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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1924-2-7, Page 3rOtir He Weak? ur Nerves ,rung? Disetiees and disorders of the heart d nervea have become friglitra1l7 revaeiit of late year, and la all .ctines whore the, heart and uervee are' affected .you will find thatMil- burn's' Heart and Nerve Pills will rengtlien ana. invigorate the heart : action, one up the nervout system, enrich the blvod, and than all your ,trembles, which` have become th o caune. of so much fear and auxiete, will be elibigof the past. Mrs, le Nyle, Moose Ja,W, Writesseee‘ About two years ago I sue - feed fro in palpitation of the heart shortness of breath. My heart woulkl sisip beats, at timee, and often I would have, to sit up in bed to get my. breath, • My nerves got SO nestrung' I could eat, sleep, only for about two house each "night. Pinging Feed so nameh about, ycmr tilt an d , • Nerve Pine I tried them and they have 'given me .wonderful so Much, so -that I have usee theni ever 24i -share te Heart end Nerve Pills are 50e. a box at dealers, or mailed direct on reeeipt Of price by The T. Ifilbuin Co. Etd.,,Toronto, Oht, • Geese pair when sexes are equal, and become very much attached to each other arid reniain-faithful. They she* a great attachment for their home. The gander is a most gallant bird, constently guardisig his mate. Geese are good Watchers, always on the alert, and no matter whether it is night or day, they will give A shrill yell at tho. approach of a stranger.' Geese aro natural foragers. Green teuff is "their main diet, and' they thrive best when given good range with, water convenient. Their ideal location is in swamps end marshes, although they do well on upland 'pas - turas and hilly farms. if water is pro- vided. Per years it has been the be- lief that *geeee impoverish land. On the contrary, geese enrich the land over which. they 'rearm Good, large fat geese usually sell well on most markets. Old geeee lay ZI greater number of lager eggs and are more reliable' than young ones'. Young geese donotlay sal many 'fer- tile eggs, nor produce so many gos- lings' the first breeding seaton as they do the secband. Geese sometiines begin laying in Decelliber then atop- and begin agaha In FebruarY. Oerierally gooSe will lay , from twelve to eighteen eggs be- fore becoming' brood, e,gg re- n cord of the g,obse is from. t,aventy to 2 forty eggs in a year. s Unlike the bill of other fowls, the goose's bill is provided with sharp, interlocking, serrated. edges, which are designed to cut and divide vege- A C11()P THAT DOES N011 RO13 THE FARM. Your ice crop is the only one yoi hara-est that does not rob your farm of fertility, and, considering the ad vantages of a good home supply of no improvement is Tore SAtiSfaC tory than a good ice su ply I "Keep Cool" is gOod advice to th politieal spellbinder; it is -exceptional ly fair coinisel on hot surrimer days When the glass registers around ninety in the shade, and the folks in the home wish to preserve :fruit and vegetables and the children want their ice cream and eool drinks. Then, there is the milk and cream to be cooled and kept cold entil Marketed. On the basis of 220 -pound cakes, it is possible to cut the ice erop at less than tiventy cents per ton, and haul and pack it in the icehouse for about $2.00 per ton. Where coerierative ,methocls are used, the cost is less', To harvest ice efficiently a few ice tools are required. A steel scraper is useful; some types of small road scraper's can be used for this or a vere good home-made scraper may be ,fashaioeed of wood and faced with a strip ge steel, such as, the back. of an old cress -cut saw. Ari ice plow is al- most essential if any great amount is to be put up. This .facilitates the re- moval of the porous 'surface ice and greatly simplifies cutting into blocks. Half a dozen pike.peles, bearing ver- tical and horizontal h6olts, are neces- sary in Boating the ice to the loading. platform. An ice saw may be useful or any ordinary cross -cut saw may be used by remgving one handle. I The ice harvest may be best carried on by three squads of men each with a team. The first removes the snow, or .sPougy ice from the surface of the field and plows saivs and cuts the ice into blocks of a size most convenient to handle. If the ice is more than. twelve inches thick blocks tvventy-two to twenty-four inches square are eas- iest to handle a if thinner, blocks three feet square are best. The second.' squad cuts loose. 'the. 'Islamics and floats them -to' the side of the open water, where they are ready to be loaded on sleighs. Here a tram- way with a pair of ice hooks attached to a•rcipe will make loading a relative- ly easy job. Let • the ropeextend across the sleigh' from the traneway; hiteli arse horse to' it and -drag the blocica. fr-gin 'the' Water hit° the sleigh. - The third gang should be at the ice- honse to place each load in position - and packsiaiVdnet or ' shavings round .it's 'rapidly- ea, possilale. "Eight men with, three teamstcan work most' rap- idrY in harvesting a crop of ice bythis method: The -average' daillek, requires only a f siederate' amount of ice, or one thou- a. and pounds per COW, so that eVen a s mall :harVesting surface usually,. is e lunge enough, eepec ally if the ice IS cut a second time. But it is best to 1, fill the house 0.1, one operation if pos- sible. The nu nber of square feet of - surface required per ton of ice in blocks twentyetwo inchee square, - and of various tliieltnesses, is shown in the following table: , Thickness of ice. Inches. , 21111102486400 8 Number of cakes required per ton. 31.3 20.9 15.6 12.5 10.4 8.9 7.8- 6.9 6,3 °Sitting Space required per ton. Sq. Ft. 105.4 70.2 52.6 42.1 35.1 30.1 26.3 23.4 21.1 After the field has been marked off, a strip of ice, one block in width and extending from the loadingavay to the main. channel, is cut through and forced under the surface of the ice. This strip is sawed somewhat wedge- shapedgwider at the bottom than at the top, which permits it to be ferced down under the ice -field. The channel is then widened by cutting another strip to enable the long strips or floats to be floated from the main channel •to the bank and loading place. The stripes are then pushed with an ice hook along the channel to the lba.cl- ing place, where they are sawed or chopped into cakes. The cakes should not be cut completely through, but should be graoved two or three inches deep With the plow, and after being floated up the channel, chopped through with a special tool before being put on the loading -way. Not only will you save much space but ice as 'well by properly packing the icein the house. You can get only thirty-five to forty pounds in a cubic foot of spade if thgice is thrown in at random, while about fifty pounds ean be packed in the same space with, a little care. This means also, that the air cannot circulate through the ice and melt it. About a foot of sawdust should be placed on the floor of the ice house, with less in the center to permit the, cakes to lean inward,. and thus drain! inward. The sides of the ice should be smooth.. Any adrojecting pieces should be trimmed off before insula- tion is put on. If sawdust or shavings are used a space of at least twelve inches should be left "between the outer walls and the ice stack. It is easy; to calculate how much ice he house will hold. ..4ilowing forty- five thibic feet per tine, an tminsulated house 18X12 by ten feet high, with one oat around for insulation, will „hold bout thirty-eight tons, while the saine ized honse, if insulated, will, hold bout forty-three tons. table ,tissuee. The tip of the goose's tongue is covered with hard, hair- like.. projections pointing toward the throat, whieli sere% to carry the bits of grass and leaves quickly and surely into the throat. - The best gander to use in the breed- ing pen is one with large dimensions, quick gait, sparkling; and clear eyes, s hoarse and ever -ready voice, and a bold, defiant demeanor. The best goose far breeding -is the one that has gOod weight, is steady in deportment . and has good breadth of foot, as this las-t quality is conceded to indicate .the pre- sence of ether excellencies. Geeeo require fresh air in plenty, and will not bear confinement in tight houset. •A good plaee for thein is a pen under an open shed from which they can run into the barnyard or „fenced -in pasture- during the- day, when they can net be given free, range, I - Ice takes about four and a half years ;to travel ham' the Arctic Ocean north of Siberia toe the Ease Greenland 'current, where it begine to affect weather ill:England. Do 'You Suffer From Headaches? 1 Readaches teens to be habitual with many people and make life miserable s ` for the sufferer in fact, a million. THE FOUR VALENTINES BY CLARA PETERSON. There once lived in a village a cer- tain rich ,young girl, the Lady Lou- ella Lapidee, who was very fond of sweets and pastry. Twice a year she •had her huge pantry stored with sup- plies for making -them; but several times the flour had run ,short. When the St. Valentine season came round -Lady Louella made up her mind that that should not happen again. So without saying anything to her'cook, and without knowing anything her- self about weights and measures she sent a large order to the mills. She wondered very much when .a wagon loaded with sacks of flour drew up befora'the , • "0 'dear, dear ni.e!"'slie.said to her- self. "What shall I do witlidit,a11?" But She had' ordeeed the flour, and _ _ I so there was nothing to do except'take it. Forty large sacks were carried, into the storeroom. , "My stars!" said Lady Louella. "I must -take a long. walk and 'try to think whet to do With all that flaPr." ,As she strolled ' clown' the road. the la , . rst house that she passed was a saver 'hanger s shop; the windows were, full of wall papers . of all pat - eras, aThe 'aecend buildinc. belonged needles could not produce the aufter. ingand torture that those afficted-un- slergo. • ' There is only one way to get rid 7 ef the headaches, and that is to, go right to the seat of`the trouble. t Burdock Blood Bitters will do 'thi 0 by removing the cause of the trouble b through: eleansing, strengtlieuing d and tonic !action on the whole'eystem. Mr. E. letachnauer, llooseliorn, Man., writes: -''I had headaches iv h every second day, aild tho.Y were so h ad I would have to stay in bed all e , der long, in feet, from 6 o'clock in Ti the morning to 10 o'cloels at night, eeeld hardly bear the suffering but e isms eday when, I SVAP tOWA I o a -banker ; there was :a pile of gold ...eine in each window. The thild be- otiged ;to. a dry -goods -merchantein he windows there Were Wax, figures f ladies in velvet' gowns The fourth uilding was a bakery, and in tire win- owof that there WasnOthing, at.all. All at once an idea oceurred to her. he turned round and went home and rote four notes and sent. them to :the ouse'S 'that - she had inst passed In a:eh' note she said, have mere flour San I know whet to do with and shall e gladto give away, thirty sacks at advised to uao leardoek Bl a Wtt. end it sure did relieve cm of all ray headaches.' e ' ' f3urdock Blood Bittere has been o reanuSeetileed only by The, T, bIlr-e. Co., 'Li ited. Toronto, Ont. the market ,Eor the pest 45 years an The notes 'Suede a 'grs t t' 1 they were delivered. "The easte ,that I Can make!" said the paper :hanger., . • , "I: "' cart those , thirty , sacks and ve'. mere, piecee for znye,, . ows, e banker. d "ail th u "I will. give ,away it pound of -flour to every customer and so, increase my trade," saidethe merchant. The baker was the most excited of all, for he had almost run out of flour. "But now," he said as he caught his little daughter, Irene, and whirled her round and round, "I can get more flour." At five o'clock Lady Louella sat waiting m her parlor. She wondered which of the four men would come, in response to her letter. There was a knock at the door, nail a few minutes later the servant show- ed in five visitors -the paper hanger, the merchant, the banker, the baker and little Irene, the baker's daughter, who had begged to come, too. Lady Louella was astonished; she had no idea that so many people wanted flour. "Couid you really pse thirty sacks of flour? she said timidly to them. "I could, indeed," said the paper hanger, the banker, the merchant and the baker almost With one voice. "d dear, dear me!" said Lady Lou- elleaiere was a pretty state of affairs! The lady looked in a troubled way at her guests, and her guests looked at her and at one another. No one knew what to do. , Then little Irene stepped forward and raised her hand. "Please, Lady Louella," she said. "What is itplittle girl?" said Lady Louella. Day ,•after to -morrow avail be St. Valentine's Day." said the little girl. "Suppose you say that you will give the flour to the person who sende you t best valentine. , Lady Louella was delighted, "Just the thing!" she said. "I will give the thirty sacks of flour to th who sends me the sweetest -yes, the very sweetest-valentirie on St Val- entine's Day," The four men agreed readily to that. Each of them was perfectly sure that he should succeed. Late the next afternoon they came again, but this 'time little Irene was not with her father. The men laid their offerings before Lady Louella. With a pink spot in each cheek she began to unwrap the pacltages. The paper hanger's valentine, eame first. It was made of layers and lay- ers of' delieate silver paper, and on each layer was painted a tiny wreath yang birds, rose and green and i of w °vein:" said th That Croupy Cough The bleach:1110, 'valentine ,wae ra:14 of ivory-col:It:ad lace as thin as a cob web, and atilt' 4'.,,Pliroads were wove through it , was 'decorated wit .cluster a ,Oif little velvet violets, whit and lavender, purple arid g'old. Lad Louella was charmed with it, The banker's offering was ver handsonle. The foundation was piece of heavy gold cloth as large a a Plate; in the centre was a perfume aose with golden petals and at th heart the .rose lay a milk -whit pearl. Lady Louella clasped he hands in Wonder and delight. ,The baker's Valentine was in a White box. ',When Lady Louella had takei off the cover ehe sat and stared:The/ her eyes began to twinkle, "How sweet!" she said. Then she picked up the contents of the box and took a big bite. For the baker's val- entine was vety sweet indeed; it was a heart -shaped chocolate cake cover- ed all over with trailing vines of green and with little frosty pink -and -white flowers of cocoanut. "Oh, how delicious!" said Lady Lapidee. "Dear me, how rude I am to beg,in eating it right away! But I eould not help myself." Then she ad- ded "You will have to admit gentle- , mennthat this is the sweetest 'valen- tine of the The baker beamed, but the other three men looked terribly disappoint. ed. "We didn't, luage, ,you meant that kind of sweet," said the merchant, the banker and the paper hanger all to- gether. ' "1 didri't know it either " said 'a h e lag the night with a. croupy eough., d liapporia there is no time Y for delay; the first tiiieg to do is to Alartria the Mother 1'1 etrilses terror •to the mother's heart to have 'ter belay wake up date - ; apply hot 'multiage to the throat toad y upper part of the phest and thee a gave a fesv doses 'of Dr, Wood's Norway Pine Syrup • ga by doing this the mother will find O that th '11 reeeive prompt and e permanent relief, and porhaps the life saved by taking this immediate pre- , caution. . Mrs Wesley loch, Conestog,o, Qat., writes: -"My tt g r a very li le i 1 a crimpy cough which kept her awake at night. I had tiled several things to relieve- it, but could got nothing until I got Dr. 'Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. After eho had taken a few dose e I saw good effects so I kept right on with it and her cough eoon left her.'' Dse Wood's 'resurvey Pine Syrup le 85e. a bottle; 60c. for the large family size. put up only by The T, Milburn Co:Limited. Toronto, Ont, e -se vOice at the- door, and little Irene Came running in. She had not been able to stay at home any longer. "Well, I didnit mean that kind of sweet," said Lady Louella. "But some- how this valentine seems the sweetest in every way." Irene's face shone. "I just knew that nothing could be better than one of father's ,good cakes," she, said. . So the long and the short of it was that Lady Louella sent for a knife and then cut out the bitten piece and sliced the cake and passed it round. The banker, the merchant and the pa- . a per hanger had to admit that it was a wonderful cake. ' So the baker, aided by" his little Irene, won the prize. He offered to share it with the other men, but they shook their heads and declared as they finished the chocolate and cocoanut crumbs that he had won it fairly. Then they all went horne and the baker and little Irene spent many happy •hour'S turning those thirty sacks of flobr into loaves and cakes arid puddings and pies.--Youtit's Cam - A good dry mash for Leghorns for winter can be made of one hundred pounds of gran:Indio:ate, fifty pounds of ,wheatibrarnandethirty.pounds of bee- -scrap. The grain ration can .be . two hundred pounds, of' cernf to one hun- dred pounds -of 'wheat. Another good dry mash can' be rnade, of equal parts ef ground corn, ground wheat argil ground oats plus twenty per cent. by weight of beef scrap. flohey as a Food. Mr. R. P, liolterness, the well- known apiarist of 13rant.ford,„Oritario, had the following to say of honey as a food in an Address he delivered be: fore the Kiwaids Club of his, home city: Honey as a food could not be com- pared he said,. to such food as 'lean meats; the latter is protein, honey a carbohydrate, with phosphorus, ircin and vitarnines, which- were so highly prized by dietitians, But honey was better than almost all other sweets in that it was inverted sugar -in other words it was largely pre-digested and ready for assimilation. The pro'duction of honey took noth- ing from the fertility of the farm, and it displaced no other ci-op. It Was therefore a wealth -producer. More- over, honey was a by-product, and the primary object to the existence of the bee was to pollenize blossoms so they would set seed and fruit. This was pra.ctically 'true of plum, „ cherry, peach, apple and pear blossoms, as well as clover, alfalfa and buckwheat, A doubtful egg is a bad egg, even if it is a good egg. Candling is the sur- est way to take doubt out of the egg - case. The honey -bee has been. accused of spreading fire -blight of fruit trees. Other insects comprise 50 per cent of pollenizers, though, and they are eq- ually guilty. The coal -oil light's a -burning bright; (It will, sornetime.s, when it feels right) ; Pa sits there reading, slick as sin, The latest poultry bulletin; Then, half to ma, and half to me, Pa up and speaks: "I see," says he, "As- how correct illumination Will make hens lay like all crea.tiOn; Guess I'll have the hen -house wired" Ma stops and peers and sews away, Does ma, and then I hear her say: "I wish I was a blamed old hen: Maybe they'd wire the homestead, then!" A Valenfine Party BY EMILY ROSE BURT' If you want an excuse to dress up, plan a regular old-fashioned Valen- tine party -oh, perhaps a little bit modern in places, but, even so, all bound up with hearts and darts. , For invitations paste a frill of white lace paper around the edges of a pale pink or lavender correspondence card and write on the card: , O'n Valentine's night to Valentine Land You're being invited; pray, under- .' stand „ That'appropriate costume you must wear - there are groups, place the members of each group in line, with a big spoon in the hand of the first in. line. The game is to fill the spoon with water from a receptacle Provided, gun with it to the milk bottle, empty the spoon and return, handing the spoon to thenext in line. The group filliag its bottle first by means of this "spooning" process is proclaimed vic- torious. Ti Stind • The Failureat Kad6sh • 26.40. Golden Tex 'Min. 14: 9. CoNTneeeseesies' see ' ▪ TORT -S- t c.impter'ef Deuteronomy cant a brief and extrer01;y. interesting, count 'oe' what ,took, place after, giving, of :the law at Sinai. TI Was the appoiatment o±' 11100 froni the tribea "wise Men and undereta ing, :and known/'''' to help bear burden. of gOvernment., ',(Dent. The., day pportunities re50,,a, aiiis1 dawn there pre other rOPPC, all And only by ilivine tviedom may wo ed-Ilearn te select that opportunity which the is momentous and rare, It is easy to Oa' be, wise after the event, but true great.' 18; cempare Exod. 18: 17-26. T reb, to do the right thing in an eme followed the departure from Ho in the .second month of the sec year of the wilderness period (N 10: 11), the Jong joueney "through that great and terrible wilderness by the way to the hill country of Ainorites," and the arrival at Keck or Kadesh-barnea, a distance desci- ed by a modern traveler as "ten eleven days of camel riding" fr Horeb. There they encamped and mained for many days (ch. 1: 4 and it was there that the events c sgribed in our lesson took plaice At Kadesh (see map) the Israel people' were on the extreme southe border of Psilestine, and they seem have contemplated invading the cosi try from that directions Imenediate to the north of them lay the vvild pa ture lands of the region known "the Negeb" or "the South" (Nu 13: 17.) In it the desert gave pia to the mountain range which extend northward through the whole of w tern Palestine to the Lebanons, brok only by the transverse valley*.of 'Je reel. The spies sent out from Kade hen nes of soul is reirealed in the ability mid 2. The Wrong Use of Pacts, Ths u,a_mll, lasiturg:rtiioemtdd,otYn Yet 18 inatte awnelsi iseeeviinntahilill. el Ylpv.oer the false in the impressions it gave, be - eh, cause of its 'fAlse ehaphaels: Thr0 ib- were dangers and 'obstacles in the Genie 111 the e Butsiu atbieonmoweat sindlPisorse'tgaanytdeoldesnEerive re- ery day we see events, truths, soda aa, and political conditions, with „emu le- essential element left out leavm them distorted and false iTttloel tahr.edAl nmy anscloeqluittlil'eetshclegunalc'lpetoesideis hoyaf .1.6v is °recall co" saa c' T it n- dangerous half truth. "The worst ene- lyirmes of Christianity are those who, COrideSeendi/Ig'iy praiSe its civilization as and then class Christ with Socrates."' m, Tine is to a'clamn with faint 'praise ce and :there is a tremendous lot of this ed isoivadays --the measuring of society es_ by city slums, of' political life by its en 16ehaurtrych'hbeeyierths eanfodcuhsallogferienqc!ani'ry tonehe- eh "What is wrong with the church " and he all sort of pernicious sturf, of -the an character of a people by the moral' ad and methods of its hijaclaers, or of the progress of the 'race by the fiendish n. /less o was. y 8 COZtrage• 18 i cowardiee that s_ shils men out of Canaan. But it is le the vision and daring of youth and of ar faith that "sees life steadily, and sees it whole" Moses and Joshua and oGefeadleev wasl f, aac. gax all si thehre ae facts,thtaone na ltbelieved oPalestinewter hats nd immediately. Canada is a goodly Ca- naan. "If the Lord delight in us, then he will bring us into this land and give it us." But its wealth to -day is in wrong hands. Poverty, vice, politi- cal patronage, trade restrictions, mill- Iounl a people.tall and strong, t Amorites, whose cities on the northe . , si e of the Negele were "great a fenced up to heaven." - Num. 14: 1. All the congregatio This is the name frequently used b the writer to describe the poPular a sernbly. We may imaghae the peop gathered in some public place to he the report of the spies. See ch. 13 26. The Whole story in chs. 13 and 1 should be read. Twelve men, repre- senting the confederated tribes, had been sent out to "see the land, what it is, and the people that dwell,there- in." They were to report as to the numbers and strength, of the people of the land, and what sort of land it was, Whether "fat or lean." They are said in one passage to have spied - the land as far as "the 'entering ti agitation, gambling habite traf- in /IF in liquor and drugs are arnong'the of Hamath," a mountain pass in the extreme north of Palestirie. It is hardly likely that they traveled so far, but by inquiry of people in the nearer parts, they could have learned much about the parts more remote. Re- turning they brought grapes, pome- granates and figs to show the fruits of the country. But they said, "The people that dwell in the land are ..Softness is strong, and the -cities are fenced (os• Melee:se il walled) and very great." Caleb and! bacon sells at a discoun Joshua. alone showed a more courag- heavily in early life, particutarlY an eons spirit. "We are well able to fattening, feeds, and at the sante time overcome it," they said, and that was closely confined in pens wipeout ex - no doubt true had an the men of Is- ercise produeed, a soft ...bacon. Exa rael been like them, rt was Caleb per/mental -work at tile Ontari A el - giants of our heritage. The •chilech is able, if she is willing, tog o up and possess the land. The Lerd our -God /lath set this. land before ut. , who, an old man, forty years later, cultural Cone& has proved this fact o g asked perrnission of Joshua who was as wen as that pigs grown to 100 to then the leader of Israel's armies, to 125 lbs. weight on mixed feeds well go up against one of those sa.rne walled balanced With skim -milk (about 21/4 cities of the south and take it for hienal lbs. milk to 1 lb. of ingaD or tankage If e and his family. (See Josh, 14: up to 10 per cent. in the -ration snay -16.) be finished on cern or barley and still V. 2. Murmured against Moses. Produce a firm, high-olualitY product --: hey were a difficult and stubborn , Close confinement in pens from -wean- eople to govern, and the patience of 1 ing until marketing has a tendency, to heir leaders must often have been produce a soft flabby product 6 rely'r ed., Every unaccustomed riure tiiae-any' , or called forth suffering, au% tobstaclehghielr lve and steadfeat purpose, but mur- uring And always they blamed eir leaders. Or they found fault th the Lord himself for having ti 111 so th For the next stunt the golden num- wi beis in the window literally 'figure. br Say there are six windows, an even sl number of slips, bearing some digit th IVIarketing immature, unfinished pigs should:be cliscduraged. They kill a low percentage carcase and are gen- orally soft and so, do not grade seleet, Unthrifty hogs generally produce.soft carcases. Exercise and thrift ge: to, gether, and thrift and firmness are ought them into trouble. 'Better, inseparable. every and the flesh -pots of Egypt, Feeding. on meal and meal alone has an liberty and the trials f t d from one to six, is passed around. The persons matching numbers with the window numerale take .their stands under their respective numbers. The assembly in each of these groups is them. Everybody is going to feel ,very o he wl- a, ten ency to produce' soft bacon.' Comic or sober, freakieh or fair. Vs. 5-9. They are breczel for zts. So meal rations. 'derness. See v. 3 and Deut. 1: 2'7. Mid feeds are safer than exelniive Into the atmosphere of an evening of fun their "dress -up" garb will lead cheerful if you imrt pink and bine. bound to. be delightfully mixed as to costume; for instance, possibly Peck's Jap - .nese lanterns over the electric lights' and make a softly curving ceiling, fee Bad Boy, a Quaker lady, a little Dutch 1 lengths of rosy-cheesecIoth by draping maid; e pirate (of hearts), a lady in hoopskirts, and a clown -may find i it from the center to the, side walls. th'ernselvas together, gInoidehacehart,_wint:rdyo,swtsihouousllyd .nsuinit baeregdrehayt Each of these window groups is When the meeting th comes. to order. Valentine in a pitnalafeame p . , at e to rovided at tileway. pose se as a composite said Caleb and Joshua. They meant Beans produce soft pork, Bucks; "We shall eat them up." Their defence wheat fed alone has .0 similar ten. from them. That is the overshadow- all right asid gives good gains. „Cerse Ing and thus protecting power of their tain by-products .al-iould not be., gone. "And," said Caleb and Joshua, small portion of the ration. or rather, "their shadow," is departed clency, Fed in a mixed ratioe, it le gods, in which they vainly trusted, is fed oily in large quantities but only as a - "the Lordis with us." Compare Dent.- 20-: 1-4. See aleo the g•reet assuranceWinter brings the -farm" time -ta't °1 Psalm -46 and Iess. 41: 8-1-4. think. Good. b°°1's gilre him s°m°' V. 10. The answer of the fear- thing to think about stricicon Mob to these brave words was KIDNEYS SO I3Au, - Had to Stay Homo . From Work 80 to speak, the first stunt is the grand the -ens] if the room or on the'plat- to stone .thezn with stmes." Some- thing of that sort is too often, even march to shoW off costumes to the ..11;---refroshmenta ,are Very tiny . form in our own,day, the answer of fear to judges. The next stunt is indeed a the exhoreations of courage and hope. - heartening one: Each' person draws frau). a hat at random' a Sealed enve- asannddewaiachhepeer(sVoenlernetcianicvVe's. infOYa°ureoliwkeee)1 Hut, in some inrsterious waY, out of lope with a heartfelt wish in it; this invelope is to be pinned to contained NO;footdheenm--sktehweera.rrow a feather -tipped tchouatracgoenflaicntdofeofNa7stitrhdpenepd Nlvinhbenelieff;itohf ete. eis • s' paper frill, with a 11 1 to "e in line. wee!, all are tees adorned, lace-tries/fled Valentin --a slice of avail there came the manifeetation of the shoulder of tbe nexCPerson ahead The ice cream leeks 111(0 a romantic and courage aPPearleod8etwo hhoenotf,erendo severest and., most domdi , g e - When the itidneyo begin to "act tap'" and „fall. to filter the bloos) through them, . there pastes into eht system uric :acid aud other virulee P023008 which cause some of the they form a cle,ele, facing. out and th p.ises ice cream surroundedhpanyo7olecane. thegwloryrnoofttOsoofdrosTeltin.otPev , ver.,) icaawa to muill nkitd. y eeses in tote wheels about, and watches the • eenael:rhwaeik winith his Nand- The circle tPllide ppiunskhiendeiss and coldness. The cook- ion. of that glorY. Is there not in this trouble Dear Midney Pills should . e eire e'tonehe's slarrie- down at in the cetter of 6 ilde eS sanctuary, saw the viss or, the firot approach or kidney unfortunate victuril open -his envelope ies are heart -shaped, and there are narretive sorne Pravleie/1. and some be used and serious tie:nib/0 avoided, and perform his wish in the center a 'nett° hearts and.eall<IY kisses. ef tha glerY' of the E. Johnson ltrnatferd, (Yete the circle. As all are in the same "Post aogffircaen”d ifisnealvienofouil.leteldie; eenevesenryg.., cg/.1.602oisfised,Asso ehaelseo leweas: hateanatia .andLyede writes My husband sufres-ed some-. thing awful with hie kidneys and boat, it behooves each 'one, tO be syzn- leir or pathetic. performer's From the ac- tion the rest gtess the wish. Such wishes as these are good actable ones, Wish I had a datvg•! Wish lislatedeeAhco`awt Ito make mo 110 Wish T had red hair! Wish I had -a piece of apple pie! After this, chooto two captains, who in turn "choose, sides" tin. everybody s in line foe a relay race in "spoon-. ng." set up as intiny milk bottles as body shrieks a little with thought's ad and ours, e)aneified and yet triumph- wan -id have te ata -Y home 'Isom work it, but at proves to be merely a wilt - the old-fashioned method, of playing ant. AppzIcATIos. 0,wiekeinratshroese things, abnWteVhr•03, Rote iytrired. • lieved hiancfor fihort svhile. He saw dow where you go to i•eceive a parcel - post ,paeleige which, on being opened, , is sone Sett of joke favor. This could Y' very well he introduced earlier in 0 1. Opportunity, When God sets bee p9a,,, ata, nag Pine °advertised .ana fore us an open door, "to doubt would after a few dotes he felt flee; a„Cter be disloyalty, to falter would be sin." he had used four boxes he was c'hilla The wilderness wandering need not be nletely relieved. That was tw°, 'es/i's' the evening, so that there would be aimless. When we are guided each /40 aad'Ae has nef's'Afeei:eci. sillee." plenty of tie a for the jokes to file.. day nearer the ideal of heart's desire, 136 :"Ire 83t. get ,..:3?Uilnr7S') 1.)ee nisihn tahlie3jrcIsishoa,r0„;.,eorfytbhoedyenitse\s•Ntaloinramhetentd, the 11,11g/ill/ way is a 'march ef Pre' :e„-ee°cliOebetiElteoei;eal,neretsteeelleirb. vea-iital?''co:(17.,..,‘'d°?a.,,a;ctleatbiloc'nst: to g away happy from Valenti/se There are some things in life which i.4 L., ,,.. 1,1, 0,,,t -0 -. , _ „JO, 3111i CX, 7 . Orolt 0, , Land. must be done now or neVere ertsery ,' .