The Huron Expositor, 1938-01-14, Page 6,•r
016111
ours*** KnovelAt41,
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s(Be 'Dr. Chengbing T. Wang,
THE HEALTH LEAGUE OF CANADA
CANCER RF THE, SKIN
eer Di the Skin Wee inasm.ltsk"
:.katilis and Is very common Particle
lady in. fair white races. The Coin.
and epithellomas. They occur on ex-
posed parts of the body and among
e the factors welch play an important
"e Part in their eaucation and preven-
e tion are, the eetinic or cheopticaely ac-
tive rays of sunlight anal pigmenta-
e, tion of, the skin. Despite the fact
s that dark-skinned people 0Coupy as a
rule the botteat regiens, where the
s effects of sunlight are. most' serere
jong-continued,, the sun's action
upon them is comparatively light. The
Melanin, the pigment of the skin
a stands as a sentinel guarding. the unr
derlying' tissues from +be baneful ef-
fects of sunlight.
•The backs of, thielierids and the
face auffee xdost from the shin can -
tete. It is remillekable that these
cancel's', plain tte view, are`often al-
lowed tt, progress! eithout treatment
until the conaition is hopeless. This
is because tbe public have not yet
learned to distinguish the early algae
of cancer.
Jeotv can cancers oe the akin be re -
1. Rodent teem 'Ilhis type gen-
entity affects the centred" horizontal
third of the, fate, that is, the: area
bounded belows by a line Orme& just
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PICOBAC
PIPE
TOBACCO
FOR A MILD,COOL SMOKE
Farm =miner to its all -year
htiMe. Thrill to pplfunder bine
for' a winter -inanition- or a
kisser stay, there is never a
dull moment. And living costs
ere very moderate.
Choose your own route. Tares
applidirect or via the Canadian
Rockies, Vancouver and Vic-
toria to San Francisco in one
or both di.-ections:
FULL INFORMATION
AS TO ROuND TRW
STANDARO FARE
0 TOURIST FARE
0 COACH FARE
Oit Aporoxotoo to Gov Agent
LONDON and WINGHAM
South s
Winghom
lesigrave
Blyth
Brucefield
kzeter
beneath the nese to the lobule of
the etre and limited above by the line
of tfie 'eyebrovte. A large number of
cases arise from the innee and outek
angles of the eyes! and the groove be-
tween sense and face. , Rodent ulcer
begins as a small nodule with a shiny
appeerance sometimes having small.
veins on the sairrace. The growth
slowly eelarges, breaks Idown in the
de not smeadete ether parts of the
body. The pertem goes on treating
it with ,ealve fnom the druggist or
some euack remedy until it becomes
2. Tee Epithellemas are a some -
Whit rapidly -growing malignant dis-
eese of the prone to epreed
other parts of the body. Thie form
'of cancer. is commoner in the . aged
than in those of younger years, and
is r,ather more.frequent ire men than
in women because men are niore ere.
posed. to /113u/se-and to tee weather.
Tee .predomireating sites are those ee-
posed to strong suidiget that its the
ears, face, neek, hands and forearms.
An epithelioma. frequently arises from
a brownish spot caused by the sures
ection on the. shin, the effete of tare
soot. paraffin, arsenic, X-ray or ultra
violet light, radium and X-rays in the
heeds of untrained person& It may
appear ess a pea -shaped grovel& or. An
an ulcer which softene in the °mare.
The nodule is dome-shaped with a
serface. like the skin. --Talreen in the
,early stage both rodent ulcers and
epitheliomas are quite cureele. Neg-
Next -aiticle "Cancer Froth X -
Rays."
1.55
2.23
3.27
3.41
315
MILLION DOLLAR BABIES
The Dionne quintuplets will prob-
ably be worth around $1,000,000 by
the time they are eighteen years old,
the guardians of the three-and-a-half-
cear-old babies estimated to -day, says
he Toronto Star ;recently. •
"The quints' fortfine to;da-y amounts
to $520,000," Judge Vale]. told The
Star. "With the exception of a few
thousand dollars kept as a cash re-
serve, every penny- of it is invested
in Provincial and Dominion bonds.
There are municipal bonds and no
stocks of any kind."
Judge Valin, for forty years a mem-
ber of the Ontario bench, and now
one of the guardians of the quintu-
plets, is financial administrator for
the fast-growing estate of• the five lit-
tle sisters. He has purchased , the
bonds in which the $520,000 fortuae
has bee,ni invested and reported to -day
that their average yield is just over
three per cent.
Expenses $24,000 a Year
"Thus the quintuplets have an in-
come from their investment of about
$17,000-aayear," he continued. "Their
living erxpenses are heavy, however,
and amount. to $24,000 a year. If
future plans for the quints material-
ize, this $24,000 a year will have to
be vastly increase4:k"
With the probable added expense of
sew quarters and the inevitable cost
of education, expenses are bound to
increase within the next few years,
Di-. A_ R_ Dafoe also predicted.
"Naturally we would like to have a
larger area for theliabies, providing
room for them to pley and helping to
keep them away from the crowds of
teople," he said. "At present we
have only about five acres."' •sse ""
"I should hate to eee the babies ev-
er taken away from Callender, but if
we caret get the land we warut here,
we wee of course, tave to get rt.
somewhere else. The welfare of the
babies is paramount and will lie con-
sidered above •everythring else."
Land aeound - Callender formerly
gelling at 50 cents an acre is now be-
ing held, inaome instanees, at a price
price of $50 an acre. About 300 acres
of land iminedeately adjacent to the
nursery le owned by Oliva Dionne,
father of the' quintuplets. The Pro-
vircial Government owns some of the
nearby lamd, but most of it is in the
hands of private owners, moetly resi-
dents of Callender and North Bay.
"It we ewe to buy land from Mr.
Monne, would melte that the qtr.:li-
e:Fleet would be paying their father,"
said Judge Valin, "but I'm sure we
have no objectiot to that."
•Shice they were a year old the
quintuplets •have paid everY Penny of
their expenses, Dr. etafoe explained.
Art present the nursery has a:staff ef
nine, including ' three pollee, theee
'names and teachers, and three house-
keepers. In summer thts staff is in -
we !•limans.
' Phe nursery was erected by the
quintuplets' °fund," adided Dr. Defoe.
"The Ouhlts are even paying the rn-
tire eost of the rest /looms weed bY
died dellars a year to keep the ob-
servation platform in repair. .The
bablee get netheng in return for this,
Mice noecharge is Made tor peeing
'Sem and none 'ever made. :
"The Provincial .. f;iovernment, of
course, hag paid for the roads into
tbe nursery and gives, nil traffie of -
fitter With tWo Or theise, other , men -el,
the sunnitee 'The nuiterses three
bY the quintuplets, are tinder the,e011-
Exeter
Henson
Kippen
Itrucefield
Clinton
Londesboro
Blyth
Beigrave
Goderleh
Seaforth
.Dublin g•
10.34
10.46
10.52
11.00
11.47
12.04
12.13
'2.24
12.45
TIME TABLE
Ent
A.M.
6.40
West
7.17
7.37
11.06
11.45
12.05
P.M.
220
3.16
3.29
3.41
9.36
9.47
10.00
10.25
again the. Prin0Plos .ireeteratietate
of national - poliey, the 33344017
oltearehe of' Japan is eavaging
Miele with all the deadly weapons
of wee. Tbose who are not quite
sfetniliar wile this .phase of the
weds' is ,suffering to -day, will do well
to examine into the illegal aceionel
japan in whiebe awe attended
with sdupecity, greed, cruelty end ven-
civilian: In recent Yeaes the world
eas come to question openly the good
faith -or Japanese pretensions regard-
sibLe Japanese officials told the woeld
that Japan hes no, territorial •desiges
en China, but their actions in China
belie their words.
Steadfastly and ineessently Japan
has encroached upon the administra-
tive and territorial eovereigetY of
Obina;. en less than six pease she; has
occupied four large proviecee
Chine. in addition to certain pfurts -of
the provinces of Suiyuan and Chahar.
.genersally known es 'Eastern. Mongol-
•ia. is characteristic of Japanese
aggressions in China that "incidents"
are purposely created, and under such
resorted -tee eVelefilleYthe smoke clears
after each conflict we find Japan in
occupation: of more Chinese territory'
and more firmly enteenched in posi-
tions whic•h senable her to infringe fur-
ther on ehina's eigkts.
As regards the military occupation
by &pan of the north-eafstere. 'prov-
inces of Chine. beginning from 1931
and the fighting in Shanghai in: 1932,
the legal aspect of iseue is very clear.
by the League of Nations had clearly
pronounced that- Japen had acted; in
Mancheria ape at Shanghai withoue
justification. under the principles cf
iesternational law and prectice and ire
violaticat of her undertakings eel em-
bodied in the Covenant of the League,
•he Kellogg Peace Pact and the Nine -
Power Treaty of Washington. • -
Recently, Japanese aggreesions
bave been directed towards the five
northers'. provinces of Chinas particu-
larly , Hopei, Chahar and Suiyuan.
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4,33
4.52
tion of a new and larger nursery and
the acquisition of laud around it to
be made into a park, however, would
make a Lig dent in the eand.
Guam:Nowa:rip over the quintuplets
ends when they are eighteen years
old. Neither Dr. Defoe nor 4.udge
Valin, would hazard a guess as to
what will be done.vvith the $1;000,004
which the five sisters will probably
have by that time.'
The moat lucrative contiact for the
quintuplets so far has been the tie-
up with a big Hollywoo,1 film com-
pany, front v hich they win soon have
received a total of $300,000. At pres-
ent the five little sistens must pay an
income las in the United States,
where the- bulk of their ineezne Meg.
Inates. and in 1938 bhey com-
mence eaying an' income tax in, Can -
Government Reaps Gas Taxes
It is eitimated that the, Ontario
Government is receiving about $300,-
000 ft seal ir additional gasoline tax-
es from touristr; outside the Prov-
ince who make the long trip to Cal-
lander to see the quintuplets.
"We had 375,000 people here last
summer, and the total number of
visitors for 1937 will be close to 500,-
000," Dr. Dafoe said. "About 125,000
automobiles filled with , tourists came
to Callandler this year. When, you
consider that the gasoline tax is six
cents a gallon, and that every auto.
mobile ate up a good! many gallens
of gasoline in coming here, you'll gee
that the Province has had a lot of
extra revere:re from the quintuplets."
• Both Judge Valise and Dr. Defoe
said they had no intention of ssking
the Ontario Governmeet to contribute
toward the support of the quintuplets.
itA Ant; ,itlie. thief.: roettoir why the oak
- to dilan'7,,litave lind,to. so strict '..ab
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TOBACCO PRODUCTION
ina
e .beondr .., u
y1 natl* i Oone Slw e,' 1i of
Chiiaa has td eller ell'a44e0 : resd ace
tie the heat of her ehleitY fence all
attenepte on h bait at cOwlleiflaitfon
ha''e.' Proved' uuseuco3e tu1.
it needs 40:14 ' faithex lianTotOod
that Cltine while resfMtng 'the Jal
Meese aggressin o pnlotaa1Y ]fuer
owa avcoutut, ars treineto 'Uphied,
least incidentally, .tAb,e steireity of the.
interauatiaura1 _aieatlies dfecctly aP$ll-
cable `e the Mtuati n such :urs' the
Covenant of the 'Tue of Nations,
the Kellogg Peace Paot and the Nitre -
The extension of tobacco. growing
in 0-nterio hes been raped. With the
the aereage has ste'adily increased,
ami last geason 60,000 acres were
planted as compared with 46,000 acres
in 1936. With fratiefectoey weather
conditions in the main, belt, produc-
tion reached a total of 62,e00,000
pounds, comeosed of 53,000,000 iceuels
of flue -cured, 7,000,000 pounds of bun -
lee, and 2,500,000 potmds of dark to -
peak oonsiderably in excess of the
previous reeord crop of 48,492,000
pounds harvested III 1935.
Prices amounted to an average a
27 cente• per poend foe flue -cured and
111e cents for burley and co'mpare
very favoerably vete prices of 28.7
and 11,7 cents in 1936, reiseettively.
The 1937 tobacco 'crop will return
growers • approximately $15,000,000
which is $7,000,000 more tban last
year and about $5,000,000 greater than
the previous high figure °beaked in,
f9g6. -tobacco now asstunes the role
of one of Ontarioei -chief _agricultitral
preducts, and- this sfetement will
readily conceded when it is 'realized
that the value of thie seascm's crop
will slighter exceed the value of
inest -as muoh es total egg produc-
tion, more titan twice as much as the
heir times the potato crop.
th• e pueleifedette "Manchukuo." There
is pp lienteto the ambittioars of .rapitn.
Aceordine -to heir Heed pollen gernet•-
ally known as the Centinentse Pollen
only over, rMna, hut also over the
whole of .4.siait,`Ovealtually.
Te martmealize the imniediaite. pros -
pact .4 beepoliey toedoniinate North
Cents, theeeeteeirese militariats pule
den• t" at leuleauchlate or -Mateo P010
Bridge where Japae has no right to
Since thenethe Japanese Ichtias have
been teecentrole of the whole Peiping-
Teintein area,- from whicit radiate
lust as the Mention of. the puppet
state "Mauchekutt" was note tine to
"spontapeous end genuine endePend-
ence movement," the fighting that ,ts
raging in Sharighai is not a mere, lo-
cal event, Again, it Is a • tactical
measelle purposely enniloyed by Ja-
pan est centsemmate another venture
of conquest. The fact that Shanghai
centre of bhirse and an iniM einal
eity where foreign: commerce end in-
vestments abound, isetoo well knoWn
to require elaboration, And rt.**. ip
the realism: inv. .4.rfaii has "eliitea
such a place as tune- object for her
vandalism, as eke died en February,
1932. While Mina is cempelled to
meke supreme sacrifices for sere pres-
ervation 9f 'her national exietence, it
is tragic indeed that innocent lives
and properties have le suffer in ,atene-
meet tor the pins of Japenese mili-
tarism. _
The muse of the present hostilities
in- China de very apparent. It is are
rootivess ion the. part of JaPan it is
an uedeclared war for national ag-
grandizement apd ,. territorial eePan-
eon; while foe China it is armed re-,
sietairce• for the preservation of li r
is
an• d compliened, Call, be. earrectly call-
ed "jingoisait versus national self -de-
terminations." .
Resistance is the only.' Connie open-
ed to, us. ,Chinat has exeausted every
effort for a peaceful settlement with
Japan. !Indeed; my government has
repewtedly mei° it known to Japan
as well as to the world that it is pre-
pared to efetle any or all of the die
feeences with Japan by any of the
pacitic procedures known to interna-
tional WV' and practice. Bet -such
from the Japanese igovernanent. In
spite of China's coneiliatory attltude
and utmost' 'patience, Japan repeated-
ly resorted to force for sthe seizure of
Chinese territories. My government
wishes it to be known that the pro -
fkle
to
I sir li taa hiHi a Jibe eipecte °fihat
n,1k.o!i for {Fo 41? ' 'Yens
Ilotj .ous of their
Otilf *der them. ,
I •wis±.( t» ft/Mit/PP deer aPOreefol
of the . supPorrt an'the keens
rae ree of�t �uet1ce, • oo W011 exPreshed 1a
the;; public op nion of this coe►atrry'. 4
scents !rat concrete atctsons arreieeec-
essakei to crystalize thee woral erce
in cube cause Of world Peace, *Which is.
oilaeparable from the prospect of
ice in ,Mile Fans East.
mig444,
tw,wirialicititwitoott
,000,47,*
**".744*,
•
..BORRIPRING, AT THE BAlig
SMALL BUSINESS, CON,
CERN S independent, well-
managed, established on personal
hotiesty and indium -
fortunately abound in Canada.
Many of them have all the ele-
ments of inaeasing success. They
may,need only icInd financial
assistance to make them even-
tually large and important
contributors to Canadian
The Bank of Montreal welannes
enquiries frotn such bilitiejn con-
cerns Tigarding loans, and the
manager of our nearest branch will
, be glad to discuss with you,
in itrict confidencsinny plans
you may have for taking a
constructive step forward.
BANK OF MONTREAL
"a bank where small accoants are welcome"
Clinton Branch: H. M. MONTEITH, Manager
Hernial] Branch: W. B. A. CROSS, Manager
Brucefield (Sub -Agency): Open Tuesday and Friday
MODERN, EXPERIENCED BANKING SERVICE ... the °urn:nu of I20 Year,' Successful Operation
11
Oustmnere "Why do You wear rub-
ber gloves when handling .
Barber:. "Foe the DorPoso of kooP-
causing hair to grow on my hands."
wan' grandad's annbitiot hare
"Yee, end Dad Wanted id Mese
"And the•Sen will Probabit want
COSTLY
EXTRAS
For 62 years doctors have been coming' dp.ily to this
Hospital to donate their time without charge. During
the past year over three score of them donated 40,000
hours of work to the: task of giving sick and injured
children the very best chance for the recovery of health
and happiness.
Crippled? Deformed? Hurt in an accident? Suf-
fering from Disease? Just "yes" to any of these ques-
tions has always opened the doors of this institution to
Children in need of hospital care.
No distinction has ever been made in respect to race,
creed or circnnistances.
The Provincial and Municipal Governments each
contribute a fixed amount per day for those who cannot
pay. But these grants do riot contemplate the cost of
medicines, operating rooms, oxygen, X-rays, plaster casts,
anaesthetics, special diets and extra pursing -and they
do not provide for the cost of many, many other neces-'
sary items.
Each year we depend on public subscriptions to
Over these extra costs. Won't you help this very
worthy cause?
-Please send your gift direct to 67 College Street,
Toronto. We employ no canvassers.
IMPORTANT
This Hospital does NOT
shore in the funds collect-
ed by the Toronto Federa-
tion fcrk Community Service
because patients are ad-
mitted from all Darts ai
the Province.
67' COLLEGE STIEET
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