Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 24, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 November 1925 — Page 6

Walkerton Independent = Published Every Thursday by THE lli:l_)El_’Ehi_DE.\f'l:—NKV‘YS CoO. Publishers of the WALKERTON INDEPENDENT NORTH ‘LIBERTY NEWS | ——— . LAKEVILLE STANDARD | THE ST. JOSEPH COUNTY WEEKLIES | Clem DeCoudres, Business Manager Charles M, Finch, Editor ; SUBSCRIPTION RATES N Y. oo nioaissesesnosssivovantioßLED B DRI sci s e asavinssatobysnssss SO Fhres MonthS...cccososeavsoconastsses 5O TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton, :xu.. as second-class matter. - And now Belgium howls because 3 it has to pay its debt to America! The corn crop is so big now that it hides many a dangerous corner. What has become of that once elegant appurtenance, the gold toothpick? Is the come back of horse shoe pitchilng a presage of a return to the simple life? s e L After all, isn’t it rather sickening to hear a grown man call a child a “kiddie?” The objection to sleeping out of doors is that insects don’} know when to go to sleep. ‘ There’s enough joy in the world to keep us all dancing—if we only knew when to quit. After all, the principal virtue of the porch hammock is an utter lack of parking restrictions, We never heard of the “Charleston” dance until recently. Was it named after the earthquake? A bricklayer recently took part in a chess tournament. If ever a game suggested “by the hour” it is chess. Saddening though it be, the heavy frost that ends the mosquito problem will also kill the cantaloupe Yines. Is there any way to inform the chat- | tering couple back of you in the movie that it is supposed to be the silent drama? Treasury department urges the public to use more $2 bills. We find spend: | ing the dollar variety quite too easy | as it is. : ' The crop prosperity song promises | to be considerably louder than the sound of the croaks made by the knockers. : « T ———— l : Nothing is more interesting to a | man who owns only one suit as the | news of what a well-dressed man | should wear. o The prince of Wales has been throwing violets at South American girls which is a good deal safer than pinning them on. Swimming the English Channel is still one line of endeavor in which femInine achievement has not equaled that of the male. Trotsky is not liked by some of the Russian politicians in power, but they recognize the fact that they need him in their business, The government might as well understand that the only unlucky thing ) most of us think of in connection with $2 bill is that we can’t get enough of them. ; Now that dinosaur eggs are being | discovered in quantity, it seems to be up to archeologists to do something | aleng the lines of producing a prehistoric ham. | The sword swallower who sum-/| moned a surgeon to recover the cut-| lery had best confine his genius to simpler tasks—such as eating peas T with a knife. ; One sometimes wonders if a novelist could write just as well if he | didn’t have his picture taken with a | pipe in his mouth. ; Hand-painted frocks are the latest| vogue in fashions. Hope they're done more artistically than some of the hand-painted faces. ' ‘ An East Indian in Paris has suoh' control over his nerves that he allmvs! scientists to jab needles and kni\'es’; into his body and beat him with ham- | mers. What a pedestrian he would | make. { ——— I A Los Angeles woman tried to havo! her ankles made slender by sur'_'er,v.é and now tells the court that she has lost both feet as a result. Minor matter—the real question is. are her ankles slender. as promised? ' “A train is approximately 1,650 times | as heavy as the average automobile,” | says a promiment railway (lfii('i:ll.! Let's make this curious fact publie, | and maybe fewer speeders will try tug wreck trains at crossings. I Whatever became of the old-fnsh-! foned squeaky shoes that sounded !ike’ a dry axle and announced the young man’s arrival in Sunday school? i Practically everything about this| business of swimming the English| channel is now clear excepting where% the swimmer carries her passport. ! A 30-acre fire of pasture and WOO(]-g land in Connecticut was started by a | squirrel that caught fire from a hightension wire. Most of the town fires ! are caused by nuts. E The old-fashioned bicycle speeder geldom sped on when he struck a pedestrian. He stayed rizht there, and | helped him lie down on the road. ' One good thing about the bathing | beauty contest serson is that the re | ward of lasting through it is always the prospect of a good football season. ' To spare the feelings of beggars and peddlers the Russian soviets have 2 e peed the removal of all signs orderng them off the premises. Anothe: ~. L the premise.

I In Indiana ! Republicans won most of the battles for city offices in western Indiana towns in Tuesday’s elections. Old Gold day, one of the most cherished traditions of DePauw university, attracted hundreds of the alumni and other visitors to Greencastle to join in the celebration of the nineteenth annual home-coming, More than thirty inmates of the Indiana reformatory, near Pendleton, are being deported lin connection with parole conditions requiring that they return to native homes. Ten will be sent back to Mexico. The children’s school building at the state sanatorium for tuberculous patients near Rockville was destroyed by fire with a loss estimated at $40,000. The building was built less than a year ago at a cost of $47,000. Rev. Willis D. Engle, retired rector of the Episcopal church, dean of the Masonic fraternity in Indianapolis and veteran secretary of Mystic Tie lodge, No. 398 A. F. & A. M., died at his home in Indianapolis. Eight men, soft-drink proprietors and employees, were arrested at Jeffersonville by federal prohibition officers. Michael Wall, former chief of police of the city, was one of those arrested on charges of violating the prohibition laws. Lincoln C. Andrews, assistant sec-a-tary of the treasury, Washington, D. C., approved appointments by prohibition administrators, including that of Ansel R. Harris, assistant administrator in charge of enforcement, Indianapolis. A central gymnasium and civie auditorium has been assured Gary through a gift of a $75,000 downtown site by Elbert H. Gary of the United States Steel corporation. The building to be ergcted on the site will be constructed by the Gary public schools at a cost of $150,000. Checks for $300,000 from the United States Steel corporation, representing the final half of their city taxes, were received by City Teasurer John Lane. Payments from the various steel company subsidiaries at Gary with the $300,000 already paid into the city treasury, represent approximately half of the total tax collections i\the city. Taxpayers of Indiana will be saved $1,201,212 on next year's tax payments, as a ‘result of reductions in tax rates ordered by the state board of tax commissioners at Indianapolis in fifty-four taxing units in twenty-six counties. The reductions, ranging from %% cent to $1.05, were ordered by the board during the last few weeks. A temporary structure replacing the wrecked Gosport bridge on State Road 12 is now open to traflie, according to the bulletin issued at Indianapolis by John D. Williams of the state highway commission. The large steel bridge over White river, west of Martinsville is closed to traffic while a new floor is laid. New joists will be laid under the floor, as the old bridge has become unsafe. Former Mayor Roswell Johnson of Gary rewurned home from the federal penitentiary at Atlanta, to which he was sentenced for violation of the national prohibition law. More than a hundred friends greeted Johnson at the railroad station in Gary. Os the seventy-five persons convicted in the Gary liquor conspiracy case, only two are still in prison. They are D. M. Kinder, former prosecutor of Lake county, and Attorney B. S. Lucas. The cost of maintenance and operation of the general departments of the Indiana state government is growing, according to statistics made public at Washington, D. ~ by the Department of Commerce. For the fiscal year ending September 30, 1924, the cost was $22,928,956, or $7.57 per capita. In 1923 the per capita was $7.02 and in 1917 $4.28. The total 1924 expenses. including interest and outlayvs, were $36,889,363. The total revenue receipts in 1924 were $37,475,218, or $12.36 per capita. Floyd Williams won over his Democratic opponent for mayor, Thomas Mullenix, in Gary. C. M. Greenlee was a similar victor over John G. Capouch, Demoecrat, for city judge, and John R. Lake and John Dwyer, candidates for city treasurer and eity clerk, respectively, were returned by big majorities over Cassius Carpenter and James Cory. At Hammond, Adrian Tinkham. Kian-supported Republican, won over Dr. D. W. Weis, Democrat. A victory in Whiting for the Independent Citizens’ ticket was the only Lake county loss for the Republicans. Walter Schrage defeated Frank Paskewietz, Republican, and T. Joseph Snllivan, Democrat, on the same ticket, was elected city judgze. Dr. Raleigh P. Hale, Republican candidate for mayor, and his entire ticket, won in East Chicago.. Mayor Edward Glover, Republican, was re-elected in Crown Point with no opposition. Lying in a pool of blood, with the top of his head virtually blown away, Dr. James D. McDowell, age fiftytwo, widely known physician and twice mayor of Vincennes, was found dead by his mother-in-law, Mrs. Samuel A. Jordan. Judge W. A. Kittinger of Circuit court has granted A. W. Brady, receiver of the Union Traction company at Anderson, permission to buy 33 new automobile busses that will cost an aggregate of $271,000. This purchase will give the company thirtynine busses, Charge of shooting with intent to kKill probably will be filed against Mrs, Sarah Showalter, age forty-three, who shot and seriously wounded her husband, John Showalter, age fortyfive, at their home in Connersville. Showalier is expected to recover, Harold William McKeown, fif‘een vears old, of Fort Wayne, was Kkilled instantly when a shotgun in the hands of a companion, Russel Straub, was discharged accidently while they were hunting. Young Straub was absolved ‘ wy Dr. Harry G. Erwin, county cor- | ner.

Dry Cellar for ' . Wintering Bees

At G Where Temperature Falls Below 25 Degrees Good Quarters Needed. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) In localities where the average winter temperature falls below 25 degrees Fahrenheit it is usually best to | winter bees In a cellar, especlally if the apiary Is unprotected from the | winter winds and when the winter | stores are of satisfactory quality. The | placing of bees in a cellar is only another way of insulating the entire number of hives in one lot instead of \ Insulating them In groups or singly, |'as is done in outdoor wintering. A good dry cellar under a residence heated by a furnace ordinarily makes a desirable place to winter bees. Partition off a portion of the cellar through which some of the furnace | pipes run in order to provide suffi- | cient heat for the bees. If the room becomes too warm, insulate the pipes ”somewhat. A temperature of 50 de- | grees Fahrenheit is suitable for a cellar in which bees are being wintered. If the dwelling has no cellar of the kind required it may be possible to construct one in a sandy hillside, 'using the soil as a floor and building | wooden walls to prevent the cellar | from caving in. A cellar excavated in moist soil will require walls and floor of waterproof concrete. Locate the } celling below the frost level, which, in | regions where bees are best wintered | in cellars, is at least 21, feet below the level of the ground. Leave a dis!tance of 61% feet between the floor and ceiling. If the ceiling is higher than this it will usually result in too low a temperature at the floor. Insulate Ceiling. Cover the ceiling completely on top with some Insulating material, such as sawdust, to a depth of 1% feet. If the cellar is built in a sandy soil it ;ls possible to use the soil as a cover | for the ceiling, a 3-foot layer of solil | over the inner roof of the cellar being sufficient. The entire insulating mate’rlal of whatever kind used should then | be protected by a roof prejecting at !least 2 feet, preferably more, beyond | the outside of the cellar wall. Make | provision for carrying off the water‘ from the roof. Locate the cellar, if ,posslble. close to the apiary, not | farther away than 50 yards at most, | where the drainage is good and where ithe snow drifts deeply, thus providing additional insulation for the cellar. If | ‘ the cellar is on level ground the drift- | ' ing of snow may be Increased by the | construction of open fences such as . are used to prevent drifting over rail- | 1 way tracks. | A ventilating shaft six inches square | running through the ceiling of the | ' cellar to the outside and so construct|ed as to admit no light will be suffi- | clent for\any cellar adapted to win'terlng of bees. The top of the venti'!lating shaft, which should extend at }least six feet above the outer roof, | may be painted black in order to in- | duce greater movement of air when' | the sun shines. At timmes during the ; coldest weather the ventilator may be

PLOW UNDER RESIDUES TO AID ~ FERTILITY OF VARIOUS SOILS

{ éSuppl;' of Organic Matter Is | Very Essential. \ | e—— w. | Don’t rake off or burn the trash left | on the fields after the crop is harivested. Plow it under. It contains | plant food of a value from $5 to sls | per acre and will increase crop yields ' the following year. | “Even where we use summer and iwinter legumes for soil improvement, | the main crops have a larger acreage | and therefore the cover crops planted | are not sufficient to maintain the sup,ply of organic matter,” says W. F. i Pate, fertility agronomist at the North | Carolina State college. *“This being | the case, it is necessary to plow under | the crop residues such as corn stalks, .!cotton stalks, tobacco stalks, peanut | vines, grasses and other vegetative | matter. This will help to keep up the ; ; supply of organic matter.” 4 Professor Pate states that the sys- , tem of farming generally practiced in .| North Carolina tends to deplete the | amount of organic matter in the soil. 1 This causes the soils to wash and the | crops to suffer under abnormal grow--4 ing seasons as a late cold spring, too ' i little rain or too much rain. In most | cases, where a soil has yielded smaller rlcrops from year to year, the reason .| can be found in that the supply of or- | ganic matter has not been maintained. | Then, in nearly all cases where the tsoll is increasing in crop producing " | power, the supply of organic matter is ' { increasing. | “Years ago when our farming im- ' | plements were crude or inadequate, | | there was some reason for burning the | crop residues but not now,” says Professor Pate. “With heavy plows, disk ' 1 harrows and tractors available, it is | Fall Is Best Time for | Spreading Ground Lime : { The fall of the year is usually the | best time for the hauling and spread- : l ing of ground limestone. The stubble 4 flelds are usually hard and the roads ' | mostly good and the field work not so " | pressing as in the spring. Some farmers have used hydrated lime at the | rate of about 200 pounds to the acre | and received good results with it | Where the haul is long from the rail- ' !road giding, this type of lime treat- | | ment for soll is worth trying, because ; !of the reduction of labor. Some men * | have hauled the crushed limestone in ' | contractor dumping trucks and then | | dumped the ground limestone at the - | end of the fill and then spread with a lime spreader,

[ e nearly or entirely closed. In a warm‘ cellar built in a sandy hillside no ventilating shaft need be constructed. Best Type of Vestibule. In constructing an entrance to the cellar proper insulation must not be‘ overlooked. The best type of vestlbule is a long narrow passage leading ‘ into the cellar, with' heavy doors at each end of the vestibule. The heavier and thicker the doors the better for the bees. It is important that the vestibule be built and protected so that the temperature within it will never fall below freezing. It is desirable also that the vestibule be constructed so that bees may readily be carried in and out of the cellar. | The cellar must be well drained, either by natural or artificial means. Before carrying the bees into the cellar give it a good cleaning and leave it open to air several days. Bad Housing Conditions Cause Various Diseases Colds of poultry which are similar in many respects to the colds of the human family, should be regarded critically as they may be the forerunner of more serious trouble, such as nasal or ocular roup, diphtheria or birdpox. Poor housing conditions cause many flocks to acquire colds, especially In the fall. Chicks should be trained to roost as soon as possible, as this allows a circulation of air around their bodies. Dampness in houses should be particularly avoided. Chickens that do not have sufficient feed or the proper kind of food acquire colds easily. A balanced ration consisting of approximately equal parts of mash and grains, supplemented with plenty of succulent green feeds, is one of the best preventatives. In preventing colds from developIng into more serious trouble, where whole flocks are affected due to exposure, it is often advisable to administer epsom salts at the rate of 1 to 1% pounds to 100 adult birds, say poultry men at the Kansas State Agricultural college. Unsanitary pens as compared with clean ones result In a death loss of 35 per cent, experiments conducted ‘hy the Kansas State Agricultural col- | lege show. Proper sanitation includes all measures that are conducive to good health, but is probahly more considered in connection with the cleanliness of houses, yards, runs and general quarters as well as the feeding and drinking utensils, It also includes the control of both internal and external parasites. Business and Success You can nearly always tell a farmer's success and business ability by the appearance of his house and barn, No good business man will permit his buildings to remain unpainted and in a dilapidated condition for he knows that he is losing money by doing so and the man who is wunconcerned about tne appearance of his premises is apt to be careless in his farm practices.

a crime not to turn under these valuable crop residues. By practicing fall and winter plowing, the crop residues, sometimes called trash, will be completely incorporated into the soil and no trouble will be had in the spring in preparing a good seedbed.” Storing Seed Beans to Keep Little Weevil Out A problem that often confronts the farmer and housewife who wishes to keep some of the seed from the garden is, how may this seed be stored to keep the bean weevil out? If the beans are kept only for eating purposes, one may heat them before putting them in a box, sack or fruit jar; or beiling water may be poured over them. However, for seeding purposes, neither of these will work. In this case the beans should be thoroughly dry and put into a fruit jar with camphor gum. A small amount of the gum is all that is necessary as it is strong and lasting. Usually the eggs are laid in the beans before they were hulled and the gum must be used to help in controlling the young weevils when they hatch. If the seed is put into an open container the beans may become contaminated or infested. So they should be kept in a jar or something that is tight enough to keep the adult beetle or bug out. J > Frequent cutting tends to kill out alfalfa. * - - ‘Where you find scrub sires you usually find a scrub farmer. , * * = In one year eggs and chickens worth $1,047,323,170 were produced in the | United States. - - - Gophers *“played possum” during | the dry weather but are making the | dirt fly since the fall rains started. |= 4 = Egg production from hens is de- | pendent not only upon the ability of | the hens to lay eggs, but upon an abundant supply of the kind of feed | out of which eggs can be produced. |- * * ; Sudan grass stubble has been found | to harbor many chinch bugs during | the winter. These fields should be | plowed, listed or disked as soon as | practical and under no circumstances | should they be left standing after March 1.

'IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL | v Lesson ’ l 5 (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D.D., Dean of the Evening School, Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) (®, 1925, Western Newspaper Union.) e e e et .eS, e e .. e e e e S e l November 15 PAUL’'S ARREST IN JERUSALEM l LESSON TEXT—Acts 21:18-23:22. l GOLDEN TEXT—"If any man suffer | a8 a Christian, let him not be ashamed.” | | _PRIMARY TOPIC—PauI Is Brave in | Danger. | JUNIOR TOPIC—PauI and the Jerutsa]em Mob. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOP- | IC—Paul Faces a Mob. ‘ ' YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC—The Spirit of the Mob. : ] I. Paul’s Vow (21:18-26). ‘ | Upon Paul’s arrival at Jerusalom; | representatives of the church there ! gave him a most cordial reception. In ;order that the brethren in Jerusalem ' might graciously receive him, it was | proposed to him by the elders that he | take a Jewish vow to prove that he | was in no way oppcsed to the law. | The effort was to remove prejudice. | They recognized that such an act , would in no way compromise or in- | volve the Gentile brethren. Further- . more this would not compromise his . own principles of action, viz.,, to the ' Jews he became a Jew, and to the Gentiles, a Gentile; all things to all ‘men in order to gain them for Christ. | 11, Paul's Arrest (21:27-40). | How far this act conciliated the Jews we are not told, but it only enraged the unbelieving Jews, causing them to resort to mob law. These maddened Jews on the basis of a sup- | position seized him and dragged him | from the temple and beat him mercilessly intending toy put him to death. Paul was rescued from the mob by ' the Roman guard. The chief captain, ‘not being able to get any information from the howling mob, bound Paul and ' started for the castle. In order to ' protect him from the murderous fren- ' 2y of the mob, the soldiers lifted him upon their shoulders and bore him up the stairs. Paul kept himself under | control, and politely asked permission of the captain to speak to the people. When he addressed him in Greek and | quoted his Roman citizenship, the cap- | tain granted his request. | HI. Paul’s Defense (22:1-27). ; Paul's chief concern was not -his own safety. He used this opportunity to witness unto them of Christ. 1. His Claim for a Rightful Hear- | Ing (vv. 1-8). i (1) His birth (v. 3). | He was a Jew born in Tarsus, a city . of no mean reputation. (2) His Education (v. 3). ! He was educated under Gamaliel and instructed “according to the perfect manner of the law of the fathers.” | (3) His Zeal (v. 3). | He was as zealous toward God as | those Jews who were trying to destroy him. 2. His Attitude Toward Jesus (vv. ' 4-5). | *“I persecuted this way unto the death,” so that his attitude was one . of hatred as was that of the Jews. | 3. How His Attitude Was Changed (vv. 6-16). . While on his way to Damascus with | authority to bind the Christians at | Jerusalem, he was smitten to tha | ground by a light from heaven, and | the voice of the Lord said, “Why | persecutest thou me?” When Paul inquired what he was to do, he was told to go to Damascus where he would be | told what to do. ! 4. The Lord Commissioned Him to | Go to the Gentiles (17-21). | IV. Paul Before the Sanhedrin (23:1- | 10). ; The Roman officer, in order to learn why Paul was arrested, commanded | the chief council to assemble, and | brought Paul before them. This shows { that there was an effort made by the | Romans to give justice to Paul, which | was entirely lacking in the highest re- ' ligious body of the Jews. | 1. Paul’s Earnest Look at the Council (vv. 1-2). | This was a solicitation of their | honor to give him a fair hearing, and | also a look of comscious integrity and ' unfaltering courage. | 2. Paul’'s Stern Rebuke of the Head | of the Council (v. 3). | “God shall smite thee, thou whited wall.” | 3. Paul’'s Appeal to the Pharisees - (vv. 6-10). | Seeing that he could not get a fair hearing, and perceiving that the body | before him was made up of Pharisees | and Sadducees, he appealed to the | Pharisees hoping to get their attention, | for his preaching had something . | common with their belief. | V. The Lord Stood by Paul (v. 11). | This assured him that his ‘course | was right, and thus comfort was | brought to him. | VI. The Conspiracy to Kill Paul | (vv. 18-22). | More than forty men placed them- ! selves under a curse to abstain from eating and drinking until they had ' murdered him. God defeated their ; plan without a miracle. | —————————————————————— | g Sure to Come ! When we think of all the good in- | strumentalities that are at work in the | world it seems as though evil must be f soon crushed out. When, on the other | hand, we count up the evil forces that | are fighting it seems that all good | work must be destroyed. It has all ways been so. It will -be so always, until the victory of the Lord is com- | , plete. God’s kingdom is sure to come—- | God’s will to be done.—Herald and $ Presbyter. (: b ———— 4 God’s Interest in Us ' { The wonderful thing about God's t {cnncern for us is that it never abates. His interest in our affairs is so manifest that it seems as if He had nobody || to look after but ourselves. Even in | the hour of greatest extremity, when | everything appears to be at a standj | still, we can always find Him hard at | work for us if we will get near enough | to Him to see His hand.—Christian Cynosure.

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