urn-w w‘. nausea-w. cape-e Iullruro, l Llan- D. ldltor and lounging Director-J. Auoelnu Iditon-Inlk Walkdl irnrcuuionm I. I. Vldrflelldoll, I. II». llurll“: I. I. l. A. Ileiilnal, D. , 0. I. Burnett, I‘. I. L . and D.‘ K. Curric- Ilernlng Daily (founded. Ill!) 85.00 per you (In ulnlooJ dnllvnod. I450 pa." your (in advance) mulled to Olnldl and Illltdil lhlfi- TUESDAY. JULY 39» 1935. ISSUES NEARER HOME ‘twice in the past few days the Halifax Liberal press has published the misstatement that the Conserva- tives in this Province “opposed" the balancing of the budget ln the re- cent election campaign. What the Conservatives opposed was the de- ception practised on the electors in making such a profession when, ac- cording to the Liberal brief filed by Mr. Lea before the Audit Board in 1930, it would require a minimum of over four hundred thousand dollars additional revenue to balance the budget at that time. As suggested the other day, the Halifax Liberal paper would do well to confine its attention to financial problems nearer home. Its own party government, which gained power in Nova Scotla on the same hypocritical pretense, of econcmv. came out last year with a revenue deficit of $1,129,000. Before dis- cussing what it is pleased to term the "bankrupt logic" of The Guard- ian, our Halifax contemporary might give some oi its attention to the bankrupt exchequer in its own pro- vwce unqq- Liberal administration. The HiI-UISXJHPEI. $59813. is “lun- gtic" to place the question oi.’ further subsidy increase on the ground The Guardian puts ltr-namcl)‘. m“ °! fiscal need. Apparently it has not read the minority report of the White Commission, in which this [mind is set forth specifically‘- Al for Ottawa revenues cominr- out o! the pockets oi our own Pt-‘OPPB. which the Halifax P5P" "I895 “'5 a reason for expecting further subsidy v gig, win. or without "fiscal need"- this is indeed a. change from the at- titude voiced by Mr- Mwkemis Ki“! ffyg ygarg ago.- Atthat time we '10 n0?- recall that the Halifax Liberal prcBS oflgrgd any protest to its federal _leader‘s assumption that he 0W!" ed the Federal treasury. w"! wild ‘refuse giving even "a ti" “‘“‘ piece» u, guy province not in accord with him politically- _________ 01.0 LIBERAL TACTICS Accordinktlo Liberal compels" gymngernerrts, Premier Hepburn 01 Ontario and lvlr. Ian Mackenzie ci Vancouver will tour Western Canada when. “my wi1i'0fler the pgople p, radical programme in $119 hqpg o; outbidding the 0.01‘. and other left wins part1“- It is on the boards that simul- Qgneously w. Mackenzie Kins. Mr- upomtg and Mr. Cardin will range mmugh 4,3; , Province of Qucbei! with a lalssez fulre prosmmmc 1n- ‘tcnded to catch the conservative 519mm o! the French-Canadian province. There will be nothing newHn this plan o! action. The Liberals have often tried it before. Some- times it has worked, but ooudli-Wfll no different today and the voters m“ not be as easily taken into “mp as the Liberal party leaders imagine. 1m; PENDULUM me mistrust‘ which the Toronto Globe (Iliberak) expresses of a one- party dictatorship in Prince Edward Island, resulting in the 9x61118109 from legislative representatl . of over 4o per cent of the electors, is shared by other newsroom throughout Canada. The Sydney Post-Record (Independenh so?! in this connection: . "Barring by-election chanson or revolts within the Liberal member- ship of the Legislature. Prince Ed- ward Island will have no 0PP°31' tidn in the Assembly for the next five years‘. This mayprove a 800d thing for the province at 11889 and for the Liberal party, but if so it will also demonstrate that all pol- itical thinkers and writers oi ac- cepted authorityaro wrong in their adherence to the theory thlt the tit-puny system can only function to the advantage of the M0019 when Government measures are oarutiniledby an alert_ and watch- (u! Opposition. The Prince Edward Inland experiment under the single- pmy system will he watched with inmost for the next year or two. on.- it prove! lllceeufui beyond ‘lnythingthot could be exPNted i: mun. the electoral" victim pertain p be swift and molar. ' U ' the Islam! elem-up. w“ ti: bro-third: of the now in Prince Edward Island-am in no sense victories for liberalism or any particular political cult or cause. They simply represent the mused revolt or the people against conditions which can be no more ameliorated or abated by the new- ly-elected Governments than by their omcial predecessors. This fact, obvious enough to the detached observer now, will be amply dem- onstrated to the whole country in a very brlei space of time, "Conservative governments have struggled vainly against the econ- omic crisis in most of the Plov- inces during the past several years Now the responsibilities of admin- istration in practically every Pro- vince become the task and care oi their political opponents. Ii the new Governments fail to measure up to the expectations of a depres- sion-scourged people, the swing- back of the pendulum is certain to produce new changes and possibly a. complete realignment of political parties." 1 l EDITORIAL NOTES Ethiopia was nominally a. Chris- tian nation when Italy was still in the midst of barbarism. Her Em- peror is a direct descendant of the outcome of the first recorded prac- tical experlment in eugenics. Complaint is made of the conges- tion of car and truck service board- ing the car ferry at Tormentine. Two tourists called at ‘The Guard- ian and stated the traffic requir- ed proper regulating. On the oc- casion they crossed. two cars of in- tending visitors turned back and ,.roceeded to Nova. Scotia. Colonel Batista, Cubas military dictator, is reported to be prepar- ing to establish absolute military rule in the republic, “to save the island." As Cuba has already been in the throes of revolution for the past three years, with successive dictators, it will be somewhat dim- cult to arrange a military despot- ism ‘that will make an impression upon the present chaos. Borah and Hoover are again mentioned as probable Republican candidates for the U.S.A. Presi- dency. Hoover has already declar- ed he “does not choose to but pressure may make him change his mind. With Borah as the only alternative many Blepilblicans would gladly back the “has, been" than seek to popularize a candl- date with so many opponents al- ready as Borah. V ' Col. Eric D. Macke ' , who bears a striking resemble to his chief, Lord Bessborough, is to re- main as comptroller and first pri- vate secretary to Lord r dsmuir. MI‘. A. F. Lascelles private secret- ary will return to England ‘in the fall. Liz-Col. H. Willis O'Connor, DBO" will remain as senior A.D.C. to the incoming Governor-General, while others will be named from Scottish regiments. Miss Agnes Maephail, M.P., is no better oil today than she was three months ago, when she demanded an investigation into a charge that Penitentiary Inspector J. D. Daw- son had told a prisoner that “she had made" a G-—- D—- fool of herself.” The investigating commis- sion found that the Inspecmr made no such remark. To ascertain this thourands or dollars of taxpayers money have been spent. As an indication o1 the unprovo- ment in business and the growing confidence of the people in better times, perhaps the auto trade is the best example. The total of new motor vehicles sold at retail in June was 11.687, of which 9.606 were passenger cars and 2,031 trucks and buses. The gain was 1d p.c. over the 10.1% in i934 and ‘f0 p.c. over the 0,513 sold in June, i933. The cumulative total for the first half of 1036 was 61,737 vehicles, an in- crease of 33 p.e. over i084 and 13B p.c. over i933. The retail value for this period, 067.120.0951‘ chewed cor- responding increases of 28 p.c. and 100 p.o. respectively. As I. result of the fvedatribution new, names appear amen: cl entitled ‘and planted m the human breast ' Ilhtnll‘: l0 mil, llx mvociilew tes y Way "Thole who have dared hflp-bocn those whohave ruled the world, built nations, constructed highways through the forests and duertl. hope eternal! All pioneers‘ are dar- bu. Columbus, Peary. Lindbergh W011 dI-IJII- What made them so? Largely the dosiro to explore into the apparently forbidden-the un- known. To the daring there is a lure for the untried. the undone, the ao-calied impossible. When cums 811C188 81186 Iii II t0 L116 GI!’- ing that we all look-unless we are daring ourselves! I‘ W"! lmlilll 0on0 ll nome- what oi a surprise to the majority of Canadians to be told that the total number oi deaths in Canada during i934 from violent causes was 6,440. That an Lt- undlng statement, and one that should cause considerable thought. If a town with a population oi between slX and seven thousand persons was completely wiped out by some sudden catastrophe it would shock the whole country. Because the deaths are widely scattered all over the Dominion the realization of the calamity is less vivid.-Brant- ford Expositor. _ There is no doubt that the per- iod in which we live is in many respects an exceptional one. Over a great part of Europe-in Russia, Italy, Germany, Poland, Austria, and elsewhere-democratic govern- ment as we once knew it has hem rejected in favour of dictatorships. In Britain, France, the Scandinav- ian countries, and one or two oth- ers oi the smaller States represen- tative political institutions are still in existence like islands in a sea of change and unrest. In France, as in Britain, National Guvel ments representing men oi different pol- itical parties working in co-oper- ation have been formed recently to deal with the difficult taskswhich confront these respective States.- Befast Telegraph. The Ethiopian trouble seems in have been arranged for Marcus Garvey. Jamaican colored gentle- man, now in quest of a seat in the British House of Commons, who is ready to accept further fame as a recruiting agent for Emperor Kalle Selassie. Marcus has a scheme to get all colored people in the United states back to Africa. and among his claimed titles are Provisional President oi the African 81601111116. Imperial Poientate of tht Valley of the Nile, Emperor Marcus I of Ethiopia, Commander of the Nob- les of the Sublime Order of the Nile, Knight of the Distinguished Order of Ethiopia, and Provisional President of the Universal Negro Improvement Association. " Provincial ‘hinki "‘- ' ls. luc- al thinking-is making worldwide reconstruction impossible. This ar- resting statement is made by D1‘- Robert McElroy, Oxford's Harms- worth Professor oi American His- tory. He. came to the University of Virgina to lift his voice in protest and appeal, at the Institute of Pub- lic Affairs. Local thinking, he shows. was the basic cause of the American Civil War and the hor- rors of reconstruction. History is now repeating‘ on a world scale. The only hope lies in dominating the world somehow with broad hu- man principles. This means devel- oping a concern that leaps outside national boundaries. — Christan Science Monitor. Here is an outside viewpoint of Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett from The Chicago Journal of Commerce: “Whether Mr. Bennett wins or loses ~in the coming election he has served Canada well. f-rs con- structive acts have more than laid the foundation for recovery. — London Free Press. At 41 the Prince of Wales i still an interesting and popular figure, though the charm oi his youth has inevitably departed. As a young man he captured all hearts much as Bonnie Prince Charlie did. But his has been a happier lot than that of any oi the Stuarts. From his wide travels he brought back a mature conception of duty, and at home he has studied closely the lives and fortunes of the British people. That he has never married is a disappointment. But this is a detail. No heir to the throne has more’ faithfully fulfilled the obli- gations of his positions-Philadel- phia Enquirer. A SLJAuIs, Mo., high school teacher, convicted of auto speed- ing, has been condemned to write a LOGO-word essay on "Safety." There must be something almost lmpsh about the Judge who thought of this unique sentence. Surely the essayist will convince himself in 1.000 words that speeding on the highways is a foolish business, re- marks the Toronto Globe. attachment of half of the old riding oi Hunts-Kings to Colchester, wh'le Inverness-Richmond disposes of Cape Breton West which disappears entirely from , ‘“‘ lnomenclature. The city oi Toronto has been almost completely altered as the zesult- of the new Redistribution Act. Of its l2 seats only tram-High Park and Parkdole-Iretain their former names. Oomph! boxing il discontinued in the new lino-up, the hats, North-White. 0mm: and so on, having been discarded in fwor of such’ locality names u Broadview. Greenwood, Rhosedsh, 8t. Bpedina and Trinity. Changes have token place in id-other tidings in Ontario. O1 the island and City of or almond names-flutter um. m, mum-cabaret.) l ncuvo-Roaemont, Aguilar. duke- wt M ’ a 351;»... Madalyn. nnoonvsssans‘ an: uxa ma: nasal-v m srnucruaa You have been told often that the heart is simply a musculnrpump that pumps the blood through a sys- tem of tubes-Abe arteries-to all partsofthebody anlrtheblood then ‘ through another sys- tem of tubes-the veins-to the heart to be again pumped out and again retumed. Now this is quite true but what is not really known by many is that these tubes that carry the blood to and from the heart am not hard solid tubes like the water pipes in the house but are made of the same tissue as the heart, that is elastic or muscle tissue. In fact a simple way of thinking of the whole circulation of the blood is to think hi’ a round- hollow elastic tube. in one part of which is an enlargement of the rubber tube- mm-e layers of elastic fibre in it — which is the heart. Some nervous or “electric" impulse starts the heart beating or pumping and the blood within the heart and the rest of the tube gets moved forward and con- tinues on its way around until it reaches the heart again. While on its journey it nourishes all the tis- sues with its building materials and oxygen, and carries away from the tissues the wastes which were brok- en down while the cells were doing their work. When these wastes Fame back in the blood the heart sends this “used" blood for a short jour- ney to the lungs where the lungs remove the waste _and replace it with fresh oxygen. As the heart pumps the blood into the large vessels which lead out from it, these vessels being elastic like the heart, become enlarged to receive the blood, and after receiv- ing it the elastic tissue in the walls oi these vessels tightens or squeezes downward on the blood and it goes onward to another part of the tube system. This next portion andthe next and the next, all the way along, relax or enlarge to receive the blood and then squeeze down on it to send it further along on its Journey. You can thus see :hat the whole tube or system of tubes act exactly like the heart, that is they relieve the blood and then squeeze it out again. As long as these tubes remain el- astic your heart has no trouble pumping the blood along. When they lose their elasticity due to in-' fectlons, overeating, overdrlnklng, or emotional excesses, then the bean has troubletrying to do its work. Again The Starling . (Toronto Globe) To biologists the starling is a sturnold, passerlne bird. To astron- omers it is a small star. To fruit farmers it is afreebooter andathief. ,To fortunate citizens who can afford to live in the country and sit cut under trees it is an infemai nuis- tectlon placed around the piers of a bridge. Nevertheless, to us it still remains a small bird equipped with sturnold primaries. And in one re- markable rospec‘ it is like the wild pigeon; it multiplies prodigiously. Who still alive remembers the wild pigeon? Yet it used to infest Ontario in flights so dense it ob- scored the sun. Millions of lt. At night you could take a stick and knock it down by the bucketful off low-lying trees. So that pigeon pie was as common then as the liquor authority is today. And yet what/has become »_-i' the wild pigeon? The Smithsonian In- stitution of Washington has hsxl a standing offer of 310.000 for an au- thentic cimen of one of its nests. A pretty fair nest-egg. A180. what about the English spar- row? At one time this agile little fellow was l:oked on as the bane of the whole countryside, Nevertheless, he soon necked his way into our esteem. But. alas, he is slowly dis- IDPeB-Ilnil. very slowly-with the horse. Makes us think again of the pres- ent complaint about the sterling. For we used to prop scarecrows in trees to shoo robins ofl’ the cherries. much as we still do in the fields to scoot crows off seed corn. And yet neither of these birds has establish- ed itself as an intolerable public pest‘ let us hope. then, that the star- llng. which really is a cheerful little invader, will never multiply enough ‘m replenish the earth and subdue it. On the other tack. it may dwin. dle and diminish. like the pigeon. until the Royal Ontario Museum will be induced to offer a course in Egyptology in exchange for a spe- cimen of its sturnoid primaries. Canada Forges Ahead (Windsor Dally Star) An increase of in Canada's sales w the world was recorded during the year ended May 3i last. Purchases from other nations showed a rise of $68,000,000. This Dcrninion exporte" goods to mhrmh, Ilglfngton. "‘“‘ PM“ mum growth ance. To civil engineers it is a pro- _ The Borstal "System innit»! Iflbune) _ As‘ announced in tho/speech tun the Throne last January. the Bor- sisal system is being brought into.»- ention in Canada's penltontiariel.» After studying the operation}! the sgltemfin six olllhglieb primal: Gene D. . Orm . auprrln - dent ci’ Oanlllfiilotn prepared a re ou ndng , mpg by which a similar lyqtcm could be brought into operation in Canada. This report was tabled in the House of Commons on JulU 0th by Hon. Hugh Guthrie. whistler o! Justice. with the announcement that the system would be mode of- easy to see what basis there is for the effort now being made by cer- tain partisans in dismiss the reform as an election dodge or an "eleventh hour attemPt t° PM!” Public opinion.” The Borstal system is by no means new. Two Public inquiries in Great Britain in 1894 arrived al- most simultaneously at the empha- tic conclusion that special treat- ment was required for incipient cri- minals of the "dangerous age" be- tween sixieen and twenty-one years. In 1908 the system was established by act of parliament. and achieved such immediate success that. all Canadian administratio s of the past 2'1 years must share e blame, if there is any blame, for having failed to adapt the system to Cah- adian requirements. Even the British government took twelve years to consider the matter after its own lnvestigatrrs had made emphatic rocommendatiins. Judged by that standard, Canada. has been reasonably prompt in responding to a demand for prison reform which was never very active until a little more than a year ago. All Old Liberal Custom (Moncton Til-hes) Reorganization oi the different departments of government pro- mised by I-Ion. A. A. Dysart during the recent provincial campaign is apparently under way. As predicted by The Times, however, the reor- ganization is in the nature of dis- missal of those employed in the government service suspected oi having Conservative leanings and filling their places with supporters of the Dysart Government. The new provincial government has not been in office very long, bu: it has apparently been quite active in weeding out any suspected friends of the late government pre- paratory to rppofnting some o! the party heelers to office or to the pro- motion of some of its friends who had been retained in the service by the former administration with a full knowledge of what their politi- cal sympathies and afllliatbns were. According to the Fredericton Mall, Thomm T. Blair, who has been bridge superintendent for several years has received ofllcial notification from A.W. Barbour. deputy minister of public works. that his services are no longer m- qulred afid that he is to turn over the keys of his ofllce immediately. Fred R. Pond, of Devon, replaces Albert Hanisrn as caretaker of the Ftedericion-Devon highway bridge and Duff King, and John Stephens have been suspended from the me- chanical branch of the Motor ve- hicle department. , As stated yesterday Mr. B. H. Kingborn. Chief Highway Engin- eer has been let out, and the Prem- ier has announced that other changes a:e to be made in the var- ious departments. Dismissal of civil servants—unless they have been of- fensively partizan-ls not an evi- dence of high-class statesmanship, and is not in the interest of public service or good citizenship. streets: my love was winged within my mind, It left today and yesterday and thrice a thousand years be- hind. Today was past and dead for me, for from today my feet had run Thu-Will thrice a thousand years walk the ways of ' ‘ Babylon. - 0n temple top and palace roof the burnished gold flung back the rays Of a red sunset that was dead and lost beyond a million days. ‘The tower of heaven turns darker blag, a starry sparkle now be- 8 I The mystery and magnlflce . the myriad beauty and the sins Come back to me. I walk beneath the shadowy multitude of tow- m; Within the bloom the fountain fete its pallld mist in lily flowers. The wafers lull me and the scent of many gardens, and I hear Familiar voices, and the voice I love is whispering in my ear. Oh real as in dream all this; and then a hand on mine is laid: The wave of phantom time with- fiws; and that young Baby- ian maid, One drop of beauty left behind from all the flowing c! that tide, Is looking with the self-same eyes, and here in Ireland by my ' side. Oh light our life in ion, but Babylon has taken The blue dusk ran between the ed “Peerless vThe I Question 0f . Plagiarism (Montreal Gazette) It is stated that sill the copies of a travel book. entitled “Jungle Mania," written by Dr. Arthur Tor- rance, an American explorer, have been withdrawn from circulation by its Inndon publishers. This action has been taken on the discovery that; many passages in this work contained striking resemblances to a novel previously issued under the caption, “Sepia? by Mr. Owen Rut- ter. an English author, who has called attention to what he regards as an unwarrantable instance of plagiarism. Inrebuttalof thischarge Dr. Torrance declares that he ,has never heard o! Mr. Rutter and has never read his novel. The questio of downright robbery of another man's ideas without any acknowledgment oi obligation is a most difllcult one to settle. Boswell tells us that Dr. Johnson was can- vinced that the scope of ideas and of invention in literature is so limited that the same incidents and imagerles must have sumced for all authors who have ever written. Men who feel. think and observe alike must express ‘hemselves in like terms. And unwittingly those who; read widely are apt to reproduce the ideas and the phrmng. of others ‘under the persuasion they are giv- ing utterance to concepts which are their own property. But if it comes to the search for parallelisms in poetry or prose which would seem to warrant the accusation of nich- lng from smother man's wallet, there are few authors who might evade the strong suspicion of hav- ing in some degree ignored or vio- lated the proprleties of literary craftsmanship and credit. '.f'he greatest poets have been numbered amongst the greatest offenders in this respect shekespeare drew so largely upon the translations of Latin and Greek classics similarities 0f’ expression run through the whole fabric of his plays, "rough he im- proved upon nearly all that he touched. Gray's famous "Elegy" has been declared a piece of mosaic work made up of aphorlgmg bop. rowed from earlier writers, especi- ally Thomson and Milton. Alexan- der Pzpe embodied in his verse every proverb that came into his dragnet. and has been called the boldest of all plagiarists. I-fls oft- qlloted ndage. "The proper story of mankind is man," and the sarcastic line, ‘Tools rush in where ‘angels fear to tread." appear ,in Boil- eau's “Art of Poetry" ere t ey found place in the Twicken m bards versiilcation. And the list 0i Pope's pilierings might be greatly mung. Thackeray urged that Pon- 0001: thtlllkhts from other: in grim-n and compete his nwn. Among the Fterary productions which have the reputation of being classics rather than Rffifltly read by the public, the writings of Data-e and Burton's "Annflomv of Melan- choly" have been described as in- exhrustible mines for literary lar- MATS llair Restorer A delicately perfumed pre- paration which realm-ea, IT WILL RESTORE GRAY RAIR T0 ITS ORIGINAL COLOR An excellent hair food ton- In; up and invigorating all the glands, blood velelr and nerves of the hair and scalp. thul vrvllflu: a rich and abundant growth of hair. Promotelanewandnpqg. lerlrowihwhmtheluirh llllllll and is reinukeb‘ than carefully d “g almond at the h. Gotabottleiodayboonniq. IIAOI PIG Wollnl mam]; , A very eilectl ggqy llu treatment l? 3...... ‘A can eon. Ihllonlerl teale010. m 2 u... rnmipun-Aapudy: mmellyai- R1 VAL PIPE SMOKING TOBACCO | btrongthen: and bentlfles the _' _ hair i at the Price" ceny; and the number of well- known authors who have amply en- riched themselves thereby, includes some of the most prominent crafts- men in the literary fleld. To come nearer modem times, if any reader will turn to Henry Vamghanb fine paem. "The Retreat," and compare it with Wcrdsworthb “Intimations of Immortality," the striking resem- blances oi thought everywhere throughout these two poems will certify that chance coincidence can hardly account for the singular cor- r nclence in tone and treatment between these two effusions, albeit the term plagiarism is not admis- sible in this notable instance. Paley, of "Natural Theology" fame, was accused of stealing all‘ his thunder from an out-of-print volume styled “Physico-‘rheologyfl’ it being the Boyle lectures delivered by Canon Del-ham. of Windsor, in the year 1712 and published at that date. Finally, there are those why will recall that when Rider Haggard is- sued his stirring novel entitled "She," he was accused in the col- umns of the Pall Mall Gazette oi hllvlllg plagiarized the story oi Tho- mas Moore, "The Ep1ClL'9&l1,"'BIld lung passages word for word were set side by side to sustain this crit- icism. Haggard replied that. how- BURLEY LEAF OF I THE BEST QUALITY gives RIVAL PIPE the mellow flavor and cool. ness. All Island flier. chants stock our to. baccoe fresh from our factory and specially packed to preserve moisture. JIIOKEY m NIBIIDLSON points of similarity, the novel i“ published was entirely his own won and the fruition oi’ his own studies. and that he never knew that Moon had written any such work and hm never seen a copy. fords scope for some reflection; upon the long arm of coincldencq and the surprising upshot of cham- es upon the spinning wheel of event: and oi human experience. Plagiarism hi. "There is something about depression that doesn't speak for what we call our common sense." -.Hugh S. Johnson PIMPLES ever close and remarkable the ....*'-.=-;=-—_:_-—. ... . BRA HMIN TEA’ IDIIII loll o!!! I! Nd alrtiflt 1kg: USE Ol-ANGIPIK GIOII Lower Queen Street, Good Property p to Own Lifeihsurance is good property to own-it keeps families from want and provides independence in old age. Information gladly submitted as ‘ regards Protection for the Home, Educational policies for the Children, Endowment or Pen- sion Policies, and Annuities. , Let us help solve your Insurance problems. IIYNDMAN & 00., umrrn l Provincial Managers-The Great-West Life Charlottetown The Unanimous Verdict of Successful Ranchers “We have never fed anything to equal IMPERIAL FOX BISCUITS IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD in promoting healthy and normal growth of pups and developing sturdy bodies with superior pelts of lustrous sheen, thick-skinned and retaining their color." and