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The Wingham Advance, 1920-03-18, Page 3EM ) *—I * _� I C� HAVE YOU A!"3THMA? I Do U andu're the. rabory ot 9thma with also ess Ufthts. d1f4cult breattilus audio" of strength? How- ever b%d your ca6e, (lute "' rell0flaguarautee NO use of TEMPLETONIS RAZ -MAH CAPSULE$ Thttigeparahlon. lathe re. suite earsoto orlmont. lux qua at Thousands h4vei darl"41 v the re4test Wemdt through NO use. W for tree sample to T letous. 10 Xing sto VNoroAto, Gold by reliable driA _ gTists everywhere for $1.04 a , ox. 04 __ _!_--______ r#*# "" THE [P,0!U1LTRy WODILD MN" L P" ., _ _.] _ ##"**~**-- RENEWING TI -1E FLOCK. . (F. C.. Elford, In Ottawa Journal.) The Ability to renew the flock each Year and not only to keep it !a the acid test In poultry keeping. 10 general farm practices the aim should be to renew from one-half to three-quarters of the laying flock each Yeaz Pullets lay the best and yearling hens breed the best, so that It is advisable to retain some (if both to get the highest combined maximum results, The time to prepare for the next year's flock it c t least one year ahead. Select the :,ullets this year with their breeding in mind for next Year. klave in 'view not only the egg production In their pullet , year, but the ability to reproduce high producers the second year. Keep in mind thd stu'vival of the fittest, and never hes- itate to destroy tlie weaklings. Not every one uses trap -nets ,and very few are so situated that they can look after them, nor Is It essen- tial.that ;ill should -so long as some good breeders elo, and it is possible from high producing females to mate with one's own flock. The breeder, however, should be able to &elect his own pualets, or rather, during the pullet year to se- lect those birds Which ho intends to breed from the next year, and a'good WAY' to do this is to mark the pullets that lay first. As a rule the early laying pullet, without it's almorrup , Jly early, Is the pullet which will give the best production and will also make the best breeder. There are other requisites to go along with hte early production, such as good strong constitution, breeding -type and qualifications and a good handler --that Is, she 'will have the , capacity and the soft p1lant skin. . Such birds' should be marked with it leg band or in any other way, so that they can be picked out at the end of the first year When the rest of the birds are disposed of. In selecting the breeding pen the birds retained as the best producers from the pallets should be taken' and agilin selected. 12ome of these birds wfll'not have developed as they should have, Any bird which lacks in vigor should be discarded, also any bird which has not grown and developed as the.otliqrs have done should also be discarded as. unfit for breeding. The breeding. females should be in the pink of'health, not large and fat,.but In medium flesh With plenty of vigor. The best male for these birds should be a strong, well matured cockerel, one which comes from a high produc- ing mother, a ,bird with plenty of con- otitution and vigor adhering to the breed type and with as ,good color as one can get without sacrificing the other points. The flock should be mated 06 couple of weeks before fertile eggs are re- quired. As a rule, one male to a dozen of the American breeds, or A .few, more of the lighter breeds. See that the eggs are chilled before they are collected, and keep them in a covered box or basket in a medium temperature. .. I . For the ordinary flock of 100 chicks or less, the natural means of Incubat- ing, if properly handled, is probably just as satisfac'.ory as any. For de- tailed instructions on the setting of hens, write the Experimental Farm, Ottawa, for Circular No. 1. ,For over 100 chicks, artificial means are an advantage, and, the Incubation way be by the means of a small in- cuibator, handled privately, or breed - ore may be fortunate enough to be aear a large machine, 'where they can get eggs hatched at a comparatively small, cost. Vor the heavier breeds the best av- arage time'throughout Canada is, the first vebk Or two in April. The light- er breed;a can be hatched two or three weeks later, and in the hatching. It 16 much 'better to have the birds all hatched as near the same time as poftible, as It cuts down __ I I 1, NOWRAISES I 1 600 CHICKENS After Heing Relieved of Or. pnic TrbUble li'y Lydia E. , Pinkhanes Vegetable - I Compound. I 0"9" U. -III took Lydia 9. Pink- bam's Vej;tablo Compound for an or- . � 1______.___.. I gania trouble which pulled me down un- til I could not put my foot to the floor And could scarcely do, my work, and as I live on a small farm and ralse six hundred 11 1 chickens every. tar it niado it very Kard . for me. ,�,�� T) it I Raw the Com. .. � . ound advertiged in r " � '.. I out 111aPer, ---Ait. t has health so r can do all my, n so grateful that I AM Me it to M4V friends.IP—Mri mms, R.'R. 4. Oregon, it can .L�do# Co., Lynn; MsAwj., for rewt of V11fit 40 709ft *I% �4*kxov $try. '? 1W, t4r- recom- i I I foodlug and caring for the chickw� and it VIvw a, uniform lot of �pulletfs frow wulch to, select 174 the tail. Earlier v4lcus thatt tblis Way be hatcaeol is propor couditiouo are uviilk- kutilo, but ao the*e are not always present, It I* better not to hatch We 014e too early. Late ChIC4 are al- wayis a nuisance and more or lose, of a failure. Late hatched chicks Is one ot the kbiggest Obstacles to the gue- ce66ful Production of egp. Try this year not to have chicks hatched 430 late that they will not be matured be- fore winter .gets In. It is the early chick properly fed that gives the earlier layer And the high producer, and It the pullet next year does not come Into lay before 'New Year's, she liaoi just that much handicap that she Will not be able to overtake. Six or 'ton Weeks' laying before New Year's usually means the difference between sacceze and failure In egg productic�, Tliereforo, by all means have the pul� lets hatched at -the right time, For natural brooding, coops for the u de. They should always be kept away from the rest of the flock and given fresh ground upon which to run, For the artificial raising of the chicks, brooding ment Is more difficult, ,but If suitable colony houeea are 'built with the proper brooding appliances the work is reduced to a. minimum and good success should be looked for. Colony houses With small brooder �tovea really make the, beet equipment, and after the chicks get big enough, the heat can be taken Out 'and the colony houses given to the -chicks through- out the summer, 0 i 0 . 0 1 Pale, Wan (heeks A Sign of Anaemia To Have Good Color and Health The 13J0Od Must Be Kept . . � Many women who had good color And bright eyes In their girlhood grow pale gild colorless and lose much of their charm when they b6come wives and mothers. Why Is it? When the fading color in the cheeks and lips is accompanied by a loss of brightness In the eyes and an 'increasing heavi. ness in the step and a tendency to tire easily, the cause is to be sought in the state of the blood, ' Many causes may,contribute to the condition of the blood known as anae. mia. Care of the home, overwork, lack of outdoor exercise, insufficien- t rest and sleep, improper diet, are a few of them. The iniporfalit thing is to restore the blood, to build it up so I that the color will return to the ,cheeks and lips, brightness to the 'eyes, and lightness to the step. To ,do this, ,nothing call equal Dr. Wil- liams Pink Pills. They begin at once to Increase the red corPusles in the blood, and this new blood carries ,strength and health to every part of the body. The appetite improves, ill- 'gestion becomes perfect, and energy and ambition return. Proof is given in the statement of Mrs..Alex. Arch - ,ambo, Cornwall, Ont., who says: - !"Two years ago my health b 1fail. I was suffering from headaches, 'pains in the back and sides, and a ' t .constant tired out feeling. I had used 'a lot of medicine, but instead of it 'helping me I seemed to be growing Veaker, My friends urged 'Dr. Willia,ms pink pills, and while I 'felt disheartened -'a,t my experience ,with 'Other medicines, I decided to do so. To my great joy I soon found the *pills Were helping me, and their con� tinued use for a time fully restored *my health if I did not give my experi. ,ence with Di. Williams, Pink Pills, in the hope that It may, point the way to bealth to some other poor sufferer." I Dr. Williams Pink Pills can be ob- 'tained through any medicine dealer, or may be had by mail, post paid, at '50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50� 'from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., 'Brockville, Ont. . .000. 4*-*-" - - - - 1 A STORY, FOR CHILDREN 66, The Swineherd" 1 _*_*_*_4_*_*_& -4_* There waG once a ,Prince who Was Poor, for his kingdom was very small, but's,till it Was large enough, for him to think.of getting married, and,think, of it he did, . r bold of him that he Yen-tured to say -to the Em- peror's daugliter, "Will youliaveme?" But he ventured for all that, for his name was celebrated far and near, ana there were hundTods, of Princesses who would readily have said "yes 11 ; did she say so? Now we shall hear. On the grave of the Prince's father there grew R rose ,tree oh, such a beautiful rose tree! ­far, though -it blossomed only every fifth iear, and �tben bore 'but ohe rose., that WaS a rose, ivitb such -a dellcloue scent ' that A, bct.vei smelt it forgot all care and trouble, ,He also, had, ,a. nightingale, which sang as If all ,the most beauti- ful melodies were congregated in Its little ,throat. This rose and this nightingale -the Princese was to have, and they -were -therefore put in silver boxes and sent ,to ber. The ,Emperor nad them oarraed, -be- fore him drito, the .great hall, where the,PrinmG rwas playIng at "puss in thecomer" ,with -her laillies-in-waiting and when she saw the, large boxes with, the rpreGents she cloupped her hando with delight. I "I hope it's a Uttle, kitten," she said., but the rose itree with the beau- tifui rose appeared. "Oh, how pretty it Is done!" all the - ladies cried, � "It is, ,more than,pretty; It !a beau- titul," the Emperor ,said. . "Faugli, papa,!" the PrIncemi cried, , "it is not artificial, it Is, natural - " "Paughl" 9,11 the ladies tried, "it to : natural." "Let us Brat see what is In the 1 other box before wo� grow angry," the Rbl)ei,or said; ,and then the night- Ingale wkLdc itG appearance, singing so beautiful that nothing could be said agatuat it. "Iftpexlib, charmant!" all the ladies cr.`,td, Zor ,they all Jabbere French* one worse ,than ,the other. "How the bird, reinin,da me of the ,musical box of the late Empreso," an old courtier said. "It Is exactly the same tone --the, eame execution." "Yes," the ,Xhiiveror so,ld', and he cried like a little child, 1,1 hope that At leaftt lot not natural," the PrIncets, saoid, "Yes, it is 4 na,tural fbird," those who brought It e.nowered,. "Then let the bird, fly," the, Ptlu- emoo rmufnK and, 4ho would by, to mftn6 llmt6n, to the 'Prine4le oobUat. But bettme for all that. He paln0d hie Nee with 1)rown and,biaok. pullad h1s cap 4own over his wos� arA knock66 #A the xAto. "Gwd,4ar. Nnoaror," he Wd. 110sA RARV mwm M" A'S OWN 2 I What bUts U6 did Make to be sure! When he reached the Yard he walk- ed quIte softly. And the ladies were engd unting the kiss. I es, to make sure all was � fair, th-It they did not notice him. He stood on tiptoe. "WhaVs this?" he cried, when he saw them 'kissing, and he bit them on the head with hie slipper just as the awlneberd was receiving the eighty-sixth kiss. "Get oat -with you!" he said, for he was very angry, and the Princess as well as the swineherd was banished the Empire, ' There she now stood crying; the swineherd grumbled, And the ralu came pouring down, "Oh, miserable wretch!" the Prin- ces- orfe,j 'IT-T.A T h.+ ROYAL YEAST CAKES � vo now Poked in I square packages. -r Each ,Package con- tains five cakes, Which axe equa,l in que'atity to six round cakes. All dealcres are author. 0 ii-ralA in dgiA r2% *%fg-to � ,,i,�a, '-` " '* I � SOAP 4 0,� . " JV . handsome Princel Ob, dear, bow unhappy I arul" . __ " *"— "';! * he 7 that the quality of 9 �ha' ' q Y4 uai)k*'ens I .. , . , , � I _ � � I The swineherd now went behind a ' , , the round wnd the rou 'd 1� ,� In the interest of your skin, �L tree, washed the black and brown quare cakes 5quare c a insist ,on Ilaby's Own Sogp. I and brown from his face, throw off O'N BA 0jy,S HFj1D are e tj I are identical Cleausing-Healing-Frairant the shabby clothes, and appeared in 0 I a IQ TCAI,forbaby-bese.rory,,." . 9 Al�or'ksoapa Limited, uftl.. Bloutrol. 620 his Prince's costume, so handsome 1,.,wln.,w, bulletio from the U.S. .144tiftj . that the Princeso courtesied to him. al 0cographic sovietX: � "The I respect respect. I'll . cuticura Heals,, - "I only despise you now," he said. "."WM004-010 to that cr Keatu&y, and a total N'-fi* . " Wby woo two month* 014 when I I not meet with some employment "You refused an honest Prince, and 1 noticed- little vlvnrlee on her, bead. that at any one of hirty stass :; a Th% kept goWn I I astol S worse and opr here in the pad -ace?" did not understand the value of the . _ till rX bcs,4, f4co, neck and arms, more Inhabitants only about 00,004, I were one mass 9feruptions, burning, 61 Yes, -certainly," the Emperor an� rose and the nightingale, but were ,it' 1111 1�11 1(1111 a owered. "I want some otae to look ready to kiss the ,swineherd for a after the pilga, for we -have a great plaything. Now you see what Y � �� Mally.14. ince Was a.upoluted Im- for it all." � in, and Y -le then went into his kingdo der present conditlont-,, the writer Would say that to a iarmer who has Perial swineherd. Ue had a miserable little room down shut the door in her face. NOW she "Home, sweet not had years of experience In root below, near the pdg- GtYe, and there he bad ,to live; but might well sing, home." . seed growing one or two acres way ' 1110 whole day he sat working, and � __0 ' prove Moro remunerative than a large acreage, because with a small when night`Mma -he had made a pretty little lron-�pot, with bells a u Women Canad acreage, the yield Is apt to be much around, and as soon as; -the pelt bol led of al greater per acre than if the acreage is so large that It cannot lie handled they ran so prettily, andi played the -old tu-ne. "'1102ne-, Sweet 'Home." Bat . Testify conveniently.-iM. 0. Malte, Do.mialon Agrootologfet. the ,most curious part was, that by '�Its .,.t;atherxr boundaTy is Its AV . . — holding one's finger in the &team, of the bodling pot, one could, Immediately Dacre­,Ont.:-"I am more than ple,4sed with Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescription. I CITY OF MYSTERY. smell what food was lbeing prepared was run-down and I ill every house in ,the tG,%Vn. Now. that was a 'Very ,different,th.ingto the so nervous that I could not even stay in None Have Rea4 Picture-Writinga rope. The the house alone I in the day-fte and 01�. of Copan, next time the Princess went out wi,bh her t . tried every kind of , ,�­ I - -ladies, she heard itte beauti- lul 21ell and was quite delighted. W medicine I heard of r__�A but go no result. 1W I` Copan is a city Pf mystery, The for h .116Y8 could ,play ,,Home. sweet On, .it my friends advised me to take People who once Mronged Its streets . Home",-it,wee ,the on,ly ithdng she � __ 'Favorite Prescrip and bowed at its altars are long since Could Play and that 6fie played with _- - ,st-w- tion,' said that it gone, leaving no record of their ex - one ftniger. 1.� ft That is ,the very same turie, that I would cure me, and , it did. After taking " 0� :.n letence save the hoary ,stories of their ' . play,11 she said', 11p,nd. ,he must be,a , - . four bottles I felt .,_�iw city. These stones, ,built Into pyra. very "well-informed swineherd. J at 90"down, One Of You and ask him tu ,he . like R new woman and it is also the very beat medicine for a mide, walls and monuments, bear their story carved in the Maya Price Of 'the instrument." SO woman bringing up a family. I will recom- mend 'Favorite Prescription' to any one char� actere. But no descendants have 6ur- oneof the ladies had togo down, but she -put wou Woodqiif cloga�. suffeting.Jilre I did." -MRS. JOSEPH BEAUDWY, R. R. 2. - I vived to interpret the stories, and no "What do You 'want for the Iron Pot?" the dady ,asked. - � WEAK AND NERVOUS scholar has ariv-Qu. wise enough to read the pictun-writirp- of Copan. . "I must have ten kisses from the Pninces,s," Tillsoriburg, Ont . ..... PI found Dr. Pierce's 1-tuins ol this olacst city of the the a,wineherd answered. "Heaven- fGrbld! " the lady cried. Favorite Prescription an exc�nont medicine Maya Indians may still be seen by "I cannot -take less," he plied. for the affinents of women. I had become very weak and nervous. I was just miser- those sufficiently persistent and on - . �'J­le is a rule fellow," threPrincess able when I began taking the 'Favorite thuslastic to seek them out, A lit - said, -and she iwent On, but had mot Prescription' and it proved most beneficial. tle Indian village in western Hon. gone inan,y steps when the belle It so comoletely restored me to health that duraG, and the river on which it lies Sounded 6o Prettily, ,,,Home, Sweet Home." I have noier had any return of this ailment. I do advise the use of'Faverlte PreScriPtiOn' keep the name of Copan alive to -day. again, And ask ihim whether ,ten by wome� who stiffer with womanly troub- To visit the ruins of the great Copan You must seek out this village by k,"CIO NeG from my ladles, will not dO." "I am very much obliged," he le." -MRS. CEO. WALXER, P. 0, Box 490. train and, then go a,long journey on an- swered, "they must be- ten kisses from 'Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is horse -back. Just beyond the village lies the old Maya metropolis. the princess herself, or I keep my In- strument." made of lady's slipper root, black cohosh The only inhabitants of Copan to- "What rubbish all this is!,, the root , unicorn root, blue cohosh root and , � Oregon Dr. Pierce day axe queer figures of the Maya ,, gods, that peer out ,of unexpected Princess said. "Now you must all stand round grape root. knew, When he first made this standard medicine, hiding places like the creatures of a me, so that no one may see it." that whiskey and morphine were injurious, bad dream, Wonderfully carved many of them are, grote.3que in attitude and Then the ladies stood round her and so he has always kept them out of his expression, according to the artists' spreading out their dresses; and th� remedies., Women who take this standard conception ,of the beings of the other swineherd got the ten kisses, and the remedy know that in Dr. Pierce's Favorite world. Princess the iron pot. Pro8cription they are getting a safewomari'a When ,Copan flourialied, how it fell, Never did anything give so much tonic so good that druggists everywhere sell and what became of Its last people, pleasure. The whole evening and it, in liquid or tablet form. no one knows. The city is as deso- the whole of the following day, the . - - late as only a deserted city can be, iron Pot had to keep boiling, so that 4 0 + 0 0 0 4 I 4 0 s s 1 s s s . oppressive and sad even in the bright there was not a single hearth irat tilie . , sunl!ght of a tropical mid-day.-IINIk- whole town that they, did not kr-,ow principal city, Monrovia, in honor ot' gall," In Indianapolis Star, What had been cooked on it -at the WHAT FACTORS 0 - - ' - I Prime Minister's as well as at the - . ' - "Cold In the Head" shoemaker's, The ladies danced 11KRUENCE SEED I I Is .. acute attack of j'L*Tasal Catarrh. about, clapping their hands. � Persons who are subject to frequent "We know who' 'Will have sweet IM BOOTS? " colds in the head" will find that the use of H.&LUS CATARRH MEDICINV soup and omdlets for dinner, and who "YIELDS I will build up the -System, cleanse the will have broth and sausages. Oh, . .Blood and render them less liable to how inierestini that is!" . colds. Repeated attacks of Acute Ca- "Yes; but you must not blab, for I 0 0 0 4 0 * * 0 * � 0 0 ! 4 0 $ 0 0 4 0 0 4 0 0 I 0 tarrh may lead to Chronic Catarrh NALL'S CATARRH 'MEDICEIZE, is am the Emperor's daughter." . During the last few years consider- taken internally .and acts through the 'of "The Lord forbid," all cried, able quantities of field root seed, in- 1cluding Blood on the Mucous Surfaces the System. The swineherd, that is, the Prince- but no one knew he was anything mangel, .Swede turnip and All Druggists, 75c, Testimonials fz,ee, $100.00 for anv more than a real swineherd -did not carrot seed, have been raised by the case of catari-h that HALL'S CIATX11RI-1 ArEDICINI,1 -%,vill pass his time idly. He -had made a ' Dominion Experimental Farms' Sys- not cure. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. rattle, which, when swung round, tem for the purpose of s*eguarding , .0-0-*— played all the waltzes and quadrilles that had been heard , from the begin- against a threatening shortage in the WOMEN WHO XIIJI. aing of the world. supply. Much valuable Information � "Oh! that is superb!" the Princess has been accumlated on the subject A Few ofThenlHave Been Real 5aid, as she passed. "I have never Of root seed production, the more so ' ful composition, because, while engaged In seed grow- . Mercenary. Go and ask him how much the instru- Ing as an emergency undertaking, the — ment costs; but I wiII not kiss again -'I "He asks a hundred kisses from Experimental Farms' System at the Do women commit co5ld-blooded the Princess," the lady said, who 'went same, time desired to gain reliable data bearing on the possibilities of murder? That there have been thou - sands of women killers within a gen- in to ask. � "I believe he is mad," the Ppincess making root seed growing a perman- ent agricultural Industry in Canada, ere,tion we know. But are Itheir slayings, not always aither what the gaid, and she Went on, but she had ,One of the more Important subjects French call crimee passionnels ' or not got many,yards when she stop- in connection with root seed growing killings -of revenge, or homleidee ped. "The arts must be encouraged," which have been investigated 16 the Prench call crimes pit,selonnels, 'or 5he continued, "and am I not tile question of under what conditions the casione due to pathological condi- Emperor's daughter? Go And tell heaviest possible seed yields may be tions -insanity, neurosis, Lysterla or Min that he shall have ten kisses expected, This question is, of course, ePHOPeY? In a word, do womewltill, Iroin me the same as the last time, and of -particular interest, as, the size of as countlese men In every age ana the rest he can have from my lad- -the seed yields*will largely determine Clime have killed, for' lusilveIy, mei,- ewxelth ies," rowing. canary motives and calm pre. 11 ' Oh, but we ard very unwilling!" in the first place, it is necessary meditation? the ladies cried. that the roots to be used for seed These old but ever fre�sh questions "What rubbish that Is," the Prin- raising are absolutely sound when are revived by the confession and ,ess said. "When I can kiss him I , -planted out. Our experience Is that life-lon,g sentence of Mrs. Amy V. ihould think you- can, too, and re- planting of roots which show signs Archer Gilligan -in Connecticut. A few member that I feed you and pay you of disease or rot, especially at the crown, leads to most die' appointing days since, this mature woman lief. wages," So what could they- do, but go results. Such roots may linger along self brought to an end a three years' figbt against charges of the state igain? for some time. but sooner or later they die off, With the result, of which -inferentially involved the "A hundred kisses -from the PrIn- he said, "or let each keep his course, that the seed field becomes deatha Of perhaps 46 human belng<g- ,�ess,ll � I patchy and consequently gives a com. This woman wa.q, not emotionally )wn.11 \ . he said. The lad- iparatively low yield per acre. Or erotically concerned with any of eq stood round her,, and the 'kissing In the second place, the seed roots heF victims. At no point was Any, tbe� natives, iiiany ,c,f them bearing 6 should be planted as carly as possible hatred -or passion against any 10110 )egan. ' "What is all that commot.lon attlip In the spring. The earlier they are set out the heavier are the seed yields 6hown. She tried t,o,Dlead Insanity, but repeated examinAng -boards ot )lg-styo?" the ' Emperor cried, as he which may be expected. This appliee. physicians found her all too sane. She itepped out on the balcony. lie rub- to , all kinds of field root seed crope had �ln:iply murdered P, number, and )ed his eyes, and put on his SPGc- "Why, It Is the court Iftilles, and has been demonstrated over and Perhaps a very large number, of .old Adles. Pho ate lip to some of their tricks! I Over again, In the third place it Is absolutely men and women'to profit a few hun- dred dollarig extra on each traolda. itippoge I must go and look after necessary that the land Is In good tion. �hem." So he pulled big slippers it) tilth and in a high state of fattlity, A complete and perfect Borgia, a the heel, for they wero show, tho Several experiments - conducted the one w1th few par6.11018. ieels of which he had-tvoilden down, last few years have most decidedly But It Lucretia norgla?s record, i W I I shown that the land must be In the best shape It good seed crops are to true or fabulous, in no way ,comparm t'�'. , , , I I �_ . '' 11 " - _ - be macted� An experiment carried 'to this gtoty,.there are ot e,r W16 iell '�long I R . .- young lady," said he. I out at Ottawa In 1915 gave tesults to the backwaters of h tom old I I :. I 111�ut It Itny queen should propos* tUe effect that an application of 20 and now, whose doings wi add evl Ill, I'll 14 : %,�,, a � ... 1, 1111 - --- leap year I'm 901119 to tell bAr tO tons of ,barnyard manure to the acre, dence to support the truth that wo. .1 I � V.. . . L �� . the rolst of living." ___*4_*-_ or of a commercial fertilizer, oom. IT uin may kill and does kill as calmly '. ��. I � 1, .. '. � fle,tiort when Alis tecx a Wrror, pwod of 500 pounds of super . 412 41 eon6clou;sly as Inan. . % phate, 20 pounds of nitrate of a a The celebrated Marki V'Aubray, . 11 . k�, .. and 200 poundo of murlato f t h, Marquise do 13rinvilliors, 1690-76, Is 4) Iscreased the seed yield mangols one of the best eXaMPlek; from Olden , ldeN is not with almooit 50 per cent. orl enta timeA, T1Avdng exhausted her huts- . S, ... S-1ZO carried out later, have not only sub. band's fortuno and disposed of him. acrlke 6 ,*Wl"6-t0'' "1,%UW% stantlated this result, but also shown she poleon6d her maher, :father and 1WfA6.""Jk.W&d-W- that a still greater Increase In the lYthor relativca In startling succession, rWW"rXWW1.W*�%""WW114WW1"" I ' yield may be realized if the land Is t� tpoososq hemelf,of -thell, money $§ht I . ',rlle noosrorpuNry", givom both inanure And artificial fer- ,flnally,pol8oned ber lover by mi;i%ke, rAWT-06; tilfters In liberal quantities, ,, m ,, Ill I 1,111 11 11 ! I 1-1! Vzp."==� F=�g.ot!�A,Z.rt,%-W..,..O".*"*w 't � Bound toots, early PlftntnX alAd rich � I rm-ull.-Ioi.;.XA�f-ol-&�WN*.*%Nbt land are the main factora 'Which do- I hd$l§,19d1rt$ht1,S06ik^ INS t,* M W *Ow a *Mft W ~ I A .I,,(, ro', -114 %,* I I tarmine the Aske of the Ylelde, It , Healls-Keep out UY0 N "I It �,� L 4T, '. , . , , � 4) I %I a I Ahould be added, though, that the Ylelola are �%,Igo influenced, to it not _ Strong AtAd 641thy.61f A theyTira,Sftrt,1t0h,ot 4 ,1HCJ ! unimportant degree, by, the suWy, of . I Burn, It som 1"Rat �f Ved, A 3 1, _ ,& , 0�'JS,o I ' farm labor that may be, ayallablo aud b the sl*e of the fields. Plrmofit- I . lnftfi*d or .1, �. ton. $Af*f0r1t1f#=AtrUA1U1L '0 4S 4,6*d X, 4 a root *W tumm" u"Wo M in C�_"Au I L covitic roquim 91ta. Spru P, � I tilfal 14bor at aiottaln porl,otht a*d uyi- I ic"Ada. It* ift�ft #0101lolt 11 M 0 1161 41M I . . I I � '. �. , �,,. i A 6'..,. 1 " , 1, L _ ,A41jbit6V0fiiW- I 11 I I was C4404 $44 400001tated- Th only,erfraeot hot many in whtoya tta ! WAQUOnQ eleamts were at ploy wa her 140t, A44 ft Vae more Aociden � th4a crime. I France 1140 h#A a Auniber Of othe � 0xitmPles. Matle Bompard, tbwt abys � ulal child of (rime, will be examp) surfi0eut. Ilk 1889 thill, youn . g gir formed a plot with �ber lover, on 10yralid, to lUre-Gouffe, a x1ch notary In -to an 4partmeAt And there otraugl A'm. She went from Parts to Londo with ByrAud and there bought th PutaPhernalla of her crime,-& 14 . .rg trunk, and a strong colored cord t match a. -dressing gown. With thl equipment she and her lover returne . mud then. she led the amitteu Goutt ,, Into her room And oat In hie lap In t chair. $,-he, slipped the'otrong cord *.4 h R;owus abouthis neck and reMarlt 4"" ed what -a lovely necktie it wouR make, That was the signal. Byraud hid -den behind a drapery, tugged a � the cord. In a, few minutes Gouffe wae dead. His body was lal.doleu in � the trunk and she sat beside It a) night. She and lier paramour ,were ,caught after prolonged search. In- deed, ,she brazenly walked In the -pre' teeVe office and . said she had heard be was looking for her, hoping to sh-ift the blame to Uyraud. Bcrth fIA- ally were convicted. The girl had done her crime only to get money, I �* $ 0 tie Says They Are Surely the Best I '- FRANK HANNON SWEARS BY DODDIS KIDNEY Pli.L$. States th . at they cured his backache after other medicines had failed and that he would not be without them. Corcoran, Joliette Co- Qua,, March 8. -(Special) -Claiming thiat he is cfompl,iFtely cured of backache from which 110 was a severe sufferer, Mr. Frank 111ann.cn, a well known resident Aere, Is shoutingthe praises of Dodd's Kidney Pills. � "After try1fig various medicines. for � my backache," Mr. Hannon states, "I finally bou.-h?t a supply of Dodd's Kidney Pills. Prom the start of the troitment I fait',benefitted and now I am .,completely' cured. "I theretore Proclaim Dodd's Kid- neY Pills the finest .on the market I ­wculd not be wilthout them. " Dodd's, Kidney Pills strike right at the .seat of the trobule, the kidneys They are Ino cure -'all. They are simpl� and purely ft kidney remedy. ',But ae -cured kidneys vtrain all the impurl- ties, all the seeds of disease, out of the blood, ,.D,o,dd!s KidneY Pills naitur- ally get 'credit for curing a nuii)ber ,-�Ir differmt- d1coases. Ask your neighbors about Dodd's Kidney Pillo� I ( I - - - I - I - LOYAL TILL DEATH. � . I � . South African Ostrich is a True MonoganAst. I I - . I Fifty-five years ago the ostrich Was not a domesticateii. bird in Soutih Africa. True, a few wild ostriches had been captured and kept in cap- tIvIty for private or public exhibition, but no.attempt appears to have been made to I farm them seriously. The few ostrich feathers that reached European markets were from- wild ostriches,' and, commercially, were considered much damaged. Neverthe- less they fetched over high Prices, which naturally drew the attention Of South Africa to. the possibilities of the ostrich -feather trade. The -more venturesome atock-Vreea- ers and speculatore practically start- ed the present extensive ostrich farm -*ng industry by ctferiug very high­p�rlces for eggs, chicks, or full- grown birds. The Kalahari -the fav- orite haunt of the wild c6trich-was searched for eggs and chicks, but the demand for some time continued to exceed the supply. I in a comparat4vely very short time hundreds of -domeoticated or half�t wild ootrrehes were successfully rear� ed, partly with the� help of Incubators; but the loss: by death through lack of experience was for a long time considerable, Fortunately this draw- back has since,been largely over- come by the -application of. new me- thods, which, taken in conjunction with greater attention to selection for freeding punpbaw, has put South African ostrich farming foremost In t - he world. I I in the life of th� ostrich there are some cliaracterlstlea tnat deserve mentlon,'�be6ause they have been fre- quently mi.stated or misunderstood. in the wild or natural state ostrich - as P�ir in the spring. Once paired* they�--Xemaia paired "till death doth P ! thei�`irt." The fernale, ,or hen bird. makes &-gh'Allow hollow In the ground away from water-�_6oursee for her nest. ' Vur!ng -the'sitting period the male remains, on the nest by, night, the female by day. As the eggs are in greater ,danger of wild animals by night- this mutual arrangement be- tween the parent., birds is as obvious .As Instructive. On the approach of danger, the ,pa-ent bird sitting on the nest will pat Its ne�k and head flat on the ground in trout of It, for by doing.so it can ,be easily mistaken for an ant -heap or.low bash. Even While going In search y tesort to th!e, deception. in the domestic state they retain the characteristic. In course of time they will no doubt ceaee to be mono, gamiste-a fate that seems ever to await afilmals selected by inan for domestic us8.-V�Ily Herald. . 444 — I DM MARTEL'S PILLS' - ' I FOR WOMENS AILMENTS s of Worficin boo testiflod 1A.0he last M Deirk re 6 ARTE L * sclend VraDared -k t -�'del whil P= ifienotruft n. 17%. K Patent A. Hive.00 i �* Ox ; t r C, 4 titt, or d t by 41 1, I sT t or Rfu U FrOIRS g2 olo . C du I .1. , , � 0 0 , GHOST _DS, Strango Tradition$ That Are Widely Believed. -*,__4­6� ltand8 frow the days of Dantel-Whobn writings appeared to mysteriously On the walls of Belsho,%zer's palacii-have alwaya been Connected with the occult, and were n�garded by Chaldoarts and , ngyptlatis tit � Ike to be omens of the groatent motfitlit and significall0s, ,The model of & band, for example. wall always carried in the festivals Of isI .. .is at the en4 of a pAim Umnoli, and hinft figured fretutntly In the writi on the pyraxalds and statues, both In Rgypt and mosopoid-mia. A tta&Wn bmnah of the Doragita fami- ly ueed to its the Madow ot-a nW1*4 I UlLud AlwAys boroft the death bt one at %&* olml; whIlAt A br"Ou of A's low Doaaslls 0111 bay* beer knib u ro�b- t , -!� 4,A 4� - . I .. F 1- I ,,, '&Mk"&,&_,1...",.k,� ,I j .... ������� 40 .4��, ­ ­_ _ � I _. 101,40,11,1114,01" -1111 i- — - __ - - i 1 1 71MIM11111 1il!illillil!illi! M!i . —, _ f i "_ � , r , e y __ - - , , _ , _ � 01''I'_0 - - �� , 1.1-111 , , � , . Ettik-11- , , Z At . ........ ­ i - ­­ * 44 �+++*+4 *+,#,+ * **+* �,*++*. * 4 I � , , .... I 'I I. O'N BA 0jy,S HFj1D . 1 .LIBERIA', 1. , r , , I . �. 1 ""W"Wilol" I 0 I . . ceiNeckArms, Terrible L!ber!a, to the subJect of the 10-t 1,.,wln.,w, bulletio from the U.S. .144tiftj e I, I'll htt Itched And Bumed, al 0cographic sovietX: � "The R I'll . cuticura Heals,, Afrkan republic, Amer:o ,only colopy, liar. an area equm',Z 0 "."WM004-010 to that cr Keatu&y, and a total N'-fi* I " Wby woo two month* 014 when lation v,st:mated to ,be .greated LA04 0 1 noticed- little vlvnrlee on her, bead. that at any one of hirty stass :; a Th% kept goWn I I astol S worse and opr lie union, But of these millious 01 . _ till rX bcs,4, f4co, neck and arms, more Inhabitants only about 00,004, 8 were one mass 9feruptions, burning, of whom one-mourtli are, of A)zar.4h I Itching, and blooding. I was told it origin, may be considered clvJI)z#4,,, a wspxcutow4en)4� lbadwftwuphet and take a part in the goverAmeatk , ' arme and le Is In Unen. She ws4 a I I "Liberia )a sUated on the wa*t tw1ble sight. Fore no yar I b*4 coast of AfrIc4 a i t the point whate . no feet night or day. the coast line makes , the great b4d, 40 WO got Cuticulli SOAPI.WdOlnt, t3 f0im the Gulf of Guinea, Its Do - p mmt. In less than two week* she Fitton outs it directly on line of oce*A t began to in,end oind In a 4 I . qW months cominpuleation between Europa and she was be"IV, pr,Od) MM South jUrIcu and Point% reaclied bY, Boorman, 243 McDonne I St., peW. , . , way f -f Capa (100d Hope. I I I boro, Out., April 19, 1919. I '�Its .,.t;atherxr boundaTy is Its AV 1. Stop the use of aU doubtful eo&pg. laiit:c� caaet line of same 350 milless' Use V,utkura for all toil 0 purposes. On the wost Is the Dr;t1sU coloti� 3 P I , 0lut-mont 20 and Sold th%us =eDominion, CaAaRa%Depat. . of Sierra Leon,q, where futtle af# tompts . Lh— _ *t* Paul& montreal. �� cutl�twa ". I ,at calorillzat!on were made b4le-k fo . re Liberia Was reached, and on th� I ,g4ft gap ahav- without =101r. , east and north are Prench poss#i# ,�­ I - sions ct Jha Ivory ccast an -1 .MZ�0 I ' '_ basin regions. pinj on doors or walls invaribly before miles back ot a similar oce"rence. Its coast Liberia has been ejear64L. Some years ago a gQntlemen wrote and -developed, but from that linagto., to me from Torquay apropos of one of iny ghos,t bGolcs and Informed me that ary line Inland there are dense foir- w4king up one night, lie liad put his ests, Primitive Pec.'�,-, and Six, Harry' hand out of bed to feel it immediately Johnston encountered beasts, bkd4 taking hold of by a hand of lea cold, and reptl'e3 living to -day which, W ness. The following morning, he added, he received tidings ot the Jeaut or a mar wrote lara found fossil In Mloce4q relative, formation ,of Franoe and souther,4, Later on he wrote to me again, ,,i Gprmany,l . I have had another experience with the "Thus -there Is the contrast of ono hand," he said, "but this time or a inore startling order, as it took hold of nie the most unique expe..merits In 04,11 mucli more emphatloally and seemed litical anuals-Stevenson referred tO very reluctant to let go, I wonder what Liberia as 'a footnote to lilstory'q" it weans." . set amid the least kncwn region at I had idea, but did not tell him, And I was �Tlgyht, for, I learned 800D afterivard the erstwhile 'dark continent.' t lie had died, The hand this time had "Planned as a reparation for tIll predicted his own death, I seizure -of its natives as slaves. athl The family of Tulloch Gorms was an experiment in transplanting a f0f, haunLei b!,, th e glost of a girl with a. dreadful halry hand that used to flun- mce once more In* the,r t"atiY6 ' ,she point at any member of the clan that -oil the bealrinings of Liberia Lha4 ' ' was soon destined to die; whilst t1la many contact P)intS WIth early AW, Kincardhies had the spectre with the erican history. . " , blood-stalned hand wh ch used lo -t nd .1 I lt,will be recalled VLAat the xuov9��, still does -haunt Glonmore, It, was formerly ve17 aggressive, and inent for emancipating slaves had Its " 4 in 1669 ruet ant! .challeneged three brota- beginning a year af�;r the Deelar'l.. ' ' ers successively to a duel -each of the + !on of Independence Was signed, w.'a, brothers dying Immediately afterwards; but latterly ithas been much more dOO110 i�e abolition of ,slavery In Vermorkii and has contented Melf Avith merely way. ing its blood -red hand --a and that, as early as 180S, the U4 - , - portatilon of slaves into 1111S sure signal, however, of an approaching death or .African country Was prohibited. MeantiinOs some other- kind of disaster, I George Washington having set thd In Cernfany phantom hands Would ap- pear to be even commener, for nearly all example, many slave owners madO provis,011 in tlie!r will for freei4, the old families have at one time or an" ,3ther come under the spell or ban of their ,human propert�. . mailed fingers, I 1111%lius It came about that the �ree&� , There is -or was before the war -an Inn men's problem antedated the CIVO In Saxony that was once a PrivatehOuse, and which was haunted by a huge liand war by half a century and Henry Claj, IVV�ashlng- that used to descend at night fk.om the presided over a, meeting in ceiling and ImPart to whoevel, Was Pre- ton, D;C, in 1816 to form a cOlOniz2L-',- sont all the sensations of strangulation. , tion society.. Bushrod Washington w4g, According to tradition, a certain count- ess. who originally owned the house, the first president of that soclet��, got rid of her infirin husband by hav Int" 111M � formally organized on New Year's day . strangled there by an Idiot of monstrous in 1817, and after several expealtioils . size, and as a punishment for the crlrne, had met with misadventures throu*4 her family and house were ever after haunted by a hand inconceivably litzge . eplIdemles arid opposition of nativell , the Rev. Jehudi Ashmun, In 1811411 - and hideous and cr;�el. I --,-& . *.*— founded Liberia. LOOKING FOR HIM, "The country's name, slgn:f_y14,4 , * I 'Land "Where',s of the Free,' and that of the ' that infernal Proofread- principal city, Monrovia, in honor ot' er?" shouted an Irate Man with blood the then President of the Tjnite4 in each eye. States, are variously attributed to ' "He certainly would be right hard Rev. Ralph R. Gurley, Ashinuft'S ' to find now," said the editor, Uneasily. friend and biographer, Who draft6d' "What's he don�o. this time?, , the firet Liberian constitution, and "In that advertisement for my t:) Robert G. Harper, Of Baltimom , valveless motor he turned the second Md,, a p�tron of the ,colOntzatIOU - v Into a u!" movement. . ------ 10_*_� "Within a decade at Ashman's ar- 'GEEs I'M HAPPY rival the American population bad .' I to 1500,a daily new,$PaPer MY CATL risen nearly . had ,been started, and a code of lawa � ' A' RICH ALL GONE was in practical operation, OrIginall:V , the Portuguese and the Dutch h4d - . � I. sought gold, pepper, and slaves from � suffered ,Uke .1 Boob For Years.- Liberia. To -day, as then, it has v34t � Got Relief in Ten Minutes. undeveloped resol=65, iboth mineral ' 11 I and agricultural, But before the war - — . it exported goodly quantities of rub, I Catarf hozone Did ! Cure ffee ber, palin oil, libre, cocoa, co p I . ' Ivory and sLpices, . - That'a the way hundreds of the I "Liberia is a",erted to have oue ot , boys arcund tomn. 'are talking since the hottest climates in the world, and . ClatarrhGrone got Into the drug stores. few areas have more rain. The yehrly ' Nothing on eapth like CiltarrhoazOne tall arnoun'ta to nearly W -feet Ot to really cune Catarrh, 'Colds Aor Bron-. water. � a cliftis. � . I Tlie colonists declared Liberia .an "Catarrliozone"-It isn't a d rag- ind"opendent republic in 3847, and it , it's a hct3,llng*tvapor fall of pine es� was recogn�zed within a few year$ - nences R4 helaling balsams. It by nearly all countries except the I United !States. Previously there li�4 , eprer-ols cver 1he surfaces that are weak and sore� from coughing. Every p Mryland, now thej� , spizit that is conge�ted aw-ay, phle.-m' southern country of the republic, was a rival state of Liberia, It had Its ' and secretions ar� cleaned out, and all symptoms *f cold and ,Catarrh 'are iliception from a second colonizati6u ' cured. Nothing so (quicIc, so sure, r.o , society. from the state of Maryland# pleasant as CatavrhGrone. Beware In the United States. 11TFn years Ago President Roosevelt of dangerous substitutes mcfant to ; 9..-nt a cornin"SsiOn to Liberia to imw, dik-eive you for genuine Catarrho- i , zone. All dealers sell ,Catarrhozone, I vesdgate conditions. That COMMIS, sion : s report, i esulted In negotiationO, large .size which Mats itwo months for an adjustment of Liberia's debt. � price $1.100; small size 50c; sample and of United States. officials size 25c. . I plachig In c'auge of, Liberian customs -col-, ' Oto I lections. The follow!ng year the. VOODOOISM. American government, acting In ' I a.greeatnt ivith England, France aud, ' Worshippers f o Caba Are Di, I Germany, assumed supervision ot- finances, ,military organization aA4 vidod Into VaTious Sects. I boundary quostions, . - "German nierchants .offended the The Voodoo vArshipers of Cuba art chief executive of the republic in divided into various $eets, each with 1912 aid oA of this Incident a quar-� - Its sop. -rate god, The latter Include rel developed which resulted In tw.6 Badiagueye, god ­of sickiless; Elecua, German guilboats iorcing an apology got of injury; Olorrun, god of mi!�ery from the -president. But the presideist arid Chango, ths terrible god, to, whom retallatod by ghing English traders human sacrifices are in,le, Chaugo, special' prlvfle.�eS and in the World I according to the Vooaoo belief, was war Liberia cast her lot with the 61 - the so*i of Clorruil and Arkaragua. 140 lied nations. The government of thd was slain by Eleoun, the god of InJury republic Is modeled after .that of the , And aste:�ded Into LeRvOn from a COi- ' United States. ba, or god tree, in the mouth of May, I "Now that the stream of C0101)"'As therofore that the 13i,ujos Aservii has Iong since stopped, the future of their only week, wl n Chango Is eX- U-borla, lies in the natives, rauglu$ pected to make a ..e&s visit to the i - riin barbarity to the verge of elvilIN earth, I descending by the Ceiba, his %fi.tion, but practically all alileft(LAOd' sacred tree, always on Monday. The �­ raw material for civilizing InfllieuceR. followers of. Elecua do not directly of- "There are no ,Pygmies in Liberlsig fer human sacriffae, allhough their and some tribes;,quch as the Mandla, healers. sacrifice the lives of some pa- g.)s, are tine ip,hYslcal specimens, 'Wilth tietts by giving them poisonous con- a pronounced European cast of feit- coctions, supp6sedly A my,aerious cure tares., for s.)me ailment, 1 -, rder to restore "There are quaint customs AMO119 to health some, ctho,-, patialit. Elecua tbe� natives, iiiany ,c,f them bearing 6 being the rod of Injury, his followers similarity to civilived practices, Such believe that good can come to one per- as the Mandingo method of courting son only thr I,'. Injury to Another, by presients which, It accepted, 8!9,m Voodooism Is nct practiced by the nify a tacit consent to further attteik- negroes alone .Many white persons tions, and the wearing of mourning also are said secretly to take part In bands, not 'upon the sleeve, -for the - their religlons meetings, And necusa- native galb Is often exceedinglY ' Vons have beej heard In many quar- "' iit, but aroltild the fln,%ers or about ters of the, diff.culties encountered by tile lie ad. , These bands Are made Of officers seeking to, break up their . dried grasses or Palms." temples because of the obstacles plac- . I-- -1 � .--**14.— ed In ilielt Way by parsons of In- ' A SIZE SMALLER. flueftec An activo eampaigii. by the authorities In Havana Rn, other parts Shoe Salesniati-I'low does that of the Island have reaultowl In the feel? capture of numerous brajo and the Lady Custolilel—TrY a SiZO simallor. seizure of many curious Und weird I (,,an boar a lot Molle P11411 thaft th:M objetots used by them. I -Judge. I 11 I .�_ I . I 11 � I ! 111 wouldn't Want to be rude to 6 - - -TtLl- 11 11 young lady," said he. I .I I '' PHOSPHODINE's I "Well?" I t'he areat Enritsh Mofloh. � 111�ut It Itny queen should propos* it , . 40, Tohes aud thv goratts t a wWo . Adtvfts ty.qft woo blaod to me during 1920 Jaitt becauite IVA htw . o In ON I= tot ftro"s leap year I'm 901119 to tell bAr tO � ­­. . _­­ � � . � " - , , ­­ � �, � I I I . 6 4 . it rbox,tlx the rolst of living." ___*4_*-_ tw � its, owt ft In 660C a . Im A woman AIWAYS has OMS for ft - W . fle,tiort when Alis tecx a Wrror, , - "ALI&I ..,L','4. .- ), I _­=