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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1929-6-26, Page 6WBD2' Jd1)AY, JUNES 19th, 1929. Lucky Children Indeed, If Their Mothers Know and Serve With all the bran of the whole wheat Children don't have to be coaxed to eat it—they like the crisp, crunchy shreds of baked whole wheat, They have to chew it—and that means sound teeth and good digestion. Paper inserts in each package offer a surprise for the children. White Pine Blister Bust The Dominion Botanist, lE:xperi• mental Farm calls attention to a Cmtdian white pins, Blister rust -is a fungeovs disease affecting all pines wh:.h have th' it needles in groups of five. It is 1:'.,t Cam.do 1 d trate+;c but was brought t t from Europe about twenty y-nrs ago on white pine nit • ry o 1 Introduced to Ontario and Prt It Columbia about tae snme tine it bit, since th:•11 i r •1 now it is pres- ent •,u eat !(('oilsSnit` e e. tI r n t this country in width wiiitit rude occurs. Irl Eur‘os. it ha, no., ,1 . o serious that it hat : a 0' e *u abandon the. use „thit p -.t1,. and unli it it eontrnll.d it may prose equally sena is in Caracas The fungus ent, i.= the tie.,, by way of the me—dies and Lena there grow; downward into the. ba,k. For about three years after a tree has become infected th;'r no v noticeable evidences of disease, bt t after that time the disemied pari Of the branch ttsstnnee a charact: ri -t- ic dull yellowish groan to Or n ^o colour. During May and June con- spciuous orange—yellow bliters break through the hark. Thee con - WITH •ETN F.`G E tui[[ a very fine powder, composed of .spores, µhuh .serve to dio:centin; ate the fungus. Thege spores cannot inject pine trees but spread to either wild or (i.tltivatetl currants and gooseberries where they continue to grow, In later summer and early fall a spore is produced on the cur- rent or gooseberries which goes back to pines and- so the life cycle ,t 1" c0mp1c t t, 1b eel trees of all size., oreub- j ei•t to nttark young lune or killed much more i1 wkly than nature trees. The ti , 1 1.,ei taken a num- ber ,,2 • n ars to .tb1 r t bat it is now showing toi to a sitrion:; degree on white pie - • r pines arc urged to e xamitti their trees and determine whether or not they are diseased. as it is only at this time of year that the synt;'ton' of disease are at all conspicuous. There r b.ct one ,•:feet ve means to ptioteet the white pines and that is l,y relnoVlli!_". ail aura. nts and goose- h•rrie r: itt the immediate vicinity of the t 1 Dominion Department of „Aire has issued an illustrated r;,e•esls,r deraiilla with blister rut and this can be obtained free upon ap- plication to the Publishing Branch, Dept. of Agriculture, Ottawa, Ont. R.YrAlAYF..._,,,LKYz__,171c Yz..4f.Yr__YzA.a.g- Beautiful Silverware as t a Xodern Necessity X X NAl Ann what better indication of 41 taste and retinetacae than a service of celebrated COMMUNITY PLATE The T.ib6eware De LAW By reason of our complete stocks this store is fast becoming known as headquarters for this delight- ful ware. Prices Most Reasonable J. R. WENDT Jeweler Wroxeter — Ontario 10 1/ �c-� � tom, QY tk iasis sn R 2[ sk s4 siz st sr[ Im 18 Itexamomeasmostoomagannwassam APROPOS Rambling Pete—What's the Idea of weaning then antics in the sum- mt r? time? Dreary Dan—Why, I goes to a fat n house and tell the lady I have just returned from a north pole ex- pedition and she helps- me out, 70t TRY ARBITRATION Father—You've been a very naughty boy ; I wonder what I'd better do? Young Hopeful—Can't we have a peace conference, dad? GIVE IT A TRIALI We respectfully suggeest that folks spend as touch time practising religion as they do quarrelling a- bout it. OF COURSE A convict who escaped from a pri- son in New York :tole fifty dollars from the head warden. For running expenses preumably. Salesman—Why don't you buy a new ear? That wreck isn't fit fo your wife to drive. Man-- .I know it. That's why 1 keep it. lot TH *RIVI5S* POST- Fretting OST Frettin' about HAY FEVER ? Or Summer Asthma? Stop fret - ling. Stop the play Fever, Take RAZ -MAH CAI'SULI:S before the attack is due. We know people who had Hay Fever 20 years who stopped it with RAZ -MAH, You either get relief from one 81 box or your money back. No sprays, snuff, smokes or serums, No harmful or habit-forming drugs, DON'S TAR THAT H YFEVER� RAZ The Goderich Sommer School JULY 15th to JULY 22nd. The Program for the Goderich SOUTH AMERICAN INDUSTRY, phllded Reef Trade Grown 10 Hugo Proportions. Tile drilled beef trade of Soutlt May1'1ea has growls to liege moimr- tion burial;. repentyrare. 1'hxr, are now scores of Vessels which aro ex- anelvelY t 110aged on the tn4 at -carry - Ing trade while tine new and lnxur- 10us liner -caro bunts have just been put into calami. ir,n. 'Thea( tach tc^ =maculate 160 ldrst-class p tsieugr rs and tiairy the chilled carlli0soli of 410, 000 laud of cattle. Ilcudrede of thousands of Argen- tine steers are annually rounded up Iei up -000 try "estanefas," or ranches, and are then brought down t0 the 'frlgerlfatas,'e or eb1111110 boilers, of Buenos Ayres. Ono s'ue1t "frlgerltoJo,e' sitar((ter alollgsfde the Bora, at• Buenoi Ay'rr•5 South Dock, covers an area of mail) SIX ae1•r•c, and ie roughly livid, d iu.0 halves by 1t lane on one side of which Ile the cattle Pens, and on Lim other the factury buildings thcm- selvea, The carcasses are dealt with at a terrific rate, while horns, hoofs, hide, Sumner School in connection with avd so on, are cleansed and put ;o a the London Conference of the United 1 Ilundre Church of Canada has been issued, and me will be seen from the outline ' published below, a very instructive Series of sessions has been -arranged Of special interest to the general public will be the evening meetings, to which the citizens of Goderich and vicinity are cordially invited, A special class for ministers will lie conducted by Rev, Prof. Davidsin, of Emmanuel College. A pennant is offered for the pastoral chrage hav- ing the largest delegation was won W. Rev. �i.A as year Brussels. Ire . last by Bremner, of Brucefield, is the press dent of the school ; Rev. W. R. r Alp, of Auburn, vice president ; Rev. E. J. I'.oulston, of Arkona, setae- tary ; Miss Mabel Baillie, of Goder- ich, treasurer : Miss .teary Clarke, of Goderich, registrar, and Miss Violet I NEEDED FREQUENTLY Sharpe, of Dashwood, lihrairian. i Salesman (to customer who has The preident of the London Confer- . just bought a bucket} : "What ad- once and the chairman of Huron. dress shall I send it to, sir?" Presbytery are honorary presidents Customer : "Oh 1.5, A,e'vea-riven- and Rev. R. B. Cumming, B. D., of 00 ; and I should like you to .send it 13entniller, is the dean of the school. along at once because the house is The daily program and the topics el. on fire." addresses for the evening meetings len and Sunday services are given be - MUST HAVE BEEN SHIPPED low : i WEST DAILY PROGRAM 1 "Prehishoric oysters were found 7.45—Breakfast ' in the Potamic River recently." 8.45 --Worship Period : Rev. C. "Yes. I think I ate some of them M. Parr. in a restaurant the other day." 0,1S—Bible study : "Jesus Christ both and the Meaning of Life," led by I STRAIGHT LINE THO' Rev, Messrs. Alp, Clarke, Cumming "Has the trolley car gone yet?' and Connor, under the direction of the swaying gentleman asked earn- Rev. C. A, Myers. r tly. —10.00—Recreation Period : Led "•No, not yet." by Rev. S. J. Mather', Gesto, Ont. "Must have gone. Can see its 10.20—Students will divide into tracks plain as anything. the following groups of study Y. P. clot Leadership by Departments. Fellow - GOOD TEST ship and worship Rev. M. C. Parr ; ' Seaside Lothario—"What is there Mission : Foreign Miss Isabel Me - 1 can do to prove i love you?." Intosh, Ronan, China ; Home— Rev.i Hero Worshipper—"How about J. A. Cotmie, D. D., Supt. of Mis- swimming the Atlantic?" cions for Manitoba ; Citizens : Rev. c==icire C. W. DeMille, Stratford ; Literary JUST THE OPPOSITE and Recreation : Rev. S. J. Mathers, Hubby—Don't bring me any Geste. more bills ; I can't face them. 11.00 --Young People's General Wif —You needn't, darling. I Methods RSV. C. A. Myers, D. I). drily want you to foot them. 11.00 Dismission Peron for Minis* ters, led by Rev. Prof. Davidson. Island of Orleans—lsland of Bacchus 'the ship may he as aid us the,cvyvstde shrine, and r, my sen trump where tmrtler found the Indian and rho vines. The house by the road is more thou 250 years WF li1 t wi::n found quantities of vines such as WY ti.tt had 14000 nowhere else in the world and which led us to call this tho `Island of Bacchus'". Thus the Saint Malo eaptain, Cartier, who discovered the Isle of Orleans in 1535 first named it. the Ships of the adventurer, coat hundred ears. Four Y explorer, the pioneer, tho builder of empire and later, great shies of commerce followed those of Cartier, but the Lila of Bacchus has not known them all and has slept before the portal of the new world for many generations. Not that it has been forgotten, but that the bigger ships have gone by. Industry has not destroyed its charm and today it remains, if not the pristine isle of Cartier a piece of old France as translated by those who ohortly followed hints The illustrations above typify the island. "Progress" has been slow. Its people have learned the secret of content. Their tongue, their modes, their' homes are of a century ago. They weave their catalegne• live in homespun. They are blessed with old people. Yet, a short ferry distance away, Quebec with its ramparts, its Chateau Frontenae and its ocean shipping, keeps pace with the advance of the times. h quaint lits a villages Ateste '1 [t e1 Ste.P Intl c, one o g where wealthy Quebec has its summer homes, an inn has this year been opened, so that it is now possible for the visitor to rest for a while and absorb at leisuire the charm and beauty of the forgotten island. But he must be prepared to eat of the good viands of the Habitant and to live a little closer to the homespun. The people of the island will welcome him with good -nature but they have little liking for the modern. They have the secret of content and good -living, on the Island of Bacchus. t The name of the new Inn is La Catalogue and itoncewas a eeignorial mansion. 12.30 --Dinner. ' 2:30—Recreation : Supervised by Rev, S. 3. Mathers. G.00—Supper. 7.15—Vesper 'Service: "Christ's Way for 1Iis Followers," Rev. Pro- fessor Davidson, Toronto. • 5,00 p.m. Public Meetings: Citizens of Goderich and vicinity are cordial- ly invited. i Evening Meeting at 8 o'clock Monday ---Reception to students tendered by the Y. P. Societies of the Goderich churches at 0 p. nt. in Nortit st. church. Tuesday—Rev. C. A.' Myers, D. 1),. Secretary Ed. of Religion; Edu- cation, Toronto. Wednesday. --Rev, J. A. Connie, D. D., Supt, of Missions for Mani- toba. Thursday—"Ireland and the Irish in Lantern rn Slide and Story." Rev. 7•:. W, Young, Dundas Centre 'United Church, London. Friday- Missionnry i'ageant by the ;ancients of the School under the dh'eetion of Miss Isabel :ilclntoilt, 110nan, China. Sunday Services. d uses by the staff of Ger- alums, Greeks, Argentines Lind Czechs. From tate time the ships leave Buenos Ayres to the time they dock � In London the thousands of carcasses must be kept at exactly the right tern- perature. For this reason each hold is surrounded with a complicated sys- tem of pipes containing a retrigerat- ing mixture. 11.00 ---Student;, will attend local churches, 9,O0Communion Service and Con- secration tondueted by Rev. Prof. Davidson nod ne.v. 11. C. Parr, 7.00 --Closing Service : Rev. C. A. Myers, D. D., Torrntto, Secy hoard of Religions 1 elueation. HURON COUNTY Goderich is going to celebrate Dominion Day. Y Preparations are under way for observing the 80th anniversary of the foundation of Bayfield parish. The church of England had its be- ginning in this community in 1049 and on the occasion of the eightieth birthday it is planned to observe in a fitting' manner. Special services will held morning and evening on Sunday June, 23rd, and Sunday,- Juno 30th, when former rectors of the parish will be present. T}11E GAZELLE. Can Burt at the ITnte oi' Sixty. Miles au Hour. While 1 t i t exploration tour IIn� 4 e of tl i the little-known t-hnh n Gobidesert, R ❑3 Chapman Andrews reports a wonder- ful exhibition of running by a gazelle. 144' vats nn a hard soon h plain when we came abreast of hien, he writes, about three hundred yards off to the right. He trotted parallel with us for tt few moments and then broke Into 1t run. For a furlong be held even at thir- ty-five miles an hour; then I stepped on the. accelerator. He did likewise-. i Another push brought us up to forty miles an hour. He seemed rather sur- prised at that and slightly annoyed that anything should challenge him. After a quarter of a mile lie evident- ly decided that the matter has passed it joke and he would end it right there. Then he really bagau to run. I could not better forty-five miles an hour on that going and the gazelle drew in swiftly on a long slant, pass- ing; fifty yards ahead of us. Once across, he slowed clown, gave a final leap as though be were on rubber tit,•s, and stopped to gaze curiously at ' the Car. He had a ami a fairly good race, for he started 300 yaids away and we were going at forty five lanes an hour on a straight line. He was certainly doing sixty miles an hour. I MOTOR, PRODUCTION. Output of 10.213 Largest In History of Trade, The 1928 output of automobiles in the United State (factury sales) was 4,257,354, the largest gest in the history of the Industry, according to the Department of Commerce, and the same is true of Canadir:u prad1riinn• which vvas 249,383 ears. The to- tals, by years, for tlu' i'nited 3tet-1 and Canada were given by the De- partment as states A ' r Year • United ti it s Cana la 1921 861,003 15.675 1922 2.544,176 1(2,u:,a 1923 4,034,012 106,435 I924 3.602,540 135,246 1925 4,265,030 161„89 11)26 4.201,135 204,727 1927 3.401,336 170.427 1925 4,357,3434 242,382 The 1028 output of passenger ears was 3,£26,613, or 29,7 Per rout. greater than in 1927, while tha: of trucks was 630,771, or 16.7 per ,•r-nt. larger than for the previous year. World's Highest City, La Paz, Bolivia, where the war clouds have been hovering of late Is the lofdest capital in tie world, for it stands on a mnunta.in top I2.470 feet above sea -level. This is 2,0410 feet higher than Quito, in Ecuador, and 5,000 feet higher than Mexico CO.y. Its nearest rival for htieht Is the far - distant Lhasa, whirl stands at an al- titude of 11,530 feet. The mean tem- perature of La I'az Is 50 degr, es Fah- renheit, but 11 Is never rea11yy warm there except in the sunshine, and the cold nights are unrelieved by fireside contf,nts, for the simple reason that the folk have nothing to burn, ;her,• being neither coal nor trees In the desolate mountainous regions around the city. Hing of ('locks Proposed. A German inventor has suggetstee the advisability of /nuking one clack to 1,r at timo for the whole world. From some ventral observatory its tirka would be broadcast hist amly by fireless to the whole clvllizrd world, giving a single accurate tlate. Clocks throughout the world would be brought to agreement as eioso as one ono -hundred -thousandth of a se- cond, and the inventor"s elaborate plans include the use of television de- vices to synehrnulze the earth''s clocks with the master time-ptece, Rolled 'Whale. Whale flesh was a recognized ar- ticle of food during tho fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. In England whale e restated and serve o was either ast.d d on a t s spit .nrboiled and served d ith peas, The 100000 and tail wore the favorite parts. Lite or Wood Ut Water. The average life of wood In sol water is from ten to fit teen years, In tropical waters It may be only two years. Sound piles have, however, been removed from fresh water in which they have stood for more than 1,000 years. the Master Salesma 1.o, the people of the earth do me homage. I am the herald of success for men, merchants, manufacturers, municipalities and nations. I go forth to tell the world the message of service and sound merchandise. And the world lis- tens when 1 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 salary paid me than any other sales- man on the face of the earth. The fabled lamp of Aladdin never called to the service of its master genii half so rich and power'fui as 1 am, to the man who keeps me constantly on his payroll. I Hold the Business of the seasons in the hollow of my hand, I com- mand the legions of fashion, mold the styles and lead the world whithersoever 1 go. 1 drive unprin- cipled business to cover, and sound the death -knell of inferior merchandie. Frauds are afraid of me be- cause 1 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 amen to fight the battles of freedom beyond the seas and raised billions of dollars to foot the bills. Nations and kings pay me homage and the business world bows at my feet. I sow broad fields for you to reap a golden harvest. 1 Amilaster Salesman at Your Service 1 Am Adv&tising —x— Waiting Your Command —� The Post BRUSSELS