Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-08-04, Page 1sEArORn, r •1. 01, rl Stewart BETTER. CI.O!IHIN REASONABLY PRICE What you pay for your clothing. is an important matter. What kind of clothing you get for your money is more important. Unless you get clothing that comprises those high standards of material and workmanship that spells satisfaction to you, then the' price you pay, no matter how little, will be money wasted. On the other hand, it always pays to buy BET- TER CLOTHING. The old adage' that "The Best is always the Cheapest,” is just as true to -day as it was a century ago. Our immense clothing business has been built, not on cheap clothing, but on BETTER CLOTHING REASONABLY PRICED The tremendous stock we carry gives you addi- tional opportunity to make a becoming and satis- factory selection. In the final analysis you will be convinced that it pays to buy Better CIothing. Eventually you will always buy good clothing. Why not decide now to always consider quality as well as price in buying your next Suit. WE SELL THE BETTER CLOTHING. Price$15 00 to $350O 1:44.44.44+++++++++++++4•444.44+++++++++++++++++++++++41 •r• To Set Off Your Favorite Frock Wear It Over A Nemo Corset which is scientifically designed to meet the individual requirements of every type of figure. A Nemo KopService Corset does not "dig in" at the top. It does not constrict the sibs. It does not "ride up." It protects the abdominal organs, controls excessive hip and thigh flesh and coaxes forth flat, fashionable lines. While You Are In Our Shop let us show you some Nemo Corsets. You will find that the wearing of a Nemo will give additional style to your gowns. $3.00 to $7.50 All Men's And Boys' Straw Hats HALF PRICE 'li 11, lj' ewart Bros;, Seaforth I; AY, AUGUST 4, 1922. WHY Dear $syo.iW f novice thatb.� ?i�'PPY �0 Rs Via, mi- . �, 444. have of ,lam ao Beverly • «ItI- cieed by a wile a aas geodesar f Dubbin orhiton, in° to ids 1n- Ait this day aird 4120 no one vnoOld Re -Built Threshing: Engines ji+Jone efforts theyt►duce on theirOne 22 H. P. Bell Traction Engine.; more One 20 i;. P. Whits Traction Engine. One 20 H.P. Goodison Traction Engine risk their tor sanity by One 20 H.F. Sawyer & Maesey Trac- trying to uiih'alldi; ',Awe, other than as a Medicine, a4.` Hien only under the meet careful ;a ervisron of a doctor, or 0f one iii deli stands the terrible conditions •+becoming ad- dicted to it ent a . The press, Thera**, that has its eye on what talks Sat about it, can give the Devil his shoes in its pages so far as the Poppy `is +concerned. Of (late it has been bald enough to tackle King AAtebbQ, and is now at- tacking Kinn vii!t% a : vengeance t1Hat diagralces the `high place he once oc- cupied' in their calamine. It can .hardly be expected, I sup- pose, to give �apatce for criticism of the tolatcco and tea ,babits''hat are at ,present so moat 'masters of the situation. They are Broth gime ars prominent a plaice in their advertising columns as King A'loahOl ,ore enjbyed. Tea, ala a beverage, is used in neaa•- 1 y every home three times a day and no social gathering woWld be complete without it. By its ctilsbnual use Ifrb,m childhood on, it gradually becomes a part of the system of the user, and those becoming aifiliieted with the tea Maladies try to devise some reason for their oddments other than the one so evident to +others, and to.which they barve become victims. Tea drinking at ,present is general- ly classed as a womanly virtue, and men dare hardily raise t heir voices against it, as by od-iminghng in social galtherings, and their use of it to- �get'her in their homes, they too, become more or less tea drinrkers. The same reasoning might apply in respect to the use of tobacco; other than that, but few women acquire the filthy habit. • We find, therefore, that in some of their W.C.T.U. meetings th�-y pub4icly denounce its use white they fail to make any comment in respect to their own social Chine, master Of ceremonies, "the Tea ,P„t J. R. GOVENLOCE. Seaforth. Tlily 24th, 1022. tion Engine. One 20 ' H. P. Waterous Traction Engine. One 16 H. P. Waterloo Traction • Engine. Ona 14 H. P. New Hamburg Trac- tion I.ngine.• One 16 H. P. Goodison Portable En- gine. All these Engines are rebuilt, thor- oughly overhauled and repainted. They are exceptionally good valve, and we can make immediate delivery. TRACTORS Two 12-25 Waterloo Boy Tractors. Four 10-20 Reliable Tractor. + SEPARATORS One 24x40 Separator *Qith Cutter. Four 24x40 Separators without Cutter. Two 28x50 Separators without Cutter. ,One 32x50 Separator without Cutter. Immediate Delivery. Straw Straw Straw Straw The Robert Bell Engine & Thresher CQ., Ltd. SEAFORTH, ONT. of being affected. Other experi- ments have demonstrated that tuber- cle bacilli may be eliminated from cows affected with tuberculosis to a degree that can be detected only by the aid of the tuberculin test, so that a herd of cows in the various stages of tuberculosis, it is to be expected that some of them will excrete milk infected with tubercle bacilli, which when mixed with other cows' milk makes the entire output dangerous. The ease with which tubercle bacilli may be eliminated by the udder was strikingly illustrated by an experi- ment conducted by the Royal British Commission in which a cow injected with human tubercle bacilli under the skin of the shoulder, began excreting tubercle bacilli from the mammary gland seven days later, and continued to do so until its death from general- ized tuberculosis thirty days after innoculation. It has been shown by Gafky and Esher in Germany that the tubercle bacilli are not only excreted by the udder but that the dust and manure of the stable where the diseased ani- mals are kept, are in many cases contaminated with •tubercle bacilli, thus contaminated material may read- ily pollute the milk during the pro- cess of milking even though the milk come from a healthy cow. The im- portance of this method of infecting milk cannot be too greatly emphasiz- ed when it is known that cattle with slight infections in the lungs fre- quently raise tuberculosis mucus in- to the pharnyx while coughing and by swallowing this material con- taminate the faeces. It may be of some interest to quote from Farmers Bulletin No. 1200, U. S. Department of Agriculture, June, 1921. Tubercle bacilli of the avian type have been found on several oc- casions in tubercular persons, the danger to man, however, is, slight, especially since cooking the flesh of fowls long enough destroys the bacilli fowls long enough destroys the bacilli the principal danger would be the eating of raw, eggs from tubercular fowls, the outlet for the tubercular organisms is principally through the intestinal canal by means of the droppings. •The bacilli are given off in great numbers from the ulcerated areas in the intestinal wall and from the nodules of the intestine which open into the intestinal canal through small channels. It is also probable that the bacilli may pass from the liver through the bile duct. Having ascertained the grave and positive danger to man from tuber- cular milkiand eggs it becomes nec- essary to etermine if tubercular meat. contains the infectious agent and if it does reproduce the disease in animals fed on or injected with it. Through the exteiThive ecperiments of numerous investigators much evi- dence has been accumulated to the effect that meat of animals affected with generalized tuberculosis may contain virulent tubercle bacilli, the experiments of Kastener, Hoefnagle and Westenhoeffer, are especially of interest as well as of great import- ance because they took into consid- eration the extent, character and condition of tubercular lesions. In one series of tests Kastener fed to experimental animals meat from cat- tle which were affected with localized tuberculosis, the carcasses of which had been passed for food. In this series he could not obtain a single positive result, while in the meat of condemned tubercular carcasses his results in every instance were posi- tive. r Another host which is very suscept- ible to bovine bacilli is the pig. It has been reported that 75 per cent. of one day's killing in a local abat- TRANSMISSABILITY OF BOVINE TUBERCULOSIS TO THE HUMAN FAMILY The question of • t4-'transmissa- hility of bovine tuberculosis is re- ceiving a good deaf ot. attention and rightly so. If greater precaution were taken regarding the health of animals used for milk production or the production of meat, it is believed that the. health of the general public would be safeguarded to 'a greater extent. The following paragraphs are from an address �l,•livered by I)r. A. J. Damman, Presi,i, nt of the Brit- ish Columbia Vete rinoTy Association, before the Vancouver Medical .As- sociation: The subject of tul,erculosis has been discussed from a great many angles, but when all the facts have been ascertained it resolves itself to this cold reality tl ,t the tubercle bacillus finds its hh t in every an- imal, let it be hunuu or dumb. It is useless to tar.• up your time in following out the ,,iscovery of the bacillus of tubercula- , and the many theories that have advanced from time to time. In th„ paper I wish to call your attenti��., to the neces- sity for close co-ee ration of the two professions to safeguard the hu- man family from th! great menace, bovine tuberculosis. How do we as "•t.•rinarians know that the human family is infected with bovine tuberculosis? Because the medical prole --ion tell us that they find bovine tubercle bacillus in the human body! We, also, find this to be true from spot 'mens which have been taken to lal,,,ratories, where examinations have been made by the veterinarian, such ,,s the innocula- tion of guinea pig- from the speci- men and finding th, resulting bovine tubercle bacilli. Little does it. mat er what type of tubercle bacilli ilia, infects the hu- man family or .vi at part of the anatomy, lungs, l i , , r, kidney, eye, brain, joints, lyroph.,tics either mus- cular or abdominal, osseous or men- ingeal. The presence of bovine tubercle bacilli in human beings is quite prev- alent, no definite ,nclusions can be drawn at present .i to the extent of such infection owl r g to the lack of data on the subject, but the fact that the tubercle bacill',s of one species may be transmitted to an animal of a different specie, or to man, makes it quite apparent that any.preventa- tive methods of transmission for controlling tuber, a osis to be -success- ful, we must take into consideration all species of animals that are susceptible. The most frequent sourcee'of dan- ger of infection from animals to man 'are the meat and milk of tuberculosis animhls. . The fact that most cases of bovine tuberculosis which occur in man are cases of infantile tuberculosis points with grave suspicion to milk caber than to the meat supply. coming .from a tubercular udder is capable' of transmitting the infectious principle , requires very the argu- ment. It has boon established that in advanced generalized tuberculosis the adder may excrete tubercle bacili without showing any indication li I�I I rl 11 It j toir torts too* to conterll sis in s. Form tering b of tags `1111000r •of Pig been done In #a 'fir >9 was As corked to ltio pi only Aria abattoir in OM city where any inspection 1, ea.rried., t o man family would b ' ;mt)sveimr lop endangered by eating 'tb. tongue or some other 'part of 'iscera. The milk supply comfit from .ftp and dairies where some of the cows are tested for tubercplosis and are not. Many of the barns . Are fine sanitary condition and others are only makeshift. Many of the War era are in good health, some have tuberculosis, all this milk is oblppeti into the cities, mixed in various vtays, bottled and sent out to the public to use. Is it any wonder that the young of our cities contract Bovine tuber - MO Tear Ia OWN* Kamm Brea., Pabbilsem ES HURON ' NOT —Mr. Richard Wilton, of Turn - berry, has .reeei'ved the appointment %Wonto to judge the Field Crop tions in the Owen Sound dia- trtet. i ---The Advance Office in Wingham has on exhibition an Irish. Cobbler rich weighs 14 ounces. It on Mr. Dan Martin's East Wawanosh. highest temperature in June liras $1k oar the 24th; the lowest,. 40, ass tills,, 'The rainfall was nearly Veir ,ice, much more than the ay. }swage for that month. 11dr� Rudy Sehwartzentruber, of the Brorwon Line. delivered to the Herald Office in zuria 'fast week, a own ,stalk isealeirtrig.9 feet 11 inches. This : 'bows an enormous growth.. --In » of the hydro lat4 the *tea ton, Dr.. Orme art neo Ttlar credi- taJ�phOne culosis ? t Pilo frOrt., ones*. ' road to the Our meat supply is no better f other ou tiro broad from the 2nd to condition. Animals are slaughtered 1 at an abattoir where strict inspection r the 4tb concessioh:' is adhered to and animals are slaugh- f — BaVfiead,00tteeer flet hos bean tered at an abattoir where strict in- spection is adhered to and animals are slaughtered in the majority of cases at abattoirs where no inspec- tion is made before or after killing. These carcasses are sold on the mar- kets. In shops we find carcasses which have not been inspected hang- ing an - ing beside inspected ones. All the meat in the shop is cut over the blocks and with the same utensils, how easy it is for the uninspected parts to contaminate the inspected portions. For example had it not been for a skilled veterinarian in charge of the slaughtering floor, the carcasses containing this gland would have been offered to the public for consumption, how easy could the tubercular pus from this gland, that you .can see escaping from the in- cision infect all meats which would printed. and was ,tlrst poste4 .up in the clerk's office on Watlesisisy, Tim total number of voters is 24$ ` aa* those qualified to act as Jurors rime. ber 66. —The Secretary of Bfyth AgKieul- `- tural Society has been instructed by the Department of Agriculture that Mr. John A. Kernahan, of Maxwell, has been appointed judge of the Field Crop Competition for this society acid will commence judging on July bat —The assessment of Reynold Oda year is $22,500 higher than Last yearn assessment. Some idea of the amount of building done during the .past may be gathered from this, esp ally when it is borne in. mind gist in sev- eral cases assessment has been low- ered. , —Mr. Andrew Gibson, of the Thames Road, Usborne, met with an come in contact with it either on the unfortunate accident July 12th. He block or elsewhere. If a round steak was engaged in drawing in hay when purchased for making beef juice for he accidently fell from the Ioad to an invalid is contaminated by the , the ground on his shoulder, fractur- tuberculosis pus in this manner, and ing several ribs, breaking his collar fed direct to the patient, would it not bone and otherwise injuring himself be likely to produce bovine tuber— internally. culosis unless thoroughly cooked? I —Mr. F. W. Gladman _finished We have it on the authority of Dr. ' moving his household effects fro= Amyot, Deputy Minister of Public Exeter to London on Tuesday and Health for Canada that the handling the family left the same day for the of meat of tubercular animals prior city, where they will reside in future. to cooking is a source of infection ` Mr. Gladman will continue his con - to human beings. This leads us to a two professions must -co-operate reduce the mortality of the hu nection with the law firm of Gladman e the and Stanbury in Exeter as usual The to j family will be greatly missed in town but their marry friends will wish for family from the ravages of bovine them every success in the future. tuberculosis. Tuberculosis is on the —The Clinton News -Record of last increase in this Province, and we - week says: Chief Fitzsimons is veterinarians think that instead of I something of a gardener, if one may directing our efforts to the building of sanitariums and other palliative methods, more effective work could be done by eliminating the various sources of infection. One of the most important, and which receives least attention, is that of seeing that the food supply is not contaminated with the tubercle bacillus. Prevention is more effective than cure, in most cas- es and more particularly in tuber- L'U1osis. The elimination of infection of human beings with tuberculosis through the food supply falls upon the veterinarian. Why? Because he is responsible for the health of the cow which produces milk for our young, also meat which is placed up- on our tables, and eggs which are of- fered for sale in our public markets. The veterinarian is the only person who is qualified to carry on the in- spection of animals and premises through which the output must pass before it reaches the consumer. I ask you as members of the Vancouver Medical Association to arrange a campaign of public education to fight this common enemy, bovine tuber - judge from a fine green cucumber he picked in his garden last Satur- day. It weighed exactly one pound and "looked good enough to eat," without a doubt. As cucumbers are seldom sown until the first week in June, it is going some to have them ready to eat by July 22nd. —The Hydro records show the fol- lowing facts regarding hydro in Ex- eter. Exeter is 155 miles from Nis, gara Falls. Before the town began taking hydro electric energy in 1917 the local electric rate was 10 cents per kilowatt hour, with a meter ren- tal of 25 cents a month. The first hydro rate averaged '7.9c domestic, 8.4c commercial, and $25.69 per horse- power for industrial energy. The present rate averages 4.7c, 6.4c, and $27.01. Because the load has increas- ed from 28.9 horsepower to 178.4 horsepower, it has been possible to reduce slightly the cost for delivered energy, despite the increased gener- ating cost at Niagara. Last year the revenue was $14,487.44; the expendi- ture, $12,745.91, leaving a surplus of $1,741.53. The assets are $33,489.06; the liabilities, $18,270.55; and the culosis, particularly, infection through sum of the reserves and surplus ac - the food supply. counts is $15,218.441. Ferguson & Company Always Something New in Men's and Boys' Ready -to -Wear Summer Goods to clear at special prices—Men's flannel trousers, worth $7.50, at $5.50 Men's Balbriggan Combination, reg- ular $2.00 line. Special price $1.68 Men's Balbriggan Underwear, the best quality at special a garment 68c Just received a good assortment of Men's Blue and Grey Suits—some- thing real choice and priced right for quick sale. Men's Overalls in all sizes Kitchener Brand 'Big Jumbo Big "B" $L95 $2.00 $1.65 Boys' Wash Suits of good material' and assorted colors. Worth $1.50 a suit, to clear at $1.00 Boys' Blouses, print and gingham; good assortment. While they last .......... $1.00, Boys' Porous Knit Combinations, reg- ular price $1.00. While they last at 55c Hosiery.—Many fine lines in Mena and Boys' in all colors, in Cash- mere, Lisle, Silk or Silk and Wool. Something worth seeing. Men's Smocks, extra value at saw Boys' Overalls, in all sires up to ss. Speciafy priced • • • $1.10 Ferguson & Company ' - Seaforth