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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1929-1-23, Page 2lilrEDNF,SI)AY. JANUARY 23rd, '29, CREAM! TRY THE MOPERATIVE WAY SHIP CREAM TO Uniteri Farmers' Co -Operative Bow w i r G i -i A iii WE LOAiS CAIS PAY EXPRESS REMIT PROMPTLY MY LADY'S + COLUMN. ta SCOTCH PLAID. Printed jersey now grows Scotch and appears in stunning Scotch plaid a +>I patterns. One in tans and brown.., with a dash of orange and red, is (3f140 ,e moo., with he cloth. n 11 of t diagonally YMilitia gIC.0 C.M.G., ex -minister of pipings of orange. ; and National Defense, elected Vice - NIGHTLY BRUSHING president of The Huron & Erie Business coats and frocks retain etIortgage Corporation. their pristine freshness much more easilyf their r wearers brash sh th em PINK FUR. carefully each night, put them on Fox,dyed to match the velvet of hangers and place where a current of air passes through them. a sumptuous coat, makes a stunning cushion collar and deep cuffs for it. CONVENIENT BRUSH NO MUST One of the long handled brushes, similar to chose for cleansing milk Lay a little stick across the top of bottles proves indispensable in the seldom -used teapot, just under brushing the crumbs from the elect- the lid. This will permit fresh air to riv toaster. - enter and prevent mustiness. APPOINTED DIRECTOR r we Kindly Heart Caeca ' SHeereseeeeseseeeseeseasessee ERWIN 1@11, by the woaaera 14.wM- paper Qnise ) there guns n tine woman, Martin, She'd make a good wife for somebody." Saul lap; and bdfllth; Bross were runver•100 when the holy desh;neted its the former pawed dwell the teed. Martin looked after her w111 a certain fond and 'unglue e\presslon i11 lits eyes, hill he sighed deeply. Yes, sheet n ver, ,elegem lady." he treeed,,1. 1. ha0" often th,miilil huW she 11(111,1 grace awl l 1..,rn e ,t pleas ;atm holm.. but go'.' 1,.01004+ hn. tet Wine her way. She ,lus•t u1,ln Woes 10 el out a living t'•t herself and her Wee rltild Winev( t As le 1u"elf, y"81 I.1) 40 11101 ,1' 1•'11 the plopu e bore only. mod that 1s lnelly Mortgaged." 'Queer ah"ot ,fart, Martin. You -rve your fattier 'ettululy had some money. and securities before he died. for 1 borrowed ami paid hint $�a,00u um a 111or'tguoeti' "'Pell. towards,' the Last 110 sated very strangely. as, you Intow•, and st>etlls to have lust what ht. had:' Saul Espy passed on Ms way and Martin catered the tuutshsckly old house where he had been born, It bud been a lonely lame to him. Ills tootle er bad died when le wits n c,did and at twenty-two he had found himself saddled with a badly run-down little 1[ 1•' :eta. fits t it caul 1 Atrm, heavily en t , e vel a ens neighbor. Airs, Mary Beeves. wid- ow and her little ch11d we1•0 about all the company be laud m eought. Blas. Reeves wee about Itis own use lied they had heroine true friends, Martin event into the ho100 00 pau0e, listen and smile. A whirring 0011101 dire,Iol him to a corner of the kltelte11 where a mouse caught In to trap was speeding rowed anti round in the tread- mill whorl at1aehed to the rage. "'\lust people le 400111(1 drmvn you, lit- tle 11.110w, +hsc•t•%1.0 11(,•1111 takine up the. rate :mrd eyeing indulgently 1110 Flee!: IfYtle ft•i.'!.1,ne•d ealrtive within. By JESSIE 1:, GELATINE SALAD GOLD PAJAMAS. in making a fruit salad for com- Golden satin and gold cloth fash- pany, using a geloatine base stretch- ion a suit of stunning tea pajamas. es the fruit and other ingredients The trouscre of satin lace up the immeasurably. It is an excellent legs with gold cords and the little dish for Sunday night suppers. tuck -in jumper of satin has gold em- broidery. The hip -length coat is clay Prisoner, who at Hoot se aulln r t•c PLAY BROOM. made of gold cloth, severely tailor- to food valuable foodstuffs to dis- •Little girls and little boys will find ed fere rata>r There w:10 a viii ht arelun it fun to brush the snow off their mud Mrs. Reeve+ stood ce••o feet away eased cattle, besides which the pub- Little her linger playfully. lie is demanding dairy products ob- if youo before one of into the ho toy "Is that the way you greet a neigh- tained from healthy herds. Natur- if keep one of the little toy TARIFF AGAINSThor hent on bringing you a fresh pan ally diseased free cattle from restrict - brooms with a cheery red handle f I i0euits'e" ;he rri0el ed areas or from accredited herds hanging at the entrance for them to TIIA RRUSS L$ POST,, TUBERCULAR CATTLE MEANS ECONOMIC . LOSS The prevalence'of tuberculosis in Canadian cattle -herds has been esti. muted by Dr. A. E. Catneron, chief veterinary inspector of the depart. moat of agriculture, to amount to about 5 per cent, While, this percentage of infection is perhaps not great In conversion with other countries, the general average for Canada is large in com- parison with those areas where' the farmers have been instrumental in having their herds tested and tuber- culosis eradicated under federal gov- ernment Aid, Though the restricted area plan, whit] represents the most effective pollee. for suppression of bovine WALLS Ole 1377 11 a reit e Tibia: Prefect µSays 1,1$()0-erenrseel Battlements Must (11o. New Turkey Is eronteneeleibl3 an. act wltich lalstQrl many lateen, velli 1 not soon forgive }tet The tenant Is curr'e'nt that the [mighty walls ,of Byzantium, which l have e111d-1cied tet swan Mils of Scnitrbul' for 1,5 OU years, witheleed twenty-six fanloun ,heves and surviv- ! ed forty-four disastt-,ttn earthquakes, etre to be demolished, ',Whit the borrowed western slogan of "Safety Ilt'st On hie tiles, tire' pre- y a•i of Ounetautinoph' has issued a statement ,that the thirteen -mile chain of cr inulin 00 c etone is a menace to the gypsy hovels crouch- -lug under its ramparts, that the municipality cannot assemble ilio money needed. for repairs and that the walls tenet therefore be razed. The statement saga that an effort will be made to Save Some of the bcuel ale•II IA 1lc nmed of 0 "certain 1) 1' interest," but the latest addition to the Byzantine ramparts dates from 1150 A.D. and it le difficult to un- 1-istand how the prefect will And any of the stent; recent maty:{h1 not t b } was only introduced in to be "historic. e s 'snore areas in Canada where the infection grandiose than the walls of Rome, 'has been reduced to well under 1 more poetic and more savage than per cent. In area No. 1 in Manitoba those of Avignon, influitely more ex - the incidence of this dread disease ex- tensive and more important than those of Carc•iesone," These are the dropped from more than 5' per ramparts before whose might even cent. to less than 1-3 of 1 per cent. Attila quailed, and' these the walls In r• r n the newer from which the last. of the emPe e s and 1 in three years,of easfsrir Christendom, Cotistan- quarantine districts similar results tine d(II•, plunged to death when the are being obtained, says a bulletin by Ottoman Turks broke through the the department of the interior. barrier in May, 1453, The figures of Dr. Cameron indi- The traveller 10 modern Constan- cate that there is still a great need dimple Atilt reaches the city via the tether he comes byland or [.alis whether v for concerted action by Canadiansea, � From the Simplon Express, cattle owners in districts where they which plercee the land walls near the have not yet got together for the Golden Gate by the Marmara, the mbl- herds. Dr. Cameron estimates that tag. ivy -colored towers, stretching there are still something like 430,000 northward to the Golden horn. tuberculosis cattle in Canada, repre-}fTbe travwhrrbye gssea a rf000ds snSeraa- Senting a tremendous economic loss the single line of Byzantine sea walls to Canadian farmers. Besides being still cling to the shore they once pro - a menace to human health and life, teeted from many a hostile fleet, and department of agriculture officials on one phenomenal occasion from t t that then diseased animals the crash of icebergs which the swift u arca oere These are the ramparts which 1923, there are now a number of Schlumberger describes a a e traveller beholds the double 11ne of elimination of tuberculosis in their battlements flanked by 400 cru polo ou a e Bosporus hurled down from the cost more to maintain than healthy ,, Black Sea, "hut 1 have'ri t the heart 10. '!'here yon rattle and that the general pro- Beauty, grandeur, mystery, the are --now run for it." ductivity of a healthy herd is much history of mighty centuries, live in The kindly :lktrrin curried the trap greater than flat of a tubercular these thfrteen miles of stone which a to the open doorway and ,cult nut the modern mayor will have no more of, „ i one. In other words, it does not pay Only one voice in the new Turkey has thus far been publicly raised against this impending outrage. The Constantinople Daily Akscham alone among all the Turkish press attaoks the mayor, writing boldly that the destruction of the Byzantine watts will constitute an irreparable loss, which nothing under the sun can jug- tify, and hazarding the suggestion that It is the imperiled gypsy hovels ; and not the battlements whicb i should come down. CANADA i "\Vile, are you that thnifir smiled are in greater demand at much nae Martin, taking the mild scoldiu ;end- higher prices than those where tests ally, "It was the '01alle's1 mouse pals` have not been carried out. elide and if you had looked into its in- Tubercular cattle represent one would have let itg eyes ." I did you 1 serious economic loss to Canadian ,vuldd have let it go, tar.' "To come back Into the house and ' stockmen and the feeding of weak, bother you again." retorted Mrs. ' scrawny animals of inferior parent- Reeves.`1ell, t supposexiso 0011can't age represents vents anotherloss of very help being tender-hearted, It's the talk great magnitude. The problem of of the town that you sat up 11010/110t getting rid of the low -vitality anl- o{d Carlo two nights het'ore lc flied?" • mals has been tackled by the Sas - LACE 1 autt tet the famine a lr•dimt h amend in an inter - of LACE SLEEVES 'Phe people of Canada may just 'Cream Lace flaring sleeves give a as well proceed on the assumtpion rthat they need not expect any trade noon touch 0ta blackedwithvelvet afcer- favors from the United States. The egown fashioned snug hip- Republic has never consulted the skirt. ed ..k art and irregularly hemmed r_ line its high. to Dominion as to whether r g li touch of cream in the form of a 111 walls would prove disadvantag- eous jabot enriches it further. to the shipment of Canada's FLAT PATCHING products into the markets of the When patching underwear, try United States or not. This has been slipping the worn places over a ma;- demonstrated on many occasions. azine and 'then fitting the patches. Now it appears that once more an - You will find the magazine will serve other tariff barrier will be erected as a very satisfactory lapboard, just against Canada that will be a serious stiff enough. hindrance to the lumber trade of NEWSY LETTERS. British Columbia. If advocates of A woman, famous for her inter- n higher tariff have their way, the lumber and shingle industry of Bei- esting letters, keeps a series 00 tish Columbia will have to revise its Iarge manilla envelopes in her desk, entire system of marketing, and in each having the name of a comes the process will probably suffer ser- pondent. Every time she sees an ions loss. item that would interest one of Advices from. Washington indicate them, she slips It and sticks it into that a definite and insistent effort his or her envelope until her next will be made shortly to place higher letter. duties on lumber and shingles. At HERE'S ELECTRIC LIGHT BILL •the present time between 75 and 90 Some of us do not think of the per cent, of all British Columbia wattage of our electric light lamps shingles are sold in the United until we are presented with a size- States, as well as from 50 to GO pet able electric light bill. Then we cent. of the lumber. If the advocates realize that the little side lamps that of the higher tariff succeed, Cana - are just for decoration could burn dian shingles will be practically barr- khe smallest -sized lamp instead of ed from the United States markets. the 40 or G() watt and that one 60 In this case the manufacturers of watt could be used in the reading these products will have to look for lamp with practicaly the same re- an extension of their markets in ult as the three or four 25 watt Japan, Australia and ocher over Ras lamps now in use. Look over ;mar countries. It is evident that in tl:c lights and lamps and see if they matter of markets Canada must look cannot he planeod so as to lessen out for herself, and the sooner the your bill. better. of the home, alnico: as old aK myself?•. katchewan government spoke Martin stanchly. "As to the esting way. The government of that arouse tribe, Mrs, hooves, one ;debt province last year passed legislation when 1 was playing try flute twn of , know as the pure-bred sires areas them Caine creeping cautiously amiss act providing machinery whereby the Oan' and 'aril there almost hutunit the -stock owners could get rid of until I ceased playtime' scrub bulls and other undesirable Martin accepted the covered breeding stock. First brought into proffered Wait until 1 get a rake of action by the establishment in 1927 hunt.; for sun.- be 01;111, and 110 Airs. Reeves departed he stood gazing after of the Last Mountain pure-bred sire net. with a gnlekened gleam in his eyes, area, this advanced policy of the He stopped outside his pretty neigh- Saskatchewan government is report- hur's gate the 1100) morning and and- ed to be meeting with success and tied cheerily to Mr,. peeves anti little the stock owners in many additional Winifred. "I 011011 be gone all day anti municipalities have petitioned the over night at Riverton," he said. "I government to make the regulations wonder if you would Mho the toy to operative in their districts. the haus' and step over and feed my i pIn New Zealand it is the practice cunartee?" to keep exact butter -fat production "And let out any golly mouse there may he in the trap?" intimated Mrs. records for each cow and to weed Ree00i. with twinkling eyes. out from the dairy herds those ani - "Yee, that ton, 11 you please," replied mals which do not show a good re- Aiartin, eord of performance. In one district He got hack home the next after a unique Co-operative scheme has noon to find a desuitory crowd view- been in operation for a number of Ing a heap of ruins. years for the elimination of cull "It burned down yesterday," lisped Cows. Instead of selling these on little witat.e l "fwd manna ys snit .Ire to come 00e0 30 om' 1101140 till you the market in the ordinary way and bund a 140W nn, " passing the "duds" from one farmer 91 w110 pow' friends the mice who to another, the Farmers' union 01' - are necnnnt ." for the tire." the weegtrnized "cull cow -drives," The sn- ow '1""1"i i -'1. ' "\1'b' 11 1 w"e1 11:1" the inlets are fattened up and a drive i,"i'e 1 lewd 1r lux "f it1a1,•h•'o s.',m etart for the abattoir, the sire of the •eyd all :wood. I- mohair el lip 1111 1 mob �rowin steadily as it gets tear - rwtmd, lilt [lir , I '0,e:e bhp g g _._ - er the Storks. The cull cows are in _.. az'ss, "rue• 1.;w„:„ 1„ 11;.,;1.0 sP. ;+11,1 t i I a "�;y,y Iq"ka axPf'F , r_t tsr that way definitely disposed of, and r%R'a�, 2i+.�l"�'�..tAi i.,fa�k°kP'.,ef' +1:"•tc.. tl:,h poo cher see 1100 1)0.6 0,.. 111•. the New 7.enlsnd d.rixy farmer srlcets i 1,,. " elle had 1.•d tate 0.sy In the new heifers from herds of proven • :melee 1"'eau There ,yi1,0 on the deo• butter -fat production ahility, the ea, :, '11, 1 , •d e 1+1 111, 1I.10. pre[ eny of purer -bred bulls, e t I need 111,1111.les the et i 10--.15 1. lett 10y. nnth t 11...0 t.. ,,.t•1, 108 p,tp, 0, m. 1 lu,cep t ',POI, it ettunan Snereace to lie etunrpea Una. -io.•e he ,lied." Sir Harcourt Butter, ex -Governor -No. for he 1,1,11 11 hidden wee,' in t1f Burma., says that besides abollsh- it1 the 01tle and 1. round is among the lag slavery' 1n i3uram he had triad to ,ashes after the tire, BIt 1lress, tee abolish human sacrifice. Duman sae - only one I've told is your 111wyt'r. ht's Hike was now confined to one small full of gold. He says 10 must be the area and he was convinced it would soon be stamped out, missing fortune your father 111(1 away Pier; yit•'r re Wanted We pay Highest Cash Price for Cream. 1 cent per 11). Butter Fat extra paid for all Cream delivered at our Creamery. Satisfaction Guaranteed Brussels Creamery Co. Phone 22 Limited 1 GOOD WORD FOR WASPS. Sets an Example to World In Matter of Industry. There is a good side to wasps, ac- cording awn naturalist.IfI a ell-kn cording to w The hot weather of last July, he writes, exact�ly stilted those tiresome insects which devour our fruit, our sugar, and our jam, rob the bees of the honey which we ourselves pro- posed to steal, and make outdoor pic- nics impossible. Now and again, too, the wasp— quite without provocation, aa it often seems to us—reminds us very forc- ibly that It carries a weapon of de- fence, which it does not hesitate to use where it feels that the occasion requires it. But the wasp is not really an offen- sive creature—it stings only when we happen to get In its way. It sets an example to the world in the matter of industry. It is up and doing long before the dawn and it never goes to bed until long after sunset. Even the black sheep among wasps spend three -parts of their time and more in the public service; the rest spend the whole of it in that way. The wasp's main object in lite Is bringing up little wasps. It does not really care about anything else. And never forget that 1t is the wasp—largely carnivorous in its hab- its -which rids us cf countless mil- lions of insects which are a far great- er menace than 111011 to our health and happiness— the poisonous mos- quitoes and the detestable and dis- ease -carrying flies. Swallowing cold. and it holde over lite thousand dol- Salt In the Oceans. lays In gold and silver," If the oceans Sucre dried up, the curd be 1 esremainingw lovenhvh t t have•1,10 "Then. the mice p . amount of s, friend,' cried Martin, 001800 out of enough to cover 6,000,000 squar'e himself. He gazed raptly at the wld- tulles with a layer one mile thick, ow. IIis eyes sparkled. Then he ['deiced up little Winifred and kissed A Great Variety of Anilnttis. her. Sumatra, in the Mast Indian Mali- ' "Airs. Reeves," he said, "when 1 build ipelago, has the greatest variety of my new Boase I want you to promise 1lmlinall and vegetable life of any place to let this sweet little friend come to In tha 'world, live with me" '"01, dear! I ehould miss her—" Where :'ravelling is (heap. "And you with her,"eadded Martin twIt le Inty-three possible in on a ho traW tomwayl avel With yearning eyes.for twopence. Most people have a fondness for gold either as coin of the realm or as a preeloue ornament Tho natives of India have :mow other uses for gold which are gnit0 exl.raordinar•y. In certain rases of illness they swal- i low it as m 11,1141' le the form of thin leaf, A )Hou:: Dentin E00011 001 810w his dentition hy regRding the • don''l, of religions buildings, an net 1 of piety width may t'asily cost him ugwnrdS or 360,000 Sovereigns with . a 81)1, hi on the nlrve rsl• side are much prized by the natives A rajah who had veneered a large number of 140011 1 coins used them to feint a centre to each pane In the windows of his Pal- ace, Unlike other countries, where the people's savings are used to pro- mote trade, those of India are hoard- ed and buried. Cockatoo Imitates Rumens. A Triton cockatoo, just arrived at the Zoo, is an adept in the use of a cup, sari an Old nt1Y newspaper. a er. The keeper filled the cup In Its cage with milk and handed It to Jocko, as the cockatoo is caned. Jack() grasped it securely, d0spi the fact that the handle had been broken oft, and raising it to his 10011(11, drank the Contents In very human fashion—un- t11 neerty emptied. Thea, releasing his held of the cup, he seized 10 In his beak, and tilting. the reoeptaele, drftined it to the dregs without spilling, a drab. the Master Salesman Lo, the people of the earth do me 'homage. I an the herald of success far men, merchants, manufacturers, municipalities and nations. 1 go forth to tell the world the message of service and sound merchandise. And the world lis- tens when I speak. There was a day long ago, when by sheer weight of superior merit, a business could rise above the common level without me, but that day has passed into oblivion. For those who have used me as their servant I have gathered untold millions into their coffers. 1 Sell More Merchandise per dollar of salydry paid me than any other sales- man on the face of the earth. The fabled lamp of ter of its mos Aladdin never called to the service genii half so rich and powerful as 1 am, to the man w3to .keeps me constantly on his payroll. Hold the Business of the season's in the hallow of my hand, I com- mand the legions of fashion, mold the styles and lead the world whiithersaever i go. I drive unprin- cipled business to cover, and sound the death -knell of inferior merc'handle. Frauds are afraid of me be- cause I march in the broad light of day. Whoever Makes Me Their Servant for life takes no chances on drawing down dividends from my untold' treasures bestowed with a lavish hand. I have awakened and inspired nations, set mil- lions of men to fight the battles of freedom beyond the seas and raised billions of dollars to foot the bills. Nations a.n'd kings pay me homage and the business world bows at my feet. I saw broad fields for you to reap a golden harvest. 1 Am Master Salesman at YOU hrvice tWvrtiri � —x— Waiting Your Command —x - The Post BRUSSELS