HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1919-5-29, Page 5Fresh,rich, full-fJa.v e ; ted,
----te same every time
TEAis g
Sold only in sealed packages
SiJeroods
"SMOOTHER THAN VELVET"
Let the children name their favorite dessert.
It will be ice cream every time.
It is popular with 9,1,4 and young alike.
If it's Silverwood's, it is pure ---pure pasteurised cream ---
homogenized- pure flavor giving extracts, and cane sugar.
There is a distinctiveness about our bricks that you will
like. Among, out many flavors you4vi11 find your favorite,,.
SU.VERWOOD'S LIMITED, toeneON, ONT.
Brick, in alt
F'laeora
Look for the
Silee►wood's
Sign
For Sale by Wilson & Simms
Every Wage Earner
An Investor
In May
111 -SS.
Cost $4,04
in June
W-S,S.
Vast t4.05
yt,P.
eye_ t Wier -
t this sign is
&splayed.
Eeery wage earner can `be an investor tat
gilt-edged securities bearing a high rate of
interest without sacrifice or worry.
The plan is so simple and secure that it
commends itself to everybody.
All of us spend a portion of our earnings
thoughtlessly. It is human nature. Yet
most of us would be glad if someone woulel
take the money we fritter away and save it
for us, because we find it difficult to suet it
ourselves.
Melte your employer do it by mans of ;Vac
Savings Stamps. Say to ltim: "I want you
to take five per cent. of the money in my
pay envelope each week and buy me Terift
Stamps. .Then with each $4.00 worth of
Thrift Stamps buy me a War Savings Stamp.
When you have bought each War Savings
Stamp, put it in mywenvelope. Go on doing
that for a year."
That is all. Your mind is free. You will
not miss that 75 cents or that dollar which
you have hitherto squandered on trifies.
But at the end of the year you will have a
little package of War Savings Stamps, each
bearing the $5.00 mark, but which have
cost you but a few cents over $4.00 each.
These Canada will redeem in 1024.
Make Your Savings Serve You and
Serve Your Country—Invest Them in
War Savings Stamps.
Zurich ,
imoom
Mrs. McDonald of Toronto is vis-
iting with Mrs. E. Appel.-. - Mr. and
Mr Jas. Laidlaw of Croswell,
Mich.
visited relatives here. -Arnold Heide-
man, who has been seriously 311 for
some time, is npoviing.-Rev. .F. B.
Meyer and •Mr. J, Preeter attended the
RED HEIR 5021
The famous Willkes Sitanldard bred
Trotting Stallion wrilli be at his own
-stable, Metropoliitan' Hotel, Exeter, for
season of 1919. See caalds for ped-
igree arid terms. -Wm. Mitchell.
i
RANDTRUN SYS EM
THE DOUBLE TRACK ROUTh
Between
MONTREAL
TORONTO
DETROIT
and
CHICAGO
Umtexoellsed dining car service
Sleeping cars on night trains and
Parlor can on, principal day trains.
Full :normattoni"
,€Jtam..aai -r G"
y
Trunk Ticket Agent, or C. E. Horn-
ing District P s
Dnpertt"tFIoroet
0
Phone 46w ---2--"•Agent;' F,xetei
Temperance Convention at Toronto. -
The little daughter of Mr. and Mr&
Oscar Koehler had the miskorturueto
break her leg the other day. -Albert
Bender arrived 'here from St. Marys
;where lie visited his sister. He re-
cently }returned from (overseas, after
three years in France, He eanlilsted int
Winnipeg. :Mr. L. Davidson also re-
turned last week., He enlisted with
the 161st. -Mr. Edward Appel of Zur-
is visiting his mother at Wilmot Cent-
tre, and with relatives in New Ham.-
burlg.-Miss Mary Browi n of this vil-
lage is spending a few weeks' holidays
with her sister, Mrs. Gordon Bergey,
at Mannheim.
Pte. J. J. tZettel and Pte(.., P. L. R.
Davidson of Zumdlch also returned. last
week.
JOYFUL .EATING
Unless your food is digested with-
out the aftermath of painful acidity,
the joy is taken out of both eating.
and living.
are wond
stomach i
Pleasant to "
definite.
MADE
.their . help to
ih 'ever -i csdaty
It --relief prompt and
SCOTT Off'
COT';' 71.114$1011
•
•
I HINTS ON COOLING MILK
Three Essentials in Cooling EIr.
planted.
Make That Spring on Your Farm a
Profit Question -, It Should Be
ivnlarged, Cleaned Out Well and.
Cribbed In. an Efficient Way.
(Contributed by Ontario. Department of
Agriculture, Toronto.)
ACTERIA i.n larger or smaller
numbers are always present
in freshly drawn milk, At
temperatures between 60
deg. F. and 98 deg. F. (blood heat)
they grow andmultiply rapidly,
causing the milk to become quickly
spoiled. As the temperature falls
below 60 deg. 9„ the bacteria beeome
less active, the Changes caused by
them are less marked, so the milk
keeps sweet and in ' good condition
for a longer time.
Growth of bacteria in milk 1p. 24
hours (136,000 per c.c. wliean freshly
drawn) :
Bacteria Per G.C.
(20 drops)
Temp. held. after 24 boors,
40 deg. F. ' 280,000'
1,170,000
60 deg. E. 24,600,000
The above table shows how low
temperatures check bacterial multi-
plication in milk, This is the scien-
tific fact upon which the practice of
milk cooling is founded..
In practice a dairyman, ihaukt bear
in mind three things in connection
with the cooling of milk. First --
cool milk with as' little delay at; pos-
sible after it comes from the eow.
Second—cool milk to as low a tem-
perature as possible, say somewhere
between 40 deg. F. and 50' deg. r
Third—cool milk with as little con-
tamination as possible from outside
sources, such as dust, dirty utensils.
water splashings, etc. If these three
points were regularly attended to by
all dairies a marked improvement in
the general quality of our milk sup-
plies would be noticeable right away.
The quickest way to cool milk is
to run it over some Corm of tubular
or surface cooler, pail by pail, im-
mediately it is drawn from the cow.
In this way milk may be rapidly
cooled to within two or three degrees
of the temperature of the water used.
The objections to this method are
the extra work involved in washing
the cooler twice a day, the difficulty
of keeping it properly clean, and the
danger of contaminating the mint
with dust, barn odours, etc., unless
the cooler is used in a clean and
separate milk room.
The other alternative is to place
the cans of milk in a tank of running
cold water at the earliest opportunity,
or in an insulated tank of water into
which some chopped -up ice is >Ehrown.
if the milk is stirred once every ten
minutes during the first hour, cool-
ing will take place more rapidly than
where milk is left unstirred. If cold
running water is not available all
summer, enough ice should be put
up during the winter to ensure the
milk being brought to a sufficiently
low temperature during the warmer
portions of the year.
The importance of prompt and
thorough cooling of milk is still in-
sufficiently appreciated by many milk
producers. There is no cheaper and
simpler method by which milk qual-
ity may be improved.—T. H. Lund,
B.S.A., O. A. College, Guelph.
5.0deg.11,....,.,,
Making the Farm Spring More
Serviceable.
Fortunately a great many farmers
of Canada can boast of a good spring
of water on their farms. In some
cases it is the only reliable and pe-
rennial source of water, and when
this is the case it usually receives
proper care, Probably, however, in
general, the spring is a secondary
consideration as a water supply, par-
ticularly domestic, and consequently
is let "run wild" more or less, and
is not, therefore, rendering the ser-
vice it might if it were properly
equipped. The object of this short
article is to make a few suggestions
for the improvement of springs in
general.
In the first place the spring should
be enlarged, deepened and cleaned
out well and then cribbed up in some
efficient way. Probably the bast
method is to get a large concrete or
sewer pipe tile or two, about 2 to
feet in diameter, and put them down
in the, spring, cementing the joints
well. Put an overflow pipe through
the wall of the upper tile close to
the high water mark of the spring,
and connect the overflow pipe to a
tile drain that leads down to a good
outlet some distance away. If it is
not connected to a drain the open
end should be screened. If the spring
be in the pasture it should be fenc-
ed in and the overflow pipe referred
to extended horizontally to a trough
outside the fence. The top should
be provided with a tight cover made
of concrete or heavy plank.
The spring becomes particularly
serviceable if it happens to be located
on an elevation considerably greater
than the house and barns, for then
the water' can be piped down under
the first line to storage tanks in the
buildings. From the tanks the water
flows by gravity to the points of
service. Or if the supply is great
enough and a fall of a few feet can
be secured within a short distance,
say 30 or 40 feet of the spring, a
hydraulic' rani may be installed for
pumping the water of a spring to the
house and barns. 'Usually it is pump-
ed into a storage tank in.the attic of
the house; or loft of barn, and from
these gravitates to the various plumb-
ing fixtures in the house and the
troughs and drinking basins in the
stables. If you are particularly' in-
terested in th•iss'subject "of the farm
spring and how to make it more
11414f: y rrite the. Department of
.tejx1tr.0;;;'I Toronto„ ter a copy of
Bulletin : 2%7, which `. tells you all
about it. iia• costs du, nothing for
the informs on ex `p t .a..p ostai card
and a
tw
rw
ren
t
a t4
se, e.
.
static
',4,1t. R. Grahs.m..B<.S:0.:`AyCbe
g
Guelph.
•
Hensall
Mr. and Mrs, John Elder of lien,
sall a,nzzounce the engagement of their I
eldest (daughter, Grace Victoria, to
Robert McKinley Peck, youngest son
of Mr. and Mrs Nathan, Peck of )?Ten, -
sail. The marriage takes place. in
June.
A farmer's horse standing near'the
railway the ,other day, dropped dead
through fright: -- Mrs, Wm, Luker
who fell several weeks ago and broke
her leg, but was recovetring ,Kcely
had the misfortune to fall again ane
day last week, breaking her arm, -The
people of the Methodist church' en-
tertained the soldiers very pleasantly'
on Wednesday evening.
Miss Hattie McQueen has returned
from Detroit, as has also Mrs. T.
Rannie.-The business men will close
their stores a half day each week.-
Rev Doan and Rev. Garrett will take
part in 'the welcome to Usborne sol-
diers at Eliimville on the 30. -The
Jackson Company agrees to etnploy
35 men and women in their factory
here. -Mr. Harry Dougal recently re-
turned and Mr. Sam. McAwain left
for the West. - A. G. W. V. A.
branch has been organized irr town
with 25 members, and the following
are the officers: --Rev. A. R. E, Gar
rett, President; P. Buchanan, Vice -
Pres., Wes Caldwell, Sec'y-Treas.;
Committee, Sid McArthur, Clarence
Johnston, Jos. Hudson, Thos, Sherritt.
-Hensall is taking up a subscription
for a Soldiers' Memorial. -Mrs, Harold
Glenn of London visited her sister,
Mrs. A. Case,-Ptes Frank, Nesbitt,
Ray McArthur and W. Dick have re-
turned ft cm overseas. -Mr. Wm. John. -
stone of Canora, Sask., is spending a
month with his parents, Mr, and Mrs.
John Johnstone. -Our new baker, Ev-
Brett Heist, has commenced business.
-Rev. A. MeKibbon, B. A,, sof Wood-
ham preached League anniversary setr-
ruons in the_Methodist Church on
Sunday, --The Ladies' Patriotic Socia
ety last week tendered an excellent
banquet to the returned soldiers and
their families. --Mr, Geo, Tuffix has
been. awarded the contract for all the
concrete work in connection with the
'proposed new school at Hensall,
Lucan
Mrs. Robt. Donnelly is dangerously
ill.-Rer, E. G, Powcell was in Toronto,
fast week. -Mr, John, S. Park, who
has been sick for a couple ,months;
%s ,able to be out a little again. -The
Lucan Driving Association will bold
their meet on Wednesday, June 18th
-Mr. Ph^n McLean has purchased Mr,
Ab. Simpson's residence on. Princess
street. -Dr. Orme has taken overthe
drug bu>'ness purchased by Mr. Stan -
let and ha maee.cls
h stock tot k over to
the Stanley block wh'ere he w'il put
a er sduate ::n charge in the near fu-
turt`.-Mr ,Fred, Langford ,of the R.
F. A., Mr. Harvey Langford and Mr,
Wm. Martin have arrived home from
'How Many Pigs to a Cow?
Pigs and cows work very well to-
gether as the hog is one oI the most
economical meat producers on. the
farm, and does especially well on
dairy by-products—s1timmilk, butter-
milk and whey.
The number of pigs per cow will
depend on the kind of dairying the
farmer is engaged in. If selling
milk for direct consumption, for the
milk condensory, or for the powder
milk factory, there is no by-product.
hence it is doubtful if hogs, under
these conditions, will pay at all, espe-
cially with an uncertain market.
Whey, from the cheese factory, Will
not support so many pigs per cow as
will skimmilk and buttermilk from
the farm dairy, or creamery.
On the average, we recommend one
brood sow for each ten cows supply-
ing milk to a cheese factory, and one
sow for five or six cows where cream
or butter is sold from the farm. If
a sow reared 10 or 12 pigs each
year, this would work out at from
one to two pigs per eow on a dairying
farm. There are times when a much
greater number than this' would be
on the farm, as the pigs would be
in various stages of maturity. The
farmer and successful pig -raiser aims
to keep up a regular procession of
pigs from the sow to the bacon fac-
tory.. This plan tends to stabifrae
markets, prevents the gluts which
frequently demoralize the bacon busi-
ness and causes farmers to stay in
the hog game, instead of playing "in
and out" which is not good for any
business. --Prof. H. H. Dean, O. A.
College, Guelph.
Starting Early Celery.
The starting of early celery should
be done immediatelyas the seed is
slow in germination; requiring about
four weeks before ready for the first
transplanting. The seed should be
sown in fiats in a soil very sandy in
nature. This soil is pressed down
about ee an inch in the box and then
the celery is sown broadcast over it.
The box is then watered through bur-
lap and is left covered with burlap
or brown paper until the seed germi-
nates. When the plants are showing
two or three leaves they are trans-
planted into flats, 2 inches each way
in soil that is sandy in nature but
well-filled with good manure and
commercial fertilizer, such of a, ni-
trogeneous nature. Good, fertilizer is
necessary at this stage so that the
plants will not receive any cheek.
The plants should be thoroughly
sprayer with Bordeaux Mixture when
they first break into third or true
leaf, so that they will be kept free
from blight, and every week after
being set in the field.
Another method in use among
growers is that of sowing in hot beds.
The seed is planted in rows about 4
inches apart; in making these rows
they take a piece of wood about an
inch wide and press it down on the
soil making a furrow about 3h` of an
inch deep in which the seed;is sown.
It is then covered with. burlap or
i peeer, as stated .before.
Celery to„ germinate , properly,
should be kept, at 'a .temperature cf.
7 e r. un it the
x.,, ry;o}tng ,planta
pare gro ing io ood- shape, When, i
� t
isrwell. to,lower.it to 55 or 60 de grp,
=A. ` H..A c e.nnan ,. R
table Specialist.
Children
ry for Fletcher's
yx, \,\N„.s, ‘'Nee'e
The Kind You Rave .Always Bought, and which has been
' in use for over thirty years, has borne the signature of
'and has been made under hir per
tonal supervision since its infancy.
- Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and ” Just -as -good " axe but
Experiments teat trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children E
erience a ainst Experiment.
What i c1AsORIA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric,
Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains
neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its
age is Its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has
been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency,.
Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising
therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids
the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTOR IA, ALVVAYS I
In Use For Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
TN= OENTA*.t}t GOMTANV,
W YORK CITY
That it is es,`tianated that it will
take at least 15 y+'e'insfor the gas-
dzieszched soil of France to recover
and become productive?
SPANKING DOESN'T CURE 1
Don't think childrencanbe
cured
of bed-wetting by spanking them.
The trouble is constitutional, the child
cannot help it. I will send FREE to
any mother my successful home treat-
ment, with full instructions. if your
children trouble you in this way, send
no money, but write me to -day. My
treatment is highly recommended to
adults troubled with urine difficulties
by day or night. Address
Mss. M, Summers,
Box 840 WINDSOR, Ontario.
DO YOU KNOW
That it pisses 5,000 bees to weigh
one pound?
That king'fish'ers make their nests
of fishbones?
Gr'a?shopners have their ears on
their front legs?
That wood -Paving for roads was first
used in Russia.
A baby kangaroo is but little larger
than a man's thumb?
That there are nearly 5,000 stitches
in a pair of hand' -sewn, boots?
That 'the battle of Waterloo was be-
gun and finsthhed in eight hours?
That ducks waterproof themselves
from a little pocket of oil near the
tail?
That the hair on German} -made pre-
war doll; was ,made of Bradford wool?
That in the Catianean War 22 out of
every hundred wounded died?
The size of a hat isdetermined by
its inside wjdth and length, divided
byThtwato?
Japanese girl ,babies have their
heads shaved until they are three
v,ears old?
That an ounc(e,(af gold Leaf rolled out
would cover the floor of a room 14
feet square?
That there are villages in Russian
Poland where the houses are built en-
tirely oC salt? .
That the average marrying age for
men is now over 29, arxd for women
dearly 27? -
That the suicide irate in Germany
was, before the war, the highest in
the world -21 per 100,000 yearly?
Normal Weight
Perhaps you are worried because
your child does not pick up in
weight? { Better try
Scoll'sm I r
E uson
and watch how it helps make
a thin child grow and put on
weight. There is nothing quite
so strengthening as Scott's
Emulsion fora child of any age
Scott & Bowie, Toronto, Ont. 14-$
AUCTION SALE
OF READ' ESTATE AND LIVERY
EQUIPMENT
at Centralia, on Saturday, June Tth,
at 1 o'clock, the following,
Horses', -1 aged horse, horse 11 yrs.
horse 7 years; house 6 years.
Livery Equipment. -Platform wagon
2500 lbs. capacity; platform wagon,
2000 lbs cap.; duplex wagon, 1500 lbs'
cap,; single democrat, nearly new; wa-
gonette, 6 pasis;enger; dray; . 1 top
Surreys; 1 Stanhopebuggy nearly new
2 set of new trunk 'sleighs; 3- seated
pleasure sleigh; single sleigh; Glad-
stone cutter; 4 single cutters, some
nearly new;; double covered pleasure
sleigh; „2 set `of; solid pickle bup . or
trusik harness; 1nearly new; 1 Glad-•
'stone collar: anyd han?es, nearly new..;
set carxta.,e 11;arncss> :;;olid; niekle, tumor;
ata ,set s<ungle, harness; i•et pf.
°do b e •b s !co r
1 ea lla • ou rte asr „
u r 1... ..sv� a'b .. i ., n•g ..
irabe.s; 3..patr ;god woollen blankets;
6 goodrugs; quantity dusters, when,
bits sweat pads halters boats col -
Fars, bridles, pole straps, bells, sable
blankets, forks, shovels, 2 clocks.
brooms, wrenches, jacks, pictures,
cupping machine, sewing machin°», cu-
shions, top seats, poles, whi3flgtsees,
neckyokea, rubbers, writing desk, 2
stoves, 12 chairs, lounge, plow, sca-
lier,seton
§ 20ladder, 12
fooharrows, ladder; new foot wheelbarrow; crow-
bars, barn Jack, clothes line reel, new ;
bedstead, torchlight, large whitewash
and spray pump, coal oil heater, own
tity of good tools; 2000 fee rock elm
oak, basswood and ash lum >e,r, all
dressed; cement pounder, 01 or gas
tank, quantity of whiffletree, and
neckyokea, all turned; baser. 1 bats;.
number of stall posts ahead.- groov-
ed out; cupboard, refrigerator, 3 bus
tops and cushions, boring-'nach'ne,
2 crosscut saws, 2 buck saw,, staehe,
hayefork, car and pulleys, ten,, 8
window awnings, grass seeder; en
Fox Terrier dog, Etc.
Real Estate -A twoestar cy brie 'k
house on 3-5 Iand, with live -y 4:ably:
70x81, woodshed and henhouse, hard
and soft Water, etc.
Also one -storey frame house, geed
stable and large hen -house, lot being
3-5 acre.
Terms -$10.00 and under cash; over
that amount 6 months' credit o. ap
proved joint notes. A discount of h
per cent, per annum off for cash on
credit amounts.
Terms of Real Estate made known
an. day of sale.
G. G, ESSERY, Prop,
C. W. Robinson & F. Taylor, Au: ts.
F. Coates, Clerk.
AUCTION SALE
WAGON GEARS MOWERS,
PLOWS, ETC.
At His Shop, Exeter, on
SATURDAY, MAY 31st, 1919
At 2 o'clock sharp, the fo.lowing :
6 new wagon gears, 2 -inch tire; '2
new six-foot mowers; 2 new five-foot
mowers; new cutter, new single -fur-
row ridn'g plow, 2 new No. 21, walk-
ing plows. 2 new No. 20 F. & W.
walkin'z plows, new Nip plow, 1 nine -
hoe stiff. -moth cultivator, and other
articles.
Teams, -4 rnonths' credit. A dis-
count o,' l per cent. per annum for
cash.
F COATES, C. W. ROBINSON,
Clerk. Auctioneer
Notice to Creditors
Of the Estate of Thomas Ellerington
late o
1 t f the Village of Exeter, r
'n
the County of Huron, Gentleman,
deceased
Pursuant to Sec. 56 of Chapter 121
of the Revised Statutes of Ontar:o.
1914, notice is hereby given that all
creditors and others having claims or
demands against the estate of Thomas
Ellerington, late of the Village of E
oter, in the County of Huron, who
died on or about the Eighth day of
Tune, A. D. 1918, are on or before
the Sixteenth day of June, A. 0.1919
to send by post, prier -paid, to Isaac
R. Carling, solicitor for the Execut-
ors of the said deceased, their Christ, -
Ian names and sunnanres, addresses and
desictiptions, the full- particulars of
their chains, a statement of theittac-
.counts and the nature of the, secur-
.ties. if any, held by then.: 1
And take notice that after said
last mentioned date the said Ex.ecu,-
tors will proac(eled to disttf,sbute:the
assets of the deceased among the par-
ties entitled thereto, having • regard
only to the claims of which they shall
then have notice and that the said
Executors will not be !:able for
said assets or any part thereof, toany
persor or persons of whose claims
votice shall nothave been received'
b_y their, SSd''l:icho't•^at.the •tine of such
idistributi,on., �, ,
D
L
aYed:•ratrx,Fr�ceter •a:th_� Aa ' of
i'
ia.y,.A�. ,,1919. ;.;.,.
;1 , ISAA ` !NG
CR. C . '
ARL3.
. !•t ;, , Solicitor foe, ,.,i C.ee'iti'.3
Exeter P. v.