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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1919-3-6, Page 2P••••••• •,•.••••••••••••••••••m,,,.....•••,oto.,• c, 15; i‘berAGDOT M. D. meTA.GomtT McTaggart Dross, A GENERAL BANKING 13-Osi, NESS TRANSA.OTED. NOTES 1)ISCOUNTE1), DRAFTS ISSUED, ' INTEREST ALLCW3e11 QN DE- , POSITS.. -SALE Ne/TES CHASED, • - -et H. T./1414,0E '•Nt?'14A1Y pDm:ac, coNvEr- ANGER, FINANCIAL REAL - ESTATE •AND FIRE INSUR- ANCE' A.GENT, REPRESET- INGY 14 FIRE INSURANCE ' COMPANIES,. m , 1tIVISeON. .(10111eT OFFIGE CLINTON. ' Wt BRYDONE, * BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, •. NOTARY PUBLIC; ETC: Sloan Block ---:CLINyON DR. GTNN , Office ease § at his residence, mer, High aud Kirle streets. DR, 3 C. GANDIER °Mee Illeorm-1.80 to 3.30 p.m., 7.30 to 9.00 pan: Sundays 12,30 to 1.30 p me Other bours•by appeinttnent only. Wilco and Residence -Victoria St. CHARLES B.'11ALE, ' *Conveyancer, Netary Public, Conimiesioner, Etc. REAL ESTATE. and iNSTJRANCE Issuer of Marriage License's HURON STREET, --. CLINTON. • GARFIELD MeMICHAEL, Licensed Auctioneerer, fqr the County of Huron. Sales con- ducted in any Part of the county. Charges moderate and satisfac- tion guaranteed. Address: Sea - forth, R. R. No. 2. Phone 18 on 256, "Seafortli Central. • . • GEOR,GE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer 'for- the County. of Fd11'rOrk. Correspondence promptly *Answered. Immediate' arrangements can be made for Sales Date at 'The 'News -Record, Clinton, or by caging Phone 13 on• 157. . Chargee modaat'a ancl satisfaction guaranteed. Sole Agent for Scranton and DAL (Ce L. Coal tizTurM 88.75 Sheds • Delivered ...$9• 00 Lots of Hard Coal for everybody': TERMS STRICTLY CASH. We also have on hand a stock of Canada Cement. • A. J. HOLLOWAY. B. HIGGINS Box 127, Clinton - Phone 100. Agent .for - the Huron & Erie Mortgage Colt poration and The Canada d. Tmust Company. Comm'er IL C. of J., Conveyancer, Fire and Tornado Insurance, Notary Public Also a nun:beer of good farms for sale. At Brucefieid Orl Wednesday each eek, efittpremaelmemVsminsmaa.waimmei.... ,,RArLw 1.3wATA11. e -T1111% TABLE,. Traina will arrive at and depart ST0111 Clinton Station as follows: BUFFALO AND GODERICH •Going east, depart 6.18 aim, „ 1$ 4i 2.52 mm, Going Wdst, ar. 11,10, dp. 11.10 an. " ar. 0.08, dp, 6.45 pine. " 11,18 pan, LONDON, iwRoN & BRUCE DIV. Going South, am 8.80, dp. 8/30' aim, 4.16, p.m, a it Going North; depart 6.40 P.M, 11.07, 11.11 a.m. VC-4••••,93b4t.„, •••,•.••• ,--••••••• • ,•-• . l3 lil DePartlent le e .he g" eeAoour ziu f teMalsryne readers who went tee sevies • et en expert en ane queettou regarding sell, ;coed, acme, eta If your question Ot 0U/11010M geflOral IntOPOSto WM tin anevvered through this, coiurim. •If 0,1timped and addressed antelope 11 ellen:tied with your letter, a complete senswer win be mailed you. Address Agronomisti care of. Wilson RiMILIehing VP., 1.td., 73 AO/10de Oh W.. I:straits:. • ,Sebeeriber: "ISit prolitctitle to ase to menure at a. cost of $5,95, the gain a phosphate fertilizer with 1.6oeo over netreeted manure was avaihible 'phosphate •fit $37.90 a ton ""•endianzi EXPertment Station. whoa' whet is $1.09 per bushel and ' "The addition of 209 pounde of :mid mete 50c Per bustle; OP 141141 thItt al- Phoelkate to a siX-tell aPPlitittiotea teedY aPilears to give an einitdittet Mena°, pee, time pa retetion, of corn, ,of straw?" • wlieet, and clever ha e produced addle Answer: The question you •hatre ttenilt 'eroP increaSee 'valued at $14.98 eaked dieplays evhat apnea& to Me as and $21,44 respectiyely." • :nest sentillelp Attitude en the ter. C. W.-eettkat itt the best fortilieer Mta all, the nes of for a -garden plot? 2. Is sweet clover fertilizer dome net depend' upon senti- Profitable.. for pasture or is it best Ment or, custom- oe any • other thing cut for hay? • than uperi the qlestion you have Answer-eFor m garden fertilieer it aeted, "Will it pay 1" 1 could give is well to keep in raind Welt you evish you abendance of examples of feral to apply tient fecal which will cause tato which ehow „very dearly. that rapid -substantial growthtiof garden fertilizas pay, but I cheaes rather crops. The rapedity of g mwth and the.reeorde •of long -thee expo:entente firmness of it ha-ve a great dear to carried on by officiale employed by tie with the tenclernese and azoro, the Government and •eesponsible to the vegetables, hence fairly high the peeple. ••. , grade fertilizers ere in all eases -most The „mord of the 20.-yeae •experie Seetisfactoey, For • general perposes Ment condueted at Ohio Experiment I would recommend A fertilizer c,arrye .Station shows the following yield e in hg 3 to -5 per cent. ammonia, 6 to whole numbers far wheateandthats obe Per merit, phosphoric acid and 4 te 6 -tatined where ne peeet eood. was added 'per•cent.mibta.sit- When applying" this And, Where a complete. fertilizer:eves Make ti total applieation of about 50 adQdre'Them are as follows: • to 75pounds to ,a piece of 'grounde measiming 25 x 40 feet. •It ie a good practice to make two applicetimei'e ape plying tre of this ainount on the sur- f -ace of the garden when it is dug or plowed, evotkinge-this in cie the gars den. is harrowed and raked: When the creme' are growing/scatter a sprinkl- ing 01 fertilizer ule betieen the rows each thno before you cultivate. This acte as A gentle:nal feeding to the crop with an its 'desirable results. 2. Sweet clover is looked upon as a very valuable crop for supplying nitrogen and humus in building up poor soils: It can be merle, into good hay .if. the aop is cut whiletet is green and succulent. If you allow it to become woody, the fibrous material Is not ,palatable to tho. stock, nor is it nutritious. As to sweet -clover for T,te -1fili1Ii3p Mutual FirorinsurauebOollipp4y, Ifead office, Se4forth1 DIRECTORY president, Jnmc Conniofly, Godeelebi Vice, James Evairs, Beeeliwoede See.-Treasureie Thos, Ite Hales, Sate forth, Direetors: George McCartney, see., truth; D, lt. 111cOregc.r, Seaforth; G. Grieve, Walton; Womeltiree, Sea. teeth; M. ' tacEeven, Clinton; Robert rerriee, Ilarlock; John Benneweir, Brodie:igen; jai, Cennolly, Goderich. . Agents; Mex. Leitch, 011eton; J, ,W, eiwe'Goderith; Ed. Hinehley, Seaforth; - Cheenay. Eginondville; R. G. jar - Meth Itirodliagen, Any money tie be paid :A tnay•the paid to Moorish Clothing Co,, Clinita, or nt Cutt's Geocery, Gederleb, Parties clesirieg to effect it:gem:ice it tte„mce other busireee will be peopiptly al:Leaded to on roplicatioe• to rely el the above officere addreesed• ta thee resneetive peat office, Lessee iespected hy the direetor Who iiv.0 Pecareet the eceite, ....Average yields obtained over 20 yeam, at •the Ohjo Experiment Sto- ti�n. ' 'Wheatt-Without additional plant food, 10 bus. per acre; with acid phos- phate, 18 bus, pa acre; with com- plete fertilizer, 24'bus. per acre. '. Oats -Without additional plant food, ., 30 bus. per acre; with acid them- phate, 89 bus.. per acre; with com- plete fertilizer, 45 bus. per aere. NOW fie to your guestion:-There is O gain of 8 bus, of wheat ger acre from An .application of little less than .200 lbss of. acid phosphate or, at the prices yon give, a gain of 68 for an /investment of approximately $3.70,-eacid phosphite paid! ^ There ie a further gain of h bus. per acre of whet by. the application of nitrogen and potash in eertitizer Pasture, 3 have not observed instances applied to the wheat crop, or a gain where it has been used successfully. of 14 bus. from the use of complete Liyestock have to learn to eat the fertilizer. It is not uncommon to find crop since the oil' which the sweet such no gain from the application of clover plants -bear seems to be (Ila- n() pounctssof complete fertilizer to tasteful if any other green crop es the acre. This being the case, you obtainable. I would depend onaseveet will see that such an increasewould clover either for hay or green crop even pay for fertilizer at 6140 a ton. to turn under. News as to oats; records show a gain of 9 bus. of .oats per acre from H. H. -What isathe best mixture for u permanent pasturei', the use of acid phosphates or, at your Answem-Vor permanent pasture prices for oats, assuming that 200 the ifollowing mixturels good: Com- pounds of acid phosphate was added mon eed clover, 6 pounds; alsike, 2 per acrs (which is over double inlet pounds; white clover, 3 pounds; time was aCtually•added. in this case), an othY, 4 pounds; meadow fescue, 3 investment of $3.20 makes a return Pounds, per acre. oe 34.50, area little over 21 per cent. Enquirer -I have mi twomereelleld on the money invested. The addition' which I would like to sow with some of complete fertilizer,. to the oats kind of seed which would make pas- ture for cows about the last of June. Is there any kied, if so what kind, alai how much per acre? Field is an orchard. Answer -For quiektsummer pas. tures f believe you- cannot- do better made- a gain of 15 bushels per aae, or $7/60 on your valuation ef oats. This would pay for 200 pounds per acre af complete fertilizer at $76. a ton. Let it be "noted, of course; that I do not recommend the use of com- than to plant a mixture of oats, wheat and common red clover. Use a bushel of wheat, Putting in' a couple of pounds of common red clover to the acre. This will seem fairly thick seeding, but it gives n good stand, which if kept pastured down, provides good pasterage. plete fertilizer costing $140 per ton for wheat or $75 for oats. I am shnplYtquoting" these figures 4o show the actual nioney rethens :from the use of the material. To corroborate the findings of Ohio I quote the returns of two,other Sta- tions, Purdue A gricultueal Experi- ment Station, Indiana, as in average of 12:yams test obtains the following Wheat -Without fertiBzere 10 bus;• tvith Acid phosphate, 15 Mese gain 5 bus.; with complete eertilizer, 19,bus., Crop Rotations. Profitable yields of field crous in the near future min be assured only by -the adoption and persistent prac- tice of auitable el'ep methods, There . are many factors, tyhich combined, gain 9 bus. tend to influence crop yields and the Corn -Without fertilizer, 37 buset cdst of production, but the prime with acid phosphate, 43 bus., gain 0 factoe. in stimulating immediate in - bus.; with complete feeti1izert63 bus., creased crop reetures and in establish - gain 16 bus. ing for the future a stability in crop The Dominion gxperimental Farms yielde is the practice of crop rotation quote in their report of the Division under mixed farming conditions. This of Chemistry, 1916, the average yields term denotes a combination of dif- mbtained :from potatoes at 6 experi- meant classes of grope' which al.° mental :farms distributed over the Do- grown in such order that the precede reinian as foleowst ''''' ing on& prepares the land for or Potatoes. otherwise aids the crop following. Bus. pemacre The etehentials of a good rotation Without plant food 1'75 Include roots or corn, grain and hay With acid 'phosphate 103 grown in the order named. The aura - With -complete fertilizer 120 lion or emcee of the rotation may be 15 tons manure per acre • 131 varied to suit particular conditions. .7% .tons manure plus eomplete Moreover, it may be advisable' where fertilizer / . . . ; .. , „ .„ 200 conditions' wareant to combine two Oirthe basis of oar figuring above a more rotations on the ono farm you can Teatlily estimate the returns Thetehave innumerable combinations as Obtained at the -Indiana $tnt atipn eerent clams' of crops which and froi the Dominion Experimentai, Prtt satisfactory when tI'Plieq 'Fntnis, ooli efievleieli show that email. eiudiciousler. Under 'arty icircumatances it is absolutely nedessary, in order te izers, propeelyt used 'are -a payingein- vestment. ,, obtain even niediurt crepe; to apply ./co, 1 melee in you, question yon - at least the principleethlreadY indi- eay that theeland giVes an abundance .cated as essentials ie all good ercm 04 steam. Recceme •emme time ethe rotations. The working: of these &emcee m wale mmeget,.. mage„ principlea may he explained by the Min•a to/Asmara/hie •reembee of OCCOMPanying praptidat illustration. live -stook, hence, .undoubtedly, 'they Such (irons as corn, -roots :and petite return a fairly large arnoenteof Mall- foes ttiluir"b"ndttlt eupybes of U0 to the soil. In addi,tion to thao, food from the soil, to stem, leaf and meads show that you grow consider- Nob groovs1, This may be most • eloyee hay, both of which things profitaby and...Practically furniehed tend to increase the kincl of plant 'by clover oe other sod ploughed down fond-nitregren �r emmonia-which eatees 'straw growth. The peobabil- ity ie that your land ia share of phos- phoric acid and that you actually ob- tain, boo ieueh etraw. If this is elie ease, the addition of eel& phosphate to the manure and the use of fertil- izers high in acid phosphate will be 00 cisceedingly paying peoposition 100 you3 dolt with the question of the use of fertilizeve alone 40 What was geld :Love. I evisloonly,to quote the results of three experiment eta. Lions where , the problem of supple - meriting .the mature with acid phos- phate has been earefully inereistigated. The imeelie obbained are as followse. Ohio Experiment litatioa. 'Covering a period .of 13 yogra the /Average increesed production from fibi1 treated with atoll .manure and hchl phosphate ovee yard manure weal -Corn; 15.27 bum; wheat, 5.18 tame hay, 1,840 pounds." Peummleania Expevimei01 fitation. iitiv the /addition o /Mid 5100 oph 0 to or by applicationa of barnyard ntan- ere. The ceeeitle snch RS wheat, oats 1 the same point: Although Mile is net' mettps•that something es wrong. i and barley require lass oe the -readily! good peactice,it May be necessary eit Nursing consists less and lese in available food and genetally do best Mmes. I the giving of drugs and more ancl folloWing hoed croPs ?or evhiell non -I Norrfial temperature . lies bemoan' more in obseetetiom reports iiiiid uee is applied or ahem leguminonsi.:18 degmee end 99 degrees -or a trifle' treatment 'guider the cloctoris direc- crepe eueli as pees or clover.' above On degrees for the rectum (Mon. Still, medicines Play their pare Sat . too, well prePared, pm- Fran ,these points rip Le, 108 is a and the nurse ahoulel lieve wisdom in 1. ducte 'satisfactory yiolds of palmate; lo•veetever rine from 103 to 106 As a: handling thent,Ateeping Mei:Meet:nits The area eown to ceroaki, seeded te high one, • High :fevers aro loss' and poisons well apart :from remedies clovers anfl grasses, vrill eupply ex- cellent hatricrops the following year or two, The, soil of the .latter turned down and numured fits the land fa corn a roots oneminore. •'''' . Such general plan' of permadure or eve,: reettioe maythe modified by (loch farrnee OS 'ill, beet suit his soil and neada,, .SeveraT combinations of MIX - ad faminimerop rot/Miens nee id' op - oration throughout; the •Experimentol 30011111 hlyeteen ie Faletern One:Wm art patine of 'whiell is ••conteirted in tho Circular Ne, D. 'Clopice; of thie er- odes: are medicabla feat on aintlieotion io the Vichl Hushomlry Division, The preen:Gee made in the work' eeeried en to data:: Itee e4to the Mine eiusiou ' that the 1ollowiefe eineratiter- ieties ere • doeirahle nudge ahnoet any in .1211xed farming rots, 011(1471'401141 seeded (lett% with ielov'ete, mem "though it be •-vieed Graaa• and, (slam acedingseetionid he heavy: increiteed crops of hamand rime failure of a catch have ittlitfit'd Peactiees• Itted eropetshould Jerm a hula proportion of ,.every retation., Jin',et', ternpt to fiont small ell'ea 'without imecimi.op woo not euceesefel. 'Weeds eould. not veadiiy lie icePt in check. ' ' Ne..0441-eheu1d be lett ilihet' More' than .tem, Years. Plet eeeordee egetv. that the eeciend erep Ahriefit alwaYS cots 01900 thee theelleat mer-Cilt arid that succeeding ceope are Verv tO IJO valve at a 1ose. „. 140rilya1'd manure should, be applied frequently in compaeativeli small cluantitics rathee then at long inter- vals it large equantitiee. •• Illotheihoed. So r &hat a time at my command, These children that): held toenight; God; gtve 100 greet, to unclexistancl, • Wisdtento guide their steps aright, That I may. be -throughout the land • .A lame) unto their 'feet for light. So .sbort A time do -small hendseling, With confidence .of babyhood; Let me noteidly dream the thing, But livethenoble peat 1 shoulel, That liencefortlYerom Su& motbeeing They shall instinctively seek good. So shoot 'a time tfor`my • embreceei ,F01'lovo,. theer, comfort, lullabies; Gad help :le hallow the brief :mace That turns to gold each sacrifice - So surely does no mother's grace .Buitcetlelr eoul's mansion in the ki. It pays better • to drain thedew le yard bau to stand the loes of calves through the mother slipping while she is araying than. Jr dialging the protIte of the flock hy the Elee all the feed 12114 ftetr. troy. to deferrable it't wloat iP1990 90 199.4 In keepine' fowle, Never In thc liftteltY 01 Poultry eulturo 4114 tobte eggs and table toile aim:nand thopr6a they,did dering 1913 -and neve: ,wase feed se hitelt Those who "put the hen in the lod- ger" leet year, erediting her with ttetY :laid (whether ,sold or used in the family), with the- tai)1ee sold, evith the market value of her ciee- Masse weee 'eel:pies:id to lean -that, dee' spite the high cost of lode the hens rounded out A Pnriti Itis PrActical to 101535 the; books-- ,a ceelebook, a ledger and A.dair book, Some prefer A 43iary instead of a dAY hoAlc. In the diary they, may record not, only the transactions, hut also the daily happeninge on the place, ..100011 ae experieneese visitors, 0001- 0(1051 triiedfer cee'es of sickness elc. The' cash book, ab its name implies, Will shoW ithe.,Itmounts Paid aucl re. ceiyeer daily. 'the ledger records running eceountri,. the amounts due and arnounte acted. To make the led- ger even.inote interestieg, noll aecount am be opened with each flock, or With each breed kept, el:owing the value of the eggetlaid, the manure the flock yielded., And the sale of the carecieses. Approximately the cost of feed far each/fleck can be given, so that iit can be :shown whether that flocic is coin - Posed . of moneyeznakers, or whether it is 'not worth keeping. Ilhis is more eomPlex than Jceeping• one set of boolcs for the grhole flock. Begin right now to adopt a Anton. It is the only way to know whether the epees are really paying or losing. We have found that cows leaving water available aft1:1 tines will yield more anilk than -where the eupply is. l'tricted. • MOTHER -WISDOM We Can Do Much to Kelp the Doctor Curti the By Helen Johnson Keyee. However good the doctor' may be and also tell him the age of your whom we call in tocare for our sick child. - children, hewill need ow: asststance in getting them well. 11'nurse, whe- ther she be a bospital graduate with O cap and kerchief or just the anxious iziother, is the agent who puts the doctorts• knowledge and experience into execution. To be valuable, she must work in 'harmony" with hien, her purpose being always the 'fulfillment of his ()rah's, not the expression of her min ideas ie these- conflict. with evliat he has directed. No matter how much she loves her child, she knows less about the little body than the physician knows, and the moment -he acts in opposition to him, that mo- ment enter an army ef dangers and 'surrounds the bed where the -deatest thing -an earth elies suffering. • To be a truly geed maze, a -woman must know: (1) the service Which the physician needs from her.'(2) how to make the patient comfortable, both before she can get the doctor and afterward. Factg, not opinions, are what a good nurse gives the doctor and those as briefly as possible. He likes best to have them written clearly on a paper, which he, can glance over quickly instead of asking questions. In hoopital practice they aro put upon O chart. • These facts concern: Temparatere, pulse, breathing, digestion, nourish- ment. Temperature is vead by means of a clinical thermometers which costs 0110 dollae or a little more. In the case of a baby or young child this is in- serted about an inch in the rectum, the end being greased with vaseline or table oil. Wibh older PeoPle it is pat in the mouth end held under the tongue -with the. lips ;closed. Most thermometees require to be kept in- posetion for one minute in orde4 to register correctly. Of couse, if they are kept in longer than this no ham is done, for they could not rise higher than the temperature of the patient. 'Xo read a thermonjeta, hold it onio level with your oyes. and face th0 the sharp angle should be toward you with Ole figures in sight. Shift it very slightltr feem side to side if necessary in ader to catch the light, •which will reveal a broad band of quicksilver. The figure at which thie hand ends is the temperature of the patient. e, Having read the temperature, re - coed it on a piece of paPer opposite to 411e holm it was taken, fer the en- feemation of the doctor. Thenhemice diets . ;above, broiled and -Xo,asted down the 'mercury till it lies a little meats, except veal and poik, well. below 'the mark between 98 .degrees cooked 'f1h, leaked, creamed and meshed potatoes, well -made beead, and light cake, Of course, these dia.t0 l'efer 'only to children whose diet in health" has other one, perhaps. Only be egreful includeci solid foods. to hold it tight fen it is sure to break!. The action of, the bowels, lelacidee ia fall. Neither cold, time, nom and skintetee symptoms of moment to exp,osure will, budge mercury, which' the physician and etiould be pet on mud be jolted beak hi order to eegia.1 mead by the nurse. 11 the tongue ter torrectly at the nextgose, This; 18 not of a clean reddish -Mink cola feet. makes it possible to lay. it *down: the d00000'45 attention male be called after it hae recorded a temperatuee, to ft. A. bad -smelling ebeeath or a and. return bo/ib lhter and tind it; at rash en 1116 inside of the cheeks At birth At one year At Iwo years At three years At seven Years At twelve years Fifteen years and afterekbout 70 You have seen a doctor lay his ear on a child's chest and lieten to its breatheng. He alone really under- stands the story -which he hears, for certain, disea•ses malce the breathina more rapid. while others -retard it. When breaths become so few as ten to a minute, however, there is cause for grave alarm; and deep, sighing breathe followed by long pauses indi- cate trouble. These are the rates of breathing during health, at different ages Per minute 85 27 Per minute 130-150 -• 11.0-130 90-115 80-110 70- 00 70- gee At birth At one year At two years 25 ,At six years 22 , At twelve years and after20 The doctor will want to know the amount and the kind Of nourishment taken, When it was given and whether it wa.s enjoyedi Moreover, a physi- cian oetei forgets how little people know of medical or nursing terms and will eay just as he is leaving the room: "Oh keep the Child on 4 liquid diet," or. "She's ready 'for convales- pent diet now." And the mother, struggling to do the right thing, yet misunderstands what these expres- sions mean and feeds her child im- properly. Therefore, the eluese should learn what is included in these 11005types of mei. • Lemid diet is usually given at two- hOur intervals and is based upon milk, includin broths with milk or chieken broth, cocoa, beef juice' oyster broth where the oysters can be had fresh, and eggs beaten ut in milk. Not more than. halt a cutful is given to O child' at one time. • Light diet includes liquid diet end addi to it, soft-boiled, poached and aceambled eggs, granum or farina .porridge, farina, mush, cream of vege- table eoups, cream oe dry toast, eus- tards, home-made ice 'cream'and jel- lies or very light puddings, Only two - -of tha'articles'should be gamed et a time and there may be 'five meals a day. Convalescents' diet adds to the two Your Mind On ft. .... etraetieltitetettleitiltitteitottett-yetetteletti'itleetteettelitee Those who Mayo made their tve7 O the woeld (iind this dime not plea 1 orely the success rests on 11 onaary appramale) those who utto SARI "TIM: one til!ug do" and iavte tided in eonformity with, that 1115113'Feed. They have 1101.allowed seatteriug aim and et sliver4Y Me. ocamation to diffuse find dilute enev. I fey, They have acemieed the Vicflity of petting' emir enincle 00 coerneletelY 40 the. 0)1131101 bend that they are oblivious to distracting begeossions extrtneets ImPartunities. They do not fly off at a taegent feoen their, work for a sliert recess or a long VA.! eathin when *1 worm breath of epring stitie from the *„eodland. They do not yield to that "vggrant. gypsy madnesti hi the bloo4---though it would be much more fUn to go than to,rerriein," A greatin captaof buzinese hoe a way': of talking. just to you 'when you meet him, 'He is not looking over your shoulder to the next in the long line of appeintees for an interview. He seems to. hwye no thought but for your presence ‘and this ino4nent. Tau leave him', flatter'ed by that deference. It only occurs to you when the door has Cleeed behind you that somehow the great men- you came to see got through the enterview end dieinissed yen -with celerity equaling the court- und.,09, degrees -which indicateS nor- Thae is no way 00 get 10 down except by a quick; sheep jerk of th0. hand, bionght foreibly against the Maiming and less:persistent. m chil- dren than in adults. The pelse can: be' fee most easily two Melee below' (Inc bega of the theneb. Each pulse eecorde the filling of blood -vessels by. a bate of the heart. The pulse ha taken by hold- ing a Watch in the and counting Ole remitter of pulse becies ie anint. ote, Their qualitY, :Leo, As A nutter of impotence; they mayebe ireegular Wi5110U5 Ca110111jr witiciety, but te. they feel/hard and Light, troubleis cated, The normal nonther of. heats to a minute varies at different ages, na Die following tnhle shoWs. Give Lino (lector the connt eaid the quelity, whiell will drop from 1'0)100)) and all Well-eorked arid well -labeled, leresv•ee give a medicine without look - lug ,a1; thetlabel, Poultices are riot used 0 great dee 9111 0011 found to be posilivetly harm- ful in zoine 00505 where they 'were tieed formerly, •Theie place ha e •beeit taken by hot fornentetione; Mustarel fermentation:1 Mite taken the plaao mostard plastore wide -eve made by addiug n tebleepoodul ext dry emstard to a pint of hot, hut' nob ,beiling, water. Plitneed firinentations Are made by airing into boiling water enough tiagseed to bring it lo A thichnefis • That is becausethe' man 41 large eat poising affairs ha a learned to crowd .much into a. narrow .space, even as„a pre.cticed traveler paelcs trunk. He Itriows bow to "fill the unforgiving minute with sixty sec- onds' worth of dietance run." Ile sAves time, breath, strength, foot pounds of energy, vital electricity. He relaxes when he can -though he may not require a book or a doctor to tell him how to do it. Putting one's mind on a matter is more than givAng one's hand to it, more than going through the mo- tions. The laborer is not 'worthy of a better hire who does not bring thinking .biarin to his task. The old, old saying runs that there 13 -plenty of room at the top -merely because the crowds clown there at the bottom are content to go plugging and petti- fogging along in the same day -after - day, dead -and -alive routine of Ole un - illumined drudgery. Those who mount the ladder from the lower rams are those who keep their wits about them for use upon the instant; those who can without notice mobilize their in- tellectual powers;..those who do not spend so long, a time adjusting_ their thinking -caps' that the. occasion has whizzed past while they still ,con- fusedly debated. The pnites after the dint and hest of life's race go to those who' bring to their walc a radioactive intelli- gence, an alert perceptien, dulled by no selfish indulgence, impaired by no deleterious habit. TONEUP, THE BLOOD HooWs ifersaparlila, 10 98r1n11 Tonle. Mt:dieing, le Neeeeeerry. Ever,Yhodyie troubled. 0 tide 4494 44503 wElt Tres of vitality, failfuo of APPethei .that tired feeling, or -with turna, (Lilt headaches, iudi. kestiou and other stomach troubles,' or with pimj,les And other eruptimot ol4. the face and body. The reaf.fou 35 that the br094 18 And tmvoY. orished. 1100d'fl Sarsaparilla relleveb all 'these aliments. Ask your (ingest for this ufsfliaine and got it today. It is the old reliable medicine that lies stood 1110 t0St ,e90 booty 704041:: - flea makes pure, rich blood -that strengthens every organ And builde up the whole systole. It is 'the all' the-yea-re:1nd blood -purifier lind 'health -given' .1‘,Tothing else acts.like it, for nollfag else is lik� it; tio be sure to get Hood's, They shut in tbe problem, they shut out the; fretful turmoil in order to consider and solve it. They are soTdilers-immune to shell-shockIp the midst of uproar they can deliberate calmly to a sage conclusion. Iinpul- sive beillianey may be R. little ,scorn- ful of their :whammies and tber etownesse but when they have chine there 10 nothing to -undo. There is no damage to repahe There ie no Mit motion to make up, That is bemuse She executant hand was directed by an infoimapt and not a dormant mind. Faith. We may not know what eorce come pets, : And •guides this earthly sphere, We may not learn its laws sublime, We see but darkly here. We-eannot giasp the infinite, Nor reach beyond the bar, But tee believe a Hand Divine Lights yonder gleaming star. --e---c.• -- It happWenheedetinttElBnegtnnadedWhere ene of the crack regiments of horsemen were drilling. One very wild liorse made a dash across the field in spite of all his rider could do. Instructor -Where are yob goin'? Rider ---I don't know; sir, but the horse belongs•in Canada. "Ae long as you don't love em- body much, your character es like a garden in winter, one virtue is under O glais shade, and another is covered over with straw, and all of them are dreadfully pinched mut. 'Sickly. Then love comes by and it is summer and your garden rejoices and blossoms like the rose, without year bothering about it at all." -Ellen Thorneyeroft • Fewl el. GOOD HEALTH QUESTION -BOX By Andrew Pi. Ourrier, M.D. Dr. 'Currier velll answer an signedietters pertaining to Health; if your question ls oj general inteliest it will be answered through these columns; if not, it will be answered personally If stamped, addressed envelope is en- closed. 00. Currier will net prescribe for Individual cases or make diagnosis. Address Or. Andrew F. Currier, care of Wilson Publishing Co„ 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Diphtheria. - ' Diphtheria is an acute infectious disease, caused by a germ which doc- tors call the Klebs-Loefflee bacilus. The incubation period is four days. The sae sign of diphtheria is a dirty yellow 'or gray patch, or membrane which forms on the tonsils and In the throat, sometimes in the nose. This membrane. does not appear at first, however, •being preceded for 5150 Or three days by a dull red color hi the throat, painful swallowing; seeelling of the glands in the neck, chilly and feverish sens-ations, and nausea, The breath becomes Offensive, the appetite is lost, the heart beats rapidly anti there are 'table to be complications affecting the -kidneys, the lungs and Ole nervous system. ,The diphtheria germ grows on the walls of the mouth and upper air passages; and 'there they form the poison (the toxin), whioli is absorbed by the way of the lymph land bloctcl ohannels, thus producing the serions constitutional symptoins Mentioned. The germs pass from perm.; to per- son hy direct contact, of infect:id hands ,or lips; also, in coughing or even speaking vigorously, small par- ticles of moisture or spit Or even fragni,ents 61 the viru1en0'falemlne111- brume (.all gefih-soaked) -.are dils- charged,by the patient to the great jeoptirdm of other people. If them is en epic-len:de' ie the neighliothdoce or a case .in tito family oe he the house, be aln0 toihave and to use only your MVP glass, cups, spoons, towels, handkerchiefs and so on; and exacise unusual eleenliness -especially as to the hond ancl to lehjects placed in the Mouths You am be immunized against diphtheria, eo that -you will not "catch" it, by submitting to prompt injection of diphtheria antitoxin -that is, with- in twenty-fourt'bours of eXpoeure 'to Ole lefection. This your data or *your health board will do for you. Never neglect a Sore throat, 'When there ere.-: eases about, take 110 cinemas, Have a doctor take a ail - time from your throat; by this mum, it most cases, he can tell whether you are coming down with diphtheria or not. Questions and Answers. Miss S. K. -I have severe cramps in my limbs; sometimes they lest for a long time, and if they -aro in both limbs at the eanie time; they cause extreme agony. What is the cause of this? I have also some heart trouble. Answer -Comps in the leg are clue to muscular exertion, alcoholism, liver ailment, gout, diabetes or hysteria. Neuritis may in your ease be a cause. Your letter gives 0111 110 clue to which of these elements your erampe may be due. Mrs. M. N. -Can an injury or les- ion in the body or any of the orgate be located end its nature determined by an X -Ray examination? Aeswer-in most cases, yes. 'Clinton News -Rea CLINTON, ONTARIO. .Terms of subscription -$1.50 per year, . ' in advance to Canadian addresses; $2.00.- to the 11,8. oe other foreign 'cotintriba. No tater diseontineed • until all arrears :are paid unless at thee option ofthe publisher. The date to which ;every subscription is paid is deeoted on the label, Advatieing' rates-e•Traneient Mime. Use:no:Its, 10 cents per 'nonpareil line for first ins'ertion and 5 cents per 11110 Toe each: subsequent inser- tion, • Small advertieements not to exceed one inch, such as "Lost," "Strayed," or "Stolen," eta, insert- ed once for 35 cents, and each subse. quent insertion 10 cents, Cormeunications intended fee publieci- Um' must, es a guarantee cif good faith, bo accompenied by the name of the writa, ' G. E. HALL, Id. R. CLAIM, Proprietor. 2diter. eX",r iffin - There isn't a membet of tho family need suffer tenni iudigeetfon, sick headaches, hilioushep,f evinentecl citomaelmetc., 13 inc ot She will tele Chertherlain's Stienaith ad nLiver:Tablets.' They 01t.suse the etoteach Mut howelo and etimulato the liver to heal thy a6liVity and tenti up.the , whole syStein! Take Yee et night anchyOu 're RIGHT In the Morning. • 5)1 ank:ds!r, .25c, or 1,yni f.•otz Chrtmtoliiti 3*3odk3e6 Compatiy, Toreeto, 10 03 el