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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-02-13, Page 3RRUARY 13, 1920. x + 8+9,000,000 :hes ts Bank )it of resolution and practice. os of your earnings in THE: ocn acgt+ired. f ti!e interest which we pay it. It is safe, and can be a savings account with us.. DISTRI Kirkton sail Zurich !Conscious power of command. ailes rather than frowns, gams! is 1 and pleasant in manner. His. outdoor look, for lie usually a day or so each week atgolf ae other outdoor sport of which fond. You are very likely to ie picture of a sweet-faced we- ar his desk, and generally she Ivo or three children about her. re is inspiration for the young if America in the life -history of Tut of ten of these husky young who stand head an shoulders their fe?lows in the financial dis• Here and there is to be en - Ted one whose mouth, at birth ned the proverbial spoon of :oho inherited a great fortune, ho is inerr;iy engaged in gather - tore. 'I hese, however, are the ;ions; indeed, the men of inherit- with and power who are to -day ?aders may be counted on the 3 of one hand. t of the new g aiyts of the next s were shot out into the cold, *rid with physical assets which be covered by a twenty -dollar zt with an invisible asset of the p. "get there" which could net be ted in terms of d lrars and' Most of them have forced way upward through the ruck great field of starters..They :ho mons of farmers, or preache- r country storekeepers,, wilt's* ons did not run toward farm - preaching or storekeeping and ruck out for themselves. Da=ne ie, too, has taken a hand here ere, and boosted them along: i five different colleges ask - her services, Dr. Caroline ale, a Philadelphia doctor and the meet active in the cam - for funds for the Women's 1 college, is now engaged ii shing a school of hygiene at arnares college at Albany. Durr e war Dr. Creasdale traveled r the world in connection with rational work of the ccis- a training camp- activities. s .Schuh's', UMW Be.s—Keep your Eyes Strong and Healthy. If theyTire,Smart, Itch, or Burn, if Sore, Irritated.. Inflamed or Granulated; ins often. Safe for Infant or Adult uu ists in Canada. Write forFreea k. Murine Company, Chicago, U. S.A. Helps aPPetite and digestion. Three flavours. to make ° & we od until package Hardin!, sous con. . oody. Lasts EP's g( fiT wwwwwww wwwwwww wwwwwe wwwwww wwwwwwe teat,- 55 FEBRUARY 13, 1920. THE HURON E R e Prepared The war has taught us the importance of preparedness. Sick#tess may overtake you without warning --- are you prepared? Open a savings account to -day and possess the assurance of your ability to meet all emergencies. BANK SEAFORTH BRANCH, _ - R. M. JONES, Manager. SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES FOR RENT. - CONTAGIOUS ABORTION A Too Common Trouble Some Farm Mares. With • Cause of the Disease Discovered--• Method of Spreading Described,— Measures for - Control -- Oyster. shell Bark Louse With Its Treatment. • (Co ntrib(ated by Ontario Department `of Agriculture, Toronto.) ONTAGIalJs abortion of mares is due to a specific `bacillus. (Bacillus abortivus equinus) which gets -established in the uterus, fetal tnelnbrane5 and foetus, setting up Ideal inflammation leading to expulsion of the foetus 'dead or tithe at any time ditring pregnancy. The symptoms of approaching THE HURON EXPOSITOR dent whofailed to come up to the abortion are not usually in evidence standard. The worrying professor until just before `abortion takes died, at the, 'age of fifty-five. The place. Then the animal is seized with other is living and bids fair to reach colicy pains, restlessness and strain- a venerable age. i;ig, and a swollen vulva with a mu - Worry, in the view of this expert, cons discharge is noticeable. After is on the whole a greater foe to long life than immoderation. The con- abortion, the symptomsare more scientious man worries about his specific. There is a chocolate brown work, and this may be good for his fluid discharge from vulva which has work, but is not 'good for the worker. a typical offensive odor, and the .toe - The ambitious man worries about, tal membranes are inclined to remain his prospects, and is likely also to intact thus necessitating artificial re - over -work himself. So he is burning the candle at both ends, although mover to prevent -blood poisoning; he' may leave an estate that will re- The disease has been known in lieve his heirs from ' the necessity Europe for. many years, but it was stomach in order, for nine -tenths of of worrying. Worry or any powerful not found on the American contin- all childhood ailments arise from a emotion: acts upon the bodily organs, ent -until 1886 when it appeared in disordered state of the bowels and' and .particularly upon the digestive the Mississippi valley. Since then it stomach. Such a medicine is Baby's organs as directly as a drug. For has spread far and wide in the TJnit- ed States and Canada. Although many investigations were made both in Europe and America, it was not 'until 1912.that the cause of the dis- ease was discovered. In that year . E. S. Good, of Kentucky, discovered the bacillus which causes the disease - re/figments of the alimentary system y The - same year Dr. Schofield, of To - ought more fairly to be set clown to ronto, discovered the same bacillus. worry, Laugh and grow fat is to the • in some cases of joint, ill in colts paint, for worry Makes - thin those whichhad developed in districts in who naturally would 1*' fat. Worry Ontario where contagious abortion is doubly dangerous ii that it is prevalent - something a doctor cannot . cure. loofuringmares yearwas round the 'gameand baythecilltolus Every man must be his own doctor in cases of contagious abortion ' mares in Ontario. Method of Spreading.—The dfeeaire is spread mainly by the diecharge* from the 'rate* of aborting animals. If a mare that has aborted is served - before all discharges from the. vulva have ceased and the genitalia have been efficiently disinfected, then the stallion is liable to 'get contaminated with the bacillus and spread the die- ease to other mares which he -sub- sequently serves. It the .discharges from _an aborting mare are allowed to contaminate the bedding or other materials that other mares come in contact- with, then the mares are li-• able to, contract -the-disease. If the - discharges are allowed -to cantata. - nate water or food materials that saga given to other' mares, the latter are if at a toil that was uncongemal, liable to contract the disease, created • greater friction and con- Measures for Control. --1. Three, - sequently wore him out faster. He months must elapse between abor. does not believe that the - capacity tion and subsequent breeding.,. for work can be increased, The ` 2. Mares that have aborted molt working hours may be . increased; the not be bred if there is evidence,- of concentratio,n can be intensified, but uterine catarrh, even after three only at the 'expense of longevity. The months. war -has provided! thousands -of in - mutter MATTERS t ` HEALTHY CHILDREN ARE HAPPY CHILDREN The well child is always a. happy .child—it is a baby's nature to be happy and contented. -Mothers, •if your little ones are cross and peevish and cry a great deal theyare not well —they are in need of medicine—some- thing that will set their bowels and Own Tablets.. They are a mild but exanLple, let anyone eat dinner when thorough laxative which regulate the he is intensely angry and he will bowels, sweeten the stomach, and thus certainly -have ) indigestion. The - old drive out constipation, colic, indigos- Proverb about the stalled ex and the tion; break up colds and simple fevers, dinner of herbs is medically aceux- and make the baby healthy and happy, ate. Worry destroys the digestion, Concerning them, Mrs. Albert Hamel, and many a death ascribed to de- Pierreville, Que., writes: -- "Baby's Own Tableta are the best medfeh e I know of for little ones. They relieved any little girl from constipation when nothing else would and I can strongly recommend them to - other mothers." The Tablets are sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25 cents' a box from - The Dr. Williams' Medicine Cosi Brock 1 when the diagnosis is Worry. ville, Ont.. i•i Dr. Meylan is convinced that the capacity for work varies greatly in ONLY FOR THOSE WHO WANT= individuals. This . seems common sense. Sir Harry Lander thinks that TO t vE LONGr ten hours' work a day is a proper Do you want to live long'?• Because dose. Edward Everett : Hale, never a if you do you can find out how by strong man, `found by experiment reading the following article. Or if that he could work ! only: four hours you happen to be• too busy, or you a day. He never worked after noon. think length of days toodearly bought Yet he Iived longer than the average at the price, the information can - be than and accomplished far more. . veyed in two sentences • Don't worry; The Columbia expert believes that . Be moderate in everything. This is the limits for work- axe as fixed men- said on. the_ authority- of Dr. George tally as physically. .The important i.. Meylan;.°ddrector of the Columbia thing is the one should choose for University gymnasium, who has an occupation the thing that he can made a long study' of the subject, do with the greatest ease. Then he and who is well qualified to speakcan work longer, if necessary, than with knowledge. He points out that it may not be to the; advantage of the race that long life .should - be- come the rule instead of the excep- tion, for living long means slowing up. The man. who .sits before him- self the determination" to shatter re- cords for longevity is, not likely to shatter records for industry or other achievements. . His first idea will be to take care of his health, and anyone with this- burden on his mind will not have a great deal of energy or - thought to • exi5end in other directions. For one thing he must divest himself of ambition, for ambition is likely - to mean worry and overwork„ and these are - the .field, secretary to the president of two things to be particularly avoided. the Board of Aldermen in Ne* York Dr. Meylan gives as an example city, proposes to live on cher salary of the only case of a maxi he knew $2,400 a year: who died from causes that were perfectly natural, from the normal MUCH SUFFERING wearing out .of the machinery that DUE TO THIN BLOOD keeps a man alive. This was Heze- kiah Lombard, who was ninety-seven years old. As a young man he worked hard at lumbering, and as he grew older took to farming, working" not so hard, and as he got into the seventies did not do much but farming. By the time he was ninety he merely did a little. hoeing in the garden and cut wood. Later, on he dropped' the hoeing and cut wood alone. Then he ceased to cut wood and would merely pick up the chips. For the last year he did not even pick up chips. The day he died Dr. Meylan asked him if he felt sick, for contrary to his life-long custom, he was not up aiid about in the morning. "No," he replied, "just kind of lazy." Dr. Meylan exam- ined hien and found that his extremi- ties jxnd he died that afternoon without pain of any kind. His life was the essence of moderation, ex- cept that he neither smoked nor drank. His brother, who lived to be ninety-three, smoked a n d drank moderately for some eighty years. Hezekiah's son, aged seventy, who built two log houses with his own hands last summer, has been a stances 'of mer who wore themselves only be bred at -the end of the stal- lionout, who are now physical wrecks season. - or have shattered nerves and who 4• Application of an ei!lcient din - thereby have- shortened their lives infectant to the external genitalia of by many years. } the stallion after each service in af- tested districts. - Measures to Be Employed at Time Though she is the daughter of mil- of, or Subsequent to Abortion.-- lionaire parents, Miss Charlottee Dela- 1. Isolation of mare at first sign of approaching abortion. - 2. After abortion the foetus and membranes should be burned, if pos- sible, or buried deeply in quick lime. 3. Those handling the foetus and mare should disinfect hands' and clothing. - 4. Bedding should be burned and the stall washed with a strong dis- infectant. 5. External genitals, :thighs and tall of mare should be washed daily with -a good disinfectant. Two per cent. bacterol, Lysol, or cresol, is sat- isfactory for this purpose. 6. Isolation of mare should Ile - maintained for at least a month or until all evidence of uterine discharge has ceased. Treating the animal with drugs, as carbolic acid, black haw and meth. lene blue, though popular in some districts, cannot be recommended as being of any value.—Dr. J. H. Reed, 0. A. College, Guelph. - Rich, Red. Blood Necessary to Health and Strength. If more people knew how many ills and pains are caused by thin, watery blood -a great deal of suffering -would be avoided. -Men and women often suffer for long periods from stomach trouble, headache, palpitations of the heart, and nervous complaints such as neuralgia, without suspecting that anaemia or bloodlessness is the cause. The blood goes to practically every part of the body, carrying oxygen and nourishment. The -efficient actions of every organ is directly' dependent up- on the quality of the. nourishment it gets from the blood. If theehlood- is thin it 'becomes week in, nourishment and health fails. The best way to keep the blood rich and re& and thus enjoy good health is through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills:; At the first sign of weakness these pills should be taken and good robust health will soon. follow. The state- ment of Mrs. J. J. Murray, Corbet- ton, Ont., shows the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in cases of this kind. She says:—"A few years ago xihoclerate smoker and drinker all hay - daughter, Lillie, was in a very his life. badly run down corvdition. She was As regards smoking and drinking, 1 pale, thin and. scarcely able to go about.- The least exertion made her heart palpitate so violently that we were actually afraid one of . these 'spells might carry her off. She slept so -badly that often she would lie awake until morning. Treatment did rot seem to help her and we were almost in despair when a friend ad- vise& the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. A few weeks' use of this medi- cine showed. a decided improvement, and a further use of the pills fully restored her to health, and' she has since been a strong, . healthy girl. Some time later I was taken ill my- self, being badly run -dawn from !household care. A doctor was called in but his medicine did not seem to bring back ,my strength and remem- bering what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills had done for my daughter, I decided to drop the doctor's medicine and try them. The results that followed were like those in my slaughter's - case, and through the- use of the ,pills I was soon a well:; woman. I am glad to give my experience in the hope that some other sufferer may find! the way to health." You can procure Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine, or they will be sent you by mail at 50 cents a box or- six boxes for $2.50 by writing direct to The Dr. Williams' other would worry over every stu- Medicine Co.,Brockville, Ont.. Dr. Meylan says that the evidence is evenly balanced. Moderation in either or both will have little or no effect upon longevity. - Excessive smoking or excessive drinking will shorten a man's days, even though they may, as Tom Moore suggests, lengthen his nights. But this is - a question upon which opinion now- adays is so sharply, even bitterly, divided that nobody can expect any- body else to take anybody's asser- tion as final. Another example of longevity due to moderation is af- forded by Dr. Charles W. Elliott, president emeritus of Harvard, now almost eighty-five ' years old. Dr. Meylan met him at a dinner a short time ago when he was in perfect health and full vigor. "Moderation in everything," was Dr. Elliott's ex- planation, but Dr. Meylan adds that any professor at Harvard who tried to duplicate Dr. Elliott's work- ing average would have killed him- self in three years. A third case that came under his own ob- servation was that of two prpfessors of mathematics working side by side in the same university. They were apparently equally - healthy. One would give his pupils the marks he thought they deserved' and dismiss the examinations from his mind. The Oyster -shell Scale. This is a very common orchard insect. It attacks not only apples but also pears, plums, currants and many ornamental and shade trees and bushes. Full grown scales are found almost exclusively on the bark and are easily recognized by their oyster- shell appearance. They are about of an inch long, 1-24 inch wide, taper towards one end and in color resem- ble closely the bark. The injury is caused by their suck- ing the juices out of the bark and thus weakening the trees. When very abundant they almost completely cover the bark and in that case may kill either the whole tree or portions of the branches: Most- infested tres, however, are not killed but only weakened. Control.—Spraying the trees just before or just after the buds burst with lime -sulphur solution, 1 gallon to 8 or 9 gallons of water, is a satis- factory remedy. The regular Codling_ Moth spray with one gallon of lime - sulphur to' about 39 gallons of. water, to which two pounds of arsenate of lead paste or one pound arsenate of lead powder is added will also help greatly, because it will hit the young scale insects just after they .'have hatched, while . they are still unpro- tected and easily destroyed. Dead scales may remain on' the trees for several years - after date of killing. Pruning the trees early makes it eas- ier and cheaper to spray them well. —Prof. L, Caesar, 0. A. College, Guelph. CASTOR IA ihr rtea and cam. lb Mid You Ilan Ahrap Bowl Dim the oisna..d Stewart's Sell it for Less Mali or Phone Your Orders j We prepayCarriage Women's Furs of Superior Quality 20 to 25 p.c. off This store has always been known as a noised fur store. Noted for the unusual variety shown, including all the new ideas and specially noted for the dependability of the furs. You can buy furs here with a degree of certainty that re- moves any doubts in your mind as to their wearing qual- ity and stylish appearance. Every fur set and fur coat in this !magnificent stock will be sacrificed this month. Don't wait, buy now, when the stock is big. 20 to 25 p.c. off Men's Suits Made -to -Measure We have made special prep- aration for the coming spring trade and owing to the rapid advance in prices we bought ,our woollen early. We have all, our new stook in the store now and can give you the ad- vantage of theold prices, al- so guarantee the colors as well. Blues, greys, & browns, will be the leading shades fpr spring. We guarantee a per- fect fit. - PRICE $40.00 to .$65.00 These three things are assured to wearers of Corsets Their fitting provides a perfect base for the lines of one's gowns.. Comfort is assured - be- cause ample support is given while allowing free play to one's movements. The steels will not rust. Several, fine elastic garters are fitted to each pair and almost all models are attrac- tively trimmed with lace and ribbon, We invite you to come and sec the new models. We are also showing some fine Wash Dresses, Reppa, Cinghams, etc. c--4_ H1 111111111_I111111 Great Display of New Staple Goods at L ess than You Expect to Pay The New Staple Goods are in, all crisp and new from the ware houses. They demonstrate more than ever the buying power of this store. In a seas.. on of unprecedented scarcity of goods you will find this store shows the greatest range in its history and while in some cases there are alight advance in the prices, still, the advances at this - store are only " majority of cases are hardly noticeable. Come ini early and see these goods in their complete- ness. The new patterns in prints, gingharns, gala teas, kindergarten cloths are really delightful. The Prices are Very Reasonable 1'EABODYS' UNIQN MADE OVERALLS Aft° AMERICAN GOODS MANUFACTURED • m �• Big Sterling Values in Men's Working Clothes Everything that the workmen require is to be had here in the very best values that money can buy. QUAL- ITY N'IRST is the secret of the long wear and honest values you get in our work clothing. OVERALLS SHIRTS Peabody's 2.75 Flannel 2.00 Black Derry I.5o to 2.50 Blue Stripe 1.5o to 2.50 SOX Union sox 25C Heavy wool 75c Extra heavy wool $ i Black & white $I,25 MITTS Horse hide 75c. Calf skin 75c Mule skin 5oc CAPS - Shop Caps 25c Light weight caps 5oc to $ i Heavy weight caps 50C to 1.25 Men's arni- Ui?wea:' Filled with - soft warm comfort are our lines of pure - wool Underwear. There is no good Under- wear made that is not here, read over the list of famous makes and you will be satisfied that only the best is permitted to enter into our stocks. Stanfieids,. wool rib Watsons, fine rib Turnbull's' fine rile Tiger Brand, rib :Scotia, wool rib I� Penman's fleece .00 t. 2 3.00. 2.50 Sweater Coats For man, woman or child Thete is no garment that affords half the comfort you • will get from the sweater coat. No one who has ever felt the warm cozy comfort of one of these coats would ever be without one. If • you have not got one, try one this winter, you will be delighted with it. Price Men-..... Women... Chilcren. .2.00 to 10.00 .2.00 toj 15.00 5,00 STEWART BROS. Seaforth