the $1139, heavily . Parenlly still struggling v!“ 191' he was carrying. 1‘0 NEW painfully up for a hand- tor so; menuluomho and mu! mo prey tumbled ‘.\ 9‘ ‘\p" \ I'lzw zwawék saruggles to M- ln-a'umw funh’l‘ and lamb haul km“; !~â€" mlwrsary. but ' llxllalll‘t'ï¬' ll. all“) lay RIVDS “\IJ camsomEs ils C (}relses unite NOB! Hes and Svrvice IAWK PICKS A TABTAI QI'OUS C0., lilid w-ooâ€"o-ocâ€"oo’ww LE’S GARAGE SERVICE at evrolet P“ i W Ills! a duvl ~0 the m and a “- 8339‘ con). contributor Who†I raln Ul’ Gas Ihr rop. m 99"†minim; ' . (Byuuan) _. £03" %§)‘“¢"§ Lï¬ssmzhï¬ ._ _ :\\ _ :-L L-_ __._-n-.n AI.___ By DR. W. J. SCHOLES Note: Dr. Seholee will answer such health questions in these cola?†as will be of interest to others and permissible in public print. ..Pereonal questions will be answered only when accompanied by self-addressed and stamped envelope. Address Dr. W. J. Seholee, in care of The Durham Chronicle. 'I‘here are two chief .forms of the recently broke out in California. It plague. One form involves the was probably originally brought into .‘ynlphatlc glands and is called the the sea-ports of that state from the nuhunic plague. The other form Orient. Outbreaks of the disease ..-.u.~ws an acute, very fatal imflamp seem to be largely limited to the .uation of the lungs and is known slums of the larger cities where '15 pno‘llmflnlc ,NBSUP. the poorer people live. Insanitary 'l‘he plague IS a disease of certain conditions seem to favor the occur- "Mauls. particularly rats, the bu- rence of the plague only insofar as :mnic forth ‘of the_ disease being they lead to infestation by rats. 'l‘he plague is a disease of certain «Mauls. particularly rats, the hu- ;mnic form of the disease being :.x-;msmit;ed to man from the rat by .luas. 'l‘he fleas feed upon infected rats than bite human beings, inocu- lating them with the plague bacil- lus. Besides the rat, certain kinds .lf ground squirrels, weasels, chip- munks. the prairie dog and the pock- et. gopher are some of the animals mm. are susceptible to the plague. 'l‘he pneumonic plague seems to dim-ad directly from man to man without. the intervention of rats or fleas. Like other respiratory infec- tions. the germs are apparently «pread by coughing and spraying the infectious sputum into the air. Uncloan Conditions Responsible \ certain amount of the plague ( Copyright, 192‘, by The Bonnet-Brown Corporation, Chicago) HEALTH QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS In Irregular Pulse Sweating during sleep. K. L. W. asks: “What would make L033 0‘ weight. the pulse be irregular once in a Increased frequencv of the pulse. while? I am twent ears old." Anyone who suspects that he may y y be developing tuberculosns should _ . 391“! . immediately place himself under the Some disease in the heart itself; observation of a physician. disease or disturbance. in other or- __,__0__. :ans having an unfavorable effect . :m the heart; infections, as in the â€â€œ11“ 1;“ “um tonsils or teeth; over-use of tobac- Mrs. E. W. writes: _ “A man 32 co: too much cotton or other car- years old, living m this town. was {nine-containing drinks; excessive recently 1" Wit-h what WEISSUDDOSBd ‘ to be mumps. Is it possible for a In L-.. I “i‘l‘l'. IS“. Early Symptoms of Tuberculosis K. A. ll. asks: “What are the ï¬rst wmptoms of tuberculosis of the Hingrz‘r' ilnugh. This may be dry and hacking. or, accompanied by some “‘(lH‘I'tfll‘atiOll. There. may be pain in the chest. Spitting of blood. Fever. rising to its highest point 'illl'ing the late afternoon or evening. TH E PASSPORT TO glly Leste'r Banks) 'i'ln-ro- are two wa‘ys to control manuals-*kindness and fear. In- tuu-vs of the ï¬rst are seen in the "vial inn between the owner and some not, like a horse or (log, that has wwwl' known cruelty; while the cir- ‘Hs furnishes the best examples of wrnmvnt by fear. If you want .m animal to love you as well as 'inxv, you must treat that animal in l \my to antract rather than repel t. {UM as you would in dealing with t po'rsnn, I I‘ndnuhtndly instinct is strong in !n\\'i‘l' animalsâ€"I have seen dog: it sm‘mmi to read human charac- ~ mth astonishing accuracy; but l'ww tho sense of smell is the 'ziii:ll'.~‘ ï¬rst means of judgment Nit-'11 approached by 8 stranger. "Winn twn men are ï¬shing “(in)“! lllt Hut while kindness is the only um! tn the heart of a dog. for in- :zmvv. there remains the interesting hummus of Why some persons will ivatmt by him even befnre an 3‘..i‘.nt.:nn'e is formed. while some -;'~ amuse his suspicion or anger "z†ï¬rst approach. \‘mnvi'nus theories have been ad- uwmt tn mxptain it. the most popu- -r~ wwtmg upon the assumption that "11' .tmnh animals have a sort of .«a-zai sense. a proiective instinct. â€.71: applies particularly to human :n~' inngth of each other and one .. in? made almost frantic by in- Reply Aï¬iuALS' FAVOR THE FAMILY NEXT DOOR Pneumonic Plague Important measures in the pre- vention of plague are cleanliness, which decreases the liability of rats finding food and nesting places; dis- infection of houses in which plague has occurred; disinfection of ships, wharves and warehouses; the build- ing of rat-proof houses, and the de- struction of rats and other rodents and their fleas. Strict quarantine of all known and suspected cases of the pneuonic type and scrupulous care to avoid con- tamination with the sputum of pa- tients. or the secretions of the mouth. nose or throat, which may have become infectiousâ€"are the means of preventing the spread of this form of plague. lumps in Adults Mrs. E. W. writes: “A man 32 years old, living in this town, was recently ill with what was supposed to be mumps. Is it possible for an adult to have mumps? It has alâ€" ways been my understanding that this is a disease of children.†Reply Mumps, generally. is a disease of children. The period of greatest susceptibility is between the ages of four and fifteen. Occasionally, however. it does occur in adults. In army camps, there. were many cases in men between l.wen;y and thirty years of age. So it is likely that your townsman had a real case of mumps. sects while his companion is scarce»- Ix annoyvd at all I think there is. no doubt that the dim 1-0111'0 in per- 5011111 â€1101‘. the offlmium. 11xplains Another point worth consideration is that this ability always to win animals to oneself seems largely hereditary. ()ne zoo attendant, in whom all animals seem to have per- fect conï¬dence. immediately. states that both his parents and his chil- dren possess the same ability. A man and a woman. especiallv in characteristic dress. must look very dilTerent to a wild animal, yet he. may accept tlm overtures of each. then repulse a third person who ap- pears to be a twin to one or the other. Certain it is that the animal’s judgment goes below surfaces. Bod- iily ordor we know to he often a fam- ily or hereditaryleature. it. Louis C. Mullikin. an expert with animals. explains his success on the theory of odor. He can. on first. ap- roat-h. pot dogs that. are so liel‘C-c: with other peome as to bo chained. He has potted wolves and coyotes when they would ï¬ght every one also present. and has had panthm-s snuggloup tollim oontontodly like a pet kitten. 119 takes no credit to himself. but says that it is. simply a matter of effluvium. His father and grandfather had the same trait. or faculty. and his daughter now displays it to a inarfl degrre. You can’t tell by the speed of the car whether the [match is in the car or the driver. \\ \\ l / g {/flllm\\\\\\\\\ In: noun or m It is doomedâ€"the home of the Eur- o pean hison. The Bison honasus, which has existed there in numbers since the mammoth and the rhin- oceros were common in Europe, un- til almost the present year. And it has been statedp that a few. very few, are still to he found in the depths of their ancestral breeding-grounds «the Forest of Bialowieza. Soon. however, the axes of timber-tellers will be making the silence resound in this, the oldest and the greatest of forests in EurOp e. Here in Lith- uania is the last refuge of the auroch, as some term the Bison honasus. For centuries the Forest of Bia- lowneza was the private hunting do- main of the Polish kings,‘and then of the tzars of Russia. The Bus-J sians, since the middle of the eigh- teenth century, gave great attestion to the raising and preserving of the auroeh, the true strain of the Euro- pean buii‘alo, and a herd of between 700 and 800 head was in existence at the outbreak of war in 1914. When, however, the German invaders oc- cupied Lithuania, though a pretense was made of protecting the bison, it amounted to no more than a pre- tense. So many of the magniï¬cent animals went to form butcher’s gmeat that in December, 1918, only lsome 140 survived. What the invaders had com- menced, the peasantry ï¬nished. With the departure of the troops, the pea- sants at once started to slaughter the buffaloes. In many parts on the fringe of the forest, the animals were looked upon as a hereditary foe, ow- ing to their depredation of crops, which they preferred to their rough ipasturage. It has been stated that 1n September, 1919, the last of the mighty, wild bison, so famous in history story and legend, was killed to ï¬ll the family- pet. It has also been reported that a fewâ€"a very fewâ€"still survive in the fastnes-s of Bialow1eza. Anyhow, the operations of the London corporation that has ob- tained concessions to fell and mar- ket the timber of this and other na- tional forests, will in time disclose it gny of the anrochs do yet exist. _ The Germans however have, had allies assisting in the work of kill- ing off the last herd of the Bison bonasusâ€"the congener of the North American buffalo. Count Potocki possessed a famous ancestral herd of its species, but the Bolshevists, not content with the destruction of human institutions and human in- dividuals, deliberately exterminated this historic and i1replaceable rem- nant. The mason they adxance is characteristic. It is that. because there was not enough of the bison for all men, no man ought to have any bison at all. Luckily. the Bolshes cannot suc- ceed in wiping out the wild buffalo 3030!“! 318†o'fv' the Caucasus. Those {mum th Bjeleis, the Kiacha and other rivers. It is a wild country, and thirty miles long from. east to west, and about ï¬fteen to sixteen miles in width from north to south. As quick in pace as any horse, and outvying the chamois in climbing and daring, the Caucusus bison. ex- ceedingly wary, with extraordinar- ily keen senses of sight, smell and hearing, very seldom falls to the gun of even the native hunters. Though it appears identical with the aurocb of Bialowieza Forest. this buffalo re- mains today, as three hundred years ago, much of a mystery animal as jto its habits and particular charac- teristics. Fortunately, its home no mercantile or any other company can ever put to destruction. _*-‘.â€"â€"â€" rnn'r'rr 18 as rum noes (Kincardine Reporter) . Writer in a p0pular ladies‘ magaâ€" for m in vii-tall all of W - rica, it is the of life. bodies of their kingly dead. Today the oil palm not only represents the‘ most important agricultural indus- try of the Oolony,-4't has long since surpassed rubber as the premier product,â€" but it has an almost be- wildering variety of uses. It is food and drink and shelter. From the trunk the native extracts his wine; from the fruit comes oil for soap, for salad dressing and for margar- ine; with the leaves the native makes a roof for his house; with the fibre he makes his mats, his baskets and his strings for fishing nets. The wood itself he uses in building. As quick in pace as any horse, and} outvylng- the chamois in climbing; and daring, the Gaucusus bison. ex- ceedingly wary, with extraordinar- ily keen senses of sight, smell and hearing, very seldom falls to the gun of even the native hunters. Though it appears identical with the auroch of Bialowieza Forest. this buffalo re- mains today, as three hundred years ago, much of a mystery animal as to its habits and particular charac- teristics. Fortunately, its home no mercantile or any other company can ever put to destr_uction. PRETTY 18 A8 PRETTY D038 - (Kincardine Reporter) Writer in a pepular ladies‘ maga- zine makes a very amusing state ment when she writes: “The only 1 a thing men care for in a woman is ‘ beauty, and that h‘as become the al- ibi for practically every deserted wife.†The statement in itself is horribly wrong, yet it is a curious fact that when a woman loses her husband’s affection, she invariably attributes it to losing her looks. She pins her faith to the theory that the only thing you can hold a man with is a corset string, and a great many lmiddle aged women are half-starv- , ing themselves to keep thin, and are dyeing their hair, painting their faces, in a futile effort to stimulate the yOuth they have lost and to fool their husbands into believing they are still in the flapper class. It’s al wrong. No woman is responsible for losing her beauty. As a matter of fact, she is bound to lose it because time takes toll of even the peachiest. Figures grow more meagre or stout- er, hair loses its sheen, eyes their luster, roses fade out of the cheeks, and life etches its story of pain and sorrow on very fac. Then if love,- as some women think, is hung on a hair or is only skin deep, then they are going to lose out. When a wife is affectionate to her husband and fusses‘ over him and tells him he is the greatest thing on earth, he doesn’t care whether she is fat or thin. or whether her hair is grey or black, or whether her teeth are her own or hers by right of purchase. Among the many things that cause the loss of a husband’s affection are discontent. extravagance, perpetual criticism. bad housekeeping, lack of good naturedness and sympathyâ€"- and all come before the loss of looks. INSTALLED NEW ORGAN The Sacred Heart Church, Walk- orton has installed an elaborate pipe organ of the most modern type at a cost, of more than $7,000. An oil palm will bear fruit within seven years after the young tree is (Slanted. The fruit comes in what is called a regime, which resembles a huge bunch of grapes; each fruit in the cluster is approximately the size of a large date. The outer peat which is called the pericarp, is al- most entirely yellow oil incased in a thick skin. Imhedded in the oil, We Wish All On Patrons A Happy and Prosperous New Year WIW , _ _ - - - - ‘ A - A,,A_ Resolved-"To Resolve! ' loll ballad dried wh the For hundreds of yarn "I. m huvqguhmd the fruit, of the pun and hive bluch (hm any the kemli bo- cause they were um valunblo immune, inside. Between four and ï¬ve thouund has: of flour were washed ashore between the 10th of Bruce end In- verhuron. some bugs even hei picked up on the beach of the Concession of Seugeen. This flour which is of an American brand. is in 100,1t0 and 200 pound begs. end is said to have been the cargo of n scow thelI listed in a storm mil lost its entire freight. Mr. James Blue of Ambersley y, wreckage man for this district, has been on the job for the last few days salvaging the flow and storing it in barns and houses nearby. Some of the flour is only slightly damaged. One format in Bruce, who purchased II {to-lb bag realized about 100 pounds 0" goéd flour. Ldnrtiu in The Chronicle. It Pays ".00! wunn Anon (Port Elgin Times) Box 82, Durham