West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 16 May 1929, p. 2

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hospital as the result of an accident he met with while at work last Friday Will T. Anderson. South Side, an em- ployee at the Coombe Furniture Pac- tory. is confined to the Kinwdjne holiday as a resultâ€"Dundalk Herich was received here till Monday night and a newspaperless noon-hour wag experienced much to the regret of many. The rural mail ‘eom'iers got a Monday noon's express from Toronto, due at 1130. did not reach Dundalk till 230 that afternoon. owing to 3 blockade on the line near Laurel. The pile driger, in proceeding from Or- angeville to Laurel. left the track and plunged into the ditch. A flat car was badly smashed but the engine and other cars stuck to the rails. Pas- sengers for the north were transferred to a freight caboose and freight w. and brought to Shelburns. From there the Saugeen train brought the passeng- ers to Owen Sound and intermediate jected to paying an account of the Liquor Control Board for $4235. The Warden informed Mr. Hunt that the bill was quite in order and was for spirits to revite the drooping spirits of the aged and infirm. Tea and coffee apparently. are not strong enough for some of the inmates. the living dead, to use a figure of speech and so spirits fermenti are necessary for medicinal purposes on the recommendation of the House of Refuge physician. There are not many accounts get past the lynx-eyed Reete oi Bentinck and he is to be commended for carefully watching how county funds are spent. Evidently he considers booze a luxury and so it is.â€"Chesley Enterprise. A: the April meeting of Grey County Council Reeve Hunt, of Bentinck, ob- thisMay 10th,whenhesoldhistann equipment on what is now the Mc- Cluskey 1am For three days before thesaleitsnowedandonsaleday tbecrowdenjoyedoneofthebest sleighing days or the season, hauling away the auctioned articles with speed and gusto. The winter weather at that time lasted for a week after the sale.â€" Thorn'oury Review. peoplehavedecidedthatthb hasheenutremelychmyand 1’6”“qu Perry Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. PAGE 2. play which is so much a part of police methods across the border. That there are about one-twentieth as many grave crimes committed in Canada, per mp- ita. as in the United States, is not so much a tribute to the methods of our policeâ€"which are nothing to brag aboutâ€"as to the certainty that once a A superintendent of the Detroit police department counsels Canada to "Stick to capital punishment,” other- wise, “you will have to do what Detroit doesâ€"arm the police and send them out to shoot it out with the thugs.” The arguments for and against cap- ital punishment are many and varied but one thing is certain, and that is, that the effect of punishment that 'only then condescend to display his 'manly figure to the uncouth gaze of the populace, because he needs the money. We refer to Mr. Gene Tunney. late holder of the heavyweight ring title by virtue of being the most skillful bicycle rider the hempen arena ever hasseen. tissaidheiscomingback by way of Montreal to avoid any paper shower down New York's myon of streets. He needn’t bother. We doubt if Mayor Jimmy Walker even would don his white spate for the occasion and everybody knows that he seizes the least occasion to parade them. There is nothing more intriguing to human ture than the quarry in flight when there is nothing to fly from. except one’s own egotismâ€"Chicago Referee. in old-world culture, prepared to také his position with the social elite as long as his worldly goods lastâ€"then, and eamingafortuneinthedegradingrole of a boxing champion, is about to OTHER PAPERS’ OPINIONS That erudite gentleman, once as- C time and Punishment Tunney Coming Back and sure is infinitely more export for buckwheat grain. In a meal mixture buckwheat has almost as wheafiwhjch grows rapidlj and usually ripens in ten to twelve weeks, will keep per acre. The Rye variety in experi- ments at the Ontario Agricultural Col- lege has outyielded the Silver Hull but it possesses about 2% more hull, proâ€" dum a flour having a yellow east and a feed which is less pdatable than that otzotaajnet.‘~ from the Silver Hull variety. Bees do not work on the Rye variety. sifcifiéat but it gives good' results also on most typa of sgil where the} This is one of the best grain crops for late sowing. It gives its greatest yield of grain when sown between June lst and June 15th. On the aver- age, throughout the Province, it yields more oer acre than spring wheat and made it certain that there will be a considerable demand by farmers for emergency crops for sowing in Ontario tion trustâ€"and some day he'll have to explain away that connection. Lindy, Mary Garden and the others must re- member that a hero today often is a bum tomorrowâ€"Chicago Referee. Special Article Written by Professor W. J. Squirrel. Ontario Agricultural FARMERS OVERCOME WET SPRING SET-BACK BY EMERGENCY CROPS deliberately turned his machine and threw mud on them. He later explain- ed this away by stating he did it to prevent someone being hurt by his whirling propellers. Maybe so, but the opinion seems to be spreading that the Lone Eagle of the Air is getting quite cocky, since he has been made a paid ward of the Guggenheimsâ€"the avia- ’town. This drew down on him the [fire of a lot of hero worshippers. but Howe stuck to his guns. Some time ago the Chicago Civic Opera Company Eand Mary Garden appeared in Amar- gillo. Evidently believing there were {only provincials living there. the actors are alleged to have cut the perform- ;ance and the citizens refused to pay the guarantee. Editor Howe swung out his typewriter. panned the company and. horror of horrors. criticized another idolâ€"Mary Garden herselfâ€"2 and even accused her of having grown 'so feeble and old that she actually tot- tered. If there ever was such a thing as lese majeste, Howe had committed it, according to the sycophants. But; his fellow citizens rallied around him with their moral and financial support. Howe didn’t need it, for he is one of those fellows whose courage will carry him far. but it showed a fighting editor reaps his own rewards. That the hero or heroine, whatever their status, must watch their step. was emphasized further by the recent criticism of Lind- bergh by the Washington News, in which it was charged he showed so little consideration for the admiring crowd on a recent landing there he of Lenine". Speaking at a mass meet- ing in South Wales recently, he said: ‘ I have fought to protect communists. I have been reviled for it. I have'fed them. clothed them. and I say now they are the most dishonorable set of men I have even had dealings with; ‘It is quite evident that. however pure their motives. the methods of the communists are fast losing them the sympathy of even the staunchest of their erstwhile supporters.â€"Farmers‘ Editor Howe of Amarillo and son of old man Howe is a chip off the old block. His father long was known as. a fearless editor. who threw a vigorous pen. Editor Howe of Amarillo first came into the national spotlight when he dared to criticize the then pOpular idolâ€"Charles Lindberghâ€"f or trying to high-hat the citizens of that Texas from Arthur J. 0001:. general secre- tary of the Miners’ Federation. long a veritable fire-brand in British labor circles, once widely known as "Emper- or" Cook, and as the “humble disciple But probably the most sufpfising denunciation of the communists comes 511003me in defying the law of econ- onlics as ip dgfying the law of gravity. (ii-o'llege, Guelph. for The Chronicle. Nehmmadetmhlunderâ€"ametac- :, but less than' ba_.r_ley am; Buckwheat of the “Hobbs wanted a phonograph am: his wife wanted a piano “How did they settie it?” - 'It is evident that you are not mar- Rape is essentially a pasture crop but is occasionally grown as a soiling crop. It" is an excellent smother crop for weeds and is better. for this purpose than buckwheat. " The common method of harvesting rape is to pasture it 03 with sheep. hogs or cattle. In pasturing there is a danger of animals bloating it turned on rape when hungry or when the plants are wet. The safe plan is to turn animals on rape for a short time at first and let them have access to a the co-Bperative experiments through- 011 'largest yields when sown in drills 28 to 30 inches apart. The Dwarf Essex variety of rape has given the largest yields in the experiments at the On- tario Agricultural College and also in and fi-om four to five pounds when it is sown broadcast. Rape gives 1m rich, moist soils with a plentiful supply of humus. It grows well on muck soils if they are not too wet. Rape may be sown from early spring until as late a the first part of August. Much of the rape grown in the Province, however. is sown during the first two weeks in June. From one to two pounds of seed care should be taken not to éonfuse it grown in Ontario is a biennial and safest plan in buying seed is to order it by variety name or to ask for pas- ture rape. Rape does best on deep, This is one of the best late pasture crops grown in the Province. It is less injured by severe frost than almost any other crop. The cultivated crop with the annual or birdseed rape. The have been obtained when it was sown early in the season, but with favorable weather following, it can be sown as late as May 24th with good results. Vetches are sometimes included in the above combination but experiments at Guelph and the experience of farmers in Western Ontario indicate that a smaller yield per acre is obtained. Both Hairy and Common Vetch seed is quite expensive. crop? â€"I"n addition to being an excellent annual hay crop the above mixtgre bushels of oats and 1 bushel of peas per acre, makes an excellent annual hay crop. Varieties well suited for growing in the mixture are'O. A. C. No. 72. 0. A. C. No. 144 or Banner Oats along with Golden Vine, O. A. C. No. 181, McKay or Prussian Blue peas. Best hay from the mixture is produced if the crop is cut when the pea pods are about one-half grown. It is handled and cured like any other hay late as May} 24th. Soy beans make the best hay or green fodder it cut when the pods are about one-half western peninsula. The crop, how- ever, if a variety like the O. A. C. No. 211 were used could be sown for fodder or annual hay in Western Ontario as When soy beans are used along with corn for silage in Ontario, it is usually best to. grow the crops separately. A comparatively small yield of soy beans will be obtained if grown in the mix- ture along with corn. At this date it would be hazardous to sow soy beans with the idea of producing a grain crop except possibly in the South- Western Ontario and much of Central Ontario an successfully grow soy beans for fodder when suitable var- ieties are sown. In South-western Ontario, several varieties ripen seed. Soy beans prefer a good sandy loam but will give good results on loams and clay loams where the drainage is good. When sown for seed in rows thirty inches apart. 30 to 45 pounds of seed should be sown per acre. A grain crop may also be produced by sowing through every tube of the drill which will require one to one and one-half bushels of seed per acre. When grown for fodder production it may be sown The O. A. C. No. 211, a medium early ripening variety, has proven to be the largest yielder of grain and one of the best yielders of green fodder in the experiments at the College. Many farmers in South-western Ontario have successfully grown this variety both for grain and green fodder with a grain drill at the rate of '11): bushels per acre. Soy beans are very rich in protein both in the plants agd This crop, the plants of which are largerinsizethancommonbamsand less subject to injury by frost, is com- at Guelph, produced 3.32 tons of dried hay per acre. Hungarian millet, when sown on June lst produced in the ex- periments at Guelph almost twice as much grain per are as barley sown on the same date. This seed has almost the same nutritive value as barley. Pens and Oats are, sown at the rate of 2 nowlcan call b I qo autfirr the 323%" .ROP in next time you’re in town and I’ll demonstrate Delco-Light for you. You’ll be highly interested in learning the real facts about Delco-Light. You’ll probably get a surprise when you hear the money and work it saves, how little it costs, and how easy General Motors have made the payment terms. SMITH BROS: Durham, Local Dealers. H. JOHANN, Glenannan, ONTARIO DEW (I AQICULTURB WWII!” LAC“ M dMH mg. Writeorcaluponhm ”,0: OntarioDepa-unmtofw Egg. Wrigoa-alupoqhimfiqwmcwiucodn admyouaboataflablecropoadd‘e fhyaopouiggumdaeuflet, on: and «Get Amixmreofodypwand “~75“ vachamybemedforeitha-hayocdnge. Rapeisaceflenthktepm Tompflydm in and!“ Mmmdhmfificthemyfim many. Wbmfl WMpayyoubmthanawud-fidd'mcrop! more. E VE N I N G rates on station-to-station calls now begin at 7 p.m. with about 25% off the day rates. A convenience in two waysâ€"you can place a call at the re- duced rate before you go out for the evening â€"- and you are more apt to catch the called party at home between 7 and 8.30 p.m. After 8.30 p.m. and continuing till 4.30 mm. there is a further reduction which is about 50% of the day rate. Let me give you the Delco-Light facts to fight weeds when the rate is 25 cents or District Supervisor. ”by, Kay 16, 1929 The Dominio Parliament By LCMacphail, M.P.â€" Warm weather would spoed u} m old political machim ambles leisurely along when :m are cool. The Agricultural Commme '~ in hard. Two sessions 3 ed; sometimes §hree keep the meml: that Committee humping. How ileum be graded: the mixing of A“... LA... - W081 grain busifiâ€"e'aq l‘be'mg fully looked into. . The Election Committee is; re} to be considering a far-tea chin: All outstanding acc‘ Attractive Prices for Early Buyers: Egg and Nut; Stove Coal. pt Coke, per ton p ' Phone 85W or 8.3.. FURNIT Reduction in Coal Price continuing un May 31, 192‘ complete with a a tonne covered m: tress. $12.00 Steel Slidil Couches Effective April Felt bdattress $7.25 to $15.00 With 21 50c. pe. WHEN building ing over an 014 Of all wallboards. Y supreme building a‘ Full 511;," Ilaickness mral strength and 1 Easier A pplicati without muss -â€" 531 money. Take: any D850“ bastine, WAUPaP“, J Fire.Pr00f -- N6 walls are fire barrie: or shrink. SUP Shingles, Fire!) Alberta Prices FR E

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