# \ § o on e Nt ooo rond lE-Hll‘l S uluuguh. The tin re: t + ate the kingdom of God in power and‘. y vestee is removable. It glory, but Jesus a.J not come again, ‘% M®r®!y fastened at each side with at least not in the way expected. The SN@DPP¢rs. The skirt cuts in thrse Church as a whole today no longer soctions and is stitched to the bodice u(‘;pect.s h th: stpeed'yh' st:pnd a'(‘i'.'er;t of under the removable belt. rist, an is teaching, therefore,| presents grave perplexity to many | HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Christian hearts. It is an essential‘ , _ Write your name and address plainâ€" rart of the Christian hope that the !Y, giving number and size of such .ingdom of God will surey come. The Faiterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in day and the hour are known to Gol stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap alone ; but it is far from clear whether it carefully) for each number, and the old expectation of a physical r>â€" address your order to Wil e n s t "â€" Address tlson Pattera turn of Jesus to this earth on the Soprvice 73 West Adelaid clouds of heaven is what Jesus really , ~ * 3 claide St., Toronto. :f."ant. ‘lt is clearly suggested in thei Invoppmomunics Apmammemmed sospel of Iohn that tae coming of the | ® Spirit s the second coming of Christ‘ The Salic law was the old French (John 14: 18), and this may be nearâ€"| law that prevented succession to the er to the mind of Christ. Again, every Crown by or through a woman. "lemperance is not confined to the use or nonâ€"use of ardent spirits. It vperates in every snhere of life. The lavishing upon self of the gifts of God is intemperarce of the highest order. Therefore let us not be drunk with goods, wherein is excess, but strive to be filled with the Spirit." III. tus cominc or "tHE sox o MAN," 12: 47, 48. When we speak of the duty of watchfuiness, wo are generally thinkâ€" ing of watchfu‘ness against temptaâ€" tion; that is not at all the meaning here. Here is a watchfuiness for "the coming of the Som of Man." Wnat are we to understand by this" The warly Church believed that Jesus would very shortly return to inaugurâ€" ate the kingdom of God in power and them Â¥. 28. The max has had no real lov Igy‘a::yb_()dy in his heart. The wealth . 19. "Coul" does not mea higher and spiritual rart . ture, but rather the "self." ANALYSIS, L a certamm rtek MAXN, 12: 16â€"21, II. watcurunNEss, 12: 41â€"46. III. tz commc or "THE soN or MAN," 12: 47, 48, I. a certarm ricH MAN, 12; 16â€"21. ‘ V. 16. This story is not so much a parable as an illustration, but an ilâ€" lustration of what" There are two morals whick might be drawn from it, and it is not clear which is primâ€" arily internded. First, the story illusâ€" trates the extreme uncertainty of huâ€" man life; man who "knows not what a day may bring forth" is always making plans for the future; indeed some men so "live in the future" as we say, that they never enjoy today. Let us make the most and make the best of life while we have it, for we do not know how long it will be ours But while this might be the chief meaning of the story it is not probâ€" ably so. Rather, it seems we are given a picture of an, entirely selfish and unspiritually minded man. He has put together erough wealth to| last his own lifeâ€"time, and that is alli he cares about. For the future he‘| j interds to "have a good time." His idea of a good time is a life of eating, drinking and merryâ€"making. His ideal of life, therefore, is that of one lon«, easy, unadventurous and selfish holiâ€" day. He had found no happiness in his work as a piece of human service; his work was a bore, and his life beâ€" gins where his work ended. It has often been roted, in wodern times, that men who make money very quickly and then retire to enjoy themâ€" celves, rarely live to a full age. A life that "i~s no real. unselfish interest to feed .. is apt to flicker out. Let a man, then. find his true life and hanâ€" piness in fa‘thfully and hopefully perâ€" formingz each day‘s task as it comes. . 19. "Coul" does not mean here the ste BCY Auaa imat 4 .. 2 VSC and Abuse of God‘s Giftsâ€"Luke 12: 16â€"21, 4148. Golden Textâ€"Be now drunk with wine, wherein is excess; but be filled with the spirit.â€" Ephesians 5: 18. Sunday School * z. * \“»’"FLE B §¥ CC 5 &7) \ & ~. ES ~ 20 \,.a:k\\\ x#A ~ 0@ ) e hi K 4 . €t c, «‘m Gom6 To 6er THERIETY, YOU Res»+:mBER THAT ELEVEN DoucARS ; Lesson Xilâ€"The nded man. He ough wealth to , and that is all of our na o a, The Salic law was the old French law that prevented succession to the Crown by or through a woman. Style No. 2953 is designed for sizes 18 years, 26, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 and 50 inches bust. The 36â€"inch size reâ€" quires 4% yards of 39â€"inch material with 14 yard of 18â€"inch contrasting and 2% yards of ribbon. Rayon novelties, printed batiste, linen, printed dimity, gingham, men‘s cotton shorting and tub silk appro-,{ priate. with kimono sleeves that can be easily made in an hour or possibly two.© The small cost will prove a revelation. ~ The frorts cross and close at the left side creating a charming slenderâ€" izing effect. By BUD FISHER Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson nished With ~=~~ Pattern BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON 2 2220va, will you darce no more? Will the tulip shut tp in the earth? Will the swan forever fold white wings? | Will the flute go silent 'And the ray full of rainbows flicker i and fall? Paviova, will you dance no Somewhereâ€"oh, softlyâ€" Paviova, your foot is lighter than the perfumes of lilies, Brighter than the sparkle of waves, More musical than the thrush at twilight. (January 31, 1885â€"January 23, 1931) (From Poetry) Pavliova, will you darce no more? Will the tulip shut up in the earth? Will the swan fnravar Pall ) whtia eR td 22. CC VTCT HuC exhaust the meazing of the passage, is isA at least a truth we can clearly mno atjik_.oc _ _X T. uoy a coming of the Son o?mtoul, if we will let him come to us in our extremity. . ‘The Chu:ch plods on its weary vway with doubts and deficits great crisis in our own lives or {n the life of the worls il‘, or may be, & anmine aBCRE im o â€" PSE 1 What New York ," said William of man is always 'cz}ni‘;x}â€".to “.'..... are watchfu‘. If this does m:t\ PAVLOVA DEAD . morning dress that can be easily possibly two.© The dance no more? â€"Harriet Monroe t things for y, "and exâ€" clearly _ An Aberdeon lady was suggesting to her husband that it was time she possessed a motorâ€"car. "Na, na," he replied, "ye‘ll jist be content wi‘ the splendid carriage nature has given ye." Wr of whose head arers.â€"a.i»d marks of the sacred finca Easier Animals The date of Easter depends upon the moon. It falis upon the first Sunâ€" day after the fourteenth day of the moon,that happens to be reigning at the time of the spring equinox. This is the reason why the hare is always associated with Easter. For many centuries the hare has been reâ€" garded as the symbol of the moon. The hare feeds by moonlight, and its young, unlike those of most other warmâ€"blooded animals, are born with their eyes open. Indecd, the old fable: is that the hare never closes its eyes,. In the Egyptian language the word for . hare meant also a period of twentyâ€", eight days, or that of a Iunar month. | Other creatures are associated with | the geat festival of springâ€"the ass’ because it was upon an ass that! Christ rode into Jerusalem; and the‘ fish called the dory, for this is the creature from whose mouth the silver | piece was taken, and upon either side | spray during full bloom n * s should be mused. _A special ~ tion of fungicide about a mon:» 0 six weeks before harvest is advis able. _ The pamphlet may be obtain ed from the Publication Branch, De partment of Agriculture, Ottawa.â€" Issued by the Director of Publicity, Dom. Dept. of Agriculture, Ottawa. age. If it is Experience has shown that good commercial «control of the apple scab can be obtained by proper and timely use of any standard fungicide, whether in solution or dust. _ Formâ€" ulas for limeâ€"sulphur, bordeaux mixâ€" ture, copper dust, and sulphur dust, four of the most popular sprays and dusts used for apple scab control, are given in a new pamphlet on the Apple Scab, issued by the Dominion Department of Agriculture. In order to be effective all control measures must be taken before the injury or disease commencs to show on the plant. The growing leaves and fruit must be protected as soon as possible after they are formed. The first apâ€" plication should be mada when â€" the leaf buds are in the "greenâ€"tip" or "mouseâ€"ear" stage â€" of developnient. The second spraying or dusting is applied when the flower buds are showing pink and â€" are separating from the clusters, and the third is given when the petals have mostly fallen. From ten to fourteen days fhen it is necessary to protect the developing fruit during periods of prolonged wet weather. Dusts may be applied on wet foliaze hnt e~â€"~va The Ct_mtrol of the Apple Scab An informal snapshot of Charlie Chaplin, fore ian, strolling with Ramsay MacDonald, premier about latter‘s estate at Chequers. _ A knighthocd ored. wet weather. Dusts may on wet foliage but «~ ~yg applied only on ~ £51} is consideel nece . , | ;, inz full bloom n wiger a _ are said to be the sacred finger and thumb. upon either side Two Celebrities Sydney, Australiaâ€"Because his litâ€" or tle farm was in the "sound shadow," ‘sâ€" . or depression to which outside noises aâ€" did not penetrate, a farmer was e acquitted here of the murder of his â€" father. | Yesterday the twig was brown an j bare ; (Toâ€"day the glint of green is there | Toâ€"morrow will be leaflets spare; !I know no thing so wondrous fair, No miracle so strangely rare. I wonder what will next be there! ( â€"L. H. Bailey The weekly crop weports of the county representatives of the Onâ€" tario Department of _ Agriculture would indicate that the majority of the farmers have sufficient supplies of feeds to bring their livestock through the winter in good condiâ€" tion, A greater number of cattle will be carried over for summer marketing. ] Then, by accidont, it was discovered that the farm was in a "sound shad-‘ ow." Men shouted, gelignite was exâ€" ploded and bombs burst at the spot| where the old man had been killed.I The sounds could be heard all over,‘ the surrounding districts but not on | the farm. | A material factor against the acâ€" cused was his steadfast denial that he heard his father‘s cries for help alâ€" though farmesr on the other side of the ridge heard them distinctly. When his wealthy seventyâ€"nineâ€"yearâ€" old father was found battered to death within 200 yards of the farm, Cecil Charles, fiftyâ€"two, was arrested. l Rupert Brooke‘s dream of a little corner of some foreign field that "should "be for ever England" has reâ€" | ceived a striking fulfilment. Over in fBelgium. in the Ypres district, where , so many of our dead lie buried, about ‘six hundred British people are enâ€" gaged in caring for the cemeteries. | There is, in fact, a little British setâ€" :tlement at Ypres, a community which is in some ways unique. It has been | granted legal status under the school’ law. It has its own church and par-‘! sonage, a school in whic‘ about one‘ hundred children are being educated | as British citizens, and a rest room} for pilgrims. When he introduced the | bill to regularize an entirely Britlshf Community in a foreign country, the Belgisn Minister of Justice said that his govermnment had framed it "in reâ€" membrance of what we owe to the British natior and in homage to the sp‘r‘t that inspired the creation of these establishmerts in the Â¥pres district." Needless to say the British ; peopie everywhere are pleased with ‘ this evidence of continued friendship P and good will between the two coun-:] tries.â€""The New Outlook" (Toronto). ‘. wner of "Soundprocf"‘ Farm Cleared of Murder nald, premier of Great Britain, A knighthocd for Charlis is rumâ€" Belgium‘s Gift to Britain March Miracle not on| Put 1 cup of milk in double boiler | to scald. Combine 3 level thisps. cornstarch and %4 teasp. sailt with YÂ¥ cup cold milk. ‘Then add to hot milk, n anq, Stirring until smooth and thick. Cook | 2 tbisps. butter and 1 cup brown ére sugar until sugar is well mixed and fe: bubbly but do not cook to caramel.. !air, Stir sugar into cornstarch mlxture.! Then add 2 yolks of eggs beaten llght, here!: | first diluted with a little of the hot ailey, | Mixture. Turn the filling into a bakedl pie crust and cover with a meringue f the | Of the white of the two eggs and % e On.| Cup white sugar, Let bake slowly 10 ulture | minutes. Serveo when partly or! ity of| wholly cold. ' PPM€S | Twilight Hour Story â€" About Wee stock| Chickies and Other Littia Enxtianal® | Twilight Hour Story â€" About Wee Chickies and Other Little Friends Chapter 14 Do you remember about the lovely black and gold butterfly Mamma Lady taste) 8 cups brown sugar, & cup boiling water, 1 thisp vinegar in water. Let boil till it hairs from the spoon in a long hair. Beat the whites of 2 eggs, then beat syrup into whites of eggs. Add 4 cup nut meats if desired. (This can be made with white sugar as well when a little vanilla improves the + So each house reflects unconsciousâ€" ly the personslities within.. The winâ€" | dows smile their welcome or look |dingy anrd forbidding and it doesn‘t | matter if the home is large and comâ€" | modious or small and commonplace, | those windows with curtains plain or fgay and silky, sparkle and shine, tellâ€" ing of the cheery housewifely care \within or are dull and uninteresting. The windows are the eyes of the home. And the personalities within that home mirror from the human eye the window of the soul. _ ‘The cheerful look expresses the brisht personality within and gives glimpses of thought and purpose,. Character is revealed and all unconsciously we tell what we ore. }that thinking magnanimously, we are glad the o.d place has blossomed out. | Then agai~ it may be everything has deteriorated. _ ‘The walls are smoked up, the once carefully kept floors are scratched #nc dull and the rooms cold and uninvitin@. ’ Sometimes, even though it were our own loved ho >e, we must admit the ,change is for the better. The furniâ€" | ture may h# more suited to the differâ€" | ent rooms some of which are newly painted and pipered. A window may |be draped in a manner unthought of lby you and be much more artistic, so These Are Good â€"â€" Seafoam Candy | Very often do we not find that| "V‘"8& * ow over onio her show!der | houses express the personalities of | and stayed there while she got breakâ€" the peopl: living within its walla?i:“t- I won"or if it was asking for This question can best be answered:s°m° breakfast. It had to ask in a by asking another. Did you ever no.| USZerent way because it couldn‘t talk. tice the diferent look a housé puts, !t ©OWdn‘t say "meow," like the kitty on when another owner or tenant’cats' or ‘"peep, peey," like the chicks dwells within? Perhaps you have had | °* ",Bowâ€"wow" like Rover, or "I‘d like occasion to go back to your old homelsfame‘brenktast. Mamma, please," like after a long absence. ‘The house is | "ttle £i@!s and boys can. ‘ occupied by strangers and as you look| Mowever, Mamma Lady was sure Itl over the old familiar rooms somcehow | 48 4°King for some breakfast. She they are familiar no longer. It seems‘ looked at it very closely, but she °°“l‘l so different one might almost think ° #%* that it had a mouth,. It had / the plan of the house had been| tW9 P‘8 ©¥ye# alright, but she wondered | changed. jhow it could eat, what to feed it, for , " (The following is to be found in | Chostcr Cathedral). Give me a good digestion, Lord, _ And also something to digest; Give me a healthy body, Lord, _ And sense to keep it at its best. Give me a healthy mind, good Lord, To keep the pure and good in sight, Which seeing sin, is not appalted, But finds the way to set it right. Give me a mind that is not bored, That do:s not whimpor, whine or gigh: o Don‘t let imne worry overmuch, About that fussy thing m@d "I"* Give me i sense of humor, Lord, Give me the grace to see a joke, _ To get some happiness in life ] And pass i; on to other folk. l Windows I Butterscotch Pie A Prayer No Check Is Good On A Hat. . MARJE AnN BIST The courts‘ have ruled that lege can compel its students vaccinated, We wish the same could be extended to getting educated.â€""San Diego TUnian * soon o It will l;e June, June, June! earth is making, se Sleepily, drowsily, ready for wal April is coming, and May, and March By Mary Carolyn Davies March is the month for such wonâ€" derful things: The winds are white eagles; we feel their great wings, March is the month when the whole j time too, for it was protty thirsty. _ This is what it did: Right in between the eyes it had a little curled up whistle, the kind that when you blow in the end the curl flies out straight, only this little curl was so very small, not any bigger around than a fine thread. Mamma Lady often noticed that curl on the butterfiies, but she didn‘t know what it was for. Now as soon as it zaw the water and sugar that little curl unfolded long and. straight. It felt around for awhile with the point and then it dipped it | right into the middle of the sugar and water «and kept it there for a long time. ,Do you know what it was doâ€" ing? It was sucking it up just like you do when you have an iceâ€"cream soda and you drink up that good creamy juice through the straw. Alf ter it was through eating it grew proetty lively and started whirring its| wings. Do you know what that is like? It means it stands still but makes its wings go so fast you can hardly see . them. I wonder what it did that forâ€" Just because it felt good, I suppose, , Next Weekâ€""The Chicks Again." .| However, Mamma Lady was sure it | was asking for some breakfast. She | looked at it very closely, but she could | not see that it had a mouth. It had | two big eyes alright, but she wondered ‘how it could eat, what to feed it, for two long days since she found it was | a long time, and it didn‘t have the yel-‘ | low of the egg in its tummy, like the | wee chicks had at first, either. l (â€" Then Mamma Lady thought she ofâ€" | ten used to see these dear little but-! terflies in the summer on lovely flowâ€"| ers that have honey away inside the blossom, but she never noticed hovl they got th» honey out. Do you think,, perhaps, if it liked honey it would like‘ sugar? _ Well, Mamma Lady got a pinch of segar and put a drop of water on it in a saucer on the window, then gently sha lifted the butterfly off her shoulder, when it had its wings closed, and then she watched to see what it â€" would do. 1 knew you can never guess | how it ate the srsared water. But it ! did drink it an1 it drank for a Ian« | found nearly frozon on the porch two mornings ago? Well, all day long it stayed on the window vory quiet in its little corner. It didn‘t seem to be dead, but it wasn‘. very much alive either. So she just let it sit there because it Iooked so pretty. But when she came down this morning to gei ,breakfast it was on the curtain with its wings tightly folded together. Good old Mr. Sun had kept on shining on its cold stiff little feet and dainty wings to make it well as fast as he could. But today, when Mamma Lady }touched it and said "Good morning" i~ really answered her and said "Good morning" by spreading its delicate wings out an back, out and back, out and back, slowly and gracefully. All at once it fluttered its wings and flew onto a plant in the window, then beâ€" fore Mamma Lady knew what it was doing it flow over onto her shoulder and stayed there while she got breakâ€"| Tast, I won"or if it was asking for. io ahit ! its students to get wish the same ruling anl it drank for a long ed toâ€" getting them Diego Union." , ready for waking a colâ€" oh, The total gross value of the prod ucts from the furaiture factories 0; Canada in 1929 amounted to $44, 136,176 as compared with $41,825, 534 in 1928, according to a report of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. There are 367 establishments in all, 213 being located in Ontario, 71 in Quebec, 28 in British Columbia, 21 in Manitoba and the remainder in the other provinces. Capital inâ€" vested in 1929 amountea to $41.851,â€" 682 as compared with $39,829,474 in 1928. Australia‘s sheep population this year is about 100,000,000, which is 10 times the number of human inhabit ants. Whalers estimate that the average whale can cover a distance of about 12 miles in an hour. Such fragile cups That yet endured A flattened thimble That outlived its â€" I hate these beads and | That lasted longer than sOckets. (From Voices) Why canpot our things « When we do? a& new bridge across the River Avon here. _ These towns will be asked to send suitably letiered stones Among the American towns â€" are the Salisburys in Connecticut, Maryâ€" land, Massachusetts, Missouri, North Carolina, New _ Hempshire, â€" Now York, Pennsylvania and Vermont, A point may be stretched to include Salisbury Mills and Salisbury Center in New York and Balisbury Cove in Maine. * Salisbury, Eng., Secks Stcn: From Salisburys of Ameri: Salisbury, Eng.â€"Stones from ev town in the world named Salishur are to be sought for construction « References in th the procision of shells, in discussio ties of rockets, su; dinarily dangerous experiments now b the Berlin rocket f! ity to fall at a given de is believed that mathom ness of line of flight car ed when a rocket is ab in the thinâ€"air . gzone, si miles above the earth for an ordinary leiter can lished betweon here and » while a flying time of haif Present experiments deal perfection of a gas which « veloped as the rocket flin creation of gas in exact 1 the rate of speed is an e« ture of determining a rocie fying iWo i Bor"‘3 Good chicks to start with, good foed, kept in clean, well v ated not overcrowded hon> clean, fresh, â€" green rang> : strong, vigorous pullets in th> which are the only 1nd +»~ satisfy the uptoâ€"date, suc: poultry keeper. | See that the chicks have suficieat | heat to enable them to warm up any | time they feel like it but avoid koep ‘ing the houses closed more than is necessary. . Allow the chicks out on range as soon as weather permils Prevent crowding in the brooder houses by stretching pieces of wire netting nacross the corners and put in low roosts and encourage the chicks to use them as early as posâ€" lllble. Beparate the sexes and dispose of all cockerels that are not to be reâ€" tained for breeders as soon as they can be satisfactorily marketod. Feeding tests at the Centroj; J porimestal Farm have indicatod that equally good results can be ohtainâ€" cd where a good mash is fed in hopâ€" pers kept constantly before the chic}s from the time they are ready to foed , â€"â€"{about 48 hours)â€"as where regular feedirg five or six times per day is practised. _ In conjunction with th» mash feed, of course, water, milk, fin~ grit and oyster shell and groon feoq are given, When the chicks are abou: ten days of age a light food of scratch grain is given daily. Whoen the chicks are a month to six woeks of age the chick mash is replace] by growing mash and when at about two months of age,, a hopper of crushâ€" ed oats in addition to the growin: mash is kept before them at a! times. This system cuts down great. ly the labor of attendance. pe There may be too much dogmaiism ‘regarding the proper methods of chick feoding and rearing. . Givep well hatched chicks from good, vig ©rous, ®calthy parents and almo= any system of feedinrg, where ord‘ inary common sense is used, go~|] results are likely to be obtained. 1n many instances there is too much time wasted in fussing with chicks juat ie cups, with chips, endured longer than !ip â€"Gladys Nolan. Rearing Chic!:s Belongings â€"ver..n now has a d wich an area of re miles, and experin day will come when bi finger 1Â¥11 t] s of th cha can able field locket s b U p Doe oor _ and