HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-11-04, Page 6r juin'
New 'York Qpltt11a1-
badtitute, Mooreiie °at
S. care %broat Hee-
Sing, At 4r, 3. Rasa
oonth fromr
d Wedneg-
m11 a.m. to
Waterloo Street, Reath,
Phone 267, Stratford,.
3a`18ULTING ENGINEERS
, proctor & Redfern. Ltd.
proctor, B.A.,Sc., Manager
Toronto St., Toronto, Ca..
ldrldset Pavemeaa, Waterworic, .ewer-
$7atews, lneineratas., sohoe*
c . Uta tloa. Factories. erbr-
veld out ut
Our
money we savsave oar client.
MERCHANTS CASUALTY CO.
Specialists in Health and Accident
Insurance.
Policies liberal and unrestricted.
Over $1,000,000 paid in losses.
Exceptional opportunities for local
Agents.
904 ROYAL BANK BLDG.,
2'I78L50 Toronto, Oat.
JAMES McFADZEAN
Agent for Howick Mutual Insur-
ance Company. Successor to John
Harris, Walton.
ELS
BRuss
x
1,
address BO
or PHONE 42. 2769x12
LEGAL
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and
Notary Public. Solicitor for the D
Do-
asInion Bank. Office in rear of the
ii n Bank, Seaforth. Money
nto
Octan.
a
3. M. BEST
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer
and Notary Public. Office upstairs
liner Walker's Furniture Store, Main
Street, Seaforth.
PROUDFO TKI RAN AND
HOLMBarristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic. etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
en Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, K.C., J.
L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes.
'et Thea in; Shape foul**
Long "Shut in."
13e Sure Your Queen Is a Good One --
A Strong Colony" end Plenty of
Stores the Next Requisites—Pay
'Less for Better Bulls.
(Coat r*I Utsd ultOOstsrLorroe,srtment et
It is taken tor granted that the
beekeeper has introduced a vigorous
Malian queen to every colony In •
stitch a failing or poor queen was
iouud, late in July or early August
if this has been done and room pro- •
vided, so that the queen could lay
to capacity and the bees still store
any surplus honey that might be
harvested, thea[ the beekeeper le In
a fair way to winter the bees sur-
cesstully. There are two other
manipulations, however, which
,should be. completed to assure enC-
cessful wintering.
First, unless one has a first -clans
cellar, it does not pay to attempt to
winter weak colonies in the cellar.
Weak colonies er nuclei cannot be
wintered outdoors with success at
any time.
All colonies covering less than
three frames, on both sides, should
be united with other colonies. The
beat way to unite le to place a sheet
of newspaper between each brood -
chamber er and allow theto
bees unite
without any further attention, except
that in a week or two the paper
should be removed and the bees left
In one hive -body.
The second manipulation, and
equally important, with having a
good queen and a strong colony, is
the question of the winter food sup-
ply. Beekeepers who are willing to
make an Investment of not less than
tifty pounds of first-class honey per
colony, are the beekeepers. who next
season secure the large crops of
honey. If the fall honey is not of
known quality,.then It will be better
to toed each colony from ten to fif-
teen pounds of sugar syrup, mixed
In the proportion of two of sugar
to one of water. The sugar ahould
be thoroughly dissolved, but the
syrup must not be burned. This
syrup should be fed while quite warm
in an inverted Mason fruit jar or
honey pall with perforated cover;
and if fed inside an empty super,
with the entrance reduced, there will
be very little" fear of robbing. Feed
the warm syrup in the evening and
before the end of September. Then if
the colony has 60 pounds of natural
stores and is headed by a good Italian
queen, this colony will then be in
shape to either pack for outdoor
wintering or to place in the cellar.
In the winter of 1919-1920 the
winter loss throughout Ontario was
over 50 per cent., yet even in a win-
ter when the lose was so heavy,
many successful beekeepers wintered
practically without loss. It is un-
necessary to have a heavy winter
loss in bees, provided the beekeepers
will give the same thought and at-
tention to the aplary, which success-
ful business men in all walks of life
give to their individual business.
'The office of the Provincial Apiar-
ist, Ontario Agricultural College,
Guelph, is always ready to assist bee-
keepers in any way to make beekeep-
ing more successful. Consult him, it
in doubt.—F. Eric Millen, 0. A. Col-
lege, Guelph.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN, V. S.
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. Seaforth.
All orders left at the hotel will re-
solve prompt attention. Night calls
received at the office
JOHN GRIEVE. V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary
enamels treated diseases
Calls promptly
eat -
tended to and charges moderate. Vet-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office
and residence on Goderich street, one
door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea -
forth_
MEDICAL
DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN.
Osteophatic Physician of Goderich.
Specialist in Women's and Children's
diseases, rehenmatism, acute, chronic
and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose
and throat. Consulation free. Office
above Umbaek's Drug store, Seaforth,
Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m
C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M.
425 Richmond Street, London, Ont.,
Specialist. Surgery and Genio-Urin-
ary diseases of men and women.
DR. J. W. PECK
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
Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15. Office, 2
doors east of Post Office. Phone 56.
Hensall, Ontario.
DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderich street
east of the Methodist church, Seeiorth
Phone 48. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
DR. C. MACKAY
C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin-
ity University, and gold medallist of
Trinity Medical College; member of
the College of Physicians and Sur-
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;
Rojral Ophthalmic Hospital, London,
England; University Hospital, Lon-
don, England. Office—Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5,
Night calls answered from residence,
Victoria street, Seaforth.
AUCTIONEERS
THOMAS BROWN
Licensed auctioneer for the counties
of Huron and Perth. Correspondence
grrangemertts for sale dates can be
made by calling np phone 97, Seaforth
-Or The Expositor Office. Charges mod-
' Meals and satisfaction guaranteed.
L
e., stoics
X14
Back en Stage
OR those to whomthe this
things of the theater mean
much, nothing in many
months has transcended in
interest the anuouucement that
Eleonora Duse is ehortly to return
to the stage. She proPosea, first t0
appear in Florence with Emete Zee -
cunt. The plan to to give three per-
forivances, and upon the relative
success of these appearances, Mme.
Ouse is to make her decision whether
or not to continue on tour in Italy.
;'ante enthusiastic predictions are
•a outlining professional visits t0
l ranee, England, and America.
An event, indeed, for the play -
of Florence again to witness
Lie great art of Mme. Chloe. For
toward the end of her tirenty years
cf, retirement she became •all but a
legend and a name ealsting for the
general public, only in the somewhat
va:;ue but always enthusiastic remit -
R. T. LUKER
`lensed auctioneer, for the County
[ilsoh.$ales attended to in all
"Of .the County. Seven �yqears' ex
ifs' .: Manitoba and Soskatche-
:S'e'itldTtabTd aSI aria
ay E.
lef• 'i;.;,
se
to i weallher Will
and we
the smmeY�et', When lie at`.
win hold the,fo.rt long enough to suit
the moat o8 ata. - As ret we have'ealy
had two imetWalimalies but the trel3a
art being ra , y divested of their'
Leaves, and a' tun's tint is appar-
ent everywbot+Q;' At m0dei'ght of, the
11'st a' 54-tnite, "ate •sprung into ex-
istence and made 'loose articles rattle
around for a thole.
On the eftEl'noon a the 15th a
Duluth Lester Durk car, going east at
or near 24th Avenue East, Superior
Street, filled with passengere,'got out
of neutral and: started backing down.
grade and gaining momentum as it
proceeded, and did not come to a halt
until fifteen blocks were covered.
Marry of the ilaxsengers Mere very
much excited but were kept quiet by
timely advice., The conductor stood
on the back viatibule, signaling back-
ward and following street cars, and
a male passenger done the same by
a side door at the front and close
to the anotormaan, the latter sticking
like a veteran to his post and tooting
the horn continueusby. Some of the
passenger's refused to take another
chance on the runaway car. 1 'had
four friends on this misbehaved car,
one refusing to board it again. I
missed the car by forty minutes.
This lane runs on a twenty minute
sdhedule.
Some twenty years ago er so the
pavilion on or nc.ar 7111 Street and
7th Avenue West, and used for danc-
ing and other rntertainmenta and
situated at the tap , tri the Duluth
street car incline, caught fire and
,bursa dawn. A ear was stationed
there and it was known that the fire
would release bh,• ear and that it
would come down the grade at tre-
mendous speed. Officers were stal-
tioned on Superia• Street by the side
of the incline 3o worn and keep all
out of danger. 1 got a glimpse of
the burning, blaring car as it tore
down, seemingly a sheet of fire. It
struck the abutments at the bottom
with awful force and the momentum
caused burning b,ards and timbers
to shoot across Superior Street, even
on to Michigan Street. These streets
are not far apart. The quick re-
sponse of the lire department remov-
ed any further danger.
Many years age on Lower Lake
Avenue a street car, fortunately with
no •passengers aboard, got out of con-
trol headed for the ship canal and
plunged in, the motorman and con-
ductor jumping before the car made
the leap. Later it was raised and
used again. Many improvements in
and around bhe canal have been made
since then.
Speaking of runaway street cars
reminds me of an incident much
earlier in trty life when a yoke of
oxen got beyond my control. In
July, 1883,'I hired with a farmer nam-
ed Currie for haying and harvest,
and residing some seven miles snth-
east of Brandon, Manitoba. The as-
sinboine River ran through his farm.
He had constructed a hand ferry to
Pun across the river both for his own
use and also for conveying settlers
and others for -which he levied a
small toll. His son .Robert had a farm
opposite and across the river. This
particular afternoon in question a
young man and myself with a yoke
of oxen were stacking shay on the
latter's'farm, and I as teamster. At
supper time we were bringing home
a load of hay. As we neared the
spot where the ferry was stationed
my companion suggested I better get
down and lead the oxen. "When we
go dawn the first grade I will do so,"
I answered. But in going down the
load shoved on them and they refus-
ed to held back despite all my
"Wloas," but I very nearly got them
stopped on the following level but not
enough to enable me to get off the
load to lead them. Then down grade
number two they started, gaining
momentum, and then on to the ferry.
Again I thought my "Whoas" would
save the day but th my dismay I saw
them plunging over the edge of the
ferny into the river. The front part
of the wagon partially went over
and several hundred pounds of hay
and myself followed melt. The wagon
tongue had slipped out of the neck
yoke ring. When I got disentangled
from the hay I started to swim back
for the front end of the wagon. The
oxen also started to swing around in
my direcbibn. My companion yelled
to me to hurry or they would
trample me and drawn me, but I got
there first, and with my companion's
help and :my own exertions I got on
the front end elf the wagon again.
As lone of the oxen showed signs of
being in distress I reached away
down, grabbed shim by both horns
and hung on to keep his mouth and
nose out of the water. When Mr.
Currie and a young man named Will
Brown, saw bur awifu1 predicament,
they rushed to the scene, untied a
rowboat, the farmer plying the oars
and young Brown hastily disrobing.
With , an opened jack knife, the
handle between his 'teeth, he plunged
into the water, hastily cut the two
necloyoke straps and unhooked the
trace chains, one of the oxen hitting
him a nasty blow With This born. It'
would seem 'if I remember right that
a turned back plank kept the wagon.
from going completely over the + ferry,
The worst Mr. Currie said to us was,
"I wonder that one of you two young
men could not have got off the load
and led the oxen." Slummed, up, the
total loss was a neekyoke;two cut
straps, a quantity of hay and what-
ever prestige I lost as an ex team-
ster.
On September 18th, there passed in-
to eternity Capt. Samuel 3. Thomp-
son, in his 83rd year, being a resi-
dent or this city for fifty-two years
and its first Chief of Police. Born in
1y
niscences of playgoers of loug stand-
ing, and in the glowing passages of
criticism written in Europe, Great
Britain and America during the last
two decades of the nineteenth oen-
tu ry.
ManY Pages of
Shaw's
"Dramatic
matin
a
ee
Essays and Optufous" are devoted to
the power of the Duse art, Re truth,
aimplic;ty, and fire. Except, per -
taps, when gaily belaboring "Sar-
dooledom," or indignantly deneunc-
Ing playgoers for their coolness to-
ward Ibsen, G. B. S. was at his beat
to 111. descriptlous of Duse's perform-
ances. When he ventured into the
dubious field ,of comparing her
method with that of Bernhardt's he
Laid on with a will, and always to
the disadvantage of the French-
woman.
Accepting Shaw's definitions of
acting, one could not but agree with
him. but after all, he had something
of the distaste of the incorrigible
realist for the ways and traditions
of the romantics. Granting "Sarah"
her Theatre Francais traditions she
Is unrivalled inimitable, and com-
parisons become a futile debate over
irreconcilable definitions. For those
whose ideal of acting is an Illusion
of life likeness colored by an -his-
trionic device that is discernible to
the keenest observer, Mme. Duse
seems not unworthy of the term
genius.
Perhaps It was the Spartan experi-
ence of her girlhood, as a child of
strolling players, that taught her the
shallowness of
the fruit-
lessness
pretense,
lessness of temporizing. Certainly
she came to be instinctively truthful
in her acting, but for all her passion
for honest effects there never came
the chill of austerity. Always there
was warmth and force in her acting
of the great roles in the plays of
Victor Hugo, Dumas the younger,
and the Italian playwright of the
day, Pellico. As. a very young girl
she played Juliet in Juliet's own city,
Verona, before delighted audiences
that thronged the Arena.
Probably her first memorable suc-
• eees was in the leading role of Zola's
"Therese Raquin," when the per-
formance won her an important con-
. tract, signed by Rossi, a leading pen-
sonage of the Italian theater of the
times. It was In "La Princesse de
Paying Less for Better Bulls. Bagdad" by the younger Dumas, that
Eleonora Duse won attention in
A survey recently made in con- ' other countries, even venturing to
nection with the "Better Sires— South America. Her tours were the
Better Stock" campaign carried on • triumphs of a great artist over the
by the United States Department of barrier of an unfamiliar language,
Agriculture shows a general ratio of for playing always in Italian, she
one bull to every 13.9 cows. Hxper- . won upqualified approval of the
fence, however, in Pennsylvania, the press and public In Vienna, Paris,
state which leads •in the number of London, Moscow and Berlin. It was
bull associations, shows that 93 bulls in Vienna that Sarcey, who had ac -
are sufficient felt the.5,604 cows be- companied the Theatre Francais
longing to members of the bull also- company on tour, first saw Mme.
elation, or an average of about One Duse, and declared in his account in
bull 'for every 60 cows. These fig- the Temps that she acted with equal
urea are taken from the bull ancient- ' brilliancy parts as varied as Shake -
tion directory recently issued by the speare's Cleopatra, Dumas, Camille
Dairy Division, United States Depart- and Sardou's Cyprienne. He said of
ment of Agriculture. ' I her "She is not handsome but has an
If' the members of these associa- intelligent and expressive face, and
tions owned their bulls individually, • wonderful mobility of features." He
at the usual ratio of one bull for ' said, that her tones, though some -
every 18.9 cows, they would need what metallic, often produced
296 bulls instead of 93. Yet the 93 ' thrilling effects; and that her "dic-
bnlls give the required service as tion is distinct and clear, like Mme.
effectively as 296 would do, and in Bernhardt's, each syllable coming
fact better, because the reeufting off- nut with well rounded edges."
spring are better. The association • Until that time Eleonora Duse was
bulls are of better quality than the not widely known outside Italy, but
ordinary run of sires privately own Sarcey's fenllleton seemed almost to
ed, and their daughters are apt to sound her praises round the world,
he better -producing cows. • for at once it became known every -
Even this does not tell the whole where that a great actress had come
story. After an individually owned
sire has been used for about two
years It is usually necessary to get
a new one. In eight years, there-
fore, these Pennsylvania farmers, if
they owned their bulls separately,
would have to provide themselves
with four times 296 bulls, or1,184;
whereas in the bull associations at
the -end of two years they simply
move each hull to another block.
The original 93 bulls, if they all live
and do well, can be used for the
whole eight years. There is quite a
difference between the cost of 93
bulls and that of 1,184, to say noth-
ing of the difference in their use-
fulness.
The members of bull associations
sometimes (lay less and always re-
ceive more for their money than cow
owners who go it alone.
out of Italy. In London and New
York she won the rare accolade of
the unqualier -I admiration of other
players. *musing stories- are told
of her manner, in which mistress of
her every means of expression, she
eluded experienced actors, aware of
every trick of their craft.
This illusion Duse always achiev-
ed by disarmingly simple means, or
means- seemingly simple. Instead of
an elaborate facial make-up she used
paints and powders. not at all, or
very spartegly. She was noted for
her original byplay, her little nat-
ural
abural touches and the avoidance of
trite stage "business." She was of -
tan startling In her Budded contrasts
of moods, but had a why of modu-
lating quickly from one phase of
o:notlon to another, so that the aud-
ience while stirred or getpped was
1 at the same time thermal. Het one
Clean Thrashing Saves Wheat drawback, for the casual playgoers,
was a frequent rapidity of utteranbe;
ate.,-.
1epas Clagtn "'t4te
Waa M ixt'gtr"
Walla blue ;
t eibi
that o�moa'la'b!'o trim 'day. J11447 pOb`�
1889, .y (fought and t to Mat a fitg1
estimated at girer 700 strung..:, AI'1
the aleers were wounded -excepting'
one, ulna lay.' bullets, the rest bybricks,
seines and other missiles,'
The . pessiblMti'es 'od a threatened
railroad strike of tremendousppro-
portions 'emus up in this cou,ntry•
October 80th is the tate set, to ma-
terislize it woad .be d 'national ca-
lamity. The pudic .ls surely suffer-
ing crony' now.. The • two cantond-
ung parties aiheuld bear in mind that
in the fight the innocent public, is
hurt and squdezed, and that w*thout
the latter both lire railroads and the
unions world •starve, blit Uncle Sam
will take things in his own hands if
they both don't be good.
On November 11th, the third an, ,
nivensary of Armistice Day, the great
disarment conference called by Pres; -
dent Harding, opens at Washiagten•
The prayers of millions of mothers,
fathers 'and others will be that God
will guide the deliberations of these
eminent statesmen, Who will assemble
from many parts of the world.
ROBERT McNAUGHITON.
Duluth, Minn., Oct. 22, 1921.
CANCER A MUTINY OF OUR
BODY CEI LS
Drawing a most striking parallel
between mutiny in a regiment and
cancer in the human body, Dr. L.
Duncan Bulkley, senior physician to
the New York Skin and Cancer Hos-
pital and member of the American
Association for Cancer Research, con-
tributes to the Medical Record (New
York) atrether.brilliant plea for treat-
ing cancer without the knife.
lie piotures a regiment far away
from home, where transportation has
fallen dawn, /food is soarce.and bad,
horsing is vnretched, clothes are worn
and insufficient, filth prevails and
conditions of life have become Intol-
erable. A few soldiers—representing
body cells--atir,up a mutiny, others
join them and :propose to kill their
officers. The Colonel returns, bears
of the dissatisfaction and begins by
shooting the ringleaders, just as the
surgeon removes the riotous group of
cells farming the 'tumor called cancer.
Bat the intolerable conditions con-
tinue and presently more soldiers
mutiny—or more body cells run riot.
The trouble spreads to other regi-
ments just as the cancer breaks out
in other parts of the .body, until the
whole regiment or body is affected,
and this ends its life.
But if the regiment has a good, kind
Colonel he listens to the boys' com-
plaints, dismisses the petty officers
who were to blame for it and reme-
dies the evil conditions. There is no
shooting of wren, nb• murder of of-
ficers, the soldiers return to their
duties and the mutiny is at an end.
So with cancer, as the many physic-
ians Who have treated it by remedying
the diet, applying the principles of
correct hygiene and medicinal treat-
ment, can testify.
Of course," writes Dr. Bulkley,
"we have not reached the point where
every case df cancer in every stage
of the disease can be cured, but under
sufficient and exactly proper medical
management there need not be the
90 per cent, of ultimate deaths fram
cancer that surgeons acknowledge to
be the case at present."
As to the supposed local origin of
cancer, Dr. Bulkley continues 'hes
parallel of a mutiny:
"We all acknowledge that cancer
of the tongue and buccal cavity arises
from the local irritation of a broken
or decayed tooth. but of the thousands
of suoh that exist haw leny few re-
sult in cancer! Smoking, especially
the use of a pipe, Is accredited with
cancer of the lip and mouth, but how
seldom does this occur among the
thousands who use tobacco! Cancer
of the breast is often attributed to a
blow, but ,almost every woman has
at some time had a blow on the breast
or irritation from a corset, while rela-
tively few develop Dancer.
"Applying nolw our simile of a
mutiny of soldiers to .the action of
the cells forming the lesson which we
call cancer, we can readily see how
a local irritation may act as the ex-
Members of the farm bureau of but for those who listen elosely,
Kitteon County, Minn., last year sav- there was a constant delight, at once
ed $77,000 or about $500 to each emotional and esthetic. •
thrashing Machine, by using tight- It is only to be bbped that'
bottom racks, canvas ander the Eleonora Dune's experimental pea
-
i feeder, cleaning- up when• required formances will satisfy even her own
and after each setting of the mar•sever e standards of self-criticism
hi no during the thrashing season. nd that she will then grant to theta
donservative eatitnate of the suer- terfuls of new playgoers in the large j//�l/fl/E'ICOriCallaOtBnY
Ing by clean thrashing 15 this coahty capitals of the worifl, at least,' an Nil', Eyes
was 27,500. baslrela of wheat, 20,400 opportunity to see her In hot great �g y6a ten Pesmole O
bushel f sate and 10 OOd bushels et i —Cb 1 W Science Mont- ���*
4r more. 'Cr'y'ing. "Are Out *vie i'#eajt and Hap- asreo ijCl ptIvie .i.
z7s,.dotr"C try alai bY''. p- ldeopyotlrl2yes bfdaeaneflealtfap
i Kitchener atiint the Di Cin r ca Hook
C a
EEN
has a far finer flavour than that int nnay;d0►.
or China Green Tea? Send for a sample and
be convinced. Address- SaIadae Toronto.
citing oaute of rebellion, by soldiers
or cells, against existing conditions
Of 'iife, While perhaps the lather alone
would not suffice to ptoduce'a mutiny
or the malignant growth—even es a
spark eutiices to /Start a great fire
in combustible muateriaie.
"The soltdim+a may have endured
their increasing discomforts and dis-
tress without Tes'Ista'nce or mutiny un-
til some unjust or unkind treatment,
or .a, blow from a Corporal or a Ser-
geant, led them to open rebellion.
In the .same way the cells of a part
may have long suffered nutritive and
neurotic or other grievances and yet
have 'striven to perform their Sane
tions Taithftully, secreting milk, gas-
make room for the others.' Natant
in the same way has put a limit to
the Hfe of man.
'Another Murillo: You know dae
principle of the continuous perficama
ance at the cinema. You Pay Para
money and see the show round. Yost
are then supposed to come out, bort
aoane will stay. The second time you
see the show you will be bared; the
t'hi'rd time you go mad, and the Boards
time you may commit suicide. hu-
man life s something like that. Peo-
ple crave atter human immortality.
They have never thought what it
means."
tric juice, bile, urine, &c., until some
external agency .gave e them
a
Shock
of .unusual or unjust treatment.
Some local injury preclpitatea mat-
ters and leads them to .throw off their
allegiance to p'hysiol'ogical control
and action and starts them on their
abnormal and ridtous career, Ceas-
ing to functionate aa before in 'their
proper glandular or other action, they
still have the power of growth and
reproduction, and a useless malignant
neoplasm is ffoamed."
Dr. Bulkley closes by insisting that
cancer is a constitutional and ndt a
local disease, and that when taken
early the local leisions disapper and
remain absent so long•as the condi-'
tiohs that caused them do not re- i
turn.
s o a e. ro ea. r e an c peila,neslibyCoaehlte
of barley �,
of
s the $ictal sooner. tc eller . py,7" ire d b B sae, WrttefotP EE8'e re
rd Say. p340 Tlamea T tbarle, ftmiaaerafl0 dyC.l: ulUlu0SttW ,tacos.
:060 est
'S.
0
CAN EXTEND LIFE BUT WHY
DO IT?
Prof. Keith, the great English an-
atomist, physiologist, pathologist and'
anthropologist, in a recent ;interview
in London, remarked that he hoped 1
that some day we might know what
life is.
Queabloned about the possibility of ,
lengthening the spam of life, he re-
plied:
"The desire for the extension of the
span of human life is a form of mad-
ness, and if people would only think
of the conditions of life they would
r.ever entertain the idea. Old age is !
not a disease •but part of the eseen
tial machinery oaf nature for running
human life. Look on nature as the '
business manager of human life.
What nature requires is to keep life
going. Nature aims at the species,
not at the individual. Nature has .
built our bodies in such a way that 1
we should have short lives. The whole'
system, is built up on a period of
short existence. In trying to' extend ,
the span aY life you are night up
against nature's basal law. Her whole 1
idea is to use young and vigorous
lives and kill off the old.
"Civilization has tended to extend 1
the span of human life. Animals like
the gorilla and anthropoid apes that
are nearest to min are old at forty.
The aborigines of Australia and Pata-
gonia
were old at sixty. Human life'
is longer now. Experience points to
the fact that life might be extended
by at least another decade. But it
is t:esirable? What we want now is
young, healthy people. What we
need is to extend the period of their
vigorous life. This necessity is now
being generally recognized, and it is
the rational view.
"I will give you two similes which
I think will appeal to the general pub-
lic. Regard life as a restaurant, and
nature as the manager. 'People rush
in at midday to lunch. It is crowd-
ed; tlhere are no seats. Why? Be-
cause some people who have ,finished
their meal are lounging about and
ecgupying the seats. The manager
sajss: 'I must make regulations. I
must limit them to ball an hour to
1
Send for free boot
giving runt partic-
ulars
sg D
wore er Tsepch
'e
world-famous pprem
and Fino k;ptlooppeeye
boo Fits— boom -treatment. hometreatmeno.
(iron 90ryo '.1000 not'nyear. Wa rite n / row i mots
pfrl,a wroENCH'S REMEDIES 1Wena et onwte[
TRENCH'S ambers.7 LIMITEademidD
2607 St•Jamrie' Ohambvrs, 79 AdelaldoBLHI.
Toronto. Ontario
a
t.?
DON'T
D®
THIS
dt,
LEON ARD
E<"',R OIL
RETIEVES DEAFNESS and
STOPS HEAD NOISES. Simply
Rub it Park of the Ears and
lrsert in Nostrils. Proof of snc-
c.•ss alt I,o siren by the druggist.
MADE' IN CANADA
ART981 211.55 C9., Sales Agents, Tomato
f n. loosani, lo_, NM., 70 5th Ave., It T. My
IFor Sale b
by
E.
UMBACH Seafortb
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
1
GENUINE ASPIRIN
Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross"
are Aspirin—No others
There is only one Aspirin, that marked
with the "Bayer Cross"—all other tab-
lets are only acid imitations.
Genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin"
have been prescribed by physicians for
nineteen years and proved safe by mil-
lions for Pain, Headache, Neuralgia,
Colds, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis
Handy tin boxes of 12 tablete--alae
larger "Bayer" packages, can be had
at any drug store. Made in Canada.
Aspirin is the trade mark (registered
in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture of
Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.
*While it is well known that Aspirin
means Bayer manufacture, to assist the
public against imitations, the Tablets of
Bayer Company, Ltd., will be stamped
with their general trade mark, the
'Bayer Cross."
:f.