"~'7‘311~‘-‘-"-F<-=‘€'~kw"';.a-rz<1::- its: ruin ‘Lo .. nanny" h nuns.- one name Mateo use _pw' nu 0a alvanew) Minna. Ifilf OI advance) Daily afauadao Ill?) ..,- w. ~ aue on" lac-sing Pecsldébfiefl. Cheater l. lies-Ira. Vlco-Iresldeat-el. I. Burnt!- l... l ,. lieasatas-y-Jlleas. Cal. h. A. lav-Ileana. II ea. I'D. zaneripaunaaree-s. a. ass-am Aaowlafa nun-u. n. Cleric. WIEDNESDAY, MAY 22. 1929 E, ~ l contests to invest the campaigns with ‘v interest. In Brita-in most of the op- The lfldilfitrlll Bwflkenlullfl thli "lrtimistio forecasters are on Premier now in evidence 1n the Maritime PW- : Baldwin's side, but those who view "it?! ll 591M b44113’ #1154358"! 111 W1‘ i the campaign from a distance fore- iistcr Provinces in middle and wvst- 1 see a close issue as between the 0on1 MABflTblE REVIVAL srajCanada. This revival is still in its incipient stage; but considerable pro- hss already been made. and there is a promise of further develop- aient ln the not distant future. No doubtthe start to this impetus was the. result of the partial implementa- titn by the noel-cl Government of the recommendations of the Royal laervative and Labor parties, with a Iconsidersble augmentation in the iLibei-al representation in the next , House. T In Saskatchewan the Gardiner Government is apparently up against a stiff fight, and it is conceded in ithe province and generally believed outside, that the Conservatives wili| i ‘ ~ \ Notes By The Way i. Confederation was a wise prudent measure ior British North America. No one can believe that the develop- ment which has taken place in wcal- th and population could have been achieved had the Eastern and Cen- tral-Provinoes not been united uu- der a central Government. Especial- ly was it a good thing for Quebec ' and Ontario, and_for the vast lone ‘land .that lies beyond the Great Lakes. From the beginning oi d! years ago the St. Lawrence Provinces have been in the saddle, planning, legislating, ordering everything. We oz the Maritimes were slow‘ to realise what was going on. We had not rightly estimated‘. the sacrifice we had made when we surrendered lour principal powers oi government land legislation to the absolute con- ltrol oi another ‘authority centered a . thousand miles away. We thought we i were equals in a great co-partnership E dominated by a principle oi fair play. iail for each and each for all. We lare wiser now, after the event-l- We are not here to blame the rul- Oommission under 511' Andi"! RN! , make heavy gains. Next to Quebemling powers altogether for what has Duncan. 0ne_.oi the noteworthy re- sults so far has bcen the determined eflort to seek ‘a wider Canadian mar- ket for Maritime products of the field.. the sea and the factory. The rec- ent organization oi the sons and daughters of the Maritime: resident bi other Provinces has been a big fa<> ihowever, Saskatchewan is the Con- ‘ servative party's hardest fighting ‘i ground in the whole oi Canada, and ithe Government's defeat seems im- , probable. In the lest election the‘ ‘ Conservatives entered only l9 candi- l dates and elected only 3 in a House ‘of 65 members. But they remember, 7oocurred- Human nature being what lit is, it ls quite possible that had the Maritimes had and retained a large majority in the Union from the first ‘they might have used their power in jmuch the same fashion as the bl! ‘Provinces have done. As it is the Marius-ice have been. shall We say, Ithe victims oi their own imprudent fagrcement, at least in part, and in fir in the progress so far attained. and take encouragement from, Nova E put the “cum. o! cucumluntwl Maritime Provinces Associations are ‘ becoming powerful magnets in the Central Provinces, attracting the pro- ducts of the provinces by the sea to the inland markets. As has been pointed out so dbly by halde Commissioner Burnaby and! Professor MacPhee during the past lew days. there is a. practically un- limited market in the growing cen- tral and western provinces, particul- ariyior food products grown on Mari- time farms ‘and in Maritime waters. The Central Provinces are expanding It a tremendous rabe inimetallurgio- aland coal mining as well as indus- tfial activities. Thus vast areas, com- prising the richest mining districts in the world, will attract million} of peo- pla who must be fed by the agricultur- a.l provinces. and in this the Maritime Provinces cannot iail to be partici- pant.“ While the press oi our sister pro- ’ Scotilrs big turn-over in 1925. | In South Africa both the National ‘Government and the South Africa Opposition profess the utmost con- fitiice in the outcome. which pro- mzl-acs to be excsediugfy clusc. With sturdy nritlshers, General Smuts is the favorite, because 'of his strong Imperlallstic tendencies, no lei than because of the separatist trend of the Hertaog Government. All three oi these election cam- paigns are oi political importance far greater than the mild interest they are evoking would seem to imply. If the Baldwin Government is return- ed. Britain will be under the heav- lest tarifl protection it has had elude the repeal of the Cora Laws. If the Gardiner Government is upset in Saskatchewan, the result will leave Quebec as the one remaining stronghold oi Liberalism in Canada. Should the l-lertzog Government be finces have been generous in sympa-i defeated, imperialists will ' rejoice thy with the Maritimes in their solne- ‘ both in Britain and all the Domin- vrhat difficult fight against heavyi ions. In all three eases, therefore odds, there still remains the miscon- the election returns will carry mes- ception, frequently voiced in Western sages oi unusual political. signific- | The Hudson Bay Territory was ‘bought and the St. Lawrence Pro- vinces proceeded to exploit it, turning their back upon us. We complained and they called us ungrateful seces- sionists and went on with the Job of exploiting and developing the Wait -,-a market for their goods and wares. Also they seized upon the northlands adjoining them, which belonged as much to us u to them. and made Ontario iive times as big as it was be- fore and Quebec seven times as bil as it had been when we entered the Union. Did they think of paying the Mari- times for their share? Nor, at all. In good Roosevelt fashion, they wanted the territory and, having the power they took it. The entire area oi the Marltimes, some 50,000 square miles, is insignificant in siu compared with the territory thus ravished, and less rich in mineral and forest weath. Under these conditions the Mari- times stagnated for half a century.‘ Warned by our fate Newfoundland has steadily refused to Join the !Canadian Union and has prospered by her refusal. No one stoic the U1- bl-sdor" from her, after the Canadian examples. New-ioundland retains her independence, makes her own laws. builds her own railway, and goes on prospering and contented. What s 30hr of ” Quart h lana- W larvae. I3 T00 MUCH BTABOIIY FOOD You are the ordinary healthy indi- viduai at work every day, and have nothing to complain oi from a. health standpoint. However you rind that you have frequently a pain in the abdomen which while distressing at times, is ‘hardly worth a visit to your doctor. metlmes the pain seems to be “under the heart," at other times it is at the same point on the other side oi the body under the liver. 1t may also be down on the lower right side of abdomen in the region oi the appendix and you quite natur- ally have a little suspicion that it may be appendicitis. Again it may be on the lower left side of abdomen, or it may even be lust uhder the middle part oi ab- domen. There is one outstanding point about the pain however and that is that it seems to shift about to and from these different points in the abdomen. Your abdomen feels greatly dis- tended and there is a considerable amount of "gurgling" which you rightly attribute to gas. Perhaps you will be constipated for a few days and then there will be diarrhoea following this. You are thus unable to figure out whether or not you need a purgative medicine, for just about the time you determine to take a purgative, the diarrhoea com- mences. Now what is the matter’! Dr. Ii. S. lmnery, Jr., tells us that it is the failure of the digestive appara- tus to pro, digest the starches in the food thairbrings about the above symptoms. Perhaps a few, general rules about eating would be oi help here, such as: -Eat slowly, chew your food thor- oughly. Do not hurry your meals, nor be in a hurry before and after meals. Do not eat when hot or excited. kt only at regulartimes and just three times a day. Five to six hours between meals, and the particular treatmentis to cut down on your starches such as bread and potatoes and avoid hot rolls, hot biscuits, muffins, wafiles, and cakes. If [the symptoms are at all severe Dr. Emery suggests that you do with- out starchy foods entirely for s. few days. This resultsin complete relief of the symptoms. Remember then that much oi the pain in the lower abdomen is due to too much starch ln so far as your par- i i and Central Canada. that the devel-i ance. oprdent of the Maritime Provinces de- pends- solely upon our own people and that the present improved conditions are eitamples merely of the benefits that come to those who help them- selvaa, This is but a partial truth. The Msrltimes have suflersd. through no fault on their part. by the industrial and economic changes brought about by Confederation. As the St. John Tel- egraph-‘Jotnnal pertlnently says: How. could a people help them- selves when they lay under such burdens as the Duncan Commis- sionfrevcsled? It is quit/e true there isa new spirit and a new energy in those. provinces. It is due to the improved conditions made possible by the Duncan Commission and by the ‘new expressed dcslre of the Central Provinces to buy where ior so long. they have sold to the in- _iury,_oi_ Maritime Provinces indus- tries. 2 ' COMING ELECTIONS Three elections, all of which will possess greater or less intcreet for Canadians, are scheduled to take placawithin the next three or four weeks. bfay 30 is the date fixed for polling in Great Britain, where the three major parties, Conservatives, Iiiberals. and Socialists, are already well-away in s. contest which, though described as one oi the most crucial a... fought‘ in the Old country, can- "not be said to b; claiming even an average amount of‘ interest in Can- ada Ona week intern-on June 0.- polling-will take place in Saskatche- "where the Conservative" Oppo- Qiitios), allied with an attenuated ‘fiirognaaslve party. is Ilndeavorlng to "gig from power a Liberal ‘Cov- drnnssnt. which, under various lead- m. baa held office continuously for signal-e. 8i: d iatnn-on rune '~ss,waii itsuewilllbs emcee sum ‘South Africa between the Government g and the south African ___.___i______ TRY THIS 0N THE COW Acting on the theory that cows like music and are vastly more contented and quiet while music is playing, a i Detroit creamer, has spent large sums l’ oi money to give it to them. Radios i have been installed in the barns, a whole battery oi loudspeakers govern- ed by a master speaker. Music is tum- ed on while the cows are being groom- ed and while being milked. "When the i music is soft and low," we are inform- ’ ed, “you will see whole lines oi cowl settling down, and with every head turned toward the loud-speaker, all chewing their cuds and acting as con- tented as possible." We are not told how they react. to jazs, but our guess is that the cows would resent it. Cows are sentimental creatures; they like to be stirred emotionally but it is . doubtful if they could bo-induced to shake a hoof except under compul- IQ. _._____._.._____ EDITORIAL NOTES Recently compiled statistics shbw that the Dominion Government is col- lecting more than 81,000,000 a week from the people of Canada in income tax. The total for the fiscal year and- ed March, 1028, was $08,071,047. while the business profits tax totalled 0060.- 031. The total core of collecting time taxes was 81,00,078. Although the united ltates units ing the aflllrl ct the nation. its ailin- bership only lncludl one doctor. Saunders “Government was elected chiefly on a pledge-which it liner implemented-of new! enforcing sea particular" law, and it baa two dotted in its cabinet. Whether medical warsataps-saiium inaaierican politi- eai life, or‘ wbether the saddens hsvn-uneutaeverstemevitaaee- tau and melanin: miles vita’ lwalttiwhaneeiiotssiiba. \ ..-il I , ‘ The Meritimes once had five Ca- ticular body is concerned. blnet Ministers at Ottawa. Now. they have two. Once they had 41 b in a House of 1h at Ottawa now they have 29 in a. House oi 245. Always in a minority, we still had some voting strength to be reckoned with i in the first Parliament, say ‘one in four. It is in- not necessarily £11110!" i!" significant now. The then almostr OPQIIW" °| ""°3P°“d""~ uninhabited regions beyond the * _ The Public Forum This column ls open for the discussion b! correspondents of question; of ' ‘ ‘ The tmarlntietown Guardian doe! l. rim cil-iltvnrrfrowlv nuslzmau cat-no “ »._....i____z "‘-‘ ThefTree As An Invention Condensed from the Atlantic Monthly-Charles n. Stewart i In any tree, however alive, the . substance mposlng trunk and fibrshch-thc solid part oi the tree-is ‘inert and lifeless matter. The heart- twood oi atree is dead in every sense. ‘its tubas no longer convey sap up- lv/ard. From the heartwood outward ito a point very near the surfact- we flnd the water-conveying struc- ture consisting oi long» tubes; and these tubes are mere conduits, inert land lifeless. At first, when they {were Ileing built, there were live cells working inside of them, little bags of protoplum: but, once they were completed, the live tenants disap- peered. l The only part oi a tree that is ireeliy alive Ls a thin sheath of cells Sat the surface oi the wood called the cambium layer. It is this lilvc part that kecps building and aking the tree larger. Ii we cut through a tree, we can count the rings of its annual growth. A cut acrom a tree near the ground may show 300 annual rings, while cuts at. higher points will disclose but 100, or 50, or 40. The rings become fewer and fewer. Ii we take a par- ticular rlng and follow it up we find that it grows email-er and smaller till it diminishes. a ring near the cen- ter of the stump coming to an end at no .great distance from the ground. And each of these rings, ac- cording as it is the 40th or 100th from the center, will show s. height as well as the thickness that the tree has attained in that number of years. Just as a tree grows smaller upward, so likewise do these inner sheaths o! annual growth. All the successive surfaces oi the tree are enclosed here. Thus we see that a tree is resly a sheath of life spread over the dead trees of other years. Generation stands within generation. successive- ly wrapped about. The outer life of cambium and leaf and bud uses this trellis to go up and- reach out sun- ward and skyward. Instead oi throw- irlg its old skeleton aside each year and starting anew, it clings,to its dead bones, profits by their stature. and makes tubes in them to provide a supply oi water for a. larger growth. when we compare this way oi growth with other methods. both animal and vegetable, it must strike us as a. most interesting invention. As the inner or lifeless part of a tree is incapable of growth a nail driven into a. young tree at any par- ticular height will remain at that distance from the ground through- oit the life of the tree. And a branch coming out at any point will not be carried upward as time goes on. A tree, like other forms oi life, is engaged in the constant circulation oi fiuid through its tissues. Life pro- cesses. animal or vegetable, can go on only so long as each individual cell is surrounded by a fluid con- teinihg nutrimcnt. To meet this de- mand and to provide for a large amount oi evaporation, a tree passes up a great deal of water. A fairly gallons of water on a dry. hot day. and a large oak will require much Lakes have now a voting strength in‘, M01551; 3,051) CQMPLAINT , the House oi Commons, two and oi f half times as great as the Maritimes,‘ Err“, ‘Lflenflqn o; m; Deplfl- i Iand the disparity is lncreulfls- {ment of Public Works is respectfully l | m B~ 39mm“: m” 51" “m” ‘directed towards that section of road thWEht t0 i119 Win55 h"! "i1 “"1 iextcndlrig from Shaw's Comer He was born in the Maritime-s, knows ‘hwugh s," Catherine, m 3°mhaw_ our history and i! Mt “WWI 1°°1=1"B ‘This piece of road is in a most dis- tO wlihinit°n~ Weml" Kml- 4"‘? ‘lgraceiul condition. The heavy spring l naturally. looks “non Mlflilme l-- liloods have cut drains and gutters in i i=1" 17°!" l "TY dmFnm "319- illlitiiy places and up to the time of _ fwrlting no move has been made to sumu" u“ m" “l” madam” ‘have them filled in. The greater part M" ti" "W" Md "m" Pmw" ‘o! this road has not. been machined “'3 t° their mm pmmmm“ °i my {since the spring oi 192E. when under i oi the Canadian Provinces, and are ‘he capable dircmm o; w_ n smw’ also the most thickly settled, whilola‘ Roldmuu ‘m, the 1m on Prince Edward Island tops them all Eshenen who had chnge of the mad l prescribes scores oi laws for regulat- - both in regard to age and close resi- dence together. From ‘these facts. "length of days" being counted l blessing, we ought to be happy down here. Experience teaches and we have it here. ls it. not somtIhing to be proud of that there is more experience, intelligence, thought and wisdom in a square mile of this Province than in any other ‘machine, ,this road was left in splendid condition and a monument to the! efficiency of the late Stewart government and its officials. Last year the residents waited long and patiently for the coming of the tractor. Spring came_and summer had almost passed when one morn- ing in the latter part of July they were rudely awakened from their Province oi the 1‘ ' ' 7 “ by the ‘ “ groans of this cumbroua machine as it ap- ‘- ‘ ‘ ‘ by its worthy BIA GIPBY T!!! Lam favored with the sunset, I am fretful with the bay, ‘rer the wander-thirst is on me And my soul is in canny. There's i schooner in the offing, Wltlf her topsalls shot with firs, And my heart has gone aboard her ,0? ti“ Bill“ 0! BS1". . 1 mustfsrtb slain to-merrowi with the sunset I must be uundeaaoatbetraubnsotm fatbewendvroftbessa. g-Iichaldlovsy. operators. This is the season of the year when Sirius the dog-star reigns and the dense foliage of maple brats makes pleasant shade fr: those who are weary. The hills were gone over and all the dust and small stones available were dragged up onto tbs centre oi the road to be formedtin- to a quagmire when the heavy fail rains came. All were patient until the spring honing that the road work would commence at the south end. W0 are informed that such a not to be the case but that the roadlwork commence at the north side of section and that the taxpgyara inst. Catharinas will be obliged, crumbs that more. Even a sunflower will use two pounds. And this wafer. in th‘e larger species fo trees. will have to be lift- ed 200 and evs-"t 300 bet. Anyone familiar with pressures in a water towr-r must be interested in asking. How is this time? In the present states of mrns knowledge of pint-rims. we do not know. The lamp-Wok principle. capillary attrscticn. will not go far in raising water. Water rises in a capillary or fine tube to a h~i~ht in proportion vkscoriiv of v"=""‘ is sl-~‘1 that if the. tubs is vfirvflnc it will not r‘se_at lccluctioh made because a mere pit- tance had been spcn‘. on our roads; the last cent was exacted and this money was spent on themore favor- ed sections of the road division. This road has often been half-hum- orously, heli-sarcasticaily» called a rabbit path. rt is quite possible ii it had been called a cow and horse pain, more attention might have been paid to it by those who are re- sponsible. The bridge crossing Mac- itenswa Creek is in a very danger- ous condition and for the past year titers has been no railing on this bridge, and anyone crossing with a spirited horse 1e liable to be precip- ltatod into the stream. The bridge crossing Darrach‘: Creek is also very much in heed of repair, the railing has been crowded in each iilne it was repaired until nowf a team and auto could not pass. This letter is not written with any political ani- mosity. but merely to draw the Department's aitenticn to existing conditions, and as a comparison be- tween "efficient servants bu. the one hand and inefficient ones ca tbs other. Thanking you for your valuable space in your mueb appreciates Munster. - ' I I01. lit. '00-» large beech tree will use about et, to the firm-nos: of the tube: and the v all. Capillary attraction would not raise water to the top oi even a mod- erate-siaed tree. Root pressure or osmosis, a sort o. powerful absorption due to unbalanc- ed chemical pressure, has been con- sidered. By cutting off a plant hear the ground and fastening a glass tube upright on the stem, it is pos- sible to ascertain the height to which its sap will rise by the pressure from below. Under favorable conditions a grlpevine will exert a pressure suf- lnclent to raise a column 36.5 feet,‘ Iwhlle a birch has tested as high as 84.1 feet. This might seem a prom- iising line of inquiry except that root lpressure takes place only in early ‘spring, and especially in the morn- ling. It has been found that when ithe tree is evaporating the greatest quantities of water, on dry,, hot days |of summer, there is no root pressure Jvhatever. It has been proved that the rLsc of water in the tubes oi a tree is caused by a pull from above. A branch, if cut from a growing plant. with its end inserted in an air-tight manner in a glass tube. will draw a supply of water from the tube with such force as to pull a colmn of mer- cury up after it. But here again a difficult intervenes in the solution of the problem. A suction pump at its best-will lift water but 33 feet. The pump, by the lift of its piston, removes air pres- sure from the upper surface and tends to create a vacuum, in conse- quence of which the water is pushed up the pipe from below by the weight oi the atmosphere, a pressure oi l5 pounds to the square inch at sea level. No invention can be made which will pull more than the laws of physics will enable it to do. And 38 feet falls far short of reaching the top of a sequoia. But water has got to go up those tubes to the top of a tree. It will and does. Hence, scientists began to consider whether ‘water in thin col- unuls, as in these fine tubes, has not an actual coherence, a tensile strength. suflicient to stand a strong pull. Possibly, after all, wat- er may be drawn up from the top as if it were a rope. Strange to say, ex- perimentation has gone quite far in proving this to be the case. But there is a difficulty. ' The rise of water to the top of a tree is dependent upon evaporation, which mak-es room ior the continual upilow, and gives rise to the strong absorptive pull, or osmosis. This be- ing true, if a plant or :1 branch is placed in an atmosphere so saturated with moisture that evaporation is ilniwssible, it will be unable to keep the water flowing up its stem. Yet experiment hsssholvn that the in- take persists, though it is slowed up. even when the leaves are entirely submerged in water. So the rise "of the water still remains a mystery. A tree manufactures its food di- rect from earth and air, a thing the ‘animal cannot do; and though it »,has no lungs. nor anything corres- ponding to such a device, it feeds life's constant fires by taking in oxy- 'gen night and day. And how can a 1 tree breathe without lungs? Another mystery! It is when we consider the tree as 1a plant made to conquer difficulty. f a sea creature living no land. that we lsee its lofty waterworks in their full ‘significance. The tree was a very bold and original idea in nature: and the steps leading up to it were four. First in the order of develop- ment came the primitive water plants. the thallophytes, floating freely about or living in the satur- ated soil along the shore. And in those days there were no other kinds of vegetation. Second came the am- phibious plants, such as the mosses: third the woody plants beginning with the ferns; and fourth the most modern woody and two-sexed plants of this high mechanized vegetable I89- ' In the mosses we sec vegetation crawling on its belly up toward; the dry land. Btealthily and cautiously it draws away froom the water's edge lying low. It must not venture far; for it has no true roots; and it cannot raise its head out oi the moisture. At first it was but a thin mud: then it became several layers thick. the moisture being passed from cells below to those above by absorption. Fihally, the great idea came to pass in the form of a fern. Here was a vegetable mechanism with true. run- hing roots, which the moss has not: and it possessed a woody stem pm- er. With the invention of the fern, Divihl the waist upward. while the rooiastruek dovrntobringitfrom below, uothins more Wihlmkinsqsthetreencnly lshmnflbflklhhuah F35 Nnv ma 1929 ‘“Hhflbbetsct" -». m» . sheath of cells, lying flat on the‘ vidcd with tubes for conducting wat- - ROSEBUD This is only one of “Poker Hands”. and Save the “Poker Hamig”? The large 10c package of Rosebud Cut Plug contains 1 “Poker Hand”. The larger 15c package contains TWO “Poker Hands”. For FOUR complete sets of “Poker Hands”, you receive this genuing Rubberset Shaving Brush.~ manyvvalulvble pre- sents you can get by smoking this sweet, rnlld, satisfying tobacco: and aavingtehe i 4 , t better" plant. - Water is the food and life oi th tree cells. Every cell had to be im- mersed in water. And that is lust what came to pass. Every cell in the top of a tree continues to be im- mcrscd in the life-giving water. Be- tween a cell in the sea and one in the topmost twig there is no essen- tial difference in situation. And the reason is that everything is done to control evaporation and hold it within bounds. Every leaf is coated with a preparation that most effect- ually seals it. Air can enter and water escape only through micros- coping openings called stomates on the under sides of the leaves; and every stomate is capable of being opened or closed according to con- ditions. The whole‘ trunk and every limb of the tree are Jacketed in the protective, suberised bark. There is nothingmore waterproof than bark. more stubbornly impermeable. It is because cork is so waterproof that it makes stoppers for bottles and gas- kets for_ engines. it is because it is so impermeable that it is ground up to make linoleum. A tree, from head to foot. ts armored against evapora- tion. Cue quently its cells, though they hang in the very eye of the which surroundk them in the sea. It is when I look at a tree from this point 0f view that I feel ilk! plnning~or nailing-a medal on its chest. If a man is the height oi achievement in the animal world, so is a/trec in the vegetable. A bronas tablet really ought to be hung on a tree here and there to memorialize scientific facts. The inscription could be a very simple one, as, f instance: ~ HERE STANDS THE KING OI‘ VEGETABLES A aria cam. mar aeolian‘. sssnmops iilillilb '- Kl D N EY PILLQ- "Get Your Fishing, Tackle In Order For the 24th. One-stock ofIishing-Taoklelaaabaanoosnplafaly’ ""1 "° "W" We m levels sear mry and. You W likely}. lfllliihl’ your first trip on Friday next for tba ‘Tina; pan",- . I" l"!!! and lee that your tackle is up-to-dgeg-Duv‘ la" u m‘ u" ll"- mlllili-l. you are certain to overlook something then. Vhflmlflfllhylllllnlodlel-lnaaloelacqggyuuqq noon. rib-u. Shakers, Baskets, m, Bee our special Steel Ind It ‘L00. E0 A: sunnyside Mail orders for Dr. Pharaoh's Vermlolds Capsules [hug "an" a tention and post paid 0o any address, sun, are in water as wet as that, -_- THE LAND WE LOVE a! nan: rams l ' THE TELEPHONE IN CANADA, Q. What is the present ststuul the telephone in Canada? A. The number cf telephones! Canada is steadily increasing, total- iilll It the end 0f i927, 1360371.! a _'phone to every eight of the popiib tion. There are no lees thaslil ‘ ‘ ‘ systemsinCanadatiisI being the largest. The capital invalid in all the systems represents, $15M 000. The net operating revenueil 1927 was 88,840,423 and salaries ll wages oi 33.431 employees was i!‘ 000.000.’ Ontario leads in the numb oi ‘phones with 50,400 and 01W second with 355.010. ::Miller's Worm Powders PW" a value. They do not cause an! ulsturbances in the stomach. ll pain or gripihg. but do their n! quietly and painlessly, so that" condition of the worms is WW’ ceptible. Yet, they are thomillh. from the first dose there is ma"! tations of internal trouble. FQUNDl l known for l One of the best unveil“ "SMUT -or RUST T “on GRAIN ‘ FGRMALIN l _ A cheap but thmlsbl affect- iva ralnsdy. Grill would be wise to act P sa order to have sub I’ ,3], heated bolero sewill- oaealattemrv “F” of nun rail direcilflll with every aler- -l‘oraaloat >2 M“ DRUGSTORE A us" Grass deem W" 0N an Give! .. .' 1'41""-