ald Thirtyâ€"three thousand, eight hunâ€" dred square miles were covered in Canada during the season of 1928 by eblique aerial photographs taken :, the Royal Canadian Air !'wf_; for the Photographical Surver * rtment the Interior. /,?ODI of New York Sun: "The Fordneyâ€"Mcâ€" Cumber Act imposes on cattle a duty running from a cent and a half to two cents a pound, of two cents a pound en bacon and ham, of a cent a pound en lard. This protection has helped the brecding industry to its present pros perity, put it in a healthy and indepenâ€" dent condition in which competition from foreign sources has been satle factorily met. The burden of proving that further tariff increases are necesâ€" eary rests upon the breeders. If they have a good case they have not M| wade the facts known. . fered for his weakness, in the stifling, meglected confinement of a prison ghip.â€"Lorna Ryan in "Our Dumb Aniâ€" men are able to go from "prohibition America" to the tropics without fall Ing a victim to the conditions prevailâ€" ing there. in this instance it was a cargo of imprisoned animals that sufâ€" later I happened to meet the man who was in charge of this living andâ€"in mome casesâ€"priceless freighi. Ho appeared on the verge of falling to pieces, and if he was not actually drunk whey the officer introduced him, he had not long been sober. Nor bad he been on his feet for any great period at a time during the whole of the trip. I understand that he was an expert curator, and ha dbeen seâ€" lected for this responsibility for his knowledge and capability when he set out from his own country, but few Here again there was dreadtol silâ€" ence. This time it seemed even more striking because many of the birds were naturally songsters in their naâ€" tive forests, and even birds that do not sing are seldom completely dumb unde _ ordinary bearable circumâ€" stances. ‘They are always associated with a wealth of little twittering sounds and fluttering movement. In that cabin there was only stillness and the hush of life that has lost inâ€" terest in living. Every now and then the cageâ€"doors were opencd and the dead removed from among the clusâ€" tored rows of feathers that crouched on the perches or littered the floors of the boxes with crange and gold and scarlet, with yellow and green and blue. ad The birds were separate from the animals. How many of them there had originally been in the tightly packed cages that filled the cabin which had been converted to their use It was impossible to judge. Their number was greatly reduced by this time, although there still seemed to be several hunired too many of the brilliant little creatures in so inadeâ€" quate a space. \ Large Area Photographed glass cases, and it is so difficult to tell when a snmake is miserable, that I could not make out how they were facing the situation mentally. Physiâ€" eally they had proved hardier than either the birds or the animals, â€" and had come through the voyage beter than anything else in the shipment, excepting the tortoises (tiny turtles, or terrapinâ€"I don‘t know which). The whole of the barrel that contained them seemed alive with the swarming mass, crawling all over and ““"1 each other with complete unconcern, and a total indifference to the nn-‘ pleasantness.of their condition. All the smaller animals of the Antiâ€" podes were huddled in the boxes that lined the walls, but many empty cages testified to the toll that death had taken among the more delicate speâ€" cies. A few wallabies, wombats and bandicoots still lay supine on their grubby doles of straw, but I did not see any koala bears. Hf there had been any, they had not borne the tria‘s of that suffocating dungeon. In a corner a valuable and rare parâ€" rot, the last of an original six, elung, drooping and unhappy, to his perch. The glass tell wi As 1 went up the companionway The bulk of the animals were in a eompartment that was below the deck and yet above the water line. I don‘t know what the technicalt term is for that part of a vessel, but as I came down a long passageway and paused at the entrance to this place, 1 saw that a section of the ship‘s side was withdrawn to allow a flood of light and air to do what it could with a prison which had long been in darkâ€" ness. 1 looked around, and although the place was full of living things, there was not a single sound except the lapping of the water outside. The atmosphere was charged with such mute and hopeless misery that 1 could not help thinking of the slave ships of olden days. °"°°5, Nangaroos, and a lioness. It was summerâ€"time, and partly to shade them in their confined quarters, and partly to screen them from the activiâ€" ties of the ship, there were awnings of sacking hung before the bars that imprisoned these panting captives from the open plaing of Australia and the fragrant jungles of India. When 1 went on board a freight ship at a Western port the animals had only to endure about a week more of a Toyage that had lasted the best part of six months. Onthodocktleremlmd wooden cases into which the animals Atted like eggse in a crate; tigers, panâ€" thers, kangaroos, and a lHoness. It Animals for the Zoo Tariff on Meats S and unhappy, to his perch. snakes lay motionless in their 1(194 by.‘ 1 4 : > tor ts TIRES /« for the h A rtment of. 3 §6 Front St. E. Safety First La Presse (Ind.): The Safety Leaâ€" gue of the Province of Quebec has reâ€" cently addressed to more than 1,200 cures of our province a circular letâ€" ter soliciting their active coâ€"operation in the prevention of accidents. e# ly This.new move of the Safety League should produce good results. There is no doubt that the cure is the man who, in his own parish, is in the best position to educate his parishioners. .« «. . Our cures have a mission to proâ€" tect the lives of their parlshionor-,“ whenever they can, simultaneously with looking after their spiritual vu)-i fare. He, readingâ€""A so they were marâ€" d. That is the way all love matches end." Sheâ€"‘"Yes, they dont burn long." DrNMMillians‘ PINK PIHLLS Distributor for Ontario NEWTON A. HILL my sister‘s advice, I tried Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills,and now dizziness; felt very weak and could not sleep; had no appeâ€" tite. . I felt always as if someâ€" thing terrible were going to happen. After taking other treatment without success, on fhes to this : i _ "I suffered from a nervous dizziness; felt ver THE nerves are fed by the blood. Poor blood means starved nerve tisâ€" sue, is in, irritabilit ""A wousrwoun maw® IN #4 cowntTaine ** Friendâ€""Gad, but you‘re lazyâ€"you - ought to go to the ant." Sluggard (fAngering hbiés watch)â€"*"Think I‘ll be more apt to get what I want by going Foromto to an uncle." Guripipped Resortâ€"A place where you pay $15 a day to look through a window at the rain. Don‘t expect to be taken for a genius if you‘re only a common crank. The thing that looks dangerous about the newâ€"‘ ingled underwear for men, in all the »retty patterns, is that someone‘s apt .o get the fool idea it will take the place of pants. Only when he is beating the carâ€" pets," said the second one. ~"When he is thoroughly irritated he makes a much better job of it." "I hope," said one wife to another, "that you don‘t nag your husband." For him death held no terrbr;' And* now be‘s where the "Good Fel lows" go, Mrs. Smithâ€""My, no! They not marrled yet." He mafl_e no enemy hore below, Jonesâ€""Do your daughters lve at home?" ‘"Well,‘ she said at last, "have you anything for Clarence Murphy?" The girl regarded the clerk for a moment in openâ€"mouthed @&stonish ment. Nothing For Murphys z ‘"Anything for the Murphys?" inâ€" quired a freckleâ€"faced girl, putting her head i nat the postoffice doof. "No, nothing," replied the clerk. "Anything for Jane Mtrphy?" purâ€" sued the girl. |â€"""No.‘" _ "Anything for Bob Murphy ?" "Nothing, 1 tell you." "Anything for Biddy Murphy?" ‘"No; nor for rPat Murphy nor Denâ€" nis Murphy, por for Pete Murphy, nor Paul Muirphy, nor for any of the Murâ€" phys, individually, jointly or several 1y." A thing done right toâ€"day means less trouble toâ€"morrow. Now, I want so.me humane mothâ€" balls; something that won‘t harm the moths but will just make them lose their appetites. There is no reason why women can‘t succeed in business. A woman who can get the rolls and the gravy and the roast and the potatoes and the coffee all on the table steaming hot at the same time and then get all the family there too, can succeed in anything. I call my girl Wrigley‘s because she is always after meals. No runs, no hits, no errors The height of something or other is getting out on the wrong #ide of a lower berth in a Pullman. Maisiesâ€""The jury awarded me five thousand dollars damages from that fellow who kissed me." Mamieâ€""Gee! that‘s swell." Maisieâ€""But he hasn‘t got the five thousand dollars and mobody else bas offered me a kiss. Sheâ€""No; if you love me, please don‘t sing." ; Heâ€""Wouldn‘t you like to hear me sing ‘Because I Love You?" A cable message can go around the world in eight minutes. But of course gossip is much cheaper. â€" Boy Scoutâ€""Yesâ€"I‘ve taught Cousâ€" in Lucy not to poke her tongue out at Boy Scouts!" a Grandmother â€" "Well, dear, bare you done your good deed toâ€"day?" The normal way, I‘ve heard it said, Is to lose one‘s heart And then one‘s head. 1 had to laugh At old man Mart; He lost his head Then Jost his heart. The Erratic Mr. Mart Mine Too stead of dominating by hbllln\neo and kindness, the survival of the ‘ftâ€" test is ensured by war, strategy, exâ€" ploitation, fraud and destruction. Quebec Evenement Cons.): In the greater part of the old huntingâ€" grounds of the natives of the country, %there barely remain a few thousand descendants of a human family which lacked neither intelligence nor nobiliâ€" ty. Outside British,. Columbia. and the least hospitable parts of the Proâ€" vince of Quebec, there are no longer any forests where the proud nations who hbave been despoiled and humiliâ€" ated can taste the illusion of their 2 lost liberty, And it is the nmlenu-‘ tives of the most generous nations of the white race who have accomâ€" plished this inhuman work. Cu“ we, after this warning, blame the yol-i low races for rebelling against Burâ€" opean penetration? Men are no whit different from fish or ants,. Inâ€" stead of dominating by inteélligence Minard‘s M. Henri Franklin Bouillon‘s, leader of the National Union group in the French Chamber, who spoke of delibâ€" erating with a knife at our throats, make interesting reading, but they are of assistance neither to his own Government por to this one in reachâ€" Ing a final settlement of the debt question. Philadelphia Ledger: It is reasonâ€" ably certain that the people of this country have no wish to be hard upâ€" on France. Indeed, the terms of the Mellonâ€"Berenger agrement, which in effect conceled the principal of the French debt and arranged for the payâ€" ment of the interest alone, show unâ€" mistakable generosity. But it is now more than three years since that agreement was made, and though Its obligations aveh been met regularlyi by teb French Government, it has not yet beem ratified. Speeches llkol The French Debt to the U.S.A. Julyâ€"the month of oppressive heat ; redâ€"hot days and sweltering nights; is extremely bard on little ones. Diarâ€" rhoea, dysentery, colic and cholera inâ€" fantum carry off thousands of preâ€" clous little lives every summer. ‘The mother must be constantly on her guard to prevent these troubles, or, it they come on suddenly, to fight them,. _ No other medicine is of such aid to mothers during the bot sumâ€" mer as is Baby‘s Own Tablets. They regulate the bowels and stomach, and an occasional dose given to the well child will prevent summer complalnt,‘ or if the trouble does come on sudâ€" denly, will banish it The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25¢. a box from The Dr. Wilâ€" llam‘s Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. RED HOT JULY DAYS HARD ON THE BABY The Disappearing Indian Lovs! Are you there? < Or is it only That I am mad k As well as lonely? â€"Elizabeth Hollister Frost in the London Spectator. 1.â€"John Caesar, pioneer of Canadian Pacific Station Gardens. 2.â€"First Canadian Pacific Station Garden at Markdale, Ont., 1881. John Caesar, like his great prototype, "same, saw and conquered." When he first started as station agent at Markdale, Ont., back in 1881, it was just a station with the rails running past it He decided that passengers should sit up and take notice when they passed through his territory, so he started in to landscape garden it. Soon he had a beauty spot where before there had been little to interest the traveller. Canadian Pacific officials were quick to recognize the value of the work and the Floral Department of the railway was formed. Mr. Caesar was chosen to look after the beautification of the road and he bas to his credit a large number of stations through Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and Maine. Since 1871 Mr, Caesar has been drawâ€" ing pay cheques from railways and probably has signed more than any other living railroad man. When he retired in 1917 on his agent‘s pension, he went on to work at landscape gardening and has literally created hundreds of station gardens, some of them real showplaces. "I have received new life from the soil," he says, in replies to compliments on his fresh complexion and alert manner, for he is a man well in the seventies, and he hopes toj make many more gardens before he completes his life span. ‘ Was that a hand That stirred the curtain? Was that a laugh? I am not certainâ€" But what is that? In here! Out thereâ€" Was that the wind The clock has stopped, Stark is the bed, The fire‘s out, My love is deadâ€" The grass uncut, The vines swing wild, The door is shut; But What Is That? The weeds are rank, Along the stair? Making the Railway Beautiful Excess acid is the common cause of indigestion. It results in pain and sourness about two hours after eatâ€" ing. The quick corrective is an aikali which meutralizes acid. The best corâ€" teotive is Phillips‘® Milk of Magnesia. It has remained standard with physiâ€" clans in the 50 years since its invenâ€" One spoonful of Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia neutralizes instantly many Bheâ€""I wouldn‘t think of marrying such an intellectual monstrosity and physical misfit as you areâ€"you numbâ€" skull! Do you get me?" Heâ€""Well, from the general trend ofâ€"ypour eonâ€" versation, I should judge not." ‘ "I‘d like to see all the bootleggers behind the bars." "So would Iâ€"most of them would make excellent bartenders." _ The picture was too good to spoil by intrusion so we have no facts in rsâ€" gard to this tabby and his protector. From our knowledge of cats, however, we feel sure the confidence displayed was founded on previous association and friendship, and henceforth & trafâ€" fic policeman will mean to us someâ€" thing more than ar administrator of Police Department regulations.â€"E. M. Rutherford. As we strolled along, what was our ’nmazemont and delight to see the traffic policeman standing in the midâ€" dle of the street and cuddled cosily between his wideâ€"spread feet a someâ€" what soiled but very contented gray and white cat. _ We were not near enough to hear the purring but never have we seen a cat by his own fire side looking more peaceful and comâ€" fortable. w It was near the midnight hour, on one of New York‘s busiest avenues, in the section that years ago was known as "Hell‘s Kitchen." The swarm of taxicabs that follows the theatre closing hour had just cleared fro mthat block and for a moment the street was fairly quiet so that pedesâ€" trians had an opportunity to observe the magnificent office buildings reâ€" cently erected in that part of the city. _ The traffic policeman is usually asâ€" sociated in our minds with sharp reâ€" bukes for unknown offences or a sumâ€" mons to court for infringement of traffic regulations. That he may be, after all, a most human and humane individual, is confirmed by an inciâ€" dent which the writer recently witâ€" nessed. The Tariff Policeâ€" e\ _ 2R â€"Acid Stomach Be sure to get the genaine Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physiâ€" clans for 50 years in correcting exâ€" cees acids. °* Each bottle contains full directionsâ€"any drugstore. quick. You will never rely on crude methods, neyer continue to suffer, when you learn how quickly, how pleasantly this premier method acts. Please let it show youâ€"now. tmes its volume in acid.~ It is barmâ€" less and tasteless and its action is but oftener!" Wife: "You know, James, 1 speak as I think." Husband: "Yes, my loveâ€" Throughout the various Government ' buildings at Ottawa there is a system | of over 600 clocks controlled directly | from the Dominion Observatory. ‘The‘ majority of these take the form of | "minute dials," whose hands are actuâ€" ated electrically once each mlnnto;‘ the evact instant when the hands | move marks the beginning of the minute. ‘\ And if the Steaks were slow in comâ€" ing and rather Tough when they come still were we each the better for each |other‘s good wishes. And it the wait be lJong and the Steak be tough, there is no use makâ€" Ing matter worse by fretting about them. Minard‘s Liniment for aching Joints _ And I said, "May it be so with thy life‘s Success, And though it be someâ€" what toughened by reason of the deâ€" lay, I trust thy Knife may be sharp and thy Digestion good. And I hope that Success for thee is not very far away." f And I said, "I rather think thou wilt gain Success and enjoy it Fare thee well. And he said, "I thank thee for thy good wishes, and as for the Success, it is not so bad or remote as it might be. Fare thee well." And be said, "Thou bast well spoken. And it was not so bad a meal at that." ’ And the man said, "Such is lire.i -â€".\la:garet Emerson Bailey in They also serve who only stand and Marper‘s Magazine. wait, and a large part of the service‘ ie ds rorete Bs divigenpecotes for which one payeth well is of that | sort. And he who fileth an ordor for | Very Important ; Sucéess and waiteth for it to come! The master had speat the morning must often find that when it cometh telling his boys of the wonderfal it is Too Tough to Cut." 'strldes that science bhad made since Now I sat at a table near at hand, | the days of the war, and 1 said, "My friend, thou hast' He aad noticed that the most back some reason for thy complaint, and I ward boy of the clas» had paid the also have suffered here and elsewhere least attention of all. by reason of the Alacrity which Walt-l "Smith," he said sharply, "can you ers Jdisplay in Quiescence. For there tell me one thing of importance that are few things so stationary as some | did not exist fifty years ago?" Waiters. _ Nevertheless, we bave! The boy came out of his droams eaten and are refreshed, and the price| with a start: of the meal is within our means, and | "M«e~sir?" we still have time for our Train." en a nz dfg _z w But he was hungry and he ate, the meal was not a Total Loss. And the Waiter said, "Art thou ready for thy Steak?" And he served the Steak. And the man essayed to cut it, and he said, "The Steak also hath grown; it is old and tough." And the man said, "Thou must parâ€" don me for the question. ‘Thou bast grown." And it came to pass after a time that the Waiter returned. And the man said, "Art thou the same Lad that took mine Order for a Steak?" And while he waited, he sang softly concerning the Waiter, saying, "He never came back, he never came back, he never came back any more; but his neck I will break if he bring not that Steak when we meet on that Beautiful Shore." Once upon a time there was a Resâ€" taurant which was equipped with Hot and Cold Running Waiters, And the Waiters â€" were accustomed . to wait, and so were the Guests, And there was a day when 1 was there, and a man entered, and he said, "I desire a Steak, and I want it toâ€"day and not toâ€"morrow, for I am about to take a Train." And the Waiter answered and said, RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE is extra good The finest tea you can buyâ€"Red Rose Orange Pekoe. Made from juicy, flavor él:d leavesâ€".d‘;ra:g days in bud. Every package guaranteed. se Supplying Exact Time And Why Worry? TORONTO tore. © â€" |~~~JSSUE No. #49â€"‘29 and :is good tea‘ | Headache Mrs. Goodkey Tells Her Experi | ence with Pinkham‘s Compound Mrs. Wau, GoODKEY, Byemoor, Alâ€" Castoria, ATTENTION, WOMEN OF MIDDLE ACE! Baby‘s tiny system rebels ugainst castor oll and strong purgatives; but here‘s a medicine that jus: suits him. And it does the work quickly and «o gently that Baby doesn‘t feel it. Fletcher‘s Castoria is soothing cross, fretful babies and children to sleep and making the feverish, constipated, upset ones well and hapoy, in milâ€" ons of homes toâ€"day. Castoria is purelyâ€"vegetable, barmless and â€" enâ€" dorsed ‘by the medical profession. Avoid imitations, The Chas. H. Fletcher signature marks â€"zonvine ! The master had spent the morning telling hbis boys of the wonderfal |strides that science had made since News reporters speak of "coverin a story, when, as a matter of fa what thoy do is "uncover"‘ it. "Smith," he said sharply, "can you tell me one thing of importance that did not exist fifty years ago"" ‘The boy came out of his droams €limb The sky with a lilt or a whistling rhyme, May stoop and listen and mark the time Of surer songs than a» bird cver singsâ€" Songs slow with the pulse at she root of things. â€"Margaret Emerson Bailey in Marper‘s Magazine. mole May fit to its body its cool, dark hole; And I, who have never a wish to ABY CHICKS: JULY AND aAUGU®ST, ‘Rocks 12%¢c, Brown Leghorns and nconas lic, White Leghorns 10¢, asâ€" #.â€"rted chicks 9c. Express paid on 200 or over; free catalogue. A. H Switzer, Granton â€"Ontario. > q For close to the earth a beetle may trundle Its treasure below in a clawâ€"clipped bundle; And close to the earth an ant may funnel Earthwork in turrets the length of its tunnel; And close to the earth the . secret Let the brown lark fiy That bas wings to fiy, The ant, the becotle, The mole, and I Keep close to the earth Where we like to lie. Bathe the head with Minard‘s in water, Also heat and inhale Minard‘s. LAXATIVE FOR BABY THAT "STAYS DOWN" Classifhed Adv Close to the Earth dn