HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1940-4-17, Page 8TETE BRUSSELS POST
•
ROUND TRiP RAIL TRAVEL BARGAINS
From BRUSSELS
APRIL 26-27 To TRON'TO
also to 'Brantford, t:1 than) Goderlch, Guelph, Iialtlilton, I.Sudo a
Niagara Fane, ()wee Sovrd, St, Cathharines,. St, Marys,
Stratford, StrathroY, Woodstock,
To Stations Oshawa and East to Cornwall inclusive, Uxbridge,
Lindsay, Peterboro, Cam-0011ford, Newmarket, d.
Meallos^(1, Midland, .forth Bay, Parry Sound, Sudbury, 001t1e
01and west to Beardmore.
See handbills for complete listof destinations,
Tickets, Trate Information, Return Limits from Agents. ASK .YOR HANDBILL
CANADIAN NATIONAL
• ALWAYS USE CANADIAN. NATIONAL TELEGRAPHS
•
No Work For
Canadians, ;Aliens
More Fortunate
Apparently interned Germans are
doing quite well in PetaWhey have
Per -
est Reserve carnal.thele
plenty of wotik to do, azul
evenings: are spent pleasantly about
wood fires. They sing read a d
teach onto ,another languages
art according to the news story'.
"Bayo Marie" is a favorite song on
convival occasions. in about
There will be no Cotio does re -
this, though the situation,
call that during other winters
wandering, homeless . young Cam-
adians bat neither work, nor .roar -
Ing aamltp fires, nor sins geong even-
und
in:gs. These neglected men to
shelter where they could; to
ireigbt oars, church basements,
and: slept on any kind: of floor
could find. They ,wanted. 'work, but
there wasn't any for theta, because:
nobody in authority cared.
There is plenty of work for in'•
ternel enemies of Canada. They
are ,cutting down trees to open
roads thrrough a district that may
become a popular tourist cevit're;
but that is not a new ,prospect, The
need for meddle not a recent de-
veilepment. When spring, comes
there will be more work for - these
interned men. Planes include the
tapping of trees for the making at
maple sugar; gardens are. to be
laid out and cultivated. Tbere twill
I be brush -clearance, treeplanting,
1 and reforestration work, "and. per -
1 hasps some roa1-building,". all the
men are not fully engaged.
Thom ie.: ie oaex
idaccoJUST LIKE
LOSS FROM WEDS
POUND
tarmea+s
The, loe,i to 'Canadian
by weeds:, is pleb. eallY imTossdble r
to estimate correctly; but ,the am-
vont
m
putut must 0pprogimateiy every year
or. more than '10 Million dollars. To
learn, the moat effective and least ,I
expensive methods of weed erradi-
cation, many expea'1lnerats are 10
progress, etnperintended by the
nemEuslaudry . Divtslow of the'
DominionCsatertmental Farms Ser-
vice,
wERY 'iiAvY
Mother At
Age of Six; ,
Lima, Peru - Ea --year-old Lina `
Medina, 0bildwmother of an. 11-
moutth-o1d boy, :was returned to the 1
oustedY of her parents by a decree t
of the Perr talk living onCourt.Supreme the 1
The parents,
term
a
slope' od the Andes, .foregut almost a 1,
year against they .order of the Peruv-
ian Government placing the mutter
and child under a guardianlebf1)
to
keep them from "grave
barna
whdeh might resat trona uncon-
trolled
niontrolled .dealings with commercial
enterprises."
Says Plowing
Best Exercise
'fCr27'!?yivar,e,o4Y, APJUI, 1'1th, 194o
rl•„ sf : J,•F„�j
: All this is wank thatcould have
,! ,4,..
1 been begun years ago, not only to
the Petawawa dietrfot,but through
'"_-out Canada. In the uemer Parts of
=� this country development work is
< chicks a "head n eed ed, and should be done; wank
Give yotu 1940a Vitafood Chick ' that wool have saved hundreds of
start” "di a fartn-proven&4ng fine young men -who are not
starter--uildingn10neypntasio aliens -from the misery of pro -
that
m
thatisb , leading longed idleness.
But year after year these young
fellows tramped the roads or "rode
the rods" in search of something
to do. When winter came they
were regarded as an annoying
Problem, and responsibility for
their keep was passed 'from one
authority to another, With the
coming of spring they ceased' to be
a problem, because they took to
the road again. The municipalities
were rid' of them. for several
months.
Now many of these youths are
enlisted --or.. having volunteered,
still are walking the street. And
representatives cf the enemy they
undertake to fight are at once
steadily employed; paid a small
sum per day. They are not depen-
001 on charity. True, they are
under guard, but the point is that
i there was no trouble in finding for
i them work that is for the good of
layers tamers.
poultry
At 7 weeks, "follow-through"
with Roe Complete Growing
Mash -the atomized feed that
gives your chicks everything
they need for steady, profitable
egg production in the Pall!
els
Indiana "U""Expert Holds It
Finest For Feet and Legs
t
Plowing, says Dr. Russel Jones ;
of Indiana University 'School of 1
Medicine, is "perfeet exercise" Lor'
feet. and lege.
He also advanced the theory
that public speakers "should sit
while they speak; it :certainly
wouldn't hurt their ideas and
would do their feet a lot of good:"
Designed For Walking
Dr. Joules s'ait 110 Plowing, un- 1,
evenfurrows teitd to spread the
foot in alt directions.
The Indianian also declared
that people "stand nip too much. 1
Thefoot was designed for walking,
not steuditvg,"' line explained..
About the only -solution dor foot i
trouble is "shoes tbat fit," Dr. 1
Jones concluded, adding that per-
sons 'with aching feet should go
to bed and rest their feet, Mgt as
they would go to bed with a bad
cold.
COMPLETE
GROWING
MASH
ROS ,y fT OI01 ZF•D"
pales FRB SotD BY:
EASY !•t1sota PRODUCE,
brussels
ALBERT TRAMISS,
Wal•'on
FRANK
HARRISON,
Moperieff
ft
The Questioning
Public
(Excerpt from The New Yorker)
The six librarians at :the informa-
tion desk of the New York Public
Library apparently regard as c(mr
mon:place the amazing variety of
thinga: peo0le want to know. There
are about two thousand questions a
day. In rapid succession the librar-
lens may be asked: "What is a
shim?" "What are Napier's- bones?"
"What is the chemistry of bath tub
rings?" The librarian looks up shim
in Webster. know offhand that Na -
ARCHE
Thedemands of our Country and Empire, occasioned by another Great War, cause us
to pause and recount the progress mode in the quarter-century since the beginning of.
cres
the first Great far. to over
Then ennweoexported but 000 25,000,000 lbs. were sown to Nof bacon and Cham to Great Britainin a
now;
year, whereas shipments our ,will- lbs.
average
yearly production of a dairycoW was 4,500 lbs.of milk whicch now has been raised
to 6,500 lbs.
Farmers have been alert to the findings of science and the better practices developed
by our agricultural colleges and experimental farms. Changed methods have brought
Yost improvements; too,
a plied- standards fniproducts of knowledgeen attained and has, through the solving oof,
Science, rima ed ated bo practical
many of our immediate problems, greatly increased
the productivity of our farms and
added immense sums to the farmers' yearly
Rust-resistingaright varietiesestimated to have cost ve now the farmersed the uof losses
• W stern Canada in the
62re
62 years of0 perwheatcontrol
an amount inperfectedess of olf t athebillion
pointdollars.
where the damage
Gtheseopets hastb effortsfiehave been the
from
k tat several hundreds eds of millions of bushels of groin int he Iastseven years.
And
this
And the agricultural implement engineer
a
geetaseenbuscaigningmaisto meet
the specific needs of the moment. lman-power, costsof operation, have
been
hearesult
undergone
r
Trncto have been tremendously New machines have been made available.
One -Way -Disc
Seeders -till and sow in one operation, cutting the cost of these operations
by, 40% to 50%. The new Small Combines extend the use ofathiis s new
low
cost
caharvesting
a sting
method to farms of all sizes -saving upwards of $1.60 per
in naKarg sting cosribution
• i assey-Harris is proud to have played an important part
of the implement maker to those of the scientist and farmer in furthering the interests
of agriculture.
THE SERVICE
ARM OF THE
CANADIAN
FARM
..��_ _ —_ - - ._._----• the lady said: "Oh heav-
routine, lady who asked for the wording of adultery," 000 a the a of simple: hind
One of the assistants: was d'lscon- the ,Seventh Commandment. When anal') in
thanking an
vented, hotwever by a call from a he told her "Thou shell not commit hung p
the country; work which, during 1 pier's lo',uos are a calculating de -
the hard years, would have kept 1 vice and siameats the chemistry
{ hundreds 01 young Canadians OF • , r•; .n far the last question.
the highways and out of polite
9 and other shelters. Interned e--
1 molest are more for:ura•r sic
and Mall.
WEEKLY Q"UO' TAT,
'rise sat r - is -'
ea:rya:he,.F ._.
to 14,,..;- W s
Tae ana
iatat
F.
:al
FAY
HIC ES' CASH PRICES
S 1(
FOR
CREAM RED
ATBRSSE'iTr3L:
EAMERY
BRUSSELS
�J
PHONE 22
t`T, her1 a than 4a11 a deep voice re -
'.1i; 'oie,,honod to ask how many
;t_mGs In an elephant he was
Lilmorp con 4n't sn er
• ctlen :v1s considered frivo-
Ii:s (:laic sense way out-
. *:`.C. hell am I Paying
'ae demanded. barging
"y 001,3 forbid liolping the
t matters r -f uu.d tint` and
,1 Yt people keep calling
en bow '. 'r .at r. t hftea.
r a x quinsy. Finn. .>: errn.an telu-
i,,"i:.crl, hefal her Prying baby up to
rile-Iranarratier and wanted the
dc 14 to V it t',.t ar en•l•n(. the 1
e.;.,1. Tie 1 f t+i dt idv'. -11.e11
r- Ide 'a er .-d:' n 11; it t,r the
Meaie0,I ,.. i(' I"1re or M3 t'1itMS
a
41g toriv,;, ':r, a.Ill far il0i6
a+a a +(:; b . 5 (:s. ;11ar curds 10
their hr,l 1: rd; i0 1(11,01 er0Ss the
men figare z t t war. Rouse-
t(ic, :•}•Ir r..l. t„ rt('ip(s '.re
r, tr , •1 t r ,: , a and, to
IT rut. l ::Sy r a , a •.''il+ ea! la. St •lali(st
r s' n - trim on the
,t s 1h -r ,t(, •t':t' is pre.
1,11 ,1 t ,"'t?out 0bn1110s who
e ill .a• Si: , c ::,.ri • ;t '1y stales of-
f-"r
f•f r t1.• 1 t, mate a m1rria'r sere,
nl 5.10.1. They are (•001 to hantltiera
Who want them to figure it player's
m',' t110mati0al chance on a ginning
tit vice,
(,inestiettn (thnlit 1111' Ten t (lnttt•(
lnlindlliftits are, frettuent alert'ordhl•' l
Great Lakes Cruises Delightful Holiday
. delightful break in the long
trans -Canada rail Journey
and Perfect summer cruises are
combined in 1110 survives offered
by the Canadian Pacific- Great
Lakes steamers, Two gleaming
white ships, the "Assinlboia" and
0110 "Xenwatilt" 111a1te c0nVelllent
connecUuns at Fort William and
Port aleNh u11, tomttnal points for
their wider 10utnny of 512 en-
chanting miles, inal er•ub:es aro
operated (penally fur vnenttoll-
1",ts who lilts the -harm of the
Vaal. 1111and trnit,
"Iltese LW(' flnn. p11Sisenenr 0111110
travel Weitheand on Wednesdays
and''Satnrdaye; (aaboun(1 on
(lal.15odays and 7 utialayn. 'Phe
routo• of thuuo utifl'0lo evuloou,"
from June 15 to mid-September, is
most interesting. Westbound
from Port 1IeNiooll; the ship
glides through beautiful Georgian
Iiay, past Manitoulin Island, and
into tante Iluron. It sails up St.
Mary's River, through Sault Ste.
Mnrio 10 Lake Superior, largest
.01 rho Groat Lakes, to Fort Wil -
Hain.
' The acisedulea provide for 1:01)11 -
lac week-olid.cruiees from Sault
Stn. Mario or cilhnr terminal
point, half ,tiro length of the full
(anise. ,
latter delightful tivt-(lay (wattle
trips ern 1nad0 by the apaclnus
entitle ship "Manitoba," 301 font
1nng, 2,01.0 tons and of nteel enn-
otruction,. Thono crows) from
. MINIM
July 1 to August 26 aro from Owen
Wiliam but the son osis to
rule
North Inside Channel of Manitou-
lin Island and there Is a special
stop at Maoklnae Island, rich 1n
Movies of early explorers and fur
traders,.
,Shipboard nettvlties on all these
vessels aro patterned On those of
an 00000 liner -- morning Ibouil-
lon, afternoon teas,
eunoks, impromptu pnrtios, ntas-
quorndes, dnn0Oa and moonlight
Promenades an dock Pnetint0e
Include shuffle -board, dock satiate
and lls aro
equipped ts, Tho tl
dwith spacious(leeks,
c0SY loung0e and Wry staterooms
--the lest word In lanirtoua 00m,