5 clullumelowll euAllnlAll par your Dully (founded (In advance) Iss1) 05.00 mulled in cllldl and Unlkd Shill- DII your (In advance) delivered. Incident-W. Chute! S. Ill-Lu". Boorotury-Llout. Col. D. L. Muzlflnnnn, D. S. 0. Idlfol and Manager-J. B. Burnett. vioo-Preuident-d. B. Burnett. Anoclatc Editor-D. K. Oprrlp, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1929- A LASTING MONUMENT e beneiactions bequeathedlAby late Hon. J. H. Bell, ex-Premier - nce Edward Island, recorded turday's Guardian, will be a g monument to his memory. Mr. was an active and busy man ed life. : a more than ordinarily leng- He had amassed con- ble wealth by thrift and in- ,and he has left a generous on of it for the benefit of those ' are less fortunate than he was. e benefit fund of $25,000 to pro- medical attendance, hospital etc., for the needy oi‘ his native more t4) the Endowment Fund of $10,- Prince County Hospital, d provision of six scholarships, and - for the encouragement of or- among Prince oi Wales stud- will be an aid and a blessing to potions yet to come, to men and ‘~ who never knew their bene- only as a figure in the politi- FALSE ECONOMY ' I cording to our Ottawa despatch- - Saturday's Guardian the King t- emmentlpurposes to ivithdraw A J grant of $1,100,000 to the prov- dor technical education. _ e Minister endeavors to justify - withdrawal on the ground that n the grants were authorized the t expenditures consequent upon war had not been fol-seen. and educational matters are in the ds of the Provinces themselves; that the subsudies w the Mari- = Provinces had been increased, eby increasing their ability to ' _ after the matter. - far as the latter is concerned, ould appear that the Saunders The A MARITIIVIE NEED In an excellent article onihe im- migration claims of the Maritime Provinces, the Saint John Telegraph- Journal says in part: | “In the early days, when the West came into Confederation and the railways were built and the people brought in, the Maritime Provinces loomed large in population and wealth, and contributed largely to the cost of the building up of the western territories. In more recent years, the growth of population west of the Lakes, and the great increase in wealth and population in Ontario end Quebec, have made the relative proportion that the Maritimes have contributed to this immigration, pio- neering, railroading and developing scheme somewhat smaller. but, nev- c-rtheiess, it has run into substantial sums of money. "It is now time that the Maritimes made a demand that this condition oi things be reversed-that money be spent to bring immigrants into the Maritime Provinces. The hack- neyed excusethat there is no free land in these Provinces can no long- er be offered as a reason for inac- tivity. indifference and hostility to- wards Maritime ambitions in this line that has been evidenced by both political parties at Ottawa during the last forty years. "When the western development was udertuken, there was no hesita- tion about the whole wealth of Can- ada being placed behind the con- struction of the C. P. R. There was no hesitation in after years in financ- ing, out of the national pot, the con- struction oi another pioneer road, the G. T. P. There was no hesitation at Ottawa about guaranteeing the bonds of a still further and, up to that time, private development, un- der the name of the Canadian North- em. Nor was there any hesitation in pledging the credit of the Domin- i if cnt, enacted in i919 legislation I D‘ ~ aid to the provinces for the con- , ~ction of highways. 010,000,000 among the provinces 0 1 V ture and to help to meet the cost of it. But that by the way. bie excuses can be found for oat any political movement, but it curious fact that the King Gov- ent has discontinwu practical- ‘ l1 the provincial grants authoriz- y fonner Conservative and Union W ti e Dominion parliament, on the _mmendation of the Union gov- ' orizing the government to con- w te $20,000,000 toward the cost of hwuy construction throughout the lnry. The King Government, it true, took steps to keep the sta- e in operation until March 31, 19- 'by which date the whole of the oropriation of $20,000,000 had been H. il A C l e Borden government in i013 se- ‘I - the enactment of federal legis- ‘-- providing for the distribution _ period of ten years to assist ag- ‘ agricultural instruction. The , government allowed the agri- instruction act to expire in Q1010 the Union government, led -- Robert Borden. proposed and ‘ out enacted legislation setting , "$10,000,000 to be distributed lh of ton years in grants to cea in aid of technical edu- "rho governments of the have pAOPOEOd that these ion, of which the Maritimes form a part. when the Hudson Bay lands ere needed. to prepare the way for western development. “All these things were good in their me, and subsequent events have justified their wisdom. But the time has now come when the tide has got to pe reversed. of Canada, which has got behind the The Dominion est and made it a success, has got to get behind the east and make it success. A vigorous immigration effort is one of the best and surest ways oi accomplishing this latter... “If the Dominion of Canada can tax the people in the Maritime Prov- lces to help build railways, buy lands and maintain an immigration stall’ in Europe. to say nothing of hauling that immigrant across the tlantic and then half way across anada all to build up the West. then it is lllgh time that we in the Marltimes realized that we are not asking any charity but merely de- manding our own when we insist that the vacant lands Provinces be systematically listed and bought at a fair valuation and then sold to the newcomer at a price which will not mean a loss to the public ‘treasury, but which will m some measure do for the East what has been done for the West. Maritime horse needs more oats." of the Maritime The EDITORIAL NOTES Nothing but the peelings may be left of alien spuds when tariff revi- sion is t- mpleted in the United .2» be placed on a permanent but the Dominion Government dy stated, has indicated its l- to allow them to cease. the withdrawal of the agri- i grant in this Province the Government succeeded ,5 portion of the} technical in applied to purpose: of agricul- “Divot-ion. and it proved a ‘ " ' 0. Plftlcuiurly f0 70BX18 The discontinuance of the [not in a notion: matter to ,... but It ml! not be g fit to have the whole .-, States, says the Vancouver Province. American growers are demanding an increase in the tariff from 80 cents to c dollar a hundred weight, The New England States claim that po- tatoes from Prince Edward Island and Nova Scoiia arc cutting into the market in the Eastern United Stain and also Cuba, where the United States growers formerly had a mon- opoly of the market for md potatoes. Potatoes from Bermuda,‘ also an complained about, although mud-n chicfiyurlyvlrieiloefortbobidb- Notes B__v__ The Way The Cblguccio Canal must be kept to the front by the press, the public men, the Boards of Trade of the Maritime Provinces, and it will be if our people are alive totheir vital in- tereais in transportation, their Just rights and the urgency of the present situation. There has been since the Dominion was formed an expenditure of untold millions by our Federal Government-s upon Canadian canals, and these waterways. unlike the rail- ways, are free of toils to all who use them, whether they be Canadians or foreigners. ' Canadian canals are operated at a loss and an ever-increasing expendi- ture on capital account to widen, deepen and build extensions of them. And Just now a new and colossal ex- penditure is impending to make a greatly enlarged waterway from Lake Ontario to the sea. impending and approaching. It will inevitably be constructed in the near future, either as an all-Canadian or an international work. The Maritimes have almost no cun- als, but they have put their shoulders under the heavy burden of paying equally with other sections of Cari- ada for a vast canal system from which they get no benefit and no con- sideration. lair-play demands that these" unequal and unjust conditions shall be readjusted and as far as pos- sible equalised by the construction of the Chignecto Canal. The construction of this important and greatly needed addition to our system of water transportation would cost a few million dollars, perhaps four or five millions-a mere drop in the bucket of Canada's canalvoutlay. Be it also remembered that a canal through the isthmus of Chignecto was projected long before the Marl- times joined the Dominion, and its early construction by the cannula“ Government was promised us as in- ducemem. to enter the Union. Good faith between Canada and the Eastern Provinces demands the fulfilment of that promise of 65 years 8E0. There are other considerations that Dlead for the Maritime Canal. Its construction would greatly bene- fit each of the three Mariime Prov- inces in their trade intercourse with each other and would equally bene- fit all waterborne traffic between the St. Lawrence and ports on the At- lantic coast of the United States, the West Indies and South America. It would shorten the distance of wa- ter carriage on the Atlantic coast by hundreds of miles. The need of the hour is line upon "I19 9-1111 Precept upon precept to so awaken our own people and the rul. ers and people of Canada to the 1m- portance of this great work that the St. Lawrence Waterway shall not be undertaken until the Chlgnecto can- al is coupled with it as a. prime re- quisite of the Dominion canal sy. stem. Prince Edward Island since it be- came united with Canada long en- ioyed the distinction of being the most sober of all the Provinces and also the most free from crime in pro- portion to the number of its popula- tion. It is not quite satisfactory to rilzht thinking people that since our Drohibiiory law was enacted and un- der prohibition the number of our people has diminished by more than 20.000,‘ while there are more of them now in the Dorchester Penitentiary than there were 27 years ago, and also more in our county jails. , A plebiscite on pl hlbiuon is prom- ised by the Saunders Government to be taken this year. It will cost some money, and the provincial treasury is not overflowing after all that the Government has borrowed. More “X63 must be laid on in the near futurc- and year by year there are fewer people to pay them. And in its brief career the government has contrived to waste more of the pub- 11¢ money than any Previous admin- istration in a like period of time. The alarming increase of mortality from the "flu" in England after it had considerably diminished in Am- erica is remarkable. It is also the subject of comment that while hith- erto this epidemic had come west. ward to America from across the At- lantic, this year its desolating course has been eastward from America to Europe. . Spain's dictator, Primo do Blvcru according to a pres: despatch, has issued a ukasc that has caused the Pedestrian to B10100 and the motor- ist to mash his tooth. It specifics that any motorist who hits a pedest- rian, whether with serious ruults 0r "00- lhlll '80 t0 llrbon for six yearn. Should the pedestrian be fatally in. lured. the motorist lhaii go to pruon for twelve ‘years. Dictator Rivera i: moot specific in stating that wealth and cociurpmition will avail nothing lo flt ll mltliltion of flle penalty is concerned. It h said that the Spanish pollution. mtwhilo :0 tor- rlliod and humbled: now high-hat- an l use; a, It is not only . c... M112 of , Quota By luau . Barton. MD. EXTRA LUNG SURFACE WHEN NEEDED A man boasting about his motor car will tell you that it has a won- derful pick-up, and will go from five to fifty miles in a few seconds. This is no doubt a wonderful point about motor cars, and yet did you ever think about that body of yours, and how quickly it can be going its fastest and hardest work? You step on the gas of a car and if you step too hard you get no par- ticular response, because you have to work it up to its full speed gradual- ly. However someone just pushes a. pin into you, or you see something that frightens you. and you reach your maximum speed immediately. You can get your speed up in about the fraction of a second. You and I never pause to think about the fact that we can change from a lying down position to the actual speed of a one hundred yard dash in practically "no time." You can thus see how much more perfect that body of yours is than any machine made by man. And yet despite the difference be- tween lying down and running at full speed, there is practically no heating up of that body of yours. In fact, the most vigorous exercise you make take will not send your temperature up more than one de- gree. Work cannot heat up your body,to a dangerous point. And yet when you do a tremendous amount of woork, you manufacture a. great amount of carbon dioxide. This must be removed froin the blood and thence out of the body by way of the lungs. To supply oxygen to make up for the loss of oxygen thus thrown out, the lungs must pump a great amount of oxygen into the body. And the heart must of course pump extra blood to lungs to get rid of the wastes manufactured. It must then pump this new pure blood to all parts of the body to take the place of the used up materials that were thrown out as wastes. Dr. E. D. Churchill of Bosotn tells us that in addition to the breathing being faster and deeper, there seems to be parts of the lung that are in a. sort of resting condition, but immediately the need arises these spaces, or parts that are resting. spring into action and thus give more lung "surface" which gives out carbon dioxide and takes in oxygen. This i8 Just one more example of how Nature keeps always ahead of our needs. THE POET'S CORNER In Old Stamboul (r. Yeats-Brown u. m mum oucm) We were in the Dormitory of the White Eunuchs. Two centuries have‘ passed since the slaves of the Sultan ordered the affairs of the harem from these blue-tiled rooms. Yet at the gate of the Seraglio three sexless attendants may still be seen-surviv- ors 0f the last of the house of Oth- man-who were moved here as care- takers when the Sultan was exiled from Yildiz Kiosk. They were point- ed out to me by a Tlukish lady jour- nalist of twenty-three, my charming guide for the afternoon. ' One of these eunuchs was o. plump little dwarf. "He hates women." my friend told me, "and when I used to come here, often he used to turn his back on me and scream." The old Turkey and the new ". . . Handcuffs are hanging on the wall of the Dormitory, also a large stick with a thong in it, into which the feet of those about to be bastinadoed were twisted. I know, for I have seen the things in use. The dwarf knows too. But my friend, who speaks seven languages, writes for the XIEWSPBPSAB. and is dressed a la Parisienne, does not know. The sight of her, which rejoices my eyes, makes the dwarf scream, while a. man being bastin- adoed, which makes me feel sick. probably beats cockfighting for the dwarf. So the world goes strangely, especially in Turkey today. - , You must visit um the Old Sarag- lio, if you would know something about modern Turkey. The Seragllo, is now a. museum, but the most hu- man and interesting one I know. Take the glories of Byzantium for granted if you like (as Mohammad the Conqueror did). you must know something of the clever and ferocious p. ‘ecessors of the present Ghazi. The beautiful old Council Hall, for instance, where the vizier-s sat. is a sermon in stone. Above his vizlers. unseen behind a. marble trellis, the Sultan listened to their debate. So to- day, although the Ghazl is only seen by the elect few he has a very ac- curate idea of what everyone through- out the country is doing. Again, the actual living places of the Sultans were small, both here and at Yildiz. So at Angora today, the President and Prime Minister live in cottages, partly no doubt to mark the life of strenuous simplicity they lead, but also because the Turk is a nomad at heart. Let us enter the room of the de- funct Sultans. It is an amazing sight. Ranged in the order of their succes- sion, stand lay figures of all the rul- ers of the house of Othman, from Mohammad the Conqueror to Mo- hammed the Reformer, dressed in their original robes, decked in their real Jewels, armed with their splen- did weapons and coiffed with their enormous turbans, in which aigrettes sparkle and glow. The emeralds in the hilt of the poignard of Mohammed lL-three of them pigeons egg size. and a fourth, still bigger, in his tur- ban-- led me with their size FROM ‘AUGURIES OF INN O CENCE.’ A robin redbreast in a cage Puts all Heaven in a rage. A dove-house filled with doves and pigeons Shudders Hell through all its regions. A dog starved at his master's gate Predicts the ruin of the state. A horse misused upon the road Calls to Heaven for human blood. Each outcry of the hunted hare A fibre from the brain does tear. A skylark wounded in the wing A cherubim does cease to sing. The game-cock clipped and armed for fight Does the rising sun affright. Every wolf's and lion's howl Raises from Hell a human soul. Tile wild deer, wandering here and there, _ » Keeps the human soul from care. The lamb misused breeds public \ strife, ' And yet forgives the butcher's knife. l-le who shall hurt the little wren Shall never be beloved by men. He who the ox to wrath has moved Shall never be by woman loved. The wanton boy that kills the fly Shall feel the spider's enmity. He who iormenta the chaferb sprite Weaves a bower in endless night. The caterpillar on the leaf Repeats to thee thy mother’! grief. Kill not the moth nor butterfly, For the last judgement draweet nigh.» Hc who shall train the horse the war Shall novcr pus the polar bar. The Mum's dog and widow's cat, Feed them and thou wilt grow fut. -_-wllll|.m Blake, 0151-1021.) taato. In Barcelona, so it is stated. most of the taxi driver: have thrown up their jobs. This may possibly be throuah resentment at being depriv- of courlo, under (he circumstances the game l: hardly wcrthtbe candle. Suttblcoushttomukoflpalaagroct . P co of their favorite outdoor sport, for, _ and splendour. So did the dress of Bayezld, which was much the same as Mohammed's, but perhaps richer in lustre of pearls. Suleimans rich hroiderles are worthy of his title of Magnificent: his turban is adorned with a triple tiara of rubies. as if in memory of the blood he shed for Roxelanas sake. Murad IV., who took Baghdad in 163B, has a. marvellous suit of chain-armour, with greaves, helm, viso'r, and vam-braces set with great pearls. Over the throne of Ah- med III. (i703) is hung the biggest emerald in the world. 'I'he gold throne of Selim is almost invisible under its weight of jewels. In short. the whole place glitters with the visible vanity of the eye, and beyond that, with an invisible but very real vanity of race. As we come to the later Sultans, however, we sec the marks of decadence; the chaste mag- nificence of rarity gives place to a diseased profusion-bedroom basins in gold, soup-plates encrusted with un- hygienic turquoiaes and sapphires- trash jostling beauty-worldly pos- sessions run amok. Then come the rocoeco rooms of Mohammad the Re- former, who introduced the fen and frock-coat. For the next change you must go info the streets of Stam- boul whore the work of Mustapha Ke- mul the Ghui, or Gull, as he spells it, u fulfilling itself in flesh and blood. Hi: commute are hops greater than those of plot Sultans, for besides material achievements, he has gained victories over the preju- dices of a people almost a: stubborn u mil-selves, capturing its heart and mind. That irmorc than the takinl of a hundred, a thousand humble: places where life was gracious, re- served, dignified. In that little heav- en on earth of white marble and blue tiles, looking out through min- arets and cyprcsscc to views of land and ace. ofenchanting colours and varieties, one feels that ghosts still occupy the divans. One turns, expect- ing to see some fair Circassian; one listens, hoping to hear the low zith- cr and the muted drum. But the dancers have gone. and those who watched. Instead, there are phono- graphs for sale by the hundred in the shop windows of old Stamboul Sheets of the Roman alphabet sell like hot cakes on Galata Bridge. earns, keeping a real sense of neat- ness and beauty about his tumble- riown surroundings, has my affection and respect. The small restaurants in Stamboui are scrupulously clean, and the food in them is delicious. Butcher's meat is behind glass, also ency, pervade Stamboul, mingled with that immense and delicious la- ziness which the Ghaai must remove if the country is to prosper. Can he do it? I write what I see and hear, and hesitate to prophecy. The faces of the people are brighter than they used to be. The visible women are all unveiled in Stomboul (and extreme- ly pretty ‘some of them are, in all classes), but I am told that even in Constantinople there are many wo- men who hardly ever go out, on ac- count of this heathen discarding of the veil. As to ountry districts, I can only say that just now, walking in an old town, when I passed a lone female she instantly converted her- self into a biack- shroud. It will be some time before Turkish women of the provinces consent to abandon that air of mystery and masquerade which every woman love9. But the immediate practical result of the emancipation is that any woman who wants to earn her living by teaching. or in some other profession, can do so without fear of censure. Of the mosques I would write at lenoth, but must end these preliminary impres- slons by mere glance at San Sophia, that fane of many memories and glories. Fortunate is the visitor who is ai- iowed to enter during the hour of prayer, for in a mosque there should be the sound of Arabic to complete the harmonies of the building. 1h the early centuries of Christianity the beautiful proportions of San Sophia were no doubt respected. But if it had remained a Cathedral, I am All the Turkish ladies go to Para now for the dansantaloti would look for his desenchantees in vain. I spent a- few hours in a fashionable tea-shop, and discovered that the sights, the sounds, the dresses, the drink, the dancing. the food, the mu- sic. the prices, are as internationally standardized as the cinema. If that were the end of world peace I would rather have War and individuality. Like the dwarf, I felt inclined to turn my‘ back on it all, and scream. But jazz and kokteyls and sinemas" and parlour: for permanent ondu- lasyon (one quickly catches this new spelling) affect only a small propor- tion of the population; as also did the pageants and Selamlike of the old days and the life of pnshas in some yali on the Bosphorus. Are the masses becoming “ ‘ d and eman- cipated- For that is- the important thing to know if we are to make up our minds whether ‘Iurkey can fol- low the path she has chosen. The new wine of nationalism rnust have new bottles of education. Before, the Turks were content to allow the Greeks and A. enians to manage their trade. Now that they control their own affairs, they will have to work and ‘think as never before. What a good fellow the plain p000! Turk lsi Officials I am not so fond of, but the average citimn, smoking cigarette after cigarette out of a large amber holder, playing with children, giving his wife all the money he afraid by now it would be full of screens and :tuffy ikone, whereas the worst the Mohammedan: have done is to flk some easily removable cir- culur plaques to the pillars and to colour-wash the mosaics. The rumour that the Ghoul intend: to substitute his phonetic writing cvcn hare. in Dlloa of the cursive script of Iulam, i: lurol! without foundation. Mar- tyrcd All and Hussein would turn in their Braves to no themselves badly commemorated in the Ircnkich tou- guo. One do! during the War, I ent- myvioit) ofmlloldior tbrcoclctkmflllddin sweetmeats. Self-respect, order, dec- I British and French soldiers perform. Morne hrtuue is said to be the most , i A l Mil.» you wish to send money away- —-to pay an out-of-town aoootfnt, —to a relative or friend, -.-to pay for goods from an outside point, --ior any purpose, call at any Branch oi this Bank and secures Draft for the amount. Sold “over the counter,” with no delay or formality, Bank oi Nova Sootia drafts ofier a sate and convenient method of sending money away. THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA ESTABLISHED 185i ESTABLISHED 1832 Capital $10,000,000 ‘Reserve szolloum-c Total Assets over 970000.000 With the object of giving the but pnnlblc ucrvlcc to our Maritime ‘ouulnluer: Illa Eastern Supervisor's Dnpnrtmout ll located lll Saint John proper rite cannot be performed. Tile ' four men are mere dots in-a magni- ficent emptiness. By the millrab, a. mellow and practised rtnder sends l verses of the Koran rolling upwards }_ to the domes-to the great Cross in its field of blue, sown with gold stars. and to the saints and nrchangels and emperors of 900 years, all behind their plaster-and presently the son- orous Arabic comes down to us again in showers. An imam _ offers me a rosary of sandalwood. I buy it so that its scent shall remind me of this mo- ment und oi the Divine Wisdom, when I am hurried and worried. The reading ends. The worshippers gath- er together their gear and vanish through padded screens. Outside, motor horns are hooting. ‘n. REMEMBERED WAR HEROES During the great war Canadian troops garrisoned the Island of St. Lucia, which. because of its facilities for docking and ‘coaling large ships,‘ is one of the most strategic points in the whole Caribbean Sea. l A number oi Canadian soldiers died while on duty there, and they are buried in a very beautiful cem- etery in the suburbs of Castries. When the R. M. S. "Lady Nelson" was making her initial voyage, inaug- urating the new Canadian National Steamship service between Canada and the British West Indies, Peter R. Jack, Chairman of the Harbor Com- mLssion of Halifax. who was the per- sonal representative of the Prime Minister of Canada. and the Federal Government, placed. a. wreath on these graves, when, ihomeward bound, the ship called again at St. Lucia. The Governor of the colony, Hon. C. W. Doorly, and the Mayor of the town of Castries each placed a wreath in honor of the Canadians. ‘The ceremony took place under most extraordinary and inlpressive circumstances. The "Lady Nelson" did not arrive at St. Lucia until late afternoon. The sun had set when the official party left the ship. and the 5h"?- "ODR! l-Wlllflht gave only time Bflflllsh to motor to the cemetery. The simple ceremony of laying the wreath took place by the light of dimly burning lanterns. more was no bugler. but the call of the night 01m “V1118 over the palm groves was more impressive than any note or the "Last Post." The whole setting was extraordin- ariiy reminiscent of those lines qe. lcfllllng the funeral of Sir John Moore at Corruna. "We buried him darkly at, dead of night. _ _ -- The sod: with our bayonets turning, Br the Iirussling moonbeamh misty light. And the lantom dimly burning." The cemetery in which these Can- adian: are buried is not far from the Mornc Fortune. upon the slopes of which a hundred years or more ago to N! some of the most valorous deeds in the annals of either country. Mllht over bit of ground in all the wmm-Fflllllllhoro. It was taken W the Inglhh fmm the P's-ouch scv. cn different times, each occasion in. volvinl heavy fighting. The War Graven Commission u “H!!! their usual cure of the my“ in Stfnlcia. and practically the "l" m» of memorial hu been or. acted bore an marks fiho mm o‘; Irltllb loldior: who loot their. lim in an orutwu- ui almost every ' sums-ma. , N. B. THE LAND WE LOVE By FRANK LEIGH CANADA'S HYDRO POWER. STATUS Canada's Q. What is Hydro Power Status? A. Canada's utilization of‘ power has increased 180 p. c. in the past l0 years and now stands second in world in utilization of hydro power. The 5,000,000 h. pp in use, capital oi’ over $900,000,000, while de- veloped power wealth is conservative- ly estimated at 28,000,000 h. p. Only 15 p. mum development is developed over represents c. of title estimated flow at maxi- billion and a half is invested in electrical development, a. sum that is being steadily added to. Beetles of certain species are being used in the Minnesota agricultural experiment station to test the effects of various foods. The Egyptian government will turn over its old wireless telegraph station at Cairo to a private corporation for commercial uses. Buttons of great strength, uniform wearing quality and permanent colors are being made of plastic albumen, a new chemical product An English ini/entor claims to ln- crease a ship's speed and decrease its fuel consumption with fins to be attached to it's hull to direct water its propeller blades horizontally. ARE YOU TROUBLED WITH LUMBAGO OR SORE BACK? 1f s0 we have one of the best remedies to offer, namely BACK-RITE . TABLETS Especially effective for Lum- bago, Sciatica. NSIIIIIII, Join: Muscular and other form: of heumutiam which ordinal‘! treatments fail to reach. Only 35c Per Box . The M808 DRUGSTORE m Great 090m llflvi All Mall Order: (liven Pnflllfi Afloat-Ion GMLammuQCoQ wick“; {kl-r Public Auction Sales or