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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1924-04-25, Page 3kitighlymecomMend Ahem, ':•tagn4fa'le,Sqleriencelk_ gat .cit tirqs relieving front :,.by.niedicirie'dealers -Or by Mail at 2$ .icents a box from The. Dr. Williams' e*edicine Qtr„ Brogleyille, Ont. " DUBLIN (Teo Late for Last' Week.) Notes.--eThe ladies of the , parish are having a social' evening on Mon- -Ay night.—Miss Hanlon arrived home Item a visit to her relatives in Inger- soll.-eMrs/ Simpkins is home front I -With, friends in that city.—The C. W.1 le held a very well' attended meeting on Sunday afternoon in the High school. Funds „are to be raised, 11:0Y the ladies to decorate the sanctuary and the altars of the chureh. Mrs.1 James Shea read an excellent paper ' on "The Life of St, Ritg.." The lady 'was tendered a hearty vote of thanks -for her contribution The president, Mrs. Frank Feeney closed the meet- ing with prayer. RELTEF CAME AFTER • UMW TWO, BOXES -NM JOHN McRAE IS VERY SAT- ISFIED WITH DODD'S KID- . NEY PILLS: She Had Suffered .for Three Years and Found Relief in Dodd's Kidnee Pills. Grand Pabos, Que., April 21st.— "(Special). Prom an parts of Canada come' the same glad tidings, telling the sa,nee glad story a sufferers that suffer no longer, of the weak being _made strong and healthy, and of the good iiroxk.. that is being done by .1todd'it- Kidney Pills. People are now learning the importance of keeping' the kidneys in shape, ei wateidiatnfor 'the legit, sy4n.ptems Fa tine), Trott- -Nei and they turn at Mice Docld's Kidney- because. they: know they Inv*, a remedy that they .can' rely 'on„ letremedy that never faili. Eight here 'Grand rabos,- Mrs. ,Tohn McRae, much respected resideni, comes for - .Ward with -a statement that adds to the long list of grateful letters. She "I have suffered from my kidneys /or three years. I sent, for some Podd's \Kidney Pills. They have help- / mad me so much that I intend taking them again any time my kidneys pain ane. I only used- two boxes, and I /have not been troubled since." HULLESS OATS GIVE SATIS- FACTORY YIELD A variety of oat named "LB:lefty", +which 'threshes out free of the hull, kis does, wheat, has given good crop- ping results at many of the Domin- ion Experimental Farms and Ste- ttions,practically every year since 12910, The average lield for a ten year period was 1,42,.!„ pounds per Beware of imitations! frat' e or on tablet are mot get Ong: he genuine Bayer Asp proved ititife by' -millions. and prescribed by ts miter tWentrthree years for Hes e Seuralgia kart "boxes of OAS* d proven drractialwa, _ tWelve tablets, OSP' 'le eats also sell WOW., laephin is the' tradeiseThar ginada) of Payer WSW ": is Well known that he OttlPe Wade mat 31 OtiPatztt,, 14". .*14080.0741144' . Oe 140101 !.PAPlinie'll'9W;Ill en040- Penner? is OtitylekluX. PihSktY years 1,9/1i,to 1R22,t9tatvariety gave e/yield' of 1,56V win Per acre. ' e. A .point; great .ilaportance in fev9s c.tf, these :two varieties of hulless oats is their strength of straw., \-Setereld from this stand- point for a period of tett years, al- lowing ten points for perfect scgre„ Liberty, scered 9.8 points and Laurel the full number of ten points. This feattere ;ifs,t particularly valuable be- cause it prevents great losees of crop from lodging, due to the added ex- pense of harvesting. The Liberty vare iety has proved particularly hardy at Beaveriodge; Alberta, the most north- erly:Experiment Station. Liberty has for several years been &deg Ein av- erage of 75 bushels per acre. This in Weight of kernel without the hull is considered etfual to a yield of 10A bushels of ordinarer grain, Especial- ly for feeding poultry and for home grinding for human con,stimptio these hulless varieties are well worth growing. • COLOSSUS OF GERMANY News of Hugo Stinnes' death has been received with a good deal of stoicism by theeoutside world, and the German ?nasses will be able to mas- ter' their emotions of grief and des- pair at 'his taking off. Nevertheless it may prove that Stinhen; though he enriched himself fabulously at the expense of the scores of thousands of Germans whom he had set toiling for him, was the wisest of German sthtes- men, and that the path he had peint- ed out for his countrymen is the only one that they can follow if they -are to escape the worst conseguences of the war. . It all depends upon whe- illier the vAst enterprises which he had gathered under his control will con- tinue under his heire`; or whether theyeAvill crumble mid pass to dif- ferent owners.- It is necessary- that the Stinnes policy shall continue for some •tithe before • ith benefits, or otherwise, N to the German people shall be made plain. Stinnes him- -serif had no doubt that he,etras show- ing the German people the pnly way outapf 'their slough of despond. Stinnes was fifty-four, years old, a --man in the very prime of strength and energy laying his plans for re - salts far in- the future. He became an industrialist on his own acegunt when he was twentyethree yeers old, using $12,000 which he borrowed from his Lather for the p.urpose of entering businesSt . His father and his graddfatlaer before him were in the coat and transport industry\ and were more than usually prosperous. lingo might; had he chosen, have become merely an expert in spend- ing the money that they accumulat- ed, though as a matter of fact he did not turn out to be his father's heir; but he chose to become an active business man. As yeers went on his absorption in business in- creased until he cared for nothing else in the world. On his death -bed his only messages for his faraily were those coneerning the busi- ness he was leaving. Thoughts df his soul concerned him less than thoughts of his coal, and if he pic- tured a terrible hereafter it was that his heirs would misnianage affairs and he wonld be conscious of it, By the y+ear 19(1,3 he -had laid well the foundations of the trust which was to be responsible for the truth in the remark once Made: "Go to any room in any building in any part of the world. Look at any article you ch,ose in that room. Stinnes can aid does thrn it out in one of his factories." , The war 4c -teased his wealth and strengthened his grip On German industries, but it was not in war but in the subsequent 'peace that he made the most rnolley. When the war broke out he was reckoned among the wealthiest six men in Germany, with $10,000,000 aS his fortune. ,When he died the estimates ran from $100,000,000 to $1,100,006,000, with the former ad- mittedly under 'thd Mark. Three years ago it is said. that he had 'betinglit everything worth buying in Genitally on a large scale. He was not only an owner of factories, coal mines, and real' estate, but/of news- papers, Albs, industries and shares ef 'all kinde. Ms holdings were not confined tO Germany but extended all aver Eurepe. /He had enorinous de- posits in foreign bankst os nsibly for the' -purchase of TAW MU Ws. 'rens of millions of.profit xvere de by the fluctuations in exchange. How he, hnpresSed a shrewd ob- server in his Own man* WAS shewn Bernhard, of the Vossiche-Zeitung, in the Neva York nines,. a short While ago:— . "Ever Since the war' Stinnes hall been the evil genius of Gerinany. ttt it ,would .be, a eatital *mite to nein him to be of an evil *AM% IS gist thought in the eonfttsioni f lens, with .411: a Deoret ,and 41,04 the canitalist wit g,;aga, matter who leads it, always does stupid things." "Frankly, I worship on the altar of 'big bueiness." 4.Gott sei 'dank! My children ane interested only in business. Art and the theatrls are as diatasteful to them tis they are to me." "If the so-called rich -people of Germany are dispossessed, the Ger- man people will starve to "'death. Immediate cheap production M. ab- solutely necessary. Every strike is a murder of the people." "Do the German people want to survive? Then the German people mu;t work at least as much And as long as before the war. If` they want to pay reparations also, then they mu,st work, and longer. Who- ever tells Germany that taxation of the se -called property class has a chance in the present situation liee and deceives the people." AND NEURALGIA, Caused by Starved Nerves Due to Weak, Watety Blood. People think of neuralgia as a pain in the head or face, but neuralgia may affect any nerve of the body. Different names are given to it nnien it- affects certain nerves. Thus neu- ralgia of the sciatic nerve is called sciatica, but the character of the pain and the nature of the disease is the same, and the remedy to be effec- tive, must be the same. *The pain, whether it takes the form of sciatica or whether it affects thee face and head, is caused by starved nerves. The blood, which normally carries noor- ishment to the nerves, for some rea- son no longer does so and the excru- ciating pain- yoef/eel is the cry of the starved nerves for food. The reason why the blood fails to properly nour- ish the neriret is usually because the blood itaelf is weak and thirl., When you bind up the impoverish- ed blood with Dr. Williams' Pink Pills you are attacking sciatica, neuralgia and kindred diseases at the root. As proof of the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in cases of this kind we give the statement of,' Mrs. Marion Bell„Port Elgin; Ont., who says:— "Some years ago I was attacked with sciatica in my leg and hip. The pain was excruciating and finally I was forcecnto got- to bed. Apparently all the •doctor could do was to give me gs to dull the pain, as otherwise I und no relief. I had/fbeen in bed with the trouble for eight weeks when a lady who came to see me said that she had had a similar attack, and had only founct relief through the use of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills. r decided at once to try this medicine, and be- fore I had taken more than three boxes I found relief. I continued the use of the pills and nnder the treat- ment the pain left me. I was able!' to walk again and have not since had the least raurn of tile trouble. f feel that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have been of such great benefit to me that' I strongly urge similar sufferers to give them, a fair trial." You can get these pile from any medicine dealer or by mail at fifty cents a box from, The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., BroCkville, Ont. NITRO -CULTURES FOR LEGUME / SEED The value of leguminous plants as soil enrichers has long -been recogniz- ed, and to -day the custom of including a legume in a syStem of crop rota- tions is almost universal. The value of these platit,„4\rests in their ability to make use of the nitrogen of the air and it has long been known that this power came through the nodules or swellings which develop on the roots of healthy 'plants. In these nodules bacteria develop which have the power of collecting nitrogen from the air sun-, making it available for the grovOng plant. In Many cas'es, especially where 'a certain legume is being grown for,the first time, the groveth of nodule6 is weak which results in the plant not developing. This`condition is due to a lack ie the eoil of the proper bac- teria. To meet this difficulty and to insure that the proper bacteria may cothe in eontact with the -roots of the, young plants, a, method was develop- ed of mixing a cultut%. of nitrogen - gathering bacteria, commonly called nitro-cultyres, with the seed before sowing. The presenee of the right bacteria in the soil is thus insured, and under good conditions of cultivan tion, a healthy nodule &math on the roots should follow. The Dorninion Experimental Farms wish to4nccrarage the use of rdtro- cultured/ for inoculating legume need, and the Divfsion of Beeterielogy will an application one bettler. Of culture for etch. type of legunie he &sites to wool. The Dominhal ,Eft % k \Polo *W4, aq b +¥¥r D a tr Vii:.f©�2 #¥` <# S¥�# m�p�{� vitovils sity are INA» it is iticillehtl$ nntleed that -494+1 treatment than access to . good symptoms. of the Disease. The presence of the symptoms of depraved appetite indicates that there is something wrong with the feeding of the animals, that there is something lackiag in the ration, and that that something can generally be espressed as being lime salts.' Well able amount of good, clean, well kept food rarely show any tendency to eat unnatural objecti. In those farm yards wheee a salt trough is at the service of the animals, and wher19 .clovers and other legumes are fed klinboewranily„ depraved 'appetite is un - Treatment suggested. Should tosimals pecome affected with a deilre to eat unnatural fe,ods, steps should be taken at once to remedy the trouble and get tne ani- mals back to a condition of thrift. Blocks of charcoal , and rock salt should be placed where the animals can get them at will. When animals are confined.* stalls or pens, pow- dered charcoal ma3r be given—one- halt handfill thre(r" times per day along with the feed. Advanced cases will generally respond to the follow- ing: ounces; mixed well and given at Cr gentian, four ounce ' common salt. eight ounces:' carbon te of iron, four ,rate•of one tablespoonful three times each day on feed. Good feeds, such as roots, silage and clovers, well preserved and free from fungus and bacterial growths, shonld be supplied, and don't forget that such common things as rock salt, charcoal and bone meal do much to Ouppiy the usual winter de- ficiency in animal feds as compared with the green pasturn-of summer on which all animali thrive. -,—L. Stevenson, Dept. of Extension, 0. A. College, Guelph. . DISTENTION OF RUMEN. How to Treat an Animal That Has , Gorged Itself—lf Serious. Every winter many g farm ani- mals are lost and man ore nearly lost through carelessnes in the tie- up, or the leaving of feed bins open. if a cow gets 'dose in the stable, she generally manages to find. the bin where the feed grains are stored and just naturall,- "gorges herself on the concentrated food. Don't blame the cow for eating. She knows not what trouble she is wading into by cverloading her paunch with mill chOp or grain meal. • if it is known that an animal has gorged itself, ancl it can generally be determined by pressing the flank with the closed, fist and noting it the indent of the hand ten:Mina for a short time, a drench should- be given at once. One and a half pounds of isPsom salts dissolved in two gallons of water given at a single dose and folloWed by kneading the left side below the midian line vigdrously to separate the compacted Walls of fer- menting grain and allow -the drench to penetrate it. Stimulants, such as aromatic spirits of anunonia, should be given in two ounce .doses. Should the drench fail and the im- pacted condition continue, it can be relieved by a trained veternarian per- forming the operation known as rumenetomery. This operation is performed by making indision through the left flank and into the rumen, large enough to Permit the entrance of the hand. The compacted grain or meal is removed in part (about two-thirds) and the wound in the rumen sutured up with catgut, after -proper antiseptic precautions have been taken. The wound through the muscle and skin can be brought together with silk stitches. placed one inch apart and through the entire thickness of the muscle. Therwoured should be dreased daily and kept cov- eted to protect it from /infects and ite useful dressing lotlelh can be made by using Zinc Sulnhate, one dram; Carbolic acid, two drams; Gly- cerine, two ounces; water, fourteen ounces, mixed tegether. ShaUld this operation be attemeted by aneione other than a trained veteriitary sur- geon, warning is given that only an antiseptic, absolutely clean operation will permit the animal to Stevenson, Dept. of Extension, 0.A. College, Guelph. ' in most localities the. poultry tinose abeuld face the stinth, as this attentive the greatest ainount of sun- 1110t.desing the winter. ...Proper vet,- seVera$74:444.'t 0/W-4.(Yel 0 Met being ectettphetnel it attracted no intere0 heminse,. stooe.Neaig and bane, ao40,04ing its "honimesS" behind a shining ',nice terior a fresh white -Paint auk Men hlinds. Itjaas the same home Au me. Chanioal construction, but it required the sOftening influence of the plant - it the clfarm so much desired. When Spring opened the ovffiiitk.oA, the neva home was hard at werk with spade and shovel diggine hOles--small round holes, large round holes, and "long shallow trenches, to „receive the trees and shrubs and vines ,which nurserymen and -nearby woods" had contributed. He had studied from observation 'and the printed page, theories of plant grouping and was doing the work with an eye to th.e effect that would be produced in a few years. Following modern ideas the first planting was done within „a few feet of the walls using bushy plants, which help to conceal the brick, stone and concrete. Nature soon wrought a marvellous transformation. Many village, town and city hornes need tilts sort of treatment, the value of which is always somewhere to be seen in an urban vicinity. What to plant is the problem. The nursery catalogue and the nursery operators can as a rule be safely followed to the extent of what one can readily afford. Whether to plant one variety or a number of varieties is a question the individual must settle. It is considered better to make gyoups of one Sort rather than rnix varieties indiscriminately. With evergreen groups tvvo or three varieties can very well be planted together, afford- ing charm by their different habits of growth. In shrubbery, the Spires Van Hout- tii is one of the most beautiful. It %rows from two to five feet high and bears a profuse mass of white flow- ers early in June. Aneearlier variety beris Thunbergiins regarded as the best barberry for ornamental pur- poses. It is a dwarf, compact shrub, with bright green leaves in summer, Changing in autumn to deep.red. It carries its red fruit well into the winter season. The Caragana grand - yellow, pea -shaped blossoms in May. tarica, must be given more room, as it grows from five to ten feet high. This well known variety produces a crop of bright pink flowers towards the end of May. There are several varieties of the Philadelphus or Moek Orange, Rosa Rugose, summer and fall flowering Hydrangea and the Vibuinums, are among other shrubs from which to choose the foundation planting that will give to the honie that attractive appearance so much desired by the occopant and admired by the passer-by. —Last week Frank Woods Was ap- pointed Brussels agent for the ' well known Ford car and will have his show room and office in the large frame building at' the bridge, Turn - berry Street. Mr. Woods is no stranger to the people of Brussels and SIONIM SMNIM orpoema owesem ARE hardwood floors ,are "too expensive -or , r—, you one of those .who think 'that "too much trouble to lay"? Have. you the idea that Hardwood Floors are beyond yonr reach? Then we want to hear from ynut, Seaman -Kent Hardwbod Flooring it,gbether Plain Red Oak, Quarter Cut White ' arak Maple; Birch, or Beech will so transform your hallways -and rooms that you and your visitotS_Vit be charmed with their changed appearance. Seaman -Kent Hardwood Flooring is sanitary---. eisy to maintain—and adds tremendously 'to the appearance and value of any -horne.—Mid, f the first cost is the last—for Scanlan -Kent Hardwood Floors last a lifetime, and more. nen FOR SALE BY 1sL CLUFF & SONS Seaforth, 'Ont. hit FREE -10 Much Finer Shaved Cleaner Shaves—Quicker with no skin irritation! If you were paid for putting into words the perfect shave, you would probably define it as . . . "the cleanest, quickest, easiest en skin." Because that's what 1000 men told us a really good shave should be. Now we ask you to judge how well we've put these three requisites into a shaving cream. At our expense. We've put it up to millions of men. And, having tried it, they refuse to use any other cream or soap. There are 5 distinct superiorities. shaving came- o tages, in Palmolive Shaving Cream. It cost us 18 months' work, 130 laboratory experiments, to perfect them. Now jedge our work._ Yoe'll find cream multiplying itself '250 times in luxurious lather. You'll find that lather softens the most unruly beard in one minute—without any irritating "rubbing in." You'll find the lather remains rich and creamy for 10 minutes on your face, if necessary. - You'll find cutting easier, cleaner, because bicieblee of extra strength hold each hair erect. This is import% tent. Finally, you'll marvel at the cool, soothed 'after feel"—a result of the carefully blended palm and olive oils. We ask your judgment on these points as a favor. Failing, the would be all ours. Send alcreg the coupon for your ten free shaves. Made le Canada THE PALMOLIVE COMPANY OF CANADA, Limieet? Toronto Just ail rn and matt to ifiainolive Totontn, Ont.