Wt I III! to III - 30. 9rd " awe memh-os out of sleep just. as on. 'ti Tht me every cannon In renov- "'2, u shoe from a painful mot. no my no sudden Jam“ may add to we misery. To tttere, I no!!! "W 'unm to get up is like a st" in ttte tare, A gentle, even '1th trait, wit! probably mean the ttinereneg ot huvfng I good “I'M beeab tas: fellow. irtstettrht menial that looks like (III! will " NH thundm' across the table. Dnn't think because you like to rm the blind to the top of the “1va um (Max In the woman: “n: moryone like: MI room to bo I'm-‘1 with a sudden hurt! at ar. 3 AW Some people require to can HM do you wake!) rour family r', tho morning? To not: Maple mle is one or the most delicate In- fidc-nrs ot the day and as web should be handled with tntderstamb in: and tact by the breakfast call- :". There, are, ot course, u may inurhods tor arising as there In "'rsoualities, and it II the hall.- mukar's job to Jtueo"r her own unlily's peculiarities. A Cross Family In The Morning rm Hm production of out. If a hen l i, accumulated a quantity of hard ht In the abdomen lt in an ttltgtottt n-rnzu indication that her by!“ ,iay, ai'hr uhout over. It is about ri:ro, that her stay in the t1oek in Mrmixmtod and that she should be .dwn‘ to the market. Auyirne who has dressed hens m" "aw noticed a large accum- uimun of tat in the abdomen of man- birds. This aeetuntttatiott can 'r.. determined while the hen I: Lrmrt by handling the new in the we: sack. The tat, if present. Hm 1w hard and firm. This is a sign km ovulation has cealed and that "xv mu is now using her food unp- '.c.i to lay up body tat instead ot When She Eh: Accumulated A Certain Amount of Firm Flt York cit days. , km 1' Spence. cf Timmins, Ont., Min paddled to New York to see tfu. World's Fair, is pictured as he arrireul at Battery Park, New ank My. The trip took him 101 He Paddled From Timmins To New York elieullon to other "ride. Sub-ow in: performs several useful func- tions. It breaks up lard in or in- pervious soil layers had thus per. mlts better aeration and linings. This in turn accelerntr soil nctlv- ities and plant food preparation by bacteria. It allows rain Inter to penertate the soil more quickly and prevents loss of needed moisture try evaporation or by run on from tho surface, The roots are induced to go deeper. thus giving the dry plants a better water supply in dry weather. and the feeding are: ot tho root system is increased. in short. it helps us make use of n grnater depth ot soil, virtually add. irut in the size of the field. Enact: Last tor Venn Tim aliens of subsolling. espec- iully in heavy land, will last tor pars. In Europe subsollers of var- lull? types are used, but in Canada most interest has been shown in a machine which opens up the sub- . vii Hui. at the same time. dt-noslts frr'lil: 'r' In the furrow. Wham " is wizhin rtuv'n of the deeper plant mole ty cam qs'. iiisn.tir.""" Farm' Sub-oil In. FidA-lmntm irrr'l'def.ktlrat"a'd'tr. tym--Give"- A... (ion-mam. 'ime To Send Hen To Market and withdraw Join tht - myâ€. I0 GG ' mu. hence.†The can w" “Journal sine die. Alloying thst his wife ave him s sound heating. Arthur Parry, re- siding on highway No. 4, 1 short distsnce south of Clinton. 0nt., he preferred s charge ot ssssult. oc- cssioning actual hem. Parr said his wile threw stonoe " him, and broke three of " ribs. ' When the case we: called Crown Attorney Holmes ssid he wss "in receipt of s letter from Perry, in which " intimated A desire to try Do-tieTrouHesDriveCtin. MOM-Item He Wants Peace: Joins The Army M. For so shall it come upon all them that dwell on the Nee of the earth. M. But watch ye at every season, making supplication, that ye may prevail to escape all these things that shall come to pass, and to stand before the Son of man. Budding Fig-Tree Luke 21:29. And he spake to them a parable: Behold the fig tree, and all the trees: M. when they now shoot forth, ye see it and know " your own selves that the summer is now nigh. 81. Even so ye also, when ye see these things coming to pass, know ye that the kingdom of God is nigh. The the and olive-trees are symbols pe- culiar to Israel, and with the vine represent the whole earthly his. tory of the covenant people with- in the times of redemption. Trees, like men, have their youth, matur- ity, old age. They change with the seasons. Israel misused her first national summer, and, being un- srved. entered into a long, dread. ful winter. Here are given signs that a great change approaches in the history of Israel. The fig-tree is putting forth its leaves. Peril of Workman: 34. But take heed to yourselves lest haply your hearts be over- charged with surfeitintr, and drunk enness. and care of this life, and that day come on you suddenly as a snare. Surfeiting may be taken to mean the nausea which follows debauch. Neither the Old nor the New Testament explicitly teaches what we call total abstinence from all intoxicating liquor. but we must emphasize the fact that drunk- enness throughout the Bible is ab- solutely condemned as one of the gravest forms of sin, and more than once we are reminded that drunkards will have no part at all in the kingdom of_God. The day that is here referred to is the day when the Lord Jesus Christ is com. ing back again. Our Lord is warn- ing of the danger that men and women will be so occupied with in- dulgences of the flesh or the care of business that they will not be ready for the Lord when he comes back. Wine and strong drink here are figures used to denote earthly blessings and sensual en- joyments. promise of which was held out to the people by these false prophets 9. The women of my people ye cast out from their pleasant hou- ses from their young children ye take away my glory for ever. The unrighteous men of Israel are here denounced who have oppressed the widows and the orphans. 10. Arise ye, and depart; tor this is not your resting place; because of uncleanness that destroyeth, even with a grievous destruction. The passage is based upon idea con.. tained in Lev. 18: 25, 28, that the land is defiled by the sins of its inhabitants and will vomit them out because of this defllement. 11. If a man walking in a spirit of falsehood do lie, saying, I will prophesy unto thee of wine and of strong drink he shall even be the prophet of this people. --. -rrwu‘. Ill“ club of the city of Jerusalem. The city of Corinth was located in southern Greece. N, I.--.,..-¢u.u "e tween A.D. TM and 715. The Olivet discourse was given on Tuesday of Passion Week, April 4, either A.D. 29 or A.D. 80. The First Epistle to the Corinthians was written about A.D. 56. Plaee.---Mieah primarily pro- phesied regarding conditions in the city of Jerusalem. The Olivet discourse was delivered on the Mount of Olives, opposite and east .V -__-. 1...."- " not In“ the “righteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? I Cor. 6:9. THE LESSON IN ITS SETTING an..- ... . BEVERAGE ALCOHOL AND SOCIAL PROGRESS ttntomati-t Tuna-co Sunday) Micah 2:041; Luke 21:29-31. 34-36; I Cor. 6:94]. Golden Text.~Know ye not that " o....'-,, . -- Sunday" f School t Lego; l . ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Time.-; Yieth, $3565.23. "ii'. G "might 51:90!- Peter Heniein, a mechanic and locksmith. ot Nuremberg, Germany is generally credited with being the first man to matte watches. About 1,500 he set himself to pro- duce a small pocket clock. For the Introduced In Germany, They Became Fashionable Articles in Sixteenth Century Earliest Watches Were Egg-Shaped Striking at the Scottish coast for the second time within two days, Ger- man bombers damaged the training ship Iron Duke at Scapa Flow naval base. Air raid sirens screamed warnings at Edinburgh and other centres on the Scottish coast, but no raids resulted. Forty-seven varieties of fruits and vegetables are in common use today on everybody's dinner tables as against a choice ot tour that were available to the people of 12th Century England, according to an exhibit at the New York Mus- eum of Science and Industry in the Rockefeller Center. Exact repro- ductions, in wax. of the plump and luscious products of modern farms, shown in the exhibit. our: a strik- ing contrast to the reproductions ot the dwarfed and puny speci- mens of peas. beans. leeks and the beets ot eight centuries ago. 47 Varieties Fruit And Vege- tables Found on Modern Dinner Table As Against Today’s Meals More Varied Pictured as they met in Stockholm to celebrate the 80th birthday of King Gustav of of the four Scandinavian countries who came together a in this week to confer on protect their countries against the threat of aggression. Rom LEFT to RIGHT, Pre Finland, King Haakon of Norway, King Gustav of Sweden and King Christian of Dem POP-A Good Reason Why She’s Not Guilty Old-lime Four MY DESK 's BEEN RIFLED .' 332i Bombers Raid Scottish Coast Rt*trttf.. Sum-van com: Jiiiriiittiiii mm, 5 who came together again this week td confer on what action to take to threat of aggression. om LEFT to RIGHT, President Kyosti Kallio of King Gustav of Sweden and King Christian of Denmark. We can an old-fashioned watch a "tarnip" because.“ I: " thick. but that is nothing compared to Peter Honlotn’a products, any: "The Rocky Mountotn Herald." They were almost round, and when they were sold throughout Europe, they became known no "Nuromo berg eggs." motive power he introduced the main spring. and with this " a basis produced little clocks - "wateheg" as they came to be known - which would tlt in the pocket or the purse. In parting with Charlie McCar. thy, Edgar Bergen, Don Ameche and other members ot the Chase & Sanboru Hour, Eddy pleads as his reason the heavy commitment: he has made In concerts, films and re- cording activities this winter. It seems that Mrs. Eddy hag been NELSON EDDY GOES OFF AIR The biggest radio news ot the past week, ll that Nelson Eddy has handed in his resignation to the sponsors of the Chase and San- born Hour. Eddy will bow himself out on Sunday. November 5th, and a substitute. not yet named will take his place. RADIO Illllllllll NOTES Lax/4 WELL, IT WASN'Y ME I By MADGE NOTES AND NEWS Saturday, Oct. 28, Football on both American and Canadian net- works will be the order ot the " ternoon . . . 10 pan., CHI. . . Tote canini will conduct Beethoven's First and Third Symphonies in the first in the series s' Beethoven Festival concerts by the NBC orch- estra . . . Oct. 29, CBL, Henriette Schumann plays Third Ruhmsntn- " Concerto on R"dio Music Hull program . . . ' p_m., CPRB, John Bannirolli conducts N. Y. Philhsr- manic orchestra. . . . 7 p.m., CBL, Jack Benny arrives at another broadcast in " Maxwell . . . 9:00 p.m.. CFRB. Grace Moore guest on Sunday evening hour . . . Oct. M, 12:30 p.m., CBL, Farm broadcasts of interest to farmers in the Prog. ince of Ontario . . . 8 Fm., CPRB, Andre Kostaianetz an" Tune Up Time . . . 9 pm, CFRB, Cecil B. DeMille's Radio Theatre . . . 10:00 p.m., CBL, Carnation Contented Hour . . . Oct. at, 8:30 p.tn., CBL, Information Plea . . . 10 MIL. CBL, Les Concerts Bptnphottiqttes . . . Nov. 1, . . . 8:30 p.In.. CPRB, Music Box Revue . . . ' mm. can, Serensde tor Strings . . . Nov. 2, . ' . 8:30 9.111.. mm. Bonlevsrd songs from Montreal . . . 9:00 on. CBL, Good News . . . 10 thm., CBL Bing Crosby. OUT‘TANDING MUSICAL ARTISTS Tuesday evening, at 10:00 p.m.. the CBC will present the second broadcast of its new symphonic hour. Wilfrid Pelletier will conduct the orchestra ot Les Concerts Symphoniques from Montreal. This orchestra with that of the Toronto Symphony will alternate every Tuesday in giving concerts until the third week of December. The series will resume the beginning of January and continue until the end ot the concert season. Guest con- ductors will be heard with both orchestras together with some of the most outstanding artists in the music world. urging her (unious husband to de. vote more time to hard recital work, at least that is the zonip of the studios. In my event the baritone'n voice has much improw ed of late and " singing gives every evidence of long and ardu- ous practice. ARCHER of Sweden are the rulers .rsLGk".'e"daup. M.“ . N... . r. . W'--""'-"""- 'e-... V "W’- . _ l In Wave Of Milk Vehlo Maki, 18, was alum-f drowned in milk when a truck in which he was riding was in com. sion with a freight train on the Sudbury-Nutt the. [trio highway near Worthington. at am In“ 33;: 'Jftf.." " Work of a 30 Paid publicity. " Before. "Small " To deposit -- 13990th _ " He was a runs away. " Oak. " Russian ruler. " Charts. " Thing. " St I I " To recover. . " To aster. " Work of “It annoys. 20 One who instrument. 14 To harvest. 16 Christmas. 17 Arabian commander " Masculine. " One that naturalist. " Roof edge. " Viol [EEC-SE IIOIIIDN'I'AL m0. WM: 15mm Maki aid from “I hospital bed THE mean distance trom the earth to the sun also ts used " the base line for the measurement of the distance: ot the stall Ind other celestial objects outside our own Iolnr system. It this ream. great core has been taken to see that this measure- ment is very accurate. P I NOTED NATURALIST n To deposit Imam. qoreether bub. i2 He was a .Anny drill " Toilet cue. world-famous Imus. - (pl). term/Me. tytt5lyt " ll a»... ptnnt.a? tom oe ' a. “I“ " Re mm a swan t m. can“. coin. 2 Pulp: 1min. _ with " Ila-teal no“. 3 hill. plants. " Pair. mOFMV KEYSFITIT' Br J. MILLAR WATT , Rubber he. 0 Most 4 Always 5 Verse. d4t â€7"! "e râ€! "J5... CltiiTig milk ant and Ts"irtt2 crash can he was blinded by the W. He “guped 3nd CW ill" he thought he would drown. he II“. . Approximately 240 cello» a! milk poured over the road all most at the 80 milk can: were de- hex-end. â€will 9e.9lggrfulte tuck- in“ milk can and when an ECU] " Measure ot U LI