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The Brussels Post, 1974-10-16, Page 101 0 • a No. 586.036 FARM SALE PRICE 2399 en. With side tilting handle for easier pouring. 16 (U.S.) Quart. No. 586-054 ...inn FARM SALE ZiOU ea.} PRICE WORDS TO LIVE BY FAITHFULNESS the CO•OstoreP Dimensions 13" W x 24" L x 18" H. Electric Heater-325 Watts (Thermostat. ically Controlled), Carr be installed to serve 2 pens. The heavy steel sidewalls are fully insulated. Built with round corners to prevent injury to livestock. One piece drawn galvanized steel trough with drain. 7489 ea. No. 532.300 FARM SALE PRICE STRAIN ER Low.wide design, excellent forbulk cool. ers. Special punching givei maximum straining area. Uses 61/2 " filter disc. DAIRY PAILS Extra thick bottom offers greater resistance to damage. 13 (U.S..) Quart. No. 586-047 A Ann \s.LARM SAI.E 1114U0 ea. PRICE 12 TON, WAGON Rugged dependable, gives years of operation. Automotive type ' front axle steering. Box type rear axles welded to spindle to ensure positive tracking. • Ap- prox. 10%' turning, radius • 72" track; 84" to 132" telescopic • 2" high carbon steel spindles • 6 bolt heavy duty hubs with high speed bearings • 12 Ton capacity (depending on tires) • Rear hitch included • 15" rims (less tires) No. 529-060 2900 FARM SALE PRICE I CO-OP PENICILLIN STREPTOMYCIN A combination of 2 antibiotics, provides protection against in• fections, enteritis, bronchitis swine. N o bacterial associated infections ,..o 2 .3o iin wi th pneumonia in S E ff.-- 100 cc, CO-OP TERRAMYCIN INJECTABLE A broad spectrum antibiotic, effective for a wide range of infectious diseaSes, Rapidly maintains high end lasting blood levels for fatter tesults. 402-395 149 SALE 1 II 500 cc. by Richard C. Halverson The United Church of Canada One of the rare qualities of leadership is faithfulness. Doesn't sound like much on the surface — but it's absolutely basic to worth- whileness. The fellow that can stick to a thing — see it through — fight to the finish -- is the man that adds up accomplishment in life. Remember the hare and tortoise? The hare that had speed — show — glamour . . . played to the crowds — had them all on his side . . but the tortoise won! Somehow nature compensates in crisis. Many people go through storms without leaning too heavily on God. But it takes plenty of God's grace to stick at a thing day.after day with dog- ged perseverance! Think of men who were faithful — who stayed with a thing — long after others had quit. Stuck it out through bitter criticism — ridicule . . in spite of scorn and cynicism . . . in spite of failure — weariness -- heartbreak. With rugged, stubborn faithfulness, they .pro- duced . . . Men like Thomas Edison — Louis Pasteur — the Curies — Henry Ford — and scores of others who sweat out hundreds of mistakes — failures — contempt — loneliness . . . and won unheard of victories invaluable triumphs! Contrast the men who started something in a flash of glamour — public acclaim.— show . . . but ridn't hold on. Men who let go when the going was tough. Who took failure as final. Quit! Sometimes inches from their goal! The world is crowded with little men who do nothing without recognition — who can't stand one failure — who fear mistakes — who won't do one thing more than they're paid to do. Men who start clearing the desk as five to five. They stay little . won't be missed when they're gone! • There are never enough faithful men. Big men who can take criticism — ridicule — failure. Who stick at it through 'every conceivable pres- sure, until the job's done! Men who do a thing because it needs doing — for the sake of getting it done — not for the credit — whether they're seen or not. Men who never watch the clock! "It is required in stewards — that a man be found faithful." 1 Corinthians 4:2. Your comments on this column are welcome. Write Words to Live By, 85 St. Clair Avenue East, Toronto, Ontario. ;44 al C3. • Beigrave Branch POit,OCTOBER 1974 11J1C0 UNITED eo.OPERATIVES ONTARIO'