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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1921-9-29, Page 4COOPER'S STORE N. W'S Why I useConarch Yaz ns; BECAUSE the QUPeIrITY is UNEQ'UALLED, BECAUSE the YARDAGE is GREATER, per' Ounce. BECAUSE the FINISHED 'GARMENT le sure •to gee Satisfeotipn; •1 know that I can 'hu:v Clt4V'apor `yarns, but cheep Yarns are tnadia from low-grade wools whieh haven't the body or fife of the high- grade Australian Wools used in. milking' MONARCH YARNS, So I won't rise, cheap yards,, • don't ,want to use my time and energy,. and then leave an tunsatis actol'v goement. The best yarn is elisapeet•. You don't need to USO se much of it, and the garments wilt be more satisfactory 01 every way, It will Jtavi+ style. It ,will retain its shape, • and it will wash in- finitely better, • ' • "Knit, and' the world knits with you; Darn and you darts alone" MONARCH FLOSS, DOWN, DOVE AND BUTTERFLY YARNS are ' made hp to a STANDARD, not down to a PRICE. 1SATISFACTORY RESULTS \i Will be obtained only by using the Yarn our descriptions cell for. AVOID STJI3ST1TUTES ANI) DISAP x ' POINTMENTS, A. Ta COOPER. Telegraph agency Clinton RAND TREE GROWTH IN SOUTHERN ONTARIO At the meeting of the 'Council of Norfolk County, Ontario,. at which it was decided to purchase •a block of 500 acres for reforestation, one of the councillors gave an instanee, of a 27 -acre lot in North Wals:nghalt township owned by a man who lives five miles away. Seven years ago it wlis a sand plain, decorated only with the dry.stumps of a primeval forest. Today it is entirely reforested in growths ranging from fourteen i'ec•t downward. It was first fenced and each year a portion lids planted 'in pine. The planting was done by ploughing a furrow straight as nliget be and planting the seedlings along the furrow. The entire plot is thriv- ing, and the first years planting is now beginning to undergo natural thinning out. - • CANADIAN FORESTS PUBLICLY OWNED The methods of handling forest lands in Canada differ radically 1'rorn those customary in some other coun- tries. In Canada the different govern- ments sold, and stili sell, the timber to the, lumbermen and lease then'. the land en which, the thither grows. In some countries a large percentageof the timber lamd is owned outright by private interests. In Canada 93 per cent of the timber land is owned by the provinces or the Dominion. The Q u a l i t y T'1aintain5 e00000ey. 110 inattor how mucheYou pay aper gallon" for otherlubrica- ting Oils you get more lubrica- tion "per dollar" when you buy Imperial Polaribe motor Oils. 0 Zjfl$:kjiZS 77 IMPERIAL Polarine Motor Oils save many thousands of dollars every year for Canadian .'motorists because of reduced operating expenses. Imperial Polarine Motor Oils CUE down repair and mainten-' pnae cosfs, reduce fuel bills and insure you for all time !wind excessive depreciation and repair expenses, Imperial l?blarine quality maintains economy all along the line. Judged by quality—gauged by actual miles of perfect lubri- cation each gallon will give, and by real motoring satisfaction,' • Imperial Polarine is the least expensive motor lubricant that ru can obtain. • The more carefully you check up costs, the lore thoroughly convinced you will be of the advantages of • lasing Imperial Palatine Motor Oils exclusively. it on the correct grade of Imperial Polarine otor Oils. Consult our Chart of Recomrnendatious at your eater's or write to 56 Church Street, Toronto, for our inter- okiting booklet, "Automotive Lubrication." IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED $radfhes in all Cities For a clean' .Effiident Motor 1 .. Clean out your stank -case every thousand miles or less, Imperial 011 dealers displaying the sign dhows on the right, will flush your Crank -case with Imperial Flush - Ing 011, a specially prepared •cleansing agent for crank -case cleaning purposes. You save money in longer life and more efficient service from year Meier by using this service, MARES AC000 CAR BETTER • provinef 1 ting federal 8overn}mitts collect to stomvitege dues and g°roimd }'onto a revenue of between nine ran1- '19an .and 'ten;,inilliou dollars pet' year,. Ne a natter whether the forests are owned by the state or by private Ore povetioge,every •.Itieen is Intorested In theca' rbonservation beaties al/hal money their utilization eirculattesi but Canadians have this additional ineen- tive tg nave for tT10 forests that 93 trees out 'of ev01Y twinned out 'down bring amtfe'r'ovenuo;direetly into a provincial treasury or the Dolninlan Treasury. WOLF CHILDREN' Grow Up Without Intelligible . • Speech The origin of language ie a tnye- teruthet has never ben properly ex- planed, Would a person who was isolated from ,infancy and never heard the human voice Mari to ex- - Prose tiimsel1' in any intelligible vocal sounds? An inter'estinng account of Indian "wolf children" given by• Sir William BeinpfyldeFuller .in. "`The Science of Ourselves" (Hodder. and _Stoughton, les net) goes to prove that when children grow up among the lower an- imals they neither speak nor stand meet ' During the last. 80 yells at least nine of these wolf children have been recaptured from their foster - mothers. -• • In India wolves carry off many children, but they -do not kill them all. Major-General William Sloetnan gave the first authentic: account or these extraordinary ca';es as long ago as 1849. IIe himself saw two of the children who were rescued -from the wolvesivhen they grew too large to enter the burrows. -None of them showed any traces of human main ners; they ran on all -fours; they had no articulate speech, andethey pre- ferred the soeieiy of dogs •to that of 11101. Mr. Bennet, of the Indian -Civil Ser- vice, described another eaee. "Itis posture was .scan -erect; he shuffled about on his `kind legs,' occasionally touching •the ground with hie hands; he made no use ,of articulate words, had noo-sense of decency, and -pre- ferred raw to cooked meat:" Even long subsequent association with human beings effected no change A wolf child reacted in the Agra district was - kept in the Secundra Missionary Asylum from 1867 to 1895 1Ie was, discovered sitting in.the com- pany r.f a wolf et the entrance to a burrow • • •During% his 28' yeaire' stay eh the asyluni,jie never attained a complete= iy erect position; he never learned to` speak, and his •sple accomplishment was that ho came to.uso his fingers in eating instead, of ."wolf ing" the food, "A puppy brought up apart from dogs grows up with the Manners and utterances of a -dog," says the au- thor. "A cuckoo does not lose its dis- tinctive 'habits by being; nurtured :by hedgesparrows, but an infant brought op in brattish surroundings will iron surpaes, the apes in its man- ners- and utterances." ROD AND GUN The October issue of Rod and Gun in Canada will be .perused with' great pleasure by. all those. to whom the great outdoors is calling. "Nova Sco- tia Fishing As It Is" appeals in this splendid number written in a fascin- ating, original way by P. E. Nobbs. H. Mortimer Batten's story entitled "Henske, The Terrible" is of an ap- pealing nature and will prove of in- tense interest to both young and old, "The Industrious One" by F. V. Wile ]rants will doubtless attract the in- terest to every reader. This together with stories and articles by the usual clever nature writers, Robert Page Lincoln, A. Bryan Williams, J. W. Winson, also the instructive columns of the various departments, add greatly to the' value of the maga- zine, and in their own mysterious way impart to it the spirit :of au- tumn. Rod and Gun in Canada i$ published monthly. by W. J. Taylor, Limited, Woodstock. RUPTURE EXPERT DERE Seeley, Famous 01 This Specialty Called to Stratford F. H. Seeley of Chicago and Phila- delphia, the noted. truss expert, will personally be at the \1iedsor Hotel and will remain in Stratford Wednes- day, Oct. 5th, only. Mr. Seeley says: "The Spermatic Shield will not only retain any case of rupture perfectly, but contracts the opening in 10 days on the average case. Being a-vast advancement over all former methods —exemplifying instantaneous effects immediately appreciable and with- standing any strain, or position. This instrument received the only reward in England and in Spain producing. results without surgery; injections, medical. treatment or persariptions, Mr. Seeley has documents from the United States Governments, Wash- ington, D. C. fatinspection. All char- ity eases without charge, or if inter- ested call, he •will be glad to show game without charge and will fit them if desired. Business - deniands prevent stopping at ' any other; place in this section. - P.' S. --Every statement in this no- tice has been versified before the -Fed- eral and State Courts.—F. FL Seeley. GRAND _TR!! K SYS EM TheDouble Track Routt t-BFSTWREN --n MONTREAL TORONTO DETROIT and CHICAGO ittiexcetled Dining Car Service, Sleeping cars on Night Trains and Parlor Cars on principal Day Trains.' Full hnfornbation from any Gtand Trunk Ticket Agent or C. E. Horning, District Passenger Agt., Toronto. J: Ransford Si Son, Uptown Agents, ?hese 57. Clintoq News -Record `epow to reek Hinter for Keeping.. Tisa tryst point to observe in the packing of buttfir, in order, to have it 11000 Well for Winter use, le :to have good butter. '%e best butter fee' Inching le usually anade to tile; menthe of June and.Septemlter, It le preferably made from maniere,- , ttvely sweet cream which lits been pesteut'i;zed, I•Igwever, on the farm pastem'iziillon is not commonly fel- lowed, hence the butter ehonld be made waren the weather is compara- tively cool, and the cream should, be churned before It becemes very sour. in feet, the sweeter the cream •the more likely it le to produce good leeching quality in the butter, so long as' thorn Is sµfilcleint cord on,e tb.e cream to give good churning' results. The cr'ea'n should be churned 10` the usual way, except that the butter may be washed once with brine, which ie made'. by dissolving salt in water, instead 01 using water at both washings. Salt at the usual rate, but not over one ounce v1 salt per pound of butter, because salt deed not Pre- serve butter, as is commonly sup- posed, -except in a minor degree for unpasteurized cream butter. It is a mistake; however, to add so much salt that tate flue flavor of the butter is coveted up. Having ;worked the butter as Usual, pack it firmly Into crocks, tubs or.boxes. I1 unparaTnod'wood-, en ,packages are used, these should bo soaked several days in salt water to prevent "woody'', flavor in the butter. A bettor plan is to coat the inside of the tub or box with hot wax, then line with heavy parchment paper, before packing the, butter.• Glazed crocks which are clean need uo lining. When the package is full, prefer- ably all- from one °burning, smooth the top of the butter, cover with parelunent paper or 0 clean cotton clout, then tie heavy brown . palter over the top and place in a cool cellar, or lh cold -storage. Sometimes a sail paste is put oil top of the cloth or paper, mask this is kept moist by spriakliag on water irrou tante to time. This excludes the air and helps to keep the butter, We recommend peeking the butter in solid form which is In ho kept for solea tithe, ratherthan holding it 1n prints, even thouth these may be submerged in brine. --l1. 11. Dean, 0. A. College, Guelph. READ THE' NEWS -RECORD "THE .PEOPLE'S PAPER" FOR NEWS QP. CLINT&N AND 'HURON COUNTY • Dr; S. R. Datta, at Empire Club, Toronto, stressed the value . of a friendly India. • President Falconer outlines great Year for the University of Toronto. .Registration of students at Uni- versity', indicates -large attendance. Women's Missionai, Society of Methodist. Church hears encourag- ing reports at the big gathering in. Toronto. • E,-Lacelle, aged 40, of Lachine, C, 1'. R. section . mn, killed by train near Vauclreuil. GROWING 'i'REES ARE FUEL • AND LLTIVII3ER The question of economic tree- cul- ture•en the prairies has not yet re- ceived sufficient attention to furnish enough absolutely reliable data upon which to base conclusions, There seems. to be little doubt, however, that tree -planting would pay in many cases. There are nit almost any farm certain portions of land which are not utilized for grain grow:ng, and which, if pastured, do not really give the returns they ahould du. Low epots difficult to drain, rough, stony places, steep banks of coulees, and odd Corners cut otY from- the large fields by water holes or creeks, are left idle, as they aro too small to snake it profitable to cultivate them, These are instances of conditions where tree planting might he the meats of converting land, at present worthless and idle, into valuable and revenue-producing- peoperty; Nor - nuts. M. Ross, Dominion Forest Nur- sery Station, Indian. Heacl, Sask. THE SCHOOL FAIR Oh, come, one and all, spend a day with the children. They've .worked at their fair with a zest and vim. They will open your eyes with their show goods bewilderin'. O come see their Fair in our bean- tiful fair. They have big and wee beasties all pasted on, paper. They have penmanship wonderful and good to. behold. They have even the leaveseof our grand, lordly forests. And baking and such things as good as pure gold.. ; See the flowers that they tended, But not one whit fairer than those kiddies themselves. See the eggs that they're showing and the corn they are growing. And the Att that would startle old Raphael himself.' I'm toldthat there used tobe shows every autumn, ' Eut the rain always came and so squelched out the zeal. Till at last it 50 robbed the peer gate -keeper's coffers, That they threw' up the job for woe or for weal. Now our kiddies have started a new ball a -roiling. Help them on with their work by a word of good cheer, Perhaps it will grow as the years keep advancing. And 'outrival the one that used to be here.—Contributed. 2 THE VALUE OF TRAP NESTS (Experimental Farms Note) Out of the many styles of trap nests, the 'trigger type, now being used at the Experimental Farm, Nap - pail, hide proven to he very satisfac- tory. ' If any of Dint 1eaders.are net fann- illar with construction of this nest, T 'Iil?SDAY, ,SEPT. 29th, 1921 i^ -t 11It.S7EVCi4? Sr, „an 4.‘, HENR1'UIL1ral � } R ME1GN R:faOg, NTY me, %R4 pyo,» onHkP.fC 6'rA'IS[EII n, rINNACE 'Axapfn°len .'"w 00, RCRETARY9f59 AMo' z ' N� H a 4ZED V1P 0' 1.QeEl-LEY ANo•co�onan*roN 34'SNAP'S 05(3E5A TIIE DOMINION CABINET The , above represents the Icon, A , Meighen's reconstructed cabinet. Many of the faces are well-known the general public; some ar e strange, bat all are men of charas ter in whose hands the af- fair of the country should be safely and sanely carried on. to we would be very pleased to have them write us for a sketch of its construction. Wherein lies the value of trap nests? Their value is four fold; First, it is a means of securing the individ- ual records of each bird and that, :from these,'the boarders are easily, detected and only the profitable fowl kept. Furthermore, the outstand- ing birds can be selected and their Progeny uesd, In this way one can raise the standard of production very materially. It may not seem so apparent that the trap nest has, an economic value, for at a first glance it would appear that envie labour and expense had been added to the 'poultry work. A few figures 'taken from data compiled at the Experimental Farm, Neiman,' N. S.; chuing the pais- ten months, ob tailed by the trap nesting of ono pen of 53 Barred Rocksalso a pen• of .53 White.Leghorns, will answer this..,., Out of • the 53 Rocks, 22.0 percent laid less that 100 eggs in the ten months, their average being 7.14 doz- en, which, at the average market val- ue of 50 cents per dozen would real- ize $3,57. It cost $2.81 for feed alone, thus leaving• a balance of 76 cents. The remaining 77.4 per cent of the birds produced an average of 10.05 dozen per bird, realizing, at 50 cents per dozen, $5,48 at the cost of $2.81 for feed, thus leaving a bal- ance of $2.67 per bird. Therefore a hundred like the former would only give a profit of $76.00, over the cost of feed, while 1.00 like the latter would give a profit of $267i.00. Out of the 53 White Leghorns, 37.7 Per cent laid less than 100 eggs in tine ten Months, their average being 0.3 dozen per bird. These valued at 50 cents per dozen, give $3.15, and, deduct cost of feed, $2.81, leaves a balance of 34 cents pet' bird. The 62.3 per emit over -the 100 egg mark laicl en average of 10.9 doz, per bird,. at 50 cents, realized $5,45, less $2.81 for feed,. leaving a balance 01 $2.64 per bird. Now it cost practically as much to keep the poor hens as it did the good ones, and ,t'1•om the foregoing figures ono can readily see the value of trap nests as a means of increasing the profits of our poultry plants and that one will be well paid for the extra labour and expense. Mr. Baird, Supt. Experimental Farm, Nappat Station. N. S. AGRICULTURAL INSTISUCTIOl' IN OATARIO From the grant of $1,100,000 made annually, by. the Dominion for 'agri- cultural.jnstructicon, the Province of Ontario receives $336,303 for the purposes contemplated. Of the lat- ter amount, $115,000 was devoted in 1919-20 to the agricultural college and to the agricultural school and farm at Kemptville, $126,000 to the agricultural representatives, and $40,000 to elementary education; in- cluding household science and manual training as applied to work on the farm, The remaining $53,303 is used in varlets ways, such as demonstra- tions and instruetioli in vegetable growing, the encouragement of co-- operation and instruction in market: ing, the development of women's in- stitute works, the' extension of short courses, demonstrations with vege- tables end hardy fruits. hi New On- tario, and in other ways, all tending to the advancement of • agriculture and improvements in rural life. How the progressive work corning within, theprovince of the Aet has been fes-. tared is illustrated by the feet that while Elia years ago there- were no live stock shipping clubs in the prov- ince, there are now three or. :four hundred; by the creation of/ egg cir- cles and the extension of co-operation in the marketing, not only of eggs and. poultry, but of many other farm products; by the extension of the ag ricultural representative system to practically every county in the prov- ince; by the increase of ag'r'icultural co-operative associations, from 102 with a membership of 2,850 and a business turnover of $281,355 in 1914 to 329 associations with a member- ship of 15,123 and a business 'turn- over of $5,278,1.06 in 1918; by the ex- penditure ..in ' fi.ve years' froth the grant of,$691,313 on the Ontario Ag- grieultural College -and the Agricul- tural School at Kemptville; by the extension of short course teaching; by the development of , school and home gardening; and by the greatly increased number of . school fairs. In 1914, only 204 schools with 208 school and 510' hone gardens gualifiied for grants, but five years later, 1,02(1 schools with 588 school and 432 home gardens qualified, while 1.500 public and separate schools conducted classes in agriculture and qualified for. grants. Also in • 1919, 83 high schools had adopted agriculture as an optional subject as against only 11 in 1914. In 1914, the number of schools in the province engaged in garden work was but 208. In 1918 it was 588, and in. 1919 close upon '700. in 1909 there were only three school fairs held in the province; in 1919 there were 357, with 11,828 entries. It is estimated that only 250 people saw the first school fair •with 58 children taking part, whereas in 1919, no Iewer than 92,600 -children and. 107,590 .adults attended the fairs. 3 Crl*OtJib4s3Rea AL aafuA a1d 4 4 4 '4 4 4 4 • 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1 4 4 4 4 4 tweet eratheh7CWr;7CEir, GI2. 64,Wa6'Sac66itm7a(3'f3 ReeRc82, +Ba We have at last Secured the ageac4 for st , if 11d OF TORONTO and in order to.properly introduce these Famous Suits and Overcoats we are having an expert come to our store from. Head Office in Toronto on e est two days only—when we will give a. Suit or Overcoat, Made - to -measure, for onlg This opportunity to save money on your Winter Outfit is a rare one indeed. Who the West of England Tailors are The West of England Tailors are one of the leading tailoring houses in Can- ada. They import materials direct from the makers and make them tip in their own tailoring shops at 86-88,, Richmond Street, West, Toronto. There are no middlemen's profits. When you buy West of, England Clothes you really, get the WHOLESALE PRICE, The values are unquestionably the greatest in Canada. Every Garment is . GUARANTEED to be SATISFACTORY or you do not have to take it. BE SURE TO, COME An immense, range of Fine Suitings and Overcoi tings will be here from which you can make selection, Yon cannot afford to miss this great opportunity. urray UeEwan, fite Tailor Minkel) Block Clinton �Ne sl 2 ' 04) 7t" 28 1 1 oo i 2' 39 2' i" 2' 331 14 .13 Idea dpi'