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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1929-11-6, Page 6BIBLE THOUGHTS For This Week aisle Thon¢htu mon ortzed will prove priceless herniae in alrter yo.ro. WI NESDAT, NOV, 6th, 1929. S. MI.NU TE. READY IN TWO A HOT NOURISHING BREAKFAST With all the bran of the whole wheat All the body"building elements of the whole wheat, nothing added, nothing taken away. So easy to serve and so delicious- ly nourishing. Gives new vigor and life to tired tissues. Serve with hot or cold milk or fruits. 4114.44144. SUNDAY. T]tou shalt be like a watered gazette:, and like a spring, whose wvatexs fail not.—Isa. 58:11. MONDAY. Riches and honour aro with me ; ye'•, durable riches and righteous- ness. --Prov. 8:18. t1 TUESDAY, Fcr they shall say such thinve declare plainly that they seek a country.— Heb. 11:14. WEDNESDAY. iHe keepeth the paths of judg- meat, and preserveth the way of his saints, Prov. 2 :8. THURSDAY Tte Lord liveth in truth and in righteousness. —Jer. 4 :2. FRIDAY. For as many are led by the Spirit co. God.— Romans 8:14. SATURDAY. The foundation of God standeth acre, having this seal, the Lord kroweth them that are his. —2 Tim. 2 .19. • o k CREOSOTED FENCE -POSTS Experiments are being conducted ex the Indian Head nursery station of the Department of the Interior to •determine the life of fence -posts treated with preservatives by the use of equipment such as could be used en the average farm. In 1916 sev- eral posts of Russian poplar ( a very perishable species) were specially treated with creosote and were set in the ground in the spring of 1917. 'Fen years afterwards these posts were apparently as good as ever; on the other hand, untreated posts of tee same species of similar size rott- ed out in the second and third years. —O PARKS ATTRACT et/REIGN TOURISTS Under the policy of development An, publicity being carried out by tee Dominion Go••ernment the na• I tiopal parks are not only r+,nderin. a wider service each year to Cana- ri•aes themselves. but they ere arid ins; to the knowledge of Canada a• broad and attracting• ee th.• Iemale ion thousands of visitors from other countries in every Hart of the globe. A MAN'S PRAYER TEACH me that 60 minutes make an hour, 10 ounces one pound, and 100 cents one dollar. Help me to live that I can lie down at night with a clear conscience, without a gun under my pillow and urhaunted by the faces of those to whom I have brought pain. GRANT that I may earn my meal tickeron the square, and that in earning it I inay do anto others as I would have them do unto nee. Deafen ire to the jingle of tainted money, and to the rustle of unholy skirts Bind me to the faults of the other fellow, but reveal to me tee own, GUIDE me so that each night when I lock across the table at my wife, who has been a blessing to me, I will have ncth+ng to conceal. Keep me young me arch to laugh with little children at+d sympathathetic enough to be ca :cderate of old age. ANIS when comes the day of dark- ened shades and the smell of flowers, the tread of footsteps and crunch- ing of wheels in the yard—make the ceremony short, and the epitaph short "Here lies a mane' " a DIARYING AN IMPORTANT INDUSTRY. Dairying is one of the oldest and one of the most important of the industries of Canada. It owes MI mc'ern development to the introd- uction of the factory' system for the meking of cheese and butter, to the invention of the eontrifugal create sepr, rator, and to the facilities afford- ed hy improved methods of cull storage. IMPORTANT FOSSIL BEDS The Red Deer veil •y of Alberta is c:a+rdim„ly rich is fcesil remains of dirosaurs and other extinct verte- brate animals, which are being slow- ly exhumed by eros'on of the sides of the valley. It is the most pro- ductive collecting field in Canada and has already yielded much new sed well preserved .naterial to the museums at Ottawa, Toronto. Ed- n,o :ton, and New York. In Christian art, the goat is a syr. hol of impurity. At the end of 1a:t year, there were 25,550,000 automobiles regist slid in the United States. fIlillltlr There are a great many ways to do a ;ob of printing ; but quality printing is only done one way—THE BEST. We do printing of all kinds, and no matter what your needs may 'be, from name card to booklet, we do it the quality way. P. S.—We also do it In a way to save you money, The Post Publishing Douse 11 - HUDSON BAY PORT: Churchill, to Open Neat Fear, WAl De New Outlet for Middle of Continent, At a bottle shaped naturat harbor on the western shore of Hudson Ilay, 500 miles frdm the Arctic Circle, gangs of workers are putting up raile way sheds, deepening the narrow channel with drudges and making ready for the construction of a dock. The scene of this activity of the thia- min Bay Railway—now officially styl- ed Churchill, without the fort, for the sake of brevity. Churchill's petectnent population consists of a Mounted Pollee unit, a Hodson Bay Company agent sed the caribou, coyltes and foxes that are the natural denizens of the north. In three or four years It will be a busy seaport. In a generation it may rank with the Dominion's chief centres of export trade. The laying of steel from the settled prairies to their nearest seaoonet, bringing Europe 1,200 mike closer to the wheat - growing plains, Inc changed Church- ill's status, The place has a history, and a longer 000 than any inland town in Western Canada. On the earliest t:cmcdian maps it appears as Port de aluuck alter Jens Munck, a Danish officer who wintered there in 1619-20 with the loss of his crew, except three and himself. The Hudson Bay Company, trading into Canada's northern waters in the seventeenth century, quickly found that It was the finest harbor on the bay and In 1686 gave it the name of Lord John Churchill, afterward the. first Dulte of Marlborough, who had been elect- ed governor of the company In the previous year, Churchill Is one of those rare har- bors which seem made to order In their design. The Churchill river, taking rise as a string of narrow lakes in Northern Saskatchewan, flows northeast for a thousand miles and empties into the bay. Near its mouth it broadens suddenly, then narrows again at the junction with the open sea. The wide part of the stream is Churchill Harbor, protected by rocky cliffs rising tie seventy feet and forming a magnificent natural breakwater. When there is a heavy sea on Hud- son Bay itself—and there often is— the waters of Churchill Lagoon are unruffled. The harbor is six miles long. At its narrowest it la one mile across when the tide is out, at its broadest tour miles wide when the tide is in. Here is room enough for a vast fleet of merchant vessels. Just what the ice hazard are is still a matter for argument and will be accurately determined only by ex- perience. '"Canada's Arctic port" Is one title which has been bestowed on Church- ill, although it Is not far enough north to deserve that adjective. Stockholm and the Orkney Islands are in the same latitude; Oslo and Leningrad are both nearer the Pole. The Winters are severe and when a cold northeastern blows in January there are more comfortable places than the western store of Hudson Bay. Still, there is compensation in the temperate heat and length of the summer days. Eighteen hours of sun- shine daily Le Churchill's normal quuta in July. The waters of Hud- son Bay are on that account warmer than those of the Great Lakes in midsummer. Bathing in the bay is comfortable until September, and Western Canada looks forward to having its own summer resort near by with the long sandy heath at Churchill as the principal feature. Geographically Churchill has a strategic position. It is almost at the exact centre of Canada, and it is within a 24- or 36 -hour journey from almost all points lu the Canadian Middle West and the North Central States: Take a compass and draw a circle with Churchill as centre and a radius of 1,200 miles, Within that orbit is included not only the whole of North Dakota, South Dakota, Min- nesota and Wisconsin, prartically all of Montana and a great part of Wyo- ming, Nebraska and Iowa. Butte, Mont., is 150 miles nearer to Church- ill than It is to Chicago. The new chapter of Churchill's career will not begin in earnest until next year. While the steel of the Hud- son Bay line has been laid to the terminus, only a skeleton lino is in use and the road will not he ready for heavy traffic for some months. The fall of 1930, prairie farmers hope, will see the first cargo of West- ern wheat leave Churchill for Euro- pean dectinatton. Submarine Mountains, Surveyors of the ocean's bed have discovered two new mountain ranges which they nave accurately rnapped and measured, says an article in Pe•arson's Weekly. All the credit for the discovery is really duo to that elusive subject—the echo. Shells that explode on striking a solid substance were tired at the sera led below. Ily calculating the time that it took the echo of the explosion to penetrate from the bottom of the seat, the sci- entists on the vessel above realized that they had discovered a range of mountains capped, not by snow, but hundreds of fathoms of ocean. One of these ranges ]fes about one hundred miles off the coast of Ecuador and is considerably over live thousand fest M height. The other range of moun- tains has berm discovered some dis- tonee to the north of Juan Fernandez and rises to a height of Yearly ten thousand feet. A Miniature (.low. What is supposed to be the world's smallest row, Daisy, was recently on exhibition et the Rand Show, South Africa. The little mite, whe was born from ordinary parents in far -away Buenos Ayres Smith America Ie 51/ years old, stands only a few inehc,; high, and vvcitths to the vielepev'1 "f about 40 pounds. She is absolalcl;: perfect in every dr•'ade and is insured with Lloyds for $15,000. Her car- case will be presented to the Britisb Museum after death TNGI',A.M Monumental. Has a large and complete stook of Family Memorials. in newest designs at very reasonable prices, Call and see us before plea- ing your order. R. A. SPOTTON phone Office 120 e'Ingham Houeo.2,6 + MY LADY'S 4+ COLUMN. '+8'++', ''+tit•'8'8+8. CLEANING OIL CLOTH To clean oil cloth, wcsh it with water and wipe dry with a clean cloth, USE FOR KEROSENE Kerosene is useful for cleaning polished wood that would be injured by alkalies. GETTING RID OF MOTHS Powdered alum sprinkled in the crevices of upholstered furniture will exterminate moths. NEW STOCKINGS Stockings will look new longer if from the first washing, a little mild dye is added to the rinse we - tel. KEEPING MILK COOL To keep milk cool in hot weather place the bottle containing it in the West of this Continent, was Reue- -centre of an earthen flower pot and Robert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle. the flower pot in a tin pan nearly/ full of water. ON TON IIONI►IL+I IBANAS. The Advantage of "Purity', Sole of ist 1d6 Se Is )tg, tail on I3ae1¢ Two (Votaries. Six blends in Loch Lomond are for sale --the tiionght toads the imagine atlou back two centuries, says the Christian Scleace Monitor. Then Rob Roy, the faulous freebooter, roamed the countryside and, 'according to popular tradition, robbed the melt to relieve the poor. No name Is etched more deeply on the legendary story oe Scotland. 'Rob Roy's cave and "pris- on" on the shores of the loeh and the lofty hills wllielt rise from the wat- t+r's edge are a ocnatant reminder of the difficulty authorities once faced in enforcing respect for law when an outlaw took to the Mile and °raga for shelter. Legend megn?1era Rob Roy's exploits into the heroic', Rudhone of Scott's work is more faseinatiiig than that which deals with the notorlous 1•Iighlander. Both in the execution of his plpns 'Rob brooked no opposition. Of hint Wordsworth says: ' And thus among these rocks he lived, Through suntiners heat and winter's snow: The eagle, he was lord above, And Rab was lard below. is richwith great di lite use • Since puri a strong, r c flour r expanding qualities, s, 1 tablespoon less per cup if your cake recipe calls for ordinary pastry or soft wheat flour, if milk is called for, use half milk and halt water (luke-warm) when using Purity Flour and your cakes,: will stay moist longer, Serrd 30c for it'i(ritp ,Floor Cook Book 98 Lbs. WINNIVgDe cci5'' r BRANDON '+++LSnr gpNON1 Goe1RICN PURITY FI:OUR Purity Plain Pastry New Recipe For two pie Shells use 2 cups Parity Fleur, 54 teaspoon salt, ''A 'cup altortenmg, i' cup cold water, Mix flour and salt,- canoe in the shortening until the mixture is like line areal. Mixthoroughlywith the water, Roll out thin. keeping it thoroughly dry, For extra Fiat pastry use half butter and hall lard, Western Canada Flour Mills Co. Limited Toronto, Ont. • 97R Peet and painter, inspired by the Py'�j.� wild grandeur of the loch and the J 111 O n is Scrap -Book e Car W e encircling hills, have t e pt•oduced the secrets of nature in expression of beauty and blending of color. And the peaceful loneliness of the loch, *e". - (By the Left Hand Monkey Wrench) broken only now and then by the OIL IN THE COOLING SYSTEM replacing burned -oust fuses, always Passing of a motor bus, is refreshing The presence of oil in the water replace with a fuse of the same am to the traveller, who welcomes the of the radiator is 'an indication of a ,perage as the one furnished by the sight of purple heather and green foliage freshened with the rain. It is leak bettween the compression irate.. Where the fuse is in a red to be hoped that nothing will induce chamber and the water jacket In fibre, there is a little ring printed on the new possessors of the islands to addition to loss of power, this may its side. When the fuse burns out, disturb their primitive beauty or result in the blow-out of a cylinder this will become black,as a rule. change their, character for they are Part and pardel of the bonnie, bonnie head gasket. Changing the fuses around will also banks and. the bonnie, bonnie braes prove if a certain fuse is `blown." where EASY WAY TO START COLD ENGINE. While the lighting system, with its The wild flowers spring, and the wee Iuniib, the batthry, switches, fuses birds sing, Starting. the car on a chilly morn- and lights, is a separate and inde- And in sunshine the waters are lirg will be found easier If the en- 'pendent system, the ignition system, sleepin . gine is turned over with the crank the generator, and the starting motor SIEDD DE LA sALLE, I handle a few times and then release arc also connected to the battery, the clutch before stepping on the and so in order to save wires and to Famous as Explorer of the Central I electric starting button. Batteries reduce the chance of short-aim:lita, West of This .Continent. i become difficult to turn over because etc., the various systems are connect - The name in full of La Salle, fam- the oil becomes stiff. 'eel together. ous as the explorer of the Central. • I r h rs ECONOMY Many hosewifes find it more economical when buying a rib roast, an early age he became connected to have the butcher cut the rib end with the Jesuits and studied for the priesthood. Decg to change his oft so it can be used for soup. If it career, he parted with the Jesuits on is left on and roasted with the meat good terms and with a reputation of it is largely wasted, • excellent acquirements and unim- peachable morals. He bad an older brother in Canada, the Abbe Jean Cavelier, and in the spring of 1666 he sailed for Canada with a small beauty and sanitary standpoint to capital of cash in hand. His life of paint the insides of clothes closets. adventure and exploration came to an A (-ream with okra yellow in it is a end in the summer of 1637, when he good choice for aiitt, unless you was murdered by mutinous followers p while crossing what is now Texas. wort to match up your bedroom de- "One of the greatest men of this corations, age," was the tribute paid to him by his able and faithful lieutenant, Hen VERY ATTRACTIVE ri Tonty. The hangers in the closet of the guest room look very attractive if covered with velvet or velveteen to correspond in color to the trim- ntings of the room. It eives quite a dainty touch when the hostess opens the closet door. HANGING MIRRORS Never hang a miiror so that the sun shines directly onit. Use mirr- ors, rather, where they will reflect light into dark come and give you a sense or more spaceand sunshine. A GOOD DIP If you use a wire basket for dry ing croquettes, neverforget to dip the basket into the boiling fat be- fore putting in the croquettes will stick to the wire whendone and be difficult to remove. The home of the family to which he belonged was Cavelier, and the fam- ily was among the burghers of Rouen, in Normandy, France, It was old and rich, and several of its mem- bers held high diplomatic posts and honorable employments at Court, La Salle was the name of an estate near Rouen belonging to the Cavelier fam- ily, and the young man, Rene -Robert, took the name of the estate, which was a common prae.tice among the rich French burghers, members of the family being designated hy the names of landed estates. Rene -Robert Cavelier was born at Rouen in 1643. His father Jean and his Uncle Henri were wealthy mer- chants, living more like nobles than like burghers, and the boy was given an education answering to the mark- ed trait and intellect and character which Ire soon began to display. At PAINTED CLOSETS It is advantageous both from a ARE YOU A GOOD JUGGLER?, When serving a salad for the buffet lunch and each must balance dish in one hand and fork in the other, have the lettuce shredded and arrange like a little nest to hold the salad. It will he much more comfortable for the guests. THE WIRE CLOTHES LINE Frequently a strand in the wire clothesline snaps. If this happens fasten the ends together and bind them well with a strip of white cloth. Tie securely. This precaution will prevent the ends of the wire from piercing some article of cloth. Mg. GLOVE WASHING ,After thoroughly wasnng silk or fl.bric gloves with a good brand of scup flakes, hold the fingers under the, faucet so as to fill them with water. Hang them dripping wet on the line and when they are dry you will not have to straighten twisted fingers. IMPROVEMENTS Keep a slice of bread in the cake box with doughnuts, as it will keep them fresh. Turn beets with a spoon instead of a fork. When the beet is pierced with a fork the juice escapes from it and makes the vegetables Ices tasty. Mix the hatter for hot cakes or waffles in a wide-mouthed pitcher. Then it can be poured onto the grid- dle without spilling all over the stove. Discovery In Pontefract Castle. An interesting discovery has been made at Pontefract Castle. It is, says a correspondent in the Leeds Mer- cury, on the site labelled "The Site of the Treasurer's Tower." An arch- way was there with no apparent rea- son fur anything of the sort. A study of the matter led to the belief that intelligent digging would reveal a so- lution of the apparent absurdity. Enough digging has been done to solve the problem and to suggest the possibility of fresh discovery. Through the archway, and raised above it, is a narrow passage, so narrow in fact, that it nilows for the passage of only one person at a time. This leads to a room, at presoul only partly cleared, which was plainly the strong room of the Treasurer's Tower. The reef, as far as Inas be•e,n cleared, Is of stone vaulting in good condition. In all probability this is bit. room In which. te•,r+, st rnrit nit the famous siege coins of lbs• (1iv1l War period, when it yal- ists wl•rr besieged in the castle. 13.•ll5 ('beer" lekhernren. "Abid, with me," rolling softly °vee the harbor Where It was written, will one,- more chime Clod -Speed to 11,;It ini n c,f Ilrixhr.tn, Devon, England, as t)e•y depart at duet f r tr+ir ni:;int's work. The vicar of All �aihth' Churl) has succeeded to rair;- 'ng the n+ cessary arr•a+wy to buy the r',niplete• set of bc•!hs, alta of the '.y/Ams wt•itt+ritit b,,' ev. Fra,u'is 14.0,tate first. vicar of tit•• li:,it. Bolting ell - to :•, will now b,• played mc;rsin,a cti;.d si;lit for all tiro,. Mr, Lyle wrct With m the. b + bcl::yod ',e'en in the Termaieb lan:em in ;me rieek ee the i., rub i)rix' t o leek on it 1111 51ntittrty th it d t± •-e itis. n• 1,11F of i.heir Ihtt•cl, •Itol)d make tune their daily 1 it lilt cul." ken trvtx ll ,':'r , 1 t, ((Jh:.. ,-G •,• the Arehtleae f ".':•' r,;:.. Cttttrt hr's Ti•ctu-)7lti•tit C nt •s, 711, three h•ou-maktn ::arta are; Sydney, N'•v + rt+a, on 'It- Minutia coast., aryl 1-b01uilt:.,A t nr ti:t ata. marls In the l'roviu;a u. )ata 1'1e. RESULTS OF AN EMPTY GAS TANK. t The proper width of spark -plug Sediment may be sucked into the VIPs is now .018 to .002 of an inch trod line from the bottom of the t tark if the gas tank becomes empty I Crankcase oil is completely cir- on the road. This will prevent a free culated through the system from 100 flow of fuel to the engine when the to 160 times an hour. tank is again filled. The engine will I A. blown fuse, discharged battery sputter and miss, In such a case, or faulty switch are the causes of try to struggle to the top of a hill the lights failing to burn. and coast down the other side with the ignition on. In all probability, Hard steering is due to lack of oil, the feed line will be sucked clear of misalignment of front wheels, or low dirt and the engine will run smooth ee-ere in front tiros. ly thereafter. p' " IMPORTANCE OF GOOD INNER When starting a car with a four TUBE speed transmission, it is advised not Air pressure is as important to a eto run too fast with a cold engine, tire as oil to the engine, its very life' del: ends on it. Leakage of only a few 1 Have all rust and scale removed' pounds of air pressure in a balloon from the engine jacket, radiator and tire is much more serious than in an otter parts of the cooling system be - old high pressure tire, because it fore adding anti -freeze preparations. conutderably increases the movement ,See that all parts of the cooling sys- tem flexing of the tire, producea ? tens are tight to keep the solution Melly tread wear quieaiy, and in- .from soaking away. creases the possibility of bruises and I To the speed of the car cannot be premature failure of the cord car. ' cries: of the casing. While the usual !increased beyond ten miles an hour la - tendency is to put an old tulle in a i in second on a hill the engine is uscl casing, d minstancesiboring and the driver should shift to evr:n in an newanrasining, any this is poor foe'' economy, because an old tube is :ea I Knocks at this season of year are stilly thinned out and enlarged lit apt to be the result of using too e'ze, which not only greatly increas- I heavy a stoic of oil in the engine. es the porosity or normal air loss of the tube, necessitating frequent Fast backing is as harmful to a i-fl^tion, but is almost certain to cold engine as driving 40 miles an cause tire trouble due to the stretch- ed out tube not fitting the casine'.I ,. and the resultant formation of morin- CANADA'S HISTORIC SITES kiss and pinches. A tire which ih i driven flat'is quickly ruined. 1 The responsibility for the admin - EXTRA FUSES FOR EMERGENCY tration of the work of preserving A few spare fuses are about the Citneclian historic sites of national meet useful items to carry in the kit importance rests upon the National of a car because there is always a Parke of Canada Branch of the De- parsibility of a short-circuit, an Tnrtment of the Interior. To date incorrectly connected or a crossed 800 sites have been reviewed and wire. For the headlight and horn, a from this number 220 have been se- 1!i-empere (15A) fuse is usually lected as worthy of preservation. So used, while for the side tail and far 129 such sites have actually dash light, a 5A fuse is used. ,When beer marked. Wanted We pay Highest Cash Price for Cream. 1 cent per 1b. Butter Fat extra paid for all Cream delivered at our Creamery. Satisfaction Guaranteed Brussels Creamery Co. Phone 22 Limited