The Huron Expositor, 1938-12-02, Page 3yi1
ty
E = , 193
(bontedi from Page 2)
Celebrates 91st Birthday
David Cantelon., one of Clinton's
oldest Citizens and known and re-
spected throughout Huron County,
will on Sunday celebrate his 91st
birthday. Hale and hearty, he still
works every day and his hearty laugh
and ready wit are well known. Mil-
lions of dollars worth of apples, pro-
duce and livestock have been handled
by rim icturitg his colorful career. For
the past few years he has devoted his
time mainly to the buying of Rye -
Stock.' Wednesday be laughingly re -
merited that his birthday gift to
farmers this year would be $8.00 a
hundred Boa hags. Sunday will be
just another milestone in Air. Cantel-
on''s life. To all appearances she in
good for Many more.e Clinton News -
Record.
Fatally Injured From Rifle. Shot
Genevieve, .eleven'year-old. daug)iter
of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Scherbaarth,
of Riversdale village, near Walker-
ton, and a niece of Mrs. Catherine
Benninger, of Dublin, was fatally in-
jured on Sunday when a shoot from a
rifle penetrated her head. Several
children were playing in the roomy at
the time and oats ,of the young boys,
seeing the rifle in the corner, and be-
lieving at empty, pulled the trigger.
The little girl happened to be in lane'
with the shot and died instantly. Es-
pecially •tali is the fact that within
the past year another daughter met
fatal injuries in a motor accident near
Orangeville.—Mitchell Advocate.
CK x, WINOHAM
100 454s, ` 25o Metres
WEEKLY PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
Pridlay, Dec, 2—.'rn11 aHarry J.
k
_,oyle; 11.30, "Peter MaoGregorr;
'12.45 p.m., Poultry Talk; 0,45, CKNX
Hi17 Billies; 7.30, "Jimmy Grier Orch-
es tria.
Saturday, Dec. 3-10.30 a.m:, • Shut-
-Ins; 12.45•p,mn., ICKN C Hill -Billies; 7,
Wesi McKnight; 7.45, Barn .Dance.
Sunday, Deo. 4.-11 a.m., United
Church; 12.30 'p.m., Ken. Sable's Ama-
teurs; 1, "Lorre Tales'; 7, ?resbyter•
len Church.
Monday, Dec. 5-11 a.m., harry J.
Boyle; 11,30, "Peter MacGregor"; 7
pan., L'.andt Trio; 8, Kenneth Rantoul.
Tuesday', Dec, 6-17,30 a.m., "Peter
MacGregor"; 11.45, "Jack & Jill";
12.45 lame McCallum Sisters; 1, Royal
C'befa
Wednesday, Dec. 7-11 a.m., Harry
J. Boyle; 11.30, "Peter MacGregor";
7 p.m., The Funnyboners; 7.30, Jim-
my Grier Orchestra.'
Thursday, Dec. 81-11.45 a.m.; "Jack
& Jill"; 12.45 p.m., Jack Wafeford; 1,
Royal Chas.
THE VITAMIN FOLLIES
,(Condensed from Hygeia in Reader's
Digest)
I,n••tihe opinion of the medical pro-
fession, the American people have
gone "vitamin crazy." Victims of the
latest health fad, they gulp quantities
of vitamin pills and capsules, to pre-
vent colds, to ward off a long list la
'dread diseases, to give them pep,
beauty and strength. The family
washes with vitamin soap, and.milady
may rub vitamin cream into her skin
to "nourish the skin cells and bring
back the bloom of youth." Children
chew vitamin gum.
In drug store sales, vitamin pre-
parations have .leaped from tenth to
third place, and, in the words of one
trade paper, "are already eating big
chunks from the sales of rival laxa-
ti,ye, cough and cold groups." Manu-
facturers have learned that their
drug, cosmetic or food products will
sell faster if they are labelled as
"containing valuable vitamins A, 11,
'Canadian
Clipper"
.u_
This Christmas, give o
BULOVA Watch! There is
no remembrance so precious
as a dependable timepiece
*-none that lives so long in
useful service.
t
A Small Deposit
Holds Any Article
Till Christmas.
J. A• ESTCOTT `EveninOpn
gen
JEWELLER SEAFORTH December
PHONE 218 For Evening Appointment
'CRJPELED +ix ,eputellx
WITH, RHEUM AT1SM
Improved Greatly When
He Tried Kruschen
There bas just come to our notice
a case of grand relief from severe
rheumatic pains. The seriousness of
the mantas condition and the step that
Led to hie ultimate recovery, are de-
sc'Lbed in the following letter:—
"For aeveral years I suffered from
rheumatism. I had all my teeth out
and still suffered. A year ago I lay
in hospital for fourteen weeks, al-
most crippled. When I got diomie 1
continued to .take medicine, but be-
gan to- go down again. A friend of
mine '9lsked me to try Kruschen Salts,
and I am very pleased to be able to
says I have beer on the mend ever
since."—H, P.
Two of the salts in Kruschen are
the most effectual solvents of uric
acid known to medical science. They
swiftly dull the .sharp edges of the
crystals—the cause of pain and stiff-
ness—and often convert them into a
harmless solution, which is then ex-
pelled through the natural channels.
C, D, G," etc.
One current advertiser proclaims
the joyous news this way:
"Wonders can happen —to you.
Wonders of feeling well, looking well
—of being awfully glad you're alive.
Vitamins can be the secret. Wlhdch
vitamin's!? All those `✓itamins you
may need. . . . Combat the strain
of everyday living—be a very charm-
ing person to know."
So millions of Americans, who want
to be charming, who want to feel
well, look well and be awfully glad
they're alive, down their vitamin cap-
sule's every dray. Even the cigarette
girls in New York night 'clubs now
sell vitarein pills -sand plenty of
teem'.
It's all pretty silly, at best, for
there is some doubt whether many
of the pills advertised so blatantly
contain the vitamin potency claimed.
Worse, the fad encourages people to
feel they can neglect diet • and sun-
light—then take a pill and be all
right. ' And it encourages, too, the
dangerous notion that when you're be-
low par you can ,dose yourself back
to vigor, when perhaps you ought to
consult a doctor. The "below par"
feeling may not be remotely related.
to a ritanuin deficiency. Finally, it
wastes a lot of money.
The doctors have no quarrel with
vitamins. . Every torah, woman and
child needs a normal supply every
day in order to he well. A lack of
ary of the vitamins may result in
what the doctors call "deficiency
diseases." But the reason these de-
ficiency diseases are •not common in
America is that most people get all
the vitamins they need simply by
eating three adequate meals, a day.
Which is just the way grandpop got
his •vitamins long before they were
discovered. With young children it
may be a good precaution to supple-
ment the diet with proper vitamins.
The medical profession's quarrel is
with 'the 'advertising which creates
the irnpneesdon that vitamins are drug
preparations rather than elements in
the balanced diet. As Dr, Nina Sim-
monds of the University of Califor-
nia School of Medicine reminded the
American Medical As=lociation con-
vendon last. June, this type of ad-
vertising is "leading people to -de-
pend too much, oa drug store cap-
sules and not enough on ordinary
food from the grocery and, butcher
shop.
The American Medical Association
calls this latest. ,health craze "shot-
gun vitamin therapy," and has ex-
pressed the opinion that "even if no
harm results, it should not be forgot-
ten that the gibing of complex vita-
min concentrates often proves to he
an economic waste." Just a dignified
way of saying, "Don't be such a suck-
er."
The tendency of many manufactur-
ers has been to offer as many differ-
ent vitamins as possible in a single
pill—thhe theory being that the more
HUDSON IS STRESSING STYLE AND SAFETY IN 1939
H
ws
sesneeeseeeo
,M'anty more than one hundred fac-
tors enter into motor oar safety in -
chiding such itenvs as styling, com-
e tont sand rocmitesm. for the deiVer, I I
designing the three 1939 lines sof. Hud-
sones, that ,Oamardianu maker has con-
sidered
onsidered all of them, All ears, alma
those in the lowest-prtoed field, now
Carry the Husi on name. Among the
models annotmcead today is the smart
anal spacious Hudson six Victbria
wouf a for five pa:tsengers, 96 horse -
passer, 118 -inch w'heelbarse, shown at
the top. The front end, of the 1939
lludson One -Twelve is' sleek and has
l?n.luo:.i9i,i 1Aeo.;:,r.e:t'
yi
the new safety hood, as seen at left.
The touring sedan, shown .here, has
86 hp. motor and 112 -inch wheelbase.
At the right, is another of the ex-
clusive Hudson features, aidto-e'oise
control, a patented method df keep-
ing the Car on its course, Straight
ahead, even, in bumpy going.
r:cn.h.wgrS
lar bra .try te olltib(lcl..?tl!eir
rivaila for p Ue far by liltlii?g
"vailuuable mxnet'ra/e" ' the oonminae
tion. The Connell en Pharma ey Antl'
Chemiatry of the American Medical
Aasoeia:lion Ilene rePaated1y refected to
approve such ootab'leatiane and has
pdi.nted out that awe vita7ndne may
Jose their potency entirely when com-
bined in thele .compleat form.
Wlho.'t, after all, are" these myster-
ious vitamins? They are infinitesi
mal chemical .substances that, are
presentt in eertain natural foodstuffs,
and they have been bund to be vital
to health and life If all the vita-
mins presentt in tlbe foodstuffs of one
day's adequate and balanced diet
were isolated, they would bulk about
,one-tenth of a gram, or approximate-
ly .003 sof an ounce. Yet the lack of
any of the vitamins contained in this
microadopic pile can eventually cause
ill health and ever death: Rickets,
anemia, pellagra, beriberi and other
"deficiency diseases" are results of
long-oantinued and extreme d,eficiena l
ice of one or another of the vitamins.
The wbtole subject is highly com-
plex and rapidly grows more so as
research extends the frontiers of
knowledge. But the ordinary person
need be concerned only to get five
vitamins. They ane A, B, C, D, and
G (B2). Never mind the restP of
them, winch rum through the alpha-
bet as far as Y.
This is where you get the five es-
sentials.:
A, in butter, milk, cheese,-, cream,
liver, lettuce, spinach, carrots, corn,
artichokes, peas, Brussels sprouts,
sweet potatoes, bananas, cantaloupes,
prunes, and dates.
B and G, in liver, kidneys, hearts,
spinach, watercress, green cabbage,
turnip greens, lettuce, whole cereals,
oranges, cantaloupes, turnips, carrots,
muscle meats (as steak), and certain
types of yeast.
C, in orange- juice, tomato 'juice,
spinach, raw cabbage, peppers, straws
berries, and the citrus fruits.
D, in egg yolks, sea food, cod or
halibut liver oil; and is formed by
sunlight,:
Obviously, most adults can get all
needed vitamins from mi,,., butter,
eggs, green leafy vegetables and •a
few meats. Oh, maybe some of us
dont eat enough liver, or drink en-
ough milk. Maybe .we boil our vege-
tables too long, which diminishes the
potency of vitamins, or we boil them
with soda which keeps them pretty
and green but causes a marked Joss
of vitamin content. In winter we
could use more sunshine, and in lieu
of that may need cod liver, oil ar
some other acceptable vitamin D pre-
paration. But most well people oer1
tainly don't need the A -B -C -D pills.
The people who buy the pills prob-
ably need them least; it is the peo-
ple who can't afford a good diet and
certainly can'tafford expensive Med-
icines wiho suffer from deficiency dis-
eases.
There are, of course, valuable vita-
min pills, capsules or solutions put
out by highly ethical pharmacefftic
houses. designed for prescription by
physicians in the treatment of defici-
ency cases. They never were design-
ed to be, peddled indiscriminrately and
they aren't the brands so alluringly
advertised'.
WINTER FEEDING OF PIGS
Winter feeding of swine presents
several problem's which are not of
the same importance in summer hog
production. First, adequate housing
accommodation is essential in.. order
to grow the pigs quickly and econom-
ically. Second, suitable feed mix-
tures are necessary, and third, par-
ticular care must be taken in feeding
and caring for the pigs. .
The housing accommodation for
winter pigs should provide dry and
reasonably warm sleeping quarters.
Draughts should be avoided and the
bed should be well bedded' with dry
straw. Do not crowd too many pigs
into a small pen, but allow sufficient
pen space and trough space so that
all can have an equal chance.
In the feeding of the pige a suit-
able mixture of grains properly sup-
plemented will go far in keeping the
pigs healthy and thrifty. Provide a
mixture of grains such as oats and
barley, and possibly a mill feed or
whoe t, and suppiem+ent with, a protein
supplement such as skim -milk, butter-
milk or tankage. Include with the
meal mixture at the rate of 1 to 2
pounds per hundred a simple miner-
al mixture such as equal parts of
iodized salt, ground limestone and
bone meal. Roots and good quality
legume hay --alfalfa or clover — are
valuable in small amounts to supply
THE HANDY POURING SPOUT
for the tum poeuxd tin
It's free—write for one NOW
• 'Fits the special top of the 2 ib.
tin of Crown Brand, Lily White
and -Karo syrups.
• Is easily cleaned and can be used
over and over again.
• Pours without a drip.
• Provides means of accurate
measurements.
• 'Makes the 2 lb. tin as eat -anent
table container.
• The protective cap provides a
smeltery cover.
Tell the boys that portraits of famous
hockey stars can still be obtained for
"CROWN BRAND" labels.
CROWN
-(UR-N; SYRUP
no Famous Energy Food
The CANADA S'AROH 00., Limited, Tomato
BRAND
Q J1ib'�?
r,s4w,ry4e��l:�il�
$W�.�r
steel' i
t to ""'
Theze 0,Ce when h le Wit t3 O E;
obz he ter , ineled clear. 5 std t � ,
Com• to 'boas.
it o he U
asts so .
i ` Easy uick r, p
long!.
9 ting A p}ea shovel roe. -
with, O
to to
tbe'cn ht on the
ovel
h leaves %tw Isle Today" s, beSt
of heatig�barga a r
Y� s loca�a
te r_: =: >•� :::: :
... � •��
k, your. dealer about
AS 1\ , the ne atia
xAMCT CO,�TgOL
T7Rk'F and
1-1.01TVVATEREATETwo great money
saving
conveniences. n eniences
Wm. Ament
Ernest L. Box -
SOLD BY.
HAMILTON SY-PRODUCT COKE OVENS. UMITED
HAMILTON. CANADA
N. Cluff & Son
John J. Sclater
succulence and maintain the pigs in
a thrifty condition. These should not
form the main feeds but should be lis -
ed in small amounts as an addition
to a good feed mixture.
Finally, good came is necessary in
the feeding and management of the
pigs in order to keep them in a
healthy vigorous condition. Surely
nutritious feed at a rate that they
can handle it but do not attempt to -
force the pigs.
Hudson's Weather -
Master Fresh Air and
Heat Control avail-
able in all mode&.
NEW HUDSON 112 De Luxe
Touring Sedan—$1060,deliv-
ered in Tilbury, Ont., fully
equipped; including govern-
ment taxes, not including local
taxes, if any.
aai_fz6i e7a7taigezei
HUDSON PRICES START AMONG THE LOWEST and mean what they say
Even in the Hudson 112, these things do NOT cost
extra: Bodies finished in costly hand -rubbed lacquer;
Fenders in body color; 7 color options (including 4
opalescent colors); Handy Shift (at steering wheel);
Auto -Poise Control; Front and rear arm rests; Bump-
ers and bumper guards; Safety glass all around; Spare
wheel, tire, tube; Door -locking package compart-
ment; Front window ventilating wings; Headlight
beam indicator; 2 assist straps and 3 ash trays in sedans; Sun visor; Thermo-
stat; Carry -MI Luggage Compartment, "concealed trunk"; tire removable
without disturbing ordinary load of baggage.
and up for the new 86 H.P. Hudson
112 De Luxe. $1109 and bp for
new Hudson Six; $1222 and upfor
new Hudson Country Club models.
• • •
Prices delivered in Tilbury, Ord.,
fully equipped; including Govern-
ment taxes, not including lata1
taxes, if any. For delivered prices
to your locality see your Hudson
dealer. Attractively low time ppaayy
ment terms, with new Hudsoa
Time Payment Plan.
COOK BROS. Hensal:
au rsr5e�;3',�u1v]�Ca1n: use' ak
• Distributors
PHONE 54, HENSAL.L, 'FOR A DEMONSTRATION
,Il