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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-11-19, Page 6''SIR Ss 9111. DR F. J. .FORSTER Eye,, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. Late Assistant New York Ophthnl- mei and Aural Institute, Moorefleld's Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, London, Eng. At ,Mr. T. Ran - kin's Office, Seaforth, third Wednes- day in each month from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. 53 Waterloo` Street, South, Stratford. Phone 26-7, Stratford. CONSULTING ENGINEERS/ Limited imi The E. A. JAMES CO., L E. M, Proctor, B.A.,Sc., Manager 36 Toronto St., Toronto, Can. r"' given below •asl the result Pavements, waterworks. .ewer } bele the standard: 8rid�es tests, 100 being -the fine black regranulated cork (dust term), 100. Chopped straw, 86. Coarse black: regra Forest leaves (well Granulated • cork, lig fl WINTERIK6 Some Insulating Materials and Their Appreciation. al Tablets THE GREAT FRENCH 'TONIC If you are not just feeling yourself, you feel run down, tired and lack of ambition, you need toning up, You --- get Vital Tablets, and in a short Cork Dost" and Dried Forest Laves note, the change. Price 50c: a box, 6 Are 'Better Insulators Than Wood for $2.50. Sold at all Drug Stores. Shavings or Sawdust—Even Tem- Tli Scobell Drug Company, Montreal, rtiu t.- ,Qtle. 1►e��ttnt�e In the Hive IntPo (Contri.buted by Ontario Department o! agriculture, *Toronto.) THE EAST WIND of pimness in the bine eyes, a strength in the line of the tight- lips which made =him think suddenly of Helga. This woman was i fighter, too, he though He guessed that she was in, the early twenties. "Where's Mr• McIntyre?" The 'voice puzzled him. It bad a whiplash quality, a rebuke: He shrugged. :Don't know him. Who is he?" "Didn't he hire you?" He saw the eyes narrow slightly, the'hand tighten on the pin.. "Oh, the boss? I thought his name was Wayne. He's down in the hay- field. Said he'd be up when he fin- ished" She turned abruptly. "All right. I drove the cows down, You'll find the pails on the shelf out there. You mighf as well start milking, I guess," "Guess again then.," He chuckled. "I didn't bargain on a twenty don't hour shift. And besides, I know which end of 'a cow to tackle. "All right. Settle it with father when he comes." She transferred thin • circles of dough topan tested the heat HE results of the relative' (Continued` from page 7) - ' vit: of ome` bee- brother?" He asked the question. non -conductivity Y , - c� carelessly of Lon as they unhitched hive in 1 sulating, material; are under an open tool shed. "Don't. he age Systems, Incinerator, schools. Public galla. Soinings, Factories. Arbi- trations. Litigation. Oar Fe .: Urually paid out of the moray we save our clients. LEGAL S. HAYS. color. This is the grade sually used R. S and as packing about imported Malaga Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer 1'c. Solicitor for the Do- grapes for instance, 84. Notary' Public. in rear of the Do- 8-20 grade granulated cork (eat- *airier Bank• Seaforth. Money to ural color) . It leaks similar to pre - minion: Bank, , Via. ceding one but it is a little coarser ted cork, 85. ed), 84. or natural J. REST Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Main Street, Seaforth. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND COOKE BarriatZra, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- lic, etce Money to lend. In Seaforth on Monday of each week. Office in VETERINARY Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of all domestic animals by the most mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street, qeaforth. An orders left at the hotel will re- ceive prompt attention. Night calls received at the office Honor graduate of Oniatio* Veterin- College. All diseases of 'domestic ale treated. Calls promptly at - ',melded to and charges Moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistry a specialty; Office and residence on Goderieh street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatie Physician of Goderich. S list in Women's and Children's ases, reheumatism, acute, chronic and nervoas disorders; eye, ear, nose and throat. Coneulation free. Office above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth, Ituesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-'Urin- ary diseases of men and wobeen. Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons Of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General Rospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phienet56. Bengali, Ontario. in grain and lighter in weight, 80. Sawdust, very dry and from well seasoned -and clean lumber, 68. Excelsior --grade used in pat�king. boxes, 60. Planer shavings, 60. The lesson of this table is that the. fine black cork dust is the poorest conductor of heat or 'the beat insu- lator so far as the resistance of the passage of heat is concerned, end planer shavings is the best ,conductor of heat, and therefore the poorest in- sulator of the nine, substances tested. The fact should be emphasised that these results do not tell us anything about the substances except their power to conduct heat. It may be that if they were tried out as insults - tion for bee -hives .we would arrange them differently than as given above. - There . are otherpropertiesbesides conductivity of heat that figure in practice, and.a consideration of these Is my second purpose as announced at the beginning. , A good insulating_ material neces- eerily is a poor conductor of heat, but all non-conductors are not neecssarily good insulators in practice, or, at any rate, not always desirable or setas- factgry. Next to non -conductivity is low inosture absorption or the ability to keep comparatively dry in moist weather conditions. Experts in bee- keeping say that high moisture con- tent on tent in the hive is fatal to the bees since . it . revises. dysentery among thein. ;'Let us. assume that the air in a . hi're is very moist, say at a nor- mal temperature. and the tempera- ture gone down. several - degrees ow- ing to ,inadequate protection. or in- sulation about them, and see what happens. The result is exactly the same condition *e:'all have often ob- served on the outside of a water jug Oiled with cold water and set in warm air. ',Moisture congeals on the outside of the . jug, and it becomes cold and clammy and the water drips from it and makes everything else it touches wet. Like*lse the dew is formed. The physical reason for these ` phe- nolnena is the fact that coLd air can:., not hold in the invisible or vapor form as touch moisture as warm air Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth, Phone 46. Coroner for the County of J. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and niember of the Col- - lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of C. Maekay honor graduate of Trin- fty University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College' of Physicians and Sur - awns of Ontario. know 'enough to quit when the whistle blows?" Lon, a lank shambling man of fifty or more, displayed broken stained teeth. "Guess he knows, it'll rains afore mornin'," s he drawled. reason" don't work lessin he's g "What's the odds if it''does rain?„ Matlock was „puzzled. "He'll be un- der cover, wont he?" yeah, but the hay won't." Lon regarded him with visible 'amuse- ment"Never farmed much, did !Nth Matlock .did not reply. He mustn't let them get to thinking of him as a greenhorn. It would- weaken his chances of persuading them. He tried to solve the puzzle of double harness without asking for instruc- tion, and stood.back while Lon de- liberately''brought order out of the • intricate tangle of straps he produc -ed. He watched closely. Next time he'd know how. He helped the other mix feed and thrust down hay from the loft over the stalls. The horses ate with a kind of ferocity, -so that their teeth grated on the wood of the feed boxes anhe sound of . their grinding molars' followed him -out of the barn. His own hunger found a new edge. , "Where do we eat?" He stopped Lon' as the awkward figure sloughed away. "I eat home." Lon chuckled. "Guess Wayne% feed you up to the house." He jerked a thumb at the hite- painted building which . topped a_ gentle rise. Matlock _ was surprised and pleased and a little disappointed. The house impressed him—a substan- tial, structure, with a • dolumped porch in front, a shaggy lawn running down to retaining wall facing the road, rosebushes in bloom and a grape arbor arching over the approach to the side door. It stirred! the old class hatred. in hint by a- hint of wealth, almost of luxury. , He had never- slept in such a place,. not even since the boring -from -within idea, had enabled him _to •exchange the empty pockets of the I. W. W. for the comfortable salary the union paid. He nodded to Lon and walked up a path paved with irregular flat stones. The smell of wood smoke greeted him as he near- ed the screened door; his nostrils lik- ed it hungrily. Through the wire mesh he saw a woman at work before a table. Her back was toward him„ her head bent forward over a baking board. He watched her bare arms moving swift- ly at their pleasing task, observed the contours of the print dress, with approval. There'd be agreeable com- pany, he foersaw, to share his kitchen. meals, Again the class conscious- ness woke - in him. The girl and he belonged in the .same world. He opened the door and stepped inside confidently. She turned, without lift- ing her hands from the rolling pin, her eyes challenging him to explana- tion. "I'm the new hired help, sister," 'he said, cheerfully. "What's the chance for supper." He decided that she wasn't pretty, after all. Her face was reddened f Vom the stove, her hair untidily moist. But something in her direct glance held! his interest. There was a kind Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeeps of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chic -ago Clinical School of Chicago; Ophthahnic Hospital London, England, University Hospital, London England. Office --Back of Dominion I Bank Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from residence, Vic- to any season in fact. The ineulation toria Street, Seaforth. assests in. preventing exremes of I body of water doee to th.e adjacent THOMAS BROWN !Accused auctioneer for the counties land areas. Another reason, ana not of Huron and Perth. Correspondence the least because mentioned last, is arrangements. for sale dates can be that a good insula.ting around the made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth hives provides a drier, and therefore or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- a healthier and in all respects a bete ter atmosphere for the bees than orate and satisfaction guaranteed. could be possible otherwise. Surely these are sufficiently good reasons why a hive sliouid be protected by an etlicion.t insulation. Flax chaff and a fine excelsior known as wood wool of fiuron., Sales attended to in an a.Iso prove good insulailons for parts of the county.. Seven years' ex- alaY potence in Planitoba and Saskatche- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. 1. lege, Guelph. R. No. 1. Orders left at The Huron More books on Spiritualism are be- ltspositor Onice,.Seaforth, promptly at- ing written by women authors than they did it, ( eh? The spurting sound of the jets pleased his bar; there was a rhythm in it, a marching time. He tried it himself, gingerly, u��t the nearness of the hoofs. was patient, good-humored, not cone descending. Matlock persevered, doggedly in spite of aching wrists. He thought wearily of the oceans of milk the cities consumed, every drop of it wrung by such labor -as this. When Mclntyre had filled two pails there was a pint or so in Matlock's first. The farmer finished for him. . "You'll get the hang of it soon enough," he said. "Not so bad for the first try." , They carried the pails back to a lean-to at the rear of the kitchen, 'led at the handle of were Matlock tot a 'whirring . machine which in some inexplicable fashion separated the yellow cream from the skim milk. The process interested him. He listened understandingly to Mclntyres brief explanation. They went to the kitchen -together. ,: "Great thing, this running water, said McIntyre with a touch of pride. oug an iron t of the oven with her hand and slid "Don't see how we got. along with - the pan into it Matlock's presence out it. Piped it down from a spring ceased to concern her, he felt. last summer." Father, eh? Then she was on the Matlock •'grinned. Funny thing to other side, after all—one of the crowd brag about. Peasant --that was it. he andhis kind were to crush and. Making a fuss about something every scatter when the Red sun rose. He tenement kid topk for granted!" hated her suddenly, hated the quality "dean, this• is Joe Martlock." her voice -which seemed todee enMcIntyrecInt y re made the introduction ro dvct ion the difference between them. Ile - carelessly. Matlock's ear, alert for stood uncertainly, watching her as she offense, heard none. He -was present- spread a cloth and arranged china and! ed as an equal. He nodded. = The silver on the table. Take a lot of 1 girls eyes met his briefly, without breaking, he thought, conscious of an softening. He had an unoomfo table untamed spirit in her. The idea feeling that she could penetrate his pleased! him. - Perhaps if he stayed thoughts. He shook it off, drawing here a while he could pull her down: back , his chair, his hunger:- suddenly off 'that high 'horse. savage, desire. An niri mane He carried- the thought into the air with him and considered it as be rolled ansmoked a cigarette. He was still 'busy with it when! Wayne McIntyre came up the flags, walking risky warmth so that they can live com- fortably and not haive to eat an- extra- ordinau amount of food in order to maintain a normal temperature. The bees get their warmth and energy from the food eaten, and it is the function of the W.f.() and the ex,Cra insulation to keep this heat from 'be- ing wasted in cold weather in the surrounding atmosphere. A second reason is to maintain. an even tem- perature in the hive, and this per- tains both to summer and winter, or Licensed Auctioneer for the County "'Forgot you edutdn't mille,"1 said giood-humoi(edly. show you. It's simple enough when you get the trick of it." Matlock checked a refusal. He es Its exquisite- flavour-. Anticipates free sample. please state the Send us a postal a ,�� Green or lt�ized pt'iCt i►OM now pay whether nvza In oro Address Ji�►Zadw, the curious touch of personal- impulse. hel ?„ voice, 1 ant any W sty, ` if old, McIntyre's God +stood be- fore him, visible- and terrifrra It occurred to him that- it was comic-- this omm this pretense of thanking somebody forgiving them the food they'd slaved and weated for with their own hands. Be forgot his amussement as the prayer ended and he hunger, sudden - 1y edged and intense, dominated him again. He ate with an ' eager haste .him on the steps• which puzzled hips ae little-- -ae it he on tl el Long day." ge, ' were afraid that there mightn't � ed wearily,. `Guess you aren't used neglecting � enough. He saw the girld- to our kind of hours, eh. "Not much. Eight's enough in the hills." Matlock grinned in. the dark- ness. McIntyre laughed. (Continued next week.) d not glance at hira,r Her. She di . head moved in negation. e "No, thanks. I've almost finished.". Something in the tone angered him: It was ae if he had aekedf a favor, instead of offering One; as if she re - 'buffed a presumption. He hesitated a moment, shrugged and wen out presently _ Yana :again. McIntyre her' own food to wait on her gran father, tying his napkin under his thin beard, cutting' his bit of hate, picking up his fork when he dropped it. , He guessed that the old man was a serious burden to her, and his con- tempt stirred again. If they had any :sense -they'd stick the old fool ins some shrunken and tremulous, wavered institution instead of let ng im through an inner door. Matlock was make extra work. conscious of an instant change in the It pleased him where Jean waited others. Both. seerded to soften curie on him. She moved. back' and forth ously; the girl's smile revealed an between stove and table, mechanically unsuspected gentle warmth. supplying his needs and her father's. "My father," said McIntyre.e"Thse The service ministered to his self - is Joe Matlock, father. Going to regard. She was on the othee side help us out a while. of the gulf, a bourgeoise a petty Matlock nodded as the old eyes capitalist. But ihe fetched him his stabbed toward him, queerly bright food like a servant. It was almost realized, from what the gir a a under heavy white brows. • h a sign of the future, when he and his kind would rule, and she and hers that the faien day differed from the ,. "No farmer Wayne, Won t earn (eight-hour institution - of the cities, his keep. Why don't you hire good would beg or die. If he expected to ac,cornplish•anything men instead of these tranips? Where's He..went out after supper to smoke /he'd better tubmit to established cus- 011ie Dexter this summer? Or Jim in the early night, a pleasant fatigue IP increasing his sense of well-being. tom for the present. Later e co attack' such abuses easily enough. And even then there was another motive. /le foresa.ve that McIntyre would discharge him at the first n the blunt eomment, suddenly under - of insubordination, and he didn't want stood, enligheened by the tone. The to be discharged just yet. Not till_ old man wasn't all there. Second he'd got better acqtiainted with the childhood. Ile kept his head up while girl in the Icitchen. anyway. He fol- the others bowed and the thin voice lowed McIntyre °back toward the, deepened! an steadied' in a prayer. group of barns, nested pails swing- The whole pro *rig was new to Intereeted, he Watched the demon- stration of milking.' That was b.ow "Supper's getting *cold., father. Behind him in the lighted kitchen Better ask the blessing now." Wayne McIntyre helped his danghter Matlock startled and angry under with her task of clearing away and washing the dishes, the milk pails, the removed parts of the cream sep- arator. Matlock's contempt retiveck Woman's work, tele,' He finished a second cigarette and went back. The old man read at the table, covered now with a red -checked cloth. Mc- Intyre ,had gone into the dairy and him.' He had never heard anybody give thanks for food. He listened, the 'girl was still busy at the sink. amused at the reverent fear in the Matlock yielded to an. unexpected USE "DIAMOND DYES" Dye righti Don't risk your material. Each age of "Diamond Dyes' con- tains directione so simple that any woman. ean diamond,dye a new, rick coley. into old garments, dfdperies, coverings, every- thing, whether wool, silk. linen, cotton or nfxed goods., Buy "trammed Dyes"—Tio other kind—then perfect re- eults are guaranteed even if you have never dyed before. Druggist has "Dianiond Dyes Color Card" -16 rich color& CATARRH OF THE STOMACH IS DANGEROUS "Thousand's Have It and Dont' Know It," Says Physician, Frequently Mistaken for Indigestion—How to Recognize and Treat. "Thousands of people suffer more or less constantly from furred, coated tongue, bad breath,- sour burning stomach, frequent voniitting, rumbl- ing in stomach, bitter. eructations= gas wind and stomach acidity and calf it indigestion when in reality their trouble is due to gastric catarrh of the stomach," writes a New York physician. Catarrh of the stomach is danger- ous becaute the , mucous membrane lining of the stomach is thickened and a coating of phlegm covers, the surface so that the digestive fluids cannot inix with the food and digest , them. This condition soon breeds disease in tbe fermented, unassimilat- ed food. The blood is polluted and carries the infection throughout the body. Gastric ulcers are apt to form and frequently an ulcer is the first sign of a deadly cancer. In catarrh of the stomach a good and safe treatment is to take before meals a teaspoonful of pure Bisurated Magnesia in half a glass of , hot watee ae hot as you can comfortably drink it. 'The hot water washes the mucous from the stomach walls and draws the blood to the stomach while the bisurated 'magnesia is an excel- lent solvent for mucus and increases the efficiency of the hot water treat- ment. Moreover the Bisurated Mag- nesia will serve as a poweeful but harmless antacid which will neutra- lize any excess hydraehloric acid that may be in your stomach and sweeten its food contents. Easy, natural digestion without distress of any kind, should! soon follow. Bis- urated Magnesia is nOt a laxative, is harmless, pleasant and easy to take and! can be obtained fram any local druggist. Don't confuse Bisurated Megnesia with other forms of mag- nesia, milks, citrates, etc., but 'get it in the pure bisurated form (powder or tablets), especially prepared for this purpose. 6. MACDONALD'S "BRIER" has become a Canadian institution. Smoked by the men who made history. In the bush, on the trail, in mining camps, prospectors' huts, factory yards, on trains, steamships, in the luxurious homes and do-pntown clubs of our Canadian cities—Macdonald's has always been recognized as the smoke, but in new form—maintains every Macdonald tradition since 1858, and gives to smokers—more tobacco for the money. q7Xe aeacco -wed a Viewtt NOV By mailock look in II line torcle the where the 1-6te ont above in the fe, the m enemy Sh on. your sun risini whete the lulove the I tell yin shrill : down on sweated u s, that t deep and Matioelq hearing seerned something -sense of Lately he deepening everthrow and setbn 'workers h thoughts. vitrol out bring bac' "If yoe strike aln ing the on the n in the lane -by this e the plantl you'll dee fest! Fig whines to your fiste Yes, sla Matlock si bring herl :it had h had been ingy" he makes ze Here she Matlock ough. Bu rnittee nor had manai ence had They migl but they'd tory for t He felt I hearing li nights. T the raw se had led ti union, ove pleaded fo pired agre file headio for wages - When he Seveynie his only the wege strikes lik€ ed dimly s -was the ft ae he care - It was 4t Helga Swe Boi him. He ether men of ms,rsha clique nisi eFturnin arid puttin I3ufort the easy thoui, no resiste through eN And the tlae by eleuttir troops to lock had StveYn respond to s into word, against 11 mob react: vaguely ill ing yet. Y2lb T111. Yelb for 1 1414:4 Ir.: :FT; ii.:1;441: 4411AH eeeeeteeoeieieett 14 Who Canal evith eougel fin ds of every dae sustThe laisrumred tt's fat eyer Why, eve curini The fc of lettcr my sinee -wife deri bottles ever thi. t cutely. Qi Ili i-ef was niest glvc; 11, * butt should b eny inal of pt., Teal eough fails, C to. retie tory. 1 nOW fro in •