the spring growth has former seeds the need of training do not imagine that a gift fpr a certain kind of work precludes the neccs- city of training sometimes- young children show an extraordinary gift for music but unless they are willing to submit to a gruelling course of training they will never be heard from in the musical world a gift for a special work is a great- help and so is a- liking for it but neither will take the place of train ing a prominent literary woman receives every year hundreds of letters from literary aspirants asking for advice and assistance and she says that a large proportion of them have never taken the trouble to learn to spell they are typical oft great numbers of young people who want success without preparing for it they are ambitious to skip drudgery to reach their goal by a short out that avoids everything hard qf course this is not posslblptaste and- talent are iielpless without training i know an artist that painted a cob web so real a maid spent an hour trying to get it down sorry but i dont believe you why not artists have been known to do such things yes but not maids nadian nationalr 1 100 1 ootai bart jjauy except sunday dally amfjo dauy except sunday aispjn sunday- only 00pml the chicago flier that passes through here at 930 eastbound stops sjt george town at 942 p m 7- l going wert daily except sunday dally except sunday daily except sunday daily except sunday sunday only sunday only 740 ajn 908 1 338 pjn 640 pun 845 ajit lojsfpjn in what sort bf syllable ought a par rot to speak t inpouysulyrbuls ikce the annual vacation has become a definite pari of modem lite the decision as to where it wiu be spent is of considerable import ance canada has a par ticular appeal to the vaca tionist for it has r ah tmusuaj variety of abtraotione which may be enjoyed at reasonable cost recreation areas easily j reached for most people the timmer vacation is limited to a few weeks and is really shortened by the time used in travelling to and from the locality selected oahada has ah extensive system of good roaxte and excelent railway services which greatly facilitat travel besween pronnoeb l if- uyj stimfeif ki- m c vumisq attractions cover wide vrrange canada presents astriking diver sity of natural features the rugged ami picturesque atlantic coast the st lawrence rjver ahdgreat lakes the workls greatest inland water way- the lauwmtiian mountains land of forest and stream the prairies the majestic rockies and the beautiful pacific coast each of these areas has its dvfn attrac tions of scenic beauty and- oppor tunities for enjoyable recreation fishing bunting camping canoe ing and- mountainrcwwrng uay aoyed-tinderdew7xondi- tione white gdlf and tenms rhay be pfiyedpieucbriy everywhere ao coiramodiatiori inckides everything from cahp ate to luxurious hotel those to whom economy is matter of concern may spend pleasant vacation close to nature at surprisingly small cost travel information gladly furnished the national development bureau department of- the interior at ottawa has preipared a series of automobile road hiaps showing the main routes from one province to another also a number of in teresting booklets including vaca tions in canada which describe the- tourist- attractions -ca- eaxilj- jrdvipioe these will be sent to any b pur readoro plannong a vaoa tion apdkcarjto ahokid state the areas m which they are interested- all pjjrsons having claim against the estate of the late edwin atkin son who died on or about the 18th day of march 1932 at the township of erin are required to send to the under signed solicitor on or- before the sqth day of jurie 1932 full particulars of their claims and take notice that after ihe 30th day of june 1933 the administra tor will proceed to distribute the assets of the said estate having regard only to the claims of which he shall then have had notice apd that he will not be liable td any person of whose claim he shall not then have received notice for the assets so distributed or any part there dated at acton this 31st day of may v v 1933 1 kenneth m langdon solicitor for lewis edwin atkinson 493 his administrator ns a for all mngaziim at tw free pwaa qfyt f- smsmmmmmi x mm

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