hn lliy its Â¥er Able Article by D. D. Mann on Relations Beween Canada and the United States. (Philadeiphia Saturday Evening Post), President Taft expects a special se ion of Congress to complete a revision t the tarif? before midsummer. There 4 cousiderable interest in the subject a Canada with regard to changes that nay affect Canadian trade with the Unâ€" ted States But there is very much mere interest in the United States as io what will be done for Canadian trade. y friend, Mr. J. J. Hill, has spoken ®veral times in favor of eliminating our sustome houses. ‘The chairman of the Hoston Chamber of Commerce ucont.l‘y‘ fort CANADA Canadian nati influence in th be handied s business and tween the two be prepared 10 Curnegie in his dustrica 0 tb ’ownf .."o;z f1 for instance. . NOW coming alarmed at American supply of Rrowdiy speaking, | to where it is c@ ble .u:pliu of fis ters should be |. and ‘NYM thene the Unrited State Nove Sceotia woul natural course of the consumer in t OA Y im interest change. Ontariw. FOF, "*C °C present tax on Unite the consumer back . and Erie, even thoug! biy buy other than Undoubtediy the dut :nh- Remove it inctease. Ars Oi cen the two countries. M , conference of u::ultd American cities is being ca +~ comsider reciprocity Y States 381 1¢ Ar ti hairman of the mmerce recently m of the taridf countries. While of representative itrast . with t generation ted _ States that â€" which Â¥ight times Toâ€"day, Canâ€" is @ Wl“il‘ is a netion «ituation 6f ition in a m chance and consumption he tariff ada and n ferences | paper to the | cost c Can by any compe Om RECIPROCITY. |z.‘g f2.. y imsdoutt EPCOW [ P TT NCLLL wnérr vears in ty tyâ€"iree we oi n by we in t the t 18CUSS1 U the 100.000 I‘l \cCcOoORNS itf Sou sAE NO RERIT TT UTDGNCLLL O WMérT vom allng gums baims. ,‘lï¬x years in :1.;‘1! o&fe .u’ngunw’?:‘ Sold by all druggists we. bottles, â€" Refuse substitutes. + pPUVTNAM‘S PAINLESS â€" CORN EXTEACTOR so, will there be only one flag continent? 1 have listened to t prophets to wish to join their « Eut I think tariff for revenue T x W \Need Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills to _ Give Them Health and Strength. :1 there be only one flag on this ent? 1 have listened to too many ets to wish to join their company. [ think tariff for revenue neceasiâ€" will eontinue; . and, though . the for industrial expansion may diâ€" h in importance, it will remain. eeeemie C n CR CY NT voaus wb twhether Bite of M Poisonous to tion, mati A where we are. times 1 am asked whether loval to England. I answer , like Englard, is loyal t ‘ There are still a few J ; continent, I believe, who at Canada pays tribute to KING OF EXNGLAND. Kipire is more than En 2 hok SE GILA mONSTERS INCREASING al union, we more than England. â€" suppose it is bigger tates, It is a free conâ€" râ€"dependent _ states, as much liberty to do y State of the Union. deration, Canada has s more important eyâ€" an unique identity in { she became four of « in the Union, she on Canada has trade resta which affeet her reciprocity with the Though we hbuy more nited States than from : borrow more money purposes from Creat do from ths United sked whether Can wh of Prescott, Ariz. I Is are of great interest | for in spite of investigaâ€" ‘ os still differ as to wheâ€" of a gila monster is fatâ€" 1 have had several inâ€" under my observation e been bitten by gila monâ€" : ever dicd. In the case of biting a guinca pig, howâ€" n was fatal a few minutes mea pig was bitten. The o Southwest, particularly of Mexico, sincerely beâ€" _bit of a gila is fatal to g and the lizard is held by them. c. however, that this fear This Lizard is Fatally ) Man Unsettled. ho recently visited the Avizona say that there ease in the number of that recion.‘" said Dr. CURED in 24 HOYRS leve, who imaâ€" tribute to the 11 as girls need Williams‘ Pink d rich, red and i health and rd Koch, postâ€" mios X. S.. tells We thorough‘y in endliness with it you like, t wall vernment has e Trade Comâ€" between the Ve have given the Old Lond | Canada has nportant eyâ€" e identity in ame four oT Union, she la has trade ch affeet her y with the We have deâ€" st be as Out r that to the that this fear the repulsive w e e picture puz . _ Bad mon di« ocks, . and bt that the bl 1 this down PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., 1sS ABOUT READY FOR BUSINESS. Provision for 10,000 _ Persons . M‘ Have Been Made When the Town Site is Put Up for Saleâ€"Grand Trunk Pacific‘s Western Terminus . Planned Ahead. [bi"‘i 0C A new city is to appear on the Pacific Coast within few months,. It will not be of haphazard growth. It has! @een planued for years in advance, the lines The Grand Truok _ Pacific â€" Railyay Company, which is building a new transâ€" continental ling across Canada chiefly through virgin territory. is responsible for this city that is to be. It has been christened far in advance of its birth, The city is Prinrce Rupert, and it is to be the Pacific coast terminus of the new railroad. Prince Rupert is 550 miles morth of VYancouver and only forty miles south of the Alaskan boundary. ~That is pretty far north, but it is in the came latitude as London and its mean temperature is about the same as London‘s By land and sea it is protected by mountains. Its harbor is practically landlocked, but it has a mile wide roadstead for ships. of its gmwthvlmve been mapped out, and it only remains to set a date for occup ation and then get the people. The projectors of this new seaport went at the choice of a site carefully. The entire north coast was searched and every harbor sounded. The best way for the railroad through the mountains had to be taken into consideration. Further, the most available route to Yokohama and the rest of the Far East had to be taken into account. The choice was made four years ago, and since then they have been making plans for the new city. The first subdivision of the town site will be made about May 1 i;nd the public invited to come in and uy. The steamship route to the new port from the Far East lies through the Dixâ€" on entrance into Hecate Strait, thence into Chatham Sound and Prince Rupert harbor. The harbor is really a strait beâ€" tween Digby Island and Prince Rupert Island and it extends fourteen miles inâ€" land beyond the site of the new city. MAKING A CITY. The Provincial Government of Britâ€". ish Columbig made a grant of 10,000 acres to the railway company, . which bought up 14,000 acres of Indian _ reâ€" serve land, making 24,000 acres for the city to grow in. Probably it will need no more acreage. It will start out with 2,000 acres only, but that is some space. The work of plauning Prince Rnrx’t began in earnest in May, 1906. _ Bince then surveying and clearing have been carried on simultaneously. The land is cleared now and the town site, the 2,â€" 000 acres on which the start is to be made, has been mapped out. This town has got to grow as the law directs and not as the people will. Streets will not follow cow paths or Inâ€" dian trails. It has all been attended to, even to laying out purks and boulevards which may not be needed for half a cenâ€" tury. (Ome of the first steps the engineers took was to employ landscape gardenâ€" ers, who have produced a plan which combines the utilitarian and the artistic in city building. The landscape artists were Brett & Hall, of Boston, who laid out Mount Roval Park, Montreal. If you visit Prince Rupert toâ€"day you will find a settlement huddled on the waterfront. It is made up largely <f temporary structures in which the enâ€" gineers and workmen have been housed and fed and provided for. Many of these structures will disappear when the city gets its start. Your idea of the city to come must be had from maps. These maps show a long waterfrout broken by several little bays. A few streots back from the water the land ascends, at first gradually and thom abruptly. f The streets are to go up hill in curves, in fact scarcely half of the streets ®KÂ¥ this new city will run in straight lines, Most of the thoroughfares are numberâ€" ed, the avenues generally parallel to the water front, the streets at right angles to it. There are many familiar names, Water strcet, Beach street, Main street; also a Railroad avenue, but no Broadâ€" way appearsâ€"possibly it is too Ameriâ€" can. THE â€" BEST Here and there where the topography permits are circles with streets radiating therefrom. Away up on the hillside the Prince Rupert _ Boulevard had been mapped. _ 1t courves around above the prospective city, affording (on paper) ForWomenâ€"Lydia E. Pink= ham‘s Vegetable Compound DBelleville; Ont.â€""I was so weak and worn out from & female weakness that I concluded to try Lydia E. Pinkâ€" â€" ham‘s \'egetable Compound. }moli , ECC NT g1% i t several bottles of | WO Te Bol it, and 1 gained ‘ ks * ~ e strength so rapidly | es > that it seemed to | e slfits Â¥BB make a new woman ‘ pits: {% of me. T can do as | i us good a day‘s work | ‘ fsgx as I ever did. I| l esc > sincerely bless the | viy z_ i é day that I made up | * # -:,y my mind to take | TD your medicine . for | | female weakness, | | and I am exceedingly grateful to youfor | your kind letters, as I certainly profited \ ‘by them. I give you perm‘ssion to | Wublish this any time you wish.""â€" | Mrs. AusE®rt Wicketr, Belleville, | l Ontario, Canada. | \\'ulneueverywhcre".lnmldl;emeulber‘ Womeneverywhere should remember PM "og o mds hav w & that there is no other remedy known \flat ledge when at a height of thirty | to medicine that will cure female weakâ€" | °. forty feet the crow _mll stop his | ness and so successfully carry women | flight and drop the winkle on . the | through the Change ‘of Life as Lydia E. | t0@ks. thus breaking the shell. | Pinkham‘s Vegetable Com undv. made | Then perhaps ~ dozen will gathe ‘f.â€"'om native roots and her{::. arouu;l a{\d _ravguozs;yl e,,; the sweet For 30 years it has been curinz\“‘"“- t is doubtful if +t!> crow | wome ¢ 2 | destrors as much as he is accuse« | n from the worst fpï¬r_:gs‘?_t_leng‘a{l_o of doing.â€"From the L ewition Jourial ki k ho td td t ces t c c Pal dnc At detcani P + ills â€" inflammation, ulceration, disâ€" placements, tibroid tumors, irregulariâ€" lies, perlodic pains, backache, and nervous prostration. If you want special advice write foritto Mrs.Pinkham ‘{nn.m. It is free =«ad always Jfelpful, 10,000 â€" Persons Will REMEDY ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO of | CAVERY CEET C EOO 14 and ifl’?l“h"'i-\ Teacher (to stupid pupil)â€"For what iche, and | is Pisa noted? Stupid pupilâ€"â€"Forâ€"for ..â€"â€"â€"â€" Bright little scholar {prompting in jce write | a wh'uper)-l,eauing tower. Swg&d puâ€" nu, Mass. â€" 1i {eagerly) â€"Linen towels,â€"Western nful. (Christian Advocate. # future array of themselven are yet to be driving in autoâ€" mobiles along the boulevard and taking in the sighte. There are mountains on the opposite shore ready and willing to be looked at, and io the northwest, through an island studded channel, is the famous Indian village of Metiakalta. The harbor itself has been mapped by the Dominion Government Hydroâ€" graphic Survey. It is free from rocks or other obstructions and of sufficient depth to afford good. anchorage. The entrance is straight, 2000 feet in width at the narâ€" rowest part, with a minimum depth of 36 feet at low tide. A permanent whart 1.500 feet long has been constructed. The British Columbia Government isn‘t going to have this new city at the merey of a corporation. It has taken a | strong hand in the work of development. Oneâ€"quarter of all the land reverts to the \ provinee, as also onequarter of the waterfront, after the townsite has heen ‘ laid out. The first inhabitants of this city won t have to worry over public improvements. They will find graded streets, sidewalks and sewers ready for them. . The Proâ€" vincial Government appropriated $200,â€" 000 for early improvements, and ample provision will have been made in advance for a population of 10,000 people. As the population increases the improvements will keep well in advance. The gradual slope of the land, with an occasional abrupt rise, has made the drainage probâ€" lem very easy of solution, You ‘The town of course will have to wait for the railway, but it is creeping across the Northwest prairies. It is 1,756 miles from Winnipeg to Prince Rupert over the Grand Trunk Pacific route, and trains are now running between Winnipeg and Wainwright, Alberta, 667 miles, The time table bears the usual legend, "Subâ€" ject to change without notice," and in this case the change usually means the addition of a few more stations to the west every month or #o. Construction from the Prince Rupert end . will soon be’dn. ‘ Transportation _ facilities _ will give Prince Rupert its excuse for being, and many industries wait upon the compleâ€" tion of the railway. ‘The fishing indusâ€" Ary expects to take a jump forward. The salmon _pack last season in the Skeena River. twelve miles south of Prince Rupert, was valued at $1,000,000 and gave employment to 5,000 persons. This product has gone to Vancouver and Victoria by water, but when the ru’lwn{' somes much of it will go through Prince Rupert. Other fisheries besides salmon atre waiting to be developed. A license has been granted to establish a whaling staâ€" tion near the new city. In the winter months whales abound, even in Prince Rupert Harbor. L i v dube Palg e ces h e sabk Adp sn C t e onl ‘There is a timber industry yet in it infancy, and mining properties in the mountains need only means of transporâ€" tation. Of course Prince Rupert has had & start already. There is a population of 600. But ouly those have come to the new town who have had to do with the work of the railway company or the Government. It has been impossible for any one 10 buy or lease land without official sancâ€" tion, and the bars have been up quite securely. Just enough business was let in to furnish the contractors and laborâ€" ers with supplies. There are a dozen or so stores, two branch banks, and two hotels. Also there is a weekly newsâ€" paper, the Empire. : . d i4000 NB qi Eim Psny it es At the opening of the road clear to the Pecific no one can speak with definâ€" iteness. It is like the Panama Cana!. Charles M. Hays, president of the Grand Trunk Pacific, who by the way is an American, has made a trip to Prince Rupert recently, On his relurn to Montâ€" real he said: "We are doing very well, indeed. The various contractors are in good lÂ¥lï¬h. and well abreast of their dates. Tabor is abundant and is more productive at lower wages. I see no reason to doubt that by the autumn of 1911 our first train will break through to tidewater, passing from the Atlantic to the Paciâ€" fic The country editor is easily the foreâ€" most man in the community. This is evidenced by the frequency and persistâ€" ency in which he is asked, nay, demandâ€" ed! at any time of day or night, to sit up with the sick or officiate as pallbearer at funerals. The editor is always asked to be pallbearerâ€"it gets to be a habit with him. Perhaps it is because he habitually looks sad and mournful, He feels slighted and as though he was losâ€" ing his standing in the community if he isn‘t asked, and if by any chance he is also requested to drive the hearse the proffered honor raises him to the seventh heaven of editorial delight. An editor PEROTRT TY PE C ce no escape from being palibearer. Once, during a late spring when the Pale Horseâ€" man wrote cireles about the hills of Old Q Schoharie, there were so many funerals | the ministers were all busy and the ediâ€" | tog was called away from a bitter editorâ€" | ial en the tariff to go and preach a {uneral sermon. This was an honor that he had never dared to dream of, and he said so in strong and emphatic language, but, having done most everything else from prescribing medicine to subscribâ€" ing for headstones and being a pallâ€" bearer anyway, he could not refuse. To this day the relatives and _ friends of Smith Van Denberg, of Cross Hill, say they never heard a better funeral serâ€" mon. It didn‘t bother ye editor much to deliver a funeral sermon, for he had already addressed political meetings and lectured a few times for chureh societies. | It was no trouble to say something nice . | about Smith, for he paid his subscripâ€" | tion rgularly. If by chance the "boes" : | wasn‘t called away for a funeral and we | saw Ann Chase going by the office on l | printing day, we immediately stoppred | the press and went out to find where ) | the ceremony was taking place. Ann ) | never failed usâ€"we never 20 Seqnoped" 8 | on a funcral while she was alive, for K | 5. never missed one, and never came may be exempt from jury duty, he may not have to carry the mail, fight fires or officials as deputy sheriff, but there is ty Ay OMW . MdR®INW 4C Versatility of the Country Editor o1 4 0 12202 0B itvh 1 ie C000 printing day, we immediately stopped the press and went out to find where the ceremony was takinx place. Ann never failed usâ€"we never g0 Seqnoped" on a funcral while she was alive, for whe never missed one, and never came out unless there was one.â€"Don Cameron §hafer in the Bohemian Magazine for March. Large flocks fields and on mussels are can get, excep! now and then. 4 tough "*shell 1 Large flocks of crows are in the ields and on the shores. Clams and nussels are about all the food they an get, except perhaps a few winkles | ow and then. As these winkles Imve‘ i tough "shell the crow, when he finds me,. will fly for the shore and over a (at ledge when at a height of thirty. or forty feet the crow will stop his fMight and drop the winkle on the rocks, thus breaking the shell. Then perhaps â€" dozen will gather around and ravenously eat the gweet morsel: It is deubtfnl_‘ .++ crow views of the harbor and its Crows and Winkles who to asgar Und Adolf in der Wheat Pit. 2 e ©a T&PVB. Nearly all these cases can be cured, or the progress of ; the digcase arrested, by inflation of the ears through the * mnose apd eustachian tubes with medicated air. A very safe and efficient means of accomplishing this te end can be had by the use of Catarrhozone, a positive * eure for catarrh in the most chronie form. It is sure death to the microbe life which maadin‘t a ie the inflamed condition, and also through its healing proâ€" perties restores the diseased organ« to a healthy, normal Ne _ condition. It is not mere theory. The result of actual experience proves that ninetyâ€" nine cases in one hundred can be cured, and stay cured of impaire j hearing by the use of Catarrhozone. 9 P _ Catarrhozone is a new scien respiratory passages caused by tarrh, asthma or bronchitis, it i It never fails to cure any the seat of the disease. That Conn ment by snuffs, washes, douches, ete., whi they cannot reach the root of the trouble. You simply breathe the medicated air, simpler. Complete outfit sufficient for tw all dealore or by mail from N. C, Polson & «> {¢ t . It is not me (By Fred Schaefer) "‘Vot is diss blace, Oegar? ‘"Ignorant oysterface ! Di Chicago grain marget, und down der iss her traters." "Iss id? make â€" an der floor?‘ ‘How mice. In dot vay, 1 subbose, dey beat der boll weevil to id." ‘‘Yess. For instance, toâ€"day dey are dealing in Chuly." "Such a silliness! _ How can Jy deal in Chuly ven id ain‘d â€" here deal vet? 'Vfl: "In answer 1 vill wék you diss: Aal you nefer been Thursday on Priday ?‘ ‘Thursday > "*Yess, Thursday for a trink. Ha, us, ba !" "Laugh on, hyens. Bay dere iss . ® broker mit hiss trousers rolled up. Dues he dink he iss in a shower batt?" "No. He iss simbly brepared for & deâ€" luge of selling orders. Teeâ€"hee !" *‘Blease don‘d get serious mit a funny supchegt. . Dere iss alzo a fellerx who looks like he hass receifed a stagâ€" gering blow." * Sure, He was hart hit in der pit." "Ah, I seeâ€"below der belt." "Yust now a great deal of wheat i« passing back und fort." "Vell, to me id listens _ more like chaff." A Positive Cure for DECORATES CAKE wITH TRADE MARK 1 years of age. ano BM VUUAIT "llusa eigner‘ for & long time. He can make a cake when he #0 desires, and this da made & layer cake, icing it wich white, red trimmings. He delights to sget & recipe or find some new way of decori ‘The London Advertiser, after we have ished with i. trequently finds its way t kitchen. and as 8 proof that the cook * w‘ we give this;â€"About thine e‘clock | went into the kitchen to see how things getting aloug. The cake was there, lood OOR _ 1 a aith red. foriniog getting ©006â€" * "" 0 un red. fori white, and decorated with red, formipg three | pows across the cake, and this is what Percy | saw and read: Dodd‘« Kidney Pille. "On th*â€" table beside the cake was that wellâ€"known adâ€" | vertisementâ€"the cireuiar box, with this inâ€" } scription. He, poor fellow, bad taken It tor a wellâ€"made cake. and decorated his lke i. | They are vOrY splendid Imitators, and clever | in their way, eVefy one of them. The cook ! kpows considerable English, but when he | triee It on us We pretend not to underetand | Radium in Surgery. Sir Frederick Treves considers _ that we have practically reached the thera peutic limitations of the Xâ€"rays, the high frequeney current aud the Pinsen» light, but that in radium we still have unexplored ficlds of ncefulness. ' M e yeer 10100000 oont aha briame This write: to raise false cure every f‘ Lo Eanm® abeiet dBI s Cot cure every form of naevus, whether at is a port wine stain, a pigmented mole or a bhairy mole, and rodeunt ulcer which has uot yviclded to the Finsen» light ox the Xâ€"rays, and that too in two sittings of one hour each. Wonders are also acâ€" complished in the carly stages of epiâ€" thelioma of the lip and tongue,â€"From the British Medical Journal. id Und for why do an â€" oxcitement nud stamp Catarrhozone Cures I dï¬ c t ic ad th s ca h ie 3 seeâ€"below der belt." k "8o? I am glat dere iss no corner w a great deal of wheat i*® | beer,. How can dey stop id?" ck unad fort." ; "Der ouly vay to break a corner , me id listens _ more like | wheat iss to swamp der operador, | den surrount der ewamp mit a posse old mitations of the Xâ€"rays, the meney . current and the Pinsen t that in radium we still have od ficlds of nsefulness. riter believes, without desicing false hopes, that ndilkm“_ nlf is a new scientific remedy for all discases of the nasal and res caused by microbe life, and if you are affected with os bronchitis, it is well deserving of your attention, to cure any of these affections, because it is sure to reach lisease. That is why Catarrhozone is far in advance of treat wwushas donches. ete.. which are â€" absolutely useless, because A large proportion of all cases of impaired hearing and deafness is due to disease of the middle ear and eustachâ€" ian tubes, caused either by acute inflammation or chromie eaterrh. . 1 g ° ED EALC "Aevncmar ie mm interest! Dise iss der und dose men why do dey transpiring in the incldents letter received ut the Chinaâ€" A n;;,"it. does the restâ€"nothing for two months‘ treatment, price son & Co., Kingston, Ont., and zigar und lightet moustach â€"him mt der 40â€"caret loaf of Lread l‘?u&lh. on his shirt bosomâ€"dot is# atten, . der wheat king." "Â¥ot does he dit?"" "Oh, noddings much. Only he mase wheat chump from 18 zents a bushe! to $9.63 a peck in fice minudes.‘‘ _ ""Ad dot rate wheat vill soon be a poâ€" tet blant. Yot iss der soludion of der angwer "Don‘d you see id vill make flour +0 high dot you can‘d eat vite bread "I can‘t eat id now." "Why + "Benoss my vife bakes id." "Yet, id may efen raise der brice cf pumpernicke} bread.‘‘ "‘But pumpernickel is mate of rye "Dot‘s so. Nuch a vaste of rye!" "But der rezuld on wheat* Nill id 1« felt "Yill id! W1 to make flow prozess, yess." â€"‘‘Nell, he zertainly iss fohcing . hiss enemies to der vall." "Nat vill dey do dent" "Chump off der vall into der lake, } guess "I don‘d dink dot a -p‘:clcidu shoult be allowanced to make der luxzâ€" vuries of life a necessidy." "Ah, but he hass a corner on id." "Vell, a polissman shouldt run him off der corper." ret ""‘u'i}i von vill, after bread iss zents a loaf." How Paris Market Gardeners Manuâ€" facture a Suitable Climate. The market gardeners around Paris do not dream of wuiting for spring before they raise spring vegetables. As one mau put it, they move the climate of Monte Carlo to the suburbs of Paris. |_This they do at enormous expense in money and in time. . The gardens whenâ€" 'ever possible are placed on land with a | slope to the south and are well protected by walls on the north and east, walls ‘ built to reflect 1i$ht as well as tmn protection from the northeast wi ‘ The ground is practically covered with 1glm, not as in a greenhouse but by glass frames in the open, three â€" light | frames of uniform size, twelve feet by | four and a half; and also by glase belis. | These, too, are of a uniform size about | the rhape of a chapel bell, a little loss | than 17 inches in diameter and from 14 | to 15 inches high,. The Freuch call them *c«oduo. You may often see over & thou | saed frames and over ten thousand glase belis in one two acre plot in the subâ€" | urbs of Paris. i See dot man ofer dere mit a gray UPDS O1 PRTCS A more recent innovation, scoording to Success, is the employment of hot watâ€" er pipes run under the soil, making of the earth a veritable steam heated hoâ€" tel, with this essent ial difference, that the hotel keeper here is desperately eagâ€" er mot to keep his guests, but to perâ€" suade them to leave on the earlieet posâ€" He mus: be manipoliuting der mar sible day Shingles From A lumber compa»y at DU recently sent out a pumber shingles that were out from years old. The tree from which the # cut bad 350 rings, which that it was 350 years old The «tump of a tret whic ‘ is it has T50 rings. n have started to g« after the first fell i ETEAM HEATED GARDENE Mechan by the resm heliotropiam â€" warnd light. distinct CwÂ¥ only two se die power. of light, that the ong a. D. $00, wh Why der millers vill all baf our by der Patteped roller ;l|e~n', Fk". "mo at Ont., and Hartford, om a Tree 1.10( Years Old. company at Buckley, Wash .. t out a number of souvenis rsich the shingles were , which fact denote* ears old when it fell. ree which grew ove‘ ind a« this could not row until some time j+ is practically cerâ€" nal tree was thriving ch was 700 years beâ€" of America, ~â€"Popula® tree 1,100