West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 31 Jan 1929, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

F. i." . I; , VI F-lcruar'y 3. LOW" W-The Holy Sr-vptures-PFtt 19: 7.14: 2 Tim. '. 1+0. Golden Text-ttper, thou p n: eyes, that I may behold t.ort. ums things out of thy taw.-.. 517.2“: l!9: 18. MUTT AND JEFF o-Bud Fisher. Lhr Sunday School my greatly enriched our Bible ore are three features to be in these verses: .i-h verse speaks of the law I new name, by which the calls. attention to the many- Cr, of God's word. We should aim 119 to see this same fea- iiied still farther. 2. Eaeh 'ft'l'li out one particular qual- hu law, such as perfection, re-, , righteousness, purity, clean-1 ruthfulness. ,.3. Each verse w crio.N--rt is diftkult for as land and age of liberty to mu prin'lege which is ours in an npcn Bible in our own The Old Testament was 'originally in Hebrew, and the _,tametrt in Greek, and for a w it was a sealed book to the npenple. It was only after struggle and many a labor :2 were able to get the Bible -rl into English. We believe those two parts of Scripture. , togaher. we have a faithful or.' the gradual unfolding of i and purpose of God. We see 'i-l is prefittured in the ro- "lore and more clearly til? tit ~ume~< as the word of God in [ We should. therefore. learn this book Augustine' said. In is a long letter sent. to us . heavenly home." PRAISE or THE scnlnrnm ar FIT HELEN} - THM's THE _ a A”; CY?,,', ' “tome .‘(OU ' Y.' AINT boas NOTH(N’ , Tum. ----, - L4) H m hives the mind weak the real The dark places tanifest, and sec ' themselves. A men wrse unto sal- h he may mean that coming of Christ, and V for the gospel to be q also had said that testified of himself. aful to add that it is dine that gave-s. The sh. It is faith which The result rive, the n 19: 7-14. WW" The writer of this Psalm small Bible, only the Law, full of plaise of this that to shame when we rem.. (a USE br THE tl 19: 7-14. f, tttt is, therefore, he goes on to an te highest terms than fine gold. it ANALYSIS I.BI.ENE of the Pastoral rcause they deal problems which minister or pas- Me}! an import- H Ht or Bible study P. mind in upon e real nature of I places now be- and secret faults Ives. All of this pray to God for we in v. It the ' a prayer such fth 14-1 x. We believe i of Scripture, ave a faithful J.snf.oldiryr of 't' swing“, , span SCRIPTL'RES [ this that" we rem- our Bible its an t! it m BETTER OFF! The popular t1lm star, Mr. Adolphe Menlou, remarked recently that he discovered. quite early in his career as a "movie" actor that film life was the way to "get rich quick." "How do you make that out?” ven- tured a listener, [ "Well," replied Adolphe meditative- ly, "almost the very first film I played in was a Wild West one. They mount. ed me on a bucking broucho. I came to the conclusion at once that I was much better'om" o e UTTERLY SIMPLE {162 tae h Long slim line " simple one-piece).", per d coat frock of novelty silk crepe in‘was al smart tweed pattern has a plaited-I'lwese ',, inset below waistline and button- whom I' trimmed closing bodice. The notched branch l rever collar and belt are of faille silk“ in Pri I crepe. Style No. 360 is especiallyian inn-e l popular with younger fashionable to est. grin . wear beneath fur wrap. It is alsolcent..O , very smart made of sheer tweed irtitotsa 4.4 , purply blue tones, tomato red silk)previoun I crepe, black wool jersey, Lanvin 'treenichpesem, faille silk crepe, and blaek crepe satin. I an more; It is unbelievably easy to make, as istm that seen in small drawings. Pattern is de-l signed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38,!' The m 40 and 42 inches bust. and req.uitrs.lpri//i.e/, only 3% yards of 40-inch materiallous intiu, with V. yard of 40-inch _,1Ttetiryrliiiii'ry"///i for the 36-inch size. Price 20e Mllpressed l stamps or coin (coin is '"""'red))iiiiirai Wrap coin carefully. 'mental F HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. (hirer an Write your name and address plain- with mor ‘ly, giving number and size of such and the d patterns as you want. Enclose Me in Elabora stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap of clean n it earefully) for each number and sides mus 1y, givmg number and size or such (and the dairy vquipment he possesses.itliere p, patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in Elaborate equipment is no guarantee I which 0 stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap of clean milk. Contamination from all I mon cor it carefully) for each number and sides must be excluded in the produc-‘latod wt address your order to Wilson Pattern tion of the highest. grade of milk, and l the 000] Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. this moans that care must be given to I useless. Patterns sent by an early mail. stables. animals, utensils, milkers andloonsider -----AF------ the methods used by the milkern. (ed, shat BETTER OFF! I Clean pails. properly seamed, and.iudignan The popular illm Mar, Mr. Adolphe I the chant-vs removed for dirt from the i German Mrutiou, remarked recently that heicow into the pail reduced to a 'n.ttif:'lt.ty.n?er Uncovered, quite early in his career f mum, are two of the main points, 1nfiht"h a is a “movie" actor that film lite wasltho best pint-ox to commence in clean-l this quot he way to "get rich quick." ring tip the milk supply, These are superfici: "How do you make that out?” ven- the main ttout) ot (‘Oniamlnallomldistinct“: ured a listener. and any rare with minor soul-res 1'iy1tet. "Well," replied Adolphe moditauve- the neglect of those two main sources problem. r. "almost the very tlrtrt film I played is largely wasted effort. ['ii,i,iriii,',iili'l,i, 'rxartt n was a Wild West one. They mount. No. 79, "l’l'mluving Clean Milk," pnb- Allies on d me on a bucking broncho. I came lished by the Department of Agricul-l "shed by (ha Department of Agricul- ture, at Ottawa. expresses the View that a clean pail and a clean cow are 8'35 per ('01 n‘was also rrhee.se ma _ where che, d branch of k; In Prim-1 “an llll'l'ellSF , est. grades uairying industry. This view is px. pressed by Dr. I'nant Lochhead, Bae. teriologist to the Dominion Experi- mental Farms, who credits the pro- ducer and the methods he omploys with mare importance than the barn an inn-ens:- of 1: per cent. in the high. est. grades. New Brunswick 9.1 per cent.. Quebec 11.8 per cent., and Mani. tuba 4.4 per cent. compared with the previous seawon, covering all the choose-making prnvlnvvs. there was an increase of 5.7 per cent. of the out. put that scored about M, per rent. est. grades cent” Queb toba 4.4 no I Mr, Burns!“ announces that the out- ‘me of 787 of the 66 fat-tories "Wet ating in the Province of Ontario graded 100 per cent., while the pro- duction of 488 factories graded be. tween M and 100 per cent. This was an increase over 1927 of 51 in the tae, tories making perfect cheese and of 162 factories making cheese scoring 9.", per cent. or more. Improvement was also shown in the quality of cltoese made in the other provinces! where cheese-making is an important'; Irrativlt of the dairy industry. l in Prince Edward island there was i All of the provinces have shown a ‘murkwi improvement in quality. with Ontario leading in this respet-t with 96.7 per cent. in the two highest grades. in the first yvar ot grading the "el't'ettttu.,re of the two highest grades was only 78 per cent, which. rompared with tho results last year, shows the value of compulsory grad- ing in improving th" quality of the output. . I Canadian cheese has made a steady; 'advance in quality since (-ompulsoryl grading began in 1923. In a review of grading during the past year Mr. li? Burgess, Chief of the Division ofI Dairy Products, in the Department of; Agriculture at Ottawa, brought out the! tact that about M per Hunt. of thei entire make of the Dominion, with 98 per t'cttt. of the (119639 gradmi. scored in tho vlusses for "sperial" and "first grade." . Babe Ruth "Swat King“ take 1929 season. CANADIAN CHEESE SHOWS IMPROVEMENT anitary on the “me In Farm Notes CLEAN MILK fury quality of the milk the farms has a.tyetmmd. e upon the welfare of the lustry. This view is PE. REDUCENG HIS TUMMY Life Insurance: "siGGriri, ables a woman to marry an " London Times (imi.t: Two cardinal , points are constantly forgotten in the disrussion of an early evacuation ‘of the Rhineland. The first is that ’thero are certain legal obligations orbit-h can only be set aside by com. ‘mon consent. ’The second is that iso. l lated withdrawal by any one party to the occupation would be worse thanl 'nseless. And there is yet a further consideration, which, properly weight. led, should mitigate the outburst or; 'indignant disapproval with which the German Press greeted Sir Avail Chamberlain's recent definition ot the British attitude, The.very nature of this question, as also of Reparations, superficially re-creates the pre-Locarno distinction between victors and van- quished. In spite of Locarno both problems must. to a certain extent ml the “enemy on one side and the ex- s to exercise early to be ready for the the field crops ot the districts sowed.‘ For several wars farmers near Ot. tawa had their seeds cleaned at a cleaning plant operating at the Cen. tral Experimental Farm. The value of the work so impressed the local grain growers as to lead them to set up several plants in the Ottawa Val. ley. At these places seed grain for both home seeding and for Rah: um] The operation of efrh"ient seed clean. ing plants plays an important. part in determining the yield and quality of the field crops ot the distrirtu ser-him" . MOULDY BUTTER Creamery butter which passes soon after making into the hands of the f trade may afterwards develop certain , defects. One of the most serious de. '/iiGii that crop up in this way is the .‘presence of mould spots on the sur- [518.08 and on the parchment covering. giAddressing the. Canadian Creamery- ,imert's Association, Dr. E. G'. Hood, ('hiet of the Division of Dairy Rem search in the Department of Agricul- lurn at Ottawa. pointed out that while trouble from mould is decreasing from year to year it still appears at timrs In both commercial and exhi. bition butter. Creahnerymet, were 'urged to tind out the sources of this ‘tronble so as to apply, preventive measures. Dr. Hood pointed out that mould has been found to enter largely tion of pasteurized with vat cream; from tho following 'sources-Improv. erlv pasteurized cream; re-trontamina-. insanitary equipment, as holding vats, ,vondm-tor pipes. pumps. outlet valves; I unsterilized churtts and packing equip- ment; improperly treated liners: rare- 195:st stored salt; air infection from insanitary surroundings. As an aid to diseovering the cause of the trouble and to decide on the remedies to apply, creamerymett were recommended to procure and study Bulletin No. 48, "The Cause and Pre. l Vention of Mould in Butter," available from the Publications Branch of the Department of Agriculture at Ottawa. SEED CLEANING PLANTS C "I" the main factors In producing clean the other, The Rhineland n: and commercial and exhi. Creahnerymet, were u! the sources of this to apply. preventive Hood pointed out that d be worse than; lg yet a further properly weight. the outburst (fi l with which the ted Sir Austen! ling that en again. . sa , " The spirit ot the Anglo-Japanese Alliance still ttourUheg Ind consti- tutes one of the strongest guarantees ot peace in the Far Eau.~Premler Manley Baldwin. - to know the story ot helium ithvan‘}; be steeped in tug tiresome oration: ot ‘mdin message to the New York Am. erivan and associated Hearst new» {papers that he will return to America land prepare for the sec-0nd phase which will be carried on next year from a different base. ' The announcement was made tol. lowing a new boo-mile tlight during which Captain Wilkins searched Gra- ham Land in the hope ot ttndintt a suitable end more southerly base which would enable him to continue his explorations farther south through- out the present eeeson. .No such basal could be found. . I are the New York-Ha, Brst phase of the [;;ii't'iitl:' work In (Sir Hubert Wilki (Capt. Wind; "ALi'"'" I .. __ AtExploration Tri tee It The trearoormiTin Show that a ne' dead hope Anon in the They at Ian: foe. Let the names go: they lightly. Why drag them dowr words at tall By one particular grief knightly Tl One , How many of our return, laugh and recall "when t tion Went astray." The Halifax were no doubt "h veterans and "onto" all tricks. It is " this point the story becomes somewhnt hazy. It is said that some- where between the dock yard and the barracks the ambulance was held up by two men purporting to be temper- ance Sleuths. The tour soldiers al. lowed them to search the ambulance with the result that the liquor was duly "seized". The ambulance was left in front ot Deputy Inspector Stove Kennedy's residence tor the night.--- Paid. ( 'Here are tw, mint them over, Before I lav Bids 1 is Tho military were matitied of thit handsome gift on the part of the Sack tars and sent an ambulance to the dockyard to transport it to the bar- racks. The liquor was loaded aboard the ambulance and under guard of tour soldiers left for the barracks. It is at this point the story becomes somawhat hazy. It is said that some- a ammonia or England at night the coldest places anywhere In wor1d.--tm. Wilfred Greats“. It ht stated from authoritative sources that the liquor was A gift trom omcers ot the Dnuntleas to omcorl of the Garrison, who had enterulnod them during their long stay In port. Haiku. N.S.--one'ot the strangest dis-[apartme- of liquor to be report- bd in‘Halilux tor some lime in that some so Recs of line old rum from HMS. Dauutltrss. which is alleged to have been “seized" while in ttautsport from the man o' war to the unicorn“ barracks of the Garrison. Neither the preventim service, nor the inspector- uuder the Nova Scotis Temperance Act have any knowledge of the seizure and it is presumed the Inuit wu the work of hijackers. WI Fifty Keg: of Fine Old Na _ Rum Vanish in Transit at Halifax ley more Important for Dr. Herbert Lavinia]; washed stone. . . . " my wounded bats on Dover, , got me out of No alone; arlet rose 3 keep sile us all, ave and pa An Army Joke At the Cenotaph are twelve rose lay them on John. . , le others, shared m n It our returned men win a" "when the rum ra- ins: completed Wilkins-Hearst the antarctic, ( m announces I faith ro Matt Mutt Ought to Pay Hi; long tstay In part. re matitied of am be part of the Sack ambulance to the thaws! Ar “Boys" at srd boiled" the army -9ld Navy the on it ll rock pt I‘ve sold In last " year. E. Smith. " is one of th important of truths that man think, but only Hoover. Twenty little Night Clubs hoopla; open late, -, Nineteen raided. then than wen thirty-eight. . Thirty-eight Night Clubl running bold and two. V l, Thlrtrserett stopped by law, now there no to?" hundred ud‘ . '"mttttr-tttrms. I (including the orinnnl tan) THE urn: NIGHT Ten little Night cum n and plenty, Nine were closed down. . were twenty. M as " But then will f “question, does this . penance of the in . Always in "or: ta ) been look“ upon t t the nation. To " ' iish pin-nu still ndh jot the tturdy yeom "in: belt. it may t (It,';',,. the farmer. t debt, possesses all lwith which orators 1There are those w the doctrine that it a mortgage on n tn which is mortgaged. Iwho assert that in Hive-day, forty-hour still works from d; night, and finds his But even with them there is day ot t tr 'wasteful and needless mulrlplivutlon of agricultural machinery no that em-h tarm will have rape-rs and thtashers and gum: Dim”, useful for only a com paratively for any: throughout the year, will be Iupplnuted by corpora- liw Ind cooperative mvlhode by which more will be I would: of ma- chinery Inlluble mnd all of it ‘kept busy up to it: evono-lc limit. Beyond doubt farming today In the non dir tinctly lndlvldunllntlc “a thereto"; wasteful ot Auction- Industries. Yet it is one to which the theories ot In" production can may be applied. In“.-. “H...” - M Henry Ford's vision at a trysido tram which the tr ot today shall have wholly be "mph-ind by gun u trolled and directed by u. may have in Implant-t fe it is Mevertheless in Itricl I the economiv pronu- ot t is his conviction that tho t individual farmer is m Mr. Henry Ford's - F arming Vision nit m sibl pen. It may be qua the farmer, up to poaseues ttll the I which orator: like ttl n nearly everything tn the r. except 'nratslf.--Auted \stderlb par: in” Wh ude 'tfot the molt profound null exact psychological n tn the mun do“ not ly teeyls.--Hertrert C. Mbdl Inc necesnry lun- machinery and cupiml operation are furnished "many. which also di. netiug ot the produce. a ryttem will work out are: it is tyrrhnrte .M ‘n conclusion can not he 1tC2'd'/l,'8g not!!! to be taken " early v the Congreu ot ".--A2srtsttan Belem-e 0 original ten.) -Brooklrn Eu]. hour week, )In dawn Ut 5 his work t these facts cure for ain thro M'ms IIGHT CLUBS uhs running [cod the tll the Independ "it like to invest Who have pm it was better to tum than the 1 d. There are ot in the lime ot nil! M " e for Ms "In than through politic-l Np. then the]. edi or a system ot t to establish a Each of them ction ot 3 mm. rial interest In necesury gun. the farmer l- eats "“dependence , invest him. nioned whe. his 0y" in TORONTO pa mo of (he the farmer nu late " never done. before us. a rural mun- small tum: II! named. to “PER" 00.. "a"parattotu, teaturs. but t ucmrd with the no, " ' "me of the passed. The tttttttttttration an that each In these ', the farm are others economic he farms up: t Peartlon. loped to 3In: fruit mm and preached " d can. b t1tte---msnrTiitiai; back In ooihc---Pates. Quanta-los- or Wink-l. 30.0.11de ' dl (llift/tUrs "i/ai in! "i,ie to alt about 'those mum yhichlmorz '.ytve1.s' y2.te upon their sanity. and art- at last am to be sentimental about their put as soldiers " we are all unlimenul when! our basin. They ran never " ‘cone to untold or no untimenul u the survivor. of other vary; the proportion of horn-am. MOBY, strain and activity to relaxation has been In too seven}! intend; oven the an plegmatir cannot (one! [he 00-h- tt.tee of misery, the one of harm hula-.124 Illne- of t'metnhtt iuluauu 'edt-ttft gut-ml! may to in. their charm... at: W11 WIT I ‘me name unusuu tl and carries them all ‘pacuuar It”. It is ‘tary. [Iowan]: than warm: and less In 'huntl high in the a! Let, VON: beiUre I _.. Inch longer and 1 ‘golor trom the red we ' Arnontr the Interest; ll Botttit . Amer-In VIWI, which In If I mm leaves his " night, they my be : or (base mu. creatr: a mu. . But no hat it it tho mum is und! In neatly 'tettlq up the ministers an amino": Ind 9 "If Rt given t In unu for in Mead the d In four lnrhés Inhg spread of I toot. I iover moat ot the continent trom u. brador to Alaska southward to Florlda ‘and California. " la very fond of caves. be!“ abundant in the lan- moth Care, of Kentucky. nurlu the winter, many ot them. bats migrate trom the north to the warmer mm ot the south. where they Mbernata. The young of this apt-clan. one or {to In number. are born In June, and an carried about by the mother for abouk two weeks. When thro- monlha old. they can " about and cateh tttrir own food. The I dint-1b: eaves ot m batltittg all ove When they I l treat deal are no “the bat Bomo very In” but: of the tropics food- upon fruits. but our but: are " [moot feeder: and dose". protectio- u do our mug-birds. When they Brat come out at twiltght. they are hum And one 1MMttt them “run: lbout very actively In put-wit of mosquitoes - other Insect: on the wing. The art to appear In the big brown hat, the: the red but, than nth-wry hut, um! (I. hoary bat. After hanging up by their Mud Net all day arueep In sumo. dark III-n- that tree: them Bats That Fly - Late at Night pr " tt quit Ir" York mob In he ve . n ti won truth. but our bat. an " foedon and deserve protectio- mr sou-birds. When that in: Its ll I In early mil Ildlng away in tt " Memory n thr [mud body (It-nu " no harm tboptt ("at " t. Elm-h may be 10-32 or , ran )nly Ike " They tlt tetra-per! toier. of boredom can " ot onloylnent trod. Incident... t used to can”. " be (sited of tit ti h ll ll u In; Ir " b b of [Menu lid-mind nd of my Md. Noggin-d " fired fur It th h HI tryte 'bomdum come, ll beau“ ir hind foot dark plan. but thirsty they drink MIND“ a men may trunks of c to no“ I win:- te hunt “d, In- during In and . of the W:yn ml. on. bod range- Tl but: It” " " It tre. m " mt- In me " It Att ds It h than him ("I tw "

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy