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Durham Review (1897), 22 Apr 1937, p. 6

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Golden Text â€" "8y faith, Noah, being warned of God4 concerning things not seen as yet, moved with godly fwar, prepared an ark to the saving of his house." â€" Hebrews 11:7. h Seeding Dates For Grain Crops fa Result of Five Years‘ Experimentâ€" al Seeding at Different Dates An experiment to test the best dates for seeding grain crops was commenced | at the â€" Experimental Farri, Ottawa, in 1925 and carried on for five years in which wheat, aP m ud Wh A LESSON I1V Obedience of Noah 5:28 â€" 9:23 no pian nt it aw T we YNDAY~ â€"~â€"~â€"~~ CHOOI Es5s50N ~oo» Problems P n P2OFE AF 1ay be that the s receive from mt due to the ant is thought ir the sea. Salt e whatever. As rcts only as a m t eration of the various departments of nlario Agricultural College SCR HENRY C. BELL sugar AT ty, it r, but it of ularâ€" it of it m it ngâ€" not nducted by ure uld it lzA the the the this time, for, undoubtedly, due to the invariableness of the laws which do cause rainbows, there must have been many before this time, whenever the physical conditions creating a rainâ€" how existed, but what the passage does tell us is that now, for the first time, God appoints this phenomenon as a token of his pledge to never again ‘curse the earth with a flood. "And it shall come to pass, when I bring a cloud over the earth, that the bow shall be seen in the cloud, And I will remember my covenant, which is between me and you and every living creature of all flesh; and the waters shall no more become a flood to desâ€" troy all flesh. And the bow shall be in the cloud; and I will look upon it, that I may remember the lasting covâ€" enant between God and every living creature of all flesh that is upon the carth, And God said unto Noah, this is the token of the covenant which I have established between me and all flesh that is upon the earth." The acâ€" tivity escribed to God should be parâ€" tieularly noticed. Four times is he xd twice it is said that he would rememâ€" ber his covenant (15, 16); and once that ho would look upon the bow in remembering his covenant (16). "And there are no obligations on the part of men or of the creatures. This covâ€" enant is God‘s ouly. It is contingent on nothing done by the recipients. . God binds himself whatever be the conâ€" duct of men. This covenant is the self motivated promise of an unconditionâ€" al merey. at the small rate of application which would be possible to put on the soil, I cannot conceive any beneâ€" ficial effect resulting from the appliâ€" cation of salt due to the moisture it gathers. later could this be done t best results?"â€"C. B., Pert Answer: I would not ady to add fertilizer to the field barley, peas Banper oats (a late vartâ€" ety), and Alaska oats (an early vari ety) were seeded at five differenet dates at two weeks intervals. The obje of this experiment was to learn the most suitble date to seed these crops under Ottawa conditions and also learn which of the crops Was west adapted for late seeding in the event of a delayed seeding. The experiment was conducted in a roâ€" tation of grain, clover, thus allowing for duplicate plots of grain seeded h rant t t rs of A nant with you; .n be cut off any m« \the flood; neither re be a flood to d he word my point ady in existence, t mentioned until th enant (9, 11, o set his bow he is said to th (14); and vould remem at the varying dates, one Crop folâ€" lowing clover, the other following grain. The results of these dates of seedâ€" ing grain experiments at Ottawa in« dicate that wheat and peas should be sown as early as possible in the Spring. Barley and Banner oats may be seeded without loss of yield as late as May 15, and Alaska oats (the early variety) as late as June 1. Buckwheat may be seeded at any time during June, preferably about the beginning of the month. It should be remembered that the results of these experiments conducted at Otâ€" The picturesque Yeoman of the Guard, wea graphed during their annual Easter morning Fure ui 11 hi 09009096 4. 4.00 ds Olficn rbntatis nb it Add d Aiiind dar seinnnn tiiee i oi the early summer. | Mr. Taylor is a painterâ€"etcher and has received great praise in Engiand for his w A son of Colonel and Mrs. Plunket B. Taylor, of Rockliffe Park, Ottawa, he is a grad:xate of b1\1“c<()?:fi|ll(l University, having won a scholarship, and lived here prior to going to England to study. Mrs. Taylor is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Delamere Magee, of Toronto. The imarriage took place in London, Engâ€" land, last December. » Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Bourchier Tay The infant son of the Crown Prince and Princess, the only royal heir born in Norway for nearly 600 years, was christened, Harald, In Oslo, recently. He is shown in his first portrait with his sisters, Princess Raghild (left) and Princess Astrid. ‘The last heirâ€"presumptive born in Norway was Olav Haakonsson, in 1370 ONLY ROYAL HEIR IN 600 YEARS Picturesque Corps Parade for Easter tawa may not be applicable to other points with different climate and soil conditions. As a rule, however, wheat oats, barley, and peas should be seeded as soon as the soil is sufâ€" ficlently dry to permit working satisâ€" factorily, Barley adapts itself to growth over the longest range of seeding dates and, if necessity demands that a crop be seeded late, barley is a suitable crop. Alaska oats is also a very suitâ€" able crop for this purpose. Will Reside In Montreal wearing the uniform of their 16th century fore ing parade and service at the Tower of London of London, England, who are coming to rg_side iq 1}lontreal, in uP 1 ie s e es se t # us s «= TORONTO LO3 ANGELES.â€"It begins to look as if a policcman may hbe asâ€" signed to help a swan hatch her eggs. The park has asked the Police Chief to station a patrolman near the swan‘s nest daily during the hatchâ€" ing process. It was George R. Mitchell, president of the Humane Education Society, who said that orâ€" iginally the swan had nine eggs, but somebody had pushed the bird off the nest and stolen five. « Swan Aided in Hatching Eggs So many people complained about the â€" moderatelyâ€"happy â€" ending of "Lost Horizon" that the director changed it several weeks after the picture had started its triumphant run in New York and Los Angeles. The ending that the rest of the country . will see makes it appear very doubtful that Ronald Colman w1 heroes and heroines of a movie being shown extensively in the producing regions of the South and Far West. The picture, designed to bring the big city auction markets to growers, dramatizes the selling process on a typical auction market where thouâ€" sands of cars of fruits and vegeâ€" tables are translated into millions of dollars in revenue to the growers every year. blizzard to the he Shangriâ€"la high in t With cither ending that everyone will 1 List among your future film favâ€" orites Ella Logan whom you will soon see in Universal‘s "Top of the Town." She is the enchanting singer with a thick Scottish burr to her voice who, accent or no, used to shout swing music over the radio with Abe Lyman‘s band. I like her best when she sings simple songs, but swing addicts rave about her ability to imâ€" prove new hiâ€"deâ€"hos, "Seventh Heaven" was previewed In Hollywood this week, and everyone A agrees that it _ brings m o re < glory to Jimmy ; & Stewart than to j Simone Simon, In & ucinare DoOW JUse over head, and was so noticcabl that she fidgeted with her dress, and her hair ribbon ing. She was accompanied girl at the Paramount Studio has 12 wrist watches given to her by grateâ€" ful stars. Just to be different, Franâ€" ces Dee gave her an alarm clock at the finish of "Souls at Sea" . . .. Ann Sothern will probably win the airlines awarg for the most persistâ€" ent airâ€"commuter of the year. Whenâ€" ever she has two or three days to spare, she dashes off to Chicago to see her husband, Roger Pryor, who is leading a band there. . . Everyâ€" one at Paramount is glad to have Marlene Dictrich back, particularly the electricians and carpenters on her set. She brings such luscious Viennese cakes and cookies to them. Husband (reprovingly)â€"Didn‘t 1 hear you tell your friends that your pretty dress came from abroad? [Movieâ€"radio Wifeâ€"Not exactly, dear. You see, it‘s last year‘s dress which I turned inside out. I simply said ‘It‘s from the other side.‘ T he Mail Goes T hrough "Oid Bill" Trainer, Inter the Lethbridge Heraldâ€""A can remember, the harde ever had to get the mail th around the middle of Jar year. The snow was at i and the thermometer arou wrees below zero. "I left Manyberries as usual around daylisht with my sleigsh and teaim with the mail piled behind and it wasn‘t so bad in my closedâ€"in cab with the heater going. 1 arrived at Comrey alright that night and the next day 1 set out for Onefour, The drifts were bad through Devil‘s Dive and Lost River where there is ao traffic, and as I was going down Lost River hill the drifts were about six feet deep and one horse got down. Well, I unhitched the other horse and managed to pull him out and go on again. "ime next Cay 1 made the trip ta Wildhorse without any trouble and the following day I started the return trip. I got to the postoffice at Cartâ€" son‘s alright, but leaving there, there was such a terrible blizzard, and there being no fences, I got off the trail and got lost in a twoâ€"mile stretch. Well, I kept on going till finally we struck a fence and followâ€" ing it I arrived at the farm house, where 1 stayed the night. The rest of that trip wasn‘t so bad but that was one time that it took me all of seven days to make the trip which i make in Summer in less than two dayg." ODpDS and ENDS Simone Simon wiil see ubtful that r fight his heroines of a movie bei nsively in the produc the South and Far We« Bjy DOROTHY _ terrible blizzard, : ; no fences, I got off got lost in a twoâ€"n Vell, I kept on going struck a fence and foll rived at the farm ho ayed the night. The 1 p wasn‘t so bad but t me that it took me all previow wearing a hair ribon tied w just over her foreâ€" so notccably nervous ampar W rakes it appear Ronald Colman way through a avenly peace of 1e Thibetan hills. this is a picture rourh rt it ossip in ind appeal irm nouse, The rest d but that me all of COA uary t s deepe Ar m m 0 r € Jimmy than to Simon id ynOr Simone t the ar as 1 trip 1 ch was Ar ever U eâ€"up the 18 n Roadside Weeds And Tourists One of the speakers at a county conference of municipal . cials held recently . at . Woodst: Ort., suggested that weeds grow alongside country roads in the ; vince constituted one of the cl bugbears of Ontario and would h to be removed if it is to continue attract tourists from the .Uni States. This gontleman . expres the belief that if Ontario . did clean up her roadbeds and make th more attractive generally, much t« ist traflic and revonue would be . within the mext feow years. But if the statement in quC seems to be rather farfetched i; connection _ between _ tourist weeds, there can be little doubt it would pay rural municipalities those regiding in them to have â€" weed inspectors devote greater teation to the appearance of the allowances The seeds from the w which grow alongside the high maybe and are blown into fart fields and thus cause loss from crops. Weeds are thus assoc with cconomic losses as well a fecting the scenery and putting down will prove of tremendous sistance to farmers who desin keep their own premises clean. There is, bowever, one thin; be said for weeds. They often accumulation of rubbish dumpe the roadside by people who : have dirty jusects and who do It is doubtful if the . pays much atiention to nelghborhood of the which he travels as t to think observes the King Has Autos t &n real ly up chin»s resemble the st; British army comman during the Great Wa: The two automobil dered by the king ar« between the oldâ€"style ousines used by his fa V, and the slick stre dianâ€"built models pr dianâ€" Duke mat thi ind his and more spending for Britain the promise of the latest _ of figures. LONDC () Fitted comp th VIHl n t 1 state en vil Good News P rather farfetched between _ tourist can be little dou!? rural municipaliti n ut in U 1 as Offices h n ially nt wh 1 h 11 Its n n L A $# e 4# 4e moe en 6 e ce e e 0 0 m s > Y ® COMMIsSs 20 ALBERT sSTRCEY T his ; Your Supp PB U

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