The Exeter Advocate, 1922-11-9, Page 5LUMBAGO
IFou feel a touch of lumbago you can wad p
the evils of recurrent attacks, by to ng
Pills without delay,. Learn a lesson from e
experience of Mr. 11..A, Jukes. After suffering with
lumbago for years, and being confined ,to the house
at times, Mr. Jukes began to take Qin Pills. His let-
ter to us reads, in part; "and much to my surprise,
T at once felt a change for the better. I have beer
taking,tthem at intervals, and, up to date have had
3to recurrence of any old trouble; in fact, I have not
felt better for years,'
Don't delay. Duy a box on ou o e-baelf-g"uaran
tee, or write or a free sample. yattiopal Drug
Chemical C. of Canada, Limited, Toronto, Ont. U.S.
--residents should address_; Na-Dxu•Co.. fns`.. $1341
Exchange St., Buffalo, N.Y.
i 411
APPLES WANTED.
All Kinds of Apples at
The Exeter Evaporator
Appies received any time and until
end of season.
;highest- Cash, Price Paid
A. D. CLAPP.
WOMEN HELP FOR. TRIMMING APPLES.
A STUPENDOUS AOHIEYE .E.`1T
$445
Ford Touring Car F.O.B, Ford, Ontario
"NEW PRICES ON ALL MODELS
Effective October 17.th, 1922
. Chasi;is, .. . :..
.Runabout
Touring ........
Truck Chassis
Coupe
Sedan
$345
405
445
495 serviced
695_
785 who can
1GIVE THEM "A SALT ,BOX.
IN ANNOUNCING .A PRICE OF
$445 for the Ford Car in Canada, the
Ford Motor Company of Canada, Lim-
ited,. have made good the manufactu1 -
ing ideal of Henry Ford—a ear so low
in price—so lioneA in nhanufaeture—
quality so backed by service of a kind
undreamed of by any other manufac-
turer—that it is avatilalele to the small-
est purse,
At the
same ,time ,these are closed
models of beauty, manufactured and
The above prides tare F. 0. B: Ford,
Ontario. Starting and Electric Light-
- _ing on Chassis, Runabout, Touring;
Truck Chassis, $85 ;extra. On. Coupe
:and Sedan, starting and electric light-
ing are standard equipment.
in ,the same
way for those
pay more for added comfort.
R�dilo Snell, Dealer,
Exeter.
•
fly
WSTERN IIMVEE .I' SIT Y
THE WESTERN ONTARIO UNIVERSITY
LONDON
To Every Faker and Mother
This is the era of progress. The call for
trained men and women to carry forward in
Medicine, Science, Engineering and Fine Arts
is stronger than ever before.
If you would help your children make the
most of their lives you should give them the best
education you can afford. A university education
is the first essential for our future leaders.
A college stands at your door with open
gates ready to give them complete courses in
Medicine, Arts and Public Health.
Admission is by
Junior Matricula-
tion except for
special or nurses
courses,and the
fees, are so low
that any one may
attend.
Western University
degrees are universally
recognized.
For information apply to
DR. K. P. R. NEVILLE
Registrar
London. Ontario
12
Pigs and Other Live. Stock Re-
quire Mineral Food.
Farm Animals Must Rave a Body
Builder —A Good Mineral Mixture
Suggested — Combatting Field
Mice..
(Contributed. by Ontario Department of
Agriculture, Toronto.)
The feeds that we give our young
animals are the body building ma-
terials, and are Just as necessary to
the young pig, calf, or colt as are
bricks and boards to the carpenter
engaged in building a house. Mouse
building and body-building are alike
in that both depend upon the struc-
tural materials furnished. When we
see a. tine house we are at once im-
pressed with the evidence that is
before us, in good and abundant
material supplied . the workmen.
Wheii we see well -grown, fine and
sleek calves and pigs we have the
game thought—. -that abundant body
building material. has been supplied,
On the other hand when we observe
a snack built or scrap lumber, or
see a calf with Its back up, pot
bellied, under size, or a pig crippled
and off its feet, we are at once struck
with the thought that someone has
not etipPlied tike very necessary ma-
teriale for body building or house
building.
Need of Lime mad Phosphorous.
Two materials that are neoeesary
in growth and body building are lithe
and phosphorous. Yount' animals
running with their dams on pasture
will as a rule show no evidence of a
shortage of these minerals in their
development, since the milk of their
dams is adjustedd to the mineral re-
quirewent of the young, But as soon
as the young animals become depen-
dent on the feeds given them by man
their ease is different, and they are
frequently very ni}fell neglected, in
that a proper selection of feeds is
not made for them.. A ealf or pig
that is shut up tight in a pen has
no choice; it is entirely at the mercy
cit the owner or feeder. Should the
feeds supply all the requirement of
growth. then all is well and good.
If the feeds do not supply the re-
quirements, then development cannot
take place. With animals confined
in pens the mineral food shortage is
usually pronounced, unless some spe-
sial provision is made to supply such.
The effect of its absence is shown in
unthrifty, crippled or thwart animals.
Results of Experiments.
In an experiment recently conclud-
ed, where two groups of pigs were
being fed the same grain ration, a
remarkable difference was noted in
one group that received in addition
to the grain ration free access to a
mineral mixture or salt box contain-
ing the following essentials to
growth: Lime, bone meal, rock salt,
and charcoal. The presence of the
salt box In the one pen during the
124 days of the feeding experiment
gave an average gain of 132.8 pounds
per pig, While the pigs in the pen in
which there was no salt box gave an
average gain of 69.5 pounds per Pig
in the 124 days. The presence and
use of the salt box was accountable
for a gain of 63.5 pounds per pig,
If young stock are out on good grass
they can generally get what minerals
are required for their body develop-
ment. But the confined animal gets
only what you give it, and the giving
is iuelicated by the condition of the
animal. If the animal does not thrive
your giving has been misdirected or
stingy.
Watch Your Stock.
Look at the pigs and calves on
your Yarm. Are they "off their feet,"
"up in the back," "stunted," or
"scrubby"? If so, then just take a
look in the mirror when nobody is
around and see the fellow respons-
ible for the condition. When you
recognize yourself as the stingy or
neglectful feeder, proceed at once.to
the .,workshop and make a mineral -
salt box, fill it, and see that the young
animals never want for the essential
bone and muscle building elements.
The pigs and calves will be more apt
to thrive, and they will also have a
better opinion of you.—L. Stevenson,
Sec., Ontario Dept. of Agriculture,
Toronto,
Combatting Field Mice'.
Traps for field mice can be used
only on limited areas. In' the case of
barge tracts, recourse inust be had to
poisoned grain. One ounce of sul-
phate of strychnia dissolved by boil-
ing..in a pint of water and an equal
'quantity.,.of cheap'syi;up added will
poison half a bushel of wheat or corn.
Cracked and crushed corn is better
for this purpose than the uncrushed
kernel. This grain should soak in the
poisoned liquid several hours and
then be allowed to dry. Grass grow-
ing about the base of a fruit tree
encourages the presence. of mice, as
does also, early mulching. Cover
crops such as buckwheat, oats or
clover may harbor mice. Snow about
fruit trees should be tramped down
occasionally to keep mice from work-
ing under it. These pests would be
less numerous if neighboring swampy
areas were drained and thorough
ploughing and harrowing (I esorted to
in cultivating crops. Hawks and
owls, weasels, skunks and foxes de -
story large numbers of field mice.
Tke free use of an effective lice
powder is always in order with poul-
try. A dustbath is very essential in
ridding the fowls of lice. • White-
washing is effective against vermin.
Use kerosene on the roosts and in the
cracks to exterminate mites.
Mustard, cress, radish, lettuce, set
onions and •spinach are crops that, pan
be grown fn a hotbed.
Be' sure •thatthe .snow is, well
tramped about the: apple and plum
trees. This willdiscourage mice fr,ogr
nesting near them.
WINNING HAPPINESS
dee on Good Terms, With Yourself ane
Everything About You.
Happiness can never come from the
outside to the inside unless happiness
already exists in the inside. We be-
come bappy because there are certain
elements within us that respond im.
mediately to the tbings that make MS
happiness.
To be thoroughly happy you must
ibe on goodterms with yourself.
Also it means that you have fabs,
timed the mystery of happiness in
every growing thing about you. A
Man that is not on good terms with
the trees and flowers and birds and
bouses and the scores of other gifts
of nature Can never be upon good
terms with himself. For nature,
though silent in its expression. speaks
truths more wondrous than the ex-
pressed truths of men.
To be thorougbly happy you must
be on good terms with everything
about you.
Did you ever look up into the sky
and ask yourself whether or not you
were on good terms with the stars,
with the planets—with the moon? And
during the day. with the clouds and
the marvelous sun that so greatly
affect ,your dispeeldon. aa these tbinge
do affect the dispositions of every one
To be thoroughly bsppy you must
make the wouderful truths and ex
pressigqns (-4 nature your mental euro
paaiori's.
It is imposstble for you to be upon
good terms with ail people unless you
fall In alignment with their sympa
titles and with their viewpoints. it Is
lmposslble for you to bring out the
best that is within unless you use as
a baste stauding a perfect t gnallty of
terms.. --Toledo Times
Buoyancy of Fresh end Batt Water..
• ChineSe lad Mopped his bail lit s
narrow bold sal rutrld mg get 11 out.
So be poured Water in the holo, think -
hag that he wota,d thou the ball to the
,surfnee. As the ball was alightly beam.
ler than water, it remained an the hob
tom. Then he draught rat mixing salt
with the water. as he knew that salt
water would float denser uhlectx than
fresh. This be did andwee rewarded
with the tiorttittg had.
This mirth:M e tact is demonstrated
at the mouths of rivers, Objects rolling
along the bottom of a fresh river, too
beavy to t"otutr to the top. will rise
wben they sire earned nut to sea The
general rule iieso implies to denting
bodies, For inslamee. at ship with a
eargo on the sea will link sometimes a
toot on entering a fresh water port.
On the other hand, If she leaves a fresh
water port w th her cargo she will rise
tuber enterlrg the ocean. So fl ship
may be londei apprtreutly too mueb at
a wharf ane still be all right on tba
waves.
In building a dam the Net of salt
water's being heavier than fresh must
be takeos Int > r•r,nsideration, and the
Yam for the same tread must be u good
deal stronger; this, too, without taking
into considere don the beating of wayes,
eta. --St. Louie Republic.
Brita n's Civil Service,
Life in a ch it service office Is a very
Irab affair today. 13ut sixty ;ear. age
It appears to have had its cueupenste
lions. Sir Alj ernon West. who enter.
ed the admiralty to 1851, retails, in
his "Reminiscences," the figure of an
official "always dressed In a black and
snuffy suit." It was the chief clerk.
This gentleman 'occasionally came to
the office In th,a morning dressed in a
great frilled shirt front and evening
clothes and announced that, as be was
going .to dine out that evening. tie
should not be +tt the offices the next
day. Frederick Locker. who always
wore kid glover in the office for fear
be would dirty his hands with ink
• • • was evllently not Impressed
with the dignity of the .man or the of
lice. for on my ;tsking him what his
duties were he raid. 'All I know la.
that whenever I event a clean towel or
g piece of fresh soap. 1 always- ring
the bell and send roe the chief clerk?"
—London Citizen.
An Unfortunate Phrase.
"Franz der kaiser." Napoleon's fa.
ther-in•law, who was a rather weak
and silly ruler. bad revertheless a thor-
oughgoing belief In absolutism and In
the divine right to rule of even the
most incompetent of the Hapsburgs.
His abilities. duct' as they were, were
beat displayed in catechisms that be
wrote and printed for the use of bis
h umbler subjects and In peevish crit-
icisms of those of superior Intelligence.
According to the author of a recent
life of Archduchess Marla Louisa of
Austria entitled "An Imperial Vie -
dm; the emperor once raged against
his doctor for rzmr..king that he had
"a good constitution."
"Never let me hear that word agalnr
he said. "Say robust health if you
like. "There is no such thing as a good
constitution."
Switserland's Navy:
Long before Germany was tb' bereft..
tined with as a sea power Switzerland
possessed a fleet equipped for warfare.
Hight hundred years ago on all the
larger Swiss lakes armed galleys were
maintainedby the rival cantons. Skill-
ed shipwrights had torbe imported from
Genoa for the construction of these
vessels, some of which carried crews of
600 men. The largest Swiss flotilla
was maintained on the Lake of Gene-
vs.
enuva. when the lnhttbitantq of Geneva
were at war with Saves,. Sincethe
neutrality of Switzerland has been
guaranteed by the powers there has.
been no need for warships on the lakes,
The Swiss, however, possess a merean.
We navy, which' carries a considerable
amount' of trade over the 342 miles o4
9nvigabli waterways in Um reptablic,
Good Lu,cli
is thought to
g go a long
Good Judgment. goes
TO USE
ways but
farther..
IS GOOD JUDGMENT.
Hen
"The Tea that is always Reliable."
SCHOOL REPORT OF S. S. No.
4. Ursborne, for Qctolier, based on t'lie
daily work and examinations.--IY„Lulu
Hunter 85, Marjorie Hunter 79, litfb-
ert Hunter 45, Wilfrid Bai:gctyt; I11.,,
Marjorie
esleast 72, Gerald Ford
69, ,Doreen Westcott 68, Lily Hunter
56, Harold Mitchell. 54, George, Thom-
son 46; Sr. If,, Mary Hunter 58; Ise,
Ila Hunter 84, Roy Hunter 71, Arcb.:e
Thomson 62; ,Sr. Pr., Jean, Coates 94;
Jr, Pr., Bessie Coates and Florence Mit
chell equal 85, Norman Hunter 81, Ar-
nold Ford 44. No. on roll 19, ,average
htten+4anee 17.5,
L. M "Dards, teacher.
e iNroN-Qn Oct. 29th sauiue -Vti
t-aas pasee;t stray at the age of 156
yeers an.i 10 months,. Born .tn Itul et
t.p., he poracticaljy spent all .his .ta
there, moving to Clinton only Z years
ago.
PARKKHILL—Wils=on Grieve passed
away on Nov. 1, in London, after (a
.linger;n; illness, that -had extended
over some years, He. formerly lived
near Parkhill and was a son of the
late John Grieve, ex-M.F.P. for North
liiddlesex, and is survived by his
mother, two sisters and a brcVeer:.
The funeral Wes heed Sunday, inter-
trent taking- .peace :;n Par:hel1 cern--
ters•.
PAitinHi1.L—A qu et marriage took
Piece at the Aiciaiedist parsonage ;on
Oct, 2tbh, when James ,Dinadlale and
Airs. Bertha Morley, both of Parisi: 11
were joined in wedlock.
eiSAFORTH--Last Menday morning
it was dae;overed that Mr. Calder's
stable was inflames. All but two
hens an°d the car were eared, btttilh;
building, a quene ty of hay and tit:
hugely were a total les — 1.r,. A. A.
1 '<i enna.n had the s1 laiertun. .o
break his leg on Monday. He :.” pp;:s.1
from this rutuz n ,board of h:a ear
an -1 slipped, dams damage to the :ase.
Umb that was broken Jess than a year
ago.
-ULA CRAIG-1b.e tuesrel n: tate
late Joltn Cowan, who died on «Vial
mall:1y $eft took place on. Sunday
(rain the Met/iodise Church to Nairn.
Cemetery. Services wer.i conducted
lay
bis late pastor, Rev. W. Brooks..
AILSA CRAIG.—The funeral of Jno
Hare -son, who died suddenly on Fel,
day in h:; 92n.1 .year, tnok prise en
Tuesday, with vertices at :he Ietho
dist church, and interment at Nairn.
r1ITCHELL—Wilahmina Suter, wife
of \Frill am L, Young died at herhome
here Saturday, in her 44th year. De-
ceased had been ,ill w th cancer ::,r
several months.. Besides her husband,
one daughter and three ;ons survive,
—Miss Jennie Greenwood who- has
been lit -_t2 with her brother, John,
died on. Sunday after several months'
illness. She was born i.n Logan, Tp.,
and was 67 years ,of age. '
WANTED
RELIABLE SALESAGENT
For this district to sell our
Fruit and Ornamental Trees,
Flowering Shrubs, etc.
Exclusive Territory
GOOD PAY
Our agency is Valuable. The
Stock we sell is grown in our
own Nurseries. Our list of
Varieties is the best.
For particulars writ,
Pelham Nursery Co., opxt°'
Established 40 years • 600 Acres
1
Here's the way to
BUY YOUR SUIT TO
BEST ADVANTAGE
LET us take your measure -help you
choose the style and fabric most be-
coming to you—meet your every need or
wish. Then let the Master Tailors of
make up the suit. This is the way to
secure a made-to.order garment at a reedy -
to -wear price. It will hold its shape, re-
tain its style and wear longer because it's.
a "Better Built" suit.
Well Johns,Agent
CLEANING, REPAIRING, PRESSING
DRY CLEANING AND DYEING,
I'iONE ON SHORT NOTICE.
You can use sweet milk, sour milk,
buttermilk or water with
IGG-O
.11 Po er
ORDFR FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCER'
salleseesseeelane
k
A Big Bar
A full-size, full -weight, solid bar
of good soap is SU- RP RISE."
Best for any and all householduse.
1$t:
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