HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1926-7-7, Page 61'i ieleN :S11:\'+', JULY Till, 1926.
THE BRUSSELS POST
est Pian
Prices from $375.00 tap
TE ") MS TO SLUT AL
Do not waste Clttl'S dU 0'112g 1127 i,1(1s but get in
touch with ill., cilai c'statl,is'he cl atn(l. reliable
firm and cart -full value for your money,'
11.‘411a3C)n
0; Ontario St. filets,! 1, 1 Stratford
The Code of Ethics
To the average reader the pro-
ceedings of the Canadian Weekly.
Newspapers Association Convention
held at Quebec last week, will not be
a matter of moment, but it may b.:
worth while to point out that the
deliberations were not confined to
the material and monetary- side of
the business, but that serious consid-
eration was given to ways and means
of improving the service to be ren-
dered the public. The responsibil-
ities of a newspaper to its readers
was one of the subjects on which
much time and ''discussion were -
spent, with the result that a "Code
of Fthice" was approved by a unat,-
jmouai vote. r:r-•• j •
code of ethics was adopted as
an ideal toward which all weekly
newspapers should aspire, and to
which they should adhere as eln,ely
as possible. Inasmuch as ii keeps in
view the rights of the public, as well
as those of the publisher, we repro-
duce it herewith as being worth per-
usal and contemplation;
Journalism is an honorable profes-
sion, most helpful to the welfare or
society.
The success of democratic govern-
ment depends upon sound public
opinion and newspapers shoul.&aid 111
creating and inuintaining sound pub-
lic opinion by publishing significant
news and editorial interpretation of
news.
:Newspaper writers and editor
should be adequately prepared foe
the gent responsibilities placed upon
then.
A newspaper should publish the
- truth. the whole truth, and nothing
but the truth concerning matters of
importance to readers as citizens of
the community, the, tate and the
nation, in so far as i.* circumstances
permits
A newspaper that goes into the St. Helens
home snould puplish nothing that Colborne
cannot be read aloud in the family 'Hensel'
circle. Zurich
News of crime, scandal and vice Varna
in all matters not of public concern.
No propaganda or publicity mat-
ter should be published unless it con-
tains information to which readers
are entitled, and whenever ver such mat-
ei•ial is printed, its source should be
plainly- indicated.
Editorials should present the truth
as the writer sees it, uncolored by
bias, prejudice or partisanship.
Neither the business interests of a
newspaper nor any outside influence
should interfere with the publication
of the truth to news or editorials.
The purpose of newspaper adver-
tising is to create a demand for com-
modities or Nervi, es, to inform read-
ers, not to mislead or defraud them.
Advertisements should be as clean
and wholesome as news. and editor-
ials.
Hates for subscriptions and ad--
verti_;sments should he sufficient to
insure the publisher a fair profit.
All statements of circulation
should ekes the actual number of
bona fide subscribers.
Only sl:,?: neweeapers as maintain
the h , h. t ads of truth, hon-
esty and n• a 'a news, editorials
and adv, ,r , deserve the sup-
port of tle eemmunity.
Newspne es which find it advan-
tageous ` ^ their readers to copy
from oth: e • ;epees, editorials or news
features t:• e have cost the originator
time, effor: and money, should give
due credit.
SCHOOL FAIR DATES,, 1926.
Grand Pend Sept, 7
Dashwood Sept. 8
Crediton Sept. 9
Whtlrhe'.ea Sept. 10
Wroxeter Sept. 13
Gerrie Sept. 14
Blue sal,• Sept 15
Ashfield Sept. 1(1
Sept, 17
Sept. 18 I
Sept. 20
Sept, 21.
Sept. 22
Sept. 23
Sept, 24
Sept, 27
Sept. 28
Sept, 211
Sept. 30 I
Oct. 4 and 5
shut! be presented in sneh a man-
- nee tt, to deter readers from imitate
hx ale criminal and the vicious. Vrndtnn
All 1_,_•1.50ns and organizations are
entitled to fair play in the columns
01the newspaper. Dublin
Individuals sire entitled to privacy Clinton
l liyth
Ethel
Gnderdch Twp
Beberave
The purchasing public is daily becoming
greater readers of advertisements, The reason
for this is that they profit by so doing'. They
find the goods they want described in the right
manner, It i:; news In the purchaser.
That being the case, it behooves the wide-
awake and straight -dealing merchant to study
his advertising matter carefully, so that when
the customer comes in to buy, he or she will find
that the goods are as represented,
Those who do not read advertisements are
losers, Make it a part of your reading to go
over the advertisements of the merchants. 13y
so doing you will know where to find the best
bargains.! Also you will learn whether the goods
are as represented.
Merchants are studying the needs of their
from Buy fr )m the rnan who advertises
and you will not go astray.
Stud The Post Ads
Y YWeek
..M,I
Chosen to Press Button
Ola C N.E. Opening Day
Sir T. Vijayaraghavutcbarya
Who represented All India at the
British Empire Exhibition, and who
will preside this year at the open-
ing ceremonies of the Canadian Na-
tional Exhibition, Saturday, August
2S.
:1 i1 UTE:•il-1 (1t i,.., t oL 2 ,...t+.
Ti:rveller (dives 1)e.eliptiv!• 22;r) fid
lli❑ Visit.
3'11(• jangle is, 1 205 ):; 1Uwiltr0 e
1:1.0+s01 sit -2211:. ,u,• sit -01..a ac' iii IIt
U;-
01'ui1.iio writ,..
E., 0 ,
rti i:•,
e ju_t re'tu 1.2,.'11 frnni�a 2'+s;: '.,1 •r
Largo lit. t,:, sued :o; un• h:'
((nitre, the 14: to:•rasa and 111 'i€'rl 25
ills :2.121 11112,: 211,1.15 u :i:.
..12 i l ' 01' t o-. :,,it22:Oc al,
\C Y. ' 00 Iwo „1 0c.c..
p ]rtiun.: 11 1, c l.•a dq. 1t
1 eos 1. nth_ Mutatunl 022 r, 021:2
rt:ya a i - 1211 11 -
( t!.
S i ,tu , "•t. un( is in i4. . ,.
,'e
Tl:,r 01211.10 2120 has
is libl) to t„ r; ';;,f : •`
dos: 'ln>
A.. h ,4 up or, of the Lae' 010:,3
(1,21, 1,elen to 11 • n, r.:•"
tee at 1102,.:. 'i il, t 1't are. 502111'lr!:rw
l:tiF'l'ints:l} a c tent -t. 11:,1
i
'.0.:1[1 1r .0 ,,r
riiro pers, and Harm (•:1,021, up")
make 0 dense Wait at t1, ri0.4 tn.i is
1;.;: within t1, junta( tte.r0 is com-
parattvele little uud,1-g0 -1li There
i:: drama there. if one will ebeeree iL
In the )utr;le a teas•:1'5s etre g25le
for sunlight Ours (in. At a river blink
light ps'netratt s obliquely inland a
tew yards, hence the denst, mass of
creepers of all kinds. Hut further
back the canopies of the tall trees
prevent all except a slight infiltration.
of sunlight. lime ('1 •0' tr.•e strug-
gles to get its head above the others
and in the sun. It an old tree fails
all the -young seedlings which have
teem bared•. living begin a dramatic
meg to (weepy the free sky place,
It may be that the fittest survives;
at any rate it is the one that gets
to the 011111i:ght first.
Another disillusionment to the
newcomer is the seeming absence of
wild minuet Ole. One may be to the.
,tui i,• for daps without sc.eing a
uunl y'. Of coulee', the red howler
monkeys wili be heard in the morn-
ing and in the evening, but only after
careful search will one be seen. 'rhe
11,520.0 is ohvinils. All wild life is
Din- and flees or becomes immobile,
:cl hence invisible, upon the ap-
proarlt of a strange being,
'rhe coloration of many trepleal
animals find girds is en effective that
when they are inimohile it is almnst
impossible to pick them out from the.
back ground•. If one is willing to sit
mnti.mlese in the jungle for fifteen
er twenty minut,•0 he will be surpris-
ed at the number of animals he will
10*'.
Nor are the parrots in a'vcry tree,
in the morning and in the evening
droves of then' tip to and fro nn(1
from their reedier.; grounds. As one
5000 up the river into the interior a
be seen usually inpairs,
fetvwill
ht
high At infrequent inter-
vals
9u
ane may nhierve In lumbering
flight a few tun ins, those strange,
lar„„^r-hill,'2, anachrentetic birds. Tint
most of the birds of the tropics are
as dt th-relore d as Iheir northern
relatives.
After all rays and browns are
ext, ll'nt protective colorings. It is
noticeable that the highly-cnlored
birds, 011011 as the parrots and tou-
cans, .inhabit the upper branches pf
the high trees, where their brilliuut
markings are not such an invitation
to disaster, The exceptions are the
bright humming birds and 1101103-
511ckers, which depend 1112011 snood for
safety. The birds ordinarily Seen
frn,,n the 340011 11[1 Up to seventy-five
feet are uniformly dttl1 colored
Perham; illi' 111000 unexpected sight
the visitor In the tropics will see is
a tree in the tassel or hymen foliage
of autumn. The 10,21' of (111(11re Is
t at trees tlrllHL pass through .1 seed -
ins and wintering period. Of ,obese,
the great majority of trees shed their
leaves gradually and always maintsrn
a dress of green, But in the midst
of the €;r(eneat. jungle trees may he
seen with colored foliage that re-
mintis one of northern words in
Octnher,
The wide tliffe•renee between the
temperature in the sha(lr' and in the
Sun gives rise to 15001151' customs.
When You land and see a blaekeetem-
ber of the gendarmerie dressed 01 a
woollen jersey, a.heavy woollen Nadu-
or uniform and benvy brogans, you
smile and t1211ik some 013(1 Is ple..ying
a practical jedie.
,
• 1
As you Ct'(aathe aq llaY`( i r 14 of n f n
the market and sae :5 big sign ad-
vertistng non -shrinkable pure wool
underwear,• you laugh out loud. But
a few days latt'r one of your friends
'is certain to. 'confess that he, too,
wears woollen nnlnntlonajal05, The
reason. is eftey 110 understand.
If you exercise vigorously, you
perspire freely. If yon Alt down 1n
the shade, you. cool off tato rspidlY•
Tile next day You will probably be
down' with a laver, tinlesG yen slave
taken the pl(natitlon try. Wear Wocld-
lenv. Thatu is h marieet rot' thete•
.hi into irlrbtll'asi
-Here and There
iiturm,iltt, 0202 12101 112(11<' in No
Srctix, when t1)11!1111121115 fu l'•
province twice :ell. indust ('3', is to ..
r: -opened, ], Uhtil it Owed (Lown,
1' 'else yrary uc'n, Stolnnnnl min*' 11::1
11;u(lucr12 ut•..'1• 2 2,1021 10210 of (1'),
giving an average ,of free geld of
$-1.1 S pea' tote, or $2.225,000 during
its activity.
A r.'ceri eingle ehipment of Indian
21101: r-(l,l ('011 ting ofef, (Hass,
from Armory, Mass., recently ar-
rived in T ekyo, Japan, 11110115 come
forward by Cenadian Pa its Lail
and Measlier lines 111e demand for
motor -cycles 111 Japan Is a steadily
inel•ea0ing one, being a cheap and
convenient nlc.t1211 of loeomutinil and
well suited to the somewhat nareow
roads of that country.
Twenty-one British Rotarians re-
cently came over to Canada on the
Canadian Pacific liner "Montclare”
en route to the International Rotary
convention at Denver, On their re-
turn trip they cane back through
Canada, travelling to Winnipeg and
Fort William, and taking the Great
Lakes trip on C.P.R. steamboat to
Port McNicoll, They returned to the
Old Country by the C.P. liner "Mont -
calm.” • en d N 1T}r e Ti -Me
The Canadian Pacific Railway has
just added two of the new Mount
Class observation cars to those run-
ning out of Montreal. Five more
are just about ready to rim and the
balance of four cars will be ready
for service shortly after these. They
are all -steel cars, made up of three
compartments, and one drawing.
room with a parlor room and ob-
servation platform. They will be a
feature of long -run trains on the
C.P.R.
The English football team now
touring Canada had one of the most
strenuous work-outs hi the history
of any athletic body. Staying for a
week -end at the Chateau Lake Louise
they had a practise at an altitude
of a mile and a half above sec level,
where the thinness and dryness of
the air had a wonderful effect upon
them. Their captain thought it re-
markable that prize-fighters in train-
ing had not utilized the marvellous
properties of this training camp.
A fourteen -car special Canadian
ravine Railway train carried more
than a hundred of the most promi-
nent representatives of. banking and
financial interests of New York City
and State to Quebec, where they held
their 33rd annual convention of the
New York State Bankers' Associa-
tion at the Chateau Frontenate re-
cently. ' Included in the party was
Col. J. W. McIntosh, Comptroller of
Currency, Washington; and W. J.
Donovan, Assistant Attorney -Gen-
eral of the U.S„ and several finan-
cial specialists of New York's lead-
ing newspapers,
While Canadian Pacific train No. 87
was standing on public crossing pre-
paratory to taking passing track, an
automobile, occupied by four persons,
ran into the -side of the train, badly
damaging the auto. In another case,
a driver -said he saw the train and
heard the whistle signals sounded,
but too late to avoid running into
the side of the engine. Yet again, a
touring cat., travelling about 26 miles
per hour, ran through the crossing
+•
barn+V.rs at a public crossing in
Montreal but did .not stop, No in.
juries were reported in all three in-
cidents.
Representing capital running into
billions of dollars, a .party of around
eighty prominent bankers, financiers
lied gleed 1•12reeentiug conunertiial
and business interests, recently ar-
rived at the 'Windsor Street Station,
111MA-real, from New York, and made
a tour of the pulp and paper indus-
tries and the new aluminum dis-
trlet:: of. the St. Maurice and Sague-
nay Valleys in Quebec Province, wilh
a view to personal inspection of the
prospects in those great develop-
ments. The party was accommo-
dated with five twelve -section com-
partments and drawing room sleep-
ers,
l . e1-
ers, two dinialg cars andthe p iveLe
car "Montmorency," the whole be-
ing C.P.R. equipment.
Piabjle School Holidays are here.
p •
i
•
$ .
0 fir.. '`L'0 4
i
o +
1 �q {� 1
• •••
i Highest market prices 4•.
A, paid. .•r'.
• See me or Mote 140, 2a, I3rue- 4•
s sets, and I will call and get +
s your 'Weo1. ' •
I d of t
11
J nalt4 li
;` 'Diamond Ring
,' The Diamonds are chosen by
experts—they have that exquis-
ite blue white color and
Lk
distinctive beauty found only
in Diamonds of high quality.
'Whatever die size Diamond ]a
a Princess Ring, you may be
sure of its superb quality gad
you may buy it anywhere with
1mplicdr confidence,
Prices are very moderate.
Zook for the 'name
Primers, and be tale.
PI . -
—We have a—
Large display of Diamond Rings
All new up-to-date mountings
COME Now
and make your selection ;while
stock Is complete.
t
Its You Prune Goo cam
Inti want the blest results under the new Grading. System,
il) your Cream to -THE PALM C13EA1V11 RY, OurCre'unety
will be operated 24. hours a day in the 'hot weather, and
your Cream will be in 0111' Creamery 2111(1 Graded 15 minutes
atter arrival in Palmerston, 'Thus assuring the farmer Wile
produces good Cream the best possible. tirade .sin Price,
We loan our Patrons cans and pay cash for each can of
Cream received, You can ship on any train any day and be
assured of prompt delivery and pay. Send us a trial can
to -day ,
Tho rah Creamery Co. - tl ai erstotig
n..m +..410, w:..aza,. me,mp m...m..«.,..a*,'',
owes. They must be burned up for
Fall cutting. He does not see Nat-
ure all around hila raising his young
wood crops. He drops his match and
the fangs leap out again.
"I'11 look around this logging camp
to -day," says Mr. Wolf, "My friend
Jack will be working in that nice lit-
tle 0111011 I had prepared for ate.
Maybe he will forget to put out Pais
match or drop his cigarette butt."
As he thinks of this toothsome mor-
sel Inc smacks his chops again.. "This
will make It killing worth while," and
Our the fangs leap out again.
At last eve see him seated on his
haunches on a high pinnacle looking
over his handiwork and we know hint
for who he is. The Fire Wolf. No
disguise now. Do we hear him say,
I wonder, "df they only knew, if they
only knew, my feeding grounds, my
army of helpers, my yearly Fire har-
vest Would be reduced to one-tenth."
J. R. WENDT
JEWELER WROXETER
x3f;4fii
CHRISTIAN BENIFICENCE
The golden calf never grows into
a cow that gives milk.
The man whose religion costs him
nothing pays for all he gets.
Some men are laying up trasures
in heaven at the rate of five cents a
week.
A rich than may give the Lord too
little, but a poor man cannot give
Him too much. •
It is as hard for God to bless a
stingy man as it is -for rain to fall
on a desert,
One of two things is true. We
either gvie according to our means
er according to our meanness.
The reason that the Lord lgveth
a cheerful giver is that He recogniz-
es in him resemblance to Idis own
benefcient nature.
Soma ono has said that giving is
like a .The blister. It is counter-irri-
tent to selfishness: It never does
heti) good until it hurts. One thing
is sure --there is not a greater drudge
in the world than he that is under
the power of reigning covetousness.
God cannot do 11111011 with a main un-
til all that the man has is freely
turned over to God. While we care
more for some possession, than we
clo for God, how can eye eceoptably
serve God or know the jor and bless-
ing of unhindered communion with
him? 11ut when- God in Christ is
our complete and only , desire, 11e
can work wonders with the little or
large possessions that he has entrust-
ed to us. Then his unquestioned
ownership and use of our "purse and
all" becomes our joy and blessing;
and we wish that we had more only
that we, might put it at His disposal,
It ds a day of freedom when We step
out 2oreveefro pl teh bondage of our
potiee:,eions into the liberty of God's
a '
ownc.t lnp of all that we have and
all that eve aloe. -
Give id
a toGod's Cause, the great,
cause of the age, •
To lift op the world, it's woes to-
assuage—
Give
oassuage—
Give labor and counsel, prayers and
self,
For in helping God's cause, • thou
are helping thyself.
—D. R.
The Fire Wolf Goes on Rampage
Do you knees him? This wolf in
sheep's clothing, awaiting his con-
federate, Drouth, when, in a night,
he shows his red fangs end starts de-
vouring his prey, our tiinherlantls,
our young growth, the timberland
of to -morrow. H0 hips up the
streams, the rivers, devours the fish,
the game, until at last Nature's boon- '
tiful gift is gone. And who is there
to put the monster, destroyer 'of
homes and industry, in bondage?
You might if you knew him, but he
is aver in dlsguiee. One day we find
him dressed as a .boy going oft to
fish He must play the man, have a
little smoke, jauntily toss his match
Unbr kennot out,
into the unnotic-
ed duff. The canny wolf smiles and
bides his time a day of two. Warm
weather, a little wind, he bares his
fangs ---devours his in,eal—,your-wood
—your work,
Again we see him in settler's garb
looking over his slash pilas whleh
trust be burned, to -day. The .o»,g•ue
shoots out again. More wood, morn
homes, industries, consumed. On
Suaday Inc walks to the Beaver mead -
ALMA GLUCK'S PROFITS,
"Carry rite Back to 01' Virgtnny"
Brought .Her a Fortune.
The theory that persons endowed
with great artistic ability are never
any good at business received a set-
back recently when Mrs. Efrem Zim-
balist, well known to opera -goers of
a few years ago by her maiden name,
Alma Gluck, revealed that in the
sale of her house at 101 Least Seven-
ty-second street elle had made a pro-
fit of more than 100 per cent,
Mrs, Zimbalist, W110 is still a famil-
iar figure on the concert stage,
bought the place in 1919 on the
royalties from more than 1,000,000
reproductions of a sin;ao phonograph
record, "Carry Me Back to 01' Vir-
ginny." Overcoming the vigorous
opposition of her violinist husband,
who maintained that "we have no
earthly need of a twenty -one -room
house on Park avenue," she said, she
had paid down $127,000.
The building contained four goes
les and a basement on a lot 20 by
102 feet on the corner of Park ave-
nue and Seventy-third street, She
spent $76,000 renovating it to con-
form with the tastes of herself and
Mr. Zimbalist. Recently contracts
were signed for its sale to Jerome 5
and Mortimer 0, Mayer and Shrodee
& Koppel at a price of $1100,000, she
said.
"The offer of this sum was one of
the most romantic surprises of my
life," she said. " `Carey *Me Hack to
OP Virginny' looked like a hen that
laid golden eggs from the time I
recorded it in 1914. But I had no
Idea It would lay such a whopper as
this! Now I'm looping forward for
new worlds to conquer. Zimbalist
buys' 'Steads' for $50,000, He says
they will be worth a quarter of a
-million in fifty years. But this looks
better to me."
Since the time when a single re-
cord netted her sufficient to buy a
private house on Park avenue, re-
ceipts from royalties had fallen off
precipitously, she said, and ail be-
cause of the radio,he radio
is
T
a nuisance,' she declared "They are
perfectly darn fnnlish things to have
around, and besides the 5quawlts,
most of what one heats over them
is terrible," She said she had one.
--New York Times,
++++++++++++++++++++++++++
,•++
When ,you think a newspaper
'Mould "rip things up the back," just.
'oiled a little on the number of tithes
you have been glad, it didn't.
PERSONAL SAFETY
Industrial -safety, or the better and
marc expressive term "personal 1f :,
ty," in the slain is just the d2f(renee
between afterthouht 81x1. forethought.
The phrases "Take a chance" and
"Try anything once" are especially
foolish when human life and bulb are
the issues at stake. The train and the
motor ear have met top often at
crossings. The inexperienced boat-
man has found the water too deep
and the chance -taking industrial
worker has found out many times
that serious injury is the penalty for
placing false value on foolish heroiea
or grandstand plays.
The known accident record of the
Province of Ontario is that one out
of every ten industrial workers re-
ports injury once during each year
to the Workmen's Cornpensatioa
Board, with every reason to believe
at least seventc-five per cent of those
• so-called accidents are avoidable
101011 care is exercised. The mutil-
ated hands oi' machine operators, the
strains, bruises and contusions of
other industrial workers, the blind
and partially blind workers sound
temple warning to the careless or
thoughtless. Quite true, chance tak-
ers may enjoy immunity for even an
extended time but the law of aver-
ages holds true and no regret or after
thought can restore life or limb, nor
atone for suffering and sorrow,
That self-inflicted injury does not
enter into the situation is obvious,
but there is no good reason for eo
many accidents penning. through
failure to extrchse common sense.
When warned of clanger by others 2t.
is well to remember the good inten-
tion and appreciate the great posad-
bility of some bitter lesson learne
at great cost.
Safety is of general interest but
only when we appreciate the vital
individual interest to each 0110, year(;
or old, and exercise individlal cage,
can 1h0 expect to enjoy reasonable
immunity from accidents.
It'e a little,thing
Just to think.
Anyone, no matter who,
Ought to think.
'l'alte tt little liner each day
From the sonnies thrown away,
Sparc it from yunr work oe play--•,
Step end 1h:' it!
Yon will find that men who fail
Do 'lot think.
0alf ilre trouble that we See,
Trouble brewed for you and me,
Ptnhahly W011 Id never be
If we'd think!
Shall we journey hit-or-miss,
Or shall ire ,girl"
Let's not •o almag by geese,
13ut rather to ourselves confess,
It would help us snore ole less
If we'd think!
The appeal of Fournier v, the Can-
adian National Railways was dismiss-
ed by the Privy Council Monday.
United States doubled her dulporta-
Lions of Canadian 00011111 and fresh
milk during May, as .compared with
the previous month,
.,sees.. eeee-rrr..e
caratmealeremenleMealleraal
rea
Means
•
ETTER CREAM
E,TTER BUTTER
ER PRICES
W a atreeiocv prepared to ('trade yoev ()reams heneelty,
gather it, Lwire a week and deliver al; out' Oreatnery each clay
the lift it. \Ve gather with covered truck to keepmin riff it,
\Ve pay a Pi'euiium of 1 cent per ib. butter -fat for Spec-
ials over that of No. 1 gentle., and 3 cents per 1b..blltter•fat for
No, 1 grade over that of No, h � garde,
The basic pi ineiple of the improvement in , the quality of
Ontario butter re the elimination of, Second and off grade
creel'', This may be accomplished bypaying
the producer
of ,good cream abetter mice per hound: cif butt,etefat than l5
peat to the producer of poor memu, We eohcit your patron.
age and eo-operation' for better market,
ieteWe will loan yolt a can,
See our Agent, T, C1 McCALL,.
or Phone 2.32o, $russets.
Tho &0th' dreamor
A lily
2
I1