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Durham Review (1897), 25 Jul 1940, p. 3

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yoy ine ful, ) Hotâ€" es of alled he 0t n H as compared with t&e acreage of 91,035 acres planted in 1939. Reâ€" ductions are general for all types of tobacco grown in Ontario, the greatest change being in the flueâ€" cured crop, the area of which has been reduced by approximately oneâ€" third from the area of 62,550 acres in 1939. Decreases are also indicatâ€" ed for the cigaretto and cigar leaf types in Quebec. i LESS BURLEY AND DARK Following the recommendation of the Burley Marketing Association of Ontario that a 12%4 per cent. reâ€" duction in acreage be put into efâ€" â€" fect in 1940, it is anticipated that » â€"Che acreage planted to burley toâ€" _ bacco will bo approximately 9,600 * -hlso |;l-l?ted' _t;the Province of Queâ€" bec. Not much change is indicated in the acreago planted to the pipe acres. The acreage of dark tobacco under contract in Ontario will show a reduction of at least 35 per cont. Thero will probably be a decrease of tive to ten" per cent. in the area planted to cigar leaf types in Queâ€" According to the first report on the 1940 commercial crop of leaf tobacco in Canada, a considerable reduction in acreage is indicated Canadian Tobacco Acreage Reduced A review of military might was in progress in the square in backâ€" ground (note band), and all passersby had to state their busiâ€" ness and destination. The young girl is being questioned here beâ€" fore being allowed to pass through the square. German dominaticn. Steel helâ€" meted troopers are everywhere. France‘s capital is no more the gay city. The tramp of booted German feet takes the place of the laughter that was. Here is a typical street scene in Paris under German domination â€" Steel hel. At three years, $96 words. At three and a half years, words. At four years, 1,540 words. At four and a half years, words. At five years, 2,070 words. At five and a half years, words. Many children â€"ave not begun to talk at one year,; and some have not at 18 months. Of the children studied the average vocabularies are as follows: At one year, 7 words. At 18 months, 71 words. At two years, 328 words. 2 002 MCqUCREEC BA study by M. E. Smith at the Uniâ€" versity of Towa concludes that the words used most frequently up to and at the sixth year are: I, is, it, you, that, do, a, this, not, the. HERES A CHART memEDerie mm inernintnineme ns t 8 421 0 not only can say dada and mama, or its equivalent, but has mastered at least three or four distinguishâ€" able words which ho articulates with much Dbrecision." The other words most popular were byeâ€"bye and baby. At 13 months, byeâ€"bye, taâ€"ta, hello and bhowâ€"do were most frequent. A ENCE Show ) Nes Sm iX is o2 â€"__ * ~C0% tireo or four able words which he with much Dbrecision." The other words m were byeâ€"bye and bat months, byeâ€"bye, taâ€"ta bhowâ€"do were most fr study by M. E. Smith versity of lowa ennein, ‘ /A number of vocaularies of young children have been published, each word being recorded when first heard or at various intervals, Dr. Arnold Gesell, of Yale University, studied 50 babies 12 months old and 50 more 13 months old. Ha saveâ€" «mm > > At six years, 2562 words At Planted This Year in Ontario Oneâ€"third Less Flueâ€"Cured This Is Paris Today Can Say Five op . 1,540 words. a hall years, 1,870 a half years, 1,22% 28 words. half years, 690 i O e e w 12â€"monthâ€"oldâ€" child Six Words . flesh reap corruption; but he that God is not mocked: for whatsoâ€" ever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.. 8. For he that soweth unto his own flesh shall of the 21. Woe unto them that are wise in their eyes, and prudent in their sight! (the road of pride) mighty to drink wine, and men of strength to mingle. strong; 28, that justify the wicked for a ness of the righteous from him! In his last "woe" Isaiah returns to the drinking habits of the upper classes, from which it would appear that among the judges of fatal results. Je ebd annbmbe ul naee nc P tnctiee hn ces Aean s moule that put bitter for sweet, ad sweet for bitter! Referring to the things that are sweet and bitter, it has been said that although they may be sweet the material taste, they are nevertheless bitter, inasmuch as they produce abhorâ€" rence and disgust in the Godâ€"like nature of man, and, after a brief period of selfâ€"deception, are The larger part of this chapâ€" ter. verses 8 to 24, is occupied with a series of woes pronounced aga.nst various classes of people in Israel guilty of certain flagâ€" rant sins. 18. Woe unto them that draw iniquity with cords of falseâ€" hood, and sin as it were with a cart rope; 19. That say, Let him make speed, let him hasten his work, that we may see it; and let the counsel of the Holy Onre of Israel draw nigh and come, that we may know it! These people are making an impious chailenge to Jehovah to make gocé his words spoken through the prophets,â€"a defiant unbelief which seems to have ‘been the reigning spirit of the political circles of Isaiah‘s times. 20. Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put darkness for light, and light for darkness: Isa. 5: 11. Woe unto them that rise up early in the morning, that they may follow strong drink; that tarry late into the night, till wine inflame them! 12. And the harp and the lute, the tabret and the pipe, and wine, are in their feasts; but they regard not the work of Jehovah, neither have they considered the operation of his hands. kKoman provinee in what is now known as Asia Minor. In this lesson we are reminded that a true Christian life is not a mechanical obedience to many rules, but a life so filled with the ‘ presence of the Lord Jesus Christ, guided by his Spirit, that obedâ€" ience to the laws of God becomes, as it were, second nature to a person. All God‘s laws for us will be continually and gladly kept if the Spirit of Christ is alâ€" lowed to control and guide our every thought, word and deed, ruling sovereign in our hearts. From Father to Son Prov. 1: 7 The fear of Jehovah is ‘the beginning of knowledge; But the foolish despise wisdom and instruction. This verse stands out as the motto, or keyâ€"note, both of the whole book and of the whole subject of which the book treats. 8. My son, hear the inâ€" struction of thy father, and forâ€" sake not the law of thy mother: 9. For they shall be a chaplet of grace unto thy head, and chains about thy neck. The moral beauty which will become conspicuous by following the advice given in verse 8 is here symbolized by obâ€" jects of conspicuous adornment to the person. 10. My son, if sinners entice thee, Consent thou not. This young man is warned not even to begin to give heed to the enticements offered to him, for once one begins to walk on the paths of iniquity, human experience everywhere testifies to the fact that the step will lead to others that will swiftly carry that one down to lower and lower levels. Place.â€"Solomon ruled in Jerâ€" usalem, and there also Isaiar prophesied. Galatia was a vast hpy N00 Smss . 1 in A.D. 57. Dr°Len about 760 B.C. Paul wrote his epistle to the Galatians a HHS naime ie l Time.â€"Solomon, who wrote or collected many of the gems found in the book of Proverbs, €lourâ€" ished about 1,000 B.C. The chapâ€" ter in Isaiah, from which a porâ€" tion is taken for this lesson, was written about 760 B.C. Paul THE LESSON IN ITs SETTING img promise of the 'iifo_:b.i;iu ;:: is, and of that which is to come. % es u_ i Netiande n un en 1 nc 7 Eo t en en ;I!)-â€"an.rb. 1: 7â€"10; Isai 9: 11, 12, 18â€"23â€" Calit_ Tâ€"9. is profitable for (A Principle of GOLDEN into the bitter woe of SUND A Y SCHOOL LESSON ive Roads to Ruin CONSEQUENCES Temperate Livâ€" havâ€" 6: soweth unto the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap eternal life. â€" Our present life is the seedâ€"time o5 an eternal harvestâ€"we must be careful what we plant for the quality of the future harvest deâ€" pends entirely on the present sowing. Like breeds its like; life springs from life; and death eternal is the culmination of a soul‘s present death to God and goodness. 9. And let us not be weary in wellâ€"doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not. our natural resources will be disâ€" cussed in a popular and accurate style. These articles have boen written by G. C. Toner, B.A., for the Ontario Federation of Anglers, and will deal with our familiar aniâ€" mals, birds and fishes. x Need Is Urgent The Ontario Federation of Angâ€" lers is the associated fish and game Do you know how vitally all of us aro affected by the depletion of our natural resources? At no time in our history has it been _more important to know how we can conserve our wild life and figsherâ€" ies. In a series of articles that will start in this newspaper soon, conâ€" servation and the replenishment of This show is one that every re good Canadian will want to hear. Another "Empire program" is beâ€" ing presented by CKOC each Sunâ€" day afternoon at 5:30 â€" when "Songs the Soldiers Sing" is the feature. This program introduces new and old war tunes, the patriotâ€" ic songs that everyone knows, or wants to know. Ontario listeners can get this splendid program â€" each Sunday night at nine, daylight time, by tuning in at CBL, CKOC or CBC. p.m. from Toronto studios, and it is produced in coâ€"operation with the Federal Government‘s Departâ€" ment of Information. war effort. The CBC has utilized its networks to bring the news to list eners, and to provide the entertainâ€" ment essential as a respite from each day‘s reports of the struggle. And during these arduous months, the CBC has experimented with and developed another urgent serâ€" vice â€" programmes specially planâ€" ned to assist Canada‘s war effort. Of these, "Carry on Canada!‘" is broadcast Sunday nights at 9:00 Radio in Canada has responded readily tq tl}g intensification of the was through its entertainment valâ€" ue; today, it is a vital source of communication, presenting the news that develops so fast no other facility can cope with its swift pace. Radio entered a new phase of its service to the world with the outâ€" break of the second world war. Hitherto radio‘s first claim to fame This twinâ€"engined bomber and reconnaissance the Royal Canadian Air Force by the Imperial Order from coast to coast combined forces to collect mo: of the order and the words "For King and Emnirs ” RADIO REPORTER POPâ€"No Choice RADIO AND THE waAr‘ T ( (‘3. Jue , /, N 9 NOW WHAT WOULD You po IP YOU UPSET A BOTLE I. 0. D. E. OF ING â€" Mr. Toner served overseas in the last war and on his return, while in hospital, became interestâ€" ed in animals. After graduating from Queen‘s University he worked for the Ontario Game and Fisheries Department for several years as a biologist. A breakâ€"down in health caused him to turn to freeâ€"lance writing and he has successfully conducted a column on nature for several years in eastern Ontario newspapers. At the present time Mr. Toner is working on diseasos of fishes at Queen‘s University, under a grant from the Fisheries Board of Canada. During his periods as Prime Minister, between 1924 and 1987, Earl Baldwin (then the Rt. Hon. Stanley) had 8,000 pipes sent him as presents. protective clubs of the Province. Organized in 1928 by representaâ€" tives of angling associations from all Ontario it has expanded until toâ€"day it represents most of the sportsmen who are interested in conservation. The purpose of the Federation is to assist the Governâ€" ment in maintaining, improving and perpetuating the game fish roâ€" sources of the province; to bring before the public the urgency of conservational efforts; and to eduâ€" cate the growing generation along these lines, The President of the Federation is Dr. H. C. Bliss, of Toronto, and the secretaryâ€"treasurâ€" er is Mr. C. C. McGibbon, of Oshâ€" awa. The executive council includes most of the leaders in conservation in Ontario. * King at $:00. Sunday â€" Sandy‘s Cang@dian Hour from BBC via CBC at 8:00 p.m. . ., Mondayâ€"Burns and Allen with Artie Shaw on the NBCâ€"Red network at 7:30 . .. Tuesday â€" Laugh and Swing Club from WOR mutual chain at 9:30 p.m. ... Wedâ€" nesday â€" Dr. Christian, a drama starring Jean \Hersholt, on the Colâ€" umbia chain at $:30 . .. Thursday â€" Stag Party via CBC from Vanâ€" couver at 11:30 p.m. .. . Friday â€" Music You. Want from CKOC at 3:30 . .. Saturday â€" Radio Guild 4115 is the time of the year when your garden needs special attenâ€" tion â€" to keep your prizo roses, plants and flowers free from bugs, fungus and all the other blights. The best way to care for your flowâ€" ers is to tuno in Dick, the Amateur Gardener, heard from 1120 on your radio dial every weekâ€"day at 12:30 noon. Dick will tell you how to meet all your problems. HANDâ€"PICKED RADIO BRIGHT SsPOTS Sunday â€" _ Sandy‘s Cang@dian NOTES AND NEWS The Columbia Broadcasting Sys tem has an ambitious summer pro gram schedule lined un héaded hy This is the time of the year id on the NBCâ€"Blue network mov Col. W. P. Mulock who was recently named by Prime Minister Mackenzie King as the new Postâ€" masterâ€"General of Canada. The Straw Compost was made up by Michigan Experiment Station as follows: A 10 ft. square pile of fresh wheat straw was started and the straw was piled to a depth of 1 ft, On this was scattered 30 lbs. of the following chemical mixture: 67% lbs. Sulphate of Ammonia, 20 per cent. Superphosphate, 22.5 lbs., and Ground Limestone, 60 lbs. Anâ€" other foot of straw was placed on top of this, and 30 lbs. more of the chemical mixture was added. This was continued until 5 feet of straw I am unable to tell you just what the straw pile should weigh at the end of six months, but I do know that in compost Experiments conâ€" ducted by Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station where 6 tons per acre of Compost Manure wore turned under, 1 compost consisting of Barnyard Manure in comparison with Synthetic Manure which was dampened and treated straw as explained bolow, there were the following yields: Barnyard Manâ€" ure, 110.6 bus. per acre of Potatoes. Synthetic Manure 179.6 bus. an acre of Potatoes. The note says that, "It ure failed to give as good results is believed that the Barnyard Manâ€" as the Synthetic Manure because of the rather high content of straw which possibly led to a nitrate de ficiency where the Barnyard Manâ€" ure was applied. Turning under such quantities of strawy material low in nitrogen often reduces the yields of the crop that immediately follows it." New Postmasterâ€"General I would say that the weights of fresh straw aro approximately as follows: Crop Wt. per Cu. Cu. Â¥ds. per Foot (Ibs.) Ton Wheat 3.5 23.3 Oats 3.4 24.3 Barley 2.8 30.2 The straw which we have menâ€" tioned takes up to the pound of litâ€" ter, the following amounts of waâ€" ter: Oat Straw, 2.28; Barley Straw 2.85; Wheat Straw 2.20. A. Answering your inquiry, which has been referred to my attention, mer Farm Notes STRAW COMPOST on of straw compared to pig manure where the litter? "N. M. â€" York s been presented to Lodges of the order its nose the insignia ///74// hk f ‘ ,‘:'l,‘.;"i:;: / a" P WRM: 2 Le: ; 3 o C ol Sflrlgl. 1939. by The BetiSyndicate. Soc )!:23 America. manufa 20 Nude. 33 Star. 21 Strip of stecl 34 Spectat in tube 35 Amuser making. 36 Born. 22 Compass 37 Owl‘s c point. 39 Myself. 23 Covered 40 Grain. trucks. 42 Female 24 Bundle. 43 Thing. 25 Electric unit. 44 Definite 27 Hodgepodge. article. 28 Sundry. 46 Half of 29 Logger‘s boot. 47 Plant. 30 Disturbances. 48 Pilaster. university. 15 To scratch. 16 To straighten up. 17 To rub out. 19 South HORIZONTAL ~ _ Answer to Previous Puzzle 1 Pictured = q DAIâ€"_ADT ES _ECIRAnNe alligaton" _ AJMAR LNEMIBANCON 9 It is found [ggl’] D[AIRIKIARICIARLC chiefly in EIOEINMRIPICIEIR CR frosh â€". |PWW@ llF!llL!l:lfl[! ‘fl';.‘; 13 Fertile desert [%Eluil!;fl [l][:l@]{m HL. spot. CERmcomur) gmtif 14 School of a â€" [mizâ€"/[=M@_} m â€" had boeen added and treated with 6 applications of the chemical mixâ€" ture. The pile was then thoroughly soaked and allowed to stand for whout 5 months. It was then applied to the crops such as we have just ( Cream? 1 AAAACCCAACUSTER cce stal CIRCUS folk have & language all their own. To them, camels are humps, clephants are bulls, monkeys are old folks, hippos are hogs, hyenas are gravediggers, and ostriches are big turkeys. And lp;eople who take in all the free sights, but never buy tickets, are tâ€"fleas. HOUR GLASSES wEerE usep |BY EARLY NEW ENGLAND ( MINISTERS For. TIMing ~ THEiR. SERMONS. .. +7 (\? Ano sometrimes 12 # .’\Qo( THE SAND WAs @ s R Run TtHhroucH zn 2 s u:23 / P Tomes. fPll N i l ‘ 4 ‘a, e . / e | v ’s\ . Cb -':'1 S <g Ezrwâ€"â€".â€"= _ a| : é W s zP /& aroMm ‘ .A is s g Ts Curious Worip ONTARIO ~NERCGYZ ... 4M02 auower to Erevious Puzzle 9Donlct once a _â€"_ BACAp T ECE _ FEeaAncs® .. °* JMADI ENEMIAA T COREC 19 o.concede d [5'}['] [:]V‘.‘IEJKVA“ @L‘!l:l['}[ii 12 To repent. EDENMIP!LC PME RARAT 1: Skillets. . PK |Hâ€"beig â€"CGMICADN 18 Biaae of grase. ort _m‘.l}]!=' INIEJOIN] l-'JL.l" 20 Double bass, *"* del [Tmce {g |ANSIS 21 Mentally â€"IE/CEMCIO FOUARY [EICI2EIT] _ sound. * ICSOSEW p|LQOMRMIG] 22 It has â€" CR USBDAARppAEAG _ tecin. _ ~ GCORE OMREINS] 23 Interdiction. * IANMIMOCALNERRET]E 244 sratuity. i. BRIEMNEIRST 1CIR|( S|| fg] 26 It has homy 32 To masher. 27 Pigmented manufacture. 51 Its eggs are spot on skin. 33 Star. laid in â€"__â€"_â€". 25 Blemish, cl :3;1 §E‘cctfitfirs‘ 52 Its eggs are 29 Brooch. 37 Owl‘s cry. 39 Myself. 40 Grain. 42 Female sheep 43 Thing. 44 Definite manufacture. 51 Its eggs are 33 Star. laid in â€"â€". 34 Spectators. 52 Its eggs are 35 Amusement. â€"â€" by the 36 Born. sun. 32 To hy Heat sroducing duciâ€" AQUATIC REPTILE JUST /| . C usren! 2 29 / W a # V ‘. 1F Y) s )\ By J. MILLAR WATT 5 Ridge. 6 Cake VYERTICAL 1 Heart. 2 To elevate. 3 Bones. 4 Citizen. decorators. masher. and 14.5 lbs. of Potash. your question, a ton of straw carâ€" ries 11 lbs. Nitrogen, 4 of Phosâ€" phoric Acid and 20 of Potash. A ton of pig manure carries 15.2 lbs. Nitrogen, 9.5 lbs. Phosphoric Acid In answer to the second part of foodsuscdhmkingiuj 31 Sluggishness, 32 Mysel. 33 Mongrel. 35 Enemy., 38 To have. 39 Affray, 41 Flock. 43 Wealthy. 45 Female fowl 47 Twitching. 48 Postscript. spot on skin. KHZ

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