Ontario Community Newspapers

Orono Weekly Times, 1 Dec 1938, p. 3

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More Fruit Was Grown In 1938 Increase in Pear, Peach, Plum, Cherry and Raspberry Crop in Canada Noted According to the preliminary es- timates of the 1938 fruit crop in Canada compared with the revised figures for 1937, increases are in- dicated in the crops of pears, peaches, plums, cherries and rasp- berries. A slight decrease in the apple and strawberry crop is re- ported and an appreciable reduc- tion is noted in the crop of grapes. The figures for 1938 are: Pears, 485,800 bushels, increase 39.600 bushels; peaches, 706,000 bushels, increase 41,200 bushels; plums and prunes,: 205,000 bush- els, increase 74,000 bushels; rasp- berries, 9,484,600 quarts, increase 883,800 quarts; apples, 5,029,400 barrels, decrease 119,700 barrels; strawberries, 22,570,200 quarts, decrease, 953,000 quarts, and grapes, 38,804,000 lbs., decrease 15.580.600 lbs. The decrease in the grape crop was in Ontario alone. The only other grape- growing province in Canada, Brit- ish Columbia, with a crop of 2,- 404,000 lbs., shows a gain over 1937 of -19,200 lbs. Canada’s Best Amateur Named Canada’s outstanding amateur athlete for 1938, Eric Coy, ABOVE, shot put and discus star of Winnipeg, was awarded the Norton H. Crowe memorial trophy by the Amateur Athletic Union o,f Canada. Coy was the* dominion,’® leading point scorer at the British Empire games in Aus- tralia and was chosen for the award over Joe Gagnon, Montreal boxer, John Bearing, of Windsor, and George Sutherland, DeWin- ton, Alta. OH Indian Village Found on Prairie Dates Each at Least 500 Years, Manitoba Museum An- nounces â€"- Inhabitants Were Moutijd-'Buiidërs â€" Worked With Copper Remains, of a Mandan Indian village which flourished in south- western Manitoba at least 300 years before La Verendrye set out on his journey to the forks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers in 1738 were discovered recently by Mani- toba Museum officials. The party, consisting of L. T. S. Norris-Elve, H. Rand and R. Sut- ton, all of Winnipeg, visited an ancient Motindbuilders’ encamp- ment and discovered what they believed was a huge buffalo trap. Included among the. collection brought to Winnipeg was a string of genuine wampum, a sea-shell ornament made from a shell found in the Gulf of Mexico and an ar- rowhead of a type .made by early Texas Indians. Evidence the Moundbuilders were familiar with the art of working copper was shown on a skull with a copper band around the forehead. The copper, weath- ered through, the centuries, was paper-thin. Germany will spend $15,000,- 000 a year in advertising itself to foreigners. Are You Listening? By FREDDIE TEE HERE IS JIMMY FIDLER Jimmy Kidier, the- air reporter with the famous catch-phrase “And I DO mean YOU,” began a series, of ‘Hollywood Gos- sip” programs iver the Columbia network recently (WABC-CBS, 7:15 to 7:30 p.m„ EST. Rebroadcast at 10:30 p.m., EST). Fidler, who has bee-n a part of the movie capital in various capacities since he left the city of Memphis; Tennessee, home at the age of nineteen, will be heard describing the behind-the-scenes ac- tivities at the film studios, report- ing human interest items about the stars at home and in analytical cri- ticisms of motion picture-s he has previewed. IMPROMPTU Studio visitors to the Kate Smith Hour sometimes get. more than the show tuned in by arm chair listen- ers. After each broadcast, Abbott and Costello, featured comedy duo on the show, occasionally stage an impromptu gag session with fellow cast members. Jimmy Fidler “MAYOR” ON NANCY JAMES PROGRAM Joseph Curtin, pictured here, fills important roles in two of CBS’ ma- jor dramatic shows, He is “Ricliard Wharton,” reform mayor of Metro- polis City, in the series, “Her Hon- or, Nancy James" which is heard over the WABC - Columbia network Mondays through Fridays, 12:15 to 12:30 p.m., EST., and he also plays opposite Helen Menken in “Sec- ond Hsband, ” broadcast over Joseph the WABC - Col- Curtln umbia network on Tuesday from 7:30 to 8:00 p.m., EST. Recently, to get more realism into his portrayal of Metropolis’ “mayor”, Curtin interviewed Fior- ello H. LaGuardia, mayor of New York City. “Little- Flower” gave the “Nancy James” star some valuable tips on how the big city should be run. LONDON CALLING Owners of new 1939 DeForest Crosiey “Spread-Band” radio mod- els are getting a new thrill out of tuning their radio to bring in dis- tant stations on the six spread bands (especially the four individ- ual channels, devoted to the short- wave metre bands). Any owner of a new DeForest Crosiey “Music Mas- ter” model can tune in London, England, and listen to the news be- ing broadcast direct, at 7:40 p.m., EST., just as though it was the broadcast, of a Canadian station. LESSON X â- â€™ THE SIN OF LYING Exodus 20: 16; 2 Kings 5: 20-27; Proverbs 6: 16-19; Matthew 15: 19, 20; John 8: 42-47; Ephes- ians 4: 25; Revelation 22: 14, 15. Printed Text Exodus 20: 16; Matthew 15: 19, 20; John 8: 42-47; Ephesians ' 4: 25. Golden Text “Behold, thou desirest truth in the inward parts.” Psalm 51: 6. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING Time. â€" The Ten Command- ments were delivered 1498 B.C.; the incident in the life of Gehazi took place 894 B.C.; the book of Proverbs was written somewhere about 995 B.C.; the passage from the Gospel of Matthew was utter- ed in April, A.D. 29; the conver- sation recorded in the ieghth chapter of John occurred in Octo- ber of the same year ; the epistle to the Ephesians was written A.D. 64 ; the book of Revelation, about A.D. 90. Place. â€" The Ten Command- ments were given on Mount Sinai. We do not know where Elisha was staying at this time, nor where Gehazi overtook Naaman, nor do we know where the book of Prov- erbs was written. The words tak- en from Matthew were spoken at Capernaum;, the conversation in the book of John took place in Jerusalem; the epistle to the Ephe- sians was written from Rome to the great Greek city on the east- ern shore of the Aegean Sea; the visions recorded in the book of Revelation were given to John while he was on the island of Pat- inos, donated in the southern part of the Aegean Sea, between Greece and the Province of Asia. 16. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor. See also Deut. 5: 20, and, for the pen- alty of bearing false witness, Deut. 19: 16-21. The worst or most serious form of a lie is per- jury-â€"false witness-bearing, that is, to a neighbor’s hurt in civil or criminal prosecutions. We trans- gress this commandment when- ever we conceive a strong sus- picion and repeat it as a thing- we know. There is perhaps no command- ment in the Decalogueâ€"certainly none in the second table â€" so frequently broken by us as that with which we are dealing. The pages of the Old Testament are dark with the records of men and women who lied about other men and wjmen. Our Lord him- self was the greatest sufferer of all in the matter of false testi- mony. Matt. 15: 19, 20. 19. For out of the heart come forth evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, for- nifications, thefts, false witness, railings: 20. these are the things which defile the man ; but to eat • with unwashed hands defileth not the man. The sins here enumer- ated are those which violate the Sixth, Seventh, Eighth and Ninth commandments. The particular point which our Lord is here em- phasizing is that the Pharisees were sinning in their severe in- sistence that food eaten with un- washed hands defiles a man, whereas the truth is that real de- filement is not derived from, the things we eat, or the manner in which we eat them, but in the things which proceed from our - heart, many of which find their expression with the tongue and the lips. Father Of Ail Lies John 8: 42-47. 42, Jesus said unto them, If God were your Father, ye w.puld love me: for I came forth and am come from God;, for neither have I come of myself, but he sent me. 43. Why do ye not understand my speech? Even because ye cannot hear my word. Jesus now says that the reason why they refused to ac- cept what he. was saying was be- cause they could not hear his word, i.e>, they;, were in such a condition of spiritual death : that thë words Jesus, was uttering fell, as it were, on deaf ears. 44. Ye are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father it is your will to do. This is true of all men until grace regenerates them. He was a murderer from the beginning-. And standeth not in the truth, because there is no truth in him. When he gpeaketh, he speaketh of his own: for he is a liar, and the father thereof. This distinguishes Satan from all other evil persons. The lie has become his nature; it is his own; he has made it so by identifying his will with it. 45, But because I say the truth, ye believe me not; 46. Which of you convicteth me of :sin? If I. Nay truth, why, do ye not believe me? 47, He that is, of God heareth the words of God: for this cause ye heat- them not, because ye are not of God. .Refusing to believe Christ is not a matter of superior intellect, but arises from absolute godlessness. To. have God and not to : believe Christ is an impossible situation. 25. Wherefore. This word re- fers back to the preceding para- graph (vs. 17-24). Putting away falsehood. Speak ye truth each one with his neighbor. A neigh- bor, the Scripture teaches us, is a fellow man of any creed or na- tion; and. to all such we are bound to speak the truth. We are to watch ourselves scrupulously that we do not lie to others in busi- ness, in home life, in social life, at the lodge, in writing letters, in speaking from the platform, in re- porting conversations, in making promises in telling others about our own achievements. For we are members one of another. Christians are bound by recipro- cal ties and obligations, and false- hood wars against such a union. MIAMI.â€"En route from Day- ton, Ohio, to Florida, a group of hoboes hopped a freight car and crawled inside. Two days later, when Ray Barlow unloaded his 50-foot cruiser from the train, he discovered empty, beer bottles in the cabin floor, cigarette stubs in ash trays, cans of provision in tin refrigerator raided, the ,acio con nected, the beds mussed un lj dirty, shoes. The hoboes had mad'; the overland trip by boat". Babies may bo “parked” for s penny an hour in nursery shelters in London. LIFE’S LIKE THAT By Fred Neher HOW CAN I? A Ay f//<A “Ain't no use, Maw . . , , we've scrubbed an* scrubbed an” we've come to . another suit o? clothes !” Biblical King HORIZONTAL Answer $0 Previews Puzzle. locks and hinges of a door or win- dow when I am painting? A.:â€"Before painting, coat all the hardware with paraffin or petroleum ointment. The spots of paint can then be very readily re- moved. -â€"0â€" Q.â€"How can I avoid having- to squeeze the juice of lemons every time a recipe calls for it? A.â€"Why not extract the juice, of a dozen lemons at a time and keep in a tightly covered glass jar in the refrigerator? .It will prove a great convenience. 1.. _0â€"- Q.â€"How can 1 facilitate, the work of ironing napkins? A.â€"A good method for ironing napkins is to dip every third nap- kin in warm water, placing it be- tween two dry napkins, then fold and roll. Allow them to stand for about an hour before ironing. Q.â€" How can I remove brown marks from dishes, caused by bak- ing in the oven? A.â€"These marks can be remov- ed by rubbing the spots well with damp salt, then washing off, and repeating the treatment if neces- sary. (â- :.â€"How can. I treat scars that have resulted from pimples? A.â€"These Scars usually ‘will disappear very soon if they are bathed with a solution of boracic acid, followed by an application of zinc ointment. By ANNE ASHLEY A lUUfi - , pictured here. M A R ! |EL £ E R D [UN A N D A M E NIV A T Oâ„¢ u HOD d R found in the T A L KISH R A M iDlR 1 V E Q.â€"How can I prevent tearing Old â€". c R VHP R E N A P EHÉT A W a dress pattern? 13 Public H A. HCIUE L E Al A.â€"Cut the dress patterns out disturbance. M bIuIn t »! À a D mm htm of old cloth instead of paper. This 14 Grinding tooth A R ABHW Oft IT D kind of pattern will not tear, and 15 Above. K 1 DIE Mil M | L or Arc t it will cling to the goods without 16 To perish. E H MB A N! c Lj E Al pinning. 17 To deem. S| a TÃœSRÎË A- L 1 S til F R n - : O -' 18 Golf device. L G PÃŽE- B Mi 0 A i HJI R E R Q.â€"How can I remove spots of .1.9 Edits. P A R E«P E|A P L |RA N G paint readily ; from the knobs, 20 Things to be G R anidTs OpNj B EAU T Y 24 South America 25 Kind. 28 Neuter pronoun. 30 Groundwork. 34 Driving command. 35 Kind of pottery. 36 Convent worker. 37 Within. 38 To repulse. 39 You -and I. 40 Gowns. 46 Irony, 50 Every. 51 Advantage. 53 Wine vessel, 54 Bones. 55 Ago, 56 Low sand hill. m 58 He was a'---- as a boy. 59 He killed the giant Goliath with his --- (PL). VERTICAL 1 Doctor. 2 Naval assistant. 3 Vacant. 4 Virginia willow. 5 Peaks. 6 Prophet. 7 Grit. 8 Maples. 9 A speck. 10 Opposed odd. 11 To require. 12 Transposed. 14 Witticism, 19 He â€"â€" about to 40 years. 21 Worker. 22 His favorite son. 23 Boundary. 26 Rumanian coin. 27 Cognizance. 29 Light brown 31 Beer, 32 To drink slowly. 33 Frozen water. 39 Walks through water. 41 Headstrong. 42 Otherwise. 43 To hit with the hand. 44 Actual being. 45 Bustle. 46 Membranous bag. 47 Mohammedan judge. 48 Last word of a prayer 49 Warbled, 52 Finish, 54 Ridge of a drift. 57 Electric ùmt. Si 2 3 4 15 113 H lé 17 Ã" 10 )l !2 i15 §5â„¢ tagô 45, POP-â€"-A Little Soap and Water Will Do Wonders HAVE YOU GOT A PIECE OF SOAP 9 WHAT DO YOU WANT SOAP FOR Q VfnrieWrht hv The Unll .Syndicate Ini- l By J„ MILLAR WATT LITTLE WILLIES GOT HICCUPS AND 1 WANT' TO SCARE HIM /

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