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The Brussels Post, 1928-3-14, Page 3rraarrAai • `¢ p'3 €geo, v4w`m,3i resit i 'w n1`w + hGL't ' }� ER 7 T Wanted POSITION with several families. Permanent connec- tion desired. Best of references liven. Wages no object, Guaranteed not to leave or disap- point. Helpful when Spring work starts. 1ck Price $3.75 Others from $1.5 r up For Sale by J. R. n A® JEWELER WROXETBR THE BRUSSELS POST George 1=,•,bite apt;' SonS Co. Ontario Distributors '>f The ideal Farm Tractor uaaros Low Ornade iFauei FORMER PREMIER WAS NEW BRUNSWICK i OIiiC TS, NATIVE OF PEEL - Corer Over Severity PVT vent of its TOW Area, The forests of New lirtin.ewleit cover over seventy per eeut, of its total (iron. The• citelett•• is very fav- orable to forest growth, es the t x- cellenee balance of violet tire and elan.- ahtno provtdo lot.•. entente •.F•..:ane:; in which tint tree x0.,.,1: t'a•nlinate quickly and r. ..e );rew rapidly. Planting para 11.11 c• r teen resnt•trel t+: except in a few Instaae.et, All the valuable soft woods and hardwoods of the northeastern eeniineetal sour• grow abundantly, so 111111, given some attention as to methods of cut- ting and protection front lire, the forest awnet• is ass111•v1 el' a :leads annual crop front (h.• I•ur•nt. Due to the st171if. is 1110 ritimr• posi- tion of New 13rii tewlclt with its har- bors and intensive network of driv- able ,,tname, railroad.; ,and 1ti ,1lwaY roads, raking all areas easily acccs- sible, both the cost of manufacturing and marketing wood products Is reasonable. says the let tatneial Post. The products of the forest in the form of Ileal, dimension lumber, lath, ahinglea, pulpwood, pulp and paper, are sold 10 the united King- dom, South America, Wast Indies, United States and Eastern Canada et Dependable — Economical — P arable Fewer Working Parts -- Easy to Operate Saves in Upkeep Cost — Meets Every Need Working Parts Automatically Oiled — St901.111 Engines Wood an Steel Threshing Machines -- SALESMAN —• Whitechurch 1.1.10.11 Phone 611 r 5 Mena ;:,,, efY, higtor4°thee Emote. �� ,�i ehar[e iztte b" March 7—Birth of Sir Edwin i rules of the institution, and five years Landseer. later he became a Royal Academican, In 1863, on the death of Sir Charles Eastlake, ho was unanimously elect- ' ed President of the Royal Academy, but he refused to accept the appoint - moat, which is the highest attainable honour in the art world of Britain, Landseer was one of the most pop- ular society men of hie day, and he enjoyed the friendship of Queen Vicitoria and her husband, Prince Albert. He was frequently their guest, and he spent many holidays with them at Balmoral Castle in the Scottish Highlands, where he taught them both the art of etching. For several years each of his royal pat- rons .presented the other with a paint- ing by Landseer as a birthday gift, and he also painted for them many portraits of their children. Land - seer never married, but at one time it was thought • that he would wed Rosa Bonhour, the femur French artist, for whom he possessed 0 great admiration and affection. Ills work was bettor known throughout the world than that of any other contemporary pointer, and in 1855 he was the only British ar- tist to receive an award at the Paris International Exhibition, which pre- sented Trim with the much -coveted Groat Gold Medal. The four bronze lints which stand at the base of the Nelson Column in 7, ifai,„;ar Square., London, and which are the best-known of Itis few semi- 'pturcd works; were completed in 1b137, and preyed to be his last artis- tic effort, for his health broke down suddenly, and during the last few yr0)s of his life he was a invalid. One hundred and twenty six years ago, on the 7th March 1802, Sir Ed- win Landseer, Britain's greatest an- imal painter, was born in the West end of Loudon. At an early age he commenced to study drawing under the guidance of his father, who was an eminent engraver and art writer, and when he was ten years old he became quite a finished artist and had also devel- oped the strong preference for an- imal subjects which he retained un- til the end of his life. At the age of 12 he was awarded the silver medal of the Society of Arts for a spirited drawing of a hunt ing horse, and a year later he sent in two pictures to the Royal Academy, both of which were accepted and ex- hibited. At the same thne he painted his well-known picture of a St. Ber- nard dog, this engravings of which, his brother, laid a world-wide sale. ile studied for a time under B. 11. Hayden and in the Royal Academy Schools under Henry Fusel!, and at the age of 10 he painted the picture --"Fighting Dogs Getting Wind", which was exhibited by the Society of Painters in Oil and Water Colors and established his reputation as n painter of animals. From that time his pictures :old faster than he could 1 paint them, and during the next 7 years he produced a large lumber of works,- all of which realizod.high prices. He was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1820, when he • was 24, that being the earliest ago at which the honour could be con - Hon. T. C. Norris, who took a prominent part in the reunion of Peel County Old ]toys of the Can- . rental West in Winnipeg. The ferm- i er premier of Manitoba is a native Chinguacousy township, in Peel County, Ontario, 11 at the age of 71, and was buried in J the famous "Artists' Corner" of St. Paul's Cathedral, where his memor- oriel bears a relief carving copied from one of his most popular pict- ures—"The Shepherd's Chief Mour- ner", in which a sheep -dog is seen sorrowing by the coffin of his dead master. Pruning Bearing Apple Trees Pruning is a practice that modi- fies the form of the tree, regulates the yield of fruit and next to spray- ing is one of the most important operations affecting the quality of the fruit. In many orchards in this county good pruning methods are followed but in others there is need for more attntion to this valuable practice. The following hints deal with the actual operation of pruning and should prove helpful to those with limited experience, 1. Cut out broken, dead or dis- eased branches. 2. Where two branches closely parallel or overhang each other, re- move the least desirable, taking into account horizontal and vertical spac- ing. New Brunswick ranks fourth among the provinces of the Dominion in both lutnber and pulp production, The industry is in a prosperous con- dition. There are also vast virgin hard- wood forests in the province which have been scarcely touched. About sixty per cent. of the for- est area is Crown Forest., bringing in an annual revenue to the province of over $1,000,000. BOOM IN CANADA. 1. 8, Looks to This Country Eta Landl of future Development. Ono billion, two hundred million dollars' worth of Canadian securities have been marketed in the 'United States by Dillon, Read & Co„ in the last five years, says a New York wire to the Financial Post. In every fineactal circle, the Post's representative' was greeted with in- terest, and every person asserted, in one way or another, that Canada is about to boom and that Canadian securities will become increasingly valuable, The trading in mining shares nu the Standard Exchange, Toronto, on a scale of trading comparable only to the trading on the big board in New York, has Impressed everyone in New York who pays the least at- tention to the mining industry, The tact is that the whole United States Is looking to Canada as the land of future development. Ono man quoted the Rt. Hon. Reginald ittcKenna's now -famous speech in Montreal, when he said that "Cau- licit rs t.ne tarn os rue rutttre an u i Times, was overheard outside a Lon - plane, that is to say, leave those tat- Several. prominent New York in- don labor exchange, from which a orals on the main branches thatgrow vestment houses intimate that the man had just emerged, to be greeted meat. opening of branches in Canada will by a passing .friend: horizontally or nearly so and remove be a step in the immediate future. those that hang down or grow up- The New York branches of Canadian The Man: I'm on the dole, ward. This cannot always be done, houses aro extremely active. but where possible should be follow- Cuba Ts Enterprising, ed, Cuba Ls bust, with an era of de - 4. All varieties should be thinn- volopntent t:sng••ing from silkworms ed out just enough to permit of to potatoes, and even hue adopted 1 thorough spraying, and the entrance tltt' country fair. Aca•ding to ehe Cuban embesey of sunlight and air. Close -topped at Washington it has been ye in: ed varieties such as Spy or Transparent ' will require somewhat more thinning than the more open varieties. are being carried lent. Also it is said 5. Where it is desired to reduce that farmers are beim; supplied with the height of tall trees, nut the leader ' the hest seed potatoes :tom abroad broaches buck moderat<•ly, to a her- and that Imported -0n of any but the very be..;( varieti, s has been pro- izont t1 Internal if. possible, ' Mimed. (,, Varieties which tend to pro- 1 A movement Is afoot to estahnee duce numerous twiggy, lateral ' a re sty ti `vice l'aw''''" 's. r V,'r it ;Ind Ii Ivac•r on rite oompy ti n of the growths, should have some. of those ,� his:htta> uaitlnl; tie;; 1i•eat ^;tth removed to prevent overcrowding, : 111:• ;•'ln'Ido nt:1..:u1:1nd a;1 1hat 111"192•- 7. Melo. elvse, clean cut+, Stubs ,. I' ...so. to all prat. tl to .,, are uneightly awl ufteu decay, thus miler from aug p^rt ''l' Eh" I t 1 forming a source of injury to the 111 ( to Cuba ,rail leer t1n :.=head in h,411 owe ears. parent branch or treat:.. _ S. Prune lvmlce•.ttely, Very. heavy S a: Set1 ee, heavy pruning is likely to upset the A stoade .Sp•,...1,•,11 nt (he• air nail 7,''..,‘I'''',15 }lame' ,l 1 1 tlo' 1'0"L,(1),'"' h:`Lan betwe,it wood growth and •11:ilit i666160'(mt ,ru. feuitrolus•;•, Land generally 5120u1,1 be Ihparirle•ut of ''S.uinuul 0r- 2,4 an:t avoid •tl, lu iv tt •,u e n ; r of , 0,6 11.1 to !t Prune i. (11ruly. Trees renewed Inn 010 1. nt .11. It an - which ase given :00) 1 attcnfi00 each on tut , i e tt h •un 6 r:ure- r NOT NEEDED. Proud Parent ---"So, now children, you know what I did in the Great War." I.i.ttle Twenty - -"Ila ! , tt.ltt• d'ct they want all the other men when tl.ey had you?" WORKING TOO HARD Doctor: "You are run down-- no violent exercise ---:what are you?' Patient—"I ate an anarciti-t," Doctor—"Then don't throw any bombs for a week or two," Trade Sought. A Coventry prisoner, brought up for disorderly conduct on Saturday was said to have sung in the street this Biddy at 2.30 a.m, "Wheel the perambulator, John, Be careful how you go, There's nnany a slip 'twixt cup and lip; Be sure you wheel it slow," HELP WANTED Sonny—Must I sleep in the dark? Mother—yes. Sonny—Oh, then, let me say my prayers over again—more carefully. SOME GUAGE. Grown-up Visitor—Well, Joyce, bow did you enjoy your birthday party?" Joyce --Not bad! Not as much as Willie did, anyway—the doctor's still coming to him." COCKTAIL EFFECT Barrister at 'Mansfield (opposing a licensing application): Do you prefer a club or a fully licensed house? Man: I like it mixed. REAL REASON The dialogue that follows, say The WEDNESDAY, MAl1Gii 14th, 1928 - ,A wobble. _4 umrrr he,1rin6._.-4 tat::N 14.,e,1.1, uttect - • cn':tlen:h 61,,a 10.ps t r je-m t t 1.114 t.•;;i r1.i, yn:a of mtleagr ani mai e y .ar tnotanng csst,y, EVEN if the tread doesn't show it to yr'ur eye —our experienced tire men will the first signs of trouble.. Give us the chance to save you the price of a new tire. Wheels da get out of alignment. U .t c it Se..ore it gets really bad and you will lower your tire mills and get greater tire mileage. Let our sn t ;d _ e: wan check up your tires every week. Let it; tu -t.ost tire pressure and look for hidden trouble. A little care may save you a half-hour on the roacitale..•. ,::d knock dollars off your running costs. E. C CUNNINGHAM BRUSSELS, ONT. tai ++++++++++,4,,—.)!,,i {il MY 1 LADY'S + t�• ,+ COLUMN. + GARLIC TOUCH When cooking mutton, or any in- expensive cut of beef or lamb, rub your roasting pan with a little garlic and you will have a much tastier cue that the island has 1111 the re- quisites for suceessfill silktun•m c'ul- ttn•c. ttnd experiments along that line p to. mall te .L ... re .l sed '( r 21te g• sprin:are meret 41,. 10 kola in geed 4110 sand Jahn mud Fhtiin o nt t,r1.11:-., :ondun t.h:ut •tree:; •that are • ter. throe or taut other :crvie,:: are c plume h.S•tllarly, Eire! U1 pI neo: 6 t, I fe`t'ed u]i' -upon him according to the IIe` flied an the 1st October, 1873 56, .', ,till be .r w v k!r •- 1 0. DiAributo the pruulng vl•e• from hh.ton,!ti a1 Patrol. i 11116 to the nmilt shorn of the 011. 101',- r, nc fuer t0 1101V0 5(1 101(0 and r it- ht .. s uavr eetved only !.y dote hales tete 'planes for (bis narvirr having (1apecity for 1,060 pouted:...'P serail, The third se,viee will he ler Pelee Island in Lake Erie, A 1.w•ie,- n `11th- ly eerviee 111 A111:00:111 IShurd is 111011 Planned. —es throughout the tree. This is parti- cularly important with old trees. New growth will be stimulated only In those parts of the tree where pruning has been given. 11, Do not remove a branch un- less there is a very gond reason for doing so. It should not be forgotten that the leaves of a tree are the food-manufaeturing organs, and if the leaf area is reduced unnecessarily the tree will be injured in growth or fruitfulness or bout, 12. Pruning may he done any time in the. Tate winter or early spring months and should preferably hr. completed before the time of the first spray. Per marc complete information en Pruning, the reader is referred to Ontario Department of Agriculture Bulletin 823 --•-`The Apple in Ontar- io." ntar- io. 1 - Mount Whitney, in California, is the highest point in the united. Stat- es, being 14,501 feet above sea level, Simeon Stylitos, a Syrian monk of the fifth century, lived the life of It hermit on the tops of pillars for 37 year's, ]_.1 }1 (I (tt@1'-Mei ' 1)t5'r.,,y1 °N ri.,it1�') yF .'r'P'-+ L•tl' "`1t1;t Salesaliee Aflx'st:Vs ("area Area.. 'rite Forest area in A11,crt:t emu- prises 30 per cent. of the total land area, according to It r.:1)1(1-21' made by the Canadian I'aciflo Ii. ilwty. The land area is gtve0 at 152,011:aware mils, of which forest comprises 80,- 060, The total softwood stand Is given at 11,7011,3)013,011(1 feet MM. and hardwood at 5,200,000,000, No Paint Will be I10gnirrd, No paint will ever b., required in the new labot.•ttory erected for 11ris- tot Tlaiversi(.,Y at a cost of $10110,- 000, All the joinery is of teak, and bronze has been need for all the metal fittings, lv. 'Y. Chain Drug 8101 es. The chain drug stores of five or more outlets did X10,400,000 bnsi- cess in New York oity last year, ilailway !l`t'ack In Britain, There Is enough railway track in Great Britain to go twice round the world, The Friend: Why? The Man: Because Thu out of work The Friend: But why are you out of work? The Man: Well, hceaase I'm on the dole. SLIGHTLY SARCASTIC "When two people like the lame tb'ng their married life is hound to he happy'," sighed the rom:tntie girl. ",Well, you and 0,•or•0,' car•ht to 1)0 happy," rchnarkc;i her friend, who wanted Genres. and didn't get him,. "I knew you love (tint, :Ind 1 notice he is very fond of 'himself," elt GILDED POTS. Fictt , oat,: tem t he : i(. 11, 7,'t+1 thou 111,1),• . seri to make a d1eor: it 11.110/1 W11011 they hold only a f'e'rn u some other 01(6)3 that dee, not binoim Milne, Italy i- con: true lies;• a 11,0W cite 11:;11 and many ,01111015. Prevailing directions of while 11- i',•rt the ['.10,6.111 or trees on one :halo nor the other. 3 tet' g aphis• map of the felt, 111,5. starteef .11 years neo, will be completed in 20 more years. Gff1STLY MEAT. BLACK TAFFETA. Black taffeta ensembles will be smart this spring—the coat usually three-temetcrs. For diversity, ehar- 11(000 (rune fa'bions the coat lining end the blouse of one, PRINTED SATIN New and lovely les an afternoon ensemble of rose tinted flowers on a 4're„e background in a new printed satin. Grego lace decorated it. SILK SI•IIRTS With the growing impertanee of the blouse, silk shirts return, P1.,,, - ;u•, _1 dotted and b,.: , e ei silks •rn u.cd for them, ----- VELVETEEN. C.NI"E. (greets velvct,re 1 w hth a ,at .0tt- -1t t t. i..•"tion :1 thr_. ,}u:uics t..e for ani. that '•- t. not t 4• 011'0r •t 6',!, Pei sill. 01' 0;1111, .-„1e l,:. CA/1ir 4i•1 at?7'R SOUP ('eel, eenliflisteer a,4 lilito va:•e ,t 16, poy,dide. (I 1!,. c ,1:er ;for •eu;a h} alddin^ il,ici n�a;:', better, 'c'a.•un- i;e;;• 1101 if 1i1id. 106'1011. e,11 re, ,' r 41)2)111 12, hi, gristly, APPEARS IN NOTED CASE 1, c:u6•tul to pooh it a.°. -lowly. JTishap F.elieon, a i..ondon, 11,110 is 1',1, ado of1Un'r m ,:)t' sen 111 :'.tat .<n ,:;144(!2 of Pleuro-. 11)6) 111 has; ec aelps. 7:14 1(..,1(21. l MEAT STOCK. 1t ie. often. advantageous to have y,.ur bnt.eher hong a joint you are buying. T's•, the hones for meat stock or soup and your roast can be staffed with dressing to fill in, FLOWERED FIAT Agnes introduces a turban of tiny laequersd primroses, pink, green and yeIIow, that has one of the new tip - oft -the -eye forehead line, SERIOUSLY ILL Alexandre Milierend, former Pres- ident of France, who appeared for 13rainbridge Colby in tic recent U. 8, divorce hearing at Versailles. The Court ruled that it had no jurisdict- ion, bringing to an and the acquiring of divorces in Paris by Americans. 112illeranti will appeal the decision 1 ' sa 11 Waant We pay Highest Cash Price for Cream. 1 cent per ih. Butter Fat extra paid for all Cream delivered at our Creamery. Satisfaction Guaranteed Brussels Creamery Co. Phone 22 Limited ua nstif�'�l'' "lrl•T .e.:. ib''. a j�lti+++;, i1�+r�tlr &cly �r.pls ,y.v.