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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1926-11-10, Page 6, WleeDNESDAY, NOV. 10, 1926, Irgainal Only F esh Tea od Seededeerier...tight. FreFele and deiiciCleaSe 192.00411•CAM.M111n1.1•31.111 Bishop 'Williams Chosen To Head Church of England In Province of Ontario Assembly of the House of Bishops ELECTED METROPOLITAN Elects Lord Bishop of Huron Met- ropolitan and Archbisktop of Ex- tensive Domain—Zealous Worker in Many Fields. Right Rev. David Williams, M.A., L.L.D., D.C., fourth Lord Bish- op of Huron, was elected Metropoli- tan and Archbishop of the Eecle astical Province of Ontario in the Church of Englacid by the Assembly of the House of Bishops of. Ontario, I which convened at the Church House, ; Jarvis Street, Toronto, last Tuesday. ' His Grace succeeds Most Rev. George Thorneloe, Archbeehop of Algoma, Dr. David Williams, who was chive who resigned recently on account of en by the House of Bishops of On- tario to suceeed Most Reverend George Thorneloe, Archbishop of Al- goma, resigned, as MetropolItaa of the Ecclesiastical Province of ()Ma- io. Dr. Williams, who will now have tee rank of Archbishop, has preelded wee. the Diocese of Huron since 1:. health and advancing year. 'The appointment was not unex- pected, as Bishop Williams was the senior Bishop of Ontario and, al- though there have been excentione, it has been the custom to elect the dean of the House of Bishops. The new Archbeehop has takere an . increasing prominent part in the work of. the Church since is com- ing to Canada -some 39 years ago from a curacy in Ffestiniog, 1,Vales, to join the faculty of Huroa College, London. Held Important Posts, r eon:e lent le s of the ArchblehoprIc etree Diocese of Huron may be led, or provided with further -opaovereg.hte form of an !ant or coadjutor Bis.hop. THE ERUSSELS POST „ At Perth, County's Annual Plowing Match Interesting pictures taken at tit annual plowing match of the Per e , with W. 0. Grenzebach, Woodetock, h at the plow, and W. Doherty, the County Plowmen's Association held i n judge, standing; upper right show.> Logan Township on Oct. 27t:1. Th upper left pietere shows the bee piece of plowed land in th mate! c. the best high cut plow sod, with N. t McLeod, Galt, the winner; lowee left, Austin Nairn, Munro, the youngest 1 plowman and his brother, Mem In, winner of the boy's jointer plow com- petition; centre, best tractor plowed land with W. IV. Ballantyne, 0. KU - ler, F. G. Sanderson, M. -P., standing and L, Ce Vincent, Ayr, on th . tree- I 12 months and $158,000,000 for the 12 months ended September, 1025• l i , t in h Exports to the Old Conry were \edited at $487,000,000 for the past year and $433,000,060 for the pre - During his professorship at Huron cowling 12 months. e was also - assistant prieet at the CANADA'S TOTAL TRADE. Importe from the Republic to the Chapter House in London, end for a SHOWS BIG INCREASE ,olitll have increased during the twit time curate at St. Paul's Cathedral. 2 n . periods from ., .... e.000,000 London. in 1892 he left the eollege Markee Advances in Value of Both to e652,000,000. At the eater. limo to become the rector of St. jetties' - Exports and 1mports—Favornble Canada's exports to ihe United Church, Stratford, and we:mime-I in . Balance -_Volume of • Butter States rose from $449,000,000 to $468,000,000. . (charge of that parish until hie elec.- Brought in Greatly Exceees That tion to the Spp of Ffuron in 1904. of 1925 In 1903 he had been appointed Arch- deacon by the late Bishop Baldwin, Ottawn, One, Oet. 29.—Cnnadlee and on the death of Pi hop Baldwin total trede in the last 12 menthe is he was elected on the third ballot to 8.281,01(',non greatt,r th Lit in the succeed him as Bishop of Huron. preceding 12 monthe. Both import Who is the American hillionaire? He was consecrated in St. Paul's and export figures Amy marked ad- There is one, because one men pave Cathedral, London, on Jan. 6, 190e, winces ofer the totals for the past 2 income taxes on wealth estemated at (the feast of tho Epiphany) by the years. In the exports from Canada, it thousand million dollars. It is not late Archbishop Bond of Montreal, efeienitural product,; and wood and likely that this annonymous billion - who was .Primate of all Canada, and miner products lead. Imports phew aire exaggerates hie wealth. It is assisting the Peimate were the lete sharp advances in metals and textiles, more probable, that he is given to un - Archbishop Sweatman, of Toronto, The total trade for the 12 months der statement, and in that case there and Bishops Du Moulin of Nicezera, ended September was as follows:— may be more than one billionaire Mills of Ontario, and Carmiehnel. (r- 1'924 ......... ... 51.912,000,00n) among the 11,000 millionaire -4 who adjutor Bishopof Montreal.1920 e2,02.3,000,000 have been unearthed by the. United Man of Many Activities. 1920 $2,304,000,000 States Treasury Department. Ie it e.„„„ei„„ imports in the p,„, „nd. poesible that he is none other than Outstanding in his work has been 4. - - '- A Iced month were valued at eleeee the head of the same departnient, hie determined fight against raec. Ail - 000.000. from which duei‘s of more Mr. Andrew W. Mellon? It le known eide and hie energetic efforts townrd then e I 51.000,006 - ' ' 11. q ql that Mr. Mellon is one of the very the prevention of consumptio 1 His ' ' were .0° "t ' . richest men in the world, and it ie ' ' Canada's exports during the same work in the Church, too, has not period was 51,320,000,000. Thus quite conceivable the, being an hon - been confined to his own iineeee, for the commercial transactions of the est inan and. Secretary of the Treat - in 1906 he presided over the commit- Dominion for the 12 months leave it ury he would not shrink from paying toe appointed to prepare a hymnal favorable trade balance! of .1:337,000,- taxes on a billion dollars. ,The Am - for the Church of England in Can- 000. ada, and in 1908 he was a delegate . Trade with the United Eingdem to the Pan -Anglican Congress in and with the United States has in - London, England, at which time he creased, On the imports liet butter was presented at the Court of St. shows a sharp jump from 49,000 James'. pounds in he 1925 period to 0708,- tvas credited some yeere ago 000 pound:. in the past 12 months; with having refused the appointment anthracite dropped from 4.700,000 as Bishop of Bangor, Wales, which tone to 3,209,000 tons, but biturnin- would have meant , an income for ous coal rose from 11,000,000 tons greater .than the one which he was to 18.000000 tons; imported alcohol - receiving in Huron, and it ii thought ic beVereges rose from $21,000,000 that whenhe declined he was influ- worth to $26,000,000 worth; the val, ONE BILLIONAIRE, AND 11,000 MILLIONAIRES enceci both by the fact that the Church in Wales was dienstabliehed and bemuse he was loath to leave the country to which he 1106 become so attached. Born in Wales. Arehbiehop Williams was born at Silian, near Lampeter, Cardiganehire, Wales, on March 14, 1850. Ho wa3 educate da St. David's College, Larne peter, where he took a B.A. degree tie of imported metals role Timm 13198,000,000 to $262,000,000, and the number of passenger eutomehiles entering the eountry went from 12,- 783 to 25,830. Butter Exports Decrease On the export tables it is shown that 232,000 head of settle wet° shipped in the 1925 period and 205,- 000 in the past 12 menthe; the value of butter exports dropped from $12.- 000,000 to $3)000,000; apple tra.le and a.ubsequently at Oxford ilniv .r (-- showed a very slight gain by export - shy, where he also took a 13.A. and ing 1,4213,000 barrels in the past an M.A. degree in 1901.. year; wheat exportatioe rose from Ordained deacon in 1885 by the 159,000,000 bushel:. to 204,000,000 Lord Piehop of Bangor, he was rais- bushels; automobiles shipped from ed to the priesthood in 1886 by the the Dominion increasei from 64,000 to 76,000; the value of paper export,4 rose from $102,000,000 te 8118.- 000,000; the value of Winer., c report. ed more than doubled, go:ne; from $779,000 to $1,980,000. By his appointment the Diocese Of Canada's two hest customereon- Huron becornes the Metropolitan See I thine to be the United Kingdom and and the. Archbishop will continue to I the 'United States, The Dominion's reeide isi Lendon. It is thought Cos- imports from the Motherland wove eihle that in view et the additional Veined at $163,000,900 for the poet same prelate, arid frorn 1885 to 1887 When Ile came to Canada, he was it curate in the Diocese of Bangor. He was married in 1883 to Alberta EL Burwell of London, Ont. erican Bankers' Assoeintien Jowled hazards the guess that the American billionaire, the first in the history of the world, is a citizen df New York. If so, there is no doubt about the identity. e It is John D. Rockefeller. Other.; think that the richest and most honest of the millionaires lives in Detroit. If so, his name iseelenry Ford. It is among these three men that speculation flutters and all of them are content to let it flutter. Rockefeller the Great Giver. If Mr. Rockefeller had held 011L0 every dollar he ever made he evould have been .a billionaire years ago. It is known that his nubile gifts to religion, science, education and the ;Improvement of health, amount to e600,000,000. It is astounding that having given away this teemendeus eum he should still he euepeeted of taining loose change to the eetent of e1,000,000,000. In addition Mr. Rockefeller is supposel to have giv- en much of his wealth to In's son and there ale. no doubt Rockefeller' chin- ities which have never been made public.. So it is safe to say that if ho has not a billion now he has had it. It is possible Mr. Rockefeller clove not knowhow much money he is worth. He belongs to that class that eo 'impressed Sentimental Tommmy, through a gentleman who was asked by his wife if he had a shilling in his pocket. He said; "Idon't know, my dear," and then proceeded Lo fe..1. It dumfounded the little boy to thiek that there was 0 man in the world so eel that he might conceivably have: a Wiling in his pocket and not be thrillingly aware of the fart. R. would not be surprising if Me. Rocke- feller had a mellion lying aorund that he has lost sight of for the time being. The Ford Wealth. Not long age it finctneini peep e Aid that the t'ash balance of tile Ford Motor Company and Henry Feed per- sonally exceeded $350,000,000. It is known that Mr. Ford is the lareest banker in the world, and that some- times there is as much ae $200,000,- 000 in cash standing to hie credit. Moreover, the Ford Meter Cempany is owned by Mr. Ford and his eon, Merl. There are suppoeee to be no liabilities standing againet them, anti that father and eon own the money, the plant andthe cars itt them, the various factoems, the realeoad and role estate awl other heloinge of tre- mendous value. that are connected with the Ford enterprise. To isti- fliate these at a billion dollere does not seem excessive. The 1925 state- ment of the Ford company showed an asset value of $640,000,000. - itt eether words, this is the amount the Fords believe could be secured if the enterprise were solel. In 421 the profits of the concern were $100, - If nu Pr duce Good Cream and want the best results under the new Grading System, ship your Cream to THE PALM CREAMERY, 'Our Creamery will be operated 24 hours a clay in the hot weather, and your Cream will be in our Creamery and Graded 15 minutes after arrival in Palmerston, Thus assuring the farmer who produces good Cream the best possible Gracie and 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, The Palm Creamery Co, - Palmerston, ht. tor; lower right, Alex. Ruseell and bie son, of Brussels, with the best plow team in the match. Mr. Rut - sell travelled practically all neght to attend the match. 000,000, and en 1325 $115,000,003. If one were to capitalize earning power, and since the general ratio is to value a sound buelnese at eight or ten times its annual .1..1'11111gs, It would be seen that the Fords are not fee from the billionaire class it in - deed Henry Ford does not belong to it. Born Rich. There are fewer details available for gossip than ovee Mr. Millon's wealth. He inherited a fortune from miles long. He is also a well known eontributor to The Dearborn. Inde- pendent. School Teacher Takes on Big Job Alice is only twenty-one. Yet she has it profession and a career and left both behind her, From now on her principal business 4,, n fight + ++4' 4. + 4. -4," • ... ,....., ':i.4 I,P i 4+ MY LADY'S + COLUMN.. + TO KEEP CHEESE If cheese is wrapped in it cloth moistened.evith eleven'. and kepi; in a closed creek it will keep for i long time. FISH AND MEAT Always remove fieh and meat from the paper as soon as they are deliver- ed. Place on earthenware in a cool DRYING SALT . When salt becomes dumo 111 raiey weather, put it in the OVL,Il foe a kW minutes. STUFFED TOMATOES Chilled tomatoes stuffed with cook- ed sweat corn and chopped green peppers make a delightful ealael, with lettuce or watercress. MUST BE COLD Be sure jelly is absolutely cold be- fore you pour paraffin over the top. SMALL QUANTITIES Jain is most successfully made when only a small amount ie cooked quickly over a hot fire. KITCHEN CURTAINS. Checked gingham, that will stend repeated and frequent laundering's is very attractive for kitchen curtains. CARE OF EGGS As soon as eggs are delivered froin the store, wash them' and put in a cool place. • TASTY SANDWICHES Small sausagee, fried, may be used in place of franfurters to make "hot ,dog" sandwiches. CHILLED FISH Fresh salmon of halibut, broeed and then chilled, anti eerve,.1 with cold summer vegetables, makee al; excel- ' lent summer dinner. - MEAT LOAF I , Molt meat loaf with a little ge a - tine, and turn out on lettuce, with tartar eauce or mayonnaise. hard for life, and when the footing doe. become a little less precarious 1 she may take ,up some other kind of 1 work, but it (must not be teaching. , At least that's what the doeto • CABBAGE Cabbage for coli' slaw simuld be finely shredded, soaked ene hour 10 ice water and then drained and pat- e —for the hard work, she went througIS r3 ted dry betareen towels. Chopped bad just one result—they plaesd her ! Vieicoonn,%eno$11,42,5 Muskoka Hospital green pepper is a pleasing gar ni :311 his father, who after retiring. fron the bench, formed a. banking firm into which Andrew entered 4131 young man. Later on this house be came the Mellon 'National Banle.to ,noata_etei li_d4odeeto,i, who hl pabi %,,kyou ;:yeu3siv: 31; hr e nand s h e IS. 1 afvf slie Is ons ege !_1_, the°le?iit;.5.11erubn,i Aitaessai°clt. tel, 1..?.! le Job ;en ete verat t yrite :ins! e nurses s t .k 13te 4't1' olrvi-Pn tuogh2: 0111;:cti:::':1:3: 01 lu ease months en se ob' 1°h el.tintilnit:°47, biggest banking institution bete...en New York and Chicago. Mr. Mel len is suppop,ed to be the larges shareholder in the Aluminum Com- pany of America, and the Gulf 011 Company, one of the strongest ef the indepdendene oil companies, His in- vestments are large and veried, and for a long time have been set at hun- dreds of dollars. When Mr. Mellon • entered the Cabinet he divested him- melf of numerous directorship, but he did not precisely sell all his 1)01 sessionsand give the proceeds to the poor. Billionaire or not, be is no such interesting personality ae either Ford or Rockefeller. He begae with a fortune and has added to it. They started with nothing, and have added no less induteriously. The etiginel Rockefellers went . to the United ;States from Germany a coupie of hundred years ago, but failel te. dit- tiagui$h themselves fel' wealth until John J. got his first job. It was a; aseistant bookkeeper in a commission house, and he received $50 for three months'. work, of which he banked $51.25, the increment representing intereet. ,In ao years' time at this rate of going he became cashier and Who- says that baseball didn't Come from cricket? According to records, New England rules in base- ball once gave the victory to the club which first made 100 r1111E. And the games lasted fully as long ns most of the cricket matches in England. ee + • Is the fact that a well -know rail- road in the United States is to equip is cars with roller bearings evidence that its rolling stock will be greatly emproved? 4. 4. 4.• 4. That liquor ie not good for the I constitution was one of the chief rea- sons for the amendment to the Unit- ed States Constitution prohibiting it, ee le el. e• In the United States the West raises the wheat, but it takes the Yeast to raise the bread. 1 Footle c STEADY HEAT ooked by electricity benefit in flavor and texture by the steady heat. Electric refrigeration, main- : Mining it uniform temp...tenure, is • extremely efficient in keeping foods f re sh. -- 1 SUMMER CURTAINS Muslin and voile are the beet ma- terials for summer curtains, for they, , exclude it minimum of light and air. . MILLED COCOA Beat cocoa with a clover beater for two minutes to prevent the forma- ; tion of a scum over the top. GIVES VARIETY You can vary the monotony of poached eggs by serving a mushroom sauce over them. SALAD DRESSING Never pour the salad dressing over a salad until you' are just ready to servo them. After you have peeper - ed French deeming it should be kept very cold—some cooks place it bn ice, others put a chunk of Ice eight in the dressing. bookkeeper of the firm The Ford Miracle: At eighteen Rockefeller formed it partnership aild entered the comis- sion business as a principal, the firm doing $450,000 of business the first year, In 1859 oil was struck in' Pen- n.sylvania and soon afterveerd Rocke- feller went into partnership with an oil man and established a refinery. Four years later he bought out his , partners ahd not long afteeweri oe- ganized the Standard Oil Company. When he Was thirty-six years old he was head of the company then having I $10;000,000 worth of assets. He re- tired from the presidency of the vast concern in 1011. Twerity-two years tgo Henry Forel was night engineer at the Detroit Electric Light Com - Any, receiving $125 a month. He lad become seized of the idea that he ould make it cheap article that; later would come into general use And lie was right, It is recalled by many hat when going home at night he sed to get it meal at a "hot dog" tend. NOW be employs 217,009 len, and operates 'a railroad 600 1 1 .11 14 ream Means' ETTEP. CREAM ETTER BUTTER ETTER PRICES We are now .prepared to Grade yeur ()venni honestly, gathee it twice a week and deliver et nue Oreameay each day we lift, ih We gather with covered truck to keep sue off it, We pay a Peerninm of 1 cent nee lb, butter -fat for Spec- ials over that of No, 1 evade, and 3 cents per lb, butter.fat for No, 1 grade over [bet of No, 2 grade, The basic principle of the improvement in the quality el Ontario 1101101 18 the elimination of Second and off grade dream, This may be eccompliehed by paying I he producer of good cream a beeter price per pound of butter -fat than is paid to the predenee of poor 01,69411. We solicit youv patron- age and co-operation for better market, terWe will loan you te can, See our Agent, T. C. McCALI, or Phone 2310, Brussels, The Steaforth Creamery