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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1914-02-19, Page 6Thursday, 'February 19th, '1.914. TP1 : Cl. iNTON NRW RBA' cage' seuremenseessememir +++4+++++++4+++++++++++++4++++++++++++++++++i..•••++ e+++++++++++++++4+++++++++•••....••••..0..•e•.••.•••++++++++++++++++++++++++++ •+4+++444++++++++++++4++++ 0••004.0.00•••0•••i30:•800f • • • 444,+++♦4.4+•+++4++a'r++++00*0.000**•0.410•®.40*p 4.++++++++++++4++++.+ AFYER SICKNESS OR OPERATIO +++4,s••••••••••••••••••••• ti.•• • S 4 + 4 •..+.••.va••e•.4.0..4•.0••••.••s••M.•4...r•.4.4..440+++.++++++++++4+4++...++.4 It is a pathetic mistake to accept drugs or alco- holic mixtures when nature craves nourishment to repair the wasted body and restore the vigor of health. For forty years the best phy- sicians have relied on thewhole- some predigested nourishment in Scott's Emnlsionwhichistotally free from alcohol or opiates. Scott's Emulsion sharpens the appetite—renews blood- nourishes nerves—strengthens bones and restores the courage of health to make life bright. Scott's Emulsion sets in action the very forces that promote health; it is pure, rich strength. 13 -so --- - Caktd tickler in Cev,3. ('nlcrtl udder it, also euatnlun- ly veiled gar- ' ,.1 vv hi,•h there erre tNee kink - out. n..au each„ions, f h.' u; h. er infectious. It is ,frequent tTui:l ., especially lu cold-\rt'.rther,ort. n. dm, to •'entehin;e (•010” in the L.1 :,,. The Symptotrs -usually appear soon all", r calving. an many (tulip ietii a•its u."I t 11 unsiltt. some- rostiltingtui11(1(111(1 (punter. hie e eons are sir high priri-d it is Certainly pout erunune; 111 ill:erupt home treatment 111 severe en,es. Il' your veterinarian treats the muse 11.1 tan give You the hrue1t or a person:It examination. If n veterinnriul is'nut available the general treatment Is to give a pnrgtitive of elwnrl1 salts niel bailie the udder (Pith Ivarnt wader to which have been nailed scrawl 1,lhir- epoonftlls of sodium by pnsnlpbite, Dry completed,, and rah h7 rnrbclnted he'd or ointment. 111 Ilk frequently.—hausus Fn101er. BUSINESS AND 1SHORTHAND Subjects taught by expert instructors at the >s ,j/P/I/Weier, Y. hi: C. A. BLDG., LONDON. ONT. Students assisted to positions: College in session from Sept. 2nd, Catalogue free. Enter any time. J.W. Westervelt J. W. Westervelt, Jr. Principal CharteredAcoi Accountant cD Cc,3 UM, ;diet nessCol lege Stratford, Ont. Canada's best practical train- ing sohool.'jh!Three departments Commercial, Shorthand and Telegraphy. Courses. are thorough and prac- tical. Individual instruction is given by a strong experienced state. Our graduates succeei Students may enter at any time: Get our free catrlogue and see what we can do for you. D. A. McLachlan, Principal Ilea4 arIers V d FOR Walking; and Riling OlaVer plows LE. C. Gasoline Engines McC4tmiek Machinery Pumps and Windmills. ALL ffiNDS OP REPAIRS ANI) EXPERTING. CALL ON ..01,0111011001. Mi1rer 11tf1 Corner of P;,inces and Albert �• streets. 00000000000000000000000000 • T1?jtst�1B (iI • Oftenmeans so much. .It has • • ' • meant success to thousands of • f' young people who wrote . for • 0 our catalogue as the first step, eo'toward a good sadaried position. o is Take the step to.day. Address 0 ▪ Ventral Business ,(lollege, 305 • 'Yonge Street, Toronto. ea a W, H. SHAW A • President 0 • 0 • eseeetesoees•eeriessseseoos arm ane Garden HOW TO BUILD' HOTBEDS. The Sunken Type Best For Raising Early Plants From Seed. Of the several' types of hotbeds in. general' use the sunken or pit type is, all things considered, the nest for the ' raising of early plants firm seed, This style of bed is consirueted by excavat- ing a pit six feet wide and two und one-half feet deep and as long as uee- essury to accommodate the number of 3 by 0 root sash it is desired to use. '117e sides of the pit are boarded up with lough lumber naii'ed to posts whioh may be placed three feet or more apart, If some degree of perma- nency is desired good material will need to be used. Chestnut lumber is • very Serviceable and, reasonably cheap; spruce conies next iu point of durabili- ty and cheapness. The sides of the pit should be raised above the surface 'of the ground twenty inches at the back 1111(1 twelve 11101105 in front. This " will provide ample pitch to the sash for shedding rain and also be of suffi- cient angle for good cemstructiou of the sun's rays and heat. Cood sash should be used. The location of the hotbed should be chosen where the natural drainage is good and, if possible. where there is a good windbreak at the north side. If a suitable sheltered spot is not availa hie then a tight board fence six feet high and extending several feet be- yond each end of the hotbed should be ITOTBEES IN CONSTROGT1ON. erected to break oft; the cold north winds. Without such u windbreak It will be almost impossible to raise early plants successfully 111 the hotbed. The windbreak should be about Ove feet. away from the north side of the frame. The heating material for the hotbed should be horse manure fresh from the stable, to which should be added, when accessible, one-half its bulk of forest leaves. if these are not available straw or hay may be used, The manure and 7added material is to be thoroughly mixed and l'ormed into a conical heap to undergo fermentation. In the for, :nation of this lea I it should be trod- den down (u successive layers of a foot in depth until the heap is four feet or more in height. The base of the heap should be of sufficient diame. ter toinsure good fermentetiou in the severest winter weather. All the ma- terial used for heating should be well dainpened before putting it in the pile or the fermentntiou will not be evenly distributed. Care must be token that no frozen material is put In the heap or fermentation will be slow nnd'may greatly interfere with the operator's plans of an early sowing of seed, -Ru- ral New Yorker. Celery Storage. Hotbeds and cold frames are quite satisfactory for storing celery. They mayeither be dugout deeper or have p another set of boards on top to give the required height. The plants are set in the frame close together and then covered with boards hipped to shed rain. In very cold localities such framesare covered with sash. over Which are mats covered' with boards. Ventilation , must be given on warm days by blocking up the sash. Celery is also stored satisfactorily in trenches, with the boards used in blanching, nail- ed in V shape and placed over the top. If warm weather follows ,the troughs are blocked up to admit air. 'When frost comes a light furrow is thrown up along the boards nod lIltel mauule is thrown over them, but this trench plan is usually adopted when the crop is to be sold early in the winter. Tops of celery should alwny8 be dry when it is stored, and sono -soil is lifted with must before the plants, It est he stored bcf hard freezing., "GOING TO LAW." When a written contract is made, do not allow the other party to carry' 11 away. Have it made iu duplicate, se that each party may keep ft dopy. A, rural carrier is required to travel his route In` its entirety each day on which service 15 to be performed un- less it is absolutely impossible for hien to do so because of extraordinary weather or road conditions. Complaints of trregnhtribies in .the rural mail serv- ice when submitted to the .postofflee bnreau with alt the facts in the case will receive careful consideration. 1. Result of Recent Floods in New Jersey Showing some of the cottages at a popular summer resort in NewJerfsey swept from their 'founda- tions by the tremendous floods recently in that slate. t•tmittrn (Ir to too 1i. ell Ir is 11l'•ll u'V FIGHTING HOG CHOLERA. Preventive Treatment With Serum Has Proved Successful. The university farm of Minnesota university has published a bulletin on hog cholera and Ile preventive treat- ment, from which the following 18 gleaned: Hog cholera has been recognized as a specific contagious disease of swine for about 100 years. The first authen- ticated outbreak iu this country occur- red in 1833, when large numbers of hogs in Ohio died from a disease which answers the description of hog cholera as we now know it. This highly contagiousious disease has s caused the loss 0P millions of d01laC8 �� thannually. It has been estimated that le family remedy for coughs and Colds, the losses during 1012 reached $50,000,- Small dose. Small bottle. Beat singe 1870. 000. One state alone is said to .have sustained a loss or $$10,000,000 from Iteaso,ns For 1i4'('ping this dread disease in 1912. Books on the Farm.It bas been recently discovered that well hogs may be treated (vaccinated) diet h, (hd re. gmin he initudnew' 1 into his system simultaneously with the serum, which protects the hog Duel i1e rhult rn gorut Iiiwrtod, This iv deco 911311od by the luirodnetiou into the 111)55 body of 11 small enema of virus. Virus Is the gcl'nl Inden blood obtained from It hog Sick -cvlth (-Indere. 1t is injected at the seine time will the scram, butwith a sep- arate syringe, Ay thls method the hog- is o>gis en•lbletl 10 develop enough protec- tive substances of its own to render it permanently immune. This is known as the double or "serum virus" method of treatment. with hog cholera serum so that they will not take the disease if exposed later. Such 'treatment Is called immu- nization. This method of treatment has passed the experimental stage and Photo by University of Minnesota.. TREATING A 1300 9011 CHOLERA, is now on a practical working basis. There are several different methods. for immunizing bogs or making them Immune to cholera. Immunization consists in bringing about the presence of what are called immune bodies In the blood. They enable the animal to resist such cholera germs as enter the system. These immune bodies are. present in the blood of hogs that have recovered from cholera. Such animals are sometimes called "immunes." A hog that has been treated with bog cholera serum without exposure to cholera at the same time does not form any :protective substances or im- mune bodies of its own. It is render- ed immune for a short time (three weeks.to two months), due to the press ence of the protective substances in- jected. Such treatment is known as the single or "serum only" method: When it is desired to make a hog u tl immu 1 at d th re Is no 0••••0 Farming is a business jus: as much as banking or running a de- pahtlnental store, and 'the first and probably most important step in getting farming on such a basis is the keeping of farm accounts, It is the only way to know w,heth er the farm is being run at a good profit or at an actual loss. It enables one totrace the profit or loss to certain parts of the busi- ness. For example, the expenses may be too high, the live stock may not be paying for their keep and a certain crop may be grown' at a loss while another makes a profit, so' the two balance. In other words, both leakage and profit are located. .I1 tends towards ecomony by keeping the expense accountcon- t'iilually in view. It enables the farmer to elituin- ate the source of loss by aband- oning orimproving the branches that do .not pay and directing his whole energy into branches•which show the gileatest profit. It is a mem.oa'andum and a ref- erence as to dealings and trans- actions which is handy and of con- siderable information. The keeping of accounts on the fat+m which'are really valuable is no easy task, owing tto the dif- der'ent operatio:16 being more or less woven together. :The prob- lem is to arrange a ,system that will give all that is necessary at the end. of the ycag; The first essential is an inventory, It con- sists simply of a statement show- ing the value of land, buildings, live stock, live stock productions or any other property. It .should be made at the same time each year and is necessary in determin- ing the actual profit of loss. Some prefer taking stock January first, others prefer the spring when the barns are empty. In making the inventory it is better to classify iil1opertese under di&!ienent head- ings, such as real estate, including land and all permanent improve mental. Live stock, keep the dif- fetlent classes, such as horses, cat- tle anduigs, inse:parate lists. s; feed �p r and:'tool Farm tLa: Nitre • and 'supplies, y(bills i�cetvable, bills payable and cash. 13y -watch- ing local sales the farmer will be able to come very close to actual values', for care must be taken net to place values too high. In the. case of machinery etc., we must al- low for depreciation. in value. We do not think 10 per cent. too much to allow for this. There is more or less'. depreciation on all parte of the farm, although on a well-man- aged farm the repairs''should off- set the wear and tear, and at the put seng time we find that land • xoq atdwms.lo; a7vaa 09 peas ao—siainaf aupo)payil Bq zn.coj pgiib'n -w V1414 rn PI°S a a nu *Soustewetsnssuaulsu aro p ssauidde Haueddt -sip snalds 54o1 pun sseusnonaais •epA oq oils Jo uotsau u on e o uoi u mato e u u ails .8urasstt9aa ! p poem q7 J .4 I q9 umsezqunbe else ui cisdieg sl 3I .ra311 3o u.tne age„ eaueiaadxe 01 enogs gas oqm (mums 2O beim e se sau9S Slam vane, am pepuamumees ueeq sus °P9°g'l000m..enua •t.i a,0e, e13i •Jif ,snip 'PV•erg aryu aaeed 8001 r uolgtpo poata -a-.,puoa'oo-anstnpv 1 ear a aura P w s uowuto0 a,aoaalg aQ ui pauivtuoa tat aOUaIOSno! -pout ui lseas1049. I113cl{U3S . S690:1 71 6.10- '114°d OW'1ul°d Suluma sig0 esedtet103 pfO1 noS .03139 LIMO ancec se,g '412u6aes pun ~dunes tins ,zati spoeu mama 73 :Iowa 01214 n S! 11 •poieed' [testaa..0 55 sassy` 'anew etreesodtu1 112 seo2sepun iusiunale see uognt mg samtu08& iiaene (11 sure 13 .500100 ;,I'iltuIt i.J DIE < ii f ®r O ,�®® :�.�x. �aso�m.®® aim*, e.4 o PaPagilcH 64PueilSuiapt r values are advancing. In the cash account accura,terec- cord should bekspt of all receipts' and expenditures during the year. One of the simplest an,ethods of keeping a cash account is to exited receipts on one page and the ex- penditures on another. i This will give all the accounts fotl'the year, but to be of more value they should be classified, ,or entered un- der respective beads to a ledger. The main 'Items which constitute farm receipts' consists of money re- ceived for crops, live stock, live stock 'products, labor for others and miscellaneous Reuses • It will be net esmrd eoltu3elp,h seen' to account for each class Of live stock and should include the sotek bought and sold, expenditure for feed and pasture grown on the ;farm, and also the labor expended in caring for the 'stock. In that way wa know exactly what line of live stock was making the best returns. With the crops it is hard- er. One way which has worked out satisifactorily is to have a month- ly sheet, on it would be received the time taken incultivating the erop by both man and horse, rent, seed, threshing bills, etc., to bo credited to each individual crop. In this way w.e would determine which was the most profitable. The val- ue of Ifaitm accounts will depend entirely on the use to which they are put. Every farmer should start some system, and When 11x+ does this hti begins to study his ,busi- ness' 'the sooner he sees ways in which to stop leeks' and increase farm crops. COU : h Almost All Night `eCr With That ®r+ Ti;., ling Sensation i the Threat. A bad cough, accompanied by that distressing, tickling sensation 7a the throat is most aggravating. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup 1:3015 the mucous surfaces, relieves oppression and tightness of the chest, renl.;ves accumulated mucous or 91110301, (mites even the most obstinate and distressing coughs, securing sleep and rest at night, not only to the -sufferer, but to others whose rest would otherwise be broken. Mrs. Duel Marshall, Basswood Ridge, N.B., writes:—" Jost a few lines to let you know what Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup did for Inc. I took a severe cold, coughed almost all night with that dry, tickling sensation in my throat. The first bottle (lid me so much good, I thought I would try a second one, which c in a corn fete n • resulted e tos p I am pleased ts cure. I can strongly recommend it .to any one suffering from a cough or any throat irritation." • The price of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is 25e, a bottle; the large family size, 50c,, It is put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark. and is manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co.. Limited. Toronto, Ont. PROPAGATING SHRUBS. Garden Work Is Never Over—It 1s a Continuous Performance. When the late flowers have been cut down by the frosts it might be pre- sumed that the time for garden activi- ties is, over. But as a fact, garden vork is never over. It. is one continu- ous performance that anticipates sea - Sons by months, and.to this early prep- aration is ane the success or our sum - fuer gardeus When the tulips are put, into the wetted the svintei' is marching along fast, but there is work to be done just at this time which will bear fruit tbe.next simmer. Just before the ground freezes laird ('over up a piece with leaves or litter, or tinyfling that will keep out.'tiio frost, for it is in this ground 1 lint 11117 of the stirnbs for which you nuty have n fatigy are to be proptiented. Do you want hydrangeas or weight or privet or (dogwood or forsythia? If vnu care for niece now_ is emir (•lanae 44 .'66 ,ese..ase.rsar. aa,00Nsi...Earraa, Your Oven Gains PURIT by Our ' Oven Test Your oven becomes a certain producer of more bread and better bread. We can promise that. For from each :shipment of wheat delivered at Ow' milts we take a ten pound sample. We grind it into flour. We bake the flour into bread. If this bread is high it quality and large in quantity, we use the shipment. Other- wise we sell it. There is no guess -work ilboui• our prof (lige , 11 01'0 bread and better bread from :dot_ bearing this name. "More a1read and Better Bread" and ®� "Better Pastry -.too" 525 Sold by Gunn -Langlois, Clinton to get a great many for almost nothing. With a sharp knife make as many cut- tings as Son want plants and throw in 20 per cent for good measure. Bury these cuttings all but; two inches and by spring they will be young plants ready to plant out. This is what is called "sweating," or making little sticks into large bushes under the snow. The question of getting stock is sim- ple. No one would refuse you permis- - sion to take a few sticks off their hy- drangeas or other shrubs in the middle of the winter. Stock is possible if one has a sharp knife. The handiest and most satisfactory way to proceed is as follows: 'Make a trench about four- teen inches deep, and long enough to accommodate all the cuttings you make. Make the cuttings ,a little long- er than the trench is deep and put them In the trench either singly or In bundles, and pack the earth hard about them. Cover well with enough leaves to keep out the frost. When the frost has gone out of• the ground throw back the blanket from your cuttings and take them out. On the ends of fully 80 per cent of all you put in the ground will be found swol• len rings, and from these will start the roots that are to make plants of the sticks. Now separate the cuttings and plant them In their proper -locations, and it will not be long before you have the pleasure of seeing leaves sprout. This is profitable winter work, making possible a stock of choice things for which there is always use about a house.—Country Gentleman. A HOMEMADE STERILIZER. One For Canning Purposes Can Be Easily Made at Home. In all methods or canning some form of sterilizer will be found very con- venient. To be :ableo t do will the tidings she already has on hand is an important item to the housewife, Al- most every housewife has a tin clothes boiler, and this can be easily converted 1011 CLOTHES B0001(11 CONVERTED INTO A STER-LIZI(B. into a convenient sterilizing vitt. The only things neeeesta•y are a tight tit - ting cover and it false bottom. The false bottom is 'absolutely neces- sary in order to prevent the jars from sculling to contact with the button or 11(0 sterilizttlg var.. M1118111=; teem to" break during the boiling. Icor this purpose an ordinary No. 1(3 wire net- ting of half inch n1es11. which is cut to fit the bottom of the boiler, can be used. If the netting is not available thin pieces of wooed or almost any - Whig 'of this kind will answer the pur- pose. A paiteut open door steam cook- er Is even more eo1reuient than a elothea holier. 11' neither of these is ii:ullhle a deep sa11eeentl or bucket tightly covered will rulstver the pur- pose. 0 14 -1 -I -1 -I -r -I -I -e -I -1 -1 -I -I -1 -1 -e -I -d -I -1 -le ,}} STORING VEGETABLES. { 4- Store cuions in - a loft rather X than in a cellar. In the latter J. they will sprout, to their injury. ... A few parsnips for -winter use T may he lifted and stored in sand 1....in the a, but as freezing : sweetens them itis best to leave many of theta outdoors for later ,,; 1150. Store potatoes in bins one •1• foot or eighteen inches deep, raised somewhat from the floor. �. Do not bruise or they. will be likely to rot. Roots in the •i• nature of salsify and horseradish ... freezing does not hurt, so the main lot may stay out where grown, but some should be dug • and put in earth in the cellar for •• whiter use. A few heads of cab- : bage may kept, heads down, in a barrel in the cellar. • For Artificial Hatching and Raising Chickens we have Prairie Stale incubators AND Universal !lovers A great saving on the old way of hatching with hens. Call and see our display of INCUIBATORS in Four Sizes For laying hens, we have Oyster Shell, Crystal Grit Beef Scraps, Etc. FAT HENS WANTED Live hens over 5 pounds Live hens over 4 pounds A full line of (:rain, Flour and Feed always on hand.. — Limited ' ��e-�GaoIl laD lois Co. L The up-to-date Firm. Clinton Phone 190. N. W. TREWARTHA, W. JEN1KINS Humanity Finds H . � , ,inds thatreliefmustbefound for the illswhich may come any day, -else suffering is prolonged and thereis dangerthatgraver trouble will follow. Most serious sicknesses start in disor- ders of the organs of digestion and elimination. Thebestcor- rective and preventive, in such eases, is acknowledged to be 0 PILLS This standard home remedy tones the stomach, stimu- lates the sluggish liver, regulates the inactive bowels. Taken whenever there is need, Beecham's Pills will spare you hours of suffering and so improve your general health and strength that you can better resist disease. Tested by time, Beeeham's 'Pills have proved safe," certain, prompt, convenient and that they `Health Always Lead . t® Better Prepared only by Thomas Beecham, St., Helene,. Lancashire, Bnilland,: .. Sold everywhere in. Canada and U. S. Amorion. In boxes, 25 cents.