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The Brussels Post, 1929-11-27, Page 3THE BRUSSELS POST Men Like this Pastry MAKE IT WITH PURITY FLOUR Ose nips Purity Flour, ee teaspoon salt, fri cup shortening ,t4 cup cold water, Mix flour end salt, enttmg in, the shortening until the mixture is like fine meal, 141x thoroughly with the water. Boll out thin, peeping it dry, iba will maim crust for two plea, For extra rich pastry use .110 butter and half lard. Purity is a strong., rich flour with great ex- pending emdtties. Always use less Of it than of ordinary pastry or oft whcat flour. VISITED JAPANESE EMFEROIt SUB the Best for Bread 700 Tested Recipes in the Purity Flour Cook 13oolt sent for 3pe.. Western Canada Flour Mills Co, Limited, Toronto 98B ,...-8:+:444.3+3-4.3.8444.4.4444.444.4-4+4,4:+8,44434444.444-14.441:;.. 1VEWS AND INFORMATION FOR THE BUSY FARMER* —0— (Furniehed by the Ontario Department of Agriculture) 4. ...L.:44.44.1444.44.4.44.44-444.444-04+4.44...:44.044+4+.:4•44,44+:**4.44.4.4.4.1.4": roowinterf Ontario Beekeepers' Asseiciatiori veinter. Outdoor wintered bees Toronto—Nov. 26, 27 and 28. must be kept in waterp Guelph Winter Fair— December i cases." Oc:11:11:=4. Oth to 12th.. Ottawa Winter Fair— December An Important Ruling 2nd to 6th. Hereafter persons coming to Cane 0==113M=0. oda to buy cattle for export will Typical of vast work or investi- be permitted to use their motor- gation now in progress at the On- cars of U. S. manufacture for tbal; tario Agricultural College is the purpose without the payment of study of parasites in hogs and of duty, bond, or clepoit This regula- the reasons for lack of vitality in lion will greatly facilitate the winter -born hogs, under the direc-' movement of cattle buyers from tion of Prof Knox of the Depart- outside Canada, inasmuch as form- ment of aninial husbandry, The ' erly they were obliged to leave ultimate solution of these prob- their cars at the port of entry and trans will prove of direct value to engage a means of transportation every farmer. in travelling from point to point in e=e:101:o Canon. The importance of this in - Count The Cost ternational trade in cattle is shown Farm profits are small. They are by the fact that since the first in - limited by the selling price of pro- ternational trade in cattle is show ducts and perhaps to a greater ex- by the fact that since the first of tent, by the cost of production. The the year approximately 350 pure - veiling price may be influenced by bred Holstein cattle' have beem ex - organizations but each farmer etin- ported to the United States. trols his production costs. It is ec=r113) much 'better to feed and milk five Prizes are Increased rows which give a good profit than The exhibit of draught horses, ten which pay cost only. To raise which has alwys been a feature of crops cheaply there must be a high the -Guelph Winter Fair, should be yield. The cost for the farm, or increasingly interesting at the rom- per acre, or per cow does not tell lug show, December 9 to 12. Over much. Comparison should be on it $1500 is being offered in itrizn ;on, bushel or pound basis. Curbing Cannibalism Prof. W. R. Graham, head of the yearling geldings. Previously no Poultry Department of 0. A. C., classification was provided for ani- eas a good suggestion for curbing mals of this age. With the exceta the frequent outbreaks of feather- tion of the yearling gelding class lets are first put in confinement. Such an outbreak occurred at the college plant this fall. A quality of fresh raw blood was obtained from the slaughter house and given the pullets as a drink. In fifteen money and an additional section has been added to the prize list by which $100 is being offered for ten prizes are offered in each of seven sections, with $210 being the total prize money in each section. Tn the yearling gelding class the Best prize is 830, with each subse- quent prize $5 less. minutes the appetite had so abated ,teeeetnoece that it was safe to put back in the Shrinkage of Potatoes Sir John Airdo was another Gan- acibui who had an audience with the Emperor of Jpan along with Hon. Herbert Martin, the New Canadian Minister to Japan, at the Imperial Palace last week, drought, and large numbers of live stock the still on pasture. Sheep are reported - to be in good condi- tion, Terniskaming sheepmen being of the opinion that flocks were never in better condition than they are this fall, .0:101==o Yield of Seed Crops A larger than usual acreage of red clover has been cTA for seed in Ontrio, the yield per acre vary- ing from 120 to 300 pounds, It is believed that there may be from three to four million pounds oi seed, which will constitute the largest red clover seed crop in Old Ontario for many years .The ,qual- ity of the seed is reported good. The crop in Nordthern Ontario is practically a. failure this year. Alsike acreage in Old Ontario was estimated 20 per cent. larger than in 1928 and yields per acre have varied from 60 to 500 pounds lees, yields being general in the southern and lake counties and high yields in the clay country be- tween Toronto and Georgian Bay. In Northern Ontario, Temiskaming district, the total production of til - tike is not expected to exceed 10,- 000 bushels, about half as much as last year. Alfalfa seed production in On- tario was again light in 1929. The acreage left for seed is not hello. - ed to have exceeded 10,000, which may yield from 60 to 120 pounds ; per acre, about the same as in 1928. An aboundance of sweet clo- . • WEDNESDAY, NOV, 2741, 1929, illicire and Thcre, 1} I "11Y It v.lt 1:nrress r'Y for the qi Eat,. if 11 ea ta• dlan 10 frill.; in Gr Itrii and ;:o•opo, is 1''im ''ti 11 If otit f Ilia., 4 nil NOW .17.'1' pr1•3 to gifts :-'ect at ail miles of she year. With tae prosent homer apple crop id C.nuada, the !rail can be botiathatt reerona hie price and its (lualltY fa of the highest. If sent overseas before the close of navigation oc the Se Lawrence. cost will be considerably refluctite Over 300 officers and men of the 4th canarlian Mounted Rifles first mounted retrieve) t, formed in Tor, onto 01 rise ow ;weak of the Greet War, Is 1)01'd,m, its lirxt reunion since the war at the Royal York Hotel, Toronto, November uext. The unit proud of the Met that It still has in its ranks T. Holmes of Toronto, youngest V tem ria la'rtroxi4 wg',',`,; 74i singlebanded at Passchendaele. An apple tree, over a aundred years old, remarkable for Its sym- metry and havtcg this year pro- duced 22 barrels of Callcin Pippin applee, is attracting much attention in the orchard of Downey Morton, Lakeville, King's County, Nova Scotia. Mr. Morton picked apples from the same tree 55 years ago and it was then a fully grown tree, Today be believes it to be well over the century mark. The arrangement existing be- tween the Canadian Pacific Rail- way and the Government of Nova Scotia with regard to English im- migration which has proved mu- tually satisfactory, will be con- tinued for the coming year, is the recent announcement of L. B, Fra- ser, secretary to Premier Rlaodes. Superior grazing conditions in British Columbia are given as the reason for a shipment of 3600 grade Itamboulet ewes and rams from Montana recently made to the Van- couver Live Stock Exchange for distribution to sheep raisers in the Kamloops and Cariboo districts of British Columbia. The farm of Gustav Elgert of Wetaskiwia that won the trophy recently offered by the Edmonton Board of Trade for the best field of wheat in the northern ball of theprovince of Alberta as well asa the Pcup donated by the Albert Government for the best farm in Alberta, has yielded 46 bushels to the acre on a 100 -acre field and graded No. 1 hard. Elgert is an- other farmer who came to Canada without capital and has made a striking success. The British Family Re -Union As- sociation has just been created by the Canadian Pacific department of Colonization and Development — backe,1 by influential oreaniza- dons, groups and individuals — to prcinote irtereaFed British settle- . 111F111 in Canada: it will par: :en - ver for seeding purposes is ex ' lar!F -benr.fit beads of fa mi: ies in pected to be available next spring. e.:13.1.3 e.F.Sir011,4 of havin.7. th?ir Timothy seed production in On- w '''''' "'' 'I ''"..11`'."'' ';''''in tbe ft,.• :.ti'm. ,o -i,! .1. a,rs 55 -5 is reported as normal, a large . tt . - 1-; • iee ii teltele "0 la -en proportion coming from the. Navas re ei, re, or fvien-.., ovi.r,I.:43 tm district of Russell County. Produc- ree - e. re, -he 1,muint.m f.,.r ,.,A.. ten of blue gross in Southwestern tie., et reside:ice, Ontario is estimated at 50 per a. cent. of normal. The seed is report- Seventy-one towns in Germany ed to be particularly heavy per are named Neustadt. bushel this year. ee pen the pullets that had been prel Experiments conduttedl by the The Pacific Ocean has viously attacked. One gallon oil Division of Botany, Dominion De - blood was given to each 100 pul- pertinent of Agriculture, shows — lets. There has not been a renewal that shrinkage of potatoes while in of the trouble, storage can be greatly lessened if correct storage practices are fel- Wintering Bees lowed. All tubers placed in storage "Experience has shown that 11 18 should be mature, healthy and better to winter bees outdoor§ than as free from moisture on their surfaces, dirt and mechanical in- jury as possible. The storage of even a small percentage of diseased or field frosted potato endangers in Ontario are wintered in various all the healthy stock. It is however, wintering cases outdoors. In Old prodically impossible to keep Ontario almost every beekeeper large nuantities in good Condition winters outside, but in Northern Ontario cellars must be kept ob- viously dry and at an even temp- erature of about 45 degrees. Poor- ly insulated and damp cellars make poor winter storage places for bee. Wintering bees outdoors means more expense, but' unless one has an ideal cellar, this method is ea, commended. Bees can .be packed any time in October or early No- vember, and need no attention un- til spring if properly prepared for in the cellar unless you have an exceptionally suitable cellar." says P. Eric Millen, Provincial Apiarist.: "Eighty per cont. of the honey bees Head Off Colds, Coughs, Bronchitis With This Fine Old Herbal Remedy right from the Hear t of Nature Ward off all the cold weather ills. Get yourself a bottle of Gallagher's Indian Tlerbal Remedy, It will make and keep you healthy --heal up iatlamod tissues and give your blood and body now vigour. Keep this good del herbal remedy al- ways in the house. Take it after ex- posure to wind, rain, (bill and crowded, gorm-laden places. You can get tha, and other Gallagher Herbal Beusehatel can buyele have been (mite aetive, Remedies now from r° type of Holsteins, Middlesex, Co. H. B. ALLEN BRUSSELS has been less fortunate, owing to for prolonged periods unless the proper type of storage house is used. For this purpose Pamphlet No. 10 issued by the Dominion De- earthy/it of Agriculture, explains the requirements of the perfect type of storage house. It clearly explains .the proper enethoes to tel low in order to secure the best prices for your potato crop and may be obtaigned from the depart- ment. Weekly Crop Report A splendid season is imported by the farmers of Ontario, according to the current weekly crop report. Farmers in Durham County report increased egg production and splendid markets 'for eggs, which are selling locally at 55c for ex- tras, and 48 for fiesta Essex Come. ty''s tobacco has practically all been bought, and, although prices are . no higher than last year, the aver- age is considerably higher. Wheat is looking well in Huron, although drought has decreased the fall out- put considerably.. There has been considerable demanh in the emir-. ty of Haldimand for oattle. Arneri- payiug as high as $500 for some an aver. The Roman catacombs are 580 square miles in area, and it is est- imated that they contain about 15,- 000,000 dead. SUCCESSOR TO EALIDWiN Winston Churchill has been mentioned, as one to succeed Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin, as leader of the Conservative Party in the Old Land, It is feared, however, that this elevation might cause a split in the party, *BIBLE THOUGHTS .For This Week B!bi° AtragelItfwAranradfe7Ur.'"' SUNDAY. Thy mercy, 0 Lord is in the heavens ; and thy faithfulness reacheth unto the clouds.— Psa, 36 :5. Ain f== MONDAY. !Lord, to whom shall we go? Thou hest the words of Eternal life,—John 6 : 68. tite TUESDAY. They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountains.—lea, 11 : 9, feet WEDNESDAY. For the Lord thy God is a mei, ciful God, he will not forsake thee. --Dot. 4 : 31. ===i THURSDAY I will establish my covenant with thee : and thou shalt know that I am the Lord.—Ezek. 16 : 62, FRIDAY. Hearken unto my voice, and 1 will be your God, and ye shall he my people.--Jer. 7 : 23. t:=1 SAT URDA Y. Before me there was no God formed, neither shall there be after rte.--Isa. 43 : 10. Visitors to the English Parlia- ment average 5,000 on ordinary days and more than 20,000 every Saturday. Of the 90 known eleinents, 70 are metals now taken from the crust of the earth . By the proposed air service, tra- veling time between Rome and Turin, Italy, will be four hours, compared with 14 hours by rail. C.P.R. Herd Wins Hundreds of Prizes A.,111;11. `,4 :40'700'4 :o "Vet Here arae some of the 179 first prizes and 73 championships and reserve championships won by the Strathmore Farm herd on the prairie and coast show circuits during the current and last year. The Strathmore show herd of iiiteett Holsteins won 100 Mut prizes at 8 major exhibitions in 1928 and 79 firsts in 1929. The shield at lower left was won by a carload of calves from the Cana- dian Pacific farm at Chin, Alberta in 1928. The large cup, right, was won at the Calgary spring show f or the best purebred Aberdeen Angus heifer. Diploma at right was ooh by the Holstein bull Strathmore McKinley Fairchild Wayne as grand champion in 1928. He is shown above and he went through all western fairs without a defeat from 1927 to date. He was Grand Champion at the three coot fairs and also at Saskatoon. The Cana- dian Pacific Railway tillid own 0/10 of the finest, if not the finest, herd of cattle in Canada. The company has done a great wprk in improving the breed of cattle throughout the West, Sunday School Lesson BY CHARLES Q, TRUMBUt4., tgilitar of The els weletY School Tinton/ THE CHRISTIAN NOME IN A MODERN WORLD Sunday, Dec, 1 : Deuteronomy 3-9 ; Matthew 19 : 3-9 ; Luke 2 : 40-52, 24 : 28-32 ; Eph shin, : 1-9 ; II. Timothy 1 : 3-5, 3 : 14", 15, Golden Text Honor thy father and mother fleph. 0 Here are seven Scripture pas- sages that should make this lesson one of the richest, of the entire year ;n any class or school that really gets their meaning. Would that these Scriptures, so wisely ehosen by the Lesson Committee, could be blazoned in letters of fire in every home and church and newspaper and magazine, in every court of law and in every place of government throughout the world. If these Scriptures were really studied and obeyed we should soon have a transformed world. Those who think the Old Testa- ment is an obsolete book should no - tiro that the first lesson passage, in Deuteronomy, was written B. C. 1451, and the last of these passages, containing the last ever& of the great apostle given by inspiration, was written A. rt. 66. Here is a iiketch of more than 1,500 years, Or a millennium and a half ; and the teaching of Moses B. C. 1451 is ex- actly the same as the teaching. of Paul A. D. 66, The Old TeSiament Is not obsolete. Moses's last words to Israel told God's people to put the words of God in the Centre of their family life. It was a "modern world" into which they were coming to Canaan. The same delusions obtained there have a strong hold on the so-called modern world to -day. People knew more than God then, as they do now ! They had invented their own religion as improvements upon His. So Moses tells Israel to be safe- guarded against all this by teaching words of God diligently to their chill- dren ; to talk of them when sitting in the house, when walking by the way, when lying down and when rising up ; to bind them upon their hands and keep them between their Pres ; to write them on the posts of their houses and on their getes. In other words, the life and homes and activities of grown folks and children were to be dominated by God's words. That, and that only, can make a Christian home iioolIly. -cay.. The modern world about us l$ desperately in need of this testi. n A picture of ideal Christian home life is that of a home of which the boy Jesus grew up, as given by Luke.. He was the only normal boy that has ever lived on this earth, He was sinless, yet human, and also divine. Joseph and Mary were scrupulously careful to observe the religious ordinances God had ordain- ed, taking Him with them when Ha was of the proper age, 12, to the great feast of the passover in Joie usalem. Tell the class the whole in- cident, which centres in the boy's surpassing interest in the World of God, His Heavenly Father, and His: eagerness to learn all that he could about this through the exceptional opportunity in the terinne with the Jewish teachers. He felt that He must be about His Father's 'mei- gess, Children of to -day can do en taught and influenced by Christian fitments that this will be of absovb-1 ing interest to them, and only so ! can they increase "in wisdom and etature, and in favor with God and man." • When the boy Jesus had grown itt iminhooci He littered an authortal live and divine word nn merriage, the relationship of husband and wife as making. the Christien homed and he exposed the MO of divorce, that sinister and destroying enemy of homes to -day. He showed that marriage is not a mere convention- ality originated by men and to be set aside by neer when thee- will, but ordained to Geri when the hu- man race began. He owed elk/ i that divorce can properly occur for one reason only, the sin of adult -1 erv. Tf a linshrind or wife is put away in divorce for any other rea- son, then romarriage becomes ad- ultery. This verdict of the Lord Jesus Christ, who is the judge of all men, is crystal-clear, infallible and final. No law made by men can save or ems° men the any violation of this law of God. The sanctity of the Christian home de- pends upon it. A home without grace at meals is sadly lacking in one of the es- sentials of a Christian home, The risen Christ, sitting at meat with two friends ,"took broad, and Wes" sed it, and gave to teem, And their eyes were opened and they know Him." They had not known Him until He. lifted His voice in prayer at meal time, This is enough to ,sanctify and ordain the simple anal precious custom and privilege of asking God's blessing upon every meal, in the home; And let us not forget that every meal ie a type of the atonement. Bread is a typo of Christ, "the bread of God" (John' (3 : 33), given to us that we may live. Animal food, ordained of God for our physical welfare, sacrifices the life of the anneal that we may live, So of all growing things in the vegetable kingdom given to us of God for our enjoyment and physi- eal eustenance, they die that we. may live. To the Ephesians Paul laid down divine principles and roundatione for a happy Christian home ; child- ren to honor and obey their par,. ents ; parents to love and train their children in the knowledge of the Lord ; servants to obey theik masters as unto the Lord ; masters to love and care for their servants, "Knowledge that your Master also is in Heaven ; neither is there re - (meet of persons with Him." Young Timothy was Paul's spirit- al.1 son, that is. Paul bad brought ium to Christ. But he had the un- meakable blessing of a Christian ?...raridnipther ; he had always lived' in Christian home. This lesson pas- sage in the first chapter of Paul's Second Epistle to Timothy \vat writ- ten on the flyleaf of the Bible giv- en to the -writer of this article when he made his public confession of faith in Christ ar. 13 years et age, by his father, the late Henry Clay Trumbull. Christian parents mean a blessing that cart come in. no other way. Then children can be lovingly en- treated to continue in the things which they have learned and have been assured of, because from childhood they have "known the holy scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus." Is the home we live in a Christ- ian home in a modern world? Takakkaw Falls, Yoho Park The streams which culminates in the famous Takakkaw falls in Yoho national park, British Columbia, is fed by the melting waters of the Waputik icefield which lies upon the summit of the Great Divide. down the mountain for over half a mile it reaches the precipice that walls the east side of the Yoho Val- ley. Here it takes an initial leap of 150 feet over the edge, then, gathering itself together, falls in a glorious curtain 1,000 feet down the face of the cliff, and finally tumbles in a magnificent cascade of 500 feet into Yoho river. At half the price you'd expect! You'd expect to pay around 1140 for a 26 -piste silver ser- vice. But here are 26 pieces -- six of each—in a chic little ceee of green and gold, for only$19.001 And it's the famous Wm. Rogers & San silverpfate— guaantecd to give satisfac- tion aithout time limit ! Knives have solid handles, plated blades. Conte in and see the exquisite patterns "Mese Pattern, Set No.125 J. R. WENDT' JEWELLER WROXtTER.