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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1934-07-20, Page 3070' l4; •Ar 0 .4{ 4,1 .,. "...- {"... ''.{....,(e.,,se..- • ,,,s e• 1 :*4 e• S (1:3 .• • . 4 1, 4 It s , 4+ , •, !' • ... AS.21.401001,0F,08 Y 1 f:! (44, • „ 11.,1Seir own POO ea Mae. -nere, otter: comIteaaly cure Thea are' fraestently eourteouse tems. eler4seerted, said • emaiderate to. the tatHbainV Yornantie. They angle sesSriMart taniernbarraseed demeanor which te indicative of sloulepoise, and Insaillest 'on ;many ocea,sions %if be- Inavior that has the intellectual (pale ity of good taste and -fine perception. 'Lapses of ;good; faith among animal for instance, are snore certain of binned than are our breeallea trust. For in the nattered world. the laws are those insuring life itself; and one who disobey's usually invitee- ils himself and ell atie fellows. Nearly every grielp of wild cies"- -tures, for example, has a sy posting sentinels. One day a flock on the creekbank a halfens away. Then a splendid black form suddenly - • . nee-. \-•••„ is faniilioa'. with the anagetliessesfe*e pa) falling in love. One a usge ss - the desireeto "show off." Bat_ While we. often like to:astonish the 'Whale weeid with ttur ,miparierity, a wila creature Mates hiniself exeeptional only thist,he may be loved by another. Throughout one entire winter' I tried te oultivate the sequaintanee a wild turkey. All ney coaaringa :with a. variety' of calls failed to prOduee on .his part the faintest response. Then deme the spring. At daelereak one mornizig went into the woeds, hav- ing with ine..nething bat a turkey - cell made out of a rwillow Seat- ing -myself on an cda pine stump, I gave' orie soft note. Imsnediately the. gobbler answered: from a tall* cypress • rl,s4,",,, i4[•,, • • . 4 • • • .•,47;T;;Ilinintolifo " 14,110rootnliMiti'•*Ingic:. 41011ige Or107444.07.'09A4PgiOnread*.neekelAPSsias. ahaYjits..1-iiatsiVattltended the, 001**ast corn. A sentry Naas, perched on the • top of . a dead pine on an adjacent ditch bank. Getting down in the ditch, I evaded him rand fired into the flock. Even in their ensuing precipi- tate flight at least a dozen crows, -with loud cawings of disgust., and .clamorous blame, attacked the sentry, beat him unmercifully, -and drove nim, :not only -ler over the forest, but, believe, eompletely •out of their fel- 'llowehip. His 'vital duty had been to -give warning of the approach of an :enemy. Teehnically, he had been st isleep at his...post. :One day, rwalking in the edges of fo-rest bordering a big cottonfield, a friend -of amine saw a fox dragging -with difficulty a 2 -0, -pound -gobbler he lhad killed. After' s-ome further at- -tempts to move the big bird, the fox left it and trotted away into the for - My friend picked the turkey ea, bat had hardly gained the shelter of the woods when he sew the fox corn- ing back with another fox much larg- er and, derker nhair himself. The two sniffed about ea(gerly arid vainly for la few. minutes. 'Then the -neweerner that had been i-nvited either to :feast the -re in the field-, or to help 'drag the turkey into the woods,, find- ng- things not as they had been re- presented. to him, sprang on his host, sand a fierce an-cl prolonge-d battle en- sued. Once I gam.eup-on two foxes evi- eiently hunting together? on a rices feld bank. I watched there from be - bind a sin -all can-ebrake. One lay down -seeder si bush close by the path. The -ether. slun-k away craftily dlown the wide of the thank. 'Presently I heard a slight noise and dOwn the bank to- ward the fox in ambush eame -the Other fox on a full run, a scared rab- bit before him. The waiting fox made sndden dash at we flying bunny, ibut for some reason the stratagem -went wrong, and the rabbit escaped. 'The diiver-fox attacked his confeder- ate with unfeigned fury, sure that tie had been double-crossed. They lbroke away from each other only -when I cam -e up;{ end• even then, as they raced down the bank together, they were g-rowling and snapping at -.each other. I once saw an old gander leading. about 30 of his fellows northward in unidsMarch. The floek was flying low; end as it passed over a farmyard, the farmer began shooting at the geese. Almost at once the birds, aware 'of their (lenges, but aware also that 'someone h:ad blundered," set up a raucous chorus of denunciation, and -drove their pilot from the point of their V. In the cOmmunity of wild life trusted leaders are addressed to the stern service of utter and infal- libe loyalty. If they fail, they are dis- -graced. One form of ' etiquette that birds and animals apparently observe- by instinct is personal immaculacy: Ev- en many of the scavengers, usually desnised because of their habits, are strangely clean — considering their scharice-s to be otherwise. I have seen 'between 2,000 and 3,000 wild deer. 'But I never yet saw an unwounded deer that did not impress me with that patrician elegance, that gallan- try of air and natural vigor that come from a most exacting form of ilife and perfect obedience to the laws .of (personal hygiene. A wild creature 'is always on a -diet. We cage and pen them and are disgusted at their table manners. But when they -are at home, they behave. Even the tiger is na- turally a delicate feeder. Any observer of the human scene " filled the rosy morning hewers. lia was flying straight for me. The mom- ent he came to the ground about loq yards off, I called again. Listening keenly for a element, he then came for vile on, a dead Tun; stopped thirty yards -away to strut in most grand- iloquenrb , fashion, and to gobble blat- antly. Then he advanced in 'all the sheeny grandeur of his nuptial pin* age. 'When I moved, he, was, of course startled; but fear was not his chief etmetion. IBle felt snore tlisappoint- ment and 'disgust He did not fly. Be did{ not run. Be just stalked away with injuremajesty. All about us in the woods and the fields and the sky and the -grass one may observe an etiquette of -loving. In inueh of the affection of wild metes for each other there is a tenderness - of eonsidera.' ton that is clear evidence that -they care for each other with a genuineness of affection far beyond mere, physical 'attraction. {Cardinals, for instance mate for -life; even in the de -ad (xi winter they renter/thee love and carol to „,each other in its name -clear scarlet madrigals. , 'Another display of good (manners is the large tolerance with which wild creatures regard -one another. Of Course there are+fights, originating al- most vsholly in love -rivalry; and --there is the .ancient feud between predatory creatures amli their preyn.laut there are no social climbers.There are no tUsiness antagonists. there are no - fantastic jealousies over plape a n d pewer. There does appear to -be a bond of the consciousness of the rights of others. To a fax greater de-. -gree-then. is -commonly realized, they dwell together in unity. In a huge dead pine onmy place in the South is a 'series of hollows, one above the other, the lowest at a height of about 30 feet, the highest at 90. During the course of a single mating season I have known these homes to be .oc- cupied by a pan- , of 'bluebirds, of black pileated woodpeckers, of . flick- ers, of fox squirrels; of screeehowls, and of sparrow -hawks! Here were six families of entirely different na- tionalities, let us say; yet all living '{hap.pili, one above the other, in the same tenement. Such serenity 'requir- ed genuine -tact and observance of etiquette. Being a -good sport is, in a deep sense, showing goo -d manners. Birds and animals have a gallantry of bear- ing that se -ems a part of their code of behavior. They bear disappointment, pain, death with a courage that is extraordinary. A certain resiliency Of spirit is theirs,. a certain grace of heart. They have solved the problem of living joyously and completely. t#0. -4°4""Oeltic0 'O'ffinetreniia Aeneas listiM of Whaels he was a meselhen.,_ 4.10n. and .11VIZES Oordon Yeung' w: 1rootc!' fixgtti a shaania :teem last- Week reaming aisquaintancets. 0/11151.9 -1Vf, WA, B.A., -of Ottawa spent. the week:mid evith Wlss Yvonne Ille- Pheinsen. Kra Matey 'Weeds and her twe daughters,. MissesBetty and alliary Woods; spent -their vacation at tbe home of Mr. end Mrs. Patrick Gibe boas, 'Wlawaniash. raitne,,,W. H. French and family:are spending the (easel -nee at their cottage at point Clarke. irs$. Biarrlette Sutton has return- ed biome after spending the past week at Point ICilarke. Wes Agnes Gibbons of Cormac has returned home for her -sannimer vaca- tion after spending a few dayts Ottawa. Miss Flaky Falls left Monday to attend sumtmer whoa at Toronto Un- ivereitY. Capt. and Msg. W. J. 'Adaiiss spent the areeksend at Clarksburg. Eliot Fells arrived home from Port Arthur on Tueeday. Mr. Howard Grey -of Niagara Falls elPient the week end with his, parents', and aVIrs. W. G. Gray. Mites Jean Weir, B.A., ef Saskaiteon is holidaying with her aunts, Miss{ M. Weir and aliss Jean Weir. dant they' e ftareign co__Oi linested by Enlaiire trattle 1. • in' •. Tine moweglot a sheep and lainelei in !Canada freni; frieniie to sitook yarde and packees Obtained a substen- trial titter:Seise during 1933 and Wee well above the five -Year averiaave 19294933: • ,• Cataada and lthennotte nerthern latitudes and on the tope of moun- tains, the duration sunlight during srixminalee smell greater ftllan on OK' lowlands or in places-neEurer the eves toe. OOP of** • :1444#4, 'aeiled.l. , :1494(.1440, ' essioe 4131 Aceording eeeeraimentatieste, dairy COW on full ration requires in the neighborho.od of 31) pounds- of dry matter in eaeh 24 hours. iiFbraerlyhe*, • • east.Snld*' gnat* presitiet. degiiand. 'net J0.7 PekaneS lekaeoi4ss thAt. faiParien. lkoilFsihipe tie 4 • OaixibigillaOlir. PiernalarS- lsacesi,..breed 'Isieth...frem the •Standaai ofathefassetereina thespackess TaPiCal. Yoravelidrie hoge, When peeper -1Y -and finished for "Market, predaee . . canries 'the desSeqa eels arfl4e, . aMid PrIPPOIVO114 relailfran: length, an eves]. diatributiket et f4t,',:••• iand. a wealth of slean ?meat.. -.GoJod.- quality of 1:00.111e, iilih 1 associated. with natality; in.: the WM Mid Wir,. leaves the eareaiss witha rind pies senting a clean- attractive appear- ance on the rail'. . . • Although a 'higher PercentageOf • ef . the , Yerkshar' e breed attained perhaps more closely te the deslired standards; of perfection. thee .stilla too great -a percentage Of mine keit hogs of ,Yorkshare breeding 'which faTh.short a the requieements. Some retrains lack the desired . length of ;body. 'Ohms flank clonatiiibution and thrift. The Yorkshire:breed offers a teasonahly large number of strains to ehoiose foams so that discretion can exereised tin the choice ef -animals that have the fleshed length, a rigor- ous -conStitution, and a smoothness of conformation 'essential •for " themak- rag of econormatalgains that result in. a ease:ass staleableatt the to -p price foe Wiltshire sides or best Canadian cute. , Tarr:worth hogs have always Main- talizied a hh pepatation for ..the pro- duction rcvf ;high-class Wiltshire sides. Unfortunately, in Canada they harve never been produced extensively,. and, whiJle there -are many individessle of 'excellent type and quality, there are comearaibively few strains from {Which to select. Tatmemeths as a breed- ere inclined to ibe slightly heavy -ire the shoulder. Some -strains are apt to •shorb of side, and market hogs from ouch breedling iiivariably carry too heavy a fat cloves -leg if • fed -to weights of 20 to 220. pounds.. Tam- Canada is (specifically mentioned in anorder issued by the German gov- erment respecting the imaiortation of fruit into Germany. -All imports from the Dominion minsbe shipped direct to, specified posts and be sub-. jett (on (arrival to inspection for San Jose scale and ',railroad worm. • • • Timothy WOMB relativel earlier in Timothy 'blooms rellativela earlier In northern areas than in southern. One possible explanatian of this, says the Journal of Agrieultu_ral Research ie that he -development Of the plants in the south during earkly spring is debayed by the relatively short days that occur 'in southern aebitudes, while on the other hand 'the development in, northern regions is hastened by the relaively 'bang days of the late spring and early bummer. Do You Believe It? To erect a estrum with domino men is not easy as the structure usually collapses at the thirtieth bone. The world record wes set by James E. Mood vrho succeeded in piling up 139 do-mino -men. The French lawyer Paul Goguilot registered a tooth -pick as luggage at one of the railway stations of Paris and insured it for fifty dollars against theft. The toothpick was lost ansi the lawyer aired the railway company for fifty dollars -damage. . The aetual- ly won the case in three- courts. A. Warsaw banker by the name of Gsaetz owned what must have been the niost peculiar garmlent ever worn by a men: a suit. miade of fragments of historic relics. These fragments ostme from a coat worn by Napoleon, a IRessien flag froan 18-12 a shatwl of Lord Falmerstonea, a bed blanket of General Moltke's, etc. Joshua •Dickenison of London be= queatased his enormous fortune to his wife, specifying in his will that she "Who had never cared for him in his lifetime" must spend two hours daily at his grave. The widow buried him in the garden of their estate, :had: a little house built over the grave and as her bedrOorn lay right above it, more than complying with the 're- quirements of the will. The legend of the Pied Piper of Hamelin is bas -ed on an error; rats - are such good. swiesinees 'that ' it would have been easy fax them to swim the river Weser on which this town stands. (Front inscriptions on tablets found in the tornlbs of the Egyptian kings it appears that the Ancient Egyptians were ,such drunkards that the gov- ern-ment enacted a legisl•ation some- what similar to the Eighteenth Amendment, -A (respectable 'Meal was served at the Lord Mayor's BanqUett in London on November 9, 1841: 250 diehesi real turtle -soup; 30 dishes hors d'oeurves; six plattens of.various fish; 4 turkeys with oysters; 46 capons; 50 French pies; 60 pigeon pies; 53 hams with garnish; 40 roast tongues; 2 quarters of lamb; 2 roast -beefs; 13 rib roasts; 6 dishes asparagus; 60 dishes pota- toes, whole and mashed; 44 dishes shell -fish; 4 large -dishes lobsters and shrimps.; 140 jellies; .50 blane-rnang- les; 110 different tarts; 20 Chantilly baskets; 60 dishes mince pies. The main course consisted of fifty- six salads; 60 hares; 80 pheasants 24 geese.; 40 dishes partridges; 17 dishes game an.d poultry. For des - 'siert were served:. 100 hirge pine -ap- ples weighing several pounds each; 240 plates . hot -house grapes; 250 ice CrelaffilLS ; 50 dishes apples; 100 • dishes pears; 60 fancy cakes; 75 dishes wal- nuts; - 80 dishes preserved and can- died fruit, plus cookies, wafers, sweet moats, etc. About 700 bottles of the choicest wines and • champagnes were drunk. • The largest book in the world is to be found in New York: it is 9 feet 10 inches high, 3 feet 3 inches thick and weighs 250 hundredweight. The pages have to be turned electric- ally. In the oasis of Fachi in the Sa- hara desert all houses are built of salt. The largest and most complete col- lection of stamps in the world con- sists of 4,000 volumes and :belongs to the British. Museum, London. At Vera \Crum, Mexico, degener- ates and in.dividuals who axe in finan- cial -straits are forbidden to. have children. -A "IIniversity of Laughter" Wes founded in Philadeaphia by a certain John rSteward Higgins. There were 60 enthusiastic •pupils during the first term. Camels like tobacco smoke, dogs anise oil; lions lavender- scent, bulls maga and cats valerian. (Nemo mentions that 'the an:rile:rut Babylonians knew all about the'mort- gage•systese and that they intventect the cheque and hill system in, Ws to- day. The fireb books on medicine were (written and published in 2100 B.C. by the 'Chinese emperor -Shen Nung. -Altheegh Canada has exported 25 to 30 million bushels of oats to the United Kingdom every year, there is a limited outlet fax Canadian oats' in the world market. World import re- quirements amount to about 90 mil- lion Ibuielsels a yea11-4which is the equivalea of less than one-quarter of average Canadian production. In recent ye(ars, Europe has supplied a- bout half of her own requirements,. leaving a market for about 45 mil- lion_ bushels to be supplied by non- European exporting counties. * The High Cost Of- Beauty Tel costs about $20.00 a ton; zinc oxide $0.15 a pound; precipitated ch -alk $0.05 a pound, and Zinc steer - ate $0.28 a pound. How much do you pay for a three ounce box? My wife's faiverite powder is almost entietheely zinc oxide. Taking into account small amount of stearate, color and perfume, the total cost can't be ten cents. It sells for $1. Facial lotions are another type of cosmetic which advertising men would have us buy in increasing quantities. And it's no wonder. Some time ago the wife of a pro- fessor friend of Mine asked me to analyze some face lation which her hairdresser had persuaded her to buy. It was very highly recommended. The label said that it was good for the complexion, that it removed freckles, was excellent fax sunburn ancl wag a "skin tonic." It is typical of the lo- tions on which women spend their money. It -is miade in {Chicago and sells for a dollar a bottle. On enelysie, this beautifier was found to coesist of a concentrated so- lution of 'magnesium sulphate, with a little 'coloring and perfume. Mag- nesium sulphate has probably been known to us since childhood under the name of E-psorn salts.' I haine. nothing to- say regarding tthe bene- ficial effect of external applications af Epsom salts,' but do suggest that 'it might be even More effective in clearing the skin, if taken internally. DON'T BE CONFUSED BY MISLEADING CLAIMS WOilthS 'are ,prolific,- are economical ¼' continu ° ent• she is lurcL an*qgi4t,na per capita srealth, r,he best p1a; Xhe world in.which to live. You would, of course, like to start your children on life's journelz equipped to take advantage, a be - great opportunities which will offered them. Then, save regularly for the future of your children and deposit your savings in a bail. ' "When your children start out for themselves you can so establish them in life that thty will face the viorld confidendy. And they should become substantial and prosperous citizens. . The road to your children's future is open at every branch of The Canadian Bank of Commerce. 11 •..- 4 4 , THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE w•ith which is wnsaganii.ated THE STANDARIJ, BANK OF CANADA - , feedens, have good q.uitiity of bone and skin, and are cohsiderred leets, subjeet to sunstaldi than white hogs. An infusion of new blood on the part of pure-bred breeders would appear advisable, and should ,be followed up with the objective( of developing strains with' smoother and . lighter ishioulders, slightly mOre le-ngth of side, and better balance of body throughont. Possibly fewer hogs , of Berkshire breedirng conform to bacon standards than of -the other -two recognized ban - on breeds. This is • due to the feet that only a few breeders 'have confin- ed themselves definitely to the de- velopmeet of a bacon type hog. There is still a percemtage of individualst from +wee the 'best strains that re- vert back to the short thick type. However, , says MT, A. A. {MacIVIillan of the Dominion Live Stook Branch in the liarudJbo(ok of the (bacon hog, - with persistent selection along pro- per lines, this difficulty will uncioulet- E (fly be overcame. Berkshire car- casses from improved strains carry over a large proportion of lean meat to fat, and the yield of dressed meat is high. Owing to the •bleek hair, there is an objection; on -the part of NI -elvers to the Berkshire carcass, as it. does not present the clean attrac- tive appearance necessary for first - quality produets. Berkshere hogs will not stand close pen feeding and farc. ing with a heavy carbonaceous grain ration. Under such feeding practice, individu:aas of this breed do not de- velop sufficient length and the- -hog at market weight produces a carcass possessing an excessive fat covering. The Marvelous Properties Of Mother's Milli (Co-n-densed from Die Umschau, Frankfurt% in ;Mag.azine Digest.) -- Most Miedical discoveries were made aceidentally by research workers ex- perimenting with different aims. in view. The latest medical disdovery is due to chance. It was originally the color reac- tions of mother's milk which had ca-ptured the imagination of the Vien- nese physician, Dr. Sole.' In the course of his experiments he mixed this milk with blood and was surpris- ed to -find that the blood clotted un- usually quickly. The whole process tooketwo erainute-s at the most, while the other substances, such as physio- logical solution, caused complete coagulation in six to eight minutes, at least: It is not the milk itself but -a cer- tain substance centained therein that is responsible fax these results. This sabstance car be Centrifugally ex- tracted from the milk, dried and pre- served as a white powder for two or three months, without losing its ef- ficacy, although it will lose- it when heated. The chemical composition of the subs:these is still unknown. This styptic element has been found ohly in human milk. There smarts to be :no trace of it in the -milk of cows, ewes and guin-ea-pig,s. But its action is not limited to human blood, for it has the same effect upon the blood of ail :merrimalse If you cut yourself superficially a fe-w drops ,of blood will oose from the wound but soon the bleedin-g will stop by itself, because the vety moment it extravasates, that is, loses the con- tact with the walls of the blood -ves- sel, the blood begins 'to clot. The clots plug the wound and stop the hemorrhage. Not always, however, do things proceed so smoothly. If the wound is a deep one and involves a great loss of blood, the clots are washed. away by the stream that is pouring forth and the intervention of atlas- styptic factors becomes nec- essary. Worse still are things for the bleeder or haemophylic affected with a congenital deficiency of coagulation. With such individuals the process lasts so long that they can bleed to death from a small cut or a minor operation, like the extraetion of a tooth. The 'effeet of mother's milk as a styptic has been tried out on such subjects, because any substance that accelerates the clotting of the blood Etc -6 at the same time as a haemosta- tic. The results obtained preve that in -clinical practice -mother's. milk is superior to all other styptics, be- -Be Sure You Get Genuine Kellog____g's ALL -BRAN Bran lias proved so successfpl in --relieving common constipation that some cereal manufacturers, with products leaving only a fractional quantity of bran, have claimad that -this -minimum bran content as suf- ficient to get results. You may have tried some of these -part-bran products-i'Land have been disappointed! The Simple truth is that they do not furnish the amount of bran you need. It's the "bulk" or fiber in bran, that 'helps correct mini:non consti- -pation. This "bulk" is sit:tiler to that in Ieafy vegetables. Within -the body, it absorbs moisture and forms a soft mass,which gently .clears out the intestinal Kellogg's ALL -BRAN provideS "bulk" in conienient and concen- trated form. It also furnishes vita- ', min B, as well as iron for the blood. , It has won mMions of friends be - •cause it overcomes {dercerion consti- , ration safely and pleasantly. It 18 all betteetust as the 'name implies —with nothing added ex- cept the flavoring of Malt, Bight . • ' And Salt. II *berition larsia ,bran ogreal' tor The reli of,genotipagoe,:ree, d tbe wording on theittea.aftet„ are therel C310110 .01t0 -6D Kelloggs ,Attki; and -green plikkaiXObld 41.Th ears. MadK1Zg in LOA itSIntatiO, • Branches at Seaforth, Blyth, Brussels, Dublin and Exeter - CENT -A -MILE' ROUND TRIP BARGAIN FARES (Minimum Fares: Adults 75c.: Child 40c.) FROM ALL C.N.R. STATIONS (Except Giielph, Kitchener and St. Marys). SARNIA To BRAMPTON including all branch lines north to Goderich, Kin cardine, Southampton, Wiarton, Owen Sound, Durham,. Creemore — Sarnia to Komokar Ettrick -Winghsina. - Ta FOLLOWING' -STATIONS -ON DATES SHOWN .11U LY 2 7th -OSHAWA, port Hope,' Cobourg, Belleville, Kingston, Gananoque, Brockville, Prescott, 'Morrisburg, Cornwall, Agincourt, Uxbridge, Lindsay, Peterboro, Campbellford, Aurora, Nevsnaarket, Allendale, Collingwood, Meaford, Barrie, °sillies Midland, Gravenhurst, Bracebridge, Huntsville, North Bay. All towns in New Ontario on line of ThnIskaming & Northern Ontario Ry.: Nipissing Central Rly.: Kapuskasing: Sat JULY 2 St h TO TORONTO Als° t° Chatham' Sarnia, London, Ingersoll, Woodstock, Paris, Brantford, Hamilton, St. Catharines, Niagara Falls. and Sit. JULY 280. RZIY, bag712 ingrztaekt:ergle-Encrjr • For Fares, Transit I,iinits, Train Information, Tickets consult nearest Agent. CANADIAN NATIONAL TzEIO W. R. PLANT, PHONE 4J or 4W. cq' • Currants 10inasants should be (handled' very carefully and preserved as soon as possible after rplielking. They contain •so 'much acid that little heat 19 nec- essary to preserve them. airrants also contain a great deal of the sub- stance called pectin, which causes the boiled, Sweetened juice to "jelly," so that they are used a great deal in jelly-makingL-either silent or iu com- bination with oithee fruit juices. .Many housekeepers always can a quart or two of currant juice fax Use .in :making .mincemetat, and it is also exeellent to add to a punch fruit cup or plain iced tea. • Bed Currant Jelly Piek over currants, but . do not re - Move steimls. Wlasli and drain. Mash a few in the bottom of a preserving kettle, using -a wooden potato Inalsrh- er, .Oontinnie until currants are us- ed. Cook slowly until Currants leek white. Strain, thrchigh a. coarse Strainer, then-alio* juke to drip 'Omagh a double thiclateSs-of cbeeae Cloth. MeasurOthe „juke, bring it to 400. maa, *10.4g hgted:,:ciagar. .-toitror„.thr* inin.Utets;m td nitbklassa Mee in a tiEtTaw,. 2114 pit vtiviketAni*Vittif4t4Ak cause of its quick and sure effeet. Thus a hemorrhage following upon the extraction of two teeth of a haemophilic child was promptly step- ped with -a tampon impregnated with •hulmian milk, and the wounds healed up rapidly without (complications, while before -the eerie child had near- ly bled to death after the extractien of one tooth. The now method opens up new pos- sibilities in the lurgery of the nose, ear and jaws. A tampon of mother's milk applied to the wound for hall an hour stops the haemorrhage com- pletely and enables the patient to go home without fear of complications. The haemostatic a&ion ,of hrutmian milk is, however, strictly limited to the greet hs which it is applied. It is, therefore, not a specifle against haemophilia. InjeCtIons •with this mailik.remaiu without any. effect It acts only 'When (brought auto contact with the bloeding tissue, • 'The queetions Of the checnieal position, eharatter,, nurpooe and ori- gin of.. due • *rode substairee in motheeo.milik Still.. await, octagon. In th aceatifitne� bei&mtent iiiteh he Nfe bibboPheiTicin Word* that -atiktittea.ibn;-.tiettliti,linfbao-,"•• Some Weekly Radio Salaries 6,000: Ed Wynn, Al Jolson, George M.10olian, Eddie Cantor, Will Rogers. $4,000: Lawrence Thbe'bt, Pani Whiteman. 0,000: zoo 42,,e0): teway vanee. 12,60: Burns and Alln, etred liti.sgy. Lombardo, Al- flclk 13eity. i1,780, *titter - *maid% 3, sia k AIL-Itstertt: • - eguianty ! I • TO MERCHANDISERS • "You sweep out, you trim the winddws, you dust off .the counters, you make up new price cards, you unpack and arrange new stock, you plan your merchandise showings, you do these and a hundred other necessary jobs REGULARLY in the normal conduct of your business. "But how about the biggest job of all—contacting the peo- ple and telling them repeatedly that you are in business and have the goods they need. Do you do that REGULARLY? Do you figure you are going to get your share of the available business if you don't tell folks about your merchandise or your service at REGULAR intervals instead of doing the job spasmodically or not at all? "By all known tests, experience and thousands of records, the acknowledged best -of -all medium for REGULARITY is ad- vertisirig in the local newspaper. A newspaper going REGULAR- - LY into the homes of your possible customers, not only in your tavn but the surrounding territory as well, makes it easy enough for anyone to see how your local newspaper offers you the finest kind of a vehicle for carrying your business message REGULAR- LY to the people. • "And don't think these folks won't miss your REGULARITY of advertising. They look for their newspaper REGULARLY, READ IT REGULARLY, study its advertising (yours, if it's there) REGULARLY. And what's more, you'll find they are buying fairly REGU- " LARLY, too, if you'll just -check up, especially with the adver- tisers who do use space REGULARLY. "YOURS FOR MORE REGULARITY IN ADVERTISING." \ The Huron ExpoiiiiOr • •••S • s. 1 H.