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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1928-05-18, Page 64 kr r.: ID WE= =DMZ, the time 1 reeeke k your you we1¢lo ed articles on "reliable," sources ' W-0. V71&elsl'a 'greatest Shepherd) eadbva'rie was saying that we write something for "Cawge. We' pager. ?Duda not have to confine, his 4a to sheep. He could tell bow ps the local. doctor busy pick- • sot out of chicken thieves he 'ea throua'gh the woods. They say alums faster after them with his oft. Jess Andrew can give you llfl. the details, Also how when Jess pito his auto up to "75," Tom con- tee](Donald Green and he drove much ]aster in a Ford when they made fifty miles in twenty minutes and Tom held the door shut for fear of falling PLes Dissmew 4 Nio;pwirful cutting or greasy salves now needed to banish piles in any oraw. Dr. Leoahardt's prescription HEIVE-RO1D frees the blood circula- tion in the lower bowel and removes the cause. It's br'oug'ht quick and llaeting relief to .thousands it must do the same for you or money refund- ed by Charles Aber'hart or any good druggist. takes but a few mo- ments a day to keep your shoes well polished Wi Nugget pnv, the leer -orad prevents cracking, tore Mereo n Nugget C. 'sdc - fee revere shoe 17zuede 'Tan sorry the Martins are moving away," said Mrs. Drummond te. her husband. 'It will mean 'that we are going to lose track of some very nice people!" .lt don't see why it sho,, d. If a good customer of mine moves away we follow hire up by ling istance. Don't let a little thing like dis- tance separate you from the 1'Jartins 1" A great chanes has comae over Long Mstaraee tele; phoning.. Now it is almost as rapid as local telephon- ing. You give Long Dis- tance the distant number ids eo, a great rnnjerfty of le es she is able to makes donned -loin while you hold #&s line. The Long Dn'c- t an�, eeeferaatorr wiIll' leo/ens the. Jilin numbers fere Vara lid yeti dont Mew ftb and Jos `ghat it is. l hatter, gtile us ss ]list ' tlac frri do -ufli cu teoesinerrs wl e liho t talkMt 'add ghs tinEatltSt OD VIM. out The only tiMe Ile spnate Quo tTnc,j trip was when we =de a heater tine. Tom asked how long tires laatrtl for 1 kept the news front. Tom ass Yore; as II could butt be fila:ally- found it out anyway. 'When en II explained that AV black heifers were to be bred to nay father's roan Shorthorn bull he post- poned the "raking" he will give me later. ]I really got the heifers to eat the coarse grass my sheep leave but being from Texas they "range" fat* and wide. Just so they are on some other man's farm wshen the tax asses-' sot`' comes around. I can stuff' a sheep with feed, and will not have a hog on the place, but II felt II must have some cattle to run along with the sheep to eat the coarse feed. d A lot of men tell me a few cattle with a lot of sheep, or a few sheep with a lot of cattle work admirably well so far as grazing is concerned. The few seem to be carried at no ex- tra expense to the other. Well meaning folks will tell you that poor hilly land is, best for sheep. It may be, but why do the champions at the big shows come from the best soil? 1 think more depends on the man than the soil. Two of the best flocks in eastern Illinois come from extremes of each kind of soil, but the hill land man grows his feed in the river Ivelley where he grazes his cat- tle. II suppose Tom Bradburne is as eag- er to learn about the care of sheep as the most wide awake club boy. When be saw my fat lambs which had received no feed in their creep but wheat bran •he wanted to know all about it. Tom will voluntarily tell you a lot about the care of sheep but you cannot "pump" him. When the pumping starts Tom is too busy to talk. I eagerly read all of Mr. McGav- ock's writings but was sorely grieved to see his advocates the compulsory slaughtering of a certain percentage of all pure breds. Such propaganda as this and that blasted "Coalition" stuff should be swatted. This is not Russia even if we are threatened with " Hooverism." Mr. MGavock knows full well the culls in some herds are superior to tops in others.—J. D. A. Green, Oakland, Illinois. TREAT TAPIR COW KINDLY Cows have few bad habits, and all that belong to them are caused by faults of management. The most troublesome are the habit of kicking and holding up the milk. Cows kick owing to fear, and the act is an ef- fore to defend themselves. Some young heifers may kick when first handled in the effort to milk and from nervousness, but if they are gently used this trouble is easily gotten ov- er and nothing further may be seen of it. But if the young animal is ,struck the association of the punish- ment with the act :becomes fixed upon the memory, and ever afterward the cow may be a kicker, ;because it na- turally expects punishment at milk- ing time and tries to defend itself from it. The frequent change of own- erships also greatly helps to produce this habit, because some cows will resent the approach of a stranger; but this only happens with very fret- ful cows or those which have been habitually ill-used. This habit may be prevented by the cautious and kindly treatment of the calf and heifer before she becomes a cow. A young calf will usually make an attemspt to kick when the udder and teats are handled, but the objec- tion is soon removed by gentle per- sistence in the treatment previously "'recommended both for calves and heifers, in regard to handling, brush- ing, and other familiar attentions. A cow that has been thus reared and trained will never become a kicker ex- cept by very brutal treatment. To cure this vice is sometimes, if not al- ways, easy. I have never found any difficulty about it by using patience and kind and gentle treatment, not- withstanding some occasional relaps- es and annoying accidents. The meth- od of treatment has been as follows: First, to secure the confidence and friendship of the animal; second, to approach her cautiously, both to a- void alarming her and to secure my- self against an attack; lastly, never to strike or punish the cow for an at- tempt to kick, but, instead, to, soothe her and so remove the fear of danger which has given occasion for the Kick- ing. All this may be done by gent- ly patting and stocking the cow, speaking to her when approaching her, and familiarizing her to the hand- ling. After this milk her in a small pail whieh can he held so that is kick can be warded off as much as pos- sible. While milking, the cow is spoken te, to attract her attention, and every movement about her should be slow and deliberate, so as to amid anything to cause her to suspect that d blow might follow the movement. Whefa the milking is safely over the cow Is petted and spoken to, and a'. handful of meal or oats may be giv- en to her. If a kick - is made or threatened the cow is never to be beaten for it, but spoken to kindly. No other person than the milker �jjt�,, �tliil"tF 7a11"ll G 15 Po ds I.5 G`oycells Men and women, weak, thin and Miserable, are urged to put on 'weight and get back their health and strength with McCoy's Cod Liver Extract Tablets. One walla n gained 15 pounds lit five weeks and that's going fast elrslaie for annyena: McCoy talte r all the mals-411tend Jtki ironclad guarantee. Et afters ta. . i duty cent ho:re6 a#i' 1116Coyv'ss 'Coma, Liter F.4itiaet 'Tttb1et6 or 2 one de lax '•b'ostss.. J '.tfiits; t' n g1tt nab bar wof>itgvn 'doesn't b aG Ilcaatt ou add, fol 1 'donrlpleteoy" asatYwfa:r tla�n Mailed§ itaptOtiVnetit Balt i Jon- olft gest >i ' O ttrfoiz iced an 'return two pnW idle plat. • 1Ple6%). G,tl II ssuaMAVQ Igow) ` I -(=t-. mtgrr until 1y r?velu4aUopt. .and �a��r(eaaT1 cdJI(y IIgrrri- Ne natter fav]l at your may hes, ram icing yrou have bean'troubled or hovr maauy mee><icines• you have triad without suecess—if yon are a victim of Bladder Weakness and Urethral Irritation, causing days of tro ,,,, a-. soars annoyance and nights of brok- en rest --you should try the amazing valee of !i' -r. Southworth's U]ItATA;eS at oecel Made from a special formula, sue- cessfully used in the Doctor's private practice for nearly 450 years--URA- TADS are particularly designed to swiftly relieve tl,ri pain and misery of burning Ureth'- Irritations, Back- aches, Bladder Weakness and Getting - up -Nights. Safe, Pleasant, Inexpen- sive—and supplied by all good drug- gists on a guarantee of money back if not satisfied. If you need a medi- cine of this kind, try URATABS to- day! should approach the cow during the milking. Halving entirely cured some cows that had 'been in the habit of kicking • badly, by this treatment, wholly dispensing with sticks_ and ropes and other arrangements to pre- vent the kicking, and which only irri- tate the cow, I have confidence that there are few cows that have been so utterly spoiled that they may not yet be made quite gentle by it. Some cows kick because their sight is de- fective and they cannot distinguish the person approaching them. Such cows should be approached and hand- led always with gentleness, or they may be very easily startled, when it is instinctive with them to kick. Holding up the milk occurs chiefly when the cow is fresh. A cow that has been used to suckle her calf will naturally prefer that way of :being milked. It is most frequent with cows that are so habituated, and for this reason it is rare among those cows whose calves are not permitted to suck them. It is a fault more easily prevented than cured, and at the same time one that is very trou- blesome and . mischievous in its re- sults. A fresh cow that holds up her milk nearly always provokes there- by an attack of garget and future loss of milk all through the season, so that the dairyman or owner of a fam- ily cow should be on the watch to avert the trouble. When the calf is -habitually taken from the cow before it has had time to suck the cow will come to her milk naturally and with- out resistance, and this practice can- not be too strongly recommended as a constant rule in the dairy. When, however, the trouble has occurred and a remedy is sought we find how pow- erless we are to strive with the nat- ural instincts of an animal excited to stubborn resistance. Many devices have been tried and recommended to overcome this vicious propensity, but none of them is of much value. One of these is to hang a heavy chain across the loins; an- other is to press upon the loins fore- ibly with , the hands while efforts are being made to draw the milk. Others are to give some feed at milking time or to distract in some way the atten- tion of the cow from her supposed grievance. Soothing measures and perseverance, or the use of milking tubes, are the only effective remedies. To give some feed or salt, and to sit down and rub the udder and manipu- late the teats, as in milking, and to persevere with gentleness, is often effective; but the only successful method of getting the milk is by the use of milking tubes, by which the milk flows by force of gravity, in spite of any unwillingness of the cow. The tubes are inserted gently into the teats, and the milk runs in a stream until all is drawn off. This method, or any other, is only tem- ,porary, and to be used only in the spe- cial emergency, because of the danger of injuring the lining membranes of the teats and producing inflammation of the udder. Sieepi]°: s Nights :ladder'Tti'e e1lefed 24 li®],! r� 4?j If your sleep is disturbed by Blad- der Weakness, Irritation, s tuning Sensation, ]Backache, Nerivousness and Bad Dreams --due to clogged Kidneys, Prosbratic Troubles, or inflammation of the Bladder Urinary Tract, you should try the amazing value of Syrol Tablets at once! 'Syrol Tablets, Which any good drug- gist can now furnish in sealed pack- ages containing 2 weeks' supply, are especially designed by a world fam- ous chemist to bring quick relief and comfort to those folks near or past middle life who are almost- co'iistant- ly troubled by Backaches, • Bladder W'ea'kness, Irritation and restless troublesome nights. On a strict guarantee of money back on first box purchased, if satis- factory results -are not obtained—you are invited to try and enjoy the won- derful value of Syrol Tablets to -day. Any good druggist can supply you. EITiGIIPES Velvet Launch Cake. One quarter cupful lard, 1e cupful butter, 1 cup .brown suer, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cup sour milk, t-4 .clip molasses, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1/3 teaspoon nut- meg, 1 egg, beaten lightly, two cups flour, 1 level teaspoon soda. If de- sired, 1 tabiesi,00nful cryfitallized gin- ger cut In fine pieces. Method: Crena-- the fat and' sugasr, add the "egg molasses, -Mills, ginger, •alio'[ lastly' well (sifted floor,' salt, Spice and soda. ' :; eke fieJme ioanf in as Inodeegtaa m✓eia. 12 deli ed •fldured' raising' may .be 'used instead Of tlae 11.811. eTafIg0i to tone.,„ n arta, r it iz1 lard, vA . dniis2aul bitticdsr, 1 dagtb -g ca a7it'l;ltea meat two e �8d,, i,,i `ftfll(� . "otiI0 ^Naini. 1116761 Vater Ui, q a V�yfiP •!th ,„ 5 UA ,uta onbe tYe rk. t0 geese. V44/ orange and 0,4a with -144h Put reua az der Of =alto thren$le the food -pknep a tiler with alae, koua+' .end eaz t, xaan4Irlienn4a;f• y. Bate iu4 two layr,0 0 711,1M; One-llual pulp boiling water ]I- anulated sugar, juice and grra' raid of 1 large orange, yolk of ,leva 1 tablespoonful cornstarch. 1ltt[l tea+ Reber the sugar and corn- starch: Vowly pour over the boiling water, place on stove and cook. until smooth and thick; add, yolk of egg, cook go' 1 minute and theta add juice anfl• rind of orange. Ice cake with orange ' icing. Favorite (Granath Cake. Orae -third cupful lard, ea cupful ,butter, 2 cupfuls flour, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 cupil white sugar. '11JIix 'together, rubbing , the shortening in with the flaws. Take out one cupful of the crumbs for the top. Then mix as follows: - Two eggs, 1 cup sour milk, 1 pound dates, '1. cupful chopped walnuts, one teaspoon soda, %, teaspoon allspice, 1,4 teaspoon cinnamon, pinch of cloves. Mix together. Put in a well greased ting spreading the cupful of crumbs on top. Bake in a moderate oven. When cold, cut in squares. Economy Layer Cake. One-quarter cupful lard, la cup sugar, 2 eggs, 114 cups flour, -214 tea- spoons - baking powder, ik cup sweet milk, 3f teaspoon salt, 1/S teaspoonful vanilla. Mix and sift the flour, baking pow- rder and salt three times. Thoroughly beat the eggs. Cream the shortening, adding the sugar gradually and mix- ing c;dd the sifted flour and bake powder alternately with the milk, beating between each addition. Mix well. Add vanilla last. Place 'In greased -pans and bake in a moderate oven (350 to 375 deg. F.) 40 to 45 minutes if baked in a loaf tin, 20 to 25 minutes if baked in two layers, and 16 to 20 minutes if baked in muf- fin dans. -, Five O'clock Tea Biscuits. Tiwb.cups flour, % teaspoon salt, 4 teaspoons baking powder, 2 table- spoonfuls ard, 3 tablespoonfuls but- ter, 2-3 cup milk, nuts, raisins or can- died fruits, cut in pieces. Method: Sift together the flour, salt and baking powder. Cut in the shortening. Add the milk, mix thor- oughly and turn out on .a slightly floured board. Roll out to one-quar- ter inch thickness. Cut into biscuits with very small plain or fancy cut- ter. Brush top of each biscuit with melted butter and press into it a nut, raisins, or candied fruit. Bake in hot oven (450 deg. F.) 15 minutes. Serve with or without butter. Or, .press a small cube of sugar, first dipped in orange juice, into centre of each small biscuit, before baking. Fruit Bolls. Make biscuit dough as ,instructed in recipe for Five O'clock Tea Biscuits. Lightly roll until it is one-quarter inch thick. - Butter, and sprinkle with cin- namon, sugar and half a cupful of currants. Now roll the dough slowly and carefully, as for a jelly -roll. Cut into one -inch slices and place in greas- ed muffin - tins. Bake 12 to 15 min- ,utes in hot oven. Serve with after- noon tea. Fruit Buns. One-quarter cupful lard, ', cupful butter, 1% cups sugar, 2% cups flour, sea teaspoon soda, 1 teaspoonful each cloves and cinnamon, 3 eggs, 1 cup sour milk, % cup nut meats broken in pieces, % cup seeded raisins. Method; Cream the shortening and add sugar. - Sift together the flour, soda and spices. Beat the eggs and add to sour milk. Flour raisins slightly and add to broken nut meats. Add flour mixture and sour milk al- ternately to butter and sugar. Add nuts and raisins and mix thoroughly. Bake in greased muffin tins in hot ov- en (375 deg. F.) 25 to 30 minutes. CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM I have yet to learn that any com- petent manufacturer or tradesman suffers iv competition.—.Sir William Schooling. After a man has .gget a new record what does he do vtT{th it ?—Detroit Free Press. What Captain Wilkins has won for himself is a place in the midnight sun. —New Yor c Herald -Tribune. It's well that the ben's don't know that an .oyster lays 50,000,000 eggs. It might discourage theme.—Hamilton Herald. In the olden days they used to kiss and make up; novo the makeup comes ahead of •everything --]Kingston Whig Standar,? SI Cold NA Meg Or De hep © NEW :tit:W TSWfak LADY IIS T IF1Al 'lUL: S t:t lE TOOK DODD'S MIMS''1f PILLS Mrs. A. IP'. Aihfietall Suffered With Weak Kidneys. Nashwoolasis, lti. !:., May 10—(Special) "Every, three I .got a cold it settled on my Icidneyed' `writes Mrs. A. P. Ashlield" a well-known resident of this plate. "II h= •,' such a pain in may back, I could not sleep or work and thought the pain was there to say. A kind friend of rain told ane about Dodd's Kidney Pills. II had only tak- en two loges when It got relief. 1 take then. l,'ttiS :often noir and *.hank Dodd's ttifIntr,'7 ino for my health." Avails �omself Of the best infor- mation, '4. bikladeot .and most praad- tieaa oyt3 tt- . d relief in :the world to-day,i'0; 1iaa o'Die itti tihich the sufferer aseertain f t` ;hinli ellf the nature of his r'linedtl� „r*pti . then a looses the most data% u ; Of healing; this has been tatio ^3 'for the past • thirty years ea the )])oddd'i i is Inb Pill treatmetftt. Dodd'n ;afar 'Vigo i'au''ca obtained ve,ryvtti?nteve, or 1II14 , ltd„ Toronto 2, .from- d"a ra -,l Montreal �o ,6IR, VINCENT MEREDETFL ].'ART. • Maim of gita Bawd and ChaiTran of the brecutizra Cemantitti a IL DauharAom,1E a D. FoRBEs ANGUs,1Es�Q�,, HAROLD D KENNEDY, ESQ. ]E. W. BEATTY. ESQ., JAMES STEWART, ESQ J. W. MoCoNNnu, ESQ, PRESiIP ENT BEL Ci nes GORDON, o.a.ii. VICE-PRESIDENTS MAj. sm. T,'s HON. S. C. MI mt-yRra, O.W.a39 GENERAL Mi .ANAL illi Sm tezm Rac/I WIILIZAPSa'-TASrnoa DER.3CTO ttS Wm. McMAsssa, Esq. G. B. FRASER. Esse. Tin Hon. Sm LoMER coast, It.c.na.o. 1F. E. MEREDITH, Esq., TLC. I?. W. Mouton, Enz. LT.Cwi.. HERBERT Mooson, c. c f THE HoNQR ARTHUR HENRY Cocnszwri' GEN. SIR AHUR CURRIE, THE Hoffa. TuotAs Anesaatac W. A. Br.Acrt, Esq. • E:'t ECUTIIVE COMMITTEE OFF THE ]BOARD SIR VINCENT MEREDITH. (C aerznays) SILL CIAtiartS GORDON, aa.a.e. ° H. IL Damaioics, MAJOR:GENERA1. THE HoNoult.as ,E S. C. MEwauRN, C.M.G. LONDON COMMITTEE Has GRAcs THE Dance o? DEVONSHIRE, Ix.o. (Chairman). T. a. S. ALPOUR. ESQ. SIR HARDMAN LEVER, BARTa.° tt.o.D Ts r. IRT. HON. LORD STa ATHCONA AND Mourne ROYAL. 117namuutca A Ml, ]Fall, PARIS COMICII'A CONSULTATIF M. LE SZ;NATEUR GASTON MENHIR MEXICO COMMITTEE C. GORDON PATERSON, ESQ. BERTRAas E. HoutiwAv, Enz. The has over 600 Offices in Canada, Newfoundland, United States, Mexico; at London, England, aaa1 at Paris, France, with Correspondents in all Counries, offering exceptional facilities in all departments of General and Foreign ]Banking. 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