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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1960-01-14, Page 3gyclwa,..,,so:, f,apidly and to „ suwch , ' — ,, , lecwisig . 1.123stYalledaff15,1P,arrilS,Art'y9aarl'aPPAnnier,:,", e +-cc, r rrr tt. `1' • 4t 4, t IC "4 liNK THE' ARMY`' Ne,W'rna's idot'f& theHU,S. NilrealaAeademy, ,)(N/1,11 Y:gets• spruce";d up 'far" greiglifcition'afteAche "Rebury atreatmentetakes ftriel.pedigreeci• Angora, who •..'ae r ; replacesc: owhich,ne which, dieatrietelilfru ,•,.,,o •a••;/i,,.• e v: "r¢ sine,11, It should have been 'sold thishands Who Vy- the ton, instead of by the -prat' These pond lilies were the Kept mouths Shut rough, uneven ends of logs, left When Ilirain Kilgore came floating in the mill pond until home from work one .evening salvaged for;fuel, watold take summers of sun to, dry them out 'Os meal was' n°t• ready, Ile started to -complain and his wife sufficiently; to be usable, writes Ivraucie Rubin in the Christian told hint, te,•!`,Slilat Upt" He did so with a vengeance, for- he,. Science Monitor, didn't speak to her again for ir ,'•blocke were the perfectly smooth, round cores of the huge 1.w'enQP-one 'ears, . There haye abeen Many _other logs, that lied been shaved Hato 'Ill'en1aYei's for Making plywood. instances a a particular remark $heeteiron.ca otoyeplpeaaa arithpvt w, , Planer ends oi clippings were 0 r AetiOn, leading to long per- ir the ...waste from the kiln-dried lads of silence between married luestion. We' learned to take - lumber at the planing mill, They couples.. ashes and dirt ay sniolte in our a awere, very appropriately, called Eva Wilmer, of Los Angeles; itride and. to ,think n54,nin`g of a "ladiesa.wood." them. In that hoods country,, has not spekeli to her husband - la the episode of the Pond,' , for 'eleven years, .fits offence WOO was king 'and w01114.11' lilies, we tried load of "fdrest WAS forgetting their first wed- waO 'queen of the woodpile, •- at .- ...PITIVirtg*coua, Bret , iareta Winter' •"' Weoe" „-- alder and hemlock, dinevanniverseryr lough from a , man "up- mune' -4A 4 5patiard kept up a 41- an' the; Skepetanelitile a. wide , river that flows .4ph in, forfspvArt,4,,c :xsz.;, e was honest enough to : epee pact for eighteen years al milmlyilq9enr. twe. tide cotl)es ,• 'v'sas not Ti dry of course," because his wIce. scorched. his , a Masterpiece of un- atrousers when pressing, them, In, we learneal that -them ,was.; 'clef:statement, , .Did you Dnihig comannall- more „tg a Washington winter try to burn-Wet hemlock? Well, 'cateci' with her by writing on than evey-alripping skies. There don't. It can't be done, When.the- a a slate, .1 'didn't, In A Cot' 'country X 'felt like44 Jr)derro Oollo'or vtwp, I went with nit husband ao jive oh a "stimip ranch" in • Pvesteee Washington, 'Pala partia %der corner of -our country is f,he 'mine of rain4 end more, rain, 71)0 annual' fall actually mea.Sur-' .Pg from .66, tet,120 inches, With ilk the lush, ereen beauty about a ?a, we leariled, to, peeepr, liness of iron cookstovee and was the ever-present problem of wood — a problem if we had axe strikes it, the sap squirts up into the eye of the defeaaselqsa .died leaving in Bacupa vLancashire, 'A' Man it, a still greater. problem if we his wife ohlea i$3 chopper with more venom than I never ceased to wonder at a fresh-cut grapefuit.'" And 'if • in Ails will. The wife later ac1.- ord!,04'4.7'401.4. ' ' 01 1(0,4,1kst. O rl .71;7 UNDWYKU001 LESSON gev, tt, BarelaY Warren, 4,A., Whip, VI/Ming Evangelist .40$ -8; A6.311: gemory Selection; As my FAI, tttgr 'nett sent :Mel even so $0.44' X' you,. John 20s 31, • So it went, up the chimney in- Vealbarnedaaaaerhole new Ian- to smoke, pond lilies, kiln-dried, '.guagea all Washing!ls own. We planer ends, clippings, body- talked of planere As, bark- wood, mill-run, door-ends, cross- wood, mill ends, forest we arms,g thilialimgdagdfolathe'„Npathei ii tried onekiredaaafer aanAer. One west wherev „a learned w that a night Jack tried i-de otiAn what sturnai:ianeheill •'Allfg"LiCaif be kind preferredi*what?kind to more than a housewife. She:natiet order. be a jill-of-all-trades, a commis- - *t "They tell ,me that '13 rkwood seur ofl,cooking -...wayadath„eaqtlea iaa PUZZLE . •..10. StlIc fahric 0. DitidefIl .• ,.1.1;Proofretider'd ACROSS 56, LQtirrie marks •• • 17. Black bids 1,01d World 5/..,seire retteas . 8, 'Stage Of life Vertrieb,. lizard .."-"Dolyata • 2.1.1neaemerot , 9. lOnglisli letter 2, Girl (61a1.).. 22. Otiido'd'it, 'id 12, Scarcer „ 3. Diet Asiat•-•• •.• 2 4: sot a 13. Baseball club country min' :23,Citatronod„ 14, tii.fgo tub 4. Not ring t n 15.3"Akraeoloi•ed more than Concerning and redid, as cigar 16. Work 28. )ClediS to 10:_Entifiried '21. RaWalicin wreath 21. Before .. 24. Makeie tint is 25, Word of Ainerleati•L :mites 19. ArttlidrY 31,14(horitY 85. paddiiicreWO • • :87;4otheta 'it8,11titilter 41,+AbatraCt 4 • +`+'" , 47'1'1 ,e on 44. Strelecri . gel] -iittantittes ,:• • '47, Anything ,.."-1iuge,or' • •. •eitortitob,•• 3--3. Wdet. Saxon rldseffikeidt.* 31, reMeette• *letrathi .aseeni, te like lent Say; they make old wood-range, a „black iron SOFT LIFE — The ultra in bed- e..,lot` of " dirt' around, 'thl house." inonstWIMP,3‘ to riellilthecitrutli, ‘,„ •:attaine,• Wecara isitall4 gown finish - • :I let thet.;paSs.J.'; .a-A' s though turnetlfouttibetterofood tatiana,araw ar a „:„:;eaclitteff .wilti.h ?1,,nowy cellar of eYacrealclaanake airy more dirt I have had since. ,,, Canadran fox' fur. The fur-: aCtlie.hflier, kends>.NOk cfdacgdu ctO r'llve `farllfronext ; it-44wit eacaaaeliaalaa may be re- Pe.-t414.lie you'd better get a that :green andalovely ;eaeaper .et a .1,4110,,,ecttfilv,kfreq ,use.- 1k8iptKaid, partly ':till-run or the TJaajteA‘States.,. I long to, be 'Wood, e.aridaPaatt lelippings. back'i"Vieret.-T Jai' yesterday 1 lea„,..e. „ a. ,404fik IN );b at W.0441 be:40d4V4t.. w glibly went to a nearby , haminamdca:tatiatt ',1‘,..eiee..„tilatt.,afirst thing on .4es-0616n-hag' .j,p7r el Off the to buy a piece of board for a Wednesday morning as I am go- .atraniOa fleet, i'areir block from new-.she'll. araThgetr,,i,chasrpellael--, • ;01.ingl eway, afept a :clay or two." eacetry.,,pondlilies. Pond Janes for 'of 'dry fir in the iheCli••elgi r ' 014' athenteafrona thlateattrig was the g11.40;:,,:leiYlis timecl knew their butketaliQatie: ,ibedkidleiv.a,14 xmliense,„,,Whe lejlabend wanted, to e fe?-.1111iittO take things liter- ing fot their crisp short-cake ... sell' it,"'sbare' lire proceeds and ally in this great Northwest and' best of all, a big fire in the go on his own way, but his wife where Paul Bunyan had started fireplace. There indeed was the wanted to keep the home. SP a trend of tall stories to go along ' reward, compensation for all the. the husband stayed on, under with the tall trees: I guessed that worry and work, the dirt, the protest, as lodger. Said his wife, weeping: "I have tried to talk to him, to re- mind him of-our aove, but it's ueeleeM.' ''' : "'"a".•:"'ae., SoMetimee ' theee,: triaiital sil- epaeoc start• on the first •daY of the Marriage. A NeW aYerlZer Objetted to the way his .bride a said "I Will" at the wedditii,,,,,, her for five years. ' • ''' When granting a divorce the , • judge said that "silence lea ci:a, much a Mental cruelty es ,bifert; talking,'' A French bride discovered, on a her wedding night that her bus bend wore a wig. "Yoteve -court-, ed Me under false ' preten- ces!" she screamed indignantly, This was the feet tithe she, spbke to hint for five yeats. c e)a'`'+,.;+. The husband of a Paris' bide , objeoted tei, the Pyjamag• aohe ' was going to Wear' on ,:the 'flit.O' night of their haileeindoilea.1-lea insisted oh het 0/define edialea thing else, She reoluseci. Tbk,rg.-, sulf was thirteen years rit, `4,4- tied slieridea George Downing did tint' speak to his Wife for sixty ,years.. They Were Married in the eha, , teerith century arid Met for the" first time at the altar'. the, lifteenyeai.elci bridegroom took: an instant dislike to 'the 'Mli . elidagria."bY,. his afhinily,„ bait aefite; fOrbed-.i.O to. throtigit '.*tif';;..lbef. • ieeie!hleni;.,,,:;- 4 ceremony. He didn't speak' to •,•P "':••5.•Vot up so, Lubricate Cit OSSWOR . habitations 7. Yawn 32, Workshop 33, Light carriage 81, Work unit 36, Ogled 39. Pleshy friths 39, Wear away 90, Tiinda queen 42, Dinner course 45. Dalian river 96, Character in o"rTphec 7nApsetuDay 48. Tilt 60. 'Male Ahem slabs last better 'theni'..j'anything good woodchopper! In addition else . but the wo en don't to these, I learned to cook on an ,*,a ::r ..,t, . ;the . plywood fatetory are- ,.good, Dougl 4„ fir filled! the air, 'cle- , ooms. Tak• onlk• thing that kept 4.,Oxiee .. frien, suggested that menwelepaaaaeit&iiew,ginqaa ktee The cou tOba-Tauttey'retard to split, 1 gh 4i1 • ificattileletreiced rae lelcdc re livted in separate "style", et ..wood: We decidell to try seine. When thetload arrived, I lifted.. It piece off the soggy, muddy.' wood: It •,iivas heavy, water-, logged, With a dank', moldy 8. Fr: ciurnther must be eptitheaia. abeckaehea,• a the-, ,in,eerivenience, la 21 • 22 25A ltitt 44 42, 12 :1 16 ' I# 40 mated that they had notaeneleena, r 44 # 4 4 .4 ,thea high cost and scareitY or yoy put a piece of it into the Aare, on toe of a g g yeaes. ' to each "other for twenty - one this fuel in a section Where trees 'bed roam ,,..- • , . fire you soon hear the, dreary ca- ,. . . , a , . giant' rerZe7 Wheit almillieel L;Iiiitli 7 " mina or nemrocit saP. and drizzling onto hot soejs dustries. In the mill'afkl lamber then onto coals that are n,de ---e0:. .doesn'tcaeeralealong, blirth. Ma* logging are. priorig tlie main in- towne it was sometimes almost hot. When you open the akaab' ' '''Cri f'e Pit N".'s,' ''''Irli-ci PbX1. ea.r.bili.77 ,.:: a' :1011)Paaillle: to obtallaalY,,-°°d aat.a4Pkva. , again,.„.vitou see only tl-rd ,black-.7 ' ,111/e,rcoorp.rep la , ,een IC tor- - price, especially when the inilis •'• e'Ilit`cPre nains of a still-daipping a lalgr tea, neaa13,a, flart)r Yeaase he-, ' closed' because of strikes or de_ Picoe Pf hernlOck. I finally de- fore the ariumenr Which, finally., r " anyone of a number of reasoes., a wood in'the oven to be put into the two years, the .huiband $,. Th eo sa.e learned the hard way :the• firebex, to dry out more didn't speak one, 1.vorrfa: his what itqii%iil to 'live throughtea wood in the oven, to lae put into Wife, but sent her notes?, ludilis:" ,_ fuel farnine," as the newspapers the firebox, ad infliniturn, "The meat is tough" . , .'"Iaclon'ft MO 10. .readeireaera, _meta ar,,cia -- leeeea. eal ,1 lear.ThPre. o-PJhe -stumPalle '' 4 " ' want any more of this stuff, it'a mare art Jhr,o,ugh thet,,,,,,,first,, wintee cave cookirig4obad had to 9 spait, of, ' ' taiiteress" • • • "I shalla'weaat e l thougliPaboiii'Veod raugiTef alba; course: Ladeon found %at '11Vere" "` " ' ,,litataiv.viittrn.e .,—,. wanting it, needing it; was a definite knack to that, - , noting its nuisabteritetdirt, itS aPeapratfick of it depends upon ‘,., maddening habit of burning out how shdap the axe is,''11,1 Jaffe'," t'' l'"\ jeatoyehonek likeloa cake,,,,ealeKadyie at and still more, upon' 'hoW: eatala f a ',', for the oven — or when' the pertly it is wielded. The,finalefewee fa:). -clams , were .waitieg in ;their inches of the strokea jgot,,,hea al . , bueket of COrnmeal Water, all , fore,,,the blade comes, ,intia, eon:, -ready for their steam-bath. We tact with the wood, ingst haye a had no plaee to store wood, so an added force, a Vei-Tain " "" . -,,,,ave,te, obaiged to pureleese it qne "timph," in order to do business. aea• a' cord at a time, Each food \Vas' an ' - I was no fragile eeiboning Vic- event, something to look for- 'torian, but the first time I tried ward to, to get excited about. to split a piece of wood my .. 'Through those quiet gray daYs efforts were merely laughable. with the constant dripping of I searcely dented the wood. It rain on the roof, wood was the was a moment of complete frus- main topic of conversation. tration. I little thought that in "Did yeu order the wOod to- three short years I would actu- day?" were the first words to ally master that treacherous axe greet a 'husband on his return _ and in a short half hour be home at night. If, miraculously," able to split a huge pile of 'eahad not forgotten it, the next , w:eod, - md tie-hereto cook ea- tithe', dP..,:a . lief unc i. a liklittal ' Ph'. 11,5h' btcamt&a,m- questx. a wasou"W*11 it be dry thi think?" Foolish questionialte s never dry. AnsW elSow here oh this oage- 26 35 # Eaet"dr*weOt, 194CecoPa1959, noth- iners-S64eltful, so cheering and .0„,heatiewarrniege an open fire "-4-'faiblerablyt. of-flagrant Wash- ington wood. I get the wood- smoke blues when I think of it! 4 30 2 • 27 2s • 19 36 16 + ••• iii rr0 31 4 2. 17 37 43 9' 32. 507 SF 33 3.4 10 ii, 44:faa•ea, .4s • a• tlivoace, da'fat er-a itonicallY, that had 1,06b old eitottgli to lino* his own' '4 I "' A yearningA5Fgaiitland'e tra e . than '$l billion" at " -fire end of heatherale leading ppm, ' ple afoul of the-jawa and eausing ac work. .1 or, offacaajs of the arriada e Department ,ofa,AgricuItufe. pres.evnli,, le6i,c a demand or for , Neloped a System of drying out caused the long silenee.„plIrlIM „ rret7ir 'I , "n40.0r * * ." •• `This is pointed up by "a 'same • • g,....of-aarepoets from, Plant Protection Division inspectors, which showed that in one month: —At Montreal, four ship 'pas- sengers were intercepted- leer- rying 22 heather plants; --At Toronto, 34 mail shipments were investigated and found to be cut heather with the stem's inserted in potatoes or heather with roots and soil; —At Vancouver, 10 mail ship- ments of cut heather with stems inserted in potatoes were held up. * * Cut heather may be brought into this country without in- spection, but all plants contain- ing roots or soil from countries where the Golden nematode, a serious pest of 'potatoes, is known to exist (and Scotland is one of these) must be accompa- - hied by a phytosanitary certifi- cate stating that the Soil where the plants were grown was eially tested and this nematode not found, " Furthermore, Canada prohi- bits importation of potatoes from' all European as well ,as a num- ber of other countries. * * • " There has been Siteadi in in the arnount''eff heather a brought into - Canada, possibly because more and more ,Cana-, „ diens are visiting Scptlend ;when; heather is in full bloom. So if you are thinking bra`41e- " ing Auntie Flora' Or 'Cousin.' Stuart to send overettaeweeabit • o' heather", tell them, to leave,„ the potatoes .at home. ,- I Credit Unions • have become h' multi-million dollar' tbusireess! Canada and expansion continues. Membership, assets ancleithana showed substantial gains in 1958, according to a report by the Eco- nomics Division, Can'ada Depart- ment of Agriculture. There were 4,43e chartered credit unions, of whieli c.4,197 re- • potted a membership of 2,212,a. 000 — an increase of seven per cent over the previous year. * Newfoundland, Prince Edward Largest of the world's twenty , or,,ao floral clocks is the one aft-, Queensthli, Ontario's Niagara Peninstita. 'With a diameter of 40 feet, it is larger than its prototype in Prince§ street Gar- dens, Edinburgh. This floral Island, Nova Scotia end Saskat- clock, lbeated at Sir Adam chewan reported small decreases Beck Generating Station, has in the number ” of chartered dramatized the work of The credit unions, but all provinces Ilydro-Electric Power Commis- shared in the' Membership gale, sloii of Ontario for thousands of Assets increased 19 per tent ; tourists since 1950. to reach a new high of more ' The clock methaniorn—hands, 00 • ONE .TOWG,BTEE.L.6-.BEGINNING, 'ENG—steelmak- requitei -handtitt of A great Variety of raw Materials. • ,ranciful factory, above, shOws the production, of tale. ton Of ingot (carbon) steel and What it will make in ternie of con' Sumer goods. It takee 4.9,e0 'pounds of re* Materiels to Make ,the Loh oi cleel. Included in the 3,400 pounds of Pig, k`iii ••0". FERe0_, eta.oye 3004/ taMGe ,r1), 7,Ap • 9ciblbs tot -tc4t1Oltis dOAL 170l156 1958. Odebec thole ith'eTlead with ''''O'Ver half '"th'e'n totaimembership 'an'd ‘per ecerit, ef•athe total erassets. girt"' 1*„ " "-Loansnnade to meinhers of all crediteunionsaroeeala,per cent to P94 Savings, the sum' total of shares and depoelti, increased by 18 per cent to $936 million and. represented. 93 ,per cent of the totals aThe aver- age savings per credit union were $3421 Ruraleacredit 'unions accounted for -38 per , cent, of all unions, a slight decrease from the pre- vious ;year. Occupational, the fastest growing tYPe, claimed 32, per cent. Urban and other types' ,of credit unions remained about' -the same as in 1957. The 27 centrals, each of which serves as a credit union for credit unions, had a member- ship increase of nine per cent to 4,976. Members consisted of 4,265 credit unions and 711 'co-opera- tives. Assets of centrals increased !b3; 23"ipel• ;cent to $126 million. The. 10 centrals affiliated qa With the' edeaationt 'des Caisses Po-t. 1 /6 tilairdea'aDesjardins accounted' for 62 Per cent of the total assts of all Canadian 'centrals, Loans" grantedi 'by centrals ,,amounted $4e, million a- a „small decrease from the 1957 figure. trt 44.4 c ..1"! rThe„ Caeadien , Co-oper,atiare credit Society, a Central savings and "credit bi•garilzation at the 'haticititil""'leeel, "'established in 19541aliad 'assets' totaling $104-,= e185 -in-11958a Member societies, subsceilaed „2,656 shares with ,a total valueoi $265,000, of which• $1.08:906 iliasrPaid up. PThe'ObcietY made its first.loan airre1957a In' that year, loans of $400,000 were, made to members. STEEL, MAKING 1\44,011.T03.P.U1 drive, chilnea designed and fabricated by Hydro's re- gional staff at. Niagara Falls, The hands are telescoped staiea re a s steel tubing, welded to stainless steel castings., The stub ends are counter-balanced with lead, so that the hands require the ;same turning effort, :whoa ther Moving downwards or up- wards. This required nice eaten,- lation, since both the hour and the minute hands weigh 500 pounds each, while 'the sweep second hand weighs half •of this, The hour hand is 14 and a half feet,'th'e' militate hand 17 and a half, and the second hand 21 feet long, - "The clock mechanism runs in a bath ,of oil," ,t ,,e engineers state, "and is driven 'by 4 two horsepower .;1% phase sqttirrel-•( cage motor, the rotor of WhiCh ,genhas altered ,so that -the' motor now operates'' 'gyro! ehronous motor . at 1500' rpm up to an $nput 9f :,a1`)prO2dinatgly 1200 wittg; the:input r6qUired 'to opertte:i th9 clock -Peute00 watts." f So that its aacee ca,n,abei seena clearly, and thus '00e..itSa purpose of telling tinfe,.fhe'elecl? is mpunted oraaan- artificial slope ,nt-',I,Ap 1, The' space beneath ap,eapp: ',three ,conceete a roOma, • haehaliptise':.the,,,elOck A There th'e!figirdenei;:.000".:Are:t,04.411iir frirnthini4he XoliagiVo t}ii .floral cldekafaavia' 1,eveatiloral 'Arks strike. t , hop`r,,, ,but this ti# does. ,A.,' ..fi.footle tower eisin,g.'behind: tI clock conta ins °four.:. 25-'watt axial o0altereaeWhiehashroadeeet the arekiiiiiisteiliffiles. .eVer'y 15 ni3O-iWa,f''..";a . rTliga0 ores, The, '.lames prodtkedl'by :fiiNitOr01 met ,rods. being :struck byOnall ham mers,‘Lietiakted:ele icallyaaabya„,, c2staets .0.4hei,:eldels," the en- wgineers explain. "This "reletiVelt /low initiaj aoug, is erePirilecr° to a peak aloelwear' output of,;, 19/1 watts "'to deivefite speakersaasa ..a SorOar2090 caapV, plants are et out each 0ring ,tb form the sontrasNiipglopetrir'lfloral mac ; he' clock'ais„„attraatliely land- „. Seeped With_ a,c*rdeli!,,gardeo, and,:, c rved poateeta.vithalotue, pee: p' us analealtgra004ie plants, a illuminItect abya,'sulamerged li tine „Ft44:„Iangerial Oil- W48. 344 . DRIVE CAREFULLY — The Ilferiu save may be your own, Upsidedowte to Prevent. Peeking ii IS UE 46 — 1959 NOT.SO-BRAVE BULL — „Panicked,: lay,,Alle cheering Crowd,. a hell in a Madrid, Spain, ring heads for the stands in ct Mighty leap, -He didn't Make it. itori ore, coke, lirnestone int; scr'40, .13y the thee ifigotateel fabricated into finis:46a steellalquatteur-,,toitig'pafed -dB *Melt goes back into the ftirnabeS edrep, In 1958, foe kaninlea irigot ateel production. avaa 85.3 tOna atie. thipineete eteed 'at ts.g tem; elieludiag eltifettii 004 Van- Ardatiteti•Ittai and Steelalrialittstaa .444 1 RoN 18Ib: Biggest Floral Clock In The Work' annno nEn DUMP 0031 Onu triDOW OEIPUMKM EHRPOD wano E1210 OM) 'MOM OUMM DEIHDU UUUMNPE LIPOU'A ©M000 000 UOW anon ENUNEIN tinnoun Emnw MO PON 00015M MD Loa ammo -laws n..:11, lf1,--- "N o r.4151,e 1410 The martyrdom of Stephen sig. nailed the -beginning of a fierce Persecution of the Christians of aieetlealern, Saul) Who, might be called an accessory to the crime aga.inal4tephen, became a lead, aria the attack.'"Ile made halt, ciek ot the church, otering into , . # xveray ouse, and hairng men and women, committed them to pals. env Riles been said. , hat the ';'•'•ilieleeil 4 thq church, proved i blood of the martyrs her become a sO tiatiV4aSe. The:disciples that er . sOttered abilearli on ace -ct3iirit eV this perseCutien, went pyr.71)9e;e preaching the word, hilig one of the seven who, it liielfae'd A the administration to the greedy, went to Samaria, setiole heeded his preach, ,i .a aartlean spirits ere cast iPlail,ai,Apostles Peter nd John a coita'aaidianany of the 'cic were le'e over and prayed?,, that the w; emoverts might receive the p,i.ait. Simon, ?who had *..,S.91:Orer, thought to buy 0.,aeaVeer of imparting' the Spire ;Was aternly end fearfully t'eri'''• •i* ' Philfp reCeived another -ass innent. The angel of the Lord"-.13a,de din go south into the wilderness, He might easily have questioned such a leading -t41 le4v,e,, „Oty where so much 4gOodewesabeinga4,one„..pd go into "aleMeaYeaaparsely pogrulated area. a Btit h„ obeyed. Soop he saw a .41diVriifffeial of Ethiopia reading -,th.e.. Pea'APteaaes, in ,bis chariot as , he , ,-returAed f'roT)-1 Jerusalem. Here was., the ,rnan to whom he ff was1 to bare witness. The off'. " dal; Whom fwe ‘would call the vICtiiiist4Kotrinanc,e, was reading the- fifty-filif'.chat5ter of Isaiah. , philip gps,Any,itgq,,into the char. . let a „and, !„had„„tafe4 privilege of c preaelling,,s,u,s -to this earnest 'a4man. lie.elcpliariegl how Isaiah'si ':.-miviirds% tiad abeeaf fulfilled in je's'irsa'l The -EthiOpian believed that Jesus was indeed the MeP, siaheaficlawascbapkized. The Spirit .1,.-pf •.,thex.Lerd ,ca3,1.ght away Philip for "another' taelcalnd the Ethio- pian went home to his own land rejoicing in his faith in the Lord , Jesus. a a--. No tioubtt there were many „,,otherl episode) pf a like nature among the early Christians, Their hearts were burning with a holy love and joy in Jesus Christ their Saviour. They had to share the good nears: If the task had been left exclusively to the apostles, * comparatively little waaild have been done. The whole chgrch took up the wit- „nessang. That is what must be 1 %Jae' today. ,