Ontario Community Newspapers

Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), March 15, 1922, p. 4

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tub oboroktown hphuil u h ii 1 kui h hirschorns ladies wear tailoring to the ladies ot georgetown and vicinity having k settled in our ntw ind up to data premises in the mtgibbon block corner we art- better prepared than ever to supply the m eds 01 our many lady customers dresses coatsblousesetc ail the i itst at most reason ble prices a hirschorn mcgibbon block georgetown phone 166 thf hmokh si ltav b t soot deposited on loudon li averaged 4 00 ioiih pt r ktjut smokelean coal proili ted inlxatlon in aukgenied naming the montclare 4jn aa medy i t fuel f f ireal estatel h you want to buy or sell property it- willpy you to consult me i over sixty houses in town t and vicinity for sale t t i i t t nsurance i district agent for confederation life insurance co see our special i policy issued without medical exami j nation i i fire insm ranee a specialty t auto accident and sickness insurance t r j hynds j phonl g e org e to wn will all those in arrears to the herald kindly remit their subscription rnnnmica 1 trench sflo at tbe recent dairymen s conven tton al regina mr g h button saperin ton dent of agriculture and animal industry of the c p r de partment of natural resources at calgary gave an interesting descrip tion of a trench iito he said dunne recent vpars jt has not been a very scijouf problem to make money in dairying inasmuch as the pness of butter and cream and whle milk- have been ruling rela tively high during thai tinn nnd the man who khvl hi business the eerlous ionkideratinn which it shwild receive bar wpi able to nha a aatlsfactnrv return on his invest meat how vi r wiih thi decline id values r all dairv products which haa ink n place during the li month and aheh accord i certain for uii will continue for another ni r lh the question of reducing n tr f production b come a orr itvf and imnortai anli gvr rst result wht suppl wl th an thundance of ju culenl fodder lune pnaturea hai frequently much i nget momicat orod ictionl if b iytem f r imilar fodder li wh eh mill point la doubtlaea wall taken 1 an certain that the ailaga aton ed in the trench will give excellent results at we arc now finidliii aotn sixty five late anmnenaad fail calves id tha open on euluvwar ait- age from the j argument tough bhe infall irld f nv and a half 1 nne on rr paled ground vhilr thi season n ured a v rid of 1 ton- to the acrr oq dry lurid nnd during a very drv season iond on the other hand the mfluwpr crop ger latea and nerarure ihxn corn and resims jroni in spring and fall thus enjoying in thin- climate a much longer trow nc this rroii because ol it weight per cubtr font can be safely stored in the trench ilo uch tvpe of kilo bringi thi cla f fodlerjuth in the rearh of th usand- of dairy than thli tnt ny farmer for many of them will now be enabled to engage in mixed farming keep dairy cattl- and thna afcay on the land and gel r tbefa- feet whereat prior u the advent of thta crop ihet ere far iag defeat and despair othet bom ln recommending the ire n il j da not for a moment disparage jint t tbe typamnb run inn a neam m atoring feed they have one dfeadvkbtscc however and that is that they coat money the treftch silo affotaw nethed of ftoring feed wtteh if tmxpenslve apart from lajbvr and bloat men vrhe are itrug tins brfwt on thetr feet are prilllne to amaxe an axpaitdrtiire w their own ulm r otwb to achieve stwreafc wfva nllc atvto torett i to be qitlti kma to that year nor at any 0m is therefore that even though th may be some loss oi looa valoet h rough moisture which drains away from tbe trench alio tha fodder which remains ia highly tntrituxm and superior to any fodder ordin arily available canstrvctiod the method of conatrnctlob at t trench silo is simple it ostailsts an excavation on a fairly wnll- drained site it is not lined with cement or lumber nor ia it provided with curbing to permit the titling of the tilo above the surface it ia sim ply an excavation it is about eight feel deep sixteen feet wide and can be aa long as desired depending upon the iiw of the herd and the material to be stored it is fed off on end like a loaf of bread the duly capacity per- animal 4s- iron forty to fifty pounds depending on the quantities of straw hay or grain f any which ib being fed the weight f a cubic foot of eneilag in a trench will average about 36 pounds aad baited on the above figure tba length of tbe silo required m ccsns- tnudate sufficient feed for tie bard id be readily determined hm cat ling box was set up outside tbe trench and a short length ol pine jjnd the hood provided the necesauurj piping tbe silage was distributed ind well tramped this year tbe tremh was filled only to the level of ihe ground when it was wellcover ed with straw from an old stack bouora i think it would be an im- orovement to round tip lb ettag ibo the level of the ground a oou pie of feel keeping it well tramped f r two or three days when tha ulage has finished settling the irenrh would then be approximately full the it raw or other covering to be used could then be 1r on the trench method of atorfng bae kepi the silagr with practiow- no lots and the quality of the fodder n 1 have already said is firswuu condition demand barnonv coi dition demand tbe strutet economy n t r handling uf any of our fodder propositions and if the rlairman is prepared to do some nai isl tabor in the w of cutting the rop by rund the only equip- nent that hi- will require in order te provide his itock with nuagw ia aburd nee ii a cutting box the por- rui eof wnjch could be handled by he community ot roup ed far mer o thai ihe cost would bo a try tmail amount fer each mendber f the silo ansociatfcm aa it might b irttoed i i onclumon i simply want to i int out that this matte has beam nufjjpently tested to ramorndooat a to it teasibdlry we bv k hand in western canada weans by which the tost of- prodaetjao af dairy product can be re twenty to thirty tr cant hi areas which hive been dairying onder former mote health and cli it would appear never lieutm llmi london is far from being the sunt i t place in h uglal d und th ri c rds ot tbe mi i eoroloklcal jrdce place the dlatlnctlud on liverpool wtere it is stated during jauutiry lone there were 26 03 tons of dirt li poalud on every a kllomtlre kingston upon hull came next with 0 24 and newoaatlcupon tyne ahowed a deposit otns 36 tons f oniparlson witii london 1iih be hindi- when it is shown lhat the dirt lnl neighborhood round southward tark totalled 16 91 tons aoqimre kilometre some of tbe luns f the metrbpoll were astonish ngb clean and dnsbury park was only onethird as dirty as southwark oolden lane and wand worth com mon showed 14 and 12 ions deboslt respectively march winds bad a good e up on most or the dirty air spaces aide of london but the uocnvlnbl reputation which the town has gain cd seems again to be largely due tu the beavy fall in the southwark neighborhood olaagow la a much cleaner plare above ground than london but birmingham is distinctly bad and with the inevitable exception of bouthwark park showed a much higher percentage of sootinesh than london y britain retains ijead recently there was inaugurated in london the institution of rubbir industry with the object or promo iug the interests of rubbir growers manufacturers aud distributors und of advancing the standard or th rubber industry 1 in a curioux fact that the inaugura ion took place ul most exactly 100 years after- thomas hancock began to manufacture rub ber in great britain twtnt years later this pioneer look ou i h p tent for vulcanlzatlou that in to aa for tee hatdenint- ul rubtx r i c i blnlng it with sulphur another lutercstlne item of ubb i history la hat it wan an 1- nllu iuau who in 187j brought tlir brsi seed of the r jber plant out il hratll tliiet m eda win brouilt to raw onrueia loudon i- iiliuiui allele oou i plants were rain d and tranalerred lo ctjlon thus eutabllal lug lie rubber growlnk indiia ij lu tilt laal the fajii filar iiiucklnluxl is alao a brititih invention having been devised in 1843 b c mack inloah who devised lh llrst waui proofing rubber solution it is ex peeled hat the uew institution will uaaibl ij main tain in k ttit pr mln ence which great brjtaln holda in the nianuracture aud ikiilxutlui it rubber queen marys hobby cmeceftw mint koinankoad about 1 970 years ago julius laesar invaded britain and roman cohorts took their compulsory dipm ture about 450 years la er yi t mud has to be ascertained concerning theli entirprib n la england und fresh discoveries disclose relics of their skill aud industry under clai dl a hadrian beverus aud coustan lino not many tears slnec a plough man turned up a taaselated kouiau door at castor near peterborougl on tha site of whal is believed to have been a lloman city the floor uow boing on view in the dairy nr pitiw and ae to the referee at huntingdon it hav ing been determined to provide work for the unemployed of the district the laborers excavating a mw sewt r suddenly happened upon an old ito man road bull of flint and con crete of great thickness the site of their discovery stood on the old ito man road known aa ermin strtet and close by we e unearthed sevi nil molded stones apparently bt lone ihk lo some old monastic eatabllal ment a cewiuy i- ire the news tha britain s blast fur naces are being rekindled is encour aging for months iikj have imcii cold swing to the prohibitive cost of setting ihcm going the blast furnace which lookx like a gigantic beehive i vised for smelting iron its roaring crown ot dames is a familiar sight in the midlands few people realize whu it costs to set one going many tons ol woo i are needed aud once this has if nil ed load after load of coke is poured into the furnace the heat is now int b it la not ne sudlcf lit to smelt iron ore for three weeks the furnac u iat roar night and day to bring tbe clay lining to a temperature grosjt eivt n for the purpose all thlitlnn the furnace is producing nothing whllet it consume coke worth about f1 000 as there are about 300 of these miniature volcanoes in the country the cost of betting all or them tolng runs into something like xi 000 000 amwi in eh ordinary silo tt ma tattxwd oat oat b ortafa low 9m 9 arainag and the worlds coiion one of britain a most important industries is cotton spinning and of thi 1g2 000 000 npindlea at present at work in the world over onethird mire in this country the raw cotton used during the lira half of 1s21 amounted roughly jo 1 500 000 tons or 7 367 112 bales i of this great britain used s6 230 hales the united states 2 640 000 japan 971-ss- india 04 181 oar msn 4s7 257 ahd france 161 36 a bale varies from 400 lbs to coo lbs lu weight fe ate that a reduction of twenty par oant in thi coat bf o of dairy products tn the three p woold naean line million til hundred ana i dollar palm garden lunch roorrts meals served at all hours xoe crejun frnit confeetiaiiery a tall line oi tobeoos oigaars nnd cigarettes jvh 1hont orrlprh doiivortvi h wheaoey eggs for sale vnteed mncll new innl why hips as she intpectinp- the model room fcpfore the luncheon lady brown remarked how stranfre it was that tince first they sail er the main shins had arwavs been spoken of as she i snrtnosp she added they made her n woman because thev found out that loved and humoured she in an anfrel but driven well she isnt shei thottprht it wan kiplinff who said that ships were like wo men in that thev had many secret hnnee and dreams how ever that might be her lady ship trusted that the irood ship montclare the new c p r liner would prove to he what all vomen honed and dreamt of the beautiful the stronfr and the true one of the raciest speeches ever heard at n chdr launch was that by ladv mclaren brown followinjr the luncheon at messrs browns yard de cember 16 while the new can- adian pacific liner was not put into the water her ladvship christened the vessel and as s souvenir she receied a beauti ful brooch which the recipient declared would give a fresh lease of life to her dress and hereby gratify her husband the new canadian pacific steamer montclar 16 200 tons as she appeared before launching at the yards of mearav john brown co clydebank scotland the speaker was the wife of sirj george mclaren brown the european manager of the c p r who with a distinguished party travelled from london to liverpool for the launch j ladv brown a candian was both eloquent and witty and sh was warmlv congratulated on her contnbution to the post prandial oratory st patricks concert 17th child injojf noil ii k l mm tha i ii kit i a gi it uu xpeel 1 aud ll forniijl dip in ul i allhoi1fl hie jut en remu klilila p puluilt is u not ice of uiuch llll ilea ion lo i er h s ofu u gi ally a jciube of enibarnihsment jf tt true i intend rular shop t a group ol ratals k stirring children such ss are being saved from death by fl contributions knasiai cnvemnwnt may have jnred but her llrtu children hav not rnsilas people a vast horde but dimly tenacious if at all of octal responsibility other than that which each man felt for his own fan- mediate family may have brought added trouble and dlaorganixation to a warahaxtered world her utile children had nothing to do with it and yet it ta tbe little children of russia that arc faced with tbe hideous over powering brunt of it all they are not facing it it is too great for them in millions they are tottering to the ground to end their short lives of unrelieved hor ror in one last agonised snaam in the famineatrkken provinces of hnaaia there are or w 33 00 people million already have died of starvation nanaen says ten mtlllone mere must die that in eludes men and women patient bumble peasants who have had no ban no thought in the making of tha dnapeakaole conditions that have swept over their one bappy aand these know they moat die are almost content to die ftodiiw in death tha eu a suffering and the cessation of ho4 bnt their children thf parents are hmnan beings if they were mera animals the long protracted jeath cornea of their little one would tin be unbearable to moit of them theraeoeaaanohalp tba task of t d- tng their chndren first and than them- 1 selves to bx great they dla kwkad again ff they were animals it weom be different and easier in- itinctively they would know how to wrest a living from mother nature bat little children mnst be fed they must bavefood found for them and in russia there nonet so they moat die death is not tbe worst of it if a peaceful death were all they suffered it would not be so bid it is tha hideous horror of the drawn- out struggle and it is helpless little children that are suffering they are offering today and must eon tlnue to suffer to death unless unless the clvillxed well fed peo ple of the world hear their awful cry far help and give that heln quickly rtsrill be too late for cout lass thousands of children the fill has come te canada with eviden e far too bomble to print the photo graphs reproduced herewith merelv suggest others more dreadful that this little chap left alone im the world crawled into a deserted cottage to die thetr chttdren are alone to wander about the country in qnest of some thing anything to devanr little claws that should be the pretty hands of chndren dig in the ground for roota except when tba ground is frocen and misshapen little r-e- tree crawl from rsfnsa hasp to turn ed cottag sat if one small tai- able fragment may not ba a ca be published will canada isnd of hapi y lsn healthy children heett appeal is being made bi the belief that she wfo th save the chit dren rsmd has epenedan office in kha elgin building ottawa and the canadian people an otrd te send their sntacriptlons now to sir qeorgw burn treasurer of the fund at that address one doltar wttl feed la child for one month 500 will faad on hundred children until next harvest bo gtvaa twfca who gtvos autckly iksmix saved from death by the humanity of thoss who have siready ooatabatetl t 1m fund would c rtumly be u huge aide the establishment by the time i liei uajes yurrlveb and probably j lnsid ii an well then it would be lond bye to all prospect of shop- i i ink in an ordinary way i ectraequetitty t hequeendoe not give any indication of where she la lolnj until she is ready to mart lvtin then she will go od her way i a unostentatiously aa possible i have known bar to walk quietly into a town accompanied by only one or two personal friends and drop caa- curlo shop after un old r without anybody being aware ot hir presence these excursions give her mnjes- t a i rent deal of pleasure for one tliiut lliey enable her to get an in sight into the everyday life ol peo- lu which she takes dp inttrist she tsjs keen observer who misses nothing of what is pass- inn around jier bough she may maki no rjemnnent ufipn it of course same of the antique dealers recognise the queen tmmedl ately others do not it is really quite amualug to see wbat happens sometimes when her majesty walks quit tl into a stuffy little establish l and begins to inspect tbe stock if the proprietor recognises bis aug ust patron he generally becomes very much uuutered but her majesty soon puta him at his ease by picking up an art li h and asking questions about it i j man keepers of antique shops themselves upon on aubjec or another when the queen uieeu with on ot this kind they not infreqi etitly gel so deep into a dls- tipon an old china specimen thing of the kind that any differences in rank are for the mo- munt forgotten you see when old china old laea old silver or ivory are under discus sion the quetn knows her subject she is a discerning collector with a connoisseurs love of all that if ancient and beautiful and a suffl clently wide knowledge of antiques lo enablt her to judge their value pretty accurately china and silver are her great- eat hobbles t bough her interest is not limited to them it includes fur- j nlture tapes try and prints during the present year the queen has traveled hundreds of miles j to vlatt curio shops many of them have been situated in quiet villages where the royal incognito could be strictly kept occasionally her majest comes across a shopkeeper who not recog nixing the queen regards her aim ply as a wealthy amateur who can be easily fleeced this kind of ven dor soon finds that he has made a big mistake the queen is very shrewd she knows wbat she wants aud cannot be readily duped any body who endeavors to pass off sham articles upon her wastes the effort i believe ber majesty rather en joys a little passageat arms with a dealer who is trilng to take her in by selling her imitation spode or faked worcester i recall one amusing incident a dealer had offered the queen some obvious shoddy and had been told by her the difference be tween tbe imitation and the real i suppose you are in the trade maamt he asked quite admiringly not exactly replied the queen i smilingly but i have some knowl edge ot china wish 1 had as much ma am added tbe man her majesty seldom leaves a shop without making a purchase be it ever so small for which she will pay full value but no more dialers who know her do not attempt to deceive her nor does she care very much for having specimens submit ed to her privately part of thi charm of collecting ilea tor the quten in dis covering her own treasures vaaceaver flags sf twewryanm nations affiliated with the inter national association rotary wbeeta and blue and gold colors will be neen from ihe c p pi station up t jnvillc street to tbe apttol thea tre and from the hetel vaneowvwrj down georgia and te the arena dur ing tbe rotary tonfereiice in artt1 chairman robert show of tbe d- corstienn committee of the confer- eme has omnleted all nlans and ex pert a to have thr city dressed in her sunday bent the delegates nura b ing nearly i 000 will arrive by i oat and train over the c p r c n r and t n tt these three companies have promised to have their depots suitnl ly decorated tha hotel vancouver will be the head quarters and the nanagenteat wilt have the rotary emblems and rotors in prominence everywhere vancouver when tbe canadian pacific empress of asia sailed fro i vancouver for thr orient she earned in her hold a shipment of wireleas equipment made qp of a number of sets of instruments whch are to be used by oil prospectors for orient these instruments are the highest quality procurable and are valued at several million dollar in tbe aggregate lack of transporta tion facilities and mends to get in formation from one point lo another in the orient has forced the larger concerns to use wirelea telenhonesl as a means of communication several of these wireless e have siready been in use about a year ia china and the superstition f hine have s great fear of thetr c wer in ne province they clsimed the tbe famine had been caued bv the devils tn these instiroe t and local troubles arc always tt iird to the unseen spirits in the wireless telephonr instruments ancouver thai he new can adian pacific steamer pnneem louise is easily tbe queen of the coast in performance six con rwc tien and fittings is the opinion of tle passenger who came from vic toria on her first trip 1 the steamer has commenced regu lar lervice under command of cap tain t rippon formerly of the princess royal and will m the victoria vancouver until early summer whew she will go- on the skagway ran inder command of captain slater the engineroom is in charge of chief engineer james pettigrew the princess louise is a soorce of especial bride to the people of the coast owing to the fact that she is entirely the product of british os- hxmnls craftsmanship hall and en gines were built by the wallace shipbuilding co and the sopet- strueture cabins fittings and de corations are all local work tha only parts that are not tbe product of british columbia are some ot ia furnishings which were taken iot of the steamers irene and priav tesii margaret milk podding d t dont drink milk with your meals so said sir jamas can tile the eminent surgeon in a lecture re cently milk clots upon meat or flah and the gastric juices cannot get to work this curd geta harder and decomes like cream cheese thereby imp ni ing the digestio of the meat by drinking milk with meal you loae the benefit of both and c ise great trouble to the stomach milk puddings should not be taken with no objections great man angrily so you want m autograph eh i m getting tired or this sort of thlnj put a eh ck to 1 bon m oh well sir i d just as soon have your name on a cheque flromth of kumer vail the nails on our anders do not grow with equal rapiilim hut of the thun b b it the ftlon si u d of the middle ouger the fastis coal at wood onjmnri nil the time best scranton coax cement on hand john ballantine georgetown new barber shop exchange hotel t roberts proprietor no sfaevaulag bqalrd standard anthracite scranton coal in all sizes automatically screened and loaded coal wood select lump for domestic and tbrosbmg poepoeeh smithing nnd cannel coal in fact i curry everything to be found in an up to date coal and wood yard john mcdonald georgetown prone 12 shoe repairing for seen work and high grade repaint tins is the only shop in town fully ctidipped in chiding htitclier vbili will ev on from twenty to thirty pairs of noletj per hour from ft aingle nolo to a tlncknphb of of an inch od pottititely gunranteid i bu the try- boat no 1 cutttom stock and enter to high grade nnd fine flhoe tiade i don t hell shoes bo it will pflj on to have jour repairs done at a shop of thib kind there s a reason having followed tbe shoe rnine since 1b96 i understand rut i know nbonl it ja ballantine ulurday aid delvered i hone zv at your service h c bcdley electrician headqnaurters for masd lamps fixtures jshxdes etc call at the harness shop and let nt give yon a price on yonr electric work satisfaction guaranteed phone 212 weokrettwn

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