HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1929-5-8, Page 2W
Y, MAX 8th, 1929.
THE IItIKUs$E4.
POST
Sunday School Lesson
BY CHARLES Q. TRUMBULL.
(gaiter of Tho !Sunday pcheoi Times')
THE EAR MINISTRY OF JERE• must be the mouthpiece of the fury
MIAH.
Sunday, May 12: Jeremiah 1:1.10,
ret
6:10, 11; 8:18, rJ.a; etti:1-24 we
-- - ful
Golden Text : sion
We ought to obey God father than the
enem -Acte : 29.
RIGHT IN
THE SHOULDER
"Fruit -a -tines" Did Stop
ms Rheumatism
Of peel to them rig, l..a en lee vennlir,_ _ _
Some men are craned the stormy
petrels of thin generation. Jeremiah
was one of these He was one of the
seven Outstanding prophets or lea-
ders who came before us in this six
months' study, IIe lived in the midst
of storms and he piadieted the com-
ing of worse storms. Moreover, his
predictions were infallible, for they
were God's predictions.
Unlike young men Josiah, whom
we studied last week, the good son
of a bad father, Jeremiah was the
good son of a good, father. Elea fa-
ther Hilkiah, one of the priests—nut
the I3111cialt who found the book of
the law of God in the temple that
Josiah was reparing, for he was the
High Priest and 'Jeremiah's father
was one of the ordinary priests. But
the young man hacl a good start not
only through the parental training
that a was evidently his, but also
through his King, for he began his
Ministry under young Josiah and liv-
ed through the stiring scenes of that
righteous King's reformation.
The soec+reignty of God conies out
very strikingly in the Scriptures.
God had commissioned Jermiah be-
fore his birth. It could never be t
said, threrfore. that God used the t
yoeng man beennee he had "roved t
himself to be -worthy. God, in his
omniselen e. ane oreniratene•, knows ti
and derides whom He will us! • and,
we rimy say, makee them worthy to th
be used. Yet fr.rwili is as 1-lainly th
taught in the Scripture as God': Sov- k
ereighnty ; there iv a mystery in the
two which we cannot stn 1, r: trend
th!s
Here is the worn of the Lord p
spoke to Jeremiah: Before. 1 formed e
.thee in the belly I ku,.w thee : and t
before thou Gamest from out of the o
Bu
the t
tired
God'
and
not
Jnr
meJ
nat
and
alm
The
the
him
ly
to
th
w
th
Pr
the
mi
Di
ly
fro
Gt
fo
d
rr
WANTS NO GOVERNORS
oho T. Haig, Oonserative el,L.A.
or Winnipeg, who advocates the
bolition of a provincial Govern-
nenit House and Lieutenant Gov -
more. Government House func-
ons, he eelleves, create snob-
rovince could take oveand the Chief r the duof -
ties of the Lieuteaant-Governor.
IUJY LESS LLS, CARL
Qaitad0 No Longer kentlrely Depen^.
dent On V.S. ttintt}clte---•Using
(lvlset British tlattht'rkeite, Ito,
The : great change :hat has over-
taken the anthreeite tuurket in this
coent1'Y is described In the second
progress report of the Dominion beef
eriod
fromd19 3 to 1928. covers
111 1928the
the Peo-
ple of Ontarla and Quebec were wore
tied as :o whether they could tett
euouo h fuel to keep thein warm dur-
ing the winter, Now the fuel cotrl-
pttniee are fighting for business. The
report Buys
Phe atsttu'bing oonaltione 111 1923
were the extent to which the peuple
of Ontario and Quebec had come to
depend upon 'United 5.ates anthracite
for domestic purposes; the general
belief that this was the only avail-
able fuel suitable tor title purpose;
the limited .reserve available in the
United States, estimates as low as 35
years' supply having been made; the
growing cost of the feel; the inter-
ruption to,supplies that had been Lx-
perienced during the nwa and 1902-3, a again in 1923,
and
that would ation bPlace y # Congress
em-
bargo on the ou'ptrt of anthracite.
' In 1928 an altered situation
exists," says the report. "Thera is
now a superabundance or both for-
d. Thinning of all vegetables is eign and native fuels for all put-
sirable as soon as the plants are poses, Coke. British anthracite, low
e enough to catch hold of, that ' volatile coals, and fuel oil are strong
g g competitors of Ameroean anthraoLe
quite small. Lettuce can be used in the household fuel trade, and. the
en though the plants are thick, but ! range of Alberta and Maritime coals
have satisfactory individual plants Is being extended through special
' leaf lettuce the plants should be ' provisions to Ontario and Quebec.
Though still using large quantities of
inned to five or six inches apart, American anthracite, we are no long-
nd the plants of head lettuce should er entirely- dependent on this fuel,
thinned to eight inches or more the producers of which are now fight -
art. They will not develop satis- lag here to retain a declining mar-
ket, as they are in their own e
oun-
story heads if much closer than try »
is. It has been found in the Icor- A comparative table of the fuels
cultural Division, Experimental used in domestic heating In. Ontario
rm, Ottawa,that the larger eerie. and Quebec in the two years under
g review follows:
11 of head lettuce give the most sat- en!:
of American anthracite:
t
story results when the heads are 1923, 4,783,873 tons; 1927, 3,D73, -
early one foot apart. Carrots should Imports of British anthracite:
e thinned to about an inch and one _923, 207,282; 1927, 720,203.
half apart; Beets to two inches a- . _ Coke consumer for domestic heat -
art ; Parsnips to two inches apart; Mg: 1921, 270,000; 1927, 812,000.
Dnions to one inch apart; Spinach Low volatile coals: 1923, 180,000;
our to eix inches apart: Radish is 1927,386'000'
After th'ecribtng tare investigations
own rather thinly are thinned as undertaken by the Fuel Board, fire
ready for nee. Often too many ker- prefaeti says:
nels of corn are left in a hill. Five "Although :he use of alternative
fuels hti:• contributed to a reduced
Yield of ;Beans
From Different Rates
of Planting,
Green Beans forth a very excel-
lent and popular Igarden vegetable,
in roost parts of Canada: Fortunat-
ely they grow particularly well in
Nortber'n Ontario where the quality
is unsurpassed:
At, the Dominion Experimental
Station, Kupusltasing, Ontario, an
experiment has bee nconducted for a
number of years in order to)deter-
Mine what rates of planting would I
give the best results and be,most sat-
isfactory generally, Two varieties
were used, The seed was planted in
rows 80 -feet in length and 30- In-
ches apart. Over a five-year ,period
the following yields in quarts per
thirty-foot row has been obtained
Round Pod Kidney Wax, when plant-
ed two inches apart in the row,• 12.2,
four inches, 10.8, six inches 7.1.
:Stringless Green Pod, two inches,
13.5, four inches, 10.6 and six in-
ches, 8.7.
These figures would seem to indi-
cate that two incites is a very good
distance for planting beans, as this
rate has given the largest yield with
both varieties- included in the test
and the quality was reset quite super-
ior to that obtained in the other
rates tried.
ewere,- tter throu,;,7 to : t r ! er Ps1L l
mor —Pax. 84:11.
e primes ea) rte; that the man was �-
ot worthy of death, for he had spa- TUESDAY. plants are quite sufficient to leave af- • •
err God'. mev a t. Some took tete For the Son of than is not come to dependence upon American coals, the
tme of a, ,x,,., ter,,•,i the prophets ter the cutworms and birds have. problem of Canada's complete fuel
1 deeiroy men':. lives, but to save them taken their toll. Bean plant, should iudc•pendeac, is still unsolved. The
gab. Son's r .,11 d t t :et • r' 1 °'' _•_.',uke• 9:56. b' from two to four inches apart, geographic leaf aurcap consequent on
raphet had i'ctr i J :t =-:,!"leo' ` t-7 and Peas about one inch apart. the location of our largest markets
lrstruction, and tet. pro,,i -t we nut I Inc frum our great producing fields,
WEDNESDAY. Veeetahles will not develop saris- but in close proximity to those of the
o death, 51111 other. needled an- Mercy and troth are met together fattoriler if the plants are thick, united Status, is one difficult).o over-
ther prophet- who had beim :lain for t,i ,.iltrnusrae=s and peace have kissed p, r,.,, Judicious thinning is very int- some.
"The Dominion Fuel Board cannot
womb I sanctified thee_, and I ordain- m
eel thee a pr'nphr.t unto thr; n•itione,"
It was like the eousinias'nn that Gou
gave for John the Baptist before hos t
birth (Luke 1). g
Jeremiah had no centiremen in .1
himself. He earinir d : "Ah. Lord r
God ! behold, I cannot speak : for I t
am a child." But God's rei'ly for- p
bade him to say any loner, "I am a
child," but authorized him to do all
that God commanded him, and prom-
ised God's own protection and de-
liverance from the enmities of men
that the prophets messages would a-
rouse.
Then we are told that the Lord
actually "put forth His hand, and
touched", the, mouth or the prophet.
Should we have difficulty in recog-
nizing the verbal inspiration of the
Bible when we read what God then
said to Jermiah : "Behold I have put
My words in thy menthe" ;
This is one lone man—accompan-
ied by the host of Heaven, however
—was placed by God Himself over
nations and over Kingdoms, "to root
out and to pull down, to destroy, and
to throw down, to build, and to
plant."
Exciting times followed. And ion-
ely, dreary, terrifying times for the
prophet. He knew that the people
would not' listen to God. He knew he
!eh a prophecy. ,,arh other.--Psa. 85:10. portant.
Finally a man n^meth Aisikarn. fir 1--d
Th 40,000 painters in Paris i is a prerogative of Governtnen„ and be
assume as its function the formula-
tion of a national fuel policy, for ibis
en of >s eeribs of r„r,,t ?e•-'•,'•,••'• THURSDAY ere are
circ rian s!tt faithfully len chum fru love ...,•. �•, -.._ I any suck -pinky, so far as It concerns
as well n: many other artists.
owl King Jo: ah, interrovr, c) in .no when he goeth forth in his might. The Chin, eel and Japanese use the ' complete fuel independence, must be
remiah's behalf, "that they ehoeld Judges 5:31. determined largely by questions of
same written language, but the spoken national expediency, based, however,
int rte to him into get hand of lant'uages are quite different. upon the most complete and accurate
he people to nut high to death." Th,1 FRIDAY. Pntlhagaros, a ire di mathematic- knowledge of all technical and econ-
rotertion had come. 1 Take up my yoke upon you, and )omit facts obtainable. The hoard is
you shall find rest to your souls.-- an living in the sixth century H. C. endeavoring g t secure and correlateais
A LESSON OUTLINE was the first: nrohibitionist. He these faces.
Matt. 1L'L9.
Commissioned of God Before G� founded the first society of `tsobric- "The most important point stillto
Birth (1 :5). SATURDAY. ty be determined is the cost of trans -
10 Self -Confidence, But God's He made of one every nation of three to. six feet lone,
Confidence(1 :6-10). men to dwell on all the face of the African refrirerstion depends for
A Hopeless Undertaking (6 :10, earth.—Acts 17:26. ils nneration on the fact that' when :t
11 ; 8 : 18 ; 9 :2). 1 -te liquid such as ammonia e.+.hands into
Delivering the Message (26 :1-71• i11Ai�liirr 1\TriL' a ens it absorbs heat from its,sur-
roundings.
The Murderous Response (26 : 1-
'7).
gue (1G :- i OF THINNING
Princes and Priests Ar
10-23).
The Profit Delivered(26:24),
WASHING SWEATERS 1
Before washing sweaters, sew the
button holes together • and remove.
hvttons. This helps the sweat's re•
tain its shape.
Australia kiting coneide ed a con-
tinent. Greenland is the largest or
the world's islands. It has an area of
,4."27,761) square miles.
VEGETABLES
Beginners in vegetable gardening
are almost sure to make the mistake
not only of sowing seed much too
thickly, but also of leaving the plants
too thick in the row. A very large
amount of seed is wasted each year
because of this and failure to have
plants develop properly is another
result of more consequence to the
sower of the seeds than the waste of
RHEUMATISM?
Neuritis? Sciatica?
T -It -C's brought speedy relief to Mr.
W. G. Burrows of Chatham, Ont. He
had terrible Rheumatism in his thigh.
After the fust dose he felt better, says:
"In half an hour all the sharp stabbing
pain had gone. Two more doses cleared
awayeverytrace of pain." T-R-C'sare
equally gond for Neuritis, Sciatica,
Lumbago and Neuralgia. quick. Safe.
No harmful drugs. 50o and $1.00 at
your druggist's. eta
I� TEMPLETON'S
ir-R V a IAt ^nU1 TE.SC
It Pays to use
n•
10070 1 T..,k VA
d special product N for every purpose -.for every surface
100% PURE
PAINT
Iraxlertor
or inferior
MARBLE -ITE
For hardwood
floors
forSaleliy
S. I. Davison
NEU-TONE
Me fiat wash.
able paint
VARNOLEUM
for Oilcloth
e'Linoleum
BRUSSELS, ONT.
W00D•LAC
slain Forfloors
andfurnifure
porting coal to Ontario and Quebec
from Alberta and the Maritime Pro-
vinces, and to the Board of Railway
Commissioners has been assigned the
duty of determining this point by
actual test.
"All the available technical data
having been secured, the economic
aspect o1 the problem has to be fac-
ed, and on this aspect great diversity
of opinion has prevailed.
"Manifestly, coal cannot he hauled
2,000 miles from Alberta to Ontario
at a cost lower than that of carrying
it 500 miles to the same market from
Pennsylvania and Virginia. Never-
theless, IL has been maintained that
the advantages to Canada of increas-
ed use of her transportation facili-
ties,
acilities, increased output of her mines,
and consequent greater employment
of labor, would more than compen-
sate for the difference in transport-
ation costs. The problem is one en
which economists hold strongly diver-
gent views, and on which the board
is seeking further light."
Approrimtttely one-third of Ha,
sail's 343,767 population lives in .the
city ofellonoluln and one-third re•
sides in the county of Honolulu, Hat
wail's trade with foreign countries is
around 59,500,000 worth ofpmports
and $2,000,000 worth of exports
annually.
LOOK AT YOUR LABEL
"I took Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vege-
table Compound because 1 was so
sick every month that I had to keep
my bed for two days and I suffered so
that Ifelt badly all the time. 1 had
been working in a factory but for a
long time was not able to work es f
was so rundown and nervous. My
friends told me of the Vegetable
Compound. I am now sound and
well and have gone back to work, I
have a good appetite, my color is
good and I am in good spirits."
Evelyn Bourque, 532 Alma Street,.
Monfort New Brunswick.
'iyd a t Pinkham's
' .egetabie.Gampouad.
Lydia. E.PInAta,n, Mad. Co„ Lrna. Mur e. 2. A
There are several tropical species
of earthworms that grow to be from
It costs twice as much 100 rail-
roads to replace the ties as the rails.
"HURRY ';P, GEORGE."
Quaint Little Story is 'Being Told of
';Ling George.
A quaint little story is beIm; told
concerning an incident that occurred
at the Duke of Devonshire's York-
shire home.
The icing frequently stays there en
his way to Balmoral, and on one such
occasion recently he encountered the
duke's little granddaughter, Arabella
Mackintosh, as he went down to
breakfast one morning.
He stopped to speak to her and
asked her what her name was.
"Arabella," she said simply, add-
ing: "What is years?"
"George," replied the King,
"Well, George,,you had btte1liur-
ry down to breakfast," e
Arabella, " 'cos granny will give you
no end of a scolding if you're late."
Hotel Longfellow Built •
and, with the exception of the out-
door swimming pool, the lines for
which were borrowed from those at
Banff and Lake Louise, it is a
handsomebuilding of early English
type of architecture. The opening
of the Pines will shortly precede
threea day
festival at
olis
Royal incommemorationn ofthe
three-hundredth anniversary of the
arrival there of Sir William
Alexander's Scottish colonistsunder
the
of
Scotland
granted by King lames 1.
This hotel, the New
It Pines at
Diwas by gby, N.S.,
Long-
fellow. Not, however, that he saw
it, thought about it or even
dreamed or imagined it. What he
did do towards it was render im-
mortal the Land of Evangeline, the
beautiful Annapolis Valley of which
Digby is the gateway, and so
create a tourist lure.
The New Fines is being built by
the Dominion Atlantic Railway to
further aid in the development of
tourist traffic in the Maritimes
73rltitin's Many Deacons.
The demands made by aviators.are
turnitrg Great Britain into a land of
lighthouses, each lighthouse flashing
out its Morse signal for the benefit of
aircraft 5ying by night or through
fog. Pilots will carry code books en-
abling there to note their positions
from the signals of the beacons,
The Neon light at Croydon has
been so successful that similar bea-
cons are to be placed at intervals
Worn: tlse math air routes, the land -
Ina grounds having the more power-
ful lights.
To Operate Salt Well.
The Alberta Government will oper-
ate its salt well in the McMurray
country this year. Salt Was struck at
1a depth of 670 feet.
OYAL MASTER
and
your
new
car
rrt HERR are three major features to
be considered in choosing tires
for your new car — economy, safety
and freedom from trouble.
—No other tire in the world will re-
turn as many miles per dollar as the
Royal Master.
—The Royal Master insures safety
from blowouts and punctures.
Not one Royal Master in a
thousand will'ever puncture.
Not one in five thousand will
blow out under two years of
service.
-With Royal Masters you will enjoy
care -free motoring not only this year
but for a long time to come.
h s 1)
Royal Masters cost more than any
other tire made and you cannot expect
them as standard equipment on your
new car.
Any dealer will, however, be glad to
equip your new car with Royal Masters
as an extra. You will find the addi-
clonal cost one of the best investments
you have ever made,
You are never far zc'tvay from a
DOMINI
b. H.
Sproule,
VirALTON...-,-,..,..,....,...,...,,....•....,..,M.,..,. J. S, L. Cummings