Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Orono Weekly Times, 17 Nov 1938, p. 3

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Bagging Moose Popular Sport Many of the Animals Are Shot for the Head Alone â€" Beware of Waste Bagging moose is an extremely popular sport with big* game hun- ters in Ontario and Quebec prov- inces. The main purpose, aside from the adventure of stalking this largest member of the deer family, is to secure a magnificent- ly antlered head for a trophy. Meat for the table, of course, is another incentive for hunting the American elk or moose.. In the taking of any big game animal, waste of any sort should he guarded against. Look before you shoot to make certain it is the legal sox (and also that the object is not a human being instead of an animal), and do not waste good meat, the hide, or the feet. The head, hide, and feet, if in clean and unscarred condition, should be mounted by an expert taxidermist as prized hunting mementos. A sportsman is entitled to take one bull moose not less than one year old in restricted sections or zones of Ontario and Quebec. Consult Provincial game laws to determine these hunting zones. His Teeth Don’t “Hiss” Ned Sparks, dead-pan movie comedian, is a native of St. Thomas, Ontario. One set of false teeth was not enough for him. He had to have two! The actor ex- plained that the second set was necessary to eliminate a slight “s-s-s-s” hissing sound when he used the letter “s” over the mo- tion picture microphone. He set the cost of the teeth at $3,500 when he protested before the United States board of tax ap- peals that he should be allowed deductions from his income tax returns for cost of the two sets of false teeth. The government charged Sparks is deficient $8,187 in his income tax bills from 1934 to 1936. Claims Timber Being Wasted Canada is Going to Suffer Thereby, Declares Director of Royal Ontario Museum of i'oology v Canada’s timber wealth has been handled so wastefully that the people arc “coming well with- in sight of the.end,” Dr. J. R. Dy- mond, director of the Royal On- tario Museum of Zoology, Toron- to, said in an address at New York last week. “As active competitors in the lumber markets of the world,” Dr. Dymond said, “some prophesy that at the present rate of consumption and destruction, Douglas fir will be out of the picture in 15 years and white pine in three. Worried About Ten Years Hence. "Recently the statement was made that many pulp and paper men today admit that, 10 years hence, they definitely will be wor- ried about their sources of wood supply.” Dr. Dymond, speaking on Cana- dian conservation problems, said one of the biggest such problems at present is to bring about adop- tion of a forest policy that will ensure adequate timber and other forest products on a sustained yield basis. At the same time, this policy must take Care of the other functions of a forest, providing a home for wild life, regulating stream flow and supply a place for recreation. A cabinet maker of Sarajevo, Yugoslavia, has invented a cradle which whispers soothingly and rocks automatically. Collingwocd’s Caveman Alfred Staples, 68-year-old back- to-nature advocate of Colling- wood, Ontario, who in the coldest days of winter swims in the icy waters of Georgian Bay, has for- saken his cave for a third ven- ture in matrimony. Sunday School Lesson LESSON VIII THE SACREDNESS OF THE HOME Exodus 20: 14; Matthew 5: 27-30; Mark 10: 2-16 ; Ephesians 5: 22-23 Printed Text Exodus 20: 14; Matthew 5: 27/28; Mark 10: 2-16 Golden Text Keep thyself pure. I Tim. 5: 22. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time. â€". The Ten Command- ments were given in 1498 B.C. The Sermon on the Mount was de- livered in the summer of A.D. 28. The words recorded from Mark were spoken by our Lord in Feb- ruary or March, A.D. 30; the epis- tle to the Ephesians, was written by Paul probably, in A.D. 64. Place. â€" The Ten Command- ments were given from Mount Sin- ai. The mountain from which the Sermon on the Mount was given cannot he exactly identified. The words taken from Mark were spoken in Peraea. Ephesus was in the . province of Asia, on the eastern shore of the Aegean Sea. 14. Thou shalt not commit adultery. See also Deut. 5: 21; the entire eighteenth chapter of the book of Leviticus; Job 31: 9- 12; and a great many, passages in the book of Proverbs, especially* chapter seven. While the Bible does not explicitly define these various terms, we are properly justified in saying that adultery is a crime possible only when one .or the other person is married. True Marriage Now, marriage involves, and true marriage rests upon and pre- supposes, the union of two person- alities, the husband and the wife, because of love for each other, not only a physical union, but a union of mind and spirit as well, so that we may speak of marriage as the true completion and fulfill- ment of human life; and, by God’s ordaining in our creation, two be- come one. But when that cord of love which God ordained should be between two people, one hus- band and one wife, has been brok- en, purity has gone, and the foun- dation of domestic and pational life Crumbles. Matt. 27-30. 27. Ye have heard that it was said, Thou shalt not commit adultery: 28. but I say unto you, that every one that looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart. It is through the eye primarily that passion enters; but if the eye be turned away, and the moral purity of the heart expel the intruding movement toward sin, then the law is not broken ; on the contrary, it is kept. Regarding Divorce Mark 10: 2-12. 2. And there came unto him Pharisees, and ask- ed him, Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife? trying him. The question of divorce is dis- cussed in the New Testament ' in Matt. 5: 31, 32; 19: 3-11; and summarily in Luke 16: 18. The attitude toward divorce at the time of our Lord v/as, an exceed- ingly loose and careless one. 3. And he answered and said unto them, What did Moses com- mand you? 4. And they said, Moses suffered to write' a bill of divorcement, and to put her away. 5. But Jesus said unto them, For your hardness of heart he wrote you this commandment. The ref- erence here is to Deut. 24: 1-3. The Lord does not deny that Moses permitted divorce; Com- mand it, he did not. 6. But from the beginning of the creation, Male and female made he them. 7. For this cause shall a man leave Ms father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife; 8. and the two shall become one flesh: so that they are no more two, but one flesh. 9. What therefore God hath joined togeth- er, let no man put asunder. Our Lord here teaches that marriage is a divine institution, the earliest of all social relationships, the very foundation of all society, and that every: marriage, even though God is not recognized, if it be a true marriage, is a union approved by God and sealed by God, and no man has a right to break this union. 10. And in the house the dis- ciples asked him again of this mat- ter. 11. And he saith unto them, Whosoever shall put away his wife, and marry another, comtr.it- teth adultery against her: 12. and if she herself shall put away her husband, and marry another, she committeth adultery. At all periods of the history of Christian teaching differences of opinion have existed within the church as to the practical application of Jesus’ words concerning adultery, divorce, and remarriage. Mark 10: 13-16. And they were bringing unto him little children, that he should touch them: and the disciples rebuked them, 14. But when Jesus saw it, he was moved with indigation, and said unto them, Suffer the little chil- dren to come unto me; forbid them not: for to such belongeth the kingdom of God. 15. Verily I say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child, he shall in no wise enter therein, 16. And he took them in his arms, and blessed them, laying- his hands upon them. All Christ's servants must be as dependent and as trustful as chil- dren are. A 189-lb. tusk, !> ft. 9 in. long, largest elephant’s tusk ever ob- tained in Kenya, was taken to Mombasa recently. Death Threat A Kansas City mother of a 12-year-old boy received this letter: “If you don’t treat your son better, he’ll go away and be returned to you in a bas- ket.” Detective Edward Hayes traced the threat to an 11-year- old blonde, with whom the boy had been forbidden to go roller skating. Are You Listening? By FREDDIE TEE HONOR WAR DEAD The unsung heroes of the World War, the soldiers out of uniform, were honored on the Dan Harding’s Wife program on Armistice Day, Friday, November 11, at 12.00 noon. EST, over the NBC-Red Network. This tribute, given on the program last, year, was repeated as a result of thousands of requests. Dan "Harding’s Wife (Isabel Randolph) tells her twin children, Donna and Dean (Loretta Poynton and Merrill Fugit) the story of what happened on Armistice Day 1918. In a flash- back, Dan Harding (Bob Griffin) re- turned to tell the children what took place in the hectic days be- fore the signing of" the armistice. COMPLIMENTS The CBC deserve compliments from all the listening public for the splendid production of Shakéspe- rian plays being presented at 9 p.m. EST Sunday nights. Walter Huston certainly was a great cre- dit to Canadian born actors for the marvellous presentation he gave, of his part in “Othello,” . Noted Canadian Chemist Dr. George Stafford Whitby, director of the chemistry division of the National Research council in Ottawa for the past nine years, who has been appointed director of the chemical research labora- tory of the Department of Scien- tific and Industrial Research, Lon- don, Eng. STARVE TO SCINTILLATE Julia Sanderson and Frank Crumr it never eat before their Battle of the Sexes broadcasts on NBC. They find they are more alert if they starve a little, and they also enjoy their dinner more thoroughly after the program. RARE RELICS Among the rare relics in the lib» vary of Dr. Frank Black, NBC’s general music director, are a first, printing of the Kreutzer Sonata, a first edition of Liszt’s Hungarian Rhapsodies for Piano, original scores of Wagner's “Nibelungen Ring” and full scores of Gluck’s operas printed in 1774 from wood cuts and a Lutheran hymnal dated 1784. EASY SHORT-WAVE TUNING Short-wave reception is becoming more popular every day, due to de- voting individual dials for each short-wave channel as offered by the new “Extra Value” 1939 Rogers radio models. Whereas in previous years, only about three-quarters-of- a.n-inch was devoted to each short- wave hand, each, now has been spread out to 9% inches wide, mak- ing short-wave tuning as simple as long-wave tuning. Toy Mouse Found In Boy V Stomach A nail, several coppers and but- tons and a small rubber mouse were found in the stomach of a 15-year-old boy who underwent an X-ray examination at the Toronto General Hospital. The lad lives at the Ontario Boys’ Home. As none of the articles had lodged in his intestines, he was returned to the institution under a doctor’s care. LIFE’S LIKE THAT By Fred Neher “That’s what I’m doin’ countin' to fifty before Ï bit him an* I’m raakm’ sure he’s here when I’ve finished !” French Soldier HORIZONTAL 1 World War soldier commander of French army. 12 Jumped into water. 13 To preclude. 14 Fold of string. 16 Inhabitant of Ireland< 18 To disappear gradually. 19 Dried coconut meat. 20 Depends. 22 Conclusive. 23 Ell. 24 By nature. 27 Southeast. 28 Tanner’s vessel. 29 Chum, 30 Toward. 32 Male ancestor. 33 Reverence. 34 Banishment, 36 Courtesy title. 38 Ruler., 40 Street, 41 Eye. Answer 42 Goddess of peace, 45 Monkey. 46 Those who raid. 48 Work of skill. 51 Sloth. 52 English title. 53 Swift-sailing canoe, 55 Hawaiian bird 56 His official title (pi.). 57 He was Commander in Chief of the ----Armies in France. VERTICAL 1 Book cover parchment. 2 Bad. 3 Amber. 4 Idant. 5 Born. 6 More competent. 7 No. 8 Doctor. 9 Branch of knowledge. 32 35 37 39 40 43 44 45 46 47 49 50 52 54' To contend. Cornucopias. He------the largest army in the world. Person’s head. Heavy cavalry To accumulate Heavenly body. Finger or toenail. Indians. Armadillo. Excessive acuteness of sight. Thick slice. In reality. 'Frosted. Hair ornament Sawlike organ. Streamlet. Fiber knots. Dutch measure. Hurrah! Sun. Eggs of fiÿhes. Thick shrub. Electric unit. Morindin dye. FOP -â€" A Booming Start By J. MILLAR WATT JUST AS WE WERE STARTING MA SAtD â€"* ” HAVE WE GOT ENOUGH GAS SO I STRUCK W A MATCH TO LOOK IN THE V 4- TANK â€" BUT THERE WAS PLENTYâ- THERE, SO OFF WE WENT / (Copyright. 1936, by Tha Bell flyndteato»JUi-\ )

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