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The Brussels Post, 1926-7-21, Page 6WEDNE 'DAY, JULY 21, 1020. Splendors of Famed Canadian Choir Preserved for Posterity In the Brunswick Recording Lab -1 oratories at Toronto, a few days age, the first Mendolssohn Choir phono- graph records were produced. At this ceremony officials of the Choir, had the honor of operating the pres- ses which turned out the first ree,ords of this internationally famous Choral • OrganizatIon. Shown in the picture, inspecting the first records to come through the prees are, Mr. J. H. Parkes, Presi- dent; 'Mr, J. P. Milnes and H. Rooke, Vice -Presidents, and T. A. Reid, Seeretary. Immediately behind the press le Mr. W. Puckett, General Manager of the Brunswick-Balke- Collender Co. of Canada, under whose diTection the recording- NV08 aceornpliehed. CRYSTAL JEWELRY +.'ite.+"1" 1.` Crystal is acclaimed for fall. It is developed in varied combinations of • An- LADY'S pearls, graduated, interspersed with .a COLUMN. crystal drope and small pearls. GOOD COMBINATION With Iamb or mutton .chops serve tomato sauce or green peas. BETTER ROASTING When roasting beef that is very lean put a few bits of fat in the roaster. After the beef is seared and the dour brown, reduce the heat and cook more s1ony.. HIGH IN CALORIES Clu•eee sandwiehes fried in it butter make a very rich and eatiefy- inn portion of food. They muet dried very quickly so the butter does not soak into the bread. DELICACIES Now that the preeerving season is et hand fill some of the tiny individ- ual jars with choice jams and jel- lies. They are most 141viting for an invalid's tray, or the breakfast that is individually served. • TAKE YOUR CHOICE For breakfast fruit then, can be no lack of variety tiedaye—be- eith•s the regulation orange joie., or 1 cantaloupe there are strawirrk., ott i the stein, cherOies .9n the et :in, iced INV IVA poaches. . CONTRASTS LIKED Colored laces and colored bands of ;Indigo, are tued on white frocks very eir,••tively. • F07.- 771.E -SLENDER of light wool and of silk eeve horizontal stripes or ' squares contraetine coler. L'eually ' they ar worn with a eilk skirt of plain co! STUNNING SLIPPERS A pair of blaele patent leather pumps that aroused considerebb, ad- miration recently had a tioral deden in white leether applique oe the vamps. FOR MIDSUMMER • iihine•qone pins, in animal shapes, are used with the light colored hats of eracheted straw. Crystal pini are also very prominent. KEEP IT COOL. Never leave milk out or th.• re- frigerator longer than is abeolittely neeeseavy. REDUCE RICH PORTIONS N summer menus require lees ae- tee •.•ooking bat more planningthan n winter, Fresh fruits, vegetablee, alik end eeel drinks Must featur- daB vents The purchasing public is daily becoming greater readers of advertisements, The reason for this is that they profit by so doing. They - find the goods they want described in the right manner. It is news to the purchaser. That being the case, it behooves the wide- awake and straight -dealing, merchant to study his advertising matter carefully, so that when the customer comes in to buy, he -or she will find that the goods are as represented. Those who do not read advertisements are losers. Make it a part of your reading to go over the advertisements of the merchants.. By so doing you will know where to find the best bargains. Also you willlearn whether the goods are as represented. Merchants are studying the needs of their customers. Buy from the map who advertises and you will not go astray, Study The Post lids Every Week THE BRUSSELS POST vailL 41( ?..amonci 'Ring "4 Lk.W:'s'It'LlIsla==it Ii wee es dice color and distinctive beauty found only in Diamonds of high quality. Whatever the size Diamond in pia Princess Ring, you may be sure of its superb quality and you may buy it anywhere with implicit confidence. Prices are very moderate, Look for the name Princess, arid be JaJi. . .. , —We have a — Large display of Diamond Rings All new up-to-date mountings COME Now and make your selection While our stock is cOmplete. • *, - Jr. R. W EN DT JEWELER WROXETER TO AVOID SHRINKING Flannels should be washed in sev- eral venters, all of the same tempera - STOP FADING COLORS When washing colored clothes id - ways try a sample first, if pos,ible, before you put them in the laundry. If there is danger of fadirex, II01" the color by soaping in a gallon of water with two cups of salt or one of. white vinegar. Then dry before really washing with soap. PREVENT INDIGESTION New that the iced tea and ived coffee season is at hand, remember that when drunk very rapidly iced drinks are apt to rause discomfort, s by too sudden chilling of the sten- ach. To sip them slowly is more re- c freehing ai well as more healthful. b SAVES SCRATCHES It it,: advisable to protect th•-, bot- t tom of a sink with a rubber mat whee you have the dishpan in it. YOUR ICE BILL Nover put warm food into Ht.! re- B frigerator. It increases the temper- ature and increases the ice bill. in BAN LUMPY STARCH is Always be sure that the starch for it laundry purposes le free from lumps and well cooked and hot. a The Arms and Motto of the Provincefl - of Ontario CONTAGIOUS ABORTION WD 1N A ND \VD bHb E P11 I (.1 E DMS LocATE, -- Three Very ttoportant Points That should kie Full 1el tion - tion te Hely Keep Herd 1 Iran. (INMCV11,(11,1 I,y OW s viN I.,11,11-ttUela a r; 1 dtrtotil I. al -v. Lr, *1 'Ji*, int% etious: n respastid, .c( tilts o;odun loa otl tatty:dolt...1 to ill. wo small and Wi 1 1)1,2,•1 a,dortt and ‘ibrio 11,11 1111 be pre:, in the. some animal an. others nu* also intailp hp :tonal: A •s -A A IV ly fe seeseeesseeee,erese=reses.seesee-4.7e..-'• , LI" IIONYWOINI 1,, reported to coo- tain 1.0,000 preoes whit Ole ti innbitione most or them get tissues all, r th's, t0o harp (rat conditions faviiralde to then]. Th abortion gi,rins thrive hen en feta li.t:ales anti nilik, and like all MIK living things they item 00 t 1,1.8 eues whore conditions suit thel development best or not finding sue Perish. After gaining entrance t the animal body the bacillus circu latein th o blood streatu and final establishes in the udder and prog nant uterus, where eonditions for growth are favorable to it. How plug it may live In these localities is not nown, but eases have been observed where cows were eliminating the germs in the milk two years after having aborted. The germ can live outside the animal body, but for growth it depends entirely on animal tiara It is generally helleved that the non -pregnant uterus seldom if ever becomes infected, and it is well known that utetus•from which abor- tion has occurred, is generally cap- able of cleansing itself of all abortion bacilli, within two or three months after abortion has taken place. From this we can assume that the intra- uterine abortion infection, is depen- dent upon pregnancy. The fetal tis- sues must be present to sustain the germ, and infection does not take place in the non gravid uterus. The udder has been found to har- bor the germs of abortion, and each drop of mill: from such infected ud- der may contain many germs. The condition offered by the mammary gland Is apparently ideal for the growth of bacillus abortus, as this germ is frequently found in market milk. It causes no atiparent damage to tho mammary gland and in so far 08 im known does not render milk Unsafe for human use. Experiments with new-born, calves from Infected cows show that they generally harbor in their ittomachs and intestin.,s, large numbers of abortion germs. Fortunately the body of the calf offers no tissue suit- able to the maintenance and growth of the bacillus, and it is soon threwn off. Heifers Readily Infected. Investigations in dairy sections how that more than 80 per cent, of he abortion cases had occurred be- ars, the heifer had reached second Hiving, The physiologival changes roug,ht abont by pregnancy create a uitable medium in the placenta and he fetal calf is gradually deprivecl f nourishment as a result of InIurY 0 the placenta or fetal membranes, vhich appear bloodless and show evi- ence of decomposition at the point attachment. Expulsion must then ake place, and it usually does so at VIM etesting Method of Control. The testing of the blood of every nintal, for the evidence of alnirtion fection, at lutervals of six months lid promptly retaining itll re -actors, a satisfactory method if started in me, that is, when ,the first abortion rears, Should there be a number f aborters, a herd division is advise ble, providing there are two sets of uildings available. The testing of 1 purchased cattle before adinitting : d ttbundant practice in regist'?i disoppointment.---Huitiorkst. a• Diner: "1 erte't decide •ivhe"l'i- - or to -order roast veal, leg a r • lamb, or pork." o Waiter: "Why not order - 1 ehielten croquets and get them Y ee e. "And what did you IMMO the twins?" the mistress asked the dusky washerwoman on her re- turn. "Ah tell yuh," she began, "Alt am pahttial to de testamental names, so Ah named one 'Poetle Paul an' de othah Tistle Peter." se es • 41. - A hired girl, just arrived in America, was sent to the theatre by her mistress. She returned very shortly, saying: "The big picture (curtain) went up into the ceiling, and then people came out and uak- ed about things which didn't th th The motto of the Province of On- of tario is "tit Ineepit Fidelie Sic Per- 111 menet," which might be translated, f,,tie "Loyal She Began, So Forever esle-, 111 Remains." This has reference to the fact that when the Province of Upper Canada was creted in 1791, 'British law was introduced and the Govern- ment and Administration were mould ••,0, so far as local conditions would permit, on British usage. The strong British senthnent which from 1011 time has prevailed untii the present, developing in more -recent years into an ardent imperialism, finds i-xpres- sion in the motto 8,:deeted by the Hon, Sir James Whitney when the present Arms of the Province were iidepted during his premiershlp. em to the herd, the safeguarding of ; e feed and water against possible mtandnatioa and the enforcement sanitary measures are three very iportant points that should be given 11 consideration in the attempt to ep the herd clean. --L, Stevenson, rector of Extension, 0. A, college AGALACTIA. The ellalSO of Failure In Milk Secre- tion. CAT RAISING A RABBIT A Maltese eat, belonging to Wil- hinni Milese of Clarksville, Poe gave birth to a number of kittens. Soon after birth oneof the kittens died. The cat went to a. nearby field where she robbed a rabbit's nest of a young rabbit and returned with it to the Miles home, where she is rais- ing it with great cave. ,The young rabbit seems to be in 'good health. FALL FAIR DATES Brussels Sept, 30, Oct. 1 Atwood Sept, 21-22 Dayfield Sept. 28-29 Blyth Sept 22-23 Dungannon Ott. '7-8 Exeter ......... .... • Sept 21-22 Fordwieh Oct, 2 Goderich ........ „ .. , . Sept. 8-10 Listowel Sept. 21-22 London Sept. 11-18 Luelcnow Sept. 28-24 Mitchell Sept. 28-20 Milverton Sept. g3-24 R/PleY • • • — • • — .. , Sept, 28-29 gt. Marys . . Sept. 23-24 Seaforth Sept. 28-24 Toeswater OCt. 5-6 Toronto , „ . „ . , Aug. SS -Sept 11 Wingham , ...... .. . . , . Oct. 7-8 Zurich ..... ..• . e.. Sept, 40-011t, 1 All heavy milking eows must have a digestive tract that is capable of assimilating large amounts :LC food. M11lt2 secretion will be reduced by anything that interferes with normal digestion, assimilation or well-being of the anitO common Pauses.— (1) Attacks of indigestion, espe- cially those cases that have occurred as a result of overfeeding, (2) The continued feeding of grain without sufficient roughage to main- tain normal digestion. (3) The injeetien of toxic plants or weeds. (4) Overcrowding 0 heavy pro- dueer during test by feeding concen- trated feeds and drugs may break the vitality of the animal and be follow- ed by a reaction with marked falling off in milk secretion. (5) Abrupt rhanges in feed, sur- roundings or attendants. (6) Any agents that extAte or worry an animal of nervous tempera - as fltem, dogs and 'rottglf;.teten. Treatment.—Each ettae must be given indiVidual attention and treat- ment applied to meet the require- ments, If feeds aee at fault, thange them and use a succulent nutrition fodder and clean grains. If thedi- gestion is at' fault, give a tonic of gentian, ginger and fax vcomica. Create conditions of quietness, clean- liness, kindness and liberality In the dairy barn. and there will pe no trous bib through failure of millOseeretiOn, —L. Stevenson, 0. A. College. Club Boot of Cabbage. A heavy applicattpe of lime to the file best known inehne of pre- venting club foot of cabbage, 1:4,0 iItn Is annlied before planting at the rite of from two to Palm isms per acre depending on bdw troubiesome the disease 12. Ityd,rated•or a,trsIatt- ed is Wetter to use than ground limestotie. Rotation of crops is Also deeirable, concern me, so I came away." + + Little Johnny was being shown through the art museum, and was stopped In front of a , well known painting "Van Dyke, by Himself," • "Anybody could see that no- I hody'e with him," commented i the boy. • este,* anada's est wiaflo ----Prices fro m $375.00 p TERMS TO SUIT ALL j),t tilt weste time seilvieg puzzles but get in gich \via; the old (•stal.tlisliecl and relialdv brut and get full value' lor your money. TA AT' . ? r01801.11 Ur; VaSelt R (,)7 Ontario St, Phone 171 Strati,ird PAS11.1.M.O.RUN44,1.94a.. - 1926 this eieff isn't poetry. It's just en eseape of gas," Editor: "Why, my dear sir, , GraSnCaI-10eFAIR DATE 1.7nd S, , 'Young Poet: "Alt,. something Winclugsea D1.7to .alliw°1 la Cracker. 1: d he m wrong with teter."—Georgs C + + + + Wroxeter "Rip Van Wirikle" was being Rimed, and Rip, in a bsautiful , , setting, was dr'owsily Fettling ; bark for his long sleep. Just then the head director cume up - 011 the scene. Much amazed, he ! shouted: ' "Here! here! Put more life ; into it!" 1 Mr. T. A. Edison is still hard iat work at the age of 79. The . ease of this famous scientist ; shows that the road to longevity Iis paved with good inventions. - _ ; A policeman was leading a ; child toward the police station when a woman stopped the pair -and began to pat and kies the + + + "What. side are you taking in the election?" one' of the eldest • inhabitants was asked. "Well," he said, "there does- , Sept, 7 Sept. 8 Sept. 0 Sept. 10 Sept. 13 Gerrie Sept. 14 Bluevale Sept 15 Ashfield Sept. 10 St. Helens Sept. 17 Colborne Sept. 18 Hensel]. Sept. 20 Zurich Sept. 21 Varna Sept. 22 Dlyth Sept. 22 Ethel Sept. 24 Walton Sept. 27 Goderieh Twp. Sept. 28 Delgrave Sept. 20 Dublin Sept. 30 Clinton • e. Oct. 4 and 5 The Post Wants the NEWS from every Concession. You Can help.. ▪ 4lquilt+0+0+ 0442+ 01-9+0 +et + it,P .3+ child. Presently the woman said I es 5ISEU to the officer: "It i•s a shame 'die 4. way some parents neglect their .?. as ih : s' 1... children, .so that they fall into. . ÷ the clutches of the law. I won- - der whose child she is?" a a "Mine, lady," said the officer. + es + + Producer: "Did you notice what a roastiug the Timee criti mc , gave y show?" . See me te• Phone No. 22t, Bios- .1- n't seem to be much of a choice ! F " riend: -"Oh, don't take him ,?, "18' aI "V/ mil ami g"Il t ÷ s 0161 1-1 P114. 0. 4, 0, • Highest market prices paid. between the men, but juot ne I seriously. He doesn't give much ,II, , 4. to be 'hitter!" i is saying." 4 soon as I make up my mind, you , thought to what he writesH1117 Hick . e can be sure of this—I'm going . just repeats what everyone -else I - 't soi-sseesteete+01-seigeeerre-leese+e+ Treasure island is Mecca tor Childre suoma=sanne-srarsestese-sseesusresses-cor SenS1711.191.71400.. A (% Martamienasr-ralxna 1. Complete mid exact lo oyory dots)) is this small enable representing. the largest typo of e001110 used In the Rockles.in Canada. This small engine 5 torrent:tire Nand" acone allowing party of young girls leaving lichee on thn pulls 30 people around the "isimul" at (Inc trip. 2. A composite rture of e Canadian Pecific Train and passing through thn e coneug At tunnel situated in the Canadian Rockies. At top of cliff is a niittiataire of one of Canada' flowst hotels. the Chateau Froutenoc. rrreastire Island, the outstanding amusement feature of thit British El-00re Exhibition at Wembley — with it's bold but nice pirates,Long johnSilveiand Captain HooleP' and its many other famous characters from storylartd, Peter Pan, Wendy, Alice, the Dtichese, the Mad RatterN Cinderella, Mother Goose and Robinson Crusoe, has proved to the greatest entertainment attraction at the Sesqui-Centennial International Exposition at Philadel- phia. It is a much bigger and more wonderful "Treasure Island" than the one which delighted thousands at Wembley last year. 11 )100 six arras of land, surrourided by a natural lagoon. Thekentire lay -out orthe Island in Philadelphitt was designed and built by Maxwell Ayrton, architect of the Wernniex exhibition overseas. Drake's ship the "Golden Hind", Ikloab's Ark and its animals, Iwo by two, and,pirate and smugglers' eaves will be a few of the features seen, But quite the most fascinating experience of the vieiter to Treasure Island is the Jeep across Canada on the miniature Canadian Peel& Itt4levey's qmpetitel Limited" train which is pulled threugh a repliea of the Canadian Pacific Rockies by a small puffing engine only four feet long,, but strong enoughlto pulP30 people, The engine driver is J. Terrenee Holder, the twenty-one year- old s '.f one of England's wealthiest families who prefers /his) o an Oxford career. On ets on the train at the Palais Station, Quebec, Nat below the, magnificent Chateau Prontenae, and passes through Quebec and Ottario provinces and enter the prairies intless than no time. When Banff is reached be train stops to allow reasseegers to Site the Banff Springsllotel and the beautiful Bow Valley.. Westward it, speeds tkrough the'Canadian Pacific Rockies, some 600 feet 1og, the tallest towering 74 feet high and built of sheet iron and plaster, mid dashes into Connaught tunnel; thenee'On to the Coot, where one sees Vancouver Harbour, the Strait's t:f Georgia and pieturesque Victoria, Mare than half a. million people rode oh the little Canadian Pacific Ralievey at WellibleY last year, and among its distinguished passengers were the _Xing and, Queee and the Duke and 1)ttclaess of York.