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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1931-07-24, Page 24j,Ov " (.�i�".. I i" , I , `� 1/`1 `� I- __ � r . �.. r I %� ' ..I "IJ ,­ , I q ..���.*'�'f,".�i',,".-.qi44,�.,,„1 ,.� 11 I 'ill'ill i, . - .0 , .!, , . .. ... :. ,,, , , , q ".... . � . , .” . ., I , I _(, , ,��. I . , �� � 4. � 1. ,-,I. � , 1, -1�,,�li.1-�i.,A��",��v�,'J."."f� ,,-;.,X,44T'- ,I - ", ,: �8% ,,, , , ­ �V �� ,;,fl,',�q �. � 1 4 11 - , 1, . ,. , ". �­., ", a -, � r .. , ,. "4 1 , " . .i _ " " , , I, _ �, ,1 . . - � ? - !.: . . . � . . ,� , . . ,% I - I '. . , ,� , � . .r , , 7 " �c � � ; ,,, � . . � , . , ro. , . I q : i � . ,� . �,� � 'l� .� ,e , ."I"', , .,o... - 1, � I I � . . , , .: . , , " .6 1 . � ". ,� ; I I I I : % � I . . ,. . I I . . - I 11, �,­- , . I ", � 1-1 - � I., . I � -- Y" I Englishman was a spiritual monarch 1 1. REN,_." 11 , - I with 4 great passion for souls,. Who - .Ii AnM"No _. laughed at Impossibilities and was a "'g-Anwa I 1. !!!!! ,7�'!., stranger to fear. His resting, place .1� r . . ce i, �,A : ,F I R, rcmmw� _D was in a room set apart for hinx in I . \ . the Hudson's Bay Company's fort, but \1. his real home was in the. wide spaces, .. .1 I because he travolling with the Indians, as they OFFICE I — hunted the buffalo. His school and r . k ; I � tabernacle in the wilderness was a , was always buffalo -skin lodge, where he taught I the children, learned the language and I made translations, The vast prairie, tired however, -was his place of worship, where he sang, prayed and preached , to large congregations of untutored I and wondering savages, who listened with reverence to this man, whom they IN EvERY wALX of life you Eaten regularly, it helps keep looked upon as an angel from the . meet the "Drowsy Bills" ... the system healthfully clean. skies, sent,by the Big Spirit to teach men and women who are los- Isn't this far better than them the way of life. ing out because they are al- taking pills arid drugs that ' Oftentimes was he .hungiy when ways tired.They try hard are ,often habit-foriiiiirg and the herds of buffalo were far distant enough . . . but most often may become ineffective? and there was no food in the, camp;the poisons from constipation sap energy and strength— ALL -BRAN also adds iron to .. keen was his suffering in the depth of and bring illness, defeat and the blood. It is a delicious winter, when the thermometer was 40 old age prematurely. cereal with milk or cream. below zero -and fuhis heart was kept el was scarce but be Use it in cooking too. Recipes murmured not, as What a pity, when eating on the package. At your gro- warm with the joy of opportunity to a delicious cereal could pre- cer's. Made by Kellogg in tell the old story, and minister to the vent it all Kelloggs ALL-EFUN is guaranteed to n London, Ontario, needs of the redan. When foul div - ease stalked among the lodges, and relieve both temporary and 9 the wails of the bereaved, and .the o recurring constipation! Tw. wild coronach of grief fell upon his tablespoons daily—at every , 0ga ears, he became a man of sorrow; his meal, in severe cases. 110, soul surged as in a raging storm, as Kellogg's ALL -BRAN brings 44leA he listered to the solemn tones of relief in a natural, healthful the tom-tom of the medicine, man and way, by sweeping the intes-his songs of supplication. Amid the tines of all poisonous wastes. ALL -BRAN isolation and lack of congenial fellow- , ship, he struggled on "unhasting, un - resting," an unconscious hero, holding - . aloft the blood-stained banner, sus- tained by a great peace in his soul, . SUNDAY AFTERNOON Golden Teat—Revelation 2:10. as he sat by the dying Indian, speak.ing softly the. words of life and pray - The Sermon Bible in giving the his- (By Isabel Hamilton, ,Goderich, Ont.) tory of ,Stephen says we learn that ing, as the aged man reached the end of the trail and he ,heard not tbE holiness and sin are Hear the victors who o'ereame; fidelity to truth provokes antagonism; mutually rape irge of the blizzard -outside, for the -l- Still they mark each war3ior's way; lent; love and selfishness are the op- fallen enemies, was translodge decorated with seaformplocks of ed into All with one sweet voice exclaim, . posites. Of each other; and sooner or a palace beautiful, and angels were r 'Watch and pray.' 'later the followers -of one will come hovering near! Like a flashing meteor Watch, collision with the votaries of the he sped over the western plains away Watch, as if On that alone lother. The opposition of the ung*d- to Rocky Mountain House, ari� dowr Hung the issue of the day; I lv is one of the seals to the genuine- into the Bow River valley. Native Pray, that help may be sent down: Iness of our discipleship; and if we councils were 'held to enquire and de. l 'Watch and pray.' � bear ourselves rightly under it, who C. Elliott. i cide. who he was, and where he came PRAYER I. tell but that it may be the occas- from; he was the subject of discus. 1 -ion of blessing to multitudes? The sions around the campfires, and whet. As in the early Christian Church banner -which bangs in idle folds round he visited the Black -foot, two Chiefs 'Thy followers conquered, their foes by the flagstaff in the sultry stillness of met him as an escort, a horse ww fidelity and prayer, so teach us Lord the summer noon, is fully unfurled provided for 'him, and on his arrival to watch as they watched and pray a; by the wild rudeness of the wintry the principal Chiefs walked, ahead they prayed. Amen. t wind; and men may see in the latter followed by all the people. ,case, the emblem and inscription which A mountain in the Rockies, namesS. S. LESSON FOR JULY 26, 1931 were invisible in the former. Even after him, keeps his memory fresh.Iso the antagonism of our spiritual ad- Lesson Topic—and green, -notable converts as Mask.Christianity Spread versaries is valuable, in that it brings epeetoon, Ben Sinclair and -Stepher By Persecution. Iforth anew those traits of Christian Keeheyees attest the value of hi� Lesson Passage --Acts 7:59-8:4; 11: character and points of Christian doe- work and when Henry Steinhauer vis. 19-21. i trine which otherwise would have been ited 'a native camp, where no mission. r— .. unobserved, ary bad been for several years, he . We learn in the second place from heard an Indian pray; Lord, send u.c ithis history that the glorified Re- another missionary like Rundle!" ­. deemer has a deep interest in his suf- .N. I..." ifering followers. He cannot sit in . 0. 14 ,� ;such an emergency, for be is himself i'C_",�: . )q -11, ll !_i,�_v �, ,\ - "! �-,, - ; ,persecuted .in his dying disciple, and JOEL'S CLAIM TO FAME FOUNT I I ��(� � �..Il Z,;, "I � ., t, ! - and sustain him - � � . \1�1 � I IN STUD BOOK must go tp soothe I I 1 4 .) ,� -7 can strike us only \J . I I " -71 ,through our Saviour's heart. He is Solomon Barnato Joel did not die . / - I w , z�,' our shield and buckler, our high tower of the cancer of which for years he 11 . - .. �, ._,.q, �, , � I and our deliverer, In the third place had been apprehensive, but of hears � . 1, rl-� I ��_,•- . I .we see the peacefulness of the be- disease which he never suspected. Ir ( - _ �. - liever's death, "When he had said his 66th year be had tasted all of the > 1 p � , - , this, he fell asleep." These words tell triumphs and miseries of life. He ­­ , -%r I - , of the peace that was in the martyr's was famous as a diamond owner and I . .1, i 11heart. You cannot go to sleep with collector, as a horse breeder and race ! anxiety fretting your spirit; but when track man and as a patron of the Jyour mind is calm and undisturbed, stage. His career was an adventur. I - .. then the night angel comes to you ous one, but we suspect that he will be � I I /_,(� 11 with her gift of forgetfulness and her remembered rather for the exploit: , ministry of restoration, So when we of his race horses than for his, Fper- 1 read that Stephen fell asleep we see sonal gifts, however unusual they , le,01F ® through the words into the deep un- may have been. After all he wa,, broken quiet of his soul, made by his uncle, for if there had Words which seem to have been in never been a Henry Barnato tberE V,- Vaiii are not always fruitless. Steph- probably never would have been E , �,* -p-hem en's defence (7:2-56) was unsuccess- Solly Joel. But the horses that be L to -& ful so far, at least, as securing the owned or bred have made turf his• preservation of his own life was con= - tory and their blood will continue tc CMANAN RAP40NAI cerned. But his argument was not be valued long after Joel himself has WN111 lost. for when not long afterwards ceased eiven to be a memory. . FAN the zealous Saul was converted on his Apart from the fear of the cancer I way to Damascus, this address, I have which clouded his later years no doubt, came back upon him, and family troubles came upon him. His I I became the means which, in the bands daughter Doris became estranged of the Holy Ghost, were used for his after she had become the wife of 8 . enlightenment in the significance Of man whom ber father did not the gospel of Christ (8:1-4). approve, and Joel removed her name ISO RG N TIG Chapter 11:19-21. from his beloved yacht and called Recreation and -- - I I Dr. MacLaren in "The 'Secret Of it after another daughter. The education for ­ I Power" says: This incident suggests most conspicuous wreath at his fun. . . . . . Ill: - . �, the universal obligation On all Chris- eral was of carnations and forget. all the family. - ".:A Itians to make known Christ. These nie-nots from Doris, with the words. ::::.:,:.:. .. . Features and '. . t Imen were not officials. In these early j,l love you, Daddy." Unfortunately attractions Ona I. - . I., (lays the church had a ,very loose or- Daddy was beyond hearing. Solly huge scale. , ganization. But the fugitives in our Joel's father kept a public holise in Costly exhibits . . . . . . .. ,"... , I , narrative seem to have had among Spitalfields, and the boy got his . .. . : -.� �1. . -: them none even of the humble Of- early education at a board schoo' . .;� . - . . from every . , ., ...,::; . . . . . :: ; , :_ ". ficers of primitive -times. Every and in the streets of the East end' country. . . I Christian is solemnly bound to fulfil The chances are that he would have "Orientia," supreme triumph of the the divine intention, and to take heed become an unnoticed denizen of . to the imperative command, "Freely these purlieus ' had not fortune pageant masters'artwilld laTmysrtc ye have -received, freely give." Their arranged that his mother should before charm of the East nightly � the nessage was but the proclamation Of Itave been a Barnato, the sister of Engrandstand --St, Hilda's Band (Eng- their own personal experience. They the renowned Henry Barnato a circus d) five times world champions; had found Jesus for themselves to be performer, especially gifted 'as a con- Cavallo's and thirty other bands . , . lover and Lord, friend and Saviour of jurer. , But his native England was Exhibition 2,000 -Voice Chorus most their souls, and the joy they had re- unappreciative of the talent of H,Bnrj famous of all choral organizations in "ived they sought to share with those Barnato and he was permitted to ply Greeks, worshippers of gods and lords his arts far from the land of hisfour concerts Sat., Aug. 29. Thurs., many. birth. Sept., 3. Tues., Sept. 8. Sat., Sept. 12. Notice the mighty Helper who PTOS- More than 5.0 years ago Henry nii. Sixth World Championship Mara- pered their work. "The hand of the 'grated to South Africa and tried to thon Swim, sport spectacteof inter- Lord was with them." How little any earn a; living in Kimberley where he national renown . . . Admiral of of us know what shall become of our called -himself "Signor Barnata, ' the the Flee'i Earl Jellicoe to officiate at poor work, under His fostering care. great wizard." He was able to lay Impressive Opening Day ceremonies Little these men knew that they were by a little money which he invested . laying the foundations of the great in what was called kopje walloping, ...another million -dollar permanent change which was to transform the or in other words purchasing the building this year, the Horse Palace Christian community from a Jewish finds of diamonds as they were sorted . . . etc,, etc. sect into a world -embracing church out. Whether he did a little illiet I Let us sow the seed, and "He will give diamond buying we do not know, Let us send illustrated literature. it a body as it ple'aieth Him," but we are inclined to think not as Reduced rates by rail, steamship and be made no great success. However z{.,•,: buses. Consult r than ever he had - - local agents. WORLD MISSIONS i in England and sent for his younger I ii I fgq` I Plan to visit brother Barney, to join him. Barney : the CanAdian Rundle of the North-West. formed a partnership with Louis National Ex. Cohen, contributing to the firm as- hibition this By Rev. Dr. John Maclean, Wesley PeU in the form of a box of cigars . College, Winnipeg. %hile Cohen put up 4100. 14 a "I Year — Augmt couple of years Barney bad been 28 to Septem. Far out over the Western plains, able to save 23,0.00 with which he her 12. there lingers still in the memory Of bought four shares in the Kimberley � -- I . the first Protestant rnissiOJISTY west diamond mine. He and Henry ,Ihen "I of Manitoba, and as the years pass by formed the firm of Ba -mato Brothers 42646 SEPT.12.1931 a balD of glory encircles his' head, and and started the Barnato Diamond I .1 . .1 . �! A C '"EA, eye is a charm, in his name. Edmorl- Xining Company which was eventu- - 1 '24 I S 0 , TEST there I I—.. �q , ton a -rt Torrill, Rundle are in- ally amalgamated with the Kirdt r. I A14'ENT separably linked, and the, year 1840 Joy mine, , I : . and Robe % , 111. I I . sepa Wealth poured in upoh �11 ltl� 40 'V31 becomes an impo'rftnt date, as it was them and had 'at evil effect upon . . . . . 1,111" .01 ITIPIN I - I,_ � I ' � 'Y lento in the fall when he e6mrpleted his Sarney' Barnoto who was subject to T40MV, TAR memorable journey from England via fits of d6o6nion and eventually , ,,, -0.) mvv&"'*�_- im &V I New York and Montreal, having spent co,nimitted suieiao by Jumping over. _ 6:�p .. .... .. . , more than seven months OA the way, board front a liner on tho way from f�':� 1.1 A-." It. WEUIPAWhoso. 1 In t - early days,, this w6gforn city South Africa, to England. .,.T "7"� ,7 .. , .. I Ii. , , . . T#US Was the oentt,6 of, fli# 'fur trade, the The wealth of the uncles -arabload ,";, W, W'A' � I .1 . 14. , I hadtit of Orob, t1ft61d*oV'StoI1e7 ftnd, fhtm to AgAd for their -three young .. I I - -, OsooralAfanago , - 'h- 111:..:, i­�_ � �, .1, . ;'So,veed �iidian Ufts the '96eno of "and' ' *111�, W10 o - ::. 4 �l "O"y 3d so U 'twerp W "�A � At 'kow�' X .1 . . ,,, � mnl..'.��_,&. _', . ... .. :..; . . .... ,"',_," " ttfUl wuv# *1i4,6 114,66&&A 'and ro- "op ll I ... ­ . . Vve . -16 w4re, diamonds 6 1pit *06fttl -bilt' tug sturdy ree2tittzed S the tats and I 1.1; I-; , . I ;,, :� 0 11 ..� I . , 1, �f 1�v ,,.,,; , � I I - . A4. , . . I . -� ".0,%.14�1-A ­,,��`, . � . I - . � ': ". V­�W ., *, 1, %� `1 � I � . , I � : I . I , , . I ql 1, I I . I , I I �_'­ I � 4 1 .. I . o : -R , '' , o , , .11V ''. I i I __ �� . ""4'­;�.�;. ��, F, , .." .� ,,. - 1, �! i 1 . ", ;L. I I 11 .. !.'.,�',`." .��,,�, ,, �, �,'J ,; 'j� ,�,:;�'t,l�, ,:,A�; "o, , , . � �, , 11 ­ . I ,.. ` � , "Ill 1. 0, ,,� 2,.�4"A,71',� . :.,,: � . 1, ;.,:, . ',,,�, � ":�,,.�'-!,!: , , , I . " ..., 4 ;, ..; - ". ,. . ��. � � . -,�,(. �, .VA 10110 - I , r . .. " 4 to tKu ed , es , I '' ery � J.Ili 1 1 ­ . ., A1010 Even To Stay Alone in the Day- time; Dr. Williams' Pink Pills (tonic) Proved to be What Mrs. Stinson Needed. I---- "Following a severe Now Well illness," writes Mrs. John Stinson, R,R. No. and 2, Peterboro, Ontario,, .1 "my nerves were badly, I Strong shattered. I could not - . --- sleep at night and was .afraid to stay alone in thq daytime. I "Finally I decided to use my mother's old remedy—Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I took several boxes -1 am not sure of the exact number, but it was not over six. I 11 am well and strong now --living on a farm with plenty to do." The iron and other elements in Dr. Williams' Pink Pills (tonic) have a direct effect upon the blood. They put oxygen into the bloodstream --oxygen, the ele- ment so essential to life. I Why not make the wise decision today to get the benefits which Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have to give you? Be sure to say "Dr, Williams"' so that the druggist will 'know exactly what you want. 50 cents a package. 132 - - I financiers, Solly had perhaps more feeling for the stones themselves than any other member of the family, for he loved then, for themselves alone, as well as for .their money value. He became a .sound judge and began a Private collection which in time be- came unique for color if not in value. The whispers of I. D. B. which had concerned themselves with Henry Barnato attached themselves to the Joel boys and led to more than one attempt at blackmail. Woolf Joel was shot and killed by Carl Ludwig von Voltheim, an adventurer, who escap- ed on the ground of selfAefence -'Later he -,vent to England and tried to blackmail Solly Joel, for Which of- fence he was sentenced to 20 years' Imprisonment, but escaped' with five and was later deported. When be decided to make his home in England Solly Joel,was in a posi- tion to indulge his fondness for race horses and established a stud at Maiden Erleigh which in time became world famous. His horses won 340,= 000 pounds in stake money and prob- ably as much again in 'bets for Joel. Some of the most notable Of the an! - mals which he bred or owned were Polymelus, Bachelor's Button, Long Set, Arraiiniore, Sunder) St. Denis, pommern, Pons Asinorum, Fohanaun, Knight of the Grail, Fleeting Memory and Kopi. At one time or another lie won practically all the classic races, -and it was the hardest kind rof luck that his best year shoud have been in 1915 when his good colt Poniniern -,von the Two Thousand Guineas, the Derby Stakes and the September Stakes. The latter two races were really the substitute Derby and St. Leger. Solly Joel was not Leger. merely a rich man who could afford to buy the most fashionable sires and dams. He had a good eye for a horse and on several occasions picked an animal out of a cheap race and built him up into a high-class handicap horse. He picked up Polymelus for ;94,200, and later refused an offer of j30,000 for him after he had won iioo.wio in bets. , Yachting was- a favorite diversion of Joel's and one of his greatest friends was Gir Thomas Lipton. I 48W_ BROTHERS XRE TRUE TO OATH; I MAY CARRY SECRET TO GRAVE A number of stock farmers have asked me recently if I can tell them anything, about the old dew ponds, and if they can have, them made now, says a writer in the London (Eng.) Daily Express. They have question- ed if they -really are effective in pro- longed rainless spells. It is certainly extraordinary that these ponds in exposed positions on the tops of chalk hills should remain full of water while large ponds in the valley dry up, but "seeing is believ- ing," and in the driest spells I have seen these ponds still full, though large numbers of cattle and sheep have drunk daily from them. ,Why are they not more freely used? The answer is rather startling. The making of these ponds is a secret, centuries old, and of the con- siderable number who once shared it, only two remain. They have taken the oath of secrecy handed down through their family for many gener- ations, and they may divulge their secret to ,no one but their descend- ants. They are unmarried and are now about forty years old. They have been asked to leave their secret to the nation, because of their oath. These -brothers have made ponds in Almost every county in England and Wales and no pond has ever failed to provide water, They have been asked to go abroad and make - , Don't Swat Flies and stain your walls. Hang up Aeroxon. , wider' and longer rib- bon is coated with the' sweetest of glue that . Good will not d I for 3 w.dZ , service. .. . IAt dmj,.v,oc" mW . hardware stores I Sol* Adont's I ]NEWTON A. HILL I I 86 Front St. R: I Toronto k ,A 70" - I . , I ; —, I I ­ � � � � � . ,� ­­ , r%, '', , , Jft__ . I I , .1 . 16 A,V , � , 1, " 4 � I . . . . , Z.. ; - . . I W " 0", I k q 1-111''i . x, � liil. .. , II R ! I : ; ; f . �fI . , � -. 1. !,N,,�N , . '. :1 , � ,� , , I � � �, T�i . t �. ': . , .� : .I T' I' , . I I � , pond's in CA OrAla, . � And 010' er I . 11 I 0,0u6at , 44 . , , . , 1 daps move, 4 a Q9 _1 . - y., , ,1,07­.� ."", ,-', ,�­,, [` - I � I : . I ,�� �. q " q. , L I ! 1.'� �,'!,,�!��i�,,,���!,,,',,!',It��.�"tf":i� " " .: �, 1 , They gay they have, all the won , they need, and ,prefer Ez,glAn , '; -f-91-ce quartog, which the - t V. 0 month YeAr Would lack. rxdor� �hip .1 "i, . , , , 1. .1 . -1 , I ! *1. - It I I , 01,11! , - r �;vv, I .,,, - ,.�p I have seen them at work, and. c4lebda,V t.hero would be three, kinds I ... , , I . I ", �x I . the have desimilbed to me as,. much; mftthq� jaouary, April, July and "M , , :.� . , . R 111" � '. ". ��, 4 " ; i9c." '��,,: i of Their process as they dare. � g,ober WOUI(I Ave thirty-one days V h , , . I , ,, I .1 , I I 1. .11 .. 2. . � .. " I �' 1. , ,,, ... �.,!�, , '! " I , 1-haive seen them at work, And they. . I IDI the Sunday would fall And "I 0" In , . '­1. � . 1. — 1� � . :�, i! ":_ ,Mt I., � ,. � .,:,,� 1: " .1 . , � ;,:,, Z . .1 � � , . I i 11, . `:L. � !,': , I I . ,% I % V . . have described to me as much of their they dare. 0 11 t t Of the month and Satur- he % d, the t . :1 � ; I ....... - 'P.S. . , � � . process as on �h, , just as with th 'y seventh, I " A. I .�, ( They dig out the Soil to a depth of five feet in the . Into nt . ed calendar Febru- ,tl,nal :k'. ed International May, November - ,, 1. i .-W. I � X k� .. I., 11, ( I Z �, , , I 1, , " or so centre, sloping ary, August And I .... .0 . . � .. , � upwar& to the edges, where it be- would have . thirty days, with the 'the it; , : , , . I �,!: . .,. - .. .. - comes level ground, ,Where it is bay*.ed up eighteen inches. first of monVh falling invariably on Wednesday. March, June, Sep- N, I . / . � -I .. A. I I The pond is then lined with clay tember and December would also ... . . \ \ I . I I and the clay covered with straw. have 30 days each, with Friday being I. I ) 0 �::` The straw is covered with lime, and the first of these months. This I � the lime must on no account be would account for 364 days, The ex- I V, allowed to mix with the clay'lining. tra day would be called Year Day by The great secret of feeling, " A special substance is mixed with having an extra Saturday after De- fresh is to keep the motAth freab, * , the lime, and it is in the construction cember 3-Oth, which falls on Satur- The cool flavor of WRIGLEY'S - 11 of this substance that the chief part of the secret lies, I was not allowed day. Leap Day every fourth year would refreshes the mouth. It removes. ,. , .1. even to see the substance. . be accommodated by having a second all trace of eating, . Plain earth is then laid .over the lime, Saturady following June 30th, which or smoking, sweet- . I ens breath. , and hammered down with also falls on Saturday. What ap- wooden rams to make the bed or "Istan," of pears to its admirers to be the chief � :the pond. That finishes the advantage of the World over the In- job and it only to for the teTnational calendar is that it is not ► . - . I'll remains wait pond to filli takes so igid. The idea, is that people`I which about six months. After' would get tired of having Sunday . I that, the less rain there is the more occur always on the first of the easily the pond remains filled, and . month and would occasionally yearn INEXPENSIVE SATISFYIN01 any number of' stock within reason for Wednesday or Friday to have this CL= may be watered from it when other place. But it does nothing for the .16 sources have dried up. people who might like to see the The accepted scientific explana- tion seems to be that the layer, of honor' go round further and include Mondays'' and Tuesdays and Satur- ally all cases of cancer the patient - dry straw insulates the earth below days. It has the advantage that it has had previous symptoms of dis- 'before the itself is de - . and prevents heat passing from it to the water in thetected. pond. The water is a less radical change, than that of the International calendar; and may "" cancer Dr. Koch says that his treat - remainstherefore cold and causes the have the disadvantage that its beng- nient will not only abolish the poison. 11 moisture laden night air to part with fits will be so much less ;n this ac- which the cancer seeks in vain to at - its water. count. In any event the crusaders tack, -but in doing so will put an end' The heat of the day also causes evaporation of the pond water, -and for calendar reform have been able to disabuse the mind Of the avrage to several .other diseases. In fact,. his theory Of cancer is strikingly il- this increases its coldness and further man of the superstition that our lustrated by the title of one of his facilitates condensation, pre -sent calendar was made by God. books on the subject "Cancer and Its By following these pirincipals, firms It was made by men, sometinaes$ as Allied Diseases." Dr. Koch quot6 Frederick Hoffnian, using modern scientific meth- ods guarantee to make ponds and in the case of Augustus Caesar, by a vain man who insisted that another statistician for the Prudential Life ,gN provide water. Yp,t the fact remains that men have for month should him named after ha Insurance Company, to the effect that the average duration of all types of who worked years with the Smith brothers have some- and that it should be just as long as the month which was named for cancer is 22 8.10 months for the olper� 'I times left them and set up as pond his predecessor Julius Caesar, That aced cases, and 20 months for the makers on their own;. but while meet- is why August has the same number non -operated. He declares with al- ing with some success, they have nev- of days as July, That, in fact,is most fierce insistence that the use of I er produced ponds so effective in real- why we have an August at all, X-rays or radium in the treatment of ly dry times. cancer is not only useless but bane.- Now the, age-old system that, in . -0- ful. His own,,fatio of cures is twice the opinion -of some experts dates from Neolithic to HAS DR. KOCg FOUND A CURE as great where the patient has not previously been treated by ordinary I ms appears hang by the thread ,of two lives. FOR CANCER? - . methods founded on the belief that , It would be interesting to compare cancer is a local disease. Dr. Koch the vesults of some of the modern When doctors differ, who is ,to de- claims that after years of research J attempts at dew -pond making by sci- cide? Who can decide? When 'the and the expenditure of hundreds of entific methods with those achieved testimony of experts in a court of thousands of dollars, he has been aNev by the use of this ancient secret, that law tends to cancel, the practice is to isolate the toxin wbieb.causes can - gave our -primeval ancestors a se- to determine the -question at issue cer, and produced an antitoxin. Her cured water supply on their fortified according to the average intelligence says that when the antitoxin does its bill -tops, of the jury. 'But it would be rash work by destroying the poison which ...- - into heave ,overboard the whole produces cancer, the cancer itself is reabsorbed in -to the body and a cure GREGORIAN CALENDAR MAY b body of medical science and Opinion and revert to the methods of treat- is'effected. He gives numerous case histories ing disease which prevailed a thou- to prove his assertions. We BE SUPERSEDED sand years ago and continue to pre- are aware haw dangerous, how cruel, it would be to a'rouse false hopes of I It is expected that next October a vail among savages. Concerning can- cer, is the majority of experts right recovery in the -breast Of any sufferer. from discussion by experts from all parti or is Dr. Willfairt F. Koch, of Detroit, cancer. Bbt if there is a cure, it of the -v,qprld, under the auspices of i ' right? They are as flatly Opposed to would be criminal for anyone with knowledge of it to withhold that the L of Nations, may result in each other as one could imagine. It >-nowledge. The Koch in an agreem)mt which will precede the establishment of a new calendar. We. is hardly for a layman to offer an opinion in the controversy, though it cure, any event, would seem to be well worth do not say that the new calendar will may be more important to a layman the most careful examination. be established. That is something than to a. doctor to know the truth. 0. perhaps years in the future, but con- The Koch theory of cancer treat- siderable progress has been made, and ment was mentioned in the Ontario MOUSE FACTORY IN MIMICO we have little doubt that there is now Legislature toward the close of the a scientific and even business con- session. The, Hon. Forbes Godfrey, SHIPS PRODUCT BY HUNDRED sensus that the old calendar. that is ' forMerly-Irinister of Health and La- to say the present Gregorian calen- dar, is doomed. It is bor, stood up to say a word for So' me men breed elephants, no doubt; some breed horses or thor- undoubtedly the best calendar that mankind has Koch. So far as we can remember, nobody else supported him. ougbbred cattle, but Elgin Cullen of yet devised. But it is awkward and -Dr. Godfrey knows Dr. Koch anal Mimico breeds white rats and white is not altogether accurate. The dif- ficulty ahead, we presume. lies in the 'Street, the Koch treatment and employs it in his own practice. He says that it mice, Just by Steele's Corners, on queers Toronto, I choice of a new calendar, for there has given admirable results. He can he has a shed which factory are several which are putting forth give you names and produce healthy is a veritable for the produc- *laboratory their claims, all of them probably an exhibits. Now we have heard vari- tion of these little anim- als• improvement upon the Gregorian cal- endar. Perhaps the most interesting -ous things said about Dr. Godfrey in the in -any years we have known For he ships them, not in pairs or half dozens, is the calendar known as the Interna- him, but we hav;b yet to 'hear any- but in 100 and 500 lots to scientists all over the tional Fixed calendar. This will be body say that he is not a first class continent, Very strongly recommended to the League of Nations. doctor. He has had an experience as far south as Mexico. Research men use his finely -bred rats for ex - It is a thirteen -month calendar. as a general practitioner which we doubt could be duplicated by half a periment. Bacteriologists give his Each month will have 28 days, Or four weeks. This provides for 364 dozen medical men in Canada, He is also remarkably hospitable to new mice injections to determine the presence of disease in humans. days. The other stay would be called ideas. He was one of the first of his Mr. Cullen was weaning hundreds of the Year Day and inserted after the last profession in Toronto to administer young mice day of my visit In day of December. The extra month would be called Sol a:nd would occur antidiplitberitic serum and pub- licly admit it. His declaration took one wooden cae he had 173 of g them, three weeks old, each an inch between June and July. To take, cafe of Leap year, which has 366 place at a meeting of the Ontario Medical Association. He was sternly and a half long, not counting their tails. In another cage he had 168. days, an extra day would be inserted rebuked by the late Dr. Sheard, who Each and every little mouse had between June and Sol every fourth year. These days, Year Day and Leap told him that -a man doing such a thing ought to be arrested. But the full coat of white hair and red eyes, * es" though, when born they were blind hairless. Day, would be considered simply ex- confident young Mimico medico stood and Mr. Culleh pulled tra days or so much velvet. They his ground and said that the day out a handful of day-old mice'about dozen I would have no legal standing, and would come when doctors not using a of them, all mixed' up with straw, - 'They people, we presume, would just hang the serum_ would be arrested.' He were grosequely like I miniatures of baby about on them, not doing anything much,Thus their occasional Occur- tbL -n withdrew from the, association and did not return to, it until a fete pigs. "When do you wean?" ,I asked him I rence would not interfere with the years ago when he was Minister of as ,we stood in the narrowassage p , . slick scheme -of having every month Health, between scores of little breeding of equal length, and having every So, as an inveterate layman, we cages. All around there was a day in the week fall upon the same should feel strongly inclined to pay chorus of tiny squeakings and ag faint date from the time the calendar is respectful attention to anything that queer; rustling a n ii hundreds of the adopted until the end of time. Chat Dr. 'Godfrey said on medical sub. mice kept burrowing through " their is to say, Sunday would always fall jests, The Koch theory of cancer, to straw beds. "I on the first, eighth, fifteenth and which he subscribes, is that the dis- wean them," said the breeder, twenty-second of the month, and ease is a'bloGd disease or, as doctors, i4w1fen they are between 18 and 21 Saturday always on the seventh, are, too fond of saying, a blood con- days old," He put his band in and lifted fourteenth, twenty-first and twenty- dition. There is some poison in the up a mother mouse. Two of eighth. Undoubtedly this would result in a blood which produces the cancer, But the her ten babies c so strongly to ung their food that e actually cam tremendous saving of time, money cancer has been produced. by nature, with the best intention with clinging like limpets with mouths.and thought once it was under way. But its critics say that it would makecancer in the world. The purpose of the is to combat the poison, just theirher, r ,Mothers may have a family rang - ing from, half dozen for great difficulty' in the matter of paying long term leases, and .con- 9 as the immediate symptom of ap- pendicitis are beautifully a to asq high as " fifteen Mr. Cullen said. Ten or . tracts, loans and mortgages, The calculated to shut off the infected area, But twelve is a fair average. "And criticism is offered that instead Of nature, we, regret to say, in produc. how ,bften do -they breed," I -asked. people doing certain things tweIV& ing a cancer makes an error and gen- "Every ' times a year as they e accustomed orally a fatal one. There are, cases 1 month," said Mr. Cullen. I t "I no Ake litter to doing them now they would be required to do them thirteen times; �and we believe, in which cancer has dis ce g appeared without treatment. This y a away one day and have a doe pr9duce a fresh one the ' also that since Sunday would al- means that the cancer has done the, very next day. It is possible, if ways fall on the first and fifteenth Of job for which it was produced, and don't watch, to have litters, Y" literally !the month ,all business t'rAnsRetiOns naturally withdraws when -the task, is overlapping."' I which are commonly made on these ended. As•Dr. Koch says: 1q`he:'c&n- A veritable mice factoryl For there thousand days would have to be advanced or retarded a day. It does not seem to cer growth cannot be r4ewed as a disease tissue, but rather as a phyeio- breeders. Often the population of the cages us that these objections .are import- logical mechanism in the process of numbers as high as 2,500. ant, Undoubtedly for .a few years development. The true tissue factor 0 there would be a general sense Of is the presence of the poiso'Zi that bddity, if not unreality to many mil- causes the protective effort to come Shoe dealers in KdtcbeneT want to lions of people whose old landmarks into ex4stenee,"� keep their stoers open until 10 o'clock were wiped out, as for instance all D -A Koch ,says, that every one of Saturday night. Shoes bought late those for whom the 29th, 30tb or Us carries In mirnite, or large amounts Saturday night always hays ,a better 31st Of any month-' have, any particu- IST significance, But this Would this poison, and', according to our sensitivity to it, the possibility of squeak on Sunday—Stratford. Bea, con -Herald. I probaibly not be greater• than. the a cancer growth is either distant . changes brought about by Summer thnei, and we believe that those who or immedia-W The maintenance of health, 'Romans played football. It must have have, eperienced the blessings of general good with particular attentiou, to diet, exe)rclse and colon 'pals been baffling to call out the sig - in go -man .numerals. — Ottawa Suinivet time would be loth to sur.OW 291 Will tend to make remote Citizen. render 'them". . the devd1,G1*ft611t of this poison. it — " -The chief 4rftias of the Ifitetna. 19,6tal wil-aileto t6h;d to provide immunity Has the freight of modesty and re- Pi:ted calendar are the advo. frbm ma -by thor diseases, from this attaint in adv(Wtisirfg been reached? Oates of ,the WOVId Caloritlar. Tho 11" to pneumonia,go An advertisement in the Loud -on Times year unl&o this dgloftdAr Would ibs e•ott6nd's that his theory that, cancer says: "The 'best people, dance at divided iot UOW Into twelve M62itba - 'ho'Ve ig, An Off&t rather than & cause 16 HaridleV's when at ,Southsea. Band. and ,and *4111& IM6 A'ftafttoge�p pe#;1 0"wed from the fact that in Pratte- mo I .. I I * I , - t bad."-Vjtanc,1a1 Post., I . I . 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