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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1923-05-04, Page 3,.. 914114'`e SQ at. E, . ach , . 4: : Y ' " ' ,1 (WO Sag of a tondo ' 'teeth. .. Would itt-many inetaneeit care it, . •, s•• - , s • ,• its included in the list of breedltar • 'AIRCRAFT IN ,,. .1.%.", r coiegeropses' yilstialiffiiiiie, is decidedly _hereditary , • as well as ,the preSispesition to , it . 1, . , •1.1.., ,4)..14• - . " It ik not an infrequent occurrence t • ' Thole. intereetedSin the. conserve- liad•foals "dropped" with curbs Whic ton of kegees• Ogre the', Canadian' fthquently disappear in a large meas. 5' Forestry Assoeiation, are realizihg the sue. But there ie always some Pace • •advantages ef an eeriest fire pritibl, of them remaining. It; is the rarest because it. 'provides an uil aralled possible occurrefiCe to find a "broad means for • the sliscov,ery offorest hook, and one with the te n. steeds -fires. „The' aerial observer,. by Hui ing well out behind with n sigrr'of • ARTY reafp of hie position, is not enlY stab. • 1 -able II, itleAver in their ,incipiency Narrow hocks. and t eseswith the •ffres• ist the' °Pete copntry, ,but• it also point dipped forward •towarde, the is able•to.detect in obscure places fires body of the joint; a Ieg With small •-which, iliiesto their location, could not sitruraference nimiediately s -below possibly he visible to the fire ranger the hock, or what jet 'commonly called • en the ground until they .had reach- tied in; those with the back: tendon • ed sufficient proportions to represent not Standing out posterior to the bone .a genuine- menace. In a' great sootily et the backand' outer part of hock— in addition' to 'those indications of instances, fire rangers on the ground,. even after they see snioke spend weakness and tendency to mph, if the is 403,8 in , locating 414 Axe. :On the , jpint ht ernolsen., or what Is celled •ett• fiend the aertid observer is able ' sickle -shaped, the predisposition is •to flt. effeasy• to .tee• Beene of the Mach inbreeded— Curb is not" so very :smoke. a , land 'on a neatty.Jake or much feared' Isy some breeder, as it • 204r. ithek, tither's fires tiresprevs seldom eettsieti permanent lameness silent' anda ranger's ;territory • bes ' It iss' howevers a great' eyesore; it • comes obscured by a. smoke screen, I dere iates a befall% ,RallielverY Poo- l& value as a fire detectien agenSt sidera ly, and h 11 liable to • cause ' is either mollified altogether or rens sec ng lamenesil. dered negligible. , leg* . have 449 ' 0Y, ly at Ev'e•e • 0 • • ,! " n I A. Nerve Troia*: brie to a WaterY. •Coridltioir, of the Bleod; • urli,•01 migll"tifit, as I rrauranbe Y Fierie 'derting 'paint Pins • red • hot neediela being driven through, the • flesh—l0 the'thigh; 'perhaps down the o , l'eg to 016.8111e—that's sciatida. None h brat the -ejetiu n realize' the torte ,of this troubl. ButtbeiSufferer need dot FrOW disceeraged; the trouble Is due to thef'fact that the nerves are 'being 'starved by tioor watery blood, and when the blood is senrich.ed the pains.of sciatica will dleapPear." As blood enricher andpurifier no other nieffichie can equal Dr. Williams' Pihk F1111. They hring to the blood just , the elements necessary to re- store .it to normal 'richness? and red- ness. That is why sio many sufferers! frotn sciatica, and- other forms of nerve trouble, have feund relief through taldng these pills. Mr. D. M. Anderson, Betichhavg, Ont., telliesthat. Dr. Williams' Pints Pills have done for hint as follows:—"Some yea* ago I *as badly afflicted 'with sciatic's.' I could bratty walk and suffered great pain when I did so. I went to a doc- tor, but his medicine did not seem to do me any good. A man who was' Working with me trild me he had onee been. like that and that r. Willian1g' Pink Pills had made him- all right. began to take them, continuing to work, and the trouble diliappedred, and I did not lose a. day, although sometimes suffered terribly. Later 1 had another attack, and again the pills came to my relief. *, Now I take three boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills every spring and fall, and I have had no attack of the trouble since that time." • You can get these pills through any medicine 'dealer or .by mail at 60 ets. a box from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Breckville, Ont. • #0THING-TO EQUAL • BABY'S OWN TABLETS • — • • Mrs. George Lefebvre St. Zenon, Que., writes; "I do not think there is another medicine to equal Baby's strongly formed hock, it would be s ' 'Own Tablets for little • ones. I have safer to take a chance of breeding to him than one with a sound iniqk used them for my baby and Would use nothing else." What Mea. Lefebvre but of weak formation. says thousands of other mothers say. They have found by trial that the Teblets always do just What is clahn- Crooked' hack, unduly straight hocks, narrow hocks, small ,bock,these -bent inwards or outwards, are all of weak formation, and are con- sequently predisposed, ambngst other unsoundnesses, to bone spa.vin. Eden though a horse should happen to have a bone spavin, provided he has a go far we have run over briefly most of the . defective Tormatiops that predispose • to serious' heredi- tary unsoundness: • We divided the Rd for them. The Tablets area mild but thorough laxative which regulate causes \into. four heads,ch was 'i the second one of Whinsufficient quan- the bowels and sweeten the stomach is. and thus banish indigestion, constipa- '''''7•" The old saying, "Size is strength, other • things being equal," ton, colds, colic, dra. They are.sold applies to a horse's extremities. We by medicine dealers, or by mail at 25 Me eqnts a box from 'The Dr. Willianfrequently hear 'it said that such is' I and such a horse/ ,shas "plenty dicine Co., Brockville, Ont. of s , • •• timber under Iran. ' By this is meant that the -.Individual in ques- tion has sufficient substance in She ' ONE CAUSE OF DISAPPOINT-' various structures that make up his MENT AND LOSS IN HORSE legs and feet to give them strength , • . BREEDING' .• , and ability to stand "wear and, Purchasers of horses ramify _look The practical horseman of exper- \ with considerable. disfavor on a ience learns that the horse with dis- horse Alit is ., at all . knee -sprung. proportionately small feet sdldom Personally, the writer would rather stands mulei work without going . • • 'buy a- horse for his own use thee, is at little forward in ' the -knees than one that stands back in theme or is whale is c.alled calf -kneed. A horse • 'yeah the former. defect is almost • ' surdto be much, More elastic in his step than one with • the latter, and, consequently, will not suffer, to the same extent from the HI -effects sore Vern some unsoundness of these organs. So with the slender pasterned horse. He is not Only sub- ject tostrain'at that point; but pre- disposed to iriegbone. The horse light under the knee is apt to suffer from, strains of the tendons and- ligaments in that situ - atm, as well as troublesome splints. •of concussom. A calf -kneed horse Proportionately large • joints give is also much more likeds. to , suff. er-i,wearing ability to the legs. This id. from etrailW. well exemplified hi the case of hocks Knee-sprfmg, unlike the other with pleny—Of tissue in them. the list of The hereditary roubles, is not very in. unsoundnel given , in hocks to his offspring has handed " sire that transmits small • ft equeritly ongenital. - down to him one of the most prolific • Swan -necked horsesarid tholie sources . of • dnsoundness in. these with thick, coarse throttles are con- joints. Defects of formation of ethese • -sidered to be of the forniations most joints 'are often a cause of tiatible, liable to devlop the defect of tho ebb e :este has already been pointed out, lilt wind caned "r ring.', not so much so in my. experieneueas* In Great Brit 'n and Ireland, and lack of size. ,Stating that a horse on the, Contine of Europe, breed- has plenty of timber under him does ers are usually very • particular not coVer all eases, as some horses about avoiding reefers for breeding. taire plenty of tissue in their ,..front purposes. The climatic: condiforis legs and are deficient in their hind ones. In addition to formation 1 and quantity cif tissue, "quality" is of vast importance in influencing the wearing ability 'of the legs and feet. Parents transmit with great 'faithful, ness to their progeny defects in the quality of the horn of 'hoofs: Shelly, brittle hoofs are strongly predisposed to creek, developing • sand and ieuartheeeraeks on 'slight provocation, and giving rise to that.,very •thouble. some inability of being .unable to hold the shoes tightly. Brittle hoofs are not necessarily coarse in fibre. Hoofs of coarse fibre lack the den- sity. of structure which generally contributes to toughness. . 'Undue size of foot, low heels and fiat soles, with a tendency to be eas- ile• bruised, are pt to be associated with a' lack of quality in the horn structure. A horse with bone of a spongy character of lacking in den- sity is deficient in quality. Such an individual is predisposed to inflim- =tory diseases of bone, such as 'splints, sore .shins, ringbone .. and I spavin. , ! The lack of quality in a 'horse is • particularly well shown in tbe skin of his legs. 'The tendency to the de- : velopment of _cracked heels, stocked ' lege, mud fever and grease is Very , evident on slight provocation.. Sires .deficient in quality are apt to transmit to their progeny the tendertey to what are called soft - there seem favorable to its dev lop- • silent; but in -this country it is not nearly .80 hutch to be feared, • and - oneshoold not bold aloof from an otherwise ds1rab sire rat account of his being' a roarbr, though it utast be .admitted that'the predispositionto the troubte masi be transmitted. •The prediepobition to periodic ophthalmia, or enoonblindness is banded' down from parent , to, o,ff-' • Spring; but it is not nearly' so com- mon in • this -country as it once was, wben the, sanitary conditions were • not so good; aM1 it may be that some care has been exercised in !needing, so as to avoid its propti- gation. The only appreciable evi- .„..dende of the predisposition to this unsoundness, outside of the existence of .the disease, is the small, or what is called -01)1g Ore." The writer knew a sire well that had epig eyes"—but sound ones, and they remained sound throughout Making life, but certainlY ten per cent. of his prodgeny develop- ed, moonblindhess. • • The tendency to string -halt is un- • doubtedly transmissible.- from parent to °get:trine Horses with .snappy hock fiction are . Most likely to ,de- Veloplt. Nowadays it is not feared nearly so much as it was fernierly, fox if It should' develop, a :very large percentage •of thies are curable by a net very di -Metals and, by no meting clangero'us operation, which censist,s in the cutting' of a tendon. A -change legs,, in which there is nee only the ' I inclination of. the skin to swell up For Fascitaitlitig: sheaths 9f tendons and boggy hocks ' • 1 froth little cause, but -windgalls, ratify Make the Use of Maktie I are easily incleced. If then, we ae., - Deily Habit, This linfreshinsfEns Lotion shon Makes Dyc,s pear, cept these -statements swith regard Rotilinst, Bonitlfull Minoltas.' to quality, as it would appear that Fatal:431a, Soldby AliDrogyiety. every praCtical horseman mmit, we UR iNE. EYEs a ; of quality id by no means.o, unim-s , I must admit that coarseness or lack • 1 portant factor in eontributing to CANADA'S 100 PULP AND PAPER MILLS • The pulp and paper industry 'of Canada has 100 mills in operation, 40 being pulp mills, thirty-three paper mills, and twenty-seven produce both pulp and paper. Seventeen are news print plants. The present progress of the industry` indicates an output of 1,500,000 tons of news print In 1924e This will mean the utilization of over 2,250,00Q cords of pulpwood for a single year's newsprint paper output in this Dominion. — - • AND SINGS THE PRAISES OF ' • DODD'S KIDNEY -PILLS. Quebec Lady is Ne- w Strong and plliensalthy,. thanks to Dodd's Kidney St, Henri, Que., April 30th. (Spe- -vial). The value of Dodd's Kidney Pills is shown by the statement of Madame Roch Martel, a well known resident here. —"After five years of suffering in my back. andbwer part of my, body, I was oblige t solved to tr Dodd's Kidney Pills. 1/4.o take to my bed. I re - Three boxes restored ire to gibed health.", I am now quite strong and healthy and recommend them to all who suffer." It is •statements like this that have inade.Dodd's Kidney Pills o'household. remedy all. over Canada. Ninety per cent. of the ills from whith women stiffer come from weak or diseased kidneys. They are the. organs 'that strain all the impurities, all the seeds of disease out of the blood. If they fail in this work the a impurities remain in the blood and .t 0.P9Ph• 8411 ^rneeinst• tb,l,t ' qv oral 419 Odge 101, eAll911 U es •Walle, slISIwasnril4; 11117911na4": 4:74 , art okls ankls,„„siglY. us like all' the nie- ased Samuel', lene thrdeyi n askprayer.e4anic! was not he lett they were s'epects nig. Samuel sinstructed to tell- wthoeemld Pel4viilientliAllrtav°ert roefigninkingg tor:re them. This he, did and at the close of his discourse thee replied: 'Nay;• hut we 3411 balp,'„ri,fiing to reign over In the ninth 114 tenth chaptera we have recorded tile finding •and, ae non:ding. of Sant hy Samuel. A dee scription of Saul follows and also. of his reception by' ,the peoPle—aAnd all the people ,1rauted, and said, God save the king',s. There were however in that assemblY some who looked with disfavor on• Saul, and spoke dis- paragingly. "liow shall this man save us?' AnOthey despised Min, and brought him,no presents." Saul noticed their conduct, but showed hia wisdom by ha his peace. Hp did not at oneasenter upon the high office to which he had been chosen and anointed. Rather he returned to Gibeath and ..to hia• ordinary work as a ploughman there to await develop., menta for Sale new thing had come - into his life withirat any seeking on his part. It wai snot long before he was called upoteth muster men to help defend Jabashegilead against the Ammonites. • So successful •was he Host Samuel said to the people, "Come, and let is go to Gilgal, and renew the Kingdom there." In the twelth chapter we have recorded Samuel's resignation of the govern- ment of Israel into the hands of Saul. In the speech which lie made, he makes it plain that he is free from any suspicion of mismanagement. in the conduct of affairs. He sets be- fore them the god and the evil; th4 blessing and the curse. He then calls upon them to take notice ef how God will manifest His displeasure at their asking a king and concludes his farewell discourse to them as their judge, by expressing the hope that all will be well with them. Verses 1.4. "Samuel said unto all Israel." What a sublimespectacle! The old and grey -headed *dee stands up in the assembly and challenges any one to poifit out anyflaw in his ofgeial life. The note ringing out from it al is uprightness and honesty and he is not afraid to call upon his God to be witness to the truth of all he said. "And they anewered, He is wit- ness." They agreed with all he said, even using hie very words—"Thou hastnot defrauded us, nor oppressed us, neither hest thou taken ought of any man's hand." It was not Sam- uel, the venerable judge they were tired of but the sells • with whose hands he had relinquished the reins of government. Samuel wishes to make it clear to there that his offi- cial life having been pure, they had; no just cause in throwing.off divine government by judges for that of a •king. And when he: adds God and. His anointed—the ,ioting King Saul— ere witness against you this day they cannot but feel the truth of it arid reply, "He is witness.' Having made his.., position very plain to them he then turns their minds back to the early history of the children of ael,fand goes over all the way by which Jibe Lord had led them out of Egypt nee to thg pre- sent time. •He recalls how the Lord elelevered them tient the hand of ^ 4 4. .1 a — :';',Itt ,0 OS 'Final dig ha ' : • s 0' , ' Mal it eta , 1 their enemies en every side ' and caused thein to iliyell'safe. 'At this point he emphasized he fact that "the Lord your Gel was your king" and then adde, ••eleheild the king whom ye have chesen and whom ye have desired." They would he men- tally and spiritually very blind if they' could not after listening .to such o explanation of their conduct, see heir folly in asking a king like to the neighboring nations. Having spoken thus plainly he goes farther aed tells, them that in the choice of Saul they were directed by God for "Behold the 'Lord hath. set a king over 'you." Hp 1,..int'S out the way they must live. 1 th they and their king, to secure the blessing of the God whom they ejected when they deposed his aims. Then followed a miraoulous manifestation of God's power in sending :hinder at the time of wheat haryeee ,n corroboration of Samuel's words: "Now, therefore stand and see the great thing, which the Lord will defore your eyes." This filled their b. arts with fear and in their trouble th.y cried unto Sam - are deposited all over the body. The results show themselves in weakness, wEarinesp, nervousness, headaches, backaches, dropsy and rheumatism. Dodd's Kidney Pills strike right at the seat of the trouble, the kidneys. Ask your neighbors if all these dis- eases cannot be avoided by using Dodd's Kidney Pills to strengthen the kidneys. SUNDAY. AFTERNOON • (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.) Great King of nation's, hear our prayer, While at Thy feet we fall And humbly with united cry To Thee forlinercy call. The guilt is ours, but grace is Thine; 0 turn us not away, But hear us from.Thy lofty throne And help us when we pray. Our fathers' sins ,were manifold, ' And ours no less we own, 'Yet wdndrously from age to age Thy goodness 'hath been shown. With pitying ey'h behold our need, As thus we lift our prayer, Correct us with they judgment, Lord; Then -let Thy merger spare. Amen, (John Hampden Gurney). PRAYER Most Gracious God, King of Kings and Lord of Lords, we call unto Thee because we have called before, and , • Y Aba iire:441a4 bide" ' g.fa0e,",,.„u,; Ver0313.,:g.t;"°c , Ye IhtFll I ; .t.51 thee 0 after, SUMP ;Olt ane- nag,40- ' gre Yale tieXtAld.g are 163'04 a.gainstSplato• d�i is nothinefu the.world -(1 ,�'M) and, therefore, if they turned'. aide lima GO, no mattez‘ to what they turned, it 'would prove to be thek un- doing as individuals and as a ,nation., After thins counselling there and waningxthem, he proceeds te Speak comforti gly theme thein • that they, the children of Israel;niera in a -special way God's Peculiar peel- ple, and He, having made them this for His 'own good pleasure, vi.M also for Hie own name's sake not forsake them (verse 22). , In verse 19 they asked Samuel to pray for • them. He thought that they imagined for a moment that now he would cease to pray for them startles him, and he cries out "God forbid that I should sin against the Lord In ceasing to pray for you." He is no longer to be judge bat. he will still be their. prophet and exer- cise a prophet's nght of praying for and teaching them. All his thing -hitherto, both by precept and ex,ant- ple, had been no other than "the good end right way." From his ear- ty childhood when he waited uptin Eli iq the terhple until now his life had been as an "open book known and read of all mep;" and they in this inisembly had set their seal to the upright character he had ever b6rno; that 'trr . 6,,g42,64.4kritgawMk*a. ° SINVECOMEMPAVACir ,sea...eseee and lie ,siditheS them, to, elosirig be ,rigain- they:n*40 henieforth. as ; the:40e to theft own confine hi', relationship, to Cod, the King of warn, them of the 0691894_3thattes 4i to • acifriowledge a41 viva; "Alk re faithful Watellmast gave theni•ivarrang and deliVereti his owitirsotil.r (verses • of a public man who ecimeSth the *time when another is to take, his fliace. This is a crisis which le hazd to meet. In all history is there an, . other who met it so tioldy? "The conduct of Samuel in tag Whole af- fair of the king's Appointment, shows/ him to have been a great and good man, who sank all private. and, per- sonal considerations ia disintereste seal for his country'ss good; and whose last words in public were th warn the people and their king of the dan of apostasy and diethedienCe to ' Jamieelln, D. D.) WORLD MISSIONS God -revealing Love the Unifying Force. The federation of the world me - net be brought about by laws, or tri- bunals, or treaties, so long as the, , • .. rde, 011,,, rill dlif , ' cativiettinig,14 cluitkan, *habit! 'and And thesp notit-litslis;, ..44rig ttelrehrtiotis °fold", mea' tf! to ; oho 4,gse de iterarlo:ItYyMV1 6°2131 peke we WitPitshesi tional conscience and sfltflo friendship. But wh sioneries have rittackii j like slavery in Afriett, Oa Amerraii, industrial opium-srabldng in been creating au *MOON science, zicriv griying ine .nd powerful with elith „eefeletreeeeee,•••••esees,,e ,,,..,•:-_,-,---c-- \--,,,,,,, D 0 D D'S 1>>, t..-.... • K11::1N.EY/A ,646 F1 •L L. 5 4, ......7,-,t,y ''''----LKIDNE\(_.—%'--"c: ilf ,!ili tit e 4 le -------u rei 'r 5 Y.,/ , r.,1•G le v,e r65141' 11#1, 0 11 e„, eixiseTES --P.4;,11 . .. , ( 087 Tt1014; 1110 I 2. Lord Brig of Vimy, Fording a Stream in Jasper National Park 3. Portland Canal on the Alaskan Coast—Scenic Seas of the North Pacific "We have to -day travelled travel. The sea, the lake, the quiet streams, the mountains, the rolling through the niost glorious scenery plains and the great forests, all It has ever been my privilege to have their appeal to the seekers of witness." In this simply-woirded sentence, uttered during the course of a speech at Prince Rupert, the Duke of Devonshire, statesman, diplomat and' traveller, paid tribute to Can- ada, of which he was then Gover- nor-General. Like many of hill' predecessors he was no stranger to She beauties of nature in many issrts of the world. , Yet during Iris stay In .this country he repeatedly extolled the fascination of Canadian scenery. To -day Canadians are realizing that there are tunny wonderlands within the boundaries of (heir own eonntry, as fair as anything that some of them have travelled over half the earth to gee. That knowl- edge has given a great stimulus to their desire to know more about Canada by personal observation. Hence the growing appreciation of -the t,ducationsi value of travel in- telligently planned•and carried out. Many Canadians indeed plan their business trips so that they may be able to devote a little time to vita - Ing beauty„speta that ne In their. eoursee Thus they find brief re- laxation' from the complexities and strain, of modern business ilfe. It Is in the summer months, how- ever, that the minds of the major- ity of Canadians are aimed to recreation. he 1th, and pleasure. Seminar resorts and journeys full of charm and attractiveness are legion in their chine°. But the trip of all trips, the one that la essen- tial to the completion of knowledge by Canadians of Canada, is that across the Dominion to the Pacific coast. On the way lies Jasper National Park, a desirable stop- over point, whial Is an historic as well as, gorgeously beautiful area. Davitf Thompson, explorer and idealist, struggled with daunt- less courage through this section of the country in 1810. Irn 1811 the Athabaska Pass through the Rock- ies was discoveted, and about 1826 the Yellowhead Paas became known to the white man. The men who led the way and blazed the trails through these passes, were fortunate if they made more than six Or eight miles a day. Their discoveries opened a new route between the Pacific and Hud- son Bay, over which, twice a year, dog sleigh and pack horse made trips with goods and passengers. That was conaidered one of the marvellous festa of the time. To- day this land of wonder' may be traversed in a modern railway train at a -speed of fosty miles an hour. OF may be triewed in leisurely fashion over roads and well de- fined trails, by those whose time permits of camping and exploring among surroundings whose ever- present beauties are a source of never-ending amazement and de- light. To the travellers who journey thence on the Pacific coast; with its charm of climate, scenic detting„ and growing cities and towns, there is in prospect the finest water trip In the world. The 750 miles of ocean voyage from Prince Rupert to Vancouver and Victoria, or on to Seattle, is incomparable in its beauty. This trip is a fitting climax to the succession of gorgeous scenic pictures that can never be erased from the observant mind. Nature has been lavishly kind to Canada. Her resources in natuiral wealth are beyond human computa- tion. The greatest factors in the development of these are the rail- ways. What they have done to de- velop the country in a• material sense can enever be adequately de- scribed. Now they are bringing not only Canadians, but tourists from till over the world into, touch with the matehless natural wonder places 09 the Dominion. They are In a very large measure responsible for the awakening to the fact that a land can 'be Wit in all that make* for a gteat egrioultural and manu- facturing nation, and yet be noted to the ends of the earth for its, scenic delights. In these phases et developnient the,Canadian Matiostat Railways System 18fictive, • A trip *crass Cenada aside from • " the pleasure it gives, will prove ts, he of inestimable educational rime.. • • „et