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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1927-10-26, Page 3Made only from hard Western wheats, Purity Flour is rich in gluten -- the energy giving and body building -fund. Purity Flour is best fur all your baking and will supply extra nourishment to the children, in cakes, piers, buns and bread.. Send 30c in stamps for our 700 -recipe Purity Flour Cook Book., los Woetere Canada I+lour Mille Co. Limie,u Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Saint John. 1 Sunday (knoll Lesson BY H1.W.)n L;, TRUMBULL. (•,046nr of Phe Eunuay school' lme,t) rr A14103 DENOUNCES SIN. di1'r,•renrr: thr -!ay j. coming' Wmn Il Israel ;hall h • soya d: .c it i; auuday, a),'1. "0 (11or,ls lenrper- 101' Sunday ).--Amos 2:4 to 3:15. Golden Text. Seek goo 1, and not evil, that ye may lire: a, 1 1 so the lord, the God of hosts, .shall be with you, as yr `are'mitten. (Antos 41:11.) Why did ,Judah and Israel think votei(1 sin a'rainst God and not ;•u O'er for it? Why Ito (ren think they can sin to -day and "get away - r:•ith it?" .1s we real the inspired hi -tory of Israel, her .;ins s, em very foolish, unnecessary, suicidal. What I ruti tor i have -thought of our sine ,,-' today it sho could have looked ,1'n'rn the centuries and have read on ^ecount or the doings of nation, and - individuals in the so-called Chris- tian land,:—Europe, Great Britain, t'a:nuda, tee United States? Would War national and individual sins n equally senseless and suicidal, "Tim wages or sin i, death." "Whatsoever a, man soweth, that all he also reap,' This was 'true ie the Garden of 134141: it is tru_• (1.000 years later in Toronto and Philadelphia. Amo: denounced sin '„.muse God always denounces .sirs The other side of the tragic ,in question is • that God, who must necessarily punish sin, has provided the way of escape. He has given the Suh'tituce. Itis own Son, to bear the penalty of man's sin, so that si_ uers by faith in Christ may be saved. Xot only that, but they may be kept from sinning by trusting in 'that Saviour as Lord, moment by nrmnent. That is the way Israel and Judah will some day be saved and kept from further sinning, when ,.,••y recognize and receive "this :.anon Jesus' as their Messiah. The lesson declares that judgement of the Loral "l'or three trangressions of Judah, and for four." Evidently this means 'chat Judari s sins were habitual, chronic, deliberate, r•epeat- 1, She had of her own choice tutored away from the Lord; there- fore, He said, "I will not turn ioway the punishment thereof'." Lying and lawlessness always go t ,gethcr. The man who defends lawlessness, as so many do today, :bees it because he believes a lie. He believes 'chat lawlessness is better far hitt than law -keeping. Of such p._ople God says: "They have de- spised the law of the Lord, and have not kept IIis commancilnents, and their lies caused them to err," People really believe that sinning, which is always breaking God's law, will in some way give them some- thing worth while. That is always a lie. The first sin .of the human race came through the first woman believing Satan's lie that sinning would onako her like a god, and that she "would not surely die," al- though God had said she would if she sinned. Every time we aro tempted to sin let us ask ourselves, or, better ask God, wherein we are being deceived that we should even want to sin. Christ the only Saviour from sin and sinning, is the Truth. He alone can keep us from sin and its de- ceptions. ;Sin is a destroying thing; and the consequence of sin are destructive. Decease of their sins God said He 'would send a fire upon Judah which should devour the palaces of Jerusa- lem. This was but a faint foa'e- gleam of the final doom of unsaved sinners who rejected Glocl and Christ and who, God says, must be "cast into ,the lake of fire" (Rev. 20:15). The Atnot'ites had been in the land of Ismael before God brought His people out of Egypt and into tiles larn'd. The Amorites were mighty and successful people. They prob- ably thought they were too powerful to be dispossessed.. But' God says: "Yet destroyed 1 the Amorite , whose height was like the height of the cedars, and he was strong as 'the oaks; yet 1 destroyed his fruit from above, and his roots :from be- neath." God (must Ileal with sinning Israel in the same way, but with this Ar•it.tetn, th,•r'shall come out. or '/.ion the Deliverer, and .;hall tarn away ungodlin••ss from Jacob: ob: for this is My cotenant unto them, when I .-hall take away th.•a sins." Mom. 11 241.1 Among the sins of Israel was the giving 0iwane to the Ni.zaritw„ who wore forbidden to drink wine. L1 Nnunher, (/ Cod': law for t1. • Nazar - Res was given. They were L soli(,.!, who voluntarily separated them- selves unto .he Lord and who there- fore selna'l.tecl themselves from e•r- tain thins's, including wine and strong drink. The Israelite who nave a Nazarite wine to drink Wil0 ('031- ten)ptuo'r.-ly rejecting the law of God; and in .few sins of today is that utter disregard of God's laws more noticeable and frequent than in the use of strong drink. A start ling illustration of the relation of so-called Christain people to alco- holic liquors is Lhe following, which has appeared in different religious ,journals: "A passenger on a steamer from Ilombay to London asked the cap- tain whether liquor 'could be pro- duced at Jan'ribar, where the ves- sel was to touch. The captain said, 'Yt,u could get it. 1 know Zanzibar well, and here the Mohammedan law is against the taking of strong drink. The only way in which you can get chink in Zanzibar is by mak- ing a declaration that you are a C hrjstain. I: it any wonder that C'hristain missions make slow head- way in land, where the name of Christain is associated with the 'trade in liquor and narcotics, and where the vices that corrupt the natives are practiced by visitors from so-called Chl'istaiu countries?" THE BRUSSELS POST FINE RECORD i3Y YOUNG PI.OW- nlidt, is year., 41'1, 13..:!0•:13'. MAN. 1 1 }rut an1..I S. D. A. ,tie, Morran m 1111s C iptn,',.s Doth Cup1 111 ;1311 .1.1,1 , 44(443131.1.1 1 + At S. Brute Mao'!,, Under 1'). ' 41'1 Years ,,f Atte! I llarol'l r 1 ,, 4 irk.,1' (;sell , r; I, "e I! i•, (' t . ' .t1. 1.244;1 Nuntbe, take. Part in Cea,t.r;•,; At l ees'r:,ter. 1 third :1(3 11' ! ',10•.; 1': .. . • h the ;ill pi .': rt t' _ ,`Datil I:I'. , .0 • 11.4rr,nl". *.i'u ';i 1 1 ' i'.l ti, • .. •,1.' :. . . . ,, k'�1,:. ,,r '11 11 I!1' ,iif tt , 1 1`: l', pf 112' ('4 ,3141 1.1. ttltll !.i V.,111 1)1I• t '1• (,43 011 10 e" 2141 t t . 3111 r ..1..1 ii.a \ 1:t j,1 n Ilrr'1• 1011irh 110;1.11,',i 1;0;1,1:... : ,l)lln- silver rums donat,•d by Dr. hall, M.P, fur Suuta I1ruce, mot by W. H. St •1413' elf-, or lee, water, for ;he 'HA i,ib'r•- rd land by hoc - under 1 year: o age and the ,l7'01. 111,0411 1111 1 in -toy ('111.0 .103.3: No, 1, respectively, by Morrison Ellis, of Walkerton. 1'1.: Stephens cup is now the prn}:,'r'tt ,f Ellis, but the Hall '''11 must be wort three times in four year,, Following ar'a the other prize winners: Class 1, in sod, open a all ----1, Sandy M'hert'h'r, Wroxeter; 2 Bert M,Culleu +h, Port Elgin. in. Class..o , in od, plain plow, open -- 1, Herbert Schnurr, Walkerton; 2, Wilfred I11(11is, Walkerton; 3, .4,.. Russell Brussels. Clan; 3, open to all who have not (von prize in mens class -1 Henry Flach, Walkerton; 2 Robert Moffatt, Teeswater; 3 Herbert McKaoue, Teeswater. Class 4, young Wren under 23-1 Pert Hemmingway, Brussels; 2 Alvin Thacker, Teeswater; 3 Bernard Schnurr, Walkerton; 4 Walter' Woods, Wingham; 5 Harold Sny- der, Port Elgin. Class 5, 19 years and under -1, Morrison Ellis, Walkerton; 2 Herbert Aarkell, Teeswater; 3 W. Dennis, Walton; 4 Stanley Acheson, Iian- over. Class 0, 16 years and under -1, Arthur Vogt, Formosa; 2, H. Carter, Greenock; 3 J. Willits, Wingham; 4 Douglas Goodfellow, Teeswater. ' Class 7, two -furrow plows -1, Jack Thompson; 2 Weir McDonald, both of Teeswater. Class 8, 'cractors-1 T. P. O'Malley 2 Frei Trupp, 3 Gordon McKee, all of Teeswater. Youngest boy plowing—Leonard 1. era rt. l".4 �hi a .: . n -. a .1, . ir•. ti ho load„ •w. „• 13:11 I1.•• nr• :I u r •. I `11 le (tee I., Is , .0 't 13 p1 1I Ili'•- , t.11 rl t I.' (01� (1 u (',,111.1.1•!, 1•-. ,. NCI .11 , rb ' +1..111 :r Thr t, IR111.1 ,3Y''•: , n' a L, tel et '-0„ ..• i! rims,':(• Aa. (414441'::, d :. 1, • 31,4.11 , 4 el le'u•atr•.1 p . l; • ::. 1 (1 In 1tuue.ns ra:'!uo'I',. I ,'l s Utak' ' n , Fir 131010',11'd .0154,at--' here are ,31(311 , 1..31' Il(uupshir'''s famous seas and deur• tc rs. Somerset has the peculiar repara— tion of hada boon Go. set' thou 4,„fat Arsidd,1.0ps Canterbury. It leas proiac,'d 11141,. '•reat explorer._, .Speke, Dampier, and. Parry. Dr. John Bull, wllo wrote the National Anthem, was a "Zurra- mersct man"; so were Henry Irving and John i'ym. Goin: farther south, among 1]e- von's 310014 we find Drake, Raleigh, Gilbert, and Capt. Scott, and many other well-known seamen and fight- ers. One-third of all great English sailors hail from glorious Devon. But the South,a•n Cowrti produced comparatively few great scientists. The north is responsible for moat of the great en in"errs, in- ventors of machinery, shipbuilders, and kings of commerce. Our Eng,lish. "Heart„ With a glance she tried to now him. But be only looked sheepish. "Dog," she exclaimed. He choked—there was a frog In his throat. Than realizing he had made a monkey of himself, by acting lice a bear, he ducked. GoodFortune t, 4.1.3�}gg(t7,oUra s 2 c.:e , a Mil. E. Ill nr[A": How cftcn ch aro c mr n < marl! turning 1. c •n in ...Ur ] r Lm, ry 1.4• May of r.,,,,tr, nl ts.: 111 lo,,!th t , 451. such 1, r, telt;. H 004 1 w 4. 11 t d i a rr, and vsyss,t: 1 1, r r .: (4401.11, r t 1 e rrtrenimmird '10(33 4 +a.••.'. I pro.- c110,1 ro- 111ud ser„ 4•013 r . 0 a u_ 1 r", 0, 1 'cm .1 t ,•rt health, 1WAys t•1. r G c I :Or. 1 t 1e 300- •.:t1•' n' ;:r 1 , .tr. 1 i r arid, 310,0 ars impossible 4 , .:Tttfpation , (:431..1. you I P r n ••,h, a 1401 (h.a•rume this serious tr3nLle,in the natural. 031,:1(4.,11-.,nse way with 1 ".n t `• r• ', Th ..• (1'" '1 only r at,.rt , nldt . rem,.'} ,r(.,h fru:( juices --0:(014!(14(1 with teni;:. strengthen :red rcvi:aliso sr::kenc'1 bow- els, liver 0nd '5at c anand.5oc box at all d.•ugri,ts "Siert on the way Sack to health to -day. Try "Fruit -a -tires" FOR OWNERS OF OLD CARS. I 1140403' oil frequently is used to • compensate for wear of engine parts. Ic is well to realize that i lubricants of this quality have their deficiencies, which may do more harm than good under certain con- i ditions. The heavy oil, in the first Place, does not atomize readily, and this Is likely to result in under- ! lubrica don of vital units of the engine. If cylinders, pistons or rings are worn badly they should be reground or replaced. A New Syst-om. • T Totally illiterate people have been taught to read and write in ten les- I sons of two hours each by a Frenelt 1 lady, whose new system has bee.n taken up by the French Minister et I War. Nlt b!i11 .;`0,(' 1441(' "Overl•chnking" the eng;nc causes raw gasoline to fin;] its way to the oil reservoir Mow, diluting it and (laking it ineffective for its work of lubricating the cylinders. 11 4:111 t: t l ;•fl. 11'1 ''I t: •, 1 1f;1/ 111-.111 7}1, •ii• :3131 I: 1'...,-.31 li ,t;,,/1:1', 111,1 14, 1J)N1:S!)A>', (WT. 2',. 14; 7, ea 6teap emombio Weals iin the1' Mar l of t e Empifery Trey (*arias Cart II - 1 ,:'U n . ill , 11 J.tar1: e,'f r 10..,:d: i!1 eses'1 ,' rlam:l 431' d I 1 '. i:: ("'1,)'• 1 14 heine rr, 1. 11'':;l, rr1' , 'i be 'i ..,h of ,' 31 ', 1 iJ,:lt : L ,•.,' r•liir!',' „1 lis. 't 1 '33'1 ` re; 1•- : , I reien '1,I�• t\':. r.l., !1„1,1.•, , + }:' }„! 011. d, ;el) ,,r o,, h+, 1, Ithis \'. eh:id Ul,er , ski, i r 1 1ill rt u. p:n it n ,t'- .Irlll,, 11, 1 :1 :41.1,1 11'•!'•: r1 neat',,. :u+ 1 11 uv S1-1111111, ,: 1, 1 i r,f14"1 1141 t h. i 1a11J It ' '1! tr ., .,f ,I4l •,•n le I1 'o'' l 14 u-:': t Il I)ub!!n, xhr •:. 11,• Ira,: an 1, , L.t!',_uish.-d career and uuly erg •1 41 • 410e„1'',• by a tr 1.1. Id 22 lo' 10, .111 t,, a. \1111,: 1' :'k i( 1 ' gli.n,l, a ver, h' acted a. Brett:ry to r•\1,1'.144:3 `131! ..absurrn 2411 131'!1:1. al. 1 tLe ., iTu Cr,t rn..t Ni, Jrr• ,ln;r 1- se0, T. suds'.- natural et.u_h•.er. whorl) Sv: i:'t. leer imrn0rau;z,.l 4t'.1111" m t1.• W.11111.,11.111 rful l t ) ..nd •, J 311'121 t u •d t, lets '0:01,1 ,1.11 WhO ,• name «311 ever be associated win, his Own. Five years lata' he return - to 1r, land, where h, , i t, red ;he church and .secured a sr,1111 living a t Kilroot, It was there that he wrote his. "'Pale of a 1'uh," one of the fin- est pieces of satire in any language and "The Battie of the Books." In 131113) he returned to the Ser- vice of Temple, win (lied in the fol- lowing year, leaving Swift a small legacy and entrusting him with the publication of his posthumous wri: ings, Having completed his task Sw.i'ft went hack to Ireland as the Lord Deputy's Chaplain, and was afterwards appointed prebend of St. Patrick Cathedral. Dublin, It was during zhis period that he made fre- quent and lengthy visits to London, where he became the associate of Addison, Steele, Pope and oth'r great Whig writers, and he himself wrote numerous pamphlets, mostly on ecclesiastical matters. His disgust at receiving no pre- ferment from the Whigs 14.0 hen to desert that party and attach hint- dl' to the Tories in 1 710, and he`. for I. ItI 11:2•,1 Pr,- t.• .n , 1 11,1.1 ,1 Itoid. 101. to 11 1 Plod til. tin I 1 Irl ,. 111 11 l .11124 ,lD ! 11.1 i ((,11. i,,,, •.t(., r .,a A'antt gnu i„:h, to vvie,b: !e nd,lrr•., •t : yl nto i,1,•11 ' 1b!• ih,- Ltsi, } ,l , al,1 Aognialed hi, 4,•;(1'31, r ;1, their , ban- hm,n' hitt he gained a tromendous 'pular Ily, ler 11,4 ti„uarelis chant - (}lou: hip of their num, roils ,grl,•"- ant,-. avain=t the _ov,•rnuu•nt v.1,: n , _, (4,,,)'r he 4tame of Drap;'!, t,6',•n , t .it,• ...air try in a j 1'1.11+ n.l „!'1 ,'v 0 the withdrawal f 03' 4411 ,r;i,lultou.= paten for ':h,• mak- ing of Irish ,•ol•p,•r cuing ,. It 'o1- 1n I721 that rbli•h,al "Gulliver's Travels.” his 1)0,t -known e,t -knr own and most widely read work, which, with vertlnecessary • t031- ,( 1n .nt-. is 011 of the most deij:rhtfuI 1 cirildr,n': books in the English lit- ' 314(',4 a] 11o01.11 :t war writt,ai ,1r 1 a sratniag satire on thl, Govr•rnaleut nr the day. In his 1a1t.•r years Swift produced some of his most brilliant works, although they were penned at ai time when his migln,y intellect was shadowed by the approach of insanity. which darkened the last four years nr his lire. He 1011,4 1,ur- ied in St. Patrick',: Cl:thrrh'al, where hi; remain, were 11410 to 41431( in the ;ane coffin as his beloved "Stella', who had predeceased him in 1728. Automobile tires should carry the 0111110 pressure in winter as in sum - melt particularly if in good condi- tion. Sometimes, if the tires are old - and weak, it is not advisable to give as much pressure in hot weather, as they are apt to blow out. A broken font 01' real' spring may result in less of the control of the car, and 50111ktimes in a :.•4;0312 acci- dent. 46'1144V t c1 03 sis ti°1)N 'm1.,.,; �•°M i1n,$1s31". , i• PaiRta l t� �a Offered You by th( ' to Tell the Pe orne s er Advertising Places Your Merchandise on the Market The Residence Phone 104x russels Post Office Phone 31 — ..