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The Seaforth News, 1926-07-01, Page 3CANADA LEADS IN DELICATE GIRLS POULTRY INDUSTRY NEED NEW BLOOD DOMESTIC HEN TFIRW S Mach. Can be Had Through the IN OUR CLIMATE. Use Of DP. Williams' Pink Pills. Ciiipsiee.• The origin of the Gipsies was long shrouded in mystery and his still the subject of end.iese,tor l abstruse con- They Sdr atched, Their' Sketches on Bones and Cavern Walls. t:roversy. Tliat they name from India • is, however," generally- accepted. In India they inhabited the marsh-lainds of the Indus and were known es ata The first record of migration of this tribe, appears in the Shah Name of Nature intended every girl to be Flydusi, who tells us that during the. Canadian Birds First in Egg happy, active .and hea•Ith.y. Yet too fifth century of our era the Persian C®ate&tf+—Ca1li;regs many -of them fl d their lives saddened monarch, Detrain Gour, received Y.rom: ;Layingby suffering --nearly always because the IYtararajah•of India the royal gift at Ottawa in 1927. their blood is to blame. All those with of twelve thousand musicians of both colorless cheeks, dull skins and luster- sexes,. known •as Luris or Jetta. .How. Because the . heh in the wild state less eyes are in this condition because long they staid in Perils, is uncertain, was a jungle fowl -a native of the -hot they have not enough red blood in probably several hundred years, going countries the impression prevails thheir veins to kreepthem well and in from there to Armenia where they se among those who have not looked intothe chant of health, . They'eoffer £Dom learned a longer time. By 1100 they. the question that poultry is exotic to '.d pressing weariness and periodical had penetrated the Byzantine Empire Canada and that this country must headaches, Dark lines form under. and were spreading northward into necessarily be handicapped as cam- .their eyes, their heart palpitates vio- Wallachia, Moldovia anti Hungary. The appearance of -Gipsies in Europe ISTSiIVER.....125AQ011 pared . with the countries along the Mediterranean or other wenn regions. On the contrary the exact opposite is: the case and Canada, because of her climate and other advantages, leads blood becomes thin and watery -it can the world in many phases of poultry be enriched through the use, of Dr. production, This is in line with the Williams' Pink Pills and the troubles general tendency shown bytle- morethatcome from poorblooh disappear. northerly developed strains of plants In almost avert' neighborhood you will and animals to excel in vitality and find some formerly ailing girl who has quality their southern prototypes, a good word to say for this medicine. It should -also be remembered •that Among them there is Miss Ida M. although the hen is a native of hot countries the turkey, •partridge, prairie chicken, the duck and ,the famous'Cai1. ads goose are indigenous- to this Boum try. The two latter are, of course, mi- gratory, but when domesticated thrive exceedingly well here the year round.' Modern `poultry production Is con- cerned particularly with the domestic hen. The hen has followed the white man to nearlyevery part of Canada and has shown 'herself a thrifty set- tler. Atfirstshe took her ohhnce with- other ithother live stock and did equally well, then carie a period when men who de- sired to increase -production confined their fowls in warm but dark and un- --ventilated winter (matters (with little - success be it added); and finally with- in the last thirty years, came the dis- covery that given plenty of sunlight and fresh air domestic fowls throve exceedingly well til Canada and pro- lently after the eIlghtestexertion, and they arooften attacked with fainting spells.- These are only, a few of the miseries of bloodlessness. When the Withrow, Hardwood Lands, N.S., 'who sayer: -"Dr; Williams' Pink Pills did described as "an oti'tiandisli people, more for me than all the other inedi-, callin'g themselves Egyptians, using no eine I took, and I cannot praise them craft nor featof niercliandise, who too highly, When I began the ase"of. these pills 1 was in a' terribly run down condition, -very thin and very pale. My appetite was gone, and I had a tired, worn out feeling all the -time. DOCtor'e medicine did not seem to improve my condition and I was getting greatly discouraged when a friend advised me to give Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills a trial. came -voluntarily in later years seeking After Borne urging I decided to do so: mote elbow room. The lenited States, After taking six boxes L felt like` a Canada and South America have to -day new, person. I gained weight, juni a good color, and an improved appetite, andthe constantly tired feeling that had .made me so miserable was gone. 1 took a few boxes more before I stop- ped, -and by that time I had never felt "Zigeuners" in Germany, "Czigany" in so well in my life. I shall always feel Hungary, "Yelena" in Rumania and very grateful to Dr. Williams' Pink Zingari in Italy. Those different duced • a high ,.percentage of winter Pills and strongly recommend them forms- of the same root are supposed eggs. Tho latter fact is important be- to those who are run down." , to be derived very significantly from cause the efforts of poultrymen all the Ycu can get these pigs from your the Persian word tchengan, denoting. ' world over are directed nbt only to egg druggist,,or bymail at 50 cents a box . nsusicians,' dancers. -Joseph Eilner, in production generally blit also 'and es- from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co,, the Introducto "The Gipsy Patteran... le. -first noted by chroniclers in the flf- teenth -century, when "a peculiar -race of wandering, wastrel, ragamuffin vag- abonds"• arrived in Germany, about 1417. TheY traveled- M. hordes, each led by a count on horseback o a r by "Egypt." - Lord of Lesser i Gipsies arri ed in England at G n va somewhat later period, enjoying . a marked degree of toleration at first, --Remy VIII, promulgated a law against -them in which they are. having come into this realm, and gone from shire to shin=e, le great company." Thera are many historical evidences to believe that Gipsies have been in 'rim riga from nearly the first days of its bttlement. Many Gipsies were banished to the Colonial plantations, and many old-world families and tribes pi'obmahlyas large a Gipsy population as is to be found in all of Europe. The name: "Gipsy originated in the pretense of these wanderers to being Egyptians. They are also known as pecially_to increasing the number pro- Brockville, Ont: duced to the winter months, when eggs - are most valuable. • Steady Progress. The Government of Canada and. the provincial .governments have given a great Ileal of attention to the poultry. fndustry. The Dominion Government, in additioilto the Central Experiment- al Farm, at•Ottawa, has 25 branch farneSolimd a number- of substations throughout -'Canada, and at all of these, poultry -work is carried on. Pedigree breeding is conducted at all the fame, egg layieg contests throughout the Dominion are organized by the Poultry `Division of the Experimental Farm, and there lies been established the Canadian Record of Performance, and Registration of Poultry, all of which develop heavy laying &trains and in- crease production of the whole coun- try. World Congress In 1927. In 1924 Canada participated in the World's Poultry Congress held at Bar- celona, Spain, and, succeeded in at- tracting -so much attention because of Lovely Air. It's_Cooier Near the Sun. The predicted summer heat wave When you go to country or seaside need have no terrors -for anyone who you probably pay a compliment to the can afford to take a trip in au aero free'li, pure air. But, if you were the planet father of an inquisitive child, what) If the heat wave began this month, would you be able to tell if about afro7 with the shade temperaturewell into Country air is purest, because trees, the 70's, an ascent of -about 6,000 feet plantsand flowers absorb carbonic would bring" -the thermometer down tp acid from the air end return pure oxy- near freezing -point. gen to it. If that were not a sufficient "cooler," A summer day may be very hot, but anothermile up ,would produce ten Or in this country the air is usually from twelve degrees of frost. ten to twelve degrees cooler, than the The reason why it is cooler in the body temperaure. 'air, even though you are going towards The greater purity of air after a the sun, is that the sun's rays go di - thunderstorm with lightning is Ire- rest to earth and are flung upwards cause the latter produces nitric acid, from -the emelt. • Thus, the higher you which destroys the noxious gases in go the fainter becomes, the strength of the air, • - these reflected rays',. Air .is never "stili," and cannot be 11 the predicted heat wave -in the seen. Subjected to great pressure; at vicinity of 90 'iu,the shade -does not a low temperature, it can be turned in.- assert itself until July, It would mean to a liquid, or even a solid, I ascending four miles to feel the ef- - -0----- feels of zero. A nice coot air, with the Thousands of fire rangers are on the thermometer at 41 degrees, could be the completeness of job this month protecting the forest encountered at a height of 6,000 or and the high completeness of heroher organizationbirdza that against human eeoklessne-s. Ease the 7,000 feet. ranger's job all you can. Make your- Something very refreshing could be many sales to breeders in different se:f his ai;y1 obtained at height of three miles in IOtta'opean countries of pedigreed stock August -twenty degrees of frost! have already taken place,` and, more than this, it was decided to hold- the - next Congress in Ottawa in the sum- mer. of 1927. ThisCongressit is'an- tiona•ted will bring between 5,000 and '6,000 delegates (including friends, probably 10,000 people -all told) to Ot ..taws from all parts of the world. The;:c parties will tour the country, in all directions. Thus it will be seen that the no longer lowly Canadian hen net only adds greatly to the annual pro- duction of the nation butts also-malc- ing known the extent of Canada's re- ` sources .to the different countries of the world. When the Empire Mourned. The anniVersaryof one of the great tragedies of the War occurred recent-' ly. It was ;fust ten years ago, on June'; 6th, 1916, that Lord Kitchener, whose` statute was unveiled in Londononthe 9th, was drowned on hie. way to Bus Slit on the Hampshire. He had left Scapa Flow that day, undeterred by the violent storm that was raging. In the evening the cruiser' struck a mine laid by a U-boat near the Brough of Birsay. Only twelve men escaped, -andthe great leader, who had organized the New Armies '- and sent them put to fight for de-. -- 01001acy, was not01)0 of them. No was last seen standing on•deck, calm and • courageous,-, Its the strip Went What makes life wortTi living is Whether, one wants cooler weather that the unexpected so often happens. or not, depends, of course, on, what one has been used to in the matter of cli- mate. Auyoue newly home from a long residence in India or Egypt might shiver tit the mere thought of the thermometer Mille thirties, and would prefer to bask in the "cool" SO In the shade -at ground level. Outhe other hand, an Arctic ex- plorer home from a two or three years' expedition in the neighborhood of the North Pole', would have to go up six or seven -miles to get anything like the temperature he has been used to. At this- height there would be a temperature of .sixty degrees below -zero. The ancient -Hebrew did not know the e:ephant; but Solomon imported ivory. . �r�tya'. srlr ,•. DFSThOYS .MMI° 0195 00. (t'EWjg.RagYl When a great 'man dies •bletore his time, there are usually some. people. 'who refuse to believe that 11.4ris no more. So.for a long time Tumors were circulated to the effect that Kitchener. was alive and a prisoner in Germany. bungled Her Orders. Feldie-- "Is Mies' Ethel in?" Ivlard-"'No sir, Feid.e---'Ver- sorry, ' I will leave this candy for her." irtaiii--"Thank you, sir. ` She was just wishing alis had some when You. rang" ' Too great halts to repay an obliga- tion is a •kind of ingratitude ---La Roehefoueeld. WE BUY FLEECE • OCL Harris Abattoir Co., Limited Strachan Ave., Toronto m' a p To Get Ahead? COME TO THE O.A.C. and LEARN THE BUSINESS OF UP-TO-DATE FARMING ..- Up -to -Date Farmingis a real business -a profession, it requires know- ledge, it n•;eds training, but It pays. Come to the O.A.C. and join the Freshman class in September. We will send you the`'College..Calendar containing full particulars if. you say so. Write fo-day. • _ O1NTARIO. AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE ' Guelph Ontario J. B. Reynolds M.A. A. M. Porter, B.S.A, L. Stevenson, M.S., .President.. Registrar: , .Extension., AAA m- utv�ylppng0\q\\ ".a\w s‘miktV. Meese[ ll - Paintingsfound on the roof of the Attendee Cave in Northern Spain are shown in thesketch. The paintings, representing a bison end a galloping boar, are believed to have been the work of Cro-Magnards who lived 25,000 years ago. Secrets of Science.- By cience.By David Dietz. True, man probably made his first appearance in South Asia er North ,Africa 26,000 years. ago. It is thought that he appeared upon territory which has since sunk below sea -level due to movements of the earth's cruet and is now covered by. the Mediterranean Sea• Anthropologists find two distinct races in the fossil remains of this period. One race has' been named the Cro- Magnards. The Cro-Magnards were tall. -men, about '-six feet tall, with broad foreheads and prominent noses. Their skulls give evidence that their brain capacities exceeded in size the ave'rege of to -day. The secondtype is known as the Grimaldi -man and seems to have been a negroid type. Many fossils of this period cannot be positively identified as belonging to either race. Very likely there may have been many other races at the time. Neanderthal man was driven out of his caverns by these new types which took possession of the earth: These new races were hunters. They made.rough implements out of stone. They were artists, , Rude sketches which they made are found on the walls of caverns of the period and scratched on bones found in the eav- erne. They even triad their hand at sculp- ture, making little statuettes out of ivory and soapstone. About 12,000 years ago a new type. 01 man known as the Azilian made his appearance. - Then about 10,000 years ago the greatest change came. Up until this time implements were all *of rough stone. Hence this foregoing period of which we have written has been called the Old Stone Age, er to use the scien- tific name, the Paleolithic Age. Now starts the New Stone or Neo- lithcAge. This is the period of poIlsh- ed stone implements. From now on, man polished his im- plements with caro.` Arnow heads are found. There are also ase heads so constructed as to be fastened to handles. A• t this time the start of agriculture and the domestication of animals was also made. Six thousand years ago man learned to make implements of copper. Three thousand years ago he first (learned the use of iron. SIXTEEN YEARS [ISE OF BABY'S OWN TABLETS Has Shown One Mother There is Nothing to Equal Them. A constant use of Baby's Own Tab- lets for their children has proven to thousands of mothers that they are without an equal for babyhood and childhood ailments. One mother, Mrs. C. W Jackson, 11,11.1, Gilford, Ont., Writes. "SVe have used Baby's Own Fixing the Blame. Tablets ever since our first baby was Mrs. I nogg -"Oh, dear! Why did born sixteen years ago, We have I eve marry you?" seven healthy children and the Tab - Her Husband -"Don't blame me. I lets le the' -only medicine they re- ceived in their early years. Our baby did my best to run outonyou:" is one and a half years old, is walking • ,and talking and weighs 25 pounds, Meaning of Miniature. Baby's Own Tablets is the only nredi- \Ve of the present think of moria• 1 are as some rag sma ' , part cu ar y cording to the Mentor is the same .born babe. They are free from opiates • !and narcotics; ac as a gentle -taxa- "ntin'at e," which means "of a red I live on the stomach and bowels and Joints -beef, mutton, pork and Ham --ere perfected by the tang of Mustard. aterahauld. be cold to give the best effect and the Mustard should lways be mixed 10 minutes befoze the [heal. Some Rooms in the House. H u The very rooms,' quiet, cool, anoint. tared, had a memorable charm which' no mere catalogue of their contents could even' •suggest: Not the' charm of ancientneAe, for this had been re- jected. Just as the family itself was not eccentric, so there was not an art- Jcssl quaint Y q t corner in their house. Yet individuality d alit triumphed heti eve over the Y P n black walnut which at this period ha4 formidably superseded mahogany. The family assembly room, may have lacked actual beauty, but int had. comfort and dignity it expressed the sane, reason- able, truly liberal temperament, And only an irreconcilable. aesthete could have called the "spare chamber" an ugly room, in spite of the high -peaked bedstead, and the towering bureau with ponderous marble _slabs, and clumsily superfluous bind[ walnut tea eels ;it was not ugly because rte ap- pointments were so. exquisitely eon- sidered, its tone so unmistakable; and because blue -birds perohed .perpetually upon its pink-and-lilao flowered wall- paper in such delicately paraddsal fas- hion, And through the windows on summer evenings you heard the frogs sing moodily from the river, and honeysuckle poured heavy fragrance all night long. From the juvenile point of view, however, the consummately desirable spot in the house was a tiny room, al- most l most a closet, which juted out from that bright, orderly attic with which, one associates a slightly dusty scent of drying, sage and mullein. Here one' looked out upon a thoroughly familiar prospect that at this height seemed dizzily enchanting; and one. spent hours searching for the nameless secret pearl of books that was bound to lie hidden among discarded school. books ,a generation old, little volumes of rhymed sentiments,' with gaily gar- landed covers, magazines of the Go- deys Lady's Book variety, with bril- liant prints of ladies in ample azure skirts and flowing crimson mantles, with bright checks, triangular fore- heads, d black If there was a more interesting re - 430 L1 ht. . g Be not much troubled about many things, Fear often hath no whit of sstbst5nce in it; And lives but just a minute; While from the very •snow the wheat i blade springs; And light le like a flower m the desk- in tall leaf Ere That burst eet lour; And' he who,mads the night, 1 Made too, the flowery eweetneae o8 the light. • Be it thy task through his good grace to win IL -,4114.08 Cary. Those who find fault with oor ih t things are captious? without be O helpful. To carry on its work the Canadian Red Cross needs the help of your steady membership. Keep it renewed, BICYCLE BARGAINS New d slightly need, ftp upwards. Transportation prepaid. Write for Prloo LIe9 PEERLESS BICYCLE WORKIj 993 Condos Succi; West, Toronto Stiff Joints and sore muscles are quickly relieved by a few applications of MIna rd'e. ea a, au curls, 4 treat than 'this, it. was that, oombina { tion of olioe, studio, and workshop in the unused where a 1 family', , . . practised law, dis- charged the not too exacting duties of a town office or so, and assembled the ingenious tools of an unrememberable number of crafts. Here one found a library and documents; blueprints and ,pencils, rulers and compasses, all the paraphernalia of draughtsmanship; tripod, cameras. and the dark agenriee - or photograph development; . paints, i brushes, and canvases; tools for carv- ing and carpentry; , . and'a musical instrument or two. And one would also cone upon a book of log- arithms, a sextant, acid binoculars; for this lover of wood and river was moved by an even deeper love for sea and ships, for sea -lore and sailor -lore, His keen far vision could fully test it- self only on vast stretches of ocean; cine he has ever had:" his body -adapted itself most naturally to the motions of a ship in a stortn.- a small portrait. But this word, go- to be absolutely safe for even the new. Olivia Howard Dunbar. virtually, as the more uncommon d t t -1 Minard's Liniment for Burns. building across the send, such loved member of the EIGHT MONTHS H t th• 11 1 1 1 1 Baby's Own Tablets are guaranteed • thus relieve consti ation and indi es .et>p 8 - name of a real mineral. Treeing the tion; break up colds and -simple fevers word "miniature" ,back we lind that it • and make baby healthy and strong. lou tan. get Baby's Own Tablets means not small portrait, but a "red 'from your druggist or direct by mail portrait front an Italian word, which : at 25 cents, a box front The Dr. Wil - comes from the Latin minters mean- ing to "rubricate or to paint In I minium, red lead. (The Latin name for red lead probably was of Spanish Sentence Sermons. or Iberian origin), The name "minis- We Get -But Little -Satisfaction out • mental capitals which decorated old of money that is bought at the cost of conscience. manuserlpts.--Pleasm'o out of the happiness tbat Later the weed took on the connota- tion of "small" -just how is uncertain, but 11 may have been through some association with the Latin minor, minimus, which means small, sir less. So, from meaning a red portrait, and then from being the name of ornament- al letters, "miniature" has come to be I applied to small pictures and portraits �'in general. ler" and "minium" which is the -hams' Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont, A Snicker From Sydney. George -"Did you sound the family. regarding our marriage?" Georgette --"Yes, anti Sather sound- ed perfectly awful." Has Huge Practice. One doctor at Derwen, in the north of Australia, has a practice covering an area ten times the ole of 'Great soil as the begsnutng et ife, uud every Britain. setting sun be to you as rte close; then let every one of these short lives leave ---- - !its record of some kind,y thing done makes other people unhappy. -Enjoyment out of life if our child- ren are a disapiioiutment, --Free advice that has much cash value. -Interference when we start out to make toois-of ourselves. -Sympathy after we start pitying ourselves. ,-bincoui•agement in attacking some sin that is highly profitable. Minard's Liniment for all pains. Large Foreign Elements in U.S. More than 35, 000,000 of the inhs.bit- auts of the United States are of for- eign birth or parentage. Let every dawn of morning be to A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN Earn mmney-end get It overt'. W olh. 0:11 Ont Inca, flowering shrubs, shade Irma, -hedging, roe, end evregroens. enol[ furnished 01L rotn:.li:i, ed arm f :p attrantive proposition for' man o Woman of oandstandingand energetic. E. D. 110 95 N. sans, LIMITED, Winona, - Ontar•, 0 • for others, some goodly sticn.gth and knowledge gained for-,yoptse.1 '-Johui Ruskin. Marriage of Moslem women to Christians is forbidden in a bill now before the Turkish National Assembly I for passage.. Father of the Seahorse. One of the most remarkable egg in- cubators known hi Nature is that of the small eeahorse, the water creature that gets he amine from its remark- able resemblance to the "horse" used as a knight in the game of ehetee, both resembling the hese tnd the shoulders • The nal -terse father somehow opens up a little pouch somewhat like that of the kangarooand the female lays, her eggs in this, pouch. Then the old man seahorse travels around with these eggs at the end of his hotly until he finds they have liatebed. Then the old fellow open the pouch and out come several hundred little seahcrcas, perfectly termed. yet so email that they can be seen only with the ail of a magnifying glass. 11 to jut ars easy toform a good habit as it is a bad one. And it 1s just as hard to b,•oak a good habit as a bad one. So got the good ones, and keep them. -WI, -lam Mcliin:ey, dal "a.:.=w isv s,✓' New single cylinder lllrley-Davidson Motorcycle, has just won.a World's Re- cord foe en•lureoce. Less than 0110 cent per mile to operate, and over 190 miles per gallon of gas. 597 cash, bal- mice $20 per month. Price 5233. After Taking Lydia E. Pinkhafn's - Vegetable Componiad Could Do Ali Her Work and Gained in Weight Melfort, Saskatchewan. - "I had nward troubles, headaches and severe pains in my back and sides. 1 was so nick generally that I could not sit up and I was in bed mostof the °, time for eight months. An aunt came to visit and help me as I was `.e unable to attend c.cto my baby and t:ould not do my ax work. She 'told me to try Lydia el Pinkha m's Vege- table Compound, and after taking two bottles I could get up and dress my- self. I also took Lydia E. Pinkham s Blood Medicine, When I first took the medicine I only weighed seventy- eight pounds. Now S weigh twice as much. If I get mit of sorts or weary and can't sleep I always take another bottle of the Vegetable .Compound. I find it wonderfully good for fe- male troubles, and have recom- mended it to mY neighbors. I will be only too glad to answer any letters I receive asking about it. - Mrs. WIt.e.r nt RITCHIE, Box 486, Melfort, Saskatchewan. e Face Badly Broken Out With Pimples Cuticura Healed "My face was so badly broken outwith pimples that it was actually disfigured. They first started with at few blackheads on the sides of my face, and festered.' The pimples .spread to my forehead, chin ,and neck. They itched and burnedso that I could hardly rest. They looked so badly that I was ashamed to be seen In public. 'rho. ironbie lasted about three year. •'I read an advertisement for 'Cutfcura Soap and Ointment so, purchased some 1 used about two boxes of Cuticula. Ointment and four cakes of Soap and was healed." (Signed) Mrs, John Kelly, Rt. 3, Flay City, Mich., Nov. 5, 1925. . Nothing so 'insures a healthy, clear complexion, soft, smooth hands orad glossy,luxuriant hair as Cnticura Soap, assisted by Cnti- cnm Ointment when necessary. Sample Eaell t -b,1'211Y i A i lrnsn a. nadixn Depot; s 1 ua, t nr t nt P0190 ;nap IMIttaQ117.1.2. mid `1 1.1curn 23,.. WV" C ti uaa Slam, n . -,cl, 25,-, WALTER 'ANDREWS, Ltd. 346 Yenge SL Tot onto ISSUE No. 11,- 23.