HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1942-04-03, Page 3ti
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iNFLiiJ►;TIo Y l� klRt
Q,3• --Hew 04.0 4 ab ldl 1' OF MT'
tires?
1I.—'k�as0e 91' ca?r,SinCe" a WeekTrucks, localeV Wert'hauls; at least
twice Weeis:ly. or ,,Preferalriy dally
Trucks, long diaitanoe, high apeed ser
Vice, _, daily and before starting • each
trip.
Q.: Bhotild I increase my inflation
pressure in' order to secure better
;wean?
A. ---Air pressure .should be main-
tained acoordiztg to the tire or car
manzlfacturer's official, recommends
tion for the particular model or- size,
of car, -or truck and tire size. The
importantimportaats thing is to -maintain the
recommended. "'air pressure at all
times.
Q.—What damage will overinflation
bave on my tires:
A.—Overinflation rwill cause tires to
wear in the center of .the tread. This
- will mean_- that suchtires will be
worn through the tread in the center
while there is eti11_ rwbber on either
side. In addition, overinflation in-
creases' the probability of bruising
and cutting by putting both tread and
-carcass underegreater tension.
Q. --(Can 1 get additional service
-from my tires' by reducing the strata
on the cords by reducing inflation
'pressure?
A.—Not under average conditions.
Underinflation results in fast irregu-
lar tread wear due to- the increased.
squirming and scuffling of the tread
-contact area.
Q. -What effect will underinflation
'leave on nzy tire mileage?
A. --A considerable drop in tire•
.mileage can be expected with under-
inflation. If under recommended in-
:. 'dation 30,000 miles were secured on
tires, the following 'mileage might be.
expected for lower than recommend-
ed inflation: -
Per cent. Per centloss- Relative..
"Underihflation in Mileage Mileage
At recommended
inflation 0 30,000
10 5% • ` 28,500
20 16% • 25,200
30 33% 20,100+
40 57% 1.2-,900
50 , 78% 6,600
Q.—If on a long trip in hot weather,
-the inflation pressure increases some-
what over the recommended. pressure,
-shall I let air out until the recom-
mended inflation pressure is reached?
A.—No, . because by so doing, the
amount of flexing will increase, caus-
ing higher tire temperatures. The one
exception to this statement is in ser-
vice subject to frequent, bruises.
ELL.,
INGREDIEN
WITH
NADEIN
-CANADA'
MAKES EVERYTHING
FINE- 'EXTURED,.
DELICIOUS—
COSTS LESS THAN
1 C PER AVERAGE
BAKING
We still have what 'we can. Ort
New Year's: ;tv'Q I ,reit. - to a e'hil..
drep.'e party, and there were great do,
ings• r arrived rather date (t'J ough
cunningly enough in"'tare for tea) to
find games in progress, without about
twenty prettily d'res'sed little girls in
the big room; Our friend the barris
ter had arrived before me, and, could
be dimly seen - behind five or six
maidens who were perched" on his
knee. I am not _,casting aspersions on
the good intentions of little girls, of
course;' but I believe he is a very
fruitful source of ,half-crowns' for
money -boxes. I have seen, before
now, certain sly, transactions of that
nature. A kindly and generous man,
cur barrister.
Then came the tea which, by some
miracle of saving and contriving was
a truly splendid spread. In fact, it
was so 'good that the kids got drown
to it night away, and nobodyesPoke a
word for at least half aft -lour. The
only voices heard were those of the
grown-ups exclaiming greedily, er
gaging: "Please pass 'me/ another of
those." How the little gids managed
to turn cartwheels after all that pass-
es my comprehension. I am quite
sure none of US 'could bave done it
to save our lives! Then there 'were
more games and, as the radio did not
quite meet the case, they sat me down
at the piano for `Musical Chairs,' as-
sisted' .by a man who is clever with
the drums.
' It was an impromptu affair altoge-
ther. Th& drummer and I began to
enjoy •'ourselea• so much that we for-
got all about the 'infants, and got
them running round 'for about a mile
before a managing sort. of woman,
looking starkly horrified, hurried ov-
er and implored . us to stop. So we
came smartly down to earth after
our: 'jolly experiments with 'Colonel
Bogey' and 'Stars and Stripes.' At the
end of the session, when I was com-
pletely exhausted by 'Sir Roger,' and
the drummer's brow was damp, the
smallest girl came forward and pre-
sented me with an improvised bou-
quet of golden chrysanthemums. I
accepted it in a manner which—I' flat-
ter myself—would have done credit
to a Lady Mayoress, and. the party
finished on a note of general satis-
faction. Nobody cried; nobody quar-
relled, and --most remarkable of all,
perhaps—nobody showed -any adverse
symptoms after that gigantic tea. It
was a fine party.
Bad News Not Final
1Vews over the radio is not too good,'
in parts; but we learned long ago,
that .bad" pews is` not final news. Dun-
kirk taught us that. Somebody, some -
;where, every de ay, ,.is etting news
thy£' . °seiiss'f`fik"�f ie d ofevery-
thing; but people still go on. That
oung, airman's widow, living just •up
the road,,,.looks neat and self-possess-
ed, •and, still has •' a smile to greet
Mem* It Is only'- when .one really
Maaks;,into B er,.. eyeri . But she is
ki"ng a go,:,• of it, -doing her war-
work all day and not being a` trouble
to anybody- In fact, you have to be
rather cute at reading behind .folks'
eisartsr see anything at all. I guess,
there are.,,plentyl•more like her,
I have noticed one queer thing:
the worse things seem at the mom-
ent, the more we laugh at our com-
ediana-and the better the comedians
•become. A good show.• over the. radio
is innmenseiy popular, and there is no
humbug about the roars one., hears.
They work hard, those amazing 'Wo-
men and men, and if laughter is what
they want they must feel pretty satis-
fied.
One turns haturaily towards non-
sense, nowadays, and it feels. like a
reversion to sanity. After a good -
laugh one's sense of proportion is
quite definitely restored. .Those of
us who were 'brought up in •a circle
Where laughter is suspect and„•,non-
sense a waste of time (and I have to
count myself among those) realize,
,years after, that though life was ter-
ribly earnest, during those days, it
r was far from real. •
. in Their Proper Places
It is only when one gets right away
- from too .much seriousness, that liv-
ing becomes an actual things and the
:bogeys_ -drop back - into their proper
places. The most serilzlis people one
nate .%'unrest ... ,
ter are ... eud�denlY seen in
the light of richer experience, an, the
siliieat! They.. had, po little ' contact
rth real life that they saw only one
bide of it—the gloomy and. transient
side. Troubles, who one comes ` to
drr"his f ane and tight
Results are
always SURF:—
An
URF:An d rti �ht: wrapper
guards each -take -'
And keeps`i - ,
fresh and
4-
thi4 cif it, are ►dsain thl a fOr
one aebe there ,Are' a 3404000 'ot,gree'
able experielaees; if cue aoelte far
brain. r often: think that, whomAll
This is over and don() wig), ,mong
the nacres of our berme, and, great
Men there will be the names of those
bard -working Soule, who keep our spir-
its up for us.
An •old friend of raine—an actor I
have lost sight of for the past six-
teen years( or so ---is now playing in
an amusing series on the radio; and
the other day I "dropped) him a line,
care of the B.B.C. He replied - at once,
evidently pleased to beard' from me,
but inclined to bemoan the fact that,
after twenty years, of playing roman
tic heroes, he ' has now; 'corks dawn.
to farce.' I soon sent off an answer
to that! I told !him that he was prov-
ing himself a first-rate comedian and,
thanked him for many a wholesome
chuekle so 1 , . hope: lie . feels better
about it. There are plenty' of dash-
ing, romantic heroes, in real life now-
adays, praise ate! So maybe we can
afford that particular switch -over.
After all, when you come to think of
it, we're fighting"—dor one reason—so
that the kids of today and :tomorrow,
shall be able to laugh as they please,
and not be pushed into gaol for pok-
ing well-deserved fun at soMe over-
bearing pompous booby • in high of-,
See.
The Sausage Joke
• Our popular stock joke of the mom-
ent is The Sausage. I really do not
•wonder. I should not mind so much
if this extraordinary production would
only call itself something --else; for a
sausage it certainly is not.I do not
mean that it doesn't taste good. The
truth is that it doesn't taste at all,
by some 'miracle. But since it is sol-
id substance, and not just air, one
must put down this entire absence of
flavour to the makers' ingenuity, I
gather. At one 'time it smacked
strongly of cinnamon, lkut this pecu-
liarity has now •ceased. It •hs all, the
stolid nothingness of one's first meal
after a major operation, though it
still looks very nice in the pan.
I- think I shall suggest to the Min-
istry that sausages should be served
up in the pan,' but not eaten. Rather
ons the lines of the paper -machine
fruit sometimes ;used as a table dec-
oration. But perhaps the (Ministry has
already issued the suggestion, and I
have been doing all the wrong things
in attempting to make .a meal of this
stage property. Y think that MUST
be the answers on second thought. I
really must read the papers more reg-
ularly.
The 'points' food (American canned
goods) •however, is very good. I ,have
tiearfl no-cemplyainh,seabouk it --end no
jokes. So perhaps it is as well to
leave us our rollicking Sausage. Yes-
terday a talker on the radio was tell-
ing us of the time when be had to
proeure a load of sausage skins and
get them stuffed with sawdust for use
ire a film: the idea being that the
heat of the are lamps would cause
genuine meat to turn. An enlighten-
ing thought came to me In the night:
is It possible that these articles by
some. Odd''fhischanee, have now found
,their way into tlie'°'mar.ket? It sounds
as good an explanation 'as any.
CHNX — WINGHAM
920' Kcs. 326 'Metres
WEEKLY PROORAM 14IGHLIGHTS
Friday, April 3-9.15 a.m., Anne
Shelton, songs; 12.45 p.m., Circle Bell
Ranch; 6, George Wade's Cornhiisk-
ers; 9.30, Jean, Harold and Scotty. •
(Saturday, April 4-9.30 a.m., Kid-
dies' Studio Party;: 6.45 p.m., Your
Evening News; 7.45, Songs of the
Pra.irie;- 8, CKNX Barn Dance.
'Sunday, April 5-10.30 a.m., Music
Box; 4.15 p.m., OKNX Program. Gos-
sip; 5:30, Lipton Tea Musicale.
Monday, April 6-9.15 a.ni., Sweet-
hearts; " 12 • noon, "Farm • & Home
Hour"; 4.30 p.m., Laura. at the Key-
board; 5.45', Mart Kenny Orchestra.
Tuesday, April 7-10.10 a.m., Char-
lie Kunz, piano; 4.30 p.m., Organ Mel-
odies 6.30, . Hyde Tractor. Program;
8.45, "Salute to Empire."
Wednesday, April 8-8.30 a.m., Stu-
dio - ouniiutp; 1.15” "pip., Joli.n Har-
court:.
ar-
court 4.30, "At HonesWiththe' Lad -
lea"; 9.15, Barney- droves, ..gongs.
Thursday, April 9--8,45 a.m.l Hymn
Time; 4 p.m., Songs of the -West; 8,
Wayne King Orchestra; 9.30, Dance
Time:
Baked Chicken
1, chicken -5 to 6 lbs.
Milk
Flour or fine Crumbs
za cup butter ot other fat
In cup hot water •
Salt and pepper.
Cut breast, thighs and legs of chick-
en in pieces:for serving. 'Dip each
piece in milk and seasoned flour or
crumbs. Fry in 'butter in skillet until
nicely browned. Arrange chicken
covered casserole or baking-. dist.Pour hot water and fat over chicken
and bake in moderate oven, 325 deg.
F, for about 11/2 hours or until chick-
en is tender. -
Note: Viz. Ib. mushrooms fried in
the butter, before browning _.chicken
may be put on chicken before baffling.
The cliicire'n • inay lie „aerated on top-
or the stove over a low heat, In a pint
with tight fitting cover. .Allow same
Mme as" for Baked l irskere
>r:
43 'Weekly. .''FieVif w o , bren le nments
• On tbo Horne, F,rpn ;
1. in the menace q;`Qjtta spring' ofr
fenaives, Canada xuebliaes her man,-
power
an;power for maxjmanteeffort in- war. In
the House of Coznnsons. tMa7rcb ,24)
•Prime Minister Maekenz1e King sub-
mitted comprehensir,e agbeme of Na-
tional, Selective Service,
Among other provisions, scheme
Piens to bring an increasing 'number
of women, into war inditritry; it raises
the age for compulsory;: mrilitary train-
ing from 21-24 to 22.30.wlth plans to
select trainees. byr lot an:d extend the
call to non -British citizens; it stabil-
izes employment in agriculture and
exempts farmers, farmers'_ sons and
agricultural laborers frpant compulsory
military training unless'. established
that they are not -essential to farm.
production; it estaabil'sllee a series of
restrictedeoccupa%.ional in which fit
male pereens of military age, except
within certain specified limits, are not
to be employed. •
. Directorate ' of uatioziol' selective
service created under Labor Minister
Mitchell. ''Director; E.;M Little, pre-
sent director. of Wartime Bureau of
Technical Personnel. Appeal boards
and voluntary adiasory committees to,
be created` s '
2. In further Commons statement
(March 25) the Prune Minister an-
nounced:, formation of two new army
divisions—the 7th and, 8th -was mobile
reserve for coastal defene"e; nearly a
dozen new battalions havebeen mob-
ilized since outbreak' of war with Ja-
pan; marked increase planned in com-
bat squadrons ,•for reconnaissance, an-
ti-submarine, striking. -and lighter op-
eratlohs of the ItC-A..F.; baste coas-
tal defences either completed or in
process of completion. Farther decid-
ed in consultation' with .$ritis. h auth-
orities, that Canada should not, at
this time, attempt to send an expedi-
tionary force to Australia.'
3.. Bill to provide $1,000,+000,000 gift
in .foodstuffs and war inaterial to
Great Britain passes Howse, of Com-
mpns. .
4. Announced that financial assist -
epee will be provided by armed ser-
vices for_ medical students who plan.
to enlist when their courses are com-
plete.
5. Army technical development
board created' to direct and pursue re-
search and experiment on the im-
provement of weapons of war. Vic-
tor Sifton, master -general Of ordnance,
chairman. •
6_ Wartime Prices Board:
(a) Reduction in prices charged by
canners for some 35 kinds of domes-
tic canned fruits and vegetables ef=
fective April 1.
„ (b) Maple syrup may:snot be sold
at a bpz'ice' higher than t a't 'charged
for same grade and quantity in cor-
responding period a year ago.
(c) Changes ordered in women's
and children's wear to conserve ma-
terials. Application of order to spring
and sumnser style goods starts June 1.
(d) Retail stores entitled to buy
meat and meat products obtained
from' cattle or hogs at a cost not
greater than highest prices paid by
that -store to same packer or whole-
saler during basic period September
15 to•,October 11 last
(e) i Following made eligible for im-
port subsidy: Eari1fen*are 'tile; earth-
enware and other sanitary' ware; lea-
ther, luggage, purses, handbags, bill-
folds, pocketbooks and eases; florists
and' nursery stocks; bicycles, carpets
and. rugs,
(f). Newspapers, magazines or per-
iodicals may not be sold at price
higher than that charged for sante
publication during ba.sie period, Sept.
15 -Oct. 11, 1941. Ruling does not ap-
ply to. foreign publications Where, sub-'
scriber sends- his subscription direct
to ,publisher. •
-
• • 7. Munitions and Supply-.;._ '
(a) Value of construction contracts
awarded on behalf of armed services
now exceeds. $200,000,000.
(by Some 2 85 Canadian machine
shops engaged in manufacturing 25,,-
O00, types of gauges required in Can-
ada for production of munitions used
in mechanized warfare. -,Sine war be:
gan, orders placed for 155,000 gauges
valued at over $4,500,000. •
(c) Because the Government has
asked -the lumber industry to inerease
its outaiiit by 40 per cent;, there will
be no limit, according. to present ex-
pectation, on the -amount -of--gasoline
supplied for actual needs of timber
tractors and trucks.
(d) Forty -miles -an -hour . speed ',limit
to be general throughout Canada. Pur=
pose: to eonserve gasoline and tires.
(e): Effective March • 16, brushes
made in Canada must contain 25 to
50 per- .cent of " horsebair. Purpose:
To niake,more,effective use of avail-
able supplies Of pig bristles; ;'
(1) Plastic Advisory Committee ap-
pointed to co-operate witth'� bntroller
of Chemicals in regard to 9l.l matters
concerning 'synthetic resins, varnish-
es, moulding compositions and other
plastics.
(g)' 'Dentists will not be given any
preference under gasoline rationing
plan unless they are doing hospital
work and can show proof of need. • '
('b)' New order planes use' 61 re-
cle im rubber on much ;the same dras-
tically curtailed basis as erude rub -
-ber.
(i) Deliveries of bread andakery
products to householders, retailers,
hotels, restaurants and. canteens lim-
ited to one a • day.
"Are blaolt cats really Jacky?"
"Wall, they're not so/liable to get
hit dal s; darir night."
U,%G +4CuiBb2liu�r.
,44040in ?;JWek t, j;. a)t�4
T1�e, WOVI e' *a lapis.bee er'
'IWoodgri w. M lior, a sl%ht, Oft -04M'
Sciholariy aPl?eai ag a iiaea ;p iCo1•t",.
Cahforxzia. In 1944 -by landing his.
colonies, on truckslike a travelling(
circus and migrating from the ,Mexi-
cana border .in. January .to the Cana-
diau 'border in September, as the ad-
vancing season brought flowers into
bloom,lliiller gleaned 1,000,000 pounds
of honey and 50,000 pounds of wax. newly • hatched larvae Iu the queen
But not all from the same bees; his cells: and feed the embryos on
"royal -
bees gather nectar so frantically that jelly," from
Jel y a milky -white secretion fro
they wear their. wings ,.to tatters in glands :in the heads of the workers,
six weeks. New .generations born en instead, of the customary: "bee=bread,"
route replace the veterans. a Mixture of pollen and honey that ,is
Miller uses special motor trucks, fed to. future workers. In 16 days, in
each carrying 400 hives of bees. stead of the 21 days required for
These migratory, apiaries ,pause at smaller • worker bees, the young
P. of otherwise useless land
small lots queens emerge. , ..
that he owns or leases in six western ' The queen raiser gently cages, each
states. new queen in a tiny wooden box
Woodrow, Rae Earl and Dell Mil- screened en one side and haneeethe
ler, brothers, control about 26,0.00 col- cage in a queenless hive. Thin he,
onies,e a growth from seven hives of does promptly, because otherwise the
bees that Nephi Miller; their Mormon; :first queen would sting to death all
father, got in a swap for a few' sacks others as they emerge. ,She is re -
of oats in, 189+4. leased only wizen• the bees gnaw their
• In midwinter of 1907, while his own way through a ibarrier of soft sugar
bees,. now increased to many colonies, candy blocking her exit. This 'two or
were hibernating' in Utah, Nephi Mil-'three-day"de';ay+ saves •the queen's life
ler visited southern California, where —it allows .'nine for her odor and that
he found bees busily gathering nec- of the colony to blend—fon bees kill
tar. That spring Miller'sbought 390' all whose odor is foreign. Once se -
hives of California bees and rode back eepted, the queen, soon embarks on
to Utah with them in a box car, a her nuptial flight, mating in mid-air
nightmare trip. When the train was with the strongest flying drone in the
delayed on burning desert sidings, the group that follows her. It is a sul-
wax in the combs melted. Train
crews, afraid of the bees, refused to
help him. The $440 freight bili was
almost as much as the bees were
worth in the sorry condition in which
they arrived. Once in Miller's Utah
apiaries; however, they, gleaned a
bumper second harvest of honey.
Every winter Miller shipped •bees' to
California to 'U ork while his Utah
neighbors' bees slept. Late each
spring he shipped them back again,
double in numbers. He rode with his
bees in antiquated box cars in which
he chopped holes for ventilation, in
cattle cars, and on flat ears, trying
various schemes to keep the fretful
hives cool crossing the desert. Fin-
ally, 'in 1919, he turned to motor
trucks. By this means bees that gath-
ered honey one day from southern
California sage contentedly worked
Utah alfalfa the next. After several
Weeks there, -hey moved on to Ne-
braska, Iowa an Minnesota.
When Nephi Miller died in 1938,
Woodrow carried on the main busi-
ness, bis brothers having established
apiaries of their own. He kept -10,000
hives on a mobile basis, turned an-
other 10,000 colonies over to veteran
beemen on shares. Woodrow Miller
is the honey marketer for the whole
group and by fa,r the largest, honey
producer in the world. Most of the
honey is chipped for use in baking,
candy and . chocolate -making; for mar-
malades, pharmaceuticals( fountain
syrups and tobacco curing. In a sin-
gle deal recently, Woodrow shipped
20 carloads to market, a trainload ot
honey, gathered by winged workers
who rarely glean more than a. quarter
teaspoonful in an entire lifetime.
Normally bees produce only one
pound of wax to 60 of honey. Wax-
makiiig is the drudgery •work in the
beehive. Young bees, too immature
to fiy, gorge themselves on honey,
then hang iiiactive in chains while
spaniel glands in their abdomens•
make liquid wax. .A pound of wax
results, from each 12 to 15 pounds of
honey they consume. .Prior to the
war, most beemen, to save bee-houre.
for nectar gathering, conserved as
ranch wax as possible' instead of sell-
ing it. They whirled the honey out
of the frames in centrifugal separa-
tors, which left the wax combs :un-
damaged for return.to the hives. Now
the "wax brings income as a by-pro-
duct, since the navy needs it for wa-
terproof coatings on shells, guns and
aircraft.
Bees have been known to fly as
far as ten miles distant for nectar,
but five miles is the usual limit. Mil-
ler contends that if they fiy more
than two miles they waste timeand
wings. So he plants his hives in the
middle of a blossoming alfalfa, clov-
er, orange or sage belt, placing them,
if possible, so that the bees have a
downhill glide wiUh their cargo. The
bees' wings then last six to eight
days longer; with that much more pro-
duction. When no longer able to
work, the eiders are literally taken
for a ride by vigorous young bees
and dropped too far from the hive to
get back.
Normally, when big honey dew -
ends, the colony curtails its . nuwbera
to conserve food and the queen tap-
ers off her egg laying until she ceas-
es for the season. As' the older work-
ers die or are driven out, the colony
strength drops from 80,000 to 10,000
or less.
The Millers trick the bees into con-
tinuing their increase by dividing each
strong colony into two nuclei before
the peak of the nectar flow •passes.
They move half of the bed's, ,eggs,
embryos and; honey in each give to a
new hive. The extra : spacd :in both
hives is then filled with new frames,
wax foundations upon which the bees
store their honey. This practice heads
off swarming, too, • because bees•
swarm only when they are so num-
erous they crowd their hives.
In 'dividing a colony artificially, a
new queen has to be supplied to
mother the new nucleus. Every year
Woodrow Miller raises 10,000 queens.
Several artificially made wax queen
telltr; aboral' ti,� slue iif. bb11i tiles ate
attached to` a" single frame of bees'
whose queenhas been removed. lit
stineti el *
the lbeeif , nlaee.. eggs' or.
,r
niI
Gide marriage for him, because the
drone ,invariably dies in a few min-
utes. His widow returns to the hive
to -begin her egg laying, her sole func-
tion in life..`
After the new, half-filled hives are
placed in the alfalfa fields of Utah in
early summer, the bees surge forth
in an amazing rebirth of the colony.
This is repeated in Nebraska, Iowa
and Minnesota, before the last nec-
tar flow in the sweet clover fields
end's -in September, Then the hives
are brought to Delta, Utah, to hiber-
nate, not for the six months a colony
normally rests but only until the first
of January. After that dormant per-
iod, essential in the colony cycle, the
bees are taken aback to California and
the migratory hunt for honey starts
all over again. In a good year a well-
managed colony of migratory bees
yl�Xd� 'the •lie
ey ^#ire ithT,(eS . f
tiMlard" coistrtzes
'There were no native
this continent when Cobiut lin„
erect :.ilinerica
wasps• and hornets, 'rocly'-,'Oilcb1
ne:eci'beeaseeseOltra.are Mo,
opeszi str ifrs Poy I+4.1b ne
trees; -a "jot ane ,:'3z;andled:e
bees, their ranks now sadlyil w
ed by crop insecticides wkclt hash:
tunately wipe out good insects,
the bad. Along Miller's ?rbutes •;'U
are hundreds of eirehardiets ~who WotZlr.,
gladly pay him to let his= bees w,orle f'
a fortnight or so among their aI►pes,
pears, plums, cherries oy-.other fruits
—the crops- of =which- -are doubledi- oft
trebled' by adequate pollinating Theses
extra dollars tempt -some +beekeeper%
even though orchards yield mute more
pollen than honey, but not Woodrow
Miller. His sole interest is in holding
his title as No. 1 American honey
gleazier in a harvest which in • 1941
totalled 180,000,009, pounds. •
Vara
Roast
is
r;.
Roast Chickean -
Buy Grade A or B chicken. Clean.
Sprinkle inside of chicken 'vvitii salt
and fill loosely witch dressing. Truss
bird and place in uncovered roasting
pan, breast side down- Roast in mod-
erately slow oven 300 "to 325 deg. F.
allowing 30 minutes per pound dress-
ed weight. Baste occasionally with
fat during roasting. Turn bird on
back to brown uniformly. _'during last ..•
hour of roasting.
Note: Dressed weight is weight be-
fore chicken is drawn and inci'tuless
head and feet. Drawn weight is about
onesfiftli less than dressed weight`
When a man injures me I strive to
lift up my (soul so high that tag of-
fence .cannot reach me.e -Descartes,
anger! Liver'
i-�ublds. Serious
Are you nervous and irritable—can't
sleeper eat—tired out alt the time? if
you're lace that,a faulty liver is poison-
ing your whole system! L,estins•ill
health. may be the cost!
• Ydur liver is the largest organ in 'onr body
and most important to your health. It supplies
.ner ' to muscles, tissues and glands. ft
unhealthy, your body lacks this energy and
becomes: enfeebled—youthful vim disappears. •
Again your liver pours out bile to digest food,
get rid Ovulate aadailow proper nourishment
to reach your blood. Whey -your liver gets
out of order proper digestion and nourishment
atop—you're poisoned with'the waste that
decomposes an your intestines. Nervous •
troubles and rheumatic pains arise from this
poison. you become constipated, stomach and
kidneys. can't work properly. The whole
system is affected and you feel "rotten," head-
achy! backachy, dizzy, tired out -4--a ready prey
for sickness and. disease.
Thousands of people are never sick, and bave
won prompt relief from these miseries with
"Improved Fruit-a.tives Liver Tablets." The
liver is toned up,the other organs function
normally and lasting good health results.
Today "improved 'Fruit-a-tives" are Canada's
largest
largest selling liver tablets. They must be good!
Try tbem yourself NOW. Let "Frust-a-uves"
put you back on the road to lasting health—
feel like a new person. 25e, 50e.
"Run Down For Yours, Hes tuned
IIeatfWi
1 was badly nut
down and U db1
nsvolls.Mydlgi s
n
tion wqe poe2:
rand
1 'woe abvti�i e.n-
etipated.. 1Wtult-
a-tf•esI ea's
aisle *n 'better
and there"5.
tmi welt
new pep and energy..After yawn
of bad health ••Frutr•a-tivee
made' me teale.
Mr. Roy Dagneafints, Ghat'h.e ,O11/f. .-
"Long Years of Saiiering, Now Fall
' . el Uhl
lontime i
suForfferea d frequegmrt
headaches and
backachea.icouId
find no relief until
I triedFruit-a-
uves". The pains
came Zeasweeks, ftre-
geentiy pain hn a.
stoppedentirely. Fruit -a -dyes•
realty made me feel like a new
woman.
Mrs. Schwartz, Galt, Ont.
•
I'LL BE BACK
FOR MORE?
TIS just surprising, how"" many
poultry raisers say that to us!
Om second thought, maybe not so
surprising, either. It ,just stands to
reason . . . •-
It stands to reason that when a
'Witchery organization like Dray's
really bears down, year after year,
on the one job of. producing the
dst chicks it knows how • .
,idiee that job the year round .. .
;,''cps on plugging ,away at breed-
;,ilig, selecting, blood -testing, check -
iii -double-check — well, it ought
nice` turn out ,mighty good chicks.
7'
Day -Old Chicks*
Sexed and Non -Sexed
Started Chicks
Sexed and Nan -Sexed
.Started Capons
Turkey Points
Ask Us !
Read What These People Say
Mrs. Wes Campbell,•. Nestletori,.
Ont.—"Best chicks I have' had'
in years. Bray's for me frim
now on!"
Clare Haslam, Emerald,
"For '6 yearS 1 bave been rais-
¶ Bray Xtra -Profit Chicks.
Have always found them the
best.. obtainable."
Mrs. Wesley Nichol, Lennoxville,
P.Q. ,.Bought ido fiaom you
I .st year, and made money, so
thought e would take an extra
50 this year." -
ert McIntyre, Wardsviile, .Qnt...
"Best-chi6lts I ever had. En-' •
close order for 400."
J. P. •Derkson, Plum Coulee, Man.
--"From the first day ;these
hires have done splendidly .
envied by all my fridnds."
Isn't that the kind of birds you want?
Better buy Bray, this year. And better
see about it right now, to bake sure Of
getting what you want whets you want it.
•
Bray Chick Hatchery
ISAAC HUISDN - 't• Seat6 1
i. - ',iS'rA♦PLE'rON
1i17ss. KE1 LAK
ul,
.44
{7s
•
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