HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1923-05-04, Page 61,, Wadley, W
SieturdaY, here
20440
'OBIL F. J. E. FORSTER
Bar, Nese and Throat
te in Medicine, Univereity of ,
to.
te assistant New York Oplithal-
Old Aural Institute, MoorefleId%
eind Golden Square Throat Hos-
London. Ping. At Commercial
Seaforth, third 'Wednesday in
Meth teem 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
**glop Street, South, Steatferd,
5ne 267. Stratford.
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
James, Proctor & Redfern
Limited.
ss . Tarsal'. °la.
Sr*" Pavements. ViraterwOrks.
TIM Systems, Inoineratorn. P`aceerint.
Arbitrations, Litigation.
laMal. 104. Gabler "IPROO" Toronto
PRES—Usuelly paid eat at aff
MUM Ino IMO Onit clients.
LEGAL
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and
Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do -
Minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do-
1=ion Bank, &Worth. Money to
BEST & BEST
Barristers, Solicitors, Convey-
ancer* and Notaries Public, Rte.
Office in the Edge Building, opposite
11 Expositor Office.
PRO'UDFOOT, KILLORAN AND,
HOLM.ES
Manistee*, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
*. etc. Money to lend. In-Seaforth
an Monday of each week. Office in
'add Blade W. Prondfoot, LC., J.
Z. Moran, B. E. Holmes.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary °Merge, and honorary member of
no Medical Association of the Ontario
ifla•.rUary College. Treats diseases of
all domic anintala by the most moth
ein principles. Dentistry and Milk
river a specialty. Office opposite
• Diek's Hotel, Mein Street. Seaforth.
&U orders lett at -the hotel will re-
wire prorapt attention. Night calls
roadved at the Cage
JOHN GRIEVE, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
=lege. All diseases of domestic
treated- Calle Promptly at
tended to and charges moderate. Vet-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office
and residence Goderich street. OM
loor east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea -
earth.
•MEDICAL
• C. J. W. EARN, M.D.C.M\
spriarmond Street, London, Ont.,
Surgery and Genio-Urin-
ary diseases of men and women.
DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY
Bayfield,
Graduate Dublin thtiversity, Ire-
land. Late Extern Assistant Master
Rotunda Hospital for Women and
Children, Dublin. Office at residence
• lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons.
Hours, 9 to 10 a.m., 6 to 7 P.ni-
• Sundays, 1 to 2 p.m. 2866-26
DR. J. W. PECK •
Graduate of Faeulty of Medielne
KcGIII Ueiversity, 'Montreal.; member
of College of Peysicians and Surgeons
of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Conn-
ell of Canada; Post -Graduate Mealier
of Resident Medical staff of General
Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2
• doors east of Post Office. Phone 56.
flousall, Ontario.
DR. F. J. mrsnows
, Office and residence, Goderich street
east of the Methodist church, Seafortk
•Plume 46. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
DR. C. MACKAY
C. Mackay hOnor graduate of 'erin-
By University, and goild medallist of
Trhilty Medical College; member ot
the College of Physiciane and Sur -
001211 of Ontario.
• DR. H. HUGH ROSS
.Graduateeof University of Toronto
Faculty of Medicine, meraber of Col-
l= Pliyilicians and Surgeons of
; prim graduate courses hi
Chicago ttiffical School of Clicago;
• Roza' Oplithahnic Hospital, London,
England; University Hospital, Lan-
d**, 'England. Office—Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Pone No. 5,
Night calls answered from residence,
Victoria street, Seaforte.
AUCIIONEERS
. THOMAS B,ROWN
Licensed suctioneer for tee counties
of Huron and Perth. Correspondence
arrangements for sale dates can be
Made by calling up.phone Seafortk
se The Expositor Office. Charges mod -
aerate and satisfaction guaranteed.
'Ironer Graduate Carey Jones' Na-
tional ;School of Auctioneering, Chi-
cago. Special course taken in Pare
Bred Live Stock, Real EState. Mer-
pluakiiire and Parte Sates. Rated fn
keeping with prevailing market. Sat-
C,tion assured. Write • or "ere,
Cc4rIClopee Enrich, Ont. Phoite
2868-52
T. WEER,
oibilsetkg *anti
OUfl
SW &id to bs.
riLeitisarie ets.
*ad. Esskateise.
ssiteaik
trans . 0,11.
n
sti
ar
k
s
g
,
ye fl1n8
iet.-stAi,"PaPheiti barieg
Made from. the giant saw gratis .pf
W
the FlOrldite *UMto Sept irg
that atate.
Roumanian, which prodeelag
more potatoes than' it can et, Will
use the surplus to make March,
sugar and ayrup.
A. novel folding bed and ite hied-
ffieg cap be earned in a irunk.like
box that support. a sleeper when
it is in use.
A. new airplatie passenger aerVice
will link Belgrade with Paris, Buda-
pest, Vienna, Bucharest and Con-
stantinople.
With a new hand operated enac,hieti
pecan nuts can bessorted into eight
sizes and delivered into separate
containers.
Experiments in England indicate
that fish dried in electrically heated
air can be kept in good condition for
years.
The cores of' a new radiator for
gasoline engine cantain amall spir-
als to give the upward moving air a
centrifugal action and increase the
cooling capacity of the device,
The Norwegian government has
established the farthest north radio
station in the world on an island
north of Iceland to report weather
canditions and issue storm warnings.
A photographic process has been
ieivented with which he • likeness of
the owner, af a doll is reproduced on
its face.
An extensive plant will be built
ort the east coast of Tasmania for
the manufacture of cement from
native materials.
A novel cellar digging implement
loads the earth into a dump body
as it is dravvn by horses or a trac-
tor over ground.
In Switzerland there has been in-
vented a silencer for airplane motors
that is more efficient than automo-
bile mufflers.
A new motor operated cultivator
intended for gardeners or florists
can be used between rows • of plants
only a foot apart.
Landon's underground railway will
employ interpreters who speak
French, Spanish and Italian at its
stations this summer.
Made of fabric on a wire frame,
a new office waste basket can be
hung under a desk, out of sight and
where it cannot be upset.
A profitable method has been de-
veloped for producing sugar from
the heretofore waste pineapple juices
of Hawaiian canneries.
Paper is unwound frem -a roll on
a new desk memorandum pad and
when used can be wound on a eeec-
ond reel for reference if desired.
Managed by an American expert
awl using machinery from the United
States, a glass factory will be estab-
lished at Lima, Peru.
Machines have been invented with
which the outside of. rhilioad can
are thoreeighly cleaned while they
are in motion.
British aviation experts are ek-
perimetting with a motor of 1,000
horsepower, the largest ever built,
for use iraan airplane.
Operated by compressed air'a
brace has been invented to help fold
a riveting tool inside boilers and
other hollow structures.
• An Argentine province has replac-
ed the native sugar cane with a hard -
bit variety from Java and greatly
increased the production.
An extra long plug has been in-
verted for insertion in electric light
sockets carrying shades too small to
admit a person's hand.
That crude vanilla can be obtain-
ed from 'the leaves of the wild. pi-
mento tree of jarnaica has been dis-
covered by English chemist.
The iron ma production of the
-United States last year has been esti-
mated at' 46,963000 tons, a 00 per
cent. increase from 1921.
Simple enough for a blind work-
man to operate safely is a French
inventor's machine for rapidly trim-
ming the bristles of brushes. •
To increase the capacity of cotton
pickers a thimble like device of
roughened metal to be worn on the
finger r•aa been invented.
An aerial mail 'service to carry let:
tars arriving from overseas at Cape
Town to three other .South African
cities has been arranged..
Recently compiled statistics show
that of the 748,000 miles of railroeds
in the world nearly 265,000 miles are
in the United States. ---
A process for malting an imitation
cork for insulation and building pur-
poses from turf has been interned
by tresident of Czecho-Slovakia,
Snowplows inaented lier a Maine
man to he attached to tractors or
motor trucks have made remarkable
records in opening deeply drifted
reads.
By soaking seeds in a dbemical
This New Discovery!
Beautifies your hair
Removes dandruff
Stops kiling hair
Grows Hair
ask fot
7 Sutherland Sisters'
COMPLETE
TREATMENT
Fertilizer—Gower—Shampoo
All 3 in one package $1.00
FOit PEOPLE WHO CARE
fa am)th waraim atrnt,
EALAND OleSTEILS' 001tORMOIIS - 0511
thAtiftwin are* hair te eny shade dreiral.
A theatre home treatment. Hatrniess. hula
pensift, durable. )'
Asp true eara Amens, efithe dthe"St ,ha".
• 'E,INEITACE, Draggidt, Seitforth.'
,
;' Woret.4. blifilit P:1 ._ ._i)
Wan-
. 6btalf660.6 Fr6iTA ll. :. .04 .'W'" . dors
t f4tra4a, wren rii a t .,,! IM, to naive * • et
;sole edriZbrier paper Mail 'at:: * • • arks
in an economical way froMb, feeds, o .4USTRZAN
rushettleaued other Wattle Plaine- 0 mica . 17°P
1.
. For ting water with stems a
form o Welded tube . far the latter
ha bean designed that is claimed to
do'laie, work wice as rapidly as when.
plain 'tains are used.
Frdifiee' has . esteldished ,a raffia
letter,etiereice, lettMa Mailed in that
country. being transmitted by wire-
lesa tetegrephy and mailed in the
destined -country to addressees. '
When lather has been applied to
the face with a new :slaiaing beash
the bristles can be,.withdrawninto
the handle, leaving .alhumber of nib-
ber massaging fingers projecting.
Argentina claimto have the mile
factory of its kind in -South Ameri-
ce for the manufacture of electric
storage .batteriee for automobiles and
for lighting and radio sets.
A new fruit that is a gross between
a black currant and a goose berry
has been bred by a Scotch horti-
culturist.
Rubber bands with thick, rough
treads have been invented by a man
living in Washington, D. C:, -to serve
the purpose of overshoes.
In an auger of European .invention
for boring, post holes there la a valve
hich permits earth to pass through
one of the blades and be lifted out
with the tool.
A nail puller of the familiar piv-
oted jaw type has been invented
that can be carried i,n a pocketz the
claws of a hammer increasipg the
leverage when necessary.
Portuguese interests will establish
a paper mill on the border of the
Transvall that will utilize a native
grass in the manufacture of paper,
board and cellulose.
A recently patented wheelbarrow
can be converted into a vehicle for
carrying laddere, spraying outfits
and other objects impossible with
an ordinary wheelberrow.
Water power was the primary en-
ergy employed to operate all the
tools used in boring a railroad, tunnel
5,4 miles long through mountains in
New Zealand. e e
Only a slender pencil of light, tel-
escopically visible to its recipient, is
transmitted by a new instrument for
visual signaling at night, when se-
crecy is desired..
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
Mrs. Mary Ann Bevan, known as
the "ugliest. woman in the world,"
has four good looking children.
Several of the big shaps in Paris
have instituted day. nursery With
50 cots to care for the children of
werneri employees.
Mrs. Jessie Myers, of Loa Angeles,
Cal., at the age of 31 years, lays,
claim to being the youngest rand -
mother in the United States.
All the modern Turkish women
now insist that their husbands shall
have only one wife, instead of the
three or four as formerly.
The Anti -Flirt Society has been
formed in Dallas, Tex., for the par -
pose of creatilig sentiment opposed
to flirting in all its various forms.
Mrs. H. D. Reed, of Washington, D.
C., is the first women to be elected
to the board of Avernors of the
American Institute of Banking.
Mrs, John Hill, a patient in a Port-
land, Me., hospital, stopped breath-
ing for 30 minutes and was revived
after two hours' work by her phy-
sician.
By cffinpleting a swim down • the
}serene River that lasted 22 hours,
Anna Gutbrod, an Argentine girl,
established •a new ?record for girl
swimmers.
The Aero Club of PennsylVania, one
of the oldest organizations of its
kind in the country, is considering
tile admittance of women as mem-
bers.
Alma Gluck, the opera star, has I
adopted foar Russian cuphans.
The Daughters of 1812 claim a
membership exceeding 6,000.
The Queen of Siam is a colonel in
the Boy Scouts of her country.
F orty-five verities of macaroni are
made and eaten by Italian women. r
It is estimated that woman con -l'
sumes 400 pounds less food a ace.' ,
than a mate e
More than 1,700 women have.been
ordained to the ministry in the '
United States. •
In spite of their entrance into, poli-
ties. the women of Egypt afe not
abandoning their veils.
,The National alessembly of Panama
has rejected a bill giving women per-
mission to practice law. ,
The paogressive Chinese women
study. medicine as a profession and
already many 'have taken up '•-the
Mrs. Kathryn Gill is director of an
employment agency in Saint Louis
that hires each month 500 men and
women.
In Japan, as well as China, women
are actually forming business clubs
of their own, similar to those wee have
in America.
Mrs. Oliver Strachey, of Londhn,
Secretary to Lord Robert Cecil dar-
ing his American tour, was- once a
Bryn Mawr student,
The minimum wage Lew for women
workers in the District of Colum-
bia has been declared void by the
Lnited States supreme court.
Warrenton, Ore., is said to be the
first city to select &woman city man-
ager. She is Mrs, R. E. )3arrett,
Prominent hardness woman.
'Mrs, Florence V. Murphy runs the
Gas Workers' Union in Chicago while
her husbahd, Rig Tim Murphy, is
serving a jail -sentence.
At the age of 104 'Yeats; Mre. Sereh
G, Yarnell, of Philadelphia is the
oldest atockholder. the °Pennsyl-
vania Railroad Company.• ,
Of 1,000 'married women to when'
O questionnaire wag gent ley' the Nat.'
York Bureau of Social Hygiene, 872
sent replies that they were happy.
The risme of Qiieen- Victoria, df
•
0'W� haitiarranged our facile- let
0 ties .so as to insure satisfaetore ete
and g
ee 'caleezvile tihrie
ltodeail°rgatetr r currencieVto
fom fWtber information and 0
prices. 0
' Members Toronto Stock .e>
<><> wait, Exchange. co.. 00
0 • 10 or Street East s,
*0 Hanilltini,"'''..rRiM*
Brantford, Kitchener 0
00* 0 ,ca 000 4000
Spain, s, to be added to the list of2/
queens who have received the pope's
golden item, the highest tern_aarai
honor it is possible for the Catholic
church to bestow,
An assecleation of women has been
formed. at a Fredericksburg, Va., to
raise siso,0a0 for the purchase and
pieservation of Kenmore, the historic
leane of potty Washington, the only
sister of the great Revolutionary
chieftain. .
Two sevehteen-year-old Iowa girls,
I Kathryn sHolibaugh 'and Boulah
Rogers, won first prize in cannihg at
the inteltational livestock expOsition
held in Chibago and are now coneid-
ered ,the champion canning team in
the Pelted States.
Birdie Reeve, sixteen years old e of
Saint Louis, Mo., is known as, the
world's fastest stenographer 'Vend
mistress... of the English Itinelariaa.
Miss -Reeve can type at • the rate- of
800 stroketeper minute ane haie.e. vo-
cabulary ,ef 64,000 words.
Princess Yolanda's plea for reten-
tion of needy women railway em-
ployees, whese dismissal had been
ordered by the Italian railroad om-
missioner, has resulted in the re oca-
tion of the order in the case ten
per cent. of the women affect
CURRENT 'WIT AND WISDOM
Lick nobody's boots, but don't ex-
pect anybody to lick yours.—Forbes,
Magazine.
Thou shalt rest sweetly if thy
heart ccindemn thee not—Thomas ea.
Kempis.
Marathoners dance with their legs.
If brains were used it would be all
off —Ottawa Journal.
Don't scorn the worm. They also
serve who only act as bait. — St.
Thomas
Thomas Tirnes-Journal, •
All the world may love a good los-
es,if it hasn't made any bets on him.
—Kingston Standard.
Lots of parents think they are ten-
der-hearted when they are "simply
yellow to do their duty.—Calgary
Herald.
Nowadays a word is a deed whose
consequences,. cannot be measured.—
Heine.
De Valera, it would appear, will
fight till the last of his friends are
captured.—Manitoba Free Press.
A war veteran who heard a de-
bate in the local house the other day,
tells us that this was the second time
he had been gassed.—Halifee Herald.
Sault Ste. Marie is looking for a
slogan to boost its tourist trade.
Something aboutits Soo-lubrious cli-
mate *ill doubtlesS be chosen.—Lon-
don Advertiser. .
Dealers says that motorists are de-
manding lighter cars. So are the
-pedestrians.—Ashaille Times.
Germany will agree to any form
of debt settleneent that" doesn't in-
volve paying it—New York Tribunes
The .first million is the hardeat to
earn', but you can do it by saving teri
dollars a month for 8333 years.—Kit-
chener Recora.
A husband and wife served OR the
same jury in Minnesota. The jury
disagreect—Life.
Our to -days and yesterdays are the
blocks with which- we build7e-Lohg-
fellow.
We see whete an unsympathetic,
but witty, politician says that a Sn-
.cialist is a man who looks down on
everybody above him—Halifax Her-
ald.
The French operation in the Ruhr
will net be e saceess unless the pati-
ent pays for it.—Norfolk V1rginian-
Pilot.
View of the sea inspires delight
lead ecstasy which, are not only hard
to describe, but which has something
secret in it that a man should not
utter loudly.Thackeraw
It's getting so if &U.S. judge•con-
victs a woman of murder it is con-
sidered a rebuke to her looks.—Bran-
don Sun.
,.Now that the big league baseball
seeson has opened to the young men
of the country will get down to their
real serious work around the bulletin
boards.—Manitaba Free Press.
It would not be so bad if people
quit talking after they told all they
knew.—K in gston Standard.
'TN better to keep silent and be
thought a fool than to speak and re-
move all doubt.a-Utah Humbug. .
The dictionary -is a comforting book.
1.111111WHIMM(11111$11111111MUIMIIIIIIIP
= ASTIVIA SUFFERERS .4
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E gcm left g bOale Asthe'ma Beemead; S
= with me r bad relief from the ilcst
= dose and hae� bn burro nit 5r =
aincei eon Ile at night and rest; =
al the cough has.cm left me: I have =
= gained three , P05055, Oboe 5 etaeted =
e *Cod Swead.nrottnd this
bottle, IT le noiv'neerly finished.'misvs
vs.• disteict, roe -sr several Wang te
5 tesr it. 'I feelustel Mod over the sea
lifa ae ft were; nlice to tell others.. =
= '13R13Glir AfitAMA REMEDY'
E stoure, o oDrerbybo,itntetll,pmymbpel.c11iot
iithLtnw.i,innth.Dugroll
ff. T.
as Whitby Ont.
28•1110 3
inutomnuilistinSiusinsimissig
ouiattf, OIN'va
tb
fuel prIt
ebelen*atffing ;a: ,
teeite lege, The C: ,ifluettbt
core erate M. Nee tgal00 a it is
net IY to ohieetA,e:rli4e he
time There Meet • be oetuudeets -
Mg the year wean It 111„,PaY the 'two,
railways to baul Con 'front Alberta
et a amall margin overdost. -
The Capter:"Tray irViRidge
Front -the New Ale& Times, .
, Many brave deeds were done lit tine
battle of Arrtue which lastea %Math
and was fought on a Wide front, hut
the cafattlatte of VIMY 'Bi ge, With
4,000 Prisonees, 'stande.ont es the fin-
est achieveneirit. Itoreeli essentiel tee
seize the. bastion to pretact the Shia
Of any advaoce further! south. .Bad -
he Canadian 'Corps faltered Aires
would have been a British defeat
-
The quick gaining of Vimy insured
sueoess all along the line.
The Thrifty Race.
From the Boston Transcript.-
So the golf players at Franklin
Park must in future pay a feeof $10
a season. Golf is getting expensiver
and expenstver. We are reminded. by
the way, of something we overheard
recently. "Dont you think golf is,
rather expensiveRe asked A.
"Well, yea," answered B., "consid-
ering that it's a Scottish game."
Then the Storm.
Hostess—"It looks like a storrn;
you had better stay for dinner." •
Jackson—"Oh, thanks, bat I don't
think it's bad enough Per that"—
Virginia Reel.
HEAVY WHEAT CROP CORECAST
' FOR ENGLAND
The popular notion that England is
• playedeout as a wheat producing
country is all wrong, according to
Professor Blffen of Cambridge Uni-
versity. His admirers here say chat
he knows more about wheat than any-
body in this country, and someemain-
tain that hp is the greatest authority
on t,he subject in the world.
He addressed the Bedfordehire
Chamber of Agriculture on wheat the
other slay. He told its members that
"in a very short time English wheat
growing is going to come into its
own." Thereswould then, he said, be
money made out Of wheat raised by
British farmers despite the vast crops
growe ineother parts of the globe.
In America, he said, the population
was growing more rapidly than the
wheat area, and in course of time
there would no longer -be a huge sure
plue to send to this country or any-
where else. '
"England," declared Prof. Biffen,
"is easily the best wheat producing
country in the World with its average
of 32 bushels to the acre, whereas
the average for the world is only a
trifle over 12 bushels to the acre."
TAtES THAT DEFEAT s
' THEMSELVES
An interesting example of the way
in which high taxes defeat their own
purpose is quoted by the Financial
Post. At $6 a thousand, cigarettes
were heavily taxed, but Canadians
smoked' nearleee2,50C1,000,000 a year.
The tax was increased last year to
87.50 a thousand and smokers turned
to pipes and to rolling their own. Cig-
arette consumption dropped by about
half a billion a year and the Govern-
ment S'uffered a net loss in revenue of
about $2,000,000. The higher tax ac-
tually pravided a lower revenue. Trac-
es that are too high will always de-
feat revenue purposes, (Montreal
Herald).
TAXES THAT ACTUALLY
REDUCE REVENUE
Those who figure eat the taxes of a
country or a province always have to
reckonwith that last forkful of atj•aw
that, If it does not break the camel's
back, at least makes him an ineffici-
ent worker. There are taxes that
are greed taxes up to ei certain point;
that provide revenue and provide it
with the minimum of effort and of un-
fairness. -And beyond that point thee -
defeat their own purposes. Witness
the cigarette taxes. At $6 a • thou -
send cigarettes were 'heavily taxed,
but Canadians smoked nearly 2,500,-
000,000 a year. The tax -was increase
eeriest year to $7.50 a thousand and
emokers turned to pipes and to roll-
ing :their own: Cigarette consump-
tion dropped by about half a billion a
year and the Government suffered a
net loss in revenue of about $2,000,000.
The -higher tax _actually provided a
'lower. revery*. (Toranto Finan'cial
Post).
'
' CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM
Yon can always dada /making plaee
in front of the store Which does not
advertise.—Perth Courier.
An ideal husband is any husband
who thinks he has an•ideal wife.—Cal-
gii re- Herald.
When you find yourself With a
strange noise in your head, go see a
doctor: Don't get up and ,make a
speech.—Nanitabo Free Press'.
What the -French are trying to bring
about in the Ruhr is taxation without
.aiinexation.—New York Tribune, '
The reason landlords are riches -
than renters is because they pay for
O blame one time and then qui.—
Walla Walla Bulletin. •
They used to find fault with the
"Concert of Europe," but it Vali; betted'
than the Inez stuff we gef te-day flom
that dietracted continento-Kincerdine
Review. . • • • •
ef Cantidet desires immigrants, she
sheuld take peals 'to make them led
at. home' when ehey get here.—Saa-
katoote Star..
Treesnstiaily are consistent, but' a
family. tree will Prodeme ancestors in
one generation and fluter in the 'next.
--Ex.
*id *a
° delttious ofto
• ,
"141. , itff'miebasei4
• ,
,Illdiiiorities toe iota 'taro miaapee
.there is no re&iieribibility to,. fatale
delen tieteind ir • ears: — Wed°
, Women divide- Our . attention, tele --
trace front our ,bankrolls,ardd, toour
Wotriee and thultitilee tent goad thins.
—Kingsten Standard,.
•
There are 'may twelve 'kings ip
Europe to-dny as compared with fifty
Prior to the world wale. The kiiiK
bodiless heat a hetory diseoutit.—Osho
aweReformer.
They are celebrating the biocenten-
ary of Sir Christopher Wren in Eng,
land. As an architect he was certain-
ly a bird.—New York Worlci.
A poem by a local rhymster begins;
"My body is in the ;vale, but 4ny 'soul
is on, the mountain tops." Clearly
another case of a oor fellow not be- A
. ,
It Ili:*
f . .
•1.1.R -c•A'
ST tee
be-
ing able to'keep gody and soul to-
gether.—Halifax Herald.
Owing to the inclemency of the
weather, our regular spring poet is
upable to submit only the following:
"Sngiw, ,now, beautiful snow—Why
in the dickens don't you go?"—Kit-
chener Recoed.
One of the saddest sights of nature
is a Smart Aleck of eighteen trying
to give an impression Met he is a
Hard -Boiled Egg.'—, leingsten Stan-
den!. .
It might hey; if We worried less
about what we are after here and
more about what we are hereafter.—
Kitchener Record. •
We see where Philip Snowdeo tolJ
the British House of Commons that
it is "a terrible thing for a man to
-possess -a million." Really, we sup-
pose, a kind of capital punishment.—
Halifax Herald.
Millioneyear-old skull found in Pat=
kgenia is petrified and solid. -How
little man has dianged in all these
years.—Manitoba Free Press.
THE FOREST AND RESEARCH
Canada spends abdut $800,000 a
year on agricultural research and not
more•thia $85,000 is devoted to for-
est research. • The forests of Canada
occupy about eighty per cent. of the
inhabitable area and practically the
only population en that eighty . per
cent. will, have to be attracted be;
forest industries.
The Laurentide Company LintiMd
of Grand Mere, .P. Q. have abOut-
000,000 white spruce seedlings ad
transplants in their history.
Accoeding to the Western Lumber-
man the forest avehue of the province
of New Brunswick during the four
years, 1918-21, averaged $1,061,000.
Expenditures averaged $188,000, or
aday eighteen per cent_ of the rov-
enbe. •from fire in New
Brunswidk .averaged .$84e,280.60 per
annum.
THE BROODING • OF YOUNG
• CHICKS .
The essential factors in successful
bi•tioding of young chieks, whether na-
tural or arttficiaL are healthy, vigor,
ous chrcks, ploper -temperature, sani-
tation and plenty of room.
Where only a limited number of
chicks are leased each year, natural
bneoding has many adirantages. The
temperature is controlled by the moa
tiler hen, and, and, she , can accom-
modate but a restricted number of
chicks, there is very little danger of
oeercrowding. A quiet but not clurn.-
sy brooding hen should be Selected,
after making sate, before- allowing
tee any chicks to breioda-that elie is
entirely free from lice.
Artificial methods are advocated
wherever large number § are to be
brooded.The coal -burning brooder
Was reauced cost, and to a large ex-
tent lessened the labor required.
These brooders ate usually operated
in a colony house; and, as.soon. as the
chicks cease to -need the heat, may -be
removed and the house • still used for
accommodating thechicks during the
sumener.
Thd first requirement of • young
chicks is warmth. The temperature
should be about 98 or 100 degrees on L.
• a level -With their backs before they
are Placed in the brooder hoese. This
temperature may be lowered gradu-
ally from week to 'week, depending
on the season. In the early part of
.the year the chicks will requite brood-
ing .at a higher temperature for a
longer time, than later in the spring.
Those hatched between Aptel. Lit' tiad
-May .lat will • require brooding for
about eight weeks.
It is most important for the first
few nights after they are placed in
the broodee house to see that the
chicks do not get too far away from
the source of heat or 'bunch up in
one cortier. A good plan, is M have
some adjustable • arrangement made
.which will permite the chiclea to pass
no more than two or three feet away
from the brooder at first; then,
they may ba allowed a little further
away, until by the end of a week
they have the nen of the room. Care
should be takeh not to drive the
chicks ,away from t h e liegioder
through too much', beta. On ,the other
hand, there must not be so little heat
as to induce crowding under, Watch
the fictions of the chicks as well as
the thermometer. When they are
-most comfortabte they flatten out jest
around the edge of the brooder.
, Nothing is so elangerous s <Were
crowding. The capacity of many
brooders is overestimated, and it is
better never to use to full capacity in
any make.
Sanitation and Cleanliness are .im-
portant' points to watch. ATI brood-
ers and rooms which have been in use
before should be thoroughly cleated
and disinfected before being 'need
.pach year. Clean, fresh litter, free
from enould mustiriees„ should be
used,, All witerfpuntains, feed -
troughs, etc.; earould he washed with
a disinfectant solution every day or
two: -
Summing up: given good, healthy,
wellehatched chicks, the main brood-
ing points are a comfortaltle temper-
ature, perfect cleanliness at all times,
no danger of overcrowding, only
gradual changes in temperature and
feeding Methods. •
give your digest -
non a "kick" with
WRIGLIRYS.
Sound teeth, a good
appetite and proper
• digestion mean mum
to your health. _
WRIGLEY'S Is a
helger in all this
work— a pleasant,
beneficial pick-me-up.
1
PERNItit
" DAIRY CREAM
SODAS -
Crisp Creamy
Soda Wafers
The &wit of the Day