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The Brussels Post, 1929-6-5, Page 2WEDNESDAY, 1`JNIa 5th, 3:929 And teas from finest gardens make tl*e Mend» 11 !!SALAD T E l 'Fresh from the gardens' 621 Sunday School Lesson BY CHARLES G. TRUMBULL (Eftitor of Tho 8u nday School. T„noe) THE STORY OF THE (Temperance Lesson.) Sunday, June 9.---Jeremiah35 , 1-19 Golden Text, We will drink no wine (Jer.35 :- People are always interested in ob- ject lessons, something that appeals to the eye and other senses. Throu- ghout Bible history we find God us- ing object lessons freely in teachine and enlightening men as to their duty and His will. The parables of theLord Jews Christ included ob- BIBLE THOUGHTS ....For This Week ...se eiblo Thoe,thte memorized, wW prove pnculoua beritugo io nftec ycu,u. SUNDAY;, So we, who are many, are one body in Christ,—Roman.+ 12 :a MONDAY. But where the sun abounded, • did much more wound.—Rout, commanded you : therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts, the God of Israel ; Jonadab, the son o1 Reehab,' shall not want a man to stand before ire for ever," The family Was to continue in perpetuity. It is an interesting and significant fact that the ilechab)tee returned 1 from captivity many year:e later, and that traces have been found of them, in Arabia, professed descendants still existing in Mesopotamia and Ifo - men, This true story of the sturdy eth- lee, the moral ,backbone, the penis• Met filial devotion of that family that lived two and a half itii)leeni- mus ago, and that lacked so much that we have to -day of encourage - SLI inent to righteous living shames pres- If the Recrta- /r grit 2 j,et lessons. Sunday school teachers 5 0' r 1•-'i do well to use simple onieets in their TUESDAY, class work to illuminate truth and I am the living. bread which came fix it in the minds and hearts of the down from heaven. ---John 6 ; 51. pupils. — 1n this persi,tent pleading with 'WEDNESDAY. Hfs people to return to Hint and obey Therefore if any man he in Christ, His will for their OWfl well being, he ie a new creature. -2 Cor. 5.:17. God now has His prophet Jeremiah we. a remarkable object 1t•sson. Lookin" hack in Hi,tory almost n thousand a-+=ars before Jeremiah.'= time, we find that nt M p •s' father-in- ]aw a a 1. ni.e Jud,.. 1 :6t. and this nnmardic tribe rain,: into Cannan with the Israelites,. In David's time on: of thee l.r itee vee seemed Re- eled" and his d 3e,-,nhrnt w�•re .al led the Eze'hah,t, . Th •y were an --^� unusual people fee tees -11_411 to n SATURDAY. command of a .:nn :,f Y.,•eha, nam<•' giss do in r,+rn+ernhrrano• d m,. Jonadab, that they should drink no _ _1 see.. lI a^r.e, build no het n'.•;th••r .ems geed nor plant vineyards,but dwell in tents. Hiatt. not Get, orate tail tient to And now in J,.•r,miah'e day God 'lend:. This command of Jeremiah gave the prophet a (.-+range cam- th,•y had s p rf••+'t right to de<lln mand : "Go unto the house of the Now God drives home His trete- Rechabites, and ;peak unto them, endows object lesson upon Judah and and bring them into the House of the 3.11m'atemir 11- ntat16 ion Jerthamiahwhato o cb Lordraand give them wine to clare rk'sr'ndants of Revile)), not even Is drink." c Jeremiah obeyed God': orders, and he did so now. Gather_ng the Recha- bites, he bought them into one of the rooms of the temple. "And I set be- fore the sons of the house of the Rechabites pots full of wine and cups, and I Said unto them, Drink ve wine." They refused. "We will drink no wine," they answered, and gave as their reason the fact that their an- cestor had forbidden this, to them and their sons forever ; they had obeyed him and they Intended to continue to obey him—not only as t.n total abstinence, but in the other de- tails of dwelling in tents, doing no planting and the rest. It is to be noted that God did not command the Rechabites to drink wine. He. commanded his prophet to offer them wine. Then, as a com- mentator notes, it was Jeremiah, the I ..hall ,•lar•-. the 173: 17. Titt'It -WAY rot die, but live, and de- work-, of our. Lord.— Pisa. FRIDAY. A thousand years in thy ht are as yesterday, which is pa:.t. Pen. 90 . 4. raelites, had done so faithfully in nbeying a human command, put to shame the disobedience of the Israel iter, who would not obey God's owe commandment : notwithstanding 1 have spoken unto you, rising early and speaking ; but he hearkened not unto me." said God to Judab. There will be two results, declarer! the Lord. Judah must be punished ; the Rechabites should ne rewarded. "'I will bring upon Judah and up on all the inhabitants of Jercusalem all the evil that i have pronounced a- gainst them : because. I have pro- nounced against them : because 1 have spoken unto them, but they have not heard." But for the Revise. bites God pledged His inviolable word that "Because ye have obeyed the coimnandmeut of Jonadab, your flther and kept all his precepts, and done according unto all that he hath ent-day generations, bites could continue cwtscientiau:sly to be teetotalers, for no higher nto- r)-,• than that their ancestor asked them to he, should Onrtstians hesi- tate to take any equally high stand in the matter of abstinence from in- toxicating liquors because of the lova of Christ? Should they not be ready to say with the great apostle : "It is trood neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor any thing whereby thy brother etumhleth, or is offended, or is made weak"? (Rom. 14 ;21.) A Lesson Outline. God commands a severe test (vs. 1,2)., Total abstainers offered wine by a prophet (vs. 3-5). The wine refused, in filial devo- tion (6-11). God shames Judah by the Rechab- ites' sturdy ethics (12-15)• The penalty of disobedience (16, 17). The reward of obedience (13, 19) t a` guard your / guard Wood is the settlers winter harvest. When his own land is cleared he may still obtain employn'tent in the neighbouring forest. By care with fire, the wise settler protects his awn living. issued by nuthnr,ty of Honourable Charles Stewart, Mtn,ster of the Interior. PREVENT ORE5r riSE5 sfseissesses esseseeisses- HEADS LITERARY ASSOCIATION John W. Garvin, who was elected President of the Canadian Litera- ture Club at the season's, final meeting in McMaster. University, Toronto. wog 'OPUS ELS POST Ontario Hydro Municipalities' Surplus $2,016,451 Figures for Last ; Fiscal Year Issued 230 of 155 Utilities Had Revenue power from the Ottawa )river water - Enough to Pay Cost—Income In. Shed to Leaside' with a capacity do creases Total Plant Value signed to transmit 120,000 to 150,- Shows Big Gain During Twelve- 000 horsepower to the Niagara sys- Month Period tem ; the construction,et Trethewey Falls of the south branch on: the Toronto, May 21•.-eNet surplus of Muskoka river of a sixth develop,: $2,016,451,58 for all hydro mind - to for the Gearp;iatr Bay system,. their fiscal year, ending be completed in 1929, with afur- eipalities for December 31., 1928, is reported 111 bine capacity of 2,800,000 horse - the annual statement of the Ontario power. (Phe start of construction et released by Chairman A. Magrath. Elliot Chute, on the South river, one- REVENUE $26,376,465 third development tQ serve the Nipis- Revenues collected by the electric- sing system, which development will al utilities during the 12 months' have a capacity of 1,800 horsepower period totaled $26,3'76,465.09, and and also to be completed in 1929 ; total expenses amounted to 523,009; and competitionof the initial units 761.35, of which the latter sum 514,- of the transmission lines conveying 658,570 08 was expended in pewee power received at Ottawa from the 'Gatineau river plants to the eastern purchases. Sinking fund and debent- ure charges took $1,601,711.32 anis systems of the rmnmission, including $1,350,252.16 was chalked up again- the Central Ontario and Trent, the st depreciation. St. Lawrence, the Rideau and Ottawa Of the 255 municipal electrical u- sYstems. tilities included in this statement 230 had revenue from consumers suffi- Mine Rules cient to meet all operating expenses and fixed charges and to yield an ag- 1 Up-to-date gregate operating surplus of $2, Bring About Remarkable Progress in 031,029.96 for the year ; 11 were West—New Regulations—Changes able to defray all operating and fix- I Made to Govern Quartz Opera- ed charges except depreciation, but tions; Require Certificates. failed to set aside the full theoretic- i al amounts for that reserve by $4,-1 Ottawa May 21.—The recent re - 2, and only 14 gross deficits in markable progress made in mining respect of operating expenses and development on Government lands in fixed charges other than deprecia Western Canada, particularly in the tion. These deficits aggregated $4; provinces of Manitoba and Sasket- 735,862. chewan, has attracted nation-wide at - Not only did revenues increase by tention. upwards of $2,000,000 over the pre CLOSE SUPERVISION vious year, bot there were marked The Department of the Interior in wins in other resides .Total plant order to encourage and foster the fu. value of the$l, utilities has increased ture healthy growth of the mining (,err $10,081,469.16 in 1913 to $70; industry in that part of the Aomin• 234,599.35 in 1923, and the total as- sets from 811,907,826.86 to $98,.. ion has kept in constant touch with 312.335;45. Liabilities have not in- the rapidly changing situation and <•rensed in the sante proportion as the has by regulations and close super - asset. raisins from $1p,468,361.79 , vision taken measure to protect the to $47,183,564.07. 1interests of ,both the industry and the public. REVEALED SURPLUS New quartz mining regulations, The "pros'incial end of the hydro which contain provisions for the im- commission's report was tabled in ;movement of prospecting and opera - the second week in March and has al- ting conditions, have been drafted by ready been published, zt reveals a lion. Charles Stewart, Minister of surplus for the year of $940,663 af- the Interior, and passed by Order -in- ter providing for all expenses and Council to go into effect in April 1. meeting all necessary fixed charges ; 1929. The major changes that have a total investment now of $300,000,- been for the `purpose of bringing 000 and an accumulation of reserves over the various systems totaling 537,500,000. With respect to power supply for dal enactments. these systems, the reports records The new regulations provide that the competition of the initial unit for .every person and organization en - of the transmission line ,bringing gaged in mining activity on Domin • new regulations abreast of present conditions and of securi=ng uniform- ity by correlating fedoras and provin- Ben Bernie to Open Royal York Top, The Roi',li York Hotel as it stands out, even from the air. Below, Ben Bernie and his orchestra "I hope you like it". To millions of radio lis- Orchestra are also exclusive Brunswick recording teners-m, that announcement, coming from Ben artists and are featured by that company wherever Bernie, "the young maestro", 13 a fulfilled promise of phonograph records are played. symphonic dance music of extraordinary quality, Ben Berniis music is distinguished for the Thoagh Ben Bernie cannot possijrly have appeared ingratiating rhythm of his orchestrations and the to favoriteor before the road mieie, for whom he is symphonic overtones applied to eyncopation. It is the of radio broadcasters, haves, es name and theolpre-eminent amohg the 'new jazz" orchestras for mugs: for which it the world, have became household the quality of its music. Ben Bernie's orchestrations words throughout )aua emblematic of the hest are arranged with the greatest of care and artistry, that Ben Bernie nd hissrWorld-Famous orl Ire fart Or reason and are played by an aggregation of artists each of havethat Berme and It others 10 o open Otho new whom is an outstauding master of his medium. RoyalYork chosen l inve all nto. an to ngathe now Unrivalled hi its versatility, the Ben Bernie Royal Hotel Toronto. engagement of three weeks at the highest salary ever pals by a Orchestra olere, in addition to the familiar popular hotel. tunes, symphonic lazy renditions of classical sym- For the past seven years lien Bernie and his phonies. The Ben Bernie arrangement of "Schee orchestra have been featured at the hotel Roosevelt itrezade" presents in syncopated form one of the most in New York, one of the) est and most widely known •olorful of moaern symphonies, striking a balance hostelries of the Metropolis. The lien Bernie masic between the unresponsible gaiety of jazz and the of .dance lovers, young Grill old. favorite and iris equal forceeto lovers of the ole and and appealing sew in music. She ROYAL MASTER A. luxury Tire? Yes and No! If you drive a car for one year only, Royal Masters are, an extravagance. They last too long. If you drive a Car as long as the average man does, Royal Masters are a positive economy. One set will see you through. The Royal Master is the best tire ever made -- built with deliberate disregard for costs. The tread is double thick. Side-walls amade with extra plies of web fabric, guardedagainst scuffing. Not one Roy Not one:er in a thousand will in five thousand will ebloverwunc out undertwo years of service. Oti sale at every I DOINIiV ON_.IRE DEPOT T BRUSSELS ,_ - --- WALTON _ .. - - J. S. L. Cummings 0. H. 'Sproule, inn lands must hold a sinner's certif- ed with the minister of the interior icate. Such a certificate entitled the and in the ease of a condition assign - holder to stake and record three ment its acceptance and registration claims for himself and three claitns is at the discretion) of the minister. each of two other licenses or nine COLLECTION OF ROYALITY claims in all (a total of about 450 Considerable change has been acres) in each mining division, 1n made in the clause covering the col - the Northwest territories double this lection, of royality being paid at the number, that , is to say eighteen rate of two and half percent of the claims may be staked and recorded. value of the sales of the products of All claims must be mantel by four the location,] as at present provided legal posts as soon as reasonably pos- the new regulation require that the sible metal tags supplied by the De- payments he made on the profits of partment of the Interior must be at- the mine in messier $1.0,000 during tachedito the posts, any calendar year. This royality is Before a lease can be issued to a fixed at three percent of the annual licensee, two hundred days work profits over 510,000 and up to 81.- must be done on the, claim during a 000,000 ; five percent. of the excess period of five years or tens. Provis- over 51,000,000 and up to 55,000. - ions is also made so that if ,desirable, .000. improvement work may ,be done in ` a each year. When two hundred days Having one's portrait done in lip- stick is one of the latest crazes of the avorkl has been performed, the claim , fashionable world in Paris. surveyed, discovery established, cer- I The fourteen International Agri - and other req recordedeompner 11 cultural Congress, held biennially in Agri - and accepted the owner 1 a different European 'capital, will will for - entitled vto obtain a certifi-uPn take place this year, June 7-10, In rate improvements and upon payment within three months of the rental fee, he will be entitled to a lease for a period or twenty-one years, without further payment of rental. Renewal • for an additional period of like duration is subject to rental. All assignments or options, after the issue of a lease must be fil- the Rumanian capital, Bucharest. Of every 100 persons in the In- dian Empire 68 are Hindus, 22 are Mohammedians, 3 buddists, 3 follow the religion of their tribes, 1 is Christian, and 1 Sikh,, on the aver- age. The belief of the rc :raining two is varied. New Thigs re e w s EVERY member of every family in this com- munity is interested in the news of the clay. And no items are read with keener relish than announcements of new things to ent, to wear or to enjoy in the home. You have the goods land the desire to sell theta. The renders tof THE POST have the money and the desire to buy. '1'he connecting link is ADVEETIf31NG. Give the people the good news of new things at advantageous prices. tl'hey look to you for this "store news" and will respond to your messages. Let us show you that n Advertisement is an Intation"