Listowel Banner, 17 Jun 1926, p. 2

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“ach Spe haa ghee oS ey * RY ESC RE PST EPs Ee . Kléctric Blanket Treatments -_ RET AS . — Thursday, Jane 17th,, 192 »a@ncer, Solicitor for tf Main street, over Miss Gibbs’ Milla usiness Patronize Thete Advertisers Whenever Yo1 Need ~ the Services. of Reliable, Business or Professional Men’ Directory), LEGAL MEDICAL *} whole northern hemisphere, and it Niicases taenieeaeans ‘Siit=be a <be a returmm of 1816, cae year without a summer,’ @ grow. séason with marked crop Saivarea! ‘throughout the ‘will become necessary for the nat- ‘ROBERT.G. MacFARLANE Successor to Late J. E. Terhune Barrister, Notary Public, -Convey- ancer i Office over E. D. Bolton, 0.L.8. ."Bhone 48 : “6.0, SATE MD. : Physician and Surgeon _ Diseases of bag oy Surgery. Phone Office. Inkerman arise, West. Church. H. B. MORPHY. K. C. Barrister, Notary Public, Convey- nk of Com- merce, piowh + Muiverton, Atwood. Money to loan. Officg over’ J. A. Hacking’ . Drug Store, Main St. -Lis- wel. . J.-0. HAMILTON, B. A. Conveyancer, Solicitor al Bank Canada. Office on south°side Barrister, Money to loan. mery- anes el de My gata’ Opposite Presbyterian » DR, F. J. BR. PORSTER,, Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Graduate {fi medicine, University eatitant New York Conte mic and Aural Institute, Moorefiel Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos. pitals, London, Eng. =, 63 Waterloo St. Stratford, Phone 267 Will be at the Queen's Hotel, Listo- . wel on the first Monday» In the :* mouth prém’ 10. a.m. to 4 p.m ions of the world to use their war ‘powers to conserve food and protect their populations” from starvation, according to a forecast made by Herbert .Janvrin . Browné,- 6Scean meterologist and long-range - weath- er forecaster, before 500. students attending the four-day session of the College of Scientific Price Forecast- ing, which opened at the Congress ‘Hotel, Chicago. “The same -oceanic “changes that prevailed 110 years ago. are now in evidence,” he said. ‘We will have the severest winter in 1926-27. ever known, on the. Northern American} 8} continent. America is practically sur- rounded by cold water and will be by next year.” He bases -his forecasts on the Next W inter To Be on Q yobanges, in the amount of See giv- off by the sum and absorbed by ihe salt waters of the ocean. “It has taken- since the beginning ‘ot 1922 for the Northern Pacific area to ex- haust the momentum .of the sun's heat which began to drop nearly five years ago. Cold air will come the Canadian Northwest into the ‘United States -mext winter and in 1927 from the Artic and Ber- ing seas. Cold, will also come from cold waters which now. extend »from California to the Hawaiian Islands.’ Despite..the fact that officials of the United States weather bureau clam.that there is no scientific prin- ciple known whereby weather can be forecast atcurately aw a 36 hours. in advance, Mr, anes plenty of evidence in the bp thes indicate. a summerléss year in 1927 when farmers Dearborn to water their horses on Jaly 5, 1816. INSURANCE ©. MORTON scort, B. A. oeninte, Notary Public, Convey-! r. Office over Adoiph's Hardware Store, Main street. FIRE INSURANCE in best companies; also “accident, au- tomobile, burglary, plate glass and Jbond iasurance. Automobiie insur- ance, 85 cts. per 100. Your business Sylvania, Phila third eee 0, Office over Schin- solicited. E.-D. BOLTON. DENTAL W. G. E. SPENCE Dentist, Graduate of the Dentist ate of The eat "Colne of Dental ‘bein's Sto For painless extraction we use nit rous oxide oxygen Bas also conduct- fve anaesthesia. MUSIC PERCIVAL F. HOADLEY . mposer : Organist. and Sleminy Leader of Lis- towel United iano, _Song. Organ and Theory of Mu Studio, corner or Division and El- ma Streets, Phone 80 R. F. TAYLOR, L.D.S.; D.D.S. Graduate of the Royal college of Dental! Surgeons, and of Toronto uni- versity. Nitrous Oxide Gas for Extractions. Offiie over J. C. McDonald's store. “Phone 60. F. ST. C. WILSON, L.D.S.; D.D.S. Graduate of Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto University. Office over Banzley’s new store. one 23 for appointments. CHIROPRACTIC L. O. WHITFIELD, D. C. Graduate Chiropractor HEALTHGRAM> FRASER pasted ‘Ottioes of Health Longer Life and Less Disease Many people ask the question—is the money spent on public health worth while? Here is the answer contained, In a recent despatch from England. Scientific safeguards of health have so lengthened the aver- age span of life the English Insur- ance Companies are giving serious consideration to a revision af their expectancy tables. The public is puy- ing too much for insurance, as the great war on disease has lessened the Offiee on Main street, over John: stone's Jewellery store. Picea 10 to 12 noon, 2 to 5 p.m. Evenings and otier hours by appointment Phote No. 9. Consultation free. Bik bos AUCTIONEER W. J. Dowd \ yermepl Ss others and alwaye seils to-oth NATIONAL FARM AGENCY Phone 248, Listowel, OPTOMETRIST DR. H. ‘8. MALLORY Registered Optometrist Graduate of cig Royal ae of Befence, Foronto. Office, L Oll- “uyel’s Jewellery nade ‘FUNERAL DIRECTOR \. BRITTON FUNERAL DIRECTOR JE : : riak eesumed by the underwriters. Statistics show that ecience has triumphed over the drawbacks civilization and people are living} °8 me only longer lives but lives free | ri town will spend a lot of money to reduce ite rate on fire insuranee, will it spend any money to affect 6 lowering in its life insurance rates? A despatch from the | Canadian Press says the average span of life has been in¢éreased during the _past decade from 45 to 6% years, an in- crease of-thirteen years. It used to be stated as an undeniable fact chat health ceuld not be bought. It can be etated now without fear of con- tradiction that health within certain limits. can be purchased. Given certain amount of money end the right person to spend it. one.can al- most enc igana fewer lees diseas Next Woeks—Milik. deaths and Continued Praise For. Herb Juice “I suffered severly. . from constipation and indigesfion and wae rapidly losing weight. I was nervous and cont@- not sleep,” sited Mra. John Bardsley of 269 Blm Are., Windsor. ‘I had tried eo many remedies without relief that - was getting discouraged. E finally tried HERB Sion: The results were astounding. New, I feel like a new person. = eat aud sleep epleadidty and _peve gained sixteen pounds in weight in two months. My hus- band is also enthusiagtic over HBRB JUICH. He auffered = Somewhat the same as I and = HERB JUICE gave. him the same wonderfully quick relief. It is now our family medicine.": PHOSPHO INE. For sale byjleading druggies eyes Bree $1.09 ‘i Departmental Exams Begin June Twenty-One MIDDLE AND UPPER- SCHOOLS Floral Oddity Found Among Tulip Beds Many have edimired the. splendid beds, of tulips on the garden of Mr. Hay, Main street, but perhaps START JUNE 21—ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS TO BE HELD, JUNE 28, 20, 30. The annual departmental exam ations in connection with the High | School will commence this year on} Monday, June~21, and will continue; until Tuesday, July 6. The, high school entrance tests willebe held June oat 2 0. h rogram is as sight morn- ing-subjects being given firs 2 Middle school-Phivaton, agriculture and literature;:- Upper School.—Problems and literature. June 22—-Middle School—Geomet- ry and British history: Upper School —Geometry and ory. June 28—Middle School-——-Chem- istry, agriculture-and composition; Upper School—Chemistry and com- position. June 24—-Middle School-Algebra and ancient historp; Upper School— Algebra. June 25-——Lower School—Physlog- aphy, grammar, Latin grammar; Middle School and Upper School—} Latin authors, Latin composition. une 28—High School entrance— Grammar, writing, geography; Mod- el Entranee—Composition, epelling, geography; Lower .School—-Geogra- phy, Canadian history; Middle School and Upper School—German authors, German composition Arithmetic and literature; School--Arithmetic and French gram- mar; Lower School—Art, botany, osition;- Lower School--Arithmetic, zoology, agriculture; Upper School-- Physics, zoology. July 2-—Middle and Upper Sehool —French authors and French comp- tion. July 5~+-Middle School—Greek au- thors and Greek accidence; Uppar School—@reek authors and Greek composition. July 6--Middle and Upper Sshkoe) —Spanish authors and. “Spanish composition: . Cow Tests In Perth Making Pregress | Cow testing work:4 in-Pert county is progressing very. favorah@y ard now that cows have beon able to ger out on pasture land, an ingesasing number of farmera throughewt the district gre falling in line with the efforts of M. C.. McPhail, semealier Dp cow testing ga month rg May #0 tested in this anu x= pected That about £50 will be tested at Stratford and 75 at Willow Growe during the preseut oftnth. The advantages of oow b@ing stressed to all farmers within the county and altheugh the forma- tleon.ef-a cow _testing association may nob be undertaken this sexees interest shown ble. connectien with cow testiie is is original equipment, consistitg -o cow. test box, stale, sample Sat mu to the eaving that is effected d pardoned proper eoregh Pa jaducing large numbers to tak: up. : IN =a Bueiness more and more ie leara- ing the valne of politeness. werner it be a gteat n dgaling steel, of] or automobile 0 wk e neigh. hor! t duty o thelr .froat teet knocked out in the halls of législa- tion owe the ofigin of their troubles to. ti pes employees. rporation’ can Fag Afford to the fate. soli sweot and he - baat Ee ic anewered gs same eet 1,672-t n 2 times is whose worth get oy Dube. red in er be Ughtly a ye who can he etill consid And yet, agriculture; Upper School—Trigon- ometry, botany. June 30—High. School.-Entrance- Composition, spelling, history; Mod-j* 6] School-—Grammar, French comp- grocery css odch smmoye is ctiaready 2 to the San ta ess in- business is ‘efficiency, man. ki importance of courtesy should sot Any ‘ fe Penns: act as hs ; few passers-by Have ‘noticed a oddi- ,ity in the bed of Darwen tulips on ithe boulevard in front-of the resi- dence. e may ‘be found tulip stocks | bearing two, three, and in one. case five perfect’ flowers, but naturally ‘emaller.than those of only one ‘bloom. This is very tnusual in tul- ips, and no doubt ,these bulbs will be retained by Mr. ‘Hay to see what will happen when they flower again next year A Guelph citizen one day recently found.a fulip bulb in his garden with three flowers, and, according to the Guelph Mercury it was consider- ed a real oddity by flower growers in that city. In reference to the oc- currence at Guelph ey Guelph Daily Mercury says that Mr. J Carter, a member of the Canadian Horticu- tural Coungil,-and an authority on flowers, stated that it rarely hap- pens that three flowers were thrown up from one tulip stock, elthough it had occasionally occurred. He stated that the bulb should be kept to see what would develop with another planting, but that in all probability it would on the next occasion give only one flower, the normal number BACK PORCHES abe house ig beautiful, my dears; e front veranda’s wide You" 7 fix it up with hammocks, -eh, and wicker things beside The kit per = on the vaxt with ust step or Why, ioeaiter, it you ‘ré satisfied, of course the house w To. to me, .aerces the year like me home-guiding torch, The brightest thing remembered is your mother’s kitchen potch. Back porches in the summer time—I sea the walnut trees Atossing bons h branches in buoyant moraing breeze; A Poe ng path, a ci barn; in the erchard gra: The mellow Red June copies Racha to tempt the ones who'd p All warmed to fragrante by rhe sun with basy bees about, And rebins dipping gayiz down fim their flavor out. the to bie ll on had some simple rules; plest one of thase— She pth kept the — porch a piace for shelling On summer mornings wien the shade, Iny cool and dewy th She'd bring thenr ina ints pan, the steps her.only chair; The little curls abou Regi fareheal use@ to bob and shin In that cool, shady, eitlene bower of memowes o’ mi © | There glinting milk pails atood arow to wait the western sun. There — hand doffed their hate and stretehed themselyea when ae was dome, Until the welceme dinner call; there the ehildren played In Fe Nap the peste IF srg mlm hours of gong and had ane bagre eat 4 oo cee oat to watch; out; and B White at the: iittle, Foy eounds of night-time chirped ing formed next.year. In the mean- time every effort is pelts made to} ¥° always figure on the’wear of bring in as many m es i | oy es re aang y ahd: Practically the romly oat a ee tigare how they'll last . Por. many rooms mesg iF shelter Ws 28 life is passing by, ans Sed oa @ur memories we live un- So ehoose your house of dreams, my dears, and choose it ab you please But there is nothing like a kitchen porch for shelling peas. PASS YOUR WAY ping in Tired; he sought the shade'of e -tree along the roadside N jearby Was a crude sign which read “There je a , if you are spring” ses gnen: thirsty, drink.” A’ little farther on i lod i e a 6i af you ial yourself?’ Who had placed ered - iced * | A Singular Case of BRA. MITCHELL -The investigators of the Rockefeltor institute may be yery proud of them- selves. Indeed, they haye reason to be. They have substituted live parts ating out- side its proper place in a nian's breast. If they keep on they may in time make if the stories’ of what Indian fakirs havewlone in keeping persons alive in a#- comatose condition for many years Is true these Rockefellers or scientific fellers or whatever they are have yet parently undeveloped civilization. There is a story. going the rounds ‘| among the undergraduates of a certain university which, if it can be substan- tiated, puts the modern scientific inves- tigator to shame, Arnold Gereau, as- sistant professor of chemistry—he has charge of the la¥oratory—is one of those phenomenk who spring up once fn a century. ._He is very young, and itis well-known that he was born with certain mental powers, a certain su- pernatural knowledge of things on which many a man has studied for a lifetime without making any progress whatever. Willbur Stockbridge, 2 member of the class of '15, so the story goes; one day went to Professor Gereau with a yellow bit of paper on whieh was writ- ten in old English style This i# the body of William Arbuckle, private in his majesty’s —th foot. Cap- who was averse to the exécutio ed, and geo was turned Indian, fifty or een y fe will still be in the polly: But not one man In many. millions will be able to effect a , consent- ver to the it any time. after Young Stockbridge told the professor that in excavating for building pur- poses on the upper part of Manhattan Island on property owned by his family a tomb had been discovered containing the body of a man in British uniform of a former period. The paper had been found in the lead coffin in. which the body had been buried. Gereau—mind you, I don't vouch for this—arranged- with the student to bring the find to the laboratory, which at the time was closed on account of the spring recess and would therefore be-at the professor’s individua) dis- posal. No one has rg sig to poh process by which Gerea the remains of Private vaxbuetie but it is claimed, that be effected a The fellowed by modern getors. He must have hed an inkling of the method by Pn animation “wee suspended by the Indian or be wie not bave Been able te restore it by ig action; which, he sre. lid appl ¢@ gives as a fundamen wifes ec the Indjan knew how o kili—the action of the fieatt, Eoart, ad Gereau ,restored the pulsa- — which are the basis 6f animal fe. Whethee: tte story is true or false there is one part of it that fits in with mbdern scientific investigation. it is said that Gereau found thet. certain meraiers- ef the body had suffered from the long suspension of their funt-. tigcns. The resurrected man showed ed that, though be had remained in an @ man out of parts of other men. But © much to learn from an antique and ap- |: BUTTER PAPER 100 sheets, plain 25e + 100 sheets printed, 30c. Dairy Butter,” “Choice 800 sheets plain $1.00 500 sheets printed $1.25. Best Quality Parchment Paper | FOR SALE AT WN \ Listowel Banner Y Yi GSI, Flour, Mang old Seed, all varieties, Turnip Seed, all varieties, Feed & ‘Seeds '$0c Ib. 60c Ib. SEED CORN---Dents, White e Cap, Golden Glow, Seaming, Wisconsin No. 7 Bailey, per bushel a. Flints--- Longfellow, White Flint, Comptons Early, per bushel $1.75 $2.25 Car of Land Lime price $8.00.per ton. Chopping Done Satisfactorily and Promptly | C.H. SMITH, A ok Phone 256 signs of decay, and the profegsor fear- . é Baby Chicks For Sale Leghorns We would advise you to place your orders eatly for BABY CHICKS for a ae and August delivery. the same high standard, heavy g strain BRE PRODUCTION SINGLE which we have been receiving 25¢ apiece We arp. offering afopain DELA- layin OMB WHITE LEGHORNS, tor at be apenouny low price of i2%e each. Phone or write us at o Delamere Poultry Farm, Thos. G. Delamere, Prop. Established 1903. a Ont. ‘Phones 489 j or w naep: 4 condition of health for more years, be-would Ule within a few, honrs after resurrection. or tast was begun of different organs, apf. the first tested—the kidneys— ‘Gobsied depay. Gerenu at once ‘téle Raseaens to the College of ‘Physicians and Surgeons fer‘a pair of sound: bid- neys and, nemoring the ones affected, intreduced the new ones. He supposed for some time tliat Arbuckle had died eeder the operation, but half a bottle of Priaii ngbt it ed. These were other parts to be, sabatituted, but those mentioned ‘dhe prineipal replacements. several hours, bour ped before Erivate kle spoke. Then be opened bis eyes and cried out in a “Tteeeat et the goare!” Gerenu was delighted. .}t looked as if hé might save bis patient, for while the'man bad doubtless ‘been deanimat- ed in good health fils being” of — story. Poe say that Arbuckle 'y restored to remember ane speak sa his expected execution. Others aver that Gereau, finding his breathing defective, worked his arms vigorously, but in spite of bis efforts the man died. It is said that at one time Arbuckle sat Up and wae given a stiff drink. Raising the glass be shouted tn a horn- an; | like toice: “To his gracious madeaty King God bless bim and confound es: is Stockbridge and Gereau bare both been. asked to ‘make a statement, ‘but hi “whisky bro round, }. stha direc was beck tore! and half of CREAM WANTED If you produee good cream and want the best results under the new grading system, 1 | | ery. Our Creamery will be operated 24 hours a day in {© weather and your cream will be in our creme and ‘ minutes after afrival in Palmerston. Thus who produees goad eream the best pogsibie srade ane price We cream Te- loan eur patrons cans and éeived. ehip your cream to Fhe Palm’ Cream- the hot graded 16 -the farmer pay eash for You ean ship qm any train ahy day and prompt delivery and pay. Send us # trial can THE PALM CREAMERY CO. PALMERSTON Printin g! Bs “Magazine,” “Art Studio Life -Mag- “ "Pwou wo'k come, y Four Magazines Barred By Custom Department The customs depantment, Ottawa, has notified the department in Lon- don that four more American pub- lications have “been banned from Can The publications bear the follow: ing suggestive “Li tes : “American Beauties;" “Arts,” Fads and Modes azine” and “Harth’s Spice From Life Magazine bettab ithless Woman “Ah's been prayin’ for times,” aaynounced Jake. ~ be bettah e yo’ was to advised his wife. Jake ecard saying Many chicks you. want. "We BAB 5Y CHICKS 8. CG. Pens wis gates: yeas ete wi dams laid 226 to. 267 egge in their aan year, Sc each. . ens ale birds w dams tal Toe to 226 eggs in their pullet year, each. write you by return tn mail when we can supply you. © _ 1000 year old White Les hens for June

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