The Signal, 1924-9-4, Page 6P
r
iy
-frhutsday. gepbember 4 IIsi ' U
r
res .•'
r �
•
•
•
SCHOOL OPENING
TIn� eia}'� are rdippiug by, and
riofn you w111 be a nteri4il upon
atiath�r year of studies. Now,'
before the rush, .is the time to.,
same in and Meet a dotes!
Fountain P
Eversharp
esu• tiling you tl'il
J.Iy of the tern.
Book Store
THE
SIGNAL,
i
GODERICH, ONT.
rr;
1
SW.
•
i TO EXPECTANT
curl.y
MOTHERS
1 Labor from Mrs. Ayars Tells
How Lydia L Pinkham's ,
Vegetable Compound
Helped Her
l' Sprin Valley, Sask. -" I took the
Vegetable Compound before my last
Corrftnement, when I got to feeling so •
badly that 1 could not sleep nights, my
back ached so across my hips, and I
could hardly do my work during the day.
1 never had such an easy confinement
and this is my sixth baby. 1 read about
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable etable Com-
pound in the 'Farmer's Telegram ' and ,
wrote you for one of your books. We
have no druggist in our town, but l saw
your medicine in T. Eaton's catalogue.
I am a farmer's wife, so have all kinds
of work to do inside and outside the
house. My baby is a nice healthy girl,
who weighed ,nine pounds at birth. 1
am feeling fine after putting in a large
garden since baby came. She is an
good as she can be.) Yours is the best
medicine for women, and I have told
about Rand even written to my friends
about it." — Mrs. ANNIE E. Argas,
Spring Valley, Sask.
Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Com-
pound is an excellent medicine for ex-
pectant mothers, and should be taken
during_the entire period. It has a gen-
eral eect to strengthen and tone up the
entire system so that It may work in
every respect as nature intends. All
druggists sell this dependable medicine.
Give it a trial. C
Brophey Bros.
THE LEADING
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
AND EMBALMERS
brdcra carefully attended to
at all bourn, night or day
GODERICH
Keep a Kodak Story
of the Children
e Kodak you want for the
pictures you want is ready for
you to see at our store. And
we're ready to show you how
easily it works and to make
worthwhile suggestions about
your picture -making plans.
Anagraphic Kodaks S5.75 ap
Kodak Fila in your size
Fini,hing you'll like
H. C. DUNLOP
DRUGGIST
Phone No. 1 God.ridi
BUS AND BAGGAGE SERVICE
---o--
Bus meets all trains. Calls made for
passengers and baggage to any part of
the town. Prompt nervi .e guaranteed.
Telephone 51, Day or Night
—0--
H. R. STOWE
Residence, Cambria Road, opposite the `
Organ Factory Office
SCHOOL FAIR DATES FOR 1924
Following are the dates of the scbool
fair to be held In Huron county them
year:
Ashfield Sept. 8
8t. Helena Sept, 9
Binevale Sept.
Wroxeter Sept.
Gerrie Sept.
Minmo Sept.
Zurich Sept
Versa .... Sept.
Dash wood Sept.
Grand Bend Sept.
Porter's 11111 Sept.
Colborne Sept11. ,
Beigra ve Sept.
Ethel Sept.
Bl,rt i Sept. 25,
WIngham Sept. 29,
Bengali Oet.
eroditnn Ott.
Winchelsea
Otlt.
10
11
12
15
le l
1T
18;
20191
281
24
281
30i
1
g'
Sl
Canada's
Musk Oxen
L r - D
Of -all the native wild animals of
the •bowinIun;ot Canada, none is as
little kuown as the musk os; In tact.
It is duubttlll it one per cent. of the
people of the country know of Its
existence. yet hundreds of these
quaint beasts.are found In the moat
uninhabitable part of the Barren
[.ands, writes C. C. Fairchild. D.Lit..
lu Canadian Fureat and Outdoor..
These. so called Barren Lands ez-
tend from a few miles east of Great
Slave Lake to Hudson Bay and are
bounded on the south by' the Umber
Hue and on the north by the Arctic
Ocean. Within this area for a die -
timer pt approximately one .hundred
and fifty cones along the banks of
the Thelon river some. fair -died
spruce is tuund. The balance of the
country la varied from rallies to hilly
Too II{Isrie l'ulltrrt
A S.oIiieh gc+(tlensan paying a visit
to i.ou kid was taken by Joke nephew no
n. eervie'• in tit. Paul's cathedral. 11e
18111 no acquaintance whneevei• Lith
the liturgy of the linings of Eliglalwl.
Ile, picked up a prayer hook .1141 be -
4.1.40.. --vss
-
eYeeie_W '--aruck- fnt..rea ..d. j4 Ise.
he turned over the traces bks face
iieesme el led with a hook of totems
anxiety. _ ale plated the pryer book
carefully down. looked cantlonely
animist. picked up his bat and crept
stt.altldle to the dour. His nephew
followed him and sant :•—"Are you ill.
oldie? Whet i-, the natter?" The
uncle r('pIId:—"No. But it Is eOotICh
to make any man ill to vee the num-
ber of ,ollt.-tions made 1n the kirk
• rolleelione," Said the Iwlo,ew in Nur
prise "If there is any at all there
...Tinnily won't be any more thalami..."
"Well." said the 11008. "they should
not murk so ninny In the lss'k. There's
ua,-thilig tint '.Miert' newel hie of
prayer. then 'collet' and more pray
er.. and '(.011 41. aesln And +aye
to mele', "If I blow` herr until all
thee, ,.ditrt1.441 an. tn'en 1'11 no' ISI(c
n Iawise Its ma p,a•ket
Neatly Put.
A certain famous preuelier Wit,
introduced (.4 a wealthy city stock
broker of the )a8upolis Iur11V1•al1 rills
type. who blasted to liim of his euc-
eese. "Whit1 i landed in this eouu-
try," JS' .said. " 1 hadn't a colt in my
pas•ket." -Yes." said the other
quietly, "lite there were other pock
eta."..-Mlirhile Itegi,'he•.
A SPLENDID •LAXATIVE
FOR THE BABY
Mothers %humid constantly be on
gourd to keep bntry's bowels working
freely and iiia stomach sweet, for
nine -tenths of (bat eilmcnte from
wide?' little 0114* Stiffer an. calmed by
,k'nangern.•nty of the Stomach a,id
bowels. Baby's Own Tablet,' are n
splendid laxative for the 1Iai,y. They
are mild hot thorough; contain neith-
er oplltes torr narcotics, 11041 Orn ab-
solutely gturnntwrl to be safe and
efficient for etther the newborn babe
or the growing 4111141. By their action
on the bowels and *Norwell they delve
ort const1petIon end indigestion:
l,renk No ,•olds and simple fevers and
make the drende.l hs -thing period
,'any. The Tab',•t' ;are sold by nrs.11-
ine dealers or bV milli 111' , cents 11
t.,,x from The lir Williams' 114111(W.
i'o.. ltrrs•kville. shit -
snc.
His Useful Topper.
A vimitor to the Cotswold i(Ill.s,
Seeing a man working in the fields
wearing a top hat, venture.d to in-
quire why hhe wore slut peculiar hen,1
gear. "H+tuuse.'' replied the man,
'II Is the 115,841111e81 'at as it,'. When
i first gets un i wears un to ehurch.
and when 'es gets too shabby I w','nrm
un at work out 'ere, and when 1 can't
lerar nn no longer 1 tfAsa 110 for n
tater measure, and then when the
Bottom cameo out of mil 1 pin% n
AGA in the ground 8iwi 'ones un on
1, to Seare away the crows
"Exhausted Nerves
and Palpitating Heart"
l's. L, Whig; 202 Kies Bt. Wiat, Brockville, Oat.,
writes:
"1 took very sick with my nerves and stomach. and seemed to
be all run down. At times my heart would flatter and palpitate so
and i would take mach weak spells in the pit of my stomach that
1 meusetisees thought 1 would
sever get better. I tried
several doctors, bet it
weaved nothing they gave
ase belped• i had almost
tiger up hope wises a friend
advised the use of Dr.
�' \ 4 • 4 - icy Chases Nerve food i tried
it, sad can say it eettainly
• Y/' Vii• .. ie� a
has ♦tae wosdns for me. i
lid DA slop weal I had mks
hu re boxes.
Dr. C'ite's Nerve Feed
IS eta • hex et SO ply 11111In mean. Ream a Oe., raL. Ihrsaao
LOOK FOR LU1VGWORMS�� Roman A COLUMN ABOUT MILK
����:
An Annoying Disease Too Com.
mon Among Pigs
with well grassed valleys In the west-
ern portion to rough, barren, rocky
ridges with numerous lakes as one
approaches Hudson Bay. During the
rummer of 1900 the writer made the
trip across these Barren Lands as
assistant to Mr. .1. W. Tyrrell on a
topographical survey fur the Dom-
inion Government. At a point about
one hundred miles due northeast of
Great Slave Lake, on the north shore
of a small lake, called Sitton Lake
after the then Minister of the inter-
ior, tbs.Hon. Clifford Silton, we saw
our first musk oxen.
While crossing this lake. a gale
arose necesaltatleg'bur going ashore
In the middle of the afternoon. Af-
ter making camp Tyrrell and I de-
cided to do a little prospecting and
as the country was bare and no signs
Of ettndBu or other game,were ob-
served, we took our prospeettng picks
and geld glasses leaving the rifles In
camp, although we were in need of
meat for the party. We proceeded
leisurely along separate ridges of
rock when the chief signalled Inc to
Join him. 1 hurried across the in-
tervening valley and on reaching the
top of the ridge found nay companion
gasing Intently through his geld
glasses lier,,a northerly direction.
Focussing tloy glasses on the same
.
point saw a beard of musk oustabout three mita' distant and on the
tar fide of a deep bay of the lake.
Fifteen were counted. We returned
to camp and securing out rifles, cau-
tiously aroused two of the Indians
as all In camp had retired and were
sound asleep, we noiselessly launched
the canoe and stole quietly away
from camp.
Knowing nothing of the babits of
the musk oa except from a few stor-
les of men who claimed to have seen
and hunted them (one of these par-
ticularly stressed their wariness) we
paddled as noiselessly as possible
across the bay and bekehed the canoe
under a high bank. We crept quietly
up the bank to a small knoll at th
crest and cautiously peeped over our
cover to see two large bulls and threeu
smaller 'oxen lethan one hundred
yards from us. Some were standing
quietly, some browing and a couple
were lying down, all plainly not
suspecting the presence of their most
deadly enemy, man.
Each *elected oleo of the large
bulls, and whispering "Ready,
Fire," let go slmultantoualye The
result was not what we anticipated.
Instead of two dead musk oxen Tying
before us with the others rushing for
safety, four more that we had not
observed came Into view, Just beyond
the first five, and the whole nine
started precipitately in our direction.
The two wounded ones being much
the largest of the herd and apparent
leaders were again shot and one fell
while the other staggered along be-
hind. By this time they wore within
fifteen yards of us and coming
straight on and there was not the
slightest doubt In nay mind that they
knew where we were and were de-
liberately charging us. Both rides
were high powered 203 Winchesters
and the ammunition soft nosed and
we knew that we were not missing
es the maddened beasts fell one after
another but seldom at the first shot.
How fast events were happening may
be judged from the fact that both
rtfie magazines were emptied and
were refilled before the rush reached
us. Aa the remainder of the herd
had reached a point within ten yards
of us we rose to our feet and the
work of destruction was over In a few
seconds.
Oneof the big bulls first shot was
still on hie feet, and a bullet through
the heart at a f••w yard. hromght
him down. On examination nix mor-
tal wounds were found, and It seems
almost Incredihle, for three of the
bullets bad gone through his heart.
However when one confiders the
country where these animals spend
their lives with the Intense cold and
long winter nights, their vitality must
be extraordinary. Unlike the eeribou
of the Barren Lands who return
every talrto the timber to spend the
wildfire the musk ox stays out in the
open country with Its months' long
tenni darkness and bitter cold with
piercing winds.
Wrong ng Coo.
There are Raid to be few wittier
after-dinner speakers In the British
Cabinet than Mr. J. N Clynes. At a
public banquet recently, at whisk
Lord Desborough presided. he ma-
inlined his hearers with a story about
two laborers at a gasworks Both
men were engaged In wheelipg mita,and one of them discharged two bar-
row loads to every one by hi, mate.
The foreman obwerved this, and said
to the less Poerg.tte laborer! "Your
mate is doing twice as much work
as you." He received the delightfully
Wye reply: "Well, rell shouldn't
Mama ma for tbal. roe 9014ld him
about It ahrsay."
Vino', and Ilevelopment of the Alt.
'tient — •1're. tiuent — Preventhe
Measures—Autumn tutting of Al.
faits—Harness and Belting.
(L'unt, h',ted by Ontario t.partm.nt ot
Arrrlcutturr. Toronto.)
Mature and Development of the
Disease.
It is commonly known as lung -
worm dtsease, due to the presence of ai
small thread-like worms In the r
tubes of the lungs setting up pneu-
Bath Builders What Chem•cal Eiperiments at
the Ag riculttral College Show
Detecting Milk Adulatlo¢s--Powder-
ed ski Ilk—Milk In Breadmak-
ing—Feeding Silage Before Mtlk-
tiig—Nllk \tatters.
(Contributed by Ontario Department ot
Agriculture, Toronto.)
Detecting Milk Adulation.
The Chemistry department of the
Ontario Agricultural College during
the past year made a study of tho
freezing point of milk by means of
the Hortvet Cryoscope, proving the
apparatus to be absolutely reliable
in detecting adulation of milk by add -
fug aster. The Hortvet Cryoscope
having a scientlflcally accurate con-
struction, now fills that much needed
requirement of an official test for
detecting added water to milk regard-
less of the breed of cows from which
the milk may be obtained.
Powdered Skimnlllk.
The comparative values of pow-
dered sklmmllk and powdered butter-
milk were found to be about equal
to experiments carried on at the Col-
lege. The total gains per pig
the hese. This aceounta for • wide- I luxury. The Emperor Cumwodlus were 1211 pounds for those fed on
Spread eontamtnatlon of the floors of took eight baths a day; Caracalla's the ■klmmllk powder and 122.11
the Pens and the ground In the lots baths held about 1,60U persona at pounds for those ted on buttermilk
and yards containing affected Piga time; that of Diocletian over 30,00. powder. Although the feeding value
Small pools of water are also Liable of these products Is good. the market
to become contaminated. In these The yreetl0n of baths, and the pro- price for hogs and the high cost of
different places the larvae develop, •idfig of their appurteaancrs by the sklmmllk and buttermilk powder
successive dictators and their favor-
and
avor makes Its use prohibitive as live stook
and from time to time become more ilea was the chief means of currying
or less a menace. Infection usually pular favor. Julius Carver gave teed.
takes place with feed and water In three million pounds weight of ell
bog pastures, lots and pens which � to the bathers of Rome. Agrippa,
have become contaminated by affect-
ed
ffect the minister of Augustus, In the year
ed pigs. In turn the parasites invade I of his aedileahlp, opened 170 pubile
the air passages of the Infected pigs, 1 baths In various cities of the Empire. .
and there reach sexual maturity set- traces of one of which may be seen
ting ¢p the disease in the lungs. Once 1n the area immediately south of the
a place becomes contaminated with Pantheon. Nero erected enormous
these parasites, the infection re- baths on the Campus Martlus; Mat
mains dangerous for a long time. be- tial asks, "What could be worse than
cause the affected animals keep on t Nero or better -than Nero's baths?"
furnishing fresh infectious material.. Of these nothing remain, though
As a result the disease gradually be- the names of a number of small
comes more or leu permanently es- medieval churches (since dlsappear-
tabllahed on certain premises. Stag- ed) In the area between the Piazza
nant pools of water, moist poorly uavena and the Plaza of San Luigi
drained yards, and dirty gens, favor dl Francesca have come down to us
the development of the infection and give us the site.
Young sucking pigs may also become The next bath builders atter Nero
tnteeted from the udder of the sow were the Flavtane, who naturally
through contamination of its surface. 1 wished to show the Roman people '
Young pigs, • few months old. aro that they were more conesderate
the most easily infected, and suffer � than the old Julian dynasty. They
the worst until after they are four cleared away Nero's Golden House ,
months old. and used the area to erect great
14eatsae t. pleasure houses for the people — of
which the Coliseum is one. Another
was the baths of Titus, the soldier I
SOD 01 Vespaalan, of which little re-'
mains, and that little Is often con-
tused with the baths of Tralan. The-
latter
h.latter being a foreigner, and, more-
over, only the adopted sea of his
predecessor, no doubt also telt the
need of a little popularity. His baths
were the first to be oriented north-
east by southwest, Instead of north 1
by south, a fact which authorities
explained by the Roman liking for 1
sun baths. which has survived to the
present day, when It L de rigueur to
burn one self black In the sun on the
smallest excuse. Teti It not In Gath,
but many who cannot afford a sea-
side holiday shut themselves up la
their houses In Rome for an ade-
quate period, and so tinge them-
selves In the sun on balcony or roof.
Thereafter they emerge and talk
Preventive Measures. about their holiday in some fashlon-
Tbe first thing Is to remove all of able watering place.
the healthy looking pigs from among A hundred years later the mad- I.
the affected ones, and place them In man Caracalla built the huge mass,
new clean quarters, some distance on the right of the Passeglata
from those previously occupied. The Archaeologica, which bean his '
hog yards and pens should be placed name. The funds were doubtless
on clean high ground, with good provided by his cunning dodge In i
drainage. They should be cleaned out conferring Roman citizenship on the
regularly, and bedded with good Provincials, and thereby giving him -
clean draw. The bog wallows should self the right to tax the world with -
Tae seeeeuore to the great pubile
bathe of Imperial Rome are two 11118-
erable hostelries off the Corso Um-
berto, says the Rome correspoudeut
of the London Times. There the
vlaltor"wust content himself with a
-Plain douche or 'a bath is an ordin-
ary enamelled "vases." A frowsy
matron hands him his towels, and
an uawashed gentleman .takes his
money. Corruptio optlml madam
He may think as he Iles in his wretch -
monis. The worm causing this die- j ed tub of the gracious pools, lined
ease is named the "Metastrongylus j with marble and floored with mbsalc;
aprl," and Is also known as the the halls so huge that Situs V. could
"Strongtlui paradoxus." These take 96,000 cubic metres of masonry
worms locate la the air tubes of the from the baths of Diocletian for road
lungs, where they deposit their ova foundations without sensibly affect -
or eggs In great numbers. The ova tag their bulk; the libraries, porticos,
as well as the embryos or young i gardens. gymnasiums, race -courses;
worms are then expelled from the air the tbousaads of slaves. masseur,
passages with the secretions and die- musicians. waiters; all of whicb were
charges from the nostrils, while some summed up to his ancestor by the
are eoughed up and Expelled from word "bath,'
the mouth during spells of ;toughing.Water, whish The modern Roman
takes as an unpleasant necessity,
or else swallowed and expelled with
was
to the ancient his most appreciated
Badly Infested and well developed
eases do not respond to treatment.
owing to the fact that the worms are
located In the small air tubes of the
lungs and difficult to get at. Slightly
infected cues, if removed to clean
quarters and kept from becoming
more heavily Infested, seem to grad-
ually recover. Treatment of the af-
fected animate with drugs Is not sat-
isfactory unless the drugs are !a-
lerted Into the trachea or windpipe
by means of a hypodermic syringe.
The intra -tracheal Injections as a
rule require to be done carefully by
a veterinary surgeon. The drugs re-
commended as being most useful are
Lugol's solution, combined with tur-
pentine and oltve oil. A. a rule pre -
•snit•* measures are successful In
overcoming the disease and prevent-
ing its recurrence.
be constructed of concrete and kept
clean. The hog pens previously oc-
cupied by infected pigs should be
out discrimination. This vast work,
In eplt(• of having taken only five '
years to build, was so solid as to defy
thoroughly cleaned and disinfected by the ravages alike of time and the;
washing with hot water and ; and invader, and the battle were still la ,
then whitewashed. The hog 1 in and use, some say, far Into the ninth I
pastures previously occupied by In. century.
tected pip should be ploughed up Caracalla, In character and ex -
and seeded down. Low lying places travagance so like Caligula. probably
collecting stagnant -water ehoutd be. indulged In all this luxury out of
drained. All soon as the young pigs sheer bombast; but It was far other -
are weaned they should be removed wise with the next' builder, the ex -
from the sows and kept separate from slave Diocletian. With Diocletian,
all mature pigs In order to prevent luxury was the cloak with which be
them from becoming Infected from �ln, and
these adult pigs which harbor the hld the baseness of his ort
his baths were the means 'wherebyparadise. These suggestions, while he consoled the Roman people for
comparatively simple, are neverthm his deliberate policy of changing the
leas effective In overcoming this trou- .pearl of the Empire to the East, and,
bieeonie parasitic condition of pigs.— after his abdication, kept the glory
Dr. C. D. McOilvray, Ont, Vet. Col- of hla name alive In Rome. They
lege, Guelph. were only In use for Just over 200
Autumn Uniting of Alfalfa.
In the Field Husbandry depart-
ment of the Ontario Agricultural Col-
lege alfalfa 'las been under teat for
twenty-six consecutive years in each
of twenty -tour years the alfalfa gave
three cuttings per annum. in 1907
two cuttings, and in 1896 four cut -
Dugs wero produced In the one sea -
years, and from the time when the
struggles between the Byzantlnes
and the Gotha reduced Rome prac-
tically to a desert right up to the
last century, the structure was out-
side the Inhabited city, and large
portions of It foundered, thanks to
the galleries driven under It by
those in search of brick clay. The
marbles, mosalea and statues suffered
their usual fate at the hands of me-
son. The miring of 1896 opened up diaeval deepollers, and it was not
very early and that of 1907 very late. until the mad Sicilian priest Antonio
The third cuttings were made on Sep- del Duca succeeded In his dream of
tember 17th In the average of the creating therein the Church of Santa
twenty-four years It le Important 10 Maria degil Angell that the ruins
cut alfalfa before the 20th of Sep- were put to any higher use than that
tember so as to enable the crop to of i quarry or stabling for hgrses.
make a good growth before the ap-
Zaroach of winter. So says Dr. C. A. Birds Abe Cor.rupted-
vlts of the Ontario Agricultural "Lip with the birds," Is an old-time
College. expression. But cit, birds especially
thole found In hotels and all night
Har•nees and Belting• restaurants, are becoming sophistl-
• It Is important to note that any sated. in these places, the birds sing
leather Improperly used, or neglect- all night. The musie and the crowd
.d, will deteriorate rapidly. For ex- are there until the small hours of
ample, belts for driving machinery the morning, and sometimes till near -
often become impaired, If not use- ly daylight. When the muale stops
leu, In a very few years whether on and the crowd leaves the birds get
straight drives or not, but when they Jo sleep. Now what happens even to
are kept clean and oiled they will hirde The dining -room I. not owed
last ten to thirty years. till shoot 1 p.m., and the bird% deep
Apply the grease Ilghtly to driving undisturbed Rut at the first note of
harness and more liberally to work the jail orchestra tbey all begin to
harness The grease or oil should be pipe up In other words the early
rubbed thoroughly Into the leather bird le corrupted to item ovary dap
while It L still damp from wasbtag. ttil-late aft.rneloa, ,e
eui
i
Milk In Breadmaking.
The Chemistry department has else
studied experimentally the effect of
whole milk, skimmed milk, condensed
milk and milk powder In making
bread. The whole milk naturally had
some of the effects of fat, and the
sweetened, condensed milk some of
the effects of sugar, but, otherwise.
milk will not replace sugar, malt or
shortening In making bread. It has
an lnluenee all its own which none
of these other constituents will pro-
duce. In conjunction with these oth-
er ingredients It does, however, in-
fluence the flavor of the bread, and
improve the color of the crust. In
fait It makes a richer loaf of bread,
with greater moisture -retaining and
higher food value properties.—Dept.
of r-xtension, O. A. College, Guelph.
Feeding Silage Before Milking.
There 1s always a tendency that
when green teed is given to cows
shortly before milking that It will im-
part to the milk some odor, and pos-
sibly taste. This dove not always fol-
low, but 1t is not considered advis-
able to feed green fodder, silage, or
other strong smelling feeds lust be-
fore milking. When cows are turn-
ed Into pasture In the spring there
will be developed In their milk a par-
ticular odor that to some people L
gulte disagreeable. Also cows turned
on sweet clover, and particularly
those pastured on rape or green rye.
will impart to their milk a very
strong odor, and possibly • flavor, un-
less they are taken from such pasture
several hours before mtlking. Mot
only does the cow seem to pass on
this undeslrsbl, odor through her
blood to her milk. but where strong
smelling silage is fed In the barn the
odor is likely to be absorbed by the
milk at the time of milking. For
these reasons silage and other similar
feeds are beet fed atter milking.
Who Is Rept?
We frequently hear dairymen sae.
"1 keep ten cows," or "I keep six
cows." All too often they are mush
nearer the exact trntb tkan they Im-
agine. The statement allould be re-
vered. Dairyman should ask tbem-
pelves two questions. "Mow many
sows ars keeping me at a pronto"
sad "Mow 'many oows am I keeping
at a lose?" There L not ensugh fan,
amusement or exeltemeat bt caring
for dairy cattle to pay too btgh for
the privilege. The reason so many
"boarder" cows are to the ttsuphp of
the barn is because, few farmers
know which cows are profitable and
which are not. Milk ,Dales, wh s
paper, Baboock teat reports and fie
gumption necessary to keep tabs on
production over a year's period are
just as essential to profitable dairy -
ire as pitchforks and milk pane.
Meth Matters.
Nine and one-half pounds of milk
are required to make dna pound of
limburger cheese.
Milk will take up Impurities with
more rapidity and bold on to them
with greater tenacity than almost any
other food product.
1t Is easier to keep milk clean by
keeping the dirt out of It than it to
to clean It after the dirt has con-
taminated It. A clean udder will go
far toward clean milk, and a few
eeconde spent In wiping the udder
with a clean, damp cloth will pre-
vent much future trouble.
Encou. aging a cow to give milk
with a milking stool is expensive to
her owner. Exactly why a cow puts
four or five per Dent. of fat In her
milk Is still an unsolved problem, but
the ease with which she will take the
fat out of her milk with but slight
provocation has been solved many
times. -.
A Rhyme Abont Lime.
When In your garden soil of clay
tyou walk with patience day by day,
hrough twilight dusk or bright sun-
shine, to try to make the soil more
fine; when though you scratch and
hoe and thump, the soil will still pro -
meed to "lump," and bake as hard
as any brick, and make your peas
and cabbage sick; my friend you
then may know It's time to give that
soil a dose of Ilme,
fa eeleetlag new harp}.r sw tVkt
me portion shows wash s. the
raide wham the toadies la Nam*
best sr twisted.
It is the purest, [safest and
most wonderful skin remedy the
world has ever knows. Whether
it be a cut, burn or scald, a fes-
tered, inflamed or poisoned
wound, eczema, pimples, rash,
ringworm, boils, ulcers, abscess-
es,
bscesses, sprains or swellings-- Zam- Bttk
should be applied with the
least possible delay.
Always ieethlag • IWlabis.
The skin readily absorbs this
herbal Zam-Buk. It is a ran
balm that gets right down into
the innermost tissues, soothing,
healing and purifying the skin
in a way impossible to fatty
salves and ointments.
ear s.. /A. e' t1 . d..le.. ..a 4rwnaes
••••.,• . .- z.. .. n.,. Co 7 weenie.
Splendid for
SKIN TR008LES
I)e'gan's $yrtetn of Touch
Typewriting is taught exclu-
sively alt this+ district by the
SCHOOL OF COMMERCE
CLINTON, ONT.
You e8Iuot attend a better
school, eo why not register now
for the Fall Terni? School re-
open, -
TUESDAY, SEPT. Lad, 1,24
COURSES — Stenographic—
Commercial — Secretarial —
Speeial Cour,e's.
For information apply to
R. F. WARD. B A., Principal
M.A. STONE,Com . Special int ,
Vice -Principal. Phalle 1101.
saes�at-L
Let Us Serve You
in Awa
jNew and Used Furmre •
We possibly have the very A
thing you want.
Drop in any old time. J'+
This is your yore!
Blackstone's Furniture
Exchange
r
on the Broadway of asderkh
j
mosimmossummolt
-10
4' Air
-s-"r`� if 4l f[.
Your rapidly *'
expanding 4,10
market
The number of telephones
you can resell to do busiv
neva with in Ontario and
Quebec has more thah
do' bled in the pagt 9 years.
Ea(b year for 9 years Bell
tedcphones in service have
ilrrt`ased over 1lC('.
The value of teicphont ser-
vice may therrfo,ro be 11%
Lore each ye.lr to those who
diligently profit by the op-
portunitice it offers for
saving time and expcne('.
It takes 111 years for capital
to double itself at fi!„ in-
terest compot inded anntin! ly..
How much can you make the-
tekphone worth to you today?
F,nrli wars arbaml,er a(ira I1. w
talus of 1'Ol'R TezapAsns
ii
fe
a
sus
Sot
and
7
bad
!aq
flak
7
t•
5151
d0•
7
8th
dp
am
1
eie
th?
his
Th
els
bo
bot
ger
to
0e
Cl;
4
•