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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-07-18, Page 6• "f• el - .7 ••••• , DR: P. FORSTER' Eye, Ear, Nine and Tiroitt Griduath in Medicine, Ukatersitr ot Toronto. Late Assistant New York-Ophthal• e mei and Aural Institute, Moorefield/s ye and mid Golden *Mare Throat Hei iditals, „London, Eng. At the Queen's - Hotel, Seafortit, third Wednesday in each month frem 10- alit to:2 pan. SS Waterloo Street, South, Stratford. Phone 267 Stratford: LEGAL IC S. HAYS. Barrister, Soliciton Conveyancer and tsiotary Public. Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank Office in rear of the Do - radon Bank, Seaforth. Money to loan. J. M. BEST , Barrister, Solicitor, Convey/tuber and Notary Public. Office upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Main Street, Seaforth, PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND.. COOKtl. Barristers, Solicitors. Notaries Pub- lic, etc. Money to lend. In Seaford] t on Monday of each 'week. Office in- ., Icidd Block.- W. Proudfoot, KC., J. L. Rilloran, H. J. D. Cooke. r VETERINARY HARBURN, V. S. Honor greduate of ()aerie Veterin- ary College, ancl honorary -member of the Medical A.ssociation af the Ontario Veterinary -College. Treats diseases of all domestic animalt by the most mod- ern /principles. '1 -Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. Office opposite Pick's Hotel, Main Street. Seaford'. MI' orders left at the hotel vtill ceive prompt attention. Ni calls teceived at the office JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistridja specialty. Office and residence on Galen& street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. • MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatic Physician of Goderich. Specialist in Wornen's and Children's diseases, reheumatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose and throat. Cumulation free. 'Office above Umbaek's Drug store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays; 8 a.m. till 1 p.m church. •••• . . , througx•caterPillazkor slug.attaCk;-or "But eed deetror 14.7 greet... flatten -Mrs. Robert Lei Merrelli.. elected. through injuriefs ra.epely.ed daring bee- because itlis,,mitiled •hn a few- Peoltie vice president of the American 'Auto- int.or cultta'ations, It softene or rote , -association, is the first !woman the if 'p'etiolgfi ef. their base,..caue VToperly Rtidded Buildings Alone - the n ' story of the organ zatio to. . ,ing them to fall. oyer, and spreads bold Such an office.. slowly, in dry wea,ther, rapidly in ivet, • 1 Are Safe; • The New York legislature 'without vreathiS, M. through. the tisane- of 'the- • a clissenting vote, ratified the federal • root, inaucing a, brown -colored soft, t ;. suffrage amendment rot wi h strongor. Ri'xis ,Mof ' liti - linstidleat-bx Fanetett6 wimlan su . . ° . ' t .9d ' • ''''''" The National City bank in NEW/ In carrot the, disettee enters and ' Himself EntetentlYtand'CliedIPIY— York, which four years ago had leisi develops in much the flame way as Alumitiunt or Copper . Motorist. ' Milan thirty-five woman employees, described for the turnip'. It is more Should Be Used -:–Be *ire Rods e new has over '1,200 on its payroll.' apt to spread rapidly- through a crop • The demand for household.assiatants hat Is thickly SoWn and net well h d ' rodUced' by, Are,Well Grounded. (Contributed by Stntario -Deportment ot Agriculture. Toronto.) •.. CCOMPANTING the heated: A _ summer days are the hum- erous thunderstornis iwhich infest the temperate regions nf our, continent, and it is then we need. the proper answer tolhe ques- tion of practicability of lightning rods„ Contemporaneous with this usually come the lightning rod agents and again a knowledge of the sub-- . ject is necessary. To answer the ;question we can do no better than ,tely on the statistics of insurance . comPaniee. Reports from these in ` 1913 show that 26. per cent. of their •risks were on rodded buildbags. The • total number of Claims paid were. 193, whieh amounted to $40,904.53; of these eight were rodded and da,m- age done only ;57.64. If the rods were no geed then 26 per cent. of strokes shaiuld have been on rodded _ buildings, -rr, roughly, 50 strokes. C. J. W. HARN*... M.D'.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Oet., Specialist, Surgery and Gehlottfrin- a.ry diseases of men and en. DR. J. W. PECK Giaduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Cin - ell of Canada: Post -Graduate Member of Resident 'Medical staff of General • Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; liriffice. • doves east of Post Office. Phone 56, Rensall, Ontario. In that y ar • the insurance cern.- patties figured an efficiency of 99.5 per cent. In Ipwa the efficiency runs. • 98.7 per cent. and in Michigan, where ' 'the rodding is inspected the efficiency') is 99.9 per cent. From. these we are forced to agree that lightning rods are a protection, and we must now consider where and how to rod. During ttA -year 1900 in U. S. A. the number of persons killed by lightning was 713, of which 291 were Ldfled in the open, 158 in houses, 57 un -der tree, and 56 in barns, of the remainder the circumetances were Dr. F. 3. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for *the diounty of Huron. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY unknown. eltrom this it appears that it is more dangerous in the open than anywhere else. • The reason of this proba,bly is that the house, tree, etc., act as eonductors and carry the eliarge direetly to the ground with- out harming the occupants. Of those killed in the open the most were raised above their surroundings, on horse -back, a load a hay er an 'agri- cultural implement. In ehleswig- Holstein, for the years 104 to 180 summery reports show that yearly out of every million buildings, 549 ordinary buildings (hoases, barns), • 6,277 churches, 8,524 windmills, and 306 factories were struck. Naturally the total number of churches in 'that country ale leise than any other type of building and yet they were more :often Struck. which is due to their height and -enfecially of their spire. Thus. all high or projecting objects are More liable to be struck and hence should be rodded. A. lightning einl is merely a m.e- tallic rod. sunk in damp earthad terrainating in a point or Ants • above a projecting structure. Now. unlike charges of electricity attract, , thug the charge of the cloud attracts the oppositely induced charge on the earth up through the rod t� the point where it,slowly leaks off. into the air - about in' and thus ionize i it: This ionized ior charged air now exists -within -a field of electrical force which causes a current of electricity to travel slowly throng -IS the atmo- sphere to the cloud. which tends to neutralize the charge on the cloud above: the .building and hence, lyre - vents a discharge. However, the dire chdrge is not always prevented as lightning sometimes acts with a •"freak aature" and a discharge °c - errs between the clouds and the lightning rod. This is due to a, re- versed condition being eery sudden -0. ly brought about by induction and the slow • transfer of electricity through the 'air has not thp.e to dis- charge the cloud before the flash takes place. It is now, thit itaproper installation proves disastl ict. Hence careful inspection by the owner at the tiram of installation, is most Rods ''should preferably- be alum - alum or copper. as these do not rust easily,„aed reveight about three ounces per truntileg foot. There should be a continuous rod starting in meiat earth about eight to -ten feet . below the surface and running up the corner of the building tot_ the °aim, „hence along the elant edge of the ehof to the peak and along the ridgit to the other end, and 'down - the opposite slatVide again to the eave, and thence damp ground. This conductor should' be fastened ermly to the structure by metallio fasteaers and not ineulated from it. It shoind also be protected to a height of eight or ten feet _above ground, by nailing a board corer it to prevent cattle from disturbing it in any way. Metallictnickel pointed uprights about five feet higtt are sol- dered and braced firmly to the c ducting rod running along the ri ge and placed about 20 or 30 feet apart. In the case of a house, an upright should extend a slot way above each chiamey and should be _bent in, so that the point:. Would project above the/ centre of the flue, to' prevent a discharge passing down the chimney by the fairly good condei-croitst,--ethee heated air and soot. On a barn a rod also should extend abeve each ventiletor outlet. All weather vanes, finials, ridge ironwork, eavetroughs, metal hay -tracks, and even litter car- AUCTiONEERS, rier tracks, if close to the conductor, GARFEELD MeMICHAEL • should be soldered to nee 'conductor. Licensel kuctioneer for the County in fact, ail masses of metal of any or Huron. elk -3 r.*Jadttetedlin. any part • size should be connected to the rod of the county Charges moderate and or grounded well, as in these induced satiefaction guaranteed. Address Sea- currents may be set up by a dis- forth, R. R. No 2, or phone 18 on 236, charge, wlaich in jumping fronmene Seaforth. • 2653-tf eiece to another may come in contact with some intlemable material. THOMAS BROWN --•Good lightning rods bought frem. a Licensed auctioneer for the counties eatable firm properly installed will of Huron and, Perth. Correspondence ! not only decrease your insurance arrangements far sale dates can be premiums, but insure you against an made by caltine up phone 97, Seaforth enormous danger and expense.--• or The Expositor Office. Charges Mod- R. C. Moffat; ,B.S.A., 0. A. College, erate and eatisfeetion guaranteed: Guelph. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeone, .Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, Of Ontario. C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin- ity University, argil gold 'medallise of Trinity ,Medical College; member' of the College of Physicians and Sam geons of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS. Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal OphtlatImic Hospital London, Eggland, University i-jospital, London England. Office—Back of Dominion =Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from residence, Vic- toria Street. Seaforth. B. It. HIGGINS . Box tea Clinton — Phone 100 Agent for The Huron ead Erie Mortgage Corpor- atien and the Catenia, Trust Company. Commieenincr 'T. -E C. J. Conveyancer, Fire and Tornade Insurance, Notary Public, Government • and .Municipal Bonds bmigtat ani sold. Several good. fames for sale. Wednesday of each week at Breeedeti. • - to Work on the new eight hour ay n , , tne sehedule is More than t-cv hundred per the- heavy' -tops' making' Wesel sem' cent. sarersupply. , ditions' by keeping the ground maid .. , -Women employed in the dresemak- for:, the- clekelOpmeat of: the Aiseatie ing trade in Switzerland have received when onee itgainmentrance•, and har- • slugs and caterpillars. that a • twenty Per cent indrease in .Wages - boring and : a- red etion in weeldat vvorldng spread. the - diseaSe. Carrots. which I crack beneath the .ground are liable hours frotri fifty-six to fifty -tyro.. Tindtish omen, many of, whom live to be attacked by the disease, the soft rot bacillus gaining entrance' to in villages along the Danube river through the cracked and in Roumania, are wearing in,:the the tissues streets, with greatest pride, American tiltfafte• . In celery the disease is not very pajamas bearing the label, "gift of comtnon, but when- present is most the American. people:" . Eight American women have 'been 's (ttroff otred youngstartinggroa*tth7 near the Made life associate 'limbo% of the - In tomatoes the bacterial soft rot United States marine \corps and deco- . is very common. during wet seasonw rated with gold arid silver brooches, ' It is found most frequently in the the reproduction of the marine 'corps i fruits that are in. contact with , the insig•nia, in recognition of their help - 1 soil after they have commeneed to ing the boys. - 1 ' The bacillus will not readily' Business women from, Ohio., West I -"en' penetrate through the unbroken skin Virgina and other states, have taken ! of the tontato„ But When a 'tomato eps to form' a permanent organize- • ie. resting an the damp earth, that ton of business and professional W0 part " 't--- 1 part of the skin in contact with the then of the United States. I soil is freq,uently weakened, thus pile.. -.• Among the English. women the cus- — i viding a means of access to the ba - tom of going -without hats is rapidly f call's. t This, however, is not the 01111 Spreading. Lady Rhondda, Miss Mary : means whereby the disease enters the McArthur and other famous speakers fruit. Slugs are. vertepartial to toma- have joined the no -hat brigade when toes just ripening, In their attack speaking on public platform4. on the fruit they eat through the As the only full-fledged woman skin, leaving the interior flesh ex - member of the International As . Is'a- . posed. This exposed sur is an ah, ideal medium for the bat' us of soft •ea rot to develop in. The writer has the seventh biennial convention of - found many tomatoes, particularly in the National Women's Trade Union. wet seasons; when slugs are plentl- league held recently in Philadelphia. fel, that have contracted the disease . . New York women have net ,dimin- in this way. iShed their use of cosmetics. because Eradication and Control of Diftease. of the added tax cost resnitmg from. the lux-nry tax. Women are new admitted on the same terms with men in the Society of Incorporated Accountants 'and Aud- itors in Great Britain. Girl telephone operators in .Grand Rapids, Mich., and Atlanta, Ga.. have formed, a union arid intend to affiliate - with the American Federation of La- bor. Women school teachers in Jersey City have Organized with a. view of strengthening the chances of seeuring , increases in pay. . • • Pive hundred women students of the New Jersey State Normal schools in Newark and Montclair have pledg- ed not to marry for 'two years. • • The federal woman suffrage amend- ment has (en ratified by the state senate in Massachusetts. A recent. canvass by a pharmaceuti- cal journal has disclosed the fact that the number of woman pharmacists in the United States has more than doubled in the lest .five yeare., Women in' France are petitioning for suffrage on the ground that wo- men vete in Great Britain, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Germany, Austria, -Polanit, Bohemia, the United States Canada, Australian and New Zealand'. Miss Alice Deal, who has been lead- ing the fight for 1,000 District of Celumbia school teachers against the board 'of education on the question of tion of Machinists, Miss lian Black, of -Glasgow, cotladd, atten R. T. LUKER Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron, Sales attended to im all A et iv IT t OF WOMEN OH factory workers in Canada can parts of the cazunty. Seven years' ex- earn from $14 to $16 a week: perience in Manitoba and Saskatche- Females employed in the 'factories wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. in Dublin, /rebind, are paid only from 115 r 11, Exeter, Centralia P. 0. R. $4.50 to $10 per week. ` R. No. 1. Orders • left at The Huron Mary E. Taylor, a negro *mien Dxpositor Office, Seaforth, promptly at- evangelist of New York, is a candidate tended. • 7` for bishop- of'the A. IX E, Zion — Spraying with --fungicides, which is so effeetivie in controlling the fung- ous diseases of plants, is of no *San with bacterial diseases, as the bac- teria which cause the diseitse act in the interior tissue rather than on the surface; hence thetspray will not reach them. ' Spraying with insecticides is help- ful indirectly, as it tends to keep in check the insects, slugs, cataie pillars, etc., which are one of the most common ,nieatts of spreading bacterial diseases from one plant to another. As a rule, the best method to adopt in dealing with •a plant infected with bacterial 'diseaee is to carefully re- move and burn it. Insects, garden s, etc., coming in cOntact with will spread the disease to the nti with 'which. they come in ton - t later. •Therefore, *in order to prevent loisses from bacterial soft rot of plants, remove and bUrn affected plants, or parts of plants, as soon as /Observed; -be carefiii during cultiva- tion not to Wound plants, and keep caterpillars, slues and biting insects in check. Affected plants - shotild never be put on the compost heap or Manure pile, When ha g and storing tur- nips, cauliftovier, cabbage, celery, tomatoes, or other vegetables from teacherss rights, has been re-elected crops in' which the disease has been is toisili against the Spirit of human justice." 4 The °nod marsh:Li, who -10 one 'of the :minders of the society, called the GerMan. Society for Cleib Education, declared Germany was now in the throes' of a moral •revolution. -Tae inaterialistic ahllosophy, he ' saide would give way, to a new one which would bee crowned.- by the victory of the sogral "The one aim of the. German. so- ciety for Civic Education," he *aid, "is to bring the German people back to the religion of human, love. We ask all the intellectual and moral leaders of the world tot join, us la forming an international eoinraunity. It was the materielistic.and mechan- ical 'coneeption of the world -which ruined Germany, ,It alsa will destroy our enemies if•they do not see that it is the spirit of the citizens which constructs a state." • president of the High School Teachers present, great -care should- be taken union in that city. . . • Mrs. Philip N. Moore, of St. Louis, president of the National Council of Woraen, is one of the powerful women of Missoula backing the 'Dam- • paign to raise $9,000,000 for a na- • tional memorial building to be *ereeted in Washington, D. C. ' For every one hundred men in Eng- land there 121 women between the ages a 20 and 44. France has 124 women for every eleven men. Several thousand dollars of personal , funds have been donated to belt) woman Workers in Italy Queen Wilhelmina. by BACTERIAL SOFT R01% 9isease Is Causing Great ,Loss of Vegetables. Cauliflower, Carrots, Turnips, &dory and 'Tematoes Particularly affect- - ed--,Ilow the Diseafse Spreads -- its Sytriptoms and/ Renotedy-- Great Care Necessary Durirag Harvest and Storing., •• . (Oon.tributed by Ontario Department Of Agriculture, Toronto.) A.CTERIAL soft rot is a d4s- ease liable to attack fleshy vegetables and flowers, parti- cularly carrots, cauliflower, turnips, eelery, tomatoes, iris and cala lily, and in a lesser de -gree onions, asparagus, salsify, sugar beet and mangel. Oecasionally the dis- ease results in heavy kisses to the grower of these crops. General Appearance of the Disease. -As the eame signifies tb.e disease re8ulis ill..a soft, wet rot of the plant attacked: The rotten portion. of tb.e plant is darker in color than e e rest of. the plant. The color of , dis- ease.d. part varies from. -a light, red- dish or greenish brown to a very dark brown. Cause of the Disease. The disease is due to the action of a certain species of '`baciilus known generally as the vegetable soft rot - bacillus. This is a very minute or- ganism about 1-10,000 of an neat' long and 1-20,000 Of incb. thick, but wheneittgets into the vegetable tissue' thro\lb. e wound made by. the hoe or eult.vator or insect bite, it , feeds on the plant juice and inulti- plies rapidly and as it develops it produces tyrae, Which digests or softens, the firm tiesue, breaking it down late a soft, pulpy, strong,' sinelting ,maes, which is , easily de- tected, In this soft -rotted tissue the bacilli will be present in millions. In cauliflower the disease is found more often ,in the flower them in the leaves or stem; the latter pasta, h.ow- ever, are 'also. Subject to attack. t In' turnip,' the disease nit fre- quently enters at. or near tbei crown not to include any specimen that shows the slightest appearance of the disease, or to smear the healthy specimen with the soft rotted parts of diseased specimens. If these pre- cautions are neglected, the disease is Habit) to establish itself and spread more er less rapidly through the en- • tire crop stored..—D.-H. Jones, B.S.A. Fortner Junket. General Wants Prussian Leaders To Receive Pitnishmeitt Authors' Royaltient One of the earliest mystery plays 'n England was called .'Noah's load,”, and 1 recently tante across 011'7 -interesting extract from. original Inanascript. The ark which was used was generally kept euspended in. the cliureb, and .brought out when the play was acted. In the original .Mrs. Noah objects to going into the ark unless she :Can take some of "her -gossips" witheher. When Noah in- sists,- she -tells him to "row where he list," for she is not going to be shut up with a lot of animals. How- ever, Japhet bundles his mother, in, and the first thing the lady. does in the irk is to :lion -Noah's ears, which Makes Noah exclaim, "Ha, ha, marry, this .is hot!" Noah and his wife were always the principal • players, and. got the largest salary. Id the Hull Trinity House Books there is a record of the fees paid to actors in. this play, from which. 1 extract the following: , "Item payd to Nicholas Helaby for wrytg the play, 7d.; Item payd to .Noye end his wyff, 18clet Item. payd for drink to Noe, 4d." That was early in the &tee/1th century. In 1447 the salary of Rob- ert Brown, who represented God, was sixpence, but this was increased in 1487 to tenpence. In 1469 the wages of Noah and his .wife went up to twenty-one pence; in 147to h:+02444444 T is -the-right of our deem* ilI to -punish those responsible men on the German side wilt. are to blame for this war," deciared Field Marshal von Buelow, retired, in an interview with the Ber- lin correspondent , of. the .Handels- blad." Gen. von' Buelow commanded the Second German Army in 1914; Was engaged. in the fighting neer Manberge and. was retired in 1915, owing' to a paralytic stroke from which he has not yet recovered. i. "As /an 1 old soldier I have not learnedto ask for mercy," continued the.: field • marshal. "I only ask for justice for the German people. • We soldiers went out to fight. by the Kaiser's orders because tb.e Govern- ment Said the country was in dan- ger. It was not our task is soldiers to investigate. If we had been told the truth our duty was merely to obey. If the German people were misled when theyt were told that they - JULY 18, 1:919 across the weav�. of the material. delectable beverage the berries may be - Of European: inventien is.a hand tel- used for this formula and then in the - 1 ephone with a push button in one side, spiced raspberries, which are excellent with Which- telegraphing can be dem to 'serve Yitihr cold meat. For the '• The handle of a new razor strop of vinegar, put our quarts of raspberries Into an .earthenware bowl, Pali over it four cupfuls of vinegar and leave tonere& in: the icebox until the next day. Strain ' off every particle of liquid and vinegar from the berries and pour it over four additional quarts of berries that haw been placed in a clean bowl. , (Saye the berries for the, 'ipiced preparation.) Again let the .„ .berries- and vinegar st,and over night and in the morning strain .off the liquid and he. to the boiling point. Add -twelve cupfuls of granulated sugar and boil for twenty minutes. Seal bat in airtight .bottles. Two or three tablespoonfuls of this vinegar . the usual two-faced type holloW out to form a reties _to contain a Ilene. Demands for telephone service in Japan are about uomoo, ahead of the goverritnent's ability to supply equipi- meat. jar the gomfort. convalesceeits an adjustable - foot rest fer beds has been invented thats•can be moved by a user. London's underground railroads 'are' experimenting with ears -having -five doors to permit rapid-* Mining mitt un- loading, • • •.? A new vise attach ent has teeth Which automatically a justthemielves ..tii the shape of any o jeet placed be- - with cracked ice and.ehilled.carbonat- tween` thein.. Electrically heated lees in signal ed water malie a most delightful and boxes enable Glasgow's policemen to have warm food and when on duty, , at night A *woman is the inventor of e lock nut which cannot be jarred loose from a bolt, but can be, easily reynoved with ing water, three. broken sticks of Mt- • , rumen, two dozen whole cloves and a wrench. Ceylon's college of: tropical agricul- two blades of mace (tied in a bit of ture will be develope into one of • the 'cheesecloth.- Simmer slowly for 45 'largest institutiops the'ldnd in the minutes: After they begin to boil, take, out the 'spices .aiad store like world. than built lin the United States jest . year 132,000 tractors were,/ marmalade.. Preservedraspberries(without eolk., These raspberries ha -.-e the ed a nearly $15,000. . . exact flavor a the fresh fruit and are and this year's produetion is estimate ' ing)..--• delicions to use as a sauce with ice , Atestralian engineers have inventeti where cream ! oe in shortcake. Allow pound switches for- use. in railroads refreshing drink on a hot day. . Spiced RasPberries,—Plara the eight quarts a berries (used in the vinegar) in a preserving kettle and add eight cupfuls of sugarmoim'cupful of boil- . three rails are laid to accommodate for po cars of different gauges. • Crush • Accordifig to a French sifrgeon rat every dium emanations' are useful after the s operation toe remove diseased . readt hot, sterilieed jars, fill to -over- the knife may have missed. fladiowiutsntgi;ewiwthruhthheez;beanrrt ilsotasnsdtereiamlitraeri • Telescoping trays elevated by lazy covers and seal. Stare in a cool, -dark tongs.permit any article to be removed from a new truk, witb.out disturbing „peace, its other contents -`1 • • More than 151004) ton{ of crude i peat were produced- in the United ' B States dist ;mar, exceeding ,the best E previous year by about fifty-six per cent. •A process has been inven.ted in Australia for irrigating, aerating and fertilizing soil throne,. 'perforated. pipes laid in. it without waste. Foi testing screw -threaded ,machine parts extreme a.ccaracy, apparatus has been designed that pro ts, mag- --mified pictures of them on screen. twenty-three pence., In 1520 Noah . An English chemist's synthetic milk was paid two shillings and his wife *which can be condensed or dried is eighteen pence. • But the original made from peanuts, soya beeps, sugar, sevenpenoe paid to the playwright water and mineral salts from real covered all rights.—London, provin- milk. ciate American,- colonial' afeateur An -inventor has patented an, aver- ' and cinema. tn.d of the fruit and the sugar,. the fruit carefully, seeing that erry is well broken, then add ear and mix thoroughly: Have GEN. VON 1313-ErpW.‘ were assailed by a supelior nutabeg e of enemies, then rony a, urse be on those who, by false dealings, made three-querters of mankind the ene. mies of a great peace -loving people. 'If there are wretches who rbseeired tie when they said we were attacked, thee they defferve the severest pun. - 'satirist. whaeeer they may be. daiLgi, . • - ..q.....,,....L. 1 , Raspberry Jelly.—In- making this . Levers outside a 'new gas range delicious jelly j.WoLthirds raspberry _move' a broiler inside to any desired mice and. one - position -with relation to the hat. • (strained should t "-Work will be begun at Lee on a the juices, cook general scheme for placing el tele- and add an eel phoneewires'in England under a ound, sugar to that 'o Blades of recently patented shears Cook =0 it jell are operated by an electric motor con- tumblers. By using the red raspberries trolled by a button in its handle. • and the red Currants a blight, vivid • Electric fans have made it possible' jelly is -produced, '' while the r black - to keep churches and theaters in South- berries and currants give dark, rich ern. India open in summer months. , jelly that looks as' delicious as it A recently invented textile' for under tastes. garments stretches lengthwtse, but not Raspberry Vinegar.—In making this . m - sand that will make good stone Dime ) tar will do.1 Then take the terminds - or thp part of the young growth. et planks about tour or flve /whewkit length, eaeh shoot or catting,bu from four to six .joints. where I are produced Make Make the base eutt 'list below one of thenoniefiste or leaf joints, reeking a clean cer with a. sharp knife fiat acrose! oft aome of the Iower-leaves, I two or three leaves at the tog: off, all bloom budg- and bloinseltit' wheier Possible. Make a hole or in the wet sand deep enough to fullYs half theelength-of stems oft tingg in. the4sand. Water tent once and keep the sand moist cuttings are rooted, which shouldbin irt live or six weeks' time. The bog canbe set out of doors IL partial, shade' until the firstweekin Septette e ber, when they Can be taken the window. Wjaeu cuttings halit. root about an inch in length them carefully' from the sand wi' inStirimg the roots and pot singly into small 2Ih ineh pote set them about two- inches apart well -drained shallow boxes in -a soi. made up of one part sand, one patt leaf raould, and about six Parts at light loamy soil, enriched with ontr • part of dry pulverized cow manure from the pasture field. This last it one of the best possible fertiliser& for soil for pot plants. Set the yolitt$ plants int the window in a. tempera* ture of 60 to 70 deg. Fahr., an nary house temperature. — Hunt, 0\ A. College, Guelph. tirn that can lye, light4d with electric lamps suPported above it within a • The Beet Client. shade that directs their rays into the A. K. C. who was intimate with water. Lord Cockbinemmet him in the street - A census taken in March showed and asked him la: he would accept that Holland % had more ' than 362,000 an invitation OD/ 'short notice and horses, nearly 2,000,000 cattle. mere dine with him -Opt evening to meet than 437,000 sheep and almost 450,000 one whom he described as "My very swine. oldest and best client," "Delighted,". Paper Sleeve protectors that - are said Cockburn; "but tell inc candi ly, has he a coat left to his back. _ NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE German •sdientists have obtain paper pulp from hop vines. Java has taken the leadershiet in t cultivation of, quinine away fr Peru. • Woven wire pales for electriet wi or lights have been invented: by Chicago man. • Venezuela has bekim the manuf ture of vaccine virus in gove.mineht laboratories. Florida led the states in prednetion RASPBERRIES of fuller's earth last year and Texas Raspberries are such a perishable ranked next, fruit that they should' be preserved es a UTIFY THE Row to/Grow.Plants for Wan& From.Cuttings. August roughing Destroys a Om. siderable Proportion of WIdte Grubs and Wire Worms 'ideating Old Sod Fields—Elaxas a Spies. • did Cr‘p for a -First Crop on Sock (Contributed bet Ontario Deitarboosit eit Agriculture, Toronto.) OWARD the end of the sum- - mer, the amateur fiowee grower often wonders hair the 'stock .61. geraniums Li 'theflower border .can be increase& and preserved bolionle other moans than by taking uP the old plants in the auturan; the last named method. 4 fastened together evith a gumnind tag. after their size has been austed not having, s perhaps, proved SUCeelin• aj have been invented for the me. ,of fill in past seasons. By starting ult,' woman workers ly early, toward the end of Anguste . A telephone, microphone and phon- before cold chilly nights anSiesx, ograph have been tombined by a- . *. French inventor to transmit sounds nice supply of young plants, MOM from the last to distant points or esPeeianY of made of geranium. several places at once of the flowering kind, or those have . The beach front of at least one jag fragrant leaves, or even unik iresc'rt '° bronze or silver -leered kinds, can ble Neve JerSey seaside protected by a concrete via% so form.- • - ed on the outside as to meet the curves had by starting Cuttings or Mos 4/l of the waves these plants. First of allembtain * . shallow box about three inches dee tenor twelve inches wide, and tra�. twelve to twenty-four inches length, an 'empty haddie ,(fish) bee A tree producing coffee said. to be as score as possible after their arrival evall do 'eery- well, t should hare free front caffeine has been discovered fron iarket; to wash them, place a some small holes bored through thief in Madagascar. few ni a colander and lift in and out ttom for drainage. Pao' Folding covers, easily put into use, of a ..pan of water twice; then lay on bok tbisDOI -.- have been invented for protecting a mire sieve to drain, • firmly with, moist, 'clean, gritty _ plants from cold. The following, tested itecemts cover Meat which, can be kept for severed the best typical methods.for putting months is salted in Colomdia by dip- up this delicious early surnmer fruit: ping it into the sea. Red raspberry, jam with currant By using, a new jack svlth a. rocker- juice—Wash. and crash the fruit and like' base an automobile au be made to each quart of the berries allow half literally to lift itselfa cupful of strained turrantijuice. Let Eliglapd has a armdevoted ex- stand for tem or fifteen minutes tarn clusivelt to raising butterflies, selling into a preservingekettle, bring in the more than 30,000 annuallyboil and let simmer for twenty min - A combination wire frame and float utea Have ready heated sugar, tit- hes been invented to permit hunter e lowing three-quarters the quantity of to use dead ducks eis decoys the uncooked fruit, and. cook down um - A Danish plant is making a bouillin til a little of the syrup jells when extract from the bones of freshler tried On a plate. Store in jelly tune - slaughtered cattle and horses.. biers, cover with when cold., Pennsylvania has more blind.persouS Red raspberry and black currant than any pther state, but New Mexico jam.—Allow two-th-ds raspberries to has the greatest percentageone-third of stemnied currants, crush • As the top of a dish invented byto the fruit, bring a boil and cook for Frenchman is ilressed down it cuts twenty minutes. Add three-quarters butter into individual portions. ' the amount of sugar that 'you had For indoor target practice a pistol of the combined fresh fruits and let from which a ping pong ball is shot by boil to the desired consisteney. Skim a spring has been patented. • ' once or twice after the sager is add - A dePosit of chrome ore that 'is be- ed and store ast in the previous re- ing. developed in RodeSia iSworldbelieved ceipt. • to be the richest in the . rd. currant eince be combined. Heat for twenty minutes in,easure of heated the strained juices, and store in small ammemomaiss., ,MNESININICE& emit ,t ASrwe sell this furnace it is a guaranteed. heating sys- tem. When installation is planned by our engineers, we cleliver exactly what you want-- Cornfort in your home. If you are going to install a furnace; let IdcClary's engineers show you how Ask about the LITTLE DRAFT. MAN that tunis an the drafte and regulate,. therm aanniatically. =shim • it should be done. They have seventy year of experience to guide them, and their services cost you nothing. Adopt their plan and you are assure of a comfortably heatecl'home; and a durable economical heating. pla.nte " Let us tell you naore about this proplisithm. For Sae by HENRY EDGE, SEAFO TH 4.1ft imor AM. doilor fra Om.* Mot a.00 ems 14. Iot▪ a ra111 1 1 (C "Wel enough gether course • the •ess can yo. at Are. The contrat silent - and t break - of one will- go• - and thc that 'Jo compan angels looking .Dunhan time -in o a. dry c tho egn a • ship at met as .one of no differ Mr. Me can't b as well jaw Su give yo th4 I March Meyer latua Meyer at all, 4yes.:5 "My (LSY 8* The remaini other at his ton unprin consoli 91.1 that gobnst on tint. enough old m So John F another thump his re had ris had be- itt thos lose ou star of the hot be won the ne 'little smoked tenly at the • gether shook • buffalo , of his has battle "Of to do road • a week there • isn't a, la.s. • things to you to fu work town in the -‘ For his wa swamp hardwo ed to intens a foot • the lea • cruiser campw with X away • them t the w tuld no of it co sprinkl rush • iYflh1uJ 4-.aube Cana Compa Titer intere 4.-hattd. Dur •sold ether gemu the Tooth* bago, Hal larger in Ca ;Sion