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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1929-08-02, Page 6o f ee . ilai tars average 0 a zs 4.r travel over ansport llataes in4 the survey by the iace- an; pert revereallee. ltt ea pees tw pessenger to laeavel 12,914 le a' air -transport nes ogceu- itl3la;;r •eusenger caevice with- tla g t route once. The cost d. tile would be $71,121. The L tisenger fare was found to cents a mile between Portland enttle, and the maximum was 4',aia?ei a mile for a short trip over the;,ya Bean along the Pacific coast. The ra "4..aeclhaded taxi cab or bus trans - Plea Caton between the airports and the:;Ibusiness sections of the cities. 14710UR1IST FARES HELP YOU SEE CANADA !Of course you'd like to visit the Coast and on the way see all the places you've dreamed of—busy grow- ing cities like Winnipeg, Brandon, Re- gina, Saskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Victoria—the spread- ing prairies, Jasper National Park in all its mountain splendor, the sombre Skeena River, the famous Sheltered Scenic Seas, perhaps even Alaska, the alluring Land of the Midnight Sun. Low Tourist Fares help you see the utmost at least possible expense: Ask your nearest Canadian National Ag- ent, he will give you rates and help you in making your trip absolutely worth while. .VISIITORS' IIMPRESSIIONS OF GUJELPIH REFORMATOI•;Y Recently we walked through an in- stitution which is admittedly one of the best of its kind to be found any- where in the world, the Ontarie re- formatory at Guelph. Besides caring far the criminal insane males of the province it occupies, in our renal system, a kind of half -way position between a city or county jail and the federal penitentiary at Kingston. The average term of its inmates is about a year and generally there are about 500 prisoners behind its walls. We say "behind its walls" almost in stinctively when writing about a pri- son, but as a matter of fact, there are no walls at Guelph, or rather there are no outside walls. The criininal insane are, of course, closely watch- ed, though they' all have exercise and recreation periods at regular in- tervals. But the ordinary inmates would have little trouble in escaping if they so desired. Occasionally they do escape. There are some 70 guards, all un- armed. They are, of course, not all on duty at the same time and one of the most lasting impressions we took away from the institution was the general scarcity of guards, and the agreeable absence of that rigid mili- tary discipline without which, in the opinion of a good many authorities, proper order cannot be maintained in a prison. Superintendent Neelands said that if a man thought enough of him to salute him he would return the salute, so if there is any cap touching it is a gesture of mutual cordiality and no sign of submission or inferiority. Any prisoner in the place has the right any day at Zoon to gain access to the superintendent and lay before him any complaint. We are not ready to testify that it is going to do him any good, but the right remains and is exercised more or less frequently. The active con- trol of the prisoners is in the ham • like fists of Sergeant McGuire, who, we believe, it was much pleasanter is meet as a visitor and guest of Hon. Lincoln Goldie, provincial secretary, than as a felon who showed little ani- bition to break records on the stone pile. The general inconspicuousness of the guards no doubt contributed to the effect produced by an inspection of the various industries operated at the reformatory. One might imagine himself strolling through an ordinary canning plant, a rather hygienic abat- toir or a furniture factory. The men seemed as •busy as normal working- men who would presently hear a whistle and go home to dinner, and later perhaps to a movie or a game of softball. The prison uniform is not inferior to the ordinary clothes worn by mechanics at work. The ap- pearance of the men did not differ from that of any other group that might be found similarly engaged for private owners in Brantford, Kit- chener, Winona or in any one of hundred Ontario towns where such industries as those at Guelph are ac- tive. Nobody appeared to be either guarding or goading them. Nobody, indeed, seemed to be watching chem. Some of them were smoking at their work. Nobody appeared to be more reluctant about whatever he was do- ing than the present writer would appear at the moment this is written to any' casual visitor. Looking clos- er one noted a somewhat unusual sternness or woodenness in the faces of many of the men. This might be mere preoccupation about their own immediate affairs, observable in :most men at work, or it might be the mask with which they protected themselves from the curious gazes of visitors. thought no less of tjsem for it. Many of the men were out in the fields, pitching and hauling! hay. Others were at work in the stone quarry, now temporarily out of ac- tion because of a bolt of lightning which destroyed important machin- ery. Others were repairing roads and doing one or other of the scores of odd jobs to be found around an 800 acre farm which is in addition a pris- en, a hospital and a dozen factories in one. The prisoners, we gather, have to work hard at Guelph. We are informed that before e. man 19 ret to any kind of work he is etam- 1ned by a physician and given some- t&fi g to do which is within his pow- ei.•> r , Uta the ether liand we have been tottotaa ler former irtai inttee that the tasks they' have been set have .beet brutal th nr-Severity before they acctue- °h SC themselves to them. Writ if tylia' "tirorit Barad they are well fed, citge, as well., we should thik as the' oat TLk 1 C {iu �1PT1��0€iii c( 1`17 �. t]lacr raffia�,� '1thoar to air o as dela . ,4,, 4 etiolate". They l-4,ve t)5i Sul seenafai'E+ shoe$ f?ani Wia L3 Phiteiseal and soleness; re-d9.41a m4 in 'tlaa opr- iainty ogdlouut 1MA* lu ` is rep111y useful. `fi e reforinato L*l� g:Mettirsies aiap- ply necessary artia:'Ilgs t. a dozen otter Ontario institutions. Tine shoes have the oppomtuknity of leaguing ea geed deal about Cone of perhaps a &keen trades at which on their release they might support themselves. They live in erholesonne if restricted surraissnd- ings. And they are creating at Guels h something of permanent beauty. The growl& ale parklike. The s • ne banked stream beside the road with its artifucial waterfalls and a wealth of flowers, might well grace the pri- vate grounds of some county mag- nate. Plans are on foot for the con- struction of an artificial lake. We do not doubt that in the future many an unfortunate fellow, who is now toiling away in shame at some un- congenial task will return to stroll through the grounds and claim some share in the creation of the loveliness that he sees about him. Ladies' handbags are now made to resemble motor cars, yachts and aero - plans. Bat in what ladies get out of them they still resemble conjurors' hats. --+London Sunday Pictorial. The professor who advised students to be snobs and "to speak and act like gentlemen" probably does not think much of the gentlemen he meets now- adays.—St. Catharines Standard. CHIIU I:;IBY PACIFIST WROTE TELE "]HYMN Q)F HATE" It used to be `said while the war was on that hell had no fury like a non-combatant, and consequently it should come as no surprise to us that Ernest Lissauer, author of the "Hymn of Hate" was a chubby pacifist be- fore the war, during the war, and after the war. Nobody was more astonished than Lissauer when he found himself suddenly a world-fam- ous figure because of his verse. He now admits that he wrote under what seemed to him to be extreme provo- cation, but he writhes under the gen- eral acceptance of him as a fire eat- er and author of the blistering vers- es which he addressed to England. He now desires to be understood proper: ly by the English-speaking people. He wants to be known as he is, not as he appeared in a moment of un- governable fury. So he is engaged upon a series of plays which will have a pacifist moral, hoping thus to live down his earlier and now wholly un- desirable reputation. - Lissauer has recently explained how he came to give vent to "Hassgesang." One evening in the first few weeks of the war he was sitting with sev- eral journalist friends in a Hamburg cafe. News came to them of the British navy holding up an American ship bearing hospital supplies to Ger• many. The British contention was that no distinction could be drawn be- tween hospital supplies and other sup• plies, that all would probably be used to strengthen the German army. Lis- sauer saw, on the other hand, the in- necent and helpless condemned to suffering by a brutal exercise of strength. In this mood he produced a sheet of paper and wrote the poem. He neither intended nor expected that, it ever would see the light, he says, although we doubt that poets ever have this idea unless what they write is frankly Rabelaisian and unprint- able. But the verses fell into the hands of one of the journalists who immediately arranged for its syndi- cation through the German press. In a day or two Lissauer woke up to find himself one of the celebrities of Germany, temporarily replacing such German authors as Haeckel and Hum- boldt. In case you have forgotten the verse, we reproduce it. "French and Russian, they matter not A blow for a blow and a shot for a shot; We love them not, we hate them not. We hold the Weichsel and Vosges gate We have but one and only hate, We love as one, we hate as one. We have one foe and one alone. He is known to you all, he is known to you all, He crouches behind the dark gray flood. Full of envy, of rage, of craft, of gall, Cut off by waves that are thicker than blood. Come, let us stand at the Judgment place, An oath to swear to, face to face, An oath of bronze no wind can shake, An oath for our sons and their sons to take. Come, hear the word, repeat the word, Throughout the Fatherland make it heard. We will never forego our hate, We have all but a single hate, We love as one, we hate as one, We have one foe and one alone— ENGLAND!" And we take this opportunity of offering to Herr Lissauer the assur- ance that the poem did not disgracs him or make him hated in England. In fact, we think we are not exag- gerating when we say that England regarded these verses as being infus- ed with the spirit of high comedy and they caused more laughing than any dozen issues of Punch. It was, we believe, a favorite sport of the Aom- mies to insist that a captured Ger- man soldier should stand up and sing "1-Hassgesang" at their canteen enter- tainments. In the winter of 1915 at the Royal Academy of Music in London a num- ber of musicians out of curiosity sang the "Hynia of Hate" with Sir Edward Elgar, one of the greatest of modern composers, at the piano. They became so absorbed by the rhythm and emo- tion of the piece that they sang as enthusisetie ily Be a group of Ger- mans and thundered out in fiat class style, "We have one foe and one Es- lcfne--+>i rfigland." News of this per- formance reached the press and as those remaining at ?name lacked some- Apc7 U44' l l ri..4a OR twa 4Q:... fS' atea ' !PIN? V= Iii t`<!t i vdiM1u t lenetrate. The eitilaeite WQ �Ta�li tac cl;19Z4snui loon' taiey =Me to c�,,� 4uaa�'t: tate a`44i umiorouaaly t '4asa�raal?AQ Q417 as4l LE0111Iaised not to ol'nend cls grain. Ussatier nova sea rite that v✓hile the vier was on he hated - land with great bittermes, not only he - cause of the lmospital chip incident but because he blamed Feselarad for loosing the Russians in East (Prussia. He says sew that one ebould be able to distiuuguishbetween a nation and the individuaals who compose it and asserts that he does not hate Englishmen. To his credit it must be said that in 1916' he joined with time who said that the poem should not be included in books for the young. This campaign was begun by the Volkszeitueg of Cologne, a Roman Catholic paper, and was supported by the Berliner Tageblatt and other in- fluential papers which agreed that the poem was unsuitable for singing or reciting by school children. But this check could not stop the sweep of the song which became a kind of secondary national anthem at the front and was translated into the languages of Germany's allies, mil- lions of copies being thus distributed. It won for Lissauer the order of the Red Eagle of the fourth class from the kaiser. Now he repents and wishes the world to forget that in a moment of passion he wrote the song of hate and called upon God to punish Eng- land. Nobody will blame him much, and certainly no Englishman who re- members the even inferior drivel that was written as a sort of reply by the late l[Ebrd Curzon. MAIKIE RELIISH OF SU PLUS BEANS If you have in your garden a larger quantity of beans than you can use in your every -day menus, preserve the surplus for winter use. The beans may be canned by the cold or hot pack method, or made into bean pickle or relish. If you can the beans, be sure that they are thoroughly ster- ilized. Three hours' boiling by the hot-water method will be required. String ]Sean Pickle. Take string beans that are only one and one-half inches or two inches in length. Put vinegar in a preserv- ing kettle and bring to a boil; skim very carefully. Add sugar in the pro- portion of one cupful of sugar to one cupful of vinegar. Add whole cloves— a tablespoonful to each two cuofuls of vinegar, and broken sticks of cin- namon in the same proportion. Bring all to a boil again and then add the beans. Let the whole boil for five minutes; then put into sterilized jars and seal. Sour Bean Pickles. Prepare the beans as for cooking, but keep them full length; sprinkle with salt, cover with water and let stand overnight; drain, rinse in cold water, and drain again; pack in fruit, jars, adding meanwhile black and white mustard seeds and bits of horse radish. Pour in vinegar, scalding hot to fill the jars to overflow, then seal the jars. Bean Relish. One gallon of green beans, 3 bunch- es of celery, 2 cauliflowers. Cook the beans and cauliflowers until tender in salted water, then drain and make the following dressing: One pint of vinegar, 1, cupful of mustard, 1/ cupful flour, 1/4 teaspoon- ful turmeric, 1 teaspoonful of white pepper, 1 cupful butter, 1 dozen small white onions boiled in dressing. Cook together until thick, then continue cooking for twenty minutes in a dou- ble boiler. Chop celery and add raw Mix well and seal tightly. Pickled Green ]Beans. Two to three quarts of fresh beans, 1 lemon, 11/2 cupfuls of sugar, 2 cup- fuls of vinegar, 2 cupfuls of water, pinch of salt. Prepare to pickle the beans the day they are picked. Remove the ends, wash thoroughly, and leave whole. Place the beans in a kettle of slight• ly salted water and cook until tender. Drain and pack in hot sterile jars. Put into a kettle the sugar, water, vinegar and the juice of 1 lemon and bring the mixture gradually to boil ing. Boil the syrup for five minutes, pour over the •beans until the jars are completely filled, and seal. If a very sour taste is desired, the amount of vinegar in proportion to the amount of water, may be increased. The lemon juice is not necessary but adds a delightfully tart flavor. Bean and Onion Pickle. One peck of butter beans, 1 pint of sliced onions, 6 cupfuls of brown sugar, 1 cupful of mustard, 1 cupful of flour, 2 tablespoonfuls of turmeric, 2 tablespoonfuls of celery seed, two quarts of vinegar. Prepare the beans as for table use, boil in salted water until tender, drain and add the sliced onions. Mix all the other ingredients and bring to boiling. Add the beans and boil for ten min- utes. an and Carrot Pickle. Prepare wax string beans and car- rots (small ones may be used and not cut), sliced as for table use. Pack in jars alternately. Have ready this syrup. Two cupfuls of sugar, 1 cupful of vinegar, 1 cupful of water, 8 cinna- mon buds. Boil the mixture for five minutes, then pour over the beans and carrots and seal. This is very good with cold meats. Dried String Beans. Snip the ends and remove the strings from fresh -gathered string beans. With a sharp knife split the pods through the sides from which the strings were taken. Cut in halves crosswise if desired. Spre a! the pre- pared beans lightly over agate plates, set into a slack oven or on the shelf over the kitchen range, to 'become thoroughly heated through in 1Hfteen or twenty minutes. Stir oecasionally, but do not have a thick layer of beans on a dish. When hot throughout let CORIEU E Js /BUYING lei !a.CpTO FAV ANIO Jai 1Thrrrug&a the ee-oaerutiets oft? Ma Madness Nen cyan ru ➢ r,?QQr,¢daaca a aenen al? •e4sacietleatall nrsainlee is lbntttlrsr bansfineoa rellatti®nca al el ➢ t neem resident and mercl,'aamt is the tewni, ann4 anti lbriwaP alialneati a mere Drer eserl ea w!AZ STEWART I OE. SALE Coaso etc dty NhigE August &da The °° T GE Hen's OIl®thfing gild la QIla ge MEN'S STRAW kilATS.—Any Straw Hat in store, including all our better Hats, which sold as high as $8.60. Sizes 61e, to lib. SALE PRICE JO[; Geo. Ifl Ferguson A (Ca GENERAL 1AIIARDWARE We sell Gold Medal r Binder Twine, a ilb. .... ' TIF:1,E•PHONE 61 41..A.SC Th 1Sewe➢➢er end Watelhumaker —SPECIAL-- Summer Neckwear for IPMIC.r8ALN D QJA Did you ever enter a store and say "Give me the cheapest suit of clothes you have in the house?" You certainly did not because you realize that price is not the only consideration and that you must demand quality for what you buy, whether it is a house and lot or a paper of pins. You want the best suit you can buy for the money, and the same theory applies to all othee. lines of merchandise. The mere fact that you go to another city and buy a suit for $10.00 does not mean that you have saved money. Your home merebant could have given you a suit for $10.00 that would probably be better than the one you bought. lie could probably have given you the same suit for less money. This means that your home merchant wants to satisfy you and give you your money's worth. He will not sell you something that is not worth the money you .pay for it, because he wants your trade when you come again. The merchant in the other city does not care. He doesn't expect to ever see you again and wAll try to get all he can out of you while the getting is good. It is not the price you pay that determines whether or not you are getting a bargain. It is the quality of goods that you get for your money that counts. The next time you think of buying anything out- side Seaforth, if you ever do think of such a thing go first to your home merchant and ask to see the article or articles which you are thinking of buying. It ,is a courte sy you owe your community as well as your merchant and yourself, and it always pays. ThCnmlpg®111193 7Krofton Rid Stationery Contest Write an Essay about this Note Paper and win a prize. Window Shades Picture Frames It ook Store Made to Order Phone all Wo Ido SMITE W. A. CRIME Groceries, Teas and Coffees VINEGAR AND SPICES Vinegar, 60 to 60c Telephone 12 Our Quality I: eked Goods Angel Cakes are Delicious. Try one -25c Telephone 34 1L E. KIEATING For Developing, Printing and En- larging of the better kind, TRY KEATING'S PHARMACY Kodak Agent Phone 28 - Seaforth WALTER G. WELLIES Dependable Shoes Men's White Canvas Running Shoes with white rubber al soles; to clear at rgee ID FC RD SALES SERVICE OXY -ACE'T'YLENE WELDING Jo F. DALY Canada's Oldest Ford Dealer ROY S. IPI NKNIEY read -,-Cakes a>iiidl Pastry OATMEAL COOKIES—The kind that Grandma used to make, and better than Dad's. Phone 79. J. J. CILIEAI'Y Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables —SPECIIAL— Spanish Valencia Raisins G/ +'�j 5© 2 pounds for Delivery Service : Phone 117 RIEIIG E 1' 9S Is; AEE Studebaker Sales and Service Repairs on ail Makes off Cars. TIRES, I:,ATTERIES, ETC, Telephone 167 Tilbi1sfi1>` ere Wilite-Upo ROY S. PIINKNEY_ Mr. Roy S. Pinkney of the South End Bakery, is another of the native born business men of Seaforth. He learned the baking trade with Cardno Bros. of this town and then spent a year and a half in Orangeville and Owen Sound. Returning to Sea - forth he spent a year in Crich's Bakery and then a year in Aylmer. For the next fifteen years he was the baker for Cardio Bros., and two years ago went into business for himself, and has been very successful. Hle is well located, has a fine store and up-to-the-minute equipment, including a portable oven, electric mixer and electric wrapping ma- chine. He makes a specialty of cakes, cookies and bread, and his long and varied experience nas enabled him to build up an ever-in- creasing business. QUALITY V AVFNT COAL AND COKE SERVICE Phone 126 PREPARATION The I" obtt, !tell Engine & Thresher Company Maw„factanrers of Tractioa, IEmginea. Goa Tractors, Threaloere. (Power and ffieati,ag oilers. savrmilia, Ete. We offer a largo stork of new, rebafiit and secondhand thresiaera and engines, very anitable for inodividannl or =atom werll. Bay at home where yon are moored of prompt service. itt SIEAFO i':Th CR EAI`VIl IE I' Y FIiNEST CREAMERY BUell ER Our Seaforth brand is made from our choicest cream. Try it. You will like it. Phone 80 W. C. A. IrARBER, Proprietor. Wolverton FIketielePV IIEs Co., Limited Millers of flour that's Dependable SIILVERKI[NG for ]BREAD KEYSTONE for PASTRY Telephone 51 Il r s tfiWa�ri'd aerA II S9 AAL YOUR CPIP011F1'UNI1TV TC BIEMrrI- FIIT lay OUR PJIICN1111-SAVIING SALE IIS REGIT NOW — TIES Fr;IDIDAy. AND SATURDAY. TIIlilE PRICE TICKETS BESPEAll WONDERFUL (BARGAINS THROUGHOUT TEE STORE. FRED S. SAiATCJGIE9 (opo 717;:, tchmiakerr anal .etve➢les Cgit®nnetr; let "THE GIFT SHOP" M. ROSS SAVAUGE, Opt. D. Cptometnist 1.P eatttnes CIM :3'm Stone ALUMINUM TEA, Q 0®0 KETTLES 5 Specials in Dinner Sets. MATINEE SELLS FOR LIS ti VTAILBIER S TEES WEEK'S SPECIIAL All odd and occasional chairs at a discount. FREE.—Slip covers with all Marshall Spring Mattresses from now to August 31st. R. H. SPROAT SHOE STORE WE SELL FOR LESS Call and see our values in Shoes, Club Bags and Suit Cases. IE' Ii. ED W. WIIGG C®ts and Shoes Special Harvest Shoes ....$2.95 Special Work Shoes S3.85 (Boys' ]Heavy Shoes $2.95 LOOK 61 Floor Varnish will dry in 4 hours. That's no bluff. T. G. SCOTT Telephone 62 S. SH1INAN Men's and Ladies' Ready-to-wear Dry Goods —SPECIIA L— Ladies Flowered Crepe aa„ Pyjamas elite le Ladies' full-fashioned .TI is Silk Blase 6 c�J GALLOP McAILPIINIE Agents for Massey -Harris Imple- ments and Repairs. eatty Bros. Farm Equipment Metallic Roofing Frost Fence GASOLENE and OILS CANADA IFNR,NIITNRIE dry slowly, either near the stove or in the sun. Quick heating at first is necessary in moist hot weather to avoid souring. Kept near the kitchen range wax beans will be thoroughly dried in from twelve to 24 hours. At the last make very hot in the oven. Store in a cloth sack or in tin pail. Before use, soak overnight in cold water. Coble as fresh beans. WARNS AGAINST REMOVING TONSILS FROM CallIILDREN A few years ago the medical pre- fession throughout the world was in- terested in, and the feelings of mil- lions of Englishmen were deeply stir- red by the case of Dr. Axbam, whose name was removed from the medical register because he h •.i helped Sir Herbert Barker in some of his op- erations. A case that is also likely to attract wide attention is that of Lt. -Col. John William Kynaston, of Langham !Blouse, Regent Street, Lon- don. Be, also, has been dropped from the medical register, but he is not tak- ing his 'expulsion meekly. On the contrary, he contends that the Royal College of Surgeons has no right to withdraw a doctor's diploma. He is continuing to practice, and, as he has done for 35 years, use the title "doc- tor." To this the college of pinyeici- ans objects, and recently had Dr. Ky- naston in police court on a charge of wilfully and falser pretending to be a doctor, and usieig the title "llf.C.S?' contrary to the medi&i eats. nr. Kynaston says that there le only one body which can take away his diploma and that is the Society of Apothe- caries. Back of this police court wrangle lies the fact that for some years Dr. Kynaston has been publishing some unorthodox ideas concerning the prac- tice of medicine. He particularly in- sists that operations to remove tonsils are wrong, and the fact that recent deaths preceding or following tonsil - ectomy have occurred in Toronto, makes the question of interest to a great many people. No harder prob- lem was ever put 'before the public than that of "When doctors differ,who is to decide?" A layman would be guilty of dangerous vanity should he set himself up as an arbiter between two medical men or between two med- ical schools. But he would be a dolt, if, when he learned that doctors did differ and that various schools of medicine were in flat opposition to each other, he did not conclude that something was seriously amiss, and that medicine is far from being sin exact science. We cannot say wheth- er Dr. Kynaston is right or wrong but he has been a practising physician specializing in nose and throat prob- lems for 35 years, and in the war was in charge of one o fthe larges military hospitals in the United King- dom. Dr. Kynaston says that after n quarter of a century of experience he came to the conclusion that of eeilfek hundred ehildren who have their ade- noids and tonsils removed, 95 need not have undergone the operation* e e admits that this was an amazing 0011- elusion to come to, and he is not our - prised that after ten years 4ety med- MANUFACTUr:E'RS, LIMITED ® 1 ! ee Furniture Sectional r: ookcases. ical men were with him. The opera- tion has become so much amatter of routine that it seems a kind of sca dition to question it. The doubter finds himself in almost the same posi- tion as the man who proposes to abol- ish the annual boat race between Ox- ford and Cambridge or the Derby. It was shortly after the war that Ds. Kynaston began to give publicity to his views. It has been a costly cam- paign. He is now without the luc- rative practice which he previously enjoyed and which wiouid still have been his had he kept his original views to himself, or had he merely continued to put his methods into operation privately. But when he spoke out loud he was convicted of advertising and this, in medical term- inology, is "infamous conduct," though a newspaperman could hardly be expected to subscribe to the defi- nition. Dr. Kynaston says that his real offence lay in spre deg the knowledge that the knife is unneces- sary. Dr. Kynaston complains that he has been misrepresented. He says that if tonsils are diseased they must come out. What he emphasizes is that most tensile are not diseased when they are removed. He says that when are inflamed the same results can be produced without excision .las with it, but with none of the disad • vantages 1 nd dangers that attend op- ei•htione. Ht is also ready to dem- onstrate his method to ,<ny medicel man who is interested, which is pre- cisely the same position that Sir l:!er- bert Barker took when he Was fight- ing the English profesion 2,0 year's or so ago. He declares the a nditie n• A. W. DUNLOP GA 1' AGE We specialize in Body and Fender work. Make your old fenders like new. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Phone 187 THOMAS IIDIICKSON Dealer in Flour - Feed - Seed Poultry and Eggs Telephone 13 in which children's tonsils are remov- ed are scandalous. The thing is done in such a whalesale manner that prci- vacy is out of the question, and he says that it is a terrible ordeal for little children returning to conscious- ness to see other children spitting blood all around them. He believes that in many cases this constitutes a serious shock to their nervous sys- tems. Dr. Kynaston's theory is that ca- tarrh causes tonsilitis and adenoids. Intricate passages in the nose and throat become clogged, difficulty ha breathing is experienced and perhaso e there is earache. Blood rushes to tbn affected spot to repel the germs andl the result is a general swelling ve 'eh enlarge the tonsils. To then operate is, in the opinion of Dr. Kynaston, tm put the cart before the horse. The swollen tonsils should be regarded as a symptom, not as cause. The treatment should go farther back and the catarrh be reached. When asked to explain why the health of so many children definitely improves after the removal of their tonsils he says that what the surgeon has done is what doctors did a century ago—bleed th- patient. Naturally when a consider- able amount of blood has been drawn away the swelling decreases and relief is afforded. The passages clear them- selves, the breathing becomes normal and that one bleeding may effect a cure. If it doesn't—well, tonsils can- not grow again, so we say the ''en- oids have come back. In other words the catarrh is bad :!gain and another alc odlifia is necessary," says i1 r..Syrn- aaten, than crowning Ms professional! enfa My. po w