= 7 MARCH 31. r Lo -- Lesson XIIL. ~Byster INTERNATIONAL LESSON 14. 1-24. Golden Text, 1 Cor. 15. 57. _ tem- work, them, to ot even b this. Spirit rl ig the true indication of their love and New A | Early Rennie's | Giant | | | | | | A THLE WILLIA exit 3 5 =k & 5 the Father in me? y that the Father and ALSO. AY £ : i ', Ronic's XX - Rennie's XXX Rennie's XXX - MM aaVusevasisniae go toma Fest, Original). 18 : ) FLOWER SEEDS E (os mn -- (1) 1 PO pp of Bread Gn Ce an Eb Rink Astel, itt tsarersnissstisanrene xhibition Mixture Pans: Prize Ruffled Giant Sin XXX-Mammoth Tien Miva sees ssesTestestannan en Mall Yous Order: 'k TOOK FOR THE STARS | _ For Pl | Up to April 15th x ~ 48 of 0 » SrLsNtBNtbrsrsntetren veessssbanansne Petunia-- * sree setae snn aesssee lobe Stocks Mixture. . . teesdcane Rennie eats ae are extra insist on rT ---- . G Ta br Poa Flor Luar in rs and . Ran cons So dopartmbnt mitialn ly wit vn panes vod with Sach | @8 a means of ident! I name ; [letters Woke on side of Rar only. . | alled d " stamped an ad dressed envelope. . ® Fai i x Eh \ » Wosdbine Ave, Torontor + 0" this department to Mra. Helen Law, 28 iL 5 -- 1 NG X.Y. Z:--A complete reply to your, Harrassed:--But you won't in ng letter cannot be sent for &| the time you get the "Soldiers of few days, as the matter of the in- at' work. = Did you know .|stallation of waterworks in your home [the Canada Food Board is enre has been referred to an expert whose | 25,000 school boys between the advice will be sent you.by mail as|of 15 and 19 to help on the fa soon as received. Re; the con-| this year? The e to enlist version of the large kitchen into al 'dining-room and kitchen, your ideas are quite practicable, and the result 'will be an enormous saving of energy in housework, The best location for the sink would be at the centre of the dividing walls between dining-room| and kitchen, so that you could pass the dinner dishes through the com- municating -door, wash them in the sink, and put them right through hb | again to be returned to. the dining- #able, which I presume you keep laid battalionof youthful this year who will assist both in farm. house and fleld. Theége two classes will help greatly to lighten the burden sustained by the farmer's wife and they will solve in some measure the problem of labor shortage. + Enquirer: --"What about potatoes?" and they should prove of immense. help to the farmer and his wife. There is no doubt that there will also bg * a large number of girls on the farm = all the time. have the cook-stove near the sink? If so, you could have a place for cook- ing utensils in the new cupboard, which you would find most convenient. If you keep the proposed alterations work, many devices will occur to you shat can be installed to lessen work. Should you care to send me a plan of the layout of your house, with the windows, doors and chimneys mark- 3 STALL EE KING & MARKET Saga LIMITED. MONTREAL TORONTO WINNIPEG VANCOUVER ' ed, I will send you a working plan for the alterations. Should any further questions "erop up, please send them along. Peggy: --Here are some good rules for your household, Miss Peggy. It is wonderful how a motto hung up in the £ Ei ieveth on me . . . ter works than these shall he do; |) se I go unto the Father When e Holy Spirit is sent from the Fath- er, great spiritual . changes in men will ba produced, greater than exter- nal miracles. ~ The conversion of a sinner, through the Holy greater than Spirit, is backw: ok Sod I ul what Jesus has fold us of himself and his To in his name is not| only to ask for his sake, but to ask-in harmony with Jesus' instructions, or netording to God's , -15. ye love-me, ye will keep my folmandinents--The commandments ere alluded to are the charges he has Kiven "them while he "has been with! em. ~ To cherish and observe them Making Two {own 8] .| him, and his victory includes our vic- - | of my PF , and the 2 op aration for what follows in 2 FOR GREATER PRODUCTION Blades Grow Where Only One Grew Before V © -GUNNS SHUR-GAIN FERTILIZERS WEST TORONTO NaN kitchen pulls you up in some little extravagance through the day, isn't it? GOOD FOOD IS WASTED If it gets into the garbage pail If allowed to spoil in the home If ruined by "careless cooking By careless paring and trimming When too much is served at a meal Can you arrange to in mind as you go about your house- Why, potatoes possibilities are end less, Miss Enquirer. The Food Con troller is asking us to eat both fish and potatoes, and to eat plenty of them. Now the patriotic food is not always the most palatable but both fish and potatoes are exceptionally nutritious, economical and pleasant, and no one should have any difficulty in making extensive use of them. Do you ever roast potatoes in their own skins and eat them with a little salt? If not you are missing something in life. Next there is the baked po- tato, broken open to let out the steam and prevent sogginess. The pota- to boiled in its jacket is 20 per cent. more nourishing than the peeled po- tato. Have you ever tried potato biscuit? It is something like the | old-fashioned potato scone that is as popular in Scotland as oateake. Sift ogether 1 cupful mashed potatoes, 1 cupful Graham flour, 4 teaspoonfuls baking powder, % teaspoonful salt, 1 tablespoonful fat, 4 cup milk. Toss dough on a floured board and roll lightly to 3% inch in thickness. Bake for twelve to fifteen minutes in greas- ed pans. tremendously excited. Ted easty Molly rolled west, and little Jean rolled south, down the long slope of ge lawn. ' Laughing and shouting, ey followed the little balls with stopped. "Mine's as big as a pumpkin!" eried Molly in "a few minutes. "Just watch it grow!" They pushed harder and harder, and very moment one would call to the other, Presently, from the bottom of the yard, came a cry. "Oo-ool" Jean sang out. "Somebody come! My marble is sobig I can't get it up the hill!" Sure enough, Jean's snowball had grown so fast that now it was entire- ly too much for her. -Ted ran down, laughing, and rolled it to the top of ve . 16. shall give you another Com- torr is vossible for an out- sider, "the world," to receive the inner mforter, for the great. gifts of the cannot come. to "an unspiritual and unresponsive soul. a © 8. I will not leave you desolate: I come unto you--He comes to them not in the personal, bodily return, after milleniums have passed, but through the ce of the promised Holy 5 as Comforter and Teacher. 19. The world _beholdeth mé no fore; but ye behold. me--The world, which has, only known Jesus after the / good. In these him no more, but-té his comes visible in the spi aa I'live, ye shall live, be vanquished "by tory over death. 20. In that da; . « lam inmy Father, and ye in'me, and I in you--- The day is Soming. when the subject which so. puzzles them will be clearly 21. He that loveth me shall be Toved will love him Bn to «love. FEED THE CROP, NOT THE SIL Some farmers \bajleve In feeding the soll. This practice" may be of high prices for all farm crops we belleve that - It Is much more profitable to feed the crop the necessary plant food (fertilizer) to produce maximum ylelds, and to reelst disease. . Years of experimentation have shown Just how much Ammonia (Nitrogen) Phosphoric Acid and Potash are required. by all crops.' With this Information-we have prepared a bulletin showing Just what grade or analysis of fertilizer you should use in the ralsing of your particular crop en your type of soll. . This bulletin free for the asking, If you have never used fertilizer you will find ite use this year more profitable than ever before. * / ntario Fertilizers * Limited West Toronto 2 oa Canada ; Th is that. love "cherishes the| * 3 of the one loved, and| It had been GM 43 the out the, wishes of the beloved. {4m afraid," said Lh & Te & day late cream?" "Well Sa . FSR a their grandfather. "Here," he said, e," grandfather said, "but it's| "hold out yo hands. 1 There's a 'time now for "robins and|marble apios for you. Go to work : re sae vey ry 4 em, hots When Ted and Jean and Molly Went| The children looked astonished. RE at. 'A New Kind of Marbles. a warm winter, with does not love does not carry|no ice at all, quite unlike the Severe winter we haye just passed through. one y in March, shaking his head . | soberly, "that this means no ice cream of | next July, and no cold lemonade, and no" .-.: Sor Ta LR : ~~ 40 dear!" chorused children. whol ever heard of a 'summer without ice ) / answered. grandfather, "who ever heard of a winter without " £00 things | "It may freeze yet" put in grand- night they felt the win- reir gy feels! Maybe tall white cap. "The heavies ed her cheek. "Plenty of it," he said. marbles a while." ; ithe. ice house?' cried Ted and in: one bréath. you're making fun of us!" "Ten minutes later, <lasping a snowball, "But, doubtfully. / li your marbles," == | the hill. ' Then they spied grand- J) father. | "Will you look at his marble!" screamed Molly. And indeed grand- father's ball was a regular giant, and wag getting fatter and fatter. "Forward march! to the ice house, now!" said grandfather. And the children, who had forgotten all about the ice house, went to work with a #ff, trunling their big marbles gayly toward the open door. ~ Most of the morning they worked THE (HID Every child should have an allow- ance. The amount may vary accord- rolled care, pushing them whenever they! +| thinly on the barn floor. joyfully, and after dinner father and the hired men turned in with them, so that the long-empty ice house be- gan to fill very rapidly. Before the snow had left the fields the ice house was quite full, and the hired men had pounded fhe great snowballs mith shovels until the gnow was packed al- most as hard as ice. Then the chil- dren helped to pile in the straw on top and to pack it; and at last they shut the door. "I can just taste that July cream!" said Molly happily. "I can taste it too," Ted agreed, "and I've also learned a new way to play marbles." ice . °- To make a kitchen stove help warm the room in which it is used a metal cover that radiates the heat evenly has been patented. Smut in oats may be prevented by soaking them in a solution of form- aldehyde. Spread the grain around Take a pint of the formaldehyde and mix it with fifty gallons of water. With a sprinkling pot moisten the oats well and leave them a couple of hours. This will not injure the germ of the seed at all, but will kill the smut germs. ALLOWANCE ~~ Bartlett. | Dicthduy party, and each child was expected to contribute ten cents to- | ward a. present, All her money was banked. a heavy. white blanket like -eider down, and every fence post wore a ow I ever saw so late in the year," father remarked .at breakfast... "Well, it looks as if the ice house would stay empty, sure "No ice cream in'July," began little Jean, but grandfather suddenly pinth- "That is, if you three chicks are willing to play "But how can playing marbles fill ol "Now, "gran 5 "Not a bit of it," he answered, "Put on your togs, and PIl show you." _ coated and hooded and finished off with good, dry rubbers, the 'three dashed out to Each Tittle right-hand mitten Was} 9% a package of gum. r" Ted began, "R said: grand- father, "and roll them carefully, Then see". xn id ?"Bo the thre cbayed, pula but ing to individual requirements sud} Tearfully she sought as- family finances, but whether it be ten|gistance from her mother, but she cents or a dollar a week matters little! fourid her true to the agreement, 80 long as it is regularly forthcoming | "You must learn, dear," said the and is the child's own. It may be sympathetic parent, "that you can't given weekly in payment of specified | save all your money and spend it; too chores or errands, but it" should not| --just as your brother will find that" include payment for extra work. | he can't spent his fifty cents and then ne mother of my aequaintance pre- | have it to put in the bank. However, sented each of her children on their | I will lend you ten cents, and you can eighth birthday with a small leather- repay me next week. Make an item covered account book, a bank which of it in your account." could not be opened until it contain-| The lesson was a hard one to learn, ed five dollars, and a savings bank but eventually it was mastered. They book with five dollars deposited in the knew the value of a cent. child's name. | Recently I saw their bank books. From that date the child received | In'four years the little girl had saved cach Saturday twenty-five cents from | $25, the boy $30. The latter was two both his father and-his mother. This' years the elder, and his income had fifty cents was to cover all small ex-| been greatly augmented by outside penditures -- entertainments, | Sunday school, pencils, candy, etc.,-- been greater, as I saw by their ac- and the remainder each week was to/count books. The latter were models be 'saved. ~The child. was taught to!of good book-keeping. Heep an accurate account of every | Parents complain that their chil. cent he spent, and of every additional i dren think they are "made of money," penny he earned. At the end of the, that they have ng idea of money value, month" the mother carefully audited If such is the case, it is the parents'; the account. not the children's fault. Give them At first the half-dollar a week an allowance for spending money, Be seemed a small fortune to-the child | firm in your refusal to grant more accustomed to asking for every cent, | than the allotted sum, except as a but the soon learned that in order to' loan" Let them learn by their own fill his bank.he would have to "think | experience how to handle money to twice before purchasing a new knife! the best advantage. At 'the same [time arouse their interest in saving One of the girls showed a tendency | until it becomes a habit to lay asi toward miser}iness. - The first week some part of (tix income. The value she deposited her whole fifty cents in| of such' training can bnly be fully the bank---only to regret it long be-| preciated by those who have hac fore the week was out. The other {learn in early ma dw children were buying candy, and she;h or by those who have had no money. There was to"be a learned it at al" - ral oa 4 : y es 3 ge 2 Ye A gifts, work; but his expenditures also had