The Brussels Post, 1927-9-21, Page 5i
THE BRUSSELS POST W1•.DNF:SUNY, SEPT. 21, 1027.
Mote
Made only from hard Western wheats, Purity Flour is
rich in gluten -- the energy giving and body building food,
Purity Iflour is best for all your baking and will supply extra
nourishment to the children, in cakes, pies, buns and bread.
Send 30c in stamps for our 700 -recipe Purity Einar Cook Book, 205
Western Canada colour Mille Cp. Limited Toronto, Montreal, °nem, Salem Jolla.
Ethel School
PRIZE LIST
r Wheat --- S!1•ad'• dtarlph
Pens .. Jin 1h?;til.
! q:u•t_. Glen .!Tonin. •
0 , . -- Shear --(lieu Martin.
Dad - I quart. --Stewart lirawu,
u Shoal' -- Geo.
Pearson;
troop
Ilss P.s.1 sale
Fie! t torn• --10 ears--Lhauehe •
Bee:l:en ..
io.0 Cot .; sulk —•Velma
Haw ;ter:; I.aruhe Howland.
;ewes., Coin --Glen Uilveurtll; Fred
Iseffee ; Dorothy Kreuter; Alex
Luca,
Iri::u Cobbler Potatoes—Bert Row-
land; 1 i-y'ttn Ames; No Nano; (.al•
vitt Mettler; 11,rry 11o111as; Wal -
;e e ere
ht 1 L
1
Green \luuutaius i'otatous--Lorntt
Desjeed•uu; Arnold Earl; Earl Grum.'
ester; Geo. Elliott; Stella Seller,;
Delmer Dilworth.
Dooley Potatoes—Marjorie Brown'
Jean Franklin; Willie Berries; Shel-
don Jacklin; Lincoln Smith.
lllangoids—Vance: Baker; Iva
Turnbull; W{Ili .Burnes.
Turnips—A11Json Sleightholnr;
Fred Cole; William Lamont; Allan
Franklin; Viola Turnbull; Caul
Grumpier.
Beu.:—Alfert Keffor; Harry Hol
mos; Berea 1'arr; Edith Kreuter;
Orme Gill; _Muriel Hackwell.
Carrots—.Nora Henry; Myrtle
Savage; Kenneth' Kraulter; Stanley;
Wilson; Eva Parr; Earl Lucas.
Parsnips—Tom Saunders; Annie'
Franklin; Helen McAllister; Ruby,
Gill; Isabel Spieran.
Onions --Arthur Lamont; Laura'
Savage; Laura Jacklin; Dorothy
worth; Stewart Henry; Dorothy
Kreuter•.
Astt'rs--1 -iva 1':u•r; Nina Hen'•y;
Earl Gruuuner; Arel\ie Campbell;
Norman Stephen. -on. 1
Sweet Pea ---Gordon Sleightholm;;
Margaret Grumpier; Noru littera;
Stanley Wilson,
Phlo-Beinho Earl.
Zin.t. l- -lea vo'n Whitfield.
lfricar.
Marigolds ---Geo. Lamont;
Gordon 1 h 1:1m• Willie Pen es,,
Alma Pieter ut
Coeue )---Viola 'Turnbull.
Wil-
Cal/quells---timothyKreuter.
Fresh :dxrigoltt--...I\fyrtic \Vil-I
son lI:,l. el Ilolmes.
\ •J. e, I oni Saunders.
Cosine.' - ttenley Wilson; Myrtle
\Vi1•o:; i tel Gruun Ior; Alec 1Ic-1
ncil.
fink Stuart Brown.
Staple-, i iii on Sleighthohn.
Gl.., Iiul t .Edna Franklin; Ton.
Sounder:; Ralph Killer; Illan:h..I
Rowland; Pose Cuninghten; Ren-'
nail Kl'an'r}•.
Bouquet from Hone Garden -1
Nelson S wightholm; Ada Wardlaw;
Stanley \s : sea; Helen Currie; Ralph
Kiffer; Alma Patterson.
Cocke' •1 - -Iarjorie Brown; Will-
iam Iloll e.; Viola Turnbull; Helot
Currie; \\iodate Beckon; Lee Arlan
Wnrlaw•.
Pullen- --' attneje Brown; Willie
Bathes; Violet Tur::hull; iisien Cur-
rie; bred Kiifer; halbert Kitfcr,
Pun of Tense—Muriel Hackwell;
Olive. Ilaelovell; Stuart Brown; Ar-
chie Comiebell; Lee Allan W-antkilan;
Helen Currie.
halm] Rot•ks—Betty Dunbar;
I3elen 'Gue1?+; Clain Michel; Olive
Jackwcll; Malbert Kieffer; Fred •
Keifer.
- White Loghorns—Bryan Amc:S;
Roy Pearson; Marie Jacklin; Muriel
Ilackwell; Hugh Pearson; Lloyd
Cole,
Ducks -- Roy Pearson; Muriel
Hackwell; Olive I-lacltwcll; Norman
Stephenson; Fred Cole; Sheldon
Jacklin,
One dozen White Eggs—Stanley
Wilton; Rutin Franklin; atualt Mc-
Kinnon; Stella Sellers; Ralph 'Keifer;
One dozen `Brown Eggs—Betty ;
Dunbar.; Archie Campbell; Allan
Franklin; Albert Keifer; Alma Pat-
terson; Lawson Whitfield,
Any 'Pet---1,00lard Lamont; Clar-1
once Lucas; Mame Jacklin; Norman
Stephenson; Sheldon Jacklin; Ar-;
c`hle Campbell.
Hinter 1-hoken Colt—Ross Cnn-
ningham;1.'om Sanders. ;
Agricultural Colts—Ross Cuning-
ltam; Town Sanders.
air
Dairy Type Calf --Mildred il:dr-
.1.L. c: Lamb- •-Viel;, 'Penni ull.
11:seen Hogs - Ralph I: 1f':, , 1' .
('1.I lli,willon ii ewe t Brown.
Beef Calf—Tom Sandiir.,
Inuit S lad -Tont 14ond t ; f..•e
Allan Wa dIinv; Edna Franklin;
)1 yeti:. Wilson; Ada Wardlaw; Nor-
man Stephenson.
Graham or Bran 3lufhn —Tea
Turnbull; 1'l u riot Ilu'kwt1l; ht In
Franklin; Huth Franklin: 114 n
1)e-:ia+'dine; Margaret Pearson.
Chocolate Cake—Ill-Jen Me -al
lister; Margaret Peatnon; Myrtle
Wilson; Stella Sellers; Amy Holme?;
Violet Turnbull.
Tarts—Velma Hamilton; Annie
Franklin; :Margaret Pearson; Pearl
Faker; Ada Wardlaw; Myrtle Wil-
son.
Homemade Cantly—Pearl Baker;
Tom Sanders; Lee Allan Wardlaw;
Anthur L[unont; Alex McNeil; Mar-
garet Pearson.
School Luncb---Ira Turnbull; Tom
Stender:; Bessie Pearson; Norman
Stephenson; Ada Wardlaw.
- Buttonholes and Buttons----l.nnra
Jacklin; Stella Sellers; Edith Kreuter
Alma Patterson; Eva Parr; Isopel
Speiran.
Dolls' Shopping Bag — Edith
Kreuter•; Ada Wardlaw; Nora Hen-
ry; Jean Franklin; Marie Jacklin.
Quilt Patch:Jean Franklin; El-
ith Kraulter; Jessie Pearson; Mac-
jci it Brown; Ada Wardlaw; Helen
Currie.
Guest Towel — Della &Icinnes;
Myrtle Wilson; Pearl Baker.
Crocheted Lace—Stella Sellers.
Patch on Print—{.aura Jacklin;
Edna Franklin; Barva Parr; Mau
Cau'nochan; Alma Patterson; Nor-
man Stevenson.
Darning—Tom Sanaers; Roy
Pearson; alma Patterson; Vert
Ti o1mni• Nonan Stevenson; Ross
Stlphunjon.
Nr1il Pox—Carman Baker; llurh
Pe11401; Ross Stephenson.
Cate ---Tom S .
lIc ,1 01 Fernn-
dais Arthus I anon Jim :McNeil;
Roy P-ar,o0; Stuart McInnes; Geo.
Pearson.
Patelt on Groin Flag—Lawson
V' lutf 1d; Allan Franklin: Tool
Sander.; Norman Stevenson; Willie
Named knots ---Willie niche
Stuart McInnes; Stella Sellers; 'Toni
Sanders; Glenti laan`.in; 1„ Allan
Wardlaw.
liaise
injurious \'4eced5 --Helen McAl-
lister; Stella Sellers.; Etlntt Franklin;
Tom Sanders Norman Stevenson;
Tree Leaves—Commercial Var..
ntit a ---Stella Sellers; Helen M A1 -
lister; Glenn Martin; Tom Sanders;
Ili it'ues; Wallace Jlickett.
Nix1011;< \\reeds and Seeds—Della
Moieties; Ton Sanders; Willie nehe
11.,::, linen Rotvlesel; Stella Sellars,
Man of Iluron----:\lax McNeil;
Nevem Sneiradl; Edith Kraultee; An -
nit :Franklin; Hugh Pearson; Ken-
neth Sells re,
Map of Meritime Provinces --
Della McInnes; Myrtle \\:bion;
Ralph T'e rson; ,Inn McNeil; Geo.
Elliott; Glen Dilworth.
Map of World—Edna Franklin;
Helen McAllister; Roy Pearson;
iltia Cnrnoehanl; Gladys Lucas; Law-
son Whitfield.
Writing, "The Reason Why"••-
iM4argaret. Grummet'; Bertha Earl;
Ada Wal'dlan; Jean 'Franklin; Jessie
Pearson; Helen Currie.
Writing, "The Gentleman of Ten"
—Edith Kraulter; Geo. Pearson;
Stuart Heny; Normae Speiran, Del-
mer Dilworth; Doris i12iAilister.
Writing, `"Poday"---:Della Mein.
nes; Doreen Lawless; Geo, Elliott;
Glenwood Dilworth; Myrtle Wilson;
Stuart McInnes,
Writing, 'Tile Solitary Reaper"—
Muriel Michel; Arthur Hamel; Mar-
garet Lawless; Berva Parr; Helen
IVIcAlli'ster•; Laura Jacitlin.
Crayon Drawing of Trillion—
Marie Jacklin; Margaret Grununo•;
Jean Franklin; Clarence Lucas; Mil-
dred Biomes; Gertrude Willis.
Landescapo Scene—Stella Sellers;
M, Michel; :Kenneth Kraulter; Pearl
Baker; Alma Patterson; Gladys
Lucas.
:Poster' --Stella Sellers; Cleo, El-
liott; Gladys L,uraa; Calvin lir ul-
t,rr; lfehu, McAllister.
1'ublie Speakites Helett 11c:111L;-
r: Calvin liraute 1'; (Wain 1lilworth;
1d:: Ir'; rrllan; Myrtle Wilson.
1 t(l..m C'oinpeition lieel or
oait,t t n( Gurdon Sli ightlu}lnr;
l rl :,1,.•tl,,, '1'.nn Sander ; Low=ort
tfield
1'auL'r;: Ju(110 1 Competition•--
duri'•1 liirlrarl; 1; iia 1'riwkliu; Vil-
a 11' „n.
1.01k [quire, -.Stella Se Ili+r.,; all+!
l'.', 11 .•'I - \Ili,t r; Edith Iirauter ami
Hitt .: i (atope'tition---lloy 1'nr-
1'; r, ! - No. 10; No. 11; No, 1;
( .t u No, 1; No. 11, Ni, 0; No
10 Ni
T. l.,tto Npeci:d (('erp) -- Tom
,. I I, Grey,
1) n ,ton of Artificial
t I "n -- \iyrth W1.1-.011 :ltd Edn;t
1 r,,. leis 1i illy !,en n our ('arl
Lura,, There were three tion; of
boys • „•
I t ; .: .i feu, te:un-. of girl, in this
ennlp^.t,..(1 .
BELGRAVE
The 1.112,• eels al the Se.hnol
1+uir ours be 1 nn page 0
The Lu1ir a' Aid o1' K11x ITnited
Chun ell held a vsiy suoeeo.fol l,iaoult'
and Impel), Inst. FI kitty.
Stanley and Mrs, Snell rand thumb -
ler were vlsiter•s with friends at
Brantford nnrl London, last week.
Fi-iends of George \-:,n Camp ore
sorry Lin know that he is not improv.
ins its health aur is )•>
1 a t 1 at present, ver
low. 1 9
A number from 11110 vicinity at-
tendee the ann105rsar7) services, held
at. Prntnybtook United Chinch, on
Sunday.
Anniversary services will be held in
in Knox United Church, or Sunday,
Oct, `Lod, at 11 a. 01. and 7 p, no. Rev.
11r, Alp, of Anhui!), will have charge
of these services.
Mise. a \l. Robertson, of \Ningbo n,
who had the misfortune to break her
ankle, a few weeks ago, is now at the
longe of her daughter, 'Nis. Orval
Taylor, in \Vnwanosh.
The annual School Fair for Belgrave
district was held 00 1?'riday, and prov-
ed
rowed to be a real success. The weather -
1081) favored the children with fine
weather' and the parade of the rebid•
ren under the various school banners
was a very pleasing sight. The ex-
hibits in the halls wets of a very high
quality. in spite of the dry weather,
in the evening, a fine concert was giv
en, consisting of various nom hers
from the different school sections and
numbers by Harry• McGee, which
were touch enjoyed by all,
Gs d BIANN° L.N.
Recent Discoveries) Ffavo Brought to
Light a Gamblers' (acme.
What is believed to be the earliest
game of chance was played at least
6.000 t. us a.go at Pr of the Chal-
doos, 1.10 miles southeast of Babylon.
Tttectnt distovertes in this district
have brought to light a gamblers'
came c,n feting of a double -sided
botn•d for different kinds of play, and
various ',Laying pieced. Although it
is impossible to rc
- t nnstrutt the game
as played by the fttt'.leuts it seems
from the boards that they staked on
even chances in a form of play simi-
lar to rouge et noir on the modern
roulette table..
'Phi' ,.alone s were alternato and
int.erillting triancies, wifllo mother-
of-pearl and a pure reel made from a
paste as the •^olors to be backed.
The r h r face of the board was
used for an intricate forte of present-
day Iialntu, Forward and backward
movements wow regulated by the
throw of variously marked counters
or slice, and the player!, apparently
betted their luck of bring able to
thread a wan• through complicated
diagrams to the finishing point.
Counters found in the graves ot
the gaanldors show that dye and
seven were the lucky numbers of the
day.
Lindh- r gh Park.
Lindbergh Pak is the name to be
given a tive-aore tt,,tet. on Tinicnm
Island, near Philadelphia, site of ilia
llrst settler -int of the Swed- s in
America, The pant will he kept in
perpetuity as a memorial to Col.
3;hr11hergh. Th ht was auu011need by
t11re Swedish Colonial Society, which
lute accepted the tract as a gift from
('harlots Lottgstroth, of Coronado,
Cal. The society also annotineed that
Mt'. I.on gstreth and Col. Lindbergh
bad been elected honorary members
of the organization.
The Reason Why.
Claims are being made that a new
one is the very shortest funny story
on record, It was told by Sir Harry
Lauder. -
"Wo Scot.," he said, "are very'
fond of telling stories against our -.I
selves, and X expect you sometimes.
wonder why we have such a great.
souse of humor. '
"Well, I'il tell r Tt's a gift!"
Highestprice
FOP all kinds
Of Poultry
r I, I
tedI
Paid
R. Th Timson
BRUSSELS
It
t Vrt
WAY a i :tet V4.9
FIRST TO SEE AMERICA
3111Lti7 IJELL,JUIeSSoN 1'Ahtil•;U
A 1.4)Nt i (Xi U101 IN Ot0i.
;ruin I?rlissnr However, %%'as First
to Land In Newfoundland In the
heats 1(PLA.-,-.Also Visited Novo
ticotitt-•--tbIos, Voyage...
The diseovery of North America is
Credited to men who, toareiir,r1 with
Krill the Rod, seti.btJ 10 tiro ntland.
I'he• lit;st elan who .1)).1.4 • d the
Shores of Ame'rioa was rr"c 1.ol;
l rieseion, but Iljarai Gerieeeee-u,
esheee father, lier'jttly, ;,ad rt.1•
tied int (Ire•:annul at it place en the
wontt rn ,.e til utents, tvu:eh 13 1111 11,14 d
after 1010. But the proper uihecv:r7
of America b' inng Iso Li1 Erti u,
the son of Erik too Reeltont (0 his
brother, Torvad 1 rie.,.,on, and tot -r
on to a man of the saute tatnily,
Torflun Kati: .t a ::.r v Prof. A. W.
I3rsgger, of the fern t ti "f ();11',..
Bjarni 10iriutosoa t t • u i111.1
to the saga, a v•ry prottlit,tog
Ho had Taken to fret 1,u
from his youth. 'rids see i,t tori
both w.-tdt It and re•peti,l lou. 11Ja01 i
50011 had a trading ship of 1i: Own.
tel . iii ,
Be arrived at i and in 111 1 la
the s001tIir of the Sank, 1,10'
iu lhi
spring of wtica his (attt a 11.1 0111e1
away to anti:uland (9s6 1, At nc»t:.,
00 this Bjarni was mucic pes.urh •,1
and would Dot discha v • Lis ear6o.
When his ere ,v asked hint what ice
meant to do, he replied that he
would take his ship on to Greenland.
MI aro allowed to tat"nsttoict his
voyage In the following way:
Ile sails from Iceland in the year
986 and is met by a strong north-
erly clonus Ho struggles against it for
some, time and, delaying loo lung the
moment for heaving to, la forced to
run before the wind. He is driven
to the Newfoundland Banks, where
he runs into fog.
Lowering sail, he drifts for some
time.
The first land he has sighted is
somewhere on the Barnstable Penin-
sula in the neighborhood of traps
Codd. Now Biarnl is entirely taken
up with the idea of getting to Green-
land. From the altitude of the Pole
Star or the midday sun and the :1rI-
ferenee in the length of the day he
is quite sure that 1e Is too far south.
Sailing, therefore, on a course slight-
ly to the northeast, he sights in two
days another land, the seutbwestern
projection of Nova Scotia This is
not the least like Greenland, and he
sail away again on the same course,
whereafter he sights some part of
the south coast of the Avalon Penin-
sula of Newfoundland, and at last he
reaches Greenland.
When Bjarni came to Norway he
told the story of his voyage in which
he sighted strange lands, but people
thought him lacking {.n natural eurt-
asity, since ire had nothing to report
about those countries. But there was
much talk of exploration. Lei," Erics-
son went to Bjarni Herinlosson and
bought a ship from him and engaged
a crew of thirty -live men. He went
on board with his companions in
0 reeniand.
In the narrative about the expedi-
tion 00 Leiv Ericsson we realize that
1t had been plann0d 08 0 taslt of
exploring the countries which his
friend Bjarni had elOOn. At first.
they 00111151 the country which Bjarni
had seen last. They sailed up to the
land and, having dropped anchor
ar
and lot; red a boat, they wont ashore
and made several note's about t11
land.
Thereupon they sailed away anti
discos, red the second lanl. It was
a low-lying and tt•oude°d Mad, and
wherever they went there were 1011
stretches of white sand, and the
slope from 10 e. tiVa was not t. tirttpt.
This he namnet .l,iarkland; that Is,
woodland.
Again they sailed, and after two
days saw new land, Hero they r111 r-
ed a sound bet Ween a rape rend an
island and wenn asho•o; they stayed
here days to stake further lnvesrtg-
atitnts, Leh :ays th.,y gathered
vines and grapes and cut wood to
mak a car:n ,or his ship. 1s the
eerie they- loathe ready and sapid
away, and Leiv ant -e the country a
name aceordina 01 its 1411111' and
called 11 \Vineland. Afler this they
put to sen, end the breeze was fair
till, they sighted Greenland and the
mountains under il., glaciers.
After 1.110 exper'ltion of Leto P:ries-
son in 1002, we know 00 two more
v1y151, of ,apinratiol from Green-
land in 1\'in, land, loth or them with
the intension ef colonizing the nets
land. The' illi teas undertaken by
'forvald, the brother of Leiv 1 ries-
1 11, and by slaved in North •\meeies.
for th1'0c ye.ua, botwron 1144 alta
1007. -
1,:a t1y, Tor(inn 1111 h ane went
Feu F, oleo for ihroo yoat4, Oho
year 1r ;n Fie ,et Meetly weld e.' fat
sou1li as Ito tr1:!))pd 'ound. 1 1411
l., ri,12 .a , 1 onoi lord, 9 111' O10.-1
hull • uL 11 of his p•'0L•, .-
0 . 'a• nt - 111. v;i'1 11,
th . �' nrnbatl^1;; a
nnh n:pr 1 '
or 1 a)),.1r, 1 is at - 0 i'I -.
t .. r. use ,h•'
of v0101.r•r2l 111, it. 0 1
1• -.-•-e1 a failure.
v ',rh•,K.a, a hr tie. eIVel•ed
must lelVe 11.011 0f F0111e ire,: are,..
11-- 1..eenlan1r' s. Ir. 'lir
1147, .hal. to more than ;cies
1,frortverd, we aro told in 1 l :\nn:,'<
that there arrived in tee it..,l 1•., .:
1 t,u tl .1. slip will' 1 I .
I a 1d 114 'lent; ria t eel'Ii
She carrit tl a c'•e 0
meet who had beet to
elnr2tlautd, but on 1ht way halt lo
Gras aloud lt-11l l i n driver '
or weather to Iceland. Proir.cbly n:)
111110/0 .ontlrnrl•„ 1: '•^r0 701.-,tirel'..r.
1:. 1115 lint an accident, that nets doll-
ed ' nae vislt of tiro •thin to Ie. :111
which pre„erred rhea toy1100 ; ,. ,
o,;•vtoi, Iii:' a: 1•1 logical to :nip-
p,ea that this ship had been to Mart: -
land for timber for tbs. tbs.Gteemendt rs.
Vomits.
,;o planet. Venus takeS 2911 da; a
to go round the sou:
1
fot'tnerl,y with
r�
$t Doi'cnwend - Serr.ber
AT
Queen's Hotel, Brussels
a.
h
1 Hair°G ods
LADIES and GENTS
Advice an the Scalp
Makers of Patent Structure
Johnston & Knight
Ryrie Birks Building
r
Yonee & Temperance Toronto
RULES FOR EASY DRIVING
Less weariness in the body and
fewer aches in the Legs will be ex-
perienced if the following sugges-
tions are carried out when driving
en an extended tour:
i ss the hand brake occasionally
:0 ;..,c to ou5e the right foot.
Hold eyelid, closer together when
the tout 0, wide and the sunglar-
ing.
Feed gas with the hand throttle
control now and again instead of
with the foot.
Run slower over rough roads
rather than hurry, and try to steer
around bumps.
Always shift to neutral when
stopping for traffic rather than re-
maining in gear and holding the
clutch out,
Weel(s threat
Menu I able FY hn cite
a '
tang1OEt o[fl Emph e4
63''adns Carrovo,
ill T110 ()r,•: t In,e'.te• of
1."10110
1 n 11. I. alt
.:.t riu ,• 1
!i,. , i'':ai'1.,; of l.nu.lr t,
,fir It: i:tt.t.i ane
rtur2::' tie week riding "o !het`. •I.,
"r .;.',lit, t d,;•.
,sees sees 11121 Ut
di -.1 only. ...97 ti, •-ei _Coe th • .•
I in tote , :e,. ;,at t11;' f. •t: ,rd
tr . iOw i'r,1
b,ii ;U.r41 : itis V.•••1.1.
110V til: .,:i.1
,of e et:(4 vel -.ore W,f1.0
I l., r) nn 1!1 Ii., ,r arts Of 11,411,111! n /
I e:111 Na, or (•veld bit kept by t Is,
,t t.. d Irlte. o1' to:.dt•. t
+ 1 i ,ansa, • of 14,000 rl: ath
v a: glvca 1 tie... French .inaba •;ui--i
by 110: Del ui' Albemarle , who
plurl:ily remained in London, when
all the rest of the Merry MottarcL
Court. fled, to take charge of th”
government of the, stricken c°•:y,
incl was het ter atbler than anyone
el -es to orale a cnttesat estimate el
the unrecorded deaths,
The plague of 11103 was not the
first calamity of its kind to exact a
heavy death toll among the citizens
of London, but it was by far the
worst, both in mortallity and durat-
ion. Every few years from Saxon
days the city had been visited by
terrible epidemiee, but the people of
London had profited very little by
their pail experiences. The narrow
winding streets of the old city pro-
vided a fruitful breeding ground for
disease. Rotting refuse and the
sweepings of the streets, houses and
stables were piled near inhabited
quarters and poisoned the air; while
foul streams like the Fleet River, de-
filed from overhanging houses and
nearby alleys, were no better than
opens sewers. The dead were thickly
buried in the graveyards attached
to the churches, which numbered 110
01 the 000 square mile area of the
city, and the liv>ne drew from wells
water for ituttw•hoid ri=r• which bad
er,•e,l ,te+l
011'01101 h the burial
r'ro a elle
nils,,aa- hat little douilllhte
ei tet.ieri ole le•t:5 came from
Ilnlland insect: 1 hese bad Item an
II It bra tk r, e )0, t l rg•u: t flu) pre-
r+i s roe--:ult ships
1-+ 111 tl', l'it^, . , i:-;ltie.. from
•,Ilene ;so I,: lee!
;r:,!ar. lr (,_ a• t1k'nee
ll i ,.:: ,.,.,i in Iasi .I -t1. in 1).qt-
..0,1o.).
r.•-, 0 1,. 1 1 04;1. hot 17 It winter
le -se v,ee ons a }-t , nd
110',,• v::t v•.,• -.i, r8::a�;p-
„I dna-oraoo.r. was
until +le It 1•, . April. �l•1
ti:,• 'Lt'at.rt 1f 1.0 01 ono.) 1) an offi•a:d
Lr t -.:•. 01'121,0110.'1.'1d:
it tt mesa b -d , t tblt -',..1 it -
S its the p:(,. htat-ahe-
1 11 :.anti
directing the public t0
every cure to prevent an
.epi Iennie,
1}rfe•tlun sps.td rapidly }:t all
directions, week after week thg•
death rate increa_ed, and everyone
who could do so fled from the city.
Every night there was an endless
procession of dead -carts collecting
the (01pa-s, which were carried out-
side the city t y walls and flung•into
great pits without covering or any
form of burial service. Business
came to at standstill, persons who
were well at noon were dead before
nightfall, and whole families were
taken in a day, leaving their houses
open and uncured for. No cure or
remedy could be found, and the
plague ran its course practically un-
checked, carrying off over 110,000
victims.
The epidemic continued, but in
ever -lessoning volumes, until Sep-
tember 1660, when London was
swept by the Great Fire, which des-
troyed more than three-fourths of
the city, and carried off the last
vestige of the disease which then
lurked in its borders.
LOOK AT YOUR LABEL
Kincardine Presbyterian Chur2h
observed its 68th anniversary on
Sunday.
'eari,: •}:•'p.t�i.-.i,^ at�.ii3' &.ICiit[`^iRi1d04'-. TiP.. S. T( 5•:' Y .e --7-.4.-.4:):,.
}
aj
.111:
1<
11�
:5 tet tl t'. ikltrtdit,"-,rol'tr
•
abor7sts
"Ir
reuceof
wia
For s
N Hv
.t�. .
Of all items entering into the cost of crop production,
labor is the one item that can be reduced. And the
only effective means of rcduchag costs to a minimum
is the adoption Gert mechanical power and modem
farm machinery. -
A Fords'' _11 farmer i h .a a `"!renter c''r --(;.:i for work. He
Ile did
can ace r1plish 2 or 3 'J1aias as 5 11 a.; hCbefore
Thiswith grs.oter 7�eage and cc90 1�.;'Ince for himself.
This saving' 'ti lit+"T' I:.1M t� hl .,. y?. Y c.C.reaf St
so -x 2 tmll. - l t u::.. ) i £ . 2 'Old right ;:1t ".'.0'114.
And, --W--. i
, at, C .r.:::l .:. � i . � C--:. 'tJi .•segs '.::;v. � ! than x'^yfi
for a Fa.c uw :i.
lee For0.:ion is . tl 1 ? lee s, �.an&? ..I. It
is ohgnb1l.0 . or..: n,,n1 :1:,, 1131' 011
Canadian .nidi: 11.
O:r. ern fr1t "Tia � e1 1r u,
Ii..foTe , (2•a:l u.a. Tutelar' ,rdctaa:aest
you, tiskfc, ttali•y.
B. G. McINTYRE - Brussels
10
.t�y '4ellrf
1
CARS • TRUCKS TRACTORS
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it
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