The Wingham Advance, 1913-07-17, Page 7THE
POULTRY WORLD
to4).**404.440.....4.40“.44.•
NOTBS.
Be willing to pay A fair price for eith-
er Welling eggs, day-old chicks or
stock. One ehould remember that it
Costs =Ore to handle breeders to produce
hatehing egg e of day-oht chicke. Adver-
tieing billH muet be met, shipping boxes,
end extra. thne in shipping, and one can.
not afford to gen At market prices. Yet
many beginners ,expect that, and often
get stung on eheap stook.. But do they?
They generally obtain what they paid
for.
Don't be a knoeker. Boost the poultry
induetry. There are failures in every
liue of business, but in most every ease
the blame rests on the would-be poultry -
raiser, and, riot on the industry. It is
the same in the show room, There ie.,
and; always has been and alwaye will be,
More good than evil.
Fresh eggs have kept as a good. figure
in spite of one of the warmest winters in
a number of year& This prove that it
is the limited supply of really fresh
egg In this country. Ddring the
months of November to February there
is plenty of room in the poultry business
for live men who will make a study •of
egg -production.
The thue required to hatch lien's eggs
-varies greatly. Under the most favor-
able circumstances the chicke -will come
out_in twenty days. Then again 'when
the eggs are neglected by the men, or
were unfavorably placed, they have been
known not to hatch 'before the twenty-
third. or twenty-fourth day of sitting.
Snell instanees are rare, however. In
the majority of cave 21 or 22 days are
required.
Nearly all poultry diseases are owed
by cold, wet, Want of eleaulinees or bad
feeding. In other words, by neglect
eomewhere. It Ls better to guard against
this than to cure birds when they aro
ill, which is always an unsatiefactory
speculation.
The Barred Plymouth Rock still re -
Mains the most popular of breeds, tak-
ing the country throughout, and unless
some unforeseen ehange happens they
again will head the list of American
breeds in the standard. ef perfeetion.
Keep up the utility merits they poeeess
and they will stand a good chance of al-
ways leading.
The number of fowls kept might to
depend mot only on the accommodations
for them, but the experience of the
breeder. Expensive houses are eat noes-
eary; in fact, are 111-advieed, when pro-
fit is the object. But good. shelter of
eufficient kind should be supplied. A
certain amount of warmth and comfort
are required not only for the preserva-
tion of life, but for the laying on of
flesh and the producing of eggs The
growth of ehicks is retarded by exposure
to variable weather and chilling winds,
"Break up the breeding pens and give
them free range, if poseible. They will
be in better condition for future breed.
ing if a little extra attention IA paid
them, Separate the male% selling those
t t 1 ed and. lying those that
PO 0 ..)0 n g -
are to be kept over roomy quarters: Too
•xnany good breeders aie ruined by neg-
leet after the breeding season is oyer.
Cut out much of the corn in the regu-
lar ration, during the slimmer. Poultry
do not require the same amount.of corn ;
that they did in the whitey and early
spring months, unless fattening for liter- • Tradition About Monk Helped
ket, Les corn and mere oats will prove
Refugees in Mexico.
of more beeefit. Try it.
For your own sake, inetal some, trap
l
nests this fall and find out how little Mr. and ins. Peter Olesen, who were
you really know about heamong the refugees arriving on the
eologOne
ee
steamer -erase, yeeterday, ceedit their
who has trap neste is a, real poultry
escape from the hands of iodine ban -
breeder. lie knows what hie birds are
dits to a strange tradition which existe
doing. It finds out which hen the
among the Yaquis.
•egg and •how many. It tells the poultry
The nationality of the Olesens stood
efileor which bird he wishes for his them. good stead,' for when the in-
breedng pen. 'Arany of the best -looking
diens, Who were roving the country,
specimens are the poorest layers, yet pillaging property, learned that they
the poultry raiser cannot detect them were Danes, the foreigners were treated
-unless he is a user of the trap not. The with every consideration. .Almost rev -
whole flock eeed not be trapnested, bet
with
out enough to have t ie cream for
your future sbreders.
;Tune, July. AtiOust and September are
the months the breeder wishes to, (Ite-
mise of his breeding stoek. This is the
beginner's chance ter- obtain stock at a
reasonable (we do not. say cheap) price;
for a good breeder under usual eireefras
stances eannot be bought cheap. The
beginner will do well to purehaso .o pen
for future use, and the earlier in the
season they are purchaeed the eheaper
they can be obtained, as a rifle.
To the beginners We 'would say, al-
though June, the month of "hen fever,"
Is here, don't start in poultry during the
summer months if you wish to make
poultry pay.
:For the best results, get small chicke
out on the ground early. Provide a
green run, if tamale, and. increase size
of rim graduelly, thy become used to
/Ow
The Best Treatment
foritchingScalps,Dan-
druff and Falling Hair
To allay itching and irritation of the scalp;
prevent •dry, thin and falling, hair, remove
crusts, scales and dandrula and promote the
growth and beauty of the hair, tile following
special treatment is most effective, agreeable
and economical. On retiring, comb the hair
'out straight all around, then begin at the side
and make a parting, gently rubbing (enigma
ointment into• the parting with a bit of soft
flannel held over the end of the finger. Anoint
additional partings about half an inch apart
tmtil the whole scalp has been treated, the pur-
pose being to get the Cuticura ointment on the
scalp skin rather than on the hair. The
next morning, slutmpoo with Cuticura soap
and hot water. Shampoos alone may be
used as often as agreeable, u once or
twico a month is generally euflicient for
this special treatment for women's hair, Cutl-
cure Soap and Ointment are sold throughout
the isserld. A liberal sample of each, with
'MERE'S l'11.0.1;11' IN ..!.li'TTON,
Vatmers, a-, a elates, aro not yet alive .
to the advantw.ees of keeping a 1104. -
of Sheep, As a general rule '.fartnera
not take very kindly to the idea, Seeln-
ing to laels the taet and leindly disposi-
a etweerire
don towards eheep neeeseary to netking
A farmer eau engage in sheep eultrtre
without the investment of a great deal
of eontey for a noel., hut he umet be
bure that the .toundetion etuelc is well
seleeted rather than '31'.'est deeply into
the buelness before he fully understeutle
the requiremente, er, at least, partly
um tutelar; them,
About the ealest way to meee 0 le -
ginning ie to purAsse a Millibar Of
Stymie., healthy young orade twos of
Sheep for home consumption if no other
It will pay to keep a email flock of el:, posOess a strong eonetitution and
mammary system, and. h
good size produeed by one, two or more
eroersee by nutting with rallni. of elm of vitality, wiali well-develop•ed barrel and
the muttoa breve* of sheep. Let no elm motive were hi view. By keeping a few ave made a
oiL.Lerrs Ore
EATS DIRT -
•
k
104,.t
;
LET* ,
I
,P0VIDERED
Sr:17"7/
" 5
Ton 0 wistr4.800autifewiaago 1,4.101 000,00,4s. 9.11.1.415oT T COMPANY LitAITED
^ I •
\lee. 'Mange the bedding frequently by
cleaning everything out of the sleeping
penis. Scatter eir-olaked lime about at
frequent intervals. Vi e a coal -tar dip
or crude earbolic as:id. solution, and
spray the pens every few weelse.
When cutting hay for their own use
funnel's neitally wait until the plant liai
come into the stage known Pei "second
bloom," which (wenn after the full
bloom has paw& When oold on the
city markets "choice" timothy means
buy just cut as the plant coulee into
the Met or full bloom,
Wm.
Winter leguminous plants are very
valuable and, should not be negleeted.
• They improve the soil, 'N'oent loes
1.
In plant food during winter furnish
grazing for all kind's of do ec, Progree-
hive ;agriculture requiree that theee
• plants have a prominent place in our
rotation.
When purchasing a dairy !sire, if pop
siblo, flea bis dam, She fihould be of
good Size for the breed, a. regular breed -
expect. to raise sheen prof; tabl Le for this. purp.N..4 tavantages wm be ‘giee. good yearly official reeor ,
intends to let the SAM) rtin eovered that will cause an increase. in
Like other anintale on the ferm„ ebeel) •the size of the fir/0e until a large one There are eoene erops that may.
1; kept, if the eouditiona. of the farm go before the more delicate and fasti-
(lions feeders, 13.uckwheat, rye -and the
need, attention, but tee attenthre they
noed. malies, 'very' •Pleitsallt lcric are favorable, Keep a few sheep endsnote
eowhorn turnip are of this character
'and does not take up mit tune. Tl'cy the results.
Tbay will tame and 'beeefit almost any
are excellent seavengers for 'ieeeping •
down weeds, but they are worthy of en- FARM NEWS AND VIEWS. . wild and barren Boil and flourish over
joYing the ruu. of a good pasture a131 well) A' Cnnadian authority says the best a wide range Of • elimate, The rye must
so that they ean have a variety of • time tO perelloae‘ the ewo for foam be turned under promptly in the spring
grazing, like other animals. As to . the _neck is Auguet, just after the, Iambs time, before it drains the soil of mois-
{gist 01 keeping sheep they can be well have amen .weasted, We purchose titre and hiterferee- with orchard trees
kept and pay their board bill with their them elteap then as at any time, and or any such thing.
fleece every spring, and make over the can make the beet; -selection in choosing_
alumni increame ae a bonne to any farr eues thett have raieed lambs, as then One way to solve the bed problem
mer who look's after them properly, over qualitio and stremith can be is to ritesee-more beef cattle on our
and above the fact that they can be imertained. Besides, we will have them farina. The manager with a small farm -
drewn cm Tor a mutton wether for the In geed condition, for the next crop of may diversify his crops so that plenty
eomfort of the family at no distant in- Jambs. • of feed may be produced, devote por-
ese-page booklet on the care and treatment
tervals through the entire year adding
of the Skin. and.scalp. sent postsfree, Address
tion of the Wm to pasture and return
VOaticura„" Dept. 22D, Bostcn, s. greatly thereby to the bill of fare of a if a. little grain be fed the .ewe e for the manure from. the animate to the soil,
. • - • • e fariner'e family Plena four weals before they lamb -ono so that the yield will be inereased and
At no seasou of the ;veer doee mut- pound lice head each day of mixed oats thus find, profits in a few bed cattle.
dean them up and put them away. ton eome ane• handier for ferillere where and bran le flood- they will be ip eood
When ro ug f. ith instil at ors, clean f
clovers, a falfa, peas, beans and vetches
hot part of the year. A ematkized sheep
can be selected the evening 111 FO) wed A hen can lay five times her own --not only ineaease the nitrogen, but it
early lo the morning elaughterect and weight of ogee an a year. prize ecw all manure carefully preserved and
hung, in the well if no lee le at hand. It tbe reiverslly of Missouri produced applied the soil the humus will also
is not bo large but whit it eon be 'need sufficient milk in (wee year to equal the be inereaeed, and by paying special Lit
01) before it will 6Poil. Some Pari -6 of food value in the egreases of four three- tention to good tillage the phyeical
it can be boiled down and, put in 0 cool year-old steere. condition condition of the soil will with-
• place where it will Itcap a short time.
them up and leave in good order; if hot
water mecliines. drain off all water. Do
the same with broodere, with tools and
with everything you use, It takes littls
time, but it saves both time and. money
in ,the end,
resh meat is wanted than (lulu.' the comlition when lambieg time eomes. Growin/ large quantities of legumes -
V-
A SENSIBLE QUESTION.
(Detroit Free Press)
Why are men not considered "dressed"
unless they have on a, padded coat, a
collar and a strip of silk passed under
It to impede the circulation and increase
discomfort? Wh3t is is not possible to be
good' and respectable and recognizable
by one's Women acquaintances in shirt-
sleeves,
e t
OUR PRECISE ARTIST.
/.
4, /0. :;,,..oyfir..1...41:
• U'VP
ET_ LUN CAI
YAQUI LEGEND,
erently the Yaquis geve way to them
and aided them in getting from their
locatiou in the interior to the seacoast,
where they boarded, the Colima.
There is a legend centuries old among
the Indians that the Danes were the
friends of their people in. bygone years.
Several hundred years ago, so the tra-
dition goes, a Danish monk did much
good for the Yaquiii. At hie death he
was buried in a subterranean cave in a
mountain of the great Yaqui valley.
The Indians believe that the monk,
seated in a great stone chair in the
heart of the mountain, is their benefac-
tor.
"T. don't know how much truth there
is in the legend," laughed Olesen upon
his arrival, "but we iveren't questioning
that when we found that the Indians
were inclined to treat us with reepect
and even render us assistance because
of our nationality." _
It. Alweys train brooder clucks to use Olesen had -a, plantation at Michoacan,
the °Woor run, and see that they learn the State of Oaxaca, and was enjoy -
to go into the brooder to warm up. Pre- rag prosperity until the revolutionary
vent huddling out of doors in sunn
Y troubles began to have a serious effect
811018. on the entire country. Several thou -
When through using eggs for hatehing sand yequi Indians are leagued with
take the males away from the hens. You the rebels, but many are roving the
will have better warm weather market country in hands merely under the
ers and. the hens will be benefited. Any guise of being followers of revolution -
merles that you do not intend to carry ary eirincipals and using the cover in
over another winter, or hold for sale as their depredations, says Olesen.---San
breeder's, had better le; sold. now for Veaneisco Chronicle.
market. 1 1
liens that have laihi well all winter IMMODEST DRESSING.
and show signs of knoeking off work for (Detroit Free Press.)
the warrn SeaSOn can often be indUced Girls are seen cm the street In Clothes
to give rt fine summer egg yield by give -or the lack of them -that their mothers
ing them good, well shaded woodlandoliterisi.riaealetailoomeinTaicitsto
or orehard range. with no shelter but "
she 'appeared as m
Diana at a askeCil ball
the trees. Provide plenty of roofed at the French court in the days of the
• First flipire, in a gown so filmy and
nests • in sheltered spots. • gossamer -like that it could be passed
When thinning out the garden, do• not through a man's finger -ring. Under it
be 111
forget that the freeli young, greene will she wore a single grmireeunnlAntlivI
relished by the fowls and thick& tic
,
Feed an abnndanee of fresh green foOd* 1SrattegaitindrAesr:
What are mothere thinking iAoirie to -
Plant a peteh of rape to eupply bolt permit such n style of dress? What has
greens for growing &kits later in the - b eggleigt:ftViji ligtr a were Avon.t to
prenia
sublY
feaSOU. inneeent girls? They 1:11.Sleady be modest,
Bear in mind that while sunshine and but they certainly don't look it. If this
fresh air are tw•o •of nature'e beet gifts, kislsgiallTreonft person 15 to
protection ehou•
ld be provided •againat
allure, as the fallen wonian
high winds, arid also Aome shade is ne- to man the eliarm ef a girl Is hor mys-
out doubt be generally improved, =k-
in the West it is very rommon for Tgineediue is peed as a means to pro- ing the farm more productive year al -
farmers to kill and "quarter round." Pt, gato nna foeter good qualities found ter year. Without the soil in good phy-
That is (me will hill a good-sized mut- in a berd. The dala-fer is that the weak sieal condition no farm can do which
ton and send three of the quarters imint3 are likely to crop out more plain- the productive power cannot be great -
es many neighbors, neighbor No, 1.). kill- iy than the strong ones and time become '1y increased by the growing of more
ing and doing the same thing a. day 01 more plainly fixeil, legumes, the intelligen use of manure
two later, with neighboes NW. 3 and
4. Pentair, that ie grown upon the Firm
The "sheepy taste"' win not be found is, often more calunlde than that Which Cflareoal is a pressing essential for
in well-fed. muttons whielt have been ht purehastel in eoucentrated foem, and poultry, especially at this seaeon. in -
butchered in 0 proper manner. It is not it 1.1 also cheapor. stead of buying it, rake up some old _
the wool that gives it the "sheepy taste'' A three-year-old rnhation---potatoea„ chunks of wood, cobs arid other refuse
so much as the intestines or the gases oats• ftnd 1-,v -vimblc,.s.:11-aine his -mere te about the place, totting fire to them. '
rising from them. Removing. the Wes- keep 11-e11 ,eill Idled with biomes and in When the heap turns to a mass of hot
tines soon after death ie the beet thing rorolitioe whieh enables the crop to coals mother it down with a little wat-
to do, lf the pelt can be removed. quids.' • readily utilize the commercial fertilizer. or or dirt, and when ie eoole you will
amt. good tillage.
Lasaasessess.
itamiltozi Centenniall:1 TEACH- FARMING
industriali Exposition IN HIGH: scHoots
Old • Warne Week
,
•
, Audust nal to 16th, 1913 Ontario Plans For Federal
iVisnufacturero' Exp?sitien Produeta filling two Armourie& and Pere&
Agricultural Grant.
Grown's. Grand Carnivel Midwey, Aviation Exhibition cialipi Military Pageant, with
*even Cenaclian and U. S. Repents participating. Fourteen ilitary Bands. Arp!atic
Sports. Motor Bora, Sailing an Rowing Races. Championship Athletic EMUS. Champion.
ship Ball Games, two $. League Teams. Trap -Shooting Tournament, Rifle Matches.
Ble Parades deity.
Come to Hamiltoi—Canada's Malin:et°
and see this biggcrit Civic Holidety Week .and Industrial. 11)ereenstration that hes •
been soon in Canacla-or elsewhoe,
to,
Special Rates hy Rail and Boat -ask your Local Agent,
CHAS. A, IVIURTON, Secretary
1 11 h h 1 11 1
The Housekeeper
When frying multi' it improves the
eriepuese. if the mush is dipped in white,
of an egg before frying.
A few minced *Ace added to fudge ae
it collies from the stove will make 110.
vel and dainty eon'ecti-on, .
The tops of bureaus will keep in good
condition henget. if a piece of blotting
paper is piaeed 'under the.cever.
To prevent (girdling add a liber-
al pinch. of carbonate of soda, to each
quart before putting it on to boil.
If a little lemon. juice is added to the
water in 'which peache.e ere dropped be-
fore cooking the fruit not . so likely
to discolor.
A oupfol of liquid yeaet equivalent
toehalf a compressed yeast eake or a
whole dry. yeast cake.
Before baking potatoes, let them stand
in hot •water for 15 minutee, They re-
quire °lily half the time for baking and
- Rae more mealy and palatable, besides
saving the gas.
Alice do not like the smell of pepper-
mint, and a littie7 oil of peppermint plea-
• ed in a. pantry will drive them. away end.
not expose children to the denger of poi-
sons.
lf the wooden chopping bowl has the
odor of food, soak the bowl in boiling
- water in which a little soda is dissolved,
• A tablespoonful of soda to a gallon of
water is the proportion.
4
ly it may be well to disembowel the
mutton after its reMoval, but if Ole A good. boas' house ie dry and clean
cannot be deep in a hurry disembewel- inside, admife plenty ol t, well
fug should be thole at once and the pelt- veetilateas free frem draughte, and com-
ing proeees done snbsequentl,y. Pouring 1 fortabls warm for the hogee 'This is
a pail of eold. water in the trunk a the trat,hintr rpteiyiia by a glees in
the sheen cools the bowels end prevents swine production at Wcetern" ergrieni-
the generatien of gas until the eheep tuyal College. And the -most praetieal
has been pelted.
eessery when the sunshine becomes too terY, her elusiveness, her refinement al;
shown in modeet mien and attire. tven
hot for e•ornfort. • hot weather doesn't exruse girls\ for
Provide plenty.of eool drinking water. eheapening themselves as they do; nnd
14Zeop it in a Shady spot, Where It will the remarks made about them are neither
etay root Keep the drinking vessels admiring nor admirable, .
Isestonably deem CANADA'S WISE LEAD.
..........—........4,
•
..
Don't overcrowd chieken cows at Any•
(Ottawa Vitizen)
time, but be pertieularly eareful •at dos- vio now society of valuta, wilt 108e
ing tip time to see ttat coops and. boxes nothing ay admitting wonien to iteveneta-
rre not erowded, and that there is am- berteeo on the Sante terms as men,
pla vontiletion. though departing from. the custom and
• Preeedent of older soeieties elsewhere. on
/remise Yen happen to have been (MO& the Contrary, It loos given most excellent
tessfol with one brood or have gone • evidence of that profound wietioni whiel;
ILleiter,gigtiiitAgs t(r rg• -igilicillaorft" Viti
through one season with fairly good re -
C'ime.dst. thould triVa been the firat Refers.
eniti and without many mishaps, den't
get the notion inte your heed that you title society to reeogrdze the equality of
knontal More it to know about pourwomen. it will not long he alone.
ti -y. Ther' Aron. aoed inatij. breedere, who l'Elt COUP NATER CURE.
/rave boon at ii for a Amite of years, WhO
Win ion you thet they hnow loos new neingelerst Whig)
Dr. Heating's-Leine for sleeplessness In
then, thev thought they did et the close warm eveatber is tor water, in shower
of their first :vest. and theY are. stilldel
thWater
and, attonsf4 baths, Title Man W110 earl
itarAinit. take these frecniently,eat night, Neill Avant
Wlen throtigh with sitting ticietst zoo° dopes of ear kind. r,Tr'Tryib d '
• hog man will admit that it is good. ad-,
1
t• u
-,,,---
ssIO.
ti).1
have a. bandy supply.
e• ---
STRAWS WHICH SHOW. -
(Ottawa Evening Journal)
'What result shall coma from the grant-
iug of woman suffrage In Illinois_ is sug-
gested by the fact that opeosittun to the
.reform Came-. most Strenuous157 from tile
organization Brines and reactionary
,forcAls.
OUR PRECISE ARTIST.
;a.
\L
*
A PAIR ts. F PreNTS'.
iet-2,2;?4,
FOR FRESH BREAD.
1177,0'
14'
;BEES AND POULTRY
Among Subjects That Are to
be Taken lip.
Toronto deepatelie Ontario ha e revels -
ed the stnn of $195,000 ae the share of
this Provinee in the new Federal aid to
PHOTOS uz4TDER SEA,
agrieulture, prised by the Deminion Pate
!lament upou the report and twain.
New Invention Revolutionizes the
aendation of Ihe C. James, formerly
Art. Deputy Illitieter of Agrieulture for On -
departure in suinnarine photo- (arm, itecordanee with the conditions
graphy is promised front the eueeeseful
revile of the Williamson flexible Ella 4 to
till' Provincial tiov'ernment for exoeil-
the it the motley was transmitted.
marine tube, the invention of Cept. J.
" clitura.on the purposes designated.
'Williamson, several days
by means of which his
to utilize the lire .
1810;17 ji,111;,10.1otre.
isellewing eonsideration by the Pro-
atst.u12.1;afat.etetei.7bkerf IPeilatetep7t8cera:41PtRhatiaelalsilleeoglirelfiseicikde;trvItrebar."6, this ves r i
manent the suinmer sehool for tefichere
villein' Government it has-been decided
.. I ,,ei portion of the grant
.-.... .n amplifying and making per-
oflt.00mrelsOu.itt: 035; fewetimamsoies °nal.,
- at the Guelph Agricultural College, For
mentos with his father's Invention were this purpose the Departmente of Eden -
SQ successful that, although be is not tion and Agriculture are ce.eperaula, in
an -expert photographer, he is planning the holding of speeial courses for pane
an expedition, to the. West Indies Por , atenattlosteeLntroartelistietliiioroall teaseeileu: foil': iniiiiiigliii:
the purpose of taking moving pieturo -• aprauritiseneparate ee11001 inepectors and for
in thie
of submarine life in those. watere,
such photographs possible •is perfectly
The tube which makes the taking of I-1 110 1::71‘tteUtlduteuf l61:itesti:iitilit:tileae :lien stitnoi till:to:is,
scin:tihnot;11: :3)(1:rdtiticeililtnizilzuterprise the de.
interest in
every
flexible. and can be . etretched to any
cated in agrieulture an initial .esrant of
a teaeher verti.
length from one foot to 500 or more. At .
$00, awl an annual grant of $30 When
With a glass front and. with room for
the bottom of the tube Is a chandler
three persona, •No compressed air is na•
1:111e.p:111:111.1:111:eden11;jetta011piehris•00:gahtollatuntultitt:
eessary and those in the room breathe
The course provided for inspectors ie
the Sallie air as those on the surface, • Year, while _the teaeher's salary will be
an interesting innovation aimed at ad -
They Can thus remain below for hem. .
rancing.the interests of agricultural ed -
grant of $30 from the department.
In his Hampton Roads tests young
ucation in the rural sehools, and as an
Williamson took picturee. both in the
irneement to these officals to attend
'night and. day. To take the night
tie course the department has decided to
photographs four powerful electric light's
with reflectors were lowered beneath
-allow tnem travelling expenses with.
the boat and. as the objects passed. the
)e acorn m oda t eds a t the eoll ego
big glass eye of the submarine chamber .
esidences.
they were snapped.
AtileICULT'LlIE TN IfIgif SCHOOLS%
board and lodeine tke 1 • - •
e. e. s . -Leine as possible
A large. ehunk of meat was hung over win 1 - ,
In connection with the course of hie%
the eide of the boat on a hook ---: and 1- •
dangled before the .glaes hit° of the -
school science tear -hers, the. Edneatioa .
little room at the bottom of the tube .
Department has announced its intention
in. _which Williamson and two eompan- -
culture for the high eehools and colle-
ions worked, "..N.Tor was 'this bait entirely
necessary, for all sorts of fisitee were
qiate ini.ititutes* before they open next •
of authorizing -a course of studv in earl -
attracted to the ehamber by the light
september, the examinations in which
inside, whieh served as a jaeklight such
tame° to the- Normal schools and the
an la used in apearing salmon.
to be provided with suitable plots of
eral expert swimmers and divers took
One, of the hest tests came when ser- 1
grotind, where experiments mut demon -
may be taken as bonus options for en -
headers off the boat, and erawled be- '
•
stratione may be carried on. PlOts will
Widnes Of education. All iustitutes are
loW the surface to the depth of thirty
'feet, where photograplis were taken Fie
be alloted to the various students, and
• they paesed ie -front of the glass.
the -kind of farming parried on in the lo -
weighted. and lowered in front of the
chaniber thirty feet down and pictures
made of them, .
marine subject -8 have been confined to
Newspapers and. - magazines were •-•
Ititherto moving pictures of sub- . '
caiity will determine the nature of- their
el - ntec.k., .I.Fy the Ministere of Education
..esitntioe Je. the branehes of work sug-
work
•mteltil.
iineget aides and grains; fertilizing experi-
m. t-.,fleulture -are: Variety testa of
s with potatoes; eomparing two
the inmates of glass tanke or photo -
lode of erowine tome -)se• .
, . , . , te i. , demon -
graphs made through the bottom.. of .
s 1 al mg neW kindS Of vegetables; grow.
(melt vessel& as the little steamboat '
lug trees for home, park or street plant -
with a glass bottom that makes sight -
elude,.
ing; propagating shrubbery, small fruits,
t . T '
seeing trips of the ocean's floor in Ber-
-4-a4
etc., from cuttings; growing fruit tree'.,
Gold on the Street,
strawberries; teste of fodder (Tope, ete.
Banks distribute. large sums of gold ii(). -r
Annual special grants of $100 will be
pruning and spraying experimente:
efeinonetrating methods of cultivating
from their head offices to branches in•
the city fLondon) and the suburtH. As
•tide boards taking up dile work, aiel of
much as £20.000 in sovereigue will be
*75 each to qualified teaehere engaging
paid to high Minot or collegiate insti-
taken in bags in an ordinary brougham,
in it. it is provided that, until a teach -
the only guard being two unarmed
er is qualified, the county representa-
elerks. Only - one man is considered ne.
eessary to take
tire of the Department of Agriculture
ploy a small Motor van in the collection
of the city to ,another. Some banks ent-
zel0,000 from one point
BEE -KEEPING AND POULTRY.
may cunduet the eciursa
may be.. attached to the. waist by a. re.. . 1 se taken the
and distribution of silver, but notee up
pteket wallet, by a clerk. The wallet
to Z10;000 in value are carried in a
-net year the work will be in atericul-
. in the part of the come • •
Teak:fast in Chicago, Lunch in VVashington Keeping in Ice Box is Latest
and
per in Florida !
- ,
7"1
7. 7..
600
1
AtiFirk-
1
vsw.
. . ,
WelANTA
G-.AArc—
TEX.
AVIATOR BRINDEJO
HAVE CARRIED HIM TO FOR LUNCH AND DINNER JF .1-15 HAD
AT CHICAGO.
DES
M OU
NAI
s,
AND
A
MAP
SHOWI
NG
—Lea>
WH
(By 'Wiliam G. Shepherd.)
Paris -I'm goirt'i` to try to trans-
late' into plain tnglish some of the
recent astonishing flying feats of
French airmen, for every aviation re-
cord has been broken in loraneo
tho peat three menthe!
On the night of June tenth, Just be-
fore the closing of a theatre in Ware
saw, Ruesia-a city not so far from
theeriorth pole -a smiling little Freeen
man wag dragged onto the stage, and
the manager, introducing him, said:
"Ladies arid gentlemen, this le
Brindejone ties Moulintais,.. He took
breakfast this rrierning in Paris, hinelt
in Berlin and supper toellglit in onr
eity. 1%4 has behold five turopean
capitals , to -day between sunrise aud
sunset. In eleven hours he flew 880
• mites. The fastest train that eonnects
our city with Paris requires 27 hottre
for the 'LOP,"
hi the first stage of his flight, 'whin.
began at sunriale, he flew COO miles
• to rierlin slx hours—a rate of 100
• miles "•au hour!
Nor., suppose his flight had taken
made it. Arteries. and he had taken,
hit breakfast in Chicago. Then sup.
•pose he had started out in any cliree.
tiou chose from that city. Ile Might
have hit4 !torch WaiShington„ D.
P4'
11.
gio
ERE HIS
MADE IT
or he could have lunched at Rich.
mond, Va., or Philadelphia, or Mica,
N. Y., or in Atlanta, Ga„ or in Little
Rock, Ark., or in. Wichita, Kan.!
'If he had selected Canada he might
have followed his Chicago breakfast
with lunch at Ottawa.
As a meld feet, after his morning
meal in Chicago, h ould have flown
by lunch time, to the capitals of any
one of tlio 26 states.
Do you get that?
But what. about Moulinais' supper?
Where might Moulinnis have taken
the third meal of his 11 -hour flying
day, providing ho lia.d started his 880
mile trip from Chictigo?
Supper in New York would have
been easy! The light of the same dasr
that lio had seen in Lincoln Park in
the morning would still be paling the
evening lights in Broadway as he
e at down. to dine, for New -York is
only 700 milee from Chicago, in te
e re w litre.
Or lie could have Oleit supper in
Denver, Colo., and hit eyes, whleh had
,Seeri the sun rise out of the waters
of Lake lvtichigan, might see it set
over the Reeky Mountains,
This begins to eound like the twistm
tieth eentnry, doesiiit it?
• And it mhotrid, aiso, how those *aro.
0
Wrinkle,
Put your bread in the ice bo if yoti
want to keep it fresh! •
e- You've heard, of .iseld. laughed at the
maid who put the broad in the. refrig-
teeter with the rent of the food, haven't
you? Well, she had the -right idea, only
.it's likely she didn't know it. The
businese of putting the bread la the
cooleet; compartment the ice box has
will become general among- careful
housewives if the recent ellecoveriee of
a Dutch ecientiat are to count lor any-
thihi
gi
tgue been 'diecovered that there are
two things that keep bread fresh. One
of these is heat and. another is cold.
The man i,V1So Made theinteresting dis-
covery is Dr. J, It Katz, of Amsterdam,
• Holland, and they reeulted from a lorg
series of experiments.
The difficulty of keepirig bread freeh
for 'a very long time ledto 'the tests
that have been made and it. was diseov-
eyed, that the -aped:wells that Were sub-
jected to the cold lest were really ib
better -condition than these in
heat was used for the purpose. It 15
DAY'S FLIGHT WOULD
IN THE U. S., STARTING
ioloev e t
(Ural chemistry, physics, botany, actor-
-lion pounds is carried. through Iarolon
ehIetinis ealculated net ever half a mil -
the eourse taken the Wend year,
hui;„; _ n ontology, bee -keeping, poultry
.1)-, WIT- and. will eOmpriSe hOth lee -
streets every day in erns WAV. But it is •
field husbandry, dairying and animal
tines and practical work. In the part of
work will deal more with horticuluttrhee,
husbandry, While the outline of studies
for the first part is restricted to special
In theneighborhood of Hatton Garden,
the centre of the diamond business, that
the greatest wealth is carried in easy-
going .feshion. Every day over two mil-
lion pounds worth of diamonds and
. . . • .
neceissary to haw° a etemperateire o1. peorls are earned 111 the . inside pocketspockets branchee, there will be opportenity to
freezing or thereabout to keep the bw
read of those who do the buemese in tlus cheeeoefoal•loierk earn
acquainted. with other branchee
ed on at the College or
on the Government Experimental Farm.
The government has appointed Mr. S.
Metirefuly, director of element-
ary agriculture at the Ontario Agricul-
tural College, as head of the new branch
ofeducational work, '
perfectly fresh. treet. A diamond merehant is frequint ez
The longest time Dr.. Katz attempted in possession of 4200,000 worth of geme,
to preserve it was for 72 hours. He put The dealers and brokers who canvese
a. loaf of bread that had been cut in a for orders from West End jewellers car -
refrigerating mobilo.. irg eut the breml ry their precious burdens, often worth
so that some of the inner surfaee would £30,000 or £40,000 tueked away in °tur-
bo expoeed as well as part of the crust. ningly contrived pockets.
After 72 hours the bread was pl.leed i '•
n for a few . inome»ts and e as • -
an ove.
fresh. as it was tvlien firet placed in the THE FOOLISH EX-ALLIES.(Buffalo nxpress)
heated through. It was found. to be AS•
ne material change in the character of
oven, and a chemical analyale showed snarling at each other, Enver BeY is
While Servia, Greece and Bulgaria. are
It is hardly probable that the ordin- country ireeolog the Turkish army on a war foot-
ing with the manifest intention of re -
tile loaf.
household refrieerator or ice box covering some of the ground which his
will haVe a tempermare as 1 OW OS freez- offered. If those foolish people fall
ha,s lost if the opportunity
ary houeis
tag. lint so Tong ese it is cold enoughsoe.euannael)rit•
of the Turks again, who
ably- help preserve bread . as well. At ,,,_ .- -
etqeeriuelP?
to preeerve meats and milk ib will prob- A LIFE-SAVING ADVANCE.
t 1 i
(Toronto Star)
least the bread will keep better in a, A.. train which rrived in Toronto on
nearly freezing temperature, end be Sunday brought
a
with it a triumph of
It esher when ,1 01110Ved. therefrOill than it civilization -a passenger car -not- a Pull-
emitl poseibly be in an ordinary breadsteer, roof, walls windo
bo. . w
xsnan-anaas
de of
flames, setand floor nothing that
',would burn but the cushions. If such
it must be remembered that. the heat. cars were in general use, a collissioa
that of the bread after it iS. rentn0Ved from • wouaii not111('tileNrade death front
g, tera would be less danger
. su
ing temperatureThis, it seems, sismes
•-•^4
the ice box if3 as iniportant as jai() / of tliecars being smashed•
e
eoz. 1
another section "Of cruet to form, wiich Some people get so dazzled from look-
-
takes up the excess moisture the bread ' ing on the bright side that they can't
planes, when perfected, are going to
time absorber in the lee elnember. see the other side at all
make our huge -country look almost • ee • .
i , .
as small as a map in a, schoolboy's
hand.
Put, to get back to where Moulin-
..,:te.egef14..,,..; ‘,...r.t... .., •••"/
ais taught have taken. his supper. _
.t
.'".3s • ir Nt.4 t i /V Nilia .;,* ' r,....., i 7
8,1,1..• 1.
• BUT IT DOES'NT HURT HIM MUCH 0F
./
14e might have had Mexican grub
at Waco, Texas, on the Draeos river.
New Orleans, for supper, would have
been a cinch. Be -could have reached
-Jacksonville-, lila., in time to dregs
for supper time!
Part of the time Meulinale flew at
the rate of 140 miles an hour,
is two and one-half miles a minute,
or 205 feet a second.
And Moulinals, although he holds
the record ;lust now„ isn't the only
long-distance speed flyer in Prance.
elilbert, on April .24, flew 'from Paris
to Vittoria, Spain, 010 miles, without
a stop, in 8 home and 20 minute&
When etillaux, on April 28, flew 791'
'mike in 10 hours, from Biarritz to
Kellum, /Tolland, it was the same as
if he had flown between Cleveland, O.,
and Lineoln, Neb., or from Cleveland
to St. Augustine, Pia.
Incidentally the Prench flying -men'
have diecoverci that they fly fatter and
iriore safely at great heights and many
of their records have been made at
it height of over it mile.
•
P 4.1 •
. r
C.3 lit) th0
.... .
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enk.•••••••••• .1.1.4.1101.1.iswomemoo
ALARM UNFOUNDED
Lloycl-George Hopeful on
Financial Outlook
111111••••••••••.WIM.4....../1/11
London, July lt ---Lloyd-(4eorge, at-
: tending the customary Alan.S100. 11.011S0
. banquet to the city bankere, analyzed
some caases of the recent money shin-
: Acme. "'We nnot give in," he slid,
'•we caunot crave strengthenieg our 017n
lorccs. we eannot weaken in the
• t -it degree the immunity we have againet
invasion; it ie too terrible. The eame
thing appliee to the continent,because
there ne country on the coetinent
1 hat has not known what invasion means
; in the last hundred years, and, therefore,
whatever is dime must be done by an
-linderat.tridinff alimnif the powers of the
world. Although there 18 a good deal or
call for care and prereution, there is 00
. 1.1;ne for alarm. 1 have tshon very
great care during the last few weeks to
meat thoee in touch with business,
tree.e. collimate_ nd indtwtry. They
',are en told me the &MI thing: there
0(1 eauee for apprehension."
ROCK BOAT—TWO DROWNED. '
Halifax, N. S., 3-uly 1t.-atoy Upham,
figi.d re of Three iltile Plains. .),T. S., and
tieorge Stevens, 25, of n.iint nenisen,
both colored, ware drOwIntd yi!sterany et
emeunt Denieen. Itoeicing the heat in
whielt thoy bad been fishing, .was the
vause of the reoality. The bodies 111150
1 'POT l'er t,11A.
FLOODS TAKE 80 LIVES.
tenulon, :hay 14.--1'1oo4Ie In the "Aforos
totda distriet of Transylvania, itungare,
have eaused the toes et etelivee, accords
fie.; to 0 central Nowa desoo.telt front
1t11d8.p0s(, Fifteen villages have been
destroYed and in many p10000 the water
.iti five 'Pet deal). The railroads are in-
' terrupted owing to tiie cralapee uf bridges
0111b8.n1tillerit• t:
IlariabOrri 51 111 reeitove colas' taken
out by aeh1F1,
411 1111 1111
r.