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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-07-08, Page 6r�t Clean Wheat Oats andSticke • a,vkenwltmt ane Se',ls (National (:rep Iwpre velour,s Service.) "It is difficult to understand why grain is not more frequently cleaned in the country, the dockage ground and fed at !mine. yearn there ! n sonic is .scarcely a car of No, 1 or No 2 grain received while car atter car of No. 4 and No. 5 and no grade grain is sent into market. 'rills atm ay s tow- ers the ,price," says II A. Fuss, weigh urnste r, Chicago Beard of Trade. "Besides freight Must be paid upon the refuse contented in these cars and Moreover he dockage roust be charged bark against the shippers. "It would seem that funs, Is' or- ganizations should undertake to slip nothing but the very finest grain available and insist upon a high price for it, feeding the poorer grades at home. "Millers will always pay a pre- mium for clean grain, and it may readily be seen that the lower grades cannot fail to cheapen less whole crap if sent to iile market. If nothing but clean grain were shipped, thousands of cars could by released for other duty. The attention of co-operative societies is urgently called to this phase of marketing." Bread Mins Made I ..i t'u,u.n l,t service.) y )e.n' we see in financial :hat the bankers are couserv- •„,uey to muse the crops. .11 i'n' dues I+ ' Limier l get his He h; s been carrying carr yin all of g e,nd the suns total of this r I. all the farmers makes the rt i •.1 Ip' spe•n!alore fade into ,t tore.” s tics Mr II. S. Hider, a,. C. 's.. '.an SIr,l ;: Wire Co. terns,-[ li s always resented 7'a• I prr.•e becausr ln• considers I Isis where lilas) be it un Is more , that at any ten- when lie ws,uts > fail value for his property, but „fly the fixed arae has very elites ,!u Willi the selling price because nu time during the war pot iod did heart sell below the guarantee. "Farmers have always said that if 'he middleman could be eliminated that they could get more for Itte wheat and the public Could buy it for less. "The Wheat Growers Association has demonstrated its ability to mar- ket its wheat co-operatively and It has not been difficult to finance every wheat transaction when placed upon a business basis." The Cow a Food Lahoratory (National t'r.,p Impn,t eu,ent Service.) By Lillian C. Barron. Most women think that bread - making is too hurl work. That is only because they wake it so. What- ever their recipe way be they should not laboriously knead the air out of the dough with vigorous punchings and pokings, because it is better to fold air into the dough which is a very simple process, occupying but a few minutes. The quality of the bread depends largely upon the quality of the Sour. Canadian spring wheat flour has long been a favorite because it excels in the proper kind of gluten. Soft wheat contains gluten which is not elastic and rubbery and while such flours may absorb water, the gluten cells do not retain the moisture, most of whirl, is driven out by baking. Ix) not waste your time kneading your bread. Fold it over. Mix your sponge into dough, folding in dry flour and air until you get the loaf of the right consistency. Treat it gently. The came dough will make beautiful rolls, I Naliunul ,'nq, L•.'or,,'ri,.,,, l Service.; How can we build a new breed of men without we start with the babies? It is impossible to improve our race lint, Is we nourish our in- fants that they may develop both physically and mentally. The dairy cow is at the foundation of every industry, She is a most wonderful laboratory. She fills her 'stomach hopper with grain, grass and silage, then she lies down and by chewing her cud, converts this raw material into the most perfect food In the world. Doctor Me ahlom, of Johns Hop- kins University, tells us that the "water soluble A" and the "fat sol- uble B," two mysterious somethings, ::re found in milk as nowhere else. Without these mysterious vitamlnes children will nut grow, so milk -fed babies have the greatest possible ad- vantage over the wolf -reared children raised without milk to drink. How are the stem babies fed? Black coffee, pickles, imitation jams and molasses on their bread, eoneti- tute the daily rations of thousands of our poor families In the cities, Without milk children languish, the vigor of the adult declines and 'lie vitality of the human race runs :ow. 'Market Bread fro Stolle (National t'rui> I 'lpnn ong, Ill -socio.) "Itr32;'s a pile se remit et our good Teen* m,i n. sew.. lu w'a.e1,' after it is grown. -says .lir. k. A. hider, preslden'. Itaeadi:ul au'ci & Wire Co. "It Al onld be sale to say that there are term, iegetatiles wasted ill small gardens than ere eaten. '•The waste is especially noticeable in hay. Therefore it is very im- portant that every locality look after baling and marketing intelligently and systematically. "There will he thousands of dol- lars inrofl s P t wasted this year be- cause the crop is so poorly managed. ed There ought to be a regular baling crew in every neighborhood, ,conduct- ed either as s, club or by the owner i of the rig, making a popular prime either in hay or cash for doing the 'work. "Generally live men constitute the crew but usually there are Iwo extras. One stands up on the press, using his fork to direct the hay to the fced I box. Two men pitch the hay on to the platform. At the hack of the machlned.wo men, one on either side, I teed the hale ties, clamfiing thea, be - fere the com/resston is released: A sixth man is often used to weigh the bate and roll it to the barn. "Straw should not be _wasted. l ;There Is a good market for It when baled and baling can be done at odd • rtes. Straw should not be burned any event. If nut baled, It should returned to the land." • tom' 'the $ritish Government and WHAT EVERY WOMAN THINKS. fapturers are aiding China in That nobody in the world would 'Webinent 'Of aviation schools. suspect liar to be within (five or ten) aatinnal Cr") 1,,,,',,011e•nl ;:,•rviee.) 1'ilrle Henry Wnllaco, f.rlher or the American Sccret;ny of Agrirultnre, used to say that you cannot expccl In remove fertility y,•or after year from the soil without renewing It any more than you could keep it,, drawing money out of the hank w-ilil- ont making a deposit. lie ttsed to rage up and clown the land dennnnc- ing the man who sinned his soil and ratted if farming. The late Cyril G. Hopkins, of the I'niversity,of Illinois, belonged to the • iren d single-handed of un sing[ . handed he ••rusaded against soil robbery by ad- vnrating building up of a permanent unit fertility by the Ilse of rock phosphate. He demonstrated on three hundred nrres of very poor land in Southern Illinois, that he could hp using ma- nure, limestone and rote( phosphate, produce 351/4 hesteis of wheat per acre, whereas .on his cheek plots, whore farm manure alone was used, hr got but"11 1,¢ bushels. He taught that our nitrogen supply can he taken from the air and that we generally have enough potash, but that we must replenish the phos- phates. The time will come when Canadian land must be renewed and while our farmers, especially in the West, have never used artificial fertilizers, It must be apparent that the economical time to restore fertility Is before the (toil is exhaueted. Yearaof bar real age,. That, no matter how many other 'women a man may hard flirted ,with, THIS time be Is serious. That nobody suspects that she uses. a lipstick and a little rouge. That she could make the Winter Garden chorus look like a row of wooden dolls, if' she could bring her- self to "dress like that." That there ARE, somewhere, if one could only'meet them, men who make love like the hero in u motion picture drama. That, every time a man stares at her in the street car, she is "resisting" a tmeptation---land missing an experi- ence. That she ISN'T getting any fatter, no matter what the scales say. That the man who almost, but not quite, proposed "didn't have 'the courage, That no matter what her mirror tells her, there is something attrac- tive interestin g, "different from oth- er women u kn o ow;' about her. That she should have been an ac- tress. That she could write a lot better ztuff than this, if she "only had the time." That every time she gains or loses a pound of flesh, she loses or gains a pound of attraction. That her eyes arc "mysterious looking." GLANDS NOW BLAMED FOR CERTAIN CRIMES Whether it was indeed a question of thyroid or defective functioning at some other point of the, still half - mysterious system which we call thr imernal secretory glands, the recog- nition of a gland as a special plea by County Judge William R. Bayes, of Kings Cuunty, New York, gives ea:denee of the link, stronger than the public knows, between the court and clinic. Dr. Max G. Schlepp, of that city, whose work at the Clear- ing House for Mental Defectives is widely known, says that this intelli- gent iettitude towards crimes com- :"Itted by the emotionally diseased, as well as by the insane, has for sine. time been supplanting that of unihfui sited condemnation, writes Marian Storm in the New York Pcst. Tendencies to wrong -doing of a w,:utan lately arrested are in truth due to a disturbance of the citemieeil balance of the blood, and eOn be treated and perhaps quite curet. s.,y's Dr. Schlepp, and b or surgical means; involving nc::'tor the prison nor the insane ;isy.0 u. "Pis chemical balance of il.' blood has an important bearing the regulation of the threshold el tunctienal activity," said Dr. Schlepp. -If the thyroid is not f unctioning _>reperly--i that'• is not feeding into the blood stream the normal amount of the stibstanee hich it contributes—then an im- i.uise front outside may produce ah>,,.rma) involuntary response." That is, if your thyroid gland is misbehaving, and you perceive a charming bit of platinum jewelry on I. counter, and pick it up, and tuck it ince your handbag, why'possibly you are not to be blamed. Your roving glance, crossing an unfortunately lowered threshold of functional activity, has made the potential ct.ergy of your nerve cells kinetic, v.ith illegal results. Yours was a chemical cringe. You are to be pitied. Nevertheless, your hypo or I,y'per-thyroidism cannot be allowed to continue its festive career. Some- thing must be done about you. So says Dr. Schlepp. The internal secretory glands of the body about which we at present know' some- thing, are the pituitary, composed of anterior, the middle, and the 'post lobes, each with individual functions; the thyroid and parathyroid; the suprarenal gland, with cortical and medullary cells (the latter called the citromefine); the pineal gland; the pancreas; the liver; and the inter- stitial cells. Now the disturbance of any one of these exceedingly delicate organs, according to Dr. Schlepp, may well excuse a crime. On the other hand, that same condition may have no -vii results whatever—may produce n erely an interesting individuality, or else an emotional but in no sense !urinal predisposition. In ease glandular abnormality is called into court as a defence, as it was in the deferred sentence of Sirs. Liebowitz, it cannot, of course, be permitted to free the offender to continue his unlawful activities. Where can a man who has committed a cringe by reason of unstable emotionalism be rcpt? He cannot he turned back a:pw) sanely, airy more than. the murderous maniac. "Nor can he," say's Dr. Schleppr "be sent to an a„ylnm. lie is not insane. He is intellectually normal, but emotion- qJy diseased. There is often noth- ing for it, at pre ent, but to send such persons to prison—a barbarous necessity. What we need is.a great detention hnslitat, and the law should h,: changed so that those who are suspected of having com- mitted crimes through emotional defects (mold he held there to . he investigated. Later they should be taken -tospec i al 1 'g rsttitutlons to be treated and healed. "The connection 'between lurid moving • pictures and juvenile cringe is still popularly supposed to he lather mystical. It is perfectly ;,lain to the neurologist, The re- peated emotional jar of 'thrilling' scenes overstimulates the suprarenal. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured reachbthe applications, as they cannot Catarrhal Deafness portion uresf constitu- tional treatment HALL'S CATARRH MECatarrhal Deafness INE is a Iestcausedabyr an in- flamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachlah Tube. When this tube is Inflamed you have a rumbling sotmd or imperfect hearing, and when It Is entire - 1y closed, Deafness is the result Sinless the Inflammation can be reduced, your hearing may be destroyed forever. HALLS CATARRH MEDrCINE acts through the blood ..on the mucous sur- faces of the system, thus reducing the in- flammation and restoring normal condi- tions, P(All Druggists, .a Cheney free. o. Tot. le, , Ohio, til mately;'gbt'oale un.. 81rinp s %"r5 cal activity. The little y q vMina! who ]las been so a10eihi iu.`•710 news is the 'victual of a ohs** tempest in .the blood, ' An e' .Ilewhich every one can u,nddratti •p;€ the raising or dower: tug °CI d'!:threshold of functional activity'llWahemicals in theterl is seen ill the use ofether. Ether acts eelettttrg ly It raises this threshold ea high that there is no longer any motor response to outer sensations., The patient does not stir, But the heart goes art beat tug and respiration continues. The remarkable anaesthetic does net shift their threshold at all. Per- haps you could call the undesirable ! movie a moral ether. "Be sure not to . let people get the impression lions the case of Mre. Liebowitz, that all hyper -thyroids are criminally inclined," Bald Dr. Schlapp. "They may be just- mildly hysterical womee. While there Is a normal point at which the stimulated emotions over- ride the repressive forces of the in- t tellectual side of the brain, this threshold, or explosion point of ner- vous energy, varies greatly in indi- viduals." T. Tern barom (Continued front page 7) "He is wearing a suit of armor'.” By this time the footman was cough- ing in the corridor. "That's English history, I guess," Temlbaroln replied. "I'll have to get a histoty.book and read uo about the Crusades." He went on farther, and paused with a slightly puzzled expression be- fore a boy ina costume of the period of Charles iT, "Who's this Fauntleroy in the lace collar'?" he inquired. "Queer!" he added, as though to himself. "I can't ever have seen hint in New York." And he took a step backward to look again.. "That is Miles Hugo Charles James who was a pare at the court of Charles IL He died at nineteen, and was succeeded l,y his brother Denzel Maurice John," "I feel as if I d had a dream about bins sometime ci' il'et'," said Tembar- om, and he stood still a few seconds before he passed on. "Perhaps I sant something like him getting out of a carriage to go lit. the Van Tw^illers fan.y-dress ball Seems as if I'd go the whole show sin)!! up in here. And you say they're all my own rela- tinrts?" Then he laughed; "If they were alive now!" he said. "By jinks.' His laughter ' iggested that he was entertained by mental visions. But he did not explain to his companion His legal adviser was not in the least able to form any „pinion of what he would do, how he would be likely to comport himself, when he was left entirely to his own devices. He 'would not know also, one Wright 'be sure, that the county would wait with repressed anxiety to find out. If he had been a minor, he might have been taken in hand, and trained and educated to sone, extent. But he was not a minor. On the day of Mr. Palford's. de= parture a thick fog had descended and scented to enwrap the -world in the white wool. Tembarom found it close to his windows when he got up, and he had dressed by the light of tall wax candles, the previous Mr. Temple Barholm having objected to more modern and vulgar methods of illumination. " I guess this is what- you call a London fog," he said to Pearson. "No, not exactly the London sort, sir," Pearson answered. "A London fog is yellow—when it isn't brown 01 black. It settles on the hands and face. A fog in the country isn't dirty with smoke. It's much less trying, sir." When Pafford had departed and he was entirely alone, Tembarom found a country fog trying enough for a man without a•companion. A degree of relief permeated his being with the knowledge that he need no longer endeavor to make suitable re- ply to his solicitor's efforts at con- versation. He had made 'conversa- tional efforts himself. You couldn't let a man feel that you wouldn't talk to him if you could when he was doing business for you, 'but what in thunder did you have to talk about that a man like that wouldn't be bored stiff by? He didn't like New York, he didn't know anything about it, and he didn't want to know, and Tembarom knew nothing about any- thing else, and was homesick for the very stones of the roaring city's streets. When he said anything, Pal - ford either didn't understand what he was getting at or he didn't like it. And he always looked as if he was snatching to see if you we're trying to get a joke on hint.' "'Tembarom was freqeutnly not nearly so much inclined to be humorous as Mr. Pal - ford had irritably suspected him of being. His modes of expression alight on numerous occasions have roused to mirth when his underlying idea was almost 'entirely serious. The mode of expression was merely a re- sult of habit, Mr. Palford left by an extremely early train, and after he was gone, Tembarom sat over his breakfast as long as possible, and 'then, going to the library, smoked long. The library was certainly comfortable, though the fire and the big wax candles were called upon to do their beet to defy the chill, mysterious dimness pro- duced ty the heavy, white wool cur- tain folding itself more and more thickly outside the windows. But one cannot smoke in solitary idleness for much more than an hour and when he stood up and knoelced the ashes out of his last pipe, Tem, barons drew a long .breath. "There's a hundred and thirty-six hours in each of these days," he said. "That's nine hundred and fifty-two in a week, and four thousand and eighty in a month.-swhen it's got only thirty, days in it. I'm not going to calculate how many there'd be in a year. I'll have a look at the papers. There's Punch. , ;That's their comic one " He looked out the American news in the London papers, and, sighed hugely. He took, up Punch and read • ,every 10 IRk blues.3tr He did;meant ' tbat;' ft aiutrr. dl' was a @peele geed'Mae,' and that therewere «ome extremely witty things in it, --The jeltes were About' bi;thops in gaitetre, about garden - parties, about curates or lovely young ladles or. rectors' wives .and rustics, about Royal Academicians -dr esthetic poets, Their humor appeaaled to him as little, and seemed as obscure as his had seemed to Mir. Palfoyd, "I'm not laughing :iny heal off much 'over these," he said. "I guess I'm not on to the point." He got up and walked about. The "L" in New York was roaring to and fro loaded with men and women going to work or to do shopping. Some of them were devouringg morning papers bearing no resemblance to ,those of London, some of them carried. parcels and allof them looked as though. they were intent on something or n other e and hadn't a moment to waste. They were all going somewhere in a hurry and had to get badk in time for something. When the train Whizzed and slackened at a station, *some started up, hastily caught their papers or bundles closer, and pushed or were pushed out on the platform, which was crowded with other peo- ple who rushed to get in, and if they found seats, dropped into them hast- ily with an sir of relief. The street cars were loaded and rang their bells loudly, trucks and carriages and mo- tors filled the middle of the thorough- fares and people crowded the pave- ments. The store windows were dressed up for Christnvas, and most of the people crowded before them were calculating as to what they could get for the inadequate sums they had on hand. The breakfast -at Mrs. Bowse's boarding-house was, over and the boarders had gone on cars or elevat-, ed trains to their day's work. Mrs. Bowse was getting ready to go out and do some marketing. Julius and Jim were down -town deep in the work pertaining to their separate "jobs." They'd go home at night and perhaps, if they were in luck, would go to a "show" somewhere, and after- ward conte and sit in their tilted chairs in the hall bedroom and smoke and talk it over. And he wouldn't be there, and the Hutchinson's rooms s' ould be empty, unless some new people were in them. Galton would 'be sitting among his papers, work- ing like mad. And Bennett—well, Bennett would be either "getting out his page," or would be rushing about it the hundredth streets to find items and follow up weddings or receptions. "Gee!" he said. "every one of them trying their best to put something over, and with so much to think of they've not got time to breathe! It'd be no trouble fur them to put in a hundred and thirty-six hours. They'd be darned glad of them. And, belive toe, they'd put something over, -too, before they got through. And I'm here, with three hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year round my neck and not a thing to spend it on, unless I pay some one part of it to give me lessons in tatting. What is a di r sf1ti91Y ^luiew ,. 1 •vagsa�i�r aid' lirnil$ y e:, elite leneysiefork don0 . old ladles• an oiled , ad 'a figura of , speeeltin ja " e1'f •you • could 'ride or shoot,- you could amine yourself in the country," P,alford bad said. ' "I can ride in a etweet-ear when I've got five cents," Tembarom had an- swered "Thatts as far as I've gone in riding—and what in thunder should I shoot?", "Game; replied 'Mr. Pafford, with chill inward disgust. "Pheasants, partridges, woodcock, 'grouse—," "I shouldn't ehtlot anything like that if I went at it," he responded shame- lessly. "I should shoot my own head off, or the fellow's that stood next to me, unless lie got the drop on me first[' He did not know that he was ig- nominious. Nobody ceold have made it clear to him: He did not know that there were men who had gained dis- tinction, popularity, and fame by do- ing nothing in parbieular,but hitting things animate and inanimate with magnificent precision of aim. He stood still now and listened to the silence. "There's not a sound within a thousand miles of 'the place. What do fellows with money do to keep themselves alive?" he said piteously. "They've got to do something. Shall I have to go and take a walk, as Pel - ford called it? Take a walk by gee!" He couldn't conceive it, a Man "tak- ing a walk" as thoughit were medi- cine—a walk nowhere, to reach noth- ing, just to go and turn back again. I'll begin and take in sewing," he said, "or I'll open a store. in the vil- lage --a department store. I could spend something on that. I'll ask Pearson what he thinks of - it -or Burrill. I'd like to see Burrill if I said that to bins." He decided at last that he would practice his "short" awhile; that would be doing something at any rote. He sat down at the big writing table and began to dash off mystic signs at furious speed. But the speed did not keep up. The silence of the great room, of the immense house, of all the scores of rooms and gal- leries and corridors, closed in about him. He had practised his "short" in the night school, with the 'Z" thundering past at intervals of five minutes; in the newspaper office, with all the babel of New York about him and'bang of steam drills going on be- low in the next lot, where the founda- tion of a new building was being ex- cavated; he had practised it in his hall bedroom at Mrs. Bowse's, to the tumultuous accompaniment of street sounds of whizz and ting -a -ling of street -cars dashing past, and he had not been disturbed, He had never practised it in any place which was silent, and it was the silence which became more than he could stand. He actully jumped out of his chair when he heard mysterious footsteps outside the door, and a footman appeared and spoke in a low voicewhich startled him as though it had been a thunder - On on 'tii(nl; they are Villager of the skaidttttt,oras I, 4110 d. et Y. • "Where are. tee, �a f'I dldta'a,)r�tgW entietty whatfto 41p�,. ad?, So I left 'them ,h, the hall, The, yyoouunagg li persoi 's a sort of gulch, de- terml-ned (Continued, next week.) c- 9• rp,t II II iii1 u',n , 8 goad to your adx ORINOCO We have the most complete line of pipes in the city. Priced from 25c. up. Call and see our stock. W. W. ROBINSON SEAFORTH, tei I OTHER TABLETS NOT ASPIRIN AT ALL . Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross" are Genuine Aspirin If you don't see the "Bayer Cross" on the tablets, you are not getting Aspirin—only an acid imitation. 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