HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1928-11-7, Page 2WEDNESDAY,
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DeVICe Dimon
Extendto you an invitation to call
and illSsesel ottS
FILM line of Used Oars
Sieberling cmd Goodyear Tires
Oastroi Motor and Tractor Oita
Eriarco Motor Oil !il.nreAT
U. S. L. and Exide Batteries
\MQyleile.IVeltling and Repairing done at
able Prices. Also full line of Aceessorie;;.
Anderson's Gar -7-1
reason -
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Sunday School Lesson!
BY CHARLES G. TRUMBULL I
(edit., of The Sunday School Tunes)
l'EACE, AND GOOD WILL AMONG
MEN.
Sunday. Nov. 11 --Romans 12:1-21
Golden Tex:
he not overcome of evil, but over.
evil with good. ( Rom. 12 :21.1
Fee the Sunday that falls on Arra.
ittttl,t Day this lesson is most allPro-
F.'lar.e. Peace and good will assume;
3tiperinatural and redemptive work
t14 a, man's Saviour anti
mmobers of .the body of Christ--
61.dt en el God. born again into ':
by faith in Christ as Savi tr
—ram manifest real peace and good
:'ort.r men. The lesson tells us
The chapter us divided by the See -
Ileitis Reference Bible into four sec-
tions: 1, Consecration (verses 1, 2.1;
2, Service (verses 3-8); 3, The Chr-j-
lien and those within (verses 9-1(3);
p4. The Christian and those without
roes 17-21).
The first verse of the chapter
ant of the great verses of the Blida
It is God's clear command and in-
lailible recipe for right living and
effective service. No one can terve
(led acceptably without doing what
this verse calls for.
It is addressed to Christians only,
the saved. Paul reminds those to
whom he is writing, "Beloved of God,
caned to be saints" (Rom. 1:7), that
.they have been saved by God's mercy,
Because of what God has done for
them he calls upon them to do sont,.
thing for God. "I beseech you, there -
lore, brethren by the mercies of God,
thaat ye present your bodies a living
larrif ice."
God has given all that He has, [Ti
Son, as a sacrifice, for our salvatlon.
We have received this great gift.
Salmis% then, we are ready to make a
'present of ourselves unreservedly to
Gau.t He has given us the gift of
litist Life, He asks of us the gift of
'sat fife.
Re tells us that this sacrifice and
present He asks us to !slake is "holy."
How can that be? Only because
of what Christ has done for us. Hsly
means sanctified, separated. We are
made holy by His shed blood; Tle is
OUT sanctification (I. Cor. 1:301. 11'
ti's us that this sucrifical girt of oar
live, is "acceptable unto God." How
can that be? Only because of what
Christ has done for us; we are
ce;•ted in the beloved" (Eph. 1:61.
we are told that is Mir
"reasonable serviee"—that isit is
the logical thing to do. That eertain'y
oils, .1. lied's people ^huld
•ly tea. titti at.: /It esty
matttrs. in k•e•ping 1,0 41
:111.1 rendering strict aceotitit. ;ill
rnotte,ys ttntrusted to Ili 11) for the
..ertt •• w eta.
There are "Inspossible" )'Less".
tst t.sseet, such es
those weo reeeute nee. avmgt-
e. Wt. . 1 P0 itty,tigly for
ti t,Vtt:,t,,in'itet evil
11' !h. t.tOttd. !hit Ca., normal Citr',,,tiau
life is a 11' il which doine: itn-
lmseilde 1, a, Intbituniniiracttiott, ws-
perieness
MAJORITY OF HARVESTERS
ARE WELL SATISFIELD
Montreal, October 29,—. James
Dunlop, Commissioner of the Scot-
tish Board of Agriculture, is An e
Man in authority in Britain who is
not inclined to accept 'che tales of
woe told by some of the miner -harv-
esters who have returned to Britain
from Western harvest fields.
Having investigated himself the
conditions in Canada under which
these harvesters from the old land
teemot be denied. were working he is in position to dis-
Notitte that only those can servo pate some of the 'statements made.
C el reasonably, or logically, who aro Returning last week to Great Bri-
tain he stated that "the vast majority
of the men with whom I came in cosi.
tact were well satisfied with the con-
ditions and were -optimistic about the
in their b,half, and who are attettotred future. From all I heard and saw
by God because of the Son. Chstistise !in the West most of the men gave a
service is thus seen to bn no litle good account of themselves in the
thing; its eonditiors an., sharply de- harvest fields."
fined; they are tremendous; each Mr. Dunlop does not minimize the
service is an unspeakable priselege, difficulties which a number of the
The second verse tells us we are t- thousands of harvesters who came
"he not comformed to this world." • out from the old land, encountered.
Christians are in the world. but net Some of them, he said ;were affectod
of it. (John 17:11-11;.) I is:
-.Jig 21 le ts-e change of climate and water
Rome. we are not to do as the Rom -
and food and suffered as a consequ-
tins do. The secret of t,tis is in Cy., emit from physical ailments which
next clause of that verse, "but he yr.
trarsformed by the renewing of your prevented their being successful
Some were physically unable to faee
issind."
saved by His mercy, who have yield
ed ar ppresented, or suitreoder
themselves wholly to the Lordship of
Christ. who are holy by Cl.rist% work
With the 11°w gtv" to the work, but, he says, "there were
us in Christ. God gives a new mini
500 miners on the boat on which
We are new creatures, new creation:
(I.I.Cor. 5:17), And It is a striking
fact that the Greek word used h sce
for "transformed," which every Owl.
stian is called upon to be. is, the word
for "transfigured" in Matthew 17:
2, where the Lord Jesu, was "trans-
figured" before the disciples.
Thus tile normal and serviceable
Christian is saved, surrendered and
separated. He is saved by having
received the gift of God. He ie stir.
rendered by having given himself to
God. He is separated from the world
while living in it.
Then, and then only, may we
'prove what is that good and accept-
able and perfect will of God." The
Joy and the miracle of knowledge
and doing God's only by obeying the
first two verses of this lesson chapter.
Normal Christians never put thsm-
selves forward; they have no exaltel
opinion of themselves (v. 3). They
are follow -members with one another
in the same body in Christ. Put
their gifts in serviee, and therefor,:
lann.191111.0falanRaliMiltia2aC
aaaOltaelalea....Vrn
Often do
You leAt
Your Jeweler
Not very nften, you'll agree, compar-
ed to 1111 visits you make to your
Grocer and other stores.
This is natural enough. Silverware,
Watches, Rings, etc., aro not used for a brief 117ririji
and replaced as with other articles. Things bought at
a Jewelry Store Must Serve Longer.
That's why there i's only one safe rule to follow—Buy
the Best. Only the BEST will bring perm:merit,
dependable satisfaction in the long period of use when
the little extra cost will be forgotten.
Hr're you will find the best of everything at prices that
are always reasonable, quality considered.
Of Special interest is our new showing of Men's Wat-
ches, Ladies' Wrist Watches, Clocks, Silverware,China.
Visit US!
J. R. VVENIDT
JEWELER wi=00xETER
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THE BRUSSELS PO
T
LivEsTocK. ENTRY FROM , A.\\'•%4Y
CANADIAN WEST.
1 • ',leg lift ,1
Its reast Vone.
Ex ect over forty carloads of West -
0
tern Stock for 1928 Royal Fair.
Over forty carloads of blue-blooded
tive.-tteck the pride or Westeen
Cannda's flocks and hortIll, will mike
a trimplial progress to the Royal Win -
tor Pair at Toronto, according to
estimates made by the railway itompt.
aides. Report.; from the different
Western Provinces indicate an 00-
usally strong representation in the
livestock and horse sections at the
lleyal this .par, Manitoba will be
exhibiting in cattle, heavy horses and
swine, Saskatchewan will have 50
horses, the pick of the Clydesdales,
Pereherons and Belgians in the Prov-
ince, ill addition to other livestock
entries, The University of Alberta,
which was 0 heavy winner at th
1927 Pair is arranging with the co-
operation of the various breeds of
beef cattle in Alberta to establish in
the market steer classes at the 1993
Royal.
The 1928 Alberta consignment will
include nineteen head made up ns
follows:—seven junior yearlings, one
senior calf and one junior calf in
Shorthorns. The Herefords will be
represented by :three junior yearlings
and one senior calf. Two junior
yearlings and one junior calf will
complete the entries in -Aberdeen-
Augus. In addition there will be
three animals in the grade and cross-
bred classes. British Columbia Is
sending a strong entry of Holstein
cattle.
In addition to the livestock entries
the 'Western Provinces will be well
represented in seeds and grains,
dairy products, poultry and in the
case of Manitoba and British Colu.n-
bia, in fruit and vegetables.
went to Canada, and physically the
vast majority of them were as fine
a crowd as one would wish to see,
Though he thought that the orga-
nization at the Canadian end for
looking after the harvesters was
somewhat incomplete, Mr. Dunlop
referred particularly to the gond
work done by the Colonization Depa-
rtment of the Canadian National,
whose officials, he said, "struck me as
particularly capable men and genu -
Indy anxious to do their best for
the harvesters."
Another man of authority in ag,ri-
etiltural matters in Britain who is
now in Montreal after spending over
a month in Canada and who sew
something of the conditions tinder
which the harvesters worked, is John
Garton, vice-chairman of the Nation-
al Farmers' Union of England. Mr. -
Garton has little patience with tome
of the calmity tales of the calmity of
the miner -harvesters. "There is no-
thing about the Canadian harvest,"
said Mr. Garton to Dr. Black, Direct-
or of Colonization for the Canadian
National Railways, "that is any hard-
er than the work of our own harvest
fill s back home. The hours may be
Ringer, but there is not any work
vonnected with the harvest here I
would be afraid to tackle myself,
th)lgh 1 am over threc-score years.
I can quite re,alize that many of tee
triflers who came out would, from
leek of physical exercise for a yr
be Very Sat, and also that
nmily of them would not at once
iv& to the more isolated ltre on Wes-
tern farms, but a month at the work
should make them physically fit and
ctin st•tt no reason for complaint
otherwise."
111 signed ,,Lfliernents from twenty..
011t. Or the old country harvesters,
voluntarily forwarded to the Coloniza-
tion Department of the Canadian
National Railways,. satisfaction is
expressed with the conditions under
which these worked, Sonia of these
men are preparing to take jobs for
the winter, and othere intend to take
up farms of their own. "Any one
can do welt in Canada if he is not
afraid of work" is the way one of
the signed statements puts it, which
sums up the opinions of the 'score or
more of others who wrote letters.
It is ealeulated'that 100 years ago
170,000 newspapers wore sold weeltly
in' Great DrItaim Today the Dram
has risen to approximately 75,000,
000,
• •• oro . of 1.1X -in
.1.1111-•t•'tt -151y 1, 1),• so%)
1:1t, . .t. t•-lti
act: 'tt t,' •‘-111ty follow
ste :ey • , • 111,111' In the
nm.1:11
1*1-y hy 111'1'1,S1/11,
:t1 ; fra
h e 111:'' W0.11 et11 provinces, with
Imarlanarters Tittalna.
A new irelt,wry- 1ot.1.1er farm -
!no may be started 11 Saskatche-
wan by John itnthenherger, farmer,
of VallAlla Last .ipring mr,
itothen-reer caught a badger and
four pups, Ho built a lasso Pen.
110111 15 feet long and 4 feet wide.
During summer he fed the badgers
until they are 1105) quite tame, and
are said to be larger than • any
badger runr.ing wild. Their coals
are in excellent condition and of-
fers of 318 for each skin have been
received.
A new world record was set by
the Canadian Pacific Railway re-
cently when a train of grain more
than a mile in length was operated
between Stoughton and Arcola, in
Saskatchewan. It was the longest
and heaviest grain train In history,
consisting of 135 loaded grain cars,
each approximately 40feet in
length, a water car, a caboose and
engine. The gross weight was
8,722 tons and the total contents
of the cars were 202,000 bushels
of grain.
The enthusiasm ot the citizens
of Quebec is so infectious that It
is an easy matter to interest visi-
tors In winter sports, stated J. G.
Strathdee, winter sports manager
of the Chateau Frontenac, in giving
a forecast of this winter's pro-
gramme. Skating, skiing and to-
bogganing will be in full swing as
usual; the dog derby will most cer-
tainly take place; and the Ice car-
nivals and storming of the citadel
will probably be featured again
he said. 11r, Strathdee mentioned
the splendid co-operation given the
winter activities at the Chateau
Frontenac by the Quebec Winter
Sports Association.
The number of disciples of Isaac
Walton, Canadian and American,
who have plied rod and reel in Can-
adian waters during (Iso past seaso51
is greater than ever before, states
A, 0. Seymour, general tourist
iigent of the Canadian Pacific. Rail-
way at Montreal in announeing
the winners of the Ontario bunga-
low camp fishing, trophy competi-
tions. Phillip Peterman of Lau
Hum, Michigan, won the Nipigon
Myer eontest for speekled trout,
Edmund Slechbart of Chicago won
the French River "muskey" prize,
and Theodore kipp of Winnipeg
caught the largest bass entered in
the Devil's Gap camp competition.
England will have enotigh Can-
adian apples shortly to keep the
doctor away for the next year, if
there is any truth in the proverb,
as ships sailing For the old country
thls autumn are carrying many
boxes of souvenir apples shipped
by Canadians to their friends over-
seas. This has been the custom
for the past few years AD CI accord-
ing to J. B. Martin, manager of the
foreign departmenof the Can-
adian Paelf10 Express Company:It
is becoming increasingly popular,
So great has been the demand for
fresh Canadian apples each autumn
for shipment 4o Europe that gro-
cers throngheut the country now
have standard size boxes for
shipping and special low rates are
granted by the oxl?ross company.
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023e. .te It' s:1 tetot al' Kent
tad t: Was Ot ;1
solne patts have been t4 a gnat -
11041., 0111,1, 1111.11.• 11,11 it chinned.
1. • ,X1.'111 11 ( 1 .11' 115' iron)
WItlthy rerISS11 i 1, reand 1 lane
Regis in FA:torts:lice, hut the parts
!hot hove suffezed ''1505are those
round Cromer, and the North and
Smith it`t,ittlands. The el eston seems
11.11,t quiebt-a,d 111rIng flit, past
thirty or forty yeaes, and to -day it is
itttlit vett that FIngiond's east and
south (toast .are losing nearly 2,000
:lel ea a y sir. tll.ucsex alone is losing
401 aerss yenrly, the area of fl good-
sized farm.
Aldeburah on the Suffolk coast is a
eTeat sufferer for the North Sea is
taking steady tall of the town. At
one tint, the 101/711 11 111 1 was separated
from the Sea 11:0111 sevutral streets.
Now it stands fatting the son., all the
streets between having; vanished Into
0110 501(55' of -slother Orman.
A few miles north of Aldeburgh
Gm tourist enn see a very small por-
tion of the ruins Of an ancient priory
standing en the verlzo ar the low cliff.
This is all that remains of the onee
great town of nunwich, famous for
its wealth and beauty.
At Lowestoft the nover-eeasing en-
croachment or the sea Is a nightmare
to the people. Enormous sums have
been spent and are being spent to
tight back the waves with groynes
and walls. The latest scheme of de-
fences will cost the town no less than
£1135,000,„
All along the East Yorkshire coast
people are (Tying: "Can nothing be
done to save our homes and our land
from the hungry sea?" Pif teen feet
yearly is being shorn off Yorkshire.
At Aldbrough the bungalow dwellers
aro feverishly moviog their homes
back to safer sites, while the SkIr-
laugh Council is in despair at the
terrible inroads of the Sek. 11110 its
territory,
At Hornsea the waves in time or
storm actually threaten (Ise railway
station. Some idea of the scale on
which Yorkshire 15 being destroyed
can be gathered from the fact that
since 1786 thirty flourishing coastal
villages have totally disappeared.
The greatest alteration to the map
at present In progress is at Spurn
Head, at the mouth of the Humber.
The once great premontory, which
carries a lighthouse and a number of
cottages, will soon be an island, for
all that remains between it and the
mainland is a strip of soil hardly wid-
er than an ordinary road,
EMBALMED HIS OWN BODY.
Man 1)i'ank Poison Enough to Hill
200 raisons.
Astonishment at the ease with
which violent poisons can be purchas-
ed was expressed by a North Devon
coroner, at an la quest on Waller S.
Walker of Bickington, who died af-
ter saying that he was going into his
gun -room to have a drink, says an
011 Country paper.
"This is a most remarkable ease,"
writes Mr. Thomas Tickle, the coun-
ty analyst, in a letter read by the
coroner. He continued, referring to
the dead man:
"He must have drunk about a tea-
cupful or the weed -killer, containing
enough poison to kill about 200 Peo-
ple, in the most concentrated form to
which it can be reduced and in the
most active state possible,
"The man's mummy will possibly
never decay, it Is so thoroughly per-
meated with the most effective of all
embalming agents."
Analysis, added Mr. Tickle, reveal-
ed the presence of 328 grains of
arsenic; oxide in the body.
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;t 4
lieen apiriinted Distributor for the
11'11‘74'
1115 „
tarit Aka
Corporation
\V,' offer Cars at :;.'605.01) anti -up, incloding
six different models, viz. : P1) 11101(111 4 : De.
Soto .6 ; . Chrysler 62.6 ; Chry;sh r 656 ;
Chrrsler 75,6 ; mid Chrysler $o 6. All with
the lon,gest wheel base of any sirrill car, also
hydraulic 4 -wheel brakes.
Come in and look them over.
E. O, OMNI GHAM
Phone 9x
BRUSSELS
American collectors have, during
the last ten years, taken British
antiques valued at a total of over
$250.000,000 out of that country.
For tthe benefit of deaf people,
to whom the ordinary alarm clock
is of no use, a new invention of a
Savarlan bounces a rubber ball on
the sleeper's head at the hour se -
s'i'ted.
Sabbath comes from Hebrew, alco-
hol is Arabic, bosth Is Turkish, sago
is Malayan, tea is Chinese, and
skunks is American Indian.
Many roads }sassing 'chrough dL
'communities of less_than 6,000 in-
habitants have been declared main
highways by the New Zealand gov-
ernment.
It is believed that the world's
cihampion autograph hunter is Joseph
F. Milkulec, of Croatian origin, he
Tho "Little Midshipman"
The "Little midshipman," familiar
to all lovers of Dickens, may still be
:men keeping guard just inside the
shop of a arm of nautical publishers
in the Minories,
Dickens described him at4 a mid-
shipman, but the figure is really that
of a naval einem. wearing the uniform
of Nelson's time and taking an ob-
servation,
The figure is about two foot high,
exquisitively carved. in wood and ap-
propriately colored. It 15 almost a
century and a half old. It now bears
a brass plate with: "This 15 the orig- •
Mal 'Little Midshipman' immortalized '
by Charles Dickens in 'Dombey and
Son',"
has traveled the globe collecting the
signature of the world's great men.
The sun's mean distance from the
earth is 92,897,400 miles.
Efforts are being made to induce
people of. Algeria to use flashlights
in the poorly lighted streets.
That the readjustment ot banks
that were- closed during the linen -
1 (dal 'aoh of last year is now prac-
tinily complete, has been ant =ic-
ed by the Japanese department of
finance.
Residents of Queenstown district,
Ireland, are protesting against tit:
unsightly electric light poles being
' erected in connection with the Shan-
non river power project.
Th,. loftiest peak in the Philip -
9515(15 is Mt. Apo, on Mindanso 1)115-
) S(1, 9,160 feet. •
A rubber suit for pedestrians,
which causes the wearer to bounce
when bumped by an automobile,
has appeared in Europe.
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Eating Moro Grape-Ernit.
Grape -fruit Is gaining popularity
so rapidly in the Old Country that
there was 421,000 boxes imported as
against 15,000 in 1823, 48,000 in
1924, 141,000 in 1926, and 168,000
in 1926.
A New Use for EIephasit's Bide. I
Elephant's hide is used in Sheffield
for burnishing cutlery; it is dark
brown and not unlike wood in (ex-
ture.
Seventy,
Private persons who own and fly
airplanes in the Old Country now
number seventy,
1
Silver
Fox
'
f" •
lack
Are proving to be the most
SProfitable and Interesting
Live Stock for Farmers
Our increase this year was 4,8 pups per pair,
All are raised. 50 pairs of Foxes require no more
skill nor care than 10 dairy cows,
I have for sale at moderate prices some of the
finest Silver Black Foxes in the Province, all re-
gistered, pedigreed stock. Co-operation given
to new ranchers buying foxes, as to care and
treatment,
North Huron Silver Black
Fox Ranch
GEO. BLAKE, Prop.
Lot 5, Con, 14., Grey R, R. 2, Brussels
L
4 It.
L .1
tch
Is usually one done in a hurry, by a, cut-rate printer, mho
was not able to submit a proof to the buyer of the printing.
The price at which the job was clone necessitated quick
work and the minimum attention to detail.
Result 11
The customer uses the printed matter much againat his will,
and possibly to his detriment so far as his customers ere
concerned, all because the 'whiting was doneby a printer
at a distance, and that the job was not checked before
prin ting.
Insist
n Pr
ofs
Your home printer will always gladly submit proofs of all
work so that it may be carefully checked for errors and alt-
ered for appearance if deemed advisable, while any desired
additions or deductions may be freely made. This results
in a satisfactory job of printing, and pleases all concerned.
See that all your printing bears the imprint of your local
printer.
The Post Publishing House, iBrussels
1,