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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1929-6-26, Page 3• SUPREME BUILDING ADVANTAGES w71 -14N building a new home or mak, vV Mg over an obi one, use this greatest of all wallboards, You will get these four supreme building advantages Pull %" thickness—giving greater struc. tura! strength and rigidity. Easier Applicalion—Goes up quirldy, •without muss--saviug tirae, labor and motley. Fire.Proof — Non -Warping Gyproc walls are fire barriers. Cannot crack, warp or shrink. Takes any Decoration—Including Ala- bastine, walipaper, paint and panels. eie .1•11.10/14111•41.1.11•114.04.6. THP IERUS3E10$ POST NEW SECRETARY ieReste*re '.4sseeeeete; 110 Ii Fireproof,Wallboa For Sale By Wilton & Gillespie - - Brussels, Ont. S. F. Davison - Brussels, Ont. Chas, F. Hansuld - Ethel, Ont. 1;:aameatrm•_.,,Msoal rwonwoo••••••.....••••ro.....miugme...rwmonucr...moowycauw*auemeemewsmosaaw.oav The Car Owner's Scrap -Book (By the Left Hand Monkey Wrench) Loads on Running Boards 'The hubcap line should be the limit width for loads on the left running boards, and six inches the link width for loads on the right elite. Worth Remembering at night can be combatted by tryin not to look at the approaching light. keeping the eyes focused on th ground a hundred feet aneaci of th ear and near the right side of th road, Another idea for the beginne is to follow directly behind anothe Harry H. Johnson, recently ap' pointed•Secretary of the Ontario ' Liberal Association. -- torted parts difficult to repair. Should the car figure in a mishap, it is e wise plan to run it into some com- petent 6Orviect station where the aiienment of wheele, axle and frame ran be checked over. This may over come much trouble, and in th long run, money will he saved. SPEED MEANS TIRE WEAR. , Fast driving means considerabl • wear on the tires. An actual test by e one of the tiro manufacturers of Alc ✓ ron has shown the tires on a car go ✓ ing 45 miles an hour will wear ou e e car. • Damage in .Minor Collisions Watch the upper radiator hose. connection. It gives out first be- cause it carries hotter water than the lower hose connection, and hot water i5 more destructive in its effects on hose lining. Advice to New Drivers. The annoying blare of headlights 11111•11•••••••••••••011. For, a -./,/// 1 \'\\\ • 11741/2E with Comfort allid Safety EQUIP Serious damage can occur to t sturdily constructed car by an ap parent light blow. Collisions with other cars, telegraph poles, verbs and other substantial impediments often result in bent frames and dis- fIIII=1110,110/11.L.10111./0/ MANCESI.M.M1001•11111/iline \x\\t1//,' egynotogpvzio tiVrTtlE63. ... the toughest, lengest-westrin,q, lit.'s on earth—and know that ever you go, your tires will carry you, through with greater safety and econ- omy than any others you can buy. The extra Firestone process of G um - Dipping which saturates every fibre of every cord with rubber, eliminating internal frietion, combined with the rugged Firestone safety tread, gives you not only long mileage, but long Crnis errusited mileage by reducing tire trouble to the vanishing point, See your nearest Firestone Dealer. FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER CO. OF CANADA, LTD. Hamilton - Ontario s 4 ... MOST MILES PER DOLLA Builds the Only OVASitiVOPPti TV W063 G. B. McINTYRE DEALER BRUSSELS Itwice as fast as those on a car driven {35 miles an hour. That's quite an in nrease for the difference of only 10 ; miles an hour. SLOW DRIVER A MENACE ON TRAVELED HIGHWAYS. The slow driver on the main-tra. veled highways, particularly on Sat- urday and Sunday, constitutes a real ' menace. The drivers who are used to traveling at 30 or 35 miles an hour pile up behind the car traveling from 15 to 20 and then mike an effort to dash around it. That is the point where the accident hazard climbs. STUDY COURSE EARLY It is the misfortune of many a moa tor traveler to pass places of historic industrial, or scienie interest without realizing their important presence. Knowing in advance just what is im- mediately ahead on the journey is :01 especially effective way- of avoiding this frequently disappointing exper- ience. THEY WON'T BURST Don't woriev about the tires pick- ing up additional pressure on the long drive. The manufacturer al- lowed for it. HAVE TOOLS HANDY. Don't cover tools with luggages in packing the car for the tour. TURNING SUDDENLY Front -Wheel skids, than which there is no more dangerous variety, ueual- ly are the product of turning the steer ing wheel suddenly. Twisting it quickly on a dry pavement and on a slippery one is far different. CAUSE OF MISING An air leak in the intake manifold will cause the engine to miss much in the Sa1110 manner as a fouled or faul- ty spark plug. In removing mani- fold gaskets for any resteen it is well to use new Ones in ressembling the unit. PULLING OUT OF HOLES. A motorist should stop the oar the instant it becomes stuck In sand or mud. He should look owed the situ; ation instead of forcing the car and burying it deeper and deeper. If the rear wheels are stuels in the mud, dig holes in front wheels for them to fall into give the initial etart, and if the car does not continue then block thb rear wheels instantly and repeat the operation. Place brush in front of the rear wheels and turn them as slowly as possible to keep from churning. If one rear wheel is on good road try putting on the hand brake fairly tightly to destroy action of the differential, or fasten the mir- ed wheel so that it cannot turn, and the other wheel will do the work and slide the mired wheel along the ground. 1 Thirty Trifles an hour is the mosl economical driving speed. A wrong tilt of the front axle will cause hard steering ,and wheels to shimmy. Sticky. valves and a lean mixture make a poor combination and oft- eti a dangerous one, A spring which has a broken leaf should be replaced at Duce. Springs permitted to remain hi this weaken- ed condition lend to the failure of ether leaves until finally the main leaf gives way in a short time. 35 ON SUNDAY 40, HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS, TI -IE PRINCE OF WALES, celebrated his 35th birthday on Sunday. Mom Sunday School Lesson BY CHARLES G. TRUMBULL (Editor of' Tho Sunday School Throe) 7e.a REVIEW: PROPHETS' AND KINGS miah and Judah's captivity was a OF JUDAH'S DECLINE !period of 170 years, about B.C. 758 to 588. During this time God spoke (Sunday, June 30th). continually to His rebellious people by two inspired prophets, Isaiah and Golden Text. Jeremiah, and two righteous Kings, I have loved thee with an ever- Hezekiah and Josiah. God never lasting love, therefore with lovingl kindness have I drawn thee. (.Jr. leaves Himself without His witnesses even when men are doing their best 31:3.) to forget Him. Isaiah was given one of the great- est visions of God ever granted to man on earth, with the result that he saw the uncleanness of himself and his people, and could deliver God's message with authority. He is the great prophet of redemption, and of Israel's final restoration as a nation at the return of David's Greater Son. What is the most significant word in the title of this review lesson? It is not "prophets," and it is not "kings," and it is not "Judah's." It is a dark, tragic word, which stands 0+11 in spite of the true prophet: God raised up, and the true Kinge; God set over His people, anti in spite of the fact that Judah was the best part of the "peculiar people" specially chosen and honored and blessed of God. The signifier't word in this review is "decline." The best part of God's chosen people had gone steadily down hill in sin and re- bellion against God, to their ruin,. How can this strange ract be ac- counted for? Let us remember a still stranger and sadder fact. Was this decline of a nation an • isolated thing in Bible history, and in the world in general? So far from its being iso- lated, it is typical; it is the usual thing. Israel, the ten tribes, had declined to their ruin before Judah, the two tribes, followed their exam; ple. And every great nation known to history, apart from those now ex- isting, has done the same. Man- kind has always done the same. A study of the great dispensations of Bible history is revealing in this conneetion. Bible Otudents••differ as to just how the great ages or dispen- sation$ are to be distinguiehed, but the generalfart is clear and outstand ing, that every time God has given men a fresh stavt, with everything in their favor, men have utterly fail- ed and have had to be visited with God's judgment. The Scofield Re- ference Bible; invaluable foe ilss spiritual illumination in these mat- ters, notes the Dispensation of In- nocency ,when man (Ailed under the simple test of obedience in a perfect environment, Eden ((len. 3:24); the Dispensation of Conseience, ending in failure and the judgment of the Lord (Gen. ; the Dispensation of the Human Government ((ien. 9: 5, 6), under wheh men failed and wore judged at Babel (Gen. 11;7, 9); the Dispensation of Promise, when God called out His chosen peo- ple Israel ((ien. 12;1); the Dispeit- sation Of Law (EXCUI., 198), LS1101 failing under both tests; Promise and Law, with captivities as a 'result; the Dispensation of Grace (John l:j 17), begun nt the cominsr of the Lord , Jesus Christ, it which see now live, but which the Scriptures predict will mid by rean's utter failure and the judgment of Armageddon and other judgments deelared in *Revelation; , rand the Dispensation of the King- dom, or the reign of Chris e in His persoual, visible presence on this earth, ending in inan's final rebellion against God and the final judgments (Rev. 80: 7-15): The review, therefore, of these los- sons in Judah's national decline may well be studied against the larger beck -ground of the course of the dispensations. From Isaiah to Jere - King Hezekiah and Josiah show what righteous monarchs can do even in the midst of sinning and rebellious nations. They led their people hack to God. standing and persecution were part, of Eit ‘both figure as he pleaded with God's peo- 1. price for his testimony ; mieunder• Old Testament propnecy, a solitary ple. Sueh a prophet paid a costly Jeremiah was one of the heroes oT Israel and Jeremiah were divinely enabled to look beyond God's judgments to God's grace in restor- ing Israel ad Judah, and finally -- tide is still in the future—in estab- lishing this People in their (-oven- anted Land 418 the most favoured and blessed in order that all zillions of the earth may he blessed through them Thus, after the tragedy of Judith's collapse in captivety, her King's sone slain before his eyes put out and he, bound with fetters of brass, carried captive to Babylon the quarters les- son conclude with a psalm of praise. God had to deal with his people in judgement ; but "He hath not dealt with us after our sins ; nor rewarded us according to our iniquities." For "the merry of the Loreis rrom ever- lasting to everlasting." After man'e continued failures, and God's neces- sary judgments, God will have the RETIRES AFTER 50 YEARS Rev. Dr. W. 11 Hineas, of Toron- to, closed his active service on Sun- day, after having actually preached 49 years and 9 months. 'The Dr. was a brother-in-law of the late Rev. Josiah Greene, a well-known Metho- dist preacher in Huron Co. WTDNI0SDAY, JT.lNli 26th, 1929, A FINE, MAN PASSES. • 1-1 B. Chant, Superintendent of the Publie T.7tilitiee at Clinton. pueeed a— way 1st week. For year'e di -Teased had beim a prominent citizen of the "Hub". • last woe(' will one of grace and I mercy, as redeemed men (pate; for- ever from sin, and the righteousness of God fills their lives and the uni- VOrSO through all eternity. REQUEENING COLONIES AND WHY A most important operation in the bee -yard, is the 'giving of a new queen to a colony. Its importance ; nes in the fita that the eeeen is the erieitcat /miter in the peienietine of the honey prop ; that is. .,he all the hos :1 oi' the eo:oey, whi. turn proline the erop, aeutily em- sidered as being proportional in ;dal to the number of honey gatherers resent The iimm, therefore, must be rig- orous. Ta eeceire thie duality Of vi- goraseme beekeepers make a prac- tice of requeening their coin:lies each year, while others, who think that a queen is at her second year, requeen every second year. Whichever of these methods is used, the practice in most common use in Canada is to regimen the col- onies towards the latter part of the main. flow, during the last weiik in July or first week in August. This gives n young . queen ample time to increase the strength of the colony in young bees hefore winter ems in, and does not affect the 'honer crop. Besides this wholesale method of requeening, tle:re are times through- out the season When necessity de- mands Gm givine of El 110W queen im- mediately. In the spring, one some- timee finds a eolony queenlees or hended by a drone layer. At sural time. tht beekeeper who has winter- ed a few spare queen, for such an emergeney, can immediately requeen his colony while others, lees provi- dent, must send to the week for a queen. During the summer months ateo, losses frequently oceur. Much time is saved here, too, by the beekeeper who rears' his own queens, and who has spare queens in his mating -boxes on whieh he can draw to replace these loeses. For methods of reeemening see Bulletin No. 33 le:men ny the Dee Division, Central Experimentel Farm, Ottawa. Ont. : 'After having an operation, I was very miserable, weak, nervous and very near unfit re work. 1 saw Lydia S. Pinkhartes Vegetable Compound advertised and tried it anti believe It helped me wonderfully. I have no weak spells any more, the pains have left me and ray nerves are much bet. ter. 1 feel safe in saying Lydia E. Pinkhem's medicines have helped me wonderfully."—Mrs. Win, H. Beechteller, BOX 443, ?*sr Coilvrae, Ontario. A CAMPHOR SUBSTITUTE People who dislike the odor of camphor moth balls should know that bags of dried tang peeved among woolen garnients will answer the /sure pose of keeping out moths. Make email bags of white muslin and fill them with the dried crushed leaves and sew up. Place a half dozen of these in the packing box and you will not be troubled with moths. FREED FROM EXILE Former King Ferdinand of Bul- garia, who abdicated in its -as and has been since in exile in Coburn, Ger- many, has been given permission to return to his native country, where his son, Boris. now rules'. The ex- iting expressed a desire; to visit his country before he died and his exile was ended by en amnesty bill. ew T re ings 9 ews EVERY member ot every family in this eom- munity is interested in the newts of the day. And no items are read with keener relish than announcements of blew things to eat, to wear or to enjoy in the home.. You lutVe the goods land the desire to sell them. The readers [of THE POST have the money tun/ the desire to buy, The connecting link is.ADVERTISING. Give the people the good news of new things at advantageous prices, They look to you for this "store news" and will respond to your messages. Let us show you that "An Advertisement is an Invitation"