The Wingham Advance, 1920-11-11, Page 2Into al, Crockery Teapot
Put 4 te4soo,onful *I the genume
'ILIBA,l
for,evexy TWO cups. Pour on freshly BOILING
Water and lot It stand for five minutes. THE
114SULT will be the most - perfect flavoure4
teA you, ever tostod. 072&
Housing Small Racks
47
Bettering the Ventilation, Boosting and Feeding Methods—
By X, B. Tauberthaus.
'ro the many types at demonstration
0111try houses the writer has added.
0 that has several nalprovemosl�ta
�f especial benefit to the saaai,�_scaie
ultry raiser. I found by experlenco
commercial poultry enterpr1ses as
well as at the, Agrieultur%l College
POUltry' department that th�ma is still
fleed for ther Improvement of the
Ventilation system, the roosting ar-
Mugemout and the feeding method.
ventilation Is one or the main es-
ilentlai'a of an efficient poultry plant.
Bottom and top ventilators are best,
;rIla PrIncipal Idea of bottom and top
IrentilatlQu Is to create a constant cir-
gulation of fresh air throughout the
bouse and allOw tile escape of foul air
Dut of the -upper or top ventilators.
,This ventilation
, arrangement demon-
Dnatrates its great value best in hot
weather.r
PLENTY OF AIR
The birds will remain active and
lively and during the night will get a
refreshing xest, always breathing fresh
und clean air which will give them
spare vitailty for the hours of Intense
heat during the day,
The bottom openings are also of a
APeCial Advantage during the day, The
'birds retiring from the sun Into the
shade of the house or escaping from
rain get the influx of fresh air through
these bottom ventilators. in fact the
birds have this advantage for a great
Part Of the da;Y,� as they are spending
iL considerablo percentage cd the hours
In the house for feeding as well as for
resting. And for this reason the value
Of this kind of ventilation should not
be underestimated, ,
Another a4vantage of these Tenttia-
1tors Is that they are adjustable that
Its, they can. be opened or closed or
PartlY closed, the proper adjustment!
depeadhigon, weather conditions.
REMOVABLE PERCHES
The roosts Or perches are Indepen-
dent of each other, loosely placed and
removable. Each Individual perch
rests oil a board which In turn Is nail, -
ed to the rafters. The boards which
carry the perches are provided with
two protruding ends, creating kLn
opening of about two and a half
Inches. A wire gate hook Is fastened
Jnto the center of one of the pratrud-
.Ing ends with the eyes fastened Into
the opposite or corresponding end, the
VZrolt restig4s on the body at the gate
..hook, .. - , 't. _ ... I.. , I . _,�: - , �
�,-AP�4rkerigoamen� of W1;7Q'ierWItg
an, almost 114tant removal of the
PeAlies, as It requires but the lifting
,of thehook from its% eye to -release the
Perches, thus allowing an easy control
of mites.
This roosting method has no drop -
plugs platform. Instead a small -pit
is created by simply placing a twelve -
Inch board running parallel with the
Perch. The pit Is formed on one side
by the Wall at the house and a i the
other side by the twelve inches of the
board. A strip of poultry netting is
fastened to the wall and board to
prevent the fowls from Scratching in
this pit. Little space is taken up,
leaving the remainder of the floo:�
available for scratching. A litter cf
two to three inches of cottonseed
kulls placed In the pit serves as an
absorbent and an occasional spraying o
makes. the house highly sla� tary. Th
absorbent qualities of the hulls, to!
gether with the circulation of the air
through the bottom ventilators, dry
out the droppings, thereby preventing I
TaHs, Remarkable Story of
Sickness and Recovery.
ont-"I
to
a
ired groutl
be tired Z
?, and had no
a to do any.
goanyplace.
ves were in
�pe, I could
�p at night,
On came a
iwn. I read
ia E. Pink--
ve
an of Ina bt hl as
pera. and sev-
nay friends
Ina to use, it,
to, me. Now
V own work.
*:0V.f A Vw", WAAW!
The makers of 1,,&& 1; Vill-baria's
= tabloConipounTI,4vd'ibowiLtds of
;6 ktters an that gbof 7e-thoy tell the
trutil, else they could not bava been ob-
taintsi for loveormono�7. Thismodicine
1A no stratger-it bu stood the Wt for
TMM tbwa forty years. %
H them are you� do
e A vndcrs!*nd vhitt to Lydia H. Pink -
I Itft M"Cir* CA). (tOA94iAtW- ), LM
*�Aft, N
foul odors in the house. The twelve -
Itch board Is easily taken out when
the droppings are to be removed -with
the hulls.
Years at observation and experience
have brought home the fact to the
writer that the pit system Is in every
way suj�srlor to tile droppings board
for many reasons, mainly its strictly
Sanitary advantage over the latter. To
be more explicit the droppings cannot
scatter all over the floor, as they are
caught by the hulls in the pit. They
do not adhere to the dry boards and
Permit all impurities -to settle and
form a breeding place for the many
types of vermin so well known. to the
Poultryman as the cause at low effic-
leacY in the flock,
SIDLF-FOEDING HOPPERS
The pit raa:Y be cleaned out when-
ever the time of the owner permits,
whereas the droppings -board system
requires the scraping of the droppings
every day and a frequent cleaning dur-
1119 the summer season. It is no
doubt easier to sweep out the pit than
to scrub the droppings board and
then tn addition sweoD the floor.
Another attractive feature of this
style Of housing consist,% at the home-
made self-feeding hoppers, The feed-
ing and watering are done entirely
from outside Of the house, which
saves not only labor but also floor
space. The latter is free'from the
burden of the water containers and
feeders which sPill feed , and splash
water, thus heepin gthe floor of the
house in an unsanitar ycondition. The
feeders and water receptacles are ess-
Illy removed from the outside and
When filled, are easily returned t�
'beir compartments. The feeders and
�;Zter containers are protected against
the sun and rain by the overhanging
ventilators, tbus� keeping the feed,and
'Water clean, cool and uncontaminated.
These feeders easily can be made
Out of discarded oil cans. They mage
a ready and sanitary container for dry
mash and oyster shell at a very small
expense. Each water bucket is placed
In a compartment by Itself but near
enough to the feeders and next to the
entrance opening, This arrangement
allows the poultry to feed at their own
III, which Is a great factor In main-
tafning a producing flock.
Pil cans also are used for nests. As
� 4ay--e ar a�..pg
94�. �r n y
ve aons trom outside at a great saV-
Ing of time and labor.
A poultry house of this description
Is recommended for the fancy breeder
and especially for the small-scale
poultry-ralsers,
An Easy Pill to Take.—Some per-
sons have repugnance to Pills because
of their nauseating taste. Par-
males's Vegetable Pills, are so prepar-
ed as to make them agreaeble to the
most fastidious. The most delicate
can take them without feeling the
revulsion that follows the taking of
ordinary pills. This Is one reason for
the popularity of these celebrated
pills, but the main reason is their high
toulcal quality as a medicine for the
stomach.
WESTMINSTER
ABBEY
(Life, New York.)
It Is disclosed In the paper that I
Westminster Abbey 4s in bad repair,
and there Is a call out for a million
Wait. a quarter dollars for a. repair
i fund, MoneY will be accepted even
i frona. the United States. To keep up
Westminster Abbey or any other ab.
bey or cathedral 0 U;ch in England,
IS an excellent investment for Am.
erican loose change, These old
churches In Great Drhala are as much i
behind that part of the population of
the United States which is of British
descent as they are behind tile British
at home. Nobody much came to this
hemisphere from the British Isles be- I
fore the Seventeenth century, and In
the seventeenth century the English
cathedrals and abbeys were already
old churches. PhYsimlly they belong
to England; spiritually they belong
to anybody that derives from Eng-
land. Americans of English descent
may well help to keep them standing
and In repair, If only for the sake of
their own descendants. Nothing is sa
interesting to American travellers, not
even Montmartre. as the English eath-
edrals. When the hat IEC Passed for
Westminster Abbey. drop something
aubstantial In It, not at all as eharity,
but as an Investment, and tin Inhoshted
duty.
Oil for Toothachd.—Tbero Is no pain
Po acute and distressing as toothachol,.
when you have so unwelcome a visi-
tor apply Dr. Tbomas' 'Ltelectrle oil
R I ording to directions and you will
ee
find Immediate relief, It touchps tile
nerV# with sodthing effect and the
pain doparts at once. That It will
oase toothmehe U another fine clitality,
of this 011, showing the many uses it
NATURAL
"That ennfourided Walter spilled
some stealuing soup down nay n6ek."
Don't blame you for gettint hot
llftdj�r the Collar." -- nostoll Tran-
st"rip". -w- —
MirArdyt Liflimen For 01stamptil.
HAYWARD.
VARIATIO.NS — Heyward, Hawaro�
Howard.
RACIAL ORIGIN—English.
SOURC*-An office or title.
It Is a surprising thing how man,,
=names of to -day have comi
a us from words denoting ocen
pateloull or titles of office whicia Ion,
n 0 aye become obsolete.
Few people in this country bearlial
the name would have any Idea o
what a "bayward" or a 41heyward" wai
in ',,ngl nd of the twelfth, thirteent).
or fourteenth centuries, nor of the loh
tUre of his duties.
.Even the explanation that the meoll
Val word "]lay" meant "hedge," ILUC
IS not our modern "bay," would hard,
ly serve to give you the right clue.
The "hedge wavden�l was not the
keeper of hedges in the sense that lie
was a gardener. His duties consisted
In service toward the villagers, the
farmers of his day.
Fences and walls were little used in
those days to mark the division of
land. For this purpose hedge% either
the real thing or mere indications of
them, were used, Naturally, cattle
had a tendency to stray from one
Man's land to another. It was the
"llayWard's" duty to prevent this. Or.
Iginally his duties were limited to this.
lie was a servitor of the entire com.
munitY rather than the employee of
a single person. But in ---
of time his authority and his duties
were extended until he became a sort
of general trespass officer, and an of-
ficial of considerable Importance In
each village or community,
"Hayward" is not the regular source
of the family of Howard, though some.
times the latter Is simply A corrupted
spelling of the former.
now Sallow Skin
Can B6 Changed -
To Rosy CoRliplexion
11 a i 4 $ 10 0 1 - - - - - 1 -1 - A � � 0
Every woman with pale cheeks and
Poor complexion needs medicine — I
-needs a potent tonic to regulate her
sygem.
To tone UP the stomach—to insure
good digestiort—to give new lite and
vitality to the -whole system—where
is there a remedy like Dr. H�miltoals
Pills?
Dr. Hamilton's Pills enable you to
eat what you like — they correct can-
stipation—make nourishing blood —
InStil fOreos'and vim Into a run-down
system.
If nervous and can't sleep your re-
medy to Dr. Hamilton's Pills — they
search out the cause of your condition
and you rise in the morning refreshed,
strong, vigorous, ready, for the day's
work.
Dr. Hamilton asks every weak and
lebilitated person to use his Mandrake
tiod Butternut Pills. They make old
talks feel young. amd weak talks feel
strong. Their effects upon Insomonia
and langour is marvellous. Hundreds
leelare, tlxQy, soothe and 'quiet the
ff W-0 i .30 ti�a t a 9d,,night's rest al-
ways follows Tfiefieuse.
To look well, to 'feel well, to keep
well, use Dr. Hamilton's Pills. They
3.re mild, cleansing, strengthening—
;Ood for the young or old. Sold by all
lealers In 25c boxes.
A idine Shaf t.
The sinking of a mine shaft 21,5
'set In diameter is no small undertak�
ug, and'its adcb�mpllslamhut is con'i
dolered the�record for the world in
;ueh work. It one visualize's what a
iole in the grouad over twenty feet
�tross moans and 279 feet deep, its
nagnitude commences. to be apprecl-
6ted. The feat was accomplished in
'outh Africa. The sinking
i of the
haft was accomplished In thirty-one
lays. The average tons of earth and
ock hoisted at a blast was ninety,
naKing 8,100 tons for thirty days of
inking, three blasts a day. The total
�xploslves used amounted to fifteen
)ounds a foot sunk.
Asthma Brings Misery, but Dr. J. D.
Cellogg!s Asthma Reinedy will replace
he misery with welcome relief. In-
Laled as smoke or vapor'it reaches the
,ery inmost recesses of the broinchial
iassages and soothes them. Re-
triction passes and easy breathing
,eturns. It you knew as well how
his remedy would help you as; do
housands of grateful users, there
rould be a ptekage In your home to -
tight. Try It.
At attachment for sewing machines
a wave a tan Is the Invention of a
B00 Own
450rN *14.
CE11i
Xeeps thd skin
healthy and sweet.
10i'veolorpay
"a Bestfor 1,6u,
AfAt*t SOAP$ tb&=. M". U i -
0446
Ll
contajns no Alum
We unhesitatingly re.
commond Magic Baking
Powder as being. the
be;st and purostbaking
powder possible to.,
produce, It po;sesses.!
elements of food that
have to do the building
mp of braist and nerve .
matter and is absolutely,
free from alum or
other inturious
SUb$titutes,
b&�_ am .�W�
POEMS
You ShouRd Know
SUCCESS.
Success is counted sweetest
BY those who ne'er succeed,
To comprehend a nectar
Requires sorest need,
Not Otte of all the purple host
Who took the flag to -day
Can tell the definition
So clear of victory.
As he defeated, dying,
On whose forbidden ear
The distant strains of triumph
Break, agonized and clear.
mf ly Dickinson.
DOGIFUES—NOMEAS
—4060 M11,9S I . I
group of aviators to make'the
transcontinental flight of , 4000
miles train. New York to Nome,
Alaska, has Just finished the re-
Wria trip, landing at Mineola, L.
L, bringing with him a pup of the
famous "Blue -Eyed Siberian"
breed. which recently won the
Alaskan sweepstakes and are co 1
mucla tu demand. i
CHILDHOOD AILMENTS.
The ailments of childbood—consti-
patiou, Indigestion, colic, coldst ete.—
can be quickly banished through the
use of Baby's Own Tablets. They
are a mild but thorough laxative which
-instantly �regulate the bowels and
sweeten the stomach. They are guar-"
antosed to contain no harmful drugs
and can be given t 1 the youngest baby 1
With perfect safety� Concerning
them Mrs. Alcide Lepage, Ste. Beatrix,
Que., 'writes: —"Baby's Own Tablets
were of great help to my baby. They I
regulated her bowels and stomach and 1
made her plump and wall." The Tab.
lets are sold by medicine dealers or
by mail at 25c a box from The Dr.
Williams, Medicine Co., Brockville
Ont.
MILKING OF Cows
Twice or Thrice Daily a
Debated -,Question.
Sball cows be milked -twice or three
tinics a day? To the averALye reader
this may seem of small COne
ern, To
the farmer and dairyman It I.% a
question of considerable Interest. Tests 1
havereceritly been madefil Nova Seo�
t1a, Quebec and Ontario.
Professor
Barton, of Macdonald College, says
that It has been found from. the stand-
point at economy and Safety that a
cow giving 60 lbs. of milk a (lay should
be milkcd three titne-s. Both Pro-
fessor Trueman Of the Nova Scotla
Agricultural College and Professor
Barton are agreed, however. that un-
lesei the udder 16 over distended there
Is little or no Advantage to be gaineti
by milking thrve time.4 , zi, day. These
authorities -are quoted in the Sept(nl-
ber number of the Argicultural (;av�
ette of Canada. Professor Wade Toole
also contributed to a solution of the
same, problem by giving results of
tests made at the Ontario Agricultural
College. The tests are to be can.
tiliuM and Profesisor Toole hopes to
be able to give a more definite opin.
Ion another year'than he does at preg.
eut. In the meantime he shows that'
three high-class pure-bred cows, gave
more by t1irlee than by twice milking
a day. Ilis present tonc-,usloors.
11awever, are the game as those of
Professor Barton and Trueman,
kJ & # �
Worms feed upon.tho vitalitr of
O'hildren and endanger their lives. A
simple and. effective cure Is Mother
Graves' Worm E.,�terwfuatoar.
A nritish naval Officer M the JgI4
VOfttbr of 0. motor operated. chliln
driven lawn mowtr with Waptable
speeft
MIAN'dyk LIMM11111t POr 60011t In 0WAPA6
Magic Carpet
6DAINIH011. cure
A d gh't mbr,*V, Or
,t7
thi Y"..q I 11.111=1115
Cho Extract of Itoote, J�owxk_a$
Mother Selliti's Citrati" 4
tho radical cure of 41044MIPII.Itfooam
_11A
POZXANIA, d 6; ;Oootwn. 4t ;a IM
i1*
1r511tpqdy illat nover fa
ev
to do thet work." 30 4r..Ps
Few parts of Europe have a more
'uter"flng or more romantic history thrico 0-aily. Get t'lle ociacius,
the %
than rovince which. formed part at 6-M88*3. 01
of rr rossla
share of the partition of
Poland and which was known before
the war as the Grand Duchy of Posen.
The total -area, sometimes referred to
;before the re-birtio of Poland as Prus.
slau Poland, contains an area at 1I.-
200 square miles the two towns of
importance being Bromberg and Po- Facts About
sen, It adjoins West Prussia on the
north, Brandenburg on the west, Sile-
sia on the south, and what was known I
until recently as Russian Poland. Its Canada
boundaries coincide with no natural
division ',of any kind.
Tbere
several hunqrefA lakes
aud about one-tifth of the area is
With the Indlanr, of t1le,old days
in (4nada, Woman was a drudge and
sandy and, unfertile and one-tentla
marsh. With the exception of tile Vis-
[The History of
tula the rivers of Poznania are mostly
warriers; that was the greatest hon
Name—
that could come to her. Als far as
Sharing the regard of her lord and
19
-Your
cc
affairs of tile tribe, she had but little
tiOu of tile racial borderline between
HAYWARD.
VARIATIO.NS — Heyward, Hawaro�
Howard.
RACIAL ORIGIN—English.
SOURC*-An office or title.
It Is a surprising thing how man,,
=names of to -day have comi
a us from words denoting ocen
pateloull or titles of office whicia Ion,
n 0 aye become obsolete.
Few people in this country bearlial
the name would have any Idea o
what a "bayward" or a 41heyward" wai
in ',,ngl nd of the twelfth, thirteent).
or fourteenth centuries, nor of the loh
tUre of his duties.
.Even the explanation that the meoll
Val word "]lay" meant "hedge," ILUC
IS not our modern "bay," would hard,
ly serve to give you the right clue.
The "hedge wavden�l was not the
keeper of hedges in the sense that lie
was a gardener. His duties consisted
In service toward the villagers, the
farmers of his day.
Fences and walls were little used in
those days to mark the division of
land. For this purpose hedge% either
the real thing or mere indications of
them, were used, Naturally, cattle
had a tendency to stray from one
Man's land to another. It was the
"llayWard's" duty to prevent this. Or.
Iginally his duties were limited to this.
lie was a servitor of the entire com.
munitY rather than the employee of
a single person. But in ---
of time his authority and his duties
were extended until he became a sort
of general trespass officer, and an of-
ficial of considerable Importance In
each village or community,
"Hayward" is not the regular source
of the family of Howard, though some.
times the latter Is simply A corrupted
spelling of the former.
now Sallow Skin
Can B6 Changed -
To Rosy CoRliplexion
11 a i 4 $ 10 0 1 - - - - - 1 -1 - A � � 0
Every woman with pale cheeks and
Poor complexion needs medicine — I
-needs a potent tonic to regulate her
sygem.
To tone UP the stomach—to insure
good digestiort—to give new lite and
vitality to the -whole system—where
is there a remedy like Dr. H�miltoals
Pills?
Dr. Hamilton's Pills enable you to
eat what you like — they correct can-
stipation—make nourishing blood —
InStil fOreos'and vim Into a run-down
system.
If nervous and can't sleep your re-
medy to Dr. Hamilton's Pills — they
search out the cause of your condition
and you rise in the morning refreshed,
strong, vigorous, ready, for the day's
work.
Dr. Hamilton asks every weak and
lebilitated person to use his Mandrake
tiod Butternut Pills. They make old
talks feel young. amd weak talks feel
strong. Their effects upon Insomonia
and langour is marvellous. Hundreds
leelare, tlxQy, soothe and 'quiet the
ff W-0 i .30 ti�a t a 9d,,night's rest al-
ways follows Tfiefieuse.
To look well, to 'feel well, to keep
well, use Dr. Hamilton's Pills. They
3.re mild, cleansing, strengthening—
;Ood for the young or old. Sold by all
lealers In 25c boxes.
A idine Shaf t.
The sinking of a mine shaft 21,5
'set In diameter is no small undertak�
ug, and'its adcb�mpllslamhut is con'i
dolered the�record for the world in
;ueh work. It one visualize's what a
iole in the grouad over twenty feet
�tross moans and 279 feet deep, its
nagnitude commences. to be apprecl-
6ted. The feat was accomplished in
'outh Africa. The sinking
i of the
haft was accomplished In thirty-one
lays. The average tons of earth and
ock hoisted at a blast was ninety,
naKing 8,100 tons for thirty days of
inking, three blasts a day. The total
�xploslves used amounted to fifteen
)ounds a foot sunk.
Asthma Brings Misery, but Dr. J. D.
Cellogg!s Asthma Reinedy will replace
he misery with welcome relief. In-
Laled as smoke or vapor'it reaches the
,ery inmost recesses of the broinchial
iassages and soothes them. Re-
triction passes and easy breathing
,eturns. It you knew as well how
his remedy would help you as; do
housands of grateful users, there
rould be a ptekage In your home to -
tight. Try It.
At attachment for sewing machines
a wave a tan Is the Invention of a
B00 Own
450rN *14.
CE11i
Xeeps thd skin
healthy and sweet.
10i'veolorpay
"a Bestfor 1,6u,
AfAt*t SOAP$ tb&=. M". U i -
0446
Ll
contajns no Alum
We unhesitatingly re.
commond Magic Baking
Powder as being. the
be;st and purostbaking
powder possible to.,
produce, It po;sesses.!
elements of food that
have to do the building
mp of braist and nerve .
matter and is absolutely,
free from alum or
other inturious
SUb$titutes,
b&�_ am .�W�
POEMS
You ShouRd Know
SUCCESS.
Success is counted sweetest
BY those who ne'er succeed,
To comprehend a nectar
Requires sorest need,
Not Otte of all the purple host
Who took the flag to -day
Can tell the definition
So clear of victory.
As he defeated, dying,
On whose forbidden ear
The distant strains of triumph
Break, agonized and clear.
mf ly Dickinson.
DOGIFUES—NOMEAS
—4060 M11,9S I . I
group of aviators to make'the
transcontinental flight of , 4000
miles train. New York to Nome,
Alaska, has Just finished the re-
Wria trip, landing at Mineola, L.
L, bringing with him a pup of the
famous "Blue -Eyed Siberian"
breed. which recently won the
Alaskan sweepstakes and are co 1
mucla tu demand. i
CHILDHOOD AILMENTS.
The ailments of childbood—consti-
patiou, Indigestion, colic, coldst ete.—
can be quickly banished through the
use of Baby's Own Tablets. They
are a mild but thorough laxative which
-instantly �regulate the bowels and
sweeten the stomach. They are guar-"
antosed to contain no harmful drugs
and can be given t 1 the youngest baby 1
With perfect safety� Concerning
them Mrs. Alcide Lepage, Ste. Beatrix,
Que., 'writes: —"Baby's Own Tablets
were of great help to my baby. They I
regulated her bowels and stomach and 1
made her plump and wall." The Tab.
lets are sold by medicine dealers or
by mail at 25c a box from The Dr.
Williams, Medicine Co., Brockville
Ont.
MILKING OF Cows
Twice or Thrice Daily a
Debated -,Question.
Sball cows be milked -twice or three
tinics a day? To the averALye reader
this may seem of small COne
ern, To
the farmer and dairyman It I.% a
question of considerable Interest. Tests 1
havereceritly been madefil Nova Seo�
t1a, Quebec and Ontario.
Professor
Barton, of Macdonald College, says
that It has been found from. the stand-
point at economy and Safety that a
cow giving 60 lbs. of milk a (lay should
be milkcd three titne-s. Both Pro-
fessor Trueman Of the Nova Scotla
Agricultural College and Professor
Barton are agreed, however. that un-
lesei the udder 16 over distended there
Is little or no Advantage to be gaineti
by milking thrve time.4 , zi, day. These
authorities -are quoted in the Sept(nl-
ber number of the Argicultural (;av�
ette of Canada. Professor Wade Toole
also contributed to a solution of the
same, problem by giving results of
tests made at the Ontario Agricultural
College. The tests are to be can.
tiliuM and Profesisor Toole hopes to
be able to give a more definite opin.
Ion another year'than he does at preg.
eut. In the meantime he shows that'
three high-class pure-bred cows, gave
more by t1irlee than by twice milking
a day. Ilis present tonc-,usloors.
11awever, are the game as those of
Professor Barton and Trueman,
kJ & # �
Worms feed upon.tho vitalitr of
O'hildren and endanger their lives. A
simple and. effective cure Is Mother
Graves' Worm E.,�terwfuatoar.
A nritish naval Officer M the JgI4
VOfttbr of 0. motor operated. chliln
driven lawn mowtr with Waptable
speeft
MIAN'dyk LIMM11111t POr 60011t In 0WAPA6
Magic Carpet
6DAINIH011. cure
A d gh't mbr,*V, Or
,t7
thi Y"..q I 11.111=1115
Cho Extract of Itoote, J�owxk_a$
Mother Selliti's Citrati" 4
tho radical cure of 41044MIPII.Itfooam
_11A
POZXANIA, d 6; ;Oootwn. 4t ;a IM
i1*
1r511tpqdy illat nover fa
ev
to do thet work." 30 4r..Ps
Few parts of Europe have a more
'uter"flng or more romantic history thrico 0-aily. Get t'lle ociacius,
the %
than rovince which. formed part at 6-M88*3. 01
of rr rossla
share of the partition of
Poland and which was known before
the war as the Grand Duchy of Posen.
The total -area, sometimes referred to
;before the re-birtio of Poland as Prus.
slau Poland, contains an area at 1I.-
200 square miles the two towns of
importance being Bromberg and Po- Facts About
sen, It adjoins West Prussia on the
north, Brandenburg on the west, Sile-
sia on the south, and what was known I
until recently as Russian Poland. Its Canada
boundaries coincide with no natural
division ',of any kind.
Tbere
several hunqrefA lakes
aud about one-tifth of the area is
With the Indlanr, of t1le,old days
in (4nada, Woman was a drudge and
sandy and, unfertile and one-tentla
marsh. With the exception of tile Vis-
a slave. She was tile mother of
tula the rivers of Poznania are mostly
warriers; that was the greatest hon
tributaries of the Oder, the largest
being the Warta, The climate is tem-
that could come to her. Als far as
Sharing the regard of her lord and
perature and the rainfall is not ex,
Waster or taking any active part In the
-cessive. Poznania is the central sec-
affairs of tile tribe, she had but little
tiOu of tile racial borderline between
part.
the Germans and 'Slays which runs
The care of the lodge, the dressing
from the Baltic to the Boraylan gate,
Of Skins, the cutting and gathering of
Tile Population save for the wilitury
the family firewood froin the near -by
and civic officials was almost wholly
forests wer� her daily duties. She
Polish, but there are a few German
and her children gathered nuts and
settlements. The decree at -Annexation
berries In the fall and summer for the
of Pozotania followed the 81gntug of
mostau. of the lodge, where the husband
the treaty,of Vienna In 1815. in 1830
and father lived on the best she could
a rebellion occurred In Russian Po.
land, and as a result at this Pozn*Lnia
procure. Her cooking 'aparatus waS
the Simplest Itind is was, too, the
lost many of the special privileges
-
household work that she performed.
which has been granted to her, An
abortive revolution took In 1846
k5he contributed, too, her shares In
I
the
place
and for three years anarchy rosigned.
Thereafter the national struggle.was
manufacture of snow shoes and
canoes, and wbon. the warriors were
keen but In 1870 Bismack attacked
Poles and Catholics in a rapid succes-
on.the war path or off on one
of their long hunts, they remained
sion of laws. Pinally making a spe-
cifle attack against the Polish lan'
in the old camps and kept things In
order until the return of the braves.
guage. The Poles now have their
long awaited revenge. The chief in.
They passed the Eime in goosip—or
made ?moccasins for�,, the winter
duatry Is agriculture, the most tin-
months, wave fish nets for the river
Portant crop being rye. About twou-
catch cond prepared furs for windy
tf per cant. of Poznanla Is forest, and
aayB* The boys aud girls fished In
there are practically no manufactures
the streams or snared the small ant -
and no minerals except salt V
mals with which the woods abound-
ed. When the men of the. tribe re-
turned, there was a great cdlebra�
tion. If victory had been their lot
Don 't Hawk, Blow,'
and Prisoners were brought back,
,
one of the great events In an Indlan's
Sneeze, or Cough
I
lite came The prisoner was tortur-
ed to deatli amidst the laughter of the
Use "Catarrh ozone"t
camp. It defeat was their portion
-then was heard the death wall of the
-----------
women as they lamented the fall ct
When germs attack the lining or
the red warriors. But the life of the
Indian woman was one long drab exis-
the nose, make you sneeze and g2g—
when later an they infest thi bron-
tence without regard or love,
chial tubes—how can you follow Mem
with, a cough syrup?
You can't do it—that'F; all. Cougil
syrups go to the stomac'h—that1s`wIiy
they fall,
'INE"6atarrh ozone goes everywhere
'—gets right After the germs—kills
them—heAls the soreness—cures the
inflammation—makes Catarrh disap-
pear. Not diffic#A't for Catarrhozone
to cure, because It contdins the es-
sences of pine balsams and other
antiseptics that simply mean death
to catarrh. Large size costs $1.00 and
contains two months' treafni6nt;
a standard frr Delayad,ttnd Painful
sitialler sizes 25c and 50c, all druggists
and storekeepers.
Renatmallon sealed Tin geitage only. ail
diroct by tall prico U.00.
.606 — .
RDF.Ui.2w Ice -d Cot 71 11, Frolit St.,
roran 4. Can a.
KIPLINGIS CHEQUE.S.
At one time Ruclyard Kipling a], -
way paid his bills, no matter how
A GOLDEN CITY.
small they happened to be, with
cheque. After a while he discovered
The Mexican. city or Guanajuato,
to his amazement that his bank ac-
built near the oldest gold mines in . the
count showed a much larger balanc'e
country, was originally constructedof
than the stubs of his chequebook
adobes made of the refuse 9f these
warranted. In fact, while he was
-mines. As the early processes,of X_
drawing cheqlles for small amounts
'bie'money
trsetio)i, -were very impertect, the wiills
almost dally, In the bank
and floroTs of t1aese buildings were
did not dwindle in the least. For a
thus full of gold.
long time he was at a loss to account
Things would have continued thus
for this astonishing fact until he hap-
for an indefinite time, and the inhab.
pened one dav to visit an office, the
itants would have been livifig Yet In
Occupant of which was an enthuslas-
these valuablo buildings, it the pass -
tie autogratph collector, There the
author saw one of his own cheques,
age of a railway line nearby had not
-necessitated
framed and hanging on the waIX
the demolition of about
100 houses.
Thus the mystery was solved. It ap-
peared that the local shopkeepers
found that they could often get more
.for Itipling's cheques by selling them
to autograph hunters than th y
could by ci�hlng them at the bae
nk,
A merchant can obtuin an Imitation
and so, a,lthoUgp the author kept on
of MINARD'S LINIMENT from a To.
ronto house at P, very low price, and
signing cheques�, his bank balance
h,ve it labeled his own Product.
remained almost intact.
d.
This great�y imitation Is tile poorest
To safeguard the child from darn-
one we have yet.; seen of the many that
age that worms cause, use Miller's
every Tom, Dick and Harry has tried
Worin Powders, the medicine par ex-
to introduce.
cellencia for chilaren. These Pow-
ders w -Ill clear the system entirely of
Ask for MINARD's TAXIMBINT and
worms, will regulate P.nd stimulate the
yoti will get it.
organs Injuriously affected by the
worms, and will encourage healthful
operation. of the digestive processes.
As & verralfuge It calinot be surpassed
In effectiveness.
The decline of literature Indicate%
the deelino- of a nation,, the two keep
pace In their downward tendency.—
Goptbe.
Minard's LIMIM6nt Por Colds, Etc.
A hanger has been patortted that
sus ' ponds a towel from two corners so
air can circulate through and dry It,
9ff 9 ^
Skin Sufferejob
ft �A
Kea a
"I had a severe attuk of rezema,,,
19aYs Mr. Michael Tapley of lJoitliss000,
Sask. " My body wa,3 simpiv covered
with ertiption. I had tried tvery satve
and skin soAp t)lat money co%llti bay be -
late 1 hit 11pon ZaM-13uk.
" Zam-lltik proveol the very ti-eatinent
r heeded. I used Zkoft-Buk 'Medicinal
S6-tP far bathing.And afterwards applied
tht Zarn-Buk bulm In h1wal cinqutity.
Soothing anti comforting, this tm %.nen t
SMI brattight 1101w"t iawrovement. wroiira-
,efte With AW41A v40ted lot uly suin J)eind
tomplelely tured.11
V*0' Z"'4313k for 61141, Wouhdt
Its UAbbs stowfu
ws 7,am-wbluk
'ilwo I I - -
U
—ka-i Rugs " '.&iaique.
How "genume anialue rugs" arc
manufactured and Prepared for turo.
pean and'Artierican markets is told by
an Amerivau who visited 14cigdood.
Tile shopping streets �;eenl ]Ihe
, tun�
nels. Tli(�y are arelied overhead with
brick to keep out the he,,At; thus they
run, like subways, up anti down the.
bazaar quarter. Tbrough those long,
stifling, faintly lighted t,,inuels throngg
the eternal crowd of 1111611, Mules and
camels.
Often one 'Vill �S(e a fine rup., - lying
flat It' the filth of a narrow street,
ground beneatli the tranl) of men and
beasts, but (here Is Method In this,
Poreigner.q, Make Oriental rugs, bright
and n6w, In PerSla. and sell them
through Bagdad. Since an "old rug"
Is worth 1110re. Wily brokeri have bit
on this way to Make -- new rtig loolt
old.
There In no polsonoty,; Ingpedij%tit In
R611OWUY's Corn anti it Vrin b(,.,
Used without danger of Injury.
AFTRA 1,kIONn.4,y
(London Advcrtj�rr.)
The liquor interests have overr rcitt.
son to believe that the temale ;f th,,
species Is more deadiy than the mh* -
Minaedlik Liniment pop biolitherlA.
The 019MMMUtIO clinuffetir an
noun eft that practice Is �l pu
the tire of tbtorjr. �aw*
1010 COUNTRY NEWS'
Sir Ricliarci 13rooke, Bart., of \or.
ton Priory, Cheshire, has dieg w.11ile
on a visit to Scotland. no was In III&
70th year.
Mr. E'dward John FoOku# a director
Of the law UWan and Rock Insur-
ance Company, has cited at Laugioll
Green. Kent,
Tile Arsenal Football Club is topay
1,000 guineas In Inutalmenta to ellojow,
a bed In the Great Northern Hospital,
London,
we ore a Present. opma uo�uera Ill.
occupation of land under the Govfjrn.
Inent scheme for the settlement of ex.
Scrvice men.
Lord Wharton's monmountlislaire es-
tate, Cefa-Mably, about 1,1�.o acr:,s,
has been sold to a Cardiff syndicate
for nearly R40,000.
,For Saving the lite of la$s m.aster,,
Air. RY,le, farmer, at Oswestry, Salop,
wherl a bull was goring him, a dog
has been awurded a medal by the Can,
Ine Defence League,
The Chancellor of the lalmobequer
acknowledges receipt from "a birin,
Ingham, man" of & 500 5 � per, cent. N� at
Stock, 1929-47, for cancellation,
Owing to tile merseyside, sillp.
wrights, strike, which has now lastec)
five weeks, one firm has refused 4
contract Which would have provideq
work for nine months.
Colonel Charles Pinkham, M.P., f0i
'West Willesden, who was a woMng
carpenter In the district 80 years ago,
has been appointed a Deputy-LIeuten4
ant for Middlesex,
Pending payment of 4112, interest
On light standards disused during tile
war, Leighton Buzzard, Beds, oaR
Company refuses 'to supply. gas, anq
the town Is in darkness.
London taxicab drivers have unant.
13UOUSIY rejected an offer by employ�
err. to reduce to Od. for 20 miles tlit
extra charge of 1-2d, per mile to mee,
the extra cost of petrol.
To found bursaries for students ob-
taining honors in chemistry, Mr. NY.
J, Matheson, dye and chenaical manu.
facturer, of Now York, has presented
X2,000 to St. Andrews University.
Northampton Council, having to finol
20,226 to comt)lete the, purchaSe 61 1
the land Ott -which its houses are be-,
Ing bullt� states that unless the Gov-
Ornment helps the building will bnve
to stop.
At a meeting at Aldershot atAVb1ch
a branch of the Ranker officers' As-
sociation was formed, It was statecl-,X
that an, ex -lieutenant -colonel and
disablement penson of 4s. per day, and
was hawking vegetables.
For 20 Years bandmaster In the
Manchester City I�ollce and' prior to
that bandmaster in the 17th Lancers.
Mr. Charles Whiting, who recently re-
tired from the constabulary after 31
Years' service, has died.
Tile death is announced to Colonel
Campbell, of Ivy House, Hampton
Court, one at tile oldest Etontaus�, For
r0flisHoz to.do fifty lines which lie had
not deserved he 'was flokged every
unY tor u -week, and finally twice on
the Saturday.
Mrs. Elizabeth RoNirell, of Bardon
B1111, near Newcastle, has died In, her
100th year..
'The steamers of the TsIe of Alan
Steam Packet Company have carried
1,000,000 passengers since May 1.
Messrs. Courtaulds, Limited, have
Put 250,000 into Covp=5� Housing
Bonds, a record investment In these
bonds,
For reasons of health, Sir, Henry
Dalziel (Coal. Lila,), 4'AP. for Kirk-
caldy Burghs, will, not stand at tile
next general election.
MISS Frances Melville, Principal of
the Margaret College, Glasgow, Is the
first woman In Scotland to sit as a
magistrate.
By employers agreeing to bring w -ag-
es up to 108 I -S per cent. above the
pre -War level, the potterZ trade wages
dispute has 'been settled.
Rear-Adifilral Sir William Nicholson
has succeeded Vlee-Admiral Sir
Arthur Levenson, commanding the
Second Battle 'Squadron.
As a site for a war memorial vil.
lage hall, Lord Burnham ha& given
about a third of an acre of land to
Hedgerley, near Beaconsfield.
Blackburn mothers have decided to
oppose every candidate tit the No-
velliber municipal elections who IS in
favor of extending the school -leaving
age
Ii is estimated that in the near fu�
tare the island of Reasay, 'between
Skye and the mainland, will furnish a
halt of the Iron ore for all Scotland.
. After,some years' absenco thr6ugh
.disrepair,, 'the old folit symbolically�
representing doves and a serpent has
been restored . to West Wyc6nlbo
Church.
Sir Jesse Boot, founder of the firm
of chemists teariag- his name, has
given P-10,000 to found a Chair of Soc�
blOgY at Nottingham Congregationai
Institute,
As a memorial to 133 ex-prisoner�
who served In the War a stalned-91.4so
window has been added to Maidstone,
XcIllt, Prison chapel, which was buth
entirely by convicts,
The Rev. T. N. Tattersall. D.S.O.,
said rt Northampton half the minis.
ters in Northamptonshire had lesq
than iC2 a week, and he knew of a
faintly of five with a butcher's bill Oka
two slillings a week.
Fully equipped and with $tea,m UA
the War OdYsscY, a 10,000 -ton "fabri-
cated" ship (assembled from Standard
parts), was launched at Chepstow,
Nionniouthshire, b3r the "Monnibuth.
shire Shipbuilding Company.
Invitations Issue& by the Govern -
Ment for tenders now contain th(I
quo,stion: 'National schelyie, �for tho
Employment of Disabled Men. Is the
name of your Jilirm 1011 the Xingle
Roll?" and a negative reply It a bar
to acceptance.
After 45 years' sioxviee, Air. Goorgo
Ijake, cashier at the --(1,apital and Coun-
ties Bank, Rainsgate, has retired.
A Charles It. sayerelAn, in excellent
Preservation atter 2500 years, bas been
turned up by a DIOW111001 at Hadley
Hants.
Aftordhigto tflejr�`chfefongilaeer tho
G", 1,1101; k- COICO COMPany have over
21600 11111eq of mains running undo
London's streets.
Called to the Bar about the saftiot
U1110 as Lord 11alsbury, Sir Horatio
Moyd, recorder of Chester since 1869
aud doyen of r"Orders, is 11