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The Huron Expositor, 1930-11-07, Page 6r,?s +1..^o- y, ,! ! a ' f } i ]y le Y'� ec , I 11.,�$(j L?if �,�p y 4 �/,,�•/��1. .,A" �"q•�,,.�' .. .�ypap+���7r, y■ •f _ ',,�yi7�,��{'QjMp � n J4 S eVo-, f mV `A� NI �i ,.•���t,- , carry .11 bu, wm. Jarrott, of Brigdcu, wrote us a year ago stating that bis pointy had '. IisgaQte bade ifitected, tuiti, worms. Ve o advised h m to use 2 lbs. of Ro)ml Purplet " �9p1py $�ecilic in each 100' lies. of Laying lvinsh for ttivo wracks and coil...iled • fthrritighout the Wfµter with 1 alt. After using it #or three weeks ho wrote us atati-rg ;taitik iµ filtree day~ ]te noticed blood etleeks in tele droppings. cad that his egg pro- 'li LL duction had OoaC up 100%'0. 'leering the Fall, wintry rued spring months he pur- cbµoed 600 lbs of this Poultry Specific We received a letter from him the latter I y IV . putt of Aµgust, stating that he was am&zed at the results ha obtained, that his poultry vvgte etrtilety Free from worms, and that during. August of this year his production Wµtl 100%OL larger thea last year. " It will pay every poultryman, no Matter what feed he is using, or if he mixes his qwn;, to add one pound of Royal .Purple Poultry Specific to each hundred pounds of feed during the whole season the poultry aro shut In. While this great tonic de= obwe the wo=o, it at the same time team up the birds, keeping their digestive organs active the same as if they were on range, compd ling them to take from 15"/,r - to 20,70 more good from the feed they eat This is naturally reflected in increased egg Production, Worms in poultry is often mistaken for other disease& The birds become very thin and show symptoms of diarrhoea. When badly infested they will die. Put up in 30e. and 60c. packages, $1.75 and $6.00 tins, also 100 -ib. air -tight bags—$14.00. For sale by 4,6010 , dealers in Canada. If your dealer cannot supply 1,-;,--. f write direct- i s ®yl � L a C ` i, _ Purple Laying Ikea 1 with OY without t! e We can supply you with Royal P Y g I� Poultry Specific mixed in. Mr. T. L. mathcson, Innerkip, Ontario, tells us that ire fed Royal Purple Laying ideal to e*;i pu!lets last year with the Royal Purple Poultry Specific and got an average of i4' c produt'tion from the meddle of Vcccm- her until the middle of March. He also states that he has reccivgd the largest p:o- duction of eggs he has ever had during the twelve months he has been u5in-c r0l'al Purple Laying Meal, and that it keeps his poultry healthy during the entire season. If your dealer cannot supply you we v:::l bt pleased to quote you a price, freikht oyour station. paid to your We are sc:e VIILITE(f®1X@xly klLiliTS VEt[lBtG) dist.il:a:urs for this wonderful wire -fined product 1.r, -.d for windiz-vs in poultry houses, bLrns, sun -rooms, etc It lets tl:rouh the uitra-violet, growth rays frum the sun taut will not pass through ordinary glass. Write rur cicacriptive circular. I F We'rill be very pleased to send you one. of our 32•page bocas %F ze s -a , "'n the common dl a ., with illustrations in colour, des:nrn g of Stock and Poultry with particulars of the Royal Purl:le R Ev ri re-nedies for each, sud details of all the different lines of f ted jjj tee rlant'facttLrc. It deals with 186 subjects of vi: a,iatertst to every farmer and poultryman.: e :i THE W. A. JENKINS MFl.:. CO. LTD., LONDON, ONT. 10, 1I '-YEWS AND INFORMATION FOR ogist, which will be presented at the THE BUSY FARMER annual convention of the Entomologi- . cal Society of Ontario at Ottawa on Agricultural Education. 'November 6th, 7th and 8th. Essex That the Ridgetown Agricultural and Kent Counties show thirty psi Vocational School has been successful cent- reduction. On the other hand in. its attempt to strengthen relations, some counties in Eastern Ontario, between agriculture and edilcatdon i particularly Prince Edward County; was the statement of Acting Premier Ishow an increase in infestation. i Henry at the recent opening of the pall Building new $95,000 wing. Ridgetown was Operations. Building operations oil the farm 'lost to a distinguished, gathering for the occasion., including t1he Acting during the late fall are confined prin- hemier, Hon. Thomas L. Kennedy i, Pally to hog houses, poultry houses, Xnister of Agriculture Dr. G. I, implement shed's and other small Christie, president of 0. �A. C.; Dr. F. buildings. Those that have concrete W. Merchant, Chief Direciar of Edu-:foundations or floors can be erected cation, and F. S. Rutherford, Acting I at any time if the concrete is laid Director of Technical Education. In! before frost. These buildings are in - 'lis address, 1116n. Ma. Kennedy stated' expensive, especially if the owner i; that, the development of such schools handy with tools. Lumber dealers in the. -.;province depends on the suc- ,have plans and can supply bills of cess of the ffUdgetown institution, It materials and estimates of cost, sc was his hope to see similar schools that the owner will know pretty ac - dotted over Ontario. curate-ly what his expenditure will be. Choosing a site for 'a hog house or a Plowing Match Winners. H'.,a-.;: house requires care. A high, bach, R. R. 7, tVodd- f well drained spot is best, while the W. O. Grenze �toek, is the Bach,plowichampion of buildings should extend east an••i west Ontario. He won that title on the and face south. Convenience in car - last day of the international plowing ing for the hogs and poultry also match near Stratford, when he took should be considered. away first honors in the jointers ire sod, orcn. This is the second time Heavy Chestnut Croy. The chestnut crop he has won the title, having first cap- been amany districts l tured it .in 1927. In taking first ,has xtcepatdonaliy 1!13avy this 3wlace this year, .he. defeated a classy year with the market very poor. Many rural stores have found themselves field, inzlwding John R. Hargreaves, I with large quantities an hand and no c,f Beachvillc, who won the honor in buyers. In Norfolk Gounty one of the last two years. The intercounty the largest producers of chestnuts, champ:.onship this year was won by the buying price opened, at 25 cents York, with Brant second. There were 14 entrants in this competition and I 1 pound and, dropped as low as the battle was keen from start to four cents per pound' in some places. finish. The trophies were presented Th city markets, which in other yearF at a largely -attended banquet in have taken copious quantities o_ Stratford the final night of the match,, chestnuts. have not been buying heav- at which the chief speakers were the ily this year, although.the demand has Hon, Robert Weir, federal minister picked up in recent days, of agriculture, and Hon. Thomas L. $500 For Best Slogan. Kennedy, provincial minister of agri- The World's Grain Show slogan con- cuI'ture. test is now in full swing. What is a Commercial fruit production last slogan? The dictionary tellas us that year in Canada had a value of $19,-1 It is a Gaelic word, the war cry or the 501,240, of which Ontario accounteI gathering cry of 'the old ',Highland for $8656,097. fans. In our day, however, it has ! 'I come to mean a sort pf motto. "Strike O.A.C. Team's Good Showing. while the iron is hot" gar "Small pro- Com�peting against dairy cattle fits and quick returns are both At judging teams from practically &"very any rt of �preseanagy slogans. At agricultural college in the United any rate, the management of the ;.States, students representing the 0. World's Grain Exhibition $ and Con - A. C. ranked 11th in the international the tae offers a prize st $n. cash for 4dairy show in St. Louis, Mo. Harold the best slogan h suggestion. The yds 'Gable, of Woodstock, attained the I para shall not be more than ten wards i;t�gth. There is no entry fee for 7nighest standing in Holstein judging t e contest and it is open to the world. and he wan a $600 scholarship for his Not more than three suggestions are effort. This is the first time the prizil to be submi'ttcd• by any one person ever came to 0. A. C. Other mem- and these must be written or typed hers of the team were: 'Hilton Hart- plainly on one side of the paper, con - ley and E. A. Innep; of Woodstock, bainine the contestant's name and ad - and Gordon Engle,/of Elmwood. dress, and 1nuoh reach the office on cr before January 31, 1931. Aidress Drought Hits Corn -Borer. . , • - Slogan Contest, Wor'ld's Grain F,xhibi- The prolonged dry spt•11 during the I tion and Conference, Imperial Bank -past summer came to the aid of sci- Chambers, Regina, Canada. +e nce in the battle against the Eur- opean cern-borer, with a resultant 25 m per cent, decrease in stock infesta- TRAFFIC NOISES BECOME A Vo -In in Ontario as a whole. This in- formation is contained in the repot : MENACE of G. N. Stirrett• Dominion Entomol- For quite a few years now their silence has been one of the most ap- . . ROUP Common, Contagious, Fatal Poultry Dieedso. Symptoms:—Erol ameiliz�g dhwharge at mouth atld nostrila swollen head. closer) ape, had breBard tta'e t ,pg. choker spots. `Lreatmeric-` Jed PrattsRoupTablets according to ctions. r TABLETS .. THE FLOCK a . _ ,1 ` old by Al'1•'Drealers, WrtAiowaPrvnutorttdry w,' x? . p, ,,, , • ILatYt )"h 3::+ %ci, Yii"gtiati3i Ifs). ;kAl' 2.:d '.,, s J J A '� 6o- .n F+T , , fd.., b w ntb ''',,,nnn W %A7�.H �'1Qi; # n5 Nva Mrti .e r .1 t� � �; l lNt ,rntir"il1f,,. , , , . pealing features of automobiles. It is that. fact which makes all the more interesting the recent statement of a p: r'-ninent motor vehicle commissioner not among the noisiest aspects of modern metropolitan life one must ra-:c traffic at the top or..close to it. Wb.?n one considers cars of all kinds in the aggregate he must concc:0 hat Ch nre ii:isy. One car at a :afli'c tight will get away with silky :'mo^.1riees. It will not be annoying. One h-,indred cars Icavdng the same traffic 1r ht with a roe r x of e i ills a g I -lashu of u.s th_ lar o dozen g , b e f a en 11 'r1: eke squealing of a brake, when one dn' er tries to avoid ramming the slcwer machine in front of him, the !hri'1 exhaust notr of a couple of bus- s, elle clank of a heavy metal-hodied ::;rm-rcial vehicle--'weRl that i- zits a different aspect of silence as ,'A'lt:ire of the motor car. T -he' scene really. is one to watch and to hear If the 'itedividual motor- ist were to watch and listen to it with the Id" a lepTulug What he might do to contribute to a ingre• silent t'raf� fie it .might The groilble. As one authorlty'ou the subject sees it the Individual might learn: - The,needless use of the horn is one of the worst traffic nui,santes. That there is a tremendous volume of gear grating that might be avoid- ed. That squealing brakes are one of the most ear-splitting of traffic nodses and that they are by no means nec- essary. ec- essar . Broadly, that while there are some noises that may be legislated out of traffic there are others that can. be eliminated only by educating the in- dividual motorist. IRRITABLE DRIVER IS TRAFFIC MENACE No one who Poses his temper or be- comes irritable in traffic can justify his claim to being a good' driver. That point is made by one of the country's foremost motor vehicle com- missioners, an official who is . as in- terested in the psychological aspects of traffic as he is in its mechanics. The point he raises is one that strikes many as being worthy of serious con- sideration on the part of the individ- ual -who operates a motor car. There is little doubt that modern tr raffle is 'peculiarly designed to test the temper of every individual in it, It is congested. It often is slower than seems tolerable. It is instable in rhat while certain forms of conduct and action are specified for it, there are constant departures from them. It requdres •mental effort when one is not disposed toward great mental effort. But the greater the test the more essential that the individual be cap- able of meeting it. That is the view the motor vehicle commissioner quot- ed above takes of the matter, and there are a large number, equally qualified. who agree with 'him. Broadly, it would seem that the driver who loses his temper has nc more chance of developing real skil': in operating his car than the pugilisl who loses .his temper and fouls hie opponent has of winning a champion. ship. KEEPINGTOGETHER Jim was on the road most of the week and his constant moving made correspondence difficult. But he. anc his fiancee saw the way out—callins each other regularly by Long Dis• Lance. Now they never feel far awa3 from each other. GERMANY MAKING STRONGER BID I''OR TOURIST TRAFFIC At the height of the holiday season Germany is taking the statistical bal ance of her tourist traffic and making resolutions for the future based or her experience up to date. One of the most fear -reaching of the new id' eas is the general adoption of the Latin for the Gothic script, which it so typical of the country and such e handicap to the beginner in German What reformers of the scholastic sys' tem have failed to accomplish thosr responsible 'for the travel and trade statistics are likely to, do within relatively short period of time write: a touring correspondent of the Lon. Jon Observer. It is claimed that nearly every for, aig-ner can understand such simple an( frequently recurring words as "ver'bo- ten," that names on trams and buses and streets are read with compara• Live ease, but that descriptions of goods in shop windows, advertise- ments of entertainments, bills of fare programs and the like cause difficul• ties. And these difficulties often pre- vent money being spent which wauh� benefit the German community. This has penetrated to the Gelman con- sciousness this year, with the resuit that any body who has hopes of at- tracting tourist custom is thinking of printing in Latin letters. Thus the general movement is likely to be set rolling. The German school child spends six months of its first year mastering the Gothic letter t• s and lien has to 'v c much time to the Latin. The benefit of this change has been pointed out for years by reformers, but their ef- forts have never met with such a quick response as now when the com- mercial standpoint comes in. Care has been devoted to other psy- chological aspects of the case. The first six months of the year have brought only 9,550 English as against 116,566 Americans to Berlin, itut the wants and habits of the English are sece•i;ving as much attention at head- marters. What the Englishman ani 'his wife wants to see in Berlin more than anything else, it appears, are the great bathing places round a'bout Ber- lin, where air arid sun bathers taka no heed of publicity. They are situ- ated on the shcre of the chain of lakes that runs •throug1h the pine woods all be way to Potsdam. Next to Pots- ,11ana proper the first demand is for a picnic, or a suftable• place to picnic. Germans, accustomed to their beer gardens and the bright and attractiv:; cafe -restaurants, even in the most se - ^luded beauty spots, have found it hard to understand that one's oven food eaten in a sechi,ded spot with no waiters is ,the English ideal. According to present] German ex- perience no other nation on earth is Waterer of Ten In Hospital Wf.l, a you have 9 small farrn with a heavy mortgage and a family of ten chiloron to look after, you don't feel li • pa.,aing up any chances to earn a fe,v extra, ao;_1,s. 1 his, teas i)a.nC.,l A..'a position in Nortnern Ontarid'.'r.•,e used to work to trio evenings, cutting wood and dvin .:hort;s n • x ,, Cl 3 rll:lIra h - h �,,,, .,c.uau.-e true dautand:; f„r Kuaci a,,o c,intnes at borne were so great, l .,:Iept it up for SNnorf.tl year- i,o( la Liwe the o,tr.,,in two o„ :,...f, I 'd n.d,n•clay•'d tuhr,rc•0oalrs. He vs.s anrllVed to the Nlosl(Ok:a Mo•+ - 1"".11 _ env uonsurnptives, very 111 b,,owve*, rest, good fon,*, and ktnd- 1 r• •,ti p, •p.,r.a0 g fi,wtr custon,- rr,,'n .r 1)ar,5.1 at tn.e 11'a" 4...,...,, a.,1' , Is every hope that hn wtll ab� •'. non sant homo, ae,ble to t.. •a ;A.rc of hw tar.,.' ga.lo. r oi.r a:+f):• r!ption In !,Id of thts ex- cellent Work will be very welcorois. r'!+••, • :,4 I t to AI r. n Z. Am6e, .;k , --.. . ,.,-, ', :'orouto. Je.'10- aryl 0i1' 11eaE3aa$*,?itl Lha 11-vriXl 3 t� w�.y j ;> y. a .. ''a�rl"v0 '{ sometimes known' d9 eYe. �r 'I t+ w ? ;1 n i.�4 I., I111-1111 ,.. Agra sense, prow does Tt ork Sallee 1?te j)ecaxnte a pll�syfaiktf�r Mri ,.. f� . u „ a•„ s u . i e a . l0. s� .dila' a -so- k" mil i " _ 0,' �",. ., „ . � * + By a tens ,structure ,xl the, a .1 a 1x1 s ys that k4k hws breo . sl set . r that little n and you leave all lived. People t o r troy t e ,organ, Y Y p pa hero xL tape lialc ��. n�o sense of . molvemeat left, and .give him (business. They pro,b bly There a:cxrlaixla thole peculiar sense speak :af him as a collstltivaktiv %roe " "'' i ! i1' ,.� ,;,., N so- M1.• which inferms use of our physical and tell l lnrn how much m'orer ftmvor� , ,R . ii 0 9F N • 8I o t p9wer to lit ob•;jegits. The roan who is :tant it iso in a corxlltliluity, lilce'Palter- - f oF`i�tdy� AN�b B�s�, k, ti YC ., a tt • '"V -�A'0. A�wO SPr . about to heave a bar a€, iron instinct- son that, It man. s'h'ould be a boopte'r N �S as ��- qp VFC A AEP .. ively -brings into play the necessary instead 'of a knocker, and' that when 'tg•t� '�o�i sl{'c '.. muscular eVort• to pick up a box of an editor 'opposes• a an trying to o gang Yl g ;. QBE E UND A -N N; 1 matches his muscles adapt themselves loot the city hall it gives the town a PrOX t° o N automatically to that easy feat. bad name, People generalll* are sat -At Nor does this exhaust our senses. isf'red to worship at the shrine of tale, Ia� lY"' h tLie down, get somebody to blindfold god of things as thgy are, as a prom-- • • - • . you. You know exactly where your inent Canadian journalist once said, ;, { R;I, limbs are situated. Haw? A sense and •no doubt said a .good' deal more .. I -0, . 11 p87 THE P, a tells you. 'What sense? The kine- than once. 'S60 long as they are pros- stheti"t has, yet no name in popu- pering they naturally resent any at- . lar language, tempt to change things. When they an Irish family that had good reason We have thus no fewer than ten get their tax bills they .find them high to hate the memory of • British rule, . t senses, each one doing its own job —all tax billls• having this infli:--n1i �- but we ]learn that he is really n pm- aud reAusing to do the job of any and maybe then they will re.5�lve to d2wet of the South. Hos father went so fond of sitting on the ground in a other. To make this quite clear, con- vote the present administration Out to California from, Missouri and bia state of general discomfort admiring sider hove your 'sense of smell oper- of ofilce. But they are likely ,to for mother was of genteel Mhss'ouri-Yrr- the view, complaining of the gnats, ates. You taste and it is sweet, sour, get about it when election, time comes gini'a stock. This fact is men'tion'ed and ignoring the local places of re- ,,utter, salt. You smell, and it is around. in 'any event, experience has by' George P. West who conatrroutes to freshment. flower-like, spicy or putrid. probably taught them that the new the American 'Mercury a memoir on It is the English tourist who makes ' You never taste anything load; you administration will be merely differ- Hearst which we found extermely in- most use of the river steamers on the never smell anything weighty. ent from the old and not 'particularly teresting. It i,s the glory of a fail - Havel, Potsdam'& river into which Now thath sical science has thor- better. That of course is the; state ure, but not of a mean failure. Hearsft flows Berlin's lakes, The ex -kaiser'_ oughly explored, the senses which of public opinion in Paterson, and had an ambition to be president of castle is . foremost in appeal to Eng- have their origin in ,the functions of Mr. Haines has found • it much pleas- the United States, and it has been lish and Americans alike. But where, the nervous system, psychologists are anter and more profitable to Aubmit suggested that his expulsion from as men and women from the British probing into other mysterious sense's to it. France may have, rekindled this am - Isles are most impressed by the of which we, as yet, know but little. In support of his contention that biti•on in his ageing bosom. If sb, dreadful irony of the magnificent writ- Eventually,,,these may make the num- people are really not interested in it will ,be merely one more delusion to ing table presented - to William the ber of our 'senses still higher than civic •affairs he said that recer:tly a which he has fallen victim. In 1906 Second by a famous furnishing firm ten. citizens' meeting was called to hear Arthur Brisbane wrote in the decor - of London, at which he signed the how the annual, budget was to be ar- ous North American. Review: order for mobilization in August, ranged this year. Every newspaper "There is no- doubt that Hearst will 1914, Americans are impatient for WOMAN'S FORTITUDE in the city gave great space to the be elected president of the United crown jewels. Americans never can announcement, and When the day of States if he lives. He is the most see enough jewels, golden eagles, or the monster meeting arrived stream - costly and cumbersome presents from Forces Herself to Smile Through g popular man in the United States to - one headlines reminded the public of day." one crowned .head to another in the Pain. the tremendous occasion. When the 'Brisbane may have believed it at days of long ago. Nor do Americans , meeting was called there- was not a the time. Hearst did und'oubtedl care particularly for picnics. fnstead, I never seem to find time to rest,' single citizen on hand. So. Mr. Haines The dream survived until as recently they spend ,hours hunting for old says "many•an,overworked housewife. y looks back with rather a cynical smile as 1922 when he had books. Under 'smiles and forced cheerful- to the time when as the result of a force his name on tha the to Hess she conceals weariness and ner- Democratic vous depression; headaches and campaign carried on ,by his paper a ticket as senator for New York. But backaches. Often she is in realpain, $3,00'0,00'0 real estate -steal planned by one other man had power to force it Pumpkin Chips. but still refuses to give up. • This cert'ai'n city commissioners was stop- off. That was. Alfred E. Smith, Smdtk ver fortitude is apt to .be her un- ped. Another crusade which he con- refused' to accept Hearst as running Cut a small, sweet pumpkin in y P' ductd had the result of relieving fire- mate and the Democrats obliged to halves and the halves into narrow doing. If she continues to neglect, g 'the signals of distress she will soon- men of the payments they had to choose )between them, coiled not afford strips. Remove the peel and seeds, g make to get job. Some of them had to lose ,Smith. Mr, West speaks of then cut the strips into thin slices not er or later suffer a serious break- P P + mortgaged their home's to 821cure plat- the time when Lincoln Steffens broke more than half an inch thick, Wei h dawn. g A noted• doctor has stated that es -on the 'brigade. One would have through H,earst's guard and listened the prepared f sugar, 'and take an thought that the brigade would have as the silent, finger -drumming main equal weight of sugar, also half cu nine -tenths of the ills f womanhood g g P been grateful but when a fire devast- talked of Caesar Napoleon, of lemon juice, to each two pounds of are due to poor blood. That anaemia &ted art of the cit we find .that the ' � P , Washing - sugar. Put the pumpkin and su •ar in- is the cause of the low spirits, the p Y ton, ,Jefferson and Lincoln and argued to a preserving kettle in ale rnate p appetite and palpiilation that plant of the News was among the that Caesar was a popular reformer nor a who was kiXed :b members of the g casualties. layers. Pour the lemon juice over the make life a :burden for so many. Y Y whole, cover, and let stand 24 hours, There is no nThe most curious remark in Mr. Old Gang. He had the dream andeed, however, fbr Haines' interview was the followin• women to suffer in this wa All the „ g: he labored prodigiously to make it Have ready the lemon peel, neatly Y' The personal satisfaction a publish- come true. With his rich man's con - shredded, and an ounce of ginger root miseries of anaemia can be banished for each pound of fruit. Add these to by baking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. er gets from public 'serviee from tempt for any means save money, he p guarding the money of the taxpayers multiplied his newspapersi infeeW I kettle with a cup of water for These Pills create an abundance of who don't care whether thei- money the labor movement and the Demo - each three pounds of sugar. Cook un- new, rich, red blood and this new is guarded or not—is the only benefit cratic party with his said agents built til the pumpkin is tender, then pour blood will bring strength and vitality I from crusading,' In other words, a new party that he owned body and into an earthen jar. In a few days, to nervous, overtired women. The � there is nothing much in, it except breeches, made a war with Spain, har- our the syrup from the pumpkin Pills are sold by all medicine dealers P Y P P P or. b mail at b0 cents a box from the fun t0 be had out o£ it. But Tied the trusts not only in cartoons Boil to reduce and thicken it, and y , what 'greater reward can tbArc be9 and editorials but in lawsuits as the pour, hot, over the pumpkin. The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., The man whose work makes him people's tribune, bought stolen papers Brockville, Ont, happy is surely to be envied; &nd' if, to expose and destroy Archbold, F�or- �umpkin Preserves. in addition to gaining personal plea- aker and Bailey, forced a revision of Select a small variety of pumpkin sure, from his work he has the know- the Hay-Paunee'fote treaty to allow known as "sweet pumpkin." Remove FINDS PUSSYFOOTING' SATIS- ledge that it has been •a distinct bene- I fortifying the Panama Canal and us - the rind and seeds and cut the flesh FACTORY BUSINESS fit to the community, we do' not ed Ambrose Bierce to whip Collis P. in ,inch cubes. Steam or cook in wa- think he should ask for any higher Huntington in Congress," ter until tend'e'r but not broken; drain There may be neither news value ,payment. Certainly he is 'not likely Hearst was born in San Francisco in carefully; weigh, and for each pound nor interest in they statement that the to get it. It is to be admitted that 1869, and had some schooling in the of pumpkin take a pound of sugar, Evening News of Pqttterson, New Jer- crusading newspapers can be a nuis- east before he went to Harvard from two lemons, and 2 ounces of green sey, is a spineless, pussyfooting news- ance. But reformers are always nuis- which he was expelled. He then took ginger root. Cut the lemon through paper, for the remark can be supplied ances. Nobody seeks out lisle comp- hold of a 'San Francisco paper which flesh and rind into very thin dices, with equal truth to the vast major- any of a man who its always complain- had fallen into his father's hands and ~rush the ginger root. Let the lemon ity of newspapers everywhere. But �ng, ibut it is by complaining that gatherinb' round him one sof the most ird ginger stand in cold.water over- it is interesting to note that the improvements are brought about brilliant staffs ever assembled pro- m ht then let them cook until the t which benefit everybody. Then the ceeded to make the Examined not o lemon rind is very tender. To the wa- News was once i crusading paper j crank begins to complain about some- the talk of the town: but the talk of with same such ideals as t1wQ late Ithin else and people F ter with lemon, etc., add the sugar Joseph Pulitzer brought into' Ameri- g p Ple continue .o shun I the newspaper world. It he u al, rind more water if needed, and let can journalism. It has deliberately hint for a new 're'ason, but in the ~alai New York, bought the Journal, :)oil five or six minutes; add the pump- exchanged this heroic -role for the end they will probably gain by his denuded all rival newspapers of their kin and let simmer until the pieces mere inglorious and profitable one intolerable insistence that things brightest men, and, through• the sheer of um kin look trans &rent skim ought to be changed. force of his mons and their tales P P P , which it plays to -day. The owner of Y t, the pumpkin to jars, return the thin the paper when it was a crusader is became first a force in the public life syrup from the jars to the saucepan, the same editor as to -day, Mr. Harry of the nation.. He bought other news - ,educe the syrup, and pour over the B, Haines. It was his choice that papers. 'He entered the magazine "suit in the jars. the Change should be made. He says. field. He &-opped million's in movia Pumpkin Puff. he is a happier man and a mote popu-I Warns All Past 40 ventures, He established news ser - lar man, and undoubtedly a wealthier) ry�j, vices and induced some of the best - Mix together one cup of thiibk, roan than when he was keeping a I to Heed 1lEesi Signs known men in the world to contriabata. stewed pumpkin, 1 cup of mashed po- sharp eye on city affairs, trying to I to his various publications. To his tato, 2 eggs and 1 cop of milk. Sea- Protect the citizens and put in jail credit it must be said, and it is said ,on with salt and pepper and 1 table the crooks wh:o were out to loot the If by Mr. West that "Mr. Hearst has spoonful of butter. Bake in a quick municipal treasury. We do not know You are troulvled with bul-ning printed for the enlightenlgnent of his hove eon the News was a crusader,irritations., Kidney or Bludder Weak- vast popular audience a hundred oven Anti] firm. Serve hat as a crag- g stab'le. but it ca:n hardly have been twenty ness, scanty elimination, frequent an- words of intellli'geiat exposition and no ance da and night; swollen feet anal• •sis—of years and the trouble may be that 1• Y g y goad stuff, in the langu- Honey and Walnut Pumpkin Pie. :ler. Haines did not persist long en- or ankles and pains in: the back, lower age of the trade—wbere his nearest oirgh. It is his opinion that he per- abdomen or down through groins=- competitor has printed ten. Two cupfuls sieved steamed PIMP- sisted altogether too long. you should try theamazing value of But that is all in the past. Hearst kin, 1 pint milk, 2 eggs, 2-3 � up of In an interview in Editor and Pub- Dr. Southworth's / Uratabs and see to-day' regards his newspapers as what a i vonderful difference the • n ganger, er teas oo ce m•erel commercial enterprises. sugar, 1 teasgoo gl g 1/z P n fisher he said to John sir. Pens, as he e Y Y m p He is cinnamon, 17z 'teaspoon salt, 2 table- looked out of his window at the City make! If this grand old formula of stile surrounded by highly paid men, spoons melted 'butter, a pinch of mace, Hall; a well known physician brings you the anti is said, to have on his payroII 100, l� cup ground walnuts, whipping "They could drive up there in a swift comfort it has 'brought to oth- each ,of whom draws $30,000 a year. cream, I cup buckwheat honey or wild truck and carry away the city safe ers, you surely will be thankful and But he is no longer a crusader, he honey. and I, personally, wouldn't raise ;a very well pleased. If it does not sat- has, in short, fallen into line and in Mix 'together the pumpkin, sugar, finger. I'd carry the news, of course, isy, the druggist that supplied you is his praise, for instance, of such a spices and walnuts. Add the beaten for all it wa's worth and if some one authorized to return your money on man as Calvin 'Coolidge' is not to bre eggs and milk with the melted butter. dropped in to say it was an oatrage the first box purchased. At all goo:) distinguished from the owner of the Pour this mixture into individual pie . I'd quote him to -that effect, But that drug stores. New York Herald Tribune. He spends tilers lined with short pastry. Bake at would •be all. Crusading is a ricin much of his time on his California 150 degrees for 10 minutes; reduce the man"s game, especially in a commu'n- estate, which has an extent of four temperature to 350 degrees F. and ity the size -of Paterson. Ycu lose ENIGMATIC MR. HEARST hundred square miles. Here he lives corntinue baking for about 20 min- ad:ttitising,yov lose circulation, sole surrounded by sycophants and the utes longer. If ibaked• in- one. shell, the I . ,-,n lrs2 prestige. People be -gin, DISILLUSIONED OLD MAN' latest and most ambitious of the m'ov- pie will require forty minutes' bak- :'^:nnirag you have a personal axe to with the po e'.bTe arca tion of Al- ie stars, to whose service not infre- ing• grind, and that the publisher himself+ P quen'tly the whole power of hia mighty When cool enough to serve, garnish is working for some ulterior motive.Ifrecl Harmsworth, William Randolph engine of publicity is devoted The sash little ie with a generous spoon- I Hearst is 'the most fascinating figure liberal has been swallower) u In the P• g P And even when you have thwari ed the P ful of honey and tap with whipped plans of scheming politicians and have in the annals of modern journalism, weary cynical press agent. It seems cream. saved the city or county milllions of ,„and one of perpetual interest to all that hv has come to the end of the � - _ d-allars--what happens? No one gives newspapermen, as well as to the gen- trail, and one finds him sitting down. a damn! The friends appreciate the eral public. It seems probable that OUR FIVE WELL KNOWN SENSES service. you have done for a few min- if future generations pay any atten- utes and then forget it immediate tion to .him he will excite something g lu of the same curiosity as Gen. Tom The farmers who need the most re - ARE HELPED OUT BY OTHERS and completely. But the ensmles you or Elijah Dowie. That is to lir are ti^ ones who live a too far a• '?wave made never forget. No, and way finri the main highway to sell Sight, hearing, smell, taste and+ne:the'r do their brothers, sisters, fel- say, he will be regarded as, a freak. gas and o;].—Louisville Times. .ouch are generally regarl d as tha I °ow lodge members and everybody else 1 Tliey will find little evidence in the anly senses possessed by man. Has connected with the culprits. The good newspapers of their day that Hearst he, in fact, others of which he is only ever lived, for his wiark uphu jourx- - -"-.-----"-`----- --"--- now becomingaware? Will you generate in a crusade is short alism haul not been permanent. Yeir- -O•ne of the . most interesbing facts low journalism was not his discovery, Gain3 Seventeen Pounces about the .nerves, whish confer the though he d1d carry it to heighta or —, various senses upon us is that none of Young Airman depths whida the eld'br Pulitzer would Anyone seeing Mary would find it hard to believe that this smiling chem can convey the seas of an- ' have shrunk front►. Indeed, after young wo►nau was a ' consunilwye• I>n Grave ®ifficuity Indeed, fr.r Mary this word '-was" is other. I Hearst and Pulitzer had raced weak the beat part of the whole story, for For instance, a man gets a severe. Little Ted is g Ing to be an airman o-'1 neck fcr se-veral years to, determ- she fully believes that she is lust blow on thy} optic nerve. The nerve i3 Aome day. He has a picture book line whi•gh of them could produce the about "cured” and ready to go back hull of airplane pictures, and also an te' wont. "Why in just three months ensntive to the blow; but it nia:i:fet t'i ei,t,latne which he wistfully tells. you most outrageous, indecent, shocking they put nearly seventeen pounds t.s discomfort as light-- probably is down fn the basement, brolcett. and in„srogring newspaper, Pulitzer tree,:' t on me,' says she, with a tout I Although he is only seven, he seema c of �rlah brogue, and me that wetth ;tars. eon•^'d th? inefTittable and of the com- I{ we examine carefullythe aen5a to know al early that there 1s a big when J came in that•I had to lrl► car - it difference- bgtween him and other petition and wisely withdrew, leaving ried on a stretcher:" if touch we find that it is reale notr boys he hears shouting and laying to H'e'ar'st the field which remained t r >li.ar leas been In the Toronto Hos- , p , Y E ou on he lawn. n Indoe there t t a n And, dol if For Consumptives Lives forfthe C several l,• �• 0.1 p 'b . es three take ', one ,but three sans All h ee ke r r a a w n„rl th. coming - e � n n of the to i a ffererlce L:Zt' the rT k •n b s dt a li � t g e run the but tteh the kill Ot the Affect on the skin of the body. The plane, there Is damage to the little loid. But the tabloid Wats not his ilr- doctors, o -h the result of good ford, bol that will take long to mend, rest and careful nursing, that sue first is the sense of temperaiuxe— ,r vftt11,•it wm.r:s and tho kindly ventiari, although he is nob without again meets the world with a smite, heat and cold'; the second tha sense du.:tors at the (, neem weary t,cmpi. ,al ycn►e shLre of responsilaility fcr its and counts the days to the time wham of pressure; the third the sense of are doing their brat, and hope to re- I'1^frradatlon. she will be able to work once more store th,3 wasted Zuillis to h.•:slth sl:d r and help in her mother's ru, port. stinging. viper. Children are :ery sutceptibl.cl I mist the man reniainc. an enigma. A great work this, that cares for But we have ye'. c;.1is•_ cris_s 5.1. to oar ,,+u++intion hot nine oat of tea +Thinki t o the eonow.a tive I ng that petrh'agra some religTottsl I many husnaretis f p can t,e saved If takon iu ti.uw, 1ils sW r wilo ,.tllern'lse would Save to :Ion xecagriized. We are a;:vasa a- %,ori: rt:•,udres the co-opergtlon of t-vehoois might afford a clue to th•e aece)t tKe hardsht s and uncertatn- ware whe-1 WS are upside dorm. If r.+any, ^,1+•y friends if it t6 t% grow riddle, we' :have tried fort yenris to ties�of Lei ng tendo at home- NN Ill :somehody chanved our position diriug t„ Hoole ;,60& ,,aero Whether he las a Protestant or you tease tray .^ +ch F.� '4tary to get Your ,vista Lice is read needed. t Y r ,. i be do -will p tri n t -. , well? Your subs r w 11 p r s thz�„ the feet- •, r , • y , - R 11 „„ retool t, r9 s ibt+ rl tiun4 p v n a• t p a vs•thvlie, oral In i ..in, "f'l'ee fl<llera ratdfuI:r acitu.owledgod if dent to Or th-2o- der•'. 1 %;thea, than t'r,e alna(i, F!a,€. ,s >. trlreF"' 1t ,n nn. A. R. Alawedr and his stTorg anti-grit,sh rojudicas fir". A. 9 hrn.,b, 223 dolldgo Street, -Z col:-vo S,,,ec.., Corohw. 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