The Brussels Post, 1924-11-19, Page 2j ,� Fatleelh z Cockerels,
`i For crate feeding, coelterels give
best results when the are put into
Until a few years ago I believed the cratt.s at from four to, five pelattda
riments
that corn ire a mighty poor rood for in weight, acearding to expo
SCRAP !the farmer to buy welding apparatus. pullets especially lust before a xied on udder the direction of the
IX
I The nearest job welding shop will fix they are to be laced in winter slaaai•- llominian Poultry Husbandman.
c r '
A:TINO TIRE OLD e young t They
IndeePILEd,
it for him. . tens That fall, however, it was a stand the confinement and forced feed•
Few ;farms, indsed, bays: na grave- With the Oxy -acetylene welding "corn ing better than younger: birds. It is
and for old machinery and parte. Alcase of corn or nit grain' as I was,
y actor meth-, blowplpe in the hands of a competent unable to procure anything better at
recommended that they be fasted for
passerby, familiar with factory s operator all saris of worn, and broken prices that I could afford ti pay, Ac Practically the whole of the first day
ods; wonders s t the dismantled wz•oekt p p cordingly I began, solnewhat reluc; and then fed sparingly for several
a awing machines, ante resplenden darts can be repaired—mere than ``r days, If led heavily from the begin -
'In
g yellowpaint, now Paired' in the ordinary sense of the tartly, to. feed corn to the flock el y
iia 'shining rod and p + word actually made as good as new, pullets from which I hoped to select ring, the birds go. off their appetite ry
xustaftg in a clump of burdock and a,1 d castings can be Welded, miss- m winter layers. and lase rather than gain in flesh, of Peter at Caesarea Philippi, there rajas: In the t€m lo, Isaiah suw the
brambles. Perhaps all that is wrong Cr c ie g n sections y(After the few days of tending spar- begins. a new period of deep and luta- kin o kin u on his throne and
i broken axle, A crippled redder, lag gear troth replaced, won A neighbor, far more experleneod zn, ingly the birds will soak be able to mate communion between Jesus and g f P
a a stud surfaces built up. Malleable cast- even the courtzara who' stand lay him
that might still be kicking out the longa art will
pouitrycraft than I, declared that the handle two or three full meals in the his disciples. He is at last able to, ere fiery beings (the soraphun), Iso,
windrows of in the low meadow Ings can be braced, and tli p fowls would accumulate 80 mush fat
en July
hay be as strong as originally. Steel parts twenty-four hours. During long days, reveal what his Messialiship, which 6 The vision of Ezekiel (ells, 1-3, is
on July mornings but for a stripped g thea they would be worthless for any- or when artificial light is used, suit- they have now discovered, means. This oP a being so resplendent that the
and a' bent cam- ran be mads over; plowpoints built up thing but market purposes by the time is nothing less than death at the hands„ ]o de cannot bids him. Tho 1
and`"tootlaloss' gear, with en alloy steel welding rod will gable feeding hours are six in the gory of
a cold weather began. But X was des- morning, at noon, and six in the
perate and concluded to give corn a;evenng. Two Beads are sufficient in
trial. I the shorter days, at morning and
..The pullets were' on an 'extensive ,evening. The duration of the feeding
range at the time. In November they' period v•aries from two to four weeks,
ere place in winter quarters. and which should terminate when a birds
un.da,y F School
NOVEMBl 23
Lesso 11
The Transfiguration, Ike 9; 28.•36, Golden Text—This is
my beloved Son; hear him. -•--Luke 9: 35,
ANALYSIS, i with the lightning es hie gleaming
I,
vie Dts01ersts' vieiele of TEE GLORY. arrow or tiashing sppear, and the than-
ot• J2SUs, 23-83, der bis.. voice. In. the thunderstorm he
IL 'MS CONFIRMING VOICE FROM 11824v -I eatne 'to the relief of the distressed
EN, 84.8.4, •Psalmist (Psalm 18), hidden in the
INreeenerLAN—With the confession l aloud, it is true, but none the less
darting out fie Beath upon his ene-
shaft, disconsolately formsrusty .
'trellis for wild morning glories, I' give service like new ones. ]lent shaft-
DeZeme of smaller parts are always ing can be straightened easily by heat -
there, o, A flywheel from the thresh- ing with: the welding blowpipe.
@, to New parts rind new equipment can
ing thehrne, with a chunk missing also be fabricated by welding. One
.from ched rim. 'A broken pump handle. steak farm bought a number of Aid hot' w placed ' t t d h ld t t h th b d Transfiguration, which confirms to
Cracked transmission 'housing frim i1 rs from a from that time forth I realized that a have become well fleshed and are no- them the truth both of what Peter had
w longwas the spring
water tanks (range boilers) ) l more balanced ration should' be pro -
revealed. not to be eating well. Whole confessed, and of what Jesus had sub -
the enactor hodunk dealer, cut them into halves with
while the tractor wasvended and began feedinga commercial ain,should not be given, and the' sequently revealed. This experience
plowjng delayed h a cutting blowpipe, and after weldingg}
.' 1 ld u waiting for the new one to scratch •£sed. To the astonishment of liner the rain is ground the better forms the subject of to days lesson.
a P in? pieces of old pipe to them for lesg Let us remember that the whole pre-
oome Plowpoints, dozens o£ them; Plegs, myself and neighbor, these pullets be- feed it makes and -;may consist of a
d smell wheels,used them for stock -feeding troughs, an laying in December and kept us'buck- ceding week had been one of. groat
and half a hundTe mOn another place a shute for bags of g mixture of corn, oats,, barley, religious emotion, and indeed excite -
gears and pinions. Parts from the made bywelding old pieces in fresh eggs during rho balance .cif wheat, or wheat, The feed should be ment. Jesus had announced in solemn
ear and the trucks, Harvester parts, grain was the winter; and nob a single pullet given in a wet state mixed to the terms that he most go to Jerusalem
of steel sheet, bought very cheaply ,
cultivator parts, parts from the gas went into molt. 'consistency of porridge, o that it and die, Luke 9:22-27. He had said
engine and windmill—no one could from a scrap yard. Some months later X happened to can be poured from a pail or dipped that the path of the Messiah must be
g! It is in the repair of damaged parts, the path of the,cross, and that'his
name them 80. eve that thegreatest savings can mention the matter to a poultry' ex-vrith a fiat ladle. Buttermilk ms xe faithful disciples also must now. be
Such a ndap pile the best always isd however, i dollars pert. He merely laughed and replied, , garded as the best liquid, skimmilk prepared to forsake everything, to re -
to be found on best managed be centsen, The actual savings figure,
n "Nothing remarkable about that. In coining next. Better results are obi nounee self, and accept, if need be, a
farms as well as those run by the old and is a large figure, but'the fact I always make it a rule to feed tamed when the milk is sour and the eros- of execution. This was new teacha.
-
of the nation. Such teaching startles Ga is described fn Exod.24.10418 as
atzd. dismays the disciples who had if it were a great fire breaking
cherished very different thoughts of. throu h the cloud that bangs over a
the ]Messiah's fortunes, but within a voleeno. I have seen on iradiated
week three of them have a very won- cloud et Vesuvius by night. The Isal-
derful experience on the Mount of iter got glimpses of this glory of the
Ged of the bright heavens, and Moses
did, often (Exod. 33''17.23; 34:0, 7).
And when God tabernacled among
men, his presence was on more than
one occasion- marked out by shining
light and cloud. When Jesus was born
"the glory of the Lord shone round
about" the shepherds, Luke 2:9, When
he was transfigured, his white and
glistering presence. was encircled by
clouds, On the way to Damascus,
Paul saw at midday a "light from
heaven, above the brightness of the
sun," Acts 26:18. The early. Chris-
tians expected 1Meesjah to come in
glory—that is, in dazzling splendor—
on the clouds, Matt, 16:27. And• in
the. heavenly life, no light of .sun or
moon is needed, the glory of God doth
lighten it, Rev. 21:28.
I Put My Farm Name on My
Mail -Box.
It is now about three years since I
methods. In fact, the batter equipped greatest saving is the time necessary corn to my free-range pullets as soon l feed mixed one meal ahead. A. little ing, and at first the thought that
the farm, the larger is likely to be the to secure a new part.
heap of discarded metal parts. Mod- Take, for example, a typical in -
ern machinery converts the up-to-date stance. There are ten acres to be
farm into a well ordered manufactur plowed for fall wheat. Disc -harrowing
ing plant. This situation is followed will not do, the ground must be turned
by the manufacturing plant's problem over. The first morning an accident
.—the maintenance and repair of ma -'to the tractor put it out of service
chinery.with a crack in the cylinder block.
Besides the fact that it is an un-' A new block can be obtained only
sightly heap of junk, possibly—even: from the
hAfact ty,tan thist s
the new
dangerous to children and to lava block is the freight or express and,
stock, a haven afnd fleld mice and a unless the work can be properly done
stalkpossible .. fire hazard from the tall dry on the farm the cost of installing the
what • esf hisscrhe . p meg weeds, new block. In the meantime the plow -
significance
i does this scrap to pile e w erWof ing waits, unless a man and a team
significance has it the owner of,
the place' of horses can be put to it.
It ms a monument to waste. Welding will do away with nearly
Every pie; a on the scrap pile hasall of this delay, and much of the ex-
had to be replaced. From the mower pense. The cracked block is simply
to the smallest sprocket every item removed from the tractor and taken
was once important and necessary, to the nearest welding shop. There
and when thrown away a new part it is carefully preheated, the crack
had to be bought so work could go on., weldedand
n s he ercasting SloWly wiminot take a oled
industrial plants, faced with the
ay.
mine problem, would weld these im-{ And the results are very much
paired parts. Many scrap piles repre- worth while. The scrap pile is cheat-
sooting thousandsof dollars in ma- ed. The cost of a new cylinder block
chinery have been wiped out, never to, is saved. But best of all, the plowing
reappear, and the salvaged parts not; can go right ahead.
immediately required have in manse This incident is but a sketchy hies -
instances formed a reserve supply to, tration of the possible value of weld -
be drawn upon as needed. The sav-1 ing on the farm. Hundreds of similar
ings made in these plants have justi-1 instances might be cited of savings
fled the investment in welding equip -I that are now being made, or that could
menu many times over. be made were the value of this reels -
However, to reclaim worn or broken! oration process known to all who could
farm equipment it is not necessary for' take advantage of it.
I met my neighbor's fine, big son. I
CHILDREN
told him how proud we all were of
TRAINING OUR him.
' "Oh, it's mother who deserves the
praise," said Throck. "I couldn't have
---7
done 'what I have without her. I owe
it all to her."
And I went away thinking, "That
s true. He does owe it all to his
mother. And I believe she is right,
Failure is only for those who think
failure',"
"How does it happen that Throck •
is making such a fine success of his
work?" Aunt Tacey Ellen, who is i
anything but diplomatic, asked
Throck's mother,
"Happen?" little Mrs. Robers chal-
lenged, with a slight trace of irrita-
tion, "why, it could never have been
any other way!"
But I know plenty of failures,"
Aunt Tacey Ellen insisted.
"Yes, but my son isn't one," the
mother proudly answered. "You see,
I never allowed the word `.failure' in
Sonny's vocabulary. From the time
be was a little chap I taught him that
he must finish, and do well, anything
and everything he undertook. A task
completed develops self-confidence,
you know."
"But, my dear," Aunt Tacey Ellen
objected, "he probably had a character
that was easily molded. And, no doubt,
he was the typo of child that would
.have accomplished anything he under-
took, regardless of training."
"Indeed," Mrs, Rogers said crisply,
"IIsi was the type of child who is in-
clined to procrastinate and to jump
from one thing to another. But I
made up my mind to,rhelp hint break
this tendency, which is not conducive
to success."
"Row did you go about it?" I asked,
entering the conversation.
"First,. as I said, we made it a rule
that whatever he undertook must be
finished. When the task was finished
praised and encouraged him if it
was well done. And the next and best
influence was instilling in his young
mind the thought that he would be
successful at whatever he undertook.
X had the motto 'Failure is only for
those who think failure' framed and
hung in his room, I searched our
library and the public library for suc-
cess stories of great men who had
overcome handicaps!"
"Didn't Throck's own handicap ever
worry him?" Aunt Tacey Ellen in-
mere&
"If it ever did, I never heard of it,"
Mrs Rogers replied. "Some way, 1'
don't believe It ever occurred to him
that he would ever be anything but
CS 080831811."
"And he baennt been anything else,"
I added. -
Some weeks later I was spending a
few days in the great city in which
Thtoek is making a name for him-
self, Coming out of a store one day,
M'
The dairyman should know:
That timothy hay lacks protein, is
not very palatable to the dairy cow,
and has a constipating effect.
That, when combined with alfalfa
hay, a limited amount of good corn
fodder is, pound for pound, worth as
much as alfalfa hay.
That a good rule to follow in feed-
ing corn silage is to give each cow
three pounds of silage and one pound
of dry roughage per day for each 100
pounds of live weight.
That there Is no advantage gained
in removing the ears of corn from the
plant before putting the crop into the
silo.
That a heavy ration of potatoes
gives milk of :inferior flavor, and but-
ter that is salvy; but that the pota-
toes can be satisfactorily used in mod-
erate quantities if fed when cooked,
and in still smaller quantities when
raw.
That profits depend upon providing.
an abundance of succulent, palatable
feed in:a well balanced mixture which
is fed under comfortable quarters that
admit of a reasonable amount of ex-
ercise for the cows.
That cows will not thrive unless
they receive a regular supply of salt,
at least a daily allowance of an ounce
for each cow.
That, other things being equal, cows
return the largest profits When their
owner, through his kindness has gain-
ed at least a portion of the affection
that these cows would naturally give
their offspring.
Every rural community would ptoflt
by an inventory of its production farm
by farm, family by family. Further,
the school children would profit highly
through the gathering of the material
of such an inventory. .
An enterprising town has planted a
municipal evergreen tree which will
be used to each Christmas for a muni-
eipal Christmas tree as long as it
as the extremely hot weather is past; salt added to the mash is recommend -
and I continue to feed it liberally until ed. The birds should have Water con -
the fowls are placed in winter quer- gently available, and a supply of grit
ters- By such a system the pullets at all times.
put on sufficient flesh to begin winter
laying without experiencing a loss of
vitality, and thereby escape the wins
ter molt
"As long, as the young stock is on
free range there will be plenty of
bugs, worms, weed -seeds and waste
grains about to balance all the corn
they will consume, and it is almost
impossible at that period to induce
them to eat more of it than is good
for them. The time to cut down on
corn in the poultry ration is when.
the flock is confined to close quarters
where the birds can not get sufficient
exercise,"
e
Many herds of hogs will be better
fed this winter. for they will receive
something besides corn. Corn lacks
in protein and mineral elements.
Tankage, buttermilk, skimrnilie, oil
meal, fish meal, shorts or middlings
fed with cern .makes a better ration.
Strictly Fresh.
First Cold Storage Egg—"You don't
like him?"
Second Cold Storage Egg—"No, I
don't, he's too fresh for me."
The clerk who hopes some day to
become a merchant and the traveling
salesman who hopes to be a success-
ful executive or manufacturer should
learn how to use imagination in the
retailing of any commodity which he
may handle.
FOR HOME AND COUNTRY
News from the Algoma and St. Joseph Island Institutes.
The Institutes Branches of•Algoma Sault W. I. Rest Room, and helped
and St. Joseph's Island have in gen-
eral excellently planned and executed
monthly program put on by the mem-
bers and local talent. The reflex effect
on the girls and women is noticeable.
They are especially bright, efficient,
and clear -visioned, carrying their
working principle of co-operation from
rite individual to the Institute, schools,
county, college, and Government.
St. Joseph's Island, in co-operation
with the Red Cross -Society and Coun-
cil, is establishing a hospital at Rich-
ard's Landing. The Island Institutes
are co-operating to furnish it and having the Medical Officer of Health
render all help possible in other ways. meet with them in a heart-to-heart
Good health in home and community talk on Preventive Medicine and First
is a study of intense interest in the Aid.
north. - Echo Bay are busy beautifying the
Espanola members volunteered to Memorial Park and Playgrounds pre -
help the doctor and nurse with a babiy vtously bought.
clinic, gave a donation to the Gh-1- Capreol have a First Aid demon-
dren's Aid and Muskoka Sanatorium, stration at each meeting in tonne-
encouraged the young people to put tion with their study of health: poul-
on a play, and helped needy Ideal tices, plasters, bandages, disinfecting,
families. interspersing these with demonstra-
Gordon Lake had an apron -making tions on candy -malting, table -setting
contest and are arranging for a Girls' and serving, and a button -hole compe-
Garment Making Club tition, They help the Hospital, Sud
sick neighbors, then in August took a
day off in a jolly community picnic
for everybody.
West Korah believes that old people
should stay young and held a picnic
in their honor. They also believe that
young people should have wise heads
on their shoulders and had a day for
the naming of weeds and making two -
minute speeches, rvith a treat follow-
ing for the school children. They'.ex-
hibit at the Sault Fall Fair, selling
the exhibit at the close to an appre-
ciative public, and ward off trouble by
Jesus mustdie left them utterly
aghast, What then, they argued, -was
to become of his expected crown and
kingdom? From these thoughts the
disciples are delivered by a supreme
experience granted, as we have al-
ready said, on the Mount of Trans-
figuration. In a great moment of purchased my fapm, About the first
in was able to determine from the ac -
co
.
spiritual illumination, they see Jesus thing I did after building a house was „r+s that each hour of
f tabun anent
•
Elihis real glory. They see Mosesand to set up a mail b •
ox with an jah bearing testimony to him, and tzve short farm name printed
MY ACCOUNTS
HELP
s managing partner on a.240 -acre
s
airy farm I wish to say that we find
cost -accounting on our farm an in-
valuable asset. Accounts 'of all imp -
excite enterprises en the farm Were
first kept last year in an ordinary
,journal, along with the necessary re.
ieord of, all hours of labor expended
on. these enterprises. This necessitated
only a few moments' thee daily and
a feW hours at the. end of the ,year to
balance up, when the net profit or loss
was determined fur each enterprise.
Our cost accounts have given me a
thorough and detailed analysis of the
business of which . I am a part, For
this reason alone I consider them ex-
tremely valuable, because we'farmers
are all human, and . our interest in
some of our common duties is, apt to
lag at times, while some other enter-
prise of the farm . commands the maxi-
mum of our attention: Coat accounts
put each item of our business under
test, and we cannot help but be inter-
ested in the outcome of each,
For illustration: As a farm boy I
always begrudged the hours I must
necessarily spend caring for the poul-
try. Naturally it got minimum atten-
tion. On balancing the books for the
year imagine my surprise •to find the
neat profit registered by poultry,
which, when divided by the total
hours' labor spent on poultry for the
year, showed a net return per hour
of $1.10.' Such "results, I assure you,
are conducive to better care for the
poultry and more time spent in the
poultry yard this year.
By 'the same method of figuring 1
, neatly with the cows had returned 55 cents,
to the feat that he must die. Finally, on its .sides, with my name beneath. Numerous other figures of practical
they hear a voice from heaven naming interest and value can bo gleaned from
Jesus as the divine Messiah, and call -I never saw a more pleased impression -
ing upon themselves to listen to his upon the face of a person than ap- these same accounts, You can imagine
words. peered upon the features of our mail- with whet interest I look forward tc
I. THE DISCIFLEs' VISION OF THE GLORY carrier who came along just as I had the balancing up of another year':.
OF JESUS, 28-83. finished nailing the.box onthe post.' business, and the comparison .with
V. 28. A week after Peter's confer- "By golly," he said, "you've got the, previouss years to note the improve-
sion, Jesus takes his three most inti-. right idea. You're, the first man in ment, if any, and how to make further
mate disciples with him to a quiet re- here to give his place a name, but it improvements.
treat among the hills. Luke alone means a lot to me as well as to you. These and numerous other' advan-
tells us that Jesus was praying when If all the farmers would get busy and rages of farm accounts are in my
the Transfiguration occurred. Doubt- do the same, it would speed up mail mind, but from the standpoint of a
less, before the prayer, Jesus had been delivery nearly 50 per• cent" young man I must still mention this:
speaking in solemn terms about his watton,
r ro„t;ad "I h d„!t tt m,ah1 Most young farmers when starting in
Messiehship, and about the necessity
of his death,
of it In tnat Itgnt out 1 wanted .a way "' "'�- -
•
Vs. 29-81. It would appear from v I of letting people know where I lived." sary to barrow capital, when :as a rule
32, that during the prayer:..of Jesus—; "Well, they'll know where your
as afterwards in the garden of Geth farm is before 'they know you," he
semane—the three disciples had fallen said, as he left.
lets a deep slumber. They were ex-! I watched him until he turned the
the only collateral they have for cre-
dit is their industry and integrity.
However, if every young man who
started farming made it a point to
hausted perhaps by their long vigil corner, and thought of what he had keep some intelligent records of his
on the mountain side, and by the said. If thej' knew where my place business, he would not only find the
strain, of sad foreboding inspired by time well spent, but he also would
Jesus' words. But the evangelist ex- was, in time they would get to know
g have something definite to show his
plains that meantime, as Jesus prayed, mo and my name would be linked banker when asking for the renewal
his face grew brighter,—a heavenly inseparably withthe name of my of notes to carry on his business, or
the .loan of money to increase pro-
duction in some line which . he has
found profitable. To me, a young
farmer, cost accounts have proved ab -
to Jerusalem and die, �" y;;, solutely practical and essential.—
V. 32. Suddenly the disciples became the fellow that lives in Northaven? C• rte H.
wide awake. They perceive the radi—
ance of Jesus' face, and they are at raise on the farm. So taken as a urs Bought Fall PulIets.-
once aware that he is holding converse whole I feel that the 10 cents I spent
with the two heavenly spirits. Instan- for ,paint to put my farm name on We made $244.3S' net labor income
taneously, the elements of a vision the mail -box has been a good invest- last year by buying pullets in the fall
come together before their eyes. They ment,-H, 0. Hall. and breeding them for eggs. Tlioe'are-
see Moses and Elijah by Jesus' side fu- accounts we kept convince me that
The two - representatives of the law
radiance spread over him, and he was place, and this in the long run would
no longer alone. For there before him, 'be good advertising.
in heavenly vision, were Moses and Now it is getting so that when any
Elijah. They were speaking to him, of the dealers in our town snake my
and revealing that he must indeed go acquaintance they say "Ohl A
and the prophets are bearing witness " under similar conditions we would do
the came again.
to Jesus' Messiahship: - + r .•-
V. 33. Like a man only half-awalc-
cued from a dream and not properly
a i
A8/ons
A purchase of additional land left
us with an einpty laying house that I
distinguishing what is vision and what wanted to use. So I read the elassi•,
is everyday reality, Peter wish to pro- fled adds in the nearby papers, and
long the scene, and blurts out foolish started out with some coops. We
words about putting up shelters on bought five dozen early Brown . Leg -
the .hillside. for Jesus and the two horn hens at 75 cents: 50 pullets (12
heavenly visitors. The evangelist ex Po miles farther on) at el a head; all -
plains other four dozen at 20 cents a ]round;
and later 30 Leghorns at $1.25 each.
Our chief problem was not the price,
but. to get pullets old enough to begin
laying soon.
The average cost of these pullet:
and hens Ives 90 cents. We soon call -
ken earlier in the evening of. thel One day Mrs. Brown told Betty to ed the flock down to 130 hnnti. file
Richard's Landing are devoting bury Chilren's Aid, and give prizes Messianic; predictions associated with goo to the orchard after some apples. This we thoNovember u h ield was 11; consielermn that
er cent.
their energies to the new hospital. to the children of their own schools. the names of Moses and Elijah, and Batty was very fond of apple pie so g goodg
a lot of the birds decided to do rants
Dayton did, as community work, Kenvale believe in making a survey now in a flash of heavenly insight, she went gladly. When she got to the moulting, that their rations and homes
quilting and mending for the neigh- of community needs and seeing to the disciples see the truth. I apple tree she said, "Oh, I wish the
held
abruptly changed, end that their
bore, darned socks for the bachelors, them first. They are very active in II, TIM CONFIRMING VOICE rem HEAV- a les would 'come down to wins so 1
held a box social to: add to their funes' the Outpost Hospital aid at Richard's EN, 34-36. ' apples ��house was beingremodeled,
and neighborhood goad times, and Landing, paid a pupil nurse to look V. 34. At this moment a cloud over- Wouldn't have to climb the tree! In December the yield still stcod.
made a. donation to the hospital. They after a needy maternity case, gave a shadows the disciples,—a symbolic A high, small voice (very much like around lb per cent., but in January
also lent a helping hand to the School quilt to the Children's Shelter, to a way of saying that they become sud- Jack's) answered, If that is all you it began• to climb, and. itt February
p g q denly and strongly aware of the di- }vtsh, little girl, I will gladly he P renched 42 per cent. April was the
Fair by giving a prize for the best needy family, helped the library, and vine presence. The impressions of the you, for 2 am a fairy," ?highest month with 10 per cent. Ater.
collection of wood leaves. held a community evening w-th'gameshour have culminated and the truth . ' Betty cried with joy, "Oh, may I that the flock average continued to
Betty and the Fairy,
Once upon a' time not so very long
lams that Peter at that moment did ago there lived on an 80 acre farm
not know what he was saying. But a family of four. Their names were
while Peter is confused, there is no Jack Brown, Betty Brown and 14TH
mistaking what the vision means. It and Mrs, Brown, Jack was a boy of
means that Scrinture, in the persons, eleven and was very fond of fun.
of Moses and Elijah, is now seen wit Bettywas a quiet child two years
nessing to the truth of what Jesus has
said regarding his- Messianic destiny Jack's junior and she believed in
of suffering. Jesus had perhaps spo- fairies.
Bruce held a tag day for a blind for old and young at it by way''of
man, had a Dressmaking Course for good times at home. Then' they found
their own improvement, looked after a little to spare still to send to the
the sick and helped the Children's Japan famine sufferers.
Shelter, I Maclennan equipped local fire suf-
Walford had a fine community spirit ferers with quilts and kitchen utensilsP Butt asked several questions which
their forty-five members each sent soup, fruit, or plants to every,'Hith the voice whish Jesus heard at Y make room for about, We got 12 and '
among yhis baptism, and'signifies that what the fairy wouldn't answer. •14 cents 11 pound, selling an an aver•
one taking an active part in a Wall-: sick member of the neighborhood, had God revealed to Jesus a't the beginning, That night at supper when they age for 23 cents less ii head than we
planned program. They - are making, an apron contest, two social suppers,lis now revealed to Jesus' follorvtxs. Ate their pie,, Betty told of her ad -had. paid ten months before.
ready for a healthful Winter by plat -`took: a day off to clean up the eeme-i Coiapare Mark 1:11.) Thus the •venture, Now' why da you suppose , Our accounts show that the 150
ing hot lunches in two of their schools' tory, and propose starting a pubiie Transfiguration experience is the Jack had. to get A drink so suddenly? birds bad returned a Profit, over cost
and taking the Short Course in First library of their own, having outgrown heavenly confirmation of the truth, of , 1
B t 't 1 ei t of feed, of $278:88, or 5244.35 lifter
comes powerfully home to them that come up and talk to you, Fairy?" 1 drop off until late in August it was
God is present, confirming by his own The high voice tried to be alarmed, only 20 per cent.
voice, what they have seen and heard. n to butMit.was a very bad attempt, "Ch,1 Our own pullets were coming into
is V. 8b. They hear the Vence: 'This"
no, no, no„ little girl! You mustn't, maturity, so early in September we
H-m.v SThisore M• . braeticallycidentical for I would fly away," I sold the entire put•chnsed flock to
Aid and Home Nursing themselves . the travelling library which has seryl understoodasclear sign that Jesus' 4 g $34.50 loss in selling
ed them so well, i Seed Ears. � deductin the
Cemetery beautification is one of their, death. --I rice, Thet was our r.:t labor iitco>ne,
local improvement activities, Prince likewise aided local fire suf- Prediction ,regarding his death ; The corn seed ears are best selected P 9.
ni h a baby branch,is already fevers with housekeeping outfits? , which had hitherto been a great from the standing plant. For those
Considering that the flock ryas pick-
Spanish,
]clt-
Spa a YY stumbling bloclt _ is to be received by rthat pegleetecl to do this, the next best ed up here and there rind consisted of
active in home and neighborhood im-I East Korah and the school board faith l birds with no special igir breeditt ,
provement planning a basketball are co-operating to equip and beautify! y, 8'6. The vision passes, but aha; practice is to select. the best ears at with many of them ittirnntvre, we feel
equipment for the school children. the school, the board buying curtains truth remains, The disciples cannot,.the time of basking, Good seed corn
q lton Beach re arts: "After Pro-' and the Institute making them, and/ yet reveal all that they have seen and; will in all probability be scarce in this that tho,investmont prod well, I also
Ila n pbelieve that there is a field in each
hibition carried, we had 00 more need both putting in hot lunch equipment' heard, but they ponder it in their province next spring, so every real
(neighborhood for someone to grow
of a jail. So we turned it into a pub -and an electric stove. The' April meet- hearts, good seed type eat should be carefully inlets for sale, They should be
ingis. a regular school treat meeting THE GLORY. caved. After husking, thea seed ears P
lie library and one-half of all we earng , hatched so es to begin laying byNo-
" for of Gad' has • SCi'i taro should bo lie t in a place' o£ storage a• S >;
No -
goes to its suppdrt, the rest to our :when prizes an a treat to the pupils! The g y P P t w + should i - Advertised, r
monument fund. We have been v come from the visiting Women's In §teat fullness of meaning. It means that provides a uniform temperature,
i his exalted y good air circulation and freedom flour
ve•ry
an holy character and , sold at a lair price, As a matter of
moisture
energetic educationally, having had, a stitute being which he reveals to men, bee
course in Millinery and another in Iron Bridge put he a telephone for there is always, or dearly always, a
Iiomo Nursing," their nurse, cleaned up Hie uemoterv,�background of. nature. The Tory of
•
Ate
h School rain and t nded
helped therqq tress
p rGod starts out from the. b igh
Tantarts remembered the Old Peo-.f i through for this season.
lives, Other towns. should take the ple's tome, the hospital, the babies' to. anmo needy members of the corn- end splendor of the sky. God used to ....Of the paper now min -made. ed, The sails g
hint and do the same thing. [ ward in the Children's Hospital, the munity. come sweeping on in the thunderstorm, fully 31i Dor cant is machine -made. i Help it get 'ready for Another,
fact, we bought ours as cheaply as
•.�illi we could have raised them.
Paper Chiefly Machine•Made, 3---