HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1927-9-7, Page 34414144.14414•44141440141.0.44.
Wan 4„,e
We pay Highest Cash Price for
Cream. 1 cent per lb. Butter Fat
extra paid for all Gream delivered
at our Creamery,
Satisfaction Guaranteed
russets Creamery Co.
Phone 22 Limited,
Wige4 U40004,
r4.,411lrik.1.44,1..":01,ile:V*074"
somanamatnrnsaccomermismsners,...crarsaxemzcsowntewonnvernevexranersmrtemanoreasammretionsannowasaveanamunn1
Wed:3504ot
AteimombleEYetttS ha the >
C\.!aistorti of die Empire.
Charles eotav,./
Sept. 2 -THE GREAT FIRE OF loss was cetimi.teci at over twenty
million pounds. The fire made a
okan s‘veep of three leindred and
Two hundred and sixty ono years seventy-five of the city's area 0: four
on th • 2nd of Sept•onlor 1600, hundred and forty eight :alms and
,ne of the greatest fires ".." the Ills- spread over sixty font ares
,nt id
tr,ry of the world broke mit in the the walls, leavl.ag more than one
,ecient City of LonIon, me,••• than hundred thousand people homdess.
`itree-quarters- of which wa, totelly Within a few days of the lire Sir
:'o- 'd within the 1110tt, 1.00? days. Christopher Wren, the greatest of
At t hat time the narrow w ;ruling British arehitects, lied prepared a
•,tere,ts of Old London were elosely plan for ti, rebuilding of tim city,
hacked with houses, built raainly of but owing to the narrow-mt:•eleenese
ve)od and roofed with pitc:1 421.11 tar, ot the land ov,mers, inceesant
11 Opper noon OVel+1111,InC! tin, mites about the value of property
•,w,ee. while the 8r,•11`. W0t011-1, and the reluetanee to alter the u,,e
which hong itt front of iem..itts which had long 11_^011 1L,',.10111 1.
11011Fe and nein•ly toueli,e• three ed with some pertieular in-eitutioa I
i,.cting front the otler side o!' the Ur trade, Wren's suggeetions wen
ste,•,•1, made a line of comentaiention not adopted, and lite opportune' Ives
of wh1011 WUS ,CtIrOlAy lo,:d of malting the new London one I
a train of „:,,.tnii,oeet,,e, /Ef tle• handsomest and hest :by:geed
a sal morning., 1,11(1 oeigineted the Oi;iieter 1.:Torn! a groat it?
LONDON
THE BRUSSELS POST
A Wife
on Probation
4 By OTILLIA F. PFEIFFER
IkCeeeZeCreite:,,C,seszes...eneoe..em.peeoeseeee./
(0.1. Weo..rn rais,
W1:8 1101 IL grain of semi
Milts or nonsense 111 the make 1
Lune. WitS pr111111 10 1
10 Ills frIeltilS1 A nItloWer 1'11
1Y111.LI•tri:''dis("01',111111,11"1.1"usgtitidiet",111,4(itZis,;17:1.
and had turteNi out 11110 y011118
111 1111 resj,01.1S,
'0,1,10,11 have wade pow
1100 $011,1 1,11,11teSS loadl 1011 111111
f1.11 11r0 ussur. a," Mr, lame told
Ito r, "it is natural hod seosibi
think unirr.ving, not before,"
its, speaker 0,111SIdevell this as 11
W.11111!/1:: 1 104 1- 4,411 NI I* II
straining 001111 e the youag 1
W111.11 thv 110 101' 11 UN 1Wc111Y.1W0
1,010. Seal 1,1111 10 1 Ile 1.11101'
«likes of the 1.11 ittral Itnliway .N41
'loan company, hi widell he int
large interest. Tin• reports Int
volved fruit] limner and Irina Ms
ployCrn fur arst your Inspired
4, 1111111 W11 11 the deepest peide
satisfaetioit. Homer had develo
salesmanship qual.ficatimis of tm 111
014101'. 11 W111.1 !I.:N.0101 11110 1111.11.
extensive 1,11111ptiot wits (("'1' ('Id
eying construetion Buenos Al
Then there entitc, suddenly, jarri
ly to Gu•gory lame, 11 de\ elopm
that ror 111111' air:1.01,1(qt Ids Ill
plans 111(1 ,%11.011 the tirst bard 1:
lugs he had ever eeperienee8 agal
0411, /IrriNtl 1101%11110d
11a. )I141.0ilnlIO 1111111' 0111 11011,0 0
bright, Presentable youag fellow ale
limner's lige, who it1111011110ed 111
preliminary Nvity that he W1114 11 CI
of Homer mid a funow e
011011100 sent the to Sell you, 24
Lane," he sahl, "alai 1 hope what
101.111 10 V011tlattlii0nto wilt 1(01 diSirl
you, for itomer has niarrital a you
lady you mast ilia, and respect,
we all (I,,, if you will ham the tried
to learn uf her good qualities."
There .511140141. Ih.ge tras baited
his diselostoe.: by the obi moo sprit
ing lo his fen as tinatgh 0111111
Mill 11841 ltha, Ills face gr,
(11211 1, his glny 001111111 in A
electrieally, Ills Ups trembled
fe uttered hoar
"Y011 1,:11, 1:.11 111, t1,111 1:1.k.' 04
11111 nlitrric,1 W11 11,,,11 11,01 1‘.,111'. 1124'
1114 1111110 10;,, 4! ..e.l.;te 1.1y 4.01,,.411
"It van10 ;Own; 1.1.-g',12.,"
44
'1-'1,0,0 :0 1011 the Wliu
311% 1.0,2 1 en, sure
411.1 not blame ta. 1.14,a,er has nut
led the sweetes, t•Lri ,Iff• world. 11
las bum fer ior sum
14,141110, and 14,--, eek 11„,,, her ft
her 4,.. :;..: 41181,•82c.,•
d lu
01tsf1 \Itts tz i'111', 1 10:11,•V 11E!
d ell 111 ;:,;f111..11,1IS 141
111'0, WaS 8081111 '0
ellay teeming. 1Vithin the Nino: hou
le house 1144'4,11mill 1 limos' thal • h
ould have to the tl;•st /ammo.
1 (...1:41111 Anteriea, to "'4:11v 140 1(0
IN, 1001 ',Nil 1.1•; ,.eyeral nail:tons 0
0.1111111c. 111.1!;,...100. 1 1 1..t.
11141 'of an hear, 1.,4;,;,4 142, \dr(
ert„ fttrewe,l, ,.o 1111,0 Inv ..citat '4
111(1 Airs. Lat.,. a guest et II.
011.00. 10011 .1.11, 0,01;1..1 ell1 111.1.011ge
eta v1i11 110 11110 for her."
"Alitl 1011 title gat to ch
ith leer dote,,mice tire,,ory Lame
feee presenting an he
ngnioSt °Very 111011 1,1',01118e hobos
tide me, Homer eeds.in defiance of
1 sense and order."
"Sete. Lune," laterite:led Page pleadglY, will break 1110 heart if you
not receive the daughter he has
11 you. She Is practically hen.4.414400."
111 11 Lew phase of feeling irditienced
indIguato father as, youth against
e, the fervent pleas availed. Greg -
y Lane's temper (lid not unbend, but
`Is'IC‘It'el7e4:(1;101,n'ilt'; 1:161110e$ Wire come
probation.°
l'he trembling 11 tlle refugee come to
great gloomy home 11111(.11 In the
Me of iniml of e destitute ote
king an entrienitly and unwelcome
Iter. In Imagination the old matt
COLORFUL ALB.A.NIA
1.41 liatt1.4./r1 off olarifet Flay Is
1h•Lig,:ft u, :111 IRt...-*An
</lien 11:0140,
Til,• Wel . .. .
I of Alb:4111U 8+1'11,, 22,. 1 1. •01. an
;Arlie!, 100 1,010. .1, 1,o1ly
1)y ,1. 1, :. ,•
11, of
toast
r 15
lio•
what
man
18113'
2)10
1141'
0 to
tied
sort
imii.
Mr,
the
ti a
re --
inn -
the
Mu( riot 14-• 11 4 sr has
laid its int(ti •,,, ,,f14, 44, eett,
op, chilly t lie
510re le. Is in, :tone Tira
than anywit.1', Tin111:1
n1,. lift 112,..• 1111 3 1.8' t, la
village in the 4,114Ide (if
tandit't went:: 1,•.• mil, o froOt 11, ,11.
11) lotresso. At istra.ra,, it ,If 1.r
o 1,,..71...2,,44 141 4. 1.e.n
triad.; it I., a "Me-. of ,!trt, ince,
bevele Ie..) to, I11
Tirana. where is the twalf at
demo. of un Ot 114 .1..1111 I -
lie Of On N.11, 1'11:11..r
stInC/41111It 7111.11,,r,,d Mond
several painted MOSIVItli, lis W
older roads are lett miry lams, hut a
number of ones are Leine pierc-
ed with a certain amount of deepateli.
broad and well manned. ilihey 1' 03
made after Peter the Ort.at's style.
Where the required luta passes
through a standing house, half or a
Rua quarter or 1411 11111011 01 1 110 1110 1114
17 n111.1 110nlatleally 110e0sSary for tee
(.;in Passage of the road Is eta neatly
an away nod the rest hilt standing.
CM, 111 1117 ft fresh hot '1 named Ow "Bar
itg• 4.ffires of two avoltare, or lawyers,
P111. newest of the new roads con-
e` s. Palace," and not far a way a the
mu anti a Parliss,•rie Pzfri.d, one. Bound
it.g the Nosier :1 1, tho signs of t;•,mht-
,0. hers, (e, dcatist,s, and groeories are
pc1)1wm,“•r'iltrilanwt'ir'.01eslii tartattnta-
u 1 1011 14)110, commnnicates with
aft 13riadisi, and a emelt varier is 144.ing,
prealucer by Alb:min.:- tirst jou-nal-
a
tot, M. Ch. krusi, So after its long,
use isolation, Aii.anir. 1, 1;eglaning to go
t110 way Or 11,.
The artist would do well to visit
Ir. Antonia now, befort alliformity is
"''20), 1. •41, :sfeyer Enrols. have
11g
(04 1111'!, it may c ,111pare with
known such an ('101',' ''"188'! scene as
upea, say, the meetet clay at Pen-
:fon/4( the most celebrated sampIes
of the 18(111' 41111.- outside our con-
tinent. 11 has not the clerk,
in my.a. le 111- .:11.,•o, a, «lining streets
1g- of nor can 1 si..cw the 11own
oll roise, «nd the E.,se ••n. erranty of
DallInACT1t.
Btu ther.. it at, open 1101141 1 ,y nh011t
" ,,Teta1 1t8. n'r.171, 111411,31
111 the free Id..4.,•4 tin humatt erain
had come /o Power, 1-11t, 110IN't'S
1,t
trt:ly (le icuilts of woolen, s.ated
in wit,41ing rows end cineee,
'1 regularly as wIld flower:, 1,8,11r.,,
itt vending tit," cloths 14 r,18,:',',, :'id
.11 tisStleS they :1 11d 120111' 100' 2' rs :lave
spun and WON,. 11 11.71,1 e11111V0141, r..d,
AA p111 tiedn in the couetry-
e 71d0 eint will ee•• that they are me•or
idle; stridine. eteue evert I.-nt
Is swath 00111 L'Ard,m upon tle•ir
shoulcters, yet th-y an• foeevor
spinnifite as thee walk, A 01:eiv Is
1- in one hand or both, and they 80
e endlessly windine or turnine after
'• tie- olanner (heir ft-ttEt.
A nd .0,, bel, 14cuta rl l'ast1,4
e they spr, ad their 1' ry.orls, litoo which
r they themselves fore perchance ov•re
s wonderful. Senn, of them an, in
carte:, und to me In yen ,w or
't,natehee nr both. and many in white
with vari• gattcl tnnbrolderli.e. son',
asre blrrot. Ive444,-(t of thc,
licsiti, unrelh•ve,1 hiack, but with
Y their skirts 4'1'14I !11g our stiff and
turning upwards, so that with
rough wodllen leg -coverings and
) (elid(4)* they look like so many
, Mongolian:Z.
Here and there a woman customer
in full 1100.4:: 1V11.1k$ 11.11118 1,110M,
tiltutf:11 they are generally so close
that you must push your way, Neck-
Inees of gold ccins swing upon her
breast and heavy earrings from her
etirs; she is perbaps a recent bride.
Here and there, too, aro MOsient
women, einsoly veiled, with hut one
long slit to see by. so narrow and
so regularly horizontal tbiti 1( 1,, like
the slits in the eonning-lewers of
warships. But ranst are Christian
and some wear their black hair In
wild shorn tuft s, (11 I'llS t. through
either side of the kerchief which
they wear over their heads.
Besides there are others, women
and men, ineonneivably shaggy anti
tattered, with bits f.,1 sacking and
fragments of olci eon! flopping
about them, in the garments of
utter deetitution, mere pagodas of
rags. All move and intermingle
and jostle 'without thought, bending
over the cloths or the squares of
leather the tanners and the leaves
of tobacco the curers alike • spread
upon the ground.
The last remnants of old rubber
tyres are there, to be made into
sandals, and provender in the folds
of women's skirts or in vivid rough
bags, It is a sight without a paral-
lel, and think that the hand of a
true painter who came to paint It
nilght shake as he AMY it, shake
with fear that it might suddenly
tremble and pass from his sight,
and join ail that beauty an.d that
squalor which ended the western
lands when the clouded sunset of
the Middle Ages waned away, There
Is still time for the painter, but be
lutist hasten.
Th. fire e.art,..d in tte, „orly 11311re 08010.4 hl the world. In many wnye s
ail, s shop, ,.; own, for brick and stonv were 1.10(1 '13' r
• • •• itich bad ',one (...4 tn.. 4, af :ns. 14 u..aal in the r, building of LI- I
of kludiing wood .iacleel armee] } and the wi lening or many etrees en "
I.!s oven. Thi. !ham's, r'111111111 , 111 0 11108S 1,1'',..11/It,../
'.1111Y 1,1', I /0, spread wit:i great a 1,.yal,""114''' the In1.111,1“
1111811-0
1;,y 4,1111 nie•htfv11 ov.'r 1.ni110101,'S which 1111d SO fret;1:011t.
;.,. 11,111,17,..1 3111') .1 ,I0V,tp1111:101 1.0011011 in t110 I
8, wild,. by the meretng 0! the The tire was maliciously, but N"i1 11.•
1
,1:2) of' September, llIon•• tban t,,:l out the slightest foumlation, etle",eit- ,
boAdimr, hnd 1111.11 .o llora,u1 Catholic silot 1 "
•.:
01' intriah4. 11Iit. CRT. 0101 an ine-eipt:en to
On the morning of the 5th S..etent- that elreet originally neeenrell en the 11
the wind dropped, „eel 31mtument which Wren erecte,1 to 14
reets of houses in the pat 11 ty' the mennemora2,• the fire, hot it W1111 V
linmes 'having brew .IoWn or, 01111tortit0,1 111 1/430. The Monument (11
I,,own up with gunpowder the ft,tel.ei• a hollow stone itolunm, is 202 feet
temeress of the fire WITS stopped, but high, and stands exactly 202 f
it was many days before the con- from the spot where the steleed
flaterat!eit burned itself out, and the in Pudding Lane, and it was origin -
111
nialce? remained hot for eeveral weeks, ally intended to use it as vertical
Paul's Cathedral, the Guildhall, the. telescope, but the height of ,the col- 1",
Royal Exchange, the. whole of the um» proved insufficient. The popular
Rayal Exchange, the rhole of tho saying that the fire started in Pudd-
public buildings, eighty-six churrhes, ing Lane alld ended' at 'Pyo Corner
four hundred and • do
wo
A
tln
lie
on
02' 0(0414 1111(1 114 not correct, as the contlagretion
thirteen thousand two hundred hem- spread to a considerable distance be-
ses Wer0 destroyed, and the pf:operty yond the latter spot.
GETTING READY FOR
' FALL WHEAT
Experience and' experiment have
proven than early sown fall wheat --
Aug, 26th to 'Sept. 9th-8ives best
results particularly in following clov-
er sod, alfalfa, field peas or summer
fo11ov
Generally speaking, 1 bushels of
eeed per acre give best results. The
varieties most suitable from result::
of co-operative field experiments 111
Ontario are found to be Dawson's
Golden Chaff (0. A. C. 013 and O.
A. C. 104.
Seed selection is very important
particularly In seasons where shrunk.,
en seed is present. One cannot be
too careful in choosing large, plump
uniform seed as the yield next year
will be affected where shrunken or
'broken seed is used.
Wheat for send should' he treated
for smut Stinking smut or bunt of
wheat can be prevented, by treating
seed either with formalin, bluestone
or copper carbonate dust, if the
smut balls are present in the grain
remove with fanning mill or by plac.
Ing grain, a bushel at a timo, in water
iinci stirring it. Tho smut bails being
light will rise to the surface and can
be readily skin»notl off. 1! using
formalin, ono -half pint of 40% for-
nuitichytic in 20 agls. of Water will be
sufficient to treat 10 bushels of seed,
Immerse the seed, a sack at a time,
for 20 minetes, Remove from the
water and spread out thi.ily on s
clean floor and allow to dry sufficient•
ly to be sown. Be sure 10 carry to
the field in treated bags, Sow ea
soon as possible atter treatment.
Loose smut of wheat cnenot be
prevented by formalin or other nam-
ed treatments. If prevalent, secure
seed from n ' f
(10(41414.
the
Usually it pays many Ones ovsr fru,
to fertilize with acid phosphate 06% see
fertilizer) at the rate of at least 200 she
_pounds per acre.
SAVING IN RUGS
Bagdad citizens put their sayings
in times of plenty into the purchase
of rugs, and sell these possessions in
hard times.
"He is quite an artist, issrt he-"
"Yes," replied Jones,"He painted
an apple last week, and the critics
all agreed that it Was rotten."
f rAlft,5 AGO`people wised to
,melle themselves herd' 167
Shouting from the berme 101,14.
7018 tJ that today you
Mould plmLSb1, hove to opiielor
b6fortl A CeinadASIOrh 10 Intsab,114,,
IVOWXPAYS iheN beethesq
v mom'
11nd pictured some brazen, artful ad-
venturess, who had captivated his son,
some exteavagunt woman, disdaining
work, thinking only of the luxury the
Lillie wealth might bestow. Therefore
he prepared to accept what was an
unwelcome burden on probationary
basis, 1115 two servants were (HS -
charged, (silly half of the house closed
up. When Vera came all was chill,
dark, forbidding. The unfriendly, 8115-
Picions atmosphere fairly froze her.
When there presented a complaining,
miserly old creature, she 51121' little
hope in the future of harmony and
happiness. Then love, deep, earnest,
ideal grappled with the problem that
fate had awarded her to solve.
"Per Homer's sake 1" she whispered
fervently to herself, and bent to the
task of wbming the perverse nature
,([,,110,04,1118,;11.11111: by gracious words and
GregmT Lane was flaking Ole feet
severe and tryleg, but Vera withstood
the wield. With the :sparse household
outlay she did wonders. In the ab.
((('1(0(1 of daintieil she created them;
she transformed disorder into coheren-
cy and neatness, Mulct. the well 110'
(2111110(1 mast of an friendly harsitnees,
site SAW affection and respect worth
winning, When the husband of au
hour returned, Gregory Lane, trans-
fornsed, the dreary home all beauth
ful greeted inns:
"A wife worth having!" spoke Greg.
ory lane, "Entirely too good for
either of usl" and the probationsgy
period ended In the stInshitio, harmouy
and the hapPinoss that made the levee
of those three radiant and reapierte
deete
Briar Boot.
The root used in making, tobacco
pipes and commonly called briar, Is
not the root or a briar but of a tree
found near the Mediterranean in
southern Europe. Tbe name of the
tree is the Pennell word "bryer," and
the English name briar is a corrup-
tion of the French word.
Telephoner; In OoffinS.
An experiment has been Under-
taken at the cemetery of San ;teats,
in Spain, for the installation of tiny
telephone, in each eollin. These are
to bo connected to an alarm belt in
the porter's lodge, thus providing
against the possibIlite of anyone be-
ing buried alive,
Hoar Through Their fro.
Some insects have their hearing
apparatus in their legs.
I) A Y, SEPTEMBER 7, 102V
r••••44olNf
41,...,4 • s, • , ••
4,
.111
11%.
18 -
iit'-.5.1=1:=6:.4p1:717317:77VM1-9=ZEVI=7:1r.71,7-C,.`, 79:4117r7"--nrarrramixim=7,-. ,,,zot,r,di1
raiMiffallatallalilstra_411,1kt,h,firrivagiariffigiaultizbtr,=, ","
or costs co in
red red whit.' a
frt
Of all items entering into the cost of crop productioa,
labor is the one item that can be reduced. And the
only effective means of reducing costs to a minimum
is the adoption of mechariPal power and modem
farm machinery.
A Fordson farmer has a greater capacity for work. He
can acccmplish 2 or 3 times as much as he did before
and with greater ease and convenience for himself.
This saving in labor makes possible larger acres7..es,
sown un -'ler ideal conditions -at Fast the right time.
And, an extra 15 acres of wheat oiten more than pays
for a Fordson.
The Fordscn is built and sold tc serve mankind. It
is significant that over 20,000 a -..e now in use on
Canadian fams.
000 01)18 fnidez -Things YeeSheeki Know
&fore You atyYourZractox''Ivill intcrast
you. Ask for copy,
B. G. McINTYRE - Brussels
CARS - TRUCKS TRACTORS
e
00
NEWS IJ\1 BRIE
usEn rApr.R. MONEY
WILL REIVICIVE POSTS
31,,reo who )",'v-" -'1 1,1tA‘
HOOKED TWO THIEVES
To protect himself again,: 1211'14.
1100201,1. while travAing 111 Po;rr'i.
C. Augustine, of St. Jo-edh, :211.,
sewed fish hoeks in his pooket,i, and
he caught two pickpockets in War-
saw in this manner, he says,
N11:11 •tr, tSit,
.
()v.; ..r mer..y was 111 tiler :1 Foe, ossd toc
Delfhittif itay are to Is 1" '1(1':'!!.
GOVERNOR DISFRANCHISED
governor of the 01. 4118h
Carr.i;Inh::onot the right to
!
THE FIRST ENVELOPES
•
Envelopes were fir,.t .,.,l8.
SEEKING SOURCE
A party of explorers has set out
to reach the source of the Maranon
river, one of the chief tributeries of
the Amazon.
CLEAN EGGS WITH SAND
A new machine cleans eggs with
an artificial sandstorm.
PLANTS GRAINS ONE BY ONE
A machine which plants individual
grains of seed has been patented by saw their first demonstration of' (Asset -
Franco during the 1-1010Lola:
XIV.
LIMITED EATING
The Licinimi law, establiehed in
Rome about 103 D. C., limited the
amount of meat that could be eaten
on ordinary occasions,
SCOTS SEE ELECTRIC SHEAR-
ING
Scottish sheep owners le eently
VIKINGS NOT KINGS
The \ VOrd "1:/king,',.' 11.1S 1101111ne..
all to with "kines"---1-11-2, sh-ellar-
.!.%, of the words is 311(1813' an 111'4'1301,)Lof English. The proper pncia,-
eona
-Lion is -Vik-ing.." not "Vi.king.'
"Vi-kMe" ie no so well established.
that there is no to,e trying id change,
it, The name comes from the Scan-
dinavin work "vik" 111(14(1112(1smaft
bay or creek. The Vikings were
sea rovers freebooter whose
main lairs were the numberless land-
locked arid sequestered inlets of tlize
Norwegian coast. There are AIR
placee in Norway named Vik.--The
Puthfinder,
an Austrian inventor, rie sheep shearing. Ter -LOOK .AT TOUR LABTR,
Prince of Wales Receives First
RailwayTicket at New Static
214(1(182 :1,320.1
veto'
• .
When ILIt.H, the Prince of Wales formally opened the 11020' Union Station at Toronto, his firat action
was to visit the ticket wieketh of the Canadian National Railways, there to receive Ticket No, 1 of the
Issue from the new Depot, entitling him to passage "Between All Stations" and good "for all time,'"
Photograph shows 'Its Royal Highness at the ticirot windisw; behind him, in morning Coat, Lieuteto-
ant-Governor Ross of Ontario and to his right, IVIr. U. II, Gillen, General Manage of the Toronto Ter-
minals. On the extreme right of the photograph is seem, Prince George, with Mrs, W. a Bess, Wife 01'
the Lielstenant-Governers