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The Brussels Post, 1927-3-23, Page 2WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 19'2':, t .. 1ry,%414,:`4 1,+ir„ri�!Irr' P.4 Vi..Ri‘;,71;11111'111 � n 7 , ,g ,l. ' r 4..14114 ' /, ./ ,71;1111'11I1/��l//n 'i,;�,/r / l ill '� ! l� ' �1// l,,i,,;,l.,ern avUU (lllll ��•lula� ,ves 1/ r( ,, ,q"'tVF R and over again, in fart, m'tny `1 1 111110i1,44 et time' each year, itthtt 18' has r"yed te Ontario farm- ers f,.e r .!ly of na iceti . to cover t,.srI , . ,• .: a[h o44/1.en ]v.„ree•• eau' sitt- ing. 5F'h ,1..las. and v. n tat./.. .chances P ) rin,+' v.•"•11 ,1 , ..ir, '1 co'reef when ('orru 1 Trait reonoo g"ves t ,eteclion to emir v:tlutt 1 i)rops ettgara Lire by 1i -Moine and p 'l . gad repr.'.n(; a lif k:,g inve. strteet *r sure to get the N1'W HEAA.VY WEICIrr co UN C I L '1\\DARD CORRI ( t11':L) IRIAN with heavy coating of seelter. nest/ 30 114 anre- Let.' aur.- hates A'tr Iar. - S6.n- Liaiteuee .1 ,, r�k s 22r0,11, s. r.... i r . -..,,e,, f .t.„?m. '1rf0! n� rw.. !A .......'^?4T>`''«...-... a. : ;t«.tSr. Stomped on, every sheet t'snMtl1 1AtIDAJW EiRUSSL•L.S ONTARIO THE BRUSSELS POST They may work their heads oil' for per cent o1' its value. Of young fur - the comparative e)On0in i,c 1v•1fare of mors twenty-five years of age and the farmer on one Ruud, and for the tinder only ton per cent owls their retention of the people on the soil fauns free from encumbrance. 101 the other, land it will be all of Some hon. MEMRIrRS: 0h, oh. • little avail, 'rhe great bulk Sof this lir. Mel1IL1«AN: Sly friends laugh pimple of C:li ado are beginning to at that; that is what they thunk of reefize this: they are no longer tor- n' ucuitltl't', and that is 1110 reason rifled by the hunk which WO 111184 they 11480 tried to hough at it daring beard all through the tears Trial our the years they were in power. Moro • high nrnteetinuiet friends. Well may than that, when their friends were That is the history of 1'nited We pray, "Let in the light.” And in power they continually tried to States farm c•ouditione in t highly t than 11e ever wee before. Nut oily ie he unable to orange a (learn':. liven,, on the farm, but he cannot sell 11414 i il•.l ' property without sericite: ro us fitntl loss P211.111111%11'814have 11 vouch re. cord breaking levele and- the general collapse ,f - :rgricultu' al value,: has brought down with it a growing number of hanks in the middle w.'.t.” ''let 4- whet t ,' • levee' bowl in dn. nor.. favors and then walked i rntec'ted country, ate 1 S0'.1 warn, i'1 C•. Asth0 result of its dove .titan- away 1n all fhe'•1' lnalt1100(1 and called 15 I said at the cenmencenleit of • boll the light is beginning to shine this a scientific time tariff. 01 the 1low,+ figures, that whi6• Canar11,1)4 8;' `}culture doe, not 00pl0(1(1 sn011 a contltioi, it is the duty of everyPhone 171 Strati it'd government to do everything possible its order to save it from such calam- ity. Mr. HOCKEN: Wily are United Temptation (Luke 4:1-13; 1 Cor. 10: Good News is not ;o 1.1 a h'i •; It '9, 13). The fife that born again telis net what ment ought ti for Stales fannies protectionists? Mr. MCld1I.LAN: I 1411 glad my one with Christ, feeding continually God, but what God ass drum or hon. friend brought u)1 thaat paint. on the Word and abiding in fellow- nem. Just a few days ago the M"Nary- scrip with God, will be tempted 00 no 11, Making the World Cheist'an Haugen bill received it,) final reading other life is. Christ 11,101 thus tempt- (Matt. 28:10-20; Acts e:13.115). The in the United States Senate, setting ed, and showed us how to meet disciples met the risen Christ "where apart amongst other thins $250,- temptation vietoriousl . IIo depend- Jesus had appointed thein." He has 000,000 to purchase the surplus of 4d entirely on the Word of: God; the mune an appointment to meet us; six staple farm products in that same weapon is our "sword of the are we keeping the appointment? country In order to stabilize the Spirit." L'ut see have two ,"7•0'e' . Are we just where He has called us price. It was carried by a majority Christ and the Bible. If we look in to he, with Him? If so, we shall of either seven or eight, about the full trust to both, we cannot fail. hear Him speaking the Great Conn same nr.:•jority as it was defeated by 0. The Practice of Christian Stew- 'mission to us, "Go ye therefore,:, last year. :mishit) (Matt. 25:14-30). God re- and tell others about 'Him. O'1'y Mr. IIOCKEN: That does not an- jo1ces to entrust his best possessions those, who obey Christ's "Go" can swer my question. ' to those who believe and obey His rejoice in the fullness of meaning in Mr. McMILLAN: Just wait. Take Son. Nothing that we have is our His word, "Lo, I am with you al - your time. A few of the nuen who own; it is all His, to be administered ways." defeated the hill last year voted for faithfully for His benefit until Christ 12. Tho Christian's Hope (John it this year, and d believe in my menu's )again. Those who prove 14;1-3; 2 Cor. 5:1-10; 1 John 3:2, to such a aleg•r00 that It is piercing i' mess ,18ty-fiveyears of 11ge 1)11(1 the tare situation and exposing it. over, only 04 per cent 0041 their Mr. CIiAP1.1N: Tt hag not reached i:11 MILS free from encumbrance. What the government yet. are the reams for this condition Mr. )I'M1LLAN• It is I .av s• 0.•-' and for the wholesale desertion of ' Americanf'u•ms. Another nrtele:a- eosin 1c sdtv11e n so much so that def, fact is tluat1.144.per capita pro - will believe .e )il the near Sutura three auction of crops in the United States trill 'c o :1 mineral demand bit have I which during 1910-14 stood at the this economic evil bit and liar'. ; sp4a•ie of economic :•liver, index figure of 100, in 1921-25 drop - It is a which wo have 141(1 to endure. toyo I pod to 93.2, or a reduction of 0.8 Hong. My hon friend (Mr, Chaplin) per Bent. The report presents fee sees that the light has not yet reach- lues to show that the real annual d the government. Why dee •, h„ earnings of American farmer, in milks such a remark" Does he think 1:120 were 3 per cent below the level of 1911, while those engaged in other that this government, ma in a year in lines of employment earned 32 )ler .114'•/•11 it hass been making history, in cent more. In 1921-25, the most a 3'011 11 in tvhieh liberalism has been `loin, things which will go down to ,,,i t lily as constituting one of the • SO.UTH HURON MEMBER SUGGESTS b , hoe t pages in our pa steel We, --sees he think that in the strenuous GO VERNMENT SEEK RECIPROCITY lit',. of our honoured leader (Mr. ie ackcnzi't King) and his first lieu- tenant, the government should be ex - Thomas McMillan Brought Up Ques- tion In House at Ottawa — Says Issue Clear—Feels That Canada Would Gain By Trade Treaty With United States SIr. THOMAS McMll.LAN t South Huron): Mr. Speaker, )lc first ex- presseinn must he 0;4 of congratnl0- tion to the hon. Minister of hn roe,• upon his tar:. and shrewdness in bringing down his budget wither me day= after the rcaeemblin0 of par- liament. This shows that he, -at least, has no desire to prolong 8:1' session to any undue length. I eon- ratulete hien also on the clear, con- cise 1.11d optimistic etatenle,.; which he bus presen'e•d to this Hau':and to the country. Mr. HOCKEN: And a stare '1')• - Mr. McMII.LAN; We have heard a good deal about a stable to.rit front across tlu: way. Before I get theougn )10001141)' ley fl•i011ds opposite may Pe- e•laim, "Why don't you come across 14.'re! We are the. only Simon-tlui•e• representative.: of agriculture in this country." Allow me to s::y, as 1 have often said before, that I do not lirv0 any Bread political Harty eon ver bo successfully established and permanently maintained in this Do- minion on any class or sectional foundation. And it is not in the pub- lic interest it should be so. While farmer; should organize and co- operate s(((inus', economically and oth(1'.Vlse, lr other class,.= do, yet. dr, when we enter the pellt'e t 1114 I believe we should ,inter it as citi- ::ens of 001' country, rather than as member- of any particular elites. I Inas. be told by my friends that they are not a party and have no inten- tion of becoming a party; that flier :0.0 only as group amid believe °.n _roup government. Well, i am not going to discuss the platter et pees- ent further than to say that if 1110 11011 110t (14.1''0, WO must 11,re,' to V- eer, I aur not in favr of gems, government. Not 1((•c: Ilse such a system may not contain own and women of probity, of wisdom(- :old el' ehnract er. but lr - 0111,' I know have rea.rl history aright, and i1 we ere to be guided by the tea eldints of history --that we have Ion, ,our, passed that etage in the-;nwer1 march of human proe'ress. d May tell 111y friends wluu 1 14114 them harping continually, foe tli,ele and higher protection, tile` that is not the mandate which the eleetnl•- ate gave o1 September 1 last. We hear nitwit respecting industry and OS to what ought to be done to pre - tem. it. When we sneak 01' industry 1 would ask you, Me. Speaker, and thl'm2h you the, members of this 1'touee, to consider what is our great- est inilu-try. Is it not the pursuit of agriculture? In the full some of the terns farmers 81.0 more than a ell1ss of our populations farming ds more, than an industry. The 11':tnl- (Mance of agei('t:aittn•e in the life of this natio)) is far deeper than this. Employing as It does about one-third of our trninfutly occupied population, it toughes something really vital and ftinr)nmental In the anntionel axis - tome, it ',wolves the netion11 tree. peritl•. the even unie welfare, Ute xnr•ini character Anel the sweat nr•s- e' oa' of Jim ('11.11atrld811 percale. We must tis a neeple determine deliber- ately ;ul(1 w1!4nly the 1'011, which we wiell to helve+ a'>9'Irnit.ilrr: 1'1'41• in Otn' 110i01imil ecornr'tie We. r, ri' e, hlla11011'1n c'r'own and -1) e.•-meses.. life, has hI•rrittle (tottered in the fee- tOrye the 01Tioe, the store, 11(1.d the favorable year of the five year per- iod, the net earnings of the accrue~•' farm operators, including owners and tenant,, is placed at $801. This figure includes food, fuel and shel- ter, which the Department of Agri- culture values at $034, leaving only hank, public opinion has hecto)" !meted to !turn its attention to player $170 for other requirements. The somewhat urbanized and popular at- piano roll: e )s 1 sreport floes on further to say that heart there is method in their mad- ! worthy of His trust will be reward- ! 1 1 om a t , and Ulna ne1411. They see a presidential elee- ed, at His return, by fresh responsi- t,:•nti0n concentrated more and more fnxrs? That is the only inference the owner -farmer appears to have Mien in a loss favorable position than td•an two years ahead, and feel that bilities above all that they can ask or undo problems of city industry, otrche possible froms hg: remarks When I this 114 the last straw in the last effort think. "Faithful 0841' a few and finance. 4'14414 has leen <o to the said that this high ricins was :spec- the average; his net return was only 8573, or less than the value of his of the high protectionists of that set over many." olive comparative neglect and eqthcompass lei of economicir1'Ooslavery, it calls to country to hand out a sop as as re- 7. Making Our hones Christian atice detriment of the requirements mind the resolution made byAbru- food, furl and shelter, in Pact only about the, amount they are paying colnpenee for the miseries of the far- (Eph. 5.� ) of agriculture. ham Lincoln when standing on the their hired labor and less than one- 11lee's as a reeult of the highly pro - It has Leen said that as agriculture banks of the southern Mississippi tcctive system in that country. If half the amount earned by ordinary i; the obie st of the arts, so it is one and viewing the dreadful conditions workers in other occupations. These you are watching conditions through - of the most revolt of the sciences. A of ]roman slavery. He then made a out the United States republic you l feet ngri •ulture is the true foun- vote that if he ever had the chance figures are the most favorable that pe can be secured from the available vannot say that the farmers of that dation er trade and commerce; the to hit that kind of thing he would data, and they go fat to explain the ro)1.1'. 1 2 of the riches of the hit it hard. exodus from United States farms stste', it is more, it is the one great Mr, HOCKEN: But lie was a pro- ,ince 1020 and the unrrsteol' the Am- unctaltamirta t0(1 seal bed of the no- teetionist. 1inue it is tlerefore the business of Mr. McMII.LAN: Yes. This tariff er)can ngrieulture community. They pnblil turn to see t0 it that =rhea - tor which teas placed on the psi- show that the average owner opera- burden ('01eires just ,onsideration at nlary producers by our Conservative for it able to caro less than two p,,; thee herds of the governments n1' this friends and their friends in the days I cent on his investment. H0 is re - country. You may ask age, u•h' ',.- gone by is the result, and should be in is lr4rieulture' not receiving erne- (1000 away with. We hear much talk oeie justice at the sarins of the goy- ('f the condition of the people of the eminent? I refer you at once tun United Sttltee; I was rather glad to stedr of the customs eerie. el weal, hear that mentioned this afternoon, we find that at inmost every / .even- bocaueo while agriculture in this 44111 turn those engage.' in other country does not. approach the con- iines (1' industry arc nhfe to obtain clition of American agriculture which li:,•ir reyudtrnmlts 4411444• icer or ::'• is largely due to the high tariff sys- the lowest possible rates of duty. tens of that country over a long per - That le right: we have no fault 10(1 of years, yet we should do every - whatever to find with that provision. thing humanly possible to save Can- adian agriculture from any such ce n - priced of this privilege which pre- clition. (timers in various other Industrie: Last year 1 made some startling :,,•,• efieme(1 to enjoy? Farming e, statements regarding American agri- 1• est., e. 1(001,: it industa'y in t9rat culture, so startling that in the in - it 14)"' ueee leanly nl• t(te' t•erluir,- terval I decided I would either- sub - meets ei' the lon, It is peculiarly :tantiate them or make amends by sitmited in this mountrs'. Whil-• thee, withdrawing them this year. I hold engaged in other lines of industrial in my' hand the latest publication on •tivity are enlabled largely to hay the agricultural problem of the Unit- whole:ed.- and sell retail, the fanner ed States, issued in April, 1026, and in many instane,s is sempelle(l t„ published 110 the result of the find - tem r,Cail land sell whol'salr', 411.1 the inge of the National Industrial Con- . •e•it1 1'e, s not. do 'uatice to hint, Terence Moires of that country. In 'i'a3 i1)41/•ultoral implements, mach. 014 few words as possible I would like leery. building materials, fond, to place the condition of American clothing and other household rentdl•e_ agriculture before this TIouse, as it mems: Hee,. emnaeise over 110 )1,1. is recorded in this report. Here the cent of the entire rest of our ngr1- American fawns population in 1920 is eulturel lite. it is to the credit or glared at :31,(114,000, in round fig - the i(uve( einem of the day thalt in ores; five years later, the Board of regard to implements and machinery Agriculture, plisses it at 30,('455,000, w,. have be -en e(1•bled to gel '0ng0 of or a decline of 811)1051. 1,000,000 in our requirements clown so low that That period; (luring the same time the the !mail' is e0 longer a gnat consid- entire population of 3lu' Unites oration in the price of these deme.- :}fates increased by over 10,000,000. hut, Sir, when we have some The pereonal indebtedness of A.nwi'i- „ 1' 1, - industries which 01r vital to can farmers has risen from one thou- thI• eucee '4 of the country, such (IS 111(1121 million ((others in 1910 to 3,'250 these rrgn•esenteed by my hon. friend millions in 1025, including' only bank ieclehtr'1ness; in addition to this, the down to from 11 to 10 per cam!., and ' miscellaneous indebtedness of farm operators as of July 1925 le put at last additional 3500,000,006. During that some 1'1"1 from 1920 to 1925 the entire e capital invetard in Ameri- eel) a,t•nculturc, including land, im- plements, buildings and live et0cl(, dropped from 879,007,000,000` to ::511,154,000,000, while- the total in- dehrerinisse including mortgage, bank and nliseell l0 (nus, remained let tho Ague, 01' :al>e250,000,000, or 20.7 per e(:nt of .he entire agricultural value, lord it takes 0.2 per rent. of entire gees income of the Aim -ri- ven farmer to pay the interest, Dur- ing then' five years the interest ('h)n'Ited 112(4)14 rim awned' -operators' d0bt. not (111(1' 17equired 1.2 Per cent mor, of the gross income, but his andtl in his property declined from 47 billions to 32 11)11 ons, (luring the seem time the owners of rented Nettie ailu4ln' to have lost five and three -monger billions of the equities 'o their nraperty, The final result d0 that fuels) per rent (1f. the: land in the :Frnerielrt 1'r.)nlhlit is now in the Minds of renters, a mot unsatisfac- tery condition, while the other f10 per tient is mortgaged to owe, forty 7 I �,�t+ anada's , est !an _ -.-Prices from $375.00 L2 TE ,.:,MS it0 SU IT ALL 1)o not Waste time solving f)lg%'Lles hitt stet in Hench with thl• old established and reliable • lirin and get frill Valu(:: for your mom y, a AC. !ti Risch 97 Ontario St. ;role West Lambt0n (Mr, Gondis0111, when mere like Henry b'ord sur pry- ing out and telling ns that they would be satisfied with free tl•arl,', why' should the people of ('nisch bo itomp died to submit to a tariff of from '25 tee :35 per cent whic:l hear, clown on the primary producers as w•r•11 as upon the colaumers:' Why are such regulations so drawn?? Mark you, th',: is not to be attribute I to the government of the clay; it is dee to the. fact thllt all through the y...s to too ,great 11 (1(341ee, the falv(n':•,i 111' chlst'i4s of the country have eajnyee a 090ci111 privilege and have !Uhl oho ('8)' (11' the 1rlvert)In1nts which have been in Mike from time to time. Why is it that these regulations arc SO denten, I ask? Simply to boneftl ,(('('101 industries at the expena;• of the primary producers and th,, cleat: body of the country's consumers. if attr1(0ltl11re '.N ergs' to ))r(. Fine' Iib it should, 111141 1(s i believe it can 144 mad:• lel irr0eper, 1111 bort of thing mu•:t stop; if not, then the «,fol•:, of the Minister of Agricultnr(• (Mr. Motherwell) and of the Minister of Immigration (Mr. Perko) in their re- 191(4ive (topartmont. will be 1''utile., country are strongly in favor of a :25 to 6:4). Are really Christian hones common In such salvation, not even the salvation of a home the husband loves the wife those now do Heaven In the Lord's as Christ loves the Church. The elle p1'esollce, will be completed until joyously submits unto the husband "the redemption o1' our body" (Rom. 118 the Church is subject unto Christ. 8123) when "death is swallowed up The children obey their 'parents as in victory," and "then) also which high protective system. Although T being do God's place to thele; and sleep in 748(114 will God bring with happened to say to my desk -mate the the parents bring up the chi'2ren other day that I believe the lvteNary- ass unto the Lord. Central in such Haugen bill would be passed and :t a home is perfect, unfailing love. would be the last straw, the latest 8. Serving In and Through the reports are that President Coolidge Church (Matt. 5: 13-16; Acts 2:42- 47). Salty Christians make others 31. "That blessed hope" is "the glorious appealing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus'Christ" (Tit- us '2:13) . Not Heaven, but the Lord's return 4s the New Tetsa mont hope; for "I will conte again" is as certain as "I go." No believer's ceiving for labor and superinten- 1\111 refuse to sign it. I understand dance about the wages of the aver- it has not come '1,•i':or him yet. age office boy, less than one-half of lir. HOCKEN: Why is it that the the wages of railway workers and farmers in the United States, suf- less than ane -third of the wages of as my hon. friend says they skilled mechanics such as plumbers :arc, because of protection, me net Hin)" as "the 'Lord Himself shall de- evend from Heaven with a shout and the dead in Christ: shall rise first; then we which are alive and remain shall be caught up togethe with them in the clouds, to meet th( thirsty for the Water of Life. Shin- Lord in the air: and so shall we ever ing Christians sired light wherever be with the Lord" (1 Them tali they go—people do not see thou, but 171. see Christ shining through them. They are different and' distinct from Hybrid Teas Best Roses for Ontrtr and electricians. During the last 15 1111(dlig for fr01. trade? the world ns would be a co ony n years farm 'bankruptcies in that Mr. McMILLAN: Let my hon, 'angels living ]sere of earth.- Con - country have increased over 1,000 friend 'eke my word for this. I am tinually and irresistivly they add per cent. In spite of the much vaunt- neither as prophet or the seri of a others to their own number. but if in two years we do 9. Making the 'Community Chris - ed era of prosperity there which my prophet, hon. friend (Mr. McGibbon) told us not see the most strenuous fight 181 than --Temperance Lessen (Gal. 5: about, the plight of the United States the United States repuplic for a re- 13-25). Beast -like ve'ses the love - life: that is the (1iffeernes between the world and the Church. fighting and devouring one another. consum- ed one of another—the natural 'ufe. By love serving one another - - the Christ -life. Eighteen black, tragic, loathsome, "works of the flesh," and nine, glorious, white shining parts of the "fruit of'the Spirit." On which side does chinking intoxicants put us? 10. Sharing ti"e Good News (Atte 8:1-8; 2 Cor, 5:14-20).. Was "Char• i lid' Alexander right when he said' that the Christian who is not citing I. Personal soul -winning has sin in his ; COOL CAKE life? The early Christ:'oma could not l Let a cake cool before applying keep the Gospel to themselves, The ' icing, so that the stearal may escape. farmer is )notch as it was when the elected tariff, i am very far' mistaken; post-war depression set in. So ser- 111111 that will show the wisdom of ious 1$ the situation than in the, Ian- - which they - are pdsse.sed. - goage of Me. Evans Clark, writing n'ir. HOCKEN: That is a prophecy in the New York Tinges: nota fact. Mr. McMI1.LAN: My hon. friend has often been in the habit of mak- ing prophecies that have not turned out true., Mr. HOCKi;N: Well, WO OM both 111 the Sallie Hoot. Mr, McMILLAN: It le now realiz- ed that the great requirement of this eeuntry is to get more people, and )'articularly to obtain and retain 1)1nrr people on the soil. While our government insists that only agricul- turists, (and domestics shell he en- entn'ne'ed t.n ennui to this country, yet to ton greet 11 degree under pres- ent venditinns the tnvrn has been only n roundabout war I'or )hent to (Continued on. Page 3 ) "It constitutes al, serious menace '10 the :future enonomic welfare, of the country. In the ltrdst of an etas oi' prosperity for trade and industry which has mad(., the United States a1 itemises among nations, satyr' the writer, the American rarmer stands on the edge of bankruptcy, the bub- ble of his value burst. The manu- facturers, the bankers, the railroad MOO, the 1111110 OW/10118 o1' An101141a, have reached 11 dizzy pienacie of Anaemia] well -bring. The industrial awl transportation wage earners a'v- e'r had more money to spend. But the American farmer, null-tl(n•ct of 111e country's population, is I110110 nl1' Sunday School Lesson BY CHARLES G. TRUMBULL (Editor of The Sunday School Tlrnee) SUNDAY, MARCH 27. Review; Studies in the Christian Lire. Positional ilcetdings: -Rev. 72)-17. Golden Text: II' yo love Me keep My command - needs, (Join) 11:15). :supernatural life is the theme of Ile! three nienths' lessons we now re- view. The review should leave us in (nnsedoln helplessness and humility 14 (ore God, yet '.rusting Him fully to make this supernatural life one 011'41 by His grace. The Christian 1) Follower o3' J.s11:1 (Mark 'I:1.6-20; 2:13-17; 1 ,John 2:0). No one can follow Jesus and obey ills ('1111, "Colne ye after Mo," unless ('hrist Himself is literal- ly ends life. "rhe life that is Christ" 1>: the -sec'et of 'following l'au'ds.. it mewls to live es God lives; yet that miracle is exactly what Christ •will accomplish in every one who tenets Him folly (1. John 4:17). 2. The Standard of Christian Liv- ing -(l eke 6;227.38). The sta116iar is hopelessly ifeposdbl(, for the nat- ural man: ''l1c perfect, as your heavenly bather is perfect." It re- quires that we love our enemies, an- other impossibility.. But Christ as our life Maintains 1(1 lis God's own stanilarda - 13. The Christian's esti of the Bi- ble (Dent. 6:4-9; 2 Tim. 8:14-17). Clod's written Woad 114 114 perfect as the. Living Word. Tile 13ible ds ns peered as Christ. We 111e not to eritk•ize it, but to let it criticize res. Its every word 18 God -breathed. If we thus 'study, believe and yield to it makes us "perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works," 4. Prayer in the Christian life (,4tark I;25; 11;32-130; Matt, f,:9' . 1:"). One talking with God ought to ger" the most vital activity of 001: ldlc, Ile it was or Ghrkd's life on earth, We tial -accomplish more through )'1ty(r,r than by all the other activities el' our life. put 'together. The Lord ,1-^1405 p)It prayer ahead of all e1Se in His earthly -lifetime. Tf Ile did, can we'efford not to? 5. The (Jlirlstian Over'eonitlg Speaking of the Gage Institute mcnlllers of the Rose Society of 0 . t1(ri0, Henry J'. Moore, of the De pai•tment of Horticulture, gave an - instructive illustrated lecture on the culture 01' 1.00e8. 'rhe speaker dem- onstrated for his audience the bes methods of planting and pruning rose bushes, and explained in (1etai the m1anner in which insects and fm ,0) could be controlled. Mr. Moo: ,:tate' that in Ontario but resul in r)8cs could be secured from IT; brill 'peas, which were crosses be t:ween the Hybrid Perpetuaals and th true tea scented roses. The elimbin• roses, he said, were a good soco11«. and the Baby P011011thas were fa) gaining ill popularity. g stomers This ever-proaent iaask of the business Hurn is nue flint Advertising can most etli- ciently tlerfarnl, Advertising it) 'IRE I3iWUSSELS POST would emery any m,eesage you desire into every horn0' in ibis eornmaunity• 1.1 would spread the "dews" about new merchandise, special pales or new store policies gnieltly 1,11(4 thorougihly. '1"3her a friendly interest in telling the. "buyers" of this fawn what you have for sale that is of service to them and you will win new customers e0uataintly. f1SEiISESMVE - MESgSISTS A VESTISE n 11