Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 7 Oct 1943, p. 3

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Le mom FEE | er i \ oy * {5 5 RP SA AA rir en ~back all right." .....disgusted. sort of grunt.in.anticias | DIPLOMAT | J] '8 HORIZONTAL Answer fo Previous Puzle 13 Places at a {1 Pictured Tol {A [ALT] ' flsatlvaniose, diplomat, ERISTIMEIATIERMTIVPE] 1 Se be Leighton ----. [AMARIMI AR BIR 17 Whiriwinds | 7 He comes OMSE E OE JOE] 13 Steamship fyom OlL| 1 0 (abbr). r 1 Habituate, TIVIRINLI |P : N[SIE] 20 Rough lava, | l12'Type of NIL | MARCO . 21 Tanning playing card, L 0 . IM|O|SIS vessel, 13 Exclamation, ARTA POLO 1 {S] 25 Gumbo, i15 To accuse, - | [N[, 28 At this place, 16 College * 30 Symbor for sleeping : OKIEIS cobal quarters CHILINA 32 Compass point "(abbr.), \ ' " 35 In a little 17 Bone. ; 39 Tmbecile, 67 He is "while, 19 Oriental 41 To summon, fongdian 37160 squate nurse; ; ---- tothe rods (pl.). 2 Evefytiing 2Hore® Us A 3gStation = that grows, . 43 Wild buffal VERTICAL (abbr.): 22 Pieces out, Indin, 0 2Cirrus (abbr,) 40 Sufix. 23 Close fo, - . of India, Beloit 43 Ventilates, 24 Priestly order 44 Devoid. of 3 Belonging to 44 qojletry case, of Persia. contents, the nature of 45 Hodgepodge, 26 Debit note 48 Symbol for man, 46 Symbol for (abbr.). tin. 4 Regrets. terbium, 27 Exclamation 49 Norwegian 5 Attempt. 47 Biblical of surprise, composer, 6 Pranoun, pronoun, 29 Artifice. 81 0ne of a party 7 Two-wheeled 50 Rodent. 31 Not closed, (suffix), vehicle. 51 Electrified 33 Either. 52 Exist, 8 Limb, particle. 34 Symbol for 53 Prevaricators, 9 Head part, 53 Music note, calcium, 54 Agitate, 10 Near, 54 Smallest state 36 Mountain 56 Written . 12 Japanese (abbr.), nymphs, _ dissertations, gateway. 55 And (Latin), f Z 31915 |6 [7 16 19 [IO [ 1] 12 13 4 1S 16 (7 18 19 2 Zl 23 4 . 25 26 28 29 [30 L a 32 33 [3973 36 37 36, 39 [40 -- BT 42 43 44 | 49 [50 | 5] 52 53 59 55° ll E /] J g < 'A FARM WIFE CHATS TO WOMEN i | I£ you ever find yourself tak- _ ing part in a quiz program and the question is asked: "What are the stupidest "creatures on a farm?" take it from me, you need have no hesitation in an- swering: "Hens and chickens!" I am sure anyone who lives on a farm will agree with me but those who don't may wonder why. Well, T'll tell you. * * * "Hens and chickens absolutély refuse to co-operate when you try to make them more comfort. able. They will come back again and again to the first home they knew--the brooder house. You can shut them out and chase "them off to the nice new airy pen you have prepared for them and in half an hour they will all be back to the brooder house, squat- ting around outside if they can't get inside. Several weeks ago when our brooder house became too crowd- ed we took the roosters away and - put them in another pen. Partner - said, "I guess if we keep them : shut up for a day or two and then let them out again they will go But I gave a pation of what I was sure would happen, And it did, ' After a week we let the roost. ers out and that night every last one of them was back in the HARLKARI GUN tol patking' Japs in South Pacific are supplied with single: shot "suicide guns' to .prevent . eapture alive. Bn Allied "soldier displays one of the pistols and a Jap marine' cap, 'taken! from the enemy at Bairoko, north of Munda in the Solomons. ¥ brooder house: While Partner was milking I had the grand job of catching and carrying ' fifty-one roosters back to where they be- longed. x - * LJ "Then we have a pen of year- ling hens up in the barn. They have been shut up in that same pen over six months, Then came moulting time and we thought it might do the hens good to have . the run of the farm for a while. So we let the hens out. Did they go back to their pen at night? Well, about half of them. The others went to roost all over the place--down in the stable, on the manure spreader, in another hen- pen, and even in the brooder house from which I had so: re- cently chased the make more room for the pullets, This went on for about three weeks. Finally I went the rounds one night and carried the hens back to their pen. And believe me when I was through with the [job I said to those biddies very emphatically as I shut the door, "Now you can just stay there!" oe * -. - We also have trouble, but of a different - kind, with the "pulléts, *They would much rather sleep on the floor than "on the roosts, r the roosters had been taken * away there ,was plenty of room for all the pullels to roost in comfort. But would they do it? In the daytime, yes, But at night ' half of them were on the roosts and the other half hunched | up together on the floor. I tried picking them .up and putfing them on the roost. was no good. As fast as I put one bird 2p another jumped down. So I tried to outwit them, The next night I collected old stove pipes and odd ends of wire net- ting and I spread them all around on the floor, making the place as unconfortable as'I could, And it worked. That night ther¥ were "far more birds on the roosts. The next night still' more; and last night there were only five on the floor, So I really feel as if I had done Something, Of course 1 dont AUR peo- ple who run a regular poultry farm have quite as much trouble as we do because they would have their pullets and cockerels intsop- state pens right from the start, But when you keep poultry just as a sideline as we do--or as a necessary. evil. -- and have only one brooder stove to. work "with 80 that you have to keep mixed chickens in one pen until they «| are old enough to .do Without ~Hewitt "reporting roosters to But that 3 SphEED THE . VICTORY" Such'is the slogan dominating the special series of five Victory Loan broadcasts, the first of which was heard Wednesday, October 6. It is inspiring to note that Percy Faith, Canada's most spectacular contribution to the field of United States musical presentations, - is home once more helping his native country at war. The brilliant Toronto-born composer-arranger- conductor, who for some tine has been earning new laurels in the la of our good neighbor to the 8C . is directing the musical set... gs of the big Victory Loan broadcasts, to be heard Wednes- day evenings 9 o'clock over a coast-to-coast network. * * The celebrities Ao part in the performances are worthy of note. Wednesday, Qctober 6, it was the glamorous Jessica Drag- onette. Next Wednesday James Cagney, immortal for his "Yankee Doodle Dandy" and currently breaking records on Broadway in "Johnny Come Lately," will help speed the Flying V. Charles Laughton, 'of "Mutiny on the Bounty" fame; lovely Lucille Ball; Canada's own Shearer, Montreal-born screen celebrity; Brian Ahern, he Bits ish actor, and Barbara Stgfiwyck are among the great names of the cinema world ,who will con. tribute to the stellar series of Victory Loan broadcasts, * . L On the list of good things to come, we must include for those of our friends with a sporting turn of mnid, the hockey broad- "casts, first of which will be broad- cast oh the usual Saturday night spot, commencing October 30. The presentations will be replete with the usual trimmings, the Hot Stove League, et al, with Foster in his usual vigorous "play-by-play" style, - * * Immediately following the com- pletion of the special Victory Loan broadcasts, the 9.30 Wed- nesday évening.air over CFRB's wave length wil] find Neil LeRoy M.Cing the new series of "Pub- lic Opinion" shows, which proved so popular last season, that they are being continued this winter, * * * Scots wha hae . . . The skirl- of the bagpipes and the gathering artificial heat then you are bound to run into some kind of trouble, So you people whose only knowledge of poultry is eating eggs and chickens, please remem- ber that it mean t of work before that chicken was ready for the oven, and the hen that laid that egg you had for break- fast was fed and cared for for five months before she laid her first egg---and that a. very small one. It took a week or two be- fore her eggs were large enough to be marketable. But we keep on--we don't quit. just because" "some of our work is not as easy , as.we would like it. Norma - | RADIO REPORTER 2x rxosr of the clans 'are two of the key- notes of a new series of programs over the C.B.C. destined to catch a Highland Scot's 'ear. The first of sixteen quarter-hour broad- casts. telling the stories of Scot- tish clans was heard last Wed- - nesday, - October 6, over the Na- tional Network, 5.30 pm. The origin of the variods clans, its characteristics of dress and cus- toms, and the music associated with its name, will form part of each radio portrait, . The ¢lan regiment is to be portrayed too, and the fortunes of clan members who have settled in the New World, and brought their music, their traditions, their tartans, and their regiments, will be dis- cussed. * . . In the sphere of good music, - two programs are of keen inter- est at the present time, both re- newals = of former friendships. Sunday afternoon 1.30 to 2 o'clock has been dignified by the reappearance of Ernest -Seitz In a series of his much-appreciated pianoforte recitals over CBL, To- ronto, and an Ontario network. The present series has marked the beginning of Mr, Seitz' ninth year on the air in Canada, Of particular interest also to the student and lover of piano music "is the new series of programs of the Toronto Comservatory of Music, heard over CFRB, Toronto, -and an Ontario network, 2 o'clock © Sunday afternoons, to accommo- | date which your present Report- er's broadcast of "Country News" has been changed to 2.16 . . . fifteen minutes later than form- erly. SUNDAY SCHOOL - LESSON OCTOBER 17 JESUS AND THE SABBATH Exodus 20:8-11; Isaiah 58:13, 14; Mark 2:23, 3:6 : GOLDEN TEXT--And He said unto them, The Sabbath was made for man, and not man for the ~ Sabbath. Mark 2:27. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time.--The Ten Command- ments were deliverga in 1446 B.C.; the prophecy taken from Isaiah was spoken about 698 B.C.; the words here quoted from -our Lord were utttred in"the early. summer of A.D, 28. Place.--The Ten Command- ments were given on Mount Sinai; Isniah's prophecy, in Jerusalem; ~ our Lord's discourse on the Sab- bath took place Capernaum, The Holy SabbathaDay "Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy." This day was . set aside for the worship of God that men might not forget their Creator. "Six days shalt thou labor, and do all thy work; but the seventh day is a sabbath unto Jehovah thy God: in it thou shalt not do -~ _ THE SPOR TING THIN G BY LANG ARMSTRONG ol 2 "This one belongs to a big oil man!" not far from KIEV: RUSSIANS RETURN TO UKRAINE CAPITAL hes bods odd 10 aL » . _ Kiev street , , . as the Russians left it in. 1941, # & fo WY on FAC + The Russiang can see tive gllt church dome, "east, Kiev, metropolis on the Dnieper and: capital of the rich Ukraine, had been in German hands just two 'years to the day when Sep- tember. 22 dispatches told of the ° Russian advance to within sight of the city's glistening church domes, Kiev is the third city of Russia--Moscow and alone are more populous, How many of its 850,000 people have survived the two years of Nazl terror will be revealed when Soviet forces march back down the city's broad, modern streets, left. A centre offagriculture, in-. dustry, and cattle -raising, Kiev is built on a cliff overlooking the Dnieper. This lofty position com- manding the broad plains to the above, Leningrad - may give to- the - _ Nazis a last defensive advantage. any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, nor thy man-serv- ant, nor thy maid-servant, nor thy stranger nor the stranger that is within thy gates." While we faithfully reserve the Lord's Day for worship and rest we must also not compel others to work on the sabbath day. Sabbath and the Creation "For in six days Jehovah made heaven and carth, the sea, and all that in them is, and rested on the seventh day: blessed the sabbath day, and hal- lowed it." 'The sabbath is.sepa- rated from other days and*should be a day of joy and gladness, of rést and mind-and soul. Joy in the Sabbath "If thou turn away thy foot from the sabbath, from doing thy pleasure on my holy day, and call the sabbath. a delight, and the holy of Jehovah honorable; and shalt honor it, not doing thine own ways, nor finding thine own pleasure, nor speaking thine own words." We are to seek and do God's pldasure, not our own, on His day. We should scek, the good of others, not our own. We are to speak His word, not our own, for the day should be used for His glory, not for self glory. God's Promises "Then shalt' thou delizht thy- self in Jehovah; and I will make thee to ride upon the high places 8f the earth; and I will feed thee with the heritage of Jacob thy father: for the mouth of Jehovah hath spoken it." = If we delight to do God's bidding and observe the Sabbath we will find ircreased joy in the existence and service of thie Lord. The thought of vic- tory, prosperity and security is . undoubtedly implied. . Jesus and the. Sabbath "And it came to pass, that he was going on the sabbath day =-through- the grain-fields,~and-his~ disciples began, as they went, to +pluck ears. And the Pharisees said unto him, Behold, why do they on the "sabbath day that which is not lawful?" The dis- ciples were charged with a breach of the sabbath law which forbade working. © Reaping was a for- bidden work and under reaping was included the gathering of a few cars of corn. "And he said. unto them, Did _ yo never read what David did, when he had seed, and was hun- gry, he, and they that were with him? How he entered into the house of God when Abiathar was high priest, and ate the shoyge wherefore Jehovah ' refreshment for body, . bread, which it is not lawful to eat save for the priests, and gave also to them that were with him." Since David's action wads not con- demned it proved that, in urgent cases, human nced was to come first. So the necessity of the dis- ciples justificd them in doing on the Sabbath what. would have been otherwise against the law. Man's Day of Rest . "And he said unto them, The sabbath was made for man, and not man for the sabbath." The sabbath was not made to bring about a state of suffering, but to provide for communion with God. Miracle on the Sabbath "And he ented again into the synagogue; and there was a man there who. had his hand withered man's rest Bug "5 + «and he stretched it- forthy and his land was restored. Christ scornfully dismissed the Pharisees" question. To Him to cause a man to suffer longer than "is necessary is an evil thing: hey [held their peace." In their silence they confessed their hypocrisy, and cowardice. -- Christ looked upon his critics with grief and anger. Though angry He grieved for them. against evil is justified but it must ba tempered with compassion for those who have offended. In this case Jest did not'even' touch the man. The sufferer showed courage in standing forth among the hostile Pharisees, but the faith that made him stretch forth his dead hand and attempt the impossible was greater still Anger, as righteousness rt - By Willsm THIS CURIOUS WORLD ~~ ie: "QZ ror YicTORY "... JUNCO BIRDS, WHEN FLYING, FLASH THE LETTER CON- - TINUALLY WITH THEIR ? WHITE OUTSIOE TAIL. FEATHERS. KEEP AvinG / FN RE 485 9 a > rs : . KEEP LIZ DOWN," COPR. 1M1 RY NEA SIRVKE ME, © -[D (| SAYS MONTGOME RY MULFORD, T. MRE. U, 8. PAT, OFF, BUFFALO, N. Y. NEXT: America's first automobile-race. \" YOU PAY UP BILLS 3 "POP--A! Minor Detail to Pop By J. MILLAR WATT THEY NEVER igs JoNis NAPOLEON Ss TING T KNOW PAINT HORSES I BUT I CAN'T ; yo a 43 PRS Ne -- TS: ne

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