Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star, 2 Oct 1919, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

AT 6s are cordially Invited to write to this blished with each queston and its answer 'name and address ust be given in each ly, Answers will be mailed direct I losed. : thip department to Mrs. Helen Law, 23" | - ¢ figure in ink and write this in- rs | department. y ' | 88°'a means of identifica tion; but letter. Write on one side of stamped and addressed envelope | : . ut wi ress all correspondence told. : 'She . Woodbine --. area: tioned in this lesson by name, but it! Progress: If you will write t | is supposed that he and Andrew were. Ontanio Department of gr the two disciples of John the Baptist for Bulletin 278 you will obtait mentioned in v. 35 (compare v. 40). formation regarding the building'. .«7| It, is most interesting to learn from'a Community Hall in your neighbor the land with| this narrative that: they and others hood, the method of applying pe The HALLIDAY COMPANY, Limited HAMILTON 0 » I: . Pretend you're a squirrel for once, And join my nut-gathering stunts. «Friday, October the tenth, Of course, a nut party would hardly at half-past eight. be complete without a peanut hunt, nut; 7, cocoanut; 8, acorn. Prize, a peanut doll. rye is concerned, who afterward followed Jesus had, Government grant and other First Stunt: Suspend from chande- {and there could be also a peanut race You know it is a matter of plantfood Ween Sijracied by the preaching of His, cedure. The Bulletin Contains lier a cocoanut decorated with a in which the object is to transfer the exhaustion. ' Any crop grown con-| &réat forerunner. John the Baptist's' of four different types of buildings:'to comical face and a pointed paper cap peanuts from one end of the room to be 1 he tis : ; o Tetum of plats preaching as' like that: of the Old serve as a guide. The Community perched on top of it. From a distance Manother on the blade of a table knife. fall, especial é 16 food will use up the available supply Testament prophets, full of zeal for Hall with its Athletic Field will: prove of ten feet each person is allowed| In still another peanut contest the tions prevailing in Ontario. Bean| plantfood in the soil and vender the, righteousness and of the expectation a great boon to your district and you three blows at this cap with a light! object is to pitch ten peanuts into a should be plowed, disked and | goq , . The; of the speedy coming of the Saviour. are to be congratulated on your enter- rubber ball; the object being to knock | narrow-necked jar at a distance of : 'in preparing it eing '4 legume, of course, ~The' hope of the prophets had been! prise. Write again. i { Mr. Cocoanut's hat completely off;| about twelve feet. : ! , "koe long delayed 'but never abandoned.| Reader: To amuse your children on prize, cocoanut kisses. . . To choose partners for refresh ] the There were many in Judes and Galilee. rainy days, give them some modelling Second Stunt: Nut Exhibit. Eight ments pass a basket of English wal- so that a firm, fine: crop, but neither of these crops can|in those days who were looking and clay. With this they can make cps, varieties of nuts are represented by| nuts, each little nut with a painted could be obtained. Ome of the! ; tft ves add 'phosphoric acid or| Waiting with passionate longing for| saucers, vases, and all sorts of inter- objects, the guests recording guesses| face and a patriotic cap of some sort, bant. things to look out for in potash. It fs sometimes argied by|the Saviour, who would deliver them| esting things. This will keep them in slips of paper. 1, a bit of butter| white sailor caps, blue sailor caps, catch of sweet clover is to enthusiasts that they bing up phos-|from their foreign oppressors and busy for hours and helps to educate on a plate. 2, a stout, old-fashioned | naval officers' caps, infantry caps, Porc aeid and potash from the depths! restore the ancient kingdom. John| their faculties. The clay is made of stick. 8, a can of canned peas (indi- artillery caps, Red Cross nurse heed- ly : S the soil. This has never been| the Baptist declared that the time was| a cup of flour; a half-cup of salt, @ cated on label). 4, a single pea. 5, dresses, Scotch tam-o'.chanters and a : Bacte Went; proven experimentally and: is only a|8t hand. : teaspoon of alum, and some cake or a map of South America with the out-| bonnets, Anzac hats and French sailor of the Ontario Agricultural College, theory. What has been proven is that| But, like the prophets, he believed| candy coloring. Mix with water until lines of Brazil especially prominent.| tams, only two of a kind; the nuts obtain. sweet--clover culture else-| 41.0 yield of clovers and grain have| 5nd preached that the preparation for| it molds but will not stick to the 6, a picture of a typical English stone being hollow, in each a conundrum, in ere. Full instructions are provid-| yp... ° very profitably increased by §ib-| the coming of the Saviour must be by| hands. - The clay may be used over wall. 7, a cup or can of cocoa. 8,|its mate the answer. For refresh 4 with the innoculating material 80, gral fertilization, and, of course, the| repentance. For only the righteous| and over and kept some time if it is three ears of corn arranged to form| ments serve, nut bread sandwiches, that the treatment of the 'seed i8| growth of legumes is exceedingly | could enter into His kingdom. His| wrapped in a damp cloth when not in the letter "A". Answers: 1, Butter-| peanut butter sandwiches, hot cocoa, simple. Do not confuse innoculation beneficial in that they help: to keep| first act would be one of judgment, use. Pasting pictures in a scrap book nut; 2, hickory nut; 8, pecan nut; 4,| cocoanut macaroons, and pearat with fertilization. Jmwcdlation is , up the supply of humus in the soil.| 2nd He would destroy gll sinners.| is another rainy-day diversion. peanut; 5, Brazil nut; 6, English wal- brittle. » simply the introducing the right fam: Keep in mind that the two-great prin-| Now, when" he recognizes in Jesus the ily of bacteria to grow on the roots E the sweet clover. Fertilization is the addition of plantfood which will ~~ help these tiny forms of life to thrive ciples to act upon are first, make the home congenial for the plant? second, supply it with abundance of suitable plantfood. ; "im in as much as jt prom the growth of. the plant jusk the same as whole-! * crease, your plantfood by manuriig ba 'or. by fertilizing--frequently het th methods. 'eeds the cattle. You can in-' dl THE TRAPPER. provided by a bushel of spring wheat 108 to 1 i approximately 2 per cent. potash to the acre. The success of | re : iw the vigor of its start. The treat | etpmment indicated will give greatest-op- + portunity for a good-strong start. ; © G. H. B.:=Will you please advise me how to treat seed wheat for stink- Ing smut? ; : : Answer:--The general treatment for stinking smut in wheat is to-im- \ merse the seed in-formalin solution. Po Proceed as follows: Into a barrel that) ; 4 al 40 .of water i - bs 2 to 8 per cent, ammonia,|" per cent. phosphoric acid, |: stand will depend largely | _ of formalin' mixture and leave it in| wv i Gp nly one exe e--a poor one for oncerned. trapping too early. The excuse of course, that some other 'trapper may get ahead of you. me But where the.trapper hasn't any competition--on his own farm for in- stance--or where an agreement can be reached to wait, the taking" of furs at the right time will bring far larger returns. \ In a great many cases inexperienc- 'Led trappers get out too, early becaiise they are not quite sure when the vapi- 'ous furs are prime. Hence the fol- lowing may -enable no. inconsiderable © of trappers to make : 'more One whose coming he had foretold, he calls*Him "The Lanib of God." He must have been thinking either of the lamb offered in daily sacrifice at the | temple, or of the Passover lamb, both | of which represented t6 the Jewish mind the removal or forgiveness of sin and the saving grace of God. The Passover stood always associated with the deliverance from Egypt. John : would advise you. to. use. a. nurse, - thinks first, not of the kingdom which| two harassed peddlers endeavoring to crop with the qweet clover, such asi ! n Je expects the Christ will establish, ly. come in the fullness of its power "| when sin was banished. We. may suppose that John the Bap- was. here (vs. 20-84) talking to a 'group of his disciples.. He points out Jesus to them as Jesus is approach- ing. This is the Saviour Christ of 'whom he had been telling them, and upon whom he had seen the dove des- cending after His baptist." He would have them believe jin and follow Jesus, He would not have known Him, he said, but for the sign of the dove, and yet there is evidence that he had known Jesus as a kinsman of blame- less life before this event. See the stories of the "baptism'in Matthew]. Mark and Luke. : © V. 87." "The two disciples." Jesus invited them to come to His dwelling, and they spent the day'in conversation with Him. This was the beginning of some new contests for a "Freshman Frolic" to be given by the sophomores, shortly after college opens. - Intelligence tests are amusing and] interesting but should be interspersed with games. For test No. 1, distni- bute paper and pencils and have some one read the following paragraph, slowly and distinctly: "It is agreeable to witness the unparalleled ecstacy of) gauge the symmetry of two peeled many of the words will be correctly 'spelled. Test No, 2: Write thé fol- lowing words, one under the other, down theMeft side of a strip of paper: Rich, summer, out, dark, new, weak, front, come, good, love, male, after, tall, north, above, open, sour, sick. Distribute the papers and explain that at a given signal the word that means just the opposite to each word in the 'column is to be written in a corres- ponding column. writer then signs his name and deposits the paper on a table. The leader numbers. the but of the taking away of sin. Every-| pears." As the sentence contains many | § A or: barley to the acre. In order to thirlg, he knew, depended upon that.| of the real puzzlers of the spelling \} : ingure a good catch: you will-do well | § 'For where sin remained there could be| bogk, it will be interesting-to see how | JES ( bo. sow 'about "250 Ibs, of fertilizer| | no salvation, Christ's kingdom could | first person handing in a correct list is the winner. bis, Hostess: A "nut-gathering" would] make an inexpensive jolly little party | in honor of the friend who will visit the: top of each half an almond shell Three School Girls: Please suggest] = papers as they are handed in and the| BRY&. you in October. Use correspondence: cards: Tor the [fvitations and glue at kJ - somone A [ v. A 1 'l nings of every-day life. , corre@--meticulously so, MORALE (Mo-ral) n, (F. Set' Moral, a) the moral condition, or the condition in other respects, so fom is afctied Ju.or deer ebagnd GS con. as 3 col nce. po pe of a body of men, an arm, and Tike: wir ¥ HAT is Dr. Webster's definition. Many -of us know the weordionly in its war-time application. i/ 4... Webster dwells firstly upon the usage of the 'word "morale" as applied to the common-place His: allusion, to its reference to an army comes later. :Angd Webster is _ It was their privatelifé morale that made such splendid soldiers of our boys when the time came CR amber: v for them to don the khaki, It that, and that al there for 20 minytés. By this time| money out. of their work this year, |an acquaintance which was to trans- | with a face marked upon. it in ink. that wade them take the first rire pei Yhe liquid willed penetrated the, Skunk are prime-the end of October. | form their lives. Below this nut head draw the rest of carried them through to victory. If, their every-day paces between all of the kernels and : nm: 3 They depreciate about the middle of March. Rg It is remarkable that John, who morale had been neglected, the y could have done will have killed the disease spores or is the writer of .this Gospel, gives little with them and success would not have crowned ie Beads, ake the od he Jem os dl 4 Mink is p Suzing.. ember. to. the eof one of these two disciples, & ( It is the many little incidents of your daily routine that make up o 2 ag oul spread| the end of January. The fur depre-| but not of the other. He says also in the so that it can dry rapidly| ciates during February. v. 41 that Andrew "first findeth his ( \ Jou morale--the morning phave, your clean linen, polished shoes, Muskrat is fair in the fall, when|own brother Simon," and the sugges- shed clothes. Webster spe: sowed rye, with a 10%; bushel yield "per acre.. I sowed Mammoth clover, which failed. After rye was taken off 1 sowed to rye and vetch and have with. stable manure but I got no 8s. What I want to know is, will the land with vetch and rye, and his soil grow sweet clover, and variety is best for profit? Also; né | infectant to scatter ove trapping is, of course, easiest. But the prime fur is taken in the period from mid-winter to March. A good condition may be expected up to about the first of June. , : If you are after raccoon you will periods when furs are prime. Certain- ly no great departures should be prac- ticed since the result is fure which are of little value to the fur nouses. ike son is the way to get the most out of | trapping. . a i . 3H005¢) Air-slacked lime is an excellent dis- the hog pens - tion conveyed by the words "first" and "his own" is, apparently, that the other unnamed disciple also found and brought a brother to Jesus. Who was the other disciple? Read- which in Aramaic means "stone," and of which the Greek equivalent is Petros, from which we get "Peter." Jesus recognized the sturdy strength John and James He gave the name 4 es," which means "sons of b : . The home of Peter and John was Podmaida on the lake of Galilee, a lit- north of Capernaum. Later, at the time of Jesus' ministry in Galilee, Peter was married Both were fishermen. Their education was that of the pious Jewish home and school, in which they language nguag spoken was Aramaic, a tongue to the Hebrew, but in the school they ney have learned some | made them famous in after years. $* chanted. and living in. OraBt| rat all Where the Leaves Go. "Why are you dancing?" cried Mr. Squirrel, poking his head out of a "I'm to have the poplar leaves," cried the second, springing into the air and clapping his hands over his head cried the fourth, spinning round like a top: "I'll have a suit. with buttons, too, And all my children dresses new!" "And I'll have carpets soft and fine, And covers for my bed, with mine!" sang the second. » "And I will have a coat and vest-- For bocts and shoes I'll use the rest." sang the third. My wife shall have a Sunday frock, And 1 shall have a brand new But Adittle leaves I'll use you well." sang the fifth. | Round and round in the moonlight spun the five little merry men, singing and hopping, and singing and hopping, and skipping and singing, until all the birds out of their nests to see excitement was about. Then along came Mr, Owl, who is night wate in the woods, RL py Tomy "At. this the little' elves. stuck out] A th a end scampered off" into Sores I | § dence. It is by attention to appearance that these may be attained. The Gillette Safety Razor enters as much into the morale of every. day life as it did into that of the trenches. It helped our soldiers to maintain their confidence and bearing. It will do the same for you. The Gillette Safety Razor makes the daily shave come easy--there s of zeal, spirit, hope and confi- the lye tail of your p || is no pulling or scraping--no honing, or strop, ing--just five minutes ers of the Gospel story have almost), © = "tL 0% of perfect shaving co And, afterwards, a chin that tells of fa, 16 prime shout November, panimously replied "Joka binselt | "mtu know? | Dont you osiule sud seliruaect : : Fox, speaking generally, is prime| answer. . John modestly withholds his Houwy dhickled the $e Bile bow Sold at most stores catering ¢o men's needs. ne bushel took oF sand from the Brat of November until own name. But just as Andrew found a ir silt MADE IN = 'CANADA. 4 .i--1 have a piece of sandy| middle of March, and brought Simon, so John found and} =%, s : » ori SH anh £400 wary woil which fas heen cleared seven| It will pay trappers handsomely tof brought James. It was Jesus who Gia Jo have {hp oak leaves" wrist 4 Gillette ee years, on which five seasons ®go I! concentrate their efforts upon the: gave to Simon the surname "Cephas," : 4 IRNOWN THE = 540 WORLD OVER, The Gillette Safety Razor Co, of Canada, Limited, Montreal, Que, a SGC SE wif 82 ms wh Amin Sama a 5 vt 3 ; Sup' to have the maple leaves,"| > CL done so each season since, with a yield| By Having plenty of traps and mak-| of this Galilean fisherman, and it was] _. & 3m to Ci of clghteen to twenty two Pushels bering every possible preparation to| not long after this meeting when He| Tied the third, rumpling bis hair. | * Acre. This spring I sowed Mammoth| work vigorously during the right sea-| called hin to be His follower. To ' McCRIMMON'S Mouth Wash The universal mouth Antiseptic ; earn much of the history and ap tc for Pyorrhoea and sore gums: oiithe Old Testament, | ** yyy ¥ will do, T shall. tot tell Heals and hardens bleeding gums at once and tightens the teeth. . McCRIMMON'S Mouth Wash deodorizes all decomposed mat- ter and makes the mouth fresh and sweet. : wd

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy