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The Rural Voice, 1986-09, Page 54Ward & Uptigrove CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS Listowel Mitchell 291-3040 348-8412 R.B. Karcher, C.A. C.W. Brouse, C.A. C.D. Newell, C.A. R.H. Loree, C.A. R.E. Uptigrove, C.A. G.J. Martin, C.A. R.C. Roswell, C.A. 41st PRODUCTION SALE WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8 at 7 p.m. 80 OPEN GILTS, 65 BOARS, 20 BRED GILTS Sale being held at the farm of Warren Stein located 1 mile south and 2 miles west of Tavistock. We offer you one of Ontario's largest selection of R.O.P. tested and veterinary approved breeding stock. Our herd is maintained as a closed minimal disease operation. Ranked "Good" by the Animal Industry Branch. A good selection of boars & gilts available for sale at all times. Delivery ar- rangements available at reasonable rates. We are pleased to ,.:ongfalr.ie nnstene who showed the Grand Champion Barrow in the Barrow Show at the 1986 Ontario Pork Congress. This barrow was a pure York out o1 400P. one of our Swedish Import boars. Sons of 400P sell in our next production sale. Our thanks to Nuhn Industries Ltd of R.R. 1 Sebringville who purchased the boar. For further Information & catalogues, contact:- "31PIAPtig I tMtS YORKSHIRE DUROC HAMPSHIRE LANDRACE & HYBRIDS Richard & Warren Stein R.R. #6, Woodstock, Ontario N4S 7W1 (519) 655.2942 or 462-2704 54 THE RURAL VOICE ADVICE OATS MAY HELP STAVE OFF HAYFEVER Is hayfever turning your summer into a series of sniffles and sneezes? Troubled by backache, headache or muscle pain? Feel tense and irritable? The germ of relief could be as close as the nearest oat field. Bill Collins, an Agriculture Canada research scientist in Ot- tawa, has discovered that oat seeds contain some of the compounds found in man-made drugs used as antihistamines, painkillers and hypertension relievers. During his research, Dr. Collins combed through a data bank of all known drug compounds and discovered some of them in oats. "You can imagine my surprise to find one of the molecular struc- tures in oats had been created in a test tube and patented a year before as an antihistamine," he says. "They didn't know it existed naturally." Another structure turned out to be similar to the active ingredient in the commercial pain reliever Tylenol. A survey of research on oats showed that Dr. Collins was the first to discover the presence of most of these medicinal com- pounds. A team of Japanese scien- tists is working on another compo- nent that appears to have anti- tumor qualities but they have ig- nored oats' other therapeutic pro- perties. Dr. Collins says the compounds probably evolved to protect the seed from disease. Scientists have noted antibiotic activity in soil, but it's unusual to find these particular therapeutic drug compounds in a grain. However, oats aren't likely to become a new source of patent medicines in the near future. "It would probably be too ex- pensive to extract the compounds," Dr. Collins says. "But oats may still some day play a larger role in human health." The oat compounds are appeal- ing because they are natural substances, completely biodegrad- able. They might be easier for the body to absorb and less likely to cause any side effects. Dr. Collins says more research is