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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-7-22, Page 7yetohttee-- "Dead Tired After a Night REGISTERED HIGII LAY -ERS EY Irt, eR EBNER, 'Sleepless Professor of Poultry Ilfeebandr y, Manitoba Agritultural College, ' Great intereet has been aroased Sleepleseuese CAUSOd by the ells system leceoming derauged, aud to those whose rest is brokea by frightful dreams, uielitmexce, sieldeg eai4 sinetle eriag seneatious, who wake up in the inoraiug, feeliug tiled as whenthey. 'seat to bed, eau have their old, pectem- o1, 1.114/atm:bed, refreshing aleep back throughout Canada in the national reeistration- of high -producing Ilene. Se for the benefit of poultrymen across the lifie fall details are girerk of how the registrations IS handled. In developing auch a system, based on record a perfermaace, poaltrymen are confronted with greater difficul- ties than 'are breeders of any other stock. The hen has no eonriection with her offspring, and •she reproduces, or Might -reproduce, herself 'over 200 times a year, thus maleingapedigree breeding and r•egistralion far more . complicated than with live,eteck. • Trap -nest records are invaluable as they stand, but become, of utmost value if they can be used- as a basis Mrs. A. Aesteulmer, Larao, B, fori writes:—' Two years ago, afterregis ration. This s the goal to- . havinee ' bad a some at ac , I ward which trap -nest records, pedi- 0 p • wee left in d badly run ii.own condition. glee bleeding and laying conteste are My -nerves were all broken up, I could striving- to -day. eTo reach this goal not sleep at night, but mould tow( ,there are eequired the greatest pos- h= sice to &ie util morning when lble accuracy, a method thet is fair I eveutd feel so dead tired I would, not tOE all but de e not leave the door wide feel like getting up at ell. • • open, and. a system of registration Having read about miebutaye that is uniform for the country and your carried on by one single agency. - " Heart caul Nerve Pills for just melte mine got some and took hem T .• • ,e eases as 't hese mineyi a are embodied in dee directed:and before I had fLuiehed in, system of registration followed in three boxes I began to rast at night,' Canada to -day in connection vvith the id sleep good,and tcY nerYes 8"71 Canadian 'laying contests. Contests' ,got all right again. Pree 50e a box at all dealers, or atecl by the seine agency and governed mailed direet on receipt of price bre, by the sarne rules. • Trap -nest records The T. Milburn` Ca, Limited, Totonto, made under the conditions are fair to out, all breeders and they carry official ete-- - sanction. Selecting Young Cockerels. The contests are operated by the =rig this month a lo or young Dommien Experimental Farrn system cockerels are going to be sold, broil- at their branch farms in the different Frem among this number a few provinces. • The laying contest is the "will/ have to be saved as future breed- agency reeponsible for developing the Mg males. The question is how to de- registration work. • Any hen making ride which ones are most worth sav- a trap -nest record of 20,0 or more eggs "When pedigree hatching is possible contest becomee eligible for registra- ly simplified in that the parentage of Application is made to the Canadian every chick is known, so thst it is pos- Natipnal Poultry Record Asieciation rather than geed iadividuals fleem man applies through his association. are uniform. Seem past to coast, op - ing.• • M. fifty-two constecutive weeks in any and is practiced the problem le tion • • Bible to save families of good chicks for registratibre just at the livestock families dei which there were, perhaps, • many poor Ones. Shim pedigree hatching cannot al- • _ ways be done, it becomes important to study the characteristics of the groi• re Ing chickens with a view th determin- ing a basis on which ,togical selection tan be made with reatsonable assur- ance of accomplishing the desired re- sult. Perhaps the =est importent fact to Icee.p in mind is that a good cockerel 40 t 'deal cock birch miniature. A cockerel that -shows at twetvemeeks -of age the shape and foam of a ma - eke male is usaally not a desirable epecimen to save as a future breeder. Cockerels with good frames, fairly, large in bone and those that feather , •rapidly, normally and in balance are likely to deve:op in a way to justify: their 'being saeed. Furthermore,: , • pays to save the occkerels thattaret growing, more rapidly than the aver- ' age of the flecic. • . , Pure Water for Pigs." I • A. good many of the he plants', 'whiCh we endhunter in our visits to 1 • farms provide fe-w or no facilities for . „ , keeping c_eaa, pure water before the hogs at all times.• 1 air,g raisers' seem loath to "get away' from the idea that the heg is natarate ly dirty, and they permit him to rus- tle far his drink and.to,ke nut of the walleyes, ditches'and byways rather; than provide pure water. , There are a number of patent wat- erers on the market which can be at - tackled to barre) or cask, besides e number of galvanized evathaere which • are really indispensable where any •kneat n,umber of hogs' are grown, but for. the man who has one or two lit- - • ters, water • ean be put , into their cleaned trough frequently during the da d s eakin this will • registrar of recerds and sent to the breeder to fill out. No breeder can get birds tegistered tudeee they male their record in a laying contest, Put - lett from registered here eannot be' regietered till they in their turn have qualified in a laying contest. A bird that qualiflee for registra- tion is tattooed in both wings before leaving the, coritest. In the right"wing are the contestant's registered letters! and in the left wMg the qualifying -4 year letter—A indicating 1923, B1 1924, and so on, No female can qual- ify unless her eggs avera,ge twerity-1 four 'ounces to the dozen after thel first four weeks of laYing- I A male bird over six months and under one year of age can be regis- tered, previdecl that both his dam and granddana are registered and he ana hie sire have passed Inspection In- spection is rigid; it rules out any •birds that hatte disqualifications under the American Standard of Perfection. Females •are inspected as to diserise and breeding, and the 'flock as to care stud management, before they are ad- mitted into any laying' contest. The t' ted and the chicks hatched from the registered hen,a must be wing banded with a eealed band within *tee weeks after hatching. When they go into the contest 'pul- lets from registered hens muet be " banded inethe right wing the official metallic wing label and also • the official chick band. Cockerels for which application for registration is made must bear similar identification marks before they become eligible. 'Whea a male passes final laspeetian it is tattooed In the wings in the same wayees the female when it leaves the laytteg contest. h • This system of registration of heavy layers has so far been an unqualified success, There are sufficient restric- tions and limitations placed upon it to• guard-againet fraudulent practices of any 'kind: It appeals to the breed- ers and carries' with it accuracy, re- liability and integrity to a degree not reached under any other system that Registration papers are issued by the has se far been ouggestecl. ,Cattle for the Shcrsir Ring. Beef cattle must be properly fitted_ before they are taken on the show 'Liming Young Clover. Several experiment. stat-ioes have given some attention to the matter a circuit. Although the feeding and the beet time to apply lime -and have fitting muStithe begun a long time in found that over a pdriod of • years advance a the opening of the show there is little difference in the effee- season, the routine of putting on the tivenese of the limestone no matter final touthes is just as important as whether it is applied on the plowed the feeding. soil Or at some more congenient time The cattle should be trained to lead during the rotation. ' The two points well and stand in a correct position in the ordinary rotation at Which when lined up before the judge. This limestone can be most conveniently training must be begun several scattered are: On the new seeding Months before ,the cattle are taken of clover following the wheat or oats away from the farm. Animals that 'harvest, or on the sod land after the are properly trained to lead and stand hay crop has been removed. ° well when .lined up before the judge Of these, liming the young Clover always present a better appearance would seem to be of especial interest. and receive hiore atthntion than rest- Probably much' of •the _ new clover . - less cattle. seeding .elervives the summer • and Shoiv animals should be washed at would be preserved' against winter - least once a week for ea month or six killing if limestone were applied to it weeks before starting on the shOw ch- during the summer. If the „stand of cult. Washing tnereases the growth clover is not thick enough it can still of hair and makes the skin clean, soft be 'reseeded during the month of July, and pliable. Soft water is preferred. just before or after the liming takes to hard water. Tar soap should be place. used When it is possible to get it. • In, In connection with surface appli- washing the, cattle, first pour water cations of limestone, -we have found over -the hair and skin so that the that coarse products can used to dirt is thoroughly soaked. After aP- advantage under these condition,s, paying the water, soap ahould be rub- Lying on the surface- of the ground, bed into the hair by means of a stiff tlie -large paaticles .are exiosed, to brush until a good lather has been weathering action ancrtend to he re- set up. A. litt'e water is added from cluced in glee arid to he disselv,ed, Lah- ti= to time white rubbing to loosen sequently becoming a part of the soil. the dirt and wash it off the skin. After 'July and August are good months in the entire surface has, been thorough- which to study -the new seedier of ly, rubbed and wasliedethe animal clover and help it prepare for its should be rinsed with clean water first winter, when meatesof -the casuali- until all the soap has been 'removed. ties occur. The surface should be wiped as day as! possible. If the hair is -ong 'enough! aa it may be curled, which usually gives • an en Y P the anima) a more attractiye appear - S.S. LESSON July 26. The Paeeover, Exodus 11: 1 to 12: 16. Golden Text—For even Christ our paesever Is sacrificed for us. -1 Cor, 5: 7. ANALYSIS I. roe Deal% or Tim FIRsTsoall, 11: 1-10; 12: 29-80. U. me eAsseriaa LAW AND rrte PniST tIL rREFABATION FOR DEPANITRE AND O1027311:::IGN, 12:1-28, THE Si'OILING OF THE EGYPTIANS, • 'INTRODuvrtox--The ohaptere foie lowing our •laet lesson tell of the re- turn of Moses to Egypt, his meeting with Aaron his brother anewith the elders of Israel, their interviews With Pharaoh and request for per/al-010n ho go into the wilderness to hold A sacred Babylonian, exile that this eiew method of' reekoriing the eelD:Se 40f the year was introduced, following the liebye Ionian practice. Thie fact woald, therefore, appear to prove that the law of the Passover, in the form, given here, comes from the period of the exile or later six or severtehundred thee iiarratives of the Pezitathueh, 111 complietion of materiel drawn from various oider documentary soarcea Here we have a first set of rules for the Paeaover ix ye. 1-13, then rules for f.eetival 11-4,.eavned bread, Which seems to have been origirially operate from the Passover (23;15), in VS. 14,20, then a second eet of Pass- over regulations in vs, 21-27. • Photo are supplementary rulee in vs, 43-50, and further regulatioes governing the feakit of unleavened bread and the eacrifiee of the first bora in chapter 13'21itis enontd, v, 2, was the month known as Abib, or Nisaa, Compare 13;4. Th Id h • be in the autumn, and to this day the Jewe still reeognize the year as beginning in September, The month Abili cor- responds to the latter part of IVIarch and the first part of April, or our Easter season. It WAS /Kit until the fast, 'eand the series of terrible plagues which followed, the king's ee- fusel. Ten' plagues in all are recorded. There Is, however, evidence that the hietory is drawn from three (Oder nar- ratives, and that some of the stories are du,plicated, as, for exam le, 8: 16-19 and 20-24, where the wer which is translated '1toe" may, quite possibly I mean "sand -flies" (see Revieed Vete sion margin)enad 9;1-7, as compared with 8-12, where the word "murrain" is a general kerne for pestilence mu/ may be identical with the boils and blains of the following story. It will i be ' th sti compare the oeti al 1 account of the plagues in Psalm 78, Which gives a list of seven, and in IPsaltri 105e whtch has the same num- ber in a diffee•ent order. The plagaes 'seem all. to have been natural pheno- menet, common to the land of Egypt, 'but the hand of God is seen in theit ;rapid eucceseion and their extra,ordi- 1 nary' severity- Each year the water of the Nile tuxes a dull red at the time of the flood, in July arid August, owing th the presence of vegetable 1natter. Each year the flood brings with it myriads of frogs. In autumn 'there are swarms of mosquitoes which breed in the shallow water a the rice Ifielde. Skindiseases are common, anci at rare intervals there have been cat- tleplaguese Locust swarms are some- times known. which do fearful dam- age, while thunder storms with hail, • and sand storms which produce "dark- ness as thick as a London fog" are not uncommon. The most mysterious and terrible of all the plagues was that which smote the first-born in all the Y' ' g , mice •answer the, purpose, if we don't get1 It is (mite essential that the artinial too busy with other work and neglect be keptoutof drafts and blanketed it. 'Dheres where the automatic faun-, until the skin is dry. ' • taire Conees, in, and rarely fails; and it addition to tee washing and Y9.1-vcan go °n about your other work training to lead well and stand cor-• . and not worry. - rectly, the feet must be trimmed, the Dentthrow cold water on hot hogs horns cleaniede scraped and polished. or pigs, especially 927., top of .their In the case of Aberdeen-Angps the _......te- shoulders. if they get overheated thtthead and tail should be clipped. I a cool pockl for them' to lie wn in. Theggeima',. elionld be brushed just . before- eading into the ring to remove \ -- Shadeand p'enty of good water will obviate overheat. A WOMAN'S BACK •WAS NEVER MADE NEITHER WAS A MAWS Backache is 011.0 of the, first tigns showing tbat the kidneys are not working -properly, and that .they should be attended to at once, for 11 they aro neglected, at this stage of the game, 'serious kidney troubles are, sure to f,llow. • • There Is only ono way to 'get rid of the weak, Jame and aching back and that is by tho uso of • rimy adhere' to the body. II the hair is moistened to curl, the welter should be used sparingly so that -the skin is not saturated and too wet when the animal is bronght into the rink. If the body is wet; :from the use of too =eh •water, the judge is not hicey 40 oxamine'the Anima30 carefutly ea IS done wheh brought befete hira 'in the very best condition. Aatmals that do not have a long coat of bait ehould be shown dry and the hate brushed enmeth, The animal should be led into ,the ring with a. leather show halter. .... . i ., [ Through the"Su/imy Garden,. , Throttll'the sunny garden ' The hen -ening bees are still; 1 The Pr climbs the heather, I The heather climbs the hill, tool4 • . "Doer's's are the origlial "rid- •„Thefluvve been on the inerket age the pad 40 -years so don't accept a. substitute, "-Get 1Doands' whim you agile foe theta.” Put up only by The 'A leauteere"009 ItImited, Toronto, Ont.., , ;The, loW cloucle have riveo A little rift through. Tbe hill cliesbi-to heavoii, • Isae away and blee, --IVary E. Coleridge, in "Poeins," 'luthia has 80,000,000 fiirmers, but it importe oimlyS1,00.0,000 worth of Satre Implements and machlaery each year. ••••-•4 • Reforms In Italy. The Fascist Government of Italy hes undertaken- to prevent begging on the street and has eucceeded to an aston- ishing -degree. It has also begun an active campaign against the sale of irn. proper and immoral books and.papers. Flag ProbleM". at Aldershot: Every reginrent at Aldershot now flies its own flag at its thief office, the TInion. Jack being reserved for head- quarters and government house. TEETHING ,BABIE5 ,Ttruspnqs of Then DIE EVERY StIlitliVIER Thethot we:ather i5.. very hard on babies starting to Gilt their teeth. On the Rot sign otetny looseeess .of the bowels ttlio mother should give few closes of This will ,quickig offset the diarilioa, vomiting and pliegingo teed, Petheys save the baby's tifo, Put up °elf* The T. htilbura .004 Liimted Torente Ont. • I. THE DEATH OF THE FIRSTBORN, 11: 1-10 and 12: 29-30. „ Yet one piague, 11-1, is promised. A ready Pharaoh has been threatened with this greatest calamity. Moses has been bid en y the Lord to say to Pharaoh, Thus saith the Lord, • Israel is my eon, my first-born; and 1 have said unto thee, Let my son go that he may serve me; and thou hist refused to let him go; behold •I will •slaY thy on, thy first born" (4:22- 24). Let them ask, v. .2. Compare 3:21e 22. They are bidden, accotcling to the . custom of the -East, to aste for pres- ents, not to borrow with no intention of returning What they borrowed. II. eke PABSOVERIAW, 12:1-28.- . • There is here a combination of the story of the first passover, on. the eve of the departure-fronr-Egypt, and the laws made at different times, long afterward, governtng its annual cele- bratioa. No better illustration could be &and of the fact, already more than onee mentioned, thet we have in LET SUMMER .HURT : y EY SARA, SWAIN ADAMS The lovely SUMMOF days take their toll, These long, lazy hors are the tottie-eating clays when we stir an- eaellY under the pilAlese heat of min and aceept wiahoat resistance the dry- ing warmth of sarainer breezes, • You (ticket thtalt—yolt weren't lawate that -the lazy hours were af- : fecteng your skirl, were yon? You ceuldn't believe that neglecting your , eoldeream jar in the swam% would bring such dire results? Yet, examthe those "cruel little pre - :mature wrinkles fanning out from the corners of your eyes and traversing your brow! Tan too! 'Freckle, scores of them, What can you do about than? And, look eloser larto your enirrer—do you see how your skin has coarsened? I The answer to it ail is neglect, 1, Now you must devote yourself te correcting these things, for what -*a- Years afThi ter the time of 'Uses. The ma4 eSe 111° Y s will et lw month was reckoned from elow moo, skin grow oid and ugly? Intelligent to new moon, so did not correspond women appreciate that, next to their exactly to ours,• 1 SQUIB and Millets, their bodies require A iamb for an household, v, 8. The intelligent attention. lamb was slain and the lelood put uponi! Crack your whip of ambition. Stir the door posts and lintel of the house, about with ^ pep • and, eutleasiasm. On the night of the pestilence ft was , Don't crawl out of bed in the morn - believed that -the estroying angel ,ing, but dash out -vvith all the joY of pa.esed over all the houses thel an adventurer starting on a DOW and Rebrews whieh were so marked and; darning trip. t till b b d Pen e 5 es sun th spared their first-born, and the cus-, 0 th hacl d let thei orY of that great deliverance. The, if it ie a bright day, And if not, put fieeh of the lamb roasted, was to be sunshine into everything you do your - ea en un eavene bread- se e gray ay aregood timnes ter herbs, The eating of unleavened to put on a little extra touch of rouge bread was tO continue for seven days,' and to` start the household duties in the first and the seventh days to be a criep frock or apron. as Sabbath days, for religious gather- As you prepare breakfast or make Kill the passover, v. 21. In vs. 21- up the watch beds, tch the way you stand; 23, we return to the story of motes watch the action of your body every and the last night 'in Egypt. Hyssop time you bend, You can form eeeel- i was some kind of herb, the nature of lent physical habits with these daily • Tht Inge., and coinmon warship. .which is not certainly known,. the duties. Throw your shoulders back stalks and leaves of which were used and expand. your chest, keep your bac in cererrionial sprinklirig (Lev. 14 :&f, etraight when yen stand erect; sta Num. 19:6, and compare Psatin 51:7). squarely o,. both feet, These fiats -oared at the door became to the He - 'The blood thus she and sprinkled 'or • reminders keep your body young and ,grews ,a symbol of God's savrng grace normal' and power. Their enemiee and oppres- Coaxing Out the Wrinkles. :sors suffered, but they were spared. • Drink six or eight glasses of water age between -meals each day --make your= III. PREPARATIONS FOR DEPARTURE, 36 • self ! The human body needs lots of • There could have been no sleep that n'istnre anti you can scarcely ever- - • d th healthy night for thenien and women. of Is- e shoes on Lir feet, and stafc in han , habit of drinking pure rael. The ate with loins girded, their fresh water frequently. If you feel d ' cold, drink hot water. It will warm and they ate n haste. waa ng or up yo oma en g word of commancl which was to send) over your body. Never drink iced water as a practice. Water of, the them forth upon their great advere-1 w tare. In the homes of Egypt there coolness that does not contract the Was lameetation and dread, and p"tehoe.i threat but merely ereobees it ie the Egyptiana were urgent upon the !of the land in haste; for thee said, We automatic and- es easy to do -as the best. These habits once fornied become as elle, made a way to his auger; Itask of dressing, and every one of be all dead men," v. 33. He spared not their seul from death, I them .helps to build newer and more But gave their life over to the: beautiful -looking skin. e • . pe,stilence; I Have a schedule for each day. Even And smote - all the first-born of lipfien EgYpt; you can't always follow out the • at ' ast have me, and include in • The chief of their strength in t'ne .t 'f nutes for epecial attentien tents of Huse; - to pear skirt " But made his own people to go iorth Every skin differs slightly from -like sheep, And guided them in the 101derness ethveartylsotheeirrectskema ahindesosraheetrtnnetismaecufore• r like a flock." oneeperson may take much longer for (Psalm 78:50-52.) Calgary Stampede a Unique Event -tetra the es.. eneieetatatto ser enohetra • e:ertir , another. Yet the fundarnentel riot quirementts of the /mown ekin are BO similar that every woman can tolloW these eitnple instructione with bane - fit. A jar of pure cold ethain IS the first essential if yon would ialso own a love- ly kin, Use it, Uwe it freely and yet with the gentle consideration of your eldn that it deserves, Don't look tepee a jar of eold cream AS a luxury: or an eattavagance, but see In every jar an insurance against an old, ugly, wrinkled skin, lVfalce a little rite of thaee minute devoted to beauty. Brush back your hair so it will, not be touched ley your cream. Push your clothing back froth Your shouklers se Yea ear, make long, firm sweeps With your fingets when you apply youro cream. Sit -before tnirr4or so you carewatch, your faco as you eleenee it, And, fie 'the (Ade. fasbioned photographers weuld say, tt't look pleaeant. iiiirleat is the use te ooax out yesterdays lines if you screw up veer dountenance whea you do the ceaxing V. out_the creern with your finger tips and smooth it gently over your akin. -Begin jusbamder your elan and eweep -upward and outward tweed the 'top of your ears, Start 'over again,beginning at the comers a the mouth, aria cover the cheeks with a broad flat -fingered movement, always slightly upward and outward in your progress. Persistent Atthntion. You know why, don't you? • This upward stroke helps to lift the mus- cles end tissues that tend to fan. It fis aanazing how much we can help counteract n little slimy of Nature by persistent attention! Your forehead wants cream, too, plenty of it. Start in the centre with the finger tips of both hands wed tieently zigzag them apt end do1rh oyift ut toward yeaff templets. At the temples rub 'the re: ' maining cream in sloev, firm circles, upward anti outward, till you feel a relaxing of those tired eye muscles. Your nose Inuit have its creana sup- ply; begin at the 'bridge and use the firm little circular movement between the brows, than. down the bridge, and use this same circular movement for the wings of the nose. You can spend anywhere from five th twenty-five minutes with this treatment. It is the thorough ;way to cleanse the face and it also holds the first principles of a facial massage. You can make it what you choose. You must have a clean, soft cloth to wipe away this ereame It has be- come an •oiler substance now, a sub- stance that penetrates the pores, soft- ens the surface of the skin and coaxes out all the stubborn dirt. Wipe this - i away as gently as you would Tub a• • to , baby's skin. Never uch your s rough:7, especially when you have !made it tender and pliable with cream. After you have carefully wiped away as much cream as you can, sponge your face with a little witch - hazel. This homely, healthy liquid can be purchased at any drug store and lis a marvelous tonic to yeur skin. -- e If you give your skin this treat- rnent just before retiring at night, you can let this tonic dry on your skin. If, however, yo • have taken the earlier hours of the day, finieh the treatment with a little ice rub over the witch -hazel. A Front -Yard Beach. Fortunate, indeed, are _children whose homes have running -water, for in torrid weather mother ean bring „ the sea. to them by letting the younee eters don bathing suits and feis'e.in the shower flu•own by a, fountain spray attached to the garden hose. The sprinkler attachment we have c:st less than a dollar and was Purchased th water the lawn, but its gentle spray 40 ideal for play bathing. We do not let the children turn the •direct force of the garden hose on eaeh other and their bathing sport is limited to extremely hot days direct sunshine and half-hour periods. It's great fun!—M.P.D. Left Out, "Oswald, why don't you clean up the yard?" "Aw, how can a fellow work when his daddy goes fishint his uncle's at the ball game an' you gettin' ready tor a bazaar?" Upper—Beady to contest for the hcilors el:their t,Ibe. LOWAr---JUdgisil the Bucking contest. Tbe. Calgary% Stampede, July 5tb to 1,0th, • was unique,in Cainida',-in that'll -was not professional. The' actual .cowhoye, 'hicgtot chuck -wagons. andwork horses fl0111 ihe ranehes in the district were the per- formers. 'in other words, this stampede was "the . real thing" in a:ranching territory, where every kind, of thrilling siertknown to the west was participated in by geuulno westerners. It is flescribed as a gigan- tic celebration, staged an ite own .grounds, by a west- ern coitimunity. Theme are very few suc1i events. in America or even in the World. •' The chuli. .wagons came from ranches as distant as one hundred oncl fifty mileat Cow -boys from parts or the country, with realbucking stock, depict- • ed the old and thrtlnifg days of the west. Peck trains from the' mountains staged the most noVeI packing cenipetitions on .the Maie Streets of Calgary, Tile old red River-, cart, the prairie schooner, the dee-menus, pareaect the street. There was aa Indian village :eel Ito India:lie, In ail the glory el their 'tribal drove gave daily Pow-woW.,The. o:d T.Ittdoen's Bay • log trading eost arid the pioneer's hut welcomed the • pioneers. This annual reunion of Oormer Moented Police Veterans, cattlemen, pitispe.ctors, trade? a and IF YOU HAVE yspepsia IT NECESSARY 'DIET YOURSELF. For 48 Years all those pathfinders Who opened up the A:berta trait% is an event of importance in the pravitme, The dwelt is turned back te tho good old daYt or forty Years ago when the town •of Calgary was a typical mid -west ranching oontre. Now the old is mingled With themodem develeament of the citY. The,old-t.ineers portrayed the pioneer peeled. Tourists from all parts of America attended. Auto trails now connect with all the centree of tho oak tinent: and many journeyed by the grand circuit, arid otheamain highways, to the stampede. An Interesting- feature WAS the , gatlieriag of Mayors of various cities of Canada and the United Stfitee. Aut.:here, pressmen, magazine writere, artiete and sight ,seeing travellers. swelled the orowd, whteh broke all Dre'viciug records, has boon toning up an restorieg Weak atom -Cote to a peeemet„ healthy cputlition so that the food tie ,longer ceuses 'distress, but is thoreggely dioeitoa and assiitileted, an enables Out to. eattake -of all the Wholeeolue food tecluireii Withoat feat el any eta , pleakitint alter offsitte, • is .ranzinfaeterad ohlY by htilbura Ce 1,imited(tete * t