The Brussels Post, 1928-3-7, Page 6WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7th, 1928,
Made only from hard Western wheats, Purity Flour is
rich in gluten -- the energy giving and body building food.
Purity Flour is best for all your baking and will supply extra
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Send 30c in stamps for our 700•recrpe Purity Flour Cook Book. 260
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�f Sunday School Lesson
13Y ^` 1-I"R'+"r--,c.+ G.. -.nems tneuu_
(Cid itor of The Sitanday bchOot Tones)
JESUS FEEDS THE MULTITUDES
Sunday, March 11.. --Mark G:31 ll;
8:1-10,
Golden Tee"
I am the bread of life; he that.
cometh to Me ;hail never hunger;
and he that beheveth on Me shall
never thirst, (John 6:35.)
The attitude of most men toward
their fellow mon, when they eve them
in some need, is "Let them meet their
need themselves." The attitude of
God toward those whom He sees in
need is. "I will greet their need for
them." That is the difference be- ,
tween God and man. -
It cornus out impressively in the in -1
cident of the feeding of the five
thousand, The narrative begins
where last week's lesson ended, as
the newly appointed apostle.; return
from their first preaching tour and
report to the Lord. It must have
been a strenuous time for them, ex-
acting and fatiguing., "And Ho said
unto them, Come re yourselves a- :
part into a desert place, and rest a
while; for there wore many coming}
and going, and they had no leisure
so nueeh as to eat."
It is important to realize that our
Lord cared tenderly for the bodily
condition of His disciple,. Plainly
Ile would have Christian workers
take heed to their physical condition
ta:iay, and re -t when they need it.
It does not honour the Lord for His
work; r: to disregard their bodies and
work until they break down, render-
ing themselves helpless and incapa-
citated for service and peehaps ps a
Burden to cte,ers.
As th,e Lord and His disciples "de-
parted into a desert place by ship
privately," the crowds caw thein, and
ran afcot around the head of Lake
Galilee to the Northeaat:mn shore,
reaching there even before Christ
reel the diseieb s errived by boat.
PIans for _e .t h rd been broken into;
it must be had at a later time, For
the Lord "teas moved with eompas-
sion"'toweed the multitude of help-
less, neeely eeeele. They wer'e"as
eller lmehre t , h p' '•(:.tnd Ile
1t'i e:1i He w•a: the eternal Son
of Geri, yet during His earthly 19•t'e-
Citt•irt lit -:•d by hath in the
I'm p t, as we meet. So He took the
ree 'onvee and two fishes, and ''He
looked un to H: oven and blessed."
We n- ii 'l 1 . ee cxeected Him to ask
the Father to work the mitaele of
tyros sty hi. .imply adequate. in -
steed, He simply tply blessed God, When
L:lz,rle wa, lying rima Christ "lift-
ed up His r't'es and said, Father, I
thank The that Thou bast heard 11"
(John 11.:11). Do praise and wor-
ship and thaekeedving to God need
to have a la:'er pia,•e in our prayer
life than they have? Perhaps if w.+
thanked God for mere we should
have to ask him for less.
Remembering that bread is a type
or symbol of Chriest (John 5:35,48,
51), and that His body was broken
on the cross for us, it is significant
that He "brake the loaves" before
He "gave them to His disciples to
set before them." It is Christ cruci-
fied that we have the privilege of
ut1'erinrr lo men as the Broad ad of Life.
G a' e war gives men just enough,
butt's more than enough. of
:
the t thousand men in addition to
women and children (Matt. 14:21),
they "did all eat" of the five loaves
and two fishes, and :tot sparingly, but
they "were filled"; and after all had
hod all they could take, twelve bas -
)cuts full of fra•_ntents were left over
and gathered up. It was God doing
exceedingly abundantly above all
that we este or think" 1 h:ph. 3:20).
The nt::acle of the feeding' of the
four thousand, recorded only by
:Hark and Matthew (I5:32-38), was
a striking incident, but similar. A
striking similar incident aimoet a
tho Band years earlier is recorded in
II. Kkats 4:43-41. God is "the .same
yesterday, and today, and forever"
(Heb, 1"
. MY
e LADY'S 4�
a
i
COLUMN. +
be _ -o to t' it 'h t . 'r:, thi 1,;,s SNAPPY i'OKF•S
V'c ere r tiee t ' t' .i t., t e.:1 eve i Tine ,•,ire, all e - aov'•ity 'g• 'el um-
miuht leeve,i,.._ , in a:•: of ca • Lorr- eeelee _ eee•_:e t.t- O rl maple' yulee. .1
1,,•••fl. 1 lease es,eeeen ••{..a hat.' :t deep
i-:_e, lee! ,,..'• %la d 1 •• ,.1: -.1._. L'.. ,[,
finit.•e- al, e p'c't, !ti — •1 0 , .ints.'r
ezrele
It .
and th
w, it , 1 , t ., i•.
li 5: t1 real .! rl1 reser,.
fags null:• sleety t:h_:n h ^i'.,,, , . .
1y iii=, .end. ser hoes• *l -u• Ibis,
t� t
t
1 n (. n .II I ��
Sprit I r
hod -1T„ ,'l. a v, i i ,r 11 le;e,
WOOF! WOOF!
Nitt: I'm wedded to my art.
Witt: Well, it ought to divorce
you fez• cruelty.
se es ee
ALL IN THE TASTE
Mr.. Newlywed: "This steak tastes
-MM. Newlywed: "I can't under-
stand it, dear. I did burn it a little
hut 1 ruh',d vaseline on it right a-
way!"
ee
TRY AGAIN
What is your worst sin, my child?"
"My vanity ---I spend hours before
the mirror• admiring' my beauty,"
"'I'h:d is not vanity ----that is inlag-
innt: (11."
OF COURSE
Teacher (giving grammar lesson)
"Try this sentence: 'Take the cow
out of the. field,' What mood?"
Bright Pupil: "The cow."
er. ie
THEN WHAT
"You were always a fault-finder!"
growled his wife.
"Yes, dear," responded the bus -
bend. "I foand yon."
BEDTIME STORY
"Ye ken it was a thick nicht when
he passed rte. I couldno rightly say
if he was a short mon with a beard or
a tall mon with a sporran:"
List of New Books
In Brussels Library
Adult Fiction
The Desire of His Life —E. -E, M. Dell
Linder the Grey Olives Keith
Hugh Loyall Elliott
Call of the House Mitchell
Wacousta Richardson
Penny Plain 0. Douglas
The Quest of Youth . , .. , Faruol
The Barberry L'ush Norris
'Che Head of the House of Coomb..
Buret t
The Master's Revenge Cody
The Black Knight ......71. 11Dell
A Daughter of the R•
tch Waller
Little Miss .Melody Keith
50 Famous Stories Jacobsen
The Dark Dawn Ostepso
King of the Golden River—Ruskin
,Ruskin
Fighting Stars Cody
1',nily's Guest Mon:guurery
Janus De La Roche
Peacock Feathers Bailey
Forlorn River Grey
Overcoming Handicaps , , .. Wallacec
Prudence of the Parsonage ,Huestnn
Frontier of the Deep L' •ale•
A Dealer in Sun: 'rine —Thompson
Mi Brown of X Y 0 , . ,Openheita
Anybody but Ann Wells
New Jnv nil e. hooks
50 Famous Fairy Talc: ... Leen
-ird,,n \;,,
bit
Child', Garden of .t r•,•. -a
t'he
Lit?le I-:nno Prince . , .,llu'10,'k
S:?Lr eeA.PE ..l 17oc i,r 1"i+uvlere hick
T. e,,• n i'ook 1'I1lue
r,,I.11 1.1,‘,1:
,''. i ;he a 1'
'i 1 ,. ,ihx:rlu, e a '.h,• inial ...Seaman
a,! It , 1'. l I! t tr. ...tui.., 0 If -
t, h n we, re very yrung , , , Millie
J r ,iu: ; tpe h Spyrt
Neahit
4T
eh is .t. IL 1)16,.: de-
Testameet. Tefr, eseraee.1 rl 1:1.:1„,eeteehle lbs rool'-
1
e, e then pe x 1)11(1 vele , t :or r t styes a =i n rornul:rtioa
err i,+,l.: teaching dotty.; rl.' 111- r:r u,;r• 11:•4,
car•mlti'.,tl (John 10:7, 42. I8).
EV, '31 1 P,1'1, ell, th.• '11e.pl ,
reeegnieites trite reeltitudo', ee,:1 'f
fond, sese•d they Lord to ..anal tt,r•m
ltv t :- , 1 t!i n .his u lete the
villeges .,rd I'l..ey themselves 1,,.• ]
That erne the enternl attit'tde (or rtls-a
toward tapir fellow )let 11,
Christ's. ettitiet, eliff,•,reet.
When the Lord 1,, to eL•<ro
les: "Me ye them e int they ,:' 1.
amazed. H( wae aeein;l nit impes'i-
bility. But why should they ]lave,
been amazed? They had seen
Lord of theirs worjung couet.l. .,
miracles. Should t -hey not have
known by this time that with 111111
nothing was impossabie? Yet tan
have opportunity, through the ecrip-
tlu'es and the Holy Spirit, to know
Hien better than they did; have we
ever failed in the same way by being
hopeless before 00010 impossibility?
Tho Lord; asked them to bring Him
what they had, five 'loaves and two
fishes. When we are facing an im-
possible obligation, Ile asks as to put
whatever we have into His hands;
then He does the rest.
NEW CO:.I.,'hiw
11 e.r•ple_ r r -r!y art-.: nuffit of
1 ! : 15r<: j 1)01 t and Jrl , .�el Circ:
t;. n111T, rrpind e,ilui• ci :!p1 the'
te,e-ainat.e in the Laek v,i71 a ti..
with rimy,"•rr•e e ed end.+.
A MATTRESS I1 HANDLES
Make r epring r: -elution to ee
bnediee on all mettreeees tr facilitate
,wning, Mak[, handle: by stitching
001113e of ticking together for
etrcno'th. Attach two to aside,
MOTI-I PREVENTION
Never put a single winter garment
away without cleaning if you would
prevent moths. They dislike. cleanli-
ness. Air everything in the sunshine
before packing away.
ORIENTAL HAT
A boil de rose toque, of fancy
straw braid with a small pattern of
circles woven into it, swathes the
head in a most oriental manner.
Pretateei,O0K AT THE LABIIIL
(.r li ('6111rr0
rSeekers
u.. r
..t,
Heide
'foto and the Gift
The Happy Venture
Hr .l.n s Iuu1: ' 1,11
°t , ev Pain: et Ail, rough —Wei
!
l'lu Measure c'f Margnr,rt , ... L,•,.
Se;, Le?..; I.winds
I'b.ae Iini,,iet 1 1(1 seaman
A !,11 tie (t•sp(ive Lull Dix
k11,10110 wonderful year .ITawthorne
Orpheus with kis i.nt; ...Iiulrhi;nee
Mudd Oujda
David Maze and the Door
..
I;, F, Benson
Literature
t atur
Time ren; ..an Stories ..., , I r r te•11
The Fortune of the Indus ..,Price
Stories of Gritt ........ , Wallace
The Cruise of the Cachalot , .Bullon
Travel
With Lawrence in A abia ..Thomas
The Revolt in the Desert .Lawrence
•
Business day population of the
Woolworth building, New York, is
approximately 14,000.
There are. $50,000,000 invested in
forest industries in New Brunswick,
which includes some 356 sawmills,
4 pulp and 1 paper mill.
A new throe -bladed propeller has
been cast for the steamship Lev/lath—
er:, which weighs 64,000 pounds end
l.; uiadc of manganese bronze.
B illinren•
Spyri
Adana
isle
r
THE BRUSSELS POST
Cockshutt
Frost & Wood
FARM
IMPLEMENTS
and a full line of Repairs
will be carried at the
popEMachine
Shop
Agent Brussels
When you are in town call
and see the new machines.
Here and There
(20)
Invited to see Montreal by 11 o
hotels and the tourist and convei
tion bureau of the city, 75 menthels
of the Itlassachusetts I•Totel Men s
Association spent 0 week -end re-
cently there and were given a royal
reception. As their president, Esti!
Coulon, said, "We carie to sell New
England to Montreal, but you have
sold Montreal and Quebec province
to us."
During the usually quiet immi-
gration months of December and
January the Canadian Colonization
Association colonized 75 families
who took up land to the extent of
22,734 acres. In 1927 the Canadian
Pacific Railway, through its land
department and its subsidiary (the
C. C. A.) placed 2,694 families on
Canadian farms, this including 626
families averaging 5 persons to the
credit of the Association and 1,529
families on C. P. R. lands.
The movement of British youth
to Canada promises to be consider-
ably heavier than usual, due to new
arrangements made with the Brit-
ish Government. Ontario is taking
500 boys, Manitoba 60 and the Mari.
time Provinces and Saskatchewan
an indeterminate number, while
some hundreds are to be moved by
private organizations. In all it is
estimated some 2,000 boys will prob-
ably be brought out under the new
scheme this summer.
Another body of sportsmen are
finding Montreal and -East”, Cee-
ada good places in winter as
well as summer. The Apbarachtiut
Mountain Club, of Boston, picked
the best period of the winter sea-
son to spend a week in the Lauren-
tians mainly devoted to ski-ing, but
with sleighing, dog-mushing and
tobogganing thrown in. It was the
first time they had ever visited this
district in winter and they are go-
ing to repeat it.
Resignation of Colonel Walter
Maughan as Canadian Pacific
Steamship Passenger Traffic Man-
ager has been followed by the ap-
pointment of William Baird, who
was assistant European Manager
of the Canadian Pacific Railway in
London, Eng. Mr. Baird, whose
appointment is effective March 1,
joined the Allan Litre steamship
company at Glasgow as junior
clerk in 1905 and came into C. P.
service when theft company took
over the Allan Line in 1916. •
Bee keeping in Saskatchewan
made marked progress in 1927, there
being an increase of 45 per cent in
the number of colonies over those
of 1920 and an increase of 191 per-
cent in the 1927 honey crop over
that of the, previous year. The num-
ber of spring colonies in 1027 was
3,803 which increased to l'1,952 by
the fall dolt. The production of
comb hnr 3' for the year was 04,042
potouN trod of extracted honey 430,-
9.2 lertieris, smelting an average pro-
duction p.er colony of 115i, pounds
eirpleees are roe, heir 0') to
h,'rd vast numbers of t r in
the leg Ate : t nit I:n•r ,.. •e-.., cd -
1n : e: 1- h , , r ' the
reimicer industry of ' 6- - e "It's
i
LeV. id -a and it's tett i 1n pr::c
1 eereelerly. but it •telt nt er
1 L es seem fee: ul dt',
Lem. n. (t'10
,110 :eel r.to ,
t -a 1 i,1 11
es,1. ia,n, .l .t n!
nem. There is room foe
• n the northere tee
( and such a herd ;tue1l
9) 0,1100. It could be
if Cantona stai'L.d 1011
t! :1 e: 4t way "
Jarapanests Proverbs
The ignurmit are never defeated
in any argument.
Doubting (Mods will ever bring a
:swarm of demoos.
m n,
Everybody ybody itis eight ;ht eyes -for bioi
nniTlibot b business.
With a mots, in the eye one can-
not ::00 the Himalayas.
Patience is the -rope of• advance •
ment in all lines of life.
Negligence looks at the battle-
field, then makes its arows.
Genius hears One individual aid
then comprehends ten.
When the sense of shame is 1o4,
advancement ceases.
A woman without jealousy is like
a hall without elasticity.
Who steals: goods is called a thief;
who steals dominions, a ruler.
14-
The
'Tho pecan tree, though native to
warm climates, has boon grown sue-
ctssfully in Verment,
L•.NG1,.1.NI) S ()1 I)I'h4'I' 0.1KS,
Huge Oelk Trees: soba In 3ltnly Parts
01' the Colurtry,
As memorials of past days, when
the might of Tingland de•p"nded On
Iter wooden wails, there are uu 111 1(1'
examples than the huge oak trees
that exist in many- Parts of the
country.
That those great trees remain is
probably due to the fact that the
roads in earlier times were far too
ruu-gh and transport too elementary
to draw such vast weights for any
considerable distance,
The largest oaks in England to-
day are standing in the park at Powis
Castle, near Welshpool. They ore
four In number, and 1t has been cal-
culated that between theta they con-
tain no Prewar than 7,000 cubic feet
of timber. The circumference of the
largest tree near. the ground le 40
foc.t.
1'he hilly Wilkins Oak at Melbury,
near Durcheeter, bas a trunk 38 feet
in circumference, which in its turn
is eclipsed by the Newland Oak near
Coleford, Gloucestershire, This tree
has the largest girth of any in Eng-
land, over 43 feet, •
Sherwood Forest in Nottingham-
shire has long, been celebrated for its
fine oake, many of which have ro-
mantic legends attached to them.
'they are nearly all far gone in de-
cay, but the Major Oak. is still
healthy and vitorous, This tine tree
is 66 feet high and 30 feet In cir-
cumference,
The Gr.:e('ndah' Oak is Well known
to all visitors. It was flee -mei' title
tree that a Duke of Portland cut an
opening through whirr ;le ',vas, said
to have driven a coach and four,
A fine old oak of historical interest
stands at Ryston Hall In Norfolk.
This tree was the meeting place 01
the followers of Robert Ilett, who
led a rebellion in 1649 as a protest
against the extensive enclosure or
common lands. This tree wlis, and
still is, owned by the Pratt family.
After the rebels had left for Norwich
the following message was found pin-
ned to the trunk:
Mr, prat your shepe are very rat
And we thank you for that,
We have left you the skinues
To buy your lady pinnas
And you must thank us for that.
The oaks of Windsor have been
celebrated for centuries, but old age
has played havoc with them of late,
andleft. there are few really tine trees
jl'flliam the Conqueror's Oak, re
puted to be over 900 tears old. is
now only a magnificent 0teek, but
in the Cnwpond wood is a tree which
towers to a height of over 130 feet.
Not far away is the Druids Oak or
Burnham Beeches, reputed to be 600
years old,
WOOD THAT 1)0l'3,'i"i' HOT.
Tests Are Being Made of Me "Mora"
Tree.
A new type of flintier which is
grown principally in liri:ish Guiana
is being tested both in En,.;land and
South Africa for use as railway
sleepers, says the London News.
The wood, which is known as
"Mora," is claimed to resist. any at-
tack by Insects and to ba impervious
to wet weather,
Tests of this timber 01)' under-
stood to have been made by the four
English railway groups, and also in
South Africa, whets 101(15. rot in
sleepers is prevalent.
:Reports have ur , yet 1,5 en ((1,•ntse-
ed by the Tat; r 11 t tilt t companies,
but the Soutar Aft can I ,ti, :.^ys De-
partment, which has lagan conduct-
ing tests for neve 1'•a 1 wept bar.
stated that it has fu1tG' ` 1 et cry 0(0(11
1vllfe l has been .pied,• 5or )t.
- Sections 01 111, brunch lines
have brow I(11 i1 with sig e io=ta of
mora wend, -which le.eiasnh-
ject to (..ntirmone
They have li an lft 11
by extreme et..•,-.ra 11) 1e. •,.t•,,:etr,-
or• by marine r,0 11:(1..•)1 .,t i ,r•tr :
hise•c ,,
Th .e last te eo t + I l . in 0
etatement ,ns r e0tl te. Ay. el.
(.arty a. r? 1 ,tt•o of 1( r•r1rL-
totw1115;11 (itt:::nn., 1`: r,u'r of
0001u1, -''e.
Un of
lA. - Cul J,
ceh0,ini, d ()hi Country iuilit ry
1)11rr1a,a,.ter, is 1, llitz 0 ri B axial
ianry flndmi i,•. h ..PP -'1,e n"
not alts }s ume e.teod is ti meals, for f r 0111 1 1,1 rainit.g is not
1111 o:: ni1al put of 11 11)1 n trafniis..
A Celt,: 1nlr 1,1 (taco r', nplrtiued to
the wig lti, r of th _ r(Tinr oral baton
Dial his hand was a ch-;teee to til•
tree limm 1.
"Why, sir? asked i hn handle es-
ter. i , 1 pride • t onnd :'d.
"WI, ?" roared the 104 111rl, "Why,
ile' me•n tvhe 1110(1)1 in 1.111, ['runt
riinks and pl 1 th(t irr-trams ut;
Cloy (rush in and out eaen. teeop time,
and 1103 never, by , ey chance, push
together!"In and out together!"
New' Paper 'I'c:w'n In Manitoba.
Coustruetinu work on Pine Falls,
the Manitoba Pule et Paper Co.'s new
lnodrl town 15 pracieraliy complet-
ed; the entire outlay (('1)00 e0ting an
expelnditure of nearly 910,000,000.
The town is on a model plan, with
a sewage system, water works and
electric: iights. There are nearly 800
employes of rho eouipiiny.
Has Cosmopolitan Population.
Among the comnopetitan papula-
tion of Chicago, which totals 2,701,-
705, are 500,000 Germans, 400,000
Polish, 800,000 each Irish and Ital-
ian, 250,000 negroes, and 000,000
Scandinaviane.
Electrically -Operated Razor.
An electrically -operated razor with
a blade which Oscillates sideways
while the user draws the razor down
his face 1108 been Invented.
Ont,'tria) Tobacco.
O.ntat'(o prodaccld 85,000,000 Ibe,
pet io}ta,coo Iu 1927.
C•.
r.
;Lo, the people of the earth do tyle homage.
1 am the herald of success for glen, merchants,
manufacturers, municipalities and nations.
I go forth to tell the world ('he message of
service and sound merchandise. And the world lis-
tens when 1 speak.
'1'11ere Was a day long ago, when by sheer
weight of superior merit, a business could rine above
the conlnlo•n level without rte, but that day has
passed into oblivion.
For those who have used the as their se vant-
I have gathered untold millions -filo their centers,
t, Sellore
dandise
per dollar of salary pa'i'd me than any other salas-
man on the face of the earth. The fabled lamp of
Aladdin never called to the service of its maotor
genii half so rich and powerful as 1 am,.to the elan
\Oho keeps tyle constantly on his payroll.
old the Business
of the se-aso es in the hollow of my hand, I com-
mend the legions of -fashion, mold the styles rind
lead the ,('(:rrld whiihcrsoevlor I go. I drive unprin-
cipled bossiness t+1 cover, and sound the death -knoll
of inferior merchandie. Frauds are :front of tyle 11--
cau:;e 1 march in the broad light Of day,
Whoever h ever Mak s Me
Ther Servant
for life takes no chances on drawing' dawn dividends
fro'in mV untold treasures bestowed with a lavish
hand.
1 have awakened and inspired nations, set mil-
of
il-
n
- f 111011 to tight the battles les of freedomn
m,beyond
o
d
the seas anti raised h,illions 01' dollars to foot the
Bills. Nations and kings pay me homage and the
business world bows at my feet.
1 sow br(.iad fields for you to reap a golden
harvest.
I Am Master Salesman at Mr Service
II B
ikr
m�11� z1.,l �
�al a
USW '•
—x—
l�
Waiting Your Command.
--x—
RLISS ii.:LS
lei