Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 26 Jan 1928, p. 2

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=U. SUBJECT JESUS AND THE GALILEAN MASSES. Be As Careful 12: 87. N--The freedom with, | Jesus had proclaimed the will God in opposition to the rulings of | 'Pharisces and other teachers of day had now alienated the reli- i and as we saw at rag Sno hie Sowntaln. Feo ; about his all. From i me Souris wd oe : § ng 7 LR Jesus teaches on ads out- n u ness to take him from one part o im f, f the lake-shore to the other. Meantime, his infl with the goes on increasing. His fame as a healer penetrates to every part of the coun- try. He appears as the great teacher and Dhgulcian of Isrsel. It is not to be conc! ded that the altitudes who thronged him understood or respunded to his spiritual demands. Their ideas of God's salvation was very di from those of Jesus. They were | ing for a deliverer who should them from the Roman yoke thoughts of the kingdom of God w excessively worldly and materialisticss Nevertheless, Jesus went on patiently teaching and healing. Ho had com- gion on these multitudes who were an unshepherded flock, and he strove to find entrance for God's love into their hearts, Chap. 8, v. 7. The retreat of Jesus to the lake was due to the increasing menace from the Pharisees, whose in- flu waseper gogues, Apparently the y were shut- the synagogues against Jesus, and he had now to carry on his work in the opemair. But his popular fame increased in 'spite of these measures. Crowds fram all over Galilee thronged him, and the angelist adds that some came all the way from Judea. V. B. The nation-wide character of Jesus' influence is here stressed. It brought together ple from Jer- usalem and Idumea in the South, from Perea in the East, and frong Phoe- nicia in the North-west. Idurhea was the country of the ancient Edomites, the old-time enemies of the Jews. Its people had been subjugated and fore- ibly compelled to accept Judaism about | two centuries before this time by one of 'the Baccabean princes. Perea lay | beyond the Jordan, where Israelites had been settled fro mthe earliest times. The Pheenician territories of Tyre and Sidon bordered on Galilee to the West and North. It was the fame of Jesus as a healer which briught people in such numbers from theee regions. V. 9. So great wure the throngs now arriving on the lakeshore that Jesus had to have recourse to a boat, from which to preach. At his hidding the disciples moored a skiff a for yardg from the beach, and row we find this | boat in constant readiness to receive m. V. 10. The reason of the popular excitienentt is aga' stated in the clearest terms. Jesus' work as a heal- er had produced a sensation through- out the entire length and breadth of the . It was considered that even his touch would restore the sick to health. Jesus himself, as we know, was moré anxious to minister to the | | "Plagues" isa Biblical word for diseases. It was popularly be- that disease aws a "stroke" or "scourge" from God. Vs, 11, 12. Particulac mention is made of Jesus' healing of demoniacs, the sick in m saw in the pre- -possession the clear | ce of Satan's reign in the world, ! and he devoted himself to rescuing the unfortunate victims from their ter- rors. It is noted that these deranged of God or It was their fixed belief that only the Messiah could deliver them fro mthe power of Satan. But did not permit these outcriea., knew what false ideas people asso- ted with Messiahship, and he sil- s kind of language wherever it 6:53, 64. Similar phenomena at a period in . Jesus was at this JEeparing to leave Galilee, and ts hud the premonition that time opportunk was draw- close. He had Janded for a the - 4) lst HE REE "eae him ie toms: Advises 'Caution r ; | In Purchasing nthe>syna-y 5 pCR | As In Buying A Horse States W. J. W. on Lennox: experiments. Summing up A man should be just as careful in ence gained at the Harrow Station securing his seed y as he would & bulletin on Tobacco Growing in ba in buying a horse," states W.J. W. Southwestern Ontario, - the author Lennox of the Dominion Seed Branch, tates that for both yleld and quality "In-fact-even more care-is , Resistant Burley is the hest variety because the seed secured this year for planting on diseased or doubtful will soon spread over the whole farm, soils, Broadleaf Burley for soils par. whereas a poor horse can soon be sold ticularly susceptible to drought, and and the loss written off without any that Station Standup Burley should further re be used on all other types of soils. Mr. Lennox strongly advises secur Slleage and Oat Straw for , ing the cleanest seed possible, not only Fattening Lambs. free of weed seeds but free of other| To compare the value of hay and a seeds as well. 'When you buy alsike,' combination of straw and corn silage you want alsike,' not a mixture of for fattening lambs, a test was recent- alsike and some other clover, and ly carried out at the Grandon, Mani- when' you buy wheat be sure you get toba, Experimental Farm. The lambs § wheat alond," he says. He also ad-{used in the experiment were divided | vives getting the seed tested for pur-!into two lots, one lot being fed hay ity and germination before using it.'and a grain ration made up of equal The Dominion Government at any of parts of oats and barly, fed at the elr five laboratories scattered rate of 134 pounds per animul per day, ughout the country will test the While the other lot was fed\the same first three samples free, the reports rain ration in conjunction With oat sant back showing the farmer how |Straw and silage. many weed and other seeds are in the| The results of the experiment show sample and how the same has germ-|that sileage and oat straw together inated. In other words he will know/| With a small grain allowance make a whether he may expect dirty or clean [Satisfactory ration for fattening lambs. crops from the seed and how much of | The lambs fed hay made somewhat it will grow when planted. larger gains than the sthers but the Ohe" fii' 8very F8a%0r fo~ be sulpic| 00st Of feed per-pvmo of guin was 40 cious of cheap seed just as ome is|Per cent. higher. suspicious of a cheap horse or cow. When you are offered a.No. 1 horee at a low price, you immediately start looking for defects and if you don't know very much about & horse you will have him taken to a veterinary for examination. Follow the same rule with your seed supply," concludes Mr. Lennox. "Buy tested seed wher- ever possible but if you are using your own or that from a neighbor make use of the Government laboratories and have average samples of the seed tested before sowing." SEED MARKET QUIET. Members of the Canadian Seed Trade Association report the Ontario seed market as very quiet. On the basis of recleaned per hundred pounds tho following range of prices is offered F.0.B .country shipping points, ac- cording to quality: Red Clover, $1310 $28 per 100 Ibs. Alsike, $12 to $16.75 per 100 lbs. AMalfa, $16.75 to $25 per 100 Ibs. Improvement 1a Quality of Bacon Hogs In 1927. In a recent statement issued by the Dominion Live Stock Branch, com- menting on the present situation of the live stock industry, it is pointed out 4hat in spite of the present gen. eral depression of the world's swine and bacon trade there was continued marked improvement in the type and quality of hogs sold off farms in Can- ada in 1927. A feature of the live stock movement in the year just closed was 'a very appreciable in- crease in the production of bacon hogs. The general situation is there. tore quite encouraging in that it proves the capacity of our swine in- dustry to flourish even dlring a period of market depression. To no small extent this continued improvement in the industry is due to the work done by the Federal Department of Agricul- ture in promoting the raising of bacon hogs among farmers in all parts of the country where hog growing can be successfully carried on. : Sweet CI'v'r, $2.75 to $8.75 per 100 lbs. $3.50 to $4.50 per 100 lbs. pee Tir ay The Future of Canadian Dairying. Addressing the Dairymen's Associa- tion of Western Ontario at their an- nual meeting held recently in London, which showed that our exports of dairy products to the United States are increasing year by year. The ex- 'Iports of milk and cream to the United States when calculated in fat equivalent, is shown that in ten years to have increased from 3,809,661 pounds up to almost six times that amount, reaching in actual figures in 1927, 21,458,697 pounds. This was made up of almost five million gallons A BAD NIGHT 1st Fish: You say you didn't get a wink of sleep last night? How was that? | 2nd Fisht The dog-fish kept me awake barking at the moon fish! Chamberlain's Son to Give Hon gallons of cream. Dr. Ruddick also pointed ont that there is a grow- ing demand for Canadian cheese in Jthe United States, and reaches tlie jon that unless the unexpected happens, the future for dairying in Canada will be a matter more or less of trading with the United States. This conclusion fs based not only on the wing exports during recent years, but also on the fact that the population of the United States is in- creasing faster than 'the number of cows. Speaking particular! of cheess, Dr. Ruddick points olf that the new demand from the United States is very largely for Canadian cheese of highest quality, He there- fore end red' to make it clear at 'London.--After a lapse of 20 years, the name Joseph Chamberlain re- appears on the toast list of the annual dinner of the Birmingham Jewellers' Association, which is to be held on Jan. 28 and which will be attended by the Prince of Wales. The great statesman's 20-year-old grandson, who bears the same name, will make his debut as a k under the eye of his father, Sir Aus- the. Mi & that' Canadians should 1 don't like in r those days--1905 eetin, \ n. par dnt ten Chamberlain, din, Secretary.| io nitalize on the special quality of 3he four Xho turned me dow 1B par io 1514 es Alto 3% the service gf the Tommy--"What- is the greatest] thelr cheese in order to take full ad- © mor mp al . 'vautage of the growing demand 80! Some friends cling to you for a SERA be TNS Naterpouer knows to Banvisise-s | Iumags Vf the ~ Lyon are worth, oo 0 | Hie who: digs deep often rises. high, » M [ Dr, J. A. Ruddick presented a table dling of milk and about four and a half mil. , RAPIDLY BECOMING POPULAR _ This sunset ski-joring scene comes from Western Onta Springs. rio, near Preston Lenin's Life Was Duplicity Model Notorious Revolutionary was Also Secret Agent for : Czar A Bright Outlook for Dairying. While the Old Country has been looked upoh as the principal market for export dairy products, the experi- ence of the past few years would in- dicate t it is shifting in the direc- "tion of the United States. During the past fiscal year, which ended with March, 1927, the United States took 'practically one-third of our total ex- ports of dairy products including cheese, milk, and cream. This is an Jncrease of about 23 spot. cent. since 1919. Addressing the Western On- tarlo Dairymen's Association at their annual meeting held in London re- cently, Dr. J. A. Ruddick, Dairy and , Cold Storage Conimissioner, pointed out that the proportion will be con- siderably larger during the present 'fiscal year. The increase is partic DOUBLE SPY Friends for Dis- ion the | IHith Oullai®ft, the Mongol who over- threw the Russian Empire, and, under the name Lenin, established the rule (larly noticed in regard to cream,| {which 1s 'crossing the American tt the Soviets. In a study of his life boundary not only from Quebec and | Ontario farms, but also from the pro- vince of Manitoba. Concluding his ad- dress Dr. Ruddick said: "It looks to meas though Canadian dairy produc- ers are very favorably situated with the great world's market within easy reach in the United Kingdom and with 'the largest tonsuming country in the { world next r, a country which is rapidly Increasing its imports and | Which mist pay um on the world's price in order fill its re- | quirements. "I do not other important dairyin 'odpying such an enviable "Issued by the Director Dominion Department of Agricultu Ottawa. i "The Nicaragua O { Louisville Courier Jeu: {whole sorry and N Sandino and his¥® serving of respoct. 'accept the tates army. They would not be cowel" the might of the United States... . '0-day they hold in. Nicaragua the of his role of double spy, Working with the Russian secret police against | the revolutionists, for one branch of the revol i inst ther, |and at the same time bending every 'effort to end Czarism. .The details are taken from the re- cords in the hands of the Okhrana, an old secret service. Joined Terrorists. "Lenin joined the ranks. of the ter- rorists in 1890 after his brother had been hanged for an attempt on the life of the Czar. He founded the "Fighting Union for the Deliverance of the Working Class" in the same year, and was recognized as its leader ; his drrest and deportation to in 1806 for Socialist propagan- while followers carried on his work but refused to carry out his in- from 'this "trearon' 'to his principles and resolved on revenge. His chance came when' high official of the secret Took Full Revenge-on Former] sinister concluded. "Revue de Paris" are given details |. - ons. Lenin suffered intensely | mean loss of life "The other day, ing in a doctor's they had years before." Dr. Bates went A, The chic police visited 'him and pr d that banner of patriotism and nationalism. | 5 : i... Calvin Coolidge rarely writes a | C. PhOUId: become "gu" agent of the * Czar while ostensibly remaining a re- | 5 State paper or public address without { volutionist. = In return for such ser- some preachment about morality and ! 'religion. Under what cloak of morall- Vics, he' would be freed. ty and religion does he justify, in his y Money Both Ways. x own consclence, his slaughter of hun-| Lenin went to Geneva, the centrd pf dreds of Nicaraguans, some of thém | revolutionary activities. Here ko hid women and children, bombed from {ample opport: to take revenge airplanes in a resort to methods hard: (the men who. shorn him of auth- ly more defensible than what, dur: in terrorist circles. He got in the World War, we ware accustomed | with' the revolutionary organi- to denounce as "German frightful. glon in London afd received a large ness?' for propaganga. 'He was paid by Confession. cally unlimited expense account. He From Life: established newspapers for secret cir- I don't like married women; they'ro ,culation in Russia, calling. for revolu- always talking about husbands. tion and sent, week by week, to the I don't like single women; they're Obhrana the names, hiding places and | ) and details of tha activities .of the men formerly his comrades. always t 1 don't like widows; they're always angling for husbands. I don't like divorcees; ways about to catch new husbands, that practically. every leader of the re: uti y forces of ithe dart-fitter sleeves and the long Russian police and had a practi: | Extracts from the papers in the ar-| they're al-|chives of the Okhrana demonstrate |. "it carefully) for RTLY SIMPLE FROCK frock shown here an lly smart syle." The ski as an inverted plait in the centre and is joined to. a pointed which fastens at the left side, and the back is in one piece. Contrasting ma- terial may be used for the cuffs, on { i collar. No. 1698 is for Misses and Sniall Women and is in sizes 16, 18 and 20 years. Size 18 (86 bust) re- fquires 3% yards 86-inch, or 2% yards 64-inch material, and % yard 81-inch contrasting (cut ). Price 20 icents the pattern. 9 Many styles-of smart apparel may ibe found in our Fashion Book. Our |designers origihate.'their patterns in the heart of thé style- centres, and. |their creations are thoss of tested popularity, brought within the means of the average woman. Price of the ibook 10 cents the copy, io uow TO ORDER PATTERNS. © Write your name and address plain. i "In the' absenc that; frequently, eases, appearing after a first examina- tlon has been made, develops into a serious condition which later, may fand the unnecessarily early the! of the ful lamou the company cofieerned: -- incipient dis- to the policy-holder yment icy by Bet nad nt of the pol 1 saw two mon wait: y office; both of whom had just been refused insurance. One: bad locomotor ataxia and the other had heart disease. ~| them, {amounting to §1 Yet, between insurance policies 25,000.00, taken out § on to explain that a these diseases and given the opportunity "to ampaign of cduca- hich the average h opportunity to Eith information Dr. Bates as the ns of getting at the ble. 1] of sound public opinion behind them, for instance," he cald, "health departments are likely to be weak--gene results." He dealt rally with disastrous in defail with the work, i along educational lines, which the Canadian Hygiene Council..is doing, and sketched the programme for the coming three yéars, Aad will be exp when $643,000 8s the D i by the Council, in an educational ef- fort to promote health. Gang ated Interna-. ng Ope Seale, Le i "United States Officer theft and re-sale Detroit.--The operation of what he -deseribed as an international for the of automobiles was by Th C. Wil- ly, giring uumbes and 3 ; an stamps or coin . dress your order to. ie

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