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INCOME TAX PREPARED
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RONNENBERG INSURANCE
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PHONE 887-6663
All other days Monkton — U7-2241
17 year's experience of income tax preparatio
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BOX 129, BRUSSELS — PH. 887-9221
McGavin's Farm Equipment
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Local and Long Distance Hauling of All Livestock,
Hogs Shipped Mondays and Wednesdays
JIM CARDIFF
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GENERAL INSURANCE'
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FIRE AUTO
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PhOnts: Office 8874100
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JAMESWAY
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14 —THE BRUSSELS' POST" MARCH 18',.107
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kint4It.64"tOlcd5e4;02%.9%tt:k4t.6'442nt.91 49%tG"Ite,%t0-04>t,
Swine experiments contribute
to the benefit of man ,
By J. R. Morris
Good eating habits are essential
for good health in both animals
See the new
line of
.51/77/1/1Citi ff
washers & dryers
at
OLDFIELD'S
HARDWARE
8874851 — BRUSSELS
and man. The similarity between
nutritional requirements of man
and many animals used in feed-
ing experiments are of great
assistance in establishing ade-
quate nutritional standards for
human beings.
It is interesting to note that pigs
and man are among the few ani-
mals who will volimtarily con-
sume alcohol. Researchers are
investigating the problem of alco-
holism by feeding pigs diets simi-
lar to those of alcoholics. Fur-
thermore, pigs are being used in
studies of diabetes, heart dis-
ease, cancer, aging, and malnu-
trition.
Many swine diseases can be
directly or indirectly related to
the inadequacy of their diets for
their nutritional needs. The nu-
tritional requirements of pigs are
constantly changing as the type of
pig (more muscle and less fat)
and management procedures
change. Methods of handling and
storing feed ingredients must be
closely watched so that nutrients
are not lost. If nutrient losses
occur, pig diets must be properly
balanced.
Diets containing improper le-
vels of protein, energy, vitamins
and minerals for pigs can cause
disease symptoms such as loss of
hair, rough hair, skin rashes,
cracks and pores, poor eyesight,'
crooked legs, swollen joints,
weak bones, soft teeth, depressed
growth rate, loss of strength, and
internal bleeding; deficiencies
cause muscular dystrophy, 'liver
degeneration, diarrhea, heart
failure, poor conception, im-
potency, abortions, deformed ba-
bies and dverfat carcasses, and
nervous disorders including
muscular incoordination, trem-
ors, epileptic-like fits and mul-
tiple degrees of paralysis, as
well as death. Malnutrition may
decrease immunity to certain
disease organisms and weakens
body resistance to infectious dis-
ease.
Through feeding experiments, it
has been possible to develop com-
pletely balanced feeds for ani-
mals so that with each mouthful
of feed consumed, the animal
takes in the correct complement
of nutrients for good growth and
health.
Man tends to feed animals such
as pigs better than he feeds him-
self. Of course, the feeds which
we feed animals would seem
rather monotonous to people,iBut
if human beings ate properly bal-
anced diets there probably would
be a marked improvement in
health evidenced by reduced inci-
dence of diseases caused by nu-
trient deficiency and by in-
creased resistance to infectious
organisms.
The revenge
of red man
The Canadian Indians wrecked
by the white man are having the
last laugh in the Great Beyond.
obacco is the Indian revenge.
Before Columbus, I tobacco was
unknown to the white man. But
explorers soon saw that Indians
smoked the leaf Li a Y-shaped
pipe called a taba$o. Each end
of the double-forked pipe was
inserted into a nostril. In some
places, though, Indians smoked
tobacco leaves rolled with husks
of corn. The white man sampled
the stuff, liked it, •and thereby
put a curse on coming gen-
erations.
The Indians smoked for cer-
emonial purposes and as a symbol
of goodwill. They also believed
that tobacco had medicinal
values. It was, in fact, primarily
for this reason that explorers
carried the weed back to Europe.
The brainwash took so well that
by the middle of the seventeenth
century, a London doctor wrote
a whole book on "The Wonderful
Vertues of Tobacco." The over-
zealous physician recommended
a drop of tobacco juice in each
oar to cure deafness, a green
tobacco leaf flat on the head to
cure headache, and a tobacco
leaf tied over a tooth to Cure
toothache. For a cough, he ad-
vised boiling tobacco leaves,
shaking the syrup, and putting
the mikture on the stomach.
Doctors have learned a lot
more about the effects of tobaccO
over the last three centuries.
NOW they knew that snioking is a
leading cause of emphysema,
chronic bronchitis, lung cancer,
coronary heart disease, arid other
diseases. But in the intervening
centuries, stroking haS spread
aroung the world. And there
are still millions cif cankliaris who
smoke cigarettes.
To avoid going early to the
Great Beyond, find out ways to
kick the' habit frOm your lodal
tuberculosis and respiratory dis-
ease association.
§ MODEL 831
Now
MODEL 8?6
Now
MODEL 817
Now
Mfg..List $79.9
$59.00
Mfg .List $59.95
$45.00
Mfg. List $39.9
$30.00
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