Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 16 Jan 1936, p. 7

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VE | 7 % La ! - (F357 ah C. ¢ ; 'had viewed with interest. the motion Invention of Finn Enables ~~ Dairymen to Keep Up we Standard Co ------ | MONTREAL -- Getting cows to, 'produce summer milk in winter is mew occupying the attention of _ dairymen on this continent, largely! because. a Finn has developed a chemical that preserves in fodder the juices and food values it re- 'tained when cut, and the topic is of ~ particular interest in Montreal _ re- cently 'because of the "presence in _ fhe city of G. L. Rosnqvist,'a Finn- fsh farmer and agriculturist. ~ Summer milk is richer in vitamins and other health-giving, body-build- "ing characteristics. The thing to do 4s to preserve thoke qualities in the fodder, thus enabling milch cows to give a milk that approximates their summer :milk. This is the gist of ~ Mr. Rosenqvist's remarks. He pays _ tribute to A. I, Virtanen, inventor of the so-called A. I. V, method of treating fodder chemically, thus keeping its summer nutrition pre- served intact for winter cattle con- sumption. Mr. Rosenqvist has visit- ed agriculturalists from British Col- umbia to Nova Scotia, = - Like Finland He claimed that Eastern Canada, partitularly the rural districts very like Finland in many - ways. The soil, farms, and people, even "the crops grown, were quite similar to those of his homeland on the Baltic Sea. -Slightly more rain falls during the year in Finland than in Canada--Canadian summers are a little longer, he thought. A His attention had been drawn to an item which had appeared. relative .~ .to -expériments which were being started at the University of Wiscon- ain at Madison aimed at producing ~"symmer milk" in winter through preserving green fodder for winter 'feeding of milch cows. It was sug- gested that the Wisconsin agricult- ural chemists and animal husband- men were attempting to improve on 'the famous method of Prof. A. IL Virtanen of Finland by using molas- ses for mixing with the gréen fodder. to overcome disadvantages of labor, 'equipment costs and unpalatability. Mr, Rosenqvist, who is greatly in- terested in Profi Virtanen's method of preservation, and is in fact visit- tng Canada in order to interest Can- adian farmers in its greater use, felt that the Wisconsin = scientists were quite unfair in their judgment of the "A. I, V." method, as it is known. throughout Europe and Nor- th America, © He" pointed out that the molasses method of retaining the * vitamin rich substances, which made summer- grass more nutritive than dried hay, had been used. in -Ger- many as long as 15 years ago, and ~ the same German scientists who had invented the method were now furn- 'dng to the "A. I. V." mineral acid method of fodder preservation. 'Less Labor Required ~:From his observations in Canada and the United States Mr. Rosen- qvist claimed that the Finnish me- thod required: less labor and equip- ment than the molasses method, and the total cost was much less. He was. ablg to prove that-"A.I.V." fod- der was not unpalatable from per- sonal experience as his own herd of 40 milch cows had subsided on it for more than four years now and were producing more and better milk than ever before. He bore witness"that a great majority of the farmers in Finland were using Prof. Virtanen's invention, and in 18 other cuuntries of Northern Europe and parts of the United States it was growing in popularity. : Apart from their slight to his eompatriot's scientific discovery, which had been described by Pro- fessor Boving, of the University of + British Columbia, as "the greatest wdvance made in agricultural 'scien- "ce in the last 40 years", Mr. Rosen- qvist was glad to see that Wiscon- sin scientists were attempting to im- prove the nutritive quality of: wint- or milk. In his numerous visits across Canada he had found leading agriculturists and farmers = keenly Interested in the "A. I. V." process. In Montreal, through the medium id the Board of Trade, he had been n touch with high officials of vari- ous agricultural organizations, in- eluding the Montreal Milk Produc- ers' Association," the Co-operative Federee, the two railroads and the Jepartment of Agriculture at Que- 'Farmer groups everywhere icture which he had brought ,with ~ hm of farm work in Finland. Mr, Rosenqvist was particular] 'Interested in the Co-operative Fed. eree of Quebec, an organization which markets farm produce for farmers' clubs, as he himself Is chief inspector for the Valio Co- tive Butter Export Association * Wpera : ¥ Finland. This organization boasts 80,000 farmer members and con heese produced and a large the bottled milk sold. Rosenqvist returned to Fin- nd of the week. Was4 | J ~ Every time you give the other fel- Jow a boost, it is a hitch ahead for: you, wil Neighbor--Have you got a bottle opener?' Parent--Yes, but he is college. away at The actor was boring his listener badly: : Actor--Ah, my boy, when I played Hamlet the audience took twenty minutes to. leave the theater, Listener--Really! Was he lame or something? \ It is announced that ears are grow- ing larger. But that doesn't mean that anybody is going to listen any more attentively to all you say. Harold--Did you hear the big news? . Gerald--Spill it! Harold--My dog visited a flea cir- cus and stole the show. A lot of folks keep: their radio on every minute of the day. They per- haps can't get over the notion that it will finally "say something." Barber--Haven't I.shaved you be- fore, sir? .Customer--No, from the war. those scars are Ham (mournfully, as he leaned oul of the window of the Ark)--This is tough luck. ~ Shem--What's the kiek now? ,° "Ham--Why, we've got 'allthis wa- ter around us to fish in, and omy two fish worms on board. A smart men-is ' one "who never makes the same mistake twice, but a smarter one is he who never mak- es it the first time. i Sweet Young Thing (at the music counter)--Have you: 'Kissed Me in the Moonlight?' Abashed Clerk--Er--it must have been the man at the other counter, I've only been here a week. Work is the best way to drown worry . . « Work frequently gets us soméwhere . . . Worry never, never does. The last ime Ed Masterford of Brushville went to the city he cama back with the news that even a toe- dancer walks on her 'heels when crossing a muddy street, Most girls are of the moody type unless the right fellow is. along. Prisoner--Judge, I don't know what to do. : i _Judge--Why, how's that? Prisqner--I swore to-tell the truth, but every time I try some lawyer objects. . An old-timer is one who is con- vinced that the people should support the government, and not the govern- ment support the people. Mrs. Smathers took a great inter- est in the doings of her neighbors. It was a great day for her when a new arrival came to the house next door, and she watched with interest as furniture was carried into = the house. Husband--What did you find out about the social standing of the folks across the street? Mrs. Smathers--They're not much, They have no automobile or radio or even a grand piano, I can't imagine what they have got. Husband--Perhaps bank account, SEVEN YEARS' {AGONY /ENDED BY SASKASAL First Bottle Brought Relief fom Painful Rheumatism Read this letter: "I had rheumatism for peven years and never left me night, or day, pains sbmething awful: everything I could get, but nothing did me any good till I got Saskasal: I had not started to take it a week till I was "a lot better, and am getting better all the time, and have not finished the first bottle: 1 can go to.bed and don't have any pain like I had before I took Saskasal: I will sure recommend it to anyone that Has rheumatism." : If 'you suffer from rheumatism,' lum- or poiatioa start taking Saskasal Mineral Salts now: At all drggiete-~ enough for 10 weeks' treatment 606: 11 they have a ! rols 95 per cent of all the butter |y produced in the country, 60 per cont). LIVE STOCK MARKETING Shipping on the co-operative pla a8 been productive of "aplend a" yosu ts, ling on the open market means ft vile tor the owners. Qet n Louch BH : Watering Cows There are more than eight gallons of water in each 100 pounds of milk. Then the body gives off mois- ture in addition to the other needs. It requires nearly seven pounds of water for each quart of milk which a_cow produces. This must come from the feed or the water trough, During the Winter season a large part of the: ration consymed is dry roughage, This ne- cessitates the drinking of larger amounts of water than if pasture were a part of the dairy the water consumed is insufficient | the milk pail. 'Watering the forces the cow to consume five, eight or. perhaps ten gallons at one time. Although the stomach of the cow! is larger than that of any other of our farm animals, taking this large 'quantity of liquid into the stomach at one time tends to interfere with the digestion of the feed. This is es- pecially true if the temperature of the water is near the freezing point. Cattle in Great Britain total 6,- 538.600 head, a decrease of 1.8 per- cent compared with 1934. Canada's cattle. number 8,061,900 of which 3,- 864,200 are milch cows. Canada has 3,421,100 sheep, while Great Britain has 16,470,700; Canada's swine pop- ulation is 8,654,000 while Great Bri- tain's is 8,811,700, an advance of 14.8 per cent over any other year. Cruelty To. Show Horses tn A reader of The Journal sends us an. article, from a source that is not stated, denouncing the practice of "mutilating" the show horse "by setting up his tail in about as un- 'natural a position as man's foolish brain could devise." = BE "According to this article a horse so treated has to endure a surgical operation, sometimes several of. them. The muscles that control the movement of the tail are cut, and the tail is bound into an unnatural position until it heals. Unless it Is perfectly straight. it must be brok- en again .and the process repeated. The practice is called "inhuman and barbarous,". and our correspondent declares those who submit horses to such eruelties are no better than savages. : Asked by The Journal for an op- inion on the matter, a horse-owner who has taken many prizes at shows has this to say: "#Phe facts are about as stated. In the.old days almost every good- looking carriage horse was treated tail was considered very fine. The controversy is as old as horses and crops up every now and again. "Today the practice is wholly con- fined to horses kept for show pur- poses only, and at that only those horses which appear at the very best shows. Of course, only hackney hors- es and ponies and a few saddle horses are so treated. The number is not great. is LUAt the big shows competition among 'wealthy owners is so keen and appearance counts for so much that they will go almost any length to enhance it. There is no doubt it is & cruel job, and it is one of the reasons why many_keen harness and saddle-horse men have gone out of | the business, They say it has be- |'come too artificial. . . . There are a dozen other practices of grooming and training which are questionable. The old story of win at any cost." It seems clear there is cruelty in- volved, and to the layman the rem- edy would appear easy--the enact- ment of rules that horses thus "beautified" into artificiality by ways that cause the animals in- tense pain should not be eligible for prizes. Latest Slanguage : MINNEAPOLIS.--Joe Collitch -- he'll identify himself that way, too --is annoying Websterians again. Consider today's latest examples of campus 'jargon at the University of Minnesota: . : "Breaking"--Synonym for '"neck- ng." ; #8mooching"'--Co-ed's term for "breaking." * "Spook"--College man otherwise referred to as a "dud." "Goon" --He's low as can be in in. telligence. k : H'Flatto"'--The feminine "goon." te STOPS ITCHING In One Minute For quickrelief from the itching of pim les, 2; eos, uslus and Others n eruptio , Dennis' pure, cool liquid, : tic D. D. D. Prescription: irty years' world-wide success, Its gentle oils soothe the irritated and inflamed skin, thus aiding nature itself to heal the igor = der, No fuss--no muss. Clear, grease and stainless--dries up almost immediate- 8 ghemost ntensetching instantly, Hy now. A 85 trial bottle, at . D. D. Srugatores, will rove it=-or back. D. TD Presctiition Is sade by the own ore of IrALIAN Bara, Issue No. 2 -- 36 in some such manner, as an arched of the most | ilexorable Bigness that see A Fine British Plane A British airliner that for speed, economy and efficiency will outclass any yet built has been practically completed in the works of the Black- burn Company at ' Brough, Yorks. Minimum: performance figures guar- .anteed from the machine are: Top speed 210 m.p.h.; cruising speed 190 m.p.h.; non-stop range nearly 600 miles; landing speed fifty-eight m. p.h. : The 'best speed hitherto achieved: by a British commercial airplane of: feed. When low power suitable for regular trans. the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. port work is 1756. m.p.h. But with the effect is not long in reaching that top speed only 150 m.p.h. has ; | been possible for economical cruising. gjgn countries increased by 21 per milk herd once daily | \ is not often enough. Such 3 practice wireless operator will be carried in "Ten passengers, two pilots and a the new "Blackburn high speed trans- port. Yet the total horsepower from the two engines will be only about 800, ; : The famous American Douglas, cruising at about 170 m.p.h. in the service of Royal Dutch Airlines, needs 1:400 horsepower, United Air- lines' fast -ten-passenger Boeings in America use over 1,000 hosepower for the'r cruising speed of 184 m. ph. The Blackburn may also be used for military purposes, as no machine has yet been built capable of carry- ing its load on such low horsepower, Petrol will 'be stored in the cylindri- cal main. spar. of the big single wing. This spar means a big saving in weight, and would support the ma- chine in water. be seen on the main Empire routes. It is not big enough to carry the volume of passengers and mail con- templated: under : the government's | speed-up program. But it will be an ideal "feeder" for the main services.--London Daily Mail, -- Pm i; Jean:Hersgholt Calls lets, says Jean 'Hersholt, "five Garbos." The veteran character actor returned recently from 10 days of movie making with the famous bab- jes at Callander, Ont., was most en- thusiastic' about the sisters. are "It was like working with five Garbos," he said. Healthy, strong, intelligent and intelligent and charming were some of the adjectives he used in describ- ing the quintuplets. What amazed him most, he said, was to see them sleeping rout of doors in weather 20 below zero. © Hersholt impersonated Dr. Allan Roy. Dafoe, the quintuplets' physi- cian, in the picture, "The Country Doctor." ; "Beyond question, Dr. Dafoe is one unusual men I ever met," the actor said. "The miracle he performed, and the universal inter- est in it, has passed over him with- out so much as ruffling the surface. He takes the attitude that it was a job and he thanks his God he was able to do it well. Now, all he is in- terested in is following it through." "NOT WORTH A CONTINENTAL The saying that such a thing is "not worth a Continental" is not profanity, observes The Detroit Free Press. While the conditions which inject- ed this expression into the Ameri- can language may have been round- ly cursed by their victims, the ex- pression itself is merely historical. A "Continental" was one of the bills or notes issued by the Contin- ental . Congress, iithout metallic backing. Without authority to raise rev- enue by taxation and unable to bor- row large sums, the Congress re- sorted to "printing-press money" to finance the War of Independence. Altogether 40 emissions of "Con- tinental notes" were made between June, 1776, and November, 1779, to- talling $241,525,780. These notes, which were merely promises to pay, steadily declined in value until in 1781 a silver dollar was worth 100 paper dollars, or "Continentals." J And it was at that ratio of 100 to one that the Government redeemed them under the funding act of 1790. The value of the supplies and ser- vices obtained by the Continental Congress through the issuance of more than :$241,000,000 of this flat noney has been estimated to have been about $50,000,000 in specie. With that experience in their his- tory and with "not worth a "Cons tinental" in their minds, a good many Americans are wondering how long the Government in Washington can go on overspending its income before it, too, will have to turn to the printing-presses, with equally di- sastrous results to public creditand private pocketbooks, rr ------------------------f i "One of the weaknesses of de- 'moeracy is that, until it Is right up against it, it will never face the truth."--8tanley Badiwin, "We are so often trapped in the necés- ut does sarily to imply Betterness. #1"-Fva Le Gallienne, lest Exports Soar Sales to Empire Lands in November Increase 35 Per Cent. -- Britain Leads Way OTTAWA, Dec -19--An increase of 35 per cent. or more than $12,000, 000 was 'shown in Canada's exports {to British Empire countries during November compared with November, 1034, according to'a report issued by TOTAL OF $84,114,900 AT THE same time exports to for- cent. or more than $6,000,000, Exports to Empire countries dur ing November amounted to $48,200, 475, compared 'with $35;660,381 in November, 1934, while exports to for eign countries totaled $35,858,615 a- gainst $29,664,131, Total exports in November amounted to $84,114,- 990 against $65,124,612 in Novem- ber, 1934. The United Kingdom was the best customer among Empire ecouncries, taking goods to the value of $41,208. ,464 and increase of $11,136,012 or 73 per cent. over November 1934, while the United States was the high among foreign countries with $25,698,398, an increase of $5,762- ,726 or 28 per cent. OTHER COUNTRIES A value of exports to other leading Quints "Five Garbos"| Empire countries with last year's fig It is unlikely that the 'plane vee 076 in brackets; Australia, $2,403- ,076 ($1,464,839); Newfoundland, $1,085,665 ($740,317); British Sou- th Africa, $830,124 ($730,236); New Zealand, $705,435 ($56563,777); Brit- ish West Indies $820,145 ($566,411) Irish Free State $270,764 (8476,- 671); British India, $207,405 ($849- ,066); British Guiana, $145,493 ($87,489); Bermuda, $135,602 ($92,336.) 2" ' Valdes to other leading foreign coun. tries with last year's figures in brac- kets: Japan $2,236,437 ($2,301,- 'Hollywood -- The Dionne quintup-- who 1685); - Belgium $987,670 ($867, 791); Netherlands, $819,272 (8595 077); Norway $772,488 ($652,660) France $761,630 ($1,208,662) China $489,395 ($333,667); Argentina $433,168 ($688,915;) Brazil $433,- 013 ($284,400); Germany, $424,588 ($156,526) ; Finland, $335,388 (823- 1,460), Denmark $223,750 ($332,609) 'Sweden $284,320 ($128,274); Italy, $141,628 ($615,832); Portuguese | Africa, $203,843 ($84,614.) '$167,000,000 Value Set On Wheat Toronto. -- Preliminary govern- ment estimate of the vaiue of the Canadian wheat crop is nearly $167,- 000.000 or about $3,000,000 less than last year, it was stated in the week- ly grain report of the Canadian Bank of Commerce. The prairie crop ac- counted for $153.000,000 of the to- tal, $5,600,000 less than in 1934. Winter wheat conditions in the Un- itde States were generally favorable, the report continued, adding that more moisture would be desirable in the southwest. The acreage sceded for the 1936 crop is larger than last season. Harvesting started in northern Argentina, Gut will be somewhat later than usual™ in the south, where useful rains have fall- en recently. oo Crop | eee - , v-------- 'Fahrenheit, and for periods of ex- Britain Plans To Reduce Fire Loss ---- » $50,000,000 Damage is Done Every Year; to Change Materials London, -- A far-reaching scheme for cutting down damage done Ly fire--it amounts to approximately £10,000,000 ($50,000,000) & year--is to be launched in this country. The plan has the backing of gov- ernment departments, municipal au- thorities, the Royal Institute of Bri- tish Architects, building and engin- eering experts, and the great tariff insurance companies, Sensational changes in building. materials and methods of construc- tion, and sweeping revision of prem- fum rates for fire risks, are only two of the important outcomes expected from the scheme. A fire testing station--only one of its kind in the world--has just been completed at Boreham Wood, Elstree. It is on the work to be ¢arried out here that the hopes of bringing down fire damage by millions of pounds a year are based. i The station has been set up by the Fire Officers' Committee---an organ- ization comprising all the tariff fire insurance companies. Its most remarkable feature is a building which contains three mobile furnaces, each capable of testing building specimens at temperatures ranging from 1,000 to 2,200 degrees hour to six half an posure from hours. Special machinery working under pressure of up to 4,600 pounds to the square inch, has been provided for applying the necessary "load" to specimen walls and columns while they are being tested. The increasing financial toll exact- ed by fires and the development in recent years of new building mater- inls and methods of construction spurred the fire officers' committee to search for a standard method of assessing the fire-resisting qualities of the various eclements--in the con- struction of a building--floors, walls, columns, and so on. A specification for "fire resistance incombustibility, and non-inflamma- bility of building materials and structure" was eventually evolved by the British Standards Institution. It established five grades, accord- ing to the severity of the tests .ap- plied. This specification is known as "No. 476." There will be two=immediate re- sults of this "advance in the fight against fire waste; local authorities and others interested in the building side of fire control will be urged to make use of specification "No. 476" in preparing their requirements, and those manufacturers who wish to do so will have their products tested and graded. "Revolutionary building changes are almost bound to come," said an expert recently. "Local authorities will hardly be able to avoid stipulating for the standards specified, and manufactur- ers who do not submit their products for test or whose products fail to reach the standard wiil be at an ob- vious disadvantage. Manitoulin is celebrated for its his- toric interest, for its beautiful lake and farm scenery, but probably mniost of all it has taken the lead as being the centre of the first exclusive tui- key show ever held in, Canada. Farmers on the island have gone into the business of turkey-raising in an aggressive and commendable way, and the district is steadily gaining prestige in this respect. This devel- opment has not come about all at once, however, but is the result of the application of energy and busi- ness-like methods. The island has been raising turkeys for more than 20 years, the excellence of the birds having been demonstrated in 1916 by consumers their es, where markets and were. much impressed quality. ; As a result of the co-operation of the Dominion and Provincial Govern- ments, representatives of which made a study of the turkey-raising condi- tions on the island, an orderly sys- tem of marketing was «established and the organization of the present Growing Deaf With Head Noises? Try This. If you are growing hard of hearing, and fear catarrhal deaf- nessy-or if you have roaring, rumbl. ing, hissing noises in -your ears, go to your druggist and get 1 oz, of Par. mint (double strength) and add to {t 3% pint of hot water and a little sugar, Take 1 tablespoonful four timés a day. £ often pring with This wil quick relief from the distressing head noises, Clog- fed nostrils should open, breathing Qisome eas y a, Ho Jhagous stop ropping 'in oe throat, easy Ay 1 Anyone who is threatened with eatarrhal deafness or who: has head n s should give this preserip- on § trial. Manitoulin's Famed Turkeys carload shipments to the United Stat- Manitoulin Co-operative Turkey Growers' Association was affected. Since that time practically all the birds have been marketed through this organization, dressed, box-pack- ed and graded according to Federal poultry Standards. The results are indicative of what can be accomplished by co-ordinated effort. Turkeys grown on the island find their way to the tables of thou- sands of homes, hotels and restaur- ants, not only in Canada, but in the United States. The Manitoulin bird has acquired a reputation for quality and the farmers make such concert: ed efforts year by year to improve the standard that continued profit- able returns scem assured for those engaged in the industry. Maple Syrup Evaporators PRICE LOW -- QUALITY HIGH Makes real high class syrup re- taining the maple flavor You like s0 much. Kvaporators that will make profitable your maple bush for a small investment. Write for cata- logue of equipment, 1t is Interesting. W. GORDON STEEL WORKS LIMITED TWEED, ONTARIO " Would you like to go to dinner each day with a real appetite? Then take PHOSFERINE., Just a few tiny, economical drops each day. But what a difference they make! They lift you up. Strengthen you. Help you sleep and eat as nature intended you to. "And give you new wellssof energy. Get PHOSFERINE now. 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