Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 11 Feb 1932, p. 3

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" 1s to condf where acid pre-{ Fi Would a proper application, after © A decorated skull unearthed by Professor Alfonso Caso leader Sh Ss - Answer.--In the system of farming mmonly pursued in Ontarfo, lime a, i hould be applied once in four or five What New York ipl grig indi Is Wearing of it. Crops are ro: | tated so as to jatroduce a legume crop | nn yt once in four or five years. The d| BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINSTON tortie but points. to a decided "after" eff a growth of this {0 a decided | 8 | growth crop is usually turned fortilizers. For instance, where fers under as green manure. It also adds| jiustvated Dressmaking Lesson. Fur- wished With E: ory Pattern tilizer was applied to alfalfa in 1930] considerable nitrogen to the soil it giving an increase of 9,200 Ibs. (green|legumes predominate in it. A fale weight) per acre, the same plot {n|amount of livestock 1s usually kept 1931 without further fertilizer gave an and manure is returned as generously increase of 2,240 lbs, (green weight) |as possible. In addition to these prac- over land which had been wm 2d.| tices, suitably balanced fertilizers ap-| In another instance where er| plied to money crops or to crops: of re} had been applied to. barley on clay soil! atively high value has been found to in eastern Ontario in 1930, there was |increase ylelds at considerable profit. . an increase of 13.6 bushels, On the|Of course, the degree of profit will de- same plot in 1931 without any further pend among other things upon the fertilizer there was an increase Of{quentity of fertilizer employed. We 4,820 Ibs. of clover hay (green weight) {mean that while thres bags of fertil- over unfertilized land, In a test con-|izers per acre m ive a highly profit- ducted by the Department of Chemis-{able return on wheat or corn or sugar try, 0.A.C., where complete fertilizers |boets, the addition of eight bags to the were applied to mangels and no 'fur-|acre, which would entail a much ther fertilizer applied for two years; |greater cost, would in all probability there was a gain of 4.1 tons of mangels | consume the additfonal profit. The the first year; 9.7 bushels barley the|Ontario farmer has to determine this second year, and 600 lbs hay the third, point for himself, in view of the type year. Necessarily, attention must be. of his soil, the cropping system which given to keeping up the organic mat-| he follows and the amount of fertility "ter of the soil by turning under green that lie is able to return in barnyard Fons oe Hus all the strawy manure manure and green manures. obtainable, 'if the soil "is to be im] 7, What proved in its productive capacity. las sa =. Shosphrte 3. Should a 4-810 fertilizer = cause tilizer? For the last two years we scab on potatoes, used at the rate of have used 4-12-6 for early potatoes and 600 Ibs. per acre? | 212-6 for late, and the results have Answer--We know of mo reason been very good. We have a sandy why fertilizers of any kind should loam soil and usually put on a light Suse scabs Scab is a fungus disease coat of manure. whiel ves in an alkaline soil. If} Answer--Results in our demonstra-: potato seed is not treated and is plant-! tion fertilizer tests thronghout = the | od in a scabdnfected soil that is alka-! past three years point distinctly to the line in reaction, thers is every chance|value of 2-126 fertilizer on potatoes of a scabby crop being harvested.| under general conditions. In our tests Many potato growers find that by turn-! or 1931 where 212-6 and 48-10 fentil- ed. 2126 a well balanced fertilizer fu- * of expedition in Mexico. This unusual specimen is adorned with carved eld: n Sigs beets { s production to an economical| sea shells in the eye sockets, a piece 'of flint in the nose cayity and Pra by fertilizers a' maximum? the whole finished off with turquols. : ee tae tertiary ahd February 14. Lesson Bli--Jesus and I. THE BLIND MAN CURED, John 9: 1-T. 11. "2 WON'T BELIEVE, John 9: 8-34, III. WITH CHRIST, OR AGAINST HIM, show the gradual hardening of the Jowish hearts agains. Jesus, Many o his own disciples no longer walke with him. The shadow of the ap- proaching crisis was already darken- ing his way, He knew that the end could not be far off. The "man born lind" is a type of the Jews who re- ceived Jesus. The Pharisees in the story represent the prejudiced stub- bornness of those whose hearts were hardened by Jesus' life and teaching. was at the entrance to the Temple. neither be begging nur receiving alma. his cure spread suggests some reli- under a second crop of clover in pre-|izers wera compared, we found the| For little daughter of school age, paration of the potato seed bed, the, attr gave a little higher yleld on | Why not this darling coat-like dress? desirable small degree of acidity in the 1ight soils and loamy soils, but the dif:| Yoa can carry it out so chasmingly soil which produces clean potato stock| ference on loam soils hardly over-|in sheer woolen, now so modish, For Tapults from the decay of the organic! came the difference in cost of 'fortil| the darling pleated collar, you could matter. Lzer. The reverse order was:found to | Use Pique, linen or self-fabric in.a 4, How does 6% potash in the fertil-| yrevall on clay soils. From the rather contrasting color, izer, say 212-6, applied at the rate of extensive investigational potato work The original dress used brown wool time in Ephesus held regarding Job's comforters--wa1 that trouble is the pmishment or the sin a man com- mits--o' the sin which his parents commit, previous state of existence a man did 200 Ibs. per acre, help the grain to Pay | conducted by*this station we are of the crepe. The collar was almond green extra cash in a spring crop, say 0ats? | opinion that as least 13% phosphoric | Wool crepe. The wide brown belt was} Answer--With oats at the present acid can be used with h 2 good results in| shiny patent leather. low prices it is difficult to make: a'gertilizers for early potatoes. It would Saanish tile wool dersey with biven " directly to this crop. From results ob-|izers for the early potatoes, namel unnin; - ; y h y 4-| © g. : tained recently in our demonstration'ysg is quite as we would recommend, | A dark . green tweed-like woolen benefit most: profitably from the Te-|thap you could got slightly larger | other scheme you'll like. Sidusl effect of fertilizers applied 10) yields by substituting 4310 for the| Style No, 3465 is designed in sizes o crop preceding If, however, 0ats late potatoes on the light soll. "This 6, 8 10 and 12 years. a3, grown. as.a cash crop, 200. 1bs, Of| will 'depend, of course, upon how| Size 8 requires 1% yards Gi-inch tiliger to the acre may be of.advant-! yeqvy a coat of manure you apply. In material and % yard 35-inch contrast. age: nother or not it: will pay will the tests conduotedito which we have | ing epend upon the type of soil and state! referred, mo manure was applied. In| HOW: TO ORDER PATTERNS Il fertility. It "the event that you have a fair coatin, of soll fertility, grain has been g i . plain. taken from the fleld frequently within}os manure to apply, 2126 will give Write your-name-and address-plain the last few years without the returniy,y, a petter balance of plantfood with ly, giving number and size of such of much fertility, the available potash}: y ig patterns as you want, Enclose 20c in en Mais | jmanura ag: 1514, stamps. or coin (coin preferred; wrap) _ siderably lowered, in which case a fer- 3 -------- Be Sasatully) for a and tiliger sach as 2-126 will well, ~ address your order to Wilson Pat... n 5. In howamany Wass oi Mahogany Used as Fuel | Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Torcrto elements taken from the soil? In the interior of the Republic of meeps Answer--Plant food elements are| Panama one often sees valuable ma- THE LOVE TREE removed in crops which are harvested | hogany being: used as fuel in the car- Love Is like a tree--vegetating of * from the oD a in the straw stalk|boneros, or charcoal burners, doiig itself, striking deep-roots through ail enti the fruit, grain or seed They the cooking for. the villagers andi ll being, and often oontinuing to are also removed in the bodies:of live:| planters, Mahogany is cheap and grow greshly over a heart fn ruins. stock pustured upon the soil, and nitro-| makes:the best charcoal, but the Canal pad. ldgaphautia 4a it 1s, ths Bling: gen especially is washed out-of the|Zone authorities are planning to in- > : this pas oo the more 5 s soll through drainage water. Small troduce other fuel so as to save the |'°nac ou of 7 and' phosphats in val shadow of reason.--Vietor Hugo. something wrong for which he is made t pay in his next incarnation. "Who i ginned, this mas, of lia parents, that vi ind? v. 2. trong profit from the addition: of fertilizers! gopaar that while your choice of fertil- | linen collar snd brown suede belt is' (are. the old legalistic i the disciples; that He sight of suitor. ing arou not he impulse to help, work, it would appear that oats can'yet the results of our tests indicate | with vivid yellow pique collar is an- but the desire to discuss. that sin does mot bring suffering-- for it does. He did mean, however, to discourage the tendency--still am- ong us--to think ancharitably of cuf- clear by Jesus' repiy to his speculating | ¥What can I do to help?" So will the "Sunday Schoo Lesson >oo the Man Born Blind--John 9. 1113 30-38. Golden Text--I am the light of the world: he that followeth me shall not walk in the darkness, but shall have the fight of life.~ John 8: 12. ANALYSIS. John 9: 35-41, INTRODUCTION--Chsoters 7 and 8 I. THE BLIND MAN CURED, John 9: 1-7. It is probable that the blind man On the Sabbath, however, he would The rapidity with which the news of aious festival--pernaps the Feast of Dedication, 10: 22. The "disciples" (9:2) may have been the Judean grou), and not the Galilean. Would fishormon be interssted in the theo- logical question? The question which they are made to ask in the story indicates the two main views which the people of John's trouble. The Jewish view--as old as Tha Jreek view was that in some Jesus' answer (v. 3) did not mean fering as punishment. Let a non- churchgoer, say, be killed in a motor accident on a Sunday and some one will be sure to say, "God's judgment!" We are not in a position tp say. Our duty in such a situation is made disciples, v. 8. We are to ask, not-- "Why do such things hap a?" but works of God be mad: manifest. The elaborate process of wetting the clay--sealing the man's eyes, sending him to the Pool of &'lcam, is symbol- ism. The ¢lay symbolizes the act of creation, Gen. 2: 7. The Christian, the man whose eyes Christ has openéd, is a new creation. Sealing the eyes means that our spiritual blindness must be brought home to us. Siloam means "sent." John'saw in the name a reference to Jesus Christ, "sent" by hunted om every had slipped back one dimension in| Perhaps at some distant place and walked In a shadow world. !time, in utterly incongruous surround- + these shadows were not all color-|ings, it may in turn 'Although. the light was strained | sciousness -- a memory: almost barren by the moon mountains, | late yet the glow from the distant lava and craters still kept something of 'color, | tening ta the baying of a hound, or so and the green of tho leaves, groat and {1 thought; that musical ululation Ee Te wa Jato fe a D wards, filmed with clear water, and te alan of he a Seuck duck Joe Je hd polished sit: Vit his quiet smié® he whispered, , -| "Kunama,"" tion. The trail ahead was sithge Black 3 frog of size and voice well in keep: ere and 'heard the glant tree frog of Guiana-- there in the jungle on each side, where ing with these mighty jungles. I could imagine the great goggie-eyed fellow sprawled high near the roof of the jungle, clutching the leaves with its vacuum-cupped toes. would make him 'ghostly--a pastel frog; but in the day he flaunted splash- , 08 of azure and green on his scarlet d by some sound of the future. stood {n'a patch of moonlight lis: and I knew that I had or a solid sheot ofl ight! a tree hadfallen, space led moonwards, the effect was of cold electric light seen through trees When such a shaft struck down upon us it surpassed 1 have seen old paintings in Belgian cathedrals of celestial™ light which now seem less imaginary, At last the silence was broken, and like the first breath of the trade-wind which clouds the Mazaruni surface, the mirror of silence was never quite clean again -- or so it seemed. My Northern mind, stored with sounds of memory, never instinctively accepted a new volce of the jungle for what it Each had to go through a Te- ference clearing house of sorts. strange wall or scream striking sud- or a flue of clear At a turn In the trail we squatted and walted for what the jungle might send of sight or sound. And in whis- pers Nupee told me of the big frog kunama and its ways. to the ground, or even descended part way down the trees; and by some uu- known method of distillation it made little pools of its own in deep hollows and 'thers lived, --William Beebe, of the sacramental tendency of this Gospel. Only after the rite of bap- tism does the believer enter fully into ELOQUENCE OF WORDS By words we have it in our power suoh combinations as we cannot possibly do otherwise; this. power of combing we are able, by the addition of well-chosen cir. cumstances, to give a new life and force to the simple object; in paint ing we may represent any fine figure we please; but we can never give it 11. "1 WON'T BELIEVE, John 9: 8-34, The story begins with the healing of physical blindness, but it soon shifts to the Jews who, in spite of the con- elusive evidence, remain stubbornly unbelieving. They fastened uj id no sirls--and he never had more. He not one of those who take more light in a mere infant; but no father ever devoted more time and tender care to his offspring than he did to each of his, as they succes- sively reached the age when they could listen to him, and understand his talk. Like their mute playmates, Champ and the greyhounds, they had at all times free access to his study; fia never considered their tattle as any distughance; they went and came a8 they pleased their fancy; he was al- ways ready to answer thelr questions and when they, unconscious how he was engaged, entreated him to lay down his pen and tell them a story, he would take them on his knee, re- peat a ballad or a legend, kiss them and set them down again to thelr marbles or ninepins, and resume his labor as if refreshed by the interrup- tion. From a very early age he made them dine at table, and "to sit up to supper" was the great reward when they had been "very good bairns," In short, he considered it as the highest duty, as well as the sweetest pleasure of a parent to be the companion of his children; be partook all their little joys and aor rows, and made his kind informal {nstruction to blend 30 easily and playtully with the current of thelr own sayings and doings, that so far from regarding him with any dis tant awe, it was never thought that any sport or diversion could go om in the right way, unless papa werg of the party, or that the ralniest day could be dull, so he were ak home.--John Gibson Lockhart, im "Lita of Sir Walter Scott." emp met work involved in wetting the clay on the Sabbath, and made it the basis of the charge against Jesus, v. 16, * good man would not break the Sab- "A bad man could not work a miracle," retorted another. So the controversy went on. Failing in their purpose, the Jev those enlivening may receive from words. gent an angel in a picture, you can a beautiful young man winged;, but what painting can fur. ot nigh anything so grand as the tion of one word, "The angel d| Lord ?"--Burke, i emenfib enne GROWING IN DARKNESS Kind hearts are gardens, Kind thoughts are roots, Kind words are blossoms, Kind deeds are fruits; Love is the sunshine That warms into life, For only in darkness Grow hatred and strife. eee pee em Getting Ready bath," said some. Therefore they woul neither see nor admit any good in him. What about our atti deeds of people whom we dislike? III. WITH CHRIST, OR AGAINST HIM, tude toward the! Resourceful and bold as this man proved to be, he could not but have felt keenly his excommunication, His f employment would now he He would be shunned as the One could imagine him moodily wishing that he had been left as he was, where he could-at least have had society provide him his liv- meeting Jesus, who, hear- shment was probably he found a friendship which more than compensated for any loss which his loyalty may have caused him. To him as'to many another, be- set by life's misfortunes, Christ be- came "all and in all." { Jesus, summing up { the "sign," declares that his coming} into the world is like a judgment. It, brings out the characters of men, v.| 29, No one ever comes in contact with | him without being compelled to side; with him or against him. "The choice he makes determines his destiny. "Where did you find your won- derful follow-up system? get money out of anybody." "I simply compiled and adapted the letters my son sent me from J Aquitania at the Southampton floating dock, under- "No new aga ever going a thorough grooming in scratch. Bach era makes Its partl- cular contribution to the future"--- God, The command to "wash" is part THIS TRIPE 13 | ""% DELICIOUS! : { on, = ALMOST roll BE JEFF WAITRESS - WELL, ASAT Raymond B, Fosdick, vias 'a Dusk and Stormy Night--! WANT A CoLPLG oF HARD Boiled €GGS TV TAKS ouT TONIGHT- 0 B L WALT 'TILL AF Dizzy Descent A Pennsylvania farmer who got dizzy whenever he looked down from a height, and who transmitted this peculiarity to no less than 17 of his ,¢ tha children, grandchildren and great grandchildren, is reported by Mise Mary Lou Heaton, of the University of Wyoming, to the Bugenles Research Association, as a part of that assock ation's collection of human pedigrees interesting for studies of heredity and eugenics. All seven children of the oe iginal sufferer experienced this dizsy, feeling, Miss Heaton reports, one wo- man go severely that she could not even ride in a high carriage because it made her dizzy to look down two or three feet to tha ground. Five of the goven children married and four of these added to the family a total of 18 grandchildren, eight of whom sul- 8vaq frenkihe same kind of dizziness generation is so susceptible that he cannot watch another person walking | near the edge of any high place. An- jother boy so far conquered his defect |that he became an aviator during the | war, but continual dizziness forced him {out of this activity as soon as the war was over. Oue girl of this gens {eration married and has added four | great-grandchildren to the family, Two of these, both girls, are dizziness vio- tims, being unable even to go into & barn loft, without serious distress. One of these susceptible girls is the twin of a boy who has not vet displayed the defect; the twins mot being, how- ever, of the so-called identical type whose hereditary oonstitution is ber lieved to be exactly the same. r-- MIDDLE AGE Ona of the mroblems of middle | age is to avold bad debts--bad debts to oneself, because it is in old age that the debts become payable, and it i3 not pleasant. Still, there are | compensations for ageing. They say | that a man is as old as his arteries, | but it is truer to say that he is as * old as his spirit. Let him get more interest and some spice of advem- ture, and join the soclety of the old and the bold. There is then the pos- sibility of increasing your chauce of being younger every day, As a biologist let me remind yom that thers is no senility in the ani mal kingdom outside domestic onl mals. . Senility is the prerogative of mankind, and ons of the problems ot life at the end is to submit to old age while avoiding senility. --Str J. Arthur Thomson. ate Ap ete, Wisdom The Chinese, who know more about wisdom than any other race, designate th) wise by a combination of the ideo graphs for wind and lightning. Wise, with them, is not the sarene old maa bereft of all his illusions, but he who, like the wind, rushes headlong and ie resistibly on is way, and cannot be stopped nor laid hold of in any station of his career--who purifies the alr ia the mauner of lightning and st wherever there fis need --Her i Keyserling. oad met gt Little By Little roma : Little by little the world grows strong Rath Fa jas thelr grandfather. Ona HOY Tle cn ned

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