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The Brussels Post, 1929-7-17, Page 6"WED;VIfSDAY, JULY 17t11, 1,020 THE $RU33E*'.03'x' The Secret of Coolness is in Light, Easily Digested Foods SHRE WY tM aa. With all the bran of the whole wheat With whole milk, does not heat the blood or tag the diger. eon. It is not only cooling but satisfying—saves kitchen drudgery and expense. Iteadv-eac,ked. rentlo to ..ee Timely 'Don'ts' Compiled for Anglers and 1 -hunters Phamphlet Released by Hon. Charles McCrea Synopoizes Game Laws With Some Advice Fr m Depart- ment at Queen's Park. "Uont•e" which are cotnl:ilml en nuttily by the Department parte of Game and 1 ,herie.- for ee benefit of are. lets and hunter.; who went to kn . just Whit th,•y OA end e,t?loot d•i to the finny 71,nd furry fe r , }lee, just been rely a. €d in pamphlet forty by Hon. Cherie • M ('rei. _ In reality they ate ai se n0„si7ta1 for•nt of the, I'rorinei; l Game Laws vtali a bit of ti;re.y de m:e ur-ntal ad - eke. teemen in fur 0:'.pi nr, .an•• This eett. they read ae_. ;_lion Don't shoot eetween t and sundown f-:tanda .l thee' o,• betweee sunset on Seturday and sure lee •+: the fcllnwieg Monday i-tend::r•i time) ; permit boumi-• it 1,,:- to run deer &trine the clo.sine s'a=nn ; per- mit the slush of any cinema of =ird taken suitable foul. to he destrr, ed, or spoilt, or h peite of fur -bearing animals to be destroyed or spoilt ; bay or sell doer, manse, caribou, wild geese• wild rleck:e. or other wa- ter fowl, snip, quail, woocock, plicas ants, ruffled. grouse (partridg' ) large or small mouthed byes, maskin. onge, speckled trout, rainbow trout or other Paelfic trout ; hey or scdl pelts of fur -bearing animals, either commercially or for pereomtl use, before securing a license; have poi- son in your poseession for taking fur -bearing animal$. Don't keep fur -hearing animals of game birds, in captivity without first securing a license; trop fur -bearing animal; without .first securing a li- cense, unless you are a farmer trate ' ping other than beaver and otter on your own premises. Fox by gun or dog, and bear may be taken without a license; molest or destroy a den or usual piece habitation of any fur - bearing animal, other than wolf ; 'carry a loaded gun in motor car or other vehicle ; ,ship out of Province. or send to tanner any pelts without a permit ; shoot or spear muskrat, or set a trap closer than five feet to muskrat house, barrow, feed -house -or push-up, or within twenty feet of .a beaver house. • Don't angle or hunt without a 15 een,e, if you are a non-resident ; .take any small or large -mouthed black bass, maskinonge, speckled trout, brown trout, rainbow trout or other Pacific• trout except i,y eng- lin;; • have, any fish in posseesion nor take away at any time, more than twu day.:' 'einel catch; fish from u boat of otter floating device or tl:rou•zlt the lee In th • oeunties of Vic- torle. Peterbnre', Dc ._ •. ee _. Nee- : tle0mbe e•- tle0mb. t''nnd and ties ate, ro of the Ri- e , Trent in any vottrtty during tile reel.. . eesen fee the taking of base and eitiskinocee ; employ a guider nett•_ le, is li. a.i ed; ta'tee more i than one deer or moose pe rlicense, ' not a row moose or moo ,. calf ; Car- ry a fire arm in Essex, Kent, Lamb - ton, Elgin. 'Middlesex, Oxford, Not' - folk. Brant, II ldiman,,l. Welland, 1.; 't, 1\i'entworth, York, Peel. Hal- : ton W terloo, Perth, South Welling - tor end South Huron, ror the pur- po=•' of hunting without a license. It is advisable to drain the carbur- etor occasionally to clean the fuel line of water which is force from the gasoline tank. The most practical method for dry ing out the ignition system is to blow compressed air on the parts affect- ed. A sudden application of the brakes on a wet street will start a skid, par- . titularly if the brakes do not grip evenly, might have been taught -ticking ,j'ust where they were, while washing in the opposite direction would dislodge them. 4ti Russia :hipped 480,000 tons of crude petroleum last year. Novelty feminine galoshes, NO pop- ular in this country, are being intro -1 duced in all parts of the world. The number of general hospitals in the United States 1s 4381. There are 508 hospitals for the treatment of tuberculosis. • Here a Thee 841 "It is a good thing we left the tent flapopen or be would have', ruined the tepee tato the bargain," said 13ehnere Brown, weal -brown artist who has been painting and! sketching in the Rockies for a num,-, ber of years, lde 'lure forced to return to Banff when a bear ran- sacked his provisions. Bruin took' the cases out of the tent eo he could open and devour them at his convenience. It was possibly the tante bear that tore the tent to bite a previous Year when Brown thought he could safeguard his supplies by closing hia tepee, Dr. Wang Chung Hui, member of the judicial department of the Gov- ernment of China, who arrived at Vztnemiver receutly on the Empress of France, en route for the court of international justice at The Hague, of which he is a deputy Judge, said when interviewed that China was now completely unified and the Nationalist government firmly in the saddle. The main problem now before the govern- ment was that of transportation, he added. Canada's national 'wealth is to - creasing at a rate of nine hundred ntiilion dollars a year, according to a computation recently made by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. Ontario leads in total wealth with $9,560,775,000. Other provinces fol- low in this order: Quebec, Saskat- chewan, British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, New Bruns- wick and Prince Edward Island. While eastern provinces lead in ab- solute wealth, the western pro- vinces rank highest in wealth per Capita. Canada, it was stated at a recent convention of the International Cir- culation Managers at Ottawa, has the largest foreign trade per capita in the world, the two greatest rail- ways and the cheapest electricity. Canada ranks third in the produc- tion of the world's gold, third in silver, first in nickel and first In asbestos, More paper is handled in Canada than anywhere else. A fast 2n foot quarter mike race track built up and surfaced like a good tennis court will be ready for the 40th annual Dominion track and field championships to be held at Banff next Labor Day. The in- field has been specially prepared and resown and the grand stand enlarged. This will be the first time the Dominion championships have been hold in Alberta since 1922. Situated in the heart of the Rockies and of a huge natural game reserve and refuge, the ani- mals at Banff are naturally very tame. Recently a bull elk who had been following with keen interest a game of golf played by Lou Crosby, charter member of the Banff Golf Club, picked up the ball after it had been played onto the 14th green, chewed it and finally drop- ped it in a bunker. Mr. Crosby is willing to take his affidavit that this occurred as described. Opening of the Pines Hotel at Digby, Nova Scotia, late in June, marks the interest taken by the Canadian Pacific Railway in Merl - time Provinces tourist traffic. The hotel is handsomely appointed with special sarmni'Me and golf facilities and is a centre fro:n•which many interesting trips through the Evan_ gellne, reentry and all over Nova Scotia can be made. Railway Shop Workers Give Long Service Nine men 1;.,wn iti the, illustration above have a total service of 301 }ears spent at the Motive Power shop of the Canadian National Railways at Point St. Charles, 'Montreal, This gives an average of over 43 years fur each man, but the senior has the amaz- ing record of 63 years, while the junior is a mere youth with 27 years behind him. This group was photographed outside the door of the old shop, now closed, through which they had made their daily entrances and exits. The shop are older than the men, dating back to 1857, a period of 72 years, This shop has now given way to a modern structure capable of dealing efficiently with the heaviest type of motive power, absolutely the last word in machine shop equipment in the Dominion. in the standing group from left to right the men are: I. Twigg, 43 years service; A. 1,inthier, 44 years; Sandy Welch, 4.3 yeare; 'Thomas A. Bates, 50 years; J. C. Marchand, 27 years; D. A. Rollo, 30 years; Frank O'Reilly, 48 years. In the insert left, standing bestde one of a set of drivers, is W, H. Sargeant, locomotive inspector, who has been 63 years in the service, and continues active and alert. At the right, in the doorway, is W. H. Surgeon, erecting shop forenlan, with 44 years service, The O'Reillys, of which Frank shown at the extreme right is a sturdy representative, have had three gener- ations in the company's service with a total of 108 years. Of the Surgeons, grandfather, father and son have been in the shops, and in the case of Mr. Rollo his father carte from Scotland to work on the construction of Victoria Bridge and afterwards enteted the service. Throughout the alums at Montreal, and elsewhere, there will be found numbers of men who have spent thirty, forty and even fifty years in the service of the Canadian National Railways and its forerunners, Your Country and Mine �IQG- "Breathes there a man Who's souls so dead: Who never to himself hath said^^ This Is my owrt--my Native lane,' ++++4,4.1.4.++++++++++++++++++ The Saint Hubert Aviation Field is situuted a few miles from Mont- real and will be the largest and beat equipped of any in Canada. Its chief feature is a mooring mast, 220 feet hirfh for the reception of the giant deriglble now being built in England and which is exl?ected to inaugurate, its trans-Atlantic service during the slicing of 1929, The field is already widely used for the aerplano services especially the mail under the Domin- ion Post Office Department. Sieur de la Verendrye was a na• tive born Canadian from Three Rivers, who with his sons became one of the famous pioneer explorers of the great West with the object of trading in furs, The Sieur penetrat- ed as far west as the Saskatchewan river and the Missouri. Following up his work, Itis two sons exploration in later years to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains 'as probably the: first white men to reach that far. No more romatic figures appear in Can- adian annals than this family of French Canadians. Oereaslmeo The Royal northwest Mounted Po- lice is one of the most remarkable police forces in the world, patrolling ail area in the Canadian West as large as many an empire, and with an honorable and rornatic history. Its strength now exceeds 1,000. The duties of the Royal Northwest Mount ed Police are the enforcement of fed. eral laws, the patrolling and protect- ion of the international boundary line, and generally to aid and assii t. the civil power, in the preservation of law and order whenever the gov- ernment of Canada may order. At the end of 1927, Canada rank- ed fifth among the countries of the world in import and export and gen- eral trade, being exceeded in these respects only by the United Kingdotn 'United States and Gee.- many er`=many and France. The Dominion's rise in international commerce in the war and post-war periods has been extremely remarkable and probably unparalleled. In 1918 Canada rank- ed only eight in import trade among the, world countries. the rise in ret - Tine INS'iltS or Till. 13rlieveti to Ito Family of the Anelen tab Oita Ms. Tc(mnlord chlcfshe 1 Inlubasabltingeacing••rtaln valleyss or near Cuzeb, and oell••ved to be orig- inally it tribe o1• family of the Quin- ehuas, the ante ti.t iuhabi.ante of Peru, cone to•prominence, under the len: kings itt the thirteen century. The first luta was ina)tso Caput, who called 'ltltneelf "Child of the Sun." With lits WHO, elates OMir), he founded the Peruvian royal fam- ily (about 1240), The pair elaunetl to be children of the sun sent from heaven to Instruct the natives. Froti3 Mance Cttpac 1 so.'ade1 ttva:lve atiter hlatorleal pt teem, the last rt' ;meet Dieu being Huascar, though the line- age was preserved lone after. Tht' Government of ,the Incas woe a mild forte of depotisnt Ilse Inca made all the laws and tntp"ard ton taxes, The sacredotal offices were his also, He •presided ost•r all rcli0leu:t festvals and sacrillcee and was heed no; only of the state but of the priest- hood as well, The Incas recognized a supreme being represented at Cnzco,by a 91one statue covered with geld. Their be- lief was mixed up with sun and fire worship. human sacrifices --if any, tvere rare, Aii the male descendants of the Inca formed the nobility and were the governors of the different Harvesting ng and sub -divisions of the eouna'y. Lands and a large portion of goods were Threshing Barley held In common and all elas:s a were compelled to work for a stipulated For Malting CreylS ;'m Wanted We pay Highest Cash Price for Cream, 1 cent per lb. Butter Fat extra paid for all Cream delivered at our Creamery. Satisfaction Guaranteed Brussels ' Phone 22 Creamery Co. Limited time for the -common welfare of the people, After the fall of the 'etas (about 1532) most of the Quinchua tribe submitted to the Spaniards, RAL'1'Y INLAND SEA. Among highest Bodies of Salt Water on the Globe. Five thousand feet above sea level to Persia is to he found a huge, :ail y inland sea. It is known as Ct0lia and Is 250 miles :trotted, revenue; 11 area of 1,600 square stiles, and boasts of some 56 islands, Ninety miles long by seine thirty wide, it completely dwarfs the Dread Sea, something like a mile and quarter lower in level, and contains a greater percentage of salts in solution. Urrnla is fed by a number of email streams and is the catch basin for a considerable area, but as it has no outlet whatever except evaporation the salt that comes in stays in. Con- stant leaching by the streams brings in a continuous supply of salts, and given time enough, this results In it salt lake, for while the evaporation takes care of the water it must have the salt behind. And this is what has happened to Urmia. For years and years it has been becoming saltier and saltier, probably exceeded in this respect only by Karabugas, the salt water annex of the Caspian Sea. No fish live in it, but one species of small crustacean does, or up to some time ago did, manage to thrive in its briny port trade has been eeven more out- waters. standing. In general trade in the per- iod Canada has come up from tate ninth to fifth place. C�7OC� The greatest activity prevailed throughout the Dominion In 1928 in harnessing for commercial, domestic and industrial use the water power resource of the country. 550,000 horsepower energy were actually in- stalled and brought into use during the year, while in addition, many other projects are under way or plan ned which will result in 1,200,000 horsepower being developed in the near future. The total installation now exceeds five million horsepower available at ordinary minimum flow or 43 million of total 24-hour ....ewer available at ordinary six months flow. CJI]rx=c• Probably the most valuable and the rarest Bible in Canada is the ropy presented to the Six Nation Indians by Queen Anne, and bearing the date of 1702, was signed by 11. R. 11. the Prince of Wales, and Prince George on the occasion of their recent visit to the Re- serve, This Bible: al- ready bore the signature of King Ed- ward, King George, Queen Alexand- er, the Duke of Connaught, the Prin- cess of Patricia, and was previously signed by the Prince of Wales in 1910. All, tate governor -generals al- so signed it, as have Lord Willingdon and Premier Baldwin. It has two pages for royal signatures only. c.=1ot� An interesling chupter of Can• atla's story is recalled by the ship- ment from Havre of a bronze bust of Louise VIV presented by the French government to the ane:ielit city of Quebec, to be erected in the hi toric Place Notre Dame de, Victor its in the "lower" town, while lies close to the river St. Lawrence be- low the citadel. Place :Notre Dame Iles Victories has many associations which date back to the very earliest days of French occupation in Can• ada,For many years after the found- ing of the city by Champlain in 1508 this square was taken es Place Roy- ale and here as early as 1080 wain set up a statute presented by the French,, government in recognition of the remarkable progress made by the colonists in the reign of 'le Roe SO. ell," The new bust is a replica or that executed by Bernie and which to -day is one of the treasures of the Salon de Diane in the Palace of Ver- sailles. EMERALDS. Succeeds In Supplanting the Ruby as the Stone of Fashion. The emerald is very liable to cracks and fissures and 10 blots on its transparency. That is why a per- fect emerald is so valuable, far more costly than the diamond, and to -day even more costly than the ruby. The emerald seems to have been the favorite stone of ancient Egypt. Old emerald mines have been dis- covered so extensive that hundreds of men must have worked in them at a time, much as the; work in the dia- mond mines of South Africa to -day. Many rings of Cleopatra's time are set with emeralds deeply cut with her portrait. These she is said to have bestowed on foreign ambassa- dors as a mark of her favor. The most productive emerald mines of to -day are in Colombia and. Venezuela. There is a famous emer- ald mine near Santa Fee. Stones are still found, however, in some of the old mines of Egypt, and some years ago emeralds of a lovely color were thrown up by the sea near Alex- andria, It possible they carte down in the silt 01 the Nile from the mines of Upper Egypt. Ho Tooke No Risks. Mr. Herbert lInover, t.be. 1 nled States' new President, relates tin fol- lowing as hie funniest story. "During the earlier part of the Great War ] used to have to go batik and for,h frequently between London ane! I3el- t;iurn in connection with the Belgian relief work, which was under my direction, "These boats had to take their chances with the Mines ;hat were conetantly breaking away from the fixed minefield in the North Sea and were floating on the surface, "On one of my lest trips before the United States cattle ilit.o the war. 1 asked 111e steward, at hreakfast, as usual, to keep the account In mind and collect from me at the end of the trip. Be s;oad first on one foot and then no the other, and finally blurted out:— " 'len sorry, sir, but when the Last boat was blown up the passengers got drowned. We mag be sunk at any moment, so I toast collect after each meal,' ' Her Epltaph. One of Mrs, A. M. U. eltitiing'a anecdotes eoncerns a 'worthy, Ryby Wright by name, who one day was observed by his wife to be sitting gazing into the fire with a very mournful expression, "Ryby," she said, "what are you thinking about?" "I am thinking, my dear, what epi- taph I should put on your tomb - atone i" The lady, It should be remarked, was then In perfect health, and nat- uraly resented this undue thoughtful. ness, "Oh, that's very slmplo," Oho re- sponded briskly, Just—'Wife of the above'," A sample of barley suitable for snaking malt must be pure as to var- iety, uniform as to maturity, and thoroughly stature ; a mixture of varieties will give lack or uniformity. The sample must not be injured and must •be free from other grains and weed seeds. Presuming that the crop to be har- vested is from pure seed of a known variety, much can be done now to in - stare a good sample from the malt- sters viewpoint. Firstly the grain must he fully matured, in other words "dead ripe" there must be no green kernels or immature kernels in the sample. If necessary, save for the malting sample, only the parts of the field that are free from signs of greenness, and put the rest of the grain in a separate bin. This extra work insures a sample that the malster will buy, and consequently commands a better WARNS EMPIRE TRADE PREBZIER BRUCE, of Australia, predicts overproduction of manu- factured goods of the United States with consequent onslaught on mar- kets of the world and declares for trade with mother country, SCHOOL FAIR DATES price. The grain after cutting, Following are the dates of the vaar• should be allowed to cure in the rious school fairs to be held in Iiue stock for a short time, but must not on County this year: be left too long, as owing to the in- Sept. 11th—Honsall. clement weather often experienced Sept 12th—Zurich. at this time, 'injury from sprouting Sept. lath—Grand Bend. in the stook, or bad discoloration. Sept. lath—Colborne lrownship. Careful threshing is just as int- Sept. 17th Ashfield Township. Portant as acreful harvesting. Many Sept. 18th— St. Helens. a good crop has been ruined by care Sept. 19th—Wroxeter. less threshing. Good barley must be Sept. 201h—Howick Township. free from broken or skinned kernels,' Sept. 23rd—Ethel. to these threshing will cause this. It Sept. 24th-13elgrave. is better to have a little of the awnSept. 25th—Goderich Township. adhering to the kernel than by close Sept 27th—Blyth. threshing to have the hull skinned Oct. 3rd—Clinton Rural, off, as this injury allows the en -1 Oct. 4th --Clinton Town. trance of moulds, and a consequent deterioration. in the malt production' o— -� from the grain. By the use of proper Speed of the Gulf Stream as it screens in the thresher, many of the ilows along the Atlantic coast le the weed seeds can be removed, thus United States is about five miles an lessening the work in recleaning the ]lour. grain up to the required standard' All Catholic archbishops and bish- for malting. I ops banished from Mexico two year's ;ago when they refused to obey the stringent regulations of the Callas I government, will return home im- mediately. The lower part of the eye retina of the horse is not useful and so he sees iut little except what is below his head, often being known to bump his head when passing through door ways. Hipparchus, a Rhodesan, prepared the first card index to the second century B. C., a catalogue of over 1000 stars. GETS PROMOTIori C. E. Neill, of Montreal, whose promotion from Vice -President and General. Manager to the posts of Vice President and Managing Director of the Royal Bank of Canada is an - pounced, One billion in nuance or the Un- ited States is one thousand million, or 1,000,000,000. In England and Germany many it is one million mil- lion, or 1,000,000,000,000. Housekeeping is the largest in- dustry in England. It employs more people than any other industry. 'rhe prairie hare, commonly known . as the jackrabbit, would be difficult to see at a little distance if he would sit or stand still, Perhaps the most dangerous earth- quake in the United States was in 1811 when a severe shock occurred in the Mississippi Valley south of Ohio. It was.felt in New York atitl the West 'Indies; caused the forma- tion of lakes and temporarily ding- ed the course of the Mississippi. Only In picture's can you }taut tial glory about the record catch. Take a Bromic. Drop in before Saturday \TEXT week -end you'll have a lot ill of fun—take along a Brownie and you'll bring it all back. You'll find a salesman here to show you just how simple picture -making is with a Brownie—drop in before Satur- day and get fixed up for the best time ever, Developing and printing of the quality kited J. R. WENDT, Jeweler Wroxeter BROWNIES & KODAKS IN COLORS