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Show j 'fill: IIHII! MITES Should II nvc Bfttrr rmlfol inn from the A row of sheds eonstrueted on the Tabernacle grounds would prove mighty serviceable, especially especial-ly to conference goers during the winter months. Saturday night at the concert, a number of poor animals were hitched outside at the mercy of the cold. frosty weather. weath-er. Heated from a long drive and then unhitched and tied outside, a horse is just as apt to -take cold as a man would under the circumstances, circum-stances, when distemper or oilier kindred kin-dred diseases would follow. Horses are not made of stone, but of llesh. bone and blood, as we are. If a narrow strip on either the south or north end, or both, of the Tabernacle Tab-ernacle block was fenced oil and converted into sheds and hitching yards, filthy streets around the block at conference times would be a thing of the past. A hetlgo could be planted to separate the sheds from the remainder of the grounds and thus their beauty would not be marred in the least. These protective protec-tive structures would show that the people of these parts have warm, sympathetic hearts for the poor dumb animals. Such sheds are common in the east. |