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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1927-5-11, Page 2WEDNESDAY, M. 1.1, 1927, Cali?s baked v„,;th Purity Film, thrall. for tlti•:I four days. Purley is t ,luta' us, 11, er 'let and 1101,1s int•re water t'r lrriil;, T• cakes, rt. largo, light buns and bread are al:: r-.`..; afar: w hr Seed .I.trenut t r ; r , j , ] c'.• Nacho, t /....Ada Hour 1r U. Co.I. ,cot. d. Tkooloo, Nt rw.:al. . '.n l .ltn. L � 3uu d av ,Sct;r`o oo BY C;ri•a,LCS e.;. :"RUNI3ULL, (Editor et The -uneasy School •1'01,00:1 PET%R AT ?F.ni I” _ ;T nd tvnnten 1'•:t et. , ie ten' tete mer ti. Gulden T.,...t: ren 1 tit- I:::r: f,•• C-11 1,1110 --,t 1'' .1 ., ,., ,,.. ,l'. erre. ;te1.1 ;lla:.i 1' t _ t't ,. _- The lesson to -day marks one of _l. ortwils, p _11,.0= tilt _.'.;,,. c.. It t''., u .11,ticnt wv hat':' fort= His ti :ln:,on our Lord ..•,:•- 711 - His t':1''. tare:: n •h , u ,1, i..aa they should t,.- dur'- 1 with Powi'r f'r910 on 1: 11—al 1:-f I The teetort rieh suegostive met -oriel pro ti Il 1•' pl eet:cn to the ne-r1e of che c h.1 cI and tit. world et the present lent, Here is kaon kd th • stork of the fit.st revival. First it expleios .h•• secret of all power in the 1i: 'hir., of the C, s• -i pal. ft is not h might, nor by poo-! • r. but by 31y .aith the I. •'d. it :-.t a-: tl ueleersolity of the ap• I pea of the l., ,eel. Devout inn I "Celt ,•.vert n ti n under he•1vt•n" I hearer the Gospel on that day. 1m - press this fa't o11 the hinds of the seiadars. !Much is nc:nh said and written to -day about the 'goblen 1 tbre•tul" that runs through alt rellg- • ions, and that it is a mistake to at- I tempt to take the Christian religion' to the people- of the East, who lea:,: their own religions which are stilt1 `.•I Int ,just . good. That is the devil's • lir. The Gesp:1 of the Lord .Laos Christ its the universal remedy for a universal disease, and it is the only remedy. There is none under name under Heaven given among men whereby we must be saved, and men 1. L•• I tin f • itt 'Ill, . from :tr te.t. 171'st.:..... en the ti i Pee t. \ 1,•; ; ,', o 11 t 1'11:1 err :I- tilt. . .11 j. in the i'tii.i t...n life nil ., 1.•;:ditee men i1PT . , 1 r - •, 1 .. . Nl til..' 11 ,0 i,ti tit the hand ',hat It world anti bring the rc lc. 1 Viet ,?uitor. Lo '1, t _:..h us to 1'h: following t_ xoral'. ,:n. ut power in brit:goer ahocubrit:—o ereet+•'t t.tl in Wales, A otieiger who was remarkably sueeessfui in hi p: milting had but ,,n. serttem. hut throe h itucelettds of wee we sceved. For aen from wile,•., he lived, in a lonely .• 1:; newts of thle wonderful stet ,... rra:h nd a brother preacher, Forthwith he 11 come atrxIous to find out the seerel of this success. He 'tilted out end walked the long, wectry road, and at length, teaching the humble eo rag where the minister hrea, hit se. ,1. "Brother, where, did you b t 1'a:t' sermon: He was taken into a hotel' ly furnished room, and shown a spar, vehere the carpet tea. woi'u batt- and shabby near a window that looked out toward the sob n:•• uu,l.nt'ell :lnd the minister said: "Brother, that is where I got that .sermon. \ly heart was heavy for men. On,. ev- ening I knelt there and cried for power to preach as I had never .11.011924121. eeh..I Memorable &mals ha t -e hig/or' of tife Dinpure. %' h Lx 6harI s CoriW LORD ^ACON'S DOWNFALL Tdree 1•undr-d and year ego, on Tee. r•d 'Inv, t1;'1. the »oldie: art:r,r of the fammi; Fr:11 1 11'10.'111, l;•iron V rulant and \'i -count St. Al - fele':„. one of th+: •,•teat s ti' :11,1'1,, C.,.."111,Ii '.r, 1.'.riti;h 1L1;tar•,-, ,n -rte to a axltl: n ire was the yolneest of Sir M1icilatt haeon, tit • Elizabethan Lotti lit-• per of the Geer:- net:, a'ri'l w•as hoer. in London in 1:,111. A an early :tate his precocious intelinct attrar•to•1 t110 11o'10e or Queen ?:1'au• home:. wlio tea= eliarmtri with the child': wit wild <:rw,iity. Hr• was edn- :Itr,l a' f'am,ridgot leorvereity, rend at 1.1, a nr Ir ho.._ .nenl?r'1' of t•let staff of the. !•ogl .h timItasse- dor in Prance, where h1. ri•mainnd j'or thret•y•ar'. Beretln•ned to England on the death of his father is 11179, and as he was left unprovided for, it be- came necessary for him to malt his own living. IIe derided to stud, law and was ealled to the Bar in 1.582. Two years later ho entered the House of Commons, lend although ne earned a brilliant reputation, both at the Bar and h1 Parliament, it waw not until. the accession of .James' 1 in .1(108 that he was able to secure any lucrative appointment. He speedily worked his way into the; fav- or of the new king by systematic flattery, and was first rewarded with a pension and a knighthood. His rise to great power was rapid, and he advanced from high position to another until he was made Lord Chancellor in 1818. All through his career Lacon had been unscrupulous and open to Yn'l berg, and as Chancellor he was guil- ty of inumerable slats of eorruptioh, but he was no worso than the mejor- ity of hie contemporaries, and his downfall • was engineered solely for political reasons. The arbitrary gow •tirrnnent of the Ming and his minis'- tars was resented by. the House of Commons, and its nienlbers •decidsll ,. to melte an t•xtnnpl,• of on of the royal rater,.;:. P.arnn w r- the victim ...11.11, and early in 1121 he WI,' charged w•Lh 2114 eases of corruption, to which no r10fenet -was nn;: ible, and ire at once pleaded guilty. After a lengthy do• liberation the House of Lords pro- nounced judgment and he was order- ed to pay a fine of forty thousand Pounds, disqualified from ever wain sitting in Parl1antent ne holding of- fice under the Crown, and was 1•:'n- 1 011,1 to iml.n•i; onment at the kinat's pleasure. The king rnncctted the pay. ment of the fine and ordered his favo'itt to be set at liberty after nn imprisonment of :four ;lays, but Pa - con was deprived of all his valuable er'pointment.; and was compelled to retire in diegrace to his ma g nifieont r ountry honor at St. Alban', , whore he spent the rest of hi:, life in study end writing. - Although Lacon discharged the duties of his various offices with great ability, and was also one of the great outstanding statesmen or the: day, his fanle rests entirely upon his eminence as a scientist, it phil- nsoplleer and a man of letters. His intellect was one of the most pow- erful and searching over possessed by man, and his rlevolopment of the • inductive philosophy revolutionized the future thought of the human, 1nee•. His essays, fifty-eight in num- ber, are the most popular and host known of his writings, but he was also the author of numerous tracts, histories and political pamphlets, while his ninny great philosophical works include the, r:amouls "Novus Organum," upon which he hod hub- nred for over thirty years before he presented the completed work to ;Int icing in 1620. Macon died on the, Oth April, 1(126, as the result or a chill, which he had contracted while making ex•• periments es to the antiseptic, quali- ties of .snow, and he left behind him debts amounting to fifty thousand pounds,:. THE BRUSSELS POST CLINTON'S NEW COL EGIATE BWW DING 1 t, tic 1 1 ,1 e' 111 , d, ,t.• f - tl 1.t.1en t• 0bt utled waa- • c It hnuld he so platted that :, !in:, . -t 1 u t t f:u,s nr 111'11; ;:h n ;h lnakt i, released it will 1 11Ii - . whet 1' • tie l:a er : ni-ii1'•ln',nf c„n- i,1e- 209 ®a to 4 crisps to each ceiratns worth of tea. ..F T` NOTES . ', .o to tae rig_^ht—111,vr CHALLIS COATS Printed challis fe:d'inns ;orae of ill , new ports coats and :11' :e diet- ed ,., 111 conning material for bath- ing suits. . 'i - :,,tot .,r wheels. d; nuc - i, A-„lts on the Chux.:• imam. :;.t n.• t.f review ]n: rn.. ' I tit ll wed, theown by travellers from a trip around the world, who arrived ' "11 1 t 11 minor; nn 111 o;:- • at 11111 Windsor street ;'rhino in. boo. t ; tee ; .0 k"1 1111111. Dfoutrcal recently, on the last lap Underinflation Ilexes the side nail; of a tiro too :each, caut,ih'" :hent to break down. ,,:,•,1 , „I.,;oleo: 1 ane • le designed in sac) a' Wh• a 'i rnr woods nn n sleep in - 1 : r. of this l:•tl. ,.11•,01 Iteite,r .. f' 1 of Tule:- lie 1 alieli'. much employ- ed 1 I r ht fleelcuol ot 1.' • ti -t; 1:. ' . t', ilt v„k+ .erre, when The y,•t':-- ri 11,111 th cut. a young mho •r L.'I1 nt -etc �1' - r • tar "It 1c cc.. lik• 1 t 11' - silica].” lie 11.,•1 u'hi.+ . - 141'c, It Ims app '11'.1 rce wed wlte l you. ,•o 1.••1,11 th' 71'•et i-; by 110 111,110:- 11:=t, 11 tL, :1Z7 :err is of fine modern tiro- pl tte comfort and tiara - :d„1; its 1t•-11 co bratty, Tru• Poor eon;tt'uction in all eines- moms le of 'wooden jesets resting 011 iiitcsintry wa'ls, :inn on the ::teed be11111s, covered with a inch rouser, floor h0d illa•torally and finished prcachcd before. The hours passed until miler„ ht :truck, and the au's looked dozen nn a sleeping valley and the silent hill.; but the answer vain, not, s0 I prayed on, until at 1.41111 I saw a faint grey sheet up in the cast, Presently it became sheer, and I watched and preyed until the silver becthntu purple and gold, and on all the mountain crest; blazed the elan fires of the new day-; and thein the :1'1•inen ammo, and I lay down and s1_]tt, and 0,•0141 arc: preat•hnd, seri r('(cI ; fall down before the fire of (lode That is where I got that sermon.” • Nothing. is perhaps more eletm rz n hi; lee -o11 than the contrast that met rated. by Peter. The nts,k, t to dlntmg Peter of a few weeks 110- 0,•,•, helm, With oath:; anti cur,as, had .ir1:• •11 :hat he knew Christ 'for fete” t1 nitlid would laugh at him, is new; nr..parud to ria•k 11114 life to proclaim he rosne1 and testify for His risen Lord and Saviour. There is nothing else that will impart such moral courage as the power of the holy Spi'rit in the life, and physical cour- age also, as the whole history of thu Chris`inn Church and the shed blood or countless martyrs clearly show,. Notice the sermon that Paler preatc'hed. It was Christ and the re• ars,,•,+inn that he proeialmed, nd- (hieing three proofs to attest that Jesus was the Christ, the promised Meseia11 of the Jews, and that Coil had raised Him from the dead. Sete tits, effect of Peter's sermon. "They were pricked in thei')' heart, and said unto Peter and the rest of the apo:.- tles, brethren, what shall tvc do," Tile: preaching of the Gospel will always clr, one of two things, it will harden the heart or soften the heart. It will create conviction) of sin or cause resentment of spirit; it will bring men and women nearot• to Christ, o1' it will drive them farther limey; it will be a savor of Ilfe unto life or of death unto death. Sen the effect of this, the greatest sermon perhaps ever preached, Three housand were converted. The audience of that day was not one whit different from the modern aud- ience of to -day, Under the, faithful proclamation of the Gospel, the preaching of Christ, .erncilfed and ,risen again, men and women are converted and brought to the Sav- iour, Ilut some ,nocicocl Pete,' and the Apostles, saying; "l' -hey arc fill- ed with new wine," Jn • other words, they said they were drunk. How true a picture of the many today who are "wise after the fashion of this world," who, when they sec some poor soul converted and shoat- ing his praises to God for the great doliverance He has wrought in his '1'11e windows 111eof 1 i t , ,Ot tlite v'i:lt two 1::,1111. 1 0. t::et and ,.'Zit t ,1 n ' t'., • ;tor- cid, „r.. , •- :i twetet111:1', t:• With :'1:-i- 1 'i'01' e1' r•tt:21 • 1,.11 e,] t'''1' ,1111 11na .,ti 'file ('('105'ei walls ale tl t td t1 111 it lop.” pt bt it l dello and 1'- . around til teal's. 'I'lrc. 'taitl•ats tiro of steel con- tuctinn w•itll nett::tith non -slip :tan t earls. Th e clues noon .r: tact p'lrll 2•;111 enterel .l et lit kb.t a 1: on t'1 •" walls. Thie building is built lit • ,e way of the very best material:, a,:d is iitu:h1 ci in such a w•,".y that fo',r ne five generations of Huron county students will have the benefit of its use, True ventilation, which is of such life, hold up hands of horror at such "neurotic" people and these displays of emotionalism. But wherever the Iloly Spirit conies to abide He 1s the harbinger of joy and gladness. tt is tht, Pentecost of the soul. That sav- d :;inter; should break out into joy - nus gauging at such moments is not to be wondered at. The amazing tltitlg would be if they did not. Simi] not the redeemed o1' the Lord say so amity aloud with joy. 11 they fetid their peace the very stones mig'itt. well ery out. The Necessity of Provithing Fresh Soil For Chitins Poultry production in Canada has 1 been in the past almost a general ,1 ''arm proposition. Under such conditions little atten- tion was paid to the changialg of the • rearing ground for the chicks, a, it was seldom that any ground was over, to eked, Even under the old order of thing.o "poultry sick" land was occasionally referred. to, and backyard poultry- men had at tinges to give up the keeping of chickens for n tine, :n ord.rr to clean up their yards by the -trowNg of garden crops. It was not however, until speciali- zed poultry farming became more i general and the keeping of poultry by intensive methods became corn- 1 mon that the necessity for the year-; ly changing of the rearing ground became generally recognized. 11 has long hoer known that. ,•.hick, planed on new land, that is, land ov- er which poultry had •'not previously been running, would out -grow tilos: raised on previously used land. Iiut the wonderful development of the "day old" chick business and the shipping of stock from one part of 1 the country to the other, to say noth- ing of the tremendous importations from the United States, has made the spread of disease and internal para• sites inevitable, To combat divease 1 and especially the spreading of in-; term") parasites, a yearly changing 1 of the fearing ground is essential. The sooner farmers, and especial- t ley those who are speeialiting in pool- I try farming, realize the necessity for giving poultry a place in the regular - crop rotation, the sooner will those troubles bounder control. Nova depend too much on chains.; They aro good to pull a car out of mud and snow ruts, but on slippery streets it is doubtful whether chains will help when a bad skid occurs, { 1 11"0I1 '+;11.:11 it 1, -', •h"l?a t • t,•t.:•l•1 l t dl> 111 it 1.01,1 ,air from ah.a•• ter. 11_, I 1.11 i,l s',, vat'0114 1'20,1,, .0 ntl,•-'ice 011111111101'S 011 t 11, ,:1 ,•11 10•' ft .11 22111 the o tut t 1 -011:1,• -tot lrdt', and ih,• fne-h air 1, ' t ,teteli ;An:, rood, by m 1e. •l: eot pee elroted ventilators hi tee -I' 1 cool Inc ft. •h e., 1° 1 a, 1et dic try 'cis it ee•ers the 101101s' t lc ern: 01 50' ; excess direct it•tti• nu radiation. Th • woodwork in the nudismriam, l+r l urs 1l s loom, teat'her room, lib - t'' t utd corridors f: all of bindle 1. lied in m ho r,uv. The gymnas- ten—not yet fiel.le„d—will have wooden cc ilio:g and edge grain Doug- las, fl • dadn fie feet high, with an an - "le iron base to protect it from mov- ing apparatus, The boiler and coal rooms. are finished in fireproof con- struction. The Government was advised by cable of the :hipping of the bells for the Ottawa carillon. run into the curb. To .start •u1 engine when the 1-.111';on 1., In itr•d autd the key is lost rim a wire from the underground :hie of the horn to the it,cnition roil. Spline's '.houid lip tested to see that the tension i. current aft•'• the valve; are erauntl. Exhaust and gasket leaks usually can he discovered by blowing tobac- co .awoke around the part suspcetcd. 'Motorists who turn to benzol fuels should have the carburetor of their cars set at a loaner adjustment than i for ordinary gasoline it they would get a maximum of mileage. The average car, travelling 16 miles an hour, uses one-half horse- power to overcome wind friction, 1 When the speed fu doubled, however, the wind friction takes five horse- power or 10 times as much. of their i'211110y, They ware: Har - risen Williams, well-known public utilities financier of Nene York; Paul Cravats general a null -el of the llis- eour1 P.i.Ifie Railroad; anal Colonel R. 11. Woman, of the bollen army, who had joined the trip at Madras. 11Ir. Cravat') was in Shanghai, his arrival corresponding with the cap- ture of the city by the Nationalist forces. lire Cravath statc'cl that he 11:17 not 11. nr1ta=hotffired e n that day, and would not have 1.:'24-1 aware he was in a city tal:t,n is open war if he had not Lodi informed of the National Fertriliizer .r _' t Have considerable amount of National lrcrtil'azer on hand for• ]cin 1' et : $ o . 1 J. 1 1 Also Hog Tankage, (10(1;,. Did you ever try GRO-MOR ._ for your house plants. They are very high in plant food. Xg Th, t Pieroe x tt Phone 5810 i. teeisaursemaacigEtEMEMeMn ryNn We have for sale the only motor car made entirely in Canada, a product that has held the leadership of all cars during the past twenty.five years and proved its superiority as an invest. ment in motorized transportation. But our business has not been organized for the sole purpose of selling Ford cars, trucks and tractors. We are here to give service. Both those who now own a Ford, and those who are going to buy one, will find that our service facilities and our service staff are unequalled in this part of the country. Our investment in this community is large because we are operating a permanent business. That means you can come to us with confidence and be sure of honest value and square dealing, 61 Phone 73x MCI: 'bt rel Ford Dealer Brussels CARS TRUCKS tan Kamm., 11•31111.1.1141.1.11 011