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Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), August 24, 1944, p. 7

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toobsdat august m ism i the acton free press pace seven upon hy altera of their youth tan camttes fjwuu aat ifenm their heat npon the doth of faith that rich cfubraunn doth whose i a sheen fall the nwmqre of each the sunday school lesson avgvklh ttfc imi or ixace artth points of cxo the tatxatli off ufe to fans a pattern qlll with intensity the golden tapers flame each night i ttjatiui to their hearts desire to play the cuae aright duu i is their wish to serve by wa ring trails across the sky i most wait i ad pray god mrj atch them with and with a master hand teach them to fry grace ibton- twcnty years ago tl liy an t colng to the exhibition is popular query these days gooncillor nicol has been engaged this week in cleaning up the old cem etery and making presentable at the guelph cladioli show last week messrs mann and gilchrist of acton were awarded first prize for the heat four varieties canadian traduction a big fire at beardmore tanneries occurred on sunday when the 1 yard in am house buildings said much expensive machinery and stock were destroyed estimated loss in the sole leather department la auojoon ef fective assistance was rendere by ge and milton brigades israels first king ccti tvst merer m men 1 ove the brotherhood pear god honor the king- 1 pet 2 17 lesson text- 1 sam 9 1521 10 2527 11 121s time 1095 b c places ramah mizpeh jabesh gueod exposition l behold the man whom i spoke to thee of 9 15-21- the true way to c a ruler in church or stale is to let the lord choose him v 17 saul was a good prince for the period for which god h chose him when his usefulness was ian end god chose another 1 sam lfijl the wordjbeeriv 19 means one who sees me sees things god makes manifest to him in visions imum 3 4lgk the etymology is very simitar lo that of the modern word clairvoyant many would make modem clairvoyants the successor of the bible the week at ottawa wartime controls mav be continued war am far british acricuitak beats to take shape wann at ciwlph general honiul m tomday aovat atth 190 to rev and mm s w who or naa- lynd at the home main street acton on wdnaday august 20 ibm william lynd in his ktrd year mccittchbon at hamilton on sunday augml 3 1921 hathlaa mcoitcfaeon formerly of oaprtak aced 64 year tuts tomb peas 300 years old grow in florida they are slightly longer and darker than average var iety and have walnut flavor orlando florida cp the sec ond and third generations of three small dry peas nearly x3o0 yeant old are creating quite a stir in the florida horticultural world the peai were discovered in the tomb of king tutankhamen among the predous works of art jewels and rich furn ishings befitting an egyptian ruler of 1350 b c in 1936 an english archaeologist who had worked on the tutankhamen excavation sent three of these 33 cen tury peas to his american friend moj walter g dyer who in due sea son planted them in hu garden at portsmouth r i they flourished as any ordinary pea from a seed store and the result ant seeds planted the following year brought a harvest of about u pound and a half of fresh peas the major brought some of these seeds with him to the aaf tactical- seed centre here and the school com mandant col harlan w haldol planted some 60 in the sandbased soil outside his office planted in april florida gardeners raised their eye brows at the colonel s planting peat in april since the pea bearing season is during december and early janu ary however by early july the- plants were fullgrown at seven feet these green peas which grow about four to six in n pot are trilglit- ly longer flatter ami darker thou the average garden vurlety the pea vine bears a white wlngllke flower which ut a little smaller than the av erage oddly these remarkable plants are given a wide berth b vtorms gtveti lice and beetles which continue to cheu up other vegetation only a few yards away no explanation as yet has been discovered for this curiosity except a aergeantv theory that even the pests fear the king tut curse maj dyer ate a part of the second crop after boiling them in the usual manner he soys the were very tatty and had a distinctive walnut flavor there is a possibility that these peas more heat resistant ana apparently more bug resistant than the common pea may prove the nuc leus of a new southern crop bight ip the nsenchman8 ftlsltjl in renaming in german the street of alsace the nails made at least on bad blunder which recoiled on their own he they altered the nam of the principal street of mul- t tp adolf hitler strasse that as formally wellknown to avetyone as the rue de sauvage alter the change the mulhouslens would exclaim to one another at last we know the name of this sav- aga when the apt association dawnod on the germans- they deck to do homage to hitler elsewhere ottawa improved ere prospects should result in the malnv enance of farm income during the 1944 government experts say a re port issued fay the dominion bureau of statistics noted that the 1944 es timate of 5716394000 for cash in come from the sale of farm products in the first six months of 1944 was an increase of 90 per cent over the comparable period of 1943 the bureau said that farmers nor i mally received about 40 per rent of their annual cash income during the first six months of the year the fact that ihe cash income figure fro the first six months of 1944 is only 96000noo ss than the estimate tm the full yvar 1939 indicates the im portance of canadas role as a sup- legitimate fp of foodstuffs to ihe united klng- andom prophets they are the succes sors of one ckus of bible prophets the fake prophets jer 14 i4 and those who had familiar spirits tl chron 10 13 14 isa 8 19 30 lev 19 31 20 8 deutu is lou 2 k 21 1 2 6k the important reason vly saul should not set his mind on e asses was that they were found v 20 but there was a deeper reason namely all that be desirable in israel was to be his and a few asses were of little account to one who had come into a kingdom much less ought we who are heirs of the heavenly king dom to set our affections on the poor possessions of earth oot 3 1 2 2 cor 4 18 the humble way in which saul received the intelligence of the greatness to which he had been called v 21 promised well for the future and indicated better than his magnificent physique v 21 his fit ness for the exalted position to which god had called him when he was little in his own sight god made htm head of the tribe of israel ch is t7 but when he became puffed up with power he rejected him ch is 23 luke 14 11 hos 13 1 tlte thigh given to saul v 24 was the choice piece eiek 24 41 it belong i ed to the priest as his portion of the offering lev 7 32 33 n how the people received their king 10 2527 samuel was very enthusiastic ovoi the man chosen see ye him whom the lord hath chosen he cried wlto far deeper meaning may ye point to jesus and say see ye him whom god hath chosen ac 2 36k sam uel went on to say there is none like him it was true but how much truer u it of jesus that there is none like him song of sol 5- 10k saul assumed to himself as yet no glory he went quietly back to his humble home and walled for the call of providence to do his duty it boon came ch 11 lll not all the people were apathetic there was a faithful little company m band of men whose hearts god had touch dj ezra i s it is always the band whose hearts god hos touched who do the fighting and win the victories but there wus another sort of men in israel sohi of worthlessnotts their descendants htlll live these men mocked they asked questions too the bans of ytel- lal are always great nt asking quest ions and their favorite questoil is how so these kons of btllul asked how shall this man save us that is just what the sons of belial today are asking about christ they showed tholr contempt by bringing him no present in acknowledgement of his kingship in the same way many today show their contempt for christ saul showed his wisdom and humility and meekness by being ullent under ullghts and mockery how lit tle one tan discern as yet of that proud spirit of selfassertion that is afterward to be his ruin he is acting like christ now mntt j7 1214 af terward vie shall set him acting like the dovlt hi saul made king by all ivoplf u 1215 when snul viat first anointed king some had despised him and had said shall saul reign over us ch 10 jz many are trying the same thing of our divinely uppalhtvd king jesut todu luke 10 14 but all were now ri iy to acknowledge saul s right to reign and some dw the whole world will acknowledge the right of the lord jeaus to reign phil 2 7 in this duy of saul s triumph it was suggested that those who re fused to recognbte his right to reign should be put to death sauls great ness of character at this time comes out again he would not consent to the death of a single person no mat ter how bitterly they had opposed him he humbly recognized that it was not he but jehovah who had wrought deliverance for israel v 13 all peal victories come from god cf 14 13 30 ch 19 5 ps 44 48 prov 21 31 r v lcor 15 10 between 1940 and 19l2 higher pric es combined tilth an expansion of livestock production and higher grain yields lo bring a remarkable increase in farm income ket farm income in 1943 amounted to s974oo0o0o 5180000000 below the high of x1154 o00o0o reached in 1942 but substantially above the 1940 estimate of ss430000o0 also of interest to in farm ers was the announcement by agricul ture minister gardiner of the ap pointment of members of the farm price board charged with maintain ing floor prices under farm products to protect producers from loss in the postwar period and prevent the glut ting of markets a fund of 200000000 will be at the disposal of the board whose chairman is j g taggart former minister of agriculture for saskatchewan and dominion foods administrator the board will be empowered to buy and sell farm products should prices fall below the level deemed equitable in postwar years paying a fixed price for them and if necessary disposing of them at a loss wom south afmican asutv cape town cp ten million units of penicillin have arrived in south africa from the united states by airmail the supply is for the use of the union defence forces and the delivery of a further 1200000 un its is expected during the next twelve months 1k8t febuulk fsukfksfloal saint john n b cp dr louise thompson ph d is the first woman to be appointed to the faculty of the university of new brunswick she bi acting head of the department of education and philosophy liwilia where he re the m- femsee off 3ssnmaasnwttst bt ntakk rtjunattv ttrraslit fveas staff writer the wartime regimentation of brit ish agriculture will probably continue in modified foiro after the war the brilsh farmer is considered the most severely regimented farmer in the world he must farm the ay the authorities want him lo form or give up his land in return h- haj been given fixed prices and assured markets for th things he wax asked to produce fin ancial assistance in buying machin ery nnd fertiliser and loans for im proving his land through drotnigc and hush clearing the ruling authority uvr rach farm is the countv va- agricullu at tfommiltee in a prellmlniiry post war policy statement the national farmers union suggests the commit tee be continued after the uur but made representative of the liidutr tim union also says farmers nr hot disposed lb call for the carlv ab andonment of wartime control it advocates continuance of controls of imports with the machinery now functioning in the mlnstry of health land ownership promises to be come political issue in the future the labor partys policy calls for national ownership of land the farmers organisation says the exist ing landlord and tenant system has served well the only difficulties are where land owners with tenants are uaanle because of impoverishment or unwilling to comply with the ord inary rules of good estate manage ment in such cases the union pro posed the land should be taken over auckland n z cp a group of seven or eight solomon island children recently made a gallant al though unsuccessful attempt to cav- turea one japanese soldier surviv or of the defeated occupation foce while playing on the beach the child ren spotted the man moving furtive ly in a hearby bush they flung themselves on the soldier and manag ed to get him to the ground hut tht jap uas too strong and escaped befoio help in the form of neu zealand soldiers could arrive wairemrvoorrxg a cmunev rake out all ihe crumbled or crack ed mortar from bet ihe bricks brush out all loose cement souk the brickwork with water then pack with a mixture of 1 part cement 1 part hydraled lime and 5 parts of clean coarse building sand adding only enough water to make a work able mixture if the brick or mort ar joints absorb water you can get a colorless waterproof coating or cem ent base paint to apply to the cfalm- ne pebhaps you thought that loag lantanoo umca wen lea cradod bow aetnally they are caiiyaag an averaga off r any ssssc than year ago your help is still needed if urgent war messages arc to go through promptly mease use irfug distance only when you moat especially to hosy arar centres jfmea4fif r might rates mow begin at c pjul m yfev si mfuxm gray coach lines

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