Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 24, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 January 1912 — Page 2
The Daily Republican Every D«j Except Sunday HEALEY & CLARK, Publishers. INDIANA.
It’s almost as easy to give good ad-' Tice as it is not to follow it Among the things that we were not thinking of ordering is a new alphabet ’Persons with no other form of amusement can watch the days grow .longer. ' • <#£&***=**?' - - 11 "" 1 It ip difficult for some men to be good when they have a good chance to be otherwise. . A fresh egg of the season comes Straight, from a fresh chamber of the cold storage warehouse. St Louis girl, twelve years old, wants a divorce. Some of them certainly acquire the habit early. . Germany has seventeen dirigible war balloons and England is fortunate in being too busy to worry. A Connecticut woman found a diamond in a leg of lamb. And she wasn’t anywhere near Wlnsted at the time. A girl umpired a baseball game in California the other day. -Those California women certainly are heroines. fAn Imperial edict in Pekin order* the cutting off of queues. Switches . and rats ought to be cheaper next year. - A divorce law has been passed in the Philippines, but it will be a long time before Manila achieves the fame of Reno.
Every time a Mexican patriot tires of work and longs for a little easy money, he organizes a new “(revolution.” Many a man who believes In doing the greatest good to the greatest number regards number one as the greatest number. It has been decided by a court that collecting tips Is begging. Thus the idemocratizatlon of the bench proceeds delightfully. A' Philadelphia physician says that mince pie, taken In moderation, will cure insomnia. About how many triangles, doctor? .New York’s new..... “whispering •whistle” for trains would be a great Institution to introduce to Willie, the gifted office boy siffleur. The trouble with the man who goes to.see a doctor generally is that he wishes to be cured in a day of ills it has taken him years to acquire. The Bostonian who claims that the earth Is flat would have been considered a wise and conservative man in the days of Christopher Columbus. Jack rabbits with horns are said to be plentiful In the grand old state of Texas. Since when has Wlnsted, Conn., been transplanted to Texas? Vesuvius has been throwing mud again. And yet people who live in the neighborhood probably think that Home, Sweet Home is a great little, '"‘ifittg. ; - • ■ . " •. - If you are a hotel guest, don’t give your only pair of trousers to a bellboy, and then go to bed, for a cry of t‘fire!” would put you In a predicament. i “An eastern highbrow asserts that we are losing our sense of smell.” "which we may infer that he doesn't live in a boiled cabbage neighborhood. The household furniture of the future may be made of concrete, as Tom Edison says, but it will be necessary to hire a derrick and a freight train on moving day. ii i.ii'ii ■ ' l A jury awarded S3OO damages to a woman who sued because a man failed to marry her after sixty proposals. That places a handy and exact price upon a proposal. The'lrony of fate appears to have been demonstrated in the case of the famous surgeon who was operated on for appendicitis when his trouble was caused by gallstones. It is announced that shoes are to cost more, and the family mad wffl perhaps feel, grateful that a long succession of such announcements has aoade him somewhat callons. ' 1 • Reindeer meat is to be shipped from Alaska to Chicago, so that It may be served in the restaurants- in Chicago. Unless It is going to be a good deal cheaper than steak it will not be lik«!y to cause much of a sensation
Motor cars in New York last year have killed 89 persons and injured 85S. Strikes us that it is safer to be a guide, or A football player than an innocent bystander : ln N*rw Ybrk. j g|pndge Mulqueen of New York, on ||£>f|ng‘. told tttat some one bad stolen Jthe tfottsers fff a Tombs prisoner, ob* iserved: "You would better make A ■most thorough investigation of this, jit would be a great calamity to find itbieves in tbe Tombs.” Some would isay, on tbe contrary, that that is just (the place for thieves.
FILLING THE FIREBOX
NOT A SNAP FOR STURDIEST OF HARD-MUSCLED YOUTHS. Increasingly Hard to Find Men Able and Willing to Take the Position and Automatic Stoker Is Contemplated. If prophecies are fulfilled the next great evolution in railroad operation
the standing committee on stokers that has been appointed by" the American Railway Master Mechanics’ association has predicted the advent of the automatic, or mechanical, stoker; and according to popular belief, “three times is the charm.” Not every one knows what firing a locomotive means. To the country boy who sees the fireman lolling on his cushioned seat box while his train stands on the siding waiting for the limited, it means a life of indolent ease at good pay with abundant opportunities for long range flirtations with the girls along a strptch of a hundred and fifty miles of steeh highway. Consequently he loses no time in applying at the nearest division beadquarters for a job. He is received with dissembled, but none the less sincere, joy;- for tho demand for firemen is great and the best ones are farm bred. —. — But the “cornfield sailor” who has the strength of mind, character and muscle to struggle through all the preliminaries required to reach the left side of the cab imediately discovers that in addition to anticipating the coming of the pay car and throwing kisses to the prettiest girls along the road he is also expected to shovel from fourteen to twenty tons, or even more, of coal a day; and that this coal shoveling occupies his attention so fully that by the time he gets to the end of his run he doesn’t care a hang if he never sees a paymaster or a rural coquette for the rest of his natural life.
To a husky young man, shoveling twenty tons of coal a day may not sound like a terrific undertaking; but that is because he fails to appreciate the difference between shoveling that quantity in the cou,rse of a ten-hour day, standing on a steady footing and pausing for a moment whenever he feels like it to gaze at the scenery or light a cigarette, and trying to keep his balance on a joltifig, jerking, plunging steel deck which tries ceaselessly to pitch him head first into the Bide of the cab, while with legs spread wide apart he humps over a scoop shovel, working 'with frantic energy to get coal into the firebox fast enough to keep steam up. While the engine is running the fireman must be straddled put on the deck working continually to the limit of his strength, for ordinarily he will have to get from two and a half to three tons of coal into the firebox every hour. Three and a half tons is generally regarded 7 as the limit of a fireman’s capacity, hut this has been greatly exceeded on the fastest trains from New York to Chicago.
Railroad “Graft” in Russia.
“Coming across Siberia on the railroad about the only diversion is playing cards,” said a traveler. “Four of us were having a game of whist when we stopped at a station. A big bearded man in uniform entered and came up to us. He said there was a tax of 50 kopeks on playing cards in that town, and we would have to shell out. We did. “At the next station the performance was repeated, and then at the next and so on, the tax varying according to the size of the place, from ten kopeks to two rubles. After two days it began to get tiresome. Finally one of the party said-there ought to be some way to provide against this Kvste.matic holdup, and’ "we approached the conductor of the- train and presented him three rubles and pointed at the cards. Thereafter, at no matter what station we stopped, we were never molested by one of the local officials looking for ‘hisn.’ ”
LESSEN LOSSES BY FRICTION
Two Methods, One American and One English, That Are Expected to . Accomplish Much. Two methods recently developed to overcome the retarding effect of journal friction are shown In these illustrations, one being an English method, and the other American. In the latter, a. series of short rollers of relatively large diameter take the place
American Railroad Truck Running on Roller Bearings.
of the ordinary ball bearings. These rollers are adapted to tbe existing type of truck without much difficulty. It Is claimed that the results show a
will be the general introduction of auto mafic stokers to relieve locomotive firemen of a task that has grown beyond the powers of human muscles. For three consecutive years
ALL LOYAL MEN, AND GOOD
Railroad Employes Put the Serviep' First, as Authentic Records Abundantly Can Prove. work is as a religion. No matter if It is cleaning an engine “It will be a -pleasant memory to look back to know that you made something better.” . . “Only do as you’re told and do it the best ! you know how, and no kicking.” “A traveling auditor once said to me, ‘I never heard you complain; why is it?’ 1 promptly told him I was getting ail I earned and I had no complaints to make. I gave my best in service and am now reaping the reward Philosophy walks in the language of a train dispatcher: "What improves the character of work, as wel} as of the man who performs it, is pride in the same.” This one is more explicit. His spirit is the same. “It perhaps does not appear to. the layman, or he who is unfamiliar with the internal economy of the motive power department of a great railroad, what it means to keep the wheels round; what skill and care, brawn and brains are needed to produce and keep on schedule time any one of the magnificent solid vest!b ule-passenger trains.” And again, "There may be as much (if any) glory that anyone could notice* at least, in a man being able to keep engines in good working order with the help of a bunch of green though ever so willing hands; but any railroad man knows that it means something ihoiWThah courage, which most every red-blooded man has anyway. No, it requires just plain, common downright grit.” Dennis Hennessy had felt the same pride when "myself and Steven Regan pumped water in the water house, piled wood in the wood house and unloaded lumber out of the cars.” When the time came Hennessy worked the Sterling bridge of which he says: “Those piers will never give out. We had made a noble job of those piers.” His farewell is: “I never drank a quart of whisky in my lifetime, so I am living yet in good health, thank God.” It was the study of this man that his boss never had a chance to boss him. “I would never wait until the foreman would call me to go and fix this, but with one jump I would be at it, and I could hear the general superintendent come up and say to some of the other ofr fleers who were with him, ‘Oh, it is all right. George is there.’ Well, that would make me feel good. That sounded just as if I was working for a father who had confidence in my work.” —Exchange.
HIGHEST TYPES IN DEMAND
Modern Locomotives Cost Twice as Much as Did Those of Twenty or Twenty-five Years Ago. President Alba B. Johnson, president of the Baldwin Locomotive works of Philadelphia, one of the largest in the world, says: “Twenty to 25 years ago the standard fast passenger locomotive of the Pennsylvania railroad was a locomotive of tne eight-wheeled or American type, having two pairs of driving wheels of about 68 inches diameter and weighing in working order not more than 60 tons. The cost of a locomotive was approximately from SIO,OOO to $12,000. “Both the New York Central and the Pennsylvania, railroad -are—nowusing for their heavy fast passenger service the Pacific type of locomotive, weighing in working order about 135 tons. These locomotives have three pairs of driving wheels of about 75) inches diameter, and a trailing truck, in addition to the usual four-wheeled leading truck. The approximate value of such locomotives is $25,000 each. “The rate per pound of engine and tender in working order would not bo higher now than 25 years ago.”
Makes a Costly Terminal.
Montreal is to have a costly railway terminal. A subsidiary line of the Canadian Northern has completed plans for effecting an entrance into the heart of the city of Montreal by building a three-mile tunnel under Mount Royal. The total cost of the tunnel and terminal together will be $25,000,000. - ~ - - v
Cheap Fares in India.
In India third-class fares on all railroads are at the rate of less than onehalf cent per mile.
saving in power of over 25 per cent, and a saving of at least two-thirds in lubricating oil. The Einglish device consists of an
English Car Equipped With Anti-Fric-tion Wheels.
anti-friction roller or wheel, mounted as shown. It is claimed that at least 60 per cent of the friction developed in the axle-box is done away with, the anU-frtctlon wheels being mounted in separate journals over the ends of the axles. One great English railroad has equipped over 1,000 of Its cars with this device. In actual service the wheels are covered with thin metai shields to keep out the dust.— Popular Mechanics.
The Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Ever y Day, CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS IbT NSv v v responsible they Jfimtftg&Blnot only give relief they perma- /ffjgjapgja * p™* nentlycureCop- MMEq&qr w{J.LK| Itipation. BLYiie lions | them for Or Biliousness, ’* Indigestion, Sick Headache, Sallow Skin. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature H CENT - glr% seed SALE W f IWjUvU sllacl»dic r >■sl I FERTILE SEEDS for I II 17S0 Lettuce 1000 Celery ] 111 760 Onion 100 Parsley I I | g 1000 Radish 800 Cabbage I ’I I I 100 Tomato 1000 Carrot L f I I 1760 Turnip 100 Melon /I |J 1700 Brilliant Flower Seeds. 50 sorts Anyone of these packages is worth the price wa ask for the whole /“V V 10,000 kernels. It Is merely our fr 3 ' V way of letting you test our seed—proving to you how mighty good Kthey are. m” - - Send 16 cents In stamps to-day and ■ we will send you this great collection of seeds B by return mail. We’ll also mail you free our ■ great 1012 catalog-ts you ask for It—all postpaid. JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO. B 800 South Eighth Street La Crosse, Wls. FLORIDA ORANGES In order to acquaint you with the Wonderful Florid* Kumquat Orange, we will forward to you ono box *ll CHARGES PREPAID on receipt of i 60 CENTS, BOX contains 28 or more ORANGES of the above famous and delicious fruit. Write today a* thisi offer is limited. Make remittance to FRUIT EXCHANGE CLARK BUILDING, JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA
GIVE AND TAKE.
“Rockefeller must be a great believer in reciprocity.” “Why so?” “Why, whenever he gives away a million or so he advances the price of oil.”
See Value in Open-Air Schools.
During the year 1911 the greatest percentage of increase among the different forms of anti-tuberculosis work was among the open-air schools for anemic and tuberculous children. On January 1, 1911, there were only 29 open-air schools in operation or provided for in the entire country. On January 1, 1912, there were 91, an Increase of 214 per cent. Sixty-two new schools have been established or provided for this past year. This entire number of open-air schools have been established since January 1, 1907^.;^.
Entire Country Interested.
On January 1, 1905, there were about 150 different agencies engaged In anti-tuberculosis work, of which number 111 were sanitoria. The increase to over 2,000 agencies has emphasized, the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis points out, the importance of the campaign for the prevention of consumption being carried on In all parts of the country.
SURPRISED DOCTOR. . ' , ■ -_1 (The remarkable adaptability of Grape-Nuts food to stomachs so disordered that they will reject everything else, is illustrated by the case of a woman in Racine, Wis. “Two years ago,” she says, “I was attacked by a stomach trouble so serious that for a long time I could not fake much of any sort of food. Even the various ldndß prescribed by the doctor produced most acute pain. “We then got some Grape-Nuts food, and you can imagine my surprise and delight when I found that I could eat it with a relish and without the slightest distress. “W#en the doctor heard of It he told me to take several small portldhs each day, because he feared I would grow tired of it as I had of all other food. “But to his surprise, (and that of everybody else); -1 did not tire of Grape-Nuts, and became better day by dar f till, after some weeks, my stomach entirely recovered, and I was abla to eat anything my appetite craved. “My nerves, which had become so weakened that I feared I would become insane, were also restored by the Grape-Nuts food in connection with Postum which has become our table beverage. I appreciate most gratefully and thankfully the good that jour food preparations have done me, and shall be glad to anlWer any letters inquiring as to my experience.” Name given by Postum Co., Rattle Creek, Mich. - Read tbq, little book, “Th'h Road to Weilville,” in pkgs. “There’s A rea- ' son. Ever read the above letter? A mew we appears frost time te time. ; The* are ge*Btoe, troe, mad tall of hmmsma tmterest. , r
THE HOME LIFE OF THE SETTLER
WESTERN CANADA AFFORDS ALL XHE-COMFO RTSANDMANYOF--THE LUXURIES. A young lady of Wisconsin secured a certificate at the Milwaukee office of the Canadian Government, and on presenting this to the ticket agent of the railway at the Canadian boundary line she secured a ticket at a reduced rate which carried her to Edmonton, Alberta, from which point, about forty miles, she had friends. This was a couple of years ago, and the young lady is now married to one of the promising young farmers of the district. In writings of her trip to the Milwaukee representatives of the Canadian Government she says: "lenjoyed my trip up here very much, and expect to go out to our homestead in jthe Pembina district next spring.” To the housewife the information that she has “put up twelve quarts of raspberries” fe important, as they "picked them themselves,” and they might have picked ten times the quantity If they had required them, for tpeVe is no country where wild fruit grows In such abundance. The letter goes on to say, and this Is interesting from a woman’s standpoint, “the country la very beautiful.” Speaking of the friends with whom she went up to live, she says: “They certainly have a beautiful farm and house” —they had been there about four years, also going from Wisconsin—“they have about twenty acres of, oats and barley, five acres alfalfa, three acres* potatoes and I don’t know how many of vegetables. I think they have about forty acres under cultivation altogether. They are now draining a slough which they will afterwards plow and put into fall wheat. They also have a large herd of cattle, and Mrs. C. has about 100 chickens. They make on an average of 30 pounds of butter every week. I never saw such grand cream.” Now these people are enjoying life in Alberta; they have a splendid climdte, excellent prospects, and are happy that they are part and parcel in the working out of the upbuilding of a new country, that will take Its place amongst the progressive countries of the century. Numbers of letters that express satisfaction as extreme as the one quoted appear In literature sent out by the Canadian Government and which may be had on application to any of its agents.
The Problem of Evil.
“Mother,” asked four-year-9ld Gerald, “who made all the burglars and the cops and the Indians and the mosquitoes and those bad things?” “Why,” replied his mother, slightly taken aback, “I suppose God did, dear.” ; . .' - > “Well, mother,” said the boy, with a puzzled look in his blue eyes, “what do you suppose he made ’em for?”
When Your Eyes Need Care
Try Murine Eve Remedy. No Smarting—Feels Fine —Acts Quickly. Try It for Red, Weak, Watery Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Illustrated Book in each Package. Murine Is compounded by onr Oculists—not a “Patent Medicine”—but used In successful Physicians’Practice for many- years. Now dedicated to the Public and sold by Druggists at 26c and 600 per Bottle. Murine Kye Salve in Aseptic Tubes, 260 and 60a. Murine Eye Remedy Co,, Chicago
Her Logic.
It was the week before Christmas. Emery and his younger sister, Mildred, were debating very seriously the reality of Santa Claus. “There Isn’t any Santa Claus,” said Emery, with finality. “Why, there must be,” insisted his sister. “How could they make pictures that look just like him?” < '
Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Castoria
Asking a Good Deal of Her.
Mrs. Back-Bay—l shall want you to he dressed by three o’clock, Ellen, to receive any friends who may -call. Ellen—Oh, lor, mum! Ain’t you goin’ to be in?
The Fool Season.
First Ice Pond —You look thin. Second Ice Pond—Yes, they had better not skate on me till I have embonpoint. Constipation causes land seriously aggravates many diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce’B Pellets. Tiny sugarcoated granules. Even if a woman can’t afford a new FILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYB Tour druggist will refund money if PAZO OINTMLNT fans to cure any case of Itohing, Blind, Bittd’-f or Protruding Piles In 6to 14 days. 50c. Most of us have repair shops for our broken promises.
*> \ >s
If yon suffer from BpUeptic Fits, Falling Sickness, Spasms, or tare children that do so, my Few Treatment wtU relieve all you are Mked to do is to send for a FRHB *2.00 Bottle of Dr. May Formula. It has reUeved permanently tho very worst cases when everything else has failed. Please write and give age and complete address. DR. W. H. KAY, 548 Pearl Bt., Nswr Fork CJUmiIG FAMES FOB SALE On tfane,p«rceßt of pack, or cash. 15 sixes. For Farms, Large CoauasairilKSS or Towns. Make yon S3O to 5300 a day. Writ* for Free Booklet.
PJL^g^S
lOWA WOMAN WELL AGAIN Freed From Shooting Pains, Spinal Weakness, Dizziness, by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound* Ottumwa, lowa.—“For years I wa# almost a constant sufferer from femal* 'p^-...i...: a sLy i i [ i.j4ipw| trouble in all it* ■> 'JSPmm dreadful -forms; shooting pains all mss* over “y L°dy* sick headache, spinal « weakness, dizziness, jilijljl Jpl depression, and ililbv everything that wa* horrid. I tried many f doctors in different \V\ to \ v P arts United \\\ States, but Lydia E. . \\-a,k—lß I.oJ Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done.more for me than all the doctors. I feej it my duty to tell you these facts. My heart is full of gratitude to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for my health.’’—Mrs, Harriet E. Wampler, 624 S. Ransom Street, Ottumwa, lowa. Consider Well This Advice* ' No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope until she has given Lydia E. Pinkbam’* Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from native roots, and herbs, has for nearly forty years proved to be a most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co* (confidential) Lynn, Hass. Your letter will he opened, read and answered by a •woman and held in strict confidence* Splendid Crops In Saskatchewan (Western Canada) ils from 20 aoroa ;at was the thresher’s return from a Lloydmlnster farm In the season of 1910. Many fields In that as well as other districts yielded from 25 to 85 bushels of wheat to the acre. Other grains in proportion. LARGE PROFITS are thus derived from the FREE ! STEAD LANDS era Canada." ;cellent (showing causes advance. Land values mblelntwo years’ time. rrowlnK.mlxed farmtie raising and dairyall profitable. Free eads of 160 acres are ad In the very best i; 160 acre pre-snip--53.00 per acre within areas. Schools and ■s In ertry settleclimate unexcelled, richest; wood, water tiding material ■ticnlars as to location, era’ railway rates and re Illustrated pamphlet. 9t West,” and other in1, write to Sup’t of lmmlOtt&wa, Canada, or to Government Agent. ton, 412Xer*fa**tiLo*n STr.it ciso, 111. | Goo. lire, *l6 You Can't Cut Out or bat M win dean them off permanently, and you ■ Bn work the horse same time. Does not A fa blister or remove the hair, 12.00 per Cl H bottle, delivered. Book 4 E free. Kt.M ABfeOKBINE, JR., liniment tor Jsre mankind, reduces Varicose Veins, RupBBlsiaft tured Muscles or Ligaments, Enlarged Before After Glands, Goitres, Wens, Cysts. Allays pain quickly. Price *I.OO and |2.00 a bottle at druggists or delivered. Will tell you more If you write. Manufactured only by W.FYOUN6,P.D,F = .-31Q Temple St,.Sprlnflfl»W.Mß«SBrown’s BronchialTroches For Hoarseness and Throat Troubles. No opiates. Sample free. Joh* I. Bbowx A Sow. Boston, Maas. rmmrntzxm relieves T | RED eyes ■ A.xaiiaaciinr wa ntbd Ham lift to MD weekly. Liberal cash advances. Experience unnecessary. Write for terms today. Give references. Sherman Nursery Co., Charles City, la. CITC GUSTO. BottleFßEK.We payexpres#. rllO mu.cauucALcospaii, hajihostos, a. j. » . REAL ESTATE FLORIDA EAST CO AST-rich fruit and garden lands. Best easy payment propositions. Agents wanted. Booklet free. Scott« Backus, Stuart, Fla, CALIFORNIA IRRIGATED LAND-Where the Gov’t, furnishes water; project now completes write for booklet. BiamSrea,mSaw*BMg.,<taktaAGM. FERN SPRINGS of Houston, Tens, the coming gulf seaport where the U. 8. Government Is spending two and a half millions *f dollars In deepening the ship channel. A set of U postcard views of Fern Springs sent TOIS on request. rkRS SPRISiGS,IMMMreUI Huk Bid,.,iluulim*T'i. WESTERN CANADA FARM LANDS the finest mixed farming district In Canadian West. Close to Prince Albert, Sask.. splendid market point. Free Government homes tetdsalso within *5 miles of City, crops excellent, settlement coming In fast, lor free literature and map*,write Julius s. Woodward, Sec. Board of Trade, Dept. L, Prince Albert, Saak. feet, a happy medium between the extreme cold north and hot winds of the south, Washington _County being one of the largest fruit growing •Counties In the United States. A oountry that offers a large range of diversifying, adapted to the growing of fruit and berries, grains, grasses, stock and poultry. Fruit farms from 176.00 per acre and up, Mock and grain farms 116.00 per acre ami up. U interested call on or write, Kwalt Land Company, Washington County, Springdale, Arkansas. M ■REARING PECAN GROVES-23 acres grafti* D pecans, Stuart and Van Demon varieties. IS acresll year* old, bearing. balanee6 years old. Sold 6*7.00 worth nuts from one 11-year old tree In 101 L 200 acres weU located, comprises entire tract. Only bearing grove OB' market. Need the money and must sell whole or make small co-operative company and develop these trees and plant others. Want few .parties take Interest and help develop Industry. *ver7body on equal basis and at actual cost to company. Bplendld land—tine bearing grove —co-operative company. Pan cash and monthly paymenta If desired. Shares 1100 each and limited number. Write for pantcslan. Take a number of tharss. ftwsrjjsofls Urn better. Address W. A > British Columbia Graham Island Farms Graham Island Is the jmrten emrt of the Northern ProU^Cgj^^r^|mnrsnlgJ^forveyTOshl(M^g
